New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 3, 1923, Page 13

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

" | CATHOLIC PRELATE - ISPUTTO DEATH ! (Continued fram: First Page) fead to him he was executed, This v the general procedure in the swirt and quiet carrying out of the death penalty In Russiy, and third, with engaging In . a cam- palgn of agitation'among the Catholic clergy and parishioners in the hope that the churches might be closed, thus Inconveniencing the ipviet gov. ernment hefors the Vatican and im. Jairing the terms of the Riga treaty with Poland, Objects to Poland's Attitude Ifarelgn Minister ‘Tchitoherin has Anformed Poland that Premier Bis. korakl's recont pronouncement in're- gard to the . sentences Imposed on Arehbishop Zepliak and Vicar Gen, «{Jautehkaviteh is “undoubtedly an un. friendly act and manifests an aggres- Love Quadrangle (By NEA Bervice,) Chicago, March 30,—In the shoot- ing of a city fireman here police be- lleve they see the climax of the moat unusual love plot with which they have ever dealt—not a triangle but o quadrangle! | Michael McGinnls, the fireman, log dead from a rovolver shot, Ann belle McGinnls, his widow, and Miss Myrna: Ploch, her sister, are being! held without bail booked on a charge | Seen in Slaying Spanish War Vets Seek 25 New Members in N. B. Plans will be completed at the meeting of A, G. Hammond camp, United Spanish War_Veterans, at the armory on Arch eot tomorrow night, for a membership drive to he held in New Britain shortly, There are about 26 men in town eligible for membership In the organization who! do not belong, Those who, served in the war from 1898 to 1902 are elig- fble. Committees will be appointed at the meeting which starts at 8 o'clock. Pour directors of Krupp plant, whom I"rance held responsible for fatal clash between German workmen and troops, will be courtmartialed next week at Bredenry, kssen advices say, Jewlsh quarter of Jassy is in ruins an result of invasion by mob of anti. Semites, Bucharest, Rumanla dispatch declares, Judge Cochran of U, & district court, northern Kentucky, rules that officors have right to search automo- biles for liquor without warrants, his decislon dissenting from that of Judge Evang of Louisville, George Hearst, son of Willium Ran- doiph Hearst, publisher, and Miss Blanche Wilbur of 1daho }alls, Idaho, elope from University of California and are married by priest at Martines, Russla sends note to Poland calling latter's attempt to save lives of Catho- e prelates an unfriendly act, New Bedford cotton cloth manufac- turers follow uction of Fall Niver mill managers in agreeing to 12% per cent wage increase for 70,000 operatives in both cities, Sentenced March 26, of murder, And two youths, Francis Nee and s Charles Schade, beth 19, are held in $10,000 ball as accessories, At tho coroner's inquest, Mrs. Me- Ginnis testified the shot that, killed her husband was fired in self-defense when he sought to attack her. As a result of this testimony, both wom. en were released after the inquest. When police questioned the twod youths, however, the women again were t aken into custody on the strength of the boys' ements. With these statements and other b\;‘!drn&a. police will attempt to prove | Mrs. McGinnls and Miss Ploch slew| McGinnis in order = Harrisburg, Pa, April 3.-—Governor pel untroubled,fl mlt;;:tt e;';;;v;;e'f:'c‘ ; ¢ Pinchot, chairman of thé committee e -an 8, " e innis “that o) nounced today that Prof. Albert Bushnell Hart of Harvard university e e — had accepted the chairmanship of the alded the cause of Monsignor Butch- Massachusetts auxillary to his com- kavitch, by creating a public senti- mittee. ment here against . foreign interfer- o = ence. Not since -ctual‘lnwrvrnunn BY MAIL ORDER TRADE. days when the elements of Kolchak, | , Chlcago, April 3.