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N NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1926. refreshing dentifrice with whitening and tar- tar preventive powers. Safe to use— SOC Tube The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN STREET v'l;lle Family Friend Nothing purer, sweeter or more effective for eczemas, rashes, itch- ings end irritations. Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water to free. the pores of impurities and follow with a gentle application of Cuti- cura Ointment to soothe and heal. foick relief from pain. revent shoe pressure. A all drug and shoe stores DrScholls Seam® Lino-pads "~ DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEAN —— ~ riental Rugs All Sizes CLEANING Tel. 1190-2—1190-3. ELECTRIC TREATMENTS Whea given in connection with the Ultra-Violet Rays, Alpin. Sun Rays, Electric Light Bath» Electricul Massage and Biolox fcal Blood Treatmen:» control all ncrvous conditions Coughs and Chest Diseases Heart, Stomach, Liver and Ki ey Diseases, High or Low Blou: Pressure, all forms of Rheum tism, including Neuritis and atica, or regardless of what & ment. These trealments are & God-send to the aifiicted and 1o | weak, slow-growing children. Dr. F. Coombs NATUREOPATH 19 So. High St., Near Post Office Lady nurse in attendance Tel. 766 iaedbiitemee) MOORE BROS SANITARY FISH MARKET Is the Place to Select Your Sea Food. Large Variety and Fine Quality Live and Boiled Lobsters Live and Boiled Shrimp Large Deep Sea Scallops Prime Soft Shell Crabs Eastern White Halibut Fresh Swordfish Fresh Salmon Fresh Mackerel Fresh Codfish Fresh Bluefish Striped Bass Silver Bass Large Native Eels Large Butterfish Large Shore Haddock Round and Long Clams Salt Cod 18c Ib., 3 Ibs. 50¢ 30 COMMERCIAL ST. Open until 9 p. m. Thursday Telephone 1199 PUBLIC. WORKS BOARD MEETIN Takes Up Broad Street Condition and Other Matters The board of public works last evening voted to refer the matter |of vemedying the condition of Broad strect after storms Engineer Joseph D. Williams for nis opinfon. Mayor Weld recently | visited the area under discussion recommended relief from | present conditions as the street is almost impassible at times, An illuminated sign erected on Arch street was voted to be tak down. The owner of the sign made petition for a permit and, not wa ing for the issuance of the permit erected the sign. The ported as being d: swings far over the members of the board voted | it be ordered removed until further | notice. A sewer at the corner of Broad | and High streets was petitioned and was tabled for the engineer's re- |port for the coming year. The sewer is needed because of mud | and water entering into the cellars of the vicinity. City Engineer Wil- liams reported that the sewer line nearest this point was inspected every so often and that there were | no obstructions visible to back up | the water at the point mentioned. He further mentioned that the e tablishing of catch basins at this point would not facilitate the car- rving away of the water and the only remedy would be the installa- | tion of a sewerage line at this point, a costly project. The widening of the highway at | the Francis street trolley terminal was held up pending inspecting of the place. The highway is at pres- ent 24 feet wide {ncluding the cob- blestone gutters and trolley tracks. Concrete curbs on Stanley street were to be given a hearing at the | common council. The installation of sidewalks on - Ellis street from Stanley street to Lee street w | recommended by the board. A catch basin at Carlson street north of Newington enue was also recommended. A sewer at Somerset road and Richards street was to be inspected by the city engineer. Sidewalks on Farmington avenue were laid over pending inspection by the city engineer. Sidewalks on | Oliver strect were to be recom- mended for action by September 7. | A sewer on Acorn street re | mmended, and also one for Steele street. A permit for a gas station on Lafavette street was lald over for inspection by the city en T. The section is industrial and therc is some question of the fire hazard in the place if erected. Rills paid to August follows: Laborers and 16,450, payroll $1,189, Total for bills to . which covers about 70 per nt of the work proposed. This in that the board will spend ,000 which is well under d. which was $40,- that were as The' board passed a resolution iccommending hiring labor and buying materials for t Broad street paving project following City Engineer. Williams' inspection. 