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PEASANTS MARCH N 10 CAPITAL 900,000 Rumanians Determined to Express Themselves Alba Julia, Rumania, May 7 (®— Determined that the governn should know thelr will, 200,600 It manian peasants were 1eady today to March 175 miles to while thelr leaders waited a reply to thelr demand that the governn of Vintila Bratianu resign. ‘The peasants, mee Ju'ia, resolved to form umns to march on the raised bands, they took t “We swear to t! God to fight a rig: the government, which is a p! to the country ard which was inated by a decree wrang from K Ferdinand on his death bed. swear that & new Rumania created which shall stand for frec dom and justice to all of Ruman brave sons.” To frustrate any attempt at open revolution the government placed 10000 troops at strategic points out- aide the city with machine guns and airplanes. No attempt was i lhowever, to molest the peas: Premier Bratianu at Buc est aid that, knowing the real stute ot things, the country's desire for peace and the impossibility of any revolu tionary act, he had assented to holding of congress of the pea- sants. He termed it merely an epi sode in the, opposition ainst the government, which, he joved the confidence of the One resolution pa gress was interpry that if Julio Maniu, peasant's party, obtained might recommend the abolit the regency which rules for t in three nd good id, en people power he n of vear old King Michacl, and this in | turn might leave the door open for the return of former Crown Prince Carol either as a regent or as King The resolution read *This congress reiterates its mon- archical sentiment, but decl that the form of the entirely upon its conception by the people, who possess the privilege to change the existing form if they con- sider a change desirable While Maniu and other lcaders were addressing 200 of the more im- pertant delegates in the municipal theater, an enormous crowd gather- ed outside and cheercd. Maniu took the Associated Pross correspondent by the arm and led him to the balcony where they < | the vernment depends | SLID DOWN PULLEY BUT WAS NOT AN AVIATOR nestigation of Old Records in Bos- | | | ! | |n 1 | ton Church Shatter IHusion of Early Lindy. | Boston, May the glamour of John Childs, en & sort of had been re to have d- supposed 1 century Li roved toda iator,” was reported ‘n history to ha hree flights Trinity chu vesterday wh M 's club of that church, 1 the results of ry ction with Childs' stunt. ion of some old church parchme said, disclosed that C T AT not North steeple to hed down Insts accordin tor' re and a rope to it on a slid | expected that Rice's dis- 1 would dia- turbing to the 80~ clety of Colol Amer- which, clos prove rather cu's , de 1 to the memory of “Amer first airman, NDIANA T0 HOLD End of Bitter Campaign Now is in Sight Ind, May 7 (P—A bitter primary campaign approached | the end today. Indiana voters will | vote tomorrow for republican tie candidates for presid Indianapolis, ress, governor, state legislature and county offices. Precinct com- mitteemen and delegates to the state convention also will be sclected Principal interest centers in the fight between Herbert Hoover, see- ry of commerce, and Senator James E. Watson for the preferen- tial vote for the republican nomina- tion for president. Cantrol of the 38 delegates to the Kansas City con- vention is in question. | 7 (UP) — Much of rounding the name | PRIMARY TUESDAY - | posse, Arthur NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 7, 1928 h ———,———eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee e e e e e e e e e e e e ey HENTUCKY POSSE HUNTING SLAYERS Seven Others Arrested Alter Fa- tal Shooting Shepherdsville, Ky., May 7 (#—A federal prohibition posse continued to search the hills of Bullitt county today for two men who escaped un- der fire yesterday when seven others vere arrested in connection with he slaying of Mrs. Kate Browning, 60, shot down as she fled with five members of her family from her { burning home at midnight Friday. The prohibition agents invaded | the county after local officials had |indicated that investigation of the burning and slaying would be de- layed for several days. Their ni | warrants charging conspiracy to in- timidate a federal witness we based on reports that the family was |attacked because one member had ! supplied information about moon- hiners to the raiding squad at Louisville. | L | The prisoners, one a magistrate, |the four weeks ending April 21, ac- |calls, as I think she may, I will night | cording to figures made public here | answer. were sent to Louisville pending arraignment, In the meantime, bers of the family, they dashed barcfoot and scantily clad from the blazing home, were believed hiding in the woods nearhy with no prospects of shelter. for at the jail in Bardstown Satur- day night, they received shoes and last | from citizens there. | When the warrants were issuod yesterday the Brownings started for | thelr home neighborhood with fed- |eral and local officers preceding them. With return of the agents and their prisoners, it was lcarned that |the refugees had been left in the forest. | _The arrested men are Magistrate | John Bolten, 60; Frank Kinder, | Walter Crenshaw, Elmer Crenshaw, Frank Hodge, James Harris, and Clarence Crenshaw, father of