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FRENCH MINSTER * RESTS INBUFFALD ‘Given Tumultuous Reception by New York N. Y., Aug 25 P— America’s reception to Maurice Bokanowski, French minister of commerce, industries and aviation, posts and telegraph, who arrived in New York yesterday, was unofficial- ly extended until today through the medium of a wind storm which Buffalo, announcement of the engagement of Clarissa Tennyson, former wife Major Lionel Hallam Tennyson, to James Moptgomery Beck, Jr., son of a former solicitor general of the U. 8. Beck, Jr, was named as co- respondent in the divorce suit brought by Major Tennyson against his wife. Adelaide Wilmerding, former wife of Mr. Beck, obtained a divorce from him last March in Paris. Mrs. Tennyson is a daughter by a former marriage of Viscountess Grey of Fallodon and is a niece of the Countess of Oxford and Asquith. Under the English divorce given | Major Tennyson a month ago, Mrs. Tennyson and Beck were prohibited forced him to abandon an air tour from New York to Toronto, Ont, and remain herg overnight. As the guest of Commander Rich- ard E. Byrd, whose host been when the transatlantic fiier landed In France, M. Bokanowski had planned to reach the Canadian city last night in time to attend a dinner arranged by the Ontario gov- ernment, Severe head winds were encountered en route, however, and | when the Buffalo airport was reached, it was decided to postponc ‘the last leg of the trip until today. In marked contrast to the tumult- uous and typically metropolitan re- :ception which he had received upon landing in New York, the French .cabinet officer enjoyed almost com- iplete seclusion upon his arrival here With the exception of airport o cials, and a few newspapermen, emall group of persons at the air- ‘port was taken quite by surprise when the distinguished a landed and few recognized the mem- | to | bers of the party as they went their rooms at the Hotel Statler. Continuing the trip today, Bokanowski was to he the gt the Canadian Bar association at its annual meeting in Toronto while ‘Commander Byrd planned to return to New York city guest to his destination. The minister will be back in Buf- falo mext Sunday night for the an- nual convention of the American M. {Bar assoclation at which he will of- | ficlally represent Premier Poincare | of France. TESTS OF SANITY GIVEN GANGSTERS Police Use New Weapon in Fight on Crime 25 (M—The new enemy of Chicago gangsters and gupmen—police sanity tests—today had won a partial victory over Frank and Vincent McErlane, figures of the once powerful Saltis-McErlane gang, as they faced a 10-day “stretch” in the psychopathic hospital for mental observation. Chicago, Aug. The brothers, arrested last night |~ in a fashionable Hyde Park hotel wilted before the threat of this strange new weapon in the hands of the police and refused to take the simple tests which tell their minds’ meanderings. “We refuse to talk until we get to court,” the men said last aight when ‘contronted with the test questions ‘but their defiance only led the police ito decide to send them to the psychopathic hospital for observa- ition after which they will be taken ‘before the county judge for a sanity ‘hearing. The arrest of the brothers in the hotel resulted after other guests complained of a disturbance. Frank McErlane last spring wi acquitted of murder as a result of a holdup in Lake County, Ind. Their arrest precipitated brothers into the midst of the new ‘police move inaugurated by Chief O'Connor for *“padded cells for crim- inals” At the ontset of the move, ‘the chief had predicted he would “land the McErlanes.” ¥ Clarissa Tennyson Is Reported to Wed Again New York, Aug. 25 (A—The New York American today prints an arti- cle by its society editor which say that he is atthorized to make formal Proved safe by millions and Colds Headache Pain Toothache he had | visitors | st of fter seeing his | s | ploy the | Neuralgia Neuritis NOW YOU ASK ONE ‘ MOVIE QUIZ Tt you know your movies, you'll have no trouble at all answering to- day’'s questions. “What two film stars are mar- ried to princes? 2—What author actress to y the ected what title role in the name of Tom is Marshall Neilan's 5—What is the color of Clara Bow's hair? What is the pame of the first an movie director? Was Adolph Manjou born in , Pittsburgh or Petosky, Mich.? What is the real name of O ? st created the character of “Ol1 Bill,” who was | the hero in “The Better O 10—What was the name of the director of a recent picture in which American frigate played the title role? $12,500 IN ACCIDENT SUITS Edwin B. Hyde and Maggie Gra- Defendants in Actions | | | ] bowski Brought for Personal Injuries. Suit for $7,500 damage has been brought against Edwin B. Hyde of t y by Jane E. Smith of Mon- ro es t she was struck b ndant's automobile while |she was walking on the highway in { Trumbull on August 29, 1926. She ‘J erts that the car was operated in gent manner and that the ces were faulty. Deputy Sherift Mathew Papciak served the papers. | Action for $5,000 damas has Ibeen brought against Mage Gra- | vowski of this city by Claudia Por- 1ven, through Stephen f that town. An automobile in North Haven on June 27 t is the basis of the suit. Deputy herifi Papeizk served the papers. [Rescue Three Marooned | In Ocean Storm 22 Hours Newport, R. I, Aug. 25 (UP) — oomed for 22 hours on Elephant {Rock off Easton’s Point while a rm raged, three Fall River, Mass., men were rescued by coast guards | with the aid of breeches buoy at Inoon Wednesday. . | Those rescued were John Barnar- !do, Jr, 740 Bedford street; Frank Arudo, 639 Dedford street, and An- |tone Perry, Plain street all of Fall | River, | The rescucs were made after ards at Price’s Neck station {had been notified by a gardencr em- d on the estate of Mrs. Arthur IN. ce. The gardener had scen (the men from shore. Though suffering slightly from ex- the men did not appear se- affected by the experience. [posur {riously ' RACING BACK 1N MISSOURT | Kansas City, Aug. 25 (P —Horse jrmecing returned to Missouri today [after an absence of 20 years. More than 400 horses were in the stables at the Smithville track, near here, where seven or more races will be run daily. The races will be oper- ated under the contribution |of betting, held valld recently by il)\e state supreme court. prescribed by physicians for Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Sufe— Accept only “Bayer” ackage which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Asplrin ls the trade mark of Baser Manufacture of Monoacetlcacidester of Salleylicacld of | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1927. San Francisco, Aug. 25 (P—The| action of Martin Jensen in Honolu- | lu yesterday In paying his navigator. {Captain Paul Schulter, only $25 for navigating the monoplane Aloha from San Francisco bay to Honolu- | lu to win $10,000, second prize in | |the Dole race, was not in accordance with finstructions glven by Mrs. Jensen to her husband before the race. She insisted that the naviga- | tor be paid nothing. | From the beginning, Mrs. Jensen | wanted her hushand to fly alone. | Sho belleved he could make the hop single handed and her opinion | was based on her experience wh-n; she accompanied him as an avia- trix at country fairs. When it became apparent that| Jensen might be compelled to use 47 five-gallon cans to carry his re- | serve supply of gasoline, he cabled | to Mrs. Jenscn saying he would be | able to obtaln a second man in the plane, who could re-fill the main | fuel tanks from the small cans and | navigate the plane as well This| MRS. JENSEN DIDN'T INTEND TO PAY NAVIGATOR OF PLANE ALOHA ANYTHING Mrs. Jensen approved, providing no money was pald to the navigator. The five-gallon plan was discarded later. Jensen interviewed a long line of applicants and found an experienced navigator—a captain in the navy— who agreed to navigate the plane and pour the gasoline without com- pensation, The officer asked that he guaranteed his transportation back to the mainland, should the mono- plane arrive in Honolulu. Jensen said he would guarantee the return fare if the plane prize money, otherwise not. Mrs. Jensen raised the plane pur- chase money by subseription in Honolulu while her husband = was en route to California to obtain a | She has been the business of the wenture from the plane. manager start. In a m nge to him that #f he dared to let the Aloha down at sea she would row and “pat you on the head with Jensen she told SHELL-SHOCK VET | GONE FRON HONE { University-Educated Man Lost in New York Aug. 25.—(P—William 33, Boston co Iting said to have been shell- | Ishocked as an army captain during | the World war, has been missing for | the past eight days, police have been linformed. | He motored to New York to visit his wife, Jean Moore, an actress, whom he married in June, and reglstered at the Hotel Chesterfield. He left the next night, saying he was | zoing to a theater, and failed to re- | turn. Police found that he had called | {at the veteran’s bureau the follow- | !ing day. He is the son of Mrs. Julia | Fay of Brown street, Marblchead Neck, Mass. William M. v, Louisville, K versity of Michigan school of mines and served with an engineering unit during the World war, during which | he was badly gassed. He spent the first four years fol- | lowing his return from overseas in the West and for the three years had been associated with the Walworth Manufacturing New York, was last | company | Get a two-ounce bottle of Moone imerald Oil (full strer ay. | ery well stocked drug | with the distinct understanding | that your money will be cheerfully returned if it does not reduce the inflammation, soreness, and pain | much quicker than any remedy you | ever used. | Two or three applications Moone's Emerald Oil and in fift minutes the pain and soreness di appears. A few more applications at regular intervals and the inflam- | mation is gone. | And as for Soft Corns a few ap- plications each night at bed time] of | en | | Compasses, Pencils, Pencil Boxes, Foun- tain Pens, Erasers, Loose Leaf Books, Composition Books, Pads, Theme Tablets, Pens, Pen Holders, Chalk, Dic- tionaries, Inkwells, Pencil ~ Sharpeners, Stenographers’ Note Books, ete, Gummed Rulers, Reinforcements. ADKIN at Buffalo, N. Y., where he made his | home. His mother, whose summer home joins that of her daughter, Mr arl D, Skinner of Boston, at rblehead Neck, said that her son to have joined her here Satur- v for his cation and that she e may have collapsed duc to overwork Millicent Rogers to Wed Argentine in Fall New York, A the A red Rogers, former Countess Salm, will wed wealthy Argentine, probably in Octobe ormal announcement of the ment was made severs o by the rmer countess’ father, Col. H. H. oil magnate. “Oh, isolutely yes” said Miss Roger: nfirming the announcement ght upon her arrival with jance aboard the Olympic Wit on, Pe gL r and s still in aro Perlata F in Ne mos. en- co n her the former countess was her Salm, a nurse and a er countess' mother D IN JAPAN. (UP)—An Ex- telegray dispatch from Tokio said court physicians confi- jently prediet that within a weck Japan will celehrate the birth of an heir to the throne. The empress was reported in splendid health. London, A Here’s Speedy Relief From Bunion Pains and Soft Corns Emerald Oil Must Give Complete Satisfaction or Money Cheer- fully Refunded and they just seem to shrivel right up and scale off. No matter how discouraged you been with pads, shields or other | it you have not tried then you have som pplication: nerald ¢ thing to learn. It's a wonderful formula — this combination of essential camphor and other antiseptics so marvelous that thousands of bottles are sold annually for reducing va cose or swollen veins. Fair Drug Dept. and every good a gist guarantees the rst botile of Moone’ foot troubles or money hac “School Will Be Opened Very Soon S came within the | fore midnight. York, | weeks | last | White Star liner | rs was not at the! oils with | s Emerald Oil to end your | PRINTERS AND STATIONERS 66 CHURCH STREET LAWYER IS SHOT ! da; wh ine | Sh [ e kil h | ma in vie sla of tha | | Police Gomb “Little Italy” for be!wnru probing ‘Little Italy” here to- | Gid taurant, ostensibly to kill Giamanco nd two companions. Giamanco lay dead death car had pas: ington veteran of the Mexican war, was the said today, | death by e been again opened its | Italian gang. 25 (A—Millicent | ROOSEVELT'S MATE NOW SHUNS POLITICS Never Was So Happy—Wouldn't Go Back to Public Life For Any- thing On Earth, New York, Aug. 25 (A—Theodore Roosevelt's running mate as progres- sive candidate for vice-president, ex-Governor John M. Parker of Louislana, has been ‘‘re-discovered" In an isolated, $:00 farmhouse where for four years he has nidden from politics and amuséd himself shoot- ing ducks and catching rattlesnakes, says Farm and Fireside, “These past four years have been the happiest of my life,” he is quot- ed as saying. “I wouldn't go back to late dinners, dress clothes, steam heat, confusion—not for anything on carth.” Parker's little Louisiana retreat has several times provided a refuge for sough-after public figures. Gen- eral John J. Pershing regularly hides out with the governor each spring and fall to indulge in duck shoot- IN GANG WARFARE (lue to Slayers St. Louls, Aug. 25 (P —Police v In search of the slayers of Aloys Beelman, an attorney, and Benny amanco, well known gangster, ho were shot by gunmen in a re- wal of gang warfare shortly be- Spetding past the Lyric Coffee op, a gangster rendezvous in the art of the business district, the lers fired four shots into the res- the sidewalk when the , while Beel- an, slumped over a cup of coffee the restaurant, fatally wounded. Beelman, a graduate of the Wash- university law school and | on raph or radio connects the Parker farm with the Irest of the world. \When the recluse he gets it itaming wild turke capturing rattlesnakes, “I caught 17 last year,” he said, “and sent one, six feet, one linch long, to the zoo in New Orleans. { They're not so hard to handle.” ctim of a stray bullet, the police as nothing w found to e gang warfare s simmered here for a year ng. Police believe that Giaman- SS0¢ e of Vincent Spicuzza ony Russo, gangsters recently in in Chicago, was marked for her friends or enemies the pair. The other theory it the Cuckoo gang, which has suppressed for a year, had fight with Wants Best Englisl; To Be Spoken on Stage London, Awg. 25 (A)—Mrs. Patrick |Campbell, who hates to be but is the | sometimes called *“Mrs. Pat,” is making addresses in England in an FOUR PIECE WALNUT BEDROOM Reduced from $219.00 ny Colonial Dresser, $47 00 o Reg. $4. Reg. $22.00 Full Size Coil Spring NOW s s S Reg. $24.50 All Cotton Felt Matt's. WING CHAIR With claw and ball foot. Reduced from $75.00 to BOUDOIR CHAIR Covered in cretonne. Reduced from $21.50 to $14.95 GRASS RUGS REFRIGERATORS COUCH HAMMOCKS SUMMER FURNITURE effort to save the diction of the Brit- ish stage from “being overwhelmed by the jerky naturalism” into which she says many youthful actors are falling in the bellet that plays, es- pecially ultra-modern plays, must be spoken in the easy style of the lounge. -~ “Beautiful speech,” the famous actress warns, “is the first and most valuable weapon in the actor's armory.” Many modern actors, sho declares, seem utterly insignificant to their audiences because of their forced efforts to be realistic and natural. ICED "SALADA" \ i Ideal after Golf and all outdoor sports For Iced SALADA Tea: cHMake tea as usual, Pour inlo glass’ oo, chill. Flavor toy taste. It Cools, Refreshes and Stimulates” HERE ARE SOME OF THE FINE BARGAINS You'll Find . Tomorrow at B. C. PORTER SONS August Furniture Sale NINE PIECE WALNUT DINING SUITE Reduced from $169.00 THREE PIECE LIVING ROOM SUITE With Bed Davenport, Chair and Wing Chair, covered with Genuine Baker Cut Velour. Reduced from $257.00 Covered in tapestry. Reduced from $32.00 } GATELEG TABLE lid Mahogany Top 34x48. Reduced from $24.50 Buy at B. C. Porter Sons and Be Perfectly Satisfied.