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News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 NOTORIOUS BANDIT, SOUGHT FOR TWO Of Gunshot Wound But Implicates | NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1930. -TWENTY-TW" C East Hartland Girl Dies as Result |PEACFFUL SESSION int and Run Driver Kills No. ASPRUSSIANDIET * Police Officer On Boston Post Road; Caught After Chase of Over Mile YEARS, WOUNDED George Patnode Before Expiring OPENS IN GERMANY Jennie Carr, 25, Found Lying Beside Road With Injury ‘ ey Sergt. Frank Stratton Knocked Down While Quizzing “Jake” Fleagle, Wanted Since 1928 for Bank Robbery Kill- ings, Captured at Branson POLICE REFUSE T0 TELL SOURCE OF INFORHATION 510 “sei"" - | George Patnode, a farm hand, fs Alleged Bank™ Robber One of Most | under arrest in the Hartford bar- racks of the Connecticut state po- lice in conmection with the fatal shooting. Police said the girl impli- cated him in & fragmentary and whispered account of the shodting as she lay dying in the hospital. The girl, clad in overalls, was | picked up by a passing motorist in | the road running past the farm of Branson, Mo., Oct. 4 (A~—A man | Mr. and Mrs. John Litchdi, her fos- identified as g'Jake” Fleagle, long | ter parents. .| According to the version of the sought as thSleader of the EAang |y oiino picced together by police, which robbedgthe First National | East Hartland, Oct. 14 —(P—Jen- nie Carr, 25, farm girl who was found lying by a roadside yesterday with a gunshot wound in her back, died early today in a Westfield. | | | i | | Sought After Criminals in United| States—Took fart in Holdup of | First National Bank Which Re- | sulted n the Killing of Four | Persons. in Back—Whispers Halting Story. of Attack to | Police — Authorities Believe Farm Hand Killed Her With Shotgun. Sessions Begun Without Demon- | stration Such as Marked Reichstag Convening ONLY THREE FASCISTS IN GROUP BEGINNING WORK 'Riot in Street Resumed, But Pefcc Soon Disperse Rowdy Element — | Patnode had accosted the girl as she | was working in a barn on the farm. | As she turned to leave, police believe Patnode placed the muzzle of a | shotgun against her back and pulled | | the trigger. Miss Carr ataggered to | the road about 100 feet away and | collapsed. A few hours later Patnode | was found sleeping in a nearby farm | house and was placed under arrest. | Police said he admitted having | thrown his shotgun into a well. | Patnode had lived in this section | for a number of years, first as a | renting farmer and later as an occa- | sional farm worker. He was fre- quently employed at the Litchdi | farm. A former resident of Hartford, | Berdin, Oct. 14 (#—The Prussian he was sentenced in 1925 to Cheshire | diet, center of a bitter- controversy tions Would Enable Them to Rule Group — Newspapers Generally Condemn Window Smashing. v ot o e DRATITAN REBELS - CLAIM VICTORIES were killed, was shot and wounded | probably fatally by Kansas City dc-“ jonists Say Sao Paulo State Officers Beaten I‘NATIONALS ALSO SANGUINE ficers here today. 1i The maggvas shot as he attempted to board a Missouri-Pacific trgin at | ReYOlut Insurgentd Insist Movement the station’here. He had purchased | o ticket for Hollister, a short dis- | tance from here. Worked on Tip . The Kansas City officers had been sent here on information that ¥leagle was hiding in the hill coun- iry. After an examination the phy- sician said Fleagle probably would live. He was shot through the ab- domen. Eight officers were in the posse which surprised the supposed Flea- | gle at the railroad station. i Witnesses eaid the man attempted | to draw a pistol and had it half way out of its holster when he was shot. Had Fresh Wound \The prisoner was discovered to have a gunshot wound in his right wrist which apparently had been in- flicted within the last 10 days, the physician said. Approximately $4,000 was offered for the arrest of Fleagle, officials of the Colorado State Bankers' associa- tion said. | Revoluttbnary authorities announced At one time $55,000 was offered | today that troops of the rebel move- for the bank robber's apprehension, | ment had extended their operations but most of it was withdrawn, | westward into the sta‘s of Matto Fleagle was said to have been Grosso and were assembling along traced through post office officials. |the Paraguayan frontier. — At the same time it was said that Sought Since 1928 the federal soldiers defending the Kansas City, Oct. 14 (A—A man | state of Sao Paulo were worried by jdentified as Jake Fleagle, long|the advance of the southern galuchos sought as the leader of a