New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 22, 1924, Page 1

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' post with the News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN HERALD 22, 194, : NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, JULY 22 Average Daily Cireulation Week Ending 10’391 July 19th .., —EIGHTEEN PAGES, PRICE THREE CENTS STEAMER BOSTON RAMMED OFF PT. JUDITH, # *ILLED Today’s Dispatches In- dicate That Revolt ls‘ CHURCH DESPITE AGF Much More Serious Than Earlier Stories Indicated. No Americans Injured Yet But U, S. Section of City ‘Is Not Adequately Pro- tected. Washington, July 22.—Three thoua- and clvillans are reported to have been killed and injured in fighting at Sao Paulo hetween Brazilian federal and revolutionary forces, Reports received today by the state department eaid, however, that no Americans were included among the casualties. The heaviest fighting of the revolt, the message said, took place during the night of July 20, but the resnit did not materially change the situ ation, Rebels Well Equipped The rebel forces, it was sald, ap- pear to be well equipped with arms, ammunition and food. Their strength was estimated at 10,000. or mote. The American consul at Sao Paulo, Arminius T. Haeberle, and American Trade Commissioner Connell were re- ported “well and safe." The food supply of S8ao Paulo was declared to be adequate but many thousands of residents had left the city. Americans in Sao Paulo are housed in the districts described as being “most adequately protected.” The Brazllian forces at Sao Paulo are being further strengthened by re- inforcements sent by the government from varlous points. BURKOWSKI 10 BEGOME PROF. “Boy Wonder” of Connecticut Golfers Will Take Position With the Mat- tatuck Club in Southintgon, Waterbury, July 22.—William @& Burkowskl, who as “Boy Wonder” of Connecticut golfers, won his way through the state golf championship at the Shenecossett links, Groton, in 1923, defeated Reggls Lewis in the semi-finals and becoming runner-up when he was defeated for the cham- plonship by Henry J. Topping, will become a professional it became known here yesterday. Burkowski though but 20 years old will take a new Mattatuck golf club in Southingeon. He ls rated as one of the most finished golfers in the state. He learned the game as a caddy at his home in Naugatuck. BIG FIRE IN NEW YORK $300,000 Damage at Standard Com- mercial Body Co~—8$10,000 Worth of Live Poultry Also Is Destroyed. New York, July 22.—Fire today caused $300,000 damage at the plant of the Standard Commercial Body corporation in Kast 164th street. A two-story brick structure Thousing 1,000 eomplete and incomplete auto- mobile trucks and horse drawn ve- hicle bodies was destroyed. The fire spread to an poultry market where $10,000 worth of live poultry was destroyed. 3000 CIVILIAN. AS KILLED OR WOUNDED IN BATTLE AROUND SAO PAULO |For Fresh Air Fund—Golf | adjoining | fund REPORTED LA FOLLETTE PLANS 10 OPEN IN EAST With Wheeler, Will Start Cam- paign in New England ‘ROUTE THEN GOES WEST | { ACTIVE AT HOWE AND IV Third Ticket Candidates Announce In- tention of Taking Divergent Rontes [Mrs, Elizaheth Juengst Will: Be 92 Tomorrow—Does P —— i n Chicago, July 22,—S8enators La Fol- Dally rasks {In"n and Wheeler will open the third |ticket campalgn In the eastern sea- |board and New England states, tour- Irs. Ellzabeth Juergst of 419 South {07 o “and sonth over divergent Matn atreet will observe her 92d ., 105 (o every state If the Unlon, birthday anniversary at her home to- | I e | Representative John M. morrow. Mrs. Juengst was born in | ol S e LA Frankfort, Germany, July 23, 1832, | o, o0 ; and ""l't'l"" "; ',l,""' ‘I':","‘","" "q -‘"""f Representative Nelson added that "”"t' e i i ‘fl‘d' ‘;’ U “]" N "('e,"','r the proposed tours would hegin “after mel ‘“l"{"‘”; 9 “’:"‘l’_' rv'"”"‘f‘f"‘l'_,m,_ the senators have a brief rest in name before her marriag as kKliza Washington.” beth Shaefer. Will Visit Cincinnatl. Mr. Juengst died 18 y S 3 i se t o) & ! Cin ainide that time ahie Nas been muking| . o0 rosponse o s teqiicatrom aCin | her homa with her daughter, Miss Adeline Juengst, She has three other children, Mrs., Hattie Dressel of New Britain, Mrs. Elizabeth Gugel of Ken- sington and Henry Juengst of this city. Mrs, Juengst is extremely actlve for a woman of her years., She reads the daily papers, keeping in active touch with the affairs of the world. She is interested in the eoming presidential election, although not a voter herself. She has also been active in church work, belng a member of St. John's e German Lutheran church. Her ac- e . tivitles about her home are also nu-| Wil ’J“‘r““" A A merous and she insists upon being al- | Chicago, July 23,—The natlonal headquarters of the La Folletfe- Jowed to ald with the housework, s 2 i b which she does in & manner ordinar- | Wheeler campaign announced today ily credited to a woman much young- er in years. It is not expected that there will be Into Every State in the Nation, IFollette 'S ag0 nnd' | senators inelude that eity in his itin- | erary, Representative Nelson stated to- day that “one of the leaders on the | ticket certainly will visit Cncinnati.” The two senators, Nelson said, I would arrange the details of their re- | spective itinerarics personally, but the I‘[.:t neral lines and scope of the cam- | paign already had been agreed upon |at least tentatively as a result of the recent Washington meeting of the na- tional committee of the conference for progressive political action, ew Name. in the presidential contest be entered under the name of any presently es- any celebration of the event beyond a | tablished political party or group. at her home tomor- | The decision made eertain that the lf—l;l;”filgl,::heré“i will recelve her | Wisconsin senator would not be en- he day. |tered in Minnesota, North friends during the day. ARACHOHIN lof the farmer-labor party, Repre- isr’malivo John M. Nelson of Wiscon- 1S HELD IN CELLAR | Police Convinced He Is Not Man Who Tournament Attracting Much Interest Killed McDonnell Child, As Is Vie- tim’'s Mother, New York, July 22.—Milton Ware, a E . walter, who was alleged to have con- | The much advertised widow's mite | pocaad to strangling eight-year-old | is finding its counterpart ulm_out Francis McDonnell on Staten Island, | every day in the activities of NeW|yaq gont hack to Newark, N. J., to- | Britain children who are doing their'| gay after the Staten Island police had | bit to help the cause of the Iresh|peen convinced that he was not the | Alr camp. The Herald has had | man they sought. stories lately of children who Bave | Ware, who previously had made and | a show on the sands of the beach, fpretracted a confession, was brought who had a refreshment stand on a | before the boy's mother this morning prominent street corner, who 80ld [with the ball, similar to [Francis, soda at the Shuttle Meadow club, | which was found in his rossession ete. All these indicate generous con- when he was arrested in Newark, Mrs, tributions in years to come. McDonnell sald that the ball was not An extremely interesting letter re- | her son’s, and the poiice decided that Nelson, na- | ated today, | | cinnati organization that one of the | {fire and the current on the high ten- | sion that nowhere would the third ticket I”m()]s Men “Bent on Mengmg o Noth Puets KIILED DURING HOLD-UP [her father's FIRE L0SS FROM FIFTY 0 HUNDRED THOUSAND Hamden Chemical stroyed—Insurance Policy Had Just Been Caleelled Fira said to chemical lab. New Haven, July 22 have originated in the oratory, practically plant of the United | Aluminum Co, in the town of Ham- | den today, causing a loos estimated at | from $560,000 to $100,000, The city | dopartment responded to an alarm sent In by an autoist, B, P, Fuller, of Meriden, who saw the fire and sup- | posed it to be In the cit The fire | being outside the jurisdiction of the (city firemen the Hamden companies | were notified and after considerable delay a second alarm brought all the | fira fighting apparatus in that town, The fire was extinguished after a long Ight, only the scrap metal department being saved, Avi | of the company, eaid today tha the | company had just discontinued insur- |ance on the property. Three companies of local firemen | were later sent to assist in extinguish- ing the blaze and ald the Hamden de. | | partment, | The factory ia situated alongside | the tracks of the N, Y, N. H. & H. raflroad and traffic on the road was suspended during the height of the wires in the Cedar Hill yards was shut off to permit fircmen to run hose across the ks with safety, Mr. Lapsides, treasurer of the com- pany, sald the insurance recently dis- continued amounted to $200,000. He placed the loss in excess of $100,000, MOB OF 300 0UT T0 LYNCH TWO NEGROES Murder of Young Woman The Two Negroes Had Attempted to Hold Up Her Father, Near Mounds, 11, When She Came to His Ajd— Shot to Death, Cairo, Iil, July 22.