New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 29, 1925, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. over N it is clear that HERALD PUBLIBHING COMPANY ahead of the slower trucks plied. Every Tarued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Horald Bldg. 67 Chureh Street such ceident the need for wider highways, 1n- BUBSCRIPTION RATES §5.00 & Year fortunate widen the will cost Citimately it v, to existing the. s Month, main thoroug! o8 con- b siderable money, will \ave to be done. Butered at tha Post Office at a8 Bocond Clwse Mal ew Britain A MORE PROSPEROL S RAILROAD ve been notle the TELEFHONE CALLS It ediately will W that im- New Haven allroad was granted a 40 per cent after The only profitable advertising medium in the Ci Cireulation books and | press room 4 open to advertlsers increase in fare t from the metropolis, and 20 percent from | the announced the second encouraging The ome of the company for the commuting | points in New York state to Member of the Associoted Press. The Assocla P exclusively en- titled to th. use for re-publication of | all news credited to it or not otherwise eredited In this paper and also local news published hevel ne Connecticut points, company financial t report in two years n —— st half of the present year has $2,6 $2 Member Audit Burenn of Clreulation, | hern The A. B. C. s & which furnf*h tisers with o strict] cireulation. Our ¢l are based upon this audit. This tnsures | protection agal raud in newspaper | dlstribution figu.es to both national and | local advertisers. | 574, an Increase of tlonal organfzation ewspapers and adver- honest of ulation st o 190,060 over the same perfod last vear, Indications are the net of ths company for the year will be between five and six milllons ¢ dollars The rates increase in commutation increase the esti- earnings for the re- year. Commuters to pay the increased rates are now more certaln than ever that they were not The net the rallroad for June was $552,619, compared with $6 224 for June a year ago. This rep- resents ought net | mainder of foreeq The Herald 1s on 1L York at Hotaling's New Stand, Bauare; Bchultz's News Stand, Grand Central, 42nd etres aale dally In New Timee Entrance mated DISPUTE OVER BUILDING INSPECTOR The time-honored tween th various necessary income of jealousy be- Common Council and the L city commissions, each at- | tempting to increased business and no powers and there is an apparent upon their rights, found food for nard their own legal | raising ructions when in New England. Nearly two years ago the New Haven railroad was considered ripe |for a receivership, following the ro- ! port of an investigating commission. iI:J;Hrond officlals greatly resented | the transgression argument in the controve over The only a con- that of eac a deputy building inspector. good that dition * tinual comes from such 13 the possibility con- watchfulness other keeps the Council and commissions within their charter bounds. The howls of anger when the fire boards in rules; they have lentitled to due credit. Luck has been with the New Ha- Council ntly emitted bzen succe police and | made appointments not | accordance rec with the Council the building commission re- | railroad still suffered from the fused to rescind a permit ordered | rescinded the and the by Common Council; centered building appoint- |and curtailed expenditures as a re- sult, Two years ago the railroad also was guffering from the after- strike, latest disputation the refusal of the commission to accept charter an ment which the of the shopmen's allows the | math commission to make which was a The pointment industrial erisis for the rallroad. En of its citizens have been inclined to be char provides b ade | When the C of & deputy building i New nd, although many spector ghall Le 1 the Luild- Mayor Pa- Council ing commission somewhat critical of the railroad, on asked has in no wise been inclined to de- to authorize the building commis- | cline assistance. recent hond in to the re sion to name a deputy building in- lssue was a case spector or to name a ce to , point. The 1 1 1 commi ilroad received widespread the nvestigate and if this comment throughout bteq the rallroad the citles it will should be repald by committer puty was nation. needed This act Inde to that deleg not m in citizens of serves could have elf. efore and good as good service as it is possible (o give. It The could or to ommittee is evident from the last finan- notify nilding commission ommission to name | firmly on the road to becoming a prosperous more." It that property New once commission was en- |18 said England in retus- of Coun 1 time more from such properties tha ating the sheriff action the | Mt from those Council comn cilman N. I ford building i in in naming steps a or roceive puty taking 25y tors and the the dire but railroad making t not only ) to olders The o stock and grou el a st ady improsement. An is considerable considering the past CIRCUS POSTERS STILL WIEH THE BRYAN TRE! AND THE U. S. from In some of the reviews of the | ot the late William Jennings his term as s 1913 and 1915 is pointed | en entirely Jmmi; ment; that he was in Thi compli nd con th and amateurish. ception of | ecretary of state is not entirely in | sonformity with the facts. Althougt and t sident Wilson over the lat q criticism tow he star toward Germany an peace treaties are re all diplomats and goven sfficials as great achievements. | unstinted had the of Presiden passed the It is barely possi t a Democratic s autho TIGHWAYS their SOLUTION WINER \ ONLY 18 influence in shap in soms clrcles. firmly tie t w e impulse of pas ntinue in nation’s internation each he impartial comm the points & in ution © gate i ion for a 8¢ at none of the eignatorie , to war after waiting nine o think it over. jed In ple embo t L The again wider highways. nioblles are to use the same roads secretary of state’s treaty achieve: enant of the League of Na. other accld all of its kind hasized nnot be regarded It tracks and auto- [ wise than a tribute to the forme: the emp need the drivers of the faster machines will endeavor to get In such operations caution Is not always ap- advertises earn- | [ doubt will be gratifying to everyone | intimation, and the report at| |least inspired them to renewed ef- | forts to avold such a climax. In this sful and are ven since that time. Two years ago effects of a severe winter; since that time there have been mild winters particularly expensive | ment. In the League the principle of a nine-months 'walt and an im- partial investigation binds 52 na- tlons—or all civilized natlons except the United States, Mexico, Germany and Turkey. Natlons which did not slgn the Bryan treatles were Ger- Mexico and rmany was making negotia- tions to sign when the World War broke out, and Japan was hesitating because the antl-allen land troversy had got been settled; Mex- fco was in the throes of a revolu- tion and Turkey was suffering from diplomatic indiscretions of the past. many, apan, Turkey; but G con- It can be sald in criticism of the [.mh!vu-monl that just the two na- tlons whose signatures would have | value to the United and Germany—did not sigu;it can be replied in justice that they might have signed within | a had World ;\\ar not started. And there are many of the opinfon that had the | European nations involved in the World War i\raned even a month before begin- | ning hostilities there would have been no war, By its adhesion to the League of Nations Japan is bound by the prin- ciple of a waiting period in her re- lations with 51 other nations, If Germany enters the League in the near future, she also will be bound by the principle. But in neither case would the principle bind them in connection with the United States, 80 long as this nation is not a mem- ber of the League. There should be credit where credit is due. If these treaties are | to be construed as valuable adjuncts to peaceful international relations with 30 nations, then Mr. Bryan as their author was entitled to all the | credit their negotiation reflect upon { his name and memory. From this standpoint they are his greatest If they are not valuable been of most States—Japan |a reasonable time the | | | | early phases of the monument, —and increasingly few are of this opinjon—then and only then they entitled to be ignored by com- mentators. Our opinion is that the principle undelying the treaties sound and that its adoption by the League of Nations tends to cdhtribute proof to this end. are was A TAST MASTERPIECE BY BRYAN The “last speech” of Willlam { nings Bryan, excerps of which { given in the Herald yesterday, con- Jen- were | tains paragraphs that in the esti- vear old youth was for quest of Helen and