New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 12, 1930, Page 19

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NEW BRITA DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1930. CORONER PROBING GROTON SLAYINGS First Degree Murder Charge| Against Bogue Expected New London, Aug. 12 (A — Cor- oner Edward G. McKay of Norwich was in Mystic this afternoon inter- viewing persons residing in the vi- cinity ot the residence of Mrs. Eva Roberts, who, wifh her alleged lov- er, Ole Ostberg, was killed Satur- day State police of the lodging of a first degree murder charge against Stanley S. Bogue. Sev- eral witnesses have been hrought forward who have stated that Bogue | Birth Record | | Groton bar- | racks are laying groundwork for the A son was born early this morn- ing to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Larson of 114 Carlton street, at New Brit- ain General hospital. A son was horn Monday at New Britain General hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Richard McNamara of 55 Oak street. DESERT RAILROAD MAY BE RUN AGAIN Arabian Line Built for Pilgrims | Carries No Freight | ‘Washington, D. C., Aug. 12—Eight | ot “Travel of a vast pilgrim army in picturesque array ended with the coming of the railroad Then in 1914 came the World War and Turkey used the pilgrim railroad as an iron whip to keep Arabia loy Mountain ranges between the rail- road and the Red Sea protected it from attack by the Allies until the insurrection.” f’ersonalsl | Mr. and Mrs. Adolph C. Bigge and daughter, Rachel Edna, have returned to their home in New Jer- sey after a month's visit with Mre, Bigge's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ern- est Herwig of this city. Mr. and M Everett Herwig anad family spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.’Leroy Strong at the lat- [ter's summer home at Cornficld Point. | Mr. and Mrs. tained Mr. and this city Leroy Strong enter- Mrs. George Denny and Mr. and ,Mrs. haal planned the crime for some time [ hundred miles of railroad that be- | George Denny, Jr., of Hartford, at and the coroner was confining his examination today to those who are believed to have knowledge of pre- meditation. The coroner said he ex- pected to hold a formal inquest to- morrow and that his finding in the | case "would probably be'submitted before the end of the week. Bogue, who slashed his wrists and | throat with a razor blade following the dual Killing, is recovering at the county jail, and the police said his self inflicted wounds were of a mi- nor nature. » MAY SET UP RANGE FOR AIR GUNNERY Army Officials Considering Two Sites Near Grot fon Hartford, Aug. 12 () — An aerial gunnery range for use of the regu- lar army aviation vice ablished in Connecticut if present plans of army officials materialize. Yesterday Lieutenant Robert M. ‘Webster, aviation instructor for the Connecticut National Guard, manager, flew to Groton, where they met Major William O. Ryan and Lieutenant Colonel John M. Howard, regular army officers. The possibil- ity of establishing an acrial gunnery range in this state was discussed and, according to the Hartford men, met with considerable favor. d Stone’s ranch at },a<t Lyme, | now used by the Connecticut Nation- al-Guard, and Trumbull field at| Groton are the two places under consideration at present by federal officials. The final decision will not de for some time. Army offi- cials in Washington are keenly in- terested in locating t#e proposed gunnery range in Connecticut it was stated. The range would be avail- able for use of the National Guard air forces Real Estate News Warranty Mary Furman to John A. Ander- son. Last strect Richard Neary to M. H MecClintock street Joseph Pigel to Jozefa #ka, Market street Karol Tomasiak czyk. Corbin avenue John Baldesari to Mary Baldesar, | Btanley street Mortgage Ahern to