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VAR DEAD TRIBUTE ON MEMORIAL DAY (Continued from First Page) coperation of the Spanish War vet- erans and the World War veterans and the Sons of Veterans and their auziliaries and the Daughters of Vet- erans and the Women's Relief Corps for all their kind assistance in all of our plans. “Captain Alfred H. Griswold of the Spanish War veterans having been appeinted marshal for Me- morial day, all those participating in the Memerial Day parade will be governed by his instructions. “Past Department Commander Harry C. Jackson of the American Legion has been appointed chairman of the various committees and all committees will report to him. “Committees of the Sons of Vet- erans will decorate the graves of our comrades, Wednesday afternoon, May the 29th: Fairview cemetery and Catholic cemetery, W. F. Stern- berg, honorary chairman; Newing- ton cemetery, decorated by the American Legion. “George H. Wells of the Sons of Veterans will furnish automobiles for the Veterans and the Sons will ride with them, “8. H. WOCD, “Commander.” Memorial Service A memorial service will be held at the South Congregational church on Sunday, May 26, at 10:30 o'clock which the following organizations are invited to attend: Stanley Post, G. A. R.; A. G. Hammond Camp, U. .: Eddy-Glover post, Ameri- can Legion; Stanley Woman's Relief . Penfield Camp, Sons of Patriotic Order Sons of he auxiliaries of the Span- ish War, American Legion and Sons of Veterans, the Daughters of Union Veterans and all units of the Na- tional Guard. Mothers and Daughters To Banquet at Church The mothers and daughters of the Bouth Congregational church will hold their first annual banquet this evening. Dinner will be served at 6:15 o'clock under the direction of Mrs. William F, Bentley. Sixtecn young men of the church will assist her. The presiding officer for the evening i3 Mrs. E. B. Proudman, president- of the Parent-Teacher league. The program includes spe- cial songs appropriate to the occa- sion to be sung by all, a violin solo by Frances 8allee, poem toasts by a mother and a daughter, Rev, Dr, George W. C. Hill will speak in recognition of the inaugur- ation of the occasion as an annual event. The main feature of the eve- ning is an hour's program of read- ings and character impersonations by Miss Nan Lagerstadt of Boston. Miss Lagerstadt is exceptionally pieasing in her presentations. Nearly two hundred are expected. g Doyle Stresses Mayor’s Words on Unemployment The annual report of John L. Doyle, superintendent of charity, re- iterates the atatement mede by Mayor Paonessa in his annual mes- sage, that assistance must be given unskilled workers in providing for themselves and their dependents. Unskilled men have caused great drain on the public welfare depart- ment in the past year, the superin- tendent reports, but in spite of this fact it has been possible to return a small balance of the $91,382.50 ap- propriation made to the department. As suggested by the mayor at last week's council meeting, Superinten- dent Doyle urges execution of pro- grams for public works during per- fods when work is slack in factories. ‘The ocean contains enough suit to form a solid block measuring 4,- £00,000 cubic miles, n your ' Children Cry for It Mothers, who take one simple REPORTERS BARRED BY SENATE ACTION (Continued from First Page) son of California on the senate floor late yesterday. LaFollette nullified it by barring representatives of other preas associations from the floor, 80 that now no newspapermen are per- mitted on the floor for the first time in many decades. . ‘The Wisconsin senator called at- tention to the senate rule which does not permit newspapermen to be ad- mitted to the senate floor and upon his objection Fraser Edwards, the capitol correspondent of Universal Service, was ordered byVice Presi- dent Curtis to leaye the chamber. Curtis upheld LaFolette's interpre- tation of the rule. “The United Press - violated no newspaper ethics and no rule of the senate is binding upon it in obtain- ing a legitimate piece of informa- tion and printing it,” LaFollette told the senate. Newsmen Not Under Oath “No -newspaperman is required to take an oath to observe the rules of the senate. He discharges his duty if he honestly and fairly reports the facts concerning the public business. “No one can contend Mr. Mallon did not conduct himself as an ethi- cal newspaperman should conduct himself. The rules committee has no right either to expand or to curtail the privileges of the floor as defined in the rules themselves. As I under- stand it. the committee has taken a disciplinary measure against the correspondent, who violated no rule of the senate and no rule of news- paper ethics.” Johnson Condemns Action Johnson was equally vehement, pointing out that every newspaper carries information concerning ex- ecutive sessions and that the only “crime” now appeared to be that a complete roll call was given out. He said: “] want to express my vigorous dissent from the action which has been taken by the rules committee in barring the United Press Associ- LAMITATION OF CLAIMS At & Court of Probate holden at New Britain, within and for the District of Berlin in the County of Hartford and State of Connecticut, on the 22nd day of May, A. D. 1 Present, Bernard F. Gaffney, Esq. Judge. On motion of LeRoy Cameron of Yalesville, town of Wallingford, as Ad- ministrator on the Estate of Jacob Cam- eron, Iate of New Britain within said district decensed. This Court doth decree that six months be allowed and limited for the creditors of sald estate to exhibit their claims against the same to the Adminis- trator and directs that public notice be given of this order by advertising in & newspaper published in said New Brit- ain, and having a circulation in maid district, and by posting a copy thereof on the public sign post in said Town of New Britain nearest the place where the deceamed last dwelt. Certified from BERNARD F. GA LIMITATION At = Court of e holden at New Britain within and for the District of Berlin, in the County of Hartford and State of Connecticut, on the 22nd day of May, A. D. 1929, Present, Beruard F. Gaffuey, Esa. Judge. On motion of Btockert of said New Rritain as Executrix of the last will and_testament of Carl Bt ert, late of New Britain, within said district deceased. This Coury doth decree that six months be allowed and limited for the | creditors of said estate to exhibit their | rlaims againat the same to the Execu- trix and directs that public notice be given of this order by advertising in a rewspaper published in said New Brit- ain and having a circulation in waid district and by posting & copy thereof on the public sign post in said town of New Britain nearest the place where the deceased last dwelt and return make. Certified from Record. BERNARD F. GAFFNEY, Judge. A &t YA LT s i T ation from the fioor. I do not recog- nize the right of the senate to bar the United Press while other news agencies are permitted it. And I do not recognize the right of the chair- man of the committee on rules (Sen- ator Moses, republican, New Hamp- shire) to indulge in any such action or any such discrimination as - be- tween the various news agencies. “If the wrong is in publishing what transpired in executive session, summon all the newspaper corre- spondents who are in the senate gal- lery in regard to accounts whici they have published of executive sessions, “If the heinousness consists In the publication of the roll call wherein is the logic to say that, and that alone, may make publica- tion worse and more reprehensible tHan the publication of the facts themselves?” No member of the rules commit- tee attempted to answer either La Follette or Johnson. Senate Keenly Interested The senate is manifesting keen interest in the situation, not only be- cause senators are under suspicion for having given out the informa- tion and are liable to expulsion for 80 doing, but also because of the strenuous fight now in progress to amend the archaic rule which pro- vides for secret sessions. 