New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 28, 1924, Page 10

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o Rretd NEW HRITAIN DAILY BUAZEINSHOE SHOP! ~ Personale ~ FLATING ISLANDS | Tiden's Rival? AROUSE INTEREST 1. Crean of Summer street ying & vacation in the Alaing n e W hite HERALD, AUGUST 28, 1024, \WALL ST. REPORTS | A THURSDAY, P (Wall & Some of the bears are looking for ven price Ruetuatic bring them peaing) ne an election seare to s PUTNAM & CO. DOES $1300 DAMAGE ot 1N me My i Mra William N ‘v! Kirdy ¥ of rore e Lon tor trip ter. Biva incoln | and daug Fire and Smoku Rolled From 108 Main Street street, will day s’ Host wiera to Cap Cod and Lan ponding the at Chalker Miss h of ford o of 1he Al art 18 K A fire that started in the sk paining shop at 123 Main sty ducted by Brune Gagliarducel about 6:30 a'clock last night resulted in dapmage estimated by Deputy Chisf Bugene ¥, Barnes of the fire department at $1500 before it put out by the fire apparatus whieh newered an alarm from Box at the eorner of Main and Arch strects The fire started when an employe of the ahos shop was cleaning a hat with gasoline, Deputy Chief Barnes learned, and two botties of the tinid that wera kept on & shelf nearby eaused the blaze to spread rapdil When the fire apparatus arrl ot the scene, it looked as though entire structure, which eompose h wodan frame building at the corner of Main and Chestnut streets oomed, as big clouds of amoke wer pouring from the National Tes Tm porting company, the Johnson & Poterson photographic studio and the barber shop conducted by Jim mis Bordiere, besides the mass of flames that could be seen In the shoe repair shop. After the fire Deuuty Chief Barnes commended the firemen on their work, saying that it was only as a result of their hard and efficient efforts that the flames were confined to Gaglinrdue cl's stors, The other occupants of | the store suffered from a smok damage. FATE OF BOYS UP 10 JUDGE (Cemlnurd from First Page.) amin Saunders or Ogean be he ren: was Mise Mildred oourt beach vacation Aby has wh 4 gertor rety Chalk sh spending her Anthony Martine has r from his vacation at Brackvay, | Walte strest Hermavn of 1 Vi leave tomerrow for In. Vil remain over v " lan Neck where he Labor Day wa - e 1eft this " 4 Parl Indian over lius Ryan of 3¢ afternoon for will remain street ! Labor where he Day Oscar Desmarais and John Marf vaek are at Indlan Neek where they will remain over Labor Day M. W. Putnsy on a motor trip to where they will be the relati Mr. and Mra 1eave tomorrow Vermont guest of will John Cronin, 17 Spring street, | Frank Kelly of Hart street, 1 are spending thelr vacation at the White ‘\!nm\lanm in New Hampshire, Joseph Donlan of North street, is spending his vacation at Mr, Mark- ham's cottage at Grove Beach, Mrs, F. C. Bauer of Shelburne ‘I‘:HII. is visiting her daughter, Mrs. R. E. Snyder, Fred Dorman and Sam Dorman, Jack Clancey and Leon Honiss have retirned from a two weeks camping | trip in the Maine woods. say to those peopls who' are here | now that there will be nobody ad- mitted in this room on that day ex- ‘eept members of the press and mem- | bers of the family and sheriffs and the state's.attorneys staff. If any-| Mrs. William Murphy of 315 Park thing occurs whereby I could not be | Strect has returned to in a position or cannot be in a po- | After a stay in Putney, Vermont. She sitlon to render it on that day, 1 1as apent about three months there will notify the press and the au. | for her health, which is mueh im- | thoritles at least three days in ad- | proved, | WAR GAME ARRANGED | 400 Army Airplanes and a Division wance, But there will be nothing to | deter from rendering judgment on that day gentlemen, unless it is ill- ITINERARY OF PRINCE | He Will Land at New York Tomor- row and Go Directly to Glen Cove, Long Island. | i of Troops to Make “Attack” on France From German Frontier, [ | | | | Nancy, France, Aug. 28.—Four slon of Moroccan troops will make an “attack” from the djrection of the | Weshington, Aug. 25.