New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 7, 1924, Page 16

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16 DISMISS POLIGEMEN FOR INTOXICATION Souney and Bloom Discharged- Crosgrove and Kumm Appointed | CEMEN WEALTH OF STATE OVER FIVE BILLION .. Dept. of Commerce Completes = Estimate as of Dec. 81, 1922 poli omme ! prelimin- of the December ney a Joseph 1 have been under rom i taxed ents in- to 8$2,- exempt 1o $444,- farm im- The estimated value property and improve tools, 00 to nt: and | \Hluuh an rom $145,807,000 to 81 or 22.7 per cent b Private transmission railroads, ed transportation and other value ¥ owr enterprises, incre: to $2 than from ; g 482 | per ¢ d stocks of g vehieles other than maotor, furnitur and clothing trom $415,193,000 to $1,349,- 5 ., or 225.1 per cent. No com- on is possible for the value of | vehie! which was estimated because no s made in 1912, | estimates the (e e al the dis W of the was guilty ot r occasio the board Comymiss - motor 21,000, went followe employed in making the m though it is beliey some respects the work in more thorough, 1t in mind that the in- 1o a large ves which methods timates for ed that i 1922 has been shou orne money vilue to the ris r0- | EXteNt has ta so far represent corr ntity o evtimated valu silver coin and bu the navy, and g will appe ited States the qu ritic The and vessels of 1od water totals for Ism i8¢ ard t departme juty that crit of the b as o bers ful Lange works the U1 » mem faith- foner Officer FRENCH ELECTIONS, department, Com onded the motion adopted pted, moved that Danie regular r Souns H moved m the to Comment Oficial Circles Decline ously Ay on Outcome, circles today Paris, Ja would expre isappoint : O Ary OfSicer J, Cos- e Offic s a mon of Police of the man out as i wit 1 as we ers of the de oting the ssioners would t in prom mm rit imimous Parker e As tabulate aptured 5 a gal Premier Polr lepartme tlon 58, was are effe Officer ¢ the ACTOR DIES, Ja Forrest Rob- ANy years Moy o8 Ange ires and on yes- tlon \V seum Broadway a8t ap- STRICKEN WHILE GOLFING Miami I"a., Ja rey J 63, died ' ing a stroke FOR SALE Two-family house on Star St. Large Lot—Price Low THIS IS A BARGAIN COX & DUNN 272 MAIN ST. Strombe:g Carburetor A. G. Hawker | 4 Books register m-rmm and are constructed tor convenience. TIRE CHAINS McKAY — “The Better Black Chain” for Passenger Cars and Truck Pneumatics SCHMIDT “Hook On or OF At Will” For Solid Truck Tires Rackliffe Bros., Inc. Park and Bigelow Streets faction nor| ' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TELEGRAPHIC NEWS FLASHES | Edward W. Bok proposcs {1 nmediate he United States into the 1t court of international jus- o g cooperation with the League Nations under spegifie conditions. z plan for Battleship l.(r\lislali.l with seven aboard, on the way from Phi phia to Baltimore andoned by two Atlantis coast and off or tubs in gale is adrift Premicr oincare reclected in ‘rench senatorial contests and inter- prets the resull as a vote of confl- dence in his government. is ms to temporarily, but the weather bur late la night promised only p al relief at least in the castern section of the country. I to se- three per- at Phil started deaths are attribute from overheate Administration disco ment of arms from the Unit to the La Huera revolutionary gi in Mexico as against the poliey Washington government up the General Leonard Wood will weleome a congres- ry into his administration Governor Ieclares he inani Philippines sional of the Compuarison of the tax on married persons without dependents under the Mellon proposal and the democratic plan made public last night by Rep FIVE RACE RIOTS 0CCUR DURING YEAR JUST OVER Morve Serious Clash At Rosewood, Hlorida, Where Fighting Lasted Vour Days New York, Jan, T.