New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 7, 1924, Page 2

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s | VALENTINES Cyphers lnéubators . and Brooders Fof 15 Years - Agents For the 7.—The jury in ndler $500,000 Atlanta, Ga., Fel the de ouchel- breach of prom suit Tuesday re- turned a verdict for Asa G. Candler, sr., the defendant. . I Neither M Onezima de Bouchel of New Orleans, who sued him, nor the defendant was in court. The jury was out about forty-five minutes, its verdict s “We, the jury, jant.” A few Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. development of the adlay industry, it is declared, would in a large measure POST CARDS | | C ouTs” Selection While the « Complete Stationery Dept. find for the uefend- / | ’Hml Mrs. Clark after qnestioning | | Meyer about alleged ‘disparaging re- ' | marks the woman charged he had 3 ; { 4 o 1 a pistol and shot Meyer. He clinched y i with her, and as she broke loose from S i ' 8 ! Clafk was shot five t:mes. Meyer, S i " . witnesses said, tlen turned his pistol Jury Finds for Delendant-Is Mas. Clark Shot Up Man But Was | 7 made no remarks detrimental to Miss | Clark’s character, authorities stated. Opelousas, La., Feb, 7.—Mrs. Ro-| As-Source of Breadstuffs land W. Clark, former mayor of Pal-| Manila, Feb. 7.—The production of { ' o | as a substitute for wheat flour in the Ry erehant of the same Place: | ropics, is recommended by officlals | years old, daughter of Mrs. Clark, was | scriously wounded in a pistol battle at | { g s 3 make the Philippines independent of 19, son of the degd woman, who nlat; Satibis aarotl of Aeuh ‘wounded. Mrs, Clar cas kil by Meyer | in aletter to the Wirector of commerce fes. Olavks ‘was killag, by . Meyer | nnatey, poilita out.the possibiife IN Blfi EUN Fl[iHT made about her daughter, she drew his grasp both began firing. Mrs. lon.the daughter. Meyer déclared he | ! {Tropical Grain Boomed | metto, La,, was shot to death,sLouis | flour out of a grain knowh as adlay, 'of the department of agriculture, The Palmetto Tuesday night. Cleon Clark, particlpatad tu. the, sidoting, wag 1y ' Director of Agriculture Hérnandez, after she had shot him twice, inflict minutes after the verdicet was found in the lobby building surrounded were congratulating ing wound from ‘which he died late | ties of adlay as a substitute for wheat | flour and requests his cooperation in | After Meyer had fatally. wpunded | Producing adlay on a large scale in . 2 i 2 Mrs. Clark he was said by witnesses ' the Philippines. Director Hernandez HARDWARE ¢ 336 MAIN ST. (to have continued firing, one of lhu‘!“EHl‘Sls lh_.x( the government under- g : g | Bullets striking the Clark girl; inflict- | take the milling of ‘adlay, which grows s |ing a serious wound. A bullgh from | W 11 here, as long as private capital a group of | the girl's pistol struck Meyer in the | hesitates to invest money in the erec- ER 68 YEARS OF SUCCESS hotel | oV L head, and a load of shot from a shot- tion of mills. e " gun, said to have been fired by her TO TRY LETHAL |Siitssssige s s Pt T Schedule e (A3 ON A CAT According to advices received Here | g |Cousin of President’ trom Palmetto the shooting was said , Two kindergarten classes, one at the Rehearsal for Execution Tomor-| row--Prison Guards Resign | . . & g to have grew out of a political contrp- | Monroe and one at the Staney | Dies of Pneumonia *vecping the versy, which started scveral years Schools, are operating on part time| Reno, Nev., Feb. 7.—The Right! age, when Mrs, Clark was elegted because of insufficient school accom- | Rev, George Coolidge-Hunting, fourth mayor of Palmetto over a candfflate |[modations. The opening of the sec- | bishop of the Protestant Episcopal supported by Meyer. In a prunury“oml semester has caused this condi- | church in Nevada, died last night at recently Mrs., Clark was defeated for |tion, the school authorities say, the|his home in Reno after an iliness of reelection by A. Isaacson by one vote, |lower grades being filled beyond the | but a few days. He was 53 years old. | which, she was reported to have |number that can be handled with two | Pneumonia was given as the cause of charged was obtained by Meyer send- |sessions. The school accommeodations | his death. Bishop Hunting, who is & ing to Port Arthur, La., for his broth- |committee is now working on a build- | cousin of President Coolidge, served er to.go to Palmetto and vote for|ing program whieh will emphasize the | pastorates in Evanston, = Wyo., Salt The Associated Press. Isaacson, |immediate needs, and this program | Lake City and Virginia City, Nevada, Carson City, Nevada, I'eb. 7.—The | Witnessos testified inquest | will be heard by the “pruning” com- ' before being named bishop in 1914, first lethal gas execution in which two men have been sentenced to die Mri- |day will be given a rehearsal in the | death chamber in the yard of the Ne- vada state prison today. A cat will be the vigtim of the ex- | periment and experts supervising the | exceution -will endeavor to learn how | quickly the cat dies and whether the |arrangements for releasing the hydro- |eyanic vapor afterwards are satisfac- tory. | IFour prison guards sent in their resignations to the warden today, state [ing that they were unwilling@o have any part in the execution. The condemned men are Gee Jon, Chinese Tong slayer and Thomas Rus- sell, American born Mexican conviet- | ed of killing his Indian sweetheart, The necessary precautions have Leen taken to insure the safety of exe- cutioners, attendants, physicians and spectators but,no gas masks will be {worn, Ogyee the gas is pumped out of the death chamber it will flow harmlessiy over the prison walls, The witnesses will view the execu. tion through a window in the chg BULGARIAN LAUDS U. §. last night in a New Orleans hospital. than that I am very happy,’ “I didn't expect anything e Mrs. friends he said. mittee of the board of finance and 3 |taxation before the annual budget is | prapared. { and lunching in the when a reporter brought the news, which her attorney, Harry Gamble of New Orleans, left the table to re- ceive. He said the New Orleans soci- |ety leader had no statement to make. | Argument Completed. | Tuesday Mr. Gamble, counsel, cam- |pleted the argument for Mrs. de Bouchel. Referring to the persons alleged to have prevented rgrriage {to Mr. Candler, Gamble said he| | “congratulated them on their handi- work.” He could picture the group of dominating influences that pre- |vented Mr. Candler from “following jhis own will,” By [ He said Mrs, de Bouchel had been| irretrievably damaged by failure of Starting Today! the defense to produce the persons Horsfall's |making the charge of immoral con- {duct against her. ac | Attorney Thompson, for the de- |fense, read excerpts from letters by |Mrs. de Bouchel to Mr. Candler in |an effort to show she had made up Tremendous Values de Bouchel were Big Forest Fire Sweeps Maugg Loa, in Hilo By The Assoclated 8 Hilo, Island of Hawaii, T. H., Feb. 7.—A forest fire two miles wide is pes of Mauna . Loa lles from Kralakeua, according to reports received here, There are no buildings in the vicinity of the fires. . - by him, “I have no statement to malke other | Miss Helen Parkhurst, director of |the Children’s University School of | New York and originator of the Dal- | ton laboratory plan of education, will speak this afternoon at 4:15 o'clock at Central Junior High school on her plan of education, at the HE VICTROLA and Victor Records cost no more than other similar products, but they provide a wider range and a better quality of entertainment. Some one of the twenty-one Victrola styles will suit your purposes exactly, just as some of these new records will be exactly to your liking, and the combination of Victor Instrument witK Victor Records will produce results that are unattainable by any other means. Out tomorrow New Victor Records Red Seal Records pesngh 1 Number 0%, {Romance (Rubisseia) Fisiin s Mischa Ehn} 974 $1.50 Souvenir Poétique (Fibch-Schindier) 7t suie -~ Mischa Elman . Rubinstein never wrote a more haunting melody than this Romance. With it is paired Fibich's Souvenir Poétique. 1 Shall Never Forget Orville Harrold That 16 Why! (©Hue Kt Orvile Harrold A love song from an English source, and one the Western world, sung in ike ringing tenor, ing to hear, fascinating to compare. h\l‘l’ mind to marry Candler before |she sought a divorce from Adolph Rocquet The defense attorney dwelt at {length on Mrs. de Bouchel's letters | with reference to her stay at Reno, basing his arguments on the alleged invalidity of her divoree | He concluded his argument with a| {poem, “A G Little Town in the | West,” which dealt with persons jour- neying to Reno for divores Charge to Jury, his c¢h to the delved at length into Nevada law as to the validity of di- decrees, He said the present hinged on the question whether Bouchel was domiciled in when she obtained her di- HORSFALLS 93-99 \dsylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays to Buy € In Sibley | State | voree | case Mrs, Nevada vored It the plaintiff had proper residence in that State, he clared, then the court had a right to jaet, but if the jury decided the stay had not been a bona fide residence, her divorce was dilegal, notwithstand- Ing the decision of Nevada courts. | { Bofia, Bulgaria, course of a statem the ury, Judge 1 de Kind" established de | [ ern ANNUAL | END OF SEASON ’ SALE Foreign Minister Kalloff Pays Offigial Tribute 10 America~Hopes Tecent Treaty will