Walter and Elmer. Those sought by the and Syliva Hodge, | dropped several bottle of whiskey as |they fled, agents reported. Al live In the Rrowington section in the hills 10 miles from here, where the Kkilling occurred. They refused to | talk. | Mrs. Browning's slayers are al- leged to have barricaded the door | ot her one-room cabin, set fire to it in many places and awaited tho | flight of the family from ambush. | Ben Browning, one of the wounded, stockings and other clothing as gifts | said he was forced to break the door with an axe when flames and molten tar broke through the roof, making the cabin *“like the inside of a stove.”” He had been awakened a few minutes before, apparently by persons who wished to make sure the family was inside before firing | the eabin. The other wounded refugees, Peachie and Angine Browning, Mrs. | Amanda Jones and Mrs. Lou Brown- ported Ben's story. circumstances and fearful of further | retaliation on the part of the moon- | shiners believed responsible for their flight, they are said to have re- turned to the section from Bards- town with extreme reluctance. | Where they intend to make their {home or provide for their immedi- {ate wants has not been learned At 2 mass meeting of Bullitt county citizens yesterday the slaying | was condemned and federal officers to do their utmost to suppress the “erime breeding traffic in moon- shine.” 525 Die in April Aut Accidents Statistics Show Washington, May 7 (UP)—Motor icar accidents were responsible for |525 deaths in 77 large cities during |today by the commerce department. the five mem- | This shows an increase of 35 deaths | That wounded when'|over the four weeks ending April | should 19 New York reported the greatest numher of motor car accldent Cared {deaths during the four-weck period | {with 95. Chicago was sccond with {63 deaths and Los Angcles third with 28, The deaths during the same pe- riod in other cities incinded: \ Boston 17, Bridgeport 3, |bridge 4, Fall River 2, 1owell |Lynn 2, New Bedford 3, New H ven 2, Providence 8, Springficl Mass,, 1. Cam- | SHOT AND ARRESTED | Boston, May 7 (UP)—Shot In the back as he fled from a stolen au- |tomobile, John Lawless, 17, of Wal- fthem, was under arrest at a hos- | pital ‘here today. | lawless was wounded by a Brookline policeman while trying |to escape after the officer had hell P the car in which he was riding. | Two companions escaped. AMERICANS ARE SAFE London, May 7 (UP)—Americans, Canadians and Britons comprising the staff of the Shantung Christian university at Tsinan are safe, a Tsingtao message to the Baptist | Missionary society said today. |ing. sister of the slain woman, sup- | In straitencd ENGLAND GREDITED WITH FOILING PLOT | . (Said {o Have Prevented Gonp by London, May 7 UP—The Daily Express today said the British gov- !ernment had prevented the carrying out of a plot, of which former iCrown Prince Carol of Rumania was the central figure, to the | Rumanian throne from Carol's six | year old son, King Michael. Despite |the temporary check the plans have | not heen abandoned, the paper as- | serted, | ‘There were reports that at the |estate of M. Jonescu, & Rumanian |living in Godstone, Surrey, where Carol is visiting, a fast automobile | waited to speed him to the Croydon !airdrome, from which point he |could fly to Paris. There he keeps [nis flown plane in readiness. Carol | himself said: “I am walting, and if Rumania Some people think I am | trying to kick my son off the throne. | is wrong. But if the calll come, I am ready to go** The newspaper said British afr- ! planes had been chartered to carry | manifestos and scatter them over Rumania. These manifestos, of which 20,000 were printed in Lon- don, were said to quote Carol as asserting: “I wish to return by your will to lead Rumania to its rightful place lot having Michael abdicate in his |lish school and eventually reign as Nations Meet for Centennial Ju-| | scntative of a host of nations con- chief emimary, on a secret mission, which was understood to be to Hungary. Carol was asserted to have promised to use his influence to ob- tain & Yevision of the treaty of Trianen and thus hoped to obtain the support of the Hungarian gov- ernment. The was to declare his claim to the throne and announce his intention favor. Michael was to enter an Eng- a democratic monarch. Carol, himself, however, asserted that he did not meddle in the poll- tics of his country. When asked to comment on the peasant congress at Alba Julia. “I hold myself above party,” he declared, “and am con- cerned” only with the welfare of my country.” TELLS OF LONG WORK FOR PEACE bileg of Peace Society — i Cleveland, May 7 UP—A hundred | years’ work for international peace was recounted here today as repre- vened for the centennial jubilee of the American Peace soclety. newspaper said that (:amll Persons high in Washington dip- lomatic circles will be here to par- ticipate in the discussions that will extend through the next five days. The gathering, known as the worid conference on international justige, will be a non-political affair, how- ever, called only for the purpose of strengthening sentiment against war. Three ambassadors and one for- mer ambassador will speak tonight. They are Sir Esme Howard, British ambassador; Paul Claudel, French ambassador; Dr. Frederick Wilhelm Von Prittwitz, German ambassador, and Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, noted Norwegian explorer and former ambassador from Norway to Eng- land. Prayers Offered ‘While prayers were offered in churches throughout the country for world peace yesterday, Con. gressman Theodore E. Burton of Cleveland, president of the Amerl- can Peace society, sounded the key- note of the conference in an ad- dress heard by several hundred delegatea- at Trinity Episcopal cathedral, He appealed to the church to ald the cause of peace. “There 15 no| cause for which men have hoped and prayed and died that is worthy of so much attention,” he said. Burton traced the history and achievement of the society, founded May 8, 1828, by William Ladd, s New England soclal reformer, and David Lowe Lodge, a New York merchant prince. Mr. Burton emphasized that the organization, while sponsoring and in the world. I wish to return to my child and make him a worthy successor of the dynasty. I declare that T left my country unwillingly, |compellcd by unhappy clrcum- {stances. Madame Lupescu (with | whom Carol eloped) was not the |cause of my leaving and she will | not prevent me from doing my duty to my country.” What was claimed to be the text of the manifesto appealed to all Ramanians to gather around Carol !and help him obtain such reforms | as frce elections, freedom of the prees, separation of the army and | judiciary from politics, the aboll- |tion of monopolies and ald for the | peasants. | The paper eaid the British gov- | ernment, learning of the plot, pre- vented the airplanes from leaving Croydon with the manifestos. Not deterred the Carolists were sald to have sent an unnamed Englishman, 'who bas been acting as Carol's could survey the crowd. “Look at that mass of humanity,” Maniju said. “It could be paralicled only In liberty loving America. It is mot a mob. It is an orderly, peaceful assemblage. We are neither revolutionists nor Bolshevists. — We want an honest government. “Dropping their plo and shovels theso legions of peasants and toil- ers have tramped hundred of weari- some miles in order to join the uni- versal demand for the overthrow of the present government. They will return to their homes as peaceably as they came. The government will do § ce and give us a chance to govern the country. “1f all peaceful means to dislodge the government fail, we all be forced to adopt active resistance to- ward the government. “There is at present no intention of disturbing either the dynasty or the regency, but our patience with the latter cannot endure forever. They must give consideration to the legitimate aspirations of our people Throughout the city hung pictures of King Michael, Queen Marie Maniu, Queen Marie still enormou ly popular amor 0 who call her their where was there ap ment for Prince Evans Woollen, Indfanapolis | banker is nnopposed for the demo- cratie preferential vote. He will control del s to the Houston convention. M. Burt Thurman. national eam- paign manager for Watson, in a final statement sald that Watson will carry every district in Indiana and have the support of four-fiths of | the de? tes to the state convention. Oscar Tocllinger, Hoover's state | campaten manager received a tele- |gram from Hoover whe declared {!hn' From all T can learn, your success will depend upon a full rep- ition at the primary next | Foellinger predicted Hoover would nine districts. itson today carried his presi- | fight into Fort Wayne where was booked for a radio address. ver speakers were irent any 13 ARE KILLED IN BOSTON DISTRICT Many Violent Deaths Occur Over Week-End ‘ May 7 (UP)—Thirtcen ths occurred i this sece England over the week- Boston, violent tion of cnd. Railroads automobil. mitted suicid fatally burne W aing killed Two p and two How to d);e a rashed into grade cross a NEW ORCHID +.. how many times you have wishedlyon could change the out- of-keason color of a winter dress into a . new lighter shade for Spring - Yetitseemed so impossible. gra : now you can do it! and Mus! steven Melvin G. 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Within a price range of $2.00 to $10.00, for instance, there are gifts like cold meat forks, jelly servers, salted nut spoons, steak sets. And of course, there arc suggestions. Let us show . Then, when Mother opens one of our charming Mother's Day gift bdxes, and the soft #leam of the imperishable beauty within is reflected in the brights ness of her smile, you'll realize that this Mother's Day you chose more wisely than ever by + working for peace, was patriotic e Mother's Day, it should famous sterling pattems dozens of more elaborats them to youl - efore. The Porter & Dyson Co. Manufacturing Jewelers 54 Main Street E gift of lovely hands is every girl's right, for a truly beautiful skin is only 2 normal, healthy,well- cared-for skin. But how necessary is the proper care! There is no need for telltale hands that speak loudly of dishes, mop, and broom. You can have hands alluringly beautiful, softand silky, white as the pure sosp that cleanses them. 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Goodwin Erecight Specialist 327 Main St. JTel 1905 ———————GLASSES flIX?U NEVER MORE THAN 10¢ SPECIAL NOTICE—We will not reserve any of these Sale Dresses— None sent on approval—No alterations—All sales final,