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CRISIS IN GERMANY " SEEMS LESS LIKELY Sutony Siaton Beter-Rhine: und Repulc Losing Ground By The Asseclated Fross Reriin, Oct, 31.—Wilh the situation in Baxeny gradually beeom slabil: | ised and the united soclalists in charge | of the new government there, political eireles in Berlin expressed belief today | that the danger of & Ml'll.l'lll"‘ erisls here was less fmminent, | The socialist deputation in the Telehstag will vote this afternoon on | the question of retaining the party's members in the present coalition gov- | ernment, | The newspaper organs of Chaneel | for Stresemann velee belief that the | political situation is more faverable for him today, They incline to the| view that the assumption by the so- cialists of the new government in Saxony presages the continuance of soclalist participation in the present | coalition government here, | Fellisch Is Promier Dresden, Saxony, Oet, 31.—(Hy A P.)—The Baxon diet early today elect. | ed Dr, A, Felllsch as premier by a | vote of 48 to 15, BSeventy-one depu- | ties were present, but the German na- | tionals left the hall before the vote | was taken, The communists cast no | Lallots. After the election the house adjourned untll November 6, Dr, Felliseh, a soclallst, was min- ister of economics bhefore the recently | doposed mocialist-communist govern 1ent was established, The cabinet Is composed entirely of soclallsts, but the democrats under took to support it, The following ministers were named by Dr, Felllsch: Herr Lieb, minister of the interioy Herr Held, minister of finance; Herr Graupe, minister of labor; Herr Neu; minister of justice; Herr Flelssner, minister of education, Dr. Carl Heinze, who was named federal commissioner for Saxony after the soclulist-communist government | of Dr, Zeigner had becn deposed by the Berlin government, informed the Soxen diet yesterday that his mission | in Dresden consisted in the formation of a new cabinet and that as soon as 1hat had beenfaccomplished he would lcave the eity. Nepublic Losing Ground Duesseldorf, Oct. 31.—(By A. R)' =The young Rhineland republic has Jost ground during the last few days, according to the German newspapers, | while a French circular letter which » German press publishes shows the | aratists have been remfnded that they are not recognized by the I'rench 2s in full control of the Rhineland. The French communiques today make no mention of the republic, but reports from German sources declare the separatists have left Julich, Nouss, Stolberg Eschweiler and Meunchen- Gladbach, and that the territory around these towns has been freed frem republican control. A dispatch to the semi-official Wolf | burcan from Euskirchen, near Bonn, states that the ¥French superior dele- &ate of the Rhineland commission has addressed a circular letter te all the burgomasters in his district advising them that the separatists’ republic has | not yet been officially recognized any- where, and that if and when such recognition were accorded the repub- lic the authorities of each city con- cerned will be officially notified. Therefore, the circular letter adds, the old regime stands throughout the dis- trict, | The letter gives notice that the! separatists are not permitted to make ! requisitions or remove old ofticials | from office, and that as heretofore all requisitions must be countersigned by the superior delegate or the military auvthorities, Tt is said a similar letter has heen | distributed in the Bonn district. S — | There are more newspapers in Cairo, Kgypt, than any other city of its size in the world, recent statistics ! show. | % Thursday EXTR AS Friday FOR THE FINEST IN FISH! COME HERE FANCY NATIVE MACKEREL.... LB. 15c SELECTED SHORE HADDOCK ...... Lb. 9¢ | BOSTON sLuERsH ...... b, 14C STHAK 00D ..... tb. 16C 18¢ FANCY 16¢ ° WHITE FISH .... Lb. 10¢c = 25¢ 35 FLOUNDERS .... Lb. CAPE BUTTERFISH FILLET OF HADDOCK . BLOATER MACKEREL vov Lb, ceoes L, ST. MARY'S CHURCH CROWDED FOR LUDORF-McMAHON NUPTIAL EVENT | MRS. HENRY FRANCIS LUDORF Twenty-five priests were in the| sanctuary and hundreds of spectators | in the charch when the marriage of Henry Franecls Ludorf and Miss Nor. | ena Monifa