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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1926.' at ! Make Your Selection Now for Your Valentine Party WE HAVE EVERYTHING THAT WILL HELP YOU MAKE IT A SUCCESS Stationery Department The DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN ST. WITHJOWER CO. John P. Hannon Assistant Su perintendent in This City From meter man to i.iun su perlntendent ts tha rc oi l of John P. llaimon, now aeilnt iitt rlut su perintendent of the onuoctlciit Light anil Tower Co., nl;o i.-ia been with Dint concern to- n je.irs. Mr. JIannon h-xv i h activities wltlj Die company i i rltaln in 197 when ho enere I s , mploy as a meter man. vile .1 . i..r, ineimiin Regardless of What the Groundhog Says It takeg nerve to have a nervous breakdown But It doesn't re quire brains to court a cold In the head. On the contrary a little thought now, today, may save your own sweet self from asking a nurse what your tern perature Is! Here are warm Overcoats In smart styles coats that will keep you well at prices that will keep us busy, A fine line at $47.60 others $29.60 up. HORSFALLS 95"99jfyhimStreci nARJTcno "It Pays to Buy Our Kind" r N J. D. DONAHUE Voice Culture Voiri'ft tested Tuesdays nod I'ridaj, from t p, ru. tu 9 p. m. tte. 3111-3. Studio 3818-2. M. C. LeWitt's UPSTAIRS JEWELRY SHOP Room 4 299 Main Street . New Phone 3100 drive'yourself new cars to rent DAY AM) NKillT SKRVU'K 23c an hour 15c a mile. You-Drive Auto Renting Co. tor. Sevmour mul Kim Telephone wi: cu;an i:vi:itYnu.. I NDKIt THK St:. X VHOVAI, WINDOW l.! MM COMPANY 21 Tiemont Street Telephone 550 D. J. SULLIVAN Instructor of Piano Ragtime Classical For Appointment Phone 37S6W Dr. C. W. Vivian DENTIST 2(li We.t Main Street Extractions, Dental X-Rays I'hmie "US. 101-2 DENTIST Dr. A. It. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. v-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN JOHN P. HANSON Photo by Johnaon & Potoreon, meter worc In reneral. A few years later he became foreman In the meter department and then was sent to Norwalk In that capacity. Later he was transferred to Wat erbury where he had charge of the test department. Ho served time in the army during the war and re turned to the company's services. coming to New Britain in 1921 as district engineer. Last week, when Ebcn Putnam, district superintendent, resigned, to become president of the Greenwich Gas and Water Co., Mr. Hannon was' made assistant superintendent of this district and will be acting su perintendent until the arrival of the new superintendent, B. 11. McEl hone, of Boston. The district including New Brit ain comprises tills city, plainvillo, Routhlngton, Berlin, Kensington and Newington. MINERS GRIEVE AS COAL PARLEY FAILS Both Sides Blame Each Other as 158,000 Workmen Sillier Mr. Lew l summoned tha news papermon Into tha presidential aulta of the Br llflviin-fftratford hotel where the parle wire held, and dictated a statement, obviously ustruiiilng his pent-up nnotloifs, the minors' head paced the floor restlessly, choosing his words with Treat care. "We cannot now," he snapped, "and will not later accopt compul sory arbitration. "We do not propose to barter away for a mess of pottage the In herent and Individual rights of the miners. Our pcoplo are anxious to work but not at the price of their freedom and manhood. "The public must not forgot that the anthracite controversy Im . no longer a strike. It has become a lockout of the anthracite Operating Interests. Referring to the operators' de- niand for arbitration, which has 1 been tf) chief stumbling block in the dlsmite, ho said: "This Is a price we cannot and will not pay and for litis reason the operators' purpose to keep the mines closed until a popu lalion is starved. It Is as truly a lookout as ever existed In the his tory of American industry." . An American flag was noticed in the conference room and It was said that It had been sent there by a per son .not revealed, with a card say ing: "The American flag has a), ways stood for arbitration." Nono of the conferees would comment on the presence of the flag and the In crlptlon. Major Inglis sent a typewritten statement to the press some time ,'ifter the adjournment It. recited that Mr. Lewis had consistently re jected all proposals. "Not only our own ingenuity." said tho statement, "but the thought of scores of earn est men have been devoted to devis ing some formula that would meet Mr. Lewis' demands. ... No Im mediate question of wages or em ployment remains at issue. We are faced only by the blind determina tion of Mr. Lewis to Impose his will upon us, our employes and the. peo ple of this country." He then said the operators were willing to be Judged by the record to what they stood for and the proposals made. Before the open-tors made the motion to adjourn, the miners voted down two more pence proposals and the operators rejected t proposition to submit the question to the full scale committees of each side. New U. S. S. Eagle Starts Off on Her Maiden Vovarc New London, Feb. 5 W The U. 8. S. Eagle, new 100 foot steel SEEK NEW DANCE WITH WALTZ STEP International Congress Will Pay Big Prize lor Best Submitted Paris, Fob. (.P) Europe Is ready for a now dance, and the dancing masters are ready to pay a goodly sum for one. The "Charleston" lias been tried and found "not wanted." The fox trot has endured for twonty years; the one step has had Its day. The tango has met with a mixed re ception, but the waltz apparently is to be eternal. At tho European dance congress, which meets at Brussels this month. a special prize of 10,000 francs will be awarded for ,v"the dance most likely to replace tho fox trot In popular favor." Tho dance must be based on the waltz step. Now dances, say the masters, are Invented at the rate o about one a day. Each year tho congresses of the various national and Interna tional dance organizations award a prize for the best invention of tho year. These dances, however, the masters assert, never are heard of again. So they are Beeklng thin year one based on tho waltz step which will endure. "The waltz Is th eunlversal dance," Is the advice given in tho prospectus of the Brussels congress. "Orientals and occidentals alike are stirred by its rhythm, a primitive, effortless rhythm that must havo been old when mankind was young. To oust it or rival it, a new dance must have something of that Irresistible appeal." Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS J5t and 75 Pac-kaHes Everywhere Brooklyn Man Arrested As Fugitive From Justice Worcester, Mass.? Feb. 3 (PK-An. Ihony Blmba, 81, who says ho lives in Brooklyn, N. y was arrested Inst night charged with being a fugitive from Justice and held for Hie Brockton police who hold a war rant for him charging Inciting to overthrow the government of Massa chusetts by force and violence. The warrant Is based on a speech - tho man is alleged to have made in Brockton recently. Ho was arrested here as he was about .to "address u- gathering. COLOR SHADES TO BE WORNJYTHE LADIEF Main Tendency Is Reaction From Full Colors To the Half Tones Queen Marie to Try Her Hand Writing for Movies Culver City, Calif., Feb. 3 iT Queen Marie of Rumania is to turn scenarist, for motion pictures. Louis Mayer, of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, announced today that tho royal author has sie-ned n pnnmi , write nil original scenario for im mediate screen production and also giving Metro-aoldwyn-Mayer option lor a long period on any additional story material from her pen. HAKE OF BEACH'S ESTATE New York Woman Says She Is ' Hartford Man's Daughter nariioia, reu. i wn-iurs. i'ior-i ence neacn i:oiomnn or isow York has filed suit for $50,000 against Mrs. Amelia 8. Beach, widow 'of and executrix of the ostato of tho late Captain Henry Ledlle Beach, prominent Hartford business man and social leader. Mrs. Coleman al leges that she is the daughter of Captain Beach and Mary E. Asher, and that the $60,000 which iti& seeks was promised to her by Captain Beach, who Bald he would leave her a bequest of that amount if she never revealed the identity of her parents during his life time. Mrs. Coleman claims that on tho death of her mother, May 1, inns, Captain Beach, at that timo head of H. B. Beach and son, requested her to leave Hartford and keen secret the identity of her parents. She claims that In consideration of her ngreemont to this ho promised to leave her $50,000 in his will. Captain Beach dropped dead July 26, 1924, and left a will in which no mention was mada of Mrs. Cole man. "WHY!- An actual photo of our plate work. A duplicate of those that are now giving a comfort here for un known to hundreds. TAKE A NEW LEASE ON LIFE NOW AND BE FITTED FOR A NEW PLATE. INSTANTLY THE DIFFERENCE WILL BE APPARENT. Aftroed He: What time shall I come? Voice Over ,1'hone: Come after supper. He: That's what I was coming after. Answers. T never knevfi but what she had her own teeth I" You have heard that re mark a hundred times. That is what everyone savs about teeth from this office. "It's hard to tel! the difference." Years of ' experimenting have perfected the teeth illustrated to the left un til they have attained as natural an( aspect as hu manly possible. Natural not only in ap pearance but in every way How comfortable they feel How easy on the gums in fact as full of comfort as dental skill can makt possible. Dr. Wm. KEITH Surgeon-Dentist 338 MAIN TEL. 34 10 London, Feb. 3 VP) Leading Brit ish color experts have chosen ten shades which will be fashionable in 1 women's dress this spring. The main tendency of the new fashion spec trum Is a reaction from full colors to half-tones of pastel shades, with Dieselized type of patrol boa a very definite though unobtrusive which recently arrived at the local brightness. , coast guard base from Bay City, "Bright mauves," says one expert. Mich., where she was built, saiUd Klve "'aV ' a soft shade which veslordav afternoon on her maiden i n ni?' n named roxgiove. -j no patrol voyage. Being more com fortable and seaworthy than the 7F. ORIENTAL RUGS I l I.I. LINE IN .M L SII S Kl.l'.li;i(; AMI CI.L.iMV. S. V. SEVADJIAN Store 112 Glen St. Tel. 1190-2 rtc-ideiiee ).". Grand M Tel. 1190-3 BATTFRIF? Auto Electric Service C A. AliE'lZ Tel. 2SG0 114 FRANKLIN SQ- CABI.NEl MOKB OF ALL KLNDS sine die adjournment. Philadelphia, Feb. 3 (.T) Failure has marked the latest effort to end the long drawn out coal strike an thracite miners and operators today wore apparently digging the trenches for lengthy siege. Faint hopes of a. settlement of the grim struggle, which has caused in unprecedented shortage of hard coal and idleness and suffering among 158,000 miners since Septem ber 1, vanished in thin air last night, when the Joint conference ended in 0isap,rei ment. Each side placed tho blame upon the other. President John L. Lewis, of the Foiled Mine Workers, de elnred the situation no longer was a strik-i, but a lockout, Major W. W. iugllp. chairman of the operators' negotiating committee, asserted that Mr. Lewis had rejected everything. Declaring that ho was willing to )H the public Judgf, Major Tnglis made the crptic statement that "Wo .'hall submit, our proposals to our employes and to th.i pcoplo of the anthracite region and ask them also to judge of the fairness of our course.'' He would not, enlarge on his formal statement: and observers ps prejr.r.1 curiosity as to what' he meant by placing the matter before the miners. News of the disruption brought -7I00111 among the thousands of In- : habitant of tho 500 square miles of j ' territory comprising the 1'ennsyl- 1 j tania hard coal Helds. Hope for a j settlement had run high and tho, . news was crushing. Many of the 1 ' rnbiers, who have had no income, I j since last fall, have suffered hard ' ships for weeks and soup kitchens I j have been established in a number I of localities. Many merchants in ! numerous towns have felt the pinch, j There have been a number of bank- , , nipt el eg and more are feared. ' ! Xo one could be found today who j would hazard a guess aa to what the i li' xt step would be or w ho would j take it. The operators' committee planned to- leave for their homes luring the day. President liewls will reinrJn in the city for a while. William Green, president of the I Anv rlenn Federation of Labor, and .1 former secretary treasurer of the I miners' organization was expected 1 I here today in connection with the fr-.ihire. of the Producers and Con- sutrTs' bank, a labor inslluition, but whether h" would consult with the miners could not be learned. Al t though the federation has appealed, to its membership for funds to help th" needy miners. It was thought un- ' likely that the head of organized 1-il.or would irjeet himself Into the ; situation. j The disruption of the conference 1 came with dramatic stiddeness on the erst day of the resumption of I regottatlons after a week-end suc- ss. While few observers expected j peace, none was rrerared for such a 1':1ck liisarrecmont. I The first Intimation came when I , the iiMicny smiling Major Inclis hur- j i riedly ) ft the conference room, j hooking haggard and dejected. He parrbd the Olbys of questions shot at him by newspaperman and r" . f rrcj his interrogators to James A I Gopman, secretary of the conference, j who a moment later announced a I fashionable blue will be alrforce. this being the color of the royal air force uniforms. Full browns, after an extraordinary vogue, will hardly be seen at all. Their placo will be taken by more delicate shades, no tably the tawny oakapple nnd paler sant effect, Sahara. "The two principal greens will be yellow green, named chartreuso aft er the famous llquer, and palm, re calling the trees of the Riviera. Cloud, tho new grey, is the color of clouds on a fine spring day. It will be worn during the later stages o! court mourning for Dowager Queen Alexander, hut there is every imli cation that it also will becomo r general fashion. v (ucebier uni snoi ana . icl Riadfs ftre Pnwn at Biskra," in. Her Sweetheart IS Held I expert added. "These are delicat. Worcester, Mass., Feb. 3 (Pi Miss 1 shades in pink. Finally, there is Mary O'Connor. 