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e 17 KILLED IN PEKING RIOTING AS STUDENTS PROTEST CAPITULATION Government Accedes to Ultimatum of Blockade at Tientsin. | Peking, March 18 () — Seven- teen students were killed and six- teen wounded today by guards who fired on a thousand were demonstrating cabinet offices. The demonstration was in protest against the government's acqui- escence to the ultimatum of the powers regarding the restoration of free communication between ek ‘ing and Tientsin and the sca, Troops are guarding the resi- dence of the chief of the mili squad which fired on the studef students whe before the The acceptance by the Kuomin- | chun and the Fengtein forces of the five demands of the powers with minor re: vations appears to have wolved the Taku crisis. The foreign office, replying to the memorandum of the powers, while asserting that t commandants of the powers at tsin had as- sumed an attitude which the gov- ernment considers beyond the scope of the protocol of 1901, and which {t cannot recognize as equitable, at the same time reaf- firms the stipulations of the proto- col concerning free communication seaward, “a principle which government always has respected.” Lack of Patience The memorandum comments on the alleged lack of patience on the part of the diplomats but assured the powers that the competent military authoritles have been au- thorized to take proper measures regarding the clauses in the memo- randum of the powers. In the communication the elgn office asks the naval mander at Tientsin to enter into relations with the local military authorities with the object of find- ing ways and means for the n the for- com- Allied | Powers and Will Lift|, 'Mhlpn rotlre, thereby removing the (danger to Tlentsin, the Kuomin- chun will abandon measures belng applied, Fourth — Urging {nvestigation | of Chinese passengers ahoard all | €hips 48 necessary to safeguard | Mentsin —against — infiltration o | armed etleners likely to create | disturbances In the city Japan, it s reported, 1 demand from apology, punishment indemnification of for tho firing upon destroyers by national army troops In the Pel river lust week when one Japanese oflicer was killed and several Japanese wounded. Tt 18 sald not to be the intention of Japan sort to force it China fails to nccept responsibility but to take world court, a5 decided China formal of guilty and the wounded two to Japanese were to 1 the matter up hefore | The fiva demands the ultimatum of the as follows contafned power in hostilities in Taku bar 2 discontinued, The mines and other obstructions must he removed Third The navigation signaly must be restored and not further molested I'ourth -— Combatant must remain outside the refrain from interference the vessels bar with for- arches of for , except by customs authorities, t be discontinued ultimatum gave intil today ly favora Tientsin, March 18 (F) — 1t {s mi-officially announced that Kuo! fonal army) he ngtien troops of M: Chang Tso-Lin, Manchurian , have accey the C inesc to the and dieta d the demands of that operations fln‘ Pei ri DF“(‘R]BW LEVIATHAN they cease the to | around | subject of “The Leviathan," howed a large number of lantern | [slides illustrating the construction o |the ship, and showing pletures of its |tnteri | - the & id the Loviathan not only is (st ship that can be bullt, but | It is 50 safe that a ropetition {0f the Titanic disaster would be ims possible with this boat. Statistics juoted showed that she uses 1,000 tons of oil a day for fuel and 5600 tons of fresh water a day. On the onditloning job were employed at time 8,000 workmen, The ship L welght of 64,000 tons, and Incs all the luxuries and faclli- | s of two hotels like the Pennsyl- | e e New York; a Ritz Carlton urant, a library, a bank, & num- stores, swimming pool, movie , tailoring establishment, three Bymnasiums, rooms, greenhouse, barber and winter 1t will accommodate a crow 1,500 and a passenger list of and costs $400,000 each way trip across the occan. HELD ]N RUN POTS | r of heater | shop, Turkish baths Former Boatswaln at New London Arrested as Seventh Member of | Alleged Liquor Ring. \ N March 18 (M—Dis- | | | boatswain John. | New Tondon missed York yesterday, McGuire, rom the coast guard at New son-in-law of Frederic | Zepp, prominent 1 baker, was tuken into custody at hls home here last night charged with being 1m\\ll~ the o tions of the al. leland-Block Jsland arrest s th nth | late in connection with in- | veturned by a federal / in Providence. fs epecitically conspliring and J. J swport R. T nd liquor in cated in leged Rhode His nade t grand ju McGuire charged John Camp- Connelly, both of | «nd hoth under ar- Ithode Island v. He is further charged with | ng a bribe of $10,000 on or May 1, last, from Connelly &choo the ith to 1 o permit a Sakonet before foner Russell H loaded with ||} river, ||} TR e —— | CLERGYMAN EXPELLED | FOR HIS ACTIVITIES, L IM IDENTIFIED {Man Tound Murdered In Nl‘w‘ Amsterdam Minister Dropped ang | Ca"aan Was New Yorker—Leaves Will Also Be Deprived Wife And Two Children. New Canaan, March 18 (A--Iden- » |tfication of a man found murdered | Amsterdam, Holland, March 18 (#) vesterday fn the underbrush on ”w‘ The general synod of the Calvin. o |property here of Frank C. Dodd, ist church, now in sesslon at Assen, [New York publishpr, was establisi. | has declded unanimously to expel ed last night through a book dis-| the Rev, J. H. Geelkerken from the covered in one of his pockets. He | reformed church. He also will be [was Rosarlo Streva, 238 100th leprived of his pastorate at Amster- of His Pastorate |street, New York City. lam because he preached while un- | Tt was learned that Streva left his lor suspenston {home Monday morning at 9 o'clock - and told no one where ho was going. The Rev, Mr. Geelkerken some |What brought him to this town time ago stirred up a rellglous con- (could not be discovered. He was | troversy in Holland when in a ser- |married and has two children, | mon he cast doubt upon the story | The man was slaln with a sharp of Eve and the serpent in the garden 'Instrument belioved to have been a of Bden. At his trial he refused to |hatchet, and conditions {ndlcated ign an undertaking to subscribe to | that there had heen a struggle. literal Interpretation of the chap- | —_— ter of Genesis referring to Eve and DE MOLAY HERO MEDALS the serpent. Last Saturdny the synod, w)mh‘ had sat throughout Friday night un- | {1l the early hours of the morning, | TW0 Members of Lodge Recognized f".lfii‘:;’"”f‘,fl‘ Siocierken for {hIe | For Outstanding Feats of Dravery fer an ultimatum had been given | bRt “unconditional signatura | hofore 11 a. m, Friday,” of a decla- | ration prepared by the synod to the efficet that the second and third chapters of Genesls must be inter- preted literally, Then followed the lengthy session which terminated in his suspension for three months. Tt |is prnl-ah!h that the sermop which he preached while under suspenston was after Saturday morning's de- | cislon hy the synod to suspend him. | | During the Year, Kansas City, Mo., March 18 UP— | The grand council of the Order of De Molay, at its closing session yes- | v, awarded heroism medals to William Elkins, Baltimore, Md., and Arthur Whitehead, Quincy, Mass., members of the lodge. Elkins re Mrs. Barbara Wagoner, 62, of Baltimore, when the steamer Three Rivers burned in Chesapeake Bay, July 4, e ——— |buried in a new grave at West Point 1922. | NE W BLII‘AW DATLY HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH 1%, 1926, S S S S Whitehead and a companion, Joe | Dodge, rescucd Max Englehardt, keeper of the Tiptoe House, Mount Washington, N. H., from death in a bllzzard, October 13, 1926, Proposeq Canada Put Tax on U. S, Magazines Ottawa, March 18 (P—A delega~ tion from the Magazine Publishing | Assoclaiion of Canada has suggested to Premier King and members of |hls cabinet wnd the leaders of the |conservative wad progressive parties the lmpositiom. of u tariff of ten cents a pound on al perfodicals and week- end magazines entering Canada, They pointed out that Canadian | manufacturers wers suffering from the competition of American manu- facturers, who are able to reach the Canadfan consumers with thelr ad- vertisements admitted free into Can- | ada in periodicals and week-end newspapers. It was also pointed out that these concerns, having no busi- ness establishments in this country, |do not have to Pay taxes n Canada. | (D A. R (“ertam Grave Is | That of Famous “Molly” | Albany, N. Y., March 18 (F)— | “C'aptain Molly" heroine of the revo- | lution and the first woman to enlist In the service of her country, lies and a monument, commemorating | her valor, Is to be erected over her | resting place. 1 After nearly a year's investigation, | the state organization of the Daugh- | ters of the American Revelution is | |certaln that the body car be none |other than that of the intrepid Joan of Arc of the new world who took up her husband's gun after he was | wounded In the battle of Fort Wash- | | elementa | Ocean-O {s taken into Drink Deep Sea Water andDrive Rheumatism From the Blood Axelrod’s Pharmcy Sells It In Concentrated Form—One Tablespoonful In Water Twice a Day Name Is Ocean-O and Money Back If It Doesn't Couquer Rheumatism When the agonizing pains of rheu. signaling for help. It {s starving for the want of vi- tallzing natural mineral elements. kind of alkaline elements | | nobody knows, but fnasmuch as deep | sea water contalns the same natural by drinking | a concentrated tilled and purified deep sea water, it What |elements as the hlood, Ocean-0, has been found that rheumatism can be fought and conquered and the alkaline condi- tlon of the blood re- stored. In nearly every | person's blood some of | these rare natural min- eral elements which only puro deep sea water can supply are lacking. Every gland, every nerve, every muscle and every organ in the body needs these vital and when the stomach and gets into the blpod etream many allments and ab- normal conditions disappear. in constipation, obstinate gkin eruptions, and dis- | mineral the JAN.O Ocean-0 Analysis made by | bottles Samuel P, Salter & Son, Inc, Phlladel- phia, Chlorine Sulphurie Acla Radical Silica, Calcium Oxfge Magnesium Oxide Sodium Oxide Potassium Oxide Bromine Sodium Carbonate Sodlum Biearbonate Manganese JODINE time. you money back. Glve the blood these mineral sub- stances In the form of Ocean-O and |matism almost drive you crazy, re- (it will distribute them to every part | member it fs the blood in your body |Of the body, bullding up weakened ‘nw\un and glving energy, strength and vitality to the whole system, That's why Ocean-O is so helpful indlgestion, auto-in-~ toxication, nervous breakdown and What any run down human ma- |chine needs most of all is vitalizing elements blood and this Ocean-O will give you. coraes containing 10 fluid ozs. and as dose {s from one tea- spoonful to one tahle- spoonful twice a day, you can readily see that a bottle lasts a Axelrod’s Pharmacy sclls dozens of Ocean-0, as do druggists every- where, and always with the understanding that it you are not satisfled with the help it gives, can have your MeGuire was released furnished by his further examina- | Corcoran, in bond of ther-in-la fon on March 31 W. Aldous, whom a tenance of communications. Tt ndds that no recourse should bo had in Prof. Seward Talks Interestingly On extreme or hasty methods. The substance of the reply to the five demands of the powers is as follows: | High Spots in Reply Th “Ifrst — the Kuominchun will ment undertake to observe the protocol [ of 1901 with the United States, reconditione Great Britain, Japan and Ialy, from Germs which provides for the disarma- cven ment of forts at Taku at the mouth of Ya of the Pei river, and guaranteesan who open way to the sea, member: Second—Xeasures taken at Talku of the were purely defensive and intended ical o guarantee the safety of Tientsin. |ginec They will cease automatically when |f ) the damage has been averted. |boat at t Third — Provided the powers|with a sp guarantee that the Nengtien war-4 tor a Oce: P 8 IRt o Mammoth Ocean Liner at Meeting nion e was reported to have st in Providence late today. with having disposed juantity of liquor from a cap- rum runner to Truman Dodg Island, also under arrest at of Engincers In This City mketing' officlals on trip by board the T the ship had eviathan, after fol was Jo i n Society of Mechan first round of what was tc e been a fwelve-round bout last The knockout, a left to the as delivered one minute after the time as engineer mission dress was on the Sarah Jones Is A S She depends on silent salesmen, Every bundle of washing That she sends out of the place Must speak for her, ent oImtan Porter’s Furniture is the best quality and their values are the best. This is a fact proven by the satisfied cus- tomers whose families and friends hought Porter’s Furniture nearly sixty years ago and who always rely on this fine store for Quality, Service and Satisfaction. PORTER'S sell GOOD FURNITURE at LOW PRICES and do not attempt to sell discounts and prices. When that all important bundle Is placed before your critical eye, It must do all of the talking. It must say, definitely and emphatically: “Behold, madam, I am the perfect product of the perfect Jaundry. - Your continued patronage is the only indication of your unqualified approval. Does my appearance appeal to you?”. We'd like to send a Silent Salesman To your house next week, Won't you call us and say we may Rt haie Just the thing to brighten up your bed- room and give you real comfort. This one, only the well Porter's in unfinished so them hairs, You can get made ones at either finished color or You can vourself. Corner Card Tables A rickety card table is a nuisance at best. Our new ones in attractive colors are strongly made with double braces. Bahy Carriages This is the time of year to keep the baby out of doors. Whitney and Heywood Car- riages at Porter's — LOW PPI(,}:,\, 904 is the number. SARAH JONES Of New Britain any decorate Table Cupboards, ete, HERE WE HAVE TWO OF OUR FEATURE 100 D SERVICES: * WET WASH I e ! the entire washing ni’ a rm al family | ®'|8 b 8 | Bt fap!ts endl f i i T I bundle. It is washed in ELEVEN CHANGES OF | | @) ( | LRl L A It gt ~~~‘T——"u“. WATER, with the m' of the m\‘\ and purest of | § ; ! .‘i soaps and other washing pr ed to you practically ready for ironing Pays for gt Was aelvel » at home. lnets— R \ Is the minimum charge for our Rough Dry Service. We wash, starch and dry all of your clothes, IRON ALL OF YOUR FLAT WORK and return your wearing ap| parel dried soft and fluffy ready for you to iron at home. The Living Room the: ) at Porter's are of good quality and are exceptionally low priced. You can get a well made Davenport for only $69.00; or a complete suite for only $§149.00, The l_hre& Rapids style — such a suite \\ml]d only cos piece suite pictured above with the Coggswell chair, all $2 79 00 POR rER" covered with genuine mohair is only $295‘00 B. C. PORTER SONS “CONNECTICUT'S BEST FURNITURE STORE” The New Dining Suites are most attractive. Just think how fine it would be to e have a real handsome walnut suite of the latest Te]ephone 904 West Main Arch St.