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News of the World By Associated Press NEW BRITAIN HER A h c\,itu ! ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1930. —TWENTY-TW( COOLIDGE ASSERTS HE WILL NOT SEEK PRESIDENCY AGAIN Says in Magazine Article He Will Not Be Candidate for Rny Office PRESENCE IN WASHINGTON | MIGHT BE EMBARRASSING| Reasons for Avoiding Senate Hints BULLETIN FROM HOSPITAL ON QUIGLEY'S CONDITION GIVES RISE TO OPTIMISM Mayor-mking In- m; terest in Events for First Time, Statement Says — Temperature More Nearly Normal‘ at 1 P. M. Today. Patient Passes Comfort- able \Ilght and Breath- ing Is Easier — Mayor: Paonessa Calls But Can-| not See Sick Man—Visi- tors Still Barred. at Difference With Hoover—Cap- ital. Solons Place Different Inter- pretations on Statementi—Tilson | | ‘ Says He Is Sln('cre—CooHdgcfuys‘ | Prohibition Solution Far Off, | New Yo April 10 (A—Yormer | President Calvin Coolidge, in a copy- | |righted article in the May issue of Hearst's International and Cosmo- politan, writes that he has no in- |tention of returning to public life, | The former president gives hi |views on prohibition, the tariff, ciated Press | playing the market, the suggestion | . finan- | that he run for senator ,the talk of | Ark,, »‘!anolhnr term, and “minding enc's| pneumonia own business.” “When I left \\‘-\shmmon | public office.” Mr. Coolidge “1t) |is on incomprehensible Seiitia i |have no intention of returning to it. “If I were in the senate,” he adds, it would not be agrecable to many | of my colleagues, and with all m: | desires to be helpful it would prob- ably oftentimes be an embarrass- ‘mont to the administration. To have —Photo by As H. “Coin Harve; writer of Monte Ne, il with Ark. | Il | [ | (‘i:vl eriously Roge “For the first time since he has been in the hospital, Mr. Quigley | today is taking an interest in what, is going on.” This reassuring statement contained in the New Britain cral hospital bulletin issued a o'clock this afternoon on the condi- | tion of Mayor-Elect George A. Quig- | ley, who is making progress in s | battle with bronchial ‘pn‘umoum‘ after a siege which for a time| threatened to cause his death. It is the most optimistic statement au- thorized by his attending phy: vcmv\%\ since he was taken from his honw; at Maple and Whiting streets last T left was | G n_ New Britain - Buildings—Month's | ecl s done. Mr. Coolidge discusses prohibition son Half Year After Wife's Peath. at some length and in connection therewith the editor of the Cosmo- JolLi |politan has singled out for prom- | facturer, for the past 10 years a|nent presentation this sentence: | resident of Worthington ridge, Ber- | «Considering that people have dif- lin, and for 45 years a resident of | fered most radically on the best New Britain, died this morning at|method of regulating the sale of | 4:15 o'clock at the New Britain |liquor for generations, it is not like- | General hospital. He was prominent- |1y to be settled for a long time to lv known both in Rerlin and New |come.” Britain. e was years of age and had been ill slightly more than a| month. Mr, esting | woven Tliness Fatal (o 32nd Degree Ma Pinches. prominent manu- |a former president in Washington | Berlin Ma]]u}ac[mer Known a§| excreising poiitical power woutd re-| sult in all kinds of uncomfortable | ‘Man WI]O Bm]t Mam S[ree 1 Mompll("x[loni Only the necessity of | |serving in some national erisis, so | Sunday night in an ambulance. geaat au fojguiordinalo st otiericons Hospital Bulletin siderations, would warrant it. Today's Hoanitall bulletii follows: HEADED WOODWORK PLANT| Will Not Run Again The attending physicians’ report | | “Nor,” he says further, “do 1] this noon on the condition of George | {have any sympathy with those Wwho A. Quigley is most favorable. The |Contractor Erected Many Important are discussing again making me | patient passed a comfortable night | [president. The service that I could and the temperature is slowly snl-.