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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1930. _Sth district—155 out of 268 Ralph | bition, but it saw no such signifi- . |lican, sweeping back an urban lead L repn., | | The Daily Mail foresaw today that A Holdale margin which pass- : ~ 15 out of 465, Tred | OYER HEFLIN 02,000} President THoover's aieultics. wi e A et ! 5. R. Ken- | MFNT be increased but with regard to pro- lating had faded to only 4,171 with | ) | I, repn | MLl hlumon the paper emphasized that 5565 precincts in the state still to S Jefiersonian Says Election Was l would be a mistake to attack any be heard from—a majority of them 5 Congressmen and Senator Tn- MNSAS SENATOR sbansi Provie Goveror Quits "o ¢ s ‘ S dl Cand Sonl ot s come Imveaigation o maoce. |Lo0Con Election Comment Deals |“}:f‘m‘i‘;;tf:‘:_':'nwd chat wneen- | CODGTeSSiONRl Candidate HT) 5 Soaeen cabutates dicated s Pa‘“ysRew* UBSCURE HEURE Aiter 19 Year Term sonsoners. e, o s | LAIgHY With Prohibition s < conseavence of the etecuon. -a | ADGad O REPUBHCAD | Einets Seotante nac 545,175 votes o | > return to tolerance regarding drink | 244,602 for the blind republican - K s inissing today, John H. A : {is inevitable sooner or later.” } = | against whom a large number of ) i I Do¥o g SLECE d's unefficial majority over| London. Nov. 6 \.T“v]msull‘ of | Juncau. Alaska, Nov. 6 (I)—The | republican leaders in the state turn— - | States attracted popular British al- majority of newspapers nommlllv si-Shan today announc- | ¢ < en under the spell of the acmmrmh,.mpporun republicans likewise had HE[ 6 ]L] Nation 1 ctirement cir ele- | Bankhead, regular demoeratic| oRHioN Drincipally as they turned on FOREGLOSURE FOREGAST tide which hit the states TuesdaY. |geserted the Schall cause. x t thro it : 2d amassed 149.953 votes | the prohibition question and indicat- Georze B. Grigaby, democratic| rmne farmeriaber - candidate for Heflin, who ran as an|ed growth of opposition to the 1§th T candidates for delegate to congress.| prnest Lundeen, was far behind independent after he was excluded amendment Bondbolders Admit Intended Action |the highest r‘lr-r(liivc o:lice in ‘t\hcie‘" | with 148,930 votes while Charles s a candidate in the democratic| Serious editorial comment, how- ; % oy A as Alesdng st amesEW IC ket Criim iy e i- Drimary for failure 0 sapport. the | cver while nating the wet {enden.| AEWinst Company Owned By |sham, republican, by 417 votes, with | yopn. ,;I}id'fgcfsz‘d;";mi;fl ‘c:"‘“h’. party’s presidential ticket in 1928.|cy in some states, took the view that | aXew Haven' | approximately 70 per cent of the| .ouji with 4 bare 17,860 votes. o N nas formbdl Clsadnys olsc | anyBimmediate eration o." the | ;‘0'1"5 reported. i o5 | % Aad frauadieat pronibition laws was not to be ex-| Worcester, Mass., Nov. 6 (UP)— | Democratic candidates for the ter- [yar Aih 3 DG S peeted and that everything pointed | Holders of bonds of the Worcester | ritorial legislature here also “'"0“‘ oman Vindicated in . iited States still remaining | Consolidated Street railway, which |polling Jarge votes in many districts, | Wallace Rum Rebellion cave B. M. | hominally dry |is owned by the New York, New Ha- | but returns were too incomplete to| Wallace, Idaho, Nov. 6 (A —One The morning Telegraph, openly (ven and Hartford railroad, will fore- | be conclusive. of two women who sought offices for | Sympathetic with F ident Hoover, | close the mortgage on the railway, Republicans were apparently as-|vacated when their husbands were Tan with Hefin : “That his clection was followed |it has been admitted. | sured of two posts in the territorial | convicted in the so-called “Wallace n ticket. | DY t depression the United | The railway's funded debt wasduc | government, however, as A. G.|rum rebellion” apparently has wom States has known in many years cer- |on August 1. Clark V. Wood, presi- | Smith, candidate for treasurer and |her campaign of “vindication.” tainly is not his fault but it is no less |dent of the railway, said the New [Cash Cole, candidate for auditor,| Mrs. W. H. Herrick, whose hus- ins who have claim- | railway through the New England opponents. | ccunty when convicted with sixtcem ed A(- E are any r I N ! ed not wi wom justification that they S < a | f ‘ i 4 MINES SENT TO pR]SON hat they |Investment and Security _ company | other officials of conspiracy to vio party of prosperity oubleso i b ~‘l4’1t no obligation to meet the m |late the national prohibition law, —_— ult of opposition between | turities and would not advance ad- | MINN |led her opponent by a large margin i PINCHOT MARG]N 80 00 Hirce Conl Miners Also Draw Peu- | (1€ President and congress Is a dead- | ditional funds. in the tabulation of Tuicaday's slec: 0 )" alysis Of lxoln and ‘W. Eugene McGregor of Boston, ’ tion returns. or altiest Foct Kentucky Ontrage— ssuc of the clec- |chairman of the Consolidated Rail- Mrs. R. F. Weniger, wife of the er DAY]S RUNS UP BIG LEAD g ) s a_great misfortuns | way's Bondholders protective com- | cenvicted county sheriff, apparently Terms Total Nine Years Americans, and not for America |mittee, sald foreclosure would take | | was beaten by Walter Hendrickson. Nov. 6 (UP) place but would not divulge anv- | S Republicans Assured of Pennsylva- 0020 el e Would Welcome Wet Move | thing concerning the future of the S ]] I Besi t 0 { k INDIAN POET SENTENCED ial Gonfrol e o oA lor ¥ ed guil the acrial bomt | Daily Express cmmented that | railway. ol egms 0 YOI{AKE| Bombay, India, Nov. 6 UP—The ontrol For Four Mor pescse ey ing Drovertics | American politics is so complicated | ———— | : Indlan poet, Harindranth Chatto- e 3 Soeica s sl DO whatever may come of | DIAMOND BROKER ROBBED | Hoidale in State Returns [padyaya, who was arrested yester- i ey e M8 st sSldiodag il il | (OBGEGY RO, [ Tyt TOlEY A day while addressing a proscribed Iohe e ( Ll principally “a vote of disapproval of |blum. a diamond broker, reported | meeting on Chowpatty Sands, was om an opera- | ford Pinchot was governor-clect of | The men sen were pagt | hard times coupled with the name |to S (50 Pt e R el ol bl b N (| R e was a White House | Pennsylvania today by a r er ‘dward Heckel- |Of Hoover." The paper added that | #40.000 were stolen from him last Two days after the election, the vic- | prisonment on a charge of holding Hoover o 1) e o 1L lall well wishers of the U night by three bandits who kidnap- [tor in the United States senatorlal [membership in “an unlawful associ- el e fid s - " | would rejoice if the election could |ed him near his home. {race in Minnesota still was unde-|ation,” the All India National Con- 4 : T f reted to mean Ameri- | Rothblum said he was held up |termined today as a belated tide of | gress. District Uncertain e e 3 o an S n CEoEAE 3 N a step to free them- [shortly after he had left home to | rural ballots came to the support of c entanglement of prohi- | tzke a train for New York. |senator “Thomas D." 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