New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 7, 1923, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press BELGIUM DEMANDS GERMANY ' PUBLICLY DISAVOW RECENT WRECKING OF TROOP TRAIN Note to Berlin Contains v am o Veiled Threats of With- e T PV drawal of Minister Un- less Government Does| As Ordered ‘ 3.00 France Has Not Yet Joined in This Move But Is Re-| ported as Reaching Com- | promise Wit Eneiand. | FACTORIES OPEN WAR ON BASEBALL LOTTERY Mrs, C. W, Lines . Dr. M. 8. Dunn Total today . $3,216.80 Your contributiohs to this fund, which is used for the maintenance of the Fresh Alr camp in Burlington, where 300 New Britain children will spend two weeks apiece this summer, will be gratefully received and acknowledged by the Fresh Air Editor of the “Herald.” e By The Associated Press. Parls, July 7.—Belgium has made what is characterized as a velled threat to withdraw her minister from Berlin unless Germany publicly dis- avows the Duisburg bombing and other violence in the¢ Ruhr. The de livery in Berlin by the Belgian minis- ter of such a threat was confirmed in French official quarters today but so far as is known the French ambassa dor has not yet joined in these repre- | sentations. | New Britain manufacturers have Is Not An Ultimatum been investigating the activity of The Belgian demand was not in the | “baseball pool" agents in this city and form of an ultimatum but it never- | a result of the revelations of ac- theless conveyed the idea that unless |tivities in Bridgeport will redouble Germany complied the situation wonid Itheir efforts to suppressythis form of be likely to result in the withdrawal |gambling. The investigation has been of the Belgian minister. |in progress for a month, A factory The French, while standing with the | official made the statement to the Belglans, still hope no necessity will | “Herald" that certain persons known arise for the carrying out of the Bel- |to be connected with the “pool” wonld glan threat, which would he followed |be discharged and hinted that ar- by France, | rests might be made. | At a recent meeting of the Civic Determined to Drive It Out, Manufacturer Tells “Herald” Will Agree “ ith Britain By The Assoclated Press boards was denounced by a well Paris, July 7.—TFrance has LDm-Iknofl'n business man and complaints promised with Great Britain on the jwere made to the police. At that latter's desire for a written answer to [time the extent of the "business” was the British questionna’ on repara- not guessed. When asked a few days tions and the Ruhr o ago whether the league was still in- Count de St. Aulaire, , ro vestigating lotteries and punch boards sador in London, has been instructed in this city, Attorney A. W. Upson re- to deliver to the British foreign nI'lr'b—IplIed that the league at this time is a copy of the French government's in- Idovofing its attention to liquor viola- structions to the ambassador on the [tions almost exciusively, reparations conversations he has had | “The Bridgeport arrests will with Tord Curzon. not This copy was left with the British | head of a manufacturing plant, one of | secretary for forelgn affairs yesterday (the largest in the city. *‘You ecan MANY TO DRIVE OFF INLINKS TOURNEY Gollers Enthusiastic Over th| Aiy Lamp and_ Contest & i+ Explanation of How Prizes Will be | Tournament To be Held on .- "ls Safety league the operation of punch | |stop our local investigations,’” sald the | should bring his net somewhere be- | Awarded—Out Out Coupon on Page 6 And Mail to “Herald." (‘uns‘x‘dnxah!' interest was aroused New. Britain golfing frater- the announcement, made Thursday evening, of the second an-| | nual IFresh Air Golf Tournament iwhich s to be held on the Shuttle Meadow club links Wednesday, July if the weather if fair, and il not, lon the 19th. The tournament is to | be conducted under the auspices of | | the “Herald,” which is furnishing the prizes, and the Shuttle Meadow club dlreuomw has voted to suspend all greens fees to entrants in the tourna- mend, making it an ‘“‘open’ affair. The entry fee of $2 will cover all | costs of play over the finest course in | this section. The entire amount taken in will be turned over to the Fresh Alr fund which is used for sending New Britain children on a two week's | | outing in the country. -It's probable| that there will be well over 100/ players In the contest. Several| nearby places have announced their | intentions of sending players to take | part. How Prizes Will be Awarded | I in the { nity by Prizes will be awarded on basis ofl total scores for 18 holes in the men's event and total score for 9 holes in| the ladies’ event. But one wround is| necessary to make up scores for the three different sets of prizes for men. | First, the player will be eligible for | the prize for low gross score for | the round. 1If he fails in this he may win the low net prize, which is to be given to the player whose gross score minus the handicap makes his net the lowest of those playing. Handicaps will be given as | | they are listed at the home club of the player, with a maximum, how- ever, of strokes. Finally a prize | will be awarded to the person who | | finishes nearest the “blind” number | |in a kickers' handicap event. That is, | he may select any handicap' which, deducted from his total score, tween 75 and 85. One number, be- | tween these two, will be drawn from “LITTLE BILL" I0ANSTON IS NEW WORLD CHAMPION Defeats Hunter for Title in htrl'gh! Sets—Lycett-Ryan Team Wins Mixed Doubles. By The Associated Press. ~—Wiliam M American lawn trnnlu ranking, is the world’s cham pion on grass courts. The diminu- tive San Franciscan defeated Irancis| T. Hunter of New Rochelle, N. Y, July 1 2.in the Wimbledon, Johnston, No. ninth ranking American, in the fil\:ll‘ i WILLIAM M. JOHNSTON of the Wimbledon tournament today, 6-0, 6-3, 6-1. Johnston outdrove and Hunter in the first set in did not allow him a single Hunter was more effective second set but Johnston many of his opponent’s placements while putting his own entirely out of reach, Little Bill was playing with sureness and speed and keeping Hunter on the defensive at all times. Randolph Lycett and Miss abeth Ryan, both of England, the world's title in the mixed doubles by defeating I. S. Deane, Indian| Davis cup star and Mrs. Shepherd-| Barron of England, 6-4, 7-5. Randotph Lycett and L. A. Godfree outserved which game. in the recovered Eliz- he | intended | won | SEEDS OF HATE BEING PLANTED FOR NEW WAR So Declares Speaker Ad- dressing Warning at (. E. Meeting Des Moines, July 7.—Seeds of hate being sown throughout the world gre causing it to drift into another world war, according to I'rederick J. Lib] of Washington, executive secretary of | the ‘National Council for the Preven- |tion of War, in addressing the Inter- | national Christian Endeavor Conven- | tion here today. “The world drifts toward a war of gas and airplanes and neither the government nor the churches nor | organized women have taken one ef- fective step to prevent it said Mr, | Libby. “The seeds of hate are the seeds of war and they are being sown again in the French seizure of| the Ruhr. No fondness that we may feel for I'rance can blind our eyes to the awful consequences of the policy {she is pursuing. Many of you pres- ent at this convention will be drafted to be 'killed if the present drift to- ward war cannot speedily be stopped and law be established in the place! of ' war as the accepted method of set- tling international differences. “And it will be a war of gas and airplanes. Recently in Dayton, the home of the Wright brothers, a young man asked me if 1 knew about their little ‘Bug.’ I said 'No,’ and he went on to tell me that it is an airplane which they have sent from Dayton to Xenia, turned around there and| brought back safely to Dayton with | no one in it, guiding it by wireless. ‘And it might have been spraving gas! {all the way to Xenia and back?’ 1 | asked. He nodded and said ‘Yes. | Alrplanes, poison gas and hate make |a trio of destructiveness so deadly that no-ene of us can contemplate the | present drift toward war without hor- | ror. “Our military men say: ‘Prepare for war.' I am frank to admit tha they are justified in their demand if | we are not going to work far more| effectively for peace in the next four| years than we have up to now. It is| their task to make the nation ready’ 50 OF LARGEST NATIONS IN WORLD - ADVISED TO TRY CHRISTIANITY IN EFFORT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE 19 YEAR OLD YOUTH SEES HIS MOTHER MURDER RIVAL hicago Woman Meets Another on Street and Shoots Her, Making Good Her Threat Chicago, July 7.—~Nine months ago Mrs. Minnie Bernatowicz, 38, mdther of four children, is alleged to have threatened to slay Mrs. Annie An- draski, 39, whom she accused of steal- ing her husband. Today Mrs. Bernatowicz at a street corner awaited Mrs, Andraski and | shot and killed her, ! In view of scores of persons, Mrs Bernatowfez, revolver in hand, rushed apon Mrs. Andraski, selzed hier by the hair and screamed her hatred, Then as Mrs. Andraski writhed and sought to escape and several men ran up Mrs. Bernatowicz shot her rival twice. John Bernatowicz, 19 year old son of the slayer, was with his mother. MORAN'S DEATH STILL UNSOLVED MYSTERY Cause Left Open in Certifi- cate Filed by Medical Examiner A new angle in the death of Li rence Moran, whose body was found in a vacant lot at the foot of Grove street on the morning of July4, came to light today when it was that Medical Examiner Lyon, in filing the death, certificate at the office of the town clerk had reported the cause - of death as “chronic alcoholism™, and directly following had placed the information in parenthesis: “Was found in open lot, foot of | Grove street. Subject to changa it more evidence is obtained.' Frank, Duffy, an undertaker em- halmed the body after Dr. Lyon had turned it over to that concern and today Mr. Duffy recalled that there | was a considerable amount of blood on the side of Moran's face. The aw- | Waterman | following | Average Daily Circulation Week Eading ’068 June 30th ... } b Conference on Christian Citizenship Says New | Standards” Must Be Based on Teachings of Jesus 3 A Present Chaos Is Called: Only Result of Selfishness of Nations and Rulers and Lack of Fair Play. M By The Associnted Presy Winona lLake, Ind., July 7T.—An lfl‘t dress to the rules of the world say- “the time has come to tryf Christianity” in international relnlonfl ships was dispatched today by mo. International Conference on Christian{ citizenship to the capital, of virtuallyy every nation of the world. The text, declaring that the nations “should unite in creating new stand- | ards based upon the teachings |Jesus” was approved oy delegates rep= resenting many denominations of churchmen and more than a score of j foreign countries. | 50 Nations Get Message | The address was sent to the n‘v’,i ing that ereign head or principal executive more than 50 nations, including every world power of Europe and Asla. Th action was presented by Dr. Charles found | Stelzle of New York. Reciting that every other effort tod lavert war had falled through the ages, |the address urged an endeavor founds ed upon “the Im\s of love, brothere* hood and fair play Fears of New War “Humanity is staggered by the poss sibilities of another world war, me- |in every land, over which the mw {of sacrificial death still hovers, are! |saddened by the prospect of still fur< t | ployed by M. J. Kenney & Co. em-|ther heart breaks and suffering. The people in these lands have already given millions of their sons in the be- lief that their supreme sacrifice would I make | create a high idealism whlch wq\u‘ world a faire 5 b5/ the world safe for democracy. . indication was that he had bled from make the the wose and appareatly after an which fo live and end Wu- 10,. ¥h b hemorrhage, Mr. Duffy said. time, | Whatever politiclans may adh A:;:{d‘ On the morning that the body Wwas| “Nene of these hopes have beem d found, Dr. Lyon went to Grove street realized. Men hate each other-as in< ;and conducted an investigation. l[“‘tpn‘("I} as ever. Chaos reigns in | tord representatives of the press every human relationship. HEconomis afterward that the man might have land political conditions have sunk to been ‘beaten prior to his death as|low levels, xxx |of England, captured the world's title {in the men's Qoubles dofeating the | Spaniurds, Count de Gomar and ‘Edu- ardo Flaquer §—38, 6-—1, 3—8, 8-—3. Suzanne Lenglen of France and|ica cannot remalin aloof. | Miss Elzabeth Ryan formerly of Call- | I8 too small for us to be unaffecte tornia retained the women's doubles| by anything that affects Europe.” {title by defeating the less experfenced | Mr. Libby urged the adoption of Austin | the world court as one step toward | & hat preceeding the play, no person to know what it i{s, and the player who picks the happy combination | that, taken from his.gross, comes | nearest to the unknown number will | win. In the event of a tie the pries | will be drawn o% between those who have tled. by (ha French ambassador, it {s said. 'rafely say that all the factories are it ‘termined to weed it out, root and HELD, POLIGE SILENT for -n Jhen war cames, They know, t/28 A gesar war splits ' Europe, | 9 holes in the |usury, Governor Blaine has vetoed a bill to permit loan agencies to charge |Interest at 3 1-2 per cent a month. Admit Hn\\ ever, He May Be| The ladies will play morning and the winner will be/ | (Continued on Fifth Page). VETOES “USURY" MEASURE Implicated in Murder of Madison, Wis.,, July 7.—Declaring that it was a measure to legalize A ged Recluse Danbury, Conn., July 7.—John Dan- done, Topstone farm hand, arrested by the-state police yesterday in con- nection with the investigation of the murder of George Hultz at Topstone, May 4, is still held in the police sta- fion in this city, The state police de- olined today to say anything about the arrsst of Dandone beyvond the | statement that he 1is being held on suspicion and that further investiga- tion as to his possible connection with the crime is in progress. The pris- oner has made no effort to procure counsel The arrest of Dandone was made by State Policeman John Kelley, of . the | Ridgefield Barracks, who has been in- vestigating the Hultz death for two months Dandone has been employed on the farm of Mark Dewsnap near Top- stone. Hultz had worked periodically at this farm. Farly in ths morning of May 5 Hultz's shack was burned to the ground and no trace of the man | could be found. RBlood stains indicat | ed that a body had been drakged to Umpawaug Pond nearby. State no- lice and other officers dragged the pond and searched the surrounding country for several days, and finally the body of Hultz was found in the pond. The body bore wounds inflicted with an axe and it was believed Hultz had been killed by a robber. After the finding of the body Dan- done was the suliject of investigation The state police took him to view the body and questioned him in re-| gard to his whereabouts on the night | of May 4. that time. Story Discount Other Candidates. Juty 7 New York, Detailed plans for launching a Willlam G. McAdoo- for-president boom were worked out dozen of his most here, the New York today. not formally at a dinner of a intimate friends Evening Post Mr. McAdoo has said were declared to be confident his hat would be in the ring. The diners, meeting recently osten sibly to honor Samuei P. Amidon, national democratic committesman |from Kansas. picked Mr. handle the McAdoo campaign Evening Post sald The diners discussed the strength of former Governor |Ohio; Governor Smith of New York; | Senator Underwood: former Ambassa- |dor to Great Britain John W. Davis |and Henry Ford, concluding that Mc- |Adoo could enter the convention with | He was ‘not detained at|, . .~y . dred delegates and with many others ready to switch (a8 soon as they had registered ‘r-rh‘- son” choices a Mr. Amidon, now on his In July Fourth Final | Burope, s expected to return A= a result of yesterday’s matchea tember, by which time it was In the Fourth of July golf tourna- \McAdoo clubs would have been form ment now in progress at the Shuttle [®d in many states and the campaign Meadow club, H. H. Pease and A. B. Wessel will meet in the final event, Yesterday Pease, to whom C. W. Wilson had defaulted, beat Dave|of the diners’ time Manning, 5 up and 4 to go, and Wes.| Smith and Underwood, they dectd sl won from Morgan Felt, 7 and 6 €0 Were not especially dangerous, i . | being held that their “wet” trend wa S | particularly unpopular. | Cox, the democratic standard bear- jer in the 1920 race, Bucket Brlgade Flghts H : | be McAdoo’s most powerful opponent, Fire at Meriden Farm | wnite pavis, the diners decided, prob Meriden, J the “fay Pease and \\ essel Meet way to in Sep eaid, | Discussion of Henry Ford's chances *taining hay and farming implements |2 80od showing of strength led by his | confind several months following but eriminal attack upon his daughter. native West Virginia contingent, miost of his strength, it was declared, could be swung to McAdoo, on the far mof A. H. Gardner in the Highland district was destroyed by tire early this morning and a bucket brigade, including persons from the Highland Country club, saved a dwelling and other buildings. Twenty five cows housed irf the burned build- ing weer at pasture. The loss is 88,000, partly insured. Mr. Gardner helleves the blaze was started by tramps. INFANTILE PARALYSIS the local health officer, the \lcflm be- ing Thomas Hamliiton Jr, of 7 street, 15 months old. London's first case for-3 or 4 years. I REAL BOOM EOR McADOO FOR LEADER | | OF DEMOCRATS IN 1924 IS REPORTED‘ New York Paper PrmtSICARD MERCIER T0 ORDAIN | of Get-TogetherI Meeting of His Fnends—i l'obable‘ ders on John F. Kenney of ‘ Although | an- nounced his candtdacy his supporters | Amidon to | relative | Cox of | ta him | ready to be brought out into the open. | | was said to have occupied a good deal | was believed to obtained from her. July 7.—A large barn con- | ably would enter the convention with |at Northampton where he had been | Fourth | by Th(s is \ouX(or trial in the federal court undér || l '———«-——fii mayor, although of a political connec- I NEW BRITAIN STUDENT| Belgian Prelate Will Confer Holy Or. Grand Street. of this city will Catholic priest- | John F. Kenney bal ordained in the hood tomorrow at the American | | college in Louvain, Belgium. The ceremony will be performed by Car- | dinal Mercier, Belgium's heroic pre- late, who will ordain the class of | | students who have been sent to Europe from several countries | After his ordination. Mr. Kenney will make a tour of Ireland and will| sail for the United States on July 18 Het is expected to arrive in New | Britain on July 26 and will say his| first mass at St. Joseph's church on| Sunday, July 29 | The young priest is an aluminus | of St. Joseph's school in this city | and was a member of the class of 1913. After his graduation he took | a course in St. Thomas' seminary in| Hartford, later pursuing' his studies in St. Mary's Seminary® Baltimore. | For the past four years he has been | IIn the American College in Beigium, | | completing a five year course. | He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. | | James Kenney of Grand street. { SLAIN WITII ANAXE ‘('Mcnp«\, Woman Killed and Husband, Recently Released From Insane Asylum, is Held as Killer. | Chicopee, Mass., July 7.—Mrs. Sal- |omea Zygarowski died early today.of it wounds said to have been inflicted by | her husband, Joseph Zygarowski, with the blunt end of an axe. The woman died before any statement could be | The husband was arrested. He recently was released from the state hospital for the insane a AS COUNTERFEITER Paul HELD Bridgeport, July 7. Solomon New London, July 7.—A case of in- [arrested here as an alleged counter- | fantile paralysis has been reported to |feiter of bills and charged with pass- | ing bad ones in Middletown was held | U. 8. Commissioner Lavery today| $1.500 bonds. [eolony in Westover, |lowed revelations made at English team Miss Joan W. and Evelyn Colyer, 6-3, 6-1. MYSTERY SGILL UNSOLVED Scarsdale Police Now Look for Sup-| posed Religions Lover as Slayer of | | Dorothy Kauffman, Scarsdale, N. Y, July 7-—An qmrv was begun today by the police !to discover whether Miss Kauffman, 22-year-old governess who | was killed in the home of Magruder (“raighend on Tuesday, left a suitor or| flance behind her Md.,, when came north last September. Police (aptain MeQuillan declared | he had instrncted a White Plains un- dertaker who left last night for West- she over with the girl's body to make in- | quiries about her friends there. He expressed the opinfon that some | | man might have followed her from the south and killed her when she refused to return with him. It was pointed out that Miss Kauffman fre-| quently reecived letters couched In' devout religious terms from men in the Mennonite colony. Meanwhile police cought a burly negro who was seen near the Craig head home pn Tuesday. SCANDAL IN PITTSBURGH Cleanup of Tlicit T lqnor Results tn 11 Members of Police Department Be- | ing Suspended Pittsburgh, July 7.—The city's drive sgainst illicit lignor launched recently has hit the police department with greater force than it has the bootleg- |gers, it was revealed when police of- ficials announced the suspension of 11 l()fl'ers to Split Commission With Lawrence M. more patrolmen ‘The order removing the officers fol a police board trial by were suspended last week after a sen sational raid on alleged “speak easies” an'l beer ad wine resorts. Pt HIGH TIDES ° July 8 (Standard Time) At New Haven— 6:57 a. m; | At New London— 5:02 A. M.; T4 P M. 5:20 P. M. | —— % THE WEATHER 525 Hartford, July 7.-—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity: Generally fair without much temperature change tonight and Sunday. in- | Dorothy | in the Mennonite the prevention of war and also the | reduction of armaments and’ educa | tion for peace. | - GIRL AGIIIN DISAPPEARS Indianapolis Police Seeking 16 Year- Old Who Was Kidnapped and Kept by Father 10 Years. Indianapolis, July ~Mary Eloise Montgomery, 16, whose father T. Wil- bur Montgomery, served part of a | prison sentence for kidnapping his | daughter in violation of a divorce de- crea and kept her for morae than ten I\qus‘ is being sought by police of | this city today. Mary Eloise disap- peared Wednesday night Mrs. Ethel T. Crum. the girl's |'mother, was granted a divoree from Montgomery and custody of the child shortly tefore the girl was stolen The child was traced through Cuba and Mexico. Montgomery was ar- rested in Florida and returped to In- dianapolls. While he was at Prince- | | ton, Ind., attending the funeral of his grandmother he escaped. In 1918 he wrote to James P. Goodrich, then governor, from Cuba, offering to re- turn the child if he were granted ‘a pardon. He returned and received the pardon, but again disappeared '\’I?h the girl The mother gained DOS'?'SInn of the child in 1921 | his face bore marks of ill treatment. | | There was one scar on the side of | the face, but this apparently was one | of long standing. The body was found about 7 o'clock on the morning of July 4, by Patrick F. Leahy of 223 Lawlor street, Fred McGlainchey of 320 Main street.| A call was sent to police headquar- ters. Desk Sergeant Matthias Rival de- patched Patrolmen Herbert C. Lyon and Michael Massey to Grove street, |and the medical examiner was noti- fled Chief of Police W. (. Hart found that Moran had a wife and family living on Willow street, New Haven,| and they were communicated with. The body was taken to New Haven and has been bnried. Moran was 35 vears of age. kad besn in New Britain only He two weeks prior to his death and was em- | conatruction worker on Normal school job in ployed as a the new State Stanley Quarter. Turks Do Not Belleve Story of Greek Fight | Lausanne, July 7. — The Turkish delegation to the Lausanne peace con- | ference stated today that it had re- ived no advices regarding a reported ash between Greek and Turkish | troops at Kara-Burun. The opinion was expressed by the Turkish repre sentatives that the report was erron eous. Agent Tnes to Bnbe Member of Council Committee Considering Chill Plant at Slaughter House Stanley and is Quickly Shown to the Door 1? other officers who | Councilman Lawrence M. Staniey of , the fourth ward was approached yes- terday and an attempt made to in duce him to throw his support on city contracts to a certain contractor for a money conslderation The councilman was visited at his place of employment by a representa- tive of a concern that installs re- | frigerating plants and chill appara- tus in slaughter houses He is a | member of the common council com- | mittee investigating the cost of mak- ing such improvements at the ecity slaughter house and has been active in that work It was apparently felt that because of his leadership in this movement his recommendations would be likely carry greater weight Mayor A. M. Paonessa when in- formed of the atempt to bribe Coun- | cilman Stanley and of the council- man's action in ejecting the would-: briber, spoke in praise of e work of Councilman Stanley. The to be — tion other than that of the fourth warder, regards Stanley ag one of the | most valuable committee Workers In toe common council Councilman Stanley was wuncom- municative today when asked for de. talls of the attempt to bribe him. Not until he was pressed, did he tell| of the incident Then he said: “The agent of a certain refrigerating ma- | chine company came to me and said the company was anxious to get the contract He offered to split his commirsion with me if T would use my influence in his behalf. I rejected his offer, showed him out and told the girl at the telephone switchboard to tell him that I was ‘out’ if, he came looking for me again. 1.took the matter up with a member of the committee and the company's bid| was thrown out despite the fact that it was the lowest submitted. “There’s nothing about the affair that deserves publicity, in my opinion. It is simply a case of a member of | the city government doing his duty.” and | “Efforts have been made to avert the disaster which is inevitable if present tendencies continue. Every suggested method for adjusting these. |difficulties has failed. Try Christianity “The time has come to try Chris« tianity. It has never falled in any field when given a fair chance. xxx “The nations of the world must de< part from selfish individualism and | |human isolation. They should ‘unite |in creating new standards which are based upon the teachings of Jesus. ““We believe that the divine right of |sovereignty and civil authority is vest« |ed in the natlon and that the nation is an intelligent moral entity which |God holds responsible for the use of I-more:gnl\' and authority which He . |has vested in it. Urges Fair Play “We believe that God's judgment can be averted only by national re« |pentance for sin and by national {ohedience to the laws of love and . |brotherhood and fair play, as taught by Jesus and that such obedience will |bring peace to the world and restora< ‘Inn of prosperity and happiness te& all peoples. “It is hecause nations and rulers {have held themselves above all moral 1av& becoming a law unto themselves ‘ s far as their civil lives are concern- od that present day world conditions ‘have become so chaatic. | 2,000 Agree On Text ‘We, therefore, an assembly of 2, |700 Christian men and women as well as officials representing the governors of 12 states who have been in session for the period of a weak to discuss these problems, unite in asking the |rulers of the United States and of the (world to join in setting up the king- |dom of God on earth, acknowledging Jesus Christ, Lord of Lords and King of Kings so that justice and happiness and brotherhood and peace may pré- vail through the whole earth.” WHO'S THE BACK NUMBER? I“""‘ Robertson, ex-Congresswoman, Says Girls Who Bob Hair, Quit Cor- | sets, Wear Low Necks, Soon Will Ba Muskogee, ®kla., July 7.—Miss Alice Robertson, former congress. woman, now welfare chief at the fed- eral soldiers hospital here, in an ulti- matum to office girls in the institution declared that “the woman who flag- rantly displays her charms soon will !be a back number.” Miss Robertson ordered the girls te |go back to corsets, quit bobbing their |hair, roll up their hose, and adopt {high neck dresses. CHLOROFORMED AND ROBBED By The Associated Press. Rome, July 7.—Prince Carlo Giuss |tiniani Bandini and his wife, Princess = ,Mnrla weare chloroformed during Inight by two servants in their {who stole jewels and money at 2,000,000 lire. The servitors ed with their booty and have been found. A

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