New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 10, 1926, Page 11

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Ior work. All the tenons and mor- EEMS |tices are sheathed with copper. It has copper attachments for curtains | or doors. The sarcophagus will prob- DESCRIBES GENS | FOUND I8 TOMB o v s, Reisner Tells of Discoveries ati DENY L0OT WAS IN CASH Queen's Grave e B Sl | g Not Cairo, Nov. 10 (P—Dr. George A. | Friend of Stock But Not of Reisner, assistant professor of Egypt- | His Money. ology of Harvard university, has is- | sued a report describing the work | he has done on the tomb of Queen Netepheres, mother of King Cheops and wife of Senefru, first sovereign of the fourth dynasty. Identification of the tomb is based on two in-| scriptions in gold hieroglyphics on | the back of a carrying chair. Dr. Reisner found evidence that Netepheres died some time after Cheops came to the throne and was buried directly south of the great pyramids. The tomb was rifled by| thieves and when the vio!l discovered Cheops transferred body to a new tomb at the entrance of the pyramid Ghiza. This tomb is a vertical shaft cut 100 feet| through the limestone with the chamber opening from the bottom. The discoveries included a bed and three chairs, still intact, fifty imple- ments and tools, six of which are solid gold, fifteen copper and the others a dozen wooden panels | with inlaid floral designs in faier framed in gold: household vessels, including three gold cups, a copper basin, a ewer, 28 alabaster wi and flve boxes of linen. Perhaps the most impressive dai covery was a gold cased jewel box 8, | rested the young men last even ssels | Charged with theft of $3 from the home of Bennie Dunitz of 3§ Silver street, Tony DiPolo, aged 22, of the Hotel Bronson, and Frank Avella, aged 19, of 51 Franklin street, were before Judge W. C. ford in police court this orning and their cases were con- | tinued until Monday quest of Attorney Thoms ) Donough, who appeared for DiPolo. Judge W. F. Mangan has been re- tained to represent Avella. cer Thomas J. Feeney ar- the theft. Ex- ng how they came by some money they had when arrested, they said they stole several five gallon |cans of alcohol from Dunitz and them, according to the police. Dunitz claims $180 was stolen from his home. John W. Burns, colored, of 63 Willow street costs remitted, on charge | of the peace and drunken rested last n by Officers Stadler a on complaint to head abused his wife and dro their home in the midst of the rain- storm, according to the testimony. and they denied aged 56, ed $5, of breach NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1926. Judge Hungerford asked Officer |, Strolls to restate the circumstances | of the arrest and the officer said | Boutin was driving at the rate of | | 40 miles an hour between Huriburt and Allen streets. Judge Hunger- | | ford imposed a fine of $10 on the | speeding charge and remitted ehe} costs. He suspended judgment on | | the other charges. | The continued case of Thomas | Scorak, aged 34, of 303 High | | street, charged with violation of the liquor law in a store at 80 Lafay- lette street, was continued until | | Monday on request of Attorney Thomas F. McDonough. Officer | Feeney arrested Scoral last Satur- | | aay. i } Wets in Congress To Commence Work | | Washington, Nov. 10 (P—Their | ranks augmented somewhat as a sult of t recent prohibition | referenda, leaders of the wets in| congress plan a series of confer- | ences soon to determine upon a | {course of action at the coming ses- | g |sion. | Their program will include resist- | |ance by every parliamentary means | | possible to the enactment of the | |pending administration bill tighte 2l |ing the Volstead Act and the pre |ing of measures to amend that act | |so that definition of intoxicating: | malt beverages will be the same as | [that for clder and fruit juices. Some W favor a pro-| {posal to resut the eighteenth lamendment, but others have indi- cated that their real fight at |start will be for modifica Volstead Act with consid tion of the prohibition amendment (to come later. 1o proposat o marmiase b ! SEMINOLE. INDIANS Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, has returned from la year of excavating among buried |One of Their Own Braves Who Killed 2 . & 1‘“ ite cities of Asia Minor. | Friend Hi It Is Executed Fidelity Finance Corp. Wants to|, ne wevoian queen ottered her. 7 y self as a bridal prospect in a com- By Tribal Member. = - | munication to a Hittite king, asking| Build on West Main Street |5iervhe e & son eligibie to mar:| Miami, Fia, Nov. 10 (P—In the |ry her. The scientist said the queen |Everglades country an immutable |was very young at the time, but did |Justice of the Seminoles has meted The Fidelity Finance Corparation [not give her age. The answer was|Out the penalty of death to a tribal has asked permission to build a one- {rot known, but Dr. Von Der Ostend |murder to atone in part for the life SENSATION EXPLODES Sergeant P. J. O'Mara, who in- tigated the report that a man living at 65 Smith street had poi- soned his wife with a needle yes- terday afternoon, was unable to find any justification for the complaint, and Dr. George M. Flanagan, the | dimension, at 13 6West Main stre. Because the district in which it is proposed to build is in a residence zone, it will be necessary for the company’s representatives to appear betore the board of adjustment to- night and request a special excep- tion. The property owned by the financ- ing corporation is the former Beach home. bringing the sidewalk to an accept grade has been completed as conc tions precedent to an application for a building permit. It is planned to the proposed structure for bank- | ing purposes only, and it will be but one story in height. Tonight's meeting of the board of adjustment will also consider t Masonic Temple Corporation’s peti- tion for a permit to build on Rus- sell street; Mrs. E. M. Roche plication for a special excer permit placement of a building in the residence district Tast Main and East s 1 other propositions of minor in- business at terest. Work of clearing the site and | bearing the queen’s name and con-| Gerard Boutin, aged 18, of 364 taining twenty silver anklets, gradu- | Elm street, whose cas ated to fit the leg upward. Each |tinued Monday to allow hi anklet is ornamented with four con- nity to produce his | 0 ventionalized dragonflies inlatd with | ion for a motorcycle he malachite, lapis lazull and cornelian. driving on Stanley street Sa Dr. Re has now begun to re- |urday forenoon when Motorcy move the canopy on the alabaster | Officer Strolls arrested him, sarcophagus, with the jewels bearing |plained his case. He the name of Senefru. The canopy’s|copies of the papers this morning framework {s an astonishing piece and sald he had lost the originals. e ex 14000 YEAR OLD ROMANCE ‘Whatever hopes the wets had that " lan outstanding dry, would join their {Senator Walsh, democrat, llonianu,l |ranks as a result of the referen- {dum in Montana in favor of repeal- ate enforcement code ve been dissipated by that sena- tor. produced | |READ HERALD CLASSITIED ADS | FOR YOUR WANT. These Are the Specifications Size 0f 1OVEN) i« idsismdicvaanmis 16143 Size of Broiler ........ Height to Cooking Top . . Height to Bottom of Oven ..... Extreme Length Without Shelf . Extreme Width . Extreme Height . Gas Range $49.75 Cash Or On Easy Club Terms FORATHREE-DAY SALE THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY UNCOVERED BY EXCAVATOR University of Chicago Archeologist Brings Back Story of Tut's Widow hicago, Nov. 10 (P—On inc ent romance of nearly 4,000 yi ipl- |story banking house, 35x55 feet in |had a mass of manuseripts and in-|Of 2 slain brave. Iscriptions to decipher and these may throw r light on the affair. Thes lics of a powerful race Qr group of races which mastered all of western Asia from the eighteenth to the twelfth centuries B. C. and llong have been a puzzle to archae- and explorers, are expected considerable new light on 1 civilization. . Von Der Ostend, who covered a {only by his | settiem tomobile, accompanied fe, discovered fifty-five 1 Asia Minor, against thre which previously had been | know | Pt o {Movie Stars Indignant At Advertising Story | Hollywood, Cal, Nov. 10 (P— ars of the film world seethed with nation over the disclosure in Chicago that a testimonial company pr ed to be able to roduce, for a price, the o ment of any product by certain sc n luminaries, {m A motion picture magazine which ade a hurried check of the first ames on a list of 75 said to been offered its customers by testimonial dealers, declared had denied they ever had | ha |the | that ar | pa | 2 unbroken chain 660 miles long be formed of persons Kkilled injured annually in the United cou |and rse- | Past the barriers of Indfan stoic- ism, the fragmentary tale was brought here last night by a half breed interpreter. | Two weeks ago the boom of toe- |sin and tom tom resounded through |the ‘glades, heralding the first cele- | brati sminole nation since {the ge festival of Chief Tony Tommy and Edna John Osce- {ola in June. Decked in their glitter- |ing finery and bright hued apparel, the remnants of the vanishing race ‘ assembled. | Far into the night the Braves and squaws sang and danced. In the early | hours of the morning, Pashey Billy, !in a drunken flash of temper, clubbed |a friend and companion to death. | Pashey Billy escaped in the excite- i ment which followed and remained | hidden for a week in a secluded | hammock. Then his fellow tribes- | men closed in and captured him. | At old John Willi's camp, the | death sentence was pronounced on| Pashey Billy by the council of eld- Under a canopy of blue sky, veen walls of cypress and marsha | grass, the court heard the plea that \Pashey Billy had imbibed too freely |of “kiohmi,” the powerful native | beverage. The spirit of retribution Foreign Countries. | be |&r was summoned, likewise reported no indication of the alleged assauit, The couple have been having do- mestic trouble, according to the po- lice. | READ HERALD CLASSIFTIED ADS who | FOR YOUR WANT. It begins immediately to take out the Inflammation and reduce all Swelling. application brings Great Relief. Stops Itching Instantly and Quickly Relieves Irritation. Severe tests in cases of long standing have proved that PAZD OINTMENT can be depended upon with absolute certainty to Stop any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Recommended by Physicians and Druggists in United States and The first PAZO OINTMENT in tubes with Pile Pipe Attachment, T8¢ and in ¢in boxes 60c. The circular enclosed with each tube and box contains facts about Piles which everybody should know. PARIS MEDICINE CO., Beaumont and Pine Streets, St. Louis, M. alings with the Chicago com- |, gmwe 7889 | prevailed and the sentence of death | | was invoked. | Charlle Tigertail, a leader in the rs of the tribe, was delegated to . |take the life of Pashey Billy in the | (e sl ot spher S0 s Every Pair of Eyes gel as used by the convicted brave. ¢ ‘ s, o | should have care and skill in their exami- | MRS. J. J. TOBIN ENTERTAINS | | nation and the highest quality of lenses to Mrs. John J. Tobin of 128 Black aid them. { Rock avenue rtained two tables | g by v 6 ¥ . My Specialty—Comfortable Vision FRANK E. GOODWIN at her home in honor of Mrs, John | J. Mangan of Black Rock avenue. | Eyesight Specialist 327 MAIN ST. PHONE 1905 The prize for bridge was awarded | to Miss Anna Duggan and for to Mre. 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The coats are fashioned of English, French and Scotch wool- We Believe That These Are the Greatest Gas Range Values Thanksgiving or Ever Offered in Hartford Christmas . How much more you will en- joy cooking the holiday feasts on a new Glenwood Gas Range Wouldn’t it make a wonderful Christmas gift! Street HARTFORD . C. FULLER CO. Glenwood Ranges ens, tan and gray mixtures and chevrons, block effects and novelty coatings. Trimmed with luxurious collars of Kit Fox, Badger, Australian Opossum, Dyed Red Fox and Jap Cross Fox. Smart Styles For General Wear Women’s Apparel—Third Floor

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