New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 6, 1925, Page 12

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¥ “ .4 B TR o e GOOLIDGE OFF T0 VISIT MINNESOTA 1 Leaves Late Today for Norse-| American Cenennial | Ihkton June 6 (AP)—I'r lent Coolidge faced a busy morning isposing of a varicty of details re- uiring his attention before parture n mid Minnesota Monday at the He ifternoon today for to deliver an Norse-Americar expects to he Iress = ennia at back sk morning ompanicd and Mrs Is in St of Wis K me Paul sharing hem) - teide *ds sresidest gestion of raiiroa "4 had bee Tn adlitiona \rs. Kello he President 11 he accompanied trip by Secretary Sand heney, a White House = Tlouse vhysicians th James G. ¥ Rutler of 11 Committee, Coupal, one of “hairman n Natio pres usual e loa The sch n to St men )-hour of Secretary and Mre. will be | Foreigners Would Be Subject To Tax | r to Mint Bet cning the Coolidge a reception ween § oelock in nd Mr. onor at e e yuse MARINER LEAVES FARM T0 SAIL FOR ENGLAND | — Commander Eustace B. Maude, Age 77 Years, Planhing a Danger- ous Cruise uver or ay of the Pan; ow preparing for ome on Mayne isl; get under way to within a month. ade winds wheel and e coast with lays and a com- Shakesp along care's get Maude “ommander sea hen he wa COOLIDGE IS READY Willing to Call World Conference 10 Outlaw Gas if Geneva Fails 1o Get Action, Mr. Burton’s statement Never Bought Dress Liberty, N. C. — Mrs. Sit man s 102 years old never bought a dress make it. She aiways has ma clothes from homespun, co with dyes made by herself fro stk bdark, cedar tops walnut I s wd similar materials, |13 per cent of the o e g WASHINGTON S HUCH SURPRISED Astonished at Ttaly’s Financial Declaration Waushington, June 6 (AP)—Sur prise is manifest in some circles over the statement of Linance D here Minister o that to yesterday 10 the ltullan senate ltaly s not | now in position fund its war | Jebts The minister declared further no systemization of inter-allied var debts can be aceepted to the possibility of p and such possibility can only flered by the financial situssgn of u siate and by the budget e "a- This budges, e unless subordinat it ternational payments, satd, today cannot support her burdens t surprised offi- | taken an opti- on because lor's recent | wry Mellon, that made nary negotiations for ut the 10 announcel who wd sit 1ls here mistic view of tl of the Italian onversations with Sec n supposed by some bgoriar 2 a settlsaicnt, s8 was being prospect now considerable lor De avoid giving the im- Martino is said t Ttaly was re although iry con s were regarded as design. him a de to the nt which the debt | it onee the treasur um basis &tion of Ttallan senators | granted a period of payments on the cipal of her debt been discussed hy the ""“i with officials. | ten-year | for seftling the | installment pay- | treasury ocated ter which One senator a morator, could br vision ments, FOREIGN LAND BUYERS | Four Times Larger Than That of | Natives, | aris, June 6.—Ioreigners 1sing real estate in subjc pur- | would estate sales tax | large as that levied it & bill now in the nce committee of chamber is approved by the French parlia: t to times as natives ands of th four upon h law imposes a tax of price paid, while the new bill would amenc the law by making it 52 per cent when the buyer is a foreigner, “even when such a foreigner has a legal domi- ile in France | depreciation of ou a cert currency international to invest in the hope of r ranc ” the pre- wvhen the s par valu 2 lost 80 per cent the buy 1 be Plastic Wood Now ndon a e perfected LEARNS LANGUAGE British Governor Gencral of wmh‘ Africa Makes Speech In Cape | Dutch Coiffeuse to Film Stars Never Could Abide Bob i W ( June 3 1 (AP) designer was Persia | Oh, Boy! when the mercury is buisting the top of its tube ain’t it great to be a kid and climb aboard old Dobbin and get under a ready-made show- er in the streets of New York? But it's tough to be a polar | bear in the New York Zoo| when the temperature is sky- rocketing. Can only lie on vour back and pant and dream of those Arctic ice floes. Even | the Kolbe Vulture from South Africa thought he was back in his native country and held | his wings wide in order to cool ! his burning body. However, Miss Eleanora Marra, of London, has solved the heat nroblem with her lat- | est dance costume. Striking, cool, but will she wear it on| the street? UPRISING NEARS END Persian Troops Evacuate Two Towns and Baluch Trouble Seems About Concluded he border of Balu- is ex Persian en to apparently aid from rising in istan. gen- seemed troops Afghan bor- era imminent, and British were der The Genev Russian and tartars in a last mon 1 that the incited nomads Turkestan to make n effort ire the holy city f Meshed. -Persia, he added, might to the of nationa. The allegations was by the | soviet government which | declared it was takfng all possible at soviet had to capt tented Moscow Record for Slowness A ying ptain Lep who T new record for slow- was established rier. a French vlsted @ plane 1 1-2 miles an re- BIG DEMAND FOR ANIMALS FOR 200 Seek to Replace Specimens De- pleted by the War London, June 6 (AP)—The de- mand for wild animals of various parts of the world has been greater this spring than In 15 or 20 years | owing to the desire of numerous continental clties to replace the stocks In thelr zoological gardens | which were depleted during the war. Moscow, among other far away points, has come Into the market for various specimens, the Soviet authorities having announced inten- tlons to reopen the zoo in the Rus- sian capital which had been closed since the revolution. The Russlans desire particularly jungle beasts and birds ot plumage not procur- able In thelr own country. Riga, Latvia, which had an enormous 200 prior to the war, has also be- gun buying animals in foreign mar- kets to replenish the supply which had begun to disappear elght or nine years ago when the food situa- tion In the war stricken areas was at its worst. England has come to the front this year as a rival of Germany in the importation of zoo animals, this !coun(ry now being better prepared | |to branch eut iIn this particular | businesy since the Germans lost ilhelr colonies. While there Hfus been | & little more than the usual demand for elephants and other standard | zo0 attractions there have been | more orders for tigers, leopards, | llons and zebras than the, deal | have been able to supply, | In one steamshlp recently there arrived 15 elephants, 12 Tasman- fan devils, 12 Tasmanian cats, 12 ‘fasmanian wombats, numerous wallables, hundreds of assorted parrots. as well as bears, antelopes,: zebras, tigers, leopards, and a col- lection of cranes, in crates, which is sald to be the largest shipment of | its kind on record. | — | l Sausage Meat Is Death Of Baby Elephant in Zoo Berlin, June 6 (AP)—German | sausage, it is belleved, was the | cause recently ofthe death of Mampe, an African baby elephant, whicly, with his twin brother, Karl, | was given to the Berlin z00 a few | months ago. The twins had become | the pets of the elephant house, but | since the death of Mampe the other is Inconsolable and refuses to eat.’ Mampe died from stomach trou- | ble after a week's ‘fliness, caused, ! | the veterinarians believe, by meat | | givn to it by some child, Animal experts of the zoo have | found Indian elephants more hardy land more adaptable to the diet | which a northern zoo affords than those from Africa. Dorothy Takes Good Picture From 17 photographs of girls nominated in the -annual University of Arkansas beauty contest, Doris Pinkerton of Fayetteville, Ark., was chosen as winner. MINDS SHARPENED BY AUTOMOBILES Useof Cars Canse Drivers to Quickly Think of Detals Urbana, Iil, June 6 (AP) = 1f | you saw a person take a slanting dive off of a’ wharf, Would you di to rescue at the same place Whe: he disappeared under the water? It 'you would you a ‘statie- minded" and should buy-a car and cultivate motlon-mindedness” for, according to Prof, H. Fy Moore, re- search profoasor of engineering ma- terials of the University of [llinols, “motion-mindedness Is a sign of progress which Is cultivated by the widespread use of the automobile.” “The driver thinks not place where the car is atsthe pres- ent time, but where it will be in a few seconds later; he thinks for- ward or he has a collision,” sald Prof. Moore, “It the auto can jead people td think:. of men, events, philosophies and religions In the same way, there {5 hope that they will get into a habit of asking where this man or that institution is lead- ing and will avold a few dangerous collisions in the future. “It is surprising how static mind- ed most people are. They think of things as they are, and not what they are becoming, 1L Is the static minded person who started the pithy but Inaccurate slogan ‘you can’t change human nature, and would dvubtiess say ‘you can’'t move a spinning gyroscope.’ The diffi- culty in each case is to get some one in the notion to do some chang- tng. rather than the impossibility of change, “If in future years the majority of people are progressive and mo- tion-minded, it will be due iIn a great measure to the influence of automobiles.” SUBURBAN HANDICAP TODAY Smart Field of 11 Horses Running at Belmont Park This Afternoon— Track is Fast., Belmont Park, N. Y., June 6. (AP) —A smart fleld of 11 horses is card-. ed to face the starter's flag here this afternoon in the 39th running of the historlc suburban handlcap, a race for three-year-olds and upwards over a distance of a mile and a quarter, Twenty-five thousand devotees of the sport are expected to attend. The track was lightning fast. Joseph E. Widener's crack ghs- tance horse Altawood, with ‘Sande up, will likely be the favorite in the betting with Sting a close second. Backers of Sting stoutly declare that Altawood has never measured strides with a horse of the class of Sting and are prepared to back their choice to the limit, Sting will be rid- den by Bruening. Some horsemen say that the'suburban this year is a two-horse race—a contest between Sting and Altawood—but there were others who insisted that with Mad Play, a stout cup horse, entered for the event, his claims could not be lightly set aside. of the | WANTS GENIUS T0 BE GIVEN LIBERTY Faseist Relormer Wants All Re- ~ straints Lilted { Rome, Jyne ' 6 (AP)—Th thustasm in the Unfted States for Americanization, durlug the first tew years after the World war, now, has its counterpart In Italy In the Fascists' cultural program of Itale Ianization but, whereas the Ameris can reformers used the publie schools and. uniyersities-to atiuin their purpose, the vanguard of the Kascist! urge the abolition of the present type of Institutions of learn« ing. Abolish ‘the schools, banish the professors, and release the creative spirit of youth; such Is the creed of the most advanced of the Fascist educational reformers, who Insist that “culture cannot be taught in the schools,” A number of addresses seiting forth this general program were made at the recent Fasclst cultural congress at Bologna, but even more startling proposals were advanced by F. T. Marlnetti, ardent Fascist and ftounder of the Italian futurist movement, which now numbers 300 | groups in various parts of the na= | thom: | Art, the speaker said, was the best means of propaganda for Ita! the best method of spreading Itali« anity abroad and of developing it at home. Hence there should be vse tablished a “chamber of art,” wele coming the work of all Italians: an “artists’ bank,” supporting the workers, and a clearing house for the work of artists. “The greatness of our country.” maintained Marinetti, “comes from her poets, painters, sculptors, archi- tects and her musicians, and from her color, air, electricity, , blood, | radio and coal! creative genius, the only raw material in which Ttaly abounds.” The national art salons, he con« | tinued, instead of welcoming the | works of great foreigners, should show the works of ltallans: the | Scala, San Carlo and -Costanzi | opera houses, instead of represent- | ing Wagner should foster young | Itallans; the Syracuse theater, now ;used solely for the production of | Greek classics, should also opén | competitions for modern Italian | playwrights, | laws should be passed requiring | the exclusive use of the Italian lan- | guage on dil menus, hotel stationery Iand commercial papers. Other laws | should require that strictly Italian | architecture be used in construct- ing new buildings, especially publie buildings and monuments, and that ‘all printing, whether of books or | newspapers, should be with Italfam varieties of type. | Al academies, protessional schools and art institutions should be abolished, Marinetty asserted, and be replaced by “fres Institutes of artistic technique,” teaching the value of material In relation to dif- terent applications of the material in art and manual technique, and by “institutes of aesthetic experi« | ment,” giving lectures and courses. | ene The pledge of the printed word your entire satisfaction DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- TION OF A} Y PAPER PUBLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN The Herald is the Only New Britain Newspaper With An Audited Circulation FRIENDSHIPS in ancient days were formed by pledges of blood. Medieval knights won mutual aid by, pledges of the sword. 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