18. is in a serious (beautiful pastel red called Hose Ma condition at City hospital from 0. i rle. The colors have been chosen bullet wound in the left breast near !?o that they will blend in any coin- foot type of patrol boat, and with a fuel capacity to remain longer at sea, the Eagle, in the opinion of local coast guard officials, will prove of great service In the patrol of rum row. Charts at the local headquarters show only one or two rum vessels now hovering off the coast line, and these are many miles at sea. The Eagle, will be able to cover these craft tinder weather and sea conditions that the smaller type or patrol boat could not be expected to cope with. the heart and Raymond Wentworth, 0, with whom she has been keep ing company, is held on a charge of assault with a dangerous weapon, pending an investigation. The shoot ing happened while the two were auto riding last night. Wentworth claimed It was an accident and oc- blnotion for any purpose.' Asa warn Police Now Are Sure Girl KilM Self Agawam, Mass., Fob. S UPy State, investigating and local police death of Yolanda Grasse, IV, the found curreri wnno tne girl was examining fatally wounded In her homo here iue pistol i..onmcung versions leo yesterday morninir. definitely nhnn. doned the murder theory, holding that she accidentally shot, herself when she tripped over a rug while carrying a loaded revolver. Tt was her custom to remove the gun daily from under her mother's pillow when making the bed, to place In a to an investigation. TIAXBIUY BANKRUPTCY Xew Haven, Feb. 3 UP) Harold G. Turner of Panbury. doing busi ness as a grocery and meal retail er, filed a petition In bankruntcy wun ine cierK ot the t. H. court 1 bureau, and authorities hellnvn the here yesterday showing liabilities I accident occurred while this was be of $5,930.15 and assets of $4,3 63.77. ling clone. PILES j Must jy Go When PAZO OINTMENT is Applied, because It Is Positive In Action, It begins immediately to take out the Inflammation and reduce all Swelling. The first application brings Orear Relief. Stops Itching In stantly and Quickly Relieves Irritation. Severe tests in cases of long standing have proved that PAZO OINTMENT can be depended upon with absolute certainty to Stop any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud ing Piles, and in the shortest time possible. Recommended by Physicians and Druggists in United States and Foreign Countries, PAZO OrNTMENT in tubes with Pile Pipe Attachment, 75c, and in tin boxes, 60c. The circular enclosed with each tube and box contains facts about Piles which everybody should know. TAIUS MEDICINE CO., Beaumont and Fiat Street. St louu, Mo. fjf OINTMKNT l Are. 40 GRAM) PTKLET Meats, Groceries TWO STORLS Telephone 512 li: ARCH STREET Seafood M cKnerney & Son H THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR STRICTLY FRESH FISH IS 112 ARCH STREET. WE CARRY A FULL LINE Of Fresh Fish Oysters Clams Clam Chowder to Take Home 30c quart Oyster Stews and Clam Chowder Served at Our Tables Orders m-elvwl Ibur.vloj night up to I o'clock will lx delivered Friday morning. There's An Ideal Home Waiting For You In Belvidere! SEE THESE COLORADO SPRINGS ALL BRICK BUNGALOWS AT FRANCIS AND CARLTON STREETS F O A Li E o R S A L E These bungalows are situated in a restricted section of Belvidere and are modeled beyond wordy flencriptlon They consist of rooms laid out as follows: As you enter you come into the sun parlor. From there you enter a spacious living room, on the right of which is a neatly proportioned den. The dining room is situated and laid out in a manner to give both sunlight and attractiveness to irery festivity, whether it be the everyday luncheon or a celebration. . The kitchen, the soul of a home, where the woman spends the greater portion of her day, is well flooded from 'all sides with sunlight. Spacious pantries and convenient appliances are the keynote of the kitchen. The bedrooms are .so laid out that each has easy access to the bathroom, which is built up to the latest-minute conveniences and improvements. S There are five bungalows for you to choose from. Some one-story, where the entire home 5s situated on one iloon and others divided into two floors. Inspection would e nlighten you on the latest improvements and architectural science for convenience and stability. COLORADO SPRINGS BUFF BRICK BUNGA LOWS FRANCIS AND CARLTON STREETS ; Open for inspection tomorrow, and each day following, from 2 p. m. to 6 p. m.; 7 p. m. to 9:30 p. m. THIS IDEjAL HOME IS COMPLETELY FURNISHED WITH RUGS, SHADES, DRAPERIES, FURNITURE FROM in Reliable ew Britain's Home -Furnishing Store ALLIN Here you will find six rooms and sun parlor attractively furnished with the newest styles in Furniture as well fh latest patterns in Draperies all at much lower prices than you might expect to pay. The home tjtfoughout bespeaks comfort and good taste and weaves an atmosphere of cheer and happiness which can easily be tntasplated to your own home. i i MACKAY & 97 FRANCIS ST. fjpen for inspection afternoons and evenings. We'll be mighty glad to have you pay as a visit IVfACKAY & WALLIN MAKERS OF HAPPY HOMES j P. STo Teach this home take Stanley Street Trolley or Oak Street Bus at 'Hi III If 1 1 !! fi:,'' i f ft