New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 7, 1926, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press R0 'pm_u.u;“ 3RITAIN, ESTABLISHED 1870 dq ) L1ngr eyg l":nuoqun) S STRUCK BY CAR, THEN ™ v VIO RUNOVER BY ANOTHER AllTfl "N 'fimmlflg WHOSE DRIVER SPEEDS AWAY J Direct to Headquarters WRITES Joseph Skibo, 56 of WIN&TH] WOMAN BIE MlddletDWfl, Klll“d on| hairman Cadwell Prepared To Go T0 SUPT. SNAVELY Way 1o Work T, ATERAUTDACCENT -0 less Natisfactory Reply On Mornmg —Death Ma- ( ar Overturns on Curve at :mm-.mm. 15 Made, chine EscapesIn Darkness. favorable atan's Kingdom, New Hartford Cudwell of the raliroads committs the common council to Superin- J. Snavely asking imme- 08, Tepairs and renova- Winsted, Jan. 7 (1) iz ocal ruilroad station, the ning Rebillard, 82 years oid, of 461 peiition will be carried direetl Returning street, Hurtford, died in the Litch- he main oftices of t w u\)v fleld county hospital toduy roud, Councilman Cadwell to- 1 automobile accident nounced, orning. I months Miss Rebillard, nd other officials « Charles Rebillard of with the feved a fractured ler automobile, opernted her t panion, ¥dmond Dixon of Court, Hartford, turned turtle double grade crossing at Kingdom in New H Miss Rebillard was thrown out of the machine, striking on her head. pinned beneath the nd was rescued by wrmer living nearby ous woman and then to tl ly ion ot t In Norwich, Workman Prostrate on Tracks, Ground to Death | Under Wheels of Trolley. ' Snavely railroad council committee to suggested chang Thig took place on July 9, and on October 10, the railroad authori- of projected im- : plan was not ex atisty and additions that time no work 1 the depot. John | Cot lwell's letter calls yon | attent : long period of time lapsing since the July conference nd irmation as to what the da this il w by Lenox on th Satan's wriford. ens mitte Ve 10, submitte provenme Middletow Skibo, ag 5 section of Middletown, killed this morning while on his way to the Russell Manufacturing ‘company where he was employed. He was struck and k ope -Joscph the Long Hill was enot on 1ds aske has been don cilman Ca ocked down 1 by Wil- 1 Stuyvesant «wvenue, Irvington, N. J., and then a scceond car, its driver wssed over the hody Struck By Second Auto ion to t took docto pita Dixon was not Dixon said he not familiar with the road and that the car over- The accident occurred in Durliam | turned when he applied the avenue, near Pine Grove cemefery, 'ufter rounding a short curve and not far from Skibo's home, He ' car crossed the the Canul [0f concrete or other similar wag walking along the side of the | road and landed upside down on the tance, relocation of the settees road when struck by the Smith ma- | Central New England road tracks, |1nd radiators to avold congestion in chine and was dragged about 50| Miss Rebillard and Dixon had been | the middle of the building, S TR o i PART TIME INEVITABLE ~ DIFFICULT TO' FRAME IN -JR HmH SGHU[]L Question Arises as to How | taining Officer Cole of the Meriden | He police department and a companion Far Country Can Go in Its Rules drove up. As they in- ui seriously hu s in the sanitary accom- hoval of the present or and substitution of a floor tracks of some vestigating, a third s to- | vards Middletown approached and passed over the prostrate body of Skibo, The third machine did not #top, and the operator switching (\{x his lights continued on into the city. The number of the machine was not | secured. [Not Enough .\'pacc to Coroner L. A. ordered % = Care for Fall $mith held on a technical charge of | anslaughter under bonds of $1,000, T Ktopey I e Enrollment a by | i Autopsy is to Be Held An autopsy will be performe | ledleal Examiner Calef in an effort {» learn whether Skibo was killed | The o iy Smith's car or the machine that | b ]1’-,1,“ 'm & pussed over him later. 22l oy i Ol Skibo sustained a f Buperinsend note 3 xplained today ) 0?,‘(,”“ i Al o ekl ar schools will be incres IR 0 although there | modations for only Previous to this year's n raduation there 1 been accommodations to care of the enrollment. Gradus from the Central Junior sehool will take abont from that school, togetl 57 stndents t from the Elihu which brings the total dents. Tnquiries among lof the clementary the fact that approximate students arc sent to the L 1 . lith o ior high sehools this Iebru ephion motorman stated 1 By The matter c e iie first saw Forsyth, the i L peared to be lying on Bt 0 be attemptir o i he T S g the car to a &top be- | |/ an but that this was Washin, oust gton, Jan. T (P—The committee considering a bill ilate radio found itself con- plating=unis ¢4 ¢d possibilities 10~ lay when it attempted 1o go into the international scope of the situation. The question that tangled the com- mittee was how far the United States could go in regulating the passage whove ifs territory of messages des- ted from one foreign station to ! Major J. J. irmy schoul plants m at an opinfon of School H. Holm that in Se th extensic who ptember junior to 1hout six 1,300 students Norwich Man Rilled Norw!eh, Jan. 7 (P—Jot syth, ahout 40 years old, au em- ploye of the stern Conneeticut Power company of Uncasville, died e W. W. Bakus hospital this morn- ing as the result of a fracinred skull sustained when he was struck by a trolley car of the Connecticut company at the Montville Line last vight. The trolley car, which was yunning from Norwich to New Lon- don was in charge of Conductor Al- Lert Vetter and Motorman Wisthrop Mauborgne of the signal corps asserted that the had no such n or- = government power, The wi ion High students ness added that the arm found it difficult carry on th necessary experiments in radio be- iL did not want to interfere ondeasting wave lengths. is opinion that the radio lustry sliould be so o) nized that milit communica- take precedence imme- to the raduat Burrit chool wipal ools pri time of v e s could Iy to he the Interc company artment discrimin commercial radio competition cgraph and telephone ty of iking care of t of charg 164 in enroliment rce by crowding the superintendent an ideal situation possible way ney. Suy s of must comm class said on take carc of the Holmes feels, A short time announced the was skating on thin fee as fur as fimior high school tation ened. He said posevelt elementar hool astern section of 1 in Today emerge impos: Tt was thought po syth might have been struck by an utomobile and thrown on the cks, Forsyth left New London at 45 o'clock night and alighte ym a trolley car at Pe - sze. He 400 from ye trolley stop when struck by the £outhbound car. He lved with his sister. Mrs, Al Junlon rt Bonfory at Uncasville and had | 4 Crreal en employed by the Fastern Con- | (58 0F Septet ctient Power company a littl L] there He g ca) | accommodations. With the ituation where to in trans-oceanic busi- the competition sible that For- ago Supt. Tolmes gehool department cannot see that nd telegraph the| The } the sit at home committee wider pov commere National conc that for { sc in the | which would assign ou » city W - [the department dorsed by the | tion of Broade; structed so that it mi ed into high = said th way to t sitnation wor rt time school | unior 10 FILL VACANGIES IN DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEES | I'red G. students on p: unless are additional VERGHANTS DISTPPBAR two junior } some Holfclder and Stanley Sa- moraczyk Expected to Be Deputy Marshal Unable To Finish to go fo ¢ time plan, nior school wi 3 s apparent. When asked his to disposir Named Tonight part Edward Vassos And James Va- Fred G. Holfelder Samoraczyk are slated for election the democratic town committee a meeting which is to take place tonight democratic headquarters in ign’s block, and which fis opening gun in the spring and Stanley lides, Market Owners. old Burritt of Main and at he would ot 1 the property other accommoda d into bankrupte and James Va. nt to rshal of court to After being forec ey, Edward V ldes, local by parts unknown, a the United States New Haven has court. The deputy marshal has bee able to serve notice of the procecd ings upon the pariners who'were do- ing business under the of the New Britain Market Cc biock on Main street, Their store was closed under a writ issued by Nair & Nair on behalf of Louis Croll and other creditors. CHARLESTON FORBIDDEN well Known Dance Step is Bananed B on the Main str lared 1t any plan to sc until there werl to tak care of the now in attendance there. ritt school is part of Burritt Junior High school inessmen, W deputy n district reported Iast Holm avor Sover to be th campaign Holfelder is expected »mas Hinchliffe, now in the first ward, of the firm of V nd has t active in lemocra politics. La spring he the party’'s nominee for alder- in the first ward Samoraczyk is connected with Drug Co. He is slated as cessor to William P, Sikora in the tiftth ward, Sikora having resigned. the to suc- filling He is sh & tions students The Bur- |2 "y the Elihu plant BIG RADIO BUSINESS noun- Holfe name tic n the Clark st Mr he City Goods Valued At Nearly Nine Million Dollars Exported During First {11 Months of 1925, Was Full of (.m, Beer and Washington, Jan, 7 (® — 7T ldwide interest in radio was il- Mary |UStrated in comtmerce department {figures showing radio goods worth 8 re expor 11 months of Williamsburg, Va., Jan. T (#—The |pared with $4,950,7 harleston, the latest step to invade [same period of 1 the dance hall, was forbidden hvln\i The radio ln\r\lls now constitut e the college of Wiliiam and Mary. (12 per cent of the total foreign |fatal “Dance, after all,” it was held, (electrical trade o United States. | Asked why she tried should emphasize grace and beauty, | Another demonstration of the pop- she replied and as the fal preserves |ularity of |‘£u was noted in a Ber-| T w 1l of gin, beer cither of t qualities 1t should trade report showing that 400.- | whiskey and just drank it hold no place on the program of |000 visitors had attended a radio ex- | plenty in hopes that it college dances.” hibition in that city. | enough.” | { wor Chicago, Jan. 7 () —Evelyn Nesbit Thaw will recover from her attempt at suicide. She She at College of William and Soctal Events, is sorry. | first made this statement to her when told that the t ounces of powerful disinfectant drank T would not be physician today eigh uesday to end her est and 1 drank | would be COX | the com. | uns to do and when it | improvements sought | police | compete | difference | Whiskey, Evelyn Explains | NEW BRITAIN HERALD NECTICUT, THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1'.1213. Bride Of Two Weeks Asks Police To Help Her Find Missing Hubby Tells New Haven Police She's Especially Worried Since $5,000 and $700 Ring Have Gone With Him Henry rding 10 Vew York ) lica today for aid in her s |her hushand, who, she el d her last n N 1) Her husbar € T lay arch for time | Al her he ) 2 Davi twho she says told cany DAY OFF SCHEDULE 0F ;’I]IAMUN[] NECHLACE 1S FIREMEN IS CHANGED | ONE WEDDING PRESENT mnuiss ion Believes )I()-!l"z\ll\il}' Heirloom Is Given notony C'an Be Avoided | by New Rule ! i | [ to Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt y off every six % on a different day. S b o S clal meeting of the fire b lcelded instead of allowing | firemen o day off every | they would have a different < ok on spe- | | which | | today | Mrs. Willi d time Y oft | vanderbilt This week the off day turday, and ne on Iriday, with corresp | difteront days each It pointed | low] the men to have | day each week, | become tired of having the same day o wl will b xt week | ndingly | ® week. Sl that by al- ‘ Mrs, a diffarent | herse foen will not | s Virginia Fait, monotony of [of James Gralam | free all the | United States ser However, the shift to an o married x days will not allow the men any extra free days dur-| ing the year, William McKay, ar No. 7 fire house which will be on Stanley street, presented | plans of the building for the proval of the board. A few minor changes were made, after which McKay was told to start work on final plans. They are expected 1o | be completed in ahout two weeks. | The new firehouse 18 of an unusual design, with the appearance of a | quaint English home rather than a fire station Many of the most {modern conveniences will be | bodied {n the structure, | It also was declded that in the future any fireman who wishes leave to go out of the city | must, a0ply. to his captain or lieu- | tenant, who in turn must get the | #pproval of the leave before it be- T cd comes effective, 1In the past the |ay's ceremony whic | firemen have mercly asked the | formed by ey | heads of the varlous fire houses | Phy of St. when ve the city, [cathed I SEN. BINGHAN'S EAR DRUN 5 o6 2 PIERCED IN OPERATION """ ted that she was s the Serfousness of Recent Illness Comes | FIRE N WINSTED couple | to Light—Patient Believed on e ith was set fol at the Vande 1f re “rnoon was e cefved o daug: the from Neva vear. Mr, amily association. Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt brid et a dinmond br Harold Vanderbilt wpphire, rubies H. Muckay itect for the built his ap- 1 1monds. 1 Miss let Mac Iair rose pre nond 1 days when from Irish fmm to wealth by mining 1 Mackay's ¢ Just both Lhose ‘”\’rlyn”‘ W ling A house {n G4th street | been presented to the last uiam‘ em- return from Only tives and chiefly r friends of to tend ntimatc € fnvited to- per Mur- will be the Patric Jomas it has by undergo sonth on t1 And Road to Recovery. | Quality Store Damaged o1 i GEOR . MAN | Automobile Sales Building—Dan- ! - | ) Ja {tor Hiram Bingham continues to im |prove from fliness that has had m lald up since b Christma The wound in his car where it was | necessary for surgeo to plerce the | ear drum to reliey tion and | allay the inter lealing nicely, it e scnator was | Fhysicians to sit up in bed a while today. About noon he |word to his office at the capitol to nd up to the Powhatan hotel some |und the more important 1. No |dea |mail has been sent to him since he | The firemen were returned to Washington last Monday |born fight for an hot from Virginia Hot Spri where | Tha Joss is estimat and Mrs. Bingham and their five {pp, SHI {sons spent the Christmas holt Jo | Mrs. Bingham and the senator's of- |fice force considered his request to | | see the mail a very encouraging sgn, | but care taken not to sen | Ihis hotel any too kerious problems or too many letters for fear the sen- | The la ator, a most active man when well, new y might overtax himself. | whe Senator Bingham's physielans |the ¢ tated today that if he continues ta |aparty |improve as he has during the past |strc |week he should he able fo leave his apartment by next Mond nd per- {haps go to the senate by the middle of next week. i : A Last Rites of Church Given Cardinal Mercer Brussels, Belgium, Jan, 7 (P | Cardinal Merecler's condition was unchanged this morning, perature normal but puls was announced that | bulletin would be issued age Is Put at $10,000. Winsted, Jan, 7 (P—8 driven to mine n brok« footwe by Antor ;\L\m t, oppos y his| T did ttle jage to the stor sent |their way to a blind ng ved nes |story buil Ave TS, oceupi corporation, ot he buildings ned by H. V. | Apartment HmN‘ on puth High \l rgest real es .\'uld Wis Co rad block rer sur trical further imp fEEnIY medical iuring the DIES AT AGT New Haven, J Hathaway who died | the oldest voter in the voted for all repu president of the Ur John C. Frer Coolidge in 1 no o1 t fs learned that Cardir cier last night expressed a d |recejve the sacraments, although his {condition had not become aggravat- |ed. The sacraments were adminis- |tered in strictest privacy. mont ir 1S 102 YEARS OLD TODAY Bangor, Maine, Jan. 7 (A—Mrs Overlock who celet birthday t to the |Judge Walsh Warns All Lawyers to Be on Time Bridgeport, Jan. 7 (® — Judge John J. Walsh in the criminal court of common pleas today issued a warning to lawyers tn he ¢ when thelr cases were eal terday when the appeal of Vanik of Bridgeport, charged with breach of the peace was reached attorneys for the defensa were not ready and the bond was lared forfeited. Judge !,,V) would | but warned Irnu?d on Jongevity the oldest state active ir | posea woman in Althoug! erest in polit to woman T THE WEATHER —o Hartford, Jan. 7.—Torecast for New Britain and vicinity Generally fair today and Iri day; cloudy tonight Walsh that be permittcd a tr the atorneys t “the | would not dance attendance attorneys.” —_— ~I‘IIGH'J'EEN PAGES lerbilt | {su pract Average Daily Circulation For Week lmdmz 12’522 Jan. 2nd .. PRICE THREE CENTS BAKER, ON VERGE OF TEARS, DENIES KNOWING ANYTHING ABOUT USES T0 WHICH GILPATRIC PUT STOLEN CASH ”,fiH{ PRUB}, [y BONDS PUT AT $2[] 000 Does Adnut However, MWWWMMWMW&W*WMm of Former Treasurer’s Denial M | Loose Dealings At sented Gonlic Ie’mal Data The Putnam Bank. OONTROL CALLED UNFAIR I His Case Nolled in Police ehagsi: ' Alrflllxl‘»:‘ Court in Order That National ba Federal Authorities May | Take Jurisdiction Prosecution, Pre- To Have Hcalmg in U, S Court on Fourth Tues- day in February wneral Manager of Rubber s Associa- Putnam, aring bef ed oner 1 ernoon, lited fourth y Haven in bonds of When arraigned on ton of America Tells of Unsatis- was glven ¢ States com- Corbett this a8 bound over to district court on ! factory Negotintions With British | m mn Tnterests, 1 oth Hartford, Guy | Ul Baker, charge 1 the embezzli- o i ment of $16,300 of the funds of t1 Cohen, a plea of | First bank of Putnan guilty was entered that the in- { and who was held in bonds of $2i.- . rests of 4 at | fully protec Baker has to guilty but on the ady United George H National (000 on the nolled in ting that charge, had his case police court this morn- © might be turned over [ to the authorities. Baker sccure his release a d been held the county j have counsel w der the state warrant since Sat- cd in court, He was taken back confessed his pecu- Hartford county jail United States Sheriff Albert P. Ma ’ Colen. ¢ said he felt much Hearing This Afternoon than he did last federal warrant, signed on 1 dented that he | Monday by United States Commis- into making a confession | sioner Frederic J. Corbett, was not -1 the theory of a black- | served on Baker this morning.: His hich had been a d, | hearing was set for 2 o'clock by ing that such action as he had | Commissioner Corbett, At 10:30 taken had been entirat | this morning, during a recess pe- He said he would be|riod of the police court over which willing if able to assist | Judge George L. Day presided, te authorities in any w Baker was taken Dback to a cell up Gllpatric's operations | there to await the arrival of Deps : or, 1f such appeared | uty United States Marshal Allen <in the Uni . He declined to com- | Marsh, ussions which 1 ) status of his father's | Baker Vo d | q CHARGE MAZZONE WITH, ILLEGAL ENTRY TOU. S, v Principal in Sunday Shoot- ing to Have Hearing Tomorrow announced nent 1ssion the ould probal cary Kel- wh docu- Attorney com- | t for ntion that the how better | I:Hu to hellog Adress arker of consumer Zrou: 1o 'lh d vy Nervous ! “I thought he would be here be- fore now,” Baker remarked to a reporter when the mars] had failed to put in an appeurance twenty minutes before court was opened at 9 o'clock, Baker was visibly nervous, and during tle court gession as he sat alone in the front row in the prisoners’ dock, hie clasped and unclasped his hands. During the latter part of the ses- | sion he sat with his hands in bhis pockets, and with unfeigned inter-. est in the court proceedings, Prior to the court session he conversed for a considerable period concern- ing his own case and the affairs of Gilpatrie. “I have told all re I8 to tell concerning mys Baker again declared, “As I have before said, 1 did not come up here to make half a confession.” Knew Gilpatric Stole Baker, while admitting that he 4z- | had knowledge that Glipatric had this | heen playing loose with the funds of the bank, denied he had any knowledge of where the money went. He declared he did not know what Gilpatric did with the money, denjed once more that he had n with Gilpatric when the for- mer shier of the bank disposel of any of the nds. He disclaimed knowledge of any of Gilpatric's as- sociates, and asserted that he had en John Burns of Hartford in | the bank but once that he remem- bered, and that was to cash a grouj selves h repr of forcign any to or 1ection > \~~||v ances Given oduy, A. .. Viles the Rubber As- 1, told of ne of th British Ru iation, beginning in Assur had been | success from the he said, , that pro- given Americon jm- | cd to the state de- nee As intimated in the Herald yester- | v, Louis Mazzor con- | ed with a shooting scrape Sun- when Glovanni IBuchard was |shot at 152 Tremont street, has been h a more serious crime Immigration Officer Willlam Hartford, is in New Brit- | n this afternoon, questioning Muz- whom he believes is in ¢ illegally. ugh Mazzone steadfastly sticks to his story that he is right- fully in the United States, he admits wing gone under another name in New York, where he rather inde uitely states, he resided el street. Lot intere th 5 5 | day M e Stevenson trol of production in ial possessions was My unsound wrk, of r price hearing Hoover was s ac- house on d | examination | zone became | From now on | I'm dumb!” this morning Pros- Joseph G. Woods Hungerford for a c : thelda - | check. Attorney Thomas F. Mc- | counsel for Mazzone told state has no one, for he can r passport showing that > {8 legally in How- McDonough did not produce passport this mor: t Mazzone's bond be | 1 tated that with breach 0" AL J,.JN UM fl] PROBE 5.7z e has not even been al- | on Gilpatric's to go to the county jall, but | Baker said, “I only wish I knew. I ust stay in a dirty cell down- |am willing to help all I can, but the lawyer s | there is not much that T know.” Your honor, T resent that state. | On Yerge of Tears exclaimed Detective Serge Beker's lips trembled as he dia- im P, Mc “Qur cells are | 1 his own peculations from e bank, and it was with difficulty e y are as clean | that he restrained himself. He re- 2 p 1" answered | peated a previous assertion he had Attorney ‘nnde that it was a desire for lux- It was nced that the case |urjes he did not have that was re 1 until tomorrow l sponsible for the theft of the bank's ee will be placed on a | fynds, hher 1 tell you not In police cou uting Attor) wsked Judge s Has No New Facts He asserted he did not remem Ler when he first became suspicious of Gllpatric, and further said he |could not recall the transaction | that confirmed the suspicions that | the cashier was using the bank's for private purposes. He said could throw no light on the ansactions of Gilpatric involving e funds, fund ng. the investigators avoring to check up financlal operations, Senate hrdumn Will Delve Into Various Phases Tomorrow Wil When pressed for information as to the time he first took money and t{from what source, Baker professed that he could not recall. He Worked By Himself : | He again reiterated that Gilpatrie il dn thofatm he re. no knowledge of his pecul NoeeLnE "“hrl“ SUl- | tions, nor did any other persom. W\M i r:fl‘:‘:”(‘(‘;‘ certainly did not work with ¥ the police Mp\. #ilpatric in taking money from the shooting ‘Wi i ban! Baker asserted. g Was acc fental on Sunday, as they state Bu.| BAaKer was alone in court this Caireiterated “ one's statement | MOTNINg, not even having the con- shooting was unintentional, | S0!INg presence of counsel, Andrew Buchard, brother of Glo. | GOIng back to the days when the nl, was in the room at the time | TUd Was started on the bank in f the shooting and disappeared | Putnam and he had assured pa- shortly afterwards. Although he has | trons and others that the bank was been found it is probable | Solvent, Baker said he did as he t he will be produced in court to- ) was instructed by Norman 8. Bean, " by McDonough. Police dn'c\h. federal bank examiner of ) at the man is outside of | Boston. *“I think the examiner at that time thought the bank was solvent.” Baker said, “In factl be- FILED | leve it was some time after the (M —Appeal was! bank was closed that they dlscove ite court today | d for certainty the bank was ¢ of Prot insolvent.” e Bartram fixing the inheritance| Baker said hia going to Florida the usual |tax at about $185,000 on the estate lot Robert Hirsch. is still in the hospital as a | morrow satisfled t committee atlure will | to for | court y from of Inot yet permit th refusa morrow [mor not t} in the ssion it orrow be cad of before is was de- nmi mmittee, (Continued on Page 18)

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