New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 24, 1930, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

News of the World By Associated Press e NEW BRITAIN HERA PV ARIgr] sy NIpsenRS) LD Average Daily Circulation For Week Endmg Oct. 18th 15,293 LSTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1930.—THIRTY-TWO PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS SHELL TORN RUM RUNNERS CAUGHT BY COAST GUARDS AFTER LONG EXCITING CHASE MORTGAGED STREET DISPUTE IN COURT Speedboat Helen Stages Thrilling Midnight | Run Through Gauntlet of “Enemy Craft,” But | Finally Founders In Shallow Water. in Double-Barre] Action GALLAGHERS HELD Waskowitz Sues Bendza and City | Noted Artist Dies ] i FOR STEALING GUN - SLAIN BANDIT USED oung Bristol Gunman's Weapon Stolen From Maine Store, Amhorltles Leam POLICE THINK BROTHERS WATCHED DURING HOLDUP | Belleve They Fled When Officer O'Connor Bested Therlault in Gun | ¥ Battle—Second Pistol Found in Associated Press Photo Gallagher Home—Movements of | —Photos by Associa.ed Presy DEMANDS $10,000 DAMAGE Second Boat Captured, But Was Has No Liquor Aboard— | tranded Vessel Carry- Plaintift Claims Taken Without Compensation Be- | Property ing Given Owners of Encumbrance W hen Willow Strect was Extended The city of New Britain was med defendant in two lawsuits for ing 1,000 Cases of Choice | Brands of Contraband— {7 (L Trouent by samuel 2 . Waskowitz, local realtor, today as a Four Men Captured. recult of the taking of land of Fred Bendza to extend Willow street from West to Lasalle streets. | Bendza, Moses Stein and the city are sued in one of the actions, the allegations being that Bendza failed to pay the principal and interest duc on a mortgage note on June 24, 143 thereby making himself liable for payment of the entire balance 1925 due on the mor 36,000 which he gave Wa Dec. 24, 1924, and that t an interest in the mort ause of land, while account of holding the property in the a 750, dated June 21, 19 In this action, the plaintiff seeks » foreclosure of the mortgage, DO (PL—Shoi- southerly over her, the Newport, aboard, Oct. 24 seas of a w London, torn and with swell speedboat Helen 1,000 cases of liquor lay bow down and stern in the at the edge of a breal water Watch Hill Point. The vesscl captured today by the Co following a stirr ase from Mon- 1auk Point, Biock Island sound, and Fisher’s Island und. Four men, the entire crew of the vessel, were taken into cus- tody. They were saia to be unhurt ! and were to be brought, here today "heir names were not known at th scetion base here. sion of the premises and a de- The speedboat Pucblos of Bridge- ficicney judgment. Taxes due the yort, reported in some circles to bl city of New Britain on July I, a sister ship of the Helen, also | 1930, amounting to $524.29, have not captured early today and some re- heen paid, according to the plaintiff. ports were that she had been in Got Nothing From City i 1iisher's Island sound and had made| TIn the other action, in which the ior Stonington harbor when sightel city alone is named defendant, the | by service vessels in an attempt to| plaintiff alleges that no award of | divert attention from the Helen. |damages was made to him, nor wa Inquiry Only in Her Case he at any time notified by the city The Pueblos was brought here for | that condemnation proceedings were | examination, but so far as could be [peing taken. A large part of the certained there were no charges|plaintifi’s interest in the property against the craft. The official state- | was taken without compensation mept at headquarters was that the and the sccurity for his morts Uueblos, which is & Jarge craft, “had |was materially afiected, impaired, been brought here for examination,!and decreased, he alleges. being too rough to board her oui-| Bendza was awarded damages of side. 152,800 and *d benefits of $300 | Headquarters said that it had no|when the street was extended | Information that the crait had been | through his property, and a commit- | involved with the Helen. tee of common council members in The Helen, said by the Coast|conducting an investigation into the Guard to be a 67 footer, ran afoul |entire transaction. The city paid of a Coast Guard picket linc near|Bendza $2,500, it is said, without ob- Montauk Point about midnight and |taining proper rele: pound guns boomed a warning ol to halt, as she went roaring alow a itic flight the speedboat o vay and various craft in the pick- line opened fire on