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“in some respects one of the « cured ErpEAS A ety City Items The boys' eholr of St Mary's FATE OF CHAPMAN HUNG IN BALANCE -1 i i, 5 |time will follow the meeting. The suit of the Nationla Paper Company against Max Levin has been withdrawn from the eity court, Roche and Cabelus represented the “Yea," he raplied farsaly: plaintift and Willlam M. Citron of “Picked up a little, haven'y you?" | Middletown, the defendant, “A little”” and the bandit turned away, f He taces the major portion ot his (Continued ¥From Iirst Page) & guard: VBack again Chapman?" |Belgians Sentence Invaders of 1914 | 25-year scatcnce, assonly a few | 2 months weré werved whan lw‘gh:‘“::,‘u, .ly:'.lrflulml' Jn"v- .’i‘\_Aflll,pcl. escaped March 27, 1928, ‘He had AEIR AR BONOAIMUEE Ko death a’ German Sergeant, Muller, 0 ? i t been sought throughout the eountry who on August 20, 1014, is alleged during the almost two years of frec- dom before he was captured in Muncte, Indiana. [ Muller was condemned by default, To Be Brought Korth Secretly Ithorities, Sentences of 20 years at Hartford, Jan. 23, — Witnesses |N3rd labor were returned against trom all sections of the country whil | COlonel Hulsen and Captain Lepplg, be called in the case of the state of |°OnVieted of arson. Conneoticut against | Gerald Chape| A Courtmartial at Bruges similarly man in what will undoubtedly de- | velop into one of the biggest, and | most | important murder trials to be held A _ in the state in years. It was learned | Spanish Air Bomb Yere today that the list of Wlln('sfl(-fll 3 nl to be called will be large and may « Kills French Sentry contain some names ‘long entered in the “who's who" of the police throughout the country. State's Attorney Hugh M, Alcorn | labor for the life for firing on civil- fans, ' tinel stationed at the lighthouse on Point Malabat was killed yesterday by a homb from an airplane. The incident has greatly stirred the pop- returned this morning from Wash- | . . A e Togton swhere on Thursday ‘e se. | Ulation: The newspapers have pro- | tested on previous occasions against the transfer of the famous |, =) " 0 § mall bandit from the jurisdiction of |} Sp“m;’h fig&;z;;n the part of the federal government to that of | Ty "y onnational zone of Tangler, the state of Connectlcut, He bad|esapiished in 1923, adfoins the no_comment to make on the situa- | goo i tuon ot ol SO ere tion. | operations against | are proceeding 1t is*not anticipated that Connec- | oy 0yione tribesmen. ticut will be obliged to concern it- | self at all With the transfer of Chap- an from Georgla to this state. | yuggment for the plaintiff in the it will undoubtedly be done bY'aomunt of $54.48 has hen rendered the government and at such HMe |y 5yap0 \winfam ¢, Hungerford of as best suits the convenience of the | g “oity court in the case of Adam federal authorities. It was toda¥ |yyneent ggainst William Albrecht. congidered likely that Chapman fmq, . action was brought, following would be nfoved from Atlanta t0 |4 aecigent on the Plainville road on Wethersfield, without any advance | Novemper 16, when a car owned by informatiop as to the transfer, the |tny plintiee struck that of the de. ’state’s attorney for Hartford county fendant, the latter car having Leen to he/motifled follownig the success- | noreq"sione tho roaq. plain- ful Incarceration of the famous pris- | i 200y that the dofen s cor oner in tha stateprison. Then Wil |1, o ¢af) light. Joseph G. Woods follow fomal habeas €OTPUS PrO-|yepvocontoq the plaintiff, cecdings,sand on instructions from SN Wales’ Pal the attorney general, the U, 8. at- JUDGMENT FOR $81.48 torney for the district of Connecti~ cut will appear in court and ac-| quiesce with the motion, The ae- tozl représentation in court on the | murder charge will then follow | speedily. 1t is gald there are any | number of precedents to support | such procecdings. I/ 1t foday appears unlikely that | Walter.J. Shean who is now held in | the Hartford county jail without| bond on a charge of murder, will ever be presented on that charge. | Shean has not been indicted and it | docs not secm likely the grand fury | will be asked to indict'him, cer-| tainly not before the trial of Chap- Shean has already given the | ble informa- | has aided man. authorities much_valu tion which undoubtedly the authorities materally. ’ ‘Lefty’ Denies Engagement Grage Loses Faith in Men | Hollywood, Cal, Jan. 23.