New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 20, 1930, Page 2

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY\, SEPTEMBER 20, 1930. GUNYEN SOUGHT INBREWERY RAID (Continued From First Page) it,” one of the gunmen stepped behind Young body as a shield Fienello attempted to fire but it jammed. The man Young opened with killing the agent seven times. City and s to the brewery Wi and riot guns fearing the a might entrench themselve place, but they had fled in autom biles after disarming the arding the entrance. Detective Wounded Later Police Detec Craig was slightly wour neck by a bullet window while place. No o house. The bre are district th. The 1 blocks and the state Dry agent dit city dumping The federal men g that raid gang: federal agent guard flow of beer into John J nounced and his velled to » his bel gun f ate police hurriced th tear gas bombs were ackers A one gallons of beer declared that du ers set upon and stopped Dunne his 1 charges of maintaining fering with feder The federal 1 the Jeader of the invaded the brewery, he was the owner of in company of two 1 torney had merely call agents to stop the destri beer. The raid at the Ri ery was made under Prohibition Admir Pennington of has jurisdiction over New J¢ 1t took place without the knowledse of Alexander P. McPhee, deputy ad- ministrator at Newa ate charge of the district. Gang Followed Raiders Federal authorities said thev be- lieved the gangsters had followed the raiders from Philadelphia and attempted to waylay them, as onc of two cars in which they set out ance a1l officer but the wction of John D. iladelphia, who w Jersey had been forced off the road by an-| 7 escaped said of my His loss by the depart- which Pennington one other automobile Administrator gent Fienello was bravest and best off will be keenly felt ment. I hope the citi of New Jersey will take corrective measu agalnst the gangster domination of the beer racket. “Fienello could not be bought and T feel sure the gangsters set about purposely to murder him, calling him by name before firing.” The agents destroyed 100,000 gal- lons of beer and opened i which among other things gave forth a list of the automobile regis- tration numbers of all agents working out of Newark. The administrator said he believed thered would be little difficulty in findidg the identity of the owners of plant. Little significance was attached by the agents to the arrests of the three workers, John Howatt, New- ark; John Fox, Elizabeth, and Aug- ust Gobel, Maplewood. EWALD AND WIFE FREED ON BONDS (Continued From Tirst Page) | receive the appointment to the of magistrate. “In the third count George Ewald is charged with the crime of accepting the appointment to the public office of city magistrate upon ,the payment of $10,000 to Martin J. Healy. Bertha Ewald is nam as a principal in this epime in t George F. ald accepted the pointment with direct and counsels,,comm nds and inducements of sald Bertha 1d, and in she aided and abetted in the ment of the $10,000 to Mar Healy."” Two Year The charge against ishable by two years' and a fine of “wald also dictment for ma tion with sale Butte Mines, Inc which he merly was a director. The special grand cessed until next V expected it 1 take of Jacob Cash who says Healy $2.000 on the day pointed city marshal, ANDREE JOURNAL TELLS OF FATF ON ARGTIC FLOE - Term them imprisonme is pun- nt in cor of stock in Cof of up t (Contir some Inhabita was ‘eastward they came ) east lor miles from the 1 The doomed v after day, cross and traversing by canvas ho: water whi between th the three ience with fallin it all kept up ¢ and down as h the jok The irony of t not at first s they kne thelr raveling westward at an ind | two guns. | iencllo was shot if immedi- | prohibition | the office | ol hat | Ziegfeld Injured When Trolley Bumps His Car w York, Sept. 20 (P—Flor- enz Ziegfeld, musical comedy pro- ducer, escaped with a bruised forehead ecarly today when his new imported town car was bumped by a surface car at 30th street and Broadway, the Bronx. | He was on his way to his home || at Hestings, N. Y., in the car | | which had been purchased only a hours earlier, when his ur stopped to maks a turn, e trolley car struck it from the | | rear. | Mr. Ziegfeld continued his trip n a taxicab. The car, which was adly damaged, narrowly escaped destruction when gasoline leaking from the fuel tank caug: red it to Bys of the frog in every single 1d ou his dilem n A 4 hops £ o st 4 was wrting poir Change Course consider and be some ation ir own food w were on outlook | me 11 pola wan Arctic,” kill the ghtencd. 