MeMahon was solemnized | with a nuptial high mass at St, Mary's | church at 10 o'clock this morning. | More than 500 persons were in| [front of the church when the bridal | platinum cuff links sct with diamonds, | party arrived and as they walked down the middle aisle to the strains | of a wedding march played by Or- ganist John J. Crean, nearly ecvery | pew in the church was occupied, | Rev. John T. Winters, pastor of St. | Mary's church, was cclebrant of the | nuptial high mass; Rev. Lucyan Bo Jnowski, pastor of the Sacred Heart | church, was deacon: Rev, Ernest Wil son of I"armington, was sub-deacon, and Rev. Walter A, McCrann of St, Mary's church was master of cere- monies, The couple was attended by Wil- liam P. 8. McMahon, a brother of the bride, as best man, and Miss Harriet JKahn of Cincinnati, Ohio, as maid of | honor, Miss McMahon was charmingly at- tired in an ivery setin gown with duchesse lace and pearl trimmings. | She wore a headdress of duchesse lace, and carried a shower bouquet of or- chids and lilies of the valley, The maid of honor was dressed In a gown of tangerine chiffon trimmed |large practice with French flowers, She wore a large pleture hat of black velvet and carried a bouguet of chirysanthemums, The bridegroom's gift to the hride | was 4 rope of pearls, and {he bride's | gift to her madd of honor was a sa- toire of onyx and pearls, The bride- groom presented his best man with I"ollowing the ceremony, members | of the immediate family attended a wedding breakfast at the home of the bride's mother, aret Me- | Mahon at 10 Grov Mr. and Mrs. Ludorf wiil 'les today on a moon trip to Miami, Ila., and ington, D. C. Upon their return will reside temporarily the McMahon home on Grove Hill The bride is the daughter of Mrs, ret MeMahon aud the late Pat- . McMahon., The groom is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Peter Ludorf, Mrs. Ludorf attended St. Mary's| Parochial school in this eity and Col- umbia university in New York. Mr. Ludorf an chitect with a| here d in various parts of the castern section of the| United States. He has designed nu- merous public buildings and churches in the past few years, including the Polish orphanage, recently dadicated. He attended & Mary's Darochial school, New Tritain High school and Pratt Institute. in C. D. of A. Has Successful Whist and Bridge Party The whist and bridge party held at| the Y. M. T. A, & B. hall last evening| under the auspices of the Catholic! Daughters of America, was a success, | lly and financially. The prizes| v whist were awarded to Mrs. Henry IHornkohl, Mrs, Marry Lam- bert, Mrs. Charles Oleott, Mrs. ,\Hl‘h-_‘ ael Lynch, Mrs. Alice Bonefant, M | William Rourke, Mrs. Mary Crean| and Mrs. Mary O'Brien. 'The gentle-| men's prizes were awarded to Fd-| Kaminsky, dward .\lfl\\\'(‘”.: John Dunlay, Charles McKeon and Joseph Pelletier. The winners at bridge were the Misses Della Daley and Regina Dunlay. The committee in charge the affair was composed of Miss Isabelle Kitson, chairman, assisted by M Anna MecBriarty, Mrs. Anna Murray, Mrs. Margaret McKeon and Mrs. Catherine O'Brien. oc ward of EASTERN WHIT HALIBUT PENOBSCOT SALMON 45¢ T, N HADDIE .... Lb, T0 FEED 2,000,000 | American Society of Friends Making | Plans To Provide Food For German Children This Winter By The Assaciated Press. Chicago, Oct. 31.——Major General Henry 1. Allen, who commanded the American forces on the Rhine, an- nounced today that plans were being made to feed 2,000,000 German chil- dren this winter through the medium of the American Society of I'riends. General Allen, who returned from a visit to Germany last July, declared that “a Yery grave situation and one with which Germany itself is not able |to cope,” exists in the former enemy country. manship of the American committee | in charge of the campaign. | |01d Time Town Criers Are Trier, Rhineland, Oct. 31.