Georg. goes to the man who was knocked dawn by the surf and looked for itg license number, Correct this sentence: me for waking you so late at night,” sald he, “but 1 promised to pay ten today and almost fo on got i (Proteccted by Assoclated Editors, Inc.) 25 Years Ago Today Dr. J. E. Martin las a appointment to the liospi The receipts of the ment this year are terday was t last day for the re- ceipt of the water rent, and $4,500 was taken in. The receiptd from Aprll to August are gain of about § The state board ined the sewer heds in Berlin yes- terday and will ask New Britain to submit a report on its sewage posal so that the the location is suitable and methods practicable Trumpeter & the Tirat Regiment has called a meeting of the company trumpeters to be held at Hartford for the purpose of in cepted an staff water depart- excellent, Ye 00 ot of health year, exam- state may know if 1eny of | struetion Officer Cosgrove had a livel with st chi He street, buf they could not tell where lived, He started for the po- lice station, but when reached Fast Main strect the older two said they lived out that way, Ife let them go and continued on with the youngest.who was identified at the statlon a man and taken away Then three girls came in after the ¢hild and Cosgrove chased the man finally convineing him. that been mistaken in his ideptification and took the child away, The committee on water and lights has made its annual in spection to Chairman Tin reports that all electric lights Welshachs are doing duty F. G. Ste n of Plainville merly with the P. & F. Corbir is to be superintendent of the Welch Mfg. Co. of ¥ The column, “Bot Without; What the Wear, and Cook a description of a thn requiring 6 1-4 vards material, tme ren yesterday. North three 1o found them on he he supply cstville Within ies Should and plc of 10 YEAR 01D YOUTH 1S HELD IN NASHUA CASE Will Be Questioned Ry Police Con- | cerning Movements At Time Of Murders, N N. H., July 29 (P —A 1d here tod garding the death nna Gillis, aged ashua oning r “Excuse | The floating of the loyalty of New England sisters, whose hodies were found last Thursday in their at Hudson ith skulls crushed drew Lefebvre of B yesterday at the home of re Fitehburg, Mass., to this city early today He is a . cousir byre, who worked as chore the Gillis sisters and has told | mation of many equal the pearls of | thought that first yieldeq him fame in his “Cross of Gold” speech. The marvelous mastery over I play of words that Mr Bryan pos home The | 1shua, was found I the sessed is being more generally ap- | preclated now that he is dead: prob- {ably no man now living can com- of Charles Lefe boy cial report of the railroad that it is| needs prosperous railroads and will bene- just & few| the The financlal report of the Haven therefore is gratifying the public at | has reached a |look at hi {urn in its financial history and is| etary of state | commoner's work as | himself open to some serious end broke | Smxav:‘ and by being included in | bine the postic possibilities of the | janguage with such high-fiying and eloquent phraseology as came na- tural to Mr. Bryan. It was a gift | such as comes to few men, One can- | not help but admiring the astonis |ing that the I | | commoner so completely mastered verbal virtuosity Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN scorns religion. Take a Russia that matter the mosquito makes a hole in one. 1| For | nanally A telephone hooth affords all of conveniences except a towel the | How silly pride of ancestry seems if your own dad was a peddler, To to dre Americanism and yet dread heinz | wrong, d being put | Birth in a village: 011 Tom's got a fine Loy.” Birth in a metropoils: | “| More population. h | | 1t is too much rest between 7 a, and 6 p. m. that causes so mu unrest after 6 p. m. so back- Killin he not three T Russians are ward. Moscow s ahead of Chicago. d t s f vvers , The pu se of ten new icated that there keup in the dry force aged 4 i -| When a business man i& er | he's working; when a girl gaged, her work is done. en- a war to make the world something makes it safe six mo Anyway fe for for about &l t sinners, trustworthy in the who Isn't good at a s to iny The man thing | widow else can alws who has mc 10y A man whe ‘1: nce and howls becaus isn't as wise as he el critic is a feels Democracy has a time as democracy cess just as It's a queer world. Once liberty| meant the right then the right to representation; now the right to drink to worship: r The prise tor abssat-mindedness ) flicting stories since i dscovered set as | o'clock changed Tue bodies werd On the chore hoy's story the time of the murders was at tirst Wednesday oung Lefebvre having eorgianna Gillis alive in that his been atternoon he at said § day declared he Gillis home and near the story had not on Wedn 3 Andrew Lefebvre left his tere last week to visit relatives in Members of Nashua on Massachusetts city his family said he Ir lay. He has been in difticul with the police before and at pr ent is facing a charge of steali the BORAI'S STATEMENT Before Next Session of Congress “To Prevent Trouble fore the senate of congress, Senato declared in an ad “I will do so not trouble, but is the only Borah of Tdaho vesterday because T % 1 Ledteve re int way to the chairman of t lations com said tude of the foreign China is keeping that progressing and maint Unless the fores form 1o nes territorial rig labor ble,” powers to nation Chinese he government e she we are g can live condition in th who loves pe Observations On The Weather g the past ake regions and eastw York state and Ne in some of the southern states and the plains states section Tem, peraturés have remained practically unchanged England, also | | | had | | the | i contains | { | | | | | ves in | |k for | con- | | times with | fiea SOV [ heguty parlor, and I've ; | and jerked and pulled. Very pain- | Later the boy |yt | | was | with EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, dis- | A the | 1 youth, An-| (As 1 home | 1oy 20 JULY MaxsoN Recognize T, Folle? ty1 we've found on g cationg, lady with the o T Ihe erations, chilg Telp! Help! “When he Kissed el ‘hat did he do, beat it No, he helped himself,” her she The anley Policeman M ‘alles vs happy day the beat; il the trim and ne smile as he goes by 11 the conks contest which one can fo0d he the By Where's pounds always chuehs be chir nusemi ar Swell And 0/ 866 The feed the man best virl staring The harde 1s 1t 1 were His job T'd surely pick When erowds are round It must be fun To say * Ang " hi lire oy has to do stiek; learn 1 aeain, K when folks to hunt funny th AR What Iight into And legally to wallop men To whack them left and right! And if his corns begin to ache, can ate, him it 1s 0 ar to Some Flesh Foor Hilder £ ho with Bl Mrs ave full I them 2 bly a skin d o wonder matter Hilder A Sug to yon criti- and is apt to tell him stands him, sstion whom The your woman hus! o Frank, Anyway Grant, 67, owned ful home, and with her daughter, her son-in-law, grandchild, Helen, One day Helen, looking up with loving to her grandma, said: “Grandma, 1 hope you never die. Grandma wag very pleased, and thought much little Helen loved her. o she darling, ¢ never Mrs. a beau eyes 1 W 5 you hope Grandma will “Ca to moye of a Boh red by Beth and Rudie) I came into the world barber shop tod in a nice shir and was brought | The woman that owns me has wait- | we I'd never | 1 T tho cems ht proud of taken can't o long that born. July 6 — and curled me, very pleasant, She burned m the iron. Oh, w T—Heaven; n't with Shee took me heen She me. 1 me say it 1L satis- to a reent July me! July § Another barber, and I 4 tin I'm etting or every day. his last? She nead today doesn't shorter and v sted flat to 1 ook a fright, but seem to think so. 10 — W 1i today. T} and scorched the wavers and 1 — Went ble today! e her she July again home erent ok htfully I'm be- born through some- They call it a me fr irons ning o wish 1 wasn't July 11 thing horrl | permanent wave, but what T ever rom | e aid me to punishment is It was a hor- she'd let her 1 put an end deserve this than 1 know rible process! T wish ErO again to my serable life! e and why! hair ont a 1 fou Tuly hair in me, she know Common Type “Didn’t Brown marry & woman “well, wonic s0-s0. She's one eof a three enger t make five I've while, been figuring said Uncle the for quite a “on tryin’ od old sport of As far as I m it ain't nobod Tke, o revive pitchin’ horse th he only Comparatively Did you en ; the jokes made R. D [6] Tue Unturnable Worm ather's been so hot I'll of in handy; on 1 can good shora sandy hed myself in 1 at yesterday, v stata this life is t the sun epidermis, each one Washed Away €he isn't sick. the rain.” Very