New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 15, 1926, Page 3

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FIVE DOG TEAMS START | OFF ON TWO DAY RACE 1. DEMOCRATS IN | PANIC OVER SMITH Runouncement of His Retine- ment Comes as Bombshell New York, Jan., 15 (A—Reitera- tion by Governor Smith of previous announcements that he will retire | | Road Conditions for Annual Maine Event Are Reported as Being Excellent. Poland Spring. Me,, Jon, 15 (@ | Five dog teams were off to a start this morning from the Mansion | house In the two day race of the | conditions wers declared to private life at the end of his Although the snowfall here has present term has thrown a declded | been only recent. bombshell into state democratic | Three politics, What effect his decision will have on the national campalgn in 1928 is & question recelving much attention by political followers. In many quar. ters it is felt that his chances for the democratic' presidential nomina- from New Hampshire towns were the dogs of Arthur T. Walden of Wonalancet, N, H., of Walter his animals from the same line with this, that he will be {u a visions of his financlal b M Doumer has announced the govern- | ment's intention to maintain the | Hssue Will Be Fought Out in New England Sled Dog club. Road the excellent to play politics and that the has gone cven one teams had been given a to be overthrown | rlgorous workout by mushing here | Premicr Briand has deei They | parllament. squarely in the face of its fate of Channing of Boston, who brought program, which town, about the rehabilitation of France, and of Phil Mooley, who pulled in| Wil be fought out main lines of its financlal proposals and demand that the finance com- Ittee chose betwean the bills of the rovernment and those of the left cartel, The committes will make its report to the chamber Saturday, sfter which debates will begin, with 1S FACING CRISS Chflfl]h p OI D [ 2 vote likely pn Sunday. The eltuation as viewed hy the 0 epu 16§ political u\wsw‘:\"‘ra ts this: The left Renese coalition {s campaigning a nst M Parls, Jan. 15 P —Daclaring that Doumer and Premier Briand and present situation fs too critical time n governments or » can be permitted | by committee q to place kirg no secret of its intention to y and bring about the downfall of the Brland ministry and place M. Herrlott at the head of the govern- ment. M, Briand's friends admit that his government can be saved only through the votes of the moderate conservative opposition. whe ministe ts responsibilities, Therefore the hls cabinet on its financial | seeks to bring | Legion A ks Some Member Be Ap- ' DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 102. e ———— ! mander John R. MecQuigg to lay the Legion request betors the president Was based on the policy enunclated at the 2 convention which asked Leglon representation in all formal international discusslons looking | toward disarmament ON POLICE BLOTTER | Complaining that some boys took 'WOMEN MORE GENEROUS Stanley Memorial Church Organiza. tions Show Rivalry In Com. three rabbits from his home yesters duy afternoon, Nick Moleski, 325 | eniystovie Fund Stanley street, reported the matter The Ladies' Ald soclety of the to po t and Officer Stanley Memorial chiurch yesterday s investigating. 80 Booth street he broke a “No Main streat near last night, fternoon voted to donate to- ward the East Sido Community liouse fund. The men recently vot- | €d $25 and there fs a spirit of friend- 1y rivalry between the two organiza- 0 Stanley Mirogen, told police that Turning” sign on 424 Main at §:3 e - | tlons. The Community house tund ACCEPTS RESIGNATION | committee consists of Mrs. Arthur | jrussels, Jan. 15 (M—King Albert | Spencer, chairman; Mrs. Oscar A. accepted the resignation of | Marsh and Mrs. Edith Hedwall ral Kesten as minister of war, becanse of his unalterabla oppost- tion to the months’ military Fach member of the soclety agreed to contribute during the year in ad- lition to what has been given to the fund. Forty ten service bill now before parliament women were present fn the open | pointed on Disarmament Committee = — at the meeting. Four new members tlon have been enhanced and that | from Berlin, N, H, [chamber of deputies when the | Indlanapolls, Ind., Jan. 15 (P | ANDRE COTELIN DFAD vere recelved, Mrs. Louls Cadwell, his announcement refers only to| Todav's run Is taking the teams finance committee subraits its ad- | Representhtion ot - (e Anecionn | Fitchburg, Mass, Jan. 15 (f— |'he new president, presided for the slate officers. over the eighteon and a half mile \'If0 report on the moasures tor- |Leglon on any delegation which | Andre A. Cotelin, president of the | fIrst time. Shortly after Mayor Walker of | course, Danville Junction, Mechanie d by Finance Minister Dou- ( President Coolidge may name to|clty councll, and s leader. ta the | e New York had been elected, partly | Falls, Minot Corner, East Peland Mer. represent the United States at the n soclety New | Bly through the powerful support of the ‘and back to the Mansion house. | The finance committee already has | world disarmamens eonfereney ¥ Sl ,',“;,l &"‘M, . Blind Man Tha"k‘fUI fOl" governor, Walker made a tour of There will bo a twenty-one and a 'cd M. Doumer’'s proposal for |asked yesterday by the organization's | his home this morning. He had | Pleasures He Can Enjoy scveral southern cities fn which he | half mile run tomorrow. slamp tax on business fransac- [executives meeting here, been fIl from indigestion. He was| Springfield, I, Jan, 18 (P— pleaded for cooperation between the —————— jtons and two other important pro- | lInstruction of Natlonal Com. |4S years old, | Blindness does not take from man- southern democracy and Tammany | ! I'riends of the governor feel in ‘ better position to accopt invitalons |y i Bertin and Wite Rematn in eway from New York as a private | citizen than as a public officer tied | Cabin As Leviathan Arrives down by his dutfes. Cherbourg. Democratic and republican follow- ers also are busy speculating on the | Cherbourg, France, Jan. 15—{P}— his retirement will have on m of French, English and fortunes of thelr respective par- | newspapermen boarded tles n the next gubernatorial and eenatorfal elections. It had been expected that the governor would bo renominated for a fourth term or would accept the nomination for | T'nited States senatorship fo oppose | Ecnator James W. Wadsworth, Jr., wihose renomination by the republi- cans is thought highly probable, With the governor out of the fight, however—realignment in both partics seems assured. For one thing, {t is felt that it will silence | talk of the republicans pressing |land. Charles E. Hughes, into the breach | “They are the most unobtrusive | 10 oppose him in the event he shou)d | Passengers we have had aboard in a have run in the next gubernatoral T only saw them on deck campalgn Mr. Hughes had been |a fow times,” the Captain volunteer- considered most able to combat ed g0 ernor's personal popularity. He refused an oplnion as to The spotlight, as far as the gov- | Whether their seclusion was volun ernorship is concerned, has been fary or due to the elements, although thrown strongly on George V. Me- he admitted that the Leviathan had Laughlin, who only recently re. |encountered a rough passage, espec- sigried as state banking commission. 1ally for the last two da et 1o become police commissioner of | S New York under Mayor Walker, Mr. McLaughlin long hus been regarded From Vater John Todere a5 . polftical protege of me'ngr- N A e T vor and took the more spectacular EL L Police job on advice from ‘.‘Al\wn}. iEnesidontiotivnteriganniiodas fier, man Order Harugarl, at its meeting last night, and Herman Arendt who rounded out 10 years of serviee as financial seoretary was presented with a fountaln- pen and a gold plec Dis! the Leviathan as she came into Cher- |bourg Roads today for the purpos: of fntervicwing Irving Berlin, song writer, and Lis bride, the former Ellin M. ~kay, daughter ot Cli\r?n"f-‘ H. M. kay. The reporters were doomed to dis. appointment, however, as Captain Hartley informed them that the couple were in their cabin, refused | to be Cisturbed, and would see no one. They would stay on the lner until she reached Southampton, Eng- @ POOR 15 (P —En- COMPOSER DIF Plorsnge, Italy, Jan. rico Toselll, operatic composer and rineer, in, & hospital today, it Mepuly George P, Fris Ho got some notoriety fn - 1007 oAy o lonstyie installed President Kalbach and the W1l was married to the Coun- 01l ol and th tiso Montignoso, - former _ crown | [OIOWINg dssieting . officors: Vice- Bt A ey {precident, Otto Kalbach; recordi ¥ ¢ ) corresponding secretary nhabe Adam Ziegle ¢ separated some 3 ano. a poor man when he years financial secretary, Herman Arendt: for trustee Guenther 18 months, Andrew \D - THE IFICLD FOR RESULTS ADs | CLASSIFTELD ADS Tomikowski & Dawson i The Store for You Kirschbaum Suits and (vercoats ) If you wear Kirschhaum clothes you lower your cost of dressing well r 160% Virgin Wool Hand Tailored Throughout - : Known from Coast to Coast [ $21.95 - Tomiiowski & Dawson 361 Main Street, Opp. Myrtle IN GIFTS T0 CHURCH | 11te supreme prelate of the Knights Phythlas, expressed kind the pleasures of this world, Ove |amassed a fortune from the mans deprived of his sight is busy with ufacture of B his thoughts and sces even greater |doys @ o at pletures than ever were painted by | human hand. This is the view of taken by Fred A. Atwood, blind of in an address last night, Mr. slght n & etorm a number of years | s cen! late of K RELIGION Atwood was deprived of hls For almost a quarter of tury he has been supreme of P, a pre- RESPONSIBLE FOR WELCH GRAPE JU16 Will of Former Manufacturer of Ji Unfermented grape due 186 |serve G-1 Beverage Discloses What Prompted Business amestown, N. Y., Jan. 15.—(P— cé Was pro- Welch in ton to church ed vy Dr. Charles 9 in conscquence of by helping pas his {give at its communion the “frult of the vine" instead of the “sup of V1s," s related in the will of Dr elch, wh probate h has been admitted to here. Dr. Welch, who e julce, died a few Petersburg, Fla. The religlous nature of the test |tor expresses Itself in another pa sage of the will, in which he wrote: | "Verlly did I hear from my Heav. enly Father and from my earthly father, 'Take the child and train ft for me' and this commission I have tried faithfully to perform.'” | Mrs. Julls Fralley Welch, the wi. dow, recelves the bulk of the real | pronerty, as woll as funds for pere |sonal expences, for unusual needs and for use in benevolent work. The remainder of the estate, which runp |into mililons of dollars, is dividea bc' een four sons and a daughter except for fourtec bequests of $1,- {000 ench to other relatives, seven beavests of $500 each and 13 of $100 each to faithful employes and friends. | SENT TO REFORMATORY Pittafie'd, 3 Jan. 16 (P— Edward Mah 19, Richmond, who fatally injured his brother Michael | by striking him with a shotgun last was sentenced yesterday {to an Indefinite term in the state reformatory at Concord. 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