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ROUTINE WORK AT ASSEMBLY TODAY Bach Honse Passes Three Bills on Calendar State Capitol, Hartford, Feb. 1t (P —The senate and the house each today passed three bills. Twenty seven judgeship resolu- tions which had been adopted by the houss yesterday were adopted by the senate and sent to the secretary of state. The house adopted ten which had been passed by the sen- ate yesterday and tra smitted them to the secretary. Toda) attenda branches was small 20 senators, present, Qquorum. ere were less than 100 representatives in their seats when the house was called to order. The clerk of the house reg ter from the Admiral F No. 17, Sons of Unio the Civil War, dorsing t house. wherever in both re were two over a of flags in adds th for the e rch rittee for March 1 nry service bills and for Ma or the hearing on the v mpensation bills The nate bi No. 125, extending org ion of nd and Title Compa 1929, te passed the time for Mortgage, i1 Jan- the No. en's ( incorporating the Y. hristian Associ; to hold L of not more than ciation to ermit h (0t exece No. 63, ch roperty 0,000 in va nging the name of the New Haven inty Anti-Tubercnlo- s Association, Inc., to the Gaylo rm Association. The judgeship resolutions mitted to y were: 4 Branford: Edwin R. Kelsey, judge; arl A. Barker, deputy, Stafford rings: William H. Heald, judge: Ernest K. Taft, deputy, Danbury: Samuel A. Davis, judg Charles A. Hallock, (for vacancies and full terms). Unionville: William V. Jjudge; Robert E. Ayer, deputy. Plainfield: George R. Torry, judge; Arthur R. Doanis, deputy. Wallingford: Michael T. Downes, judge; Henry L. Davis, deputy. Winchester: Hadleigh H. Howd Judge; Luther L. ' deputy Bristol: W. J. M seph M. Donova Stonington: Judge; deputy. Stratford, Henry Harford, judge; John T. Curtis,*deputy to fill vacan- cy and for full term. Putnam: Mahlon H. Geissler, Jjudge; Archibald MacDonald, depu- ty. Rockville: John E. Fiske, judge; John E. Fahey, associate, Griswold: John T. Barry, James H. Shea, depu Ansonia, Robert Judge, Manchester: Raymond A. Johnson, Judge; Thomas Ferguson, deputy. Waterford, Frederick N. Dimmock, judge; Frederick W. Jacques, depu- ty. New London, Victor Prince, judge: Lewis Crandall, deputy. Seymour: Harry F. Mann Weiler, Seth N. Beecher, deput Milton C. Isbell, jndg Naugatuck: I'rank A. Sears, judge. Unfavorable reports were made in house by the judiciary comm on house bhill number 726, pro- viding $300 annual salary each for udge and prosecutor of Sprague town court, and number 314, amend- inz Stafford Spring court charter con ing jurisdiction in Willington The military affairs committee ree. ommended bills calling for exy tures for repairs to fifteen armoric for $175,000 for an armory at Bris- tol, and for $15,000 for ge at Brainard Field. The bills were all referred to the appropriations com- mittee, Favorable reports on the folle bills were received by the house Housc bill No. 36, providing ges for DBridgeport provision for additional sistant for prosecutor and clerk. No. 206, validating order of pro- nd deed from Floren dministratrix Paln No. 116, authori department to ma for handling of tetra ethyl No. 111, providing bodics may trans- secretar, e Dufr, lon deputy. Willlam Billings D, Wilcox, Fairbrother, judg L. *Munger, ENTRY DATE EXTENDED Entries For the Third Annual Hartford Dog Show Of the First Company Goyernor's Foot Guard will be accepted until Tuesday, February 15, Those malled that date Included be held and 26 is to February Show Silver Loving Cups, Kibh and Cash Awards In ull Obtaln Entry Blanks mium Lists from DR. F. I. MAXON 9 Vernon Street, and Pre- owing | 8 T m— disinterred at any time. No. 381, providing for filing reg- listration certificates in cases of| still birth. ’ No. 53, providing annual meet- ings of Meriden Savings bank in | August. A | | No. 80, prohibiting officers of | Thomaston Savings bank borrowing |{money from institution or guaran- |teeing loans of that bank. | No. 608, changing name of City Loan corporation to City Industrial bank of Bridgeport. Only the incorporations and ju- ary committees held hearings afternoon. The appropriations visited the Long Lane the State hospital at i this committec farm and Middletow Last of Students Transferred to New Structure and Old Building Is Abandoned. older schools their useful- institutions when the | stu- new of ol A second hich have was caral 600 trar quarte the Lincoln school Steele t. Last month the old school the corner of and East streets was ned by grade stus who we ccommodated 1n < Junior High emont str coln school truction