Strengthen Ties, Now In Progress | Have a Suit Made il To Your Measure $35.00 tion in the death sentences agains his followers, has been ordered by the Siberian revolutionary committee, The committee has also asked the federal executive to pardon the prisoners, de- claring that the present strength of the sovict federation permits the We Know How.” Pepflinyev and hi —_— _———: DR. COOMBS | i1/ oo S The Naturcopathic Physician defeat and Chivopractor has MOVED Into His Nature Cure Institute 19 S. HIGH ST. Opposite the Post Office, where he has installed the new Biological Blood Wash Fob, T.e=In the t on foreign re- | Sobbranje last Kalloff paid Pepelinyey and Twenty of His Follow- ers Given Stay of Execution—=Soyfet Strong Enough to Tet Him Live, belore Foreign Minister a tribute to the United States, The | good will of America toward Bulgaria, he declared, had not been interrupted | i by the wat ' | “Hundreds of thouwsans of Bulgare {lans,” he added, “are finding homes 'and hospitality in America, whence| those who return bring a fortified faith in democracy, We welcomed the recent opportunity to sign our | fiest treaty with America, and hope that the treaty, which provides for naturaliation, will strengthen the !friendly ties between the two couns tries.” His statement drew from the deputies. ations night } 980 1.50 Moscow, Feb, 7 A stay of execn.!| Victrola No. 100 $150 Tailors f Mahogany, oak or walnut 13 MAIN STREET “Let Us Clothe You | ] . Lot Homer| 979 A pleasant pastoral ballad by Mme. Homer's husband, &fin:nhbd o:vl?ontl wh:munfiu her at the piano; Light Vocal Selections Hold Thou My Hand Merle Alcock {Gnu and beu ru-u': MM}‘“" MM.MMM-I'* - of quiet and friendly type. {Sweet Alce Fank Comi 19236 First Victor Fecord by this clever Follies star. “Oh, Baby!” Frank Crumit has Phil Ohman at the piano. “Sweet Alice” is not Ben Bolt's, but Frank’s, now featured in vaudeville. and Immhqam\mvwxfim hlcl Hmc(-upvm-) 4 y Il-nyul!nlo Tnumchnmlnlolwhr&-?vfl pro- m WEre o military tribunal at great applause ™ EY FARE CONFERENCE Mayor A. N. Phillips of Stamford, Las written Mayor A, M. Paonessa dking him to attend a meeting of col- | mayors and municipal _legal advisors at Hotel Garde, New Haven, Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock, for a discus- | sion of the trolley fare situation. It { Methodist ch* .n to the “|is Mayor Phillips’ plan to introduec | 000,000 will open in the fa |suggestions as to how further in. | — ereases in trolley fares may be avoid. ed and to urge adoption of gome posi- tive procedure in fighting e increase |which is to go into effect February 10, no definite action having been tak. Voice Culture Cinn-o-mon , EBAR TRAINING SIGHT READING :‘-:‘;‘\:'r-vfi otz o o Fie NAME (O Valdesta, Georgia WILSON, The South Methodist the Wo row Wilsen colle e W - Ling finar H Victrola No. 260 $150 19240 Mahogany or walnut — James D. Donahue = * Miss Edith White, the head of the wom. | bray New York City | Mission will be the speaker at the ar sal meeting of the City Mission of | New Britain tonight at 7:45 o'clock the parish rooms of St. Mark's | Episcopal church. Reports of the mission for the year wil read. B M. Wightman will preside Trainee of Yale Uni 81 Sefton Drive " b conld be transpianted ocean, it would fi between the United Australia Atlantic £pace States and Great Britain ————————— LA R AR AR R LR R RLLRD]) Its purity cannot be overem- phasized —The Varmer Boy We talk about the pur- ity of our milk because every precaution as been taken to insure that this food-fluid reaches you in a perfect state United Milk Co's milk is a guarantee in itself —of Purity. 1S NO SUBSTI- TUTE FOR FRESH MILK Why Not Bring Up Youw Baby On Our Nurery Grade A Milk United Milk Co. 49 WOODLAND Tel. 1610 COUGHING RELIEVED o X s rour TR ise the phlegm easily without strain or pain by tacing Leonardi's Cough (n.“. od ;‘ .fl i : Melodious Instrumental {Scherzo (Mesdescha) Piens Master Shura Cherkassky mfl.’"fi-.fl.-fi'fi.w;mmh&u-:, Dance Records Blue Grass Blues—Fox Trot David H. Silverman and His Orchestra Honolulu Blues—Fox Trot Jack Chapman and His Drake Hotel Orchestra *Blue Grass Blues” is j and with snappy “Honolula Blues 1s soft, spimmerin S s B th, Simieg e, My Sweetie’s Sweeter Than That ~—Fox Trot Orchestra of Chicage 1 19239 Wow!—Shimmy Fox Trot Orchestra of Chicage A fox trot in the standard strawfoot-straw” with & lot of cornet 19237 Victrola No. 220 $200 Electric, $240 Mahogary, oak or walnut There is but one Victrola and that is made by the Victor Company ~look for the Victor trademarks. Thmh"fl The Virginians in the first number. The other has won- the slow, easy dance being arabesqued with speedy and difficult passages. 'Victrola

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