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ECLECTIC BOARD MEMBERS ‘FIRED’ Governor Acts After 85 Licenses Are Restored Hartford, 27 (A—Tb tire membership of the state eclec- June en- tie medical examining board was yesterday Governor effective board bad notified by displaced 1 next Wednesday, bull sut not until the fifty-five doctors, whose licens \cre revoked at the instance of the | Holden grand jury that their li- es had been restored e Health Commissioner Stan- Osborn laid uefore Attorney Healy Jetter which he the eclectic ctfully demanc health department Ations ot these doc- the ground that no ad been pro- ey H General depart- ternative but to issue fied by powerless licenses un- had unanim- such action, | for a case where the eclectic considered and re- iation for the and ordered partment to return the as ceent enses Acting on ! 2 t the at- I ommis- board h council’s next orney gen cioner info the eclectic hat its 4 to the meeting Meanwhile. doi whose licenses the fol- eclectic vere revo eivin m the of our board has o informy you that the lectic medical exam- s officially resc “tion rning license to 1is state and t i1s restored the conee They notified state 1o this effect.” re eclectic board's ydation for the disharment practice of the fifty-five doc- hrou t about by reor- d itself Three of the doctors whose licenses were re- toked were appointed to the exam- ining board hy Frenk E. Webb of Bridgeport doctor whose | license wag revoked. acting as presi- Connecticut Eclectic Dr. John O. Perry and Dr. James E. who were on the from ganizing MRS. WINNIFRED MASO. anothier dent of the FROM THE INSIDE Medical society of New Haven Hair ot Bridgeport board when revocations were recommended, remained. the thre new members being Medestin Cop- | polo of New Haven, Anthony .| Campo of Stamford and Raymond . Prisque of Danielson | Winnifred Mason Huck. L | congresswoman and the first wom- the |an to preside over the house of | representatives, got herselt tenced to prison Guiltless of any sen- crime, she sought answers o the questions— Are our prisons humane Can a girl, crushed by her men, regain her place in society? He is her first story written for the Herald ANOTHER TYPE OF CONCRETE MADE Said to Reduce Cost of Building (Operations tellow BY WINNIFRED MASON HUCK Representatiye from Tllinois glancing toward y corner of t room she prepared to search me. 1 stepped gingerly jark floor to the hat rack. ¢ A wild assortment of feminine gear confronted me. One peg From that high van- usty cockroach \iewed to Cong our matron sald e cell as Across the (A—An acrated much cheaper London ne dweliing. said to be as tage point, a the world. One or brick atiess been d at the Empire exhibition whict May 9, and attracted much attention amon ntists and hous- ing xperts interested in solving building shor n England. | process was developed n cost t cither woo! housas British opened -eved glance of welcome m ed off into shot at nd scut: ark. of stale tobacco smoke, t of rotting food in vermin-infested corners of the accosted every brea in used in culiar me at hard. and, it! manity pervaded all Have you any money the matron. As I showe 2 asked ocketbook not al greeting dismay- the cockroach led me into some ing anticipations “Ts t all?" she spiclous: B asked sus- mixture W hic) veast cork. ned on inside * is pos- I said, looking un- a con- ompared ke wood, and ca impervious t P searching GARVEY The Door Clangs ailey of 2 William J Margaret Gariey Providence Monday Joseph's churc officiate. ats. to the that soon the rats e cor- street, mornir eyes were getting used and I thoug as wel at St Miss will Alice be Gar- e will sister of t best man. as eyes shone in th the room bride groom ¥ nose, ne acclimated hat followed place however. and du r became g the days breath T took in that s sting on my memory In the halt cerned light giris watching me witk AN GONE! RUB SOBE, RREDNATIG, =% B y mingd e colored knees shook ran man rheumatism ue will | inals Stop “dosing” ught of how It's pain only. St stop ¥ny pain, and not o tism case in fifty requires treatment. Rub soothing. pe ! ing St. Jacobs Oil right on ten- der spot, and by the time you say Jack Robinson—out eomgs the rheu- matic pain and distress. St. Jacobs 1 Oil is a harmless rheumatism lini- | sit ment which never disappoints, end doasn’t burn the skin. It takes pain soreness and stiffness from aching ;joints, muscles and bones; stops sci- | atica, lumbago, backache and neu- ralgia. ’ Limber up' Get a mall trial bott i of oid-time, honest St. Jacobs Oi trom any drug store, and in a mo- he fres ¢ aches and stiffness. Dox't suffer! R Jacobs Oi & rheuma- waiting t 1| of the gr ked arou There a ce somewhat I saw a floor leaner 1 door ot looked rest The cockroach w me faded into insignific: the scene that presented n the ce A Million Koaches A million wan HUCK ATOR WILLIAM E. MASON, WHO & RIGHT: JUDGE FRAN TO SIX MONTHS IN THE STATE REFORMATORY A T MAI tormer , it And the stench of cooped-up hu- | FORMER C! URED HER O W S L. SSWOMAN ANT ARREST IN ( STEVE OF CLE Wrath seized me. ¥ fought for my | wi right to a géat in the cell, snapping t them here and with my very own. fingers, controlling my horror of them in my rage to dis Their nonchalance infuriated me, 1 hated them because they did not scurry out of sight when I entercd I should have liked to build a bon- | fire under a thousand of them, as they promenaded up and down - iron wall. But T reached the point where T could have stepped on one. 1 fought for the seat, and 1 got 1 did not enjoy it, but I did sit here and wonder how I could e have been afraid of bugs. Life had moved sw within the last hodr. For vears I had wanted to sce th a jall from the fnmate's for months I how I might do it day a good friend said in presence a of the things elt ut persons who were cken-hearted to prosecute t who wronged them. 1t people stole show them! the world to jail, i thing he did My Opportunity A few da) my opy ame. His car was standir thars never er iftly for me oint of vic schemed my few he too 105e he'd from hin f it was the last g att irb, His new coat was inside, and the door was unlocked. 1 saw him con cening his pac " he said at my touch of recogniz s the big exciten { him of m inside secret am- of at I was expecting him gt rcat of a n his fac et's go to whole busi- girls ewered, mand, the sS flesh or to my and a a new A { He'd send any thief in | of the hurts she re CONGRESSWOMAN HUCK GETS SELF ARRESTED FOR PETIT LARCENY ) DPAUGHTER OF JRDER TO VIEW P . LLAND, WHO SENTENCED F IYSVILLE, OHIO0, re their crafty houghts writhed A scuffle, a flesh’ brought me the impact In t outer iceman room the matron bringing was a sort match, ree-for-all wrest 1e three plunge The po n and the m of their str ng e woman pri; recling velocity into one Livid Rage nd made med in her face bolt nto a storm of st 1 not imagined r fury mere trifle in comparisor ved k to my cell, place w i obscenity? not instead of | un- | had dead to roam rp com- of suddenly in of | week In advance | Table STUDY OF SUN 18 VERY IPORTAN Regarded as Great *Aid in Weather Forecasting Washington, June 27 () — 'rhe} heat of the sun has a proven rela- | tion not only to changes in the | earth's temperature, but to the| variations in weather conditions in | general, Smithsonlan institution | scentists have declded after experi- | ments covering a long period, To| increase the dependability of thelr observations, tliv experts hope to cstablish within a few years sta- tions {n various parts of the world | where data can be gathered. | Through u sevies of papers deal- | ing with cxperiments of its astro- | physical * observatory, the institue | tion ruys “rescarches give clear | proof of a connection between solar | variations and weather changes, but show that the relation is a com- plex one,” Whether rec of world-wid¢ caused by be determined, t records of 1 radiation ar Dr. G G tary of the rector of the ‘nt abnormal aspects weather have been conditions cannot cause extended past history of solar lacking. Abbot, assistant secre- | institution and the di- | astrophysical observa- tory, says that not only does the heat received by the earth from the | sun appear variable, but that the changes can be predicted nearly a | Ly looking at the sun through a eclescope. H. H. Clayton, who for scveral years was official forecaster of Ar- gentina and recently has been col- laborating with ©r, Abbot study of the sun, has pred what the institution as: tair’accuracy solar through ted with is very the actual daily tem- peratures of New York city nearly a week In a for mere than a year For several years the work has been conducted from two observa- | torie at Mount Harqua Hala. Arlzona, and the other near Calama® in the nitrate desert of Chile. Both | are in high, arid locations. To in-| rease the accuracy of the observa- tions 1mprovements are being| planned for the Chile station while the Arizona observatory is to be moved to higher location on mountain. California, near Los Angelea, Stations in the eastern hemisphere | are needpd and Dr. Abhot will go to one into the room. n with armg rer of broke shaken vile sights, 1 the 1 knew nd locks and gray g could shock me anew, But 1 was Wrong. ds were delicate Her clothes refle fine and 5 Tomorrow — 1 meet and learn more English language. about And | = Pae baentll This is the c g tmagine ance months, 1|} k on | And 50 I was t 1 was put on a warrant ssistant proud ong prosecutor, Six Months Jo ecture desk Elizabeth Sprague, sald. 1 was policeman and fou pounded on the led out, turned ove within an 4 myself a big short time, with the scum I had seen th out them times to peer down inlo the aby SHANGHAI RESTAURANT CO. BEST OF FOOD 213 MAIN ST. New Britain, Conn. Open Every Day from 11 a. m. to 1Z p. m. Regular Dinner from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Special Supper from 5 p. m. to 3 p. m. Chinese and American Food Regular Dinner with Vege- tables, Pudding, Bread and Butter, Tea or Coffee—40c. . Telephone 2885 Special Sunday Dinner from 11 a. m. to 3 p. m. uring life be- 1 Asia this fall and with funds sup- | plied by the National Geographie soclety seck a desirable location for an observatory with Beluchistan as his first objective, Later he will go | to southwest Africa in search of a | probable site for an observatory | there, Since 19, conducted un regearches have been | r the most unusual | solar conditions known to modern science through a marked long con- tinued low period in the heat thrown out by the stn, Where- as the normal has been established as 1,04 calories per square centi- meter per minute, this value, known as the solar constant, since 1922 has been as low as 1,90, or 2 percent below normal. At present it is 1,93 and showing a tendency to rise. The phenomenal drop was first announced by Dr. Abbot in' April, 1023, and he then pronounced that departures of some sort from nor- mal weather conditions might be expected, Mr, Clayton says that changes in the sun's heat almost immediately affect the barometer and the ther- mometer in western Canada and western United States, perhaps as a rcactiop from the tropical at- mosphere, travelling with the vel- ocity of sound, The atmospheric waves thus set up drift slowly south and cast, and three days later are observable at New York city. Strangely enough it has been shown that it is not an increase. but a de- crease of solar heating that makes it warmer in the ea ° Has Her Nose Insured For $50,000, Costs $3,400 New York, June 27 (A—A $50,- 000 nose from OKlahoma City fis sniffing the airs of Peacock . alley and other parts of ManRattan pre- liminary to the enjoyment of the tang of sea breezes. Mys, Blancth Cavitt, before lea¥- ing home for a three months' tour of Europe, had her sense of smell insured for $50,000 at a cost of $3.400. 8he is a specialist able to detect the base of complicated per- fumes by the odor. With her husband, R she lcaves on July 4 for a three months tour :of FEurope. Among other things she expects to have a sniff «in Egypt at perfume 3,000 years old and to act as judge at an exposition in Paris attended by per- fumers from all over the world. P Cavitt, meunt of MONUMENT Wil BE STRANGE ONE {Is Designed fo Show Mark Twain Characters —_— Hannibal, Mo., June 27 () — At | the base of Cardiff hiH, where fore- { gathereq Tom Sawyer, Huck Finn and Tom's gang, will rise & monu- ment to the i Huck, figures In the books of Mark Twaln that bear their names, Frederick C. Hibbard, Chicago sculptor, I8 at work upon the me- morial which will be erected by George A, Mahan, a local attorney, and his wife and son, Dulany Ma- han, In the monument the sculptor hopes to set forth those qualities that have appealed to multitudes who have read and understood the youth exemplified in the hoy char- acters, The sculptor will represent Tom Bawyer as about to leave the haunts of his childhood to take up the more serjous business of a ran's life. He is bidding Huck Finn fare- well, on a pedestal of red Mistouri gran- ite. It Is expected to be completed by October of "this year. It will be on Hill street, approximately one block from Mark Twain's boyhood home, avhich and Mrs, Mahan. It will stand only a few feet from the former site of the old stone jall where Muff Pot- ter of Tom Sawyer was confined. ‘The Mahans recently purchased the site to._eliminate a dangerous traf- fic corner, | Looking from the monument ‘ahoun two blocks down Main street | one may see the bullding in which immortal Tom. and | humer and pathos of American | The menument will be of bronze | also was purchased | and presanted to Hannibal by Mr. | Mark Twaln started his career printer's devil, | GREAT HAUL WADE OF ILLEGAE RUM | Thousands of Cases Aré Con- fiscated in Mobile Mobile, Ala., June (A—-While | custom officials prepared to move a | huge cargo of seized ilquors from a |captive schooner to a storage ware- | house here toda; 3 men, arrested aboard that vessel and several small- er craft, faced preliminary examina- |tion on charges growing out of the sensational liquor haul, in which the coast guard cutter Suukee rounded up seven boats single hunded about 20 miles west of Southwest Pass, La. Nearly six thousand cases of alco- hol and assorted whiskies, contained {in burlap and wood packages, con- | stituted the liquor cdrgo, a majority | of which was carried by the schoon- er, the Marion Adams, a British reg- istry vessel of 90 net tons, wWhose home port is said to be Lunenburg, N. 8. Six small boats in the vicinity of the schooner were also taken cap- tive. Liquor was found aboard one of the motor hoats, coast guard au- thorities stated. The haul marked what is believed to be the largest seiztire made by a single coast guard vessel since the beginning of the rum blockade along American coasts several weeks age. All seven of the captive hoats were towed into port here last night, | The selzure was made last Wed- nesday night and the Saukee cover- ed 200 miles to deliver the captive craft and men to Mobile, | The United States grows more than two-thirds of the world's cot- i!on crop. bun's rain-gauge. Sir Francis Lathrop's discovered in the home five miles distant on ed citizen. s e e s e 8 ders the blood analyzed. B WORTHY lifeless rear of the Lathrop Honeybun and Lathrop were not known to be even acquainted with each other. And added to that is the fact that Honeybun is a quiet, peace-loving, respect- He likes to see justice done, and wishes to uphold the law. He immediatelynotifies the police of the gruesome find in his rain gauge, and or- MYSTERY IN RED RAIN Human blood is found in Samuel Honey- Meanwhile toward Sir Guy Lathrop. planned to marry Sir Francis Lathrop’s daughter against her father's wish. body is the same day. Who Killed story runs. =TI ON ST OF ITS Luxurious! You will be entranced with the luxurious upholstering, the gof.t, yielding springs, the artistic new Six Mounted w .‘ satin finished fittings, and the general air of refinement in the Sedan. on that famous Six Cylinder Chassis — identical with the one that has made so many trans-continental and cross-country records. Arc two pretty the is the question, and why placed in Samuel Honeybun's rain-gauge? It is a mystery that balks the best men of Scotland Yard. On through chapter after chapter the Be sure you get your Herald June 27 and start in with the firet chapter of this greatest detective story of the year, % ! é suspicion has been directed Sir Guy had Sir Francis Lathrop? This was blood ISV S — e s < e e - A e NAME . This Sedan justifies in its amaz- ing performance its beautiful appearance. Here is a car built as you would have it, did you specify every detail. See this new Sedan — drive this car yourself —it will be a reve- lation to you. M. IRVING JESTER New Britain h Street 6-Cylinder Sedan 4l 795 b. factory, plos war tax. U