—Montgomery and Denikine and others were trying to be | Co, sales for March were the highest heard or when the Polish war was on of any March In the company's his- has there been such a storm of in- tory $12,975,073 an increase of 61.55 dignation as was aroused among per cent compared with March last soviet officials on reading the declara- year. March sales by Sears Roebuck tions of the Polish premier and of the and Co. were $19,756,338 an increase archbishop of Canterbury. of 25.03 per cent over March 1922, This indignation was voiced in the sharp note which Tchitcherin has sent Premier Sikorski and in the re- ply to the British appeal for clemency. The latter reply said: “Russia is an independent sovereign state and has the undeniable right of passing sentences in conformity with its own laws on people breaking the established ordinances of the country, Every effort on the outside to inter- fere with this right and to protect sples and traitors fs an unfriendly act and a renewal of the intervention which has been successfully repulsed by the Russian peoples.” western tour, It was said here today S DRMASKED BN WHIP |5 s & e AND THR MAN IN TRKAS . s b by talked for some time with Dr. Nicho- las Murray Butler, president of Col- umbia, university on the subject. Dr. Butler recommended the pro- posal of membership in the interna- tional court as an issue which the re- ‘publican party could safely carry be- fore the: country. Arguments that such membership wouid involve the United. States in the league of nations are illogical he asserted. : The conference with I3r. Butler was the first the president had since his arrival here Sunday for a week's stay. Charles D, Hilles, republican national committee man for New York who 3 s had been expected to confer with - - . 2 | President Harding left today and it is A " on g considercd unlikely that any further This workman is busy on the base of the new Alexander Ham- I.fln"ar d & Herrmmn conferences, of importance will be | jlton statue which will be erected at the south front of the Treas Destknis 350 &, ahioski held during the week. ury buflding m Washington gns The president planned to get in * some more golf today over the Augus- | = = = ta Country club course and also had an invitation to visit an exhibition baseball game bhetween the Detroit Americans and the' Toronto Interna- tional league club. EAST ST, LOUIS VOTES Mayor and Four City Commissioners Being Electcd—Ku Klux Klan is #ive policy toward Russin,'’ "If,.‘::l.'lltl.:’ll?;. l(l‘u"("hll(",‘vl(ch. viear |’ 'l‘hcl-) anmmuulrl’tlun forwarded to' Teussh atholle churel 1ny00n10 Oblenski, the soviet minister & &, was sentenced to death by the Warsaw, for transmission to the "m" ";:"“" on. March 36 after heMpoiish government, says: that: Russia “)Ilhfib ;ep’l‘{nl,(‘r;;lr:lt;e[l‘;v:-‘:\",x:::: ::fii‘;',“unlcn the evident contradiction be- [ tween the peaceful of opposing the soviet ~government, Folish ;ol\:e:fi:n:nl“":?dnc:;e or'“l'): The 'Russian central oxecutlye com- ments of the ‘premier” regardin, mittee meeting last: Thatrsday night to Archbishop Zepliak. . Tt then wn. :!:nuqer appeals made {n hehalf of tinues: % i 0 ecclesiasts, denied . clemency In | 4 N the case of Monsignor Butchaviteh, ‘In \.1'(!‘:'“:( 7;’:’";:0?..{::: every ;::T::;g'n:h:t ~-l:‘~:t lhl:n uned '::"niuuv hay the undeniable. right to el mtlvfls‘ mn?r o"r“y 8‘:":’:‘ + [punish criminals according to laws of Gihinipamuilteee’at th bants fime com. its own territory, the attempt to inter- vené In this right and prevent the muted to ten years imprisonment the . s death sentence imposed upon the execution of a legal sentence passed 7 upon a Russian citizen proved guilty archbishop. G {of a crime againat the people and the - Whole World Aroused, |etate—an attempt accompanied by News that Monsignor Butchkavitch |threats and unheard of fnsults di- would have to pay the extreme pen-|rected against the Russian = govern- i alty created a stir in many lands. |ment--is undoubtedly an unfriendly Boviet officials however, since last|act and manifests an uaggressive Friday have professed ignorance as to| policy toward Russia.” what final outcome of the case Moscow Insistent Wwould be and on the afternoon of| Appeals from. ‘the oufside world March 31 Commissav of Justice Bur-|which had poured in upon the soviet #ki told correspondents that the death | authorities had: no effeot in staying sentence had not yet been carried out.