New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 10, 1923, Page 15

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GERMANY BEGS FOR - TIME EXTENSIONS - STATE 0 OBSERVE ARMISTICE SIGNING (Continued From First Page) (Continued from First Page) points. Germany finds herself now in | a state of grave disturbance of inter- nal politics, The German government believes ‘it can dispense with setting forth here in detail to the council of ambassadors the causes and dangers of this crisis. Fear ¥Fresh Outbreak | ‘“Because of the course events have | taken in Germany the resumption ot | the control operations at this moment might create a fresh subject of con- flict that would «considerably aggra- | the internal political situation. | tuation would be all the more grave because, according to reports from all the domestic services con- cerned with the matter, the appear- ance of the interallied control officials | would inevitably bring about incidents so that difficulties of foreign politics would be added to the internal diffi- culties. | “The government, takes it for grant- | ed that the council of ambassadors | also will consider the maintenance of internal order and Germany's future | capacity to pay. The council of am-| hassadors ought to recognize that the present moment is not a propitious one i which to demand of the Ger- man gevernment the strict execution PROHIBITION FIGHT IS | STARTED IN ENGLAND)M‘ the exactions contained in the note | S0ap BOX | consoquently requests the council of | ssadors to postpone its exactions nees."” Bridgeport to Pay Respects Bridgeport, Nov. 10.—The city will | pause for two minutes at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning to pay respect to America’s soldiers of the world war in response to a proclamation isgned today by Mayor Fred Atwater urging the tribute. Special services will be held in the churches tomorrow. Observance in Ansonia Ansonia, Nov. 10.—Observation of the fifth anniversary of the ending of | the world war was ushered in here tos day by a general sale of forget-me- nots for the benefit of dfsabled veter- ans. ‘Tomorrow, Armistice Day serv- ices will beheld in all the churches, At the state armory last evening an Armistice Day ball was held under the auspices of the local American I gion post, which was an important so- cial event. Other events are taking | place over the we nd. Printed Propaganda and amb through force of circums Orators Are Busy l"lfilnm,-: With the “Wets' DIDN'T FIND DOCTOR to Locate Al- London, Nov. 10.—Almost , every- oue in England feels that some d in'the future this country will be t of a-big fight over the prohi- bition question. Both sides are ai- ready busy bellowing from soap boxes and lecture platforms, and spreading printed propaganda here and there th of the ets ha ust I'rofes Iirnest H. Starling ity Londos Waterbury Police T leged Fake Doctor, Negarded Dead secne and Reported Alive, Waterbury, Nov MacMullen of t To si loca! iver Ve after an un chusetts for Man The 1l search in Mas Dr. Oscar Gittens,officially recorded as having died in this city, said to be alive and practicing in Massachusetts, according to a report received by Governor Templeton. The doctor in Everett, Mass, with whom Gittens was supposed to be practicing, accord- ifg to the report, was located and questioned, He admitted he knew | uccess wark the community,” he contends, “is carried out almost en- tirely by men with whom the mod- erate use of alcohol is habitual, “We have only to look at the lead- ers in every wakk of life. In each group we find a small handful who are total abstainers, but a census would probahbly give over 90 per cent who habitually partake of small doses of aicobiol, Tresith Is in most people heee years and had heard he fort a necessary condition of success, and. | Ig§d. The warrant for Gittens )”":‘ [ most of the members of the lending |in this city will be held for use in the groups of society enumerat are |cvent that “u.\!‘:u‘h\l\;-tls n‘l‘;:'l‘: n:ll(c:‘-‘ distinguished not only by their gopd |10 Whom the —case has otovds Ieglth, but u’um'h_\hnwgra:-: turned over should by any chance lo- Lhat tl live to a ripe old age,” cate Gittens later on, Tocal I;O‘ "' ‘T( Dry dinners are an awful bore to |ficlals today are inciined 10 Lie BE'H overyone, the professor scems to | that the death of Gittens actually oo think, and the merriment is obvious- | Curred, and that he was :jmkl as Iy forced. But an prdinary feast Woodlawn cemetery, Now e thhd which alcoholie drinks form n cliisted” By e AnSERAian Whe S ever “distinguished by a natural flow | Charse of the body. - of spirits and good fellowship,” L o “A man may go to such ;: dinner GIRL GETS 10 YEARS. full of the carcs and work of the Wheeling, W. Va, Nov. 10.—Mies day, with littie or no interest in those ' Carolyn Alloway, an 18 year old Mar- he has to meet, whose wccupations tin's Ferry, Ohio, girl, was sentenced may be very diverse from his own, today te serve ten years in the pen- nervous of making any remarks to his after she pleaded gullty to neighbors for fear of making himsel( ing in a highway rohbery chane of Martin's Ferry and ridieulous or saying something in Wwhich they are not interested, After Gordon of Boston, Mass., were sentenced early this week to the first glass of champagne we no- tice the conversation, Instead of serve years cach in the peniten. being spasmodic and forced, ) tiary for the part they played in the general ‘und freo: the hold-up. The girl admitted that she fot angd preocoupatior decoyed Marry Siegel, a Wheeling | merehant, into a position to be held with his own affairs sened.” up and robbed. itendiary partici Donald Thomas comes self-conseiony of cach becomes man [N There should be a real desire on your part to handle your financial affairs in the most modern way— “Paying Your Bills By Check” Start Your Account .Here at this Bank—deposit your salary each week, make your pay- ments by check, keep a little spare change in your pocket,— but let that Bank Balance Em_ld up. This is one real cure for worry in later years. Start this week. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY,, NOVEMBER 10, 1923. WALL STREET STOCK EXCHANGE REPORTS MOTHER AND BROTHER ILL, GIRL ATTEMPTS SUICIDE Miss Virginia Redmond of This City Drinks Disinfectant and Is Now o in Hospital (Special to The Herald), Boston, Mass., Nov. 10.—After she had told friends a sad account of her mother being seriously il at New jritain, Conn. ,and of her brother in Newark, N. J., Miss Virginia mond, aged 24, who came here from New Britain a short time ago, at- tempted suicide at her home morning by drinking a disinfectant. Before she put the poisonous potion to her lips, she telephoned Dr. J. M. Masters of, 709 Washington avenue, Chelsea, asking him to come to her address at 28 Copley street, Brookline. He found her in an unsconscious con- | dition and sent her to Peter Bent Brigham hospital in Brookline, was later removed to Psychopathic hospital. Little is known here of the Red- | Prior to her suicidal at- tempt she wrote a letter to A. L. Tenney of 286 Columbus avenue. The police refused today to disclose the contents of the lette: 10 YEAR OLD HERO Little Tndian Boy Drags Dying Father mond girl. in Canoc 50 Miles To Doctor But Parent Dies After Arrival Winnipeg, Man,, Nov, 10.—His arms deeply scarred by the tow rope, the ten-year old son of Samuel Big- nell, an Indian, arrived here yesterday after towing his dying father in the | fast flowing river 50 miles to get medical attention. When his father was taken i1l while out on a trapline | with the youngster, the boy helped him into the canoe, took the rope and dragging the craft for civilization. - Big: his arrival lly, after days, reached died soon after Beaths Anthol Visnianskas, Anthony Visnianskas died at his Gttens, but said he had not seen him{jome at 40 Huriburt strect this morn- | He ig survived by his wife and I'uneral services will be ing. six children. hr' at 8t, Andrew’s church Monday mofning and interment will be in St. Mary's cemetery, Funerals Funeral o8 for David Yonan were held this afternoon at 2 o'clock t the South Congregational church chapel, Rev, Elisha Adams officiated and interment was in Fairview ceme tery, Henry M. Lyman The funeral of Henry M. Lyman will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock from the home at 705 Stanley strect. Rev, Samuel E. Piske will of- ficinte and interment will he Avon cemeters, Mes. Mary M. Woods Mrs. Mary M. Woods, who died at home of her daughter in Hartford will be buried Monday. Services will be held Monday after- noon at 1 o'clock at the Erwin cha- pel Rev, Henry W. M r will offi- clate. Interment will be in Fairview cemetery the yesterday Julia Godkin Mrs. Julia Godking widow John 11. Godkin, who died yesterday morn- 1ng in Hartford, was buried this after- neon. uneral services were held at the B. C. Porter funeral pariors, Rev. Henry W. Maier officiating.. Burial was in Falrview cematory Mrs, of Mrs, Alma Flia, Funeral services for Mrs. Alma Elia will be hald at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon at the South church chapel Elisha Adams will officiate and will be In Tairview ceme- Rev, interment tery. JOSEPH A. HAFFEY Funeral Director Patvlors 33 Myrtle St Service Exceptional, Lady Assistant Tel. Parlor 1625-2 Residence 17 Summer St —1625-3 Red- | this | She | in the | NEW SPIRIT AMONG RUSSIAN YOUNG MEN Rmerican Customs Have, Drilted in Among Younger Generation | | Moscow, Russia, Nov. 10.—An 18- | year-old boy of the coming Russian generation boarded the Riga-Moscow express at a wayside station the other dny,‘ and drew the interested atten- tion of a carload of foreign passen- | gers. He was freckle-faced, smiling, | | energetic, bragging and full of na- | tionalism, and he seemed to typify | an important element, that in recent | ars, has come out of the crucible | |in which the present day leaders of Russia are mixing their international chemicals., Change this lad's Russian blouse | for a suit of the'college clothes” ex- | tensively advertised in America; his | round-necked hair cut for the pre-| vailing style across the sea, his soft | peasant accent for slnng-sprlnkled; United States, and he might have | | been an American boy boasting of his | own home town, his own state, and | the U, 8. A. in general, | The Russian youth was a railroad | guard. The locomotive on his train, built by Russians ten years ago and repaired by Russians a few weeks | beforey was better than any loco. motive ever built abroad; its drive- wheels higher, and its speed surely greater. His train was cleaner, his railway administration was better, his country’s crops best, his country's fu- ture the rosiest. The determination of Peter the | Great back in 1700 forced upon his people an acceptance of the idea that the mccomplishments of western civilization were superior to their This thought lived a long time for up to six year before the r cent revolution, Russians, partcularly the educated young, were inclined to swallow without question the claims |of forcign civilization to superiority. They were timid violets in the field | of nationalism, shyly offerng Russian art as an offset to the more practical | | accomplishments of the Germans, English, Americans and French. In 1917 the Russian Soviet govern- | ment set out to establish a spirit of | | interrationalism throughout Russia and the world at large, and the Third | Jlntwrnntlonal is still preaching the | Utopia of an international brother- | hood, attainable by a revolutionary | proletarian dictatorship. This young railroad guard product of the lust revolution, | thousand like him may be found throughout Russia today. Perhaps they have absorbed some inkling of internationalismy from the Third In- | ternational, but to more than one ob- | server of Russia they seem to be red- | | blooded, enthusiastic nationalists, and | | nothing else, The “Red Army to | them nfans the Russian army; “Red Fleelt” means the jand the “Red Air Service” | Russian aviation. This boy boasted of his home town, of his state, of his railroad and of Ru to England, Germany, France and the United States. Internationalism was the last thing in his head. His thoughts were all of Russia, not as a leader in communism, but as a na- tional entity of which he could be proud, He was the exponent of a personal nationallsm, youthful and vigorous, produced by the happenings of the last six years that today is readilyfound by observers who look below the surface in Russia, There would appear to be something of this @& mes nationalist spirit in the hearts and heads of the older communistic erusaders at the Kremlin., Now and then they play nationalist jokes on their * interna tiopalist selves, They play Russia's hn&l in the int#national poker gathe: bet for such stakes as Wran- gel lsland, and eling tenaciously to the chips that may be used in some future pot involving land, or ports or ships over which once flew the flag of Old Russia, Such thoughts evidently are in the minds of Lenine, Trotzky and the other leaders. They surely prevail with the young guard on the Riga- Moscow expressgwho typifies a new epirit abroad in the land, own Is a| Many | also iack SHOT. 10 was PATALLY Vt, Nov years old, at the home of a boy chum and 13 year old Emil Kozo- lowskl was arrested on a charge of murder. According to the authori- | ties the Kozolowski boy picked up a | revolver, whieh another boy was showing him and exclaimed | show you how it works,” unrld‘lrtd at IDI\I:L noy Brattleboro, Van Cour, § shot today David fatally MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK | Am Sm & Ref .. | Gen Motors .... ssia In camparison | Bagle Lock “'11 | tiona High 4% 101 61 73% 5814 Am Su Ref com . 