New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 22, 1925, Page 1

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FINAl EDITI | "STABLISHED 1870 HYLANS DI fllfTATE\ Pablisher's — Statement Shnws' Willingness fo Aid Independent MAYOR ATTACKS WATERMAN Claims Protection Interests in Demo- eratic Are Alding “Bnockdown” Republicans to Put Manufacturer Across, New ¥ atatement in the municipal yvmm\\ Aug Iph Hearst in his first formal eampalgn, published today, says he Mayor Mylan n in- | would back dependent candidate if defeated in the democratic primarles Septe m\ 16, Mr, Hearst emphasized that would by the ml: ment, abide mayor's Will ollow Hylan “I will do whatever Mayor Hylan | Diaz the his publisher California | ence | il | thinks best 1o, telegraphed from ranch. T have in the loftiness of I the s of his in “The obhject gire to accomy are larg: honesty n public public interest, ho to pre-election promises and equal fustice in go to the more prosperous and the less prespero alike. confid s purpose a acity political lender- which he and T de- h in public matte v the same, They ¢ 1if oyalty to the very i 1hle adl | v ment b Faplains “the Chofee” a chol tration ex- pecula hosses | “The hetween il bv an situation presents an honest admin honest man or priv ploftation of the public hy & tive financiers and corrupt whose records are discreditable and hose word {s worthless.” tovernor Smith, visiting at Cilens Falls yesterday, was ed if he s 1 w was on his vacation in the Adiron- ": i dacks, There Jsn't golng to he any vaca- | ! tlon this year,” the governor re-| pited. “T've got to pet back to New ! York an Jimmy Walker nom- inated.” | Hearst | Rapublic have descrihied the primary eampaign as a fight to de- | mine whether Governor Smith or | Mr. Hearst shall control N¢ York delcgates to the next democr 1ic national convention. Mayor Hylan's last opportnnity to | withdraw from {he primary er both the primary and the ¢ tion as @n independent candidate expired last midnight when Loard of elections clo i Jes nointed mayor runs ind must do so with a st him and risk the ief supporter, John H. Brooklyn leader, who would abide by the resnits primary and support the demos in the election Yer 3. Smith v, ne fhe y « as | tu 8 | out that if th pendently now primary defeat | Wi loss of his | McCooey l s i winning at Nov Hylan Repndiated State nat Willlam joined half a dozen otl senators \ho have repudiated the mayor and gone over to Senator James J. Walk er's Tamn y p because of thed L2 ayor's attack on Governor fmith's | J V0,000,000 hond issue proposal for ) e elimination of railroad crossings. Two ferms are enou for any man Senator Love sail. | The mayor confinued hiz speaking mpaign in Brooklyn : Ty Walker was kept the | sh C. Bronx. Mr. Tyl for sn est 5 fare, but e | or or mayor. Mr. Hylan, i by com John J. Lyons, one ¢ republican candidates, | go D. Waterman as the i stionary republicans, |, — knockdown™ eandi in \ aid of protraction in teeman Starts Monday will Williaw man his cam 11 S natdnte lso for the of \ Nebs, for leaders If of the Iz presid will : soeiall inva tv in bel Irea Feature Tight Wonderfnl Gowne 1t Success port Funetion Make Fire at Charlestown Navy Yard ‘h“cx ()ut \!nme\ N s faw arte out on ing they The fioor eping emoke was undetermined and about §1,000 damage was dona yard th out by | the fire I HEARSTTO FOLIOW Sovel R FROM MENTGAN PALAE E " TOGELL IN NEW YoRK > ery re |in President |raigned befor elf Inearly which as well as the claims to distinetion as sistant editor of Harvard, sald, ¥ pension | wor he strength complaint Ithe wlhom he purchase a m ... FINDS JAIL. BORESONE ‘Man Frects ana o0 Guests o New- SORAPPER) BATTLESTIP De ha anan and weil lighted EW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, am] NEW BRITAIN HERALD r"\ Uppressing