New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 24, 1926, Page 12

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O O R oo S e T e 12 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1926. NEW JERSEY GUARDSMEN ABSOLYED BY OFFICER WONDERFUL LINKS FOR PUBLIC MEET Annual Championship Play at| e BlmfllO ThlS Yea]‘ | Buftalo, N. Y., July 24 ¢P—Com- Commander Wheeler Denies Whole- | mander W. J. Wheeler of the coast guard today denied reports pub Buffalo, July 24 (®—Public links | here that he had suspended golfers will have one of the finest 'th ) courses in western New York as the e coast. scene of their annual championship i nied reports from Asbury play this year. | N. J., that the whole fifth district o The national tournament, opening | the coast guard will be investigated August 3, this year will be c ed 'as a result of disclosures during the on the Grover Cleveland park links, estigation which was opened to the public for ry among crews of coast guard the first time this spring following long the New Jersey coast. chase by the city from the | r came to Buf- ntry club. into the Estraordinary efforts are being t of Jurie nade to get fairways and greens | tn Canadian shore in tip-top condition. An extra force ing & rum of men has been busy dally co ich had kidnapped a coast the 6318 v ecourse to display it f1g nan encounter on to the best advants 3 the lake. Greens Well Trapped | Regarding the reported wholesale The golfer who has mastered the e foni ool T N art of holding his pitches on the | conct, Commander Wh green will have the upper hand OVer | .q that while he had no authority to those who specialize on long drives | gyve out details of the completed in- or smart putting. A goodly number | quio ho wished to sa o of the greens are on elevated | commicsioned offic mounds from which caréle Phat Gily ons warsint oftice: proach shots roll down into imited number of lower grades rough or bad traps With the slight- 'ore. " ha¢ the amounts of bribes g est provocation. leged to have been given coast guard There are water hazards, but members were exaggerated; that in periods of wet weather there are | gy District Commander Rasmus- numerous ditches which answer the %o 1ad the situation entirely in purpose. ! band, and that t Par 71 on 6,318 Yards fifth district is to be investigated s length and par figures for | ., " each hole follows: No. 1, 375 yards, par 4: No. 2, 4 rcs, par 4; No. 3, 170 yards, par 3; No. 4, 405 yards, 390 yards, par 4; No. 588 yards. more reg bril boats Commander Whe during an inves| Th true Sworn testimony was introduced at the inquiry by a wealthy and w known bootlegger that he had ap- proached a boatswaln In charge of a coast guard boat offering him a bribe. The bootlegger swore the of- ficer not only refused the money but par 4; No. 5, 6, 230 yards, par 4; No. 7, par No. 8, 300 yards, par 4; No. 170 yards, par No. 10, 590 No. 11, 400 yards, par 4: No. 13, 890 vards, par 4; No. 14, 525 vards, Yo. 15, 150 yards, par 3; No. 16, 375 yards, par 4; 17, 150 yards, par 3; No. 18, 3 rds, par 4. Total yard, 6,318, par T1. The four short holes are each well guarded with traps and deep rough. The seventeenth is perhaps the most difficult of the four as it | is on an elevation with nothing to stop a rolling ball from a plunge into trouble. again in the vicinity o fthe coast guard station he would be shot on | sight. SREENWICH FIRE DOES BIG DAMAGE No. GHECKING UP ON TAXES Be Asked 1f| | 840,000 Loss in Business Center of City Enfield Citizens to Greenwich, July 24 (P—Fire dam- in the business section of Green- {wich late last night amounted to They Have Paid—Effort to Clear Up Audit of Collector. Thompsonville, July 24 (P—Let- ters will be malled to approximate- ly 1,800 taxpayers in the town of Enfield on Monday, it was an- nounced by the selectmen here to- day. Starting from a gasoline clean- er in a tallor shop in the rear of a three story wooden building own- ed by Dr. M. S, Marshall of Port Chester, N. Y., the flames spread Soy in am effort to facilitate the [Fapidly, endangering the lives of aundit of the books of Clark L.