‘ siding. The early morning tempe: ture was within one degree of nor- mal and this noon it is within onc and a half degrees of normal. | Breathing is markedly casicr. Ex- pectoration is freer and without | pain. The physicians are entirely sat- isfied with his condition. “For the first time since he has been in the hospital, Mr. Quigley today is taking an interest in what is going on.. By fthe T icians’ orders only his wife will h(’ permit- ted to visit him during the next day or two. 0250 Interpretations Differ Washington, April 10 (UP)—Cal- vin Coolidge's renouncement of pub- | lic life has plunged Washington nto ! another verbal political quandary. Like his famous “I do not choose to run in " statement issued be- fore the presidential campaign of that year, the new statement of the former president has been received | with various interpretations by po- litical authorities. There are cxpressions of rogret | REEKS, | “Superintendent.” Temperature Goes Down in Night At 10 o'clock last night the re. | Of i port from the hospital was to the |Lngland Tebruary effect that Mr. Quigley’s temperature [ €ame to this count was lower and that his general con- (He was married dition was much better. In fact so|on May 14, 1874, His wife, Mrs.| much improved was his condition {Henrietta L. Pinches. preceded him late last night that Dr. T. 1%, Reeks, |in death. slightly less than six| superintendent of the hospital, said |months ago, having died October 3¢ : that “Mr. Quigley’s recovery we feel |of last year. that ho will not serve; compliments | now is pra ally assured. In mo\ He was, up to a few years ago, |on his sound wisdom in remaining | or three more days we feel sure he |active politically, being a leader in |in retirement; interpretations that | | | Pinches's history is an inter- one and is closely inter- with the early development | of New Dritain. He was born in | at the age of will be out of the woods.” |the republican ranks, |the statement indicates differences A subsequent report from {he hos-| “Man Who Built Main Street” ‘|between Mr. Coolidge and President pital said the patient had passed a| Mr. Pinches had long been known |Hoover; and predictions that he will comfortable night and his tempera- as “the man who built Main street.” :‘bonmclx in public life again if duty ure was normal this morning. |He spent many years in the con-calls. : Mayor Paonessa Visits l'{us:ll_nl | tracting and woodworking business Puzzling After Recent Trip Mayor Paonessa went to the New |in New Britain and was active in| The confusing opinions represent | Britain General hospital today hop- |this field until his last iliness, The |sentiments of the right and lcft‘ ing to have an opportunity to scc appellation, “the man who built | N Main street,” was justly earned by (Continued on Page Two) | hiny, as he had much to do with the | SR, | construction or many of the oldest | BUSINESSMEN PASSIVE %< 5y s IvuoBNGE ON SATURDAY CLOSING |were t]\s‘ Upfira hous now lhc ‘Woman Tells Authorities She Gladly Take No Action on Sugges- Palace theater, the state armory, the B. C. Porter Sons block, the tion to End Day at 7 0’Clock (Continued on Page Two) |former Universalist church on Faces D Jscape Magic o e, ‘aces Deportation to Escape Magic Spell of Religlous Leader Detroit, April 10 (R—Kept prison- er in the county jail at her own r quest, Mrs. Edith Richards, 34-yea old writer and lecturer, today looke forward to returning to Sweden and to the hushand and four children from whom she has been held away. she told immigration officers, by a| cult leader’s “magic spell.” The charm with which Mrs. Rich- ards says the chief of a “perpctual life” cult held her enslaved, was| broker when immigration officers | found her in an apartment here, €he from Ernest Hem- | asserted. Told she must be deported, novel, Iarewell | she asked to-be kept in jail hecause which incurred the ire of | she feels “strong and free” when| to “Pilgrim’s’ Pro- | forcibly separated from the cultist. includes Turipodes,| The officers who told her story. Fugene O'Neill, and|did not make public the name of the W man, Book Given Hoover Was | Banned in Boston Lists | New York, April 10 (UP)—At least one book in the library of 500 vol-| umes which will be presented nus‘ month to the White House by Amer- ‘ ican booksellers for the edification and amusement of President Hoover and his successors, has run afoul of | Boston censors, it became known to- | day with the announcement of the sclection of hooks by a committee | | appointed by the American book- | sellers association | The proposition to close stores on Saturday night at 7 o'clock through- out the entire year joined other Sat- | urday closing movements at a meet- ing of merchants in the Chamber of Commerce headquarters this morn- ing when the meeting adjourncd without taking action. The meecting was the result of a| qpojice tun muggestion made at a general meet-| o covre rocent ing of merchants on January 28| o Arms. when 8, M. Davidson pointed out|pocton censors that there is not much Saturday night | gress” and husiness in the city and proposed 10 | ghakespear close at T o'clock every Saturday |Tindbergh's night. The merchants present at that time voted unanimously in favor of the suggestion, but adopted a mo- tion that final action be deferred to| some later date when other business | men would have an opportunity to consider it. Secretary Ralph H. Benson called the meeting for 10 o'clock this mo ing. All merchants in the city wer invited to attend and 13 appeared. Chiarman Maxwell §. Porter of the mercantile bureau announced that it ¢ i | required 20 {o make a quorum. He|State of high excitement following a | opened the meeting for informal |Fiot last night in protest to increas- | discussion. No one seemed anxious|°d admission prices at two Chas- | to discuss it. Louis R. Raphael, who | lottesville theatel was out of the country at the time| At least two students were in the of the last meeting, expressed his | university hospital, and one police- willingness to cooperate. No one|man was suffering uncomfortable Virginia University Students Riot Over Prices Charged at Theaters e Charlottesville, Va., April 10 (P— fundreds of University of Virginia students early today were still in a Though the actual riot was dis- persed with a plea for arbitration by President win A, derman, of the university, hundrede sti!l were milling about the town loi after midnight with a spirit of gen- | eral unrest prevailing. | Led by a drum corps. nearly thousand students mobilized on th> | univeristy campus ecarly last night, | noon give to the people in that office I | |of | nationalis | night for selling s | offering the forbidden product to his residence Alderman David L. Johnson of the council at a republica Monday night, with liam H. Judd of the promise candidate Nair ter the caucus fight. e; Nair first ward and Aldeyman J. Gu fourth nounced today that they would be | candidates in a contest for the ofice an ward « of Nair and Johnson Enter Contest For Council President Pro Tem. ALDERMAN D. L. NAIR the 1 an- of president pro tem. of the common aucus, Alderman Wil- rd ward the cl | the volunteered pledges of probable choice in the event s is to he and Johnson dccided Dic t h car support com- ked. o cn- rying T Average Daily Circulation For Week Endmg 15 887 April 5th PRICE THREE CENTS M pm— Man Caught in Detroit Admits Bank Holdup Detroit, April 10 (A — John Smeden, of Pittston, Pa., was held here today after confessing that he and two companions robbed the Watertown, Connecti- cut Trust company on March 28 of $20,000. Smeden told police 000 of the loot is in a safe de- posit box of a Pittston bank and also gave them key for the bhox. S ——— HORSE AND BUGGY" DAYS CALLED BEST Mrs. Plummah Skinner 92 To- - day, Yeams for 01d Times TIHES ARE WORST EVER” Eapr sses Opinfon God Never In- ALDERMAN J. G. JOHNSON A tended People to Fly—Likes Autos \H\ rman me he of members of the council Judd said today he would 1o cifort to gain election to | office hut that he would accept | it provided it is the cxpressed opin- | ion of his colleagues that in so doing | Mvs: he will bring about a compromisc |solid comfort” satisfactory 1o the supporters of two active candidates. o Alderman Walter R, Talk of the | second 1is the present occupant of the hut it is understood that his support will be thrown to But Is Saddened Because They Kill So Many Children, Plummah “took = Skinner « in driving a hor [t she disapproves airplancs “God t man to travel that she always finds it childr |some vears back but because neve o mean way” and | although likes to ride in office, an au- tomobile “saddening Kill- *d on Tage = because o many are (Continy I'wo) ed by Mrs. autos. Skinner was getting ready <o London, April 10 (£ ference experts were have been put to work drafting a_fiv ment which both Briand of Iranc vention this morning. This treaty, effect be | power | States, | but will include on which all the between | can sign. Italy wil! be left which exclusively affec three powers will be the two Latin countr involved. The decision to adopt cedure was reached th after Sceretary IForcign Minister under: Naval this power orcign Ministers and G Italy have tentatively agreed to sign {2s an outgrowth of American inter- it was said, a comprehensive tl Great Britain and numerous five powers agreed and which France and Italy t Stimson had Briand and W he the this andi Five Power Naval Treaty, With Itale-French Reservatlons, Planned con- o00d toci after- | agree- of ill in three- United | Japan, | points | arc Treaty to Be Carcfully Worded The present plan is that versial matters between I°rance and ~ut and the clauses contro- other o worded that | will not pro- morning v isited Hugh nd birthc held in in the fattend her 4 [ Which s Dein afternoon granddaughter, Mrs, |ner Austin in Maple hibited a silk {that my arly “The and M Chestnut strect. Ad ndant of one of the fi | families of Connecticut, Mrs, Skin- ner watches the younger gencration reads much and *“minds her owr x\ " She was reluctant to| ways of the flappe that she thinks thing: better when she was a times a the worst| said with convietion. | | s are full of everything except what is good.” She lookea . - | SRR e S i ontradiction. None was forthcom- | yling. She continued, “The way peo-| 2 |ple live now is awful. There just| sn't any home life When I was girl we had partics ag cach others homes and were miore select. | Now parties held in road houses ind anyhody gor | Reads Many eral religious beside her of reading I'or 1 | Mrs. SKinner was an ac meniber of the Congregational church in th party honor of a| Skin- her home Natalie Hill. She ex; teh quilt. “I made | cat-granddaughte two months old she child is a_daughter of |} Harold Wood of| this a 8. Gibson had Minister Briand over 1150 to s conferre Grandi is said to be enthusiastic this solution and Grandi ha ted tentative willingne: . The Ttalians have rath seen left out of negotiations recent- Iy and Grandi is not so conversant with the trend of affairs as are the other delegation chiefs. Thereforc he naturally wishes to know more about what he is expected to sign before he definitely agrees to his name to it. | Al business. comment on the but did* say {were much |girl. “The put | ever, The p Two Nations 10 (P—Althou the naval nce was pr definitely committed today to threc-power limitation pact exclud ing JFrance and Italy, conference olb- servers believed th wo nations might be asked to subscribe to cer- tain ¢ accomplishments of the parley. France and Ttaly. out, while at complet May Tondon Ask April confere Wi e we Jess Books books were on 1t her it was pointed with a favorite any years variance table fornt (Continued on Page Two) City India, Bombay, uvnteers, including six April Two hundred civil disobedience 10 (GANDHI VOLUNTEERS | DEFY BOMBAY POLICE 1200 Make Salt on Steps of | Congress House in Py~ vol- Mohamme- dans and three women, brought sca water to the steps of congress hous: today for the in violation of British la The band divided groups, each the se: of the city. were manufacture in the salt making them, mostly bringing sca water where they vio violations of ¢ the first step the civil disobedience by s hope to ence for their country. There were two ¢ tecrs in Bombay's 1t to! frov win magistrate ahatma at Ganahi, lead for Kar there as ‘he had men and women at and at Aat collected kis guidance. Gandhi's followers salt bed near Dandi. hcaring of the siscovery, them theer. the mineral. theless managed 300 pounds which villagers. At Cuttack Orissa India national congres: pal Bandu Chaudhury, today while marching R the law The students, greatly streets and picketir them were arrested. w. m to their °d the law It law cam which independ- i n sts of suburbs one - was unable to leaye fo manufacture of sa itself into bringing a supply a water from different Thirty-two salt installed at congress parts pans v the of the contraband. A large number of women figur 1 Many Azujer 1 cons of natio dimatyad to break the intended, bu dima found a &N o hes itute of dian volun- | last them | nalist | Jalapur Jaw | t th new The policz, v le pre ceded and destroved most of The volunteers neve: to gather was sold to the about | a prominent ader, Go- as arrested to seashore heading a party of volun- | teers for the purpose of breaking |jiay excited, the school and began parading the || Yourteen of [ 1g A d the left atvad | salt without | |communitics i which she live FIFTH WARD LDERMAN People low, Iwhat is lastin Favored to Succeed Pajew-| ski—Zajkowski to Take His Place today id re all for outwar “and they d | forget | fail in any way but I'm | she gommrnlvd she I¢ 50 to the r muuhm; and ch, “No suade there nged the subject. amount of mo; me to go up in an God didn't that and SO many us v would pu airplane,” mean us to that is why| accidents. The up above is comes and not be- | | | said to go when our call Councilman o is favored for Joseph L. Miyna 5 3 the fifth ward Braids Skinner braiding window he is tak scorning to use Rugs spends most of her rag looking | of her room and| is slightly deaf but unimpaired and she short walks alone a can Sometimes | Mrs the cading | ner eyesigh | trequently ‘manic berth which is to be vacated J. Pajewski, Attorney B.| - J. Monkiewicz, fifth of the republican town id today. Ior the position of councilman to be made vacant by this promotion, | Walter Zajkowski is favored. Zaj-| by Peter ward member committee (Continued on Page Two) Police Seize quuor and | Arrest 3 Men on Truck Mass.. April 10 (UP)-— Armed with riot guns, Ipswich police by Chief Edward Bleuvelt held men who were on two mo- ks coming out of a private 1te on Stue Island carly today, ar- ted the men, and confiscated the trucks and their loads of liquors val- $100,000. men ar thoritics, | volvers, were Lynn, Dominic Ipswich, | ued a sted, who, according carried . calibre re- Robert Marshall of Debonis and Armand Gauthier, hoth of this town They were charged with illegal transporta tion of liquor and carrying dan apons without permits |to a {nis opponents | clerk. 19 | | has | mad | published a declaration that |on election day for him would not WICKERSHAM CRITICIZED BY CARAWAY IN LOBBY HEARING FOR CHURCH GROUP ACTIVITY THOMPSON T0 KEEP ‘Chairman Says Law HIS STAFF INTAET Enforcement Commis- sion Head’s Position “Indefensible” Con- sidering Legal Con- nections. Town Clerk Will Recommend Primary Rival for Deputy ANTICIPATES NO CHANGES Official Bay State Leader Resumes Federal Council Churches, Anti-Saloon League and Wayne B. Wheeler—] ligious Group to Answer, Veteran Believes Expe enced Workers Should Be TRe- Evidence on tained and Carries Over No Ran- on cor From Race For Nomination. Alfred veteran | clerls, pointment as his “ochra Col. Thompson, will recommend for ap- | dep 1e who has filled the and town , Miss Jean | | position for 13 years who was one of in the republican | A 10 George the (#) — The W. Wicker= Hoover law commission, with Wash | connection in | 1t | on, primary of Thompson ht Clerk explained 1. sham, chairman of the primary is over insofa S nforcement in- rned mafnt tact the experienced force which has of town nd his re conce pational d hat it is his mlan to i banking affairs while the foreign policy commit- Council of termied an “indefensi- today by Chairman senate lobby com= IFederal long conducted the office i osition™ Caraway of the | mitt ayor Must Make Appointment Appointment of a deputy is made by the meyor upon recommendation £ the official in charge of the fice here has been but one stance when the nomination been rejected, this happening Brought Up By Tinkham Wickersham's name came befora s |{he committee through testimony, in | by Tepresentative Tinkham, repub- e or Daoneons wag in. |lican, Massachusetts, in ampiifying e ;| charges against the Federal Council augurated and performed his first i ! official act as mayor by refusing to|9f Chur Arfer asserting that sanction re-appointment of Harry A, |the Council was attempting to sub- Hargreaves, A fow days lator Col, |Sttute a theocracy for the present Thompson brought in the nomina-{{orm of government, Tinkham add- . auloetion |ed that Wickersham had until re- ey approval. | |cently served as chairman of the Miss Cochrane has been connected | Council’s foreign policy committee, with the offiee for 19 years, Dur.|He continued that the former at- ing absences of the town clerk she |lorney general had been active in been in charse of the office, |international business. giving her familiarity with the mul- | A letter from Wickersham was Ei1a Auties of s depattrent then read which said that his law Tuiers BrniesiRace firm Jiad represcnted at times “in- A few months ago when it | ternational bankegs and e probably rumored that an effort would b “]‘V'\m“]\‘;l“; “‘“‘:(‘h“l‘l’“(c(r‘:(:l”j""““‘ = = displace Thompson as lr.mnf e e e clerk, then appoint a male deputy, | ¢ o = Miss Cochrane was mentioned as a| Schator Blaine, republican, . Wis« e hRhl il ls for R after Caraway's sharp com- A e e s on the law enforcement 3 . asked how Wickersham qualificd as an officer of the Coun- cil of Churche G n- schran the mayor's was consin, ment in view | ehairm assured opposition to Thomp- son in the primary election she |©H L would also seck the republican nom-| ‘1 8 npos ination. Harry E. Scheuy was the | Mer Anlon third contestant to enter, iswered. ] Miss Cochrane announced {h He added that he understood elected, she would recommend sham had quit his post with pointment o\ Gol. Thompson Council some months ago. deputy, while Scheuy said M ‘husetts representative s stfied the Council, largely through propaganda. “had attempt- od to influence both forcign and |domestic policies of the govern- I ment He said it interested itself | handily, The vote given him was|in the naval building programs, the nearly twice as great as that given |10ague Of nations, war debts, com- Miss Cochrane, and three times pulsory military training in high large as Scheuy's total, schools and colleges, United States 3 and Japanese relations, extra-terri- ‘SHOKE IN SUBWAY TUBE ot ontgn e - FAILS 0 HALT TRAFFIC = Appearing before the committea of the a3 because T Dusiness, is active in Tinkham a victory ad esult in the removal of the veteran clerk as a member of the office for Col. Thompsen won the primary | as ¢ the second day, the Massachu- (Continued on Page Two) Warren Street Blaze Delays l|m1|(d e BEFORE GRAND JURY [Man Who Li\'ed Unknownt in House 18 Years Faces Charge =% April 10 (B — Dense | smoke from a Warren street fire on | the lower west side today seeped in- to the west side interborough subxw and filtered through the tube as far nort 14th street, one and one half miles away Althou rable engers, th o smoke caused innoyance 1o subway it did not hamper service con- pass- in tubs Llevated trains nue line, however the trains wer Iy through the thick smoke in pa ing the burning building A police emergency called to keep bacl (CGP) — jury wera Tc April 10 fembers of the grand cheduled today to hear how an “at- tic hermit” allegedly Kkilled ed | Oesterreich, millionaire garment squad was|manufacturer, in his home here crowds of office | cight years ago. bound worke many of whom were District Attorney Buron Fitts plans commuters from New Jer: The | ned to go hefore the jury to relats fire was in one of three six story|the and to seck an indictment buildings occupied by Masba against Otto nhuber, aliad Walter Hardware company. T Klein, who assertedly crept from his estimated at §2 abode in t ves of the Oesterreich dence and shot Oesterreich. on the Sixth ave- delayed a d to move slow forc story the loss was JOSEPH L. MLYNARSKIL | | | kowski was one of the unsuccessful | candidates for councilman in Tues- s election. Pajewski has been ted | school committee. He will present | [ his resignation at Wednesday night’s | meeting of the common neil and | the election will take at the mecting. | Miynarski w | council in 1920 | returning 6 to 1928, Bath, Me.. April 10 (UP)—A new queen of the seas was christened to- day—with real champagne. Ncither grape juice nor water, the conventional ch fluids o fthe prohibition cra, would suffice to start the carcer of J. P.