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R T ¥ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1926. THO NEW HAVEN HEN ARE KILLED Rutos Figwe in Couple of Tragedies in One Day New Haven, Aug. 18 (P—John Phelan of View strect, this city, was fatally injured and Francis O'Leary of Deep River, was serlously hurt vhen an automobile In which two men were riding collided with a trol- ley car at James and State streets. “Phelan died on the way to the New Haven hospital. O'Leary is suf- ering from a fracture at the base the skull and is on the danger list. The trolley car was in charge of 2 sdward Haude and Con- or Spang, regulars on the Yale *eld-Ferry street-Chapel street line. “The trolley car had stopped at the corner. O'Leary, who was op- erating the automobile, attempted to pass another machine and the rear end of his automobile collided with the front of the trolley. This threw the automobile around in a circle and it then with the trolley car.” struck By Auto. New Haven, Aug. 18 (P—William 59, of 42 Fourth avenue, West tally injured last night whe was struck t tomobile ope ond A Brown, of 176 this city supervisor of traffic of the S New England Telephone company. Frey was employed by the Rubber company and had the plant and was crossing Hallock avenue when the accldent occurred. He died of a fractured skull while | being taken to New Haven hospital Brown claims that Frey steppec out from behind another automobile and into the path of his machine. He was arrested on a charge © | reckless driving and was released under $500 pending an investigation by the coroner.. e et e Dr. Scholl’s Zino-Pads For Corns, Callouses and Bunions SURE RELIEF The Diciinson Drug Coipany 169-171 MAIN STREET ELECTRIC TREATMENTS When given in connection with the Ultra-Violet Rays, Alpine Sun Rays, Electric Light Baths, Electrical Massage and Blolog- feal Blood Wash Treatments control all nervous conditions— Coughs and Chest Diseases Heart, Stomach, Liver and Kid- ney Diseases, High or Low Blood Pressure, all forms of Rheuma- tism, including Neéuritis and Sci- atica, or regardless of what ail ment. These treatments are & God-send to the afflicted and to weak, slow-growing children. Dr. F. Coombs NATUREOPATH 19 So. High St., Near Post Office Lady nurse in attendance Tel. 766 S DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN —_—— Oriental Rugs | Al Sizes | | REPAIRING, WASHING & CLEANING 8. V. SEVADJIAN, 162 Glen treet Tel. 1190-2—1190-3, LOANS o For the Family A N UP TO $300 Overnight service. Repaid in easy instalments. BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY 89 West Main St., Raphael Bidg. s Room 101, Phone 1-9-4-1 Open 9 to5.30 Saturdays 9 10 Licensed by the State and Bonded to the Pul e —— “(HAFINGsRASHES (Hprmmpnly relieved and healed by i a few applications of Resinol crashed headon | an au- |t Calles Administration Is Alert —| Keeping on Catholics Deny Any Armed Revolt Plans — Unconfirmed Reports of More Rioting — Women | Said to Be taking Active Part. | Mexico City, Aug. 18 (A —The |Mexican government still is hard at |work In trying to run down and |take into custody all such persons | as it belleves were connected with the alleged plan for a revolt last nday,jalso it is keeping a careful upon the American border for L evolutionary incursions into the north of the republi Meantime the religious controversy |continues deadlocked. | Attitude Being Watched There is considerable speculation as to whether Mexico will request the United States to extradite for- mer provisional president, Adolfo de la Hue in California; General Enrique E who is under arrest at and o revolution across the border. Thus far, How- ever, the government has not made | | known its policy 1t is reported that General Lopez r governor of Tamau- and follower of de la Huerta, and who recently had been living in an Antonlo, Texas, crossed the fron- tier into Tamaulipas and was cap- |tured and executed by federal troops. The war department asserts t it has no information to this ffect. Revolutionary Reports There has been numerous rumors in the capital that revolutionists have come into Mexico, or intend to do so, from Texas, New Mexico and |Arizona. The war department says it has failed to verify these rumors. |Nevertheless Secretary of War Amaro, who was on a military in- spection trip in Durango, has gone hurriedly to Chihuahua City for the |purpose of personally directing | |troop distributions and military | preparations against possible | lutionary attempts at the frontier. ’ The foreign office says it has re- ceived information that “religious |elements” in California contributed toward General Estrada’s projected |revolution. It erts that special |agents reported to the government |some time ago that funds were be- ling collected in California to aid , who with all of his outfit war stores, was captured by Americans near San Diego and land- ed in jail, Women Reported Leaders According to assertions made by the secret police Catholic wome whose tightening of thefr p strings is proving a big factor in t | economic boycott o by league for defense of religious liber- v In protest against the gover | ment's religious regulations, are n |only foremost in prayers for pea but first in alleged plans to fight. Jose Masgorro, chief of the secret police, asserts that Catholic women |were leaders in the alleged plot for |uprisings in various parts of the re- | public last Sunday, which the police |nipped in the bud. Furthermore he |says the plot was definitely connect- I|ed with General ¥ a's plan, the | [two together being intended to throw {Mexico into revolution. | According to Mascorro, | Tosefina Novoa a:d Senora Luz | Deperchez, prominent Catholics of San Angel, a suburb of Mexico City |were the guiding spirits in the plot Chief Mascorro said his secret police, posing as Catholics favoring the revolution ,for some time had been attending meetings of plotters in their residence: The executive hoard of the revolutiona ment, he declared, en men and seven women. Iy ever y district in which had been planned had women the board of directors, About 60 Arrested Senora Nova and Senora Deper- chez are still being held under ar- rest, together with about 40 o ther more than 60 n arrested in or including General Some of them ed. | Secret service agents say they saw {arms and ammunition in the dences of Senora Nova and Senora Deperchez when the attended neetings there, but when they re- turned to make arrests these disappeared. One of the age that he once heard rchez say that women were di- the plot “because men are or nothing.” He added that had been originally for tomorrow, but that the 1ad been changed to last Sun- s0 as to synchronize with Gen- proposed movement | | n, Senora evolt on persons have be near Mexico City, Carlos A been r have res good the uprising planne date Y ral ¥ rom California While the made no formal has h, dhie atholic ep atem from church thorized arme by Catholics and that the epis- thinks the government offi- giving undue importance 1 plot Mediation Attempts toreign office admits merican diplomats Yorts to mediate in the reli- It was said this he insta t that the unable scopate ity it ascertaine the i t d resist- that oversy Mexican v to permit any foreign good office in a purely lomestic affair, It was said also at foreign office that it had inform ation concerning alleged Catholic | propaganda in the United States at South America against 1 government, but that messages of approval of his stand | om all these countries and t | these more than offset the propa- | The episcopate has i cefved a let- ‘ ter from a Catholic deciaring that he had heard that a Catholic priest | in Tepalcingo, state of Guerrero, wae | sh' and killed while saying mass in |a private residence. A crowd pur- | sued and lynched the assassin. Spe- ' ANTI-MEXICAN GOVT. OUTBREAKS ON !‘ BOTH SIDES OF BORDER CONTINUE | state , who is belfeved to he | revo- | clal dispatches from Durango, which have not been confirmed, report that a priest, Father Luis Batis, and three civilians, were killed while a group of Catholics were attempting to rescue them from soldiers Who captured the priest for an al- leged violation of the law, Riot Reported Advices from Colima are to the t that one policeman was kill- \d several civilians wounded in t in the village of Ixtlahuacan, of Colima. No detalls were en. Several policemen, walking along a residence street in Coyoacan near Mexico City, are said to have been fired upon from a house. [When they entered the building the occupants had fied, leaving much religio propaganda, economic boycott leaflets and cards inscribed Jong live religion, death to bad government.” The police say they are of the bellef that Catholics were holding a meeting in the house and sceing the police approach thought a raid in prospect and there fore fired first. Alvaro Torre Diaz, governor of | Yucatan, in a telegram to El Uni- cersal, denies a report issued Mon- |day by the Catholic episcopate authorities saying that the state cis had allowed Catholics to wor- ship outdoors unhindered when they left their churc after com- had been named on the committees to take the ehurc The dis- patch says the state of Yucatan al- \ways was law abiding and that at| present time it is enforcing the | of ed a riof The attorney gener: artment | announces that it has ved re- ports from lower California sayi that all Catholic priests there I accepted the government's religious regulations. HARDWARE SALES - WELL MAINTAINED ‘Seasonable and Staple Business Being Reported York, satisfacto ing in both indus reflected in hardw =ales through- out the count ccording to reports from the various wholesale market centers. “During the past week,"” ardware Age, in its weekly hard- rare market summary, will say to- morrow: “Sales In both seasonal and staple lines have been well | maintained, with no marked depart- ure from prevailing price levels, “Hardware sales during the bal- of 1926, it is believed, will fill wholesalers and In support of | it is pointed out that crop whol more Jle than last y and in | ons yields are substan- xpected. during Aug. 18—The gener- v conditions prevail- and trade are this belief conditions, avoral the more active t Building contracts larger than for the period of last vear, while car load- ngs are maintaining the high p ned during the past few weeks. ollections, always indicative of \eral business conditions, are re- ported as satisfactory.” TABOO MAGAZINE WITH BRANDY ADY. Ruling on London Paper Sub- ject to Review by Buckner z0. New York, Aug. 18 (A—All n magazines containing liquor ad- tisements will be ba m th United States if a tentative ruling by Edward 8. Bar ting solicitor of the United States customs house is sustained for- here, Mr. Barnes y Key to London,” a lished in England ch formation of Amer n tourists, be- e it advertised a place where ‘Grant’s Morella Cherry Brandy” might be purchased in England. The decision was rendered pend- ing an opinion from United States Attorney Emory R. Buckner, now tion. Mr. Barnes cited sec- 7 of the national prohibition h declares it is “unlawful anywhere or by any 18 or method liquor, or the man- re, sale, keeping for sale or ishing of the same, or where, from whom or at what price me may be obtained.” fons are made for mailed to the United | . said, but “The XKey to | is classed as a magazine, | sped by exp mitted erday barred “The ine pub- fly for the in- magz cay the s Excs foreign newspap: London" and Mr inte ion wzines ¢ ing liquor ad 11d be banned States. nton Williams, Bar his pret mag: ments United we ago, said to Lon- ob several copies of lon e admitted without tion last montl wer READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | FOR BEST RESULTS INSTANTLY RELIEVED CATTLE DEALERS CHEATING STATE Mass, Has Reports Tubercular Gows Are Sold Bpringfield, Aug. 18, —Investiga- tion, both Federal and State, is ad- mittedly being carried on of charges made to the district attorney’s of- fice and other authorities that cer- tain Western Massachusetts dealers in cattle have been making a good profit off the Federal and State Governments by palming off cheap cows bought at Brighton or other markets as bona fide dairy herds and getting three or four what these animals cost them when the cows were condemned and killed as tubercular cattle. admitted by Charles R. Clason, as- detectives. According to authoritative infor- mation, the Federal Government has been investigating the situation for some months and has determined not to pay claims in the future for cows killed because they were tuber- cular unless they can be shown to be real dairy herd animals. State Officials Handicapped Private veterinarians, moreover, known for about a year of t game the pseudo dealers were play- ing, according to Gordon Huse, ani- mal inspector for this city. The State it is alleged, has also realized th: times | | thing Ino | made unless the farmer has owned | That complaints have been made | to the district attorney’'s office is | sistant district attorney for this sec- | tion, and it is understood that the | charges are belng probed by state | | ers things were not os they seemed, but | has dome nothing because of .the Present state law which ties the hands of the officials unless, per- haps, some out and out attempt to trim the State can be definitely proved. This law, Mr. Huse said, pro-| vides that if any individual own- | ing a herd demands a tuberculin test for his cattle, the state is bound to give it at once regardless | of circumstances, and to share| with the federal government in compensation for the cattle that | are condemned. Veterinarians say | that a state agent, when he makes | a test, can usually tell whether he | is examining a real dairy herd or | a fake one assembled for the pur- | pose, but s prevented from doing anything by the state law as it now exists. Other States Protected I Other states, it is sald, have a protection against this sort of ough laws w]xiih say that and reparatfon will be | test serd for six months and the have been within the state r. It is argued that what- outcome of the present ion, Massachusetts should s laws so that it will be similarly protected. The complaints and reporte of | ake dairy herds all agree as | methods used by the deal- | also that the trick has| played often in the vicinity ringfield. The men involved the Imost worthless cows at places as the Brighton mar- ting them cheap because of r tendenc They fl}rn ship the cattle to some convenient farm and blandly demand a tuber- cular test from the state. Most of them sign recment to submit and been of Sp such ket, tuberen to the federal test, according to the accredited herd plan, and re cme} the federal compensation as well. Use Deserted Farms The selection of a farm evidently calls for some ingenuity on the part of the dealers. Often, it is said, the place is owned by an agent who is not a farmer at all but who takes over a herd of 100 or 150 cattle just |so that he can ask the indemnity. In | me cases the dealers bave been so bold that they place the herds tem- porarily on a deserted farm and then call for the test, it is declared. All they require is the name of a different man to use each time. The inspectors come to the farm | where the request has been made, condemn and kill' the diseased cows and determine cows and up to $50 for pure bred cows, while the federal goverament contributes an equal amount. Con- fequently, the men who have paid 310 or $15 per head for the cows make a profit off the government amounting sometimes to four or five times the original cost. ALCORN CUTS CAPERS ON OLD HIGH WHEEL Attorney Applauded Suffield for Riding in Traffic. State’s at Suffield, Copn., Aug. 18—guffield citizens rubbed their eyes terday to make sure they weren't ‘seein’ things,” then gasped and applauded when they were sure that State's| Attorney Hugh M. Alcorn was rid- | ing along the main thoroughfare on a high wheei, popular 50 years | the compensation. | state pays up to 325 for grade | [ana bumpy roads were plentitul. | Only three sueh wheels hav The wheel, recently presented to, been owned in Suffield. The other |Mr. Alcorn by Selectman Amos B.|two were the property of Leavitt | Crane, formerly owned by|P. and Charles S. Bissell. 1]3\-‘&!! N. Austin, who rode it in| The demonstration was particu- {races on the abandoned agricul-|larly interesting to the younger tural park track. Mr. Alcorn sent | generation which had never seen |it to Westfield to be refinished and |such a contrivance except in family | when the job was finished startled |album pictures taken when grand- the natives by venturing in traffic. | pa donned his brown derby and He showed ability as a rider. | went courting. SAY "“BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not ge.tting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets 5 '7 Algo bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. 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