Savings Bank of Britain, §4, ranklin Camp, et al, Bakszan- to Leon Kowal- B.J New, square Drn er Instantlv Killed | ~ When Auto Crashes Tree Waterbury, Aug. 12 (P—Gilbert Donnell, 24, of Madison, I, a‘sum- mer camper at Lake Quassapaug, near here, was instantly killed early today when his automobile went out of control on a back road and crashed into a tree atshigh speed “The machine, in which Donnell rode alone, was reduced 1o twisted metal It was folind by other motorists rest- on its top with Donnell pinned ath Other be young men, two or three in from Illinois were tellow cotiagers of the accident vic- tim. It was said that Donnell was on his way to Waterbury to meet the friends and bring them back to the cottage when the fatal accident oc- curred. towns LOS ANGELES OVER PORTLAND Portland, Me., Aug. 12 (P—The United States naval dirigible Los An- gele flying from Newport, R. I., passed ov heart of the city at . 1:08 p. m, E. . T. today. She circled and headed sou | Men Your $2,500" ’—For saving $16.25 per month for 120 months. Over 185,000 ambitious men and women use our 36-year-old Plan. Wilte for helphl free booklet, “‘Enjoy Money." Sand booklet, “Enjoy Money," te — {rearch; Nome.. Addrens. 00 leests SYNDICATE FOUNDED)894 99 West Main Street New Britzin Tel.i 3663 Sscond National Bank Bldy: NEW HAVEN ©IPrERS 1h 81 PRINCIPAL erTiES will be | and | Captain H. H. Mills, Hartford airport | | 50 miles by | gins in a desert, runs through a | desert and ends in a desert, car- | | ries no freight, and whose only po- | tential passengers are pilgrims may | soon be running again. Mohammedans of all ions; Persians, Egyptians, yrians, Mordecans, raqi, Javanese and ['petitioned Abn Saud, King of Hejaz, to reconstruct the Damascus-Me- | | dina Hadj Railroad that was de- stroyed during the World War. | Sheiks and Turks Aboard | “Glistening black ‘Abdul Hamid,' | | puffing and blowing smoke, with | its whistle screaming to an empty | desert, pulled its first string of | .nmhm, loaded with robed sheiks from the desert, and fezzed, be- :nurded gilt-braided Turks from | )amascus into Medina in 1908,” | | says a bulletin of the National Geo- graphic Society from its headquar- | ters in Washington, D). C., “but only | after three sheep had been sacri- ficed by high priests in front of its ‘camel catcher.’ Medina, the termi- | nus, is only 200 miles north of holy | Mecca. | | ‘Qydered by the Sultan, paid for by faitiful Mohammedans through- | out the world, designed by a Ger. man engineer, built by Italian, Pol- | ish, Hungarian, and Turk engineers, using Itelian, Greek, Turk and | Montenegrin labor, the = completed | pilgrimage express ran regularly |\ |vntil Bedouins hcgan planting | bombs in 1917. Some of its rails| were made in America, some ml France, some in Belgium; the cars | the pilgri rode in were manu- factured in Belgium, while ‘Abdul |Hamid’ and the other engines that | | whirled them through desolation | were German. Christians built it | Christians cquipped it, but they could not ride on the railroad of | the ‘faithtul.’ | Railway Banished Strange Parade | “The pilgrim railroad banished one of the most remarkable proce: sions in the world, one witnessed by | few Christians, because the great Mecea caravan whose weary, toiling legions once numbered more than 16,000 men and thousands of cam- els opened its tents only to Moham- | medans. “Every true Mohammedan burns with hope t malke the Hadj, that is, the trip to Mecca and Medina, holiest of Islam holies, It the jour- | ney costs his life. as well as his for- tune, s0 much the better. There is | greater” glory in paradise for those who die making the Hadj. “Many qf those who travel by land gather at Damascus in Syria. To go by sea. as thousands do in our softer civilized days, earns the pilgrim less merit than to make the strength-sapping, overland jour- ney through sun-burned valleys be- tween black rock wails, balanced ou an evil-tempered camel, 8rink- | ing the luke-warm water of desert wells, and risking cholera Racketeerinz Anfong Bedouins “Onc» outside Damascus the great caravan used fo hait until all companies assembled and until the caravan leader had buttered the palm of the desert Bedouins. To pass safely through the desert, free from attacks by jhe crafty| Bedouins, fat bribes were paid every vear “Convoying A pilgrim army one thousand miles through an almost waterless desert was no easy task. Everything was minutely organized. | The Persian 1 s were grouped to- | gether: Syrians kept to their tion: sects and tongues and nation- seemly confused Camel complex- | Turks, | Algerians, | Tunisians have s split 110 manageable units waited for orders. to bring grumbling beasis to the rid- the tent corps was prepared to down the camp and rush it head to the desert well the moment the caravan marched. There was even a market street that keen Syrian merchants from Damascus set up the moment the host halted. a noisy smelly market, where pilgrims bought food and where Bedouins of the desert flock- ed to buy cloth and bright trinkets. At night the camp twinkled in the plain as hundreds of candles were lighted within paper lanterns that swung from poles hefore tent doors The Camel line Forms | “Before dawn a cannon shot echoed over the camp. The signal! cursed in many {osgues stumbled over tent ropes in | be off. Squealing| nass hoys their next they their haste to | camels bent their knees protesting | against, the riders climbing up. Dogs | barked, stray Damascus dogs that | went with the caravan annually {o Mecca like degs that ally them-| selyes to hunters walking through forests. Tied nose to fail in long files tha camels swung along fo the kling music of a pilgrimage sung | by the bells tied to the ugly beasts. | The great caravan was on the no journey for a weakling. | Sometimes it traveled as much as| steady going out of 2 i #Some of the camels carried huge | | curtained litters on their backs for women, for wealthy pilgrims and for dying pilgrims. When a pilgrim on Hadj felt the spirit leaving his body he willingly spent ihe last of his savings to die in luxury 50 he hired one of the camels bearing the ‘hing compartment reserved for dying mon. Friends lifted his sick- ening body in. When the caravan <lopped they would look in, find him dead. roll out the hody. bury it fi the sand that has received so | many bodies of men and camels, and prepare the litter for the next | weary traveler. 4 | at the summer cottage of | Lagenza and F. | That hours | © their summer home’ Cornfield Point over the past week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Guest and daughter, Elaine, spent last Surday Mr. and Cornfield at Mrs, Jeroy Strong at Point in Saybrook. = ———— Deaths Wladyslaw Pletnik Wladyslaw Pietni, aged,49, of 66 Overlook avenue, died this morning at New Haven hospital after an operation. He was born in Poland hut for the past 10 years had been a resi- dent of this city. He was a mem- ber of the carpenters union in this city for many year He was a | member of the Holy Cross church. Surviving are threq daughters, Misses Gladys, Rose and Josephine, all of this city. Funeral arrangements .in ct of Frank P. Duffy, are incomplete. rge ’ Funerals Benedict Schweltzer Funeral services for B Schweitzer, aged 65, who died day at the home of his daughter, Mrs. A. J. Bottomley of 130 Roxbury road, were held this morning at 9 o'clock at St. Peter's church. Rev. Joseph Rewinkle, pastor, was the celebrant of the requiem mass. The pall bearers were Simon Wil- fred and Herman Herzog of the St Peter's society, Ired Yost and Charles Hess of Court Charter Oak | Foresters of America, and Charles Maier and Edward Dahm, represent- {ing the