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B —— WONEN CONVENE INLOUISVILLE, Y. Leagne Opens. National Conven- tion—DBelieve Sex Helps Louisville, Ky., April 2§ (#—0n> thousand members of the National League of Women Voters, bling herc today, plunged into 2| week’s convention of international issues and a tenth an- niversary celebration of women's| suffrage. They were planning to the world court and work London disarmament confer: and come preparcd 10 Urge Passas of the Norris bill for government operation of Muscle Shoals and th pending legislation for materni and infancy welfare Believe Women Help In this year that sees a woman compaigning for the first time for a seat in the scnate, they were pro; posing, 00, to add to their program a statement that the league believes | women contribute *a necded point of view,” nationally and internation- | ally, and that therefore they \honll\\ be placed in state, local and nation- al offices, and on international com- | ons. | The organization also Wwas mobi- assem- national and endors of th ne | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1930. Winning Hudson River Outboard Marathon Winner of the 136-mile Albany-to-New York outboard motorboat marathon, the bright orange | mately NEA New York Bureau speed craft of J. E. W: ilkinson of Boston is pictured above as it crossed the finishline in a dash of spray at the Colonial Yacht club, New York. aimlessly, without spark, down the Hudson River, Wilkinson in pursuit of those who had passed him, and finished ahead in the time of 3 Nearly 200 boats competed in the event. and 3 seconds. Though for half an hour his boat floated was able to make repairs, set out hours, 25 minutes lized to pay sweeping homage to the past, to the women crusaders of th suffrage period, in ¢ 1omorrow night, roll announcemse ing, and a tenth anr day party, with C: Catt speaking on ‘“building th birthday cake” Friday night Incoming trains today and t row were cxpected to bring at twenty of the thirty or mo; ex-suffragists of the “honor Women Crash Wedding | roll.” | In London Church Today ™ April 28 (P —Hundreds of women gate-crashers stormed Westminster cathedral during the wedding today of Lady Millice Taylour, only daughter of the Mar- quis and Marchioness of Headfort and Henry 8. Tiark: T Although precautions were taker to prevent this by issuing cards 1o guests, the custom in Roman Cath- olic churches of leaving a side door open for worshippers provided the invaders a means of entry which |, they quickly spotted. They dragged chairs which to stand for a better view, and in the scramble for thes: | g grandstands many hats were knock- ed off and other scencs of confusioi London, w When the bride and the bride- groom appearcd outside the crowd rushed the police cordon which sur- rounded the honeymoon car. machine was unable to several minute; Knocked Down by Pal, Child Has Broken Arm Alfred Cayer, 7, of 163 Hartford avenue, was playing in his yard urday when a 12 year old boy knock- ed him down, fracturing his a cording to a complaint KeHy today. investigating. be and th: | A start f P ac- to Captain The detective burcau is CONTROVERSY SETTLED Berlin, April 25 (UP)—A iroversy among the diplomatic cor i Berlin was ended today when tir government announced that Cacsare | f. Orseigo, the new Papal Nuncio who will present his credentials Iriday, will be dean of the corps. cgnized the claim of the 1815, demanding that the Berlin ‘automatically be made deas | th of the corp It also deprived Am-| o bassador Nicholas Krestinski, the Soviet representative, of the post which he had claimed. MINISTERS ARE EXEMPT TRome, April 28 (F—The council | of ministers decided today to ex- tend exemptions from inheritance | taxes only to familics having two or | more children. This is in line with Premier Mus- | solini's campaizn for larger fam-| ilies. Nuncio at | $100,000 FIRE IN DETROIT |2 Detroit, April 28 (UP)—After n more than seven hours fighting. men brought under control 000 blaze which