55% v a18% Am Bt.Sugar . Am Can ... Am Cotton Oil Am Loco Am Sum Tob Am Tel & Tel Am Tob Am Wool . 4% Ana Copper ¢ o At Top & S Fq 9 M Gulf & WI . 16 Bald Loco .. 1253 Baltimore & O .. 59% Beth Steel B 80%% Con Textile 6 Can Pacific 1457 Ches & Ohio L TR Chi Mil & St P . 13% ChiRIsl& P .. 23 Chile Copper ... 27% Chino Copper .. 17% Con Gas 6215 Corn Pro Re .. 12032 Crucible Steel .. 65% Cuba Cane Su .. 11% Erle b 15% Brie 1st pfd . 25% Gen Elec ... 182% 143 o B 2 148% Gt North pfd . RO coivis § Int Mer aMr pfd 35% Pacific Oil Int Nickel Int Paper Kelly Spring T . Ken Copper .... Lehigh Valley .. Middle State Oil . ) Missouri Pacific .. 91 N Y Central 1013 NYNH&H .. North Pacific Pure Ofl Pan Am P Penn R R Ray Con Cop Reading RepI & S Royal D, N Y Sin Oil Re South Pacific South Rail Studebake Co Texas Co Texas & Pacific . Tobacco Pro Trans Oil . Union Pacific .. 131% U 8 Food Pro 4% U 8 Indwus Alco 659% U S Rubber Co . 363 U § Steel 94 % Utah Cop Willys Over . Westqghouse &T 20 8614 2% 28% 1 148% 78 8 Low 34% 99% 6% T2% 5T4% 54% 18% 28% 8% 37T% v (Putnam & Co.) Bid Aetna Life Ins Co Am Hardware ....... Am Hosiery ... Bige-Hfd Cpt com the | Bills & Spencer com Russian fleet, | Bills & Spencer pfd means | Bristol Brass «. Colt's Arms .... . Conn Lt & Pow pfd FFafnir Bearing ( Hart and Cooley Hfd Elec Tt Landers, ¥ . J R Mont. com ., 1 R Mont, ptd N B Gas N B Machine N B Machine pfd Niles-Be-Pond com North and Judd . ... Peck, Stow Russell Mfg Co Seovill Mfg Co 8N E Tel Standard Screw Stanley Works Stanley Works pfd Torrington Co com Traut and Hine Travelers Ins Co Union Mfg Co TODAY'S TREASURY U. 8 Treasury—Balanc .0 445 59 148 Close 34% 101 6% 3% 581 56 ¥ 18% Asked 450 60 50 153 10 13 nerony 465,06 BANQUET FOR HUGGINS 300 Cincinnati Sports Tollowers Will Homor Managzer Tonight Milter Cineinnati, Nov. 10 ging, a native son can league team o world's championship, w a dinner here to fans and admiring frien August Herrman pr Cincinnati Nationa be toastmaster and scheduled to mal Moran, man John Hey More been made w ight b 1 le ) Are You Keeping money at home, with the idea of accu- mulating enough to start a fair sized Savings Account? Yes many folks do—but, if we will ope an Account for you with just $1.00 don’t you think it far safer and more business like to bring in those first few Dollars — Start a Savings Account, put a little away gradually and all the time secure 439 interest. Try it. H Ameri Yor} innat PUTNAM & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange Members Hartford Stock Exchange Staaley R. Eddy, Manager 231 West Main St., Tel. 2040 —_—_————————a We Offer: , 50 American Hardware 50 Landers, Frary & Clark T T I €23 JUDD & CO. | MEMBERS HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGE Members New York Stock Exchange Hartford: Hartfora-Conn. Trust Bldg., Tel, 3-6320 New Britain: 23 West Main Street, Tel. 1815. MM WE OFFER: 100 Shares of Am. Hdwe. Stock * Price on Application [ T TR T T T T T O (e T TR T omson, Themn & Co. HARTFORD 10 Central Row Telephone 2-4141 Members Members Hartford Stock Exchange New TYork Stock Exchaag Donald I, Hart, Manager % NEW BRITAIN New PBritain National Bank Bldg. Telephone 2580 We Offer: AMERICAN HARDWARE. Price on application. We do not accept margin accounts JOHN P. KEOGH Member Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York STOCKS Bridgeport BONDS New Haven Direct Private Wire to New York G, ¥. GROIF. Mgr—~Joom 509, N. B. Nat'l Bank Bldg~Tecl, 1013 Waterbury Danbury Middletown The Hartford-Connecticut Trust Comgany Old State House Square, Hartford, Conn, Safe Deposit Boxes, $5.00 and upwards. Foreign E>changc to all parts of the woru. LETTERS OF CREDIT — GENERAL BANKING Bank by mail. It is safe and saves time. Saw Coburn Die M » Ha 1 eland narrowly escaped death factional sgrife, was shot and killec is office Ga. One bullet from 1 as Coburn's slayer, smashed a part of Mrs. Haymond was in con- when W the Ku Klux Klan the gun of P 3 the desk at wi ttir Coburn at the time relative to the settlement of an sultation wit!

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