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the same e borrowed a provements wh u hstill actically \1.-. 1all said, 10 separate ed compuositi given by causes of SINCLAIR ORDERED TOTELL OF DEALS Teapot Dome [nquiry Also Delves tate, ike on all sum h remained his holdings in New he had finance im- ranch, said to Home unpaid. he is and comprised at leas parcels of land. @ of the Secretary his troubles regarding tax- The ofticials of l “ said, attempte nto Fall’s Alfairs value the I1is opposit he continued, the courts. T began in 1021 statement, tand Was the prot operator naval oil nate voted to require of ali transactions ir compa rmed in connection that ¢ and of operations o i to market such stc ormation ed v e Harry Wyoming committee today m to give det tock of the | stock of the o 07" Ge fo with contending. serves i an when he sy CAles orga rl Muct Currency and for Divided livided our to the to compel Mr. lair to $ Lenroot, Ari ng sh, Committec committee o8 Buchar Wis : on amer- on iv the Mon- | from America democrats Dk Adams, Ladd, reput ing in the Renewing his pr duction in a p business relationsidps an cate i licated which constit s0 la any busines: Sin in his refusal say what considera- tion was given by the Hyva Corpor tion for rge holdin moth Oil n ny consideration was stock by memb: icate, which ma investiga otk Kota ic ine tampered wit) During the t ican {was in found that what | [ctte their | some mammoth T jsed the efforts ticials. or the ma Un inqui rs o asked t to start ar \Nfamy i with th Whitney supery he May ~m-p.-»m| P holding witness re- been paid for isposition had proceeds, Senator weed he would ask for a Mr. Whitncy Sinclair offered to supply prac- | the tub. tically all data required by the com- |¢d the dange mittee bearing upon the complicated |into the tub. y which the Mammoth |tended by Dr. ed to him in the first in. |dition of the was transferred to the Hyva |critical this and the in large part ned over to the syndicate for king a market, only to be repurchased by the witness Objects Strenuously “Notwithstanding this 1 am com manded to produce hooks, records and papers revealing the organization, financing and administration of any such eompany. These are not my per- sonal affairs alone, but are the con- | rn and vital interest of many others. They are essentially private in their character and lie at the base of the stability of these companies not the Fast nwilli except an unwill my de not t pri affair represent will W 1 Mammot was H ney, who 000 shares ¢ ¢ fused to say this block been made Waish ann subpoena f | tub of | child's {other Bridgeport | operator’s lice posed by De fver is 1 tine ur annour o while was here today to drivers, chu motor laws an 8 1o prob 2 I am » these as yrody prod make ate which arises from the legitimate and those | disclose of myself ot conceive that you to produce in & public evidence of those business ships: those vital affairs of and in general all of those deligate and complicated which constitute ATEC any business, “I am engaged in the management |, of independent ofl enterprises wl difficulties are obvious « out baving those difficulties i " by a genem! ploughing through th Pt 3 private affairs of such enterprises in from a publie inauiry.” Fall Given Loans A detailed statement of estate and cattle investments Vormer Secretary Albert B. Ia today with the Senate Public Committee, declared that loan advanced to Mr. Fall by Mclean, Washington publisher, abled him purchase additiona ranch holdings in recent years in New | Mexico. The souree of funds with wi Former Sccretary enlarged Mexico establishment had hee by the committe as a mony given by prev the Senate inquiry into t the Teapot Dome O Harry¥. Binclair, wi at the head ment T Becretary, ness (rom committee’s | arious been touched ings The Mclean cured by and was loa the Harris the Seeretars years, at t publisher to call ship wi a8 o to an placed ¢ require | M“':'J)r.