Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘12 | GARLAND DONATES | . MILLIONTO ART Greenvich Villge Liverals iven Full Powers w York, July 10 land's famous fortune of which he first rejected cided to ac fall into t} Greenwich Vi whose 1iews trimony are shared by willing-to-he-milli The prospect money have American | for the pury Formal a has not finishing t od yesterday t prospect and t tills the soil on far, is thoroug plan of divesti riches. Exploit New Agencies, What is to hee after it is thus f 1 remains a somewhat uncertain tter, Accord- {ng to the incorporators of the fund they expect to u mn aid of “agen- cles which ar now or experi- mental that they do not command general public ¢ Garland, whe now twenty-two | and separated from his wife and two small childre c nsuccessfu experiments 1 a ul- mate' into his household a year agot recenfly came to New York and agreed to en the contempilated organization. This came about ly through previous contact with leading spirits. The incorpora it was announced yesterday, are Nor- man M. Th Lewis Gannett of this city, e f the Nation; Prof the Universit N. Baldwin, director of the Americ Civil Liberties T Directors of Fund. Directors of the F. Ward of Union Tt cal Sen By NEA servic. inary, James We nsor National Associati ment of Colored People L. Magnes, school, William Z . cretary of Having dragged your eyes from pic- the Trades ['nion al l.eague | ture to type. consider the problem— of Chibago: Miss Mary I2. McDowell of | it bathing s for women underwent the Umniversity of (hicago Settlement s metamorphosis in 50 what and the incorporators, will the next 50 bring forth? The formation of the fund wa Hope Hampton, movie star, dug i nounced from the office of 1 to Godey's Lady Book and othes arc me of the money Long Beach, N. Y., y 19.—Take nother look Miss 1922 Now 390 n with the story CARE OF VETERANS PROVES HUGE TASK Rehabilitation Is Slow and Pro- cess Diffienlt please and a dash demonstrated our | of boric ac grandfathers seldom S of the|skin-tight (gown is the word) 5; full length coat buttoned round|cap to matc the neck, bag 2nd hat and slif s Hampton's conception of next year's suit. She displayed it shown and elbows were emancipated : p York board of Trousers had gone censorship decreed Washington, July 19.—Taking care jof Uncle Sam's disabled veterans of the world war and fitting them for |useful vocations, is a huge task ac- cording to the Veterans bureau, pub- |lishing accounts of the number of men undergoing vocational training. Up [to May 1, the bureau's figures show, :a total of 601,615 veterans had ap- |plied for vocational training, of which number 812,930 applications had been approved, In addition to the 30,000 factorfes and industrial organizations which are affording placement training to 36,- |704 veterans, there are 3,228 institu- tions engaged in the work of remaking men who were disabled or partially disabled. Of this number there are 162 unlversities, 253 colleges, 98 state normal schools, 1,041 commercial schools, 244 public school and 266 in- stitutions teaching miscellaneous sub- jects. Of these 49 are government in- stitutions. The number receiving instructions has almost doubled in the period from July 1821 to last May, the hureau says. On July 1, 1921, there were 85,338 men actually taking vocational train- ing and on May 1 last there were 108,919, The number of those graduated, or declared rehabilitated is constantly in- creasing. Up to last July 5,050 men {had been declared fit to take up new vocations, and since that time 7,514 veterans have been added to that number. Agriculture, the bureau adds, seems to be the most popular course pre- ferred by the men, as there are now 14,006 men under that course of in- struction. The other courses which seem in greatest demand are commer- cial, professional, mechanical and electrical trades and trades and the various crafts. In the government schools alone which offer such cours- es 4,674 veterans are enrolled. SEEK MISSING MAN Stamford, July 19.—Police dragged a canal at the foot of Ludlow street today for the body of Michael Doshana, who was missed from his kome nearby at noon yesterday. Apartments in which no single per- son is allowed, and where married couples with no children ‘must pay double rent, have been built in a Cali- fornia town e SR R S AT . THE HERALD “WANT ADS” Alphabetically Arra Expect Release Now That Moroc- | and Ready Referonce. ‘ 3 LINE RATES I'OR can Campafgn Is to End. CONBECUTIVE INSERTIONS o P Foreign Legionaries in Spanish Army‘ Melilla, Morocco, July 10.—A' 4 line line movement has arisen among the for- e eign legionaries serving in the Span- ltne ieh army looking toward release from fihe i service consequent upon the wide-'|l 30 days.. 1 itne 180 8180, spread announcement that the Mo- (| Yearly Order Rates Opon Ap7lication, reccan campalgn is terminated, ! Count 6 wordy m_—-‘-—-. Most of the Leglonarles are Span- Ll' I‘Inu ta“rn bncl‘a. i lards who enlisted for the duration of haan - Apace, inea. the war and now consider their en- Jniolén SHoek' Chure, 30 - Omtsa . ot e e e gagement concluded. The men {nr-’\ cl:u:qa'pumm‘g M"'ix‘ P. M. For . i 'Age on Bame Day. warded a claim to this effect to the| Ads Acoepted Over t)ie Telephore For commander-in-chief through the reg- || Convenience of Castomi Cal)' ular channels, but reczlved an un- ||| Ask For a ‘Want Ad" Operafor. favorable reply stating that the cam- T palgn offctally still continues, A bat- ANNOUNCEMEfi e talion of the legion stationed at Dar- | === e druls showed immediate diseatisfac- | _Buriul Lots, Monuments 1 tion and 40 of {ts men disappeared in | MONUMENTS, 7.usoleums And _ Beads the court of one night, followed 'by| fenoh Lstes veclety an/ sl grades ot eight others the following day. See- n ¥, Meehan Monument ing the men's determination, the auv- _ Works Clark 8t, corner Union 8t. thorities ordered the remainder of the Florists battalion to Mellila to rest, replacing \ FI6RAT, OESIGNS and fowers for all oo it at Dardruis by a battalion of the| casions; anniversaries, parties, banquats, regular army. woddings, funerals, etc, Call “Flower Phone" 1116, Prompt attentiom. Vol i Floral Co., 90 West Main Bt. VACATION PERIODS PORCH PLANTS, window boxes, wedalr Vacation periods ended and others ;:‘s ‘!"‘:'I‘l‘f"‘;'ofl"."‘\'\’e‘f;': g} °c“=: began in the fire department today.: si'west Main Bt Member P Dby 0 Captain Michael Souney, of Engine| = = = company No. 5; Captain Michael But-| _ ,mfl' ","], PM__" ler, of No. 3; Captain George Hoftman | BABY CARRIAGE loat, Tn, front of Df g Bictel | Faulkner's ofice, corner of Walnut and ot No. 1, and Fireman John Brophy,| Main Sts. Reward offered for return to of No. 4, returned to duty. Lieuten-i 53 Connecticut avenue. ant Fred Linn, of the Aerial Ladder |STRAYED ontp my premises Chap- Co., Lieutenant Frank Gilligan, of | man, corner Newington, two Holstein and : o B one Guernsey heifer. Owner can have Ensines Co o L nreman Lo | _sama by paying bill._Aibert Wil o » of No. 2 and Simon Wolfer, of | G ArcH FOB lost, Tuesday mornin, No. 1, start on theirs. with gold filigres band. Reward {f re- turned to W. L. Hatch Co. Tel. 131. Many times a Heraid Classified Ad [ TOUNG getter, bird dog, lcst. Colored all’ will sell that house, rent it, or get| Mhite. Reward for return of same or any 4 information to Charles H. Greene, Camp what you want in exchange. Bt., Plainvills, Conn. Tel. 105-2. = Moore Bros. Sanitary’ Fish Market ' IS THE PLACE TO SELECT YOUR FRESH FISH. A BIG VARIETY AND FINE QUALITY. Splendid Shore Had- Sword Fish...... . 28¢c dock ... Genuine Blue Fish.... 35¢ Boston Blue Whole Fish 12¢ Block Island Mackerel, 25¢ Saybrook Flounder... 12¢ Long Island Sea Trout, 22¢ Blue Fish Steak. . . 14¢ Saybrook Eels........ 30e Silver Bass..... . 15¢ Penobscot Salmon. .... 28¢ Long Island Porgies. .. 15¢ Weak Fish........... 22¢ Rockport Cod. . i =18c Large Butter Fish.... 25¢ Nelles, attorney, of S0 E. ‘t_ h| aje chiv for the a itectural | least,) and a bit of the calf in mod- |strong for the eyes, . street. Mr. Nells represents the in-| 1ang of heach costumes of the past.|est stockings appeared So wait for 1923! —————————— Scrod Steak..... .. 18¢ Eastern Halibut...... 35c corporators, hit 10 mention was ma ie ———— —— e S . l N ti of Garland's connectio: it; nor BishASTE Wesh Mals Seresk pecial INotice Medium Soft Crabs 10c, each extra large. would the incorporators discuss that | the Ga”!!ar*d theors ] inheritance, a;[ Crabs, 2 for 25¢. Live and Boiled Lobsters, 45¢ each R nounced the Gariand view of the PERSONALS o L e ; , . obsters, . To Experiment for Public. bonds of matrimony. Miss Conrad, a : Fi] Mrs. C. Fred Clark of Greenwood ho{f;a:];"oo‘a‘ (::1:”1151 '}Em.: C‘K::r‘e“:'ls Large Scallops, 50c a pint. Round (!ams, 25¢ quart. R s st drpies. (| iapletel nenilent, dert: the fannyand : street has returned from a three| Furniture store at 132 Main street Boneless Salt Cod, 18¢c b, 3 lbs. 50c. “The establishment of a n to ar i Mr. and Mrs. William Buckley and | weeks' visit w relatives in Chester, | Friday afternoon. ; fund to promote experiment e 4 family are at their cottage at Silver | Vermont Miss Jessie Fairchild, her ' cles for public welfare was an-|Tcr¢ Feported reunited Beach for the halance of the season. |niece, returned with her. of a son, but it is said now that the Solomon Ginsberg unced yesterday by the incorpor- o o o i o reconciliation did not last. At pres- John S. Whitteler of the Stanley = ators of the American Fund for Pub- S . 5 3 Mrs AT e 3 A e lic Service, just incorporated in Dela- |€ht Garland lives by himself on his House, Maple et, is spending his| ,rs PyJ. Spurvey and son Everett, Sarah Goldberg, et al. H e Rt = farm, leading the lahorious life of the|vacation at his home in Dayton, 0. |aT€ enfoying a vacation with Mrs. ) _ ‘a‘r;; Baldwin explained that so many |farmer, which he has chosen | : Spurvey’s sister, .\Ir; J. McAvoy, Cll\{ CO;A}r!'oiv l\éw Britain, i : ZDiasn gos e N 5 “alley ! hey wi New Britain, B Jexel tecniionllifon Were enconntered] Rejeoted a-Secondi81,000i000; Mr. eud sl John Willbughby| Selel FRLC T LS aRY L L A0 S 89 CHURCH ST.—Next to Hotel Delaney, Church St. in New York that it was decided 10| Garland also rejected cond in- | Crandall, of Wew York clv. spent the |steven Nary, of Pawtucket. R. I ORDER OF NOTICE incorporate in .rw'hma!f—‘ where the|paritance of $1.000,000 that would eek-€n Mr.and AMrs. Earle K il Cootpaint dn il - oaie laws are less exacting have come to him from the estate of brought to the City Court of New The New: 8roup the I‘P:f\m;‘rcmcm‘m“ uncle in England. His mother N y . . Britain, at New Britain, Conn., on the continued, “is analogous to the v forfeited her claim to a share in the Pllot [ Qulck Act Saves Llfe First Monday of August, A. D., 1922, All orders must be in by 10 o’clock Friday for delivery. We are open till 9 o’clock Thursday evening. ious ‘Community Tru NOW In SUC-| = 1and estate when she was mar-| cessful operation in a number of the| ' " " poohie Cushing Green in larger cities. The governing boards o/ “opo locaived a divorce in 1914 of these and other funds so far estab- lished are conservat.ve and di clined to assist new movements Won't Be Conventional. “Various persons desiring to give or bequeath money to public cause expressed the desire for the estal ment of a fund controlled by persons who will not be conventional in their and was married n in 1921 to Swinburne Hale, lawyer, radical poet {and active member of the Greenwich Village set. It was gaid at the American Civil Iiberties Union in West 13th street that it is the present intention to dis- pose of the prospective fund by giving conception of public service, and who it to the causes f\"zirh the directors will give preference to new and ex-|favor, and that they are opposed to perimental agencies The Board of|establishing any permanent endow- Directors of the new ind is com-|ment fund as inconsistent with their posed of such persons, with practical working contracts with the whole| gl range of such agencies throughout PAPERS IN the United Statss | ¥The Board of Directors will an- nounce at a later date the funds like- Cirenlation of Fnglish Publication Es- LgogLer tieir dispdsal 1o aBbis timated at 45.000. such agencies in near ire “The administration o e fund Tokio, July 18.-—1It is estimated that will differ fram most of now in there are five thousand foreign resi- existence by not depending upon sal aries executive to handle the work, the members of the board undertak- ing the necessary inquiries with the help of advisory committees drawn from those who know best the needs of the experimental field Garland Carries Out Plan. “The fund will also distribute among such agencies the current gifts of any donors who prefer to sukt tute the collective judgment of the di- | ably rectors for their own.' he estimated By turning over the vexatious $1,- | while for the other 20,000 he would 000,000 to the fund, Garland will be | have to rely on the Japanese stu- carrying out his original idea of re-|dents. These young men and wom- fusing for himself money he did not en now that English is complsory