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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 7, 1927 — T TSoonttn o EMBASSY RAID MAY of Sporte | CAISEOPENBREIK FPOPCCOIC I T IIPNSTITE Iy | | asam sutici, tocal voy wio <] 100000 Foregasts Red Drive at | Tso-Lin's Strongholds trying out for a catcher’s berth with the Kinston, C. Baseball London, April 7 (P — Diplomatic club, 13 going good in the practice | sessions according to word received | circles in London were speculatin today on the likely consequences | of yesterday's raid on buildings at- tached to the soviet embassy In i Peking by soldiers of the northern | army of Marshal Chang Nothing was knewn as to Mosco ude, but it was thought that istrong action might be taken, the guess rumors including the possi- [Lility that the soviets would treat Sullick's arm, always in good ape, will probably land him a ico with the team. His opponent the catching position is an old- pep'! rd that the local boy stands z0od chance of landing the posi. {der of the killing of her husband, Thie Kinston manager has taken a B deal of interest in Sullick and told him it he had a good throwing arm, he stood a good chance to make the team. Sullick got into the first game and plaved in the ~ighth and ninth innings. The team went out of town for the sccond exhibition game and Sullick accompanied the squad with the veteran staying home, Sullick caught ix frames. He batted twice, the first time being thrown out short to first and the second time, lacing out am lost ‘s success or failure ir the grade wiil rest with h of expericnce. Whether h an play the game as good as the old timer he 1s battling will depen: on whether he can work himself | fto the team as a component | the club, jond ¢ | His work around ihese parts mad: m casily the premier catcher of | New Britain last yaar and he was surely ready to land into faster and | ligher company. We lock for him bo retained as regular catcher on the team. i Clinch, local pustli second knockout nee fig professional, jast night in' rtford when Referee Jim Kee ~topped a one-s auzhter in the th round. | Jimmy | chinch had Pl Chapman of Iridgeport as his opponent and| from the start, the local lmy‘ swarmed over the Bridgeporter. | Referee Keefa showed good judg- | ment {n stopping the bout when| Chapman failed to protect himself | coming out of the clinches. | Clinch is showing a world of im- ! {rovement in his every fight. He works out daily with Louis (Kid) | K an at the latter's training quar ters n Meriden and he goes three or four rounds almost every day {"rom these exchanges, the local boy las been learning how to shoot his 1ches and the results of his work | being shown in his recent bou Johnny Clinch, brother to Jimmy. of amateur boxers in ho is the ace city nirsday night in the ¢ the Mohaw hall. nest tourna- A. C. at the Manager (Pat) Coons, who suc cssfully conducted the P & 1./ Corbin - Girly basketball team throngh a season of no victories in the Y. M. Dusty league is gathering an all-star team from the leagie to play the Aetna Girls of Hartford. | The game will be played Saturday | pight as the preliminary to the | National Guard-Meriden Tnsilco and | the Rristol k£ feriden Endees contests at th fiden State Ar- mory. i The lincup of the all-stars will have Mary Jarnot of the Stanley | Iiule team, center; Ilorence svnska of the American Hosiery and Doris Kilbourne of Landers, for- wards; a Truhan of the Hosi and Pat Dashner of the Stanley Rule & Level, guards Men's rules will be used during ihe contest He is also bringing along his ccond zll-star team, consigting of Connie Mavis, Hosiery, center; Anna | : achine, and Roso Paul, ards; and Jennett Semon, . & F. and Hattie Saunders, lgsicry, guard Springfield Man Named In $681,000 Action | Springfield, Mass., April 7 (UP)— Alfred H. Chapin, father of A. H. Chapin, Jr., tennis star, is being sued here for $651,000 for alleged illegal appropriation of large sums of money and property. The plaintiff is John M. Willlams, stockholder in the Moore Drop- | Vorging Company, of which the de- fendant is president and treasurer, FORCED TO TAKE AUTO Commuting Jams Too Much Aged New York Financier. New York, April 7 (A—Rush hour e have driben John T ry An- 86 year old capitalist and known as the subway's “richest strap-hanger,” to automobiles. Ior years Andrus, a patent medi- ‘ine manufacturer, rode back and fth between his home in Yonkers and Nis office in Manhattan by cars and subway at leas ok, Iis ieg was injured when he was knocked down in a jam in the sub- ral weeks ago, causing him nsfer his allegiance to auto- He suid that he will take sional subway ride, “just to Kkeep in trim.” For Irus, NEW HAVEN TEAM New Haven, April 7 () — Haven team in a game with the New York Giants' second team at Suffolk, Va., yvesterday, won, 4 to 3. Elmer Bowman, first baseman for New Ha- ven made three of the nine hits for his team. The New Haven battery cre Kenner 4 Woodman, piteh <, and Lerinn and Macklin, eate! ers New Haven is In Norfolk today for a game and will go to Raltimore | for two days. + | diplomatic will return to the ring next | ¢ | China if charges against them are | Nanking would be part of an ener- | ing factions | earried the incident as an act of war and demand reparaiion or otherwlise at- tack Chang Tso-Lin through Man- churia. The average Tondoner was inter- ested in the exact reason for the Outstanding among the rea- sons discussed was one advanced by the Westminster Gazette, on the basis of information in well in- formed circles in closa touch with Chinese-Russian affairs, that it was ordered because of the discov- cry of a plot against the Peking government hatched under soviet The plan, as described b wspaper. was fo have the coincide with the expected | antonese advance on Shanghai. Among the 70-0odd persons ar- ested in the ra 22 Russians and about 50 Chin — were the | staff of the Dahlbank prominent Chinese agitator, Li Ta-Chao, and three girl students. Red flags, | propaganda leaflets, a machine gun, a trench mortar, bombs, rifles, thousands of Kuomintang (Canton- ese political party) flags and a supply of ammunition are reported 10 have been seized. Information received by counsel-general at Shanghat the soviet embassy at Peking was that several Russfan watchmen d in the course of the raid, “beaten and tortured.” This infogmation agrees with other ac counts that the raid was confined 0 one part of the embassy grounds, il main embassy offices, the chaneellery and archives not being molested. A Reuter despatch from Peking, saying the rald was not on the soviet embassy proper, added that it was pointed out in Peking that the soviet flag was not flying over the embassy yesterday morning, but over the section raided. (Official quarters in Paris information that the Chinese au- thorities asked permission of the diplomatic corps to search the Rus- sian bank situated in the legation quarter, which quarter has enjoyed immunity since 1901, The bank, it was declared, occu- picd the former Russian post office Luilding, no longer In existence, and did not enjoy diplomatic im- munity sinea the soviet government renounced all fts privileges in China). A short time before the raid was ried out, two American journal- — Mrs. Mildred Mitchell, for- merly of San Francisco and Hono- Inlu, and Wilbur Burton -— w detained at a hotel, ostensibly b ause of their connection with the publications which have been charged with hostility to the north- ern cause. © No direct accusation was made inst them by Marshal 1z Tso-Lin's agents, hut it wi reported this morning that they were still under eclose gnard. The Westminster Gazette Jearned that they probably wil be delivered to the American anthorities tod: nd be transferred to Tientsin for trial by a consular court under the ex- traterritorfality law. The paper's Peking correspondent s thought the Amecrican govern- will order them to leave lot the from were had ists news- proved. Relations between General Chiang Kai-Shek, commander-in-chief of the Cantonese armies, Who is now at Shanghai, and Cantonese headquar- ters at Hankow have been further obscured. Foreign sources in Shang- hai learned” that he had received word from the executive committee of the Cantonese political party at | Hankow to proceed to Nanking to resume military operations and in- structing him not to reveal any for- cign policy or to receive any com- munications from any “imperial- According to some interpretations, transference of Chlang's troops to gized Cantonese push toward Pe- king. It is rumored that General Chow Feng-Chi, noted extremist will replace him at Shanghai with fresh troops. Shanghai despatches shed no light on Chiang’s reaction to thesa in- strucfons, which aroused discussion as to whether the committee sent them in an effort to rcunite dissent- of the Cantonese or whether the move presaged the climination of (‘hlang as a political factor. His action yesterday in closing the Shanghai office of the political burcan was looked upon in some quarters as a direct challenge to the Hankow authorities. Great Britain’s determination not to recede from her position in China was reiterated in the house of com- mons by Sir Austen Chamberlain, the forelgn secretary, while the Chinese question was under discus- . “Great Britain is ared to be hustled out of te declated. The British nolic and it was necessary hefore this policy conld he further that Great Britain should know what was to he the at- titude of the responsible authorities in China toward the Nanking out- break., After John Wheatley, laborite had declared the forgign office had es- tranged the other powers, the for- cign secretary said:i— “I believe that all the powers con- cerned will be In substantial agree- ment that it {x necessary to require reddress for our suhjects and are also agreed as to the terms wherein this redr 11 be demanded. ited States, Japan and Great will probably agree. not for reparations. hut as to the amount which should be arked for.” not fwork I GRAY IS REPORTED AS NOW DEEPLY RELIGIOUS Snyder's Confessed Slayer Said to | Be Preparing to Meet His | Maker. | Park, N. I, April 7.—®) A. Douglass Bedell, today made | public a letter in which Henry Judd | Gray accused with Mrs. Ruth Sny- | Albert Snyder, declared Lo was pre- | paring to face “not only the judge's | verdict but His judgment in Heaven | as well” Bedell was a friend of y for many vears. i In telling of Gray's life in prison | and his thoughts of the future, the letter said in par “Looking backward is abont all the happiness I have just now, for all T can do is o prepare mysclf to meet Him that made my life pos- sible; but I thank Him most vently for all the I 2 been graced wit } ds with which-he endowed me. | “I can truthrufly say that if was not the Judd G t did thi¥ aw- 15 accused— not the Judd that you know or the Judd that even I knew, “If it was I that did such an act, | it was a man that ncither of us knew, as God be my judge. Bfe here holds little, all my deg ones, But on somehow—cver preparing to face not only the judee's verdict on earth, but His judgment in Heaven | as well. For I am in His hands now, whether or not He will call me—or it T am to live on to carry on His know not, God's will be fer- | way from | 1 must live done.” FOREST FIRE WARNING New Haven Weather Bureau Re- ports That Lack of April Showers Has Caused Hazard. New Haven, April 7 (P—Contin- uance of winds and lack of precipi- tation which usually comes in the form of April showers and lack of | late winter snows and rains has| made the countryside so dry that al fire warning was issued today in| connection with the weather fore- cast of the local bureau. The month of March was dry without a snow covering and so far this month there has been a de- ficiency in moisture in the air. The woods and fields are in about the same condition as when winter set in because the winds have taken up the scanty spring moisture. This | also has been a spring without freshets in water courses. The fire warning is issued now that fishermen who beat the brooks, and others who go out in search of | spring flowers, may exercise care in use of matches, or the ignition of | fires over which to cook. | Holy Cross Baseball | Team Off for South | Mass., April 7 (P— | 1 squad, numbe! ing 15 men, left Worcester today on | its annual pilgrimage to Dixie land. | accompanied by Rev. oach John 3 Charles E. The chedule will be opened Saturd Ashland, Va., with Randolph-Macon. Tuesday the team will play William and Mary in Williamsburg; Thurs- day, Catholic University tn \ ington and April 1, Georgetown Un versity in Washington. TABS HALL BOXIN FIGHTS THAT Main Bout 12 Tounds SIG KEPPEN New York's fighting Polish contender ARE Ve, IRWIN BIGE Nebraska cowhoy Somi Final 8 Tounds FRANKIE MACK ian destroyer Ve JEAN BORDE Georges Carpenticr pupil Fight Rounds JIMMY BONES Bridgeport Meriden e, TONY DE PALMER New Haven 0 including Tax. ickets on wale ut Patsy Bridgett's Smoke Shop, Church St., Presto Lunch, 331 Main St. GOING TO THE FIGHT? PARK YOUR CAR TONIGHT 25¢ AT RAY'S REAL SERVICE Rear 505 Main St. Opp. Lafayette St. 25 SALESMAN SAM WHAT? Ya AIN'T BEELIN' WELL aGaN AN' WANNA GO HOME? You START TAKIN' & SPRING ToNle ! | Social SOCIAL HYGIENE ' STRONGLY URGED Teaching Facts-to Children Ad- vocated by Dr. Galloway Washington, April - hygiene education, begun in childhood, would raise the stand- ards of morality in America and help eliminate divorce, in the opin- ion Dr. Thomas W. Galloway, head of the social hygiene society. “The phenomena of life should be taught to children step by step,” Dr. Galloway, a foremost biologist, | said in an exclusive interview with the United Press toda “When a child reaches fiv eliminated 11. C. Kinel, three up and two to play Two other Ryder cup pl lin the first round and A. defeated George Dunc four to play. C. A, Whitcombe, an other The vers who will de- | fend t Ryder cup against the Americs was eliminated y H. C. | Jolley, two and one to play. | The Roehampton cup tournamen lis the first big golfing event of tl | English season. | 1 | ers met | Havers | ns JEALOUS HUSBAND * HELD FOR ASSAULT 1 Wile Takes Witness Along Even| to Church Services %would be a great step toward proving America’s years he should receive his first lesson. “Young people taugiit sexology in | the correct way become better citi zens and better mothers and father of tomorrow. Instruction of this delicate subject, however, should be | given in a proper wa Mothers and fathers should tell children the secrets ot life befo they learn about it on the streets S and obtain the information “with a | 'IPven if bad flavor,” Dr. Galloway stated. |Vitness, or if 1 go to the grocer in lower classes study |S'0re I bri a witness, still he says , when they just o | ! U el could apply the same time to study bis s human development,” he said, He “Soclal hygiene lessons should | Noplcyiand el start in the home, graded and high g shard e dar g e schools should have courses on the e s i subject, and colleges.should ins S B LR SO ) ents i B . not have enough to eat, he said m‘-dmls infleiofstart eheriuiglivhin (BR8N STE B e that 1o “Lifting the vell of ssereey con. | Vas in Prosecuting Attorney Woods' tainediint olastashionsa. conveitions costerday when Mrs. Zi . | Ski made a complaint that she had morality stand. |D°Cn assaulted. She had a mark on "% [ her shoulder and the collar of her as torn, the sergeant testificd Alling told Zienofski the ase impresses him as one in which the husband is too lazy to work and 18 willing to be supported by his wife He continued the case until May 7, on probation. Mrs. Joseph Murow 47 Washington streef, was glven a | suspended jait sentence of three months on the charge of violation of the liquor law in a sfore at 249 Washington street. | Detective Sergeant Ellinger testi- [fied,that he and Sergeant O'Mara |and Officer Feeney rafded the store fon April 4 and seized a small quan- tity of liquor in a hox nalled on the When they entered and asked shloflihe Antonio told assault, Mrs. nofski of 32 Gold street dge Alling in police court has no comfort at home beca her is fealous of her and companion when goes out of his sight, I go to church, T brir a of is in poor les he | does affice nof- giene, interpreted cor- r taught with kindne and careful guidance, te dis- crimination. Young men would learn how to pick mates instead of marrying for infatuation. Clear un- derstanding of lite would elimina the large number of marriage fail- ures. “Divorces would fall off. “I do not mean, however, that marriage is a failure, for there ar less matrimontal failures in propor- tion to business failures. Marriag. is a sound institution.” Abe Mitchell Continues To Play Winning Golf Rochampton, England, Ap#l 7 (@ | \fys. Murowski whether or not she ~—Abe Mitchell, captain of the J:\'-; old liquor, she told them to *go der cup team of nine British profes-fand find it,” the sergeant testified. sional golfers which will go to n.«[ Attorney B. J. Monklewicz chang- United States next month, survived ed the plea from not guilty to guilty the first round of match play to-land made a plea for leniency. day for the Roehampton cdp. He Tha woman took the blame when i, aged 37, of wal YOUR HAT When you feel that you look better in your hat than without it—that’s Style. 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The sub- will stay in | ject for the competition will be on the roof | chosen by a different academy each nt house | y: for 1928 will be selected academy of St. Thomas sould Will Keep in h 'rim in Own Gymnasium | o; April 7 P—Jay Gould, 1 « court that she has been an en 1 « vorld, liquor law t the death of her hus rons of t} od to Iifth avenu 00 for ki s r * tov Negro Must Explain Two Rl ion, | Wives and No Divorce yd of Mre. 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