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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1930. 1 Prohibition to Play Big Part In Elections Next Fall, With “Drys” And “Wets” In Struggle for Seats’ Closest Approach to Refer- | endum History of | Law Seen as Result —| Wets Hope to Make Each Candidate State| Views. in Washinglon, March Prohibition will play a more nt part in the coming cong lections than in any since the eight- | nth amendment was adopted, in | the opinion of political leaders here. y it has taken the leading | of Massachu- former Senator William | M. Butler, former chairman of the republican national committec just declared he stands with Presi- dent Hoover against modification. Plan to Force Stand | Preparation are being made hy wet and dry groups to force every candidate for the house and senatc on record as to prohibition and mod- | iification. Some who' have been able 10 ride through onc npaign after nother avoiding prohibition as an issue are likely ord now. The result is that the cong 1l clections this year are expected | to be as much in the nature of a rveferendum on prohibition as is| possible under the American political | system, | In every clection for the last fen vears drys have worked systematical- Iy to increase their strength in con- ess. They have seen it risc slowly until it is more than threc-fourths dry nominally. Despite the agitation of wets, dr at their highest peak in cong: A loss this year would have a de featist effect on many. It prol would be ‘reflected in a gene tempt of politicians in both parties would be reflected up for the presi- | dential campaign {wo years later. “This is why the congressional cle tions this year arc all-important. They will point the way for somc years to come, | 18 (UP)— import- ssion - Two Points Stressed Dry ctrategy, it is expected, will be based on two main objectives, first, | to convince the country that prohibi- tion, with all of its faults, has been far better than the old-time saloon: second, to convince the country that another ten years trial will provide a sounder basis for judging its mer- it=. Raymond Ttobins, Chicago ccor omist, urged this latter point before the house judiciary committee this week, Wet | ward building a feeling throughout the country that prohibition has fail- cd after a decade, that conditions arc owing worse and that prohibition re greater than its virtues. Big names those of Henry Iord, | Thomas A, Edizon, W. W. Atterbury | and Pierre Dupont will head an ex- | propaganda battle on both sides. Since a politician regards it as his | foremost bu s to win, those in both partics are cagerly watching the numerous straws now :AI\()H[‘ nothe wind. Dec that | of the Union L onal Hepublican clubs in N nfluential in the cast though in the | west republicans are more inclined 16 discount them as a product of wet New York Poll The Litera of its nation studied like clec But regardiess of st Tutions and declaration ty as a whole will take position on prohibition this year. the opinion of practically cians. Both parties hav ot and dry wings which ¢ re- | conciled durinz the coming cam- | paign. 1t will be cach candidate himself. ik tossing ions like and N York arc Arouses Interest Dige poll, ‘H\l“ vide scope will be | tion tigt v votes, 1 neither par- national in | any for | FOUR X DANCES | Wednesday and Satu thi \ce sCason Prozi way the Four X dances in in popularity with the dancc folks of New Dritain and vicinity The splendid dance music provided | by Lionel Kennedy's broadeasting bhoys and Leo oy's Hotel Clinton cavaliers is considercd the best oh-| tainable hereabouts. The Ilour | Boys, William I% Pow Josenh ant, rank E. Little and Rus sell Higgins, wish to extend a mm' cordial invitation to all to attend —————— Here's Instant Relief From Bunien Pains . and Soft Corns —soit Tiach night a on it 150 Actually Reduces the Swellf Corns Dry Rizht Up and Can Be Picked OX bottle of Moon:' strength) today ha inflammation much quicker you ever used. | swollen Get a {wo-ounce Limerald Ol (full Iivery well-stocked dr nd it will reduce the soreness, and pain thany any remedy Your bunions may be so and inflamed that you think can't go another step. Your way fecl as if they are cutting right | into the flesh. You feel sick all | over with the pain and torture and| pray for quick relicf. What's to v fone? Two or Moone's Eme st this vou | shoes three applications of | ald Oil and in fifteen | ininutes all the pain and sorcness disappears. A few more applications | ¢ roguldr intervals and the swellng| ! reduces, And as for plications each and they just up and scale It's a combination camphor and marvelous that are sold Ay Drug Dept. and zood drugglst guarantees Moone's Bmer- | ald Oil to end your foot troubl | money back. soft corns, a few ap- | night at bed _time| 1 to shrivel right | off. | wonderful formula—this of cssential oils witn | other antiseptics thousands of Lottles | every ional | 1 to be forced on rec-i ¢ |lic health | read | the | ject. T | teer | {the pa ‘\Icmondl Tablet for | Hall | is life two yea | ity | teparations, | coptanc 0| | to NEWINGTON NAMES | ZONING El]MMITTEEl ‘Ious Four Men, One Woman Appoint-| e(—Nurses’ Duties Combined ! Mg 18.—A of five zoning commission con; clected at in the mem- | | Jers was held cvenin; town mecting Junior high school’ last | Middlemas, chairman of plan commission, stated | L recent town meeting a zon- ling commission was appointed by board of sclectmen and it was | believed this hoard had the power tor| , but upon the perusal of the statutes it was found that this com- | mittec appointed could not act in a Ttobert the town that o |lezal manner. It was then formally moved that| the following persons be clected as | members of the zoning commissior Royal B, Doane for one year, E. Le Pond . for two h nmons for three year: William Holt for four years and Robert Middlemas for five years. | This motion was carried. Nurses' Duties Combined The next matter to be considered coming the duties of school nurse and visiting nurse. Harry Howard, | chairman of the | school committee, stated that he did | not know until last Wednesday that this question was to be brought up. It did not seem right to Mr. Howard | that a definite action should be taken | at this time, as the school commit- f tee had not had time to hold a meet- | ing to consider the matt Miss Brinley, chairman of the pub- association then presented a motion which was to the cffect | that the positions of school nurse| and visiting nurse be combined. This | brought considerable discussion and | the motion was finally amended to | that the town of Newinzton | cmploy but one nurse for the year | commencing September 1, 1930, and that she should take over the work hitherto performed by the school nurse and in the performance of said | sehool work, said nurse should be | under the supervision of the school board. |8 Discussion y to when the nurse the drawn up. contr nd new same then brought up as contract for school expired and at what timc nf‘ the new c were | Mr. How stated t t expired Septembel 11 ones drawn up in April at; time that the teachers’ contracts were made o “Expected” to Follow Up The question was also asked if e did ny follow-up work in the summer months. The reply was that | he was expected to. | Selectman Gilbert was then asked to express his views upon the sub- ated that he had found upon investization that' a small | town's best interest was to have one | nursc Some towns, he found, had | considerable friction where two nurses were employcd, cach feelin that the other was over-stepping her | duty, and in his opinion it was hest | that both positions be combined. The | motion was then carried. AMr. Gilbert moved that the ard and the nursi appoint a hoard of thre cach to confer and outline to obtain the bhest results, tion was carried. Fire Dept. Praised Mr. Howard at this time arose and d the town w to be congratulat- ed upon the efficiency of its vol department, He considered as more remarkable in the the difficulties which the de- | partment 1d to encount in the matter of obtaining water, wi e at the fire on the property Mrs. . C. Rowley, where the men, fter considerable difficulty, d to save the milk room, Newington Notes I'unils of lorence Green- ¢ land's ds class will hold cital in ( hall tomorrow Mrs. I Elliott is restin fortably the Hartford where she is confined with u( d hand, he discuss Ay sday year 1trac he school assoeiation | members the work | This mo- firc that it w face o fire- Miss lospital | an in- sion group will meet on | night at 7:45 o'clock in rish house. The topic will be ting Public Opinion.” Hall Placed at Yale 1l New et Haven, March in memory popuiar Yale 15 (®) of Norman thlete who lost go while saving | a classmate’s sister from drowning, f has been placed in his former uni- | versity room in Bingham hall by a sroup of his friends. i Hall's friends have also estab- lished o Norman Stewart Hall me- morial scholarship fund throu voluntary contributions and recent- Iy published & book containing hrief of his life i trib- hy Yale officials, fac-| and others with came in contact rsity life. The Hall awarded annually to history utes to him meml the athlefc during is unive cholarship is unior. whom LNDS LEASE | 1S (P —As the first | At With passage of the | foreign control over | disappear soon, &, agent general for | terminated his | private residence. 1lc | suite of | e hotel, next GILBLET Berlin, March visible sign Young plan Germany is rker Gilbe case for has engaged rooms at the to Amba BANKERS' ACCEPTANCES York, March 1S () - cd prices of bankers' s were reduced 1-§ of in today, making the reduction announced within L three weeks, new ra ve as follows: days, 3 1-8 per cent bid, 3 per cent asked, and 150 to 180 day per cent bid, 3 1-8 per cent! ew The | ac- | 1 per| bid an cent similar the 1 30 | | | ve | duty | 000 to complete | smallpox Vietim Left | fering | nied. | produce shoots that grow | or mo |eorn {then shortly loff with your freally! 1t | et onc cvery A tiny sixth | only tdrug store and il COURTS SETTLE DIAMOND ACTION |Syndicate and Independents End (ase in England London, March 18 (UP) ment of an action in which the fabu- wealthy diamond syndicate | headed by Solomon B. Oel and others was charged with throttling a new | and independent diamond field was announced in the k s bench divi- cion of the high court yesterday. The settlement provides that United Diamond Fields of Guiana, Ltd., shall recc pounds streling, vahich includ 000 pounds costs. ] ges of fraud against th brought by the plaintifis awn. the British di with The defendants Sol Joel, his brother, Jack Jocl Bar- nato; Sir Ernest Oppenheimer and his brothers, Louis Oppenheimer and Otto Oppenheimer. The hearing last- ed cleven days. United Diamond Fields charged that it had ruined by the syndicate within a year after it was formed Counscl for United Diamond Fields | charged that the syndicate controls practically the entire diamond out- | put of the world. Producers, he said, agree 1o sell to no one except the which decides how many on the market New Guiana Fields discovered, he charged, it w that no new supply | dumped on the market. and th included. besid Guiana con Senate: Continues with tariff bill Lobby ation of Chairman Huston of repub- lican national comm Hous Meets at noon. John W. Davis of New York. ap- pea ore judiciary committee to pre como tax figures of Ied- eral Judge Moscowitz, castern New York district What Congress Is l)omg Tucsday Monday Senate Votes keep shoes on > st Chairman Wickers forcoment commission, ady improvement in prohibition ment, before judiciary com- hid ther and am of law cn- enforce | mittee, s bills airman ten naval com- mittee, announced naval offick would be called to explain ordering utenant Alford Willlams to sea Appropriations committee report- resolution to appropriate $300,- toration of “Old ed Ironsides. GANDHI PRESSES ON IN HMARCH T0 SALT MINES 3ehind—0ne | comple Man Refused Leaye of Absence. Anand Leavin Bombay, March 18 () hind onc of their numbe who was stricken with smallpes Mahatma Gandhi and his Swarajist d>votees left here at for the next village, Napa. They are en route from Ahmada- bad to Jalalpur, where they will manufactu It in violation of “iic British monopoly and b a cari- paizn of civil disobedien they hope ultimately will bring Tn- dian independence. he Mahatma greatly fatigued of marchinz, although his halt here Monday and day of silence. Tteports that he was su’- from rheumatism were .