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SECRETARY SCORES EAMON DE VALERA Birkenhead Says England Ac- cepts no Hall Way Oath London, Aug. 15 M—Lord Birken- head, secretary for India, is the first nber of the British cabinet to ~.uuent on the action of Eamon dc Valera and his followers in the Fianna Fail republican party in tak- | the oath of allegiance with res- | tions, as they announced it, and | ming their places in the Dail reann. In a statement.to the Daily Mail Lord Birkenhead, who was respon- e for the drafting of the oath of iliegiance embodied in the Anglo- ish treaty creating the Free State, id: 'No modification of the substance p the Irish Free state oath to the Villa for the American champion- ship, although Villa was permitted to fight Jimmy Wilde for the world's title, which Villa won by a knock- out. Genaro's first battls under Jacobs’ management will be with Frankie Garcia at Utica, N. Y., on Aug. 23. COAL MINE DISTRICT QUIET AFTER RIOTS Five Men and Two Women Arrest- ed For Inciting Riot and At- tack on Non-Union Workers, St. Clairsville, Ohio, Aug. 15 (A— Belmont county's coal fields arc again qulet after last week's discr- der which resulted in the arrest of five union miners and two women sympathizers on charges of inciting | a riot and assault. Sheriff C. C. Hardesty yesterday questioned several additional per- | sons regarding the clash Friday in which a crowd of about 300 men and women attacked a taxicab car- | Soviet diplomacy {in China, | today. KNEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUS! 15, 192 JAPAN UNDECIDED IN CHINA TROUBLE May Assist Asia in Freeing Hersell From Enrope Willlamstown, Mass., Aug. 15 (P— | Russia’s policy in China coincides | with the present state of mind of | |Japan and America in that it is ad- |Of republican leaders, |verse to having the diplomatic in- |fluence of western Europe restored Thomas F. Millard, former adviser to the Peking government, declared at the institute of politics like Mr. to be ba l‘l(‘«l”\ Ru those of Millard pear imperialistic | continued. ble pressure the toward Pacifi However, similarity between the three policies ends at that point, he 1d. The decper objcctives of the They include the inevit- | room bore the woman's Dr. F. Scott McBride ,to be prima- rily educational, it is a matter of im- mediate interest to the temperance | leaders to have control of the major political parties vested in persons | sympathetic with prohibition. What political support the league could command, if it should enter the political lists actively, doubtless would be accorded Presi- dent Coolidge should he later be in- duced to accept renomination, it has been indicated by “dry” leaders, but in the event that his Rapid City pronouncement is final, it is under- |&tood that the league would look with favor on any one of a number notably Her- | bert Hoover, who is acknowledged | Woman Kills Herself And Little Daughter Boston, Aug. 15 (A—Mrs. Helen “kblom, 24, of Gardner and her three yvear old daughter were found ¢ far cast ap- | 4ead from gas poisoning in a room |} in a house today. Columbus avenue lodging A card found in the name and address, CHAMBERLAIN WILL | WELCOME GERMANS (Flier to Head Reception in New York New York, Aug. 15 Clarence D. Chamberlin ready to re- turn from the air the greeting he received in Germany, New York |today prepared to welcome the Junkers monoplane Bremen. After the welcome from the air, Iplans included a brief reception at | Mitchel field and a round of cere- monies at the hands of the city and German and other societies. Avmy authorities in Boston and New York have announced prepara- tions for guiding the fliers toward their destination, which may cago or New York. dependent upon fuel supply. Lieut. Col. Benjamin D. Ioulois, commandant at Mitchel (A—With | be Chi- | | nual vacations today, and Captain E. J. Woods, Firemen William Smith, A Mary Murphy and family of John Heisler, Francis Loughery, Jo- stroet are in Canada, making |5°Ph Tynan and Edward Cronin re- e b by trcion | sumed duty after their vacations. 