guited the four story building of the John Ivory Storage company today. A hundred |t then were driven from their in the Salvation Army hotel which a re- ddjoins the building. LA, contents of thode Island on North M tr the vault w about oOn | their great rounding trated on resulted. the box Stew SENTENCE IN COURT TODAY Takes Refuge took refuge in his Bible today as he in the eth away.” The announcement indirectly rec- | nrurm awaited made at the Congr 4 der. surrounded by many friends during|and paddling out to home without gold but W”Jh J abella <o was called to a gl a 3400~ property Deds [to a grass SAFE WITHSTANDS _COTTON IS STIL THEFT ONSLAUGHT ~ KING IN ANERICA Only 12 in Vault That Once Bul Machinery Threatens fo, Held Many Hillions ‘ Depose Old Esport Leader Trovidence April 28 (UP) ey 28 he I jacket of an antiquated | Washington April Cotton, arly than a century, crown as United tes export crossed the $5.000,000,000 ma Jmmz 1929 for the first time in securities today prevented bu the built-in r more m ol bout §12 sole hug safe hich formerly held state millions of dollars before the present house was con- ’ o tlers in_the New 1sed th h 4 floor of what | 280 and continues to be hort penter plant Never, while g . had Cotton' was' the first. export d by permanent Buropean sc d, the the chiz w the Congdon-Cs ct. perhaps doomed, by machinery, a bulletin from the Washington, 1 C. headquarters of the Nation Geographic Society. Machinery Edging to Top “The billion dollar of 1925 has while the value of machinery ped abroad has doubled. 1f m chinery passes cotton in 1930 the Volume One of the story s foreign trade will close. States, for three centurics the res voir of raw materials, will beco definitely United States, ma turer to the world. Alrcady total value of manufacturcd plus semi-manufactured three-fifths of the United State export trade. “There have only kings of, American |and tobacco. bacco place for 150 years ed the sccond century and a Only for two short periods, imm diately after the Revolutio and during the Civil war, and wheat take the lead, from North it is recorded, urglars Early tempte today, however, with $12 as possible reward, safe med with an axe smashed irough two walls of masonry sur- the ault and were fru c by a steel jacket lining inner A litile believed to <ed a strong the ¥Franklin at Broad and later, burglar: me gang, cra in the cc uto Supply company of Unitc ASTOR CALMLY AWAITS good been two re exports: cott held fi in Bible As He Iaces One to 11 Ycars for At- tempted Robbery i s A wa April 2§ (UP)—The Wilson, convicted of h and the latter's letter to a' widow ca were of onc penitentiary 1 the lord tak- -year-old_pastor nd over while he mpted mur- entenee Joliet “The lord giveth a the red over 7 entence to 14 years bus whe landed place n Lawrence river and cut timber. Th timber was consigned to Greenlan {but winds drove the Viking ship ol her course. Iceland in the 1347 got the New port, som The jury ballotied 29 times hefore hev were able to on the fate £ the minister wrors retired at and not until | at were Cotton and “Christopher Columbus™ expecte to gather gold anfl spices from th but the natives swimmin his ships pr 1 Parrots afternoon 2:30 to Rev., agree, The Wilson, who has been | Indies, sented him with balls of cotton an ots. of trial. heard the verdict ot even his wife, who had | P; ned at his side throughout his| “He came - was with promised Ferdinand and Isabella o G Rt get some on th THREE GRASS FIRES Co. No. 6 of the firc depar t 1ss fire on P & ¥ on Shuttle Meadow o'clock this fore- is wee next voyage to th Indics which, he declared prove valuable also drugs, cotton, m rhubarbh. Mastic island of Chios in the has maintained its fire on | command of the mastic trade O'Connell. | pite Colunibus’ prophcey. P street and | nuts come from a tree of the 20 oclocl No. % went 5 o'clock this Miss Mar woul tic, alocs is a resin. Ac an orbin property venue 1:48 oon. (‘0. No. nt to 1. therford nue, at 1 a gra W orner ocky of Hill ternoon fire noon on property of Lynch on Clark street mily Then, “Codfish 1d Fre Anierican coast product. exported his and Co. Codfish drew and Sassafras first 1ing the No fter nch Court Decision Cancels Their Marriage probably sassaire Drin years 1 came forc nd companic which helief When Capt 1ile to Iin ter leaving Car and his served to kept them sailors back in John Smith 1blish Jamestoy T he ca d one nall gold nugget of pyrite whic ot | be old, | ‘fool's gold.’ sill he was Much to Captain John Smith's di ust Captain Newport carricd by next a second car precious’ d Captain Smith Shipped Logs Smith sent back 1 of ced wou party ougl but which tu not cure lo, claphoards oards for cxtario: 1 State rame s know hous Legal storm clouds have marital bli For the mai 111e world fi) i]l-v Ivm Jng the dnozc" was fraudulen been served with a ulmmun 3 ne of round pic- - this sc Arnold, sereen ac reorgia court 1y tion charg- he had not hippinz, Ronoma king of American exports kept its | col- World 438 years “But cotton’s recign is threatened, | 1y s il | y cotton cxpor been cut by one-fourth, | ship- ! - | of Ameri- goods ; cotton has ru! halt, rw was did flour | “pfsn Ameri- 143 ycars before the landing of Columi- of the St year World's first ex- them | small crop of {obacco grown and harvested by John Rolfe, colonist hushand of Pocahontas, and sent to Ingland in 1613, did more than any other cxport to assure the success of the Jamestown ecxperiment.” A Comparison of today in the order of their im- portance are: Colonial period — Tobacco, fish, hard tack and wheat, rice, mnaval stores, indigo, whale oil and bone, deerskins and furs, pig and bar iron pot and pearl ashes, pickled bea: and pork and horses. 1929—Cotton, machinery, {leum, automobiles, % | products, iron and steel, alflour, copper, tobacco, fruits and nuts, manufactured cotton and saw | mill products. = Settlement of America was coin- cident with the rise of Lngland io naval supremacy, so Britain looke | to her mew colonics to relicve her of the necessity of buying ship tim- ber, masts and naval stores from ). | the count round the Baltic. Al | hite pine in New England larger than two feet in diameter wa served for masts for the king’ t|navy., In those days single mas were used and American trade has ne more thrilling chapter than the tting and trimming of white pine 1| masts some of which were 120 fes lo Soventy to cighty yoke 1l oxen pulled these prize logs to the sea and so great was the task of getting cig voke of oxen startcl that the anim petro- packing hou It a beast faltered it was instantly cut out. “Beginning with the building cf the Blessing of the Bay 21 mouth in 163 ship building be- N came the outstanding, highly techni- t1cal manufacture for export. Whea the Revolutionary war opened one- third the ships sailing under the -| English flag had been made in America. rum, slaves and tobaces gured in a curiously complicatel 1rly export trade. Codfish caught 5| by Boston and Salem fishermen on the Newfoundland Banks were trad- cd in the West Indics for molasses The molasses was converted into rum at such places as Newport 1| where there were 17 distilleries, an ff | the rum traded in Africa for slaves Slaves were then | planters for hard cash | wooden | With the invention of stamping ma- | Sacrificing from tobacco marketed in England. | Shipping Ice to India “Building of clipper ships event- ually brought China and India into the United States’ export market. A little village in New Hampshire might make augers which were readily traded in China for tea.| Exporters of American clectric re- frigerators today must bow with | respect before their predecessor of a century. ago, a New Iingland ad- venturer who took loads of ice, cui on Thorcau's Walden pond, to| India. “The characteristic fealures of the United States’ modern export trade are products of its inventive genius; sewing machines, safe razors, cash registers, automobil automatic vending machines and phonographs. * Clocks were pionecrs o? this trade. Connecticut craftsmen had long been famous for wooden- | works clocks but their produc could mot be exported because parts warped in sca a (45 BLAMED FOR DEATHS OF THREE Leaky Pipe Spreads Explosive— Inited in Kitchen Oklahoma City, April 28 (P— | Natural gas from the South Okla- homa oil field v-here exploits of the mighty wild gusher, Mary Sudik No. 1 recently attracted wide attention, a mothet | probable child. Last night Mrs. H. L. Shipman. wife of o r aurant man gather cd her family together at the supper table. Outside the home gas hissel (hrough the pipe line of the Pioneer Gas Company. burst under the heavy re and investigators said the contents poured -into the Shipman kitehen, It was ignited by the Kitehen range and a terrific cxplo- sion occurred. Jater the bodies of Mrs. Shipman, | and her children, Dale, 12, and L 10, were taken from the wreckage. Fuller Shipman, a third child, was not expected to live. and two fatal injury children to a third chines about 1840 brass parts were | sbstituted for wooden parts and by 1£43 one company had sold 40,009 clocks in foreign countries. “American exports in three ce turies ha had a remarkabic growth: $7,000,000 (approxi- 830—$71,671,000; 1930— $8,157,000,000,” Ince’s Widow to Lose Estate Over Marriage ! ——— Los Angcles, Cal., April 28 (®) —| o o S DENES TLLINOIS AGATNST Elinor Kershaw Ince, 45, widow of Thomas H. Ince, pionecr motion pic- ture producer and director, will be married to Holmes Herbert, 47, film actor, on May 15. The ceremony will be read in the garden of the Ince home. McCormick Nomination No Proof, Colcord Says in Letter Pre- Exports of the colonial period and | { that she | should not rec wheat and | i | s were never allowed | ¢y to stop until they reached the shors. | highway. 1 brother, Michacl, was fatally wound- sold to southern| obtainel| 1 1 as & source of | 1 The des- 1ssafras 1o mak n in good ned out to h 1| SIMPLIFIED washing! Spin- | drying! ... it does them both at once! Only 20 minutes help from vou for an entire load of clothes. See this wonderful new Graybar v washer today! . GrahaR A SIMPLIFIED WASHER Barry & 1 Bamforth i) MAIN STREET Tclephone 2501 !deliver an address at Silver | Ma. at Ply- | Under Ince's will his widow will Fenteditog Curi be deprived of her quarter of his! $1,600.000 estate. The will provided ould receive the interest from her share of the estate in the cvent she remarried within seven years of his death, in 1924, but cive any of the princi- pal. Three sons shared cqually with her in the division of the cstate. Washington, April 28 (UP)—De- nial that the recent nomination by Wlinois republicans of McCormick on an anti-world court platform means that I1linois opposcs American entrance into the court is contained in a letter to be present- ed to Vice President Curtis today. It was written by Samuel Colcord, New York ci nd endorsed by 50 prom- inent citizens. Support of the women voters in Tllinois and assistance of the Thompson-Crowe political WANT BETTER DIRT ROADS A New Britain chapter of the state organization for the improve- ment of dirt roads will be formed at a meeting of all those interested in|arc cited by the letter as the real the movement; Wednesday evening | reason for Mrs. McCormick's at 7:30 o'clock in the Chamber of | cess at the polls. Commerce rooms. | “I do not believe,” The movement was originated in | “that any senator who voted for the the Connecticut Grange and George | world court will now reverse his po- Hamlin, master of Burriit | sition on account of the Illinois pr Grange, and a committec of fi mary election.” tended a meeting of state represen- | Josephus Danicls, Hamilton Holt, tatives at the state capitol last week. | Ida Tarbell, Trving Fisher, Dr. Wil- | This committee will form the|liam H. Welch and Will Irwin ar nucleus o fthe local organization but | among the endorsers of the lctter. anyone interested in the movement| It will be presented by Major Gen- is invited to attend. cral Henry T. Allen and