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. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY §, 1928 - the uphoMing of Dias in the . dency of Nicaragna and the United Btates forces were ready to disarm the victorious armies of the constitutional government of Dr. Juan B. Sacasa, ne definitely com- mitted the Unitad to an un- precedented and ‘ndefensible net of tyranny against another nation \nd tyranny will aways bring violence and the shedding of human plood. “Three of the military chiefs uper- ating against Dias refused to obey the command to disarm; one of Philadelphia, Jan. 5 UP—Dr. T.|them was killed a few days later in 8 Vaca, former confidential agent |his own residence, together with his in the United Btates of Dr. Juan B, woman companion, by a marine ser- acasa, Nicaraguin liberal, today as. | §eant; the other two, Sandino and erted that the uprising in Nicaragua ; Balgado, have been operaling in the is the direct outcome of the *im.|northern part of Nicaragua, position of the Dias regime upon the “Sadino is a young man in his people of that country last May. thirties, he vows he will fight it out Denouncing American interven |to the last and declarea that, though tion in Nicaragua affairs, Dr. Vaca'he realises the seriousness of the pleoitation and conquest by s foreign [ivades.” 4 CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH 10 HAYE ANNUAL NEBTING Newington Body to Assemble For First Time Sinco Incorporetion— Mrs, Kigsicy's Arm Amputated Newington, Jan. $—The annual meeting of the Newington Congrega- tional church will be held Tueaday evening, January 13. The prayer meeting for that week will be omit- ted. Supper will be served to the members after which the business of the meeting will be taken up. Officers will be elected and plans for the year will be made. This is the DR, VACA AGAINST U.. INNICARAGUA Suys Sendio Will Fight to the Last Man Leules L) o fe i has been taken out for her mother's sister, Emma Kilbourn: Wright, who lived with Mrs. He H 1] i i The Protestant Episcopal cathe- ° |dral Foundation in Washington gets $3,000 for the proposed national cathedral and $3.000 goes to the Home_ for Incurables in Washing- ton. Trinity Parish in St. Augustine, Fla., gets $2,000 and the public li- brary and Red Cross chapter in 8t i 11° i H it il been placed in the library. 3 bruises about w'lhh he said were sustained hen he tried to fight through the flages of the burning reom in which the children were trapped. Todsy the children were to be burial, Orphelia, 14, and J. D. 12, in one casket; Lorene, 9, Ruth 7. and Ravis ¢, in another casket. Dendy's arrest was ordered fol- lowing & veport of Coroner Bamuel Boyce, . who investigated the five % Boyce said after an investigation, made at the request of one of Dendy's neighbors, that all of the bedles were on one bed, although there was another bed in the same reom, and that some of the bodles erushed heads. FHe maid, ho ever, that falling timbers might have struek some of the children on their urprise at his rned that the heme Ophelia waked him. hie room but found which the children were sleeping enveloped in flames, he maid. Dendy has two other children, who were visiting in E1 Dorado at the time re. “';:: :uflu of the Dendy chil- dren brought to 14 the number of who have dled in Ar:a;mu a cold wave arrived Jan- fi“"'m ‘!-mml Floyd, 16, Velma Fariln, 14 end her five-year-old brether, ‘burned to death yes- terday in & fire Which destroyed the 7, C. Farlin home at Mountain Home. MRS HEWSON LEFT ESTATE OF $230,000 Remembered Little Obio Church Where She Wod New York, Jan. 5.—UP—The little Chureh in Keokuk, Ohio, where she married her first husband, General John M. Schofield of Civil wap fame, receives §2,000 from the $360,000 te of Mre, Georgia K. 8. Hewson, wiow of Jehn H. Hewson. Mrs, Hewson, who died in her home, 439 *East Fiftyfiret street, on De- cember 38, male thia bequest “in memory of the wmarriage there of General John M. Schofield and Georgia W. Kilbourne” in 1891. The bulk of Mrs. Hewson's estate passes to her daughter, Georgia Schofleld Outhwaite of 438 East Fifty-first street, after sevaral smill bequests to other relatives, servants and pub- le institutions. Her will was filed Wallace F. Peck, a retired marine insurance broker, who died on Sun- !day, left his estate of about $500,- 000 to his relatives and friends, un- der his will filed yesterday for pro- bate. The principal beneficlaries are his son, Laurence F. Peck of 218 East Seventy-second street, and his | sister-in-law, Maria E. Hampton of 123 East Sixty-first street. The son recelves the income for life from one-third of the residuary estate after bequests totaling $14,000 made, while Mr. Hampton recef' lifeé estate in the other two-thirds. The principal of these trust funds will pass eventually to Laurence | Peck’s grandchildren, while the prin- cipal of a $10,000 trust fund estab. lished for Florence K. Bonnell, a friend, of 1058 Southern Boulevard, will go to Mr. Peck. EXPECT MORE TRADE Car Requirements For First Thres Months of Year Show Increase in Industrial Activity. New York, Jan, § (M—Car require. ments for the first three months of 1928 indicate increased activity in most industries in the Atlantic states over the same period last year, the Atlantic States Shippers’ Advisory board announced today. The board, composed of shippers and receivers of freight, met in an- nual session at the Hotel Comme- dore, The board functions with the raijroads in estimating the number of cars needed to move the velume of business. The expected increase, mald the board, would range from 23 per cent in the case of automotive parts and accessories to 25 per cent in tanning materiala, In machines, machinery, coal, iron, steel, elay, clay products, canned foods and roofing materials the same volume of business as was moved in the first quarter last year wag expected, while in paints, brick, electrical machinery, brass, copper bronse, crushed stone, sand and gravel a decline was looked for. Increases are expected in tobae- co, powdered milk, petroleum pro. ducts, siate, paper and pulp, chemi- cals, cement, fertilizer, glass con- | tainers, confectionery and cordage. READ HERALD CLASSIFTIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS ; ltehlng-Pllos || Sl ey | have i | pazo in tubes | sttachment ot The; and in tin box o4 ped and that they would fight to the ploitation and conquest by a foreign invader.* Dr. Vaca asserted that these forces numbered several times those that fought at Quilall last Sunday and that Sandino had the support of the inhabitants of the northern :nd eastern district, where he is operat- ing. “The present Nicaraguan situa- tion.” said Dr. Vaca, “is the direct outcome of the imposition of the Diaz regime last May upon the peo- ple of Nicaragua, exhausted and bled after a year of civil strife that re- sulted from a plot by New York financiers, first wilfully allowed to hatch and then fanned and enlarged by the active help of the state de- partment in war materials and marines, as well as finances to the bankers’ man, Dias. “There can be no peace and hap- piness among human beings withcut Jjustice except by the butts of the guns and that ts the kind of peace that Nicaragua enjoys now. “When Colonei Henry L. Stimson dlsregarding the most fundamental principles of equity, decreed that the ‘honor and prestige of ‘e United States government, required For Colds and Farhy JOHNS MEDICINE All_ Pure Food y wife and I and our children | have been using Father John's' Med- {iclne for coughs and colds for over eight years, and it has always given ‘us quick relief, ere is no better medicine.” (8igned) Thomas Man- | occhio, 88 Crawford 8t., Woonsocket, R. L - Safety Before Yield, NoMatter What The Yield As the result of more than twenty years’ experience, contacts with thousands of investors, and the distressing memory of piles of worthless securities brought in to us for analysis by investors who had bought, without investigation, on the promise of high yield, we say to you: “Investigate before you invest. Get an investment banker’s opinion before buying any securities you may be offered. Put safety before yield, no matter what the yield.” PUTNAM & CO. Members New York and Hartford Stock Exchanges 6 Central Row, Hartford, Conn. Telephone 2-1141 | dino, rebel leadar, were well eqlllp.‘ said he was reliably informed that!odds agairst him i the forces of Geenral Augusto San- | power of the Stars and Stripes, he is comforted by the conviction .hat he is defending 1s native soll and last man against “unwarranted ex-|own pcople against unwarranted ex- in defying the first annual meeting of the church as an incorporated body, The nominating committee is com- posed of George W. Hanbury, chair- man; Mrs, Edith Stebbins, and Mrs. 1 e The Friendly Hour Whist club i John F. Walsh, Mrs. Ernest Stotser, $35,000, What Kind of Man Can (Above)—8uddenly from the dark interior of the closed sedan came a girl's shrill crys *Stop that, you fool!” An‘instant later the doormfluuop-,mdlddhlwhm' dress leaped to the running-board, desperately to free herself from a man's detaining hands. 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