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News of the World By Associated Press NEW BRITAIN HER Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending 16 176 March 1st . AT aect! u.—~ oY on Dent.: 15t ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, pifor PRICE THREE CENTS MARCH 7, 1930.—THIRTY PAGE: 3 TEAR NORMAL SCHOOL COURSES 10 BE ADOPTED New Haven to Be First to Begin Plan, With Others Following, One Bach Year Therealter NO NEW BRITAIN CHANGE PLANNED FOR NEXT FALL| Increase in Unemployed Teachers and Need For Better Preparation Lead to Adoption of G\fltm—sizc of Entering Classes to Be Iimited | to Avoid Expense of Additions to Present Equipment. | Hartford, March 7 (# — Three | years' training instead of two will | con be required for normal school | students in Connecticut. - Such is the action of the state hoard of cduca- tion which was aproved by the statc board of finance and control yester- 3 The plan will become effective in September at the New Haven nor- 1ial school ch year, and successively, the other three schools will be placed on a three year basis. 1t was deemed ) place all inadvisable | the plan 1t once as that would bring one yo T At i S B 56 et duates. | New Haven Choice Explaincd | ew Haven was chosen to hegin the plan as that has the largest num of unempioyed fc hers. The lucation board feels that the state| hould require a greater degree of | preparation by s cligible school | teachers, and, under the plan adopt- «d, that of reducing the size of en- tering classes at the four norm #chools, this will be lonn at no addi- tiunal cost to the st A present cultics and cquipment are deen 1 “dequate to accommodate the three ® year program. The size of the entering classes at 1e normal schools next fall will be I mited as follows: Haven, 32 Danbury, 100: Willimantic, Britain, 160, he quot ssigned ast Septembe A Haven 160; Danbury 1 |M 120; New Britain 160, BACHMANN WATS " ADDITHONAL JU!]GES Predicts U. ( ommission- er Plan \\ ill Not Pass Congress four schools on Washington, diction Lills to give ] March the Ck T (B--Tre-| topherson United States commis- to try olators that i0 the power & Detty would congres prohibition law fail this « to through | made in| tive | n- the house today b Bachmann, republican, West Vi ia, who urged cnactment of logisl tion to provide for additional 7\d‘*r- al judges. Bachmann {5 a republican member of the house judiciary committee | considering the me: s which arc designed to carry out a part of the ! Hoover law enforcement commis- | sion’s recommendations. At the re- «uest of Representative Christophe son, republican, South Dakota. au- thor of the bills and chairman of the judiciary sub committee in charge of them, the West Virginian conducted asurvey of federal court dockots and | advised the house today he had found them congested and that more | judges were needed at once. Bachmann said hefore the Christo- person bills could be enacted it would he necessary to amend the Jones law to definite small offend- | ors. The bills would ers the right to guilty in minor S fines up to §300, and to six months in jail o epresent give commission- accept pleas of and imposc entences up hoth. « New Haven Fire Repair melmc Killed in ()rangc Have arch l/P IFrank I ell of H city fire spair de- partment died in ‘H(\Hmh 1 crash on the Milford turnpike in Orange early this morning anl John De Loughery, who was with him in the car which hit a truck, was badly hurt Joseph De Rosa, of Hartford, truck driver was held by the Ora police on a reckless driving charge pending a coroner's finding. arrell’s car w coming toward Haven. De Rosa claims he r ocom toward hin. arrell swung the left inst the ri ) pass and the the left front The police theory was that Farrell | was blinded by heaclights from the ick. 'He was thrown out and - ived a fractured skull. De Lough had a lacerated race and hands. lassing autotists brought him to a | hospital. Farrell leavey a widow and a young daughter, san but WOMAN 100 YEARS OLD DIES Andover, Mass.. March 7 UP—Mr th Gray Kimball who v ratulated on her 100th birthday August 7, died at the howme of \ grandson here today. Mrs. Kimball " a brother, Jar Gray, in saco, Me. n grandchildren and 74 great-grandchildren, ‘ wves seve | would be tomorroyw. | | today 1to the [ train dispatehed to t | ments in the | second section crashed into the rear | torney ‘ l Granted Parole )¥ederal Judge In Boston Holds s Purchase of Liquor Not Crime In | ) Meaning of Prohibition Statute | Court Cites Supreme Court Decision and Text of Act, Pointing