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e s S S ——— ADDITIONALNEWS OF OAKMONT PLAY Bobby Jones and Watts Gumn Playing for Championship ! Oakmont, Pa., Sept. 5.—The sec- jond hole was also halved, On the "Second Jones' drive was near the edge of the fairway, 25 yards ahead of Gunn's, and his second dropped six feet from the pin, but he missed the putt and took four. Gunn also was on the green with his second and missed a 20-foot tap by a few inches to halve the hole. There was another halve on the third in fours. Jones' drive carried fully 320 yards to mid-fairway and his pitch carrfed him to within 20 feet of the pin and he was down in two putts for a par four. Gunn's drive was long and hounded into the rough at the left. He brought his second to the green, 30 feet to the right of the pin, and also holed out in two putts for the third straight halve. Gunn took a lead of one hole by scoring an Eagle three at the fourth, His second shot was played with a No. 1 iron and stopped ten feet be- yond the flag and he dropped the putt. Jones, who had equalled Gunn's drive down the middle of the falrway, spooned Into a trap at the right and his third crossed {he green, His fourth was harely five feet from the pin. Then he picked up. Bobby Jones took the fifth hole, evening the match. A birdle three gave Jones the fifth and squared the mateh. Both drives were well down the middle and Jones pitched to within 15 feet of the hole, and then sank the putt, whila Gunn barely sayed on the edge of the green with his niblick and required two to go down for a par four, Jones won the sixth hole. Both were on the back edge of the green with their tee shots on the short sixth and Jones nearly holed his first putt of 35 feet tak- ing a three. Gunn played his sec- ond for a bad lie and overran fhe cup by a matter of 3 or 4 feet. His (hird was inches aw from the hole and he took four. Gunn took the seventh hole. Jonee drove into a ditch on the | scventh, Gunn's shot was 250 yards out en the fairway and the young- ster's pitch was 40 feet from the | pin. He went down in two for a| four while Jones hit the edge of the | green on his second and rolled into a trap. He was out well ten feet| from the cup but his putt was wide, Jones won the eighth hole, making 4% m one up. The champion’s spoon Pt from the tee reached the cighth green and his putt fell two feet short of the cup and went down in three for par. Gunn drove with an iron into a sand trap in front of the green and pitched out well to within 15 feet of the pin. . His putt over- ran the cup by a foot and he re- quired four. Gunn won the ninth. Their cards: BLAKE 1S FINED IN NORWALK Not Only That But Place Is Held Up Norwalk, Sept. 5 (P--John Blake, owncr of the gaming house at 18 Main street, which was held up by elght gunmen last Sunday, was found guilty of keeping a reputed gaming house and of keeping a gaming house before Judge John H Light this morning and fined $100 on each charge The {rial was marked | ing of the police by Blake Leo Davis, when they testified that | they knew of the reputation of the place for four years and did noth- ing to stop the gaming there. Six All square. excoriat- | s attorney, | . Here are the survivors of the home station at Lakehurst, N. J. wrecked navy dirigible S Some of them are in dress mixed costumes gathgred together after the crash, which des henandoah as they arrived in Philadelphia en route to their uniforms, some in their working clothes and a few are in troyed most of their own belongings. TEST OF SEIZED BEER Two Barrels of Nut RAISE GIVEN NEW B HAVEN POLICEMEN P (e e Fus { Grade Patrolmen and Fire- bar of what William J, Fowler | i s e i D et Increase of $100 Brown nre“ ' Which Owner Says s 4‘\mr‘, \ chased for “near heer" was seize last night by Patrolman David Doty | at the rear of the Washington hotel. | New Haven, Sept. 5—A flat Detective Sergeant William P, Mc- [crease of $100 per year for first Cue has sent a sample of the beer to le policemen and firemen has be analyzed. Joseph K. Topa of 269 |been voted hy the board of finance High street was with Fowler when;of New Haven. All members of the the heer was 1, according fo [police department will have one- Patrolman Doty. 1alf the cost of thefr uniforms paid AN T s [for by the city and the firemen will BONSALL ELEGTED {receive their rubber equipment free |of charge. No other provisions {have been made to take care of other memhers of the departments Philadclphia Man Leads Brother- [oufside of the first grade, although hood of St. Amdrew This Year— it is known that they will receive Vlected at Pittshurgh, favorable attention, Pittsburgh, Sept. 5 (P —FEdw ard | adjustment of fire and police H. Bonsall, Philadelphia, was ve- | department employes has been one clected president of the Brotherhood |of the wtest problems to confront of St. Andrew, men's organization of |the hoard of finance, The matter the Episcopal church, at the¥annual |has not been settied outside of the convention of the brotherhood here |fact that the $100 flat increase in today. Other officers named were sulary for first grade men of both tenay Barber, Chicago; Walter | departments has heen granted. Kidde, Montclair, N. J., and B. I The Board of Police Commissions Finney, Sewanee, Tenn., vice-presi- | Were originally petitioned for an in- dents, and Charles E. Beury, Phila- crede of $1 a day for policemen and | delphia, treasurc their officers. 