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WOVIELAW BRIEFS GOING TONE YoRK Constitntionality of State Act Is (uestioned New Haven, July 18 (F)—A special dispatch to the Journal Sourler last night from Hartford says that the briefs of the state in the dction pending in the United States district court to determine the constitution- ality of the new movie tax law will be sent to New York tomorrow, it was learned from Attorney Arthur L. 8hipman of Hartford, special counsel for the state, Attorney Shipman's briefs contain & more comprehensive argument along the line of that made at the hearing before the court and he cites authoritles purporting to show that the state has the power to pass legislation of this kind, the dispatch s6y8. The claim of the American Fea- ture Fllm Co., of Boston, and the Fox TMim corporation, of New York, complainants in the action, that such fllms as “The Ten Command- ments,” “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse,” or “The Christian,” eould not be classified properly un- der the new law becauss they are both educational and entertaining, was one of the points which Mr, Shipman passed over as inconse- quential, according to the dispatch. The complainant attorneys, Bene- dict M. Holden of Hartford and Georgs W, Wickersham and Edwin P. Grosvenor, of New York filed briefs Thursday with Judge Henry ‘W. Rogers in New York. In addi- tion to Judge Rogers, the briefs will be scanned by Judges Henry God- dard and Thomas Thatcher, the three judges constituting the special eourt which heard arguments in the cass here on July 10, W. L. Morgan Lodée Officers to Be Installed The newly elected officers of Washington 1. Morgan lodge, Knights of Pythias, of this city, will be installed on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock at Junior Mechanics' hall by District Deputy John J. Basker- vills and suite of Hartford. During the ceremonies the follow- ing officers will be installed in their respective chairs: Chancellor Com- mander, Paul Kalin; vice-chancellor Clifford Austin; prelate, Willlam Hirst; master of work, Lothair T master at arms, Samuel T. 3 inner guard, Thomas P. Orch- ard; outer guard, Waldorf Peterson; representatives to the Grand Lodge: Past Chancellors Lothair I. Seigel and Arthur F. Hayes. At {ha close of the installation the entertainment committes will pro- vide a fe knights present. Washington T,. Morgan lodga was instituted November 24, 1905, and is t of watermelon for ail| City Items Miss Constance Paonessa, daugh- ter of Mayor A. M. Paonessa, suf- fered a slight injury yesterday when she was thrown from a horse at Lake Pocotopaug in East Hampton, Victrola halt price sale at Morans. —advt, Martha Washington council No. 1, Daughters of Amerlca will hold a watermelon cut at the regular meet- ing Monday. Victrola half price sale at Morans, —advt, John Arata of Atlantie City, N, J,, formerly of 25 Seymour street, this city, is spending the waek here with relatives. Miss Catherine Grace, who is tak- ing a course at Yale summer school, returned today to spend the week- end at home, Miss Kathleen Grace s epending her vacation at Bay View as the guest of Miss Mildred Fagan of Meriden, Peter J, Cooke of 47 Stratford road reported to the police at 1 o'clock this morning that he had been assaulted by two men just previous to that time, He {dentified the men, stating that thelr names were Forsell and John McGrath, The case has been referred to the prosecuting attorney. Phenix Temple of WHonor will hold a meeting tonight fn Odd Tel- lows® hall. The initiatory degree of “Truth” will be conferred upon a class of candidates, Willlam J. Kerin reported to po- lice headquarters last night that a number of bovs have heen stealing junk from the Stanley chemical plant on Curtis street and disposing of it to junkmen. Gunnar Anderson, through George W. Brady, has sued A, N. Koppel for $100 damages as the result of an automobile collislon on the Berlin turnpike on July 15, The papers are returnable in the city court the fourth Monday of August Frank Recchio,of 466 East street reported to police headquarters last night that a boy whose name could not learn fell from his