New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 23, 1924, Page 2

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FICTION MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE AND 100 OTHER TITLES 75¢ S — Book Dept. THE Dickinsen s during the final four weeks | W NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1924. '[mTE,PLANS " ALARMS NEIGHBORROOD EXTENSIVE DRIVE (Wil Go Into Every Section of BY DISCHARGING GUN | Russell Street Man Fined $5 in Po- lice Coury For Fomng Revolver From Window. Theodore Peterson of 73 Russell sireet threw residents of his neigh- borhood into a panic last night when he loaded a revolver with blank cartridges and started firing from a window of his house. A call was scnt into police headquarters and the police patrol, with policemen Thomas J, Feeney, Delbert Veley and Gustav Hellburg, was rushed out to investigete. They found that Peterson had been demonstrating a revolver to a triend, They placed him under ar- rest fot discharging firearms with- out a permit, and he was fined $5 without costs when he was arraign- ed in police court. In imposing the fine after Peter- son had pleaded guilty, Judge Ben. Alling mentioned the fact that {he Country D¢lcrmined | appeal for votes | he considers debat- La Follette, independ- iential candidate, turned his | lay to the arrangement | iy, He cxpects to start lays on a tour which ep him on the move z the senator with a series of | juring October wiil be Mrs. | She has accepted an in- | wddress in lependent presiden- Mountain Lake, Md., nd arrangements are her to make other to deliver an NONGOLIA CRADLE OF HUMAN RAGES Scientists Make Great Dis- coveries There — By The Assoclated Prems. Urga, Mongolia, Sept. 23, —Profes- sor Peter Kosloff, Russian explorer, had discovered near here an enor- mous number of skeletons of hithe erto uUnknown animals and many human remains which lead him to believe that Mongolia may have been the birthplace of man and the point or origin of a considerable part of the animal and reptile world. Among the fossils already un- earthed by Prof. Kozloff and his assistants are those of 26 quadru- peds of undesignated species, 150 birds of varying sizes, 100 reptiles, snakes and fishes and more than 1,000 insects of giant alze. FIRE BOARD AND GOUNGIL PREPARE FOR DISCUSSION Ald, Judd Says Meetipg Will Be Held This Week on New Apparatus, A meeting of the fire board and & committee of the common council appointed to investigate 8 of fire apparatus sultable to’ this city's needs, will be held this week, Alder- man Willlam H. Judd, who heads the latter group, said today. The fire board has twice recom- mended a Seagraves pumper and both times it was rejected. Alder- mén Judd favored a Maxim pumper in the common council and an American-LaFrance has been sug- gested as a compromise by other members of the council. Councilman Charles Bradley of the third ward and Councilman Eli- as T Ringrose of the fifth ward, are members of the council committee. Drug Co. '169-171 Main St. the campaign, for Senator > past La Follette, wo sp itinerary, still tentative, arry him to the Pacific coast. that before ¢ who week has delivered s in New York city, his probably 1t is regarded as almost certain ection day he will in- the ordinance covering the case fix- cs the penalty at $5, leaving nothing to the discretion of the court. John Grzyna of 61 Grove street charged with theft of 12 pigeons from Edward Kelter of 102 LaSalle street, pleaded not guilty and the case was continued until Saturday It will be recalled that Prof, Koz- loft last June discgvered several re- markable tombs néar here belonging to the Chinese emperors and princes who ruled Mongolia at a time ante- dating the Pharaoh Tut-Ankh-amen of Egypt. It also will be remember- ed that Prof. Roy Chapman An- 10 SET PRIMARY DATE State Central Committee To Name Time For Selecting Nominees For General Assembly. Service the Secret of Ouf Large Sales in | i “F ° 99| wind up his campaign the Saturday | night before election in Clgveland's alr s e | public hall, where the republican na- | tidnal cor \ | said today that if he goes to the | coast he will speak in Los Angéles | as well as San Fra delivering an address in Denver on | his return east. He a%o intends to invade the Dakotas, home state of Wisconsin and Jowa. PROPOSES SETTLEMENT Sweaters Since our introduction of this popular sweater last spring we have received monthly shipments for your selection. See the rich eutumn shades for Fall—rich in design, and cosy for these days. $6.50 v HORSFALLS '93;99 sylum Street Hartford. «Tt Pays To Buy Our Kind” ma Backwardness at School s, speaking ew York cities, swinging into both New Jersey and Pennsylvania, ence westward, ich cities as Chicago, Mi . Louis, Ka Mr. La Follette is Englishmen, Army and Navy Officers, Urged To Take Up Land in South Africa. London, Sept. 23.