--Five race riots oceurred during 1923, according to a annual meeting Association for the Advancement of Colored People, The ish took place at Rosey 4 re rioting last- ed four day ven persons—five ne- nd tw whites. killed, negro section of the town was 1 by fire, It was stated, Other ceurred at Los Angeles, Blan- Braddock and Philudelphia to the Nutional report made today of tn« most serious « la., wh were riots tord, Ind,, 'a negro farmots of Arkansas who were ced to pris- for racial troubles have been , the report stated, and applica- fong have been made for writs of yeas corpus for the other eight The state supreme court a citizen tried in a court a mob sentiment had process of Forty-nine of 67 sente risoners, ruled that lominated by not recelved trial by due law, the report set forth, Governor 8flzer of New Jersey and Governor Groesbeck of Michigan, it continued, during the year denled ex- tradition of two negro men to south- ern states when it was shown there e of lynehing fon of negroes from Johns town, Pa. was stopped by Governor Pinchot, the report said TO VISIT HOLY CITY Jar King Hussein as acoepted an invita- o government to ounecd. The visiting 4 also Heb- ve issued & icing their objee- Huseeln being the guest rt Bamue ’wu‘n com- the Hedja visit Jerusa king is especially d the M © of Omar, a ron. 1 alem, it ann irous of missions to be scrapped, | ! the Department | complete his training for the def ‘of his 18.2 billlard title against Wel- | week, is enthusiastic over his recently | matches he sentative Garner shows that the per- son with an income of $5,000 a ¥ will pay $75 under the Mellon p and $40 according to the democratic proposal, Mr. Garner says. Fire in St. Louis business district causes an estimated loss of about $1.500,000, i Bishop Freeman of Washington, D. C., at Chicago declares that quibbling | by churchmen about belief and ereed | is out of place in a world that calls| for practical, every-day religion. Marketing organizations of farm- ers did more than two billion dollars| worth of business last year®reports to f Agricult show. National Commander Quinn of the American Legion, in letter to Repre- sentatives in congress, accuses em- ployers of compelling former service | men employes into writing letters op- posing the soldiers’' bonus bill. | Johnson at Chicago says ministration policy toward 1tolerable from the moral Hiram that th Mexico is standpoint. Alexander \l"lkl?mlm at Baitimore declares that the American “colle of tomorrow” will abandon the lec | ture system Governor Pinchot of Pennsylvania leads a band of pilgrims to the grave| of Theodore Roosevelt at Oyster Bay | on the fifth anniversary of his death, | Conditions of Venizelos, who was| stricken with heart attack, shows some improvement, Athens dispatch says. S E TH(NI\\TN' In Training for (ummx Match Expects to Win, He Says, Boston, Jan, 7.—Willie Hoppe, who 1s playing exhibition matches here 1o | nse HOPPE and ker Cochran in the Mechanics build-| ing on the last three nights of this} an active Al-| announced plans to take part in the three-cushion game. though the three-cushion league offi cials have made it clear that any may play with three- cushion stars this year must be classed as exhibitions, he is going| ahead with his arrangements and has | intimated that if successful he m enter the three-cushion champlionship games next year, Hoppe wants to start this three- cushion play next month and 18 ]m[nv’ ful of being able to meet Augie Kieek- hefer in Chicago next month in a mateh which if he has his way will| be in six blocks of 60 points ecach. He hopes later to play Robert Cannefax at New York and Detroit, Otto Relscit in Philadelphla and Johnny Layton in | . Louls, MISSIONERS NOT H\I(\II D. Tibetan Hordes Capture (h But Don't Injure Europeans, Peking, Jan. 7.