|SeVeral and threatening yge neigh- Hamilton, former tax collector, who |POring houses . \s under bonds of $25,000 for ap- | The structure next door, owned by Dearance at the September term of |Philip Marks, was also badly burn- s a barber shop above the the superior court on a charge of [¢d a8 ™ it |tailor, and the apartment of Josep e tn pavers will be asked to |LWis, Who with his wife and three notify town officlals whether they |children, was forced to had paid taxes for the years 1924 and 19 ‘his information is nec- y as many of the books and records of the tax collectors wr-rc‘ destroyed or badly damaged by fire | and chemicals in Hamilton's stere a short time before he surrendered | 501V¢ Yy the'books ‘and” Tesigned his office | Of $4 which a Winter street resl- The auditors have been working on | dent said his 9-year-old son had the records, which will have to be stolen, The boy admitted the theft YPN)H*UCH"II. for more than a i l?EIM a 14-year-old boy who lives Sihati oW, bt no estinate of the |00 Spring . street Tad sfolen the & money from him. The latter denicd Fan or the shortage could be ;o charge and then the first lad | said he had lost the money | About 11 o'clock the officer met {the first boy and his brother and P 7. talked with them about the theft Fertilized With Sugar |1y, ime the 1ad saia he and a 13- Miaml Beach, July 24 (P—Miami | year.old boy companion had secret- Beach soon will boast the “sweetest” | a4 the money in the excavation at golf course in the world with the use {the Y. M. T. A. & B. socicty build- of 100,000 pounds of Cuban Taw |ing on Main str sugar for a vast fertilizer experi-| Officers Cosgrove and Grabeck ment. searehed for the money, but could A surplus in the market not find it, whereupon the boy ad- the purchase of sugar at one and|mitted having spent it. one-half cents a pound, a lower figure than the Everglades muck soil using a fertilizer. He plans to use psing a fertilizer. He plans to use the bulk of the shipment on greens and fairways over his four golf courses and possibly a small amount on trees and shrubbery. = SRS v SHOWER FOR MRS. WRIGHT. | tormination of democratle leaders A shower was tendered last o dadio _€¥e-lto center attention on the republi- :-"{g] s 'H”"'('i: of girls of the | can tariff policies again was evi- R h o v e, me Of| donced today by a statement from o eohn Maers of Commontalth | headquarters of the democratic venue in honor of Mrs il < b S °r | tional committee saying that “fore- Yyrint, formerly Miss Lilllan At-fmost among the issues of 1926 is the erele el M e real and last farm relief a8 D LY O must come largely through tariff Sl Y25 | Tarift modification bills introduced tered by Miss Helen Fa Mrs s sion of congres Wright received many beautiful and ‘1“(]" _°m_‘( L I“ Srotn 1seful gifts. s g nons ‘ T Nimble Wit Has Sleuths Bound in Skein of Lies Ofticer Daniel Cosgrove was kept busy for a time last night trying to the myster of what became Miami Beach Course Is lowed has been than $4 in taken fin the past mone amounts the lad. larger by Tariff Issues Will Be ashington, July 24 ()—The de- any IS NOT MOTED Washington, July 24 (P mander Robert G. Heiner, sxecutive er of th naval hospital which resulted recently of ( | Has Driver Arrested Com- On C'harge of Evasion fpxier stant Prosecuting Attorney W. . Greenstein issued a warrant this morning for the arrest of Edwin Johnson on the charge of evadin responsibility nd Detective Ser ed it. W. J. Raber of 2 \rmington avenue cot his car was struck by Main Johnson did not any damage court martial Charles M ler of t in the Devalin, comma hospital A n liquor charges. was geore of medical ly cligib selectio A 8l T iined that driven Sunday corps com- SNEE assed over in by Johnson street in t al { and on for promotion stop fo deter- board's list i : had been mine whether esterday done. SIGNS NEW VIGHTER HINVESSY L Murray oy e champior Bined wged by Billy Git cludes Gene Tunney, he contender. Gibson took ov ray's ms ment from New Y I r arrived here two v expected to IAVING Inspector E. J POST. Hennes- claiman o il the building department 10 on the evening of that \issioners Monday day the 1l gather to accept and appoint Arthur inspector. Ruther ll-time in- acting in For was ford 8 the city's first f 1 he has heen during v eral months Ancies go east shortly { past sev he part CUBAN MOTOR REGISTRY : Havana, July 24—Automobile reg istration in Cuba had r 1 il of 39,013 on June 30, the flscal year. Truck vas given as 12,144, Lack of good | roads throughout the country s |Tue <ald by automobile Importers to pre- { Miss Rosc ent a boom in sales of cars and rucks R HONOR GUEST Woods of Columbi gave a dinner last night ir of Mr. Woods' niece, Spancer of New York city. On Miss Margaret Welsh an¢ mary Woods gave a lunch- con at Silver Lake In Mrs Spencer's honor. MRS, SPENC Mrs, J. G the end of strect registration {h report the whole | about $40,000, it was estimated to- | grove said the boy's father told him | na- | s his last week of service in| @ | blackmail Mrs. L. LIKE MR. RILEY, HE - LEADS EASY LIFF iYou(h Does No Work, Rises and Eats a Random ert Essel, aged 30, of 2 ap- done no work in a en he is hungry and he awakes, he Alling in police en the judg (tioned him relative to the of theft of $21, E thett and said he spent $12, return- balance to Sergeant P. J who arrested him on com- of his father and sister. What do you do all day?” Judge inquired b was the reply 1e do you get up in the the judge pursued. 