New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 23, 1929, Page 1

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i Q NEW BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1929.—TWENTY-TWO PAGES ept, iy News of X i the World Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending By Associated Press Oct. 19th ... 15,530 ESTABLISHED 1870 | WUICHET BLOCKS EFFORTS - HOPE WANES FOR LONE AVIATOR AS UFT(]LUTBR%El%sgfil\}gglsfi / | HOURS DRAG ALONG WITHOUT WORD ~ | OF PLANE FROM VESSELS OR SHORE N Connecti‘cutWi tness| - — T Pleads Falty Memory HOOVER T0 SPEAK CHILD STEALS BACK Esperts Conclude Mon- FROM AUDITORIUM HER FOSTER SISTER o2 Sieemer e When Asked for Been Added to Long Source of Secret Infor- Last Minute Change Made in Kaminsky Girl Brings Beloved List of Atlantic Fatali- | Louisville Ceremonies | Playmate Home Once Hore ~ ties—Craft Overdue at BONT BN ROUIE 10 oty Bt 15 meaRrsogey 2 F- M TodeY PRICE THREE CENTS Montana Aviator Attempts Atlantic Flight SEEKING CABINET 3D0umergue Faces Diflicult Crisis mation on Proposed Aiter Fall Rate. [CONFERS WITH LEADERS Briand Group's Resignation Blamed Walsh Becomes rcastic When Witness Senator | on Tnternal Political Dissatisfac- | 5 e e : 2 . 7 % Pessimistic Atti e Grow ton Rather Than Definite ¥or- Urban F. Diteman, Jr. (left) of Billings, Mont., and his plane the ‘Golden Hind” in which Waves and Wind Batter Steamer Woman Who Adopted and Reaved Pessimistic Attitude Grows Insists He Cannot Reca]]: fiC i }Ll(f l'].]pol\ off from Harbor Grace, N. F., for London yesterday. Without a word of warning Bearing President (o Kentucks— | Baby, and Her Daughters, sadden- | as Whole Observer Staff } intentions, the former Montana cattle man sent his tiny Barling plane into the air leaving behind a letter with airport officials revealing his destination, Vessel to How He Obtained Data On Proceedings of Fi-| Expected Dock About | ed by Action of Child's Father in {23, —(P—President | Doumergue today began the difficul- Paris, Oc Reports No Sight of 4%, M. Today. Taking Her Away. g e NS i £ | [ DBiteman—Frail Machi ; ; task of finding a cabinet with an | = — | | Touisville, Ky., Oct Y - A Machine nance Committee { adequate majority behind it to take | | [Mob Hunts “Ghost” in YI |ident Hoover will spealk at the Me- 1 of Kam ' Probably Exhausted Its A |the place o the Triand ministr | || Woods Near Kingsdown || $ s e Nome (i FonE Seateord asusht : ; s | which fell last night by a close mar-l | Kingsdown, Kent, Eng., Oct. 9 [stead of on a boat in the Ohio John Smulsky had be Fuel buppl)‘ h)' 11111 AN gy | 8in and immediately resigned. | | (P—More than a thousand [ river. nfancy, to o to the 2 N The p T Seah | ons, including motorists from | 3 | Broad str e s Washington, Oct. 23 — ‘The faulty| [The president began receiving | g ““”“*'J‘”' Ot i O i i = || far and near. spent last night in = || @ik # A B iie Mt suodiatn T reas memory of James 1. Wuichet, a sec- | Various political leaders, bu nay | . Fawkham woods hunting a ghost . lof inclement weather ey mRe oM et otlen he © o s before Hlemon JJ d S e P vk \s h G F : inting i : w ,ld War Veier | AT the child| T i ving margin allo‘ted Tetary ot the Connecticut. Manufac. | be days betore tis probtem wit be | JIAEE SCONES Parker-dmit 0,! “with gioving cyes” reporicd. fo 0r ar Yeteran Goes 10|rcrence attenaea ny e happy moments|the nidget monoplane i e dav defeated | solved. Those who were recoived to- 5 have been scen by local inhabi- e tac 4 er foster mother and Kistc ; i ssociation, today defeated| YR NG Attorney for Tactics e Ambul 0 Norot secretary. George Akerson, and |\1U0 DCr foster - mother and MSICh | Hind” was reached today, and wh the desperate attempt of the senate|day were Paul Doumer and Fernand y ] ey, : 3 ance 0 Noroton Cole W Storline oDi D o eacrat narvs| theyEthouehBi0 hetteritha Gisnia o 8. SR i e e e il The searchers carried —guns, [ d, and chort time | it Passed, the craft and its pilot were committee investigating the lobby to | S=0l ll : L the chamber. e 1 stick ten racque cricket - | he child was he ho believed to have been added to that establish conclusively that . L. 5o "',x',:v']“y Bl ““F_i o bats and ropes, to say nothing of et LA 1 TR father e cret hearings of the senate commit- | FHONS HISE CH0ATec SO them- | i ruments. Police forces janthedOnta 0ckias iUt Nawine SaN sl i e i (o el DKaNe e m orthi s glanticianditalleds e | Young plan, Rhineland | — | appeared in a motor coach o fthes colorult sforysthalhasbce ehold Sres Gt ith icn Urban F. Diteman, Jr., tock ehet o ained o could not | SYACUation the Saar Valley and | Wolfe Says Lawyer Apparenly Ts e searchers spent chilly | {Gas and Wounds Sufferedl During | Voven around the Ohio river through | gpor our vears at HarBor Gr S ounaland remembaiihow ot nitiere he racely:||(nayalipolicyin cales e fthisi oo : | ambushing each other in || | century and a half were added t0- | ;06 and hadl enjoyed happy con £l iy ed information he passed on to iwo|feat was due more to political dis- | Asking Improper Questions to ke for the ghost and emil- Duty on Front in France Expect-|day as President Hoov passed | oo ith the mot o London at 10:45 a. m., yesterday o R e formation | satisfaction with the cabinet's com- i e hs T ol | westward from Cincinnati to Louis- | : lie carried 165 gallons of gasoline Jisess | Trip Court On Ruling sis n ks. : : Take T Vet e o OWIS | phere was no adoption z peepl Ssthot ke 1o] anyone whokaidjnositon than differences over | rip Court On Ruling as Basis|§ 0 0G0 cime too hot for the ed to Take Toll of Another|ville at the head of a pageant of | f0FC T 70 B It he estimated would keep him not attend the secret heurings, al-|foreign policies, | Yor Appeal. real speetre, which did not ap- American Warrior. steamers, tugs, barges, yachts and | ;%o stompion, and took wlotk £o beun ov leuger Than the {hough he could remember all other| The character of the new cabinet pear. : ‘ 3 patrol hoats. Iie b it within the period he would require to cover his | details snrrounding the relaying of | may possibly cause some shift of | w Haven, Oct. 23 (P—The de- |\ J| The siren of an ambulance ti In fhls pageant wasrecorded the |y /oo 1imen g course of about 2,350 miles. The 235 k the nformation. | sentiment on big foreign nolicles, but | fense in {he case of thres ofticersj———""— —_— fmorning at about 11:30 shricked a5 | TOMance of an ¢ ring rather | 50000 O | to stay with her | Hours ended at 11:45 a. m., today, | The information in question wa M. Briand himself expects the |op ihe Parker.Smith company, de-| Vhe sonitle enell Hivough fhe heare| 0nn & plonserine age. for this M-l (o qoiher whe was pows and only negative reports of ihe flier ( contained in an officc memorandum | new cabinet to be of the left, there | : ; o i of the city carrying Emil Remut| o ¥ d the complotion (2% rior the child had scamp Enaihsienatt camepront inglase and | e e T St S5 S 1) ST o et |l {CHEa s well R O S0 Do s ol ] Tl A O e | RO E et | signed by Wulchet, which Senator | threat to the Young plan, As far as | Corn rested this noon, after a stormy R R BRSOl e manismodenn hieds oL coMtnNOuSHCEEeR i Sta D o T o[ Gl Sl el L e { e ontans ) Erbes of {he | [tita Sass Valleyfib concimics. it waqDour in whichieonnsel iwasiint con_f oot at Nocoten steady cor through flood, | Wort K0 A, Tut despite the |Nim in the air but 20 hours. Mean- 1 N elisa ine Cor il ton tinediint s i tealio i thag achimaa e sofin | CiocuereatedivAN I R T ud s VoL e e e e o ervinel man | Slonshuand satorm l % offorts mothing could be | ¥hile he had mot been reported or 1 some unknown manner. e Rarals Has el haen | who presides. Once the jury was e T een And it was to celebrate the frui- ke A i sighted. ‘uichet's Memory Faulty | e SRS | sent out - the c 1 defens o 1 past few years has been | tjon of a dream come true that Ry e i _Wuichet's Memory Faulty | Naval Pollcs Definite -ent out while the court told defense RSl e e dream cc ths Pamily 42 XEystevical Diteman was believed by some SWiohet: fovelen tinde Sorotery| TL Wieh i eililbial Prampes 2ibecldush what U (Bouelt of he S e R R Rl aii Bl the | roday the mother and two dau shipping men to have chosen a path et e it e S SIS i Ro g g oning aich nas been | Lone Mourner, Remaining e e ught for | KKentucky city for the climax not |, TOReY LHE OLATE T (T Motfice | north of the present shipping lanes, association, was called to the stand. | oring submarines a8 fav- | yged in examination of witnesses. almost two years. He never recov-|alone of his own first extended trip | ' oo im t and help them, | but it he was forced down on the = - s bl ymarines on which there is | Judge Vents Ieelings Daughter, Dazed by cred from injuries and s spent | since entering the White Hous. and asked him to and help them. | DUt | B > J presumally to explain where and|agreement among the party. Early . " B D s ) e e e A AL L L AL fhree were In hysterical condi. |Water, his little craft was conceded { e R e s s DR iR Gy ot Julee WOl ) : ¢ meRbistinopycate s X 1150 of o week rejoicing from Pitts- | 7 3 s e A 4 in the office memorandum which | iy g e FHEIANCRs el isuid BofCharles MM uTting {ofic) Great Sorrow 2 e sonlonslione e DBLILRD 1) Dl | Attorney Nair has asked Miss Cora | Atlantic waves o the lgfloe mEmamIAE. UL | In dispute, but the left wing favors | tions there has been objection: was brought to this eity and las Views Work as Engineer A e s S e Ml DR UG L and just at the nt the stock | begins to appear to me t Beonloeraal eorh by iniai iz nol| IO R Y oS Ca T v For ol Saecrs e IS LSRR o7 DRl Jue e B i of partisans of the 1eft seems higher | the defense is asking questions to get| New TYork, Oct. 23 (P—Down o |Tesides at 43 Lyman st 1 engineer as well as Welfare association, to take the case SR on financ The memorandum Was' than that of : | w York, Oct. 23 (A—Down a under advisement as a disinterested | Tondon |G Deseimi on e ndum s than that of the right. L s o male rlings and enter them |ovsoace: glattering wost aide steect | His condition arew o serlons|that My Hdover vewed fthe werk| o . ALt rerestect condon Grows Pessimistic il e L b |in the records that exceptions may i today silently passed seven hearses |this morning that he was hurried | which fellows of his profession Yiad (0rRolt SHiE he i _"]‘[“"‘ to do %0 Tondon, Oct. 23 (P-—As hour after O S e LRk Cabinet Crisis Reached be taken for the mere purpose of a | one grey, in the lead, the others t0 the soldiers’ home, where final|performed in constructing a new jq There are nine children -n 1'% lhour went by tfoday and xo word A B gehed-| Taris, Oct. 23 (A—French supreme court appeal. [omats o B mallerone bearing |fforts will be made to save his!system of locks and dams on the ;‘j“{“‘“}“v»‘ "\‘y‘{"‘{"’“ Thres of the: was received from any place regard- edge of the memorandum jeation of the Young repar “It is evidently the purpose of the ony (ayanagh and all his children | 11 Beautiful River," Tndians {IDCAIng the (our-sonr ol and | !NE the fate of Urban I\ Diteman, e plan, cuation of the Rhineland, | defense to see if I can make an er-| ovo ono 4o e jaid away in a ceme-| Mrs. Remut, who is employed in|named it, so as to prevent tilaidlss | DON 0L SIS S orm to | Jr» Who made a surprise takeoff A “‘h,('!:k'\\‘v{::: f“ o n‘, > ,'\‘ ";"’; and “hearted participation in | ror, which I may do. 1t is the hobe | iy 1ot 'beside their other who |2 local factory and has done all to astrous floods of years gone by a ‘:”‘ e of ; »*’\r ”q‘ 18IS ““"m POTN 10 1 ¢om Newfoundland yesterday for t alsh, chet answered tha ¢ i 5 % 2 10the ot 3 ; Mrs. Smulsk a former ma g B al okl wheoe ho wet the) - lnimnnmal paley ry | Of the defeise that the court Will| gieq seven years ago. make her disabled husband's life !ensure an adequate supply R RIS {London, aviation circles here held et ‘ : { were (hreatened today in a cabinet | Make an erro o e e 5 e resr, fes |28 uiigubble. aw Tpomible, - \a|fon tHe EovERSHU Oficanubares i less and less hope for his safe! anioriaLion, crisis precipitated by defe: ¢l “The question fs not whether the H iy R 1y th ~the dry seasons | Although it was th Rt ‘Had I not been instructed not | Ll defeatioli] 3 B A el qazea for weeping, rode the sol ing in tears patiently the hour ! Yy seas : i as thought he P o inshr n0L| promier Aristide DBriand in the | COMPANY was insolvent or solvent at| . oo nohar of the family, 20- When the hero will pass away. | The eclements provided the most should have been heard from hours o Rcomimnicats with s Mn. g BYRIE0N en? mperilastin st | the time of the receivership, inas- | 20 HoB v i o agh, ARG LA trying of conditions under which the | ago, instructions were issued for :xln\l‘f: 13: [\;‘«sl'n‘ull;( Wulchet saidi| M. Briand, who less than three | M h as a crime can be committed | ¥EATOE T ATY A ah. : PATEN |inspection might hase been made tor | e e Sy ould think T got it from him." | o FE L T eded Raymond | BY, @ company whehter solvent or Drivers Watch Curiously T ATT R | rains had swelled the river and a | to be illuminated throughout the s Ml 2 Raymond : 5 g th . Says Mind is Dlank (e irtare tast hoait crlithetener(or e mal i ootn s SRy hethon lig trucks drew over to the curbs high wind meeting a fast moving | night. Persistent efforts on the part of g0 00Te &8 Bond o the rench | money due noteholders was paid tojand stopped as the dreary proces IN INVENTORS’ DISPUTE current churnca up meavy seas! Diteman figured he had enough the master interrogator failed 10|5¢ 253 fo 271 when he aage. mi|them: | sion trailed by, and expressions of | through which the paddle steamers 4 + . soline to last “hours. That jog Wuichet's memory and he insist-| qogira for postponement of ‘mp’r“‘ Brown Sums Up wonder and tenderness softened the | pushed relentlessly during the day Berlin Resident Brings Jeriod of time was up at 4:45 p. m ed he could not recall where the in- ! -| The defense closed at once and |tanned and grimy faces of the wodlzs = S ; el el beny oellations AL R ¥ Aaron L. Appleb: Arg after a hard head-on Wrive in t q = . London time (11:45 a. m. E. S. T. A o m e iatat b tha| beliations: en’ (iie| focelen) policy | A frorriey Arinus D1 (Brownof e\ diore; pplebaum Argues Wit after a harg headion wine i Action for $15,000 Over fime (11545 2. m. B 5 1) Norwich Arms Manufacturers came | ang members of his mum"q]:y‘:b‘”"” London county, who had sat through| A short {ime before, a crowd of | Petro and T.eonardo Danno— otilla anchored east of Madison s i | Croydon experts pointed out that from. He said “his mind was blank | aterward presented their re V| the trial without indicating his part 5,000 had gathered in the strcet to Indiana. Sewage Flow [when Sir John Alcock and Sir Av- on the subject.” l4ions to Precident m”m;r i in the prosecution, rose to begin the sca those seven coffins—one grey. Both Men Held by Authorities, Three locks and dams marked the R O e o “Is your memory generally fz Fetan rgue, Who | argument for the state. the others white and smaller—car-1 v 0 o0 10 (m their pioneer flight from Newfound- or only in respect to these circum- | dent Doumergue today | No limit was made on the time for | ricd out of an undertaking _gstab- (1, A uanen (Continued on Page Two) Claiming $15,000 . and jang to Jreland, they took 16 hours mtanices,” Walsh asked sarcastically,|gan conferences it oarty ic L Ui lishment, Hardened New Yorkers | #PPiehititie & DEIcrt SUOMCy. onl e asking for an injunctior 12 minutes. Diteman’s plane e Eor O e R D P Py R i lendets > these, reared amid tragic sights in arkiBovomes shosant killed ing the defendant from poll approximately the same speed W s [ before designating someone to form | (Continued ve Two) Lo e ot tenements ust back of |\ his office today during a dispute L e T e e e LD Se. la new cabinet. | Lo ts Just Dack of | \iiij; two brothers. inventors of e o e tjand should have reached the Irish Senators Robinson and Blaine| Various public fi e | the mid-town waterfront, they Wept |, jiance for bicycles e | which flow through his property ificonst some time this forenoon, and (POER G T o e q c 'ARREST [IF BI]Y MAY e |long distance racing. ‘The brothers Berlin, Arthur W. Rowers of Berlly Croydon by. midatternoon. insiste ? S g for 5 3 4 Rt 5 L st s : N has brought suit against the city of S g ) A insisted that he may have guessed (Continued on Page Two) For seven years, until last Sun-|petro and Leonardo Danno, were | L,‘ 01‘%:!" ‘\m St Not a single word regarding the at the information he had. “I may R N | day morning, Tom Cavanagh, a|apresied | w ri “”'i - ALEOLTL i @'Cllone airman had been received from . s o : e e s - Qe | Gafney issued the writ, which was|g et e S e have taken a long shot,” he said. | chauffeur, had kept his mother According to police the hrothers | e Coatinie D B Olynes o hips at sea by 6 o'clock tonight. The memorandum in question | tamily together. There were seven | were caught l-aving Applebaum’s | e S anIverl ROl aR e SR he coast guard service kept a stated that he (Wuichet) had in- | children, four girls and three bOYS. | offics afte e s Bateman Still on Trial ity Clerk A. L. Thompsen today. isharp lookout along the Irish and s ; | L L o ffice after a shot had been fired e e SR e formed two arms manufacturers 3 When Mother Died ! g X ! = 5 (Continued on Page Two) NEARS LAST STAGES Jury Y Get Testimony Late This Afternoon in Trial SEN. BLEASE SHOWS OPIUM TO SENATE Says It Was Purchased in| “Shadow of Capitol” Building Washington, Oct. 23 (A)—The jury in the Fall bribery case was placed under stricter surveillance today as the trial neared its concluding stag- es, with prospects that the fate of the former cabinet member would Ie turned over to the cight men and Washington, Oct. 23 (F—A con- | four women jurors by late after- tainer of opium was shown in the [Toon. senate today by Senator Blease, dem-| Chief Deputy N 1 Callahan ocrat, South Carolina, as “tangible |announced this morning as soon as proof” that “dope” was being sold | the jury reached the —court room in Washington. from the hotel, which has been its home for two weeks, that it would not be permitted to leave the court building again today. He said luncheon would be served Other than to say that it was sold “in the shadow of the capitol.” | Blease did not explain how the opium was obtained. The container was turned over to Senator Cope- | in the jury room and that the usual Yamd, democrat, New York, a phy- | oonday stroll on the lawn would be cian, for use in an investigation of | denied. , the Washington police department | Defense counsel had one hour in by the District of Columbit commit- | Which to conclude its final argu- tee of the senate, of which Copeland | ent, While Owen J. Roberts, spe- is a member. | cial government prosecutor, said he | would take less than two hours to present the government's argument. The charge of Justice William Hitz is not expected to require more than 30 minutes. Irank Hogan, defense counsel, re- Blease accused Major Henry G. Pratt, superintendent of Washington police, of trying to discredit Captain Robert E. Doyle, of the eighth pre- | cinet, and Patrolman TRobert J.| Allen by demanding a report from them on accusations they were said sumed his closing argument shortly | geant O'Mara reported to Chief Hart o hve made against the district | 2fter Fall was wheeled into court in|that a search of the boy's home| S tommey's office. Both Doyle and | an invalid's chair and mentioned the | failed to disclose any stolen articles, Allen were suspended last night ! ng of the Dome oil re-|and although he was questioned by Pratt. e to Ha v for the|closely he denied having had any \.pratt is a moral coward,” Blease | first time. said. “The Sinclair case has been lugged Senator King, democrat, Utah, ex- | in here by a desperate prosecution,” plaining he had been a member of | he told the jury, “in an cffort to di- the district committee for years, said | vert you from your case.” Hogan he believed the police department |gaid the Teapot Dome transaction was as efficient as any in the world. | had no place in the trial. . 113 Year Old Lad Caught Ransacking Broad St. | Tenement | A 13 year old “ransack robber” who is not believed to have commit- ted the burglaries in the south end of the city last Sunday night and a week earlier, was caught in the third floor tenement of a house at 305 Broad street about § o'clock this | morning, and turned over to the po- lice. Mrs. Anthony Bryzgel, who lives on the second floor, heard noises and | decided to investigate, because she was aware that the dults of the | third fioor family were at work and the children at school. Going in through the front door, she found | cvery room ransacked, articles of | clothing being thrown about in the san manner as reported in the Moriroe and Arch street burglar land on looking carefully she dra | ged the boy out from the protecting | folds of a heavy quilt and held him for the police. He admitted having gained entrance through a rear win- dov Sergeant P. J. O'Mara questioned the boy and learned that he had absented himself from school yes- terday and slept away from home Jast night. In his pockets were a | lady's wrist watch and a Pulaski day souvenir badge which he admitted taking out of the temement. Ser- connection with other house break { ing Jobs According to the police, the boy has the reputation for entering hous- es and was arrcsted a short time ago on the charje. raigned in juvenile court. He will be ar- | Mary, now left alone, was 13 when r mother died, and little Geor whose body was borne away in the last of those white hearses in | line today, was then only a bab: | year old. | he T des Mary and Georgia, there were Ethel, 17, Catherine, 15, Rose, | 13, Tom, Jr. 11 and Walter, 9 | grown up into young men and wom- {en in these last seven years, but only (Continued on Page Two) the | | They offered considerable resistance | before they were overpowered. Sev- cral shots were fired in the melee with police but no one apparently was hit. Applebaum, who lived in Brook- Iyn, shared the office with two other men. | PROF. TOUT DEAD | Tondon, Oct (P—Rev. Thomas | Frederick Tout. not | history, dicd at his aged T4, authority on home today | | What is considered a rap at the { common council ig found in the let- Iter sent out to members of the Kiwanis club this week by William | R. ¥enn, sccreta ridiculing the { council for rejecting the request of i the park department for permission | to accept a $19,000 fund for a muni- cipal golf course. The Kiwanis club has been one of the prime movers and instigators in the drive for the golf course. Edwin P. Lanphier, publicity director for the campaign, is club, and Arthur E. Berg, a member of the park board, cer of Kiwanis. Judge Morris D. xe, chairman of the general com- mittee on the golf course campaign, is vice president of the Kiwanis | club. The request of the park hoard for | permission to accept the $19.000 was rejected when Alderman William H. | Judd expressed incredulity at there being more than $9,000 in the Cham- | ber of Commerce fund. No recogni- ! tion was given by the council to the | actual request which was to accept } the gift of $19,000, and not a differ- ‘iKiwa;is Club’smlfi.etter Ridicules : treasurer of the | s a district offi- | Council For“&and On Links Fund ent sum. . The Kiwanis lefter taking a fling at the council this week, follows “If someone offered you would you refuse it? weil hardly. 55 week, the Civic Municipal Golf Course committee asked the city of New Britain to accept the $19,000 | pledged by the citizens o for the construction of a M Golf course. What a fumble to our sponsored project, they refused to sept the money, and there you ar Chey are in a huddle now, any thing is liable to happen, perhaps on the next offer they a team, if they make ms fumbles iike that. Oh well. what's | the use, we get a good laugh out of |it anyway 1 1 THI: WEATHER | i | New Britain and vicinity: | | Fair and colder tonight' and | Thursday | *— —% $19,000 | v put it over | for the goal. Oh! hoy, Oh! hoy, what | more | superior for Assault on ‘fucsday in November in | (Continued on Page Two) court e et | Schoolmaster Bowers sets forth that he is en- | titled to the natural flow of the [;HIL[IREN TEST":Y river through his property, uncc London, Oct. 23 (UP)—James (aminated by injurious substances. | atoore was acquitted in 0ld Bailey |Dut alleges that since June 1, 1300 | IN TRIPLE SLAY‘NG | court today on charges of being an [to the present time, tho city of New | | conssory to an attack on Philip Ea- |Britain has caused large quantiti ton, New England schoolmaste of acids, vnuvm'-\; a > and R afon's Mayfair flat last sumn other noxious and impure substances (v ol Hlwell’ o lon's Mayfalr flat last o o !to flow into the river, so as to ren- Contradict Stillwell’s Story 18 ahas e, b, |der the waters filthy, noxious and | f e “ |is charzed with attacking and rob- 9er 1l b | in Arkansas (ase {bing Eaton, were arraigned together. | Rl X | ™ "Fhe prosecutor stated the case and | _Another allegation is that the de-| Today saton vestified he had offered Bate- |fendants action has caused the 2 | man a drink on the night of the |Plaintiff to be deprived of the use| ¢k, but never thought of the pos- |of the water for domestic purposes drtes ¥ A sible risks of a ‘“casual acquain- |and he has also been ir Tl SO e OFiad ’“; lg‘ i e use of his land for Bituzall andjooenStilmelt Starmen iyt s el Bn ’ & S Llhe o fooses hbla G etis vl e Kcounty tTal Lo XS DERCIE Ll London, Oct. 23 P—Ronald Bate- nosed to “impure and unhealthy bbbt ”“'{“:'\f’ byl e ey e amnt 1o |odors arlsing from the impure con- |Chiidren that B MEEe Flo 0 Umurder Philip American dition of said st e i school {eacher, on At 12, today | - heritE DL T AN te0 pleaded not guilty on (Clemenceau Recovers; children ot C. C one of the for trial in the Old Raile | Moore, who is accused of receiv- |ing clothes belonging to Eaton also Uses Wit on Physician men killed. co ot he st ey ey & ICIAN || 4 of Stillwell that he killed John S e ‘,,:ff“ el ,l(l‘f,'l,f;: Heath, after Heath had killed Starks | pleaded not guilty s |and William | The prosecution detailed the former Premier Clemenceau in |#M% T0 RIS i oation was un- | events of the night of August 12 |his latest illness. said today her Pa- |y, ay today to determine tie | when Eaton, who is a school ma tient had a restful night and was (o0 TS SEURF Chich killed the | very much better than yesterday. lin Southboro, Mass., and was travel- was found seriously fair flat thre At his morning examination by his physicians the former premier made |ling in England injured in his her Nance said an examination of the pistols used showed Stillwell Eaton, giving evidence. sl that them the vietim nl’[\n. wnnc -“YM B calitre | during moments of consciousness he He is getting along a Tight. | histol using “short” rtridges. said Mr. I.:\'n\iv_; ‘U\o {'0x'0\\'0}r:\1'{':\1|: Hoctiieiiants his mental faculties because he told | ;g “yiging a hat all doctors were donkeys. Degennes was pleased Wwith w a man going through his trunk nd getting some clothes. He was unable to identify him in court as times, Sheriff Nance 32 calibre pistol but calibre bullets. us | i tiring . thie man who altsgked Bim b o b John, 13, and Nancy, 15, Stark's Cross.examined by Dateman's at. | the patients condition, but sald “We| oyijgren and the only witnesses to Baton said he had no par.|must give him a little time to r torney | the killings said their father was ticular reason for leaving the flat on shot by Heath and were quoted by cover altogether. the night of August 12. He thought = Sheriff Nance as saying Stillwell Bateman spoke to him first on the L NDS [fired at Heath. Whether Ash was street, and that later three-quarters Springfield, Mass, Oct. 23.—(UT) | Killed by bullets from Stillwell’s gun |'of a bottle of whiskey was consumed | —The Massachusetts Total Absii- |\aq the object of the investigation. | 7a Tis flat, ¥e denied the attorney's | nence league, one of the oldest! stiliwell admitted, Sheriff Nance ! temperance organizations in Amer- g he killed Heath, claiming self- suggestion that he was struck in the face after acting improperly toward | ica, is to dissolve, it has been an-|defense. Stillwell, was wounded Bateman. *nounced. slightly. .

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