—~The old {town criers in the scattered moun- tainous districts along the Moselle, whose newspaperless villages arc well known to American troops of the early |days of the American occupation, | have been pressed into service by the separat The criers now walk the |streets ringing their well worn bells | to attract the attention of the languid | population, and then reading the lat- (est news, orders and proclamations ems ing from the provisional gov- crnment headquarters at Coblenz, Snake bites killed 20,000 persons in | India in 192 He has accepted the chair- | | Being Used in Rhineland | Stomach Comfort for Good Eaters No Sour Risiags, Gassiness, Heart. burm and Distross of Indigestion If You Follow Meals With Suart's Dyspepsia Tablets, They may talk about balanced ra. tions, caleries and all that, but west people enjey eating the good things they see before them, What (they want is the simplc means of stopping gansiness, sour risings and such dis. tresses if they come, A host of people use Stuart's Dys. pepsia Tablets because they give the stomach the alkaline effect, they | stop the gus, they sweeten the stom- 'h, they ald @igestion In the stom- ach; they are balanced to do just these things, and you can rely upon this rellef every (ime, Get a 60- cent box of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab- lets at any drug store and you will eat your ple and cheese, steak and onlons, sausage and buckwheats, cream in coffce and defy old man dyspopsia. WINS GREAT RACE Verdict Crosses Wire Just a Neek Ahead of Epinard, the amous French Race Horse Today, By The Assoclated Press, Newmarket, kEng, Oct. 31.—Ver- dict, owned by Lord Coventry, won the Cambridgeshire stakes of £1,000 with extras, run here today. Pierre Wertheimer's Epinard was second and G. Hardy's Dumas was third. Twen- ty-three horses ran. The victory of Verdict over Epin- ard spoiled a betting coup for which | the owner of the latter had carefully laid his plans. Wertheimer stood to win £210,000 if Epinard had won to- day without having risked a cent of his own money. He won £30,000 on Rose Prince in the Cesarewitch stakes October 17 and these winnings were wagered by prearrangement at 6 to 1 on Epinard for today's race. Verdict (by Shogun, out of Finale) won by a neck. A length separated the second and third horses. The betting was: Verdict 100 to 7 against, Epinard 3 to 1 against and Dumas 7 to 1 against. The race aroused unusual interest as it was virtually a duel between the ———————— | French horse Epinard, with the top weight of 128 pounds, and & bunch of | exceodingly good English horses with | lesa weight, Dumas, which ran third, | carrying only 80 pounds, and Verdict, the winner, 110 pounds, | Epinard had been the favorite for sovern! weeks, being backed to win ‘-uuu-thmx like & half million pounds sterling for his French admirers and | connections, It was only by a neck that the crack French three.yoar-old falled to carry off the prize and eclipse the record for this race held | by Foxhall Koene's horse Foxhall, which won in 1581 126 pounds, | WOMEN LOVE HOME LIFE It is the Only Thing in Life That Makes Living Worth While, Speak- er Declares, [ Phoenix, Arix, Oct, 31.—Home life as the only thing in the world that makes living worth while, was em- | phasized by Mrs, Alice Winters, pres- | ident of the National I“ederation of | Women's clubs, in an address before the annual convention of the central | Arizona district federation. “Women's sphere throughout the | ages seoms to have been made up of things men did pot like to do,” she declared. “Men have reared the church spires, built the schoolhouses, { but every good thing men have done has been to serve that which women have in their hands—the family. Out of the home must go the man, the boy and the girl who believe in their country and because of this belief are able to adapt themselves to the great- er world.” Mrs. Winters pleaded for unity among the clubwomen, whom she urged to take a more active interest in national and civic affairs. “No other group in tho world can teke the responsibility of the family— it lies with us,” Mrs. Winters contin- ued, and we can control the evil ferces when we get together the 2,- 800,000 women in the federated clubs of the United States. “The assertion that women care lit- tle for the home s false. Those things that are related to the home appeal to the clu rywhere.” carrying Rare Ape FRESH BOILING PIECEK e seee Eh Pint Quart OLAMS FRESH OPENE BLOCK ISLAND SAYBROOK SWORDFISH . 45¢ Mohican Special Fruit Cake..... Lb. Wheat, Graham or Rye Bread... Lb. Whole Milk Mild Cheese ........ Lb. 29¢ 1 tor the flest Lim Blording Heart oons have the Londen Zoo. “Ham,” here, kept the photographer husy half an hour before he TN | -4 arrived shown for | | PINCHOT AGAIN ATTACKED MELLON'S DRY ACTIVITIES Calls On Secretary to Refuse to Re- issue Permits to Breweries That Violate the Law, Harrisburg, Oct, 31, — Governor Pinchot's eriticisma of federal prohi. bition enforcement-—expressed last night for the second time this week in a letter to Becretary of Treasury Mellon—occupled the attention of state and federal officlals again to- day. In his letter last night the gov- ernor termed Mr. Mellon's answer to his previous. letter “a defense of things as they are,” and the deter- mination to abate them, followed by effective action.'” ' Citing cases of certain breweries which he said In his first letter were operating under federal permits after having been detected in violations of the Jaw and which Mr. Mellon said were being dealt with in accordance with the law, the governor last night asked the treasury chief to refuse to reissue permits for the operation of plants where the law had been broken. The governor declared there was no provision of law that required the treasury department to reissue per- mits after a year to applicants “‘who are admittedly law breakers” and he puggested the secretary refuse such applications and let the applicants appeal to the courts. WALTON TRIAL DELAY Postponement of Initial Hearing To- morrow Regarded as Quite Likely Oklahoma City, Okla., Oct. 31.—A possible delay in the impeachment trlal of Governor J. C. Walton loomed today. Prediction was made in legis- lative circles that the senate court of impeachment would consent to a con- tinuance should the executive request it when the hearing opens tomorrow. In such event a postponement at least until Tuesday or Wednesday of next week was considered probable. While final arrangements for the Navy Day, commemorating the birthday anniversary of the late Theodore Roosevelt was celes brated in Washington with simple ceremonies, Navy officials marched from the Navy ent to the monument of John Paul Jones, There Seoretary Denby hoto above, left to right the front row shows: Major M, E, | Denby (on crutches) and General LeJuene, comman Elmd the wreath shown in the Shearer, Admiral Eberle, Secretary nt of the Marine Corps. trial were completed today the house investiguting committee was conduct- ing an inquiry into other departments of the state administration in the course of a genoral impeachment ine vestigation, UNDERWOOD PROFITS Now York, Oct. 31—The Underwood Typewriter Co,, announced net pros fits for the quarter ending Sept. 30 aggregated §488,468 as compared with $341,003 for the third quarter in 1922, Here is the statue erected in Judi- clary Square, Washington, D. C., in memory of the late Judge Joseph J. Darlington. The statue shows a nude maiden petting a fawn. Churchmen are protesting., Art critics say it is beautiful. What do you say? Thoughts—for You HE world’s greatest inventors would be v;ras_ting their talents if their creations were such that they interested no one b Don’t close your ears to it. ( Published by the New Britain Herald in co-operation | with the American Association of Advertising Agencies | THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA. TION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN It is the Only Local Newspaper With An Audited Circulation would pose, j else—and unless some one else were able to enjoy them and benefit by them. Nothing amounts to much that is confined to one person or to a limited group. Stop and think for a minute ! Isn’t it because thoughts are so easily exchanged and spread broadcast that this country is so fine a place to live in? The advertisements in this paper are thoughts. Many of them are thoughts conceived with you in mind—thoughts for your [ comfort — your’ pleasure — your health — your satisfaction. Thoughts that will save you time, money and comfort. Do you take full advantage ‘of them? Do you read them, every day? Advertising is the voice of American business. 10,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY