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e — —————T——y———" NEW: BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1925. | which was successful . which instructions may be con-|Willlam ¥. Mangan for the pmmm;’.\lansun for the defendant; Joseph [with a sterling silver clgarette case gift. from overy |representing Coleman V of veyed to any part of the great hall |James Andrews et al. against Peter |Sankoskl against Louls Schmidt, de- | by his assoclates, the presentation George Kaplan, treasurer, and standpoint, Virginla, 1 { \ y to keep things running smoothly. |Rutkowski, default for fallure to ap- |fault for fallure to plead, Nalr & |address being made by Bydney Sy.| Manager Syman seized the oceasion| Among the guests of the evening | V5 H More than 60,000 plates and|pear and judgment, Kirkham, |Nair for the plaintift, Hungerford & [ mon, manager O the store, Mr. [to thank the employes of the com- | were A, L. Ready of New York, rep-| (anada now exports to the United H v dish will. be required, . 24,000 |Cooper, Hungerford & Camp for the |Saxe for the defendant; New York |Kaplan responded briefly and ex-|pany for their spirit of cooperation | resenting the New York Lamp and giates one-sixth of its total produs. glasses and 100,000 pleces of cut- [plalntift; Aaron Danlelson & Co.|Contract Purchasing Corp. against| . o.cq piy thanks for the beautitul |during the recent anniversary sale,|Shade Co. and A, W. Silverberg. tlon of electrical energy, o L lery, ‘The largest number ever [against John Walkal, judgment, |Anna Battaglla, default and judg- ’ served In London previously was|Dopald Gaffney for the plaintiff, |ment, Kirkham, Cooper, Hunger- Men Die of Overwork in the Prime of Lile Londou, June & ' (AP)—King George's physiclan, Lord Dawson, of + Penn, yesterday added his voice to incréasing chorus of medical men on both sides of the Atlantic ‘who are condemning the speed of modern ‘lite, In an address delivered today before the final sclentific sesslon of the interstate postgraduate assem- bly, which was attended by 600 American and Canadian doctors, One of the big problems of the fu- ture, Lord Dawson avowed, would be to prevent men, especially men of affairs, from overworking, with the result that their lives were prac- tically ended when they should be at the helght of their powers. Dr, Charles H. Mayo, the Ameri- can surgeon, announced that the as- sembly had conferred honorary mem berships upon following: Lord Daw- son and Humphrey Rolleston, both physicians to King George: Sir John ;Bland-Sutton, president of the Royal ¢ College of +Surgeons and former president, of the Royal Soclety of Medjcine; Sir . Willlam = Arbuthnot Lang, consultiing surgeon to Guy's hospital;+ Lord Desborough, prom- inent figure in commerce and sports; Forelgn Secretary Austen Chamber- ‘lain and Philip Wranklin, formerly of §dh_Feanclsco, 8,000 FREE MASONS TO BE FATERTAINED Duke of Connaught Will Kot as Host in London London, June 5 (AP) — An office fashioned after a battleship's con- ning tower is to be used for the direction of a banquet August 8, when 8,000 Free Masons in their | regalia will ‘be entertained by the | United Grand Lodge of, England, | with the Duke of Connaught pre- siding. It is claimed that this is the | greatest number of perdens who | will have ever been taken cars of | at one time, at an elaborate fune- tlop which s to be a banquet in | every sense of the word. There are | tn be seven kitchens, several hun- | dred chefs and assistants, and 1.- | 500 girls as waitresses, The \\'crklmx‘ arrangements will be controlled | from the conning tower, electrically fitted, and containing cans by‘ |Maxicans Seek Amity in 1923, when 7,000 persons sat down at a luncheon, With U. S. Business Firms Mexico. City, June 6. (AP)— Adoption of a commercial arbitra- tlon agreement by the national chamber of commerce of Washing- ton and the confederation of Mexi- ran chambers of commerce is rec- ommended by a speclal committee named by the Mexlcan confedera- tion, The plan recommended to| seftle, without recourse to the courts, différences between Mexican | and United Slates business houses | follows virtually without change lhei American-Argentine agreement. 1t will be voted, on at the next meet- | ing of the confederation. | SHORT CALENDAR DOCKET Thirteen - cases are listéd on the docket for the short calendar session of the city court at 1. p. m. Monday afternoon, as follows: J. Camp against A, J. Daly et al, judgment, ‘Traveling over the rough surface of the Tucson, Arlzona rodeo field at| a speed of 45 mlles per hour, Homer | Roack, champion bulldogger of the| west coast, leaped from the running | board of a Packard Six to the horns| of a longhorn steer in one of the most spectacu'ar feats attempted in | the recent Tucson rodeo. Roy «uick, another bulldogger who won | prize money in the three day events “hazed” the steer alongside the car | for his companion to make the leap. On the followlng day the two men reversed roles, Roack hazing and Quick bulldogging, again using the Michael A. Sexton for the defend- ant; John Skritulsky against M. H, Fox et al, motion to strike out, Jo- seph. G. Woods for the plaintift, willlam M. Greensteln and A, C. Baldwin for the defendants; Fred L. Stevens agalnst Teresa Kerrarls, default for fallure to plead, Stoner & Burke for the plaintiff, Roch & Cabelus for the defendant; Racklifte Bros. Co., Inc., agalnst I, N. Francis, I. I Rachlin for the plaintiff, E. A Merriman for Willlam Marchel, gar- nishee; Rackliffe Bros. Co., Tnc, | agalnst George Stocker, judgment, Donald Gaffney for the piaintiff; Charles Abrucewicz against Wadys- law Kulas, pleading or default, Michael A. Sexton for the plaintiff | Stanley J. Traceskl for the defend- | ant; board of water commissioners | against H. @. Doolittle et al., default against non-appearing defendants, John H. Kirkham for the plaintiff, M. A. Sexton for DooMttle and Bkri- | tulski; A. M. Koppel against Frank | Jasinski, default for the failure to comply with order of court, Nair & Nalr for the plaintiff, Willlam F. Packard, When asked to choose the car they wished for the difficult exhibition, Roack and Quick named the Pack- ard, explaining thelr cholice by eay- | ing that it was necessary that the| car used be capable of a very quick | get-away and also have casy riding| qualities as the rough course was| pt to throw a performer if the car | bucked” too much just as he was about to make the leap from car to steer. “T use a Packard whenever I can | get it,” Roack said. “The response of the car when you want speed 15 immediate and it sure helps when ford and Camp for the plaintiff; Citizens Coal Co. against Edward J, Dyer, judgment, A, "W, Upson for the plaintiff, GUEST OF ASSOCIATES Leon Kaplan of John A, Andrews Co.,, Inc, Feted in Honor of His Approaching Marriage. Leon Kaplan, junlor ~member of | John A, Andrews & Co, Inc, was| tendered « reception last evening at | the Burritt hotel by about 20 em- | ployes of the firm in honor of his| approaching marrlage to Miss Minnie Glass of New York city. Mr Kaplan and Miss Glass will be united n matrimony on June 13, the | day of her graduation from Storrs college, of which Mr. Kaplan is also | a graduate, : After a delightful banquet, post prandial exercises were held af | which Mr. Kaplan was presented | the longhorn starts from the line, It | is also easy riding and the smooth going makea it much easter to judge distance when you are traveling at | 45 per and want to light on the steer's head nsteadi of on the| ground.” | Quick, who is from Fort Worth and who is one of the “top hands” of his proféssion, endqrsed Roack’s choice of care, giving the same rea- son, plenty of power, a quick pick- up and easy riding. The Packard used for the feat was a standard equipped stock Six. 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