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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1926. o'clock this afternoon when the trinkets were bought. Miss Janis' 25 trunks and bags were selzed when the Paris docked, but were released when an inspec- tion showed less than $100 worth of goods in them purchased abroad. In addition to jewels taken from | Miss Janis, her mother contributed a pair of earrings, a brooch, and a pendant to the seized bag which was held for today's hearing. ' MURDER VICTIN ALIVE WHEN BODY WAS BURNED Californfa Police Think Killing of where and JEWELS. TAKEN . TROM ACTRESS { Olsie Janis Must Explain fo | Customs Officers 1 i e New York, July 21 (P — Jewels belonging to Eisic Janis and valued at $50,000 today were ig the hands jof customs officials who seized them on the actress’ return from RIGID SELF-DISCIPLINE URGED BY MACDONALD Addresses Former British Premier World's Christian Endeavor Union, | London, July 21 (P—Xore rigid |young of today by former Premier cDonald, addressing sion of the world's Chris- convention at the Crystal palace. Because of the misery the world | night | aspect until bed-time. |self-discipline was urged, upon the | great Cheops London pyramid, and Jast town bore its usual During the evening the Rev. Wynn remained at his home Chesham, seemingly secure in th belief that if nothing of a mo- mentous character took place be- fore 4 a. m. he would be able to | point to the critical financial situa- | tion in France as upholding the | prediction of the pryamid. Yesterday Mr. Wynn asserted that it was not improbable that the | French situation might be a fulfill- ment of the prediction in the ale- Mr. in gory. | on complaint of Frank P. McDon- | ough, owner of the Casino Bowling Alleys. Avella gald he was shooting the pool balls around when Tronosky, who is employed in the place, spoke e” to him and told him to stop | playing. An argument ensucd, end- | ing when Avella punched Tronosky in the eye. Avella said he had permission from Mr. McDonough to go into the pla He denied Le went there seeking trouble, William Collier Again Gambols With the Lambs New York, 21 (P—Willlam Collier, actor playwright, is ain am member of the Lambs' club after an absence of seven years that followed personal differences with some of the other members. Collier w greeted with cheers when he made his appearance at the annual “washing gambol” of the theatrical club Sunday at the Long Island estate of John Golden. Collier, who had never resigned, was re-introduced to the club by Thomas Meighen, shepherd of the |Says Unlicensed Woman Ran Into His Truck The police are investigaling a re- port by Walter Pekarski of 147 Broad street late yesterday afternoon that his automobile truck was struck by an automobile driven by Miss Geneva Walicki of 99 Broad street, at the corner of High and Myrtle streets. The mud guard and bumper on the truck were damaged and Miss Walicki had no license, ac- cording to Pekarski. d MILES ANHOUR MIGHT BE SPEEDING 40 Might Not Be, Judge Alling Says in Gourt An automobilist driving five miles an hour might be gullty of speed- ing and one driving 40 miles an hour might not be properly classed as a Suly and active 33 YEARS IN POLICE DEPT. Lieutenant Samuel Bamforth of the police department observed the 33rd anniversary of his appointment Yanks Wake Up World With Morning Alarms By George H. Manning MAY RUN PERSHING Him For Europe with $100 customs declara- | ltion of duitable goods purchased abroad. The one time | American soldiers in she cannot understand why fcan her mother, Mrs. Josephine Janis, who arrived with Miss Janis | yesterday on the liner Paris, on her return from vaudeville engage- ments in Paris and London. “The fact is.” Miss Janis con- fided after she had been stripped | of a.two string pearl necklace, dio- mond earrings, and a diamond brooch, “I have no jewels. Tt was reaping from the sowing of a few years ago, he said, youth re- quired a discipline server, more dras- tic And more hardening in spiritual things than ‘had been called for by any generation for a long period. Los |The speech was roundly applauded. Rev. Tra Landrethsof the Ameri- can delegation, addressing the meet- ing on the topic “the youth of the world for sobriety,” said: “Ame 1 deserves her reputation for greatness because of the many speeder, Judge B. W. Alling sald in police court this morning during the New Britain Herald) trial of James Jianatonio of 288| Washington, July 21.