New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 21, 1923, Page 1

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s News of the World By Associated Press (T ESTABLISHED 1870 WOMEN T0 DEMAND - EVERY PRIVILEGE ‘To Ask Constitutional ~Amend- ment Forcing Every State to Act. WISCONSIN STANDS ~ ALONE Is Only State in Union Where Gen- eral Rights Bill Has Met With Suc- cess — Ask Protective Legisla- . Average Daily Circulation W Week Ending 9 ’1 1 ?_ July 14th .. NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, JULY STADIUM TO SEAT 100,000 MIGHT | BE BUILT AT SOUND B@ACH, CONN., IF THERE'S NO %“%%ECLE IN WAY Fight Promoters Confer With S\%‘o to Dempsey-Wills Fight—Opt. Goverpor to Be Sounded to See Objections. 21,1923 —-FOURTEEN PAGES. YANKEE ATHLETES LOSE BY | FRENCHMEN PROMISE THEY ONE POINT TO ENGLISHMEN WILL KEEP SECRET TERMS e o T OF BRITISH REPARATIONS THREE OF SLAYERS. OF VILLA GAPTURED Other Four in Assassination Plot Being Pursued by Mexican Troops BODY NOW LIES IN STATE o ®, %'U)‘ Mayor Relative| %‘(en On Land—| %zre Are Legal % ‘Yale-Harvard Tr‘ack Team oAl sl ‘ _ e Suars S ana FRIENDS SAY HARDING ~ Official Text Received 3 One-half Points to Five| WIN'T (ALL fiflNflRESSi in Paris But Those on and One-Half. R Inside Agree Not to No Extra Session, Special Div ulge Its Contents option has bee or ten days on a tract of lan.#’ 'Hound Beach on which to erect a stadium. Mayor Phillips has been told that the materials for the structure would be bought here and local labor used. The capacity of the stands would be aboft 100,000, Stamford, Conn., July 21-—Confer- ences are under way here in which Mayor A, N. Phillips Is a party to see If there would be any obstacle in the way of staging the Dempsey-Wills boxing match in this vicinity. The sportsmen who are behind the plan By The Associated Press. ‘Wembley Stadium, London, July 21. —The Oxford-Cambridge team won the athletic meet with the Yale-Har- vard team here today. The English universities scored six | | Dispatch From Alaska Positively Asserts Poincare’s Speech Tomor- row Will in No Way Re- tion, By The Assoclated Press Seneca Falls, N. Y., July 21.—While 23,000,000 women have benefited by equal rights legislatjon in the 1ast two years, the state to state method of and who are said to be in opposi- tion to Tex Rickard are represented | by William A. Dwyer, James Daugh- erty and a Mr. Cusack of Philadel- It wab understood that representa- tives of the promoters are to have a conference with Governor Templeton hush, His Secretary Meeting Death In Same Fusillade — Thousands Ex-Bandit Leader Killed From Am-| and a half points against 5 1-2 for the Americans. Yale won the first two places in the first event of the athletic meet, the On Board the U. 8. 8 Henderson With President Harding, July 21— President Harding, it can be declared positively, has no intention of calling flect Attitude Toward waging the fight has proved wasteful [ pnja, The promoters are sald to be |at Waterbury within a day or two to ; England’s Suggestions. 120 yard hurdles. of time, energy and money, Miss Alice Paul declared today in presenting her equal rights constitutional amend- ment resolution to the national wom- en's party in conference here. The resolution urged congress to amend the federal constitution in De- cember to give men and women equal rights throughout the United States and all territory under its jurisdiction. Wisconsin Is Alone. “In the past two years, 23,000,000 women have been benefited by the passage of equal rights legislation in fourteen states,” Miss Paul said in part. “In Delaware, Georgia, Massa- chusetts, New York, Ohio, Mississippi, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, the rights of women have been made eligible to public office. In Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia married women have been empowered to choose their own residences for voting purposes. In Maine they have been admitted to jury service, Various other minor reforms have been affected. But in only one state, Wisconsin, has our general equal rights bill met with suc- cess Progress Too Slow. . "Consldered in comparison with the gross mass of discriminatory legisla- tion which exists throughout the country this progress has been too slow. The experience of the fight for suffrage proved that exclusive adher- ence to the state method is wasteful of our time, our energy and our money. The only way in which com plete equality can be gained for all ‘wome:a within a reasonable time is by federal amendment, just as the right to vote was gained for women throughont the country that way.” Protective Legisiations. Hope that protective legislation in the industries may be made to apply not only to women but to all indus-| tria! workers was expressed by Miss interested In horse racing York state. in New Today it was said an | see if there are any legal objections to bringing the bout into Connecticut. Actress-Mother Wins In Kidnapping Case i 'BLAMES HIR countenance of the man” was today blamed for the “Her- rin President Frank Farrington ‘of theiVilla guard was wounded. Tilinois mine workers with the Unit-| ed States coal commission in answer to a brie association, mal expression from the miners’ pres ident regarding Herrin, rington's answer said, actually possession of part For proof. ing to hs ED GUNMEN FOR HERRIN MURDERS Farrington, Head of Union, Gives Out His First State- ment Since Massacre By The Associated Press. Springfleld, Ill,, July 21.—"The ugly American gun- a brief filed by calamity,” in filed by the national coal This brief {s the first for- Mr. Far- took of the country." he offers a letter purport- been writiten by Sherman “Highly armed gunmen, DOROTHY MANNERS. Holman, “one of the so-called guards employed by the Hargrave detective agency, who performed the so-called work of guarding the property of the Southern Illinois Coal Co.” It is ad- dressed to Holman's' divorced wife, March to City Hall to View Remains By The Assoclated Prees. Parral, Chihuahua, Mex, July 21.— The body of Francisco “Pancho” Vil- la, a Robin Hood of Mexico;, the most interesting character of contempor ary Mexican history, a strange com- binatidn of herse sense and fiery im- pulse, lies in the city hall here, with thousands of persons fldcking to view it. Heavily guarded as always a part of his military strategy learned in hard school of experience, Villa met death yesterday on the outskirts of Parral between Long's House and the Guna Juanto bridge when seven un- identified assassins from ambush sent 16 bullets into the body and head. Others Also Slain Col. Miguel Trillo, Villa's secretary: Rosalio Morales, one bodyguard, and one bystander, whose name has not been learned, also were killed. One The attacking band totalled seven, the bandit's unlucky number. The {assailants were on foot, while Pan- cho's men were mounted, leaving Parral on a happy-go-lucky journey to his ranch at Canutillo, Durango. The assassins fled on horses which had been hidden in the river bed near the bridge. Three Are Captured General E. Martinez, commanding a detachment of 100 federal soldiers, however captured three of the at- tacking seven late yesterday near here. Gen. Martinez, who hurried here from Chihuahua City | a for per-| the | ter of appointment of a guardian for Carlos San Martin, away from a family having the child in charge earlier in the Darien, Conn., July 21.—The mat- five year old son of Dorofhy Manners, who took him week, was dismissed in probate court today. Mrs. says in part: 9, learn I moonshiners, Fay Kuntz of Marion, 111, and “I've been here close by since June No doubt you will be surprised to am down with a gang of Ha, ha. but the moon- field sonal investigation, is holding men under orders from President Obregon. left Jiminez and Valle de Allende to trail the murderers. Federal troops have gone to Canu- tillo In anticipation of possible dis- Military detachments have| Hulman of Yale, finished first, Mil- | liken of Yale, second and Huhne ofy Oxford, third. The time was 15 8-5 seconds. 100 yard dash, won by Abrahams, | Cambridge; Comins, Yale, second; Rusnak, Yale, third. Time 10 sec- onds. & 440 yard tun, won by Chapman, Yale, Gage, Yale, second; Stevenson, | Oxford, third. Time 50 3-5 seconds. ‘(‘hupman won by two yards. Hulman won the 120 yard hurdles event by one foot. The big stadium held a large crowd | of spectators. The afternoon was| | clear and hot which seemed to favor | the Americans who are more accus- | tomed to such weather than the Brit- |ishers. The crowd was far quieter /than an American assemblage for a | similar event. One mile run, won by Davis, Cam- | bridge; time 4 minutes 21 3-6 seconds. High jump, won by Derould, Har- | vard; Dickinson, Oxford, second, five feet, nine inches. Walter, Harvard, was second Seagrove, Cambridge, third. Two mile run, won by Tibbetts, | Harvard; McInnes, Oxford, second; | Fookes, Cambridge, third. Time 9 ! minutes 41 4-6 seconds. | 220 yard hurdles: won by Huhne, | Oxford; Cole, Yale, second; Durant, | Yale, third. Time 256 1-5 seconds. | High jump, Mitchell, Oxford, third. | Half mile run: won by Lowe, Cam- bridge; time 1:56 3-5. 16 pound shot put, won by East- man, Harvard, 44 feet, 2 inches: Reese, Oxford, second, 41 feet, 6 1-2 Dunker, Harvard, third, dis- 40 feet 9 1-2 inches. jump, won by Abrahams, distance 23 feet 2 1-2 and | inche tance, Broad Cambridge, {inches, | 220 yard dash, won by Abrahams, | Cambridge, time 21 8- seconds. congress into session in advance of its| regular meeting in December. | While he has made no direct state- ment, those among his party on his |tour of Alaska who reflect his views! say that he has no idea of heeding a demand for an extra session made by| Senator Brookhart, republican, of! Towa | Those close to the president point out that the president, in an address| at Hutehison, Kan., last month, pre-| sented a list of measures instituted by the government for the benefit of | farmers which he said should re- store the agricultural industry to nor- | mal. | Any further legislation at this time, | it is held by some of the president's| advisers, would do more to hinder| that restoration than to help it. | The president and Mrs. Harding and | their party were today en route from Cordova to Sitka where they expect| to arrive tomorrow for an all day visit, before bidding farewell to .\Van-' ka. The president, enthralled, viewed the massive ice cliffs of Childs glacier yesterday. Told that a gunshot would usually cause great masses of ice to| break off, he asked one of the secret service men to fire at the glacier with his pistol. But the distance was too great, Just as the president was leavlng( a mass of lce greater than any of the| others broke away and plunging into| the river sent the waters ashore like a tidal wave. ACCUSED BY A WOMAN New Bedford Man Has Folice Call| Her to Prove He is All Right—She| | | | | Washington By The Associated Pre Paris, July 21.— on reparations was foreign office today. Knowledge of the note's contents is limited to a small group of foreign office officials each of whom promised Premier Poincare to keep the inform- ation to himself, the premier saying that the French government ' had given fits word of honor to observe secrecy until the British government agreed to the note's publication. Address Tomorrow Premier Poincare’'s address at the monument ceremonies in Villers-Cot« teret tomorrow will present anew France's attitude on the reparation issue but as the speech had been written before the British note ar- rived it will be a simple statement of the French position without regard to the questions raised by the British. Actual negotiations among the al- lies will be begun next week as soon as the French and Belgian premiers have had time to discuss the note with their cabinets, The French cabinet ministers will probably meet Monday or Tuesday and go over the note with Premier Poincare. After- wards views will be exchanged with Belgium v e British note received at the Washington Gets Text Washington, July 21.—The British note on reparations sent to the allled capitals also was delivered to the government today as a matter of information. State depart- ment officials said the text would not be made public nor could the subject be discussed. The note came through the American embassy in London. ONLY FOUR ARE LEFT is Winchester rifles and guns. We are only waiting for them to start the band playing. We havé two guns planted on the dam reser- voir, two on the cook and sleeping cars And six guns on top of the hills. orders at the Viilg ranch. Affairs affecting Villa's esfate admittedly are mixed, and some opinion is openly stated here that the ranch may re- vert to the state, Troops from the command of Gen. Counsel for the selectmen raised the |shine point that_as the child had no legal residence in Darien the court had no Jurisdiction. The court agreed on this and granted a motion to with- draw the application and dismiss the Half mile run, Burke, Harvard, was ana Miliigan, Oxford third. 220 yard dash: Renwick, was second, Noren, Yale, Orders His Arrest-as Car Thief. | Stamford, July 21.—William Pina| of New Bedford, Mass.,, under arrest on charge of stealing an automobile Josephine Cagey of Chicago, chajrman of the producers councils of the na- tional woman’s party, in vreporting to-| day. 2 “The producers counclls of the second, In the Oxford | third. All But Four of 34 Who Started “Last Man" Dinner in 1886 Have woman's party have been organized to bring equality to women in indus- try,” Miss Casey said. “They aim to| secure for women equal pay and nor- mal promotion to positions of respon- sibility. They alm also to see to it that protective legislation in the fu- ture will apply to all persons in the industry affected, and not simply to, women, and to secure a like modifica- tion in protective legislation already in existence.” Miss Laura Berrien, chairman of| the government workers' council, re- ported that the recent appointment of | three women to the personnel board of the treasury department gave wom- en a voice in appointments, salaries and promotions for the first time in the history of the civil service. BOLD RIGHWAY ROBBERY Two Men in Auto Held Up and Sepa. cl rated from Money and Valuables on Road in Columbia. Willimantic, July 21.—Clarence | Moriarty and Herbert Woodill re- ported to the police today that about last midnight while on the state road at Hop River in Columblia, three men with guns stopped thelr machine, made them get out and then searched them, taking all their money ana valuables. They were then told to drive aw: The victims did not make a report untfl this morning but meantime the police had been notified that the ofl service statlon in Co- Inmbia of Abraham Kolsman and Al- bert Silverman had been broken into and goods stolen. At one place a tank lock had been broken and gaso- line taken, indicating the thieves had n ase. DELANEY SUSPENDS FIVE They only shoot 600 shots apiece a minute. There are also 100 guards with Winchester rifles that shoot three miles. But as long as they stay three miles away they will' be safe. “But Heaven help them if they ever start in on mining company Jose G. Escobar are bound here from Torreon to help in the pursuit of the assassins. Two Motives Advanced. Two theories are advanced by in- vestigating officers, One is that de- serters from Villa's guard committed | day night. | fulfill their promise to present them- | BRIDGEPORT GLOVE ARTISTS As Chairman of State p U. Regls- tratfon Committee He Acts Against Absentees. W. F. Delaney, chairman of the state registration committee of the A. A. U, sald today that he had sus- pended five Bridgeport amateur box- ers who failed to appear for bouts scheduled at the state armory Thurs- The men will be given a hearing and asked why they did not selves. If they cannot furnish satis- | factory reason they will be suspended from participation in A. A, U. events for periods to be determined by the registration committee. Mr. Delaney said that he has had no word from the boxers. It is pos- sible, he said, that they might have met with a mishap on the road, but he is determined to learn the reason for their absence. A At Sigsbee, Gen. roperty. The brief concludes: “Must ‘this terrible calamity Was on Maine ‘When Blown Up, Spoke. New York, July 21 ices for Rear Admiral commander, of the battleship Maine, were held today in the cathedral of St. John the Divine, conducted by the precentor sathedral by Rev. H. P. Veazte, Honorary pallbearers Charles P. Lee Bullard damiral having been She “uneral serv- Charles ill-fated of were Plunkett, Melville E. pass without a lesson having been learned, | without a correction made?” SIGSBEE FUNERAL TODAY vices Last Night, Chaplain Who Was the Rear Major Stone, The men involved are Kelly, Loz- ick, Christy, Keeley and Lenn. RAIDS AT SAVIN ROCK Two of 11 Proprietors Arrested for 8150 Liquor Offenses Are Fined Fach——Others Continued. Col. Henry L. Swords Philips Zilden. Memorial services were held last | night in the Sigsbee home, at which a |eulogy was spoken by the Right Rev. | Father Chidwick who was chaplain of |the Maine at the time she was de- gtroyed Four other Maine survivors were present The body will be taken to Washing- ton for interment in Arlington na- tional cemetery. and Major | the Kkillings. The other is that of revenge. Villa, the mountain man, with ability to ride, shoot and swear with a peculiar complex, the great weak- i ness of which was an, uncontrollable hundreds of men had sworn to take his life—and, according to his friends, he had no other enemy so bitter as Francisco Herrera. Villa is claimed virtually to have exterminated the Herrera family, prominent in Mexico, ¥rancisco being the only male mem- ber of the family left, He sl a gov- ernment official at Gomez Palicco Durango, near here Had Terrible Temper To his fiery temper is “"attributed his downfall and the boy of the Sierra Madres of westérn Chihuahua who grew to be the most notorious figure in all Mexico often admitted his weak- ness. From a sane man laughing, joking with his friends his eyes would become bloodshot, he wonld pitch his voice several tones higher and pull his pistol and fire at the slightest provocation. So, in death Pancho Villa once more has become a front page story, which position he had often emphatically declined He also s=ald he never wanted his picture shown before an American audience No Military Honors. The Associated Press. Mexico City, July 21.—President Obregon's plan to accord full military honors to the funeral of Francisco D. By temper, had many enemies—probably [ New Haven, July 21.—The West Villa, former rebel chieftain who was scholph, Yale, Harvard, Dickin- won by Martindale, Pole vault: height 12 feet; second, 11 feet 11% inches; son, Cambridge, third. In the broad jump: Comins, Yale, 22 feet 7% .inches; Cheney, Yale, 22 feet. EUROPEAN FILM FANS WISH GRACEFUL GIRLS | Men and Women Tired of Seeing The Old And Famous Actors— i s Want Youth | Berlin, July 21. — Young women with graceful hands and feet are now being sought by European film direc- tors in their efforts to compete with American films. American pictures long ago made it difficult for the film studios of central Lurope to market | pictures abroad, or even at homs, if the heroines were not young and beautiful. The pracfice of featurin actressos regardless of theif looks has igone into the discard. For a long time the German and Swedish mov- |ing picture producers clung tenacious- |1y to the theory that histrionic art was Ithe chief feature of a film, but today |they are looking for youth and beauty of figure, as well as beauty of face. Europe's tired business man wants to see girl shows, and he wants youth in |hls musical comedies and movies {alike As a result German movie actresses are all dieting. ( There has been also a marked change in the types of footwear popu- lar on the German stage. Long, slender shoes on American and Eng- |lish models are making their appear- ance. The short-vamped shoe, which Europe used to believe made famous in Philadelphia, got into the lockup here through his own efforts to prove| that he was above suspicion. The po- | lice detained him last night to ques- | tion him about a machine he was driving. He offered to call up a wom- an in Philadelphia to identify him.| An officer accompanied Pina to the telephone and after reaching the| woman Pina asked her to tell the of- ficer that he was all right. The wom- an, however, told the officer that Pina should be held and that the machine was stolen. Then a man, who sald he| was a detective, came in on the wire| and asked the Stamford officer to hold Pina for him. Tt appeared that the detective was making inquiries of the woman just as Pina called by tele- phone. GIBBONS GOT NOTHING His Manager Says He Did Not Re- | ceive One Cent for His Fight— Training Expenses Only Were Pnid.; St. Paul, July 21.—Reports from Omaha that Tommy Gibhons had re- | ceived $23,000 for his fight with Jack Dempsey, world heavyweight cham- plon, at Shelby, Mont., July 4, were emphatically denied today by Eddie Kane, Gibbons’ manager. | “Gibhons dld not receive one cent” Kane sald. “He was paid. however, | his training expenses and that money | went to defray the cost of his camp | and sparring partners. His only source of revenue will be from the motion pictures.” Hihel'niéhsifdr’férfii)erance ; Rather Than Prohibition | Montreal, July 21.—Resolutions fa- | unable Gone to Last Reward. sociated Pre ter, Minn,, July 21.—Thirty- four places arranged at one long table at which were 34 chairs all but four of them draped and with their backs turned to a dis- play of china, sparkling glassware and polished silver flanking a decora- tive centerpiece upon which reposed a bottle of rare wine—this was the setting in the low ceilinged dining room of the Old Sawyer House here today the scene of the 39th annual banquet of the *last man's club”. Three surviving members of this quaint organization who for the last 38 years have met on the anniversary of the battle of Bull Run, July 21 in the Sawyer House sat at the tuble today. The fourth member was to attend because he must end the rest of his short span ef ars in a wheel chair. The unopened bottle of wine, a gift to the club in 1886, will be drunk by the last survivor in a toast to his de- parted comrades of Co. B, First Min- nesota infantry. It was brought from the safety deposit vault of a local bank shortly before the three survi- vors arrived, and graced the center of the table, where it has reposed dur- ing each banquet for the last 87 years. in black SGOUT SLIDE REPORT War Department Knows Nothing of Reported Closing of Panama Canal by Landslide, As Rumored. Los Angeles, July 21—Rumors that the Panama canal had been closed by | central | a machine, |the foot Haven town court was thronged to- day with defendants in cases brought' by the state police as the result of raids made last night on saloons and hotels there. Only two of 11 cases were disposad of in these fines of $100 each for selling and $50 each for keeping liquor with intent to sell modernist movement In the church! peing imposed. The men convicted of England, is serfously {1l with ! were John Long and Charles Hughes pneumonia at St. Luke’s hospital {In the other cases continuances were He has been serving as special given preacher at St. Bartholomew’'s Epis-| St hrietl S Disabled Vets' Head Glad Hylan Opposed to One 1 Templeton Takes Interest Way Mind in Po]itics;“ Bridgeport, July 21.—John H. Wil liame, former déepartment commander New York, July 21.—New York po- | of the Veterans po( Foreign m\\'nr:. litical leaders today were studying|who has made charges of “bootleg not without misgivings, Mavor Hy-|ging” and “dope peddling” at Alling lan’s address last night at Ogdensbure | town hospitat! today said he was glad in which he rapped the idea of “‘rock. | that Governor Templeton had prom-| phia authorities that Wilson escaped bound allegiance to party” and pald|ised co-operation in investigating in an automobile stolen from s wop, the sole compliment of the evening to | conditions. He said he was willlng | ap, i SOM (N esp. Henry Ford to send to the governor a copy of the| report he had made on conditions at| | Alingtown and Connecticut hospitals| and sent to Ger. John F. O'Ryan. | | out, it' is announced at the war de- partment, because Villa was not car-| ried upon the officlal military rolls of the government voring temperance rather than the prohibition of alcoholic beverages, urging an Investigation by the United States into the treatment of women in Jrish prisons, and renewing al- leglunru to a landslide were contained in radio messages received here last night from the tankers De Roche and Im- lay, on the way from Los Angeles | harbor to the east coast asking their the Roman Catholic| zgents for advice and instructions, church were .adopted by the Ancient| gooording to the Los Angeles Exame Order of Hibernians in America a}{ner their §3rd annual convention. i According to the paper a radio also = % was received here from the tanker RUSSIA WILL | Hugoton at Salina Cruz, containing By The Associated Press. | the statement “Sii - Moscow, July 21 —Russia will sign | e the Turkish straits convention at | Constantinople early in August, it was | announced here today. Dean of Oxford Is Il With Pneumonia in N, Y. New York, July 21.—Rev. Cyril W. Embhett, dean of University College, | fOxford, England, and a leader of the look small has been aban- | donea | Shoe shops everywhere are adver- | tising real American styles, and it is| no longer Bossible to identify Ameri- {can men and women immediately by their shoes Russian women have beautiful hands and feet, and have found great favor with the flm photographers who are constantly on the lookout forl |grace even in the humblest members | of their mobe Attorney General Gets ! | Summons to Go to Trial | *]‘ Columbus, O., July 21 —Attorney |Gen. Harry M. Daugherty who has| |been in Columbus recuperating from | | his recent {liness, today was served iwith a subpoena to appear in the | District of Columbia supreme court | Monday as a witness in the Morse case. The attorney general will leave | for Washington either tonight or to- | morrow, he said Ex-Vet, Once Pardoned by President, | | Gets Away on Eve of Trial on Ser- ious Charges in Philadelphia. Runs Down ?;desfr}an And Breaks His Nose| John Sinklewicz of 476 East street, reported to the police this morning at 7:15 o'clock that the automobile he was driving had struck Erie Westman of 115 Smaliey street near the Union Manufacturing company. Westman was knocked down and sustained a btiroken nose. Philadelphia, July 21.—Erwin J. Wilson of Brookline, Mass, who was | pardoned by President Wilson for| preventing =« jail delivery at Fort Leavenworth, where he was imprison- | ed, escaped early today from the state hospital for the criminal insane at| | Fairview, Pa Wilson was this week declared pane and was to have been brought to| Philadelphia today to face four in- dictments charging larceny and as-| sault with intent to kill two police men The hospital notified the Philadel- SIGN Washington, July 21.—No report of a serious slide in the Panama canal | had reached the war department and | officials said today that any real oba e ————————"29) struction to traffic through the wa- FRESH AIR FUND. iterwny undoubtedly would have been ‘wvm*ed promptly. HIGH TIDES i o | July 22 (Standard Time) | —0— Previouslyacknowl- edged ...$4,011.00 Universal club Contributions to treas- |Claim Adjuster’s Bonds Cut From $7,500 to $5,000 Bridgeport, July 21.—Leonard J. | Maloney, claim agent and accident | claims adjuster for the Cennecticut | Co., charged with embezzlement in | four counts, had his hearing contin. | ued one week today and the bond was |1owered from $7,600 to $5,000. At New Haven— 5:12 a m.; At New London— 3:49 a. m.; 5:50 p. m. 4:25 p. m. Total today ........$4,056.00 Another factory club, the Uni- versal club, of Landers, Frary & Clark today sent in a wejcome contribution to the Fresh Air fund and $35 more has been Darien Selectman Dies Suddenly, Wife Very 1ll Stamferd, July 21—Edgar T. Bates, second selectman of Darien, died sud- denly at the home of his son-in-law * | . * {Treadway Wants Special Session on Coal Issue, ‘Washington, July 21. — A special | Rodriguez, Baseball Star |4 s |With Bridgeport, Sispended | Dr. Pryor, Lung Expert, Is | Bridgeport, July 21.—John J. Kear- : ,* T Victim of Heart Attack |ney. president of the local Fastern || THE WEATHER —o0— |league baseball club today announc- Melville Downes in South Norwalk. He was 65 years of age, a descend- ant of the settlers of Middlesex county and had resided in Darien most of his life. Mrs. Bates is ge- riously il daughter. f a H. Pryor, directors and physician in chief at the | driguez Perryburg hospital, died There are a son and a|nationally known as a Buffalo, N. Y, July 21.—Dr. last rom a sudden heart attack. specialist iseases of the lungs. John |ed that 62, head of the board of | Baseman Jose Rodriguez, because Ro- night | without permission. He was | will stand until the second baseman in | gives the president a satisfactory rea- | son for his action. he has suspended Second left the team Thursday The suspension | Hartford, July 21.—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity: | Fair, continued warm tonight ! and Sunday; gentle westerly { winds. | * session of congress to deal with the coal situation was advocated today by Representative Treadway, republican; Massachusetts, who declared legisia- tion should be enacted creating a fed- eral agency to regulate coal prices and distribution. sent to the treasurer. The Fresh ||| Alr Editor at The Herald office will gladly receive and acknowl- cdge any contributions which may be made to this fund. CLEARING HOUSE REPORT. New York, July 21.—Thé, actual condition of clearing house banks and trust companies for the week shows an excess In reserve of $22,260,250. This is a decrease of $4,538,230, M 33

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