New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 25, 1926, Page 2

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JEWS WILL ACCEPT - JESUS, 13 CLAIM ‘Re. . L. Brooks Pays Glowing Tribute to Hebrews ng from his pulpit at the s Chureh of Christ on Court st night, Rev. I L. Brooks tributo to the Jews, stressing polnt that they have survived uries of persecution and ve ) years of tragic, glorious and We Invite You to Try Coleo Soap Made Entirely of Vegetable Oils 3 LARGE CAKES 25c | actton NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, “Some astute statesman and ruler | will later rise out of Syria and will gain control of the natlons of the world. He is called the ‘Little Horn' in Dan, 7:20.21, He will prove to be the anti-Christ. The league of natlens and the world court, which is virtually the same thing in the end, are only paving the way for his arrival, “I am personally unalterably op- posed to my country's entry into any world court, T plead not gullty to any part in the request which th local clergy sent to Senator Bing- ham, I can only say regarding their ‘Father, forgive the fc they know not what they do.' he difference between the world court and the league of nations i the dif. ference between six and a half qualled history” *to look He declarcd that the public question today Jewish question, the worl sarmament aration. Mr. | iirooks predicted at some | future date * evary ehall ac- The ”; Jes and becom back most | 18 the ! 1 court, | One Trial Size Free Try the small cake first, If it is not the nicest cake of soap you have ever used re- turn the three cakes and we will refund your money. n Jew medium of blessing to all the tions of the world, | Mr. Brooks' sermon follows [ ‘The Jew is occupying the m'-rwri of th © in human affairs to like it or not we l‘y‘l.\lv‘ 169-171 MAIN ST. race of people glorious § race iy ock the mysteries of the problems of the ) reveal the uncerts A strange p almost (o hatre |quently ame |people. 1 Auglo- Horsfall as there is a striking kinsmanship Overcoats at $47.50 ‘Saxon' is derived from ‘Isaac’s Great Drop the “I' and we haie imported woolens — some plaid b and the amounting found g Gentiles to {1l becomes th @ 1o harbor so fre- ard this The Greatest Values of the Season ord He who troubles the Hebrews be- 10 dig his own grave. God has 2:3, 'l will at bless thee, ‘und curso t curseth thee' It ig rather {llnminating to study the history of who have opposed people. o1d them | of Ba into ¢ What of Egypt who bondage for 400 years? who carried them ! What of Rom« coats, new tube coats of with —in mixtures, gray hirsted for of Spaln who sought thelr annihil > It may be interest o sw that to one family driven from vain to Constantinople v o was namad Mus is now the favored dark blues, A wealth of coats to choose of from ~and each cout a supreme value in style, workmanship and mater- fal. ha—U master of Turkey and I Behold record of | thank Buy them now while at 347, HORSFALLS 93-99 Msylum Strect HARITORD “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” they last— 50 and save, maseacre. a country that | vcd the Je owes much to to remove from our is distinctly Jewish | would result! In | learning and at- Jews have no supe 1 the r Einsteln; | orld Were we 1 rrenness }JA WS, tiome | | general science science, Hirschfield; astron- | hel; mathematics, syl-l tor, Berstein; medleine, | v, J. P. Benjamin; ; musie, Mendels- Spinoza; history, | ceonomy, Ricar- . ex much to | | |Franke; {drama, Bernh {sohn; philogop! S g J. D. DONAHUE Voice Cuilure {Neander; political Yoiecs mml Tuesdays and Pridugs o |in cxistence 100 years hefore a Jew was convicted of murder. Gen. B. T OUP per ¢ m of the Jews were Room 4 299 Main hh(-ethm ec per cent of the | New Phone 3100 do; archaeology, Op 0 2 pom. to 9 p.m. | d that in his 39 years e ass.s, 1| “Our own country {this industrio aw-ablding :-wl‘ {loyal peop Our government was jent nor had met with a J UPSTAIRS JEWELRY \H("’ m« irged with a erime, In the World today as or when Lyesight Specialisy 827 MAIN ST, TEL 1905 “WE UNDERSTAND EYES? His me up in smoke. g2, custom and not changsd in over | Other nations are ea amalgamated our nation but the Jows, distinctive. Were to earth he modern Jew. h for our in the as mue The marvel s gurvived midst of jons nturies is that DENTIST Dr. A. B. John<on, D.D. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN ORIENTAL RUGS FULL LINE IN ALL SIZES | also l ations and | . 1 upon him. Th nations ls are on thougiit that th ice as long as the G of Frankfort said that ars lenger than th He fount Ve REPATRING AND CLEANING S. V. SEVADJIAN K 1 <idence Grand St 1190-3 0 1190-2 all this. n- tn ing served ¢ us to recog: o Bible en things: | peopla, Ex. | called | is ) onored, | a temple p 14\.‘ 4. Tel, Dr. C. W. Vivian | DENTI West Main Street Extractions, Dental X-Rays Phone 703, and There in is (8) Matt tion mman 1AL TRAL hRA Wi CLEAN I VERYTHING UNDLR THE SUN NATIONAL WINDOW CLEANING COMPANY Tremont St Telephone & world t ly s komathing for an Ameri The biggest quest not the world cou t or reparation, but < a of hed the time when uifill his promise to his own land & will always lve in his- | irvive time's ravages. One | of Cyrus, the Baby permaitting the their land and 1s the decree of Bal of 1917, This race you will LOTTEDSORETAIHNIR BAT‘TFRIF‘; Auto Electric Service C. A. ABETZ Tel. 2860 114 FRANKLIN SQ. CABINE] WORK Ol ALL KINDS t arn ftain, READ HERALD CLASSIFILD ADS FOR RESULTS 14 in o | blens | and abused | cir blood? What pha Kem- | v | masked, i pistol into play when | eial [ gonen “This anti-Chriet will make a cov enant with the Jews regarding the possession of their land. He wil Prove t6 be treacherous and will vio- late the agreement after three and alt years. This breach of cov- cnant will be the beglnning of flerce persceution that will only find an end in the personal appearance of the Jew's Messiah and the Chrls tian's Saviour. At this time every Jew shall accept Jesue as the Chri and hiecome the medium of blessiug to all the nations of the world ac- cording to (ien, 12:3, “Every sign ‘points to tha speed approach of this hour of world ble ing. It will not come, however, un- til all opposition to Giod's authority be put down, a Tt is time to av BANDIT DEAD, PAL SHOT IN HOLDUP ke." {Intervention oi Yictim's Fnud‘ Puts Gunmen in Plight Philadelphia, Jan. 26 (P) -—— One | gunman was killed and another seri- ously wounded in a pistol battle yes- terday in a darkensd room during a holdup in which they had lined up their weuld be victims against the | Joseph Corradio, known to the | | wall police as ** and his Two-Gun Joe,” met death companion, Claire McCabo was 50 badly hurt he is not expected | ting occurred in the home a Marelln was | playing rards with two other men when Corradio and McCabe, both broke open the door and | | with pointed pistol commanded | them to stand against the wall. This cormmand was overheard by { Christopher Leonetti, a roomer in the house, as he started for the sec- ond floor. Taking his pistol from a drawer, Leonetti removed his shoes and crept down the stairw where the masked men were search- | ing their victims' pockets, one of the bandits shot out the light and both were alleged to have opened fire on Lsonetti. The latter also brought his the smoke | clenred away Corradio was dead and his companion unconscious. Leonetti was unhurt Leonetti was later arrested and re- leased tn $2,500 ball after & magi trate's ‘I"‘H‘an CHANGES IN PROOFS (0ST GOYT GREATLY | Public Printer Savs That This | Alone Totals 8221 During the Past Year, W 26 (P — oM. governmen! f congress, hington, Jan. riters of the cluding members the treasury § last fis year by minds after their hern set In type. The expense of revising proofs | of typ: articles and speeches s disciosed in the annual report o Ge er, with the added information that | figure this year is $54,610 more last year, \‘Ir (Y\r(l-r offers the information | es for increasing | e of the congressional record | ge of &0 pages daily | but he adds this ad- ¢ during t anging their writings had | A 56 puges, tndividual who e Hteratur, ernment would have to outlive Methusaleh and cven then would {n a few years be hopeles aspires to of the gov- t publications n[l of government diepatch of the congressional record alone, he said, raquires 200 mail sacks. The post- offica department led the others in amount of printing, while the White House economizad on that acore, its bill totalling $3,268.81, a | saving of A771.08 Postal card output for the year set a new record — 342,303,710, ‘CACHED LOOT LOCATED IN PALN BEACH GRO £5.000 Worth of Stiver and House. hold Goods Stolen Trom Trucks Tound By Investigators West (P We Palm Beach, Fla, Jan Police and private detectives in | Palm Beach and Palm Beach were still ercking the gang of thisves thought to be responsible for the robb worth of silver and ether articles helonging to E. T. Stotesbury, Palm Beach soclety leader, which were discovared Thursday evening in & palmeatts grove ncar Kelsey City, The discovery of the cache of stolen property was not made pub- lic untll late yesterday. according 1o the butler at tha Stoteshury es tate. The recovered article: m prise part of household goods slip ped from Philadelphia in stxteen trucks a short time ago. Only 12 cks reached their destination, it be. ound buried READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS The morning s ap- | Tnsists Future Will Prove His . As he | uppeared at the door of the room | [tentlary at |unwavered in his claim to the dis- lcovery. By The Assoclated Prom. “Stetin, Germany—Tly're in the Baltic sea for a Jolly Roger The Swedish schooner Rupld, miss ing for several months after u 8LOFIN has become a pirate Geneva—The two guns of Amerl- can movie cowboy heroes are b 1ing blotted with nk in elnema post- {ers in Switzerland lest the imagin ation of the young be exelted un- duly, London--And now It develops th the late Arthur Do Courcey Bower “the man who broke the bank Monte € ' was r a agent for the casino, he came to ! when the casi an expense uc ally The jed him with press nearest deference to from India, the and'’s Tey Mouu- a Luth- referring to lon’ isle, omit- York—In a visitor ¥ n Greer taing' 'has been censored eran ra The stanz ‘spicy breezes o'er where only man is vile, ted, New protest of the re- Rumanian shington, 1 int out that the prin daughter of Margot Asquith, in- § biting wit. | Londo call of Pri g lambas W Binger, is to 75, who i m_q marry Mrs, be Simon exy 22 grand Fannie Ehrenfield, 72, It will the fourth marringe for each. acts to live to be 102, 8ol Bloom of New ar out of the has a bill in department anr d:-pmn-rn He e to make it the army. o' Up New York—In an effort to cure \\m‘.nvfi, 4 other ills of the hair, |Charics Nessler, president of - the American Master Dressers' assocla- |tion has given 85,000 toward the es- {tablishment. of a collcge on hair rc- seareh, Cal.—Elaine is badly bruised as the crash at Holly’ ‘s'rinr fac result of a toboggan 1 | pose: at| | K was | the | Hammer- | a i Noj JANU/ FLASHES OF LIFE: MAN WHO BROKE THE BANK WAS ONLY PRESS AGENT |mountain resort which knocked her hunting | w nnconscious, New York = Calvin Coolld s humor in an unadulterat. This frowm JoLn Erskine o' who established s by his version of the of Helen of Troy. «d for! Columbla, a witn i us private Branford—Tire destroys home 1. Howard Martin, president and treasurer of Perrlgo, Inc., at Pine Orehard; damage cetimated at $50,- of Willimantic—Willlam H. Phillips, votired lumberman and former mem- ser of general assembly dead, New Haven-— | nounced tn elsmograph arthquake of pro- nsity registered on Ya Danbury—Charles Kilherg frac- t d skull when he and fetl down « kment, New Haven—David McAndiess of | Chicago, manag of a tour Hoppe and Schaeffer, billlardists, ar- for automobile law violation Hartford—Edward Acheson, Jr., son of Suffragan Bishop E. Campion Acheson, seriously fnjured in auto- mobile crash near Berlin, Corwich—1J. €. Dumeer in state of me confusion due to overwork on hot dey when he was drowned last July, compensation commission- er fl Bridgeport—Aleoholism and ex- tensive burns causes for death of Dantel Kozlozny, medical examiner finds; poured boiling water on him- self. Hartford—Bedy of Charles R Croul, Jr.. 4, missing since. yesterday [found in Park river; searchers have Jarrow eseape. New Haven—Gussie 8, fe of Adolph M. Men dies after short illne Norwich—John T. Clark, rwich hotel for 64 yes Mendel, 1, merchant 36, DR. COOK STILL STICKS TO STORY' Claims o Polar Discovery 5 (A)—~Thrust through to the Cook, Kaneas City, Jan, |again into the limelight |claims and counter claims as whether or not he discovered North Pole, Dr, Frederick A. now a prisoner at the federal peni- Leavenworth, remains The renewed controversy, tated by th precipi- reported statement of |Cook’s claims ar {as Admiral R ~ | publication of ge H. Carter, the public print- | = “ |tentions and o v of approximately $5,000 | Amundsen that as well E. Peary's was be: "lo'kl‘"d last night when Amundsen ‘1']’\1“] th tatement and {he had been misunderstood. The purposted statement support- ‘m Dr. Cock brought statements from Vilhjalmar Stefansson and Donald MacMillan, noted Arctic Plorers, upholding Peary's ¢ hesc statements were follov ltter from Dr. Cook to the Kansas City Journal Post that further discoveries would bring vindication of his dizputed ‘ml asking that judgment be with- Captain Roald declar im d by held “What 1 said Capt Amundsen suid in denylng the tement attributed to him, “that could not form an opinion—that one ‘slmilnl\\ gituated cannot form an oplnion—without first having the |opinton of both Cook and Peary be Itore me for study. T was misquoted. |Amundsen safd he meant to cast no {reflection on the work of Admiral | Peary. | 1n his letter to the Pr. Cook declared that the |acrial dash to the North |Captain Amundsen, and other |plorations were bearing that further work in he Arctic will prove his claim. “It is by his production that {ploneer must stand or fall’ ar said, “and 1 am willing to rest recent Pole by ex- 'WURDER MYSTERY CLEARED S SUSPECTS CONFESS Hackensack Burglars Admit Part in Express Office Hold-up and Shooting .25 (P—A com- plete confesston of the Hackensack | express messenger murder of last Thursday was obtained by detectives last night from one of two mén ar- rested as suspects carlfer in the day. | After the confession both men wers | charged with homicide. The To wers escaped with $8,000 after kil- | ling the messenger in the robber Tho prisoner sald they were James Lynch, 20, and Charles Strand, 36, Loth of Manhattan. Their arrest fol- jlowed the finding of a letter alleged 1 {of the ex- | clatms | Now tooy the ve bLeen lost by Lyneh during 1l press com- pany offices at Mackensack, after he slaying of Frank Brannon, 22- LENgeT. Strand, according to the said he was intimated by L forced poiles, nch and to accompany him. His share money obtained, he told the police, was 8500, Ho paid debts with some and loat all but $154 in gambling. COP BEATS BOY, SHOOTS SELF, GOES T0 HOSPITAI | Patroln Finds Himself Un- der Arrest For Drunkenness And Assault, New York, Jan. 25 (A—Charged | with beating a boy and being intoxi- | being attended for a bhullet Journal-Post, | out his con- | " the let- | ny case with future generations by | Dr. Cook dash- published records.” wrote that many other P s will b= undertaken soon, |‘1hfn this latter work of explo {tion 15 completed the world will be lin a position to pass final judgment |upon my work and that of Pea | MacMillan's Story Commander MacMillan declared at he stood on the spot “where |00k raised his flag and called it the {North Pole, and it was five hundred {miles from the North Pole.” {mander MacMillan was one |three wh sum {pedition. | “There fa no doubt at al,” |commander MacMiilan, *in {mind of every man who wei {Peary, that Peary reached the North {Pole. There is no doubt in the {mind of virtually every that Dr. Cosk came within hundred {miles of it.” | MacMtian “Peary’s claim the North Pole s fu ! Amundsen’s to hav South Pole. Dr. Cook, in his letter, says he was ‘the first to report the physical con- | aitions at the Pole and that all work since has tended to confirm my re- |ports. Rear Admiral Schley was the first to point out this