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VORRPTL e This Rare Treatment, of Dunbar G. Adams, died during & the war while her husband was in Washington, March 26.—A survey [gorvice overseas, Mrs Gracle alleged of the fire prevention activities of |that a will leaving Mrs, Adams’ en- | commerclal hodles throughout the |tirq estato to herself had been stolen country and the results during the from s hotel desk and destroyed. past year was the purpose of a meet- s ing here today of the national fire ’ 0 at the chamber of [N€W Gold Strike Reported commerce today of the United States, At Bl‘ifish Columbin Poin'- Announcement of the winners and Wrangell, Alaska, March 26— | Finds Case Against Husband Is Postponed We Are The Sole Agents in New Britain for | | | | in arriving and, due to the report of conditions in her famlily, the case had already been continued untl] April and court had Been adjourned, making her trip a vain one, Mias- nik 18 alleged to have beaten her, The case of Sebastian Russo of Middletown, charged with non-sup- port and violation of probation, was continued until tomorrow. Russo told the curt, through an interpreter, that he obtained a good job in Mid- dietown yesterday and would now be able to pay his wife her weekly al- lowance, He was arrested yesterday | afternoon by Officer Thomas J. Feeney. MILITARY TRAINING Has to Spend on it Washington, March 26.—Military training would be worth every cent the country spends on it even it they were assurances of no more wars, Secretary Weeks declared in a paper read last night before the as- | soclation schools. | “No more vonvincing evidence of | 3 this {3 necded,” thé secretary said, | “than that the-military schools and colleges are notably free from the many unsound theories, ideas and practices that thrive like choking weeds In some of our other educa- tional institutions.” The military colleges, Mr. Weeks added, counter-balance “many sub- versive influences and educational evils that are distinct Ameriean lia- blites and others that must he class- ed as national risks, decidedly ulative In character and un ever-to bhe ENRIGHT 1Lk New York, March 26— Earight, New York police commis- | sioner, is Il at his home here suf- | fering from a general breakdown, | Mr, Enright was ordered to take to | his bed by his physician after he had become il while at his ofiee in tiny glass tubes. Radium emits three Kinds of rays, known as Alpha, Beta and Gamma, but hitherto only the Gamma rays have meen harness- ed. The present success conmcerns the Beta rays, which the experts now are capturing, purifying, con- densing and confining in glass tubes a little thicker than a human hair, to which is given the name *Seeds.” These “Seeds” they are are pre- pared to distribute to other hospitals for curative purposes, and suggest they may prove useful in treating cancer, although they depregate the idea that they are likely to prove revolutionary or offer a certaln cure, The Beta rays, which have a pro- Ifnmul effect upon the tissues of the body, hitherto have run to waste, of military colleges and | _. i A French woman now in America re. rnr\s that a new treatment for obesity h found by a well-known French sciantist; it is a simple, harmless combigation of ingredients’ put up in a small tablet called “'SAN-GRI-NA," which lelps nature in throwing off unnecessary fat-forming elements, thus making it impossible for fat to form and accumulate,on the body, Already surprising reports, from all parts have been received, Cases of reducing vary from 10 to' $0 pounds, in a remarkably shprt time, with compl-te restoration of health "and marvelous change in general appearance, While “SAN. GRT-NA"™ is mostly recommended. for reducing, it is also an invaluable hel to get rid of all-worn-out, tired feel- ing—does away with puffing, and in any cases entirely rel high blaod ssure. GUARANTEED ABSO. LUT: HARMLESS, Recomniended by specialists, physicians and nurses as a safe, positive and simple way ta take off from § to 6 pounds a week. Can be boy was playing in a vacant house |HONOF cities in the 1924 Inter-cham- { ber contest and reports on the work accomplished in varlous fields of fire prevention ativity were included in | the program of the meeting, President Coolldge arranged to re- celve members of the council at the White House during the afternoon. Claims Will Was Stolen From Desk and Destroyed Marche 26— Mrs. Constance Elise Gracle, widow of Colonel Archibald Gracie, on July 14, Hagan admitted that he fired at the house to scare away in- truders, but sald that he had no idea that the child was in the house or had been struck by a bullet, MOTION DENIED Richmond, Va., March 26.—Chan- cery Judge Moncure today denled the petition of minority stockholders of the Chesapeake and Ohlo rallway who sought to restrain a meeting of all the stockholders of the railway here, March 30, Riverhead, | Telegrams recelved here announce a | Imew gold strike 250 miles northeast | of here on a tributary of the Eagle | river in the Cassiar district, British | Columbia, a short distance from a | placer discovery made last Septem- | ber. The strike is free milling quartz. | Telegraph Creek, B. C., 150 miles | northeast .of Wrangell and the prin- | cipal base of supplies for the Cas-| siar district, was reported without butter, bacon, lard, beans, rice and | clgarette: ’ PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERNS To every woman cAn opefi letter from the President of the Pictorial Review Company who would like to make her own clothes Dear Madam: Now, for the first time in history, you can get a perfect PRINTED pattern —a pattern you can use with- out a moment’s fear of making a mistake—without a possible chance of cutting your material wrong. had from leading drug or department work since his return from his trip | 8 0T last year to South America has caused the breakdown. - NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1925. e e ey ey HER but now, bottled, they can be used lost his life in the Titanic disaster,| THEATRICAL MAGNATE DIES ' | fardening of the an MRP[ANES AfiAIN MOT OF scARLET PEYER RAD]UM DISCOVERY in conjunction with the Gamma rays, FlRE PREVENT[ON has filed an affidavit in surrogate's Philadelphia, March 26,~J. ¥rbd [cause of :eulh, llu.v:::I:[:[‘y‘f::: n leTms WAIJKS 10 GOURT ""dnfi ok i mt“auw S e e "";"“"f s ”;'"‘“" ahe Wad |7y merman, B, widely known the. |74t old. ) bt v Ao i . made against her son-in-law Dunbar R Wi, Wild **|" Mr, Zimme v ¥ PR"VE SUPER“]R fiwe British Hospltal Experts Discover | " Afpha rays tro yery weak and [Natonal Fire Wasto Counci fs Hold= |G Atium ‘and nia varomms 2 ot [atrical munager and ownor diod sud. feilioa R i oW Sk " ; ; Y Jur Value y aro regarded ‘as negligible, Moo v ® o Mrs, John D, Adams. denly here yesterday at the home of [was financlally inte 2 1 Orange Street Woman, Sick Herself, Curative Value of Any Quantity of # ing Meeting Today at Natlonal M, Gracle's daughter, the wite |his son, . Frem. !‘fi‘ Frodbitirdini | oo v interested in several i : New York Cop Is Freed | Cowiat Aerial Targets Not Hit But War- . el gt e ey TG S London, March 26.~The experts n Manslaughter o]un X ol g ) of Middlesex hospital in London, the' New York, March 20.~Patrolman § Ships 3001'0 on Sea lal'ks “.n‘:",'l'l"',"‘;]“l 'f,m“h":”‘:,mjr::“l ::3 center of British radium research, Harold Hagan was acquitted of a ,. claim to have made an important charge of manslaughter in the first } carlet fever, Mrs, Dimitry Miasnik pred ) : by i Ctine Anrs ! of 108 Orange street walked from |d18covery enabling the curative value ;t’lre"! ly a !enh b g (Naval Base, San Pedro, Callfu)y,"yome (o the police court this|Of &Y Elven quantity of radium 10‘:";;""“' attarithree Bours':delibere | o y™ counoll Spipn ap e eaiy: Dfmorning o sty concaruing un)un- hnli’:::-‘::;’”lll‘;g }lll‘:‘i:bfn"r‘;. acf‘ml:‘r::‘,:.or‘ lln’zrm was accused of having shot m‘rml‘trnn-lhnt ye-!aran)l'l pl:;c('] :;‘: sault by her husband. She was lato Dottling radiam. Bun, oown e o and killed Leo, Visse, 7, wille the role of an enemy armeda miled off ‘shore, today bore witness to the anuibflating force'and speed with which the combined United’ States fleet can strike an adversary on the surface of the sea. Sleeve targets simulating cnemy airplanes emerged unscratched irom the shrapnel hail hurled aloft ut them by the battle flect's 44 w1 alreraft guns, according to observers, bt the six hundeed ton cloudburst of steel that fell on thd surface tar- gets during the six minutes of massed firing left no'doubt that the figet that they represented would have been destroyed, Although no ‘“bombs” were dropped by “enemy” aircraft, keen interest attached to the efforts of opti-aircraft gunners to score hits oy the sleeve targets towed about 6,000 feet aloft by eight airplanes. Atcording to Lieutenant Commander James H. Strong* of the aircraft squadrons of the battle fleet, 850 shrapnel shells were fired at the cight sleeve targets without scoring asingle hit, ;“They missed the targets, but rearly hit a couple of our.airplanes that were’ towlag them,” he said. !1'lag officers were - reluetant to dfscuss the outcome of