1 wake up,” Essel replied. what time do you wake the judge asked. | “On, sometimes 6 o'clock, some- times 4 o'clock, and sometimes 12 o'clock,” came the reply. | “What time do you h meals?” the judge asked “When 1 get hungry, plied, brazenly. | “I think you are in need of some- thing to ulate your habits Thirty days in jail,” the judge said, closing the case. cats w when B. W orning w wrises court ques- charge ve your Essel re- Greenstein and Probation recommended to be examin- and Attorney Officer Connolly |Judge Alling that E | s to his mental condition will probably be done, Theft of Check Charged | The of John Ra k, aged 18, of 24 Overlook street, charged with |theft of a check from Stanley Lej- | kowski of 82 Broad street, was con- sel 3 assured him if he was ever seen|tinued until Tuesday morning nrw} | weel. | " Sergeant 0'Mara said Bennie Sze- | weskowski, aged 18, of Doris street, |1s implicated and may be charged | with forgery. His father has prom- lised to turn him over to the police ! he will be arraigned with Rac- | zek. Accused of Cruelty to Animals I Adolph Asal, aged 38, of 27 | Hunter road, pleaded not guilty to | | the charge of cruelty to animals and his case was continued until Mon- day to allow him to engage counsel. | Before court Asal said he would ask | a continuance, so Dr. B. D. Rad- | cliffe, the state’s witness, was ex- { cused. When the case was called, | however, Asal sald he was ready for trial. The continuance was neces- sary because Dr. Radcliffe had left. Held for Non-Support Fred St. Lawrence, aged 40, of the Central hotel, the charge of non-support and the ,case was continued until Aug. 81, in charge of the probation officer. St. Lawrence said he has not been | drinking and has been looking for | employment since leaving jail after having served 26 He sald he is desirous of supporting his wife | find |and four children, but cannot work. Attorney Thoma representing St. a difficultt case to handle, St. Lawrence is behaving himself nts to shoulder his maritaf ilities, but he is unable to do 50 because of his inability to find work. Yesterday afternoon Attor- i ney McDonough was talking to St Lawrence on the street when De- | tective Sergeant McCue served the latter with a warrant. POINCARE BEGINS - WORK IN EARNEST Expects Debt Terms to Be Ratilied Soon Paris, July 24 (A—Prem McDonough said it is because {and w respon; ster today, M. Briant was back at the foreign office, and wheels of the new government began to run {smoothly after the hiatus caused by |the downfall of the Herriot minis- ltry A spokesman for the foreign of- Aim of the Democrats ifc® said he believed the debt ac- pall team of the University cords with the United States and ireat Britain would be ratified with- in a fortnight, as external credits lwere of the big factors neces- sary to the flnancial rehabilitation of the country. He cited France's present needs s, first, economy in government ex- penditures; second, that the coun- try should work more, spend les nd raise an tnternal loan, and third, foreign credit. All three, he said, were necessary under the present circumstances, one |Fort Benning Soldiers Must Learn to Swim Benning, Ga., July 24 (®)— The soldier at Fort Benning infan- try school who would avoid com- attendance at swimming classes learn to swim fifty vards any stroke ,and to cover sixty fet carrying a ten pound w Compulsory attendance at s ming classes been made rule of all combatant troop units of the garrison nd only soldiers who have demonstrated their ability to withstand the tests are relieved. The rule was put Into effect upon consideration of the demonstrated |usefulness of swimming in active loperations. pulsory must lemincinrt Lowell Men 4‘ (et Blackmail Letters Lowell, Mass., July 24 (#—Police and private detectives are guarding the homes of two Lowell men who have received threatening letters, H. Hutchins prominent lumber man, to- jved a note similar to two this week by Willlam E. handing sums ranging be- $2,500 and $3,500. Parker, | day | received Potte: tween $40 IN OIL STOLEN Oil worth $40 was stolen last | night at the Texaco Oil Co. station on Fast street, according to report to the police this morning. The de- tective bureau is investigating. told | el admitted the | After court, Assistant Prosecuting | pleaded not guilty to | r Poln- | Officer Cos. |care took over his duties as finance | business | ] i PERSONALS | Miss Inez Campbell of SUBWAY STRIKERS | s, Mtargorie 5nt of cnescone | 01011 New York Police Set Upon Thfhn Unreasonably - today for Maine where will spend a month's vacation. July 24 () — claimed selves victims of an unprovoked attack by ile police in- volved in the clash of the night claim to have fight to them- unprovoked *attack. after having been rsday as lost, yester- declared on again when Winthrop weeks at ‘ | street 1 | she | Joseph W. Roch {will leave for B: afternoon where vacation. of Union street yview, Milford, this New York, vill his . way strikers today Sub- he spend - police, w Fabian with Z Storey, who s eld Review at AtrTie aut theater, New York city, is a ade a heroic end guest of his aunt, Miss Mary A. : m an Story of Winter street. ailed to get thelr jobs DEVENS HOSPITAL | | : gain. Interborough Rapid | Transit company officials refused to | SEENE [][-‘ BLAZE k with strike leaders except as | individuals when they applied for | johs for the men. Afterward th 900 Patients Are Hustled Qut oo metormen rrom trains * fo Salety MBS SN ES Anthony Guggino, a bricks thrown thro | | | | knocked | | playing first Globe the week- ave gh win. the striker, unconscious in the cla last night, taken to a hospital, and later arrested for disorderly con- duct. Fellow strikers got him free on $i00 bail and hailed him as a martyr. Other strikers are nursing bruises from nightst on their h and shoulders. Mrs. Alexan- der Barton. of a striking mo- torman, declares she overheard po- and detectives in an automo the onslaught any time — sail the first violence of Camp Devens, Mass., July 24 — Fire which started last night in an unoccupied barracks in the rear of { the camp hospital here, threatened, | to destroy that building and other: adjoining, g that occupied Ly the press bureau. Help was summoned from Sterling, Ayer Lancaster. | Two hundred patients moved from the base hos the flames spread Iy second unoccupied barracks. Voluntzers from the Twenty-Sixth , | ivision, national guard, the regu rmy a oined i ighting the fire. John Os born of the 101st engineers led jetail into the burning area, as did had been sent to Man- | Lieutenant jerome Lally of the |hattan casino, strike headquarters, Ninety-Fourth division, . 0. T. C., | to maintain order ‘aptain Leo Fuohey of the Twenty- division wagon train detiail, utenant Patrick Collins of and wife were re- bile “Don't g say them them claim trouble the cry of a striker. are the Il give police; we'll hem all they want now.” 1e police was Colonel “Here HERO OF 27 YEARS Sith was | { burned. Hoban of the T y-s k company was blistered by the terrific heat. Removal of the patients was di- rected by Lieutenant Kovarick, aide neral Malvin Hill Barnum, commander of the post. |~ After a spectacular fight ond barracks was saved and the | was beliey effectually fined to t build Medal of Honor Awarded Fight er in Luzon Gampaign the sec- fire con- Washington, July 24—A quarter ury search for a Congressional Medal of Honor man s ended a few days ago when the war depart ment received a letter from Joseph L. Epps of Panamaw, Okla., aski about the decoration. For an a of gallantry on December 4, 1599 during the Gilmore relief expedition at Vigan, on the Island of Luzon when Epps captured 21 insurgents, EXPLODES FATALLY Brooklyn Woman Killed in ANCIENT MUSKET tions. That was on February , but the war department hao n a to locate Epps. search had been tually abandoned when the department re- ceived a letier last week from the missing hero. Unaware of the hono awaiting him, Epps wrote to asl about the statement made by his captain, that letter had intended {to recommend him for a Epps wrote: “My Captain, Charles Van Way, informed me personally that he | wrote up and eent in a recommenda- {tion for a medal for me. The battle of Vigan occurred Dec. 4, 1899. This |was for the capture of 21 armed nen—17 with guns and four with bolos—in hazardous position. I bought the gun some time ago and | & I had taken # to the Sukol home to | Vill B | show it to his friends. He often had | ! Fe8ard to the battle” = | pulled the trigger, he 5. s ' N P Ca id, and it | G 3 el Alscharkailbafon {tenant colonel on the retired {15510 wes uanning the togeer ot (VINE BL EOCIANREORG SR the musket and had pulled it hait a | The department today forwarded | e ohien Mrs. Sokol, who |the medal of honor fo the com- tmi Fedn Srorl i Jout the apart- |Manding general of the eighth corps ‘In.lnhrnrp"llrl 't the doorway of |Eres Fort Sam Hlouston, Texas for |the Hitchen and just as she'did the |Presentation o, Mr. Bops. (Mr. Eipy s (it is also entitled to the Spanish war M | - |service medal and the Philippine campaign medal ,which he will also |receive. He was born at Jame toywn, Mo. He first entered the mi tary service in Company D, first regiment, territorial volunteer in- fantry, from Oolagah, Indian terri- tory. He then was a cowboy. served later in the Thirty |ed States volunteer infantry. citation for his medal follows: “Discovered a party of insurgents inside a wall, elimbed to the top of the wall, covered them with his gun |and ‘forced them to stack arms and |surrender.” New $250,000 Highway In Mass. Opened Today Springfield, M July 24 (P— |The new Pecuousic cutoff, a relo- ca i1 highway at the Southern gate- way of this city, completed after New York, July —An ancient | muzzle loading musket nfac tured at the defunct Harper's Ferry arsenal was discharged ye ] Mrs. ( Sokol walked into the kitchen of her home at 12 16th trect, Brooklyn, wounding her ix the head so sever that she died a few moments later. The weapon was in the hands ot Martin Munson, a friend of Mrs. Sokol and her husband, Russell So- kol. e, was arrested on a charge of homicide at his residence, 38 15th street, Brooklyn. He admitted the | shot was fired while the weapon wa | in his hands. | He told the police that he ver bee The roline had lien- list, [Lepcr ]?aseball League Gets Perpetual Trophy Honolulu, July 24 (P—Baseball ers of the leper settlement |Kalaupapa now have a perpet |ehallenge trophy, gift of the bas of Cali- | pl se- fornia. | The patients of the leper s | ment wrote the Honol#lu Hin trophy. Ceeil m: r Hawaii baseball league, gave a cup for the winning {team this year and the Uni | lof California here for a | {summer series nst n | teams, chipped into buy another cup {for perpetual challenge The trophy will be known as the “alifornia cup and bear the names the members of the team donat- Benny, two e was opened to motor traffic today Brother }'n.o new roadway not only elimin ot lates steep grades and dangerous Fllqht curves but trolley tracks are relocat- ed which on the old road had to be crossed twice. This road carries practically all traffic entering the city from southerly points. FOOT SHARK IN NET Com. Byrd Takes First Washington, July 24 (# — Gov- nor Harry Byrd of Virginia took from the book of his famous brother, Lieutenant Commander Richard E. Byrd, the naval polar flyer, and made two airplane flights late sterday, the second one land- ing n at Bolling field here. The governor's firs light of the day and also of his life was from Richmond to Virginia beach. Offi- | cers at Langley field acted as pilots Trawlers Capture Big Fish Near New London Bathing Beach New London, July 24, — A five- foot shark disporting with a school of weakfish and dogfish was caught on this hop well as on the flight in 4 trawling net by the crew of the from Virginia beach to Washing- 'smack Imp this morning. The shark ton. | was capture in the waters |as the Black Passage, a quarter- | Coast Guard Fires Shot |mile of the Shennecosett Club's [ bathing beach, where Hotel Gris- Through Wall of Offlce;\m,,, patrons and Eastern Point San Pedro, Calif., July 24 (UP—A cottagers go swimming. shot fired today from a one pound un on the coast guard cutter No. 254 while that vessel was chasing the power boat Imyp, soared over the | heads of a score of workmen in the | Bethlehem shipbuilding | Franc Continues Today To Show Improvement Parls, July 24 (A — While the company | Bourse was closed today, the franc yards and tore a hole in a wall of [showed steady improvement on un- the compan: office building. official quotations. It was quoted at Later it was explained at the Inine‘o'click at 41.75 to the dollar t guard base that a loaded she |11 nd 204 to the pound sterling, as instead of a blank one had been |against last night's official closing fired by mistake. of 42.87 and 208.25 respectively. The Imp was wanted as a susp At ten o'clock the quotations were ed rum runner. No liquor was |41.12 to the dollar and 200 to the found aboard, but two men were |pound; at eleven o'clock 40.87 and held for questioping. 198,756 and at noon 40.91 and 199. them- | AGONOW LOCATED medal | e you any information T can| years at an outlay of $125,000, | known | TOUN 101 4N ABIDING MEN s e couren s gveere ve | e Those Who Violate It Are Well Fed church tonight, Sunday night, and Relic To Be Applied At Services In Local Church Tonight And Sunday Monday night at 7:30 o'clock. This is an annual ceremony and is usual- Iy ded by thousands from other | parishes. : e The services which will be in |At the Boston immigration station | French tonight will be conducted by [4T¢ ten Wwell-fed Portuguese prison- | | Charles Coppens, pastor and | Eomewhars &t {ange MZPASIRAL] Sl biant o e |others, and on the bark Lina in port ev. Since conc noon the first of s held with Irwin rbury, vice-pr dent of the company, s speaker. Mr. McElhone and Albert 8. Jourdan, superintern in this city executive in Wa- s the former {and now terbury, also spoke, benediction, | i and the »pli ion of the reiic of here are ten more, who have al)ld-“ Anne. Sunday might the services [¢d by the immigration law and who will be in German, face starvation. will be in English. The v lacteridvio Nervieas vAIL S conaucten Cape Verde Islands with & by priests from the LaSallette Mis- 28 and a passenger list of i brought no cargo. | - —_— | chor near Fairhaven shore, repeat- jed bre for the forbidden shore i have been made. Ten men Were re- C ed and i t are eight listed as missing, i wmoifg them Captain Joaquim Clau- | a Durate, and what is more im- ip's cook. None of the crew had been paid, they said, and yesterday the credit New Britain District Workers o’ srevidon store was cur oft P | _ S They appealed to the authorities for |relief. The local Red Cross declar- Connecticut Light and Power Co. a |{i. soamen, G. M. Lutz of a local thorough knowledge of the com- |p,nking and ship agent firm, volun- pany’s aims and endeavors and to ered to stand the grovery bills for matters concerning its service, B. H. | Yicartime a warrant has been ls- McElhone, di uperintendent in {04 for Captain Duarte charging this city, has ged a series of lyim with violation of the federal ern will speak on subjects of United States exacts a fine of Ly S0 arean $1,000 for each illegal entry from the owners of a ship. The Lina, when ade, brought only $6,700. en missing represent fines $8,000, not including the ten others recap- ant might move. It is regarded as un- ; = |likely that the owners will make any In his address Mr. Day stressed |sttampt to secure the Lina, nof & icomuiodity, fbutia fsey |wegian bark Tiburton which was | “something that must be d¢ o byt aee ase aaSa DOLICE runner and sold by the United States | and Monday | Wight ihey | arrived here on June 21 sionary order tioned in Parkville, then, the craft lay at an- aken to Boston. Now | portant to those remaining, the (. L. and P. Co. Official Inspires | which they had enjoyed at a water- In order to give employes of the | .q they had no funds to assist desti- enable them to inform the public on a week. meetings at which officials of the |y v jn permitting aliens to land. she was last sold into the Cape Verde t d against whom the government ‘mrr point that the company supplies | The Lina was formerly the Nor- | Nor- | datl marshal in Boston. | on immediate soon as it is future ‘im shipped or put for * IGNORES OWN GIRL ])mw good relations, we are not Savin Rock Goncessionist Turns | Back on Her | very apt to prosper. 1t we do not | | prosper, the community is going to | | suffer in the form of service they | receive. A starved public utility | means a starved We can- not build lines and extensions or do all the things we want to and | give this service unless the com- | munity supports our efforts in that | regard. In order to gain the sup- | port of the community, we have to show that we are worthy of hav- | ing it.” Mr. | main obli | the public, | vide adeq lall who want service; everybody discrimination; | The pair were found wandering 4 — to charge f: and reasonable | ghout the city streets at 2:30 o’clock s yesterday morning, the girl clad in is probable that as a result of ilhone's suggestion, these | conferences and meetings be held in all the company's district | SEVERAL HUNDRED | BORAH MAY BE OUT AR VDo oo Against Rebels Western Trip Savors Somewhat Beirut, Syria, July 24 () — Se \u‘ OI Tha[ P“mose sral hundred dissident tribesmen SRR have been killed by the French and | Washington, July 24 (P—With the more than 300 prisoners taken in cyes of politicians ,following him [saEnm Rl he et Ghou- [closely, Senator Borah, of Idaho, will | communtas, = = Benersl #4%1go west in a week. He will g9 to Of the French and on his way iliaries, the statement s speeches. killed and wounded. Among { those killed was Colonel Ving, a distinguished officer who had par- ticipated in 21 campalgns, winning | 13 citations. He fell while leading [States. ; | his troops against the dissidents, | Senator Borah's speech-making The statement charges {hat two |(oUF is Tegarded here as having been 1 q |pla a view to capturing the aviators who were forced by motor [Planned with a view { republican nomination for the pres- trouble to land in the midst of their enemies were wounded and |l9ency Hei1q undetstood position in astene o . 279 |be hoping to attain a ;,].';r!;,»dhm'n‘d to their plane and | s The will have to be seriously |considered for the nomination it the next convention should not turn to {President Coolidge. Reports that | g 3 Senator Borah has any intention of "W"""‘: _('r;‘"'l"“}f.o (:,‘,"”"" EYer |} cading a third party movement are Moner s pot o PN oo (dRnied By Mk close fricnda: N L dary | Senator Borah plans to speak two [k snnd el anck Iy Dalkota on his way west, an vesterday after having received for |Nors Dot O e, His Kan- two days the greatest popular ova- [>%° 0 SPC . Ton, e adndbd oralines 1oy mamancech milLdealuliy ‘,‘m‘;‘b' t 1oms ; i |He plans to discuss the world court, Soviet ‘Kussis |the League of Nations and other fm- il |portant issues in his speeches. clix E. Dzerzhinsky, the supreme council economy did mot seem-to cool the | ardor of Russia’t numerous film | whose vehemence in cease- |lessly cheering the American guests [overwhelmed them. The silver | ("% A 200, Tap ¥ ate this aft- ,;'r'.'“""“‘"|h;"d. \':';‘C :’:"Slvt";"'\“ ernoon on their return trh‘: trom heir two nights’ stay In MosCOW. | cpicago, 111, where the chief at- “Doug” " eniosed things immensely | tonded the convention of the inter. but the strain was too muc T Mary, resulting in a case of com- plete nervous exhaustion. service, Bridgeport, July 24 (A—"T'll have nothing to do with her,” replied Igo- ra Tomisawa, Japanese keeper of veral concessions at Savin Rock hen informed by Bridgeport police today that they are holding his daughter, Frances, 18 and a com- panion, Emory G. Stevens, 22, both of Pleasantyille, N. J. outlined the four ions of the company to | as follows: 1 — To pro- — to serve Da 50 ite service — to serve withofit e being held for the girls' ther arrival. Now that he has re. fused his assistance, the police are awaiting a reply from the girl’s grandmother in Pleasantville. |Tdaho for a time and important their aux- 49 were [make several ‘Lul“r he will enter on a more ex- ended iidnerary of speech-making, several which will garry him into FAIRBANKSES QUIT MOSCOW and funeral of chairman of of national CHIEF HART RETURNING Captain George J. Kelly of the po- lice department received a telegram this morning from Chief W. C. Hart | that he and Mrs. Hart will arrive the United States and Canada. SAG INDITION CRITICAL Little improvement has been no- ticed today in the condition of John Sage of 43 Babcock street who Was | (g a store in that place and 12 boxes taken suddenly ill while at work at|of cigars, 35 cartons of cigarettes, the Stanley Rule and Level Co., ves- (12 watches, elght pipe sets, 12 terday, and was taken to the hospital | combs and 18 fountain pens taken. where it was learned he had|Two men in a coupe are suspected, ptomaine poisoning. He is still in & | the sheriff sald. very serious condition. TERRYVILLE BURGLARY The local police were notified this forenoon by Sheriff Buckley of Ter- {OST A KLAN.RIOT Corning, Towa, July 24 (PM—Armed with pitchforks, hammers, crowbars and similar crude weapons, 70 per- sons attempted to stop members of the Ku Klux Klan, bound for a county meeting at the farm of Wap Goodwin, near this city, Jast night. Arrival of officers prevented a dis- turbance. Ty e, < e Al Y. P. C. U. ELECTS attle, Wash., July 24 (P — Ed- win McKirahan, of East Rye Gate, Vt, has been elected national president of the Young People's Christian Union of the United Presbyterian church. Miss Myrtle Patterson, of Beaver Talls, Pa., was chosen as general secretary. - national police chiefs’ association of | ryville that entrance had been made | 125 GOLF ENTRIES Miss Collett Included Among Those Who Play Next Weck at the Shenecossett Country Club. New London, July 24 P — The elghth annual women's invitation tournament for the Griswold trophy and ‘other prizes will open Monday morning at 8 o'clock at the | New Bedford, Mass,, July 24 (#)— | Shenecossett links at Eastern Point, and will continue through to Fri- day when the finals will be played. Up to this time 225 entries have been made and more are expected. The Griswold trophy must be won three times by one player, not nec- essarily in succession, before be- comingh er property. Among the entrants is Miss Glen- na Collett, United States open women'’s champion, who will defend her title as woman champion of the Shenecossett Golf club against such strong players as Miss Helen| Payson, Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, Miss Dorothy Klotz, Miss Bernice Wall, Miss Maureen Orcutt, Mrs. ¥. E. Dubols, Mrs. J. Rose, Mrs, Thomas Hucknell, Mrs.. H. A Martelle, Miss Marle Jenny, Mrs, Roland Barlow and Mrs, J. D. Woodfin. EXPLORERS WILL CONTINUE SEARCH National Geographic Gives More Funds for Work Washington, D. C, July 24—8ci- entists are working out a gigantic | | Fight |J1B-5aw puzzle in the southwest, first searching over hundreds of square miles of territory for the pleceg that nature has hidden through the centuries. The story of this fascinating “game” i{s wrapped up in an an- nouncement just made by the Na- tional Geographic soclety that its research committee has made an additionai grant of funds to con- tinue this summer the "“Beam Ex- pedition” work under the leadership of Dr. A. E. Douglas of Steward observatory, University of Arizona. “No one knows the age of the in- teresting communal dwellings, America's first ,aparement houses’| that have been unearthed in New) Mexico,” says a bulletin from the ‘Washington, D. C., headquarters of| the National Geographic Society. “The largest of these, Pueblo Boni- to in Chaco Canyon, has been fn- tensively studied by National Geo- graphic Society expeditions -during the past six years. Much new in- formation has been gathered in re- gard to these early Americans from the examples disclosed of their ma- sonry, pottery, baskets and jewelry; but no definite lights has been cast| on the age of their culture, for they had no calendar. Now this secret| seems likely to be found out from thq examination of what laymen might consider prosaic old wooden beams that supported the flat roofs of the Bonitans. “Dr. Douglas found some years ago that trees in growing not only| leave a ring for each ‘year, but that often the character of the ring de- notes the particular year in which it grew. That is, in an unusually moist season an especially wide or well| marked ring will be left in all the trees of the region subjected to the| unusual conditions. If a living tree 400 years old is cut and a recent characteristic ring identified, other| outstanding rings made in the tree’s youth can be dated centuries ago. These characteristic marks may be found in turn among the most re- cent rings of an ancient log pre served in a sandbank and so nature calendar may be followed back still farther. Scientists Hunt Old Wood “Since the working out of this} method the scientists of the Nationall Geographlc society’s beam expeditio have been scouring the southwest for| specimens of ancient wood. Some] have been discovered in the form of] old tree stumps covered centuries ago by the gand and clay washed byl some extraordinary storm. Others| have been found in Indlan pueblos, still in use; and still others in the| ruins of ancient’ structures. “In every case cross-sections have: been prepared and microscopic studles made. Many of the specl: mens, of course, have been found tc cover approximately the same period of time; but now and then a lucky find has pushed the earliest knowr date line of the United States a few decades or generatlons farther back: “Science has not completed this chronological puzzle, but working| from both ends it has fitted piece after piece into place, steadily nar rowing the gap of the unknown. is hoped that before long a trust. worthy estimate can be made of the ruins, so fitting America’s early civil- ization into its proper relation te that of the Old World.” City Items Samuel Abrahamson has brough an action in the city court agains Richard Fox, for possession of ¢ tenement at 34 Talcott street. It if (returnable July 26 at 10 a. m. E. D'Agostino of 142 Oak streef complained to the police today thaf his son had been bitten by a dog |owned by a woman llving at 3¢ Daly avenue. Motorcycle Policeman W. P Hayes was detalled to shoot a dog which was run over by an automo: bile in front of a house at 74 Wood- iand street about 11:30 this morn. ng. LICENSES SUSPENDED. i The police were notified today of the suspension of the operator's li censes of Joseph Lopez of 40 fayette street or 155 Washingtoy street, Jullus Beckius of 138 Dwig] street, Paul Klelst of 34 Black Roc! avenue, C. Vincent O'Neil of 27 Chestnut street, John Gradeck of 4 Millard street or 45 Newington & enue, also that the licenses of Davij| Gorfain of 67 Walnut street, thfj right to operate of Joseph Barys! vich of 22 Broad street, and the Ii cense ‘of Frank Groman of 118 Win throp street have been returned.;

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