New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 11, 1926, Page 1

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‘llllng ‘Projaey Awiqry s3mg mop. IO Wi FINAL EDITION “PV LI V" BRITAIN HERALD ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, Average Daily Circulation For| W Sept. 4th ... eek Ending 13,373 CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1926.—EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS SPAIN’S RESIGNATION FROM LEAGUE FORMALLY GIVEN TO SECRETARIAT THIS MORNING Acton Follows Rejec- RS, GLENDENNING 1S tion of Her Demand goynren iEp DIVORCE for Permanent Seat on League Council. |Wife of Norwalk, Conn, Man Was Former Du Pont Girl Swiss Government Cele- Term in Congress Malay Arcmpelago RC-HNN‘"\ Yook Just Like Pictures On Chincse Upon His Record of Effort and Red Forked | Declares He Seeks Flags — Have Achievement, Tails Rather Than ms‘[ Tongues and Their Length of Service. Spiked—Sought Since 1912, New Haven, Sept. 11 (® — Con- brates Entry of Ger-‘ many by Reception to| Various Delegates. Reno, Nev, Sept. 11 (A—A ro- mance between an heiress and the E jent son of a mail carrier, begun at sea on board the steamship Aqui- {tania has ended in divorce. | Alicia Glendenning, the adopte | daughter of Alfred 1. Du Pont, the 11 P |Delaware powder manufacturer, has the |been awarded a divorce from Har- |old Glendenning, member of one of |the oldest families of Norwalk, | Conn. i The Glendennings were Geneva, Switzerland, Sept =~Spain today resigned from league of nations. nitely £ News that Spain had decided to resign from the 1 of nations was first given in an As-lin London, England, June 28, 1922. sociated Press dispatch relayed | Glendenning was a Rhodes scholar | over the Spanish border to Hendaye | ot Oxford, Miss Du France, on Tuesday last. hg singing in The dispatch said the resignation | it in her plea had been agreed upon at a cabinet council Tuesday presided over by King Alfonso and that a note had Dbeen prepared for dispatch to Ge neva. The delay in forwarding the res- fenation was exploined in Geneva | his remarkés to her. este: as being due e Span- | s Jesteraayian belnsidue o ne oy A three year old son, Allan Stan- fards’ desire not to embarrasy the | S + Jeri = G Tanwia | Tord, e arded by the court to T bl seBslont |3ear, whiloitne father, who makes The nation follows | is home in London, will be entitled FoJiRnoR SAner dbranA fanfater | Lo the enilditor gllie SOLhER four Shanent!seat on! the Jsague connoily| momthe: BEhasdlyorce proceedings ek were held in Camera London Gets Advices Glendenning and Miss Du Pont London, Sept. 11 (P—An met on board the Aquitania in Sep- change telegram dispatch from Ge- |tember, 1920 when she was bound for Europe to finish her musical ed- nev ys Spain's note of resign \-‘, i Hon from the league of nations was |ucation. Mr. Glendenning who had handed to the league secretariat|Won his scholarship as one of the this morning. honor men of the graduating class Swiss Reception at Dartmouth, was on his way to Geneva, Sept. 11 (A—The Oxford. government celebrated Germany's entrance into the League of Nations by giving a reception t night in one of the principal hotels, All the | delegations to the league and their | families were invited. With Germany finally in membership in the league and con- firmation of Spain’s withdrawal from the international body expected mo- mentarily, the six component com- missions of the assembly, on which Germans sat for the first time in a briet session yesterday evening, have | begun their work. It is expected that the comm #lon dealing with the plan of Vis- count Cecil, England, and Henri Fromagot, France, for increasing the number of non-permanent seats in the league council will have some difficulty in satisfying the Scandin- avian, Dutch and Greek members, who view askance the proposal to have re-eligible members of the council designated in advance. This part of the plan was designed to | give partial satisfaction to Polish and Spanish desires. Aside from this, however, plain sailing is ex- pected for the commssion. LEARNS HE HAS BUILT HOME IN OLD GRAVEYARD| Man T divorce charged that her husband was in- sanely jealous of h that, reatened once to choke her. He nted attentions paid to her by declared, Europe. for a ex- | Sw Miss Du Pont teok place at St. Paul's church, Knight's Bridge. It is said to have had the approval of the Du Pont and Glendenning familie A number of the bridegroom’s fel- full | low students were | ception at the Hyde Park hotel after {the wedding ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Glendenning resided together in London until she returned to the United States. Mrs. Glendenning came to Reno and became a resic dent | on August 8, 1925. Although her phni for the immediate future have not been made known, her attorn stated t she contemplated ma ing her home in Reno. CAPTAIN FENTON T0 GIVE KEYNOTE TALK Democrats Select Willi- mantic Man as Tem- porary Chairman New Haven, Conn., Sept. 11 (P Frank P. Fenton, of Willimantic who was democratic house leader in the {assembly of 1923, will be temporary | chairman of the democratic state Discovers | convention in this city next Wednes- |day night. He is the present town |clerk of Windham and also its trea |surer and registrar. He A&lso served (Pr— | 1917, The Invitation extended to Captain | Fenton by State Chairman James J. Walsh of Meriden was accepted last Nachville, Tenn., Premises Are Filled With Indian Skeletons. in the Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 11 Jonathan Dennis, farmer, who lives five miles from the center of Nash- ville, has discovered that he built Dhis home in the midst of an Indian | veyard with human skeletons today by A. S. Lynch, secre rounding his house. |the state committee. While digging in his front lawn| Mr. Fenton is ver to plan® some flowers, Dennis pen- (his, party and has been a delegate etrated an Indian grave. The bur- | to many conventions and often times {al site covers about two acres and |took part in debate during the pro- is an Indian mound. John Trot- ceedings. wood Moore, state librarian and| He has alw been popular achivist, who investigated the find, |among his party members and was will seek the aid of the Smith- the spontaneous choice among the sonian institution in mapping the |51 other democratic members of the mound for further discoveric house in 1923, where it came to a Several of the graves were inves- choice of a leader. tigated. One of the skeletons mea, He is a good speaker with a strong ured six feet, nine and a half inche: deep voice. In the same grave was another skel- The election of a temporary chair- eton, supposed to be the wife of the |man for the convention was delayed | warrior and between the two the|for various reasons, one explaining bones of a child. g being that there were many factors The bodies were found with the entering into pre-convention arran knees crouched up against the|ments which chest and lying on the side. [before a temporary. Mr. Moore estimated the graves pamed, were from 500 to 1,000 years old,| Mr Fenton's acceptance of the judging from the crudeness of the chair was awaiting the return from implements found. [Washington last night of State | L | Chairman Walsh. JUDD AGAIN CHAIRMAN OF REPUBLICAN FORCES ary of chairman was Arraigned as Bootlegger But Is Called a Hero | New York, Sept, 11 (A—Thomas Shea heard himself pralsed as a | hero when he was arraigned yester. day before Federal Commissioner | Wilson on a charge of rum running| brought by the man whose life he | had saved. Shea saved the Ha fedel Third Ward Alderman to Lead G. O. P. For Another Year—Mrs, Walthers Vice-Chairman. ‘William H. Judd has been reelect- od chairman of the republican town | mittce and Mrs. Ruth Walthers | vice-chairman. Mr. Judd, who is third ward alderman and president life of \'numinn} a federal dry agent when the | al authoritics captured a trawl er on Long Island Sound last Wedl- nesday might. Haas was knocked | pro tem of the council, has been |into the water in the scrambls for | town committee chairman for the possession of the boat. Shea's com- t few years. Mrs. Walthers also | panions escaped. Shea, hearing| had experience in state and city | Haas's cry for help, plunged in and | election campaign saved Hoas as he was einking for - - the second time. TORNADO DOES DAMAGE | “Why didn't you Beaumont, Texas, Sept. 11 (— and escape?” Shea was asked A tornado struck the Spindle Top |his arraignment. oil field here late yesterday, over- | His only answer turning 26 derricks and causing | would you have dons minor injuries to three persons.