New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 19, 1930, Page 2

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- POPE HOLDS MASS ON SOVIET DEATHS (Continued From First Page) a most ingratiating sm’le, was stern and set. The holy fatier scemed to dlinch his jaw cven tiore firmiy when the Sistine choir, saluting him with the chant “Tu Est Petrus” (Thou Art Peter), reached the pas- sage: “And upon this rock I will | build my church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.” As though he were anxious to be abo a solemn duty he had sct for him self, he hurried his preparation for the mass, donning the ritual ments with unaccustomed celebrity Then, placing himself at the foot o he marr i e T Millionaire Youth Pneumonia Victim New York, March 19 (®—Paul Brown, 3d, 17 year old million- aire, died of pneumonia yester- day at the home of his mother, Mrs. Bess Masterson Brown, 75 Central Park west., Two ycars ago he inherited $1,180,000 from his grandfather, Paul Brown, St. Louis sportsman and broker who died in Colorado. Last Saturday he came home from Worcester academy, Wor- cester, Mass.,, where he was a student, complaining of a boil on his neck. Infection set in and pneumonia developed. He was born in Los Angeles and after the death of his fathe: Paul Bro N 14 ycars ago, was brought by his mother to live in New York. Th body will be taken to St §.ouis for burial. His mother is aly immediate surviving EIT OR NOT (On request, weut with stamped, ad- dressed envelops, Mr. Ripley will furnish Droof of anything depicted by him). (Reg. 1. & Pat OfT.) BY RIPLEY Rescue Efforts Get Man Job and $150 Reward Fairfleld, March 19 (UP)— Richard Weston, who had been unemployed five months, had a job today and $150 in his pocket as a result of other men’s mis- fortune. When three laborers were overcome by fumes in a man- hole, here yesterday, Weston an- swered a call for volunteers to rescue them. The contractors, I". ] Lew company of Springfield, Mass., rewarded Weston with the cash gift and employment. “Through all the vicissitudes of politics the friendship with which J was honored continued. My admir- ation for him and delight in his company cannot be expressed. This ment of his great career. It is deep- ly imprinted in the vital inner hi: is no time to attempt any measure- | Speaker at Banquet Of St. Elmo Lodge INCOME RECEIPTS : SHOWING INCREASE Sudget Estimates Likely fo-Be Nearly Met — \ Washington, March 19 UP—Fiir- .ther treasury reports on the March 15 collection of income taxes indd- cated today that budget estimates for the first quarter's receipts would be nearly met. 3 £ Up to the close of business on March 17, receipts turned iw amounted to $99,666,010, about $10,000,000 behind the total count- ed by the same time last year. 1t this proportion should apply also to the remaining collections as they are audited and reported to the | treasury, the quarterly total would tory of the British empire during‘ the last 50 years. “He was the greatest member of | the house of commons since Glad- be about $50,000,000 behind thé $601,000,000 collected last year. It was the expectation of (:6 treasury, when the budget for this _ stone. The earlier part of his politi- ALD. DAVID L. NAIR qum"’ e up- and a Tedues cal work was intermingled with ’don was made in the tax rate, that party controversy, but his principal| St. Elmo lodge, Knights of Pythi- | o quarterly collection would total actions were national and command- | as, will celebrate its 60th annivers-|.u ¢ ¢550,000,000. 3 ed the gratitude of all.”” ary this evening with a banquet and “introit” o o road will enter the democratic pri- aken f om t} psa €r¢ I mary March 26 as a candidate for apposite to ¢ sclectman. He is making his first bid Judge me, : a4 distin- | for politi but is understood lish my oz the = to have strong backing. His father, 18 not holy, . ederick J. Charland, a member of municipal garage commission, THE HEAT OF A CANDLE many e e i o s (S SO BE DEMECTED AT, The funeral will be held in Lord Balfour's Scottish home at Whit- moan avia 1. aie, apromiment | BOYS' CLUB MEMBERS member of the organization, will be DISTANCE GF 2 MILES / why do I g rrowful, le ti mir Majewicz, the only demo- enemy teth me?” came the re- | iber of the board of select- sponse to his s . v will seek nomination and clec- nd forth ti thy for a third term. Mr. Majewicz Pope d: “the business man, conducting 2 stor ave conducted mer i ton Lawlor street. Sam Bptera, fac- nie to thy holy mount 1 into th is a third man in the bernacles race for nomination as selectman. A tingehane. It has not been decided | FET0CF 07 CONTRIBUTE PENN[ES | Thether there will be a service at| p,g¢ " Cnancellor Samuel Hatorf = Westminster Abbey. 3 : e i and the entertainment committee Pinishing His Memoirs | have completdd arrangements for|gei to Defray Cost of Monument When the end came Lord Balfour | tho most claborate affair this order | 6" b | was “‘ri(l.ng the finishing pages of | pa5 ever sponsored. to Australian to Be Built v his ‘autobiography in which he re- vealed the thought and opinions of in Canada The response can : campaign commit is already the schlar all the world ance knew C“NVIETS’ FATE lN Wl o, e MG New Britain have started a fund to § will go unto God: 10| working in his behalf, and it is ex- . | God, who giveth joy to my youth.” od that he will prove one of the | HoRAN His successor is his brother Ger- , Pt strongest contenders in the primary SN A POCKET WATCH || _of Miloukee - ” ald. Lord Balfour was created an | help defray the cost of a p\er[ng_fi} Lawrence P. Mangan, chairman, < WAS LOSTINACORNFIELD || '\ oovey o | satl andlViseount T appraln atton to be bullt to the memory o | nd Richard B. Viets, a member of FOR 39 YEARS | - : the Washington conference in 1921 liam E. Strachan. | the board of relief, will be candi- / CONTINUOUSLY _ ! and 1922. He also was made. a2 e ——— | r h 1 dates for re-clection and it is not ex- B:(“'lf;fim%vzs FOR THE LAST I, e Knight of the Garter. He seldbm altar, and the Pope read the gospel | pected that they will be opposcd. £GA afterwards appeared in public roles. | / £ 15 ot ataay hanh st e e ame is expected to be true of 2 \ WELLAS EVER 75 years { He was president of the British | qemanded “the chair or acquittal,” |P00¥8 and officers of k!hc l“'m::‘ he sang out the first words of t Henry T. Martin and Joseph M Academy from 1921 to 1928, but his | pranding the crime *premeditated if | Australla league to make fldour . Nicene creed: “Credo in unum | Ward, members of the school com- time was given largely to his auto- |ever a murder was.” He called Lan- [th United States and Canada, deum” (I believe in one God), the |wiitee who will run again. blography. His last state duty was|dry as a state witness, who testified | While at Niagara Falls b‘trdcb an tire congregation taking it up and The entire fifth and sixth ward attendance as lord president of the |he believed the *“shootings unfair | 723 taken ill ftncl died. Hf’ was ur"- finishing that profession of faith. | common council tickets will again be council at the privy council held|and unjustificd.” Landry will be tried ied in Lundy's l..a_ne. a hxslm'c Trumpets Sound Flourish n the ficld. Petitions of candidacy last May 10 at Craigweil House, Bog- | jater. Canadian cemetery in a vk_fl donat. At the conscc ion 4 elevation | were filed with the town committec BAS nor. King George then signed the C: Goes to Jury at 10 &, m. ed by the Canadian go\ernmeylt of the nost, the silver trumpets |last night by C cilman Lucian Ma- oo i\ document dissolving parliament andy y o Per b totad hls','rr_\c Young Auslral!alle?guc is af- ounded forth with a flouri The | ciora and James P. Murphy of th bringing about the general election 08 : P | fliated with the Boys' Club Feder- Strachan was an Australian