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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 29, 1930. By Memory of Quarrel With Foch; Found French Policies Irritating Autobiography Bares the Fierce Individualism of 0ld Tiger—Attitude To- ward Field Marshal Is Softened Somewhat Sections of Narrative. in New York, March Georges Clemenceau's (UP)— last day were shadowed by the bitterness of | his quarrel with Marshal Ferdinand Foch, but the old Tiger found many other irritating post-war ments on which he longed to vent his scornful wrath. In the volume which Clemenceau wrote in the days when he was fighting off death as he had fought off the Germans at the gates of Paris, he penned an indictment of other than Toch. Sees Universal “Flinching” “Whether in the government, in parliament, or in public opinion,” he wrote in the first installment of Grandeur and Misery of Victory, published in Colliers, the national week today, "I see everywhere nothing but faltering and ginching. Our allieg, dis-allied, have contri- buted largely to this result, and we have never donc anything to deter them. England in various gui has gone back to her old policy of strifc on the continent, and Amer- ica, prodigiously cnriched by the war, is presenting us with a trades- man’s account that does more honor to her greed than to her self-re- spect.” In regard to his reply to Foch' attacks on his direction of govern- mental affairs during the peacc ne gotiations, Clemenceau shows much bitternees but some signs of the softening of his relentlessness in the days of retirement. Resumes Attack on Foch 'Ah, Foch och! My good I7och! Have you then forgotten every thing?" he wrote, only to resume a few paragraphs further on, his attack on the marshal. He paid tribute to Foch's genius at the Bat- tle of Ypres, giving him credit for knowing how “to impose his will upon the allies,” and he did not re- gret that he won Foch's appoint- ment as generalissimo, although the difficulty came mainly from the British side. Later, in regard to the allied de- feat at Chemin Des Dames, he wrote: “It must indeed be said that in his (Foch's) exercise of the single command, the cralissimo at times gave way to hesitancies, to temperings of authority alculated to leave the desired results to un- certainty...the commander of the British army never submitted whol- ly to General Foch... Duty to Guard Himself “But his (Foch’s) first duty was to guard himself to the best of his power and the Chemin our most important field fortifica- tion, was very badly guarded...he wanted to know if 1 intended to court martial him, to which I re- plied there was no question of that .1 won a signal victory (in de- nding Foch in parliament)...but nobody can seriously doubt that, had I faltered for a single moment, the high command would have becn swept away.” The book will be Harcourt, Brace & Co. ge published by Special Notice mmage treet, R ale will be held at 571 Main April 1st and 2nd.— advt. develop- | Des Dames, | DEMOCRATS START HOOVER ATTACK lThree (laim President Failure . as Leader of Nation Washington, March 29 (#—A con- certed attack was directed last night at the record of the Hoover admin- istration by gressional leaders. Issuing statements or speaking by radio, they charged the president with “lack of leadership,” asserted the agministration had utter! lapsed and assailed the legislative record of congress since Mr. Hoover became president. Two Start Barrage Through the democratic national committee, statements were issued by Senator Caraway of Arkansasand Representative Garner of Texas, the democratic leader in the house and Representative Byrns of Tenmessee delivered an address over the Na- in reply to a recent similarly deliv- | ered speech by Senator Fess of Ohio, | defending the administration. | Caraway seized on a recent mes- sage from the president to the Maine state republican convention in which {administration record justified the continued confidence of the people. Caraway asserted it ‘“made one doubt whether to smile or grieve. The senator said that if Mr. Hoo- ver is not aware of the “utter col- [lapse of‘the administration, both {the only intelligent person who is {not. | Farmers “In Bad Way"” farmers will be in a “bad way.” he continued, if everyone s satisfied “with the legislative chievements of this administration which has to its credit only the so- called farm relief and tariff bills, neither of which promises the slight- est relief to oppressed agriculture.” Garner asserted that “there hasn't been a congress in the last 50 years that has not done better present one. He