New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 27, 1926, Page 22

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AN OF 62 FINE IN ASSAULT CASE Chiappini May Be 01 But Ideas Kre Young Eugene Chiappini, aged 62 years, of 184 Oak street, pleaded not guilty to the charge of assaulting John Patrick, aged 34, of 64 Acorn street in police court this morning. Mary Patrick, 14 years old daughter of the complainant, testified that Chiappini struck her father in the back and on the he.d with a piece of iron. The trouble started because of a dispute about a cow. Mrs. Anna Patrick testified that Chiappini accused her children of | throwing stones at a cow. Chlappini | used a plece of iron to strike her husband, she said. Chiappini testified that Patrick's | children were throwing stones at his cow and he told Mrs. Patrick to compel them to desist. She told him to keep the cow out of the lot if he did not want her stoned. Pat- rick later threw a stone at him. Chiappini denled having gone to Patrick's house. He sald Patrick came to his barn. He did not use a plece of iron In the fight, he de- clared. Questioned by Judge Alling, Chi- appini admitted he had not seen Patrick's children throw stones at the cow but he took a nelghbor's word for it. Judge Alling asked Patrick it he had attempted to strike and Patrick replied that he did not have a chance to, as the first blow he received he “lay down.” Judge Alling fined Chiappini $5 for assault and Patrick $5 drunkenness. Motorcycle Police- man Alfred Tanguay made the ar- rests. Thomas R. Frawley, aged 22 years of 45 West street, pleaded guilty to the charge of breach of the peace. Mre. Catherine Scanlon, his aunt, of 248 West street, testified that Fraw- ley came to her home about 1 o'clock Wednesday morning = and made a disturbance. She was his guardian and he ac- cused her of being “a crook, a rob- ber, a thief,” and threatened to kill her. He also called her vile names and when her daughter interfered, he threatened both of them. After leaving the house he threw stones at the windows. John Spring testified that Fraw- ley struck him when he told him to leave Mrs. Frawley's home. Frawley said he had a few drinks of beer before going to his aunt's home. He wanted some articles that belong to him. He did not use vile language. He did not strike Mr. Spring. Mr. Spring seized him by the throat and he pushed him away. Judge Alling fined Frawley $25 and costs and warned him that he will go to jfail if he is arrested again. John Marandino ,aged 19, of 117 Pleasant street, Hartford, charged with speeding on Stanley street, did not appear when his case was call- ed. Judge Alling ordered him re- arrested and placed under $190 bond. Marandino was driving a furniture delivery truck when M>- torcycle Policeman Alfred Tan- guay overtook him last evening. Accused Clerks Aiding In Norwalk Tax Probe Norwalk, Aug. 27 (A—Investiga- tion continues of the condition of the books of the second taxing dis- trict of the city of Norwalk. As- sistance is belng given the commis- sioners in straightening out the muddle by the two clerks who were arrested on Tuesday charged with embezzlement of the funds of the taxing district. Percy Dann, Stuart avenue, Nor- walk, and Arthur Sterling, Flax Hill road, Norwalk, are the clerks charg- ed with taking the money. They were released in bonds of $3,000 and $10,000 respectively Tuesday night shortly after being arraigned before Judge Candee of the city court of Norwalk, who fixed Dann’s bond at only $3,000 in view of the fact that he has together with his widowed mother and brother and sister, sign- ed over a house left to the family by his father who dled last week. Sterling also has shown a willing- ness to make full restitution but has not as far as can be learned put the money sufficlent to make up his withdrawals in the hands of the commissioners. Disarmament Conference Preamble Is Drafted Geneva, Switzerland, Aug. 27 (P)— Competitive naval armaments should be limited so as to decrease mis- givings between nations and thereby