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ROUTINE WORK IN STATE LEGISLATURE Reports, Both Favorable and Un- | lavorable, Are Made State Capitol, Hartford, March 17, Patrick, apostie to the Emerald Isle was remembered in the gencral ussembly today. In the senate house Chaplain Arthur ¥, Lewls, who took the place of Senate Chaplain Ayer, referred to the mission of the apos- ‘le in anclent days and asked for “tod's guidance to those who in these fays are laboring to lead humanity ‘nto paths of righteousness, A large bouguet of green carna- tions, sent to Senator Lawler, by Waterbury friends, was presented to the senator and each member had a bloom for his lapel and Mrs, Mer- ritt of the second district, had her flower on her desk, The week's business in both branchés opened with a clean-up of left-over * reports which were brought in Friday. There was in- S Cloims Indigestion Easy To Get Rid Of Asserts Pepsin is Best when 'Com- bined with Menthol and Other Good Tivigorators and in Li- quid Form, Axelrod’s Pharmacy Guaran- tees It and Is Dispensing It to Many Stomach Sufferers. You can be 80 distress with gas and fullness and Dbloating that you iink your heart s going to stop seating. Your stomach may be so distend- 1 that your breathing is short and <aspy. You think cating. perhaps you are suffo- You are dizzy and pray for quick | velief—what's to be done? Just one dessert spoonful of Dare's Mentha Pebsin and in ten minutes he gas disappears, the pressing on he heart coases and you can breathe cep and naturally. ‘ Oh! What blessed relie why ot get rid of such attacks altogeth- r? Why have chronic indigestion at 12 it With this wonderfui médicine you i banish indigestion or dyspepsia, atarrh of stomach, or any abnor- il condition that keeps the stom- *h in constant rebellion and one ottle ‘will prove it. And how happy you wil be when our stomach is as good as new for \en dizziness, nervousness, sleepless- %8, headache, dull eyes and other timents caused by a disordered omach will disappear and you will your old happy, . contented. self Axelrod's Pharnfacy and vy regular pharmaclst’ guatans s one bottle of Dareis Mentha I'apsin to show the way to stomach omfort. creasingactivity noticeable In qu' legislature chambers the time ls near at hand when more important bills will be considered, a number of Sunday observance bills being be. fore the judiclary committee this afternoon, On members desks was a pam- phlet quoting from a recent address in this city of President G. E, Vin- cent of the Roeckefeller foundation {on “preparation for the practice of medicine,” This was a contribution to the many documents relating to |the medical practice bil' which is to he heard a week from today Favorable Reports Favorable reports to the were on these bills: Allowing New Haven Water Co,, to issue bonds to the amount of capital stock outstanding: extending fime for incorporating the Bozrah Electric Co.; extending time of or- ganizing the Outlook Iire Insurance Co.; authorizing life insurance com- panies to hold proceeds of certain policles in trust; extending time for organizing the Life and Guarantee Insurance Co. of Martfor ing the charter of the st Rein- surance Co., of Hartford providing that the company shall not insure persons, A Dill to reincorporate the Rozrah Electrie Co., was rejected in view of action of the Incorporations commit- tee to extend the time for organizing the present company, Chaplaln Lewis in his prayer ro- |ferred to the “little isis beloved by many.” The house rejected the federation of labor bill which aimed to stan- |dardize plumbing in towns hy setting iun a code for plumbers applicable to |other than cities which have their own code, The bill to extend the time for or- |ganlzing the-Danbury and Bethel |Traction Co., and incorporating the |Danbury Power and Transportgtion Co., with right to operate a railway |in Danbury were refected on an ad- verse report, it being explained that the committee was working sonate on |s\lhs'llmn bill, | Other hills rejected were those |providing that street railways shall pay for cost of repair of streets in the area between tracks, | Tavorahle report was made on an amendment to the charter of the fmldg-npnrt Hydraulic Co., making George 8, Hawley commission to |certity. bands of the company in late Morris B, Beards- ley and to issue bonds to an aggre- gate value of one haif its property, Another bill would glve Cornelia E. Smith, assistant clerk of the Litehfield county superior court a monthly pension of $70, 4 Under rule suspension a hill to pay Mansfleld $1,480 for transportation of high school children was adopted. [place of the Artist Hit by Auto Is In Critical Condition | Norwalk, March 17.—The condi- ition of John Held, Jr., ‘Westport |artlst, who was taken to the Nor- walk hospital yesterday following in- |juries when a horse which he was taking to the blacksmith’'s bolted, was, reported this morning as un- changed, 1t was admitted ihat Held was in a crifical condition. with ‘s.depress- ed fracture of the skull. Doctors H. S. Phillips of Westport and George Fawcett of Norwalk are in attend- ance. ] FAIMAN ACCUSES (Continued from Kirst Page) Asked sald he replied he was entitled to one fourth of the whole deal, “He laughed and sald kldding' "' Faiman sald, “I can't afford to take a chance for less,"” Faiman sald he told Shep- what he wanted, ‘quit youf SHEPHERD TODAY Falman | e mpsvise= Insist on “PHILLIPS” HILK " OF MAGNESIA herd. "I have $30,000 sunk in the school without worrylng about any- thing." After a bit of quibbling, they do- cided “the success of the proposi- tion" was worthy $100,000 to Fai- man, he sald, Young McClintock died December 4, 1024, After Christmas, Shep- herd telephoned Falman, the latter said, “things were getting hot.” Tn- quiries were being made into the death of the youth, and stories were going about. Faiman said he again calmed Shepherd's fears, Wamned to Keep Sflent Falnian “sald his ‘school’ recefved numerous telephone calls in which he was warned to “mind his own business, A letter apparently written by woman also admonished him to “mind his own business.” Faiman was present under guard when his statement was read by a shorthand reporter to three as- sistant state’s attorney’s, He grinned at times, particularly at the mention of the money he as- him, After the reading TFaiman was taken to a restaurant, and was per- mitted to eat. Because of developmenfs in the investigation of MeClintock's death, the hearing on the will naming Shep- herd as chlef beneficiary {s expected ! to be continued. An error in the court record had represented the case as set for today This has been corrected and hearing will be called tomorrow. In the latter part of his statement, Faiman was asked: “Did Shepherd ever make such a statement as ‘this is hard to do,’ or ‘I hate to do this'?" “No, the only thing that seemed to worry him was the tuccess of his plan,” Faiman replicd, “It was uppermost in his mind, and he never once showed remorse or expressed any sympathy for the boy.” Faiman said that after Shepherd's return from New Mexico after Christmas he telephoned and “I told him things were getting pretty hot, and I was worried alittle about the servants knowing something.” No Need For Worry “He said there was no worry about the servants, and everything would end up fine,” said Faiman. The first investigation of the state’s attorney’s' office, later drop- ped, then was under way, and Shep- herd was quoted as having said he “knew about it, and it was all right.” “What was the principal point of this conversation?” Faiman was asked. * “He told me to forget everything, I guess,” was the reply, That was the last direct communi- 00 &) =3 e . \ N\ SJor i ad . and charm of the Wiz ning FKoom SUITE of the better kind that will drive the thought of winter from your mind and give your room all the sweetness is an‘inspiration with its handsome woods, durable construction, fine carvings and handsome finish. Each suite is nominally of 10 pieces but for the smaller home we have a number of 8 and 9 piece suites—$129.00 to $795.00. B. C. PORTER SONS “Connecticut’s Best Furniture Store” Springtime. Each piece the Unless you ask 1o “Phillips," you | may not get the original Milk of | Magnesia preseribed by physiclans | for 50 years as an antacld, laxative, | corrective, | 26-cent bottles, also 50-cent bot | ties, contaln directions—any drug | store cation he had with Shepherd, the | witness sald, Harry Olson, municipal chlef jus- tice, who initiated the investigation, declared he had recelved telephone calls from “people who told me to Mhiind my own business” and that | “I dia not know anything.” | One letter, a page and a half long, { "aiman sald stated that the writer, apparently a woman, “knew the Mc- Clintocks and the Shepherds and that it would .be best for me to mind my own busines " DUBLIN OBSERVANCE serted Shepherd had agreed to give Big strcet Parade, With An Acrial Made to him Demonstration, Part of St. Pat- | " rick’s Day Celcbration. Dublin, March 17 artillery, alrplanes | thousand Free State Armored cars, and several troops with their bands took part in today's mili- tary display in Dublin in honor of St. Patrick's day, After mass the raded the prineipal streets, rplanes maneuvered over the | city, some of them flying so low as almost to be within speaking dis oughfare watching the display, At Collega Green President Cosgrave, | with the members of his government |and the army chiefs, took the salute |as the soldiers marched past. | The day was observed quictly as a | general rule, more festival than a secular holiday | clal fcligious services, with the | singing of Gaclic hymns and the preaching of sermons, were held in the Protestant as well as the Catho- | lic churches, There was no “drown- ing of the shamrock,” all the saloons being closed under the - | censing act passed last year. The { weather was mild and sunshiny, lrmxkhu: the day an ideal one for the crowds out for the celebration. | WHEN ARE YOU GOING 1 ‘ TO SEE | “The Only Woman?” | | | How can you expect to get back your health and strength | as long as your body is serawny |and underweight? Let Tanlac put some good, solid flesh on vour bones, put your stomach in shape to digest your food, I purify vour poisoned blood! Then see how much better yvou feel. In our files are one hundred thousand glowing letters of thanks from men and women who have been helped back to health and strength by Tanlac. | What it has done for these | folks it can surely do for you. Tanlac is Nature's greatest tonic and builder. It is com- | pounded after the famous Tan- lac formula from roots, barks and curative herbs. It gets | right down to the seat of trou- ble and makes you feel right | from the first dose. Don't put off taking Tanlac | another day. Don't go on drag- ging vour poor, tired-out, sic Iy body around when this great | remedy can bring you quick { relief. | TAKE TANLAC VEG I TAN FOR YOUR - -~ “ask for Horlicks . The ORIGINAL k- ETAD ) Contains the valuable muscle an tance of the crowds linipg the thor- ! as a religious, Malted Milk 4 LONE WOLP DIES FOLLOWING FIGHT Former Dry Agent Killed in| Newark Brawl | TN | Newark, N, I, March 17.—Louls | La Fera, former prohibition agent | known us the “Lone Wolf" for his| sensational ew single-handed raids in Jersey, died In the Eye and Infirmary ecarly today of fracbured skull recelved when a he was knocked to the pavement in a fight outside Laurel Gardens, where he had attended boxing matches lust night Joseph Reinfeld, 83, who gives his occupation as a Joan broker, is un- | ler arrest at pollce headquarters charged with La Fera’s murder, police declaring he has confessed that during a fight with him La Fera recelved the fatal injury, Rein- feld surrendered when he learned he was wanted, ive other men were taken into ly and released as material witnesses, Reinfeld decla he struck the former prohibition agent in self-defense; the five witnesses according to the police, that the .one Wolf" to strike a blow. that the accused man confesscd the fight was due to hard feeling reated by La Fera's continued fail- V<|r", to repay loans Reinfeld say he cust s According to the witnesses some words passed between the two men as they emerged from Laurel Gard- ens after the boxing exhibitions. They relate that ‘La Fera invited Reinfeld “around the corner to fight it out” whereupon Reinfeld swung his fist in La Fera's face, knocking him to the pavement. When La Fera did not risé the five men carrled liom to a nearby store; he did r_)uf d was taken in consc to the infirmary where he died with- out reviving. La FFera was 32 years of age and He conducted sensational liquor raids in the northern part of the state while attached to the New York divisional office, These raids ¢ made alone, in Most cases over of the prohibition resulted zures from disti and tr leased from id to have entered business here, Trinity Freshies Best Sophs in Their Scrap Hartford, March 17.—~The fresh- man clas§ at Trinity early this | morning defeated the sophomores in the annual St. Patrick’s Day scrap. IThe freshmen, appearing on the fcampus before 7 o'clock, charged |the tres guarded by the sophomores, downed the guards and succeeded | within two minutes in tying two of T8, gler icks. e w the coal their class flags to the topmost branches of the tree. On such oc- casions it is customary for the sophomores to withdraw the regu- 'the beginning of the year. Tanlac puts solid flesh on scrawny bones Got Rid of Neuralgic Pains “I suffered four years from indigestion and neuralgic ain. Now, thanks to Tanlac am in perfect health.” A. R. Anderson 1505 Austin Street Houston, Texas In cases of torpid liver, rheu- matism, stomach complaint, lowered resistance, indigestion and malnutrition Tanlac will work wonders. Get a bottle this very dayv and start feeling better tonight. 3 PILLS FOR CONSTIPATION LAC HEALTH Safe Milk and Diet For Infants, Invalids, the Aged, Nursing Mothers, Children, etc. d bone building elements found in the grain and whole milk. Easily assimilated by growing chil- | dren, students, anemics, etc. Excellent as a light lunch when faintor hungry. Prepared at homeinam the powder in hot or cold water, No cooking. ite by briskly stirring | The police report | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1925. DAUGHTERS OF ISABELLA did not have g chance | Jations imposed on the freshmen at -K.:-'{“'.l‘alxl.:;:' .\l\;\l'h-n‘\vl rilil:.”mlf;‘: (i Hlinois Coal Operators Smilin e Kunne; remarks, | Won't Attend Convention Della McCabe, president of the| Hilsboro, I, March 17.—Coal building ition; “Roamin’ in | operatoss of Tilinols will not attend B.YV.D, the Annte Devitt; re-|the Cleveland conference, Rick Mil- g I mark Nellio Hahn; seloction, | ler, president of the Iilinols Coal UNION SUITS “The Low-backed Chair,” Sadie Cal- | Overators' association, said this n; orlginal version of Gallagher | morning. “We are about at the olic Women; sclection, “Songs My | crs, especially President Lewls.” { Mother Used to Sing 1ie "rle-i 1e Illinois operators feel that ln; selection, “It's Nice to Get Up | the wage scale Is too high,” Mr. Mil- §2.00 | ] i in the Morning." Annie Devi -ler sald, “many of our mines can- |iection, “When Trish Meets Trish,” | not op but while the miners DOMP® PAJAMAS [by. cliapiatn of the Cireid, was, une able to attend because of iliness, OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY ?‘ - e L Musical | /ictim of Shore Fire Lived in This City Dean, Ashley’s it Birthday Program of Leonard found in the fire ruins of a cottage whose body was | Sclections and speaking At Burritt Hotel it Momuuguin yesterday, was the TIsabella Circle, Noo 12, Daughters | superintendent of the dyeing depart- | of Isabella, celebrated its 14th an- ! ment of the Unlen Laundry Corp., piversary last evening with a ban-|In thix city. Leonard was also in quet at the Burritt hotcl, The ball- [the employ of the corporation for some time room was prettily deeorated and the following program was carried out Specials nd Shean, Sadie C he added, “but see lie Kuhne; remark: ng the conference of the Connecticut Council of Cath-|in view of the attitude of the min- lahan and Nel- | ¢nd of the rope, Miss Ringrose|no use in atten $1.00 Sadie Callahan, accompanicd or Deputy was toastmaster 50NgS Were sung. Mrs, Delia Salmon | continue to say they will not con- piano. suder reduction, conferences are use- Margaret H Any reduction of the scale During the dinner [ must result from mutual agreement Rev. I, J, Clab-|of miners and operators $1.29 loss. $2.50 GLASTENBURY SHIRTS and DRAWERS $1.65 §3.00 FRENCH FLANNEL SHIRTS $2.15 MOTHER:- Fletcher’s Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and > $1.50 Children all ages of Constipa- ‘ NECKWEAR tion, Flatulency, Wind Col and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of MM $1.15 Absolutely Harmless—No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it $1.00 . NECKWEAR .50 CARTER’S WOOL UNION SUITS $1.65 2 $2.00-$2.50 SPRING CAPS $1.65 k $1.00 fl NAINSOOK UNION SUITS 79c¢ Swift & Company Produce Plant, Nashville, Tenn. Every-Day Service Butter, eggs, and poultry are every-day items of household pur- chase. Their story is more than “every-day.” Swift & Company’s 1925 Year Book, which has just been issued, tells about our produce plants located in the best farming commu- nities, how we buy cream and pro- duce the best grade of butter, which goes under the Brookfield Brand. $1.50 SILK HOSE $1.00 $3.00 WHITE ATTACHED COLLAR SHIRTS $2 35 Ittells how, in order that nothing may be lost, we use the buttermilk mixed with grain to feed chickens so that they are good enough to carry our famous Premium Milk- Fed Chicken and Golden West Fatted Fow! brands. Eggs alsoare purchased, carefully candled and graded and the best marketed as Brookfield. $2.00 (VOOPER'S BAL. UNION SUITS $1 59 26.00-88.00 SILK SHIRTS $4.45 $2.50 FAULTLESS PAJAMAS $1 65 ASHLEY [BABCOCK CO. { 139 Main St. The growth of the produce busi- ness from a haphazard, itinerant occupation and its development into a scientific industry are fascinating. The story will be found on page 39 of the Year Book. There are many other interesting stories, also. A copy of the Year Book on request, free. Address: Swift & Company Relations Dept., 4337 Packers Ava. iion Stock Yards R