New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 5, 1930, Page 13

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Second Section NEW BRITAIN TERALD . J m v NTTOTTT T - = NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1930. . . B N “S ] ” Ch | [vecalled the recent furor over the| 2 Si'e Congress Should Adjust Railroad May Be New “Slecpless” Champ — SAFFTY WILL BE i toionisi’ Uit i Crazed Man Commits Suicide When e |claimed was submitted to children | Rates and Leave Prohibition Law ' BT LI R ¢ Take Him From H HT STUDENTS S G| el to Take Him From rome ' Alone, Ford A In Intervi | | one, or sserts n ntervlew ‘ | — ‘ Wellsy , N. Y., March 5 the tloor, let himself down under the T i Norwalk Puplls 10 Be Showh|angeto miczo, 28, ¥ouna meaa: in man who had barricaded himsel house and iilled “.:.;M‘\g while fha ays Roads Appalently IBURNHAM SUITE Ya]ue OT Gal’e Cellar of Boston Tenement House today after a six-hour hattle with a effort to reach him. e police, troop = e Trying to Levy Heavy —Weapon Unidentitied. veriffs who used. te PLANS PUBLIC HEARING i i i PLEASINE M”SI[; Norwalk, March 5 (UP)—A con-| Ioston, Mar. 5 (B—Police Boston, Marghnp i) Wi es el Tariffs On Florida—Pre- structive program for teaching eafe- |sought the slaver of Angelo tive ways and means compittes an- § : e e B sl vy rren, Pa., |nounced today that it would give a, dicts Trucks Will Help K Lnglish, art and civies has been ounes ks, tagt [Committed ¢ suields ith i slitsin pUBIG earing next iy £ty . D) , @ anc cs as ) E ounc iere las { 3 ' yesterday rather than submit to cap- | teport of the 1 war memorials . R artiord Composer Avoids Sur- Taniianen Beve by o sbals depart (Sight dnl tho felnr bt tneme d ; teonat s r e e Beat Down b) stem . p 2 ‘mrlyl'of cducation and educatio T B ey long police L v“r'w'u(vlv |;;v r v‘::l \n't‘ l(vjl‘v‘,,\"l'v,ce:::: S | prisgs of Ultra-Modernists e e e s el i’ | 1oele 1n tlie. BaehEnisot aitha dorts ) ik g0l al a cc he mu capon. i .38 caliber Recently he struction of an island memorial in i otk Ayars s ataranls (rire| ’rm"lmu of 250 educators here Yes- | revolver from which two shots had H - fEcHanCar eyt el 1d(‘y work, let its members set about ad- | Curnham of Hartford and Lolia M. | e R e P T e e R LR S hadibarhis Slovernovbant Wy apn s eviody L { Tililehales of this oty 4t camn| t b s une |identification way. Marks of NoBie aad dicl s the Milea A At ReElite Justing railroad rates, and leave the |cchool auditorium last night had as | direction = of Dr. Frank M. Shuttle- |jgentitication also had been re- riod W] kept his 8o = 5 : prohibition law alone—that is the [its distinguishing feature the first norbuiot “'%m institute of human |moyed from the clothing and noth- a prisohcr under thre convention of Henry Ford. | presentation in public of a suite ! "(,':fl_'op”d’”'.”“‘o‘,“{‘ A L'}”,"_"l” of ¢har-ling was found in the pockets. f N6 altempted tol escape. Mr. Ford's impression and the |Written by Miss Burnham. Two & e bt ""‘( ”‘i arch, . ; The body was found by the three Authorities yesterday tried to dis- S i | movements of this composition were 1001 superintendents and teach- small sons of Mr. and Mrs. Irank |Jodge Fausey from the house with 2 :,bua,,(stton are founded on many |Liiced 0" gne’ piano by the comi- ers throughout the state were urged | Russo, who went fo the cellar on|tear gas hombs, Iausey fired from months’ study of the rate situation. |poser, the remaining two movements to incorporate a program for safety |an errand for their parents. who!the window and wounded Constabls 1ic made his 1dcas known during an |being given upon two pian The instruction into courses in English, [live on the third floor. The man had | Warren Ives in the 1 interview as he sat in a comfortable |title of the suite was “Impressions,” | .’;fi.rfld i .f(:;-o"\i:(]'::tvv?'m;:h 'l'(”"” been dead ov short time, Atter of several hours, chair in the tiny office building at |37d it closed the program. | lonioa drawine ot o seterstn N o TosliE S [ErinErontahetels his Fort Myers winter cstate. Miss Burnham interjected verbal e R i l()LI.\uI‘|.I.\,?l,\\lH u]lr,‘\»nuP fevts of the tcar gas, mie his - Sold and Serviced By ywhere,” |explanatory notes preceding cach 103 LI GO arsaw, and, March 5 (P— | cape. Fausey, overcome by the gas ity 2 | Members of the Norwalk Mothers' The death of Joseph Sliwinski, 110t- | fell to the floor. Before the o BLAIR & BRODRIB f id. “Railroad officials cvery \ so often appear with a plan that they are entitled to fair returns on their investment. I believe that the present rate structure gives the car- riers a handsome, but none the less unjust and exorbitant profit.” Trucks Beat Down Roads “Convoys of trucks everywhere are beating down the railroads, be- cause of cheaper carrying rates.” Mr. ¥ord commented on the fact that automobiles manufactured by his company are being delivered in Ilorida and in Michigan by truck because, he sald, of a saving in comparison with railroad rates. “Can you explain why fruit are higher from Flori from California, as far as large mar- kets of the country are concerncd ¥ he was asked. Yo more than T can cxplain why they arc high on everything e 3t looks, however, like