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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