—A mob of ap- proximately 800 men formed in Pu- laski county today, apparently bent on lynching two negroes tentatively identified as the slayers of Daisy Wil- son, 13, in an attempted holdup of store near Mounds shortly after midnight, The negroes were in the custody of Sheriff L. J. Hudson, who was en- deavoring to take them to a place for safekeeping. The mob formed after the negroes had been identified by the slain girl's father, J. C. Wilson, and a neighbor, A posse of several hundred armed men aided by bloodhounds, had been searching for the negroes several hours. They were found, however, by Henry Bour, a railroad man, near tracks 12 miles north of Cairo. He summoned the sheriff. ceived by the fresh air editor today |there was no basis for Ware's second and containing a b0-cent picce, reads | “confession” Jast night. | as follows: The police continued to check the “Dorothy Cooke, Margaret Hemder- |story told by Achillo Eposito, hn).l‘f son, Rita Forterl, Billie Cook and without hail on a homicide affidavit. | Doris Forteri gave a little show in [Iiposito has been identified by a five- | our cellar on Park street at 473 and | year-old brother of the murdered boy are sending you the money that we [as the man who followed Francls into raised, |the woods last Monday. “Hoping you will make good use — i e COOLIDGE T0 BROADCAST | “The committee in charge, | “DOROTHY COOKE, Will Address Boy Scouts in New | “MARGARET HENDERSON." Considerable interest was manifeat among local golfers last evening fol- lowing the announcement fin the Herald that the third annual tourna- ment for the benefit of the Fresh Alr | would be held Wednesday, July 30, at Shuttle Meadow. Pro- Viding the early Interest is followed up by action, and there 18 no reason York Through Transmitting Set to | Be Installed in White House. hington, July 22.—President will make a short radlo ad- dress ¥riday night from the White House on the occasion of a dinner to be given in New York to about 60 jcouts who are leaving for a trip posse had heen made up of Ku Klux Seymour Weleh, 50, a neighbor of the Wilsons, died of excitement, | The negroes are sald to have ar- | rived at Mounds yesterday. They called Wilson from his home to open the storc on the plea that they wanted provisions. One of the negroes drew a re- volver and the two sought to hold up the storekeeper. Wilson grappled with them, His daughter, hearing the struggle came to his assistance. A shot was fired and the young woman fell mortally wounded. The bullet struck her in the head. The negroes escaped, leaving Wilson se- verely beaten, K. K. K. Men With Posse. The sheriff said a portion of his Klan members, a large klan meeting having ended just as word came of Laboratory De- destroyed the | smelting and | | ] ew Eastern eanmer ruc ank- ‘Bfllfifl%fl"&é%fi‘ 4 er Il:n 'Denses tFog ipBt!‘tweenStm)l)k l?:{dr ;(1)‘0 Survivors Taken From Lifeboats — Wrecked Husband, in Hospital, Tgnorant of Vessel Beached At Newport. ‘ Her Death Between 800 and 900 passengers of the sound steamer Bos- ton, rammed by the tanker Swiftarrow off Point Judith, Rhode Island, last midnight, were on their way to various ports this noon ahoard several steamers which responded to calls for help and picked up lifeboats in the fog. — % Three Killed, One Injured, | Say Oficers Did All Possible to Re- Three persons were killed and one injured in the crash, ac- S ite Petoio187 ot tha Bioamer cording to reports received by the Eastern Steamship company, owner of the Boston, Details of the collision were fragmentary. | Other reports put the death list as high as five. ot Survivors Being Brought In R e S | The Fall River line steamers Priscilla and Providence, with Green of 1281 Lastern Parkway, | S0mme of the Boston's passengers aboard, were steaming to New Brooklyn, Y., was killed in her| York. The Plymouth and the Commonwealth brought several berth on the steamer Boston in the | supvivors to Fall River, Mass. \PASSENGERS RELATE CRASH Boston's Survhvors Taken to Fall River. Fall collislon with the Swiftarrow last| {night. Thls was learned when her| et The Boston sl Beached husband arrived hera today on one I'he Boston partly filled with water, was beached at New- of the rescue steamers, port, R. I, The Swiftarrow anchored off Beavertail, R. 1., and sent out nine boats filled with passengers for Newport. Mr. Green was taken to a hospital here suffering from a shoulder in- jury and®from shock. He had not| been informed of his wife's death. He and Mrs. Green occupied state- | room 48, which was at the point on the Boston's side where the prow of | the tank steamer struck, The walls| of the room were crushed in and Mra, Green waas killed instantly, Mr. Green | was in a dazed condition on his ar- rival here. He carried his wife's furs and some other garments and evi- dently was under the impression that| she had been taken aboard another ’ The Boston Is Beached New York, July 22.—The Eastern Steamship company an- nounced that the Boston carried 696 passengers. These have Imen_transferre(l to the following ships of the Fall River line: "rovidence, carrying 46 to New York; Priscilla, carrying 480 to w York; Plymouth, carrying 130 to Fall River, Mass.; Com- monwealth, carrying 40 to Newport, R, I. Bodles I 1nted Pross, B9 Tho A Steamship lines was placed {n com- Newport, July Three passen- | mi ! + duly assen- | mission two months ago. € H reactis ship, Fors, two men and one woman, ara | o at a ever ot $1 750 000 ohe man ey 167 Reach Port. known to have been killed when the | commodations for 1,088 passengers, The steamers Plymonth and Com-|0il tanker Swiftarrow, crashed into |anq carried a crew of 180, She was | monwealth of the Fall River line|the Eastern Steamship liner Boston, [an ofl burner, turbine driven. 02 brought to this port 167 of the pas-|Cff Point Judith, late last night. Their sengers from the Boston. Many were |bodies were seen in the wreckage of suffering from minor injuries, but|tWo staterooms when the Boston was Mr. Green was the only one taken to|towed into Newport. harbor and B hospital. teached there today. All the paseengers arriving on the| Identification of the hodles was im- | from the steamer Boston was ©. Plymouth, numbering 130, and the nmslhlfl_h;'m ‘They were caught be- | copeland of 11 Colburn Crescent, 37 who were brought in by the Com-|hind ship's plates that had. been | Brookiine, Mass. He was landed by monwealth, with the exception of |erushed in and it was sald that the | tne coast guard cutter Acushnet and Green, was transferred to a train and |Plates would have to be cut with gas | taken to a hospital suffering from a taken to Boston Immedlately. Among [torches hefore the bodies could be | tractured loft leg, fractured shoulder- them were C. B. Carberry, managing |extricated. blade and internal injuries. editor of the Bpston Post, and Mr. | Several passengers are known to| Offjcers of ghe Acushnet sald that and Mrs. H, M. Hope of the Hotel ‘“""‘ been injured. ~Of these the most | tnoy had seen the bodies of two pas- Somerset, I3oston. serlously hurt so far as known'is C. sengers on the Boston which it had Describes Crash. f;‘:‘]:’ifi“;’n‘;fifi""""‘t"""»‘)‘l 58 e was | heon Impossible to extricate from the 5 hig port o : kSrs " Mr. Hope said that the {irst Warn- | gnard cntter Anaehmet o o Coast | wreckage. They had heard an un- er Acushnet and taken to & | sonfirmed report that had Ing he had of the accident was the |hogpital, where ; ¢ port that one man ha spital, where it was said that his | jymped overboard and was drowned sharp sound of a whistle evidently |jog and shoulder were broken and he | o) erboard a s drow! close at hand. The next minute there |had sustained infernal 5 after his wife had been killed in the sustained internal injuries. collision with the Swiftarrow. was a crash, He and Mrs. Hope went He died at the hospital this after- Co 1 v 5 i on deck and found the officers calm- Uopeland iwas aaukiL ing el wiaee noon, fng the fears of the passengers. Everybody was quiet and apparently feet long and registered 5,091 tona. Injured Brought Ashore, Newport, R. I, July 22.—The first injured passengers brought ashore Taken Off In Lifehoats il Passengers and crew were taken oft (Continued On Page 18) Mrs, James Hinchey of New York, |FFall River with other survivors. A matters very calmly and she saw no |WhO 0ok with him the only availabla e v . Praises Crew and Pas- of the Boston passengers, stood by en. |C10rage outside Newport, whence sho rew realized that the ship was in dan-|in lifehoats and transferred to rescu- TSRO T AR *;3 ger until they were told later that [ing steamers and naval vessels which they had better take to the hoats.|hurricd to the scene after receiving flESGRIBES ERASH AS The transfer, Mr, Hope sald, was ac- |the Boston's radio calls for help., A Who Was & passenger on the Plymouth |1arge number went aboard the bound to New Bedford, said those|River liner Priscilla, due in New York evidence of hysteria, Many complain- | P2 ""'ij".r”‘“'- ed of the loss of their effects, how- ie Swiftarrow, apparently undame " ) sengers for Coolness deavoring o Ret & fow line ty the |SCNt ashore nine boats containing pas- e e [sengers from the Boston. The Swift- complished in & systematic way and|few were landed here by the steamer there was little confusion. Commonwealth which proceeded to TANKER H"‘ STEAMER from the Boston who were brought |this afternoon. Among those on the | g f aboard that vessel apparently took |Priscilla is the purser of the Boston, |Chief Officer of Boston ever, and were impatient when the |80, stood by the Boston until day- Plymouth after taking off her quota |'/8ht: Then she proceeded to an an Newport, July 22.—The meeting in In the fog, however, |~ ° 0 he the fog off Point Judith early today this was found to be impracticabls | 'O Was hound from Tuxpam, of the Boston and the Swiftarrow was described by Chief Officer A. C. | Mexico for Fall River, with oil. and 'J;Hflrl constderable «lf‘k-.\' the l‘_!\:-: Collided Tn Tog Morton of the Boston. With Cap- mouth resumed her voyage to I%all | e colltsion came in a denso fog |tain Alfred W. Call, skipper of the River, |The tanker struck the Boston amid- | Boston, and a quartermaster, uniden- o e |ships on the portside, cutting a gash | tified, they constituted the group on MOTHER DIESI FR |30 feet long and 20 fect high three | the bridge of the Boston when the N l E |feet above the water line. A number | crash came, of staterooms were crushed in and it | e calm of passengers, Wwomen was there that the casualties oc- | @nd men, in the exciting moments of Stamford Woman Fatally Burned Try- |curred, the early morning; the manner In | Half an hour afterward the steam- | Which the watertight compartments ng To Rescue Three Children From | ML e IO LR RGE DU x : {er appeared fo be settling with her | functioned to keep the Boston above Their Burning Home engine room filled with water and her | Water and the success with which the power and lights gone. | transter of the hundreds of passen- Stamford, July 22.—Mrs, Barbara Wo and Children First gers to other vesscls was accome- Vitiliano, 30, of 74 Spruce street, died “The work of lowering the hoats | plished with loss of life only in the in the Stamford hospital this morning [ was begun then,”” said James [, | collision itself were emphasized in his of burns sustained when fire resulted | Rooney of 438 Pleasant street, Mal- | story We had a little fog all the way from Boston,” Chief Officer Morton “We had horns blowing every from an explosion of gas in her home [den, Mass,, one of the passengers who early toda and during her subse- |landed here. “Women and children quent efforts, while seriously injured, (went first in accordance with the law | said. nl o Nt " t be, the largest |, the slaying. to rescue her three children from the [of the sea, and then the men pas- | thirty scconds. Then a thicker fog Malta Fever, :l‘lol’lcal ,‘;:;; :f,”:};"":":, T‘",., taken part in a | ,l.'m‘,,,“u”g {he address today,|. A coroner's verdict of homiclde, | burning home. sonbers AHAL ‘attafwatan. ‘the . orew | nst 10, And. e barely: RvoiAed MRk Disease, in New Haven purely local golf event will tee up on | White Iiouse officials sald the only | NOlding the negroes responsible, was | Mrs. Vitiliano attempted to light a|Captain A. W. Call and a radio op- | ing a schooner, by coming to a full New Haven, July 22, — A case |that 4da_v. As the number of years|gther apeakinrg engagements, either returned today, gas stove when leaking gas from one |erator were the only persons remai stop. We had started ahead again, known as Malta fever, a disease pe- [in which tournaments are held in-|tentative or final, which have been jet exploded, throwing her to the floor [ing aboard. The ship's officers did | going slowly, when we heard whistles cullar to the tropies, has heen dis- |crease the number of entrants do|made for the president are for his and serfously burning her face and|everything possible for us There | from another boat apparently quite covered here, according to the elty |jikewise, all willing to partake of a | notification ceremonies here Auguse Springfield, Mass., July 22.-—Dwight, hands and setting the house afire. lwas some difficulty in lowering the [ nea P board of health. The patient 18 at & [round of golf and fo also ald the |14 and at the dddication here early | Loomis, $1, engaged in growing eng | Reallzing that her children, asicep in |hoats, but ax the sca was ealm there | “Caplain Call, &ho was on the local hospital having been there since | fund for children of the city who |in October of the first division monu- |warehousing tobaceo since 1870, dieq |2 Foom over the kitchen were In|was no danger.” The circumstances of | bridge, ordered the quartermaster at July 16, supposedly suffering from |are denied outdoor recreation in the | ment. The statement was made to|today. Me formerly owned and op. | G2NEOF she groped her way upstairs the colliston were described briefly by | the wheel to stop the engine. Then typhoid fever. Health inspectors |qummer time unless enough money | head off reports from various points|erated a woolen mill in Mystte, Conn, | Where she was overcome in the . 1. Corvell of 6 Brimmer street, |we hear two wistles,meaning that the o L smoke-filled room Boston, another of the passengers other fellow was going to pass us to were sent out today to Investigate In | jg fortheoming to send them on a vi an effort to locate possible contacts whizh might result in a spread of the disease. AN BANKRUPT. ENGT New Haven, July 22.—Henry M. Engleman, New Britain filed a bankruptey petition here to- day eclaiming labilitles as $4,515.45 and assets of $2,000. Another petition filed by Harry | i | merchant, # BODIES OF TWO CHILDREN FOUND; that Mr. Coolidge had tentatively ac- cepted 2 | tions, ‘ | (Continued on Page 12) SEARCH FOR OTHER FIVE GOES ON/ Bridgeport, July 22.—The bodies of Mrs, Rudolph Berquist of 22 Seaview | ¥ — e P number of speaking invita- | 4 - The firemen arrived in time to res- |jlanded here by the Commonwealth, port. So we went full speed astern to cue the children who were unharmed | Describes Collision | get out of the way, blowing three HIGH TIDES—JULY 28 and Mrs. Vitillano was taken to the “It came at 11:45 p. m.” ho gaid. | blasts as we backed up (Standard Time) hospital, The woman's husband 15 luy was just about fo retire for the| Apparently the tanker that was ol | [sald to be in New York city. !nich! For half an hour T had heard | coming on did the same, but it wae At New London— 2:32 a. m.; 3:07 p. m, At New Haven— 4:37 a. m.; 5:07 p. m. 8500, the firemen stated Attempt to Be Made to late. "he watertight compartments | were immediately closed and but for “I found that the Swiftarrow had |them I belfeve the boat would have |eut right through the Boston's en- |sunk almost immediately. As it was End Robber Band Attacks [gineroom and also had crushed in | she listed a bit then settled a few 3v | The engineroom | feet. The tanker struck us just fore Damage to the house amounted to |another steamer whistling in the fog; suddenly there was a crash and the Boston listed sharply to starboard d - " " la e and Erne e . | staterooms. Gould, Bridgeport manufacturer, |two boys in the party of seven chil- |avenue and Ernest Peterson, 8, son | Avnidted Pross ) severa tar - named Ilahil!fh-‘; as $2,237.72 and no |dren who lost their lives in a canoe [of Hjalmar Peterson of 86 Midland % - % | ®ofia, July 22. — The cabinet an- [soon filled with water and within an | ward of the engine room, |n[lhe nr.n g nounced today that every effort would [hour all lights on the Boston went |room section, and the water 800! asseta. I JULY QUOTA FILLED Stockholm, July 22, — The quota of Swedish emigrants under the new American immigration law is al- [ rea filled and the American con. ( sule in Stockholm and Gothenimrg | ¥ he've been obliged to refuse visas to several hundred applicanta July |7 St. Mary's by the Sea last Thursday | afternoon were recovered just before |was called and after viewing the bod- | foot of Brewster street about a mile | Waiter Berquist, 12, son of Mr. and maining five is continuing. n which they put out to sea from off | street. | The medical examiner, Dr. Delucca, | w0on today oft Fancher's dock at the |les, ordered their removal to the city | | morgue here. | vom where they were last seen allve. | The discovery of the bodies finally | | ‘aptain Thomas Bly of the fire de- |confirms the fact that the children sartment recovered the bodies. missing since last Thursday were lost. The bodies recovered were those of | Search for the bodies of the re-|! Hartford, for New Britain and vicinity: Thunder showers tonight and |be made to put an end to widespread out S— land simultaneous attacks by y 22.—~Forecast robber bands upon peaceful citizens, sengers and crew put off in them. T| particularly in remote places, which helped disentangle some of the rop the government considers as the fore- poured into the boilers, putting the lights out “Discipline of crew gnd passengers os | was as nearly perfect as could be ex- of these bos pected under the circumstances.” Boat Cost 81,750,000 Chief Officer Morton sald K% small | “Lifeboats were lowered and pas Wednesday; not much change T in temperature. A unners of & communist uprising. The government declares it will lr_\': The Boston, built with her sister | thought the bodles that were in the to erush all bolshevik organizations |ship, New York, for the Boston-New |wreckage represented the eccupants nd suppress their activities York passenger sarvice of the Eastern | of staterooms 41, 42 and 68, parfb L el 4 ; ———

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