her m ug her in the beam searchlights he went by. The more the picket boats took up ©f the Helen. Twisting and turning shells, the speedboat i held in the beams of ti breakin big withy today of air at city has g chy 1ged prem- across into ein is in a mortg ount of = the |on was = th preim bringing ition in which the mortg nolders actually have part of their ity in et cextension. S Attorney Ol father of the {him and the bout 1 In e spe ! S. Polk Waskowit plaintiff, represen papers were served last !night by Deputy Sherifft Martin H. | to avoid | Horwitz. The action against Stei shed on, | Bendza and the city is returnable in | search- | the city court the second Monday in lights of the pursuing craft. As she [November, while the action in came upon several large vessels At |\which the city-alone is sued is re- intervals, the Helen shot under their{tymable in superior court the first sterns and changed her course o 43 | pyesday in November, 10 keep the craft between her and FALEY the pursuing boats. thus causing e sgcom) ADVENT GHURCH Sinks From Gunfire | sound and into Ilishers Fall the cha; The Tsland Is- Jand sound, with the speedboat gain- tadilv on her pursue in a strategic attempt to escape (Continued on Page Two) JOHN A. BLAKE DIES AFTER BRIEF ILLNESS en she ing Invites Rev. Clarence Baker of River to Accept Call to | v { | This € | Mass.,, has been tendered a unani- ous call to become pastor of the | Second Advent church on Chdrch | street. Rev. Mr. Baker has been do- | ng field work for the Advent Chris- | working out of the 1 headquarters. 1f he accepts Former Manager of Boston ine invitztion to come to this city s - . pe will be the first regular pastor t Store Expires in His 101 that puipit in venr 78th Year 11 that pu I Rober pastor, resigned in September, wid left for a new charge in No- vember. Since that time the pulpit has been supplied by temporary pastors. | R. Hu, Blake, manager of the Boston Store on Main street | John Armstrong | the ases of the mort- ®\[aine, Rev. Clarence Baker of Fall River, \thcal Plate Passers | or more was dropped into the plates Robert Winthrop Chanler, world {renowned mural painter, died today t his home in Woodstock, N. Y. HEART DISEASE I FATAL TO ARTIST Trio Traced—Police Congratulat- ed On Officer’s Exvioint, Herald) — Kenneth Gal- n street and his r, Charles Gallagher of Hart- | sted today in conn the hold-up of Tuesday night when in- | working under County Edward J. Hickey traced un which wa ound upon ond Theriault, youthful bandit whose pistol duel with Officer Id- ward O'Connor resulted fatally to himself. Theriault's gun and a sec- ond onc which was discovered at Gallaghe home terday were stolen from the gencral store f A. M. Smith at Presque Isle, Me., while Theriault and the Gallagher grothers were working in that pla a few weeks ago. Kenneth is bein held in this city and his brother in Hartford. Theriault, 21 vears old died in the Bristol hospital yesterday from five bullet wounds inflicted by Policeman O’Connor the youth backed out of drug store he had invaded while officer chanced to be chatting with the proprietor. Polic ce Weanon The Gullagher brothers are held for investigation and as fugitives under suspicion of having burglar-| Chanler ized the Maine store. Police also be- | card lieve they took part in the holdup | one- Wednesday night as watchers on the | wo outside. side Their arrest resulted from a study | daughter, lof the records of the Colt Patent|nephew. Firearms Mfg. Co., which showed |secre the gun used by Theriault to have| e been sold by that company to J. L. Mrs. Galef, wholesale dealer of New rs York. Galef in turn sold the gun to the Maine dealer. He, on heing ques- tioned, replied that the weapon had been stolen when his store was bur- glarized Sunday mornis A Har- | New rington-Richardson automatic pistol |of Paris : had been stolen at the same time Virginia. he reported. | Second Gun Found | After an extensive search, detec- tives, knowing that Kenneth Galla- gher had accompanied jault to found the Has ington-Rich- ardson weapon buried in the ment of his home here. Offi James Keith made the discove A wire to Hariford resulted in arrest of the brother. e Americ d the He zained pro wers during ator of a time precedi hold-up and |that was beautiful found that Charles Gallagher and |just as he disresa Edmund Theriault visited the home | conventional painting, so he aban- of a friend, Robert Crumpler of 58 | qoned himself to the pleasure of liv- Fairfield strcet, where Theriault is|fg with a zest that would have said to have attempted to sell the |shocked his Puritan and Dutch an- automatic to Crumpler, who refused | costors. to buy. Crumpler was questioned | Chanler was born in 1872, He was in Hartford last night. {a great grandson of John Jacob As- May Have Acted As Scouts [tor and shared in the vast Astor es- Polic: also learned that range |tate. He was also a descendant of automobile was Rock’s | of the Dutch nw long list of lain in and of Gov- | i had its Roger Wil- | Dion in of i Rock's pharmacy vestigators Detective Dies in Weo tock, N. Y. Former Husband of Lina Cavalieri, Noted Opera Star—Heir to 1 tune, Mural Painter Lived Vigor- ous Life as Caprice Willed. , N. Y., Oct. Robert throp Chanler, | decorative artist and former hus- band of Lina Cavalieri, died at his hon 8 today of a hear ailr Death iad been in a con had been sufferin om | for the past two and His condition grew At his bed- | e were a Chanler, a and his 24 (UP)—| 68, noted Woodsto the il. The for 12 ho ars. days ago. de Dorothy Ashley Chanler, wi ca survived by Julia B: Mrs. J. ( Aldrich o rytown Stoney rs, 1 er of city, William A.Chanler | nd Armstrong Chaloner of | another daugh- h of th apan and M New York ity nple and and three Member of ;hhu\umv blood of half a dozen of 1 © mo: istocratic famili flowed in 1 s of Robert Win irop Chanler, but he was unim- sed by his lincage. Destined for | ¢ h family de- s relatives to most picturesqu n ar ol cas base t one of the Police yesterd tions of the Gall FraL nce as the cre- | n al bizarre, and | the tenets of the new form of if a st or ant. last governors of New York John Winthre uyve nor ion the machi even followers of VETERANS’ COUNCIL REECTEDBYD. A1, Project of Smith Post, V.| F. W., Fails to Gain Support (Cont rwo) Mor: (Continued on Page Two) Scandalize Churchgoers Malden, M Oct. 24 (P—The ushers of the Maplewood Me U\mlv\ Eipiscopal church who scandali; the con; ation by whistling taking » the collection a the church hod so¢ he 80th | inniversary ot were restored o today when t B. Aldrich, strange behavior The pastor instri to whistle every sery explained tev their ing Duane et N American War, d n LoAnd Britain chapter Veterans o ied today that zation was connected in any with the movement Instituted ws, commander of Disabled World | W cted the time a dollar bill i They whistled exactly 159 time “l':‘ for more than 20 years and widely known in the women's apparcl and men's furnishings business, died this morning at his home, 94 Glen street, after a short illness. He was in his 77th yea Mr. Blake entered the Pullar and Niven, then the store, as a clerk but his bus ness-like dignity and power of win- ning friends won him the man ship of the store. He was connected with the concern for about 35 years. After serving as manager for more than a score of years Mr. Blake r signed his position when the store was sold to the H. J. Donnelly Co, to assume charge of the men's de- partment of the Besse-Leland Co., jetiring from active work three years later. Born in Edinburgh, came to this country fn 1871 jlad been a resident of this city since. He was a member of St Mark's Episcopal church. I Besides his wife, he is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Samuel Waldo Hart of this city and Mrs. Claude| 12. Sibley of New Haven; two grand children and two brothers in Scot land. Funeral services will held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the | pened to upset his program lome. Burial will be in Fairview | Dry leaders had hoped that the cemetery, I bells of famous old North Church Drys’ Paul Revere employ of owners of Boston. Oct. 24 (UP)—It was wet today but not too wet for a "dry,” masquerading as Paul Revere, to canter over the historic route of the midnight ride. A heavy drizzle prevailed as vid H. Oakes of Belmont, in the guise of the colonial hero, galloped away from Old North Square, bound | for green as th amb; of the Massachusef | Woman's Committee for Law forcement. / Spreads Oalkes, W minute man arm througl! ge and farm®™ on the Muassachusetts baby wet, which is to be the subject of repeal referendum at the state clec- tion November 4 No redcoats were expected to balk | the modern Revere on his ride to { Lexington, but several things hap- he and *Alarm” to D ring the uniform of a was to “spread the vy Middlesex vil- wet onslau, Volstead a Scotland, eve of the be Of Ride for Prohibition’s Cause { Private Walter J. Smith post, Vet- | erans of Foreign Wars, last night, o form a veterans’ council to han- .m all money appropriated for mu- in connection | Retraces Route obscrvanecs Britain Chap! D. A tion, knows noth- tter and has at no | Comman- of the ntirely sipal "he New s an organi out this taken Andrew eterans’ 1l al would him spur Francis church e his for stes start Webster, rector refused permission. s was to have distributed pamphlets alo his route and to have read a manifesto urging citizens to vote against repeal of the state prohibition act. All this was legal. Instead, it was announced, Oakes would hand copies of the manifesto Lo prominent citizens in the various communities through which b 1 On cither side was a banner, citizens Vot and the other “Vote ‘No' on the children!” Revere Made Punchhowls wets professed to see a ot in the choice dry symbol. It to ing a Rev. | time the der name action The \ s connection.” said the D. A unauthorized in th 'As for the protest with regard | {to the action of the Amer Le- |glon in turning back the $1,000 ap- enforcement | propriated by the city for am ob-| | of of wus ¢ an founditosbedilsfisary of Armistice day,” Com- mander Andrews stated. “the New Britain chapter, D. A. V., was not organized he priation was mac to do with 1 D. A. V. had with this appropriat it had position tain, taken the the Legion did in returning the city treasury for the i~ |the unemployed of the city. “The Disabled Américan Veterans | of the World War for nce | appro- d nothing i, if the ing 1o do or felt that | about its rider's hors one reading “Arou ‘No* on November 4, bearing the words, question 2—protect ion anything to say it would have, I am cer- | course as | it to ef of very same Some tain incongruity Paul Revere as a is organized (Continued on Page Two) | (Continuad on Page Two) Robert Winthrop Chanler, €8, MADE OWN GONYENTIONS: ! winner:. | spons | gional | Hoover | wise | ploy | more his organi- | | American fathe | bers | charge W0ODS OUTLINES PLAN'TO PROVIDE JOBS FOR NEEDY Employment First Thought, Re- lief Where Work Is Not Avail- able Second Consideration COLUMBUS MAN T0 AID GOVERNMENT GHAIRMAN Croxton to Cooperate With Gover- mors of Middle Western States— Great Lakes States Apparently Hardest Hit in Depression—Main Effort is to Stimulate Renewecd Actlvity During Winter. 24 (A) — The unemployment will b Coloncl Arthur Woods relief direc ha find employment for ons possible and, o provide relief in the employment is not Wash {problem {attacked overnnient Oct nzton of by as avails h stressing the unemployed anizations to id the federal st in aiding th out plans to increase the of jobs and to care for which do not have a bread- of vas one for handle, Col, government would states to assi lies Columbus Man to Help | he had obtained the Croxton, Colum- with the gover- middle west. said, largely re- for a successful plan Ohio to take care of to cooperate in the st worked out the unemploy Woods said th fecfed region ireat Lakes would work to appoint most seriously af ppeared to be t s and Croxton | in them. He expects about three other re- to cooperate states. | Our main idea now is to 'rn\ilyi cfforts and stimulate renewed act ity to get over the winter,” Woods | said. I expect to continue the ad- mirable policies dlld the organization \ set up a ago by President W and industrie results a redu would other- have been overwhelming uner nt during the past they have prevented ac up to this tim Pwo Phases in Problem “The problem embraces two phases—the first is unemployment; the provision of relief in | where employment i he first is obvious direet the The lable | very much to be desired, but the last will be necessary also. “There two direct intensive ns in which work. t cipali ot coope state bot with t i mm‘\ nd local cor ona hand, an th itterent ir the Co ing nel Woods said the accur ployed. “We expect from each city, pass it to other wtinued on Page Two) and cities, particularly AMERICAN AVIATOR KILLED IN FRANGE Vilbert Lane, Youngest French War Flier, Succumbs Paris, Oct. 24 (&> American aviator, a companion, Killed hich they Bourget \ an tlying today v tiw coronation of cmpe Ithiopia was destroyed by Lane, who cnlisted army during the World War, undezstood was born in Pari and I Lane was said to have bee voungest aviator in the French a He was a member of An Legion post No. 1 I but said they had records of wh found. The accident and his companion time in trying to long journcy with gasoline and oil The first effor o air had and had be of their plane finally ro scemed to labor in a straight dive. houses took firc line tanks of the muc Four dwellings were without other casualties, The the flier cognizable en taken ruins. rican ris ne- no ¢ his family be oce i the they some, load but fell Iive destroyed bodics of we whe THE WEATHER vicinity tonight; and New Britain and Cloudy and colder Saturday partly cloudy colder, % It university BRAZILIAN GOVERNMENT OVERTHROWN; PRESIDENT WASHINGTON LUIS RESIGNS; STATEMENT DECLARES REBELLION OVER | ESISE T R Shakes French Hubby | |dent love Assolunt, I married it, made divor home, arrived advice that The Pauline neh just before torced landing cour Now and is shown Yo ot Parker for flyer whom his Atlantic Jean Paris in a| is above as with the should n. The | mentioned part of [iANI]MN!] NS MURDER AIELLD Capoue Rual Victim of Machine Gun Bullets HAS SEVENTEEN WOUNDS Plot sl Ame Am Is | been Assassination One of Most Elaborate in History of Chicago Underworld, Police Say After Learning Details of Plans. cago, Oct. 24 (A — Gangst silent in Chicago for time, opened up again last night and | removed Joe Aicllo, one of the fc remaining rivals of Alpho; “apone from the p T 0's crime. Aicllo, in r of Georg: Mo Mor the Ch comm some i alcohol ) pari mn ag0 crim en- 1d killed by a nknown, as he atsy Presto, ar Kolmar the impor North fired into the chine three diff as walked into what the police one of the claborate tion plot land As apartm cab wailtin, take him and secreted in to Presto open- | of an Aiello tloor window one in the apartmer way blocked by locked fled into the apartment only to meet the fir zuns coming from a building to the north. r of the court in an attempt ape ove ack fence, he ran fusill shots comin > building arouse some ding his doors, he courtyard machinc window of a Fleeing to of he to esc to from N aken to Hospital nt and who Jamg ous call fr A hom hos a vab to take nd Aiello's 1 man to a ore arrival othe 1 tinued on Page Two) ’Harv'ard Alumni Would Raise Fund .'EAPITAL SILENT | past | was of America ON BRAZIL COUP News of Rebel Victory Surprisel in Washington U. §. FAVORED FEDERALS Ambassador Declares Reports A “Absurd”—Embargo On Arms for Insurgents, lIssued By Hoove Gives Inkling of Stand. t. 24 @) Washington, Oc as to press disp fall of th. Pre B today rican the admin Washin departmer awaited wor in status there, It was obvious tion of brought officials ether tration of zton of state ials embassy Itio gna- 1tion ise to lined to statc e linist ore t 1 surpr here. he fall of vernment om ordinates nt on come from during the personally ation in- es was af- should > Stimson, who days been the [ 1 Uni st aside of the handli sohu um.m\ ing busine that purpose. The Brazilian aiting advice embassy a from Rio. The re ction of Ambasador Do Amaral, when informed of the dispatches, “How absurd!"” Hoover adm lending n also was nistration had port so far as possible in compliance with interna- tional law to the government of President Washington ILu While insisting it was not siding actively with either the government or the sinsurgents, the state depart- | ment afforded the government au- thority to purchase arms and muni- ions in this country. Rebel Arms Embargo 1o other hand, President Hoover imposed an embargo on such material to Brazil, except that going | to the government, thus making it | impossible for the insurgen wnitions. ion was ihe Lo On ident on ary Preside firm friend of ral William V ion, depender tate depa nt. he Pensacola was expected 1o ar- at Bahia about 1:45 p. m., to- had been ordered to B zilian waters to s in t aid cola on movenic now v wishes of PAYMASTER SHOT DEAD IN NEW JERSEY HOLDUP J. MeCausland Killed With- Bandits i William out Warning Before Even Accost Him in Salem I 24 (P — | Glass Works as | robbers outside | McCausland w ~kly payroll for the | ployes, amounting to eral thousand dollars. sland had 1 was w liam for shot the plant motor of 1 in an au- of without ts entered 11, still door i up arby. One opened fir and h hing the bag of money robbers fled hout the money when a score workmen came running from the plant ers of M To Pay Back Wages of Charwomen Cambrid \ I'he i3 owing 1 rubwomen last §80 by year will re- vard 1 W total as a preser group of Harvard alumni niver con of ity way plans of a materialize he charwomnc at Widener were L Christmas n had ry a been at the wher wag who libr dischar; employed