New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 21, 1925, Page 11

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Anniversary Of George Washington Washington's tomb at Mount Xemon, visited annually by housands. He died Decem- ber 14, 1799, after an attack of acute laryngitis. Martha Washington, wife of A photograph from the original the first president. tion NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1925, Of Birth drawing of the first inaugura- of Washington, April 30, 1789 man race, That is just what we have PROPHESIES LONG PERIOD OF PEACE Dawes States This Was Issug in Last Election « Chicago, I'ch. 21.—V clect Charles G. Dawes, in what he termed a ‘“valedictory” address be- fore the Bankers' club of Chicago, of which he is a member, last night, predicted a long period of peace and lranql’lllh. saying it was the issue in the world last year in all elcc- tions. “In the Unifed States and Eng- land, tranquility was found,” Mr. Dawes said. “The people found it in voting for the right sort of cons vatlsm. In looking back over his- tory and trying to see the great tide which led mankind forward and then down and up, we can s think, the beginning of the great for- ward movement of peace and tran- quility throughout the world| It ma be small to begin with, hut we a enteripg upon such a period as that.” He compared the last one hundred years of the world's history to the one hundred yeares of the Roman republic preceding the Pax Romanum, and also referred to the two centuries of peace and tran- quility following the conquest of Gaul, saying: “It was the natural reaction under those great laws which govern men, and the attitudes of humanity in the mass, that produced this greatest period of happiness and prosperity that the world has ever known. It was the great reaction of the hu- e-President- WOMAN AVOIDS AN OPERATION Awful Pains and MiseryRe- | lievedbyLydiaE.Pinkham's | Vegetable Compound Lima, Ohi T want to tell you how your medicine has helped me, For weeks I suffered with awful pains from inflamma- tion and I was in such misery that I had to bend dou ble to get relief. I could not b touched or jarred, had awful pain all ver my abdomen andcouldnottouch my ' feet to the floor. It was im- possible for me to straighten up and the'pains never ceased. I took treat- ments for some time and finally was told I would have to have an opera- | tion. Ido not believe in operations | and T had read so much about LydiaE. | Pinkham' l\'egemble Compound that 1 told my husband I would try it. be- fore I gaveup. I soon began to feel »at it was doing me good. The awful r misery began to leave me, also the backache. | have agood appetite and | am gaining in weight. ‘aking this | medicine was the best thing 1 ever | did. I feel like it has saved my life | and I do not hesitate to say soto my friends. It has saved me from «*| dreaded npernno'\ and I am ukvng it,”’—Mrs. ETHEL THURSTON, 824 North Pine \t Lima, Ohio, | in a shallow grave, plowed over, oh the Cote farm, eight | the head by hig own confession. . been going through with after the four years of the war.” Sir George Paish of London, Brit- economist, editor and financial advisor to the chancellor of the ex- chequer during the war, in an ad- dress agreed with t views of the lect, M ir George sai hat there never will be another war, The time has come when the world must have peace. “We cannot expect recover from the war sured of peace. “Great Brl until it is as- n has changed its policy and now we are well on the way to assured peace. Tranguility and peace cannot be had without ac- tion—the right kind of action, “What we need is action so strong that no nation will darc break the peace. We must act in such a way that those boys who gave their live in & war to end war must not have died in vain, “The world m adopt a policy of internatio! justice to assure world peace. Iair play and must be the keynote of the cco- nomic and financial relations of the world, We must act for the com- mon good in our all—the United States and Great Britain—relations. “France is undoubtedly impover- ished by the war to an cxtent that few people understand. However, that is my personal view. That is not the national po The policy is that France must pay to the extent of her power and I hope that sodher or later we shall have a Dawes gommittee for I'rance for th purpose of discovering how much I'rance can pay or whether it would not be advisable to her debt, forgive ACQUIT WOMAN OF SLAYING HUSBAND Maine dury Frees Mrs. Cote in Murder Trial Portland, Me., Feb, 21. tie Frceman Cote, was found not guilty of being an accessory in the mugder of her husband, Alphonse Cote, at their farm in North Gor- ham, November st, by a jury here yesterday. Charles 1. Fielding who pleaded ilty to the murder cha appearcd as the state's chicf witne in Mrs. Cote's trial The jury reported the verdict after deliberating two hours and 10 min utes. Mrs. Cote was placed on trial Monday, Iebruary 16. Fieldin when about to be placed on trial a the same time, pleaded guilty. Ralph R. Sanborn, 19 year old son of Mrs. Cote, through another marriage, is under indictment charged with being an accessory after the fact The body of Cotewas found b which had be Mrs. Lot days after he had been shot throv Fielding, according to SUSK Torrington, Feb. ter was arrested he the New York charge of grand larceny second de- gree. He d to have stolen an automc t as arrested is all Kins , but t 1 whe Yic e o to take charge of him the world tol cooperation national | BOSTON BANDITS SENT T0 PRISON Long Terms Given Because of Bad Records CAPTAIN A.E.Dll* 1924 b, BRENTANO'S | L[A‘.’ID by N'I‘A. ER VI BEGIN HERE TODAY Alden Drake, formerly a sailor, grown soft and flabby through a life of idle ease, clipper Orontes as "'boy,” under the command of— Jake Stevens, whose enmity he incurs because of a mutual love for— Mary Manning, daughter of the owner, who is a passenger. At Cape Town, Blevens is superseded as cap- tain by Drake, whose lawyers have scen to the purchase of 'the Oron- tes during its cruise. 1In hls new role of master, Drake becomes cold and ‘dignifled in the presence of Mary, Stevens, now chief mate, finds time to follow his suit, There are numerous conflicts bee tween Stevens and Drake, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “I see you are, Mister Stevens,” nodded Drake, “What was that you answered when I spoke to you just now?" “How do I know? Can a man re. member the words he says when he's half drowned? Might ha' said anything.” “I remembered what T said,” pur. sued Drake, evenly, *'I asked what you let those fowls out for, I be- lieve I called you a clumsy fool.” “Ay, and I told you to go plumb to hell!” shouted Stevens in mad rage. “What about it? Hey? What about it?" “I see you do remember, apologize, Mister Stevens, “I'll sce you damned!" Mary stepped into the compan- lonway, her hands pressing at her hot cheeks. There stood two men, Both had wooed her, each after his own fashion, She saw bitter con- flict abrewing between them now, far more Dbitter than any before, And now she could | mot be sure where the victory would go, She knew “Stevens for an iron man; would Drake prove true steel? And, most disturbing of all things, there was a subtle doubt in her Leart now whether she wanted iron or You'll | steel to endure, It was a new doubt, conceived and born within the bricf (space of time that rolling sea took to upset things. And it frightened her as she had never felt frighten- ed before. “I'll see you damned!” repeated |Jake Stevens, and swung on his [ heel with nality in every line of his big body and bold head. “At six bells, Mister Stevens, you will bring an apology to my cabin,” said Drake in the same even tone. “Otherwise, you will complete the passage in the forecastle.” | Stevens flashed around at that. | But Drake had gone below as he uttered the words, scarcely noticing Mary as she cowered in the dim companionway. As for Mary, she shrank as far from him as she Ieb, sentence —Three of the | s in the history w urisprudence were | court e longest Massachusetts meted out in superior yesterday when Judge Bishop sen- | itenced Harry Davis of Providenc It. L, Nathan Green of Philadelphia, | and Joseph Lewis of Chicago, to| terms of 22 tc cears cach in state prison after the men had pleaded guilty to chargés of breaking and entering, use and possession of ex- plosives and burglars’ tools, in con- nection with the robbery of a jewelry store here, { Consideration of the past records !of the offenders, who had served long terms in Sing Sing, Elmira, and other penal institutions, rather than | the cnormity of the present crimes with which they were charged, led to the request for the imposition of | the record sentences at | the district attorney's office. | The men were classified by Dis- | trict Attorney Thomas C. O'Brien, | who conducted the case for the com- | monwealth, as “cnemles of society, whose entire lives had been deyoted to crime.” KD MCCOYS TRIAL I'urther Hearings on Charges ~of Assault and Robbery Will Take Place on Monday 1.0s Ang b, 21~ trial on charges of ault will be show that McCoy ranged when e number . of pe Kid Me- robbery resumed today. attempting to was mentally de- hot and robbed a | ons in the Mors | Antique Shop morning Mrs. | Mors was found dead last | called a number of wit- yesterday to tell of the de- ndant’s peculiarities, This trend of cvidence was inters rupted by the testimony of Mrs, Iva Martin, neighbor of Mrs. Mors, who that she gaw Mrs, Mors' hushand, Albert Mors, run from the vicinity of the slain | oman’'s apartment the night she| | August, ness | | | asserted Killed: Chief Deputy District Att Buron Fitts, commenting stimony of Mrs. Martin, no attention would be paid to the infer that Mors was the man | running from the apartment after M Mors was slain. \Ilddletm\ n Boy Lnse: { | Life in Conn. River | Middletown, Feb. 21.—Joseph Faz he five year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincenzo Fazzino of 44 Cherry street, was drowned in the Connec- ticut river last night off the foot of | Ferry street. He was playing with two companions and slipped off a 12-foot wali | Santina Gullitti, 12 years old, saw | the boy fall into the river and fol- | lowed the body 500 feet down river before it disappeared river is at flood stage and the rent very swilt boy fell was orney on th said that th he | into the water slice are scarching | | for the body. ! | he almost | Drake's door, cap in hand. | toilet that evening. | which | it dive could, then, terrified by the apalling sense of calamity which over- whelmed all her earlier fears and made them seem childish, she ran out on deck and gripped Stevens by the arm, “Oh, Jake, don't start more trouble!” she pleaded, and the ecyes which she raised to his astonlshed face were brimming over. “What do you car he retorted with a bitter laugh. “You want to see that dude walk hobnailed over me, don't you?" I care more than you think, Jake,” she persevered. “And you didn't teil him to go to hell when got clubbed to death dragging you out of that drunken fight in Cape Town!"” Her eyes were big and dark and angry now, and she met his gaze “It you're half the man You eay vou are, yowll be at the captain’s with your apology at aix she said. Then she turned and left him, But at six bells he knocked on CHAPTER XX The Miner’s Kiss Mary spent a loi of time over her She went in to’ supper dressed as if for a gay party. Drake, thrilled with her spark- ling vivacity, yet resented those few moments she had spent on deck. He knew quite well what it must have cost the mate to make that grumbling apology awhile ago. | Yect Mary ought to know that he did not like her to break his rule about speaking to the mate while on watch, “Mary,” he mnsl' not- “Oh, just a minutc rupted him, springin, ning to her cabin. into her trunk for pretty clothes to wear r, she had taken out a mah jongg set purcl in Cape Town. She had almost forgotten she had it. But sight of it ded lm that it nlight well serve a good | and she had laid it on her through sheer necessity to stop the reprimand that was on his lips, she flew to the game as to a refuge from something terrible. So they played at playing a game | neither knew, and Jake Stevens knew still less, &in he had never heard of the game. ch a muddle they made of it. But rted their thoughts steady rush of did not blow politeness which accepted relation aptain Drake and his Try as she might, Mary keep her mind off that outward form of friendahip which | she felt sure was but the shining cloak covering an evil thing. It was | the one thing, so far as she saw, |j keeping utter peace from the ship. | Oft watch, Jake Stevens often chatted with her in Jightsome hu- t mor, That alone made He stood beside her started “you she inter- |¢ While digging at suppe emi whicl T Even the he wel- come breeze that perfect become 1ween mate could not away | first Hr on the poop | one “Mary, 1 wanted to talk with you a long tim now, Jake tev- cns, with something like awkward- |t ness in his manper. t said talk to you,” she smiled, bold face upon the problem. ships aboard the |is it? Something on your mind? t been having Drake— | geant the man you loved, Thompson, holes. Weatherby and Thompson had diroctly. #arl‘)’ Paton of the Sandy Bu ment i match, affair, | Tells sex, color or rank. If and run- | one of the most painfu acid or body often generated | kidneys to do double work: come weak and sluggish and fail to | eliminate Keeps accumulating and |through the system, nad |4 get from any pharmacy al ounces of Jad Salts; spoontul in a glass of neutralize acidity, stimulate thé kidneys, her afraid. | po logwatch | w RIGHT! RV ci SQ!}L 1] “Why, Jake, T am always glad to turning a " words with Captain “Blast Captain Drake!” hé spat flercely, 8he shrank back into her chair, and he softened amazingly, laying a hand as light as a child's on her shoulder, his blue oyes darkening with apology. “Forgive that, Mary. It Isn't easy for me to i hear you speak his name. I want to tell you something. How long have we been friends?” “'Oh, ages!" cried Mary, looking up sharply at his tone. His expres- slon went straight to her heart. “How long?" he insisted. “Since T was ten years old, isn't it? I know I was a mite of a kid, when you joined the Orontes, Jake." “Ten years.. Ten years. How long have you known this man Alden Drake?" “I can't say exactly—" “S8ay ten weeks. Thereabouts, anyway.” He supplied the estimate for her. She wondered what he was driving at. Mr. Twindng stood be- side the wheel, giving the newest apprentice a ledson in cunning helmsmanship. She did not feel so utterly deserted. And she knew that Drake was at his desk just beneath one of those open skylights a little abaft the companionway. She was liquor, She could afford to smile up at him, brightly inquisitive. “Well 2" He grew more il at ease. His feet up the fleecy sheepskin until she wanted to scream at him, He mut- tered as if the words stuck. with a rush, he said: “You kissed that miner chap on the Green Point read.” The surprise of it left her staring | at him with lips parted and blue at their widest. Something in her face must have comforted him, for he smiled. Bewildered though she was at his talk, she was obliged that he smiled. “What did you do it for?” “Really, I don't know. Impulse, perhaps. I felt ,glad fight was over and you were ail safe."” “T'll tell you,” eaid Jake, and the smile hovered over him again, un- certainly now, declining to settle., “You said you kissed him because he had saved the life of the man you— Then you stopped. But you you, Mary?” Her eyes fell his dark, passionate gaze. There waa a wistful note in his voice, too, which saddened her. She knc\\' well enough what was coming ne “Did you mean me, Mary? you mean—?" (To Be Continued) Ur did Weatherby Winner in Miami Tournament | Miami, Fla., Feb. 21.—J K. Weatherby, of Minneapolis, won the Miami district golf championship here yesterday defeating of Toronto, one up in 36 worked their way into the finals through a strong field, D. J. Hennes- v, Brookline, Mass.,, defeated D. S, Henderson, QChattanooga one up in 19 holes in the third flight. PATON Tt)l RNAMENT WINNER Belleair Heights, Fla., ¥eb, 21 club, oston, won the annual Washir ton’s birthday amateur golf tourna- here yesterday by defeating Herold J. [Ingersoll Colora Springs, two up in the 36 The match was a hole see-saw e TAKE SALTS IF RHEUMATISH 1§ BOTHERING YOU Rheumatism Sufferers Take Salts to Get Rid of Toxic Acid. Rheumatism is no v ter of age, not the most filictions it is Those s langerous of human ject to rheumatism sweets for awhile, as possible, posure und drink lots o avoid any and above all pure water Rheumatism is caused by wastc matter, an in the bowel absorbed into the blood. It is t function of the kidneys to f poison from the out in the urine; the pores of skin are also a means of fre blood of blood an ing this impurity nd chilly, coid weather pores are closed, thus forcing they b acid, w circulating eventual t ling in the joints and m g stiffness, soreness and this oxic ich cles, cau pain called rheumatism. At the first twinge of imatism ont four put a water drink before breakfast each ng for a week. This is t remove waste ar thus helpt o rid the blood of these rhe ons. 1 Salts is ine nade from the combin table and morn- pful to xper acid uie 1 with exc of folks who o rheumatism. ousar safe. She could detect no trace of | shifted and his big hands crumpled | Then, | to smile back at him in very relicf | i that horrid | didn't | before | Staniey | | CHOOSES HUBBY OVER HER MOTHER Stamlord Judge Acts as Assist- ant to Cupid Bridgeport, Feb, 21.—Mary Sher- wood Vendenburgh, 17 years old ol Danbury, on the stand before Judge Leonard J. Nickerson in superior court yesterday was asked to choose between her young husband of two months, George I. Vendenburgh of Stamford and her mother, Mrs. Hat- prevented from living with him, Judge Nickerson asked of the gir) what she most desired, to rejoin her young hushand in Stamford or stay with her mother in Danbury, Bhe whispered that her mother had threatened “to make out papers and have me sent away” If she tried 10 go to her husband, “You may go to your husband,” he sald, turning to the girl “if yot wish-——and in my judgment you should.” Judge Nickerson granted habeas corpus petition in favor of the young husband, Michael Gilman Made Capitol Store Manager Michael Kilman of 560 East Main strect, for the past six months as- | the | | Loomis, who sings with “The Seren= 4 Patriotic Service by Everyman’s Bible C A patriotie service will be held by Everyman's Bible class tomors 8 row morning. Members of the P, O, 8. of A and the O, U, A, M. and | Jr. 0. U. A. M. have been invited to attend in a body. Tt is understood 5 that the uniformed rank of the Py | 0. 8, of A will appear. Rov. Bamuel Fieke of Berlin will§ spedk on “Washington," Robert does considerable solo aders” and singing will give one or two solos, There will be a cornet duet and patirotic music by the orchestra. AWARDED $500 DAMAGE A Joseph Delldonna of Newington . has been awarded $500 damages ip & tle 8herwood of Danbury. went with her husband. Vendenburgh corpus proceedings yestérday. alleged his .bride, December 13, was held by force by her mother and, against her wishes, e T, sistant manager of the Capitol 5¢ to | $1 store at 328 Maln street, has habeas | been appointed manager, He [to an announcement Capitol stores today. Mr, has been {dentified with the for The girl instituted | in the court of common pleas. Gilman | automobile variety | in October, 1928, than 15 for the action. Thomas T, Donough acted for Delldonna. the with Portchester, N. Y., whom he last business store more years. ANNOUNCEMENT ON OR ABOUT MARCH 15T NEW BRITAIN VULC. & TIRE SALES WILL OPEN A FIRST CLASS TIRE SALES AND SERVICE AT 4 ELM ST. e ][] [ e WE HAVE BEEN APPOINTED THE EXCLUSIVE DIS- TRIBUTORS OF HCOD TIRES AND TUBES EXPERT TIRE REPAIRING Quality the Best — Still Hoods Cost No More! Get Cur Prices— Try Our Service TEL. 635 his suit against Robert Young of according | Newington by Judge Thomas Malloy An collision on the turnpike was responsible Mc-

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