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ONTARIO PREPARES FOR LIQUOR TRAI]E} ' Rules Drastic But Prices Wil Be Reasonable Hamilton, Ont., May 5 (UP)— Ontario is preparing to re-stock its cellar and entertaln a million Americans. About Monday, May 16, or as soon thercafter as they are ready, the government liquor stores will be open for business and alcoholic beverages will be legally sold with- out medical prescription for the first time in eleven years. The province is already chafing under the fetters imposed by the control law. Drastic restrictions and severe penalties are expected in some measure to make up for the abolition of the bone dry stat- nte. No Return to Bars. In answer to the universal cry of 10 return to the bars,” the govern- ment has framed a law; which it promises to be hole-proof. Any man or woman, Ontario citizen or visitor, who has a permit bearing his own name can obtain a limited amount of liquor from the govern- ment. But he must take his bottle to his home or his hotel to drink it. In hostelries and clubs, there must be no liquor consumed e where than in the purchaser’s pri- vate living quarters. The clause forbidding a man to drink a bottle of beer with his meals in the public dining room, is arousing the most strenuous oppos tion among hotel proprietors. Plans have been made by some hotels for the installation of a small re- frigerator in every bedroom. Roadside Camps. The ruling that permament or temporary residences alone can be used for drinking purposes {s ex- pected to permit the tourist to en- joy his bottle in the roadside camps which dot the highways. The most severe penalties impos- | ed are those for bootlegging. Jail without the option of a fine will be the sentence for bootlegging on the first offense. In expectation of the influx from across the border, property prices on the international boundary are scaring. Fvery farmhouse along the provincial highway: adver- tising tourist accommodations and new hotel bu are announced for the princi $2 Fee For Permit. The privile g liquor will cost the n initial $2 for a six-week permit. Each pur- chase will be entered on the per- mit. Prices at the government siores are expected to remain at the levels obtaining from the gov- ernment dispen where liquor ix now sold on m While ne announcement made, other than that the prov- ince will sell beer at cost, the fol- lowing prices per imperial (forty ounce) quart are most probable: Scotch $6. Brandy $5. Gin, Rum and Canadian Whis- key $4. Beer will cost about 17 cents a quart and $2 a case. Wines will | range from about $7 a case for the | native product to $7 a bottle for the rare imported vintages. The liquor commission has been | surveying the weeks with regard to the ODening | (pe Middlefleld Rifle club in a match | this afternoon at 1 | of stores. The number in each city | varics according to population and | proximity to the border. | with 30,000 cltizens will have three | stores; Windsor, with a much | smaller population but with Detroit |as a neighbor, will also have three. The current bellef s that the gov- | ernmental restrictions will be modi- | fied after the new law comes into | operation. A large part of the province s in favor of sale of beer | by the glass at hotels and restau- rants. | Meanwhile, the wide powers | given the Ontaria liquor control | commission will enable that body Hamilton | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1927. NEW BRITAIN RIFLE CLUB { READY FOR TITLE SHOOT | Mects Middlefield Team at Cromrwell | to Determine Which Shall | Wear League Crown The New Britain Rifle club will province in recent ., to Cromwell this evening to meet | Clark street, Hartford, took place | | which will decide the championship of the Nutmeg Rifle league. | Through its victory over Middle Haddam last week, the local squad ‘\wnt into a tie for first place with | Middlefleld. A neutral range will be used for the deciding match and | the local sharpshooters are confident that the championship will rest in the Hardware City following to- night's meet. President Fred Beach | will lead the local warriors into | battle. | STARTS OGEAN FLIGHT |to alter the law if experience shows | | the need. | The three men who form the | commission and control law en- forcement are David Blythe Hanna, | chatrman; Hon. R. K. Manion and Stewart McClenaghan. Hanna, & | former president National Railway, receives an an- nual salary of $20,000. He is one | of Canada’s best known industrial- ists and a director of half a dozen | great companies. Manion is a fo mer federal government mini and McClenaghan a prominent busl ness man. 200 TAX WARRANTS | PREPARED IN DARBY Pennsylvania Personal Tax Dispute Likely to Find its Way Into Court Soon. | women, today faced the prospect of | paying for their own arrest. Robert §. Shaw, township tax collector, served notice on the de- !linquents that he had prepared commitment papers calilng for their arrest and that they would be compelled to pay a constable $3.66 for serving*the papers. Instead of | paying $4.05 which included a 20 | cent penalty for tardiness, the de- | linquents will now be forced to pay !