Jews, Berkman, Zionist Lecturcr, Says and School Thous Sent Tnto Exile in Sibe- rian Wastes Gives Birth to 21th Rynagogues Child in 24 Year Closed and Aug. 22 wite of Yuma, has Lirth to her 24th child in of married old and he The 24th 1z Sanchez ¢ giv { ye “American Jews are nists, indeed, It very gaod New Mexio Judge Attacks Gasoline War Results in Big, ago, 1s a healthy girl is pursuing her duties only are living. dren wera The al houscho n of the 24 chil Al of the chil n ecutiye mat {canse ¢ |trit f thelr willingr to the cau those Jews Enrop &5 to plus the - | ne seve, lesire | dren subjects of | stern irn foreve n r to the that t 1 of ultimat Berkman r for the Nation Jewa of the 100, nan w countrics P born to re being no twins slestine of the \hers, novement s, declared New York, 1 al Federation of Amerien, in et stec [ ture I krainian in Eh \n afterr Berl i hall Grandson Freed as ? bolng (Cr ition r. Berkman Vagrant, Then Bor- ! #lohs {of th ist ruovems erent 1 America o glish M wish, , his & t mean ef has tra the and during A In master- ngua He oy in nterest Trows From Cop L Lt ing hag been in Besides ¥ speaks fluently Gern Hebren United States lecturing principally in an and German who | Thousands Barred From former | “The Jewish prople e was ar- |Furope would like more than any- {thin to be permitted to become | Amer Mr. BRerkman v for their States immi- s denv admission yearly some five thons 1 yet, that is just what wc these people, pre- from taking up thelr abode have harkened fo the hehind Ziontst are going into Pale tine. Four thousand from Po nd removed all tl helonging o the Holy Land last month alone “During the 7 three the n Berkman French, Rus- and Japane he has b Jewish, T New York, Aug. from the presidenti Mexico City to the si W York. yet Magistrate Richard ¥ niry in Jefferson Market Court rday was told of just such ip when a penr imed to be g Diaz 22 P—1tisa mansion walks ¢ an, An 1Tn the vagrant Amerlca andson of istern of Mexico him W thed him M. Diaz-( tald In preei sh The prisoner, of Aleon 1d homeless, perfect F had seen him cifizen unfortunate the Un as- of ation to all ar a at the helghts depths, Amor his that he |want, Iventea in America T movement an sav A or sy were London at post thus Oxford former ns- t English ns University, a and a lingnist e iguages and ofessor of Johns Hop- of those the of ven Iz several Indian Tn the War, an the avi v in t tired on mes ench arm after receivin sove nds. e man was arrested ar the Pennsylvania st A. on complaint of I. s ek secreta had lent DI of a last nig tion Y. M. from moven t epposition it is only the u t we have 1o t of tl shevil rt of 4 en Johnson, - who said! | dountry Garcia $47 on the promise to repay it soon us had painted some p res for which he had a contra Magistrate McKiniry dismissed the of vagrancy with which e defendant was charged and freed | » prisoncr, who leit the court room | th Patrolman Meehan, from obtaincd enough money to al. ank Fo- of the people th or the |gime to ¢ g tailure 30l ush 1 Ju very he recent] 1ders have he prisons anda people | move 0o ng Jewi ported {vo ae- for n rs in turn for in- preading Ulrainia under ari And with Tewish organized hould 1“”‘ pirati WAITS DEPORTATION, | “There in Russia d th mie > of is very bad. The soviet closed the Jewish syna e conntry rs have and sehools are endeay- ir might, aided by I band of Jewish communi all the Jews in R w1t this they can never t onist ment rmly impregnated souls; and this spirit with all ti and \\‘ihmut Country’ i'-'f,’,‘f Brings Writ to Ob- tain Freedom sia ¢ mo becon thei > too rovery people all Palestine, but with heir ned with wher story t es¢ want to their g0 to Jead every miove a like punis to turn it Boris Berl wherever he lec the tremendous fronting the ranks bo Is a king to nski hter is to be bro win 8, Thom 1 fniprisoned 1 nt threat v s 1 oW reason v et b er Kops onld 1 connty Attorney ar not cased s h from 11 Kknow a ! g shows stil s city e Ju 1 it Zionis vercome o theft tenc ionism overcom n ment cople of th 1 on 'nd confine S naty onee ir own il W ABOUT DEBT FUNDING Not Very Optimistic. Taking Bel- gian Terms as Precedent, Papers State. hood that commis Americ 1 sum up the CONVERTED INTO HALI Are t 1S us Atter 108 a pr lengt tions an cks of Minnis Available Tor ereeme etween ir trade . Et F tal uidating 1ch ereditors soldiers Smokes: ! ! t he armistice t nd pavable in ¥r n Ang. 22 (P hip 1 The from Tampico Trade det nents pre-armistice ot with ligations ne T These with HERCURY DROPS T0 %9 Thiz connection s Official Temperature Re- corded Last Night at Bryantville, b Mass Cranberry Bogs, 1 feet -:Mbmucw Iu lodg South Hanson, '. |regisared RUMANIAN PRESS TALKS | LONG ISLAND WOMAN ADVERTISING "5 4, 1 -1 spring |Mrs, alely as the pat of the Barion lam, SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1925, -SIXTEEN PAGES. y“ POLITIGAL FEUD | MOTORISTS RIDING | DUTCH" ANDERSON BELIEVED ENDSINGUNHIGHT| ALONG WITH GLEE! TO HAVE ESCAPED ON BOAT M\ sterious Craft Sighted in Gulf of Mexico Thought to Be Vessel Stolen At Gulfport, Miss., With Hance Slayer On Board. | | ‘ Pensacola Aug. 23 O 1S KTLED SELES FRON 16 T0 7 GENTS K ward, galled a small schooner-yacht which authorities A Edl[fll‘ Whn Slmnfs PEACEN AKFR Whao Gufs in Mid-West ! W. R. Gaston Golt of first were sus it was taken a would have Judge Tenhy Had Tinocked Natlonal Concerns Slash Figures in at Guifport motors Hi(r0! Macee new chief expressed the Tditro Mag \azimssacd e were without provi 1 of the growers here no order ed recently, % 0f the type of the g Tde known the 1 up at Guif- Suffers | Ffort to Drive Ont Independents | avried When Bullct Hits | —Many Stations Go Out of Bust- .\, tn Floor, paper men George “Dut robber and ere Shattered Arm CH Him—Manslavzhtor Charge Likely | ness, disclosed stores had Or that for ship's been fill v N, M between et night from it Tt two nmity grins and ing merrily in four| t vilssiy on from 1 Tiesda Gulfport have| by fhe ogganing gasoline prices. | troit-Wayne zhest In Decatur, | in the g are the lowest.| vation of t national concerns attempting Ditroit-Wayr ndependents have trim- | tha sehoons gallon 10| i {ho of thel have succumbed,| 04 pilot B nded until the war | sheola naval air station rs continue to fight. | whjeh made an uns es Down. for thestolen boat, expr { llef that Anderson and where the months, approximate- |ty 5 with the Tdea NEW ENGLAND llRAN(iE ~ INVITED TO STORRS: rals were com-, . suit for awhile and | fnisuspend=aitoglecinEmEnshiit 1IN0 0 Members ]‘]xp(‘clcd to fter six days the Lakeside down to 17 cents and the | A“e“d ('onference they will resume when AugustZl-‘.’G " go broke or sign an| tive to 18, T J — nited Stat auerq nited newspaper ed ahy, form stole The other is tie Danisl moorin ted iy midwest today, as Ve el n lers 2 (P the read resemblance to Anderson resnlt- rion here sterday a thor- aled that the man's pal himself ss jnst pily upon another of his ‘AMFRIIJAN AIETOR N MOROCCO 1S INJURED Col. Kerwood, of Phila., Was Original LaFayette Escadrille Member s rival ¢ Aug, ght of t by the ator Tenly Lass & arm Judze Leal safl be aper n terms missing craft fef Byrd of B. Barker, radie on sisp! was roleased ye police today mination, rey not Gerald Ch ho deseribed search tramp, sed the be- lering &0 added \\‘u"‘\ by cents a 5 Several ox wa when stations seay essul wer with many way his the to ? of the stations are selling at nd 13.9, state tax of cents a gallon, ' rger com- prices are 17.8, 15,8 and 20.8 x. The latter belng quotation Standard Ol company of !n s remained nhm Woonsocket, \a tant need atel after Attor respe him o vo 1'1\.1'& in arted it and 11ed to follow T.ase was Shooting “T regret more thar irals say “hattler: Dealer Cuts Low. Independent dealers in Kan: : Mo., have st d making er's Storrs, Conn., Aug. 22 (P annual gran lectu of the big even nge circies, will be held this Connectic Agricultural August 24-2 s A, Wh ¢ lecturer, is n ¢ ngements and made for an attendance 1ge: from all of the ingland states. At the regular jons, (e from Maine, Massachusetts Rhode Is nd, will e one anc t 1 5 day auto tours of Connecticnt L ori\\~ | Patlent, Operated on 13 Years Ag0|jne inqustrial, educational and his o e rical points of interest connection with il n“nm:.'p‘{m | dress the grange contempt Hiram Bingham, 1. i o ‘;:mlm.& Ohio, ,\(.1 t gran an T e e, ot & ',-'\‘:',[l mly[wl b » National Grange Iy and il and Hinkle 1 est of demet iconed grange delegation making the trip here Eiha Me nso Casablanca, French Morocco, Aug. (P—The American flying squad- o volunteering for service with the French a fered its f wvhen L Kerwor ing a S| fourteenth ce one resultant > rang 19.5 to 25.9 cents a gallon. On r operating six stations, has cut prices to from two to four cents! the prevailing price. OPERATION FAILED T0 | | MAKE HIM A GOOD MAN, pric casualty yesterday, nant Colonel Charles W. Philadelphia fell training fight. He was pain- but not dangerously injured. Colonel Kerwood was making his ht alone for some years. He anded at excess and his plane overturned, throwing him some distance. Comrades rust Turried his in, sever Char! i Mexi need o 10 was of Ne f tions prison ¥ o ¢ speed nitr to ken to the p Sent ar later and two +isit- Jail d to his aid and ! @ hospital, where uries were said to consist of cuts about the fage and a n arny, 1o airplane w Ay him to libel “This time it was ase. Leahy held b and sentenced uths' imprisonmer sentence, Jud, in the o to Correct Criminal Tendencies broke wer v ol Arrested. s a total wreck. Taber r\f Co M n ter M. Gardner oper Minneapolis, Ioward, UP—John who was ted on by court orders 13 years ago, in an ef- fort to correct criminal tendencics, | _ vas arrestde today by Minneapolis | police and confessed to robberics in r downtown buildings. | The case attracled national atten- on fn 1912 when a judge in district here directed a surgeon to operate on Howard, then 17 old, in an effort to remove pre rom his brain, on the theory ed Aug. Lieutenant Colonel Kerwood was | a member of the original Lafayette adrille, serving on the western front fn 1516-1917. He was shot lown in an areial fight early in 1918 ¥ the Germans. rmistice he became a utenant colonel in the air forces Greece, continuing in that posi- tion until the fall of the monarchy. He was one of the first organizers the volunteer squadron now in Marocco, of mont from 1 1 s said e to at 1 he ed hy"! maintaining the fo by last ad Malr tomobile, fair gr night, his assembled nds at Lewlston, e where John W. H 7 utant genr of Maine pa- tron, provided cot 1 To night the delegates will stop at the University of New Hampshire tomorrow night at the Massact feultural college. After a stop in Aeld, Mass, during Monday they » run to newspape on Leahy Started ack B court g Inyestigation i nd a o with havir Tkets, 1 st g ald- sure that credi of ! to black inve Wion scovery of the to begin training last Monday YOLUNTRERS TWO SONS AT COFFIN OF THIRD I s . his personal- | . iged com- out an parole, oud reforma- | Spri full pardon. That | morning, of him | §te “little Dome f was s of rum 100,000 in a suite: New Mexico.” veloped ¢ Farly 1424 witn m d the st youth Louis C he a I sl last police heard 1rrest today. told New Tlampshire | me the gs on Massa- in the egations will lead with police that in Sep- red from he 1 the surgeon who perform- | Mother Meets Body On Return From sday mornir 600 was L o fon then removed iat had been placed it Dome ’\' 1 Femald he h Riff Encounter and Proposes Additional Sacrifice Since then, nty spells s skull ris lling 1 When Howard was -4 ou was struck on the head by Welling nfe e edited | cirens ten Wealthy Mass. Woman Is Now Missing in Florida ¥l Aug. (P—Mian nd county authorities with private investig an effort to sol s disappearance of Mrs. Fl n, from the Poir 14, Aug. (M—A story re- he Roman mother who gave ive agnin of her sons for her is related in a story sent by 'e correspondent of the Temps in when his Bouzht Paper Trom Fail, mmons, MISS BRADLEY ENGAGED A Zaer young sheik belonging to the , whic i is a partisan «f the was killed during the re adva he news of the son's leath was broken to the mother as zently es was possible, uick t out to home body, taking with her. nore than a minute b her on which her first- threw herself before IPrench % ent had offere o 2 Miami 22 mpt o Prominent Chicago Girl, Related to & sons Judd and Tanders Families, to om two opy Marry Overseas Veteran, she i 1 to t rn lay, Shifted of Politic to Miami from Winthr be ofs at the hotel rinst Abd-El-Krim has killed one of my to the officer. *J e him wealthy said to replac ESCAPED KILLER CAUGHT IN HOTEL IN CENTRALIA Tom Turray Who Broke From Ore- und a note stating nt or de nue, thee two event of accic Madison ave address were not ed {Ci today FOR HER PANCAKE EATING TURTLE; ' jiooei i mon v o | FEARS PET OF FOUR YRS. IS UNHAPPY 7o i oty n antomobile gon Prison Week Ago, Double Crossed By Pal . An 7. = escaped from prison at cap- h a ruse today in a ho- g 22 kil 1e pet r of [ 4 r nd 1 and hibernated. Ce of Portland Vancouver persuaded it to accompany him to ¢ he pretended they would rob ouse had separated at Wash.. from lisworth Kelly 1 with him in the escape, Philip Carson ed M 1st night Wash., the con- ntralia. to the po an ray in and Mrs. R up the vnor satd, turtle after m in or its 1t 13 the eon of M Ma fast drove off with h White convlcts asse. and t them in the east ng Murray to a hotel called policemen and tted to arrest without HIGH TIDE (Stand: 11 ta August 23 arsor At New London, At New Haven, ay sub Rclman Parliament Not (0 Hold Special Session glum, Aug. 23 UP—-It cided not to call a spe- session of parliament for ratifi- cation of the Belglan debt funding agreement reached in Washington u pone the discussion until the parliamentary reopeniag in No- vember, DRIVE ON SHOWCASES THE WEATHER -0 Hartford, Aug. —Forecast for New Britain and vicinity Generally fair and warmer Sunday caused them | 'to be a nulsance, in the opinion of »-— ey @06 Who seck their removal. gainst the Riffians suf- | dur- | He arrived as Casablanca | meet the | Without | r who enlists tribesmen for | James Willos | Average Daily (irculation For Week Ending 12’041 Aug. 15th ———c— S L PRICE THREE CENTS COAL STRIKE Now BELIEVED GERT It Gomes, It Will Cost Miners $1,130,000 a Day in Wages 162,003 MEN ARE AFFEGTED As Anthracite Men Propare For Walkout Nine Dars Hence, Coal Mines Show Signs of Renewed Sof( Activities, Philadelphia Angust 31 and ; Witk of anthra ations looming b but nine days distant, the pubjie this "d on the at, able (o report develop- UL NO Progress toward ayert. ing a general tie-up, In Philadelphia the de, radlock in negotiations, broken off on August 4 at Atlantic City, continueq with {both Samuel D. Warriner, operators’ chief, and John L. Lawis, president {of the United Mine Workers of Am- |erica, out of the city | See Slight Chance Seeing slight chance of a renewal of the present hard coal working igreement before the end of the |month, when it expires, Rovernors |and representatives of the New. Eng land states, meeting in Roston, made plans to side-step possible hardship by arranging for the use of bitum. hous coal and other substitutes. Alan e Treadway, a representati in |congress from Massachusetts. advo- ;("le federal control of the entire anthracite {ndustry, | Operators including Mr. |ner, W. W, Ingl vite coal mining opey morning anxious mer remain Warri- chairman of the scale committee; W. J. Richards and |Charles F. Hubler, met in Scranton 'lo discuss developments. They is- :'mvd no statement. Mr, Inglis, in n interview given to the press wel- comed the efforts of anthracite re- gion businessmen to avert a Bsuspen- sion, which he declared would be “Indefensible” and a “business dis- |aster.” | Boom Ts Started Signs of returning activity fn bi. fuminous coal fields, long in the grip of depression, were evidenced by the decision of the Pennsylvania raflroad to increase its car repair force at Altoona. Six hundred of the 1,000 soft coal mines in central P sylvania are idle, but road offi- clals are preparing for renewed op- |erations in the event of an anthra- lmw shutdown. | From Pittsburgh came conflicting ireports regarding the reopening of 'Ih" Pittsburgh Coal company's ha- |ning mine No. 2, near Fayeite (‘iry, under the 1917 wage scale, The |company reported 122 men at work, while P, T. Fagan, district president of the miners, declared but 11 me n had responded to the company's call. . Officials of the Lehigh Valley Coal company in Hazelton suspended op- erations on a new tunnel, throwing many miners out of work. Officials sald work would not be resumed until a new working agreement for the industry reached, Have Good Supply Reports from cities throughout the state indicated that hospitals, |schools and other public institutions ‘h’hn been supplied in advance against possible shortage and will not suffer in the event of a shut. down. In Pottsville operators an- nounced that many locomotives and coal gondolas are fdle due to the {fact that the miners are stocking . Many concerns have notices giv- ing employes preference of fuel de- liveries. | 162,503 Men Affected | 1t John L. Lewls, president of the United Mine Workers America, calls for a suspension of mining in the hard coal fields of northeastern Pennsylvania when present wage contract expires on August 31, his order “will affect a host of men. tate estimates for 1524 placed the number of employes at 162 largest since 1915, Would Protect Mines The union, itse! uscs an approximate figure 000 today, and the 1f, for convenfence. of 158,- of these about 10,- 000 maintenance men® would prob- ably be left in the mines by mutual agreement with the operators. This skeleton force of pumpmen, timber- men and engineers would patrol the underground workings prevent flooding and cave-ins, Otherwise, some would lay down plumes of ste gir would and The crunching flow of coal t1 breaker nd be Paralysls would descen?! mines operated by | pantes controling throughout anthracite basins to 450 their N workers W holstisg e tools. ita am from droop sappear rou the wo upon al come s long. Would Be The walkout would ¢ = mine workers themselves In lost wages a sum estimated ,on tha t of $4 & at $1,150,000 a day The brunt of the tie borne by three of th less than a dozen companies, ze Lackawanna an counties produced t the entire anthra 924, figure show, | four-fifths of the me ful of corporations, a g-o ly owned In the main by rallroads, produce the “company coal” com- prising some $0 per cent of the en tire tonnage. The remainder is mined by “independents.” Principal Companies The principal “old line” ecom- panies are: Philadelphia and Coal & Tron Co., 46 collierles; Lehigh Valiey Coal Co., 23; Glen Alden Coal Co.. 17; Hudson Coal Co, 15; Le. high and Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., 12; Susquehanna Collleries Co., 10; Pennsrivania Coal Co., §; and Le- high Coal and Navigation C In the fields as a whole the pro- Costly ton, up would b 1ylkil quarters of output employed The hand- former- in (Continued on Page Twe)

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