New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 10, 1927, Page 1

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-~ miom] NEW BRI NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, [ ESTABLISHED 1870 STIRHDEATH 0L L ogion Members Argue WONVS Oper Prohibition Poll AUTHORITIES FEAR Suggested by Spafford 21 Reported Dying From Intense Oold on Board Vessel Frozed ' past Commander Edward Ogren Sees in Move Attempt i i to Introduce Politics—Opposition Also Voiced in Ontari B&Y Elsewhere About Country. SNOW FOUR FEET DEEP IN PARTS OF OREGON : _ en jumped to his feet and objected | point that prohibition {s not a poli- to the proposed prohibition poll of |tical issue. Gale Which Has Swept From Coast |all Legion posts, sponsored by Na-| At this junciure of the meeting Commander Spafford of New | Mr. Ogren requested Commander Nathan Avery o read the Associat- n, in the course of his re- {ed Press report of Spafford's re- that he thought that it marks about the prohibition poll. At | s an attempt to bring the Legion |the conclusion of the reading, sev- | 2 : |into politics, and any such measure |eral members clamored for recogni- g Nortinyest Sl zainsgand "“""‘}.m no place in the Legion. Junfor |tion National Committeeman | Vice-Commander Robert Vance took | Harry ickson was given the |the stand that the Legion had a 10 (P—Fear that|right to vote on it, saving that a lit- 21 might be added fo | he toll of more than 34 exacted by | e s e on | Quarter of Million Dollars May ’ Be Tnvolved {FOUNDRY IMPROVEMENTS ¢ ng abatement of the storm to go| near-homb shell was exploded | tle dispute one at the meeting of the Eddy-Glover | would tend to ¢ post, American Legion, last night | throughout country. He also en Past Commander Edward 0g~‘sdld that office seekers strese the [ r A way or the other | the To Coast, Subsides Except in Lake | Below Zero Cause Great Suffering in Serious Tie-Up, (Continued on Page Five) CONGRESS REAPS ‘PROBE’ HARVEST Investigation Season Opens on Capitol Hill CHALLENGE HEARST ‘NEWS' = Chicago, Dec. more deaths the cold reaching here ont. Seant cue ‘of t of the n-wide storm wave was in wors from Proviaence Bay, st on a t near 10 the rescue, feared the men either | iad died from exposurs or had been | rapped in the forward parc of the | at by the sheet of tce. Tee en 4 the portion of the ship in view | \hove the surface, and with the tem. perature still below zero, was gradu- ally thickening. Rescue parties hastened to the aid of many other wind-whipped shipa rom various Great Lake ports. The gales which had swept from coast to coast had subsided except| n the Lake Region, and the middle | west today was greeted by milder | temperatures, Melting, Coal Handling and An-| Secrctary Mellon's FEstimates on nealing Operations — Will Eftect | Big Saving. for Tax Reduction. Dec. 10 (UP)—The son has opened in The Malleable Tron Work at the rtle and Gr congress. strects, which was taken over Jan- | oroseaing that { uary 1, 1927, by the Eastern Malle-|and Vare will s able Iron Co., is planning extensive ! af improvements to fts equipment | !'® "”'} tions inv which will put the plant in line to the foundries in the country s lo ‘Washington, e lor ar vstigation se Senators Smith a committee trial er having been barred from tak- senate oath, the Reed ele committee was | t today to consider its Heaviest Snow fn Years Portland, Ore, Dec. 10 (A—The Leavic now in several years to- day blanketed a large part of thel oo i Pacifie norfhwest. Freezing tem- | peratures were reported at man e s A : to officials. These impro e Sk v tiag ing | following a similar plan to those| Meantime, u;in:\:‘ n': ,’,?“,2,:, n::,;“:;m:;m:)'l_"f { which were started at Vulcan Iron | tigating was shaping. The Reed com- con welcomed the snow as a pro | \WOrks several years ago and are |mittee agreed to open : TR o bl stll being added to from year to|Thursday to the origin and truth of Snow continued in the Klamath |Veur | documents printed by the Washing- s district last night, with nine {ton Herald (a Hearst paper), pur- hes at Fort Klamath, | [ porting to show President Calles of i i St | compris: revamping of the melt- | Mexico ordered payment of more ing operation which does away with (Y”“ $1,000,000 to four U. S. sena- {the old hand fired methods and cuts | 1O me entirely some of the most dit-| Capitol Hill viewed the expose as fieult Tabor operations in the malle- | Unfounded, but felt its dignity and | . any | integrity had been aftronted. ble industry. Tn addition to any | e Tax Dispute Starts suins oo SRR SR o B e e R milinc W ey 1L ““‘h‘" It also makes the process & | . o) ohate on the tax reduction PRI Gl And maced sure. The debate had started {ally in the with which the high S S of quality and uniformity e 1ay be maintainec it SR | In the new process coal is taken sopropriationtiortguniele | dircet from hoppers put through a pulverizer which passes coal | (o T & | through a mixer and directly Into ;o000 aenon's ¢ on the furnace where it “is burned, ! oo foceints and limits for tax thereby eliminating any man hand- | jyctjon, and insisted the nation |ling at all. Considerable time is also | 0™ (' n4 o tax reduction of as |saved in the melting operation by | i) o e 000000, Garner wants the use of this process Sttt ierabvicosting | ard today after a drop of nine blzjlimo saying 8 {the treasury about $33,000,000 more degrees y rd | The biggest time saving how SR Weather official’s promise of clear | has been accomplished through the | skics and a temperature of 36 de- | installation of a continuous oven for | tended to alleviate the suffer- | annealing. The old process in which | sed by the heavy gale which | the annealing \\l'xa ;lmw in a p{v)rl;: New York the sccond odic oven, that fs, in an oven tha ek “vere storm uro||m- e i i castegtysaad | Gontinnedionkass The storm which yesterday loft a | “saggers.” bricked up and fired un- most up-to-date ; according | The senate itsel? was in recess to 1ents are | Monday. another serious inves- Melting Operations The most exter improvements (Continued on Page Two) FAIR AND WARMER, IS FORECAST FOR EAST Relief From Sudden Cold nap Promised by Weather Man 18940,000 vation Rep. Garner, dem. Texas, ew Yor Dee. 10 (UP)—"Fair warmer” weather for tha ea predicted to send the mercur Vare Denied Oath session y the The afternoon saw the senate refuse oath to Two) lliven the meetings | Plans Tnvolve Fntire Revamping of | Rep. Garner, Dem., Texas, Attacks | the Treasury Reccipts and Limits | hearings | containing 2| late | erday | [ MASONIC TEMPLE £ INNEW HAVEN IS DEDICATED TODA. | Whitney Avenue Structure One| of Most Imposing of Its ‘ Kind in New England 1 | | |CONSTRUCTION COSTS NEARLY HALF MILLION {Interior of Bullding 1s Wonderful, Todge Room Having Lighting I-ZI‘~ | fects that Resemble | Firmament | at Night—Structure Taken Over by Masonic Bodies Without Debt or_Mortgage. New Haven, Dec. 10 (A —Dedica- ‘tion of the Masonic temple in Whit- ney avenue, erected through joint effort of 11 bodies of the traternity, which for a long period of years had held their communications fin downtown lodge rooms, and by vol- unmn contributions of the craft in city rally, will be held late 04\'\ . The worshipful nd Connecticut, of which | Foster of Deep River is the grand !master, will carry through tn. time honored ceremony in the presence of .more than a hundred guests and the master Masons of he city and ourth Masonic district, An Imposing Structure The temple is probably the most mposing of any in the statc and for its beauty of design and intertor finishing and furnishings it stands mong the most distinetive England. It has been forec building will accommodate craft who use it as their home the century should no unfore- seen mishap bring it down. It will [be the social center of something {lke 7,000 members and stands {n ta section towards whith Yale uni- |versity is extending itself with im- | posing buildings, Interior Layout interfor layout two are on the main floor fone of very ample dimensions lodge of Theodore th In ! rooms lodge end in (Continued On Page h\t) | DOGTOR IS UPHELD British Jurors Agrce Mcdical Man Did Right in Letting Suilering Patient Die, Sheffield, Eng. Dee right of a doctor to let rather than live in pain has been itly coroner's jury here. The coroner in summation clared that ncither he nor the jury should cither commend or censu Dr. A. {mpson for letting his pa {tient, John Robinson, die after | patient had taken an overdose o |dangerous micdicine. T jury {brought in a verdict that Robin, |died from medicine taken to reli ‘p.\in and cause him to sleep. Dr. Simpson w Rot son for rlln;\ | se, On {the day that Robinson died he found {13005 Sihrein T b L dose of medicine. In view of t} great pain Rohinson had suffered in Ithe past, Dr. Simpson decided to !make no empts to counteract the poisonous effects of the medicine, 10 (P paticnt unremedi 1d The die hle by & de- 't-\pv S Hmaauuq) | Daily Herald {respondent TAIN HERALD fi3ER 10, 1927. —EIGHTEEN PAGES Average Daily Circulation For Week Endmg 14 420 Dec. 3rd ... PRICE THREE CENTS - ) WAS CROWD | NAVAL PARLEY, BRITAIN 1S TOLD England, America and Japan Found Three One Too Many, Chamberlain Sags \ANY TWO COULD AGREE, LONDON ENYOY DECLARES - Laborite Herald Points to Failure of | A8y 9wy, Tri-Partitc Conference as ample of Conferring Without As- certalning Sort of Agrecment Might Be Expected—Three Planks of Triangle Could Not Be Joined London. Dee. 10 (Pi—The Laborite today prints an ex- clusive Interview by its Gene SR e G be British foreign secretary, on the Buropean and disarmament situation. tri-partite na ence of last sum mple of the going into conference powers on having o s with othe i ned what sort Xpected. showed | sement : conferen at, while Great Bri 1 Am ca could agree, Sritain could agree . mll n could agr: he three of this triangle comid not be Fallure Not Discouragement Sir Auste however, was couraged by the fact that failure had not embittered the very friend- Iy relations of the three govern- nents. He decline: advance a definite opinion whether a di lament con- for was le in the near fu- ture, he insisted th ous inother ind that there must pointment it progress v tirst In co s that Maxim Litvin- , Soviet vi CO) rissar for foreign \ffairs, sought the recent interview with him, Sir Austen sald he was inclined to regard the crsation 18 premature. Neither government, he asserted, had changed its position on the questions in dispute and therefore no progress was made. He did everything in his power, » declared, to disabuse the Soviet representatives of their obs Britain was planning to | isolate them. He sald and of I° oo to avoided be no disap- slight at Stresemann of endeavored to convines that Great Britain had not made any overtures fo them in that direction. Discusses Mussolini In discussing Premier Mu Ttaly, Chamberlain said it was not his business to form any judgment of Mussolini's internal policy but he dmired the force and dircetness of the man, who was a Fascist only be- ise he was an Italian and who would have been a man of mark no matter where born. Sir Austen did not helieve that re- | lations between France and were as grave as had been repre- sented in some quarters recently. He quoted Mussolini as saying to im: “France and Jtaly quarrel like but will never have He ssolini of brothers, s misunderstanding. newspapers of both 1wl heen aggravating thought countries the dift Two) (Continued on Page {Widow and Alleged Paramour Sentenced at 10 o’Clock | | sion | form. {al committee, Italy | Ten Years in Prison ‘PfAfif IS NEAR - AS POLISH ENVOY Is Punishment Given SEES LITHUANIAN 30 3y | Ll”lendabl S Slayers Premiers of Two Countries Face Each Other at Geneva Council Megting ‘DISPUTE OVER VILNA IS CAUSE OF TROUBLE This Morning After Defense Abandons Its Plan to Ask for Second Trial Based on New Evidence. Mays Landing, N. J Mrs. Margaret Lill was sentenced 1o 10 ye art in th E Dr. William \vmm Beach v and alleg Isimilar sente Justice whom they sentence 1l fense had a new trial ven notic be taken later for the two d brief pleas for Dec. 10 (UP) ndahl today s in p aving of Lilliendahl co-defendant, was given a hich co a8 imposed son paramour, Spokesmen Declare Ask That Walde- maras Will For Docunients Sy Signed By Nations and Poland fore That the Question of Sovercignty Over Contested District 1« Not Settled, in principie made session - STORMS CONGRESS BT 1S T00 LATE_W Vetoed MoNary -Haugen Measure Bridegroom Races From Pekmg il Sighty Wodiled | 0 Chicas = EQUALIZATION FEE KEPT WEDDING POSTPONED DAY, Part of Plan Coolidge Would demar nia ach other council . which d in the Sir I ral o Broad Li fore ent fice o gene nd secretary s had b lement itted, howe la had not While the cil ing the Lithuanian )0 Half Way Around the World, that what Lithuan 5 T | x {was documents sigl Washington, Dec. 10 (P—The Me- | Chicago, Dec. 10 UP—Balked for | e ang fiotens s vetoed last ses- weeks by the elem -nts, a bridegroom !sovereignty over Coolidge — ha y around the settled ithu way th e 1 3 open pourparlers htly finite determina- nia olish fron= Objected to | Financial Adviser to China Marries s, Now Be Invoked Only | Marketing As- Mrs. Ryerson After Traveling by After Cooperative Auto, Train, Boat and Alrplane Ll sociations Failed, | > pow- stion of 1 bill Vilna district Nary-Haug by the Pres who raced half world by land, sea modified | in Zo to m nformed him wostponed She been started on its rough con- and air gress again in sl who | had his flancee, thelr wedding until tod. s Chinese Senator McNary, republican, been on, new chairman of t Forsythe gricultural committee, put the r to the bill In the s Tegistative Peking, completed th yeste ¥ S00n after it v Y when stepps 1 1y opened for busines irplane at the municipal field last Th new ) n ht, just six hours after the time controversial equaliz heduled for his wedding to Mrs. sion—objected to by the Smily Borie Hyerson of Chicago unconstitutional in v tyerson is the widow of Arthur inal bill—¢ mean ing It . the wealthy steel man, who funds to meet the his live when the Titanic sank, rplus crops Mects Storm on Pacific qualization Fee Retained A storm on the Pacific soon after The equalization £ however, Yokoha 0, delayed would now be invoked onl arrival of Mr. Sherfesee's ship at cooperative marketing assoc Vancouver, B. C., two days. A rec ith the afd of govern ord snowfall in the Rockies necessi- ound thems: unable outing of his train at St. the surplus and the fees t} and set his schedule | 4 able to all Ll hours further. | required, in: nined that the wedding | should be held as planned if human- m relief |1y possible, Mrs. Ryerson chartered some in the |a planc to fly to St. Paul, pick up campalign, the bridegroom and bring him here. | in congre Chair- | But it was a losing battle with the | ouse agricultur- {elements for again strong head- | ithor of the Mec- | wit snowbound roads, and bitter | Nary-Haugen measure, announcing | cold weather cost many valuable day he would begin hearings next When it was learned the | federal week, ould not possibly arrive in linto A majority of republi . Ryerson announced the | senate also have giver lage would be celebrated at the western independen 1 today. their party that a v Take Nary-Haugen bill in son form would he perm 1 by early Febru- v pilots of the plane, who ary told him of the plan to fly to Chi- Scnator McNary had been looked Motor trucks carrying gaso- | here next T Gkt and ofl to the alirfield were |the outcome imizht he pesce i it in a snowbank and another |Lituminous industre for Chyist hour delay to dig them out| In a teleevaphic invitation Zaleski of Po- mesting that an lied In prineiy Poland state of NG iccord had been [that Loth Lith: should recogniz price exists betwen He added that Loy werts Von Block lands, commiss to the di GUUNTRY TAKES HAND IN'PA. GOAL STRIKE ecretary Davis Invites Workers and Operators to Hold Joint Meeting Ministee president ra cost of market- ter tions unds e to hen commodities, of to only n An early issue, a republican pr ems certain man Haugen o start on the ¢ invoked sidentia co- Washington, Dec. 10 overnment today bitumi coal st western and I northern West Virgin attempt to bring prace ltion between mine operatc United Mine Workers of America. ecretary of Davis issued 1l to both tons for 4 meeting (UP)-~The stepped in nnsylvania, Otio to in the to ip of Me- s nd concilia- Plane at St. s and the in St. P Sherfes Paul (Continued on Page Two) ) 1th toll in the west swept | til temperature reached at 3 ge estimat- | which time castings were allowed to | 1 at hundreds sands of dol- | “soak” for a certain period and| rs along the coast. then the fires drawn, allowing cast- New York city suffered only tem- | ings to cool slowly to room tempera- ture, THIS WEEK'S AFFAIRS . . followed. When the plane finally | mine wor Ehiets started strong head win were [Davis said: “Th fought every mile of the way. Forlnl nhnkhdisa G prohitt The wedding couple met in Pe-Vufecting the Pl king expecting to for New lthe object of & ABANE 10 poss York after the wedding. They plan- sinle, a satis caceful ned to sail Dec. 13 for Ttaly and pro- |gituation, The led and operators, eting will be ve <58 of the storm and lodging houses moved and castings taken out of the | ind charitable concerns were fillad In the new process castings 1o capacity by unfortunates which cked in “saggers” which are were given shelter from the storm. | placed on ¢ These cars are Only one death was reported. placed in a train and forced by a b | hydraulic ram continuously through Chicago, Dec. 10 (UP)—With a | the kiln which at all times is kept eturn to normal from the sub-zero |at the same temperature in each mperatures which yesterday grip- | compartment. The castings first en- 1 the middlewest, apprehension | ter a chamber which is held at a felt over safety of a num- | moderate temperature, gradually in- v of Great Lakes shipping vesscls. | creasing as the cars move along At least 70 craft, plying between | until the mnpfr#'\mln rature is at- upper and lower lake ports were re- | tained. The casfings after going ported overdue and feared to be | through a short soaking period then locked in ice jams. A check-up re- vealed damage to smaller craft 1 be enormous Crews of two of the three lnown aground were night Reports indicated the blizzard | which accompanied the subnormal veather was the worst suffered in this part of the country in many vears. Forty deaths weer ascribed | to the cold, fires and accidents caus- «d by the storm. Railroads were resuming service nd communications was being re stor Wisconsin, Minnesota and |lonate marriage is condemned edi- Michigan were still snowbound but | torially in today's issue of The Pilot, tratfic had becn opened up suffi- | Official organ of the Cathollc arch- ciently to prevent | diocese of Boston acute suffering. | dioces st It was expected several days would | “While religious —leaders are de- [crying divorce and wise statesmen nass hefore normal traffic could be | f {"\W_ 'T,’ RO e CRCRU TR o President Coolidge are insisting Rt upon the integrity of the home as | the foundation of national greatness, He Did Not Mention | radical reformers are actively en- v ged in the press and on the plat- He Also Was Modest |5 Giyea R e D e Almost every day there are sev-|theories ‘about marriage and family eral applications for work at the of- | Jife the editorinl fn part. fice of Mayor Wel Today one of | +The social dislocations caused by those who called wds asked what | the great war and its aftermath have kind of work he is capable of doing. | been detrimental to the best inter- “Well,” he replied, “I am an awto- ! ests of the family. The growth of | mobile mechanic, a carpenter, truck | the divorce evil menaces its per- driver, and 1 also do clerical work.” | petuity as an institution, and the un- The market for jacks-of-all-trades reasoning clamor for such abomina- | being a bit sluggish today, no work | tions as companionate marriages was found for him. threatens its very existence.” | | porary discomfort from the sudden- after which doors were re-| | oven. are (Continued on Page Two) | GATHOLIC CHURCH HITS COMPANIONATE MARRIAGE The bhoats removed last S:’ATES 1 WHY NOT WrITE Some OF Mis EXPERIENCES 2 Pilot, Boston Publication, Strongly Condemns Most Recent Social Dislocation Boston, Dee. 10 (UP)—Cdmpan- D w ErE 7 NOK ASSOCIATION — BANQUET—_ 1 to Persia on thelr \\--1-11:\; trip. [ with the knowi s den -VE W e OTHER. THAW BERNATD STEIN, TREASUREL OF THe WisTer uiDers THEY HAD AGnear SIDEWALKS T0 BE LAID doha L. Lo | United Mine Wor | ALONG MILFORD HIGHWAY | covierent. Cartisy 50 | | conference called by 1 o ne “as the only solutic contro. versy.! The prosiden 1 the matter to Davis, In announcing th Vis express: may at least wi | vance toward | holidays may s 1ation in soft- coal mining s not only to operators and m by ness in g the districts that have condi- tions."” Davis desires, it was 1o bring to un end, if only the financia man hardship resul present conflict of REPRESEATATWE i FENA PRESEATS STUBAY SILVER PLAGUE (N WASKINGTOA D ¢ n of the ferr New | o oVen Scction of Turnptke From e Da- ting u ad- the Devon Easterly Will Revog- m nize Podestrians. ord, Dec. 10 (A —Gravel side- feet wide will be built conerete highway tate highway department is planned for a section of the ford turnpike. is understood that first time In a state ot bord iway have heen s he section of road will walks | along si | which the five tisfactor e of the ral in all lost by existing 1is 1Is the that lina cxplained, not the possible, loss the ing from interest.” B be geven ngth ANY PLANS HAVE BEEN :’s‘vumrmp ForL NEw 350,000 H(GH SCHOOL ADDITION— extending from De- | asterly. It will be fift th in addition to the and the contract awarded at | an extension of ) to a Bridgeport concern, | wage scale, which in the spring. e operators wished sidewalks is in recog- recent demands that the | safety of pedestrians be safeguarded s possible fir this way he strike in most called follow { of miners and operators to tions was ing agreg on Jacksonville pired March to cut ast s Many mines in- Ohio and western and central Pennsylvania closed once. The majority of mines stop- — — | ped eperations by June JOESTING TO MARRY | Davis pointed out the seriousness Minncapolls, Minn., Dec. 10 (A— ot the bituminous coal situation in by Joesting, Minnesota's All- | his anfnual report to congress nerica line plunging fullback, is | eral days ago in which he s 1 to plunge into matrimony “The mining of coul remains one He took out a marriage license | industry that lags behind others in | vesterday to Miss Lora K, |living up to Awerlean zcandards of | Davidson, polis, a class- [ organization and business admini- sity of Minnesota. | stration. * * * Coal remains an in- | dustry composed ttered and e | competitive units. THE WEATHER [|rwe know in detail what is wrong New Britain and vicinity: ! | with the coal-mining industry. * ¢ ® nition of }Jl.ooxs A5 |F THERE WAS MOTE COOKING ON THE Stove/ of s Partly cloudy tonight; Sun- | We have all the facts we need. The unscttled, followed by | |industry needs no further examina- armer Sunday. | |tlon. What it needs is to he urged # 'and helped.” Doaue 8Y, ZEsab monr »

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