gang that | or cowboys. e ¥ robbed a bank at Lamar, Colo,, May | Another announcement, obtained 23, 1928, and killed four men, was|by the correspondent here of the Has Extended Westward Into Matto Other States. Porto Alegre, Brazil, Oct. 14 (P— A revolutionary communique declar- |ed today that a-rebel force had de- feated Sao Paulo state police in the region of Quatigua after a heavy battle. The police retreated, leaving behind numerous men, munitious, machine guns and some heavy artil- lery. Rebels Etxend Work Porto Alegre, Brazil, Oct. 14 (P — Grosso—Cowboys Also Advance in | | Rally Tonight—Lieut. Gov. Rogers | Promises to Speak to Columbus | Republican Club. Preliminary plans for the biggest | rally of the campaign under auspices | of the democratic party were dis- | cussed at a meating of the rally | committee last night at headquar- | |ters in the Hotel Lrwin, and as soon | | as the date is set full details will | be announced. Dean Wilbur L.| finall rged with their clubs and cleared the Potsdamerplatz. Karl Zoergiebel, —_ precipitated by Adolf Hitler's fas- (Continued on Page Two) | tumultuous scenes accompanying the |such as enlivened the Reichstag Inasmuch as there were only three |- ernor Coming to This City Imarch of yesterday. The Hitler Italian Democratic Women Hold |Prussia and that if the body now which is not far from the scene of within the courtyard and driveway. Potsdamerplatz early this morning. city, and ex-Congressman Augustine | Pands vesterday during disturbances a campaigner assigned by the state |Start window smashing all over hall on Main street and fegtures are | campaign as his itinerary is planned | (Continued on Page Two) cist right wing national socialists, - |began its sessions this afternoon in | | | R S T A R convening of the German Reichstag. LL HE ES“[]NF With every gallery seat filled, in RA Y R {opening, the diet began its work at e |1:17 p. m. | tascist members, the Hitlerites could | stage no demonstration within the ‘DATE HAS NOT BEEN SET | party has been clamoring for disso- | |lution of the diet ever since the | Sept. 14 elections, declaring its per- {could be reelected the fascists would control its membership. yesterday's window smashing in the Leipzingerplatz, patrolled the street Rowdles Insult Police Police, after an hour's fighting, The disturbartce developed when Cross, nominse for governor, will | 2fter-theater crowds stopped to see Lonergan, nominee for congressman | ncident to opening of the Reich- in the first district which includes |Stag- organization. |again and perhaps to profit by pil- It is expected that the rally will contemplated to-attract a large at-| | tendance. It will probably be Dean | |to take him into practically every | town and city in the state. |a quiet that had none of yesterday's | anticipation of possible spectacles ‘Democratic Candidate for GO¥- smasmie'ad ieee Voo |chamber such as their uniformed | sonnel does not reflect the will o Police outside the diet building, in hundreds. Others were massed quelled rioting in the vicinity of the make his first appearance in this |the destruction wrought by fascist New Britain, will also speak, as will | - Rowdies saw an opportunity to be held at Y. M. T. A. & B. society Cross’ only local appearance in the | The rally committee also {laging. They insulted the police, who | Marines in Stolen Car — Father of Deatly Driver Proceeding Behind Auto in Second Machine —Victim On Force 28 Years. Norwalk, Oct. 14 () —Sergeant Frank Stratton of the Norwalk po- lice department was killed by a hit and run driver early this mornmg on the Boston Post road as he was questioning a suspected automobilc | thief. | Edward Bodine of $6 North 34th street, Flushing, L. L, the driver of | the machine which hit the officer, Grath had pursued him for a mil He is being questioned by the police. Father Close Behind Bodin father, Edmond Bodine, was driving a short distance behind him in another car, The pair, with two friends, had been to the Ford- ham-Boston College football game at Boston Sergeant Stratton and Officer Mec- | Grath, who comprised the early | morning shifts of the police depart- ment patrol of the Post road, had stopped two marines in an allegedly stolen car and had halted the men on the Westport town line. Sergeant | Stratton was standing beside the | ine's car on the outside of the | road, talking to the driver, when h Hitler Followers Olatm New Elec- | W28 arrested after Officer Paul Mc- was struck. Medical Examiner Wil-| liam H. Slaughter of Darien stated that death was almost instant and was directly due to shock. The im- pact fractured the officgr's skull and left leg. | When Bodine did not stop, Me-| Grath left Stratton in the care of | (Continued on Page Two) | CITY MAKES SWITCH IN FINANGING PLAN Notes for $100,000 to Be Tssned, Mayor Quigley Decides TAKES ADVICE OF JUDD DOUBLE DROWNING TALE FOUND MYTH Telephone Call Sends Police on Vain Hunt to Berlin BOTH VICTINS” SAFE | fisherman’s | favor a race today. e RADICALS FIGHT POLICE IN Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending 15,287 Oct. 11th ... PRICE THREE CENTS MARCH ON LABOR SESSION: 14 ARRESTED DURING ROW GLOUCESTER RAGE AGAIN POSTPONED Lack of Bregze Makes Fishing Schooner Tilt Useless CAPT. BEN PINE IN BED Third Consecutive Day of Delay Forced by Light Weather—Vet- eran Skipper Has Recurrence of Old Sinus Trouble. Gloucester, For the third consecutive day, the second contest in the Lipton cup races here between the Gertrude L. Thebaud, fleet, and the Bluenose of Lunen- burg, N. 8., champion of the Cana- dian fleet, was called off today be- cause of lack of breeze. The race committee took action at 8:45 a. m., when it became ap- parent that the weather man did not B Capt. Pine Sick Had there been enough wind for the race, the Thebaud would have gone after the Lipton international trophy with a strange Obligations Will Be Sold to Savings Frantic Mother Hears False Report | skipper at the wheel, the old veteran, Bank of New Britain—Intent to Borrow $100,000 Called Off — | $150,00 in Sewer Bonds. | After a conference with Chairman William H. Judd of the board of | finance and taxation, Mayor Quigley {announced today that the contem- | plated move to provide funds for the public welfare department will not be taken at this time, and therefore the approval of the common council at a special meeting tomorrow night will be asked relative to the | ance of $100,000 notes { $150,000 as was intended. ‘ Chairman Judd pointed out that {although the public welfare depart- ment has on hand only.approximate- \ly $38,000, which will not be suffi- ient to carry on throughout the fis- al year, there will be funds on hand | through savings in other depart- | and emergency cases resulting from | unemployment may be taken care of at that time. Finance Board to Consider Move The board of finance and taxation issu- | instead of | | and Sets Search of All Nearby Ponds in Motion—South Street | | | Youngsters Found in Sisters’ Care. | | | The telephone bell at police head- | | quartess rang sharply shortly be- | | fore 2 o'clock this afternoon | when Captain Kelly, who was at the | desk, picked up the receiver he| | heard a voif% of a woman who was apparently laboring under a great| mental strain trying to tell him that | two boys had just been drowned in | the pond of the Stiles Reynolds brickyard which is located at the | foot of South street. | With this information, he detailed | the police car with Officers Herbert Lyon and Alfred Tanguay to the scene with pulmotors to aid in re- viving the youths it they were | found. | Following directly behind the po- |lice car was another automobile ] chiet of police, | ments to make possible a transfer |with newspaper men. Down to the said that virtually no one but fas- | in February, so that the outside poor | reported scene of the accident both | | | cars went only to find on arrival | that nothing in the nature of a | | drowning was known in the vicinity. | | All Nearby Ponds Searched | Continuing on, they searchéd | wounded possibly fatally and cap- tured today by two Kansas City de- tectives at Branson, a resort town in the southern Missouri Ozarks. A telegram to police headquarters here from Lieut. E. L. Nelson and Ollie V. King, the detective, said: “Got Jake Fleagle this morning. He is shot and may die.’ * Police did not divuige the source (Continued on Page Two) newspaper La Nacion, said that the | gl will meet in special session at the every available pond and brickyard revolutionary forces of the state of Rio Grande had been reorganized in accepted military fashion, with the first division being placed under command- of Col. Joncarlos Toledo Bordini. At the same time the rebels have adopted yellow and white as their color. Another dispatch said that nu- merous Italians were alding the re- volt, forming the Garibaldi Legion. mayor's office at 11:45 o'clock to- in the vicinity, even going so far as | | election. | At last night's meeting announce- nent gvas made that several autos | will be available on Saturday morn- Members Oppose Eighth | d af .to transport to- M ing and afternoon.to transpor Spl vitual Leader and be-made voters to the city hall‘ where they will be sworn in as elec- COmplain '.0 Police tors. | ward, probably in Rialto hall on| i | Broad street, the Sunday preceding} l N F 18 | Italian Women’s Rally morrow forenoon and the situation |to trayel into Berlin in the belief | will be explained by Mayor Quigley|that the person who sent the mes- and Chaggman Judd, who will|gaee might have been too excited to | recommend that authority be quested to issue $100,000 in street fund gotes. After the common coun- cil \'g‘es approval, which it is ex- pected' will be done, the board of | finance and taxation will sell the| notes to the Savings Bank of New | | in directions. Still no sign that gny | |untoward circumstance had arien | was found. = | When the police and newspaper- | men had about reached the conclu- | T0 HARTFORD ALTAR | Brazil today claimed wide victories | | over the revolutionists who moved | against the federal government ten Arthur Sullivan and Miss Agnes M. Wall Are Married Today days ago. Gains were listed Paulo-Parana region, in the Sao south of the | | | (Continued on Page Two) | Roper Bolts Party as _ Anti-Pinchot Gesture Blindness is no barrier to love. Philadelphia, Oct. 14 (P—William | Bride and bridegroom in a wed- |W. Roper, city councilman and | ding ceremony at St. Peter's church, | princeton university football coach, Hartford, this morning at 9 o'clock |today joined the Philadelphia re- are blind. | publican ward leaders who have Arthur Sullivan, aged 35, a New pojted the candidacy of Gifford Pin- Britajn news dealer and reporter, chot, republican, and gone over to‘ and Agnes M. Wall, 27, of 56 Maple | yonn M. Hemphill, the democratic- | avenue, Hartford, were the princl- |jjperal party candidate for governor. | pals. The ceremony was performf’d} In a statement, Roper said he | by Rev. Thomas L. Greylish. Gerald | f3yored Hemphill because he is ad- | Sullivan, brother of the bridegroom, | yoeating the repeal of the national and organist at the Limbassy the-|prohibition amendment and modifi- ater, this city, and Miss Alice Wall, | ca4jon of the so-called Sunday blue | the bride's sister, were attendants.||ywe which he also favors, He re- | According to reports, A rally will be held tonight when the Italian Women's Demo- cratic club of New Britain will meet at the democratic headquarters and (Continued on Page Two) DRIVER ESCAPES INJURY WHEN TRUCK TURNS OVER Big Van Hits Stone and Tips On East Street — Operator's \ Hand Bruised Robert Jones, of 143 Oakland terrace, Hartford, an employe of the General Bakjng company of that city narrowly escaped serious injury about 9:30 this morning when the truck he was driving and owned by the baking company turned over as he was driving out of an alleyway near tha Wells' property on East street. According to the police version of the affair taken from Sergeant Feeney's report the truck tipped tried to discourage the union. Mr. and Mrs. friends had |forred to Pinchot as a “fanatical | Sullivan will make | | over after the wheels had struck a large stone in the alley. Jones suffered a slight bruise on dry.” “Roper directed Pinchot's campaign | their home in this city and plan Nno |y pensylvania in 1922 when Pin-|his left hand. The truck was badly Captain George Helly of the local police department was confronted with a difficult problem this morn- |ing when he was asked to decide | how many pastors should be neces- | sary to guide the destines ot eighteen | members of the Congregation of.the | Baptist church located at 71 Hart- | ford avenue, but proved quite equal | to the occasion when twithout a moment’s hesitation he remarked that seven pastors should prove sufficient. The situation was ecreated when two negroes excitedly entered the police station and walking up to the desk addressed the police captain with a request that he stop a dis- turbance, which they said was going on at the church because one of the pastors who was recently dropped by ‘the members insisted on attend- ing services. Captain Kellysinquired into all the details of the affair and when he learned that there were only 18 mombers in the congregation and that there were eight pastors he told the visitors that the next time the obstreperous parson came to the meeting place a report to the po- lice would immediately bring ahout the investigation. The men went happily on their vay when they had satisfied them- Britain, and to raise the money with | (Continued on Page Two) SON WINS LONG RACE T0 SEE DYING MOTHER Rushes From College in Michigan to Her Death- | bed at Eocal Hospital | Leaving his studies behind in an | effort to comply with the last wish of his mother, Stanley Myszka, son | of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Myszka of | 173 Broad street, arrived home sev- eral hours before his mother died at | New Britain General hospital this | morning. | A telegram, informing him of the | serious condition of his mother, and requesting him to come home im- mediately, was sent last Saturday to St. Mary’ college at Orchard Lake, Mich., but because of some delay in the distribution of the mail the mes- sage was not delivered until the fol- sion that the alarm had been a| (Continued on Page 18.) ARLO GOES T0 JAIL, CAR KILLED LOCAL MAN | New York Driver Sentenced For 30 | \DEC Days on Charge of Evading Responsibility Westport, Oct. 14 (F)—Louis De- Carlo, 22, of New York city, today began serving a 30 day sentence in | county jail for evading desponsibility | in a fatal automobile accident. He struck and killed John Buda, 50, of New Britain on the Post road in Greens Farms October 5 and was captured in Stratford. DeCarlo was also fined $50 and sts yesterday when he was pre- ented in town court. Five com- panions were fined $15 al’\d costs each. Coroner John J. Phelan exonerat- ed DeCarlo from criminal responsi- bility for causing Buda's death, leaving the question of determina- tion of responsibility to the town court. L Captain Ben Pine, having been con- fined to bed with a sinus attack that developed during the night. craft itself was in prime condition for the fight, having undergone a between race painting and tuning up. Captain Angus Walters of the Bluenose was highly encouraged to- day by word from Toronto that “the folks back home" were ready to | give a large cash prize for a race| between the Thebaud and Bluenose | from Gloucester to Toronto at the close of the present series. He ac- cepted the offer as a deminstration of confidence in him, his crew and his ship. Face Badly Swollen Captain Ben was under the care ot a physician during the night, suf- | fering from a recurrence of the old sinus trouble. His face was so swol- len that he could scarcely open his eyes and he tarried in bed long after Gloucester fishermen are accustomed {to be up and about their vessels. In the absence of Captain Ben, Nate McLoud. chairman of the race finance committee, was placed in charge of the Gloucester boat: Nate was to supervise the replacing of 10 tons of ballast, which was removed before vesterday's race. The ballast will be stowed aft to bring the Thebaud's head up. Sparkling in new paint,after spend- T~ | realize that an error had been made | N8 the night on a marine railway, | the schooner Gertrude L. Thebaud, skippered by the veteran Captain Ben Pine, was ready today to con- tinue her battle with the Canadian champion Bluenose and Captain An- Mass.” Oct. 14 (P— | pride of the Gloucester The | 1300 Communists Clash | With Boston Officers - Before Hotel-Attempt | to Enter Convention | Frustrated By Au- | thorities. Leaders Attempt to Speak to Crowd, But Are | Shoved Into Wagons— Reserves Called Qut to | Handle Near Riot That Results. Boston, Oct. 14 hed with a group (UP)—Police of 300 men a women described as communists here today just outside Hotel Brad- ford, where the 50th annual eon- vention of the American Federation | of Labor is in progress. For fully five minutes wild scenes were enacted at Tremont street and Shawmut avenue as several mem- bers of the communist group at- tempted to deliver speeches to the crowd. Fourteen demonstrators, including € women, were arrested during | the melee and later booked at La Grange street police station on mis- cellaneous charges. 1 Sought Admission to Hall | Prior to the demonstration, the communists had sought and been | refused admission to the labor fed- eration’s convention, Not untjl extra police arrived and [charged the _throng with drawn i clubs was the demonstration quelled. Several men and women demon- rators appeared to have suffered | bruises and scratches, but none was | believed seriously hurt. | Police Captain Jeremiah Galtvan, ‘{n plain clothes, directed the police in their battle with the communist demonstrators. He had been sent to | the hotel earlier in the morning. . | after police had received a tip that the demonstration was to be staged. | 1t was shortly before noon when the communist group, 300 strong, | appeared outside the hotel where the | labor federation was in session. Some of the marchers carried ban- ners and placards bearing such words as “Vote Communist,” mand Social Insurance,” “Work or | Wages,” and “Help for Unemployed.” Police stationed around the hostel- | ry attempted in vain to disperse the | unauthorized parade. 3 | Telephones for Help Captain Gallivan, scenting trouble, telephoned the Lagrange street sta- tion for aid, and presentely g wagon. load of policemen reached the scene. Two men in the communist group® |attempted to make speeches. They were guickly bundled into a patrol (Continued on Page Two) | — = wagon. CHILD DIES OF BURNS | sturiod to-adtress the cromes: iany AFTER LONG SUFFERING | of the 300 communists set upon the 50 policemen as these would-be speakers also were put into the v / | One policeman suffered scatches 2 120 Putnami| o\ i face at the hands of a woman demonstrator whom he was trying to Louisa Carino, 8, of Street Found in Yard With Clothes Aflame Oct. 4 | | | (Continued on Page Three.) Louisa Carino, § year old daugh- | ter of Mr. and Mrs. Carmino Carino | of 129 Putnam street, . died this| morning at 3 o'clock at New Britain | General hospital from burns she re- | ceived while playing in the yard of her aunt, Mrs. Rose Zaccoli of 61 Oak street on October 4. | FOR KILLING BIRDS children when her screams attract.| Lnree Caught by Game ed the attention of the nelshbors,| Wi dens Found Guilty whe found her clothes in flames. | She was rushed to the hospital. | . . Besifes her parents, she is sur-| in Court vived by a brother, Rosario Carino | and a sister, Mary Carino. . g Funeral services will be held to-| Three men paid fines and costs morrow morning at 8:30 at the |3Mmounting to more than $120 in po- home of her parents and at 9 lcecourt today when they were o'clock at St. Mary's church. Burla) | found guilty of shooting birds pro- will be in St. Mary's cemetery. | tected by law. Gino Bonatti of Cor- z __ |bin avenue, Amido Verzulli of West wedding trip. Mrs. Sullivan has been £ stenographer in the office of Stet- son K. Ryan, secretary of the state board of education for the blind. She retired from her position last Saturday. She has been blind since babyhood. “Sully,” as the bridegroom is known throughout Connecticut, came to this city several years ago to take a place in the dictaphone de- partment of the Stanley Works, after having taken a course in the Con- necticut Institute for the Blind, at Hartford, to prepare for the task of supporting himself under the great handicap of blindness. He had lived in New Haven prior to suffering the Joss of his sight Leaving the Stanley Works hé’ opened a tobacco and news stand at the Main street railroad crossing and about a vear ago he entered news- paper work, in which he had been experlenced to some extent in New Haven. Despite his inability to see, The makes his and on trains with slight assistance and his cheerful dispostiion and friendly manner have aided him greatly in his fight against heavy odds. “Sully” and his mother made their home on Church street for the v about the streets | |chot ran for governor. damaged. selves that the captain’s ideas on | “Giddap, mule.” | Persons on Main street, between Winter street and the New Britain | nigh school, between 8 and 8:45 last | night, heard this command sharply | uttered, and turned their he&ds to see a young man, dressed in white, wheeling a small wheelbarrow of ancient vintaffe, containing another young man, huddled into a rather | uncomtortable posture, marching |along as the rider repeated his | command from time to time—"Gid- dap, mule.” Edward Cliff of West Pearl | street was paving his world geries baseball games bet and Michael Pal- misano of J00 Seymour street was being paid for winning the best. The former “wheel-barrowed” the latter the length of Main street and back. It was a perilous trip. Winner of World Series Wager | Gets Long Ride In Whee]barrowi' | the 'number of pastors necessary for | the needs of the small congregation were identical with their own. Motorcycle Policeman Chases Horse Running I|] From Pasture to Bar [boys in the street and by girls and ||y 0 & (\}leccr to,rhin:: | older boys on the sidewalks, the loser || o, A REFE CCECT TROTES |and his passenger marched bravely || puy 'S0 S0l O Tk BERCS on. PR b | ; || merry chase about six o'clock Hst | At 8:07 Lafayette street was || .n¢ o, west Main street to Cor- [reached. and a stop was made for || y;® OF W MAR SHEEC 0 COF |the motive power to et second | i;oroughtare into Clinton street. [wind. The sidewalks salutes were || pyroe® oS08 (00 0 On |feartul at this point, At 8:11, Cen- || porcy reet, | tral square was reached, and anoth- RSieh s da alattad when e horas ex =iop gmadimade; | owned by John Nannchik, which | At 8:13, City Hall was reached, || yas peing pastured in a lot in the |and another rest and another oiling | | vicinity of wWest Main street, de. up process on the hahds gave