New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 30, 1930, Page 2

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5 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUS T 30, 1930. — e —— TEXAS ATTORNEY HILLS SELF WiTh NYTROGLYCERINE Asked For Tnvestigation IART WILL PERVIT EETING OF REDS' *olitical Meeting DRAMATIC RESCUE OF WAN ON'ROOF Crowd Sends €p Cheer Officer | 10 pon against out the rope as s hag was low vost neighborhood specta ir. one hour from Liegky was in minutes from had arrived, he the hospital Soon after Mr. Liegey His hodv was uises but phs #ind any fractured bones. rez Ragged Civilian Garb ) Fools Crap Shoot er N A 30 (UP) New TALIAN REPUBLICANS PREPARE FOR CAMPAIG of ~torm anization Local Poles to Attend Jubilee at Middletown Two Motorists Killed As Car Strikes Pole Grand Jury Wiil Probe New Facist Association Few Officers Trained In All Flving Phas SUICIDE. PLANS FUNERAIL CNI(C 102, MAN ATTENDS PI CATCHES HUGE CATFISH SCORCE D WOOL SAVED Mass (On .request. eent with stamped. ad- dressed envelops, Mr. Ripley will furnish oroot of anything depicted by him). (Reg. U. & Pat Of) IBELIEVE IT OR NOT BY RIPLEY HHRIDATS T ing ok Porfus COULD DRINK POISON WITHOUT 1LL EFFECTS Tnventoy of the Anlidole “MITHRIDATE ((or&mmng T2 mgredlehls) « £ N/ B (el < | FiRe OPAL {WITH A SHRIMP | INSIDEIT- Cuwned by James Ford, Wiimington cal MO > Ted T Mo m <momTrmomg MO MO m< — (= 2 2= e (S e fie= =il s & thir==ultr =D =i triier M- oD WXV opr—m ol SE = me o) e i ©w» T — Gak{r= meli )y == (Y Setie tnn) =i (72 Sl VS Aol (in) e O mOim <= = OimiEr MU SS a <mMmgogmrTEmmom MO M Ted Tmio m LR L “ JHE DEVIL HELPS HIM * CAN BE READ 194480 WaYs ~— BEGINNING AT TE. capiTaL T AT Eier Zin S A o450 [ o = - WATER FROM THE ROCF OF THIS HOUSE ~— FLOWS INTO 2 DIFFERENT RIVERS — 36 MILES APART Swensburg, Tnd @ 199 kg Fatnes Syndiat, Tnee Gren Brivn rghs ruxres EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S CARTOON th of a Mountain, Mt. Izalco—Mount Izalco, a volecano, of San Salvador, Central { February 23, 1770. Since its birth it has never ceased to erupt ashes h three crate It is contizmously enveloped in a column of fire, and ided by it at night. Hence its neme of the “Lighthouse of Salvador.” An Albatross Cannot Fly From the Deck of a Ship—My statement about the albatr ictual experiment, Some ornithologists explain it on the ground that the wings of i nble those of an airplane to a greater degree than those of any other bird. at the albatross requires a long runway before it can rise into the air. TUESDAY—Honoring the Potato he L orn” atros: se Codfish Brings l\- ews Of Long Lost Sailor Boston, Aug. 30 (P—A cod fish with a toothbrush in its stomach was brought in here yesterday in ;AB@ catch of the trawler “Wild Goose,” from George's Banks. The brush was inscribed with the name of William Whalen, of Longbay, Placentia, N. K. Whalen was one of 20 men lost when the steam trawler “Seiner” foundered in a storm in January 1929, off George's Banks. None of the bodies was recovered. Except for a ventilator swept up by an- other trawler, no wreckage from the lost vessel has been found. The “Seiner” was owned by the Portland Trawling company of Groton, Conn.. which also owns the “Wild Goose." gloves for good.” the Manassa maul- er declared he feels he can get into shap for another crack at the title. “I'm going to Ensenada, lowe ereeing tour and start training.” he said | _The ex-champion said he believed | Young Stribling, Primo Carnera and hmeling should stage an eli- | mination tournament, and suggested | he would like to meet the winner. DRY FORGES SEEK ILLINOIS CANDIDATE Anti-Saloon League Frowns on | Stand of Mrs, McCormick Chicago, Aug. 30 (P)—The Anti- Saloon lLeague of Illinois. hibition stand McCormick rep nominee, “entirely unsatisfactory, announced last night it support a dry independent candida George B. Safford. leag: | tendent, issued a statem | he said the entire infll organization would be “any worthy candidate’ by the dry for nce of his exerted for brought out The state Anti-Saloon actively for Mrs. McCormick & campaigning for com- gresswo nd it supported her passively in the primary campaign against Senator Charles S. Deneen The injection of an independent candidate into the race between Mrs. McCormick and James Hamilton Lewis, democrat, was forecast by althogh he mentioned no | worked when Safford, names, Mrs. O'Neill Mentioned Lottie O'Neill, ¢és Grove. first tor, has been mentioned the C Mrs of woman Holman Illinois’ FOR TROPHY RACE - DF SPEED PLANES LIGHTNING BOMBS nued worst trouble ar phone co between th two o A few telephone and signal i the Connecticut Co. were out mission last night during of the storm, cz er of cars 1o be off schedule. zency towns was completely shut o o pairing the damage all nigh Two Bolts Hit Church steeple of the ch was str lightning b ild compete Free-For-All on Program right races on the progr Hea w partly burned b years ago + bolt, doing dam sout A group of resident ty of edifice the chu the down a portior on the side facing ond striking a short er almost in the identical spot the of smoke e shingle After shed letected by gil some ud e group, time for after th rence, it fire b alarm they necessary at first ney of a house at 40 $tar doing slight dam though Mrs. O'Donnell Wins Ol house owned by Frank Mon nd accupied on or another floor by De Ellinger at 151-18 was struck with sligh vicz cwner and tive Geo th street ge Lightning Stimulant n street crt Ande ome wires sidence o ed ou were struck fou nd Maple Hil here and Hart ~tric between here wires batween SPEEDBOATS READY FOR WATCH TODAY ed From First End when Molumphy dri West home was £ ge branch onto his car, driver and slightly in Third Fatality Occurs s Cooley of Hart street was partially paralyzed for a brie period when in parked car ir Farmington, when lightning a nearby pole The slorm water sewer system wa: }taxed to capacity at the height o the storm, but no damage was re ted at the office of works department today ol Page) . will be run on Crews In Races crews for the Tuesday. five Harms- | Weod and George Wood | gl Sn . e wens wsa DEMPSEY WANTS BATTLE 7, Betty Carsta and Joe Bert Hawker and Joe | ernational race will be three heats on Sunday for the News international trophy. | Britain I, owned by Hubert| Scott- P the challenger. The | defenders are the Baby Minchas, | owned by Commodore Charles §. Moulthrop, of Bay City. Mich., and Phantom, owned by H. Luetcher Brown ,of, Houston, Te There vill be three 15 mile heats, en doctors alities of from for One More Pight Before He Quits Aug. 30 former believes h Definitely ing plane near ds Wednesday before crash had waved an to Colonel and ndbergh as they after a 24 hour is El J heavyweight Paso, Tex., Dempsey, the cr champion, fore he retires definitely from th s I'm still a young man.” Dempse caid here late vesterday, “And think I.can lick a sucker, providin, he is a big enough sucker.” Before he hangs up the roit ri eption for Von Gronau export market for Philippine today'’s program was cigars declined 30.000. in 1929 ied between the races themselves from sales of 187,000,000 the and the prospect of seeing the latest | vious year. [} The pre- | ol SPRINKLE ON CITY sy | still pers acred ck &nd 12 was grazed last night by two bolts ocking Horace street and time had signs of a fire could ho kept oc- was decided not to send floor by |1 nn ng struck a tree and knocked strik- ring | struck the public WITH “SUCKER,” HE SAYS 1L1~Hea\_\\\'elghl says He Is Good (UP)— | world' | is good for one more title bout be- the choice of the dry leaders Mrs. O'N aigned for republican, cam- Senator Deneen in his le with Mrs. Mc- admitted yesterday dry leaders from all over the had asked her to enter the torial campaign t the state party con cspoused a res Mrs avor- tion tion time all tele- o8 ¢ the g 2 num- rer- a dr Corm also promised repeal of the Mrs to vote 18th amendment if th ity of the voters favored such Mc- The Anti-Saloon league has been opposed to former tor Lewis, whose keynote speec e democratic state convention ur ed repeal of all prohibition legisla- always Sen Accuses Mrs. McCormick Referring to Mrs. McCormick's speech before the republican vention Anti-Saloon head said “The drys consider that this nounceme s made for the t votes and the leagu: an- pur- that t T aloon - hope in - | support of t will be t ) - | pendent ¢ United 5 States se ntire infl league will any worthy ought out by dry leaders of t |cnce of th bs exerted in sup candidate who ¢ | united action of t | the atate OIL BURNER EXPLODES, WORKER BADLY BURNED Employe of Arch Street Concern Re- 1s b . 4 n fuses to Remaln At Hospital After Being Treated hauffeur said to be employed .| Louis Darabus of 153 Main street £ was painfully burped about the , | face and hands late yesterday after- noon when an oil burner on which he working in Claude J. s Leroux's plumbing and heating es- ¢ tablishment at 174 Arch street ex- . ploded. He was taken to New Brit- ain General hospital for treatment but refused to stay. his reason being that he did not want to alarm his family. He was advised to remain at least for the night but he asked only that emergency treatment be given so that he might hurry home. Darabus is about 40 years of age and has been in Leroux's employ several vears. The cause of the ac- ! cident was not.known, Leroux said ?wda,\v | SHOST TO FRAT BROTHERS Leonard Schlafer, a graduate of the New Britain High school. anl now attending the College of th City of New York, is visiting at the o |home of his awat, Mrs. I. Reicher of 100 Lincoln street. Accompany- v | ing him are the officers of th 1| "Alpha” fraternity of C. C. N. Y, e Californio, after completing my ref- | finding the | league | for | con- | GARRISON TROOPS REINFORCED TODAY \Heavy Guard Maintained in \ Buenos Aires District Buenos Aires, Argentina, Aug. 30 | P1a-The garrison of Buenos Aires was reinforced heavily today with | the arrival of the eighth regiment | of cavalry from Campo Mayo with | full war equipment, a grim remind- | er of the governmant’s deternrnation | to guard its position in the | mosphere of unrest prevalent for several days. | After a night marked by gunfire in the streets hetween adherents of President Yrigoyen and opposition demonstrators in which two persons were wounded the capital today pre- |sented a wartime appearance with bodies of troops stationed in many parts of the city. This was especially trué of the | squares near the president’s house land the capital. Guards also were | Placed at the Cabildo building ad- jacent to government house and the | Banco de la Nacion. The government post office and | other public buildings surrounding the plaza had extra heavy soldier guards. at- here Nations Appear Quiet Buenos Aires, August 30 (UP)— | Buenos Aires and Argentina remain- ¢d outwardly calm today despite scattered encounters between politi- al enemies which led to shooting |and minor disorders. | The presence of warships in the | harbor and troops at the presiden- | tial palace and around government ! buildings was still unexplained, and ous unconfirmed rumors kept populace wondering what the ext move in the country's mysteri- ous political situation would be. Several outbursts of shooting, cli- maxed by the firing of approximate- |1 20 shots from an automobile into a crowd of 500 radical suporters of President Hipolito Irigoven, occur- red when a parade of Irigoyen ad- herents packed the downtown streets of the city last night el Varela, 24, was wounded seriously by gunfire from the automobile which attacked sup- porters of the president, and several others suffered slight wounds. Five who were said to omobile were not appre- One m | me T hended Varcla and his fellow demonstra- tors were grouped on a street corner | in the outski to join the followers of on foot, in dec s of the city waiting Irigoyen parade. The president travelled ted automobiles, in trucks, and on horse back as they swung down the Avenida De Buenos Aires’ principal street eaded by a br band Cheer President d Irigoven El Pr and ds labelled “Irigoyen Peace and Work." large police force asembled at tersections to facilitate the progress of the parade. Traffic was blocked on Avenida De Mayo ind in Calle Florida. The sidewalks mostly vacant. while the were filed with marchers. distributed in the afternoo tas to be on the alert and net allow the opposition to hold a parade. The national constitution authorizes citizens to take up arms de of the con ted wer,” the leaflets read. “Long live law: long live Irigoyen.” warships arrived and were the port yesterda They were t ships Mendoza, Catamaroa, and Cordoba, and the gun boats Libertad, Independencia. | Parana and Rosario. Two hundred marines were landed from the Cata- marca and marched to the naval arsenal to await further orders, Leguia Held in Prison Peru, Aug. 30 (UP) president Peru Augusto B. Leguia was held today in the prison to which he had banished many political exiles. Leguia and his son, Juan, were re- moved from the warship Admiral Grau to the island of San Lorenzo late Friday afternoon. It was under- 100d that Leguia would be placed 1 the Lima penitentiary Lieut. Alfonso Llosa was in com- mand of the heavy guard placed over the ex-president and his son. Llosa served one year of a sentence in the island prison, imposed upon him by Leguia, and was released only when the. movement headed by Lt. Col Luis Sanchez Cerro overthrew the Leguia regime Leguia will be held for trial, San- chez Cerro told the United Press. He did not indicate the tria would begin Lt. Commander Harold resigned from the United ¢ to become head of the air force under R ul face a court martial said. He alleged that Arequipa with an airplane with bambs Deserves Severe Penalty “He deserves the most severe pun- ishment because he was acting as a mercenary for the traitor Leguia” Sanchez Cerro said Grow was safe and there was no need to worry about his welfare, the foreign office stated ‘Another American, Charles . Sutton. was brought to Lima from Lambayaque and placed in grison His dentention was not expMhined Sutton has been a resident of Peru for many years and developed the | most extensive irrigation projects in history of the country. Jose Codali, a former employee of the irrigation commmission, also was arrested. Shipping and train service return- ¢d to a normal schedule today. It was learned in diplomatic cir- cles that representatives of foreign governments were making a careful study of the situation created when Sanchez Cerro's de facto government came into power. They a che shouted carried Only, dente,” A street ctreets Leaflets were streets Irigovent esterday | Seven [ anchored Form when ow. who ates navy Peruvian a, must also Sanchez Cerro Grow flew to loaded { Grow Case Delicate hington, Aug. 30 (UP) — The Commander Harold P. Grow former U. S. naval aviator now awaiting military trial in Peru, have heen | warning | authoritative quarter today. Ferdinand Mayer, American charge d'affaires in Lima,. already has been instructed to employ all means at his command to secure Grow's release. Instead of being freed by the military junta, however, the American has been charged with what virtually amounts to treason- able conspiracy and will be tried on these charges. Under international law the Unigéd Sta’ds would be privileged to interfere with Peruvian judicial pro- cedure only to the extent of seeing that Grow was given a fair and im- partial trial. Natign Can Protest Should the American be sentenced to death or given a long prison term by the military court, the United Press learned, the state department would make the strongest sort of public protest to Peru against th | execution of the sentence unless tr ) | evidence against Grow were o ove. whelming as to leave no doubt that he is guilty of the charges. Grow is 39 years old and a native of Greenville, Mich. He graduated from the Naval Academy in 1812 | and served as naval aviator during | the World War. After going {o Bra- | zil with the United States air mis- | sion, he resigned from the navy in 26 and went to Peru at President | Leguia’s request in the capacity of a | civilian to help aviation there. ANDREE PROBARLY "~ LIVED IN ARCTIC Scientist Believes Explorer Sur- vived Two Years in Wilds | Osio, Norway, Aug. 30 (P—Beliet | that Salomon Auguste Andree, Swed- {ish