New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 26, 1929, Page 13

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Second Section NEW BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MO Pages 13 to 20 NDAY, AUGUST 26, 1929, CO-OPERATION WITH CANADA IS URGED Williamstown Speaker Says Do-| minion Links Us With England M: strengthening Williamstown, —Plea for Aug. 26 (P of Canadian-American on the ground that the Dominion the “best possible interpreter” of the United States to Great Britain, ana that Canadian-American interchange of trade, investment and population has created need of better inter tional understanding, was made Dy Dean P. E. Corbett of McGill Uni- versity before members of the inter- state of politics tos Pointing out that, while there been no war between Canada tne United States in 115 years, there | has been a number of disputes for| the peaceful scttlement of whi treaties have been erected, Corbett stated that he believed there | should be now “a simple all-in-all treaty providing for arbitration of y dispute in order to fortify our! existing cordial relations.” Discussing Canada’s role as an in- terpreter of the United States to Great Britain, he said the four-pos cooperation as and N Business Men On New York Trip Shiplaho,\', or maybe it's thar | everything, here is the crowd of New Britain merchants who|and a continuance went to New Yoik last week to visit the Westinghouse Light- | ing Institute. ew Yorl he blov storm seas en route. | of Linden street, | ler and STACK AMBUSHED IN DARK CELLAR Raiding Police Scare Alleged Rum Dispenser as He Enters Trapped smoke shop at 3 Saturday night in a cellar under his 8 East Main street Raymond Stack, 38, was fright by Sergeants P. J. O'Mara and T J. M. Licb- 3. B Kiely, who stepped out from the darkness as the storckeep- er was entering a cellar compart- a | ment where were found 198 bottles of beer, 7 1-2 gallons of alcohol, a number of empty containers, hot- es, sugar, bottle cappe: cap: malt, hops and other paraphernalia. @ In police court today Attorney L. J. Golon, representing Stack, entered a plea of not guilty for him on two Regardless of | counts of violation of the liquor law. er treaty which replaced that of tae|go far as the fz wrmers are conc rned, | ed a war between two groups of Bos- | Anglo-Japanese alliance might with | suffered chiefly from from the ills ton gamble e be regarded as the fruilt or |over production Planned Torture such interpretation. However, he ed, the world' Gilbert was said to have told Mr. | Britain Much Interested normal mar food supply, Doyle that the bookmaker was to be “Great Britain can scarcely be ¢x- | pite surplusage in certan linc tortured if he failed to come through pected to view without concern s¥ch narrow, and it is evident that with | with “twenty grand,” Sherman was small imbroglios as we have with |any wide dislocation of supply slugged on a strect in Revere a | our neighbor,” he sald. “On the |aster might readily visit la week ago Sunday and taken other hand, Canada has to face the consequence of any maladroitness in | 3reat Britain's conduct of the | ich still bring her into @ affairs w rect contact with the United Stat Stating that the three billion | American dollars invested in Cauna-| and the interchang- of | cient reasons for giving attention Canadia relations, to Dean Corbett said: merican “In dealing United State the assumry with Canada the may safely proceed on | ion that the Dominion has the petence to transact husiness under discussion. C is, for most ordinary and pr purposes an autonomous political | entity, although it is also part of the cor the ar on; British commonwealth of nations. | custody in Annexation Not Wanted | napi “In both its aspec our dual |man, B character expresses the wish ot the | the distr vast majority of Canadians. Alm the had no one in Canada would wish to turn to the colonial states;. few |addition, t Canadians desire aration 1 | recent dar complete independence; fewer stiy, |in this city. T believe, long for union with the| A tip from t United States, “While the annexation crops up from time no serious beli United S to time, there 1s | {10 in Canada that the ates intends to ahsorb it. | With respect to the view of foreign- | Of his father-in-law ers that the two peoples are so much | Gilbert, they alike and so nearly identical in therr | house at North aims that fusion is only a matter of tme, I say that 1 do not believe any | JO “shakedown brought bogey | 11 tioning, wz for the arrest o of the world's sur SECOND KIDNAPER MABBED N BOSTO §20,600 ¢ known man about town, who was (Smkelgwi]" pl(]t frussed and robbed by two armed G "’) . men in his apartment house last == == Mite Iman, known also as “Kid Doston, A rest of Georg d paroled 1 A ederick om . ( Sherman was found under guard of Roach, hn J. 1ce. to the from bandits Gilbert addition in a police David S Parker 26.—(R—With the E. Gilbert, the sec- up, co lit to be taken into | som attempt on tion with the Kid- | pers of this city's Joseph Sher- | to fear they m police and sre robberies rworld which hurrying s he was vaca- »onsible, police said, Gilbert at the home at Bedford. , owned the h in which 1e un of M N. %, W, body (¢} Iord Dodg led in a motor andria DRay August floating in St. terday. It hoat decla Weymo s in who be had en re- Woman’s Body After 9 Days in Water I. Y z. 26 (A—The les Lipe, who with her husband, and pilot, Captain ., of Clayton, were drown- W near Alex- A Lawrence two lineup tods porting f 7 Located er: 16 was foun river practically a baseball gambler, was re- lieved of $850 by the pair. His hold- 0 soon after herman, led mem- ernity ht be made victims the ran- of & new type of racketeer. believed | Gilbert was convicted in 1925 of & 000 | payroll robbery at Holliston and v in ! paroled in 1928 after WO | serving three years and five months. d el the same spot where her husband, Syra- amount of radio, journalistic, or|leased from Charlestown only five |cuse millionaire and sportsman, was other influences would ever broak |d previous. Police said Gilbert | recovered Thursday. down the feeling of national pride|and Roach knew each other at n-oi o S i, or the pride of independent owner- | Prison and declared that from ad- | Switzerland has completed the | it | made by the for- | clectrification of 1,300 miles for the “Tt would be difficult for Canada | Mer they believed they had uncov main line of the federal railway to live, ecither as an autonomons | o =1 £, ! 5 community, or as a part of the Dritish Empire if our commercnl, | cconomic, territorial or social poiiey | were such Unit as to involve us in serious continual conflict with tne d States, take yonr aftitude to be that described by one of your pr ‘Our protection is our fraternity, armour is our faith, and the that binds more firmly each year, ever increasing acquaintance a comradeship.” Concessions to Young. labor British parliament “concessions” which he stated Great Britain to draft treaty ptians people, 2ypt Geor member the the lad been made Egypt in the submitted to said: “The new tr had a clause by the B to say tre compel the store the ment. “The high commissionership replaced by a diplomatic amba dor and a professional diplomatist was appointed. The Egyptian rison at Cairo—a symbol of British suzerainty = offensive to Egyptian of discussing by recent the aty in the first place requiring ratification ptian parliament—that is government used the s it properly could to lgyptian crown to re- constitution and parlia- the ty insofar e a sentiment was withdrawn to the canal zone.” There was no concession to the tian claim for the sudan, but that was an imperialist claim. The gyptians had no more practical claim to the Sudan than the British and much les: developing it Defends U, or Herbert T the University of California, acterizing United States tion in the Caribbean a “for the purpose of maintaining stable conditions of government which are held to be basic for the economic capacity for Action Prof Priestley, of char- interven- designed promotion of sound business rela- tions and social and political evolu- tion,” asserted t still wider Am n poitical control is in pros- peet if ex-President Coolidge's policy remains unmodified. Discussing Maxico, wate policy of recog he said, he ition or non- | recognition” had played such an im- co portant part that due to the nice balance of existing political factions and the continuous habit of minority rule, it js impossible for the United Fimy Anyone can ly Downs in Test Top A Thilade this autogiro plane after eight or ten hour Iphia Bureau instruction roved Autogiro Has Its Ups and un- | | conscious in an automobile which he 1id contained four or five other men bert house where his plight | 1s only accidentally discovered. downtown v ¢ which within the p two weeks have lost $13,000 to dar- were to seck to recognize | y. In | Mitchelman, well | States to avoid an attitude of inter- laccording to claims of its makers. The improved model, which takes off | vention “irrespective of our action |in less than half the spaee required by an ordinary plane, is pictured in the case above as it landed, tail-skid first, during successful tests at Philadelphia o Food Shortaze Likely It descended almost vertically and rolled only a few inches after touching Frederick S. Snyder, chairman of |the ground. Nofe the four propeller-like blades whirling above {h of the hoard of the institute of lcockpit. Below is i close-up of the autogiro’s viplane tail. The bottors Amerfcan meat packers, speaking |surface of the tail is fixed, with the top one acting as an elevator and before the trade relations round |equipped for tilting in starting. Juan de la Ciery 3-year-old Spanish table, said that this hemisphere, far |inventor of the craft, is shawn with Harold Pitcairn, left, owner of from a danger of food shortage, has, | American patent rights on the autogiro. until Thursday as ordered on his request. Stack was released in bonds after his ar- Ti:e picture was taken aboard the good ship|rest. Hartford, or maybe it was the Middletown, of the Hartford- line, on which the delegation sailed, as it plowed the The raiders were in the cellar for given a bad | | more than an hour before Stack | came in and they had failed to fin any liquor, but they reasoned that | someone would come into the cellar if they waited long enough, anl they | were right for Stack dii nhot know (hey: were in hiding and had open- |ed the door leading into the ad- | joining cellar and the liquor supply | without suspecting that he was being | watched. | Joseph’ Yekebowski, 16. of 605 Main street, Stanley Regalis, 19, 91 Jubilec and Adam | Stankus, 46, of 88 Church street, | pleaded not guilty to the charge of violation of the liguor law and on re- quest of Stankus, the cases were con- tinued until Thursd Sergeants Feeney and Officers | Liebler and Kicly took a gallon and |2 half of aleged liquor out of a box { behind a stained glass window on an | upper floor of the Hotel Belmont, §8 ‘i East of str | Church street, | three glasses having search of the 1 jquor in the hotel = Stankus, who is proprietor of the | hotel, was charged on {wo counts | while the others, who are counte | men in the restaurant, were charged on one count cach. Tea was probably the first artifi- cially concocted human drink. The |tea habit in China dates back 4,700 | years. had cautioned him not to Victor Luzietti than 20 miles an hot street, pleaded not car had just ) charge of reckless d he was not speedi found guilty and fined 5 1 pproached the corner costs in police court today. He gave |how girls are,” he explaine They notice of appeal to superior court |want you to blow your horn hefore and bonds were set at $100, bt get out of the way. 1 blew my er court he changed Questioned by Mr. Greer paid the fine‘and costs stein, } he was going at the Motoreyele Officer William O'Day approximate rate of 10 miles an testified that he v hour when the office rtook him street, near North Burritt : ind about 20 miles an hour just be- ton streets about 4:30 yesterday fore that. He said he needed his li- ernoon when he heard feminine |cense to carn a living and Judge shricks and at the same time Alex Saxe replied that one who earns his Karos of 179 Broad street called to rator's license should him to follow a motorist who had ful about the ma just crossed North Burritt street |ner of driving on the stree from Broad into Clinton. According | As for threatening anyone, Luziet- to the officer, Luzietti was driving |ti said he was a when brous |and between Albany avenue and back and he said to Karos hope | Corbin avenue on Clinton street he |you get $10 for squealing.” Karos | cut to the left and almost overturn- testificd that two young women | ed his car while traveling at the yod off curb and were Hot days lose their terr cooling freshness of WRIGLEY’S SPEARMINT. The dry moistend nerves calmed by this little joy bringer. Big in benefits, small in cost. ks SWRIGLEY'S or in the mouth is and edgy ost struck by Luzietti's car. “the cop” and called tion to the incident. He his atten- Michael Hrywiniak, 31, of 22 Clark street, pleaded guilty to the charge of reckless driving and was 1ed $35 and costs after Motoreycle Alfred Tanguay .estified that he followed him from Vine to Cedar street on West Main street about 3:15 vy day afternoon, passing even cars the rate of 40 miles in hour. The motorist had nothing say John Snyder, 17. of T4 Seymour street, pleaded guilty fo the charge of driving without a license and was nd costs. He was arrested v street by Officer Fred L bout 11:45 yesterday fore- officer said Snyder admit having had an operator's r had nothing to say t it was the first time he Frank Amodio, 38, of 221 Elm street, ¢ ed with driving while his license was under suspension, pleaded not guilty and a continuance until W ne Wi granted. Ser- geant T. J. Feeney made the arrest. Atty. Gree n entered a nolle in the case of Joseph E. Tintl, 28, of 105 Clark street, c 19 with speeding. ed on August arg, Kansas City police are warring inst bombing racketeers. Jui TASTE the i i J-42 ce of Real Mint Leaves 4

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