New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 14, 1928, Page 5

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FLASHES OF LIFE: FRENCH RAISE CRY OF “LONG LIVE THE QUEEN” proves to be poisonous liquor and | medical aid is unavailing to save {their lives. Police are now trying to {find its source. WOMEN DYING OF | RADIUM POISONING: 169 lan- : Bridgeport — Governor Trumbull | B the Asmociated Press translated complete has sccret conference with shipping i New York — Governor Smith h unages and diale . The 169th is the |firm heads about Connecticut ter- Science and Law - Unable to narrowly escaped being described in . jula-Lunda, spoken by about 2,500,- | minal for proposed four-day steam. the E‘“"C'“""d“ Brittanica as “the [0¢¢ in the Belgian Congo. ship line across the Atlantic. Noth- son of arather unsuccessful market | e s § oo ! ofinite naturc agreed on vet, Hell) Tm]ll gardener.”. The British editor, un- |1ne e natura agreed on ¥ The United Press presents | aketch of Governor Smith. but in head of the Jerusalem Mothodist| —Bridgeport — Latrick W. Salmon, herewith the first of a serics of |2 Tevision the governors father is/church in Copenhagen, here seeking Terrysille, killed while- crossing three stories dealing with one | described as a “drayman. reinstatement, crossed the Atlantic 'street to get into his machine. New Jersey working women | Ttaft and Wilson travelled upon oc- fioreycle broke down. Who arc slowly dying from radi- |casion have been placed in the per- | St um poisoning. Their fight for | manent exhibit of the army quar- *w York — Sir Charles Higham, Orange, N. J. May 14 (UP)—-|placed them. | Bremen fliers were welconed. | Bridgeport — While the scientific world looks on ' | elplessly, five former New Jersey | Justice has been unable thus far to comfort the last days of their lives. | The strange death sentence, Ina Hussman of | herine Schaub result of radium into Union City —Mrs. George Irving [lived to walk to the nearby police station with a crushed chest, run over by an auto, hut on being rushed to a hospital in Waterbury, several miles distant, she was found dead on arrival, End comes to State Commissioner of Agriculture Philo T. Platt at his home in “Newtown following two weeks' illness. He was chairman of the New England Asso- sociation of Agriculturc Commi sioners; director of the Milk Pro- ducers’” Association of Connecticut; director of the Newtown Savings bank: zovernor of the Founders and % ¥ and a retired mem- ber of the republican town commit- New York — Some 25 families of New York's socially elite cach spend |more than $100,000 annually {their stables, racing excluded. Paris — The almost forgottcn cry ‘Long Live the Queen” arose from {the strects of Paris when a proces- slon of royalists, paying homage to {the memory of Joan of Arc. spicd the Duchess of Guise at a window The duchess, wife of the claimant of !the French throne, smilingly dis- claimed the honor, | \. Weagle, newly elected dean Yale divinity school. says in address {{han o stone's throw from his homie that conference held by International i tha Waterville district. After he- Missionary Conneil in Jerusalem Was fiuzs v umod home it is believed to help to rehabilitate old faiths o ' 3 . at he will suifer no ill effccts, malady in the casc of the factory |vited to the Rockefeller home, in- | throughout Asin which have heen wonien was contracted between 1917 |quired and learned that not even cevorcly handled by the progress of e ——— and 1920 when they were employed |stiff collars would be necessary. [modemn scirnee. by the United States Radium | 0 REAT ! corporation, painting wateh dials to | b : ECZEMA AND | | Rome — Mussolini never drinks ampagne but has it handy for on [gucsts. He opened a hottle for Mina American singer, aft she ave a concert for himsclf and daughter, New York Princ Mclikow De Somhetie, widow, hushand was related to the Czar, has leased the entire 23th floor of a hotel on Park avenue to live in | i h editor, un-| Kansas City — The Rev. John P. says the executive when pressed for derstanding “truckman” in its Eng- ' Ingerslow has come from Copen- |a statement. i jlish sense, substituted “gardencr” in hagen at a cost of $20. The deposed | = of the most unusual cases in the | =r=a as guest of a steamship line, rode | history of jurisprudence and | Washington — Horse-drawn ve- his motercycle as far as Dayton, | niedicine — the plight of five !hicles in which Presidents Roosevelt, | Ohio, and took a hus when the mo- redress from the law has at- jlermaster department. They were British advertising man, wonders tracted wide attention. jused for White House marketing un- 'why no British flugs were displayed til February, when automobiles re- in New York or Chicage when the factory girls arc dying slow and painful deaths. Scicnce has dis- paired of saving them and Jersey which has been passed on Miss Grace Fryer, Mrs. Albina Larice Quinta Mcbonald of ss Rosalie Whosc riots socl of Newark, is poisoning s Wateriury Two-year-old hoy, lost overnight, is found after many New Haven -= I'rofessor Tuther fhours of scarch in a swamp, le Doctors Bafiled Physicians know something of {he | curative powers of radium but they know mothing about treating the ef- fects of radiwm poisoning. The Tarrytown, N. Y. — Public offi cials, when dinner guests of John D. Rockefeller, Jr.. are expected fo dress for comfort. Town fathers, in- New Haven — Mysterious amages Dradley- Scovills to the extent of $65.000; hlaze to visit the fortnight. company the it} within a at the American college at Samoko |, Al of them painted have a much increased respect for a day, wetting the brushes With |royalty. After striving ainly for their lips between strokes. In that [three hours to repair their broken way they 100k a certain amount of |down automobile, they saw th radinp into thalr systens {young driver of a machine whicl Seven years later, in 1927, the ihag overtaken them start it in ten five watch painters developed radi- [ninutes. They discovered later that um poisoning. NeeKing redress | he driver King Rorix, against the company for which they | s3illon worked, the women found that the ket Bt has statute of limitations had expired: |acquired five new fathers since ho iihos o that they could not hold the com- | ieuc'ing fame as the first flier 10 | war M. 1ini1 pany responsible unless suits Were poaen the Bromen on Greenly Island. |ife several ye filed within two years after the |y was claimed as son by men in | cause ot dho gocident. Germany, Hungary, Alsace Lorraine, Seven Years to Devclop | Australia and Jugo-Slavia, hesides Tn this instance the symptoms did |}, ©mn Enthon in Toronto, not develop for seven years Ray- mond Berry, Newark attorney cm- ployed by the plaintiffs, then at- tempted to enjoin the Radium corporation from employing the statute of limitations. There has heen one hearing on that injunc- tion, m month ago. Then the case was continued to September 28, be- | cause of a crowded docket. At the one hearing several phys cians testificd that the five plains tifts were dying. that nothing could he done for them, that their bones were being eaten away and that probably within a year their bodies would be so devastated that they wonld no longer have the insistence to live. Docket “Too Crowded” Vice-Chancellor Backes, who granted the postponement, Was as- tounded at the helplessness of ence to save the women, but maid the docket was so crowded that he could not put the case ahead of September. According to Berry, 15 of the 70 women who worked with his clients between 1917 and 1920 already have died of radium poisoning. The damage suit by which Berry hopes to gain redress sccks a cash sottlement, of $250,000 for each of the five women “to comfort and maintain them in the last days of their live 250 watches s company New o Haven dot and dash craftinanship of the telegraph- (g ended for B Dexter Hubbard, S0, who for three score years w ed the wire” and many news items includ Sofia, Bulgaria — Two professors make them luminous. b T owants < quic that a n Peter " iteh Many New York - all o ban eczoma and o bl niment pimples, es, axo. Thompsonville — Day's excursion to New York ends in death of Mrs, Steven Peter Akias, Springtield, who' died on a train before medical aid could be reached. bites as Peterson's Oin Rome — Another Juliug Cacsar {has met with disaster in the Eternal | | City. Giulio Cesarc was a poor fourth | Southington in a turf fixture | hottle which Mrs, Frances Donalow- | - ski and Mrs, Alice P. Helm. mothers | New York — The Bible has been |of familics, sat and drank alonc |, woman writes: t helps control u n the State woman writes I can find +inthe only zema,” Waslington an Tt is the only that will cure The contents of a i nt any drug store-a box for Plan American Trust For Oxford University New York, May 14 (UP) An American trust fund for Oxford univetsity {8 being planned by sev. eral hundred Amcrican Rhodes #cholars. The amount of the fund and its purpose will be decided June 18 by &n American committee meeting with Oxford officials at the: Harvard club. The leaders in the movement are Franklin F. Russell, attorney; Henry A. Moe and Carroll A. Wil- son, all former Rhodes scholars. The fund may be used for any one of a number of purposes, sup- plementing the Cecil Rhodes fund for bringing forcign students to Ox- ford or for endowment fo rresearch. About 550,000 ads have heen printed in the Herald Classified Ad columns in the past seven years. Rinse frequently — eight times a day, if nec- essary. ‘Every time you think of it! But be sure it is with Octagon Toilet Soap— so mild and pute its cleansing, that it alone is safe to use that many times. The special lather lifts away all dirt and soothes your skin. Do try Octagon Toilet Soap—then lift up your hands—so cool and fresh, so faintly fragrant will they be, so soft and exquisite, that never will their beauty have seemed so real, so fascinating ! ow do they do it, these modern South- ern gitls who live such busy lives yet keep their hands so lovely? ‘The way is easy for sll who have 2 not- mal skin— for lovely women all have nat- urally & skin that's soft and lustrous, fine a3 silk. The only enemy is dirt. The con- stant soiling of household tasks, and oh, how tightly this greasy dirt can cling ! Don't wait till night to cleanse your hands. Don't let dust and dirt work in all day. Far bétter than special treatments with costly medicated soaps is the way that Southern women, wise in matters of beauty, fiese discovered. This method is frequent tinsing, all through the day, with the mild cleansing lather of Octagon Toilet Sosp. A special soap for pretty hands How to tell a real good soap Some soaps form 2 “skin” when you are half way through the cake. Other soaps get soft and mushy. But Octagon Toilet Soap is the same all the way through, generous inall waters with its clean, sbundant lather, yet firm to the end of the cake. THERE §s nothing that has ever taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi- cians wouldn’t use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several mil- lion users would have turned to some- | for [ ways than o MONDAY, MAY 14, 1928, New Haven — Insane manm runs| amuck in Grace hospital cor'“ws}MARINES FINAL[Y ! after sclf-inflicted wound with {1187 shears and an attempt at suicide by gas fails. AT [4 IJJZ MINE Boston—Iorest and brush fires re- g b ‘ ported in numerous places but cen- —— tering in Worcester county caus2 heavy damag Concord, N. H.—Blq 000 damage to d trial property in Last Concord be- fore being brought under control. Rebels Have Fled —_— Assume Control in Nicaragua;j Managua, Nicaragua, May 14 (P After onc of the most difficult trips probably cver recorded in the his- tory of the marine corps, American marincs today were at the American owned La Luz mine, recently raided and damaged by rebels. The insur- gents flcd the marines ar- rived. The marincs sent no word to headquarters of having learned any- thing of the whereabouts of George B. Marshall of New York, assistant manager of the mine, who has been 2| MISSINE since the rebel raid, It believed that with the marines in control an effort would be made by the mine owners to re- open it Tt 100k the marines several days to pole their boa swift and treacherous Prinzpolka river. The | swift current forced them to aban- don their oars With the political campaign connection with the national clec- tions become more intense, the ma- vines alsko established patrols in sev- cral ecities, aloons and amusement places in nada are being closed promptly At 10 o'clock at night by a marine Rutland, Vt—Snow pgrted in Ea squalls re- Wallingford district. One man wrned Body of sccond ruins. Brother of identi- 1 third member of for intoxication, Norton, Mas: to death in sh sought in fied victim party arrested befor shears means a rigus, Connecticu g lege freshman should be a fi barber. I capturing three ; third and a fourth place in a sheeps| shearing contest, he besides won the | state championship, was Bridzcport- John M. Trumbull besides bring an aviation | lover is also somewhat of a gun to-| ter. Tn a trapshoot contest the high | awards were a little above his abil- ity but 40 out of a possible 50 in the doubles and 126 out of a possible 130 in the sinzles is some shooting | an zovernor | Governor in aviator is Serviee vodueed | in in more Herald Classitied Ads, PLAN TO EXHUME \Parents Will Endeavor to Learn! [girl's parents began to place { girl nine years ago. atrol established there and the MERCERIZED COTTON 11c spools NEW BRITAIN’S marinc commander has reccived | wany letters from prominent eiti- zens congratulating him on keeping order. ic poisoned Ruth Little, sister of his wife in 1919 «t Summittvitle, Ind., and that he also poisoned James L. Carroll, 18 year old brother-in-law {of his present wife in Los Angeles three years ago. Los Augeles authorities were in- clined to helieve Hooven was suffer- |ing from delusions due to shellshock qYEAR []ln B["]Y and five wounds received during the World War. —— HOTEL MAN DIES Burlington, Vt. May 14 OM— | Frank B. Follett of Wells River, Vermont hotel man, died a his home last night at the age ot 67. He was proprictor of Halc's Tavern at Wells river, Fate of Daughter Alexandria Ind May Plans for the exhumation body of Ituth Little, 17 y daughter of Mr. and Mrs Little, were hegun today 14 P— =2 No Morfe Piles | some | credence in story told by Ja Hooven, alias Huff, held in a j Los Angeles, that he poison | Hooven was & | brother-in-law of the girl. | e The parcnts first placed no | knife credence in Hooven's story as doc- | from ! fors at the time of the girl's sudden |vou death said she died of acute indigos tion. Sheriff Frauk Danicl of M son county said plans for the exh mation of the girl's hody would go forward but that ne definite action would he made until he hears fur Thousands Bless Dr. Leonhardt, the Specialist. Who Discovered This Common Sensc Remedy yo that th the surgeon's method of escape ¥ of piles, it's because haven't heard of the internal treatment known as Dr. Leonhardt's li- | HEM-ROID, J. 8. Leonhardt t at worl 0 1o find a real internal remedy for piles, He He named this pre- ther from Los Angeles authoritics, scription HEM-ROLD, and tricd it in The girl's parents also asked that | 1000 ¢ hefore he was satisticd the body of the five months old son Now HEM-ROID is sold by dr of Mrs. Blanche Musick, who for- |gists cverywhere with money ha merly was Hooven's wife, he It is casy to fake, and humed and an autopsy performed will gladly refund The boy died coon after the girl 1o any dissatisfiod Hooven in Los Angeles confessed at anly M some D., a special- s W ex- | guarar Vair Drog Dept the purchase price customer. OW ON SALE! BASTING COTTON PPING CENTER. - 2w 9c ASH YOUR FACTORY PAY CHECKS HERE 1,374 Yds. Figured Rayons Tn checks, stripes and figured effects; 36 inches wide. The kind that sells for 69c. May Sale Special . yard 49(: 1,413 Yds. - Rayons and Mopack Silk Figured and, plain; 36 inches wide. for 89c. May Sale Special ............. Always sold . yard 690 Plain Colored Silk 36 inches wide Value to $1.98 May Sale Special 69c Figured Silk Crepes 10 inches wide, in beautiful floral patterns. A regular $1.98 seller. regular seller. ki sl.zs May Sale Special .. .. All Silk Crepe De Chine 10 inches wide White and 28 new spring shades. Sold up to $1.49. May Sale Special and sumner Fancy Shirtings 32 inches wide Satin Stripe Effect 19¢ grade thing else. But get real Bayer Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on box, and the word gewsine printed i And Octagon Toilet Soap is big, heavy, full measure—a// solid soap. An extra week in every cake. Order Octagon Toilet Soap. Be fair. Get two cakes. For normal, pretty hands—this pure white soap. Try Octagon Toilet Soap for your hands. Not once or twice & day. Not night and morning. To care for homes means soiling hands so many many times each day that skins need far more frequent cleansing. AT YOUR DEALER'S - NEVER MORE THAN 10c Colgate & Co., Jersey City, N. J., Depc. 000 Plessc send me FREE a wrial cake of Octagon Toilet Sosp. FREE—A trisl cake with our compliments. SPECIAL 1 35¢ yard /2 Fancy Crepe Materials 36 inches with beautiful colors. Just the thing for hot weather. Value to 98c. May Sale 49 c l Here’s Where You Save! 651 Yds. Fancy White Goods 36 inches wide, in Crepes and Satins Some sold up to $2.50 yard Wash Goods Remnants Thousands of Yards To Close Out At May Sale of New Wash Fabrics Starts Tuesday, May 15-—Ends Saturday, May 19 Thousands of Yards of New Wash Fabrics To Be Sold At Extra Cash Savings Organdies, Dimity and Charmeuse Dainty flowered desi Always sold up to 69 May Sale Special gns in assorted colorings. i per yard.27c 36 and 40 Inch Sport Satin In white, tan, black, rose and blue. Alw- for $1.98. May Sale Special ........... ) 36 inches wide brocaded designs May Sale Special 39c Silk Georgette Crepes 10 inches wide. In a full line of colors. Our regular $1.39 grade. $1 19 . May Sale Special All Silk Flat Crepe 10 inches wide and washable. White and new shades. Value $1.75. May Sale Special ... .... 0o Figured Prints 36 inches wide Assorted Floral Designs 29c grade SPECIAL l GC yard Dress Gingham and Devonshire Cloth In stripe effect. Sold up to 39¢ yard. All pretty colorings. May Sale Special ...... yard 18C Price

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