New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 11, 1926, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1926. POINCARE SPEEDS REFORM MEASURES Preaier Sems o Be Aol ing Tmpossible Paris, Aug. 11 (P—Premier Poin- care has completed, equalled in the an- nals of the third republic, his finan- | for the rehabilitation of France as far as it was politically | possible under the CONFESSES ASSAULTS Strangling to Death or Attacking : and Philip H this seriously considering ways means for re-cxamining ope The national Versailles has hich followed provision for a sinking fur Robbins B. Stoeckel, state com- tangled financial It was not without sce disorder, brought about by position of the y afternoon. Commissioner Stoeckel saic operators was based purely on pe estimates, since the records tepartment contained noth- would make a more scien- acted by members of the BUTLER CONDENNS BISHOP' SPEECH for “Un-Chris- to be suspended streperous tactics of the opposi | Fist fights between members of the | extreme right curred during one stage The communists banged desks and hurled insults of the ses- Raps Leonard fian” Attitude One deputy was expelled chamber because g |expiration dates. is generally Premier Poincare, it understood. wonld have pre have had the Franco-American and | of Franco-British de] tified and put out of the way during the session of the national asse and he might |ANADIAN GOVERNMENT ~ ii:.’ t agreements REORGANIZING CUSTOMS ivuocr have even suc- ceeded in forcing them through by the authority public support. have felt it would be wiser for him which, referring to Gov pal ring and | ithin gunshot of the White | accomplished and not jeops whole program part of it, however important. Consequently the senate and the | chamber today began a long vaca- | During this vacation a sub- | SP€ committee appointed by the cham- ber's finance committee will study | the two debt agreements. L has been made president of the sub- | commission. It was decided that the commis- sion, which is to have charge of the the tobacco monopoly and a portion of proceeds of the in- which will go into the ainking fund, shall be gemoved from all political conflict, thy commission changing fortunes of parliamentary This action, it is asserted ted in favor of the | the sinking against ' ler denounce ristian and un- The Canadian government is taking | towards a complete ganization of the ment of customs and exci: ech Sunday at Round lake ponder this speech by Bishop Leon- | In o statement k upon almost 1 straight-thinking American and Christian holds most dear. impossible to uphold at one and the principles of that Me and Dilworth, chartered tions covenant is propos income from stigation, make a carcful study of | league in 1923, who is lect administration of the entire the Institute of Politics here. department and to make| Constitutional defects and ndations with a view toits | tendencies that have made pol reorganization as contem- | disputes almost entirely plated by report of the customs, in nature while the cconomic read-| p; adopted by parliament | justments carried on under the|continuously. Every time he goes|bership of more than 200 leading out she accuses him of going to| engin necessity |meet women. As a matter of fact| work. Field reports of the New Ha- heritance tax, 1s guarantee- ure from those s can well he constitution by Iment and to restore s possible our form of that amendment by those who Yol invasion of the mensure, assure the & leakage or against going astray. In telling the assembly that the n chould be adopted | shortly before prorogration. 1 The acting prime minister an- ch government which sinking fund pla Hes'a6 mravely. distovted Premier Poincare said that t “our creditors will find proof at we are determined to pay all our debts in the measure of our ca- sultative commiittee, Bookkecpcrrls §lain In Daylight Robhery | | Scope of its Benevolent Work s Definitely Establishes 26 Sailors Are Drowned | rwo aaring (P)—Twenty-six members of the crew of the auxil- jary fishing schooner Sylvia Mosher | ed in the are believed to Have perished \\hrn‘ the eraft was piled up, a total loss. on the north side of Sable during a hurricane last Captain John Mosher, old and married, is among the m 1t is said that nine bodies and several dories have ashore on Sable The Sylvia Mosher was the high- | si liner of the Lunenburg fishing fleet. All the members of the crew Nova Scotians. Halifax, Aug. Chief Issue Before Session in Chi and serlous wou | flelds into which the order is urged | {to project a major share of its be-| program were a pr ore the convention of the lodge of the Knights of | and Woodlawn where seven the question has become a major is- sue of the th ank and covered em- READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS| ployes and customers, FOR BEST RESULTS ¢ CIAL ERUPTIONS unsightly and annoying—im- proved by one application of Resino! proposals are for the estab- lishment of a tuberculosis institution | matters, therefore, there is a in the United State | pation in the | Leper Colony in the Philippines. nAother major matter is 8 in currency. left the bank Pa t ployes followed them into the street er was killed and Gabler wounded, “squaring the thematical document | papyrus dating back nt's board, announced yester- tivity of cooperation, wh IN NEW BRUNSWICK CASE Investigation of Hall-Mills Murder (0,000 UNLICENSED) MYSTERY WOMAX SouGHT 5BA[i OF DOUGHNUTS [ereoic seow s DRIVERS INSTATE ...~ | L Stoeckel May Re-Examine Many SN (0T AFIVE SPOT But Then Todzia Thought He| Could Get Them Free Today is Turned to New Aug. 11 P— The scarch Mills murder mystery today shifted 11 (P—At least to new and unnamed regions. T, AeAstoRI ot Halloe g court re Jriving automo- As a ate without proper ment s “NSeS. ange motor vehicle depart-' “state is not ch Auto Operators _ Somervil to his pronounce- morning had almost as much mystery woman in |ty as a Mon morning session. claration that the Several cases were heard by Judge asing rainbows" State | Hungerford, in ition to automo- 1ps0! special attorney | bil law violation charges. o | Naval Observatory Reports 25 Seen | num Last Evening—Phenomena Will Continue hington, Aug. 11 (#—Approx- | Dean Kimball, check valve sy 25 meteors in the annual s in the Hall- imately B — shower from the constellatoin of a step Perseus were seen between 11:30 all ;30, g uri.|last night and 3:45 a. m. today at | public drinking the naval observatory here by Com- nder Asaph Hall, U. S. | . astron- | | regulations, said that a 5 | ber of factories and office buildings The shower, in the northeast heav- found it necesary to mer at the okbservatory these non-fatal accidents is 5( 000 days yearly, while the total er of days lost i proxi- | 1, would in ma ese regulations, average W of only $4 a day]held early this of $1,184,000,000, according to | plants from the singl of er. in explaining the impor ible ibed by Professor Hall from the put directing the renewed in- | g Frank zia, aged of 5 i 5 vel= | ¥ : d Ih~;r first rm_n|n<»< vestigation Into the four j St et fi“ it et i\ ri‘!mg dls(]:ngulshcd by rather yel- | iifEpendent ater shpplv ore modern conaitlons mystery, announced that hi o . |lowish streaks. SR E fors modern conditions mysters, annonced that his - ass0- |Gt o doughmt valued at 4011 . e ot e meteore DOUDIE Check Valves Must Be tory and . sen. i nvestigators would ave o 0 4 he mete These two supplies quirement of licensed and Middlesex counties | | 7 [v:“],”‘ .fm‘,l N Iy is observed at this time, he | lns[a”e through the \dxmpvm-x Id be reduced to their quarry into hither- o OO L and the shower undoubtedly | 1 d e Al ca OBt Evis SEaly fre- || visible again tonight. 5 5 . s T f a store at 63 N S T « Kk ve The the chiefpoints made 4 x ‘he meteors are believed t 5 el Rt 10 moln. myste 1" who wore ' o this morning h The - MeLeors Are, .2 S Ricpne Hartford 11 (P-New ri lealthdepartment ss when she and 1 herselt at tor Simpson's Jersey City of- |t last week, will be examined today. Wh th ‘mystery d by Senator Simpson vealed the names of eye oprietor watched and ind a companion take un. The other man Todzia was c: lown Br color motor vehi in the state c present as 1 d street. gave for unlicense to have witnesses to the murder of Rev. Ed- | officer ward Wheeler Hall and Mrs, I lress, that the man lived Mills, is being questioned, th prosccutor and his chief assistants will confer in Jersey City to decide nor special | el possible. He arrive 10,000 r cent of all the a om the store hefore doug particles of a broken up comet and the display sometim tears of § commemoration of the anniversary |St ught aft-|,¢ that saint's martrydom. gor te sa is referred to | lations in the st vy code de- Lawrence” in |Signed to protect public drinking »plies from contamination by back from the non-potable supply ems were announc H. Osbor: flow of the non-po the drinking supply of! The use of two check dual water sy waters more difficult. e most 118 in the code. prohibits the use of MANY BIG d and approved by nes | | dual water supplies without the use | Rome, Aug. 11 (P—Ital said he had not stolen |of doubue check valves that have Of more than 20,000 families which | t wve n children or sclosed by special statistics com- been insp drivers in the state were! Whether the "”‘“'] "‘”‘""1 four | ang the reason he took them this ! tment Of health ! : s . exhumed as sug- SA R ht 5 b uline. Dr. Os. piled by order of Premier Musso- thout proper licens mor was that he thought it W“ G t D 23 000 F I effect of this ruling, Dr. Os portion of the was a ¢ : to get a free dinner.| {f] il 0 A | born said, will be to render unla commissioner said was Besides the “mystery woman" be- It was 5:40 o'clock when he took ' < % if‘ll a ze number of dual water T T ovghlise artite s lieved {o be a sister of the murder- | them be planned on having | systems in factories and buildings | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS » £ renew their licenses at the ed chorister, other witnesses will be r lunch this noon. throughout the state, that are con- | FOR YOUR WANTS questioned here. 1t was not vouch- ey ik, aged 35 of 193 sE——— | safed by the investigators whether er street, pleaded guilty to as-|' New York, Aug. 11 (® — Prot.| S e = stryman, Ralph V. M. Gors or m they said a w accessory after the fac be issued, will be iting Patrick Welch last Sun- day morning, and was fin without costs. Officer Feerfey gusstion rear of 193 Beaver street, where | the arge of horse has ¢ Department. Pozonak sald Welch and several| duction study I] other men annoy him day after day many Ontario, Aug. 11 (A — and he felt justified In teaching|east and south. Welch a lesson. or- Patrick sderal dep ; two young girls on Commonwealth United States navy steam en- | g cusomes SietiEn i Vi avenue, and had judgment sus-| gineering school of Hoboken. N. J.| Honedining the list Sronion poran Hls Vlews pended. He was represented by| He invented diagrams for l'nlzmeer»} : | —_— Judge W. . Mangan. Officer | ing formulae. | nt Sir Henry Dray- ; (Gieorge Moffitt made the arrest late, Two thousand industrial plants | prime minister, an-| Willamstown, Fass. Aug. 11 () (0080 TOH 0 e, R e Lt gue of s. Clarkson, | — Revision of the ‘oronto, employed in Politis. minister of Greece have been en- for ague have assumed r, . point out a univer |nounces that the whole work, how- for a reorganization, M. Politis said e does not go with dther women,|ven and other cities will be assem- o “nrthe cter of the po ried in conjunction | last night advisory and con- ropean char: | problems tr about ¢ ore, the Eu-|pe al | constantly accused. ed have so far centered Mon night about 11 o'clock s ment 1 security | his wife came home and h ed he rm has made the influence of non-Fu seized an electric smashed it and also smashed a bot-, tife hose problems t that with the tle of wine. He activity the | thréw her on the b “There is no lopment of its 1 to the from the unive | plane,” M. Politis said cipal problems with which it deals such as disarmament and security are of more interest to FEurope |ventured. | than to other parts of the world,| Asked by Mr. Greenstein if it is| and there seems no settlement for | possible for a person's eye to be- ¢|those problems other than on the|come discolored by falling into bed, | basis of continental regionalism. | Peferson replied that it is possible| !The extra-European political ques- | if the person falls in the right spot. || n, and whereas its political com-|“Yes. or if you hit her in the right paten, becoming restricts more spot,” Mr. Greenstein said. | and more to Europe, the economy Newleyweds Appear | and humanitar aged 24, of 72 | which it presides, is hecoming more |Grove street, a rank Montiaro, nd more universal. In political aged 24, of the same address, who fla- | pleaded guilty to the ¢ opean jbecome 4 ‘he prin-|the bed. The mark on her arm| must have been caused by his seiz-| |ing her. Women bruise easily, he| Aug. 11 (A—The two, rcipal | on the eve of de the Pythians will unite prises at home in en ateth hicnsliT s an cooperation over| Margaret Gome arge of im-! and for partici- nt contradiction between the de- | Proper conduct last week and whose | work of the Culion|velopment of the league's activity |Cases were continued with the un- | and its present organization. lerstanding that the couple marry, | "he logic of events demands appeared in court this morning with the covenant adapt itself soon- |Proof of marriage and their cases on im- | Were nolled. Burrel Hallett, aged 21 ye t Berlin, pleaded guilty to ulting a 14-year-old girl and I for the Sentenced to jail for 60 days, " sistant Prosecuting Aftorney Green stein told gJudge Hungerford that fraternal | e foundation of the|t partment in 1886, a to-| er or later to the distine 10,000 has been paid out | posed by facts between political ac- A. Horton of St.|tivity which, in principal, is only t., member of the de-|FEuropean, and a non-political ac- rs, of | present can only be uniy ETHEL: To the Front |the originfil charge was indecent |assault but Attorney Alfred LeWitt, | | defense counsel, agreed to enter a| plea of guilty to the charge of sim- ple assault and accept a sentence | of 60 days in jail for Hallett. The | | young woman In the case was as-| | saulted in an automobile with her | consent and has since been com-| | mitted to an institution. | | Manuel Atashion of 10 Green- wood street fined $30 and costs | |and had a previous suspended sen- | tence of 30 days in jail revoked, on || the charge of keeping a gambling house at 7 East Main street. Sam artalan, Harold Parpagi, James | Bigbision, Warta Wartamon, Peter | Karzarian and Mike Gushgarian || were each fined $3 and costs for || gambling. Attorney Cyril F. Gaff- ney represented them and claimed a distharge on the ground that there | was no evidence of gambling. The | men were playing cards about 12:45 a. mi. Sunday. | Officers Doty, Feeney and Liebler made the arrests, No money was in sight, but according to Officer | | Feeney ashian sald there were | cards used to represent money. At- torney Gaffney claimed a discharge | but Tudge Hungerford denied the | | motion saying that the police testi- fled the men were “kambling. He set bonds for an appeal at $500 in Atashion's case and $100 in the | other “cases, ACCUSED OF THEFT., Manchang, Mass., Aug. 11 (— | Charged with the larceny of about $1,000 of the funds of Manchang council, T'Union St. Jean Baptist D'Amenique soci Adelard Du- buque, for more than 15 vears treas- urer of the society, was arrested to- t his home and taken to the | police headquarters, | was released on bail for appearance in central district court. | | where | A g L | The rafiroads have been author- | 1zed by congress to carry any totally | blind person, accompanied by a | guide, at the fare charged for one person, under euch reasonable regu- lations as may have heen established | | by the carrier. has been appointed to direct| investigation in a nationwide survey by | ican Engineering couneil, | | field ed that Welch sleeps in a barn in|a part of and last #hich seeks to check the growing Scandal Is Resulting in ' Sunday morning Pozonak beat him,|number of ’ ! causir is eye e swoll, v e cou b v, Complete Change In Federal (B, cansing his eve o become swollen | this country. The council's survey, and otherwise injuring him. in the nature of a safety and pro-‘ the large cities in 'hr“\ Professor Seward, who will laier! Degnan pleaded not| extend his work to other Connec-{ et Williamstown Speaker Explains svies o the charee of annoving ticut Frank Peterson, aged 38, of 90| gineers under the direction of a 1 by M. |\ oh street, was fined $10 and costs| main committee, with the aim, ac- lting his wife at their cording to Dean D. S. K nce, and delegate to the |y, e Monday evening. Judge W.| Cornell univers Iring at |y Mangan represented him. bottom . Peterson testified that her|accident | \d struck her and discolored | cidents, despite 15 years of organ- | her eye and also injured her arm. ized safety effort, were declared to| ZUropean |He has assaulted her frequently. | be increasing. son said hfs wife nags him| Twenty committees with a mem- the whole = problem of | prevention. [ndustrial ac- | are carrying on the and he cannot stand being! bled in Washington by a staff head-] (nce upon a time, a fellow would Joshua Eyre Hannum, re-| arch engineer of t | scold- | Conservation council of America. | for being out so late, where-| About 23,000 fatal accidents oc- | an and | cur vearly ized her and|have 1. He did not| Kimball. Tt has been estimated that | are 575,000 non-fatal found, agne has little by little slipped |strike her and her eve must have| there colored when she fell on| dents causing four weeks’ or more | Once Upon a Time The Drunken Driver Was Safe in the Back Seat Seward of Yale univer- ew Havenas | industrial accidents in now going on in organized and operated | nball of | ing to the | ty. of ge BY TOM SIMS Th w drinks. He go out and have a few drinks. The | pic o Eyesight 2walks and buildings would start | m in ell the Industries of similar to the one above can sober,” replies the States, the engineers ccording to Dean |fel his ¢lothes and get it off an old let- Some accl. | ter. After a short drive the hilarious | begins to admire the | gentleman would arrive him safely. |becomes a part of it. imes he abse disability and about 3,000,000 acci- | treidedby the single check | dents in all causing at least one|Such plants must be reconstructed expenditures of money | mately 300,000,000, which at an|born, were the result of two hearings ummer at which the | would amount to a total wage loss | feasibility of changing factory water to the double m was di The regulations, he also said, were n the direction of eliminating pollution of drinking water investigations of check valve often became opened by dirt so that bz ble W render such intermingling . the officer on a wild = today by Dr hase for his companion, the| health commissioner. 1 : ding’ on arrival at the ! portant regulation which is number FAMILIES t, however, was “once time.” Now a fellow goes out and climbs into to. Perhaps a more nded friend will-remonstrate ng peculiar, so he would call a| “I can drive better drunk cabby would either ask the ong And besides, I'm not his address, or look through | Sometimes he arrives home There Is No Substitute for Circulation In the days before the advent of the Audit Bureau of (Circulations many ingenious schemes were used to in- flate circulation as inducements to the advertiser. This was attempted substitution. The prevalence of such policies brought about the ne- cessity of an authorized authority to check these unfair methods. The A. B. C. was the result, and today the majority of leading publications in the United States and Canada look to the Bureau to verify their circula- tion, both for their own, as well as the advertisers’ pro- tection. . We are proud to be members of the A. B. C. Our last report from the Bureau’s Auditor is open for your in- spection, and it will reveal no semblance of substitution for the circulation we claim—and have Advertisements are frequently the most interesting news in the paper. Read them New Britain Herald OVER 13,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY The Herald is the Only Newspaper in New Britain With An Audited Circulation

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