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GIRL PSYCHIC IN TEARS IN COLRT Kansas Wonder Accused as For- tune Teller New Work, March 14.—Tears— large, down the gl psychic from Kansas, when Magiskeate Moses R. Ryttenberg, re- fused % dismiss‘the charge of fortune telling a kot .mourt yesterday., With jeweled fin- gerw she daintily wiped them away. Then she shrugged her shoulders jnto an expensive, heavily furred grayfeoat went back to the hotel. he “Wonder Girl” was not dis- wsuraged in spite of the testimony miven by Mrs, Mary W. Foley, of As- maria, L. 1., who is the complainant against her. She fixed her dark, moist eyes on the magistrate with pleading in their depths. But he refused the motion made by her counsel, 1. Lie bold, to have the complaint dismissed He gave counsel until Saturday to present their brief and reserved deci- sion Mrs, Nannie Dennis sat beside her daughter and followed the court pro- ceedings anxiously. Mrs. Foley told with animation of her contact with the “Wonder Girl” and her mother. She made an ap pointment over the telephone for a *reading” and was told that the fee would be $25. When she reached the kotel where Miss Dennis and her mother were staying Mrs. Dennis met her and turned her over to Eugenie, Mrs. Yoley said. Her son, who turned up lately, had been missing since June 2 2. “Your boy is tall and slender and has wavy, light hair,” the girl in- formed Mrs. oley, according to her testimony. But when told that her description was all wrong Eugenie tried again. “Well, he is stout and has rough hair,” she obligingly amended. Then) she proceeded to tell the mother that her son was in the West and was working for an automobile concern. Moreover he had made an application to go on the stage and would be a success, the ingenious “Wonder Girl"” divulge In the mean time, however, he had fallen in with evil companions who wanted him to steal, but he was “a good boy at heart.” It was when her revelations 1eached this point that Miss Dennis btroke in with “Time's up!"” Then she collected the $25 feo, Eugenio looked aggrieved as Mrs Foley went on recounting what had happened. She sald that on the strength of the information the girl psyehic had given her ghe spent about $125 trying to get in touch with her boy through the Y. M. C. A, where #he was told he was staying, and the automobile works at which he was supposed to be working. Helen Foley, daughter, corroborated her mother's testimony. The boy's own testimony to the effect that he had never been in the place mentioned by Miss Den- nis had been taken proviously, Charles White u(‘tml as |-rn utor in the case. NEW BOUNDARY ISSUE British Quota to U. 8, From Ircland D Cannot Be Set Until - Prontier I8 Pefinitely Established. Dubling March 14.-~The American immigration law is indirectly involved in the question of the Ulster boundary at issue between Northern Ireland and the Free Stute government. ANl Treland now Is included in the British quota, but sooner or later the | Free State is expected to claim thwe same separate position ax any of the British dominions, and if this is con ceded it will obviously be impossible to fix a Freo State quota until it is known exactly how large the state is to be. The quota question is at present un- der the consideration of the Free State minktry for external affairs, and A there 18 no disposition to hurry it Apart from all the difficulties of de tall that it Involves is the settied pol- fey sgainst emigration from Ireland. During the struggle against England it was considered an oftense to emi- grate and prior to the signing of the Anglo-Irish treaty there were some instances of Intending emigrants be- ing foreibly restrained from leaving. Pupils to Entertain Northend P. & T. A A meeting the Teachers association end will o'¢lock this eve the parents teachers in their At 8% o'clock a I be heid A sor will be given and has been arranged and violin etior Bleanor Amata and play by th grade; tall child we viay by grade. teadi Markham. 1 grade. A the conclu of of hetd At sehool he i aith ronme ning honr will meet the pective nd entertainment a pleasing program u fe M Flor pupils of the sist will be held jon of the prog TOR MIsSs RROWN party wa A Mies PARTY A birthdas ning in Brown at her Vocal selaction Mise Ha nnd Ceaorgs given by Mis the Highland Mae Begies bein and Michaeling K favored w=ith plans snlos Tunch 1 decorated in gree Brown was the r beautiful gift Tos Ay Annce Wiewes Fling The Your children pmet have good cands! nst her in Jefferson Mar- |- ! Townley SMALLPOX INCREASING THROUGHOUT COUNTRY Three Times ay Many Cases in Week of Feb, 16, in 192 Washington, Marel 15.