something has been levied against Florida all the way through. “Do you have any idea number of Ilorida banks their doors during the summe “No, but it might have been ca ailroad rates. T don't know much about banks and would not hike to definitely. Mr. TPord spoke from perience as far as operation common erned. His company a railroad. Praises Prohibition Law automobile builder was em- why a closed use ersonal ex- The phatic in expressing his belief that str law ‘ture of the present prohibition satisfactor; is the cnforcement of ame as an afterthought. had no trouble from drunkenness in our plant at Dear- born, and we're right on the bor- der.” he pointed out. The seller and the buyer of illicit liquor should be punished, Mr. Ford Delieves, inasmuch as he sees one as guilty of violation of the law as the other. “It won't do any good to stir up the present situation,” he respond- eds in answer to a question as to his opinion of recent conferences Washington, and in other cities on the subject. “If they stir it up they'll only get in trouble.” (Copyright 1930 by the Associated B Press) GARMENT STRIKE CALLED IN HUB 4,000 May Walk Out in Sweat- : shop Protest law Boston, March 5 (UP) strike of the more than 4,000 lo ad’ ents of the International dic Garment Workers’ union, American Federation of Labor ganization, scemed imminent today. At a mass meeting attended by more than 1,000 Boston cloak and dress malkers last night, officials of the union were authorized to call such a walkout within the nest few days. The contemplated strike s de- signed to climinate alleged sweat- shop conditions in the garment in- dustry here and to secu better wages and hours for ths workers. A resolution also was asopted nt the meeting denouncing communist + workers in the industry who have conducted a strike for several weeks. Arrests have occurred almost daily in connection with this labor contro- versy. At a special session of municipal court here yesterday, 63 cases in- volving persons arrested in connec- tion with the left wing demonstra- tions were considered. Fines ranging trom $10 to $50 and totalling ap- proximately $800 were imposed. Minister Sent to Tell Count Match Is Off Bucharest, Rumania, March 5 (%) —The government today sent M. Grigorcea, a minister in the cabines, to Berlin and Pless, to notify the father of Count Alexander Von Hochberg of the cancellation of his son’s engagement to Princess Ileana. After official information is ceived of publication of the cancel lation in Pless Premier Juliu Maniu will issue an official communique informing the nation of the incid DIES O Salem, Mass., Wladyslaw Mend unconscious in his gar; of carbon monoxide gas carly today by his wife and died within an hour. The widow and four children sur- vive. an or- here foundd vietini the | at | movement of her suite, saying how the various titles had been suggest- ed to her while viewing scenes in Ttaly, Switzerland and France, and inspired by these views she wrote | music embodying her emotions. The suite was casily the most interesting part of last night's per- | formance, everyone present natural- ly being keenly alive to the fact that an opportunity was presenting itself to hear music played for the first time in public. Such music lovers present who |when confronted by the title “Im- pressions,” thought of impression- istic music in the style of Debussy, Ravel, Resphigi and the other mod- | |erns of the impressionistic school. | |soon found that the suite was not | of this type. It was not moulded in | |the modernistic _idiom, relying almost entirely upon orthodox con- | ceptions of the tone art. There werc | melodic strains imposed upon at- tractive and easily comprehended harmony, interlaced with roulades of arpeggios as elaborate at times (as those encountered in Liszt's | music. | This reviewer is not disposed to | zive an opinion upon the merit of |the suite as music, preferring to | content himself with a general en- |umeration of its apparent char | teristics following only one hearing. The tendency of modernistic music |is to startle, to shock, to confound | the intellects of those nurtured upon more conventional musical fare. The fact that Miss Burnham's suite did none of these things, but rather {tended to please an audience at even | when he'd quit although he w a first hearing, would indicate, in |y he g bLroken the previows [the opinion of this, reviewer, that | record of 150 hours |the music did not pretend to offer | He seemed too sleepy o care much | | competition with the bad boys of |the modern music world. But the [ fact that ney: music is not conceived [in the modernistic idioms does not Imean it is inferior in quality; for |general consumption and apprecia- | tion it may possess advantages o\'cr! much of what ultra-moderns pro. | duce, Certainly, if really inspired, it lis on 2 more direct road to the hearts of mankind then the other. | Whether this music, heard for the | first time last night, is of the lthlPri |type we decline to venture an opin- | ion. | What we cannot understand in ‘connomion with the "nnprossions"} |suite is why an American composer ’noods to go to Europe for mspim.