\' the Cineir relation. ation- | huginess igion, nter . n operatio part me na confliet D of the Advar today eory or t said t - here t One tior in erea et| filed | Tie ands E 8 wil proved i it a 81 o prey to ler of the est sal par Froeba Bar res hile of t e statement who wa $100 the cnRtm sum wine ummats ir Fa proached Mr Doheny for assistance Referring to a ed cattle to his pia Mr. Fall said he the livestock be market value Tree Rivers, N prior leasing of the Wyoming It & pure colncidence, the Former retary declared . Tells of Cattle Co. The Three Rivers Tattie mpany. | headquarters 8 Which he owns 50 pereent and his cussed today sonIn-law the remainder. was de- h annual seribed by Mr. Vall as “holding a line; pa ¥ of erefit to $100,00 from the That sher esiate of Pueblo, Colo.” From th (B} ». K M campaign and from 4 in the presence of peefect George d to the assess him on w W The vari- rea was of the whole as one Otero County, he th as im- the tract upon ole 1n el as improvements. ion to was leg accordin w s this essment, finally upheld in ght over taxes to Mr. Fall's tinally settled in paid all back taxes on r which he had been Documents TAMPER WITH U. §. Rumania are Be MAIL En Route Stolen, Of- ficials Conducting Investigation. -The Ruman- is convinced, after a gation aluable n and ( tn Rumania reaches s whose mai & that thefts of documents anadian mail to a committed this coun esulted from had been nvestigation a sack of The ited condition, A number of Leen open States il, shipped on a British an American por Amer- apparently but it was the registered d in transit and sack contents taken. government has government es in that country and hip companics gag was r th Th G De nse puty und give rged nd e disposttic 0., betwe General noon suffering from painful burns as the result of hot water mother was | foor and Salvatore children 381ore at h th M child was reported afternoon ¢ | suspeunsion trom the is o Motor Vehicles Melvin L3 I with i8] n Charles D American sement of Science, Although evolution, Child I’amfull\ Bulned l-cll Into Tub of Water aged 5 of 8 remov to the hospital yester- falling into a s home. The scrubbing the and a number of were playing around | e mother realiz- | child had fallen boy is being at- Dunn. The con- as | | Proposes Five Years With | No License as Penalty Five years right to have an the penalty pro- ommissioner of H. Snow when uilty for the sec- f operating a motor vehiele r the Influence d today. of liquor it Mr, earings to several violations of expressed himself n he would of second offenders Science and Relifiion Are Not in Conflict There 18 sclence and re- Walcott, presi Association for declared believer in Dr. Walcott a ntion of his ergani- iman ides ate | of w AREI [N} on Dee to at t sald science th oLaeTn « cetablist New Yor cont ention e rather entifie discoveries fled with religious enriches and beauty. (-em‘ge Froeba Leaves His Estate to Wife and Son 1 of George probate Froeba was ap- court this morn- t per been ivered to rematn- ng thre Carolyt a Philip remair crLTuRy APDVANGES 1O RETURN AMPAIGS A tiona was 4 opening of e Kap- Snow was | DIAGNDSES ILLNESS OF UNITED STATES (Continued from First Page) er people’s right.’ Disrespect For Laws Still another discase is the failure to show the proper respect to the laws of the nation. “It is possible,” he said, “that the flippant attitude of gome of our social leaders and re- spectable citizens of influence to- wards the 18th amendment have opened the floodgates of lawlessness. Like Samson of old they have broken the pillars that supported respect for | government and like Samson they will bring down the house on their own heads.” Another discase he indicated was | the living for the pleasure of the mo- | Wi ment. “People who mortgage their|th "homes to buy automobiles, people who buy things on the installment plan when they are unable to pay the hills of today. Silly styles and senti- mental movies; Jean Stratton Por- ter's gushy novels, and silly sentimen- tality, which neither justifies wrong nor remedies evils in high places. Another discase mentioned was that of restlessness, “Class con- sciousness between capital and labor. We have built machines that have climinated time and space, we have | conquered earth, sea and air, but we w it tw | 1ea pr tra 1 he of th an formalities formation. s present at the conference, part and did dra fre LEAGUE WORKS STEADILY TOWARD GODlFlED LAWS Seventeen Conventions (‘oncqm Ihr- Protection of Labor, Three Free- dom of Communications Geneva, Dec. Some tries have which An American took no active vote. 30 coun- already signed the conven- | tion for the simplification of customs ! was recently ela- borated at Geneva at an international conference( and copies of the |have been forwarded to the United|,. &vauw government for its general in- delegation though not treaty | Of absence. 925. BEARDSLEY RESIGNS FROM TROLLEY POST (Continued From First Page). CONSTRUCTION OF GREAT DAM BEGUN IN KENTUCKY Roosevelt Dam in Arizona, e Acclaimed as Ideal Location. | holidays and when Herbert C. Lyon resigned as starter to become a mem- High Bridge, *Ky., Dec. 27.