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RSl el g i Jl, S i h o g0 ML News of the World By Associated Press NEW BRITAIN HERALD Average Daily Circulation For Week Endmg 13 732 Oct. 23rd ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1926. —TWENTY-FOUR PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS PROMIBITION IAW Brave American Nurses Minister to Injured While Earth Trembles TOPIC AT RALLIES OF BOTH P PARTIES | | | Many Tales of Heroism Coming From Armenian Quake Zone Where Destruction and Suffering is Appalling —Cold and Food Shortage Adds to Misery. Galnen, Democratic Gandidate for Congress, Favors Repeal | Chicago Movie Hoi of 18th Amendment CONWAY FOR REFEREXDUM, HE SAYS IN . 0. P. TALK Hartford Tawyer Says He Wants Change in Immigration Restric- tion Act—Hits at Fenn's Silence— Give Free P'mee.,\“,h“ Have § .afe HalIOnc on Chicag Oct. 26 (A—Ninety- n hborhood movie houses -operating with school and city officials to keep Chicago's gates on their hinges and the ity gencrally intact Hallowe'en. Teachers have 100,000 free tickets that will be exchanged for pledges to sce a good picture w and call it a night. G. 0. P. Spelibinder Told Connec- tiont Hasn't Proper Representa- iton in Congress. Prohibition loom large in po- being z noon, nocratic congress, ared that | modification of the ent to the constitution. a fi ° council at noises o corner, Cand was apparently im- t o the prohibition ques- democrat | 18th Jialek home, wk school, and the came ignite following morning, FATHER ASKS $10,000 FGR DEATH OF CHILD o i oy B0y Received Fatal Burns In Yard of Washing- ton School claim for $10,000 gainst t City of New Britain as Te t of the death of Leo Bialek, r old son of Mr. and Mrs. inley Bialek of 42 Farmington venue, who was burned by a bon- re on October 15, sale and B. | stable Fran lynes served the papers and it is xpected that a hear r com before the common e November meeting. allegation, the gton School fire in the rear of the boy's clothes be- About 1 o'clock the eleven hours af- was burned, the boy died at tain General Hospital. father, as administrator, action and sets forth janitor had been warned n several occasions to desist from r he the practice of lighting fires on the Bialek property. The action of Frank Biaxall, aged throv his a Winifred Cheever for $2 rly as it is in ( tion of alcoholic words b; from he prohibi- | wyer Calnen con- lican opponent | g, d to st how cct. He is ldling the He is neither it or ag t. If [ am elected for the mod- law and , arrive ority of the people Tmmi He passed on to the immigration restrictions placed on this country in 1023. He said that this ques- tion was one of vital interest to the people of New Br ed M posi audicnce from send- er homes to hav vour ves,* sister: brothers paren you here in this g land o be that prior to the ssent restrictions, s allowed to en- | iited States was based on but ature chan; nts to conf can legi ta of immigr . > consus of 1890. He said that|m now, 1 these res because s are 1 they will I vs are have these re- E ns changed, send a man to congress who will vote to change th ' he said. “If you want the representative of this district to | vote to cf the Volstead law and the immigration restrictions, then ive me your vote. "If you don't| want them to be changed, then don't vote for me ome of the best citi- zens this country has ever had are those who were reign nd who c ) adopt I We don't ut, we t them her vér Cainen pled out to the letter the will take It electc t all times, this city sday, that best int oath of shonld crendum prohi anatigh, a spec- 1 entry wnley seussion of in: n imprompt declared him- ndym on the | dompleted the f rallies at the | m san | the e (Continued on Page 17) Madeiros of New espited to Hotel Lawncrest is partly probabl complained to Vho court. Attorne represented ction was the re- s sustained hy the was thrown out of an ¢ Peter Lluzas, ever's ir at the corner of Elm and Park led out of strects on April 1. MADEIROS AGAIN HAS ESCAPED THE CHAIR! nother Reprieve Has Been Given Respite to January 27 By Governor of Mass. Boston, Oct. 26 (P—Celestino F. Bedr ocution for murder nted a respite to Jan- by the governor and | of el ction was taken on the recommendation of Attorney Gener: and District Attorney Wil- for the Benton t it was “neccssary orderly administration of justice. This was the second respite grant- leiros as a result of his de- n setting forth he was p at the muxder of a paymaster guard in South DBraintres in u‘l th icola Sacco lomeo Vanzetti were fnvolv- cd in that crime, of which they have en convicted. Originally sentenced to dle early September, sentence was October 27 to permit | motion for new trial otti based on the n of Madeiros, Judge Web- aring on a ter Thayer on Saturday denied this | otion on the ground that Madeiros had not told th FIRE AT SAVIN ROCK Partially De- stroyed and Loss About $15,000. ew Haven, 4 a hotel at Savin Rock, was th a loss of house was the Stanford neration board- | g the s hotel faced sort. the owner, had for sale at $30,000, sts in the south. surance. Charles ¢ West Haven department, lost work, a timber fall- 1shing his hand. teer fire r while has been filed by | will be glven | ¢ the claims committee after the h adjoins the | under | Is Placed at | (fP—Lawn- a| oA % Oct. 26— l 0 pJO”'"'H (‘dla'e assist- | “4930 APV g every part Divorced Themselves By Simply Destroying Marriage Certificate =0 Cleveland, Oct. 26 (A—DMr. and Mrs. Kennedy agreed to disagree and divorced themselves without V the ald of court by burning their marriage license, the state charg- ed in a bigamy indictment issued today against Mrs. Kennedy, now Evelyn Redr ond. And to show there was acted as bridesmald when Ken- T 8IS IMDNIUMO) | yiruceting | vallantly to extricate herself from | the misery, famine and desolation caused by the series of earthquakes beginning Friday night. | Fifteen villages are in ruins and 23 others partly destroyed, the death | | toll is placed as high at 600, wunj 11,000 others maimed or missing in | the earthquake zone, which covers | 100 square miles. The survivors are the bleak hillsi unsheltered, | lacking bedding and some without | necessary clothing, the intense cold | | adding to their mise There is | also an acute food shortage, as much | of the livestock was destroyed and | the flour mills were razed. 850 Houses Razed. In this city 8§50 Houses were lev- clled. The orphanages of the Near Last Relief were considerably dam- | | aged, and some of the buildings | | housing the American personnel are beyond repair. Leninakan is still | without electric lights, the power | station having been wrecked. The telegraph and post office also was levelled, and telegraph communica- tion is greatly curtailed. Thus the correspondent is allowed but a half | hour each day by the government for transmission of dispatches over an improvised wire to Tiflis. Russians Give Freely. | The Moscow government has do- nated $250,000 for relief, and the | big industrial centers of Russia are contributing generously. Through all the anguish and ter- ror produced by the recurring earth | shocks Friday night, American wo- men furnished an example of su- preme heroism “our Near East Relief nurses, modestly asked that their names be not used, operated on the maimed all night, plying their sur- gical instruments and binding wounds whils the ground rocked under their feet. | | Their work was made doubly| heavy by the destruction of the Ar- menian government hospital, the surviving patients of which we transterred to the American med- ical pavilion. Americans Praised. Particular praise is heard for Mise Else L. Jarvis of Washington, D. C and Miss Laura MacFetridge of Mor- risville, Pa., attached to the Amer- ican nurses training school, who, atter leading 1,000 orphans to safety, worked over the maimed and mutil- ated natives who were brought in by | the hundreds. | The 9,000 Armenfan orphans un- | der the care of the Near East Re- |liet displayed infinite faith during the crisis in their American nurses, | | whom most of them look upon as their second mothers. | “The orphans behaved like little | men and women,” said Dr. Joseph Beach, the Near East Relief dircc- tor. “They are soldiers, every one | of them.” | An extraordinary commission has |been dispatched to the earthquake |region by the Transcaucasian gov- crnment and reports already hav begun to come in saying that the| property dest on will be much | greater than at first announced. Not | a single house remains in the towns of Daarly and Baindour, while even sturdy churches and school houses built of concrete have been reduced | | to fragments. | The havoc in Lininkan was so great that the entire city must be rebuilt, leaving 80,000 persons more | or less homeless for the present. All schools have been closed for ten days, the payment of all taxes su- spended and a month’s salary ad- vancad to workmen in all state in- dustries. | The city of Karakala has suffered heavily also. | RADIO MAN AND ENGIN ‘ GREW STUCK To SHIP encamped on Went To Watery Grave That Com-[ panions Might Be Saved, | | | Survivors Assert ‘1 Hamilton, Bermuda, Oct. 26 (A— Tales of heroism are related by the | twelve survivors of the crew of 35 of the British freight steamer St- | way which went down og eBrmuda 1 hurricane. The radio operator, R. James, | stuck to his post and went down with his ship. The engineers and | firemen refused to make an attempt | to enter the single remaining life- {boat, and went to the bottom with | picked up | celve survivors, British schooner Luciline, been brought to St. Georges. that the storm struck the | ay Friday morning. | At four o'clock fn the afternoon the master of the Eastway was| washed overboard. At six o'clock the coal in the bunkers shlifted, glv |ing the vessel a heavy list. All but | one of the lifcboats were smashed. | |In this the twelve rescued men sought safety. The steamer wal-| was unoceupied since |),5vq yn the heavy seas until elev- | ison closed. on, the | Tenants (')rwhm of Poorly quhted Halls | Tenants at 3 yette | | bottom w | gine room and street | health depart- | hean when she plunged to-the hout the men in the en- stokehole or the wireless operator making any at-| | tempt to reach the small boat. The rescued men say they had for seventecn hours with mo | en o'clock nt this aftecnoon that the halls in | water and but little food when the | building are not properly light- | Lacline plcked them up. They say | ient lighting in buildings |that while they were at the mercy | 1 department in- rded as con- ct of heal since it s r | trary to the health code. of the waves they were passed at | close range by a large steamer 'which ignored their rockets. {Indiana Court | investigating charges of political in- | Senator | question Mrs. Wheatcraft | tions next Tuesday | determined by Senator Reed. | | | will be summoned to St. Louis. i | sas City in a single day, f ana » Socerset grand jury l\\ r(fiflur\ de ed s n rdered special Prosecutor 5 . B o | Simpson out of the reom today, | Berlin Judge Sits for Hour | [iml [;[]MPAN"]NS []F | in the primary eampaign. | Crown Polnt, and | Bossert and James | Hiram W. | here he could see nedy remarried, it is charged. e Ca JURY ORDERED T0 HURRY IS REPONT Wants . Facts Known Belore Election Day \KLAN PROBE IS CONTINUED Reed to Delve Further inte Klan Activities Thursday — Watson Denles Any Connection with Klan In Indiana Politics. ar 26.—P—The | jury which 1s | Indianapolls, Oct. Marion county grand trigue in Indlana, day by Judge James A. Collins of e criminal court to return in- tments prior to next Tuesday | election against any candidate for public office it believed guilty ‘“of corruption or criminal acts.” Voters Entitled to Know The grand jury has been in ses- sion for several weeks investigating charges made by Thomas Adams, Vincennes publisher, Judge Collins told the jurors Adams' charges re- tlected upon public officlals gener- | {17 ally and on candidates on both ocratic and republican tickets who are out to succeed themselves. He held it to be the right of all voters to know before casting their ballot, whether any such candidates have been shown to be guilty of | any of the charges so made.” m. To Reopen Thursday St. Louis, Oct. 26.—UP—Decisi to reopen the Indiana campaign in- vestigation here Thursday to dcive further into Ku Klux Klan polit Ivities was announced today Reed, democrat, Missouri, chairman of the senate campaign funds comraittes. Investigation came halt here today when Dr. Logan certified to Senator I democrat, Missour!, chairman of t campaign funds committe Mrs. Vivian Tracy Wheatel not in physical condition “Polison Squad chairman had to a sudd John vi desired to who s | vice-chairman of the Indiana state | W republican committee. Concerning The he had stated she had bu a “poison squad” among of Indiana for the primary paign of Senator Watson, republi- organ; the women Up ca e Mrs. Wheatcraft :s been in a hospital here for several days under- going medical treatment and her | hysician sald it might be scveral days before she could give her testi- | mony. Whether the Indiana inquiry will be pursued further befors the elec- remains to be If ad- ditional witnesses are heard they | Fnds at Kan- the com- Indiana | T! Kansas Inquiry In winding up its inqui mittee heard from former Klansmen a more how the Klan was down the line” for S ordered to “go | Si tor Watson nesses were Ralph B. Bradford of | fo Wall C. J.| Granger of Longansport ju Bradford quoted both Walter F. | Bolin, both of Indianapolis, as having | Senator Watson had attended a con- | out. | terence at Washington of high K ofticials, at which Bossert's resig tion as grand dragon was demanded | | and received. | Evans “Packed” Mecting |day and taking me from my Then the two witnesses described | In a meeting at Indianapolis nuary, at which they declared Dr. | m Evans, imperial wizard, | to had forced the sclection of W. I Smith as Bossert's successor, They | he serted that Dr, Evans he meeting in order to “put ovey” bu Smith, although he knew th in per cent of the accredited delegates | Favored a Major Hite of the volun- teers of Ameri | Granger said that as a result of | the row that followed within Klan | ranks the membership dwindled in | ak Apr the month before the primary, to less than 17,000 from a peak of 178,000 While indicating a desire to call|o’ }new witnesses and re-cxamine some | escape without getting any of those already he Senator Reed announced that beyond the possible hearing of Mrs. Wheateraft | pi little probability of carrying on the Indiana Inquiry until after the elections. The Mis- | sourian came here primarily to de- | ac liver a political address tonight on | ta behalf of Representative Harry B. | zi Hawes, the democratic senatorial candidate, and others on the with him. D Watson Denies All on Senator Watson, when informed at Indianapolis last night of Brad- | ford’s accusation denied he had ever | 4 \ | | had connections with the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana politics 1 Senator Watson also declared that | Bradford had been a “bitter cne- | | my"” of his for many years and that | reports that the Watson organiza- | tion made large expenditures in cer- | | tain districts “scarcely merits | | denial.” I3 TOLEDO TEACHER tecing hotweon the conpte Eocan | SELK CLUBBER MURDERER {ton school, hree women were murdered and a was instructed to- ' .oqre of women struck down on two other police to th 13 found them not far | testimony before the committeo that | intended to enter m spon the death of her father a few Hall-Mills Case Develoyp ng, The wit- | son had been before the grand jury | by a sccond said that | there,” Jast | work there. packed" | and cd Isracl up at his grocery st Taub's right br Commerce which was mail tickeg | da BOMB, POWERFUL ENOUGH TO RAZE LARGE PART OF LOWER NEW YORK, 15 DISCOVERED IN THE COURT HOUSE BRUTALLY SLAIN olim Attacked Belore Body Was Mutilated sz v HALLEACKS WELD O WOUENSBOIRDHOLDS Xt crna Mackine Wrapped in Small Pa- per Valise Found on Window Ledge by | Man About to Enter Building. the Series of Killings and Club- | | i o s+ (QUNCIL REDUGTION ANNUAL HOSPITAL TEA Year Ago. do, Ohlo, Oct. 26 (P—The ed body ot Miss Lily Croy, cher at Gunokel school, was 4 under the steps of Washing- | Points Out Action Could Mys, Be Taken by Legis- | early today. | The clothing was torn from the lature ! h bore marks of criminal | £t oroner Henzler stated. Sy Relatives Find Body Gl The 1 membe Miss Croy left her home early i» | the committee on char- ! the women evening to attend a class at ter revision has seen t ity. When she falled the usual hour Attwood Gives Ac-| ccunt of Last Year's Activities Senator Edw s Senator Ed who as ship tea con- board of New hospital is a on, chairman of Powdered Dynamite and Machanical Apparatus for Exploding It Re- moved by Fire Depart« ment Specialists. ree attempts Britain 1 being with a grati- present. Aside the social program, the most to reduce the numerical stre of |jield this 15 the common council fail, agrecs L nm Croy, noti- N y ico. The body was found | With Mayor Weld that such a change - J. W. Welst, a half brother of |i8 desirable, but the opinion fying from attendance interesting point in the event is the | Ireport submitted by 1t was nerally belleved that one man ponsible for all of t Voluntarily and Never Has Asked | Gr. iss Handle uary 19, rom tEMOR R 0UT BY GRANI] JURY corded on the se St | university at 11 Into Real Fight Now Somerville, N. J., Oct. 6 HF\—-— The action was taken after S "m-l and Yawns, Not Know- r ten minutes. 1 After Simpson had left the grand ry room, the clerk was put out, ing Alleged Burglars resolution. Were in County Jail. here was a young riot said Simpson when he came | | “It was a regular cat and dog } calling each other liars.” The special prosecutor Was Very | ing Judge e dlgnant Pro rmey Charles F.| marttora, Oct is bringing me out here to- ‘. 7ast | JLsgbinginE, work | LeWis waited Jast evening for one | new and startlin Jersey City has interrupted my | hour in the town court room in |modern youth come to the at- It they had not taken to try Andrew Dorbuck |(ention of t“““ W“w with the dis proceed with the case by Fr lars lob ey nind ' L.(‘l"”‘ e s N4 folreet et outhiul burglars who hav re today and f in nents iting ing sicres ¢ and in sur- A BRsEN ng towns the last few months. n o of this gang, Percy Parker, ut 1 think they a ones hold SRR o8 ; b e ‘*m)fl\ lx.;“v\‘ ¥ -:\1 \;; g the empty sac Attorney Lewls T : , and Andrew Dorbuck, 19, calls to locate uaker Lane, West Hartford, t, officlals includ- | (P—Something in the tendency of readiness » the slain_teache W that it cannot be accomplished with secretary of pAmpsianof I'he consent of the council. the board, Mrs. Willlam E. Attwood, | i ; private citizen is privilezed to pro- of the achievements of the past 1> a year ago is scen by police. | : : Fihtihe ign of ‘h : : Eharencmancher e | year. % York, Oct. 26 (P—A bomb, s B littee on cit' ; and ) e report of Mrs. At{wood Was &S| which experts declared contained it to the charter revision commit n's Hospltal Board of or common council. Several of the v General hospital | section of Lower New York, was most recent changes in this city's st Monday | found today on a window ledge of ¢ bolics activities |1t Would be possible 1o create a | ceptions [the frst floor of the New York of police ac °S |board of aldermen to supplant the | “Our offic t ard of alder 1ppla ] ur officers and directors for the °TS. | present common council in this way !pw ar who have all had a share| 1P¢ oMb Was wrapped in a 0 men were arrested [T e ! small paper valise and was found aq f investigation A score r : e ey =ueako to| The plan thrice proposed provides | committecs are as follows: President, | 0 ® Tan Who was about to enter hese later were comu > creation of a board of 12 aldermen, | ) ¢ V. Traut; vice presi-| i d The valise was taken inside of Circumstances Similar district Bt the bullding and two clerks tried ; - G. T. Ki . C. McKinnie; Coroner Henzler recalled similar | *opjoction to the council as now | honorary u . {to open it. As they did so they e s aohl | honorary vice pre m(m, Mrs. Har- |10 oben ) a smaller board | panelyes : W. E. Att. |aroused thelr suspiclon. The bureau body was found in a yard 1 to give more tucr- | wood. . V. B. Cham. | ©f combustibles of the fire depart- er ?)m:::i‘n a'rhr-fi' e w.‘\i igh consideration to cfty business | o qain , Mrs. W. H. ment was communicated with and reased importance of their posi- |y | i i women in recent W. A, H Hmmp,"l'hu( gasped when they saw the o [ 4 g Mrs. H. L. . Mrs. F. A. Secarle, | contents — a mechanism similar Tlr;_ " Lydia Baumga was | IS MAN OF MYSTERY Mrs. B. F. Gaftney, Mrs. W. 8. l(ow Ho that in time bombs and a large AR Sl [McDonough, Mrs. A. S. Grant, )lr:u The experts described the queer SRy s e LAy | | M. DD. Saxe, Mrs. H. L. Judd, Mrs. | package as an “Infernal machine.” A dica trom her Injur- | Wisconsin Lifer, 86, Never Speaks |P- key, Berlin; Mrs. Henry|The case measured 14 inches long, O e n, Kensington. | deep. Inslde was a wooden box o bber was that of | v a Pardon | auiliary commottee of | with dynamite in sawdust form. | 5 | which Mrs. W. C. Hungerford was|Alongside of the explosive was & 1028, | Tead Du Lac, Wis, Oct. 26 (P— g 014 Bill Maxwoll has rounded out | hOSPital twice a month by two mem- | clared, probably contalned the 2 Ton the west sid er his Gfty-fourth year at the state bers of the board who read reports|mechanism that was intended to s conditions as|cause the dynamite to explode, it oy old and is spending his last days in | found ie hospital at the | They did not investigate the small Work of Degcnerate the infirmary, awaiting death. time of making thelr visit. These re- | can, fearing it might cause an ex- rdar, > sald, was the | Maxwell is a man of mystery and |POr'S are never failing in _stating| piogion, its brutal- | He was convicted of killing a man |Partments visited are found to be. | Kirmball, as ichair-| A ”)[HZE 'm clubber attacks, police pointed |from being lynched by a crowd that | Man of nurscs' entertainment ol ¢ in the clubber cases there |nhad strung him to a tree. mittce, arranges for funds with as no criminal assault, as Was the | Since then he has refused to ask Which to defray any expenses in- MEMBERS UF [;flMM“NS onary work | wish he might die in prison. He ous social activities during the Win- : forced to abandon this plan has not seen the outside world for en and Christ- & {han hallia Genticy, ho - |mas part dances, ete., | more than half a century, has nev P Instead, Dr. Slater Repeats mo and he has never ended |themselves. m,m | o surgical dressings commit- | |tee this year has been in charge of Drunk at Sessions 6 (P—One earth a most cfticient chairman. Eleven —_ not severe, Was |to 13 groups of women have been | yondon, Oct. 26 4P — Called to mograph at —_— ) 57 last night. (Continued on Page 12) day for his recent allegation that . e he had seen members drunk in the house, Dr. Alfred Slater, laborite . . Town Court Walts Ta Vam for draw the charge, but repeated it. Dr. Slater declared he was not prepared to withdraw, modify, he had sald in his speech. It was Pl |an affectation and hypocritical for | the members to deny the charge. |the members, and Dr. Slater sald he was prepared to give them. H After a lengthy statement, he |the members debated Sir Arthur . + 7 Holbrook's motion of yesterday Free Because They Did | iiac tho charges were a gross iibet ¢ A | well as a gross breach of privilege. Go to Cheshire | It was a delicate situation and |Prime Minister Baldwin jumped that the sooner the members dis osed of the matter, the better it would be for thelr own dignity. ings of the house was that one of their members, who had shared their life, had thought it his duty side, and not to express to the house his regret for doing so. The motion was that presented Hartford Man Wounded o B | whose carly Sunday morning (¢4 address at yesterday's session, Men I 0 af to the identifyi at which Dr., Slater was absent, ”B“‘ Young HO]d l‘op\ : rior to the vote, a labor amends artfor: e bbings which tervorizen Ton| Any member of the legislature or 'who gave a comprehensive resume ut the formality of presenting | follows: | ; enough dynamite to blow up a big charter were enacted in this fash of every month With one or two ex- | county courthouse. clubber murders. Senator Hall pointed out. 1n the various auxiliary | late o con |the courthouse. e Toledo State Hospita two of whom would represent each | gents, Mrs }hm“nord Mrs. | A VD Al T ed is that it is too large and | et Merwin; treasurer, Mrs, George | clicking sound which the scenes of fatal attacks e its members would realizo the | poyrony e . E. H. Cooper, Mrs. | three experts opened the valise, T h,“q, Mrs. J. S. North, Mrs. P. F.|quantity of dynamite. EnGale I, Plainville; Mrs. Robert | eight inches wide and four inches h0se body was [ whic : chairman, arranged for visits at the | emall tin box. This the firemen de- prison at Waupun. Hc is 86 years|Oof th its and although the | has never spoken unless spoken to. [OW how entirely satisfactory all de- | nce 10 |over a woman. A sherift saved him | Mrs. Ge with Miss Croy. Miss Croy had | for a pardon and has expressed a |curred by the nurscs for their vari- ars ago. |er seen a prison ball game or & |all of which they plan and carry out Charges of Seeing Them ORDED. | Mrs. Arthur Harrop who has proven | book in the house of commons to- M. P., not only declined to withe " Men Taken Away By State Cops i bt e There were cries of “Names!” from | was asked to leave the house while NOt Hdp Youths |on the members of the house as |into the breach with the assertion He said what had hurt the feel- to speak about these things oute Sir Arthur Holbrook In a heate it 10 more | ment to refer the matter to the rtford County jail robberies here and probably (‘,““,”:;‘,1’ al in Hartford for in nearby towns, were sentenced to “‘1“1,,",;‘; i 5 It fs understood that the A \atory b r offered to give the namas eraraval AReRn sl (i in police court today 10 had been drunk, was efore v Britain police sta nd two ot y - f 47 to 95, de their | {; 1 2 that they wer rallem] 2 i s e IS ungetatanding that theyyes Harlan W remarks attributed to Dr. thou ng ¢ ) ; 'rml in th : court b on avenu Slater in his speech, which was A hullet wa: - state policemen lod the two Beaumont, 20, v Hill. ' magde outside the house, were that youth ;‘\n(h;“»;]‘<v q'oy\.l[ u wi x"\; ,“\“l" sat in the |ng had “scen many members lles used by the drunk” and that “frequently the —— ing to J Gr into stores, DISCUSSES INCINERATION. Having no cases to try outside of | roadhouses debates become noisy because someone taking part in them has with 20 | committee on privileges, to whom nd Green street clock last even tal this mornin old's statements, Inns, and The subject of municipal inciner- | the burglary case, the officials of | State Pol n Paul Levin taiked tors is discussed in an art on-| the Berlin court returned to their RIS 5“1.4\,':',,,” lost, through drink, his power of ined in the Hardware City Ma homes. Judge Griswold stated that they were not arrested because they | Self-control.” ne, publication of the Chamber of | last night's incident was the first of | took no direct part in the whole ——— d out to- | its nature in the history of the court | rohberic The boys admitted that | Johnston of This City fter a lapse of scve ronths. | and he feels that Berlin authorities |they began thelr series of burglaries | Py < r. Pullen writes of s o rvations | should have been notified of the |py breaking into drugstores to ob- Is Appointed Delegate n the system employe other | change of plans. No further action tain perfume, rtford, Oct. 26 (P—Frank H. s and the possibilities locally. |15 expected from Berlin. metics for th Johnston of New Britain has been was learned at police head- Pralssant were to ap- | ppointed delegate from the Cone rs today that two state police- |pear for a in Berlin last |fecticut Chamber of Commerce te men called there yesterday morning |night on the charge of robbery in a | the New England-Virginia confers' |at 10:30 o'clock and took the drugstore, but after their confessions | ence to be held at Fredericksburg, — | prisoners to Hartford, explaining and following the arrest of the other | Va.. November 5-7, it was announcs New Britain and vicinity: | | that they would be tried in Hartford two, all four were locked up in the | ed here today by Secretary Clark Generally fair tonight and | Police court. Later two members of police station cell room here. Belden of the chamber. This is the Wednesday; not much change | | the Hartford police force arrived at| Wallemboft and Beaumont were | third such conference, the first have' in tempcrature. | | headquarters for the prisoners and |taken to Glastonbury this morning [ Ing been held In Virginia in 1924, | | were surprised to learn that they had [to face justice this afternoon on|and the second throughout Connees # | been taken away by state policemen. jcharges of burglary there. ticut and New England in 1925,