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say: the says. o1 o arts, he'll have s W job Vo qu a pect is a boom two Irench island Miquelon coast lgeior and m which are that| important Macken of Can yon minister ey is engaged prohibiting cargocs now law be impossible Miquelon to > liquor that used border. This proportions. | cxporters sent <o | tha conditions govern sin dian gov- under- o cou doubted 5 to cost gles have been an Ll Paso po- ng in plane birds we 1y 2 dozen sheep daily and | of range of gunners! In the air they paid | the plane il it was | from them. It took lours to de the flock, A the to 5 excice tax collec h Dominior the gOv- eatent o 909 on of § casily got out ground ttention to on : Ul on the anticip: ha no i troy couplet from angler's pl n en suggested 1o for hanging above his Rapidan lodge me to catch a fish | :n T in talking of it zton the| | before they -EditorsiGaI};er T;)d":iy (un.g‘ was anson of d ds his liquor malkes at a|yitchen out his | away. | it make im- |, \ cxport liquor to the United States ARfifl T[] [;AUSE from Canada legally. The day of ] big shipments will bec over. In- stead of loading a big cargo of i several hundred cases, bought di- v rect from a distillery, the rum- 1 = e S runner will Dbe able to load only . | what he can buy from the govera- 3 | ment ligaor stor and in On- {M-Ofl Expom [0 U- s' Ex"uno. at least, the Liquor Control 2 \ Board is very strict about * selling - pected to Have Great Elfect | v woimiities The carsoce 5.5 ¥ LAl ill have to be loaded and : 1\ stealth. There will be Editor's Note: This is the !'ourlhlor(“n bR ¥ and, last of a series of stories pre-|jean, senting an impartial survey of con-| A rum-runner at Windsor § ditions under Ontario’s liquor con-|(nis will practically double trol law. | price for American consumers. BY BRUCE TTON | “Good, uncut Canadian whiskey Ottawa, Ont, April 17.—The |now sells in Detroit for $7 a quart Domjnion of Canada is on the verge |or §7 he “Whn of clamping down hard on the busi- | this new oes into cffect, tho| nesq jof exporting liquor to the Unit- | prices will t lcast §12 or §14 ed States; and the rum-runners who a bottle and § a case. It will i Fave_got rich out of the traffic arc|profitable, then,to smuggle over divided between joy and despair. | bottle vo ot a tim the riv Despair—beeau Dominion | ferries o0ss Wi means business a the wiil made a de- be ‘a great deal harder than, it|cent ever has been I Another Joy—beca smuggled recketing, who puts danger will money. Under th Honorable William 1 zie King, p ada, Pa in passing a all 'clearances destined for the Premicr K under present ment offici ances to the links” be distillerie; the rum-ru “This a condition,” marks, “that I believe the citi of this country when stand it would not v tenance.” This law will u minlsh the flow of border. It is goin plenty, too. At present ernment profit 2bout $135,000 traffic, an lon being cleared for addition, it is Dominion will around $10,000,000 new law. All in all, out about §25,000, i The Canadian pr i being unanimously in favor of the|p ca pro . o bill. Some critics complain that | the law's chief effect will be 20 wp o' oo make the export of liquor an un-| o oot escjind S businoss. & Quebccy Sis | ifterward shall have no need to lie, largely opposed to it, and there is ‘ A eRton i rom L E] | a good deal of opposition in On- president of Randolph-Macon | tario. i |2 submitted by Senator | However, chances @ Vir the bill will pass. What will hap- - | penishen? - London—Peter Freeman, a Welsh- | At present it is perfec is perturbed by the groans of | as far as Canadian lav R A e e T e expgrt | lquor to the Unite n the house of common nejiexporter. 1 Telling the house about it, goyernment 1 was informed by a government clearance papers and pokeaman that if he would provide The new law will humane method of killing it possible for such a vesscl 10 get|would bt o clearance papers.. The rum-r ted d was instantancous, ‘ ners gimply seoffed when they fin herad; this proposal. l “That's easy,” they said. In ef- | insi rlin—Kemaleddin rkish ambassador, ped from Vienna in 1a ottles and | all coffre served at embassy 15 made with it. He believes it makes he most palatable Turkish coffec. | Pasha, er ship fect, “We'll simply t clearanc for Havana, —and well land our Detroit Buffalo, just v But the government caught on. So the law now carries a provi- sion requiring any exporter, on his | return, to vrasent to the customs| officers of Canada his clearance pa- | pers—duly stamped and signed by the collector of customs at the por: for which he cleared! That fs, il he clears from Wir sor, say, for Mavana, he must turn with docamentary proof - he actually went o Havana landel his cargo there. If he does not, he will not be able to get any more clearance papc nd he will| be subject to a heavy fine | Thus it will be impossible to| Vienna—Tor forty Frau Demel has becn cash desk her hoppe and |dob daily. years or sittin mor at the cctionery | on 11n‘ long has r for chocolate fuses to m']:lu‘ in she erbread or to introduce |and tea dances that | and| New York—Bert Lytell is ret ing to the sercen handsomer than | when he left it to go on the ,mgmi > has been beautified. | i i urn- His nos Baltimore—Arthur W. Baumann SHE KNOWS WHATS GOOD FOR HER Dr.Trues Elixir | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, and Viola McBeath, known on the stage as Yola Mack, divorced. two years ago, are to be married again. They are so happy about it that the sccond ceremony will be in the pres- ence of the audience of the show in which they are playing. America’s large oil of one mind that something must be done jointly toward conservation of oil. “So far nothing has been agreel upon and nothing can be done one compan, he said. “Worl.l wide consideration must com: through a united action.” DUTCH OIL HEAD SEES REDY FALL {Says Suppression of Individual- ism Will Cause Failure Chicago—Gordon Thorne has more money available to pay requir- ed alimony to three former wives. His mother’s will leaves him a trust fund of $2,000,000. Manila — The governor-genera palace is shy of spare rooms. When Sir Cecil Clementi, governor of Hongkong, and Lady Clementi mado a visit Dwight Davis gave them his room and had to sleep on a cot in his office BOOTLEGGER SHOT INSPITE OF PACT .. FOG BLAMED FOR FATAL AIR CRASH Believe Pilot Lost Sense of Di- rection—Two Dead Francisco, April 17 (UP)-- on of individualism in a as in 2 human being, is do- for that reason, and that one only, Sir Henri W. A. D:- terding, head of the vast Royal Dutch oil enterprises, forecasts the [ downfall of the Russian Soviets. Sir Henri for the opening of the new §4,000,- | 000 Shell Oil Company building and made his prediction in an intervies. Individualism is the mortar that m:-kM secure the cornerstone of the | al - politico - cconomis ture « Saned progress, he said. ‘hus there is no hope for sur- | vival of communistic doctrines.” | Henri asserted. Because he believes | Russia is doomed to failure under “Scarface” Al Capone Makes Peace With His Vassals Tussi ] inder 17T (UP)—Whil2 | nation, he said, even though he con- Al Capone and his va .lndu-.q Russia the greatest ficld for supposedly .t market development Food Shortage Sir Henri :aid a man normally cats about six pounds of food in a v, while Russian people are con- suming but three pounds per day to | 1 person. “That means, with persons in Russia, the 000 tons of foodstufts « normal and there is no |supremacy in the world of com- merce for sub-normal or unde:- | nourished people,” he said | Discussing the oil industry, | Henri readily agreed there nation, cadent and Hays, Kas.. April 17 (#/—Fog. the enemy of aviation, has claimed at least two additional lives, the result a plane crash here vesterday. J. (Steve) Lacey, Wichita, . test pilot. and exhibition flyer. and his wife, 20, died in the plane piloted by Lace Guild, 22, of Holyoke, a critical condition in pital. Dr. H. C. Hill, also of Hol- voke, the fourth occupant of the plane, less seriously hurt, also is re- ceiving hospital treatment. Exact extent of Guild’s injuries had not been determined, but it is | believed his spine is fractured. Dr. Hill received a broken nosc and sev- cral fractured ribs. According to Dr. Hill, the pilot apparently lost his sense of direction fter flying for 20 minutes in a nse fog, and headed the into the ground. The plane speeded B fect and buricd itself in ol Russell Col., is in a Hays hos- Chicago. “Scarface” April sal chiefs made mer; and cut flowers and signed a new | “peace pact” a bund of their hench mien raced along Blue Island avenus about midnight in their traditional | gangland murder car and assassin- | ated another bootlegger. Authority that “Scarface’” Al and | his erstwhile cnemics had buried the hatchet. came from the Chicago Herald and Examiner which said i addition that Capone and his un derlings agred to quit murder and | pool their resources and income. 