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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1930. JEWS T0 OBSERVE THEIR NEW YEAR Rosh Hashamah Marks Year 8691 on Religious Calendar The Jews all over the world \\m‘Thl‘ee Held in Plot to Gat wve cclebrate their New Year, called in Hebrew “Rosh Hashanah,” day, September 23rd. According to the Bible, this holiday is to be ob- scrved but one day. The Jewish cal- endar designates this year as 5691. on Tues- Year's Day ranks in sacredne: solemnity next to the Day of Atone- ment. Its message to the world at large, as well as to the Jewish peo ple. can best be understood this holiday is considered in the light of its historical development. The origin of this holiday r traced back to the ¢ indulged in agricultur All Semitic peoples be their agricultural year with the first month of autumn. According to Tible, there was to be a holy cor cation of the people on this « trumpets were to be sounded special sacrifices were to be ed at the Temple of Jerusalem particular meaning and this holiday are not set plicitly. but from ancient times on, no doubt, it was regarded as the New Year of the agricultnral cycle by the Jewish people. With the dispersion of Israel tliroughout the world and the | destruction of the Temple, the agri- cultural background of this festival disappeared almost entirely, and it umed a higher religious and spir- itual aspect. The Rabbis of old clothed New Year's Day with new | meaning and significance. They re- garded this day as the beginning of and r- The of ex purpose forth when | | shofar. The symbole act of sound- |ing the Shofar is intended to stir | the heart of man and awaken him | | BEEVE GUNS PO CAPONESHUE D - Weapons to Chicago 18 (P—The pro- goods com- r men were ar- in what police be- a plot to provide m or Al Capone’s gang- ¢ and t rested yes lieved to he chine gun; sters in Chica clins Bertsinger, owner of Hudson g Goods Com- Joseph Bona- Brooklyn, and Charles De N proprietor of a bowling alley in Buffalo, were arrested. Folice said De Netto's brother was lain some time ago in Buffalo, ¢ Buffalo police, searchi: 1t the request of New horitics, had found pany ventu » ot tto, two guns already ha {hrough operatives police said. Dertsinger, at e store police belicved the guns rchased, insisted he was in- t and that he had been tricx achine nt west detectives were inclined to | believe his story. Bertsinger said suns to men who agent for the C he had sold six represented as ol Coal Company o Detroit. He said it was not un- usual for legitimate concerns to buy weapons to protect their property Police . raid, hcwever, that the apitol Coal Company went out of months to the essential aspects of the day. | DETROIT POLIGE. " NAB HUGE STIL Fquipment Seized Said to Be, Worth Nearly $1,000,000 | 18 (A—Police early | oyed | roit, Sept. today announced they had dest |an illicit distillery which had been | doing a $1.000,000 a month business | for several months. In a raid late last night they dis- | covered and seized the largest al- cohol plant found in Detroit since | the 1Sth amendment went into ef- | fect. The raiders said the value of | | the eclaborate equipment and ma-| terials was $1,000,000, while con- | servative estimates placed it at more | | ators of the plant escaped by of rope ladders from rear| | windows, while police were batter- | |ing down doors and partitions. The | building, located near the center of | the uptown, business district at| Woodward avenue and Grand Boule- vard, formerly was used by the fire rtment but was abandoned and several ve: ago. | Even Had Elevators | | The big distillery was equippe. | with a telephone system and a bat- | tery of elevators. There was evii-| | ence that it was operated by expert | Each vat was furnished with a bul- | letin board, giving the formula used nd instructions as to temperature nd time of heating. There was a well designed ventilating system for lcarrying fumes to the roof. | Lighty thousand gallons of grain | h was found in vats and 20,000 illons of grain alcohol was ready for shipment. ere was a crating department and evidence that five gallon tins of alcohol were shippe |in carload lots from a railroad sid- | | m | Jersey ISHBEL MACDONALD SHIES FROM PARLIAMENT SEAT Declines Offer Made By Representa- tives of Moray and Nairn Constituency London, Sept. 18 (A—DMiss Ishbel, daughter of Prime Minister M Donald, will not be a candidate for | parliament. Representatives of the Moray and Nairn constituency, embracing Los- mouth, fishing village home of her father, asked her to stand for parliament from that district, but e has declined. She is a member of the London county council and has been active in social work, but thus far has re- fused every opportunity to become an M. P. SHIP'S OFFICERS TELL OF STORM Hurricane Tore Clothing From | Grew on Steamer’s Deck New steamship Orleans, Sept. 18 (P—The Commercial ~ Bostonian was tied up in port today, badiy crippled from the hurricane that struck off the North Carolina coast last Friday, and her captain and crew told spectacular stories of the | storm. The steamship arrived with its ra- dio antennae, lifeboats and after house torn away, but with its mis- cellaneous cargo intact Captain Sexton M. Berrgren, of City, said the ship encoun- tered the hurricane off Frying Pan 'Says He Will Not Include Like- sculptor of the Stond useless. The Commercial Bostonix plies between New Orleans and Philadelphia. ants in a basement vault, ransacked nd stole § ATLANTA DECLARES WAR ON RADIO AND SAXOPHONE - - BORGLUM DENIES - GEN, GRANTRUMOR 0,000 worth elry and liquor. The lives of vietims were endangered by focation. When released, C lared he would spe tten d every cent of his down Ordinance Provides Heavy ife if Fines For Those Disregarding kling the New Nolse Curfew Atlan decreed tonight and every at 11 p. m., for student A new ordina im T in the ci radios or al instruments All that is nece He rrendered July other night adio fans and saxo- ness With Confederates 18 (P—A denial ned to include a like- cral U. 8. Grant in the proposed Confederate memorial on Stone Mountain was inferred in a is the complaint of telegram received here yesterday |the alleged offender from Gutzon Borglum, sculptor, pelled to face a police vho is now at Rapid City, South i Dakota Augutus Lukeman 4 Borglum as the memorial sculptor, after Borglum's controver- sy with the Stone Mountain Me- morial Association five years age, charged in a letter made public here recently that Borglum had pro- posed that a figure of General Grant be carved with those of Con- e leaders on the mountain. 1an succeeded Borglum as Mountain me- | but stopped ago when ociatoin whereby the city of Atlanta would & > work and re-employ Bo, was form- ed recently. ‘ provides Atlar that he p! Sept A unse of mu- neighbors and will be comi- court judge SPENDS § YEARS FINDING BURGEARS Man Vowed He Would Trace Down His Assailants who supplant- RELIEF IN | MINUTE! The very minute Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads are applied to Corn: wder Toes, Callouses or Bu all pain is gone —forgotte: The soothing, healing medic: tion they contain gives you this quick relief. At the same time they cushion the sore spot and remove the cause — frictionand pressure of shoes. Zino-pads are small, thin, dainty, protective, guaranteed morial 1 more t of the memor exhausted. A p ands of doll (rersts of n ille to t the and almost back liberty who plotted a robbery | Over gang of men lire grain oper Downers Grove, THEY'RI VISITORS NOW | London, Sept. 18 (UP) guests in Great Britian in the future will be known as “visitors” and not “aliens” by order of the home of- fice. “oreign eight years a: locked Cu his wife, his brother, and four serv- | CORNS CALLOUSES — BUNIONS come almost to the end of the trail. All that remained was for Rosen- berg to be convicted. At the request of Cutten, Rosen- was released yesterday and will triec ber, not be TRUTHFUL BISHOP cpt. 18 (UP)— Johannesburg ad- to his congregation he had sleep during the interpreta- his own sermon while fn Africa. ne, Eng. hop of safe and sure, No danger this of blood-poisoning as with your corns or callouses, of acid burn from old=- time harsh liquids and plasters, Zino-pads are made in special sizes for each of these foot trou= bles, Sold everyhere —35c boxe Dz Scholls Zino-pads Put one on—the 'pain is gonel ing near the building. Shoals, N. C., and that the wind was Storage rooms were crammed to|so strong it tore off the clothing of |the ceiling with materials for mak- | the crew. He said the wind smash- ing alcohol, including ‘”“-”‘“‘1(‘d his speaking tube, and that it lpounds of raw sugar and 2,000 gal- | was only by the courage of the |lons of molasses. | third mate, W. Cadman, of Provi- A stoppage in the ventilating sys-| dence, R. 1., in divesting himself tem led to the discovery of the dis-of his outer clothing, and working tillery. Persons living nearby had | himself forward to the engine room complained of the odors. that word could be got to the chief engincer. CLEAR COURT DOCK | “We kept the engines going, Budape Sept. 18 (UP)—To re- [though we burned out bearin | lieve. congestion in the regular courts | Captain Berrgren said, “and later in various parts of the country the|had to stop twice at sea for repairs. Hungarian government has appoint- | Many of the crew helped oil the ed 142 justices of the peace to deal |engines by hand, as a list to star- | with minor infringements of the law. | board rendered the oiling system the creation of the world and set it | aside as the day of judgment—the | day upon which the Creator of heaven and earth judges every creg ture of the world. This idca fash-| foned this festival into a most sol emn occasion when man is to striv for a new life of amendment and reconciliation with his fellowmen and God. This finally gave rise to| the idea that New Year's Day is a day of self-searching und self-criti- cism which runs through every prayer o' the Union Book. Even today the observance of this festival is stil) distinguished by the blowing of the ram’s horn — the | Budapes pt. 18 (UP)—On ar- rival in Budapest Vilma Banky, the | Hungarian movie star, denied that sh: has retired from the films and stated that she returned from Amer- lica only to visit her parents and to take a r among her own people and in her own country LABORERS CRUSHEI Kronstadt, Rumania, Sept. 18 (UP) | | —rive members oZ a labor crew | almost | were crushed to death instantly and Prayer |a sixth was fatally ‘njured when 15 tons of stonc crashed down upon the group from the ceiling of a new railway tunnel near Kronstadt in which they were at work. is Filpruf Bottles can be filled only through this little bar which fits only Mobiloil pumps. '\ 8% "Sold under seal! 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The great success of your experiments dem- onstrates the wisdom of this union between business and science.” LUCKY STRIKE — the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the finest tobaccos —the Cream of the Crop—THEN—"IT’S TOASTED.” Everyone knowsthat heat puri- fies and so TOASTING removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and coughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! Everyone knows that sunshine mellows— that’s why TOASTING includes the use of the Ultra Violet Ray. “It's toasted” Your Throat Protection —against irritation = against cough Consistent with its policy of laying the facts before the public, The American Tobacco Company has invited Mr. Samuel Harden Church to review the reports of the distinguished men who have witnessed LUCKY STRIKE'S famous Toasting Process. © 1930, The American Tobacco Co., Mirs. The statement of Mr. Church appears on this page.