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Man Fights Policeman, Woman Flees, When Caught Taking Milk at Store GIRL KILLED, SIX Caught stealing bottles of milk, according to the police, Frank An- drzecik, 38, of 11 Orange street, put up a stift fight with Supernumerary Officer ¥Fred Jones on Farmington avenue near the home of Captain George J. Kelly about 5 o'clock this morning before sybmitting to arrest. A woman who was with him ran away and could not be found. Officer Jones saw the couple car- rying & burlap bag containing a duck or a goose and before they caught sight of him they went into the door- way of Michael Niedbala's store at 30 Farmington avenue and took two | quarts of milk, he reported. He started towards them and they ran but were overtaken and Andrzecik tried to rid himself of the evidence by smashing four pint bottles on the sidewalk, pulling them out of his pockets as fast as he could, Jones | claimed. } Man Fights, Woman Fleees Placing the couple under arrest, the officer soon was in a struggle, Andrzecik fighting furiously to get away but the officer held on to him while the woman fled. In police court today, Apdrzecik was charged Swith theft of §1 worth of milk, the property of J. E. Seibert & Son, milk dealers, and interfering with and resisting Officer Jones. A con- | tinuance until tomorrow was ordered | in $100 bonds on request of Prose- cuting Attorney Woods. Mrs. Felycz Kdpec, 33, of 140 Grove street, was arrested by Detec- tive Sergeant O'Mara today on the charge of theft. She was identifled as the woman who was with An-| drezejik. Two quarts of milk II-\ leged to have been stolen were re- covered in her home. | Kicked in Mouth During Fight James Manning, 27, of 184 North | street, pleaded not guilty to the | charge of assaulting John O'Brien, 3L, of 897 East street, and O'Brien | pleaded not guilty to the charge of | drunkenness. Judge Saxe suspend- ed judgment on Manning and im- | posed a fine of $15 and costs on O'Brien, suspending execution of the penalty, however, and placing him | on probation. Officer Thomas Tierney and Su- | pernumerary Officer Hart made the arrests late last night on O'Brien’s | complaint. The latter testified that he was on his way home from a | meeting of a labor body with which he is affiliated, and a friend from | Hartford gave him a bottle of beer. He was passing a store on North street, near Erwin Place, and step- ped in but was ejected. “Who put you out?’ Prosecuting Attorney Woods asked him. “Manning, his helper and the rest of the bootleg- gers,” O'Brien replied. Manning, he | #aid, kicked him in the mouth and broke his tooth. As to his own con- dition, O'Brien admitted having had several drinks, but did not consider | himselt intoxicated. Manning testified that he was in *Joe Sarra's place’ when O'Brien came in and started a nuisance. Sar- ra led him to the door and seeing Manning standing there, O'Brien, with an oath, declared he was going to “get” him, at the same time | swinging the bottle of beer as & weapon. “He tried to hit me in the head with it as he has done be- fore,” Manning said, “so I just push- ed him away.” Manning Denies Owning Store Asked by Prosecuting Attorney Woods if he owned the store, Man- ning replied that he did not. Asked what kind of a place it was, Man- ning replied that he did not know. Asked what was sold there. | the highway, | Hornell. | nectady, HURT IN ACCIDENT Head-On Crash in Mohawk Val- ley Has Fatal Result Fonda, N. Y., July 11 (® — Elsie Craven, 18 vears old, of Methuen, | Mass., was killed and six other per- | sons were injured in a head-on col- lision of automobiles on the Mo- | hawk Valley state highway east of | Sprakers today. | The injured are: Eugene Legault, | 16 Church street, Lawrence, Mass., | arm broken; James S. O'Brien, Sal-| vation Army adjutant, 206 Broad- way, Lawrence, cuts on head and wrist; Mrs. O'Brien, his