New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 3, 1925, Page 1

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" ( \l ) I3 Al " o \ A . ‘3 Al ' o) News of the World By Associated Press " ESTABLISHED 1870 i ey, WG PRI (QUIETNESS FEATURES DAY BEFORE INAUGURATION AS | T0FIGHT CONTEST) ONFLODROF ROOM Neighbors Had Not Seen James SIMPLICITY President Coolidge Ap- parently Gives Little Thought To Morrow, Busying Himself With Day’s Affairs. Will Take Oath “on His Grandmother’s Bible and Entire Program Should Be Concluded by Mid- Aiternoon. By The Assoclated Pres Washington, March 3.—In setting that reflected but dimly the showy splendor that has shone upon fn- augural history for a century and more, the American government brought to completion today its plans to install a new natic al ad- ministration at noon tomorrow. Everything considered, it was the quietest March 3 of an inauguration year that Washington has seen in many a decade, The ceremonies to- morrow will be somewhat more ex- tended than those of four years ago, | when President Harding ordered that the whole inauguration be at- | tended by utter simplicity, but on that occasion the fmpending change of government stirred the capital to a high pitch of expectation and | brought here a tremendous crowd of spectators. Streets Almost Barren Today the wide avenues of the ecapital were almost barren of pre- | inaugural crowds, and only a few scattered reviewing stands and a profusion of red, white and blue, which draped alfnost every building along the line of tomorrow's abbre- viated parade,evidenced the near ap- proach of another inauguration day. At the White House President Coolidge was a little busier than or- dinarily, receiving distinguished vise itors and keeping pace with the fev- IS WATCHWORD Here's the Program « For Inauguration If everything progresses smoothly, {however, and no last minute legis- lative tangle upsets the expecta- tions of officlals, the day’s events wilkmove off about as follows 10:30 a. m.~—Vice-President Dawes leaves his apartment at the New Willard hotel fo the White House. 11 a. m.—President Coolidge and Vice-President-Elect Dawes, accom- panied by committee of congress and a cavalry escort, leave the White House for the capltol. 11:156 a. m,~—On arrival at the |capitol, the president goes to his | room to sign last minute legislation, and the vice-president-elect goes to the vice-president’s home, 11:30 a. m.—Senate recesses un- til 11:45 a. m. House adjourns sine die, 11:45 a, m.—President and vice- | president-elect, house members and | distinguished guests take places in senate chamber. 11:50 a. m.—Oath is administered |to vice-president-elect, | President Cummins of makes brief address, journs sine die, Noon—New vice-president calls new senate to order, and delivers his inaugural address . New sena- tors are sworn in, 12:30 p. m.—Lntire official party moves out to the inaugural platform on the capitol plaza, where President Coolidge takes the oath and de- livers his inaugural address, 1 p. m—President, accompanied by cavalry escort, returns to White House for buffet luncheon, 1:40 p. m.—President takes his place in reviewing stand in front of White House to witness the passing of the inaugural parade, occupying about an hour, and bringing the official program to s close. JAPAN 1§ WILLING Ready o Take Part in Disarma- the senate Senate ad- ment Conference If The United States Calls One, ered activities of the dying congress, but he went about “doing the day's | work,” according to the motto he | Jong ago adopted as his watchword of public service, without apparent | thought of the morrow. | Dawes Makes Call, One of those swho called on the president was Charles G. Dawes, of | Chicago, the soldier-statesman who | in another twenty-four hours will be- come the nation’s second in com- mand. Foilowing his celebrated dip- per pipe on a trip about the capital y to renew old acquaintances the vice | president-elect. dropped in for an hour's chat with his chief, and re- galed senators whom he met in the executive offices with quips about staid parliamentary decorum he fore sees for himsel as presiding officer of the senate, Delegations from a =core or so of states, headed in most cases by a governor, ecither called to pay their | respects or sent greetings to the president upon their arrival for to- | morrow's ceremonies. There was a | short cabinet mecting, as is custom- | ary on Tuesday, and in all the crash | of his duties Mr, Coolidge found time to witness the conclusion of a mara- thon race in the mall, and award a prize to the winner. Warmer Weather. | As the pre-inaugural period enter- 1 ed its last twenty-four hours a bright sun tempered hourly the crisp air | of a blustery March day, and the weather forecasters predicted that tomorrow would be warm for com- | fort in the outdoor stands but over- cast with perhaps some rain in the | afternoon. If the ceremonies ean be | carried through on schedule, how- | ever, they should be over before the | showers begin. | Under the plan of brevity and | economy laid down by Mr. Coolidge | himself, the entire official program | should be concluded Ly mid-after- noon. It is the passing of the Inau- gural parade that usvally drags out | the ceremonies until evening, and | this time there will be places in the | pageant only for the governors of | states and their staffs and less than | 10,000 soldiers, sailors and marines assembled from posts nearby. | Uses Grandmother’s Bible. | About 9,000 people will be seated | in the stands on the capitol plaza to | see Mr. Coolidge take the oath of | office on his grandmother's Bible. | and seal his obligation by pressing his lips to the first chapter of St John, which describes the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist. Another 4,000 will have places in the review- | ing stand at the White House, but along Pennsylvania avenue there will be standing room only, for the thou- sands who will gather there to cheer | ‘he state and national dignitaries and fighting men as they pass along in the footsteps of the great inaugural pageants of the past. Except for the opening scencs it is impossible to measure by the clock the course of tomorrow's repetition of the quadrennial drama of inaugu- ration. Those inauguration visitors who took a preceremony view of the ar- rangements of the capitol tods heard strange volces echoing over | e ‘plazd and resounding about the corners of the library of congress. | They even distinguished sentences — | (Continued on Pugw 14) | ( + | | way, proprictor of a By The Assocfated Pross, Tokio, March 3. — Baron Shide. hura, the foreign minister, replying to a question in the upper house to- day, caid Japan was prepared to |participate n an armament confer- ence should America call one, bue preferred that the agenda be dis- cussed in advance, "ined $800 and Given Sixty Days in Jail Bridgeport, March 3.—Pleading guilty to four counts of violations of the state liquor law, Charles Sigs- oon In Rail- road avenue, Norwalk, was fined 10 and given a 15 day jail sen- ce on each count by Judge Fred- erick ' W. Huxford in criminal com- mon pleas court today. In the eity court, Norwalk, Sigsway was fined $1,000 and sentenced to six months in jail. MARCH 9. CTI0 y Associated Press. Berlin, March 3.—The date of the German presidential election at which a successor to the late Presi- dent Ebert will be chosen was offi- clally fixed today at March 9 Retiring | NPT AN, ian X0 ¢ ' NEW BRITAIN N BROOKHART PLANS FOUND LYING DEAD Says He Will Go Belore Voters in Every County FORMAL PROTEST FILED Senator, Already Read Out of Re- Knight Since Friday publican Party, Object of Election Contest Filed by Republican Cen- tral Committee of Town, () onty Of A Washington, March 3.—A contept of the election of Senater Smith W, Brookhart of Towa, was filed with the senate today by officlals of the republican general committee of Towa. At the same time a copy of the ppers were personally served on the senator by B. B. Burnquist, of Fort Dodge, chairman, and H. E. In the door of the tenement at 26 Glen street in search of James had not been seen by people llving in the house since last ¥Friday night, the aged man was found lying on the bedroom floor dead. Medical Exnincr John B. Purney was noti- fled d after viewing the body, he pronounced death due to heart disease and sald that the man died either Friday night or Saturday forning. Knight, whose wife died about {two years ago, llved alone in the {Glen street .house and was heard walking about the tenement Friday night. Since that time, according Spangler, of Cedar RBaplds, counsel for the committee, Already Ts Ousted. Senator Brookhart, who already same house, no sound has been heard from the upper tenement and |no one in the house has seen Knight. | Becoming alarmed, Porter notified 'the police shortly before noon today and_Patrolmg' Herbert Lyon and | Anthony “Nalinszus were sent to the house to investigate. | Receiving no answer to their re- peated knocking, they broke in the door and going into a bedroom, found Knight fully clothed, lying on the floor. A hurried examination satisfied the police that the man was dead and they notificd Medicd Ex- aminer Purney. Permission was glven for the removal of the body to the undertaking parlors df Erick- son & Carlson. The ouly relative known to the police is a nlece, Miss Edith Ham- fiton of Plainville, Funeral arrangements are as yet incomplete. INATOR BROOKHART. has been read out of the party coun- cils by the republican senate organ- ization, previously had declined to accept service unless by a United States marshal. Just as he was leav- ing his office for the senate chamber today, however, DBurnquist and Spangler handed him the formal no- . . tite ot the contest, Three Litchfield Prisoners Half an hour before, Senator : ‘ Brookhart had announced that ¥ound in Goshen | would take his fight against the’ 8 ‘ committee to the people. of Jowa, | Summer Home campaigning in every county. He| 2 sald later in reply to the charge that he had been elected through fraud and deceit by representing himself to be a republican that the people of Towa had' phssed upon his rept lcanism at the polls. The charges brought against Brookhart are those outlined in a resolution adopted by the state com-| ner Lome of Mrs, Mary Wadham mittee at Des Molnes last January.|mother of John M. Wadhams, chair- Burnquist asserts that the meeting|man of the state board of finance. of the committee was a duly consti-|The three fugitives were barricaded tuted one, but the senator asserts iy a pedroom, hiding under a quilt that a number of the members of |on the bed, armed with two loaded the committee already have In-|ghotguns, when the ofticer smashed formed him of their repudiation of|ihrough a window and the action. | them™ with his pistol. —— | rendered without resistance. BABE SUES FOR $10,000 |of the loot from the post office was New Haven, March 3.—Suit for|found in the room. The three men 1$10,000 damages was brought today are Alfred Beebe, aged 21, of Great Torrington, March 3.—Three men who escaped from the Litchfield jail Saturday and who are alleged (o have been the burglars who looted the West Goshen post office and general store Sunday night were ar- Dominic Tremp at the Gosken sum- |by an infant, Bernice Tatantul|Barrington, Mass.: Courtney T. Tay- through her father as guardian, |lor, 16, of Providence, R. I. and against the Grace hospital society of | Thomas Bowes, 19, of Troy N. Y. this city. It is alleged in the papers | This was the second time that that a hot water bottle placed | | against her feet and:legs of the in- | tant after her birth at Grace hos- pltal caused burns which have per- | manently affected the child’s legs. Beebe had escaped from jail within |a month, i | The men were traced through a {pillow case which had been left at the post office at the time of the Mother And Two Children Among Known Dead In Brooklyn Blaze TR | Two Others Are Expected to Die—One Woman Throws §ix Year Old on From Third Floor— Youngster Will Live. New York, March 3.—Three per- sons including a mother and her two children are known to have lost their lives and a dozen ofhers were injured in a fire that swept an apart- ment building in Brooklyn this morning. The bodles were recovered after the fire had been put out and the firemen were searching the ruins for the bodies of other possible victims, Two of the injured persons are not cxpected to live. Six firemen were overcome by smoke. The bodies recovered were identi- flod at those of Mrs. Alese Carroll| and her children, John 8, and Ruth | 6. The husband of Mrs, Carroll, John, and two other children are| ing but it is believed that they escaped from the building. Mrs. Mary E. Labruyere threw. her | six year old son from a window of her apartment on the third floor. The boy suffered a broken leg and | arm and other injurles from the fall. | Mrs. Mary Labruyere, grandmother | of the boy was burned almost be-| yond recognition and was not ex- to live, Her husband, Louts, | red a fractured skull and burns | \ are expected to prove fatal.| Numerous rescues by firemen The story structure triet, were made was a five- borough dis- apartment house in the and it has been accepted by Presi- robbery. A laundry mark disclosed that the pillow case had been tal | from the Wadhams place which been closed for the season. The state | policeman in company ith Mr. Wadhams and John M. Wadhams, Jr,, went to Goshen last night to in- vestigate and found the house brok- en into and things scaltered about. | At first nobody was discovered on the premises as the small bedroom, which is on the ground floor was overlooked. Inasmuch as two doors of the house were bolted and third door was fastened by means of ALGORN NOT ALARMED Report of Alleged Plot To Relcase | Chapman Does Not Excite State's |@ chair propped against the knob, | it seemed certain that the intruders Attorney At All were still in the place. It was t Yoo |that Mr. Wadhams remembered the | Hartford, March 3.—“We all bedroom and tried vainly to worried” said State's Attorn door which had been bar- | ricaded with furniture. A quilt had been nailed over the window to shut today when t corn in the light. Every lamp in the way to rescue Gerald Chapman from |poyge had been moved into the the custody of state authorities here. | room. |Chapman is scheduled to be tricd | Tayior and Bowes were Iy for murder here March 24, and Hill, | gont to the jail from Winsted for who was arrested for attempted Tob- | {respassing on railroad property bery in Portland, Me., said that a d Beebe was being held for trial meeting of Chapman's friends had | "y 00 SO S el ege | {been called for March 23 in Spring- mitted in Salisbury fleld, It is believed that Mr. Alcorn had | information of this plot before HlH's‘ confession. | 82 Year Old Dean of | Two ¥all vorty Feet et Govt. Employes Resigns | w Washington, ,March 3.—Washing- ton Gardner has submitted his resig- nation as commissioner of pensions | TRUCKMEN INJURED in Bristol n Railing Gives Away—Both L) Taken to Hospital. Bristol, March § key, 23, and O: men employed by dent Coolidge, effective tomorrow the 7 Mr. Gardner who appointed by pjatt Co., were seriously injured this, President Harding, 1s eighty-two aeternoon when tr 40 feet years old and 1s 'n as the dean | from a stairway on the third story | of the government buroau chie of a South street house when a rail- ) . ing gave way. o men were en-| TWO DIE IN WRECK. gaged In elevating furniture on Cincinnati, March Q) r‘;mh.! rope and Y-Mvv:l‘ agatnst the rhflmfl; ings, engineer, and ’ s C. Har-| for support. T wero taken to rison, fireman, both of Sor t, Ky., | the Bristol hospital where it was| were killed early today on the | stated that Mackey sustained a locomative .of their train, the| fracture of the bhip, sever bo Suw: River special of the Cin- | bruises and possible internal inju oinnati Souther raflway. Cincinnati- | ies, while Blair suffered a compour bound, turned over in yards at | fracture of one arm, s and i Helenwood, Tenn. ternal injuries. o POLICE BREAK DOWN DOOR Adjutant Meddcal Examiner Purncy Says Glen Strect Man Died From Heart Disease—Victim Was About When pollce this afternoon broke Knight, aged about 70 years, who | to Willlam Porter who lives in the | CAUGHT BY STATE GOP| rested last night by State Policeman | the | S ‘ATHER OF POLE INTHIS GITY DEAD William Parsons Active in Furthering Interests of Sport DEATH OCCURS SUDDENLY Was Strect Commissioner of New Britain in 1906-1908—Funeral Services Tomorrow Afternoon in Charge of Hartford Lodge of Elks. ‘Word was recelved here today of the death of Willlam Parsons, a for- mer leader In roller skating and polo activities in this city, which occurred {in Brooklyn, N. Y. Sunday. His death, which was sudden, was caused by heart failure, News of the death of Mr, Parsons brings to the minds of many sport enthusiasts the time when Hanna's armory on East Main street was the amusement center of New Britain. It was here that Parsons, coming from his home in Worcester, in 1881, got a position as skate boy for Hob- son & Hall, who operated a roller skating rink there. Being intent on following the amusement world Par- sons worked hard and faithfully and his ability as an artistic skater was soon known in this vicinity. captain of New Britain's polo team and in addition managed several other teams of minor importance. Mr. Parsons was sent to Germany as a representative of the Winslow roller skating interests in Worcester to introduce roller skating and to promote the sale of thelr skates their, In 1906 he returned to New Britain to become street commission- er, as his abllity as an engineer was also known. He was instrumental in the laying out of many streets here, this office having moze impor- tance then than now as the office of city engineer had not been created. He held this position for two years. However, the world of amuse- ments had taken him so completely that he soon returned te follow it again. He conducted several places of amusement in Coney Island and Atlantic City. During his last yea although his home was in Hartford he conducted & skating rink in Brooklyn in the winter and operat- ed a restaurant at Steeplecha: Park, Coney Islund, in the surams While a resident of New iritain he married Hattie Hart ughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Hart, who re- sided for many years on Eim sgtrect. Several older New Britain resi- dents, when informed of the death of Mr, Parsons this morning, wers | greatly surprised and expressed. | their sorrow at the passing of this | man who became |even temper known for his nd honorable tactics. | City Clerk A. L. Thompson who ha scen many well known employees | come and go, said that in all the | years he knew him he remembered only one time when he becams« angry and that was when a man proceeded to administer unde- | served beating. Surviving Mr. Parsons are his wife, Mrs, Harrict Parsons, his mother, Mrs, Henrielta Parsons this city and a brother, George Par- | sons of West Hartford. | I"une services, conducted by the | | Hartford Elks, will be held tomo |row afternoon at 2 o'clock from his late home, 0 North Oxford with Rev. Jesse Roberts of M str | for | officiating. Interment, with comr th in charge of tal services will be in Fairview cemet | {MRS. SCORSOTO AND FIN HELD UNDER $300 BA Charges of Breach IL Technical of | Peace Against Witnesses in | Yottari Murder Case and Mrs. Anm material witnesses in t | Anthony Fin the state against Giove se of &l | i i, held for the murder of Jo D’'Angelo, were ar | seph 1 be- for Judge Benjamin W, g | police court this morn | nical charges of breach and ¢ » request of Pr ‘Woods, the | | | | sep | | L¢ tinued until March their rclease were ; e two were tak to cu r the police received word [ th arrest of ¥ afte rt th them and they were the trial of the lling properly wer to perior | fur ernoon fo this mor tnable to obtain a b n | Vottari is expected to be present- 1 before the grand jury the latter art of this week f er which the date be set. Chief Hart s: not been notified will he 1t jury * | THE WEATHER TR, i tor New Britain and vicini- and warmer tonight; ~lay unse(ted and warmer; probably rain i HERALD EW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1925. ~TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES. : He also | took a great interest in polo, became | Fi 11,933 & e | PRICE THREE CENTS ARMED BANDITS HOLD UP ST. LOUIS | BANK AND ESCAPE WITH RICH LOOT MILFORD WOMAN, 100 YRS. OLD TODAY,— I!One Keeps Motor Run- : SAYS SHE’S SORRY WOMEN HAVE VOTE| ning Outside While { . Miss Sarah Curtis Hepburn, Oldest Real Daughter of : Five Others Keep Em- American Revolution, Enjoys Birthday Party As ploye; And Patrons | ; 3 She Reaches Century Mark—Still Strong Mentally. | At Bay With G 1’ y - Miss Hepburn was the youngest| seven children born to Captain | Richard Hepburn and his wife Har- rict Miles Hepburn, Her maternal | an: ors came to Milford in 1639 ! ‘\\)\l‘ll the town was founded and| home- of he rnieces, Misscs Sarah | her parental forebears came over and Jennie O'Connor. In accord-|from Scotland to Fairfleld, thence to [ ance with a custom for ten years | Milford seventy-flve years later, ;pm a birthday party s to be given | She was born in Milford but had [ in honor of Miss Hepburn, Numer- | lived in New York and \\'ashing!on.l | Milford, Conn., March 3.—M rah Curtis Hepburn, oldest person [ of | in Milford, and probably the oldest real daughter of the American Revo- lution, celebrated her one hundredth birthday anniversary today at the Bandits Scoop Up Money Estimated at $33,000 and Flee in an Automobile, St. Louls, Mo, March 3. —Five armed men entered the Mound City Trust Co. today, held twenty or twenty-five employes and patrons at bay and escaped with $38,000 fn cagh. One shot was fired by a rob- ber but no one was wounded. 4 The robbers entered simnltaneous- ly from the front and two other doors of the bank. “Everybody stick ‘em up”® was the gruff command, accompanied by a shot for emphasis, ‘While one man stood guard at the | front door four of the robbers, car- rying revolvers and sawed-off shot- guns, herded the employes and pa- trons into a rear room and scooped up $33,000 from the tellers' cages, They escaped in an automobile | ous floral pieces together with tele- | returning here 28 years ago. | srams and cablegrams of congratu- | At the age of seven Miss Hepburn | | lation had already begun to arrive ' recalls making.a shirt of homespun | | for Miss Hepburn early today and |as a gift to her father and at the many friend and acquaintances are | age of 12 attended a ball given in expected to offer their congratula- | Castle Garden, Bowling Green, N.| tlons during the day. Y. with her father at which she | Miss Hepburn who 1s still strong | “danced every dance.” She can re- | mentally and physically, maintains | call indicents of the administrations | an inteerst in current events. Com- | of many of the president of the | | menting on the many chages that| United States. She is a member of have occurred during her life time | I'ree Love Baldwin Stowe chapter, he said that she was peclally | Daughters of the American Revolu- sorry that women have to vote.” tion of this town. STEPS ASIDE T0 LET IDENVER DOCTOR T0 BE WIFE WED HER LOVER CHARGED WITH MURDER = = s mon e o™i i Two shots were fired in the air | { by Frank A. Hoel, teller, to sum- \Now Wealthy Chicagoan Accused of Slaying De-|mon the police, as the men drove | Goes to Defense of Man | formed Daughter—Pris- | away, Only the leader was masked with 4 | a handkerchief, All were young men, ' Who Supplanted Him | oner Doesn’t Remember | employes said. & Blazer since his daughter, Hazel, | GHARTER AMENDMENTS one week ago today. |Senator Hall Favors Delay Denver, March 3, — “It I killed ‘HEARINE MARGH | | | my daughter I did wrong.” | [ | | | Chicago, March 3.—The Chicago | Tribune today prints a story about a |soclally prominent Chicagoan who stepped out willingly to let his wite |marry the man she loved and then defended his wife and the other man | when the latter was condemned in a | |#uit for separate maintenance rath- | |er than a divorce suit, | “Such is Richerd Toiukinsan, for- |mer husband of Mar mKkin som, the “Jans Doe’ of Mr. Whiting's |snit for separate maintenance,” says | the Tribune. Mr. Tomkinson is an advertising man and, like Whiting, is an a teur yachtsman. It was at a breakfast in the Tom- kinson apartment at which Whiting | was a guest, January 8, last, said This assertion last night was the first made by Dr. Harold Elmer | His next sentence was: 3 | “If Y did KiM her Y have no recol- to Allow Further =~ Consideration ! Tections of it.” Hazel, who ajthough she w voars old, had never grown np, was | suifocated by chloroform, authori- tles said. District Attorney Stone ald that a rant charging thr father with first degree murder wa served today. Dr, Blazer 1s in a hospital appar- ently recoveriug from what his (Spectal to the Herald.) Hartford, March 3. — Charter amendments proposed by the com- mon council of the city of New Dritain appeared in the legislative | schedule today for hearing before il b Al -in-law, R. E. Bishop said|the committee on cities and bor- ;}:"" '1,.’.‘}1“("':”: ”“"":"“l‘l"’;fd_ Tomkinson, three attempts to end his own | oughs, Tuesday, March 24. S e Twice the doctor took poison,| Senator Edward F. ‘Hall thought bl ot W b op told ths authorities and the | a later date for the hearing might et | thira attempt was made by slashing | be advisable so further scrutiny by A T T et ok nock my.| himiihroat: | the New Britain delegation might be riendl BradtWhitine all iover S {he “The details of that afternoon,” | afforded. This is the second jolt place.” the Tribune quoted Tomkin- | €814 the physiclan, “when my| that has been given an effort o son as saying: “then before 1 knew | Jaughter was found dead in bed | rush these amendments through, it, T was admiring him for coming | Veside me are not clear. T cannot | the hearing having been reassigned out clean. seem to recall any of the happen- | last week when one day's notice was “Well, the short of it was that 7 |ings of that day | given of the hearing. promised to lot P T was sure Paulet divorce,” v divorce me if | really wanted a | “I loved the girl dearly and had | The public health and safety cem~ no reason for taking her life and 1f| mittee, of which Senator Hall of onsible for her death I New Britain is a member, will have Mrs. Tompkinson recently obtai lered her in a fit of temporary | large delegations of New Britain and ed a divoree, last week M ity." Bristol people in attendance at its A\ ng sued for scparate mainte daughter was deformed. hearings during the next few days, nance, allr id he had been s when the matter of compulsory vace to “dope” y to temporary lapses| cination will be up. thereby crc nd that for that reason had given Oliver I. Davis, head of the New Britain antl-vaccination forces has > said that during his profes- | written New Britain's representa- B st not brand Brad | slonal career he had known persons | tives arguing against continuance of v drunkard and dope addict; he 1s| who would have heen better off had | the present law. R. J. Kloiber of neither,” the Tribune quotes Tom- | they died infancy but said| New Britain, and Rev. Weismer of kinson as saying. Whiting is ill in a | h way about his| Bristol, also anti-vaccinationists are Chi hospital laughter. expected to attend the hearing. Preliminary to the trial Senator Hall had in his possession suit for separate maintena At e | today a letter ¢ e y :\:\\!“wr“ hrate malnins QUAKE IN ITALY. | today a letter from Secretary Buel B. Bassctte of the Civic Safety League, calling attention to the fol- Italy, Ma junction restraini Whitin ~A strong disposingz o B DLONENtYIC 5 Py g eekesn 1»4 | lowing resolutio: vesting it on the stock market was ' o'clock this morning. No damage has . That the New Britain granted t reported, afety League in annual meet- ing assembled, liereby expresses its | appreciation of the work of Chief ‘J ustice Wheeler of the Connecticut ate's attor- ors in pre- en the law intoxicants, me court, and the Factoriesm'fo i’ay Nearly 40 P.C. | Of Taxes Levied By New Britain; ' assemt ntatives house and ence and ills now before Stanley Works is Second With $201,637 and Landers, ° secretary be A D r 7 Q1% X1 smit is resolution Frary & Clark Next With $153,516. Whecler and New epresentatives.” e < rtor Smith rman of the ST $133.9165.30. | o mmiittee on cities and boroughs amount of proper oy $1-1aid today his committee will get . be collec 1 by tr " ter the Dbill > allo v Britain assessment 0 X a ft town of New« g 2 gton, a » session ob inesday or sday of this 334 is bill enjoy iy . 4 a bill today tories will pay an Ca 1o great by the committ e Bristol & Plainville Eiectri Ir bill 1o allow a change in the o ix part value of stock from $100 1¢ o 5> or $10 at the discretion of g ] rd of directors has been pask Co. e house of representatives ¥ 50 a bill to allow the New Gas Light Co. to increase s L. The latter bill now lacks & A the signature of the governor me ss 5 N x, $2.586.2 e o : ERMLILY A bill to establish the New Beife year B 85 ¢ h s being taxed for the |ain-Meriden roz coielac . o ’ st time, will be billed for . TR Landers, Frary® & Clark, assess on an assessment of $47 (Continued on Page 25)

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