longer tha ols in the city and was just six months after e Peck-McWilliams | met with considerable | in getting material and | ns of Architect Walter were not fulfilled. co Septem old Burritt wcoln school art time, Complaints we board of public work voard that A through steam pipes coln school, making actory for the children itions to the notice of the eity oards there were still students in the old oln school. Since the school will no used for educa tion any lo: wil affected sfac- conditions, weré 10 tents | on st ot M 1 i under any of the W company culty tree in hn’h‘ and the | were on| school district eived by the nd the considerable re e the children by the unsat Dr. W. Pullen tory R. nounced to Countess Minotto, Once An Actress, Passes Away ott, Ariz, Feb. 11 » ® ount Agnes Minotto, 63, who achieved some distinction as an s during her carly years, died unexpectedly last ght at her home in . Crownking, Ariz, near here, fol- lowing a heart attack. At her hml-! her son, James Minotto, | fo, the former Ida Mae Chicago, daughter of | Louis Swift, the packer. | Countess \linotto, a German by birth, had lived 1 this country 1916, Ir or stage career she the name gnes Sorma and | ted States the ion of Con- Pro side was and his W Swift of d direc Germany | | Minotto died in in 1920, NEW CITY DEPARTMENT Sceretary Ralph H. Benson of the | Chamber of Commerce has received | two complaints of men going from | senting themselves | to be from Department of | Heat” and making all sorts of in-| quiries about household equipment. | 'here is no department of heat in/ New DBritain. | door to door re of 9 three t | | Hoffman Wallace str entertained tables of bridge at her home la night. Prizes were awarded to Mis: Mary Scheidler, Miss Agnes Car Mrs. J. Zohler and Mrs. Turnbull. Mrs. Charl t CLUB TO MEET Pritain Yae club ial meeting and shuttle Meadow club next ning. R ion Rose, & ssor, will spé m- ¥ will ban- The New hold its an quet at the Monday ev Yale prof pus Comments. s of Ohio ri in cities in the valle, r wale Hartford, Conn 'hone o peril grows, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1927. City Items 'NLEAN SEES CORNER ETHEL: Steak sandwiches on rye. Soda Shoppe, 93 West Main.—advt. Willlam Rowe, night clerk at the | ~IN'FOOD OF NATION Stanley hotel, is expected to leave | the New Britaln General hospital today following a two weeks' stay there as a patient. See “Miss Hitty's Valentine” at St. Joseph's card party tonight at 8: Whist, bridge, pinochle. Handsome prizes.—advt. Flowers for Valentines. Roses, tullps, daffodils, carnations, violets, sweet peas, forget-me-nots, frees snapdragons, lily-of-the-valley, et Flower Greenhouse, 1163 Stanley S Phone 3526-2.—advt. Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Horwitz has been appointed by Judge Thoms Molloy of the court of common pleas, : receiver of rents in the foreclosure action of Josephine Biclechowski against Frank Derzewlecki et al. The property concerncd is located on Benham street, Bristol. Nair & Nair represent the plaintiff. A Valentine dance will be given by the students of the grade 9-1 of the Nathan Hale Junior High school on Monday. 1 (Continued from First Page) | aaoeEt treasury to prime the pump and they don’t want to pay but 4 per cent interest. So we not only have | a price raising bill but a bill which | | proposes to use public funds for | {the purpose of establishing nE monopoly in foodstuffs that has not been equalled since Thales of | Miletus cornered olive oil. i | “The McNary bill will raise prices | | at onc The mere pendency of this | measure has already started the | price of wheat on an upward course | Che price of wheat and corn and | rice and cotton can be raised in | | 1927 and 1928; then what? The low cost producer, who will be mak- ing good money, will extend his| operations, and by 1930 you will have a surplus that can be removed | |in but one way. The low cost pro- | ducer must cut his acreage or the | high cost producer, the man whose | | farm won’t produce more than 10 | forenoon by Officer Thomas J. Feen- |stead. | struck | ente ancis Carpenter of 1s been called to Hudson, , by the death of his sister, A daughter was born at New Brit- ain General hospital today to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kreuse of 21 Lyon street. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hickey of 29 Spring street at New Britain General hospi- tal toda THEFT OF (0AL LEADS C0PS 10 ALCOHOL CACHE must go out of business. farmer from the smother the three blades And when you who is making is increasing by the purchasing power of the farm- or's da proposal that flies every sound cconomic principle and every other principle that plenty. “It {5 true that the farmers are ! not getting their share of the na- { tional income, and this is just as | true of the milk and poultry and hay and fruit ducers as it is corn growers. own county fn Connecticut are as much in need of higher prices for their products as are the wheat and log growers of the west. New Britain Man Who Took Gar- ment at Portland Dance Held on of the wheat and More Serlous Complaint. Felix Blitz, aged about 40, of 27 Wolcott street, was arrested this y on a warrant charging him with theft of an overcoat in Portland, and later the charge of violation of the liquor law was added, after Detectiv Sergeant Ellinger and Officer Feen found six 5-gallon cans, three of ! which were flilled with alcohol, and thers partly filled, in Blitz's garage. In all approximately 22 gallons of alcohol were seized. The cans were | in a large wooden box. About a quart of wine was also taken. According to the authorities, Blitz, sing grains meats for market beca of western competition. The eastern farmer, the New England farme., with his stony hillside farm, knew that unless he could save himself he could not be saved, and to his cverlasting credit he is of that sam opinion today. And he can not understand why sess the great, fertile, ly cultivated acres of the w and stoneless, | while attending a dance in Portland | (o) 6t Jive without help from the ast Saturday night, took an over- | ot M " cont owned by Joseph Zisk o |PuPtc funds. Middletown, lewving his own in its Zisk’s coat being better than | , the Middletown man com- | plained to the local police, who ad- | vised him to obtain a warrant from Knapp Is Restored to Sane Status by Court Bridgeport, Feb. 11 (P—George v . S. Knapp, $2, paper box manufactur- the I‘org}\;\\d authorities, which was bt SR "L G business has "?,’f' n ;"' II';'"“‘-‘ ,"’"'l‘x" It on 'y don in charge of a conservator for itz at a local factory, and recov-|, ;. umper of years and who was de- ered Zisk's overcoat. S g e Information having come, to the : Waleman police, of the presence of the alco- | o hd e i was restored to h and e hol in the garage, they acted at once | st {tate by Probate i and made the seizure. Blitz will be | 710 3 £ 00 arraigned in police court tomorrow |~y T P o £ on the liquor law violation [ A0 1E G0 HC arge, and when this case Is dispos- d : 4 attention upw ed of, he will be turned over to the | o0 GO : The City National bank wl Portland police. He has retatned |, (1€ e Attorney Thomas F. McDonough, | "8 ¢ i e e {to manage the property but Mr. Load on Truek Hits Knapp will have the full income. Overhead Signal Light | The overhead cross strects warn-| ing light at the interscction of \yjnjam J. Baldwin of St. Georse's North street and Hartford avenue|.,.con Guilford, has been gned was smashed shortly before noon to- | """ g BE® S M day, when the load on an automo-| ¢ o jartford dio s bile truck owned by the Hartford!gennt = 1o ‘o Tosarh Despatch Co. of East Hartford, | oy S0 S olarlles s anved it. Willlam Shechan of B e Comstock Place, Fast Hartford, was Biward 3. Du driving. He reported the matter to it Captain Kelly. Miltor | clared sane in a de; Probate Judge Bacon closed a PRIUST ASSIGNED Meriden, Feb, 11 (®) ch in n church, BIG SOCIAL TONIGHT. ‘ New Britain lodge, Loyal Order of Moose, has arranged a pr inment for the mecting to-|only $2,400 night in connection with its eam-; works and antiques paign for a membership of 10007 the schools of Darien in The evening will be devoted almost | his mother, although he cla the { entirely to a social session. The com- | committee*had promised to take out mittee has engaged the services of [ insurance of § on them, Emil several entertainers of star caliber| . Degicbing retract ais ind promises an interestng show. | gift. He collection at nch will be served. 50,000, WOULD RETRACT GIFT Darien, Feb, 11 (P s am of | Jocal school committee insured for the collection of art he had given ory of MOO! the values the | FLOOD WATERS DRIVE HUNDREDS FROM HOMES vor and its tributaries are putting hundreds of families to Photos show Cincinnati families evacuating their dwellings Church | or 12 bushels of wheat to the acre, v Then our less fertile states will wonder who and what hit him. man of wheat grow where but one grew be- | fore, when you cripple the man who | scientific methods s work, you are back of a in the face of has brought us thus far on the road to and vegetable pro- | The farmers in my | In the | and 60's the farmers of New | the men who pos- | [pound.” | tof the Natlonal Food Products Cor- Wi IGED TO BUY OIP CLOMES Y T PD —~ John McCormack, world famous Irish singer, - dis- claims title of “world’s greatest tenor,” laid upon him in London. He says the honor belongs to Edward Johnson, American. “He is the best all-around operatic tenor in the world, and in addition hé has a perfect figure, which few tenors possess. ©1927 BY NEA SERVICE if.C tied around his neck and shoulders, Wiltiam B. Ward now operate 150! Greatest Tenér’ the senate's orders, or indirectly. Stock lists of the| eral and six in hoth General anc Ward Foundation Co., W. . Ward | ompany, whereas no other in- “During the six years from 1 | . WAR[' [;(] [;[]NTR[][S | Compels Horse to Aid y ' Him in Suicide Effort ; | Youngstown, 0., Feb. 11 (P—Ed- uU | cr near Youngstown, today anchored — his body to his barn with a chaln, Senafe Receives Repofis a hitched a horse to another chain, i {and then urged the horse ahead. As Glflm Merger |the animal jumped, Wenner's neck |and back were broken. He was dead E— | When relatives found him. Washington, Feb. 11 (UP)—Three | siant baking companies controlled by | Lakerles in the country with an es- | —~ - timated bread production of nearly 20 per cent of the total commercial production, it was reported to the 5¢ today by the federal trade commission, which investigated on In organization these corpora- tions have a common parentage, the report said. i “All apparen are fhe concop- | tions and creations of W. B. Ward, | who organized them ecither directly | three corporations as of October 31, show that of the fourteen who were officers and AHI‘M‘H)Y'S‘ the Ward corporation, ten held stock in both Ward and Continen- tal, seven in both Ward and Gen Continental. Six of these fourteen held in all three corporations, their oldings in General and Continental | being on the whole as large as in the Ward Baking corporation. By direct holdings and through was on December 31, 19 the ! rgest single stockholder n the Ward Baking Corporation. He also was the largest single stockholder in the Continental Company, holding per cent of the voting stock of dividhal owned on t date as much as five per cent of the total For a time also, all or a conslder- able part of the voting stock of the General Baking Corporation was controlled by him. the companies produced billlon pounds of bread at an average cost of 7.154 cents per pound. On this, their sale realiza- tion averaged 7.851 per pound, leaving a net profit of .707 cents per 1920 The report also described the or-| ganization by the three corporations | poration which was dissolved last | April in Baltimore by a consent de- | cree entered by the justice depart- ment. Beauty Hints It the f | does not fou—do way indefinitely — does not vour skin colorful like a peach—try this new wonderful special French Process Face Powder called MELLO- READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS GLO. Remember the name MEL- FOR YOUR WANTS LO-GLO. There's nothing like it —— ce powder you now use The recent bread mergers & > being Investigated by a s judiciary subcommittee of whic tor Walsh, d« are -§40-§435 OVERCOATS NOW $24.50 stay on long enough to suit | not keep that ugly shine make | xtinguished the blaze. The loss is covered by insurance. Fire Does Damage to Ansonia Radio Store| Ansonia, Feb. 11 (A — Damag: TWO CHIMNEY FIRES |estimated at $1,500 was caused by| Co. No. 3 of the fire department la blaze in the automobile tire and|was called to the home of William radio station of Warren James on|pioiconer, 23 Osgood avenue, at 6:40 Maple street this morning. James| : : was making a fire in the furnace |thls morning, to extingulsh a slight of the wooden building where his|chimney fire. place of business is located when| Slight damage was done by a a back flare singed his face and|chimney fire in the home of S. Bug- started a blaze that spread to the [naski, 104 Rockwell avenue, at g% upper portion of the establishment. |yesterday afternoon. Co. No. 2 was {The firemen who were called soon | called. WHAT DO YOU KNOW of the work that the Y. W. C. A. is doing ior the girls of New Britain? DO YOU KNOW that there are the following departments alreuly serving many hundreds of girls of this city? 1—Physical Education 4—Educational 2—Girl Reserve 5—Cafeteria 3—Industrial 6—Dormitory | DO YOU KNOW that in order to make the advantages they can offer available to all girls in New Britain, the Y. W. C. A. must raise in its campaign, $15,500. ASK THE GIRLS WHO GO THERE $50-$50-$65 'OVERCOATS Now $39.50 | The ASHLEY-BABCOCK Co. 139 MAIN STREET CLOTHIERS and HABERDASHERS 139 MAIN STREET