listed as its accom- plishments the passage of farm re- lief, congressional reapportionment and tax reduction legislation. Byrns centered his attack on the tarift Dbill. “At this time,” he said, “it ap- pears that the crowning achievi ment of the Hoover administration will be the president’s signing of the Grundy tariff bil. . . . Now we are advised that the president is quite | prepared to accept the Grundy ta iff, in face of the revelation before the senate lobby committee of the processes by which the favored In- | dustries obtained the rates they wanted.” The Tennesseean also referred to the president’s selection of Claudius | Huston as chairman of the repub- Ilican national committee, which said Senator Fess had omitted in his | summary of the Hoover accomplish- {ments. Byrns then recalled the tes- timony before the senate lobby com- mittee on Huston's use of funds, collected for the Tennessee River |Improvement association, in stock |market transactions. In addition, he attacked the ad- ministration's treatment of the pro- Ih\bnmn issue. The law enforcement commission is a ‘“caricature of Mr Hoover's genuine faith in scientific inquiry,” he said., adding that the | president *had not been true to him- elf” in dealing with the wet-dry controversy. | growth of many New Britain commercial and industrial insti- tutions erowth of Co. There between th runs parallel to the the New Britain Trust is an essential relation he two, based on the bank’s varied capacity for ren- dering financial counsel and guidance, and summed up in the one word SERVICE ! Total Assets Shown on Last Statement—$7,453,032.56 New Britain Trust Co. three democratic con- | tional Broadcasting company chain, | |the chief executive said that the | legislative and administrative, he is| than the | OF HAITIAN REPORT Commission Uiges Gradual| Withdrawal of Marines Washington, March 29 (UP)— | President Hoover had before him to- |day a clinical chart of Haiti's ills, a | | prescription for its every ache and | pain, and fair assurance that one of his biggest Latin-American prob- | lems could be solved by ad- | ministration and a small outlay of wise cash. | The Haiti commission of inquiry, | instructed to determine “when and | how" this government shall with- | dray from the island republic, Visit- ed its patient, drew up its recom- | dations and had them approved by Mr. Hoover within the short space of seven weeks. They stand now, the president said vesterday, as the basis of America's Haitian policy. Briefly, the recommendations call on the United States to help make Haiti a country of and for Haitians. | Meanwhile, however, this country is to lend a steadying hand to the gov- ernment of the small revolution- torn republic. Marines are to be withdrawn cventually, but only when Haitians have established & strong steady government capable of maintaining order. The commission * made |lowing recommendations Hoover 1—4 fol- Mr. the to American naval and marine offificers to Haiti for at| least four years and choose those who will stay there after the pres- | ent treaty expires if the Haitian gov- rnment wants them. Provides Road Fund —Provide a continuing appro- | priation to be spent for roads by !the Haitian government. Keep exist- ing roads in repair before building new ones. —Do not object to a “moderate | reduction” in customs duties, in- ternal revenue taxes, especiaily |those on alcohol and tobacco, or to a reduction or elimination of the ex- |port tax on coffee, if the treasury | condition warrants it. | Under the head of “sequent steps” the commission recommended poli- |eies to be followed by this country | in helping the Haitians csm\;nsh} | peace, prosperity-and order. | These asked Mr. Hoover to recog- | h\zo the temporary president of | Haiti when he is clected, provided | President Borno and “opposition” |1eaders keep their promises of a fair | election: recognize likewise the per- manent president to be chosen later | |by the Haitian national assembl | |send to Haiti American officers | | free from ‘“strong racial antipa- |thies": “Haitianize” the services of | | the island: and limit American inter- | vention “to those activities for which provision is made for Ameri | can assistance by treaty or by spe- |cific agreement between the two | governments.” The commission, headed by W. Cameron Forbes of Boston, was ap- pointed by Mr. Hoover on February 7 and sailed for Haiti Februar 1t stayed in the island about two weeks, visiting a number of places and hearing both partisans and op- | ponents of the existing regime, | | meapwhile delving into social. re- | ligious, political