'ha\e returned home from Canada and | Mary, of Mr. and Mre. J. W. Roche | daughters, Kathryn and 154 Lake street; Mrs. Catherine Conlin and Misses Margaret and | Mary Conlin of §3 Hart street have | returned from Bayview, Milford, | where they spent two weeks. William Notle of Harrison street, Virgil Maguire of Black Rock ave- nue, Joseph s and B. Humphrey | of Lincoln street are on an automo- Ibile trip to Washington, Virginia and Kentucky. They will be aw two weeks. on an automobile and the Thousand left yesterday trip to Canada Islands. Arthur Parker vistor at Sound View. Howard Gilbert spent end at Point-0'Woods. George Beyer of Arch street visit ed Sound View during the pas week-end the week- D. W. O'Connell, John C. O'Brien, Frank P. McDonough and Albert Volz have returned from Manchester, Vt. where they spent several days playing on the Ek- wanok Country club course. | John MeNamara and Lester Bic arton have returned after a week- end trip to Sound View, Dr. Sergeant J. J. King Sergeant M. . Flynn, I S A. McAvay Moffitt, Wil- Carlson and have resumed annual v itions, and Officers H. C. Lyon, A. E. At- | water. Hanford Dart, Peter Me- Evoy and James McCue started their Strolls, Axel Edward B. Kicly duty after their Dr. John E. Kelly and 1. T. Hills | was a week-end | Taxi Rescued From Rock 150 Feet Out in Water . New Haven, Conn.. Aug. 15 (®— | It took mechanics and tow cars from fwo garages and all the rope that could be found in an amuse- ment park to undo in two hours’ what it took one drunk to do in two minutes when a taxi had to be rescued from a position on a peninsula of rock jutting 150 feet |out into the harber here. The troubie started when the jdrunk climbed into the taxi, which |had been left standing with its mo- tor running while the driver was elping a party of tourists to coax life into their motor which had gone dead. Asked to climb out: |again, he complied but when the | coast was clear in he hopped and away went the taxi with its right- ful driver sprinting after it and the tourists bringing up the rear. The attacking party finally saw it bring up on the rocks at the end lof the street but when they stum- bled their way out to it. the drunk Iha’} already taken his departure. ! READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS rying non-union workers to the Police broke open the locked vacations today. | Miss Anna and Sally fter a conference | Uritish Empire could be assented to »y Great Britain without funda- -ntal disloyalty to the whole im- oerial conception, while further dis- loyaltles hardly less grave would be nvolved.” "In saying this he was answering a direct inquiry respecting a reported impending attempt to obtain modi- fication of the oath, the hope of | which was publicly expressed by John Redmond. Lord Birkenhead's statement ad- mittedly was made in his own be- talf, without consulting his col- icagues, and he added, that as far is he himself was concerned, noth- ng in the world would induce him o whittle down the oath or allow its substance to be impaired. 10 CLATM TITLE Frankie Gemaro to Appear New. York Commission Today Be- cause of Coast Report. New York, Aug. 15 (UP)—Frankie Genaro, ex-flyweight champion of the world, intends going before the boxing commission today with his new manager, Joe Jacobs, and put in a claim for the title which he lost on a close decision to Fidel La Bar- bu several years ago. Genaro's action follows reports from the Pacific coast that La Bar- ba has vacated the title because he no longer can make the weight. Jacobs announced Genaro also will claim the bantamweight title, because he holds two decisions over Bud Taylor, who, in Illinois is rec- ognized as the champion in his class, although in other parts of the Before Provident mines, injuring C. V, Nichols, taxi driver. Folk Dancing Program At Washington Grounds On next Wednesday evening 7:30 o'clock at the Washington playground, the children of that ground and the Nathan Hale pl ground will present a folk dancing | éxhibition under the direction of Miss Helen Bonney, folk dancing in- structor. A program of six events has been arranged for the purpose of showing parents and visitors what work of this type is being accomplished on the playgrounds. The program follows: Polish Dance, Nathan Hale chil- dren. Shoemaker children. Swedish Dance, Washington chil- Dance, Washington | dren. Minuet, Washington children. Dutch Dance, Nathan Hale chil- dren. Flag Drill, Washington children. The flag drill which concludes the program will be presented under the direction of Miss Margaret Con- ley, director at the Washington grounds. Special costumes for Polish and Dutch dances were made by the children of the Nathan Hale playgrounds under the direction of Miss Anna Kalmanowitz, director. CITY COURT JUDGMENTS Judgments for the defendants to recover costs have been rendered in the actions of Ernest Casperson and of Mrs. Laura Pierce against Charles | Bernstein, by Judge Morris D. Saxe in city court. the | The actions were non- | |ocean, the peopling, developing and | | | {hegemony in China, he added. Itara saia, at| securing of Siberia a other | door after a lodger had reported Asiatic impact, and the prevention |smelling gas. The gas jets were of any other power from obtaining a | open and tape had been pasted over | the cracks of doors and windows. The woman came o the lodging house a week ago with the little girl Britain's Chinese policy, Mr. Mil- | is “more advanced, near- er to realitics, more liberal and more | forward looking than any other im- | portant power.” HOUSES TO BE SOLD IMield, announced — Police Sergeant and Mrz. Michael Flynn and family, Mr. and Mrs. Maloney and family of East with Count Von Lewinski, German consul general, he had requested 60 enlisted men from army posts in | john New York area to supplement the |treet, Mrs. Margaret Maloney, force of 500 air corps troops under | nis Maloney and Miss Margaret his command, to handle the huge |yaloney of Sunrise avenue have re- |crowd expected to gather to Witness (yrnod from a two weeks' trip to the landing. Conaan While the arrival of the German i Den- | Bavlock of | 47 Hurlburt street and Miss Elsie Paladino visited Sound View }'°sier-‘ day. | Miss Dorothy Ryder of Plainville | and Miss Josephine Olmstead of | South High street spent the week- | end at Sound View. | Asiatic viewpoint, ( Coolidge to Be Principal Subject He described Japan as standing in the strategic position of cither as- sisting Europo to regain her hege- mony in the far east, or assisting Asia in liberating itself from Euro- pean domination. Indications are that Japan is leaning toward the he sald. DRY LEAGUE WAY SUPPORT HOOVER at Convention Winona Lake, Ind., Aug. 15 (P—| Political considerations brought to| the fore with President Coolidge’s recent statement of the 1928 presi- dential race, are expected to be of | prime importance before the execu- |tive committee of the Anti-Saloon |League of America which meets here today for a three-day session. This quarterly meeting of the ex- | ecutive committee, made up of the na the state superintendents, is being | quested to make At a meeting of the city plan com- | mission Wednesday afternoon at 4:30 o'el two how the site of an extension of Monroe street will be sold. Bids will be re- ceived by the commission up to the hour of the meeting. Immediate re- moval of the houses will be re- v for the street development. | which amplified tional leaders of the league and | held in conjunction with the con- gress of the world league against AIR AD FOR CIGARETTES Advertising “Old Gold" cigarettes, an airplane carrying five people circled over New Britain Saturday afternoon for several hours. An- nouncers, through a contrivance their voices, di coursed on the good qualities of the | cigarettes and their voices carried to | earth distinetly. Have You Piles to Learn e have and permanent re- omplished with i either cutting nor any ( of treatment with ointments and | suppositories will ren Then You Have Somethinj Thousanda h ! that who au nat k a a weakening of 1 Leonhardt found t nd called his prescription HEM- Leonhardt tried it in hun- cases with a marvelous record ich a wonderful record that is now sold by druggists Albert J. Simmons of Common- s standing on | | tour. |mer home at Clinton. row, the aviators, if they arrive after dark, will be enabled to lay their course by towering shafts of llgh! | from a battery of searchlights at the ! ‘fl‘ln] | | Personals | Mr. and Mre, Harr\ A. Emmett 'and daughter. G and Miss Grace Smith have n:!urn‘:d (rmn Hampton, Beach, N. H. Mrs. Augusta Holmquist and son. Walter, of Linwood street. and Charles Sexton of Arch street. have returned from Indian Neck, where they spent the past week. Miss Marie Warren of Wichita, Kansas. who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Howard L. Sheldon of Monroe street, has gone to Boston. Mre. Mary Luddy Mildred and Grace Luddy Misses Gertrude. and Wil- liam Luddy have returned from Que- | Canada, after a week's auto They left today for their sum- bec, . and Mrs. Thomas J. Curtin, Catherine fliers is expected some time tomor- | Traffic Sergeant John T. King of the police department and family have returned from an extended mo- tor trip to Nova Scotia. Motoreycle Policeman and Mrs. | William S. Strolls returned vester- |day from a motor trip to Canada. William B. O'Brien has returned from Indianapolis, Ind.. where he attended the national convention of the International Typographical union as a delegate from the New | Britain branch. wealth avenue left yesterday for Wilkesbarre, Pa. to join bis wife |and family who have been spending |a vacation in that place. They will | return Wednesday. Miss Margaret T. Sliney of 121 | Winter street spent the week-end at Sound View. Miss Ruth Hart and Miss Marion Muller were at Sound View during the week-end. Man Shot and Left At Door of Hospital Newark, N. J., Aug. 15 (@ —Be- lieved to have been the victim of a bootleggers' or gamblers' feud, Frank Ciccone, aged 24, was shot {and “dumped” at the door of St. | Michael's hospital today. | He died as police, summoned by | hospital authorities, attempted to | question him. | Police arrested five suspects, | whose names they refused to reveal. When Skin Itches Peterson’s Ointment become dis- may fail—but Wiliam Roche of 154 Lake street has returned from Woodstock, N. Y., where he spent two wecks. Dr. D. W. O'Connell - spent the week end at Bayview, Milford, where Mrs. O'Donnell and children are passing the month. Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Conlin and sons, Edward, Bobby and Billie, and Miss Estelle Conlin of 88 Hart| street will return from Bayview,| Milford. and Mrs. F. 8. Cad-| well of Lenox place, and Miss Edith Northrop of East Berlin, left today on a two weeks' automobile tour. Miss Helene Voight of South Main | Couneilman Don’t give up or Dust Breeds Germs Germs settle easily in rugs and breed by the millions, spreading di- scase. Sweeping doesn’t banish or destroy them—just moves them around! The right way to clean hy- gienically is to use a Sylpho-Nathol to every pail of water used for mop- | ping. scrubbing and cleaning. Keeps whole house healthful. Nathol at all dealers. Get Sylpho- ASK TUTTLE IF 1.—8$17.00 yearly will pay vou 325 weekly on accident and $1,500 for death. 2,—8$1,500 fire insurance on your furniture is enough to replace it should it burn. 3.—Your wife could con- tinue living in comfortable circumstances should you die leaving only the life insur- ance you now have. KennethAsfi. Tuttle world the title 1s open. suited by the court, since they werc alcoholism which will open under a rigid m ack when skin is fiery and itchy and ec-| It necessary, Jacobs says Generao will fight for the titles, and will welcome an elimination tourney. Gienaro was recognized as the suc- cessor to Pancho Villa, when the lat- not brought to trial. Attorney Wil- llam F. Mangan represented the de- fendant. The plaintiffs sought to col- lect damages for services alleged to have been performed for the defen- dant. died, because he had beaten Loans Total Resources -« -oovvveivt $6,330,043.31 here | upon conclusion of the Ant League conference. Although the functions of the Anti-Saloon League have long been held by its general superintendents, more time with out- | tions a package of from the Falr Dept. Store Tt nas ghen auick and lasting | and must the | u or money back. e any | Miss Anna Me vacation at Sound View l Captain Stanley Rozanski, Fire- men Stephen Maikowski, Lester Henry Young and Barnes, John Brophy, Alvin Wright ill of Franklin Square |and David Moore started their an- tin, Mrs. Helen Doran and Mrs. herine Rynn left yesterday for a motor trip to Canada. | Mr. and M rtin, Bernard Cur- street left yesterday for u two weeks' | couraged—others zema tortures your body, Peterson's| | Ointment is sure to give instant re- lief and quickly heal. It never disappoints. box at all drug stores. 35 cents a THE COMMERCIAL TRUST COMPANY NEW BRITAIN, CONN. CONDENSED STATEMENT OF RESOURCES AND LIABILITIES AS OF THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS AT 11 O'CLOCK A. M. STANDARD TIME ON JULY 30, RESOURCES and Discounts - ss e e Overdrafts ««-e-veoveeveennnn Cash in Banks and on Hand Real Estate and Equipment $4,280,135.40 9,998.09 1,238,019.99 341,347.66 460,542.17 We Certify that the above bilities 1s in accordance with the true statement of the condition of pany, of New Britain, Connecti on July 30, 1927. — Deposits -+ Notes Payable - Unpaid Dividends Due to Banks - Reserves - Total Liabilities Capital Stock -+ Surp]us and Unchwded Proflts Statement of Resources and Lia- books, and 1s, in our opinion, a The Commercial - Trust Com- cut, as of the close of business Total Capital and Liabilities 227 AGENCY 259 Main Street Phones 3683—2683 Insurance Mortgages LIABILITIES $5,156,421.62 345,000.00 I 104,4 48.75 17.38 $5,605,9 500,0 224,0 87.75 00.00 55.56 $6,330,0 43.31 Hadfield, Rothwell & Soule Certified Public Accountants Hartford, Connecticut August 13, 1927