(the hand of their executioners. Com- Political, Not Relizious | petent opinion indeed is that even the The. prelates were charged In gen-|breaking of diplomatic relations by eral with carrying ‘on widespread [outside governments or a threat of propaganda against the Russian gov-!war ,would not have moved the ernment and wére aileged to have in- | Moscow ofticlals from -their course. cited the people against the com- | heir, last word in the.case had been munist regime, Maxim Litvinoff | ypoken, it appears, when they com- was quoted as saying that the action|muted to.ten years' imprisonment the against the defendants was political{gcath sentence upon Archbishop Zep- rather than religious. In reachingjiak, convicted at the same time as ity decision to commute the sentence |Vicar Gen. Butchkavitch, given Archbishop Zepliak the central! Great Rritain made representations executive committee said it had de- through its oficial agent at Moscow; cided to modify the decree ‘of the|the affair was the subject of a warm court because a ‘“certain backward debate in parliament and the arch- element ef the Catholie citizens of |hishop of Canterbury took the lead soviet Russia’ might consider the iy voicing the attitude of the English sentence as directed against the|clergy, priests and their religion. Specifice Charges, | The trial of the prelates began on|department was based Mareh 21, They were charged tarian grounds and set forth “the specifically as follows: First, with|earnest hope” that the life of the copposing the decrce separatinz the |vicar general might he spared. church and state; second with oppos- The foreign protests in the view of ing sequestration of church treasures, |close observers, injured rather than Lord Robert Cecll at New York de- clares two emotions, fear and suspi- clon, stand between France and Ger- many in settlement of reparations problem, SPENDS NIGHT IN CKLL Washington, April 3.—Arrested on a charge of illegal possession and sale of liquor although claiming diploma- tle immunity because he claimed to be connected with the Cuban legation, Maris Fragrals, 23, spent last night in a police cell, Fragrals who told the police he came to Washington recently from Cuba was arrested last night after he is alleged to have sold half a case of | g rum to a polfee woman, Mrs. Sidney Jones Colford, Jr.,, of New York announces engagoment of her only daughter, Miss Cathleen Vane derbilt, daughter of Reginald C, Van- derblit, to Harry C, Cushing, 8rd. Secretary Hughes informs (ireat Britain, France, Italy and Greece that American Red Cross will end its em- ergency relief work in CGireece June 30, PROF, HART ACCEPTS idith Day Cariton, actress, known as Idith Day flles bankruptey peti. tion at New York. Bishop Page, Episcopalian, at Spokane, declares that contact witk spirits of the dead eventually is pos- sible, | Dritish steamer City of Victoria is on fire in mid-Atlantic and is headed GARDNER MAY RESIGN for Azores, according to nessages Washington, April 3.—~No lmport-:rmm vessel intercepted at oston. ant matters affecting the American - | T Canadian boundary Waters Were be- | se——— fore the international joint commis- sion at its semi-annual meeting today, but there was unusual interest in the gathering because of indication that formed Senator Obadiah Gardner of | Maine was preparing to resign as| chairman, Former Senator Charles E. Townsend of Michigan has been men- tioned as his succesor. MYNA PIOCH (ABOVE) AND/| MRS. ANNABELLE McGINNIS (BE- LOW). HARDING T0 TOUR Will Probably Talk on International Court ‘During His Proposed Trip Through Western States, Augusta, Ga., April 3.—American membership into the international court of justice probably will be used by President Harding as a subject of one or more gpeeches on his proposed New Statue For Washington American . Protests, The protest:of the American state on humani- Self-Correcting Embroidery Patterns for Home Stamping A New Kind of Pattera A New Way to Stamp A Wonderful Assort- New D Ku Klux Klan Disclaims all Respon- sibfln; for Outrage—Victim In Hospital. Taylor, Tex., April 3.—R. W, Bur- leson of Wear, Tex., a small town near here was in a hospital today recover- ing from a flogging Sunday night. His head was gashed and “his shoulders mutilated. Burleson was taken from an auto- mobile by a band of six unmasked men, driven to a point near the San Gabriel river, whipped and beaten on the head with pistols, then brouglt to Taylor and chained to a tres near the city hall, where three buckéts of creosote were ‘poured -over him, ac- cerding to the story told the police, Representatives here of the Knu Klux Klan denied connection with fhe whipping and the police apparently had no clew. According to Burleson: the police said, he had besn notified bv a preach- er that an attack was to be made on him. The preacher handed him a card bearing the name of “Kn Klux Klan No. 176 of Georgetowa” Burle- son said, adding that he was told he must quit going with a certain wom- an. He had scoifed at the notice he told the police. PIONEERS' MONUMENT 1 Denver, April 8,—A monument to the pioneer miners .of Colorado, of which 'he was one, is provided in the| will of the late U, 8. Senator D. Nich- olson. The monument will be erected in Washington park, Denver. Thé amount of the Nicholson estate is es- timated at $1,000,000, With TRANCILLA, any one A can stamp any fabric in a few minutes— No muss, no fuss, no troublesome mistakes and spoiled pieces, That’s the self-correcting TRANCILLA.+ And every pattern can be waed over »nd over agsin, BIG MID-WEEK SPECIALS ARE QUOTED HE BELOW Live Issue. East St. Louis, April 3.—With the Ku Klux Klan an issue, voters went to the polls here today to elect a mayor and four city commissioners. Ralph Cook, August KEnglemann and Rev, William R. Williams, three of the eight candidates for commis- sloner are said to have received the| SR ol endorsement of the klan. SPECIAL—FROM 7 A, M. TO 12 M, Mayor M. M. Stephens and his op- SIRLOIN. ROUND, PORTERHOUSE ponent William J. Veach have denied STEAK e LB. l7c any connection with the klan, « 3 Lbs, ICIAL—FROM 9 TO 11 A, M, FRESH CUT GARDEN SPINACH .. Peck 25¢ SPECIAL=FROM 3 TO 5 P. M. N SMOKED—- SHOULDERS ........ LB. llc BONLLE ROLLED SHOUL Lb. 19¢ ALL DAY SPECIALS Bo | Ingvar . 3ge L 12¢ | cuors .w. 16¢ l\:\(::{"hl',tu:s".‘,.‘.l‘ .. 16¢ :Hnr_:,mms I 220 ; v\l;l'vgflllh i 22¢€ Chief of Police Mulconnery an- nounced that extra police would be on duty to prevent any outbreaks. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, has stated in news articles that those can- didates having the endorsement of the Jllan have pledged that if elected the chief of police will be a Protestant, all | city appointments will be to Klans- | men if possible and a klan committee | will approve appointments before they are made. Wilson’s Friend FRESH CUT HAMBURG . FANCY LAMB L GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 25¢ | 25c | | . Bag $1.00 Lb. LEGS B i . 1w 22¢ FRESH CUT P()".'\l‘h_ zoc . qiflj Ho @000111[95 —_ 60a pound Forty different delicious varieties to choose from. Tally-H_o Choco- lates are your own personal selection. How about some of those big, juicy WHIPPED CREAM C cakrs i r:u1|37‘35c E 55¢ MARGARINE .... Lb. ALL KINDS ROLLS 59¢BU THE BEST BREAD . Lb, 5 C FRESH CREAMERY POUND BEST PURE WHOLE MILK 12¢ 20¢ 10¢ 10c 25¢ . Lge. Bot. 2 Cans PURE TOMATO CATSUP .. FFANCY SUGAR CORN . NEW ELBOW MACARONI ... 15 BUSHEL MARKET BASKETS | P’ & G. SOAP Think of it! 40¢ | 10c | 25¢ ¥VRESHLY BAKE 21c ' ' | MOHICAN EVAP. MILK vens Then there ) ‘ i EXTRA LARGYE NAVEL mivs 2o 18€ | T ORANGES ::‘;A:Atill: ..+ Bun, 350 R v LEMONS ... Do BBC Med. Newport Mackerel. Lb. 14c Shore Haddock chocolate-covered cherries? are nougatines and creamy caramels. Or, perhaps your weakness is for chocolate pep- permints, or maybe nut creams? Just ask the candy man to put some in your Tally-Ho box. He fills it with pieces of your own choice. FOR THE CHILDREN You may trust the children Kibbe's Candies. Even xpensive of Kibbe's ewe n only pure_and whi some ingredients. For 79 years this teputation has been main- tained. In glassine bags at Sc are: Kibbe's lime dcops, lemon droj assorted drops, spearmint lea and many other delicious candies. Wherever good candy is sold P T T AR AR G B LARGE RIPE FRESH R BANANAS J STRAWBERRIE! Saybrook Flonnders... Lb. 15¢ Ex-Pregident Woodrow Wilson has Lge. Smo. Bloaters. . .4 for 25¢ asked Governor W. E. Sweet of Col- orado to appoint Husten Thompson, shown above, to the United States| Benate to fill the vacancy caused by I'hf death of Samuel . Nicholson, Rackport Steak Cod ... Lb, 15¢ Boston Bluefish 150

Other pages from this issue: