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- PERKINS GIRL IS . HUND Gty Faces 10 to 20 ‘Years on Man- slaughter Conviction New York, June 18 (#—Convicted of manslaughiter In & Jury of fathers, Daretay Perkins, 17-year-old bohbed blonde, who worked for a newspaper &3 an cdvartistag clerk, i Jall today awaiting wentence, AL a convivial otine party in hor Grosnwich Village home during n scuffle with her father over a pistol she shot Thomas Templeton, a young bachelor natlonal guards- man whom she had rofused to marry, It was the state's conten. tion that she was trying to shoot her father, who objected to her rela- tions with Mickey Connors, a 40- voar-old truck driver now in jail for wife beating. The father want- el _hér to marry Templeton. ‘When the jury returned its ver- dict after deliberations of two hours during which some jurors ar- guad for a first degree murder cons vietlon, the defendant fainted. She was led fram the courtroom soh- bhing for her mother. The jury re- fused to recommend mercy. Sentence will be fmposed Monday. The maximum penalty for first de- gree manslaughter, of which she was convicted is imprisonment for 10 to 20 years, The minimum is within the discretion of the court. “A verdict like this may stop women from shooting men in the future,” sald Judge Mclntyre in praising the jury. “Too many times have women appeared in these courts on murder charges and ap- pealed to men's natures. In many cases they have escaped punish- ment." In her testimony the girl denied firing the pistol. She sald it was fired accidentally when she was try- ing to take it away from her father. who she said had threatenéd to NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1925, the daughter of a dru to live and dio i misery The defendant admitted four glasdes of gin and whiskey at, tha party. MOTORMAN GAUSE OF BAD ACCIDENT “1" Gar Operator Stops to . Pick Up Glove kerd, born haying two of MORE LOVE NOTES ARE MADE PUBLIC MeClintock-Pope Missives Print- ed by Chicago Paper Chlcago, June 18 (#=~The Chicago Tribune today printed another series of letters: written by Ieabelle Pope to her flance, Willlam Mec- Clintock, who died last winter of typhold fever. and for whose death William D, 8hepherd now is on trial on a charge of murder, Shepherd was McClintock's foster father. The, letters were written while McCiTntock was at Dartmouth col- lege, before thelr engagement was announced. The only reference to the Shepherds in these letters is con- tained in this sentence, written May 12, 1924: “No, we couldn't announce any- thing, probably not for some time— certainly not this Christmas, though I surely would like to. One reason is that our marrlage is too far dis- tant and another because of your New York, June 18 % —The stop- ping of a motorman to pick up a glove was held responsible today for an elevated train mceldent in which 40 persaps were slightly injured out- side thé Jerome avenue and Ande #on avehue station near the Yankee Stadlum In the Bronx last night. Morris J. Ryan, motorman of a train that crashed into the rear of another, told Distriet Attorney M Geeban that a second or two before the accldent he dropped his glove and stooped to plek it up, being in a hurry to get home, Consequently, he said, he had his eyes off a train that had halted ahead of his own, He was arrested on a charge of criminal.neg- ligence. family. =~ When we announce it, I A city fireman after the crash|Will of course have the dinner freed I from his cabin and with | party, either I or one of my family.” Some excerpts from the letters of Miss Pope follow: “It is proved, to myself at least, that I love you far more than you love me. You will say it isn't true, but it Is, dear.” whether 1 feel like a two fire extinguishers put out a fire that started. None of the cuts and bruises was| serious enough to warrant injurcd passengers remainiog in hospitals, you pride, jealousy, anything, and it may i % “You asked about MU[;H A"V!GE IS Hatiouldgot out or tiok \ eoifish cad when I say no, for I want you to have a good time, but HIVEN [AWYFRS truthtully, T feel funny when you J | —_— be all of that. 1 only know this, f] . | that whether foolish or not, conven- {Those in S(}Opes (ase Find Theip tion has handed 1 down ‘that the do. Call 1t selfishness, foolish | ; man just doesn't, that's all. ; Mail Flooded Every girl T speak to feels the same way., It just hurts a little, that's all. Really dear, it Not A Dull Time Rounder — Stumbled into the | dressing room at the Joyous theater | by mistake last night. Bounder—What was going on “Oh, nothing to speak of."—c, N. Y. Mercury, today, dearl You used that very | bossy tone that I don't like and AB R which makes me more stubborn you, darling, more than words can %0 unhappy." f . ' logg's Mexican Policy administration’s contlaued support Federation of Labor, and Senator |logg of his apprehension that the support a “policy savoring of dol- you baven't heard of the new treat- |tp a situation that might lead to than ever, Most of the letter was tell.” S Washing June 48 (P—Secre- {of the Mexican government . has |Claude A. Swanson of Thousands Bless Dr. Leonhardt, the slatement might encourage revolu- It you think that the surgeon's|jar diplomacy.” ment known as Dr. Leonhardt's military Intervention in Mexico.” glven over to scoldings, as you'd The latter letter montions that she | tary Kol recesd pronounces |drawn criticism from Willlam elgn relations committee, Physiclan Who Discovered This | '1008r1és 1n Moxico and he issued a knife Is the only method of escape | It is unthinkable, he said, that HEM-ROID. | He characterized as “mystifying and scold & little ‘ehild, I love had made another man “so sad and ‘PI‘GS. Greene oblecls ',0 Kel' ment of conditions ¢+ govern the Ho to B ish |Green, president of the American Mr. Green has advised M. Kel- warning that Amerlean labor will not b s Mapas varning that American labor w from the misery of piles, it's because | “our government should contribute i This Doctor's treatment 1s in-|iost disturbing” the unexpected- ternal. By experimenting for years ness of the secretary's statement he discovered the exact cause of und the “general implication as to piles and then went further and responsibility of the labor compounded a remedy that would | movement.” : remove the cause, Officials of the American and Dr. Leonhardt wants every suffer- er to benefit Wy his discovery and so that there will be no doubting or | Mexican Iabor federations will con- fer here July 3 on the immigration | question and that meeting, he sald, delay, all drugglsts are authorized |will afford an opportunity for to sell HEM-ROID with guarantee “claritying the situation." that it will do as stated or money | nator Swanson, at Richmond. back. On that honorable basis sufferer should secure a package of the situation and expressed Dr. Leonhardt's HEM-ROID today. [that it offers “serious de ared he did not approve of Sec- [ Virginta, | | ranking democrat of the scnate for- | for the United Stat should have been through diplomatic channels, he declared, | adding his opinton that the Kellogg | statement served to strengthen the Calles government with the Mexican public. i Bale of arms and ammunition by | the Harding administration to the ! Obregon government in Mexico, he | declared 1o be the “greatest mis- take” “We refused to recognize | the Bolshevik government in Rus- | [sa" he said, “yet we aceepted the | | Obregon regime in Mexigo." | i The discus. | slon IISABLED VETS WILL AID LEGION \ppreciate Eddy-Glover Post Offer of $1,360 The following open letter has been | sent to the Eddy-Glover post of the | American Leglon by the committee and trustees In charge of the Dis- |abled Army Veteran's Camp Kund ;l)rm‘. ageepting the offer of the | Legion to underwrite the drive funa for the New Britain quota of $1,250 for the camp at Niantic to be held during August, It was the desire of the committee and the trustees | that their drive, and that of the | Amerian Legion in no way conflict. | The letter follows: Commander Harry Scheuy, Eddy- Glover Post, | “American Legion, | “New Britain, Conn, ‘Dear 8ir: “Kindly be advised that at a com- €very |retary Kellogg's method in handling | mittee meeting held last evening in belief | Mayor Paoneasa's office the com- possibilities | |sible thing to avold & conBict in the |1t his organization will, 13 e i o T T A SRR S PR drive for the Disabled Army Vet. MAYOR A. M. PAONESSA, erans’ camp to be held at Niantie during the month of August: Voted, to aceept your tender of a check for $12.60, that being the minimum amount New Britaln was expected to | “Trustee.” for the camp Commander Phillip D. Ross of the “The committee and trusteos ap- | Disabled Army Veterans and a mems preciate your generous donduct and |ber of the drive committes wishas ulso appreciate that it 1s a very sen- 1o announcé through the committes . K in every drives, The committee and trustees | way assist the legion to reach ite also pledge théir support to the Le- |objective and urges the friends of &lon drive and assure you they will | (1o Disabled Army Veterans to send do everything lo their power to ald |in (heir contributions te the trease m‘uflrl,.-m]» in ralsing its quota. {urer of the Lagion drive, Clrtis K& ‘Slgned: Sheldon, e MICRARL. . BAMNON, |notach pre ofi New Biafy “hatrman of Drive Committee, “WALTER MURPHY, “Secretary of Drive Committee, | “PHILIP D. ROSS, “Commander, D. A. V., ‘® 11 Dependable y | "uouzu; VANCE, | "GEORGE A. QUIGLEY, | ralse Italy had 700,000 visitors in 1928, Rickets are due to lack of sune | shiue. 3 | Jgagmg Powder never spoils a baking. It is so easy to work with that you need not be an ex- pert cook to make good, nourishing, delicious hot breads, cakes, ete., if you use RUMFORD THE WHOLESOME BIIAKING OWDER mittee and trustees in charge of the Flavor it does not Affect~ Proportions Because are Correct. shoot Connors. She said she loved | Templeton, but admitted Intimate | Winchester, Tenn., June 15. (#)— relations with Connors. | A8 usual in the case of famous trials, “She's, too glib; she's the smart [the mail box of the judge who will doesn’t matter a great deal, for I love you and trust you to do the right thing by me."” young woman of today,” said the prosecutor in arguing to the jury. Defense counsel pleaded for her as “a product of the tenements and WOMAN 80 ILL WASHED DISHES SITTING DOWN Mrs.Ashcroft’s Remarkable Recovery After Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound e i ey o e workasI could not stand because of nervous sat down most of the time and did what I could do in thatway—aswash- ing dishes, etc. One day a book de- scribing Lydia E. Pinkham’s medi =i cines was put in my mail-box. I saw how the Vege- table Compound had helped others so I gaveit a trial, I had to take about a dozen bottles before I gained my strength but I certainly praise this medicine, Then I took Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Blood medicine for poor blood. 1 was cold all the time. 1 would be #0 cold 1 could hardly sit still and in the palms of myhands there would be drops of sweat. I also used the San- ative Wash and I recommend it also. You may publish this letter and I will gladly answer letters from womenand advise my neighbors about these med- icines.”” —Mrs, HARRY ASHCROFT, 632 Beech Avenue,Covington, Kentucky. Fli the bearing-down | and abdomen, . I | |preside .at the evolution law test 0 Lt nooiyiletier fromiyeu case at Dayton, July 10, and of other |persons connected with the litiga- [tion, recently have heen overflowing |with unsolicited communieations per- {tdining to the coming struggle. | Attorney General Stewart said thit | Ws mail was overloaded with ap- | [plications from lawyers from all | | Warts of the country nrging that they | be permitted to take an active part on ona side or the other. Judge John T. Raulston alsa reported a bombardment of communications, ny of them apparentiy from \ks. Some of thae letters he read, but others wers so incoherent and | illegible that he hundled them to- {gether and placed them In his ob- | solete file. M. Stewart in a- statement said that ho feared that the legal phase lof the case was about to be lost | lght of. explaining that the question | {nvolved was the validity of the Ten- | pessee law prohibiting the teaching | [of evolution.i “The questiogs Involved fn such a } ath ubs. bmm S s | all porcelaing - leyal Americans. The line-up certain- | SmOOth and ‘fanaticism V8. Iy has the color of oA | tolerance.’ ** : h | In u statement to newspapermen S lnlng | ttanooga, John' T. wnt, decluren that | yesterday at C Scopes, the defen RINSO dissolves completely while he was a b er in evolutio! -—nothing to mar the fine he also was a Ch glazed surface of porcelain. | that the Dbi Just wonderful cleansing suds | He ox 1 the opinion that there | that dissolve away every bit was no conflict between science and of dirt. Use it, too, for dishes, | religion. T i pots and pans, linoleum, floors foueaii ppLica 1on ] and weodwork, position as teacher in the Rhea | county High school next term will | ) not be aocted upon until after the > trial, it was stated. At the same time, Walter White, superinténdent of | schools, and prosecutor of the case, | said that he would not recommend | any onc as a teacher who was not Paoal » a fundamentalist | v P O Coleirbien, St es will always find a parking place Spraying Flit on garments kills P g IMPORTANT CHANGE GET rid_of dangerous, filthy flies. Use Flit. Flit spray clears the house in a few min- utes of mosquitoes and disease- bearing flies. It is clean, easy and safe to use. Kills Household Insects Flit spray also destroys bed bugs, roaches, ants, and insect eggs. The eracks and crevices where insects hide and breed are readily reached by Flit sp and their larvae which eat Extensive tests showed that lit did not stain or injure the most delicate fabrics. A Scientific General Insecticide Flit is the result of exhaustive re- search by expert entomologists and chemista. More than 70 formulas were tested on various household insects be- fore Flit was finally perfected. Flit is a 1009 effective insecticide containing no inactive (inert) ingredients. Try Flit in your homa. For sale everywhere STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY) AN IN PoLicy TUDEBAKER herewith announces the discontinnance of the custom of - presenting a new line of automobiles each year. Instead of bringing Stude- baker Cars dramatically up-to-date once in twelve months, we shall keep them up-to-date all of the time—with every improvement and refinement made avail- able by our great engineering and manufacturing resources. This policy not only directly benefits present Studebaker owners, but it also enables purchasers of new cars to obtain models that are always modern—without the necessity of waiting for annual changes, and without the danger of their new cars becoming obsolete. ACK of this new policy is an amazing story—of interest to everyone who owns or expects to own an automobile. # The dramatic success of the present line of Studebaker Cars S > is one reason for this important change. Month after month we keep breaking records —sales keep piling up. This year we will sell almost four times as many automobiles as we produced in the big boom year which followed the war. Owners report endurance records, even beyond our greatest expectations. Out in the rugged mountain regions where Studebaker sells four times its normal proportion of cars, owners talk about these models in the most extravagant terms. In 1924 the Corporation’s sale of repair parts dropped to $10 per car per year. Mechanical stamina under severe usage —remarkable performance under the most difficult travel conditions —these are the qualities for which Studebaker Cars have long been noted. Surely, these significant facts prove beyond any shadow of doubt that Studebaker Cars are so soundly engineered 2nd manufactured and so envinently satfs. factory in the hands of owners, that drestic annual changes are not required. Improvements and refinements will be made from time to time. New features will be added. When our engineering department (maintained at a cost of more than bhalf a million dollars a year) devises an ime provement in any model, it will be made without regard to the calendar. As in the past, we shall continue to pioneer vital betterments that have proved their merit through prac- tical use. Alert, aggressive, receptive to new ideas, resourceful in executing them, guided by scientific research and spurred by imagination, the Studebaker organization proposes to build better motor cars than ever before. Now you may buy a Studebaker on any day of the year with the confident “assurance that the sturdy, thrifty, one-profit car you drive away will not be stig- matized by any act of ours as a ““last year’s model.” Today, in even more generous measure than in the past, Studebaker Cars offer the utmost value for the money. THE STUDEBAKER CORPORATION OF AMERICA, SOUTH BEND, INDIANA STUDE MOTO BAKEPR RECARS Thisisa Stua"ebaker Yeor