} tion, seeing that our own country is | full of enough scenery to satisty the | most fastidious, and possesses other | inpirational attributes which ought | to sufficc almost anyone. Dvorak, | during a_compartively short period | of residence in this country. speedily | | incorporated something of Ameri doing 50 oSt s e mto his works, and contributing | nently to the archives of the | The remainder of the pro that which came before the contained much presentative including Mozart sonata cessfully . or ite, | | music a \d & gem by Arensky. Miss Little- | hales was a skilled keyboard com- | panion. The pianos used were pow- |erful in tone, evidently being of the type made for concerts in large audi- toriums, such as Carnegic hall; and as Camp school auditorium is small a genuine pianissimo was rarely heard during the performance, per- haps being impossible under the cir- cumstances.—G. H. ‘PRAGTICE DRILL - WADE VERY REAL Esthonia “Demonstration” Ends With One Dead, One Wounded Reval, Esthonia, Mar. 5 (UP)— The Esthonia self-defense corps went through a practice drill at 4 a. m. today in anticipation of com- munist demonstrations Thursday, but a sentry became confused in the | darkness and shot the chief of the army general staff and an adjutant who ignored a sentry was killed. The practice alarm aroused the town before dawn when bells and fog horns were sounded. The Es- thonia self-defense corps members ran into the streets and occupied the government offices and posted themselves at strategic points to]] combat the theoretical communists. At that moment a group of com- munists, armed with rifles, appeared |in the streets in respor to the ex- |citement. The practicing members | |of the Esthonia self-defense corps | arrested them. General Toerwand the chicf of | general staff, was scriously Wounded when a sentry fired at him. Major Tbrosrn, his adjutant, was Kkilled | to Morpheus ‘Winning the radio insom arathon for Michael Petillo, a husky voung 200- sec him, right, still awake after twelve and out to sct a world’ sen is shown giving hin offered by a radio sho Miss Ruth > the 200 prize awake listening to the radio for the greatc RADIO CHAMPION STILL STANDS BY wanted to switch off ths power of & radio in the Silver Tone Radio shop but Mike kept right on listening just | he had since last Wednesd:y en he started this listening busi- ness with nine other persons. At- tendants admitted they didn't kn as about the honor and its attendast $200 prize. Perhaps he was thir ing about a bed not very much dif- ferent than the description of one2 which had put his last opponent to sleep Tuesday. The 200-pound title holder is the last survivor of the contestants who | attuned their ears to the radio for the money or a $300 radio. Before the 12th hour all had signified their | desire for the money. | 1t Mike ever quits listening and ever gets enough sleep after he gets | through listening he will take $200 and marry a local girl and maybe later they will honeymoon at Niagara Falls—far away from & radio. 22 HELD IN BOMBING at Nutl N. T, pound football playe Here you rival contestants had succumbed s record of 160 sleepless hours! 1 nourishment after he had won p to the person who could s t number of consecutive hourz. Kurt v emnants of Laber Discovered by I Explanation of Death. Petillo Breaks Previous Record | sonton ava war. 5 s ge-) 7 : layed report aching here today | 0[ 150 Houl‘s Llsteflmg { said the torn remnants of the body ;u‘. Dr. Kurt ¥Faber, German writer Y ;‘.H‘Y scientist, were found by a Nutley, N. J.. March 5 (UP)—In |roval police patrol 15 miles above { the future, this little town will re|lower Hay River post in the north- Lnown as the home of Mike Petilty, | west territories, Jast Saturday. the champion long distance radio | details as to how Toaber met dea Nitenas lor thatworlas | were availabl ¢ had been is 5 a. m. today an ndant [ g . ' RADIO 8old and Serviced By ANDERSON ELEC. CO. 163 Arch Street wasn't enough | Police—No club attended the conference at nn»i inviation of school authodritics \\lm‘ ed Polish pianist, was announced to- day. e was 635 y s old. could break into the house tle man revived, crawled to an opening in 170 Main Street gold and Scrviced By \Henry Morans & Soms MAIN ST. Sofia, March 5 (P— Twenty-two arrests have been made in connection with bombing of th principal hotel at Pirot, Jugoslavia yesterday. Death of onc of the thir- teen wounded brought the number of dead to two. The Jugoslavian minister approached’ the Bulgarian ment and that be taken to suppress such outr 1t was believed the dead was in p. test against a Bulgarian-Jugoslavian fronticr agrecment. | in Sofi. requested e o ; 7/////1,1 ES GROUNI REPAIRS MADE JEWELERS ) when he disobeyed the sentry's EST QUALITY NEWEST AND BEST A PRESCRII'TIONS FILLCD Sold and Serviced By POLISH MUSIC STORE 97 Broad Street CT OPTICAL SERVICE ™= HAVE YOUR EYES EXAMINED FREE! GLASSES PERFECTLY FITTED ) TO ORDER 354 Main St. OPTICIANS formance. No matter how critical a radio judge you may be —no matter if you've seen and heard every make of radio for years past, waiting for the “per- WAIT ANY LONGER! IT’S HERE NOW! The new Bosch Cruiser Model! 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