—Reports from state health officers and from 105 citivs in all parts of the United States indicate an increase of small- pox throughout the country, accord- xarl,\' ones——rolled turbulently |j,, 0 16 o gtatement issued by the sur- e cheecks of Fugenie Denais, | geon general of For the the public health week ending Feb. health officers reported many smallpox cases panding week of lust r. The cities reported 473 asey for the week as compared with 140 cases for the same week as 1923 Influenza and pneumenia were much less frequent during the first 16 bout twice for the corr !stable when it became seven weeks of the year than during | the corresponding perfod of 1923, the report states. Nearlet fever is more prevalent, although the week of Feb. 16 showed @ decline in this disease from the preceding week. The pub- lic health situation on the whole is il d to be good REVENUE INQUIRY OPENS Hearing Today is in Among Witnesses is Commissioner H. D. Blair. Washington, Mareh 14.—Inquiry in- | te the operation of the Bureau of In- ternal Revenue opened today before the senate select committee headed by ! Senator Watson, republican, Indiana Meeting in executive session, the committee heard officlals of the bu- reau headed by Commissioner D. H. Blair, who had been instricted to present charts showing the status of tax collections for past years and of claims lodged against the government by taxpayers. The Inquiry was ordered hy the senate under a resolution by Senator Couz As originally drawn the| resolution asserted that inefficiency, not maladministration, had in great confusion in the bureau, but before adoption the allegations in the preamble were stricken out by agree- | ment. As it now stands, the order for the inguiry compriss simply anthor- ity to ascertain the reason for report- ed undue delay in settiement of tax | Private and reser |lighting contract, ‘at $48,000, 1 if |be near. resulted |and struck the neighborhood it has not passed inside the monastery gates. The phystelans attribute this immunity to a diet of vegetables and fruits. ER LAST IN RACE, March 14.—B. L. Baker, of St. Paul, Minn,, drove his team of tired huskies into the Pas last night, last by many hours of the entrants in the 200-mile dog derby which ended in victory for Shorty Russick's team. Baker lost the trail after 115 miles, and one of his dogs was njured. J Fights o (ngrv Bull as BA The Pas, He Lies Prone on His Back 1= ammoth oil Co., temporarity én- | Middletown. N. Y., March 14.—Ly ing on his back on the ground, with | #n angry bull endeavoring to gore him to death, George H. Myers of Montgomery, suceessfully fought off the animal until fwo men rescued | him. He was leading the bull to unmanageable, knocking him down. Myers had an ax handle with which he was able to | it hack the attack of the bull, fle with the other hand he clutch- «d the ring in its nose. Altheugh Myérs' arm was nearly twisted from its socket, hie held to the | ring until assistance arrived. The bull was shipped away for slaughter, Contract for JS 000 for Street Lighting Signed ' ard of public works and rep- of the Connecticut Light | & Power ('o. met vesterday afternoon and reached an agreement on a street | placing the figure The contract will ba rec- ommended to the comme ncouncil at the next rbgular mrrflng. Wildcat Attacks G rl . Passing Through'Woods|? N. Y., March 14.—A large wildeat carly this morning attacked Florence Yosman, 12, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. John Yoeman, living at High | Point, near here, The girl was pass- ing through some woods when she was attacked. The cat tore her cloth- ing and scratched her about the face, Suffern, CONTINUING DRIVE ON OIL CONTRACTS Roberts and Pomerene Now on ~ Way to Los Angeles By the (heyenne, Wyo., ssoefated Press. March 14— with joinéd from further development fl( he Teapot Dome naval oil reserve |and its propertics on the, reserve or- | |dered into the bhands of a joint re- “c»'l\t-rsmp Atlee Pomerene gnd Owen J. Roberts, special govetnment coun- el toduy arve traveling to Los Angeles or the second attack in the drive for .unnulment of the ofl reserve jeanses. The temporary injunetion and re- ‘cr~hernhlp order was granted yester- |day the federal district court for Wyom- Hng after gevernment counsel had filed a bill in equity asking that the |lease of the Teapot Deme to Harry | | ¥. Sinclair and the Mammeoth Oil Co. he cancelied alleging frand in its ex- | ecution. Rear Admiral Joseph Strauss of the United States navy proposed by the |government