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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JUNE 26, Bon Voyage Gifts and Cards GIFT DEPT. The DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN ST. | Correct Quality Apparel for the Country, Club MISS BE or Seashore ATRICE BENZON man, who has been in naval re for the sta- street, ceremony was perform- o'clock at the home of the Mr: lolph Bess was ma- | onor and Rudolph Bess br bride, was groomsman. Julius Caesar Losing Prestige—His Old Camping Grounds Being Cut oneymoon tour in New 4 e ! 11 ;‘: Jsland, Mr. and Up Into Building Lots. yrdelman will make their | kome in this city. i S London, June 26—Jullus Caesar 1is losing ‘he wedding of Miss Edith Paul- |prestige in England. ~hter of Mrs. Clara John-| AS a consequence, the old camp of the Ro- PRI rree man roldier-statesman on St. George's hill, i .| Weybridge, established in 54 B. C., or there- . Heln 18 to be wiped off the map of vacar Cr R 1 modern flat buildings erected on it. AR /i This has been brought about by the com- Sns ot teldeiT smers orks who have refused an ap- W. C. Hill will o maid (peal of the Walton town council to preserve 2 Ry Enge- | the They contend that no useful pur- : < man Richard |pose may be served by considering the question further, and besides the property is too valu- ed 1 table to be kept idle merely as a reminder of ! L ir a - trimmea [some of the old timers. X wear a| Cassar had his camp at §t. George's at the came to England with five legions will o hoal ) cavalry which were harassed by the 1ir po riots of the British Prince Cassivel- ilie o1 by Piaeus us so vigorously that the Roman columns Hatns is employed at th compelled to withdraw to Gauk 28 e [EACHL RELIGION BY WIRELESS ey, That religious teaching spr oughout e e R by wireless preachers whoss fame 500 0 Tohn TWillard'C, MoX will rival that of film fevorites is among pos lieves that ity do not enter the mi e other occupations afford n;\pnr» religious service which were more Before long, he thinks, the new n of the Gospel which i8 now being »d by leading thinkers will establish it- and (he better sort of influence spread by id of radio sermons which will reach millions ERSONALS i i S e is ever given more t a passing bishop be gebee, ean- 165 Wilcox ics of cham and Mrs. | will enter- riends t their coun- TAX MOTORISTS HEAVILY British motorists are the most heaily taxed world says the motor legislation com- i llowing for different methods of axation in various countries the result for a 10 horscpower car worl 0 pounds for Great Britain, 3.10 nds for t J for Canac Hartford on pounds with silk Coot 11 't Hartf . K !SIRIKE 1S BOON TO HEAUTH Linens—$ . s | The recent general strike was a salutary and —TFalre 1s ¢ rot s experience from a health point Wool Golf Hoss «2 T el New Health ty's organ St " oo | LAS T OF JUNF BPL’,‘ES MAKE e o Henlh Bocty'n ng leathe on—as ‘smart v in Cley It humdrum routins of everyday 28 you eyaRop £t | g il o e : brisk exercise in crisp air, instead PEICE Lk 8 5 THEIR TH[PD 0 AL TAH Mrs. ( les vle arrived today hat in bus or train, been - from Balt 1., to spend v p truly healthful and invigorat- o e SR o Gro n, g. says the C\ 2 e o Burton| The society expresses the belief that unrest ALL Several Weddings Today . St S1 and discontent among workers are largely 5 based on lowered health and vitality. The en- g ie Mr, an Mrs W Porter of Ten thusiastic vigor of the volunteer during the i tioners of as time-killing is called. HARTTORD “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” Famous Players-La . To I uy ’Ihealnr'al (6 ham SRsnin e sl ‘Ca canny STEP TOWARD EQUALIZATION ¢ should it not come to pass that the should feel guite at home Miss 1 the Rev. F. W. Congregational Mr, Newland suggested ident of the Union of England and Wales, says a great stride toward relfgious equality and cooperation was made by the kin 1 few s ago, when he appointed a Wesleyan minister to be one of h plains, 10| Newland, pre nont ‘ I ) G t I 1 Europe i s p ¥ ughter, WOMEN CLAIM DISTINCTION ¢ ; i PR Y H. Crittal, who first rode a bicyele 3 - : tooein 1897, and was her in some newspapers orpor hich od of Rocky H i ) brother of the ests it of Ten|in 1897, of 11 jn th el etk : e T weak, will re- a8 the original lady bicyclist in Great Hrimm', for furiher nation Miss Edith M. Pe ; . et ; = elr homs in But. |bas been denied that distinction by scores o of Famous Players theater - ST ) = ey offer proof they were riding “The deal had been pr v an 0oL B A r back as 1880, when the Cyclist ke ¢ of ock il e 1 . A o chi- | Tourd clup was organized and included ed it oaaiiEo e o , i Texas il mp. |women riders in its membership. G. Herbert I Lasky will ok £ 4 : - : © to spend the |Stancer, seeretary of that club, says there were tain two-thirds control o e Ba- || NS Aok ( 0 : e Mrs, Gilbert has |doubtless women riders of bicycles in England laban and Katz corporati A 1 {ha 1% Porter reslderia on|batore: 1880, ] ! CREDITS WALT WHITMAN | John Bailey. the English critic, in his new ife of Walt Whitman credits him with being paper original genius America has yet seven ve 50c ' a curl i Nestle ~ Circuline Process FOR PERFECT PERMANENT WAVING Of the poet he says: “He is often a fing “artist by a sort of divine accident, but as equally pleased with himself when, as happened still oftencr, he was not an artlst or a poet at all.” TIMES HONORED The first Walter Hines Page memorfal (Jun. for) fellowship in journalism in the United States has been awarded to Thomas T. E. Ca- dett, foreign sub-editor of The Times. He will lcave New York late in June, and will &pe » year in different newspaper offices in various parts of the United States, returning to Whe Times at the end of his sta; SUB-EDITOR OF 1926. PARIS——— Longchamps Season Ends Tomorrow —Skirt Beats Breeches in Style Contest at Horse Show. DOINGS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS BERLIN=—= Wife's Craze for Latest Styles Drove || Him to Drink, Accmdmg to Young || Husband's Story to Judge. 4 L and industry in order to lessen household du ties and make England brighter and cleaner. Lady Cowan has just returned from Canada and the United States, where she has made an ex tive study of the model homes of North American housewives. She is making a cam- palgn for wider electrification in Great Bri The women allicd with this organization are espousing the measure now before the Ho of Commons for an Improvement of t eral electrical situation in Great through a consolidation of existing plants un- der government assistance with a view to les- sening the cost of current and eventually lo- iting great power plants near the coal mines arls, June 26 (#- . which ith the runr Prix de Paris at Longel Lunre- gretted by 1 umbrella venders. be favorably rec ntertainments ¢ n in behalf 1ore certainly w lection of th France su country. pt the coal dealers and th 1ts features most likely to will be the sumptuous the opera and the balls rity. But memory of it be kept alive by the recol- in. wind and cold from which ered worse n any European gl SKIRT MOST POPULAR The skirt b the eeches in a contest for he most elegantly attired woman horseback der, 1In the contest there were entrants, 10 of whom rode astride and the remainder vearing the traditional riding skirts. st place went to Mile. Molitor, dressed tn a ligis gray riding habit and wearing a hunting stock and the regulation riding derby hat. The Dowager Duchess d'Uzes, whose riding ex- iences includes horses belonging to the rian queen of the former Hippodrome Circus and who acts as master of her own pack ‘of deer hounde, opposes women riding astride. She maintains that the side saddle position gives her a firmer seat. EXILED KING IN PARIS One man in Paris is following the scant news that leaks through from Lisbon with eager interest. From his room in a great hotel he keeps bell bovs busy ringing up all the news agencies to get th test developments When he learned that General Gomes : naster of the Portuguese cay to murmur, “Perhaps, after woman was right.” he man is the royal exile, 111, made of his King of Portugal b . tion fathor, Carlos T, and of his elder brother Luis The nineteen year old king kept his throne for less n three years, when a republic made him an exile, The ‘cra woman is compatriot owes the epithet to over 1 of feminine views. A fortni predicted to the former king, again, Rire, and before long. be in Lishon Up to the present there has been no sign that General Gomes {s meditating summoning the ex-king to replace the president. OR DIVORCES way for divorce” is what writers jastic expres € had We shall meet s time it will in the French press term the women in Paris in months their husbands by shooting. Not one of the women has paid the death penalty. Two or three of them have been given prison sente of a few months. ‘“Divorce by Browning the special term used by sarcastic writers. French juries have always been lenfent with the accused in a “crime passionel,” but the commentators on the cases of these 14 women point out that it has not always been the wom an who was wronged. The woman herself, in some cases, had deceived her hushand and then killed him in erder that she might marry another man. “We are becoming accustomed to the re- volver, to murder, to summary and individual justice, immediate and irreparable violence. We shall end by consldering that any person in France has the right to condemn to death whom he wishes and to executa the sentence,’ says one writer. coy is 1 Cory rved copy of MOBILIZATION ORDF A clean and well pre mobllization order that called the French armsy to the colors on August 2, 1914, has just been sold at public auction and realized 90 francs, or rather less than three dollars. Coples of this momentous little oblong docu ment have become extrcmely rare. Those that were posted fu every town and village in France naturally soon became iliegible owing to exposurs to the weather and disappear. ‘When the war was over, a copy on a build. ing near Maxim's restaurant was discovered in good condition and was covered with glass and protected by a frame for the benefit of posterity. the but no llon did he ever pull a bead s rifie beaters, last day of their stay in Nairobi, Mrs Harrison was motoring along a road where there was considerable stunted growth and some grassland. A huge lion crashed through the bush at ong side of the road, wal Jv across in front of the automobile and paid no attention either to the car or its accupants. “And T was not aven there to see the beast,” says Mr. Harrison. THIRD DIVISION STORY On the Place des Etat the memorial /nis at Chaute monument to near rican Division {8 an American in- stitutio h has become a kind of god- mother fo the citl of the battie-swept flere at the Methodist Memorial thera tivi h .8 States but almost es su of welfar the Uaited wide rang: common in unknown in Fra In addition to classes in English for chil- i, re is practical instruction in nursir ind in child-rearing among other welfare act ities. Dr. S orth, formerly 1 known r Ingland. is head of the ssisted by Mrs, Wadsworth 1 a Aff of e ans touring the battle- rorial each year, as th contains bas a unian rom the Bellean Wood ireds of A th which nirs s stop muscumn olleetion field. In the courtyard of the house arc . | Gorman cannon which place a warlike lly in contrast with the work o rich i3 carried on within Berlin, Jun iron Ago von Maltz German bassador to the United States, de voted most of his official report of the succe our of Erich Rade world's ch pion breast stroke swimmer discussion “of the importance of fostering international relations. g of first class German athletes tries is the best concelfy propuganda,” the ambassador's report “More attention is pald to a record-breaking te like Rademacher and more benefit ac rues to Germany from such a man’s perform- ances than mber of official de zations conveying good wishes. The Amerjcan was loud in its praise of Radem i mac ful Americs “The sendi to forelgn c fro: called the what he preposterously ited styles of women landed Paul Frei he a locksmith, in jail for a night and cost him $10. Frelhoff explained to the court that on re- e was shocked to find that d bobbed her hair and stockings and a late The sight drove him from work I year old wife h ased nude-colored 1 afternoon frock. to drink he eaid. Police found him parading the only in a shirt and bedroom slippers. for disorderly condt he pleaded wanted to teach his wife a lesson. court failed to be convinced. NEW HEALTH RECIPE cigar a day will keep the doctor away. it from one who knows, aid Bernhard nt who is enter- hig 2 pure! mo streets elad Arrested that he But the Berendt, Berlin's oldest res ng on his 105th vear. He allows an exception to the rule on birthdays when he smokes “two good black stogies. Berendt is in perfect health. He has vivid regollcctions of political events as far back as 1848, when during the revolution he was a member of the Pru n palace guards. “During the funeral of some of the victims,* he said, “King Frederick Willlam IV appeared en the palace balcony in full uniform. ‘Flaps b* (L off) yelled the crowd, and the king removed his plumed heimet.” 70 YEARS A MESSENGER Germany's oldest journalist, Karl Busch, tor and publisher of the Wattenscheider ‘citung has just celebrated his 90th birthday, coineiding with his 70 years jubilee as a news. paperman. He founded his newspaper in 1865 T'EW AUTOS ARE German police, though little bothered by automobile thefts, because there are so few omobiles, are faced by a wave of bicycle robberics. The police commission reports that an average of 15 bicycles are stolen daily in Berlin. Organized gangs are =aid to be making thousands of marks a day stealing, repainting and reselling the two-wheelers, Newspapers, following the example of soms of their Americ: contemporaries in regard to automobiles, publish daily the number of bicy- cles stolen or recovered daily. ONE ON THE LISH A German view of the “easy-going” English- an is making the rounds of comic supple- ents of the newspapers. The story records Christien Beauty Shop | The Page Journalistic Fellowships were n : 82 Church Street Phone 4189 | founded under the auspices of the English- = three Englishmen walking silently down the —_— Speaking Unlon of the United States, as a DOUBTS LION STORY street, An automobile crashes into a horse. — | means of promoting a better understanding Carter Harrison of Chicago does not believe Tm" pause for a moment and then resume the —_— ! ¢ s =) oAty . . between the British and the American peoples. East Africa {s overrun with lions despits eanc o E—‘ i ’f—i S "()‘u a L]ke thls - Stewart Edward White's tales of shooting First glishman an hour later: ‘Did you ELECTRIC TREATMENTS i i MOVE FOR ELECTRIFIED HOMES them with bow and arrow. However, the Ti- notice how the automobile ran over the i | i = | G‘ROOfll Col(mial ‘ady Astor, Lady Cowan, Lady Brooks, Miss linois man admits there are lons in Nairobi— horse? g i When i connection with | | = Fllen Wilkinson and many other prominent because Mrs. Harrison saw one. Second Englishman 30 minutes later: ‘That the L ays, Alpine | 7 6 ol i sh women are active in the Electrical As- As Carter Harrison tells the story in Paris, B s ashorse T““’i a cat.’ ; Sun I g | h()l(s(’. sociation of Women. The organization is strive he spent weeks stalking the king of beasts in Third ‘Frmwhnv;m 30 minutes later: ‘Will Eisctrical Massage and | inf for wider electrification of British homes East Africa with the ald of scores of native vou two finally stop quarreling al I 0 OMT Priv- 1ca ) E | ) priv e } oien Siictin H ilege ir Lvery family Ten Acre rod for the summer, One June 25, Mr. and Mrs. Chris-(Horace W. Eddy, William W. Pease, | Ki an enjoy it— v family should. months. topher P. Birmingham of Clark |William Coplishapand h”'y "‘ Blood | Our ¢ s to help vou plan and ol P street celebrated their 7th wedding |Griswold are attending the G5th re- Pres uma- | it S iy Mr. and F. W Dorter andanniversay. They were married at {union of the Masonlc Veterans' as-| s and Sef | 1 fill your require- aughter, % 7 Acre road St. Mary's church by the late Rey, |soclation at Hamden today. | U HT u | T your means. will leave Wednesday on a motor J. T. Winters. They were remem- S e L Il 1 trip to ol bered with a number of beautifull Mrs, Harold Lee Judd gave a sup- | 30d-send 1and to | || ix-room house i gIfts. {per party at her home in Berlin | g ) s & childre % el Mrs. A. J. Sloper of Grove Hill an G LR Tuesday evening. S A ked t Se d Q ( ct, wellplar | | | I {\J3 : N‘]inc.d' Miss Emily Sloper of Russell street| Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. Fletcher se e upemumemnes § 0 o¢D { Dr~ F Coombs | { sy " bt , gl will leave on Monday for Green-lof Monroe street and their three| Miss Irene Fceney of 80 Grove Hill | m Thell' Bfld & | NATEUREOPATH { | TR et 2 8 t too large for the ordi- ville, Me. sons left today for Hotchkiss Grove, 'is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Louis | g s ) Nes omee| | S e = rooms may be fin- LIRCNE Branford, Conn. P. Slade at their summer home at | e e B | ] ! | in the attic later. See the pl Miss Lucy Taylor of Washington, 0,0 o Tiverton, R. I | i WA Par g ek | D. C.. has heen the house guest ofi Mr. and Mrs. Harold T. Sloper b A . e police board yesterday { N Mrs. Be lker of Cor ,and daughter, Miss Ella Sloper, of | Rev, Theodore A. Greenc to six supernwmetiry officers re- — — = = A L " Hirnate ot Russell street, with Erwin loper, lleave Wednesday for Jaffrey, N. H., | questing their resignations pursuant DENTIST . AR son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Sloper of |where he Wwill spend his summer va- | 15 5 vote of (he board some time | L | Clarence West of New York city Grove Hill, left Friday for Green-|cation. x0. Some of the officers are be- 3. Johns ).D.S b has been the guest of Judge John H. ville, Me, | aeie | v the nge e proviciion 1o the Diadonnon, Sl [ ““"‘""‘1’ of Plans Kirkham and Mrs. Kirkham of| sl Miss Clara M. Washburn salled to- | yogular forcs and others on the st Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. i e Radceia of | Cedar street at the summer home| Mrs. Dudley Walker of Hamilton |day from New York on the Coronid. | nave failed to respond when called Q OXYGEN ST Rt o s and types of the Kirkham's in Plainville, street entertained at luncheon fol- (Eho Will pend two months travel- | upon for duty. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGE! 3 it s e T"'H O lowed by bridge at her home Fri- (g in England and France. iTHo GIIcATN’ Aoe - Tolin & Obftey, . € ¢ olonial, Dutcl | Mrs. Norman Cooley gave a sup-|day. , i ek Michael O'Brien, Joseph Pac, John o Whe Cx a Juses; also West per party Sunday night at her home| AR | Miss Melen M. Stone has gone 10| Riley, Edward Peterson, Attwood | prote 1 Hart street for her nicce, Miss {Boston where she will visit a sister | pajmer. Coffey is the oldest man in 3 b . I n designs; and bunga | |on B 4 a | Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. flearls of| it % ¥ By OPTOMETRIST 2 et CURTI il an | Z | | Elizabeth Cooley, daughter of DI poregt street are entertaining guests for m? weeks. Later they will 80| the department in point of years of 2 $ u e ges. George P. Cooley of Lincoln road. “m,r the meek-end at their oummer|t® Cleveland, Ohio, for the summer. | service, but has done little duty in T OF .1 IC l\ o See Pages 102 and 103 This Week's Saturday Evening Post | ‘ John A. Andrews has rr\urum]lhem'\ 1 M“‘“':""'. 5 Miss Tsabelle Kitson of 61 Wells| Thorough Eye l.A\:lmmu(mn\s | from Phillips Exeter academy to | street is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J.| BOYS SUSPECTE! 3 | 1 lspend the summer months with his| Mrs. Arthur Sampson of Walnut|yartin of Detroit, Mich. | The police are investigating a re- § | Ie]ef - | !Darents, Mr. and Mrs. John A. An-|Street and Mre. Elbridge Beecher of | w0 port made today that boys set fire em e E I} ‘ \&C il e IOS ,O nC | ldrews, of Lincoln street. Grove Hill gave a bridge tea at| rs, John F. Sullivan and daugh-|to a shed owned by Sebastiano Suf- ¢ i # d o i - sV Mrs. Beecher's home Tuesday after- |, Rena of Wilson street are at|ranski of 137 Linwood street. The H 2 $ SHOWROOM—25 BIGELOW STREET | Mrs. Arthur G. Kimball gave a [noon. There were six tables of play | their cottage at Indian Neck. | shed 1s on Haley street, according to $ 9¢ iy "m\l e ¢ Huncheon bridge at the Shuttle Mea- (#nd the prizes went to Mrs. Harry | - — the report to the police this morn- E 99 WEST MAIN ST. Sy velusive Curtis Distribntors for New Britain and Vieinity dow club Thursday in compliment to Btes. Mrs. Artqur Gard and Mrs A law to limit industrial labor to ing by Mrs. Sufranski. The fire de- § Oppositc Hew Betiain st Office] {Mre. Willam E. Attwood of Vine Bruce Conover. 10 hours a day and eliminate | partment was called at 4:44 o'clock i Telephone 1185 § [C — — —————2 lirect. who s salling July $rd for| i night work for women is béing con- | vesterday afternoon and Co. No. & o |Europe | Willlam J. Rawlings, E. J. Porter, 'sidered in Tokyo. responded. A AN AN AN AN AN ARSI ) * ] { \ | v )