New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 31, 1921, Page 1

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N i85S BILL TO RATE WHICH ERE CN MAR. 4 BRITISH AND IRISH " "IN NEW PEACE MOVE Meantime Warfare Continues —Bloody Battle Occurs Near Cork Today. ast, March 31. (By Associated )~—Cardinal Logue, the primate MFeland, was interviewed Tuesday lla Willlam Goulding and three B¢ southetn unionists, with the it is understood, of bringing peace negotiations between the republican parliament and the overnment. The interview at Dundalk, County Louth. Willlam Goulding is chairman o Great Southern and Western ay of Ireland, and of the Irish jway Clearing House. He was a imber of the Irish convention of %918 and is a former high sherift the county of dubin. b P ‘Cork, March 31. (By 8% )—An attack made this on the police barracks at Ross rberry, County Cork, resulted in ous casualtiés to the occupants of e barracks. missing and it is o killed. An official report of the affalr says attack was made by civillans at so'clock this morning. The front f the barracks was blown in ostves and bombs were thrown ko the interior while a heavy rifle was maintained on the building. The poliee held the barracks until room in which, they were con- rated took fire, when a few péd by an upper window. EBUKE FOR CONGRESSMEN n Federation of Labor Report . 'IM Session Was Reactionary It “a do Nothing Congress,” .. March, 31.—The last Associated morn- believed five o -y o B rt by the legisiative American Federation Pyblic today. nothing congreas ex- re&ptionary results were sald. “The en- *was to preventgs remedial legisla- jage of any TERACY DECREASES ™ tho Wave Spreading te Mareh 31.—Illiteracy ing In the nation, according Bahis burean returns today from it thrée states in which 1920 tion has been worked out on plabama where the percentagd ' was found to be 22.9 of fipuu(lon oyer ten years _lt.’un 1920 percentage . s the percentage drop- RAneS ot 1206 in 1910 to 9.4 in 1920 KWare from 8.1 in 1910 to 2920, . r ) i3 under the census tion fnclude all those B Write. b states - the pn-e-m.-.o. 3 P, . the rural districts was Fourteen of the police | > =L A Herald “Ad Better Bu EW BRITAIN. CONNECTICUT. THURSDAY, MARCH 1 ~ S EX-EMPEROR CHARLES, SUPPORTED BY HUNGAR AN ARMY, PLANS ADVANCE ON BUDAPEST N EFFORT TO REGAIN | HIS LOST THRONE, ACCORDNG TO BLIND OX DIES OF ;V' N S ’ REAL BROKEN HEART, 'lenna Newspapers Say | — That Former King e | Has Proclaimed Mili- Separated From Care-Taking Ganpder, Beast Pines and Dies—Unusual | | | Nature Study. ! Greensboro, Ala., March 31.—The blind. ox, famous as the protcge of a stately gander on the J. A. Holcroft plantation near here, is dead, and those on the farm believe his ath is due directly to enforced separation from his guardian. Recently it became nec- essary to transfer the ox ‘o another pasture. The gander was unable to fol- low. The separation was too much for the ox and he pined and drooped, re- fusing food and drink and finally lay | down and died. The ox and gander lately attracted widespread attention by their, strange friendship. Kach day at regular intervals the gander would lead the ox to water by strutting ahead of him honking loudly so that his afflicted ward could follow the sound. If other cattle approached, the fowl would ily furiously at them and drive the in-| truders off. | Steinamanger. General Lehar Said to Have 15,000 Troops Willing to Fight to Restore Monarch to Power. HUNGARIAN REGENT REPORTED RESIGNED Local people will give this more than passing interest inasmuch as not oniy did the Herald publish a previous story about it, but also a news reel at a local theater showed pictures of the ox be- ing led by the gander. 'HARDING DELVES INTO PROBLEM OF RAILWAYS Confers With Clark and Bar- ton, Preparatory to An- nouncing Plans. London, March 31 (By Associated Press).—An Exchange dispatch from Paris today says it is reported tha majority of the Hungarian troops have railied to .the standard of ex- Emperor Charles who will march on | Budapest. Report Not Authentic. There is no confirmation from other sourcas of the foregoing report that ex-Emperor Charles contemplates moving on Budapest. Direct advices from Hungary so far have not indi- cated any notable degree of support for the ex-ruler from army circles, although it was said that in stopping | at Steinamanger, ot persuading the there to support him. military forces 15,000 Troops Ready. Vienna, March 31 (By Associated Press) —Reports were received by various newspapera hery iloday thag involved in the formulation of an ex.Emperor Charles had proclaimed administration * program towards rail a military dictatorship at Steinaman- transportation . were . ‘discussed by ~£ér and’that General Lehar wus bald - et &, g, o be ready at tho head ot 15,000 F in v i ciadmiui B & 4 o of, Hr ol s Washington, March 31.—Questions 2= I3 S P ¢ 'the ' 1 1 m.owl;:mez ;-xn.d stand in thé Budapcest palsi ph the rence nterview against Charles’' Gemand s ‘request detailed data regtoration and. the mimisters &0 | Fates, earnings and mgped by Premier Tm e meeting was. & grrjving in the confere step to & thorough in- inu¢ the ex-ruler, feeling the vestigation which Mr. Handing Pro- tion of his situation became m m‘m to make in the immediate sistent ‘and’ declared He would fRyer The two chefrmeén were with the i "",;".'.‘.'Z. "uo:-c'Sumfl. * president Awo heurs but . Cparles!then began pleading with . 7 g Wy to discusa ) the ,Bome of those dbout him for support. # 0 P! form' the “414 pointed to General Lehar and ex- administration’s L tion pro- | cjaimed that there were three divi- gram would 'l'h- sions of troops in west Hwmagary sworfi . Ome subject’ before the .con e to sapport him and ready to. march ‘was a statement upon. Budapest. - -:I.uon of 5 General Lebar then turned to Geh- claring that the erals Pronay and Hayjas and asked: nted at a loss of /31,000,000 *“What about your men?" during Januvary. © idered Rorthy Hokls Reins. in‘¢onnection with avatable Before they could reply Admiral information forecasting what earnings piorthy turned, sharply on the two might be expechd} Abring the coming gcommanders and told ' them -that i months, . 3 * they, mtod to answer they wopuld a : LR ‘he was alone Gene “heir & room and telephg ; trogps Raab not.to Hungary Has Bétm Taken Over by ‘M, 2 o in- R} ¢ than in'the cities. -} # ttle ds, The board of} ‘hmve decided that coal { ba ratioved rigidly. Stocks for home o allocated to essential d:fll;nllc consumers tloned. the same as T supplles on n}.’ 4‘:‘ was » Wte gene! better tary Dictatorship at Charles had hopes | DISPATCH TO PARIS 'SALOONMEN HEAVILY FINED AFTER RAIDS | Farr Is Assessed $100, and Fernetti $50—Liquor Is Found in Both Business Houses. John E. Farr, proprietor of a cafe on | North street, and Victor Fernetti, owner of a place of business on the rail- | road arcade, were fined $100 and $50, | respectively when arraigned in court to- day on charges of having liquor on hand with intent to sell. Liquor Prosecutor M. A. Sexton pre- sented the state’s case and the aceused were represented by Lawyer P. F. Mec- Donough. Police raids revealed the presence of liquor in both business houses on the evening of March 19. In the Farr case, it was explained that the accused has a permit to make certain sales, but the extent of those sales has been the cause of much con- fusion elsewhere, hence the inadvisabil- ity of trying out the matter before the local court. Fernetti only recently came into possession of his place of business and for that reason his counsel asked that the unsavory reputation of the house not be held as evidence against the ac- cused. When the police went into his place they found 15 or 20 men present. BOYS IN NEW BRITAIN . ARE WORTH 32 MILLIO | Rotary Club Speaker . Has Unique Method of Driv- ing Home Facts. ! “That the boys of all communities |need aid and assistance from such | organizations as the Rotary club. was /clearly explained in a talk on “Con- | serving the ity by © 100 : jifson ' in his Nlt } “There 15 @ great déal of Medning i ; g: little aa.y‘ln;‘:'_‘gr. glected. ‘believe, making a. careful’ Wil that i is more or 1 . In, try= {ing to prove this and # “the work that should be. done th let me a dol & first place, t is In answer to this I T e (Coq&ug'd on Fourteenth Page.) e Aged 5 ¥ears, Suc- & Bicycle Monday. fecko, aged 5 years, daugh- Anthony Stocko ¥ at 1 o'cleck 1021.—SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE THRE OFFENSES OF BRITISH ARM IN IRELAND LIKENED UNTY GERMANY’S IN BELGIL !EARMNAL GIBBCNS IS !ComyfissioqofCo mi SINGERELY EULOGIZED Of One Hundred P ‘ . ing Irish Question Archbishop Glennon Recalls | Whole Blame On Aid ‘ Government His Services For of Mankind. Baltimore, March 31.—With all the 38 W II]JESSES TELL i splendor of a ceremony centuries old, OF ALLEGED C RII 4 \ l the Roman Catholic church today laid | to rest one of its oldest and most | faithful servants--James Cardinal ' i Gibbons, archbishop. of Baltimore and 30,000 Word Report the second American to be elevated P l Al' to tha. cardinalate. | €0 epll' Archbishop John Bonzano, apostol- | ple e D Vd' ic delegate at Washington, celebrated ; Ieg'al Protection of Ex land and Moral Inte la pontifical -requiem mass in the | tional Safeguards. 3 cathedral of the Blessed Virgin Mary { with seminarians chanting Gregorian music never before heard except in the Sistine Chapel in Rome during a funeral of a pope. Archbishop ‘John J. Glennon of St. Louis delivered the funeral sermon. v During his eulogy of the dead there spgl:f;:?gwfr;’r L{(::cfir:‘:;l:?::l remained scarcely a dry eye among |, Treland i 1 a . his hearers, whose memories went | °® 5 ‘placed ‘upqn. the S back to the kindly, gentle old man f.‘;::‘::zz" :ty g::eclt_’[:l::::;on‘:f who led with power of spirit as well gating the Irish ‘question in's ‘34 lafl ower of mind. ’ > word report made public today The service was like a scene from e s | the middle ages, like an altar Dpiece coverm; the examination of witne at public hearings. held by the come to life. Numberless priests in . | a seemingly endless procession filed mission in Washington last No { into the church, and in their stately ber, December and January. The i robes of the varied colors of their or- [ Port has been issued under the ders, moved forward to the catal- |©of:“The American Commission faque on which rested the late Car- Conditions in Ireland,” which dinal in his archbishop’'s vestments,| nounces that it will continue thi of purple. In a few' moments the quiry. ; body of the church was filled with Declaring that the Commission this army of clergy :and the atmos- “under the disadvantage of la phere of the- 20th century was dis- | the official British side of the pelled. 1 except as it was gathered from Standing at the bier of Cardinal { ments presented to it, the repo: Gibbons, Archbishop John G. Gleén- | clares that “the imperial non eulogized the dead prelate as one jarmy in Ireland has been gui of three -eminent churchmen who 50 | proved excesses, npt ‘incompara vears ago kept the lght, of jdeplism | degree and kind with those allegi burning “when materialism Was |the Biyoe report on Belglum a| -ewding. its deadly misima over the | yies to have been committed ,“attractiag the multitude by the | jmperial German army.” The' %) is_pol P . “sraduate of the N¢w ‘Wellesley atte %flu Iy Fraut is ritain High school &nd of ‘college. .~ Mr. Brierley Wesleyan university in when the war broke out. petty officer in the United States apring the war, and .after the arm stice took wa position ‘in the ew York office of the Traut and i Manufacturing company. Y The following served.at . this afte ernoen’s social: Mrs. Wheaton Hu son, Mrs. Carl Lockwood-and Mrs. Ard thur Hilyery, all .of Hattford: Mrs, swell Porter, Miss Beatrice Porter, Miss Mildred Palmer, ‘'Miss (Ma 4lewis, Mrs. Arthur Samp#on, °Mrs. Kenneth Searle; Miss Margaret Eady, Miss Esther Stanley and Misy Frances ¢ Parker, all of this eity. Mrs. 'W. X Hungerford and Mrs, J. = A. /“Frewt, poured. 5 X s mission finds * are deprived of Washington, March 31=~The 3 4 pointment. of Charles H. Burke ofis ‘Pierre, S. D., a business man and | 5ave former chairinan of the Indlan'com- | wpye alesion, was ‘announced by President rding today a8 commisgioen of In- diéin affairs. The president ap- pointed George H: Carter of lowa 1o "he pablic printer, and Thomas Roberts{ : of Méryland comimssioner 6f pat; (Co ‘WMe Wage Gu né whieh inclia ”&“"‘fl iplumb- A voted mot |? c _oha\- wages,

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