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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER IDEN BOY, 10, NEAR DEATH FROM BAD FALL| leceives Skull Fracture HORE EVIDENGEIN 5% INDIANA SEANI]AL' Newspaperman Publishes Cupfl of Mayor Duvals Letter in Two- Story Drop TFrom Rear Porch, | 7 — Boyishly dis- l ng the risks that lurked 1n Me Oct en, ed startling corruption | tractured skull at politics, vesterday photostatic copy of a ing to have been writ L. Duvall, mayor of 1 5 o'cl ma | day atternoon when he fell to the d from the 1t of the sec- ond-floor rear veranda of his house t as the fourney to the the boy slipped e corru ner § ground was started, the noose and dropped {o the MAvor Doval o | ground, landing on his head letter as a forgery. everal other boys and firls | were in the vard at the time to| Thomas perform the feat ed in so & and se- S et el e ap- | riovs manner. int any person as a member of f A the board of works without “ ar Governor of Utah first hav ¢ indorsement of Dies at \ze of 19 |c Salt Lake he letter was dated v 12 in 1 Duvall was elected mayor the | 1021, died | foyed the | Utah's first 1 as th 1-Mormon gov- rnor ot The canse of In]unv to \[dn,s —\uto de 7“7“1~ ¥, to two months in jail §10 by Justice Elmer r nm” after she had been found putting nails and broken der th . CORNS Quickrelieffrom painful corns, tender toes and | pressure of tight shoes. | DrScholl's " | Zino-pads Commenting on the s Miss Br deed bec that fon for the und flme slovtl everywhere LABOR INGENSED ich the mayor prom as he was being vered with rope by one of his ¢ The hoy is in a critical co on at the | M hospital | | The rope with Thomas | | was being lowered harge of of the Xu Klux Klan and now serv- | his ten year old chum, Warren sentence for the murder | Spencer, of ths same address. \han om,vm“,n has | Thomas had been made fast to the ro ¥ a loop; but in some 1rwr‘ George L. Berry, president of the umnmanonax Printing Pressmen's | stant's union of North Am-rlr‘a. and former vice comman- der of the American Legion, defined |the actfon of the Detroit churchmen 4< an insult to organized lahor, and denounced the Detroit board of commerce, which he charged in- spired their action, for having pub- ed a lstter to ministers charac- !Prmnz the labor ‘p(“lk“l’! na for Sunday engagements OGS, CATS, RAT ATCHURGH ACTION Formal Denunciation Expected at Today's Meeting nen Indiznapolis, Oct. 7 (A —Th e that he was playing w | porrott, Oct admittedly attacking our - (o o , wh. eclarec 2 n in- | Belcourt, ten year old son of Mr. |a very emphati | B ¢ ss oit SEmboshaideciatediithat fen) in- i v e e et i “The amswer to such a charge,” s pit where hun vestigation made with the assistance | Mrs. Arthur L Berry declared, “is the fact that | ler fering and death ride of other Indiana editors has reveal- | West Main str ol ln e ranes cras it 652,000 members of organized labor o mou 12 enlisted in th |in the world w service of the nation ‘Ouf\\ in the f Labor cony ention of the work- e and it would seem to, in r.z.lvu-n, of overnight att empts to Im the rz-mg tempest of resent- this is the pla ment lugeonts the te f: S ing the passing pageant d sion :\v the !np of 2 atic fashion, a er this | were . dar of u T on of autocracy in De- Too of the trees. Crackling and side tracked ro o T leaves glint with a thou- oslden: Moty tha s & X sand shades of red and o fon of Labor, | vall refug 1d b ol i |groups which had vention against ill the b gold, as they twirl in & pulpits to spokesmen ion but urged presen- > a relief expe last defiant dance be. e ta nimous response Cross emblems | fore the leaden march Possibility of an from the body of delegates release of those ! B “If the time ever comes when A P | of winter. 3 liam (.m»n quaInIon s the altar, tion. The 1} | Head your motor out Christianity has passed away,” he civilian popu! coneluded. 4 to depart, Officers of of the Detroit hoa rnoon nt of labor dele. |COMmMerce and the Y. M. C. A. of- failed when the ships of the city is only a distant gates that the action of the Detroit | (1 ’va "‘f" on the action of S Yvrr d on «11 fa rr; skyline. Reap the mel- . f this week the opposing low harvest of autumn Pm:nned (ofl'ee, Is Sent To Prison for 3 to 5 Yrs. 'R( dgeport, Oct. 7.—{f— Theo of Long Hill was prison for from ]”'\ Jam tary of they were hora to the ministerin .M received | sent to three fo five years by Judge Banks sted by the Canton- | efore adjournment | i Superior court yesterday after- those who were | noon. He pleaded guilty to attempt- Military as well as| T | ed murder by poison. flery ses- pril 24 lined the | deral Cou are star: invitation of the F Churches to speak Si section foreman, placed a co: poisonous powde coffee. McGuinn e and became ill State’s Attorney W. H. Comley [ plained that Draly poison into the ¢ feated foreman, cation by of the board it Y. M. C. | d voted Mon- invitation ex- ieftain in July n's rally 1S put g0 mu fee that he de- of killing the against whom he had a his p labor ch: e 1 to have reached T s down H.- T} He knows what Lucky Tiger will do for your bair end ecalp. Mil- lions of Lappy users. Take homes v the hope | Sun’s troops will be strong e to break the army and | forees before v are dm\lhlh EATEN FOR FO0D This Is Desperate Plight Chinese City of Wuchang to succor non- ng. The soldiars of the souther northern ) in | | | 1 OCTOBER Healthful, sparkling, F snappy eutumn deys! k. ++ « And the roads ere beckoning! The hills § and the valleys are stag. | th lation where woods and rest- ful fields flow by end sunshine. Let each breathful of crisp brac. ing air store up new energy against the long indoor hours to come. trans- g of- forces | For your fall motoring use this easy starting new Atlantic Gasoline FALL days are cool days. They offer you still another test of the remarkable qualities of the new Atlantic Gasoline: Cold starting. that nough Throw in the starter and instantly this easy-vaporizing gasoline stirs your motor into action. What's more, it od remains in action. It won’t “‘die” after the first few revolu- tions—a common occurrence with ordinary gasoline. It It's all a matter of HOW much fun you get out of a pipe depends largely on one thing: the to- bacco. The pipe itself is the accessory, after all. The tobacco’s the thing. That’s why the most contented bunch of smokers in the world smoke Prince Albert exclusively. The instant you open a tidy red tin of P. A, you know this tobacco is unlike any other. That warm, rich fragrance! Only real tobacco could give off such an appetizing aroma. You are com- pletely won to P. A. when you smoke that first load. PRINGE ~—n0 other 1926, R. 1. Reynolds Tobzrvu Company, Winston-Salem tobacco picking the Cool as a cove, sheltered from the beat of the sun. Sweet as a breath of clover. Fragrant as fresh-cut flowers « « o fragrant and mild. Yet with a body that satisfies your smoke-taste right down to the ground. A rare com- bination, Men. It is a pretty safe guess that, if you smoke one tin of Prince Albert—all of it—you will continue to smoke Prince Albert from then on. That has been the experience of other pipe-smokers. It’s worth finding out about. Buy some P. A. today, ALBERT is like acking P.A. is sold everywhere in tidy red tins, pound and half-pound tin humi. dors, and pound erystal-glass humidors with sponge-moistener top. And always with every bit of bite and parch removed by the Prince dlbert process. it! doesn’t pop, cough and sputter. No repeated churning of the starter. No heavy drains on the battery. No long uneven running. No excessive crankcase dilution. Atlantic gets right down to the busi. ness of driving the pistons with vim and regularity. The easier starting qualities, as well as the greater power and smoothness, of the new Atlantic Gasoline are due to an entirely new combination of petroleum elements—e obtained from various types of crudes. It represents the cleanest, rangiest and most perfectly balanced all-round gasoline you have ever used. Try it! ATLANTIC GASOLINE = the uq-»C lflvuhl Inclade 4 in that motor trip you are planning. HOUR AND A HALF TATION-TO-STATION S toll telephone rates now start to decrease at 7 o'clock instead of 8:30 in the evening. During the new hour and a half from 7:00 P. M. to 8:30 P. M. a decrease of 25%, of the day rate is in effect. A second decrease at 8:30 P. M. mnlu‘s the rate from 8:30 M. to 4:30 A. M. about 50"(. of the day rate. These discounts apply where the day Station-to-Station rate is 40 centa or more, with a minimum reduced rate of 35 cents. These two decreases, one at 7 P. M. and the other at 8:30 P. M., give an excel- lent opportunity for the wide-awake toll user to save money. Toll telephone sers vice carries your volee quickly, naturally, and ac curately over the wire. Whether for business, social, or family converse- tion, let the telephone bridge the gap. THE SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM One System One Policy = - Universal Sorvice