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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1926. Latham, gave several selections for HAWES AGAIN PLEADS FOR |iinriiiie St ASKS JUSTICEFOR iyl FLASHES OF LIFE: | pended sentence to Connecticut State PENOLOGIST HAS |nicomees NEW IDEA FOR PUNISHING CRIMINALS| s — comn witiam | Smith, flight eurgeon of the 115th | observation sqnadron s made com- nceing to wear without them. Trinity | manding officer of the medical de- college professors point out thal |tachment, 43rd division. chemistry figu in the production | of shoes, furs, gloves, hose ““‘Ji Hartford—Severe blows on the Price P. Disque, silk manufacturer, other things are made from artificia former prison warden in Michigan silk; perfume and jewels are pro- head, causing hemorrhage of the ¢ brain, are found to be the cause o d head of war-time spruce lum- |duced synthetically. se 0t bering for the government. All con- | death of Charles Pegulihan, French boxer, wh ol sed M victed criminals would have to xer, who collapsed Monday night ‘\‘vul‘k for a state corpo ion for PSRN S rITRP Rl during bout with Al Friedman. New Haven Youth Held wages qual to those paid in private industry. Their keep would be de- for Payroll Robbery |ducted; the rest would be held to New Haven, Dec. 16 UP—Believed | grandson of {a rising vote of thanks for their Ow Hi who signed the Walla Walla | courtesy in enlivening the meczing,l "l‘v:\ly in 1855 by which the Indians Like Red Flag and Bull 1 O AR e | 1 have found that as soon as I| BUTLER To TESTIFY mention public ownership, it has the same effect as waving a red flag in | tront of a bull. Immediately peoplc 'xmm Marine Commander Called as begin to disagree with me. You must | E i remember that public ownership of | Witness in Col. Green's Defense at | forests s something entirely differ- | | ent than public ownership of rail-| and political privileges as are ac- roads or public utilities. We have|. gan prancisco, Dec. 15 (P—Briga- |corded othor citizens, was made last tound that privately owned forests' .. General Smedley D. Butler, dis- |night at a gathering in 0dd Fellows' Pelham Manor, ) he thinks penologists and ers have failed to soly. the ¢ oblem, a solution is offered ceded their land to the government Gme[ stl‘oflgheart []rges RGCOQ-}'“" consideration of plows, horses, | | ‘ gons and a public school. | ition for Bis Broters, [, e 2 g re ation, who acts as his man ager. But It’s Like Waving Red Flag in Front of Bull, He Says at Meeting of Ex- change Club. An appeal for justice for the Red | |Man and for the same educational John hog s al- says bout their ringfield, 1. — Mrs. t of Chitham, champlon caller of Sangumon coun ways tidy on the . e women who are car Trlal Today. QuEtnoR: Hewes,'sfale’ \forenten compensate their victims. and president of the National Asso- clation of Foresters, addressed the Exchange club last evening at fits rcgular weekly meeting held at the Burritt hotel. Mr. Hawes emphasized that although this state and New England in general contains three and one-tenth of an acre per caplta of timber land, and that eight-tenths of an acre per capita has been found sufficlent to make a ecountry self supporting in timber lines, S0 per cent of the timber used in this state is tmported. Two-fifths of the tim- ber imported comes from the Paci- fic coast, two-fifths from the Guif ccasts and one-fifth form the north- castern siates. With the tariff and froight charges added to the original price of tho timber the prices have soared, and although Connecticut could use home grown timber with proper care of the forests, builders are paying high prices for imported wood that is left here to grow un- cared for, “New England is now going through an interesting experience in timber production,” Mr. Hawes stat- ed, “as this portion of the country is reverting back to timber after being cleared and left to grow again, and as there 1s 60 per cent of the entire acreage covered by timber, Connecticut will soon contain 80 per cent timber land. ber ean grow as high and as grained as any imporf it is given time Protection must be the point wel Connecticut tim- | |is a slow wait for any profits. Ior this reason investors in forests draw | land just when it would begin to| produce results. A 50-yecar wi returns on an investment does not entice many people into putting | their money into forests, and for this ! more results than private ownership. What Department Needs “The Connecticut forestry depart- ! ment needs many things. It nceds more men and lookouts and fire fighting equipment such as is used | in Vermont and Massachusetts. Fire | protection is as nceded to the for- est owner as jt is to the city prop- erty owner, and at present the state is not equipped to give the service. The forests are necessary for wild iife and wood supply, and some leg- islation should care for the fire pro- tection needs of the state.” Mr. Hawes went on to point out the public preserves which exist in the state, giving an idea of the work being done in them. members of the club to vieit the for- | ests and added that any dead wood | they might want to chop up is at| their disposal gratis. | serves are for the enjoyment of the citizens of the state, he urged the ‘members to take advamtage of the forests in communing with nature. A committee take care of the club’s Christmas ted timber g party to be given at the next meet- | {ing. No glit over ten cents will be | {thelr money out and neglect thelr | ", iy it ton |ed to testify in defense of Col. Ned alt TOF | 5. Green in federal court here to- | day. reen himselt was sl on the and when court adjourned yester- day. He had undergone rigid cross-examination . Bennett, district attorney, Who tHe use | made by Green to Alf Ofteda u {crnment “under cover” agent, in an |(Tom ths western reservations. |effort to impeach the former dry di- | | rector's testimony. = schools to allow He invited the | Poison Liquor Believed As the pre- |into four deaths attributed to poison | ilquor, were before city authorities Sovernment an exorbitant cost which . if the Indians were allowed to participats In gov- | no lasting was, found | pital yesterday. An hour later Rob- ernment, and little or was appointed to |ert Cameron, who came here from Zood comes of it, Chief Strongheart Scotland, where he was taken when found suf- fering intense pain. ms in the ase, was among those list- the liquor for |soigiers in civil hours by Eugene | United States | resorted to of a statem:nt previously ov- deputy Nad toms of Edward Glenn, an American, would b dead in a Nelson hos- succumbed in a hospital, claims. s proposed div campaign $39,000,000 worth bonds w are a paying investment, but that it | ingisheq foo of alcohol and prose- hall, by Chief Nipo Strongheart, a | r of the late Colonel Alexander native of the “cocktail court \vashington. Strongheart, a full-blooded Indlan, is touring the country in the inter- |ests of remedial legislation to raise he standards of life and education Green is charged with embezzling lamong his reason a state department created confiscated liquor from government |graduate of Carlisle college and has | "y for the care and development of the |vaults while he was prohibition ad- ';i50 attended Simcoe school. ! forests with legislation to guarantee mMinistrator for northern California ag the first application for Roose- the carrying on of the work obtains |and Nevada. The prosecution charges Green appropriated consumption at riotous parties, General Butler is expected to tes- | tify as to Colonél Green's character, wit Yakima fellow men. He sion of for service in France, lifo perhaps his most of |Indian scldiers and 16 Indian the World of Liberty red- and immense stocks of wool ere turned over to the government b s served in ere purchased by the Chief Strongheart urges abolition of the reservation and the his tellow men to mingle and thereby learn the cus- The To Have Killed Four |Burcau of tndtan Atatrs, conducted Nelson, B. C., Dec, 15 (P—Inquests by the government at a cost of §15,- 000,000 a year, their white brothers. throws upon e overcome he Indian chief traced for audicnce last night the history of his reservation, | His Indian and im- ortant deed has been a successful - for the American Indian h special reference to his 80- | citjzenship bill, passed in 1924, | In a great measure, his work was responsible for the fact that 18,000 Red Indian the his to have walked into the office of the Alling Coul Co., Saturday morning and taking the payroil of $5,000 os- nsibly to pay off the workmen, 19, was @ ed yesterday after search hy local police through th poolrooms of the city, ngello was identified by a the ed over the payroll. He had worked at one time for the concern. About three years ago he was bound over to the superior court on charges of robbery with personal abuse. iState Grants Permit For Sale of Magazine Permission having been granted v Sceretary Kellogg of the state department of charitics, the sale of copies of “The Pillar of Fire” in business houses will not be proh i by the police department Chief W. C. Hart states. Representa- tives of the organization publishing the paper told the chief Mr. Kel- lozg promised them the permit by December 1, but the chief would not sanction their operations uni they obtained the permit, which they finally did. Sale of the paper on the streets is not allowed, Lowever. here MOTOR VEHICLE REPORT The police were notified today of sension of the right to op- erate automobiles in the cases of Abert Mankus and Frank Todzia; suspension of the license of Jam personal appearance are responsible | walking off with it John Langello, |a clerk as the man to whom he hand- | ' 'racquets, baseballs and fruit. i In answer to 1 of the coddling of prison- chall games and movie shows Sing and elsewhere fended as necessary by Geor Alger, Governor Smith's inve ing commissioner. Columbus, 0. — § ler must feed prisoners in the land county jail, not what he thi they should have. but what a county judge thinks. Censured for a “sta fation menu, Kohler weont to about it and los Camaen, N. J. — Women are now violating the laws to a greater ex- tent than ever in story, il opinion of Justice I bach of state but bobbed hair t to blame. One troub ther is the same thing Marc Anthony to spend §900,- 000,000 “in his patter, patter after the greatest vamp of all time Cleopatra.” law s wealth, Toms River, N. J. to figure largely in the administra- tion of Jersey justice. Mrs. Laur: W. Thompson is head of the Ocean county grand jury. In appointing her, Justice Lloyd sald it was time for an innovation in the state, — A woman s New York — Barnard girls have | heen adv ised to paint the cheek: from the inside out—with tennis food and sport fs The | for a whole iness. Bucharest — Th s a fight in the making with which Queen Marfe s to h nothing whatever to Dr. Lupu, rmerly minister of h M. Co- jo. i uel over a remark in pa-liamentary de- bate. Injuries received in wectdent Monday result in Mary Damiatti, 10, Midd a coasti mist with has saved his st tubhes and reagent rankind billions of dof told pain and has pre neccesities and the luxuries Trinity professors radio dialogue, s and un- ed both the of life, say weekly Danbury— Seymour cars old, ams boxer, 1 Friday night, is paralyzed below the waist, physicians announce, eur Westport—Prohibition a an elaborate and large quant quors in a house ing ies of amford—Henry missing from home is found at Deposit, Seoficld, bus ss man since o N | Bridgeport—Tda Almstead is given 1 senfence upon a serious atutory charge, is divorced-and is lot of this divorce bus- | The tonic and laxative |! effect of Laxative BROMO || QUININE Tablets will for- |/ tify the system against Grdp, | Influenza and other serious ills resulting from a Cold. Price 30c. The box bears thia signature 1 value of correet afforded from the gypey moth, the|gccepted, and the presents will be | Spanish bug worm and a recurrence oxchanged by an Exchange Santa of the disastrous chestnut hlight. | Claus, And it i for that reason that T ad-| The “Serenaders,” consisting of vocate public ownership of the for- |“Hump" Muldowney, “Wamp" Carl- st json, Arnold Thompson and I John Matthew Doyle and Clarence race from the primitive da: Cook, the former from the United |of its legends, superstitions, life and States, and the latter from Hamil- customs up to the present day. He ton, Ont., were sentenced to jail for explained he had been moved to tour |drunkenness and then removed to a the country when, at Camp Devens, “Red” | hospi ro they 1ied last night. |he saw foreigners being given th telling Lentine of 157 Washington street, |y aine descrined and return of the licenses of Samuel | ,q) Reeve of 602 t Main street, Thomas Leszcz; of 24 Gf)lfl‘ street and Romeo Demers of 221 Hurlburt street to Timothy Sullivan, father of her child, within two hours. n the college's an- Hartford, Conn. — Milady should | Bridgeport—Phyllis Wentsch thank chemists when she is all|who pleaded guilty to a charge of |dolled up. She would have noth- | bu ary last week & by Prree 1889 is given a sus- | ERSTE | * GREATEST COAT SALE EVER HELD BY ANY HOUSE HUNDREDS OF BEAUTIFUL HIGH CLASS COATS If the Season’s Greatest Coat Savings mean anything to the public, the biggest crowds that ever attended a coat sale will be here. All Silk Crepe Lined Every New Color and Black IN THESE CLOTHS Duvbloom, Bolivia, Venice, Broadcloth, Suede, Glorsheen, Tweeds. Cherio Mixture, Plaids, Solid Colors, Sport Cloths, Reversibles, othe: WITH THESE FURS 238 Manchurian Wolf, French Beaver, Skunk, Black Caracul, Wolf, Genu- Dress Sa]e ine Beaver, Iceland Beaver, Platinum Wolf, French Coney, Jap Fox. ; MAIN f = . Mandel, Vicuna, Pieced Squirrel. Y 3 p STREET k Extraordinary FINEST AND SMARTEST COATS Made to retail at $22.50, $25.00 % and $29.75 Priced less than cost of furs alone. Never ligt than $35.00. $19.0G Many sold at $40. . Natfonally famous for distinctive &tyle and superb quality - $27_00 A marvelous group Never less than $45.00. Many worth to $55.00 LIKE A BOLT OF LIGHTING FROM A CLEAR SKY — THE NEWS IS FLASHED CYERSTOLRELD Sensational Sale Women’s and Misses’ Dresses VALUES YOU WILL LONG REMEMBER! New High Grade SILK DRESSES New High Grade PARTY You will be amazed, just as we were, when you sco these wonderful Dresses—you will wonder how such | §35.00 values, at Dresses can be sold at $14.00. $19.00 “On the Square” | Overstocked Sale BEGINNING TOMORROW, THURSDAY MORNING December 16th at 9 A. M. THIS SALE IS CONDUCTED BY THE NICHOLS' SALES CO. OF NEW YORK CITY Our agreement with the Nichols’ Sales Company rveads: That our $19,000 stock of Coats, Dresses, Furs, etc., must be turned into CASH within three days. almost any style that you may Mr. Nichols personally is in charge of this sale. He says: HUDSON SEAL PLUSH COATS $ L edil 1T CAN BE DONE. IT MUST BE DONE. 18 90 Nk Big shawl collar, large cuffs—trimmed with fine § IT WILL BE DONE. A MATERIALS e wears like S ot 81 10,000 WOMEN WILL WAIT real Hudson S Don't miss this value $69.50 PLAIN ; e RS T o HEON. S saloiEs % for our doors to open TOMORROW, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16TH AT 9 A. M. — HUDSON SEAL PLUSH COATS With the most SENSATIONAL SALE of finest Coats, Furs, Dresses, ete., ever HHEARD of in history of New Britain. We have forgotten COST PROFITS and PRICE.—Everything but the IDEA of disposing of our mammoth stock. on sale. Silk lined. Lar $44~00 LADIES YOUR CHANCE IS HERE! collar and big cuffs . i ACT QUICK! ALL HIGHER PRICED FUR TRIMMED COATS Are Included At Correspondingly Reduced Prices The biggest money saving event in the history of New Britain The decidedly unfavorable weather condition all during this season, has left us with the biggest stock we have ever had on hand at this time of the year. The time has come to UNLOAD in a HURRY to close our eyes to cost or value \ Over Stocked Fur Coat Sale AND SELL therefove 5 BELOW WHOLESALE COST $250.00 French Seal Coats—Finest fur coats, trimmed with large BEGINNING TOMORROW, THURSD AY MORNING AT 9 0'CLOCK the most deliberate price cutting in all our years in husiness! shawl collar and cuffs, of natural gray squirrel ls‘?go‘]&f E;ruink. Ee'ery 0nle silk lined. .. q p $ 1 29.0 i accoon Coats—Tom Roy style, finest A n YERQ T 2 $ selected furs. Best values ever o}f,i'ered e $259 .00 i Cualy PREbn, FUR, Bte, ingour store goe $300.00 Caracul Coats—Brown caracul trimmed If you have waited till now to buy it’s the most profitable w with brown fox collar and cuffs ................. $ 1 59.00 $125.00 Northern Seal Coats—(Dyed) coney, self trifhmed, big shaw] collar. Beautiful matched skins. Exquisitely lined ...... Fashion’s Smartest Modes for Every At regular prices are Amcrica’s biggest values Occasion THINK of the BARGAL -at $35 00 e . this reduced price .. Never less than $59. Many worth to $65.00 OVER STOCKED Women’s and Misses’ SPORT TOP COATS « $12 00 Actual former selling price up to plaid and § straight line models, splendidly lailored, of fine soft materials, in all siz misses and women. OVER STOCKED SALE Lovely New Dresses $39.75 to $49.75 are varied; 00 value $12.00 o style you w made & yeclal effort to put T'ine Crepes, Fine Geor, Crepe and Georgelte Velvets combine? and Crepes cr Chiffon Velv b this most wonderful combinati with Georget ined with Velv ts and hs, STYLES Kon's new assortment of dainty dresses to- How de- lignted every miss creations, de e doiman sleeve, graceful sleeves and new h flares, | Will feel to get a painted frock at this SIZES oo Misses' Sizcs 16 to 36, Lk Women's Sizes 38 to 44 Stouts’ Sizes 46 to 52 tiful net on many models. Wonen's and Misses’ SILK and CLOTH DRESSES A Sale That Surpasses Them Alil Sizes 16—20; 36—10 Don’t Miss This Sale! squisite styling—the extreme qual- wonderful selections offered in event are astonishing! $9.00 LOOK 100 All Wool Sweaters Values to Sl $l 00 we start — nothing reserved. it you have ever made! JAY'S. WOOL JERSEY ONE AND 2 TWO-PIECE DRESSES g $15.00 values. $7 85 ‘ $2.00 No. 535-652 Van Raalte and Onyx Black Silk Hose NO C. 0. D.’S NO CHARGES Ample Salespeople to Wait On You NO CREDITS LOOK 50 Women’s Skirts Overplaid and striped; up to $9.50 ; $1 00 values. at .. 500 Pair Women’s Wool Hose $1.25 values. $6.00 Wool Sweaters ... $1 98 at . 100 Brassieres Values to $3.50. At .. $5.00 Silk Blouses Princess Slips Slightly Soiled Ao $1.59 at