Boys’ club member who in 1929 came o4 |this country with a group of 160 (Continued From First Page) WITH THE MILWAUKEE ROAD J"S(H\Po —of Temea INSCRIPTION ON HIT 2 HOMERS WITH THE' A MONUMENT To A DOG. ES FULL IN THE SAME s erecled by tRs.L.W. KENNEDY INNING SP on 3419 e e 50N AnlOnio, Texon men Win Match By | A pistol team representing the ew Britain Rifle Association de- Pope intoned the Lord's prayer, | fifth ward, and Aldcrman John ¥, | which threw Ramsay MacDonald|CD2TEeS and submitted the case 10| .4jen a5 is the New Britain Boys” Gormel, he starterl on the “Litany af | Sxth ward | The Suicide Oak—-This famous oak tree stands in the City Park, New Orleans, La. Under | Totes Grand Old AMah was asked how he felt "about his i o s the plot in the cemetery and || & : s ; will do? 1 didn't kill that Connecti- P L | is done in vaults and mausoleums. of statcsanship. It came hard for all over this country and Canada Russia, was the Pontiff's recital of | 5 e SRt tbgag 54 s G e BY SEH“[]L BUARD | Portuguese governments agreed to send a personal representation to the Paraguay-Brazilian | mhey naa known nmim so lons as strategic points in the court to pre- |, gnyment on the plot. The N¢ | | i to the day of his death. selves to give one cent each. Many blush for shame that desire evil to | “waited 20 years in vain for them. peerage on the man who had held |Qdd Fellows’ Home Is Dwight Skinner, have offered moriy Gt 1 Wenhinston Sonteroace: than 100 persons, including officers against us,” the Pope went on e, an institution similar to the Kurbonick was arrested about 11 |J0¢ Jackson, is a challenge to the | Berenguer and members of the gov- |the front in parliament. |Tairview Odd Fellows home at 5 - 5 35 i i 3 feated the New Britain police team) Allies. e el i v Tana Bl i A od e vel| SRR TGRS R S T Ul i e L gt pien K ien o |ence—the “grand old man” was|Pusiness sesslons was called to order. : e T 3 2 bers of the board of managers were : thy holy place,” intoned the Pope ible far estig: r a description which fitted o He came home once more to find The high marks for the associatio g b : * {public welfare. An investigation | ° ° 3 3 (reased. This conviction is a direct | AT el but a|to be clected this afternoon. No | . s = almost overcome by his emotion. |, a4e by Justice Hadley, exccutive | K i alittle later the Jat-| gt or the bosses against the | L e e e Iy vl s B aiouasmatios oSl aerpimade DERL AL WAL TR 5 ; | ¢ ‘ o = z 3 | . | the jury at 10:08 a. m. | ctub. s e S el T nd Councilmen William . | y AN A ° YESTE < into power . I | club. communion, and reading of the last | Bovle and William W. Green of the | EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S CARTOO After the jury filed ‘out, Lalone| “mne canadian government isecar- the S%is coneneraLion AnzibE - e its branches 16 people have commited suicide. New Orleans has no graveyard because the | with the death of Lord Balfour. ‘h"’}‘g‘f (‘l‘:dl ';;‘x"“‘;f“‘lm the jury |¥eePs the flowers trimmed. walks m® the responses. dampness of the ground prohibits burial below the surface. All inhumation in New Orleans | England loses her “grand old man” : JUTY | order, and lawn graded. Boys' clubsy Appropriate to the mass of expia- E ; cut copper, but I got the rap.” ; btk tion, dedicated to the Christians in o lie TV Araiva Wai - A : : the English to call him, an out-| "}, ! TS are raising funds by contributing Don Felix D’Azara Waited Twenty Years—After the peace of lldefonso, the Spanish and | ;¢ qing commoner, “Lord” Balfour. | , Folicemen were stationed at| . “oont“cach towards placing & . ; e PR / > 'S| vent any possib] ; A el my assistance; O TLord, make hastc border to settle their boundary dispute on the spot. Don Felix D’Azara was the delegate of | “mister”, or “A. J. or “Arthur, I 'Mr; ’La’fi; lcn‘\l:ll,:;.b"o"femc de. | Britain Boys' club is cooperating 1 * to help me. Let them be confound- the Spanish government who was despatched to South America with such haste that he could |that the simpler titles clung to him | onaant, was present. this fund, the boys pledging them- ed and ashamed that seck my soul : T o : ' s otas fav Reas SO A ; e let them be turned backward and W|TH UT RE take no luggage with him. The Portuguese delegates for Brazil never arrived, and Don. Felix Incidentally, the bestowal of a | boys, according to Superintendant me. Let all that scek thee, rejoice Having nothing to do in the meantime he devoted his time to a thorough study of the |every other gift in the power of the Scene of Meeting Today than the one cent, but additional and be glad in thee; and let such as| (Continued From First Page) local fauna. Ile is considered an authority on mammals. :Q:::::L:Sfi?:xi1l~;nf|l\‘:~d<‘£fi~ e prime |, New London, March 19 (I1—More | 0™ 8¢ ROt accepted. love thy salvation say alw: the — , 2 % a4 . g . & , Was o o N . D v: B RSN R AR Yiord be magmified, Tut T am needy of the charges of brutality which TOMORROW—Where Lightning Struck Thrice « and poor; O God, help me!” \ under investigation.” 3 Balfour, born in 184§ and a|8nd members of the board of man- POUGE TEAM BEATEN o ; . hely | g : ) - |agers of the 0dd Fellows Home “Save thy servants” chanted the | Mr. Peck has been in charge of | | stetespian. of | the gld schgol, Bl GO oo C i Pontift, the mehool farm for some six o sev- | Dility that a charge of contempt of | “The arrest of Peter Chaunt, dis- | by the side of that of his wife. seen & world war come. with its vic- | Sorporation of Connecticut, corpor- N PISTOL CONTEST “Trusting in thee, O God!" the |en years. He was formerly occupied | court may be preferred in this in- | trict organizer of the \‘mnmums({ Shortly after 10 o'clock Xing Al- |tory for the allies. He had also been ‘:0‘5(3“‘1 {xsspcxalc corporators rep- crowa responded. in a similar position at the Berk- |stanc arly, Albert Suskin, organizer of |fonso himself came to the temporary |a change in pelitics, with a younger, [ FeSeNUing various lodges of the Odd T [ “TLet not the cnemy prevail |snire Industrial school in New York | Womse s Pelies T the Trade Union Unity League, and 'station chapel with Premier General [more aggressive school forging to |l ¢llows in this state. gathered at the | yoo gritain Rifle Association Marks=" or BHEHRSEGRA Lo it Have | o et aohiosl 1 purpose. | o'clock lnst night on’ Sextor street | Workers of New Britain which must |ernment to'attend while a final mass | He had been forced to give over | Groton todsy, for the annual meet- power to hurt us® the chorus ro- | e is a native of New Britain, and | by Officer William J. McCarthy, who | #nd will be answered by militant or- | was sald over General Primo: De | his power to men, like Lloyd George, | "% ol e nporations 53 Points plied e e o oa angaged i the | tosiiicd that a woman living abovs |Salization and defense aeiivity on | Rivera's body. When General Beren- |whom ho had battled _throughout | Lhugheos, Wi sag s thinf pate Faidiri “For our absent brethren— O e et Haven. | three stores near the junction of | the Part of the working class of this |guer arrived he greeted. General [his carecr. As a mark of distinction |{2Ken of by residents at the horte, "0 God, save thy servants e e Farmington avcnue. Beaver and | €Ity At the time of the arrests the | Primo De Rivera's sons and other | —since Lloyd George couldn't go to | W23 served the gathering shortly in thee™ wellod up from the vast | 1, wororicd Present Trobe res. | Washington strect, fold him a man | OFkers emphatically expressed helr | relatives, and waited for five minutes | Washington for the Harding confer- | before 1 o'clock following which the as he ' ; L < last night by 22 points in the first Pope Almost Overcome R R R e i e s i (Dl LRI BRI e W e |siven this assignment, the last of his| TePorts of inchmbent oroers more | of a series of matches on the polics “Send them help O Lord, from |yg ne ¢ t Saitatar trying the doors. She gave the MRS L R SEeoy career. cers and mem- | yolver range. e 1C e attention of the state board of this protest must be.greatly in- Phon T hn seotsah el T T R seen walking through | o ey o hero of peace. It was inescapabic | ; Larl Cooley, 46; William Trick, 43; chaned the crowd of ccclesiastics. | hourd ot (rustocs ot the . school, | Beaver street. vetaret | that he should be honored, and thus | M8 antlcipated to be brought before |11, Davics, 43. The police marks Then the Pope launched himself | jqoue a serles of complaints and | Ofticer McCarthy followed him o Chaunty Suskin jand e chson ers it was that the peerage—an earldom | 00 B |were as follows: Sergeant Kicly into the prayer that concludes the | e A e A lhn ghais o i o cted dnppiie (coUFE lash Satliny | which he had three times rejected 1CCOTpOrtlonIC ants the dflalsy Ofticer Stephen’ A. Coffey, o Digver that concludes the |stories of gross brutallty, and of | Beatty and Sexton strects and 110~} gay on the charge of breach of the | — was theusk upen i, of the Fairview Odd Fellows home | Officer A. C. Walinczus, 40: Officert Pliany At grega enerally unsound conditions at the |ticed that Karbonttk was hastening :,M{v “,H], ;“L,g., :n ,h(). J_v]-‘,{m,p_\l\l‘ e e A and is responsible to the grand lodge. | Delbert Veloy, 39 Sergeant Fiyna, o | fined each 325 and costs. ey ap- | (Continued Irom YFirst Page) Balfour was born an aristocrat, 3 44; Sergeant Ellinger, 43; Sergeant = and viewed the world with some- WANT $100 FOR CLERK Stadler, 37; Sergeant King, §7; Offi- pealed to superior court and were re- | lof the admiralty, foreign secretary, | what bored and academlc detach.| Al allowance of $100 a year for |cer John Kennedy, 41; Chairman M.V - special commission 1o deal with the [took him, he found that he had a|jcgsed in $300 bonds. works, give to thy servants that |gjiyation by Givernor Trumbull hundle of handbills and they | T ts wer i ¥ situation by Givernc ) sundle o ! | The made at the oo : i 9 ras i | clerical services for the, city plan|w, found in the door- | comer of Main and East Main streets |PTime minister and member of in- | ment. In the first place, he was ¥ planiw. Bannan, 36. peace which the world cannot give el 3 atatad Liioma : nen s [iclecical aetyites tor dhojicly sl i that our hearts may be disposed to Ways Al whyl)io|oTodl ot lont MaYch /630 Mackeen mralSysE | LD cran isoverIment anisalons and | Gecll, and membersin Sinithat Wlifes o e mtor T e S R p DO Keep thy commandments, and WIT[;H[;RAFT MUR“ER Atopped when the officer called o | having attempted {6 addroms & mase |COMMittees, the Tarl of Balfour's|tinguished family was a» mark of |thd ocommon council at tonight's week and the policemen promiss to fear of enemies being removed, the him, Karbonick sald he though the | miceting After & permit had been ro- |"olitical life spanned by a - good aristocracy. . i m:‘,‘"‘m onizeceived &) turnjths tables: times by thy protection may he ofticer was trying to attract the at- | fused by Acting Chicf George J, |MArsin the latter years of the reign | He entered publlc lite in 18is P hi SERIONEBUODEeahgves LR UE e thee that they whom we have | i Oeiledl Sthtes Jart at that time having beon in | '€EN of King Bdward VII and fpainied his uncle, the Marquis onlicss |USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS determined to offer up our prayers ety e taiaa lthe south. Chaunt was arrested |(NTOUSh more than 15 years of the |Salisbury, and Lord Beaconsfield, whether this world still detains them == harbenick, when pul to pled, b=\ yeon he called on the erowd to take [FCiEN of King George. the great Disraeli, we a member of in the flesh, or the world to come | peared 1™ have difficulty under- | p o0 TS Gkin away from the | Lord Balfour was most famous, [the British mission 1o the congress hats alreddy vedal et ing what was being read to}, ica; = " |perhaps, for the so-called Balfour|of Berlin. Xor nearly fifty years sl el P ol him, but Attorney Greenstein sus- {note in which Great Britain re-|thereafter, he served in the house : e 1se was unable to proceed pected he was shamming. He asked of thy goodness, all thy saints inter chnically, it is the 33-year-old \nounced all post war claims in con- |of commons. dadting For: them, Oblaln pardan'Enn| Jimsrkon Womean wwho 18 o triel (oo Lon ohr e ERNas thiaeh U (e tinental Europe, both from her al-| He assumed the premiership in o G e et e h who is on trial fo- | United States and Karbonick replied lies and Germany, beyond what was | 1902, after a stormy interval as sec- |20 years.” Questioned about the Pope concluded with th S auoationed Shor e T e et omanll i A needed to pay her own debts in the | retary for Ireland, during which his Memorare” to St, Joseph, whose | joindly. Mis i T O] e e A United States and by the Balfour |name beeame anathema in the feast occurred today, calling upon |had posed frequently for Marchand. |thems to hir “”‘Hv'l“""'].; s declaration of British policy in Pal- |land as Balfour of the iron hand. nim to “remember that it has e is accused of bringing all the POWer | hiom home. e denicd that he had e cstine, which set aside that country | His government fell before the on- heen known that anyone invoke of Sencca superstition to bear on [1c(t them in the doorways Asked FEE as a home for repatriated Jews. | slaught of Lloyd Geerge in 1005, but Fislt o Hollelteniny o rona s LN | rea Bovion!dar HAE e el 1ar wonis | o oty SIS dODrWE i, LA slies (Cantinued From First Page) MacDonald Expresses Grict | he returned to the cabinet with A S e i LR T e T ib e S DL ROl i it 4 Prime Minister MacDonald in- | quith, in the first coalition ministr idopted fathe of the Lternal Son, | Mrs. Marchand to death i Aol el SRS g W Gl to France where he dicd alone, | formed almost at once of the earl's |of 1915, With Lloyd George's scc- lespise not this appeal atenito ]| ST¢ atthatatatales contention thutt & o b, Draped in silver and black the |death, declared: “It is the end of a |ond coalition, he became foreign my prayers and plead for my ncees- | Miss Jimerson was infatuated with Little 1 L Attorn cone | funeral train bringing his hody trom |long useful life and the whole na- |secretary, which was his portfoi:o sities & R rotn him that wd | Paris, where he died Sunday in self |on will unite in expressing its re- | when he headed the British war Chant For Persecuted the artist's ¢ that reason. | MOt Worked in seven months and he limposed exile rived here at |sret and in paying its tribute.” | mission to the United States in 1917 on the “De Profundis Aehand oa g 2l as @ material | 1Y€ With his brother, having a little m. The body, enclosedin a casket | The earl was 81 years old last | In 1920 he left the forcign offic chanted by | witness, and District Attorney Guy | MONeY sived from previous earnings. | which was shrouded with red and [JulY and he played tennis right up |become lord president of the privy | tion for the |Moore has threatencd to bring mur- |11 Knew what was con d in the |yellow of the Spanish monarchy, was |10 that birthday. A most notable | council. | h bills, but he did not know the taken into the Notre station chapel, |characteristic was an almost unlim- In recent years he had heen clos.