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M'\\ BRITAIN DAILY HER‘\LD, WEDNESDAY, This would ma With ¢ costing per ton and ) per cent of protein we [cent o protein. §00d meat substitut seed mical | currying ¢ can got 1 $50, or at & cost of abolit five cents per poupd tion COAL LEGISLATION - PLANS ASSAILED 000 pounds of protein for "'Besfsteak which contains 20 per | cent of protein sells for ¢ pound, £0 we are paylng pound the protein ecfateak 18 almost within of the research chemist LOOKS LIKE SUICIDE Mass Hvun Bilumiuous Operators Say Pro- posals Are Unfair April pendin, for Wo Coal star, Mass,, (7. 5. batore s was assalled here today by L. Gandy, Natlonal glslation now congre Harry of the executive secretary | Winthrop, Man Believed to 1 assoclation, an Have Gone to Death Over Niagara nization of bituminous operat- Falls, of gram aring rs on th ting lealers as ona principal | at the an- lund retall ged In the pro- contem- unwar- bu Niagara Falls, N. Y., April 7 ( A man's hat found on tho riv 3 mid.way between Prospect Point and the Goat Island bridg ly to tay by Ra arey of Buffalo, and turned ov to reservation authori- ties s bellaved to indicate another Falls sufclde. In the band of the hat was written in ink, A. MacW Winthrop Lodge, Winthrop, Mass. Near the hat was found a key to a room at the Temperance house here tigation at hotel dis- that A. MacWillie of Win- Mass,, regist: at the hotel He p: bill laet lock 2 did not re- His bed had been slept in § ral suitcases found room contained men's cloth. nd labels on the cases indicat- in ed tt the owned had been travel. depletion, lurope, largely in Seotland. prices to No euiclde note was found near the rv was as hat nor among the clothing in the supply of room at the hotel & mind could e o iue N Bids for Public Works Opened by Commission bituminous re- Since the date for the regular meeting of the publie works board, April 13, falls on election day, the date for the meeting was pushed for- ward a week and was held last night. e discussed and bids for work | were received. The bhoard will mect | Monday at k to award th contracts on the bids opened Jast | night or the furnisl { cr Connecticut Quarrie following bid: 2 inch, ton: 1 1-4 inch, 81.25 a ton; $1.50 a ton; and screenings The Sherman Sand Co. Toffc hers bid the M al n epared under ulati posals conslderation ond inte fmpose 1t would r oduced he said constitutional | 1 government ;'n".u: tendeney to- chment pri- rr)".V11 out, r ultimats oh control and o es, He des the luxury H he throp, inday. re on as & o bee with mining it pointing toward | T i costs 188 of onsumer however fuel as far ahead as t fually ourcea. SINTHETIC BEEF THOUGHT LIKELY - (Continued From First Page) til there fs but a small country for the oil the lard of the . made $1.10 a % inch, 3.80 a 11 $.45 | the the ing en- | te and mads m, rised eot- | ofl of the would not be 3 to go around | tantly Increasing pop- lelivering of cru Bitiihe eotte bids wer for of walks and blue wvm curg 84,28 <1lini d oil | g, $4.2 I‘mnk Divins present | 85,045, Bids received very little | relaving of flag sidewalks anld res jven to the |ting of one curbs from the seed carries fn | Aiudi, 31,300, and from ntity than the ofl | Deicegno, $1,660. ’ Rich In Proteins The City Coal and Woed Co. of cottonseed indicates |awarded the contract for t e of considerable protein, | niehing of sewer pipes. + 1t 1s possible after removing | $1,457.41. Otaer bidders to obtain | priccs were: Sherman 1 R lifte H. Walcs Lines Co i Cornel & Underhill, $1 tat re eno fa o the relaying concrete “lat pment | 2 . Na Co., heir vers rit fon, A ~oming eeas \MnodMs Do Not Listen To Reddmg of Memoirs eftect todas 'l. new departure tool 3t opening the Methadist ¢ jec *l fully writte speakers | Wilso sard ship cretary of the JUNTOR ACHILVEMENT Women Tell Othere how this gienic pad dis tissue : |>l \YH WINS RACE April as no laundry SUNSHINE SOCTETY NOTES Plans for the coming season ! | the two Daifore & | - WHITTEMORE SAYS HE 15 INNOGENT + Bxpects Acquittal [mpartial T Buffalo, N. Y, April ard Reese Whittemore bandit leader, has ment to the through his attorn agsoclate defen Bartlett Bummer, city give him a falr tra be not judged too hars is tried. He declared t} dent of an acquittal it partial trial Whittemore 1 may not b the people wither T nor my pals 10 with the The only v, M cour an ang thing I ask f 18 that it retain its repu play and justice and impartial trial, prejudice and passion that T am sure I will t After & hour's con Whittemore yesterday declared he is more co ever that the bandit le in Buffalo on the mormna of Octo- r 20th, front the up, two wounded when an Bank of B guard and §9 T 000 WEALTH IN POTATOES Idaho and Colorado Shipping car- | Loads of Commodity Rising Market. Chicago, Colorado, Apt both ral riches, are |to another sub-surfac: diggings of pofatoes. ensational upturns i hava been checked t Middls West althoug 7 he East ted Stat Economic, lagt e . Ur cultural } 1 forwarded year ago, tates are 1ling high prices larger shipments {ron and from Washington Peak 1 mmp o ago. Me 1 pots hile East are Trench in Their Own Methaods of Persuading Rifls to Stop War. Parls, April Moroeesd re Ri ong the gardless ted H the tion could | as negotiating surprogsed interact forkg for actic Kéen 7 when the qulmr \muz"lel 1410 ntance o 840 3 ome of them r 068 of from \‘lll) Don't Let Th Turn Iato “Flu” Rub on Gond Old My conge=tion. culat up the cold. Aseffective as the me: cter, does the wark Juet rub it on = You will feel a warm tingle as it enters thes welcom he pores a cooling relief, 721 hers: Musterole is alsp -de in milde and ema = Children's fssued a state asking statement tollowe of Buffalo to know Bank of Buffalo job. 4 give ms a fair It I am gnm iffalo was held killed, lebrated {den disclosures of under treating t Bur and t ip! Moroceo Are Al on and i AP RIL 1926. FbWER ON PARMS. Farm Population of Country De- creases Nearly Half Million in Past Year lf GIVC[] Washington, April 7 (P) —— A de- creass ln the farin population of the ml W nite ates of nearly halt a mil- lion m 1026 18 reported by the de (P-=Rich. metropolitan Missing or | partment of agriculture, which es- —— timate the number of persons lfv- ing on farms on January 1, 1926, to have 80,658,000 compared with | 1,134,000 January 1, 192 [ pearance I'he estimated net movement away | son, from farms last year amounted to 101,000 persons; but there was an | estimated excess of farm births over | ©°'1¢8% farm deaths amounting to 422,000 which reduced the loss due to city- ward movement, to 479,000 The estimated decrease population in 1924 was 1 The loss in 1925 was gene sections of the country. The largest percentage decrease was in the mountain states Actual migration estimates, dfsre- garding births and deaths show a net movement away from farms for the entire country of 2.9 per cent | GOUZENS FLAYS WHEELER | Cambridge, 5 today of Buffalo elvine Greens 1sel with W, that the 1 &nd that ne hly beforo he hat he is co given an In on of the ass the navy, a Harvard collcge aported at his c bé found who h that 1856 in farm ad se 000, 1l in an | Information abouts w concerni 1, but T wish that had anythin ¥ ad last night or during lays Earlier in the ported he had gone I'but later rafused to c | this statement, mm:l word rom this city tation of fair free from | e acquitted.” on with Mr. Greene mm‘-r‘l than vaa not that 1-1 ain, abandoning Detlines to Let | tion to come by [ woma arrive at His | ding S said th ava 10: Michigan Senator Anti-Saloon Man Address mored car in ¥ pry Committes, 2 a stolen. third vaghington, g prohl 2y before arm t o April 7 (F—While | n show was on to- senate prohibition strident volece ealled attention to the erits of the sen ate civil service committee as a el attractlon for thoss looking for t kind of excitment There, Senator Couzens, can, Michigan, was do and white as annot world that he would no n while Wayr aloon 1 mmittee, Wheeler