wife, prob- able internal injuries; James I O'Brien, their 17 year old son, hurt about the head: Vernon M. Selling- | er, Cobleskill, N. Y.. cuts on head | and probable internal injurles, and | Mrs. Blanche Smith, Cobleskill, in- jured about the ches Bellinger, who is assistant cashier | of the Farmers & Merchants Bank of Cobleskill, was arrested after the accident on a charge of manslaugh- | ter. Legault, who was driving the Lawrence car in an easterly direc- | tion, said that Bellinger was dmmg, |at a high rate of speed on the wrong | side of the road. The Lawrence car was pushed off the road by the im- | pact and rolled over on to the New York Central tracks which parallel | and the rear end of | was struck by a the automobile freight train. Miss Craven was killed instantly. | All the injured were taken to the City hospital in Amasterdam. Two Die in Hornell Hornell, N. Y., July 11 (® — Crushed in the wreckage of their | automobile after it had crashed into | a ditch and turned over while trm-1 feet and that very fes elling at a high rate of speed early | today, Florence Mahoney, 16, was killed and Alice Campbell, 17, dl"d‘ | shortly afterwards of a broken back | nection and internal injuries. Both lived in The driver, Cyrus Strimple, 20, of | Canisteo, was uninjured. He was held on a charge of manslaughter. The party was returning from an evening at Loon lake sau Deaths Two . Y., July 11 (®.— Two persons were dead and two others injured today as the result of an au- | tomobile accident near Nassau last night. Murray Fichman of Ne York, died in a hospital here today Mrs. Viola Mildred Brown of Sche- | was killed when the car| containing herself, Fichman and| two other men went off the road. The two other occupants of the car, Irving Weichman and Walter Reinschreiber, both of New York were injured. Weichman seriously. BOSTON “00[1 MARKET Boston, July 11 (UP)—The Bos- ton wool market report issued today by the local office of the United States department of agriculture fol- lows: “Little concern is felt in the wool market over the decline at London. | Observers generally agree that for- eign values are stlll relatively much higher than prices on domestic | needed for pilots | 1and secking to have the air | stipulated | than 500 feet [they were raiding a |wools. While current trading here is |slow, small sales are being closed continually on quite a wide variety of wools. Most factors in the mar- | . kets are looking for the present he kicked O'Brien in the face, and |4 o0yt continue for a while but claimed that blood was trickling out of his mouth when he came into the |(N€Y fe¢l quite confident of the store in the first instance. He would Present level of values. not admit that he struck him with his fist, but admitted that he pushed | him “In self defense.” Arthur Jo- sephson corroborated Manning's story, blaming O'Brien for the trou- ble. Judge Saxe said he was satisfied that Manning struck O'Brien but there seemed to he no question that O'Brien atarted the trouble. Never- theless, Manning should have found some other way of avoiding a fracas, fn view of O'Brien’s fatoxicated con- dition, he sald. To O'Brien he sounded a warning that he must atay at work and keep out of police court if he would escape severe pun- ishment, plied that he did not know. and beans, I suppose,” the prosecut- ing attorney remarked. Manning denied emphatically that | MISS LOWMAN ENGAGED Elmira, N, Y., July 11 (® — The |engagement of Katherine Loman, daughter of Assistant Secretary of the Treasruy Seymour Lowman and | Mrs. Lowman, of this city and Wash- |ington, to William Jardine, jr., son of former Secretary of Agriculture | William Jardine and Mrs. Jardine !0( Washington, was announced here today by Mr. and Mrs. Lowman. No date has been set for the wedding. Miss Lowman made her debut to {capital society last winter. She is a graduate of the Emma Willard school at Troy, N. Y.. and aftended the National 8chool of Applied and The case of David Dixon, 38, of |[Fine Arts at Washington. 282 Elm street, was continued until | Mr. Jardine is in business in Wash- tomorrow in bonds of $500, after he |ington. pleaded gullty to the charge of theft | | of a chain hoist valued at $285, the property of Clifton E. Davenport of Stanley street. Sergeant P. A. Mc- Avay of the detective bureau made | the arrest last night. | A nolle was entered in the case of Sebastiano Ginofriddo, 28, of 215 Elm street, charged with disobeying & boulevard stop sign. ‘Warner TOR BEST RESULTS USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS LOANS UP TO $300 Our Office Now Keeps Open Until 9 o'Clock Every Monday Eveningw—Other Days (Except Saturday) Until § o'Clock Your Employer Is Not Notified No Assignment Against Your Wages Nassau Finance Corporation 5th Floor * 300 Main St., New Britain Our Only Charge is 314% Per Month On Unpaid Balance [ S 4 RAN TODAY and SAT. REGIS TOOMEY “CrazyThat Way” SPECIAL STAGE PARTY TO THE CHILDREN GIVEN BY PEGGY EAMES SATURDAY AFTERNOON A Chance For Every Child to Meet the Little Star j Coming SUN.—NORMA SHEARER in ‘LET US BE GAY’ e —— ——— ————¥—¥—/—— ) HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1930. T JEAN RANKIN and her BLUE, BELLES The Peppiest and Greatest Girl Band in Vaudeville Now Playing at Strand Theater AVIATION RULING _ BROKER ACGOUNTS CAUSES PROTEST BESCRIBED Tl][MY \Manager Says 500 Foof Limit Stock Official Tells of Sheet & Altogether Unfair to Planes Cleveland, July 11 (#—A menacs to aviation was seen tods jor Louis G. ager of the Service, in the Judge George P t Toledo in setting the minimum height at which planes may fly over property adjacent to airports. Major Meister asserted that more than 4,600 feet of ground space are to bring their | planes down from an muuxo of 500 airports in for deral 500 feet as the country this. Judge Hahn's ru with th and are lnrgn enough g was in con- suit brought by Frederick H. Swet- port at Richmond Heights Village adjoin ing their estate be declared a sance. Judge Hahn refused to clare the airport a that planes m Swetland property altitude Major Meister announced that the airport would be closed August 1 as a result of the ruling and his com- | pany’s activities removed to another | base, Raymond over the |Riot Squad Called Out To Protect Dry Raider Baltimore, July riot squad was called out today protect federal dry ra threatening mob e oon 3 2 bar- two men and confiscating 11 | rels of beer Hatton and had The cgents, Ival H Thomas W. Andrews, said they started the rald and made the rests when the crowd which hal gathered mad> threatening moves They denied they had appealed for aid. The police squad held back the crowd while the agents completed the raid and departed amid boos anl cat-calls. dle Lnemployment Llsted In Rhode Island Towns Washington, July 11 (P —TUnem- ployment in nine Rhode Island towns was announced yesterday as follows by the census bureau (1930 total population given first column; second column shows number of persons able to work and seeking work). Centrel Falls . Coventry Cumberland Lincoln 1 North Smithfield ., Pawtucket . Warwick West Warwick Woonsocket in CONSOLS FOR MONEY London, July 11 (#—Consols money 56 De Beers 7. Rand Mines 3. Bar silver 16 2-8d per ounce Money 1 3-4 per cent. Discount —short bills 2 3-8 per cent, | months 2 8-8 per cent. Bros. D- JOAN BENNETT —in— tage %\’flhb Bill S in Person sl Our GAOF Comeds AN gA\Ki\ Ales ue Be! 1 SH Smas . . More Daring than ' Own Desire . . . More matic than The Divorcee! Norma Shearer at her best. Tube Proxy Battle artner In Firm towi «aid he Mat B. Mc Corporation t alton h Mathse Warner Bros. TRAN and ori- al p Starts SUN. NORMA HEARER LET US . BE GAY Al.l. TAl.KlNG M“ru s than Mys, (1 ney heir Dra- Unless otherwise Indlcated, theatrical notices and reviews in this column are ciow