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e ALL THE LATEST BOOKS oFr FICTION Can Be Found In Our CIRCULATING LIBRARY Book Dept. THE DICKINSON DRUG CO., 169-171 Main . “Dress Well and Succeed” SUITS and TOPCOATS You'll ind what you want, we feel sure, in the wonderful showing. FOR SPRING Two and three button effects— also double breasted models, in easy swinging styles, with slight- y wider shoulder, and coat back nearly stralght with only slight curve to hip. They're tailored by hand in our | own shop—custom made if you please—but ready—NOW. $50 HORSFALLS 95-99 Xsylhum Strect Hartfor. “It pays to buy our kind” 'Louis Geidel l Piano Instructor | Pupil of Guy Maier—Piano New Englamd Conservatory of Music— Theory, Harmony, Solfeggio. Address—196 Otis St., Hartford, Conn. Phone Charter 4470-3. In New Britain Tuesday week only. Lessons in your own home if desired. of ench DENTISTS A. B. Johnson, D. D. S. T. R. Johnson, D. D. S. Gas—Oxygen—X-rays National Bank Bldg. NURSE IN AT DR. LASCH Dentist Quartz Light Yor Pyorrlica 353 MAIN ST. HOTEL WASHINGTON GRILL I8 A NICE PLACE TO EAT. Prices Reasonable. Bakery Department Connected, Cor. Washington & Lafayette FOOD VALUE Milk has a food value that is at once benc ficial agd economical Seibert Farms milk is pure. It nourishes children happy health. toward a 7 PARK S 4.SI’HONE- l720 NEW BRITAIN, CONN MAKE SURE 175 SEIBERTS b 3 T o'y Ao NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1925. tallor. He attended the elementary schools, but never found time or PRES"]ENT EBERT flnances to enable him to attend the Heldelberg University, Barly in life he betame an apprentice In a sa dler's shop and although he worked 1 ¢ and 14 hours a day, he read and studied a great deal at night. He acquired the habits of industry and hard work as a youth and never for- got them. §s president of the re- public he was said to have been one of the hardest working men in the | country, and usuallyswas astir before official Berlin was sipping its morne Ing coftee, After he had learned his trade ns diler, President Bbert began mis grating from one town to another until ho finally settled 1n Bremen, here he became intensely intereste ed i the Socialistic movement, In an effort to help improve the condi- ccutive duties. Ho said all who had | o HT8Et 16 “m’_’l\lnx‘ g been thrown with the president were | 7% L Fhe MOrICH cooperative A RlbeTea taTe rR ot Lt up at & o'clock fn the morning make The Bonese e o bo. | Ing deliveries of bread. And all the ¥ Bl fima ho kept expanding his knowle cause of the president’s death. | : The cabinet proclaimed eight days "’H‘l‘m'" reuding books by tho best | of official mourning. 1t also deeld- | ed to prepare a law calling for the | | clection of Ebert's s This | v must have the approval of a [{#ederay oo containing repre- cntatives of all the German states, | and then be submitted to the Reich- | stag. The constitution provides that the successor to the presidency must be elected “as moon as possible.” 1t fis generally believed that an election sannot be arranged in less than six weeks, (Continued From First Page) el | Prosident Ebert lost two sons in the war. Funeral Wednesday. At the will b ecutive widow's request the funeral held Wednesday at the ex- Chancellor 1 mansion, uther { will deliver At this morning's cabinet meeting, the chancellor made a briet address commending the masterful manner in which Ebert had handled the the funeral address ex- Wrote Books Ebert wrote several books detail- ing the circumstances under which laborers lived and worked in the.in- dustrial centers. These L of- forts attracted attention in his own country and led to his acceptance of a reportorial position on the Bremen Bergerzeltung in 1891, He | covered police and court news and in that way recelved a stood him well in after y In 1900 Ebert became a trade union se ¢ and a little later | | was chosen a member of the local ning assemblage of Bremen, B ars later he was elected a member of the presiding board of cessor, Ridiculed at Tirst jected 1o much ridicule, ¥ by monarchists when he h the republle that suc: downfall of the Hohenzollern reign ; : lin fll\(n]:“\]'_ Friedrich Ebert he Social ].)n‘lnlhl.\'\(‘ party and in rogarded ighly by ghe peopte gen. | 1912 Was elected a deputy in the and, in his own country at | Reichstag. =~ There he gradually 5 | forged to the front as'a political least, was given th. & [+ e major portion | leader and became head of his party | of the credit for bringing order out | for all Germany. In 1918 he was| of the chaos that followed the ab- | e S e fichioten iead ot the Main e ymmittee | [ o ¥iten the upheaval came on No- | el S CHO. 110 brentaent of | vember 8, 1915, Ebert assumed a!,, S reblibllc e d=ciarealtnatir ard | | Duden, who had been tnstrumental """“]”i] ok || in negotlating the armistico. Ho was | 10 the TPUD S GORRLECE IO in ofice only 36 hours, being forced | WOWIA, BS B0 BT 88 8 T FUCEES { | out when control of the government | ':\“"“ e b ll\:t n‘; fimm was take v o lo's | 21O 2 d vas taken over by the people's| how his enemies have eviticized him, | commissaries. It was Ebert, it was| NOW his enemios Ha¥s criies B { eald, who by skiliful maneuvers at | (O1¢ NE BOCHRCC M OF 1 25 | that time, prevented the radicals | the Presidential job. } from gaining the upper hand in Ahat 1“""", “"U'M"_d, 2 m’:‘ | turmoil created by the revolutton, | dency in the Interestrol the countty | A few weeks later Ebert became | 210 not for personal gain is shown one of the six commissaries who ar- | b the manner n phia 3::::;2; ranged the first meeting of the | V¢ Faany; 5 St o 5 ;,,,?,:]t "1;? 8o ”1, | one as head of a nation and when Skl e e government made him an al- Welmar to form a provisional gov- e A ernment or the republic. foresnacinsunc) ) On Feb. 11, 1919, he was elected provision president, 79 Su he f the the | lowance State dinners at unknown ‘mr other purposes, receiving 217 ou b ther social functions 9 votes cast in the assem constitution adopted by the national | iye auans o) . assembly provided that “the | during his incumbency. The tive power lies with the peop! ocial activities, and they were few, The provisional government were when the president desired to tloned untll August 23, a few friends. At th the | ok the oath as Impe only refreshment served was beer. 14 two days later th Horseback riding a e were the principal r President Ebert. He ¢ mobiles and seldor ater. He was s ticularly goos joked and scar smiled at the the only | ane- :n Ebert president 1 as- recelve stag. lent The of our ition shall, above all, be freedom must have vou have now established. We will ointly hold it. It will give us r the new vital of the German nation edom and right Qm-qmu of Treaty he first few government its f tion was threatened by the | which over the signing e Fbert Upor 0ol went to the ! the but |t oath essence con; dom Thlaif SRAOILE wore than free aw. 2 : jokes of t rt had unique hod of handling politicians, Iy those who were his enemies crities. Under fire he always held is temper and permitted his op nts to talk themselves out. Then | he would step in and have his say, I usu was final. 1In this ner he was credited with having | ed up innumerable party con- rsies which had reached the | D crisis arnse questio which e t premier, I Scheidemann were opposed to ing to the demands of the With no other co 1t b eidemann and 1 ed and a pro-reaty ent was formed, which of the mini T, ide ma married in 1894 of four children. in i was the fath gover: clude WIFE GRANTED DIVORCE i la Makowski of this city from Wincenty Jennings of the | some ous cabinet. whilo treaty, July, 1919 the ter to accept it President Ebert the bill ratifying the treaty With this phase of the tr the Ebert government with the problem ¢ ael s to go to Paris an the responsibility of treaty. These ohtained many dec hat they as an en nor denouncing ided L tolerable cruelty. T Jor husband s fro Handke hy is tha tie knots in the r things, but this | re me of the Round signing were used cor- S tre disrupt Germar Internal t were CT0ben a Really |, } Good ook wants wlm]'m‘f’m”q | Good Cake — She Uses parties to re : until \ | 192 President E! d Commur = tion in \ coalition ¢ June, a new that eve memori work \was 1t was no ¢ sk \er the blic be conditions existed old /msémm’d reliable when r was born after it was the new of foood, ing c in variov ed to reestablis ally the cras cial and mo ame the ] and w to depr was less thi | movem ove mmmh\ ‘and country’s f syster the busi s pape its money valu paper and ink of which wi made, Presid Ebert, howeve athered one storm after another | and finally saw the dasn of a new 1ay for Germany, which experts in governmer agreed was ght | bout by Dawes T plan Presi t 181, at H By all means the || most satisfactory [’ chocolate for cook- | ) ing or drinking. REC.US. PAT. OFF. T mo! ESTABUISHED 1780 [th DorchesterMass. Montreal.Can. || BOOKLET OF CHOICE RTCIPES SENT FREC I ‘ynnk\ L\nu.w and turned it to the treasury to be used |{ne key jthe exccutive was accornpanied by J supcrintendent of a walking | Stone mountain, He v“ | ha as saying the so any efr memorial that the re was | Borglur un- |it stone o 5 g | 2 - down from ; g D 2 & 74 Conn., 10 be [will raise - Bakers £ ' <Chocolate you (PrREMIUM NO.T) memorial | on the ed as saving Walter Baker&CoLtd. (i e signed Heroic Wife Fights for Husband Up in Kaatersville Cove, N. Y., in the heart of the Catgkill Mountains, dainty Jeanne Danjou, one-time Broadway dancer and star, is gamely aiding the fight of her husband, Armand {man with ever-tender care. BORGLUY QUOTED INHOT SPEECH == % 35 Vil Not Work for Gommit tee,\S[]”] LIQUOR TO He Says |can coin that is the first tribute of (\n nation to your leigh News terday that Gutzon Bo wissed sculptor, of the Stone Moun- tain memorial, sought by authori- tics of Georgia on charges of mali- | cious mischief in connection with » alleged destruction of models | and plans for the project, spent some time here yesterday and left on a north bound night train. Tells Lombardo A fine of $300 and cosls and a sus- | pended sentence of 60 days was tho The story. which appears in the ‘“f"fll’ LTipased on Androibombando Observer this T momnine | ©f 145 Wushington street when he seulptor as saying, “I'll | Va8 avraigned before 3 forever befors T wiil give | Mn W. Aling in police court this to my design of the Con- | morning for sentence of charges of e G at Stone Moun- ‘MDMIII):: the liquor laws. Lombardo tain to that committee,” referring 1o | V28 tried before the court earller in commiftee of the as- | 116 week and found guilty, the case sociation promoting the carving of | being continued until lmld) for sen- e huge mountain memorial tence. 3 i T s Lombardo was called to the stand ucker, | @nd questione to conditions at Sfraticna it home. He said that he has a o ulso was dis- | Wife and three children of his own to support, and that he is also taking hud destroyed | care of his brother's family of five agial “hecase children, The brother dled in De- "€ He added | comber. Lombardo told the court e orE Al st ountain his pay was not enough to care or weeks been done free- for both families so he decided to and the only model was a rough af- | 621 some liquor to make up the de- iich had been discarded. iecy rather than make it neces- Willing To Finish sary for his sister-in-law to go to the ulptor was quoted charity department for aid. he was “willin Judge Alling impressed upon the memorial if the people o cfendant that the excuse, no mat- wished” but “not under low worthy, was not sufficient " would he work him to deal in liquor and warned committee again. | thas if he was cver arrested again y story s, that hie for a similar offensec he could ex- y to finish the t to =erve his time in jail. Attor- Alfred LeWitt appeared for rardo. Gable Eliott Gable, 2 cut avenue, a jitney driver, was| hounl over to the superior \court un- | of $1,000 after he was auotes the rot in jeil he he and, The sc further to cor plote the mistance cutlve the or the {e said ould 1 ise the me The scuiptor is quoted Bound Over. will el niy uitention 61 Connecti- oin his fam 20, of s able rded the rou cen in TH oun knowliedge of age. 4 with after the n\ur\ of a girl Gable was originally indecent assault, but of the girl had been ng reccommended that utor Joseph G. Woods change charge, A Attorney Sanl P. Waskowitz, ap- ble, attempted to es- girl had been friend- 1 & number of jitney Lus dri- and he questioned her as to quaintance with about seven alled “sheiki Medical r John J. Purney and Dr. Donnelly testified that they mined the gl Must Eschew Liquor Yrank McCormick, arraigned be- fore the court on a charge of breach t peace at his home last Sun- was found guilty and given a suspended sentence to the state He was placed in care of Probation Officer Edward €. Con- nolly, Judge Alling telling him that he was to report to Connolly as ore dered and if he reported at any time with the odor of liquor on his breath, he was to be locked up and the sentence enforced. In“addition o this, the court told Chief Hart to give orders to all patrolmen in the city to watch McCormick and if they find him drinking to place him under arrest. McCormick was arrested trolman Thomas Rouski, who lives in the apartment under him, when the former is alleged to have ar- d home Sunday under the in- fluc of liquor and started to shout. Judge Willlam F. Mangan, who appeared for McCormick, ate mo- | tempted to show that the disturb- do it. 1! ance had been started by the patrol- I do | man, when he is alleged to have ace costed McCormick and demanded an explanation for remarks alleged to have been made about him. Rouski sald that McCormick had threaten- ed to “frame him" remarking about some episode that is alleged to have occurred at the . Smalley school Shooting Case Continued The case of Salvatore Dibias, held on a charge of breach of the peace in connection with the shoot{ng af- fair on W gton street over @ week ago, was continued at the re- of Prosecutor Woods until £ 1 of the conion useies “Woul ton My child that the “Could useloss A day hat mountain? v nar and 1 nferior to rer copled ir The N will hir ain cably in e of art 0 b “Six tons of clay had heen my studio in ¢ used in the dnd is t vork o yet. It wa v connectc the origi <ing of s to by Pa- rive you ha gun there?” he {f no! 1If the ontinue the I wild myself outh wis! fal, to co e it, ot say | I o me have already not 1o the commit v sufficient to finish it, It id over to a committee governors of the southern y8." contention that on the an be ¥ ates within & d 00 much time “They 1 have loafed > he coun- aryly re isn't a cor- of my blood that loafs.” As To Coins Refe 1g 0 a memorial coin de- quest lm;:fl ,;:\lvr;n : T”n":;.«‘}r r.a”q\m .| March 28. The continuance was . taken to give the police more op- portunity apprehend Angelo Louri, the man who is allaged to have fired three shot at Diblas. y also that ered uscle to the me committee, they b with a contract hese COINS as a reward to women | or purchasing five dollars worth of derclothes. Handle them in a ¢ hartment Sto 1 were for a hig They “At utive ting of N a mer- to give 6 with folding wings of flying about 90 miles will be put e market a Br on t purpose! | soon by ish com Robi, for life. Seriously ill, he cannot help, and it is she who stands in the deep snow numde their cabin and chops the wood that keeps them warm, and it is she that looks after the suk |give this memorial to thelr fathers, ' {this work of an artist, this Ameri- heroes—they gave it away to haggling bargain || premium. 1 SUPPORT CHILDREN {But That Is No Excuse, Judge Judge Benja« A hearing on a charge of car-| under 16 | ON HONOR SYSTEM . Yale News Calls Attention To Need Of Observing It New Haven, I'ob. 28.—The Yale News today admonished the under. graduate body to observe scrupu- lousl; tlons. It sald that there was “a de- cidedly unpleasant sensation” to read of the suspension for thirty days and cancellation of the term's cuts of a junlor In college for vio- lation of the honor system. It adds: “But the end is not yot come and the strong arm methods will not gvail in the long run unless the consclence of the university is thoroughly aroused. The intrinsic meanness of this vice of cribbing must be made go plain to each hon- orable man, that he will gladly take steps to sce that such men as are without honor either conform to the Yale system or else pursue thelr further “search for knowledge" in friendlier institutions, He Had Vision Tommy in Toyshop—I would like that engine, but I know father won't let me have it. Could you put it away for me untll I get the measles or something?—Vikingen, Oslo. the honor system in examina- CHANGE OF ADDRESS ANNOUNCEMENT—WE HAVE MOVED INTO OUR NEW QUARTERS AT 16 Hungerford Court O. BECKER NEW ADDRESS: 10 HUNGERFORD COURT MOTHERS' Don't Economize on your Children's Milk. y IT DOES NOT PAY MOORLAND GOLI ERNSEY MILK from Accredited Hord No, 093. Free from tuberculosis, Raw Milk. 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