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T TSR ER——T B — P DENEEN MAY NOW ENTER COUNCILY Will Be Allowed in Republican - &r Tnner Circle % Hu Washington, April 12.—(UD) bulky figure in the person of S at Charles 8 Dencen will be wel- i o comed into the inner councii of re- publican leaders here as a result of his smashing victory over William Hale Thompson in the llinois pri- mary battle for coutrol of the re-| publican party of that state, council 1dors said today Deneen will take to the Kansas City convention a bioc of at least 47 leleg crnor Frank O. He them against Thewpson's s of delegates pledged to seek re-clection | of President Coolidge. Thompson have only 14 delcgates. ! More Gleeful Republican leaders here generally were more gleeful about the Deneen \ictory than about any recent p tical happening. They have never played politically with Thompson and fearful of what he might do his Coolidge-I'ledge delegates convention. To fill their cup were also than 1 to Deneen for the defeat of tormer. Scnator- Frank L. Smith of Illinois. General- iv it had been feared Smith would Le reelected and would come down to the scnate next session with credentials for his seat, and those who voted last spring and again last | ¢« December to oust Smith because of | his primary were worr faced with of voling against him annually The Curtiss-Watson-Dawes group in the senate is expected to work in | harmony with Deneen, and some of their cohorts have even suggested the possibility that he might be con- sidered a possible compromise pres- idential candidate in event of a deadlock in the convention. While they realize that the Deneen | ne victory may be better interpreted as | in a Thompson defeat, they are en- | in couraged that one of their group has assumed republican leadership in the second most important political state, ne of wa tol won | will Be ur {vo S N e Je in wi ri campaign expenditures | 1, ba, M RO, he Cleaned House h “We have cleaned house from | ¢ within,” one midwestern regular re- |a publican said privately, "and we did not have to use a whitewash.” The democrats, too, are not dis- |is pleased. They foresee the possibility of a split in Tllinois republican ranks in the November clection. They talk ahout the possibility of Thompson joinly hands openly or sccretly with George Brennan, democratic leader of the state, to put Gov. Al Smith over if he is the democratic nominee. Tn return, they say, Bren- | nan might give Thompson some local | support, { . MARY'S, v. I°'r. Ferrart, who preached a mission to the Italian congregation of St. Mary'’s church last October, will return tonight to open and con- duct a triduum. Services Wil be lield tonight at 7:30 and at the same hour tomorrow and Saturday eve- nings. Morning services will also take place al an hour to be an- nounced fonight. The triduum will | close at Sunday morning's § o'clock | " mass, .”‘ ca ar is th wa RETURNS $50, GETS 5 CENTS, Jersey. City,. (UP)—Frank. R. Mitchell, 15, found $50 in a wallet. le returned it to Peter Iedrick, the owner, who said: “You will be a great man some day.” Bedrick then | handed the boy a five-cent rewa How One Thin Woman Gained of a Hughes is 67 differ from other stork decre lie ha York streets she plaimed wan of 40 made of flattish, but not for flat fect hard for jeet is to create Every member is an officet. plane there are accommodations for you. | holes Evanstan a day labor containing $1,000 in from lead to the stand in superior ceurt FLASHES OF LIFE: PHILADELPHIA'S MAYOR HAS NEVER HAD A DRINK! New York — When Charles £ vears old there will | more presents and felicitations in e family than hitherto. His fifih andchild, the son of ¥ Lo Waddell, will be ¢ en. s 66th annive “My birthday does not days.” But the d otiicrwise, uphies said Havre — Gloria 3 Vs mat- | 1s 18 bound ung broth L count. movies or Amcrican ver knows 1 count New Yerk —— Mawruss Perlmutter Potash and I iter is in