Out That 10 Years of Procedurc Appar- ently Vindicate Stand—U. S. Attorney to Appeal Case. Boston. March (P—Tederal Judge James M. Morton today | handed down a decision ruling that | simil he said | purchase of liquor is not a crime!relate to the same | under the national prohibition of permitted liquor Cook, arctic|The decision was given in the cas:|comes close to being sentence at|0f James Farrar of Watertown, re- | thority against the using the | cently indicted for purchasing twe | contention, granted a |Pints of liquor. Judge Morton's du-| *The same view cision approximately covered ten|been uniformally u pewritten pages. ing officers and by the public at Farrar's counscl had moved large for morc than ten year: undmm(m be quashed on the| *As I construe the indictment, |grounds that congress did not in-!does not charge the defendant tend to make the purchase of liquor | aiding and al the crime. After len; argument ! liquor. Tven if it does, no crims Judge Morton quashed the indict-#be charged. It has been repe | ment {held that the buyer was not facto an aider and abettor of | seller and the government cou fconceded that mo other relation 1 |tween the defendant and rotonds Morton | existed in this case.” |auoted a supreme court decision| The rotondo d to was which set forth that *no person |charged with sale of two pints of shall manufacture, purchase for (liquor to Farrar as two under cover {sale, sell” liquor and referred to|men looked on. NAVAL CONFERENCE LAKE TUG SALOR RESUMES SESSI[]NSr FATALLY WOUNDED : Return ol French Deleganon‘coas £ Guards Capture Second - Makes New Meetmg Possible | Man and Seize Liquor MACDONALD 1§ GONFIDENT ARMORED BOAT FIRED ON Briand Heads Pavis Group and Will Officer T section six of “The language the prohibition law, of section “Both six sections subject, control This decision a decisl - Dr. Frederick explorer, scrving | Leavenworth pr | mafls to defraud, [ parole today. MITCHELL GRANTS PAROLE TO COOK : ‘Noied Explorer to Be Freed From Leavenwmh Soon SENTENCED IN MAIL CASE| Man Who Claimed to Have Discover- A. a on for was seems to hav held by prosecut the will dly ipso g salc | Assistant U. S. District Attorne |Eliny D. Stone immediately toon | steps to appeal the case to the U. S. | circuit court of appeals. In his decision Jud rr of ed North Pole Probably Will Be Released Tomorrow—Serving 14 Yecars, 9 Months in Oil Scheme. Washinston, parole of Dr. rving a sentence in penitentiary at Leavenworth, for using the mails to defraud, h been approved by Attorney General Mitchell. | Announcement of the parole was | made today by the department justice. Officials there said the exact date when the parole wnum\ become cffective could be ascertained | from the warden of the penitentiary but it was their opinion it probably | Says Men Tried to Turn . = - g M Confer With English Premier— Craft and Escape Of Torain, Agreement on Terms of Treaty | Dr. Cook was sentenced to Leaven- Ohio—1,000 Cases of Whiskey worth for a term of 14 yedrs and| pelieved Possible By End of April. nine months on conviction of illesal 2 use of the mails in oil promotion| London, March T (®—The naval centures. His parole was reported |conference got back into full swing some time ago to the ttorney gen-|today with a conference of the chief eral by the parole board. ]Aul».:azm at St. James' palace, During his term in the peniten- | rance being represented by Aristide | tiary Dr. Cook, who won world wide | Briand, forcign minister in the Tar- prominence years ago by laying|dieu cabinet and a member of the claim to being the first to discover | original French delegation. um North Pole, has been editor of | Today's meeting was held amid the prison publication the New Era.|an atmosphere of confidence, at|The tug carricd a — {least among some of the leading | cases of liquor, the \uo\emtns that tangible results would | captain J. Hagelo of the |be achieved within a measurable | const guard boat sald the tuz failel time. to heed his orders to halt and turn- bout in a clumsy effort to escap: - tvo warn Captain Ha cizht men pounder Bombarded Some The tug was bombare time before the coast | went aboard. They met with no re- sistance, their prisoners having thrown their guns overboard if they Found on Board Lorain, 0., March 7 (®—A who said he was Fred Hentric ftroit, ally and h was capt f midway man s, De- nded ured by probably was f; wo companion coast guardsmen, \ Mo on an armor plated tug between Lorain and Cleveland early cargo of 1,000 guardsmen said Txact Hour Uncertain avenworth, Kans.. March ast Nonr Dr, Treders former explorer and | 1l step through the weaworth penitentia remained as uncertain s was his asserted approac nor pole in 1908, Althoush the justice department| ‘Tf1T talk w 3 lancy” he s miied on Page Trvo) S e The prime minister also declared that “all the prophets of evil, as so FLAHMQN KILLE[’I IN |often 1s the case in human history, | carried any. ‘l\nw been confounded.” | Hentrie The prime minister's optimistle 1ot wounds in his back and hospital pndmmn was made at the closc of |attendants said ho probably would |a meeting of the principal delegates | |of the French with their delegation | R e S Undetermined \umber In-|in full working order. Premier Tar- [;[]MMISS"]N BEfilNS g sy imit. |dicu himsel€ was not present being | Jured as Seminole Limit- |upceat in the south of France where | ed Hits Coaches trous floods have been in pro- | BUYS’ SBH"“L PRUBE | Trumbull Tmo Starts Ses- sions at Meriden—Pro- \nf all five powers at St. James' ceedings Secret MacDonzld Confident feeling was especially voiced ¢ Prime Minister MacDonald, who ired emphatically that the o |ference was going to produce | treaty at a not very distant date th a feeling of buoy- | d, “I have very good promoter, of Le man hots love to were fir ordered hi fire dire rifles, Time d for a guardsmen a free (Co (Continued on Page Two) | palace made possible by the return Prime Minister MacDonald w {one of the most active figures at tD- |day's meeting, pleading for a faster (Continued on Page Columbus, E. White, of railway flagn March 7 (®—OQcic Phenix City, Ala n, was killed at Gle Alto, Ga., miles south of her early today, as the second section c the northbound Seminole Limited Central of Georgia railway train, shed into the r first scection which had h Railway officials were without in- ormation to the number of in- pending return of a relief e scene of the | of the first | but it was compart- car were occupied by wo0) 'MERIDEN JUDGE FINES AND JAILS CASSELLA New Britain Man Involved in Turn- cra Meriden, Mar e of three started at the Connecticut School for Boy as Gov. John H. Trumbull’s persor representatives today. port dircetly to the cxect the result of thei into conditions alleged to at, the s Judge George H. Day | the Hartford police courts, heads the Walter M. Pickett pleas court in New um A. Hendrick of member of the st nd control, completc The men went i hool at 10 o'clack Supt. Bdward & Royd meeting. At 50 they tinuing deliberations wit yet adjourned for It school this morning it learned what track had taken and whe had interviewed witnes: ommit B\ ¢ n investigation re e pike Accident Gets Court's The observation car section was telescoped not known here whether stat “Best Remedy. ive 7 A Meriden Cassella, March 7 (P—Louis of 70 Oak strect, N | Britain, was fined $100 and costs and sentenced to jail for day fter being found guilty of drunken driving by Judge B. Aubrey in police court this morning. solla was arrested after his rutomobile was in collision on the Berlin turnpike 1:30 this morn- officials here said that the first sec- | ing with a car operated by W. H tion of the train had halted to nn‘t inningham of New Jersey. (un- move a fuse that had been set as a | ningham was homeward bound and signal by the Glen Alto section man. | Cassella out-bound at the time of the Before a flagman could be sent out, | crash. Iroad officials were informed, th:| Judse Aubrey, in imposing the se- | vere penalty, remarked that ‘“the | best remedy in these drunken driv- | ing cases will be to stiffen up on the sentence.” 5 formerly of passengers, A call for nt and group. nurses and physicians and a relief train was | ispatehed #rrom here a. m, to bring the injured to Columbus, Many physicians nurses heie ceved their service Information received by railroad ou common Ha and Wil N Haven board of finar o comn to session at tl morning. ended the ¢ were con- hout havinsg h. At the could not br investigat or not they 1t F n v a nd a of the halted train, telescoping observation car with the day co ihead of it. Substitution stem used Cheshire ging which controve in the cut State school for Boys, may b cne of the results of the investiza- | tion being conducted at that insti | tion. Since the probe there got un | der way there have been persistent | rumors” that officials of the school | may be made to face eriminal pro cution on grounds of- brutality. is understood that the governor told | the investigating commission to make an inquiry into the brutality charges and get faets that would stand the test of cvidence in a las