New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 31, 1929, Page 2

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2 W BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DECEMEER 31, 1929. . . Campaigned for Hoover ¥ Beginning Tomon‘uw L Seck Independence v'. & . Idahoan, who w one of Mr. Hoov- 3 =y i = [Y ;u»'s most prominent campaigners, | —_— N v ! , il \aad asserted that the faults of prohibi- Lahore, India, Dec, 31 (P—A res- 1 drop to 1¢ \ : i e ¥ A . ,; ',‘,"" enforcement lay with those| ,ion introduced by Mahatma norrow. fccor ey p charged with ‘making ithellaw ef-liqs; ani. nationalist) leader, “declar- e : : ! S g fective and that with the present Congieis cioidin ing that the Inc personnel “from top to bottom” | fiiyre shall mean complete in- : B g ) nothing could be done. dependence, was adopted by th (Continued From First Page) One view of the letter to the pres-| onoress by an overwhelming ma | e ident was that it contained evidencr | ity today will take mo action until congress !of liquor law violations which had | “ . conzress also adopted by i bas named u joint congressional | come to Worah's attention. In this | oie of 945 fo 792 the resolution o committec to consiler prohibition | connection. it was reealled that when | \ahatme Gandhi, nationalist leader enforcement. The senate has passed | Senator Howell, republican, Nebras- | eondenuing the rvec nt homb ou Ithe resolution for the committec|ka, made charges of non-cnforce- against the lite of Viceroy Loid but the house has yet to act ment of the prohibition statutes in in and congratulating him an nators in the capital have not | the District of Columbia and asserted | jis party on ! cseape frol commented on the Lilling of the | that the responsibility lay with Mr. | japm, three rum runners, but two who are | Hoover, he was requested Ly the Strengthens Position |at home for the holidays, Walsh of | White House to submit cvidence sup-| The vote was looked upon as i \ Massachusctts and Metcalf of | porting his charges with the promise | srengthening the position of Gandhi 2 y 3 | Rhode Island, have demanded thor- | that it would be thoroughly investi- [ inasmuch as he had intended the s % ! ough investigations. gat resolution to: call forth a test volc Senator Metcalf said The would Statement From Jones on th: creed of the congress With T4z FOUR-LEGGED TREE ask rox'lfl senatorial inquiry if it| A statement is expected later this | veference to his doctrine of non- S appeared that investigators “are mot | week from Senator Jones. republi- | violence. OF BRIDGEWATER, reaching the root of the matter.” [can, Washington, the author of the| When Delegate Ansari. in second- 1ASS, | The assistant secrctary said that|Jones law. providing heavy maxi-|ing the resolution. declarcd — tiat ~ oy : £ because of t w Year's demand, | mum penalties for prohibition viola- | freedom never was won by such ¢ ‘ 2 smugglers were making unusual <i-|tions. He called yesterday at the of- | outrages as the bombing, students HIN! 3 T3 e 3 | forts to 1and liquor along the Atlan-| fices of the Hoover Law linforce- | m the enclosure waved red flags and e £ S | Al 3 : & jtic_coast. Aty ment Comnfission and after a two- | shouted protests. Ansari retortod o y l v : { X 153 [ Y I'he customs service. he continued, | hour conference said he would make | that cven Communists did not Le b ] L:] i : i % £ 1 ‘U..IA HANLON [hnows how 1uch liquor is leaving | a statement within a fow day lieve in individual violence but onlv 0 the base supply at & djerre, nass olence New Bedford,, J i ofsatinnly t. Pierre, @) yroanwhile, members of the house | 11485 violen s ' g ench possession off the Canadian RUSSELL 4 S h B pitcnod SRS RING B R oV (RN i ;’(‘f’h J ‘”'““ T e WORKED 1N THE S JUN Giot 1 sohekn it oy e ommenirromt tnatiTanalonicon T SRR e = AR E @ 1t has been seized 3s “very grat- | o e bly Iachine, | oppOsed the rcsolution, SAME MiLL 7 AY @ ' " L 0! pacnC: N individual poll of the vote was : N EP—S SLEDE: | Previously the discussion had been | . AN individual poll of the vc hi | ettt i ath o e atuse el lindinanden Nad Sl IR e Riitalcentthi Soull Cal | Towman complimented the coast | 5 ] k 3 ¥ | evening. uthern forhe, |guard upon its work and said that | Members of the senate and repr N CON 3 SUCCESSIVE e sentatives of several government cn- | S s forcement agencies Opposes AU Vilence 1 O'Mar hile deploring the loss of life in |’ b s Lahore, India, Dec. 31 (P—Mua nd Me- | SATURDAYS) 'nforcing the law, Lowman said:| Representative Cochran, democrat. |yarma Gandhi, Indian nationalis' he commis- | Ran BACK KICKOFF 505 | *“The laws of the United States must | Missouri, issued a siatement advo: [ 740s Jiaq changed his politis 100! : cords o | FOR A TOUCHDOWN | be maintained. | cating “a dignified effort” by “wet” pplicants and their AGAINST NCTRE DAME His statement suid: members of congress to bring about ons from . n X £ e The preliminary cificial - report|a modification of the liquor laws he new or 64 YEAR R Umve\sny | Congratulates Coast Guard | frrom passive resistance to the Brit- jsh government o sponsor a cam- f paign for Indian independence, but RAN BACK PUNT 65 YDS |Goes not materially alter the facts that would permit the manufacture | " cod—opposition to violence in FOR A TOUCHDOWN already published by the press. | of light wines and beer “not intoxi- all things—was seen today to be un- “ AGAINST 1DAKO altered. ’ | “On account of the’ New Year's | cating in fact.” Such a move, he said Eraroa | demand, an unusual effort has been | would help in solving the problem of | [T (O 1o have aris- 1 2 ¢ 1 BOVE SENT Al AKE . 30 | raade by smugglers to land liquor | agricultural surplusses. | e g s e R Candidates for Serzeancy ABOVE TENCE (WILL MAKE Nov. 3 | made zgle a 1 en in some quarters that passage by \\ o ‘l B "”;‘ ‘[' 1 GO0y SENSE IF qu"ER‘_\/ PUNCTUATED RAN BACK PUNT 48YDS | along the Atlantic coast SayalDrys Dicoursged e s el hall e e conie licting s s FoRAYcUCNDowN “The amount of liquor leaving| Representative Schaffer, republi- o resolutions demandin; noisier, more hoisterous welcome | possil i AR r— e S, ST WASH, STAT (he basc of supply at St Plerre, 4| can. \vise : epubli- |mittee of resolutions demandini ; » TR : D = = 2 AG he ba v at St. Pierre, 4 can, Wisconsin, said the ‘*recent|complete national independence or 1930 than has been enjoyed by X R D i, . Sond e ot | FFrench possession f\!f the Canadian | whines and wails of the ‘dry’ leaders | ight presage developments of the Kd A jcoast and from Nova Scotia, iS|are comparable to rals leaving a|most serious sort, this presumption nd restaurant manageme dward M known to the custams service, Th : AL . DT \ e i T e 3 | sinking ship.” He added that the[pased on an event of vesterday, was epared 1o cnters : Gron : THURSDAY—An Cunce of Gold Will Cover An Acre | wmount that has been seized is very | udryg” were “attempting (o ODEN UD | yoeorded considerable. importance. ew Year Eve ¢ v a eratifying. The coast guard has|an avenue of escape from their un- FPolice Commis - G 3 y X & R done well. - tenable position by attacking those | el 2 i EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S CARTOON e e ent | the | charged with enforcing the federal | uring the sessions clashed during ,‘(’,I,.,;'O‘.f; o s o 3 bing § ynn John Paul Jenes' Name Was Net Jones—John Paul Jon 1747 -1792 was a nat]xl}'c ]ot v e s e e e "rf;:‘b“"o” laws. e % lthe day with wmxll. w n? afterwarids : e v : A i e ; S is surname was Pau ater life he | avoiganle. et | This drew w reply from Repre- |sous wo of the volunteers s night clubs promply g te-Co v At \l [\1"» hm'm. otland. 1lis given name w s John and his surname was Paul. In late | #voida JWN nm 1 ’\\ :‘: l:;'v' ’l "v.v. sentative Kelly, republican, Pennsyl- | those responsible. A detachment of Wednesday., Hotel 8 : It was also i ,l;‘" -ulr.c(l_ the name Jones without authovization. . Iy | e tnan et overnment | Vania. wWho expressed the —opinion | police appeared at the gates of th N e Sromy SN S Y ey ke Though he vesided in America for some time, he was never naturalized as a citizen of | *ues! and 100k (heir ponishient, | that ten years of prohibition had | congress encampment and demand- Aizgtimncine B Cover ! ! e i ited St tes O o hanIshitent | demonstratad “the determination of |ed the surrender of the alleged cul- charges will ru d onetnair lojsa-j =it g i ok o bRl ot o { the people as a whole to retain the | prits, Seion ] senant The only fleets he commanded were French ships flying the American ilag in an emer- jthemselves, ”v';m" ‘:)‘\“ 1‘"w‘nd“m“mv”m';v:”’:_v ! “1‘“}\ M e e ST The management « : - geney, and in the end he commanded ships of Empress Catherine of Russia. el ‘;,“[4'::;;""“' POt | enforcement.” He appealed for sub- | others colleéted and a bellicose s \uns-,ulm" :<:muvw' ¢ capac- bers ”'H“ ! ; b et T guardsmen in | POrt for President Hoover with the |tjtude developed which threatened ty of its rooms | Chi e saic t — - 5 ¥ 8 ‘ L ey “the task . s . 7 FoboL s b h reservations fon yun will 1 sk« e | connection with the theft of liquor d%sertion that *the task now con-fgnt of serious proportions. The re than 1,000 voy-I'laza | hios on the Inig S . AL the place where uring town e O e e | from the Flor-Del-Mar, a rum run- | fronting us is fo follow the leader-congress authorities consulied Gand- IEOLORIANES I s ! 1 took place. beyond th ol reh, machinery and testiles, the | FE o O aight. with ship of a president who recognizes | pi who like the Gandhi of old, a plaoRuba SHoR G SRR ¥ 4 ! Colony inn on North l'uhn\ reet latter including fine musling — and 2 iat e ronibiiiics fonal who s L €00 cases of liquor. Co Fuurd vised the surrender of the two men number nd other hotels and res ! 5 liquo oasl guurd | LAl the appointent | Volunteers charged by the con- |gress authorities with keeping order taurants announced pr tions for ight end AT WRoCED locl s auee Mider UL tartans. A large amount of thread |, .\ gquarters also said that no re.|challenged all Aniericans {0 assist |without further ado. Gandhi's ad- b : 2 A sualiy slippery by the i« also munufactured T e e e ithiwes lakon olict v mbale b “iBig Ben' toRing llcve 3 ind snow of the night f Hisiorically the city marked | commandant of the New Londo : = e vendered and a clash was averted ses skidded a A e - he sa chiefly by an old Abbey chureh col- | nifice wo handle the charges If the doctrine of passive resist ],.uh'n listeners may hes "“ o i ]_’ J 1 he o erashe onized originally by the Benedictines | ¢ gainst the guardsmen. TREBI E []AMA[iES ance won here, however, in the Tear chimes as early as m. va { | R RT} L . j in 110, In its present form this | anwhile preparations of a rve- | b committee meetings of the congress crn standard time, tonig vhen T — X tructure dates from the fourteenth | port on the transfer of the prohi- the support which %Gandhi has ha.l cause of the dificrence Wl fifteenth centuries. Tt contains | bition cnforcenzent from the treas- T was cut more from under him. H will be midnight in London “" [fiR Htfif;u} [;ARRiFR EUURT FURFEITS ‘oi i . ihe tomb fo Margery. daughter of |ury to the department of justice was {was barcly able to defeat certain pealsl of Big Ben, Jamouseclotls: i Itobert Bruee, and Robert the Third [ continuing. Cenferences have been opposition attacks on the resolution 1he tower o ’l”“’« 1 ) 9 0 qu t of Ncotland is also buried there. 1d 1 the ofiice of Secretary Mills demanding independence, with it will be radiocs F ACToSS ) NNE[L B N[] L Wh _ ) ) with discussions centered around (Continued From Itirst Page) proviso ®f attainment by gradual and rebroadcast oughou i tin RN e e Other Theater Disasters report which will be made to —_ |mcans of non-cooperation with the country. i et : Diladeil 5 : Dee, 31 (B —Among | he special cougressional committee forced to leave New Britain. | British ~ governmental machinery U,\lr‘-;u.wl“‘.\;\“ 1\: s o e «t theater disasters in (he | asked for by President Hoover | .\('!]uf\l Damagze is Tn:w‘o jra | TRich the exccutive committve ams will fclud « o TS 5 : 3 > oo e | S The plaintiff claims that he has|passed yesterday. Gertehy dange i ) y i Mhafl Palitician !‘”)Jnd in HJ) . Jiion LughiLlt i | Wants Mellon's Job been forced to expend sums of | The subjects committec of the ey otk S " of L 71 e e el N : e Conway’s Brooklya| Washington Dee. 31 (#—The sec- | money for attorneys to protect and | congress, by « narrow margin o pongles At ! 10 ’][[eu llveSI ation ey ¢ ! e ond demand for the resignation of |defend him against these actions. He | 114 1o 113, defeated an amendmend ‘ seices il e oy R i % - 15 S§1--Ring theater, off Andrew W. Mellon, secretary of the has heen unable to work at his {to the Gandhi resolution which f . s bt Vienna, 800 killed. | treasury during the current prohibi- | trade and cannot continuc his busi- would have deleted an appreciativ- . i887—Opera Comique. | tion controversy came today from ness due to the defendant’s malic- reference to the offer of Viceroy i i car u I il bond given by Daniel 1 thea 2 vis, fire, 200 killed | Senator Brookhart, of lawa. a re- |ious prosecution. He estimates thal|Lord Irwin of a round table confer- ARt lo s0 nell, political leader. 1o ho rushed to the epl. 5. 18ST—Bxeier theater. | publican dry, who said he wanted |lie has been damaged over $1.500. lence. The opposition will attempr auis g e T T York. fire 75 killed. | not only Mellon, removed but others | He also seeks an injunction |to reverse the decision in the ope el oo L April 9, 1894—Davidson's theater, [in the treasury department identi- | against the defendant restraining |conference. 12 { A pool. wis ! > Milwaukee, fire, 76 killed. | fied with enforeement him, by himself or others, from in-| On another point the leader was i ited Ly Federal Pire Is Controlled FFeb. 184T—Quantor. theater, Pe-| Senator Norris, of Nebraska, re- |terfering, attaching or hindering the defeated. The subjects committee Henry Wi Goddard IFortunately the fire itself did not | f 0 Killed. publican independent. had previous- | plaintiff in the conduct of his work rejected the working committee < 3 . —Grand Charity ha- 1y said that Mellon should quit his or business. proposal to appoint completely S cars G i ol when O'Connell failed to.place had been cleared ~M‘u\"-‘ T . fire, 143 Killed. | place as the chief prohibition en- second writ in which trebl® autonomous permanent committes 4 1 as s« when e bl ditte trace of dani Had : Jun. 12, 1903—Rhoades theater, | forcement officer. ‘ ama are sought. is brougiit |to do the work of the congress in o) >d with per % Sl hold o s “1“‘* Boveriown, V. fire, 164 Killea. | Tirookhart's assertion that Mellon | @43ainst CGarston by Regina |respect to untouchability, Khad. list wo mountl | ee. o, 1405-—lroguois theater, | should lose his- official head, was | Hoffiian, wifp of the pIaintif’ | (homespun) and prohibiiion. . sccond time within reeent | ir the foregoing action. At the tini |opposition characterized the propo. months that he has attacked the of the bankruptcy, she purchascl|ed decentzalization s an it vi secretary of the treasury. In a |the asscts of the bankrupt estate of |cide on the part of the congres €peech on the senate floor made on (her husband who was then doing | Takes Middle Cou the famous “Wall street booze | business as the Iron Constructiea| Gandhi's position has becom | party” he said that Mellon should | Works and has been conducting the more and more onc of the center be removed business since that time. On cither side of hir are wings o The Jows scnator indicated foday | Her complaint states that, with- |cxtremists, the left demanding that he would carry the prohibition | out probable cause, with malicious |immediate declaration of comple controversy fo the senate floor mext | intent and to vex and trouble her,|independence, and the right sanc- ST A Garslon brougnt suit against Ner and | ioning moderation in any mov = 5 pursuant fo this. a constable at-|These appearcd more and more th e Fro el " ; ! ; e Utges Test Before Court tached her place of business, closing |distinet possibility that the congre \ 1 I York 7 chilgren Washington, Dec. 31 (@~ |1t and preventing her from carrv- |may revoke this view of independ Letore the supreme court of the cul-|ing it on. This action, the complaint |ence attained through a progressiy ltialto theater (Pability of purchasers of liquor un- | states, damaged the plaintiff's repu- campaign of non-violent charactcr . tire. 6 killed. r the present law, was advoeated | tation and caused people to tra and pre for immediate action Gillis theater, 1008y by Senator Jones. of Wash- | clsewhere because she was unable 1o against British rule. N 1 ! s City, five, 6 killed ington. republican dry leader. in con- | carry on the busincss. The impressive display of Sik 1) P « i v . nectionghvithithefilegislationinoN In defense of the action, she ex- |strength since arrival of the Punjal I & ) v wd ar 3 pending to make purchasers equally | pended the sum of 3300 and she | warriors here appearcd to day i h i N1 < 1 i r BENIEb SH[][ITIN[] AT iilty swith bootlegger sceks damages of $2,500, which fo- |have borne its fruit. Gandhi assur 4 LUR SFNT[—‘NEE i t Senator Jones withheld comment|yajeq and treoled by force of the ed Kharak Sing, leader of ({h 153 many o 5 s 5 5 » s ose who prov before a fed that annual i orfeiture of the bhond was spread to the theater after ite ¢ L hundreds, b i | Chicago, tite, killed. the Charles H door | B il Mich., Killed 10 hysi ) §, 1422 Knickerbocker his opinion that S theater, Washmgten, collapsed, 98 obile and departed for places | i e for childr lan wiricr theater, in i ederal warrin e Montre 5 killed. | ge thea disasters in e United States in recent years in an of his views on such legislation pro-| ¢i1y(e, amounts to $7.500 Sikhs, that no communal solution i !] 1 UL b BiETE e i FI I] 7 RO U Liniios iEpieh conp: | S et s s would be made which did not satis- i 1 § L ‘ S y jcrat. Texas, pending final action by | 0 210 secks an injunction re-|fy the Sikhs, and that the Sikh Wi s L AUEIL, the courts, He said conflicting deci- | a T (1T, v YN Mothers Crowd Str : straining the defendant from inter-|Would have a special color in thr davnn S op i 0 i ql : sions on this issue have ben rendered | & 00 > N T Indi i ayor, herill and C]W flicials cra crowdod e et e ay pen rendeied | foring, attaching or hindering her in | Indian national fiag. [ s ! | erie F Continue “irst Page 1t e conduct of her work or business, | Kharak Singh thercfore advise:l a nnw dav i (Continued 1'rom First Page) pressed the hope the department of | the cond 10 Know Fate Today for ews - - . Chicago Make Whaoped bross for & supreme| The third suit against Garston 1.~}U e Sikhs to work for complete na MeKenzie's cuts by Dr. Griswold of |court decision one for $900 vrought by 1. Glodstein |tional independence. He and other Bierlin were fine splinters, the lHeu- | Senator Jones calicd attention to | through the law firm of Hungerford |leaders declared the Sikhs woull tenant said section six of the Volstead act which | & Saxe. |fight to the Dbitter end to prevent Oftfeer Anthony Kozluuskas acted |states: *“No one shall manufacture,| The complaint states that a |COmmunal government in the Pun coun iy sounds of @rief i as interpreter for Savulis, who has [scll, purchase, transport, or prescribe | promissory note for $800 was rade jab. police and ¢ costrect wore velieved by wild evies ' een in the United States only three [any liquor without first obtaining a | by Karl Hoffman doing business as | —— 1ho. were he oy us a missing child who had es- | ionths. The boy bought the rifle in {permit from the commissioner so fo|the Iron Construction Works ;1:\-1“ Dr. Naldu Quits s on the ped injury was found by anions u Jog ore and fook it out yester- |do, except that person may, without | this was endorsed by the defendant. | Madras. India, Dec. 31 (P)—Dr. conspiracy Clatives. But these instanees were L day for atrial, but he had not fired [a permit. purchase and use liquor| When the note became due anl | Varadarajulu Naidu, influential the expres- it hefore The was arrested, he said. | tor medicinal purposes when pre- | was duly presented for payment, the |leader of the All-India congress, to- dants include Sherif % sions of thankfulness were quickly (e did not intend to hunt. he said, |seribed by a physician as herein pro- | complaint alleges, Garston refuscd |4ay resigned his membership in the of Shoshone couniy: ushed as the joyous parents turned |hut simply wanted the thrill of firing |vided.” to pay it. |congress and provincin J. Harweod “h to comfort a neighbor who had suf- |in the air. As to trespassing, he was | — Al three actions are returnable in committee, after issuing a statement Mullan red loss o was still nncertain as to | not aware that it was against the law | Contents of Letter Secret the city court the third Monday ia |characterizing decisions o1« pen : f a loved one R e Washington, Dec. 31 P — The ' January. | meeting at Lahore as “suicidal.” S o remarked (hal the boy contents of a letter on prohibition Propetry on Lyons strect was at-| He referred particularly to reso Husband Asks Divorce « two-year prison Town of $1.000 Peaple pparently was not telling the truth sent to President Hoover by Sena-fached today in a $900 suit which |lutions already passed by the cx- i e « t I L town of SLOU0 in-lshout the matter. and Assistant |tor Borah today were a closely || .Goldstein has brought againwt | ecutive committce demanding comi- On Ground of Ciruelis i e White ¢ viver. | Prosccuting Attorney W. M. Green. |guarded seerct while official Wash-| Duvid Garston. It is claimed in the | Plete independence for India. tre 1 netion with stein said he was convineed that he [ington turned to speculation on the complaint that an $800 note which | The Indian National Liberal fud nly’ seven miles was withholding the facts. Deputy hature of the senator's latest con-!was taken out originally by Kael |cration mecting here issued an @ Glasg Sherift Mathew Papeiak, court inter- [tribution to the present bitter con-| Hoffman of the New Britain lvon [peal today to all parties in India place beeany internationally preter and experienced huntsman. | troversy. Works was not paid. Hungerford & |declaring the federation's belicf that ous for Paisley shawls, an indus- | examined the rifle and gave it as his| The communication was regarded | Saxe represent the plaintift, | the only rallying cry which might which flourished from 1500 until opinion that it had been used. Judge as climaxing Borah’s participation | ST S aes unite all intercsts was dominion carly cightics of the last contury. | Saxe told Savulis’ uncle that the{in the current discussion, in the| Tn olden days the Sybarites train- | status for India h hand | Loy lacked the intelligence necessary |course of which he had issued two | ed their horses to dance. Lnemics, | This it was explained should not i 1 i with @ pattern in imitation of | for proper use of fircarms and he |denunciatory statements, arraigning | realizing this, played music during|be a distant goal or ideal but an | T e would not be permitted to have the [the federal personnel to which pro- | battles, causing the horses to dance [object capable of achicvement with i mill and manu- rifle, “:,mmou enforcement is enirusted |instead of charge. in the shortest possibic time. | | VOR BESE BESULTS TS HEBALD CLASSIFILD ADS <

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