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CONTINUE HEARING | ONMETAL SHEARS Lawyers File Briels on Applica-L s tion to Zone Board | Further contgnuance in the appli- cation of Morris Kotkin for a permit to install mechanical metal cutting shears at his property at Willow nd Putnam streets, was voted by the board of adjustment last night after briefs had been filed by Attorney T rael Nair for the applicant, Attorney William M. Greenstein o re- monstrants and Corpora John H 1 to the board Kotkin intend to place the ing he recentl fact may char the applicat i rr Gaftney, actir For invest Phases of t was voted The application property owners for a ¢ ing from that of district to dwellings wa members to visit tiv who owned la \ree vears prior change, and was thev Terasl Nait t no atten ing materials o rection of Kirkham as has de @ build and this legal status of ard T one s contin e treet opposed the resented by A was charged th made to chan ques placed b land and made ready for a two-fam house A petiti or zoning as industrial property, the land near the west boundary of the Stanley Works was withdrawn by E. T. Larson who had proposed the cha Mario Cianci, applicant for a special eption covering apartment houses on Court street, withdrew his application to ge — | TIREMEN OUT TWICE | “To. No. 5 of the fire department was called at 7:14 last evening to a slight fire in a buildi in the rear of 80 Franklin stree which is being razed by the owner, Morris Shurberg. Tt is believed | spontaneous combustion cansed !hw‘ blaze, wihch was in a pile of de-| bris. There was no damage. | At 12:21 this morning, the police department notified the fire depart- | ment that flames in an incinerator in the rear of 355 Arch strect were leaping high in the air. Co. No. 6| wooden | deal with English literature. | pressive NEW BidiL STANDARDIZE 10 NOW YOU | BOMBING PLANES ASK ONE | ITlliS Is Only Branch of Arino more Deacn. songnt as a renet Your first five questions today i Service Using Dillering Types 1—Who was “the Bard of Avon?" —What was the pen name of | . Joseph Korzeniowski, who wrote fa- mous sea tales in English? 3—What English aut and poet won for his works of fiction ibout Tndia? 4—Who Waverly No 5—What famous F Washington, July 14 (P—Selection a standardized type of bombin plane is the mext task of the |army in its effort to build up its fiying forces. i The bembers, the “dreadnaughts author of the |Of the air” are the last group in the | was the " {air corps to receive attention in the {sh novelist | selection of a standardized type of under | Machine, for the pursuit, attack and {observation groups already ha {been equipped with planes con lered the best types in their clas the world. As yet the selection of the homb- |ing machines is in the experimental . @ number of piaies of vary- ¢ been ordered by the will only be used in ive testing both in v that name? nd in engineering examina- Ition. The actual corps equipment which will include the furnishing of be ordered until during the next fis- |cal year. George Clements Loses Life While | Several types are under considera- |tion by the army air officers, in- cluding the giant condor Curtiss bi- plane which has been tested at | Mitehel field, a Fokker monoplane, 14 (A — |being built by the noted Datch of this city, |aeronautic inventor whose machines night at 9 o'clock |were used by the Germans in the He with several |World war: a heavy bombardment girls were in the [plane under construction by the vater close to the shore, disport- |)eystone company and auothe themselves and at the same |heavy ship which is being designe secking relief from.the op-: by the Glenn Martin compa The heat when suddenly | Fokker monoplane, which is similar disappeared lin design and construction to the Thinking that Clements was fool- | Byrd traneatlantic plane is describad ing, no attempt was made to fnves- by tlie army officers as a light bomb- tigate for fully five minutes when |ing machine, while the others are Raymond Higgins, one of the party, |of the heavy bombardment class. Tt dove to the bottom and founa |is expected ultimately other types Clement's body {will be added to this group to be Two doctors at the |given tests. lake worked over Clements for|{ The huge bombing planes are dis- more than an hour and although |tin¢t from the other military flying he had been under water only five | machines both in their size and in es found it impossible to re-|their armament. The Fok'ker mono- |plane it is planned will mount two heir opinion that a heart imachine guns and weigh 15,000 have contributed to his |pounds when ioaded, carrying 2,000 pounds of hombs, while the giant condor carries six machine guns. Tn cattle rustlers? r wrote the scors “Robin Hood?" | in r in mythology to a shel- vas hung round ient Mariner in in Bathing at Garden- er's Lake. Conn July Norwich orge Clements, vas drowned last in Gar¢ s lake. other boys and ing time he who were mir vive him Tt wa attack death. JEPLY § 90 unlike protective armor of warships' | gun turrets. ‘Robert,’ Noted New Haven Character, Passes Away New Haven, July 14 (® — One inf New Haven's most familiar and from ill health and poverty, had |claimed “Robert.” | A man of 60 years or more, gray |and none too straight, ‘“Robert” and his crutches have long been a familiar ht to frequenters of the section—so familiar, it is ved, that they no longer no- ticed the pencils and shoe laces he offered for sale. Late today *“Robert” was found lin his room in a Warren street | hoarding house, after the odor of illuminating gas had attracted the |attention of others in the house. here was no money in his clothes, nor any clues as to his identity, amily connections, or previous esidence. Since he has lived in! New Haven, he has been known | simply as ‘“Robert When found, rigor claimed the body, and it liecved he had committed soon after he was last seen yesterday. 1300 Mi. Trip Completed [ By Youths in Old Canoe | Boston, July 14 (P)—Victor An- | | derson and Gunnar Elixson, 22 year | | old East Boston youths, who paddled | {home from Brooklyn, N. Y. in a| |leaky canoe purchased for $150 were |rested today after ten days’ exertion | on the high seassThey completed the 1300 miles trip from Sheepshead Bay | yesterday in their 19 foot craft. An- |derson, a buglar in the national i;,'uard. left at once for Camp Devens, where he was to have reported for surnmer duty last Saturday. The canoeists reported weather throughout the trip. mortis had | was be- suicide late good GOING TO MILWAUKEE San Francisco, July 14 (A — Lieutenants Lester J. Maitland and Albert Hegenberger, Honolulu fliers, vesterday endeavored to make ar-| rangements to leave San Francisco' |today by train in time to arrive at Milwaukee, Wi Monday morning, attend the public reception there that day and proceed directly tol Washington, D. C. Fine Watch, Clock and Jewelry Repairing. Wedding Ring Shop HBERALD, { JULY A HEBREW UNIV. IS BADLY DAMAGED Is One of Many Jerusalem Baild- ings Laid Low Jerusalem, Palestine, July 14 (P— Examination of the wreckage of government house, badly damaged in Monday's earthquake, revealed that a stone from a partially wrecked tower hurtled through the roof of the chapel destroying a picture of the former German emperor in Biblical robes. One of the most seriously dam- aged buildings in Jerusalem, it not in the entire Holy Land region af- fected by the 'quake, is the Hebrew university. Its library and chemical laboratory suftered most. The dam- age to the university is estimated at $50,000. A tentative estimate of the losses suffered by public and private buildings in the earthquake area has been #et at $1,250,000. Some narrow escapes from death when the earth trembled have been reported. A train on which Colonel Symes, governmernt secretary, was travelling, was derailed by the shock in the Yermuk valley. It was thrown to the left against an em- bankment; had it been thrown to the right it would have fallen down a 300-foot precipice. A prominent Moslem architect, after an examination of the tem- ple area. placed the total damage there at less than $5.000. READ HERALD CLASSTFTED ADS| FOR YOUR WANTS m Eyes Examined Glasses UO Fitted Henry F. Reddell Optometrist 89 W. MAIN ST. PHONE 1188 14, 1YZi. Ma Buzz went to the country, Hooray| — dan; carriers of disease! Kill them at once, with Flit. Flit spray clears the house in a few minutes of disease-bearing flies, mosquitoes, bed bugs, roaches, ants and fleas. It searches out the cracks where insects hide and breed, destroying their eggs. Flit kills moths and their larvae Ty laboratory oo DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches research. which eat holes. It will save your clothing, furs and rugs. Clean and easy to use. Will not stain. Flit is the result of exhaustive It has re- placed old ineffective methods. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Recommended by Health Officials. Buy Flit and Flit :rhnyer today. For sale every- O orenonm ‘a.a) A calf recently born in Scotland |hoth types the machine guns are was detailed to the call. The pl‘flr»i 2 {has its heart located in its throat. !housan in steel-plated turrets not erty is owned by Antonio DiMarco. STUDEBAKER Dictator 4-DOOR SEDAN 1335 F.0.B. FACTORY’ 9 ARCH STREET The high quality of Pan-Am products never varies. They are produced and marketed by ONE organization, through rtliqfile dealers. Companion car tothefamous Studebaker Commander A brilliant example of excess power and finer quality at a One-Profit price More Power Twenty-three sedans selling for $50 to — Less Cost $1815 more than The Dictator Sedan have Jess power, according to ratings of the Society of Automotive Engineers. 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More than $100 worth of extra equipment Peont and reas bumpers; no-drafe ventilating windshield (exclusively hardwate in closed cars; dome light In Sedsn and Victorhs; uphob Studebaker); engine thermometer and hydrostatic gasoline gauge stery of ich mohalc with et Sedan, Victori and on the dush;_coincidental lock; oil filter; Sport Coupe; all other models in genuine leather in tone harmo- e ion mitror: reat traffic sigoal light; 4-wheel brakes: nizing with lacquer body finish. Tourer and Sport Roadster fullsize balloon tires; disc wheels; two-beam 1cotn headlights, equipped with folding top aad quick detachable cureains in color conuolled from steeriag wheel; front spring brakes. Butler finish blending with body. STUDEBAKER DICTATOR MODELS—Sedan {for five} $1335; Victoria (for fowr} $1325; Business Coupe {for two) $1245; Sport Coupe {]ar/amfi"v)‘llé”; Sport Ro-[gle,r nr‘{om‘ $1295; Tourer {for five} $1165; Tourer {for Seven) $1245; Duplex-Phaeton {for ve) $1193 Commander and President models to $2495; Erskine models $945 and $995 *Rumble seat Al prices {, 0. b. factory, including front and rear bumpers and 4-wheel brakes AIRRO MOTOR SALES CO 225 ARCH ST. PHONE 260 STUDEBAKER For trustworthy lubrication, use Pan-Am Motor Oils and Greases