court, Altho 1make tion for the ed, it is v ids i form in ti o iment roused Mo has £0 much Gardmer Wins Opening Skirmish In His Supreme Court Argument Henry 1 diner, who made a{pected rersonal appearance before the su- preme court of errors at Hartforl Tuesday and presented a demurrar to a motion by Assistant State" Donald Gaffney for d rdine ppeal from a jail sentence imposed conrt, won point will be ned at the cour orney Gaffn sustained, th e appeal would been disallowed, but the find- ing of the supreme court, which w nnounced late yesterday, him o a the matter. that Gardiner will again represent himself before the court and make his own argument. Gardiner served the jail sentence the charge of criminal libel ainst Chief W. C. Hart of the po- > department and upon being re- sed he busi:d himsell towar] his apeal from Judge Wolfe" findinz acted upon. Attorney Gaf- ne niing we’s Attornoy Hugh Alcorn, 1o tho preme court Tuesday that the que tion under consideration was abstract one. since Gardiner had tually served the entence froin which he was appealing. on « ot months a iperior his } motion argu \ the gover cment, out of con commission he appoin derstood that Wpproval Merides nor would ted 3 no st sidera ¥'s motisa Leen ) pros ition a comp ! 1 | S ex- ‘ (Continued on Page Two) government's today. | was found with two bul-| riden Connecti- | POLICE HOLD TWO INDIAN WOMEN IN BUFFALD MYSTERY Believe Infatuated Rese QUIGLEY AND BARTLETT CANDIDATES FOR 6.0.P. MAYORALTY NOMINATION; o et v | ATTER HAS ORGANIZATION SUPPORT Trough Jealous o e - Rivals for Repubhcan Nomination Bitter Pre-Primary ACCUSED WOMAN BLAMES Fight Expected When . GOMPANION FOR HURDER Traditional Foe of Regular Republicans s and Their Selection sed Suspect as Model—Budy of | L . : . D e ' - ~ Lock Horns in Rivalry. With Chloroform ¢ ryation Wile Henri Marchand, Noted Curator and Insect Specialist, Said o Haye Victim Discovered Beaten to Death by Son, Gaz Stuck in Mouth. Announcements From Op- ») ivag th rvation of the d in the brut Henri M : oIS posing Camps Come Al- Go wor ing o of the ind icn st most multaneously This Noon—Bartlett Ex- plains Previous Refusal to Declare Himself, Mrs, int Lillian Jimers been i s kinowle has a Mrs, have ‘nuhmn the artist’ Mr. Marchand, Indian woman, lived with hamn accused an old Bowen, who wielding t - George A. Quigley republican 1928, will be the ion as mayor in the March 23. ement, her, DONALD L. BARTLETT GEORGE A. QUIGLEY which crushed Mrs, Mar . No on why M held by IVRED ROONDLP Men Arrested as Agitators Have Heariugs Gontinued APPEAR IN POLICE GOURT According to tlett, CUPID INVERVENES INLEGAY BEHALF - Man Found Guilty of The Ges = <« = Term on Probation The o BRIDE SPEAKS FOR HIM have been in circulation in ch other fn rding (hv E official statem rom Mr. Mar police detective expected just before hour which came within his declaration, distinet an Miss Jimerson, whom MMr nd had used as a model his paintings, admitted s sent in the Marchand home vesterday when Mrs. Marchand was Dbeaten and choked to death, but did not kill her. Found Dead By Son Mrs. Marchand was found dead rday by her 12-year-old son he 1 by blow arp pointed weapon an form soaked wad down her thro A German dog. not his w n g was hou as a surprise in po- norts whil sh several days that the party or- would not allow Quigley 1d but would produce a cfore the close of this ve : St Outbreaks Throughout World Result | Storekeeper Fined in Supe dual announce- battle be- and Bartlett is antici- lett is regarded as the ndidate and Quigley ont a r Court L chlc paper stuffed S in 4 Deaths, Many Wounded and | for Having Slot Machine—>Mar- | pat en Quigley d 2 ni as Ba wtion n inde Bartlett's Hundreds Arrested—New York tinock Goes to Prison on Step- g Has Most Spectacular chill's Complaint. nt from the al months ago d by an announce- could not devote the to properly carry on his off In response declared a man too man is too busy to this answer being to dispos: eports that 1d run in 1930, Last weck, that the family. and Mrs, been in traced to h S0 suspic to some fricnd of Jimerson woman were found to h Buffalo yesterday and were the Gowanda reservation. | The Jimerson woman. Marchand had t kson, Albert Suskin and com- Bowen il sessary in da on i tablished : this morning police court, man o th occasions each cord for two of whom while 1 shortes holds nd p tint for hills hi Mr model mod ing u t i on the vical of 1d used Indian groups the museum. Mrs. Ji rday f a total o terd ords in two noon nd today four he 1 id s circulated wther try for s ag: un and his and h jayor's chair, he intended to “I do not.” Quigley's Statement Brief Former Mayor Quigley's formal ry into the campaign followed a in friends and party s office last night. Re- cived from represen- Quigley camp who sen sounding sentiment in all of the city, and the response ported to be such as to war- following formal announce- today e s specel ulous left by the bus fo tion in (a had no difffficulty locating two wor ! and arrestihg them Gave Police New Tip Marchand and Eve t Burme a roomer at the Marchand ho sociated with the seum police the which put them on t Indian woman Medical Examiner 1 nounced today he found | form-saturated wad in chand’s throat when he the autopsy at the nio: found traces of chloroform in lun, indicatir the woman alive when the lethal wad was st ed into her mouth and that bre w the fluid into the lu terday ! which | ] b . h traditional cllow work- in county ted, out was Jo ports tatives o piaced him o | understanding out of troubl all hat Policem you a when that short Tiave 1..1 uumml:uvon of him little, and words in two robhin § South words which ade hi echc s Main s st of hundreds of decided to enter the republican nomina- " or | property str nd in brevity. others had been his is bru- the day the shouted yor andidate Quigley is a native of ity and has his background 26 years in public life. ed the second ward 1 in 1904, 1905, and he returned to serve n, at the con- he was given the publican nomination for mayor to oppose J M. Halloran, a pres- n ber of school commit- . who at that time was seeking a third term as mayor. Quigley de- ted Halloran by the largest ma- en a mayor in the his- city Qui panion 1 re made has fternoon throug hat the peach b: d on Pag DR. SCHACHT 10 QUIT REICHSBANK PRESIDENGY Informs Directors ungs on of which "wo) (Conti vo) JUDGMENT SUSPENDED IN AGITATORS GASE Ge ued on Page or tory ty ever o v was again mom- s the democrats nominated Irnest W. Delton and v was again successful. 1918 Quigley bested Dr. John at the polls and went into rman inancier |intoxicating reminded 1 He Will Stay Pending Cholce Vincent and Yaris in Su- perior Court on Their Appeal of Successor Hia i his inte March preside (@—Dr i LiLE (Continued on Page 26) Boston Man Found Shot Enounced ln Lonely \\ ood Rudd it forenoo e T0 RECOVER GEMS Injunction Issued to Pre- vent Jeweler From Cutting Necklace fore Hartford. ond Harry Y found guilty o tin ordinance bills in that city nded by Ju nings in superiov John v H distribi i N R the direc 5 steps to terminat date contrac it k be would T row ng un its cxpi in office hpointe ation, it was his person final protocol reach Ha confr which he claime the original Youn endanger its succ noon Sergeant Thor Patrolmen Delbert Doty testified, but Reiner, counsel for | is, offered no evide mation he declar were announcin held in New B vertising morch. crefore did dinance ssista Donald Gaffuey it dmance is broad handbills of all des Vincent was rpreta- d at on e fons, ges in as 1o Archduch York. March (UP) Maria Therese of the Hapsbu: filed suit in suprems today through her attorney to er the priceless Napoleon necli- rom D. Michel, Fifth avenue weler An elaborated tion filed by Laurence who represented sulted in the signed b; tice Townley Tanff Paper Edltor Admlts Grundy Pays galary and Furmshes Office ist je documented peti- Steinhardt, archduch nce of an or- Supreme Court Jus- dirceting Michel to show cause why he should not be restrained from breaking up the necklace or disposing of it until ths action The archduche Michel by w Washington tioned by the ore he b Ma senate te offic building ed William & Var Grundy Denies Reports imdy on the ser denied this v said that his 10 sup i he re | the same offens Yaris beir was ame Pennsylvania, Grundy on tarif today editor fying th n G nd 1y from oh enator floor yester- tically nsed thosc again was otective his off committec by employ is s > ZOVe Doan or own Doan ne )y the aged was sold end, de- of N of nnen t . Whos sylvani Charles Towr the petition as chief of British police of Cairo under 4n dly expired power of aftorney. { the sale be voided 1 present- ed Napoleon to his wife on the {birth of their son, L'Aiglon. THE WEATHLER I self mostly * o tarif a month wa B Grundy for in and that employ New Britain and X or Rain tonight and not quite cold Saturday cooler. viceiity Saturday: tonight; called Doanc > last C ) whert to alafter At so Grundy's old | (Doane) al down th v headquart s offices in the ven- wrifl | offices newspa w into the had 1 by e CE senator (Continucd on Page Two)