Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
10 Dan Strobel Wins Game of m, Probab e Herkimer County Sheriff Spent Time in Capital o DEMOLISHES HONE Owners at Madison Notitied o Riag UM West Hariiozd $6 Pant’ for $3.85 latest Pan be used any i Come and see them. NORWOOD CLOTHES 77i-re MAIN STREET Stores Everywhere Tune in every Sunday night --- Station WMCA, 8-8:30 --- Norwood Musketeer il real ———— Salvation Army Offcer Killed in Short Fall (P—Horace 3 s old, a com- e Salvation Army ndent of the rmy ere, was Killed 30-foot fall to the elevator shaft in quarters building an officer in the y 23 years, joining tion when he was and where he was home Madison explosion, the is unknown, occurre Hartfor in caus golfers on t club course that the detonatio c by blasting. Mich an, proprietor of.the clut from reading about the eart aly, thought that the home been wrecked by a similar catastro- ved damaged to be torn down To Drive in Rhode Island of Roswell Conn., to or nnounce- | USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1930. S==S aa——————— ) — |ment just made by the Rhode Is- land state board of public roads. | Violation of the automobile laws is given as the reason for this drastic action. . Similar action has been 1aken against Paul Calande of Norwich, Conn.; Charles H. Rainsford™Ster- ling, Conn.. and Jack Rossman. of New Hapen. Conn. The board has suspended the right of the L. & H Motor Co. of Hattford, Conn.. to operate automobiles in this state for a.similar reason Five Buildings Burned At Camp Devens Today Ayer, Mass.. July or injured and of sleep were imperilled was perhaps the lives of citizen-soldiers carly today when buil¥ings at scores fire destroyed Devens started for nearly harles White e hours, Sergearn Roxbury tum the The fire sta pied by the 000 national aroused by the fire sig of them cooperated blaze About 2 were asleep in the broke out unassisted ed in the area occu- d inf: . Some 2.- guardsmen were 1 and many 000 national guardsmen barracks where e fire all escaped THIRTEEN WORD WILL 25 (UP) ur Bond eave all to v no tommy rot 5 (UP)—A na- | ble ) feet from a | in battling the LITHUANIA EXILES " FORMER DICTATOR Waldemaras Held “Danger to | Public Order” by Officials Kovno, Lithuania. July 25 (P— | Professor former premier and virtual dictator |of Lithuania, has been banished to an unnamed provincial town by or- der of the commandant of the Kov- no district The on. ore than one oc- whole machiner ions at Geneva fought to regain Po! city, for his as pronounced * a dan- zer to public order” in the decree of deportation issued by the comman- orities declined to divulge ame of the place to which the former premier was exiled. Motor lorries removed his belongings from the flat which was sealed. Waldemaras, who is now in his 45th year, became an internationally conspicuous figure during and espe- cially after the World war. Wanted Freedom Professor Waldemaras' political career began in 1917, when he took rt in a congress of Lithuanian aders in Leningrad, then St. Pe- .and led the faction which stood for Lithuanian independence. g the Bolshevik revolution aped to Berli where he be- e interpreter for the Ukrainian on the tershurg. Versailles conference in T 3 | Augustine-Waldamaras, | me strong man of Lith- | ! september, tion failed to give him a majority. resigned, and PR SRR i { Base Runner “Tagged” Second Time With Bat Chicago, July 25 (—The um- pire cried. “Safe!” when William Cannatero, 22, slid into third dur- ing an amateur game terday, but events proved he wasn't Third Baseman Thomas Con- tagno, disgusted with the decision tagged Cannatero again, using a bat instead of the ball. Cannatero was carried away unconscious and Contagno ran so fast that police hadn't caught ug with him early today. 1919 he was the official representa- tive of his fatherland. He was deep- | ly grieved, however, when Vilna was |increased awarded to Poland. Waldemaras became 1926. enlivened the August Zaleski several years. Meanwhile he was able to main- by run- ning the country under a.gictator- him much tain himself at home only ship. (This emnity). In May, 1929, when a bomb was party as it was about to enter State theater here. camp and his stepson were killed. His fall from power when the general elec brought His entire ministry Juozas Tubelis succeeded him. SPEED UP Baltimore STR July ' CARS accelerate at premier in His clashes with Marshal Jo- seph Pilsudski and Foreign Minister ses- | sions of the League of Nations for he escaped death thrown at his the His aide-de- came last 25 (A—Balti- more’s new street cars are built to | three miles per hour | sentative STIMSON SEEKS ADDITIONAL CASH| |z | | ‘Figures Not Public, But Rumors| Say $2,000,000 Asked | Washington, July (P—Intent | on expanding the state department's |internal organization and the for- ‘eign service abroad as rapidly as | possible, Secretary Stimson agmin |has asked the budget bureau for an appropriation covering |virtually all phases of America's | ! diplomatic activities. | Pending approval by the burea { and President Hoover, the figures| will not be made public, but it is known the secretary, has asked 10r} {the full authorized fund of $2.000, | 000 for the construction of build- | |ings to house American missions | |abroad. In line with President Hoover's policy of reinforcing the American |foreign service i Latin-America, |the secretary's estimates include a | provision for 18 new ioreign serv- ice officers at various points fn South and Central America. The estimates also include an ad- ditional $13,000 to be added to ths $147,000 now contributed annually by the United States to the support of the Pan-American Union. 25 |Woman Opposes Wet In Race™or Congress | Boston, July 25 (—State Repre- | Martha Brookings of per second, believed to be enough |Gloucester today was a dry candi- to keep autos from cutting in TOMORROW- N P N\ N J o S8 U T S NN \ o A SN “\ \\\\"\\\\\\N\\\\\Q\\ 3 N S0y \\\\i\\\\\\\\\&\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\“\ N\ N N N\ W NN SN PR |date in opposition to A. Platt An-| = %“.@s&?‘\g@.\\ | drew, wet fellow townsman, for the republican nomination for congress- man in the 6th district. Mrs. Brookings, who was married a yedr ago, announced her candi- dacy yesterday and cailed upon pre- hibitionists in the district to repuli- ate Congressman Andrew's recent stand. A dry group promsed support, In an address at Amesbury, An- drew declared his opposition to the dry law. He had not previously been engaged in the prohibition cantro- versy. FLOWERS with an 0.K. Our greenhouse has been inspected by federal and state inspectors un- der the “Corn Borer” quarantine and found en- tirely free from any trace of the pest. Certificates will be given by us to buyers of flowers, entitling them to pass through (the quar- antine without danger of confiscation. Hooker Gardens High Road, Kensington Turn left at foot of Arch WITH NEW SYNCRO-MESH TRANSMISSION* ..FOUR SERIES...ONE, THE WORLDS LOWEST PRICED VALVE~IN~HEAD STRAIGHT EIGHT FROM l O 2 5 F.0.B.FLINT, MICH, Millions will throng Buick showrooms tomorrow - . . for tomorrow marks the introduction of Buick’s four new series of Valve-in-Head Straight Eights . . . and carries this added thrill for scores of thousands of motorists who have long aspired to Buick ownership— One of Buick's four new series of eights, equipped like its brothers with masterly new Valve-in-Head Straight Eight Engines and new Insulated Bodies by Fisher, lists as low as $1025—the lowest price’ at which any Valve-in-Head Straight Eight has ever been offered! A Buick Eight for $200 less than last year's six! A Buick Eight priced so low that everyone who can WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT , . - afford any car, above the very lowest price group, can afford this finer automobile! sized Buick Eight with the extra power, swiftness and roadability of The Eight as Buick Builds It! A roomy, full- Buick, two-to-one leader in fine car sales, cordially invites you to see and drive these four new series of Eights —featuring new Valve-in-Head Straight Eight Engines, new Syncro-Mesh Transmissions¥*, new Insulated Bodies by Fisher and other memorable improvements. . . . On display Saturday! BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN Division of General Mators Corporation Canadian Factories: Mq‘Lnughlin-Buick. Oshawa, Oantario | BUICK WILL BUILD THEM Buick alome, of all cars st or near its price, provides the famous Syncro-Mesh Transmission. This ultrafine, wltra-lusurions fea- tare asinres smooth, silent, nom- clash gear-ibifting throwgh all sears and at all speeds. It is employed i three of the mew Buick series, with Buick's fige stondard “transmission in 1 series of lowest price. SEE IT DRIVE IT AT ALL BU ICK DEALEKS