lot ereated & cruel to Mrs, n Carr, once onuc of Helen thos Zicglield glorifiors - Worry over the| romance Madgc llamy of the screen has made Lo- n K. Metcalf so ill he has heen able to prosecute lis suit for di- ree in which he terms her domin- ring and stubborn. Los Angeles il of h wit cavort Merry ives of Windsor,” but on New must be muzzled ssie is a mongrel daschhund pick- up by Mrs. Minnie Maddern Fiske Detroit. She plays in Shakespeare | th hier mistress. A policeman com- | and a court issucd an oracr. Portland ar Plummer, 7 n the sun | daily, He ¢ s not recall when failed to get up early enough, He a cyclist who wants to race across the any country and | k. Naw York -—— Now come shors iterial from the Bay of Bengal is ing into milady's wardrobe, but els will be higher than ever, T'hiladelphia Mayor Mackey has ver had a drink. He so revealea commenting on judges “who drink private and then punish others for violating the liquor laws.” New York — “Cat” perhaps is too New York public school ildren 1o spell before th © ninc ars old. 1t has been omitted from list of 1,100 words for beginners. Orange, N. 3. secking a state e Panners club arter. One ob- internal discord. | New York — In the up-to-date | idge, poker, rummy or what will | A machine cquipped with a d table took off for the Deiroit r show. Chicago — Thar's gold in them Digging for a high school in found & hag | 5 gold pieces, | gles and double eagles. | Putnam —— State’s Attorney How- d C. Bradford of Windham county in cipt of a2 communication sovernor Trumbull verifying | e ofter by the state of £1.000 re ard for information which may arrest and convietion of e slayers of State Policeman Irv- & Nelson, New Haven — Patrick Collins' loss memory results in his arrest on perjury charge as he is leaving the | where he 11 Pounds : BEAD THIS LETTER his fa from Mrs, W. I tell you that Loony Mecoy'y 2= 1 have avs been thin do e Ippointe : 1o hezan » MceCoy's (04 1 1 choy er Ol | ust irug | When In Hartford | Dine at the Oldest and imsti Sea Food Restaurant. Sea | Food diregt from the Ocean. | Retall De ‘ tened < Tablets 4 ar went Connected Produced by | A Paramount Free Examination || WEART and LUNGS | Tueslay amt §iidas Afternoons | | AEW BEITAIN CLINIC | itoath Block l Release ¢ s [ woman was freed. !days. - |John A {of the state central committee and | | Mrs | national wemens' republican club. | there April 17. | festified as a state witness in the case | ef Marie Carbone, charged with vio- L of the liquor law. Collins re- | d statements he made in the | e in city court, de rtoxicated at that time. Bridgeport - Gerald A. Richard- son. an cclectic practitioner, open his | supreme court from his conviction in the common pleas court on the charge of practicing | medicine two years after his license | lid been tevahed by the state boa ¢t health. His appeal is based on contention that the suspension nis license was illegal. appeal in of i | Waterpury—Herman J. Weisman, president of the castern league is at | the Waterbury hospital where he | underwent an operation for the re- | his tonsils. He is expected the institution within two | moval of 1o leave Haven-=The 218 ton fishing | steamer John P, Squir sold at suction to liquidate claims for re- pairs and furnishings, is sold to Hayes of ew York for 3300 by Deputy Marshall Doherty ¢ Noank. West Haven — Wladilir Capuski, | a waiter employed in New | throws himself beneath the wheels of | a passenger train just east of the | station platform and is almost in- | stantly killed, Hartford—Republi ters numbering 500 and represent- ing practically every town in the state gathered at the Hartford club for th ly for women in the 1925 campaign. Miss Katherine Byrne of Putman vice chairman of | state central committee, pres and the speakers were Gov. T bull, J. Henry Roraback, chairman | nowomen vo- Arthur L. Livermore of Yon- | kers N, Y. honorary president of th.-} T i Hartford—Gov. Trumbull issues a | vequisition on Gov. Smith of New York for the return to his statc of | William Brown who violated his pa- | vole from prison where he was sent tor his part in a robbery nine years ago. Brown who will now be charged | with the original crime is serving a | iail term at Blackwell's Island, Ne York. He will be released from Hartford—Iar castern traditions give way to western customs when J Miss 1700 Tye of Hong Kong, China, | to Banish Pilles Pr. Leonhardt Has Discovered a Harmiless Internal Remedy That's Guarantecd—No Cutting—No Messy Salves How ¢ you think that the surgeon's knife | othed of pe from the . iUs hecause you haven't freatment hnown Leonliardt's HEM-TOUL The Dactor's is_internal nenting. rred the cau and then went or and co A remedy that would remo should benefit tiere witl pile sufferer very and so that < delay honorable i should try Dy, ROID witheut delay. on - tha sufferer Leonhardt's | BEGINS SUNDA CAPITOL THEATER 2nz Hing Hem, proprictor of a restaurant in this city are married at a Christian ceremony at the home of Bert 8. Tule, superintendent of the Chinese Sunday school of the Center church. Mexicafi Priest, Leader of Rebels, Reported Executed Mexico City, April 12 ®—El Uni- crsal 1ol uoted travellers from Guadala as saying that the priest Aristeo Pedroza, a picturesque in- surgent leads was reeently cap- tured and executed after a drum courtmarti Me was considercd ane of the mainstays of the insur- gent movement in Jalisco. He was said to have been discov- cred hiding in cave at an unnamed place with his private secretary. After resisting fed troops for sometime, both were captured, tried immediately and executed. The priest’s identity was disclosed by documents found upon him and later his hody identifical. 10ld Company D of Elm City to Be Preserved Hartford, April 12 ¢P—The mili- ary history of old Company D of the Second Connecticut National Guard known in New Haven as the ational Blues, from which Com- 102nd infantry was d and officered, is to under official orders Adjutant General's offic orders said: “To estah from th Special | lish the continuity and give official confirmation of the same, Company 13, 102nd Connecticut infantry, large- Iy officcred and recruited by veter- as of Company D, 102nd U. 8. in- avtry (formerly Company D, 2nd infantry Conn. National Guard) which served in the World War is reconstituted and designated as the or and is cntitled to the his- Tory of Company D (National Blucs) 2nd infantry, Connecticut National Guard. “Company D, 102nd infantry, is hereby reconstituted and designated successor to Company B, (formerly Company 8, 2nd infantry C. N. G.) | which served in the World War. Cold Storm Does Not Do Much Damage to Plants New Haven, April 12 (®—Jack Frost swung his magic wand in Con- necticut last night and on the heels of the rain storm with a low tem- perature a coating of frost and ice was laid over trees and shrubs in many of the towns of the central and northern part of the state. It damage was done it was insig: nificant as the cold rain had tem pered the swelling buds to the ice which quickly melted as the daylight temperature rose. GROUNDS TOR DIVORCE srstown, Md., April 12 (UP) —William N. Anderson found a man’s initials pencilled on his wife's back when she roturned home late one night, he told the court here. The court granted Anderson a di- vorce. Jesse Dodd, a soldier at the U. S. army medical field school at Carlisle was named as co-respon- dent. LEVINE SETTLES SUIT Washington, April 12 (UP)—~The government’s suit against Chatles A. Levine, trapsatlantic flyer, for heavy Boaches kill themwith FLIT Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 MAIN ST. (Opp. Arch) MO PHONE 1409 Special Sale for Friday and Saturday 10% DISCOUNT On All Dresses and Coats AT $ l .69—Colol-ed Glove Silk Knickers. Value $4.50. AT 98¢—-—One Lot of Colored Rayon Slips. Val- ues to $3.00, AT —Warm Dresses for the little Miss. $1'98 Sizes to 14. Values to $5.75. AT $ l .98—Vel\'et and Silk Blouses. Values to $5.98, AT —Cotton Broadcloth Blouses. Values to 19¢ ww AT — 79¢ Children’s Wash Dresses. Were $1.98. AT — 98¢ Leather Purses. Values to $2.00. AT —Rayon Panties in Flesh, Peach and 89¢ Coral. Values $1.00. : o 89¢"Ext)‘a Heavy Rayon Vests. price $1.00. Regular AT 59¢—Odd Sizes in Women’s Silk Hose. Val- ues $1.00 to 2.00 pair. AT $ 1 .35——'All Silk Hose, were $l,5(i. Full fash- ioned. AT $ l .79——A]l Silk Hose, were $2.00. Full fash- ioned. AT — 98¢ Bloomer Dresses. Values to $3.00. "10e ' 39¢" Bar Pins. Values to $2.00. AT — 50¢ All 69¢ Bath Salts. AT — 29¢ All 39¢ Bath Salts. AT — 23¢ All 29¢ Bath Salts. 10% Discount on all Infants’ Wear. AT 25¢—Infants' Long Flannelette Skirts. Reg. price Toe. AT 31.00_]{0“59 Dress Aprons. Were $1.50 and $2.00. AT 50¢—Odd Bloomers, Step-ins, Chemise and Marcelle Drawers. Were $1.50. AT 95¢—W0men's Gowns, hand made. 'Crepe and Voile. AT 95¢—Women’s 2-Piece Pajamas. $1.25. Value AT s 1 .OO_Odd Corsets. Sizes 21 to 26. Values to $5.00. AT —Children’s Tan or Black Bloomers. 29“' tegular 6Yc. AT 25¢—Infants’ Wool Vests. Small sizes. Regular price $1.00. AT — 50¢ Infants’ Wool Vests. Reg. price $1.00. damages because of alleged ma: lations in surplus war material con- tracts has beea settled out of court. Attorneys for the justice depart- ment and lawyers for Levine have agreed on a flat settlement price, reported ' to be' $150,000, it wa lcarned at the justice department to- day. | Twenty Crippled Children * Rescued From Flame: Philadelphia, April 12 (®#)—Twen- ty crippled children were carried from the girls’ building of the House of St. Michael and All - Angels, a home for orippled negro children We are. Here Are a 30x3Y; Oversize FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY 24x381, Inches dining room, or in $10.40 32x4 S. S. Cord $17.25 33x3 8. 8. Cord $31.90 95 n West Philadelphia when fire dam- aged the home carly today. The girls, wrapped in blankets, were carried from their second floor rooms. across a lawn. The rescue was cffected during a snow storm, Prince of Wales Has His 29th Tumble Today | Necton, Norfolk, Eng. April | P —The hard luck which has been | pursuing the Prince of Wales on the racing course ever since the first of the year caught him again tod: giving him his twenty-ninth fall, ir the past fow years. The Prince was competing in the Few Examples of the Bargains We Are Offering in Genuine Goodyear Tires Cord | 29x4.40 Balloon $11.45 31x5.25 Balloon $19.50 33x6.00 Balloon $23.65 P races when he was thrown at jump. He was not hurt. LAST CHIEF DL Windsor, Ont., April 12 UP—Jo- seph White, the last chief of the Wyandotte Indians, died yesterday at the home of his daughter. Hc was the grandson of a white man kid- naped by the Indians in infancy who grew up with the tribe and marricd the daughter of Chief Split Log. The chieftainship was passed to White rom his father. He was the last of the male line of the Indian royal blood. Stands Back of the Tires You Buy? “Is he responsible?” We are. “Is he in permanent business here?” “Does he give real service?” We do. “Has he got a genuine quality tire to stand back of?” We have—Goodyears! - O'Neil Tire & Battery Co. 39 WASHINGTON ST. TEL. 900 GENUINE IMPORTED - FRAMED TAPESTRIES FRIDAY 9 and % SATURDAY 24x38, Inches SELECT YOUR TAPESTRY Pay Only 50c a Week You get your tapestry when you make first payment. the reception hall. rs-Opticians 354 MAIN STREET Open Saturday Evenings _ ONLY A LIMITED QUANTITY ON THIS SALE — SEVERAL DESIGNS These Genuine Imported Framed Tapestries are rendered even more effective and fascinating by their beautiful Polychrome Frames in the Tiffany Brown shades. The frames blend perfect- ly with the Tapestries and enhance their beauty. Interior deco- rators advocate the use of these Tapestries to beautify the home whether used over the mantel in the parlor, over the buffet in the