New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 25, 1924, Page 3

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CRUSHING DEFEAT T0 REBEL TROOPS Merican War Ollice Gives Out, Statement of Battle | By The Assoclated Press. Mexico City, Feb. 25 (By radio via Forth Worth Stur Telegram).-—Secre- tary of War Serrano declared in a statement yesterday that a crushing | defeat had been administered by | Obregon troops on rebel forces under Jose Moran, at De La Curue. deleat, according to Serrano, the occupation of Tuxpam tion of only a few days. Coincidentally with the capture of Tuxpam the occupation of Jalapa by forces of Almazan is expected. Concerning. operations around Tehuantepee Isthmus, Serrano stated that a junction is imminent between a federal column advancing south from Tierre BLlanca and troops under Bo- noto Bravo Tzquierde and Juan Do- makes a ques- minguez, which would have a total| attack | strength of 6,000 troops for upon Puerto Mexico, where it is un- derstood scattered remnants of rebels are concentrated. The secretary confirmed reports that General Miguel Ulloa has asked terms for capitulation for 1,000 fol- This | NEW BRITAIN DALY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1924. IAPS DISSATISFIED RISHOP PROMOTES ez REY W, A KRAUSE garding Pdssession of Property hy| Foreign Residents, A % | | Gonexd: switseriand :‘;::',;aguf?,';IApp"‘ms Him Pastor of §t.| Joseph's Ghurch Bridgeport rvations assembly, recommending that Rev. Willlam A. Krause, for the | all member countries permit foseign | | residents and foreign companies to acquire, possess and bequeath all | kinds of property when neccessary for | their economic activities, apparently’ past eight and one-half years a curate are unsatisfactory to Japan. lat St. M. Adachi, of the permanent Jap- |city Friday to become {anese delegation, has requested the |Joseph’s church, league's cconomic committee} which | & the 'sadershin o ¢ naregatin convenes this week, to endeavor to |over which the late Rev, Robert Dah- la".mg.- something more stringent { me, who was murdered on the stre rl' than the resolutions and to consider in Bridgeport, February 4, was the | the possibility of an international con- hfl%flr vention. Up to now the committee | The promotion of Jather Krause | | has taken the view fhat the problem [came Saturday afternoon after Rt. | |of framing detailed rules for the|Rev. John J. Nilan, bishop of Hart- equitable treatment of forcign nation- |ford diocese, called at St. Mary's rec- | als was not ripe for solution by a |tory to visit Rev. John T. Winters, | technical conference. The subject is|the pastor, who is indisposed. | ,deemed of importance to the United | Father Krause will be required to | States on account of the landowner- |assume the task of completing and | ship question on the Pactfic slope, | paying for a new church edifice which The Latin American countries are |is shortly to be completed and dedi- | showing deep Intcrest in several other cated. His néw congregation is com- | matters on the committes’s program. | posed for the greater part of German | Cesar Scumeta, Venezuelan special | parishioners, and the local curate will | |commissioner for the study of the | conduct a part of his services in the | commercial. situation in Europe, has |German lavguage. The congregation | lasked the committee to consider | is zllmu! one-fourth the size of St | |whether any international aetion is | possible to protect contumers against pastor of St. Bridgeport, assum- l-unwr Krause was born in New lowers, which President Obregon is handling personally, but declined to| give further detalls. Federal Lead- v Cardenas has been ordered to take | command at (olima, where tele- graphic communication has been es- tablished. It was learned from the war de- partment that General Luca§ Gon- lez left Mexico City for Vera Cruz for the purpose of concentrating 1,500 | cavalry which he commands, for the | in the| Cavazos, | railway, Flores, | purpose of participating 1lidalgo campaign against who has been cutting the Colonel Guillermo Rosas commandant at Matamoros, reported | to the war department that the re- bellion in the state of Tamaulipas has been ended and that the princi- | pal leaders of the revolt have entered | the United States, including ex-Gov- ernor Oscar Lopez De Lara and Gen- eral Juan Vidall, Private advices received in Mexico City are to the effect that prepara- | tions are being made at Mazatlan to | rocelve President Obregon, who, it is reported, “intends to confer with Flores in that city within a fort-| night, DISCUS! CONCESSIONS. Moscow, Ieb. 25, «= United States Benator France after a ron{nrvnrrl with the concessions