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PULPIT ASSALS LANDIS EXPOSE Baseball Czar Criticized by Dr. W. L. Stidger ELIZABETH ARDEN’S TOILET REQUISITES Everything to make the skin beautiful | Kansas City, Dec. 27.—(#— Ten | commandments, intended as sugges- tions for Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, have been prepar- ed by Dr. William L. Stidger, pastor | of the Linwood Boulevard Methodist | || chureh here. Dr. Stidger, who formerly occu- | | pied a pulpit at Detroit, announced | the commandments last night in | | connection with a criticism of | | Judge Landis for revealing details of the investigation of the records of | | Ty Cobb and Tris Speaker on infor- | | mation furnished by Hubert (Dutch) e | Leonara, | The commandments are based fo R I Dickinson Drug the most part of Dr. Stidger's con | ception of court procedure as ap- 169-171 MAIN STREET plied to baseball regulations, and he said, on his knowledge of the sport nd his friendship for Cobb and | er. He told of becoming ac- | inted with the players while at | lr& Detrolt and said he held them in | | the highest regard as sportemen. The first commandment urges Judge Landis “not to leave it to the public to decide that which you are paid $65,000 a year to adjudica! Eight commandments are devoted to & plea for careful consideration of the evidence, carrying the theme | that “a reasonable doubt of any man’s guilt is the basic principal of {legal procedure.” The tenth warns gainst “discharged and disgruntled players.” ;m\\“\\\\\mv«\’s;\\) AT H. L. MILLS HARDWARE STORE 336 MAIN STREET The “Handy” Hardware Store 7 GAROL AND LOVER AGAIN SEPARATED Romance With Madga Lupescu Rpparently Is Ended (SRR RS CENNSN SRR SSSSARRR IR SR OANS SISO S S SSRR SRR RN AR SRS AT AAHELRARHEARRERNENEERRERNE SRS S8 whom mania renoun slon to the throne, h passed out of his life. A 1927 Art Calendar for:; every Customer this? week at H. L. Mil!s'z »h parently | | knowing his | be- | couple has ended, | nce—now plain | Neuilly affairs say gan with the flight rom Rumania The former cro rol Caraiman villa and “handy hardware store. Ask for cne. caving his | hind to the v back | is mot given King Ferdi- | irn of Queen A ESITTINIRRARI ST EANA AR SR e 2 V 4 A ¢ @ P b b N Have Your\| Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by A. PINKUS Eyesight Specialist Satisfaction Guaranteed -4 300 MAIN ST. Phone 570 only cause | It was just a , that Carol and | daughter of a Jew | Jassy, leit Rumania t a hotel in Milan, 1 was s in the background, and | married to Princess Helen match with Helen a dynastic move | of his morgantic | Lambrino, who | cestul | nch court to nowledge the legiti- | Mircea. tumania Carol re- | d his* right of succession to | rone, and his abdication was | al by act of the Rumanian | tly afterward. is companion spent some Milan and then came to| and engaged the villa in The house now is occupied uncommunicative ants detectives stationed as a | the Trench authoritie: cen withdrawn pending his | . ws0 this week.| Mme. Lupescu, | h merchant of | and appeared | Ttaly. Mme. | attempt throv force him to Wedding Ring Shop NEW HOME 9 ARCH STREET time in Paris guard by have I return, AINER P RS Auto Electric Service i’P' rominent Brookline C. A. ABETZ Engineer a Suicide 1 e, M 21 (P— 110 FRAX prominent ended his life | * home § the police The architectural building, 1ldings in ared under his seu is 5 about a mi reported to be | from the villa, TEL. 4185/ — e JOHN J. TARRAN 8 East Main Street UNDERTAKER and I UPHOLS Phone 1010 House: 1451-2 hroom by or nd nearb: vere notif Although d at once, ir finding ation had Opysters and Clams | ved Fresh Daily. HOME A QUART. re Delicions. Packar: Oyster House Corner of Arch and Walnut ORIENTAL RU received hand woven 1 ine G ™ T Tiof just real i v 7 Main St formation o 1 e 1 s00n RUAD © FOR YOUR D WANTS ADS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1926. MARTYRS' TOMB IS DISCOVERED Famous Relic of arly Ages Ut covered in Asia Minor OUR SCHOOLS Smyrna, Asia Minor, Dec. 27 (P— | Resumption of the cxcavations at | Ephesus interrupted for a number | of years, has finally brought to light ! the long sought for