balloonist explorer, waited for | two years on ice-caked White Island | in the futile hope of rescie befora he died, is entertained by Dr. Adolf Hoel, head of the Norwegian gove | ernment research office in Spitz- | bergen | Dr. Hoel, one of the men of the north, thinks that An- | dree and his companions may have lived that long on the island whera heir bodies were found this month, 3 years after their disappearance on | an “attempt to fly across the north | pole in a balloon Had Good Equipment “L hold its possible,” he said Andree and his colleagues might | have been alive for from one to twol | years. They were. well-equippe with provisions, guns and ammuni tion. So it was possible for them| to kill walrus which were abundant on the island. There were alsc many birds there “At the time when Andree st in his balloon there was very drifting ice around the island should exclude theory that balloon came down further nortH that Andree and his comradeq to st learned rted; little Thi and ra Island Arctic dispatches today said tha bank of white fog had de r the entire area where the sealer Bratvaag, bearing thd bodies of Andree and his two com panions, is supposed {o be Concern for Vessels addition to the danger may indicate for the »lf, considerable concern was fel that vessels searching for the seale to put doctors and scientists aboar ped across the ice scended whicl] seale In e she reaches a warme climate may not find her at all, and will have to return te Tromsoe An | ttent broadcast to th vessel is being made by Norwegia naval vessels in the hope that th sealer's radio receiving set will pic up a message asking that she pro | ceed to a given arctic position wher; she will meet the boats wh | seeking her. | er Once Swept Streets ;- Tromsoe, Norway, Aug. 33 UM Salomon Auguste Andree, Swedis | balloonist explorer who lost bis 1 | after an attempt to cross the nof | pole in a balloon in }837, once wws streets in an Amerfcan city te | money for his food Oluf Olsen, %0 year old sail | friend, tells the story, and sage | quoted as an appropriate commal what someone has told (him Wi | said of poat Homer: “Sev | great cit mourn for Homer dea through which the living Homd | beeged for bread | Oluf and Andree were buddies an expedition to Spitzbergen in 184 and during the long winter g there Andree used to tell stories his adventures in many lands, A | how he had had to sweep streets | America Oluf doesn't rememb the city—in order to eat. “Andree was interested in all sor| of odd th Oluf says. *“IJ member one time on that expediths | he made me ghut myself up in &3 {in the dark with him for a month | that could study the effect arkness on the eyes. Andree Excited Over Test ] “By golly that was a job. Bt little while Andree would me the pupils of my eyes to see W had happened to them and occasig ally a doctor would come in and | the ends of our fingers with lam to get a blood test. Andree’ was | excited es if he had discovered !'north pole | “Well, I didn't mind so long & | pleased him, for he was a good {f low. Always he was like that. ‘ wanted to study. He told me ha B ;heen to the United States to stw | But I don't know what he stud| | there, because he told me he had| | sweep streets to get money to livy | Oluf lives in the hope of s the body of his friend when eaches here aboard the scaler M vaag, presumed here to be en § from White Island where it was covered after lying in the ic nearly 33 yvears 4 he BEE CAU ACCIDENT \ Danvers, Mass.. Aug. 30 (U When the horse he wag driving stung by a hee and bolted, G ‘Thibodeau, 48, farmnand, hurled to death under the whee his wagon TREE SITTER STRUCK Manchester, N. H.. Aug. 30 | —A bolt of lightning which st! hix tree grounded young AH g | Al Leibowitz, president; J. Goldbers. | may give rise to a ‘“delicate diplo-| Marcotte ofter he had been I'vice president; Sam Schoenfield, sec- d | retary, and Sam Speigler, treasurer | matic situation” between the United States and Peru, it was said in an 806 hours in quest of a new t sitting record.

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