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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1928, ANDRULEWICZ RXPECTED m“ GAR'['NA campaign from the fall but got only |early today switched the majority to |that Smith, as was expected Tan well 4 4,454 votes while his succesatul opponents Boardman and McKay, Alfred B. Smith and showed him |in the city of Cleveland while Hoover leading by more than 12,000 votes. |polled the heavier vote in the rural -CURTIS SLEEPING | CHAsED Ut OF HOUSE |l NAJORITY ON WAY TO EAST Does Not Awaken to Hear the Returns En Route with Senator Curtis tc Washington, Fort Madison, Iowa, Nov. 7 P—Weary after his intensive campaign in 31 states for the vice presidency, slept soundly early today while other pussengers on the train eagerly read all available returns of yesterday's | weneral election. | The senator followed his usual | custom’ in retusing to remain awake to read the reports. Since his first clection to congress in 1892 as repre- sentative from the fourth Kansas | Gistriet, the republican statesman | Las never interrupted his sleeping hours because of clection reports. Retires Early | Determined to get a much needed west, he retired at 8:15 o'clock last | night and advised members of his | party that he was not to be disturb- | ed until 6 a. m. Sanford Jarrell, ot San Francisco, representative of tha republican national committee, was to provide him with the latest re- | ports at that hour. The sign “quiet” hung on the door | of the senator’s compartment in a| Pullman car and quiet was provided | as train attendants had been in- structed he was not to be disturbed. “I am tired from the top of my head to the bottom of my feet and win or lose, I am going to rest,” | Senator Curtis said before retiring. | Today he looked forward to a visit with his son, Harry Curtis, Chicago attorney. Arriving in Chicago at 8:10 a. m. the senator planned to| remain with his son until 10 a. m. when he was to depart on a Balti- more and Ohio train for Washington to resume his interrupted senatorial duties. If relaxation is not to be had in Washington the senator said he would go to some other point where he could rest and should this be true it was believed he would go to the estate of his daughter, Mrs. Webster Knight, near Providence, Rhode Island. Shout for Hiin “We want to see our vice presi- dent” was the shout of a crowd at Marceline, Mo., the first gathering to meet the train eince it left Topeka where Curtis -~ concluded his cam- paign and cast his vote. When in- formed by Jarrell that the senator had left orders not'to he disturbed, a leader of the gathering velled: *Missour! farmers: don't go to bed before midnight; you've got to show these Missourian “MAN WITH BROKEN NOSE" BLAMED BY SPEEDER Driver Clafms We Was Taking Indi- vidual Who Vanished (0 Hospital. Admitting that he drove past the Jatersection of Oak and West streets at the rate of £5 to 30 miles an| hour about 6 o'clock this morning, John Swentusky, aged 18, of 27 Wil- liams street, was found gullty of the charge of reckless driving and fined $25 and costs by Judge M. D. Saxe | in police court today. His car struck | a light truck driven by Vito Spinel- pis 1i of Thompsonville and marks . on the road indicated that he traveled 38 feet alter appiying the brakes, Swentusky denied that he had been driaking but Officer Peter Ca~ belus testified that he had the sigal of liquor on kim. He said he hap-¢™ pened ta’'be about so early because. he was interested in the election re- turns, and.he met two men who told him they had been in a fight with some milk delivery men. One of them cqpplained that his nose was broken and Swentusky agreed to drive him to the hospital. Going west on West street Swentusky sounded the horn on his car and not hearing an answer, assumed that the way was clear, so he sped along. only to see the truck, going south on Oak street, too late to avoid the crash. Questioned by Judge Saxe, Officer Cabelus said Swentusky was accom- panied by an intoxicated man, and relative to the man with the broken nose, Swentusky told the officer the fellow had run away. Officer H. C. Lyon testified that he took the meas- | urements on the road. | It i3 estimated that Germany will consume more than § tons of gasoline and ain: 000 tons of gasoline and henzol dur- he voque Footwear o OE P ’ L STANDARD OF QUA THE WORLD_OVER |enness and breach of the