New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 15, 1924, Page 1

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D.lly Circulation Aug. sur s 10,258 PRICE THREE CENTS ws of the World By Associated Press NEW BRITAIN HERALD FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1024, ~TWENTY.FOUR PAGES LOCAL BOY KILLED | WHAT GILPATRIC DID WITH IN MEI[]B_ CRASH| STOLEN FUNDS IS MYSTERY: Cycle and Auto G ‘" YUNT GROWING EACH DAY t ih S N T TOKIO ANDOTHER JAP |Putnam Bank Opens : GITIES AGAIN ROCKED| This Morning, But Two Youths From New Britain Meet only 'l'o Receive Ac- of 43,000 (2:: 'r;‘:-'.‘;g- counts Which Are of Earthquakes Due Institution, Not SR To Pay Others. Peculations Traced Back 17 Months—Hospital Takes Precautions Against Ane other Attempt at Suicide. CONNECTICUT, GILPATRIC STILL IS ON STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE They NEW BRITAIN, CONFERENCE BREAK ' SEEMS IMPROBABLE This Is Opinion Ambassador Kel- logg Gives o AP, | \GERMAN REPLY 1§ READY Visits ESTABLISHED 1870 DAVIS TO' PLUNGE INTO G. 0. P. ATTACK] Speech at Columbus Augost 26 Will Be Aimed at Crookedoess SPELLACY RAPS PRESIDENT 00T OF HOSPITAL AND INTO JAIL IMMEDIATELY Hartford Prisoner's Mind in l"flnmlwl Republican Members Explain Have No Right To Demand Resignation Hartford, Aug. 15.~The members of the republican state central eom- mittee are not authorized to demand the resignation of G, Harold Gilpatrie from that organization, Judge A, W, Creedon, secretary of the committee sald today, Judge Creedon explained that Mr, Gilpatrie was re.elected to serve on this committes last spring by the delegates from his senatorial distriet and that vacaneies may oceur only as a result of voluntary resigna~ tion or death, No notice of resigna- tion from Mr, Gilpatrie has been re- celved by the secretary, State as Result of Bad Auto Accl. dent May 25, Harttord, Aug. 15 His menta) condition in a confused state as the result of a bad skull fracture caused when a high powered automobile he had stolen crashed into a telegraph | pole in Windsor on the night of \lay 25, James Hawrischuk, alias (ienur‘ Harrison, 26 years old, was presented rt th n o charged from the Hartford hospital| pejtish Premier With Facts—Much | today, A sllver plate covers the opening In his head, He was bound| Diplomatic Hustling, over to the September term of the | S | superior eriminal court under honds 7 The Ase Prese | of 85,000, London, Aug. 18,—Chaneellor Marx ‘ o . Hawrischuk had besn arrested a!went to Downing street at 6 o'clock SUPP']RTS F“UR “'I'HI_‘R [\ 4 half' dozen times since 1918 for bure | (his evening to acquaint Prime Min- | glary, thett of automoblle, ndR-| 0y MacDonald with the Germah re- | support of his wife. breach of the 1 54 siiitacs peace and misconduct, He had served problem of the military | quEN WIFF ASSERTS in various Institutions as a result of | *\acuation of the Rubr ‘, [] " | his eriminal bent American Ambassador Kellogg ar He was riding toward Springfeld at |James A, Logan joined Premier Mac- A high rate of speed In a touring car Donald and the German delegates in | owned by H. G. Meadows of 100/ the conference at Downing street, Mr, | Bchool street, Epringfield, when ho | Kellogg stated to the Assoclated Press | was hurt, | he was convineed that the conference | | would not break down, The German delegation has been in constant communication with Berlin | both by sphione and telegraph Chancellor Mark, I gn Minister | N'rflfi-’-n\'lnn and Dr Lather of the German delegation returned to the Chancellor Marx Nowning Fays It Coolidge Should Pass Up Comment on Ol ts Shocking That Hartford Auto Head.on—Driver of Car Gets Broken Arm-—Passengers City feandal—Concord Woman Heads On Cyele Hurt, ' Fastern Women Democrats, New York, Aug. 15,-=John W. Da vis's address at Columbus, O, on Aug- Just 26, the second set speech In his campaign for the presidency, will be a stralght from the shoulder declara tion on the dominant issues of the campaign, It was declared today at his headquarters here, Inasmuch as Ohio is the home of Harry M, Daugherty, Mr. Davis in- tends to dwell upon disclosures at Washington of conditions in the de- partment of justice while Daugherty was attorney general It also was made known that the democratic nominea has it in mind to lay emphasis on the corruption fssue in other addreses he will deliver early in the campalign. The itinerary of his speaking tours will be ready, at least In part, early next week, Edward Hoftman, 17 years old of 117 Henry street, is dead, George Kayesk), 19, of 159 Whitmans street, this eity and Rich. ard O'Connell, 20, of Hartford are in the Middlesex hospital fn Middletown painfully hurt after a spectacular ac- cident on the ‘Killlngworth road last night when a motorcycle on which the two local boys were riding collided head-on with an automobile driven by the Hartford man. Following the col ¢ lision the automobile caught fire from | At the north end of Tokio Bay, where the spray of burning gasoline shot|°D® house was destroyed. At Choshe, from the tank of the motoreycle. The (' Miles northeast of here, telephone driver of the car, who had his arm |P€r¥ice was suspended by the broken in the accident could not con- | tUrhance, while other towns in Itrol it and the balzing machine was n’::‘.]’n'\l‘:' area reported broken throwniagatnst. & barn, ' which ‘a180)| Sy S8 aih Vahock. which resiatered caught fire, causing some damage |, "¢ b AROE ok h" "‘ though the spread bf the flames was | joo 1 FE BT O P ST OR e |ohecked before the barn was destroy- | ihg streets. The tremblers came atter led. several days of abnormally high tides |y 1 ¢ ha ene t ~ % 4 The accident 1ppened a about | oo Chiba, which caused government .“' Coffin, but only for the receipt of 10:30 last night at a point just south | coiun o10oiet |payments due the bank. The receiv- selsmologists to renew t of the Episcopal church in the town |y .o ,m: mvasurr‘rmZn‘t‘; W};G]r“_:::i: er stood by the statement previously of Ponset on the Higganum-Clinton |spproaching earthquakes, given out that he knew nothing con- highway, According to residents of e ¥, cerning the word of National Bank AFTER 150,000 MEMBERS that neighborhood the motoreycle, Examiner N. 8. Bean that the bank's New Teader One local youth, By The Amsorlated FPre | Tokio, Aug. 15.—Fifteen heavy| earthquake shocks rocked Tokio early today, The tremblors were heaviest In the district north of here where general alarm bot alight damage was reported. The heaviest shocks wera felt at Fukushima, a city of 43,000, which ia 0 miles northeast of here, at Chiba, play on the frs, Norman Merritt of New York Sues Hushand for Separation AVIATORS AGAIN ARE By The Assoclated Pre Putnam, Aug. 15.~~The doors of zh-~ First National Bank of Putnam, closed several days ago after a rum which followed at the attempt at suicide by the cashier, State Trei urer G Harold Gillpatric, were opened today by the receiver, George York, Aug. 15-—~Norman Al. lan Merritt, sald to have been post- master of Washington, D). C,, and now secretary-treasurer of the Common- Ritz hotel from the Downing street ..t Finance corporation, which conference at 7:15 o'clock. They ex- |y, "0 capitalization of $10,000,000, pect to meet Pramier Herrlot in about |has been sued for separation by his Wait tO Get Directions -to"’“ hour. Meantime legal experts are |wieo on the ground of “cruel and in- | working with the German delegates " A . w 2 - > . Sl y human treatment. Mrs, Merritt W a':‘d Better Land fon the draft of compromise proposals. | o cos ¢1at her husband had paid at- ing Place Now Mrs, Jackson Selected New York, Aug. 15.—~John W. Da- vis, democratic presidential nominee, returned to his personal headquarters here today from his home in Locust Valley, held several conferences and approved the appointment of two ad- ditional members of the party organ- ization in the east. Thomas J. Spellacy, eastern manag- er, announced that Mrs. Dorothy B. Jackson of Concord, N. H., national committeewoman from that state, would take charge of the activities of democratic women in the eastern state; while Joseph Fitzpatrick of Jersey City would direct the hureau of foreign language voters, Commenting upon President Cool- idge’'s address of acceptance, Mr, Spel- lacy said in a statement that it was a shocking thing that the president ehould dismiss “this dirty mess” (the ofl scandal) as a matter of no con- sequence.” ‘“His attitude is a reflec- tion upon the moral sense of ‘the American people,” he added. “I have read the speech micro- scopically for his views on the activi- tles of the Ku Klux Klan,” continued the statement, “Others will do the same. In view of the open amalgu- mation of his party with the klan in Indiana and Maine, with his tacit ap- proval, it is significant enough that he dismisses the subject in seven words hitched to the end of a sen- tence which is buried in the middle of a paragraph having no direct con- nection with the subject. *This reticence, which goes beyond his customary caution, is all the more significant when taken in connection with his adoption of the favorite phraseology of the K. K. K. about American being kept American, ARMY OFFICERS ACCUSED :“" .v’mrl'« y;\}:fn‘l "rl:r'~ ",];"“:’];;:r;‘)[n":’; tentions to at least four other wome LODR A O TORL ARy ) |supporting them “at great expense, urged the Germans to to an| AL L e e BETSEMenzENILI e T ‘:::Lth on cne of them alone There is a proposal that certaln| ™o g o 'or the sult hecame known points in the Ruhr are to be evacuated | O DR OLLI0 MY, B0 which Hoffman was driving, with resources were 8o badly impaired that Kayeski on behind, was traveling| its business was wrecked. north at a high rate of speed. O'Con- 1,500,000 In Deposits. [today when Merritt was adjudged in | . P 81, pos fmmediately as a concession to the ) nell, with seven passengers in his| The receiver was busy familiariz- Germans |contempt of the supreme court for i5uto wag going south. For some rea- | ing himself with the conditions, which | falling to appear for examination in ey o b avctlies Pmultl onlony | o2 the two vehicles came together Ambition During the |involve a loss of more than $262,000 connection w nother su vhich : | with a crash that was dible f in negotiable securities and in funds CRUEL HUSBAND JAILED ~ {»ere. Merritt brouent to conect s2,663 sl S % | An- | By The Associated Fress Reykjavik, Iceland, Aug| 15.—The American army world fliers will not| hop off for Greenland this morning owing to a new and better landing place for them having been discover- ed 15 miles from Angmagsalik. Marking out this new base and bringing to it the supplies from the supply steamer Gertrud Raek will oc- cupy 24 hours. The Gertrud Rask cannot be moved to the new base, ow- ing to the ice conditiona, The sup- AR plies will be carried on rowboats. iyediin DAt | of Fagles Announces This Tz His Coming Year, M ¢ {hundreds of yards. The gas tank of L advanced on straw loans. Just as “‘}""" she ?‘f;"‘i‘ ;"‘ ]"“':“ her as un- |ypo motoreyels immediately ignited, pald personal indebtednes burst and the front of the automobile The Commonwealth Finance cor- | then caught. O'Connell had lost con- poration was placed in a receivership Gaug nnell had lost con last month to protect the Interasts of trol, because of his broken arm and 16,000 stockholders. Supreme Court the machine, dragging the motorey- |cially reported at the grand aerie ueu.} Justice Benediet temporarily enjoined cle, 'vlnuz':\ml into the side (:l‘t:ne road | ::;‘;: n’;’)d:l:, annvnunc‘mlv to that body the whole Iceland-Greenland route | 1, Vohburgh today in the city court |sets of the corporation. The applica- Fighn “ni exiixx@ls!\ed by thataravid ldoum«\ !helorller'! insitance now ln' today, the storm forecast yesterday |cleaned up one of the most deplorable tion for a receivership and injunction | that had: collected just as it reachéd | force to $12, 000,000 during the com- rot having materialized. altuations ever aired in a local court sifim'fld“":nts'he c?‘\'r;?r:"nflr‘m ‘x;:: ;-: s S e Ly imposing severe penalties upon the ""““: ;‘l;m’:’rv ,;m-rr.ns: o ar'na‘;dn‘g“lufln: Ambulances were rushed to the| Reports of the auditing, insurance two offenders, Edward Tuttle, 68, of | * "0, o, scene from Middletown and the in- |and organization departments by Col. Shepard street, was glven & year in 00 oS00 Cn jured men removed to the Middlesex | Conrad H. Mann of Kansas City, Mo, the Bridgeport jail after being found Lockport, N. ¥.. save she marrfed her | hOSPital. It was found that Moffman |and of the Kagjes $75,000 campaign guilty on a charge of extreme cruelty Corilim B ors S, retired ns post. | had sustained two broken thighs, in- | to get old age pension laws passed to his wife as well as on another ser- Pextanioe \\'.'Jshingwn in 1813, she as. | ternal injurles and w suffering | in ten states during 1024-25, by Frank jous charge. Mrs. May Ryan, 21, also eTtea ls Lk A from shock. He did not survive |E. Hering of South Bend, Ind., con- Will be made the basis of prosecution of Shepard street, was sentenced to |Seried. more than a few hours, dying in the | stituted the special order of business 2% Well as the basis of the winding spend one year »a' the state farm for hospital this morning. today. up of the bank’'s affairs. 'The ques- women at Norwich. Kayeski is in the hospital with Col. Mann reported that the order |tions involved are (1) how much Tattle and .\.Irs, Ryan were arrested abrasions about the head, two black |had accumulated $12,000,000 addi- |Mmoney is missing?; (2) how was it yesterday by Constable Mills on com- | eyes and Is suffering from the shock. |tional assets in the past four years |taken?: (3) why did Gilpatric, a citi- plaints by neighbors that while Tuttle O'Connell is also confined with a |and that the Eagles now had $18,000,. | %€N of solid standing in the commu- broken arm. 000 liquid assets. nity embezzle the funds of his bank and the Ryan woman were living in Residents of the town of Ponsett g B3 S and his friends?; (4) what did he do SHENANDOAH GOES 10 SEA the Tuttle homne, Mre. Tuttle, {1l with reported seeing Hoffman and Kay-| with the quarter of a millioff dollars Is Expected To Return From Ocean soon as possible depositors who had aproximately $1,500,000 in the bank, {In addition to those who had entrust- ed their funds to the bank for safe keeping, will be called upon to file proof of their claims. Until this is done there can be no complete’ check of the amount of money represented by the cashier's {irregularities, a® proofs are expected to develop addi- |tional losses and Bank Examiner Bean has said that additional llabili= ties are developing from day to day. Five Lines of Inquiry. The federal officials have been working on five general lines of in- quiry In rounding out the facts that | Providence, Aug. 15.—Otto P, De- | luse of Indianapolis, Ind., whose elec- ! Man Was TAving With | tion as grand worthy president of the | Fraternal Order of Eagles was offi- | Sick Norwalk other Woman While Wife —= Lieut, commanding the world flight, re- ported to Major Tieneral Patrick, chief of the air eervice, today the postponement until tomorrow of the hopoff from Reykjavik in order to permit Lieutenant Schultze to estab- lish a new base in an ice free harbor found by the advance officer yester- day on a scouting expedition, “Establishment of a new base reduce hazards,” Lieutenant sald. A message from Lieutenant Bissell, an advance officer, reported tbat the emergency base at Frederiksdal was ready and that the Danigh inspection steamer Islands Falk had sailed for that place. American destroyers have sailed to take up their positions for the Ana- magsalik-Tvigtut lap of the flight, the Washington, Ang. 15, Lowell H. Smith, army round the whosa Thowe 8 in GOVERNOR TAKES HAND will Smith Asks Supt. of State Police to Inves- tigate Charges of Gambling at a tumor, was making her home in the ¢ Mrs. Tuttle was sent to the eski traveling south on the Killing-| or more, of which. comparatively lit« Norwalk hospital. worth road carlier in the evening at |tle trace has been Iound?i (8) when a high rate of speed. A report of the did the peculations begin? MORE GOUNTER—F_EITS accidant was received at the Middle- Answers U to Date town police headquarters at 10:45 These questions answered briefly so Agents in New Hnn‘n; Stamford and Sound Beach. Waterbury, Aug. 15.—After receiv- ing numerous complaints from the citizens of Stamford and Sound Beach to the effect that gambling was in progress at a carnival being held there, Governor Charles A. Temple- o'clock last evening and officers from | ¥ OY%e And Maneuvers By Sunday |far as the answers are known stand there and from the state police bar- racks at Centerbrook are investigat- accident. this way: (1) Gilpatric's admission of embezzlement probably covers $262,- | 000 already established and other Evening—38 Men On Board. Secret Service the Coroner L. A.| Lakehurst, N. J,, Aug. 15, — The OF ATTENDING AN ORGY Make Charges Disabled Veterans Which Are Tmmecdiately Denied By Accused Men. Dayton, Ohio, Aug. 15.—Testimony that a number of officers of the na- tional military home here attended a “wild orgy” near the home grounds March 17, was given today before the congressional committee which is in- vestigating the institution. Liquor was served and dancers entertained the erowd, Raymond T. Tooley, a dis- abled war veteran, testified, The statements, however, were de- message added, continuing: “Flight planned to fly Angmagsalik August 16, Ivigtut, 17th, Destroyer at Cape Farewell probably carry Wade ( Lieutenant Wade) to destina- tion. Clear weather Inside ice at Angmagsalik,” TRAIN HITS AUTO Seven Injured, Two Seriously, When Erie Locomotive Crashes Car at Buffalo, N. Y, Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. —Seven fously, when an Erie railroad train struck a touring car at an unguarded grade crossing southwest of the city men were injured, two of them ser-| Secking Source of Spurious Ten | Dollar Notes, New Haven, Aug. 15.—S8ecret serv- ice agents were summoned here today to investigate the passage of a num- ber of counterfeit ten dollar notes. Six of the notes, similar to those re- cently passed in various parts of tho; state, have been turned into the fed- | eral oflicials. Andrew A, Tassa, who | accepted one of the notes at his gro- | cery, was able to give a very good description of the man who passed it | it last Saturday night. The OUX('OrS\ who had their headquarters here un- | til recently when they were trans-| ferred to Providence, were recalled. They have issued a warning to local merchants. The note is described as a federal reserve note issued by the| {ton this morning conferred with Supt. Robert Hurley of the state police and asked the latter to investigate. The chief executive yesterday confer- red with state police officials and in- formed them that he had received numerous complaints as to the allegpd gambling. Among the reports weye two midnight telephonic communicg- tions both from the same Stamfond woman, one of these last night and the other ecall, Wednesday night. A} telegram from Charles A. Doolittle | informed the governor that “powerful |financial influence” protected the carnival, and that the closing of the affair was imperative, | Sound Beach, Conn,, Aug. 15,-~Two state policemen last night visited the carnival which is being held here un- der the auspices of the Sound Beach {Coroner's Surgeon Says ing Smith of Middlesex county will hold an inquest into the death of Hoffman, At the Middlesex hospital today Kay- eski's condition was given as “not ser- | jous,” and O’Connell was reported as | gemfortable. | Hoffman is the son of Mrs. Julia | Hoffman of 117 Henry street and was employed as a clerk in one of the lo- cal factories, Funeral arrangements are not complete, SUPPORTS McGOY'S CLAIM Mrs, Mors Might Have Killed Heesclf, Judging From Position of Wound. { Shenandoah left the naval air station at 11:35 a. m. today, headed directly out to sea as part of her scheduled manoeuvers with the Atlantie flight quadron of the United States navy fleet off New England tomorrow and Sunday., The Shenandoah is expected to be in communication with the ships of the fleet during her operations 500 to 600 miles from land. The Shenandoah was taken from her hangar last evening and remained moored to her steel mast throughout the night. When she left here today, Commander Lansdowne and 37 men were on board. After her manoeu- vers with the fleet she is expected to return to her hangar Sunday night. TYPHOID FEVER EPIDEMIC o a o u m ¥y took the money is a mystery; what he mystery unless it was lost in some losses on straw loans and negotiable securities the amount of which still status of trust funds in his charge still in doubt; take the bank of which he was cashier, a is to be determined; with the (2) he was able to the money because he robbed ne-man institution, a condition pos- sible because of his high standing as (3) why he 4) it similarly is a banker and a man; did with f his several speculations, rumors of frregularities in his private life being nsupported to date; (5) develop- nents have indicated that irregulare ities were being practiced by Gile patrie 17 months ago; how much be- ond that no one knows. Resignation Not Signed. Gilpatrie, still between life and nied by the accused officers, The party was given by the veterans of foreign wars, they said, and no in- toxicating liquor served, they declared. The committee indicated that more testimony on the episode would be sought. Describing treatment of insane pa- tients at the home, Hattie Davis, a nurse, admitted that one patient had heen given a gold water bath when he was Intractable. The treatment ap- parently quieted him, she sald. She also declared that straight jackets were used on two Civil war veterans when they became excited. JATLED, ALSO FINED Thirty Daye Rehind Bars in Part of gun today. Vincent Coppola and Henry| Kleiber of Butfalo may die. | A number of cars were halted by an | approaching train. The driver of the | wrecked machine swung out of line, either not eeeing the train or at- tempting to beat it to the crossing.| The car was carried 100 feet, All the| men are carpenters employed on a|HOW new high school at Hamburg. death and partly blinded, was still nominally the state treasurer of Con- necticut and cashier of the First National Bank and a free man today. His resignation from the state office has been prepared but not signed be- cause of his condition. His brother, Walter Gilpatrie, said today that there seemed no need for him to re- sign as cashier because he was “prace tically out now.” The federal ware rant charging embezzlement of $100,« 1ast {000 has not been served because of | his condition and it is believed by federal ~uthorities that hospital prae cautions are sufficient to prevent an« other attempt at suicide. £61,200 Subscribed. The townspeople who as a matter of local pride and necessity stepped inta the breach caused by the eclos- ing of Putnam’s only commereial |bank have obtained subscriptions to- |day of $61,200 towards the capital {and surplus of the new $150,000 in. stitution for which they hope to have M.1a national banking charter within a fire department and as a result of | 1Los Angeles, Aug. 15. —The their activity it was stated that no |that killed Mrs. Theresa Mors, games which might be considered a |Whose death Kid McCoy, ex-pusilist, violatlon of the state gaming statutes |18 being held, was held within two weer running. feet of her head, a fact that might One of the loeal persons who made |tend to support McCoy's story of the | complaints to Governor Templeton |Woman's suicide, the auntopsy an was Mra. John J. Frye who is a dele- |nounced toda gate from this city to the national MYSTER[OUS MURDER convention of Women's Christian Unidentified Man Reported to Have federal reserve bank of Boston, the| serial number hcing A437081264, HIBERNIANS 10 HEET Klan and Anti-Cath- | Port Jeflerson, N. Y., Has Thirty Cases in - Week—Belicve . Germs Came From Dairy, Port Jefferson, N. Y., Aug. 15.—An | epidemic of typhoid fever, with 30 ses reported within the last week, caused the closing today of a dairy which the health authorities belleved responsibie for the disease. The firet case was reported Friday and within 24 hours reports of 19 additional vietims had been re- | ceived by health officials. Ten other | cases developed during the week. | After the water supply was tested and found to be free of typhoid germs, the | anthorities decided that the germs| came from the dairy. to Combat olic Bigotry Is Big Issue at Atlantic Ansonia Negro Held on Attempted Shooting Count Ansonia, Aug. 15.—Henry Tutt, ne-| gro, was bound oved to the suparlor] court on bonds of $1,000 by Judge R. L. Munger this morning for an alleged attempt to shoot his step-son Herbert | |Camm, last night. The men attended | ™ " 0 iterance opened with at- a negro picnie at Hanover park Meri- | tendance by the delegates at services den yesterday and became fnvolved In |yu "ty gy, Nicholas Roman Catholie an altercation which caused Tutt to| walt for his step-gon at their home on | | Platt street last night. The bullet| 5 [1odged 1n & door jam |Congressman l\ellar to Aid La Follette Fight Chicago, Aug. 15.—Appointment of | Temperance union. Mrs, Frye visit- ed the carnival Wednesday night and is saild to have complained that she found an 11.year-old boy at a stand where wheels were being operated with money as the stakes. Frank Palmer of Sound Beach, chairman of the earnival committee and also a member of the board of asseesors of the town of Greenwich, in which the earnival grounds are lo- cated, denied today that the boy was working 2t the booth. He declared that eriticlam of the carnival was un- fair and that there was nothing un- usnal about it. The ecarnival is an annual affair and is being run through City Convention. Atlantic City, N. J., Aug. 15.—~Dis- cussion of plans for defense against the Ku Klux Klan and anti-Catholic bigotry is to be one of the principal | subjects to come before the meeting of the Ancient Order of Hibernians in session here. Killed Wife and Child on Road in Oklahoma, Then Sped Of. Muskoges, Okla., Aug. 15.—Officers early today were s ving for an un identified man who yesterday shot his wife and child on a road near Hichita, loaded their bodies in an antomobil and drove away According to Mrs. John farmer's wife, who told p nessed the shooting, the man, woman and two children we standing by the car, when suddenly the man shot the woman and then turned the on ons of the shildren. The child ran and escaped The man placed the two bodies in the car and dreve away, Mrs. Ray/ sald. Johnson Defe;ll\: ],’;l';)(\kefl : In \tramht Sets Today | Ass 1 Pre New '\r\r'_ Aug. 15, —William inston, former American champlon {fa davs. defeated Norman E. Brookes, Austra-| e stosks in some wheté cup player in stralght sets |tn. turnover fs quick have been run- of the Casino 1aWn | ning 1o for lack of funds to obtain tennis 'mymam:nt today. The scores |p .o supplies, in some instances, but il for the most part, business has been on credit to date without serious in- convenience, The malls, however, have contained many returned checks drawn on fhe First National Bank with the request to senders whose funds are tied up at the bank to pay in cash. Resignations Not Signed Gilpatric has not yst signed the resignation as state treasurer, which was prepared for his signature by members of his family and which one of his brothers, Raymond, declared yesterday. would be presented to Gov- ernor Templeton within a day or so, although at the Day Kimball hospital, it was stated that his condition was (Continued on Thirteenth Page) » Price Ansonia Man Has to Pay For | church. Ray, a Reing Run Runner. e ghe wit Angonia, Aug. 15.-~Michael Alban- fined $200 and costs and glven ! E; “l:\‘n !’r: sail h’,v .lal‘x‘dse”;{slr.ml\lugngar Oklahoma ]‘mmel‘ ’“"q HIS Wife, 3 Children, Himself | ncpresentative 0. B Keller, of st. tn the city court this motrning on charges of rum runing. Execution of | pajrijew, Okla, Aug. 15.—After |Paul, as chairman of the bureau of judgment on the jail szentence Was | ii|ing his wife and three small chil- |speakers and motion pictures of the | euspended when the prosecutor stated | gren, Julius Burgraff, farmer, early [La Follette campaign, was announced that the accused was a widower With| yesterday turned his gun on himself |today by Representative Nelson, na- five emall children. Albanse was | inflicting a fatal wound. The tragedy |tional La Follette campaign manager. tound in the north end of the city|oceurred at the family home, 16| Dr. David T. Niles of Boston, will miles northeast of here Neighbors | be assistant chairman of this bureau. yesterday by Sergeant Mahoney of the local police, Helivering moonshine in | belleve financial troubles were respon- | He will be the active director of that | a car. The accused was before the | sible for the act. ‘h-xrnau local court in 1921 and fined $100 for making and selling lquor. - stores othea * AIGH TIDES—AUG (Standard Time) At New London— 10:13 a. m.; 1035 p. m. New Haven— 18. wers §- Harvey Snodgrass, outplayed Brian I Norton, St.| T Louis, former South African Davis| | eup star, in the other semi-final. The Airplane Brings Rnhef D Pitcher Who Wins Game | cstablishes an all-California final in | 8t. James. Minn, Aug. 15.—A the singles for tomorro lief piteher brought by airplane, stop ped an onslaught in a baseball game | here yesterday. La Biesionaire, hurl- er of the Mankato team of ¢ South- ern Mignesota league, missed his teammates when they left Mankto for 8t. James. A friend offered to take| him by airplane. He arrived in time to relieve Mudeking. when the latter another truck at the corner of Eim | blew up, and put a stop to further and North streets. Sergeant McCue scoring. Mankato won, 5 to 4, and|was detailed to investigate and placed % | went into the lead in the league race. | Goldberg under arrest, Los Angeles, At 12:10 p. i |Aviation Cameraman Back From 1,000 Mile Flight Dayton, Aug 15. Licutenants Elderly Bauk Messenger raided the lower east side cloak and | James H. Doolittle and1 E. W. Plank, McCook field airmen, were back at In New York Is R(’bbed,suv contracting shop of Odzer and New York, Aug. 15.—Four youths| Trombler today and administered a|the Dayton post today after complet- felled Vincenzo Aramondo, 68 year|severe beating to a half dozen work-|irg a trip of about 4,000 miles in less 0ld messenger for the Harlem Branch | ers emiployed in the place. The fight | than one week. The flight was made of the Ttalian Discount and Trust Co, | was eaid to have occurred after one|so that Plank, asrial photograph ex- ir a strect robbery today and escaped | of the contractors had refused the| pert, could ing work and equip- with 8130 ckels and pennies. The | request that he employ | ment of aerial photographic units at| four escaped in a waiting automobile. lumon workers. The raiders escaped. | various government posts, PRIVER ARRESTED Lois Goldberg, who recently came to New Britain from New York, was | arrested by Detective Sergeant Wil- liam P. McCue this afternoon on a charge of reckless driving. A truck Goldberg was driving collided with Employes Beaten, N. Y. Shop Raided by Strikers | New York, Aug. 15 —Five men| THE WEATHER Wartford, Aug. 15.—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity: Fair tonight; Saturday increas. ing clondiness and dlightly warmer. T E——

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