| Morgan's $2,500,000 yacht Corsair. And so this Leviathan of privately- owned boats went down the at | [ the Bath Iron Works shipyard with | champagne of the vintage of 1915 | dripping from its bow. to the mineral eni place elect and last he was s s a Morgan Yacht Largest Afloat Is Chnstened With Champagne‘ itts intended to question ! Mrs. Walburga Oesterreich, the | widow. Authorities contend that wwmm er's love for Mrs. Oesterreich led him to continue his strange at- tic love over many years and finally to slay her husband. Sanhuber's confession was the main information to place before the but Fittsssaid he also expected ent the story of Mrs. Oester- who once was charged with murder, and that of Herman former attorney for the Corsair, fourth yacht of tI fly the Morgan pennant. Newspaper reporters and camera | en also were prevented from enter- ing the shipyard where Morgan and a small party of guests had gather- | ed, but were provided with two mo- tor packets for use in “covering” the | event, | & at name to| [ Jury, to reich, the Shapiro, widow. anhuber's admissions, relating & ssociation with Mrs. Oester- | reich from 1912 until after the mur- were made only after Shapiro cused the suspect in the affidavit filed carly this week. Biggest Private Boat Here is a thumbnail sketch of the | gest private craft afloa Length—343 feet § inches (over- clse spoke. Mr. Davidson commented | ¢ffects from manhandling, whil:|al the tolling of the chapel bell, an1| vigilance | the board of public wor The launching was witnessed by | all) 280 feet (waterline). According to Sanhuber's alleged upon the fact that there scemed to be very little interest in the matt and moved that the meeting adjourn. ‘The motion passe was over. It 1 utes 1f Mr. Benson writing the matter Otherwise it ed about 10 ma is be dead re- i n opened. BuG. | bo nursing min- | receives a reqliest dezens of students were reported to head wounds inflicted | sticks. marched a half a mile or mo down the main strect of the town | to the theaiers. Leaders of the demonstration gained a conference with the management, and white they were inside, their followers showered the front of one of th: theaters with eggs, broke out bulbs (Continued on Page Two) committee was formed with Assem- blyman Dass as secretary to prevent cxcesses Gandhi, asked for explanation of his speech Monday at Aat, with re- | | zard to reports circulated that had there advocated violence, said: “That is a mischievous distortion | | by nignt Eftigy Bonfire Held Boxes were piled high on fhe| | camp, and the name of the theaters | painted on them before they were set afire and burned as cffigy, whils | the crowd shouted its scorn for the | management and increased prices\ ! a he | (Continued on Page Two) THE WEATHER New Britain and Fair tonight and Friday: ing temperature, vicinity: confession, he first met Mrs. Oester- reich 18 years ago when he was 17. Later he entered the Oesterreich home, then in Milwaukee, and con- structed a place for himself in the | attic. When the Oesterreichs moved g [Los Angeles, ~Sanhuber followed | them and built himself another nest lin the attic. the | with | Beam—42 feet 6 inches. Draught—18 feet Displacement— Power—Two turbo-electric capable of 6000 h. p. Maximum speed—16 knots. Cruising radius—23,000 miles. Crew—58 men | hundreds of person including noted New York financier, who, | bovish interest. had watched m;‘i znificent craft gradually take | pe at the local shipyard during| the past year Townspeople, barred from the| vard, obscrved the ceremonies from Kennebee bridge, a few hundred feet north of the slip which disgorged the > {ons m units (Continued on Page Two), . )