and sanitary condi- | tions on the island. | | i THEATRICAL CIRCLE INRELIGIOUS PLAY \St. Elizaeths Society to Present Drama Sunday Night St. Elizabeth’s theatrical circle of the Sacred Heart church will give a six act play called “Where Art Thou, Jesus” tomorrow evening at 7:30 at Secred Heart school hall on Gold | street. This will be the third religious | presentation this season and 22 thespians of the club will take a tive parts. Miss Florence Kowal- | czyk, youthful dramatist, will again appear in the leading role and all the | leading parts will be played by your | women of the circle. | The cast follows: | Tulja, wite of Marcus e (b e on vees. . Kowalczyk OKtAWD ooeerensnne. W, Sadowska Faustyna .... R < Saral oAt ek (AT Noemi, slave of Tylja .. H. Konicl Astra, angel G. Po Marja W. Kurnik Ruth Pawlicka Rahab .. ign W. Karwas Miezejewski | . Z. Oleksy | . R. Berk Rorowska walezyk Dumin | Dednarczyk Wasik oinska N . cesn . H | Samarytanka H. | Rachela .. | Bstera, . | Judyta e Debora e < onas (G ] | Rebeka, slave of Rachela ... | S. Rud . Kowalc; iulewicz and K. K A | Weronika . Soldiers, | Zaleski. Z Europaails Back to ! Cherbourg Early Today New York, March 20 (PI—The {new North German Lloyd liner | Europa sailed on her retu to Cherbourg carly today 392 passengers. all of whom were | hopeful of making a gecord crossing. Although Captain Nichalaus Jehn- | sen said no attempt would be made | to lower the record of 4 days, 15 | hours and 42 seconds established by the Bremen, he made the same statement on the voyage from Cher- bourg to New York in which the Europa established a crossing record of 4 days, 17 hours and 6 minutes. EUROPEAN TRIP FOR SINGER Shenandoah, lowa.. March 29 () —High school singers from Iowa, Nebraska and Kansas will compete here June 1 in a radio contest, the winner of which will be award- ed a free trip to Europe in July with the Shenandoah Kiwanis club's annual tour. —_—— Clemenceau’s Last Days Shadowed |HOOVER GETS TEXT | | to be Killed by a convict within three | vears. | trained | show | nub today with the customa | dion and likes to run over Weddings SCURTI—CASTAGNA (Spocial to the Herald) New York, March 29.—Henry Scurti, 26, of 172 Smith strect, and Miss Mary Castagna, of 136 | Belden street, both of New Britain, Conn., were married yesterday in the City Chapel here by Deputy City Clerk John J. McCormick. Mr. Scurti was born in Ttaly, son of Domenico Scurti. Mi tagna. who is the daughter of Filippo and Giovanni Castagna, was born in Ttaly. \ the Birth Record A daughter was born at Britain General hospital last n to Mr. and Mrs, John Walauki of 241 Pleasant street. + A son was born at New B General hospital today to Mr. : Mrs. Frank Mierzejewski of 14§ | Farmington avenue, A daughter was born at Britain General hospital last n to Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Lugli of 57 Lawlor street, CONVICT T0 FACE DEATH PENALTY Auburn Man Who Stabbed | Keeper to Pay With Lile Auburn, N. Y..-March victed of murder, first degree, stabbing of Principal K B. Beckwith at Auburn prison, An- | thony Mortelito, a convict, today | awaited the mandatory death sen- tence, eper He was found day trial yesterday. verdict in silenc pronounced Mon Mortelito sprang upon Beckwith | with a knife which he had made in | his cell as the prisoners were filing into the prison mess hall at noon on March 3. There were 43 guards and | $75 prisoners in the hall at the time, | but before anyone could, go to Beck- | with's aid, the convict had stabbed | him four times in the abdomen. | The killing occurred while Max Backer, another convict, was on trial for the killing of George A. Durn- ford, Beckwith's predecessor, who was “slain during a mutiny ia the prison in December. Becker found not guilt Mortelito was life for murder, which he was sentenced from White Plains, N. Y., in 1922, Prison author- | d an old grudge was responsi- | his attack on Beckwith. He was the third principal keeper | 1ty after a (hrt‘(‘»\ He heard the| Sentence will be | erving 20 y second degree, GRAND THEATER, Tn this step-lively has not been slow in tage of all that ten towards ultra- | modernism Judging by what has| been advised regarding “Night Clab | Girls,” which will be offered at the Grand theater in Hartford all next week. commencing with a_matinee | Monday, it appears that this show has gone the limit in this direction. It is the acme of modernity in all the | various elements so necdful in main- | taining the character of this type of entertainment. “The Telephone So Number” overflow with mirth and | beauty. Effective scenic and