—Roland Bourne is endeavoring to create communal settlements in South Africa for Eng- lishmen with small incomes who can no longer live in England in accord- ance W they are accustomed. England abounds in retired and navy officer practically no capital but with small fixed incomes varying from $1,600 to $4,000 a year. gland has too forbidding a cli- for such people, but in South Africa, on holdings of from two to five acres, they could be very happy. MacMilTan Narrowly Escaped Being Killed | narrowly esc the coast August, t had threatened the explorer's members of the expedit w England for several ad- in several up-state for trial at the request of Prosecutor Joseph G. Woods, who told the court that the police required addi- tional time for investigating the case. Keoller reported the loss of his pigeons, which he valued at $125, to the police yesterday, saying that they had been taken Saturday night. Motoreycle Policeman William P. Hayes Investigated the report and found one of the pigeons in the possession of a man on North street. Questioned as to where he had ob- tained the bird, he told Hayes that he purchased it from Grzyna for $1.50 Grzyna was located at the factory where he is employed but denied that he had stolen the pigeons or that he had sold any of them, TAXI DRIVERS CROOKS Chairman of Board Declares Four- Fifths are Drunkards, Sneak Thieves, or Drug Addicts, and with speeches in \eapolis, nsas City and Detroit. planning to vention was held. It was cisco and Seattle, Minnesota, his Particularly Retired New York, Sept. 23.—Drunkards, sneak thieves and drug addicts sit at the wheels of eight of every ten taxicabs in New York city, Willlam Larney, chairman of the board of the Mogul Checker Taxi company, declared in west side court while testifying against one of his dis- charged chauffeurs who had run afoul of the police. He said there were 16,000 taxicabs in the greater city, each subject un- der the law to four inspections a year, and that there were only eight officials for the job. “Only a short time ago,” Larney testified, “a taxi company went into v bankruptey with llabilities ot $50,000 C explorer, |\ use their chauffeurs stripped d death by shooting . e ireaniang | the machines of valuables, tampered A . & with the meters so they did not reg- it became known here | - % : ©|ister properly, and pocketed fares This was the.second time a | toi RO T casea they stole the taxicahs outright.” CONSORTED WITH BANDITS h the standards to which He says that army and others with t, Me., Sept. fillan, the 3.—Donald he far north. | hunting walrus for the at Onoritok, , one of the n accident- drews of the American Museum of Natural History, New York eity, startled the scientific world last year by discovering nests of dinosaur egge and showed that the Central Asian plateau is a veritable paleontologi- cal Garden of Eden. More remarkable perhaps than Kozloff's discovery of animal and human fossils is the fact that he also has found in one of the royal tombs bricks of compressed tea and grains of wheat still quite fit for human consumption although they have lain in the tombs many thousands of years, { In another section of this district Prof. Kozloff excavated the grave of a woman of nobllity containing a number of bronze articles of exqui-| sitz craftsmanship and several silk tapestries of superb texture which depict Greek and Roman figures on horseback. The nature of his discoveries s 8o important that the Russian scientist | has decided to remain in Mongolia indefinitely, postponing until mnext year his expedition into Tibet to re- sume exploration work in the for- gotten city of Kharakhoto, which he unearthed ‘some years ago. Three archaeologlsts and biologists now are en route here from Leningrad to as- sist Prof. Kozloff. Prof. Andrew's second expedition to Mongolia, comprising 13 Ameri- can scientists and staff of 40 other Americans, is expected to arrive here next spring from Peking. It is un- derstood they will confine them- selves to research and exploration in human evolution, endeavoring to es- | tablish that the Central Asian pla- | teau is the cradle of the human race. e "HENLAC | | VEGETABLE PILLS | For (4il\sllp l‘.‘n,, { speak in hehalf of The date for the Republican pri- mary to nominate two candidates for representatives in the general as- sembly will be fixed this week by the Republican state central com- mittee, and the local town committee under Chairman Willlam H., Judd will make plans at once for the event. There are already three avewed candidates in the field assuring a contest unless there is a withdrawal. Oliver L. Davis, who is affiliated with the Quigley wing of the G. O. P.,, was the first to announce himself. Judge B. W. Alling, a member of the last assembly, is a candidate and ex- Councilman Henry W. Rice is also seeking the nomination. Attorney Thomas F. McDonough has been mentioned, but has not decided whether to make the rup. At least one other candidate is expected to enter the race as a running mate to Davis, ex-Mayor George A, Quigley having announced that there will be a second entry from his camp. Mrs. La Follette to fie Speaker for Husbhand Washington, Sept. 23.—Mrs. Rob- ert M. La Follette, wife of the in- dependent candidate for president, will speak Sunday in behalf of his ticket at Mountain Lake park, Mary- land, where a meeting has been ar- ranged hy the women's division of the La Follette movement. Although no arrangements have been made for Mrs. La Follette to her husband's candidacy, it was said last night by his aides here that she probably would make several more addresses ! during October. Bees Kill Horse Randolph, Kas. — Bees stung to death a horse that was left tied to a tree while its owner, Andy Ho- man, was at work. When the at- tack of bées began, Homan rushed to the aid of the animal. The in- sects drove him back, however, stinging him severely. REFUSED T0 FIGHT, THEY CANNOT VOTE Ten Aplcants or st Turned Do by Court The applicants were denled citl- zenship rights by the naturaliza- tion court with Judge B. W. Alling on the bench yesterday because they claimed exemption during the world war on: the ' grounds that they were allens. Twenty were instructed to do some more studylng and return later, 29 were admitted and nine were not present, Two denled the charges made by Examiner Allen . Church that they had claimed ex- emption during the draft and their questionnaires will be submitted to the court, Among those admitted was Carlo DiPace who has been trying for a long time to become a citizen but was unable to do 80 because he did not have his family here. Mr. Church was willing to let the court decide the matter and he yas ad- mitted. James William Adams, a Turk, was refused admittance be- cause he has a police record. 20 Petitions Granted Those who were admitted to citl- zenship are: John Sacharko, a na- tive of Poland; Gustat Alfred Carl- son, Sweden; John Ziebka, Poland; Waclaw ‘Florin Fliskowski, Poland; Wincenty Miezianka, Poland; Charles Anthony Bober, Poland: Henry Edward Clark Hill, Great Britain; Stanislaw Skurzewski, Po- land; Alfred Joseph Talbot, Great Britain; Anthony Zakacewski, FPo- lahd; Thomas Kobylasz Poland; Cesario Afftonio Napolento, Italy; Feliks Niejko, Poland; Martha Schwartz, Germany; Sanefa Joseph Cadrain, Great Britain; Konstin Mikulskas, Lithuanian; Antonio Pal- meri, Ttaly; Frank Crispin Wry, Great Britain; Dymitro Walach, Po- land; Carlo DiPace, Ttaly; Alex- ander Kozlowski, Joscph Blanca, Bennedetto Tagllamonti, Philip Hutt, Helen Veronica Bratton, Jos- eph Carpenterl, Jozet Zisk, Jan Zelek, Julla Alibozek. Ordered to Study Further Those whose cases were ordered continued for study are: Jukob Klatka, - Louis Hansek, Filadelfio Coco, Salvatore:Coco, Plotr Mich- alak, Salyatore Arcidlacono, Glovan- ni Cammarata, Stanislaw Milewski, Paglo Mangiafico, Garibad Krikor- iam, Jan Ochankowskl, John Susina- kas, Spyridon Babatowlez, Stanislaw Sold' without restrictions, but confined to the better class merchants. The great increase of business enjoyed by our ‘dealers and distributors during 1923, is proof that SAVE quality lamps have gained a nation- wide preference. Make your first purchase in the belief that you will order them continuously. Herbert L. Mills HARDWARE Baranowski, Jozet Kachnowski, Se- bastiano Bianca, Antoni Kozlowski, Wiadyslaw Kowalczyk, Henry Mer- ron Joseph Seledyn. The following were absent when their cases were called: Joseph Hy- bay, Walenty Cuchowski, Mike Rotz- lof, Vincenzo Pavano, Francesco Genovese, Charles Sausanavitch, Ed- ward Joseph Ryan, Antonio DeNun- zl0, Guiseppo Sinatra, Albert Vitali, Inocencio Manso. Clamed Exemption. Those who were denied citizenship because they claimed exemption dur- ing the war on account of bheing aliens are: [Frank Larizzo, Italy; Paolo DXAvanzo, Italy; Domenico DeFozio, Ttaly; Vinces Wasniz, Lith- uanfa; Benjamin Rubenstein, Po- land; Plus Oshana, Persia; Reinhold Pankonin, Poland; Angelo Berti, Italy; Alexandros J. Proventgas, Greece; Michael Yonan, Persia; Vito Brescla's case was continued to ob- \ 336 MAIN ST. tain a circular, as was in the case of Vito 'Nicola Fulingo for the same reason. The case of Ignacy Sz0k was continued for investigation of his draft record. The case of Konstanty Kaczynski was continued becaise of fncompetent witnesses. Sebastiano Stella was refused citizenship at this time. The continued case of Mooshie Sargle Joseph wwas agaln continued for a circular. John David's case was again continued for the same pur- pose of obtaining dépositions. The case of Silvio De Risl was again con- tinued because of the absence of Wit- nesses. Jullus Radke and Pius Joseph Mirza are the applicants who swore they had not claimed exemption from service in the war on the ground that they were allens. The petition of Jozef Chludzienski was denied because of insufficient resi- dence, ULBRANSEN The ‘Registering Piano is often due to DEFECTIVE Eyesight. Have the Child’s||| atter eyes tested now. Satisfac- “""“"y-‘ B tion Guaranteed. - RO g A.PINKUS Eyesight Specialist ally discharged a large cal rifle. The bullet passed down through the cabin of the schooner Bow- MacMillan's vessel, shattering ore of th plorer's Bowdoin College, It h a partition into irough a bed and and into the tim- » MacMi cabin where work 40 Years’ Experience in Eye t1 ullet's ‘cou Testing o 300 MAIN ST. Two Mass. Girls Arrested, Admit That They Have Been Traveling Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 Main Street For The Little Folks The Jack Tar Clothes DRESSES and BOYS’ SUITS None hetter in quality and fit and* none cheaper, quality considered. / — NEW NECKLACES — The Necklace is no longer a luxury, it has become an essential accessory of dress. Long and short chains, priced 50c to $5.75. SPECIAL SALE OF $1.50 CREPE GOWNS AT $1.00 EACH. With Auto Thieves, Woodstock, N. B, Sept. 23.—The arrest of Elizabeth and Annie Chris- an, sister from Leominster, Mass., ended for them today a three weeks' adventure which, they related, in- cluded a tour of eastern Canada as | companions of roving automobile bandits. The girls were taken during & drive by dominion authorities to round up automobile-riding fugitives from justice who were reported to | have heen terrorizing residents of North | Maine-New Brunswick border ham- . an ws | lets. op in| Farly in September, the sisters y dis- | told their captors, they rode away r of the erew|from their Massachusetts home in a passed stolen car, accompanied by two men. 1o party traversed eastern Canada stealing automobiles on the way, and | committing other thefts. Later, said the girls, they tired of nd grat- | their first companions afld joined fortunes with two other men. an had had iirectly in line | course. he adventure with Phone 570} I sh fslg i Peary in sevelt t to near GARSIDE [[EiSThetz: FOR MILL RUGS AGENT 46 years a manufacturer, $20,000 stock to select from. All kinds — Lowest prices. Call, write or telephone 126-3 JOHN B. GARSIDE 176 Pearl Thompsonville, Conn. yrearm Real Piano Music—on the Gulbransen The Gulbransen Registering Piano is an instrument played by music-roll- and-pedals, that you can play in a musical way, with all the expression and feeling you have. To play what you will—as you will— when you willl To give full rein to all your undcvelupad“ musical talent. Just think what this means to you who have nevet to play by hand, or having once learned, have not had the time or opportunity to keep in practicel No tedious finger- ing! No long study! Just think what the Gulbransen means to that musically-promising daughter—to that growing young 2 Years to Pay! M ail This A son—to live in, and share in, such , b musical, homebuilding influences. Real piano music? Yes. But, make this test yourself— Tty any simple piece on the Gul- bransen. You will be delighted at the musical results you can get—so natural and pleasing. Then try an operatic air, or something more classical. You will be agreea l{ sur- you The Burritt Gift Shop, 72 W. MAIN ST. how wonderfully wel can play it. Whatever kind of music you prefer— lar, semiclassic or classic—you will positively marvel at the personality and life you can put into anyt d everything you " - play on your ing Gulbransen. Venetian Glassware An expression of the and we will tell about bt o rndegoihe o 171 MAIN STREET highest art in glass- making. il 0, / TRIMMED HAT SALE EXTRAORDINARY Velvet Hats, Felt Hats, and various com- binations of materials, You must see 2. On display at our shop this week. $5.00 Will Xmas Club Enroll You HENRY MORANS & SON 365 MAIN ST. Directly_Opposite Myrtle COME 1IN AND LOOK AROUND Who ever heard of such a wonderful The Burritt - Gift Shop, Opposite the Hotel A very beginni f || e n :hel M egm{m:g ,g t:;m:]l these Hats to appreciate the values. In iosmiiese hadedabbnhening? this assortment is a large number, but for Iy two hats alike, These are all new hats. 5 f best choice come early. — See Qur Window Display — Two Days Only—Wed. and Th!xrs.

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