in earn. His philosophy of inheritance the schools are avaricious searchers 1s attributed to his reading of radical after knowledge of that language and doctrines while a freshman at Har-|they find the newspapers printed in vard, English fine text books, while at the He startled the world by his decla- |same time they gather some knowl- ration of his belief when he hecame edge of foreign affairs of age in June, 1919, and was about beliefs. dents in Japan at present exclusiv of Chinese so it was somewhat sur- prising to the uninitiated to find an English language paper recently t- ed claiming a circulation of 45,000 The editor explained, however, that he expected that figure to be cut in half after the novelty had rn off but was confident th culation lof 20,000 would be maintained. Prob halt of the foreign population would take the paper When this British naval plane took off from a battleship deck ! its engine went dead and it nose-dived into shallow water. Pilot Harrison scrambled from his seat to the observer's pit where he whereabouts of Sarah Goldberg is un- known, Ordered, That notice of the institu- tion and pendency of said complaint shall be given to said defendant by | publishing this order in some news- paper published in New Britain and having circulation in said New Brit- |ain, once a week for two consecutive | weeks, commencing on or before July 20th, 192 By Order of the Court, EMIL J. DANBERG, Clerk. Special Town Meeting. The legal voters of the Town of Plainville are hereby notified that a Special Town Meeting will be held in the Town Hall, next Wednesday eve- ring, July 26th, 1022, at seven o'clock | Standard Time; for the following pur- poses: To authorize the Board of Select- men to borrow money to pay for real estate condemned by the Town Plan Commission, located at the Corner of West Main and Whiting Streets. Also, to authorize the Board of Selectmen to sell, if advisable, cer- tain real estate owned by the Town |of Plainville Also, to transact any other business which is proper to come before said Meeting. (Signed) WM. J. JOHNSON CHAS. H. CALOR FREDERICK SPENCER Board of Selectmen. Dated, July 19th, 1922, | can be seen waiting to be rescued. Town of Plainville, Conn, to receive $1,000,000 as his share in Gariana of oson. e e e POLLY AND HER PALS trustees of the estate—Henry D. Tu- | dor, president of the Commonwealth | Finance Corporation, of 100 Rroad- | way, and James A. Parker of Boston | T WAS MY MISERABLE. —hmt": a l)’xrohw}:n lnn their h;ln(r!t over | MASHIE. SHOT “ThAT what to do with the spurned fortune Garland solved it for them not Jong KEPT ME EROM afterward by apparently recanting. HOLING OUT IN THREE, He explained that he had changed his | = mind, because he wished to settle | $200,000 on his wife, which he did, and dispose of the remainder as he saw fit. Took On An Affinity. He jumped into the spotlight again, | & year ago, when Miss Lillian Con- rad, a Boston art student, appeared on the scene. Garland, having his own ldeas on love as well as money, took her to the Cape Cod farm, known as “Bay End Farm,” in North | Carver, Mass. Whereupon his wife, who was Miss Mary Wrenn, daughter of Philip Wrenn, a Boston broker, took their daughter and went to live with her family. Then Miss Conrad was prevailed upon to change her temporarily adopted notions about affinities. Preachers, who hac risen to praise You BUYS GOTTA ) | Guan! I SLICINY SOMETHIA' TURRIBLE! Ny N ‘ NN Newspaper Feature Service, |nc.. Great Britain ights resorved claiming a for~closure of a mortgage upon certain real estate situated in 4 NEW HAVEN RAlLROAD said New Britain, it appearing to the |subscribing authority that the present - MEN WANTED Permanent Positions for Competent Men Whose Service Is Satisfactory As Machinists, Boiler-Makers, Blacksmiths, Sheet Metal Workers, Electrical Workers, 70 cents per hour. Car Inspectors and Repairers, 63 cents per hour. Machinists’ Helpers, Boiler-Makers’ Helpers 47c per hour This is not a strike against the Railroad. It is a strike waged against a reduction in rates of pay ordered by the United States Labor Board, effective July 1st, 1922, Apply to Superintendent’s Office At Waterbury, Conn. Office hours—7:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. Eastern Standard Time J. J. SNAVELY, Superintendent The New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad - BY CLIFF STERRETT