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f [meom] NEW BRITAIN HERALD ] “wue) ‘pi0j3eH Average Daily Cireulation Week Ending Aug. 28th. .. 13,187| PRICE THREE CENTS E ' | ESTABLISHED 1810 imuqny . NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 192 —SIXTFEN PAGES N 0. RESFRVATIONS e, POkt DRIVES 4 HOURS s o wit ot ) ep'e” OFFICE SHOWS CONCERN Five Dead, 50 Injured el Tokyo, Sept. 4 (P—TFive per- sons were Kkilled and 50 injured today as the result of a hurri- cane which blew a train on the Tokaido railroad from the track at Hammamatsu, 167 miles south of Tokyo, and d royed numer- ous houses in Saitama prefecture. Thehurricane swept the Kanto district. ———————————————————————— | NOW SEEM LIKELY W TOBEACCEPTABLE, Geneva Today Is Optimist 1c Over American Membership in World Court ‘AT LEAST 33 LIVES COOLIDGE: ALSO HOPEFUL; THO SENATORS GHANG!NG LOST IN HURRICANE : Gooding and Trammell Who Voted \ddCd Casualt-es Reported | in Terrific Storm in y for Adherance Now Say They Re- | nounce Their Support While Sena- | Japan | tor Cameron, Who Gave it Re- | } luctant Support. Now D('(‘lurc(‘ Tokyo, Sept. 4 (P—Reports to ver: ular newspapers in Tokyo say That His Mind is Open on Matter. |that approximately thirty-five per- L] " sons were killed fn a typhoon in \ Geneva, Sept. 4 (P—Optimism |central eastern Japan today. The prevailed tod. of the United States senate re that the reserv tions |storm was one of the most severe in uired |recent’ years. for American adhesion to the per-|, At Tovoshahl, near the city of ‘ { olhouse collapsed, ; manent court of international ons of whom vould finally be accepted by the rep- v be dead and a score in- resentatives of the 38 countries hold Three houses were reported ing membership in the court. {damaged there, Four of them have already been| At Hammamatsu a clothing fac- v the delegates and on y psed and eight persons | hich would require that |were reported killed. Earlier advice the consent of the United told of five being killed and pos ) st be obtained before fifty injured when the terri nay entertain request in off t the Lcague of t later reports re- Ivisory opinions on the v 2 few persons suf- in which the United Stat ested, remains to be accepted. After having been under discus and 15 members of the cr sion for several 3, the reserva- v military airpl ns have been taken out of the hara airdrome were 1 3 nds of the conference committee 4 forty telephone committee ¢ Jjuridical 14 joints connecting Toky nd Osaka were interrupted. Numerous villages of the ‘ 1 conditions. [paid toll in death and ury or ‘ xpected to report property damage or all three to the > conference prior to I phoon. Railways and light plants ing of the Lea fiered heavily although the da sembly, which be in Toliyo was negligible. ' and ends t er part AT b month. ourvanent ot o concr- NS RACE WITH WIFE sht a promin dele- 1t so far American res as to say that all rvations eventual- And H\n > session a ]‘v'(‘l 10 REPI]RT 10 POLICE the con-| Newington \Ian Fined and ’ i o-meet the Jailed for Drunken Thinks . S, Would Aid, | riving i Count Rostvorovski, an cminent D”‘m"’ Polish jurist, duri: 8¢ de- R onoe e Lol Joseph Yurewltch, aged would collaborate in any nee- _. : 0 o aRdTienis to thE statics Newington, pleaded not guilty to t t vorld cour as after rge of d g an automobile had asserted t he activities of ile under influence of liquor in volved ptance | police court today. He came into of Americ ¢ P , y ination of the police station at 7:30 last to adopting them to t ind told Lieutenant Bamforth his ns created by such ac wife got out of their automobile and A Che Polish speaker ¢ this as | threatened to report him to the po- e ":“l“‘\_' o el e ico a0 tie] il he would i shoull besrep o |there first, according to Licut p 1 conference 10 pongorth. e w 1 carry through this codlfication. lunat to arive a car, accord a I o ! ‘)-ul]‘l st of |3 jeutenant Bamforth and nt Treat n that >olish project | yecue, should provide: a pr for the | Yurewitch said he had two drinks opKE ories, 1 of wine after worlk last night. His : states renounced her adhesion to the wife's to be dri s e - “Why talk about the United home 1 her, although State: ng out of the court be- | o knew he was s g bl A retorted linsisted on he driven to her 3 mother's home at the corner of It was stipulated in turning the |fartford avenue and East Mal reservations over to the committee |gtreet, but on the way over she in- for consideration and report th: sisted on getting out of the car. He declsion must be reached whether | thought she was going to the police . s UL R E LIV i ion, and he wanted to get there American reservation should accom- 3 | pany acceptance with a commentary | judge Alling fined him $100 and | SRUrELIE s SaTme ; n - cohdi- s and sentenced him to five days tions. The great problem of the committee will be to find a formu d Taigen, aged 20, of 227 la satisfactory to the e States | North street, pleaded not guilty to nd also preserve th of [ the > of violation of the city te council of the le concern- | orj by blocking traftic on v ing a opinions. b it ion liraace 1 three tified that 1 left a the confercnce a majority of the | National Paper Co. truck on Church Jelegates manifested apprehensl R e e whether acceptance of the American | morning about o'clock and a conditions would derange the ma- car and automobile ¢ould not of the £ Nations. en was reprosented by apprehens d was that rney Monron & Gordon. ged ambiguity in the fifth | He sald he was delivering paper ‘. nor on would block and he was working as rapidly advisory opinions by the court alto- | possible. The trolley car could gether, e if the United States ed, as there was ample room, senate had to say whether America’s | ho He did notknow his truck consent was to be given there would | was interfering twith traffic until a b Iboy came In and told him. Ho did Joolidge Also Optimistic not intention: block traffic. | The optimism prevalent in Geneva |~ Rocalled to the witness stand, : that the United States will a | Oficer Lanpher testified that the :h“l“"""]‘ ‘;"‘”“ ‘""]'d‘“”-‘; ’«: st “‘1 trolley car could not have passed | oy Presiden ‘oolidge. A desy ch | . ” o * in safety. from Paul Smith’s N. Y. last Attot6sy | Cordon, dlaliea Tilzen ) might said President Coolidge Was |yiq mot gulity under the ordinance, ¢ T e L 1| There was no malice and the e ]'\,u’: atio i i ‘," e '\‘:;'l‘"‘:" delay was not intentional, Attorney an reservations and amina- tion of the reservations would show | © ‘;i"’,h g S L that their object was to place the |° - ? # o StataJect was to 2iace e | ™ prosecuting Attorney Woods sald e DL o . €| Officer he: s bee o court with nations members of the | OMCeT LanPngr has e o '\”, Lésgie of Nations. [Iiwas added | °To0 mMOe tham o) years yat Af- that the president believed when | fOTneY Gordon is trying to con- ¢ icle five was studied and under- | Vince the court that bl i stood it would be found entirely fair. | ROt qualified fo tell when a trofley T8 Rengiuod Bonthc {car has room to pass a standing Two United States Senators, Good- | truck. If the trolley could = have \ Inf, republican, Idaho, and Tram. |Passed, the mwotorman would not ; ! mell, democrat, Florida, have a dif- | Bave held it there 12 minutes, he ent view point now from that | S#d- 4 A they had when they voted for the Judge Alling said the strects are World Court, A Washington dis- |fOT the use of the public and every paich says they have renounced | business house should have means ir support of the court. Senator | Of Eetting its merchandise in with- neron, Republican, Alizona, who | 0ut necessitating the blocking of | he voted reluctlantly for the | trafiie. Public necessity _certainly - court because of President Coolidge's | does not require that the strects | 4 leadership and the belief it would [be blocked while merchandise s help credit and have a stabilizing | being delivercd, he said. | [ effect on the world, has his mind | In this particular case, Taigen b “open” on the future foreign poli justified in ving the of the United States. in such a position 2s to “Since that time unexpected block and interfere with traffic 1gs have developed, and it seems | after the paper had been taken off —— —— | A (Continued on Page 13) (Contlnued on Page 13) | L] ¥ i) Lty 5 Ak Wants to Take Part in Next Olym- pics—Enormous Purse Docs Not Appeal Just Now. Los Angeles, Sept. 4 (P—Charles | Paddock, holder of many world's records in the sprints, has announ- |ced refusal of a contract to turn | professional offerd by C. C. Pyle, |sports promoter, and which would for three races. The. contract as offered provided for three race nationally known mid-western sprint r, two to split a purse of $100,000 on the basis of 70 percent [to the man emerging from the se |ies with the highest ave nd | percent to the other. “I do not care to turn professional at this time, said Paddock. “I think I am 1.nr several years yet and t Olympic games are not ladway. ext far FIRST AUTOMOBILES NOT UNLIKE PRESENT Survey of Early Vintage Cars Shows “Nothing New Under 2 Detroit Sept. ere’ nothing new ur 1y is especially ape as ) styles in notor ca rd His- visit to tiie ) torical at Dearborn shows. A fad, presumably of more or less modernity, is the model road- ter with the convertible “rumble extra seat in the rear, just lar ough for one couple. But a roz at the same t possible also had for ster, vintage of 1908 perched on the r purpose, although it w to conceal this s The trimmi splendently brassed, and a horn, rivaling the latest “moo cow"” creation with its rubber air or as motive power, was part of standard equipment. urning to the rumble 1905 model went this type one bet- r. One of the cars in the collec- tion is a fully cquipped touring model On first glance, it appear: to be only a stolidly built car, ngly well constructed; but e a nut here, a screw ther the back seat comes off, leavi ductive roadster for two wl embles a cross between a cater ctor, and a tanden pillar truck, a tre of a little earlier period. days of the sid pul Those were the v place un placed lic or de o of ded to hold manded extra its n vals between the spokes, on the in- ner side of the wheel. A phopheey of the sweeping lines resent day plus ult found in the 1906 touring the hood and cowl are near I the rest of thecar. crs sweep in a slow curve to below the doors, where they are replaced ep-ups.” The headlights Only the top, which by small “ are ponderous, extends at sharp angles when low- er and the high sq: ks dissonnate the harmo the HORE THAN 100 AR | MEN READY FOR MEET Races and Stunts on Pro- gram at Sesqui Daily Through Next Week | Philadelphia, Sept. 4 (P—DMore than 100 pilots have mad Model I ing field a rgndez- vous tod e beginning of a week of flying at the national air races and circus in connection with the sesquicentennial exposition. Army, navy and marine corps busses have joined with two score factorles in the reunion of airme at p. m. with a salute of guns. and stunt flying are on the . program for every, day until and including next Saturday. The pick of t stion's pilots are on the program and authorities on acronautics have ringside seats with city and sehquicentennial of- ficials. Phere will be thrilling ni lows, the first of their kind to be when pilots in machine outfitted will give demon- simwating actu: aerial arfare conditions. Auxiliary equipment to $5,000,000. armament, floodlights, air- navigational inhtru- chutes and other spec- jal devices. The electricity on the fleld for night lighting includes fashing beacons and a g B. B.| T. floodlight of five hundred mil- lion candle power which lights the ground for the benefit of the in the air. neteen trophies and $30,000 in be used This in- cludes plane ments, pa men | have netted from $30,000 to $70,000 | | good | 11 10 DYING BROTHER This Gity Too Late “Rcmnms at Wheel of Automobile | Continuously With Few | Tor Rest and Arrives at Destina- tion Virtually Exhausted. | meningitis, race with death arrived eight hours too la b with his brother at the end Carl received a tel at 6 ‘h'rlm*l: Thursday even at his | brother was in a critical condition '|F.'1 to come to this city with every possible speed. He started a fe | minutes later from Detroit, driving |all night and the next day. His only | rest was minut op now and e trip Yesterday morning | clock when his Teserve rength was gradually giving ou his brother di i - |ling with ever without delay of letting 1 D as th im know of 2pt travel e speed and Wwas no way the sad new until he arrived in s city He arrived here last nig o'clock, T 1 to the hospital, n informed he had lc Tis eiforts noble went ¢ plans has been Instead of funeral v oon at the We 1 park, ent will be in West o'clock Ericson Plainville, | £nd cemeter. in SPANISH PEOPLE T0 EXPRESS PREFERENCE Premier Agrees to Plebis- cite—Also to Co-opera- tive Government . Madrid mo De consented to the lstlscits! Septembe T that Pt party ne w patriot plebis- = the na- a immoned to rat ountry to ed il from Henday ranco-Spanish frontier, y sald considerable was being tached t a banquet that was given lay n San Sebastian by the foreign mi ter, Senor in honor of the Italian wdor. Yanguas wa q as g said in a de- | sions taken by the c m- | Thursda re ost nd d a sensa- | ater than that when the in Spain was t up by General Primo De Rivero. fistoric events are heing pre- the foreign minister de “and soon they will b made known to the ral pub- lie.” The statement of Se ! evidently to tod an- nouncement by General Primo De L regarding the plebiscite. Recently there were run listurbed conditions in Spa General Primo De Rivera in onal message to the Press denied that the trouble in the country, he | aid* calm prevailed. There also was a rumor a short time ag that a break had oc curred n King Alfonso and the C . There was no - firmation of this, 68,000 H\ REALTY SALES | Property on Putmam and Whiting Streets Exchanged By Samuel Car- | telli, Schastiano Medo and TLouls Neubauer. [ 97 Putnam steet, Samuel Carte o to Lo Property old today scbastiano ) at was | ldress for $40,000: Tl dled by t Speck. Neubs property on Whiting street to Car telll and Medo for Boston Thcatcr \qucxans | Are Given Wage Increases Sept. 4 (A—While their thren were report- rike Boston, Pacific coa: prizes will be given for the various ed to be extendigg a contests in this y called S g 1 er musi- i — {ans won wage increases approxi- [t 3 3 5 pe per wder he anadian Sneak Thief |TTRE "; Sk Saiola i Takes Senator’s Pants with the alied of Massa-| ‘Washington, Sept. 4 (P)—Senator chuset it w unced toda Harris, demo t, Georgia, one of The agreement, effective Labor | | the immaculate dressers of the sen- grants musicians in vaude- | ate has returned to Washington and pieture houses, for 14| from Quebee, without his best pair performances, $72 a wes in fe: | of pants and a hat. A thicf sneaked | ture picture and legitimate houses, into his hotel room and was ma $04 week; bur-| ing away with all of his clothes and 12 performances, $60 money but dropped part of them week; musical shows, 8 perform- | and fled when the senator awoke. |ances, $64 a week, | ' ' T i f {But Carl Ericson, Jr., Reaches, ‘SPEEDS FROM DETROIT : Pauses t ‘ 10 ENFORCE DRY LAWS) ‘ Nebrask Sheriff Says Prisoners Thus Punished Hesitate to Vio- | | late Again Neb. Sept. 4 (A—Diets » materially ations in comment was made in o nection with the supreme court man- | date ordering Roy Yarson and| Thomas 1 begin servin, ir sixty th s of whic served on the bread and Five and ten day “bread 1tences are frequently| to be ed on liquor law violators by Jud, Ch: ut the sen- ces of Carson and Nelson to th fet” the longest recorded :n‘ country oth men already k on bread and w their appeal to the su which le because pleaded guilty to uor in their possession at dance. had served a r beforc eme court| of the| DRIVER OF DEATH AR IS HELD RESPONSIBLE William Pekar, 19, Blamed for Tragedy Which Killed Five made Phelan, en sent to orney im Cooper of today co the office 1to Grand umbull. Pekar police at e is be- the by al where his inju Corc t that I nd d Phelan | W 10! reckles also ion that it is the thorities of Nichols to pl | flector or other the corner w 1 for t ss and doubt from exer: t h car as to safeguard the and the other oc- | machine n in the car at ident and only w0 su William Pekar and itanley Alechonowies. The victims of the accident were Antonio Rie- cio, 19; John Norko, jr., 18; Carl Monturo, nard Malnerre, 16 | , 18, | THREE CORNERED WiR Rival Chinese Armies Now Are Bat- tling for Possession of the Central Provinces, Peking, § 1l Chinese in the Yang! of Pekin, control of the scuth il yesterday a bat- north and the south tle between th armies, today took on fhe aspec a three-corncred contest when Mar 1l Sun Chang-F moved into | the f Previou: Sun's armics | to fend off rds five rich ern provir h he controls, including Kiangs which wealthy port of ai is loca At noon TFriday rshal Wu's mies col 16 OVER LIGUOR SIIUATION IN CITY 31X MID- WESTERN SEVEN BODIES ARE STATES HARD HIT TAKEN FROM SHAFT .. Heavy Winds and Torrential Little Hope Held Out for Nme sulting in Seizure of Downpour Does Much Damagg | - \BUT FEW L[YES BRE LOST, SURVIYUR TELIS STORY Towa, timate western course side co portati Kansas And Nebraska Swept By | Tail End of Much Property Damage. commu Tllinois, reams and a mounti tailed ut reas w ion for aska. ing tod Six States There was storm of win ities service, I dea William Gu! in a i liy it Y marked the mid- Smokeless Coal company mine No. | of a summer's end 29 here ye y morning. With | 1E ant (tarrential raiar|Beven’ bo recovered early this towns labored with cur-|MOrNing, little hope was held for | e (;{f”\:llr‘fisfq lo' alleged viola- the remaining nine imprisoned in a | oo b fll“"(:‘n““‘]r’::‘:e the po- il ¥ most ersto nditi Missouri, out through Kansas in il loss of |cue work | received a letter, which prompted yorsons own to|the shaft. them to saize about 70 cases of beer, th in Illinoi. 1 pol man made this states hree Lives Lost aces to prevent suffocation. | ment when the attorney asked him . 50, of Spring-| The knowr dead whose bodies | if he knew anything of the repu= ctrocuted when he |have been re red: | tation of the bottling works. e Horm s, Henry Berry, Am- Haberl Pleads Guilty. Keil, 15, mbers and on, | Anton Haberl changed his plea, while work- is and Ross Green. |from not guilty to guilty. He testi- Istown at!| AS the rescue squads were cutting |fied that he is the sole proprietor rs. a high- Into the blocked entry, the fam | of the bottiing works and he employs e imprison nen and hundre John Enbeck: The latter does not [Raldmg Officer Testi- | fies That Police Re- | cewed Complamt Re- About 70 Cases of Hiners Imns@ned \ | Beer — Haberl Fined | \ $200 Missouri, Indiana, Poured Bucket of Water Over Shirts ‘Judge Alling Warns Young and Made Improvised Gas Masks Summer's Storm—| As They Fled From Burning Mine | -di - : B ne| Rowdies Jail Awaits n Oklahoma. [ | | Them if v i 4 (P — Crippled| Tohan, Okla., Sept. 4 (P —Sixteen The‘ Insist o . the threat of swol- |miners are believed to have bee Insulting Giris Passing on Street killed 1 loss es- v gas explosions in Superior against 8 e filled entry. The first | “blind_ tigers,” ‘about a wesk 8%0 farm lands in some occurred shortly after more | were tried be Judge Alling in Aarwat men had started the day | police court this morning, and de- Affected shift. veloped the intercsting fact that the little promise Only one entry was closed by the | office of State’s Attorney Hugh M, The weather pre- |cxplosion, ugh others were shat- | Alcorn is concerned over the liquor of the flood stricken tered and hundreds of tons of coal | situation in New Britain, s d rock loosened by the blast. Se | Alcorn Made Complaint 1 1l miners in other entrances were| When the alleged proprietors of ailed in Towa, | burned and two were in a dange: ifl‘o Haberl Bottling Works at 38 stern Indiana 0US condition, although it was con- | Woodland street, were arraigned for . sidered they d survive. d Ne 1ling beer having an alcoholic con- tent of 3.08 per cent by weight and 3.73 per cent by volume, Policeman John C. Stadler in reply to Attorn- ney David L. Dunn, defense counsel, said the police received a complaint | from the state’s attorney and later Rescue Parties Active | s worl inued thelr | ‘the night to pene- | entry. Leaders | 1d be able to open the closed cell this mornix which last vious fu rms, ir pr some ! hoped they nes dow it hen he the lookers red about works for wages, according | Survivor Tells Story Tl will miner, who guided | xmage be I and 2 e RS g e i becker said he is not Haberl's Lot LG Mg An ] the smoking cebris, told of tho ef. T and whos he Lold e S bu i e L n interest in the business destroyed. Eitin o bircre s excited rvous and did ormn DI ¥ Adams was on slope No. 7, when the While in the central Arst blast ocourred. (He had justly AttornexfiDunn Enbecker damaging element was the Rt ey should be di he is merea cd to the effects “When 1 heard the explosion I|l¥ an emplove of Haberl. Judge Alle uges of a fe s before, o the [ niade a br for the shaft and saw |ing fined Haberl 0 and costs and Nebraska-Kz line, wind of tor- 1o gas and dust coming down on |discharged Enbecker, nado egion, storm last proportions f No commt although some t off. ports reecived Far 1 farm ened me. I kept right on going up the | Another 1s Fined re repo shaft and at the eatrance of 7 1-2 1 kas, proprictor of & ations from the |gaiw Sam Cox and two other men. |restaurant at ford avenue, areas Werc| I had a bucket of water, so I|was fined $100 and costs for violas Ipoured it over our shirts and cov- tion of the liquor law. Detective o Does Damage ered our f: The heat was ter- |Serge: er and Policeman 4 (A — A rible. It came through my wet shirt |Si tler testified to scizing a sample ming district jand felt like steam. of beer at the restaurant. An ane last night,| “When we got to the ‘entrance of alysis showed the aleoholic content meagre re-|Number 5 slope, T heard' a second {to be 3.03. per cent by welght and here carly today in- explosion. We dropped into a hole |3.79 per cent by volume. mers reported the and tried to cover We just| Brazinskas said he bought a case ore than an hour, crouched there until everything was [of beer and he did not know that L rd into Nebraska auiet, then fought our way out|it was not within the law. He was A through the heat, damp and smoke. |selling it for 15 cents a bottle. son, 24, who was| The mine is one of the largest Janvic Case Continued pdl roducers fn Oklahoma. Tt is ne r< The case of William Janvic,pro= an a qu Arl s line. Tah | prietor of the Boston Bottling works on is criti ing camp, consists of a S |at 80 Seymour street, was continued 1 electrical storm |in which the miners and their juntil next Wednesday morning be= i 2 Kan- |lies live. cause of the absence of Attorney o i Ta sy Han e — Thomas Cabelus from the city. and telegraph servic LEAfiUE HBPEFUL [": Girls Must Be Protected | 1 MRS C. W, SHEDLEY DIES | | out being molested and accosted, I | | want to know it, and some boys are AFTER LONG ILLNESS‘ | going to be sent away for a while” a | | Judge B. W. Alling said in police * o e Toge Qami. | COurt this morning when Fred Ba= Wife of Newspaperman Succumbs Will E]C(‘t A\atmn to Semi raffi, n:v"‘lu 17 ars, of 25 Willow stre Willlam Mason, aged 18 at Hospital Where She Was Patient for Four Months, “If 14-ycar-old girls cannot walk on the strects of New Britain with- | Permanent Seat De- g | iy ‘ , of 1 Ann street; Edward De- | spite Absence ! : rencz, aged -8 yi of 151 Hartford Kominos, aged 18 years, vhile a heavy bo! . 4 reet; William Tomezak, 1ed from the so lllness of more than} gang pt. 4 P —|aged 17 years, of 623 North Main batteries trained from I Hi ntha. duration, The I wders plan | street, were arraigned for breach of a comman one mi had been to elect ui-permanent | the peace. from Wu American Britain C at in 1 at the| Officer William Grabeck testified church and 1 Wu Ch 1 Mrs forthcomin, despite | that he was showered with stones by were in the 2 of fire and repe 34 years Spain’s prot from the oung man on North street and edly struck, but no casualtles we Charles W. Smedle embly. will in- | they also called him vile naines last |reported by fo passed away ¢ ice the rnment to | night. They insulted three 14-years The city of Swatow was menaced ¢ bandon resigning from | old girls on Hartford avenue, calling bty an invasion from I'ukien troops, city Octo . | the leagu: one of them “Flapper Fannie” and [assumed to be under orders from ed the It §s also learned that the Turk- | seizing her and breaking the back Marshal The n troops, luated | ish ministers in London and Berne | of her wrist wate cording to the said to be under communist in- ind in [ have arrived here to observe politi- | testimony. The girls complained to nece, by reason of direction fro cal developme especially th | Officer Grabeck and he caught Ma- SRR e Yo tar s e fect of the entrance of Germany in- |son at the corner of Spring and near panic at Swatow and s \ time to the league, Which now seems a | Union streets after a hard run. Ma- ding by ald the o 's school in | certainty. son him umes and ad- evacuate. he importance of Germany's en- thors: —_— Smedley was Il known | try had been temporarily overshad- ng Attorney Woods sald i - * hoat the city and her death|owed by the agitation over t young men are rowdies and long illness, Spanish leagus . but the states- | ghould be compelled to discontinue | NO PAPER LABOR DAY She w fn men w beginning to emphasf their practice of annoying passerse The Herald will not be pub- ary's par nd was ay t with Germany once an |y street, The police must lished on Monday, Labor Day | of that parish until her active league member, no European | g street corher | ' whe took up her Do could '_\{f:;“mvf‘,‘!“: \‘"‘~- i order is to be b = * | dence in St. Joseph's parish fa hare It infsrarelel Y Rt d 8 ; ) Surviving her are her Iale A0 HHSER DY EoUIg sald he believes — % | city editor of the New B forsshacaning ently e i accused young men OF | | jon B natien Josn i he Boverhmani.tor r counsel, Attorney Monroe S, HIGH TIDES |[Mrs. Abbie B. Dawsonf a sister, ™ ot N would ent having their Sept. 5 (Standard Time) Miss K. Dawson, and two | it alled “Flopper Fannie" and New Haven: 10.06 aam. 10.16 p.m. ||y, mes A. Dawson and | ¥ FCOPI r‘\or'jw_l‘m. : o molested. The trouble e et Tondon a.m. 8.21 pm. |y Dawson, all of this| it e for the creation | With some young men is that they Sept. 6 ity 2 . 5 . il out o at night and cannot New Haven: 10.38 a.am. 10,45 pan. || & o s WIIT.Be held at|Of {hreentw NOR-BOCIAVELSCHMT e Ros T New Lonfon:. §.40. 7.5, Funeral services will be held at!goq5 ang designating Germany as a | WOrk da QDR TP [ he late home Monday morning at|pormanent seatholder as soon as she | Some of them are headed for i 4| 2:30 o'clock and at 10 o'clock at i elected {o leaguo membership. the reformatory. Tomczak docs . =3 | St. Joseph’s church. Interment will BRNATRH. 253 5 Y not report regularly to the probm; B e e be in St. Mary's cemeter Twtal T R tion ofticer and seems to think * WS e S ’IllSh “‘Oman- 90 Years of | probation system is a joke. : ‘ | I e mp—— | Age Stacks Acre of OQats| Juase Aliing continued the cases. Hartford Aadrasant ol b meeting of the Exchange club| Raphoe, Donegal, Ireland, Sept. 4 | until October 30. He ordered Pco- $ow, New Britain and viciies ’\\m be held Tucsday, September T, |(P--Mrs. Annie Clarke, aged 90, is|bation Officer E. C. Cu-r ‘ Increasing cloudiness follow- \ it the Burritt hotel at 6 o'clock, day- |receiving the plaudits of all Done- have Tomczak arrested i | ed by showers beginning Jate | |light time. Marcus H. Fleitzer will |gal. She has just completed the|not report regularly. To | tonight or Sunday, slightly deliver an address on the subject |moving, testing and stacking of an | excuse that he lost his pro | wagmer tonight | |“Music.” A full attendance is urged 'acre of oats, the bulk of it six feet #* % | by the officers. high, completing the job in a week. (Continued on h‘c l’l“