lessén the probability of war, thus pushing forward the cause of uni- versal peace, declares the preamble of a resolution adopted today by the naval committee of the prapar- atory disarmament conference. This committee has been studying the best methods to reduce navies The disarmament commission has suspended its sessions of Sept. 9. to Sept. 27 which will be at the height | of the activities of the League of | Nations. The drafting committee, | however, will sit without interrup- tion to summarize the work already accomplished. y post baseball | team left (his morning for New | Haven where the game between it and the Ridgefield team is sched- vled to take place as a semi-final | to the final state champion game this afterncon. The teams | were to have played yesterady but the game was called off on account of rain and was scheduled for 10 o'clock this morning. 1t New Brit- ain wins from Ridgefield, the te will play the New Haven 4 tion which won from New Milford yesterday afternoon in the finals. 94 BELIEVED DROWNED Chiappini | for | CONVICTED, EXEGUTED, ALL ON THE SAME DAY Four Special Turkish Court Has Former Officials Put To Death Promptly Constantinople, Aug. 27. (A—Four sentenced prominent unionists, to death yesterday by a speclal court on a charge of conspiring to slay Mustapha Kemal Pasha, president of Turkey, were executed at mid- night in the prison yard at Angora. The executed men were Djavd Bey, former finance minister and long prominent unionist; Dr. Nazim Bey, former minister of education and one of the leaders of the 19 revolt against the late Sultan Abdul Hamid; Hilmi Bey, a former deput and Nail Bey, a former secretary of the unionist army. Today's executions brings the number of men hanged for an al- leged conspiracy against the 1 President Mustapha Kemal to s teen, thirteen well known men hav- ing been hanged recently at Smyrna. Five other members of the com- mittee of union and progress includ- ing formier Premier Reouf Bey, who is at preesnt in England, and Rihmi Bey, another well known Turkish figure, have been sentenced to per- petual banishment. ists on trial were acquitted The result of the trial has caused a deep impression in Turkey. The alleged plot against President Mustapha Kemal and the Kemal government was discovered last June by the Turkish secret police | whor eported that the president was to be assassinated on a visit to Smyrna. Wholesale arrests followed swiftly and after a short trial thir- teen men, all prominent in Turkish politics and six of them members of parliament, were hanged at the street corners along the waterfront of Smyrna. Arrests continued until at one time there were more than a hun- dred men awaiting trial either on charges of conspiring against the life of President Mustpha Kemal or with working to overthrow the gov- ernment. The charges against many of these later were dropped. Minor sentences were passed on a num- br of those remaining until the final sixteen went to trial before the special court on Aug. 3. CONLISHAW AND NORTON SELECTED Assn, Committes Middletown, Conn., Aug. 27. (A— The project which has for its aim the building of a Pythian home, probably at Lyme, was advanced here last night when delegates from Pythian lodges from the state ment and organized the Connecticut Farm Home association This association will direct the pur- chasing of land and the erection of a home for aged Pythians. at $150,000, divided into 15,000 shares, each with a par value of $10. By-laws were adopted following directors elected: Fairfield county, Charles Andres, of Bridgeport; Middlesex county, J. Franklin Dailey of Durham nd John D. Hunderlach of Middletown; New London county, Thomas H. Troland of New London and &'lyd J. Clendenen of Mystic; V@ndham county, Mrs. Nelson Adams of Wil- limantic and Jerry J. Linnehan of Willimantic; Hartford county, Wil- liam P. Cowlishaw of New Britain and William F. Snyder of Hartford. Seven other directors will be elected at a later date. The officers of the are: President, Fred and the association . Ames, Clark Burnham, East Hampton, It was planned to hold an outing at Lyme on Sept. 12, when Pythians will be given an opportunity to in- spect land, upon which an option was taken last December. ROMAN CONSULTA Change in Government Rome, Aug 26. (A—The “Roman Consulta’ or advisory council which aided the popes in the gov- ernment of Rome until the loss of the temporal power in 1870, will be revived as part of the adfmin- istrative machinery in all cities and decree abolishing all municip elections. This decree, semi-offic circles say, will be approved by the abinet on August 30th, The function of the “Consul vill be purely advisory, all executive power being vested in a “Podesta who will combine the powers of or, a local junta and a com munal council The “Podestas” will be named | royal decree for five years witho any restrictl on reappointmer Qualifications demanded as ‘ |ucation and experience wil according to the size of the tow large, medium or small. The nu bers of the “Consulta”, optional towns less than 5,000 inhabita and obligatory in larger towns, v be named in part by the provir |prefect, an appointee of the cent: goverment in Rom nd partly the local economic and and con |mercial organizations. Noakhali, Bengal, India, Aug. 27. | The duties of the "Consulta” wil UP—Ninety four passengers on & lpe to advise the “Podesta” on all at are believed |pygget and tax matters. Members to have been drowned when e [of the “Consulta” may be used by craft capsized in mid-stream and |{he “Podesta” for special admin- broke in two. One hundred passen- |istrative dutles. gers were on board and only six i 4 are known to have been save, Many | The price Is o low and the re- of them were carried away by the swittly rushing water, sults so satisfylng—Herald Classi- fled Ad dept. j All the rest of the sixteen union- | Local Men on Pythian Home| all parts of | The association will be capitalized | alem; 1 Vice-president, Manlius H. Norton, New Britain; Secretary, L. Erwin | Jacobs, New Haven; Treasurer 10 BE REVIVED Italian Cabinet Will Approve| NEW ===—'___ RADIO 70 ASSIST IN FONCH FLIGHT Will B Used in Determining| Weather Conditions |2 New York, Aug. 27 (® — Radio is today turning pilot and charting hitherto uncharted seas, as to| weather conditions, James H. Kimbyll, meteorologist of the U. S. weather bureau, today told the Associated Press that ex- | periments to determinea favorable [ hop off date for the proposed New York to Parls flight of Captain | Rene Fonck and Lieut. Allan | Snody will lead to the commercial use of radioed maritime weather maps by all mariners. As a part of the co-operation of | many agencies interested in furth- | ering the trans-Atlantic flight of the 5 the Radio Corporation of America and the Independent Wireless corporation since August 10 have been relaying twice daily reports from ships at various posi- | tions on the Atlantic, At least 2 English and American ships are | sending these reports, which in- | clude position, wind direction and | velocity, barometric reading and | atmospheric conditions. From these and cable reports of shore stations | from Iceland to the tropics a map | of the weather conditions is drawn up. Thursday’s Map “Thursday produced a weather | map ideal for the flight,” said Mr. Kimball, showing the map with its charted isobars, areas of high and low pressure and arrows indicating wind direction. “Had the plane been ready for the flight, the flyers might have taken off with a west- erly wind back of them, and con- tinued with this favorable wind | nearly the entire distance. Off Eng- land they would have encountered a light southerly wind, not strong | enough to interfere. The weathe: while cloudy, was not rainy, and| | the visibility good. | Plane Not Yet Ready | The plane is not vet ready, how- ever. Local conditions have not been as favorable as those further away, and fog has kept the S-35 in its hangar at Roosevelt field. After the ship is ready, forecasts | wil be sent to the waiting flyer: When conditions are pronounced | |ideal a map will be rushed out to | Roosevelt field, to be carried along | on the plane on the flight. Added | radio data will be sent from ships on the Atlantic direct to the $-35, through its cal letters WOP, to ap- | prize the pilots of any change dm—.} Ing the 36 hour flight. I “Such ocean weather maps will | some day be regularly available to | all mariners,” said Mr. Kimball, Weather Map Plans “The data is at present avail- able and needs only an appropria- tion from congress for an organi- |zation to be completed, Experi- ments are now being carried out | by the weather bureau and the |navy department in Washington, to perfect a method of sending the weather maps by radio, much as | photographs have been transmit- | ted. Ships everywhere cou re- ceive complete weather maps and thousands of dollars lost by delay |and storm damage could be saved. “Even before the map transmit- ting device is perfected, it would | be quite practical to transmit the |information from a broadcasting | station at stated hours daily. The |sca would be divided into lati- | | tudionally and longitudinally mea- | sured areas or clocks, for which | | the weather conditions would be | | broadcast, in order, and <mp=} | {would pick up the information ap- | propriate to their positions, READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS lution ordering an investigat BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1926. YOT SURPRISED | ENTHUSIASM AT while General Condylis forms a new RS | bi d little sur- “Training religious life” was the subject of an address by Mrs. Rose hop of the Tth Episcopal dist the country in & move to terminate ‘Chmrman Winslow has returned to dozens of smaller controversies on |Washington to assume a directing :the attention of the entire board, ! don. it i L. Weller. Addresses by Dr. C. S.|individual lines. hand for the other four members in o Ol M Whitted, secretary of the A. M. E.| Tney are elated over tho spirit of |thelr efforts foward mediation of | Zion ministerial association and [cooperation which they sald was ex- |Minor troubles throughout the coun- Along That Pangalos Government | Bishop W. L. Lee of Brooklyn, fol- Ihibited in New York betwees | try. n the ! : lowed. A double pageant on Africa [representatives of eastern railroads In Greece Would Fail. o [un‘w be given tonight. s and tralnmen’s rotherhoods in| A court of antique dealers, to set- = ki - OmOrrow’s program w @ as [agreeing to arbitrate the employes’ | 3 = thens, Greece, Aus. 27 (—mne | [)eledates Show Degp Interest in | Gemands for & §1 a day wage ‘in. | !le dlsputes rearding the value, age : y,v,uly\hly;\?:nr;.\x:omn;wmp. !!rr_u.’ ‘ Prafse Servlcs Jed. by Rev. G H, lorahsa: or genuineness of curios and obe dent Pangalos, w is being Stat f.Ansonia Conn. 2 S - a i held in the fortress prison of Izeddin GOHVBH IOH Plflglafll f\r;',‘lf’“ I,‘ ;)f:”,fsmr‘) A. Wall With no cases before it requiring | J€cts of art, is held regularly in Lon- | government, h ssionary hour. Special subje rise among foreign observers. \usiasm is being shown 0 subjec T PRt e Ik o ol thiar h{s“;:: England conference of {ricany geliools and New Huss gime as a dictator in Greece would Zion churches in progress 45 pare Iniiie e g iME, Jon ) be ended by the same force which |at the local church. The con cef ESPItnesBUSlon presidant’ (of thp he used to seize power only a year | Will continue today, tomorrow and| Boston district and Jrs = Rosa 1.| E O ago—the army. Sunday. Yesterday the session| Weler president of the Hartford | Pangalos, these observers point [opened with a devotional exercise|district presiding. 5 | Out. ad notiths cholcs of theGresi |laad! by Fovs O By Hall tof Abiisat) - b anoxtsol 2ll C“‘“";"'e_"‘- sta- ) N OU people but vas a nomince of the |boro, Mass., and Rev. William Glas- :ji::."::T],"r:y?:r::nrr(;f‘ri‘\‘\lznlfvn e army officers, ~ho, under the inspir- |gow of Amherst, Mass. The s k ) t s ed- fon of General Condylis, 8o recent- |ture was read by Miss Althea Jack- | I¢2Hon tion, ly turned against him. The Greek |son of Waterbury. Rev., William people, as in all recent revolutions, | Glasgow led in r, wention. have looked on and have accepted | An extensive plea for conversions| . STHIO% \“i‘ 7{’2:; B. last days of his regime |Rey. L. W. Wells. H. Hall| "~ Rt Atn s lost ground rapidly. One |jed in singing, ching to| ,, Convention outing trip esman after another was arrest- | zion » during s time the dele.|the Connecticut ey newspapers were suppressed, and | gatos formed a o e editors arrested in a desperate ef- | aing with a general handshak- One Hour Labor Strike fort to stem the tide. The Greek | i e ing. Is Planned in Mexico | exchange grew weaker steadily while | Aremcy ware hade Byiw: o i exico City, Aug. 27 (A—A one n and the director of promo- | selection of place for the 13*"‘ E Jones, of | rrovidence, |ff COUCH HAMMOCKS $11.20 $17.20 $22.25 | Regular $14 . ... up | 3-BURNER GAS STOVES Regular $21.50 ............. 3-BURNER GAS STOVE the cost of living rose until it was{ 5 s i t e i e e i praggin of Amherst, Mass. pour strike by all union workers (Enamel) Regular §27.75.... g the World War. |ana Bishop W. L. Lee. Briet te-|iiroughout ths federal district, i L S o | marks followed by Rev. A.J. Gor-|which will tic up all transportation | -BURNER GAS STOVES e : ford. and industries, has been ordered by |H 7 - Philippine Senate e | In the atternoon session devotions the exceutive hody of the federation |k (Gray Enamel) Reg. $35.... & Authorizes robe | were led by Rev. 1 of At-/of unions. The strike will take place [# £ & % Manila, Aug. 27 (P—The Philip- [tleboro. Delegates tors pres-|shen the supreme court decides the |ff CHINESE DECORATED GRASS $3 68 e av adopted a rese.|€nt Eave a synopsis of their re-|question placed before it by the |[ 0Q. D | .| Mexi Matoh company ax 1N RUGS; Reg. $6.00 Do Powell of Malden, portance of a training school men's arbitration committee of three into the a boards e be | ance of the session. on the importance of the eMthodist Mrs. Pierce of |despatches from Zamboanga report ing differences between Moros and | Christian Filipinos over the recep- |church was rcad by tion there vesterday of Carmi A.|Boston. Church schools were dis-| Washington, Aug. 27 (P—With its Thompson, Pre.ident Coolidge’s per- |cussed by Rev. M. D. Hopkins of first big case on the way to arbitra- sonal representative, who is making |Boston. Miss Alberta Green of ‘tion, members of the new board of | an economic and political survey of lle epoke on “The Progress mediation set up to handle railroad | the Philippines. ian Religion.” d | whether the supreme court or work- consti vities of ‘“certain elements Mindanao who, the senate believes, (I € chure the highest law in Mexico in labor |are engaged in creating ill-feeling [ Miss Ma Eard of Attleboro, disputes . The Match company between Moros and Christian Fili- | Mass., made a report on the North-(subsidiary of the International pinos in (hat isiand. iflrm con nce. Rev. F. Ander- | Match corporation of New York. The resolution was prompted b: n of Providence, R. I, presided at| & parer| Mediation Plans for Railroad Troubles |1abor disputes hz-o spread out over | | i BABY CARRIAGES, Without Reservation, at a Reduction of. .. tute | 20% | A CIESZYNSKI & SONS is 4 Tel. 601 515-517 Main Street SATURDAY SPECIALS AT HOSIERY BAGS THE NEW BRITAIN VELOURS FRIGs VELVE LS $5.00 A NEW SHIPMENT OF VERY CHIC MODELS | IN ALL FASHION’S LATEST COLORS Marion Hat Shop CALLAHAN & LOGASH 95 WEST MAIN ST. TELEPHONE 3683 MARKET CO. 318 MAIN ST. PHONE 2485 Morning Specials 7 to 12:30 Fresh C iHl::;IBUI;GZ Ibs 250 | Lean Fresh or | T Smoked ‘S;((;UELDERS m23c | \' I tam . 2 m33¢ | Bewt He's always satisfied since trading 42c¢ | at The N. B. Market POTATOES peck |} PORTERHOUSE S RS SIRLOLY k lb 39 I feaks Ib. J9c : A]Fbay Specials :— ' Boned p Special L™ Roasts £oied *™ Ib. 35¢ LEGS GENUINE SPRING LAMB ..... Ib 38¢ b 28 'KERCHIEFS | OSTRICH BOAS FRICASSEE FOWL ............. ¢ ROAST PORK ....................... 1 28¢ ROAST OF VEAL .................... 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