New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 10, 1928, Page 3

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REFUSES TOLEAVE Says Foros Is Needod to , Mo HimGo - Berlin, Jan. 10 (UP)—Banish- ment from Russia of 53 leaders of the opposition to the soviet Ruasian government has been ordered and in some instances already has taken dp.llefl. the United Press learned to- y. Those banished include Leon! Trotaky, who once shared with Nikolai Lenine, the supreme power in ‘Russla. Reports that banishment of 30 leaders was impending have been in circulation but confirmation and ad- ditional details were not available until teday. Trotsky, whe in the past few months has been gradually shorn of the last vestige of his former posi- tion, is still in Moscow but has been ordered to Astrakhan, on the Black sen. Others havy been ordered to and some actually sent, to remote por- tions of Russia. Get $4.50 a Month Each will recelve a pittance of nine roubles (about $4.50) monthly. ‘The 52 exiles were ordered sep- arated and each sent to a different place, most of them hundreds of miles from civilization. Fears were expressed here that some of the exiles would not survive as some of the regions of exile are cholera or plague-stricken. It was rumored that the banish- ment followed differences between Stalin and the secret service, The latter insisted upon imprisonment or even more ruthless measures, it was reported. - Stalin was said to have contended that banishment was suf- ficient, Trotsky was sentenced to do gov- ernment work at Astrakhan but he was reported to have refused, say- ing he could be more useful in Mos- cow. He is still in Moscow. The immediate cause of the ban. ishment was certain incldents in the factories of Moscow and the Bog- oronsk districts. Workers refused to rencw thelr collective agreements with the state management, after insisting upon better conditions, Btalin attributed the disaffection to the mubversive activities of the op- position. Platakoff, former trade repre- sentative.in Parls, escaped with the mildest punishment, he merely being ordered to Australia to arrange wool purchases. Piatakoff, however, de- clined. Reports that Zinovieff and Kam- encff, had been banished, were de- elared untrue. Zinovieff is writing a pamphlet sald to contain an at- tack upon Trotsky. Christian Rakovsky, former soviet ! ambassdor to France, w to & point near Archangel. Bebriakoff, active in connectlion with trade relations between the United States and Russia, was ban- fshed to Simipalatinsk, in Turkestan, Hosnovaki, an editorial writer on Pravda, was consigned to Siberia, Others were sent to various re- mote districts, including Transcaspia, the Ural mountains, Archangel and the White sea districts. Refuses to Go Trotsky, according to information here, has said that it would be nec- estary to use force to make him go to Astrakhan. This is not Leon Trotsky's first ex- perience as an exile in Siberia. In 1898 he first set foot on the dreary steppes of western Siberia a prisoner of the Czar under a four-year sen- tence, charged with radical activity. Again in 1905, following the dra- matic but short lived revolt in what was then St. Petersburg, Trotsky ‘was sent to Siberia, to eacape again in Austria, and to resume his rev- olutionary propaganda work. Once more as late as 1917, just prior to the triumph of the Lenine-Trotaky bolshevik combination, Trotsky was arrested and imprisoned under & two month sentence by the pro- visional government. Although a life time leader of Marxian propaganda, a radical and goneral ‘subsersive’ in almost every country of Europe and in the United States, Trotsky's periods of imprison- ment or exile have been largely con- fined to his native land., Trotsky, (Lcon Dronsteln) was born in 1879, He early entered radical work In south Russia. e took the name of Trotsky in 1898 when it appeared on a false passport forged and given to him to escape from his first Siberlan exile. Six Killed as Freight Runs Into Big Throng Budapest, Hungary, Jan. 10 (P— Six persons were killed today when a freight train ran into hundreds of passengers waiting for a local train at the station at Rakoshagy. The freight engineer, driving in an early morning haze, failed to observe a warning signal and swept down the ralls parallel to the station where the erowd was waiting. The station master and five trav- elers were found dead under the lo- comotive, ordered Fifty automobiles are stolen in Taris every day, in spite of every precaution to prevent theft. TOMORROW WOMEN’S HOSIERY DAY Blind Horse Factor in Sensational Eséape of American, Mexico City, “Jan. . 10.—UP—A smuggled bottle of cognas, freed Ly- man F. Barber, Los Angeles mining engineer from bis bandit captors. To four of the bandits who. guarded him it brought death. Barber, shrunken and haggard to- day as a result ‘of three weeks of confinement and hardships among the bandits told the story of his ea- éape to a friend who passed it on to newspapermen. Pleced together it Was: Barber had a bottle of cognac smugygled by couriers who during his imprisonment went back apd fourth from the bandit camp to the mines to negotiate his release. On Saturday night his servant Pedro who was kidnaped with him from the Monte Carlo mines near Zacualpan on De- cember 15, heard the guards dis- cussing thelr captives. Barber and Pedro listened and learned that they would be killed Tueaday if the ran- som of 15,000 pesos ($7,600) was not pald by that time, They decided to make a desperate effort to escape. Passes Liquor Around Barber got the smuggled cognac and pamsed it around among the four bandits who guarded him and Pedro, Others of the captors were some distance away, wrapping them- selves in blankets, ready for sleep. Around the campfire the bottle passed from guard to guard. Finally all were drunk. “They completely passed out,” said Barber. “They lay on the ground and went to sleep.” As the guards drank, Barber heard a horse walking about among the dry corn stalks of an old fleld near the camp. In the stillness of the night every step of the horse crushing the cornstalks sounded lke a piatol shot. “My idea was to get that horse as soon we finished with the guards,” ‘Barber's account said. Killed Four Men About 11 o'clock he asked Pedro by signale whether he was ready. Pedro signalled “Yes." They took the cognac bottle and some large stones. With these they pounded in the heads of the four .guards, beating them to death. Barber and Pedro rushed to the cornfield and jumped on the horse's bare back. As they spurred him on, shots rang out from the other bandits. The captives were pursued, but were not wounded. The horse blundered and stumbled. Then they discovered that he was blind. For several hours they rode him, until he was apent. When the horse tumbled into a ravine and died they continued their way afoot. Barber was suffering from an in. Jured eye received previously when thrown from a horse while being moved from one camp of the bandits to another. The fleeing men ran most of the night. Bometimes when exhaustion overwhelmed them they atopped for breath. At daylight Bunday, they reached a little Indian village. They were treated kindly and after a rest start. ed afoot again for Cuernavaca. They arrived there Sunday afternoon and tried to telephone Mexico City but | falled. Then Barber and Pedro got an automobile and completed their trip arriving in Mexico City Bunday night, In Bod & Week Barber may not be able to leave his béd for at least a week. He will probably require medical attention much longer. He sustained an ab. dominal injury while tHe bandit were taking him as prisoner from WHAT A DOCTOR ABOUT !'x‘here I8 a way of overcoming the | tendency:to constipation. And here is how you can PROVE it. The next time your bowels need any assistance, don’t take the first laxative that comes to mind, Take one the druggist can assure you is made with CASCARA. Just as ef- fective as using force, and it's good for the system. Indeed, it helps make good blood. For cascars is nothing but the bark of a tree. The Indians chew this bark, and live to an old age without a day's sickness. ‘What happens when you cascarize the bowels? They will usually funec- tion well for SEVERAL DAYS. One more dose—no larger, and perhaps smaller than the first—and the bow- els function of their own accord for & still longer time. Until you don't Ca i | CASCAR bW v ETS . Special Lot Discontinued Numbers of “VIRGINIA LEE” SILK HOSIERY 50c Values pair to $2. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1928 TROTSKY BANISHED:| BOTTLE OF COGNAC FREED |HEID SECOND TIME BARBER FROM HIS CAPTIVES | FOR THEFT OF CAR one part of the mountains to an- other and was forced to continue ;Idlnl and tramping despite his in- ury. All who have seen Mrs. Barber (the: former Esther 8hepherd of Whittier, Cal.) since - her husband's return are filled with admiration for her composure., Asked . about her husband’s future plans, she said that ‘when he gets well and strong again they will remain in Mexico, return to the United States or go elsewhere, just as-he desires. She'is calm and unexcited and has received : officlal - visitors, - corre- spondents and friends, attended her baby-and supervised the care of her husband. The, baby was born shortly before her husband was kidnaped. CHURCH UNITY 1§ SEEN IMPOSSIBLE Papal Bacyclical Quiets Famous “Malines Gonversations” Rome, Jan. 10 (M—Pope Pius to- day issued an encyeclical which is taken here to remove all hopes con- cerning the possibility of the re- sumption of the famous ‘“Mallnes conversations” of recent years which sought to find - means of reuniting the Anglicans with Rome. The late Cardinal Mercier, arch- bishop of Malines, Lord Halifax of England and other prelates and lay- men took part in-these conversa- tions. The Pontiff, in his encyclical, sald that a union of Christians can only come by a return of the dissenting to the original church of Rome. In the document, which is the first encyclical of the new year, the Pon- tiff re-stated the church's age-long stand upon the question, emphasiz- ing that while it is good to cultl- vate charity among Christians, it should not be done to the detriment of the faith upon which that very charity is founded, The document concludes with a refutation of various non-Catholic arguments in favor of the unionist thesis and says that unity cannot be achieved except by a return of non- Catholics to the church of Rome. The encyclical eoncludes with an appeal to the "separated sons” and with the wish that the day may come soon in which ‘all the erring will finally return to the paternal embrace of the successor of 8t. Peter.” Snyder-Gray Case Seen as Anti-Whiskey Ar‘gunent — The Washington, Jan. 10 plight of Ruth - 8nyder and Juda Gray and the details of their crime make the best possible argument for prohibition, Mrs, Clem Shaver of Fairmont, West Va., wife ‘of the chairman of the democratic national committee, said today in an address prepared for the National Women's Democratic Law Enforcement league. g “Nothing but whiskey made Mrs. 8nyder and Gray lose all moral restraint,” she declared. “And the P -wet, dry or indifferent—was unconsciously preaching prohibition when it blazoned their story on the front page.” SHARKEY IS DELAYED Boston, Jan, 10 UP—The necessity of appearing in,court as & witness today forced Jack 8ha Boston heatvyweight, to postpone his depart- ure for New York untll tomorrow. He had planned to leave this after- noon. KNows CONSTIPATION feel the need of any aid of any sert for weeks-on-end. 8o, the only habit you get from cascars is that of natural and nor- mal regularity. How different from things one must usually repeat on the morrow! Cascara is the ideal laxative; and the familiar little can- dy_ cascaret is doubtless its - ideal 1 |fofm. Children beg for these tasty * |tablets, and many men and women wouldn’t think of taking ANY- THING else for the purpose. And EVERY drugstore has them. l“n Lewis Facas Knother Comnt Alter Being Bound Over Leo Lewis, aged‘31 of 50 Beaver street, who was in police court yes- | terday on the charge of theft of an automobile owned by Raymond Mc- Enroe of 131 Lincoln street, and bound over to the March term of su- | perior court, was arraigned today on | the theft of an automobile owned by Albert Myers of 146 Greenwood street on Winter street, on December 15, 1927 He pleaded not guilty, walved examination, and was bound over to the March term of superior court in $2,000 bonds. Attorney Al-| bert A. Greenberg represented Lewis and said there was amall prrobability be able to raise it later. lul for & short time he was allow- {race. That is what they preach. But|on November 18 Detective Sergeant Ellinger, who ed sleeping accommodations with a ! Billy S8unday knows, if he tells the | plaintiff claims te have brought Lewis back from Stamford Sunday following his arrest there for theft of the McEnroe car, learned that Lewis had been driving a car in this city prior to last Saturday, and he could not reconcile this fact with Lewis’ sla’ nent to him that he did not own an automobile. Questioning him yesterday, the sergeant obtained an admission that he had taken Myers' car and driven it about the city until Dec. 31, when he put it in the Beloin garage on Church street because he had no 1928 mark- ers. A few days later, according to the admissions the police say Lewis made, he stole a set of 1928 markers from Jacob Shapiro of 138 North street, by whom he was formerly eriployed, and brought them to the garage inter ling to attach them to the car, but he was unable to take the machine out on account of his inability to pay the storage. Being in need of a c:r, he took McEnroe's machine which was in the rear of the Stanley Arena Saturday night, according to the police, Lewis has been employed as & of his ability to raise a bond of any G amount. barge builder in Gildersleeve, ac- Judge Saxe sald he would be will- | cording ‘o his statement to the po- ing to hear on applicatior to reduce'lice. He formerly slept in a shack the size of the bond should l.oewlllfll the lower end of Stanley street, Protect Your Skin Soap and Ointment will helpyou. After motoring, golf or other outdoor wash off with Cuticura Soap and hot ‘water, rinsing with tepid or cold wates; dry thoroughly. There isnothing better for keeping the skin soft and clear un.| der all conditions of exposure. fame S 2inei T B ST BB~ Ceticura Shaving Stick 28e. 1.25] that I keep it in first-class condition. As a cigarette smoker it was ‘nllllve on Walnut street. At the time of his arrest, he claimed 90 Beaver street as his home, a fellow employe having a tenement at that address, BILY SUNDAY I FLAYED BY JUDGE Ben Lindsey Says Evangelist Lives in 16th Gentary Denver, Colo, Jan. 10 (UP)— Sunday stiil lives in the 16th century ,and still is chasing devils, said Ben {B. Lindsey,famous juvenile court authority and exponent of compan- lonate marriage. “He would be burning witches and 1 heretics if he had his way,” Lind- |sey asserted today in answering the charge of the famous evangelist that companionate marriage was “barn- yard marriage.” |” “Billy Sunday said companlonate marriage is the rottenest thing ever promulgated,” Lindsey said, *“Like others who rush into print on companionate marriage the trouble with Biily is that he doesn’t even try to find out what compan- ionate marriage ia. “If he did he would knew it is present legal marriage with fllegal {use of birth control and illegal di- | voice by mutual consent. “Thus companionate marriage is the kind of marriage being mostly performed in Christian churches but |it is bootleg marriage and bootleg divorce, “The Christian church forbids re- poses than for procreation ol the lations of the sexes for other pur- | |truth, that what they do is just the down and injured by an opposite. driven by Urqubast, “That is, most sex relations in|Judge Henry P. Roche 1 Christian marriages are for the com- | today. The accident occurved at panionate, and not for procreation. and, Main streets. Thomas ¥, But, it s illegal in law and sinful in | Donough was counsel for . the the church,” Lindsey said. plaintiff and Donald Gaftney repre- “All of which is the bunk. It' eented the defendant, Decislon was should be neither sinful nor illégal | reserved, 3 3 when kept within decent bounds. 1| challenge Billy Sunday to deny my | COLLEGE CLUR ENTERTAINED charge that a majority of couplcs’ The New Eritain College club was married in the churches are prac- | entertained last evening at the heme ticing birth control. 1 challenge him |of Mrs. L. J. Mueller and Miss May to deny my charge that_ if these Noyes, 151 Lincoln street. Fellow. Chistian church married couples | ing the business meeting Mrs. Patti can not get along together and want | G. Reynolds of Hartford, gave & a divorce that most of them get it | graphic description of her receut trip by subterfuge, perjury or pollution. 'to the Orient. Refreshmefits cone “Billy Sunday is preaching one sisting of ice cream and cake were thing while his church flock prac- served. tices another. The trouble with Bill | is that he still lives in the 16th con- | S ———— tury and still is chasing devils. He! {would be burning witches and here- tics if he had his way,” Lindscy concluded. \ CITY COURT JUDGMENTS | The following judgments for| | plaintiffs by default have been ren- | dered by Judge Henry P. Roche of | the city court: | Rackliffe Bros. Co., Inc., vs. Willard, §319.70; Edward A. ) for the plaintiff, | Patrick Naples vs. Paul Cianci, '$125; G. Woods for | school children receive emul- Joseph G. e sified cod-liver ol ? | plaintirf. | Now Britain Lumber Co. vs. 5. .| Answer: Because the | Maguire Co., $169; Kirkham, Coop- | :trainofthedudy ser, Hungerford & Cawp for the jen I und uses et e T w Britain Lumber Co. ' Kot ki, $111.7 Kirkham. | not only provides energy | alsoprotects with its vitamins, | Cooper, Hungerford & Camp for the plaintiff, $1500 CRASH SUIT HEARD Mothersknow the value of The $1,500 action of Joseph Man- ! cint against angus 3. Uraunart,| SCOTT'S EMU[SION ihrouxhl as the result of a accident g | Quu!:;:‘ le:-’S should ag JAMES CRUZE Director of Feature Photoplays, writes: “In the direction of any of my big pictures, and especiall? during the filming of the Covered Wagon, the constant use of my voice demands | necessary that I find a cigarette which I could smoke without any } chance of throat irritation or cough. After trying them all, I decided on Luckies. They are mild and mellow—which both protects the throat and gives real smoke enjoyment.” The Cream of the Tobacco Crop “The growth of LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes is a wone derful thing but there is a reason, I know, because I buy the Tobacco for LUCKY STRIKE. I buy ‘The Cream of the Crop, that mellow, sweet smoking Tobacco that the Farmer justly describes as 1havedescribed it above. The quality of LUCKY STRIKE Cigarettes is telling. It is nat- ural that the brand should show the tremendous growth that it is showing today.” s — Buyer of Tobacco at Louisville, Ky. “It’s toaste BARGAINS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS “Virginia Lee” SILK HOSIERY $1.35 SILK HOSIERY (1] No Now Going On—DOur Greatest January Clearance Sale—Now Going On “Virginia Lee $1.65 Besse System Store BESSE SYSTEM STORES—MAINE TO MJSSOURI Throat Irritation-N o Cough. TOMORROW WOMEN’S HOSIERY DAY Special Lot Discontinued Numbers of SILK and LISLE HOSIERY 25C pair Values to $1.

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