phase of the rival claims and the spirit of hi |etter is as true today as it was the day it was written. “In substance,” he eaid “The reports of Cook and Peary are the same. Either or both have been 1o the same place and de or he v of the Ivors of Peary's ex- sald e 1 states as good reached the “l“f sa m“hm~ 1 the me cused of second.” and | cated Patrolman Francis Qarey of Brooklyn was arrested yesterday at Vincent hospital where he was wound in his right side, which was said to ¢ heen self-inflicted. les Carroll, 16, the hoy whom he beat over the head, told the po- lice that the patrolman in civilian clothes ran up to him while he was walking in downtown Manhattan and, pistol in hand, marched him to a nearby delicatessen store. There he asked the clerk if he had been robbed, and when told there had heen no robbery in the store, began to heat the boy. Carey left the store and, several shots were fired, one taking effect in his own side. He hailed a taxi- {cab to St. Vincent hospital. | Moving of Museum is Jolt For Dan Cupid London, Jan. 25 (P—Because a | museum of geology is being moved, Com- | several writers of English love | stories will have to change the venue with | {quick clearance of their stock. of their “happy endings" lovers will be driven to trysting place. r many years, the Mussum of Practical Geology has been housed in Jerymyn street, just back of Plc- | cadilly. portals to gaze on cold monoliths and ammonities of prehistoric ages. and for this reason self-absorbed voung couples found it an ideal spot. 8o famous did the museum be- come in this respect that it achieved additional fame as the scene of love episodes in many a story. Whether the romance of the old building will endure in the severely practical museum atmosphere of South Kensington, its new home, re- mains to be seen. and many another MODERN BOOT TO VACATE Announcement was made today that the Modern Boot Shop, for ten years one of New Britain's leading shoe stores, is to go out of business. vacating the premises now occupied 168 Main street. The firm has offer for the sale of its sst vacate In thirty days 3 arranged for to bring about a adv. 1ccnpte losing “out sale RY himset | slipped on fee | of | bt of the holdup men from | | the American Rallwa founded | Few peoplo ever crossed its | 25, 1926, THOUSANDS PASS - WERGIER'S BIER Homage Paid Prelate Surpasses| That Given Monarch | Malines, Belgium, Jan, 25 (M—Al- | {thongh only three Belgians thus far have been honored with a national !fuporal, the homage that is being pald Cardinal Mercier franscends en that given a monarch, In his mitre in hand and the gre go0ld cross upon {is brest, thousands * of poople tinue in all walks of life con- 10 pass by the bler on which his body les i the archeplecopal restdents Lere to whieh it was trans- |ferred yesterday from the hospital where tha prince of the church died atur Messages of Condolence rom all parts of the world have come messages of condolence on the | passing of the beloved preate. | Among th is one from President | Coolidge, sent to the embassy here cretary of State Kellogg, In it was reference made to the | indomitahle courage of the cardinal |in the interests of humanity and | betterment of world conditions. President Coolidge’s appreciation of the departed primate has evoked | nation-wide expressions of friondly sentiments, When entombment in a erypt in the cathedral of Saint Rombaurt is made beside the bodles of former primates of Belglum, King Albert Crown Prince, members of th cabinet and other high state and ceclesinstical offfeials will be pres. at the eceremony. Befora he passed away the cardi- nal last Tuesday wrota with his owi vand « religlous wiil, addressed to » Anglican Archbishop of Center- The details of this dacum: not yet been mada public, but. wag written shortly after the t to the cardinal by Lord Halifax, president of the Anglican ehurch union, it is belleved that it has ref- crenca to the question of a union of | the Noman and Angliean ehurches, for which the cardinal long had been working. | h 18 S Police Interfere So gre has heen the d cople to show thelr loy dinal Mereler that )ast night cral hundred, helieving that doors of the archepiscopal residence would he closed before they had | [time to pass by the bier, rushed past {the attendance and gained entry into | {the vestibule. The police made sev- |aral arrests and the cardinal's see- retary threatened to elose the palac until after the funeral if further un- |toward incldents oceurred. | | Tt was notable throughont yester- day and last night that many of the | ‘\"'rioxm who came to pay tribute to dead prince of the ehurch | brought with them modals and other |holy objects with which they tonched the cardinal’s body believ ing that hereafter they would earry with them the attributes of blessing. |TRUGK DRIVER FREED | AFTER COURT'S PROBF| Milford Justice | Then Discharges Accused Man. Milford, Jan. 25 Y. Johnston, of 62 Miller street, | New Haven, who was held by | Coroner Eli Mix as criminally re-| | sponsible for the death of Ruth| | Wells, 7, wos discharged by Judge | Jervis D. Brown when glven a hearing in town court this morn- {ing. A truck Johnston was operat-| ing struck and fatally injured the | Milford turnpike a few - William Coroner Mix in his finding held that the driver's cab of Johnston's | truck was curtained and that the operator did not have a clear view of the roadway. Johnston, testify- ing today, said the coroner had not entered the cab of his machine, Judge Brown called a recess and mada a personal inspection of the b of the truck, Returning to the| court room, he announced that tI b curtaing did not interfere with e operator's view of the roadway nd that in his opinion Jobnston s not responsible. for the acei- dent. The girl ran from behind an- other truck into the path of Johnu- ston's machine. T0 RESUME FLIGATT0 AMERICAS TOMORROW Spanish Aviators Proceed to Gando | Bay Whence They Start Tuesday. Las Palmas, Canary Islands, aJn (# — Commander Fanco and his fellow Spanish aviators hopped off in thelr seaplane, the “Ne Plus | Ultra,” today for Gando bay,| whence they will start for the Cape Verde islands tomorrow morning, weather permitting, The plane arrived safely at Gan- do bay after a fifteen-minute flight. Gando bay is on the east coast {of Grand Canary island, the prin- cipal member of the Canary group. L.as Palmas is near the northern | tip of thel sland. Commander Franco and his companions are fly- | ing from Palos. Spain, to Buenos Alres, tentatively planning to fly | from Buenos Afres to New York. if | all goes well on the trans-Atlantic voyage, The next leg of their flight, from Gando bay to Porto Praya, in | the Cape Verde islands, measures | | 1,066 miles. INHERITS $4,000,000 London, Jan. 25 (® — The rich- est ecclesiastic in the British Teles probably is the Hon. Dr. B, J. Plunket, who recently resigned on | account of 1l health gs Arch- | bishop of Meath, Treland” He has| just inherited property valued at 800,000 pounds (about $4.000,000) | under the will of his aunt, Lady | Ardilaun, widow of TLord Ardliaun | a member of the Guincss family makers of the famous stout. | Wil Become {vate Howed | her abdomen. | saia Ito | hible, printed in Germany in 1 | preservation, | of | Fort Wayne, Ind. GOYERNOR SMITH GOING INTO BANKING BUSINESS SHEIK EXTRAS ARE " DRUG ON HARKET Bathmg Beauties Seeking Jobs x| lso Greatly Exceed Demand — Chalrman of New) Organized County Trust Com- i wYork, Jan tred E. Smith, nounced that he will retire to pri- | life, is to ho chalrman of & | nk when his term ends next Jan- | ¥ 1, the New York World says New York World Says. 25 (A—Gov. who recently Hollywood, Calif, Jan, 26 (- { The doom of th vase!ine-hair sheik vagrant at filmland’s doo | of the girls who dance minus clot) ing on the beach will be sealed by Will Hays. ) m industry he One of the will be rmal opening row of the \‘r*n!r.fl Casting {operated by producers The whole coterie of who have surrounded the gates filmdom here witl spicy and v temogphere that has scented ¢! atmosphare that has world will he banished Good moral charact to act will be first refs sary to listing by this ment bureau whic! source of entry to film work. The studios of the motion pletur: proc l-|m ers. uh/i 'h‘-vrv‘.\u'qrs of Amer! newly organized County rust company, of which James J. ordan, a former assoclate of Gov- ior Smith in the trucking bils- , is president, will hold the post of chairman of the hoard open for hit World asserts Vineent Astor, Willlam H. Wood- in, president of the American Car and Foundry company, and former fuel administrator, and other prom- inent men are listed among the di- rectors. Democratie leaders who have been loping that Governor Smith would continue in politics despite his an- nouncement he would retire, heen urglog him to run for re- clectlon, for the United States sen- or for the presidency. The World says the organizers of the lank are convinecd however, he meant what he gal( major moy tomor huren will b n, the ha 'SHOOTS OWN MOTHER WITH “UNLOADED” GUN New York Woman Has Virtually No Chance of Recovery After aspirants Lere for ex tra work will be ified { 1gpat. ed and segregated. There are te times as many seeking jobs as re quire Opentng of the bureau kS th rounding out of 1626 pregran of the film company e whict was based upon improveme: o working conditions, eilmination o the half. million dollar a year ecol lection of private employmen! agencies and establishment of eondi tions that will make employmen desirable, clean and ecliminate th Accident, New York, Jan. 25 (P—A young mother was dying In a Staten Is land hospital today after allowing her 13 year old son to play with Fifla thak tvasis Joaded | misfit, Mrs. Conce Dinna, of Dengan Hills, was working in her kitchen when her son Paul asked to b to play with his father's rifie. | Whiie inspecting its mechanism the | Loy pulled the trigger and his moth- | fell to fioor with a bullet through | At the hospital it was | he had virtually no cha d the shoot- | \ELDEST SON OF HAYES, FORMER PRESIDENT, DIES Toledo Attorney Began Legal Carcer that The Same Year His Tather Became President. Toledo, 0., Austin Hayes, Blhle 100 Years Old Prosident Huthe Wash., Jan (M—A |y s | owned by the Rev. J. M. Canse astor of the First Methodist church | hiera, The test s entirely in Latin and on the title page is the inscription . Coelii Lactanli.” Beneath it is a st of chapters. end of the volume is a mo slea, | Apvd Andrean Crat: Mense Febryario, Anno MDXXI. After gradnation he served wit The volume, still in good state of | the*New York firm of Evart was in a consignment | made and Choate, coming to Toledu books brought from two old in 1 He is suryived by four itholic monasteries in Burope and 'cong, Sherman of San Francisco: purehased by Rey | Lieutenant Commander Webb ¢ twe Hayes, of Washington; Wailter, Toledo, and Scott of Tampa, Two brothers also survive, Webh €. Hayes, Fremont, Rutherford B., of Clearwatér, Funeral services will he Tuesday. (x—Birchar! lest - son rford B, prominent Toledo attorney, vesterday: Death was | clifenic stemach trouble: He was borp in’ Cinefnnati, No vember 4, 1853, spending his - earl ! childhood there, He moved to Fre mont, Ohio, in 18 vated from Cornell unive and the Harvard la 1877, the year his father gurated president. dted her due to was o Tia Colon¢ Oljo, and Tla hel reinol, a new is 60 times as i’l"mg acld in germans and §s per n - beings. antiseptie fi‘cll} ha \rm] 5 lLooks for Himself, | - B. C. PORTER SONS SPECIAL FOR TOMORROW ONLY earfla LINEN RUGS AT HALF PRICE We have a number of discontinued patterns of serge bound Klearflax Rugs which will be sold way helow actual cost tomorrow. KLEARFLAX RUGS, as you know are made of Linen—they are very durable, artistic, reversible, moth-proof, and used by many of the best interior decorators. TOMORROW $24 50 TOMORROW $24.50 TOMORROW 324.50 TOMORROW $ 19.00 Regular omorrow 913 .00 Regular $26.00. TOMORROW $ 13.00 Smaller sizes reduced proportionally, COME EARLY TO GET ONE ° B. C. PORTER SONS 9x12 Plain Taupe. Regular $49.00. Plain Green. Regular $49.00. Plain Blue. Regular $49.00. Plain Tan. Regular $38,00. Plain Mole. Regular $26.00.

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