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14 Mrs. Brasseau Assumes Her Role seasoned soclal STARTW[]RR[]W ~ Express Is D Clocks in Many Eastern States DEMOCRATS UNFURL WET splendor Amazes Lights, at Steel Magnate's Party a8 President Today 1 oo v s oo 1o Be Turned Abead plasinl CER—— splendor of a lancheon ty N SO — ! pEnd 3 by iy o - Tlinols State Convention Also Hits Washington, April 24 P -Biected | Bl I i N York, April 24 (®)p--Cloc | without opposition, Mrs. Alfred J. Mis e % ‘”w“ Nl w arcas of the castern states | World Court and League e ; ol G < Miss Kl mp . ) rosseay, Detrait, Mich, and Groon Kw i atn will gain a march on the sun mmrm" o Nationa, wleh, Conn < oftice l“““‘ ey wds embossed with row. Daylight saving time starts at | o pr 1 o I slEa 1 \ . dind welil remaln In effest | . Butingfeld, 1if, Apyil g4 U—Tlic of the Amcvican Iivolution, S e e g 4 il | demacrnti state convention her will sugeced Mrs. Anthony Wayne i cmber yesterday fhing aloft its banner urg (fook of Pennsylvania, who has leld [ Changes in train schedules and [y wp g temperanee, rather the post for ¥ con. Steamship eafling Nours Wil he made | {pan theoretlon lon” s ¢ “The count of ballots in yesterd ‘ ! o 1by some companies, At loast one T e R T e oLt Shore 10 L EY e Mrs, | Lo without precedent in the annals L Ut v AW United Stn vl iia wly today. Tt showed fhat Mrs, | be ia Gitie, avors for wugi. |vo overale e standurd diwe, Wil ne 1 Gay W Brosseau and othrs on Jie ke o Were fido elephants with [eed D one of its crack traj the republic 1 ived 1,610 or the 1,680 votes cas for men gold key |18 alding passengers to catch up he executlve, cor T NS of New oty Ll clit saving time upon ar- nod vorld the \\1:7 i (“‘n““‘.‘ “,’ SR e artached fobs and seals 0. v York 1 ! 1 AT 4 ieidvad in the Interest of harmony vived RREL ! 5 \\ S | Two States Change Rrennan's wet plank, The demo enty-six vot and the remainder ‘“'““" ]"\ £ e e In Rthode Island and Massachus (oie fenored the an or cont 1t as A complini Mrs, Cook | 7 MR AN, \|’v- ctie the entire states will go on new iclan e s nih Bt paniiD el & number of ¢ YOUIR it M’“ Ay time. Local option will be ohserved |1 fn S 0 6o it P s given ouple a silve ] IEsobatn s 3 With candidates | URRIGREE SO AN R e e N 0 ONew York, New Jersey In his eonvention addr ] the vieo-presidency « { waiuie | AN RRCEHGEE P nnsylvania, West Virginia, Kens | oven Brennan the oniy real one In conneetion with the AS00T B8 & BARSAUE EAEER L loeky, Dolaware, Ohlo, Mlinote, Tn- | oy ‘sourt was | i election, The seven elected were | 11 [‘,; At s lana, Michlgan and Wiseonsin, { {1 reatity no issue at all Mrs. Eugene I ¥ tueky; :‘m«‘vx Lake Superior white fish. | Every Inrge city in New York will| ™ ponigerats conden Mrs. John Brown, Her {iargy | Binnken LAXE SHBCHON uge daylight saving time, as will Hon Bt Gover Charles T Bangs, N reoy; + i so Philadelphia. stench in the ne Mrs. W. O. Spencer, North Carolina; | 2 some steamship lines will observe |y tonting eitiz Mrs, Lyman stooky, Catitornia: Mrs. Flappers Not Wanted the new time, others will sl quote (4ye a(iorney gner John Beavers, District of Columbia, In Business Offices «asern standard for the benefit of | yonondings fo detr and Mrs, Julius V. Talmadge, Geo Milwaukee, April 24 (P) — Misy [their clicnts from the west, = “" Iesgnl vight Small is gin. Mrs, John Camphell, Colo Harrict Cunningham, New York, ex- [Cunard, White Star and United | o rovimnon as chosen honorary viee-president | o 08 6R T siness and profes- | American lines will go on daylight e republicans endorsed | jonal women's department of tho (sa he United States line, how- | piyisieation specifice i T ftice the SiORA 2 3 s . \ t on eastern standard, 1anlk o r 0 i reau &wept Into offlen the | ions) board of the Y. W. €. A, fever, will stay e lmx dard. | lank given over follawing who wero on her ticket: | (00082 ECh, Ll ation's New London Boat i gy | ents and then i anol ) Mrs, Matthew Brewster, Toulsian nial convention here, has a bil Fastern Steamship Hn s“'h called on all republican officials to chaplain general; Mrs. Sumuel Wil- dvice for business girls. apen ir season Sunday on daylight | qynpopt him jna Jarle llinole pecond nE o m\' sald: “Businessmen don't w [sehedules. The New TLondon ‘“c( Governor 8mall addvessed the ary general; Mrs, Towell I, Hobart, | 8808 OB IEErE0 boats which now sai idnight | punticans, making the only Ohlo, organizing seeret Bene | “Girls of the business world must | will to 11 o'clock, dayligh comiment on the moeratic Mrs, Adam M. Bryant, Pennslvani®, {000 %o grana on their own feet 1 [feving time. e i forum. “1t had its beginning in treasyrer geperal; Mra. Herbert M. oo de tliy 5 aicoesstul, While it f agalnst the law in Con- 2 he said, “and its finish i Lord, Maine, corresponding secretary “Business influence on the part of necticut for a public clock to show 70." Di; Eli M. Helmick, Mr Irict of Columbla, Teglatrar EBOIR S |1 o6 a sentimentulity. in the principal cities will H””“-‘I the Miss Alice Loulse McDulfee, MICH) T gonan will get better and more new time, Towns whers daslieht B Wstithus & prs. ert L eincers cooperation from men in a |saving will he obscrved ue vl ’ Givingaton Behuylor, -/ Colotacos { business way, as soon as they con- lfariford, Bridgeport, Derby, (:rr\wx“—‘ porter general to Smithsonian In-j Co0 o BUEh B T ov have gone |wich, Merlden, New Haven, 1 R onniel firme women and girls should never be daylight saving time, busines: M. Farnham, | and Mrs, | into business for a Jersey, | pUrpose stitution; Mrs. Ho! Vermont, llbrarian gen London, Stamford and Waterbus Yfforts are being made in M, really serious 1 N | NATURAL SYMPTON J B '_“r"“'::}‘”’- en, W | P — to pass _.T«:nx‘xli‘x?r‘tu mz“ of ti"-‘y\v:: ) : el ‘Driver of Car That Hit iy S S vorr | Requines Attention of Psyeho- Dickinson Fined was fined $10 Mr acgar Mieskowski jand and Bar Harbor, observe day- l1ight time. DEATH OF MRS, W. M. WARD I e analysist on the charge of operating anto- | Cities in New Jersey rln g\v')‘.”fl‘ll | ¥ Suc i icense solice |daylight saving time, are Jers: ¥ Street Woman Suc- | mobile without a license in police [daylight s " Gy e | court today. The car he was driving | Atlantie City, Tloboken, .‘;“ \:]:l”.: Dallas, Hex., Apvil 24 (P cumbs to Pneumonia After TIINCSS | oiryek Ars, Tisie Dickinson of 181 | ptizabeth, Perth ‘\,“.‘.,I_ ,«‘\,.‘,,f i b it s e S | Wooster street on West Main street Irvington, Paterson, Tia e S L Asbury Park, Tren- nd Montelair. or of day- of Only Two Days’ Duration. New Brunswie ton, the Oranges a Thursday afternoen. The driver had [Dana W. Drury of Boston ! nothing to say. {aay before the American Me rela A. Barker Ward, 66 M AfLe: : ol tashunas, chargs | When the English inv sociation’s conyention. S hehe e ite of William Ward of [ The case of John Rashunas. cha . e enaad ¢ & 2 ..., clothing and shoes and th c aie ?M{\“].ln.‘() and @ resident of | ed with reckless driving, w llght saving {imo_recommendol’ (U iy had been thought that these |SHLTE BTG DR SRS COCE M»“z’rs- many years, died tinued until Monday morning. |twenty ye 120 a8 ":15”-v of the |t ailments might be specific Sl je train Ieft Montreal at 9 O ack Jnst might of pneumo- cor Doty arrested him this morning [to the physique amd W o tho eftest (0 £omie disturbance of (he slands | oo iasg night and was due in Ll aUnOIC 00 o d R >ark and |people he did not foresee the ¢ of internal secretion, but a stndy of | e R o it nia following an illness of two daye. | following a collision at Eakeand it ?x‘.f».'.‘v have on railroads, required X’W" "’l'L_': Sl el thal by ie ot | Bastentn 3 ?I(‘\'s‘“):'i‘:‘ "“‘f;‘:"’"\»( Hlistwaa bimitied tokinsnaguiiel BL Rl EElEes ETRY by law to operate on standard Hme. \,"e o N Sgectared, “in more than qy“\b‘““‘“" Lebadity noon. R & . 3 : New Haven Road |one-third of the cases,” Dr. Drury SWS ghe was born in Cod Sprinzs, N ' Hayes Street Residents | - AN Ao 0 Lasserted, “there were changes in i | - SR CEE T in deughitn o SO ! Ask For Inprovements | jraptrord raitroad witl et aroudd b g oo gyeing (e dizziness that | CONNECTICUT. PATENTS ISSUES limline O'Dell Barker, ';n' .(“:‘).‘ i A delegation of Hayes street | Jaw by remaining on easterh | oo bl i0d (o the glands of in- Frederie & Bacon, Middietown, as- fireadnbics B e e \Hn\'m“ tandard time but rm.v\_{-‘)\fl‘kh:“bg:;‘ [ternal seerction.” R i PURDE LS \l‘:‘h,,‘ st church, the | Gardner . Weld todoy to ask that |tabies to correspond with Gty VS N Linse Sof K LY.} tori. Pt Iiberty and the Daugh- | grade and strect improvements be |used by daylight time wor \‘_TH-P_M clitma i inEoivE ot b lood Bl 1 Hermann ¥, Cuntz, Hartford, R T e worked on thelr strect. Hayes| The New York Central rallf8dithe body might he imated by [ 00 e motor vehicles. tess s ]'v"lfi!‘nk 11 made their | street was the first to be recom- |wlil Inaugurate daylight H) (s Couel 2 palm of the Band of {5 0 Donle, Meriden, asiign- Lh:l» 'n“;mn i S ‘ 'r-hn]s.l xw“ { s |)‘ font : ith ‘\n mm‘y: (v\v\‘l k(o the Comnecticut Telephone & home ‘ il | 1 o Clinton, which will run b= dyang of o normal perso 108¢€ i oCh - 7 o Maple street. [ 000 fund permifted by the legisia- ! Dewi y 4 ; A p . sl b Sleetrie Ca,, heater pad Witliam n’.'?mv‘:lm"‘i"‘R Skl d minor street ro- on Toledo, Detroit, Clevelar ‘1}1‘\‘”1 [iood vomume was dofinitely Jnown. | s RN .m-\l it ten ts @ granddaughter, | palr work. Mayor Weld conferred | Bufialo, makl the i in mw-! “The snrface of x:| valn ::j”.‘“,. . R s }:«?) Young. Tuneral services | with City Enginecr Josoph 1. Wil- |16 hours. Another chi rv\ir'r;'”m‘ that of n‘v S G Aph ¢, rskine, Stamford, ns : :?a\’ h‘ 14 Monday afternoon at 3 liams and assured the property |nouneed by th : x',\wlL:;v;!. e im;x\; GG i (T e i s iekina Dantort Ceina ‘elock. Rev. William H. Alderson, owners their needs would be met, | travellers from th AL Sy cuphoard or similar article, - oy 1‘+:l;;i)\\'l'\‘!:»(‘Vm‘rl\u church, | — fsmtedinafun off thatiched e tof Sitemation et olile B. Vageol. T.os Angelcs, Gal., L e ; 5 Southwestern Limited a sister tra Phe inerea : ; to American Chain Co., Ine., Bl et o - Accepts Invitation to of the Twentieth Centurs. Limited. [quantity of the blood s slisht o ST e Fafrview cemetery, | R o RO X A <t Louls by this four tablespoonsfil conld be detoct- | B OE! O semi-resiiler n ] Washington, April 24 (®--Tresi- | train at & 2 A sl ey humper. £ Two Men Are Found [)ead.-‘m‘ Coolidge, Who has not deliver- | York at 10:10 & m. the following jmcthod. L1 Otfo Hartford 3 i jay. Myveicians from the sity of rire-Mold New Haven Police Called 1 an out of 1awn adarees since I e Ll W R L R Wire-Mold = 5 )—The de- | we ast December to he Ne k Sto 2Xhe Mlehig ) d th I ' o, condnit coupling. : New Maven, April 24 (—The d SR LR 1],”‘],,”; i daylight saving time, Will |chronfe inflammation of 1he joint R e vw»mwr I M;h\n 1”, cepted an invitation to atiend the | close an hour earlier, aliliga Noved BERUIOL SN0k or for ignition systems. ”“:); (” “‘ found in the water celebration at Willlamsburg, Va - o e ;n(orr used n}v s h‘ ”v/\\ 3 jamin 1. Gethchell, Plainville, vorker. i b PN Rt AL i \ known as sodinnt iodozyhen _ ) Fl ihe foot of James street yesterday. May 15 of the 160th anniversary of | Another l‘ol‘;{@d Banknote ”:” A e e Yor m‘ H]v llml:y\}mu il % olhe Salvatore Con- | the adoption by the Virg log 5 e L ng.f SRR in. Josson. | Mig. Co., electric relay, : d A L v er erointion= a5ene Lo il N ScandaliStiiringiEurope canes brought retief of pain. Iusson- (MO0 SEEE R gy ntino, 50, 0 5 ¢ was fou @ 5 St nas e (Pr—Exis led the amount of swelling and tend- L Tty e in o dependence the colonics, Buchare 1 ¥ | o1 | heater. oA O I‘Q“;,‘”i,m“ Independe { another forged hanknote s erness and IneRed ane moton ARt Sy nkjin H. Hart. New Haven, as- shelier housgiin Jio bR o p eh may rival [function of the joints. ! e e st The body of the unidentified man ’ Ie it central Furope, which it signor to C. Cowles 20, Mo s Bo i i (WomantKilled dSeveral S e R - - S e o ved | Hurt in Okla. Tornado 10 Sl e Brown-Eyed People Are Edgar 11 Johnson, Stamford, ex t e SipeOlE ARSI e e o Usually Best Golfers s e Fantord jans Biciotn T fzation at Brassow—for T.ondon, April (R —Golf —in- | 000 o 1. Newman & Sons, New : st Claeiia M- Tranglyvania, for structors rather generally hold the | ypconooeder § RN Tiva otizoracdit view that brown-esed persons pls Arthur . Jackson, Philadelphia, toro Rt et ready been (betier golf than bluc-eyed and gray- | (ot BE 0 TES N e rovne Mrg, T S e for o-Slovak and |eyed persons, | Co.. Stamford, protecting cover for : e e LR i notes of nd 1,000 | John Ball, who prohably has won | padincks. A ty, Oklahc L ('H;‘ Fdir, e i denominations. more championships than any ot Martin L. Martus, Woodbury, and fat s RN Notes totaling several thousand for, has brown cy James | 4, Becker, Waterbury, battery | . oy : and e discovercd all id, Marry Vare r Ha- oo, T Ty Twentieth Child Is Born e i e o g s S Bridgeport Officials To Couple at Wikes-Barre «ni ired that @ great number [Cyril Tolley also 0 e : 4 . - . alre have passed by {wo [The two greal golfers om- e n. assignor Are Summoned to Court | wines-marre, Aprit 24 ®-r. 7 = ety jpassed SVELR ST e v e i il Mi gl Taven, lock Bdenorl EANI / J bt T Ceeil Leite fifevns, o o s s and the like, r ates of er il Extradi Sirong eyes e 101 (lorge Polrrier, Grosvenordal: . roper Will Extradite Man sk G o SR e ot For New Haven Robbery S stro WU \foce hopper-actuating mechanism oy : New Tiaven, April 24 (P—Riceno coms ir cyes 1ling replenishing looms. N g Do is city, arrestod o oo om i Tridolin Polzer. New York, as- : E at it CIVIT, SUITS RECORDED I implicated in the assault and Norwalk, stapling machine, e ; r (, l“l: $1 .‘ . v of Charles 11, Dudley, 66, of ists fail to th Irving Smith, Winsted, safety 1 ' tin Howard avenue on Mareh Iy © | razor et e e S golf than thosc John Thavenet. Stonington, ven- - & i bonds of h Po atirn system fohn : ATh knowing some- | - crett W, Tiffany, Winsted, level | 3 t 1 . but claims he- | e S PO Fe attachment. was ¢ 1a time he }(-0\ ernor Will ],“-‘ “ N‘, Franklin R. White, Warerbury, as- % s little ¢ appened. | To Submarine Station cgnor to the Fatent Button Co. (five Waterhury Man Jumps an employe at the Yale | o Tondon, Apil 24 (B —Gover. | Patents), two-hole button, four-hole | Trat was badly beaten and [nop John H. Trumbull has ) | button, two-hole sew-on button and In Front (lf‘ Train ol $200 and a gold watch, i ,‘,',,“m b CL ST two for fonr-hole sew-on button, A s ' L ; Lt Trade-Mark Registered Y . 3 S . ey ot wint - F. Berg & Co., Norwalk. Felt hefor gainst 1. Jac Brandy Soothing Syrup | 1l statio RIS SR i 7 (Causes Death of Babies | b e s | (hase Metal Works, Waterbury ¢ x-| New York 24 (P —Investi- S eTlanGy 41 Brass and other pipe and tubing. { it n oW Tayo Byde i i i e Vil a Phonograph Co., Inc Y n & orleain{n L el s a0 ] missione Bridgeport. Phonograph records. & i of 1w abies in Brook- | 0o ol T onograph apparatus for recording s yn M 1 after a nurse (ROTS0N \ iucing sounds, ete £ I 1 N o M. H. Davidson Co., New Ha- : {e sty en. Tlank pads, blank booklets WAREANTY DIEDS S P dr a bty ruled hooklets, ete. arr T ra Vs S William Manning, Waterbury, s . e v 3 2 S 2 tationery forms, comprising eom- el A t 1 rie |1 il s i’ s el by tho mere letterheads, mailing enve- to ¥ \ AT n ¥ X ) i | A ] The Stanley Works, New Brit n \ Mar- ey \ Bers g | B Hin, Kat 121 A Al 3 RUYS YELLOW CAB LINJ | BOOK ARY CASE CLOSED Trade-Mark Applicants \ e 1 April 24 (1) e T of Sam ry. charg- | The American Wiremold Co., Hart- L - I 1 oM pany o heing g om just Insulated e tric wires — CONGRESS CRITICIZED ised the Yellow Cab [was i s » Johns-Pratt Co., Ha WELD SILENT ON CONLON il 04 P o e of Philadelphia from state of (¢ s r Al protective circuit op Neror 0 0 . B 1e Yellow Cah company New Y n Pros & Aft G. 'and controlling devices, ete. bl s hich 1 the of the Ir 183 én Kat R. Sunderland, Dan- e Belie REY 1 i 1 was |bury. Stocking protectors, , o liberalize 1 recent gale of P. R 1y to stand trial for t ¢der | Rlizzard tn China. Bet they stuck ntl © ® P nt preferred stock. Tony Fanara on March heir shirt tails in then. BANNER [N MID-WEST | As Montreal erailed }At Gerrish Seven Cars, Including Four , Leave Tracks When Train Strikes a Broken Rail at Hampshire Station. | Pullmans Concord. N, H., April 24 (A - veral persons were infured when Montreal-Boston fiver was de. vailed at 4:30 o'clock this morning W stutlon at Gerels, H., on the maln line of the Boston and Maine railroad, Seven cars t t while the train was nuing at high speed. A relief train was at once sent from Coneord with doctors, according to the ralirond offi- in h fef dispatcher's of- fice hieve, there was no need for the physiclans’ services, Passengers on train were severely shaken up according to reports from the cars, several were cut lruised. | Two wreckers were ordered to ¢ scene, one from Nashua and v from White River Junc- Throngh trafiic was shunted siding while efforts were » to place the cars back rails List of Injured those injured were: Ired wi, Roxbury, Vt., back sight- urt; Albert Tappan, Lynn, Mas back wrenched; W, €, Carver, Mon- I, Que, ported on the t I roises on head, Among T gash There were about 90 passengers on the train, most of whom were aslecp when the cars loft the rails, Of the seven cars that left the tracks, four were Pullmans, one was 1 private car. and day coach, and the other a baggage car, Two e ress cars and one mail car remain- cd on the track with the locomotive, and the engineer pr leord with the three cars as soon could disconneet them from {wreck Passengers gaid the train traveling about 40 miles an hour when one of the cars suddenly tilted {sharply and the train derailed. There was but little confusion, ngers gald. The small station « Gerrish was thrown open, a fire Ibuilt in the stove, and the passen- rs crowded into the waiting room gents' office until a relfef train arrive from Concord, men gathered the pa coul Railroad New | YALE EDITORS ceeded to Con- | was | together | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1926. ‘[]AYUEHT JAVING [Passengers Shaken POLICE OPEN WAR " ONTIRE THIEVES Think They ake Pake Reirs Aroused by the persistence of automobile tire thieves, who have | stolen on an average of a tire a day for the past two weeks, the detec tive bureau of the police department is bending every effort to stop the practice and apprehend the guilty ones, it was sald today. It 48 believed the thieves operate a system of parking near auto- [mobiles and pretending to [their own car while a to remove the the others, They feally every repair alting their spare i re operat- | part of the jchance ! from ing in city. Last linden Louls Firnhaber of reported the loss of ar which was T'he tive was fastened to the rack by a leavy chaln, which was locked, and night street 1 spare tire from his parked in front of his home. it was found that one of the links lad been filed away, James Balocki of Jerome street reported the loss of a sparc [tire from his automobile at 44 Smith e Clarer ne of 320 Maln street reported today that the num- her plates of his automobile were srolen wlhile the ge on Main street, The the registration number § -~ TESTIFY TODAY 1.) (Continued from | Page Yale now and before prohibition, should not turn to present stu- |dents, who were ahout 11 years old when prohibition hecame offective, “Only a little over fifty per cent of the faculty voted that drinking was eater now than before prohibi tion,” Professor Fisher said. “All of the faculty is not [tent to festify because many cams compe- here after 1919. It was for that 1 1 went to those who the facts from thr recoerd were unanimous in their col clusion that dvinking had decreased. | “I think the students have been imisled by wet propaganda.” P! sfessor said e ha | e acts as to whether drink- er th ing had inereased ‘ there is drinking foday t a at other universitics where we have flaming youth, ] bink it is less than of other col- zes of he added. “If you could get the records could mot the students have gotten | them also” asked Reed. | They had only 48 hours in which i to prepare fo vote on it,” Fisher v | i 3 Fisher gaid I thonght it better for the students to liquor from a hootlegger than from an open saloon beeause, “Th is not so much of it." “Don’t you know Yale n all they want | | | students 1 . get leggers “No, T don’t think so.” “Do you know “No?, i from nything about it?" thought not.” Andrews Fmphatic al Lincoln . Andrews, fhis law enforcement chicf, reiter- ted emphaticaliy before the senafn vrohibition commiftee, that he did not advorate a char of the law to permit sale of non-intoxicating heer MUSSOLINI REPORTED IN GRAVE CONDITION (Continued Trom First Page) | | | J [ without an en | Mussolini’s valiant malady has given hi he hearts of to his | a lofty plac lialian people. Suffering from an ailment which s attacked his digestive n, [ Mussolini works longer hours 1 in Italy. He attends nec resistance org any ms | ial luncheons or dinners, it partakes only of milk or howls while others about him are able to enjoy the full rich repas placed on the board in front | them i Mussolini never complains, even to his intim When alone in his japartment after a strenuonus day of { physieal and mental effort in direc ing affairs of state, his body racked | by excruclating stabs of pain, 1 akes from its case an old violin he as played since youth and by soft ins of music, which all Italians | o passionately love, he soeks to ren- ru and fmpotent his personal ;rn‘m,\‘ and his personal danger. { The Romans know of the heroic | struggle Mnssolini patiently is main- ning and perhaps more than any | other single thing it has increased their admiration for Mussolini, the {man. A kind of unwritten gentlema agreement, based on common cour- esy to a fellow man, has been form- ilated in Italy that the people gen- hall talking abont the ition. ¥ stop 1Rhodc Island Inheritance Tax Rate Is Boosted Up Pro fence, R. 1. April 24 (P— An t increasing the Rhede Island Inheritance tax rate to enable the tate to take advantage of the ighty per cent rebate use in the federal court law of w among measures passed t general assembly early today fol- |towing an all night sesslon — the [1ast of the present term, An act creating a jury commis- sloner a milk grading law 1 by ast i 1 | were and ado EVENING TAILORMADES The evening frock hame or br a often ¥ two-piece of q silk s a V neckline and a suggestion of a t all very attractive because of its incongruity. e Awaiting Chance to Steal .. ‘meeting of the Southeastern Library | IMPORTANT CHANGES AT | CO0LIDGE GETS 5Vermont Wants Him o Sper Summer There Boston, Ap 24 (B—Now land is striving to “sell” President Yale and Its Frats Plan to Move to | May Way Por Sterling Memorlal Library w Haven, Conn,, April 24 (P} 0 uccommodate 200 students, three traternities and two business organi- zatlons now occupying buildings | which are to be torn down to make | | ¥ for Yale's Sterling memorlul | coolidge on its vacation advantages. libr to be begun after com- (wWhile a score of states have invited mencement this year, several the president to establish the suni- mer White House within thelr bor- ders, his native reglon has offered chianges in housing are to be made, o university announced toda The university has arranged to| r, Coolidge his choice of half a use for dormitory purposes 118 |dozen vacation residences, ‘ihe houses at 320 and 31 Temple street | range s wide—from the Berksli nd 59 Wall street, buildings which | hills to Cape Cod in Massachuseti have heretofore been leased o |and north to the eity of Burlington private familics. i1 northern Vermont. Shops now oceupled by the Yale Since he entered the Whis Cfooperative corporation and the | House the president has had {wo Birick low Dook Shop are among {summer vacations and has spent the structurcs to he wrecked, As | them hoth fn New England, White these two organizations play an fm- | Court, Swampscott, Mass, chosen nortant part in the life of the uni- [last year as fthe summer W versity