—The itiner- | German frontier agafnst the 20th | ary for the visit of the Prince of | French army corps under General ! Wales to Washington from Glen | Penet next week in the first big mili- | Cove, L. I, and return, after an 1n. tary manoeuvres of such character formal lunch with President Cool- idge was made available today by‘ official sources here. reorganization of the army. According to the announcement| The defending force will be aided | the prince will land in New York|by only a single squadron of air- from the steamship Berengaria| plancs, but the land troops will about noon tomorrow and will g0 di- | utilize every war material developed rectly to Glen Cove. He will leave|and will particularly attempt to show New York on his special train Satur- | their mobility and ability to camou- dey morning and arrive in Washing- | flage successfully against the 40 squa- ton about noon. At the \\'hncJ drons of “enemy” air House luncheon described as “very| bombers, dnformal,” only the members of the| Troops a now Coolidge family and a few officials| Strasbourg Sarrebourg and from the British embassy will be | eastern garrisons for practice march- present. The prince will leave Washington about 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon, returning to Glen Cove on a special train. MILITARISM CHARGED Governor Bryan Insists That Dafense | Day. Plans Are in No Sense a| Victims May Die, Voluntary Proposition, ‘ Lincoln, Neb, Aug. 25.—Despite | President Coolidge's inteppretation | ot plans for observance of defense day, September 12, as a purely vol untary proposition, Governor Bryan, democratic vice-presidential candi- | date declared today that the war department, is proceeding with it “militaristic program” for the day.|pyjlding. Several persons also “The war department’s plan,” Gov. ‘mm, romUaR Bl LAt Bryan said, “is conflicting and out | ot harmony with the civil head of | the government, which is supreme. | It is attempting to go ahead with | its militaristic program regardless | of the fact that the president has said there was no such intention.” | tary demonstration under the recent | Morhange, in Moselle, on Monday will begin. ONE DEAD, 12 INJURED Moines Des Moines, Aug. 28.—One man| was killed and twelve persons were injured, several perhaps fatally, when an ammonia_tank exploded in a grocery today. Everett Armel, truck driver for the grocery Killed. The injured were hurled to the basement when the explosion vipped out the first floor POLISH CLUB OUTING Polish-American Political Organiza- tion Will Have Big Affair At lake Compounce Saturday. Mrs. Lynch Leaves | Estate to Children | 'The will of Mrs. Mary Lynch, filed | foday in probate court directs that the entire estate be taken by her daughter, Mary A. Lynch and 1 in trust for 15 years after which it shall be divided among the follow #g children: Mary, Catherine, Jere miah, Willlam, Agnes, Hannah and in Bnglish and Joseph Charles Lynch, and Mrs. Julia Shee-| Jawoski of Paterson, N. J., will hy. The will provides that €0 much |epeak in Polish. A hanquet will be of the income as is necessary be ex- | fallowed by a program of sports pended for providing a home for | Members from all over the astate are children of the testator, An outing of the Polish-America political organization of Connecticut will be heid at Lake Compounce Saturday, beginning at 2 p. m. Cor Hart Fenn, Secrefary A. Palotti and Waiter ¥ chafrman of the repub- committee of Hartford hel & of Batte lican will rson, n speak | expected to he present her home | hundred army airplanes and a divi- | since the armistice and the first mili- | scouts and | leaving Nancy, | other | | es and eventual concentration near | when the week's active operations | in Des| Grocery Today—Several | al was | of the| suf- | o | Scientists Say They Carry Ani- mal bp« fes (o New Lands Was . A ' of the repart 1 which iring b Ing 1sland ired the has 1NaE 18 about 1 ma Jown the ancl o " ating i trom 1 adyuarts sociel) I own 1in: t sgua t high ) wiles out probably fr United Bt During il tree about tucket Aabont 4§ 1 July, 1 § of which e it ' m Nan ad drifted T ast f ible en mile ' miles southe 1 cgre premi farther her and 1t may Gulf stream have e tually led on the t of rope Selentists feel the Arifting 15! wits over the part they 1 At varions times earth masses finally lure of the se crets thess udgel their might in the play ry of the o be- traes, when his these brushwood ar they floated away land- ed upon the shores other land, huve been instrumentil various times in transmitting squirs field-mice, and lund shells to other purts of the earth's where cortain species did not ally exist The form lanterns' of comes ahout jove tangled 1 water and at [ rels, insects murface ori 1on of these ‘jack-o'- the oceans and _rivers in ry simple way, The grasses and rushes which grow along the edges of the water begin pushing their way farther and farther out from shore and in time moss grows over the ing vege- |table matter. Soon water-loving plants such as alders aurel {and sweet gale grew with the land then cranberries and | plants push their way out on shelf until the mat hecomes | three feet thick. When it come firm, black sprices and | begin | with their roots. | the | has be- “When the water rises the floating | Nag| | mass rises also, but the surrounding shore cannot, s great enough the mat breaks off | and floats about. These ‘floats’ are | often met with in tropical waters, | particularly in the Amazon, among | | the Moluceas and the P hilippines, One of the most remarkable of the Mississ in the Atchafalaya, a lower arm of the river, In 1778, By 1816 it bad | become 10 miles long, more than 600 | | feet in width, about 8 feet deep, and had become solid enough to support | a growth of trees, some of which | were 60 feet in height. Finally the | State of Luisiana had to remove the | | obstruction atr gmreat expense, the | worlk occupying four years. “The United States government | has since that time removed a raft | which blocked the channel of the Jm river for 45 miles, “The mysterious bits of floatsam known in the days of Pliny | who wrote that there was a dark wood in the lake of were place for a day and a night to- gether. He also described some is- lands made of reeds In Lydia which were driven about by the wind and | which could be fushed about from \plme to place by poles. | “There are thousands of floating |islands in Klamath Lake, Oregon, upon which the tules grow 12 feet high, but which will seldom bear the weight of a man. Island Changes Shores “In- Sadawga lalke, Whitingham, l\mmm a large floating island | broke oft from the west shore, drift- }od acroes the lake and has now he- |come attached to the eastern side. | “Floating gardens, which are the | enltivated variety of floating islands, have heen known in various parts | of the world from early times, par- in regions where gardens | planted on terra firma would he flooded, such for instances as the | floating gardens of Kashmir and of | Xochimilen, The latter supply Mex- ica City with practically all its | vegetables and fowers. Sometimes these mata are | firmly anchored to the shore they do not break off with water but hecome submerged. them tn appear above the eu the water must subside or mnet push the vegetation up- which has a light | tiewtarly "0 that high Yor face some ageney nard epecific Marsh gas gravity, oceasionally it is antities and can ¢ enrface. After th the island agzain 1arg e only at the seape snt this, when present in has ¢ becomes me af the [ ater best knnwn tslands of floating island of the lovelfest It appears and upper end of the als with acenmula “One thiz type the i Derwent of the English lake lisappears at lake at inter 8t neath it tion of g Savings Bank of New Britain 178 Main Street OPEN TUESDAY EVEN SEPTEMBER (Standa rd Time) Owing to the fact that Monday, S eptember 1st, 2ND, 6:00 TO 7:3 is a legal holiday, this bank will be closed Monday evening, and instead will be open Tuesday eve- ning, September 2nd, and all deposits made during the day or evening of September 2nd will draw interest from September 1st. Deposits are receiving interest at the rate of 414%, 2 does | man north and | s hold and | Now look who's going in for ten- nis honors! None other than the former erown prince of Germany He 18 golting to be & zard on Berlin courts, reports s tumored he might go in for chame | plonships and such, | | | moss, | piteher | about | ¢ [ and when the wrench | Frank ppl rafts began forming | peiphin, | hiood, | | Vadimonis | wee which was never scen In the same | WAIVE EXAMINATION Railroad Bound Over to Superior Court On New Haven Men Are Charges of Theft. Hartford, Aug. 25.—Waiving ex- amination in the lower court and entering pleas of not guilty to theft from freight cars, four railroad men were bound over to the September term of the superlor eriminal | court under bonds of $1,000 each in police court today. The accused are Stephen Quirk, Hartford, president of loc: No. 11§, DLrotherhood of clies | rajiroad trainmen, former yard man anchoring it together firmly | night conductor in the employ New Haven road; Dennis G. Hartford, secretary of the red Cline of Hartford and Pfingslag, of w Haven, brakeman, Fireworks Maker Put and of the 1l Under Arrest Today | New Haven, Aug. | factory in West Haven where an ex- | plosion recently blew a man to pieces and shook up the neighbor- has been arrested, charged with refusal to remove, when ordered to do so” by the town | 1, it was disclosed today. |Boys Are Found 1 After Their 24th Runaway ew F Aug. 28.—David and Clarence De two bLovs reported to twing, but who the police now diselosed are £zed 9 and 11 years| respectively are held by the police today after a disappearance of a k's duration. from their home, The youngsters when found this noon said they had been living in a tent since they laft home. police say this is their 24th disap- pearance. en ENTER VIA, FURNACE New Haven, Aug. 28.—That a pipeless furnace mnay be useful for other than heating purposes was demonstrated today when the police learned that burgla entered the drug store of Max Epstein here through the heat vent of such a furn: after breaking in the cel- lar door. The thieves obtained $50 worth of merchandise, Cousins vr bY Hariis & Ewing Lord and Lady Mountbatten es of King George, are m. g the trip. to this country and nada with the Prince of Wales. marked i alings | Maine election is ne of the pos quiek profita, i ooked fornard 10 as ¢ market today, with trad the A Members New VYork Stock Exchange fail and it is | —Dominick | proprietor of & fireworks | explosives | The | trend v, al As Mai b ™ ' ont o sibilities. the sount gors goes sloga g b . natien, [ 4 upon in the i [ ving brough n Geneml Ele and Jersey Contral for ' nd ralivead pfd Virginia and W 2108 p lity 10 the sees Price ved up A heavi ume o mbraced a number of lalties. Standard In d within narvew ment . ! bl peet e 4 etrie ate e Ame ated ¥ T viean loe eci bidding tably liu fluet eral Eleetr rather widely mpany for the presen likely to show 318 per share commeon stoek, whieh is game as for 1923 Heo the valye of the company's |assets vather than the divide | makes the stook itra | the company has & splendid the priee of the stoek has of ¢ discounted a greut There was talk in eles of a recehership | dated Textile, due no doubt 1o the | report frem New York that banks |era and officials of B, B & I | Knight were meeting to discuss the [ auestion of the Beptember 1 inter {##t payment on this concern's & 308,000 first sinking gold Ta. ( | solidated Textile owns all the mon stock of the Knight cor No eanfirmation of the rey s had Gie as selected stocks, Pitts. | Earnlngs of ear for the the i hidder Rl W and West burgh rh, Whi about h e | " Ve ndury ings N wwing which industrial fl limits wit Hvidend pri deal s § up quarter in o; y ve finaneial o for soll mand W of a block of m.—Absorption |l corn I ¢ 1.5 I pa bullish operations n th prics wmting || Iater ta N w ok €0 all strect 1130 p 0 shares produets at lecline 6 1 theway uence i the fa ulati ) ! ndler and 1, & Bag dropped or the ape ot from ron n |y ould Pipe o ddan N free of Fncouraging r axpansion pron in this gronp WAS restriets f a holiday totalled only An inerease n Mon v figul e ori It 18 #aid the ofl drilling venture of VeAtura OIl company has not turned out particularly well. Soma $500,000 has been spent, according to report, but no oil has bes brought forty from the ‘“wildeat" territory which gave so much prom- | ise A few months ago. There are some, however, among the manage ment, who still have hopes. The ex- | penditure will not affect the divi- dend whatever, according to thoss close to the company, ris of mercant v o unusual aety but business elsowhere 1 due ta the approach Bales In the first hour ot 136 shares froight cars loudings he largest ag 1o of any mar this year was taken as further idence of an autumn trade revival rehandis to which the | spondoed Ginins of points were tional 8hoe " Stores, B, Kavsor 8ill solidated Call moacy opened recorded Woolworth pra MeCrory | and Con- The rail mills of the U. & Fteel Corp. at Gary, Ind,, will resume op- | ations next week it 18 sald after a shutdown of about two months. This is 6ald to be the largest steel rall Am Can mill in the world. It is estimated Am ( that inquirles for between 150,000 |Am and 200,000 tons of steel rails arc|Am now in the market, lAm - |Am Am at 2 per cent. | Close '8, & Taly 16 Sm & Re 8g Rf cm, Sum Tob . Tel & Tel Am Toh Am Wool , a0y 5 127 “i In summarizing market conditions { the Hardware Age says: “In most | sections of the country hardware sales are increasing. This is partic- | Ana Cop & ularly true in the agricultural dis-|Atc Tp & & F 1043 trict City eales, in most sections,| At Guig A W I 14 are affected by weather conditions| Bald Loco ... 1225 and the vacation perlod, Baltimore & S~ Beth Steel B . President Erskine of the Stude-| (on Textile baker Corporation announces that| can Pacific . plans for capacity production at all| (an Teath Co . plants in October are progressing fa- [ (hag & Ohio .. vorably, He further states that the | cny Mi) & St P outlook for big fall and winter busi- | ¢ R 1s1 & P . § ness is excellent. Chile Cop e = o Based on returns alrendy received | o Gas .| from sales of Cuba Cane Sugar's| con pro Hef . | erop this year, of which only about | caiple Steel . 500,000 bags rematn unsold, it s es- | cyyct UEC S | timated that earnings will be at the! 0% © rato of at least $10 a share on the | -u8 [o0ei 500,000 preferred outstanding. Gen Piactvia | It was announced that King Al.| Gic2 Motors .. phonso of Spaln shas signed a de-| ,," North pfd cree authorizing a contract with the |3t North pfd . | National Telephone —company of | [P, Copper Spain, organized by the Internation. | 1Nt Mer Mar | al Telephone & Telegraph Corp. in | It Mer Mar pd | cooperation with the principal Span- | Allls Chalm feh banks, for the construction and | Pacific Oil .. | exploitation of a telephone system | [nt Nickel .. | throughout the Spanish Kingdom. Int Nickel ... The new eompany will take over|Kelly Sprg T'r | government owned as well ps private | Kennecott Cop [ telephone systems i operation in | Tehigh Val Mid States Oil. Spain, it is said. ; | Spi Mis Pac . | N Y Cen —_— o IN Y NH & H. | Nort & West Bpafllfl | North Pac .. 1 24% 126% 647 Nat Lead 156% Pure Oil 3 Pan Am P & T Penn R R Pierce Arroy Ray Con Cop. Reading . Rep 1 & 8§ ... Royal D N Y Mrs., Eveline Johnson Vinton Mrs, Eveline Johnson Vinton, wid- ow of Chelsea C. Vinton, died this | morning at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs, E. M. Beals of 108 Lincoln street. Mrs, Vinton was born in Litchfield, 85 vears ago, but lived | Sinclair Oil Ref Lmost of her life in Hartford. She |South Pacific.. leaves, besides Mrs, Beald, two other | South Rail daughters, Mrs. F. H. Avery and |Studebaker Mrs. Cora C. Bogue, both of Hart. |Texas Co . ford and one son, Louis E. Vinton |Texas & Pacific of East'Hartford. Tobacco Profl. . ¢ Tuneral services will be held at|Transcon Oil ? 4 4% 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon from |Union Pacific .14 144 the home of her daughter, Mrs. (17 8 Inds Alco Beals of 108 Lincoln street, Frederic {1/ 8 Rubber L. Fay, assistant pastor of the South (' 8 Stecl x-d Congregational church, officiating, | U/ 8 Steel pfd Burial will be in Rockville, Uitah Copper Co 90% | | str ret 1081 121 7 | wa inghouse LOCAL STOCK QUOTAT] ol i IONS | (Putnam & | T Aetna Casualty | Aetna Life Tns, C |Aetna ¥ire Am Hardware Am H 3 Antomob Ins Rige-Hifd Cpt Co com Rillings & Spencer eom Billings & Spencer pfd | Bristol Rrass Colt's Arms ann The funeral of Jahannes Anderson Conn Lt & Pow pfd ..101 was held this afternoon from 23 Sey- | Eagle T.ock ¢ 03 | mour street at 2:50 o'clock Rev. | Fafnir Bearing Co 8N i | 0. A. Hielm of Bristol conducted the | Hart & Cooley an services, Bearers were: Oscar, mil, | Hartfard Fire 618 Sven, Knut and Harold Johnson, and | Hfd Elec Light 106 Pontus Nillson. Flower bearers were | Landers, 1 Ofto and Carl Johnson, Arthur Nill- | National Fire eon and Maleomb Anderson. Burial N B | war in Fairview cemetery. NB Funerals i Florence B. Emerson Funeral services for Florence B Emerson, who died at her home in Kensington last Tuesday, were held this afternoon at the Second Advent church, Rev. Robert Huggins con ducting the ceremony. Burial was in | West Lane cemetery, Kensington. 585 106 of A Jahannes Anderson. ! tio! | el | By | cor |sir h Gias Machine pfl Pond com Juan JOSLPH A. HAFFEY Funeral Director Mr. Paul Robinson, Assistant Lovation—565 MAIN ST, Opposite St. Mary's Church Tel—Parlor 1625-2 Restdence—17 Summer Tel. 1625-3 wil Phoenix T Russell Mfg. « Seovill Mfg. ¢ ¥ outhern Tel st o | stantey Works pfd Torrington Co. eom | Trant & i | Traveters 1r | Union Mfg { vale Towne EXPRESS YOUR SYMPATAY Co. with FLOWERS 3 sHOP TEL. 888, & has TREASURY STATEMENT 2. Treasury balance, P - ot Tou nouerrERs b 72 CALRCH ST, Infen Ajseases epread by paper money often are * | B Hartford Conn, Trust, Bldg, “laim That George Bittner Created . | George Bittner | Wethersfield | charge of viclating his parole. [ 1ice inve , | created at his home. Bittner was on parole from Weth- ersfield | eharge | months of his term to serve as a res Judge | ity for phine 1S been | Peking, Ithe corps, the I hela foreigners or their property as a re. |euit Tondon artists — financ | etan preference for American jazz and most lLondon America dren 26,260,214 Thes dle the reptile with no show of fear |attention nowadays was do are eligible to join the club, Mombeors Hariford Stock Eachange West Maim S0 Tel 2040 We Offer:— 100 shares Landers, Frary & Clark 100 shares Yale & Towne DD & COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange New Britain—Burritt Hotel Bldg, Tel, lll's Hartford—Conn, Trust Co, Bldg, Tel, 2-6281 | We Recommend and Offe: AETNA FIRE INSURANCE (0, HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE C0, NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE CO, PHOENIX FIRE INSURANCE CO, TOCK Prices On Application = AEDDY BROTHERS &G NEW BRITAIN Burritt Hotel Bldg. Tel. 3420 HARTFORD Tel.2:7186 We offer: 50 shares American Hardware 50 Landers, Frary & Clark 50 Fafnir Bearing @homson, Tfenn & Co.! Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain Tel. 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. WE OFFER:— Hartford Fire Price on Application We do not accept Margin Accounts The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Company Old State House Square, Hartford, Conn. Safe Deposit Boxes, $5.00 and upwards. Foreign Exchange to all parts of the world. LETTERS OF CREDIT—GENERAL BANKING Bank by mail. It is safe and saves time. e AUTHORIZED EXPENDITURES Hartford, Aug. 28.—The board of control today authorized an addi- tional $5,000 for the expense ac- count of the governor while no ex- planation is made of the appropria- tion it is understood to be for the pense of the special 2udit of the |accounts of former Treasurer G |Harold Gilpatric. Governor Tem- [pleton made public today the text of the contract for the special audit Tt shows that Francis Oakey, direct- ing the andit, is to receive $50 per day, a sentor assistant $30 a day, and |a Junior assistant $15 a day hotel and traveling expenses addi- tional. Mr. Oakey s working with five assistants, ROLE. VIOLATED P! a Disturbance at Home. of 73 Chapman was arrested last night and state prison at morning on a He s taken into custody after the po- gated a disturbance he eet urned to the this ant from 1922, on a He has four where he was Haven in June, of burglary. W ult of his parole violation. JUDGMENT FOR 8$354.11. | — W. C. Hungerford in the court has awarded a judgment the plaintiff to recover damages 4.11 in the action of Leonard against Dominick and Jo- Grzegarowicz October 15 t as the date of redemp- | Stanley J. Traceski was coun- the plaintiff. English Actors Quit | Tondon — The London stage is being swept clean of its most papu- |lar actors and actresses because of {alluring offers from American pro- Aucers. English theatrical magnates, unable to compete with tha Ameri- can pavrolls, are in a quandary |The American stage also offers an | opportunity for more regmar em- ployment. . losek n. for CHINA IS WARNED Aug. 28.—The diplomatic ps, through the British minister, Foland MacLeay, acting dean of today eent a note to the inese foreign office declaring that Chinese government would be responsible for an¥ injury to Dump Te Hatchery New Philadelphia, ©. — Twent |four chicks were hatched by the |intense heat from partially incubat- |ed eges that had been thrown into the municipal dump east of this eit | The chicks are being cared for by the city. 100 Hours At Piano ‘ Wellington, New Zealand—James Robinson of this city has played a plano continuously for 100 hours and 10 minutes. He was unable to con- tinue because of hlistered fingers though otherwise in gond condition of conflict threatening in the inity of Shanghal. nalish Muste Hort Invasion of foreign chiefly Americans — has allv crippled British musi- English dancers have shown jazz of the leading dance halls of are housing American or | Arrest “Prince” type orchestras. | Beriin—Poltce promptly airested — — a man who appeared in downtown Snake fs “Pet | Berlin wearing a bathing suit and Springs, O.—A snake club | holding an umbrella over his head formed among the chil- |while the sun shone. The prisoner the Antioch school here. |protested that he was an Austrian have a pet snake by the name |prince, out of work, and that the Clifford and only those who han- |only way that princes could attract some- Yellow 8 been 'thing “different.”

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