New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 30, 1924, Page 3

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- VARYING VIEWS O DEFENSE EXHIBIT Wyoming Governor - Approves- Washinglonians Disapprove Cheyenne, Wye, July #0-—Govern or Ross of Wyeming, in a letter to Vrederiek J Beere tary of the Prevention of War, at scored the activities of the org Labby, cxecutisve National Council for the Washington, Anlad tion and declared himself in favor of an “army, a navy and prepured. noss," The letter was in reply to a tele. gram from Libby to the Governor asking that Wyoming join the slogan “gtop war,” and said "Since the United States is 5o overs whelmingly against the league of na- tions, Maine, New York and Minne sota carried such heavy majoriti against it, there s nothing to do in the United States hut to preparg to fight “I am for an army and navy to protect this government and its peo- ple and in favor of its belng prepared 80 that we will not lose 10 00 lives After a war starts betore ready to defend onursely After sending ‘the letter Governor Ross began preparations for “national defense day" on Eeptember 12, by naming the general state and county committees to take charge of the program. we can get Seattle, Wash., July 30.—Declaring in a resolution that President Cool- tdge’s action, proclaiming September 12 national defense day is “inoppor- tune, unnecessary and a national ges- ture that may be interpreted by neighboring countries as a warlike move,” one hundred members of t Seattle Fellowship club have drafted | a letter to be sent to the president protesting the advisability of the ne- | tion, $100,000 RL IN CAMERIDGE, Cambridge, Mass., July 30, destroyed the plant of the Simpson company, 1lnc., here last night causing loss estimated at more than $100,000, Huildings of the American Chemical company, and several other factories were threat- ened and thr alarms were sounded to furnish protection against spread- ing of the flames, Tell us when and ftell us where You'll find the ¢harges always Moving that is rapid and safe storage that is strong and reli- able, Charges that please. Mone~ N 56~ 2733 @,R{é/z‘mp‘fc’ Joserh Arbour & Jon, MOVING * TRUCKING + SHIPPING NEW YORX TRIPS DAILY OFFICE AT S~MAIDEN LAKF $15inPRIZES - b — Those Now Owning the 2 Oildest Phonographs Piece to $ 1 0 Gold having the oldest Phonograph $5 Gold Piece to the secon MAIL THIS To the Contest Manager. New Britain Herald Name Addrees Make of Phomograph . ............ When Boughi . 'NEW BRITAI DUNCAN SISTERS ARE BURLESQUING TRIAL send Bouquet of Onions to Poliveman w=Urowd in Conrt Room Haying etta and Vi and Eva") of prosecutor's resume thelr aps stage of an Evauston theater for the in the igalnst the Clcero policvmen with breaking Topsy's Chicage, July §0,—=k Duncan, ("Topsy n the role were to vian show girls Withcsses, pearances today on the tinale churged nose and b, July 4, when her brother was (arvested for a traffic rule violation Attorneys for (he officers, Chief of [ Police Bvobodu and three patrolmen, Henry G, Williams, theater, invited the charge Justice Lwho rented the audienee and ushered them 1o seuts, with "making a vaudeville show out of the trinl” Behind the footlights of a fMower decked stage with a crowded house that chevred the ae. Ltress and booed the policemen, the hearing opened yesterday | A bundie of fresh green onions, res Isembling a floral tribute, was pre Led to Policeman Widlock, wlhose was called fivst, Bonguets wore dered the Duncan sisters | Miss Rosetta Duncan told how she , remonstrated with an officer at t {station where her brother was being booked, and that while she was powes dering her nose before going into the | statlon, two officers grablbed her, ' {twisted her wam, kicked her on the ahing and hit her on the nose. & : | Phyeician festified as to the extent of | A most unusual picture of damage to her nose and other wite | nosses supplied corroborating details, {The justice invited his audience, : N Leomposad Targels of homeesires and | Drobably the most important di {college co-eds, to return again today. DEBS ANSWERS FOSTER Leader Sees No Thi= is Claim Made By Socialist Cause for Shock at Announcement He Will No Trace of Poison, support La Follette, Elizabeth, July 30.-~Anna So- Chicago, July 30—Eugene V, Debs, by 16, former nurse to Howard in a letter made public last nlr:ln,‘nu““‘m‘,.,.g 7 vear old Newark boy replicd to the attuck made by Willlam | wio was murdered at his summer ‘7,. Poster, workers' party nominee for | yome jn Windham, N. Y., & year ago ithe presidency, on his (Debs') in-{yg iy 4 hospital today having gone itention to support the candidacy of!(pore 1o ask treatment for poison, Robert M, La I'ollette [which she declared she had heen Debs' letter states that he is "un-\,nr(‘,,,l to swallow by two men who able to understand why you (Foster) | yinnapped hor Saturday night, should conelude that It (Debs' en-| " roanitat’ doctors used a stomach [dorseinent of the Cleveland progres-|pump hyt reported they found ne sive convention) ‘will come as a shock | yrace of poison or drugs. The girl to thousands of worke | “I can readily understand,” the ‘:v‘r_ur continue: hy it would havelis piiy a sods, alie was fituid [suited you fur better had the soclal-|grink ‘the Jiquid and then thrown out 485 HRILY * at Cleves ' o¢ the car, She declared she re. land and disapneared from the scene. | ;members nothing between that time onromajnied idisseyeredi ton ‘eut arl o qitha hoie when shiel found hersslt and discredited a fgure as the|yn rront of her home here Saturday communist party will in the campaig | iy ’ this year.,” front of her home when she went out ended | LIBEL AMERICAN I 8 3, a ) ur- fatthews, Its Inventor, Claims Pur terday as a | taken while being transported Temporagily Disable. Aberdeen to Tacoma, Scattle and San ‘s I'rancisco, [t Sty Grindell Mt | white:charged with conrplicity In the {thews, > Cdeath ra¥"{aftair are in jall under $10,000 bail in Boston for a few hours today de-| 2ch. The George Allen nied that his invention was a death- | \y o ’'goen from China July 1. ing weapon and pronounced the | lmost humane of modern war appli- HITS IN 38 G AMES tances, He eaid that the “ray,” which % he prefers to call a beam, could be| Muskegon, Mich, July 30.—Bud made merely a means for temporarily | ©/Ancy, Muskegon first bhaseman, disabling a man, or an army, by brought to 38 the number of con-| hocking either into unconscionsness | $ecutive games in which he has hit | for Al veriodivor loute |safely when he doubled in the eighth He denied that he had offered the |[INNIN& of yesterday's game with Sag- sale of the so-called “death ray” to|NdaW. Clancy, who belongs to the Chicaga White Sox, is playing for Irance and said that England alone, 3 L ] [which had already offered fo by ir. | Muskegon in the = Michigan-Ontario | wonld he oftered the weapon, He ||P081e under an optional agreement. saiid His visit to the United States was |11 modern major league record for safe hitting in consecutive games is [in part for scientific research and in | 1 e part for reat. His left eve s now|4lr held by George Sialer, [sightiess and his eyesight in the right S : o is failing. He 18 under the cara of | HYLAND BACK ON JOB, aliaier | New York, July 80.—~Mayor John Hylan returned today after a three weeks' visit to Willlam Randolph Hearst’s ranch in California and im- spod Norway sometimes uses corn for coin, |mediately proceeded to his desk at city hall. He had no statement to {make on the political situation and i (would not discuss the possibility of | becoming a candidate for governor. "Tabs Will Sell Bonds ¢ To Finance Building fecand mortgage honds in the jamount of £50 each, bearing interest (at & per cent will be issued by the [Y. M. T. A & B. soicety to estab. Hsh a building fund, provided a suf- ficlent number of members indicate [their interest in this financing plan, the building eommittee of that so- |ciety has announced, Questionnaires were sent out this meorning to members of the socioty |acking for an expression of opinion as to this plan for a building fund. Announcement will be made by the rommittes next week as to the re- sult of the poll, Among the industries built up or |nfinenced by the inventions of Thomas Fdison are moving pictnres, telephones, phonographe, cement, electrical rallways, dynamoes and | motors, and lighting and power. the party the party having d oldest phonograph Contest Manager M. J SMITH Adv. Mgr. Herald, COUEDN i Have you a garage that’s empty and bare? Advertise — rent it — garages are rare, USE A WANT AD KIDNAPPED AND POISONED. |ACTUAL VALUES FOUND Nurse in | Rothenberg Case. But Doctors Find | p o o Hauling Raflroads in North. i roads in ! | said that after she was kidnapped i R result of the seizure | pose Is Not to Kill, But Rather to|tWo weeks ggo of six trunks of opium from Several Chinese and one |3 arrived at | DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1024, When Three Premiers Get Together three premiers of Europe taken at their first meeting. Left to right they are Premiers Theunis of Belgium, Herriot of France and MacDonald of England. This photograph was taken as the European nations came together to discuss the Dawes report, It is plomatic conference since the peace treaty. | REPORTS SEEING SLOOP GREATER THAN THE BOOK Mystery of Disappearance of the ! Amateur from Block Island Grows om Minnesota Are Appraised Deeper Today. by I. C. C, New London, July 30.—-Although hope had practically been abandon- Washington, July 30—Actual values | °d a8 to the gafety of the three Flush- of property held by the two {ron | "8 L. L, men who saiied from Block hauling railvoads orthern Minne- | 181and to this port on July 16 in the sota, the Duluth, Missahe and North- | $l00p Amateur of New York, Captain ern and the Duluth Iron Range, were | William O'Brien of Noank, who has found by the interstate commnierce |arrived in port from a fishing trip, commission today to he greatly in ex- | declares that he saw the boat last cesa of the hook valne placed hy the [ Sunday bound east off Ram island | light, off Mystic river, corpocations on their holdings and the : ‘ 4 stocks and bonds issued against umn.' Captain O'Brien says that he saw ! least two The Missabe railroad, 261 miles|'he sloop, containing at long, on June 30, 1919, had $14,853,- | Men and towing a dingy. A few days 500 in stocks and honds outstanding, | @80, Richard Hudson, a brother of I while the recorded money outlay in 0ne of the men on the Amateur, iden- construction and equipment was fixed | tified a skiff found off BlocksIsland | by its books at $35.671, The com-| a8 that of the Amateur. | mission, fixing the value tentatively| The sighting of ‘the Amateur by for rate making purposes held it to| Captain O'Brien after a coast guard be worth $45,780,030. cutter, submarine boats, Eagle boats Capitalization of the Duluth and/and hydroplanes had scoured the | Tron Range was placed at $14,631,- | Sound, makes the disappearance of | 000 while the corporation ps:,mmmllxhv Amateur a greater mystery. | | % . | it had actually spent $25,297,349 in| = | ernment libel of $166,712.50 Was | tentative value was $28,583.609. Both | laced he eric 3 e | g i e i | James T. Maher of Hartford, act- St g o |placed ~on the ~American stedmer | yujiroade are utilized by the steel in- | 3 5 3 George Allen at Aberdeen, Wash. | qustry in delivering ore YO Tale Bl ing for Samuel Echelson of that city, SO g e ' has brought action for $1,000 against r‘fi"flr,""‘ Hates "fl‘l" i) ”"."‘ '““," he | Enil and Albertina Golnick. The ‘pon the 3503 miles of line of the ! L k i % Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. |PARers were "‘;‘;d DrgeputyEherlc Marie rallroad, the commission fixed | "'M""; : a,"‘;(‘m;“ anHilg for Rick: tentative value of $104,737,607. | 0 A | This company has outstanding stock liffe Brothers C'o., Inc,, has brought |=siut for $500 damages against Daniel {and bonds to a par value of §1 E > 516,700, The corporation’s own esti- Hickwa —of Forestville, Deputy | mate of the worth of its property is|Sheriff Martin Horwitz served the '}nfl,ns:&,a;s, \papers and attached real estate be- [ |longing to the defendant in Forest- {ville, :W“.IL TEST LA FOLLETTE . | Donald Gaffney, acting for William STRENGTH IN A, F. OF L s25n uimagen " aeninet”"‘Michaes |Daunis. Wiadyslaw and Josephine Bobrow- ski, through Willlam F. Vail of Hart- | Executive Committee In Session To- | | ford, has brought an action for fore- [ day Will Decide Policies Toward |closure on property at 65-67 Con- ¥ |necticut avenue, against John Gol- Presidential Nominee, I melski, Washington, July 30.—Labor UNION | ee—————— adherents of Senators la Kollette and [ Wheeler, in their campaign for presi- |dent and viee president, were pre- |paring today for a trial of strength | f | ; inside the Amerlcan Federation of |65 flat feet. painful heel, Inturning ankles, P |callouses, ete, wear flaxibla feather weight Labor. The executlve committee Of laren supports which we make from . indls that organization, meeting Iriday at|vidual Impressbins of your feet in cor- s City, . |rected positlon. Many continue to suffer Atlentlc Dlly Pl Jag down IR Do) o™ ot e AN AR Gloe. Tauds icy to govern the attitude of‘its sub- |niods: wreh ‘supports wnioh can ot AL (ordinate bodies—insofar as these can the vastly different shapes of be governed—in the approaching na- | Do Your Feet Suffer? ¥or aching limbs, weak fest, fallen arch- feet: may as well wear ready made eye glasses or false teeth. e At the foot and tional contest. ; not the shne, Different from all other Chiefs of several trade union or- lsupports. Fitted and sold exclusively by ganizations which already have in- JAMES J. LINEHAN, 250 Main St. Booth Block Telephona 771 Office Hours: A A, m. to 6 n. m, Fyenings nnd Sundays by appointment dorsed the La Follette-Wheeler ticket |R0o™ 402 will be on hand at the Atlantic City session, Expressing confidence that they will be able to procure the in- dorsement of tha Central labor body for their candidates despite the past policy of the federation to remain non-partisan and give indorsement to candidates considered favorable to the organization labor viewpoint re- gardless of political affiliations, the l.a Follette supporters, several of | whom are members of the commit- tee, plan to seek forthright endorse. ment for their ticket. | Countess Sails | | SPECIAL SALE RADIO HORNS Thie week ue offer the $25.00 Manhattan Loud Speaker, ad- mittedly the best of this type of horn. Pure in tone. beautiful tn design, loud, clear and resonant. e e .. $16.50 This week Other great values in horns. The Post & Lester & 14 MAIN S1, New Britain, Conn. The Countess von Bernstorff posed | |for the cameraman as the Leviathan pulled out of New York taking her back to Germany., | Pe Triomphe HUGHES, ALONE, PLACES FLORAL WREATH ON TOMB U, 8 Secretary of State Takes Early Morning stroll Through Parls Strects By The Associute Paris, July today prefaced another ul@y with & long walk In the fresh, brisk air of an autumn-like morning [0 # his first chance to sec a little of Paris deisurely and free from the constraint of official ceremoniousness. Not long after the distinguished visitor's walk a wreath was found ly. Fress Hughes round of ae- $0. ~Hevretary ing on the tomb of the unknown poull inscribed simply ‘From a friend," Instances arve rare of such homage being paid the unknown warrior withe out previous announcement and more or less official parade, and it incited eager search as to the identity of the author of this simple mark of re- spect, Mr. Hughes was not thought of at first, because it was expected by everybody that when the Ameriean secretary of state accomplished this now traditional tribute he would he accompanied an is the custom in such cases, by representatives of French officialdom. The policeman on duty at the Arc declared, however, that there had been no processions during the morning and nothing resembling a ceremony, He remembered, though, a short call paid by three or four per- sons and his description of them left little doubt that the anonymous “friend” was Secretary Hughes and that Ambassador Herrick was one of those with him, The American embassy refused either to confirm or deny the reported visit, which fact in {tself was con- sidered sufficient confirmation After his walk and his brief visit to the unknown wsoldier's tomb Mr, Hughes returned to Ambassador Her- rick's house and went with the am- bassador to the palace of the Elyses where he was entertained at luncheon by President Doumergue, CIRGUS DAY IS HERE Gentry Bros.-James Patterson Show Arrives on Schedule—City Turns Out to Watch Parade, What was that rumble of heavy wheels along the streets in the early hours of this morning; the clatter of many hoofs and, sometimes the pe- culiar ery of an animal from {ts'native haunts? Why this air of suppressed ex- citement and why the many out-of- town antomobiles lining the ity streets? Why has the small boy a clean face and, wonder of wonders, why is he wearing shoes and stockings? And why doesn't he eat the several packages of peanuts that bulge his pockets? What {8 the reason for the selling toy balloons, swagger and canes? What is — ‘Tis circus day! The Gentry Bros.-James Patterson cireus arrived in town early this morning and pitched its tents on the Vibherts grounds on Stanley street, where it gave a performance this aft- men sticks ernoon and will give another tonight, The parade through the business district this morning was a dandy>— The bands really played musie, the clowns were really funny and every. thing was just as “clreus" as you could imagine~~from the announcer who rode at the head of the parade 10 the elephants, an'’ camules, Sveryt'ng The matineee performance was siappy, clean, andg in many instances unusual For some reason or other the trapeze performers seemed to be just a little more daring, the bare-back riders just a little more attractive, the animals just a little better train- ed and the clowns a whole lot fun- nier than usual This elrens has always had a stand- ard rule of prices known the country over apd at no time during ita 40 yoare of existence has it ever taken advantage of the public and raised the price of admission such as has been done by various other showa Among the guests of the manage- ment at the afternoon show were 150 boys and girls from orphanages lo- cated here, A big erowd watched the show and ght it great, The performance will at 8:30 o'clock tonight. Count Morner Would Annul Marriage With Peggy Joyce New York, July 80.~~The Countess Morner, formerly Peggy Hopkine Joyce of musical comeay fame, who has divorced two milllonaire husbands has been served with papers in a suit Instigated by the count for annule ment of her most recent marri The former Peggy Joyce immediately countered this action with a suit against Count Morner for $10,000, which she alleges she has spent on behalf of her husband since she mar- ried him last June, t be repeated You can prepare Mueller’s just you do potatoes—in simple, easy ways It cooksl in 9 minutes and its flavor s delicious! W FrankE.Goodwin Eyesight Specialist 327 MAIN ST. Phone 1905 CONRAD HAT CO. Entire Stock Destroyed by Fire, July 18 Settlements are being made on all hats left for repairing or cleaning TOMORROW IS POSITIVELY THE LAST DAY—THURSDAY, JULY 31 317 Main Street His Nerves Were Gone— “The Nervous Wreck” BY E. J. RATH Starts Tomorrow in The Herald So He— Held up an auto- mobile load of armed men— Laughed in the face of the worst had man in Mon- tana— Licked the bully of the ranch single-handed— Defied a sheriff's posse to catch him— And Girl! The won - —

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