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gl a Sl - 5 W WILLBUID NEW POWER PLANT Plans Gall for $1,000,000 Dam on Farmington River Plans for a new power de ment project to harmess the I' ington river at Rainbow {a th of Windsor have the Farmington the majority of wh e by the Stanley Work of the pow it W about 8,000 ki wive local fa Work w dlately on th approximately dn this location, cided by the slderable amo cause the three and ing much ; 1n that vicinity. Wa have been acyuired company The bullding of t! been found a neces: aufficient amount niehed by the Power Co, for the ley Worka In this c: $105.700,000 15 CARRIED IN BILL This Som Wonld Be Used Tor Veterans' Bureau f been formulat River Po 3 he 1"a | | Washington, Jan. 10 ations of $405,700,000 for the vet erans’ bureau and $24,330,0¢ the shipping board are carried in a bill reported today by the house ap- | propriations committee, The meas- ure, with a total of $§4¢ 49,6 provides for various government bu- | regus and agcncies independent of the regular departments, | Included in the items for the salary of President Cooli $26,000 for his traveling exp $110,000 for maintenance of the exe- cutive mansion, $57,400 the | White House police, and approxi- | mately $127,000 for salaries and ex- | penses at the executive office. | Alien Property Custodian Other provisions are $189,2 €he alien property custcdian, $ 320 for the board of tax apped $150,350 for the bureau of effic ey, $999.376 for the civil commission, $860,000 for the feder- al board for vocational a $1,008,000 for the federal commission, $3,701,360 for th eral accounting office, $7 the housing corporation, for the interstate commerce misgion, $534,000 for the nat advisory committee for aeronauti $296,885 for the railroad labor L $788,0 for the Smit tution, d $721,500 for gommission. The veterans' bureau tofal is 258,000 less than for the fiscal year whils a redu $6,014,000 was made in the board aggregate. Of the veterans' b 500,000 would go for sa 000,000 for military ar pensation, $35,000,000 for medical | and hospital services, $35, ) for vocational rehabilltation, §12 000,000 for adjusted service 7 $560,000,000 for the adj: 1 ¢ cate fund, and $88,000.000 for m tary and naval insurance ¢ - tions were made in salaric tional rehabflitation ani many other —Approp s $ for u total $45 aries, $127 naval com- | items while increases were made for | MY RS |AMERICANS COOL | TOWARD_PROPOSALS SON OF GOV, DAVIS 1S UNDER FIRE ‘ (Continued From First Page) Foretgn Powers Fin Rather Hard to do Business With at Paris - City last Thursday. Previously Poll- ! had visited young man affirmed he Paris, J 1erl | Davis at t of | Davis at th Davis farm near Bron- where the latter dis- payment of money for a Kunsas. Ameor ap- lons | Cussed the Governor A Tollman also alleged | told by Glen A © had been ), who was imprisonment at Kansas, for murder, crnor Davis solicited the of money to his son for Pollman, who 1 out of prison since Jagu- 1923, on purole, hid been ac- Af of Glenn Davis and I, he said, several short or Glenn Davis, ow they nveigled my son cpting the money,” the gov- id. “Lut when he realized ven it to b he lem. At the same \e pardon, which to grant. hey could hire my | hem, and then get for the tale that T ac- from Glenn Davis, stmply lied in his affglavit knows 1 wouldn't do anything that Davis, that G paymen tion utive 1 b x clemency had hack lelivered ready decided “They thoug son to get it f And 1 money Pollmar e |11 as Pollman was ihe first man to! te e about Glenn Davis and has ed in his behalt several times. m sure my hoy had no idea of purpose of 1hat money, At 6:30 K last night he told me about the National hotel first T ever heard e | the accurrence in and that was the Gets the Dough ST o owe ™ = B e TLLI | has been in somewhat of a financial | imony, has made arrangements for | sodore Beinert, super-baker of Germany. ¢ nobility, but he has the dough, as his bread is used all over Germany. Princess Joachim kaiser, strait due to Wilhelm's | her marriage to Ti Beinert not be of t widowed daughter-in-law of ma compensation and other activitics. | Shipping Board Cuts. The reduction made in the ship- plag board allotment was due to a cat in the amount granted the fleet corporation for operstion of & The sub-committee which the bill declared ' that ooking toward a sep: activities of T the fleet corporation An {mcrease was federal trad 000 over budget estim it to dispose of accum ness. A provision ng possage of a concu tion by congre questing the c com was att Money Tor Monuments ‘The bill mn 1 to exceed 00 pended by Monumer ing Americar Europe and crec rials. It was est would ehap int terles abroad a nd erecton of $350.000 Bt. Mil Thier: 000 at In add pended for 1 at other p | This Date in History _ e ——— 1846—Waterr cator and professor of G versity. 1850 born. srchitectur 1862—Ba 1873 —How born. He i= a @essful lilu Johr He was pic Christy popular end THE POTTERS e ok S B - l_flhm- A e NEW BRITAIN DA‘ILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1925. of any money belng passed. 1 had issued a pafdon to Pollman in the course of the afternoon, but had is. sped the pardon because I had been favorably inclined to him all the time. I had been a witness at his trial, and belleve he never should have been cogyjcted. T had written Governor All recommending a parele, at the request of Pollman's attorney, the late John H. Crane. ““I'he story that 1 had ever solicited ald from Glenn Davis or anyone else 15 absolutely false, “I have becn going carefully over all the parole cases, deciding each one on fits own merits, and T be- lleve an examination of the files and records will show, in practically cvery instance, full justification for the issuance of the paroles or pardons. 1 have been Insistent on taking no verbal statements, and huve had all the testimony reduced to writing and filed. And every hear- ing has been absolutely open to the public. Russecll, who is 28 years old, is managing his father's farm dear Bronson, in Burbon county, and*has spent most of his time there. LUTHER LIKELY T0 SEEK A GABINET Probably Will Take Over Ger 1an Office Formation By _The Assoclated Pr . Berlin, Jan, 10.—Dr. Hans Lither, minister of finance in the Marx cab. inet, now 1s pointed to as the man whom President Ebert will commis- slon with the task of getting togeth er an emergency non-partlsan cabi net. Dr. Luther had conferences today with prospective members of such a cabinet, The attempt of Chaucellor Marx to construct a working governmen not dominated by the and the Stresemann came to an end last night, The fallure of the chancellor is at Himsélf. nationalists people’s party tributed to the opposition’ of Dr. Stresemann, the forelgn minister, ‘The liberal organs are bittet in thelr denunciation of Stresemann, who is charged with belng actuated by per- sonal hatred, The enforced: retirement of Dr. Anton Hoefle, minister of posts and telegraphs in the Marx-Stresemaln * | cabinet, 18 looked upon as a seerious blow to the clerical party, of which he 1s one of the leaders. Hls re- moval was due to charges that he had advanced without adequate se- curlty large sums of government money to the interest involved in the Prussian state bank operations now under investigation by the state's attorney. | BAN RAW OYSTERS IN DRIVE ON TYPHOID Iinois Health Officer Issues Order Mective During Prevalence of Discase Chicago, Jan. 10.—As a precau- -1 tion against typhold fever, Director t v . Isaac D. Rawlings, of the Illinols department of health has issued an order forbidding the eating of oysters in Illinols after January 15, The order sald to be the most drastic of its kind eevr issued, holds dealers responsible for its enforce- ment and compels them to obtain a written agreement when selling oys- ters, that they are not to be eaten raw. The order also prohiibits the serv- lug of raw oysters by any hotel, restaurant, eating house or rallroad in the state and prohibits admitting ray oysters into the state except where a writfen agreement is ob- tained from the dealer that they will be shipped out of the state or will not be eaten raw. Where a dealer sells to another dealer, he must obtaln such an agreement from the second dealer and the dealer selling the ultimate consumer must also obtain an agree- ment that the oysters will be cooked, the order recites. Director Rawlings sald the action has become necessary because earlier warnings went unnoticed, To know a man for what he is, go inside his home. Judge the furnishings, their colors, the pictures on his walls. See if a musical instrument is there; note the kind of music he likes. Notice magazines and newspa- pers, books most worn. Look into dining room, kitch- en, bedroom, nursery. It may be his wife has selected all you see. Judge the man by the wife he chose. In every case where the home is in excellent taste, Men with foresight, who save, read advertise- ments. They buy advertised goods. Do you? Do not exchange good money for anything less than advertised goods OVER 11,000 HERALDS DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- TION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN The Herald is the Only New Britain Newspaper With An Audited Circulation BY J. P. McEVOY WELL, WELL, POTTER, [ SEE YOU RAN INTO A DOOR IN THE DARK 0D CLD HARCLD) T WAS SWEET A | CF YoU TO — COME ON. GIRLS! HAROLD'S GAY. BUB. KIN YOU TELL ME WHAT THE WIMMIN SEE IN THAT FUNNY LOOKIN BEAN POLE? © 1933 by Newapeper Frnture Servus Iug CROSS WORD PUZZLIST IN “THE \WORLD! Cront Brrnn rh rovered. advertised products are there. They have to be. Only the best—all the best—is advertised. Men want adver- tised goods because they express the best. YES, 1 DD WHAY QF T ¢ HES THE BEST THE HERALD “WANT ADS” Alphabeticaly Arranged Foi Quiok and Ready Reference, LINE RATES FOR . . CONSECUTIVE (NSERTIONS el X 41,60 er Rates Upon Application. Count ¢ words to & line 14 lines to au Ine Minimum Bpace, 3 Minimum Book Charge, 35 centa Ask for n “Want Ad" Operator. ANNOUNCEMENTS Burial Lots, Monuments BURIAL VAULTS—Conci forced; either’ wood or metal. r lota, Reasonably Co., Kensington, Tel. 647-15 Florists 3 GUT FLOWBRS—potted plants, Dieasing varioty. Specialising on funersl work. Johnson's Greenhouse, 617 Ghurch 8t. CYCLAMEN—Polnsettias, Begonlas, Cine a, Cherrles and & speclal asorte ment of ferns, We deliver, Flower Gare den House, 1163 Btanley Bt, Phone 2388-12, Btore 436 Main St, Phone 3304, | Daily Thoughts ) “Never ‘leave that till tomorrow which you can do today.” LIMITATION OF CLAIMS At a court'of probate holden st New Britain, within and «or the district of Berlin, In the County of Hartford and Btate of Connecticut, on the 10th day of January A. D. 1925, Present, Bernard F, Gaftney, Esq. Judge. On motfon of The New Britain Trust Company of said New Britain, ns execttor of the Jast will and testament nf Augustus G. Bmith, late of New Britaln, within eald Qistrict deceased, This court doth decree that six months | ba allowed and limited for the creditors of eald e e to exhibit ‘ thelr claims agalnst the tame to the executor and di- rects that public notice be given of this order by advertislng In a newspaper pube- lished In sald New Britain, and having a circulation In sald district and by posting & copy thereof on the public sign post in #ald town of New Britain, nearest the place where the deceased last dwelt’ and return make. Certified from Record, BERNARD F, GAFFNEY, Judge. LIMITATION OF CLAIMS t of probate holden at New Britgln, within and for the Distriet of Berlln, In the County of Hartford snd State of Connecticut, on *he 10th day of January A. D. 1925, Present, Rernard F. Gaffney, Esq. Judge. On motion of George Thompson of said Berlin, as administrator on ‘the estate of Eliz Thompson late of Beriin, within sald district deceased. This court dath decree that six menths be allowed and limited for the credivors of sald estate to exhibit thelr claims aganst the same to the adminfstrator and directs that public notice be given of this order by advertising in a newspaper pub- lshed in sald New Britain, haying a cir- culation In sald district, and by posting a copy thereof on the publlc sign post in {eaid town of Berlin, nearest the place | where the deceased last dwelt, Certified from Record, BERNARD F. GAFFNEY, Judge. At a Unless you are handcuffed, You can enter the Lost Line Limerick contest which starts awarded prizes. The best last lines will be in the Herald on Monday, January 12th, All you've got to do is write a last line (o a catchy illus- trated limerick. Sharpen your pencil your wits and get set sackie the first Lost Limerick, and o Line The Limerick Editor, Herald, should be ©on every answer sent in. $1 will be awarded by the judge. and 10 o'clock the morning after the Limerick appears in the Herald, will be ‘he closing time, Be sure and have your name and address on the answe) The contest starts Januar) — Monday. and Is free for all. GOOD TENANTS There is a way to quickly secure desirable tenants for houses, apartments, flats — use the Wants. In describing property for rent make the de- seription complete: loca- tion, how many rooms, how lighted, general ar- rangement—tell all the facts and name amount of rent. To secure good tenants give ample description of the property you have for rent, and make lib- eral use of the wants, o = o = =mB