Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Y3 " wheel, of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 AIR RUSHING INTO HOLES LEFT BY FALLEN CABINS Board of Inquiry So Believes After Inspect- ing Wreckage of Shenandoah — No Mrs. Lansdowne Tells o Premonition of Trouble o) ‘pIoJUVH ‘e WPV ‘f1waqy] AW I0HIIMUC) CAUSED AIRSHIP TO BREAK 40 CHILOREN MOURN VICTINS OF ACGIDENT SPEND LIFE AT FAR EAST MISSION Farewell to Pargnts WAS MISS EMILY ALLARD New Britain High School Girl Grad. f Sister S, Philip Bidding Last uate Complete Novitiate tn Order ed here today of the arrest in Pitts BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1925. ~TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Former Bank T elephone Girl Caught by Pittsburgh Police For Passing Worthless Check Mrs. Clara Bernstein Said to Have Victimized Mer- chants and Trusting Acquaintances in Cities—Endorsers of Note Here Forced to Make Good were recclv-|she was not then connected with the |New Britaln Trust Co. burgh, Pa., of Mrs, Mary Bernstein, | veral Confirmed reports She mingled With the delegates to the convention P 5 P 'b of Our Lady of Angels and s As- ?»‘"u‘:-“c?"‘.k;.f”.; s“lmnrx‘;:‘,\,“:mrxm llw‘Kn.': ey e e o e el revention Possi Ie. Hushand Had signed to Japan. worthless check, Mrs, Bernstein fs |0 because her conversation indi- sald to be the wife of the former [¢3ted that she was fn the employ A local girl, a member of the re- | ropriotor of a Main street confec. Of # bank and was attending the LOOTERS STEAL Lakehnrst, N. J. Sept. 4 (F— |liglous order of Our Lady of Angels |tionery m.;.-e :uv: (:n.'m;: place, which .:"’":;:':;{jl_l':'l::\‘::mr"'U;' F:P \{g\r‘!""g Eis Forty children left fatherless by the |Whose novitlate s at Quebec, is in 108 S oon plonad Wemah. trom!the Cleveland Tris SHIP'S INSTRUMENTS { naval airigivle T (T T E7 (007 03 (5 (0 19 1 . Berneieln was unable to pay) NAMER (rom ine Cleveland Truat fated western trip, were mournin By The Assoclated Prees, { Caldwell, O., Sept. 4 (A -Alr rushing into holes torn In the Shen-| doah by the twisting off of |)wt radio and control cabins caused the buckling of the ship and its hrfiak-I ing up into two major parts, in the | opinien of the naval bhoard of in-| quiry that visited the wreckage of | the ship's prow today. Snapping of guy wires at the same time that the cabins were torn away “ In the gale also served to weaken | the structure. The stress on the hull of the ship by its rolling and rising and falling “Daughter of the mate, “The Angels commanding called on all the with the philosophy of the birdman wife as expressed by Mrs Landsdowne, widow eof Commander Lansdowne, killed. “When I marricd an aviator,” sai Mre. Landsdowne, “1 knew chances we were taking and I wi who in the wind and electric storm are | not knuekle down now. 1 am glad believed responsible for the wrench- | Zach died with his boots on. I intend ing loose of the cabine. to go t.rough life with mine on. Commander 8. M. Kraus, Com- | mander G. Fulton, Lieutenant Com- mander Willlam Nelson and C. P, Burgess, expert techniclst on air- ship construction, all of Lakehurst, visited the wreckage of the ship's nose, in company with Lieutenant R. G. Mayer, one of the survivors, who landed with that portion 12 miles from where the tail and mid- section fell. In discussing the crash it was agreed among the inquirers that nothing could have prevented the disaster cept, perhaps, Ereater speed to get away from such a gale. Technicist Burgess said that ships had not as yet been devised capable of attaining speed sufficient to have gerved the purpose, however. Valuable information that may | have aided naval officlals in deter- mining angles of the wreckage of the Shenandoah and the events ]fliln.']- tng up to the buckling of the ship is lost through looting which con- tinued all night. Naval officials this morning ex- pressed deep concern over the ab- senca of stch portions of fhe w: age as whole motors, the l‘on'roli d gwitch boards and various minor controls. These portions of the When a girl marries an aviator sh lost." ly wonderful. Every eye was dry an their only thought was to help eac: other, They are great sports.” Young, with black bobbed hal and blue ey white, Mrs L Since last June, she declared, th lientenant commander ysed all hi previous western trip because feared the battle with Ohio thunder storms would wreck the ship. Bu politics, she charged, demanded tha Lansdowne failed to circle she noted he sailed away withou even approaching their home. “He knew conditions in spot where he was born. The com mander often said the ship was like 1y to get inte troubls in thunder. the cold air coming down. A big alr (wreck are vital in the investigation | two. but they have been scattered far and Tried To Keep Away. wide. “He used every bit of influence Commander Kraus sald it would| useless to attempt to salvage of | wreckage for further use, Sal- vaging even for experimental and study purposes was prevented by the Jooting that has occurred. Lieutenant Mayer sald that when the prow Janded 1t was intact except for the | extremely nervous and two cabins that had been lost. T0- | he could not get through.” ne when he escorted the inquirers| Some ofticers at the station di %o the hillside on which the wreck-| agreed with Mrs. eze lay, the framework was strip- ped of every loose article. Covering and cells had all been torn away with the exception : some of the silver cloth over the up- | mast erected by Henry Ford at De. permost part of the ship's remnant. | troit. Pablen platforms, joints, gasoline| A Washington dispatch to the > tanke, electric communication Wires | York World quotes Secretary Wilb he could to keep from going, bu o because the secretary of the th he had to go. worried over He never appeared any previous flight, bul The purpose of the trip, they sald today in their homes near the naval air station, the headquarters of the Stars” and her Mrs, J. H. Klein, Jr, wife of the officer at Lakehurst, bereaved families and found them taking their sorrow '8 Zachar, Lieutenant was what takes a chance: T have gambled and Mrs, Klein, after consoling the be- reaved sald: “They were all perfect- s and dressed entirely in nsdowne said her hus- band had a premonition of disaster. influence to call off both this and a he | the trip be made. Never before had | over their bungalow, but on this last trip | Ohio,"” she said. “He was born in Ohio and killed in Ohio,. 100 miles from thel storms with the hot air going up and ship getting into this would snap in | navy wanted to play politics by sending | the ship over middle western cities, before starting on this one he was fearful that Lansdowne's as- sertion that politica caused the thip. were fo experiment with untrained | of | ground erews and to test the new ur | 14 y d il e MISS EMILY ALLARD (Sister St. Philip) d h | last farewell to relatives and friends, |after which she will depart for Ja- rpan to take up her life work in the {Catholic mission ficld of that land, nevermore to return to the United States, She s Sister St. Philip, before en- jtering the convent, Miss Emily Al- lard, the daughter of Henry Allard of 14 Orange street, a graduate of St, Mary's parochial school and of the New Britain high school. She recelved her diploma at high school in 1920, Three years ago she e s t t t entered the order of missionary sisters in Canada and was pro- fessed with final religlous orders August 2. A the close of her visit here she will return to Quebec to prepare for er trip to Japan and on October b will sail for the Orfent. -1 e | der of Our Tady of Angels to Japan are slmilar to those of missionary priests who never return to the United {Sates unless forced by ex- treme {liness. TURK. REPRESENTATIVE REMAINS NON-COMMITTAL Declines to Answer Without Equivo- t 1 t cation On Question of Mosul Grant ‘| Geneva, Switzerland, Sept. 4 (P— Again questioned as to whether would accept a decision awarding the Mosul district to Irak, .| which is under British mandate, the Turkish spokesman at this morning's sesslon of the league of nations —cverything detachable—was gone. | as eaying in regard to Mrs. Lans- | o et (nlonmz had stopped today at|downe's comments: council returned only an eq X k e mprovised “Commander Lansdowne was al-|TeP! haron however, an improvised | , 5 i frep! i ?u-a of American Legion men in lowed to choose his time. His judg- | I‘he I‘(rlfl.s'll r,(‘)mnl?,‘, A(;cfirctfizun" Alls, straw hats, khaki belts and | ment was that 1t would be safe to|C. M. Amery, who p ques nding watch and{make the at this time. ing rifles, s flight 1|vesterday to Tewfik Rushdi Pasha, gpectato beyond the|would not have permitted the filght |repeated it today, and thn"rnrm;h against the judgment or protest of|foreign minister ronHodt that P": J. R. Lansdowne of Cincinnatl. | Commander Lansdowne." |views of his government were s prother of the dead commander, a : ALSRE Hraks G liArat Aas o rihis ioventeonthl vea necessary to restate them. | ake over operation of the| “I have successfully carmed out el ”Mm:k\ ”:“’ylu‘v‘ujh;v’-ci‘;’l‘\’n: ?»,'p‘,,z?-i- Qh.hfl}wld'.”fil:a,'l l‘n"}:‘“’? A lengthy exposition by Colonel 1?)::pr'~:t3' Dec. 1, 1925, Payment of jmany similar missions in my carcer, eyalgortice e % to the disposition | heen his Tast fllght, as he had been | Amery of the British claim in behalt | FoPE o q0q ‘funds wiil not be |2nd I trust this one will have a sat. l:f“‘,vh:' Ik:oyv;‘\w It was considered | ordered back to sea duty September|of Trak occupied most of this morn- | 4o ynti| that date. ction on “"“Ior("'n:‘.::z:hll;«“(\”riul Dei Lobable, however, that it would be | i5. He and Margaret Ross of Wash- | ing's sltting of the councll. Receipts from ofl productior e al Details probable, h ion for burial in ington were married in 1921 after a| M. Pafnlove, the French premler. |, ;"5 es ypon which no leases or | Comnenting on President Coo- taken to Washington for buri: | war romance in France, where she |wlil participate in the consideratlon |\ itg were issued, amounting o |l1ge's statement that the terms of Arlington cemelery. = o henandoah | was a Red Cross nurse. Two chll- |of Austria’s situation this afternoon, | ¢e¥'ans " Git go into the federal |smericas eetllement with Belgium TS O charging ad- | dren survive, one by Commander|and wil replace M. Briand as resi-|f o " Ching v ratttiefa furecedent :V;r“ n‘(x x:‘ "v: T\ :::‘ grounds this | Lansdowne's previous marriage. |aentRotitho seuncliftoniorion. it loriaitotal atehigt Ixjm .w“i‘ X ‘uffi:;‘v mlméwnrm reveal th g L e nts| Mrs. Joy Bright Hancock was e volved, the leases and permits = twrally, i € P sr :;"\w.‘hr«,\n under the second tragedy n!i GAMES POSTPONED :;n“-":lded cover 730 aeres. The e “.""F‘»"‘)f':"r proposals, which will e w\ thi sold at | this sort in her life. Her first hus-| Boston, Sept. 4—Brooklyn-Boston | "o ray aeres will be held for i ”;V[l;? . It must be remember- les. Water was Dein SO% %01 Land was Kkilled when the ZR-2 was|game postponed, rain. foture disposal by the government. | ¢4 tat the individual wealth of Bel. 10 cents a glass \ds of | destroyed. She had only recently — okl e - n;us g'er ']"‘I“ that of Italy Refore daylizht the cronds married Lieutenant Commander| Springfield, Sept. 4 (P—Spring- | S | st be considered since our curious again began swarming to ik field-Bridgeport game postponed, | [AB OPERATOR REFUSE [Plan and any interpretations of it the wrec e b <l (Continued on Page Ten) wet grounds. HARR‘MAN et é::j‘hmma”"' 9 s ix alr the debris- o ! i = | pacity 5 :,,,,:""‘Ffi\ e s e narts fo and S TO PROSEGUTE 1 N1 The finance minister announced A heavy fog hung close to earth, | —_— ‘I’!“ifl'fi,"“f I'\)o Mrnr:\nn, Italian am- : g on the himy assador to the United States, w e ity ars Reckless Driving Case—Civil mission, Is sailing tomorrow to re. | and army motoreycles, some of them | with sidecar passengers, arrived dur- | Ing the night to augment the groups | finding work here and there | the khaki-clad men were na = cers, some of them in blue ur Nothing Found of PN-9 some of them in white, | 7 o The fve sursivors, tnemdine! No 1--Fears Expressed ' Lieutenant sendahl. who spent | That Hunt Will Be Fruit- less. the night in Caldwell, arose refreshed this morning, saying they had spent a restful night. They were awaiting despatches from navy department | fficiale. A headquarters was fitted | D b & ‘Caldwell hotel from where| 8an Francisco, Sept. ¢ (P—The the worlk of mvestigation and in. Navy radio station here recelved a ST et Jivciad. report at 3:45 a. m.. from the U. S. B e U H Xteln. M. Krans & Wihippoorwill In Hawaiian waters that what was taken to be a white and Wiltiam Nelson arrived at Cald-tq.r0 haq been seen in the distance well shortly before 9 o'cloc & '”‘"‘» and that the ship had steamed for Lakehurst, N. 1. and immediately .0 0 than an hour in the direction | V get about making preparations to of the supposed flare, thinking it conduct the official inquest ve been a signal from the Died in Line of Duty {might h m ng seaplane P.N.-8 No. 1 Noth- The cause of death of the 14 men was found, the report said. of the Shenandoah crew was offi- The report was not officially an- cially declared to have been due 10 Ingunced and little hope was held an accldent in line of duty and .of 'yt that it was a signal from the to any misconduct on their part. it 'seapipe was determined by the board of in- — quest. composed of Commander J.| H#nol Sept. 4 (P—Just be- H Commander Sidney M. |fore midnight the tender §. 8. Whip- poorwill, searching in mid-Pacific waters for the missing P.N.-9 No. 1 (Continued oa Page 14) SEEING FLARES AT SEA -al seaplane, reported: “At 7:10 p. m. we saw flare ahead. We headed for the Ispot for one hour and then saw {two flares or rockets from starboard Have been steaming now for half | white t Assignments of nuns from the Or- davs. ing that she was running short of Manager Harry . Havnes of the (U048, gave her a che for New Britaln Credit Rating Bureau |Which lator was returned —marked | has a number of letters from other N0 funds.” It is said that officals stein's alleged activities fn which she i of checks when she had no funds in t ( $40 fine and was sent to jail for 30 Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, and, claim- of the Cleveland Trust Co, were aroused at the loss suffered by their clork and have had a major part In rmnning Mrs. Rernstefn to earth s Ak leiist Baer | Soon after leaving New Britain Mrs, Bernsteln was at one time |Trust Co. Mrs. Bernstein went to mployed as telephone switchboard | NvW London, where she met a man ies complaining of Mrs. Bern s alleged to have issued a number operator at the New Britain Trust hamed Tack. — Overnight it is said ‘0., but resigned last December. Tt [She adopted his name and was {s reported that officers of the bank ' known thercafter as Mrs, Clara asked her to leave when they learn- | 1t was as Mrs. Tack that she o W a a < reported to have passed off worth- checks in Holyoke, Mass, and New London, Defore leaving New she Is sald to have succeeded 4 ot several business deals with which she was connected, She was vocalist with a wide reputation | : nd was in demand for local social | Iritair affairs. She wag also active In the |in raising mcney on a note for New Britain Ranking chapter. |about §500 by securing the endorse |" 1t was sald at the New Britain [m°nt of two well known resident [Trust Co., this afternoon that re-|Who later learned to their grief that | ports of Mrs. Bernstein's arrest had |they would be required to make the | been received. {note good. According {o pltcures painted ot | Manager Hayes of the eredit Mrs. Bernsteln's career in high fi- | burcan here sent a letter of Inquiry nance, she has left In her wake a|to the New London Chamber of It G o t v |¢ In by e |a 116 Commander Lansdowne waa on his | well known that he deemed It un- . oremises in the T | it founder and president of the Harri- ree egoti- man National bnm\.d\ws {1:=nd'r(lv.1vn‘ sl negoti. charge of reckless driving in traffic D sRdine & s Sl 3 | court today when the complainant in & upon attitude o | the case, a taxicab driver, refused ta | prosecute. hour, but have seen nothing more.” Honolulu, Sept. 4 (A—Into the limbo of “Ships lost at sea without | a trace” probably has gone the giant seaplane PN-9 No. 1, nav with his four companions, ploneers less day noon. ing plane and membera of her crew is still proceeding with increasing forces and frantic intensity, air sta-| tion officers, who had maintained rigid faith in the hope that the piane would be discovered, yvielded from thelr position last night dolefully| thaking their heads and saying | bad, but we had better scratch Com- | 0o | (Continued on Page M) of naval aviation, who set forth fear- | Harriman brought into court on a from San Francisco last Mon-{summons despite the taxi driver's re- and disappeared Tuesday after-|fusal to testify m Although the search for the miss- | his original charge | #* l snowstorm of bad checks. I |her name and Secy. Work Makes Report l held today that 18 c! torious for leases were rejected. to a hospital suffering from shock after his automobile hit two other cars Schelleberger of Orange, N. J | Schelleberger has a pride of the|pending against young Harriman as | -, and Commander John Rodgers|a result of her injuries r dis- | Commerce after becoming interested ant points report her presence. |in Mis. Bernsteln's actlvities, The 31lb of tongue, dexterous at signing ctary of the New London cham- showing familiarity | ber in his reply philosophized on the with banking methods, she had nomanner in which “widow gold difficulty in persuading acquaint- diggers” are able, by thelr lures, to ances and merchants to accept her abstract soft money from hard- hacks! {hearted business men, One of her first escapades report- | While in Buffalo Mrs, Rernstein fs 4 occurred at Atlantie City a short said to have issued worthless checks ime ago when she attended a con- on the New Rritain Trust Co,, which entfon of hank employes, although ' was forced to report ALY WILL PAY T0 HER CAPACITY v YEARS IN AGES OF COUPLE || Cordoba Argentine, Sept. 4 () —Soventy vears' :]isurvpzm(‘,\"\n Eusebio ages proved no bar to Andrade and Serafina Quevedo i | i | | | who were married }m'rrfi ‘:'1"; ; 3 Snieti” & i 25\ Count Vo, Fina Winistr jaughter of a cab driver, is'18. A large crowd staged a noisy demonstration ontside the regis- trar's office while the ceremony was belng performed. Plans for U, S, Settlement — Anxious To Have Agreement For Discharge of War Obligations in PAID IN OIL CLAIMS America As Soon As Possible— Denies Repudiation Rumor Bome, Sept. 4 (P—1taly's capacity 0 pay, based entirely upon business considerations, will be the sole do. in Red River termining criterion of the pr proposals Cases to be made by the Italian war deb e B ‘;y:.::l.rl‘;ws.?n to Washington next s ¢ wth, Count Volpi, the finance ashington, Sept. minister, declared to the Associated Press tod ted River Texas-OKkl the I ision on th v oma oil fleld cas “laly desires to conclude, as soon S Possible, a just settlement of her war debt to the United States, based completely upon the realities of her |industrial, economic and financial situation,” the finance minister said. “We have every reason to be hopeful. I am a business man and will be dealing with business men of my own type, like Secretary Mel- lon, who T am sure will approach the problem with an eye to realities, ims were meri- and dirccted that $2,141,898 ¢ them. o distributed to satisty The applications of 46 claimants ad prospecting permits All the leases allowed will be ex-| the near future. Citizens estic corporations awarded osition to enter ted River area cuted in nd dom cases must be in a p Suit Pending sume h!s_pn.qv_ He is charged with New York, Sept. 4 (P—Allen Har- mferviewing members of the Amer- 7 ican government and preparing th Joseph W. Harriman, REANRALLY man, son of roundwork for the commission so 15 to speed up the actual the Americans, the Italian commis- lon may publish in book form e |complete statement of Ttaly's finan- cial and economic situation, regard- ing which comprehensive data have been gathered by experts. Will Pay Britain Count Volpi concluded his refer- ences to the debt problem by declar- g Ttaly desirous to pay to the full extent of her capabilities. He de nied the truth of rumors recently current in Rome of a possible repu- liation of the Italian debt to Great Britain and confirmed Premier Mus- On June 11, Harriman was taken Miss Catherine | Miss | suit and struck $25.000 Magistrate Macreary had ordered The driver told the agistrate he could not substantiate (Continued on Page Tourteen) THE WEATHER HIGH TIDE T | Sept. 5 (Standard Time) Hartford, Sept. 4.—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity: (= WISHES 10 MAKE TER¥S TWO MILLIONS TOBE = R.C. VANDERBILT DS SUDDENLY Internal Hemorrhages Carry O Famous Horseman | | WETHERSF (MANY TIMES MILLIONAIRE‘W ERSH 'Dead Man Had Inherited Fifteen | ELD CELLS Millton Dollars From Father and Ceiling Not “Tool Proof’ as Thought, But [ Very Thin Brother—President of Horse Show | Association. good heaith, members of his house- | that followed the ~ |JONES AND GUNN LEADING OPPONENTS IN FIRST ROUND OF AMATEUR GOLF MATCH WERE EASILY BROKEN cape Wednesday Daily ¢ 12,0 PRICE THREE CENTS Week Aug, 20th ... 2 Bobby Is Four Up Over Von Elm While Fel- low Townsman Leads By But One—Former Makes a 71. 0 Portsmouth, R. I, Sept. 4 (M) ' Reginald C. Vanderbit disd early b 3 today at his country home, Sandy | Hartford, S'l“‘" ‘DL ‘\"‘”"F‘"‘“' ATLANTA SCHOOLBOY 2 el {for prison offic regarding the int e e sult o | - lIn»! Farm, here, as a result of In | construction of cells in the top tier MAKES TRIP IN 1 ernal hemorrhages |at the Wethersficld state prison has Mr. Vanderbiit had been in fairly |come as a result of the investigation Oakmont, Pa., Rept, 4 (- Bobhy Hold sald, up to last night. Shorgly |\ENL OF €arly Thursday morning of | Jones, the champlon, was four na after midnight he suffcred a hemor- | \oha¢! J. McDonnell and Frank jon George Von Elm of Los Angeles rhage which left him tn a weakened 0% 1t was confidently believed jat the end of the morning round in lcondition. About 4 oiclack ihis |1hat the cellings of the cells were of |their semi-final mateh of the ne. morning. a second. attack ocourred ‘tool proof” steel and that no pria- (tional amateur golf champlonship which caused his death. Ho e i | Oner could possibly have cut his way [teday. Watts Gunn of Atlanta may e ® W8I0 through. Tnstead they were of or-|one up on Dick Jones of White Tt was later made public that . [AIATY shect stecl, three sixteenths o | Plains, N, Y., [Vanderbilt had been sufforing from |27 nch thick and this ylelded to| Bobby Jones shot a 71, one un- {a throat infection since Tuesday, (¢ drllls of the two prisoners, | The iliness responded to freatment President Norris G. Osborn of the der par, to gain his long lead over the man who last year, in the tour- !to euch an extent that Mrs, Vander. | Prison directors and Warden H. K.|nament at Merion, met him in the Ihilt left for New York, where her |V Scott stated today that there [final round. Birdies were frequent hushand was to join her later for the | W°'® few cells In the prison from |and Von Elm had an eagle three at South American frip. On Wednes. | Which men could have cut thelr way |the ninth by means of a marvelous day night it became necessary to |© freedom and McDonnell and Land |pitch which dropped dead about two call In physicians and last night a [happened to occupy two of these. — |feet from the pin. lspecialist In stomach disorders was | Warden Scoft today was disin- summoned. Blood transfusion was | clined to discuss in detall the con Young Gunn, who disposed of Jess Sweetser yesterday, experfenced a resorted to when the first hem- }“H‘ur'inn of cells in the prison feel- [iot of trouble in gaining the advan- orrlingen developed, |ing that such informatlon should [tage over Dick Jones. The lead Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, Sr, |not be made publie. He eald that (seesawed, Gunn's fnabliity ,mother of Mr. Vanderhilt, was at |his investigation had | e | New York, Sept. 4 (P—Re | €. Vanderbiit, who died toda [count |gnard or other prison employ. Oshorn s inald at his | home in Portsmouth, R. I., was one of the leading horsemen of ithe country. He was president of |the National Horse Show Association of America ,which he organized, and 50 was president of the American | Hackney Horse soclety. He was the youngest son of the late Cornelius Vanderbilt. e in- herlted $10,000,000 from his father when 21 years old, and later in 1915 he inherited $5.000,000 from | his brother, Alfred Vanderbilt who | was lost in the sinking of the Lusi- | tania, Mr. Vanderbilt was the hrother of General Cornelius Vanderhllt, of the Countess Laszlo Szechenyi and Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney. Reginald Vanderbilt married Miss | Cathieen Neilson, a daughter Mrs. Trederick Nefison and a niecc erick Gebhard, in They have one child. offi al personnel. {of work," he said today. “All pris Tad very few in the past 30 years.' ficials. indicate the direction the two fugi the roof of the prison building. Income Tax Returns Give of | of the income tax lists to the serut salesmen, collecting solicitors agencles of business list” which they are utiliz njamin of affer a perlod of years she bronght suit for divorce which was granted | and the final decree was enfered in | April 1920 at Newport, Mrs. Vander- | bilt being granted the custody of the child. Mrs. Vanderbilt married Sydney J. Colford, Jr., in January, A ST SR GPa S 1021, Makinac Engineer Is Mr. Vanderbilt was married for | the second time to Miss Gloria Mor- trict for information,” sald Mr. { more.” S bomble Hiem Mackinac, excursion Miss Morgan had p 17 months ago. | steamer on ved small parts father r. the late General Judson Kil- | patrick. was one-time ambassador | Plane Falls infi Cemetery, earller days wi and polo player. a not rtsman | oted Kportsman | here today when an alrplane crashed | more than 1,000 feet into [fand Park cemetery. | The plane had been clrcling above Mexican Deputy Shoots Fellow Congressman cemetery when it seemed to develop Mexleo City, Sept. 4 %—Deputy| trouble. Wenceslao Macib last night shot and = - probably fat won Deputy WEERS MEETS BAKER. Marin Perez in a pstoll fight in the| Clevels s 4 streets after the ad greas for the ni The fight wa hot debate ov the state of P Calles condemned on ournment of con- | of War Weeks was here today with the ontgrowth ence, of a it waa reported, with mes fn| Secrotary Newton Baker. The object President | of his visit, which was unheralded esday. | was not disclosed. FORMER BRIDGEPORT MINISTER HAS MARITAL DIFFICULTIES here at the time action was brought. Defendant in Divorce Suit, | Dumbeii in his plea, says that in Married Again Under April moved from Connecticnt ] . { with the intent of staying away and Laws of Yucatan—Ap- (AR 8 Ap- 13 of | he Yucatan. He claims further June 3 he obtained a legal plies for Dismissal divorce from Anna Sherrod Dum . bell and subsequently married Mary Action. L. Smith In Yucatan, 4 (P—Howard nt Epis- for divorce in March. She alleged cruelty and asked custody of their son, Adrian, 17. The marriage was at Covington, Tenn. in Aprii, 1890, \"ia d the alleged cruelty treatment spread over the period after Bridgeport, Sept ‘i Mrs. Dumbell brought tha action | M. Dumbell, former Protesta copal rector. of St. Luke's church in | en who divorced his wife und decre of his parish and is now defendant |1 in a divorce action here today filed | a plea in abatement to the libel. The action was brought by Mrs. Anna|through “intolerable agony for 35 Sherrod Dumbell whom he left |years” He said his wife had made when he went from Darien to Yu- |his work in every parish extremely catan in the spring and charged in- | difficult because of lack of coopera- tolerable cruelty tion, that she constantly quarrelled Through counsel Dt with him and openly antagonized the court to dismiss t his parishioners. want of jurisdiction Dumbell recently relinquished his of the respondent duties over St. Luke's church and it atan married a singer | was 920 When the action was brought Dumbell sald that he had lived Tbell e action 1t is the claim that asks neither the At New London, 10:50 a. m.; | 3 At New Haven, | Partly clondy tonight; Satur- day fair :12:47 po m B e plaintiff (Mrs. Dumbell) nor himself | was not necessary for Rt. Rev. C. is a resident of this section. It *~‘F~ Brewster, the bishop of the ciaimed that Mrs, Dumbell is a resi focese, to act other than to accept aant af Nasth Garolina asd was ot |the withdzawak not thus far kSmd_\' Point farm when her son died. [Indicated laxity on the part of any Mr. id that no formal investi- 2 would be made by the board as |the hoard has full confidence in the “{T was a remarkably clever plece ons have some escapes and we have No clues came to elther prison of- state police or local authori- tles throughout the state that would tives took after they slid down from Agents Big Sucker List New York, Sept. 4 (®.—Opening iny of the public has given stock and a gigantic Day. chief clerk in the second district income tax office plied to the office of the second dis- Day, “the publication of the income tax list undoubtedly provides a huge | sucker list and practically nothing Charged With Negnigence daughter, Gloria Morgan Vanderbiyt, | 20 assistant engineer of the steamer | whieh a boiler exploded at Newport Chile. i mYn‘f’!;dHin-w to his activities as a | Kills Boy and Man horseman, Mr. Vanderbllt in his|, Cr o and, Sept. 4 (P—A twelve vear old boy and a man were killed | High- | the municipal golf course and the | cretary| Jones' a party of Philadelphians in confer-| former | to find himself on the greens causing him to have only the one-hole margin at the