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SEEKS $3000 DAMAGE | FOR BURNEDFURNTURS New York Man Brings Against Joseph Arbour & Son, WHITE HOUSE FRH ABDUT NIGARAGL Rnswers Critics Who Objgct to Policy There Washington, Jan. § (#—Oppo- nents of the American government's policy in Nicaragua, now augmented by certain European as well as Latin-American newspapers, have been recalled to back up its attitude. Presidents Quoted These principles, brought to light from the aging files of the state de- partment yesterday and announced from the White House as one set of several precedents for the EOV- ernment’s present day action, were contained in the so-called “Evarts doctrine,” a note communicated by William Maxwell Evarts, secretary of state under President Hayes, to minister foster for presentation to the Mexican government in 1878, Text of Old Note first duty of government,” said, “is to protect life and property. This is a paramount obligation. For this governments are instituted and governments neg- lecting or failing to perform it be- come worse than useless. This duty the goverament of the United States has determined to per- form to the extent of its power toward its citizens on the border. It is not solicitous, it never has been, about the methods or ways in which that protection shall be accom- plished, whether by formal tre stipulations or by formal conven- tions, whether by the action of judicial tribunals or that of mili- tary force. Action \ Owners of Warehouse. ‘ An aftermath of the recent fire | which destroyed the storehouse of | Joseph Arbour & Son on Whiting | street, appears in the form of a suit | for $2,000 brought against Joseph Arbour and Everett J. Arbour, mem bers of the firm by H. F. of New York city, who charges that a quantity of furniture and house- hold goods stored in the building was destroyed becau! the “neg- lect and carelessness of the defend ants.” The furniture was stored on October 10, 19 according to the complaint. George M. Hyman of FHartford represents the plaintiff and the writ is returnable in the court of com- mon pleas the first Tuesday of Feb- ruary. Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Horwitz served the papers and at- | tached property of the defendants on Whiting street. Suit for $100 damages has been brought against William H. McKay by the O’Neil Tire & Hattery Com- pany, through Monroe S. Gordon. The writ is returnable in city court the fourth Monday of January and Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Hor- witz served the paper: Action for $1,000 been instituted against § Catalano by Salvatore Gulino, through Attorney Alfred LeWitt, for the alleged non-payment of money due. The writ is returnable in the city court the fourth Monday of January. HART ST. COUPLE'S upon which the United States are | m::x?u;;xcy, together with that >M[' a]]d M[‘s R H “]lCOX wed 50 Years on January 22 | “The the notc damages has :bastiano laid down by Secretary Hughes, which led to the Central American treaty designed to terminate recur- ring revolutionary tendencies in those countries, were pointed to as having direct bearing on the admin- istration’s Nicaraguan stand. Borah Leads Opposition Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Wilcox of 204 Hart street will cclebrate their |50th wedding anniversary at the home®of th daughter, Mrs. C. H. s on January 2 Attention was called to them after Chairman Borah of the senate for- eign relations committee, had taken | a definite position against such a policy as unwarranted “intervem- |, . n 7 to 9 o'clock. tion". Meanwhile, French, English and Costa Rica newspapers have joined the latest editorial upheaval against this country’s action in sending war- | ships and landing marines in Nic- aragua, where the ognized conservative government of President Diaz is being opposed in warfare by Juan B. Sacasa, liberal with Mexican recognition. French Charges charge the United States with “im- tator says the “whole of Central and South America will be further ex- cited against the Monroe doctrine.” As to the actual developments in Nicaragua itself, officials here have little news, but Managua reports, be- sides telling of preparations for fur-| ther engagements, say that liberal adherents have asked Sacasa to ap- point a representative to treat with Piaz and that Rear Admiral Latimer, in command of American naval forces, has announced his willing-| ness to use his good offices toward | this end. | Sacasa's Stand Sacasa, in a statement to the As- #ociated Press at Puerto Cabezas, where he has set up his own gov-| ernment, declares ‘he is striving to maintain the Nicaraguan constitu- tion “without animosity against the American govanment or interests in | Nicaragua.” Borah’s Disagreement Senator Borah's open disagree- ment with the administration was made known following a conference he had with the president. He said he had learned that American in- terests were in no danger in Nic- aragua and expressed the belief that the United States was upholding by armed force a Nicaraguan executlve holding office without constitutional sanction. Secretary Kellogg- reiterated that the United States was acting within American-rec- | | been an iny French newspapers of all types active and conducts his own bt | from the Hart strect residence. perialism”, while the London epec- | cENteR N s e | age. | towers were | Laurel _Court, Amaranth, i Hart of that addre Guests will be present from part of the state and Mrs. will receive from 3 to 5 o'clock and rious Wilcox | Mr. and Mrs. Wilcox were married in Norwalk, Connecticut and for 35 years lived in Waterbury after which they came to reside in this city with their daughter. The couple have four children, Mrs. C. H. Clark of this city, Mrs. ¥Frank Howd of Wa- terbury, Charles Wilcox of New Haven and William Wilcox of V terbury. Mrs. Wilcox has for many years lid. Her husband is still iness Old Fitchburg Depot At Boston Will Be Razed Boston, Jan. 8 (A —The old Fitch- burg depot here, which in four score years acquired historical significance as the hall where Jenny Lind sang and as terminal of the original Hoo- sac Tunnel railroad route, is to dis- appear with its castle towers and give way to a modern concrete struc- ture to house both shops and a gar- The North Station Garage Company, which bought the struc- ture from the Boston & Maine rail- road, made the announcement tod Known variously to other gener- ations as “the great stone cas! and as “Crocker’s Folly” it was a chief landmark of the city. Its| aid to have proviged the United States corps of engineers with its symbol and its folly, in the minds of some observers, lay in its ercction by a fifty mile railroad under presidency of Alvah Crocker. | Installs New Officers Laurel Court, O. of A. held in- stallation exercises last evening at Marion Sackett, royal matron; John . room. i They were: xon, royal patron; Florence Dixon, associate matron; Henry Wachtel- hauser, associate patron, and their associates reccived their offices be- | fore a large attendance. Flowers were presented to the royal matron RADIOPHONE PATH TRIANGULAR ONE 860 Miles of Land Wire and 6,300 Miles of Ether , Jan. 8 (P—The radio- conversations between York and London yesterday went over $50 land miles of wire and 6300 miles of cther path, com- ing and going. The circuit involved describes a triangle, with its broad base resting at Houlton, Maine, and New Yora city. Between these two points are land wires, ing London’s mes- saages into New York. There are two imaginary lines go- out of the United States north- cast to a peak in England. One is a 5,000 meter wave lensth. The other is a short-wave of 22 meters. The 5,000 meter wave goes over | the telcphone wires to Rocky Point, Long Island. At Rocky Point rise | the delicate tracery of antennae, and six towers 0 fect apart. There is a “copper house” at the base of | cach of the towers, and in the cop. per houses are the tuning colls for | the radio telephone. i Here the voice is projected along | the imaginary line to Wroughton receiving station, in England. There land wires carry the voice into Lon- don, The parallel line on America’s southern side of the triangle circuit, and using the short wave, starts at Deal Beach, New Jersey. There the voice is picked up from land wires out of New York. rom Deal | Beach, the shore wave passes by the | New Yol telephone o er, o | Wroughton receiving station without | {repeating and is picked up at Lon- don first hand. Both long and short waves are {rushing eastward simultaneously ind London, getting the product 6f the two may tune out which ever | is weaker or static-affected. London, having no sthort wave | wn:lmg equipment ar present, sends | its voice over land wires to the Rug- | it | by radio transmitting station, where it shot northwest to Maine, cut- | ting across Ireland to get thefe. pment used represent 000,000, an outlay covering many The high power radio telephon: transmitter is declared to be a mar- vel of technical cooperation. To bring it to its present state the la- boratories of the A. T. & T. com- pany have utilized the services of hundreds of its 2,000 technical en- gineers. To the layman, the room at Rock Point where three “banks” of voice amplifying