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RAILROADS FEE] EFFECT OF STRIKE Tet Tp in Shipments as Coal I5 Cleaned Up Philadelphia, Sept. 2 (A—The an- thracite region, for all the hazy blue of its September hills today began to feel the aftermath of the mine suspension which for twenty-four hours had padlocked fts basic in- ‘dustry and demobllized an army of 148.000 breadwinne The business paralysis which the ten anthracite counties face Indefin- itely began to creep as expected down the rails of the roads carry- ing its coal. Outbound tonnage is practically cleaned up, and on its way to market. Tnevitable orders tor shutdown of shops and layoft of shopmen, car repalrers and {rain crews on mine runs have begun to put in appearance. 10,000 Face Unemployment Predictions that at least 10,000 railroad men would follow the min- ers into idleness by the end of the week because of the suspension ap- peared justified in reports that Seranton, Pa., alone wounld produce half that many unemployed. The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western railroad expects to close down its Scranton and Keyser Valley shops on Friday, throwing out 4,200 men. The Delaware & Hudson announced prospective layoff of 1,200 trainmen. and today completed placing in white lead fifty freight locomotives nsed on coal runs in anticipation of a protracted shutdown of the mines. The Lehigh Valley and other heavy tonnage roads are due with similar announcements goon. Union leaders of the threa districts are engaged today in smoothing ont differences developing in connection with the work of tha 10,000 mainte- nance men remalning in the o mines by mutual agreement with the operators, Some question i3 arising 4s to what is "mainte nce work'' and what “new work.” which latter falls outside provisions of frritafion, tha situatien is reported yielding to adiustment. Mine owners continue their as. | surances that they do not contem- plate importation of outside help in | attempt to reopen the workings. Ed- ward W. Parker, director of the an- thracite burean of information, said the state anthracite mine law pro- vided even additional security en this score, A miner must first gpend {wo years as a orer and then pasg an examination to become a full fledzed digger, according to the statute A noticeabls vorkers getting work In other fields developed Special excursion trains on varions roads carried quotas of "for- agers’ well as pleasure-seekers, John L. Lewis, international presi- dent of the miners’ union, has main- fained silence at his headquarters at v hotel " movement of mine | of to- out in search dav, as since tn say cominz alone Murray. in are hald- M. forn Tewis and Philip jonal tice-prestdent repre- | bituminous coal of the coun- described as s are said vepoarts. h union ng ¢ ntatis fialde arts nssion s the ag e nerely routine The nnidn leaders decline to com- aineoutside reports of plans on the Pl inint Lituminous-anthracite the mine unien part nf LIRA STRONGER N ROME BOURSE vatian Unit of Currency Now|:» Quated at Four Gents The Home this mornir 5 to the dollar fo 1 M (Par for the lira is 173 centa) Fame Rept Ttalian wae quoted on bours s first ot since late in financial and gotsrnmental eir- Blag sanies and arduo Credit for of vic battle tore in the leng of the lira. | th ally Fiven here to € nniver t Velpi, the finanee ministe Within a few weol has been built ¢ to the dallar valye from apy early to 30 Lelioved to Volpi's re gulations frad enlators rnment’s promnizated v campoign to reduce import v fac tors the prevaring deb 1 intention to invest in Twa contribut were 1ent's action of he t le solution of the war Vroblem 7 e Ttaly. Ameriean financier SN N PUTNAM 1 FADELESS DYES Go farther Last longer Dye better sre fresher and brighter when vou nse Putham. It is less trouble— more economicsl — a smaller amount goes farther. Putnam Fadelem Dye in inal one-package dye for all materials and purposes — dyes silk, cotton and wool in one operation. Use rame package for tinti Complete directions on package. rice 15 ceats. See color chart st your druggist’s. Use Pumam No-Kolor Bleoch to Remove Color ond Stains MOZART MUSIC ONCE REGARDED AS HIDEOUS Prussian Royalty Dubbed Selections as “Hellish” and Productive of Pandemonium, Berlin, Sept, 2, M—Not much was thought of the musiq of Mozart 125 | years ago by Prince Henry and Prince Ferdinand of Prussia. In let. tes addressed by them to Count and Countess Henckel-Donnersmarck it was characterized as "hldeous™, One | of the letters, dated December 15, 1800, says: “Last Friday a music: piece by Mozart (church music) was performed and admired by many, 1 do not mind telling you confidential- ly though that T thought it hideous, “It Is helllsh music and only re- quires a cannon to make the inferno complete, The instruments produce | a veritable pandemonfum of noiscs. T am told that this muslc is con- sidered to he educational. Well, my answer is that it is just like the Messiah written by Kopstock, which | is generally admired but which no ono understands.” | B.ANDM. TOHAVE SPECIAL WEETING Stockholders Will Act on Finan- oial Reorganization |on society {greater crime, Boston, 2 M of stockholders of the Bos- ton and Maine rallroad has called for September 23 to pass upu on a plan for financlal reorganiza- Sept. A special meeting been | tlon of the railroad which has been under consideration for several| months, In a statement sent out to-| day to stockholders the general re- adjustment committee, of which W. Rodman Peabody is chairman, an- | nounced that the plan having been approved by a large majority of the bonds and stock, the commift “feels that the success of the reor-| ganization is assnred and helieves the time has arrived for taking the | steps necessary to effect ft.” | Stockholders are now asked to| send in their stock under the pro- visions of the plan to be exchanged for new prior preference stock which | the company plans to lssue, Final ar- | rangements for extension or rencwal| of bonds as contemplated by the| plan must wait until khelders | have acted, the statement said In a letter to the committee, made public today with the statement, Homer Loring. chalrman of the ex- eculive commiftee of the railroad, described the general features of the &t The principal purposes of the re- ization plan are to give the ad ample time to regain credit by extending $43,500,000 bonds matur ing f 5 to 1932 and to pro- vide additions rovements. 313,000,000 stoc! and to be realized nece stock will be | period of improvements as | side tra grade | f et expeeted that the |- il el from prior pr expended over for profita new equipment, reductions, donble facilitles, ete. Tt is expenditure of this monev a three | | turn to the road through better sery. | ice and operating economies from 12 [ per cent to 18 1% real estate transfers | recorded at city hall Abraham Wintz has transferred | A | F | ed proper- | properte on Ta t street to Z Taffe and Mafo ol Burns et al hate trar tr on Cherry steet to Fy Manzi, Paclo d property Miastkawsl Tohn ice and Car- mela fran Ann has fransferred | 95 Broad street | Aline | proparty at No [*o imierz Kozlowapt o Nolan rty on Mill street ta Albert Paga netty has fransferred pro- and Tony Palumbe, Joseph | Reska have n Gold street | Anton Kostos- Slater has fransfer- 3h Greenstein property on Murrav Tennia Pierpant transferred propertr at No stect to Max Kennedy Ferzan Maryanna frarsfor o Alex K kl. C'atherine G red 1o stast has 129 ! Camp ADVANGE PLAN | Segregation of Mental Deficients ! permanently segregating | Hickson, director of the courts ps |chopathic laboratory, |ing the last 11 yes |pr | whom had lang eriminal records in [ Main the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1925, [BOOZE TN PINEAPPLE SHIPMENT 15 SEIZED ar, Labelled T0 STOP CRIVE| “Perishable Goods," ‘Was To Have Been Sent To Key West Havana, Sept. ®—A goodly |stock of whiskey and cognae, which |1t was Intended to ship into the United States, was elzed yesterday at Bianca, province of Ha . The {llquor had been cleverly concealed /in a carload of pineapples. The car |was to have been shipped to the [United States by the Key West {terry and being labelled “perishable goods” the smugglers had depended pon the car being moved north. ward with rapidity when it reached | American territory. After the selzure, three farmers wers arrested. They denfed any share in the plot to send the contra- | | band across to Key West and sald an | American owned the lquer. The scized wet goods were valued ap- proxtmately at $100,000. Advocated New TYork, Sept offer to rld a city of 3,000,000 population of all crime by 3,000 men- A more standing | | than tal delinquents who are marked re- peaters is in final form for tho next | the legislation, | says an Assoclated dispatch session of 1inois Press from Chicago. The Harry Olson of the of Chicago, and Chief municipal court Dr. Willlam J. offer is from J!H&(Il'n‘ in which d fendants in more than 40,000 crim- | inal cases have bee amined 4]!“'- Problem in Psychology The efperience of the laboratos has brought Judge Olson = | Hickson to the conclusion hat erfie EUROPE CRADLE tration, and that the root of the 1 s debiney renarrs o mens- | SKULL That Makes Bible Events| Seem Recent Found [ble of interpreting punishment as and retribution. | mstead of committing offenders to ons and reformatories for slort sentences and then throwing them again, to commit Dr. Hickson proposes L permanent industrial farm colony. where the delinquents conld live (000 to 30,000 y lives adjusted to their peculiarities, |"°82N to be " may He would make the colony largely {00 t2ken vidence that Europe was the cradle land both of man self-sustaining, and in addition | sorad e anc oot 3 would save upward of $7.000.000 an- |14 Of his culture, Sir Arthur Keith M Al |famous anthropologist, told the Brit- nually of Chicago's 215,000,000 I ; budget for policing and criminal |ish Association for the Advancement ) e of Science yesterday. ol skull of which Sr Arthur {spoke, a model of which lay on the | {table beside him. is that discovered Ihy Varneis Turville Pefra of fhe British School of Archaeology, a few ines meionlty the delinquents fyionths ago in a cave on the north the criminal bent is manifested In lery shore of the ot Gallleeinear some minor offense during the period |ihq o e of adnl nanm. where Christ performed many By segregating offenders of His earlier mi mental debility or emotional insta- | This discovery, Sir Arthur said bility the Olson-Hickson {“makes all the Biblically recorded would prevent their later ents, whie hheretofore seemed fo | serious crimes finark the very beginning of history Many records arc cited hy Dr. (beeome the happening: v Hickson in support of his theory that [da There was evidence, he said | feeblemindedness is a factor [that this early man was capable of | yerforming a simple surgical oper- ition probably by means of a stone instrument “From this discoter Arthur continned, “"we can sav that in re- times, the dominant of mankind spread abroad a rcradle land, carrying their particular methads of life with them juntil a large area of the warld was leavered. The balance of the evid. lence found in the Galilean cate favor of Europe being the cradle- land of both man and his culture The Capernaum 11, the speaker [2219. belonzed to a species of man- [kind profoundlv different in struc- {fure from all living races, not our ance but the our ancestor.” Tt was a mis Arthur added, to look up this ma or the Neanderthal man as for while the features certal more ape-like than those of any living this man had a brain [*hich in point of size. 1f not in or- |zanization. “reached modern stand . |ards at least.” Mr. Turville-Patre's discovery, Arthur said, sl alw among the most important events ot our pre-histors Sir William Bovd Dawkins, profes {ser of geology and palaeontology in hiS ictory university and another not rest anthropologist, fold the scientis had before them g 1 FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH will be g of the First Lutheran church Fridav evening for Emil Lar- n wha will leave the eity for Flo Houthampton, e skull of vho lived at England, n ancient Gali pernaum some s before mira performed there.” m - Sept Mental Deficiency Factor The laboratory's records mental daficieney as the prime factor in Chicago erime. and also that in a show of site the 'nd more (¢ major nt rralgned 63 per e rated in term of the Bova! marons and 531 clopaths. Only 1.8 per average intelligene: Less than have been in ' Sir cent fimote fype | from s today, 5 per cent of the hovs chool until past 14 83 per cent have not nth grade personal histories ed in this group Percentage of the reached Many st were in A large boys were found | it have been the offspring of men Aefertive ot parents, some “hicazn, whe was \Hum\ns-‘ TICENSES Licenses to marry sued by City Clerk as follows: Alfred A ter at Berlin, and son af 712 McMintoelk street, Fred Forshaw of 06 \West Main et and Emma L. Plaasant of street Jacoh Soltio of 15 {artford avenne and Anna Bereshik of 143 Tarmi avenue have bheen Iy L. Thompson Barrett Alice E. Nel. A post now St on ys rant Awav Sept, (P — Pr fomes, who has been adyised by a complete Will leave shortly GOMES GOING Tishon 2 jant rhysicians to take 2t Viehy for thalenat tne of 2 mi French watering place, trateling in A farewell party the parlors Folk B here had a grnd langh reeent expense of an Indian ra- | 1)ah had a habit nf walk the s and money anyone at the iah. Th rida where he intends ta enter tho | ‘The officia! church will FPlans for the fall and winter activities will be made sening tamarrow ing alo prome dis who real Loard of the morroT ey fributing ta meet to- Inoked as if they needed it met Trincess Victoria, King Grorge rajah pulled a 5- franc plece from his pocket and of fered it The 8o when | ening he sister of 'afternoan was | accepted ta her sa HERALD CLASSIFTED FOR RESULTS very much amused READ THE ADS maney SEPTEMBER 3rd SAVINGS DEPOSITS made here on or before bear interest from the Open Saturdays Six to Eight P. M. Standard Time TTEIIITITLIITIILLITLILNLL n{immmnmmmnmmmmm R T LT R L LT LT L e e e LR L L T EE L L L LT TR T LT P L P R T T SR S e e H STt Aerial Mail Between F Buenos Afres, (Pr—A F Prince Charles Murat and M. Portel head of the Latecoere Alr company, | has arrived here for the purpose of | closing a contract tine government for an aerial mall servica between France tina, The steamer e and Dakar, § $93342044432242422273200022 01 2eee IR eeRg e ot ettt LR e et e Rt EesesRTIRIRRRSI SR IRRIRLILILL rance and Argentina Argentina, Sept rench air misslon headed h\ | nites Chemjeals—22 ¥ with the Am‘"'l and Argen-| West Orange, NivTS | A chemical explosion t also calls for a fast| origin, last night vice between Pernambuo| of the Thomas. A enegal. pro 1EXPLOSION IN EDISON PLANT INJURES THREE' Spark Created by Belt Friction l‘gv‘wmn\..l to Orang smploges Escape Uninjured Septy 2 (- of shook Ediso | and caused dangerous bur the plant | n company 8 to three DII e tiatieiidastsss v eett pecullar | employes, {icita vt shop, [ tle tion whe: si3saivs i e 1 he one A huge el gnited fire broke story Twenty-two others es- caped without injury by | through exits and windows, The Injured are Bico Me his brother Anthony Mesce, 86, and Leonard Zambrie, 40. They wer e Memorial hos: out in the chain against chemleal powde ston and a blind PR R R S R e T ¢ leaping , 80, bake structure, where rhonograph records are made brit- spark caused by fric- of a pulley a or used In the manufacture of records. | A defeaning explos Ing red-green flame swept thre the room. y The two Mesces and Zambrie, * nearest the spot where the slon occurred were. entrapped. ! the flames, but managed to to the street with thelr elathll. ublaze. The Orange Fire De ment was called and used chemicals {to extingulsh the blaze which caused damage estimated at $5,00 A memorial to Walter Camp, fath. of American football, is to be by the National (ollo‘hu association, o |er Athletic AN ppARI9%, School is near; Some \\‘ill go joyfully—others will dream of a won- derful fairy world where school is never heard of; school doors open we shall see hig boys, small hoys, hig girls, small girls, o filing back, clad in their new trim clothing. Clothing that is good look- ing, well made, serviceable and economical! hought at “D). & 1.”"—Come and see the clegant selections! In other but anyhow, when words, Clothing Piece Suits $9.75 to $16.75 LONG AND SHORT PANTS Also COAT AND TWO SHORT PANTS Euits tailored to fif e a bo It tn a enappy appearanee Vet f ate B heap of abuse cause fhe colorings, materials are eturde Tn Al Mixtures, Hairlines, etr new Sizes 7 to 1t 2nd Fl1) (D&T Knickers—Sizes 7 to 16 Straight Pants— Cardure ANl Wool Materials v Suits $3.95 to §5 en-On and Ol Nice gelection $5.95 to $10.95 Tumber Boys' Novelty Suits with eombination Fabric Pants $2.95 fabrie k tops Wash Suits Tinen Impoarted Tersey an 95 to § e Boys In Broadeloth, Materials. Boys' Fall Hats $1.00 to $1.95 Fe Polns, Tnes M ; trom 2 Its 8 In an elrgant variety Choiee —————————————————eee] Rubberized Raincoats Sizes 14 tn 42 $5.95"$7.95 " $4.95 ANl Colors B — ) Ready! A Special Department Devoted Peneil ough an t Stouts—For pleasingly plump lads .. Regulation Sailor Pants, pair at pes, Tweed, (Mt D — Roys' and Girls Brief (ases $1.25 and 81.98 (D& Third F1) e Boys' Blouses Ql nn and $1.50 Atterns (D&T Repps, New to Boys’ and Girls' School Bags 19¢ Upwards (D&T Children's 73 < 50c Pair lish or 7 colors, (D& 010 S\&4» ain Wayne Knit Hose Riack Main FI Third Fl) Boy s and Mistures “M-iss Winféld" Cloth Dresses $15.00 to $29.00 TRE TAILOR ED FROCK FOR TOWN, SCHOOL AND COLLEGE WEAR Specially adap styles a tai the Fanltle colorings ine Cathedral Sizes 14 to 20 To Boys’ ch!{er,. and Straight Pants A nd Fl.) ted for the school miss as re conservatively smart, lored models in the newest luding Blue, Rosewood, Queen Bird and Maple Shrub. (D&L- 2nd Floor.) 83.95 1 the new colorings Girls" School Dresses $1.95 to $3.95 In Broadel a splendid va rlety of the oths and Noveltles new Prints, 7 to 14. Girls’ Balbriggan Dresses $5.95 Also a grouy » of the very newest novelty effects. Sizes from 7 to 14 years, Kiddies’ Inel as well (Girls’ Toies, Turnbacks; Dresses at $3.95 to $5.95 nded are All Wool Botany Challis Dresses as Balbriggans. 2 to 6 years. Fall Hats $1.95 to $5.95 l‘.’\snlnnvrl of Velvet or Felt. Shapes for all head sizes, Girls’ Sweaters $1.95 to $3.95 In plain Finest Quality Shirts Ql 75 and § Oxfords, vin or fa Collar attached v checked patterns. Main F1.) and Jacquard effects. Stylish and Comfortable, (D&L—2nd FL.) All wool, r,nn!~~n<