'FILING SYSTEM FOR FIREMEN PLANNED | Index Would Tell of Employes Fitness at Various Trades Installatfon of a fling system which will furnish the fire board with completa information about every fireman in the department was decided at the fire board m ing lastn ight. A card system suggested by Chairman C. J. Dehm vhich will give information as to the flreman's former occupation, his age, and his name and address, It was the opinion of the mem- bers that when this system is put into effect, the board can save con- siderables money on repairs by be- COMPARE We make Champions the very best we can. Their superiority in design, finish and careful manufacture is readily apparent if you compare Champion with any other spark plug. But vou must drive with them to know how very much better they are. Cham pion X — exclusivety for Fords 60(: Zpacked in the Rad Bax ; Champion- for cars other than Fords—packed 7 '} in the Blue Box Each 'CHAMPION Dependable for Every Emgime | Toledo, Ohio g able to call on one of the fire. to City | | Misses Alma Rempp and Ada | 27 years old, | Hitchiner are spending two weeks | and Tadiusx Wlodkowsk applicants for a e position as substitute fireman, ap-| Miss Bertha Zimmaerman of 37 peared before the board. They will [ Jubilee street is spending a week at be notified of acceptance or rejec- | Momauguin. | tion Ilater. | o8 The following applications were | Miss Lilllan Wright of Greenwood' received: John E. Farr, jr., 32 |street has returned from Forestville vears old, of 211 Lawler street; | where she visited Miss Dorothy | Michael Rozanski, 24 years old, of | Bunnell. | 3 Orange street; Czeslaw Dzelen- | = ski, 81 years old, of 15 Silver| Miss Muriel Bacon of Black Rock | street; George W. Wood, 32 vears |avenue is vacationing at Point-0'- of 45 Main street; Fred A.|Woods beach. ars old, of 402 Allen — et, ard F. Conger, 26| Mr. and Mrs. Fred Langdon of vears old, of 27 Pleasant street. New London were recent visitors at Three checks were received for | the of Mr. and Mrs, Edward the pension fund as follows: Fire- er of Greenwood streep. 's Pension & Relief association, — ipts from ball, $1,500; the| Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Schade and mewell company for old fire | Miss V Schade are vacationing at | alarm apparatus, $500; and R. O.| Point-O'-Woods beach. Clask, $160 for old hose. — Mrs. Mary Brady of Greenwood | R ' OF GAS EXPLODES at Hammonasset beach. | Messe Frank Braunstein and daughter, | |Lillan of Greenwood street, are at | Briarclifte, N. Y. } | = | | Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor of Park Brie Respite Given Car Barn = e | Murderers ‘ | Boston, are spending vacation Chalker beach. Misses Helen and Ruth Connor of nwood street are spending 2 two weeks' vacation at Camp Aya Po, Woodstock. Aug. 11 (A—The three| " lcarbarn bandits had gained another day of life today. A single legal | move to forestall the executions OIJF[]E []F SUFF A John J. Devereaux, Edward J. Hein- | lein and John J. McLaughlin for the slaying of an aged Waltham watch- man which was started Monday a| few hours before the scheduled ex-| ccution has developed ngled battle to keep > electric chair, into a three| ! wem trom Wealthy Stratiord Man, 49, Weds Hartford Hiss of 25 Bridgeport, Aug. 11—Seven years 1go Oliver Beardsley, one of ford’s most interesting chara Judge Fosdick of the superior court, who presided at the trial, yes- terday granted a hearing for tomor- row on a petition for a mew tripl d on the alleged mental de- {ficiency of Devereaux, a World war veteran. HAFRE e e vowed that if the vote were given s S - ? to women, he would never vote poned the triple exccution until Fri- He kept hia vow. day morning at the earlicst. Previ- ously a decision by Justice Henry K. |(yo marriage vow. | Braley of the supreme court to hear fter obtajning & marriag petitions for writs of habeas corpus|ense at the municipal building in | today had been supplemented by a|New York city, Mr. Beardsley and second motion by defense counsel bride, Miss Gladys M. Foster of | for writs of mandamus to compel Sisson avenue, Hartford, were Gov. Alvan T. Fuller and his council | married at once. He gave his age | to grant a respite until Devereaux's|as forty-nine, and Miss Foster gave | sanity could be redetermined. | her age twenty-five. They re- Last week alienists appointed by turned immediately to Stratford, | the governor reported the glayer!where last night Mr, Beardsley re- | sane and the governor refused to|fused to discuss the marriage, al- er to his council a petition for|though admitting that it had taken mency signed by more than 1 place. 000 citizens. | Mr. Beargsley o his occupu- | Under the M tion as ‘“retired,” but Stratford scutions were set for the iends say it has nevor heen neces August 8 Instead of a specific .| sary for him to work. He is the son Jlectrocutions customarily come on! of the late Samuel W. and Louise nesday morning of the week but the | Wilcoxson Reardsley, and procebdings forced | thuir death has lived alone home at 189 Ki reet, Stratford convicted of | By some residents, he has heen James Ferne chman at| called “the richest man in Strat 'n while they were Ithough the Dev- | holdings 1s unkno otual Bride Born in Bristol His bride is the daughter of Mrs. Catherine Foster of 1 e : and the late William MAYOR WILL INTRODUCE sha. wai, born in Tiristl, r several umn'hs, the ;,.» nded arriage of Mr. Beardsiey has heen | FOUR MARBLE CHAMPIDNS rumored around town, but when the = | matter was broached to him, he de- | nied with the vehemence that might be expected from & bachelor of long post- habeas corpus | postponement. T hree men w Killir a Waltham carb: engaged in robbing the place aux admitted being the slayer. Cear's Champion Among Those standing He has taken an interest in most | events in Stratford. While he has | cen active in politics, he was suf and the Nineteenth amend- | ment to the Constitution. He was a ife long democrat, biit he made the atement that it women got the vote, he would not vote aga | it was taken away from them. So far as known, he has kept his vow. Beardsley has been active worker and member of Trinity Episcopal church in Bridgeport, es- pecially when the ehurch was in | park on | o 61q location at Broad street and No. 2 bascball diamond. Park Super- | pypeield, where the building was intendent Ralph Walnwright has a | (45000 " Beey ‘ force of men at work today rolling| ~yr. Beardsl 4 his young nd lay- | prige’ will remain in Stratford for SRICE few months and plaa to winter. Last Y | ‘Who Will Meet Local Audience Tonight, Four marble presented to a New Britain audience at the Palace theater this evening by Mayor Gardner C. Weld, follow- ng the wind-up of the of | games between New B and | Springfield teams, The prize of a tool chest filled with Stanley tools will be awarded by the mayor to the | " boy having the largest total score after today's games. The games will be played this afternoon at Walnut Hill until | ing out 10 foot ring will begin about 3:30 o'clock At 6 o'glock the marble shooters ind their eseorts with Mayor Weld vill be guests at a dinner at’ the huttle Meadow club. A theater rty at the Palace will follow. Among the boys who will be in- troduced to the audience tonight will {be Duteh Robbins, 5 champion of America, Danny Gore, 1926 run- ner up for the natfonal champion- ship, both from Springfield, John Kelly from Holyoke, runner-up for the championship of western Massa- chusetts and Dominic Cartelli of New Britain, city champ. the next take a trip abroad in the STATE REPUBLICAN CONVENTION SOON Will Be Held in Hartford September 13-14 . Hartford, Aug. 10 (/) — Declsion ucceeds in to have the republican state con- vention held in Foot Guard hall, Hartford, Monday and Tuesday, September 13 and 14, was made by the republican state central com- mittee at a meeting last night at the Country club, Farmington. Primarles, or caucuses, for the election of delegates from the sev- O oed . of.. hia. congtitu- | #tal fowhe'$b: chis etate sonvention 15:»,[2“»,‘” Judge Edwin 8. Were ordered h\“lfl‘l \‘:-' O:Uf::l Thomas of the United States Diatrict | 27 At ';‘vl”(;‘«’m“' THmAEs, of iy court \‘)ms\"xr\;‘j:’n:‘l} his petition re- | cuses, sltkgiee; o e Sconent) ’\'"'ffc,',.;].,fi'fhlns in 'New York listrict convention will be were the cause of his conviction and srving thre terms, the -ven to ten years, and s each Prisoner ) ecuring Habeas Corpus New Haven AU 11 (P —8ucc jed the efforts of Har ap risoner at Wethersfield, who recently prepared and filed a petition in his own phr aseology and handwriting for a writ of habe: ecorpus to explain why he alle 16 sional, bute electe 3 In cities holding primaries, city conventions for the same purpose must be held Saturday, August 28. Senatorial district! conventions for the election of iwo delegates each | to the various conventions will be | held Monday, August 30, in districts comprising two or more towns. In | towns having one or more sena- torial districts within their limits, delegates. from the senatorial dis- will be elected by delegales conventions from the | comprising each senatorial district. Senatorial dis- trict delegates aro required to be residents’ of the districts they are| olected to represent in any of the conventlons. {s now first from the other two of three ye City Items Deliclous Sandwiches at Crowelle. Members of Clan Douglas, to attend meeting to be home of James Thomson, avenue, Berlin, Conn,, evening, August 12. The finance committee of the common counefl will hold its usual | morithly meeting this evening. * Don't forget the Twilight Sale of arr Land Co., from 6 to 8, this week. See adv.—advt. _ | composing committee A. C. Are urged held at the Berldale Thursday tricts to the city various wards READ HERALD CLAS IED ADS| FOR RESULTS | drums of lubricating oil and con- | firemen Several Baltimore Firemen Are Badly Injured Baltimore, Md., Ave. 11 (® — Flames still belched today from seven huge tanks of burning gaso- line, kerosene and. benzol on the grounds of the American Oil com- pany refining plant in South Balti- more, where late yesterday four terrific explosions rocked the neigh- | borhood, dealt serious injury to | seven firemen and sent hundreds of families scurrying from their homes | in fear of a general conflagration. As flames spread to the ware- house of the company filled with | | taining the offices of the firemen, | a huge pall of dense black smoke | spread over the section drawing a crowd of 100.000 persons to the spectacle as flames roared hun- dreds of feet into the sky, Company officials estimated that 500,000 gal- lons of combustibles were destroy- ed. Because of the intense heat, were unable to penetrate | close enough to determine the| canse of the fire. | Around an area equal in size to | an entlre city block, firemen threw | a curtain of water that encom- | passed the seven tanks, each with | a capacity of hetween 30,000 and | 40,000 gallons, the warchouse, and six tank cars each loaded with 20,- | 000 gallons of gasoline, to prevent | spread of the flames. Constant drenching of a 50,000 gallon tank of henzol, a few hundred feet from the plant of the Standard Oil com- | pany and the Consolidated Gas company saved the tank and prob- ably prevented a disaster. Although flames at times burned houses in the residential district | currounding the plant, little out- side damage was dome aside from scorching and the breaking of panes of glass from the heat. Most of the lighting and telephone fa- cilities in South Baltimore were cut | £ for the greater part of the night en the heat fused wire circuits and even destroyed trolley wire All of the injured firemen are ex- pected to recover. SIDFLIGHTS FROM POLITICAL FORUM Experts at Williamstown Make Pithy Statements Willlamstown, Mass, Aug. 11 (P)| tandom reflections and remarks | various contemporary toplee | ed as sidelights at the Institute rican financial opinion loses confidence the capacity or willingness of another country to meet its obliga- | tions, down goes the credit of that country; and its economic plight is in dircct ratio to American skepti- cism.” — T, Polyzoides, editor of | Atlantis, New York. “While it may be true that at | Locarno Germany learned to speak | the new language of International conciliation, which Briand has | called the European tongue, it is no that for the time being she spoke it with a Russian ac- cent.” — Nicholas Politis, min- ister of Greece to France. less true “The powers in China can’t use force to maintain the integrity, of | their treaties on account of the dis- organized character the resistance | would take. As the Chinese saying goes, ‘You can't hang a jellyfish on a pail’"—Raymond T. Rich, sec- retary of the Foreign Policy asso- tion. “Throughout China, foreign busi- | ness is blue because of the reds. | The Chinese patriots see red be-| cause they have not been treated white. And the future of Asia’s 8- 000,000 promises to be black, un- | less the western powers stop being | yellow. | To understand life in China, | take a pinch of the struggle of the carly church, throw in a little of | the European renalssance, add some | of the wild thinking and bloody | events of the French revolution, | then pour in a good quantity of the | spirit of 1776, add a little bolshe- | vik red pepper. mix well, and cook until it is half baked.” — Dr. P.| W. Kuo, director, Chinese institute | n America. “May 4, the anniversary of the signing of the treaty of Versallles, is celebrated in China as a day of | national humiliation.” — Dr. E. H. | Hume, president of Yale in China. | “From America’s junk pile of | scrapped metals. 800,000 tons were | taken in 1924, having a value of | $200,000,000 without counting iron | and steel” — Dr. F. W. Willard, Western Electric company. Discover Plot to Steal ' Radio Parts in Phila. Philadelphia, Aug. 11 (® — An alleged conspiracy by which $1,- 000,000 worth of radio supplies is sald to have been obtained from manufacturers in various citles by | organized band in Philadelphia, | New York and Baltimore, was re. | vealed here yesterday in the arrest of a father and his two sons. The men, Rubin Shector, 65, and Benjamin and A. 8. Shector, were held in $15,000 ball each for a hearing tomorrow. A fourth man is sought in connection with the case while three others are under arrest in Baltimore. The plan, according to detectives was for the men to use the name | of a reputable firm In the city and after establishing credit, order.a large bill of goods at a suburban address. Upon arrival the goods were sent to a centrally located store for sale. “Too Tired OW oiten we hear a woman use this expression! She is in a weakened and run-down condition, not fit to do her work. Bravely she struggles on. She becomes nervous and discouraged. ; Whether she lives in a luxurious apartment, a cozy bunga- low or a crowded city flat, every woman can understand the handicap of poor health. The woman in moderate circumstances suffers more, of course, than her well-to-do friend because she cannot afford to hire help. In spite of her efforts, her house begins to look neglected. Her children say, “Mother is so cross.” Eagerly she listens when a neighbor tells her of other women who found the road to health and happiness. Health! That's the answer to so many of our problems. Without health, a woman cannot make her home the happy haven she dreams of. Mgs. GorLpie SHoup of May View, 1llinois, is one of the many women who have improved their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. She was in a run down condition which caused her much unhappiness. Mgrs. Snoup says, “I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and T think it is the most wonderful medicine I ever tried,” She declares that she is now in better health than ever before, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound See—= How the Two Tubs Wash and Dry. How All Water Is Handled Without Labor. How Your Time and Clothes Are Saved. HUNDREDS of our customers have inspected the New Easy Washer and every one has marveled at its wonderful new method of drying and washing. The largest washing may now be done by the New Easy in one-quarter the usual time and with hardly.any labor at all. Let us show you this new machine on your next washday. We'll do-your whole wash, without charge or obligation. Barry &. Bamforth 19 Main Street Telephone 2504