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3 The emaw falf I8 m {necticut river channels below Hart- declined to kwe the exact valuation the burglary was not discovercd un- | parties in governmental affairs sines n glon cuuped a delay in rall l P H“PE F ford, the annual War Department BURM‘ARS MAKE of the stolen jpwelry but said it was til about 10 o'clock. Constable Ar- the break following the shooting of municatiop between Paris supply bill was reported yesterday -Mh oant. umm M |u to the house of representatives from While Van Schnick and his wife, [summoncd and started an investiga- | peasant party ‘leaders in the parlias cold wave would continue fer sever- the house appropriations commit- son and daughter were in the dining tion. \ | ment last July. al days tee. room about 7 @'clock, the burglars e i ¢ Major G window on thé front of the house ly allocated by Major General Ed- “ l(h Polmcal Rivals Raps Gavel With Effect NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY ¢4, 1929- valued at abolt at least $7,000. thur J. Bennett of Fairtield was Stefan Ragditth and several other Thia sum {8 the amount tentative- raised a ladder to a second #tory Aleyander Will Confer Curtis, in Senate Chair Marks o lliuu 70|| Willimantie, Jan. 3 (P—Marks found on the body of Mrs. Romria Lorella in & resm adjoining the Ritchen where gag jets on & was range were found open, led gutheri- ties last night to belleve the woman met doath by foul play rather than asph, tion. The bedy was fouad in home of Mrs. Thomas Mas- wola, her daughter, where the aged woman had gone to do housawork, ‘What apparently appeared to pe- fice as finger marks were dissloved én the right aide of the woman's throst and one eye was discolored. Other marks which lead police to think the woman met death by foul means wers bloodstains beneath her ¥inger nails and & head towel found on the floor beside the cot where she lay with bloed prints. 7 Dr. Charles A. Jenkins aftcs ey- Smination declared the woman had been dead three hours before she discovered by her daughter at ‘clock. An inhalstor was used in effort to resuscitate her. Medical Examiner Louis 1. Mason satd that the cause of death was uncertain and was a case for the coroner to tpvestigate. * Later in the day County Coroner @. Bill of Danielson conterred with focal police at the Maszoia ipart- ment and stated that a blood test oxpert from New Haven will arrive ‘this morning to make an examinu. tion of the stains found. An autopsy will then be performed. The daughter of the woman told police that her mether had been living alone, since the death of her husband several years ago and had often come to her home while she was away working to do house cleaning. She stated that her mother would prepare a meal for the fam- fly and would make coffec some times for herself, . The coffee pot was on the range boiling with the room filled with gas, when the dis- covery was made. FORD WOULD BUILD tion of war, in a satement aaid that oranization would welcome an im- 4 partial investigation into 3 Proposed fo Double Powor Plant Gapacity by 83,500,630 Project Detroit, Jan. 4 (M—A proposal for construction of a 12,000 foot water supply tunnel from the De- troit river to the Fordson plant of the Ford Motor company at a cost of approximately’ $2.500,000 was submitted to the Detroit city conn. cll yesterday by Ford company en- gineers. The tunnel would permit doubling the capacity of the factory's electri- eal power plant. Consumption of water by the Ford plant would be increased, with com pletion of the two and one-half mile bore, from 600,000,000 gallons daily to one billion galions, more than twice the amount used by the en- tire city of Detroit. Title to the tunnel fould be vest- ed in the city, but the cost of its construction would be horne by the Ford company. The city council is expected to act on the proposal Tuesday. HEAYY SNOW IN PRANCE Paris Alone Escapes Storm—White Sheet Covers Even Biarritz Where Fall {3 Almost Unknown. MANY: DOCTORS HAVE NO LICENSES Nomber 0 Illldlllttl Piaced at Aboat 1,500 Boston, Jan. § M—Dr. Charles P. Sylvester, chairman of the state board ' of registration in medicine, said last night that there were about 1,600 unlicensed or illegally licensed physicians in the state of Massschu- setts, His statement followed a declaration made here yesterday by Dr. Harold Rypins, secretary of the New York board of examiners, thay one out of every five parsens prac- ticing medicine’ In this state is & “quack,” DP. Sylvester said, “some of these unlicensed illegally licensed cured had they gone to repfitable physicians. This condition has e isted for many years and is worse today than it ever was because the quacke are being barred by law in other states and are coming inte Massachusetts, where the law does not enable the state bosrd properly to check up en doctors.” Dr. Sylvester called attention to a bill ‘now In preparation which would provide for annual registra- tion of Massachusetts physiclans at a fee of $2. The fees, Dr. Sylvester said, would enable the board to keep & closer watch on unlicepsed prac- titioners. HINTS SHIP BUILDERS WANT BIG CRUISER BILL Libby Intimates They Are Lobbying to Have Construction in Private Yards. Washington, Jan. ¢.—(M—Freder- ick J. Libby, executive secretary of the national council for the preven- agencies working for and af ‘kollon' treaty and the na bin. Mr. Libby disclesed such pn in-| vestigption would “threw interesting light on the activities of the Nation- | al Councll of American Shipbuilders, both in their efforts to get the cruls- er bill passed and in their determin- ation to have none of these ships built in gevernment yards." He also said that “the method of using afdd financing _the mo-called patriotic organization activities in support of the cruiser bill may throw interesting light on a situation if such a practice exis Handbag Snatchers perate From Auto Boston, nn ¢ M—The autome- bile handbag thicves who have a peared in several sections of Boston recently operwted last night in Rex- bury where in rapid succession and within a few streets of each other they held up and robbed three women. In each case the victim reported a brown sedan driving alongside the crub and while one man remained ut the wheel, a second juraped from the car to snatch her bag. The women and their losses were: Goldie Stern, $135 in cash and two rings valued at $500; Regina Isaacs, 60 cents, and Anna Asronowitch. $5.50. La Crosse District Attorney Recommends Pardon for Man La Crosse, Wis, Jan. 3 (M—Dlis- trict Attorney Lawrence Brody to- day indicated that he apparently has given up hope of convieting Mrs. Helen Blesen Bartovick of the slaying of her husband Nick Biesen. Mr. Body conducted a review ot the case following the plea for a pardon by John Beier, now serving a life term in the state prison at Waupun for Blesen's murder In 1920, Mr. Body, returning from a con- ference with Gov. Fred R. Zimmer- man addressed 3 communciation to Col. J. L. Johns, the governor's secretary in which he sald: “The statute of limitations of al criminal offenses except muTder ia° aix years or less. We believe 1t would be impossible to get a convie- tion as accessory after the fact. “Beler says he fired a shot thas struck Biesen in the forehead; thae he fell backward and lay motionless for two minutes during which Mra. Biesen came in, handed him a shot gun and said, ‘Shoot him again.’ “It is probable Biesen wag actual- ly dead or near death when the sec- ond shot was fired. If so, the mur- der had already been committed when the woman handed Beler the shotgun, It seems for this reason to be impossible to convict her as accessory.” Mr., Brody, however, reiterated that he favored a pardon for Beler. New French Uniforms Make Fat Troops Slim Paris, Jan. 4. M—French generals are to be made to appear as slim as possible, Thelr new uniformy will be designed with a fat-reducing effect, po far as the eye is con- cerned. The horizon blue they wear now is considered as accentuating the portlines that adorns quite a few of the 240 generals who are sup- posed to be models for the smare young lleutenants and good adver- tising for the army. That is only one aspect of the uniform problem. Others quite important, are cost and appearance. Will Spend $60,000 On Conn. River Channels By GEORGE H. MANNING (“ ashington Correspondent, N. B. Herald) ‘Washingten, D. C., Jan. 4—Carry- ing $60,000 for maintenance of Con- nasty days —wet feet make a cold complete! Drive it away by apply- ing Baume Bengué! 'NEUEVES ACHES & PAING gar Jadwin, chief of army engineers, Solltllport HOII]C Eflm Whlle‘:ii'..:‘.‘lé'“bi“"?.':“ :1 dvhs \:,::r:od"'.l | (from the $50,000,000 lump sum ap- | propriation the bill carries for rivers and harbors work. Of that amount $15,000 would be used for dredging river bars, $36, 000 for dredging the outer bar, § 000 for repairs to permanent works and $6,000 for administration, in- apection and contingencies. Naphthalene worked into the gar- | den soil in the production of one | ounce to the square yard is a pro- | tection against destructive moth | larvae. thousand dollars worth of jewelry ' were stolen by professional second-|case was stolen. story burglars last night. from the | residence of | Schnick. s —_— Jewelry case ‘containing & many diamond rings, diamiond pins, Bridgeport, Jan. 4 (P—Several|pearl necklaces, watches and other jewelry, Everything in the jewelry ur P. Van Schnick, | taken found a Some, articles of jewelry were from the chiffonier in the Sasco Hill RoM¥, Southport, while same room. None of the other rooms members of the family were at din- ner on the ground floor. Mr. Van| Schnick, who ia sales manager of turbed by the intruders. !the American Chain company with an office in the Bridgcport plant, | Scynick family heard any noise and SHOP AT HERRUP'S in the upper part of the house ap peared to have been forced or dis- None of the members of the Van ar lrnrluh«\\hh sult with King Alexander regarding e settlement of the crisis resuiting » cabinet Same ather Anlou Korashetz. o expected to arrive in the 4—P | washiogton, Jan.. 4 UP—The sen» lv ader of A democratic party :, president methods of its future presiding offi- rty, have sgerday when Senator Curtis of al of the ate was given an illustration of the the vice president-eleet, took chair in the absence of Vice ident Dawcs. When several tors started to speak at the time, the vice president-elect enforced the rules with a voice carrying a definite tone of authority. Roller skates were first patented the first official par- by Merlin, a Flemish musical instru- opposition | nent manufacturer, in 1760, HUNl)REDS OF BARGAINS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Oak Bed Davenports $42 Bedroom Rackers .$3.95 Chaise Lounge ..$19.95 0dd Wood Beds . . .$9.95 0dd China Cabinets . Kitchen Cabinéts, $19 95 Odd Dressing Tables .. . $19.50 ..$14.95 0dd Wardrabes . .$14.95 0dd Dressers . ....$9.95 Chiffoniers .......$5.95 Unfinished Chairs, $1.00 each Kitchen Ladders.. . .49 Unfinished Table and . Four Chairs . ...$9.95 Martha Washington Sewing Cabinets $13.95 Priscilla Cabinets .$3.95 Radio Benches . .....$1.95 Pier Cabinets . ....$6.95 Windsor Chairs . ..$4.95 Butterfly Tables, Maple Finish . .$13.75 Governor Winthrop Desks .........$49.50 Cpal Ranges ....$39.00 Cabinet Gas Range b Comb. Range ... .898.00 Parlor Heaters ..$12.95 Congoleum Rugs. .$3.95 Refrigerators ....$17.50 At the Corner of Main and Morgan Sts., Hartford "JUST A FEW-LOOK THESE OVER! FLOOR SAMPLE LIVING RO()M SUITES You must come in and see the generous assortment of beautiful 3 Pieces iiving room suites that wefare going to put on sale tomorrow morn- ing. There are some in velours—a few in jacquards—and we have arranged that you may purchase your living room sulte on the easiest of payment plans. Shop at Herrup's tomorrow. ire at the corner of Main and Morgan streets. Remomber, we $39 $1.50 Weekly FLOOR SAMPLE BEDROOM SUITES Metal Beds ..... ... $6.75 5 Do you feel comfortable in your bedroom? Why not select one 3 Piece! >t our many new designs and arrange to make your bedrqom a ¢o: Bed Springs .......$3.95 ivable room. There are a limited few three-piece suites, including $1.50 Weekly Paris, Jan. ¢ P—It was snowing &imost everywhere in France today, except: in- Paris, and- nowhere was there a- greater fall than in thé sun- ny south. Even Blarritz saw snow, ||| 300 MAIN ST. which s extremely rare there. A Marsellles, Toulon gnd in all that re. | gion snow has been falling steadily for 48 hours. Dispatches from points along the Riviera said that the sea had been stirred up by a gale which had dene | a certain amount of damage. At Cannes the sea-front was strewn with wreckage. The WILLET CORSET SHOP Second Floor Take Elevator Leonard Bldg. Day Beds, Comp. . $15.50 Ued, Dresser and Chest of Drawers without the top-deck compart- Scatter Rugs, 27x54 meats. Tieso three-piece auites will sell omorrow at §08. 1t sou esire to include the Vanity—all four pieces will be snld at $139. inc"es BB winins '51'95 Remember—Herrup's—at the corner of Main and Morgan streets, Ingraham Mantel Clocks ........$12.95 Fern Stands ......$1.00 Framed Pictures. . . .49¢ Floor Lamps, Com- . plete ...........$5.95 Mahogany Candle Hold- ers..........29c pair Ta%le Lamps, Com- plete ...........53.95 Metal Smokers . .....79¢ ColowA End Ta%les §1.95 Wall Tapestries .. .$9.95 Bridge Lamp Shades, Parchment Finish, 49¢ Genera) Electric Vac- SPECIAL SALE SATURDAY! BRASSIERES to be sold Saturday s oo We Fit Your Figure to the Right Model. Regulars $5.00 to $8.00. Regular $1.25 to $1.50 ‘ INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO EACH FITTING. . SHOP UPSTAIRS AND BUY FOR LESS EATONS k. 300 MAIN ST 2D FLOOR (New Leona;d Bldg.) At Actual SaV'”QS 0 uum Cleaners .. $24.50 ‘FLOOR SAMPLE l)[NING '{()OM SUITES Only a few of them are to be had. Eight pieces, including Buf- 8 Pieces et, Table and a set of six chairs, at only $110. We have a few de- signs and qualities for chair coverings which will please you. Come $2.00 Weekly Elec. Percolators . .$5.95 Telephone Stand with Bench ..........$4.95 31-Pc. Dinner Set .$3.95 n and see them. Price them. Buy them now, as you wiil rarely see such splendid values. Remember—Herrup's—at the corner of Main and Morgan streets. V4o HARTFORID’S GREATEST CREDIT FURNITURE STORE HERRILIPS {‘ofner Main and Morgan Streeu Open Saturday Night: PHONE 2-7922 FOR AN EVENING APPOINTMENT