1 no bears ap- hungr ravail ~ Andree's never flagged. hummocks s of cl wen rom the ck off spec ich had adhered to irse of its wand He saved them along ounce must have .h!v!m] y to his burdc One of the | mens en Andree dried h‘i putting it next to his bare chest. It| | | con- was his idea th valuable lv\.n"ml tion n drifts might be obtai samples. As approa the they ve n from time | nece v to load | and row for a of fresh water | tween the jce | found infinitely to the long marches on Meanwhile they became skiliful in obtaining dia ntions that ime t preparing known as a erved them specialty d from th hed cost wert n to time rest periods it would be at or on the open ocean 1 floes. This [y kel |a savory concoction ‘ hlunn pancake’ be ad as kcaweed With thelr arrival in the cr waters north of Spitzbergen the }‘ rift changed 1 Andree realized it would he impossible to reach Seven Islands. Between September 12 and 17 the ice on which the drifted 100 kilomete outheast direction and the me more and more inter | Their decision then was E | the winter on a suitable “ice float” sand they set to work building what | they described as an “Cecot.”” On r 17 they sighted Hvitvaen t called “New Iceland:" the first Idml they had seen July 11. xt day they d their first seal, and the fol- lowing day three more and on Sep- tember 20 a bear. Andree cstimated that as a result of their good for- tun re would be food to last un- next A men co little shallow- w | in an cold be- ted and moved bin which they At this point irreparable disaster overtook The ice floe on which th 1 chosen to live | cracked up with a thunderous roa ind separated their stores and sup- | plics on small chunks of ice. They | brought much of it together and looked toward Hvitvoen The diary comes to a sudden end | just here with the comment by An-| drec “With such companions ill go on all right in al- | mstances."” | is no clue as to the end of which of the died first brought on death. There solution of this, only the discovery of their remains, and’ Frankel's laid out | if sort interme: rec’s own body up a of a mount as if there knowing it was would dic. MANAGER RENOVED FROM MARKET POST ice everythin miost There he mer and wh; is, in any c Strindberg’s An down \, ainst the | he lay where i 1 From First clerks lirty wore who. ron i to Dr busy - e they | BELIEVE IT OR NOT (On requd dressed envelops, Mr. (Reg. U. the earliest times. — ot Shitnal, &hg. LIVED £XACTLY A CENTURY BORN MIDNIGHT, DEC 31,1600 DIED MIDNIGHT DEC 3(,1700 Ay Theo VAL- DIETED ALLOF HiS L\FE /YF_T WEIGHED 725 POUNDS 5 LMt Z - THERE 15 ONLY ONE WORD IN ENGLISH CONTAINING THE SAME LETTERS AS THE WORD CHESTy "—— THAT WORD 15 SCYTHE " BoTTenus -of Buffalo MADE 4 HOME RUNS AND A 2-BAGGER nst sent with stamped, ad- Ripley will furnisb proot of anything depicted by him). & Pat. Of) INA 7-INNING GAME = A@lm‘& . EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S CARTOON The Napoleonic Palindrome—DMy arrangement of was I cre I saw Elba oh oh,” which is attribated to Napoleon I, permits in excess of one trillion (one billion in England) different ways of reading the sentence. reading a minute, it would require more than 2,000,000 years of incessant work for one person to exhaust its possibilities. All Roman Numerals ITII On Timepieces Are Wrong—The subtractive principle in Roman numerical notation was not used until comparatively very recently. tive symbol 1V, the more ancient numeral IIII has been placed on the faces of clocks from This use has continued to the present day. MONDAY—The Armless Taxicab Driver BY RIPLEY Y @ 1930, Kisg Feawres Syndicate, Great Briin rghts reserved: M\KE A BLACK CAT OWNED BY W.D.CROUCH , MAYOR OF TUCKAROE,NY. WEIGHS 39 LBS. the famous palindrome “Ho ho Able == 920 At the rate of one Instead of the subtrac- be ed on ca in and | tional them d ternational York. | split {ing \hlhr m also was quoted as ing under $1 until Oct. bai! The party opposed | leaving five men defied the part raised pe the part they Internatio given by the health department will obeyed without question. FOUR COMMUNISTS T0 SURRENDER FOR SOUTHERN CRIMES (Continued From First Page) ying he wish- to see Sovict Russia before start- his "long stretch.” Beal, 000 bail in Pontiac, Mich. a criminal syndicate charge, has 7 to show cause why his 1 should not be forfeited. Times says the communist ofticials here were bitter to any of the defendants this country and that orders and the money to defray the ex of their trip after refusing request to submit their s in writing to the comintern Moscow. After a delay in Berlin, received assistance from the al Rote Hilfe (Interna Red Aid) which cared for spite the protest of the In- Labor Defense in New. nses In Moscow, the five defendants into two groups, each present- a petition to the comintern. rison and McGinnis ask- ed leaders for permission remain in Russia and to approve mping bail, Hendricks petitioned to begin re °s Men Sent fstood a Back representative communist party Moscow to plead with e men back merican disastrous to the in this country. ruled that alist injus- Wt > it as oppressive this ex- in ary RUSS'ANS BLAWED He | INWHEAT LOSSES exchang act s act co; placi ng of selling organization wa tely made appar Attacks A determined 0 Imports attack on also | the | while | for | return | serving | sian — Woman Thinks Husband in Trance—Really Dead London, Sept. 20 (A—The Lon- don Daily News today said that Dr. William Teasdale Wilson, 79, §at dead in his home at New Milton, mear Lymington, for a week while his wife left him un- disturbed, believing that he was in a spiritualistic trance. Dr. Wilson, who spent much of his life in America, was an en- thusiastic spiritualist and accord- ing to friends he was apt to go into trances and remain in that tondition for a long time. “He had developed spiritualism to a very high plane,” a friend said. “He had passed beyond the puny spirits with whom English [{ spiritualists say they get in touch, and he claimed to make contact with the more refined and loftier spirits.” || The autopsy Friday that Wilson died Sept. 13. His widow refused to tall but his friends are not surprised that she thought him in a trance and wait- ed for him to come around. c_—erm e | | revealed | {imports has months from been several angles, far unsuccessfully. Importat lumber and pulpwood pended under the clause prohibiting {the importation of convict- | goods but the orders were re on the ground that the eviden not conclusive he { provisions which permit an embargo of goods sold below cost are avall- able, but so far there has been gre difficulty in ascertaining Russian costs of production of the absence of tween the two countrie: The textile syndicate short selling, Hyde said, after extended investigation by the ag culture department, set in motion rumors which ga wsp: ns of were sus: e was in view an ri- ned circulation articles. in “This inquiry,” “revealed beyond doubt the heavy short selling wheat upon the Chicago market by he R n government | No Question of Sales we wired Bunr all question ell, of “There “can this sclling 1 fall in the price injury of d in season. be no question contributed to the of wheat and to the American farmers now en- their inte marketing that “Obviously it would be impossible for Fovict Russia to deliver grain in Chicago over our of 42 cents a bushel. T should be glad to know from you what provision your chan de or can the of our farmers tiviti While fore can exchan entry of zovernm ever, Russi: government m for American such a 3 ign dealing on Am is unprecedented. oreign business onopoly. Hyde expressed the exchange le to make hope that elf would ions for the the Chicago e regu eing a fair price DIES AFTER to E Marga Pe moments after being BITE Wolve (UP)— Mrs. a wa ,| been elected and are made in recent | yj but $0 | secretary | Tuttle; made | cinded anti-dumping | MAN, 70, ARRESTED diplomatic relations be- | admitted the | by | of | | by | behind, {jects of commun Jews of City Plan Jews of New Britain as they are elsewhere are preparing for the be- ginning of the New Year or Rosh | Hashonah season, which begins at midnight Monday evening and con- tinues until Wednesday evening, September 24. The Jewish New Year opens the season of 10 d pentance, which terminates Day of Atonement on October The beginning of the Jewish re- ligious year iS co-terminus with the beginning of the seventh . month “Tishri’ 'in the Jewish calendar. Rosh "Hashonah ushers in a of repentance, pray nd ri devotions. season s of re- with the igious ah solemn services are held in the synagogues. The outstanding ele ment of the services is the blowing of the Shofar, which heralds the be- ginning of the Jewish religious year. The Shofar is a kind of trumpet, usually made of the horn of a ram. In Bible times important and sol- emn occasions were proclaimed by means of blowing the Shofar. The sounding of the Shofar on RABBI J. H. ARONSON New Year's day is also intended to mark the solemnity of the occasion and to call for a searching examina- tion among emembers of the Jewish congr of their deeds and conduct during the past ye: The Day of Atonement is the most important day in the Jewish calen- dar. The entire day is spent in re ligious devotior solemn pray: in the synagogue. he partaking of any food or drink fay 24 hours is forbidden. It is the day on which the Jews ask for the forgivenecss of sins. S o Y S WILL GUTLINE WORK ! OF SOCIAL SERVICE. Club to Meet On October 1 to Gonsider Winer Program for | ew Britain Social | the Y. W. s were of club on Wednes The first exccutive the season of the Service club was held C. A. 3 for the first me membership of the y, October 1, at the Y. M A ng will be in the form of at which reports on ths gress of some of the newer pro- v social service work will be en. Miss Ruth Kimball, Dr. Louis Dumont, Miss Olive Elliott, Miss Gwendolyn Jack- on and Miss Gertrude Fossett were ent at this meetir he officers for the Social Service club for the coming scason have as follows: Miss Ruth Kimball; | Dr. Joseph Mellio s Ventlie Loga Gwendolyn Jackson; chairman, Miss Esther | program chairman, Dr. Louis | Dumont; -arrangement chairman, Miss Olive Elliott: publicity chair- man, Miss Gertrude Fossett. meeting made the entir: President, > president, Mi urer, Miss membership RABBI J L SCHWARTZ be held during in he Special services will both local synagogues New Year period. Monday evening the first of the “High Holidays" will be in the Congregation, Brethren of Isracl on Elm Jesse Schwartz will pr Tuesday in¥ Rabbi Schwa will preach on “What Rosh Has nah should mean to us.” Wednesday mor wartz will preach on for Life.” Wednesday evening, October abbi Schwartz will preach on Resqlutions for the New Y Thursday morning, October will preach on “The M¢ services held ing S “The Pr er he ani | Forgivene Special young people’s services will be held in the vestry rooms of the synagogue of the high holiday These services will be held under the direction of Joseph Miller of FOR 1884 MURDER AFTER LONG HOAT (Continued From First Page) he struck Cooley on the head with a rock, injuring him fatally, Saxon Recalls Crime | John Saxon, an old resident here, recalled that brothers of both of the vals were involved in the quar- | erl and that Tom Neely also was in- dicted, but was reported to have died many years ago. Jim Cooley, brother of the slain man, and J. B. Walls, a witness, still live A. C. Cooléy son of the slain man, moved to Texas and locate Neely at the home of brother, W. L. Neely Cooley had watched for the fugi- tive's appearance, but it was not un- 1 til recently that James rived for a visit and Cooley authorities, James another For months notified QUITCLAIMS BLOCK INTEREST Alexander Budnitz has quitclaim- ed to the New Britain Rea and Title Co., his int building at Main and Glen streets, the first floor of which is occupied tores and the upper floors for apartments. The assessed valuation is £130,000. Several weeks ago, on motion of the realty and title com- pany, Harold W. Hatch was appoint- cd receiver pending forcclosure wctien, Police in Boston are equipped | with new {ype vision glasses en- abling them to see both before and | | Hartford. period | In'the two days of Rosh Hashon-| of| Annual Services In Observance of Rosh Hashonah Children’s services on the holidays for children of the age of 8 to 14 years will be held under the direc- tion of George Gans. Services for the Congregation Tephereth Israel on the holidays will be held in the synagogue on 76 Winter street and will be guided | by Rabbi J. H. Aronson and the cantor of the congregation, Samuel Kantor. The starting point of the pre- holiday period always is marked by special services called “The Slichos” |and this service is going to take place tomorrow at 7 a. m. at the Winter street synagogue. Special services for children be- tween the age of 8 and 14 will be {led by M. Hartman principal of the | Hebrew school and assisted by L. Bell, Hebrew teacher. Every one of those who will .participate in this junior congregation will be furnish- ed with a praying showl and mach- sor. The schedule of the services on these days is as follows: The evening prayer, “Maariv,” Monday and Tuesday 7:30°p. m. The morning prayer, “Shochris,” Tuesday and Wednesday 7 a. m., Noon prayers, “Musoff,” Tuesday and Wednesday 12 noon. The afternoon prayers, “Mincho,” Tuesday and Wednesday 6 p. m. The closing prayers ‘“Who-Rac- hum" Wednesday evening Septem- ber 24th, 7:30 p. m. Rabbi Aronson will preach on| both days after the morning pray- ers at 10:30 a. m. Tuesday morning his topic will ‘Another Turn in Life's Jour- be ney. Wednesday morning his topic will be “Major and Minor Problems.” Rabbi Aronson will also deliver his message to the junior congrega- tion, at services which will start on both days at 10 a. m. CENTRAL SCHOOL CLUBS PREPARING FOR SEASON Pupils Select Organtzations and Listen to Talks On Their Objectives. Wfty-one clubs in the Central Jr. High school will begin their activi- ties of the season next Tuesday. Pupils have completed the selection of the clubs with which they wish to become affiliated. A program was presefted by the members of the Clvic league yester- day morning for the benefit of the Tth and Sth grades. The chairman of the program was Clifford Me- Carthy who is the chairman of the Civic league also. The following chairmen spoke concerning their re- spective committees: Girls' athletic, | Edythe Pankonin; boys', athlétic, Carlyle Steinberg; auditorium, Vir- ginia Fagan; banking, Kenneth Stan- ton; bulletin, Olive Smith; health and attendance, Esther Maisel; li- | brary, Beatrice Owen; music, Vir- ginia Hartman; pin, Dorothy Barnes; property, Harold Baglin; social, Thelma Crozier; save and serve, Vivian Olsen, and scholarship, Kath- erine Page, MAN'S NOSE IS BROKEN IN SOUTHINGTON CRASH Britain Motorist. Arrested On Charge of RecRless Driving New After Collision (Smecial to the Herald) Southington, Sept. 20.—Stanislaus Golon, 184 Washington street, New Britain, was arrested last night by pu{?eman Edward Geary on a charge of reckless driving after his automobile had crashed into an- other car driveR'by Carleton C. Sco- vill of 189 Willow street, Water- bury, on Queen street near Spring. William Hotchkiss of Ruggles Row, Milldale, an occupant of the Scovill car, suffered a broken nose, a cut face-and a badly bruised knee in the crash. Policeman Geary Was at the scene of the crash nvestigating another slight accident when Golon's car, he alleges, came along the road at a high rate of speed unmindful of the gathering at the scene of the other accident. He will be heard in court next week. City Items Policeman and Mrs. E. T. Blooma * quist, Bill Long and Bud Taricani are spending the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Mead of Bridges port. COMPULSORY LIBRARIES Prague — Czecho-Slovakia’s law which says that every city and town must have a.public library is aiding ite citizens considerably. Nearly 12,000 such institutions are scat- tered around this country and all of them are extensively used. About 10,000,000 volumes are loaned from these libraries every year. WHAT NEXT? Atlantic City—And now the baby carriage pushing marathon! Two girls recently arrived here after pushing a baby carriage all the way from Camden. They were Evelyn Ready, 15, and Mary McCartney, 16. The girls took turns in riding in the buggy and pushing. The rid- ing interval was an hour. The car- riage got such heavy use that the rear tire came off. ALL @R LOVE Hammond, Ind.~~What men will do for the Jove of a maid was illus- trated here recently. Evidently Charlotte Sejdenstopp, 15, got her dates mixed, and 11 young men called on her at once. She suggest- ed that they fight it’out to see who won her favor. A battle royal en- sued which resulted in the arrest of all the men—and also Charlotte, LARGE MUSHROOM Chesham, (Bucks), Eng. (UP)— A mushroom found here was two feet seven inches in circumference, ten inches high and the stem was four and three quarters inches around. Don’t Let the Children Dress in a Cold Room! Get a Portable Electric Heater and chase out the early morning chill. Now is the time to guard against colds that might linger through the winter. GET A PORTABLE ELECTRIC HEATER NOW! Connecticut Light & Power Co. . |N 82 WEST MAIN STREE‘T I3 95 cash TELEPHONE 3600 Plainville Phone 560 FREE EVENING SCHOOLS CPEN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 AT 7:30 O'CLOCK WHERE. TO GO—TO LEARN ENGLISH Central Evening School—Main St. Washington Evening School—High St. Nathan Hale Evening School—Tremont St. COMPLETE YOUR GRAMMAR SCHOOL EDUCATION 7th and 8th Grades at Central Evening School BECOME MORE SKILLED IN YOUR TRADE ENROLL MONDAY AND TUESDAY NIGHTS, SEPT. 22 AND 23 AT THE STATE TRADE SCHOOL, SOUTH MAIN STREET Schools Open Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday 4 | 7:30-9:30 P. M.

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