New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 16, 1930, Page 2

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4 ESDAY, JULY 16, 1930. POLISH EMIGRANTS GOING BACK HOME | ENGLAND RASTENS TWO WARSHIPS T0 EGYPTIAN WATERY PROVIDENCE BA EMPLOYE SHOT nded profits av ’hor‘ 1es the name of t overdrafts, in to recover sor his estate Simon dity, sevoral USE HERALD CLASSIFIED DRIVE GUT GRE ADS | J———— Attempt at Suicide to tha.hl\ l)c Success e, ADVITS HE CASHED WORTHL ‘733 PAPFR il MAYOR'S NEW 4 PLGECALEDTD BALT BANK RAD Al (On request. sent with stamped. ad- dressed envelope. Mr. Ripley will furui oroot ot snyiiing depicied by Bim) Reg. U. & Pat Of) BELIEVE IT OR NOT BY RIPLEY | 1T TAKES 1] GreAT FIGHTERS To MAKE JACK DE MPSEY JotnsoN| EDWARD BURES of Cleveland | -a\thoug,hhe hed no owre - THIS DOG TRAVELED COMPLETELY AROUND TrE WORLD -alone ed himself 1o 1he Post Otfice rvice - and wWas welcome 0ad Ov Sleamship SR 198 DANTPARMHANNSAPARIVRASHKACHRIASHAASKARANASIRASHAT NAME OF Qe ¥ MAN of BENARES . King Festers § EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S ('\RTOON Andrew W, \lollnn is Not Treasurer of the United States—II. T. Tate is treasurer of the t \u‘r“ being the secretary of the tre Written English—The letter for: illustrated are ~fl the modern tra 1 1S Aw”w'\ that fF sh,” by Rev. Richard Morris, IE: 01, The \1mle\~ and Ie~le~~ Horseman—DMMr. \I'I(‘Mllxluh C I A out s or legs, but despite this he I ‘vw‘ regularly. He rode in a saddle saa TO\I()RRO\\ —Lived Almost a Century Without a Drink phonetically written teference: *‘Speci- Part 1, Oxford Clarendon Press. augh of Borris Co., Carlow, came an excellent horseman aped like a churn, having him- nsla Rooge- th an oil Other de- ht rec- Speed 1 ity but it was considered ® long refueling flight s ted. Its ruising BOOMING JACKSON FOR HIGH OFFiCE range of a ROOSEVELT COMING T0 VISIT CRIPPLES New York Governor to Inspect Newington Children’s Home The guest of honor at the dedica- n ceremonies for the new building swington Ho on Friday o'clock will he Governor D. Roosevelt of New York vice president of the Internation for Crippled Children. orium, the nt and mming pool. w To Refuel At Havar developed inc building. are 1t was stricken and his bat- FEE o (b o of national attention. He is especial- ly interested in the under water nent given in the therapeutic pool and has had one of the green- houses on the grounds of the execu- tive mansion transformed ‘into a pool where he can continue his treatments He was forced to appear with and leg braces at the 1524 convention in New York and a spe- cial chair was provided for him. Supported by crutches he nominated Alfred E ith for governor of New York state and it was only on the latter's personal request that Mr. Roosevelt accepted the democratic nomination for tf New York state governorship in 152 The Warm Springs Foundation in Warm Springs, Ga. of which the governor is president, and in the establishment of which he was very instrumental, is the object of his occasional visits for treatment. H. E. MORTON SPRAINS ANKLE Police Commissioner Harry E. Morton is confined to his home on Arch street because of a sprained ankle, sustained when he stepped into a hole at the seashore several days ago. . tle for healt HOF AR FAVEN CRASHES IN SoUTH dea where Purchased Last Winter “K of New Haven" was pur- the Detroit on-stop re- we ouble this s empty fueling flight to § flight 1 durin long 1 ship nd if we all killed en we ' Lieut. Commander George Pond 50 poor. selected as co-pilot. The ship ed as fitted out and the takeoff ten- t spread rap- vely was set for the of the coon about all the full moon in April % t the scene where the Delays in tests and weather de- | c down |layed the flight until late in May ¥ examined the | Then, after 4 start from Hariford tooth vanted 10 ex- the paste company in South Ame time FOR BEST RESULTS | USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS e TN Lincoln Spring Water To Be Used On Cruiser Louisville, Ky July 16 (P— Water from the spring where Lincoln dfank as a boy will be used for christening the new cruiser Louisville September 1 at Puget Sound, Washington. Mayor Harrison has accepted an offer from the Ladies' Lincoln league of Hodgenville, birthplace of the Civil war president, to supply the water from the Lincoln spring. MACDONALD WILL - START FOR WEST Sell-Confessed Perjurer to Em- hark for California 16 (A -— John f-admitted per- Baltimore, Ju MacDonald, whose s¢ ured testimony role in the conviction of Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings on murder start for y first leg of the trip he wants to take to officially and personally tell au- thorities of the coast at the 1916 trials. Donald party will go from to New York, where it oined by Frank P. Wi stern attorney for Mooney there it will go to of Chicago, Hilary W. q Ru- zicka, announced. When depai- ture from New York will be made is n the hands of Mr. Walsh. Attorneys Going Also The recanting witness will be ac- by his attorneys and Ed- Nockels, secretary of the ieration of Labor. ed from MacD om by way attorneys, by the prosecution in per- testimony given at the trials of 4 Billings. planted a suitcase the bomb which Kkilled 40 during the Prepared rade in San F sworn affidavit t here F never had seen the two to their cells in the San jaill w they were pointed ou prosecution officials State to Pay Expenses @ : fornia has pl the trip from Balti farin ve petitioned to hav ed, and Walsh holds ng them to be reopen- evidence. made by ':.- Property a FIREMEN $10 oble of the ceipt of hael O'Mara . with ation of the serv t the fire in O Y eck will be deposited s pension fund played a leading | state he lied . REESSTORUSREGER S /2o JULY SERIES NOW OPEN JOIN! EW BRITAINCOQOPERATIVE SAVINGSANDJOANAISOCIATION SOVIETS FOMENT LABOR TROUBLES :Labor Department Witness Tells of Strikes Reds Started New York, July 16 (®» — Com- | munists were charged today in ts-s.j | timony before the special house in- | vestigation committee with foment- ing strikes as one means of over- throwing the government. The wit- ness was Charles G. Wood, sioner of conciliation in department at Washington. Wood was the first witness to be heard and probably will be followed by Michael Lyons, New York police inspector. Tells of Activities The witness declared that com- munists had centered their activities at Passaic, N. J. New. Bedford, Mass., greate w York, and in Gastonfa, N. C. He said that they instituted strikes and then made every effort to prevent settlement of disputes over wages, working con- | ditions and hours. Workers in textile mills at Passaic as well as in other places where strikes were conducted under com- | munist leadership were often intimi- dated and thousands driven from employment, he said. Before the witness took airman Hamilton Fish, Jr., of the committee announced that repre- sentatives of the Corporation, official commercial agency of the Soviet Union in the United States, had consented to ap- pear voluntarily before the commit- tee next Tuesday He explained that the committee has decided not to call William Z.| Foster, communist leader, now serv- ing a prison sentence for inciting a riot in Union Square, New York, on March 6, because efforts might be e said, by communists, to t his escape. Studert Led Strikes In his testimony Commissioner Wood said that Albert Weisbord of Brooklyn, a graduate of New York Unive and of the Harvard Law school had conducted strikes in 1926 extile mills. He, with had succeeded of people and as a result $500,000 and through the country had ”‘lvil betwe: $£600,000, with which to carry on the strike, the witness said In conducting strikes, Wood said “apparently they do not want to reach a settlement with the employ- He said communists “stopped the labor department from time to me when we arranged for settle- s through arbitration which we considered satisfactory to both the cers and the employers.” ‘he witness added that he felt the communists were creating much un- | necessary trouble for the employed textile and other mills. a result of the Passaic, strike only 14.0 con N 9,000 of em- by the rned to work lson of Maine witness g 5000 secured Wood said they had gone nills for worl In describing the textile strike in New Bedford, Mass. . Wood said that a local organization initi- ated the walk-out and within a week t leaders, 1ding Fred Albert Weisbord Jake had come to w Bed- n four weeks had sc- ) members of the ¢ from the 30,00 in the strike e. he said nists left town. Blames Communists under Rep- At the the com- ques- the direct respo: OVER You’d Have Today IF— commis- | the labor | the stand | Amtorg Trading| the disorders at the Gastonia, N. C., strike, beginning in April 1929 on the communists. He said Fred B. 1 had worked in a mill there under an assumed name and secretly ' or- | ganized the employes and with the | assistance of his colleagues began | the strike. | Nearly 1,000 employes were af- | fected, he said, all of them beiy | white and native-born Americai Without making any arrangemerd to protect the strikers and witho | intending to negotiate settlements ¢ the disputes between the companies and employes, the communists led the walk-out, Wood said. Representative Eslick, / of Ten- | nessee, asked the witness if it was | not true that the communists kept up a constant conflict between the strikers and workers in the mill, which led to a pitched battle in which persons were killed. Wood answered in the affirmative and added that the communist leaders | were 100 per cent responsible.” Will Not Arbitrate | Wood said that the agitators had | no desire to arbitrate the differences but used the strike as a mcans of | procuring funds from sympathizers, | which they converted to the use of | their affiliated international ‘or- | ganization | The wi ess explained that he had attempted to bring about negotia- tions for a settlement of'the dis- putes in ew Bedford, Passaic and Gastonia and that it had been im- possible to obtain an agreement with the communist leaders, The session closed with Wood on the stand He plans to discuss the co: nist activities in the New York shoe industry dur- ing the afternoon session GAT RESGUED FROM TREE AFTER 3 DAYS ON LINB Pet Though at 12 oelock and Wednesday. | to Have Run Up to High Perch to Escape Dog— Boy Gets “Pussy” Down A small boy “shinnied” Harvard street last night and rescued a cat owned by Mrs. | Oszaja of that address. The feline had not been seen about the premi- ses since last Saturday and it is be- lieved it scampered up the tree to pe a dog and was afraid to come down. up a treo near 39 Frequently during past few days its cries could be plainly heard but nobody could locate it until last night, when a passerby sighted it. Dog Warden Rouskie was detailed by the police to effect a rescue but the boy did the trick Ransacker Reported | In Stanley St. Home A strong box containing two | watches, a string of gold beads. & necklace, a gold ring with garnet setting, a gold bracelet, a Burritt | Savings Bank book, a Christmas club book and a Vacation club book on a local hank insurance papers on a fur coat and a deed to a cemetery lot in Glastonbury, was stolen yes- terday from the home of Mrs. Ber- tha Sears, 550 Stanley street, accord- ing to her report to the police last night. Sergeant P. A. McAyay of the detect burgau is investigating. DORBUCKS VISIT CITY and Mrs. Anthony A. Dor- formerly of this city, now of part of suburban Philadelphia, are spending their vacation in New Britain Mr. Dorbuck is former secretary of the boys' department of the Y. M. C. A. and for a number of years has been a salesman for Landers, Frary & Clark. Mrs. Dorbuck was formerly Miss May Mieczkowski and was prineipal of the Osgood Hill school for & number of years. |, Mr buck, Germantown, $600,000.00 AND ABSOLUTE SAFETY At Least $1,000.00 You had invested but $10 a month in this Co-Operative Savings Plan il years ago— ain’s oldest and safest savings in- stitutions. Over a million dollars have been paid to members. 1300 men and women have children through college, created foundations for future comfort and security—All members of this association, which has re- turned to them 5%9, on every dollar deposited. HATCH BUILDING 24 Washington Street Phone 73 one of New Brit- built homes, sent

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