1t was decided A national campaig ism in the Episcopal urged in the report of the national council of the brotherood. “If the ehurch is to fulfill her n sion, she must rise to the which now confronts her a > evangelism {he central ture of her effort,” Pr said in submitting the an of evange smaller amount, It was decided | that the members of the department | would no longer have to pay the oppor- | customary two per cent of nd | wages toward the policemen's retire- fea- | ment fund. It was also decided that sall | the city would pay two-thirds of the jcost of uniforms worn by e ticers, captajns and sergeants, Shoe:Eactory) Foreman i i " 2he membors ot Sirieidepartment Shot in New York | matter ! 50 they et which matters stood, so they peti- New York, Sept. 5 (@-—Charles | tioned for another increase a short Pournarou: foreman of the Mil-|time ago, this time asking for a dred Shoe company, Brooklyn, was ' flat increase of five per cent. No shot and killed today when he re- |announcement regarding sisted a lone robber who held him |cision of the board on this matter up in the factory and demanded the | has been made, $5,500 payroll he was carvyir Shortly after the mn.»m:wn asked As Pournarous fell dying for a salary incrcase, the officers of floor, the rabber snatehed t | the fire department petitioned their roll envelopes from his hand || hoard for a raise, The increase from the building, escaping I A by them on the percent. g ab hasis would amount to more at the|one dollar a d from the | the firemen ofone The sidl The ehooting took foot of Place ading ked for a flat increase dollar a day. a stairway reoms wher worli two hundred employes tion, together with that of ors and finally agreed to | buy all the rubber goods for the { members of the department, abol- ish the fwo per cent assessment for 3 | the pens fund increase the men's vacation periods from 10 to 14 or 15 days cach year. o i m 1D AS RECKIISS DRIVER. 1 of Christian Lane, rosted this Policeman and Patrolman of reckless 1in an accid corner of Lafaye(te and Washing! n\‘ Pera ran into a m morni Wil Axel Carl Ainins R ion rolls on a el FOREIGN EXCHANGE Rraala: York, Sept Foreign ex- witnesses who were at holdup Isadore Levy, Jimmy (the Gr Kavargls, Pat Annunziato, s Patsy Lynch, Frank Mace, William | Christiano all of Norwalk, and! Danfel LaMerte of Stamford. Their testimony was marked by frequent lapses In memory as to what gam- bling occurred there, LONDON LAND DEAL Lord Howard de Walden Cashes in for a Bit Over $10,000,000—His Tordship Wealthy. [ Dot | Metue {tioning London, Sept. 5 (P-—~Forty acres of 1and fn the busy west end of Lon- don have been sold by Lord Howard De Walden for a price said to be in excess of £4,000,000 ($19,200,000), making it one of the largest land deals in the history of London. The property takes in several bus- fness streets and is part of the orig- inal tract of land owned by the an- cestors ot Lord Howard De Walden, who was once a member of the se- lect group of seven men who owned | the entire city of London il The “City" 10 the anclent section now the commercial Greater London here evidently refers of London center of ©Our CONDUCTOR, LEADER AND GUTTER PIPE SERVICE SOLVES THE FROBLEM NEW BRITAIN SHEET METAL WORKS E. J. GOOBY & SON 168 8o, Main St. Tel. 57 [o'clock by irregular. Quotations (in Great Britain, demand 484 1” 16, cables 485 1-16, 60 day bills I'rance, demand 3-4; Ttaly, de- demand, 80, Hol- veden rlana ece 14.9, Po lovakia 2.96 ustria 14 1-5, 40.25, 1 reported to have rsection hefore he dia CHILD PIT BY AUTOMO! Ada aged 4, suffer injuries when sh front street this mor Ferr of ng shortly n har eru of 619 Fa William and after ques- eported that was an unavoidable accident. automobile s 1, Spain 18.15, 14.29, G 1.78 1-4, umania 49 1.2, Argentin Rrazil 13.12, Tokyo 40 3-4 150 8-4, Montreal 100, Over the Top by Hij s n ctive Jugoslavia inv witne Miss Michelle Neuberg ving “Killarney Jim” at the mouth County Horse Show held at Rumson, N.J. Mon- in-| by | the board that the men apd officers | church was| would have to be satisfied with a | their the of- | the de- A short time Jator | hoard took the matter under | - {able to use the same, nghat | such bad actors. He safd that he fired them, but he said that in seven |vears he cannot remember a man | jcoming on his work drunk for he [Knew what he would get. "Guohnr' This {s what we mean by Ameri- Alley,” can common sense and we expect {0 The reason Is quite plain to see; |1ave it on our highways. One of | Though “Orchard” 1s down in the |{hese foremen or emplayers of labor records, horrowed from any of our great 08 G iAeh Iateyatyitran usiness concerns would clean up T S e AR SAsE Eeaere N he highways inside of two weeks. | Before the swift growth of the The best thing about it is that it sat- | Toah! isfies the guilty parties for they all | . |admit the fairness of it. | The ave bee 1 g | There might have been apples and | READER. peaches Where now, bricks look down. COMMUNICATED (Gasoline Alley) called