catacombs of the carly Christian martyrs, known as |/the Seven Sleepers of Ephesus.” The systematic search for pre- sumable antiquities in this part of | Asia Minor was taken up last fall by the Museum of Smyrna with the as- | sistance of the well known archaclo- | gists, Professors Keil, Theuner and (Milner of Vienna, and Professor Adolf Diessmann, theological histor- ian at the Univer: After the workmen had cleared away great piles of debris and stones Photo by Johnson & Peterson | on the rugged slopes of the burial ELEANOR B. YATES | grounds of Ephesus, a vast com- Director, Latin ;po\lml of ancient Christian culture Senior High and Junior High Schools | and the adjoining tombs of the seven | sleepers were dlsclosed. Miss Eleanor B. Yates began her| The tombs contained many lamps n school | of manifold designs, among which ystem in 1913. She holds import- | were seve specimens of fine sculp- nt position as head of the latin de- | tural art with attractive represent; partment of the senior and two | tions of antigne and early Christian junfor high schools, a position she | scenes all bearing the monogram of held since she came to the school. | Christ. She is one of the few teachers at| Accomding to legend, seven Chris- the school who is a native of this| tian youths about 250 A. D. hid was graduated from the | themselves from pursuit in a cave. Britain High school and from | Their hiding place was discovered n University, Middletown and the entrance blocked. where she recelved a B. A. degree.| The martyrs then fell asleep. <he taught latin and English at the | Nearly 200 years later a herdsman high school of Norwalk, Conn. from | discovered the cave and letting in 1900 to 1913, | light awoke the inmates. Fraternally she is assoclated with | The emperor, Theodosius II, hear. the New and Classical associa- | ing of this phenomenon, hastened to tion of which she is & charter mem- | the spot in time to hear from the ber and upon whose executive com- [ martyrs that God had wrought this mittee she served two y: . She is | marvel to confirm the belief in the also a member of the New England | resurrection of the dead. After hav- ssoclation of colleges and secondary |ing delivered thelr message, the schools. "mar(_\'rs again fell asle MRS, JANE GIBSON NbT “PERTINAX” CRITICIZES FORGOTTEN IN HOSPITAL' PAN&MA-U. §. TREATY | 3 “Plg Woman” Witness in Reccnt French Political Writer Condemns | Pact Recently Drafted by Murder Trial Given Floral Americas. Paris, Dec. 27 (R—"Pertinax,” | writting in the Echo De Paris, be- Tributes Jersey City, N. J.,, Dee. 27 (P— With her private room banked with tion of facts. The parable of the| beam and the mote sometimes needs i rejuvenation.” |CLATM MRS, HOUCK WAS SEEN NEAR WASHINGTON Police Write Identification of Miss- ing Wife of Demented Doctor Made by Three Men. Washington, Dec. 27.—~UP—Dis- trict of Columbia police were hope- ful today that they had a clue which might lead to a solution of the mys- | | terious disappearance nearly two weeks ago of Mrs. Gladys W. Houck, wife of Dr. Knute Houck, the St. beths hospital psychiatrist who |is being held for observation of his | own mental condition in the Galling- | er municipal hospital. | They were not, however, con- | | vinced for they have become more | | and more skeptical as to the value of | | clues, as more than a week of work | | has proved fruitless in determining !whether Mrs. Houck was killed, | speak on the work and life of his SON WILL LECTURE ON SHINT GAUDENS Carnegie Fine Arts Director fo Address Woman's Club Homer Saint-Gaudens will address the Woman's club at the First church chapel tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. Mr. Saint-Gaudens will father Augustus ‘Saint-Gaudens, tuy noted sculptor. Homer Saint-Gaudens, director of fine arts at Carnegie institute, was born on September 28, 1880, at Rox- bury, Mass., in the home of his ma- ternal grandfather, Thomas Homer, a Boston merchant. His father, tion of “Brieux,” “The Red Robe” in which Lionel Barrymore was the star; and “Beyond the Horizon,” the first full length play by Eugene O'Neill and the first of that writer's works to receive a professional pro- duction on Broadway. Upon the entry of the United | states into the World war, Homer | Saint-Gaudens joined the first offi- |cers’ camp at Plattsburg. He was commissioned first lieutenant and assigned to the work of organizing the first camouflage force in the United States army. With this con- | tingent he sailed to France in Janu- ary, 1918. While in France he was promoted to captain. In command of Company A, Fortieth Engineers, he had charge of the camouflage work of the second army which held the line from Pont-a-Mousson to about 15 miles south of Verdun. He is now a major in the Engineers Reserve corps. In 1905 Mr. Saint-Gaudens was married to Miss Carlota Dolley of Augustus Saint-Gaudens, was pro- bably the greatest of Amerlcan‘; sculptors. His mother was Augusta | Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Saint- Gaudens have two children, Augus- tus and Carlota. Mrs. Saint-Gaudens is a well-known miniature painter. The summer home of the _Saint- Gaudens i3 at Cornish, New #amp- committed suicide or ran away. The | new clue came in the form of a | telegram from 8. T. Hardin, chief of | police at Blyetheville, Ark., which re | “Woman passed through here De- cmber 23, en route from Cairo, Iil, |t Springtield, Mo. Have three men | who positively identified her as | Glady’s W. Houck after secing press | picture rrying one black grip { with Washington haberdasher tag.” | | Dr. Houck has that his wife is alive, although professing not to know where she is. He left Wash- ington shortly after she was last seen | | here, and was taken into custody | | several days later talking and behav- |ing irrationally, at Hornell, N, Y. Southern Chinese Govt. I8 Being Organized | Amoy, Dee. 27 W—The commis- | sion to form the southern govern- ment at Foochow is rapidly organiz- ing. Nine commissioners have been appointed and have taken over the | Homer, who {civil governor's off | Rome where | Expected anti-Christian demon- | painting. Mr. Saint-Gaudens was a strations in Foochow on Christmas |first cousin of Winslow Homer, did not materialize. Gerleral Ho |the American marine painter. Ying-Ching, southern commander, | While still a boy Homer Saint- dispersed the student army. Gaudens went abroad with his par- There was a small anti-Christlan | ents. They'lived in Paris where his demonstration here Christmas Day. | father cstablished himselt to finish = several important commissions. He | TROLLEY AND AUTO BUMP Investigation by the police of al completed his preparatory educa- tlon in Paris and on his parents’ re- |complaint that a Hartford-New Brit- | turn {o America he entered Harvard, |ain trolley car had failed to stop | after hitting his car on Dwight ~ HOMER NT-GAUDEN! met her husband in she was a student of ed in 1903. from which college he was graduat- lieves that the Panama-United States street about 8:30 o'clock last eve- | | brance of her at Christmas time. { case in the Hall-Mil | Gibson' had expressed a wish to have a husband | v | leaving a mantle nearly a foot deep flowers, Mrs. Jane Gibson in City | (reaty amounts to virtual a tion hospital today expressed her happi-| of the smaller country by th ger. ness over the widespread remem-| The treaty is contrary to Panama's | membership pledges in the League and Inspector|of Nations, he asserts, and a Central leaders of the state's; American republic cannot thus alicn rial, at which ate its independence without giving she was their star witness, were be-| Germany and Austria a pretext for Neved to have been among the manyg! concluding a similar who sent flowers, but hospital ofti¥| “In short,” he writes cials sald the names had been re-|people who forbid moved from their tributes and they ' mercly defensive alliinggs are the did not care to ask Mrs. Gibson first to contrac' allianced when it 13 who sent them to her. | to their advantage. The absorption of Roses were mingled conspicuous-! Panama proclaims that there exists, ly with the other flowers, Mrs.