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& o HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANy Tmsed Datly (Sunday Ea. o AL Hoald Blig. 01 Cape BUBSCRIPTION RaTes B8 Yeur $3.00 Throe Mo, T4 & Montk Butered ot the Post Ofloe w1 New it B8 Secend Ulase Mall Mate TELEFHONE CALL Business Oif.o EBduorial Koviis ‘Fhe only profitable adieiiis 1 the City, Clisulat Proses oo Always open 1o ad Mombor of (he Avacinted Prvs Fhe Amsociated Piess 1s sasiue Mitled 1o the use for 1e-pul Sl Bews credited 1o it o not oun oredited 1n this papsr and news published heiciu Member Audit Bureau of ¢ The A B & natle ioh fur . Hsers with & i1 n flgures 1o both Jocal advertisers " i Grand Central, e — © QUIGLEY srrrs pine “1 belleve any in the Re. publican party has the right to run for any office within the gift of 1he party:"—Ex-Mayor Quigley, Which hits the proverblal nail on the proverbial head, he former mayor, In his statement in the “Herald yesterday, gave the Repub. lican organization to understand that the struggle against the rule of bosses within the ranks of the party would continue in New Britain, His opinion that the state conven- tion was not important cnough to provoke diasension undoubtedly gorrect. The state convention Is go- Ing to be operated by the state bosses and by nobody else. It is the | policy of wisdom to let them do their worst at the convention and lle low for a thrust later, later, _ Two Republicans freed of machine dictation are promised as contestants for the leglsiature. This looks like Dbusiness. nd stieet, man I8 th | | PAONESSA'S ALLEGRO Many Democrats in the city ap- pear to believe the mayor stepped |/ on the accelerator too hard when he | buttressed the senatorial ambitions | ‘of Mr, Hall to the extent of promis- ing to extend his help. Reports are that the mayor's ver- | bal speed has “split his party.” Mr. | “Casale, who looks toward the state | genate with emotions of impetuosity | ghaking his frame, is sorely dis- pleased. Other members of the local Democratic party likewise ave won- | can do, printed the following in two | of money vs. Britain Herald - PHAT INSANE THIAL i trial in ¥ Loehs1.ec gone the inshle fow vha Clarence Darr nka slayers past yed to save the attorney ¢ he Py s made th g ife £ Spar young the ) half of 1 \se of w@ youths. facetiously elalm thelr The oy youthy wore not insane; fumilies insist they made out i little and their were, The state has strong case, and there Ahout what the the the most this uttempt to mitigate belleved the slayers in history of crime, The perpetrated their outrugeous ™ cent A new playmate theill. The stute is pm—on the gallows, The heard speclous argument to drive but no or judge has man insane, siding justice individual, He gallows before, If the student murdereds are given ate to the hereafter, the defense | the g will appeal until there is nothing left | To ofl the wheels of | justice is costing the state of Iilinois | but not half as much | is costing the familics of the | 1t is a battle | and the proba- | to appeal to. a pretty penny, as it youths facing the bar. up. hle result is a tos: KRITICAL KIDDING The New Haven Union, which op- | poses the Republican party as only @ highly-geared Democratic paper dering whether, if the mnyor is still | column space on its front page: functioning s the leader of his party hereabouts, he is leading it | straight to the Républican camp. The Democratic situation will have | to be cleared away in some manner | and maybe the mayor can lend a helping hand. The mayor fihr-ull _make a statement to alleviate the | sufferings of the faithful. CH SEVEN just ONE FOR T Automobile statistics indicate there is in use one auto-| mobile for every 7.2 of the popula- | tion in the United States. | There are fewer in use necticut compared with the state's population than the average for the * entire country. The rate in this state in Con- issued | 18 one car for every 8.1 of the popula- | . tlon. Vermont has the best record in| gop thope, st New England—one machine for each | ew Hamp- Island, 6.7 of the population; shire, 7; Maine, 7.4; Rhode 8.7; Massachusetts, 7.3 The manufacturing states fewer automobiles compared have with population than the more rurul sec- | tions of New England; but the dif- ference between all of them is not very great, In California, more accidents ‘than in state and wher: the smooth roads is greatest, more automobiles owned per popu- Jation than in any other, namely onc machine to every of the tion, In Florida, the. season draws thousands ot p! seckers and where the native Jation waxes fat on parting the their money, .the ratio of muchines owned is one in 6.3 persons. But this is the best record in the in Georgia the rate being 17.3 to 9.6 in Virginia. The western promifient automobile owncrs beat any of the states in New jand. In lTowa the ratio is & Kansas 4.9; the remainder are these figures. lven in Texas machines per 1he where thers are any other mileage of there are popula- where winter casure- popu- from south rural ther are more population than in Connecticut, 7.6, Home pliblications point mobile ownership in the farm states and claim the can't be nearly “broke’ of the slump in farm priccs ownership of automobiles in #tates, however, has nothing with the prosperity of the Automobile ownership 10 Jiving in a county half Connecticut 18 a necessity. the automobiles existed every farmer s a week ratio bring to auto- western ople it The such " A to do owners a farmer big as Before as drove to town at least once § In a “rig,” or carriage: if in 1 Lrlage, in a wagon. They didn't walk and @@ no' Lar- rule | “I'he Konklusions of Klandi- date Dawes are certainly Kwite Kurious. He Kalls the Klan Kantankerous names in one breath, and Kalkulates they are Konspicuous by their Kindness and Kourage in the next. In the meantime “Kautious Kal" is Kevping very Kool on his Kin- dreds’ Kow pasture, relying upon the Kapability and Kant of Kleagle Butler to Kounteract the effects of the Kartridge fired by Davis, In challenging “Kal", Davis got too Kandid, and in- stead of Kalling for the Kards, he should have Konsidered the Kountless number of times he has been itioned to ‘Keep Kool With Koolidge".” SPOILS S M The f woman governor land, not yet in office office in administration lowed to hold she way. I in the gets her test of fitness to that season, organization of the Sounds like sie lay when successful fired every T out of his job, 1 vice versa, A GRAVE S A Harvey "1ON Col. Geo is back Vi vacation. his birthplac Thevillage acham, end a are all excited it the Wilson——and later one a row to he thrown overbo by Princetonfan pres th the ident muni Vermont g wi He asure the sake of sylvan thrills combine business with ple One thing v cime back Peacham for just at this time purchase a family lot in the metery,” the colonel You know, when people g msidered thrifty for to arrange for plare S A PRINCE! Wales i ed States and time attempting o 1 with the the ruler ¢ thron s in p qently boing of bei Chicago sgen the w the om the | of his the lives will be ! talent employed luwyer are, or a1 doubt | publie thinks about | punish- brazen modern Franks slayers admitted they premuditated and aguinst an inno- | lecause they sought of the | opinion that one more thrill is due enough | n ordi- inary | man could hold the sceptre of life | or death in such a case and the pre- | is at least no ordinary | has sent men to the of the | but soon to ar(s by thanking God for the opportunity and promising that I'no member of the Kian will be al- Taexas once under | Those in office will be dismissed. hold office xis is to be non-membership in has been |h(‘,} a reversion to the old | Demoerat ‘publican office holder | original hooster of Wood- of those the not com- hills for to town ot past 60 their route is having act re X- ming and has a adied with 5 king of NEW BRITAD AS & horseback rider lenen; indesd. it would need (0 by 11y -aet slved that 1h oft n\ ok into jee t wanage to 13 has Placed the royal » pardy 0 At least sin maier scoasions; per Baps B miner falls have net heen revorded New York b Amens otting, 1 musiclan On arvival b g w is g0 to have & an s or his fox 1y wation of jug in the metropolis have b ssembled to the Turnish wusle” 1o the princely lances, and when had worn eut ficient valuable sole leather in Vieinity he proposes to go te ada aid out uy taking the ern Can some for natives, azs band him. of npire the richest M A large The prince is one been able to aceumulute for e throggh good investments; in worthy than Lerd mous English on concentrating guiding the n- tments so that the prince hasn't ed ta bother brain about the soul.che: ning matter of improving his hank balances, The I8 nearly $1,000,000 rty in all no less » the fact Reselstoke has bagker, his wits upon prince’s v been his prinee’s Income A year and he parts of the The royal ran) Cheater,” received finury guest, has made it a point to disregard the owns pr world, quently drops his dines out as “Lord prince f as an * | rank, and his “subjecta” apparently think more highly of him for it. Only the royal family, however, is some- what abashed at his ways., The other leaving the place hailed a taxi by waving his hat. No King in his | princeling days ever acted quite so badly! The prince I8 30 years old and still unmarried, That is a point which the British empire. The king and queen have been interested also, and numerous “probable engagements” | have from time to time seen day- | light in the public prints; his love complex hasn't been working very well. Oh yes, there are plenty of girls willlng to take & chance with him but he has got to marry a girl from some other royal family, unless he smashes another precedent and rums off with some un-royal damsel who may be just as how good or better. CALLES AND GERMANY President-Elect Calles of Mexico is being received in Germany with fortissimo frenetics. Hamburg re- |ceived him with bands and flags; now Berlin takes a hand in outdoing Hamburg in the welcome, | Calles tions between Germany and Mexico 15415 Mexico's neutrality during |the world war was praised; and a continuance of the cordial relations between the two nations was mutu- ally promised. | Of course, Americans will not find fault with the continued ment of good feelings between na- tions; and the brotherly feeling be- tween Germany and Mexico bothers us less at present than it did six or seven years ago. German power for mischief in Mexico having been broken, there is more confidence in the future than there time. Herr Calles has Invited 10,000 Jews who are stranded in European ports to go to Mexico. If they go it will prove a good thing for his coun- try. The Jews could glve the Mexi- cans valuable lessons in enterprise. SHADE TREE BOOSTERS The national shade tres conven- tion began a two-day gathering in | Stamford today. Perhaps it receive much publicity, but it will be attended by devout souls who believe | the subj | emphasis in many of our cities and who propose to attend to the mat- in | to folks | Happily New Britain, as we fr | auently have remarked, is one of the of the state where the value of by the cities shade trees was recognized men and women who first settled in Thelr leg is apparent the Y important str upon every town. et. is to Observations On The Weather is 1o declared Aug Forecast England Washington, for southera New cloudy local probably late tonight or Thursday cooler Thursday couthwest shifting west winds, For Connecticut Partly probably local thunder showers late tonight Thursd i cooler Thurs- day afternoon. southwest, shifting to west Condittens: Th pascd out Qo sea yesterday and caus- ed rains from the tward to Nova Scotia storms rnoon est and north cloudy, or frosh northeast winds. tropical storm gener a8t ¢ he reatest amount reported during the t 24 hours was 3.42 inches at Bos- ton. A slight disturbance is central over upper Michigan. Pleasant weather prevails in all other sections east of the Rocky Mountains Conditions favor fc feinity weather and not much cha in temperatwss DAIL and on such occasions Is | He | conventions thrown about his high | day he dined alone at a hotel and on | has created great interest throughout | but some- | was reminded of the fact | | that there have been friendly rela- | “since the first commercial treaty ulé develop- | was at one won't | ct of shade trees requires | Partly | thunder | frosh | ey | Y HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST w his nose Dami ceman b Jack - Facts and Fancies! BY BOBEST QLILLEN Bull, elbow grease holds more job han soft soup . . s have previo: Kings have a lot of ¢ Mrs. 4 The new consist in est Dawes plan seems 1o Keeping darned quiet Markwell wh aid rent is eERS 4 whea the fstinction: One § finishes a last dlords chuekle paid was All hiccough His Hovowd “What's been coming off, Gap of it! B0 many asked an acquaintance, as Mr, Gap Now as second Conrads. | Johnson, of Rumpus Ridge, Hmped ’ inte the crossroads store and with a | Broun, sank down on anail kog. “Well, 1l just tell you, Lafe the reply, "1 swapped for yesterday, put a bridle en him and hopped onto his back, He umped | and throwed me off, and kicked me before 1 hit the ground. Huh! ivery time ome of mules throws me off he kieks twice hefore 1 strike the ground.” Without the Vamily Dudley 1 think you foolish, old man, to cut yaur | tion short and hurry back to the hot ity Byroni="Perhaps 1 was; | needed a rest,” Mrs, William J, The pity will be W. K. Hopkins e aglish read | Ginl Mo Did Every Bhould Hos: you What Know Minnie book say In summer it must awiul if dou feel 100 important 1o svrateh, I s Young & wule toes 1 No. hard wasn't have led camping must when Insects . existonce popular Watler Greenwald Al of Noul? You are the In the Marshall 1 ever loved.' Maxine Whe all this thme " my = fivst gir re have heen you Hortense Green. were n Motork Ne careful of d4NEerous curves "Many a driver has had a smashup because he had an arm around one (Copyright 1924, Reprody torbidd, Hint of man: Tummy back ache, Nhort history ache; heart ache but 1 understanding " Rouuda. tion better in the sad look Just frocks Age s that the prblaadiiles Ballade of Maidenly Popularity Bhe's such & demure litle wren, You don't notice the twink in her | asks the blessin' and smokes | with that Kind of smell, he is | talist instis the It he n pipe # fundamel The ¥un Shop is a national tution conducted by Newspapers country, Contributlons from readers, providing they are original, unpublishs and pow sufticiont merit, will b r at_rates varying f $1.00 Write on one side of the Iy and send you 1 Pun Khep Kditor ald, who will forward 1t York, Unaccepted manuscripts will not be returned, s around with the men, . | There's no one who passes her by, stroak s the one| The reason it's plain to deery; wheel when the| If you ever come under her fist, You'll notice—an frequently as I— | She closes her eyes when she's Kissed | . Another yellow that offers you the cur mires down, What we wish to know 4s whether officers who direct the deathi ray WeAr spurs. You ask how this comes to my ken? | . Observation amoends my reply; The first grave mistake some great | For when men are together, and | .. photographs made, She lightsomely trips her way by, L NEhd | Her glance at the party is aly, isn't And before you ean bid them de- her | sist, | In chorus the “She eloses hor Kissed!" Her mind is yet pure if she old enough to he conscious of (rightful finge fellows all cry: eyes when she's L'Envol Though she's most undeniably In view of this damaging list, Don't you think there's & good rea- son why closes her e Kissed ~—William A. Brewer, Jr, It popular songs were illustrated ] Glam Telescope Brings Satellite Within 50 Miles Washington, D. C., Aug. Mare closer to Ly millions of miles than it has been since 1909, and closer by thousunds of miles than for 200 ycars, the planet 1s being bomburded by hun- drods of pairs of trained hulaan eyes peering through the greatest telescopes. How these instruments are a especially by their effects on the image pr the moon. our ncarcst neighber in space, is the subject of following bulletin from the D, headquarters of phic woci Brings Moon Within 50 Mile he largest telescope in exi | the 101 inch instrument at Mt. son observatory, California, in fect brings the moon within 50 miles of the earth,” continues the hulle- un. ven relatively minor dctalls of the moon's surfage can be mad out, and the height of hills and | mountains can be caleulated with | tair accura Major featurcs are so easily recognized that mang | mountains on the moon have becn | name If a wreck the stze ill-futed Titanic lay on the bottom ot one of the d would be visible Wilson instrument. through this great telescope nphisize what smaller instruments had proved: atmospherele: °s when She she's Man is the noblest work of God, With but it's hard to believe when you | hear two of him wrangling over crumpled fenders, | S The puzziing thing is how many mosquitoes are required to make a summer resort. cifeetive measured . " | T'hose who have been tweive miles| out say there is something rotten | nearer than Denmark, . e The umpire differs from the speed cop in that more people hate him at | the same time, . ence, Wil- of- After a man gets old enough it is hard to distinguish between love of country and ambition. T In the old days your host could | offer something before dinner with- | out offering a digestant after dinner. | | 25 Years Ago Today “What'll T De" Hrom Paper of That Date Room to Spare Old gentleman (who hasn't been to a dance in years):—"Er—isn't I, G. Platt and family are expect- | this dance floor rather small, my ed home from Maine today. | dear?” Phillp Bardeck and family are| His visiting in Albany, N, Y. ’mml.: Joel Avery has bought the Wilson | of our latest steps property on Glen street and will con- | —Mr | duct his milk business there. | L. Hoyt Pease and family have | returned to town. | through the Mt, flapper niec: "Nonscnse, Obagevationd Just wait until you see some | ot Rigney: world,from which all Looked Silépfoldus [ lite has long since departed. The “Cullod chile,” said Tobe Brown, | Prosent condition of the moon, &0 A daughter was born yesterday to | “didn’t Ah tell yo' t* keep outen dat | P/AIRIY shown by the big telescopes, | Mr. and Mrs. John Conlin of Lafay- | white man's watermelon patch? Dey | 0fCCasts what probably will happen i | ain't no chile ob mine goin' to de. | L th® earth, unless & collision with In the absence of the regular pas- | celbe me dat way, Didi't A tell o' | #hOUNCT culostial hods tor yestorday Kev. L. S. Johnson | dat ain't hovwes' t visit his water- | [0 @ sudden end for officiated at the Baptist church. | melon patch?” TR HUNE SRy BleHdone I D. J. Sullivan and M. J. Kenney | “Yessah, pap,” said little Washing- | 1..,-“\:\u];‘r‘:‘glml\n(lr’:l rnlr.-!ti:.:p:r,v Tl. were appointed a committee to con- [ ton, “Ah guess yo' did.” (S0 8 lR LT AUR LNk disolontivea duct the fair to e glven by the Y.| “Well, yestiddy 1 went over to dat | Sahb 15e entlshteni Wav o T. A. & B. society this winter, watermelon patch,” continued Tobe, | \p e ® oS 2 The payroll for the town street| “for t' git a melon, and day ain't| ppear as small as a pe on a department for the past weel 4nonf”drxu—fluu yo' gwine t' splain | printed page, o tremendous amounted to § 1. b | some of the chasms in the sun's Work was started 1hls morning on —Daul 8. Powens wlhich we call ‘stun spots’ thai the laying of 1,000 feet of water ST or more globes the size of t(he main through Henry strect from | v Walking e requived to il them. South Stanley street to Rocky Hill | Blake:-—"Hear about Jennings' ac (s of Unseen Stars rcad. ‘The building of this main, | cident? Well, he broke a leg. | " Among other wonders which the which has long heen desired, will be | Drake:—"How did it happen?” great modern telescopes make an incentive to the ercction of many | Blake Vell, you know that he | known are swarms of myriads of new houses along this line, i s in his sleep? Well, he had to | garg where the unaided eye can Landers, Frary & Clark have [ Make a trip last week, and he took | sce hut five or six hazy nebulac | taken out an application for the an upper berth.” | which scem mere wisps of radiant | erection of a one story brick build- —Henry Jansen. | wus and which are solar ing on East Main streel. The (e | the making, and stars so f building will be used as a tinning | Did You Know That— | that it requires 30,000 years department. | 1t is more blessed to give than'to | tjeir light to reach the earth. | receive—advie light of some ot these stars is so When there's scandal in the air a | 1gint that two years must be spent | | woman doesn't need a radio set to|in photographing them. Though | }“Hwn ine” some of the nebulae appear great | ‘The shortest way is the cheapest| holes scemingly devoid of any mat- BALKEI] AVIAT[]RS —-unless you use a taxi? \\ hile “money makes the mare go™ the e tks have reversed that American Vessels Rush fo Aid MacLaren and Zanni a way for | ter, 0t course modern opes have not definitely an- swered the question on which men's minds have long dwelt: ‘Are other planets inhabited?’ . They have Slight Changes piled up additional facts in regard | Teacher:—"Willie, what were the to these plancts, however, which °t changes of the animals of the | lcad many of the foremost astrono- ic and Triassic periods?” mers to helieve that none the “Their tails were other planets of our solar system is imhabited with the possible exce | tion of Mars. It is in the hope of Willie:—*"But teacher, the other | throwing more light on this absorb. day you said that the changes were | ingly inferesting question that the mostly details.” | world's telescopes are being t nightly this summer on our neighhe e cnherde of Bethlehem Joint Field Day Aug. 30 A joint field day under the aus- pices of the Order of Shepherds of Bethlehem will be held at Lake Compounce Sunday. Lodges from Hartford, Southington, Middletown and New Britain, which form the newly formed ‘pherds Associa- tion of Northern Connecticut,” will | participate. An interesting program maxim —Edward Frost. | en dit- The Assoviated Press, Kobe, Japan, Aug. 27.—As the | American destroyer John Paul Jones hurried southward from HaKodate carrying a spare airplane for A Stuart MclLaren, the British round- the-world fiier, the American liner President Madison, has sailed from Kobe with a spare plane for Major Pedro Zanni, the Argentine flier who cashed when starting from Haip- hong, French Indo-China for Canton e President Madison will take the plane, which arrived here from Burope on the Japanese liner, to Kong Kong, whence it will be ship- ped to Haiphong by the Chukwa Maru, a Japanese steamer, eacher:—"Wrong." ret Sweet Madeline, 1 ask a favor; Your lps don't need A borrowed flavor. George Miller. and Sweet 1 am not " he told her. to give you " she replied, A. Bisbee, Short “I know that enough for you,’ “1 don't intend chance 1o prov. good a it JUR PROTEST STRIKI he local | 24-hour and also in protest nd in soit- 21 B works' strike public angle Counter drops low, The dingle and an excellent list of prizes be awarded the winners. The m of sports will start prompt- union has call effective tod demonstration against the pensions law larity with the striking maritime workers. Factory ‘workers, taxieab drivers and others are affected by the mosement which, hawever, does jnot involte the public services The moon the sun will | will “nk, Men «till insist that they must drink. Eizada N. Clover. a are likely to_he Banking methods revolutionized by invented machine that sorts inte the various denominations and counts it. The accident was averted, but how, a newl do you suppose” the hero sound his horn? on D No. 0N HOON'S SURFACE. the carth this weck | world's | of the| moon ocean beds it | further | that the moon is a dry, | should substi- | lingering | arth woulit | systems in | The | astronomical | inew | 1 I = |DR. FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL England a Liberal Give: Hy DR, FRANK CRANE ngland, @il §rubLIRG he much ternitony iy which has 190 I8 eaist) Accarding 1o iffe n k has FepuLat atend really given away Buitishers and alse e on the face of quishment He says that it may § be news 0 many their kinsiolk in the United the globe that & 80 much in 1+ TSl puas voluniary re that 14 dane way of ions as Greal Brital 1 is tmely 1o eall atten uitary transtor of Jubaland 1o tul land Wis ignored by the vast ot 1o Ring ¥t Ju than the am ol Beol milea fo northern part of th n East Afriea The territory Juba which, until res conuectiun With her vols cation and sy of Jubas WB,000 people Who & valuable tract of terntory, g some ffly thousand Liritish Colony of Kenya, 10 that lact In ton rity of the 4 alandd M Gl ge King ing 1 srger sjuire in question lies Lo the souilwest of the bread River nily, his vonstituted the Anglo-ltalian border line Lloyd Geor nd Lord Cureon conveyed the impression that Great Britain was endessorig 1o ovide ber obligations with regard to Jubsland “t the close of the and this greated Intense bitterness in Jtaly and was tespousible for of the untriendliness which Mussolini, for & iy, displayed toward Engand st the Lausanne Congress, Lut when thy new Labor Cabinet came Atice 4t Downing Btrect, sud Pramier Lam- sy MacDonald ussumed the wvotion of the forvign relaiions of the em- pire curetul gonsideration he took the line thut the national honor of England wag invelved i ifilling her obligations on the subject of her Last African provinees, And he has taken now the necessary steps for turning over the Jubaland to Jtaly without any further quibbling, @ long Nst of ternitory which Great Britain The Philippifes once belonged to England, huving surrendered in 1 1o thy naval lorevs under the command of Bir William Draper and Aduiral fa Cornish, After a few yours England | found out thut cungrants would not go to the Philippines on account of its | distunce and the olimate und 5o, @ few yoars luter, with. { out any bearing being bhrought to L upon her she deliberately, and of { her own accord, restored the islands to Spain, the latter undertaking to repay the money spent Ja by Great Leitain, The money was never pald but remains owing to Groat Dritain to this day 1t was tuken by u Uritish fieet and middle of the cighteenth contury, It was afterward restored to Spain for no other reuson than that the ad. | ministration in Downing Street did not care to retain it any longer, | avi, and i fuct all of the Duteh Bast Indics, wers in the possession of England from 1511 untll 1815, when ®hey were voluntarily restored | to Holland without uny compensution whatover in - return, Yot tnesw | Dutch East Indies are perhaps the richest colony of any Europe power, Monorea has, at two diiferent periods, o England, It was tod to Spain by England at the time ty of Amiens in 1503 Gulana was conguered by Great Britaln as the result of much cost of lite and treasure, but one-third of it was presented as a free gift to France in 1815, and one-third to the Netherlun Hellgoland was given by t Britain to doni wims in Zanzibar, fsland in the world, next ’\mmml\ 1 to Queensiand, But Great Britaln half to New Guinca and it beeame known as Kuiser Great Wur enabled the commonwealth of Australia to recover | slon and it is once more under the British flug. abandoncd by England in 1899 to Germany and was re« stored during the Great an Archipelago is now ade ministered by New Ze Gibraltar has by lined. Toda of G t giishman who does not congratu frustrated these foolish offers, Egypt has also been given up hy Great Britain and Iess than a quar- ter of a century ago Tangiers wus abandoned by it | Altogether, according to Mr. Cunliffe-Owen, kngland has made a | good record by her gencrosity but she will never give np the Suez Canal or the Sudan, F o5 to her its peace, prosperity and eivilization, Copyright, 1924, by The McClure's Newspuper Syndicate. FAMOUS SLEUTHIS . HELD AS A BANDIT MCOY DESERTED W F. Faliy Accused of Arrang- BY IS LAWYERS ing $5000,000 Wl Robbery yveoi o Brinds 0 Poomit Him to Keep One w Jubalund is only one has voluntarily relinguishud troschery of the ur o public we belonged to England, army under Lord Atbermario in s rmany in return for the aban to Austialia, was relinquished one- Wilhelmland. The ite posses- Sumon w War and. enof in hitt to al six times hut has always been her rejections of these repeated hor Gibraltar, while there 18 no himeelf on the good fortune which pmn rets to te | red to restos h ch o 'thought to have mistaken him for a mail clerk. Chicago, Aug. 27.—Charged with {being the mater mind in the “§2, 000,000 mail robbery at Rondout, |1, which he took a | Los Angeles, Aug. Disagree. Investigating, Wil- ]rr,ll-nls ‘nrmmg his friends as to the ¥ Fal S avectop | Cholce of attorneys to defend him Fahy, postoffice 1nspeclor |\epe"aqded to the anxleties of kid 1 held in the Kane county jail at | \cCoy, charged with the murder of deneva today in bonds of $50,000. |\frs, Theresa Mors, as he awaited | He was arrested in his private oftice s next appearan in superior in the Iederal building late y ourt tomorrow 1o plead to a mur- day after warrants had been issued 'dor charge, four charges of robbery on complaint of five eastern in- and three of assault with intent to fetectoky [ murder, growing out of the shooting | v Who was regarded as an of Mrs. Mors, Aug. 12, and a pistol “ace” among postal operatives, and affray in and . anti who obtained the evidence whieh | he }orlslms'xlr‘ulg s iy sent “Big Tim" Murphy and his al- | One of the alleged slayer's attor leged accomplices to federal prison | pey's withdrew from the case yes- for the Dearborn Street Station | terday, but McCoy sought to fore- | $838,000 vobbery here three years | stall further changes in the organi 80, charged the arvest was due 1o |zation of his defenge by issuing an “fiameun” by criminal —enemies |uppeal to his friends asking them to and professional rivals. He will be ' supfiort the only attorney still on 1 arraigned September | record representing him. i : specific charge against Fahy | Tomorrow, before McCoy 15 al- |18 conspiracy with Max Greenberg | jowed to plead, prosecution and de- jand Sam Grant, fugitives previously | fouse counsel will argue the prose- named as ringleaders in the robbery, | cution's motion to add to the list of to steal 10 sacks of registered mail | witnesses on the grand jury indict- taken from the mall train after i | 1 ment the name of Mrs. Jennie | bandits had halted it and subdued |Thomas, sister of the defendant, mail clerks with tear bombs and | pistol shots. i | New York, Aug. 27.—Mrs, Theresa | According to fnspéctors working | Mors, with whose murder Kid Me- on the case, it is helieved IFahy is in | Coy, former prize fighter, is charged, | possession of a cons able part of | will be buried today with only a few the loot, although they admit they | relatives and friends attending the | have thus far been unable to recover | funeral services, The body, which |any of the amount, reiched here yesterday from Los ; Fahy has been watched ever since | Angeles, will he buried in a ceme- a few d after the robhery, € hll‘f“”\ on lLong Island. Postal Inspector C, H. Clarahan of | inowledge of the manher in | York said. He stated that in- | which Mrs. Mors met her death has spectors have followed Fahy been kept from her parents, Mr. [places where they he met the fand Mrs, Joscph Weinstein, They men with whom he is charged with [have not seen newspapers containing conspiring Chief Clarahan and J. |accounts of the tragedy and have |S. Lemen of Baltimore made the | heen told that their daughter disd a complaint, which wase said: to be|natural death, | based on evidence uncovered hy — them and by inspectors G. B, Miller CHURCH CONVE of Wushington, Thomas Milligan of | Toledo, R. 1. Nicoli, Syracuse, John | The New England district convén- W. Hartwell, Alhany and C. C. A.|tion will hold its twenty-third an- Rattles of New Yor all on duty| nual convention at St. Matthew's here | Evangelical Lutheran church in this “ahy said he supposed the com- | city on August 31 and September 1 ed on hig communica- | and 2. The convention will open at James Murray, a Chicago 0 o'clock Sunday afternoon, Aug- arrested in connection | ust 31, with an address of welcome with the robher released in [ by’ Rev. A, C. T. Steege, pastor of | bonds. Murr « heen afthe local church. Reports of com- friend of his and hs sisted him | mittees will he read and the opén- in his government work, Fahy ®aid. | ing session will be completed wit | The Mondout robbery was one of |a buffet lunch in the church pa the most spec v occur in this | lors. The convention will be called | vicinity in Zight men stop- | together again at 8:30 o'clock Mon ped a sp n on the Chi morning with devotional exer go, Milw ¢ rati- A report will submitted ¢ at Rondout, 24 miles north of | b H. Wahmeyer, gale te After subduing the ci the national convention at St 1% with tear bombs, the robhers, w Minn, Rev. Paui 1. Milier ‘ort ing gas masks, made seloctio Wayne, Ind., wili speak. The eiec- certatn mall sacks and escape tion of officers will be held and a two motor cars. Their manner noonday luncheor will he served {operation led inspectors believe | during the tecess. Th inoms of they advance information conventior. wil coinpieted Three ex-eon afternoon, i informal viets from Toxs f cial - PR mection with the rabher iay the delesates will enjov an dit wae shot by the leader, who was | outing at Laks Compounce on June leading part in liam | wa New TION. | plaint was tion with | politician, Paui e Chicago. r- of of in of he Monday ail in en One