community, the authoritles | House, will not houss the presi- have deemed it desivable to locate | dential family this seapon, - Mr, them as near as possible to the cen- ter of the business district more fr quented by students, To this end the university has asked the tenants of the building on Llm street next to the we 1o of the gymnaglum to vacat Iy 1 in order to ac- commod Prick Row and the Coolldge having expressed prefor- ence for mountaln rather than s afr. But the old Coolidge home- stead at Plymouth, Vt., where the president rested fn 1924, still is in the running. The white farmhouse in the Green Mountains, where Calvin Coolidge ! spent his boyhood and where he was ive, The fraternitics — of Psl Upsilon, | sworn In as president by his fati Beta Theta Piand Zeta Psl, whosa | in 1923, became the property of Mr. buildings 1ust be torn down also ' (‘oolidge on the death of Colonel have bought Jand on which they ' John Coolidge in Mareh. Sinee his Wil soon ercet new houses fn the father's death the president has kept, center of the block on York strect 'the house open with Miss Aurora opposite the Memorial Quadrangle. | Pierce in charge as housekeeper, The neighbors in Plymouth belleve that Mr. Coolidge will return this |summer to the haunts of his youth, Vermont has held out to the prest- dent two invitations for his vacation {=ojourn, while Massachusetts, the {state of his political beginnings, has wroffered three possible vacation | laces, Both of the Vermont estates | suggested to Mr. Coolidge are near Burlington, Congressman Allen -T. Treadway of Massachusetts has rec- | ommended to the president two sum- Stake-Keepers Find They Have Steady Task April 24 () vier homes in Berkshire county of K iomdd boundary this state, while the Cape Cod fol : \ and the United have extended an invitation to th prop. “lined up”is no ! presidential tamlly to visit those hos sinecnre, | pitable shores. At least, this { The city of Burlington, Vt., wht George € has ind ~Gustavo 1. Scrano, Uncle formally offered Mr. Coolidge the use 's “stake keepers” in the south- | of Fairbolt, the estate of the late o found. Lightuing, rivers Henry Holt, overlooking Take Cham- and other natural agencies as well 5 plain. The large mansion of brick human hands keep them on the colonial design is situated on & wo0d- ump continually lest the boundary 'ed estate of 160 acres. From fts line y aficld lofty site are visihle the Adirondak A recent inspection of the ninrk- | nountains across the lake, which s ers between liere and San Diego, nine miles wide at that point, California, revealed the following | —_— casualities: One marker sunk without trace in auicksands. Another demolished by lightning. | A third covered up by excavators | in the Tmperial Valley in California, | | Villages Near Moscow Inundated by Floods Moscow, April 24 (A—The Mos- cow river is freshet and a half dozen suburban villages are under A fourth, at the Colorado river, | wate: The river is gradually ris- was all out of keltor. A change in | ing. and that part of the elty Iying the river course put res of [lenz its banks is threatened with Aleaican Jand on the Americun side. | inundation unless the waters begin Al inspect it takes the nwnfto recede. raffic was par: past 238 marl Number 1 stands | 1ast night when fce floes were swept just up th Grande from El!irom the riter upon the payement aso, whils the western | at the Trotsky gate. marile low San| The suburbs have heen cut off by Dieg | he waters and thousands of persons Marker Number 1 on their “beat” | have heen forced 1o abandon thelr probably has ser n the hardest wear, homes, Throughout night boate It has been the boundary of muny bearing torches presented a fan. a Mexican revolutionary cainp tastle sight on the riv and its finally hecame o batth red tribufarice as rescue partios moved a new shaft was erected. hither and thither to take marooned families to high ground, Pield Kitchens have been estah. lished at various polnts to feeq homrless persons and milltary ur. racks have Dbeen opened to glve them shelter, h GLASS ENGLOSED PORGHES ARE PART OF DWELLINGS, Special Exception To Zoning ll('ull-‘ En- lations Necessary If They lle i'nderpasw April 24 (P—Clyde ¥, Meriden, croach Over Building Line Mann, 97 Babeock street, Hartford Corporation Counsel Joln H.|#nd Frances Ferba, 2 Columbia Kirkham ha that g nded down a ruling street, Hortford, were treated in the enclosed porches consti- Meriden hospital this morning for tute a part of the main dwellivg | ©1ts received when the auto fn which 14f the poreh exte heyond the | they were riding, lefl the highway at building line the house does, there- |the = lle underpass and turned over shortly after midnight. who was driving, had stitches fore mo veranda enclosures will be allowed in the future without a spe- cial exception from the zoning law [ in a cut on his left hand and right in cases where the original porch is | knee. The young lady had a eut on over the line. | her left knee sewed up. The other The board of adjustment has, | occuanta of the machine weee no owever, taken the view that en- | injured, thelr names not nef e ca closures should be allowed and ha SiElear ed. dopted a policy of allowing ex tions. The board agrees iwith ruling of the city's Jeg isor, | Wife of hut feels that, with some minor re. rictions, the city should grant ex- ptions whenever asked, HORE LIBRARIES NEEDED 45 Mann, taken Sen. Capper Now Critically 1Il Baltimore, April 24 ()—Mrw, Ar- thur K. Capper, wife of Senator Cap- per of Kan: \ I8 in a serious condi- tion at the hospital for women of Maryland. She underwent a major | Operation two weeks ago and was progressing satisfactorily until today when she suffered a relapse. Senator pper came to Baltimore from lic Libraries, Report Shows, | Washington last night to spend the | night at his wife's bedside, ENGLISH FOOTBALL FIGHT Wembl Eng., April 24 ® eral men were hurt today in fist fights which resulted from attacks by enraged crowds of football fans on profitcering ticket speculators selling tickets for the final game of Per Cent of People In Canada And U, S, Have No Access to ]‘ub-‘ Signal Mountain, Tenn. April 24 (®—Forty-five per cent of the total opulation of the United States and nada access to public | ries, says a report prepared for | here tod before | fs without li prese tatjon association Tt report, which required mev- ¢y, Fngiien goccer championship at eralimon 8 Work by, & Ml BRIt e Wembleytaiadiui, R PGS were Wright Merrill, executive ass forced to come to the rescue of the of the Amerlcan Tibrary assocla- |epeculators several times. ; tion’s extension committee, repre- 5 e most comprehensive inves KING ADOPTS GAS PUMP, Sandringham, Norfolk, Engla April 24—Another American idea has been adopted by King George tigation of its ki is for an assoc promotion Tt will be the tion program of 1 development, library & The report stated expenditures per g raDit year for public libraries [t his Norfolk home. This is the » varlous states ranges from |iNttallation of a gasoline pump at £1.08 in |the royal garage similar to those in average iu.w at wayside filling stations. In 44,970 | BIving the order, however, the king nt in Mississippi to national otal of by the |Stipulated that the pump and tanks e United {Were 10 he of British manufacture, 154,133 S P I T T A o countries have no SOCIAL FOR MRS. ELLIOTT | A surprise party was held in hon- {or of Mrs, Helen Elliott at the home of Miss Hilma Quistberg last even- ing. Vocal solos were rendered b |Mrs. 3. Marsh and Mrs. Helen El- liott, accompanied by Miss Mildred vss to public librs rles. CONDITION OF GOOBY CHILD T ndition of Marg: Gooby, of 10 Madison street, four years' old girl who suffered a fracture of the ND right leg vesterday when struck by [Peterson. Violin selections were n antomobile operated by Mre [played by Miss Vivien Carlson with i Collins of Winthrop Mrs. George Day at the plano. Mrs was reported today as comfo tott was the recipient of many lat New Britain General hospital, beautiful gifts