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For Protection Against Moths Use RODOL will not injure fab- vics, furs or colors. Insures against rav- ages of moths— 25(: and 43¢ bot. — THE — DICKINSON Drug Co. 169-171 Main St. Horsfall’s Chauffeurs’ Suits With 2 pairs of Trousers $50 Tailored from high grade whip cords. The back of the coat has a stitched on half belt. % HORSFALLS 93-99 Xdsylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays To Buy Our Kind” e——————c ~ Voice Culture | Special Attentien to Beginners James D. Donahue K1 Sefton Drive "Phone 1274-13 EAT TRAINING SIGHT READING Room 318-319 Booth's Block Trainee of Yale University Pile Sufferers Don't become despondent—try Hemrold. No greasy salves—no cut. ting. A harmiess remedy that s guaranteed to quickly banish all mis- ery or cost nothing. Ask Clark & Brainerd Co. or any good drugglist for Dr. Leonhardt's Hemroid. A Hedlth Food for W=\ Frail Children i\ SCOTTS ' memm EMULSION WHAT TIME IS 177 ASKS CUB REPORTER Mr. Bewildered Citizen Gets Jour- st Into Trowble Mr, Bewildered Citizen arose yester- day morning at 5 o'clock when the 6 o'clock whistles were blowing. He had his 6:30 breakfast at 5:30 and | | went to work at 6 o'clock when the factory clock sald 7. Arriving 45 minutes ahead of the regular starting | time he found himself 15 minutes late. | He worked until noon at his job in the factory and went home for lunch | at 11 o'clock, finding his wife had | ’lurned the family clock ahead an hour and then prepared lunch at 11, thus having it an hour late by the time he got home an hour early.| Finding a mixup in her schedule Mrs. | Bewildered Citizen became excited and turned the clock ahead another hour, so that at 2 o'clock her husband went to work at 1 and found it was only 12, He worked until the factory clock said 6 o'clock and went home at 7:15 to find it was only a quarter after 5. He went to bed at 10 o'clock when |the family clock sald midnight and slept until 5 o'clock in the morning when the alarm clock sald 7 and the fatcory whistles blew 6. He struggled through another day of the same kind and about 1 o'clock in the afternoon when he was unable to figure whether it was half past 4 or 20 minutes after 11, he staggered |into the Herald office and dropped wearily and exhausted into a seat as | the editorial office clock sald 1:50 p. |m., and the composing. room clock | #aid 2:50 by way of keeping up the general inconsisteney, The cub reporter was reckless and | | conceited. “I'll ind out what time it | is for you,” he said with the optimism of inexperienced youth, He imme- | diately telephoned the Western Unlon office. “What time iy it," he demand- ed, serene in the confidence of getting an answer that would settle the ar- gument. | “It's 1:50 on the clock, that makes | it 2:50 daylight saving,” was lhe! startling reply. Nothing daunted the cub reporter tried again, "Two one nine 0,” he demanded, After ,the usual wait of a few minutes and re- peating the number to two or three | phone operators, he found the Y, M C. A on the wire. “What time is it? be demanded. “What'd ye wanta know fer?” was the cautious query from the industrial secretary, “Oh, jest fer fun, was the reply. “Well, there ain't much fun In it—it's 2:56 over hers, that makes it 1:55 stan- dard time, . Anything else you want?” ‘But the oub reporter had enough, | “What do they say?" asked the semisrevived Mr, Rewlildered Citizen, | The eub reporter went out and asked | | & policerman what fime It was “It's 3 o'clock,” said the “copper looking at | his 98 eent Ingersol, as the clock in | the Center chureh struck two. “Never mind," thought the report. er, aftor asking ahout a dinner or- Adered for T4 clock Al being told that 1t woul e rendy as ordered at £, “there is place that's always right, T eall the, Chamber of Com. | m M Me A4, U'What time ia it?" he frquired from the musical femin- ne volee which floated over the wires. “It's & few minutes after 2. according | | 16 the clocka In the stores and on pub- | l'e display, but it's & few minutes aiter 8 the way we are working here,” | was the reply. The Cub Reporiar fainted and at 10 minutes after 2 they carrie! him out fut 5:10 p. m. When he revived e struggled faintly and as a glass of cooling Water was put to his lips the | | toliowing words could be heard faint. | U1y struggiug for Wxpression: “What |time s 1627 AR nohc 1y answered, — | GRA £ GEORGE SUES | | Actress Wife of William A. Brady | Demands $10,000 as Result of an Automobile Accident, ceived in an automobile collision are NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1924. G0X-COOLIDGE ARE EASILY VICTORIOUS Run Away Ahead of McAdoo and Johnson in Ohio By The Associated Puese. Columbus, Ohi April President Coolidge and former Go» ernor James M. Cox of Ohio, the democratic candidate for president in 1920, won sweeping victories in Ohio's primary elections yesterday. The vote was probably the lightest ever cast in an Ohio primary election, officially estimated at about 18 per cent of the political vote, Coolidge, Six to One President Coolidge won the state's 51 delegates to the national conven- tion and was given better than a six to one endorsement over United States Senator Hiram Johnson of California. Cox Gets Home State Mr, Cox probably will go before the democratic natlonal convention with his home state’s 48 votes pledged to support him and back by a popu- lar endorsement of his party by a two and a half to one vote over Wil- liam Gibbs McAdoo. His probable 48 votes will be rep- resented by 52 delegates, the eight delegates at large each having but halt a vote. Daugherty Elected Former Attorney Gen. Harry Daugherty, defeated four yaers for delegate-at-large by almost 1,000 votes at the time former President Harding carried the state on prefer- ential choice, yesterday was elected a member of the Coolidge slate of dele- gates at large but was probably low member of the group. He won over the highest Johnson delegate by about four to one. Women delegates trailed the lists except on the Coolidge slate where they probably have beaten out former Attorney Gen. Daugherty. H Vote in 6.148 Precints The vote in 6,148 precincts out of & total of 8,360 precincts In the state, showed President Coolidge leading ' Senator Johnson by more than 100,- 000 votes and former Governor Cox leading Mr. McAdoo by almost 35,- 000 votes, The vote in 6,148 pre- cinets was Coolidge 127,954; John- | son 20,997; Cox 55,846; McAdoo 21,- | 214, President Coolldge carried every county in the state, Mr. Cox ap- parently has not been so fortunate as he probably will be forced to yield a fow smaller counties to Mr. Me- Adoo, United States Senator Simeon D. Foss was leading the Coolidge slate | of delegates-at-large in returns from 6,148 precincts with his colleague Senator Frank B. Willls, running & close second, 30.—Both M | LECTURE OPEN T0 ALL s e i Lieutenant Governor To Address Ma- [ sons This Evening Following | quet—Confusion Over Time, | The lecture to be given by Licu- | tenant Governor Hiram Bingham at Centennial 1odge, A. 1% and A, M., this | evening will be given in the lodge room after the banquet and not at the banquet. Places at the banquet | are limited to those who have made reservations but the lecture is open to all Masons in the city . The banquet will start at o'clock, standard time and the lecture fn the lodge room will start at 7:15 | standard time, The officers in charge are careful to point out to those who have changed thelr watches and| clocks that this means 6:30 for the | banquet and 8:15 for the lecture, ac- | eording to the daylight saving sched- ule, 5:30 | EARLE - DYSON WEDDING | Local Couple United By Vather Sulli- van This Morning | A pretty wedding took place this | church when Miss Lillian Dyson, SureRelief FO ESTION 6 BELLANS Hot water . 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhere NEW HOSPITAL 1y NEAR COMPLETION Funds Needed to Provide a Tennis; Gourt Near Nurses' Home Thé necessity for hiring new em- ployes preparatory to entering the new hospital building has boosted the expenses of operating the New Brit- ain General hospital away out of pro- portion to the number of patients treated, according to the manthly re- port of the hospMal, just issued, The report follows: Expenditures. Administration: Office sal- aries, record supplies, telephones, Professional head nurses, internes, maintenance of laboratories, X-ray de- partment, surgical and medical supplies, drugs.. 3.544.31 Training school: Salaries and supplies .... Nurses home: maintenance plies ... Housekeeping: Wage ding, clothing and niture ..... Provisions Kitchen: ment, Laundry: plies General $773.26 of technicians, sesees 140,23 Wages, and sup- fur- Wages an maintenance Wages and su property nance: Wages, light, ice, insurance, pairs and upkeep . fuel, re- 4,200.89 ... .$13,896.61 Receipts. patients, for board, use of operating From X-rays, | such declaration recently. {Experts to Debate Use~ JAPS CROWD STEAMERS | Hundreds Who Return Home to Get Wives Are Making Haste to Get Back to This Country, San Francisco, April 30.—Hundreds of unmarried Japanese men, anxious to marry Japanese women and return to this country before the proposed immigration law becomes effective, July 1 are crowding all steamers safl- ing from here for the Orient, accord- ing to the San Francisco Examiner, The Examiner says the Pacific mail steamer President Wilson, which sailed yesterday for Japan, carried 400 Japanese and did not have accommo- dations for many other applicants, Befors departing, Japanese resi- dents of the United States must ap- pear before the consul of their coun- try and make written declaration of intention to return to America within a short time. Hundreds have made Of Natural Gas in Homes | Cleveland, April 30.—How to pro-! long the supply of natural gas for \uei in homes is one of the major prob- lems to be considered at the conven- tion of the Natural Gas Association of America here beginning.May 19, “More people use natural gas in Ohio than in any other state, and | Pennsylvania comes next,” said an an- nouncement, “The total production of | natural gas in 1922 was 762,546,000 cubic feet, West Virginia, Oklahoma | and Pennsylvania are production more | than half of the total natural gas used | in the United States. Thin Men Skinny Men * Run Down Men Nervous Men You probably know that Cod Liver Oll is the greatest flesh producer in the world, Because it contains more Vitamines than any food you can get, You'll be glad to know that Cod Tiver Oil comes in sugar-coated tab- lots now, so If you really want to put 10 or 20 pounds of real healthy flesh on your bones and feel well and strong ask Clark & Brainerd or Dick- | TOOMSE, €1C, 4.i.iis Average daily expens patient Average daily patient . Training School Report Pupils on duty, 41; graduate nurses on duty, 10; orderlies on duty, 2; special nurses on private eases, 43: number of pupils {11, 2: indefinite Jeave of absence (ill), 1; students dis- migged, 3; finished course (gradua- tion in May), 1. Morbidity Report. Number of patierts in hospital during month 51 Total number of@a¥s treatiment.2 Daily average number of Dpa- “tiants e o Number of surgical case Number of medical cases . Number of births ...... Number of X-ray patients (in cluding repeats) Number of accidents ... Number of ambulance calls Number of deaths ...... Pevcentage of deaths to number of patients ... vessesses BW X-ray Report. Hospital patients Xerayed, 33; out patients X-rayed, 42; total number per ingon Drug Co. or any druggist for & box of McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets, Only 60 cents for 80 tablets and 1t you don’t gain five pounds in 30 days your druggist whl hand you back the money you paid for them, It isn't anything unusual for a per- #on to gain 10 pounds in 80 da (197 = 7w of patients X-rayed, 105. Laboratory Report. Blood tests, 195, pathology 46; autopsies, 2; other tests, 622. The report comments as follows: Regarding the New Hospital. “Within a day or two following the jesie of our last monthly Jbulletin, in which was stated what varying sums of money would do towards establish- ing a memorial in the new hospital, word was received from four or five individuals that they would be glad to New York, April 80.~Injuries re- . oening at 9 o'clock at St, Joseph's | furnish a room. Since then many in- quiries have been recelved and it is tests, | STIPATION =~ the Aggravation, ifnot the Cause, of most Diseases ‘Whenthebowelsbecomeclogged with milomns waste matter, cleanse them at once, but avoid drastic purgatives; thex make constipation worse by irritating the delicate linings of the intestines and digestive tract. Use Beecham’s Pills, which are mild but effective, tone the stomach and liver, and frain the bowels to At All Druggists 12 Pills-10¢ 40 Pills-25¢ 90#ills-50¢ T, natural, complete functioning. (See booklet.) Beecham's ERERE Pills S = Hand Carved 14 and 18k Yellow, Green or White Gold Platinum Plain, Carved or Diamond Set, Plain 10, 14 and 18k Yel- low Gold Women who are wearing their wide and heavy old style wedding rings with annoyance and inconvenience can now have them remodeled at moderate cost. Let Le Witt make over your old wedding ring. M. C. LE WITT Jeweler and Diamond Dealer 205 MAIN ST. DIAMOND RINGS $15 to $500 DIAMOND The April Birthstone “Strict Privacy” Means — You can borrow up to $300 on your home furniture (which remains in {our possession), without embarrass- inlg inquiry or interference with your family and business affairs, When we guarantee strict privacy, we mean that no one need ever know you borrowed. Your relations with us are confidential from the moment you make application until your loan is repaid. We finance the man without bank credit, Money for cAny Need Beneficial Loan Society 87 WEST MAIN STREET Rooms 104-5 Professional Building Open 9 to 5:30-Tcl. 1943 —Saturdays 9§ to 1 mmunuulunnunnmunmluuumnnmmulunulmwunmmlmmmnmn 4 R o o 1t is watural for ¢ morried men' o cxpect his wife to retein clways @ regord for her personal charma EURALGIA orheadache—rub the forehead ~—melt and inhale the made the basis for a sult for $10,000 |davghter of Mr, and Mrs, Ernest Dy- | expected that before the opening of brought by Grace George, actress, 50N of 90 Franklin Square became the | the hospital many people will avall wife of Willlam A. Brady, .',m.“hnd- of John J. Earle of 48 Beaver | themselves of the opportunity to equip Frank K. Rosen, owner of a car which | street Rev. J. Leo Sullivan officiatéd. | some portion of the bullding. collided with Miss George's motor | Miss Mildred Dywon, sister of the| *“One very interesting inquiry was |bride was bridesmaid and Raymond Ask Your Husband received from the American Legion, will bhe And drive around quite <pred- iy, We're here 1o answer your questions instantly and oor- reetly and move jou safely and speedily, L7 b ~ Whiting St NOW' - TRUCKING - Silmafilfl EW YORK TRIPS DAILY OFFICE AT S-MAIDEN LANE 2733 THERE: [ . last March, The actress was struck by frag- ment of flying glass and remained & prisoner in the car until rescued by passersby. The driver, David Win- field, Rosen's chauffeur, was arrested on eharges of assault and of driving an automobile while drunk. Unwin, cousin of the bride, hest man. | The bride was attired in a gown of | | brocaded Canton crepe with a ploture | hat. She carried a bouquet of white | roses. The bridesmaid woke a gown of blue brocaded Canton crepe with | silver hat, Her bouguet was of tea roses. Following the eeremony a reception | was held at the home of the bride’s parents. The couple left on a wed- ding trip and upon their return will reside at 68 Frankiin Bquare, CHILDREN MUST WORK Strive for Success. White Plains, N, Traves Y. April 30— | Charies H. Baker, who dled recently, | wished his boys “to strive for honor, snappy 1 delicious candy eat... Cinn-o-mon | estal fame and a reasonable rather than great fortunes,” and his daughters “to take for their husbands | men of character, thrift and industry, rather than of fortune and titl These wishes were expreased in his will which gave them as reasoms for | small bequests to each, in spite of his | of more than $100,000, MY SPECIALTY COMFORTABLE VISION FRANK E. GOODWI Eyesight Specialist 327 Main St. Tel. 1905 Strength giving Food ’ ForGirls : scoTTs B EMULSION | months; | months, competency, | resulting in the Legion providing for the complete furnishing of one of the sun parlors. Undoubtedly there are other organizations that will wish to do something of the kind. “The top floor of the new hospital is fast approaching completion. Shades are being hung and floors waxed, pre- paratory to moving in furniture, The plan is to occupy each floor as soon as completed. The new boller house has been in use duriag the past seven the new laundry, three and the f{ce-plant, two months. The kitchen equipment is being installed, and there is no ques- tion that our hospital will have one of the finest kitchens in the state, It 1s expected that the entire bulld- ing will be ready about June 15 eor July 1 “The furnishings of the rooms are entirely free from the usual hospital atmosphere. Walnut finish will pre- vail, and the window draperies will harmonize with the furnishings. The easy chairs are not only comfortable but are thoroughly homelike. “The current expense during the w months are out of all pro- portion to the number of patients treated. This condition has been brought about by the increase in the number of employes necessary (o maintain the portions of the new hos- pital now in use and in heating the new building through the winter in order to dry it out. This additional maintenance expense will be equalized past | when the building is occupied by pa- | tients, “For some time it has been the earnest desire of the training school management that funds for a tennis court might be provided for outdoor recreation for the nurses during off- duty hours. There Is ample space for a court on the south side of the new hospital, near the Nurses Home, and it would & fine thing if it we sible to bulld a court before ground are seeded.” When in doubt as to the dessert, write for the new cook book offered free by the Baker Extract Company, Sorinefield. Mass —advi. . F you want to know how a man feels when his wife’s personal appearance compares unfavorably with that of other women—ask your husband. Unless he’s too timid, he'll tell you he even notices their hands. To avoid having red, rough and coarse looking hands, a woman must avoid using common household soafs which irritate the skin. She must be as careful about the kind of household soap she uses as she is about her toilet soap. Thousands of intelligent, careful women who’ realize this, insist upon Kirkman’s Soap for all their househ6ld and laundry uses. . HEY know that Kirkman’s is as harmiess to the hands as is the most exquisite toilet soap and, being free from irritating lye, will not injure the most delicate fabrics. It is made of the purest and finest materials. It contains absolutely no adulterants such as starch, tale or water-glass, which have no cleansing value. And with these merits, it is a most thorough cleanser. For the gake of your hands insisf upon Kirkman’s Soap. YOUR HANDS WILL BE GRATEFUL