peace. Senator Charles Curtis | |tinued until Nov. 14 on recommen- [ Weat Point, Mother and Child, Latter in Night Dress and Shoeless, Driven Out by Husband and Father. Adam Droza, aged 37, of 118 Clinton street, and Wadislaw Pa- zen, aged 39, of €33 North Burritt street, were in police court today, the former charged with breach of the peace and assaulting his wife, and the latter on charge of drunk- Both pleaded guilty and were rep- resented by -Attorney Lawrence J. ‘Golon. : Droza was arrested about 6:45 last night by Motorcycle Officer Hayes on complaint of Mrs. Droza, who was bleeding about the face where she was struck. Her husband drinks heavily, she said, and the immediate cause of his attack was her refusal to move to another neighborhood. Judge Saxe imposed a fine of $10 and costs. Pazen chased his wife and daugh- ter out of the house about 11 o'clock last night and Officer G. W. Hellberg found igem in the home of a neighbor. The girl was in her night clothes and barefooted. Ex- cessive drinking was blamed for the disturbance and Judge Saxe told Pazen he would give him one more chance on account of the fact that there are eight children in the fam- ily. He imposed a fine of $15 and costs and suspended payment, Tre- minding Pazen that he should have better use for his money than the purchase of liquor. The continued case of Frank Pog- litsch, aged 46, of 152 Camp street, charged with nom-support, was con- Prosecuting ~ Attorney dation of ‘Woods. UTAH SWINGS T0 REPUBLIGANS Salt Lake City Returns Aid to' Hoover §alt Lake City, Nov. 7 (#—VUtah swung definitely toward the Hoover column. today as additional com- plete returns from Salt Lake coun- ty were received. The vote from 194 | districts ont of the 647 in the state ave: Hoover, 23,347; Smith, Actress Must Shed Clothes to Pay Debt New Haven,( ‘Nov. 7 (UP)—Miss Bee 8tarr, Brooklyn, N. Y., actress, appearing at a local theater, must climh a flagpole on the Brooklyn Paremount theater: building Wed- pesddy afternoon and shed her elot! heifipress ‘agent announced togay. . i hif “Miss Starr, he said. bet on Gov- ernor Al-8mith in the presidential &lection. The terms of the wager call for Miss < Starr to: mount the flagpole and discard her dress, appearing only in a gymnasium suit. 0,664, "TRESSES OFFENSE N. Y., Nov. 7 (UP)— Head Coach Biff Jones continues to stress the offense in practice for Army's game this week with Notre ame. Murrell and O'Keefe carried the ball most of the time in prag- fice yesterday.' READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS headache? feels as if your head would break? Baume Ben- gué relicves it —fry atube and youll believe it! 2 REUEVES AHES & PAINS OfS ous LITY, AND VALUE SINCE 1852, a state total BIG FOR G.0. P Hoover May Sweep All State Officers With Him Columbus, Ohle, Nov. 7 (P— Herbert Hoover not only swept Ohio by a majority that may exceed that ever before given a presidential can- didate, but he apparently has taken into office with him an entire re- publican state ticket and two Unit- ed States senators. G. O, P. Congressmen Incomplete and in most cases meager returns indicate & majority of Ohio’s congressmen alse will be republicans and the landslide prob- ably has also given control of the state lagislature to the republicans. Secretary Hoover's majority had mounted to more than 352,000 on returns from ¢,411 precincts out of of 8990 precincts, which would make his majority in excess of 700,000 if this ratio is maintained to the end. President Harding carried the state by a little more than 400,000, while President Coolidge had a majority of ,about 340,000 over the combined vote of ago. Victor L. Berger 1s Being Defeated Milwaukee, Wis., Nov. 7 UP—Late returns from the fifth congressional district in Milwaukee, presaged the defeat of Representative Berger, lone Socialist in congress by William H. Stafford. republican nominee, who assumed a lead of 1.- 000 with only 14 precincts missing. | Stafford, former congressman, wiped out the earlier lead of 2,600 which had indicated Berger's election and put him ahead. Victor L. | 10 SERVE AS JUSTICE Error in Middle Initial of Oandi- date’'s Name Not Oonsidered %o Be Barrier. Although his name did not appear correctly on the ballet, it is expect- ed that Anthony 8. Andrulewics will be declared elected as a justice of the peace. The name printed was, | “Anthony H. Andrulewicz” the first of the lineup of democratic justices. In the last Berlin town election, several ballots were ruled out be- cause a candidate for constable was not voted for under the name ap- pearing on the ballot, his initials having been used on some and first name without the middle in- |itial on others. Attorney Leo Gaffney, whe was id(s!gnnled by the national lawyers’ | committee to settle election disputes | arising in this zone, said in an off- | hand opinion today that he was of |the belief that there was no ques- |tion as to who was Intended and |that no error of printing could con- |trovert the evident will of the vo- |ters. Mrs. Ruth Pratt | N. Y.’s Congresswoman | New York, Nov. 7.—{@—Mrs. Davis and La Follette four years|p ., pratt today holds the distine- [tion of being New York's first wom- lan congressman. She was elected over Philip Berolzheimer, democrat, to repre- sent the 17th, or “silk stocking™ dis- trict, which, however, includes some of the poorer residential districts in addition to excjusive Park avenue, | Mrs. Pratt id a widow, the mother of five children and is the only ’“ oman ever elected to the New York {city board of aldermen. She is a re- publican and waged an aggressive | campaign against Tammany hall. | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS germs die in 135 seconds! —naturally Listerine checks STILL DENOCRATIC Gives Smith Landslide of Tea o (ne Columbia, 8. C.. Nov. 7 UP—Amid the Hoover landslide that made ex- tensive inroads upon the hitherto “solid south,” the state of South Carolina stood today with her tra. ditional democratic majority™ vir- tually untouched. Incomplete re- turns gave Governor Alfred E. Smith a lead of mearly ten to one over the combined votes of his opponents. Seven democratic congressmen, 147 democratic nominees in the state senate and house and numer- ous county and local officers were elected without opposition. “BOSSY” GILLIS LOSES 0UT FOR LEGISLATURE Newburyport's “Bad Boy” Runs While fa Salem County Jail. Newburyport, Mass., Nov. 7.— P —The handicap of having to spend most of his waking hours turning a wringgr in the laundry room of the Salem jail proved toe great an ob- stacle for this city's ‘“bad boy” mayor, Andrew J. Gillis, to sur- mount in yesterday's election and in consequence his aspirations to set as a member of the next state legisla- ture received a severe jolt. Gillis directed a spirited #ticker A $200 Mayor captured the two representative seats from the 18th Essex district with 6,061 and 5,429 respectively. The “bad boy” is doing a €0 day stretch for jllegal sales of gasoline at his service station in this city. MRS. REED SMOOT DIES AFTER LONG ILLNESS Wife of United States Semator from Utah Succambs tn Wash- ington Today. 'Washington, Nov. 7.—(—DMrs. Reed Smoot, wife of the Utah sen- ator, died today at 7 a. m. after a long illness. She was 65 years old. Mrs, Smoot whose maiden name was Alpha May Eldridge, the daugh- ter of Horace S. and Chloe Redfield Eldridge was born at Salt Lake City, Utah, August 6, 1863. After studying at Deseret University, Utah, she was married to Reed Smoot on Septem- ber 17, 1884. Three sons and three daughters were born to them. They are: Harold R., Harlow E., Ernest W., Mrs. Chlpe Smoot Cardon, Mrs. Annie K. Rebentisch and Mrs. Zella Ester Nisley. The senator said Mrs. Smoot had taken “an interest in politics as long as her health permitted” and credit- ed her with a large part in whatever success he had attained. |Smith Carries City of Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland, Nov. 7.—(#)—Upsetting | unofficial returns which had placed Herbert Hoover in thé lead in Cuya- hoga county by approximately 10,- 000 votes official returns from about half the precincts O value no matter how The official count in 495 precinots gave Hoever 61,981; Smith 73,388, Some explanation of the contradic- tory trend ‘was found in the fact settions -of the county. AUN-DOWN WOMEIN REGAIN STRENGTH ° MRS, HELEN SEDIVI 4339 National 8t., Tacony, Phila,, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa.—“T really can't express in writing how much Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. After my second baby was born I was always tired, 1 read so much of what the Vege- table Compound has doe for otbers in the coumyb 3} bottles of ]| Vogetable Cflrlld feel that I gave it a trial. 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