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16 . HUAN LEADER WILL [Phoich Thessue oF - THRE GIRIS HELD S+ e ot But Plans to Sue ity for Not Protecting Him | 0. F. Parker, president of the Parker-Buckey Baking Co. of this clty, was today elected treasurer of John the Quality Ameriea at the seventh general conference be held in the Waldort Astorin tel in New York The Quality 1 is the leading or ompetitiy tional Conference in New York City Today, Herrin, 11 [ Bakers of Smith, one of the April 15 Ku Klux X! r and Mo n contr strite, that he would I he Jispose added that he and cou killed in = (RDERED WITNESSES T0 TELL THE TRUTH Contlnued from First rin's elvil of America anlzation of non- wh 1l in tat aind membership only Mr, s 4 member of the kers s00n A e bakers age whe p from 1 kil Page.) filling his » d hir ltary duties, re taking daily March 6, continued, Colonel Wil- ims returned to him with the news it licine had been giving irritation, and plenty witness related how he re. (i) cordance (tions," the with naval statements of offi- ers who were witnesses of the in- 1t the Coronado on the b ich he inter 3 5 - el Willlams' Pavtnership Dissolved relut After Exchange Trouble s ed to recommend court martial the officers submitted o aptain Cates, a ised colonel's him, he ealled in New York, April 11 (7 S tement of yours Do you in officer of viee in the marine when thing. that of ser t know . “that T realized his embar- nt, and that T would have no or a subordinate officer who round ‘squealing’ on his su- but that I want truth Gener: colonel drunk or was * T demanded of & was drunk ' Cates repli John id member of « i el vk DOGNYO NS not smell liguor on hecause ason e ¥ e T coloncl's breath 0ld Bowery Trick Is N e Worked on Weinstein ant Patrick J. O'M was ne tain Cotes w AR while Gel I member of counsel, he proceeded to cros amine the general. defense complaitn 1 Harttord of a m D mer Philadelphia police “Didn't you say those a bunch of li t head " he asked. the witness replicd Adn't mind though “What is your definition “Beating about the bush; C ning of it.” us W of itnesses already that v s at the Iotcl el Corona Nt in question he ap- ¢ rather than intoxicated 1 Butler's condition, on the hand, said the d him a Come from Constipation Your doetor will tell you that nine times out of ten diziness il cpisode, and headaches mean thatyour of & man suffering from is being poisoned by con- pr r und ervous stipation. Nujol pre and by removing the teye days after the with poor cause. Constipation isdangerots for anybody. Nujoli body. It stomach, n bearing Fighter, Nujol makes up for a d ciency of n: lubrica tr ed .'wa i Your Blood of Psoriasis movement Nujol length « ome does n fam o1 SUI SENATORIAL CANDIDATY Guaranteed c & P STROPLY | BAKERS' ORGANIZATION 1 that after reading the | 't a man is | Captain Cates the & nearby In his his querics at the for- statements nember using that ex- admitting it if T the that's ( had 1en they saw Colonel | do surgeon who | counsel to take Peorle in Fire AS BANDITS' AIDS Said to Have Been Helpers of | “Cake-Eaters Mob” New York, April irls charged with the depredations of the » Baters Mob," afgned today in Haur- lem court and held without bail for liearing Saturday. The charges were icnied, They were Mrs, Norah Green, 21, vife of Jumes Green, who recently pleaded guilty to second degree mur- der and was sentenced to from wenty years to life; Kitty Kraus, 17, sald to the sweetheart of Herbert Koerber, who has heen con- victed of murder in the fiist degree ind Is awalting sentence to the elec- tric ehalr, and Mary Kraus, 1)-year- old slster of Kitty and who is the sweetheart of John Koerber, Her- hert's brother now in Tombs prison charged with robbery, | Previously the girls had been held |simply as material witnesses to the der of Angelo Mahalres, o Ja- maica restaurant owner, by the Mob.” They were charged today with participation in the robbery of a Chinese restaurant in Manhattan. It was brought out how a watch stolen from Wong Bo during the robbery resulted in the capture of the “cake eaters” and subsequently conviction of Koerber, and sentences of 20 years to life for four com- panfons on pleas of gullty to sec- lond degree murder. RIRTH CONTROL 1§ - VOTED AT MEETING Delegates at Women Voters' League Pass Resolutions 15 (A—Three participation in were Cake Eaters is | §t. Louis, April 15 (P — Women can bring nothing of value to politi- cal leadership unless they ground themselves in s hing more solid than a hash of French literature, marxism and psycho analysis, Prof. 1iymond Moley of Barnard colle Columbia university, told the hal League of Women Voters her Women who desire to participate worthily fn government must study the essentials of government in their relation to the news of the day, and must know the politician in his na- tive lair, Moley sald. At a “birth control breakfast” to- ¢ women delegates from New ork, New Jersey, Connecticut and Vermont adopted resolutions favor ing birth control legislation and ed- ucafion which they will seek to bring to the floor of the convention for adoption. that adoption of the resolutions - would not lead to any breach among the delegate $50,000 FIRE IN ESTATE Westwood, Mass,, April 15 (P— The greenhouses and barn of Gardens, the estate of 3 Codman in the Isli ton section of this town, werc oycd by fire today. The loss was estimated at $50,000, Police began an investigation in the belief t the fire was of incendiary ori- gin, Y d D, HANGED FOR MURDER Peorla, 1ML, April 15 (A —Josc youthrul Mexican, was hanged for the murder of his 17 year was that low blood \ustion, | 3 ch a 19 irl in o fit BY PFALL 5 (P —Henry s old, a bond broker, was k 1 today when fell or jumped from the roof of » Milano apartments in West 58th street where he lived. They expressed certainty | ( Is Vacating Peking | Peking, April 15 (®—The Kuo- [minchun or natlonal army, which lias bygen fn command of Peking, to- Iay began evacuating {he city, con- | centrating immediately to the north. The retirement of the Kuomin- | ehun troops from Tungchow, which | began this morning, was accom- | plished orderly. There were no dis- |orders in Peking. It was reported |that a contingent of troops of Mar- !shal Wu Pei-I'u has entered the capital from the south, “HATRACK’ STORY 1 - STILL UNSETTLED Postal Authorities Have Made No Definite Ruling Washington, April 15 (P— After listening to argument today by H. L. Mencken, editor of the American Mercury, Solicitor Donnelly of not been convineed that the artic Hatrack” which was the cause of the order harring the April number | of the publication from the mails Aid not come within the class of ar- ticles prohibited under the law. Mencken and his counsel endeav- ored to show that the article was not obscene, bt that it was an ef- teotive lterary work. They declarcd, that the barring of the magazine from the mails had injured its repu- tatlon and placed it in a clgss with | o numerous sex magazines which | could not be circulated in the mail. Asserting that the post office w: practically exercising a censorship the two men asked why action had not been taken against newspapers {which printed the details of the | Rhinelander divoree case in New York. The postal officlals replied they were merely carrying out the law, |East Portchester Priest . Is Assigned to Ansonia Hartford, April 15 (® — Bishop John J. lan of the Catholic dio- of Hartford today announced appointment of the Rev. gene L. Sullivan of the §: Heart church, East Portchester, Connecticut, as pastor of the Church of the Assumption, An- to succeed the late Jo- ynnott, ather Sullivan was Lebanon, October 14, 18 He was ordained at the Buffalo cathedral in 1895 and was assigned as pas- tor to the Fast Portchester church ter serving churcheg in Norwalk, Wallingford and Stamford, cese the Rev seph § born in Negro Stranglers to Be Executed Tomorrow | Chicago, April 15—Raymond Cos- tello and stranglers of women, in the death cell in the Cook coun- ty jail today preliminary to their executions tomorrow, Costello will be hanged for the slaying of Madeline Whitc. Hobhs strangled his landlady | Mrs. Betty Barnett, negress, and | robbed her of 75 cents Earthquake Is Felt at | Georgetown University | Washington, April 15 (® — An earthquake of pronounced character was registered early today on the | seismograph of Georgetown univer- | sity. It began at 4:57 a. m. and last- led an hour and a half. Dircetor Tondorf placed it ahout 560 miles from Washingt®n, the di- rection not being clearly indicated. Aurora Borealis Seen Here Last Evening People in New Britain and near towns witnessed the spectzeular dis- v of northerr s or aurora alis last night. Congiderahle ( irbance to radio and other elec ical apparatus was reported The beautiful curtain of light decorated the north as far south as New York city moving skies Eczema and Stubbern Skin Eruptions With Deep Sea Water phia Chlorine Salphuri Rad Silica n it's probably blood the those vita your is want zing nts that tarving for Bromine Cakium Oxide Magnesium Oxide Sodium Oxide Potassium Oxide Sodinm Carbonate You Can't Do IT With Ocean-0 Axelrod teaspoonful in | Tork and you :. That st a long One of mer doctor says tha a case standir Ask at Axelrod's reliable druggist an-0O today ish skin to in a are cannof ¢ Pharmacy for a bottle ptions Use one bot a get your m And bear 1 that Ocean-O0 is a wondertul blood, nerve and_ intestinal tonic and after a bot- Acid tle has been taken 1 diluted with ater as directed constipation wil asc to bother natural bowel ment will be regular. 7 an't a grain artificlal mind Salter & Philadel move- Sodium Bicarbona and it is and easy to take no after-taste. the | post office department said he had | ;| (Continued from Page 1.) [ Charles Hobbs, a negro, were placed | began | tart to ban- | [ toward 1dealism and it 1s up to the ' public whether theso . tendencles (] hould be increased or decreased. 'he public should high standard for |iis upon the undergraduates.' State President Leon A. Sprague of the Connecticut Dartmouth as- soclation presided at the meeting, which was opened by A. F. Core bin, the new Rotary president. Mr, Corbin passed cigars to celebrato his election to the presidency and the arrival of a grandson, a son having been born Tuesday to Mr, and Mrs. Emory Corbin. The open- ing prayer was made by Rev. Wil- llam Ross of the First Baptist church, Practieally all of the min- siters of the leading churches | wero among those present. maintain its influence - TOBE RESISTED ‘Boston Police Will Prevem‘ Sabbath Sports Boston, April 15 for evading A the { commerctalizéd Sunday | sport in Massachusctts was revealed }m- the Boston police today., The | practice was sald to bhe in vogue in communities outside Boston and po- lice department division heads weru warned to prevent its being at- | tempted here, new scheme law pro- | | hibiting and banquet of the Connecticut Dartmouth assoclation will be held e e ety tt the Burritt hotel. Mr, Sprague lare sold for Sunduy sports events, Il preside and President Hop- | generally on Saturday afternoons | KIn® will speak again. among crowds attending games of | ! various Kkine 1o spectator \\n'znn\Schml Boys Prepare this tag when he attends the con- | st on Sunday. In communities out- | side Boston where the plan has been | Preparations are now being made | worked out promoters are said to [by Physical Director 8. M. Brewster have made it unpleasant for persons |of the Central Junior High school to not wearing the tag ‘ |form the annual bascball league for This, tho police say, 18 in dircct |the three upper grade and the in- violation of the law which decrees|door leagues for the boys in the that no admission fce shall be|lower grades, charged for Sunday sporting events| The contest is an annual event either directly or indireetly, Officers [and the league ia composed of four are dirccted to arrest persons thus |teams each of which consists of 15 violating the law. |players and s coached by one of #he |Instructors at the school. The fol- | |lowing instructors have agreed to H"PKINS []EFENI]S take over a team: William Gritz- | | | | i |macher, Ralph P. Lowe, Leonard |Nixon, and Harold J. Cleary. The schedule will come to an end short- ly befora graduation. A call for |candidates for the batteries was |sued by Mr. Brewster tod BANKRUPTCY CASES New Haven, Apr ) —Bank- {ice to the world than Captain Fried? | NC~ Faven Aprl 16 UR-—Rank- | Louls Pasteur who gave a life of | tojeral court clerk's office today by service to the world received a re- |pyssol L, Beardsley of Stamford ward which he sald removed the |34 Touig Yolen of this city. Beards- car of want from his heart. But [y proprietor of the Stamford Ra. Pasteur, whose discoveries reduced gio ghop, listed labilities of $2,- the number of death of méthers in 1678.10 and asets of $400. Yolen, a childbirth from five per cent to 1665 | pargonal bankruptey listed Mabilities !than one per cent, received less for (or £0,061 and no asseta. a life time's work than professional | R A letes in America gecelve in one | WANT AGRICULTURAL SURVEY season. @ Guam, April 15 (A—The Chamber Amateurism for Ideals lof Commerce of Guam asked Cap- “The epirit of amateurism is the 'tain L. §. Shapley, governor of the spirit that argues that ideals are igiand, to request Carmi Thompson, thing. The spirit that domi- recently #&ppointed by President nates the community will dominate | Coolidge to investigate conditions in the spirit of the undergraduate the Philippines, to report on the “The man who pursues his own possibilities of agrlculture develop- interests at - the expense of the ment of Guam during Mr. Thomp- is a poor citizen and he |son's transport’s stop at this island. rifices his own interests for —— public welfare is a good citi- the zen, “There are thousands of men in colleges who have the disposition to retain the standards of idealism, but who belicve that the outside yworld has a different sort ot | standard. Intercollegiate athletics | can maintain its standards only | Gerald F. Trotter, his through the spirit of team work. waiting. A large crowd cheered the Men go to college with tendencies | prince as his train left, PRINCE OFF FOR REST London, April 15 () — Travel- ing under the incognito of the rl of Chester,” the' Prince of Wales, who recently underwent an ear operation, today left for Biar- ritz for a short vacation. He was accompanied by Brigadier General OFFICERS A. J. Sloper, President F. S. Chamberlain, Vice-Presi= dent and Cashier E. N. Stanley, Vice-President W. H. Judd, Asst. Cashier C. L. Sheldon, Asst. Cashier and Trust Officer A. S. Parsons, Asst. Cashier DIRECTORS A. J. Sloper E. N. Stanley H. S. Walter J. B. Minor E. H. Davison F. S. Chamberlain A. F. Corbin E. A. Moore Arthur G. Kimball George T. Kimball Walter H. Hart F. M. Holmes George P. Spear Maurice Stanley Harold L. Judd | | This evening tho annual meeting | For Baseball Games | groom-in- | | | N this gt Save it Wi As easy as a good polish job! CERTAINLY yoa can make and keep the finish new on your car. 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Agents For New Britain and Vicinity 250-256 PARK STREET, NEW BRITAIN OUR GROWTH AND TWO-THIRDS CENTURY OF BANKING SERVICE The Directors and Officers of the New Britain National Bank are pleased to announce that the remodeling of this institu- tion’s quarters is completed and that they are throwing these open to public inspection Saturday afternoon from 3 to 9 o’clock. They will also make this the occasion of celebrating the bank’s 66th ANNIVERSARY YEAR A cordial invitation is extended to ALL citizens of New Britain and vicinity to attend this opening and in this connection the bank's management wishes to emphasize that the chief aim of this institution has always been not only to supply the most complete safety for funds deposited with it, but also to provide friendly, helpful, personal service that will be of definite value to every individual and business enterprise in the community. - NEW BRITAIN NATIONAL BANK ; NEW BRITAIN, CONN. and |