home hole. At the 18th Dick Jones, who reached the green in two, made the most spectacular shot of the round. He sank a 80-foot putt for a birdie three, The sun was breaking through an early fog as Bobby Jones and Von Elm started, with Jones, first to drive, sending a long shot down the center. Bobby's second shot just missed an eagle, Von Elm conceding the birdie four when his putt for a five failed. Jones one up. Jones took a lead of {wo up with a birdie three at the second, his pitch dropping four feet from the cup. Von Elm had a par four, Jones' putt from off the edge of the green on the third stopped gix Inches from the hole and they halv- ed in fours, Von Elm was trapped badly ‘o the right on the fourth and barely escaped to the fairway. He sliced his brassie, while Jones covered the Cathleen Vanderbilt, who married |in the customs house said today. 586 yards in two, resting on the edge Harry €. Cushing, 8rd. Mr. Van.| ‘Judging from the character of [Of the green. Von Elm's fourth derbilt and his wife se \ted ang Many of the persons who have ap- |crossed the green to a trap and he conceded his.opponent a birdie four, Bobby was three up. They halved the sixth in five when l[m(h missed putts of less than six eet. The champlon added another at the sixth with a three by a perfect pltch from a trap to the right while Von Elm, buried deeply in the sand on his tee shot, niblicked across the 5 green twice and picked up. gan, daughter of Harry Hays Mor. | T”"I"“‘“‘;"- R. T, sr"“" ‘”‘ Wanfour) Soid & s B JoLeN gan, consul general at Buenos Afre duly charges: g DERUERNCE Von Elm recove: Their marrlage was fn 1923 brought against George Mul- TR0 migaly, oL {hook to the rough on the seventh but missed his second putt of six feet. Jones did the same, however, and it was a halve in five, In motion pletures abroad and in |7 August 18 taking a toll of 63| Both were on at the elghth from this country. She i3 a sister of Mre, | I¥¢S Were made public today by (the teo and another halve in par James Vail Converse and of fhe |t Jocal officers “of the federal |threo was the result. Von Eim was Conntess Demaupas, e | steamboat inspection service. within six inches of dropping his sec- ond. Von Elm gained back a hole with an eagle three, his spoon dropping the ball three feet from the pin, by | far the best shot of the nine. Bobby had a birdle four, with two putts on the green. Thelr cards: Jones Out—434 453 436—385 Von Elm Out—644 756 533—43 Jones was just short with his sec- ond on the tenth while Von Elm barely reached. Bobby missed a six- foot putt which laid his opponent a dead stymie and then halved in five. It was a bad break for Von Elm. second on the eleventh |went through the crowd behind the green and he came out well but lost the hole when Von Elm dropped a [twenty-foot putt for a birdle three. Jones was two up. Von Elm was bunkered to tha left from the twelfth tee and had te chip to the fairway while Jones' brassie second was 20 yards short of the green. Von Elm reached with his fourth, but the hole went to Jones with a birdie four, his chip stop- ping a foot from the cup. Von Elm sank a 35-foot putt for a birdie two to win the 13th while |Jones was 20 feet from the cup when he exploded from a trap on his second. Von EIm again was two down, | The Californian hooked to the |traps on the fourteenth while Jones was far to the left but reached with |nis mashie. Two putts gave Jones |the hole with a par four and he was {three up. | Jones gained a lead of fonr by holing a 20-foot putt on the fitteenth |for a birdle three. Von Elm's sec- {ond was to the right of the green {and he chipped dead to the pin but |too late Jones was home with an iron on the short sixteenth. Von Eim was 20 yards from the green. The Cali- fornian's chip rolled off and he was ten feet from the pin and Jones' putt from 35 feet away stymied him. He attempted to chip over and got |in front of Jones' ball to halve in four. Jones' tee shot on the 17th was in a bad lie when he hooked over the gallery to the left. He lofted te the edge of the reen fifty feet from the pin, while Von Elm's second was 20 teet from the cup. Each took two putts to halve the hole in four. The home hole was halved in par four by peifect golf, lsaving Jones 4 (Continued on Page 11) il | e | { '