Ol Prospect Are you furniture is antique?” Owner: “Antique! I'll say ft 1s! Wiy, the st weekly payments bave this sure &dy “And why, | | | home | was | three | | How | me | a| the me | | 1925, [ QUESTIONS ANSW You can get an question of fuct or { writing to Tl Bri er to Intormation > Question Editor, 1in Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 N York avenue, Washington, b, () osing two cents in stamps for reply, Medlcal, legal and mar | advieo cannot be given, nor can ex- 1 research be undertaken, will receive per- gned requests can- questions a | colloguial or A person sentence in i ser What is The gam nlr B as B. 8. of degree? or B. Sc, ience); it who have college cou | (me achelor is awarded nts who have technical subjects y the name of Norway changed Christlania to Oslo? A, According to tradition, No ital, Oslo, was built by ng Harold Haardraade in 1048 A. In 1624 the*name was changed that of its conqueror, the Dan- | ish Christian TV, This name, ! ihe has always had unplea ) assoclations for the Norwz 1 Janua v rdi Hin 1] and whir | scientific Gl A the | D, to king people I of Norwe Y of Oslo was resumed, How woemen per correspondents are in Washington, D. C., representing out of town newspapers anq entitled to sit in the reporters’ galleries of the pitol,« and can name tiem? A There are Ruth Finney, Ruth Klei r, Winifred Mal- lon, Cora Rigby, Catherine J. | Tackett, ¥lora G. Orr, Mrs. George % ards, Trorothy Shumate, Mary Harri . Jefterson. Q. When was the Tilinois :\h«!m"‘xn canal built and when was it opened? A, Wark June, 1536 1541, lack of funds, The completed and ri], 1848, Q. How * bushel ? Shelled corn weighs from 52 56 pounds per bushel, depending | on the weight preseribed by law in 1 corn in the ear chs from 68 to 72 pounds per Q newspa- there ( vou o and ag commenced continued in until | Maren, ed for canal wa finally opened in much does corn weigh to various s bus Q ment any July? A, We sentation Is will baby it true give horn that the govern- diamond ring to the Fourth of a on regret to of diamond July babies h been a government industry Q. What is the diameter | suspension cables that hridge | A, The diameter is 15 3-4 inche | How long after it struck the | erg did i to sink? that rings to s never say the I Fourth a of of the hold up the Brooklyn steamship Two hours and forty minutes. What of food | sort do star- | A, Oysters, mall Is 1 clams, snails “and crustacea only one day. of the which is longest, or may there veral exa the same | A The the t that th is minute may lengt re is only one but the “Jongest adjacent the year differ few seconds length of the to the nearest secutive days the same of var ime of a the given onl several appear to only I'here day when co I . General ve Did Grant change s name? A Yes was first named Hi- ram Ulys: Grant, but through | some error he was appointed to West Point Ulysses nt ¥ ¥ | | | s as Gr Q. How do cyclones A. In general, in an eastern or ortheastern direction. Occasionally a cyclone veers to the north or the northwest but this is rare and does not continue for any length of time, | Q. Has the United States ever nported wheat? Yes, th 1 throughout the and flour became wheat s im move? i wheat destroy that road Q Is than by | weight A. cEES 50 in the there weighing of eggs? of pound. Q eart} | i | any other method to ascertain the remembering that ten inary size weigh one What is the total area of the miles Q statute square Of what are ampum_ beads | made? A shells The purple portlon of elam | Q. By whom was the first photo- | The first actual picture-mak- means of light was done by re Niepce about 1823 During what period were two- pleces issued in the U. 8.2 From 1864 to 1873 When was Wor hen did h ling by Nic Q sworth born madam.” —H. on it K L. The Well-Known Bread Lines had a language, as has ofttimes been said, I wonder if the buttercups would cry aloud for bread? —H. Blondin. (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction - Forhdden) v New | Al All letters ave | | e word, "lifer” slang | 4 in| from | of |brought this | Henry B to an act of the |of the University of Chicago. legislature, the anclent | when it was suspend- | Titanic | Simpson | crops were | {pie at Luxo and | A 1A Q) struct, | canals? A. The Suez the Panama $37 TRUDEN LETTER 1§ BRANDED AS FALSE Evidence Born April 1850, Which cost the most to con- the Panama or Sues L0 1770; died cost $100,000,000, 000,000, New Uncovered Blasts Theory of Killing in Ducl and Sulcide, Cal., (A—Evi- by authorities | branded as false the letter purport- ing to have been left by John Tru- den telling the story of a duel in which he Killed Henry Kirk July 18, At the same time of r evidenc tended to prove that the letter found in Truden's pocKet and bearing his nzme v signature was not writ- ten by Truden, O rs believe that both Kirk and Truden died at the hands of a third party and that Tru- den did not kil Kirk and then take his own life, The latest definite statement today Ly a maid at the Im 1 hota] that she knocked on Truden’s door at § o'clock Saturday morning. July 18, to tell the time and that Truden replied, say- | ing that he did not wieh to get up. is declaration refutes a state- ment in the “Truden letter” which said he and Kirk had argued on the AL cumba from before Saturday until nearly| noon and that finally the ducl was tfought in Whigh Kir Flowers That Bleonied Ages Ago Brought to U, S, Chicago, July 29 (®)—TFlowers that |bloomed in ancient Egypt, twenty centuries before Cleopatra, and wheat and barley taken into royal tombs to sustain Pharaohs on their {post-mortem trave have heen here by Professor James | sted, noted egyptologist July clue was the him The |dates, collection olives, pomegr from funeral g to Professor Breas |George Schweinfurth of vear old aveheologist, who spent fifty vears assembling it. Professor Breasted has given the collection to the university. Some of the flo the tomb of Amenophis early | predecessor of the more famous Ame Ophis IT1, who built the tem- includes nates and ands, was ted by Dr, Bert, 90 which {flowers | given wers came from 1, Indian F pi; 1t;1alii t Is Discharged in Court | Greenfield, Mas July 20 (A— Chief Rheamount, Indian spiritual stie medium who was arrested s eral weeks ago on a warrant charg- ing assault on a fellow medium, was freed today in district court. The | | Bishop Adam as H [ purpose {fined ana lehurch in werth §2 RUSSIAN BALLET STIL SPECTACLE Has Sullered Little. From Revo- Iutionary Transition N York, July 29 (P—The smashing down of the doer in the residence of a Russlan orthodox bishop with hatchets is to be followe ed by efforts to put him in jail. The door to Bishop Adam Phillip- ‘ovsky's residenco in the Cathedral of 8t Nicholas in East Ninefy-Seventh was broken down last night in an attempt to serve on him a court order directing him to turn over the property to Archbishop Platon Rodzestvensky. Moanings, shrieks and wielding of sticks came from the adherenis of H. H. Shepherd, attorney for Archbishop Platon, and V. B. Greaves, secretary of the or- ganization claiming ownership to the |property broke down the door. When it seemed likely that a riot might result a police captain sug- gested that taking of possession be deferred, The court order which Shepherd sought to notified Bishop Adam to vacate the property within five hours and a fixed fine of $250 and one month's imprisonment for failure to do so. Shepherd said his had been accomplished in found the property still oce serve that he {cupied by Bishop Adam in defiance cf the court order and that he would now seck to have the bishop jailed, Bishop Adam had previously been adjudged in contempt of court for ousting Archbishop Platon from the cathedral on July 1. Russians and Galicians have clashed several times sefore over the question of whether hop Adam or Archbishop Platon is the rightful metropolitan. The property of the Russian Orthodox America s said to be 000,000, 5 alse in dispute, To Buy Radio Set for Junior Republic Boys Prohation Officer Edward C. Con- nolly is chairman of a committee of the State Probation Officers associa- tion which has undertaken to raise money to furnish and install a radio set in the Junior Republic at Litche field. Probation Officer Connolly said today that he felt it was a worthy cause and one in which a large number of local people are in- terested, His duties as probation officer making it impossible for him to carry on a personal canvass for the fund, Mr. Connolly said that {anybody desiring to contribute any um, small or Targe, can send it to his office at police headquarters. The Junior Republic is an institu- tion for boys and some time ago a dclegation of youths from there weras lto i was dismissed when the com- plainant, Converse Nickerson, falled ppear. The warrant, sworn out, charged that Rheamount struck Nickerson on the head with a guitar when the latter entered a room in which the Indian medium was conducting a ce at the Lake Pleasant spirit- walistio colony near heré. Tt was the guests of the local Rotary club at a luncheon, the president of the Republic being the speaker of th occasion. A visit to Litchfield was made a short time after by members of the local club as guests of the hoys. said that Nickerson had thrown flashlight on Rheamount, spolling the seance. Nickerson is at present on the Pacific ¢ “Death Stroke” Kills Within Twenty Miles San Francisgo, Cal, July 29 (A) Demonstration of a destructive force which he has invented will be car- | ried out on a United States battle- ship off the coast of California, Ir. Fdwin R. Scott of Detroit has an- nounced. Dr. who is sald to { have sold the French government | the “Killalite” artillery shell during the World war, calls his new muni- fion the “death stroke.” He claims| for it that it will kill life with which | it comes in contact within a radiue of 20 miles. The naval demonst tion will take ce within twu months, the Detroit inventor said. N. Y. Plans New E;i\\' Governing Raby Farms York, July 7 —AS & re- sult of the disclosures concerning the Gelsen-Volk baby farm and the sen- tence of the proprietress to state prison, Health Commissioner Mona- ghan announced today his depart- ment would license no more baby farms of the type where more than six infants are kept at one time. Mrs. August Geisen-Volk wae con- ed of baby substitution and it was shown that she boarded several more children than she was licensed | 1o st Scott, pla pla 0 | | CONCERT PIANIST HURT New York, July 29 (P—Winifred Ryrd, concert pianist, having been struck by an antomobile on Fifth avenue, was being treated at her | apartment today for fractures of the bs and other injuries. The auto- mobile was driven by Robert Goulet of Danbury, Conn. After the acci- dent he stopped to ald the planist. HEAT WAVE IN SWEDEN Halmo, Sweden, July 29 (P—An unprecedented heat wave has swept | over Sweden the past week, causing several deaths, many fires in fac- tories, farms and forests through lightning, drownings, safling accl- dents and damage to crops by hail storms. The damage is estimated at several milllon kroner, HOT KITCHENS ean's GHT HOU 3 This bulletin fs equa for tha hostess who w ng affair, or as Fill out the valua® A means of va HOUSEKEEPING EDITOR 2 New York Avenue, Wash py of the bulletin CHA CIPES, and age stampa, or co enclosa h | Three Killed When Train Hits Automobile Hornell, N. Y., July 29 (A—Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Moore and their daughter, Tmogene, 18 years old, of this city, were killed here late yes- terday when their automobile was hit by a passenger train, L VOLUNTEERS SAIL ft Havana, Cuba, July 29 (P —An. ng the caill made by the Spanish consul-general in Havana, 131 valunteers salled for Spain in the steamer Antonlo Lopez yeéter- day to enlist in the forelgn legion being recruited for service against the Riffians in Morocco. The men are mostly South Americans who ar "king adventure, SW FIGHT TO DRAW Cleveland, 0., July 29 (®—Carl Tremaine and Johnny Farr boxed ten furious rounds to a draw at Taylor bowl here last night. The referee’s decision was decidedly un« popular with the crowd, which thought that Tremaine had won. The bout had been advertised as for the bantamweight championship of Cleveland. TENNIS STARS SAILS Paris, July 29 (A—Jean Borotra will leave for New York today on the steamer Suffern as the advance guard of France's Davis Cup tennis hope for the singles, and Jacques Brugnon and Max Deeulgis, captain of the team, will sail on the Majestic August 12. Both Lacoste and Borotra will play in the American championships. The HARVEY & LEWIS Co. 85 West Main Street New Britain, Conn. OPTICIANS Better Glasses ON HOT DAYS to vary monotony of the coeok- es, easily and quickly prepared, that latest bulletin, CHAFING DISH AND la for the young eoupls living in prepara tempting things for & party rying the regular “dinner.” coupen below and mail as directed: AP COUPON AERE. Washington Burean, B. Herald: ngten, D, C. : FING DISH AND LIGHT HOUSE- ! with five cents in looss, uncan- in, for sam: e

Other pages from this issue: