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= z NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 1930. Carson Wins Another Victory In Long Battle for Copper Royalties| San Francisco, Mar. 4 (F) — The|cent of th | Refining | Adolph long struggle of George Carsor once penniless inventor, for a for tune in royalties accruing from his patents on a reverberatory copper smelting furnace, was marked to- day by another victory The annual report of the Carson Investment company, filed here terda hat the invento: scttled for $1,059,584. 10 Other Settlements Just how much money ha paid by the big copper minir panies adjudged to have ir volving other ting ade. A n smaller cor 1t is es to be paid 1 omewhere $20,000,000. The report that Carson will CONNECTICUT €0, WINS SUIT APPEA Bridgeport Woman Camnot Col- Teot, Court of Errors Rules 10 s was set upon 1 comp: Interest Rate Usu udge Samuel C. Si common pleas court Supreme Cour! 1 Maltbie in a rday in cision olding t interest charged by bus r Anna att for a surious Jud loan decision returned L which he found against il against Mrs. Ro: Joseph Saia 1 a $10,000 j injuries I 4 cement He within ten days or s trial. This was ruled preme court of Hartford yesterday. The award made by a jury in the crior court of lorrington, v led the verdict roperty Dispute John W. Tumbridze promoter of I i a suit brou 0 inst him by Tobert ficld latter decide upon a « to adjoining prope in its suit 500 of m 1 ove must do this mit to a new by the an opinion by mixer su- B air Oneglia, against Settled have the co of both parties in Ridgefield. The sug errors in Hartford yeste the decision in f The Colonial delphia recovers for the Joscph Hilton Co. 1 this city througl turned in Hartford yesterday preme Court Justice Williar Haines, with two associate dissenting. The trust cor cover for viol Philadelphia property by the company, Judge Tsane Wolf in favor of conipany an appeal was § Justice Ha orders the cou for the trust compa 36 the s ion o on local the lo ) with intercst fron PROPERTY CHANGES HANDS Notice of the 1 Linden st Kallman of N Realty Corp. Kirkha Cooper Amp, Who closure procec Redemptior ty of ] A\braha ssion of MAINE LDITOR DiAD 00k Pic Taine dead lapsed ball of as scc Your Eyes Deserve an Expert’s Attention ank L. Goodwin Optometrist Main St., Phone 1905 4 | company to i ¢ American Smelting and | company's scttlement. | Spreckels and other capi- | the investment Carson’s le various corpo the other 75 per talists who organie fight against will recei Discovered New Process s of prospecting in Cali- ada had yielded him Carson studied metallurgy and chemistry. A process for smelting copper resuited this study, b brought its in the way of roy- nies which used ed on an new from nventor not as the com npany was or opper prody of Carso ttleme NEWINGTON QUIET N BUILDING FIELD No Major Permits Issued— Rutoist Fined After Crash and Kidnay This picture was taken while arch 4—B W. Chichester lilding activity ry. The nu issued : Heand Voices and Smelled Kero- : sene She Tells Court Northampton, g | —Miss M re- | for tor} A Motorist Is Fined Coutoux of Tariffville Judge Welles last reckless drivi Mass Davi Leopold Dabrowsk Ware Polish National ( irch, 1 into a|cou 1 of aging Co-|night tI besides | down it into a1 Rev te Toliceman [in an att an investi; ance s ind Main took the sta yday 1 €. Cobu she had Ma considerably dar car Henry E. Zel tion and charged 1 ss | burning, said she nd was rical could lawn she awaken 1d costs. of which J | voice and a man's shout making a total |see no one window she heard a and some smelled kerosens She wendt kened by s fron L on her the an's f Newington Notes Ald society will hotd wing meeting in the tomorrow. It is hoped will b ¢ by |10 me later Ladies’ day hous to sleep 1t shortly hack but was ok cplioned warter ival Dabrow * which v v plannir S e Dying Man 'l'l'ull,\f('rl\ Realty to His Wile Irs e rect. tear document the clerk vill m ni town lrawn Attorne Al rose withess members t Alica also the FENDERED BIRTHDAY PARTY A birthday party was tendercd Henry Howard last eveni | 7 cticut nu by Mrs, Andr and Mr WEYLER Walter Dolb Howar ho4 was pres t dishe year-old v by hie M GENERAL id, L General continued | whist | were Phillip KILLED 1N CRASH ACTO 3 » HOME FROM HONEYMOON Mrs. Elli | have returned ing the o New Han Her Hair Prettiest Amazed! Way Tanlac Relieves “Rheumatism” For, sults obt ars the re ined from eatment o neral conditions have but most surprising of a quick relief this remarkat cine gives in cases tism” tomach ills to nothing clse. Men and seives beyond | for howel trout amazed i en wha tho iman aid, w vears with pains f aches, d ike armored car wi Notice the policemen equipped HOMAN WITAESS Detroit Police to Battle Gangs With Armored Tank 1l be utilized by Detroit police in their war ag gang vith machine guns in the observation “nest.” police were testing the car in preparation for possible rioting at a Communistic demonstration. rvices will be held to-| STOLE HIS WIFE 1 Lutheran el ey Wedn during lent. The Ladies' will Friday aftern ) o'cloc 1c hostesses Andersor Chu Alfred Anderson, Mrs. Albert Anderson, treet; Mrs. Harry Ander. Stanley street; Mrs. Frank An- res Charles Le mory ening a 145 o'clock at the . Servic ery sday eve- Aid Jacob m 1 1 Mlleged Firebug in Hospital Haven, March 4 (&) crept into the investigation of the alleged incendiary fire Anna Torello's house last when police were asked by Steven Giangrande, of Brooklyn, M. CCIBQL. ¢ Y., to identify Pasquale Barbero of pa New Brétain, a man who clop- ed with his wife three years jarbero fi and 1s now New Britain hospital, Vincenzo Luppino, i flam iangrande said that 1den e angle today Mr derson, Andrews on, Stanley derson, \ n society the Mary, seriously burned in confined in a A companon, dicd in was Johnson, South nd Linur John- New ()(Ti{'crs ('l:(;ll By Young Men’s A. C. Zachacko was elected vie ident o Young Men's A, C.| the 1« Heart church last pecial 1 held a hool m-| etball , South M he was positive rbero and Patsy Musiland, the man who took his spouse, are one and the same person. Sergeant James Ward went {o | New Britain today to sce Barbero. | Police reported they have made 20 progress in thelr search for two other men who are | been with Barbero and Luppino. Stanley the cting in the (plowsl clubrooms nley the ne ng of Corbin PRINCE OF WALES BETTER Nairobi, Kenya Colony, British W hiiep, | Fast Africa, March 4 (P “Thir. |bulletin issued this joined the elub. | Physicians to the P of Wales <day the clap | Who is i1l with malaria said The etball games | rin ecof Wales is now convalescing. Al ihe Sacieq|He expectsito for Uganda March 9 as originally arranged president, Gaj 1s named to coneh the t Siilie o b e forenoon by nee 1 new member Mondays have leag ember on will mon leave Wednesday — of and baschall will | indoor LDITOR ASSASSINATED Sofia, Rulgaria, March 4 #P—\ as- sil Poundeff, publicist and editor of | the Macedonian newspaper Vaddar, 1d & companion, were a today in Sofia. Poundef’s newspaper was strong- |1y in_opposition to another foction in the Macedonian party. GARDENS till on the grouad. plan your spring garden. Plot it out on paper, figure what you want to spend, and order your bulbs, secd . f or plants. Iowa’s Hope SPRING snow is 24 Hour Service‘ Courteous Attention Complete Privacy Repayments to Suit Your Income eharge is U Beneficiai Loan Society‘ amount of loan Raphael Building WESTOMAIN Loans 7 | ST PHONE 1913 *300 i Brooklyn, N. Y., Man Suspects|: the | lieved to have | n official | ssinated | GARVED MOUNTAIN HISTORY NOT NEW Darius of Persia Preceded Cool- ige 2,500 Years Ago Washington, March 4 Five mer President Coolidge has asked to write as a legend to ac- Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln and Roosevelt, being carved on the rocky |face of Mt. Rushmore, South Da- | kota. Darius, King of the Persians, and [ Mr. Coolidge’s predecessor in moun- tain inseribing by the margin of nearly 2,500 years, used 5,000 words for a history of his empire. To the Mt. Rushmore history has been assigned 9,600 square feet; Darius was cramped in about 500 square feet and was compelled to use part of the space for translation into two other languages. Three Historic Mountain Memorials “Darius’ inscription at Behistul the rock records of conquerors from Rameses II down to the French in 1860 at the Nahr el-Kelb, Syria; and the Lion of Luzern, Switzerland three notable mountain memor says a bulletin from the Washin ton, D. C. headquarters of the Na- tional Geographic society. “Mountains are the oldest tablets man ever tried to write upon,” con- |tinues the bulletin. “But his very oldest ‘writings’ are inside, not out- side, of mountains. Pictures of the clk, mammoth, and many strang2 beasts painted on the sides of sub- terranean chambers in northern Spain are the work of prehistoric cavemen who lived 50,000 years ago. The famous cliffs of Nahr el- Kelb (Dog River), just north of Seyrouth, have served for 3,000 years as a guest book for visiting invaders A “Parade of Gencrals” “Names qf conquerors and their remarks cover the rock like auto- graphs and verses fill the pages of L old album. The ‘parade’ of gen- | erals supplies a brief and significant history of Palestine and Syria, which have always formed a bridge for marching hosts: Rameses 1I, King of Egypt, 1230 B. C.: Shalmaneser, King of Assyria, §60 B. C.; Tiglath Pileser, King of Assyria, 727 B. C. Sennacherib, King of Babylonia, 681 B. C.; Esarhaddon, King of Assyria, 668 B. B.; Germanicus, representa- tive of Marcus Aurclius, emperor of Rome, 161 A. D.; Selim, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire 1566 A. D. Emir Beshir, Turkish general, 182 A. D.; and marshals of France, ex- peditionary force, 1860 A. D. “The Lion of Luzern is a recent memorial and one familiar to tour: |ists. In a niche of native rock lies a dying lion on a spear and shicld. Below are carved the mames of 26 officers who, with 760 privates, are memorialized as members of the Swiss guard that gave their lives in the defense of Lou {Antoinette in the Tuilleries at the beginning of the ¥French revolution. A Mystery Inscription | “The comments of Darius about himself, on the mountain at Behis tun, overlooking the ancient road RESIDENCE POWER ... nundred words is the limit to a his-| tory of the United States which for-| been | company the Herculean figures of} XVI and Marie | COMMERCIAL ........... from Bagdad to Echatana (Hama- dan) have acquired an importance quite out of proportion to their text. For two centuries the Behistun in- scription proved a mystery that challenged scholars. Steps leading to the translation of the writings make one of the best mystery stor- ies of archaeology. Final success in |reading the cuneiform sentences | ¢ the key to the whole literature of Babylonia. What the Rosetta stone did to reveal the enigma of Egyptian hieroglophics, the Darius inscription did for cuneiform writ- ing. “Cuneiform writing is a shorthand style made up of arrow-shaped marks. Coples of the mysterious Behistun ‘broadside’ were brought to Europe hy Pietra della Valle, 300 vears ago. Generations of scholars buzzled over pages of impressions not unlike hen tracks. One man | deciphered eleven signs, another added knowledge of seven more. | Still there were not enough until | Rowlinson, an English army officer, | | working independently, went to Be- | histun on leave. He copied much | of the text, working on a ledge 18 |inches wide. A misstep would have | sent him rolling down the 500-foot | precipice. “Rawlinson, laboring alone, soly- cd the great cuneiform puzzle and translated Darius' 5,000-word, moun- | tain engraved history which begins: An Autobiography On Stone “I am Darius, the great king, the king of kings, the king of Per- , the king of the provinces, the son Hystaspes, the grandson of Ar- ames, the Achaemenian,’ and so on, t considerable length. “Much of Darius’ message is de voted to the putting down of revolts in various provinces. Nine revolt leaders are carved in the rock above the legend, with ropes around their necks. The entire text is a Gar- gantuan boast of a primitive tyrant whose human weaknesses peep out only once or twice. * “There is also much else,” pro- claims Darius with sudden modesty. ‘that hath been done by me which is not graven in this inscription; on | this account it hath not been in | scribed lest he who shall read th |inscription hereafter should then | hiold that which hath been done by | me to be too much and should not | believe it, but should take it to be | | away at the cypher were on | no thankless job. Darius memorial- ized them, too. text they found: ‘Thus saith Darius, the king: 1If thou shalt not con- ceal this edict, but shall publish it to the world, then may Aura Mazda (sun god) be thy friend, may thy house be numerous and mayest thou thyself be long-lived.” " car the end of the | ALL NEW ORLEANS Whole City Indulges in Joyous Rites in Honor of Rex — New Orleans, March 4 P—The spirit of Harlequin and Columbine today swaped New Orleans in the general masking, costuming and revelry of the annual Mardi Gras. At dawn on cvery Mardi Gras day so tradition has it, a figure clothed in cap and bells, runs down the center of broad Canal street, the city's principal thoroughfare, calling on young and old to don their mot- ley garb of revelry for the day of play that comes but once a year. Rex Parades, Salutes Queen With what the older French in- habitants call the spirit of “Le Ca neval,” the noon parade of Rex, king of the celebration was formed. The lord of the revelry had a seat on a throne atop a gorgeous float heading a procession of a score af cqually elaborate floats. At the city, hall the city's keys awaited him. Further in the line of march Rex arranged a stop in front of the ex- clusive Boston club on Canal street |to salute his queen, Miss Shirley |Carter Cordill, young daughter of |Mr. and Mrs. James P. Cordill Though masked, Rex was known to nis people as Dr. Paul H. Saunders, prominent physician. | Tonight the carnival closes with |the parade of the Knights of Comus |and the brilliant and formal balls ot |the courts of Rex and Comus. At midnight all revelry ceases, and the city figuratively bowed its head in Lenten piety. BUTLER hEFUSES TO RUN West Chester, Pa., March 4 (P Fred S. Wood, chairman of ( Butler-for-Governor club, which has {been back of a movement to bring |out Major General Smedley D. Bu |ler as a candidate for governor, an- Inounced today that General Butler has definitely declined to enter the | gubernatorial race in Pennsylvania. In a telegram to Wood, General Butler gave no specific reason for refusing to run. SEEK POISON LIQUOR SELLER New Haven, March 4 (UP)—Jos- leph Labie, 36, was reported in a |eritical condition at a hospital to- |day after drinking alleged poison {liquor. Police sought the source. _— DON‘'T COUGH YOUR ENERGY AWAY HoOW a cough will mar your | winter joys! Why let it waste your energy? Take a spoonful of Pertussin | | at the first sign of a cough. It | soothes and helps to clear the | throatfrom phlegmand itisabso- | lutely harmless. Recommended by physicians; sold everywhere. | | | NEW BRITAIN USERS PAY LESS FOR ELECTRICITY THE AVERAGE PER KILOWATT HOUR PAID BY NEW BRITAIN USERS OF ELECTRIC SERVICE HAS DECREASED DURING THE PAST TEN YEARS AS FOLLOWS: Pertussin PRICE cavanao (D ceee... 28.8% 11559 NEXPENSIVE THE CONNECTICUT LIGHT & POWER CO. MARDI GRAS RULES «r s