and Albert T, Watts, vice- president of the Sinelair Consolidated x('il‘(orp nened by the defendants were appointéd joint receivers, Mr, Watts said late last night that he was yndecided whether he woyld ireturn east with the Sinclair party to- | day or walt in Cheyenne for Admiral | Strauss. | Just beferé leaving for Los Angeles | ;lnsl night, Mr. Pomerene said he and Mr. Robérts expect to follow the same | g¢neral precedure in the hearing on ‘thv opening lease next Monday as pur. syed in yesterday's hcaring. He de- {elined to reveal any definite plans or |to venture predictions. In a formal statement Mr. Sinelair declared that “the order which sim- ply provides for a modus vivendi pending the tridl of the suit in ne way Henry Sutton, a negro, happened to ! He rughed to her assistance cat with The cat cscaped, {Three C andldales for knocking it away Common Council Posts Petitions {culation for of candidacy are in eir Arthur N. Rutherford for casés, and instructions to report "'“'y'h' republican nomination for ald ommendations. Non Parllsan f:t;;e Now Is Farmer-Labor Faction Minneapolis, March 14.-—The non partisan league of Minnesota ceas to exist as such yesterday, when its state convention here voted to affili- ate with the of Minnesota, en by the working people's non-parti- | san political league, which has spon- sored the federation. Deelsion of the| non-partisan league came spirited debate in which charges were made and denied controtled the lahor end of the The Minnesota non-partisan was organized six years ago hy A, O, to further. the political and other interests of farmers, party N N Studying Monks’ Dietary Habits to Treat Disease London, Mareh 14.-British health minlstry experts are making a study of the dietary habits of the monks o the Carthusian Monastery at Cowfold, Surrey, whose immunity from Influ- enzo, consumption and other discases has long puzzled physictans, perts hope to be able to apply the fruftarian principles as practiced by the monks to the treatment of cancer and tuberculosis, Although influenza has affected al- most every THE SODA a Full Line of the Famous Offers {man in the second ward, for Harry farmer-labor federation | jives at 117 Jubilee street, Similur steps were tak- | .on Jjves at 51 W after & that communisty' HiFoley, h‘n:n: | ¢ recognizance tc The ex-| Robertson for the nomination for {eouneilman in the fourth ward, and for Martin A, Dahlson for&council- {man in the sixth ward, Mr. ord is an ex.councilman and was a presentative two years ago, contractor, Mr, Itobertson is employ- | ed at the Russell & krwin plant and Mr, luh!- Is street, New LoKdofi Youngster Is Killed by March 14, == Joseph Mr. and New London, four, son.of ames oley of 193 Willimm street, was instantly killed in front of his home late yesterday by a New Lon. don bound trolley ear from Norwioh, Witnesses say the child tripped on the tracks while crossing the street, the car coming down hill, striking him. The motorman, Arthur Brodell, of Twlley | | R. C. A. Tubes Mrs. | a stone, | Ruther- | | Us V. 199 ... U, V. 200 ... U, V. 200A . w.D. 11 .... w.D 12 ... Norwieh, was taken to police head- | quarters and later released on his own appear at an inquest.’ STHMA No cure for it, but wi nlM.h often bvw:mg | house and cottage in the SHOPPE TIDBITS OF CHOCOLATE PERFECTION = Woodland Chocolates, Old Fashioned Choco- lates, Chocolate Cov- ered Cherries, . Meal Time Mints, Fork Dipped Chocolates They are delicious, fresh made expressly for you. Ihe variety of delightful flavors unusual. offered is decidedly Our prices are pleasingly agreeable. TAKE HOME A BOX OR TWO SODA SHOPPE MAIN S NEW BRITAIN Next Trip Across the Hudson River Use the YONKERS-ALPINE FERRY fon 1 ngtenond Hakonsack Widdletown. Bear Monntain North and South wndder —starts Operating March 15th and Poin Tloats Opwerating Widnig wo Lare Passaic Suffern. Tuvedo Newburah, PFater-on West Point, Trequent Sche WESTCHESTER FERRY CORPORATION SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY £5.00 USKIDE SOLE MOCCASINS for $2.98 (Saturday Only) These Soles are Guaranteed for 6 Months (Hotel Bronson Basement) Sub Army and Navy Store Brandes Phones Volt TRANSFORMERS Acme Erla Thordagon, 3% to 1 Thordason, 6 to 1 Jefferson, 314 to 1 Jefferson, 6 to 1 .. Perleo, 3 to 1 .. Perleo, 6 to 1 ... Perlco, 9 to 1 Perleo-Reflex : All American, 3 to 1 All American, 5 to 1 All American, 10 to 1 Como Push and Pull CONDENSERS GGenyine -Signal, Genuine Signal, Genuine Signal, Genuine Ngm«l. Genuine Signal, Perfection, Dubilier-—F o9 23 Plate 11 Plate 13 Plate, 23 Plate, 23 Plate, xed Type 600, by Judge T. Blake Kennedy of | Volt Meters 050 Volts ...... Ammeters. ., 23 Plate, Verni invel I ment's clatms whie Mlgomush contest.” Mr. Sinclair added that he was con- | | vinced that when all the facts closed and understood “it will realized that the Teapot Dome Tease to ithe Mammoth Oil Co., was the result | !of negotiations conducted at arms| |length by earnest and loyal represen. |tatives of the navy and interior de-| | partments and that th!y not only fully | protepted the government but drove ‘a hard burguln in is interest.” |Radio Sets Are Jammed | By Song Singing Gobs| New ¥ork, March 14.—The 11 bat- |tleships of the Pacific fieet, which | have been here on a 10-days \-1-",‘ | yvesterday steamed oyt of the harbor | on their way to the east coast of |Panama, carrving with them the ear- nest farewells of radio enthdsiasty who have complained that -ailurs piayful use of the powerful navy radfo | | sets has interfered with” bmulramln;k | operations. The sailors, It was stated, «mm-ab !popular alrs into the zenders of the navy sets, inténding to reach the ears’ {of their feminine friends. One sta. ! tion, broadeasting from a theater last | ‘nlght was faid to have sheen foreed {to discontinue heuum of the whis- | ,vnngm A RSk | 'London Program Reported ' “Caught” by New Yorkers | + New York, March 14.-—~The English | {radio program which was broadcadt | !from London last evening was offi- | | elally reported at midnight as having | | been heard by only two New York’ | radio listeners, Promoters of the ex- | varlm»m however, were hopefu) that | !later reports would show the “globe- | |encircling” attempt was a greater Buccess. PLOT IS UNCOVERED { Munich, Bavaria, March 14.—An actor, a barber and two other men | have been arrested on a charge of' plotting to assassinate Dr. von Kahr, former Bavarian military dictator. | They will be placed on trial within a l week., T | oS 25N I the quality - A7 \8Y work you “‘short change When you “‘short cut”’the » You don’t want clothing made in fac- tories by “short cut” methods. Good clothing can’t be made that way. You want your clothes tailored—carefully, skilfully—by a tailoring organization dominated by custom procedure. Clothes tailored at Fashion Park are developed that way. Custom Service Without the Annoyance of a Try-on Ready-to-put-on BSage-Allen & Qo. HARTFORD Sale Price £3.69 Reg. Price .. 500 . $5.00 $4.00 $4.50 $1.25 $5.50 85.00 §2 $3.35 $2.70 $3.60 $3.50 $9.15 §1.49 $1.39 $3.98 $3.49 $3, Vernier Vernier Vernier $1.00 1er vee 0005..... Toe 001, Mahoganite Panels “dad a) wfay RADIO SETS Firth 3-Tube, with Loud Speaker Kennedy 5 . Radiola 4, med \poal\ar [} Grebe C, R. 9 Slesper Monetrol I. P. 501 Navy l\po.( ‘ommereial Tnnflr ‘ $2.--v .$225.00 . $87.5 2275.00 .$130.00 $115.00 . 8550.00 £59.00 £69.00 $189.00 ££9.00 $79.00 $150.00 m‘lnsf-d Saco Phones 3,000 Ohms $3.49 Guaranteed 1 Year Eveready Dr “B” Batteries Yk B 2215 Volt, large "T' $1.69 45 VoIt BER . oivcoasriins v onianissnnonds Genuine Freed-Eisemann Neutrodyne K. D. Sets List $80.00 MISCELLANEOUS Moulded Sockets ......... Bakalite, 199 Sockets ... Nickel-plated Binding Posts Bus Bar—round and square .. Switeh Levers ............. Vernier Adjusters Aerial Pulleys ...... Switch Points—per dozen Grid Leaks—all capacities .. Four-\la\' Plugs 6000 C r Lugs, per dozen Leld in Insulators Hydrometers Qpaghottl Tubing ; Battery Switches—D, .S ngn Rheostats Ground Clamps .. Bradley Potentiometer— Pradley Potentiometer— Marked Binding Posts Solder Irons Aerial Wire, 7x22 Tinned 1OUD SPEAKERS Manhattan Thono Atlas Sace Special . .. Adjustable levmgruph Units VARIOMETERS Work Write Moulded ouus Freed-Eisemann VARIO COUPL Congolidated \Inuldod vnnume flal.ahte (nuplors co ~400 ohms -200 ohms”. . e 2 fe 3¢ ole 10¢ 2 10¢ 50e" $1.50 10¢ 25¢ 10c # 75¢ 10¢ 33¢ $1.50 15¢ $3.00 $2.00 10¢ $£3.00 $1.00 ?2100 .$18.00 $6.00 $5.00 $4 00 tfm $3.29 Se for 5S¢ 2¢ 15¢ 29¢ for 5ec Se 23¢ $1.00 | 5S¢ 15¢ 15¢ 59¢ 3e 19¢ 29¢ 5¢ $1.69 $1.25 de. $1.49 ¢ $17.00 $1.69 $17.25 $9.98 $2.98 $2.79 $3.38. $2.19° c $3.38 $2.98 $1.98 When purchasing Radio apparatus it is essential to have the various sets and accessories éxplained to you. In qrdt'r that our customers may be given the utmost satisfaction we have secured the services of three licensed radio operators, who have had wide experience and who will make every effort to help you with your radio problem. Répaig, Departiflent We repair and rebyild all types of receiving and transmitting sets. to put your instrument in perfect condition. geem, we are prepared No matter how serious your treuble may’