Bishop i | William F. MacDowell. COPELANDS Washington, and Mrs. | ly escaped injury last night when the | automobile in which they were rid- | ing was struck by another machine ‘ i i Reception to Be Given To Minister and Wife b\ nbers of Trinity Methodist church will tender an offictal recep- tion to Rev and Mrs. William H. Alderson tomorrow evening at 7:45 | o'clock. Rev. Mr. Alderson has just | been returned to the local paris | upon unanimous request of his LOI\* sregation, for another year. AUTO KNOCKS BOY DOWN Joseph Koval of 29 Silver {notified Captain Kelly at | ncadquarters today that he was driving north on Washington street |and Edward Furdalipe, 7, of 161 !*'(lrlv& street, | the railroad crossing and was struc! cd two weeks ago. {and knocked down. He was attend- Perrillo is held in 000 bonds|cd by Dr. Roman Lekston, who awaiting the coroner’s finding. i found him not badly hurt. FTRENCH POLET DIES 1 TOLICE CHECKING BRAKLES Paris, April 28 (UP)—Charles | Tnspector Rufus Grant of the stafe Durennes, French poet, particularly | motor vehicle department was in famed in southern ITrance for his|this city today poems of Provence, died today aft- | of brakes, as part of a campaign by cr suffering brain paralysis for a [the department against uns year, | cauipment on motor vehicles. CLIFFORD STORES, INC. 168 MAIN STREET After Easter Reductions In New Spring COATS '14°.22" We have grouped all of our better Coats in two lots to sell for $14.50 and $2.50. represent April | Royal S. Copeland narrow- the Olncy-Silver Springs, Md The senator was on his way to Springs, He kept the engagement but was forced to finish the trip in an- other machine. The occupants of the other car also cscaped injury. CLADI €O April 28 (UP)—Po- to hold a confes- rrillo, that he with which his TOLICE New Haven, lice claimed to sion by Patsy I held a revolver Some of these Coats third reduc- All new Spring styles, clever a one tion. fur trims, plenty of capes, new polo coats in attractive new colors. Reg- | ular and large sizes | R O e T e R S A i ORI S I ENTRY IN WORLD COURT today was blamed for the death ot} and | Ruth Hanna | Associated Press Photo s. A. Atwater Kent, ish court May 14 in London. Skin Kept Clear machine | sue- | * Colcord said, | | l \ | dis |tain. street | police | ran_into the street at| making inspections | | By New Laxative ! know how omn Blemighes, ote, come from ems there is really no | ving a bad coraplexion Just do what men and women ev- doing and keep the plecan with {"een-a-mint, the moaderPchowing gum This ple ANt New Col constipation is just the thing to us for the ailments that come from harmful “intestinal bacteria” such | coated tongue, bad breath, or un- lusual tired feeling. When you notice the first symptoms of these cond tions, take one of these tiny white Feen-a-mint tablets. Because you chew T -a-mint it 'Dr the effective- & is not so much de- ndent upon the quantity swallow- od as upon the thoroughness of jts ribution throughout the alimen- climination. ¥ tract. . The action of While you chew this delicious bit {horough, gentle, of gum the tasteless laxative it con- the proper dosage, it is not necessary s gradually released and nix- | to inere the amount of Feen-a- od with the saliva. Thus it is carried | mint you take nor to switch to an- to the intestinal tract smoothly, other laxative for a change. Jeen-a- evenly, without shock to th wint is harmless and contains no or the distressing after-cf habit-forming drugs. Truly the common with old-fashioned lax Ask for a package tives. Each particle of the laxative y with utmost ouraging the resume the ac- for healthful Ieen-a-mint is dependable STORAGE We Offer Complete Cold Storage Service at Only 2% of Your Own Valuation! PHONE 2989 or 2869 And We Will Call for Your Furs For Safe Cold Storage THERE CAN BE NO OTHER CHOICE IN NEW BRITAIN! .1 r Repairing and Remodeling At Lowest Prices We will now reline your Fur Coat with our lining for as low as $12.00. Connecticut Furriers 70 WEST MAIN ST.