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New Year Cards Stationery Dept. THE DICKINSON | Drug Co. ’ 169-171 MAIN ST. Winte’r Sale of Men's and Women's Apparel AT GREAT PRICE REDUCTIONS Offers an opportunity ex- traordinary to secure the smartest of quality wear- ables at large savings. COME IN TODAY AND GET YOUR SHARE OF THESE GREAT VALUES HORSFALLS 93-99 Msylum Street Hartford. “IC Pays o By Our Kind™ o - | Good Dressers Come Here Why Not You? Ye London Shop Tailors 13 MAIN STREET | “Let Us Clothe You We Know How” ’ « Limousine Stolen, Comes Back as White Hearse Yo g [l | with its tre " vy garage o att tromw GEN. BUAT VERY 1 s i The commissio Inventory Blanks 90c ™ ™ 3400 Per 500 37 50 Per 1000 ADKINS PRINTERS ano STATIONERS 66 CHURCH ST J " Officer | | ? NLY HUSBAND CAN BEAT UP THE WIFE ‘Judge Rules “Lelt Overs” Some- ‘times Are 0. K. on Family Menu fthough Martin Pas has been liv- with Mrs. Piniozek for the. past six years and is said by the police to be the tather of her six children, ) admits having a hu omewhere in the country, Mrs. Piniozek did not object until her : ! * got drunk and beat she feit he was assum- husband and Martin lived with Mrs. Piniozek at 138 Winter street, gccording to th police,” for the past six years. One child was t about two ks ago, but Mrs. F K stated to the offi- cials that s had not scen her hus- band for verpl year unti J drank rtin went The proceede vt his 1e head | of theh ouse by tle roughhc A tele- I was sentito p head- and Lieutenant Samuel Senator ilowell from Nebr atrolmen Hanford looked upon as a ikely candida to the post of charman of the Inter-| ss, where they found M state Commerce Committee should K bleding from the nose and the deadlock over the election in the She said Martin had struck Senate continue. ins te the Winter COMMITS SUICIDE Worried was arr@ted on a simple charge of drunken and the above || acts developed equently, so Judge Alling in court this morning continued until Wednesday morning in- vestigation. Cabbage Two Days Old Good lice New London Man, Over case for further Wife's Condition, Shoots Himself in Norwich Hotel. Judge Alling ulso was ¢ 1 upon J e value of Norwich, Dec. body of £ t ¥ me Clayta ) Il bring nye ) « { a room 1 . 8¢ ig: Ay i examina- is ad &ho still remar ed ¢ ) i r had 1 a visit to his Picknic « picnic over | parents at Gr , Mass., and was Christmas. H Yke up on Thursday | ©0 his way home, it is believed. He morni he the court, “‘wit registered about 11 o'clock last d not have an night. A dight was noticed in Dhis ook, he ulso ToOm this morning and as no response | drinks the came, entrance was made and the is wife men. | body found. It was said that Bangs a8 the per. | had worried of late over iliness of was se. his wife. He left an envelope a cured, W r was churged wit dr d to Mr. and Mrs. W, rey saulting iz wife. He admitted § Warren street, this eity ™ ing her last 71 ay but said and in it was a letter addressed to his it bec wife and ehild, which _lh» coroner did not open but sent to New London. ‘;‘H'y‘;”‘ Bangs was a foreman in a sik ok tte | PlaNt in .\.l‘_]_'l_‘.'_llut,w i Jonn . MAY CALL GOVERNOR ought to be od to cat on Thursday e e tined Walter §1 CORE Grand dury ds Likely to Again Ask Steating Drill e s ! mpleton 1o Give What He Knows A {:““ . ':L‘ O it of Medical Scandal. g t 81 { South End | yarrord, Dec 29— When the 1 He W re t by s inquiry into plags of © i by Acting Dete tsstied by certain Thome J. ¥ Pa next week it is O Mara. Hr di g anyt wr Charles A, ont 1 It The § men went | again go before it to i me 18 Derby street and cment bearing upon his is " them In. {veto of asmedical bill which proposcd im e driil, which was o the state, It is understood that o anded out of the windew rnor Templeton bas d ungs Kayeski t 1 the ¥y he vetoed this bill, ] L l I r with other reasons, was ths s \ i t 1 it to be a “political bi L on et st Ve No Session of Mexican » v Assi Prosecuting Senate, Lack of Quorum Pty i co City, Dee, 29.~The Mexi- i 1 today did ot resume dis gencral cluims ce ELIMINATE TWO PORTS wer of & laok St eou- g — o, 1 wa cause the de s Huerta supporters sed to ¢ Revicion of Services Cot Ont Savan- s 1 P imed 1t nah and Baltimore A Ports of Call The chamber voted to summon sup tary deputies to fill the egislators who hat a Huerta to Vera cadqu of the rtain of Fromr New York 0 places With Australian Farmers York.e e h~The Argentine gricultura t co vda and the wi lams, agr Austra S American countric ' + Professor flaiiél\' VRc(urn.\ To Harvard Observatory Profescor Elected by - today & rd obser Ladies’ Auxiliary, A, O. H. ern Pe . . ted general astro todicd 8 ® ) € ations the - He said ne find s ted from The Parents and Teachers’ Assn. of tHe lunior High School presents Crawford Adams & Company violini<t: pianist and reader The First of a Series of Pro- grams By Artists of National repute Wednesday Eve. Jan. 9. At Central Junior High School Central Dr. Garfield OF for Europe After Speakers " organization g e e S TS e S Here is the French dirigible up for lost, with its entire crew of 50 officers and men. The lat- s that the giant dirigible was wrecked by a sudden est theory explosion. — ART CALENDAR for every customer this week—Ask for one. HERBERT L. MILLS HARDWARE 336 MAIN STREET { Dixmude which has been giveni | STUDENT VOLUNTEER MISSION WORKERY More Than 10,000 Have Gone Abroad in 82 Years Indianapolis, Dec. 29.—~More than 10,000 graduates of American col- in the leges have taken up work foreign mission fields through the student” volunts movement since its years ago, u histor- movement pres feal summary of th » sented today at the second session of the ninth international conference re- vealed. 'The paper recalls the hum- ble beginning of the movement in the late eighties at Princeton university, where informal gatherings of a small group of students interested in mis- sionary work were held at irregular intervals “to study conditions in non- Christian countries.” Today more than 7,000 delegates representing ap- ely 1,000 universitics in e s in the union are regise tered at convention headquarters here, The influence of the movement has been felt in China which has drawn over 3,000 of the student workers; Japan, Korea, India, Africa, South America, Mexico, Persia, Siam, the Straits Settlements, Jentral America and E More than 2,100 of the signments have been made since 1920, indicating ac- cording to the report a growing ten- dency among students to devote thelr to Christian service abroad of the student move- ment in Great Britain presented to. lay by Canon K. 8. Woods, vicar of Holy Trinity chureh, Cambridge, use d to the activity major credit for recent administrative reforms fin the church of England It is largely owing to the work of the movement that the national chureh asserably has come into exist 1 is earrying out the long ives An outline needed measures of reform vitally af- | fecting the work of the church in all of its departments,” he said. SO0 Approximately 16,000 students in - 200 institutions comprise the nrem- @ bership of the organization in Great : N Britain and Tretund. . HIS Bank will be open ~ Hp . ome ) 50 discussion groups consid- cring as many phases of forelgn work as usual on Monday @ under the general theme *the Chris N tian enterprise abroad,” were sched- Nerant . 9 uled for :‘r,u] nfhnr\\nnn session today. | I‘Venlng' Decelnbel UISt" E.- ) - from 7 to 8 o’clock. 0 PROYVES FAST VESSEL innati Js Ad- Christmas Club Savings Dept. New Scout Cruiser O judged the Speediesi In The Entire | American Navy. Tacoma, Wash, Dec. 20, ~For four | hours the new scout eruiser Cincin. | nati churned the open ocean under | the eyes of the naval trial board yes. | terday and returned to Tacoma ad- | judged the fastest American vessel | afloat, although her official test | showed her one-tenth of a knot slow- er than her sister ship, the Omaha. The apparent discrepancy s ex- | plained by her builders and naval of- | ficers, pointing out that the Cinein. nati had a six months growth of bar. nacies on her bottom, held to have reduced her speed by from one-quar- ter to half a knot, The records show a sustafhed speed for four hours of 44.5 knots whereas the Omaha madg | 9 The Omaha came fresh froM lock for her tost, The Cincinnati will he turned over to the navy Monday at Bremerton Foreign Exchange () v ® iry — VOICE CULTURE — Origin of yellow fever s thought to | have been in Afriea, the discase being carricd to America in connection with | trade, according to one | theory | m DENTISTS ! A. B. Johnson, D. D, S, | P. R. Johnson, D. D. S. Gas—Oxygen—X-rays National Bank Bldg. Ear Training Sight Reading Special Attention to Beginners JAMES DONAHUE Graduate Yale University School of Music W SEFTON DRIVE TEL. 127413 the slave Phone for Appointments For Quick Returns Use Herald Classfied Advis. b1 L) - JOIN OUR - XMAS CLUB AND RECEIVE YOUR CHECK DECEMBER 1st 1924 L S 3 B THE BANK OF SERVICE OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS 7-9°