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g SPECIAL Gem Safety Razor Lather Brush .59 $1.59 for $1.00 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HER . NS SHIVER 1S NANED CAMPAIGY LEADER And Davis Fixes Start of Drive for August 11 Rocklund E En sbore, Maine ted Shaver, of West ed August 11 a8 th John W northward today Maine On Board press July | Route for Is Clem | Virginia dute for | | | notifigution, Daris, | was speeding ulong the rock bound ecoast of n ALD, SATURDAY, JULY 19, 1024, FLYOSAN Used With a Sprayer KILLS THE or Acre Island, in which to study/| | areh of solitude address accepting the demo- his atie presidentiul nomination His destination is Seven Hundred off Nockland, the er home of Charles Dana Gibson, sum- DICKINSON Drug Co. 169-171 Main St. [whose guests he and Mrs, Davis will be for the next 10 days. Meturning to New York at the end of that time, he [ Wil put his address in writing before | departing for Clarksburg, West Vir. ‘flmu, where the notification ceremon. fes will be held, probably on the lawn | at his sister's home, August 11 Decided Upon l In determining upon August 11 as the duta of his official notification of | | the action of the New York conven tion, Mr, Davis has elected ‘to fire th first broadside of the 1924 campaigs At least so far as the two major | political yarties are concerned, | President Coolidge will not be notl. | Aed formally of his nomination until | a woek after the exerelses at Clarks P " | Look Over and Don't Overlook These Values in Men’s 2-Trouser Suits Specially y $ 3 5 They are the smartest models of the season— regular $50.00 values—in fine quality woolens. Just the kind of suits that will t at night; so that the vast radlo aun- | dience over the country may “listen | " without interruption, 4 During his stay at the Gibson home, Mr, Davis will not devote his time wholly to work. There will be fre. | !¢ quent rounds of golf and the nominee | © may try his hand at deep sea fishing, | That would be sport fn rough and choppy seas, but Mr, Davis is what is o0 known the ugonies of seasickness but [ h [ today known as a good sallorman, having |the Atlantic SHENANDOAH WILL ALL PATIENTS NOW ~ TEACHER HELD AS FLY TO THE COAST Battleship Fleet in Pacific Washington, July 10.—A navy dirigible Shenandoah cruise of | he from burg. Both ceremonies will take place [ Lakehurst, N, J, to the Pacific coast |¢ital now has moved all its patients dez Campos, formerly a teacher of battleship | to its angar in New Jersey was announced by the navy department in a ntative schedule for the alrship's | perations from Aug. 1 to next Ieb- uary. | The scohedule calls for the return | the afrship from operations with | scouting fleet to Lake- | urst, Nov, 7. The rest of that menth or mancuvers with the cet and subsequent return Fatal to many FLIES Bugs and Insects Safe for Humans — Does Not Stain please every man who wants his elothes to wear well and give excellent service, Remember, two pairs of trousers are includ- ed at the price you'd usually pay for a three.piece sult. In- vestigate and compare, once in his life, | will be spent In overhanling the Shen- With Mr. Shaver now actively on |andoah preparatory to the transcon- | the job, the nominee has laid aside | tinental trip and operations with the for the time being, at least the cares | battle flect of the Pacific during Janu- | of campaign organization. He has no |ary and February next year, engagement to confer with party | Beginning Aug. 1 the Shenandoph leaders while in Maine, but will, of | will start its first actual experiments course, receive any who may call on Hrnh the fuel ship Patoka, which has him, |inepected by representatives | Connecticut sald to be one of the Rospital buildings and | with the very lates, |and surgical equipment. sections, one for men and the other INNEW_HOSPITAL| GREAT JEWEL THIEF Great Airship Will Train With Modern Tnstitution Is Equipped;Former New Rochelle lnslruc(or; With Latest Conveniences | Took $35,000 Loot in hos- New York, July 19.~With the are rest in Washington of Louis Hernane Completing work begun early June the New Britain goneral to the new hospital and has discon- | Spanish at New Rochelle, the Now tinued the use of the old building so | York police helleve they will recover far as the treatment of patlents {s Most of the 335,000 in jewels stolen concerned, Early in June the ma- | from the apartment of Henry I. Sten- ternity d on the top floor of the Kel, at 1049 Park avenue, on April new building was opened and since | ‘ampos was arrested when Jie at- that time patients have been moved | tempted to sell a pearl necklace, worth depart- | $15,000, After news of Campo's arrest was recelved here, detectives of the West 104th street station went to the Sten- The building, which vecently was|gel summer home at Larchmont and of “the arrsted Louise Provnka, described as association is | Campo's wife, who was employed as most modern |a maid in the Stengel home a month is equipped | before the robbery. She was held at mechanical | the East Sixty-seventh street station | on charges of particagating in the rob- two | bery. gradually until toduy every went in the new pavilion is occupied, | from the laundry in the cellar to the sun parlor on the roof, hospital in The building is divided into Had $60.000 in Gems According to the Washington police, Sold and Guaranteed by us for 3 years Herbert L. Milis HARDWARE 336 MAIN ST. his life or liberty in violation of Im« munities, or rights granted under the Constitution of the United States, the federal district court has the power |ot entertain jurisdiction, grant a writ of habeas corpus and bring the pris- oner before the court to determine whether his constitutional rights have been violated. The contention of Valotta's counsel is that he was not convicted by due process of law, and that the com- monwealth produced no evidence “'nn police that the jewels he offered | for sale had been sent him by a friend |in Mexico, He later changed his story and said they had been given him by a person in this country, Detectives yesterday found the maid still employed by the Stengel family, at their summer home at Larchmont | Gardens, Larchmont. According to | detectives she admitted she was Cam- | po's wife and declared she had naled to him on April 8 that #t would be safe to conduct a holdup. \FEDERAL JUDGE HALTS EXECUTION OF SLAYER whatever that he had killed the po- liceman willfully, deliberately and with premeditation. Counsel sought to go lefore the state supreme court for a rehearing, but several of the judges were away and could not be reached. Previous- | ly the state board of pardons had re- Mr. Davis is accompanied by his close friend and confidential adviser, Frank L. Polk, under secretary of state in the Wilson administration and they have discussed political matters | jand during part of the trip, but Mr, Polk 8 to 21 | I heen equipped with a mooring mast. / Jiriddiiadl 1% dekis 'St [ for women, On the woman's side are | llmnc‘ tests will be |.m|(l with the ln | found modern playrooms for children, Alleged Violation of the Condemned toka acting as a mobile base in Nar-| ity piackboards and Mother Goose | ragansett Bay and waters of Long Is- | lioqurey in fhe wall paper and foys | -‘"‘”'“" New “";’;' ; "‘"‘;“'::”’!‘"lfi; |of various descriptions. i | TR0 A0NIIPASERI S ATy On e oor of the hospital ds a Is making the journcy for the purpose | made, and from Aug. 22 to 31 the B O of joining Mrs. Polk and th | ani floor laboratory where microscopica g e children, | ship will operate with the scouting |.. . rried Tach fl G A nendlng. e siminas hil nan L oTER work will be carried on. Tach floor Dark Harbor, Isleshoro. Af|dledbiinthe AUANGG, |also has a surgical dressing room so At the end of his sixt " .| Other radio tests will be continued [that dressing need not be done in jourgey, Mr. Davis will c”'?k hours' | from Sept. 1 to 7, and will be followed [wards or private rooms. hour's steamer trip to Darp krapy | DY additional —mancuver operations| On the third floor are the private [and: transter there to. a o, farbor | with the Atlantic scout fillet during |rooms, equipped with telephones, elec- for the short run to Soven Funqory |the Week of Scpt. § to 16. tric call bells, and all the conven- Acre Tsland, Mdred |y kehurst, N. J. July 19.-—Thepe [iences found in modern hotels, Rest While Mr. Davis is there, his cam. | ¥4% & Teport at the naval air station (rooms for nurses with electric annun- palgn manager will go forward with | sterday that the airship Shen- |clators attached to call bells, sun the completion of the campafgn or. | AM10#h may be sent to Honolulu late |parlors and recreation rooms for pa- ganization along plans which = have | W18 fall to take part in the winter |tients, also are found at \n_rhm;. points jeen worked out at conferences he. | MANocuvres of the Pacific fleet at|throughout the new bullding. tween the nominee, his manager and | Pet! Harbor. This will be the long-| Targe sun parlors are at both ends a number of party leaders. There js | ®St flight of the giant dirigible, which, |of the building and open air parlors to be a central “board of strategy, v | according to original plans, has a‘r:wr!‘ found on the second floor veranda directing district organizations n e | Cruising radius of about 4,000 miles |and on the roof. One of the interest- four main sections of the country. A " | at a speed of about 45 miles an hour,:l‘llk' I\l:\‘(‘r‘s!s 1nu- r’lutrs'nrl,v f‘mdflw f!nn::‘ll sisting Mr. Shav i .t Hhenandaah I8 s s | floor where the ebstetrical departm ; then fha“.m,,“l,‘,;:,?,ls,r:,:['“ hr siaifors "1;""“‘:‘\:]‘\:;1”]::0”\ :: sr‘_'(:;l ”{‘\,u:_lt‘]"“ is located. The nursery has a large |dowed after detectlves learned he was|is a citizen of the United States, and oo who wi ity ntlonal commit- | Eh, oo WL 0D & Here Tsiand, Dlate glass tront through which visit- | yegurded as the husband of the new |sets forth that it any state court at- d Ly (b S LU kil o)« | a0 fon sland, | o "oin view the new habies without | maid. tempts to deprive a citizen of his edge gained in the conduct of natjonal | and then across the Pacific to Pearl [ 315 Rl iy bty A nath campaigns in the past | Harbor. The first leg of this trip will disturbing the tiny patients. ‘e, erty or property withou ue Whi i Wl dn el | 8 i % The first floor contains the kitchen, process of law, or attempts to take h le his notification will take place | be about 1,800 miles, the second a cquipped with modern mixers, potato in his native town, Mr. Davis has yet | trifie less than 1,060 and the third r‘m“';l“ Rt oh and slaoths stéves to decide where his permanent head- | about 2,400, a total- of about 5,200 :’ wof‘ . ; $14,000 Yattireralire quarters will be established. Fe said | miles, with two stops. Nt ot loh DT Tiban P cEhe i today this would depend upon what On the return flight, the Shenan- | intendent, N;flm, is one of the place would be the most v i R rod DB » = 7 ost convenient | doah will make Seattle, Wash., the |post in the world. Miss Maude F. ant““hvrt- the national committee sets | first etopping place, and then pro- Traver, directress of nurses, has an HELLL DELEOIERL Seca Kl iR mahE, ceed down the Pacific coast to Mare |ofrice on this floor. ~ An automatic Island and back to the station here. elevator runs to each floor. At Honolulu it is planned to put THere are a number of four bhed the big airship on the mooring mast | wards, each ward having one nurse aboard the converted cruiser Patoka, |who has but four patients to look which is now ahout ready for ser after. FBach floor has a head nurse ice at Norfolk, Va. The Patoka is to|or supervisor. About 25 new nurses have the mooring mast tested off are needed or will he when the next Montauk Point in Gardiner's Bay in|training class opens in September. about two wecks, Commander Zach- During the month of June there ary Landsdowne will be in charge of were 201 patients treated in the hos- the Shenandoah when the attempt is| pital, according to the monthly bul- made at that time, letin which has just been issucd. The Shenandoah then will return IS SUED BY GENERAL | Panama Canal, and up the Pacific to I'ederal Attorncy General Stone Ac- fused a ( commutation of sentence. The verdict of the jury had been sus- tained by the state supreme court on technical grounds. | campos had rings, pendants and other | jewelry valued at $60,000, They said some of the objects had been identi- | [fled as having been stolen from the Stengel home. The rohber; Man's Constitutional Rights Is the Basis for Action. HORSFALLS 93-99 \dsylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays To Buy Our Kind" WILL OF DR. BURSTEIN The will of Dr, Hyman Burstein has been filed in probate court. Tt pro- vides a one-third interest be given the widow, Blanche Burstein, the re- mainder of the estate to be divided among Isaac, Jacob, Abraham and Nathan Burstein, Tda Grann and Anna Beers, sons and daughters of the testator. Tt is provided that 16 per cent of the shares of Abraham Burstein and Anna Beers shall he added to Tsaac 'Burstein’s share. Household furniture is left to the widow. Pilis € ihe Biomita was conducted by a| Pittsburgh, July 19.—An unprece- | man wearing a red wig and a mask. | dented legal move has gained a respite Shortly after lunch time the bandit |for Joseph Valotta, convicted mur- Kknocked at the door, which was open- |dered of Paliceman Edward Cough, who was to have pald the penalty for his erime in the electric chair at the Western Penitentiary next Monday. In the federal court here yesterday Judge Thompson signed an order granting a writ of habeas corpus, re- turnable on August 6, and a stay of execution pending final disposition. | Alleged violation of the condemned | man’s constitutional rights is the basis for the action, the first of its kind in a United States court in this country, and, according to legal ex- perts the first of its kind in any court ed by the new maid, Louise Proynka. He held up the mald and another servant with a pistol and was ran- sacking a burean drawer ang flling his pockets with jewelry when Mrs, Stengel entered the room. Mrs. Stengel saw thg bandit and ran for a traffic policeman. Before the police arrived the man escaped by a fire escape after locking both serv- ants in a closet. He left his red wig and mask. The police questioned the servants and Mrs. Stengel, but they were un- able to describe the bandit. It was|in the country. said, however, that Campos was sha- | The petitlon averred that Valotta Do Your Feet Suffer? For aching limbs, weak feet, fallen arch- s, fiat feet, painful hoel, inturning ankles, callouses, wear flexible feather welgh arch supports which we make from individ ual impressions of yvour feet In corrected Many continue to suffer from foot | through trying ready made arch | supports, which cannot fit properly, the | vastly different shapes of feet; may as wal | y made eye glasses or - false fit the foot and not the shioe. Fitted ent from all other supports. and sold exclusively by JAMES J. LENEH! Room 302, 250 Main St. Telephone Offies Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Fve- nings and Sundoys by appointment. EEE— MRS. ELIOT DIES Mixes His Stories Campos at first told the Washing- Booth Block, | Wife of President of Harvard Claimed By Death At Maine Home Cambridge, Mass, July 19.—Word was recelved here yesterday of the death of Mra, Charlgs W. Eliot, wife of the president emeritus of Harvard university, at Asticou, Mt. Desert, Maine, X Mrs. Eliot, President Eliot's second wife, was Grace Mellen Hopkinson, of Cambridge. They were married in October, 1877, Mrs. Eliott had been suffering from heart disease for several years, friends of the family said, and after an es- pecially sever attack here a month ago Dr. Elfot took her to Mt. Desert, hop- L"':e'fl‘:"l‘:l the climate there would'be |,y yag heen perfected, but it is fair- 3 ly well settled that Mr. Davis will SR Syt e | make several long speaking tours, be- | ginning probably early in September. | Tt is probable that Secretary of the | her two |, Assisting the candidate and working | Navy Wilbur will make the trip | have been | Ndependently of him, will be a num- | wcross the continent on the airship. : tetr‘:‘ from ~M‘Ta York( i3 [ber of seasoned campalgners, include | o ——— reating & ecnsation at Beste-Le. |ing Governor Alfred E. Smith of New | tion of Fixing Prices; land’s style show Thursday, York. i | % 24Y | york, and other state go A - and Saturday. They will leave New Ll cad ol Washington, July 10, — Attorney General Stone announced — yesterday e GUULD NUT quK Brrtatn Ay b Ttolias and o |tL0Ts, representatives and a number of that sult had been entered under the program which " P D ’ Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- " other chieftains, L .a Foyalixend ofl. These campa {anti-trust laws against the Seattle will work Produce association of Seattle, Wash.,, table Compound Stopped Her Suf- | fering and Restored Her Health Probably New York Close friends of the candidate’ he- |lieve, however, that the final selec- tion will be Ncw York city, where he | has made his home since the termin- ation of his services to the govern- ment as American ambassador to the Court of St. James. Sub-headquar- ters probably will be established at |Chicago with divisional headquarters in conveniently located cities in the east, northwest and south, Definite plans for carrying the fight to the country will not be laid down until after the organization machin- In the four.cylinder field, the good Maxwell is now duplicating the revolutionary results which the Chrysler Six has already among the sixes. That in brief is the story of the recent devels opménts which, in my opinion, now stamp the Maxwell a most remarkable four-cylinder car. These new results are so vital and so valuable that they put the good Maxwell far beyond your previous conception of four-cylinder possibilities. Ha ou ever driven a four-cylinder car in wh;:hythe last noticeable trace of vibration is gone? Well, that's what you'll find in the good Maxwell of today, with its floating platform spring suspension of the motor. I don’t know that you can appreciate how rauch this means in new steering, handling and riding ease and far longer life, unless you experience it in the good Maxwell yourself. As you go along, you will find the Maxwell riding the way you thought only far heavier cars could ride, and displaying a nimbleness that makes you wonder why anyone wants more than Maxwell gives. Now turn to the other side—costs and upkeep and so on, which are materially reduced by the unusually high proportion of costly alloy steels. You may not know that Maxwell owners are now averaging 24 miles per gallon of gasoline. There are a dozen other things 1 could tell about, but do you know of any four that matches up to Maxwell in these respects? B Prestdent and Chairman of the Board MAXWELL MOTOR SALES CORPORATION Detroit, Michigan | Mare Island, to await the arrival of the Shenandoah. “SWEET 16" GOING AWAY, Miss Sweet Sixteen and cuses Scattle Produce Assocti- |every state ungfer a |the national drganization | out. on the ground that it was operating In selecting Mr, Shaver as the in restraint of trade, constituting a marshal of his fleld forces, Mr. Da- conspiracy to dictate and control the |vis chose a life-long friend and the cost to the public of necessary food- {man who lannched his candidacy for P liis first political oftice-membership in | € In a statement issued by the de- partment of justice it was said that the purpose of the suit was “to pro- | congrese, and who twice placed his | name hefore national conventions— | unsuccessfully in 1920, successfully in | tect consumers of fruits and vege- S T Momence, Illinois.—*Isurely canree. | tables from paying exorbitant prices avie and Shaver served their poli- | gmmand your medicine to other women for sich produ tical apprenticeship in adjoining coun- - who have female In the bill of complaint filed today ties. Tn later vears Shaver helped to | weakness, as it has | in the United States court for the organize the Davis-For-President | helped mevery much | western district of Washington, the home town club of Clarksburg and | in every way possi- | attorney general asks that the court has contributed of his time and an-[ ble. 1'was working | jssuc an order against 24 large Seate ergy in a cause near to his heart. His | 4 in a dining room in | {0 firms, dissolving the alleged un- friends that his sclection as | town, and sometimes | jawrul association, and that its mem- the nominee’'s campaign manager is, | I could not do My | ers be enjoined “from further en- therefore, a natural and logical poli-J work ; had pains in | o.oie in a like conspiracy in re- tical dedelopment, the lower partof my | [ o0 of trade” The bill says that Born in Marion county, West Vir- body and had tostay » produce dealt in is purchased in ginia, in 1867, Mr. Shaver received his in bed. One of My | . i cconia Colorado, Oregon, Forida carly education in his native state, i AR it A . BoE wpated faw at Washington; D, O | S what good Lydia E. | ! da ‘Hx'v state 4‘a’n‘r‘l‘ in Honolulu, being graduated from George Wash- | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for | ' he ‘:"‘""” it bt bl ington university. Returning home he | her, and it has surely done wonders for et e b 5-“""‘:“ il hung out his shingle at Fairmount | me. I hope all women who suffer will petition states, “has been en- but the law failed to hold him. Farm- | take my advice as the Vegetable Com- _in_alleged illegal operations . and dealing in coa) | pound has done so much to bring back ~since its = organization about three (e mowt o I my\'ignrnndstl"‘mzthl"—Mv ALBERT vears ago, its membership comprising he’s glad to have you time and attention. As he zot more | E. DESCHAUD, Momence, Illinois. 'tu.v '“'"(-WL‘,,‘;T{,"”, nw.'p:mluuf. deal- ask for it. and more deeply in politics, law be- Over 121,000 women have so far re- 'g\il:r..l-rlnn;gd'.. ‘vh|:lr’|11’ ‘ar|n|f-nt came distinetly a sideline plied to our question, ‘“Have you re- ises' thé P fati Except for three tefms in the legis- ceived benefit from taking Lydia E, | fustice the ofticers of the association lature. Mr. Shaver never held pubiic | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound 7' 98 are G. Hertzman, president; 'Jack ; office, He went 1o the legislature for per cent. of these replies answer *‘Yes,”” | Girard, "l!'t‘-nrr.-vlfinv‘, A. 8. Nicker- | two avowed purposes—to help. elect That is 98 out of every 100 women | 57 treasurer, and E. 8. Gill, secre- | Clarence Watson to the United States who take this medicine for the ailments llur}'-"mlwn- with lh": board of di- | cenate and to assist in the paseage of = for which it is recommended are ben. | Tectors consisting of ¥. J. Cruse, W. | soveral laws, including a workmen's | efited by it. For sale by druggists A- Duckworth. J. E. Radford, James eompensation desired by labor | gverywhere. I. Rice, William Schroeder and Mack gronps. | Weinstein, L USE SEIBERTS PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM declare WHO S MAN KNOV The grocer knows that our milk has the high percentage of butter- fat and real nourish- ment that the public ing requires, That's why and timber THE the gaged - H . . § M05 Touring Eport Touring Roadster - - Club Conpe 1085 Club Seden 885 Sedan - All Prices F. 0. B. Detroit subject to current government tax. . 81025 . . 1008 . o 1325 of ANl Masuwell dealers are in position to extend the convenience of time-payments. Ask about Maxwell's attractive, plan BENNETT MOTOR SALES CO. 437 PARK ST 98 Arch St. Tel. 2052 HONE- 1720 NE VW BRITAIN, CONN MANE SURE ITS SEIBERTS act, 3 *