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In the Interest of Your Clothes Use Wayne Wardrobes ‘Moth proof—Dust proof | Prices from $1.13 up THE DICKINSON DRUG CO. I 169-171 MAIN ST. EASTER Shirts and Neckwear that will make vou ap- pear a very extravagant man! It's hard to open the door of extravagant appearance without inviting its closest relative along —extravagant spending. In this array of Faster Shirts and Neckwear we have succeed- #d in golng the limit in elabor- ateness and at the same time put a limit on the cost. At $3.50 are Shirts with separ- ate collars to match and collars attached and at $3 are cravats of Imported English Foulards and Swiss Repp Silks and Mogadores that your closest friends will judge at costing 50 to 1006 more. P HORSFALLS 93-99 Msylum Street Hartford. “qt Pays to Buy Our Kind” RESINOL 'sw"sa:o'hinq Anncél‘fiowinq i u want for your skin trouble,c,m the itch%ggand burning and heal the eruption. Only who have used it can realize the comfort it gives DR. LASCH Dentist Quarts Light For Pyorthea 853 MAIN ST. J. D. DONAHUE VOICE CULTURE Special attention to beginners and children under 16. Reoms 318-319 Booth’s Bleck. Tel. 1274-13. COAL The SHURBERG COAL CO. 55 Franklin Street Phone 2250. HOMES FARMS BUILDING LOTS Read the “Real Estate For Sale” Ads on the CONE ON FISHIN, O THISIS APRIL Trout ' Everythin' Jugt | Anious to Be Hooked Many an anxlous adult sponded at an unusually early hou this morning tothe raucouscall an alarm clock and peeked througl | the most convenlent opening that would afford a glimpse of the great out-doors in order to size up the | weather and determine whether rain or sunshine was the order of the day, Many a man, grim and de- termined in business, of few diver- slons, perhaps, and many responsi- bilities, started in last night to turn back the hands of time to his boy- | hood barefoot days. Many a busi- ness problem was shelved for the time, while thoughts and ambitions | ran into & new stream, Why? Be | cause today is the first of April. Not eye 1t NEW BRITAIN DAIDY ‘HERALD, 'Sure Relief FeR INDIGESTION | | € 25 and 75¢ Packages Everywhere HONONIDE GAS 1§ "~ FATAL T0 GEER Harvard Instructor Dies a5 Result of Poisoning because April 1 18 April Fool's day, | but because it marks the opening of { | the trout fishing season in the state | of Connecticut. And it is surprising, | the number who look forward to | fhat time of the year, even while | they are shoveling feet of snow off the front walk or tons of coal into the furnace. Be the fisherman possassed of the | finest split bamboo rod with line and reel of intricate and delicate make, | or nothing but a hickory stick with | & length of store string on a com- | mon eyed hook it makes little dit- | ference as to the amount of enjoy- | ment to be gained from a day in the | open along a favorite stream. Be | the string at the end of the day the | 1imit of big fellows or & few just over the legal six inches, the joy of fishing has been experlenced. The thrill of expectation as the humble | worm or the gorgeous fly.goes into |a pool where a big one haal been | seen, this year, or last, or ages ago. |is @s 1t was befors and always shall | be. What matters it it only a su fish or a dace responds to the fishe | man's wiles—the big fellow is still there and waiting to be caught and | the awakening trees, the brook alive with the promise of spring, the bashful birds hunting their future | homes along the banks and in the | shrubs—all of them have contribut- | ed to the pleasure of the day, Ar- | rayed in hip boots, clothed in water- | proot clothing the fisher stands on |the bank or in the waters of his | favorite brook. In his mind, auite probably, there exists a feeling that he 18 equipped in nothing but a pair fears parental retribution when he returns to his home because of & neglected wood-pile, the two and a | halt ounce rod to his self-hypnosis in again the worped and ugly alder switch, He is a boy again, he has | realized the wish 80 ably expressed Turn backward, turn backward, oh time in thy flight and make me & boy again, fust for tonight. The streams, according to the ex- perts, ars at an extremely gnod | pitch for good fishing at this time | of the year. There Is every indl- cation that today will bring many bags of good trout to this city. The efforts of the state fish and game commisslon in stocking various | brooks about the country are mak- | | ing themselves felt and the | are | more trout than of late vears, at | least, awaiting the kilful fisherman. | Every condition points to good fish- {ing and— Oh, gosh—Tet's go fishin'. Age of 82 Years Clinton, IIL, April 1.—Colonel Ves- pastan Warner, 82 year-old million- afre resident of Clinton, former ma- jor in the Civil War, prominent law- | yer, four terms congressman in this| districe, pension commissioner under | Roosevelt and Taft and prominent| | politictan, is dead at his home here. | | Colonel Warner had remaired active | in the affairs of the estate of which | he was trustee and of the bank of | which he was president until At the outbreak of the C enlisted as a private In Company E, | | wounded in the battle of Shiloh, his | cheek being laid open by a saber| | slash. After the surrender of Lee, | Major Warner was assigned o serv- | ice against the Indians on the west- | ern plains. | Meriden Taxi Driver Victim of Hold-Up Meriden, April 3.—Asked to call at |a certain street number, which hap- | pened to be a very dark section, Hy- man Sigman, a taxi driver was greet- ed by a man who pointed & gun at him and took $10 from his pockets, | according to a report made to the police last night. If this Signature is NOT on the BROMQ Proven Safe for more than effective remedy for COLDS, as a Preventive, in! ragged pants and cotton shirt, he | Price 30 Cents. Boston, April 1.—Willlam H. Geer, fdirector of physical education at Harvard since 1919, died at the Massachusetts general hospital early today. He had been unconsclous since last Friday morning when he was overcome with carbon monoxide gas in the garage of his home at Belmont. He was born at Alexandria, Minn,, in 1885, and graduated from Carle- ton college, Minn., in 1908, . After raduation he was an instructor and athletic director at the Austin, (Minn.) High school for a time and |from 1810 to 1912 was secretary and {recreational director of the govern- {ment club house of the Canal Zone, subsequently receiving the Roose- | velt medal for this service. He was {instructor in mathematics at Spring- fleld college for a year and from 1918 to 1017 director of physical |education and playgrounds at Mt. i\'ernon. N. Y. Later he served as sistant inspector of physical train- ing with the military training com- mission of New York state and for a time was superintendent of physi- |cal education for that state. | On the retirement of Dudley A. Sargent fn 1919 he was made di- rector of physical education at Har- vard, He was appointed to the |faculty of arts and sciences and Jee- |tured in the graduate school of edu- cation, Tax Collections Past 4 | Year Were $2,197,091 | Tax collections in 1924-1925 to- [talled $2,197,091:46, which is 873, |128.12 less than the previous year. | The rate book requirements for the year included $48,000 for personal |taxes and $2,057,000 for property {tax. Street fmprovement assessments |collected totalled 35 and | street eprinkling eollections were |made In the amount of $11,455.13 | Sewer assessment collections reach- ed a new high mark, $34,934.72 as |a result of the activity of Chalrman | Frank L. Conlon of the board of public works in rushing through warrants for collection. This enables | the city to lower the net cost of sewers. In other vears, warrants were frequently left uncollected for ‘mfnrn than a year after the work | was done, DR. YOUNG APPOINTED Norwich, April 1.—County Health Officar Hibberd N. Norman yesterday appointed Henry E. Young, officer for the town of Voluntown, filling & vacancy that has existed in that office since the death of Dr. J. H. Hoover a number months ago. BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Ofive Tablets, the sub- stitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positivély do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through Dr. Edwards'Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. th Illinois Volunteers,” and was 10 LSRN $h ool fens s, B Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act gen- [ rapialy advanced in rank, beins) , DF: Edwards live Tablets act ge | breveted major in 18565, He was| LY Dutlrmiy on the bowels anc hiver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. ¥ All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without gn&ng in or any disagreeable effects. . F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac- tice among patients afflicted with bowel d liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 15cand 30c. Box, it is M QUININE “There is no other BROMQ QUININE” a Quarter of a Century as an GRIP and INFLUENZA, and health | HLANSHEN Wi COURT VERDICT Get Judgment for $17,500 Net Against Teras Wan Houston, Texas, April 1,—~The Ku Klux Klan has been awarded a ver- dict of $17,000, net, against George B, Kimbro, Jr,, by & jury in the dis- | triet court here, The jury gave the klan $13,290.50 under the Instructed verdict, cover- ing sums which the Klan proved by cancelled checks that Kimbro had received from certain states of his domain. The Klan also was given a vergdict of $7,920 under the second special |issue of the court's charge, whigh permitted the jury to find for the plaintiff as much additional as it thought proper, up to about $12,000, As offsets, the jury allowed Kim- claimed under a verbal contract which Kimbro said he made with E. Y. Clarke, former imperial wizard of the Klan, and $2,000 under another similar contract. Kimbro priginally had another counter clalm for $500,000 damages for alleged conspiracy by Klan offi- clals to defame him, but this was ruled out by Judge Ewing Boyd last week when he sustained a motion for an instructed verdict that there was no evidence of the alleged conspir- acy on which the claim was based. STER VACATION IN SCHOOLS The locals public schools win close Friday night for the annual Faster vacation and will reopen on Tuesday morning, April 14, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, bro $1,615 for expenses and salaries|’ 4 Forms of It is better to be safe with one soap than worried with five 1925, by The Procter & Gamble Oo.. Clncinnati MYSTERY SURROUNDS RUM-FLYING ‘ARREST Names of Prisoners and Amount of Cargo Withheld—Suspects Held On Cutter New York, April 1.—Federal of- fielals refused last night to give' any information regarding the Lorraine 11, an alléged “rum-flying” seaplane captured off the New Jersey coast Monduy. The number of men arrest- ed, or their names, could not be learned. These men were not brought to'the elty. for arralgnment, as Is customary, but were said to be held in Gustody aboard the coast guard cutter Mojave, The Mojave made the gapture, it was sald, as a result of a Kdlo mes- sage. The Lorralne II is a Curtls plane, painted like a United States navy machine, It has two forward hatcéhes in which liquor was re- ported to have been hidden., ‘Motor- boats towed the plane to a Brook- Iyn pier today, In August, 1923, an rplane belonging to Thomas Ham- burger of Bayport, L. I, was cap- tured at Blue Point, L, I, under similar circumstances, WILL OF MRS, LaFLAMME The will of Mrs. Jennie La Flam- me, admitted in probate court yes- terday, contains the following bes quests: to Mrs. Louis Coogan as a trust fund for Henry Le May, $100; to Bertha La I"lamme, Mrs, Louls Coogan, and HKugene La Flamme, children of the tetatrix, $125 each, to Thomas Fanion, $125, It is pro- vided that, a headstone be placed at the grave, and the residue of the estate is left to St. Peter's church as an offering for masses to be sald for the repose of Mrs, La Flamme's ‘soul. OF course Ivory is proud of its reputation for protecting fine th delicate silks, fine skins, things you wouldn’t trust But although Ivory is as fine a soap as you can use for your complexion and for your precious things, it is such a wonderful cleanser, and costs so little, that thousands of women use it all through the Louse, just as much tc protect the things they their hands from the rigors of tub and dishpan. For Ivory safety and purity are as beneficial to your clothes as they are to your skin! The saving on clothes you wash in Ivory is so great that even if your hands did not benefit, you would save far more in the end than the small extra cost that Ivory purity makes necessary. After all, it is more i your hands while they are at work than to try to cure them afferwards; that Ivory safety should be in as great demand for soap-and-water tasks your hands must do, as for the far less frequen bath. Ivory possesses all three essentials of a fine, efficient soap for all purposes—safety for your skin—safety for colors and fabrics—rich suds. You actually need no other soap in the house, for Ivory is made in a convenient form for every possible use. 99 .. % Pure Fod i Ivory Flakes | | for shampooing \ | Ellingson Girl Obse Her 17th Birthday Today San Franclsco, April 1,—Dorothy Ellingson, actused of matricide, ob- served her 17th birthday anniversary here today by appearing in court proceedings held to determine whether she was insane when she shot and killed her mother, Mrs. Anna Ellingson, last January, The jury which will pass on her sanity was sworn in last night, Itis composed of three women and nine men, The prosecution last night denfed that it had obtained a signed state. ment from the young defendant in which she said she was ‘sane and avanted to plead gullty on a charge of having killed her mother, with & full realization of the seriousness of this admission. The defense was just as emphatic. ally positive in denying the truth of vague reports that their cllent had repudiated her attorneys and cen- sured them for their alleged failure to consult her before demanding her trial on a charge of insanity. May Take Sam Brown Belts From Policemen ‘Washington, April 1.—The de- partment of justice wants to elim- inate the popular Sam Brown belt from the uniforms of state consta- bularies, patrols and police, and hold it exclusively for officers of regu- larly established federal military or- ganizations. Attorney General Sar- gent said yesterday that autharities of some states already had agreed to order elimination of the belt from regulation equipment in their state organizations, Mr. Sargent warned that federal statutes prohibit the wearing by a civillan of any piece of equipment or insignia prescribed for federal military forces, including National Guard troopa. - protects lovely complexions,— yes, but it cleanses everything, ' economically ings — complexions, and all the other to a soap less pure. wash, as to protect mportant to protect s0 it is only natural t needs of toilet and Procter & Gamble It Floats won- sudsy, shampoo, nothing is finer than Flakes. Pure, rich suds that remove oil and dust oughly, wi irritating the [ quick-rinsing 1' | | Tvory thor- thout wal, | and then. rinse out 1V ORY ek § completely,leaving i | the scalp soothed LowndryIvory Ivory Flakes Bath Ivory Guest Ivory i "‘;“h‘:“n"‘" thebigeakefor tissuethin flakes the medium-sized the dainty new cake of Ivoryfor |, ¢ generl howse- ready for instant cake that floath in the face and hands—just it the uffy. hold use tich suds the bathtub toilet soup holder— g cents Here is a.fine, simple treatment Tired and Achy This Spring ? OES every day bfip( you throbbing backache and stabbing, rheumatic twinges? Are you lame and " i ; weak, nervous—all tired out? to-your elimination! Active kidneys tend to ‘tie blood-stream clean and pure. Defective ;action allows hi waste_matter to accumu- ! n blood and nerves. Constant backache i low, with theumatic pains, stiffness, lameness to nn?:nno{i g kidney irregularities. d'“ ydoux li;lneyfi ue’infit‘i;f. l_:fll‘p them with a tested 1uretic. se Loas Tecomm the world over. A;?ls.your nd‘hboet"'lu. 08 Here is New Britain Proof: Charles Bradley, 364 Parl 8t., says: "My back was weak, lame and achy and when I tried to bend, sbarp, digging pains cut across my kidneys. I felt Had all over and finally decided to try Doan's Pills. A few boxes entirely rid me of every sign of the trouble.”” Doan’s Pills Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys At all dealets, 60c a box. Foster-Milbura Co., Mfg, Chemists, Bufhalo, N. ¥, for your complexion . WASH your face once or twice daily with warm water and Ivory Soap. Rinse in warm waterand follow with a dash of cold. -Dry thor- qughly by patting with a soft towel. Ifyour skjn needs it, rub ina little pure cold cream. i Soap Ar= [ Sy’