committee auoted by the Russian press as say. ‘ ing he was chiefly interested in d"-: veloping an American concession for | trade in print paper, He is return- ing home shortly. STATE ARMORY ARCH STREET NEW BRITAIN FEB. 27 to DAILY 2:30 to 10 P. M. Fine Music Elks’ Fair, Elks”Hall $7,000 CASH TO BE GIVEN worthless goods imported into the | Haven. He graduated from New Ha- South American countries, He also | ven High school, 8t. Thomas' semin- | r\muld likegt know whether m,.kmg!ar) at Hartford, and Piacenza semin- false dec! |n’uflonq in the customs can- |ary in Italy, He was ordained a priest | not be curbed by some form of inter- | in August, 1908, recciving his first as- | mtionul agreement., | signment to St. Michael's chureh, | Cxperts representing 26 countries | Westerly, R. 1., where he served un- | V\I" assemble here on May § to dis. til assigned to St. Mary's church in | {cuss a convention to prevent unfair (1915, Of the three curates at |competition and proteet commeree | Mary's, he has been here longest, against false trade marks., The eco. At yesterday's masses, [Father | nomic committee will arrange the de. | Krause announced his promotion and tails of this conference, pressed regret at leaving St. Mary's, R He said he would ‘greatly have pre- | 16 Year Old Girl Gets | ferped remaining in New Britain, but | it was the bishop's wish that he take Carnegie Hero Medal | up the duties of pastor in Bridgeport. New York, Feb, ~“The Carne i - medal of heroism has been awarded | COAST GUARD g“ h‘ — : to Margaret Oswald, 16 years old, a{ Provincetown, Mass, Feb, 25.—~The | Girl Scout of Scranton, Pa., for b Acushnet picked | very in saving the life of a ten ) nr- old boy at Lake Coxton, Pa,, in 1 \uorordmx to an announcement from | | Natlonal Girl Scout headquarters, A |lettar commending Mrs. Virginia Me- coast guard cutter up the Barkentine Marsetta off ans last night and towed her to an | anchorage in the bay off Race Point, | Tln vesscl, bound from Norfolk for | Kenzie, of Bayfield, Wis., for hra\-ry‘ Boston with coal, lost her sails in ! and presence of mind in a fire which ! gales last week and her windlass was | threatened the lives of 200 people, | 9amaged. She ran short of provisions was also made publie, and anchored five miles southeast of — | Orleans, where she asked for help CANDIDATE FOR COUNCIL | from the coast guard | Edward H. Christ, son of Mr, and | Mrs, Ernest W. Christ, is circulating a petition of candidacy for mum'll-‘ man in the third ward, assuring a | Yanes, assistant director of the Pan. contest, nunrlllnnn Clifford W, Hell. | American Union, died here today, berg and W, 8n~'«ing Warner are |after a long illness. Dr, Yanes was already active v nuuates, Mr, Christ | born in Caracas, Venebucela, and was is a graduate of w Britain High | a grandson of Francisco Javier Yanes, school in the class of 1918, and is a | the South American patriot and asso- salesman, clute of Dolivar, ¥. J. YANES DIES Washington, Feb, 25.~Francisco J, MAR.'1 Beautiful AWAY RADIO SET ' GIVEN TONIGHT IS Very Likely That American llunch | the American branch |tion Army from the parent organiza- | | branch. | would be retarded seriously if these says, left home after | York. | favoring those among their subordi- | others, AUTO SHOW SEE THE 1924 CARS—Greatest Improvements and Values in History of the Automobile SALLIES MAY SPLIT 'THO DEAD, TWO SHOT o s cre nanom [N PISTOL BATTLE 25 —secemion ot (1eV6land Woman Slays Men She Says Are Blackmailers | New York, Feb. tion in England today was seen by| officers of the army as a possible re | sult of the recent action in London of General Bramwell Booth in approv-| Cleveland, Feb. 25.—Two men are ing orders calling upon officers to dead @nd two other persons were bes: Mary's church, wil leave this } quit secret societies to which they be- | ing questioned by police today, the re- | | long and prohibiting them from mak- |sult of a pistol battie late last night, |ing such affillations in the future. |which is said to have been the cul- It was declared by some orlu-nrsrmmnnon of a blackmail plot. The that a large number of their com-|dead are Raflile Transo, 36, and Mike rades in this country were members| Marino, who, with a third man, are of secret organizations and that com- | said to have gone to the home of Mrs. | pliance with the orders from lLondon | Nettie Annelli, 21, last night to see if eventually would lead to secession or demands they arfl alleged to have complete paralysis of the ,\murlcanlmudc Thursday night would be car- ried out. The third member of the It was pointed out that the Salva- | |alleged gang, giving his name as Tony tion Army frequently had accepted | Rnnud was arrested early today, The the assistance of secret societies in|other person being held is Mrs. An- raising money. The opinion was ex- |nelli. Police are searching for the pressed that the work of the army husband of Mrs. Annelll, who, she | receiving the | socleties were alienated. | threats. An article in a recent issue of the| Mrs. Annelli, armed with three re- | Staff Review, the international official | volvers, fired a dozen shots at the | army organ, which was said to haves three men after they had fired a shot been approved by General Bnnlh.‘lhrough the window of her home, she speaks of secret socicties as “openly 'told the police. More than a dozen worldly.” Tt mentions alleged free shots were exchanged. use of intoxicants in them and secret| Seeing the men loitering about 2 :’uncnonu. to be present at which wa jcorner near her home last night, Mre. | to “condone habits too often at var-|Annelli barricaded the doors and iance with our teaching and stand- windows, armed herself with three |ard.” 'rv\ol\firu and after sending her moth- | Reports that the orders were in-|er, father and their seven children up- spired by General Booth's alleged de- |stairs, put out the lights. A\nolhvr‘ |sire to increase his power over the sister, Ruth, 17, remained with Mrs. army in America were denied by | Annelli. Commissioner Thomas Estill, of New Shortly afterward there was a He said they were aimed only | knock at the front door. to do away with a condition which time a shot crashed through the side had been known to exist, of ofticers window. These were followed by Mrs. Annelll sald, before she nates who belonged to the same &0-|could return the fire, Then after fir- cieties. ing several shots through the window, !she fired through the door where one | of the men was pounding. The shoot- Too MANY SARDINES mg from the outside ceased, | Police summoned by terrified nvlghlmrr. found Mike Marino, 35, ‘l‘lnm Finny Rascals Are So Plentiful | barely alive on the sidewalk in front | > of the house; Rafile Transo, 36, was Along French Coast That the Fish- | found lying in the front yard of his, £ S e | NOmMe three doors away. Both men crmen Arg Limiting Their Catehes. | 4i04 oy routo to a hospital. On the | Biarritz, France, Ieb, 25.~—Sardines |8round beside cach of the men, police | | have become so plentitul along this| found a revolver from which se \Aral‘ coast that the fishermen are limiting | $hots had been fired, |their catches. It was frequently | Sitting in the ilving room of her| found that each boat was averaging |Nouse adjoining that of Mrs. Annelli, 100,000 sardines per trip, and the |Mrs. Helen Stepke, narrowly escaped price fell to 20 franes per thousand, |POINE struck by some of the bullets By limiting their catch and taking m."r"" by her neighbor, she told the occasional day off the fishermen re. |Pollce. One of the shots dropped al- | duced the supply and the canners|MOSt at her feet, she said, | ' REVENUE BIL FGAT | | lncourugml by lhr suceess of |h|~‘ Present Week Probably Will Sec Con- | move the fishermen now are throw. ing back into the sea all over 30,000 tinuation of Hectic Fight Over the | Provisions for Taves, per boat, and the price has gone up to from 40 to 70 francs per thousand, caused an outery from the cunnerul Washington, Feb, ~Another week of strenuous work on the rev. enue bill was in sight when consider- | all over France, | [:u.lnn of the measure was resumed | today by the house. | Upon complction of the fight over an inerease in theé estate tax, which came up first today, the entire miscel. laneous rate schedules were next in| {order with sharp contests indicated. | Particularly on the automobile excise {tax. A move for reduction of the taxes has gained considerable strength and, though defeated in com- lmlnon proponents hgve expressed | confidence of reducing the taxes on automoblle accessories and small | trucks, at least. | Considerable interest also has been | aroused over the proposed 25 per cent | flat reduction in 1223 personal in- come taxes payable this year. Demo- !erats have indicated they would seek, instead, to make the new rate sched- ules they suggested in incorporating in the bill retroactive a year. This section is the last in the bill, With a final vote on the measure not expected before the end of the week, republican organization lead- | ere have not pushed their efforts to | win over some of the insurgents who [ voted to put the Garner income rates l‘" the bill. Both democratic and re- | publican insudgent leaders, however |n.m their forces will l"!n' by the | rates when the measure is “up for a | final vote, NEW PSYCHIC WONDER Harvard and Columbia l,\;w'n.u Are to Examine Wonder Child from Kansas Who Has Great Reputation. New York, from Harvard and ( sitios and the Americ Psychie Research 1o analyze re- | ported clairvoyant powers of Miss Eu- | gene Dennis, 18-year-old Atchison, | Kas., school girl arrived here yesterday with her mother Miss Dennis is said to have to her previous accomplishm furnishing information which the. recovery a vanity the hotel where is house | astonished interviewers by | their fptimate friends. Miss Defhis was brought here witl her mother by a group of psychic re search students, The paychelogists | who will study her are Dr, Waiter } Frince America clety | ychie Dr. Wiltiam , We 1eb ~Psychologists slumbia univer. an Society of who addeqd nts by led to lost in Khe o case sl Decorations cribing of he &0 of Research, HARTFO At the same |. tQ Burning good many of our Q/{ ustomers who be-- gan to bank their furnace fires with Buck- wheat have come to burn it all day long— mixed with larger coal. It gives just as much heat as any coal; and mixed with larger sizes, any furnace will burn it perfectly. The more Buckwheat you can burn, the farther your big coal will go—and by the'same token, you'll pay far less for your winter's heat. It brings the avera$e ton cost down—handsomely! Burning straight Buck- wheat usually calls for a little help in the way of forced draft. There is an inexpensive blower that will make straight Buck- wheat burn ‘beautifully in your furnace — without any alterations. The Citizens Coal Co. Berlin Yard orr, | Exact size of 0ld Company's ‘o. 1 Buck- wheat— as hot as any coal! Uptown Office 104 Arel S, Tel. 3266, Yard and Main Office 24 Dwight Court, Tel. 2708, Dougall of Harvard and Dr. ( Murphy of Columbla TRIALS OF PROFESSIONS | German President and Other Leaders Mect Plight of the Learned Men of Their Country. ind r. Gariner| Petitions of P. 0. Clerks Received By Congress Y GEOR " (Washington Burcau of N. B. Herald) Washington, D, Ieh —Petis tions from the Connecticut state fed- eration of post office clerks, which *t in Hartford on Washington birth« urging support of the Kelly- bill increasing the salaries of cmployes, have n received by the Connecticut senators and rep- resentatives. The petitions were pres sented to congress and have been lald before the commitiee on post offices and post roads, which will hold hears ings on the bill carly in March Pantano, Fourth Member of Bandit Gang, Goes on Trial Anthony J. charged with exceuted the of two bank yhbed of $48,. y before Su- Cropsey. He 18 Aving suge with having o confoders Diamond, Farina, already st degree while a fifth g sought MANNING. S 1o Discuss Edge postal Berlin, Feb, 25 ) Chancellor Marx, German cabinet, the forelgn ambassa- and other notables attended a demonstration in Refchstag yese terday in behalf of the scientifie, liter- ary ahd artistic professions, calling attention to their unfortunate plight arising from the ccogomiec and finan- cial situation the country Chancellor Marx expressed that the problems confronting government made it impossible sist the sufferers, He conten that it was for the world to rally to the help of the liberal pursuits, not from humanitarian motives but becaus: sclence was the common anchorage the human race German selence literature and art, he said, re rec ognized t world over Other kers dw ent difficulties and trials of the fessions, Representatives of the man students expre 1 gratitude help received from abroad, notably from the Pope and the students of tF Scandinavian countr Switzerland America and ~President Eber members of the dors the of regret the 0 as- New Pantano, having murder messer 6 York, I fourth planned 1 last November rs Who were m urt man g goes ir Ju we preme ( wpecifically gested the erime and it with Morris and bern It on the pres- pro ( cussed s alleged the T8 = o, Is | Why is there a decided connection between whin I and dia- monds? First, because white gold emphasizes the brilli of the diamonds st in i, 10 a much greater degree than docs the yellow gold, and secondly, being harder than sellow gold. it lasts a great while Jonger. 1t i< no wonkder the reset into modern wh n derive moch pleasure wearing up-1o-date Our 1924 models of white gold of them are sapphire st amd thes an into our store, we will be pleased to show them 1o you M. C. LE WITT Diamond Dealer MAIN &7 ey tiamonds that they nare having their for thes vealing fewetnry . that " w gold mounting< many Step mountings have arvived: priced from $5.50 up. Headquarters Vor Birthday and Wedding Gifts iamond Rings Jeweler an K1 58500 HT AT ashington St. ENTERTAINMENT BY MARJOR]E KAY & CO. VALUABLE ARTICLES ON ALL BOOTHS AWAY

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