New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 10, 1925, Page 1

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. News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 FIGHT ON WARREN NOMINATION NOW 15 ON IN SENATE] [ Effort To Chairman Cummins ~ Delends Mount Morris, N. Y., Woma Nominee While Sen, Reed of | in Few Feet of 5-Year. Missouri Heads Opposition CONLIDGE APPROVES OF Lroaays A% l'renzt jed Motber |4 ) Watery Grave. Mount Morris, N, Y., March 10~ ow a frantlc mother waded into | ice floes (hat were hurtling past, in a vain efort to save her little son marooned on a cake of ice, was learned today when divers arrived here to search for the body of Ed- ward Helnz, five years old, The child was playing on the ice of Genesee Creek near his home when the mother heard his creams. She rushed from the house and saw the child being carried swiftly down President’s Stand, White House Ex- plains, is That Conkrcsq.shmdfl Be Organized in Such a Way That | the Republican Party Can Carry Out Its Campaign Pledges—Sen- ate Contest Funds Voted, DISPLACING INSURGENTS | s s minatn ot nose Planges Into Ice Filled, Swirling Stream Save Little Son n Suceeeds in Getting With- 0ld Youngster When Cake Ice Bearing Him Broke and He Sank Into stream on a cake of fce that had broken loose from the side of the | creek. Mrs, Helnz ran along the bank for a distance and then plunged into the racing current but her efforts went for naught. The ice on which the boy was marooned crashed into another floe and he was hurled into the water. The mother, but a few fect away saw her son as he sank beneath the waters, The body of the child is belleved to have bee ncarrled into the Ge- nesee river by the swift current, ‘Washington, March 10.—The dis- cussion over the nomination of Charles B. Warren to be attorney general was resumed today in the senate. Chalrman Cummins of the Judiciary committee defended the nominee against the charges that have been brought against him, while the burden of the opposition was taken over by Senator Reed, .democrat, Missourl. Opening the debate Senator Cum- mins declared the whole argument of those who oppose confirmation rested on a supposition that Mr. Warren would not faithfuily execute | the laws, Just because he had been | faithful to one client in private life. the senator said, his encmies ap- peared to belicve he would not be faithful to another, “If he is an honest man" | MURDER AND SUICIDE INNEW BEDFORD HOME Police Discover Murder When They Find 9 Year 0ld Girl on Dporstep New Bedford, Mass, March 10.— A murder and a suicide were dis- | covered by police officers last night { who broke open the door of a house | here when they found a nine year | 0ld girl crying on the doorsteps. he con- side her, In another room they found the body of Joseph A. Trem- blay hanging with a piece of wire tinued “he will execute the laws of | Within, they found the girl's| the United States just as falthfully | mother, Mrs. Marie Roberge, dead | and just as diligently as in his 00 @ bed. Her head had been crush- | ey ed by several blows from an axe be- | i Shonld Have Free Choice Senator Cummins sald the presi- dent should have a “free choice™” in the selection of members of his of- f |to a door knob. Tremblay was a boarder in the Roberge home. Both had been dead 24 hours, doctor said. The little girl had been unable to entcr her home Sunday afternoon | and was taken in by a neighbor for the night. She was unable to enter al family, and sponsible for the tion of the law.” Reviewing Mr. Warren's connec- | tlon with the sugar interests, the | Towa senator declared the nomi- | nee's “sole interest in the sugar in- be held execu- | “should faithful terests was to placc the Michigan | Yesterday morning and went to 4 hool. Sugar company on its feet so that it | ¢ AR A half pint bottle contalning “In my opinion,” he continued, | F2ces of liquor was found on the kitchen table. The police said that they learned that Tremblay had been drinking for a week. Mrs., Roberge had not lived with “a combination intended to cheapen the cost of a product is never a vio- latlon of the anti-trust law, except| when it stifles competi so that mn 3t can fix the prieer " ¢ %) hor husband for threo years. Several | ifl Senatort0ummins Maaid it van months ago Mrs. Roberge lpplniul‘ to the police after Tremblay had | been drinking. At that time he had | been warned by the police. M urged that Mr. Warren was not a fit person to hecome attorney general because in 1902 he acted as counsel for presons . connectal mith the | RoDerge formerly lived in Harri American Sugar Refinlng company | B+ T | in the purchase of a large amount of the stock of belt sugar corpora- HAVE PERILOUS R“)E | tions in Michigan; that in 1506 he | participated in the organ of | | the Michigan Sugar corporation. of { \yyjie pigins People in Driverless | which he bacame cou nid after ] 3 wards president; and th the| Car that Runs Down Hill and | = American Sugar Refining company, . - fogether with the Michizan® Sugar | Barcly Misses Witting Train, company and certain other indivdual 1 defendants, of whom Mr. Warren ety AT G FEER | o rilous downhill Mde in a driverless was one, proseeuted later by eta ol ation ot the | automobile, during which the I e l' violauignze chine crashed through the gate at| | a railroad crossing in Tarrytown tGoes Back to 1902 AL S ) “Tn 140 enator Cummi were at Eimsford, N. Y., March 10, A were o road barely missing the rear coach said. “ beel ng train, was the cxperi- | *“There least seven a hill, until it struc an obstruction. | these Michi, N, ki ence late last night of a White| Bug cloniEne sutent NI “"i Plains motoring party of four. i SR ToNDRISlyasmany | In bringing his car to a stop as » corporations. Most of them, Y1the train approached, Albert Ficlls ail of them save one, “wer stalled the engine. As he fleft the money in their aperations, { driver's seat to crank the motor, the “About that time the American | plopine” giipned into ghar and, =3 Sugar Refining company. or nersons | guiharing speed, tore through the ikl o cted with that corporation, be- [ oveq ang raced wildly down the Y gan buyving stock in some or all 4‘f“ | ! corporations. { The car was hurled against a house Warren acted as anattorney for |y tho roadside, where Mrs. Fields | these buvers, paseing upon the valid- { anq children cscaped with cuts from | ity of stacks heing purchase | fiying glass. | “A part, and 1 think it may fairly | T be said, a large part of the stock so purchased was e or 1 TROUBLE IN HERRIN to Wa he ir 1t in blan chasers. | Bixplosion Wrecks Home of Body | Approy President Cc the action of Senate Vists | fully ports | senate republicans fn | Guard of Tate. S. Glenn Young sup But None is Badly Injured. repla insurgents in fmportant | committee places with regulars, and | flerrin, T, March 10.—H. O considers that the question at issue | ©owler, father of Glenn Fowler, ono | is one of making it possible for his the prineiy in the Klan and | phrty to govern the country Klan fighting here, and his wife | The whole question, as t were slightly injured today by an dent sces itgis whether congress 8| oxpiosion which tore out a corner to b mcm zed in such & shion | o Jowler's buteher shop here, t the republicun purty can carry Vowler and his wife were sleep out its campaign pledges, ing the rooms above the store The chairmanship of the fmport- | “ero0 o LT G Sas 2 body ant commi alority onl ouavg for the late S. Glenn Young, each one RN o tomatiecally to mem of t | e —————— tnant party, and there should be no | | from th responsibilities, Contest T'unds Voted Authority and funds for the sen-| g1g Trouble Resumed in Breathitt #te elections committee to begin in- vestigations this summer of the oon tests Involving the seats of Senators Brookhart, Towa I, Minnesota, and Bratton, New , were vot de today by the s Chatrman Epencer expects ave the work of recounting ballots put under way County and Brothers Are Killod— Gunman Flees to Mountains Mexic Jackson, Ky., March 10.—Trouble broke out on old Troublesome Creek, | Breathitt county, yesterday, and two hate. during the recess and to hold hear- { brothers were glain and a third man ings after congress assemblcs, pccused of the killing, has fled to - SR the mount to meagre Watchdog Saves Lives i Tfi\“]rl B T Crsehatten Of Family in Suffield | 19 years 0. ana’Adam Marshail, id, Conn., March 10.—Bark- John D. Nob 25, was sald to awakened I Austin | have fired the fatal shots. Accord home on Hastings } , early [ to the report, Noble's father had today, and he became aware of the |taken the Marshall Loys to his t fact that the lower part of the house | home, TI four men had been was in flames. The family made | drinking, the report sald. when the | their e night clothes los- | trouble N 3 ng practically evervthing in thei-| The Marshall brother were said to t N. R. Lewis owned the hous | have been shot “in the head and be- i ich was valued at mwes 35,000, tween the eyes.” i | wound around his neck and fastened | { | ehines. {dent of the league, | supplement | the | from Horace D, (sibility of PUNCHBOARDS TARGET FOR CIVIC LEAGUERS Executive Committee De- | cides to Consult U, S. District Attorney Salcsboards, or punchboards as | they are more commonly known, will be (h" subject of a new drive | by the Britain Civie Safety League, s decided at a meet- ing of the exccutive ‘committee last night, and as a first step the coop- | eration of the United trict Court at sought. “The committee has received some advertising matter relative to salesboards,” the committee states, which clearly are gambling ma- Since these relate to a of the United States malfls, States Dis- Hartford will be it w with the United States judge at Chicago, through the United States District Judge at Hartford.” The committee has received in- formation that the boards are being handled by a Chicago company. Several other matters were dis- cussed which relate to alleged un- | lawful conditions in this city and matters of civic and political na- ture, Atlgrney. Arthur W. Upgon, presi- | declined to issue a statement this morning, referring his B. Bassette who gave out a typed statement of a part of the meeting’s | procedure. Mr. Bassette refused to s printed statement, 1rr! would not say whether the un-| I wful conditions involved persons r‘l\’\'g’» Q with the enforcement of the | legal nad moral code. Announce- ments at a later date were prom- ised, but the present is not an op- portune time, he explained. A letter was received from Judge George W. Wheeler, chief justice of Connecticut supreme court, in | vhich he outlined ways to help for- ward sentiment in favor of the pro- ! posed law enforcement bill now be- | fore the legislature. The letter was considered in detail, as was an-| other along similar lines, received | Taft of Watertown. The comniittee announced that a Civic League reel, “Broken 1aws,” will he shown on the South Church reen in the spring. s voted to take the matter up | interviewer to Secretary Buell PR FIED HART ST. DISPUTE Property Owners Take Their Fight Into City Court Dissatisfied With Permits Granted by Building Board to Anthony Naples and Anna Lee—Protest Filed on Amherst Strect Structure Charles B. Parsons and B. A. Hawley who, as representatives of a number of Hart street property owners, have flled a request for a hearing before the common council in the matter of permits fssued to | Anthony Naples and Anna Lee for |two family houses on Hart street, have taken the matter into the city |1ng commission’s action. | Papers of appeal have been drawn |by Attorney Donald Gaftney and were served on Town Clerk Alfred L. Thompson hy Constable Ired | Winkle. The appeal will be heard tin city court on the fifth Monday of March. The appeal reads as follow “On the 17th day of November, {1924, Anthony Naples of New Brit- tain made an application for a pr‘r- I mit to the buiiding inspector of t |city of New Britaln, to build a ma- | family house at 260 Hart street. O the day of December, 1924, tho building commission |the City of New Britain refused to | grant sald application. | “For divers and sundry causes and |reasons, the building commission re- |signed and a new commission was | appointed by the Mayor of the City | |of New Britain. “Said newly created building com- | | mission on the 25th day of Februar |1925, after a hearing, voted to grant 13&1:! application, n the 23rd day of January, 1925, |Mrs, Anna Lee made application to the newly created building commis- | |slon to build a two family house at | |No. 265 Hart street. “On the 2jth day of Tebruary, 11925, the building commission of the city of New Britain voted to grar sald application, “Your petitions own and reside in | *Your petitioners own and dein |type within five hundred feet of said | land of Mrs. Anna Lee and Naples. “By the action of the huilding commission of the City of New Brit- {ain in voting to grant said appli itloxs your petitiorers are se‘jous |aggTieved. “Wherefor by virtue of the your petitioners bring this, al, from said granting of the permit by the building commls- Anthony OPPOSE TWO-FAMILY HOUSES court on an appeal from the build- | of | ENTIRE PLANT SHUT DOWN IN WILLIMANTIC STRIKE Not Enough Operatives At Work To Man Machinery—No Further Cuts Planned. Willimantle, tire local plant Thread Co., cratives hegan yesterday as a pro- test against a wage reductlon on | January 12, was shut down this aft- |ernoon because, in the opinion of | Don H. Curtls, the agent, there were not enough operatives to man the machinery, Mr. Curtis sald, in announcing the closing of the plant, that work would | not be resumed until there was suf- ficient help. It is understood that no more than | {400 out of the 2,500 employes went into work today. Mr, Curtis said that he had done nothing about advertising for help {but applications for places would be recelved and as soon as enough ap- | plications were in the mill, gates would be reopened for all who cared [to go fn. | Mr. Curtis sald, in answer to ques- {tlons based on reports among the |strikers that the thread company had contemplated another wage re- {duction in April, there was no foun- dation for such a report and no truth in the claim that the company (had been considering making an- onw reduction. ‘MRS PERKINS AND HER . HUSBAND RECONCILED March 10.—The of the en- Her Brutal Beating by Bandits Brings Him | American | at which a strike of op- | ’TAX INUUIRY WILL RESUME ON MONDAY ‘Senalor Conzens Will Present His Evidence Then PROMINENT JEWISH RABBI ARRESTED ON COMPLAINTS OF COOLIDGE AND STEARNS ATTEMPT AT DISCIPLINE| | This Is What Tnvesetigating ('«,m. mittee Chairman Says \u'ru-mr) | Mellon is Trying (o Do to Him for His Work, disagr umrn s bet o shall unless 12 n'(lhv es internal rev- their superior of tax settler, 1 in evidence bef rs regarding Speeding to Her New York, March 10.—A reconcili- lation between Beatrice ¥ay Perkins | land her estranged husband, Benja- | min, a restaurant man, was reported today as an aftermath of the § 1000 robbery early yesterday morning in which Mrs. Perkins and her ¢ cort, Milton Abbott, cotton broker, | were victims, | She fs 24 years old and was mar- cd to Perkins at the age of 17. They have lived apart for some time. Mr, and Mrs. Perkins received | newspapermen In the blg studio of [ner apartment, where three armed and masked bandits beat and mauled her and Abbott yesterday before de- parting with her store of gems. Her head and arms were bandaged today. Mr. Perki {tve son™ of ¢ i s called himself a “na- liforn told of meet- ing his wife w she was Miss Fink of Kansas City, and of thelr mar- yriage at Chicago, where he owned & cafe, Asked what was meant when jslon of the City of New Britaln, and Ars, Perkins described Abbott as “a |prays that safd court set aside the | friond of the family,”” Perkins de- granting of the permit by the bulld-!clined to repl |ing commission.” | “But my wife and T are happy Ten property owners in the vieln- [now. We sort of drifted apart a few ity of Amherst street ¢ filed o |years ngo. This affair has broug [protest against continuance of work us together again. ‘It's an {1l wind." |on a building being erected by |You know. I'm golng to protect her James lin on that street. Carin |from now on.” {took a permit for a two car garage | “Who can tell?” remarked Mrs. | jat a cost of $350. After reports had | parkins. | been received at the building m«pw Itor's office, an inspection was |and city officials declared the svrun ture has every apprarance of a |dwelling house, with few slgns of | Intent to use it for garage purposes. Carlin claims it is a garage. His neighbors say it is a dwelling and in | viclation of his permit rights and | the restrictions contained in the deed through which he acquired the lot on which it stands, et | l'r}w\r protest, which wiil be read F » mext session of th . K. C. Heald. Yale Geogolist, Takes Stand Today Tn Government's At- tack On Teases. We, the undersigned property | owners of Amherst street and viein- ity y protest to your honorable body, whereas James A, Carlin ob- tained a permit to erect a two mr‘ garage on Amherst street and is| now erecting & dwelling house which | Cheyenne, Wye., March 10—K. I el | (. Heald, Yale geologist resuming |15 @ violation of his permit, and o stand In the trial of Teapot |Which we consider is a detriment to | the sandains,the. (el o [the surrounding property. The deed | Hnmv* lcase agnulment suit today | e | ostif e acalion he “sad. |{OF this property restricts the own- " ' between Teapot Dome and the | Salt Creek Oil Field, and of the pos- drainage from Teapot | Dome into Salt Creek A from J. W. concerne negotiations Harry I' with Alb Fall, then Secretary of Interior, Zevely, by B. | for deposition a lease, on the Teapot Dome Re- serve. The deposition told of the | preparation in 's office of the | lease and cussions between Fal concerning what shoul E at should not be | fncorporated ¢ lease. IR of San Francisco former land office official in charge f leasinz oil lands, testified con- cerning information on claims on Teapot Dome lands which was transmitted to the General Land e in Washington MAKES EMERGENGY CALL On Bridgeport Lineman Taps In Fire Headquarters When He Dis- | covers Blaze in Farmhouse. A lineman England Tele- a fire at the Rridgeport, March of the Southern New phone Co., discoverin¥ farm house of Patsy Puglio, Chest- nut Hill road, today turi in an alarm by climbing a pole “tapping in” with his portable test- ing apparatus on one of the wires. He succeeded in completing his call to fire headquarters but the distance | | which the apparatus to mm} was such that the ho was a \o-‘ tal loss hefore t Tiv T'n»‘ house was valued at $3 1t is believed at an overheated stove n the Kitchcen gtarted the fire, it b | s from erccting a dwelling honse at a cost of less than $3,000, as the cost of the above will not exceed $1,000. where- dwell FREIGHT CONDUCTOR HURT | |h ' FAMOUS DUELIST WOUNDED Lucien Gaudin, Regarded As World's Best, Loses in Honor Tilt With Olympic Champion. By The Amsociated Press 10, a duel Olympic with Ar- ampio mand Ma at Antwerp traversed e fles] hand during the passa arms. The wound was slig | Gandin was unable to continu Gaudin is a lef been matched to m porte, the Belgi first Faris Olym which vhich ¢ tis comm as he was g | time Ga W ne 1 Donald Day of Hopewell Junction Injurcd in Bristol When Thrown | g to Ground From Top of Car. Dristo i Day, a raliroad conductor whose home is at | Hopewell Junction, was thrown from a frelght car in the loca - ay. He hurt his head - re and internal Day was standi vas bel in g on top of g shifted ¢ uries a car r coupled the jolt threw rround, a distance of ab He was attended by Dr on whose advice Francis’ hoepital P e was tak Hartford by WANT WAGE INCREASE Springfield, Mass<. Marc Springfield trolleymer came known t a wage increase in 1 which takes effect Jun s ciation ask for tract day, wiil THE WEATHER —0— For New Britain and vicini- ty: Unsettld tonight and Wednesday, warmer tonight, nesday. probably showers, colder Wed- e e e Ywere the O Re LOCAL WOMAN SUED Defendant Mre Constance Wecorek In 82500 Action By Waterbury Charged Woman—False Arrest l\\(Hl\ SO ll\ll\[ DIES Ch 10.—Prof. Johv tee in the case of Sand and Gravel company of delphia. Frank H. Madison, an ¢ o '-H-: W;" Mu‘h. }xs 00k issue with the decision of the | not to imperil ¢ y of the pub- bard of apeals and review fixing| ¢ N an allowance to that company three| A 870UP of residents o West | mes as large as that fixed by en- I u: tk hood of Whereupon on O'Connell site petition . Greenidge, of the B e e case. Arrested by Government Sleuths he non-metalg| @ Teview, but it must be for the| Rabbi Browne was arrested by . purpose of learing evidence along| Secret Service Agent Weitzman o! division at the| Ines of imperiling the public by es-| the customs division and arraigned re seems to be & ishment of this }um[w:s stand. | in Yorkville court. ided inclination on the part of| : tve E. W. Pape and| When the aged patriarch pro- nginecrs to disagree with their | S man R, W. Erwin of Newing-| duced apparently authentic letters erlor officers, 1t is my oplnion| o0 at loggerheads over the|{rom former Presidents McKinle) that something mus done to| S¥6tem of taxation in the New-| Harrison, Roosevelt and Harding h the tendency of engineers to. | IDEton fire district which s served | was paroled in his own custody ward the taking lssue with the de.| by Hartford water. T water | without bail for examination nes cisions or instructions of their gu.!| MAins now run through Main street| yonday, perior office A and it was gleancd from & hearing| he secret service agent t Commyission Expected To Pave Way For Hearings At Meeting Thursday Night, cavorable action on a zoning map, which is anticipated ¢ a meeting of ol the zoning commission Thursday f“;”} vening, will pave the way for pub- e toy : hearings on the proposed re. | FePresentativ tons, and it is possible that | ‘° NS EUDS hese will be held prior o passage | o d to of the zoning enabling act by the reral assembly The enabhling acts passage 18 vir- sally assured by re as. nbly' similar bllls that have co in the past It s t 1ssign h tion of the ason of t views on ission to every sec ring city vers of the commissioner STORGHEL EXPLAINS E. B. M. Browne, 72, GAS STATION bTAN[] Pastor of Temple Zion Sa\s He (ould Not Re;cct Charged With “An- ' noying The Washington, March | ! T X Application Under tax settlements was determined up- | on today by the epeclal senate in- Condition vestigating ~ committec | Chalrman Couzens sald the cor al to) the Herald) | mittee's decision was made w I PR | reference to his charge yesterday| atttord, SEMarch 0 A in the ecnate that the treasury|Sloner Robbins B. Stoeckel of the | was seeking to “discipline” him by | motor vehicle department, sald this recopening his 1919 tax return morning he had no alternatlve l\uH “Thut matter was not d sed,” - o . eataliiouritataftlinaliven vay|Loi8iB NS Boplicationtotithe Blany) vork pr ng cases and will be | ¢ard Ol Co. for permission to sell ready to present (I beginning | gasoline at the O'Counell site on | Monday. In April ¢ staff will| \est Maln street, his power of re-| prepare further cases for prosen-|, ) L] tation in May before the hearings| SRRy tofcaser w Ao finally are brought to an end on|filling stations would imperil the| June 1 by senate order.” safety of the pu | Sinco the senate will not be In 10 commissioner submits the| scssion during rgmainder of the|, s hearings, the testimony given in pe- | f0/10Wing section of the General eret will not become available to the | § es from Chapter 334 of the public until the new congress as-| Public Acts of 1923: “Section 6. sembles. No station or business for the Disagreements Noted, = POV | en val-| wohesale or retail selling of gasoline tablished or maintained establishing or s I have m the Commissioner of | les stagng | 4 com- a station | for a I"o;n ning able to Stoeckel is agre on taxation bills, that a person "H"lfl" that the Coolidges and Mr. n Smith” pays noth the committee on seems to 17l\rr!‘: bill is headed revamping. | who of the cities and| ttee expressed the ion that “Pape r e is dcterminc and will leave lefeat the e anc was postponed on Repre- | commissio: 1 be tc - i missi '1.‘““ i D eXe | > bill to get money | h rictions, the to of New- is the one vie et el last month with e taci ey brought out at that | ed on the plan : b essar Hartford to Hammonassett Beach, ! via Middletown, Higganum, Kill- Ingworth and Clinton Hartford, March 10.—The f application of A. E Stew f this | cess Ha h, Madis ey arie s Hav ~ 1 2 1 i N T \ IN S = HELD AS RUM RUNNER : Stamjord Cop Stops Antofsts For A Y Traffic Violation and Finds ar Wik 1 19ad of Lignor. ekl . of New S H. H s 1 i S as i 1 |ain w i repres s v will me YW 1 K ¢ 3. News N 1 to stick|® :\Yr. Harding to New York as his Average Daily Circulation For Week Fndmg 12 170 March 7th . [ In The Is Bronx Presi- dent.” Accused of Swamping White House With Let- ters Demanding Return of Half of $25,000 Given Campaign Fund by Hebrew Elders. New York, March 10.—Rabbi E B, M. Browne, 72, head of the American Jewish Seventy Elders and pastor of Temple Zion in the Bronx, ‘was arrested today on a warrant in which the complainants, Calvin Coolidge, Mrs, Coolidge and Frank Stearns, charged him with “annoy ing the president.” It was charged that the rabbi had inflicted upon the complainants an avalanche of letters demanding that he be reimbured for half of $25,000 he claimed the American Jewish Sewmy Elders spent in campaign- | ing for President Coolidge last fall. ar | had received a great number of lot { ters from Rabbi Browne demandir that they pay him $12,500 and th they had replied to many of the letters, The Jewlsh Big Sisters : 2westigating the case. Rabbl’s Claims Rabbi Browne claimed he was t only surviving pall bearer at ti funeral of President Grant, and tha {he had once employed the lat President Harding as a private sec retary. In 1888, he sald, Mr. Hard- | ing had just taken over the Marion Star, and the rabbi, who was sup porting Benjamin Harrison, brought secretary during the campaign. H- exhibited a letter signed with Presi dent Harding's name congratulati n upon Ils birthday and recall! tim Should Go Halves Rabbl Browne said that at the i quest of Tammany hall he had held a convention of the Seventy Elders at Atlanta last year where Governor Smith was named as their democra- tic presidential choice. When Smit! fa nation at the nationa! onvention. Rabbi Browne switched to President Coolidge and spent the ed of no 000 campa g for him, the bbi said. He added that he thoug eside “go Thalve 1 the el Action Was Il|||u‘rm(n- I:_ M. Browne of New rged with annoying Presi- tdge, has been handled s sery which i personal care ¢ settle the but it w to lon, 1 not agres TS to the expressed Mrs as complatr ores © d fror entirely xecut er, tha Mother Kills Herself, Leaves 6 Little Tot: sl N: ) Y in thei Mary a wall Mrs. her life hushan

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