- dawn to 1 da was said from his four While mission visit his dthough turn in his here Gandhi for onc of his home, 1 the the cvening followers 1ome now " refused pec- devotces 9 arby on Baroda man promised when well estab- soil. often to 60 fect or four weeks. ‘Timber bamboos lished in moist fertile n three Stop Hurting Instantly then Lift Right Off! I In, brop czone’ that antly it stops hurting you lift the corn right fingers. You'll laugh is so casy and docsn . Works like a charm, on aching bit! time. bottle of * a few cents at any reczone” co! and is suf- ficient to remoy hard every corn, callouses. soft corn, Try —Settle- | { Lotti's Machine Will Not T Two of Proposed Airplane Flights From Europe to America Are | Abandoned Before Season Starts1 Lotti his hotel “And listen, Be Ready, While Second‘:’\lvdix; spondent, * Craft Is Burned When| Motors Are Being Fitted —Other Plans in Works. | confided to I am out § de no mo MANY PASSENGERS b e orke ] 5T IN FLANE o menes viamaca voone Ol Steamer Catches Fire Near La Darada, Colombia “rench aviators for have ready crashed before the planes got |out of the han Captain Sl | ville | dicated throttl d the output of the | Bernard monoplane, committee resumes examin- f o cported | fellow | > which | refreshed by | Captain Dicudonne Henri Carrctier had an- nounced their intention of attempt- ing Le Bourget to New York and Jean Assolant, Renc Lefevre and Armand Lotti, who last ycar went from Old Orchard, Maine, to San chastian, Spain, said this year they would reverse the route and f from Seville to Maine or New Yor rday when according to the weather. One Planc Burns Up Carretier’s was burned at Costes and ramanga werd towr its cargo of p Captain Antonio e his whild was transatlantic plar Villacoublay ~ficl when, after emerging from the Cot sinet Airplane works, the first at- tempt to fit the motors into it wu made. Lotti, backer to Ame sociated and tholes ind them. jumpec face of the sew. which wit um 1 hip's tanks. , and many of e were burned to ( could ) passenger 4 to number more than there- ved. Most of cre crew, to of rica flight, Press recently that with which intended to try the big hop ward, could not be ready until lat {July, or carly August, and fore too late for “The flight is | Lottt said. “We it in 1 Costes hope for a in 1 Bre | Costes, ulon 2 eneral lines of 1 Mark™ | equipped h three 6 0y | pano-Suiza, stead of one, - {and with a lifting capacity of two| " 5 tons more than the plane with which Costes broke the worl long distance ron-stop. straight lir | flight record, Paris to Tsitsil China, last autumn. Has Had Bad Luck a young man, new French aviation manufacturer very bad luck in his enterpr thick wings in ored, crashed hin, once pilot Drouhin proposed told the As- his he west- thosc h be- swim ished Other steame! vor stood by helpl try | vonture t ar postponed will certainly the 5 on which barr as Trance's 1 ing ar York fii e Is of oil were exp e onssmalny throwing out liquod Paris-New s duc to carelesencss of ou but His- 1 Dorad: 430 miles s a small om ih po! mouth ena Short btdturc ot Youth Results i in T\\o Alarms Shortly clock oon two strokes of th were recorded at headquar 1 the siren was sounded, bu 1 immediately to has some con d a boy tricd Main and so short he > lever fully. few minutes 1 came in correctly, and it went | operater the lever cever havir wen found a Devitt's property o pull 1 Brook could not op Maurice Charles Levine, in the with | ror tlost and " acciden n- for Cap- er, war flames left the ground With the f | Lotti plans ‘for a to Amer- [ica flight, the correspondent asked what had become of the successful | transatlantic fiyers. Assolant Back at Work He learned that Assolant was back at his old job of mail plane pilot between Paris and Strass- bourg. Only for his matrimonial difficulties aired in the divorc courts the former Pauline Parker of New York, he has gone of the news. LeFevre has been promoted mechanic in an airplane near Paris. up in hout Bodies of Two Victims ccident to Be Moved dferd, Vi 1 odies of Wales, drowned in Wa rcsult of an here yesterday, today to their home ter, Mass, The acciden | automobile in does your throat ! i ever feel raw and sore here’s sure relief instantly! Rub on plenty of Baume Bengué—then wrap round a wool or flannel cloth. Baume Bengue penetrates the porec and soothes irritation. ask Mr. and accide to be return in Newton C automobile were with of Rene | to chief | factory | At veur druggist's grsend 10¢. to Baume Bengue 101 W. 31a¢ St Y. for sample tube. ] CQRPORATION ._/_"ril ArYou Require Go about getting it upproved n crn method. Take of our loan plan which provides \ casy repayment schedule covering charge in a business-like way using advants Twenty months if desired. Oniy o is three and one-half per cent per moath on unpaid balanc Reliance Loan Phone — Call — Write COR. MAIN and E. MAIN Open Monday Evenings PHONE S } P S P Orders Cases of Beer To Await Law Repeal t. Louis, Marc! 18 (UP) Henry P. Schroeder, member th St. Louis board of educa today sent to he Inc., the followi tion nd it the enabl rwhelming se gainst v may not un - contident ¥ to modific e law tion | eventually ton law firm of member Wa T bad been \ermont Wheat I’r'iécs l)eércav‘ Bccduw: of Bad W ealhm Ipturns ransicnt Zains were ports of prospecti spring t yesterda provisions Shes Getting Thinner Every Day Her Fat Is Melting Fast .»\\\'va3. All over ‘.4'v4 orld Salts is appealing wonien who to strive fo it natur woin Lver poor 5 of morning of Kru; hot water and do 1 tle daily Ga cspecially rett J. Varrell active in his after the grand Jjury that some of the polic to the grand jury had Mayor Meets With Jury . Tollgg To Discuss Police Force =~ © ™" rd, Mar 15 tP—Mayor Batterson spent two hours afternoon with and jury ussing po- connections with bootlegging uc- He was the only witness the & rmoor intimated testifying perjured disc hief of police of has recommended the tion of a junior police force, composed of school children. Otto T ties. caion Provo, 1 held sev- subject with ring ayor has already for on the ' Bothered Ten Years or More With Pimples. Cuticura Healed. “For several years I was bothered with pimples on my chin. They were hard, large and red and when I scratched them they scaled over. hey certainly disfigured my face and sometimes kept me awake zt ¢ The trouble lasted ten or more years I read an advertisement for Cutictra Soap and Ointment so pur- chased some | washed my face with Soap and water and thea appli: the Ointment and in a short time 1 was completely healed.” (Signed) Mrs Charles Mealey, 94 Rollstone St., Fitchourg, Mass., Aug. 28, "29. Soap 25c. Address: Ointrent 5 Sample each free. “Catic=a Laborateries, De't H, Maldea, Mass. KEEP ‘(nUR CREDIT GOOD 1l moncey on Autos, Hom are soid. Gley Borrow aract on your ome. of $100, repay § 5.00 per mo. 8200, repay $10.00 per mo. | | & $300, repay $15.00 per mo. | & end. tras or delays—We will help your credit. per month on the unpaid balance. \ll Tl -\L I‘\ DL STRIAL SERVICE 141 MAIN STRELT (Over Ashley'’s) Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 Main St. _CamMPS Opp. Arch. SURGICAL CORSETS Phone 1409 A GIFT from ENGLAND for a Limited Time Only With Each Purchase of S ENGLISH COMPLEXION CREAM 81.50 per pot 1 Box of LAVENDER FACE POWDER FREE Value $1.00 YARDLEY'S BOTIL SPECIAL FFOR A FEW DAYS Pair—Broken sizes in PURE SILK HOSE — Service weight, also a few Chiffons. At 98C Values to $2.00 EW WASH DRESSES FOR CHILDREN Pantie Dresses, Bloomer Dresses and Ensembles; sizes 2 to 6 and 7 to 16. We carry the ever reliable “JACK TAR” make. NEW SOCKS FOR CHILDREN l\\ HO\IFR\ FOR \\ OMEN in Chiffon, Fine Lisle or WHY NEW BRITAIN IS FORTUNATE ELECTRIC URING the past ten vears the average price per KWH paid for elec- tric service used in New Britain homes has been reduced 27.5%. The flat rate form of charge for elecs tric service has heen responsible for this fact. The flat rate form of charge for elec- tric service makes possible the uni- form participation in this reduction of homes both small and large. The flat rate form of charge for elec- tric service makes possible the 5¢c meter rate—and also the 3¢ and 2c options. Every customer may choose the rate hest suited to the use he makes of elec- tric service. SERVICE IS ESSENTIAL AND INEXPENSIVE e g TR