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PUBLIC GONGERT AT BURRITT JR. H. 5. Program Arvanged for Parents and Teachers" Meeting The Parents and Teachers' ass clation of the Elihu Burritt Junior school w Yriday Ihe rooms ready High meet eve i in Hv until with ning. s from o'clock, parents, t buildi torium f 8 o ore Bur the ol the from vl in y until there will b wssociation in \luw l § o'clock, a short the idents whe associa- follows: Laura Roberts, Miss Irances ron berts, | Andzu- No. csppr Pre Mende gio nale John Prind Farrell « Scott | Miss Vit Se No. §7 e Saint Lens Andzulatis soprano and barltone Birds I'arewell . FMildack Roberts rehoezk o op Mrs, My baritone Roherts :s for A Lovely Skin Comes from within Constipation is the cause of most skin troubles. Poisons from the waste matter are picked up by the blood and carried to all parts of the body, especially the skin. No one needs to have a sallow, muddy complexion. Proper diet, exercise, surface cleanliness and above all—internal cleanliness Nujol prevents the formation of intestinal poisons that ruin your heakih'end) complexion. Constipation is dangerous for anybody. Nujolis safe for every- body. It does not affect the stom ach and is not absorbed by the body. Mcdnc.:lauxhonuu-pprmr Nujol because it is so safe, so gen- tle, and so natural in its action. Nujol makes up for a deficiencs of natural lubricant in the intes tines. It softens the waste marter and thus permits thorough and regular bowel movements withour griping. Nujol can be taken for any length of time without ill effects Unlike laxatives, it does not form a habit and can be discontinued at any time. Ask your druggist for Nujol, Nujol: FOR CONSTIRATION Little Children 'HtRJo MFDICIN Hfifi your INDIGESTION!! UPSET STOMACH GAS, GAS, GAS Iar- (a) Caro Mio (b) The Diver (e) Captaln Mac .. 8 M. Roberts . Two planos Valses op. No, Miss Parker Trio (w) (h) () n.. Glordany MeMillun inderson THEFT RES COUPLES S0 Kirsc Hine Eligle vort Norws rensky Boet m\uu dances Mrs. Pappania, Gl \ schalkows '\‘ | trio Beeause of 3 the [s 1zulatis [ Lappanta, 12 1 | \‘\h‘ was cha found the the exte Tomassont tances in ‘Namefl o Cmnmlsswn {0 Sludy x| Revision Plans woman gu story | w1 e acen | inig improper 18 (P ~A | showed lenienc 1y the of Nations council at On the tand | Pappania said that | [its secrot session last night i last night to put |y 40y, her 1 Jwrn ommission Which 18| waturday f the M composition an of sh ed N advar ( v de to se any ou the of the and clection to the council arouscd considers | sion today study rovision covenant | on Sunday night | attentions on her to show that he Mrs, Martino manhandle that her body is bru She stated that hecause of h the ring ar for meanness. ing she said that she bury where she tol what she had done, she purchased a tic hut when she got mantic of ses concerni wble discus- | said. s in rpreted b the il counci [ ing raged | took ournt on action embership “Just tion for | ance of represer | tation on the commission is expect lana she will ther rful voiee in any Ithe constitution o hough she is not yet As Germany ha { participation in the preparatory the irmament conference | she will not change t question she beca ind got ofl ticket id that she in Jewelry t | stricken, a mem vady wsed o notified the [ Mrs | city, William Willima Pappania. was nd brought b Tuesday afternc MeCue, It was lear not been living with a time, and left hir oo | children in order her attitude on leaving for Paris yester emier Briand of Prance by a German correspon the week's events did not | the proposed m.‘unwf 10mic confercnees. cartly should they mother-in-law i | Britain hospital ournalist remarked that | ©7 ould not return | ! I { morning Mrs until the o pire. | band left the tition | 4nd arm in a M. | nade 3efor | 1 { day, asked | whether mpromise and e “Why ol asked M. B When {1 Germany probably for clection was W | ain vho conrt to Geneva council 1ssembly has make a repe impossible Nor will 1." several attem Briand « 1ol “exeept that OVERNIGHT AR WAL SEIS NEW REGORD Minutes 1 am thankful n so kine vt second hushand 1 Jesn't e Four Hours and Thirty-five 1= Time From Chic New York, New York's Mayor ( footed in Favor o Ol B ho13 (P overnight establishied a record of and 35 minutes’ b wo cities ( .4 niiles which 3. toduy mail, hours actun IS nnati. Ohio. James J. W d the time with a o our or dvocat per i ished Carryi Pilot ( field, on trip Hadley field, N. 160 unds Myers left May o'clock ald of the Cley hours and five Ward, atier anot b York ore vouu mayor Chicago, at 7 i ind with the tail wind, landed at icll in two Pilot prohibition strong | fol his ca lif {air mail ninut N nail plane French Deputies Must | \ole Budx:cl Very Soon The goven Adjustment of Rates Is Recommended |« Miners Trapped 36 Hours REUNION Police St atmn Wit h Husband was Martino shoe very WALKER FOR BEER nd in I eland " and the dist he W BRITAIN DAIL NON-CONFIDENGE MOVE STARTS IN REICHSTAG Nationalists and Communists in Ger. ULTS IN many Now Warring on Free, Leaves Luther, Berlin, non-confldence March 18 (M—Motions of in the government, RSN introduced by the nationallsts and nuating -eirc “"'.\wm..q ¢d by the communis will of Mrs, Mary | gyoct Chancellor Luther and Foreign strect, Watcr- | \finister Stresemann soon after their irged with thert, | carance in the reichstag. s morning gave nationalists take the position, ay suspended fail officlal party pronouncement, riking out the | @ manner n which the Ge ring and wateh | tino, Myrtle and of Mrs, P'ap- w. oft of $22 d to stand sald that ilty, but be told yesterday tartino of mak- | the judg man Jm-h«.uvmn for admission to the Natlons was treated m)l ttitu 14 of the German delega jat Geneva have led to a complete from | g ) in the foreign pollcy of the and er-Stresemann inet.” he ie communist newspaper Wse [ faline (Red Tlag) today Away with the bankrupt rnment!* On the other ¥ Rote urges: Luther 1ces, nd, the soclalists, who hitherto have opposed the gov- ernment, intend to support it ac- tively on the Geneva issue, The ko cialist paper Vorwaerts finds that, “Of the disgrace which Germany suffered at Geneva, nohody anything except the nationalists, “Germany’s position in the wor declared that weakened, hut rather d her and said | at Geneva,” it adds, lised as a result. | rdir democratic ofticial heeame en | correspondence, the government advances and | in the joint communique wrist wateh, signatorics, fssued at Monday niorn- 4 continua- went to Water- the policy pacifying Id her husband |k nd will uphold the governs Then, she said, | ment’s course, t for Boston, \ as Willi- ne conscience T the VmH, and | to New Britain tended to return vesterday My lie came to N other-in-law on declared that wrtino forced his 1d gave her §2 serious, she is | rno surance for TOURTH ARREST AS - RECKLESS DRIVER Judge Says Simons Should Lose License Permanently ! | v | | P. Mot antic police arrcsted in th ek to New pon by 8 ned that she her husband fe n and her three | to visit her | I New sned for court this ths on Clitford st Judge in the time in ed this 1her rooin ving, Dty costs by hus- 2 stiling, Iy had Pt to have hes ous William C. Otticer John terday shortly came that no South waid down put up his hut he and con- deciared pre Carlson v i 3 <imor tear rald veporter, | Main happy. and | The heeanse very ha or the 1to mr rtini & 1 his comman o me. He 1 mother- | e had o strick 1 high of at he officer said tl man M st and the fumyp {s officer of my aside 1o vent tensen, a school I outh Muin ¢ was coming home from ¢ shortly brfore noon. wped from the curb on Main stroet th i 1 chool yesterd when ‘omes Out Flat- f Return of the n-. of South noise, She past he splashing with the ca il Simons rat March 15 (T4 ) tker of New Doy din " Sons o 1 i ieclared th aperato oked Bum Bunning 1 not heard a savid drove mud. 1 to get 50 fast his num- turn of that bt before a tenaly his Dricfly about wing up to it Suspect in New York | i h had value stration bula arres ntly re con produce his morning. 