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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY, 31, 1930. e omin especially | poseible, with the water around it NEW Bntam Herald Hen A t : ,\“M ;b.f,‘.; oy : source of pr:w‘-.:w. ‘Facts andpancies |2 does he lead the famous masters|died in Vermont in 1906 at the age HERALL PUBLISHING COMPANY K ; onn G IR e - ‘I’HE 0 B S E R VER but he outdistances them seven t{o|of 92. The last survivor of the War New Britain, Conaecticut < — rance likes the idea of a tube r — SN A By Robert Quillen = o PAGE—" ¢ the Straits of Dover tI Tssued Dally (Sunday Excepted) NI DR e Toh nother clever game is 1o ob- At Herald Bldg, 61 Church Btreet 3 S in 2 BRES:d rve a representative governmeit T nd try to guess what it represents. LESS LITTER WANTED R et woman doesn't make a fool af ot accustomed to regar Toithaliandla be Bk e PITTTFCETETITTETETT T CIPIPPIEITEIIIIETEIT: thMMOQ&O&&)&QO.\&3&z&&&&&h&&lb.b‘b‘&‘mm.“’g\ programs is a criterion. Not only |that war was Esther 8. Damon, who | | { | four, statistics based on an analysis [of 1812 was Hiram Cronk, who dicd of musical programs given here|in New York state in 1905, at the g show. The rcason doubtless is that|ase of 105. The last survivor of Makes Random Observations | Kreisler has whitten his own ar-|the War with Mexico, Owen T. E | rangement of so many of the class- [gar, died during the past twelv On the City and Its People & ics such as Lenar's “I'rasquita” and [months. It history repeats itself, it . | portions of Rimsky-Korsakov's lcast a quarter of ‘a century will “Scheherazade.” | clapse before the last Civil War vet- 4 & During the past season local mu- |cran will pss to the Great Beyond, moth doesn't knov 1 burn? { I oy s b s for plac o cu " pi oth doesn’t know it will burn? | Kteduction of Tave for places) to cut| gttt e S e mora | and the ‘century will be dtawifg ‘o e Like Labor of Hercules "hey »36,109.68, an amount | gach than usual due to the activity | its close before the death of the last 2555505888 I history peats, property owners who cast AVProximating three-quarters of Whe | o yosoph C. Beebe, organist of the | Civil War widow will be chronicled: 0dy to hold the enen for a candidate running | total to be spent Scuth Congregational church, who Last year the government spent Bt caavcis Again going through the budeel!aq presented several recitals fea- | $230.000,000 in pensions to war vet- nt of such u | after touching the high spots, onc/l ¢\ ine Bach chorales. In Mr. |crans and their widows. The higi- an impossibility. ds payrolls of the department of | pocpe has been £6 active alons this | cst amount spent in one year for n college ox- | 1 1o the works office, the police 4t |ying that he was invited by the Cos- | pensions was 3263,000,000, in 1925 ns the kids stem o ) : nt clerk and the public Wol- | pecticut Council of the National| Since 1780, the government has spend. for Ave s asallable e department, aggregating $24.- | Acsociation of Organists (o play | given over ecight billion dollars in at e e ;i 1 | £40. Next is added a light and PoW- | (he opening organ voluntary . at | pensions SanlLie TR charga of $4.00( ich is beyond | y1aiv choral festival service fbld| The total number of pensioncrs T ethd STien tNG fean ntrol. Hospitals and asylums,col- | yiav 6 in the Horace Bushnell Me-|last Junc 30 was 478,000. Ths Assucinted s . top Hello™ f who has driven home his argu- | 1¢¢t $30,800 from the city for the i niotiay nan in Hartford, Mr. Beebe |highest number was 999,000, in P g na heir vacation semewh :p nt for this rcjief 1o the tax of patients, and the only reason | .pag6 siy of Bach's choral preludes|1902. The largest number of Civil ves the support of the this jtem is not twice aslargeis be-| rom the Little Organ Book for his | War soldiers on the pension roll was thd s Gt ot te and county have not | o oyooon 746,000, in 1595; of Civil War wid- can he tax reduction | ! nst to care for local pa-| = Noxg (o Kreisler, New Britain's |ows, 504,000, in 1 stioned: but wh S to and needing care isic love ave a fondness for | The ave pension payment Tatasten N are built, this 1 3 he great Amorican composer E1-|dur@ig the last fiscal year was $352 the amount E ‘_‘\ i v lghts | warg Alexander MacDowell, cspe-{to Civil War soldiers, ands $477 to 1 to pay at city ¥ 70,0 Iy s charming. “To a Wild |Civil War widows larger sum hiftihg of poli irouped ur adi 10 in pensions to week saved R4 pecial appropriations” ar ever Begthoven, Wagner, Brahn nnsylvania than to Hahited oy amoun rich, eith Chopin vie for next place, cach o them appearing with frequency of bill increasing Spanish War nt per rer ayer tain Inst $45.( there seems to be no preference, | for approval. For thosc who serv- General Gounod, Verdi, Mendelssohn and|ed 90 days, and are onc-half disabl- morial Day ob ozart with a dozen cqually famous |cd. the proposed monthly pension is who pays be- | among the World Wa oo { composers apocaring no oft s d of 330; for thosc three- Veanindiin A e nd S A nis veterans, | quar than Cadman. Elgar or Bohm bled, 256 instead of §4 Armist 24 tlos 1he trauss, Tschaikowsky of thosc totally disabled, $69 ced. 2 new jol OCIERIOT St e s y | instcad of For those disabled hall that will olic nsion fund, | oo pioxtthe devotees of t ¥ erved 70 days, the pensions are ncumbent ahc C 6 , | but “figures do ' ar to range frgm $12 to $30 monthly, Subtracting the total of these 1at-1 - poyugicof prog i wccording to disability. For oth zo0d a method termir who ser 70 days, the proposed ularity as an r wa nsions range from $12 monthly at which the sa - e City G st groups, one finds the mayo e out §7 i with which to wo: cut hi \¢ of tax age of 62 to $30 at 75. A bill City Congratulates Barrett reasing Civil War pensions is now On Merited Promotion IREOLLEET Mostsproper rs | Stead illions he has less than thr of having three and one a quarters of one million dollars OLD AGE PENSTONS re I When Garlyle B, Barrett goes t S CAUSE OF DEATH : AR " Post Mortem Tends 10 Destroy No He ha VERSIGHT NEEDLD ation 1o renew made by I hicago af Fritz Kreisler Reported Favorite in This City probab God n order to Goddard sad tom ihe wit : ¥ : reported s days prior to his e s B G OMelnfyre Sh b gk S Relieves Talking Pictures * - HONORED BY WEST U e Galifornia Pags Tribute o niiders forrect Modoc War Soldiers TUANLL PROJECT profitaly st Accor Observations : On The Weather < = o i e G o font thel ok 1 dateni ho contend that the Rritish man a century but recently did { ner of speech is pure English. *Tiel ai044 workers disinterred the did putf | English speak with gn ac ' he | hodies of a|fays “as much as 1ihc ricans | Rejt huckles 1 other ornaments cially made | 40. But there must be some ideal of | were found o skeletons, defi- smoked onl p re Engl And that is what we | yitely Gifving Sn A Teon andlatincs try to find must lea (e €0 that will Two Amcrican Lezion posts of {wo Then a visualized 1 r of the { \ ogniz G aall it e e or t Memorial d The services were held Strong- old, Cal. the northeaste scetion Only 60,000 Civil War Veterans — of the statc near wh bodiea writes he fre. | Now Receiving Federal Pensions | were found Although there were two bodies, paying the feye e 5 ‘her | acrobats, clowns. t sts and. to ' quently drops into the sedate Hotel | On last June 3 ¥ 60,000 Civil oundla weather 2 but one cross 1sed and on it S nday in | complete the flusion, Jo Ring- Chatham, sin nto a cushioned |War veterans were receiving federal n‘» ]0‘ RoLo v‘,‘,‘ '\" ‘f"lv’”“’ _‘d i ' S ing) a friend, sent of his per- | chair and unfolds a copy of tlie [pensions out of 2,213,000 who served I‘r“l; Im ORI vy S ant | S etield Repnblica . ave |in the Union forces. Of these, 28,000 | Proclaime forming clephants Springfield Republican. “You have |in th e aAknown! moldjen—Mod As an onlooker at ren's idea how respectable it makes |were nearly helpless or blind, and| “Twe unknown oldiers—Modoc e oy 1ist realiath night out,” he says 000 more were totally helpless or | War—/15¢ < pa ccentl 1 L after a night out,” he saj el Olaly o | In the hackground of the scrv- T g ot A ¥ Assyrian | Sun essiol S st G T ices was the story of the Modoc war lin the carly 70's—the last stand of Sladaiisailses ! b 5 ; ot a fight 2 acc stray rubber bands |29, which was one-fifth of all on the [ 1" 1€ e ln. BEe Bane O ongregatios <" Horgan Is Dismissed as 170" ! : : {41t Joash) dr % Aesic pa el | pension rolls at b eelnnine of Aha | Lod Tien WiieNe Of, o extminen Guard at Wethersfield | ore thas ave no ir 'oday an uninvited visitor sat falk. |vear. There were also 151,000 wid- | (1€ HORticrs of £o8 WG ay 31 Guard D ion of be ? t P a absent-mindedly (- |ows of Civil War soldiers receiving | M " 4 i one by 8ne to drop in |pensions, iT having died during eceting of the « Brotherhood was held - smong s of economical pru-|erans died in the fiscal year o chance discovery of tons of the two e docen’t Tnov with their oot on of the Wa America ar, old timers old troopers were Ll of the Indiar oop G, First United 1 10 bribe | ¢ 1 ; owad peneil i 4 theater s of the War with Spain, 2 the bloodiest fighting he war “oldicrs and 3,700 widows of = _— 1. Solomon. |the prizan. Shartly after Horgan's| “f frowed up.” glass dingus you pecp |regular establishment {hout 60 per cent of banks. in- jonathan Daniel. David | disclosurc Roland G. Lalone, W, - You know, surprise | The last survivor of the Revolu-|surance companies and business vore ®as Dani *. Bake-|Eoncefns on air mail routes in the jadal, John Esmail, Yushia Tsaac Moudthrope and Leo [ Ir n the other day a nds ion War r ; Refresnments wer served 10 (their way to freedom he | invention showed a motor car ohe (Copyrigh 0. MecNaught man, who died in 1862 at Fredom.|United States are making use of is soon g 1 lated 2% | apout 125 in attendance. | prison bakery. ing the human voice. It is hop Syndicate, Inc,) N. Y., aged 109. The last widow D‘A'H‘n services. Boiie - o= . riousl 2 he Britisher