truck on Lincoln street. The boy was un- hurt. ¥ The state motor vehicle sion has notificd the local police of the suspension of the operator's licenses of William Foloski of 36 he 68 Belmont street. Licenses were returned to Joseph Eshos 812 Stanley street and Clarence Ashherg of 38 Lyons streef. The Parker Shirt Co. will shut down for ohe week next month to of the same time. GERMAN LIGENSES TOGIVE LESSONS Music Teachers Come Under commis- | Silver street and Victor Lusiettl of | give all enfbloyes their vacation at | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1925 VANDERBILTS GET NODAMAGE AWARD Sufered No Loss Throngh Lsitania Tragedy Washington, July 18.—Ths United Sfates-German mixed claims com- mission has practically completed its work on the Lusitania case. But elx awards of damages remain to be made, The aggr has been set at.$2,250,000. The meothod of determining the damages for the death of American passengers on the torpedoed liner is extremely interesting Tt had been cxpected that as Al- fred G. Vanderbilt was the richest man among the victims of the Ger- man submarine that the award in his case would be the largest of all. As 4 matter of fact, the commis- sion unanimously decided not to jaward a cent of damages in the rbilt case The commission took this view of the Vanderbilt claim. His money came to him by inheritance, He had \\h'l’l ly no active buginess in- te . No one of his family could come ird and show a direct financial loss from his death. His heirs had the benefit of a large life insurance Had Mr. Vanderpilt hved 25 years longer there was no (expectation that by any personal work on his part his fortune would be increased. What increase would come in the next 25 years would be by the normal increase in values, guch as real estate appreciation or higher prices of he owned Ihevefore the commission to the conclusion it ¢ any payment to gate of damages came 11d not award the of the claim made th of Charles Frohman, the the- manager. The commission dismissed the claim of the Frohman estate s for the dea n the | had not suffered financially from his lrl- 1th, but that the earnings of his various th Al enterprises larger after his death than before it. The decision in the case of EI- bert Hubbard, ing Hu i ba large, he w The commission awarded the bard estate $59,500, Mr, d's vearly earnings were hut it s nearing the end of his gro- very | wonld receive a sizable sum in roy- alties from his copyrighted works. | Had he been a younger man the | award would have been larger, The awards were made on a cold | business basis, with no sentiment entering into the matter. The com=- mission otok into consideration fl‘r n's age, his personal whether he was addicted to liquor | and his proba vies stocks and honds | Vanderbilt | ‘he same action was taken in the | ground that his estate | were | the writer, is interest- | Hub- | was pointed out that | ductive capacity end that his estate | habits, | 1 limit of capacity as | LERIGH TRAIN WRECK Two Are Killed and Two Others In- jured in Accident Which Occurs At Craigville Middletown, N. Y, July 13— aigville, a few miles from here, H\o men were grn\n)frl to death and two others were seriously injured when a Lehigh & ”':‘lrmn River rail- road engine left the rails on a curye {and slid along the roadbed, tearing { 1D the rails and blocking trafic 32 terday. The killed are Wheeler htck’r of | Warwick, engineer, and Frank H Dolson of Warwick, brakeman. The Injured are Frank Arnold, conduc- tor, and Ole Swanson, fireman. The train consisted of four cars, one passenger car, two freight and one milk. The train was bound from Warwick to Maybrook. | Unofficlal reports say the short train was deralled by the sharp curve. The engine turned over on {its stde, sliding for some distance | before it stopped in a cloud of steam STAR ATHLETES IN BRITISH GONTESTS {Murchison o[ U.§ A S(eps‘ Rlong Fast in Sprints | London, July 18 (A—Bright sun- | hine beamed upon crowded stands | (and a host of athletes from a dozen | sports-loving lands as the British | Amateur Athletie association cham- | plonships were concluded at the Stamford Bridge sports field this aft- ernoon The most active of all letes was Harold Osborn Hlmn\c‘ Olympic decathlon champion, who |1s entered in nine events only two of which were disposed of yester- | day. Osborn competed against an in- fonal field in the hurdles| pole vault and other field | The 100-yard dash brought wveral runners who competed gainst one another in the Olympic prints at the Colombes stadium last ar among whom was H. M. Abra- b who won the 100-meters event, and Loren Murchison of the |Newark A. €. who finished sixth in that unforgettable dash down the {cinderpath at Colombes, 100-yard dash—Won | Murchison, United States | Thread, Haiti: third, W. | England. Time 9 | Hammer throw- | Nokes, England: the ath- | torn jum by second Loren A Rangeley, 10 seconds. Con by M. C. second, J. Jack- {son, Scotland. Distance 151 feet % {Inch. No Ameriean competed. | Half-mile run—Won by . R Griffith, gland; second, W. Nel. [son, Engla third, Ray Dodge, |Iinois A. €. T 8 A Time, 1 minuta 57 1.5 seconds [re Serving | the side | the oplafon | the semice cept that it is specifically provided 'ROAD BLOGKED BY CARS | the | and TOWN'S NAME CHANGED GERMANS FIGHT FOR THE. FRENCH Arca, Now Becomes Mundelein and Cardinal of Same Name Pres | | sents Fire Fngine | Chie f a fire AMu 180, July 18 (P—Prese in Moroccan Gampaign 1 George | | I | senator ‘.u the Berlin, July 18 (A) j o foreign in, One-half of mark t leglonaires ) of France Morocco hting on Abd el in of Berlin military ex- it untrue that to the aid of Moroccan chieftian, name Area, 111 The town I8 the s f the Lake uniy eal cainat reity @ fout Krim in are Germans, seminary lein rican they it will be largest seminary « but on the contrary, France is be- | fn the world, The majority ing supported by abiout 12,000 fo! n's population are I 15,000 German subjects enrolied in the forcign legion. This rather startling fact is ex- plained in the following manner: In article 179 of the Treaty of Ver- iilles, Germany undertakes not to permit any of its subjects to enter | of another power, for perts. Not only Germans have come the is Ame town's name the the prelate of seminary and the fire tinal's reture ment Antelope Herd Thrives In ('m)('mn National Park' 18 P atened ada have b at able on During German young s out of jobs this article to the shall not be French ¢ ap. ign. T thre e 1522 And with men ¢ Others founq the Jally grist of Germany's recon- struction task too dull and uhar- venturous. They readily lstened, it s sald, to the arguments of French recruiting officers, who told them of | comfortable wages. exciting service, | 1" o7 0 a carefree in the French! . iy reign on, | re was an incr In this way at least 15,000 young | ,;ono men enlistad in service for Frane : littls thinking that they wo bs called upon to shed their on the battlefields of ) again decr 1923, many found ther 1 in 1915 tI he herd, the cre 45 vivors of had roamed the prairies s in the N th only in t the last ands that There erd, a gain breed in that 1024 thot 988 anim H life > own Antelope once wers prize and ered such ray | numbers that extinction the peeies was in sight. A herd finally discovered in southern Alberta the tract 3,000 acres on ch the animals were feeding surrounded by a fence of 1 wire and all the work was t disturk ani- d troph- ages in blood Morocco for ht of FOUEN L Was only a o ing tha FIRE DEPT. HELD UP And i Meantima Born i vuened | Yacht Taking “Gas” Enveloped m Flames July ) — Fire foot while she was taking n ofl company's dock badly & th nd burned Anchor J hand, abont Johnson is now fch ho but ara not believed to be ser owned by orman of Belle Haven reenwich anded by Samuel Bar tly after tyin up to the dock and bheginning to take on the , there was a sudden followed b L.oc companies called an the flames for an hour befor: g¢ control. ‘The i ta Gronnd Near N 18 Adams, Mass : which the 715 Adams own origin July 18,—Fir ) gasoline at unk fte 10 atter here terday dam o'clock last night destroyed a John Lue arks harn hnson on the farm of the o in and th burns zynski on vack road in urg. Mr. Green pital his Mrs Adams and hildren at Margaret, S years old, the fire and ran harefooted in night dress to the nearest neighhor's house about an eighth of a mils away and gave the alarm, Help was asked from the North Adams department and a chemical e was sent, but because blocked by abont Lae there home, 2ynski were in three s were Uaona.t Reams ex | plosion fi fire were fough gne | the road Was | yine the five un 0 autoists Who | t.njor of the yacht which wa Palmer, weol Dr. Michaelson H Personals Hallc ora . Co 0 of Cc 1sin pre £ 10 Hmu nt ‘ nate Error in Estimate I3 of this com was in its ue as men in t} v ‘,”1 other it me fi e Xfount Aount Mich- cientific vesea KILS 'fiwmom}a Man ¥a aces Muarder Charge 10 NVACK POLIGE IN TIT OVER DRESS Chiof and Cop Balk Over Wear- ing White Gloves ¢ 18 (P —Incense regulations adopted commissioners of Nye g policemen to wear and blue shirts without o summer months, Po Furey, who has and Patrols . known as the fused g er Floyd J Haire ap- last night I'urey with a white no coat, no hat Asked why regulations, commissioner 1 them “nonsensis » attention te a “copper” all and ha didn't need s or any blua shirt Patrolman Griffin er that he had g the regu. n Haire ask« eir shields and juarters idere 11d pay salo brought up on the town board next 1 they will have a hear« the town Eympa« officers and re« Commissionar to deprive r positions for a rea. son which they declare trivial, tate of Half Million Ih.ldvd Betw een Hundred mpton Lakes, N. J, July 18.— $ 000 estate r\! )hn Sarah Chamberlain, whe died at her home in Oak Ridge. vided among 100 terms of her will at the v conrt house in More ept for a few small bes was left to 21 first Vi Chamberlain's nearest Nut since 1911 when the it was sald today, of these cousins have died, so the estate will go to their children, ring close to a hundred. wrough a codicil the old homes stead at Oak Ridge, which had been the family since colonial times, ng buildings and 160 acres, » Wilfred Chamberlain, the Horaca Chamberlan, a in the two action of taking steps was made, n { compri il g siting Golfers Make Game Popular in Sweden ockholm, July 18 (M—Altheugh two clubs and courses have or a money maker The largest r‘am:yr'\ were " HIGH W]NDS CAUSE BIG Shooting Durving existence 25 or 80 years, en a real hold in This has been due to the increased number of from the United States and itain new courses have been this summer and clubs, had seen the glare in the Ly now nearing the 250 mark in mem- Atior Tatal bership. The semi- annual report, ending June §0, will sho wa substan-| tial gain for the past six months. sky and 4 last year by Mr. Re preceded the fire trucks, the 7,000, was wrecked. men could not get near the as the road is =o narrow that cars cannot pass The firemen brigade and saved the hous Prussian Law 440-yard hurdles—Won by Riley. Tvar glven L qume Argument den this year, house Imcmod Women Athletes | © In Contests on Coast | 13 (A—Amer- young in v o earned a large as a result of their | Heirs could =hnw. o cases that death cut Berlin, July 18 (® — All mus LHO {teachers in Prussia are henceforth to be llcensed, according to the latest decree issued hy the govern-| and ry MacEwan on Rando! fay in t who was § vork. ph form a ded by is home stre ght, bucket Six Boys, One Girl in i San Francisco, July i Roundup of Juveniles A roundup of young vandals who have been disturbing the peace of New Britain for soma days past was made arday by Sergeant Patrick J. O'M . who turred over to Pro- bation Officer Edward €. Connolly a total of six boys and one girl re- sponsible for a number of recent happenings wh have disrupted the qulet of the city. Two of the boys are said to be re- sponsible for a conslderable amount of damage done a new building un- der econstruction and owned hy John W. Hagearty at 49 outh High street. The girl, 15 and colored, is held responsible for the breaking of a window in an automobile on Chris- | tlan lane early this week. Two others of the bovs are allcged to have broken into the refreshment stand at Walnut Hill park and the last two, are charged with entering a garage at 147 Curtis street and stealing $11. KENTUCKY BANKER ACCUSED Casbler of Middlesboro Concern Sought for $50,610 Shortage Middlesboro, Ky., July 18—A re- ward of $1,000 has been offered for the arrest and conviction of W. E. Frazer, cashier of the Citizens Bank and Trust company, following an audit of the bank’'s books showing a shortage of approximately §50,- 611,09, The audit was made by representatives of the state banking commission, who report the discrep- arcy well covered, Officials of the bank tained warrants for Frazer, arged jointly with Lynn D. Rous- former a ant cashier and bookkeeper, with being responsible for the shortage. Rouser I8 now in jail have ob- THEY STAY WED, IN SCHOOL Girl Athlete -ml Art Student Rus. band to Finsh Studies Baltimore, Mrs. Albert A, crived word of French have just re- the marriage of their daughter, Miss Ada Jeftrey French, a student at the Savage School of Physical Cuiture in New York, John Paul Doremus, a student at a New York art school. The marriage teok place at Freeport, L. 1. on June 23 Mrs. Doremus is noted locally as a swimmer and an athlete, She is at a girls’ summer camp in New York state, where she is acting as counselor. 1t understood that the young conple will complete their studies and later make their home in Free- port is Submerged Catboat Is Found Off New Haven | 18 (P—A sub- 712 was picked New Haven, July merged cat hoas K up by a fug of the Merritt Chapman and Scott Corporation five miles sonth of New Haven light, Sergeant Sulllvan of the New London police informed the harbor police here to- day In & grip in the hottom of the boat was & card with the name Earnes. The boat is now at New Londoa. who is | to | ment. “A degree of order and uniform- ity of qualification in a world hith- erto beset by 1 opportunists m such a decree, ¢ be expected from says the Vorwaerts, which deseribes how private musi- cal instruction had become ¢ negligible quantity during the war and subscquently in the inflation government unfortunately had never consldered music as significant for educational purposes. The decree mentions cisive change may now in musical education.” All private music teachers under a certain age, providing they have not graduated from some accredited musical insti- tution, will be obliged to that “a de- bo expected plied with an official license to teach music. Without such a license no teacher is to be allowed to give in- structions. WIFE BEATER DOES HIS STUFF RIGH! IN COURT Then Defies Judge to Do His Worst and Latter Gives Him Six Months New York July llam Carroll, 48 Stuyvesant street, was arraigned be- fore Magistrate Joseph k. in the Essex Mar court, | day on a charge of beating his he defied the magistrate to do “wopsl.” Magistrate Corrigan Carrol at his word and sent him to the workhouse for six months. Carroll mantained his bellicose af- titude while his wife was testifying | against him and when she said that | she feared he would beat her, he actually demonstrated that | fears were well founded. “I'll do that all right! ed, as he belabored the woman over the back with his can. It took four court attendants to make him stop and he was taken to a rear Fifteen minutes later, when brought | before Magistrate Corrigan | he was still defiant and abuse on his wife and the Then he was ordered to the house. George Werner, said to be a pugi list, living at 187 Caldwell avenue, Brook!yn, was held in $500 bail on a charge of disorderly conduct by Magistrate O'Neill in the Coney | 1sland court eysterday The complainant was Mrs. Thelma Werner, his wife, who =aid that h waited for her Wednesday even At a house where she had been visi {ing friends and when left he fact and cut her liy 18 —When Wil years old. of yester s room. rzain, heaped court. worl she | beat her in the FREAK OF STORM Adams, July 1 Patterson of 11 was enjoying an on afternoon at Shaftsbury Take, Vt, a storm came up and blew a canoe off the lake on top of his automobile, wrecking the top and headlights. The flying canoe was unoccupled. North Robert street terday While Goodrich ting yes any chariatans and | period and that on the whole the | pass an | examination. They will then be sup- | Corrigan | took | her | hs shout- | off the expee | turns 1 period of years, | resulted in sizable damages. The largest sum, $130,000. was to Mrs. Mary Davis Hop- mer for the death 1 and her father. In this case mer was able to show a di- financial loss from the deaths both. In the case of Charles Klein, matist probably capacity, might ms, so over and this kins of o of the it was shown that he had veral years of productive in which new plays of his| expected o earn sizable his estate was awarded | In the | case of Justus Miles Fore. the nan, novelist, the commission refused to allow the relatives any- | thing. Mr. Foreman, while a wall- known novellst and comparatively voung, had not been a great money maker and his heirs could not shos lis death had cut them from al support of women victims the e small or compensation | finan ‘ s dne crs of New York were exception. Their relatives | able to show their earnings had ‘ large, the commission iwded $14,000 on the joint claim Interest From November, 1923 ases the commission figur- In all « 1 mn the loss of dollars and cents n T on s0 1t eir 1o the {of the vi made hasis of All these g rds bear in per cent from November, n the commission hegan work. Lusitania claims are only part 11 that citizens of the United inst Germany. ainst Germany 10,000, This amount. en reduced to about by fthe dismissal of 15 not equitable or legal. totaled has 000 mlmal Be;:m Hac ( h*mx:e for the Worse s noted today in the n of Cardinal Begin, §5 year old Cathleic primate of Canada who n partially paralyzed red a stroke last Sunday physicians’ morning bulletin Cardinal's condition was \ eatisfactory” and 1 fears for his recovery. cuse Man Heads Alpha Gamma Deltas ». Wash., July 18 (P—Loutse of Bvracuse, N. Y. was grand president of Alpha Delta. national collegiate and Ann Arbor, Mich. des for the it s of the biennial the society here last wi ~l!\ AN BANS ¢ CAR 18 has wn, Conn., July van college faculty jssued ment against theeautomobile s possession by an undergraduate as a dangerous liability. The faculty says it is too casy for the man who pos: to get away from the collegs munity for the week-end and it also encourages other sins, hey term its on of large cash re- her | The Hickson sis- | 18 (A—A turn for | since | indicated | 1977 eonvention at DISTURBANCE N VT. s | House Whirled About. Barn I | | Knocked Down and Bridge | Destroyed., Rrattlehoro, Vi, | South Londonberry, July 15—T'rom foliowing a re- sumption of telephone service, came | reports yesterday of considerable | damage in the upper end of the West River Valley by the thunderstorm of | Thursday night. The strangest fea- | tnre of the storm was in Peru, where | the wind, which was in the nature of | & “twister” lifted George Rush | houso off its foundation and turned it around. Mrs, Rush, who was in the kitchen, was hurled against the ve and several of her ribs were roken. Mr. Rush's barn was blown n, but his horse and cow, which sere n the Fara, were not injured Lee Gale's chickens were blown some distance from their coops and unable to return until the storm had subsided. A number of trees and silos were leveled | At Jamaica a covered highway bridge between the village and the | West River raflroad station was lift \, 1 off {ts abutments and thrown into | | the river, whera it cor flat-| tened onf. It was mor 100 | tect long A few te in Brattle- | bovo were p commiasion and | about three-quarters of an inch of ’l.)m fe but the damage was | | | 10 cly than ephone lines at ot of ir here negligible. KILLED AS CAR OVERTURNS | = Insurance Collector Was on Vaca- tion Trip—30 Others Unhurt Oneida, N. Y., July 18.—John F. | Lynch, 40 years old, a collector in ‘hnc of the Brooklyn branches of tha | Prudentfal Life Insurance Co, who lived at 343 Fourth street, Brooklyn, | was instantly killed at 8 o'clock yes- |terday afternoon when an automo- bile in which he was driving his | wife and two daughters on a vaca- |tion trip to Niagara Falls over- |turned four miles west of here {shown in the | Places which thay left when the | foreign agitation started There was no stock ica’s foremost feminine athletes, in world and in the barn as the owner had turn- ed hi nd out ture before leaving for the abouf six tons of new The loss is al cows horses to pas- city. He nd afternoon in the vific con rack ar cham hips for world champior amen stars. 1is was lost overy 000, with na ng la Olympi participate Filkey of 1 impion and twn you mpeted in 1l Paris will list is Hele State Executives | Fames Visit Oyster Fields /o New Haven, July 18 (@—T association of state cutives, posed of heads of various state r |\rnL\ and stitutions, were entertal ermination to | day by the state shell fish c 3 11 secor | sion in a cruise on the Sound. Forly- 1 seven men and women were in the party which boarded of the steamers of the Coast Oyster Co. shortly before noon and made the trip over the oyster grounds and along the coast. Dinner was served aboard the vessel. A mentir soclation was held on de Dr. R. T. Leak, superintend the Connecticut & ho Middletown, presiding. Trank Rowley of the Sca Coast Oyster and Howard W. Beach of H ven and Frederick F. Lovejoy Norwalk, members of the she commission, explained the ¢ of the oyster industry cut A demonstration of tion wuas given Dre that boat oysters in of development. Much at tha the in- 1ay's meet will offer chicfly in one itfon ratl il comg Sea vy Senator Curtis Asked | To Visit C Y‘]ll]"(‘ M July 18 (A— f Kansas, republican been in to visit Hou White te New an gt of Conne life hrought to the € the hermit crahs which m homes in abandoned shells. ake Ona of ot it t b stoma h erjor court SAYS COP STOLE ( Visitor at Was A 1 wi omas B, itomobil \ter at arlow AR. City Declares iten and Rohbed, 1 professionals in charge, ergan 1 varlous cities. The club at of which the crown nt, heretofore has with a nine-hole t this sunmer had a new lald out at Lidinge, nearby islands, ho one of the course Human Finger Is Found At Dead Letter Office on, July 13.~The post partment has come into 1 of one finger—apparently s finger—that found its to the dead lctter office. ratl gruesome object office department eays, an *April fool' joke to n on a rural route out of Ap+ I'he person for whom d could not be lecat« e name of the sender Wants His Coffin Fitted l » With Radio Receiver Angel Cal, July 18 (A— , aged Ran Bernare her, has placed an a 1 08 Angeles undertaker equipped vlio receiving set, ined that he {s con« soul lingers near v of judgment 1l be able to “hear on in the world,” exp! Many Chinese Strikers Returning to Their Canton, July 18 (M—Because stril ing Chinese are dissatisfied with the food and quarters provided by t strike committee, many are | oring to return to work at their old | endea anti Many strikers are being forced to join the army under uncer ditions. Two Japanese were mauled hadly | by a crowd of strik vesterday | in con | His wife, Mary, and their daugh- {ters, Dorothy, 15, and Mildred, 19, escaped with minor hurts, Mr. | |Lynch was driving near Wampsville n he lost trol of the car and | |1t plunged into a ditch, turning over lfln him, but throwing his wife and | daughters out. The family left their | ‘annk'\n home last Sunday for a | 1eisurely trip to the Falls. Mr hr—u! {formerly Mved in New Brun; N T | - | | HELD IN $20,000 BATL Woonsocket, R. I, July 18 (F— Jack Daley, arrested by the Provi- dence police yesterday as one of | three men implicated in the robt | ot cloth from the Dunn Worsted valued $18.441 o held in $20,000 1 in district court today. Two others are under in Fall Ry charged with receiving part of t stolen goods. The local police ex pect to make several more arrests of bound and gagged the mill watch bound and gaged the mill watch- men and escaped in a truck with the goods, | mins here at April 21, was arrest when the couple attempted to b food supplies, The Japanese were allowed to return to the foreign con cession. There was a revival of the r today that Chinese forces had pl ned an attack on Shameen shortly but the story was discredited Prediction was made that the anti- | foreign situation would last four or five months longer. mor i | r Valuable Stamp ('nlloction Reposes for Years in Attic | London, July 1% (M, More than €81.000 worth of unique &t een discovered under r amsta woman's house o8 in the in ) DK™ FUNNY — BRUIT DHESY GOT THE. SICEAT the atic ever since PIGHT 1t was only by nent to the attic and accidentalls | came across them. They are to be so0ld by auction, IOEA — > tE J Y WEAENG— UKE. GME OOl T RAT HOW oot T 16N [