—The United North street, charged with speeding, |States does its share toward waking and Charles Brayton of 232 Mather ::‘"J;‘f\'”,‘il,:”‘ ol ”‘;‘ o o street, Hartford, charged with vio- & 2% Hie tORanl —HCHNE hie lation of the rules of the road. The |"“M" 0% time the rest of the day. judge sald he belisved both technic- [y S | ARE HrCS ally gullty but he preferred to leave |y oo months for which statistics the cases to the civil courts for dis-|oro syajlable—the United States |oF $-1000: The architect is Willlam position, and he discharged both | 013 1o foreign countries 184,521 one |1 McKay and the contractor will drivers, e, tha United States |b® William H. Allen Co. ity e Charles Dembovski of 74 Pros- During the same period, however, | pect strect was granted permission to the United States exported 170,640 |construct a two-family dwelling on watches, of which only 13,064 were | the north side of Overlook avenue at watches with jewels. a eost of $7,500. Continuous slump in the value of | Permission was also granted John the exports of watches and parts of | Gazey of Buena Vesta avenue and watches was noted during the three | John Zegory of 68 Derby street to construct a one-family house on the months, the value of the March ex- ports being $164,3 April, $180,- | north side of First street at a cost 757; and May, $107,345. of $4,000. April had the highest exports in clocks, the figures being: March, $129,620; -April, $151, May, club. Collier is a life member. (Washington Correspondent of the 8 & supernumericy| QUlDaur S terday. In Januuary he observed the 31st anniversary of his promo- tion to the regular force. J. J. Patterson Unusually | City Issues Permit For New Fire Station Permission was granted the fire board by the building department SHaRthe or;l(\‘l?l_\’ to construct the No. 7 fire de- e e, Of | partment bullding on Stanley street. o ” The structure will be built at a cost Move On Foot to Have darling of Cruel Next Commander of the American Santa Ana, Calif., July (P— Indications that J. J. Patterson, Angeles stock breker, in conmection with whose death Rev. Phillip A Goodwin, actor priest, wag arrested | vesterday in New York, was still Wive when his body was drenched with gasoline and set afire in Santa canyon last March, were found wpen the slain man’s body | was disintepred. Tnvestigators said the man's hands | TWO HELD AS SPEEDERS Louis Strauch, Jr., aged 19, of 316 Church street, was arrested this morning for speeding on Stanley street, by Motorcycle Officer W. & Strolls. Archie Pilon, aged 35, of 111 Broad street, Plainville, was arrested this forenoon by Motoreycle Officer W. P. Hayes on the same charge. Legion, Washington, July 21 (#—General |Pershing will be placed in nomina- |tion for national commander of the American Legion at the convention lof the organization in Philadelphia colossal blunders she has-committed, |In October. The George Washing- but prohibition is not one of them.” [ton Post No. 1 of the Leglon had lgeant patrick J. O'Mara last Sun- | The American churches believe |Voted unanimously to propose the g,y afternoon, following a collision a d |that prohibition at its worst was bet- (commander of the American armies |hoiween an automobile driven by [ioke to describe the few things I|were bound by wire and the body | than license at ifs best, he in France for the place. It Was de- |Jianatonio and a truck owned by-the ‘ossess us jewels. 1 am not the|had not been stripped of Wentifying {1 A1l ok used fo be g |cided that it would be It fOr|§iangard Paper company of Hart- | type for jewels and do not possess imarks. The position of the toNEUC |4 ic; (oday it was a crime, ana |lim to again lead the veterans of |01y and driven by Brayton, at| them. There was a time fn my life, |in the mouth indicated that Patter- [L&/ B8 (W) P M O e (hey |the world war when they O to Paris gyt Afain and Laurel streets. Bray- some years back, when I might be |son had gasped for breath and fln_::’ |started the beginning of the end of for their convention in 1927, ton was turning into East Main l:nld to have jew but not to- ;\].;-n y(‘arrk;mor"]»L\sh:twr\lxuf\lfl;“hu rf‘v” that Iniquity.” High Legion officials have street and because of the length of | She sald her little trinkets which [him. DELCES dis- o dot pronibition,” he/jcuoed the question Informally with o™ e ye ot the corner short, 8 b |General Pershing, but so far 2 - | ; added and Jianatonio applied the brakes | ehe had owned for years and were Police declared that : adoi, not dutlable were not insured for [bank account had been checked jcally as | “our opponents were politi- | S A > | | R e b T he has given them no definite [ "y i " 0" Gid 48 feet, coming | % ‘ > = to a stop when his car struck the 30,000, but were worth more. Cus- |against by forged checks. Fxtradi- now are poli cepting the honor. He made clear, p Wwh 3 h toms officlals suggested $50,000 as |tion papers for the return of Good- [they are outside. b Jindication of his position as to ac- we politically inside and _Apri ; Rtk i ekitoli a0 @onteast for truck, according to the testimony. $14 . This includ the value of that he would enter es ; ioel < ; g e Brit- Attorney Israel Nair, representing [exported alarm clocks, mantel and b proger valuation, They also sug- |min Wwere prepared today and:sent| He asked the people of the Brit- |iye place, y e pre g [gested that she might explain to a |[t0 Long Beach for the signature of {ish churches to demand that t Jianatonio, claimed there was no |novelty clock wall other 4 v over “piracy” : evidence that his client was speed- |clocks and clock parts. 2 e a o Gov. Richardson. |flag should not fly over “piracy vis peclal agent of the treasury at two | ™ol i) "who had been ordained [the American seas. CHILD SHOT' DIES Peabody, The arrests were made by Ser- One of the plant pests which have caused great concern to Australian agriculturists, the ragwort, has now been discovered to be an excellent feed for sheep. Patterson's MAKES BEQUESTS OF $3,000 Bequests of $2,000 to the widow and $1,000 to each of the testator's two sons is provided in the will of John Kaczymski which was admit- ted to probate court yesterday after- noon. The document was drawn on March 5. clock on |clocks ing. Judge Alling remarked that| While the value of imported in the American Catholic clyirch | the statutes do not specify the speed | watches and watch movements, several months ago, was a ne ighbor I‘ at which cars can be legally operat- |cases, dials, parts, and fewels was NOTHING HAS HAPPENED went through M street on a Sat- |819,041, comparatively few chrono- |appearance last March CHILDREN GO TO SHORE The children at the Children's home were the guests of Iccal churches, church organizations, and the W. C. T. U. today at an outing at Hammonasset beach. Emil Lar- son was chairman of the committee in charge, the other members being Miss Gerda Magnuson, Landers Johnson, John Johnson and Walter Mass.,, Man Also Wounds Her Mother After He is Refected |urday night when the congestion meters, clocks, and parts were fm- was great, at the rate of five miles [ported. the total value of the clock per hour, he might be speeding, \imports for the thre months being | whereas under other conditions he ($224,048. Peabody, Mass, July 21 (P — 2 might drive 40 miles an hour and | Mary Romanu ar old daugh- [VELL CUNS Tl speeding. | ter of Mrs. Lena Romanuk, died e ] y |this morning from bullet wounds | Attorney M. D. Saxe. ""““"“I“"E‘ | causea wheh Joseph Boychauk, a |Bravton. said Jianatonio came along | rejected suitor of the mother, open- |East Main atreet so fast he could not 4 fon them vesterdam atlerncon, 305 Jial car initine 2l n Romanuk, a widow, was in collision. The rea nvn Brayton | continued today with guerrilla war- % oia candition andss statewido |IL18 seRotyinrg lcom g Ao ast | fare in the streets of Calcutta be- " CORPS PICNIC e O B e e |Main street was that there was a |tween the Tndus and Moslems. Re- | Stanley Women's Reliet corps and Boychauk was & former |car parked near the corner and he | ports r\.f stabbings and assaults | friends have accepted the invitation 2t Mrs, Romanul's house, |cOUld mot take the proper turn, Iié|poured in from various sections |of Mrs, Lilllan Bure to hold their it said. | Mubarram processions were attack- | annual picnic at her home in Terry- = T A Frank Avell ed by Hindu crowds in three dif- | yjlie, Saturday afternoon, July 24th. {Hartford Officials lin street, pleaded guilty to assault-| ferent localities. [ B tiola AT leh i iha iLaEE A Attend Police Court |ing Nicholas Tronosky, aged 16, of| { 12:52 o'clock. Anyone intending to Hartford, Conn., July 21 (®—|223 Oak street, and was fined 35| The crude ofl production in the{ go is asked to notify the president, | vor Norman C. Stevens and Po-|and costs. Officer William Politis | ynited for the week ending| Mrs. Mary Gibney, 441 Park street, . Commissioner Owen Morgan to- |arFested Avella about 8:30 last night ! June 5, was 2,009,450 barrels.| or telephone 140-12 y sat on the police court bench as Suitor, SESQUI ENVELOPE ‘All(‘:m"( in Great Pyramid of ACE AND BODY Itched so Could Hardly Sleep. Cuticura Heals, My face and body were covered with pimples that were soft and red. They itched so much that I could hardly sleep. My clothing sggra- vated the breaking out on my body, and my face was disfigured, The trouble lasted three months. “I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. Being satis- fied with the sample I purchased thore and in one month was con pletely healed after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment.” (Signed) Miss Yvonne Mongrain, 1 Clark St., Lowell, Mass., Jan. 7, 1926. Use Cuticura Soap, Ointmentand Talcum for daily toilet purposes. ng Soape. Olatment 25 and e, Taleum 25, Sold| | the course of the experiments it was | seeymiiers. Stople eah (e {impossible to see objects for more ' | Post Office Department Announces One Special for Centenuial. | Washington, July 21 P—A two- | cent envelope, with the red stamp bearing & pleture of the liberty { bell, will be issued by the post of- | fice department to commemorate | the sesquicentennial anniversary of | American independence. One siz will be manufactured with a ma | chine Installed as part of the d | partment’s exhibit at the sesqul- | centennlal exposition at Philadel- phia and will go on sale first at the model post office there July 2 FIGHTING IN CALCUTTA Calcutta, British India, July 21 (#—The rioting which marked the beginning of the Muharram festival, to avoid the |opening the Mohammedan year, was Gizeh Tvidently Tells Not the Truth. London, July 21 (#) — Somethin| ntly is with the archi tectural allegory in the great pyra- mid of Gizeh or with the prognos- tication based upon it by the Rev Walter Wynn, the non-conformist pastor of the United Free church of the suburb of Chesham The “something important in the world’s history” which was to have happened yesterday early this | morning had not occurred when 3ig Ben of Westminster and the great bell of St. Paul's cathedral | boomed the hour of 4 m. lhisi with Judge Nathan A, Schatz during | morning — “the zero hour, in the'a portion of the morning session. prediction of the Rev. Mr. Wynn | The invitation to the city for the coming of some cruclal|{{o visit the court was appa event in the world's history. result of the recent criticism Londoners generally took city of the police court regard- | more than passing interest asserted leniency in the hand- prediction of of cases involving negroes, evi skew der or NEW WARFARE GAS Dresden, Germany, July 21 (P—| periments were carried out ne Dresden today by an artillery reg ment with a newly discovered ga This gas has no poisonous but can cover a larse area dense haze resembling a fog. M 2 1926, a with Du little | th in the!ing the confidant of the|ling — “Guticara Laboratories, Dept. K, Malden, Mas’ Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. than a yard or two. PARTNERS We feel that even those customers who do not own any of our stock are, in reality, partners in our business.We are merely their agents in sup- plying the kind of service they prefer, at a fair price. Their interest comes first in all that we do. 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