for (he respective amusement company. “BIG PARTY" AT EMBASSY or roman 1\ Wars band, of lea, a pair of siness partners part- on their th a wdies THE STRAND LAKE COMPOUNCIE emplo mpany of FIREWORKS!! DANCING!! LAKE COMPOUNCE Bristol, Conn. Saturday Night July 12 NEW YORK EXPRESS Four Tlmu Daily 50 ONE -75 ROUND WAY TRIP Return Ticket Good 30 Dass Brand New Latest Type Parlor Car Coachis Deep upholsiery, air cushions, Inside baggage compartments, eiectric fans, ice water, and card tables. No finer built. We' gunrantee your comfort. Leave Crowell's Drug Store i Band Concert Sunday Daily anl Sunday Running Time 44 Hours Phone 1951 Reservations Farly nded and Insured McEnelly’s WED. NIGHT, JULY 16 Orchestra with SUE CAROL Walter (atlett Dixie Lee Frank Albertson WHOOPEE I SOME BUSINESS— AND WHAT A TIME WE'LL ALL HAVE MIRTH—MUSIC—LAT 'GHTERI\ELODY Warner Bros. AT EmeassY LAST OF THE TIMES TODAY REGIMENT" DL ‘(BE YOURSELF” and | CHEWING GUM NOT CANDY, RULING SAYS Commission Passes on Freight Rate Plea of Makers Washington, July 11 (P m today obtained officially right to be classified as a commodity of higher quality than candy decision, announced b nterstate commorce not be entirely to ion of «c wing gum however, since it ifies e expr companies in charg r rates for chewing gum ship- ments than for candy. The express ompanies miy apply first to chew but w the The the commission, the satisfac- will makers tealers, class s ng gun 1 con- tinue to classify candy as a second & lower rates 1 interests in cation attemp t chewing gum 1ss shipment ed 1o was a that this observel, do not think initely establish the commission x We cannot avold the co chewing gum is not a which is fairly entitled ¢ al rates as a food product.” Health Commission Backs Anti-Fireworks Movement John J. McBriarty of board and Supt. . J been appointed a attend a meeting of - committee and urge law prohibiting the Dumont comm he ord doption of tan last night 7 ordinance pre- iont for submis- n when its pub- held soon ittee ic hearing USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS 1 T SRR O3 Federal Men Work On Deportation Charges Inspector Martineau of the federal immigration department communi- cated with the local police today relat to the whereabouts of Miss I"lore Main, his purpose being te r with relation to Walter h street, who is in jail deported to Germany Hute nd soon Miss Main is at Niantic the state farm for having been sent following a recent raid on Hutengs' tenement. She testified in to violations of the herself and women the TWO POLIC Hartfor Hurley of the innounced the suspen- embers of the state nent: Edward Ekecay and Thomas N. Wrinn were suspended Carroll of th ““conduct un HERALD (l ASSIFIED ADS —————eaaems —LAST SHOWINGS TODAY— “PRISONERS” with CORINNE GRIFFITH —and— “THE BARKER" with MILTON SILLS Cory—Cool—Comfortable —SATURDAY ONL BILLY "DOVE in ‘Her Private Life’ Co-Feature JOAN CRAWFORD in ‘Untamed’ Selected Sound Shortx DANCE AND DINE AT Clearwater Lodge ON LAKE POCOTOPAUG, East Hampton, Conn. TELEPHONE EAST HAMPTON 83 A beautiful lodge on the edge of a beautiful lake. All rooms outside, with hot and cold running water. DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT 5-Piece Orchestra You'll Want to Tell Everyone About OQur CHICKEN AND STEAK DINNERS Bathing Boating Fishing Week-End Parties Banguets and Dances Arranged For Wise Smith & Co. HARTFORD All Day, Saturday as usual from 9 te 6 Make this your shopping headquarters! i A popular store with an excellent array of | I summer needs specially priced. ‘ FREE PHONE SERVICE For Our Suburban Customers from the following exchanges—Pick up your phone | and call Enterprise 1-1-0-0. FARMINGTON MANCHESTER NEW BRITAIN MIDDLETOWN GLASTONBURY ROCKVILLE MERIDEN WINDSOR BRISTOL WINDSOR LOCKS No toll charge. COLLINSVILLE SIMSBURY SOUTHINGTON MADISON CLINTON WESTBROOK SAYBROOK LYME NIANTIC NEW LONDON PLAINVILLZ