Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
[ALATI, BANKRUPT, MAY SETTUE CASE _ — ttomeys for Crelitors Arranging for Withdrawnl of Petition in Order W Pay Mortgages. Domenico Galat! of Arch street, ho recently enteréd a voluntary pe. tien of bankruptey as the result of foreclosurerof a second mortgage of 20,0000 by Hyman Horwitz of this ity, on real estate holdings on Arch nd Pearl streets, has had a report of is holdings made to Réferee Edward . Yeomans at Hartford, The sched- le, as compiled by Kirkham, Cooper, ungerford and Camp, attorneys for he creditors, show liabilities of ap- roximately $44116.37 Of that mount, $14,000 is a first mortgage on he property on Arch street; a second ortgage of $20,000 held by Hyman orwitz, and a third mortgage of $4,- 00 to Mrs. Galati, his wife. The attorneys for the creditors, owever, are arranging with Lawyer avid L. Nair, counsel for Galati, and eferee Yeomans, whereby Galati may ithdraw his petition of bankruptey ndér a plan where he will be able to fetain his block and have ample time 0 pay his creditors. Nrs® Galatl has consented to release ey mortgage of $4,000 which would legve his assets a trifle over $40,000, ¥e plan of the attorneys for the mditors is to hold a hearing at an grly date when the plan can be orked out. REAT REWARD FOR YOUNG DETECTIVE leuth Who Tempted Death May Get $30,000 For His Services, New York, July 6.—Gordon T. Mc- arthy, the yeung detective whose Fork of sevem months resulted in the lecovery of $500,000 worth of bonds art of the $2,600,000 mail robbery ere last October, and ‘the arrest of lhree men charged with the crime, jll get from thé government and onding companies $30,000 in rewards or his labor if he is fortunate, McCarthy only escaped death by 4 ours. If he had put off the arrests f the men another day he would have been killed. The robber suspects old him so when they were arraigned nd held in $125,000 bail each. They had become suspicious of cCarthy who was posing as a western oldup mar when he failed to dis- pose of mail robbery bonds they had iven him after he told of a ‘‘friend” o would buy them. Police and postal inspectors are arching for the nremaindér of the Btolen securities. It is believed they ré hidden in or near New York as as the $400,000 found in an old parn on Long Island. TARIFF PETITION IN y-Two Republican Signatures Are On Paper Fresented For Cloture To Shut Oft Febate. ‘Washingt¢h, July 6.—Continuation of the fight provoked by présentation pf the repylican petition for cloture 0 shut off debate on the administra- ién tariff bill promised to consume uch of teday’'s senate session. Pre- pented with 52 republican signatures, or 12 lessthan the two-thirds major- ty necessry, the petition must come 0 a votd at noon Friday. | Althoufh absence from Washing- on of a number of senaters would reduce the number necessary for a iwo-thirds majority some of those be- hind the movement to invoke thé clo- ture rult doubted that it would suc- eed. : Plans to be adopted if the cloture ove failed were discussed at a con- ference at the home of Senator Lodge Jast night. BOURNE-FROM Wedding Cetemony Performed Yes- terday Athaptist Parsonage Fol- lowed by Reccption at Bride’s Home A pretty wedding took place yes- erday afiernoon at 4 o'elock at the Iparsonage of the First Baptist church when Roy Kilbourne of 232 Arch tréet, took Miss Agnes From of Bain | treet, as his bride. The couple was attended by Miss JEdith From, a sister of the bride, as aid of henor, and Fred Miller as pest man. The bride wore pearl gray nd rose and the maid of honor was dréssed in blue. Aftér the wedding ceremony, a ré- eption was held at the hone of the bride, which was prettily decorated Pith cut flowers. The couple left on n extended wedding trip and will be t home to friends after July 15. There is Strength in | EveryTablet One dose often helps com- mence to enrich your blood and revitalize your worn- out exhausted nervese— Nuxated Iron is organic iron, like the iron in your blood apd like the ion in spin- ach. It is so prepared that it will not injure the teeth nor disturbthestomach. Itisready for almos! immediate absorp- tion and assimilation by the blood while some physicians claim metallic iron which peo- pleusuallytakeisnotabsorbed atall. Ifyou are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See ow long you can work or how far you can walk without be- coming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of Nuxated Iron-three times perday.after meals for two weeks. Then test your strencth again and #e¢ how much you have gained. Your money wiil be refunded by the manufacturers if you 20 not obiain verfectly matisfuctory resuits At alt Qramxista. cman_u RAGUE Reports That Attemipt Had Besn Mado To Assassinato Russisn Dele- gates 1s Not Confirmed. London, July 6,—~A rumor that an attempt had béen made to assassin- ute the Russlan delegates te The Hugue conference caused considerable excitement in the Dutch capital this morning says an Exchange Telegraph dispatch. There was no confirmation of the report up to néon, Both police and'the Russian dele. gation at The Hague denied any at- tempt at assassination was made. The report probably grew out of the action of the poll}. in turning back from the Dutch frontier 16 Rus- slans, sald to be monarchists travel. ing under false passports, NINETY PLOTTERS ARRESTED Soviet Secret Police Uncover Con- spiracy To Overthrow Present Gov- ernment—Accused To Be Tried. Moscow, July 6. (By Assoélated Press)—Ninety arrests have beén made at Simferépol, in the Crimea, upon the discovery of a plot against the soviet regime, it is announced here. LR IT ™Y NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1922, The plotters, Rays the announce- ment, were headed by Michael Dian- essef, a former officer under Gen. Baron Wrangel, the anti.bolshevik leader, Dianessef proclaimed himsélf su- preme ruler of Russia and sent a réquest to the former followers of Gen, Wrangel to assist him on a plat- form which, it s declared, pledged the assassination of Lenine gnd Trot- kky and the genera! extermination or banishment the Jews. A day waa sct for thé opening when at a signal~a lighted fire on a moun- tain top—the plotters clad in old army uniforms with a huge metallic rising sun device on their sleeves take over power, Becret agents, however, discovered the plot and all the leaders were ar- rested and soon will be tried, in s |C | w! | REPAIRING COAL MINES, Pittsburgh, July 6.—Forces of workmen today began cleaning up two mines in the Pittsburgh soft coal district preparatory to operations un- der a scale which the Pittsburgh coal producers’ assoclation offered to the miners before the strike became effec- tive Aprik 1, Several days will be réquired to put the property in cen- dition. The minés were under guard of deputy sheriffs and early reports from the mines sald there was 1o diserder. d o J Common house flies have proved to migrate as much as miles in one day. been six Ciy lems The selectmen in the Town of New- gton have been requested to call a #pécial town meeting for thé purpose of voting an additional appropriation of $6,000 towards the proposed new | schoolhouse. tion of $25,000 was found to be ,",;lhé skin,” says DPeterson, “and adequate, |ceeded that amount, The original appropria inasmuch as all bids ex- The lowest bid ubmitted was ower $27,000, Miss Mabel“Johnson, office secretary of the Y. M. C. A, Is home from the ¢ harter Oak hospital at Hartford, hére she underwent an operation re- cently, Work has been started on the new road from Elm Hill to Canfleld Cross- |ing. between $16,000 and $18,000, The Le Bon Ton orchestra gave al short concert and dancing at the Quartet club park in Barnesdale last evening. The Yoad Is expected to cost later played for There will be no shert calendar session of the eity court this week, | recently placed as the rules of the court state that uring the summer months session will be held the gecond and fourth|, Fridays of the month, and weekly at| 800, has been served with a writ of ther times of the year. The next session will be held Friday, July 14.| A surprise party was held last night in honor of Miss Lilllan Wood of 194 |gued against her husband and the erome street. Friends were present from New Haven, Hartford and New Britain, enjoyable evening was spent, Lunch was served and an l For Pimply Skin Peterson’s Ointment | Al pimples are inflammation of | the | | best and quickest way to get rid of them is to use Peterson's ointmént.” Used by millions for eczema, skin |and scalp itch, ulcerg, sore feet and | piles. All druggists, 35c, 60c, $1.00, $56.00, REPLEVIN WRIT SERVED Constable James W, Manning Involved in Case of Sarah Eshoo Who Seeks | | | Recovery on Store Attached, i | Constable James W. Manning, who| attachment on |a store at 13 Lafayette street, said to| helong to Sarah Eshoo, in an action | ainst her husband, John Eshoo, xnr; an | replevin by Constable George A. Stark. The woman seeks to recover the store, claiming that the writ was fs- | store was in her name. Lawyer Wil- | liam M. Greenstein represents her. | The case is returnable in the city| | court the third Monday in July. Judge | NOW IN PROGRESS F. B, Mungerford, who brought the suit againet the husband, will appear for Constable Manning. | The Hartford Center Bologna Co. of Hartford, through Lawyer Willlam M. Greenstein, has brough suit against the Koplowitz Bros, propriétors of the City Market on East Main street. The action is for $100, alleged to be due on goods deliveréd, and is re- turnable in the city court the fourth Monday in July. Constable Fred Winkle served the papeérs in the case. Koplowitz Creditors Accept Compromise Simon Koplowitz, of 53 Hartford avenue, grocer, has made an offer of a compromise settlement of 429 ecents to his creditors in order to pay them off, that.he may not be forced into bankruptey. Mr. Koplowitz has been pressed by his creditors and some of them have signified their in- tentions of accepting thé compromise through Attorney David L. Nair, coun- sel for Koplowitz, GANNOT LOGATE SOURCE Typhoid Fever Cases Puzzle Health Departinent—8ix Patients Are On Road To Recovery. Although every possible clue has been run down, inspectors of the health department have been unable Hartford’s Greatest Summer Merchandise Evep_zt Steiger-Vedd —Becomes— A A LA “Steiger, =S HARTFORD S Departments and You Are Invited to - COME AND PROFIT J GIRLS! LEMONS WHITEN SKIN AND BLEACH FRECKLES Squeeze the juice of two )lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for & few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter | pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach. Massage this sweetly fra- grant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty and whiteness of your | skin, Famous stage beauties use this {lemon 16tion to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy-white complexion, also as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because it doesn’t irritate. = o —————— ] to locate the source of six cases of typhoid fever now under trestment at the local hospitals. Three of the cases are in one family, & member of which had been out of the eity play- ing baseball, and it is believed that the infection was brought here in that way. The other cases, however, are spread about the city. Improve- ment is noted in the cases of all six patients. At Steiger’s, Hartford, is Now Offering the Greatest Sale' of Our Career. Mr. Albert Steiger, Having' Taken Over the Interests of Mr. E. V. Vedder Announces that the Purpose of this Great Sale is to Reduce Stocks to Minimum and Effect an Absolute Clearance of all Merchandise. To that End Prices Have Been Slashed in all ALL DEPARTMENTS. OFFER RADICAL REDUCTIONS