the || ciged to go home sidewalk rooters another chance at ¥hicn {F o officen discoyenad fie vocal encouragement. A dog trot t0 || animal it was running witdly Walnut street, arriving there 8t | along West Main strect and fear- 8:14, and then a steady pace to the || j5g some harm would come to it. high school, reaching there at 8:20, || he set out after the animal in the |showed wonderful staying powers | hope of catching it. for both young men. When the horse reached its The log of the return trip showed || owner's residence on Beach street, lowing day. He*boarded a train, in which he was a passenger for almost 24 hours, arriving in this city last night. He | went directly to the hospital, where he found his mother in a dying con- | ditton. Mrs. Myszka was born but came to this city abou years ago. She was a member of the ‘Women's Temperance soiciety of the Sacred Heart church. Surviving are her husband, Stan- ley Myszka, trustee of the Sacred Heart church; four sons, Stanley. Frank, Anthony and Henry Myszka: a daughter, Cecilia Myszka; a sister, Miss Marcianna Parzych of Holvoke, nd two brothers, Walenty and Kon- stanty Parzych of this city. Funeral services will be held Fri day! morning at an hour to be an- nounced later. Burial will be in Sa- cred Heart cemetery. n Poland naping of Mrs. Alma Wilson McKin- ley, 24-year-old heiress and expec- tant mother, stirred southwest Mis- souri today. Enraged friends joined officers ore of cities and towns in a trol ot highways from the foothills of the Ozarks to the Missouri river, °king a small masked man who ibducted the girl last night from the | ranch home of her father, Benton Wilson, oil millionaire. Armed With Shotgun The kidnaper, armed with a shot- gun, Sheriff Olin Killingsworth said, entered the Wilson home where Mrs. McKinley and her mother were alone. According to the sheriff, he demanded money, but was told there was none in the house. He then forced the girl to accompany him in the family car ,after binding and gagging her mother. Mrs. Wilson 1 | THE WEATHER | New Britain and vicinity: | Showers tonight and Wednes- | day; slightly cooler Wednes- Heiress and Expectant Mother Kidnaped By Man In Missouri “s: i oo, Greenfleld, Mo., Oct. 14 (P—Kid- Aldrich, Mo., about 20 miles north- | Yaeger of Rocl east of here. Observers said the ma- chine, a sport coupe, was followed by another car. Wilson and his two sons, Everett and Earl Wilson, and the girl's hus- band, Harold McKinley, were in Kansas City with a load of cattle from the 4,000-acre Wilson estate when the kidnaping was perpetrated. Offers $2,000 Reward Rushing back tr Greenfield Wilson offered a $2,000 reward for appre- | hension of the kidnaper and the re- turn of his daughter. Mrs. McKinley was graduated last spring from the University of Mis- | souri, where her husband also was a student. In high school and at the | university she won acclaim as a bas- | | ketball player. | Wilson, who made his money in the | oil flelds of Oklahoma and then re- |turned to Dade county to buy the The start was made from in front |that the start from the high school || it went into the barn and seemed past few years, his father having |of St. Mary’s church at exactly 8:05 died some time ago. _a lo'clock. Flanked by convoys of sma u' content with the world. —_—— (Continued on Page Two), day. | | | *. * freed herself after hatf an hour, and notified officers. The car was last reported seen at | farm of his birth, is building an ex- | pensive home for his daughter and } son-in-law, Main street and William Barrati of 17 Woodruff court were the hunters and the bag of birds was made up |of four robins, two bluejays, one by Game Warden Allhouse of Gran- | by and Deputy Game Warden C. J. v Hill. | " The wardens testified that they | discovered the men while driving | south along Slater road in the direc- n of New Britain and when they |came upon them they discovered |them trying to get rid of the game they were carrying. Searching about }tho locality they found the birds list- ed above and after questioning the {men testified that they admitted having shot the feathered creatures. | Virzulli took the stand and denied | his part in the affair while the oth- ler two members of the party de- | clined to talk. Judge Saxe imposed a fine of §25 land costs against each of the three, |amounting to about $40 apiece and complimented the game wardens on™ | their excellent work in catching the men and for the way they presented | their evidence. He also stated that |any man guilty of destroying useful |and protected birds should mot be granted the privilege of & hunting license.