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ARMISTICE DAY STATEMENT GIVEN President Issues His Anoual| Proclamation Washington, Nov. 4. —(®— By proclamation, President Coolidge has | directed that the flag should be dis- played on all government buildings on Armistice Day, November 11, and called upon the people to observe the day with prayer, and exercises designed to rpetuate peace through good will d mutual understanding between ations. The proclamation read: “Whereas, the 11th of November, 118, marked the cessation of the 108t destructive sanguinary and far- aching war in human annals; it is fitting that ing iversary of the date <hould be commemorated with thanksgiving and prayer and ex s designed to perpetuate p throngh good will and mutual und, standing between nations d “Whereaz, by a concurrent resolu- pasged by the 3 11926, the President was reqg proclamation calling upon als to display the flag of United States on all government dings on November 11th, and in- the people of the United ates to ohserve the day in s 1 churches or other places, appropriate ceremonies exp s v continua ons with all otk refore, T of the pursuance aid concur olution, Ly order that the flag of displayed on “Whereas, the re- the onr gratitud for t1 Ym ed States of the do here Unt gove 11 of the ¢ 1n in t ro America, a States b al nent bu embe people appropri ve of s with expres our and = our desire fri people mtinnan ith all othe “In witness o set my hand fixed the at and ca seal of Done ton, this city of Wash rd day of November, the year of our Lord, ¢ nine hundred and tw Independ the one hundred fifty-firs T id States, A Real “thanksgiving and | and | MASS. REPUBLICANS OFF | 0N THEIR 1 Already Are Plannin 4 1 rhe Boston, Nov. echoes still re | Massachusetts tod | party, undisr 1 b | of President Coolidg | tor William M. 1 immediate start of th | which it in elect David I. Walsh he wrested from the cumbent in Tuesda A meeting of you [which included Hi { Jr., grandson o | nds cretary of t the situation a for the at no de In the me ely to 1tle to 1928 DRIVE g How to n-m ‘Walsh From Seat Next Election. | <@— Election | rated | The republic y the r, planned an | he campaign by oust senator- | 0 the scat epublican in- | election. publi Lo it d Jle nominees n but arrived assist tor Dutler, ate by reyard Haven anno take any at 1 alsh will pired term of which Mr. ov noner Near Nov. of Durango,” 1 Arroyo T ied by ten Albert Smi aster for ti known t Mexico a record-br by cation in Rcbel.l;izmdABer aten City presi a reb Gurrol ) s at the been rs of the il of their o 4 (P — dancing Norw n in Jol I be NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1926. 'SENATE OFFERS STUMBLING BLOCK FOR PRESIDENT IN NEW CONGRESS | Insurgents Have Balance| of Power—Vare and Smith Also Face (‘,ontest‘ Before They Can Take eats. New returns tions that fror 1 of his term of offi will T e Coolidge. er just one half of ill be republicar 11t will be insurgents, s will have a T house, but the considerable York, tod Nov. 4.—(P—Belated emphasized indica- next March till the e the senate on duced majority in insurgents will be factor there, a Tn addition th of the mew two republican s of Pennsylvania and nois—because of testimony heayy expenscs in obtaining nomina- 3 testimony was developed committee before the e is the prospect The New Senate Complcte returns show that the next te will have 48 republicans, 47 democrats and one farmer-labor —Shipstead of Minnesota. In the present senafe there is a republican majority of nine. The 45 republicans he new senate will include Brook- hart of Towa, Nye of North Dakota i Blaine of Wisconsin, insurgents who were elected Tues as w as the following who did not have t0 50 to the polls: LaFollette of Wis- consin, orth Dakota and Norris and Howell of Nebraska, Seven seats in senate were lost by the republicans Tuesday by the t of Wadsworth of " of Massachusetts, <entucky, ms of Missouri, and and I the er Cameron of Arizona, W Wel- Mary lahoma. Watson and Robinson in Indi the last regulars v In Ore- got a ler of 1d, repu can incumbent, an inde- hdent. Republicans are In of elcet- ing a senator in a special clection in Maine Nov. 29 to fill a vacancy. Wil Reap Rene egin to v victories Walsh of m for President | as to] New | reld of Ok- \I'\fis’l(‘hfl“l“q anl Hawes of Mis- ‘ml]rl take their seats. They were lected for the balance of unexpir- ed terms, which had been filled till | election by appointment. | With six congressional mtw]ny: in the returns the republi- cams today had 41 more seats for (hn next house than the democrats, farmer-1 and one soci The republican sification includes some dozen | insurgents. Of the missing districts | three are now held by republic two by democrats and one by farmer-laborite. In the pre there are 65 more han democrats, the republi ng 246 scats, democ aborites 3, socialists cancies ‘M‘ nt with three v ! . Eagle Drops Partridge Right in Woman’s Window Wi Puxton, Me., Nov. 4 (A—A large cagle which is raiding the poultry flocks in this vicinity and carrying oft some of the fattest hens, inadvertently presented a partridge to Mrs. Ralph Lowell, al though it did so at the expense of one perfectly good window, as well as its screen. Flying be and an pple 11 home part- veen the Towe tree with (h ridge in its grip, the eagic appa ently lost its hold and in an at- tempt to get a better one, it hurl- ed its prey t through the win- dow, near ch Mrs, Lowell w standing in m: dinner. She tnme to ass. As the window was shattered the patridge, covered with dust and sawdust accumulated in its last | fight for life before capture, landed in Mrs. Lowell's sink. A large hole had been made in the screen. The cagle didn’t stop to see what had happened (o its dinner, for Mr. Low- cll was in the vard at the t e Dack by t in flying stepped being cut jt avoid t I'H OPERATION er e part of Paul » has been taken with operations. MeDonald, who 53 North School t, left United States Veter- al at West Point, N, Y., is nineteenth operation oval of shrapnel One piece will ck of his neck surface. led his works out no longer NINT Manchester, he World Wa MeDonald taken where it The blast body. from the 1 has come to t v one shell pnel and it MeDer s rgeo o nter ar dlstricts | republi- | king preparations for | from s with GOAST GUARDSMEN i ! Serious Charges Are Made in Boston Nov. 4P —Six | Coast Guard boats, ferrying | Boston, liquor | from Rum Row at a “union price” of $1 . have led to a federa] ir | vestigation that has revealed Co | Guard boats as regular rum carriers, with some of their officers as part owners in rum vessels, according to a copyrighted story in the “Boston American."” | The facts nave confe d Coast v 1l Coast Guard | William J. Wheelel secret examinations of coast guards- | men in the Hotel ex here, the story says. Commander Wheeler has returned to Washington with his re- ind his ed a new a been revealed by a fo Comnu © trail to Providence, R. Detalls of the manner in which the coast guardsmen landed their liquor | | were printed by the paper in an in- | terview with a member of one of the Gas Spoiled Sleep, Made I suffered from gas on bloating and constipa tion. Used to get headaches and y spells. The first dése of Ad- (lerika gave me relief. Now, I r well and the gas is gone. Blanche Brinkley. . Unlike most medicines, acts upon BOTH upper and lower bowel, giving the intestines a REAL sing and bringing out old poi “For year |the stoma Adlerika AIDRUM RUNNERS ton | d participant to | istants have un- | —Mrs. | | patrol boats involved in the investi- | gation. | “My boat and three others in our patrol running out of Base 5,” (South Boston) “would spend four days on Rum Row,” he sald. “After | we left port the skipper would tell | us the name of the boat we were to unload or assist in getting the booze off into speed boats. “When we got out to Rum Row the George and arle, one of the hest known rum runners that comes into Rum Row, would greet our kipper. On one occasion, seven i speed boats from Plymouth came up alongside the George and Earle and | we helped unload 1,300 cases of | liquor off this ship to the speed | | boats. On this particular boat our | | skipper got $1,300. Our crew num- | bered eight, counting the skipper. | The crew got $300 to split among seven, while the skipper had a grand | for nimselr.” | Hard Collars Are Under Society’s Ban | Pari ov. 4—(P)—"Women the | world over have discarded corsets, | | why should man remain bound to| the tyranny of the stiff collor?” is the rallying cry of the anti-pillory | soclety, The soclety pledges its members to abandon stiff collars forever, even | with evening dress, substituting 'h(.\ | old fashioned stock or the { modern soft collar. more | | H D I | zy orn ways of living | often the true cause of sour stom- | ach, gas bloating, mervous dyspep- | sia and restless sleep. Doctors Praise Adlerika H. L. Shoub, New York: ca, in addition to its intes- nsing checks the growth of | eris Curl highly and which fis Dr. Adler al cle intesti Dr. 4, C. lerika. with “I prescribe Avl»w satisfactory re- sonous matter you never thought was | s 0} bowe surpris tter Adler 1ave bee In sli consti tion NI spoonful alwa n it you will be more old ma 1t which ma trou casion in your how much o 1 or Adlerika is saline intestinal ne, buckthor 2 compound cle er with scara and detergent for Inte to mod- gas-ex 1t Stasis, a disc is ex du he of the . Weave practice, T have el Adlerika.” . Puckett: “After using Ad- | I feel bett:r than for 20 | Awful impurities were elim- “In my 50 years’ } found nothing to | withheld by | a in all Some require only one | | me ’rwqm-s() bowel cases. {dose.” No matter what you have tried | for vour stomach and bowels, «\d-‘ |lcrika will surprise you. At City | |Drug store and leading druggists. S‘; Cigar 1 g B e O e Fone Y LONG FIL yg ooeeeerysapbopasss LER GuamANTEED BY L ROCKYFORD 1 © 1925, P. LORILLARD C QMPANY, EST. 170 IMPORTED SUMATRA . LORILLARD CO . maxeas D T e e o oxmm rroerr rors LK * e e mwm«v»fx«a CEREIVEI RN SHVRG VBRI u«x«uwflvfw i UL SLIRT IR I nm BB 02053 WA THE CIGARS HER] WERE MARUFACT AT HGT HGHE 2 WRAPPER B EIN CONTAINED URED TR REYALL AN FIYE CENTS EACH AND ARE SDTAX PAID. Capitol Tobacco Co. Double-Deck Busses Are Mecca of Young “Petters” Washington, Nov. 4 (#—The "double” part of the new double deck busses that ply along fashion- able Sixteenth street is in bad again. A little while ago, Washington so- ciety leaders whose homes front the rich thoroughfare, complained that the upper decks of the busses forced them to keep their front shades drawn to preserve thelr privacy from voluntary and involuntary peeping Toms. Now comes Police Captain F. M, | Cornwell of the tenth precinct, with a quite different complaint. ing to Major Edwin B. perintendent of police today, he said the bus tops were finding too much favor after dark among the city's public petters. He recommended the upper decks be equipped with electric lights as a remedy for this ailment. Report- Experts Seeking to Identify Murder Gun Monticello, N. Y., Nov. 4 (P—TFive arms experts in the trial of Charles Wise, 16 year old Brooklyn boy, be- lieve that the bullet Nina Vilona, 50 year old Mount Ver- non planist, was fired from Wise's|given three months each |mail order revolver. which killed Testifying, Morton Robinson, en-l Hesse, su- | | workhouse, Arms company, said the bullet which passed through Miss Vilona's brain resembled bullets he had fired from the boy's revolver in tests. H ex- plained, however, the bullet was badly battered by striking a halr-pin. Captain William A. Jones, of New York, cncther pistol expert, declared that microscopic examination of a [test bullet and of the bullet which killed the planist indicated both were |fired from the same revolver. | The case is expected to go to tha jury on Saturday. Wise is charged with murder, first degree. Wisconsin Men Jailed For Inciting Men to Riot Marinette, Wis., Nov. 4 (P — Six | Marinette men found guilty Monday by a jury in circuit court of inciting |a riot and destroying property in {connection with the storming of a Ku Klux Klan meeting, were given workhouse sentences by Judge W. B, Quinlan yesterday. The state alleged the men were |members of a mob of 1,000 persens |who stormed a Klan meeting. The |tent in which the meeting was held was burned. Maddie Vellenealuve was given a six months’ suspended sentence bee cause of ill health contracted during world war service. The others were in the They are Clyde Barrett, Leo Belair, Harold Bennett, and Eu- {gincer of the Winchester I!(‘l)u{xtlnr; gene and Leo Sequin, Order your Chris Some of your Christmas shop- ping can be done at the Jast minute—and be lots of fun in spite of the crowds. But your hristmas and New Year's Greeting Cards should bs or- dered early, if you would be sure of escaping the crowds, the depleted stocks, and the dcvmtg hoar shopping. Cur assortment of Holiday | | Al | | tmas Cards eatly Greeting Cards is now complete and vzn:d Ie wxllbea lusure for you to pick out that express your own penon ality and taste. Let us have your order for your engraved cards at your carliest convenience, so that we will have time to handle your engraving to your entire satis- faction and ours. ADKINS 66 CHURCH ST. back intown As fine a nickel cigar as any man ever touched a match to . . . the kind like father used to smoke in preference to all others back in the good old days when silver dollars seemed as big as manhole covers. A quality smoke from tip to ash—fine long filler domestic tobacco —imported Sumatra wrapper. s‘m