- itions { evidence s discovered to justify | "M 0f the man who gave them to | where a mass 1id over it ited capacity to remember. He fre. | v identified with Leaguc of Natious usation { i, he said Sons Arvive With Body auently astonished friends with rec- |activities, and played important Jimerson , ST eT it At Paonessa and Hart Two sons, Jo Antonio and Mig- ©llections of the most trivial inci- | parts in assembly and council me it smiled 115, which wer ks rrived with the body, while {dents in his long career, | ings. taofciher. ploture. Bhe || i s on Oal et third son, Pernando, was said to| Arthur James Balfour was creat- | The last official act of the lar: | od IRy a A ros Officor Ernest be flying here from Cape Juby, |od the ficst Karl of Baltour in 1922, | statesman was in May, 1929, when Africa, to attend the ceremony, The |He held besides the title, Viscount | he presided over the privy council lat. Her long, straight hair g ol > 1wo daughters of the former dicta- |Traprain of Whittinge-Hane, |at Craigwell House, Bogndr, at ombed on her 1 and whis iees i tor, Carmen a aria Pilar, who | King George sent the following [ Which King George signed the de- led down over ity e « Jor | found their father de rived here |message to Gerald Balfour: cree dissolving the parliament dge Thorn denied the de- ! € e subje ma veral hours before body “The death of Lord Balfour will e TG Tnaa ERTe ; : Cowds collected for wiany Tours | evoke throughout the empire angd in | Rear Admiral Benson A 3 inetitution was shortly afterwards | his steps, so he called to him to stop '0 God, from whom are all holy | ¢limaxed by the appointment of a |but was not heeded. When he over- desires, right counsels, and just ? (Continued From First Page) Parker Gonngcticut illed d er charges against hin if a ghred ocking, black shoes and before dawn at the railway station [many ether parts of the world, fecl- | to wwait arrival of the funcral train, |ings of deep sorrow which the| At Memorial Dedication 4 3 ; i I S n which were Quinones De Leon, |queen and I fully share. 1t is @ na.| New Haven, March 19 (P—From i N EMPT o [ S : Spani ibussador at Paris, and [tional loss of a great statesman, the | National headquarters of Knights of of Al uiinister of state, |last of Queen Victoria’s ministers, 1 | Columbus here announcement was ICCroTEn | heme \ wed political enemy of General |shall treasure his memory as & life- | made that Rear Admiral Willlam m: [;I]URT b”hhtb'“:" i ; s imo De Rivers. but anxious to|long friend, a great and charming | Benson, U. S. N. (retired) in Wash- versonality, a wise and trusted coun- | ington today, as representative of . - o = U i e 1 Cordons of guards were thrown |selor.” | the order, would dedicate one of the 3 : L | around ibjanit o mollce’: the v m Chamberlain east colunms of the American Wom- ( ied IProu First Pag 10 stron i spite | €rowds which were silently respect- | Sir Austen Chamberlain said en’s War Memorial, which in itself ANOTHER H]R MP'[R LL ne T S A il Similar measures werc invoked | “In Lord Balfour the nation lost | Will commemorate the sacrifices and NEW Rerict praall AL ! st 0 towns through whic @ [the fines . given | S s Ca o W - [:RBHIP R ! ; rou lich the {the finest mind that has been given |Scrvices of the Catholic women in GOLFLEX iy o 8 ¢ i | fur train passed en route he o politics in our generation. W |the world war. orhed i . e ¢ ¢ the from Irun on the frontier. Only at |shall not look up his like again.| The order made a contribution of place, were untoward incidents |To me he was ever the kindest of ‘55, 00 to the memorial fund, and orted and these were of minor | friends and the most delightful of | the setting apart of a column as tor companions. 1 owe him much.” |its own memorial is recognition of \void Business Districts Winston Churchill paid the fol- |this gift. funcral corteg s routced lowing tribute: | A delegation from the headquar- Madrid so as to cvade the | “I have sustained a very keen |ters of the order also attended the and better idential dis- personal loss because 1 have known | dedication. I possible anti Lord Balfour since 1 was a child and | — = Iways have been treated by him John D. Rockefeller has spent Isidro was o in 30 years of political life, with ex- | more than $750,000,000 in henefac- vault underground, [treme kindness, i‘mm during his long life,

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