Concordia socicty Rev. Father Rewinkle conducted the committal services at the g Burial was in St. Mary's cemetery. Mrs. Otto Lenz Funeral services for Mrs. Alice A Lenz, aged 23, wife of Otto l.enz of 179 Hart street, who died Saturday. were held this afternoon at 2:30 at the home and at John's Ger _utheran church at 3 o’clock v Martin W. Gaudian, pastor, officiat ed. Burial was in rview ceme- tery. Martin Buzanowski Funeral services for Martin Ruz- anowski, 52, of 110 Rockwell ave- nue, who was killed Saturday i Plainville, in an automobile acci- dent, were held this morning at § o'clock at Holy Cross rch. Rey Stephen Bartkowski, pastor brated the requiem high m The pall bearers. members of Group No. Polish National A! liance, were B. F. Karpinski, J. Kapica, F. Stochmal. §. Lowicki. S. Dlogolecki. The flower bearers were M. Bartusiewicz P. David. S. Banulski, S. Sabatowicz and J. Wiater. Rev. Victor Piaskowski co ted the committal services at the grave Burial was in Sacred Heart ce ery. John Rouik Funeral services f of Broad Brook, were held this m at Holy nity street. Rev. John celebrated the high quiem Burial cemetery John Rozik who died yesterdas ng at 10 o'clocic church on Beay Romza, pastor mass was Holy in the Michael Semrau Funeral services for Semrau, aged 48, of Richard nue, Newington, who died Sunday will be held tomorrow afternoon ut 30 at the home and at 3 o'clock St. John's German lutheran church Rev. Martin W. Gaudian pas vill officiate. Burial wilt be In Fairview cemeter . e CARD OF THANKS wish to thank all friends and neighbors We tives, rela- for as | their kindness and sympathy shown us during the death of our beloved husband and father, Stanley La bieniec, also for the beautiful flor#! offerings, Signed MRS. LABIE and Famil — e TO WHOM 1T MAY CONCE! NOTICE 1S HEREBY . by virtue of a writ of ex issued and delivered to me by Euf i. Danberg, Clerk of the City Court of the City of New Britain, I will sell at public auction, fourteen (14) from date, at 2 P. M. DST, which will be on the 26th day of August, 1930, at the Public Sign Post in the City of New Britain, the fol- lowing goods and chattels, to-wit 6 electric fans, 5 mirrors, 8 chairs 18 electric light fixtures, millin ery cases, 3 class hosiery cases, 1 crd tables, 25 dress stands, 5 reels National register, 100 hangers, Mosler wafe, 4 stools, 1 sewing chine, 1 desk, roll top. 1 Royal typ writer, 1 Sundstrand adding m chine, 2 work benches, 1 lot dre 1 perfection sealer. Dated at New Britain, Connecticut this 12th day of August, 1930, MARTIN H. HORWITZ, Deputy Sherift days ma CROP NEWS BRINGS |Stock Market Takes Bullish Tip - SMALL LIQUIDATION' From Weather Bureau Predlctmg Crop Damage Not Bad as Feared Gurb Drilts Aimlessly While Speculators Bide Time e Yor curb driftc D - tod. The Al- camps ew Augfl, d 1 aimlessly both speculative that prive lr‘-\dsyre being tested, neith- er though seemed to believe the current was parficularly eager to show any aggre: result that the market dragged along inconclu- sively. There rading in response able crop ne ession, with the was some seling in the early to the un hich gave the bears something to t out. However, liquidation Al and soon dried up without affecting price bly. Moderate raliies ap fe spot but the ready to & an to Ford of Eng profit rom poinf advance, W ported at the lower actively.. Te and there ing in | Copptr | numer s appreci ared i st seemed mor chnicolor was a flurry of short se American Cynamid Bessemer, Fokker, s few other specialties Bond & Share fluctuated on a f Moves Super- turnover, American t Utilities ra H ntal Ame alths Power * United idson were Com- on can monse ' rallied 1 buying, dull ared on cased L rdening. ent com- to be unimpor- short selling, autious ng wed in t and the to sually app group proved There s some but it was of all money pany ren per cent HIGHER TENDENCY IN BUND MARKET | As Insn utional Buying Waues New Yo endency to displayed by trading ing as call course of money demands from the ns influenced a dit ppeared bend buying to son fiuenced some selling For the sccond no new financing of was t ce According cles, s Nat h will ot ihe ments, Domestics Active > activity in today ed domes- mov owly ir and e list moving eign group with most forward slowl ago district s was add TO CONSOLIDATE Aug railroad RAI [t oda s Conne LIN Boston 1 Maine at on Sept. 1 iivision will be con COMMANDS BARGE 1 ear-old Arge in 19, n's your sk st been fo Meadows, who Grand J and ha When s dles was 1 die vn W Ay in the Have $2,50Q\ By Saving $16.25 a Month EE our announce- ment on the financial page of this newspaper. INVESTORS SYNDICATE FOuNDED 1894 99 West Main Street NEW BRITAIN Shares Turn Upward at Midday With Pivotal Is- sues Mostly Their Losses. Regaining New Yo A iod of gloom crop reports, a bullish 1 12 () the After a govern- stock market p from the T s only moderately nd the list turn- eavy t pe over 00k man today hu impre ed ho Jast det porting hoard's the 1 was not as 1 forec rioration sts of athe for a scasonal res close lower of the e bearish r orts during tk market grew inc the final nsact issues as Unit B 1. Can, American Tele- dio los points. Harves! pped 4 and ( iropped than 12, Eastman Kod burn and nion Pacific lost 8. Mail ord 1d Rail shares also closing tone wez sales app to m day, sponse morn- turing ns Steel phone to a more new “as ports mad close previous o corn drop from J eeded mos reporting b ,,.p . five drop of n period of weeks t of reduction Farm ts con- pressure, reflecting ex- of low farm pt imple pectatio reha power Amtorg Corp of 1 ders Fdy om Alco & Fzn Pw l.oco Smelting mm'v Atlan B nrl\ Beth 1S B “anad Can Pac ro De P CMSPP G R &P Chrysler M Cotumbia ¢ Cong'm Con Gas Contin'ta Pro rible Wit Dav Che rtis I'asmn Koda Illec Aut Llec Pw Erie R Iox Film A Freeport Tex Am Tnk Asphalt Genl Electric o Genl Foo Genl Motors Pub Genl Rwy L Gold CGeodrich Hudson Tnepira Intl C ntl il Intl Joh & 1 Gen Genl Rub Motor or ment Harvest Nicl Tel & ~Manville | Kresge Co I\v MK & slont Ward Nash Motors at Biscuit Nat Cash Re N Y Central N Haven R R North Am Co . Packard Mit Pan-Am B Par't Lasky Phillips Pet Pub Pullman Co Radio Corp 1-Keith-Or Rand Rep Irn & St Roy Dutch Serv N rs Rocbuck clair Oil outhern Pa Southern Ry Stand Br Standard Std Qil Ca $td Oil o A Carbide Union Pacific U'td Gas & 1 d Corp We Wool HARTFORD STOCK RKailroads nks and Trust Companies | Life, Indem facturing Companies ASURY BALANCE EXCHANGE 1444 - lL Wall Street Briefs stockh & oxima lephone ribed a o the com the pany from mo ] PUTNAM & Co, Wl“.?fli‘wkad 31 WEST MAIN ST., NEW BRITAm 5 e ‘TEL. 2040 WARTIORD OFFICE, § CENTRAL ROW, .. TRL. 23188 Telephone Co. Southern New England RIGHTS (when issued) Bought' and Sold EDDYBROTHERS £ G2 Members Hartford Stock Exchange NEW BRITAIN, 29 W. Main Street HARTFORD MERIDEN 33 Lewis Street 3 Colony Street We Offer: 50 Shares EAGLE LOCK HINCKS BROS & CO Members New York Stock MAIN STREET H. C. MOTT, MANAGER National Dairy Products Borden es acted as host to Eir went ta ago 10 re- he burgh ithor AUTOS IN SCOTLAND Scotlanrc chine of" ch he paid s ar smokes He one AUSTRIAS BEACON POWERFUL S SCHOOLMATE DIF NEA New Ym'l Bureau was in defiance of a curse put upon their love that Edward (left) and Mrs. Florence Keller (center) \wn married, tured above, in Newark, N. Four months ago Henry heller—then MMrs. Keller's husband ‘dward's brother— commit left a note which “I will do you more d than alive. Florence, ou always remem- ber that I loved vou once, but die hating He was reported and ma ou.’ 00000 | Lo have killed himself when he learned of his wife's love for his brother.

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