New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 20, 1929, Page 10

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DOMINICAN PRIEST ONBIRTH CONTROL ather Baxter Against Matri- mony as Cloak for Shame - 0f Now Judgment Certain for Indecencies Cloak RAGING DANUBE TAKES THOUSINS OF HOVES hiouse groped their pontoons darkness, men who had lost éould be heard. fusion, the e broke down. their Invalids, the aged and #1l had to be carried on the ders of soldiers and pla bulances. . Scores of outcast eir haunts by th #aded villages and in ¢ tacked the fleeing f §¢ whom receiv ment. The cities of K kupice were under @ habitants taking r ¢hurches andtheaters. t frail en homes having collapsed like kleshells under the fuy of th Danube’s waters. in hools, EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD ASK HOOVER IDEAS | that there had been any exodus of Members of Agriculture COMm- Fepresctacna or the Necociatcs | mittes Seek Hyde Hearing | Press was taken on an inspection of | h 20 (#—Presi dent Hoover was requested today oy | the garrison and found®the number | Representative Dick republican | * of soldiers to be about $00. appar- ! lowa, to have Secretary Hyde ap-! befors the house agriculture | today. He announced that he would | | stay a week. Since the outbreak of | the revolution he has remained se- ! cluded in Hermosillo and taken no active part in the rebellion. | oon today Bratislava was ice barrier. That eo re lost during the floods to the government's | i having a special | sion on the ground in 2 and the e ated at dollar: D.4.R. CONFERENGE HELD IN WINDSOR Mrs. Mouat Gives History of State Chapters v time since General Yucupicio ook command of Agua Prieta about ¥s ago. About 1,000 Washington, Mar, rebel troops are still garrisoned at Nogales. An equal number, withdrawn intervals | throughout the past week, were said by rebel leaders to be half way between here and N General Olachea's federa] forces Naco were reported 1o number 1 mostly Indian Rodrigucz A ntly as many as there have been at | presi- rm rel said that ex gress nor- - is read at ectal session, it | helpful if the ns before iews on ¢ Dickinson e fact ideas would not reach in view | ey co. at! the v Safe Go odriguez, of owledge of Mr. Hoover's views, No Public Explanation president, w t i crossed the into Sonora, Mexico, d to stay on s border Rodriguez’ reply , but he had i ere will be no pu of his views un 0 congress Iturbe’s rebel arm g slowly toward ral control on to his pro- son said after th Hoover and Tilson Confer legislative program for the N of congress was gl sed today by President Hoover Representative Tilson of Con- ticut, republican leader of ¢t 1ouse, who said a ards still was the intention to slation very sharply ar work tn hand should | within two or three mont President Hoover had a rather \large calling list today, discussing a | COMPLAINT HALTS WORK ON MONROE ST. BROOK Steam Shovel 1s Sent Back / to From Is Work. Yard Ken ye and senate and oth of public ad an engagement to r Belgian am dor w embers of the nd concilia- | 0oWners property through STATE TOLL ROAD BILL WITHDRAWN Want Canned Goods Standard Mapes and Kef- d accumulations of t being to give the f 16 establishme: for eral farm omplis) by the aid program. Measures to s changes were pass- house at the last session ] proposal wo erence. They in some states it possibie to remove from the warehor estabilsh- rty owr emy Buys Bridge for Dime, Ordered to Remove It Hou n, Tex.. March 20 (& Roderick J. Watts, a reporte 0,0060-pound ¥ WENIGAN REBELS ON HOVE TOWARD a dime. The bridge, bayou in an exclusi ment offered Mayor who are «x- cal aeylum in An attempt will e s they may de- the Le removed in ¢ A Prafessor e good of L n Wil Hartford spok= the Americ meeting la Bank of Ne the Americ in habits and gen 1oot gentry branches What pesos t MLETING m B. 1 $2.000,000 Torreon nnounc ad looted t (about 3 1 other citi co Me e08 ral code the De the gave <p followed program Groth of detailing ountry ate vesterday with the government ko concluded | ATTENDING C. Road Funds on stat: from the re- or vehicle d "ator Chirst New xpenditures 1 come propriati ted with B. Chandler, southeastern | progident of the orth to Jimenez | per ¢ Comme 10 t was suggest- ccted here alles and - United | = guerrilla In this | ong hostilities for did Pancho Villa sev General Calles zutomobile and was greeted s’ committces, poittical leaders, and his own generals who had pre ceded him to t He announe- cd he would « immediately restor: business to normal and repair com- nications. The government estimated he had 0,000 men at his disposal at Tor- 1eon. Genera] Escobar, it was said, | could at a maximum have no more | | than 5,000 men, of whom many ere ill equipped. neral Calles found had lft behind them 11 | way cars loaded with merchandise, | cars containing railway air terfal and 14 locomotives. Aside ‘rom money taken from the banks Put at 14,450,007 Bales | ;! was said the rebel loot in the city | Washington, March 20.—UP—The | roqched large proportions. i § cotton crop was placed today S | us hureau at 14,450,007 Valenzucla in Sonora | 00 pound bales com-| Nogales. Sonora, Mexico, Marc 6.043 in 1927 and .o (M—Gilberto Valenzuela, revolu- tionary candidate for the presidency ! of Mexico was in conference with .orthern Sonora rebe] lcaders here ¢ he might pro- any months as 1 vears ago. Sits In Charter Oak Chair ned Torreon by nous Charter Uak chair ial da today ¢4, of Bronxuille, of the maker, Alexan- of isbury, and of former Governor Holley. It was Mr. sight and first ex- air, and he had rd for the sole pur-| H. 01 1 pose of the insur- schoolmate of Senate Baker of New Haven. Cotton Crop Estimate | o Pa 1928 Chevrolet Coach $125 1923 Buick Coupe .. $ 65 1926 Chrysler Coach $180 o= = 1129 STANLEY STREET {READ HERALD CLASSIFIED AUS nped about |, ; ! 1926 Dodge Sedan | Others From $50 Up WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, OGILBY DESCRIBES CASE OF MINERS Speaker at Kiwanis Club Tells| of Unemployment | Boxer, One Arm Amputated, Manages Protege to Title It was only an old shoe, but it said for $31. A boy's shoe, worn \rough at the sole, uppers almost | completely gone, bearing evidence ot having been retained in service long after the average American oy would have consigned it to the| bish heap. shoe was son of one purchased | coal miner in ales by President R. G. of Trinity college, It was sold | Kiwanis club today for $31, through collection taken up Judge Morris D, Saxe. The mon- will go towards buying leather to| air shoes for the sons of miners | 0 have not worked for aimost two and who are existing on the of starvation. ecently made an in-| 1¢ coal regions of South Dritish government. ) miners who bave om 13 months to; their dependents 11 shopkeepers in that | said this makes about a| who are living on the or what they call "un-| ce' a sum com- | 1ment and from employed else- | s to about | cised ars e and with tion million prop! from the gover: men who are and which amour k per family. Market Gone | of employmer the | Dr. Ogilby found was| Welsh coal, | dered the is being| ocean by oil| e has develop- | and Ita imder Mussolini has developed im- i pl This South h Ly Louis de Ponthicu, upper left. onc-armed old general of the prize ring, at last has realized—if only by proxy—the ambition of his life. His pro- tege, Emile Pladner, who's shown with him here, tock just 58 seconds 1o knock ont Frankie Genaro and win the flyweight championship. Lower photo shows Pladner's victor; enaro right, is taking the count after stopping the French n's powerful right, BY MINOTT SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer Puris, March years of ring some unusual tricks of Ponthieu has at last realiz ! ambition of his life, that of for France a world's hoxing ti Fat and 40, and with only arm, Louis didn't batter his way the top himself. But he gave all hi and ring 1 to Emiile Spuder” Pladn vear-old rench lad who od out Fr S seconds for the fly- hip. Pladner prok niost complete hoxer ever i e and he owes but due proper cally una < wheat or removal coal regions ion to otl i i 01 10,000 g rl Swanson was awarded the at prize ‘today. Rackliffe Gets Charm 2. Rackliffe was pre.ent: charm for food e 1o stani fields. o inds without iy, but as soon as the s over he went back to the A tried to make up for lost when he was od for an imiportant bout and he ring from painful bolls, He o postpone the fight, but xup he was badly hurt ts. As a result, blood s developed in his left arm had to beamputated., Old de Ponthicu Recalled Out me Limself, ention to traini zroup of fight Ar Ro eight cha udner that he est hopes, He told rs 0go t he tho world's champion in the 2 nursed him along care work and ¢ n came a Louis onie o Berg and William R, prese science I perfect Pupi ted T Louis g and rs. One 1 nk- «d his a over lis « world's of the agri- the follow- caterpillar ges was re feather: as in ¥ ten 1eveld tically Rob Walnut Hill X amin F + v goud lier and boxing was logked art. Louis s vicious hooks and the old de and when Genaro with one DY it v hunsclf. As soon as was over th went into with much furious kissing won & 3 110 rld . He satling Nelso it never clinci, As regarded by French exper Pladner's climb to the top was much than the road Louis had to | before the war. It is hard to just how good Pladner is be- wise the American boxers that have en coming to Europe have been Fires On Bu:gla}s “at Dr. Mc(‘arthy} Hom Bl March 20 (- ry possit e ring g o compe close quarts put a1 five e k a this | of Dr. Ja ir to several de Hu or i LY to Louis' ¢ served in i he yllars upon Margar MeCarthy, two men atte fired McCart villions of s wife, M Smith tehman saw door und ¢RUTH DEWEY RICH GIRL WILL OPEN AT 9 A M. tary Ralph H. Ben of Comm: was 1ot the five 5 and 10 that a opening hour has be Woclworth, Kres and Monroe stores will open . m. from now on. according report made to Mr. Benson. he in the nt." olosi of as by ores in the eity store wi & stores have ning INSPECT STATION nt J. J. Pell f Haven Hartford npanied by a group of tour « cetion of railroad property yester- The trip a on and had no par- far as New was ficance 0 i€ concerned party were Vice President | General Superintendent and Superintendent of J. 0. Halliday rith _AD HERALD CLASSIFED ADS TOR YOUR WANTS, S.¢E, MOTOR SALES CORP. MOTOR GARS AND TRUCKS How jmportant are 1iches to 2 gitl's happiness? Pamela Jodson, lef! above ionable Judson Hotel in N sirong-willed and petty. Mildred Lawrence, right, was a pubhc ind siter to support en her small salary all—came from the glimpses she got of the fashionable What happened when Pameia and Mildred became riv ruin Pamela’s brother wnen the lives of thesetwo t circumstances as exciting as they are Girl—Poor Girl” It begins in Down Pay't 1927 Ford Touring .. $ 40 1928 Dodge Sedan .. $200 .. %160 thr s in love TELEPHONE 731 14 on Tuesday, March 26 haa everything that money could buy. York, lavished the luxurics of life upon her stenographer, in Pamela's fathe Her only contuact with luxury—more cruel than no contact gs at the Judson Hot ally different alistic is 1014 in Ruth Dewey Groyes' thrilling new seria! disappointing. The French lad made both lzzy Bchwartz and Frankie Ge. naro look like third-raters. lzzy lasted 12 rounds, but was behind all the way and was lucky to survive. What happened to Frankie is still a mystery, unless that right hand punch to the pit of the stomach was an awful wallop. Many who saw it | believed it went into a very weak stomach, Pladner plans to remain in rope, taking on all comers. until business in the United States shows | signs of picking up. He thinks he | has been taking the short end - of ! purses long enough. OFFER PRIZES T0 GRL SCOUT TROOP { Council Votes “Live the Laws” I Winner Choice of Award i Eu- The choice of an American flag, a Scout flag or a soccer ball will he |given to the “Live the Laws' campaign now in | progross. according to action taken Iby the Girl Scout executive council at a meeting at noon today. | Reports of committee were sub. mitted including one from M | frene Haigis, Scout director, telling ‘ot work being done by the various | troops. The educational committee | ported on a training class which will meet this evening, and of a leaders' week-end camp trip to be | held at Camp Sprague, Portland, m | May. | The standards committee reporte ! that at May meeting and sup- per of the court of awards, the | merit badges will presented by | Mrs. Clifford D. Perkins of Hart. ford. Mra. J. W. Marsland. reporting for the publicity committee, said ar- !rangements have been made for a Girl Scout exhibit in the window of the Boston store in conneection with the United Community corporation drive, April 1 to S. Mrs. Willis Savage of Berlin re- ported that the entertainment com- mi‘tee plans a “Mother and Daugh- banquet in N Thera was considerable discu of plans for the next annual e The council voted to give to the {patrol leader who brings in the greatest number of applications = weelk at camp free of charge. ' committee reported that Leon A Sprague, treasurer of the United Community corporation and in whose honor ] that of Mgs Sprag former commissioner. Camp Sprague wi nam fored to give $10 as a pers gif o outfit tha girl who wins the con- Tt vot=] to authorize Miss Haigis to a 1 Camp Mac at May 28 to Ju Proudman, state treas . opened a discussion on a pro- ed state mandate for € § Mrs. E. L. Warren, New Brit- ain commissioner, is one of a com- mittee of fhree from Connectient investigate the stion. Onlv three other groups troop winning the re- ssion Logan Page chairman.of a nor tee to Lring in sy tion at the nex PATRONAGE PROBE Washinglon, March 20 () tension of its “practically ever: south was indicated s a probability today by Chairman Brookhart of the senate patronage commit POOR GIRL Her father, owner of the They had made her s ashe Ifish, s hotel. She had a mother when racket giris became re atterpted to interwo by irh

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