—The engagement of Maurice (“Lefty”) 1ynu, former Yale university foot- ball star, and now motion pleture actor, to Miss Grace Darmond, also of the screen; anpounged = two duys ago by Miss Darmond, was vig- orously denied by Flymm yr‘sterdq,\n He declared he hardly knew les‘l\'n\g. Darmond and “certainly never asked her to marry.” 5 After Ilynn's denial of their en- gugement, Miss Darmond character- ized the affai an “unfortunate cident which has shaken my faith in men terribly.” L ady Diana At least gossip in London court circles links here name with the Prince of Wales'. She’s the daughter of the Earl of Lovelance. Lady Diana has been scen in “Ed- die’s” company quite a bit of late. Long Is]and Mail R_ohber Sentenced to 25 Years New York, Jan, — James w. Cadoo, former mall clerk and son of a wealthy retired lumber dealer, to- day 2 was sentenced to serve 2 | in federal prison after he had plead- ed guilty to robbing a Long Island railroad mail train of * §10,000 on‘ January 13. After his arrest in his home at | J.ynbrook, on Tong Tsland, Cadoo aid he robbed the mail train to pro- vide money for his 17-year old bride, | Child Dies of Burns as | Mother Watches Movies New York, Jan. 23.—One child is dead and two others are in a critical condition as the result of a fire in the home of Mrs. George Kekas here last night Mrs. Bekas was at a neighborhood motion picture theater when the fire occurred and was not aware of the fatality until her name was flashed on the screen, The ehildren were carried from the burn- the apartment by policemen. Wil ) £ 1iam, four years old, died soen after of his burns, Open 9 to 5.30 . Reasons for our OPTICAL SUCCESS Our Experience—practicaland thorough. Our Equipment—modern and complete. Our Service—painstaking and curate, Our Courtesy—~extended to all. Our Patrons—ialking adver- tisers, Our Glasses—savers of sight, H. REDDEN Optometrist With A, PINKUS Lyesigl 300 MAIN ST to have killed a Belgian workman, | not being in the hands of the au- | | {sentenced Major Frelslicher to hard | | | | strikers' representatives, Mr. Ferry|mer, Qu Tangler, Jan. 28.—A I'rench sen-1&lon will eonfer with district officers | John L. Lewls”to investigate condi- | should | charters were revoked when the men | | retused to return to work, at the re- | the Poets' League of Turkey. | course thoroughly on the mechanics | SUTTLEMENT EXPECTED Miners and Operators Fxpected (o Reach Agreement at Meeting in Scranton Today. Soranton, Pa,, Jan, 23—Settioment | of the strike affecting 11,000 men at the mines of the Pennsylvania Coal company, which for two months has tied up the company's operations, was expected by leaders of the Unit- ed Mine Workers to result from a meeting here today of a committee representing the strikers and mem- bers of the special commission ap- pointed by International President tions in the Pittston anthracite field, A plan tor adjustment of the men's alleged grievances, drafted at a meeting of the general mine com- mittee of'the district, 1s to be sub- mitted at today's conference. Con- fidence {vas expressed that an agreement would be reached and that work would be resumed in a few daya. Neal J. Ferry, chairman | of the international commission, said | that it the proposals were submitted as drafted by the miners' committee| there was *“no reason"” why there not be an early resumption of operations. Prior to the,meeting with the and other members of his commis- of the union on the settlement plan which involves the restoration of the charters of the striking locals. These | quest of Mr. Lewie, pending adjust- | meht of their gricvances. [ WOULD LICENSE POETS Constantinople. — A proposal to license all Turkish poets has been | made to government authorities by | All | true poets should be able to dis-| of poetry before attempting to write | any for publication, the league con- tends, . { L Funerals | Paschaj Deschenes The funeral of Paschal Deschenes | will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the late home, 80 Pleas- ant strect. Rev. A. D, Heininger of | the First Congregational church will officiate and interment will be in | Fairview cemetery. | Joseph Andrews The funeral of Joseph Andrews will be held tomorrow afternoon at |2 o'clock at the undertaking rooms | | | { | | | | | i "MONEY SERVICE Loans $50 to $300 to Housekeepers on terms of your own choosing. Long time to pay. Strict privacy and easily ar- ranged. Why not pay those small pressing bills and keep your credit good? Full information gladly given. Call, write or telephone BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY $T WEST MAIN STREEY PROFESSIONAL BULLDING PHONE 1913 ALL Banks in New Britain Will Open at 10 Tomorrow Morning and Will Close at 1 p.m. of Laraia and Sagarino on Spring street. Interment will be in Ifair- view cemetery. Criansin Newficld The funeral of Criasin, Newfield | was held at 8:30 o'clock this morn- | ing at the home of August Newfield, | 83 Beaver street, and at 9 o'clock at St Mary's church. Rev. Walter Mc- Crann celebrated the mass of re. | quiem. Tnterment was in §t. Mary's cemetery. | Joseph A. Haffey Funeral Director. Phone 1625-2. opposite St. Mury’s Church, Residence, 17 Summer l FLOWERS | FOR ALL OCCASIONS F. H. Bollerer's Posy Shop | 72 CHURCH STRE Florists’ Telegraph Service. ROOM (04-3 Saturdays 9 to 1 HERE WE HAVE Miss Dorothy Tathe, 10, of Ayl- fered by the lighting educational | | committee of New Yorl lion school pupils ail the United States and Canada. over Mury H. Adams of Bennin, teu, Vi, the first Vermont woimnan named a presidential elector, who will probably be chosen messenger to carry the vote of his home state to the president in February. The Prince of Monaco, hereditary | auler of the principality which includes the famous Monte Carlo He is about to come to the United | States. He disapproves of and spends very little t country of which he anbling 2 in the ruler. is the MEN AND WOMEN TRADE Berlin, — Familics in a north fetlin neighborhood nducted a iique experiment in 1 of solv- ng the problem of py mar- ivd life. The me women raded jobs for two weeks — the men staying at home to t care f the house while their wives 1 their business a ment proved nothing, b The com- | petition was entered by over a mil- | . NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1925. | || Wall Street Briefs 1 New York, Jan, ~The new | name of Cosden & Co., one of the largest of the Independent Oll com- " will be the Mid-Continent im Corporation, which 1s of« day §$12,600,000 1st mortgage cent 15-year sinking fund ds, priced at 97% to yield Lhan 6,76 per cent. It s pro- i an announcement sald, to ( the title of the properties of vsden & Co. of Oklahoma, the Cos- den O1l & Gas Co, with certain ex- | ceptions, and the Atlantlc Petrol- {epm Corporation in the Mid-Con- | tfnent Petroleum Corporation, The preliminary earnings state- [ ment of the 8t. Louls San Francisco | Rallway December shows sur- for plus of $560,000 after all charges, | se of $59,000 over the same | month the year before, This brings the 1624 total to $5,918,872, equal to $12.16 a share on the outstand- ing common stogk after allowing for ¢ix per cent on the preferred, com- pared with $7.39 a share in 1923, ' RABBITS INFECTED | an incre: Injection of Streptococei Isolated | From Humans Brings the Dis- | ease; Horse Serum Cures Rochester, Minn,, Jan. 23.—How | po'tits were infected with hic- by the injection of strepto- | isolated from human beings, | «n cured of these spasms by a um made “from horses,” was re vealed here last night by Dr. E. C. | Roseno in a public lecture on th cause of hiccough epidemics. Dr. | Roseno is connected with the Mayo | {elinic as a bacteriologist. | "“In two provious epidemics of | hiccough,” Dr. Roseno deciared, “I |isolated a streptococcus from infec- tion area, such as infected teeth or tonsils in cases of epidemic hiccough. | | These produced spasms of the dia- | | phragm and other muscles when | ‘mjnrl»,d into animals. | “The duration of hiccough in the udied ranged from two ;lon cases s to elght da: | | “In seven of the ten cases there {were symptoms of an assoclated in- | fection of the throat of varying se- {verity. , Moderate tonsilitis was | found in an. “The serum from horses immun- lized with streptococei from ence- | | phalitis caused disappearance of | spasms of the diaphragm in animals. Several patients having severe per- |sistent hiccough were afforded | administra- prompt relief through rum | tion of the s Mohammedan Beauty Shows Face; Scandal | Tunis, Jah. 23.—The “Queen of | Queens”"—the girl selected as the | | most beautiful in Tunis—has been | | obliged to renounce her throne be- cause of protests from the Moham- | medan population at her being obliged to show her face unveiled before crowds, contrary to the pre- cepts of the Koran. | The beauteous one is Mile. ayntly to the pleas of the Tunisia fetes committee which emphas |that her assumption of the qua | regal functions might result in se- | rious inciden MISS PONSELLF | New London, Jan, 2 liss Rosa | Ponselle, Mectropolitan Opera Co., {singer, was reported as “very much | | better” by her manager, Miss Libbie | Miller, today. Miss Tonselle’s per sonal prysician, Dr. Arnold Galari arived from New York carly today, | land said that the singer would be able to leave New London for Boston some time tomorrow, to kecp an en- gagement there Sunday. Miss Miller |stated that the prima donna would return to New London next week or |the week arter to keep her singing | engagement here. BETTER FROST-RADIO 3 PLUGS i Wonderful Plug | Values = d .,JOC o opt. 1 MERBERT H FROST, Inc. 154 W. Lake 81, , Chicago I ‘ WALL ST. REPORTS [PUTNAM. &:HCO. MEMBERS NEW YORK & HARIFORD STOCK EXCHANGES I WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN~- Tel. 2040 HARTFORD OFFICE € CENTRAL Row The financial district hears that | directors of the Coca Cola Co. at thelr meeting in Atlanta, Ga., next | Monday will discuss the advisabll- ity of an increase in the common dividend which is now $1.76 quar- terly. The report for 1924 is ex- pected to show close to $12 a share earned on the common after all charges and preferred dividends, compared with $7.066 a share report- ed in 1928, The company’s cash po- sitlon 18 understood (o be good. TEL 2-net We Offer: High Low Close Allis Chal 804 79 (of B Am Bt Sug ... 41% 40% 4o% | Am Can 167% 164% 104% | & H Am Loco ..,. 116 16 | Am Smelt . 99% 3 Am Sug 063 % Am Tel & 133 Am Wool Anaconda Atchison . At GIf & W I Bald Loco Palt & Ohio .., jeth Steel . Bosch Magneto Cent Leather . Ches & Oblo . C M & 8t Paul CM &St Plpd C R I & Pacific Colo Con Corn Prod Ret Cru Steel ..., Cuba Cane Sug Cosden Oil ... Dav Chem E E Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange New Britain—Burritt Hotel Bldg., Tel. 1815 Judd Building, Pearl St., corner of Lewis, Hartford, Conn, We invite orders for execution on commission in the New York market ie 1st pfd Kelly Spring . Kennecott Cop. 56 Lehigh Val Marine pfd Mid States Ofl. Mis Pac pfd .. 80 Nat Lead 4 New Haven Norf & West . North Pac . Pacific Oil Pan Am.... 6 Penn R R.. Phil & RC &I Pure Oil Rep T & Ray Cop Reading Royal D Sin_ Ol Gen Flectric 3103 | . . St Motors o n | Stocks carried on margin Gt North pfd . 69 | Insp Copper .. 295 %t Int Nickel 261, 4 Int Paper il m A : @homson, Tenn & Lo, MEMBERS NEW YORE AND HARTFORD STOCE EXCHANGES A Donald R. Hart, Mgr. WE OFFER— 25 Shares HART & COOLEY Price on Application We do not accept margin accounts 19% So Pa('fi 105% So Rail . 8135 idiébaker .. 431 xas Co 45% Tex & Pacific 4515 44% i con Oil .. 5l 5 Union Pacific , 150% 150 United Fruit . 218% HARTFORD NEW BRITAIN 17 8 Indus Alco s nlibbeng ¥ Hartford Conn. Trust Bldg. Burritt Hotel Bl\dg. Wit ot Tel.2-7186 Tel. 3420 4 Radio LOCAL STOCKS “’e. Offer [ (Furiis 50 shares Stanley Works 50 shares American Hardware 50 shares Landers, Frary & Clark Actna Casi Hartford National Phoenix Travelers Ins Am Hardware Am Hosiery . Beaton & Cadwell ..., 82 Bige-Hfd Cpt com Billings & Spencer com 4 3 Billings & Spencer pfd. § Bristol Brass .. 5 It's Arms gle Lock .... e Fafnir Bearing Co. .. Hart & Coole Landers, I° N B Machine N B Machine pfd N 3e-Pond com North & Judd .. Peck, Stowe & Wil .. Fire ire JOHN P. KEOGH Members Consolidated Stock Exchange, New York. W BRITAIN NAT. BANK BLDG. Telephone 1012 Stocks, Bonds, Curb Securities bought and sold on commission. Listed Stocks carried on conservative margin, Direct private telegraph ana Ticker Service. Branch Ofrices: Stamford, Waterbury, Danbury, Bridgeport, New Haven (Hungerford & : S | CIVIL SUITS FILED et o e unpaid_grocery $512.75. o OF M8 €I 6 table Tred Winkle has attached ey Sl it in a suit 4 " o X to the extent of $1,000 on a writ inley Works . by Meyer which is returnable the second Mon- day of February in the city court. Abraham Idgarian, through Harry H. Milkowitz, has brought action ainst Kambigian for $250, clatm- he is owed $171.04 for goods de- nley Works Torrington Co. com ., Traut & Hine Union Mfg Co Yale & Towne Conn Lt & Pow 10 claims 28 tor goods de- Hfd ¢ ivered. Constable Fred Winkle, on N B Gas a writ retur > in the city court Sonther T the second Monday of February, has T11d Fioc e property of the defendant 2 A extent of $300. 0 the U. S. TREASURY STATEMINT, | WAR ON HORNETS il RO Dublin, — Trish farmers fn the 5 LS. v 5 i v of Dublin have started & :F“.G\ DAY o ] to the death against hornets. i e Sl L rmed face protectors and 000,000; balances ],_‘Hv\:‘ papers, i ' e kre pabETiNe e O e iakolk Ot rve with the one purpose g b hornet's nest every The Wants have the ranks of the them in the forefront of thos 9 1 g Ci0C Burritt Mutual Savings Bank Commercial Trust Co. New Britain National Bank New Britain Trust Co. People’s Savings Bank Savings Bank of New Britain