New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1925, Page 3

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WIFE PREPARES FLOPEMENT FUND is Now Held With Friend Tor Murder of Hughand | ov. 5 (A | lin at u J, Cl Hill murdering s prott wk's best friend is in tspicion 1+ hammer, and vidow has ad- and the eloy nark s Jadl side, N of Young had friend 0 N , a Klansman r employed by yesterday after on the head stonc magon'e hours befors to Mrs, Cla given promi being beater'| his garage with a | hamine A fey signed out Ly police, d the friend named him ne \L according atenient N unemp jron w t week ta Florida a0 “He hegg him," them, Promised to Go 1 me to run pollce travi Nre but mod with | | told than | wk of | AWay Clgrk more about 5 p, m 20 1o nig than car until | and fth* him that Monday Miami Mors to promised to follow 1 1l snid, accordi to police, that Cowen had given her | I did give her mon ving S Cowantts | quoted as it only 1o save f a friend of family.” ! Cowen has sales He was four is under | MOrrow, er founa 2 examin- ct little the sav- ked when h utomobi got to open his nding Monday Mrs. Clark ont gar evening and her The agsailant Clark had door with tim say. The been struck Samuel ( man's father tection Pol Klux are has asked police pro- s son's funeral today Clark was a Ku and Klansmen expected {o attend the funeral, the other Klan with at- Klansma in Hillside orders, funera no ' 5 LAVYERS ACCUSED Fifeld Wien Cited in Aleged Bus Deal t. Nov. b—Papers rt here charge and Cl filed John . Hall, 1d, with and attempted fraud in with the stock of the corporation, 1 by Edward L. that Hubbard and Herbert D. Joseph Kohlman, all kholders ate two buy h the cou are stratford, him that Cen- and that they operation corporatior put into busses vould stor to them but as the rporation worth much with the com- in operation sto lid not have much time if | anything for 1l stock petir holder the wanted to get {and in which Hubbard and wil- |! | saying thelr holdings. Such representations says Schlump were false and we made by Hub. bard and Hall. with the intent to defraud Schlump, Harris and Kohl. n of thelr stock, which, if sold, would have given the lawyers the majority of capital stock In the Cen. tral corporation, Schlump makey the congp! filed b to charges of :y and fraud In an answer Attorney Clifford B. Wilson an action brought against him all ask cuperior court oblige him sell 40 ek in the corporation, iat the to perform a contract to shares of & COUNT REFUSES 70 CHANGE HIND Wants o Mary Actress But Parents Ohject Nov, § (A--Young Count Stanis! De La Rochefoucauld firmly refuses to break off his en- gagement to marry Miss Alice Co. , & mueical comedy star, and the blue blooded De La Rochefoucauld tamily is in despalr. Miss Coeea made her hit on the stage when ghe appeared {in hi-Phi" during the phenomenal run The day passed when a Frenchman conld not marry with- out, ¢ nt of his parents. Now, if setween the ages of 21 and 25, has only to inform his.parents by two ‘“respectful summonses” of his intention to and after he has reached the age of 2 is {ree to marry and m he chooses. Stanislas is 23 and has made his L ul summonses'” in the local fo douard Paris, has he marry, when w Francois Marie ochefoucauld, ering that he is also Duke of Bigaccia of Ttaly, is putting his hope on break. ing the engagement th peal to th Pius to king of Italy and Pope intervene. The that regulated families” ptance Francz. In th t case the charming Miss Co- said to have the additional ) k in the eyes of the Roche- aulds of being a Rumanlan and 1aving & brother o eocialist deputy for Bessarabia, here is no bar by auld family to foreign mar- , a8 the head of ths line un- til he dled in 1901, married Mi Mattie Elizabeth Mitchell of Port- land, Qregon the best fine the Roche DEBATE POSTPONED Middletown, Nov. 5 (P—The de- bate between Oxford University and Wesleyan, scheduled to be held in Memortal chapel, Wesleyan, Nov ber 6, has 'been postponed unt vember 12, The subject will be “Re solved that this house favors the principle of prohibition,” and Wes- leyan will uphold the affirmative, Classifled ads are connecting links between buyer and seller. and IRRITATED THROATS ~tecelveimmediateand gratefulre- tieffrom PERTUSSIN. Itnotonly soothes the tissues of the air pas- mages, but by loosening the sticky mucus, gives Nature an oppor- tunity toovercomethe congestion and restore a normal condition. PERTUSSIN is entirely free from “dope” (narcotics, chloro- form and all injurious drugs). It is pleasant to take and will not disturb digestion. Known to physicians for more than 20 years and sold by sll drug- gists in large or small bottles, $500-20 EWARD 500 will be paid by the Richard Murray Brick Co. for information causing the ar- rest and conviction of the person or persons, who A reward of were responsible for setti ng fire to the company’s property on Sunday evening, November 1. Signed, The Richard Murray Brick Co. J. M. Murray, Treas. ough an ap- | American | “actresses happen in | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1925, “Lords of Cambridge, Mass, Nov, b (B There are thres things & Harvard man cannot pass gracefully—ga foot- | ball, a bargain counter, and out— |in the opinion of the women stu- dents of Radcliffe, The views of the | girls attending Harvard's sister col lfe fn the “crime” column Harvard Crimson today. Some time ago the | Harvard undergraduate comic pub- | Meation, published an article reflect- |ing on the attractiveness of thae | Radehite girl, of the of a young woman gazing Into' a | morror, with the legend: “The only | examination which a Radeliffe girl {ean't pass.” The Crimson opened it | columns for the Radclifts retort | Which was, tn part: | “There are, the Lampoon philoso- | Phers Inform us, certain trials in {1lfe that men and women eannot pass, examinations for fnstance, In {lege in Cambridge were made pub- | Lampoon, | There was a pleture | HARVARD MEN CANNOT PASS BARGAIN COUNTER, FOOTBALL OR OUT, 'TIS SAID “Crimson” Pictures Sarcastic Verbal Portrait of These the Earth” commenting on this we would say there are one or two thinga In par- | tleular that & Harvard man cannot { pass gracefully— “1--A football. bargaln countes, —Out." . The picture of the Harvard man as drawn by the Radcliffe, writer follows: “It you sce a slouching flgure shuffle up the street; if you percelve & face, rough with unshaven growth half-hidden under a fish ped- r's hat; if you stand up in a sub- | way train while the man seated in front of you gazes blankly, but with a distinct motive, at the advertise- | ments; 1f you recelve a Dempsey- like punch In the ribs as you try to | et out of the door; if you step off | the boardwalk jnto the pud to let him pass; it his taste runs to win- dows—my dear, you e dlscovere: 2 Harvard man, lord of the earth. CIVIL AVIATION - BUREAU AVISED Would Be Within Department 0f Commerce | —_— | Washington, | of a bureau of civil aer the department of com broad powers to regulate and p mote all clvil and commercia in the United States ¢ | tral recommenaation of the eam tes on civil aviation which was | pointed by department and American engineering o e to ma t the question The committes ker Drake, commerce, iy its report, made available | Micatlon today, that the possibilities which it sees fo development. of aviation in the U an b a definite and government | dustry. The lack definite 1ogal status and government control for industry, it found, have been the chief causes for its fallure to keep up with the develop- ment in Burope, Control Air Routes, Tn additfon to its function of reg- ulating alr navigation, inclnding I | Eatine. assis and of a censing of pilots and {nspection of planes, the proposed bureau would bs authorized to “develop, establish, or take over and maintain al and alr navigation facfll The provision of essential air nav- igation facilitfes. such as property narked always for both day and night flying and emergency and landing fields, the commit- s 10 be a “public responsi- outes Government aid should take this form, together with adequate pro- vision for research work in aircraft esign and use by the gov l=partment rest sut posed as idy, which the report op- unwise and unnecessary.” Tn this connection it dec Eoverr S s had worked to the best interasts of the fndustry Legislatior Flans he legislation 1 burean, t there he ot | put air navigation on t! inz as to legal requirements as other The com- and other of the bill which was reported at the last session ¢ the comfmerce committes of the to create the Ratification by the senate of international na tion, drawn up in P: urged by committee that the United suffer from the restrictions upon non-contracting in its ecognition of a natlon's exclusive soverelgnty over its alr space, | The committec recommended that the States nposed the government engage in no non- military flylng activities which can be “properly performed by private operation.” ! The commlttes ascribed to the| government's fallure after the arn istice to “formulate and put nto op- eration a continulng aviation policy" | the fact that the 24 airplane plants! In the country in 1015, with a v ftal investment of more than $22 000,000 have now shrunk in number | to 14 plants, representing capital of about $4,000,000, While these 14/ rlants have an estimated annual ca- pacity of 3,000 planes, even this rate | of production conld not be m'ullml‘ in an emergency, the report sald, within four to slx months. Other Recommendations, Other recommendations committee on the elde of ment atd were That the extend use of atreraft in non-military act itfes to all practicable flelds, That congress authorize & sonable” of govern- | governmen it “'rea navy and air mall flelds for commerclal alrcraft That the post office department transfer to privats operation as rap 1dly as possible all of its air mal servces and turn over to the pro posed bureau of cltil asronauties it alrway equipment That congress civil aireraft and slgned and constructed by private industry under the joint direction” of the government dspartments con cerned. That prese frictlons requiring competitive hidding for government purchase of alrcraft be modified to permit “equitable compensation to the manufacturer for design and de. velopment” of alreraft use of arm uthorize speclal types of equipment “de- Do You Sew in Comfort ? Have you ever considered the great strain that sewing imposes on the optic nerves? Perhaps your eyes tire easils while sewing. Do you realize that rightly fitted glasses would probahly correct the trouble? We suggest an examination sour eyes, to determine if glasses should be worn, Our Glasses May Prove A Renl Blessing to Your Sight. A. PINKUS EYESIGHT SPECIALIST and OPTICIAN 300 Main Street, New Britain Phone 570 The Thrill of Radio Think of sitting at home in your own easy chair and at a turn of the dials heing whisked away: To listen to an opera in some large city, to it through a play or a dance orches tra in another, daily news in another. where you will, when you will. With a good Radio tn yo home you can go Count on Us for the Best in Radio A Good Reputation Guarantees a :00d Product RADIOLA ATWATER KENT Here are the Big Tour GREBE MUSIC MASTER We Demonstrate, Install and Service Radio. HENRY MORANS & SONS 365 MAIN STREET The smoothest running and best cooking range on the mar- Ket. Perfect even to the smallest detail in labor-saving features. A. CIEZYNSKI & SONS 517 MAIN ST. Oppositc MYRTLE ST ; | 1inance Board govern- | taxation last night approved a pro-|out & expendi- le tennls courts within ppropriation, FAVOR 832,000 ALLOWANCE | FOR PARK IMPROVEMENTS gram providing a $32,000 this a Nt's sesslon it was voled the corporation coun- el to draft a contract under which ate normal school will bo ed to the city when other detalls of the agreement between the city and state have been com- pleted, At lust n author! t | . Recommendation witi be mads to [tho common council at its ; A that work be allowed to pro- | Approve | o) § the o placed at | trans and will be two for ath- ising the shower will fleld placed te el At sel " Members ¢ par Locker rooms 1 for others and W in number | Construction of Tool Houscs | : | and Flcld Houses | After Park Commissioner William | park w provided F. Brooks and Superinte o be Wainwright had explained the need t nyvenlence for fleld houses and tool hous will be Willow Bre and Stanle parks, the board | LR went new cook—a real meal—use the Help Wanted columns, of a house READ HERALD CLASSIFIED AD* FOR YOUR WANTS a0 plans to lay Copright 123 The Roum of Kngpendvimes The doctor called this morning —and took away with him the big blue Overcoat he saw in our window. A mighty particular fellow—the doctor. Finicky about the fit of his coat. Wants to see the way the seams are finished. Looks at the buttonholes, fingers the fabric—gets his wife to pass on the tailoring. Then he shops around to compare values—and he always comes back to this store to buy a Kuppenheimer Overcoat BOYS' SUITS '52.19u_+12% AlL S i Discontinued. 2,00 Garments; Have a Vest and Extra Trousers N.E.MAG & SONS Ye Collegiate Shoppe Main at East Main When Sweet Sixteen Does the Charleston r escort whispers as he whirls her over “Flapper,” smiles an old man as she swishes But everyone agrees she is a “cute trick.” Her slang is as fr April breeze. She speaks of Freud as knowingly ¢ mentions the. latest fox-trot. And at 16 she has shopping wisdom far beyond her years. For in- 1ce, in buying shoes, with so many different pairs needed for so many different occasions, she has to think fast to make her allowance rea But at Sloan's she finds shoes as smart as a Parisian revue, new as the next minute, and still so reasonably priced that she can buy two p: what many women pay for one “Twinkle-toes,” | the dance floor Charleston Pumps in Patent, Black Satin, RBlonde Satin and Black Velvet Prices from $6.00 to $9.00 Sloan’s Smart Shoes 78 West Main Street Opp. Burritt Hotel

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