Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OVEMBER 3, 1930. 1 to heaven, but (hr‘; laws says that Kkilling his| rm t neral wel- are, b s individual good must | subordinated to the general | 00d.” | LEVIT TALKS 08 Tells of “Mystic Experience” He o iiigait e o meomnect b 0 TURNS T0 ORGANIZATIO Works o Establish Government | With Vargas as Head minal 1d would I ro. No i th constructing Law Cannot Control soul Mysticisr on is was felt as ethod would the offic eposition of to place nt by the ton Luis Refuses to Quit em, however He was co nent d hi motio gion and Law o = PASSENGER DFAD, PILOT BADLY HURT Airplane Falls in Tailspin Over Jersey Airport pointed ent loca does not reco id inducegd vietim in Juse-the things hearers to hold Jatred, ridiculs or conte fore e ite against bl gious moral codes ed with mar while cri relation to explained. If o ierferes wi on with his al matter in most erence with religious prohibited by st of states, he expla Pointing out th code does not act fo ous laws, Professor . man cannot be stealing under the t decalogue Steal,” but that ited under tie state beca iibit stealing. Law and Sabbath man'’s . CHINESE ATTENPT TO 0UST BANDITS » o« Nationalists Move Against Com- munist Armies he No 4 man's activit ate comm cn religious grov observanc s on the g egalize the Chris! re sustained becaus pected with the rhat the legal 1iso to be the is immaterialin “The good that reii is conserved and the e ligion can do is aveided by not al o o lowing religion to u Sy b of the state,” he added : “Religion deals with a zre v ke for ps. The state what for practical r tainty. “Religion says that lying, ste and murder will damn one’s soul he world to come. The crim Jaw says that the religion be correct but that lying, ste and murder hurt the general fare. “The individual religionist ma; demand that he be permitted to sacrifice his children on the altar | of @od because in that way his soul US i FRISBIE’S FAMOU PUMPKIN PIES Baked to a Golden Brown Tasty, Spicy, Satisfying ORDER TODAY At Your Grocers — At Your Restaurant 1ds, p dislodge route to n Hus y must d import- sons is hay northern unidentified 1an and a e 10 Yochow, where American mission- al Furopeans are nchowting ting two refugees FOR BIST HESULTS HERALD CLASSIFIE] JAPANESE TAKE . sherill, former city | | manager, is being held up by Ar- | thur Woods, chairman of the pres- | ident's emergency coramittee, as | [model for other communities to fol- | {low. | The government is ac- | FORMOSA VILLAGE - - = === Mahebo Victory Regarded as|yes, cotimotea spprosimaces ..f.ifi Important Advance itself arc under way or about to be ed the capture of 1 Formosan village, by J troops, a victory regarded by authorities as one of the most RUM RUNNERS NOW he village. a natural fortress, | e 1oy towering s and | Disappearance of Detroit Real ‘ Estate Man Being Probed on (P— river rum kidnaping » conditions in the s was being inv etectives in their search | Kaier, reputed wealthy 4 real estate dealer, held sin t Thursday night by kidnaper Inspector John Hoffman, head of > blackhand squad, said that with | ssage of the Canadian law for- | export of liquor to the Unit- ates, rum runners have turned | “shaking down” wealthy persons o for various reasons would not peal to law for protection. He found irdous by bridges but no cost to At least two officers we 1 while advices failed to state the \ber of wounded. Mahebo was burned after its oc- pation by the military Japanese forces exacted a toll during the attack, which ed Saturday. Farly reports said at 80 savages were killed and more wounded. It was im- possible to estimate exactly the lo: 10 the savages, however, as they ried off their whenever runne because of v “import- st ed heavy dead of ctions reinforcements nd machine gun in rid they this less haz runnir to the past threats rather than used to obtain money Taken From oss the T however, been | days, hay Up desecribed a L v by the sava at Mahebo Frida There they piled up t of many of the Japanese led in t week, he Home aken from his home t by four men who eral prohibition