New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 23, 1926, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press e ‘frely st paoyHeH “"9»&’; APV ] 21918 m:uaa\mo;) - v ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, BRITAIN HERALD FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1926.—TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES. Average Daily Circulation For s 1 e 13,016 PRICE THREE CENTS N FUROPE TROUBLES ECINDMIC AND NOT WAR BREWING HIND Mussolini, in Interview for Rmerican Peaple, Sees Peace and Stability Ahead CO-OPERATION 1S THING 10 AY0ID DIRE POVERTY Italtan Premier Thinks His Type of Government In Which the Nation Rather Than the Individual Is the Chief Thing Considered is Solution of World’s Troubles — Builds For Present And Future As Well. 23 (A —Premier Mus- ing with Rome, Jul; solini, watc in the ilties besetting Europe, be- licves that keen erest no international crisis inter an economic struggle, racking the nations separately, is in p The premier has firm faith that will emerge into a period rope PREMIER MUSSOLINT pt stability, but that sacrific € necessary. Meseage To America people 1 th of Amerfca® ¥ d to the corres- Associated pr ope is traversing a i te—most acute—crisis, . but that'I have firm faith that she ill overcor er difficulties. After- rd I ve a per nvinced that she will of stabilization and am Make e crisis hternational it clear, that which §speak is not hat it has nothing to rever, ations between na- 1 hence in no nse brin, e ectre of war,” he add It is an ernal \ crisis that racking the ous nations separ- tely, not their 2 but 1eir economic and social organiza- ons. It is preeminently social. I m confident nations will pive it, Europe d must be must use pared t (Continued from Page 13) Patriarch Immune to Heat Found Wearing Two Overcoats | nid noonday apparently rting effect on a sitor in the city today who stood ch strect with two heavy as oat and a buttoned | d New Britain of | go which, he said, was the his residence here. The r had a flowing beard and hai 1 in folds on the shoulder He expressed par- | in what had become the livery-stable that once stood Church street oppos ilding, and which hs employment while hite. He declined to t said his re 1 given him | a New Brit-| ve his name | lence is New Jersey, | b P an Connec de open’ from one end of the te to the other | xpresses Opinion Church Music Is Doing Harm “hicago, July 22 (A—Rev. Earl E. rper, professor of music and wor- p at Boston university and chair- n of tk world-wide ) mmi on of music, who series of lectures on sing- nd choirs at * Des Plaines, a burb, upholds the statement of H. istine Smith regarding the decline [church music. 'T think the church is doing as ich harm in musical work in many ji bands and thea-, d. “It is teaching pe bad music is good music 1y -hymns are being sung in hes that can not and should| receive consideration of musi-! 18 of literary tastes. GOV. TRUMBULL LEAVES tartford, Jnly 23 P~—Gov. Trum- ) jert Wyoming where will 2ttend the annual conference state governors. ay brewing war exists, but that a grave | the | | ; }‘!m.z'vhr y |colm Norton Ci |Crabtree, Jr., who is associ bH! MYSTERY, MAYBE ITWAS SANTA GLAUS! W Rogers | | Prisoners Whistle Orders, One Is Beer And Two Is Whiskey Chicago, July 33 (A—So close to the Cook county jail was the bootleg establishment raided b police last night that thirsty prisoners could whistle their orders—one signal for beer and two for whiskey. The frequent to fill th orders disclosed quarters, authorities eaid after making arrests and liquor iz- ures which they declared would at least curtail bootleg service | criminals in the county trips of guards the The whistling, police said in explaining the presence of two hot water bags filled with moon- shine, would ger with the conceale Once in the the intoxic livered by mear tubing through t RODNEY R, WILSON, 8¢, * VICTIM OF HEAT WAVE | | Father of Mrs. W. | Crabtree Found Dying | | in House | Neighbors who heard groans from home of Architect W Crabtree at th 1 Garden str rough a pantry windo . Crabtree's father, Wilson, dying of heart gravated by nse heat odne trouble Mr. Wilson his h who had been m me with his daughter for five years, was $4 years old. about 9:30 o'clock last night H Oliver Judd and Selander, G ree bors, heard t decided to go to the ( ind investigate. Upon rea house t! nd all t locked and decided to bre: located the pantry windo gaining entrance found sitting on a chair gasping for br They called Dr Carl J. Hart of 310 Lincoln and put Mr. Wilson in bed. doctor arrived before the end Medical 1 due to heart Mr, his b Wilson ir iroom rouble t 1 g Porter Co., permission to prepare by the hot weather, nd upon | et | The | a few minutes (PO LINDER PREPARES 10 TAX ‘DADGERS' (Wil Become Chairman of Board of Assessors Soon /$107,000 EVADES TAXATION | Checkup Tp to Noon Today Reveals Many Structures Not on Books— Owners Will Be Levied as of Oct. 1, 1925. Completion of the assessors’ checkup of buildin roughout the , which is expected to be accom- before end of this month, will clear the slate for changes in t 1 of the de- tment by an F, M. n will Thomas | Lin ill chai manship. Linder, who has been appraisal engineer and adviser to the board for the past eight rs, has been cting the checkup through 107,000 in unassessed build- s b 1 n located up to noon to- These buildings, some of ch have be tanding for morr han a year, will be taxed as of Oct. |1, 1925 payment ex thi | year has announced G. 0. P. Gets Ci irmanship Back | When Linder becomes tt board will e under r leadership for the first time in fo When, A. M. Paonessa b e mayor in received th T t Burckhardt, ted Edward 19 d for signation of publican, McCarthy, subsequently merman, w | he shift soon to ta first step in Ma assessor, pprov it can be put in opera- is slated for the post -man assessor. Until the legis- meets the board of three will 4 is required b | This will necessitate the resign Ition of either Adolph Carlson Frank Deizek ,both of whom &re re- pu since not more than two mer f the board of three can be of the same political party. Ap- tment of Linder would, in event the present assessors are kept, nake the commission one of repub |licans only namec or ¢ 1 M I KE NEARLY DIES OF COLD WHILE OTHERS SWELTER Shelton Butcher Gets Locked in Ice : body for burial Mr. Wilson was born in , N. H, May 1, 1842, of the most prominent his native town during vears. For 1 years sheriff | and held other important until he took up his residence in |Northfield where he d a hotel About 35 years ago he moved to Southampton, Mass,, he |bought a farm. He engaged in agri- culture five years ago when he to this city to live with his son-in- Architect Crabtree, and his Mrs. J. Blanche Crabtree. g him besides Mrs. Cra are two Fred P. Wilson nd Gearge R Wilson, of Southamp- [ton; two grandehildren, W P. Interment will riscilla Crab- Mal- ope came Survi sons, ampton at 4 o'cl r, and Miss F randchild, Prayers wi e tomorrow at 1 o'clo: rvices will be held al be in Southampton. Box and Is Rescued Just positions | In Time. hel , July 23 (A)—Adam Wolka. mploy v 2 local meat market 1ad the stinction of being the only person in this ci erday who ffered so from cold that he na rowly escaped h Mr. Wolka was saved from death c lat ye y ernoon about three o'clock nick of time, while his fellow employes and other residents of thils city were n the f heat pros It appeare t Wolka ting some be went into the tor to put away the me re the h doo The heat of the day at t either t panded or the va ation after cut- refri had been so door d ex- sh became sticky. nt to open the door moved. It before his it refused to be | fifteen minutes follow FIVE MEN KILLED [workers missed him and thought at first that he had gone out Mean- S while Wolka was making frantic ef- Bolt of Lightning Strikes Forgotten | forts heating upon the door to at- tract attention H! fellow em- Stick of Dynamite in Virginia ves remembered that he had b Gty | ng away the beef and hit upon * i It that he might be in the Strasburg Junction, Va., Ju ey found him lying (F—A bolt of lightping which x | unconscious on the floor. a forgotten charge of dynamite was| This morning he was at work ap held responsible today for the th | parently none the worse for his ex of five men and the 1 of four others in the P quar Tt critic: was deposited in a s ago and none of \ the quarry t of it for vea dynamite fifteen y those working given a thot nic lightning flash and a des plosion late yesterday sent tons of rock hurtling through the air. The victims endeavored to find shelter, but were unsuccessful. One of them s found in a crushed pump hous to which he had gained entry. FALLS THREE STORI Derby, July 23 (#—Ralph Teodo- sio, while cleg windows on the third floor of his home at 148 Main street this morning, fell to the ground and sustained possiblc ternal injuries. He was taken Griffin hospital for observation. Practical Joker, Posing As Mayor, Almost Closes Offices in City Building A practical joker had business on the of pension yesterday afternoon after Town Clerk A. L. Thomp- son had bee advised by tele- phon that “Mayor Weld wants city hall closed without because of the intense in- to city verge sus- While the message was being circulated through the building a bo! fide message came from the mayor to the town clerk’s office asking that department heads be told to use their own discretion in the matter of clos- ing. The result ‘was sus- pensions of busine Mayor Weld today professed ignorance of the sourse of the closing or- der. tew erfence. ' JUMPS IN FRONT OF CAR il Unidentified Man Hops Of Auto | ‘ Truck Into Path of Touring Car | and Is Killed. 23 (P—A s to be from a motor | Salisbury, Co man whose i termined truck on July ntity w jumped mith by the | Russell, hotel man here, and fatally hurt, He died of a fractured skull. The man had asked for a ride on the truck of D, Ostrander of town. He jumped off ¢ ly did not see the appr sell car, which was ditched after the | impact and damaged. Russell was unhurt | Coroner Samuel A, Herman at| | Winsted was notified and was to be here rin the day. The man wor \n Eagles' pin but had nothing in his clothing which gave immed clew to his name or addre man w aboul build was struck car this | d apparent- ching Rus- | 35 and |Catholic Schools in Mexico Are Not Sold | Mexico City, July (P—The Most Rev. Jose Mora y Del Rlo,| archbishop of Mexico, gave denlal | | vesterday to the report that the Catholic schools in that country has! |been sold. A statement puhushcd} bere recently announced mnot only | that all the Catholic school had heen | | 1d, but that the new owners were illing to comply with the religious regilations, having réaching an un- derstanding with the secretary of | education on the subject. the | de- | Hill last night and | of William | Youth Helping to Put Out Fire is Instantly Killed by Charge From | Live Wire on Day Before Wedding | Fred Flamang, 22, of Bristol, Electrocuted Near Cedar Lake—gFatality Blamed On High Tension Car 1er. he Herald.) 'nt and tw to t 2 chief's eneral Bristo —While endeav- | to bend back a telep: had been he sctricity by July or one wire hed which ly charged coming in con- man- d Plainville with e | tact with a high-tension Fred hearing of the | Flamang, aged of Hull accom- | street, was electrocuted today, and es of his although employes of the Bri B. Robbins, city fand Plainville ctric Co. was called and | members of plied artif the ial re department ap- piration for about i aged | I nil Hein, ed to light t the house owned anc by James H. Peckham tt Road, near the lake. Mr. noticed that his house had that it had oc- of caught fir started lephone wire, | 1 self and the fatality He sei severed the wire on the house. | s the son of Mr. and By that time F had g of on the scene otic en employed as a sparks were still coming f Departur end of the telephone wire to the house, took hold of it fo T urpose of bending it back. Tmme- fact that Flamang was to b hold of the | ma tomorrow exclaim “Pu ged 19, 0 me away the time Mr. Peckham and the Hein boy had reached him he had dropped the wire. They led him a short dis tance, where he collapsed on t ground Mrs. Peckham got in | touch | police headquarters, a king to the = th on ms 1 Flamang. pulm be hurried JLNESS OF TWO NEN ~ WAVE OF RATRED FOR LAID O FAD LIUOR U. . SWEEPING EUROPE Hartford Visitor Admits I | ; “ | Borah, Calls Americans Making Round of “Regu | Dollar Lovers lar Booze Joints i i One local resident and one H ford for¢ ered last night New Brit- from what the a s at | ain General 1 b on of bad er. Neither, however, booz organ of the fered | as cound b serfous 'he Am full of figur: ans have th " the paper e ob: | Harry Kinnerne ~ ir ears ar ork | Ashley street, Hagtford, clicking of adding mac to police headquarters about 4:30 'have a knife up their slgves, name- vesterday afternoon by Officer Del- |1v their most powerful dollar, which found him at th an crush tw Europeans. v and East Main |live in superb ok streets condition. ss wh h is astoni g and offens- About 11 last night, Kin- ive. i | nerney was taken with a hemor.| ‘“When we hear Senator Borah rhage in ¢ at the police station [answer the auste and Dr. A. J. Savard w 1":”“ war | and ordered him to t} Of Sha A deb i In police syni an in opera 5 . tion for 's some ‘They have a right to protest ago. Yes| tew dr but the American taxpayers haven't of home and then made the CnOugh money to save France. one rounds of a number of place things with terror of what the di- ustice must be preparing for a vi g thus constituted.” this city where liquor is sold Ask- ed by Judge Alling w a of \nation r e places they are, Kinnerney replied, | Discussing the protest par ‘reguinr bogza jol Taneasr i He war veterans in Paris st was fined $5 without costs. He is tification of the Washington t settlement S 2 was quote ator an overseas veteran, is has three children. married and & United es hasn't suffi About 1:30 this m Officer nptmien e il et John '.\n\‘x:‘;\l was at racted Ij":L‘ er present domestic policy and her commotion in the Preato lunch at - Sur B S8 e BEEl e Main Commercial streets, and Syria and the Riffian country learned that a man whose name he | (\(o7ooeo.) did not as 1. had fallen to the |ty jugement is that the veterans floor and was unconscious when 1se for protest, but not taken out of the place the taxpayers of the United At the hospital, it was learn | that the vietim was Michael Stuko S of 11 Oak sfreet, and that he had ¥ {been avinking i’ an crtort to otect | BUEGTRIGAL SERYVICE IS | the,effects of the heat s after- | | [noon it was saia ne hag recovered | AFFECTED BY LIGHTNING is home, | suflicier to return to h 'Mexican Troops Ready to Enforce Religious Laws Teleppones, Power And Lights Tem- | porarily Crippled In Some | [ Nogales, Ariz, July ») Al Parts of City. | semi-c dispatch to the Herald i | from Mexico City today said that ‘ Last night's storm, while of short- the secretary of war in the cabinet er duration than that of Sunday | of President Calles had ordered all |evening, wa ompanied by a mo federal troops in the republic to be [varied clectric display and its eff | unc rms and ready for instant | and electric on the telephone action on Augus at which time, |service were nearly as jurious. reports previously More n 150 telephone%ets went ‘i'uhr»l.u chur out of order when the | nation will b under or lot 1lightn caused from high ecclesiastical official |with the system 1 electric 7s I RESIGN ¢ (P—Governor |eral ard Wood said yester- |ruptions in sca ower wires g bloy interruption - were also affe WOOD WON'T Manila, July General Leo: 1 fuses and with longer tered districts. | Reports Little Relief From method of re-! would | scist Newspaper Flays/ meaning | ex- | VALUABLE STOCK LOST IN FLAMES iLighming Destrogs Barn and | Contents at Stonington 'NEW LONDON IS HARD HIT| | Phone Service Crippled—Bridgeport | Hu. | midity Today Although Ther- mometer Is 13 Degrees Lower. Sto: Con struck 23 (P— the Williams in the July Ligh farm of Dr. C barn on of the stor fire to i ground with a loss house after closi | doors whe His lo: d by ir Jersey 20 tons of m impler No Water Ay was cov- ed two val- cows, hay and of horse ded in report and firem n we to combat the flames wi much suceess. The farm is an old land marl K | the house having been built about 50 years ago. Damage In New London lon, July overing f the most viol today fi electrical storm as crippled, many tre nd 1st one house was struck by the li ing. Entering through a windo 1se at 6 Lewis street, occupied b orge Goss o cond floor Mrs. Joseph Silva and family on the | first floor, 1t tore the carpet | in the dining room on the second shreds, bt ations were put out t the ed the floor and wires or to ound i ading i way out through llar ! Bridgeport Suffers Yet | ®Brige Jul 23 A — failed to ised by the the temper mo was but 80 for the same umidity regis- red $2, making the day quite as s the ow days. wo prostrations were reported estbrday. Harry Ellsworth, ord collapsed at the d Rubber company, the othet being E. W. ‘Ransom, 34. Both are recov ording | orts from Heat Proves Fatal (P)—)r: Anna h me here from the effect of the » had heen overcome while ening heat. St A s temp grees at of y elow t |““SECTIONAL RIVALRY Borah on d as saying | Semi-Finals Being Played Today in the Western Amateur Tournament in Minnesota. ke, St. Paul, Minn., T ®) rtersectional rivalry adds zest to the semi-final matches of the western amate tournament |today over the White Bear Yacht | club course, , young men of the Pacific hwest oppose two middlewest- of competing atur- s for the privi of Ct oppone Frank I pective tle, and L, O mi-finals by 1 Tv A Minne- fter the latter had ge Robinson and c of Chica in the nds Wednesday 1 d Willlam Medart, v v and 4, Ward of Kansas Hisert dc City, 8 and a notch W Tocoma, de day that he had no thoughts of re- | The storm broke toward the end | signing as governor. He said that |of a day of torrid heat. A s any reports that would resign |dec! 1 the thermometer follov pvere absolutely false and unwar- |[the rain I and the city for the fir ran {time in 48 hours enjoved compara- tive comfort. | " «| Several hundred persons who had | | |gone into Walnut Hill park to seck HIGH TID! htedsha and cooll bereze | July 24 (Standard Time) ade and cooling breez were New Haven: 9.41 a.um. 9.59 p.m. | New London: 8.17 a.m. 8.38 p.m. [ | # * caught in the rain. I i IE | PRSETSIG LA — Western Railroad Merger Plans Are Approved Today % New York, July 23 ()—Plans for | | the great Loree railroad merger in e southwest, combining the Kap- * THE* WEATHER ] 1 s ty Southern, Missouri-Kansas- Hartford, July 23—Torecast | for New Britain and vicinity: | Generally fair and cooler to- | night; Saturday fair and con- tinued cool | Texas and St. Louis-Southwestern systems, were completed at a meet- ing of the Kansas City Southern di- rectors today. An early application will be made to the interstate com- ® # | consolidation. 3 (A) — This | at it has experienced in recent | | years. Ithough the storm laste but time, it caused consid- erabl n Over 300 telephon ;| On October Kenneth |7 \TERRIFIC THUNDER STORMS BRING SOME RELIEF FROM THREE DAYS OF SUFFERING BUDLONG IS GRANTED |Northern New York DIVORCE.FROM WIFE| > Bt By Tornado | —38 Persons Injur- Custody of Three Children| €l And Property Also Ts Given to New | Worth Million Is Badly York Millionaire 1 Damaged. y 23 (P —| re New nd former | York agency | Providence, R. I, Milton J. Budlo wport ger of the N Heavy Losses Throughout New England — Reports resident .| ‘v!:.‘ Packard Motor com- Generally Show Lower nted a divorce from | was bed and board from his wife, Jes- | ¥ A e sle Margaret Budlong, in a rr‘s"rim“ Tempelau“es Following led In Newport or court by | . 4 Judge Edward W. Blodgett tods Break — 107 Highest least a temporary ces- | series of court actions rly three years hav Budlongs and their mar culties before the public e Under the terms of the reser .‘DEATH LIST FROM y three minor children, | HEAT STILL GROWS daughter, remains | bringing at sation to the Temperature, two sons and a in Mr. Budlong, under the terms | of an interlocutory decree entered | on December 8, 1925. The divorce | Syracuse, N. Y., July 23 (B — anted on the ground of ex-|menyio g0 ruelty, extending over a lon 3 " feen ]moyf, r‘v,\hnt 1\"1; tn i ;; Chenango and Cortland counties a | perioc vears, an o ey | B2le of tornado like proportions in- charges aaginst his character, | - e tine cemarke in the presenes |1ured 38 persons, caused property iliating remarks ir o damage estimated at $1,000,000 and of others, refusal to live with him as o, “o00 1 oo tarm buildings and | his wite and other acts tending lgwpmps on its twisted path yesterda bringing him into public ridicule | o 0 oo according to 4 through Madison, alse Th; ecree granted Mr. Budlong 3 reports is a divorce from “bed, board and | °ACBINE this city today. cohabitation.” It is not an absolute | divorce and is sometimes called a Heavy Storm Damage paration. It does not dissolve the | Springfield, Mass., July P — bonds of matrimony; the parties are | Telephone officials were busy today SUIE man and wite. | repairing heavy damage in western it New England done by last night's Mr. and Mrs. Budlong were mar- | destructive wind storm, which was rled in 1898, and three children, | Widespread. It is estimated that {one daughter and two sons, were 6,000 telephone lines were without I Sore: 16 the walon: | service today in western Massachu- 3, Mr. Budlong | setts alone and all available line {filed a petition for a divorce from |crews were hustling to repalr the bed and board. February 15, 1924 | damage. a second petition for a divorce from | The storm apparently entered bed and board was filed by Mrs. | Budlong and on April 14, 1924 the first action was discontinued. ( Mr. Budlong then filed the pres- | ent petition in Newport and after | the trial 1 progressed several days Mrs. Budlong surpr ew England iont, where mont and New adjoin, swept down across Williamstown to Greenfield, Deerfield and thenee to | this vicinity. Just west of Green- | field, however, it divided, one por- near Pownal, Ver- one by summarily disn j tion turning north to Northfield and attorney, Cornelius Moore of New- | Brattleboro, Vermont. In the last iport, and anouncing to the court named place heavy damage was that she would cond t ct her own|done and fully 150 trees broken off, 8 carying down wires to such extent An'd nt at the Plaza hotel in | that every trunk line out of that | New York in th mmer of 1923 is | city was out of commission. Most | cited by the petitioner as an act of | of the wire damage was due to the cruelty, where she made a demand | effects of falling trees and limbs. upon him for $100,000 and upon |The financial damage to the tele- his refusal to purchase her affec- | phone company around Brattleboro tion, she knelt down and prayed |is estimated at $9,000. God to curse him = s the court says: Cooler Weather Here imony shows that the con- Washington, July 23 (B —Cooler Mrs. Budlong has caused | weather has already overspread the notoriety that upon MT.| Onjo Valley, the lower lake region | duct of | so muc | Budiong's appearance in public he|anq the Atlantlc states mnorth ot {has been the subject of much €Om-| Maryland, today's weather map | ment and been so affected that he | ghows. [nas been unablo to carry on busi-| "Iy tne plains states and the ‘Roc)\y Mountain regions, however, somewhat higher temperatures pre- | (COMPLETES 23 YEARS AS | | According to the weather burean | STANLEY WORKS EMPLOYE indications are for showers tonight ‘Or Saturday over most sections east | of the Mississippi river except from | i, | Ohlo northeastward to the New [Aonze. G Bull' iFrescated . With |pse, 5. 