vesterday ona of the cor Cambridge, A Douglas Robi nt secretary of the wag missing. repul i in black to chair- iealer of addressed to Sell on an airplan A his mother, th for eud- und mi e coutr surprise—big A a result potato pri hout th soaring cor ague was mittes men a 1 10 place pro- r the ger 4 by slight {llne ition a civil Friday, doct it was explai ile T am chajrmar sald. "It senators wa vy out may t ch of Wheeler's characier a committ i com with op M nt to nd gonieons o man T have not ited to wor had not told them When his mother she found he worried. ed toda 1ho and Coln him gO the ca hefo g to do his 1 night, Efforts to locate first reports of his “c it Mr. Wi ommittes tive ecssion, URGE RATIFICATION i American Colony nt Constantinaple present and with as excluded when cided to go tnie eler.w n ing of the house a Mi the place, refu any inform. rooming there w and the added Moone; pplies of ol nhled Asks That America Anprove Tau- strength to , nor ho manages the house, say | n day his ea Robjason went to N was gon The student, unaware that | his mother was in town, oman's ref Not? he b, s ng wo n the she to No 0 'm the ! airpl 0 o'el hig arrival MESTERY ATTACHES INROBINSON CASE Is Son of Naval Secretary Mass, April 7 —Mys. | tery surrounded the reported disap- of Douglas Robin- stant secretary of sophomors at Harvard ad At his uld Mis ast few had re- w York, | or deny student’ was leaving Washingtan by lier inten. | apd | Product? ane, ock to- the au- fer not to dis- navy, ned, 1t sinus trouble, his far of his and ret Robinson disappe reached Cambridge were unavailing. Harvard authorities had heard noth- ase and at his rooming s, April 7 () — son, son of the assist- was at classes at Harvard university today, unaware that his family had started a search for him on a report that he While his father prepared to mak flight from Washington to aid in the search for his son, and former Helen Astor, vho came to Boston last night, was making frantic efforts to find him, voung Robinson w4s going about his | daily routine after recovering from York last to see a He nily and plans, last night became urned to rance’ who conducts ve new ther 154l the in vspapers students attending elasses to ta creasing imors that were put into sanne Treaty W gt ressed to hatrman Bo relations At and ¢ April were Continuing Amers calor : binse fic 1 on with ¢ ffian front i ning Ianded tour in ic reqn to b rs the urnish machines ut. B. R igned to pilot it Mo cetion clegray o 1-El-Krim ign Holcor the p ar: was TR ordey to take on to secretary from Key West, | after an | southern waters. | °%*" t from him for | eld resulted nday naval mb plane y while picked to machine, Ro ated hare t mi; 8 eral days socratary firs 2 pl and t contem S \|(> Bach | Brew- | were LOGAN-THOMPSON on to aid {n the s son tment with nav went Wedding Relts :m/l of This City Ring I'or Fred Logan And Miss Thompson of Pla Margaret 1. ation mille, t would be possible Mitchel air today e flight to > natie from Mrs. York vest jugt been voung Dousias had college mates last sday. Robinson wen: ew York las Robinsen, who is 21 ot taken any »xtra clothing arther t) L and, by ents. Rev. hureh, of- | S M )\\H!ll Corp a wedding vill resid with TRAIN IN WRECE Halifax, April 7 Limited N at CW ol treal fusterole DIES OF PNEUMONTA nister p Mass., whi Mus il of mustarc Frank binson ar th at is ctu that the a plated diree go fficials on experts doubted for him to get | L fleld He de v Yor M. to his son erday, informed not been geen by in Ca ¢ night. vears to hand-bageage him, “Hair- a combing ic co s0 tion as the story spread. Excitement In Washington Two Assist- | Boctanl to be reached | in station and pilots, was a6~ carrivng | Lieut. | fly an s &, 4 thero his he had dies for seant taking ne at Hampton Roads to go to | for him. On his arrival hera Assistant Sec- t to the tting in tound h ong Is- cided to Robin s o n, eent saying that mbridgo Boston Young old, hadl or far as . “HAIR-GROOM" I\eprLm Combed, Gle Well-Groomed all Day Groom” dignif cream sts only a few cents a jar at any drugstorc N tha an el 1d mustarr hout blister touch to ar s ion that c ymbed all day you like also ha 1ps grow 3¢ and 65¢, in Better thn a mustard plaster HEADS ENGINEERS April 7 Brigadler ‘Hair-Groom" thick, e 18 t natu d well ed effect to halr = that final bot in is Millions use it be groom the in 1y style grease- heavy IDDIES'COLDS should not be “dosed.” Treat them emmmy wh.h—- Over 17 Million Jars Used l' all | his where- his room [¢ The university later | N had | den street rooming house last | when | | drews, -d put in | | portant e secre- | & over ial occasions. Even | or shampooed hair 4 CROOKED JURORS HAMPERED WORK (Continued ¥rom First Page) |last September he sald, diversion had decreased, but he calculated that the total amount the squad had | kept oft the market would make labout $216,000,000 worth of bootleg liquor. | The district attorney sald his chemists found traces of polson in 98 per cent of the bootleg liquor seized “The condition of it depends on Although 1t was sald officially at|the conscience and technique of the been | bootlegger," no one could | erowd n him. | rooming house on Linden streat, he added, the laughed agaln. Under the old enforcement policy Buckner said, distiilers sold pure al- "ohol to bootleggers and marked the sale on the books as that of dent tured alcohol and the agents Inspect- the books and let it go at The inspection fo was so ip- |adequate,” he sald, “that the sales could not be run d Tells of Blg Sull Buckner told of a single still in New Jersey, recently selzed, which |re-distilled 4,000 gallons of complete- y denatured alcohol 4 da “Did they turn out a asked Reed. I don't know, but I assume so cause if not the vould have been gitation n my office about poison- ous liquor on the market.” Turning to “bootleg druggists,” the district attorney said investigation had shown that the drugstores in New York eity drew over 486,000 | zallons of liquor a year, whereas the total amount for which doctors could legally issue preacriptions was only 240,000 gallons. “This {llegal business” he gaid, ‘was on a retail price of $§ a quart. ‘Cut’ only once, you find there fs a total busincss of 315,600,000, There are 16 agents to inspect the drug- stores and check up on the physi- clan Senator Harreld protested that Buckner was {indicting the éntire | druggist trade by Inferring that all of them “cut’” whiskey they sold “Do you think would sell whisk hesitate ta put I There meree and palatable a druggiet v iliegally a little water in jt? d asked. o Bootleg Ethjes. are no Chambers of Com- in th underworld,” said Buckngr, “and there are no ethics among the bootleggrrs.” Two hundred and fifty of the 1 500 drug stores in New Yerk city q Senator row aré under examination, the wit- | ness said. This work months old, he added, no saying he is or and ther final resnit two hat will Stizures of ships around New York are decreasing, the witness sald, but “dry United States i5 ex- rorting bootleg industrial alcoliol into Canada to help the adian bootleggers to beat the Canadian government out of taxes." A word of praise for Gen: the prohibition chief, | given by Buckner j before committee recessed until tonight weral Andrews is the bes £aid 1 An- was the 3 hing prohibition ever had,” b Anxious to Hear Him The publicly cxpressed views of Mr. Buckner as to liberalization of the law unle it could be en- reed more effectively than it has in the past, I not always pleased advocates of prohibition, and he has been counted upon the wet 1d marshals to give jm- stimony in building heir case again ands. The third prehensive congressio into the effects of prohibition found the hours hedule, Monday's meeting having been cut short by one hour and vesterday's by two wet drys each were allotted 24 h for the presentation of their with the schedule calling for hours a day, and unless the already lost can be made up woek, it is likely that the hearing will extend beyond the two weeks limit contemplated the commi te the up of four time this Drys Start Monday ans for presentation cage, which echeduled to Monday, were announced to- by the joint committee com. prising legislative represenfatives the Women's Christ Temper- ance Union, Anti-Saloon league International R {ederation, National Temperance burean, Templars, hoard of temperance. prohibition and publie the Episcopal church and the com- mission on social service of the Methodist Episcopal chureh, South, “The witnesses for prohibition,” sald the announcement, “will cow from every phase of Americar and will present t case without direction of couns ve the right of way at the hear- ings on Monday. The e coming from every state in the Union, rep- resenting ths farm, the home the school, the missionary the clubs and the politi- arena.” How Law Is Regarded “I regard the prohibition law a a declaration of war on the li trafic, eaid District Atto Buckner mony. “It people regard peace ) § ve no doubt the prohibition law could be enforced in my dis- triet if we had the right kind of machinery. It has never been tricd of the the seems it to me t0o n as & treaty of either by the state or the federal | government, because with the kin of federal courts we have, where jury trials are necessa law cannot be enforced in such a congested district as New York elty. Describing conditions York, when he took office, ner sald state and were arresting 50 year for violagons law, Buck- persons a of the New York Conditions | “T tound the federal building a seething mass of bartenders, ped- dlers, waiters and the like,"” Buck- ner said. “The United States com- missioner told me he threw out 85 to 90 per ceént of the cases brought, for lack of evidence, “Federal judges told me the whole atmosphere of the federal who | is | by | | whieh the principal witnesses Good | morals of | at the outset of his testi- police | in New | federal officers | [ The Public Demands "SALADA" TEA Your Grocer Can Supply It bullding was one of collusion. tempts were made to bribe men even in the building."” Before General Andrews took charge, Buckner sald, prohibition agents were rated by the number of arrests they made. “I found that 99 per cent At-|ternoon sessions as originally jury- | planned, ' They are to have the cquivalent of six four-hour hearings his week, and next week a llke amount of time will be set aside [for the drys. Distriet Attorney | ceeded it or | ¢ ded mos! Buckner pro. of the time in his own ay with Senator Reed, democrat, » of sts were of pot d o) jmore of the arrests wcre of P Missourl, the one wet on the com- caser,® ha addeg, “They were BOL| oiives cubting in an: etouslensl gétting the men who were makm::[‘l”,s,mn NEW BLUE ARMY HEAD missloner told me he n‘cv»nftl | Maple Street Man to Take Executive [ 180,000 complaints & year. cour: they came from sxna!. | casies, Tt was then I suggest | padiocking.” | “My proposition with respect to | |petty arrests has been misunder- stood," continued the district attor- | ney. here have been petty ar- but my plan has been to get the proprietor and issue padlock in- |junctions, rather than arrest aiter or a clerk.” Co-operates With Police | Buckner testified that his office co-operated with the city police in |efforts to break up dens of thieves | land other crooks. | “These criminals gather in these | |places,” he said. “They don't hold cach other up there. They aren't | |violating any state law. If the po- lice find liquor there they make ar- ed as lleutenant general of irests and they are entitled to h: : | the army, due to pressure of bugi~ federal trials, We don't convict all ness, and Mr. Cashmore has been {of them, but at least they are put |appointed lieutenant general for tha to the troubls of a defense in'court. | balance of this term, thus glving “Prohibition isn't going to be en- | | him a chance to perfect his plans forced until people begin to go to % hile the class still is in gession this Jail in large numbe 1t would |spring. take one judge one year trying two! It was voted to have the annual cages a y to dispose of the cases ' nomination of officers on May ¢ and that the city police bring in during |to close with election May 16. Thers one month.” probably will be no speaker on May “Then it would take twelve & will be the earlicst the the time to ever closed, ons year it st of the calendar?” e run over into June before ator Harreld, republican, closi Sentiment seems to favor | horter class season. President B. F. Armstrong, who according to the official program of the convention of the Federation of | Men's Bivle classes at Providence, May 1 and 2, will lead the singing, |was clected a delegate as was Charles J. Bvmonds, historian coming generals will act a8 Position June 1—Wennerberg Singers to Glve Convert William A. Cashmore, 208 Mapla street was elected general of the !Blue army of Everyman's Bible class at a meeting of the executive {committes of the class last evening, The election was an offielal ratifica- | tion of the unanimous choice of the 16 army. Mr. Cashmere takes ¢ of the army on June 1. 16 executive committee also was led that Fred O. Rackliffe has nag- s sliting ail k ab having Okla- | Yes, to take care of the city po cases. Then there are the al- diversions, smuggling, and the | |lice 2 The thousands the police arr 25 ¢ only a small fraction of thos who violate the law, are they not? asked Senator Reed, democrat, Mis- ! sourd. “Probably,” Buckner taid Many Violations s a matter of fact thers are | millions of violations in New York city every year,” euggested Senator Reed S will commite myself on that.” Buckner retorted. Commissioner McLaughlin fs co- | operating with us fully,” Buckner said, reterring to the police commis sioner of New York city. The district attorney put valus on federal judges in t The i alternates, E. A, Krause, vice-president, and Harry E. Parker were added to the committee which is arranglog for the concert to be glven April 14 by Wennerberg ¢horus under the usplees of the class, The concert will be given in the First Lutheran chu not CONCLUSIVE “My client is not mentally normal The fact that he murdered his wifs | is partly a proof of that, but the fact that he marrled again s eon- et clusive.”-—Berlin Dorfbarbier. “They worth their weight in fot Off No Pain! 2 new his dis- He said he did not want to take up the judges time trying old case 'cr the government were former prohie bition agents whose testimony had been repudiated by s in the rast “'Are juries in New York disposed to let offenders off on fiimsy ex- cuses " agked Senator Walsh, demo- crat, Montana, leading dry on the | committee, “Our best ment after six or aight months," Buckner replisd, “is | that pr prohibition ¢onvic- tion fn New York is more difficult han it may be in Texas. We | think the strongest elemant which causes acquittal is where the defend. | ant is a subordinate. The jurymen | 1l say | et the fellow higher up, He's | probably paying for and getting pro- | tection'." | \NJ mean sixty miilions in one | asked Chafrman Means | ' Buckper d | to be no falling| off in the interest in the prohibition hearings, the committes room again being crowded with an everflow into | { the halls To spesd up the proceedings, committee decided to hold a tonizht That will take up unused three hours the wets now i ulated to their credit of the failure to hold af jud | Doesn't hurt one bit! tle “Freezone instantly that then shortly with fingers Your druggist sells s tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, suf. ficient to remova every hard corn, s0ft corn, or corn between the toss, and the foot calluses, without sore- | ness or irritation. Drép alite on an aching corn, corn stops hurting. you lift it right off | the | = the Women will | TO ALL WOMEN VOTERS of the CITY of NEW BRITAIN You are cordially invited to attend a reception and whist at the Elks Club Thursday evening, April 8th, at 8 P. M. Democratic Woman’s Club liquor |