Newspaper Page Text
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY", NOVEMBER 18, 1924. Mexican Members Join With Americans-Gompers Speaks YOU Big Stiff ATLANTIC CITY o I inn nir rinr nw uiii nut ii'.'l T.N, Nut. is Tln 'd' r,t't'Vi of Labor con 1 !'""iy to formulating t' i n; n .! t ! r r- lis ninior ri r.. . . A m .-ri u . , 1 ":'lon tun Trroiiiih rr.- po.ii li s for tfc- nA y i a r. l'if t-pn , '1 ' "(-! M ' 1 " . rqipnlr.tc ! at th first ' vtei.-n !':v will do the hulk of the " -,- o' t1 a, inblaire during t!ii' r. i i ; t' -t of t 1 1 ! ! week includ ing rf,-i.-r he.irii.ps or. topics of pn 1 m on t linnoi t;, uc T: report of tbe executive ronn e'i liro isiil before the convention pmc than 7 icore rf Important fynev'ior.s inolu chl'd labor, work m r. s ooniponsntion laws, pension, rou. let i.t'.r, women in industry, la- hoi' kie, b'ns.ation affecting KNEE Watch Your Finish ft i Iff. swollen. Inflamed, rheumatic joint hould Ik- treated with a lem iJy luajc for just that purpewu only. Retm-mber the name of thi new discovery is Joint-E.ue and It will taka out the agony, reduce the swell Ing ana limber up any trouhll Joint uft '.r or ti nary cure-all have mis erably f at : oil. Jus! rub It on (i"c a !'ib at all dru'glsi.9 ask for Joint- A''i;i. rf in i nihiT, when Joinl V.u it.s in ,itu Kg ou y SO' ut Blaze Is Burning Out However Two Dead for a second Joint sc-s.sion la llOOil .) uan-2. I The American IV-Jf rtif ion of t.a- I I or evcutne council report recom I in pp. led that labor organizations 'guard ".igainst hasty formation Of labor banks." J "Labor in thi- n. w fieM has not j passed the complete period ot cji ! p rlmer.tntion," the report said, i The secretary's report showed an .raff. n I duration tort'' memberahlp for the yoar of worv-s Peons of resolutions :'.s... 3. Last year the figure was torn ' I'.R vpon Mirioijs phase of the .J.JSM'1. saino genera! topics were received In President Samuul flompers iti his flu is;r.'-. 'address made only one reference to iv'T.os i:nprr-l.Ttod in 'edera-ithe pollilcal activities by labor or tlon 5iitory marked the aft-moon starvations. In sketching the back session votrr lay "'Vn approximate- ground of the American labor move ly l "r.ii ,j , : .-cn t- from tb Mexican mnf he said that some 5" years ago rnr.fr.!r.-."o-i of labor came from jth national labor union "like prevt-i,,.,-,, t - .ci-i ous similar labor efforts" had "or- BiOn r :th 1 iie A -nPriea 'is Fraternal iie'. cat-' !rom Great Britali, Germany and Canada join ed with '.he American and Mexican leaders and pledged coiitinnlns ef fort." for world peace. The Amer'ean miner lion planned to ad.-ourn at 4 o'clock this after- panbed a labor party and then pass ed out of existence." A p'.cla! report on the executive council dealing with the Aeration's participation In the La Follette Whrtrlcr campaign Is ready for an early session of the convention. It PHILLIPS hi 0rrUG4 ANTACID CORRECTIVE LAXATIVE THE CHAS H PHILLIPS CHEMICAL CQ NEW VQBK. T'uless you ask tor ''Phillips." you may not fret the original Milk of J1e.gnesia prescrihi-4 by physiciajis for 50 years. Protect your doctor and yourself by avoiding imitations of the jronuine. "Pullliy." !5-cnt bot'les, also 6-cent bot tles, contain direction? any drug tore. HAMBVRG AT LAST Hamburg. Nov. U. Mrs. Mar tha Bauer ha reached Hambu? at last! She made seven round trips from Oregon Ciry- We., to ew Vork a total of 44.263 miles to take a ship for Germany to visit her mother, and each time returned to Oregon because of homesick ness. It was only on tiie eighth trip to New York that she found sufficient courags to make the yoy-age. PILOT STAYS ABOAHU New York, Nov. 18. The steamer America arrived here today With Christopher Ahearne, the pilot who guided the ship out of Queenstown harbor, still on board. TJoiith ireather off the Irish coast prevented him from leaving the ship. iiu.ntic City, N. J., Nov. is. "Iwo guests reriahi'd and scores were Injured in a flrv that oestroyed the iHotliweii hotel and the main salon and minstrel hall of the Htnel Tier niter seriously threatening the beach front in the vicinity of Virginia ave nue last night. The dead: James flennset. !0 yearn, 1146 South Poillewird, New York. An unidentified woman. Most of the Injured were firemen. Nothing but paN-t of the walls of the hotel remained and the casing xrn the famous steel pier was prac tically wrecked. The losa Is esti mated at fi.sno.Afio. One man, James Bennett, SO, of New York city, died shortly after midnight as a result of Injuries re ceived as he was being rescued from the flames; an unidentified woman Is known to have perished, and It Is feared that at least three more guests of the hotel may have lost j their lives. Police Sergeant James A. Jlc-Wenatntn, ons of the most daring and best love J members of the department, has not been heard from since he went into the Senator about 10 o'clock In an attempt to rescue some guests, and It Is feared that-iie died In the discharge of his duty. About a score of persons, most, of them firemen, were Injured during the progress of the conflagration, although none but Bennett suffered srioii injury. The cause of the (Ire Is still un determined. Fire companies from Pleasant, vllie, Somers Point, Ocean City an! Camden responded to appeals for elp, and Philadelphia held appara tus In readiness to send, but It was ;not reeded. ; Only the fact that the wind was j blowing from the north, sending the vast volume of sparks and burning embers out to sea, saved Atlantic City from the worst fire in the his. tory. as the usual sea breere would have made a clean sweep of pinny of the finest residences and a score of frame hotels which stood to the northward of the conflagration. It Is understood that the loss tf covered by Insurance to the extent, of about 70 per cent. Angeles Water Supply. hy Frznses Parkinson Keyess "MY I II E IN WASHINGTON" Cnmit School Autlltorium tteneIiu, Not. 19, '. p. m. Vfidfr auspices of New Drituia Ivlfcgej noh. Tickets 7Bc. mt dvor or from reemtfr. f ntnr mphed copiet f Mm. Kr' book! 'Xftten Trotn a Senator' V'tf-' nil! he on nle Rt tJif tectnre it Japs Ask Halt of U. S. Nrva! Maneuvers Tokio, Nov. IS. Editorially wel coming Edgar A. Bancroft, Vnlted States ambassador to Japan, who arrived In Toklo yesterday, the Ko kurnin Shlnibun, an old independent newspaper, asks the new envoy seri ously to consider "the bad impres sion and undesirable effects in the Japanese popular mind of the pro jected United States naval maneuv ers et Hawaii." The newspaper aks Mr. Bancroft to use his Influence with Washing ton to halt a "scheme harmful to Japanese-American relations." Awseclated Tresi, Lone Pino, Calif., Nov, H Owens Valley's Utile "army of oc cupation" Mill xva.s in possession of the T.os Angeles aqueduct early today and the water .Intended for the 1-os Angeles municipal supply was counting In its two day old p.iAcane through vvn.nto. galea. No one had yet made any effort for cibly to eject the Invader or to clcuse the .-' tes. Th approximately 100 men who constl'ute the army took turns standing guard all night and their searchlight swept back and forth over the hill unceasingly. "I feel confident," said Mayor Cryor of Los Angeles last night, "that tho peace officer of Inyo county, supplemented, if necessary, by the forces of the state of Cali fornia, will take rare of the men who are now engaged in violating the law of Inyo county." Sheriff Charles Collin of Inyo counly, however, took a different view of the ma'ter. After serving the aqueduct raider with a superior court order forbidding them to in terfere with the Los Angebs water supply, and after seeing copies of the order to-ned into the spillway to mingle with the wasting stream, he telegraphed to Governor Krlend W. Richardson last night a second appeal for s'ate troops, savin? that he and his deputies were "utterly powerless to cope with the situation." The raiding pyty of farmer, clergymen, lawyer, physicians and business men of the valley, today yvero making tliemelve comfort able In camps, preparing to stay "on the Job until It la finished or until the mllltU come." They uctod, bocauso, they assert ed, Lo Angeles was taking water needed for Irrigation. The Lo Aiigole water supply is asmired for VO day by supplies Im pounded south of here. CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! 8 L Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little "Freezona" on an aching corn, In stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right off with An gers. Your druggist selsl a tiny bottle of "Froezone" for a few cents, suf ficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, an dthe foot calluses, without sore ness or irritation. HEAD COLDS ROUTED IN 5 HOURS BY SPECIALIST'S PRESCRIPTION New Treatment Guaranteed to Banish Every Symptom In 5 Hours Or No Cost No matter hew severe or how Ions nundnu-, the average Head Cold cun be banished In 5 hours thruutui a remarkable new treat ment perfected b a Cleveland spe cialist. Nose and eyes clear upas-thoush by magic. Chilliness and that de pressed, useless foiling disappear. Within C iuiuii- oiten in CO min ute? you are oece mere as happy, healthy hd l'nll of "pep" as though you had never had the cold. m So successful has the new treat ment proved in thousands of test cases that it is now positively p-tcraniicd to banish the worst Head Cold In fcuurs or it costs you nothing. " It is known as Dr. Piatt's P.inex Prescription, aire was tlrt-t rllsoov trcd in the clinical nudy of Hay I'ever. Anh'iia and otber respira tory tjiseai-. . at lhA cbnical Lab oratories, Cleveland. Ohio. This .ftudy conf.nned th roe.nt discov ery that Ilend Colds are rot slnmly a local s'lrfnee disease, but ore due to an sctual poisoning of the n Hre t-.-sftm. This poisoning Is caused by sorie W'rt of conges tion slowing up the normal body proce'-sc i-. Ordinary cold remedies mere headache or fever medicines or simple surface treatments never touched this tvitemie poisoning. But Rlneio, taken in simple cap sule form and quickly absorbed into the blood through the diges tive tract, goes direct to these poisons and neutralises them. The result is complete and heavenly relief in 6 hours or less1. Ridiculous, then, to submit to days and even weeks of misery, uselessness and actual danger of more serious trouble. Get a pack age of Rinex, today and simply ir-y it. Costs a little more than ordi nary remedies, but much more eco nomical In the end because one dose often does the work. And re member, your money hack Instant ly U not relieved In S hours. Free Trial Offer Jurt now, through a special In troductory arrangement, you can obtain a trial tri-atment entirely FREE, fiimply go to any of the drug etores named below and ask for a trial package of RINEX. No obligation at all on your part. But be sure to ask for your free treatment within the next three days this offer is limited. It may be obtained tn this city at r. J. Tube, The MIUr-Hnsoo limn Co., Denby's Drug Stor. Ntllensl Plicy Th Dickinson brus Co., W. H. Crow 11. Nathan NoverV, J. T. VcFrlarly, Ar'h St. Fhey., GeorgB R. Byington. Since tlie war the American Red Cross Has found boundless opportunity for Service in fulfillment of its obligation?. With thousands of war veterans still in hospitals, with disasters occurring almost weekly, hundreds of thousands dying yearly through preventable disease, in preventable accidents and through lack of knowledge of the simplest rules of hygiene and health, the need for the work of ihe.Red Cross was never so great. This work must go on. Will YOU give it your support? Can you think of a more unselfish way to spend a dollar? JOIN NOW! JOIN NOW Red Cross Roll Call November llth 27th CONNECTICUT LIGHT & POWER COMPANY thc house or qualm: smme and satisfaction, new Britain, conn. hsSf i For the Feast of the Feasts 1 Linens That Will Gleam O'er Your Thanksgiving Table As Only Rich Linens Can! Who doesn't wish to greet their friends and family with a zestful, wonderful Thanksgiving feast! But don't forget the Linens, Madam! You want them to be new, crisp and white as d riven-snow! Here you will find Imported and Domestic Napery that will find its way in the most Aristocratic of homes. Do come See for yourself! fivt BASEMENT Remember "D. & L." Prices are Appealing! BASEMENT Mere Words Caiuiot Describe the Beauty of These Linen Sets SVCH AHROIT HAMmVORK! SIXH ARTFIL DKSIGNSt 0E MUST SEE! 3-Piece Madeira Buffet Sets $3.95 and $4.93 Hand embroidered; lovely de signs. Emb. Linen Bridge Or Tea Sets $4.93 Up Five pieces consisting of 35 inch Cloth and four Napkins; made of Irish Linen, with Irish hand crochet lace edge, white and ecru. Hand Drawn Hemstitched Bridge Sets With hand drawn colored em broldered corners; or hem stitched hand crochet Irish lace. Irish hand crochet medallion! on a fine round thread or on Oyster Linen. Colored Linen Lace Edge Vanity and Buffet Sets $1.95 Three-pieco Scarfs to match, tn sizes l?xS6 18x49 and lSxol at $1.69 up. Towels to Match, Colored Medallions and Colored Lace Edges at $1.39 Expect Service from these Lunch Cloths Damask and round thread linen. Hand drawn hem stitched threads on the lat ter. Launders beautifully! Well worth the money! Damask, Dl-ln.. at ... SS.B5 Damask, 45-ln., at . . . S4.5U Damask, 36-in., at . . . 2.05 Irish Lin., C6-in at . . . S2.95 Irish Lin., 45-ln.i at . . . 3.j Inspired at the Ixravre Art Galleries, Paris I New Filet Appenzel Those of yon. eo fortunate as to see the Monastery pattern at the Louvre, will immediately ex claim: "My, thla Angclo pattern, Is the Image of the one I saw!" For It Is! Filet Appenzel Is new and of rare beauty. Made with a fine round thread linen center. Moderate prices prevail! -SPECIAL ! Linen Napkins $2'95 ioz. Values to $4.95 Dozen Odd patterns and sizes. Some slightly soiled from handling. Splendid, timely values! (D. & L. Basement) Doilies, 6-in. .. Doilies, !-ln. .. Dollies, 12-in. . . Doilies, lS-in. .. Doilies. 24-ln. .. Doilies, 30-ln. . . Doilies. 88-in. . Ovals. 6xl2-ln. Ovals, 10xl4-in'. Ovals, 12xl8-ln. Ovals, 14x20-in. Oval. I3x27-ln. Oblongs, Oblongs, Oblongs, Oblongs, Oblongs, sl2-ln. Iftxl4-ln. !2xt8-ln. 14x20-ln. l!x2T-ln. Eah fcach laoli Lath Kadi laoli Each Each Each Each Each Each Eaoh Each Ea.li Each Each J9c St. Sit ?2.25 4.0 $8.05 S13.95 S17.B5 $1.39 $2.2:j 83.10 84.70 8.95 $1.39 S2.25 3.IB S4.79 $6.95 Linen Towels In the Newest Effects 69c up Included are heavy Linn Crash and Huckabarks. Col ored Linen Borders with rrocheted medallions in the Butterfly design. Also scal loped and hemstitched ef-e-ts. Plain Linen Huckaback Towels 79c to $1.69 Hemstitched borders. Has n rpsce for monogram. Also floral and satin borders. "Humidor" Linen . Pattern Cloths $7 89 7"x"J Irish ("Humidor") Linen Tnltern Cloths. Round, floral patterns Including rose, tulip, Uly of the valley, etc. Regular price SS.OS. Special $1.89. (22-inch Napkins to match, special $T.M.) Brown's Irish "Shamrock" Linen Pattern Cloths $6.50 Sue 72x72; round, floral patterns. Luncheon Sets Cloth and Yi doz. Napkins $4.95 Hemstitched linen. Size 64x70. 16 Inch Nspkins. Drawn work and floral pat terns. Luncheon Sets $6.95 Hemstitched Linen ("loth snd 6 Napkins to match. Nice patterns. Luncheon Sets $6.95 With colored borders of blue, rose, gold and green. Hemstitched; Cloth and Napkins. Women! Take This Advice: Wednesday, Buy a Season's Supply! PI :i JuH Arrive ! 3 Yemen Wrm 3 1 fn'ler Hose : ijl r. fl.'S pr. A Fine Thread Silk Hose at $1.00 a pair Irregulars of Hose Regularly Sold Up To $3.95 a Pair! EVERY PAIR FULL FASHIONED A lucky purchase on our part! A stili more lucky purchase on fours! Buy for your own use. Buy for Gift Giving! The slight irregularities in weave won't affect the wearing qual ities one bit! Splendid Hose every pair! All sizes! Wed. Pr. $1.00. Colors p. U" Beige, Tanbark. Beaver, Grey, Airedale, Russian Calf, Black, White