agents. showed a badge and taking Kaier to the States district attorney’s of VAY BE CHECHED Selected Areas of Six or Eight s Cities May Be Taken received | 10,009 | not communicate | induced the kidnap- Kidnap led to app the lobby s were wa Kaier went h ghbors called (UP)—Tm- unemploy - cted key cities 1o on United of the Womiak Suspected Inspector Hofiman said (Peajacket) Woz um ner indicted two 3 in connection with the br two score border led Ka es and ph ial Tu finally question into tody for All Figures e haveniia I FATAL TO CYCLIST rp) Herbert alighted from bicycle < up an apple fron t by a motorear ¢ 0 Look out for them in bad weather Exposure to cold 2nd dampness gives colds their start. Foriify your system at the first sign of a cold with Grove's Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets. They contain both the quinine tonic and laxative neces- s to pr nnot ob- nad communi- 1 R 0- orts ar them, foo. Geta box at cny drag store, 30c. Grove’s Loxative S BROMO - QUININE Tablets pay roads imittee Still Busy loyment coordinating city. worked the direc- der One Loan will Pay them All iP + - pa you need — one ntial o prompily without ing you in any wa nified plan has helped N dreds out of debt. It will he you. Investigate it today. Find t how easily vou can get the money you necd. No obliga- tion whatever. cred en o TWENTY MONTHS TO PAY 3 Monthly repays a ... 3 60 Loan $ 5 Monthly repays a ... 5100 Loa S 7 Monthly repays a ... 5140 Loan $10 Monthly repays . $200 Loan $15 Monthly repays a $300 Loan The entire cost is based on & legal interest charge of three and one-half per cent per month on the unpaid balance just for the actual time money is in use, “A HELPFUL LOAN SERVICE FOR THE HOME" Phone 4950 The Mutual System 300 MAIN STREET New Leonard Building : —_——————————————————————» | OF GIBSON PLANS “NEW YORK ONLINER Doubt Ambassador Will Get Far | Perennial Challeager {0 Try| in Negotiations Again During 1932 pended on an increase in exports it was essential that “the world's mar- kets be not barred or limited, but rather opened. to natural competi- tion.” < Th- Keichsbank president asserted that Germany's currency is 'un- shakable.” His speech was made in R S connection with the opening of a Paris, Nov. 3 (@ Dresden branch of the bank build- cles are skeptical to be expected from convercation Hugh §. Gibson, American ambasza- | dor to Belgium, with French and| Italian leaders with a view to| bringing about a settlement of their | naval differences. | Pertin Echo De P: inz 1l seemed muck little. Some oth ind professed blic opin. ertinax s Gibson thought Ttaly fied with a theoretical which would leave I preponderance French experts view in Augu soon undecei L'Ocuvre shared Perti said t M impression in Paris that } ly misinformed Italian negotiatior He concluded that it woul ter for France to study th ties of adherinz to the Anglo-Ameri- can-Japar act than delu he the highly precari- ous chances of a reasonable Franc Ttalian agreement. YES, HE WAS WANTED Mrs. Paul Sadowski of Last ton, Mass. to this city || Chicago, Nov. 3 (P—Worms, | | estimated by scientists to be 390, ] 000,000 years old, are on display here. They were found, pres carbonaceous matter, n Island, 1IL, by Bryan Patterson, || of the department of geology of i | | rved as ar Blue the Field museum, where they were placed on exhibit ‘Worms,” said Patterson, soft-bodied cre aratively rare usuzlly the only tr are their burrows or “To find them in pressed flat between layers of a shaly rock and preserved as thin || sheet of carbonaccous matter, as s the case in this nearby Chi- cago locality, is indeed a rare New York, Nov.' 3 (4P—Sir Thomas | Lipton, perennial challenger for the | America’s Cup, arrived here on the |Leviathan this morning with the |statement that he hoped and expect- abundance, [ {ed to challenge again in 1932 for Ithe elusive yachting “mug.” Here primarily on a business trip, * Thomas will be presented with “be- ires, are s fossils and them Former Meriden Record Employe Dies Tod Worcester, Mass., Nov. 3 (UP)— B. Leroy Woodbury, 43, advertising manager of the Worcester Telegram- Gazette, died at Hahnemann hospi- the “Americans’ Cup” by admirers|tal here today following Gperas |throughout the United States who[yion performed Saturday. consider him worthy the title of the | \voodbury was a native of Nashua. [meriass best dossry IN. H. He came to Worcester in Back in the Uhited States a little 1920, having previously been con- than a month his fifth | nected with the Nashua, 1. H., Tele- attempt to lift the America’s Cuplgraph; Meriden, Conn. Record; the husband told him that his wife | failed at Newport, Sir Thomas 'lvj)iancms(er, N. H., Union-Leader, was in town, and he to the |clared himself highly cheerful over iand Manchester Mirror. police station fo see whether he was|the chances of success in his next| je leaves a wife and three chils wanted by the police. challenge. | dren. Sergeant M. J. Flynn talked with | Charles E. Nicholson, designer of | | Sadowsksi and then called the Tast- Shamrock V, will likely be commis- oo Moo Hoodlums hampton police, and found that the |sioned again to design the new boat i 5 A s wanted thero for nom-sup. {but it 1 improbable that Captain Killed by Chicago Gang Chicago, Nov. 3 (P—Two more port. He was arrested and held for Heard will be retained as profes- hoodlums, Frank Smurlo, 21, and Sasthampton authorities. He | sicnal skipper. at be came here to sce if he { William “Smooth” Sierza. 35, have could find work. | fallen before enemy bullets. The S S | pair, described by police as minor German Reparation Plan |ngures in Chicago's underworld, Dresden, German Nov. 8 () — were shot to death early yesterdav Luther, president of the[in a speakeasy on the northwest Reichsbank, in a speech here today |side. asserted that Germany must insist The police specluated on the the« on that section of the Young planfory that they were killed by mem- which stipulates that all nations af- |bers of a gang whose liquor trucks fected must cooperate in solution of [they preved on, or that a gambling the reparation problem. fight or robbery might have been The world's capital, c,air].{(hr- motive. ing the it editor, in said that ab rench is today ado and. who, she |110re Friends of ek 10 seck her hus would be satis- ¢ [learned, was living here naval pari that, we who had that same | nd September we the left party organ \ax’s - pessimism, and Gibson had given the persons he talked with had been compl s to the F YLIERS LEAVE TEMPELHOF Berlin, Nov. 3 (®—Captain J. - ol Boyd and T nant Harry P. Connor, transa aviators, companied by Maisie Proctor and | vivian Stayner, who flew with them from England last lefc Tempelhof airdrome this afternoon for Amsterdam. They will return to Croydon from there. | to Hans 1t here week, he came Says AUGUST HECKSCHER Noted Philanthropist Chairman of the Heckscher Founda. tion for Children; President Child Welfare Committee of America Director: Empire Trust Company Crucible Steel Company “The most laudable service that any industry can render is the attempt to benefit its patrons. That is the cardinal principleofphilanthropy. And so, interested as I always am in modern developments, I consider that your use of the Ultra Violet Ray in your Toasting of LUCKY STRIKE is a distinct contribution of which the public will whole- heartedly apprave.” LUCKY STRIKE —the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the finest tobaccos —the Cream of the Crop —THEN —“IT’S TOASTED.” Everyone knows that heat puri- fies and so TOASTING removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and coughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! Everyone knows that sunshine mellows — that's why TOASTING includes the use of the Ultra Violet Ray. “It’s toasted” Your Throat Protection = against lrrifcilon—cgcinn eou‘h Consistent with its policy of laying the facts before the public, The American Tobacco Company has invited Mr. August Heckscher to review the reports of the distinguished men who have witnessed LUCKY STRIKE’S famous Tossting Process, The statement of Mr. Heckscher appears on this page. @ 1930, The American T A