140,000,000 are 70,000,- | year und hope fol HERALD CLASSIE Use LD ADS companics are | fall of | rplane | | a 1930. YEAR DEPRESSING FOR COTTON MEN Gurtailment Did Not Help In- dustry Report Says Boston, April 17 (UP)—Last will go down in cotton manufactu ing history as a year in which cur- tailment did not curtail, according to the monthly bulletin issued by the National Association of Cotton Manufacturers. Despite repeated warnings eariy 1929 and subsequent reports of | extensive curtailment, the report | stated, cotton- consumption per ac- | tive epindle actually increased, not {only over that of 1928 but over the previous high record for all time | <~\1h|1\hml in 1927, “Fhe production of cotton varns | and cloth reached a new record for velume in the year 1927, much of which was in cxcess of demand and | a large surplus was carried ovex| into 1928,” the report said. “In 1 the consumption of cotton per a tive spindle was 113.8 pounds; 1929 it increased to 116 pounds. “With 143,000 less active spindles in 1929 than in 1927 the cotton consumed only decreased {350,713 bales. Tach spindle repor ecd active ran §5 hours in 192 compared to 3,209 hours in 1 or‘ an increase of 76 hours per active | spindle over the previous high res- ord in history. “The effcct on prices has been just what might have been expect- ed. The manufacturing margin, in | | | | | in 1 |less than the average of 1939, |les than ten print cloths, continued on its downward path with a drop of 2.31 cents a pound for the first quarter of 1930 as compared to the same period last year. Depressing as that statement sounds it is even more disturbing when compared to pre- ious years. It is 2.22 cents a pound 3.9 6.51 less than LABORERS KIDNAP FORMER EMPLOYER Boston Man Representing Fruit Gompany Is Missing 1928 and Vera Cruz, Mexico, eonard B. Cassidy of° Boston | Mass., was missing today, reportedly kidnaped by a band of discharged |laborers. Cassidy, April 17 ( employed by the United Py | Fruit Co. at El Hule, Oaxaca State, has been missing since 4:15 p. m. last Tuesday, reports of the incident reaching here said. Disgruntled workers were said to have hit the Bostonian over the head with a telephone after a heated argument. They fled with him into tiw moun- tains, reports added, but details of the kidnaping were lacking. The military authorities searching parties into the hills to locate Cassidy. The district, how- ever, is rough and little inhabited, and finding a little band of rene- gades in the mountains proved difficult. The kidnaping of Cassidy fol- | lowed the recent kidnaptfig of an- other American, J. E. Bristow. Texas mining man, set free several | days ago after a month in the hands of bandits in the rit mountains. sent DEATH SUICIDAL | New Hartford, April 17—Coroner i..im el Herman yesterday issued a certificate of death due to suicida in his investigation of the death of | John Asco, 59, a farmer. Embarrassed By Your Complexion? Is it rough, pim coarse texture cloudy? Use Resmol g Soap and Oint- ment as di- rected every night for one week and note the improve- ment in your tdctermined from the average pr .v, skin. Then adopt Resinol Soap for daily toilet use to keep your complexion clear, fresh and lovely. Resinol Ointment also is soothing and healing for burns, cold sores, chafing, itching rashes ete. At all druggists. 6 FREE sample of each. Write Resinol, Dept.91, Baltimere, Md. Resinol over-production and at wa of oil. While he ds the danger of = hortage as far distant, he said e must look to the future and see that posterity does not suffer from our lack of consideration.” Sir Henri said that heads Capone clected himself “king,”| the newspaper said. | A few minutes later, howeves, came the news of the latest gang assassination, casting some doubt on the effectiveness of the pact. The murder victim was identificl as Joseph M. Cameron, 40, who came here four months ago from | New York, where, his widow said, he was a salesman for a textile mill. | Police said 1 a bootlegger. The gangs according to wit ne: chased Cameron several blocks north on Blue Island avenur were, able to cateh up th his smaller ¢ THE SPECIAL COUPON of | For National Meeting W ington, April 17 (#—Look- ng forward to an address by Pres- dent Hoover, members of the American Society of Newspaper Editors gathered here today for the organization’s annual meeting. The president will speak at a ban- quet Saturday night and, following he custom of the socicty, his ad-! ress will not be made public. \i v's program called for the opening of the meeting by Walter | M. Harrison of the Oklahoma City Times, the president of the society, nd an address of welcome by Nor- man Baxter, the president of the National Press club, on behalf of the \\'1sh|nr{lon correspondents. Dr. F.S. Dcnmsi?()ted Surgeon, Eighty Today Norfolk, April 17 — Dr. Frederic Shepard Denr noted surgcon of this city and w York, is observ- |ing his §0th birthday today. He was mmmnflm among-those who worked for better highways in and around Norfolk. Frequently he entertained former President Taft and many other not- ables at his Litchfield county estate. He worked to have the Norfolk green surveyed and was also a lead- er in the organization of thc Nor- folk Agricultural society. In 1889 he was made a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons and five years later became president ot the American Surgical association. | He is also a member of the German Congress of Surgeons. “Couldn't Feel Any Better” “Iwas nervous and rundown and weighed less than a hun- dred pounds. I felt tired and weak and often had to lie down. I took Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound because 1 saw it advertised. Now I eat well, sleep well and have good color. In fact, couldn’t feel any better and 1 weigh one hundred fifty-five, pounds. 1 am glad to answer letters from any woman who wants to know more about the Vegetable Compound.”—Mrs. Bertha Stephens, 21 E. Ross Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Ivids B Pinkham Med. Co Mase literally “Dream YOU ARE CORDI APPLICATION OF (R VIGOR AND HEALTH APPEAL TO SPORTSMEN can do with Kyanize products. Look Around Your Home!—Your Guests Do! PAINT STORE Introducing the New anize ROLDART SYSTEM A new process for transforming worn and dreary floors Floors.” In order to show you Special Demonstration of with Special COUPGON OFFERS for Friday, April 18th—Saturday, April 19th ALLY INVITED TO ATTEN KYANIZE ENAMELS AND how easy and inexpensive it is shimmering beauty by using the ultra-modern “Roldart System” we have arranged a D THIS DEMONSTRATION VARNISHES. into \lumng surfaces of real beauty — anize USE THE SPECIAL COUPON to have floors of OF THE ACTUAL An expert from the Boston Varnish Company, the manufacturers of Kyanize Varnishes and Enamels will demonstrate the painting of furniture, the new stipple finishes, and many other interesting things you e will be glad to answer your painting questions and suggobt.color schemes. is pleasant to take for CONSTIPATION and asa WORM EXPELLER Al'DS young and old to be fit, regular, buoyant ... and free from round worms. Nota “candied drug,” but a depend- able home medicine made from rare and costly imported herbs of high quality . . . Nature’s own laxative properties. Used Inspect First—Then 7(. anize Now, since KYANIZE Varnishes and Enamels are so casy to use and dry so quickly, there valid reason for neglecting the appearance of the home. In fact, real delight invariably results when surfaces are refinished and new color schemes worked out in the simple satisfactory KYANIZE way. Anyone can apply KYANIZE and satisfactory results are guaranteed when simple directions are followed. Kyanizing is one¢ of the most fascinating occupations in the world and the unusual booklets and folders show countless new and smart effects that KYANIZE helps to produce. Just try KYANIZE on a marred floor, chair, table, or anywhere in the home that would just take a touch of color or brightne: Don’t forget—"Look Around Your Home"—your guests do. 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No wonder it has won the approving nod of con- noisseurs, No wonder it is a drink of distinction. Remember to order it today! 1—Full Quarter Pint Can Kyanize Floor Varnish .. value 1—Round Bristle Brush . value 1—*Dream Floor” Booklet . . value I Total Value Value ef this Coupon (on this offer only) Only I Name ... Address ----------- You Pay Us in C TO 1—Full Quarter Pint Lubtaqunk buamel (choice of 16 colors) . 1—Round Bristle Brush 5 1—Booklet “Color in the Home” . .. value .. value .. value 30 15 .10 Total Value Yalue of this Coupon (on this offer only) You Pay Us in Cash Only 31.30 80 Name Ad ---------- I I I I I L NEW BRITAIN LEADING PAINT and WALL PAPER HOUSE ‘CANADA DRY” Dr.Trues Elixir ARCH STREET Res. T The Champagne of Ginger Ales HALL'S[.: