New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 8, 1925, Page 11

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A " number of small . budget is manifasted particularly in EUROPE'S PROGRAM FOR DEBT PAYING Will Be Based on Decrease in Farming Imports Willlamstown, Mass., Aug. § (@k— Decrease in agricultural imports or an {ncrease in the export of manu- factured goods, or both, will form the basis of Europe's debt payment program, Professor E. ¥, Gay of Harvard said today In an address at an institute of polifics round table conference, “There are limiting factors in in- creased production of agricultural commodities in Europe,” Professor Gay said. “Among the most impor- tant factors may be noted increased urbanization, a return to the self- sufticing small farm, and availability of cheap foodstuffs from forelgn lands, “The movement of population from the farm to the city which waa marked in the industrial states of Tiurope before the war has been temporarily checked, but with the strong impetus to increase the ex- yorts of manufacturers there can be little doubt but that the former swing of population to the cities will be resumed, and, if anything, the percentage of urban population re- quiring food imports will larger. “Those countrles which normally bave a surplus of food products, Russia and other countries in east- ern Furope, even whep they come back to pre-war acreage will in all likelihood show a relative diminu- tion In tha amount of food avail- able for export to other countries in Furope. This will be due to the holdings which have become established in these re- wions by the division of large es- tates after the war. “While the small farmer may have A somewhat higher standard of liv- ing than the hired farm lahorer, the small farm tenure tends to reduc. tfon in total production and hence in export surplus. “Unless there are compelling rea =ons in the nature of upward price changes for agricultural products, there will be no cause for Europe to change its food consumption. ha- bits or to change the organization of its agriculture. For the immediate * future there still remain new lands in foreign countries where an in. creage in production can take place without any stimulus of higher prices.” Ales Broz, Czechoslovakian consul general in New York, discussed the stabllization of currency, the prob- lems of financial equilibrium and the industrial and agricultural condition of his country. “There are many facts showing that the financial difticuities with which Czechoslovakia has been faced hitherto are of transitory character and will soon be overcome,” he said. “The persistent efiort of Czechoslo- vakia to attain equilibrium in the its endeavor to save money in all tha departments of the state. At the same time my country is endeavor- ing to renew’the old commorcial in- tercourse by concluding commercial agreements with the nelghhoring states.” DEFEAT EXPLAINED French Attacked Suddenly 'in Jehel Druz Region, According to Official Statements. Beirut, 8yria, Aug. 8 (P—Author- {tative information reaching here concerning the incidents in the Je- bel Druz region, where French forces are reported to have been compelled by an attack by Syrian rebels to abandon the city of Sue- diah, sustaining many casualties, is fhat the French company was taken by surprise. Further trouble de- veloped, it is added, when a French punitive column was obliged to turn back because of the non-arrival of * a supply train. This train was held up by an at- tack on Syrian troops accompany- ing it. Perfect calm prevalled evarywhere yesterday, according to this infor- mation, and reinforcements are ar- riving. Suediah, chiet city of the Jebel Druz district of Syria, was reported captured by Syrian rebels in a des. patch from Amman, Transjordania, Thursday, it being said that the robels succeeded with the use of guns and ammunition which they had captured in a previous engage- ment with a French detachment. When questioned on Friday about the fiehting in Syria, the French foreign minister, M. Brland, declar- ed his information was not yet com. plete, but it appeared one French column had been surprised by the Syrlan rebels. He believed, how- ever, that the French high com. misioner to Syria, General Sarrail, had sucient troops to deal with the rebels. MOTHER WILL RECOVER Parkersburg, Jows, Woman, Shot By Own Son, Not Expected to Die, Doctors Assert. Parkersburg, Iowa, Aug. § (P— Mrs. R. J. Vandervoort, wite of the Methodist Episcopal pastor shot to death Thursday night by their 17 vear old son, Warren, probably will recover from two bullet wounds in- flicted on her by the youth, attend- ing physiclans deciared today. According to the physicians, Mrs. Vanderioort was fully conscious and passed a restful night. The tragedy in which her husband mct death has not been discussed with her since yesterday when she declared her son had shot her. DO NOT VIX GUILT | Washington, Aug. & (P—Inter state Commerce Commistion invest. igators, who inq ware, Lackawanna and Woestern become | STINNES ESTATES NOW FACING BANKRUPTGY, SR | Report fn Berlin Is This Will Be | Case Unless Banks Give : Assistance ! Berlin, Aug. 8 ()—The Rheinisch- Westfaelischo Zeltung at Lssen, gen- erally regarded as the mouthpiecs | of the Stinnes family, today ex-| | presses the view that unless the group of leading German banks, | | headed by the reichsbank, which carly in June undertook to support | the liquidation programme of the | Stnnes interests, alters its methods | the great concern left by the late {Hugo Stinnes will declare bank- ruptcy or ask for court supervision ot its liquidation. | Tho Stinnes Journal says thoe |banks have been unwiliing to as. |sume additional cbligations and also | charges that they demand high in- terest. Mcmbers of the banking group categorically deny that there are any difference between themselves jand tho Stinnes family, | | On June § it was announced in ' Berlin that a group of the larger German banks headed hy the reichs- bank had decided to come to {he rescue of the Stinnes concorn with a credit of 40,000,000 marks, This tollowed revelations of a split in the Stinnes family, as a result of whicl | Dr. Edmund Stinnes the eldest son of the late magnate, withdrew the concern his father huilt Leaving his youngest brothe | to direct the family intercsts in con. sultation with his mother, The banks weer impelled to act throug fear of the effect which the collayp of the great machine would hay | the economic life of Germany, from up. r, Hugo on TG HONE, S5 6L (Cotninued from First Page) sked to look up the racords of the larrival of the Spas family from Ro- emia to estahlish em definitely the |BIr's age. A cablegram from | Prague has already announced that no birth records of the Spas girl |could be founa. NEARS JOURNEY'S END | Baron Byng, Govemer Genernl of Canada, Today 4s On Way Back to Civilization, | | Ang. 8 (P—Atter | of Winnipeg, Man | iourneying thousands miles | through the farthermost regions of | Canada's northern hinterland, 1 taron Byng, governor general f Canada {today was on his way back to civili- | zation. | No similar trip has ever before | | been undertaken by a governor gen | eral of the Dominion. e party en- coutnered many of the dships expericnced by the scattered popula- tion of that region and came personal contact with native Fski- mos, Indians and members of mis- sfonary and trading oufpost The party stopped at an fishing camp near Kitfigarnit the mouth of the Mackenzie river, fn the Arctic circle. The governor general's appearance was a surprise to the natives, hut they proved equal fo the occasion and enter |talncd their visitors at a breakfast |of fish and tea. SOLDIERS AS SUPLRS | Los Angeles, Aug. § (P Lighteon {hundred jobs as motion picture ¢x- {tras have been obtained in studing here hy 4 capacifate into Askimo near men ork, and in- last week 3.000 of filmdom'’s pav- roll went fo this type of serecen talent. The ex-service men ns |are cast as soldie Washington's cabinet had four members. ' oil operator, proved he red into the Dela- | iNg on her husband’s woik and inere asing the size of the for- tune he left. Then, three years wreck at Hacksttstewn, N. J., June | 16 in which 50 persons were killed | and 23 injured failed to fix respon- sibllity for the accidant, ) everybody by marrying Harry | advertising department of a Houston newspaper. The two are honeymooning in the east. WILL DECIDE ON Supreme Court to Consider {he | the verdi it | leac Builder of Fortune Is Wed— 5. Mellie Esperson, widow NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD TW0 BOMB EXPLOSIONS INNEW YORK EAST SIDE —_— CHAPMAN REWARD No Direct Casualties, But One Man Is Hurt When Dcbris Ialls On Him (ase New York, Aug. § (A)-—Two bomb explosions shook the lower East Side pearly today. The first occurred in tront of a barber shop in East Thir- teenth street and the second in front {of an adjoining grocery store. Windows in adjoining tenements and in the chapel of Grace ehurch | were broken by the bLlasts and such loxcitement was caused among the | 1talian resldents of the neighborhood {that the police had great difficulty Who is entitled to the rewards for the capture of Gerald Chapman, of Patrolman the Davidson & urtment storo last Oc- This question is expect. up at the September superior court for de- cislon ¥o that the $3,000 reward of- in clearing the streets ward offored by the Herald will b [DUt Joseph Bigico, proprictor of the 3 s grocery was injured when a shelf of hottles and tinned goods collaps- |ed on him. Bigico who had been aroused from his bed in the rear of the store by barking of his police dog, was hurled Into a corner by the fist blast, and the heavy shelved |goods fell on him as he lay on the be awarded at the sosston, The floor. He required hospital treat- identity of the person who wiil re-|ment. celve the reward has never been re-| Riglco professed to be at loss as vealed by the local pollc to the tdentity of the bombers and The Vottari capture Canada ' the police are without clues, A resulted from communications be- | search of the district proved fruit- tween Chiof Willlam C. Hart of the | iess. and a chief in a Ca-| e nadian town, who told Chiet Hart | OLIN FUNERAL TODAY that a man there had told him he‘ knew whereabouts of a man wanted here for murder, but who ! refused to divulge the information unless a reward was offered. State's Attorney Tlugh M. Alcorn was noti- | fied of the communications and he | immediately set the wheels moving with the result that a 100 reward 8 promnily proclaimed by Gover- convicted murderer James Skelly in Leventhal ( tober 127 to come sion ot glven o the proven captors The reward of )00, 6ffered for the capture or information leading to the capture of Giovanni Vottari, now serving a life sentence at Wethersfield for the murder of Jo- ph D'Angelo last September, will polica tha Former Acting President of Wesley- an University is to Be Buried in Middletown Today. Middletown, Aug. & (Rh—After vice the St. Thomas church ew York this morning the body in nor Trumbhy It 5 !ing president of Wesieyan university 15 posaibla, howaver, that the rarding of the reward for the ture of Chapman will ba put off until after the supreme court has had an onno S e A the appeal from Tt the finding |special train to be brough to M dletown for burial in the family plot |in Wesleyan cemetery where Mr. Olin's father fs buried Accompanying ths body case g ct of guilty on the of the superior court was not UpP- | special is a delegation of thirty per- held and a retrial ordered and Chap- | sons, mebers of the family friends man the reward would ;nq trustees of Wesloyan, The train not be pa idatall, for the mony was | js due in Middlstown at 2:30 o'clock offered for the captfe of "Patrol- 1), g T. Immediately attor arrival man 8kelly’s murderer, and not for | here the body will be taken to the Cierald Chapman himself, cemetery where commltal services | Divinity at Wesleyan. Front and Reserve Forco Gets | Sunday Morning Ceremony to Mark i Anntversary of Wedding of Bride: Tz, French Moroesn, Aug. 8 (7)- Irench {Iving columns ave continu Ing their operations on various parts t the front, groom's Parents The wedding of Tsadore R. Rob preparing the way for|jnson and Miss Betty Pearlman will blow nzaist the rebel- | uke place tomorrow morning at the ¢ wiieh Wwill be eteuck | jome of Mr. and Mrs. Heuben Rob- fs genaally undersiool, 1f their|jngon pavents of the bridegroon, at Abd-1i-Krim, does not state | o family residence at 415 Stan- on the subject of peace by | oy stroet. The ceremony will form | part of the celebration of tha wodding anniversary of the parents A decisive lious Riffia August Carried out by fr. 15 sl troops, these operatlons are invariably suceesstul, | o pir. Robinaon. not only from a military, but \\J‘utf Rabbl Gershen Hadas will offl- is equally important, the moral point | o A reception in Hartford will cia of view, follow, tor many of the tribes which had been worked on by Abd-I Miss Sophia Lutwack will be maid Krims' subtle and persistent prepa- (o Jonor and Rudolph Robinson, | L and were inclined to join Wm | pyother of the bridegroom, will be ¢ have changed their minda, | best man. 1ly columng have inflicted a| \jjsy Pearlman is the daughter of netably severe check on the enemy| njrg, sarah Pearlman of 17 Laurel in the Ouczzan region, northwest of | street. Both young folks are de- | partment heads in the Besse-Leland | store. They will take a wedding trip to New York, Saratoga Springs and ez, 200 Kille tribes Riffians losing more than Llsewhere the rebellious men show a certain amount of activity, They still hold all the vil- 1505 on Ahe Bibane range and in{Atjantie City. Upon thelr return the Dar Romich reglon, five miles|{poy will reside in the Monroo from Taherrant | apartments at Monros and Arch In the cast, while the Taouls arel yireets, inning to abandon Lranes AbA-FI1-Krim fribesmen are still loyal Insulin;(iii.\'es Help ta him he encmy i3 creeping al % < {hroush hefween posts in the region | to Non-Diabetics, Too Paar Kaid Hedbeh, | Vienna, Aum. 8 (P—At the last S [session of the Austrian Medical as- Moo than half of the building |sociation investigators reported, and stone used in the United Stutes last [Others corrohorated, that the ad- 2 | ministration of insulin to non-dia- year was limestone, | betle persons resulted in an intense _ land healthy stimulus of the pappe- [ tite, enabling emaciated and conval- escents to eat thre to four times {what they had been eating and re- sulting in a rapid increase in weight. q fre soon after the beginning of the atment to prevent desugarisation of the blood beyond the normal de- This is considered as welcoms news for those engaged in the treat- ment of the early stages of lung af- | fections as well as unsightly thin- ne | In some cases the accumulation of Afatty tissue was so great that it was [ found necessary to decrease the | i CAN'T SET SPEED TRAPS | | dnstices Warned to Stop “Prowling” | and Let the Police Hunt Tronhle | Hammonton, N. J. Aug. e | setting of “speed traps" and “pet. I ting party traps” by industrions jus- {tices of the peace must cease. A narning to this effect was given by A ant District Pro- entor Joseph Varbelow, founder of School for Squire: The assistant prosecutor caution- [ed tha jystices against “night prow- ling.” and ordersd them to remiain In their offices not to go “hunting tronble.” but to permit the police officers to bring it to them §— vesterday the APPLY FOR A “SCOTCH” NAME The Deminskis Think Conroy Suit- able, But Judge Poud: | Clitton, N. J.. Ang. 8 — Nacalie Deminski and her brother, Anteny, 1 Hamilton street, appeared be- fore Judge Willlam N. Seufort yes- 1e to find a suitable name a wealthy Houston, Te CLEARING HOUSE v 0 Ithy Houston, Texa Nes YorkTanaty RS Tia o if an able business woman by carry PRl el i and trust companies for the } after his death, she surprised |snows excass reserve of $18.757.420 . Stewart, a v o man on the | This is an ‘nerease in res ¢ L€ i, Young man on the 710,450, compared with when excess reserve $5,048, aggregated of Stephen Henry Olin, former act- | {who died last Thursday at his home | in New York was placed aboard a | 25th | {terday with the request that he change their name inte ome of Scotch lineage. They suggested that Conroy would do very well. Jndge : Seufort, whe is of German descent, i o8 remarked that he was quite willing Ao e 0 to make a changs if ned be, but| oe&) conld not make Conroy Scotch o0 | The case was held over until Ang. | {24, when further attempts will be SATURDAY, AUG UST § 1 Sells Werms to go with |an n | Henry I'vost, 12, 15 a regular busi- |ness man, He heard a fisherman in | Davis 925, HODVER CONFERS ¢ Secrelary of Commerce at, Swampseott Today | Swampscott cretary Coolidge's en, Ihe commerce head planued his trip | over depurtmental the invitation |jubilee celebration next month in 5 I'rancisco. cant at this time also, in view of the | dispute between {and miners over It wa the visit was arrunged without pa and in the w event of tions, however, the executive would | | conter with cretary Davis ment decide to intervene, of George C., Martin, National Geographic society's expedition to the Katmal shortly after the cataclysmic tion of Katmal voleano in 1012, who led the first reglon orups June, WITH CODLIDGE 'KEEPS HIS PROMISE \ AFTER HE GETS RICH Once Poor, Now Wealthy, But Con- Mas Aug. 8 (P 5 g One- . Hoover was on President | HRUes to Give One-Afth of In sement list today. come to Religion. Chlcago, of the triple tion and re¢ duy at the His visit is signifi- | A G. Koenlg, has resun: at the university Ho started his course fn 1017, but lack of funds caused don it. In 1921, Aug. 8§ (P—A romance tincture of- oil, educa- glon was disclosed to- University of Chicago once & poor teacher, questions to present attend a exceutive to and him to anthracite operators A new wage scule, stated at White Court t him to aban- when he had saved ticular reference to the anthracite |¢nough to produce a small income, | | situation. Mr, Coolidge feels that |he made twou pledges. the government should not take a | One, that he would give one-fith of his carnings to the Lord manity, and that would continue in the teaching pr fession as the best field of huwan servi He began teaching at Maxia, where he made a wise investuient in negotiations, In suspension of opera- | and hu- the other, he Mr. Hoover as well as | should the nferred hors with the pres- | his home town of cansas City, {ident before his departure for Eng- land that had a gas well which un- | Kans., kick about having to dig land. from where he will return on | der his analysis showed a gasoline orms, so ho undertook to supply 25, a week hofore the present |content. It was found and his year- hem. He digs and sells worms by |anthracite wage scale agreement ex- |19 income increased in six montha |the dozen, fattening them on corn |Pires to §100,000. The samo year he imeal, and on Saturdays his eurr Seevetary Hoover 18 the fourth |8ave $20,000 to education and char- often total as high as $5. member of the eabinet to come to Ity w Court to confer with the | WNoenig says he helieves in the effi- > = president. He has just returned €acy of p * and has found th P h e ML from California to take part in debt it harmonizes with seienti OIE Pll.]h GRI‘JE[S funding tiations in Washington. | thous e reconciles moder, {Vrzes Men of Anuapolis Schoolship fhe transaction of official husinoss | —_— / wern planned by Mr, Coolidge at the | | &lous Zeal, s e { — | Rome, A $ (M—Pope Dius ves Al A\?u I New London Man Charged With A(- terday received in audience & party 1], AU\ of thirty Amerlcan saitors from. iy, | M BURAIRL ! | temntng To Steal Pockethook achoolship Annapolis of the Amert- ADBL I | From Coat In New Britain Home, can Naval Academy i [ The pontift delivered a short ad- | TRENY | Harry Minson of New London, dress ging the seam be loyan e {who has been held at police head to their country, ta perform their |, t o |anarters since Thursday night on a duties to maintain diseivtin: wner Ge00yaphic Board il pt Ten | enarse o suspicion, was booked on all circumstan He > rged | 10U0 ABLC boar 0pLS 160 a charge of theft this morning, Min- that they disti olves for l‘ . I M |son was taken into custody after he [ patriotism and veli or Latest s is alleged to have been caught by The Pope also re Vol LI | I'rederick Elliott of 30 South High grims from the mations of | : : street in the act of stealing a pock- Mary in the Uni 1 by Washington, Aug. 8.—The decl-|eihook from a coat hanging in the | Samuel A hop of 'slons annonnced by the United States | qaoprway of their home, Toledo: the Rev. M. A, Clark, rcefor | Guographic board atter its last mect Elliott told the police that Minson of the Collego of St. I'rancis Xavicr ing of the summer include the adop- | went to his home in search of a of New York, and Rev. J. I [tlon for use on all government maps | voom and was told that fhere was| O'Reilly rec of Josepl's the dast ten names bestowed by Dr. | none available at the time. He left chureh, Philadeiphia [obert I Griggs, leader of the {and enfered another doorway into rims pros with rs’ ( feographic m sci- Attorney General Sargent came hero |€nce and religion, saying there are h \l ¥ [ AMERIG[\N S‘UL{\‘RS esterday 1o ®o over departmental SPiritual laws which transcend ma ; auestions. Moetings hera with ;terial thines and remain outside the Tt mewbers of his official family for |Pale of analysis, ciety's Ala ¢ hall in which a coat was hanging. a penee donation and - expeditions on natural features ex- | I2lljott said that he watched him and an album confaining their sisnatures | plored and surveyed in the Katinal |saw him taking the purse from the jand also offerings for the church to | national monument region coat pocket. He called the police be eercted in the catacombs. Pop The mes, which have already [and held the man until they arrived Pius gelivered an address in ' appeared on the maps published hy | Investigating the man's past his- he expressed thanks for ti the National Geographic society, but {tery, the police learned that he has which now are to appear for the first |a lengthy police record in New Lon- time on government maps of Alask don Mount City Iter Lake Brooks IFalls, Lake Brooks, Iuitons | Grosvenor, Lake Coville, Bay of l.~1‘mnls‘! LEUROPEAN RATES CUT The'pe have heen 1 d by St ! o Montreal, Aug. $ P—Drastic cuts 1 lls, age 1 s 'as: Martin J \ S in frelght and passenger rates from the commissioner of motor vehicles | crael, Mount Martin Hotdnes o0, S R that the operator's i of Wil- Pwo Neteworthy Lakes isems ; ). T, R ; ST i R \ian B | British shipping interests, W. T, lam Andryziek has heen suspend Lalke Grosvenor and [ Coville, | . | T — [atag Dr. Gt _ ' | Preston, Canadian government rep- i ¥ [ent of 1 Natlonal (avenOf | resentative announced today on his | 73 UL phie Society and for Dr, 1 Erlevent Phlas wii Ba sub te 16 | B S V. Coville, Chadrman of the Society's I BTONE TRIBSIY 6 ouL Lo | Standand, Gulf and Aflaniie An. h Committ each, cattle from Canada to British ports to $15 a head, and morchan- spectively, lle 10 the northeast of the Katmal Mon- ! AR i dise rates will be reduced propor- nounce Reductios jut Not in UM Aince; Reduclion Lake Grosvenor is 28 miles long | tHonately, el | Connecticut District, aind has heen deseribed by surveyors The fisht against the shipping | s the most heantifnl body of water | C0mbine fs now on Mr. Presten | New York, Aug. 8 (®—The fank iy (his part of the Alaska peninsula, | Sald. | wagon price of gasoline was reduced |1t ig shut in on ol sides hy high, |one cent & gallon today in the terti= | fapest-elad mountains, but may be tories served by the Standard Oil |, ed by an easy portage of a W L |Co. ot New Jersey, the Gulf Refin- |mils and a half from tho Tay of Is. altlng |ing Co, and the Standard ONl Co. of [lunds or by ending Savonoski MR. AND MES. TAWRENCE {Loulsiana. The Aflantic Refining | itiver, which flows into Tlivk Arm LATON Co. will follow with a stmilar Lake Coville §s also surrounded hy rease Monday. ne The cut was started Ly the ard of New Jepse followed by the other e The tSandard of New and was quic m Jursey's new | of | quotation in New Jersey is 18 cents North Carolina 19 ¢ lina 19 |D. C, 18 cents, nts, South Caro- | civ 1l Washington, ' Pittsburgh Ausky eity, but her ba mav 2 girls certainly Pittsburgh,” Miss Mildred Walker otherwise known ographic so- peak rising to et just within s af the Katmai National vl overlooking 1luk e south, Buy of Islands to 1 and lake Grosvenor to Studded With Granite Islets s is an arm of Nak- Wt north o onal monument 1 hody of water stu han 100 forest-clad Lirooks lies fo the sonth m" lale and is separated from r hy h mountain, It | o Na hy a short, swift i t hles over a ledge (n feet high forming ills. It was at this fall Oreg | of the Katmal ns, did especially valuable | ng the season of 1915 Geographic Harhor Route | Enid, Okla, Aug. 8.—Lawrence Pass was found by |Eaton has gone back to the prison Hagelbarger, who was a escaped from—has gone volun- f the 1917, 1918 and 1919 | tarily, with a smile. Tn 1919 Dr. Griggs de And Mollie Eaton, whe sent him try to find a feasibl vack, Is going fo wait until his six- Geographie harbor (the ar term is over—and then they're n for future visitors) to |going to resume their honeymoon. Ten Thousand Smokes. Eaton, a fugitive from Wyoming. mpanion n ¥ | married Miss Mollle Luback of Sem- s which now rs hisinole, Okla., under the name of ation of 1.000 feet), | Moore. Then, after tha marriage, m N. Heming sur- | he told her he was an escaped con- peninsula lying be- | viet raphic harbor and Kinak | She insisted that ha must go back s hoped that some day an|and finish his term. 8o he surren- ghway will go ever this red to the polica here and told his Wng up the natural mar-|story l region to the outside But before he was taken away he and the girl were married again « and Maunt Martin This was in case the first mar- voleano near "flv‘rnnr performed while Eaton was t corner of the menument) living under an sssumed name, amed ¥ ns which 1 to 3.000 feet. ed with Lake Grosvenor it stream named in honor vice-presi- oree, of the society's 1he salmon ledge at 1t was 1oy fish were n Roth the named in Alfred H. | the hour occur on a river, have ition of the entomol- 1ecog ¥ Dr. Griggs in honor should be held fnvalid. is study of chemistry | TER ACOUITED - INBOSTON St Pickwick Trial Now Is to Be Speeded Up Foston, Aug. 8 (A—Ten of the 1§ defendants fndicted for manslgughte er in connection with the deaths of 14 persons In the collapse of the Pickwick elub building on July 4, were discharged in the Suffolk sy perior court when Judge Lummug ordered the jury to return not guilty verdiets. | Counsel for the 10 defendants res quested Judge Lummus 1o direet an jdequittal for their clients after the government rested its case, Counsel for James J, Hendricks, city of Bog. ton building inspector and Lawrence Parkins, contractor's foreman, the two remaining detendants, did not request such action because they sald they intended to introduce more evidence. After the jury discharged the 10 defendants Judge Lummus stated {that he intended to speed up the trial, which ended its third week |yesterday, court adjourning until Monday. WANTS 0 GIVE SCOPES CHANCE Scientist Anxions He Should ‘ (et Education New Rrunswick, N. J., Aug. 8— | Dr. Jacob G. Lipman, dean of the New Jersey agricultural station here, |hag with other scientists, sponsored a plan to raise $5,000 to finance John | T. Scopes in a three-year graduate |course In science at Rutgers college |or some other suitable institution. Dr. Lipman was one of the scien- |Usts called by the Scopes defense, land his views on evolution were in- icorporated in the written argument submitted by Scope's counsel during |the recent trial at Dayton, Tenn. *“I'he young school teacher, John T. Scopas, hecame the defendant in the famous evolution frial with ne |thought of any personal reward, but {With high courage in the face of public opinion,” letters soliciting lcontributions point out, *The wides i\m'v:\rl publicity which has been ate hed ta his name has left him en- tirely unspoiled., He {s still a mod- {est, unassuming young man, en. Itirely untouched by the events of [the past month, “When approached with offers of {glittering financial success 1f he |would appear on the lecture plat. |form or vaudeville stage he refused | with the comment that he does not |know enough about evelution to Jec- [ture concerning it and fhat he would |merely be capitalizing undeserved | publicity.” ty Professor Maynard M. Metcalf -ig chairman of the general committes to raise the fund. Professor Kirtlep Mather is vice chairman and Watson Davis and Dr. Trank Thone - of | Washington are sccretary and trease urer, respectively. Teading sotenti. fic men have agreed to act as region. al chairmen, BUILDING COLLAPSES |One Known Dead in Mexico City Tragedy—Slight Farthquake Bes lieved Responsible. Mexico City, Aug. 8 (A—The body of 4 man was removed this evening |from the debris of a building which collapsed early yesterday afternoon in the Avenida Madero, the main ivenue of the capital. It is thought several other persons are beneath the twisted beams and masonry, The building was under repair and several workmen were inside {when the walls crumbled and the building caved in. A sharp earth. quake shock shook the city at 1:14 p. m. and it is believed the undulae tions displaced the props holding up the buildir NOT VICIOUS TILT, HE BITES So Recorder Rules in Clearing Police Dog's Reputation Montelalr, N. J., Aug. 8.~Viehy, a Belgian police dog with a record, |once again in a free dog and once |again he can roam the streeta of | this town with his head in the air, | Vichy, owned by Byron Hanks, & lawyer of 43 Scouth Willow atreet, recently was charged with being vicious. The complainant was Mrs. Mary B. Waring of 43 Union street. After a trial in the police eeurt vesterday Vichy was vindicated when Recorder Henry W. [Trimble held that a dog was not vicious until he had taken his first bite, Vichy was | fread Yesterdayv's trial was a renewsl of the case which opensd three weeks ago, when Vichy's owner brought 20 | witnesses, who testified that the dog was peaceful to every one. Vichy |appeared before the magistrate at |that time and lay at his desk | throughout the trial. Martial Law Not to Be Invoked in Oklahoma Oklahoma City, Aug. 8 P—Mars tial law will not ba inveked {a the Henryetta coal mining distriet of Okmulgee county unless disorders how a serious increase, Gevernop Trapp indicated today. The gevers nor feels that Sherifft John Russell |18 handling the situation satistace torily Governor Trapp =ald Colonel B. Li Head has returned to the Henryetts district from Fort Sill through ins formal orders of the state exeeutive and has taken 30 men with him. The National Guardsmen are stae tioned in Henryetta merely to sups plement the sherl foree, the govs | ernor said, intimating that he would | place mere treops at Russell's dise posal befors he would declare § | state of martial law. | G S, TREASURY STATEMENT The U. 8 treasury statement was not avallable at press time,

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