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Late Photo Flashes From Central Press Cameras
CUBA’S PRESIDENT PAYS A VISIT
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Dr. Miguel Mariano Gomez, Surrounded By Reporters.
Cuba’s president-elect, Dr. Miguel Mariano Gomez, is pic
tured, center (with hands in pockets), chatting to reporters at
Dr. Gomez was received by United States officials with full mili
tary honors.
Central Press.
SUMMER RESORT HIDEOUT FOR HAMM KIDNAP GANG
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The Cottage At Bald Eagle Lake, Minn.
It was this cottage, a summer resort at Bald thy St. Paul brewer, in 1933. Federal men, who
Eagle Lake, Minn., near St. Paul, that the Bark- recently rounded up six suspects are awaiting
er-Karpis gang used as a hideout at the time of trial at St. Paul in the case,
the abduction of William B. Hamm, Jr., weal- . —Central Press.
LAKE CRAFT ENDS WINTER STAY
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The Amaranth in Duluth-Superior Harbor.
First of the lake craft to move at the head of Lake Superior,
the U. S. lighthouse tender, Amaranth, is pictured leaving her
winter berth in the Duluth-Superior harbor. The Amaranth
makes yearly tHn, t o «t«t3ons on Lake Sn^*-•
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Pauline D’Antonio
Pauline D’Antonio, above
who was to have married Johr
Fiorenza, 24-year-old upholster
er revealed as the slayer of Mrs
Nancy Evans Titerton, in June,
I refused to at believe her
sweetheart had committed the
crime. When authentically in
formed by police that they had
D’Antonio sobbed and said:
“I’m thankful that I found out
before we were married.”
Meanwhile, Fiorenza is lodged
in Tombs prison in "New York
awaiting trial for the slaying.
■ —Central Press.
Held In Hewitt Death
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“Jerry” Corley
Contending she knows noth
ing about the slaying of Arthur
Hewitt, wealthy Wheaton, 111.,
contractor, other than they were
“both drunk,” “Jerry” Corley
alias Jean Scott, is pictured here
following her arrest in Detroit.
—Central Press.
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1930
Vi CHIEF WITNESS IN HAMM CASE
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e Byron Bolton, Center, With Detectives.
i- Byron Bolton, center, whose testimony was instrumental in
1 sending most of the Bremer kidnaers to prison, is expected to
: be the government’s chief witness when several suspects in the
t William B. Hamm, Jr., kidnaping go on trial soon in St. Paul.
’ Hamm was abducted n 1933 and released after payment of SIOO,-
1 000 ransom. Bolton, flanked .by detectives, is shown being taken
c from the Ramsey county jail in St. Paul, where he has been held
since the Bremer trial ended nearly a year ago, to the federal
| building to testify.before the grand jury. —Central Press.
_ LANDON RIDES IN ’B9’ERS PARADE
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Governor Alfred M. Landon and Ernest W. Marland
Politics and state matters are dropped momentarily by Gov.
Alfred M. Landon of Kansas, Republican presidential possibility,
as he takes part n the Days of ’B9 celebration at Guthrie, Okla.
Here he is seen at the left riding in the parade with Gov. Ernest
W. Marland of Oklahoma.
—Central Press.
Pearl Gray on Blue !
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• This woolen blouse worn by Jane
t Wyatt is new and striking. The
3 fabric is knitted in a pearl gray
j on dark blue. Two large frogs of
, braided cording with the loops
hooked over wooden “handle” but- ,
*itons, fasten it. The skirt ij a |
matching blue wook
Indict Parker’s Son
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Ellis Parker, Jr.
Ellis Parker, Jr., son of the
Burlington county detective
chief who aided in the investi
gation of the Hauptmann case
at the instance of Gov. Harold
G.G Hoffman, was sought by
police in Trenton and Mount
Holly, following his indictment
in New York in connection with
the kidnaping of Paul H. Wen
del. Young Parker was one of
five men cited in an indictment
by a grand jury investigating
Wedel’s “confestCon” to the
kidaping and murder of the
Lindbergh baby which he later
i repudiated.
’ —Central Press.
I IN POISON PLOT?
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Mrs. Velma Patterson.
Texas, on indictments charging
her with the poison deaths of
her two children, Mrs. Velma
McCasland, might know more
about the deaths than has been
revealed. Meanwhile, the town
Greenville, and the home of
Mrs. Patterson, was a seething
hotbed of gossip. Every sudden
death in the past six years was
recalled as authorities intim
ated they might exhume the
body of Mrs. Patterson’s third
husband, who died under mys
terious circumstances.
—Central Press.
GETS FIFTY YEARS SENTENCE IN KIDNAPING
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The Kidnaper, Inset, and the Boy (right in group).
Given fifty years under Pennsylvania laws
awaits Richard D. Taylor of Akron, Ohio,
inset, following his arrest at Allentown, Pa., for
the kidnaping of Henry T. Koch, 10-year-old
son of an Allentown department store execu
tive. The Koch boy escaped and later identi-
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“FARMERS’ ” GROUP LINKED TO LIBERTY LEAGUE
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Samuel F. Morse Before the Senate Lobby Committee.
Describing himself as a “Harvard farmer,’’
Samuel F. Morse, co-founder of the Farmers’
Independence Council, a group which opposed
the AAA, is pictured standing at the right as he
testifed before the Senate lobby committee in
Washington. Under questioning by Chairman
Hugo L. Black, seen at the extreme left, it was
revealed the council’s fight h v r''-*-^wt : ons
ROOSEVELTS ATTEND HOWE RITES
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The President and His Family At the Grave.
Among mourners at last rites for Louis McHenry Howe,
President Roosevelt’s confidante, ajt Fall River, Mass., was the
chief executive and three other members of his famliy. Shown,
left to right, are John, Mrs. Roosevelt, the President and Frank
lin D. Roosevelt, Jr.
fied Taylor as his abductor and then busied
himself playing marbles and showing his pals
where his wrists were taped by the kidnaper,
above. Henry is shown at right after his ex
perience.
—Central Press.
from wealthy industrialists and business men
including $5,000 from Lammot duPont, and not
farmers. Another check came from Winthrop
Aldrich, chairman of the Chase National Bank
of New York. Testimony disclosed that many
i of the council’s supporters also were member:
> of the American Liberty League.
i —Central Pres*.
PAGE FIVE