'Three amendments now are pending be- fore the senate, proposing to modify or eliminate entirely the old secrecy rule. Authors of two of them, Senators Jones of Washington and Black of Alabama have served no- tice they intend to seek a vote of the senate on the question as soon as the pending reapportionment biil is out of the way, probably tomor- row or Saturday. On many previous |there occasions similar amendments have been introduced but they have al- ways been referred to the rules committee where they went without benefit of a hearing. A protest also ‘may be made against subpoenaing Mallon into an executive seasion’ of the rules com- mittee. Some senators have indi- cated they would call the senate’s attention to the fact that the com- mittee wants to hear Mallon in se- cre, and seek to have the commit- tee doors thrown open. Pressmen in Gallery ‘Washington, May 23 UM—In bar- ring representatives of press asso- ciations from the privilege of going on the floor of the senate because of a purported roll call printed by the United Press association and described as inaccurate the senate did not prohibit them from work- ing in their regularly assigned places in the press gallery. The gallery reserved for the press is directly over the chair of the vice president and faces all of the senators. The privilege of visit- ing the floor is said to have been extended in order that newspaper- men might enter the chamber and thus avoid having to call senators outside to ask them various ques- tions. Like “Gay Nineties" ‘Washington, May 23 (UP) — George Rothwell Brown in his front-page column in the Washing- ton Post recalled today an incident of the early nineties of which he was reminded by expulsion of Paul R. Mallon from the senate floor. Brown's comment follows: “Back in the early nineties—and hasn't been a case since— RrSpPoNSIBILITY. w;mhhnmawhwn“ obligation to the public in this community and this obligation we accept a8 & public trust. _This re- sponalbllity 10 you is three-fold: And it must be Satisfactory’ Your point of view is the one which we must con- sider —not ours. You want 24 hour service; you ’ o« P S2 s2 s B2 o2 S 8. Goop HARDWARE SINCE 3 ® s w1 w3 B3 W3R, €~ INSECTICIDES AND FUNGICIDES JFmough to make every bug in New Britain have HAND, PUMP SPRAYERS Lverything You Need to Start Spraying very uncom- time during the next few weeks. Every favorite beand and kind. Each sure death to bugs You don’t ron into so many film-flam games today as you did years ago. watches pretty close and people are getting more wary 1 guess ‘The government ...but anyway our ad this week BORDEAUX and features insecticides and it of brings to mind that schemer LEAD, i PARIS GREEN, “BLACK LEAF out west who had a sure potato bug killer. Killed potato bugs ‘“deader than a doornail.” There 40" was nothing lke it on the mar- One “treatment” and ... HELLEBORE, ket. DRY LIME SUL- PHUR, WHITE LIME ROCK well, there just weren't anymore potato bugs and I you would send a dollar you could get this wonderful exterminator. It would esterminate hundreds of AND AUTO VIGORO for the lLawn Rarrier’s Plant Food, Aroadian Sulphate Am- monia. Shecp Manure Bone Meal in airtight odorless cans- | Crow Repelent. You can't do better than buy & Super-Great AMERICAN LAWN MOWER with the 5-knife blade. See Them. bugs, thousands of bugs, mil- lions and billions and trillions of bugs—all for a dollar, Why that fellow must have made a million dollars. The only trouble was that when his cus- tomers received two nicely cut and planned blocks of wood, with the instructions to take the bug and place it on one block and give it a resounding smack with the other. Why they for- got that the people like to be 4 N Johnny 8hriver, then correspondent ! sugar-scandal story he for contempt. and indicted him. then a deputy went to live with |case him at his hotel (there were gen-|later, tlemen in the ‘good old days’) and |discovered the writ of habeas cor- |tion Johnny threw a celebrated wet (pus, and Judge Andrew Bradley served for posterit YOUR APRON IS THE WHITEST WHITE I'VE EVER SEEN, MR SCHMIDT. WHAT'S THE SECRET ? ONE WEEK LATER NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1929, Johmny meanwhile MY WIFE USES A WONDERFUL NEW SOAP, RINSO. ASK HER ABOUT IT would not BOILING ? party which everybody in'ordered a directed verdict of mot of the New York Mail and Express, |town attended and a pleasant timeilumy‘ and thus the farce ended. refused to reveal the source of a|was had by aH, including the dep- printed | uty marshal. | “The correspondents barred from Somebody left the the floor of the senate may con- when the Wilson-Gorman bill was|door open, and Johnny began yell- |gole themselves with the reflection under consideration, so they haled |ing, ‘I'm liable to escape, I'm liable |tnat t him before the bar of the senate|to escape. Shut that door!’ “So they shut the door. and lock- |tional Intelligencer—and incidental- ] and the marshal arrested him—and |ed him in good—and finally thely, if they hadn't beem there the|Of Mr. and Mrs. Lowe, whe trial—three years|day Webster made his celebrated |saved the One having |reply to Hayne that immortal ora. |burned to death in the coep. e been .-AND YOU SAY RINSO WASHES CLOTHES WHITER WITHOUT SCRUBBING OR EVEN same thing once happened | turkey which remained en & oot to Gales and Seaton of the old Na- | hatching egzs in an adjeining was rescued by the 10 year old egge. The fire department |an alarm from Box ¢¢ at pre- YES! THE SUDS ARE SO THICK THE DIRT FLOATS OFF BY ITSELF $28228 Rt YES, MRS. SCHMIDT, | TOOK YOUR ADVICE AND TRIED RINSO. SEE WHAT A NICE WHITE WASH | HAVE. WHITEST EVER ! RINSO MAKES DISH= WASHING EASIER,TOO. 1 USE IT FOR ALL CLEANING ....IT's 50 ECONOMICAL Ri THE CRANULATED SOAP in tub or washer (Thousands write us letters like this) “Easy on clothes and hands” says 8 1 laughed, when hch{li::: iozl‘ud out dirt and saved Now I'll never ¢ soaps again. o back to old- Mrs. Mae Jennings, 365 Charch Street a neighbor told me scrubbing. fashioned al—the clothes “‘Why, Rinso is almost magic rem! 80 easy soak whiter than 1 could ever sc:luh on the clothes—and on my hands, : ““And how economical Rinso is! Sl i nd all cleaning. | d'i‘;‘re'?-. MAE JENNINGS. 365 Church 3tree fast much longer nowW et soak out the dirt, clothes d threadbare any more. washers recomm d for safety. IU's s0 lated—one cupful k, than two cup- Two sizes— With Rinso ;%e rul d nesl"ih(: :Iezkfrl of 36 leading Rinso for whiter washes an : economical,too. Compact,gran ! gives more suds, does more wow. fuls of lightweight, puffed-up ‘:u e most women buy the BIG package. makers of LUX—Lever Beothors MANNING BROTHERS 211 MAIN STREET . Announce a Sale of STYLISH too! | 1 use it for t, New Britain. Conn. don’t Co., Cambridgn Mass: Whiter clothes...eas/ier FOOT-CRAFT ARCH SHOES FOR WOMEN Why This Sale? To sell more Foot-Craft Arch Shoes by introducing them to new wearers — to let every woman in New Britain know and enjoy a smart shoe that is a comfort shoe as well. Who Wears Foot-Craft Arch Shoes? _Any woman who likes comfortable, stylish shoes for walking or business — women who have well feet and want to keep them well — nurses, mothers, teachers and college girls. What do Foot-Craft Arch Shoes do? They keep the foot from sagging or becoming strained. They give complete support to every part of the foot. % e Gl Mazie Patterns HIS sale is remarkable in the variety and beauty of the new arch shoes. Included are combinations of Watersnake, Mexican Lizard and Field Mouse Kid. The prices run from $5.90 to $9.90—reduc- Black kid . Trixie Pattem verer 3690 precaution, are scldom worrigd. With a bottle of Fletcher's Castoria in the house they can do what their /.. doctor would tell them to do, when baby is fretful, feverish, colicky. constipated or stuffed-up with cold —give a few drops of this puic vegetable, pleasant-tasting prepara- tion. It comforts Baby and soothcs hi mto sleep in a jifty. It's perfect- ly safe for the youngest infant. Use it freely—and as often as needed, specialists advise. A more liberal dose is all it takes to comfort and relieve older children, when fever- ishness, bad brcath, no appetite, eolds, etc.. show they need a good purging. The mark of genuine Caa- toria is the Fletcher signature on the wrapper. Look for it to avoid ! imitations. fooled and had the fellow lock- ed up f(or defrauding. Moral: People don't like to be fooled— Don't try! We don't. [ K Our “SHADY LAWN” GRASS SEED at 30c. & Ib, will grow “in the shade of the old apple tree.” CALL US—WE'LL DELIVER YOUR ORDER. Patent ...... Field Mouse kid .... $7.90 White kid ...... 90 tions from our regular prices that are very worth while, considering the fact that our regu- lar prices give a saving of from seventy-five cents to four dollars a pair in comparison with other arch shoes of the same merit. Black kid .......... $7.90 Brown kid ......... $7.90 Field Mouse kid .... $7.90 GARDEN SEED Arrives fresh each week | from Wethersficld nur- series. Be Sure to See Our Windows! Betty Pattern Snake calfskin ceees $7.90 Black Lizard ....... $7.90 3 ML W WS T e HE HANDY HARDWARE Store” I z o ta ULl G s TORIA SALE ENDS JUNE 1ST