New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 30, 1929, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RRIT AIN DAILY HE HAI D MONDAY, HURRICANE TURMS 10 GULF COAS: GALE FITS T03 SOURCE AHD MOUTH of ihe INDIAN RIVER (17 ARE IN THE ATLANTIC VITTORIO THE IMPORTANCE OF PUNCTUATION CAMPOLO SRR 2 & F20M ARGENTINA — GREW! ONE INCH HEIGHT SINCE HE CAME U5 LRST JUnE 18ncw G# 6% In CE CONTAINS AcL OF THE 5 VITAMINS uub 3F A WOLF - LEGS OFADOG £ EYESOFACAT Liu"'u/ nur'h rther, and Great ame Day! Tomorrow—DBecame F"fhcr & FARER DEYIES WSIEIL E“NWA M!HHL es as to the °= Washington you should Recall How s then employ- in getting | uch interes n and | job was over shipbuilders rn of events in Washington )0 with the understanding that this permission aroused Ch also said Senator publication con- | qays employment” continuous 10 at | | SEPTEMBER 30, 1929 ot o s o o | EfLON CONVENTION WUEES FOUNDER Spake in California “T have lett | previous—rr rs in 1926— “rom First Pag D) o o Nicoia Basile, 64, Digs & Legionnaire to support that deci- e sion.” | Group Plans Services Discusses Bill Pailure | = Discussing the failure of the na-| The witness recalled that he had|tional hospital bill, the report point On the fifteenth anniversary o spoken hefore the California 10giS-|aq out that more than 52,000 World [the founding of the United Itaiy lature 1 voiced views, § War veterans are receiving com- |lodge, Sons of Italy of this city | ator: Shontric nsation for neuro-psychiatric dis- ' which was to be celebrated yes hility “We are told by experts,” |day, its (Continuc | triotic society of A one from the N mark to Shortridge. 7 vou are not lonlv a nationalist but for national- tion it added, “that_the peak of the|cola Dasi Shortridze remarked amid laugh- | neuro-psychiatric load will not street, died m preu ter, “Those are my views.” reached until 1947 monia as the members of the ord 1 was in Geneva| “The month old report of the act- gathered in their clubro . months in 1926 “for my. |iGE medical director of the veterans |brate the event. uninforme acserted that in 1926 Al.|burcau contains the information N e e § ex-scrvice men are hos- | When news of his : York World “tricd | Pit alized for mental illness and that nounced whole ““1'”, colony ve been hospitaliz- | this city and members of (I 3o i the president was critically il British information.” of these 7,217 I e from Johnson that Dear-!ed without authorization of the|throughout the state mourned fo ified that Shearer {ook |burcau in state, county, city and|their friend and associatc member. o to be aDrivate institutions. Taken Suddenly 1! carer. | Many Await Treatment Mr. B was contined {o 8 earer sail| “Our survey shows, on Aug. Ist| ped Wed ¥ eve hiatric veter- |suaden illness. is ide from those in non-gov- he proposed naval |that 2,243 neuro-ps for th avy, Senator King, | hases more serious from day to day nr democrat, Utah, “asked me fo et crnmental institutions are awaiting it was very grave lay. Th |one for salt Lake City At this | hospitalization toda he conelu- |hanquet which was place {the committee insisted that Shearer|sion is obvious. The hospital facili- |the clubrooms of Sons of Itat his remarks to the Geneva |ties of the government are not ade- on Walnut street. was postponed quate. when the news of his illn Anxious About King “I believe it to be the duty of |rcceived and many of the official “But that's =o0." he persiste], |this convention to ta a determin- | hurried to his bedside, only to learn and why did Sc i se matters and pre- | that their leader had dicd. the press about me." pare to carry the fight for adequat | plans for the celebration of th rtor King go into |ed stand on v were postponed ng to J 1, Shearer nniver clusion Mr. Basile was born in Italy, 5 No one iz a more sincere be- came to this city almost 30 years s licver in peace than the man who lago. He was interested in newspi- L s known, personally, the horrors|per work and started the first Ttal- el r, declared General Peyton C.ljan weekly in this city. He was its nd to | Mar f chief of staff of the |editor for a number of years and . ojarmy, in an address at the opening|earned the reputation of being oice in the alian languag Italian just all 1 fine writer in the he Kellogg treaties re- | He also was the fir It 1ad a navy or not 4 war as an instrument Of lof the peace in this city and hehl [ S\ earir o estirs ; policy it it ol 1 his position for man o 1 Y e L 18 olish to imas that wars wer was connected for some time witn o Ml n, Sep (UP)—=Wil- 15 p01ished by those treatics the Corbin Serew division of th ey 15 who called hin War Not Impossible American Hardware Corp. [ s8 drum” whic address characterized as made noises at the un- Widely Known fortunate” the pro- 5 nfortun m R e prevalent that war has \possible by modern and added nothing could be turther from the fac Mr. among aliax people of this thro vas o member o city and to some ext ghon atin | commint for examination bout 1 tivities for American | w414 nothing could be more dan- | UNited Italian Republican club and shinbullages gerous than for the nation to be 'l ripoli-Italiana society of Ken- Jelora Drima A linister AT Do Al ) SGh il o File eana othben ily | sinstont Helsenvias ddfnresidan ot wrrives here the end of this week to | Ly such talk as this. We need, and local branch of the Sons of Italy scuss with President Hoover a re-|always will nced, an army and a |fOr many fterms 4 sumption of disarmament nego v of & suitable strength for na.| Members of these organizations | tions liroken off at that conference, | tional defense.'” will gather tonight at the club- the committee hopes to learn from| Another speaker on foday's pro- |T0Oms of the Sons of Ttaly at 7 shipbuilders | pational prosident of the Amcrican |Walnut street to make ad him do at Geneva and later in|gram was Mrs. Boyce Ficklen, Jr. |ments to pay final tributes to their Legion auxiliary, who brought greet- fate member fron: 330,000 members of her Mr. Basile is survived by ization. Her prepared address |sons, Thomas, Carma the auxiliary hud been denou Louis Basile, all of this city; ion be- three d Mr lLouis Ma d for the main- |nano Mrs., Louis Vessella bot! try’s defens of this city and Mrs. Chester Mag- ing More Absurd nano of Newficld, Conn. ricns hearer marches t chair 28 a dramatic and somewhat in Washington in 1926 and when meret acter the witness I'rank stic orga ms sislation was under cor ne aid| tenance of the cou leration in congress the shipping could be more absurd | Funeral gervices will I Loard was pla id that lame than this charge,” it was added morrow morning at th branch of cor He bronght a ‘We have scen our men march |home and at 9 o'clock at <t taxyer's suit in court here after the to the most terrible war in|Joseph's church. Burial wil shington arms conference seek and we have a clearer under- | St. Mary's cemotery tanding of .what war means than 1ip serapping. ny Wy figures | i statements conta ine possibility of war has not he says were known only sceretly in | peen banished from the world.” the navy. e Admiral Hugh Rodman, a l) No one scemed to ) who was | native Kentuckian, also brought to him until a month i suit in a w York court asl azainst three Ame suilding companics the convention a plea for parity in val steongth. His text, he sald, sartn, wope ana_parits and GAitAl City Attorney i in Charge greatest of these is parity 100 which he contended United States needs at all [G 1 E mer: % 1 already receive avy during peace and in time suit was lo ins 2 cgual in strensth and in . s ! By GEO H Shiphullding company, ‘the | svers othar particuliriant on e pars e - Bethlehem Shipbuilding corporation with it of any other nation Washington, Sept nd the Newport News Shipbuilding | on carth. nd Drydock company, whose offi-| “There is litle or no use cials have told the committee ment of William M. hav- | Hartford ing an inferior navy: one not quite cennial cen, supervisor of the de- 1s of Hartford county She er was employed at various times ar | strong enough. The Germans spent | with headquarters at Hartford, was an obs and consuliant undreds of millions of dollars in {announced today by Dircetor of the Looks Wallece Deory crenting a fleet about SO per cent|Census § y Never claiming to be unassuming, | «s sirong as that of Great Britain. The date when Harney will offi- ! Shearer with double for Wal booming voice, is &' \When it came to a showdown dur- | ¢j ry, the mo- | ing the World war, it did not give | will be, and other detai i1 d in | Germany even 80 per cent protec- |worked out later between Harney the Spanish | on.” o i Sy 1d Director Stenart s du “It gave little or practically none. | e will take officc e World war. He claims 10 fence she reverted to submaring inv 1 one-man torpedo | warfare.” during the World war, but The admiral said hat one might on April 2, next He will have more W not wholly suecessful. He .s well expe a me n 10 or lo Supetvisianlover examinations el on o ghyth sAnerEonnil Kentucky derby as a coun- forsapplicants for jobs as cnumera- . navy department, but there the | |y a second best navy to win tors and will have some influc c y;I‘ leircordSot e sty selecting the enumerators from Reports indicating he was believ- 9 ‘:twyv.;x.:vg those who pass the exan or anothe during the \\'m]‘l war, 7y = Mr. Harney, a practicir torney ave oL ceeived b the inves llr ) L 2 it 3 T ), prominence several weeks ago in the WS r witness, Drew I \r\«)-v‘ >\ et ; ; trial of a law suit growing out of an stificd he saw what purporte be a Scotland Yard record on L automobile accident in which cars it Geneva, and® the committee l owned by Policeman James Sullivan has communicated with Scotland and Joseph Babula fizured. When | | fellow policemen had testified in Sulivan’s interest, Attorncy 1 subjected them to scorching on In R, = .o | el He was the wyor favored 11| would be sent to convey the animals | jor the Hartford § ) 1 hip by th 0od LR heres t zroup opposcd to Judge Schats ly take office, whe 5 salary 4 awy briafly dur can war and for 10 ds however, con ; siderably before the enumerators be- i gin the task of taki the count ce in W war, Yard to ascertain if this is true, Laurence Wilder, one of t builders who givg Shearer about 500 for work in Washing 1928, said he had Shearer's rec investigated and found e snip- (Continued From First'Page) to t ield. The automobile, -a sedan urn\.nl‘ he was convicted Shearcr was an | 44 'the eireus and the animals were | LLCZION ( 'mmmee to ceting w i was did not go into detail but said Nriaben (b put in the rear portion. Immedi- | Meet on Exposition Declines to Be Interviewed \tely they began to make merry, 4 The general committce in char of ‘arrangements will meet this eve- ning at 8 o'clock in Legion hom: Washington street, to discuss p for the home prog exposition which will be held by Bddy-Glover post, No. 6, American Legion, Octo- in the Stanley Arena Chairmen of sub-committees will re port Announcement has been made that |invitations have been sent to Gov crnor John H. Trumbull, to Mayor IS A. M. Paonessa, to Pardon C. Rickey | president of the New Britain Cham- ber of Commerce, and to Willilam S Alexander, state commander of the Legion, to he present at the opening | night of the exposition. Replies have not yet been recelved. Shearer has declined to be inter- | ana it w s only a short time before :ined Daniel ». | the upholstery was in siips. This Cohalan as counsel. Refore that | yesulted in a suit on the part of the | time he was quoted as saying he had | owner. received confidential figures from | Circus employes are about {the naval officials. Pearson named four town today and are under the fire naval officers, members of the|of the landlords of rooming houses American delegation at Geneva, as | for unpaid room rent and two of the having been friendly with Shearer, | cmployes are beginning G0-day jail v Adniir M. | sentences on another charge. The | i . | circus has broken up and the own- Schofield, and Commanders . IL | ers of the tents, the Mariin Tent Co., il o of New York, have alrcady shipped their equipment back to headquar- ters. The animals are now owned by viewed since he rel these including Reeves, Rear Admir Frost and H. (' Reeves has ¢ man Shortridge to put a brief state- | ¢ imals wned b ment in the record today concerning | KKnisht Brothers and their ~only e Sl hope is the money which the Tabs Pearson’s statement that “Admiral Y SR e e i e G 10 e poaes e e lcbe (hat e | yokpialntine and is the objcct of \carer <has allowed the general | ‘mployes. N ARG e T . | Cenference This Afternoon FINANCE COMMITTEL MEETING impression to be drawn that he in- tends to tell an important story Judge Bernard K. Gaffney, legal| Alderman David L. Nair, chair- adviser of the socicty, President |Man of the finance —committee cf ¢ drawn new personalities | o con“and one of the Knight |the common council, has called a into the lobbying scene. He s ex- | ot ™ OO into conference this | Meeting of that committee to he pectod to be on the stand for two|,fiernoon and a final decision on|held in the hearing room at City Wwhat will be dene was expected. It | hall for the purpose of adjusting = s i practically crtain that the society | the claims of property owners PARISI BRINGS SUIT |is not responsible for the $1,000 |against whom the city has asse Jaumes Parisi, through Casale & | cyit of the Middletown partics, and | ments for improvements and other Casale, has brought suit for $80 |t is also claimed that it is not re- | matters. | against Carmen Pignetelli. The ac-, sponsible for the injury to the boy| The action of the committee fol- | tion is returnable in the city court|\which was caused by the circus ani- {lows the enactment of a bill t the second Monday in October | mal. {in the last legislature giving the B SR The Middletown suit is being | mayor and bhoard of aldermen the Cinema shows are now given on brought through Sebastian Santa- | power to adjust the matters ind have proved very popular | croce and Salvatore Mabbotta, mem- | most of the big Atlantic liners, |bers of the commiltee which spon- |USH HERATD €T ASSIFIED with the passengers of all classes. | ored it “ IOR BEST RESULTS ' | ranged with Chair- conf which me

Other pages from this issue: