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MYSTERY IS UNSOLYED 3 . ! Have Been Murdered. Wisconsin Victory Said (0 Be| wusscncis. conn. aue 1—s0 sar ]n[luencing East s | hero l(l;v>: !1’111? (ISP:' York troopers PERSONALS | Mr. and Mrs. John Hill, Mr. and | Mrs, Arvid Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Anderson and daughter, and Mrs. Arthur G. Carlson and daughter will return Saturday from a two weeks' stay at Beach Park. ‘Ralph R, Merigold and Bernard G. Kranowitz are on an automobile trip through Vermont and Canada. " McCue Congratulates Chief Hart “Same to You” Says Police Head st Year of g D After medicine they. sure Members of Department Are Celebrating Fi . . . - Office—Crime During Regime. who are trying to clear up the taxi- | cab mystery, and disappearance of | Waslie Trinyle, the Waterbury driver, | © made no headway. | <) | New York, Aug. 1,—Vermont, long | ha considered one of the most adamant, | he only word sent over since yes- rock-ribbed republican strongholds, | terd was that the machine found on | {threatens to crack under the strain of | a deserted road in Bedford Vilage was | a surging undercurrent of progres- | being held under lock and key. | Mrs. Catherine Conlin, Mrs, Edward |J. Conlin and sons, Edward, Jr., and iRnherl: Miss Estelle Conlin, all of 88 Hart street, and Miss Irma Hallock of 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhere bile, the gift of Henry Ford. The car CHIEF W. C. HART. prospect street « have returned from Beach Park, Clinton where they spent two weeks. Mrs. Joseph' W. Roche and daugh- ! ter, Kathryn of 49 Union street have | returned from Beach Park, Clinton, where they spent two weeks. Mrs. Mary Luddy of Bassett strect who is spending the summer at Grove Beach, Clinton, was a visitor in town | today. | Mrs. Alfred .Pilz and children are {at Grove Beach for two weeks. E. J. €orcoran, of 269 Washington | | street, is visiting his aunt, Mrs, Frank Gill, of Southington. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Gritzmacher | | anZ family of Hart street left todayi | for a month's trip through New York state, the White Mountains and Can- ada. CHIEF DETECTIVE M'C Chief William C. Hart today com- pletes his first year as head of the New Britain police department and Sergeant William P. McCue completes his first year as Chief Detective in the department. At headquarters this morning Sergeant McCue congratulat- ed Chief Hart on his first anniversary| in the office of chief of police but the chief .reminded Sergeant McCue that he was also celebrating his first an-| niversary as chief detective and re-| turned the compliment. Chief Hart had little to say in re- gards to the work done this past year excepting that the liquor situation is pretty well cleaned up in New Brit- ain. He spoke highly of the work done by men in all departments and of the hearty co-operation between the policemen and the police officials. Sergeant McCue spoke in glowing terms of the support given him by the men in the detective bureau and expressed the belief that the detective bureau of the New Britain department is as eflicient and capable as+any in cities the size of this one. i 'uary 14 when James Ciacco of V\'ash.! A. Kelley of Astoria, L. I. Three suicides and one murder have Mr, and Mrs. R. W. Egan of Court o i 5 street, left yesterday for a motor trip oqoutrs, durine (h: year. that Ohlec to Boston. 'I!‘,hey will visit their daugh- Hart has beed in office. The first sui- ter, Mrs. C. H. Chamberlain in Au- cide happened on the day he assumed | hurndale, Mass. office when Peter Lemezis, despond- -, ent over the death of his wife, took, Mrs. I A. Kinney of 157+ Smalley gas at the home of a friend on Eim|street has returned from a six weeks' street, The,second occurred on Jan- visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. P. ington Place slashed his throat and| as) later died at the hospital. The single, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur. Elton and murder was the one of Mrs. Gerda|daughter Virginia of Arch street have Nelson Carlson killed by her husband |returned home affer spending two on March 24 who confessed the crime|weeks at Indian Neck. to the police and later killed himself while in jail at Hartford. Chief Hart was named by Chief Willlam J. Rawlings on September 31, 1921, to temporarily take the place of Detective' Sergeant Daniel Richardson. He was elected chief of police on| Edward J. Conlin and family July 11, 1922, and assumed office one|Hart street left yesterday for year ago today. Sergeant William P.}W"e‘“' vacation at Myrtle Beach. McCue was elected detective sergeant e by the police board on May 9, 1922,| Rev. Raymond Maplesden, and appointed chief detective July 29,| Northern Baptist convention, 1922, to assume office August 1. visitor in this city yesterday. Leroy Carvell, who has been man- Mr. and Mrs. Philip Herrmann and | tamily of Arch .street have returned home after spending two weeks at In- | dlan Neck. of a of thel was a MILLION O ROADS MacDonald Announces Policy of High- For Next Two | | way Commission Years—Repairs to Be Made. Bridgeport, Aug. 1.—At a big meet- ing here yesterday under the auspices of the Chamber of Commerce and Rotary club, attended by state sena- tors and representatives from Fairfield county, and many city and town of- ficials, State Highway Commissioner ©1919 THws You grow lighter and friskier every time you dance to them. SEE OPPOSITE PAGE THE C. 246 Main Street oing to Atlantic City? If you are not, why not resort has to offer. One of ous Benson Orchestra. Here are three Special Releases that have been the féx'orites of the resort: “JUST FOR TONIGHT” 19101—Waltz |ager of the Hudson Lunch on Main street for the past year will leave his dutles on September 1st to enter the restaurant business in Springfield, Mass. John A. MacDonald made an address outlining his policy for the next two years. His promise to spend $1,000,000 an- | nually on the post road between Bridgeport and the New York state line at Greenwich until the whole sec- tion is placed in good condition, operations to begin next spring, was the most important declaration con- tained in his address. He declared he realized the importance of the road | and that it would never be able to carry the burden of traffic it should carry. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Ensign of Em- mons place are spending their vaca- tion at Old Orchard, Me, Willlam H. Bishop of Emmons place will leave Wednesday for a three weeks’ vacation at Nantucket. Mrs. John A. McCarthy and sons, Clifford and Junior, of Hamlilton street are spending two weeks at Grove Beach, NEW VICTOR RECORDS FOR AUGUST NOW ON SALE L.PIERCE & CO. Opposite the Monument enjoy in your own home some of the pleasures this great the leading attractions of the Million Dollar Pier is the fam- “NOBODY KNOWS BUT MY PILLIW AND ME” 19102—Fox Trot ] The Victor list for August is exceptionally fine. A cool spot in our store is awaiting your pleasure. Step in and listen to the records. Hear that great record— “THE CAT’S ‘WHISKERS” 19103—Fox Trot sivism, enhanced by the vistory of| Magnus Johnson in Minnesota, re- ports recelved here from political ob- | servers in the Green Mountain state indicate. The issue rapidly clear-cut and will be brought to a focus this fall in the contest for the scat in the United States senate made vacant by the death of Willlam P. Dillingham. i Avowed candidates for- the office | are John Redmond, corporation Jaw- Porter H. Dale, present repre- entative in®congress, and Superior Court Judge Stanley C.'Wilson, These long have been identified with, the orthodox faction of the republican | | party. As opposition candidates, for- | RAILROAD HEAD SAYS |- tevens of White River Junction, LINES ARE IN TROUBLE| lost. favor is becoming or; are prominently mentioned. Hartness, as governor, | With the leaders of the state ‘“‘ma- | chine,” but is said to have made more President of Great Northern “'u,."silhan a corresponding gain among the | rank and file. Stevens, who has never | sougnt elective office, but has been a | member of the state board of control land the state budget committee, long as been rerful political fact New York, Aug. 1.—Ralph Rudd, |5 been a powerful political factor president of the Great Northern Rapl- | iy e 8tate and is almost as well way company, has made public a| “Nojther Stevens nor Hartness have communication he has forwarded {o|yet agreed to run, but their friends the 45,000 stockholders of the com- |1 yprging on them that either can pany in which he declared that “never | yweep the state at this time on an before has this rallroad needed your | anti-reactions platform. Stevens ussistance in disseminating the facts|and Hartness are close nds and it as at the present time.” | 1s not believed' they will run against After citing certain facts concern-|each other. If Stevens runs he un- ing the income and expenses of the | doubtedly will receive the support of corporation as disclosed in its annual | Hartness, and vice versa. report, Mr. Budd stated “certain poli- | Stevens, an attorney, ticlans and propagandists announce |throughout New England. He was thelr intention to force reductions in|Vermont chairman for the Near Kast freight rates regardless of conse- | Relief drives and member from Ver- quences, with the evident intention of | mont of the European Relief Council. breaking down the railroads, hecause | He is well known here and in Wash- of their inability to meet added costs|ington through his affiliation as asso- and expenses, thus forcing government | clate counsel with Capt. Burton | ownership.” | Smith, a special deputy attorney gen- President Budd urges shareholders |eral of New York state, in.the prose- as owners of the railroad, to familjar- [ Cution of clalms of several states ize themselves with the facts about|@Bainst the federal government. the raflroad situation. These claims are said to aggregate Total dividends received hy more than $200,000,000, alleged to Northern stockholders for 1922, Mr, | Bave been collected Illegally as direct Budd states, were $18,097,264 while tax in 1866, 1867 and 1868, Stevens total payments to the public in the|€Cently was employed as attorney for form of taxes amounted to $8,097,725 the state of New Hampshire in the or 61.8 per cent of the dividends. On collection of claims of the state of account of rate reductions, the in.|Ton than $6,000,000. He is assoclat- come of the company was reduced to | ed with Capt. Smith in litigation with $7,069,045 or 60.8 per cent of divi- the federal government in behalf of dends, he said. Indiana, Oregon and other states. The return for the year was 3.47 per cent Instead of the 5.75 per cent ME SPORTS WRITER contemplated by the transportation New York, Aug. 1.—Appointment of act, he stated, | Cullen Cain, a Philadelphia sporting Mr. Budd asserted the Great North- | Writer, as manager of the New Ser ern is now paying wages which con. | ice Department of the National B stitute 60 per cent of operating ex- |ball league, was announced today by penses and 107 per cent higher than|John A, Heydler, president of the in 1913. Materials and Supplies, he |league. The appointment, effective sald, cost 56 per cent more, at whole. | AUgust 15, will place Mr. Cain in sale prices, than in 1913, | charge of dissemination of National i) league data, and of correspondence TRAIN HITS AUTO; 4 HURT. relative to questions about _ the & (national game. Three Detroiters Perhaps Fatally In-| jured in Crash Near Canandaigua. Rochester, N. Y., Aug. 1.—Four persons were injured, three perhaps fatally, when the automobile in which they were motoring from Detroit was struck yesterday by a train on Stockholders Against Propagan- dists and Politicians. is known Great | NIZES FOR JOHNSON ORG. | Progressive Alliance Urges Him to Announce His Candidacy. Chicago, Aug. 1.—Letters urging| e LT the | Senaor Hiram Johnson to announce Neyivoir {;Fntrfl ‘m’l'_"":]‘ of the | jjs candidacy for president have been Narth Road ¢ S road at the|forwarded to the senator, it was an- A ad to Holcomb Crossing, four | nounced yesterday by the executive miles from Canandaigua, ) committee of the Progressive Alllance 13;""“’1_:‘;‘-1‘”::"- all of whom live at of America at its meeting here, Wiiliain Sf:m'h“ “"‘_‘S’ ‘Qm““}""’]"- _are: | The organization is opening head- | Hmith andiTonn S i Lorraine |quarteraitiere and' plaa)are . being| e : Bruthyy 2 made to organize the entire United | _Surgeons at the Memorial hospital, | gtates for Johnson. Steps already have | where all four were taken by motor-| heen taken to perfect an organization | Ists, declared after emergency treat-|in Indiana and Michi ment had been administered, there is | 3 little hope for the recovery of any of them except William Smith, Ac-| DATVIA JOINS WORLD COURT. cording to eye witnesses, Smith, driv-| Geneva, Aug. 1.—Latvia has notified ing the car, approached the railroad|the League of Nations that it has rati- crossing without slackening speed. | fied the protocol establishing the per- e e——— manent court of international _]H.\!I(‘t“ Golden opportunities glitter in every [ This makes the 37th state adhering| column of the Herald Classified page. [to the court by act of its parliament. | She's On The Stage, Now “When the Gold Turns to Gray” HENRY MORANS 365 MAIN STREET VICTROLAS Directly Opposite Myrtle St. PIANOS Mrs. Julia Lydig Hoyt, New York society leader, who a few years ago went on the stage, is in her second season with the Stuart Walker Stock company in Indianapolis this summer. She is working hard and is popular with the audiences. | | Thomas A. The state police are looking to the is not a Ford. They will go to Chau- Waterbury police to find out the|tauqua, N, Y, and then will visit Mr. identity of the three men and a|Edison's birthplace, Milan;, Ohio, woman taken hy Trinyle as a fare| The trip will take them through from Waterbury to Bridgeport, the| Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Indiana to machine however, going in an en-| Detroit, where they will join Mr. and tirely different direction. A theory|Mrs, Henry Ford and Mr. and Mrs. advanced by some Is that Trinyle may | Henry Firestone. have been thrown into the bushesiby | The party will motor through the other men soon after leaving Wa- | northern Michigan to a summer terbury and that the party then drove | samy they intend to establish in the over the state line, abandoning the|calumet district. Plans for the re- cab at the place where it was found. |\, :n"¢rin are not completed, but the i Edisons will be back home by Sept. 1. FORD GIVES AWAY CAR. Is| Of the 21 of every 25,000 people | killed in accidents each year, three 1.—| are victims of falls, four of automo- Edison | biles, two of burns, one of firearms, rest of Makes Edison a Present—But Not One of His Own Make. West Orange, N. J, Aug. Edison and Mrs. left today on a month's trip through|one of machinery and the the Middle West in a sedan illlt0n|0~‘01h(’r causes, Nurse Well Trained- It “Sa.ly,” a Brazilian monkey, practiced being nursemaid to a valuable Angora cat, and did so well that now she has a life job | taking care of Lillian, year-old daughter of Mrs. William Silva of Los Angeles. She likes it, tao. BURN OIL BETTER Than COAL CLEANER Than COAL CHEAPER Than COAL WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON? COAL million men this morn- ing are shoveling coal into hungry furnaces. NOKOL 15 Thousand men have started their NOKOL OIL HEATERS, set their thermostats to the desired temperature and are enjoying peace of mind and real com- fort. thousand men are going about their business, knowing their families are safe and snug in properly heated homes. million mex are shovel- ing dirty, dusty ashes. million ash barrels are being carried out of 5 millicn basements, soil- ing clothing, spilling ashes over floor and yard million homes are being soiled and damaged with dust and grime. thousand women are en- joying relief from inces- sant cleaning and wor- ry. No furnace fire to worry about. No dirty basement to complain about. million men are slaves to the coal vards and the coal mine. Are vou one of the dis- gusted 5 million? FRENCH & GLOCK Modemn Appliance Engineers Main Street Telephone 3130 New Britain, Conn. French & Glock, 272 Main Street, New Biitain, Conn. Please send me, withont obligation, your book of facts about “NoKol” Automatic Oil Heating for your home.