tubes are housed might appear somewhat like an engine Spotless glass, steel casings, dials, lev nd other parapherna- lia of an engine room grace the sides of two huge boxes, containing the high power water cooled ampi-| fier: Behind these is a circular ank of 15 water cooled power am- T tube Then thore is the low tion of the transmitter, “speech input, modulatin and amplifying apparatu Similar equipment has been in- stalled by the British post oifice at its rugby transmitting station. | To the telephone user, the miracle of tran: tlantic speech is like not | comprehensible technically. He takes | down the receiver, asks for a num- ber, and shortly later is talking from Broadway to Trafalgar Square. | A girl, seated before a switch-| board, can effect the connection, | with no more effort than ringing up a suburh. Behind these external simplicities however, were problems, ca of which took years of experiment power por- with i filters | > a [ The problem of suitable appa tus and systems for putting the voice waves into such a (‘Olldltmn‘ |that they may be radiated into space. Suitable apparatus and systems | for receiving the voice waves from space. Apparatus for separating differ- ent radio messages and providing secrecy. The study of transmisslon char- acteristics of the space through which the radio waves travel. Today the problem of “statle,” sputtering demon, has not been wholly mastered, and secrecy of ‘| { lein, | ness of hooey—my retorted Now Mrs. Heberleln is under arr Los Ang the w anything, Santa ( lin a que liam nothing | council. oW passing over number of placed ice s to board one ing s | wheels His hody was and his head severcd. Hartford ient. © boy NECKING Chicago, word of a | lexicon of British youth there is no | h word liam Lecd Vivian Carter, secretary h Ro when they “That word docs not ex land, eithe cr the Hartford, council, urers of the hington, _{an attendance of morning session was occupied with reports of state officers, men of state committees telling of | accompli: |three months {work Cleveland Bureau am the spirit of thy dead moth- intoned leveland medium, in the da Heber- K- lot | Mrs. Augusta seance. “That's a mother's not de Detective Victor Klopp. a What Swimmers Wear Is Up to Themselves Jan. 8 (A — What d woman will w r, while paddling :1'10% alina channel January 1 for glory and the Wil- jr., prize, Los Ange 1 dre Wrigley, to the KILLED BY TRAIN on, Conn., Jan. § (P)—Al- 16 yearold son Wilbur Pine Meadow, killed evening at railroad crossing by n on the canal division York, New Haven railroad. The train the crossing with empty box cars to be at the Greenwoods dam for men he boy attempted of the cars and in do slipped and fell beneath the the the of and was a terribly mangled The tragedy #sed by his twin brother, The body wag taken to undertaking estab- is survived by his father d two brothers, ISN'T DONE Jan, 8 (P—Take non for it, in the the bright tting.” Canon Wil- hompson Elliott, vicar of inquired yesterday atter his here in the compa of of the Brit- what Americans mean talk about petting. st in Eng- ‘necking’ doe s don't happen they dow’ he said, “and The thin; I'm surc D. A. R. MEETING an, § (A—The sta chapter regents and tre Connecticut socicty, D. met here yesterday, the state M Charles H. Bissell of presiding. about The hed during the past Fiction? No st | Pine | There was | and chair- | FOUR CHILDREN ARE} SAVED FROM FIRE (Three Firemen Are Injured in Bridgeport Blaze Bridgeport, Jan. 8 (#—Three fire- men were injured early today in a fir which started in a three story dwelling at 231-235 Parrott avenue and spread to the adjoining three building at 225-227 Parrott | avenue, driving six families out into | the cold and doing damage estimat- | ea at $5,000. | The injured firemen were: Capt. Michael H. Bain, cut on the head | by a falling electric 1light dome; | Hoseman John F. Clancy, number 1 | Chemical company, burned on hands; Ladderman Frank Bodalko, number 2 Truck company, lacera- tions and brui of the legs when he fell through charred boards on the third floor. Four childre | their beds in the were rescued from wpartment of Louis building at avenue, when Po-| Denton _discovered z from the roof of Denton ran into the aroused the Shain v of Harold Stack- [pol on the first floor and the fam- ily of Harold J. Morris on the third floor. | | A high wind carried sparks from the burning building, owned by | Shain, to the adjoining building. , | owned by H. Hillman, the clap- | boards and shingles of which caught fire. ! 1-235 Parrott liceman Leon ‘flumefl shoot | the buiding. building and | family, the fan | | | i | (Continued from First Page) Erwin, Sher- Raymond Gil- | | T. E. Reeks, H. F wood Skinner and ¥. patric. The ann | gin March The total amount 462.96. This is slightly less than $3,000 over last | vear's total of §66,588. | The budget shows an inerease for | some organizations and a decrease in others. | The Visiting Nurse association last | year received $13,009, this year ask- | |ed for $13,057.96 and was granted | [ $18,057.96. The Boys' club last year |} received $9,405, this year, asked for | ; $10,845, hoping to make a payment | on a mortgage and was granted $9,- 845. The Boy Scouts reccived $5,- 30 last year, this year asked and | were granted 9. The Girl Scouts et year received §3 this year asked for and were granted $4,055. | The increase in both these organ tions is due to changing exceutives and increased The Tuberculosis Relief ~associa- | | tion last year was given $5,440. This year on 155 was asked because | of the increased sale of Christm scals. The request was granted. The Junior Achievement organ | tion last year received $4,800. This | |year $4,050 was asked, $350 being for an anticipated rent. It is not | | sure that this rent will be necessary |so $4,600 was granted. | The Day Nursery receivea $4,700 [last year and asked and was granted | the same amount this year. Although sign Carl Frederickson has been granted an increase in salary, the Salvation Army managed to cut ex- penses. Last year the army re- jceived $4,533. This year $4,491 was ed and granted. The largest increase was granted | the Welfare Association which has increased its budget $1,000, from | $4,500 of last year to $5,800 this | year. The Fresh Air camp which re- | cetved $7,636 last year, asked and was granted $8,340 this year. Last year's total was $66,588. This year $70,812.96 was asked and $69,463.96 granted. The committee suggestion that the Polish orphanage | be included in the Community Chest reported that it has not yet conclud- |« | ed its investigation. | A financial report filed by Treas- urer Leon A. Sprague showed that 1 drive for 1927 will be- and conclude April 4. | ed will be $69,- | an increase ori c f B I N |'s o B |l s c investigating the t and |1 Patience is to Be years, but she finally lost hope, she | forest |SOEAL WORKERSSEEK 7455 LD BT SCROL gy .y 5 | Sprains Wrist When Mount| putting a spirited horse ove Wales to come another | ing, or point to point racing, solicitations of his family, first near | ed and fell on the wet ground. prince a badly s animal and continued to pur: |were thrown, 1of We is unhorsed no oftener than daring riders, of spills is ing mishaps worth mentioning. | occasions, the first in 1924 and Mass. Motor Conference The Massachusetts |took definite action on many mat- ters and motorists which during the present session. of Frank A. Goodwin, motor Monk, —NEA a virtue, , Kansas City Bureau but it can be too Miss Sarah L. Ap- | of Joplin, Mo., was engaged | jamin Franklin Cox for 28 arri legate ys, when Cox continued to delay Now she’s suing him | or $50,000 for breach of promise. | The two arc shown here. FALLS ONCE MORE Slips on Muddy Ground London, Jan. 8 (A—His liking for risky the Prince of cropper. Although he gave up steeplechas- at the' the heir| o the thronc must have his hunt- ng, and yesterday he suffered his accident of the new year. While taking a difficult hedge Great Dalby, Leicestershire account says, the horse stumbl- The ng clear, escaping with| prained left wrist, True to| ustom he remounted the captured | e the A of umps caused ne sp cmingly in pain cas the smashir x, although minor casual his wrist wa ch. Other members of the hunt also & ound the going rough, and three including the Duchess tminster, one of the best women in England. Horsemen remark that the prince kes unusual chances and that he other During the hunting follows the hounds three r four times a week and his record not unusual, they say. He has had probably 15 or 16 rid- | He ufiered a broken collarbone on two | cason he econd a year ago this month. Discusses Legislation ‘Worcester, Mass, Jan. (A — motor vehisle onference meeting here yesterday affecting the motor industry are expected o come before the state legislature Th ny conference voted to support Dill introducd for the removal registrar of Wesley E. commissioner, vehicles, and insurance rom the board PLAN FORMATION OF SCOUT ALUMNI Former Members 19 Years or| Over Are Eligible A Scout Alumni association, com- posed of former Boy Scouts 19 years | of age and older is being planned by the local Scout council, Harold | Tayntor, formerly a Scout in Brook- lyn, N. Y., and the originator of the | idea. The first meeting of those in- | terested will be held at 7:30 o'clock Thursday evening in the Chamber of Commerce directors’ room. Mr. Tayntor believes there are many former Scouts still interested in scouting who would like to form such an alumni organization, and this first meeting will be largely to sound out the opinion of those for- merly in the movement. Scout Executive 0. A. Erickson | and Logan Page of the executive committee attended the annual meeting of Region One at the Al-| gonquin club in Boston Thursday. There were 75 men present, repre- senting 35 of the 45 councils in New ingland. The speakers dealt main- ly with campaign and Dr. George F. sher, deputy chief scout executive, who will address the annual meeting of the local council on January 17, | made the principal address. Several new merit badge examin- ers have been secured, as follows. chemistry, Alexander Scott, §6 Fran- cis street; cycling, Gefhardt BE. Myers, Monier's store; conservation, | Ralph Wainright, 18 Steel street; Ralph Whinwright; paint- ing, Harry Thompson, 411 Main street; pathfinding, W. E. Fay, 490 | Lincoln street. Your new merit badges have been | created by the national council: they are.in canoeing, journalism, salesmanship and weather. Re- quirements in many other subjects have been altered, and a provision has been inserted requiring a boy to be a first class Scout for,one year ’ before he can become ‘an eagle Scout. Bronze, gold and. silver | palms have been created for hoys winning more than the 21 badges | | necessary for eagle rank. Anniversary week will be, observ- ed on February 6-13. One of the | finished and | ment were prescnted to a Newington fami, ly through the Kiwanis club. Troop 16, at St. John's® Germap Lutheran church, now has three ful! patrols with an average attendancg of 19 scouts. The officers are as fol, lows: Scoutmaster, Gaudette; assist, ant scoutmaster, Gerald McGrathy senior patrol leader, William Crow, ley; scribe, Robert McGrath; treas, urer, Gerald Roth; Beaver patro] leader, James Donahue; assistant, W. Thqnen; cat patrol leader, Ed, ward O'Dell; assistant, M. Moore; crow patrol leader, Walter Linn; as, sistant, L. Coyne The troop is hav. |ing regular hikes. Scoutmaster & Leon Jackson of Troop 18 has announced that the re, pairs to its.headquarters have been the regular indoox meetings can now be resumed. Troop 22 is starting the new year with a new troop gommittee and looks forward with continued prog, ress. City Items Mrs. Brown of 450 West Main street notified the police of the theft of a pair of artics from the rean hallway at her home. Sullivan-Kilrain _Bout “Re-enacted” Over Radia Chicago, Jan. 8 —John L. Sulliy van’s mighty bare knuckle chams pionship fight with Jake Kilrang | many years ago was broadcast “blow by blow” from WGN, the Chicagq Tribune station last night. The radiocast sought to reproduce the battle as it would have sounded over the radio, if there had been a radio then. There was the back- ground of the yelling crowd and comment on ringside incidents, in addition to the blow-by-blow ac- count, pitched to the key of excite- the announcer believed he | would have shown had he in fact been at the ringside. |Sheiks Picturesque, But Breed Smallpox Paris, Jan, 8 (A —Arabs may make picturesque screen sheiks, but the French Academy of Medicine says they are bringing smallpox and other diseases to France. Therefore the academy wants all of them vaccinated. Outbreaks in Paris and at Duoai, the FI of Plainville, from torium in Wallingford. {ship a boy who was formerly a s !patrol race show only three patrols the merit system contest. |old one having been ripped to during the game period ed last to let the boys break a path other hikes are planned winter, the sented their scoutmaster with a $5 | |gold piece for a Christmas present main council features will be the camp banquet, swhich will be held as in the past in the Boys' club gymnasium. Scouts and Scout dads are invited. Troop Notes agle’s Eye,” published by Zagle patrol of Troop 1 is asking for dope the other patrols and is con- “How to Run a St. Etienne and Valence are blamed on Arabs. The academy suggests thorough examination of all colo- nials coming to France, even though they are I'rench citizens. The No Docking Fee For Legionnaires Cherbourg, France, Jan, 8 §Pr— | Members of the American Legion coming to France for the 1927 con- vention will be saved the usual landing charge when they get oft their boats here. The chamber of commerce, which controls the dock- ing facilities, has offered this rebato s a courtesy to France's comrades- in-arms, —_— VETERAN WORKER DI Waterbury, Jan. § (P—Mrs, Eliz- i 4 o abeth Kane of Naugatuck ended 43 trols in Troop 4 are out in front in |years of work at the shoemaker's A Dnew hench in the Goodyear Rubber Shoe volley ball has been purchasedsthe lcompany in Naugatuck yesterday hreds Lwhen she was seized .with an attack > st week [op apoplexy shortly : ter she started Leon Bradley will take overthe work, She died 30 minutes later in troop next I'riday night, ite of the efforts of physicians to Troop 7 recently had a hike, and |rovive her. She is survived by her Scribe Louis Cimadon®elaims that |huspand, who is an old employe of Assistant Scoutmaster Turner w the Goodyear India Rubber Glove company augatuck, and several brothers sters, ducting a contest on Patrol.” Eagle Scout William Tallon, jun- for assistant scoutmaster of Troop 3, lias entered the Gaylord Farm Sani- The troop has recently added to its member- out urns in the | in England, The last re ahead of the Chipmunks. Billy Baker's Pelicans have ag alned the upper hand over Jou zabo’s Mongeese and the other pa- for him through the snow. Many | and s he the | for RED CROSS WORKER DIES Providence. R. I, Jan. 8 (A — Miss Abby E. Johnson, executive Troop 8 had a Christmas party, |Secretary of the Home Service Sec- the main event on the program be- |tion, Providence Chapter, Ameri- ing a feed. The members brought | can Red Cross, died suddenly here in several bundles of clothing which |last night in her G4th year. Scouts of Troop § recantly pro- | Drums Her Way Through School of appeals estab- lished under the compulsory auto- mobile insurance law. It asserted | that the action was not on personal grounds but because it did not be- lieve that the men should be al- lowed to pass judgment on evidence which might be collected by tbeir before, during since the last | drive $55,518.55 has been rec There has been received during the ceiving apparatus, engineers say, | w ar $15 on 1921 pledges, $2 on have been brought to a high ponm g 923 pledges and 8856 on 1 of development. pledges. In a man’s hand now, an object | | penditures include $45 by the officers and the past royal transmission is not entirely in-| matrons and royal patrons. The in- sured. talling officers were: Past Royal| B Patron Knight S. F. Seaman Mar- hal and aide, Past Royal Matron rdelia Banta, Past Royal Patron ymond Watkins, Crowning Matron its rights in recognizing Diaz and told inquiries after a cabinet meet- ing that this country was determined to protect American lives and prop- erty to the extent of preventing fight- fog in places where it would en- danger American interests, t sending apparatus and re- | 4 to few $2,639.90 for 2 Bruemmer, Prelate Associated The same position was taken a e ot the White House, the president’s of- ficlal spokesman also ing atten- tion that Mr. Coolidge is prepared to take the same attitude in support of the recognized government of Diaz as was taken In the case of the Amerfcan-recognized Ohregon gime {n Mexico, which in 1024 permitted to buy arms and munition In this country maintain stability. Arms From Mexico Mexico’s attitude in th Nicaraguan tangle also came brief attention at the White H where it was said President ( jdge had no dovbt arms had sent from that country to S: but d1d not know whether the source of the shipments was the Mexican government itself. Sacasa’s agent in Washington a statement last night, charged T with being a native of Costa T and therefore was in office in vi tion of the country's constit which says the president native born, COURT COLUMBA INSTALLS The recently elected office Court Columba, Catholic Da nd ere served and a social hour followed the ceremonies. Plan Demon%tratjon of School Club \ctn 1hei At a meeting of t ior High school Paren ers' association at the school audi- Thursday ning, Jan- 30 o'clock, a demon- en of the club ool eve pres the not All to advant much elient prog casa, associatior in must or Greenwich Water Co. GFiAVerioa tyare | At en it ] W “hd":a_‘fq Lawsnits meeting Thursday night. Tre list il of officers is as follows: Grand re- S gent, Mrs. Bardek; vice-grand r gent, Miss Palmer; prophetess, M Tarrant; financial secretary, Mr McKeon; treasurer, Miss Anna Mc- Briart recording M Mary Gorman; monitor, Mrs. man; sentinel, Mrs. Miss Mae Hannon Catherine O'Leary. Agnes Fox of iclated and a handsome headed ba presented to the retring &r gent, Miss Catherine O'Leary, rs ic New from t} ties ird the re dam. be Miss pu lectur District D at the exercises com- | mission in grant erec were ¢ oad pe When tried in that a set- A | mis was |ty nd re- cases to court it was tlement had b innc n react a Sosa —_ weighing only a pounds may be held, 23 of which so amplify the voice s to make trans-Atlantic communication possible. It is that water cooled tube used in three amplification. Twelve it took 500 tubes te send and the effect was of ago, nces, omising. Vhen you ceiver to get official said, *“‘con He rolled up his work, and he's still very the job Car Barn Bandits Buried In Consecrated Ground Boston, Jan. 8 (P—The three car rn bandits, who paid early Thurs- y morning with their lives for ler of h they had been con- , today went to their final rest d by the church. with requiem high John J. Mc- Heinlein at down the re- London,” a company ler the enginecer. and got to much on ceves W 1d consecr rvices, held for and Edward J nbkill's church. More than | attended while floral | family and former many. Services for lin ites from the associates we John J. Devercaux, the wetually Killed the aged watchman of the Waltham car barn, at | Maury's hall on the grounds of Boston colle Eac but i who ent to a differ consecrated g lic chu hw ll nt cemetery, | o ound of the SUNSHINE SOCIETY NOTE Reports from Canonicus Branch Sunshine socicty that of 1l supplies t are 7 n Twenty- | ere made upon the sick 3 were given 10spital and flowers sent to | the institution, b1l quadrangle tional Mrs. tain sco B stead of the n- was disclosed wher yes Burch and € au cisco Marsc up B with rhot ore Marson of lon Walk- .\vu\\x'\lfllmx\\\-rn mother, Mr 3 taken and Mrs. Burch on eral charges, fed- the organizations and expenses of the parent organization. | o There is nceded to finish the re- | maining quarter of the year $13,000, |t with only $8,056.99 on hand. This | means that about $5,000 on 1926 | pleages must come in within the ne xz} two or three months to enable the |t | organizations to complete their p: for any change in the present forms of motor vehicle tax | ent program. | ———— [ £ Deposed Ambassador pozing 1 | Sues France for Pay | Paris, Jan. 8§ (A—The Count De| Safnte-Aulaire, recalled a year ago from the London ambassadorship, is suing the government for what amounts to six years pay. ¥ He on the “avail at| the foreign office but as he has nni, job he gets no pay. He is 65, the retiring The foreign offic | demand and he has council of t ag appealed to the [l Man of 88 Takes Long Trip in Giant Plane Hasbrouck Heights, N. J., Jan. 8 | T Brigadier General J. G. Piera [t |son, of New York, ar old vet- eran of the Civil War yesterday flew for 45 minutes in the first test flight |of a giant 12 passenger Fokker air. plane to be used in service between New York and Boston, by the Colon- | Ic Air Tr It gener. ial the nsport I's first company. flight. was T THIS CHASSIS, Chester Galanck of 68 Kelsey|n Heights reported to n Kelly |t this morning that a tire pump, jack, | tube and set of side c ns were | r stolen from his automobile between 6 and 8 o'clock last night, while it |t ) was in front of his home. BUT THE | regi a gasoline tax was praised but the conference expre | Maine Posse Hunting .\]14 rm Har of ten men insists he | y on the payroll until hejMrs. sed his | sciousness after she | kash in the | was compelled to ¢ fand kne than {Wants Armed Forces to soldiers, m of liquors which have been poisoned | qucea. office. Governor Fuller's recommenda- ions for reduction. in automobile stration fgcs and substitution of 1 the belief that he time was not yet appropriate tion. The con- erence then passed a resolution op- proposed gasoline tax of wo cents a gallon. Man Who Struck Woman Me., Jan. 8 () — Deputy Littlefield and a posse e searching the woods or two men, one of them earlier ast evening struck, down with a club John Silver, 75. Although she did not lose con- was hit with the which opencd up a great back of her head, Mrs. s such that she wl on her hands s for a distance of more 500 feet to reach her home. been Hludgeon Iver's condition ¥ Robbery is believed to have hs motive of the attac Guard Industrial Alky Washington, Jan. S—(P— In a tter to President Coolidge, W. H. yton, national chairman of the ssociation against the prohibition mendment, h suggested the use of rines and coast guards- men in guarding poisonous indu; rial alcohol supplies. In this way, ie said, “the horrifying loss of lives 10w resulting from the beverage use y the could be government” re- Aileen Wright, who is just one inch under five fect tall, drummed her way through Superior (Nebh.) high s¢hool and now is doing the name thing at Hastings College. She is following in the footsteps of her father, who was a drummer boy in the Civil War and taught her to play the instru- ment when she was a baby.