65 o ohss e neaTi o e | Watch And Welcomed Into weather will prevail. The heat promises to be relieved tonight in the Atlantic states as far | south as North Carolina and moder- | Quarter Century Club. | Alonzo G. Bull, foreman of the|ate temperatures are indicated for plating departntent at the Stanley | gaturday = throughout = this area {Works, completed 25 years continu- | gomewhat higher temperatures are ous service to. In recognition f| forecast, for Ohlo, western New this service, he was presented With | yoric ang- western Pennsylvanta, a gold w. from the company. Washington, with 103 yesterday The presentatlon speech Was madesnq GHarloits, NCE: With 0L wEIe {by t W. Pelton. | offici lly awarded the records for “Mr. E 1 first went to work In the | pigy temperatures yesterday in the plating department 25 years ago as | oo o timekeeper. He was then —pro- | “45° e moted to sold order clerk and then k oried © nickal a4 cnpm_‘ _ New York Gets Relief. I plate working as a plater | New York, July 23 (P—The heat for several years, he was made as- | vave seemed de !_mw!)y broken in foreman and later foreman, ;_']“‘h\f”\ todAy. Whisy (e e Uy ition which he now holds, | WhiC ‘\‘?d ciimbed to 50 degrees at Weed welcomed Mr. Bull in- [ hine o'clock, fell three degrees in the next hour. | Cool breezes swept the city and ‘wr ather forecasters predicted further tury club vear with a ley Q cented him decline in temperature to be follow- {ed by west which ould of the hot spell, [ IDidn’t Recognize Boss, | Young Draftsman Gives | Towers a Smart Answer | rain out of the mark the end 24 Deaths In Jersey The newest addition to the | Newark, N. J., July 23 (®—With engineering department staff, a 1 cloudy 4 promi lower gh school student, who is |temperature reports on the fourth orking during the summer |day of the heat wave showed a total mor was busily tracing deaths. when Chair- Seven print this morning of these were from heat man Reginald Towers of the |prostration and illness provoked by public works board, with whom |the high temperatures, 11 from the young man is not acquaint- |drowning, two were suicides, and ed, sauntered in. With concern |four were caused by accident. for the business of the depart- An 87 year old woman, and a two . S | nt, Chairman Towers ad- |vear old girl died in Paterson fr to Continuc Debate On What Eng- ed the youth saying: |the heat last night, and a 1,,1,01::'; land Did With Loans, | at are you doing this |dropped dead in Carteret while on | morning The future build- |his way from work. | Washington, July 23 (A—The| or of highwas glanced over | treasury will go no further in t8| nig shoulder for a moment and | Death List Grows, arguments with Great Britain as to| qfter studying the man he did | Albany, N. Y., July 238 (—The whether the loans made by this| not know to be his “boss" re- [death list left in the wake of the country to England were really made| plied: “Just wasting my time; |Zale and thunderstorm that swept 1 purposes. | Acting ary Winston sald to- the given out by him lier in the week showed conclu- sively that most of England's ex- | penditures here during the war were for commercial purposes and that | he would let it go at that. The controversy started aftef a | statement by Secretary Mellon, had been assailed by Winston Churchill, for co merce commission to approve the | the British chancellor of the exche- connection with the manufacture of quer, in the house of commons. across New York state late yesterday was increased to seven today with the deaths of a girl camper and a sawmill employe. The girl, Marion Wagner. 9, of New York, was killed by a falling tree at camp near Valatie, and two companions, Regine Sand, aged 18, of New York and Regine Baxe, camp instructor, were injured. Walter Clark, 63, employed in & can’t you see what I'm doing— just wasting my time."” Towers merely smiled. CLAIMS NOT ALLOWED Washington, Jnluy 23 (#—Comp- | troller General McCarl today refused | to allow $57,798 in claims against the | government made by the Glenn L. Martin _ Alrcratt Company. The clalms involved royalty charges in alrplgnes for the government, (Continued on Page 28)

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