| He was held in $1,000 Damage is estimated at $30,000. hearing September 20. swim to shore| at v “What | as, bail for S S e a1 married | Pont had been he | and frequently | 1 scenes in public pfices by | The marriage of Glendenning and | invited to a re-| house in | |night and announcement was made | well known in | had to be considered | | pnone and New York, Sept. 11 (R)—1 zards, survivals of the “flery drag- ons” of prehistoric times, have a rived here on the Cunard liner Aquitania, Each is eight feet long, hs 200 pounds and has a body as thick as a man’s, cos close protcctive armor. The great saurlans, long sought by zoologists, were captured Dougias Burden, a trustee of th American Museum of Natural His- tory on the Island of Komodo in the’ Malay Archipelago. They are in the care of Professor E. R. Dunn of Smith college. Like Chinese Flag had the | gressman J. Q. Tilson, leader of i the house of representatives, today | was re-nominated at the third dis- {trict republican convention. If | elected it will be his ninth term in | | congress. Mr. Tilson 13 | eastern headquarters of the joint | senate and house republican cam- | paign committee in New York city | In his speech accepting the | nomination, Congressman Tilson | recalled that N. D. Sperry had served eight terms in congress but that no other man from the New | Haven district ever served as long. It I am elected and begin my | | ninth term,” he sald, “I shall hold the record. In the histo f na- tions, 18 years are but as yester- day when it is past, but in the life {of an individual it is a long period { of ‘time.” Polnts to His Record Pointing out that he had spent | the best years of his in cc gress, Representative Tilson clared this was not a on why he should be re-clected unless coupled with director ‘of the eir of t flag The have likenes 1 on for 4,000 years. forked tongues and sometimes make a loud b caping steam, just as breathing’ 'ancestors did. Their legs short and stubby and each foot as four claws. Thelr tails are spiked. The discovery and capture of the two “drag which are entlr o i of mode the portant zool times, scientists aly ones in cap lan Cob- am, British aviator, sighted th giant lizards from the coc kpit of his plane as he flew over Komodo, a Dutch island in the Malay Archi- peiago. | abilittes and so cond as to be more useful than any new man who might be in my place, then I ought to be kept at hom “The people of this district have | shown their confidence in me to an unusual degree. They trusted me to use my best judgment in serv |ing them. I have heard men 5 My constituents wish me to vote so-and-so, though I know it is not right!” My invariable response is: ‘My people always wish me to |as I think right, whatever may think about it Tried to Do Right | “In rendering you an accounting of my long stewardship, I can only say that I have voted and acted upon every occasion as I jeved to be right and this is my only | guide. T may have been honestly mistaken upon many occasions, bu I have always had the satisfaction of fecling at the time that I was doing the right as well as the best { thing. “Long service in confress does not insu vancement in power or usefulness. 1t simply gives op- portunity for such advancement and I should he #hamed to face you had T failed to make the best use of that opportunity. Since this convention last met, my republican colleagues in congress, by unani- mous vote have made me their leader. As chosen leader of the re- publican majorlty in’ the house of |state, used his influence to obtain representatives, my dutles and re. |the Dutch colonfal government's sponsibilities have become greater, Dermission for the fi\pmlhmn. :prrT:x:xm?U‘lo: xtx:‘smrn:ll:\d:m;‘(?: GHEMISTS EXPLMN WHAT SCIENCE CAN PRODUG sent Don't Like Chicken The Aquitania’s buicher pushed two chickens into fhe heavy wooden cage for the morning meal but they roosted, almost contemptuously, on the spiked tail of one of the mon- sters, both of which moved listle ly in their cage after their sea voy Dr. Dunn said one of the “drag- o expedition saw jumped on the back of a horse, dragged it town and injured it so severely that had to be shot. Another at one meal ate the hindqu: ve deer o days later” They can run faster than a man, Dr. Dunn said Tast of Spirits It §s believed the animals lineal descendants of a species once lived in Chinn and Australiz and that now exist only on the little almost-forgotten island where the Burden expedition pitched its camp Mr. Burden was told that every museum of importance had been er to obtain a living specimen of the glant lizard since 1912, when P. A. Ouwens, a Dutchman, had first reported its existence. Mr. Burden decided last December to lead the expedition to Komodo, and Charles 5. Hughes, former secrotary oOf they T Mr. Tilson continued that individ- uals who wish to shirk responsibili for their votes may promise their | support to the pet bills of millitant | and influentional minorities and | then cast the responsibili those in positions of leadership. | | “The leaders cannot dodge if they | | would,” he declared. Regarding his | | position into the house, Mr. Tilson said that in making up the program | Philadelphia, he must take into account not only | chips made from skim milk and the pet bills of his friends and of in- | sugar from artichokes wero only | fluential minorities, but, “like the | two of the many seemingly mira- would-be builder in the new testa- | cles worked by, chemists and dis- | ment, T must first sit down and | American chemical society. | ‘count up the cost.” cussed dtring the session of Declaring that it The raw material from which the task to direct the poker chip is made is tho casein Amerioanicongres of milk, it was exclainmed obteained | | work of which is steadily Increasing | 2fter the cream had been r¢ moxr‘:l | with every decade, Congressman Til- | This product formerly had been |son said that this is not the most | thrown away. difficult part of his task. Not only is this material used in | | “Great is the pressure by those | the manine of 1‘}:"\“”‘“"':"“;«"“{‘03:' | spectally interested and very so for buttons, hair brushes, often | ¥ in pens, combs and necklaces. In times by unthinking friends for laws | Skl s | that ought not to be passed and for | ' 4 ria |1 appearance of tortoise shell. | appropriation that ought not to be DL | made,” he said. | : i u eeter than cane “High minded and generous peo- deon Uch acotss o ple will clamor for legislation, the ‘rexun of which is to put the federal government into new flelds of ac- tivity that should not be entered. | tne commonest cause of hay fe- “On account of my position in | 7 - }mm»rs of this kind you will proba- | "1} g declared, | bly hear me abused by those Who | . 4" i gonerally blamed because it urge the passage of such legisla- |;,npens to be in bloom at the time tion. All I ask is that you remem- | ,po ragweed pollen is in the air. ber my responsibility and that, re- | membering it, you will in no wise | joint with those who would ad to the burden. | “I belleve that the people of my | district will continue to support me in the more difficult task I am now called upon to perform and that | pegin to pollenize. they will help me bear, rather than | The annual convention of the so- add to, the already heavy burden.” | | clety closed yesterday. 120,000 Houses Submerged ! By Big Storm in Japan | | Tokyo, Sept. 11 (A — Reports to | the vernacular newspaper today from Hiroshina say that a severe rain storm flooded the city, sub- merging 20,000 houses. Twenty persons are reported dead and a number injured and missing. | Railway communication between Kobe and Shimonoseki has been suspended as several bridges were swept out and numerous land- slides occurred. The city is de- scribed in the dispatches as a “sea of swirling mud.” Most of the tele- | telegraph lines in the | | reglon are down and news of the| | disaster is extremely meager, Sweet Sugar From Artichokes Are Two Things Sept. 11 (A—Poker the was no easy | course of the the necessary | aid, sugar. A popular belief dispelled by the chemists was that the golden rod is the cause of hay fever. Ragweed was caused s pointed was that “rose fever' by roscs. Instead, chemis out, timothy and other gr. to blame, but the generally held responsible roses are in bloom when the grass becau * | | THE WEATHER New Britain and vicinity— Fair tonight and Sunday. Ris- ing temperature. | W | | I | I * HIGH TIDES 12 (Standard Time) New Haven: a. m.—1:46 p. New Londo 06 a. m.—12:25 p. m l Sept. —_— | \ | Are wo giant red with & {do They have carnivorous, is one of the most im- | noun of M ters of a na- | was back for more| TILSON AGAIN 13 ’l]lANT DRAGONS OF VERMONT TO HAVE CHOICE OF PARTY HISTORY EAPTUREI]E PRIMARY TUESDAY Il Elected, It Wnll Be th \Two Great Lizards Found in Gonm t There Three-Cornered| One for Governor |SPEECH 0F ACCEPTANGE BROUGHT T0 NEW YORK MASS. INTEREST LAGGING | Tuesday's Vote Will Be Light A< Only Local Contests Are Likely— | In JMid-West, Senatorial paigns Are Being Planned. Sept. 11 (P—A | it for the repub- | nomination Montpeller, three corr 1 lican guberr rial been the chiet feature of n other- dull campaign leading up to primary election in Pres- s native state of Ver- Vt.. The United lidates c st atorial can- republican and dem- are unopposed and appears in the race representation, Weeks of Middle ate commissioner o and Max L. Powell, | ey and hotel ow about even in th for the governor- nsworth, a Bur- is the third candi- tes se ocratic only or ticke > cor | public weltars, Burli date. A good roads campaign, with the dispute lying over t method o t, has been the chief Vermont precedent pr ernor Franklin 8. Billings from sceking renomination. | Dale Is Unopposed 1 Senator Porter H. Dale, who vot- ed st President Coolid on the soldiers’ bonus bill, 18 unopposed for the republican renomination. At the start of the campaign he w op- posed by former Governor Willlam staunch Coolidge sup- rtner of Attorney ent, but a forced Mr. agal John akdown in b s withdr A fight for the republican nomin- ation in the t district between Martin Vilas of Burlington and sentative Elbert S. Brigham Albans marks the only con-| al contest Allen T. Cal- dlebury is the unoppos- xepresentative Er- nest W. Gibson, republican Brattleboro, and George F. democrat, of Newport, are the ond district candidates. 1 alth wal. gressio ed, democrat Root, sec- Massachusetts Primary Boston, Sept. 11 (A—The major portion of the " primary vote in oolidge’s home state of ts is expected to be wn OUL only through many pure- ly local contests next Tuesd With none of the higher offic s con- ! tested, the campaign has run a dull | David 1. Walsh ¢ upon | Poker Ohips From Skim Milk and | governor ‘s council, r | ehief democratic contest lies in the | and the ;,nms-n‘lf-nd('rs in political life. Another popular belief shattered | tal another week rose has been |torial candidates to be stricken, ————3% | been |seven on the democratic. |at Clermont, | physician. course and one of the lightest votes in years is forecast. Governor Alvan T. Fuller, ing renomination on the republican ticket, is unopposed, as is the cratic candidate, Colonel William A jaston, who unsuccessfully contest- | od the last election of the late en- ator Henry Cabot Lodge. Senator William M. Butler, pointed in November, 1924 by Pres- ident Coolidge to fill out the unex- pired term of the late Semator | Lodge, is unopposed for republican omination, while former senator is without an op- pmwnt on the democratic ticket. Washington Cook, candidate for | the republican renomipation to the ently created a flurry when he announced he ould flle independent papers in op- | position to Senator Butier. His ac- |tion will not affect the primary vote, | but will place his name on the bal- lot in the November elections. Five contests for the congression- al nomination in the 12 districts appear on the republican ballot and | Of these ts chlef interest on the T an side is centered In the fifth district, where Mrs. Edith Nours Rogers, widow of Re presentative John Jacob Rogers is opposed f renomination by John Bordman | Concord, Mrs. Rogers was elected to fill out her husband's term. The seek- or of 12th dlstrict, where Congressman ames A. Gallivan and John W. M Cormack both of Boston, are oppon-| | ents. In the Mid-West Chicago, Sept. 11 (P—Tlines placed a restraining hand on campalgns of three midwe senatorial candidates, and has cur- tailed the activitles of several other the stern George E. Brennan, democratic nominee for United States senator in Illinols, must remain in a hospi- before it can be ill be able Mr. determined whether he to resume his speaking | es are | Brennan, the third of Illinols’ sena- in- jured his left knee joint at Nokomie, I, last Tuesday His republican opponent, Colonel Frank L. Smith, is recouperating from an operation for appendicitis, performed about the time he won the nomination from Senator Wil- {lam B. McKinley, who is critically | il with atic rheumatism at Ma tinsville, Ind. Colonel Smith W. Brookhart, publican senatorial nominee in Towa, and Senator Robert M Yollette of Wisconsin are Ilnd-*r;:rvmp; ph cal examinations, and Senator Thomas D. Schall of \I\nnn\nl’x has ordered to take a complete | | rest in Minneapolis hospital. Colonel Brookhart, who became 11l Towa, vesterd ar- rived at his home in Washington, | Towa, last evening and was immedi- | the family was ately ordered to bed by Call trouble (Continued on Page 15.) Cam- has | nf‘ demo- | ap- | diag- | MUSSOLINI FAILS; BOMB | ENDORSED BY LEGION Eddy- (.lo»er Po Ap- proves of Walnut Hill Park Shaft | | | The memb: E post, American rs of the Le 1ly-Glover ed at the | | | The detail by gion! mitt ive on the com- Committeeman Andre | splathed he retorin w PREMIER MUSSOLINT n in the pu | ning t m »morial court Inut Hill Mr. Andrews said that no e ed could not encouragem HOWARD 1S FREED 0N ling to An- | but the price w - 2 e : N prod Mayonnaise Maker Sa)s‘ Deljind ersronnd Sons Never Will Get Cent of His Money drews, hibitive would the surf Nathan or r Petts than above Avery spoke at length in | the project, 1 Coraman- lled for remarks from the floor. After the discussion the following resolution was adopted e AT e Aon without oppositio manufacturer Haverhill { “Resolved:—The Fddy - Glov as been declared not guilty of the |post. No. 6, American Legion, ap- of bigamy lodged against proves of the report of the soldiers | i sometime ago by his sons, Al- memorial committee, which is to be | pory of Haverhill and John of Los submitted to His Honor the Mayor v Do id onas Toutvad and the common council tion to this effect through an We offer our support to th order of the court at Cuer- mittee in its selection of which was also signed by the and approve the location rnor of the state of Morelos memorial on the top of Walnut H oy o e e e A Een e pari. for somefmonths endeavoring to the f make a settlement sm his ipon their mother, have not n in Mexico City for were out on committed ing forcibly en- The elder he under- sed the border ates at Laredo. He had heard efforts to estradite them. turer to Mexico and from his wife and Eleanor B. Phillips of widow of Frank B. Phi of a lithographne bu ceé. She died in ath. Tt was because that the sons made against their Mo Ho xico City, 11 (P—John com- | resi of al offic S 'BOSTON SWIMMER FAILLS IN IS CHANNEL EFFORT Louils Timson However, Plans to Try it been s | | on the father for hay Once More During Coming added tr would b The Week. made Dover, land, Sept. 11 (A— e Louis Timson, of Boston, failed to- in his attempt to swim the Ing- channel. Taking to the o'clock last night, |he abandoned the task o'clock this morning. he weather conditions hen Timson took his plunge mained good until four o'clock this orning. Then a strong southwest- erly wind rose. It kicked up an extremely rough sea and Timson |abandoned his attempt on the advice of his pilot when between nine and ten miles out from Cape Blanc Nez |to the west of Calais. Captain Killingley, who was train- er and mentor for Mrs. Mille Gade Corson when she swam the ¢ [was advisor for Timson, the swim- mer had as his pilot Harry Pearson, who guided Mrs. Corson across | waterway. | At the start |eastward drift covered about fiftecn miles and used ie breast stroke He {had four meals and | malted milk during Timson says h lanother try at the |he starts on g States next S " DIVER NOW PLANS WALK " AGROSS HAMPTON ROADS onnaise ame 1 water at 1( at the charge father. Mr. Howard says he will continue 1 eclared to- day that imstances would he |allow them to g money. C0OLIDGE 1S BLAMED 1 FOR NON-ENFORCEMEN New York Civic League Finds Con- | | | ditions Shameful In Parts throughout | of chocol the swim intends to make channel befors rn to the United | day. of State. N 11 (M—The k Civic league declares that parts of New York state | ion is “shamefully and flag- y violated.” R. Miller, lent, in form Alba New Yo in opt. many the | leadin tin, 's super- rticle in places the a bulle violat Cooli llon, th, administ Gov. Deep Sea Man Considers Channel ohibition ors. The p is primar Swimming Too Prosaic— t, the bulletin points sponsible for en- aw as well who are Has New Stunt, 11 P — C h cross-cha now too prosal 1k deep sea d clad in his he out, <, Va. Sept. s ap- sider lcials swimming K. Ev announ pound walking acrc mpton R valls Point en miles the t Coolidge maxi- d in secy enth nation- érting anyw yower ti plans twve old Poi challen valk. Mr. Lers. this walk own 4 supplying divin om of t ho b and i daiver to outy challe to accomplizh five hours. His carrying OXYE ment, will be him across contact with his breathing appara- tus. Mr. Everts pointed the deep sea diver under sces little or nothing. He expre the be that could remain ubmer as as ten hours continuously Just when held has not been determined, but Mr. Everts said he was ready any time. It cannot find a competi- tor he declared he will walk alone. 101 The is open Everts said, He thrown himself nor en- to nendme ken harbor, alon, the eightee .President Coolidg to do somethi d ou presid 2d he ’ e e Harvester Company Will Ha\ ¢ Allingtown Branch | n, Sept. 11.—The Inter- | tor company of | manufacturers of rm machinery will jcut sales division in De mber 1, it y. A $100,000 arted and upon stocked with The branch ) re- the contest will be Inc nd £ a Connec | Allingtown about {was announced to America, truc |open EPIDEMIC OF HOID Hanover, Germany, 11 (P— An epidemic of typhold fever pre- | vails in Hanover. It is belleved to |bullding has becn | be due to pollution of the water by | completion will - be | the recent floods. |equipment valued at $200,000. Threa deaths have occurred and |company already opcrates at least 150 persons are ill. The hos- |sales offices in Waterbury, Bridge- pitals are overcrowded and school |port, New Canaan and Hartford, | buildings are being used for the sur- (none of which are as large as the plus cases. New Haven one will be. T Sept. | | residence, | made | to | by official ANOTHER ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATE 1S HURLED BUT PREMIER IS NOT HURT AT ALL Infernal Machine Hits Side of Automobile but Fails to Explode Before it Falls to Earth. Detonation Is Terrific and Four Passershy Are Wounded—Assailant Ar- rested—Fascists Forbid Reprisals. Rome, Sept. 11 (P—Another at- |tempt has been made on the life of Premire Mussolini. A bo vas exploded against the pr‘ rlnrr s car, Mussolini escaped un- hur The national directorate of fascis has the party, announcing that “Ged once again saved Mussolini for Italy, d an appeal that there be no reprisals Bomb Strikes Car The attack occurred a little after ten o'clock this morning while Mus- solini’s automobile was proceeding toward the Chigi palace. A young man named Fiete Giovanninl, a stonecutter, threw a bomb against the car. The bomb struck a side window of the car, but fell to the earth be- fore it exploded, and the automobile proceeded. The explosion was ter- rific, and four passersby were wounded. They were taken to a hospital. Assailant Arrested Giovannini was immediately ar- rested by the police agents escorting the premier's automobile. He said he had arrived in Rome today from abroad, and that he came into Ttaly |through the Alps, being unable to |travel by the usual routes as he was without passport or identifying docu- ments, The would be assassin is a native Italian, he told the police, and was born in 1908 at Castelnuove D Garfagnana. The authorities believe his journey to Italy was financed and directed by groups of seif-cxiled anti-Fascists, rotably in Lyons and Paris. They point out that the pair anti-Fascist paper Corriere Degli ataliana several days ago launched an anti-national campaign with the slogan: “Itallans: Boycott Italian Goods!” News Kept Secret Government measures to keep the news of -the attack secret to avoid disorders were taken immediately, and were so successtul that virtually no one on the street had the slight- est idea late this morning that a third attempt had been made against the premier within the space of a ar. In journalistic and political jcircles where the news was known, | howey r, there were knots of excit- ed talkers, The premier was hound for his offi in the Chigl palace from his the villa Torlonia, which |is situated in the outskirts of Rome, and his car was near the city gate when the bomb was thrown. The attempt created the greatest consternation. It is understood that Minister of Interior Federzoni, who t last night for Ancona, is rush- ing back to the capital on a special train. The Italian premier is no stranger to attempts upon his life. The Jast previous attack was made on April 7, just before his departure to Tripoll when Miss Violet Gibson, an English woman, fired a shot which caused a slight injury to the ip of his nose. The attack was as he was leaving a session of the congress of surgeons in Rome. His habit of holding hls head erect while receiving the plau- lits of crowds undoubtedly saved his Miss Gibson had pointed a pistol point blank at his face but at the moment she fired he straightened up nd threw his head back, the slight movement causing the bullet to 1erely miss the mark. Miss Gibson dged mentally irresponsible. Another attempt was frustrated in November, 1025, when the po- lice discovered a plot to assassnate him by the former socialist deputy, Tito Zanibonl. On Ttaly vas ad armistice day as he was on his way to make his.speech from his residence, Zaniboni was found concealed in a nearby hotel h a high-powered rifie furnish- with telescope sights. He was d with his equipment just He is still in prison await- D ed arres in time. ing trial. The press of Europe from time time printed circumstantial re- ports of other attempts to assassi- nate him but they were followed denials. Several Persons Hurt | In Oklahoma Train Wreck Tupeolo, Okla, Sept. 11 (M —. Three women received minor fn- juries and several passengers were cut by flying glass when the two coaches and mail car of an Okla- homa City-Adatoka were thrown into a ditch near here late last night. Less than 30 persons were on the train. Officials were investigating a re- port the derailment was caused by |a split rail

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