New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 24, 1926, Page 9

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FORTUNE SPENT, BUT ALL N VAIN Standard Ol Co. Fails in Alaskan Project PLAINVILE NE! (Contnued from Page Seven) The ecompany sent its first gang to the reglon threo years ago this mionth, selecting a spot 17 miles in- land from Kanatak for the premier effort, to find oil. The men had to break a road through from the lit- tle Cold Bay port and then bring fn their supplies by way of Seward to | the eastward. The routo called for | [ U - PAVANO Notes — Miss Ethel Neff and Miss Myrgaret | Neff arc ill at thelr home on East | it i o New Britain Man Bagged in The Woman's Home and Foreign ] 3 Missonary soctety wil noid 1w pust- | RIGEETEI0, Babula Bound Over poned all-day sewing meeting tomar- 2 . [row at the home of Mrs. Gertrude San Franelsco, March 24 (®-~The (Coombs, 174 Black Rock avenue, | As he was driving In an automo- “toughest” experience In Its whole | New Britain, bile near Newtown last night, Joa- career in ofl fleld development has| The choir of the Church of Our |eph Pavana of 969 Stanley street, just ended for the Standard o)l (Lady of Mercy will holq a rehearsal |New Britaln, was arrested by Offi- Company of California, the Cold Biay |2 the church tomorrow evening at 7 |cers Weber and Tucker of the reglon on the Alaska peninsula heing [9/¢1ock n preparation for the spe- |Ridgefield police department, Who the setting. Although the company |¢/Al Easter musical program. {alleged ‘they found 150 gallons of expended hundreds of thousands of | _1/08t==On Torestville avenus or [alcohol in the Pavano machine. He dollars n vain, it contributed an epic | Bohemla strect, palr of glasses In | will appear tonight at 7 o'clock In of human endurance and determina- | P1ack case. Reward. 220 West |the Newtown police court. tion, 1 Main street. | Stanley J. Babula, formerly of For sale—Dining room wet. No|New Britaln, who gives his address dealers, 68 East Maln stapet or {now as 287 Bank street, Waterbury, phone 865, |was bound over to the superlor court Evening office hours of Ralph A. |last night in the police court at Wooding, chiropractor, Bpth's |Newtown, after he was caught by block, New Britaln—Mondays and |Ridgefield police yesterday. It s Thursdays.—advt. |alleged that Babula had 176 gallons Beds, springs, bureaus, pillyws for |of alcohol in the car which he was sale, 20 W. Main street.—advi. driving. a man-pags through two mountain | The automobile was sald to have ranges and a number of tremen- | Musie N, } had New York markers, and was dously creek fords. Music Not Heard in 2'(,)“0 |registered in the name of Albert Nature fought them every inch of Years Is to Be Revived | watuiis, who ts now serving time in the way, both above and below Worcester, Masa, March 24 (#)— |the Hartford county fall. Babula ground. Tn the first year, working | Music that has not been heard iv appeared in local police court last in blizards and hurrlcanes that | 2,000 years will be used in the yre- |Thursday after Officer David Doty swept in from the bay, the little |sentation of Euripides' “Hecuba” by |found him driving a New Haven gang of 20 wen fought to punch |the freshman class of Holy Crass [car, the back seat of which was through a deposit of 1,600 feet of ;coll«vgo on next Memorial Day, May (saturated with alcohol. Babula was sandstone, Sometimes they made |30, The play will be presentey in |later released from the New Britain only a foot a day. 1t took a good [the original Greek of Euripides ynd lq:\", 12 months before they could send [the chants will be sung to muslc of | the drills through the sandstone |that period. Professor John B, nm.] e H A 7 layer, | shal, professor of music, and Pro- l‘llsh HO] nkohl to “ ed " They kept at it for two years |fessor Joseph V. O'Drain, professor | Owner of Pharmacy more, concentrating on a single hole. At times their supply boats would lave to lay off Kanatak for weeks hecause the squalls would KIck U0 | yUST SIGN APPLICATION the bay to an extent that made land- Hartford, March 24 (P—Attorney ing impossible, and there are 10 |General Frank E. Healy today gavo wharves at the little port, Finally |0ty FE0E 8 TOEE LESY 8 e the hole was down to 5034 feet and | ¢o\n'o¢ Naugatuck to the effect that | empinyed as hookkeeper at the rot a trace of oil. The gang boxed |4y qpnijcant for reglstration as a |Taplin Manufacturing Co. of this up ffs gear and “pulled ont,” UENE | o0 1 ynugt sign his application him- | clty. Mr. Swanson is the proprietor Irs tractor for the last trek over e !e.js 4nq that it is not sufficient to of the Monroe Pharmacy at TonditofKanalai Vilchinatie IOt inave anoter ejani for him: | corner of Monroe and Arch streets. ted out hehind them with tremen- ] dous drifts, | The company has declded that the | possibility of finding ofl in Alaska fis! of Greek, are collaborating in ve- | Justus W. Hornkohl of Basseft producing this anclent music. | street has announced the engage- ment of his daughter, Miss Frances \Porothy Hornkohl, to Carl W. Swan- fi\.n, also of Bassett stroet. Miss HYrnkohl is a graduate of the New Brituin high school and fs at present the | Seven Democrats Seek Constable Nomination Interest in the constabulary con- test in the democratic ranks was in- creased today with the formal en- trance of Stephen Roper as a candi- date, and the announcement by Candidate Frank Clynes that Matthew J. Callahan of 41 Franc street. g | There are now seven avowed candldates for the four nominations and mention Is made of additional | entrants, James W. Manning, John | L. Ross and Bernard J. Dougherty, | | the present democratic etvil ofticers, will come before the party for nomination. Clynes, Roper, Edward Scallse and James Farrell, a former constable, are also in the fleld. Clynes is conducting an active | eampaign and has a strong primary | organization operating under the di- | rectlon of Manager Callahan. Calla- han, llke his candidate, is mew in politics but {s perhaps one of the best known of the city’'s younger democrats. He is an ex-serviceman, | and 1s the son of the late Joseph P. | Callahan, who was chalrman of the | board of public satety under the ad- | ministration of Joseph M. Halloran, He Is a brother of Edward X. Cal- | | lahan, who succeeded his father on | | the board of public safety. | | | Hopes for Settlement | In Tacna-Arica Revived | | Arica, Chile, March 24 (®—Hopes | for a settlement of the present Tac- | |na-Arfca plebiscite crisis were re- | | vived today, | | A meeting of the plebiscitary com- mission, set for this morning, was | postponed until tomorrow to permit | determination by the Americans of | a new policy by which it is hoped | | to avert a crash and allow continua- |tion of the preparations for the | plebisclte. | | Major General Willlam Lassiter, | natural chairman of the commission, conferred yesterday with the heads of both the Chilean and Peruvian delegations, with the object, it is he- [lleved, of finding out the attitude of thelr governments toward the new American proposals, the nature | ot which is being kept secret sl very much in the future. Tt | would make no statement as to fis potential plans for the territory, hut it has not heen disheartened by the Cold ¥ V.ffect on Rubber Nipples on Bahy - Teeth Is Today's Argument in French Chamber, ris, March 24 (A | TELEPHONE ber of deputics, for w : strife over the policy o ORDERS A its entir Tornir ssion to o & restiul FILLED g over the t of rubber ipples ‘on babies' teeth, | S Er| i quesation has plainly nething to do with the Jrop in the franc rate, hut the legisiators found it to e closely connected with the bi Deputy Pinnard, dean of ber. sp from the acked the “nefarious nip- hich, T eat- ce's infant eiti with rs from stifing poison- Has (ii;'0;| ()nl; :Q‘lfl to Family in 10 Months Walter Martin 24, who his address as T was ord by Judge Alling in police court this morning to pay his wife, who lives on Hartford avenue. $10 a week for the support of their two childrer It s alleged th June , Martin has given lis wife only You rtin <ald that lier husha il 18ft her recently and t fo Tlor- after giving her &5 on February She said tiiat her parents have g 1 claimed heen suppor her husband 1 he never anted to see his wife and children in when he left her. Probation Officer Edward €. Con- nolly stat talked 1o Mar tin before t i Martin prom- to support his children, Con- Martin said her 4 her twiee dorsn't care to Mre 3 him now Martin said he wag willing o support his children. He was 1 under honds of $300. and ¥ ; e would be READ HERALD CLASSIFVIED ADS ———mmmam MAIL ORDERS FILLED EEPING standards up and prices down make an unbeatable combination. get these extreme now in suits marked 5.00 and 40% at only With Extra Trousers “Home WET WASH | LAUNDR { DOES OUR WASH ¢ AN’ MUVVER l HAS MORE i o S TOPCOATS VERY desirable style— hox coats, guard modes and Chesterfields — make up this great selection in stgle and double breasted cffects. $2250 | $2500 | $30.00 | - Wy Ml it HIS MOTHER SAYS: “HLRE'S Al SWEET AND CLEAN WET WASH | THAT Home Wet Wash | Laundry IS SATISFACTORY™ \ PHONE (1) f B R | WURDER BELIEF WIDSOR DEATHS Continued from First Page.) was first inclined to belleve deaths were due to mceldental asphyxiation. 'Two Jets Turned On, Examination of the stove indfeat- ed, however, that two pet-cocks had | been turned on and there was no likelthood that they were turned on by accldent. Dibble, in the bellet of Dr. Platt, had gone to bed and fallen Into a deep slumber, and that Mrs, | Howard had risen from her bed, | turned on the gas and then gone back to bed. The {lluminant having | filled the rooms all night both the | persons in {t dled, Dr. Platt had been &iving Mra. Howard medical attention for some time and he knew that she was greatly worrled over her own condi. | tion and the treatment she recefved | from Dibble, He made an informal finding and reported the case to Dr. | Gllbert Calhioun, the coroner of Hart. ford county, The house in which Dibble lved WAas & two-family one, and a Polish family lfved down stalrs. Members or this family, however, seemed to have no knowledge of condltions upstairs, Dibble's wite dfed some years RO, s. Howard leaves a daughter, Mrs. | orge Peterson of Farmington. that gas | - NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1926 Search Once More Tevived Yor Youngster Who Was Kidnapped | Back in 1875, ' Shelby, N. ©, March 24 (& — The search for Charlle Ross, whose | disappearance in Pennsylvania asa child in 1875 caused a natlon-wide | quest, has been resumed here, J. P. Gaffney, who noted some. thing suspiclous on the arrival at Gaffney, B. C, fifty years ago, of a man, woman and child, announced today that he had got in touck with an elderly man who claims to | have been the child who, he be- lleves, {s Charlle Ross, ; The man, according to Gaffney, {a in communication with Walter Y Roas, & brother of Charlle, and {s trying to prove his identity, Gaffney has for years been ae- tive In business circles here. The man belleved to be Ross, he said, has a family, “and for that reason” his address cannot be glven now. | ROB ROY'S HOME | Glasgow, Scotland, March 24 (#) - Rob Roy's Glengyle house, on thd! border of Perthshire and Stirling shire, where the highland outlaw dled in 1734, is to be modernized. It is to have electric call servants and incandescent lighta for the benefit of fts occupants and vis- ftor e THREE-PIECE LIVING ROOM SU Thoroughly Well Made—Davennort, Ch aiv and Wing Chair Covered in Denim Of Buffet Ixtension Table and Six Tapestry Seated Chairs. 5]4C B. C. PORTER SONS for the | e e — CHARLEY ROSS AGKIN TWO BOUND OVER ON | i o Alfred LeWitt, counsel for the Lave the case continued untll to- morrow 80 that he would produce witnesses who could prove that San- tora was in Waterbury on March 14. Judge Alling stated that ho was sure that the men were here. He placed @entora under $2,000 and Dieptro under $500 bond. Sowa was recently sentenced to 80 days in jall for attacking Officer RUM RUNNING CHARGE (Continued Prom First Page) been suspended for about twe! imonths and that he has not driven since. He deolarad that he has not | Kumm when the officer placed him o in w Dritain for three under arrest. Sowa also sald that months. wen he came to a he has served time In the county christening at 101 Queen Jail for violation of the llquor law. Say nothing and saw wood— But watch your saw! ‘Hardware Meant for Hardwear’ 7 ITE UITE Only

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