Orchard Street, There's a street | and mortar | Perhaps on some moon-lit evening, | When Nature has sought her re- pose; And the township, sleeping serenely Counld nothing unpleasant disclose; With branches laden with globules Of fruit all so luscious and ripe, | The orchard trees stood, In their beauty-— Of Nature's full fruitage, THREE FIRES IN WEEK | Department is Kept Busy putting Out Flames in Norwalk Store 'l'hLSl Week, Norwalk, Scpt. b (P-—The fire de- partment was called out for the| | third time this week to extinguish a | | fire at the Leipsig Fur company's| scene has | Plant in East Norwalk yesterday aft- | ernoon. This fire is helievedl by Fire Chlef George Bogardus to be of incendiary origin, The local police, state police and | private detectives are working on the most | ©4se in an effort to round up the | person who it is thought is start- | ing the fire, a type. Through the years the heen changing, TUntil now, the old settler sees, | That rows of gasoline huggles | Have taken the place of the trees. | {Where once there was orchard and | vineyard, And fragrance sweet, There fs now rasses Upon that gasoline street. M. H. NORTON. SENSE ON HIGHWAYS An open lefter to the commission- er of motor vehicles, Robbins B. Stoeckel. Dear Sir:— In order that may come of flowers the smell of burned WATER BOARD TO MEET, The water board will hold several e s on water main extensions, and 1t is expected a discussion will ba held on the advisabllity of re- opening the pumping station at For- ostville, Although there is a good supply of water at Shuttle Meadow lake it may be neces: y to use the pupms to bring the reservoir to the { desired level soon. COMMON ornr | | we fo and a walking delegate from Indianap- | he explatned, there a | approximately 90 to 100 men HONCARRIERS IN DERBY ON STRIKE Action Follows Visit of Labor Agitator From Indianapolis Derby, Sept. 5.—Work upon prac- teally all major buflding contracts in progress throughout Derby and other sections of the assoclated com- munities where masons and brick- layers are employed was last night reported as suspended for an indefi- nite period, due to what employers believo is a strike of hod carriers laborers quickly following ru- mored organlzation of & unfon by | oll, 1d., assisted hy two members of | New Haven locals. Contractors affected state they | have received no notification offi- clally that & union has been organ- 1zed in this section; had received no intimation a strike was likely, and are entirely in the dark as to what their employes want, either in wage increasa or an amended time sched- ule, Unofficlally, they state, rumors have reached them that labor agl- tators were busy, organization of a unfon was in progress and members were out for an increased wage. “Untfl we know what it s all ahout and what the men want, we can do little but await definite 1in- formation upon various points in- volved,” sald Thomas F. Hesslon of Heeslon Bros. this city, who have the new Derby high school and three other major contragts under He said nothing would ba done by the contractors affected over the week-end holidays, any way, and ft was improbahle anything | would be done until the men involv- ed saw fit to acquaint thelr em- ployers as to what it is all about and the nature of their demands, provided they have any apecific ones. Tt is a quiet season just now, no so-called emergency contracts under way and those for when they are being handled are acquainted with condi- tions and willing to cooperate. If |the men who refuse to work con- tinue in their present attitude, sev- eral contractors stated there is likely to be a suspension of work on buildings Involved for an indefinite period, possibly several weeks. Mr. Hession said that 52 hod-car- riers and laborers, employed by his firm, about half that number on the high school building, did not work yesterday. He estimated that were involved in the supposed strike, The first he knew of any trouble, e said, was yesterday morning when men employed on the high school contract appeared upon the scene but did not go to wor Personals Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 1. Walker of 135 Dwight street and Mr, and Mrs. Raymond E. Walker of 37 Wells street are on an automobile trip to Old Orchard, Maine. over Labor Day READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIEL ADS TOR RESULTS complete cooperation upon the gi question of making our highways safe for humanity and that the read- KIDNAPPER AND MURDER SUSPECT HUNTED TODAY BY ARMED POSSES Negro Who Sped Off Wi Little Girl Thought to Have Killed Chauffeur of | Stolen Automobile, Montelair, N, J, Sept. § (P Posses today intensified their search | for a little white girl kidnapped by a negro who presumably killed an- other negro in order to yet un au- tomobile for the abduction, Apparently having . planned kidnap the nlece of a wealthy banker, the fugitive seems to have found that he abducted the wro girl. The kidnapping plot, lieve, was aimed ugainst Joseph A Bower, vice-president of the W York Trust company, whose reven- year-old niece, Dorothy Coates, was visiting him. Instead the nogro grabbed Mary Daly daughter of David 8. Daly, hardware merchant, who was playing in front of the Bower home yesterday afternoon. By the lcense plates on the ab- ductor's automobile, police suspected Raymond Plerce, a negro chauffeur, who had borrowed the car, But Plerce's body was found last night police Le- | to 1\1 ary from several of her playm crammed In a culvert &t Cedar Grove, with a 'bullet hole in his liead, Medical examiners sald be had been killed four hours befor: the kidnapping, The assumption is that he was killed by the kidnappe> in order to get the car, Last night Mrs, Bower was calisd on the telephone by a man who ¢+ manded 84,400 for the return of her niece, DBut her nieee wa in Led at the time. The man hung uvp when Mrs, Bower asked his name. Mary Daly and Dorothy Coates luok v much alike, The kidnapper drove up to the Power hiome in a sedan and grabbed ates, | He sped away, choking the girl's creams with one hand and driving with the other. John Sandin the Dower chauffeur, gave chase, picking up two friends on the way. For ten miles the two cars dashed through the Jerscy suburbs of New York city, Between Little Falls and West Paterson, Sandin crowded the fugl- tive car toward the curb ar4 tne negro fired. The shot crashed throngh the windshield and hit Sandin in the head. One of his friends jumped to the wheel and started the chase anew, but when Sandin slumped unconsclous in the seat, they took him to a hospital, Young Man, : Be Careful. ing public may be fully informed on tht question please answer the following questions: Regarding the hearing held New Haven at which several licenses | were returned to those found guilty | of reckless driving and driving while |intoxicated. | Before asking the questions would say that our idea of common ||} nse is simply that which lies in the nature of the question and also ||§ that which the practical spirit of th American mind has worked out to | cover such question. i | 1. While such a hearing is called by that name does it not assume the functions of a board of pardons” | 2. After such parties have been Leld guilty through all the complexi- || [ties and possibilities of escaping in | the work of the various departments |of the courts, do you think that it is fair to the public, and the police | {force that they should be mumnx\ |10 the highways. 3. So great has heen the failure }Vn make the highwavs and public places safe for humanity, much of ‘“]\H‘h due to the possibility of |swift escape by auto, that six of onr |great commonwealths are |shooting criminals on sight and t |taxpayer after paying for the con- {struction of his highways are un does it seem reasonable to you to release such parties? Or do you share in the general distrust of the courts to han dle the situation? ! 4. ‘The real spirit of America i=s practical, fair and direct, almo: every question that comes up has || been or is heing handled fn a direct || | manner satisfactory to all concerned. | | B {And this question is one of them |This is simply a question of hand e distinetive thing in American civilization, with saf: |to human progrezs and welfare. This {hax been solved. Thesa are the find. {ings. 1] The New Haven railroad and trol- 1oy lines. These great companies for ybars have been handling this ques tion to the satisfaction of all. Thes discharge both the reckles: user of machinery and the intext icated man, never to return, It more dangerous to life to run a automobile for tha run through all our streets, do not make mueh noise and common sense would say that we onght to have equal protection |on eur highwa Further we find on investigation that all eur great factories han {he same question. We have looked into the following companies whose systems wa recommend for your study, The International Silver company of Mariden and Walling- ford, the Stanley Works of Nen Britain, tha Chate Metal Works of Wat ury and the Yale Towne Lock company of Smmford. In fact, so general T found such management {that it ean be found in any great factory. All of these discharge both | 8 rec ess ser of machinery or |the into d one never to return \ | Further this week while waiting for a train at Berlin, there was a gang of pic and shovel men at work. 1 lasked the foreman what he did with | i i | ) isit \ and The | simply Your Message | You may buy “10,000 circulation,” merely a “claim” of the Canada. se reports publisher? they contain, enable the advertiser to measure exn how widely his message has been distributed. Ask for the latest A. B. C. Report on the It is a member Herald. of the A. B. C. DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- TION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN The Herald is the Only New Britain Newspaper With An Audited Circulation — L — , by the authentic, reliable, verified data GVER 12,000 HERALDS The measure of your message is the number of actual readers reached by the publications carrying your advertising. but is it delivered, or The A. B. C. offers a serv ice that will enable the adver- tiser and advertising agent to measure every message placed in the leading publications of the United States Every day in all parts of the Continent A. B. C. auditors are checking the records of publishers, ings are tabulated in the form of A. B. C. reports. . and their find- ly