-Belated the capture by Tibetan hordes in mid November of the remote Chinese town r Town ‘ provinee of Szechwan, near the Tibe- tan frontier, has rea d here, Ae- | cording to a telegram from Chung- king, Szechwan, the town was taken Nor The leaders, the Imessage says, assured the Ameriean mission- .ries, the only missionaries there, that | t would not be molested. | The American consule at \‘nmmmu,| Yunnan provinee, received a telegram Dee, 23 from Likiang, Yunnan, adja- | cent to Szechwan, saying that bandits had coptured Bantang,which for years | has been at the mercy bands of Tibetan outlaws in Chinese-controlled territory. These bands, it is explain ed, are not in any way connected with | Tibet proper or its population, WE NEED ROOM For the Next Ten Days We Will Give From humnu 'h(flmlly th on all l:h THE OLD HOME TOWN 109 to 50% Discount on All USED CARS In Our MODELS STANDARD ALL ock MAKES UNHEARD OF PRICES Used cars will be high in the spring. You can more than save enough by purchasing at this sale to pay to keep a car until the sp¥ing season. Elmer Automobile Co. Sales 22 Main St. Pioneer Ford Dealers Tel. 1513 Service 10 Chestnut St. MONDAY, JANUARY ‘1' ‘w“ Take home a bottle of cream soda w—something you will like—it's deli- of Batang, in the western part of the | oue, All Kinds of Oysters and Clams, | Shrimp, Crab Meat, Scallops | 24-30 State St. CROWLEY BROS. INC. 192: HARTFORD Clearance Prices on Women’s Outer Apparel Third Floor WOMEN’S COATS — $59. Values Up S50 — To $89.50 Coats in fine soft pile fabrics with large fur collars of beaver, gray squirrel, Viatka squirrel, fox and wolf. Colors are: brown, kit fox, navy and black. Sizes 16 to 46. WOMEN’S — $109. YValues Up Poiret Twill, S brown and black. Velvet, in colors of navy, atin, Canton Crepe, Jersey, Tricosham. DRESSES S0 — To $49.95 Broken sizes 16 to 4814 Corsets Speclally Pnced 5 €. B. Corsets. One lot of what the manu- facturer terms seconds; nothing to hurt the wear or fit of the corset, but slight mars. Regular $2.00 to $5.00. 95 (v Mid-Winter Sale Price, Special, ea Royal Worcester Corsets, two-inch elastio: band at waist line; sizes 20 to 26. Regular $2.00 grade. Mid-Winter Sale $l 00 . | Price, Special, each Ton Corsets, made of white coutil;i Regular $3.50 grade. Mid- | $2.00 sieres, made of fancy ma- | $1.00 69ci Bon sizes 22 to 27. Winter Sale Price, Special, each Boyshform Bra teuse., Regular $1.50 glade. Mid-Winter Sale Price, Special Regular $1.00 grade, Mid-Winter Sale Price, Special Fourth Floor 1 \‘ —-DRINK-— hree stze hottles—ie, 0 n Until 8 P. M. . N 45 g Right in Lobsters, We Have the Goods HONISS’S + Hartford Visit Our Dining Room ‘according to 272 Main Street PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2013, 199 WE Nll ST, IMPRESSIVE REDUCTIONS IN Wash and House Dresses A very important sale of 1,000 bungalow dress aprons in medium and extra sizes. Made of fine quality percale, gingham, cham- bray, black sateen cretonne trimmed. Mid- Winter Sale Prices: Regular $1,00 aprons, reduced to ...... Regular $1.95 aprons, ra(;%ucedl to é egular $2.95 npmm reduced to ... $1 95 700 Wash Dresses in the famous Dix, Queen and Laiglon makes; 50 or more styles toRseleclt frg;n.o p egular $2.50 dresses, $l 29 . $2. 66 reduced to .... Regular $5.00 dresses, reduced to ..... Regular $3.95 dresses, PO 30 . inessnsitns Fourth Floor’ 2-CAR GARAGE TWO FAMILY HOUSE news of ’AYER S SODA WATER IN BELVIDERE FOR SALE. HOT WATER ML ? SE H. DAYTON HUMPHREY, Agent ROOM 208 NAT'L BANK BLDG. TEL, 111 the heart of the city we can offer you 'a fine one family house. It’s a fine location for a doctor, or a rooming house or a beautiful home, your choice. Look it up. It will be sure to interest you. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg, CINDERS FOR SALE High Grade Furniture A. H. HARRIS - General Trocking— RUGS AND | OVOR COVERINGS For HOUSE IIUI D RANGES A. D. LIPMAN TEL, 2 525 MAIN ST, HOLD ER | NEWT SHES AREARIN’ s OTEY wED BETTER KEEP OUR EYE ON w/ (_ ) THAT FELLER-HE (snms ~"To TAKE BY STANLEY « ( JUST GOT A MESSAGE “THE NEXT TRAIN WEST STATION AGENT DAD KEYES AND MARSHAL OTEY WALKER ARE SUSPICIouUS OF EVERY STRANGER WHO COMES To TOWN SINCE oo Box CAR. BURGLARS WERE REPORTED TAKING \\ GOODS FROM CARS EAST OF TowN.

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