|gespite what anyone may say, an for| American imperialism differing from roses for what doctors said un- | the attempts at hegemony begun in doubtedly was her last Christmas. | IGurope only by the fraility of the ob- The dying woman spent a quiet|stacles it runs up against.” but happy Christmas in her room,| “Ppertinax” reviews the American officials reported, and her condition ' expansion southward 1s not “affected materially by the | Loutsiana and Flor holiday. | Mexican and Spa can friends should not Senator Simpson Underwood, us to contract| |ning, showed that there was no cause {for arrest. The investigation re- | vealed that Motorman Barney Wetz- \ke and Conductor George Garrett Avho were in charge of the trolley car, had been unaware that the col- | lislon had occurred. The left front | fender on Bonkoski's car was crumpled PGPE CABLES SY! Rome, Dec. (A—Ihimed fter the death on Saturday of E peror Yoshihito of Japan, Pope Pius ordered the apostolic delegate at Tokyo to present condolences to the of the emperor and to the’ nese government. The Pontiff, throughout the emperor's {llness, showed keen interest in his condi-| tion. |turned to art After his graduation he cngaged | in newspaper work on the New York Sun. From practical journalism he criticism and became the assistant editor of the Critic in | 1904, Later he was managing editor of the Metropolitan magazine. He gave up magazine work on the death of his father in 1907 to edit and am- plify “The Reminiscences of Au stus Saint-Gaudens,” an {im-/ portant contribution to American v | blography In 1908 Mr.Saint-Gaudens became stage director for Miss Maud Adams. or her he directc® the revival of eter Pan,” “The Little Minister,” nd “What Every Woman Knows.” He also dirccted the first American production of Barrie’s “A Kiss for Cinderella.” This work for M s Adams was varied by an association with Gran- HOWARD Mac] Miami, Fla., Dec. ard Mac: 1 TT DIES 27.—(P)—How- | utt, 67, of New York wide- nown scientist and Bahai lectur- r is dead here. ROGKY HOUNTAIN 20NE | e Hundreds of Tourists Stalled in "illst and Intense Cold Causes An Annual Event That Offers Great Values Hardships | Denver, Col, Dec. 7 UP—Un-| usually low temperatures prevailed in the Southern Rocky Mountain | states and desert regions today fol-! lowing a week-end storm which brought snow to the valleys as well | as to the towering peakers. | Upwards of 100 automobiles were | reported stalled on a mountain pass between Miami and Superior, Ari- zona, following a four-inch snow.| A Mexican laborer was killed yes- | | terday on this highway when his! automobile plunged over a 150 foot cliff. Albuquerque reported 13 degrees bove zero yesterday with a maxi- mum of 37 while snow fell through- out the night. Snow fell at Tucson for the first time in three 'mmm:wm:mzmum:mnfimmmmmmmmm on nearby mountains. hit 33 above a W low for t ing the citrus crop. One death was reported from the Pan Handle country whe negro died of exposure in the sleet The mereury Phoenlx, sctting year and threaten- rain Missouri Lawyer Slain On Town’s Main Street Ma, Dee. bert | Bardwell toda killed Wilkers, principal thoroug was near his offices, ell, | Billy Palmer were shot and kill- go by a d ht them in connee ndicted on a of complicity in the robhery rt Bardwell is reported to believed that Wilkerson was for “tipy off the | rs relative to the movements of Elbert Bardwell and Palmer just before they were s Rudy’s ; Battery Service || Successor (0 Gould Battery Service Co. kst Main, near Summer RY CHARGING AND REPAIRING rator, Starter Repairing JULD BATTERIES FREE TESTING, REFILLING , Phone 708—Ask for Rudy | —_—_— Weonde Cffered ! | 23232200832 a8 3 siesssniiitaziaissiiafast Every Dept. In the Store Participates. Al Values pron st i1 2t {ea102e022204802038 vilie Barker in the prescntation of “The Trojan Women” and other classical plays outdoors at Harvard and Princcton universities, Later Mr. Saint-Gaudens directed the produc- I g AN R p e e D LEVENTHAL | shire, in the colonyof which Augus- {tus Saint-Gaudens was the ploneer, |and where his studios containing | many examples of his work attract | | thousands yearly. Mr, Saint-Gaudens was made as- | sistant. director of fine arts at Ca | negle institute in July, 1921,and di ! rector one year later. He has organ® ized the last six international ext bitions, spending some months each | year visiting the studios of European artists, and assembling the foreign | | paintings. He inaugurated the plan of showing these European paint- | ings in other American cities at the | | close of the Pittsburgh exhibition. As a member of the board of di- rectors of the American Federation of Arts, Mr.Saint-Gaudens has taken an active part in arousing and en- | couraging interest in art throughout |the United States. He has also been losely assoclated with the work the | Carnegie Corporation is doing in | fostering art appreciation. | City Items | , Miss Sally Waskowitz left today to | pend the remainder of the holidays | as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Simon of Salem, Mass. George Macauley et al hive sold a two-family house on Marrison | street to Charles E. and Nellle M. Dalton through the agency of the Hardware City Cooperative Associa- tion, Inc. | Three of the five secretarles of | the local ¥. W. C. A. have returned | to their homes for the holidays, ! Miss Fossett, Miss Littell and Miss Wieble have obtained leave from the | ities have ceased | local club as acti until after New Year's. A son was born at New Britain | General hospital today to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Paul of 140 Greenwood street. A daughter was born at New Brit- ain General hospital Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Josebh Gailo of 146 Hunt- er Road. The police were notified today of the return of the operator's licenses of Stanley Choprowski of 355 High street, Walton Iverson of 141 Main strect and Robert Michalman of 112 | Austin street, | A. G. Hammond auxiliary of the | U. 8. W. V. will hold their Christ- mas tree social Wednesday evening at the state armory. Officers and members are invited to be present. A meeting of the joint installa- tion committee of the A. O. H. will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at Judd's hall. An Annual Selling Event That Offers NOW IN PRCGRESS Here’s An Opportunity to Save 25 NOW That Comes But Once a Year Our Great Annual January Clearance Cpportunity knocks but once a year for the pzople of New Britain and vicinity. Sale is famous for the low prices it offers on merchandise which is all our regular at dependable quality—not only apparel for all the family, but every day needs of the home, Linens, Kitchen Necessities and housewares of all kinds are offered at sharp price reductions. B R e A a s e e et e e e REDS BLAREDFOR LOSSES T0 LABOK World Reports $30,000,00ost b Needle Workers New York, Dec. 27.—(P— The New York World says today that communistic activities in the past year have cost the needle trades un« {fon ‘apparently $30,000,000, have | practically wrecked the furriers’ un- ion, and partlally wrecked the In- ‘ternational ladies’ garment workers union through strikes that could have been avoided. A meeting called for tonight in Cooper union by the cloak cutters’ union, ostensibly to install officers, the World declares, was actually called to discuss the situation and to receive assurances of support from the American federation of Labor in combatting communism. Union officlals are quoted as esti~ matipg that leaders in a cloak and suit strike caused a‘loss of $30,000,- 000 in wages to get results that could have been gotten without a strike., The World says that actually, the figure should be about $22,500,- 000 since many of the strikers works cd under non-union conditions dur< ing the strike. The furricrs are estimated to have lost $5,760,000 in wages, but the World thinks $2,000,000 would have been deducted from this be- sause ot workers laboring elsewhere in the first strike in New Yorlk needle trades history in which it was necessary to picket shops at night to from scabbing on In addition, 1t is estimated that there was expenditure of $2,500,000 | to $3.500,000 or 9 times as much as fn. steel strike in 1919. The furriers’ union is estimated to have a $500,« 000 deficit. e 10.10 Not the time of day but the price that ! will buy one [l of the best suits of clothes See Wednesday's paper and have $10.10 ready. Shop Often and Save at This Event Great Values IN PROGRESS ' Every Day Will See Many New Clearance Values. Watch Our Sales Announcements ly Papers.