48 Bond Offieer Wil arged when “to carly this ted by bt was registration in po- v 1 of better if | st cl tor A e e ourt later recall | Ofi to | suspicion have a n I ol liam D Doty <aid that he Tibula et oty ame contini o in the corner Iriving i1 that Rabula 0 was drivi with Ty itomobile _ |ship t Postal URINE) | what \re Finally Rc-t'\lpd‘ ollegn Girls and Girls Wha W -nl\ Meet Sunday fication Pastnoned | Mo Vg Prohibition Conciles G atonce CHS AroRye vy Gver 21 Miuon Ja Talks on Politics .ll ])' "x'umtx(' Gothering | nd will he nd social | politics vill be g for- hairmay 1 The moc mong McCrann, en's £ upscts ra- Modern to treat chil- —with moly d chest rties the drawn | opr nd inder of have e are n to com- 1 to QUAKE RECORDED York, M THAMS \ corn 1O RS Useo Yearty !mvlu d s a New [taug o jtrying HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH ' 18, 1926.' 19 GRADUATE AT Y. NGHT SCHooL Five Classes Finish Courses Gonducted During Winter Forty-nine men graduated from the Y. M. C. A, night school at a joint banquet of five different class- | o8 last evening, and 25 more are ox- pected to graduate in a few months out of a total of 100 who have been studying there this winter. The classes which graduated last even- ing were the business correspon- dance class taught by Walter R. letcher, the accountancy class taught by Thure W, Bengston, the class in salesmanship taught by W. W. Leland, public apeaking taught by Rev. Vernon L. Philllps, and the course in sign writing taught by Al Malmgren The mecting was opened with re- marks by Attorney Mortimer 1. Camp, president of the board of di- rectors of the Y. M, C. A, and was followed by brief addresses by the instruetors, The diplomas were pre- nted by Rober Whitman, a mem- of the educational committee, and a student in one of the classes, Remarks also were made by Frank B. Ran, Willlam J. Gooby and E. L. Carlson, udents, « of the evening, glven cretary Clarence H. on “The Romance of The address was as fol- study, But to me there {s a still more fundamental reason for study, We lead a double life, and the inner life recelves far less attention than we devote to our public life, and yet that {s the one thing that we are sure of. In religlon this is symbol- ized as the soul, but T am not going to talk mbout religlon, but chose to think of the inner life as something that can be developed by literature, art, musie, drama and so on. Your present studies can be the starting point from which you can go back into some very interesting reading which will be of particular value to this inner life, “The malesman {s concerned pri- marily with human belngs. Tho study which deals exclusively with | that very thing is called psychology. | Today there are text' books much more interesting on the subject than used to be the case, A new book just come out, treating the matter in @ very popular way, is called “Why We Behave Like Human Be. ings." “Public speaking might well be the starting point from which a man could search out the great speeches that have moved the world at one time or another. “The accountant might amuse | himself for many nights looking up the magle which surround these dull things we call figures. That will take him back to the mysteries of the Orlental mind. “Business correspondents might be used as tha starting point for many studies which would take one back even as far as the phoeniclans. And from then the history of commerce | might be traced down through its development, By no far-fetched pro- cess of thought the slgn writer might hecome interested in art—the culpture and paintings of the great art treasuries of the world, would be the object of his quest.” The following students graduated: | Business correspondence — Harry |Nutscher, Kenneth Freedell, L. M. | Woodard, Bruce L. Long, Gerald | | Fletcher. | Accountancy—TF, (. Shepard, Har- old Miller, Thomas MecCauley, | George McCarthy, Edwin Johnson, Clarence Hjerpe, R, H. Miller, | | lesmanship-—George T. Smith, William H. Smith, Harry Hazen, William Davls, George Mitchiner, sant to recolve ideas from othen | LhOTNton Spring, Charles Pearlman, , ) bl °" | Royal Larson, Steward Lipe, E. L. ims than newspapers and mag- | ¢ pson, “Ted Toner, Dudley Bacon, our work will be of espe- | \ijiam Kiniry, Robert Bengeton, ue to you, ; ames N, Hosie, Charles Steppler, T. s Robingon. | Public speaking—George son, Joseph Caliendo, Daniel derone, David Miller, Frank Rack- | R. W. Whitman, Frank B, T S VOV Willlam B. Retz, Willlam Gooby, Proved | yonn Sioan, James Ginns, Herman | Vocation, ‘m"\ “For most of you the educational [classes which have just closed rep- [resent more than a night school In them you returned to your earlier days when yon were tiing mor= ideas out of books and have in the increas- | {study. study pwmv of study nely diffienlt to return to books, nd if these hours spent In the classroom or in reading over the les- have helped you to get back mental condition when it is | he finds it ns. nto jpie practical cours- designated, 1 lsume, because i are ¢ feontribute towards a man's Iment for making « living. licve that the will do thing for you, for they have valie to other men in the past |y vho pursucd uch studles. 8o you | gt iiine mhen strong. Ly bee ahle sure theie valie o ong” paulson, Martin Gill, ol Caliendo, Herbert s«nmnn, Norman | ilictets Hierpe, J. A, Ilov\ard . Bryan. FURTHER TESTIMONY N MATTEOTTI MURDER CASE, eqnip- We be- of t to m another by which you car study should open nues of thought, a course as a of romance. studied under Mr. Ben will have a new appreciation of In them they will see com- materials, manufacturing human lubor, wages, and and losses. They are the | by which industry and com- the course of their standard of | ess them up to you and even ‘countancy, Then men | ey !0 prosaic Tas o tings ave Witnesses Today Linking up Officials | ; With Disappearance magl of Deputy. pro- | Chieti, Ttaly, March 18 (®) -— class | Further testimony regarding the talks | circumstances preceding the disap- by the use con- | pearance of the socialist deputy s words and phrases, whieh | Matteotti In June, 1924, was ad- convey @ definite and readily under- | dueed today at the trial of the five stood language. They will note that | men accused of kldnapping and his is not the langnage of the poe murdering the anti-fascist leader. Lut-none the less contains an eser Angelo Fazzi and Glovanni Divo, officers in the Caribinierl, testifisd that they saw Amerigo Dumini, of the defendants, accompanied two other persons, arrive in an | utomobile at the ministry of the | interior shortly before midnight on June 10, meree trace Mr. Fleteher! d liow busin The men in ill have lea on paper, cise, cle t of shor na romanee, “In Mr, M will have ] prociate art, n's group 4 how better to .w-‘ Their own hands have produced some thing that has more thzn practical v for in the strokes of their brushes there is the | of the beautiful. Mr. Philips, men 1 art of speakin Lwill now better appreeiate the value lof 11 sken word and its influence s a moving power in the motives of {nen. Ainally Iy Tantaf, chiet of Tolice | Termini and other witnesses de- | serihed how Dumini was arrested | | on the orders of General Debono, head of the fascist militia, with | whom he conversed before heing : taken prisoner. | S e e e oo of the o liteiohfewiot Baleamany | stafts of fthe iRomnie of police, coda larEer K of B | satd that on June 3 Domini asked | an that contained in the idea | 521 that on June i selling an_article and taking a | fOF Dermits to carry weapons for | s money, Thoy will tell you | fOUF_ persons, and that he (1 mo)‘ evorvone i, o salesman, The | notified his superfors of this fact {5 selling Nis ldeas, or | after the disappearance of Depu to move peopls to think as | Matteotti. | He will think of He asscrted that the molice would | a man who is selling his | have watched Matteotti's activities | ures. iave been | ship [emb that public speake he docs. {countant serviee of f The sign writer is | even if he had not been a member | of chamber of deputies, be- I e ¢ he was known as a “subver- artist the | 1 @ goods H NeSs corresponder AL man | S S ) do| Fpifanio Pennctta, speaker does by |lice commissary, answ | tion from Roberto 1™ tary-general of the sald that Matteotti's | during and after t farious deleterious tlonal. i slve, | who is using the Judicial the pyblic ord of mouth. “This is the practical aspect of ‘worls . war and [ Priest Rescues Aged | (Clergyman From Fire Woonsocke R. 1, March 18 (®) —A fellow st rescued Monsig | nor Charles Dauray, 85 vear old pastor of the Precious Blood Ro- n Catholie church, when fire de- | royed the interior of rectory today. Five firemen, two of | | them injured and three overcome | | by smoke, also were carried from the building. No estimate of obtainable nor was it the fire started. ¥ Iz Hir t tt | early the damage was| known hm\' FISHERMAN LOST AT SEA Boston, March 18 (®-—The Glou cester fisherman Angie L. M:lr.‘«h:\\'i reached port today with her flag at | half mast, and reported the loss of a member of the crew, Arthur Lovde, | of Sable Island, N. §, at rea. The | schooner on Georges Bank last Monday, when the dorles were pick- ed up Loyde's boat was found emp- tossing about In choppy sca. | was no gale the crew of Marshall concluded that he had zcd with some sudden fllnesy ad fallen overboard | She Could Never Have Done It Wlth Piles! ho hasglorified rctty picture y swimmer, Piles are unthinkable foractive women, 1f you have them, you ought to ow this simple thing to do! e t that yon have the o ty, There the been and ha too. GOULD GOING TO MEETING Sceretary Ralph L. Gould of the chamber of commerce will attend| hering of chamber of cornmerce ! | executives and secretaries at the! 1navfl~1nm hotel in Hartford. April; Governor John H. TrumbuMl is xpectrd to attend. The relation of chamber of work' to] regional planning will be one of the topica for discussior | comnierce ! Miller were presented | tlon | raised at the Hippodrome on Febru- |ary last, on the President Roosevelt's HUNDREDS UMABLE T0 ATTEND SOGIAL “Shamrock Revue,” Given Last Night, Will Be Repeated More than 500 ticket holders were unable to obtain admission to the Elks' home on Washington street last night when the "Shamrock Rc- vue,” a benefit entertainment for 8t. Joseph's convent building fund, attracted what s believed to be largest crowd tha way into the bullding, So great was the number of per- sons turned away, including as it did many who had come Intending to purchase tickets at the door as well as those who bought in ad- vance, that the committee has de- cided to repeat the performance within 10 days. Those who held their tickets t night will be prive ileged to see the show and such ad- ditlonal revenue as is ralsed will go to the convent fund, The revue was written and staged by Margaret Sullivan Kovel, a mems« Ler of St. Joseph's parish. Those taking part in the were: John O'Leary, Urban Callas han, Kathleen rowley Salomon, Francis Egan, Humphrey Muldown- oy, Hazel Atwater, Tommy Ray, George Dillon, Helen 3rennan, Peggy and Marion Scheyd, Tobert MeGrath, Patricia Manning, James Donalue, Vincent Ringrose, Marion Egan, Mildred Luddy, Rose* Fitz- patrick, Catherine Fitzpatrick, Bes- sle Sullivan, Helen Bonney, Anna- may Ronn Marion McGuire, Har- riet Donovan, Vineent Kiernan, ank MeGrath, Paul LaHar, Henry DBray, Daniel Sullivan, Bob John Purcell, Frank McGuire the show an, and ‘Jamt‘s McAv GASH AND GIFTS FOR FRIED AND HIS CREW Captain and Men of the President Roosevclt Feted By New York So- ciety—Junds Distributed. New York, March 18 (F)—Cash nd other gifts were presented to Captain George Tried and the crew 1of the United States liner President Roosevelt at a dinner in their honor last night tendered by the Allied Theatrical commmittee and the Nep- tune Association. & Captain Fried and Chief Officer with silver plates and each member of the crew received a medal in honor of his work in the rescue of the crew of the freighter Antinoe. Final disposi- was made also of the fund | first return to America after the res- cue. Besides a purse to Chief Officer Miller, $1,600 was set aside for the | families of the two men who died in the rescue work: $3,300 for the boat crews that took part in the rescue and $4,000 was divided among the remaining members of the crew of the Roosevelt. 'RUSSIAN SOVIET FAST BECOMING SENSIBLE Washington Information Bureau Says Government Is Showing Improvement. 18 (A —The forward Washington, March ssian soviet is “moving rapidly in an economic sense,” the Russian information bureau an- nounces, in making public a com- mercial handbook, which is termed “the n t complete stalistical sum- mary” of that country. The burecau reported that geptember the last month of the so- viet , industrial produc- | tlon adva cent of the Iy ra spite the 19 about 189,000, ly 8,000,000 lLast a listed as about povulation, ased by near- famin )00 ine mileage » cooperative or- ember. foreign trade fzw al ¥ advance ] t over 1rrl sor. n.mum execeded exports by $ n y of the former having ‘from Germany to this coun- ar its hifted try. N AUTOMORBILE Maerz and Councilmen nd C. ehm are 's selections as a the enginec 1y pe for COMMITT! Alderman 1. Rartlett Paoness > to inves | portation needs of the o and determine what is miost appropriate work. The depa tioned for a six cyliv bt Counc car | 1ain had the ma not co automobile is ne ing he M SCRATCHLS 18 (A—Iliness the Wilby high and the Waterbury, Mz four members of | basketball squad sical condition of a fifth player this morning forced Prinef- pal Joseph P. Kennedy to wire Yale ahoritics the withdrawal of the 1 school state Interscholastic basketball tournament which begins tomorrow afternoon in New Haven Wilby was scheduled Bridgeport at 7:15 o'clock NATL. BANK INCOME T\t Washington, March 1§ (P income of na u ject to state passed today by the senats m measure will be taken up day by the house of to meet tomorrow, \l Pl l‘l)\l' JONES Il"l March 18 on lish entr ones at the ports this country ever jammed fts [4¢ during and that de- | 00 miles greater | trans- | from competition in the | Whols Your Skinny Friend, Ethel? Tell him to take Cod Liver OIl for a couplo of months and get enough good healthy flesh on his bones to look like a real man, Tell him it's the only way to take those grave-like hollows from his cheeks and neck, Tell him he won't have to swallow the nasty oil with the nauseating, Iy taste because the MeCoy Lab- oratories of New York are now put- ting up Cod Liver Oil in sugar coat- cd tablet form, Ask for McCoy's Cod Compound Tablets—every druggist ls them—G0 tablets—60 cents, Any man or woman can put on five pounds of healthy flesh in 20 days or your druggist Is authorized to refund the purchase price, One woman put on 15 pounds in slx we Children grow robust and strong-—Feeble old people feel younger in a few weeks, Be sure and get McCoy's, original and genuine and imitations, FOR SKIN TORTURES Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Just What You Need Don't worry about Eczema or other skin troubles. You can have a clear, healthy skin by using Zemo. Zemo generally removes imples, Blackheads, Blote) ma and Ringworm and make the skin clear {and healthy, Zemo Is a clean, pene- trating, antiseptic lquid, that does not show and may be applied day or night, Liver Of1 the avold | Eczema Goes In Seven Days Or Money Back Thousands of people who suffer from itching skin, Kezema and un- sightly cruptions will be glad te know that Moone's Emerald Ofl, a | elean, powerful, penetrating Anti septic O, will banish their trou. Dles in seven days or less, For years they have been using Oointments and Salves and while they helped to relieve the itching, soreness and pain, they often choked the pores and did not al- low the poisonous matter to es- cape, Moone’s FEmerald Oil overcomes this objection for the Ol pene- frates down through the pores to the cause of the trouble and leaves them free to discharge all polson- ous sccretions. It is very concen- trated and only a few drops are required at an application. You ean get it at the Fair Drug Dept. or any progressive drug store and if it doesn’t end your trouble in seven days — money gladly returned =— directlons on each bottle, Wit Cveer Store News “BIMBO” The College Kick Here's the newest model for young fellows—made of the latest light shade tan leather, wide toe, flat heel, and the price is only seven bucks. o “RELIEF " for women We are selling niore and more of these wonderful shoes for women. They are made wider across the ball of the foot, so that they are ideal for women with wide feet or sore joints — and they come with the mainspring arch built right into them, so they give that support so necessary to people who are on their feet a & Shoes for $6.75 We have just received a shipment of Women's Pumps and Oxfords at this popular price—$6.75. We stand back of every pair, same as we do on our higher-priced goods. Shoes at this price include patent leathers, gun metal, black and brown kid and tan calf. SHOE STORE 211 Main Street