$7.71 Shaw said. "Getting Up Nights Tells You of “Danger Ahead.” A Normal Bladder Doss Not Act at Night. A: O 8§ Broad St B lical prescriptions | has been | of the Canadian | Captain Saint-Roman Hops Off | From Senegal On His Attempt To | Fly To Brazil. | Captain Saint-Roman, French avi ator, left St. Louis, Senegal, at 6:30 jo'clock this morning. He is at- | tempting to fly across the Atlantic |in a non-stop voyage to Pernambuco Brazil, a distance of about miles. | On Tuesday the French bureau of | aeronautics announced that official ;xum‘lion for Captain Saint-Roman's flight had been withdrawn because ihe was planning to proceed jacross the Atlantic without | pontaons. {landing gear after a pontoon was | damaged. And it was pointed out by the bu- {reau that a forced descent on the |sea with such landing gear would| mean disaster, The bureau of aeronautics sup- plemented its first announcement with the statement that ofYicial sanction for the flight would he given if the aviator consented to re- | install pontoons. Late reports from Dakar, giving no indication that Saint-Roman was aware of the bureauw’s view, said that he was going ahead with his plans for the trans-ocean at- tempt. 'Mr. and Mrs. Lindgren Celebrate Anniversary Mr. and M Gunnar E. Lind- sren were pleasantly surprised last ovening at their home in Belvidere |in Tionor of their 20th wedding an- v, About 50 friends were and a 4 tful luncheon served. Mis Constance Mackalin presented Mr. and Mrs. Lindgren with a houquet (of flowers and Fnsign Fredrickson of the Salvation Army presented the |coupte with a beautitul fioor lamp. Dakar, West Africa. May 5 (A— | 1,875 He substituted ordinary §T. JOHN-GALPIN George H. St. John of Hartford Takes Mrs. Anna E. Galpin of This City For His Bride. The wedding of Mrs. Anna E. | Galpin of 326 South Main street, this | [city, and George H. St. John of 64| o'clock at | Christ Church cathedral in Hart- ford. Rev. Louis J. Belden per-| | formed the ceremony. Mrs, L. C. | Hathaway and Dr. Louis C. Hath- away attended the couple. Mr. and Mrs. St. John will re-! side at 64 Clark street, Hartford, upon their return from a wedding | trip to New York city and Washing- {ton, D. C. | The bride 1s a well-known nurse of this city. Mr. St. John is al | plumbing contractor. {Sister-Wife Is Held As Material Witness Brooklyn, N. Y., May 5 (UP)— Mollle Greenberg, 13, who became | the wife of her brother, Oscar, 17, | when the two met after having been separated since infancy, was held itoday as a material witness in the | case of her brother. Oscar, who was reared as “Max | Cashdan” by a family with whom | his mother had placed him when he | was three years old, will be tried | under that name next Tuesday on a | statutory charge. | Meanwhile, Justice O'Keefe of flm] | children’s court remanded Mollie to | | the custody of the children’s society. | i READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | | FOR YOUR WANTS Almost Wild With Eczema 'Happy Today | When the dreadful itching of ec- zema drives you frantic and you are praying for relief you need Peter- | Ointment. Make no mistake—many thou- ! sands who have turned to this tried | and true ointment as a last resort have ended all the terrible misery ' | | 50 quickly that they blessed the day they bought the first box. | Because it acts so quickly mil-| lions of homes consider Peterson’s | Ointment a necessity. | It's so wonderful for skin erup- tions, pimples, acne and salt rheum, for instanc that many times only two or three applications are needed to make the skin clear and healthy. 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Men'’s House Slippers ... © Ferand de Gueldre, Chicago, 19 You, too, will find that Lucky Strikes are mild and mellow—the finest cigarettes you ever smoked, made of the finest Turkish and do- mestic tobaccos, properly aged and blended with great skill, and there is an extra process—*“It’s toasted”— . no harshness, not a bit of bite e ‘ ' “It's toasted” Your Throat Protection When in New York you are cordis allyinvited tosee how Lucky Strikes are made at our exhibit, corner Broadway and 45th St.