New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 27, 1926, Page 23

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- CONPARE CALLFS WITH BISHARK Wexican Catholics Declare They | Will Never Accept His Terms Mexico City, Aug B Dalr i paid that amougt for work for ! ) Aug. ntil | minion. 1 y { ndianapolis, Aug. (P —Gene | which a lesse ek | oy i : i Fe e sene a lesser fee will be charged | e 8 p . fexico's religlous laws are amend-| Four semi-finallsts in the wom- |Sarazen of New York as the result |under the sliding scale soon to be | wegie oo Loyl P i e AR 87 I%-The hinth ot ¢ or repealed, whether it requi an's western championship tour- |of a hectic and part of a night |adopted, is favored by Alderman |qep i Dol Yault king who has|all the political parties in Greece months or years to attain this ob. | "AMePt at Olympla field today are [of golf, stood out today in the van | Davia T. Nair 2 &1 | dennitely become a “professlonal” to | have announced tnelr willingness to jective, there will be no resumption |50 Matched that a married woman |of the 250 entrants in the western| The building department and the ier (onds with Suzanne Lenglen as|support the new cabinet formed by of Catholic church services in the and a miss must make the pair for |open golf championship at the end |common council are in agreement _‘ 0 athle plor of 1926, | General Condylis, which is deseri republic. This announcement is | °MOTTOW's finish round. [of the first round with a splendid | that a $5 fee for work regardless of | from the . A, 1 by her leaith” jas a “business cabinet and in which made by the Catholic eplscopate in | . 158 Dorothy Page, 18, Madison, |69, for the 6559 yard Highland |its cost is fncorrect. In some in-|opmenC Az A: U by his action.|army and navy officors and pol a statement to the faithful, in which | s @0d Miss Naomi Hull, a|links 58] the Pa7alumoat SquslleN the S he it el 1o Inchidsa the belief is expressed that the Mex. | YOUI8 Indiana school teacher, were| So congested was the course that|cost of the job. As a result of op- e L eBLonML A0t ral i Gentyls on ican government is attempting fo | t1° frst pair in the 18 thole semi- | ncarl ytwo score of the starters|position arising among tradesmen ot Charles Dean, director | headed the coup w create a schism within their ranks, | 1P2!S matches; and below _them |were unable to finish last night, |the council instructed its ordinance f e Rt A A T it “But with God's aid,” the state- | “°r¢ Mrs. Oscar Hill Kansas City | while the last threcsome, Chick |committce to prepare a sliding | glad {65 Hadiaois | bocs o oot s ment. adds, “Catholics will net sicla Missouri valley champlon, and | Evans, Al Watrous and Joe Turnesa | scale to be made operative after the | out in et Bl ol Biplelincs 3 to such threats.” It points out that | IS Stewart Hanley, Detroit, had to identify their balls with|September council meeting. In the |“and by his Pl ldsi s e Bl (e Catholics In Germany “long endur- |, Th® Surviver of each match will | mhtches while the gallery stood |meantime the bullding department | clean bill of heslth from (Lo o o | bress satisfaction over new ed Bismarck's tyrannical laws, but|Pa'¢ 2 chance to win the cham- [about in the lugubrious shadows |is required to collect $3 fees. gn hesian WACEL LR A A DRI s o finally recovered thelr liberty, while | PIOPShID trophy in tomorrow's 36 | cast by lights from the clubhouse. | Alderman Nair will ask the or-| The A, A, U. official was not sur| gomeriement of policy by the new the fron chancellor saw his efforts | 2°l¢ final play. | The committee in charge had to|dinance committee for an expression 'prised at Hoft's Minne ov:«fl-yfn-'- i ity St LR discredited and died abandoned in| Miss Page, former junior cham.|suspend play for those behind the|of fecling regarding the proposed |contract and exprossed his oninion | moeon among the populace. It an- his castle.” {plon, won her place in the semi. | trlo, marking their bails, where they |amendment and unless there s that it was the logical move ol HERAOIL, 0 dosing The episcopate sees “no hope of ‘;“‘]’"] round by defeating Miss |lay in fhe mooniight so that the|sirong opposition he will ask the athicts DALY hekuins S0t Mistc et \‘l“ e improvement In the situation” be- | Lacrl®, HIJIDE, ¢ rand Rapids, the | contestants might resume play N | council to so instruct the bullding status with the A. A. U, and also | fessional duties and provent A cause of the denial of Foreign Min- | ik ligan champion, 5 tothe morning where they left off at| department. ecause of conditions he was likely | from meddling in politics. 1t prom- ister Saenz that he declared in an Fil S ellotae] JRAts ) = | ———— to encounter with t} Norweglan |ises that the government will strive interview in San Antonio, 1oh Turple ”f. 1 na \vu- Mis le] in m“ gallery and a rather tight | Athletic association if he attempted | to maintain frien velations with that a law not liked by the people| . m'm-)‘; year old South- KI_’HIYWLI-O]»- d in (r‘:r\ dela ¢ to return to his own country as anall ates, and adds; of a country should either be|, & champion, one upy Evans trio required some f s | amateur. | e : | in o & SHEst Cue 1ol s el sl : oA { it is anlmated with amended or repealed and because of 1 O f\"cr”“ TRl amabla 0 LB S ]U:“” Sl Hoff's recent appearance in a vau- cordial feelings for the the government’s statements that it [y e " plaved on the course, | that added to the prolonged hegira | leville act on the West Coast in|Jugo Slav nation. It will introduce purposes to maintain a firm attitu o ; 1'. and 13 over par re- |of this thre ome was a m.lsnv]‘- which he used a pole vault specia in the new parliament the election in seeing that the religious regula- _IM Ve }, ‘..{1 2 _w»\‘ managed at | ture on the 16th stoan “I\fr" ;: undoubtedly placed him in the pro-|of members o hich will take place tions are carried out. & ry ,m‘,‘ electrifying thrill on|stray dog seized Chick's ball and| e fessional class, Mr. Dean said, and ortly, proposals for a frienly set- 5 _ ery hole. ran away with it. | the athlete either by further ac ¥ 2 : It is now planned by the epi c0- | M . | i " e ath r by further action ent of outstanding questions he. e epis Mrs. Hill wo B 4 second place at the start of the y 1 ot alv fealarss e g9 B3 pate to present to congress petitions | gurey Waddles, ;‘h‘”;\":n;;[:scn“m | l(v]xn, (:Dv”“r‘v e & emartiol i 663 (L 1or fnsurance D ;\r word had not definitely declared |tween Greeco and Jugoslay N by a la " be i D o By e 8 8 ham- | C C as . . " L ew himse! Pericle ™ . a pee! igned by a large number of Cath- ' pion, with an cagle four againt a | Marietta, Ohio, who scored par 70 e e A S ericles yropoulos has been olics throughout the republic, for|par on the 19th hol One stroke behind*Hart were Lauric 1Li€S professionalize | made foreign minister in the new an amendment of the religious| qpp. 2 : % Sl et ittt logiwill be the o AR 1 M. Drossopoulos, gov- dlamesof e sonstitution, It fs ve-| mat o CoDieY WOR @ cofigeded;Aton: of Chicago, and Francls Sal nature in the United States. Mr. | crnor onal Bank e L 3 S TC~ | match from Mrs. Perry IFisk De. | let of Milwaukee, while Jock Hutch- | o o an sai ok and field ath GG R O ported that local Catholic leaders | ot 110 2 Eecey sl Deop 10 05 liwaukoe while Jock Pincrs| Hartford, Aug. 27 (R — Unsound |Dean sald track and fleld athletea in | Gres s been glven the portfolio are circulating these petitions 3”"1'0|‘c0’d > lw«'“r the ]j".‘" was \;)]1 anc 2 Rl A0 | publie policy is found in the work- past ]'.nvn:!.*-hunlvn‘] the profes- | of or ance. that only lack of time before con-|ing aight hotey - & Slor Plave | B0 L alohrs 't ite siary|inEiet theistete Tayaiundenimniohia | slonal, BHId: brca tsRot b i oblst i PG gress convenes September 1, pre- B a0let | (j”""’;" "m‘“” ere Evans, | Municipality can not be held liable of .making 1t pay, ¢ 9 vents the presentation to that body SiE o ks [eesees Yonich of it Lo ls ams|in an accident when a person is in- | Professional track and field meets | of millions of signatures. U ):;:‘ : h‘m ‘:”m e ;\' hr “M' ng red by fire apparatus on its way ;\yn\c:] nrl\lerl been “m‘rmr{ngr: Mr. | | ; a d., with 75 A 7 can added, because of the ease| i e to the | | /. >|to or from a fire, but leaves the 3 s > A basineal deneEsalon us o ) ch, the same score returned bY|giver of such apparatus personally | With which such contests culd be| cenomie oyoott continues, Cathe | Walter Hagen. This figure Was a| . coooiein ‘case of a judgment | fixed” and the possibilities that, oS IR IOnE PRS0l L et stroke than the 76 tallied bY [, oqingt him in opinion of Attorney |Such practice would —degrade all that they purpose to carry out the |the defending champion Macbon- | G580t T L APRON I nranchies ot track and, Abtd hpoveas St request that they purchase nothing | ald Smith of New York who had an |~ " = a4 W = i g except absolute necessities. Fears | Sl T loff day E e e Bad Check Passer | i are expressed by shrewd business D tlioes, who B fo, irest/|ihe- Liablliy nrlaingiiout, ot ani aos eok Passer Investigated men that many failures are lmml-’H ptford Trial i e } el cldanyas hevneens ehtploypr et 3 artiord Trials Will End on!encie nivhicks overnigne while their| CEERE 88 PERCER, N0 a8 & legal [ by Federal nent in the commercial world, Many “to rent” signs and placards an- nouncing bargain sales are to be seen In the business section of the cit. They are believed to be due 1o the boyeott. fi.0.P. LEADER 1§ GOOLIDGE'S GUEST W. P. Jackson One of Few Gallers on Today’s List Paul Smith's, New York, A (—President Coolidge returnad to White Pine camp from DPlattsburg to find a light engagement list ahead of him for the rest of the week. William P. Jackson, former Unit- ¢d States senator from Maryland, and now a member of the repub- lican national committee, was in- vited to luncheon at the summer white house today with Mrs. Jack- son. They are spending the summer at Loon Lake, and Mr. Jackson sev- eral weeks ago paid his respects to the president in a call at the exe- cutive offices. Others of today's guests included Mr. and Mre. William F. Whiting of Holyoke, Mass., personal friends of Mr. and Mrs. Coolidge. Mr. Whiting is a writing paper manufacturer. 1t was =aid at the exccutive offi- ces yesterday that no date had been set for the visit of James R. Shet- fleld, ambassador to Mexico, to the chief executive. Ambas fleld made a report to Secretary of State Kellogg in Washington on Wednesday and was understood to be coming to see the president soon. No engagements had been arranged by the chief executive for Saturday. Hundreds of native and summer residents of the Adirondacks recog- nized President Coolidge yesterday as he motored to and from Platts- dor Shef- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1926. | FINAL ROUND TODAY IN CHICAGO TOURNEY Olympia Field Contest Brings Mar- ried and Single Women Both Into Semi Finals. | . Chicago, Aug. 27 ) — The god- | dess of golf smiles impartially upon | the married and single in her do- September 30 rashington, Aug. making experimer.ts by Dr. L. |cls Warren, with the use ot naval | planes, are understood to be near- {ing completion in Hartford, Conn, | They are a continuation of tests that {ave been conducted at Intervals for | four years with the assistance at | different times of the war, navy and postoffice departments. Much attention has been given to the possibllity of clearing away fogs, | especially at landing fields, but noth- |ing conclusive has been reported. | Efforts at precipitation of rain, ac- | cording to preliminary reports, have | not offered as much prospect of suc- | cess as the fog-clearing tests. A contract made in 1925 for the tests expired at the end of July thi particles of sand were used In efforts to dispel fogs. Since then the many experiments have continued. On April 15, 1925, Admiral fett, chief of the naval bureau aeronautics, said in a letter to the postmaster-general: “The chief of the bureau of aero- nautics has concluded from the pre- liminary experiments with this method of disposing fog and clouds by afrcraft that the principles are | sound, and that if the idea can be demonstrated practically it may be lof great assistance in the clearing of fog from shipping channels and Mof- Bulgarian Note Is Most “lend of the | chance of surviving for the 36 hole o of | OARAZEN LEADING With 250 Entrants halls were bivouacked on the moon- were John Iarrell of rming- | light fairway: | New York, Charlie Hall of ham and Rudy Knepper of Chicago. ts predicted that those Who had to second round had LOSS-IN MILLIONS * INBAD HURRICANE ‘Five Persons Known to Be Dead in Louisiana Storm finals on Saturday .2 New Orleans, Aug. Five a high voltage line and a sailor was | killed at Gulfport when he cams into contact with a live wire. Another man was drowned at Fre- r. 14 miles sounth of Pontcha a when his store was inunudated by flood waters. An unidentified | woman was dvowned in the Miss sippi river gbove Convent By far the greater property dam- age was done to the rice, sugar cane, cotton and corn crops. The Vew Orleans states placed this dam- age at approximately £1,000,000, Houma, Morgan City, Pontchatoul and Hammond, damage was believ- S O L ra T Gleasing fog|od. around the halt’ million. ma iarhors a8 Well a8 an Clealins 196 pyt mo| definite estimata could he from aviation fields. {huk s Seventy passeng spent the night abeard a ferry in the Mississ- s W Conciliatory in Its Tone| burg, where he reviewed the rook- | ~ONCOEICT T TR T leg b gy e milltary ran | Bulgarian reply to the collective | ing camp. On the retuv tH0 S Inote of the little entente was de- ::r\ifl]rii‘,\‘:xhu\:(- “Chasm and Lak |Ilvered today. Tt is written in. the | Pl6old, he was grésted by towns-|most conciliatory temma and e cld, B el guests who gather. | Presses the Sofia government's de- people and hotel giets W0 Ko | termination to safeguard its peace ed along the ro"'js;,' %% Jith neighbors, smooth out exist- KEpins e b JURRD: ing difficulties and does not bring Birth Control Advocated As Solution for Japan Chautauqua, N. Y., Aug. 27 — Birth control and increased indus- trial efficiency are the solutions for Japanese problems, Dr. Albert W. Palmer of the Iirst Congrega- tional church Oak Park, Iil, said in an address prepared for delivery to- day at the conference on intern: tional relations from the Christian point of view. The speaker asserted that a rising| standard of living always brings a decreasing birth rate and only ln~l Anstrial efficlency can give Japan ' better standards of living. Miss Cannon Will Make One More Try This Year ’ Boulogne, France, Aug. 27 (P— | Miss Lillian Cannon of Baltimore today decided to make another at- tempt to swim the English channel. She announced that she would enter the water here at 111 o'clock tonight it the wind and tide are favorable. | Helmy, the giant Egyptian, planned | also to start on his seventh essay at the channel crossing. ” 3 5 | ‘W RECORD STANDS | Paris, Aug. 27 P—The new world altityde record of 12,442 metres made by M. Callizo on Tuesday at L Bourget has been officially rati- fled by the experts of the air min-| is who tested his Instruments. | The aviator bettered his former world recerd by T6 metres. Mr. Callizo's hew mark of 12.442 meires equals 40,800 feet or almost eight milec. |up the problem of minority race: Bulgaria says she will not appeal to the league of nations but 15| ready to abide by the league's de‘-i cision if that body is prepared to | assume charge and take over the | responsibility of the settlement of the entire Bulgarian problem. This reply was an answer to the | | collective note of Jugoslavia, | Gireece and Rumania asking Bul- | garia to supress revolutionary or- | ganizations and to prevent border | raiding. WOMEN VOTERS WARNED ‘ Philadelphia, Aug. 27 (P—Wom- | en voters were warned yesterday | | |at the celebration here of the sixth anniversary of the ratification of the 19th constitutional amend- ment that the liquor interests of this coun remain the most dan- gerous enemy of woman suffrage. Mrs., Carrie Chapman Catt de- clared that the liquor powers were creeping back into politics and gradually nullifying the free fran- chise. It was the liquor interests, ghe sald, who hod most strenuous- ly opposed the 19th amendment, and would kill it now, If permitted SOCCER TRYOUT i Clan Douglas Socc club will have its initial try-out tomorrow after- noon at 2:30 at Walnut Hill park. The try-out Is important in that it | will determine what is likely to! constityte the regular line-up for the ensuing season. All members wish- ing to make the team are urged to| be on hand at 2:30 prompt. Mem- | bers of other organizations in this | cit: interested in soccer are invited | either to participate in the game or' talk business relating to same. ippi river when it grounded on a mud bank as two tugs lost contro of it in the storm, reached shor« today when tugs loosened the ferry from the mud and brought it here uggestions Being Made For New Automobhile Laws Hartford. Conn., Aug. 27 Sug- gestions for amendments to the mo- for vehicle laws to be introduc at the next session of the legislatu have started to reach the office of the department of motor vehicles it was announced today. Commission- er Robbins B. Stoeckel said that he wished to encourage such su tions from owners and operators of automobiles, N WESTERN OPEN {Indianapolis Links ~ Congested of more than 138 at the| little | Several suggestions concerned the | proposed change of a 16 year mini- mum age limit for operators in Con- necticut instead of the present 18 year requirements. Additional sug- gestions concerned the curbing of drunken drivers and operation of machines with defective brakes. CATCH RUNAWAY BOYS Springfield, M Aug. 27 (A—, John H. Gerlach, 16, and Alfred both of College Point, L. I, heard “Cal. Coolidge was in the mountains,” so “we decided we would go,” they told West Spring- field police, who last night brought to an abrupt end the “tour” of Mount, 17, the east and New York state start- | ed July 25 by the Long Island youths. Their travels took them through the White and ireen mountains in the upper Connecti- cut valley, the Adirondacks. Today their parents will arrive and take the boys back to their homes. They were notified of the apprehension by police late | last night. - | | BIG IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM. | Havana, Aug. 27 (A—Thirty- three million dollars will be s;\nm! in improvements in the city of Ha-| vana during the next 10 years. A presidentlal decree signed today au- thorizes the appropriation of . this amount from the proceeds of public works' taxes. Berkshires and the | ' WOULD REBATE PART OF | FEE PAID BY PLUMBERS Alderman Nair Belleves In Return- CHARLEY HOFF 15 BUSINESS CABINET OPENLY APRONOW' MEETS APPROVAL | ing Excess Charged When New ' DRl Signs Contract to Show at Various Greek Factions Willing Minnesota State Fair {0 Back It Up A rebatement of a portion of $3 plumbing permit fees to those who ting law, but proposition under ex | it seems to me that it is not sound | | as a matter of public poliey."” | A | Mr. Hea s, lles enactment a statute ex- S | Oicials Albuquerque, N. M., Auz ederal immigration offici 1 today to question further 27 (P plan- the | The remedy. |in the of empting this class of governmental S kh ]d 5 ¥ Ratily souns mar g n under o or their oificial duties or compul- : Al et R e T MO 0 & Afad e ory law, making it obligatory on AC“(][] 0[ Rfiolgal]]la[]()[] {ed son of the head of the Krupp all municipalities to take out lia- i factEry b GRrrtiay | bility insurance covering this class e il vl e SH | biti ance L ’ ey mits using the name George Adorjan | of ris ) Joston, Aug. 27 (@<Stockholders' Gabor in the eastern United States, | The state has adopted the 1atter of the Noston and Maine railroad where he is wanted on bad check course, he points out in its coverage today voted unanimously to ratify all| charges. ik ihcet ersons injured bY actions : Semriaicl 4 i by msnr”m‘ or persons ilyll}x' 1 : actions taken by stockholders, di- In conne n with his story that | ts in its highw or persons | yect nd the executive commitice he was disowned four years ago, {injured by the operation of motor |rejating to the reorganization of the|went to Hungary and became g | vehicles of the highway department. rgoaq, u rian cit ‘\ u T nam action was taken at a session rabor and then came to this | of an adjourned special meeting at v as a college student, immi- | which 611,497 shares were represent- | §ration officials hope to learn | ed and voted. In other votes taken| Whether there may be grounds for by stockholders today officials of deporting him as an undesirable the company were authorized to|alien, if he has broken American OVER LAST YEAR'S vear. It was continued for sixty | persons were known to be dead, sev- carry out certain details of the re-| laws as charged. ‘d:\,\s. weather conditions having | eral others were missing and esti- SIS organization and to file certificates| The you man said last night he | been unfavorable during the past|mates of damage wrought by the | and papers in pursuance of the plan would waive extradition to return | spring and summer, and ends Sept.| tropical hurricane that swept Thls DeSpl[e the USll'tIl Season in various states. to Wilmington, Del, to face a 30, Navy planes almost entirely are | through Southern Louislana Wed- | The reorganization finvolves the!charge of isulng a bad check. He {now used in the flying tests, but|nesday night ranged between five | . subscription by stockholders of $13,- | 1enied ever having cashed a check other branches of the aviation serv- | and ten million dollars as new re- | able Decline HO0(000) 1kl ‘Hiew . Brione Dhatoranda | thare in Pittsburgh, where he iccs were represented before the ex- | ports of storm damage reached here stock, the ceeds ‘hic o also is wanted. Originally he was piration of the contract. .| today. 5 ‘.: ,‘,_@‘4) ‘,‘N‘?f,p,:‘:,\r,’.:fi:.imnm 1.,';1 arrested in connection with a bad Experiments of this sort began at| One man was electrocuted in New Washington, g. 27 A — Al- terments to bring about more ef- Check complaint from Denver, but McCook field in 1922, when charged | Orleans while attempting to repair | though production in the basic ficlent and more economical opera- '€ complainant, an automobile | ency official, later refused to pres \rges. estigators here are v said, to place more cr the story told by Gabor's ian, Charles Tactsch, a Brown dustries showed the usual seasonal decline in July it was one per cent above July a year ago, the federal reserve hoard reports in a review of business conditions. tion. The plan also calls for an exten sion of 15 years from dates of ma- urity of $43.000,000 in bonds An auction sale of a small surplus Inclined, ience in compan- | uni- assoc ner won last year's event by break- themselves before replying to the ng 98 targets out of a possible 100 recent Spanish memorandum aske “',‘!\‘ rards. ; ing for the exclusive control of the ere i guaranteed purse of international district of Tangler b; $10,000 to be split between the pain. 3 35 % [ MOTORMAN BOUND OVER:~ |Madeiros Is Taken to | Hartford, Aug. 27 UP—Waiving | Mass. Prison Death Cell |mination in the police courty | Patrick Coffey, motorman in the ens Boston, Aug. 27 (® — Cele Celeatino { 510y of the Connectient Madeiros, whose plea for commu L. : - | charged wi nce, tation of sentence of electrocution | was ‘bound. sven Lol “""“.l 5 during the week of September 5 |term of the tuper?or ot o was nl[< nied by Governor Fuller bond of 500, 1t is cco:flrtl“:;'nd:' yesterday, was taken from the | yg 4y last N ERCAY: 1 ° was operating a tre '.\)mm)k county jail in Dedham to | month when his car ox]::ty -c.:wnch he death house of the state SO and crashed into another car, o o man Falk of this city was killed. in Chariestown. leiros was sentenced last for the murder of James Car- by for- high guns in the ovent, S Sitac oty 7 event, in sums )\\':r‘:)‘;h ]4“4', )\lmi‘):_' l\"-r_ of the ranging from 325 to $1000. The was shot down o he ook, WHO winner, in addition to the $1,000 Darglar alapoys A8 he sounded a prize money tonight will b handed £ arm during a holdup. 1 diamond medal and the Gates tro- — — phy. There are five other trophies. Foot and Mouth Disease Source Possibly Found Mellett Grand Jury Is Copenhagen, Denmark, A Hearing More Testimony Dr. Vendel, N, sh ¢ . Aug. 27 (P —Inves- 2 ”1w\ ln]f vn.;~ found the to the murder of Don R. RS and mouth dis- Mell inton publisher today had ehon Mo dsalriniive uidE tied down to the steady grind of fungne of (b \ln,::i\ull the grand jury room from which far 0 als: selo; there appeared to be no letu: 1 touchwood fungus and the pproximately ten days. i diarrhoea fungus. A report rom the grand jury is d - i 1ly expected before Labor Day Starner Begins. Work of | [iinee otateraay tocointock s " beg A lieves. Yesterday the grand Dolendmg His Laurels 'eard the story of a "n’\tysfbry j:‘r: Vandalia, Ohio, Aug, 27 (R—Jwqc. |NeSS.” whose identity has been care 1ore than & thousand opponents, TUIIY concealed throughout the in- imong them several previous grand gation; and dt Steva Kascnqli P the informer against Patrick Eugens rs Starner, of aca, . started today to AMleDermott missing “key man,” and fend his title to t And Ay an others. includi.. Louis Mazer, who handicap, t premier trap-shooting 1§ formally charged with the murder, nt of the world. - titular event of the NO REPLY TO SPAIN nual tournament held under the au- Paris, Aug. (P — Tt is likely splces of the Amateur Trapshooting that France and Great Britain will tion of America here. Star- come to an agreement between It is the LAST WEEK OF OUR August Furniture Sale See Special Values in Windows SRR $7.90 .. $21.80 100-PIECE SETS . ... .. A. CIESZYNSKI & SONS 515-517 Main St. Tel. 601 August Furniture Sale ENDS SCON JUST ONE WEEK MORE TO PURCHASE THIS 9-PIECE AMERICAN WALNUT DINING SUITE AT '139 A. CIESZYNSKI & SONS Tel. 601 A Beautiful Wholesale prices dropped to the . s oG a6 Ba el s ; lowest level since September, 1924, |4y, b,fi,),n,',,“ s:’,‘ic.:,,“t.‘{.;;\o, ‘”,ah ,l,f:‘ "":“I ""]‘“"“"‘- who declares Gabor Buffet Mirror % cecling! being uoted pasticulstly (Hation todaye the MEel-| cashed checks in both Pittsburgh | " in forelgn products and foods | o5y eeer rer adjourned WAt ung Wilmington. |N Free With Each while " piices. 8F ateel mnd' otherfs = ¢ ol The youth’s claim to relationship | Matala Ay RANsa: IS ¥ with the famous German family has i Declines in the production or Stones and Eggs Thrown | ueen repeatediy denied by those au- Suife iron, steel and anthracite and in | At Manville Mill Owners | thorized to speak for the family the activity of the textile mills| pProvidence, R. L. Aug. 27 (@ Hans von Wuefling, commercial at- were 'declared to be more than'|A shower ot ‘stenes and sees grect. |{ache of the German ‘consulate in usual scasonal reductions but the e two officials of the Manville cot- | ¢V York yesterday said the youth | output of flour, copper, zinc, ce-|ton mills of the Manville-Jenckes | V2§ Mot a of the arms works |l mqx = s 3 ment - and yeistlsnm fnoeassd, mmp;ny {his morning as they were | 1ead, while the Krupp secretariat in | 515-517 Main Street The manufacture of automobiles antering the plant at Manville which | Berlin has denied any of the fam- | dropped further and was smaller | has been fdle since Aug. 18 when a | | than a y go. Building contracts | general strike was put into effect. | also were smaller in volume than | Ernest N. Lee, assistant superinten- = t year. Factory employment and dent and Warren Sweet, a supervis- pay rolls showed the usual seasonal or, were being escorted into the mill decline. by four deputy sheriffs when women The total volume of reserve in the crowd of 300 strikers su bank credit increased by about ro nding the gate, let fly the mis- | H $50,000,000 during July and the siles. A stone struck Lee in the § first part of August back while an egs glanced off | B — e Sweet's hat. SIAH” OFF FOR CHICAGO S— - | York. Aug. (# — Trav- HEADS DANCING MASTERS ling in a private car attached to a = New York, Aug. 27 (M—Raymond New York Central train, Juddi Bott of Youngstown, O. last night| Krishnamurtl, hailed by his foi- was elected president of the Dancing lowers as the “new world teacher,” Masters of America. The organiza- t today for Chicago. There he tion, formed by the merger of the vill speak before a meeting of the international and American national “MF New order of the Star in the FEast, of associations of masters of dancing, which he is the head. has been in convention here for the The young Hindu theosophist is past week. ‘Walter U. Soby, Hartford, Conn., and Daniel C. Quilty, Bridgeport Conn., were elected director: confiden that his visit in this country will result in a religious awakening of Americans, LAST WEEK OF OUR August Furniture Sale|| See Special Values in Window | 139| FREE! — A NATIONAL BED SPRING WITH EACH SUITE A. CIESZYNSKI & SONS {| 515-517 Main St. Tel. 601 4-PIECE WALNUT BEDROOM SUITES All colors. SPECIAL 188 MAIN ST. Economy—Smart Style and High Quality Meet Here A Millinery Value Challenging All Comparison Genuine Velour and Fine Felt Hats Magnificent New Creations of Rare Smartness and Superior Quality at a Lower Price Than Ever Before Attempted 9 " CHILDREN'S CHIC VELOURS Goldenblum $1.95t0 $4.95 SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY Come! We offer the choicest New Hat Fashions ever assembled for your selection. New Creased Crowns, New Medium, Small and Large Brims, New Autumn Colors. Black, Sand, Chanel Red, Jungle Green, Honey, Oak, Pearl, Copen, Tenna and Tan. Grosgrain Ribbon Trimmed, Some enhanced with Pretty Feathers, others with Bows, 3ands, Rosettes and Inserts. e CHILDREN'S FELTS colors. SPECIAL FOR TOMORROW $1 -95 Millinery Co. COR. MAIN and COURT STS. - $3.9

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