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PERKINS GIRL IN WARREN S. STONE, WEDDING GIFTS A Selection of FOSTORIA GLASS is sure to please the bride Gift Dept. THE DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN I e You Can Get Along in a Pinch— Tk snug fit of suit as gas T $15.00 .. Plannel ‘Tronsers Fair Isle Sweaters HORSFALLL 9399 Msylum Stre Harttord “it Pays to Buy Our hind’ = GATCH YO YOUTHS AFTER WD RIDE Conple Finally Are Arrested at Montville SEIBERTS PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM STRENGTH BOYS FOR AND GIRLS children need plenty of pure, sweet Your milk as much as they need the fresh air and the sunshine. We are ready to serve you ESEIBERT & SON 437 PARK ST PHONE 1720 PNEVWBRITAIN, COMN MANE SURE ITS SEIBERTS' >t Will Again Take Witness Stand Monday 13 (A—At nd of the first week of her the trial New York, June or the murder of Thomas Temple- her suitor, ins Is ruyed 17-year-old Dorothy secking to calm her for Monduy's orden! stund in her own be nerye of fr e was carried from sterday tria compelling ljournment of Micha 86, and married, was on the stand when the diminu- ndant swoone ( ers s man, a truck driver. While ather favored Templeton as her preferred Conners. lle s | Conners, to theft ing was said At Lrought fr ious term Me He Attarney 1 a mpled piec nt of the witness, er saw It hef Mrs, Corne - this Dotoliyet ing at Dorothy, & ped back McDenald con- by the girl from s a rust e an et up, > note writte ew W ense contends at Tem- was shot aceident father we of a rey carried to protect at the girl = for possession olver Darothiy said she herself from vinlence Mrs ONE WAY T0 CURE BEING WIDE AVAKE (heshire Tnventor Claims Pan- acea Tor Insomnia hands Connera, lLond ] hioned folks I 2o on eourting tom sheep as nient to half of the iny an induce the claims are realiz nior of a relicye new ma- lesigned 1o insomnia ictims of all t cir 1is novel contrivance patented re inventor afte ccently ung L) ears an attempt ymopRth colors to the treatment 1o going e sleep producing of ex- perimenti nts o adupt the scie or relief by repre e of ¢ of sleep! user 0l can e retina of the posed to induce sleep most restless Sons. irtherniore tus he is easily durir & no {1 effc on the « rson time e rays ha <ays the inventor. " FAINT N COURT LB OR MAN; DIES (Continued from First Page) able bullding largest offic of New York, the ullding in the world, Started As Fireman When Warren 8. Stone completed his academic education in May, 187y his father wanted him to tuke up the study of law, while the son was inclined toward surgery. As of compromise, if it may be that, the son, in September of the began fiving a locomo- ive on the Rock Islund ruilroad out of Lldoy Whether he sacri- 1 a distinguished career in law surgery will remain unanswered vork he chose eventually i internatfonally known ind 4 leader in two widely diversi- fled ficlds——as head of an interna- tional lubor organization and pr dent first nationul bank in Americ: a sort called same year of lubor's One of the characteristics of Mr Sione in doing a thing was a de- termination fo do it as well as uny could. In that spirit he began locomotive and in that continued, although pro. He worked five fir- he was promoted to Then he rounded out a quarter century on the road by putting in 19 years und threc months at the throttle in freight and ssenger hie and s slow years nine months at the ing fore engineer. service. rough all those years Mr. Stone had innate executive ability, for the display of which he had little oppor- tunity in the locomotive cab. But be lad shown it in the councils of his fellow engincers and while still & his job in the cab was calle \ in August, 1 to il the position of wd chief of the In ternational Brotherhood of Locotio tive Engineers, which had heconu vacant by the death of Grand Chief P. M. Arthur while delivering an ad s at Winnipeg, Man. Up to the he started sveland to one never for Mr. f Chicago. up his had been east Did Good Work his administration Mr. onted with a serious railroad dissatistied new Farly in workers with their The handled in the o grouped the ortation tems of tl coun- fry into western and south- i After reaching vith the railroads in the 5 Jils negotiations wstern section be- agreenents agreement s of tliose Always Kept Word of the engur Stone took an ac of the ations for all negoth eputation for yrd and never / vand ehief re brot M. tive rai the atior although he g [labor leaders in the country he had |gained the distinetion of never hav- ing been called upon to lead a strike. [1e was quoted once as having sald: |1t is & fundamental principle with- lnm which no labor organization can hope to exist, that it must carry out its contracts,” | | One of Mr. Stone's early achieve. nents in behalf of the engineers was | the erection of the brotherhood 14- story office building in Cleveland. It |paid for itself in ten years, at the | end of which time It was valued at more than $3,000,000, Another fea- ture of lis administration was com- pulsory lifo insurance for all engin- eers. During more than 20 vears us \ef executive of the brotherhood it increascd from a membership of 48,000 with $69,000,000 Insurance in ‘cfh-c' to nearly 90,004 wmiembers car- rying approximate!™ ¢200,000,000. of iife. sickness and accldent insurance. | With wide experience in money matters us a result of having han- dled millions of dollars of brother- hood dues and insurance and having made an exhaustive study of ‘co- operative banks throughout the world, Mr. Stone presented a plan | for an engineers' co-operative bank at the triennial convention in 1918 | and was authorized to start such & | pank in Cleveland, It was opened | November 11, 1920, with a capital | of $600,000, and a surplus of $100,- | Three years luter its resources were nearly $25,000,000, This was | ollowed the establishment of several other banks throughout the country, controlled by the brother- lood, and in addition a substantial | intercst was acquired in the Empire | Trust Company of New York. | Because the brotherhood eo-oper- itiye bank couid handle only a lim- ited amount of husiness under the restrictions of the national banking laws, the Drotherhood Holding Company, conce Stone, was incorporated in 000, the stock being sold entirely to engineers. A year later the Broth- | rhood Investment company was in- corporated with a capital of $10.-! 000,000, The brotherhood retained | 51 per cent of the common stock of the enterprises. A tory build- ing for the bank was erected in Cleveland and the Brotherhood | Building Association acquired a 17- | story building in the same city. | Mutual Benefits Under Mr. Stone’s guidance the | engineers individuals invested | more than $2,000,000 in coal mine properties In Kentucky and West Virginia and financed a mail order store on a profit-sharing basis fo | provide themselves with the neces- sitiex of life. Mr. as born near Ainsworth, Towa, 1560, a boy ho farm in the summer a ttended a country gchool three the winter., He rounded out fhis pre- | iminary cdueation with study at Washington Ac Washington, | Towa, and at Western College, Towa. | He a member of the Broth- orhood of Locomotive Engineers in 1884, six months after being pro- | moted to engineer. Tlis ability and | hig interest in the organization was d by on a farm February 1., rd on the | Slone was wor! q months in Ty adem becane rer of his local division. made head of the local vanes committee and later chaie- | recogniz as secre- fary-tr 1 A MOTHIER said to us the other day: “I wish T had economized on something besides MILK whe You will think £0, oo, some day. n my children were growing vp.” MOORLAND FARM GOLDEN GUERNSEY MILK i~ what the children need. Raw favor all there, Drop vs C. R. WEIDMAN, Supt. Summer Vacation Trips Sea, River, Lake and Rail BERMUDA Two Days from New All-Year-"Round Vacationists’' Paradise other resort combine York nuda's Iovely scenle ous climate, widest variet outdoor ports, or the pleas of ble nehi mosphere iet, as er. Jor h ceptury flower lorseme rms les i returr BY WATER TO QUEBE( Thonsand Islands—St. Lawrence River Raplds—Montreal—Que hec—Ansable Chasm and the Hudson River Nine Days New York hack to New York £05.00 Tours to Europe, South America, Egypt, the Holy Land, Around-the-World Cruises We represent all steamship lines. By — Twelve-Day Cruise to PORTO RICO £150.00 and up t'rom New York Every Saturday WEST INDIES CRUISES I'rom New York Every Saturday $£325.00 and up Twenty-two Days WASHINGTON Three Days New York back to New York £30.00 NOVA SCOTIA BOSTON—YARMOUTH HALIFAN—DIGBY—ST, JOHUN Every Sunday or Thursday Eleven Days New York back to New York £104.00 THE ST. LAWRENCE Niazara Falls—Toronto—Thou- and Islands — Montreal—Lake Champlain and Lake George Nine Days \ew York back to New York Seattle or Vancouver and Return $160.00 and up Fourteen Days milk Vitamines, proteins and a postal TEL. 920-13 JAMAICA CRUISES From New York Fvery Wednesday £200.00 and up Fifteen Day VOYAGE ON INLAND SEAS VIA GREAT LAKES TRANSIT 10N Tri-Weekly Service from Buffalo Eleven Days New York back to New York b 00 OLD VIRGINIA WASHINGTON — NORFOLK— OLD POINT COMFORT—NAT- URAL BRIDGE—LURAY CAVERNS Seven Days New York back to New York CITY Six Days New York hack to New York £50.00 THE HUDSON RIVER DAY LINES OFFER those » contemplate summer vacation a number of t appeal of ita York vour own great With New a oint and desires divect ing genius it is possible to mak to be vears. ea vour vacatior memorable for many We maintain an agency in New York and are therefore in a position to obtain passports and vises for our clients at short notice. Call or Write for Literature and Sailing Lists Geo. A. Quigley, 308 Main St. Second Floor Telephone 1052 ) man of the central commities of ad- Justment for the entire Rock Island system. When he became head of the brotherhood he made his home in Cleveland and took an active part in all Its ecivic enterprises, being es- pecially intesested In educational affairs. Tn October, 1884, ried Miss Carrle Agency, lowa. fr. Stone mar- Newell of BIG COLLECTION STAYS NN, YORK Metropolitan Museum Gets Gift From Rockefeller New York, June 13 (®—George Grey Barnard's $2,000,000 collection of Gothie art, the Cloisters, for which se' al citles and individuals in the country have been bidding, will remain in New York as the gift of John D. Rockefeller, Jr, to the Metropolitan museum of art. Mr, Rockefeller pald $600,000 for the collection, building and land in the nerthern part of Manhattan island, Salvaged in many instances from pigsties nd dry stone walls of France by Mr. Barnard, a sculptor, the col- lection consists of between 600 and 700 pieces of sculpture, painting and other works, mostly of the French Romanesque and Gothic perfod. Twenty years ago when Mr, Barnard started the collection as a hobby. I"rench peasants regrded the ruins of Cloisters s rubbish. After he had shipped the pieces out of France, the government forbade exportation of such relics. Mr. Rockefeller has many times browsed among the sculptures, capi- It brotherhood of the |knows practically every item in the |colluetion which includes a4 monu- |mental torso of the crucified Christ | {and statue of the Virgin and child. |"“The eity of Los Angeles had raised $500,000, it was reported, toward |Luying the Clotsters. Tndividuals in | “hicago were also negotlating with |Mr. Barnard who decided to sell be- |eause too much time and thought |was being taken from his work, He {refused many private offers because | he wanted the public to benefit from |his efforts. The bullding will be | |opened In the fall after the objects have been catalogued. PREFERRED DEATH T0 SEPARATION This s Explanation of Wellesley | Fams Tragey i Wellesley Farms, Mass, June 13 | @—Because they preferred death | | rather than separation during the | | summer vacation, Sterling Mills, 18- year-olf high school student, and | Pricilla Amidon, his 16-year-old | | sweetheart, agreed to dle together last Tuesday. Detalls of the sulcide pact were obtained by Assistant District Attor- | ney Dudley D. Ranney of Norfolk | | county after he had questioned the | voy for several hours in the New- !ton hospital yesterday. Mills, who is |in a critical condition with a bullet | wound In his head, said that the girl shot herself and that he then took |the revolver, which was her father's, and turned it on himself. | Mills sald he met the girl on the | way from school 'last Tuesday by an arrangement of several days before. 1 I'hey went to her house and got thi revolver and then walked into the woods off Glen road. He fired the §un once as 4 tesf and gave it - to Priscilla, 8he shot herself through the head, Mills said he then pleked up the weapon and turned it on him- self, Assistant District Attorney Rans uey #aid the boy's story seemed true |and unleas there are untoward de« velopments there will be no prosecu- tion. Mills, who has Leen uncon- sclous three days, does not know that Priscilla 1s dead and will not b#otd untll bis condition improves. Captains of the 814 East India company's traders shared heavily in voyage profits, Turkish Laws in 8; Headed for Jm Pile Belrut, Syrla, June 13 (M=The Ottoman code, which hus been the law of the land in Syria for wev- eral centuries, soon will be repluced by the French system. Under what {s known us the judicial fusion de- cree, comprehensive changes are to be introduced into the legal systers substituting French procedure for ‘Curkish, M. Vergelot, sponsor of the ju- Qiclal tusion decree, has arrived here (rom Krance. Assisted by six other I'rench maglstrates he will !uodlry the new laws. Upon comple- | tlon of the work he will assume | his oftice as the legal udviser to the } high commissioner. MR. BRIDEGROOM What Are You Going to Give Your June Bride? Can you give her anything she will appreciate more than a thought of a home of her own, by pre- senting her with a membership in the New Britain Co-operative Savings and Loan Association, which will automatically act as a savings account, until you later desire to build or buy a home—then you can secure a most liberal mortgage which you re- pay just like rent. How much does it cost to start? One Dollar a month or more, as you wish. So, before you start the honeymoon see our Secretary. 210 National Bank Bldg. Phone 521 First Time in History/ A Fine, Powerful Sedan for 5.Passengers . . . at a Price Never Before Thought ossible . . . Now Every Family Can Enjoy Real Closed Car Comforts. New Standard Sedan $655 J0.b. Toledo This is the first time in the history of A chassis proved by millions of miles automobiles that a full-size, five-passen- ger Sedan with sliding gear transmission has been offered at so low a price! A very roomy, very comfortable Sedan —with extra-wide doors—fine cloth upholstery—nickel-finish interior fit- tings—a streamline body with a beauti- ful satin finish., in the hands of over 250,000 owners— a 27 horsepower engine—axles of Molybdenum steel—smooth-riding pat- ented springs —big, safe 10-inch brakes —disc-type clutch —foot accelerator— 52 Weeks toPay All Steel Touring, $495; All Steel Coupe, $635; All Steel Sedan, $715; f. 0. b. Toleda. Worlds Lowest Priced Cars aith Sliding Gear Transmission 127 R. C. RUDOLPH Cherry St. OVERLAND Tel. 2051-2