costume | inventions enhance a colorful pro- duction. In the company of smart| comedians, trained vocalists and ec- centric dancers Scotty Tridell and Jessie McDonald render first aid. | The are supported by such popular burlesquers as Ralph Smith, Walter Wayne, Fred Walker, Rac Allen, Jule Paulson, Lillian Fernald and Ed Ry- an. There is also a stunning and well chorus who make a lively | till livelier. Incidentally onl ue show will be pre- | sented after “Night Club Girls® as; the burlesque ason will officially come to an end the week after ne Kuddling Kutic: rring that ini- mitable comic, Max Fields, brings to | a close its cngagement at the Laugh Vv two FORD age. burlesque taking advan- | 1s and “Rose | one more burls performances, Aged Accordion Expert Observes” Birthday March 29 (A—M wlto plays the cor- old tunes the piano keys, today greeted friends on the 99th anniversar. of her birth, She came 8 the I‘alls soction of 57 years ago, and has en a city | grow from a village | Mrs. Culver lives with a niece, | Eliza Oatley Main stres = has good eycsight for reading, ! a good appetite, and enjoys life as the days move along. She was born in Colchester 1831 and married therc when 22 years old. She had no children. Her aister, M Emma Lille is §2. Susan Culver, on her here when Willimantic Windham, | of in PASTOR DIES IN OMAHA Omaha, Neb., March 2§ (P—Rev. A. A. De Larme, pastor of the Iirst Baptist church here for the past 13 vears, and former pastor of churches | at McKeesport, Pa., Norristown, Pa., and Taterson, N. J., died late ves- terday folowing a long illness which caused him to resign his pastorate | several months ago. { Dr. De Larme was a graduate of | the University of Indiana and of the Crozer Theological seminary ut Chester, Pa. He is survived by his widow, formerly Miss Ethel Char- lotte Kirkham of Paterson. NOTICE Notice is hereby given second precinet of the first been changed from Vance Street School to the School on Monroe Street, corner Madison Street, by or- der of the Selectmen. W. LAWYER, First Selectman. that the d has | Squad,” R SRy | cards spelling out “Good Night.” | Rev. J. J. Keane, TROOP 4 PRESENTS ITS ANNUAL CIRCUS Audience of 500 Sees Trumpet| Band Achieve Triumph A of th high annual new mark in the history circuses given by Boy Scout troop 4 was reached last night when Good Turns of in almost faultle: produced before a crowd of approxi- | r 28 500 persons in Congre gational church chapel, prescatatien, which consisted of ricd acts, was pronounced by those who have attended these shows cach year to be the present the troop has iven, the Center The be to defray the cxpenses of the troop trumpct band. and be- lieved to be well above $12 g duction opened with a ded Dby Senior Patrol William A. Raker in a zaudy | uniform and fur busby, with an aide i hat | antly spraying a squirt gun. Behind this drum major came a five-piece band and then a weird collection of freaks in all manner of costumes and includ- ing the troop menagerie, which com- 1 one wild west horse and an clephant. Ringmaster “Pete” Kim- ball then welcomed the audience. Dressed in a manner of which no Ringling ringmaster had ever dreamed, Pete was an act in him- self, and his appearances and an- ments throughout the show unfailing source of laughter. Trumpet Band a Triumph troop 4 t in its first Led by Scoutmaster Ker- Parker and’ with Baker as sergeant and Junior Assistant Wallace A. Davis as ant, the 16 members of ¢ corps looked and sounded like a veteran organization as they blew nd beat their w through “Boy Sco an en- core, * Deadshot Nevermiss, son of Theodore the furry no were a Th in the Bertoline, per- did some remarkahle shooting, knocking | cracker after cr Beyers' hand without member A shadowgraph, “At Barber Shov.” was produced by cast comprising J. Noxon Howard Fred Sackett, Ralph Merigold, and Walter Brown and created much amusement g the customer’s hair was cut with lawn shears and his two-inch nails were cleaned with a owel. The troop first aid team, consist- ing of Raymond Maincr, Wallace Davis, Richard Quigley, and Dwight Holden, gave a brief demonstration. which was burlesqued by Gordon Ely ker out of Francis the |and Leon Dickinson, who had burs into the chapel as a pair of coal men and continued to make things | lively throughout the performance. Several “Scenes About New were didclosed, with Mainer as Chief Noble, Maurice Healy as a com munist, Wesley Ellms as Rev. T. A. Greene, and Baker as a fearful pedestrian be | troes, “The Pumpkinville Center I: Band” played' some horrible music then pecled its ove Is and became the troop orchcstra. rendering a pro gram of three number During i rmission candy was on sale and a sign wa arried about urging spectators to keep oft the field, the cadets would use it for marching. “Mind Reader” Mystifies Jack Battey, as Rajah Mastold, Jr., opened the sccond part of th program. Aided by Franklin At- water (and, behind a screen, by Hollis Foster) he gave a “mind- reading demonstration” which proved hilarious and even, at the end, ac- tually mystifying. Mainer, city champion maker of fire by friction, showed his skill by lighting a blaze in this fashion in unusually low time, and the Ely-Dickinson com- bination satirized his cfforts, Max- well Coe and Ely then put on a banjo act entitled ‘“Take Your Pick.” A quartet 6f tap dancers, Baker, Raymond Witkins, William Wright |and Trving Lurdin, made onc of the | hits of the evening. They had been treined by Artemas Stockman, old-timer at this form of cnter ment. Baker and Richard Hube Bave a signalling demonstration, d Ely and Dickinson again burlesqued by siznalling while standing on their heads, an Terrific Ring Battle “The Battle of All the pitting “Deefy” Mainer, B against “Gentleman Dinty” 65 pounds, was possibl comic spot of the ev went through Mainer's legs latter finally blew his oppos and then knocked him Arthur Beyers r and William Booth was Mainer's se ond. A onec-act farce. “An Awkward was produced by a cast in- cluding tant Scoutmaster ¥ Van L. Hartung as the captain, Hube the sergeant, Howard as a “‘rube,” ly as a German, Dickinson as a dude, Trancis Beyers as the dude's valet, and Mainer as an Irishman. The performance was concluded with some checrs and the singing of “Happy Days” by the troop, with the orchestra playing an accompani- ment, the boys in" the bringing into view ir ¥red Teich was stage manager. Troop 19 Boys Advance Sixteen members of troop 19 ad vanced from tenderfoot to sccond class rank at a troop board of re- view held last night at St. Joseph's hall. The board was composed of Lionel M. Depot Mr. Greco, and Mr. McKeon following boys we: approved their advancement: Leo Crowley, Frank C Dickson, Ralph Drew Edward Gennette, Leonard Maietta, Robert McCrann, James McKeon, Joseph Pellegrino, Frank Romeo, John Serevallie, John Valentine, and John Vassclla. A hike is planned for next Sunday. in amp, James Robert Grace, Robert IKelly, MAY LOSE EYESIGHT Stamford, March 29 — Edward Dunn. aged 50, a night watchman, may lose the sight of one eve as the result of a gas explosion when he opened the door of a furnace last night. 1930} 16 | The procceds, which will | impet band scored | public ap- | injuring that | ol Britain” | ath the Central park | front of the | The | atore Arena, | By Devotion to Pet Owensboro, Ky., March 29 (# —A little negro b who loved his pet dog well enough to fight the dog catcher for him has won his PUTNAM & CO wxy!d'flafid&dlfl-— 31 WEST MAIN ST., NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 WARTFORD OFFICE, 6 CENTRAL ROW. THL, 2118 PR i Negro Boy Wins Dog and his dog. hoy, Marion Bla || grew a knite on Delvert the city dog catcher. week and was love of the boy f interested ts t 1| contributions came || fine and x || vesterday with 1| 1y tagged. a juvenile court judge who remembered his own boy- hood d ught it over, ure and nodd arges dismissed.” B d. PARIS CONGESTED PEOPLE HOVE OUT Suburban Developments Attract Growded City Dwellers for Ward, here 1 sted. Th his dog so at enough to pay a in We Offer: AETNA LIFE INSURANCE (CO. CONN. GENERAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE CO. | PHOENIX INSURANCE (CO. TRAVELERS INSURANCE (CO. ed, EDDYBROTHERS & C2 Members Hartford Stock Exchange NEW BRITAIN, 29 W. Main Street HARTFORD MERIDEN 33 Lewis Street 43 Coleny Street Paris BH) winter. March 29 (#—"Now of our discontentment r ime by th ade | glorious movinzg proach of spring.” disclaims houscholder at this se d Paris 15 10 exception cither is it unique anguished wails hile there is plenty of oppor choose, the pla ally priced too age in echo! of the r We have prepared a circular on American Power & Light Co. Which we will be glad to send on request. hump of i age last summer mount of suburbs { the city lots shaped with jeined rising by city The development for statistician had - s had reached its ulation destiny. T ple living within the of the city were crowded v dyed-in-the-wool Parisians d the atmosphere stifling. and moved country The squeezing out seme bizarre cffects upon the sub- | urban ar: Many of the packed | in city dwellers expanded mentally as well as physically when they got | into the comparative freed of | the suburbs and gave evidence their joy by bestowing extrava it carment upon the they built, bo bu place m | ges of | cd vacant ets flanked | apartn locks gleaming in almos! to t limit impos M. L. GORDON & CO. Investments — Securities TEL. 6119 - 5900 timely ton, figured that atest p pea- mils ven 0 1t 300 MAIN ST. 28 square til Dy S0 toward We Offer and Recommend: Utilities Power & Light common el AT THE MARKET Drotess e Listed on the New York Curb HINCKS BROS & CO| Members New York Stock Exchange 55 WEST MAIN STREET TEL. 6505 r rented. “Blue of Corner,” “Lulu We Two,” and “My are only samples of the prominently displayed on such | places. They put completely in the | shade such typically” Americ manifestations of the same sort mental relief cxpressed by | mere Cotta “Shady Re “Dewdrop Inn 'he exotic clement is nof absent cither from the city develop- lovers of the old French car criticism Lo Heaven,” d Mimi,” Love Dream abels | in NTERNATIONAL NICKEL world aspec have been loud in their | the ne ment tiicts. Some o sidered fine cxamp avchitectural art, with special atter tion paid to the smoothly terraced facades t modern Euro- pean building The critiz acknowledge aver tha these buildir are exception rather than rules, and that parts of | the district around the Champs 4 N betwean the drill field an the Eiffel tower; stretches betwean the St. Augustin church and th Ftoile and certain of the newly d veloped sections around the uni Qustrialized outer gates show a marked resemblance 10 the monot- onous flat-lined streets of the Bronx or the west side of Chicago. But ardl of the architec- | . middle class Parisians wlio | can not get 10 the suburbs prefer| the apartments to the dwellings of sre-wa ndards. They prefer E a low ceilings to h eam heat 1o | \\m:x~ Wednesday antight coal or contraptions 50, & oluty |and constant liot water to tempers e | mental heaters of the bath, / Designers of the modern apart- | | ments have not taken a maidless | era into cousideration. Virtual all_of the places devote the floor to ants’ quarters. And them snug i vine ¢ lars. o i basemen SRt '0il Well Runs Wild While Men Vainly Try to Pipe Its Product this Okl M mbli at d workers who soug er No. Mar, 29 (A— duction with “sour” cores of oil| 1 Thomas Fuzzell, t to halt its| same companies and in the same udick, in|field, with a record flow of 43,555 Oklahoma oil today | barrels for one day, previously had continued to run conceded the world's largest the countrysid t cet” oil producer. ands of May Be Several Days we reluctant to say isher could be shut in, though some were of the opinion t it might run wild for several Vast lakes of oil, held in crected dikes, surround- nd it is probable that will be saved. ung up from the well, - as Moore, in Cleve- several miles away. lso were found as Nornmian, oil, but the No. property of the Work the in hastily of o | by as Petrolc fl 1 land cour Evidenc i so as ty, s of oil th as ha City Advertisement BADLY INJURED GASOLINE STATION HEARING Dani March 20 (R—W ; Notic he given that S, Will 0 years old thi: W ( ey in. | hearing will be held in the office o is in a serious condition in t Board of Public Works at 7: | bury hospital as a result o Wednesday, April 9th, 1950, | he received late last night whe wplication of Uni- was struck by an automobil or approval of apphi- ated by Fred S. Woodt 1 1 - e filling station to Miltord m L 35 lea be t B 26 Hartford Avenue, Mr. Willis has « fr 1 wt ! cvade sent station), and skull and one leg is the Public Acts of accident occurred ne Mr. Willis when he [the highwa oil flow in self of “drilled WILLIS vy is by b o soli okr the or = rsons interested are requesi- at said hearin and be heard in was cross enusc BUTLER SEES PACELLL (T v N tion te the above. . Vatican City, Mar 29 (A—Dr g ¥ A, M. PAONESSA, Mayor. Nicholas Murray Butler, presid of Columb university, was ceived today by Cardinal papal secretary of state, dinal’s apartm hey talk with particular re | working of the dowment re- Pace in the ca had a lor ence to th Savings Bank of New Britain Lstablished 1862 ON RKIRK Paris, March 29 (® edition of the New York Hera Tribune announced the deatl Milton B! Kirk, former Americ consul at Rouen, at his Paris hom after a long illness, He was 49, Resources — $25,089,754.66 Deposits made on or before Thursday, April 3rd, will draw interest from April 1st. RIGHT 5% INTEREST being paid SIDE PAININ sne Indigestion, G 1 tried everything, even 2 operations. be- tore finding help I'll tell you about FREE. Madeline E. Unger, Dept. I-807, 608 S. Dearbern St., Chicage, Ll Open Monday evening—7:00 to 8:30