New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 14, 1930, Page 2

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i PEACEFUL SESSION * AS PRUSSIAN DIET . OPENS IN GERMANY (Continued ¥rom Tirst Page) | | cists had participated in attacks on Jewish stores yesterday. Strong po- lice patrols, both mounted and afoot guarded the business section of Ahe city today. it was not expected day’'s disturbances, growing opening of the Reichst unusual ~fascist repr would be repeated. | The German press practically as a unit today condemned vesterday” outrages, particularly their an semitic tinge. Dr. Hugenbera's na- tionallst organs insinuated that the | trouble was started by communist provocateurs. Fascists The fascist that yester- | out of with ntation, its Outrages declared their | partisans had ing to do with | the rowdyism nr declaration, however, elicited derisive con from the liberal ftist p Deutsche Allgemeir INg, re senting the bankir shipping and | industrial intere pointed out that Dr. Hitler can escape sonal responsibility for events. Deny party rents ot yesterday's ironically said. "L rman people reason and decency has begun. ibly and visibly we are approac ¢ ‘third Reich"” was made street wa street at § at 8:34¢. St. ) N € reached at 8:36, an over. The winner of to the church steps wher sprawled out, rubbing a anatomy with one hand | between clenched teeth, "If I r win another bet like that I hope I | die first The chariot had no cushions. but | it did have a wooden cross piece nailed in the cent and this was the little joker that made t ner of the bet more to be piti scorned. “Want another ri man. But the winner’ limped pain- fully towards home wh liniment | reposed on the medicine closet shelf, in the bathroom. EAST HARTLAND WOAN DEAD (Continued From First P ) | estnut Main street hurch was | he lay g reformatory on a charge of br ing and entering and in 1926 was fined $100 and costs for operating an autémobile while intoxicated for taking an automobile without th permission of its owner. | The dead girl had been with the | Litchdl family for the past 14 years Held in Hartford Hartford, Oct. 14 (P—George Pat- |, node, 35, farm hand of Iast Hart- |y land, was being held by state police | at the Hartford barracks this morn- | i1ig in connection with the shooting of Jennie Carr, at 5 p. m terday on the farm of Mr. and Mrs. John Lichdi of Fast Hartland, Miss | Carr's foster parents, who occasion- ally ‘employed Patnode. Mis died at 1:30 a. m. today in the hospital, Westfield, Mass. ves- Patnode, accordindyto police here, | cy had admitted shootifg the young woman, but caimed that it was an accident, the old double barrel Colt shotgun, with which he says he was practicing “military maneuver having exploded and discharged its load of deer slugs into her back as she was leaving t barn where she had been working. The police, how- ever, say the girl was heard to cry “Don't shoot; don't shoot fore the gun went off. Patnode also claimed that he had been hunting and had returncd to the barn on his return, entering it | after Miss Carr - a three-hour sei house about a mil the Lichdi f: he ad been drinking he the past 1 in He was found af ¥ 1 h asl in a ind a half from tupor arraigned be Justice today Medlcal Examin tello of H: this morning He wa tective Police Licutenar perform an ed by C Hic t Paul I HIT-RUN AUTOIST antopsy De KILLS POLICESiAN (Continued From two passershy marines took portunity thought to be in Stratford later walk police to identify Serge Bridgeport, had been a 28 years two vears & cousin of I’ General Tom T Cantured in The marin excitement of t f are en rout the coupl Stratford ford and Norwalk ertir recaptured in Strat tioning by the con ! U 88 October City th iodine N illionaire Will Lead Musical Comedy Music New York, Oct. 14 (A—A mil- naire will lead the orchestra in new Ziegfeld musical comedy, in, who inherited his m his father, the late Joseph J. rmer owner of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, said he accepted the offe use he “loves conducting an stra better than anything in_ life Lannin, who said he had orc chosen slaughter and driving without a 1i- 1i his per- | lo *hurch g the fun was all | N club is plan the bet crept off | o / ‘r)'('l’\ll'r\ at the Sc art of his | \ainut street. reput plans | tenant Go! | didate | istry of justice most 1o Police learned that |1 srobably WINNER OF WAGER GETS BARROW RIDE He is b CROSS T0 ADDRESS RALLY HERE Soiy plans fo to hes w in English bers of ¢he Democratic club, will have a headqu ogram for this rally wili completed by the club ite today or tonight g between emt the Democrs one lub of New Britain, e of the leading male including the the democr: rict t, will tend a democratic ral- Bushnell Memorial ally n ay night erats some me r tic ¢ Mrs. John IS. enter- Demo- iday evening of 11 be host @ wrd party in the democr: ‘s Promises o Come Here executive Britain 1ss meeting to evening at 8 of Italy hall on held Thurse All who are registered »d to attend. candidates will Italians licans Local republican on the program on . October 1 public at rnor B. E governor, the club h Lieu- can- nised wl Rogers for has pro BRAZIIAN REBELS (LA VICTORiS \H. | at (Continued From First Page) in Minas Geraes to far north capital, northwest, and in the A unique issued by the min- said iangular Ge region of where “The vast t of Mi has heen g on comple tors by capture of Ube important city of the re “The tunn t M Gerac has been ¢ f insur- working normal- ailroad line to Sul- Adolpho Moreira was poi director of the railroad the federal governme Other Campaigns Suceess “In the other sectors of Minas ral forces are continuing in all their initia- ed contrast to the dis- mong the rebels. frontier in the state Janeiro federal for gsure against had made are nov terr along neira in- in- at- of who nd to the the z to f on 1 irito Santo (state 0 De Janeiro) states the situ In Para eated reb battalions hern the sul nment 1y or orde for war tional squadron ri In Para i service a otilla of f jary cruisers r of Sao Paulo continuing t victor- column Federal Porce Routed held under bonds | so that | club | both | > of the tepublican | s ocenrred on | ed for | | guns. and | torious. [BELIEVE IT OR NOT FLOATING RockS ON THe NELSON RIVER CANADA . o~ THAT CANNOT BARK LIVE ON THE \SLAND OF Juon de NOva, Madegascar \CE FORMS BENEATH BOJLDERS AND FL0ATs * THEM DOWN STREAM (On dreaved proof of anything (Reg. U. 8 Pat request, eent picted by of. SICHETL oA Tnest — continvously hug 1923 WHERE THERE ARE CATS. SAYS DARWIN M i (it with stamped. ad- elope. Mr. Ripley will furnish him), ) KePT WIS EYES OPEN FOR 97 HOURS RED CLOVER GROWS THICKEST BY RIPLEY L © 10, King Features Syadate Tne. Greas Brian righs reserved, WF-——‘*“% EXPLANATION OF YESTIRDAY'S CARTOON Dr. ord is told in Alfred Dorville's “Picturesque P romenade. Ashford Spoke the Same Sermon 75,009 Times—The full story of Dr. Ashford’s rec An amusing feature of this curi ous record of repetition is that the clergyma n never spoke from memory, but read his ser mon from a prepared set of papers. “Cure” is cine sold in drug stores is prohibited by the laws of the National Féod and _Drl‘lg Act. ence on commodities in our modern apothecaries is verified by E. A. Smithurst, a drug: abs gist in Chicago. Alexand city has no cemetery or gravey ard within its corporate limits. ot On a Bottle of Medicine—T he use of the word “cure” on a bottle of medi- Its La., Has No Graveyard—Though the population of Alexandria is 23,010 the Al inhumation for this city is in Pineville, La., a smaller city across the Red river from Alexandria. The Barking Sands of Kauai—Kauai is one of the western islands of the Hawaiian group, about 75 miles from Honolulu. sand-hills, about 60 feet high, and stretching along for about half a mile. Along the shore at Nahili is this series of wind-blown The sands is com- posed of coral, shells and particles of lava, and when walked on emit sounds like a barking dog. A full account of this phenomenon is contained in my “Believe It or Not"” book. TOMORROW—The Fore-Handed Surgeons [ | i eral high officers. Among the sup- |been quick also to counter informa- ‘ plies were rifles and some machine The revolutionary troops also me casualties. other encounter along the long front, the right of which in in the state of Sao Paulo and the left ana, the revolutionary forces prisoners and captured a large quantity of supplies, munitions, and two machine guns. The contact was at Gatinga | Although fighting ihcident to the revolution of Pre azainst the government -nt Washington Luis is in progress in at least three or four important areas, it has appeared here that the major operation of the civil war may folding along the Parana Sao Paulo frenticr now of revolutionary ng an army of many spread all along the . advancing as they can toward into Sao Paulo, rf i section, into wh is pouring troops for its de- growing ernmer s¢ Rio De Janeiro dispatches insist that in fighting on both the left and right of General Miguel Cosf rebel forces federal troops have been vic- In onorther Parana at Jac- qa on Colonia Mineira, and in southeastern Sao Paulo at Ribeira where a rebel attack for the second time has been broken up. Is Claim Victories is t force is railroad to re- 4 12th battalion capit a governme Bello The re During 1 the mored with < some Janeiro from hern o1 rised Over Action Oct. 1 be that which is un- | . whence a federal column | | tion which was said to have been | spread by the central government at | Rio De Janeiro that the movement here is bolshevik in character. It is pointed out the movement having | gained its desired end in the deposi- n of the allegedly dishonest gov- ernment, the city he turned to normal without anti-foreign agita- tion he new governor Is an educated man, journalist and owner of a su- gar mill. Other officlals have been appointed from among judges, pre- fects, civil engineers and men of means, and certainly are not radi- | cals or bolsheviks, it is declared. | Banks in Complete Order | Communication from foreign and Brazilian banks to the provisional | governor and military commander in Pernambuco today said: laving consented to the desires of your excellency for the opening of our banking establishments we are glad to inform you that the services are running in complete or- der, and we praise your excellency and the military government for the discipline which you knew how to implant for normalization of activ- ities of the entire state.” The communication was signed by the managers of the British Bank of South America, the Bank of Lon- | don in South America, the National City Bank of New York, the Royal Bank of Canada, Banque Francaise Lt Italienne, Banco Ultramarino, and seven Brazilian banks. CITY MAKES SWITCH IN FINANCING PLAN (Continued From First Page) \ to pay back the loan it will to levy a special tax lly for five comm As eded, the tax will y f a mill, Chair ably he one- man Judd said Judd Coners With Chairman Judd w ay in the at and the oftice ing commissioner learned that the tax over a period of provision for contained in the Chairman Judd recalled a under State Officials 15 in conference general's of. banlk t Hartford read the years is such eing statutes that the torn i plan to s five state of raising money his plan when was 1 also worinl | yea \cing | year will he | and | 1nen | hank | milles of o raised | v of the the im fund ing rk. it was aht 1 question application of the statute. \ i Bank Wil Buy Issue That the Savings Bank of New Britain, which agreed to buy the $105,000 street fund note issue only to learn that there was a question as to the legality of the issue, will purchase the $100,000 issue, was re- ported to Mayor Quigley and Chair- man Judd today by President E. N Stanley. A meeting of the directors of the bank was scheduled today to formally act on the matter. The board of finance and taxation will also act tomorrow to obtain au- thority for a $150,000 sewer bond fssue, Chairman Judd said, the pur- pose being to prepare for sewer ex- | tensions although the entire issue will not be floated at once. As time goes on, it will ba possible to issue the bonds according to the needs of the sewer department, and it was deemed advisable to obtain the nec y authority at this time rathe than call the board together later essa NOTORIOUS BANDIT, SOUGHT FOR TWO YEARS, WOUNDED (Continued FronFirst Page) of thelr information the Kansas City Branson, which caused officers to go to Hunted 2 Mexico ‘ Lamar, Colo., Oct. 14 (P—William Hareison (Jake) Fleagle, reported shet and c nson, Mo., today, was one of the most sought ter criminals in the United States. | He was hunted by police through- out the country and the search for Lim extended into Mexico but he | vluded capture for more than two | following the holdup of the National bank here May 23, 1928, which resulted in the killing four men. Three of Fleagle’s companions in | the robbery of the bank are dead, | having been exocuted in this state The trio—Ralph E. Fleagle, brother of Jake; Howard L. Royston and George J. convicted of crish, president and one of the two | hot down as they attempted | to thwart the holdup. Juke Fleagle was implicated by brother in the robbery of the | and the subsequent murders, two of which took -place in Kansas | while posses scoured hundreds of western Kansas and east- ern Colorado “bad lands” for a trace of the bandits. hi VACANCY FILLED London, Oct. 14 GP—It was re- ported in government circles this evening that Lord Amulree had been appointed secretary of state for air | succeeding Lord Thomson who was killed in the R-101 disaster. He was formerly Sir William Warrander | MacKenzie, T Capone Attorneys Use 750 Pages in Appeal Chicago, Oct. 14 (A—An un- precented number of words—750 pages of them—have been em- ployed by attorneys for Ralph Ca- pone, “‘public enemy,” in present- ing their appeal to .the Unitedl States circuit court of appeals from Capone's conviction for in- come tax fraud. | Capone is under a three year sentence. The filing of the 750~ page bil] of exceptions, fApresent- ing what lawyers believe to be a record wordage for such a docu- ment in gangster cases, probably will delay final action on Capone's case until next spring. GLOUCESTER RACE AGAIN POSTPONED (Continued From First Page) gus Walters fOr rule of the north | Atlantie. Wins Only Contest Captain Ben has chalked up the cnly victory of the series, in last Thursday's race. Saturday's Monday's scheduled contests were ended by a failing wind which pre- vented the schooners from finishing within the six hour time lfmit. Thebaud now needs only one more victory to clinch the Sir Thomas Lipton international fishermen's challenge trophy, and take three- fitths of a $5,000 cash prize. Inter- est in the serfes has been increased to an intensity not known locally since the international races of 1928 by the noticeable improvement in Bluenose since the first race. That interest has spread to Canada for an offer was received by Captain Angus of a substantial cash prize for a race between the two schooners from Gloucester to Halifax. Word was received here also that plans were already being made for ani | a two-out-of-three series off Halifax, down-east race course. Record Time for Job Tlebaud was repaired for resump- tion of the contest in reecord time. Three hours after she went on a marine raflway she was ready to return to the water, wearing a new coat of paint,above and below the water line. Thirty men accomplish- ed the task, spurred to speed by their own enthusiasm over Gloucester's claimant for international honors. All Gloucester prayer for a good breeze as time for the start of the contest approached. The race com- mittee announced that unless a promising Lreeze came up they would not attempt to send the schooners over the 37 5-8 mile open ocean course. Trué to their word, they postponed the race before the appointed hour. | City Honors Mayor at Funeral Rites Today Bridgeport, Oct. 14 (A—A grate- ful city today paid final honors to Dennis Mulvihill, who was known as | the “stoker mayor” during his ten- ure of office in the early part of the century. He died Saturday fol- lowing a brief illness. City officials led by {ward T. Buckingham funeral, Flags on all public build- ings were half staffed. Policemen appointed by Mulvihill acted as pall bearers. Burial was in a Bridg:- port cemetery. Mulvihill was mayor from 1901 to 1905 and was given the soubriquet of “Rugged Honesty.” | Mayor Ed- attended the TO ROLLER SKATE HOME Gorham, Me., Oct. 14 (P—Rofert E. Smith of Moline, Ill., who push- ed a wheelbarrow 1,744 miles from his home to Boston, where he at- tended the American Legion con- vention last week, has decided to | roller skateshome. He has been resting at a farm here. He sald he would start his roller skating trip from Boston next Monday. and it appeared the schooners would wflMEN make a contest of their, trip to the 1 @, IN BATTLE; ONE BADLY BEATEN Loser in Brawl Has Cuts on Face and Arms—Glasses Broken Officer John Liebler was detailed. at 9:40 o'clock this morning to in- vestigate a complaint that a woman | had been assaulted at 64 Beaver: | street. He reported that Mrs. Nellie Szczenpaski, owner of the property, had been assaulted by Mrs. Anna | Meskoski of 80 LaSalle street. | Mrs Szczenpaski's face andl arm were cut and Dbleeding .and her | glasses broken. The officer* found | that the assault followed an argu- ment. The assaulted woman did not | wish to have her assailant arrested, ! but asked the officer to speak to | Mrs. Meskoski. Upon going to 80 | Lasalle street Officer Liebler discov- i(*red that Mrs. Meskoski was not at ihume. { | Hunger Believed Cause | Of Man’s Fall Off Auto * Hartford, Oct. 14 (P—Hunger was believed to be the primary cause of the fall from a truck late |yesterday afternoon of Edward | Hurd of 451 Park street. whose body | was identified today at the Hartford | hospital by his wife. Hurd had been |employed in the mgrning by the | Roger Sherman TraMfer company fat the Morgan street freight yard. He was assigned togghe job of un- loading a shipmegt of goods. John G. Masony, superintendent of the Sherman company, stated that the man had come to him in the morn- ing asking for a job In Order that he might get something to eat. Fel- - low workmen discovered the man !on the ground where he‘ad fallen off the rear end of theWbruck. He | was believed to have fainted from exhaustion. 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