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WILD BEASTS HER JUNGLENEIGHBORS Mrs, Seton Tells About Her Adventures in India Her trip ‘on foot into the juiigles of Ceylon in search of n.“roguc” or “killer' elephint. was one of the thrillimg adventur raphically de- | weilbed by Mrg. st Thompson | Heton of Greenwich in her talk on | “lixperiences in Outdoor India” at | the South = Congregutionul church last wvening, the lecture being under | (he wusplees of the New Britain College ¢ No womun had ever #lnin @ rogue pachyderm, and this particulee beast had killed 18«nch and hfl w price of 10,000 rupees on its head, so Mrs, Heton was doubly jured. During (he day she sighted wll manner-of animals and birds and one dangerous mother elephant with its young, but no trace was found of the killcr and the party was forced fo turn back at dark., Mrs. Seton accused the rogue of hearing of her | scarch,for she said that the traveled | 35 milos 1] night and was beyond her reach in the morning. | jungle so swarmed with rep- | tiles and beasts that a path 40 feet wide was cut through it 40 prevent travelers from heing ambushed, but even then Mrs. Seton had a narrow escape with a -snake, which the na- tives refused to kill because “there are so many more.” She spent one night in a house where leopards had killed two men and where the floor was so covered with ants that she had to take her boots to bed wtih her. While watching a private perform- ance by a snake charmer, she say a man bitten so badly that he later died, while she herself escaped a similar fate by only two inches when the cobra sprang at her as she wds taking a photograph of it. At an- other time she was lost in the jungle among 21 kinds of animals which might have killed her, while a terri- fic electrical storm raged. This so exhausted her that when she finally reached home and the storm in- creased to a cyclone, tearing the roof from the house, she was not awakened. “America can do nothing for In- dia, but India can do much for America,” she quoted Mahatma Gan. dhi, the noted Indian nationalist, as saying to her. Gandhi's belief 1s that America, in becoming so perfect mechanically, has lost much of its spirituality, She met Gandhi twice and described him as “nofhing but a pair of eyes,” saying that there was a real reason for calling him “ma- hatma' or “‘master.” She described a Parsee burying ground, where the bodies are left ex- %osed to sun, wind, and vultures, saying that there was really a bheau- tiful meaning to this seemingly dis- gusting practice, Other adyentures related by the many-si Mrsa, Seton included a ride on @frunaway elephant, receptions by the viceroy. of India and by a maharajah who was a confirmed “woman Rater” but fell a victim to h¥r personality, and the search for a tiger. She explain- ed that she really did mot want to kill the tiger, but only to see if she could do the same with the big cat as she once had done with a bear, meeting its eyes squarely and melt- ing its ferocy into respectful good- nature and camaraderle, Her talk was illustrated with a series of unusual stereopticon slides, many of them showing Mrs, Seton herself at the scenes of the adven- tures described by her. Damage of $10,000 Caused By Blaze in New Haven | New Haven, April 16—Fire of un- | determined origin starting in the | third floor of the huilding at 146 State street occupied by the Charles | H. Puklin, general merchandise company swept through that floor and broke through the roof before it was brought under control. The loss is_estimated at $10,000, The® fire started, according to Piré Marshal Martin J. Fleming, near a quantity of sulphur match stocked in one corner of the bufld- i ready for shipment. The fire- men were handicapped by the sule phur fumes. . | No Defense Offered | By Cincinnati Detectives | « Cincinnati, Ohlo, April lfi.v—'l'l'l-‘ fimony in the cases of the three | incinnati detectives on trial for | L 1 conncetion with the liquor and narcotic graft ring was con- Inded late today. The defense sud- denly rested its case without having called any of the defendant officers 12 the stand. Arguments will be ard tomorrow. The case is ex- | peeted to be given to the jury by | noon. STEAM OUT A COLD WITH THE VAPORS OF RATILE SNAKE OIL oll Indian way and the best way to get rid of 1 cold or a tight, yheezy chest, sronchitis or asth- | MAa, is to take a Jowl of steaming ot water and| pour a. teaspoon- ‘ul of Tex Balley's Rattls Snake Ol n it Put. your | Aead over it and sréathe the strong, sowerful, penetrat. ng - vapors into he lunge: - The réliet is insfan- MAneous; these| frapors work qQuicker than any other known medi- | cines. Be sure you gqt Tex Balley's; it iy | gsed for rheumatism, catatth, neu- falgia, headache, hackache, tired feet and a hundred other uses. Di- | gections on the package; 3se, at your } Aruggist. —Adv, {Mrs. Rumsey Plans to dividual,” Richard Washburn Child, | erime situation which Mr. Child stat- | (RGN 06 Uhe cd he has undertaken (o survey, His ke ¥8, but was almost fm- [taken poison. A liner, saying that he was haviug a|March 23, A letter to the xecutors author, lawyer and former ambassu- | Albuny, N. Y. Aprll 16.=~David | i1 4rawn fn the attorney general’s accompanying the will directs how dor to Ialw sces possibilities of [Bilver of Rutherford, N. J., who|department, which wonld preseribe | the liquors ure to be distributed. firlml u‘or';‘upnon‘rmfil wrh‘:diu;; vlfl- some time ago shnulated suicide by | ten lashes per year for ecacli year| e tical Influence in the future, heljeqying his overcoat and several let- | sentenced upon conviction of rob- | 2 s sald, i an Eaterview here last ,axg):x.1l,.:alnfin:::.u JaSiginl bl bk Al | 000 MADE HOMELESS Prohibition particularly, he de- |y umnt to avoid appearing in fod- Manila, April 16.—~Twe thousand clared, has produced a condition cral court here on bootles clfurges, | A SUICIDE IN PARIS natives were made homeless by a fire which muy give rise to bootleg rings, left the Albany Jull yesterday only to Paris, April 16,—Dr, Osear Pardo, | Cadiz occidental negroes provinee, | uxerclising ponverful control over poltet oot (iito another Jegal entanglement, | an American, was found dead in « |Which destroyed 400 small houses tica through graft or influence Siiver was released under pro- SMail hotel in the suburbs of Paris here today. The fire started in a is one aspect of the "““”m”'\inlnun ot the p“up'm,‘n oath after |today. He left a letier saying he had (theater where a motion picture was He had also cut an 'being shown and a number of per- rtery 'm, bleed death. sons were Infured while leaving the orcst In U suppronsion of crime | Mediately ra-arrested on a fedoral | 1Hery 10 hib arm. biecding to death. fons were Infured white : Ihnr‘mll‘g;l" “hTm' to 8. Louls to talk |Mdietment from the Vermont '““‘\I\I"I:k:“l"lku;;::bh"| 'hmv 'ufi'é':,é:m.»"{ t‘x::.y.(':lh o ”snlfvl:r“fl'vm s gver eriminal matters with Chancels |tHet eharging violations of the tarift | ; S ik lor Horbort & Hadley of W and prohibition laws, Siiver's wife tinlostuity, Chipinar, of ‘the obtained $5,000 bond bail for him tiv9, IMmIGE of the orime lond he was released. The indict- . | ments were handed down at an ( |tober term of the Vermont federal grand jury and precede thdse on | which Silver was convicted in Al- | bany federal court. 11 face the music in Vernont as | about to be launched in Missour, Donate Big Monument By The Assocduteq I'rew Madrid, April 16.—Mrs. Mary “:II' "_‘: :"1'\"," rlir:: ‘:'x“"’ £ ”,‘,L | Harriman Rumsey, of New York, [t o hve reformed “"‘r‘;,"‘ = widow of Charles (. Rumsey, | ;1°° arges e iRengd isposad o easl Ol e W7 S e e scuptor and international polo pl er, has visited Trujillo Lo select a site for a monwment of neisco Piz zaro, conqueror of P wiich she will pesent to\the city. The statue was executgd for the San Francisco exposition, and will be cast in hronze in“the United States' before its pre-| gentation, [ o * . : 'r),:cm:nn,wr of Trujillo and mmvPalents Vote for(,‘aps And Gowns in Meriden lccal authorifles welcomed Mrs, Meriden, April 16.—Because the Rumsey and a large party of her friends, among them the Duchess of |, b |“cap and gown" costs less than full vening dress, the parents of mem- Sutherland, Thomas Hitchcock, | Mrs. Martha Hyde, and the Duke| by |bers of the senior class at Washin, {ton high have gone on record as | and Duchess of Alba. {favoring the use of caps and gowns | at the coming graduation. | y . | The attitude of the parents is re- | Eight Garages Also Are Destroyed |vealed as the result of questionaires | in Chicopee Storm |sent out by the school authorities Chicopee, Mass., April 16.—A and, incidentally, it is believed that four-family house under construction |this will settle for all time the long and eight garages were destroyed |controversy as to proper graduation by a wind of tornado strength fwhich |8arb at the local high school, swept over an outlying part of this| The parents are said to hava Glky Ite yostaraay {been two-to-one In favor of caps Workmen employed in the house, |2nd EoWNS which was owned by S, F. La Cha- | : pelle, leaped through the windows | as the building was moved from fts foundations. A minute later the structure collapsed. Trees were uprooted and electric wires wero blown down over a con- have learned the straight and nar- | row path is best.” Silver's wife said he had reformed | nd. had promised her he would | ‘never bootleg again or take part in | fllegal transportations WIND RAZES A NEW HOUSE BLOSSOM SHOW San Francisco, April 16.—A prize- winning entry in the annual exhibi- tion of the California spring blossom and wildflower association, which | opened here yésterday was flowers siderable area. No one was injured [grown hy convicts in San Quentin | 50 far as can be learnpd. The dam- |prison. The blooms, roses, were | age will total several thousand dol- |given a conscpiuous place in the lars, exhibition. In the Midst of Plenty Thousands of Children are Starving, Not atarving for food—mind you |tasteless sugar coated tablets, that | —for of that they get plenty—but |are as easy for the kids to take as| simply etarving for the want of | C4N0Y and they eure do build up the 2 youngsters in double quick time, vitamines that their entire being 18 |* So mothers, If any- of your loved eagerly craving for, | ones aren't feeling right just ask | Let us all be thankful that these | Dickinson Drug Co. or any druggist | vitamines can now be supplied and | for a hox of MeCoy's Cod Liver Ofl| that right now this vast army of | Compound Tablets — 60 tablots — weak, thin, undernourished and un- |60 cents, | derweight boys and girle can with| They start to help the poor child | the balmy sunshine days of spring|in just a fow days and they'll help and summer grow strong, robust and | you too; for you won't need to worry happy. | any more. . Nature's greatest health builder| One sickly, thin child aged 9 gain- | and strength giver is Cod Liver Ofl led 12 pounds in seven months and | —it's full of vitomines of the first now plays daily with other children. | class—everyone knows that. Splendid for any run down, weak, | But pity the poor children—how | skinny, nervous man or woman— can they take thi snasty, nauscating thousands of hoxes are sold daily— stuff that invariably vupsets their|but besure and ask for McCoy's Cod small, delicate stomachs? Liver Oil Compound Tablets—the | Most of them can't and now— |original and genuine. Try them for| thank goodness—none, of them have |30 day and if you aren't delighted | to. with the improvement get your| For now Cod Liver Oil comes in|money back, Satisfy that empty feeling between meals with this delicious simple food | OR tha mfortable mid-morning hunger—that late-afters noon fatigue—that craving for something o eat at bedtime— +Take a glass of Borden's, the Improved Malted Milk=a delight« ful combination of a light nourishin) food aad an inyiting drink. Borden's Malted Milk is « thousand times better fot you than heavy foods that spoil your appetite for regular meals and drag your digestion. Made by « new unique process, Borden's is better then any . other malted milk, too— Because Borden's is more nourishing You'll find it more su than soy other maited milk. Because Borden's is more digestible igest it quiekly and easily, \eoause the milk oasein is lly predigested—a quality no other malted milk has. Because Borden's has a better flavor You'll like it—even if ‘you've never enjoyed malted milk before. It has « delicate delicious flavor without any of the siekish sweet- ness 50 objectionabie in other malted milks. Rour druiggist serves the same delioious drink st his fountain. e’ll supply n: with Borden's Malted Mitk in 7 or 15 oz. glass isfies your hunger inetantly. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN”" and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe - by millions and prescribed by physicians for 235 years. Handy “Bayer” hoxes of 12 tablets { ~ T} rpp?? arlk 5 ‘V}. Accept only ‘“Bayer package ! Also hottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. which contains proven directions. the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetis dester of Salleyll 4 The Washtub’s Only Home We know a place where your washtub ought to be, In fact, it’s the place where all washtubs ought to be. In a museum—along with * stone-knives, mummies and other relics. That’swherewe’re putting them. Wet Wash costs least of all laundry services, but it Rives youall the days that you mighs drown in & washtub. Everything you send comen back thoroughly washed, ready to starch, iron or bang up to dry. 4c A POUND Cleansers and Dlle/a NEW BRITAIN. CONN. Voice to Voice==Face to Face THE personal element ‘is an important factor in salesmanship. Every salesman knows that much of his success in securing orders depends on his method of approach. His voice, greeting his customer over the telephone, secures for his sales message an undivided attention which may even excced that obtained in per- sonal interview, while still carrying with it the personal element of face-to-face. By telephone, the salesman's voice con- veys his personality to the man he calls. Many Connecticut firms have found seil- ing by telephone indis- putably profitable. Is there a thought in this for you ? Salés Managers and others whe fnay be interested in the THE IMPROVED MALTED Ml ~in the square package Ne tronbis 16 prapare prekages, and § pound tims. The Borden Company, Borden ! Just take « cup or bowl and ix Bor- Building, 350 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. W spoos—m den’s Malted Milk with milk (or water) and 1:°% reads 4 o jify! | work of our Commercial Service Department, and in the elficient usz of A-B and Station-to-Station Toll calls, ms; obtain full information by calling their local Exchange Manager. SOUTHERN NCW ENGLAND TELEPHONE COMPANY DELL SYSTEM Oue System - THE Oae Policy = Universal Service [N amber Five of @ serier addressed to Conneclicnt business menl . Y T 4 g el L i L Y ] i i 4».;3% e e b e S f ’f‘ L R X A 2 ff A 5. i t 2. . . - nQ o NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1925, R e e S e mm*m‘.,m . v . . | P o ( d boc nes e o th GHILD SEES DA“GERS ' I Michlgan Lonuldermg (he Bequenths Be\'eragesw l DIVORCED' AND WED IN DAY [and it had been turned over (o 1) s . Old Time Whipping Post . : agcrstown M Lo No vime 1 o0 o ot e s Don't Suffer 0F OVER-LEGISLATION e Whipping X'ost Hospitals and Churches Taking Socond Wite through the door b [ ronsing, Mies ABEl)AEIWO | Noy yobk, April 1 hetHWMO0K of | Hagorstown, Mdi Aprll 16, Hus| “Woll, tiien, lssus me & Touass 10 w‘th P"” [ thrtats of establishment of u icgul | 4 o |my wife gotten her divorce, yet?" marry Gladys M, Heuy, 18 yoars Pesmareaip | a1 ¢ 1 ikl ¢ o | Wioes and liquors, “Lought before | s 5 \ No ‘matter If you have had plles | slatus of the whipping pos n | Russell Q. ersole, 24 yeurs old, '0ldi of Beltonville, Va rmole re o0 Noars Pyramid ile Suppositories Former Ambassador o Italy Dis- | Michigan were made in the state |'he present prohibition law for med- asked the clerk.of the court here Quested, and & short 1 later the | give you t vou want from AL R ) | ———— senate yesterday. George M. Con-|iclual purposcs,” s bequeathed 10| yonterday, couple were married here the paln, iteh, straii, biseding saf cusses Teend Toward Grea M WI] s l led s 0 -d don, attorney announced he . waf | hospituls and protestant churches, | Eyversole was told that the court Eversole married his first wife :gr::‘n'l“b:x Fr':dn; at .'n& dri o Corruption, al] 0 IIlllla lllCl G having a bill drawn allowing fudges iseholarship trust funds are*provided | had just handed down, the decree, | March 4 1922 You will then know why ¥ b ) to sentence wife heaters to a cortaln [ for two southern negro schools, by |_the naticnal coast-to-coast reliance. [ 8t Louis, Apll 16,—As a result of | A ng number of lashes with the knout. !the will of Charles Willlam Trough- === e —— ealous cfforts of AmcMean legls- | Ge[s ]mo Legal Ema lemem This threat was followed by one (ton of New York, flled in the Sur- | — " | latures to regulate morals of the in- | Eientention from Benator Arthur B. Woods. Mil- [rogate's court today. Troughton died | | | | | JUDGE—MADAM: or the same goodness every day {it’s the kitchen-tested pancake flour!} Tomorrow or next week — the same rich, crisp, golden-brown pancakes as today. Never a failure! The new Gold Medal Pancake Flour never varies. For it is kitchen-tested. | test every batch by actually making pancakes! They must be uniformly perfect. Perfect pancakes every time—in a third the usual time Sincerely, Let Your 5 senses (o Crochire Judge these 4 big things d ease in = For ‘wd * ki For pure downright making . Jufi.‘..':fl.:.’: ness . . . Have you "‘fi“’ m.-:die:u ready -mixed. vertated mare delic e olt, Sinply sdd water cakes? They aredigestibe’ P00 ‘ comes frompurityand t 1 For day-in day-ou . ity . o o Today umfo!'nfwlel:ky_lhe snme rich, Jong-lifebatter . . » 5 golden-brown pancakes. "Thelast person 0 he first. i 2 cnsp. nevsr 2 800 stands up for 45 Col)iMed'.“’,::"‘,,,,k'flw, jlogt “That comes from €7 varies. Itis 1 minues. A0 ents. actly mixed v Other Kitchen-tested Gold Meda! Foods: Gold Medal Cake Flour 1 Gold Medal Wheat Cereal Gold Medal Purified Bran ew.c.ca The New - GOLD MEDAL PANCAKE Created by the millers of GOLD MEDAL FLOUR SEE THE FAMOUS GIBSCN REFRIGERATOR DISPLAY IN OUR WINDOWS A greatly reduced price for this famous Gibson pounds Four doors with ocks. Seam- less poreclain interior. Ilounded ners, Floor flush with sill ron ice compart- *aluminum one- Non-rustabl metal scasoned ation, in- TheGibsonkeepsfood fresher THris applies to every Gibson. The Gibson refrigerator is so well built and saves Corp so effectively that it able food fresher. Choose the Gibson to suit your needs with confidence. It will serve you well for years. You will always be glad you bought it. he ideal place to keep all perish- We invite vou to look at the complete line of Gibsons which we are displaying. It's a line we are proud to offer our value-secking cus- tomers. You will find just the size you need at a price you will want to pay. Come in to-day.’ ~ WE ARE SOLE AGENT FGR THE FAMOUS- ibson REFRIGERATOR HOME FURNISHING CO. R. R. ARCADE