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6 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNE 09 éé, JULY 10925, SDAY, ‘==_-—_—-_—=——__—___———-—————====_—-—-———“—_———‘ much land they would ¢ the New Britain Herald! HERALD PUBLI4HING COMPANY } | th {asued Dally (Sunday Bxcepted) b \t Herald Bidg., 87 Church Btreet widening process, Thi n s is a more 14 at Important subject wo first appear and it | tamilari themselves with the SUBSCRIPTION RA s that they 15,00 & Yonr, $2.00 E8 | tacts now may register thelr vate as they " wish, rather than Thr | wait | tled u the matter way or another and owia of then Entersd at the Post Oftice at s Becond Mall New Britaln tter, Lo tion the explanation givan last e practically TELEPHO! iness OfF1 orfal R B CALLS 925 928 would that the 13 ever land- be cut trom two pla porches the sidewalk. In Ihe only profitable in the Ci press room alway advertialng medium lation b And open to advertisers. ar feet. In some this ces bring the front up to Member of the Associated Press The Associated P excluslvely titled to thi use for re-publicat all nows crediisd to it or not oth credited fn this paper and also news put veln, s would nc s o wn of every t on decid- thorough el | this street, making it a shed ¥ {edly barren appearing Member Audit Durean of Circa The A. B. C. oual organizath which firni papers and adv tisers with o atrictly honest analyls of Tetatioe Hont re based upon this audit, Thia insures protection agalnst i new distribution figures to both natlona local advertiacrs, | New | Times | Entrance | qociareq 1 tion, e proposed of property widening the benefit 1o a nat L atrect hardly owners themselves, the last concensus of opinfon expressed but nefit the traveling public and trat- ight indicated, would solely fie In general which uses this high- The Herald ta on sale dally : : St York at Hotaling's New Btand. Bquare; Bchultz’s News Stand. Grand Central, 42nd street. in way. In fact some of those present widening of the stree would prove a detriment since it THE PLAN TO WIDEN o ARCH STREET 1s not shunted through this artery of traf- fle, would increase the hazard to life |and 1imb, and | dust go far toward The old in the latest proposal e ing is exemplified | ) widen Arch street which has gained more or less headway day, S result in mors nolse and, in general, | making the street less desirable for n last Time | FeSidentlal purposes. was, ago, | Property owners will do well to h 1 | study e rject, the: n out 100 when the same plan was under con. | tudy the subfect, then turn out 1 sideration, Sporadically, it pér cent next Tuesday night to pre- though nothing yet been done about it has s thelr views, arisen eince, TESTING BRAKES A GOOD PLAN S The practice of testing automobile Surely, to again use an ancient | adage in paraphrase “where there | be | gen- is 50 much smoke there must trakes hes much ommend it and St tire il \Yhan sicecening 1kes has much to commend it and upon the effective manner in which the fact fault at intervals covering o carried out innovation in The that half the tested had partly de- brakes indicated nec- vious, remedy | Dotent’ @ ArohniEseity street, it seem widened, | automobiles roughfare | fectve essary it Merchants al how made was to start to remove this the the trom famous ertion of i Rttt enace tp life and limb. One would scarcely to ride lacking good matter of widen the street | SA%s a stes train i o am trai rment brakes, nor even in a trolley The brakes of all operating tracks are to their busine But the citlzens i may look at without them of bettetment It benefits t the value it trom the th ttandpoint | o A vehicld upon is trite to ShEn ont wrly and none are al- to be in service without city, 1 ve to add to the s that have the power (o of along a street, to | Cause a quick stop hat au- improve wrees is L the a = tomobiles be similarly equipped. cidents that have been is ective brakes H to t retofore it has been st b is mo it the akes after an ac- ngical and more nterest fo test them defects in them inity fo contribute (il COURT trial A JOB FOR SUPREME has sottle loubtful the whether a case by Tennessee will it any in theory. This cause hefore final tionality to got the Supreme t, Court for constit 11 the highest court not overturn the Tennes- the nation may be in serlous curtailment of to teach science modern world veto the law aanish through the law t lose ot Tennessec for- evolution ed to a8 A& s will be fort proba- pass federal waracter issue to a ear of the ickly as it then we A GROWING ACCORD IN FLROPE PROPOSET NING STAND & Wibi OF Y RERLED Ger- de- only reservation the owoers may better realize just oW men government concerns the A ahooves all the property owners to | property has heen set- | front | addi- | ssitate ihal| <l 1 increase the amodnt of traffic to be congratulated | The | may | de- | | | sired entry ot that government tnto | the League of N give Nations, which wou to the participate League affairs, point will be open to discussion such Germans in the | BY ROBERT QUILLEN FactsandFanaes% -~ \ s White | | imousine, pants; participation Down would place frontiers under Article In the long probable that Germany will be This c future protection of German 1o the League, Hydrophobia the covenant run it has it the policeman is HALL JUBSLL Lost! med MaxsoN Paradise owed to join the League ught | There's and a a sucker horn every r uplift soclety 1in to mean much to the peace new to col- | of Europe but The curity French-German-British pact gentle- | LAl | \ n get an answer { or inf nat has| Question Edito 1rit Washington 1 rk avenue, V | D, discussion has been e s STIONS ANSWERLD, a matter of e far-reaching to the future of Enrepe importane yet it received no great total of publicity. to any on__ by An Old-Timer | magistrate “'Caught [ tng s ? What | on, anyway?' old fashion 3 eves up good enough 1 shioned.” cannot Kiv nor e e rotE costurie Wi Statlander, | tended research be undentaken, deliberations are not apt to attract . il receive a 1 requests ean- beat- This perhaps has kind of lack of been dus to the hington, disagreement, When states- : two e ;n\v‘n discuss an mportant matter in | here rolling Kinda , legal and marital the s makes a ratlonal and quiet Al pers | as much attention as it they called cach other puted motives. oL ; o Webbe \ rs ave con King Solomon, im- . y Hugh G. ach other's | i pact in pro- and the pro- posed German entry into the League | of Nations harsh names and of The security the sincerity ea ntion of the ment cess of being formed is destined to change western Europe from a hothouse of % | Making things s | irascible ring how the Amerlear ildren; sm With the q tota nationalistic for the ¢ to wol iled contention and let live | policy under the present status quo. The future in Europe looks less ominous than it did years ago. The llon and the £0 to speak, may yet lie gether in peaceful slumber. he adoption of a live \ ou're patrons would | ust the u; ‘...lf | several i . i lamb, down louking envy you, n they w “Get out! Your | You're passir when each | faulty the How do 3 W talk is the “pt rtion At some resorts the ink an earthquake beshrew it much folly taft honeymoon is over tick! wug h begins to observe how bhatk i L however, is ler Jooks in a MR. NEW ON POSTAL RATES Postmaster General New, cussing the 1lluminating testimony to the folnt postal committee of Congress, but took care to say that his expecta- tion of a rise in postal revenus in the future was merely his personal the That eritic American who & | no genins about chin music, mu i y their s help to my hustar ditty: skimmin'; of the Mohawk, in dis new postal rates, gave | Numbers alone Fliivy faster thar won tory. cranre increasing much grade 182 crossings. erwards occupying | Men i actual other mean nd when ¥ on a ar none hot sees e sympathy have ng a tire pudding opinion. In praising some of the re- i cent ‘“ralses” attacking other he indicated he did not | permit his position to eloud his view As a final desperate perhaps Washington get the ol Digest to poll France on the debt | i ; | Diges ey sovered mear question r s ol situation, 3 ‘ meas- The first : eotis(s 5 ov to respect law is teaching him y edly was right in concluding the two | 2% 1ad 3 “ : {o respect da From Our Chitdren's Garden of Curses equipment ng ’ expedient could ou knov A you know revisions, of the postal The postmaster general undoubt- | essential in teaching a ennis court to sid to gorv line to most criticized revisions of the pos- | tal rates were those relating to the 1seline increased postage upon private | mailing and souvenir cards, and the heavy Increas | Essential it { across coun 1 114 C Y school. ym servic | manner of asking for . g | going p le line in the rates on coples doubles as the n in- nee The supreme test of comes when t that are pants. yu mean?” “We there of newspapers and periodicals when mailed by Instead of | providing revenue these | two revislons have you individuals. driver our mo . “what you increased other 1l today si s and opencd fhe win- a alley led to substantial | D an quantity | Put hide time iy on an itoes can't deeply oys and “There has been | enormous | of mailed by the public,” the postmaster gen- | eral decrease in the wn got Drook!yn mosq him matter of this character John A When Italy for the next v bhe used to circu the opposition the on mabilizes doubtless Hint ) for the Look Cool in the June Bride / and IR¢ 2| ot v tion Summer 1 desi declared — which is in line the will | How of ¢ thog with what many predicted at ate mear sning was « ington had [ time the rates went into cffcer A Ro t‘- foot of hand h \ast winter at | It is probable in the only just that Congress Hitting inerease Correet 1) onderfu to old 4 sentenc T . ¢ e fai construction from loc mu gained in the the | again revise the rates | which the DOt wrote f rates land at will revenne the plan of came time 1t pleas work is public is no casy task. (Pro must look is tion, of ider minera heneve hot ratsing rates to the point where the I Wor Thes nts | hot e nen b lecrease in mail business more than your tion the occur nto the eir mode r. Wake 2 the alteration comnterbalances the inere ] n als stigates t room, 25 Years Ago Today | Tnker o wrong way Haeto bl 1tional automobi | little painting up of some of itneys in town wouldn't do any duck m. Some of them are beginning other duck tinge discovered in 0 wen railroad enien Registrar of Motor Vehicles were sme | Goodwin in Mass His an East - ‘ pipes wi achusetts plays no favorites brother-in-law is a and first class blast of indignation rop ors. qui- v-nm in Boston court expl wool | (he the | registrar when fined driver instead “You have the who was before told a reckless zending him to jail. | more law t the de the registrar | ie. right to violate - sira fendant y it en backir his kin in a made pul 1oaned Ja Americ | Amer investors 0,000,000 since Nature's Handicap Gi igners 1 But | spending in Eu Mayba that money how much are are w rope this summ 18 how foreigners | the to pay back what horrow Wally e Mystic the Yo Waterbury Republican: “Some- | the it [ when fundamentalists get to time ppine round they consider square mile ted in 17 United might by States of ind any gense founded Loncsomeness g and its from 181 Qbservations On The Weather that $100 abyle monarch tan tiv De Bigga Boss I'm a iory $24 pounds n mean | Reproduction ast year. car conductors. Doa’t )mm‘au) to pas med that soning expert they New ! Bureau, | ts in stamps ! can ex- | and | Jed from | the laws of the United States. But he may not (1) pardon an oifence against a etate law, or (2) remove disabllities incurred by an im- peachment, Congress cannot dm’ the effcct of a presidential |\1|r».m\ or withdraw from the exercise of| the power any class of offenders Q. Of what country s the com- mon goldfish a native? A, Ot China, but it has | since been domesticated in this and| other countries, Q the long canal and through it many v in a year? The of construction was oximately $80,000,000. During vear 1923, a total of 4,621 ves- s passed ) the What 1s Mary Pickford's ad- rong Suez. Q rees? A Ho! Q Plekford-Falrbanks Studios, California. the word *flance apply as well as a wbman who ged to ba married No; flance’ is masct feminine, ywood Docs 'to a ma is eng [ CLAINS fiU"MEN GOERGE MINFRS Conditions of Strike l< Bittner's Ultimatum ‘I‘!l' J., July 22 (R— rike unless the to prevent contracts in threatened represents Workers in Atlantic City, N -wide coal ¢ rnment intervenes abrogation of rn West Virginia is by Van A. Bittner, chief tive of the U'nited Mine | West Virginia He made the threat in yesterday Secretaries efengel vere being evicted from their homes {in West Virginia and that gunmen were being employed to coerce the wage telegrams Davis and wged that telegrams Telegrams protesting against such \v-onm were also gent to John D. | Rockefeller, Jr., and Samuel Unter- {myer, who, Bittner understands, are [ Anancially intercsted respectively in Consolidation Coal company and th Mines corporation time arrived,” the tele- ton said, “when the Bethlehem | rhe |gram to Wash government of th United |should take a definite by the opera s of northern |\West Virginia, Unless something is done, it will be necessary for t mvvn:n of the entire state of We | Virginia to join with the United Mine {Workers of America of the rest of |the country in a general strike The anthracite scale parley is u gain er a three da journment, The operators have re- considered thelr previous decision {0 open their books to the mine They | have refused also to furnish data ot ealaries of company hends CITIZENSHIP IN U S, ]9 DENIFD 10 PONZI - Former Financial Wizard Gives As. States position Jer way zent to Dismissal of His Application Ponzi the opportunity to the United Judge Lowell t court Charles july 22 od citizen action of Ihecome a « of 5 by 1he United lin the States distric Rouen | here in dismissing his application for | o 700 J learned ¥ dismis ation, it was The petition wa assent of the rnrnm- cial wizard himself. . |““Ponzi wrofe his assent and sub- [ mitted it to the Inireau when he was | by Chief Naturalization Fxaminer Farrel that his hopes of \ship wera fruitless. The la states that a parson must h ‘,, pood moral character for a \mllhl fine year or to sitizen. Ponzi sald he with the exception of » ederal court con- vietion for using the malls in mie to defrand, and a state conrt | conviction «iher 45*‘\7:0{ His witnesses also put the so in their statements natnr it torday wvith the {informed ve be was, on ndffonm'fi Youth Held for Theft of an Auto tamford, Conn, July 22 of 84 Worden eport s arrested early morning for the theft an mobile. ‘The police that r young men took to William J. Maho- kman avenue, Tarry- alesman, from in —(eo! avenue this of wnto- say Silus vo ofl the car helongin ney Be town, a traveling front of a store in Fast Main street ind that trio headed toward Norwalk. A few hours later the car was noticed returning to Stamford ind Motoreycle Policeman Milford | Hendricks headed for it. The three voung men fled but Silus was cap- tured in Noroton and was brought back here charged ith the theft TO EXCAVATE ARMAGE N York. J 20 (P)—F tion the ruins of neient fortified tawn of bloody of 35 IDON Armageddon, e ridge of em, and battle t Pro vptoogist. turn from of Mount Carmel of ccene many a vill be undertaken fessor James H. T University of Chi announced today e expedition will y John D next caste ago F pe on the be financed Rockefeller, he said s wives and little children | admission as | conviction | PR e FASCISTS CLUB - AVENTINE LEADER Deputy Amendela Victim of Attack hy Opposmg Forces Rome iy 22 (A—The members of the Aventine opposition, who have Leen bitter in their denunclation of the JFacoist government since it took of government in oused over the attack on their leader, Deputy Amen« Monday night. Only by the in- ntion of police and the Fasclst was Deputy Amendola \ angry mob of about for five hours where he was sort of Montecatint, | away from the ho- on a& the escort withe waylaid hy a band of and severely beaten What did it cost to bulld the | 1,000 T ) nkr nen Great acitement. sensational disape socialist Deputy ago and the furore was learned he had an ime pearar ¥ been caused, both in gove nd opposition circles, Pres solini in an official account ack on the opposition leads that e effort to pro= s mado by the authorls W attack is considered to be es- significant, coming as it did only a few days after the publication |of a iment drawn up by the A jsition, purporting to prove that murder of Deputy Hatteotti and aggresslons against various dept carried oug wicdge of Premier Muse ; government, and that ere organized in order to punish the deputies for their ops n to the pr regime. 1ly recently the press censor pers mitted the newspaper Il Mondo, con« 1 by Signor Amendola, to print lenunciation of the gove doc y e scathing ntine oppogition takes its m the old Aventimers who, pleased with the govern- process, fsolated themselves Aventine, of the seven Rome. The members of the nt dasy Aventine opposition their dissatisfaction wjth ist Regime by rémaining from the as¢seions of parlia- mental on the or hills of Condition Better. condition ot Dep dola, greatly impros morning. His fever has receded, and he passed a restful night after having had visits from scores of his collcagues who flocked toy his bed- side. The doctors assert there is ne danger from complications, but it is neceseary for him to remain in bed, The almost apologetic explanas tions of the beating of the deputy mmu by the Fascisti yesterday have 1 followed by a somewhat differ« erent attitude. ‘Ostensibly the Fas- cisti regret the incldent, but they are openly continuing thelr campaign to wipe out the opposition. Signor Far- | inacel, seceretary of the Faclst party, | on leaving Naples for Rome last night, eaid: his time anti-Fasclsm has brought about a comedy such as can [ not be endured. The work of provos cannot longer he tolerated. Tere and there we sce symptoms of this attitude. “Reaction The cation against the most cule been produced, reaction ich the Fascist party does not feel 1 upon to deplore.” Signor Farinaccl blamed the prove | ocations of Deputy Amendola for | the attack made on him, as the state ‘flml 1d not abolish attacks on the op position for making perfidious age itions agalnst the goternment. BUT FOUR ARE LEFT IN - “THE LAST MAN'S CLUB’ And of These, Only Three Are Able cus to Attend Annual Reunion Dinner, Stillvater, Minn, July 22 (P— Drinking a toast of water to thelr {departed comrades, three members |of the Last Man's club ended thefr 415t reunion here yesterday yer that they might meet Again one year hence, | Because one of the survivors was unable to stand without assistance, they the toast sitting down. Ihe names of the 30 members of the club, which was formed in 1884, passed on were read and 1id each one, was organized by 34 members of B company, First Mine {nesota volunteers, ‘who purchased a tile of wine, with the proviso that survivor was to drink a those who had died before Only four members survive— Hall. $8, of Atwater, Minn. as re-elected president: ckwood, 82, chamber- : John 8. Goff, 81, 8t. Paul, Emil Graff, 34, St. Cloud, Fla. latter was unable to attend be- canse of i1l The club again re- tirmed its decision of last year, te lave the Jast two survivors drink ths toast instead of the final member. with a p drank o have tribute it its last ton him \‘ Charles M. T ain, §. D The erican apples are mors popu- Ezypt than those received and Greece, from It BLUE o table M the ing or R R .. T'am & reader of the ONDAY iated so ch as & eooling and dell- in the green and -suceulent tamines that the body needs. tin on Silads and six different lrinds of besldes general direc. nged for easy reference. LAD postage DRESSIGS and stamps or