Vermont Prohibition News Articles
Exciting Capture
May 13, 1931 issue of the Orleans County Monitor
| The seizure of a Cadillac phaeton, 576 bottles of Canadian Ale, 12 bottles of wine, a Chrysler roadster wrecked, and the capture of the driver of the rum car, were the work of U.S. Customs patrol officers W.M. Stone and E.E. Revoir patrolling near North Hyde Park early Sunday morning. | |
| When they were patrolling in that vicinity at about 6:30 Sunday morning the Chrysler roadster was seen coming at a fast clip. Having a suspicion that the operator was acting as a rear pilot to a rum car, they took up the chase. They had no trouble in passing the roadster as en route it was found down over a bank badly wrecked after turning completely over when it connected with and cut off a telephone pole. Bent on capturing the rum car the government car shot through the entanglement of wires placed across the highway when the pole was cut off, overtaking the rumrunner three miles father south. The operator of the rum car leaving his car in gear stepped to the running board and jumped, hitting the shoestring trail cross country. The officers shifted their course by plowing through the fence and out across an open field in pursuit of the fleeing man with their automobile, resulting in his capture. |
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| Returning to the highway, they found the Cadillac nearly a quarter of a mile out in a field where it had gone unguided and without damage. The rum driver was Gerald G. Dudley of North Hyde Park, who was held by U.S. Commissioner Walter H. Cleary under bail of $1,000.
Barre Rumrunner Caught With Heavy Load After Long Chase By Customs Patrol Officers
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