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DYING, TURNS BACK T0 CHRISTIAN 0D Girl Who Left All for Chinaman Finally Refurns : New York, April 10.-—~Had it been left to Loule Wong, Celie might have had a burial such as is seldom seen in Chinatown, with much burning of jess sticks and many flowers; for loute was fond of her in his stolid Chinese way. But Celie, who had refused to zo back to her mother living, decided to go in death. Tuesday nigh the dying Celie had a priest summoned from the Church of the Transfiguration, and Father Musso baptised her, in the third floor flat at 18 Mott street, where she and Loule had lived; and after baptism Celie received extreme unction. Ther she telegraphed her mother in Phila- delphia. Last night, in Baccigalupo’s chape: a stone's throw from Mott street, Chinatown paid its last respects to Celie, No Chinese was there, hut some sent flowers. Father Musso officiated, and 10 or 12 of Celie's “sisters” knelt and wept—the sister- hood that binds together white wom- en whose driftings end in some gloomy closet off the narrow corri- dors of Chinatown. Mother Gives Casket, Today, in a mahogany casket lined with whitest silk, with heavy silver handles, and a silver plate, en- graved “Cecelia Berry,” the body will be sent to Philadelphia. The casket was the gift of the mother, Mrs. Emma Berry. Celie had lived long in Chinatown. ]Yomu:. sometimes as and she was extraordinary, they will |tell you, because of her devotion to | Lonie Wong, who keeps a restaurant | Cantonese families in Mott Most of the white girls of Chinatown i +Celie, Chinatown rela- tives say, was not. Celie dressed unusually well; her Y(‘,Iolllf's were of the costliest, but al- | ways quiet. She was one of the most |attractive girls in Chinatown, and there was a certain comeliness about | her face in repose at Baccigalupo's. i Her hair, a ruddy gold, lay in h |coils around a face delicately oval, | with finely wrought aquiline nose and |large eyes. Lived There 10 Years. For more than a decade C {cleaved to Louic Wong. Her famil |well-to-do, made frequent he: broken appeals to her to quit Chin: {town. How did she come and why When you ask him, Louie, who r be the only one who knows, stares with enigmatic eyes, shrugs his shoul- ders and passes on. | “I saw her in February, the Chi- nese New Year's” said Policer it, twirling his club med “*Ho sy guy,” she says, gay you please: ‘Good luck and IHappy |New Year. She gave me half a dol- !lar done up in some red Lucky money, that is. | “How did she come? Tord knows. | Maybe like Bertha, now: Bertha met NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1924. to go to work again tod Their refusal was in no sense a | strike, according to Patrick Day, a member of the executive committee of ous working conditions. | Day declared that there had been | masks, Judge 'Jolm A. BEvans last night | chang: 1n the situation on the demo- | 480 cases of “bends” this year and the | ordered the 25 men arrested in John workmen were alarmed when they tOWn in Tonnection with the fats | learned at 38 of their number had |rioting of townspeople and been taken to an emergency hospital | members of the Ku Klux Klan last | in the previous 48 hours. Clifford M. Holland, a Somerset, M charge of b Meriden Booze Runner Guilty, Is Fined $100 Coolidge’s Lead in Mich. Approximately 110,000 VOLTA’S DISCOVERY North Haven, April 10.—John A, treet, Meriden, pleading guilty to a violation of the prohibition law, 18 fined $100 and costs by Judse Waldo S. Blakeslee, >rday in the North Haven court. 2 was arrested here, Monday, by State Policeman Hansen, He was driv- ing a truck which ca barrels of a liquid alleged to have been beer. The truck and contents scated at the time of his ar- paper. | Sam Lee the day after he won $10,- 000 in the lottery, and he said he'd |take her to China. But Celie seemed |almost hypnotized by Louie Wong; | |she never had anything to do with anybody else. Oh, there are a lot | just like her around here.” Dig, Call It Too Dangerous | New York, April 10.—"Sand hogs” employed in the construction of the new vehicular tunnel under the Hud- | Sometimes she was known as Celie | son river, who quit yesterday, refused | 1 {uptown and is of one of the oldest | the compressed air workers of Ameri- |ing an opinion that it is unlawful in {and are not regarded as likely to make street. | ca, but was a.protest against danger- | Pennsylvania for a body of men to as- [any appreclable change in the final | native of out bail for June term of criminal is chief engineer in court. Two Lilly men were killed, one | the chnaal | rataily injured and about a score of | Go QUlCKl Y WITH | votes over Senator Hiram W. Johnson | ied eighteen ! 25 Alleged Klansmen Are - | turns were added to the tabulation of s P | votes cast in Monday's presidential Held for Fatal Rioting | yrimary cicction. The missing. pro- Ebensburg, Pa., Apri! 10.—Deliver- | cincts are scattered among 64 counties semble whén dressed. in gowns and | result, Additional returns made no cratic ballot, Henry Ford maintaining a lead of more than 3,000, RHEUMATIC PAINS visiting | Saturday night at Lilly be held with- cther persons were wounded in the rioting. 5 | ALESSANDRO By The Assoclated Press Detroit, April 10.—Calvin Coolidge had a lead of approximately 110,000 No Medicines To Take. Results Guaranteed By Local Druggists. of California today as scattered re- eAti At lor REsumar ved in this country y. This sclentific discovery promises to put an end to terrible rheu- matic suffering in even the most stubborn S AT Stomach and it Head Relief been named, discovered a Lination of cestaln ingredients in t This imperishable blessing has been bequeathed to mankind, Those who | pores of the feet. 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