Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
212 PETITIONERS FOR CITIZENSHIP ON COURT-BOCKET (Continued from Page 10) Gorski, John Niesiobedski, John Stefan Petruk, Joseph Bonczek, Stanislaw Marcal, Jozef Bacewicz. Alexander Laoinski. . Reza Pahlevi, Shah of Persta— David George, John Lazar, Paul Badal, Jacob Benjamin, John Jo- seph, Mary David, Jacob Abraham. Nerses Azezina, Joel Jacob. Republic of Lithuania—Jozas Jeninas, George Visniauskas, Anton Yudys! Carl Strashart, Antanas Baksa, Joseph John Zakarvacth, Wincas Masionis, Joseph Barkaus- kas, Katarina Zidziauckas. Alexander T. King of the Scrbs, Croats, and Slovenes—Anton Gant- ner. g Republic of Turkey—Mary Der Abrahamian, Simon Yonan, James Willam Adams, Kevork Garabed Darajlan, Sahag Mataosian, John Alashian, Kachadoor Vartarian. Greek Republic—George 8ipho- daskalaskis, Stylianos John Metides, Michael Jacob Hanos, Joanm/Monl- Jjoreles. State of Russia—Alex Brause, Anna Tarasoff, Minas Giragosian. United Kingdom of Great Brita #nd Ireland—Nora Forde, George Rothwell. The Present Soverignty in Syria and the Lebanon—John Meserlian. Czechoslovak Republic — John PB:llash, MABRIAGE CERTIFICATE 10 BE FILED IN THIS CITY Town Clerk Thompson Instructs Minister to Submit Record of Ashley-McKindy Wedding Town Clerk Alfred L. Thompson will notify Rev. Dr. G. W. C. Hill to file at the office of the town clerk in lin, the certificate under which married Stanton E. Ashley ard A Elva McKirdy, at the Shuttle Mecadow club last week. This is the first case of its kind to arise locally and there is no pre- cedent for the filing of a marriage return in a town other than that in which it was issued, but the town clerk has been in conference with officials of the state bureau of vital statistics and has been informed this is their wish. Dr. Hill performed the ceremony under the misunderstanding that the country club is in New Britain, and was surprised to learn on the fol- lowing day that it is not. A special act of the legislature validating the marriage was made necessary when the couple left on a honeymoon be- fore the error was discovered. DRUNKEN DRIVING CHARGED Operator Halted Twice by Policeman Drives Away But is Overtaken and Placed Under Arrest. Thomas C. Suess, 43, of 117 Ken- sington avenue, was arrested about 9:40 this morning by Officer Gesrgw Moffitt on the charge of operating an automobile while under the in- fluence of liquor. According to the police, he is a second offender. Officer Moffitt's attention was call ed to the zig-zag manner in which he was driving at the corner of West Main street and Corbin avenue, and followed him in a police car. Twice along the Corbin avenue route to Shuttle Meadow avenue he stopped him., but when the officer started to- wards his car to examine him, Suess drove off. only to be overtaken on Shuttle Meadow avenue. PROWLER ON VANCE STREET Mrs. B. W. Brown of 87 Vance street reporied to Officer Tovines Johnson last night that a man was prowling about the vard at 3:45 yesterday morning and when she called to him, he disappeared from sight and she was 8o frightened, she was unable to obtain a description of him. Officer Johnson noticed footprints n the cinder walk in the yard and | so an impression in the under a window, linrs ens ; ground directly where he stood while trying to look | into the house. Whiting Street Factory Rlight damage was caused by fire this morning in a building at 251 Whiting street owned by William E. Kinne and occupied by the Johnson Pattern Model Co. Co. No. 2 of the fire department was called at 7:29 and found a lively blaze in a work bench and the wall near it, the cnuse apparently being a discon- nected tube on the end of a gas line, READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Rheumatic Pains Go Swollen Joints Vanish pled You Can Hurdly Use Arms lLegs 1ot Khewma Bring You Quick Relief. 1t s0 Cri 1: themml anay and Betitons. beitign | of muiferers bais freed # fiom the bondage of rheuma- themselven of the torturing ced the swolln joints; thrown n ut-lies, and from » able to work and clves and families. ma; the enemy of . Jumbago, sviatica, gout and the dangerous poisons tured with pain, suffering with sore, | flamed joints or distresxed with oce sional_twinges, Rheuma is wold by the Fair Dept. Store and all good druggists with guarantee that it will end all rheu- matic euftering or mioney back. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 11, 1929. State Proposes Insurance Penalty for Reckless Automobile Drivers A modified form of the merit rat- ing plan of automobile Nability in- surance and bonding, with the cost graded according to the driving rec- ords of the insured, is now being considered for Connecticut by the committec on motor vehicles of the general assembly. Under the pro- posal every operator with an acci- dent or motor vehicle law violation record would be grouped or classi- fied by the state, The insurance rate or charge would be graded by the insurance or bond writers up- ward from the base rate for opera- tors with good records. The committee is now drafting the bill and it is expected to be given a public hearing next week. The bill results from a long study of merit rating schemes by the state motor vehicle department. It also has the approval of the state insurance com- missioner and has the tentative sup- port of many large insurance and bond companies. Extra Cost for Reckless Drivers While the effect of the proposed law, at its inception, will not at once change the rates for liability insur. ance paid by the majority of car owners, it is expected to increase the cost tar those frequently in accidents and frequent violators of the law. With the bad record drivers bear- ing the brunt of the losses paid by insurance companies, through in- creased premium