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A DENIRE: NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1927 | bodies had been carried by mules |over mountain trails to the nearest highway, was the real search for the assailants begun. The attackers apparently fled immediately after the shooting. Dave Hensley said members of | the party were not searching for' stills, and, as far as‘posse men H were abie 1o 1earn. e tnet tnat | DI Hornbeck Speaks on Chinese Ed Hensley was a prohibition agent | ‘Speaker's Choice Staves O Deteat in Dail Eirean - |kins and A. F. Roberts, residents | Dublin, Ireland, Aug. 17 (®) — |of the district, are held for ques- | President Cosgrave’s government, |tioning. Three stills were found dur- having staved off defeat in the dall [ing the search, one near the scens eirean by the narrow margin of onc [of the shooting. vote, will continue to function un- til October 11 at least, unless the governmental candidates lose in two by-elections now pending in the city and county of Dublin. FREE SUBURBAN TELEPHONE SERVICE IN . NEW BRITAI Wige, Smith £ Co. HARTFORD August Sale of Furniture COSERAVE SAVED BY SINGLE VOTE FENG 1S STRONG " MILITARY RULER CALL 4082 Our Gradual Payment Service Is based on sound business principles and reduces the bur- den of making payments to a minimum. Williamstown, Mass,, Aug. 17 (P— Gen, Chiang Kai-Shek’s resignation forecasts a withdrawal of national- | ist troops from north of the Yangtse river, and the consolation of the nationallst forces in south China un- der Feng Yuh-Shiang, in the opinion of Dr. Stanley K. Hornbeck of Harvard, an authority on Far East- COURT FIGHT NEAR The one Furniture Sale that offers EVERYTHING that makes a sale great: Im- mensity, Variety, Quality, Style and Value! Any comparison you may make will Off Our Regular Last night's vote in the dail was only a motion of non-confidence in- troduced after the government had been criticized by Tom Johnson, the laborite leader, for what he termed the failure of its social and indus- trial program, and for its public safety and electoral amendment acts. The deciding vote was cast by ’the speaker, when it was announced that 71 deputies had voted for thu‘ motion and 71 against ft. President Cosgrave immediately took advantage of his power and proposed an adjournment of ftne dail for three months, but as this was not looked upon favorably by some of his followers he suggested an adjournment until October 11. This was agreed to. In the mean- time much depends on the two by- elections, for if the government candidates are defeated, President Gosgrave indicated he would re- quest the speaker to call a s 1 session of the dail immediatel The outcome of the voting was a great surprise, that the vote came so soon another. When the dail gathered it was expected the debate would continue for several days. Contrary to expectations, discussion was calm and dignified throughout, minus bitterness, re- criminations and striking sensa- tions. Eamon De Valera and his fellow deputies of the fianna fail party, whose decision to take the oath of allegiance and their scars in the dail precipitated the polifi- cal storm, the proceedings. . MOONSHINERS KL PARTY OF GAMPERS Two Dry Agents Among Number Shot From Ambush Logan, W. V. leys from the ri Aug. 17 (Aol s of moonshiners in ambush, who are thought to have taken a party of campers for sples, today had raiscd their total of such killings in the mountains of West Virginia to four in littl more than a month Three men, one a state prohibi- tion agent, dropped under the sud- den fire which whipped their eamp on Island creck yesterday. Gus J Simmons, anotier prohibition offi cer, was shot from ambush July 11 while searching the wooded moun- tains for moonshine 6 Two men were under arrest to- day in conncction with the ambush yesterday in which Ed Hensley, the prohibition agent, Don, his 18 year old son, and Iirncst Marcum, all of Hart's Creck, were killed. The six surviving members of the party, one, Howard Tomlin, also of Hart's Creek, wounded, fled to shelt among the trees, but had beer counted for toda Meanwhi posse of federal, and count officers continued a h for th assailants. Dave Hensley, a brothe of the slain office read th alarm, cscaping the withering fire in a dash through the woods, and tramping 14 miles over the moun- tains to this city, where the posse was raised. The bodies of the three slain men lay as they fell, bullets through the head of each. Other members of the party clung to concealment in the woods until the pe ppeared, and all were gathered again. until then, and not until the sti th | ern affairs. the | remained silent during | IN CHAPLIN SUIT {Seven Women May Be Sum- moned by Actor’s Wife Los Angeles, Aug. 17 (P—Reports of a property settlement either ready effected or nearing tion in the of Lita Grd { Alm comed al- comple- ensational divorce suit Chaplin against her n husband, Charles despite the lack of any confirmation from attorneys or principals in the "hese reports fed and fattened on the hurried arvival of the actor here vesterday and the ny of his es”as well as the force for his wife despite the declaration of attorneys that legal technicalities make imperative a postponement of the trial set Mon¢ g If property problems of the cz were settled before that time would be possible for Mrs. Chaplir attorneys to go into court with a { modificd complaint. The trial then would become a routine divorce ac- tion, lacking the startling elements injeted into it by the “seven wom- en, three of them prominent motion picture actresses,” accused in the wife's complaint and the “certain man” mentioned in the counter action, ac- Lloyd Wright, Chaplin’s Los An- {geles attorney, with whom the comedian spent a large part of ye terday in conference, denied flatly that anything except a court fight was impending. dwin T. McMu s and chief counsel for Mrs. h contented himself with I statemeént that therc nothing new in the case. a was Chaplin last night spent a halt Lour playing with his two small sons whom lie had not secn since mont t California for New his wife filed her ago when he York just betor divor: and sons took place in the Bev Iills mansion from which the gir wife fled last fall to réturn after the courts had awarded her posscssion. Mrs. Chapl nd her mother were in the background while Chaplin played with the boy e wos told he could return to se them whenever he desired. The aector stayed in virtual lusion at the home of his brother, vd Chaplin. suit COTTON IN MUD Farmers in the Louisiana arca dropped cotton sced into the ast as the water receded. has bren profitable in the past. Southern Lou 1, au- tho likely will be without a cash crop since such cane is lost for the year. Corn may be planted as late as July 15. Tt is not too-late | to plant cowpeas, soyheans and other | hay crops. mud as The practice — e ———) OrientalRugs Complete line of Persian and Chinese Malkes, all sizes. Also Repairing and Cleaning. lent service and perfect satis- faction guaranteed. We Call for and Deliver. S. V. Sevadjian {[] 162 Glen Street Tel. 1190 | Chaplin, gained new impetus today | for | | | - SAYS GOTTON NoT The meeting of father | later | » | partment of a flood ! Dr. Hornbeck spoke at a round table of the Institute of Politics today. Nationalists have not | the confidence in Feng that they had in Chiang because of his former connection with the soviet, but they recognize his superior proclivities as a military leader and organizer, Dr. Hornbeck said. Nationalists predict that the new | tariff rates Chiang proposcd to im- pose September first, after the tariff conference went by default, will now be put into effect by Feng, he said. governmental pa ou-go and a ba& on public indebt- as a preventative of future international conflicts was advocat- 1 here today ,by F. B. Hawley, econgmist of New York city. When governments borrow money, he pointed out, they lure the funds of capitalists into unproductive chan- | nels, and then tax the poor man to repay the debt. The remedy is sim- |ple: Require governments to do { business on a cash basis, without re- ¢ to flotation of loans, and s, which are carried on by these Toans will ce cou wa TOEXGEED DEMAND nstitute of Politics Dispels Overproduction Theory Willinmstown, Mass, Aug. 17 (P) —English and American cotton au- thoritis dispelled the bogey of over- production from the cotton crop at the Institute of Politics toda | predicted that despite the inc {supply from Britain’s new the world’s demand, plus lowered production costs augur prosperous days for the cotton farmers. Prof. John A. Todd, Liverpool cconomist, deplored the instability of the American cotton market with } its consequent effect on world’s con- { ditions but predicted that if produc- tion costs are lowered, there will be |a return to pre-war conditions when {increased supplied will be taken up by unlimited increased demand. B. Youngblood, of the de- ulture, and direc- Agricuitural saw only inere yields, and lowered Eproductlon costs as the lot of the cotton farmer in the near future, and found no cause for alarm in the ed production of other coun- the southern | far :d. in contradic- { tion to Prof. Todd, that cotton is { not a negro but a white man's crop. | Our white farmers have increased {the crop from five million to 18 {willion b + over the negro | tarmers | | MARKET FOR COR Future prospects for the sale of American cornstarch are reported to {be fairly good, depending to a large lextent on whether Czechoslovak ! competition can be successfully met on the Austrian market. consumes about 4,000 tons of corn- starch annually, much of which is imported from the United States. flelds, RO | o Tex periment station | demans, larger | tor of the were dam- | by deer. | Claims against the state for reim- bursement have led the United States Biological Survey to seek a Imethod of deer control in New Eng- |1ana. OUR BOARDING s MIND Nowdw TM Ko T INTERESTED OR (ONCERKED «wSUST CURIOUS ! v fELL ME,~ WHAT DID You Do WiTH ~THE MATOR € ~ DIDNT COME BACK \ou BoVS ! wn ILL BET THE EDGE HASNT WoRN OFF"THAT 9CARE L HiM ABOUT-THE ELEVATOR STARTER'S 0B~ AND HE'S AFRAID-To COME HOUSE By Ahern PALS “TOURED UP HE wWtH GAVE 2 K CAUGHT, 1s ' 0 HOME = T A COUPLE OF WIS WE STAVED A WEEK LONGER WiTH "'EM! .t e N'Kow), T MATOR CABGHT A BIG FISH, v AN HE'S TELLING ALL T CAMPERS 4P THERE, “THAT -TH' FISH HE -THEY ALIBI ABOUT “THAT GO T AWAY "1, AN NEIGHBORS KNOW ALL ABOUT VT w LAY OFFA GOIN -THRL MV POCKETS,~ K1Y DEVRY 1S TH NAME OF A RACE NE @)—\E MISSES HIM, AT “THAT=—= Austria | 15%, 25% - 33%:% Savings are genuine. Prices rebound to the credit of this store and your own profit. Coggswel Chairs A Wonderful Value in Coggswell Chairs Beautifully upholstered with tapestry seat and back, arms in Mohair. The sides, base and back are trimmed with fine quality Ve- lour. Regular Value $59, August Sale Price $39.50 Lounging Chairs English Club style with fine qual- ity upholstery and spring back and seat with loose cushions, covered in finest quality Jacquard Velour. Regular Value $69 August Sale Price $41.50 ] c c J At Remarkably Attractive Sav $16.75 Cotton Felt Mattresses August Sale Priee $12.99 100% all layer white cot- ton felt, covered in fine tick- ing. Built with roll edges. $34.75 Poster Beds A Newly Choice of Full or Arrived Shipment of Colonial Poster Beds Built of Fine Cabinet Woods in $4.50 Bed Pillows August Sale Price $2.99 ea. All goose feather pillows, size 22x28. Covered in a. ¢, a. ticking. I'win Size in the Attractivi Colonial Design as Pictured Combination with Mahogany $28.75 Day Beds August Sale Price $21.99 Windsor style, panel end Day Bed with cretonne up- holstered mattress. EXTRAORDINARY SPECIAL August Sale Prices 22 100% PURE JAVA KAPOK $10.95 Children’s Cribs August Sale Pric $7.99 Finished brown. in ivory or £ Covered with fine grade art ticking, upholstered High safety sides. with hand stitched roll edges. P/ | METAL BEDS In the August Sale $16.99 § lTriple panel design, wood fin- METAL BEDS In the August Sale $14.99 ) Large panel design, wood fin- METAL BEDS In the August Sale 0.69 Twin or full size, panel de- sign, ivory or wood finish. EXTRAORDINARYSPECIAL $29.75 Silk Floss Mattresses Here is an unusual value in finely pholstered spring seat and back hairs with reversible spring seat ushions, covered in finest quality acquard Velour. Regular Value $69 August Sale Price - $41.50 FEATURING BEDS AND BEDDING ings $14.75 Spiral Bed Springs August Sale Price $10.99 Coil spiral springs that insure comfort. Finished in gray enamel. $29.75 Upholstered Bed Springs August Sale Price $22.69 High grade springs cov- ered in ticking to match your mattress. e $11.75 Bungalow Beds August Sale Price $6.99 White enamel 3 piece beds—3 ft. size—head and foot ends and spring. $24.75 Felt Mattresses August Sale Price $17.99 Hand stitched edge, covered quality ticking. 9 imperial with fine METAL BEDS In the August Sale $6.99 .Continuous 2-inch post style with one inch upright fillers, all sizes. Ivory or wood finish.