Massac conmmission isetts minin that th from 35 be in 3 hout Today's iss Alumni Bulletin carried from alumni group sraduate and alumni o the proposed fund be divided proportionat the scrubwomen The appeal ar of the must ased cents an Harvard wppeal under riptions $80, to among he or sub of 1y was accompanied by case in which the | Jumni group assailed the Harvard | scrubwomen policy as shabby and | rdly and declared that the uni- | eview indefensibl Promised Probe 1'ails “Almost six mont o, group, hs a imni wetively inte women, ing sted in scrub- gave up the project of rais; nd for the women on the understanding a member of the Harvard corporation that a sincere ffort would be made at the univer- to the whole matter in- | gated,” the statement said. Whatever efforts have heen erted since the only invsti tion of the scrubwomerr case eithe planned or carried through has been | ntly made by the Consum- sgue of Massachus at the cquest of the alumni group. he Consumers' league has rviewed at length every one of the 19 women discharged—a bit of checking up which the university apparently never fhought worth- with sity ve ex- hen, A- one ers’ L ts in- (Continued on Page Two) | of army | badly | sranted by | Mil | influence | |w |ett Coup Engineered By Rio Army and Navy Officers, Who Sur- round Palace and De- mand That Executive Quit. Proclamation Urges All Factions to Drop Arms and Talk Peace—Slight Mobs Storm Newspaper Offi- ces Backing Nationalists. Disturbances as administration of ident Washington Luis of Bra- 4l was overthrown today. The pres- 1t ousted and a provisional gov- tablished. was Rio De Janeiro in a civil and military iich called for the res- ice in the present in- the government 10 Paulo also ap- own. from nment ¢ Not only Sao Paulo said firing against the t palace there and that nutes later a white flag as run up President Washington Luis re- and there were indications Dr. Julio Prestes, president clect, against whom the insurrection had been principally directed, also would quit the field. The military committee at Rio De Janeiro issued a proclamation ecall- 1z upon all factions to get togeth- nd to re blish peace. Rio de zove: Janeiro, Oct. 24 (#—The of President Washing- Luis, which for three weeks has een ting a wide-spread reveolu- tionary mevement in Brazil, wae thrown today and the president resigned. The blow which overthrew the ad- ministration was struck by a group and navy officers in Rio de self, a provisional head- being set up and a procla- being issued to all Brazillans d the civil warfare now in pro- ress and to establish peace again. coup came with dramatic shortly after midnight, 'y police some troops tak- posi around the pres- and cutting off nment over e President at First Refuses teral Menna Barreto, head of io de iro garrison, acting name of a civil and military went to the president 1 demanded his resignation, but or many hours the latter refused to out of office. During the early hours of the day the city was but later gangs n the commi liet (Continued on, Page 10) GIRL DRIVER HELD AFTER CARS CRASH Violation of Road Rules Charge Filed by Policeman > Bilver vlaced under arrest by r Joseph Kennedy about 6:35 morning following an vestigation into an accident which wolved two automobiles, one driven ind the other by Samuel 147 Curtis street. ¢ accident occurred at the in- section of Allen and Stanley streets and an elderly woman, Mrs. Anthony Carrunba of 147 Curtis street who was riding with Allia was iken up. Kowalczyk appeared at this session of police eourt with violation of the rules road. She requested a con- of until Wednes- er time to request was Kowa was ut a'clock Mi nin charged of the lance day morning procure ase to allow counsel the th Driver in ¢ Fined $125 Avthur Murphy of 127 Smallev street, who was arrested last might by cant Fecney and Officer at the corner of Kllis and South Main street after the car he was driving had collided with two othe charged at this morn- ion with driving under the of liquor and was fined costs by Judge Traceski sion the wski, was 25 and er the court mitted $25 of the fine. Murphy was driving ar owned homas Wynne of 79 Prospect t and was traveling in a south- direction on South Main street n his car swerved sharply to the and crashed into autos driven by Arthur Westman of 120 Franklin square and James Connelly of 275 Washington strect. All three autos suffered slight damage as the result of the collision. iu Ty

Other pages from this issue: