New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1926, Page 8

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NORTH ATLANTIC STATES CONTESTS N. Y., Penn., Conn. and Mass. All Have Real Issues nator Butler's home town of | New Bedford at a prevailing price lof 37 to $10 each. Senator Butler {replied that he would not insult the | Massachusetts electorate by any in- ference that their votes were for | sale. | Political observers forecast a |close contest as Walsh is personally popular and sure to roll up a large vote in Boston. The campaign attracted the attention of the beeause it is the only stat ’in Se: ve NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1926. ; ; —_—— 'WEXICAN BANDITS MAKE RAID ON AMERICAN MINE Force Loan From Tajos Mine | in | Sinaloa Which Is Owned By U. S. Citizen | Washington, Nov. 2 (A—Mexican | bandits yesterday attacked the town | of Rosario, Sinaloa, released inmates | 2 the Rev. Kenneth Wells, pastor of the Edwards Congregational church, which the Coolidges attended when at home, and Benjamin Cook, firss mayor of Northampton, still active despite his §6 years. Mr. Lucy told the newspapermen later that the president said “glad to see you' and Mrs. bless you,” as he shook their hands He added that he told them he wa sorry they had such a rainy day for their visit but that he was sure Senator Butler would win. Coolidge “God | 'ASK BOARD OF PARDONS T0 STRIKE OFF BONDS M, REICHSTAG LIKELY T0 | HAVE MORE ARGUMENTS | Hohenzollern Dynasty Political | George Evanoft and Arthur Fights Are Far From Ended Becker of This City Seek In Berlin Freedom. Berlin, Nov, 2 (B—Further politi- lcal discussions centering about the | Hohenzollerns, Germany’s former Former Mayor Angelo M. | nessa and Probation Officer C. Connelly appeared before the Mayor Weld Appoints | Incinerator Committee | * The movement to install a muni- | cipal incinerator here for the dispos- |a1 of rubbish and garbage advanced |a step today through the appoint- | |to give study to this proposition and |taxation. Donald L. Bartlett, Wil- {liam H. Judd, Thomas B. Fay, and William D. Doyle will represent the ment of a committee by Mayor Weld, | |report to the board of finance and | ON POLICE BLOTTER Joseph H. Clark of 505 Main | street complainéd to the police that damage had been done to his prop- erty at 9 East Lawlor street. William Dohérty of 111 Bassett street reported that he had broken the overhead crossing light at the corner of North street and Hartford | avenue. Harry Murtha of 384 Allen street | reported that his truck was struck | and badly damaged while parked in tront of 28 Clinton sctreet. {contest in which the president has openly indieated a preferenc Penn. Contest The contest in Pennsylvania, where a United States senator is to ibe clected, was by no means |citing as the primary struggle which William S. Vare won ation Senator s democratic opponent, V be- The police’ were notified today of the return of the operator’s licenses | of Eleanor Renehan of 14 Vine street and Joseph Roy of 490 Farm- ington avenue. common councl; John J. McBriarty, Dr. M. 8. Dunn and Dr. R. W. Pul- len, the health department; and Jo- eph D. Willlams the board of public ‘works. board of pardons yesterday in | half of George | who is seeking release from the ten- to-fifteen year sentence imposed up- | on him for manslaughter. Evanoft in | 1920 was convicted of Kkilling his wife, the act being the result of four years of domestic trouble, State | Attorney Hugh M. Alcorn explained. This trouble, he said, was caused by the wife's desire to go on the stage| nd to go out with other men. Both| r. Connelly said | vanoff deserved | of the j imprisoned the local au- | From the reception hall the party thoritics and placed a forced loan | drove once more to the special train of 2,000 pesos on the Tajos mine, an | Waiting at the station. A throng fol- American owned property. | lowed them and the president and Reports of the attack received to- | Mrs. Coolidge stepped to the r ¢ at the sta artment from | platform to bid them a final adieu. Consul’ William P. Block- | Mrs. Coolidge hugged the huge Mazatlan, said the bandits | Pouquet of tea roses which she had the town and made their |borne from the reccption, given by No one was killed nor in- | the committee in charge. ruling family, are likely to develop soon in the reichstag, the Landtag and the press. The Tacgliche Rundschau, one of whose editors is close to the Hohen- zollerns, says it is now confirmed that I'rince Oscar, the ex-kaiser's | | son, some time ago sent a friendly |letter with some cigarettes to Wa ner Lorenz while he was under ar- | rest with Karl Kaltdorf on a charge lof plotting to & inate = Foreign |4 Minister Stresemann i | The two men were acquitted on | Oct. 20, the court expressing the | opinion that they were braggarts | who could not be taken seriousl r a commutation of his 10 to 20 | The Taegiiche Rundseau says that | years' sentence was presented by | hen the story about Prince Oscar's | Judge William F. Mangan. Becker's | action was first reported, it was not | conviction for assault with intent to | believed. | kill upon Police Sergeant Harry | “Unfortunately it develops that |Lowe of Hartford, the shooting oc- the story was really true,” it adds, curing on April 29, 1922, when Lowe “and the letter of Prince Oscar ac-attempied to arrest Becker. The | companying the cigarettes is genu- | state’s attorney protested that the | Detalle i & ciaent [ine. We must state these facts, as | shooting had been deliberate. 2 2 (P —President | the incident will |;,. [- w: (ly\lr; and other state officers, a United (oolidge’s tra en route from |ther and it must od tha States senator, and cnngrr‘ssmmn\'\\(');:;v:fiz:nn"lomNorummrpm‘n. Mass., | Vely political discussions will en- | New Haven, Nov. 2 (A—sSenator Unusually heavy early voting was| paesed through here at 4:24 a. m. |51 land Mrs. Hiram Bingham, were reported from nearly all sections of | toqay., among the early arrivals this morn- New York, Nov. 2 (P—Presiden- tial aspirations of two democrats, the prestige of President Coolidge in his home state, and the progress of the prohibition modification move- ment were at stake in the North At- lantic states today as the nation went to the polls. In New York Gov. Smith, running at the democratic sta time, tory, W make him the national hence, Ogden L. he would champion o James W, United Sta defection of « hard battle on his seat a ponent. 1 YVoting on Refe ate is voti as ex- | in the Pepper. da; ame er, CENTRAL JR. H. S. NOTES ‘SOCIAL AT TRUMBULL PLANT The results in the fifth period gym | The Social Workers' club of New class football game today were as | DBritain is to be the supper guests of follows: I°ront rank, 8; rear rank 9. the.Trumbull Electric Co. at Plain- It was a close battle all through the | ville, Wednes evening. Mrs. Nel- game and the result uncertain till ;son Marcham, welfare nurse at the the late minute. factol is in charge of the program. at od eseaps ured. Mexican rushed to Re and today bandits. om i | | ttack on | in that primary stance on the stump W. Norris, r n from Nebraska 2ven should Vare Speclal Hits Auto President Coolidge’s Special Train, near Wilmington, Del, Nov. 2 (P— | President Coolidge’s special train | |on which he and Mrs. Coolidge are traveling to Massachusetts to vote, hit an automobile at Aberdeen, | Marryland, crossing at 12:42 a. m. | today, demolishing the automobile | {but the occupants escaped unin- jured. They and M. Try the Aber federal troops w rio on a special trair were in pursult of the win in this de- state may in the senate to im to the seat. . republican, fol- estion of Wilson, is- amation calling for nee to prevent ballot- ‘he election of John Becker's sixth anpmll HEAVY YOTE IN MASS. Chilly Mills, voices knock Weather Does not Deter W o 4 | Electorate from COoming Out mi Sere- PAVATOR SW. -, Held ng, U A., stationed at n proving grounds. Bay State Today. We are siding many families to pay cash for winter clothes. Cash prices plus our interest charges come toless | than clothes bought oa installments. Bosten, Nov. 2.—(P—Citizens of Massachusetts marched to the polls in force today to choose a governor sndum a "his State New York, Nov. Note our casy term: $5 monthly. plus lawful interest. repays $60, cash loan $75 or $1 G wiul interest, repays $90 lawtal interest, repays $105 BINGHAMS VOTE EARLY on ator Hiram John R. n on the re- i Robin r 6 monthly, pi 37 oty Do monthiy B or $1 adoption & heads of b su lin W. republic policy yesterday 1o the Uni the rep took the s I°. Milliken, governor, against Ritc campaign attack on In Massa M. But Cool- Washington to votc Northampton to tor David I. Wi cdidate for the scnate, fications of the Volsic Mr. Walsh cha republicans had Former mocratic favors modi- ad act. sterday that ng 1y, na- 1 can- votes the state. A rush of voters to the lls was reported in and around From newspapermen on the spe- 1 train when it arrived here a for support of nistration. Rhode a governor and Hampshire vote and senator. cetion a month ago , ¥ held a primary elee- *h Arthur R. Gould won slican nomination for the seat made vacant by the M. Fernald, yvember 29 a and yester tion in wt the re of Senator Be ction to he Rumanian and Italian Romance Not Confirmed | Bucharest, Rumania, Nov, 2 (P)— swn Prince Humbe instead of : of Spolcto, was to have | ion arriving tomorrow, the newspaper Ade- verul says in commenting on the rumor of the coming engagement of Humbert and Princes Tleana, Hur bert was obliged to forezo the trip, because of ill health. arding the engagement report, aper s that no confirma- tion can be obtained from well in- formed circles in Bucharest. There 1re no comments on the report in the other papers iched great importance to the visit of the Italian mission, as was shown would he would act y. Princes Ilean in the United States with hier mother, Queen Marie. 'is now lan . tional details were learned concern- uly voting In Worcester was the ling the collision at Aberdeen, Md., heaviest in years and county towns fjn"hich the presidential train de- also were casting o heavy vote. Tn|mashed an automobile occupied by Springfield the first few preemets o, golgiers, who escaped without reported an unusually heavy vote. |10 In New Bedford the early morn- | = ing activity at the polling places in- dicated a big vote. Balloting in the first few hours was heavy. The early heavy balloting was carried out in spite of chilly weather that blanketed much of the state| and despite the fact that the weath- er forecaster last night predicted light rain. One third of the s said that the automobile s driven directly into the path of the Coolidge train in spite of the | fact that the crossing gates were down. The president and M Coolidge were sleeping at the time in the last car of the five-car train. | The impact was so great that the front trucks of the locomotive were total registered |lifted off the rails and the special ote in Lynn was polled during the | Was delayed about 10 minutes. The first two hours of voting this morn- | train was sald to have hm‘n- |v/‘.\.1~1: ing. Approximately 12,000 votes cast, | Iing about 45 miles,an hour at the out of a total of 34,000, established |time of the accident. ¢ record for early voting in that | - RISOIS et ea e | Hartford, Conn.,, Nov home town of | President Coolidge's spec passed through Hartford cit; . Belmont, the Attorney General Jay R. Benton, the latter reported 33 per cent of |this morning. the total vote polled at 9:30 this morning. Benon estimated that 90 per cent of the total registered vot would be cast before the polls clos ed, For Sale of Beer Toronto, Nov. 2 (B—Tremicr Fer- | | zuson has changed his proposed liquor legislation, on which he is ap- | pealing to the voters, so that the | open sale of beer will be forbididen, the Toronto Telegram says. NORTHAMPTON HAS |tent,” the Telegram says, “and will be disposed of in bottled form only ¢ government vendors. “Objection has been taken that - open sale of beer would contrib- » to the possibility that spiritous liquors also might be sold, Iy of course, in hotels; and the pre- mier has aceordingly concluded that only bottled beer through govern- ment vendors may be purchased. (Continued From First Page) arvived hicre. Among the man color to the gray hung from a pole ‘oolidge home. Not the 1 of tho who had awaited eagerly the arriv- al home was Mrs. Alice Reckahn, who for several years has lived at | the Coolidge home as housekeeper | for Mrs. Goodhue. | Mrs. Goodhue bade them goodbye | flags which gave | 1y was one which in front of the CITY COURT JUDGMENTS Judgments have been awarded as Ferguson Amends Plan |, |ing at the polls in the 1Sth ward. Their sons, Alfred and Woodbridge, did not vote here. The former voted | 2 (A—A lin Salem, where the Bingham sum- 2 rain that fell this [ mer home is, and the latter is on the expeeted to cut the | Pacific ocean en route to China, ast in toda election in New | Hampshire. Democratic pa indicated that the ather might help their candidats while repul that while the total vote might he iess than expected the cutcome w bevond dispute. In this city a fair- sized vote had been cast shortly be- fore noon. In N Senator can, was opp Robert €. Murchic, state also v Rain Expcctcdrlo Cut | | New Hampshire Voting | Concord, N. H., Nov. 2 NEW BILLIARD RECORD Nov. 2 (P—Rogert Conti, “rench billiard p! kline run of in a club. The previou 701 was held ot Belginm. nited States cs, repu re-election by nocrat. on a state Hampshire [ unfish of Mola Mola Family Found Far North cwfoundland, Nov. 2 sunfish of the mola mola ¢ unknown to local hore here today. The five feet in length 500 pounds. waters fish and weighed yout The sunfish is “a remarkable ma- rine plectognath fish having a deep body truncated behind, high dorsal and anal fins, and a sflort fring like caudal fin. The mouth issm the skin fough and leathery, and the flesh almost equally so. The nfish oceurs in all warm and temper: . swimming lazily the surf according o author ties on ine lifoe. - Her Hair Fairly SPARKLES Now! | The woman who knows what to [do after waving- her hair doesn't Ifear the effect of hot irons. Nor of frequent washings. A few drops ot Danderine—on comb or towel— and the haid is soft and lustro and behaves beautifully. | A bit of Danderine rubbed light- Iy into the scalp is the ono sure way to dissolve every particle of dan- druff. But a few drops moye make sing that is simply marvelous. it rivals brilllantine, and | m French Consul Reported Slain by Chinese Bandits Peking, Nov. 2 (®—Chinese han- reported to have Kkilled M. Irench consul at Lungchow, n Wwangsti provinee, Sunda he was motoring from [Lung- ! to Langson, 40 miles to the dits are Robert, southe v One Bottle Free drugstore in America has ow south. $3 monthly. plus lawful Interest, repays$160 cash loan. $10 moachly. plus tawlul lterest. repars yer, today | lished a new world's record 18.2 | match | unst Louis Cure at the Olympia | record run of | I3douard Horemans | |} WE OFFER | lawful interest, repays 101 Raphael Bldg., Second Floor, 99 Detween Washington and High Sts. | Open$ to5:30 Licensed by the State and Bonded to tho Fubli Q3 Call, write or ’'phone, BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY WestMain St, Tel. o Saturdays 9 to 1 ! NN OO TR TN We Thank You Over 4,000 request coupons were received by the Capitol Theater from local movie fans, signifying their desire to have us bring back Rudolph Valentino in “The Four Horsemen.” 1 S0 Beginning Next Sunday, for Four Days “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse” WITH at her home when they left for the |follows by Judge Benjamin W. All- D public recepfion in the office of |ing in city court: LOW 1 ‘c 3 i 'y 1T rintendent of schools Fayette | Non-suit in the action of Louis NC HIT K. Congdon, who held the same |Grosko against Johmn Cerkanowicz | Hendaye, Trance, | position when the president presid-|and wife. W. M. Greenstein repre- | The bootlegger of the I s joined the victims | Danderine at 3c. Or, to prove its | marvelous propertics, your first bot- | the e NOW, mla Fighting Lawyers Cited On Charges of Contempt New Hav Conn., Nov. 2 (P David J, Me( attorney, and Lou Sperandeo, assistant prosecuting at- torney, who were in an tion in common pleas court room las ri during which an inkwell w thrown spattering the judge's hench, the walls, apd records, were cited to- 1 appear before Judge Walter M. Pickett for contempt of court, on I°rid after chort calendar. T ad been verbal- out trial of a Judg Pickett were close to a deputy sheriff had his uni- hlotched with intervened so touch ea BOOT! 20 (M) - lower Pyre- of thy RUDOLPH VALENTINO The Capitol Theater Oct | | ip and Mall this Coupon to— | | | Danderinef Dept. 35, Wheeling,W.Va. Please send me the sp Danderine FREE and POSTPAID to w0 at scliool committee meetings as |sented the plaintiff and §. J. Traces- , mayor of Northampton. kLrepresented the defendant. Dam- 1 frane. Details of Ttcception ages of 825, were awarded in the ac- leohol, when Tn the reception room, decorated [tion of A. Askin Co. .against Robert | (0 across the with great yellow chrysanthemums, | MeDermott, Edward A. Mag repre- . where the autumn leaves and tea roscs, the |sented the plainti’ In the action of | nee met o settie President and Mrs. Coolldge stood |George Grulick ageinst Hilding An- could be soid at with S or Gillett and Congress- |derson, judgment was profit ten years @ man Bowles while 2,000 friends, | plaintift for damages of the peseta worth neighbors and students passed and |ham, Cooper, Hungerford times as much as the shook thelr hands in the seant three |represented the plaintiff. is greater than the quarters of an hour allotted, Mrs. Coolidge, in particular, greeted hundreds of old acquaint- nees by name, Bven In the hrief yment they stood hefore her she s able to interject brief personal s as to thelr health and that their families. Almost cvery third person was thus greeted by name by her. rst to pass the reception line the teachers of the high school hundreds of war, high, mith Col- alte | - Spanish rully viver Ir success- Bidasson nt Kings dif- im- Now, more than franc the profit here ne elr n including The Chiei Youreally enter sunny Cali- fornia the moment you step aboardoneofthe fivefamous Santa Fe cross-continent trains. The new Chief—extra fare— is the finest and fastest of the Santa Fe California trains. Only TWO business days on the way. No extra fare on the four other daily trains, Fred Harvey dining service sets the standard in the transportation world. Enjoy the out-of-doors this winter—take your family. California hotel rates are " reasonable. May send you our picture folders? 1o mens with I five Iy at civil odds through and when ris} stepped in. ink. Other that the men uther. 1eys did not Garage Board to Act On “Taxi” System Here ial meeting 1 1ction on the | of a taxi vstem in th 1 garage, and it is expect board will vote againgt this plan. hairmen of the v DESIDERIVS ERASMVS 146 USE THE The most dk; we Following them were students from the gram preparatory schools and lege. Mingled among them were scores of older people who had Mrs. Coolidge as a teacher president as a young A guraton endable bak- ing powder. As reliable in the hands of the novice as in those of the experienced housewife: Perfect leaven- ing—even texture —good appearance — wholesome- ness—economy! 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Dist Santa F' 212 014 South Bldg., Boston, Mass, Phones: Liberty 1941 and 7045 Pass. Agent ras EDUCATORS R A : DESIDERIUS ERASMUS, whose name Bgfi alg is immortal, encouraged in the @] -h) m S people of his generation—the late fifteenth and the early sixteenth centuries—a keen appreciation of education through his uncovering of buried classics and his publication in Greek and Latin of the New Testament. The Associated Press holds a par- allel position in world history, for through its dissemination of accu- rate and unbiased news of world events it is 3 powerful educational factor. The Assoriated Jress A Q\:’mu\c phosohat: pIST ‘s " n baking qualty Mg Aot N\ ey TENCAL WORKS. e b Engrcwed Greeting Cards 'HE Holidays are just round the corner. Have you or- dered your engraved Greeting Cards as yet? 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