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2 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1930. DUMONT SEES GAIN {Sew York Zoo Lioness ) Ginger“Ale and Cracked Ice Cases Has New Year's Twins OF S[,Allfl FEVER .5, w2, ol Await Senglf’—sEefiturn For Action i o 52 ginger t it is to be with liquor is a consy the law. A number ar Hartford and New F “d by prohibition aid FOUNDNEARHONE =% T g s DYSON SEECTED RAOOEISLANDIAN VN A AT Hartlord Condl 10ns flowed court this mornir Stone, submarine 1 re t logpita Mrs. chitte to'a dance i ostpski was when the u ) (I v offfeer obtained st ror ! N v tudy | Riehard To r st | street t Cumn It occurr r a disor the: road 1me 1 d ’ e ) days. ¢ . Hospitals 18 road and-ers v | ) not taken pla her own apart basketball teanm. ough investigation ling no 1 Attorney v 1 has GLEORGE 1, DYSON “2“3.?’,‘ £ MHofter o patrol boat Rugh VanDyk: that Rodman wa liquor scized and negligent Flor D ! wd (we 1rofm bus on n _ SRS . X odford nionville ) i - t hou he pearo West Hartford. on Oc £ z g e e x I 3 Alett) hoe ! : o Attorney David cnne L IRUEh e W ! ebhevsfidli;s) g dnston : , Haktford the pape whic e aCe S i osatioic i wold, West Haitford ] v § il el i t law violations Point the first Tu ' ould v or the r - taken prisoners UWTRSUSFORFEE B tor | Protest Mecting ¢ alled Judgment Azainst Estate of s Charles Highee in City Court, Kansas ity Man Hardiy Be- oo voe 500 0 0 nd hay romised to | ‘ ither in per- 2 (U1 ssages. Herbert A, : . it hall rmentor, | Parker, former Massachusetts Second Lnl Breaker Leligeannen : S ¢ wy general. will f ¢ por(” last week when | ney general. will amplify viev .\plme(l m Lm\cll Vil aaledltol DOy n $1irading e : ght when ho called Marian for the | the v of the most de- ip at New Or- E ities ever committed in the law.” Yuigain Thom it er United State Topre I t i i N i t overnm G z b t It re but r £ . s ;i Il t cary € | ent ortunate per Jennings Resigns Post itting l orridor 116 uatd, evan AL IE L st s e el Toc As Warden of Auburn L Olhen o, I've been working too | law so invoked.” John J. Mc- sloop (¢ was today turned over hen | Dolice officials said the New | ‘lg(mnu!r\ deters, v i n : Hill lottery prin:- : Y g ! I | Ma t Saturday ni n its s f G ho Jiberal Civie | | aiconot situation as the most diffi- !enlt one to solve properly, as well as one of the most important phases eld no individual and no line of Capper Urges Probe Senato per of Kansas, anoth- r republican dry leade s0 has called for a thorough investigation of the industrial alcohol system and there is every indication that Presi- _|dent Hoover shares in the view that this problem is one demanding an | overhauling. Administratior { the industrial ohol pert comes under the asury dep: ient, and more par- ticularly under Assistant Secretary Lowman and I’ ibition Director | Doran. In his reorganization of the nforcement machinery, r has propo to con- of sition In Ly Senator enforcement would complete its study bition beford cotm cveral mnlv! ms in cach phase. dJones Glad of Declston “I have conferred with several rs of the commission.” said - Jones, “I am glad to learn mission is unanimous lom or unwisdom of the L is nvolved in that it is a part of the and that ymission is to devise possible for its enfor 1 that an important report 1dy been given It will be s t ressional joint committee sought by the president as soon as created d ready for work. Other reports ready soon.” - Deaths New York, Jan. 2 (P Liquor was Dlamed by hospital siclans today 1! for death of one oman and four 1| men as an aftermath of the New alcoholism. of the woran and one | t | of the men were found by police on | Brooklyn streets An antopsy was crdered in the se of & man who p | di in his home to determine whether Tie been Killed by ) | hom i the fourth man succumb at Be © hospit The n of persons ad ed | flering from effs of in alcoholic bever- than were treat- 41 more than 1928, Six of the ases at Bellevue were pronounc- | acute, one man was in a state of coma and physicians said his con- dition was critical. One of the acute cases was a 0 year old girl taken rom a night club, Crowds More Disorderly Year's eve crowds were more dis- 1| erderly, destructive of property and 1| harder to handle than ever before ese. Womeny! TF O0LY We MEY COULD TAKE. A STAND/ ~BuE how can we— When they cauce us Yo Rick with one extreme — g —~and then simply eweep ue off our u,v ! with amother extreme ©1529, BY NEA SERVICE, INC. (AL LR ARy 26 WORKMEN RECOVERING | Most of the men managed to appointment hie succeeds Attor- Pittsburgh, Jan, 2 (UP)—Twenty- | reach the open air while others | ney John I. Forward, who has re- six workmen were recovering ¢ rescued. Those overcome were | cently been in il their homes today from the effect of | taken to St. John's hospital. —_— — carbon monoxide fumes while au- | = = thorities were trying to defermine | CLERK BECOMES DEFENDER Washington, Jan. {how the gas cscaped, trapping the | Hartford, Jan. 2 (A—Glover| Stimson and Sir lisme Howard, men in their dressing room on Campbell, assistant clerk of the :u- | British ambassador. today signed a Branot Tsland. {perior court in Hartford county, has | convention hetween e United They were changing clothes to be- | resigned of ary 1, to - | States and Great Br limiting gin work when fhe fumes entered come public fender in - superior | definitely the bound ne between their dressing room from a tunncl |eriminal cour nd to take up gen- | the Philippine ar 11p»1|~o and the 40 feet below. cral practice as an attorney. In his | state of North Borneo. 0 | Cl aid bus had been at ca- 11y v volume. In many places | velebration continued until after | 1 | daylight 1 No records of arrests for drunk- | | enness were tabulated, but police o | tstimated the number was light. Only cight cases of disorderly con- | duct were on the docket in Tombs | court where City Magistrate Adolph | Stern said the list was the shortest i could remember for New Year's Day. - CLUB SAYS PoLICE SEIZED RECORDS (Continued I'rom First Page) red into with a Chicago gang- ster for the killing of Frankie Yale sters. Terranova has not been ar- rested and no formal charges have been placed against him, Woman Not Savino's Wife Savino, on whom police say they | \d a letter referring to the hold- and mentloning the names of and Terranova, - telling the | “not to worry" told report- | crs today t the woman & as his wife of his, m 3 quaintance, / { tired in diamonds she pleaded guilty | to a vagrancy charge before Magi trate Jean Norris Tuesday after ap- | = ey o put much faith in storics | “Anxiously, but with relentless aring in police lineup and proset of big money 1 1 Parker said Driver Badly Injured, LT e llucc Hlnt in Crash sona to i 1 at i or 1 “anor or crir Paisiey Prepares for t neiple in no wise can 70 Funerals Tomorrow red J. Hartford. 21, o Srglicrousoiol Uy NTENCING 1 DEFLERED o gressional dr ven a suspended sentence. * STUDENTS ROBBED IN HOTEL ROOW. led Krom First Page) hours later to find Dickerson and | | the other two robbers pointing wh they took to be automatic pistols a them. The pistols were found to Le toy ones. oy were gagged wilh towels and bound to the bed by enforcement | ropes which the robbers had brought v | with theni, and their clothes strip- Thprai < as prohibition’s most difii- ped of the money and jewelry. oceupan tone wall a 0! vachines o situation, but th Victim Shouts Out Window Hinnerschitz managed to free | self of the bonds a few minutes after n | the: robbers had left the room and rmhm! to the window to see them [ 1e the hotel. His shout of “Stop | B { tracted the attention of two | s of the commis- | patrolmen who pureued and caugnt s will not touch upo HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS it system ol is distribu for a thorough in we diselo of Washing spokesmar ALl I Color Starts Sun. at the STRAND m to view the industriz n | the three young holdup men Dickerson told police he had co o New York looking for work a able to find a job had resor to the holdup as the only way to sa- | cure money. | ACES STATE POLICEMAN - | Jan. (P—After n | speeding past a litke car of popular | make on the Torrington-Norfolk Americus r. His laugh v ut short, how- when he discovered that the other driver was o policeman. | In city court today rzelle paid a w“rmu of $10 with costs for specding. ¢ il and Frank Marlow, New York gang- | A REDUCTION In certain Out-of-Town Telephone Rates is now effective A nation-wide decrease in the rates for day station-to-station telephone calls to points approximately 60 to 300 miles distant was recently announced by the American Telephone and Tele- graph Company and became effective yesterday, January 1, 1930. This reduction in rates has likewise been adopted by The Southern New England Telephone Company on calls between Connecticut points which come within the prescribed mileage limits. The fact that this company has cooperated with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company in putting this reduction in eftect, makes the decrease in rates apply to every day station-to- station call between points approximately 60 to 300 miles distant, whether the destination of the call is within Connecticut or is in another state. The rates for evening and night station-to-station calls, as well as for person-to-person calls, remain in general at their present levels. The rates affected are reduced ten cents in most cases and five cents in the few remaining cases. For example, the day rate for a station-to-station call from New Britain to Boston is re- duced from seventy-five cents to sixty-five cents; to New York City from sixty-five cents to fifty-five cents; to Philadelphia from one dollar to ninety cents. On the present volume of calls, the saving to subscribers of this company as a result of these reductions will approximate $100,000 a year, and to telephone users throughout the United States the total yearly saving is estimated at $5,000,000. The adoption of these reductions in rates marks a definite step along the road of progress toward the goal which is the ob- jective of this company and of the entire Bell System: “The most telephone service, and the best, at_the least cost to the public.” THE SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE #3 COMPANY