New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 23, 1930, Page 11

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MUST PATROL BEAT WITHOUT TIME OFF Policeman Loses Allowance for Year—Two Others Punished Police Officer Otis Hopkins, who has had a clean record as a police officer for nine years, was brought before the discipline committee of the police board last night, with two brother officers, John Nolan, a supernumerary officer for nine years, and William F. Sullivan, a regular officer for the past five years, and each of the three was found guilty of charges brought against them and were punished by the police board, which went into special session after the committee meeting. The committee, Commissioners Hagry E. Morton and’ Edward M. Pratt, heard witnesses who com- plained against the officers, and also heard the officers’ side of the storfes. The committee then weigh- ed the evidence and finding them guilty of conduct unbecoming offi- cers, reommended penalties to the board. The board accepted the re- commendations. Officer Hopkins was found under the influence of liquor while on duty on his beat last Friday, and while the charge was considered very seri- ous by the discipline committee, the fact that he had a clean record for nine years caused the committee to recommend a comparatively lenient punishment, which was no days off tor one year. He will be forced to work seven days each week for one year, and receive no pay for the 24 extra days that he would ordinarily have off, plus the two weeks' vaca- tion periody next summer, which he will not have, and for which work he will receive no pay. Nolan was found in,a speakeasy on Saturday night durifg a raid, and while he was not on duty or in uni- form, he was bound by police rules to assist in finding and closing speakeasies. He was fined 30 days' pay, and will have to work 30 days for nothing. Officer Sullivan was found guilty of having used unbecoming lan- tuage towards a man who is em- ployed in a bakery on Broad strect. He was fined two days' pay. ACCUSE OFFICERS OF FASCIST WORK German Lisutenants Changed With Attempted High Treason Leipsic, Germany, Sept. 23 () —Three Reichswehr lieutenants were arraigned in supreme court today charged with attempted high treason, specifically, having formed fascist cells in the Germany army. All three denied their guilt. The court room was crowded and police were stationed in the cor- ridors and at strategic points out- side to prevent demonstrations. Admission to the court was gained only after the closest scrutiny of cards bearing the name of the ap- plicant. Nineteen witness were call- ed. The three men are Richard Scheringer, Hans Ludien, and re- tired Licutenant Hans Friedrich Wenat. Counsel for the defense included Captain Meindel of the Fifth Ary tillery regiment ‘to which the ac- cused belonged. Under an old law which still is operative army officcrs accused of crime are entitled to have a brother officer defend them. Gets Fascist Salute The fascist party was represented by a lawyer, Dr. Frank of Munich, whom the accused and many others in the court greeted with a fascist salute. Judge Baumgarten, presiding, said that from the list of names in the audience it was apparent that both communists and fascists were in the court. He warned both sides that no demonstrations would be tolerated and that any disturbers would be ejected and arrested. Both Scheringer and Lubien test- ffled that theirs was not a case of discontent but feelings which had been growing in the army for years that government measures taken un- der coercion of the Versailles treaty, such as the signing of the Young plan were not the will of the nation. They testified they had not in- tended revolt or mutiny but wanted to show that young men in the army had minds of their own. The practice of paroling prisoners on good behavior has been abol- fshea Ly the nationalist government IS it any won- der that your youngster is nauseated if he is 7 suffertng from worms, poisoned with their secretions and robbed of nourishment? Worms are |much more common than most {mothers think. Look also for the following symptoms: { grinding_of tecth, picking,_ the nose, cross- ness, crying in sleep, offensive breath, loss of appetite of weight, or Eeneral restlessaess. + Any one of these signs may be your warning thAt worms are preseat. Wise mothers take no chances with these dangerous aod disgusting childhe _ pests. Even if worms are only suspected they give the DR.HAND'S * " WORM ELIXIR It is the prescripion of & famous childs —SAFE, pleasant to take, gentle and 75 action.” Your druggis bl tell you Ithat maay of your own frieads hive success: {fully used it, Buy & bottle of Dr. Hand s today, \u o MANCHURIAN FORCES AT PEIPING SUBURBS Brigades Reported Proceeding to Nankow Pass as Well a:. . Other Cities. Peiping, China, Septg23 (F) — Manchurian forces today were tak- ing up a position in a Peiping sub- urb but few had actually entered the city. Other brigades were proceeding to Nankow Pass, Paotingfu, Teh-| chow and elsewhere. A message from Tientsin stated that 00) Manchurians had arrived here in| eight troop trains. Lenox Simpson, customs com sioner at Tientsin, still was carrying on his work and the Nanking nomi- nee, Mr. Grierson, said that he would wait to take office until trans- fer of control of the city had been completed. 