the anti- afreraft firing, pointing out that the agtual results of all phases of yes- terday’s firing at both aid and s tgrgets will;be confidential navy de- partment dath, “All conditions of battle were simu- fated in the sea attack, in which 11 battleships, geven scout cruisers, 38 destroyers, an aircraft carrier . and more than 40 alrcraft paticipated. Action hegan with the catapult- ing of squadrons of scouting and spotting ‘planes. from the degks of t}e scout ‘cruisers and dreadnaughts. Phese planes located the targets and controlled the fire of the big guns. Before the firing began the battle ine was twisted and disrupted by tarpedoes loosed by 19 destroyers simulating enemy squadrons. One dreadnaught was forced to turn completely about to avoid being hit. ‘The torpedoes were emptied of their cxplosive charge. [ Seven salvos were fire by the main batteries of 16, 14 and 12-inch guns, tén rounds ' by the 77 five-inch rifies and 20 rounds by the 44 anti- afrcraft guns, making 2,464 shots in all—an, annihilating hail of 1.- 462,120 pounds of steel, | On sale at Dickinson's or City Drug | | vesterday. It is thought that over- | | dores. Predicts Next War Will Be Fought Up in the Air .Chicago, March 26.—~The next war be fought ip the air some 20 rs hence—it may’ come in 10 —Sir Charles Higham, English vertising Jmdn, declared yesterday i addressifig the English Speaking tnion. Chicago will be in as great danger of destruction by perial hombs as New York or San Fran- | «isco, he declared. England and the United States will 1ever oppose one another in war and | #ingland never will fight an aggres- | sive war again, he said, | France, he said, has the greatest itmy on earth, and with an air *orce equal to none could “with the ‘orces and weapons at their dis- spsal, wipe out London from the air ~ithin four hours.” Leaves: $50,000 for Use ' In Building New Church | <New York, March 26.—The will of Mrs. Mary Ellen McCabe, filed in surrogate's court, left her residuary egtate of more than $50,000 to. the | archbishop of the diocese of New York for the purpose of erecting a Roman Catholic church. Hugh McCabe, her brother, whose residence has been unknown for many years, will receive a trust fund of $20,000 if he is ‘located within five years. Minnie Held of Green- wich, Conn., a cousin, is left a legacy ot $8,000, ‘The new simplified, printed Pictorial Review Pattern almost talks to you as you go along. It tells you, right on the pattern itself, how to cut your material without waste—how to lengthen or shorten each piece to your individual lines—how to match the pieces and put them together easily and accurately. There are no superfluous margins on the Pictorial Review Pattern to confuse you, or trim off or fold OVer. Your material is always in sight while you are cutting it along the scientifically accurate edge of the pattern. You don’t risk your material by having to cut through paper. Pattern 2632 Price 45¢ Illustrating one of the many charming effects that can be produced by the new simplified Pictorial Review Printed Patterns, Try one. No other pattern in the world offers you all these advantages. ' - To illustrate our faith in the new Pictorial Review Printed Patterns we make you this unequivocal guar- antee: Should a dress at any time be spoiled through any defect in our [gattern, every cent you may have spent for materials will be refunded. We urge you to go to the nearest Pictorial Review Pattern Agency and convince yourself. Reduced in price because bigger sales have lowered manufacturing costs— Bigger sales because of Tuxedo’s quality— Properly aged, perfectl blended — y Every dealer’s supply specifies last day it can be sold— Guaranteeing you FRESH Tuxedo whenever you buy it— Unvarying excellence. That’s the secret! FRESH ® TOBACCO IF THERE IS A DROP OF RED BLOOD IN YOU, THIS PICTURE WILL SEND IT LEAPING THROUGH YOUR VEINS! “THE DEVIL'S CARG3” CAPITOL—Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Pattern 2644 Price 45¢ Illustrating one of the many charming effects that can be produced by the new simplified Pictorial Review Printed Patterns. Try one. Very truly yours, President Pictorial Review Aew Printed Patterns Now on sale at all Pictorial Review Pattern Agencies does the washing for you—you just rinse YT does the hard work of washday for you—leaves you only the rinsing. That’s why the makers of Lux have named this wonderful new kind of soap Rinso. ! Unaided, its safe rich suds :loosen and -float out the . dirt. And your washday is ‘cut in half. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass.