New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 24, 1930, Page 4

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— 1 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1930. J. Nel d in 00d but they anyth of rek on FAMILY OF SLAYER _ HUGHES SWORN IN | AS CHIEF JUSTICE City Items were MOTHER T0 EEP | L ITYEAROLDSON ards el of Mrs. William Deaths Mrs, tuilen Mrs, Mar Mull 1ged e o f”Runaway Complained of Cruel - : Treatment in His Home STUNNED BY GRIEF eneral ho io before Home Perfume One day s arrar esday | State Highway Commissioner ) Arouses Suspicion donald Discusses Problems Wit shortl er of C 4 Cl committee e that was broken le taken ntor course e poli : door rnoon with S vard. 0 boys the he does | Guido Tondini Dons Official Robes Yale &71"0\\ ne to Make Hardware for Hospital | derstood that ant and the P. & branehes of s survives Break and hoth refu becau The mother nth: but o r rov his ¥ dt n to Norw the home, ton Ros with the T with her. He Wife on Knec 1 and naval hos- fas S DEATH ACCIDENT 1 por . 24 (P—A TRY TO TRACE PISTOL SHOT Victrola’s Condition Alarms tives—Crown Prince Gusta 60 POLICEMEN CALLED | 10 GUARD DETROIT HALL ; with 500 Alleged Radicals Appear Before City Building—Bundles Inspect- Althoug RUNAWRY GIRL FOUND cd up noon ociate awouid Adolf Hurries to Bedside Keb. 24 (UP)— wife's stered {his mornir 1ssed a ed For Possible Bombs pecial Notice 1 hold t the Red 1 the TS Text of Second Oath Hug tor RIVER HELD BLAMELLSS 'Sick Mother Attends : e : : : Funeral of Her E the pa days, and ned to her Every Toc tube with pile pipe and every 60c box of PAZO is sold i J with money-back guarantee, For | f¢COvered from her ilines itching, blind, bleeding, or pro- 1 Brown of Beacon truding piles. Try it. Getreliel. | tended the funcral of her cldest Rudolph, 16 years old, who e fo not form all the chief accord to the cor fron ¢ d with 2 low inmate | for Boys Ifur this afte on Advent Fairy church. Buri v cemetery. THIEVES ENTER INN ony Seraphin reported 1 Kelly police dqua that his i1 on Plain was entered last night ar of ca taken. T was brok and locks T Capt toda road quantit cigars windo trance ca place has been entered s in the past Magician Makes Mistake; 1 . Performs Before Crooks Passengers Near Panic Marsborough, 1 1re When Ship Hits Another " I ) r 24 ( veral t year. AND USE IT b 3 Wring out a hot AHIS W A dbwraplie around the throat to get the pores well open, wipe dry and rub in plenty of Ben-Gay. Then wind the throat snugly with flanncl. Relief starts at once. The stiffness and sore- ness quickly begin to go as soon as Ben-Gay's penctrating warmth stirs up the blood to healthy action. Ben- Gay will not burn or blister. Doc- tors have been prescribing it for 30 years to break up chest colds—and to quict the pains and aches of nerve and muscle. & Atyour druggist or send 10¢ for trial tube to Baume Bengue, 875 Sixth Avenue, New York City. Pleasant--Digestible ..~ SCOTTS™= ~ EMULSION- .} ':flfuoc/am/ Tonic M_ ' forold ana’youny N Send the Whole Child to School esight ned every two FRANK E. GOODWIN Optometrist 327 MAIN STREET MEGRATH 6 e an MINSTREL ad MUSICAL EXTRAVAGANZA SACRED HEART SCHOOL HALL March 1 and 2 6:45 CONSTABLE'S OUTETIT STOLEN = i ; 1 ) Associated Press Phot lickets May Be Purchased at McCoy’s, 216 Main Street or the City Drug Store, 487 Main Street AEET IR Admission 50¢ and $1.00 Marjorie Best Dr ust any young to contest th of old, | Little Mich., lenges T onths ter her honor of COMMITTEE CONFERS Local Group At Proposed Site of the proposed T0 QUEEN OF SWEDEN R lgsugé Chall;,nge e world's younsest swimmer, " 11 ILLED, 100 HURT PROMINENT ITALIAN " INKENOSHA WRECK " DIES AT BANQUET et rom wirst pas - (Consfantino Vescia 1§ Seized With Acnte Heart Attack While seated at the long banquet table at the annual banquet of the | Italian Mutual 3enefit society in the | Acorn street hall yesterday Con- tors and nurses were at work. stantino Vescia, 32, of 151 La Salle Several of the dead were burlced |street, was stricken and died sud- in the debris of the first car, and |denly from an acute heart attack. it was necessiry to burn through| Mr. Vescia, for many years affili- | the stecl coach to remove their bod- |ated with the organization, fell back Rescuers were still at work 2s|in his seat soon after the toastmas- broke, and it was helieved [ter began to introduce the speakers bodies m be found. | for the occasion. Survivor Describes Crash | Those nearby at first thought that One survivor, Lewis Kresinski, of had fainted and attempted olf | Chicago, who_ was riding in the third | resuscitation. In a short time ths R confused guests were working in re- lays over the body which was now carried to the rear of the room. When their efforts failed to take effect, Dr. A. L. Avitable was sum- | moned, and on his arrival he found that Vescia was dead. Mrs. Albert Skoczinski, another| The committee which had arrang- passenger in the third toach, sa‘d|ed the banquet discontinued the the woman seated in front of her|{program. The more than 300 guests fainted and was carried out by sev-|in attendance soon left, only a few | eral men. “Passengers in the other |lingering and awaiting the arrival | cars told me they saw peoplg killed, |of the medical examiner. lying about on the floor of the car,”| Assistant Medical Examiner John he said. She #as one of the few |Purney viewed the remains and pro- of the 325 passengers to escaped |nounced death due to acute heart without a bruise. | disease. ‘Tomorrow members of the The train was carrying an un-|society will attend the obsequies of cually heavy load, due to the fact |their late associate. many Chicagoans were return-| Mr. Vesci was born in Catanzaca. ing from the double holiday i but came to this city about cars ago. He was employed b: > sewer dcpartment of this city. He had been a member of St. Mary church for many years. Besides his wife, Mrs. |cia, he car from which he jumped was de- | molished. Automobiles avelled highway 3 I l4id. The injured were placed in the | s and t | Catherine’s hospitals. | eral minutes later ambulance fac- well- | | mac om- doc- are tate A. wn | pro- he ful crash. own from their started to scream and hers groaned. Qur car was turned r on its side and were able to get out the door.” we the the | Many Too Dazed to Talk 1 “ Kenosha, Wis, Ieb., 24 (P—A| Mo, tragedy in the darkness and mud o SR Ed- |4 railroad ditch had its last act today is survived by three sons, have |in fhe wards of two Kenosha hos. | Anthony, John and James Vescia the [ pitals where mores than 50 persons |and wo daughters, Misses Jennic eep the horror |and Theresa Vescia. on the North| Funeral ices will b held to- morrow morning at 8:30 o'clock at his late home and at 9 o'clock at Mary's church. Burial will be Mary ter Mary Ves- £ last nigh ser Interurban line. Most of them were too dazed by | the accident to tell in detail what|St happened. Irom a few, however, [in St 1 & story of how they had been | piunged from con tion or read- into pandemo Bodies blocke way to free- dom for some passengers. Others were hemmed in by the twisted ma Police Find Rum Runner After 7 Months Search | Greenwich, ¥eb. 24 (P—After ! even months police on Saturday @ chairs and BEUCE, Through fl‘: found an automobilist who was run- Choaninggofininned s showt”|ning in liquor from New York and L“,’t,?i :0-‘” : ,»ir-,'f‘?r "r;:l::‘;}alm had with him a woman as a I e il e o adiion | passenger, a subterfuge which was A Eight feet above the wreckage of | T20rted to frequently last summer tha Iatertoban dare the track wsia| . Thedriver who said he was Davia ‘;”_“‘d e ‘L' 2l ok Daltoroi i Roth, of the Bronx, and the woman freight train on a parallel track had | Who said ghe was L. Garver, were Ve o and from two of | €ach held today in bonds for trial its ca > was a trickle of a|on Thursday. flour mingling with the mud and| 7The charge against cach was that of illegal transportation of liquor, a 4| dycing the ground a dirty white. ed Dismembered Bodies Found | considerable quantity of which was in the car. | Red flures and autcmobile head-| lights picked out the arms or le f passengers who had been twi or caught into the wreckage. Lee Paxton, of Chicago was riding with his tiancee, Miss Betty Shema, ago. The train, he said, was tela- i sers, the om- ever for FIVE KILLED IN BAY STATE Boston, Feb. 25 (UP)—Five per- sons were killed in automobile acci- dents in Massachusetts last week, ac- cording to the report of George A. {ravelling about 60 miles an hour| Parker, registrar of motor vehicles. when suddenly there was a crash.| This was nine less than for the The car whirled dizzily into the ditch | preceding week, five less than fo land when he looked for Miss Shema, | the corresponding period of 15 was gone. and the lowest weekly toll since oV groped 1 the darkness|May, 1928. Lvs iz for her, “when the first of| Last week’s victims included three o rescue parties ived with the | pedestrians and two occupants. flares,” he said, “I looked about and ——— her in the mud. Her foot was ing up. She had been thrown ough the window and part of th ir rested on her. 4 Boy for fully An- rough MILLION INCREASE Washington, Feb. 24 (-An in- | crease of $1,007,313 for the work of the interstate commerce commis “I tried to pull her free,” he said, | ¢ion in determining the valuation of I could not. Then they came |railroads, in the house approprii- and fook me away. | tion bill of $552.514,753 for Later, he learned she } tive offices and independent gove i ment burcaus, was recommended to the senate today by its appropria- tions committee. saw FOR BEST RES S HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS 22 million people ‘prescribeforaCOLD Take the advice of 22 million people who never have a cold for more than a day. At the first sign of trouble —a sniffie or sneeze, chills, headache or fever — start taking Hill's. Swift, safe relief comes in one-third the usual time because Hill's breaks cold in 3 ways . .. |: Checks fever...2: Opens bow- els...3: Restores energy. Ask your drug- gist for the famous red box of HILL'S CASCARA-QUININE Several Bottles of Bon-Tone —And I Feel Great |“No More Gas Pains and I Feel So Much Stronger” with pains in my back and shoul- ders—and the pains would continue all day and even during the night. I was so rundown that sometimes I |could hardly wall.—and lately, I no- ticed that my heart would beat very quickly at times—which made me very nervous. I tried quite a num- Iber of medicines and remedies, but | T coutdn't get the reliet I wanted— and then T learned about Bon-Tone from the local papers, and I sent for some at once. “Seven bottles of this tonic—ani [ feel great! Seldom am I trou- bled with 1'ose gas pains—and I feel so much stronger. I sleep well because the pains in my back and shoulders are almost gone—but the |best thing of all is that I don't have the trouble 1 did with my heart. ;.\nr‘] I've never had anything to give {me such perfect elimination as this {tonic. I'm very much enthuscd over the success I've gotten from |this medicine. and I'm always de- {lighted to tell anyone about the \\fond»‘x'lul relief Bon-Tone gave e, There is a Bon-Tone Man in New Britain at Miller & Hanson’s Drus |Store, 30 Church street, to tell you what many, many other sufferc think of this great tonie, to rters ville nd 8 USE imes HILL'S STOPS COLDS IN A DAY RL SIMKIEWICZ Mrs. Simkiewicz of 132 Lin- den street, New F n, Conn 50 | “six years ago, I was compelled to troit, 'go to a hospital due to the terrific chal-|paing in my stomach. My bowels who | would not move and gas was a con being latant terror. I was also bothered I

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