New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 12, 1925, Page 3

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PLOTS REVEALED AFTER 43 YEARS Russian Admits Assassination Conspiracies 26 for trial when Prosecuts, ‘The Associated Press Moscow, Jan. 12.—Amazing revel- ations of assassinations, plots, in- trigues and terroristic acts Alexander 11 and his ministe, made today at the trial of Iv ladskl who, after 45 year is charged with having turned traitor and betrayed his accomplices in that notorious murder which shocked two continents. The prisoner, who is 63 ycars old, | appeared in court guarded by four| armed soldiers. Ilc was Infirm and dressed in rags. The Bolshevik government accus- nst were | n 0d-| | ladski confrssed ¢6 Odladski of assisting the czarist police in the extermination of the| notorious organization known as| Naarodnaya Volio (Peoples Iree-| dom, which set out to win the liber-| ation of the Russian people from the { czarist oligarchy. He is held partly responstble for the failure of the rev olutionists to accomplish their pur- | pose until the Bolshevik upheaval in | 1917, | Protests I'hotog i Today, when the prisoner to stand up, a dazzling motion pleture confronted him. & | I am not a great mar pro- tested. “1 don’t wich to be filme | am not a hero.” But the camera his plea,, for the communists desire | tho pictires for propaganda purpos-| | spotlights | The trial is be et hall in Moscow, tie ing in which Lenine’s body la state. The judge’s bench, the pr er's er ure: and atforneys hles are anged on a great the rical stage draped in‘the revolution- ary red Nikolai Krylenko, soviet ruthless prosecutor and 1 r of | all who offend against rebolutionar principles, will demand the forfeitur of Okladski's life. 1t i prisoner undoubtedly tenced to death, but tence probably will lat ed owing to his age. Among the thous tors who are attendin, a dozen or more W nists and anarct od who trie ssinate the ¢ r betrayed by the the witnesses 1in the same b in | son- | G ta- | Russla’s 18 of the tria specta- ar haired revo- s of the 1deki, to ho were | r. They | 1580 prison a principal him Admits Bomb Plot dskl, it pousibie Ok Iy tor several of Alexander ing mined t1 when an explc 1I, e winter h upon the admitted cein ! L d the czar's 4 did not rm the czar 1 de- bt oy " Knoi‘.iéd and deformed by Rheumatism Try this world-famous rheumatism remedy Here's quick, genuine relief for even the oldest, most obstinate rheumatic aches. Pat on gently a little Sloan's. Its stimulating ingredients send freshly purified blood tingling swiltly &\fcuxh the pain-ridden Sloan's Liniment | an ¢ jfact that the | revolutionie men did not heed | § | sion | pony, fessed to having mined the railroad track at Ekaterinoslav where the czar's train was scheduled to pass. In this instance, the emperor's life was saved because of a defect in the electric wiring of the bomb, Tried Once More, Undaunted by two failures, Ok- ladski is declared to have placed dynamite under one of the Petrograd bridges over which the czar passed en route to a military parade. This | ittempt proved equally abortive, The | prisoner then is said to have under ’ taken the mapufacture of high ex plosive hombs aud dynamite, a quan- tity of which uscd a year later in the assassination of Alexander 11 When arrested and tried for this crime, the government ‘charges, Ok- his guilt and be- trayed his omplic most of whom were executed or exiled, This led to the collapse of the terroristie organization which, in turn, led to| the establishment of the blackost | revolutionary period in Russian hia- tory. According to the prisoner, it was under the threat of torture and death that was forced to give the | authorities information regarding | the anarchistic or zation and his| associates So great were Okladski's services regarded by the czarist government, it is claimed, that it not only pardon- ed him, but ve him a large salary and elevated him from > rank of ordinary to that of a hereditary noble, For nearly 40 years he is aidto have worked as a spy for the czarist regime, operating un- | der various names. | | Krylenko is trying to establish the | soner, all the time that he was supposed to be a leading | anarchist, was | really ¢ Alexander IT'| Horetofore San Frape White, a teley | men to compete yme Mardi one with the iety girl in silk an Gras. But it may be ator, has hee chosen queen of Constance of business lifferent t n by soctal lights for the rhos WANTED: A NAME | Governor Smith Has Eskimo Ihll‘.: DEATH OF But Has Not Yet Decided What to | Cherry Street Woman Call 1t g | Few Days of 72nd 12.—An Eski- 1 to Governor itive man- ught this lat- when he re- Alban mo do Smith's The N.iT has been adde the ex governor b vosterday from New York Smith family will in the near future me tor the @up, This City 16 Years 00 at Mes. Lydia C. William A. Vater 106 Cherry street, this morning, aft Had Mrs. Vater live 17 she would have She w liad been o anan about 46 y b ¢ A I'he hold a con- to choos governor s born age, ¢ z0o already is the pheasants, a log & mud turtle and and Dbird. Da 00! monk members Lutheran church My other 5. Vater leaves o 100 IN BONUSES, 1 S, Jan. 12 running payme 50 made lay to about ip to Chapman Valve Co ling 1 threc by the oyes, in mpl German view ¢ | |Three Train Cra Par arls, J Avic | experience {strip from ¢ included in ered. Nir irt in or WRS. VATER 'BUTLER, DEFENDANT, I§ frew THERE WHEN CALLED Man Accused of Bribery Wins Long Dies Within Birthday—1In to Save His $15,000 widow of Bail. t her home, 15 o'clock | illness. Jar 1 utler T8 of | 13, but for of ihe old- this city German shes in s Due to Thick Fog e rear-end v kD AMERIGAN ORATORY Newspaper L Tian sareastic teferring to Native Speakers— United States Commended 1o servic tissues, And th ) of new, rich blood des t ‘ Swelling and stif the achirg stops. fort today. All cents, .dmgz‘li‘ -kills pain! is traffi ed somew LABOR BOARD CAN SUNMON WITNESSES Federal Judge Rules They Must Obey Call | Wilkerson toda second time upheld the right of the railroad labor board to compel witnesses to appear and testify before Counsel for t} endant, J. Ma- Guire, local chairman of the Engin- cers on tha Cl nd Northwest- |ern railway, sentative of the would be board previously won a simi- decision in” the cas of D. R. ston, head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firergen and ne- ben, who was appealed to the Unite State supreme The Brother- 1s of Engineers and Firemen had efuséd to send representatives be {fore the board in connection with the negotiation of new wages working conditions with western roads, The brotherhoods took the tion that the board's grders had been nforceable by United State supreme court, and that it was a mere arbitral bod ithout power [to compel testimony. They also charged that Ben W. Hooper, chair- ‘n'xnu was prejudiced against them. As to that, Judge Wilkerson said | *“The labor board does not act as an arbitrator in the proper sense of the word, but administrative body. 1Its acts, if arbitrary Whether its acts are arbit be determined not by t its membe but by the court. 10 and posi- held une the as an ire void , 18 to state 1 ¢ a of acts 'REPORT IS MADE ON 2 GERHAN MUNITIONS .7, | Acticles Found at Taetory Could Have Been Made Into War Material Jan. 12 i Examinat tory in North Berlin, wh it was recently cl Put Markers on His Car And Drove It 300 Miles PROMINENT New Y TEACHER DIES rk, J Miss G ths the lity immig or iang 1 a and s named CRUISER MEMPHIS OFF | Seven Times As Large As Destroyer Afloat—IJieayi Armed 12 last Philadely Jan, Memp la, cruiser of five speedy and pows Luilt by William ¢ Sons ship a gine buildi d States for her offiéi (trial board, representatives department bur Cramp guns, 1our Millions Su | Cold and } FOR TRIAL TEST TODAY; 1t Norfo At iast he with him entified the puzzle o spoke an obsct wuthorities knew. vation breadasted for nge. none hieh | Oxekula, lar as Fi Y. M. C. A. News . held a man | the A “innish ish dia- BALLOTS CAST Last Formality in Flection of Cools idge and Dawes Takes Place of ‘Washington Today. Washington, Jan. 13—Calvin Cool~ idge and Charles G. Dawes were | elected president and vice-president | respectively today. The electors for whom the Amer- | lcan voters directly cast their ballots Jast November met in the respective states, panvassed the popular vote, and In accordance with the constitu- tlon cast their ballots for president | and vice-president. This vote of the electors will be | certified to the president of the sen< | ate by each of the 48 state meetings, and will be opened at joint session of | the senate and house February 18. | The electors in each state also se~ | lected today one of their number to | bring the vote to Washington. An | appropriation of $12,600 for the ex~ pense of these electoral messengers now is pending although an attempt | was made recently in the senate to legalize transmission of the vote by | mail, | board meeting 5 | class banquet | schoo! ting. High scl m.; Ty organi 1 athlet mee ; Emp "7 p Sy 1ders vs. g com-|and [, Industria E. Boys' Bibl m., P. & F. nt meeting at N.\w‘ 1ployed Qo Special Banquet for Salesmanship Class The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet A Safe and Proven Remedy The box bears this signature C. 7\ byore Price 30c. Your Eyes |And Glasses f you value your eves as you should, you w not inquire 1 glasses the t instead say:— ) is most competent to pre- t it never says a cheap - s a careful ination, make for yonr indi- ents, and charge worth I X glasses expressly idual requir My Specialty— Comfortable Vision Frank E. Goodwin Eyesight Specialist MAIN ST, Phone 1905 l Eye Glasses Spectacies Repairing [

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