4 DIAMOND FACES SUSPICION CHARGE Held in Philadelphia After His Krrival From Germany Philadelphia, Sept. 23 (® — Jack (Legs) Diamond, New York rack- eteer, awaited arraignment, before b police magistrate today on a charge of being a suspicious character. The dapper gang leader, deported from Germany as an undesirable alien, was arrested yesterday when the freight ste Hamburg, docked here. test, Diamond was taken to a police station, photographed,-nger-printed and questioned, then held on the suspicious character charge. Police | detained him several hours before attorneys obtained his release on a copy of the charge. Just “Paper Publicity” “This is just a lot of newspaper publicity,¥ JDiamond told police. “l haven’t done anything. I was bo and_raised’ here. Why can't )au treat me, right?” He refused to see newspapermen, and coming up the river from the Delaware break- water told officers of the Hannover he would “knock the block off the first newspaper 'man to come near.” | The Hannover carried a cargo of | lacking accommo- | canary birds and, dations @r passengers, “Legs” was given an officer's cabin. He ate at the captain’s table and whiled away the time by reading and playing rummy with the ship's officers. * A crowd of curious persons, in- cluding many women, awaited the racketeer's appearance when the freighter docked. When he saw them Diamond refused to leave the ship saying he would stay aboard all night if necessary, unless the crowds dispersed Police Clear Way A detail of police after considerable pushing and club-swinging, cleared the way and he descended the gangplank. Then detectives whisked him away in an automobile to city hall where the services of two attorneéys were at | his disposal. The suspicious character charge was placed against Diamond, it was said, in order that police could hold him for further investigation and to | determine ®hether he was wanted by authorities in any other city. KT INE LION Prescott, Ariz, (UP)—Giles Goi wick, government hunter of preda tory animals in this district, killed nine mountain lions during the past scason, he declared on a visit here|ont will result in ink that can he |resigned as Turkish ambassador lo‘cou!d suggest a motive for the at- recent! ————————————— mer HannoveY, from | Under pro- | and detectives| o liver oil NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. TUESDAY, | | | | | New York, Sept. 23 (P—Paul J.| | Moranti, the man who put Wall| |street on stilts and carved a half- {mile ditch through the world’s greatest financial section without disturbing the powder on a stenog- [Yapher's nose, is seeking new holes ‘to dig. | He looked forward today to his | next job—building of a railroad tun- ‘ inel under the Mediterranean sea to | connect Spain with Moroccos The | | Spanish government has appointed | him consulting engineer for the pro- | ject and he will leave soon to make borings oft Gibraltar. | Subway Job Nearly Done | Moranti's task of constructing subway excavation to link the lines of the Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit | |system is practically completed— lone year ahead of schedule. Seven |hundred men contributed to the | worl and it will cost the city $5,- 1735,149. | In executing a job that experts said could not be done without s pending operations on the mpr Moranti jacked up 35 skyscrapers, | shifted a solid maze of electric con- duits, gas, water and steam pipe: bypassed the most valuable network of cables in the world; removed a brick sewer; sank his supports in | ayjcksand; dumped the' excavated mud 12 miles at sea, and fought | every step of the way against dense traffic and swarms of pedestrians on the narrowest streets in the city. Is Distinguished Italian Moranti is the son of a drstin- | guished Ttalian family and a gradu- ate of, the Royal Engineering school | at the University of Milan, to which only titled personages go for in- | struction. He has burrowed in the | ground from the Argentine to the | Bronx and now at 43 he looks to- | ward Spain and new worlds to con- | | quer. EXPECT HEREDITY 10 HELP HOOVER (Presidents Son Will Not Get | Exclusive Milk Diet | Washington, Sept. 23 (UP) — An inheritance of the vigor that has |served his father well throughout a |strenuous life is expected to aid Herbert Hoover, jr., in his fight against tuberculosis. This is the opinion of Dr. Joel T. Boone, White House physician, who yesterday announced the result of his diagnosis of the year old radio engineer. Young Hoover | forebears, for generations back on both sides of the family, have been people of vigor, free from tubercu- | |lar infection, he pointed out Since Boone's diagnos has | demonstrated clearly that the pres- ident’s son has a smadl tubercular |lesion. a careful program of recov- lery has been worked out for, him. He is enjoying the restful quiet of his father's Rapidan camp and will | remain there until cool weather comes. I Dr. Boone's prescribed diet is not limited to the traditional raw eggs |and milk. Boone is of the opinion | such a diet often provides indige tion. The young man’s meals will be [well balanced to include a wide | variety of food values, though cod will be.an Important part diet. jof h ked in a small nd then squeezad c paper amount of water ¢ pe used i an emergen ‘Zéey S zzZZs‘fy CHESTERFIELD CIGARETTES are manufactured by LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Moranti Looks Eagerly Forward | To Next Job as Chief Human Mole 'be a multi-millionaire | “White Indians” of the South Amer- | | The strongly SEPTEMBER 23, 1930. | seat now vacant. Fethi Bey and 14 deputies sup- porting him will be authortzed to break the seven years of silence im- | now 4 upon would-be opposition, and era of true parliamentary de s will begin in the assembly 1 recently Kemal Pasha's party | was the only political party existing DIES AT ESTATE iy voug pors by s, o G EAD FOR ANSAS Partner, Succumbs at 91 ew Yort, sent. 22 om—senry| RUSSEL LA0S 8 Gontestants| Phipps, who started his busine th 00101‘3[10 MOlllll’dll]S ! areer as an office boy and rose to associate of | died yesterday at Neck, L. 1. He| Colorado Springs, Colo., Sept. 2 of the Nationa tour led today from the pes | (P—T Air of Colorado to the plans of Kans With Garden City, the first ob- | jective of their 13 day of flying| about the continent, the 18 contest- | ants groomed their ‘planes for a | 10 a. m., takeoff. Wichita, Kansas, | was designated as the overnight | | stop. The 75 mile jaunt from Denver to | Andrew Carnegie, his estate at Great was 91, Phipps retired from business sev- eral years ago. It was through his| philanthropies, to which he devoted | most of his vast wealth, that Phipps | was best known. Born in Philadelphia, he present- ed large conservatories to that clty | and also gave lavishly to the anti- | tuberculosis campaign there. Phipps Institute at the University of Penn- ylvania was one of his donatlons lcolorado Springs-yesterday left un- and he gave the money for estab- | changed the standing of the en- lishment of a psychiatric clinic at | (.,nee Johns Hopkins university, Baltimore. | New York city received §1,000,000 | for the work of improving tenement conditions. 4 itinerar; 1 <s Russell Still Leads H. L. Russell of Retroit con- | tinued to hold the_lead. John Liv- | ingston, Aurora, " 1ll, winner of | last year's tour, was second, Art. ‘YELLOW’ INDIANS M CLUE UISE[]VEREI] My puted by tour officials last night 6—George castle, Del Zeller, Detroit. Bech, Wichita Haldeman, New- mith, Newcastle, Del. hneider, Jersey City. Wadlow, Wichita. Bowman, Los Angeles. 3. Storey, Kansas City. 12—R. Stevenson, Moline, 11l 13—Nancy Hopkins, Washing- ton, D C, 14—Larry Ruch, Kansas City. . Carr, Detroit. Meyers, Cleveland Mummert, Hammonds- Dr. Dickey Returns From Trip Up Orinoco River Sept. 23 (A—Discov- of “yellow Indians" to the long sought | New York, ery of a tribe and new clues ican jungles, were reported yester- | day by Dr. Herbert Spencer Dickey, | returning from a trek along the | dark reaches of the Orinoco river. Mr. Dickey. representing lhc \Iu-\ seum of the American India: Heye Mo iot il ol liner | Marabal (with his wife and party or 11. He said he had penetrated from | SHHT AT TEKflAI 50 to 100 miles nearer the source of the Orinoco than other white men Assailant Also Sets Fire to Barns Containing Hay had yet gone. He stumbled upon & tribe called the “Quaharibos,” dis- Tekoa, §ash, Sept. (P—A | widespread search was under way | tinguished chiefly for the yellowness | today for an unidentified assailant of their skin. They told him, he said, that the “white Indians” would who shot Mr. and Mrs. Robert War- | ner, ranch, employes, and set fire to | be found further west. two barns on the Paul Masterson DICTATORSHIP NEAR |'ranch near here-last night. | Kemal PaShfi Exeflted to Make Mrs. Warner, Wwith a charge of | p buckshot and possibly bits of brok- |en giass in her groin, was in a| Announcement Soon ST G i 5 At hospital. She was shot down as she was preparing to retire. The shot Sept. 23 (UP)— | was fired through.a window at the nationalistic _people’s | ranch house. part of President Kemal Pasha i5| Warner had retired, but ran to expected to announce the relinquish- | Mrs. Warner's aid as she screamed. ment of the dictatorship which it|A second shot, apparently fired from has held for seven years at an ex-|a greater distance, felled him. His traordinary ion of the national | wounds were not considered dan- embly convening soon. gerous, The president regafds the an—; After the shooting the attacker nouncement as inauguratfig a new |set fire to the barns, containing stage of liberty and political educa- ‘ much hay, farm equipment and one tion for Turkey. At the same time |horse. Buildings and their contents the assembly will vote the newly|were destroyed. arisen liberal leader Fethi Bey, who| Neither Mr. 18—George Meissner, New York. Istanbul, Turkey, nor Mrs. Warner Paris to enter home politics, into a|tack FORECLOSURES GRANTED |and the encumbrances was given in|$2,087.50 and the property is located When it was found that properfy | city court yesterday. The plaintiff|on Burritt street. of Baba Pera at 157 Wilcox street | was the City Coal & Wood Co. was so heavily encumbered that it A judgment for strict foreclosure would not satisfy a judgment of|was given by Judge Morris D. $4,212.30 a deficiency judgment of|in favor of the Polish $4,104.78 representing the differ-|and Loan Co., ence between the appraised value|kowskt A bill suthorizing a new $4,600,- Saxe | 000 metal-clad airship has been in- Investment | troduced in congress. Tt will have against Frank Kosa-|a gas volume of 3,758,000 cubic and others. 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