—Con- ber of the police force, he was su(--[slruclion has béen commenced of the, | ceeded by Mr. Bryan. In 1910 Mr.|Dix River dam, near here, which Bryan was tendered the permanent|when completed will surpass the | position as starter which he held un- | Roosevelt dam in Arizona, according | til Mr. Beardsley was granted a leave |to engineers. It will be larger and | will be capable of developing 30,000 | Mr. Bryan is married and resides at | horsepower as compared with 23,000 1 Chestnut strect. He has two sons, | horsepower of the Roosevelt dam. Willard and Lewis, both of this city. For the last 14 years engineers of ¥raternally, he is a member of Lex- | international reputation have ac- ington lodge, 1. O. O. F. |claimed the location an ideal place to When Mr. Bryan first came to New build a high dam. | Britain, all trolley cars, except those | The project, when completed about The convention marks progress in| gperated on the Hartford line, were|February 1, 1925, will tower 270 feot | hat League of e step by the league. 0 score conventions afted through the ma ague. Seventeen of the otection of labor. edom of ansit, and others provide creation of the world court of j the inclusion of arbitration clauses in the prevention in obscene publications and in women | commonly known as the inmercial contracts, traflic e suppression d children, of traffic have broken down in the realm of | white slave traffic, human relations. We have failed in | the most important thing te work together. Prejudice, distrust | and hardening — one group tries to rule by the power of numbers and | the other by the power of capital.” He spoke of the inconvenience to which the country last sum- mer when the coal miners went on | strike, “because there was not the |, will to win through cooperation in- | stead of strif Still another diseasc that of bloc legislation | kiss you if vou kiss t wt co was put an as will cribed was cited “We He dis the us.’ as a nment within The Bed Sheet Brigade as the “invisil zeal of some misguided think they yod set up an invisible robbing women 1 sheets and pillow cases with which they cover themselves and then out and whip some decent citizen | who has the courage to stick up for | | his principles. What are a man's | | rights as a citizen if a bunch of | I hoodlums can drag him out of bed and | whip him because he has the courage {to stand by his 1deals?” The speaker said 1o one nation can | p, |tonger ~stand aloof from others. |, “World conditions have brought us| closer together. When Napoleon | shook all Europe with his battles, | Japan never knew it, but when the world war was declared, Japan was |taking official action within 14 min- |utes.” The law of economics has made another world war impossibie, The victorious as well as the defeated are bankrupt. “New explosives have been discov- ered which ¢ eliminate whole na-! tons. 1f Germany had had the new !y, explosive powers we now have, Lng- land would have thrown up her hands and surrendered or the nation would have been entirely eliminated. The world has moved to a place where the balance power must be in the hands of a nation of ideals of | international righteousness. Speaking of cure some of the ernment. The people Americans and government by | children of hed ed who | are { Eu | had | wi 100 sl | of the remedies needed to ilils of Uncle S8am, Mr. Wyland said, A new conception of citizenship and individual right ousness on the part of the eitizen iy needed. A conception on the part of the citizen that his eitizenship is not privilege but an obligation, The tragedy of ¥ has been the | reants 1t had and not the service {t | could give. He who gerves best 18 the | one who profits most Scouting has to the world | through the church and the school as an international power for rightcous. ne It is not the outdoor hikes, the summer camps in the which offer to Boy Scout what he needs | most, it is the association with and | companionship of the men worth in the community In the privilege knowing t men who and for things worth wiile the | community | Today u Rotary clubs, Lions clubs, | Kinwanis clubs, Elks clubs, Knights of Columbus and other organizations th is ‘save the world through t a pow: come - woods, the in Help the make Chilean Ambassador Is to the Vatican Dead p Scandi cities Seven Women Rescued from Fifth Floor of Tenement Firemen ear. women from | “tory honus Thomas Hug took three tiem impros Four othe 1 over cig is In rear an adjoin GUARD $200000 BONUS Dee. 2%.--Twelve a hand § of the me- the bonus to | here to- hough received any of bonus. They goarded a truck | mnk for the Crane plant | ton Bridg port yele officers had Jistributio annual empl iay the . the Crane C. a nomne which o ¢ —the will | tions several toms houses, olas Viadaovich | Unitea | Madume Betrand of Paris, |worth in hired cabs and for which he was sued and judgment rendered against him wich, In addition to these r reaching importance cgotiated through the hich provided for the nstruction of Austria. Publicity of all tariffs and customs | perience in © customs convention. d make more uniform the ery of merchandise travellers’ itracting baggage \tes promi with the have Communications financial or Nation officials call | codification of international 1aw, charged was eight cents to Plainville, which is now being undertaken step | by Already about | Hartford. been | received from 19 to 22 cents an hour, hinery of the Today the fare to Berlin and Plain- concern the | ville js seven and one-half cents Three touch the | and for the tice, general conven- specific instruments of have L league. | most notable of these is the doc ument | | of the motormen and conductors em- | with L. F. Harza, and other englnccrl to whether provisions of the treasury | formalities is the fundamental note of | Derby, general interest is the engagement to simplify rapid de- through « and the quick inspectior FFurthermore to importation « T00 POOR T0 PAY it Prince Had Been Greenwich at $4 a Day, Creditors Are Advised, New York, Dec ditors in court today, was no longer | his poverty. The trope married twice prince was and divorced States, His it d him in court today hy he hadn't paid. He smaid he was almost oking for a job, ounsel for the creditors Conn,, month. Denying this the d he paid only $4 a day, Living 27 ~—Prince Engalitchefr, twice second to broke in the The creditors explain testifiod prince had been living in Green. in a suite rated at $400 | ned to sail early prince I)A\ re- us- imit At Noch- facing declared that too proud to admit in wite, rode $2,240 was this and | champion, fare | between the rugged cliffs of Dix river | gorge and will be the highest dam 10 cents to Berlin and 20 cents to|cast of the Rocky Mountains, it is Motormen and conductors announced. The cost will be $7,000,- |000. More than 1,600,000 cubic yards (of material will be used in its con- and struction. It will be 700 feet thick and ‘ul the base, tapering to 24 feet, and and | 760 feet wide at the top. Its back- ago | water will form a lake 36 miles long, the storing approximately The of the single truck type. to Hartford 15 cents. Motormen conductors receive between 50 64 cents an hour. Twenty years I trolley express cars served only territory between Hartford and New ‘cuhic feet of water. Haven. Today they serve nearly Scientific calculations were made every important community in the |12 years by prominent engineers from stat many parts of the world who check- AMr. Bryan is popular with the trol- |ed and rechecked calculations and ley men and enjoys the confidence of estimates and at last approved the the public. When he stepped into hydroelectric development project. his office Christmas day he found on | Arthur P. Davis, angengineer of inter- | his desk a gold fountain pen, a gold |national reputation, who planned and | | pencil and a box of cigars, the gifts built the Roosevelt dam, is associated | ploved on the local division. in building the Dix dam. Mr. Beardsley had his early ex- trolley management in to New Dritain 12 | MONTREAL CRIME WAV Montreal, Dec, 27.—~A squad of | | mounted police will be added to the force becausé of the present crime wave. The squad will be mod- elled after the mounted men in Lon- don and New York. Wealthy, Single coming years ago. Self Defense to Be Plea of New Rochelle Slayer Doe, 27.—\Mrs the mother of was in jail today under indictment first degree mur- for the shooting to death of Vin- Costa, 63 years old, of New 1tochelle, She is the first woman to be indicted for first degree murder in Westchester county in years, Her attorneys said she would plead self-defense, RUHR COAL OoUTPUT Dec, local Y rdo, ite 1 ilome Lombx four children, an for der cenzo | Duesseldorf, Germany, 2T The coal production of the Ruhr for the week of December 10-15 reached | 966,000 tons, or 56 per cent of the output for the same perlod in 1922, according to French official sources The coke production was 00 tons, or 30 per cent or normal. It was fur- ther declared that 55,394 German rail- road workers had returned to their duties permanently, Ill"lfllu\ “I1H Il\lu\\l) New York, De Willie Ritola, | national ten-mile and cross country| will compete for his na-| tive country, Finland, in the 1924 Olympics, it was reported authorita. | tively today, when it was said he plan- | in January for Fin-|cateh, land to train for the international | heir to distance events at Parls, | wealthiest here's Britain's most likely He is Lord Molynecaux, and is Earl of Sefton, gland’'s achelor peor. Girls, Guide Posts of Business IDING along an unfamiliar road, you depend upon sign posts to guide you. Whether you're hitting the thank-you-mams in a flivver or soaring along in a costly car, they do their work equally well. Today, as you spend your money to fill your needs, advertisements are waiting to direct you. They are the guide posts of business. They point the short, straight road to satisfaction in buying. They will ser whether you spend much or little. about them, sideration. Do vou stop to read the advertisements? And remember that advertising always points out goods of unquestioned value, When a store or manufac- turing concern puts its name on goods and tells you vou may be sure that they are worth con- chandise. { Published by the New Britain Herald in co-operation | with the American Association of Advertising Agencies 10,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- NEW BRITAIN TION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN It is the Only Local Newspaper With An Audited Circulation Dix River Dam to Surpass the Great| e you well, They are published to tell you exactly where to go for what you want. They lead you to values of which you would never know were they not there to guide you. It does not pay to advertise unworthy mer- NAVY 70 BE SAME | Appropriation Bill Probably Will Set Enlisted Strength For Next Year Also at 86,000. ‘Washington, Dec. 27.—The house ‘suh committee framing the naval ap- xprapflatian bill is expected to recom- mend that the present enlisted 'strength of the navy—=86,000 men— be maintained during the fiscal year beginning next July 1. Hearings are now in progress and the sub-commit- tee plans to have the bill ready in January. Two years ago just after the Wash- |ington arms conference a bitter fight was conducted in the house to cut |the navy's enlisted personnel to 67,- 1000,, but the house, disregarding the recommendations of the sub-commit- tee in charge.of the measure, fixed |the maximum at 86,000 — a figure |that was retained a year ago. At today’s hearing Admiral Eberle, chief of operations, presented, at the | sub-commgittee’s request, a detailed report of the Honda destroyer disas- ter. The information had been re- quested for use in the printed record !of the sub-committee’s hearings so |that it could be made available to | members of thé house. | 6,000,000,000 ! - WANTS FULL BOARD l\ub Committee on Treasury Report | Will Not Act Upon Creation of Tax Appcals Board. ’ ‘Washington, Dee. 27.—Decision as |tax bill which call for the creation of |a board of tax appeals shall be con- | sidered by the house ways and means committee along with administrative | features or be taken up at a later | date with tax rates will not be reached Chairman Green said today, until {there is a meeting of the entire com- mittee, Attempts to have the sub | ccmmittee which has been working on the measurc during the Christmas recess pass on the question have been blocked by Kepresentative Garner, | Texas, ranking democrat on the com- mittee. In outiining the treasury’s plan for | creation of such a board, Secretary | Mellon in a summary of the bill sent |to Mr. Green Dec, 17, sald that it | would “hear all appeals from the as- sessments of additional income and estate taxes” and would “sit locally in the various judicial circuits through- | out the country.” Upon a decision fa- | voring the government the additional tax would be assessed the taxpayers | would be given the privilege of apply- ing to the courts for a recovery of the tax. 1If the decision, however, favor- ed the taxpayer the commissioner of internal revenue would be unable Lo | assess the tax althobgh he.could file | suit in the courts to collect it. Magnus Johnson Suggests Ambassador to Mexico | | | Washington, Dee, 27—8enator Mag- nus Johnson, farmer-labor, of Minne- sota, called upon President Coolidge | today to recommend the appointment of William Lemke of Fargo, N. D, as ambassador to Mexico, Mr, Lemke is |a former attorney general of North ! Dakota and was an organizer of the { non-partisan lea