charges, instead of these losses being distributed to all insurers as now, it is believed that within a short time the com- panies can provide special credits of sufficient size to materially decrease the cost for careful drivers. The tendency, too, it is felt would be, under the proposed law, to further stay increases in base rates, which have steadily increased in recent years. There would be no determination of rates nor any general rate super- vision by the state because of the proposed law. The state function consista of classification by the mo- tor vehicle commissioner of the per- sons considered “'special risks,” plac- ing each person whose record makes it necessary in the class provided by law and in accordance with the di- rections contained in the law. Outline of Plan The plan, in brief, is as follows: That the grading of insurance rates be applied to all persons from whom special proof of financial re- sponsibility is now required under the existing ‘financial responsibility act. . The law would not be retro- active and the various classifications would be made from the time when the law goes into effcct. Every per- son who has not been involved in any breach of motor vehicle law or in any accident in which a motor vehicle is concerned would not be classfied at all. The insurance for such a person would be written at a basic ra When anything occurred to bring & person under the operation of the tinancial responsibility act, then, the commissioncr of motor vehicles would rate such a person in the class described by statute as fitting the circumstances. The proposed classifications begin with No. 1, which includes voluntary applicants who would come within the standard base rate applicable to all unclassified persons. Next on the list would be those persons in group No. 2-A, who would be subject to & 10 per cent increase in liability insurance rates. Includ- ed would be all persons convicted of | reckless driving and fined in amount {up to $50; all persons convicted of speeding, operating a public service motor vehicle without proper license, failure to obey an officer, operating without owner's permission, leaving motor vehicle in dangerous condi- tion, improper passing of a standing trolley car. operating with improper mechanical equipment, improper use our of registration, evading responsibility after a slight accident; and those in- volved in one non-fatal or personal injury accident. Class 2-B would include all per- sons subject to an increase of 25 per cent above the base charge for insurance. Those affected would be those convicted of reckless driving and fined more than $50; those con- victed of any combination of offenses listed in Class 2-A or operating & motor vehicie while intoxicated, evading responsibility after a serious accident and perjury; those involved l ed of any offense under Class 2-A after an accident. The third grouping would be Class > and those listed would be com- pelled to pay an increase of 50 per cent above the base rate for insur- ance, Those included in this classi- fication would be repeating offenders under Class 2-B, and offenders listed in 2-A or who have previous records filed in the motor vehicle department which would affect the present underwriting determination by insurance companies. the commissioner to advance any person who has been classified to the next more favorable class at the end of a year of perfect performance. Companies to File Basic Rate ‘The companies which will sub- scribe to the state plan, and from present indications this would ap- pear to include necarly all of the larger companies doing business in Connecticut, will file with the com- missioner of motor vehicles a basic rate table. Thercafter the compan- fes will write liability at the rates so filed and in accordance with the classification made by the state. Connecticut's plan is unique, In the opinion of insurance company i officials, in that while it should work to the bencfit of insurers of this The daily use of Cutfura has become the approved recipe fot nat- ural skin and complexion besuty. There is nothing bettet than daily use of the Soap, assisted by the Ointment, to keep #OM the skia fresh and clear, the hands soft and smooth and the hair healthy. Soap 25¢. Ointment 25¢ and 30c. Talcum 25c Sample each free Address?'Cuticurs,” Dept. 15F,Malden, Mass. € Cuticura Shaving Ssick 25¢. The Health Claims of Rumford, the baking powder with real food value, make a strong appeal to women of keen judgment. Rumford is not merely wholesome in itself; it adds to foods with which it is used those vitally necessary phosphates so essential to upbuilding the bodily structure. fiumMFORD BAKING POWDER —Baby Ramblers ~Dorothy Perkins —Elselate —Seven Sisters —Taussendschoen —Weigela —Forsythia —Althea —Honeysuckle —Wisteria and many others. SALE! Hardy Guaranteed RoseBushes —Every conceivable color. Yellow and Pink Roses. On Sale in the Basement NEW SHIPMENTS ARRIVING DAILY —Wrapped in Burlap! Cc each Plenty of Red, White, Selected for theit hardiness and excellent flowering qualities. {based upon the laws of that state— | in fatal accidents and those convict- | A provision of the bill will allow | | to | expected state, it might not be applicable clse- | though they might not bLe brought | where. | insurance company official stated | After studying the plan, an | under its direct action “Another feature which entered that “it is clear that a plan which | into consideration at the time of the might be adopted in Connecticut | origination of this law was that it would have a tendency dually to and the very unusual statistical in- | produce a situation wherely thiough formation accumulated b; vehicle department of Connecticut could hardly be adapted to the sit- uation in any state have a similar law body of statistics. have a similar Not many states law and it is to be he motor | the the record-keeping state writing insurance which did not | be graded and a similar | that the person who has ord as an financial benefit as against the per- system which the rates for and bonds might companies and fine rec- receive maintains, by the operator might doubted whether any other state has | son who has not. any such accumulation of records of car owners and operators whose acts have caused questions to be raised regurding the carefulness or pro- | priety of their conduct with respect | to the operation of ‘automobiles.” | The proposed plan is new in state | legislation and also from the stand- point of insurance rating. It differs from a recently announced merit rating plan whizh proposes ‘to base the insurance rate on information | supplied by the applicant for insur- | ance as to his own qualifications | and driving record. In this proposal | the state will ma tion, as to the person as a the determina- | desirability of the | liability risk, and th | ever, “Gradually the sitnation has drift- ed into a position which is favorah for this consideration. apparcnt 1o an observer kind of insurance whereby the company . purchaser in the use of his car and guarantees to pay damage does through such use, is be more and more hardly be otherwi tremendonsly hazards which an automobile opera- | tor is now called upon to meet. the other side of this problem, how- it remains true at has been that about 13 per cent of It is quite hat the called liability, protects { which he ming pensive. This can e in view of the increased number of On is always companics will write the Hability in | ee—————— accordance with that decision. Stoedkel's Opinion Commenting on the proposed law Commissioner Robbins B. Stoeckel said: “When the financial responsibility law was first considered it was the cxpressed hope of those who had it in charge that in operation it might in the course of approximately six years, become to all intents and pur- poses inclusive of everybody. It was that the effect of having such a law on the statute hooks would cause many people to protect themselves by insurance or hond o: otherwise as thercin indicated, even tfl)as new zest when cookingl with GULDENS Mustard Savory salt that is smooth and fine. . always A THE finest salt shaker is only as good as the salt inside it. Wet weather will make it worthless if it is filled with ordi- nary salt. Any shaker is 2 good shaker when there's International ‘Salt inside! International mever gets bard or lumpy. Dampness makes no difference in its smooth, even flow. It's guaranteed. And it is the cleanest, purest, most savory salt you / can buy. A big, attractive carton costs /. only a nickel at your grocer’s. INTERNATIONAL SALT INTERNATIONAL - SALY.COMPANY. INC. SERAnTON Appetite Getting Lazy? If so, then you want a change in vour diet Why not try SODERHOLM'S Genuine SWEDISH RYE BREAD for a change? You will find it a real appetite bracer, and it will assist NATURE in performing its work as no other bread will do. Just Ask Your Grocer For SODERHOLM’S GENUINE SWEDISH RYE BREAD A Product of THE Small House Plans Some of the best architectural talent in the country has been employed in designing these Plans in Colonial, English Colonial, English Spanish or Mission styles. Dutch Colonial, Complete specifications and will these distinctive homes by our Building Bureau. rdware City Lumber € 1241 EAST ST. N L1 J Manor, N a KELLY BAKERY Italian, mater be LAbs s ascssssansnsssenssa a. RITAIN, Conn, | | | all operators do the damage, so there is manifest unfairness in requiring the 85 per cent who do no damag to pay at the same rate as is e for his defects. “One thing further needs to be said. While it is quite true that this luw will apply only to those cases which occur after it goes into ef- manded of the 15 per cent who do | the damage. “It is hoped that it | will be a great step in advance, that it will make for equity so far as the expenditure of money is concerned, and that the detrimental effect of being rated both financially and morally may be such that the whole project will be one great safety movement for hetter motor vehicie operation. As it will work out the criminal and the careless and indif- ferent persons will pay thoroughly fect—that t. will not be retroac- tive—yet just as soon as anybody jcomes in under it, the past record |of that person will become effective as a part of his consideration for rating as a risk.” Nitroglycerin, the powerful cx- piosive, 15 also one of the most potent heart stimulants known. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | FELL OUT OF THE SWING, MAMMA, AND BUMPED MY HEAD. THERES A BIG LUMP THERE. ILL PUT SOME SLOANS LINIMENT ON THE BUMP AND THE PAIN WILL GO AWAY. SLOANS LINIMENT WiILL STOP YOUR HEAD FROM HURTING. ILL SEND BROTHER TO THE STORE FOR A 35¢ BOTTLE OF SLOAN'S LINIMENT. BRUISES ? Sloan’s Limiment EYTTESIVEN Concrete Pavements water and nections. be quickly patched, lea face, with n blemishes. Stay Smooth as Buil¢ Pavementsinany grow- ing district must be cut occasionally to install sewer con- Cutsin portland cement concrete pavement can and neatly ving a per- manently smooth sur- 0 unsightly PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 347 Madison Avenue NEW YORK CITY A National Organisation to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Smooth !! farvelous Finish, Indeed Medium gloss, like Satin. Brushes on with ease. No laps, no ridges, no brushmarks. Zyanize CELOID FINISH Fourteen dainty tints and colors, plus black and white. A true medium-gloss fnish for walls, woodwork and furniture. Waterproof. HERE!— can K YANIZ hrush ( Value of this ¢ You pay us in cash omly WALL PAPER SAVIE PAINT HALL’S 179—183 ARCH STREET NEW BRITAIN