New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 28, 1926, Page 13

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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY,-JULY 28, 1926. . NEWINGTON NEWS $1,500,000 Worth of Oil Was Burned [SOUTH SEA ISLE SWEPT BY TIDAL St L ; WAVE; INHABITANTS IMPOVERISHED after spending a few days at a cot- age on Lake Pocotopaug, last Samoa }s.g.g said, “the storm is increasis . again from the southwest, &ccon panied by rain and wind reaclii: was hidden. Only an occasional wireless message picked up by the Tropical Radio corporation at Miami broke the silence at sea last | hurricane force.” night and most of these concerned | Titusville reported to the weather !m ltalian freighter Ansaldo San | bureau a barometer reading. of 29.- GRIMINAL ASKS T0 BE PUT T0 DEATH Apia, June 33— (Corres- |from its foundation. Al livestock Phila. Man Insists There Is No |t | Hampton. The Christian Endeavor society of the Congregational church an- | nounces that there will be no meet- p ¥From the ence of the rerston Islanc amoa and Rare! Associated Press)— ated coral atoll of Pal- lying betwee tonga, news has ju. per pigs hed except twer and a chickens, five at. So complete was |the destruction that the inhabitants |were left without even fishing lines n st lfilm"lo Secundo, which was report- ed early today to be still wallowing | | rudderless off Jupiter inlet. At least six vessels were said to be in the vicinity to render aid which had | 30 inches. | Winds of hurricane force prevail near the storm center. Hurricane | warnings remain displayed from Ti- | tusville to Charleston, S. C., and reached Apia of a tidal wave which three months ago swept over the is- land, destroying practically all pro- perty and reducing the inhabitants to most primitive condition. Only Gopd in Him Philadelphia, July 28 (P)—His re- quest to be sent to the ele because he was ind hooks, but they caught fish | been prevented last night by high with their hands and supplementing | seas. this m with fallen cocoa-| No further word had been heard | managed to subsist until the | from the Danish steamship Wilhelm | €oast. Hinemora arrived. The people re- A, Reiderman which messaged yes- | one life was lost. ceived their rescuers with smiling | terday that it was in ai Palmerston lsland is peopled by |faces and songs of welcome. | tween Miami and Jupiter about 100 descendants of William | Palmerston Island lies about 300 | Iikewise the sea gave no word Marsters, a British adventurer, who |miles north of Rarotonga. It h foot Zulivta of Brunswic tled there in 1826 with his Poly- |sists of a circular colar reef inclos- which sailed Sunday night with nesian Its destitute condi- |ing wgoon about eight miles in | 25 excursionists for Bimini T} tion iled only *when Sir [diameter, with eight islets perched | Gyif Refining company's tanker Maui Pomare of the New Zealand fon the One of the descendants |y uffey Ty two |government st of the original settler, John Marsters siorm warning elsewhere from the Virginia Capes to Apalachicola, Fla., exeept on the extreme south Floridu ings held during the month of | August. agre Gordon Wood, son of Mrs. Eva B. Wood of Main street, has returned fromgthe Hartford hospital. nuts, tric chair “beyond reform™ ress Ships Warned Savannah. July 28 —The Atlantic Towing company this morning re- that the steamer Frieda of Union Sulphur company of New York and th amer Munisia of the Munson line, New York, were anch- ored i» Wybee roads to escape the having been refused by the couvrt Willian M. Moore, day began a sentence of three to six | years in the Eastern State p tiary for raising checks and obtain- ing money under false pretences. There will be a meeting of the of lesiastical society of the Con- ational church, Sunday at 3 p. 26, of Boston, to- con- sixty ! ported wives, was rey 3 days Miss Eleanor Kieffer of Phila- | amer Hinemoa tou A natty Moore, a well-appearing youn, man, who told the court he had not been free for more than five mnontt at a time sipce he was two v« old, said he also was wanted where. “You would be munity a great favor send me to the electric chair, and I wouldn't mind it a bit,” said Moor “I think I would be better off dead 1 as reared in a reform school farm. I never learned any trade and 1 didn’'t have much schooling with book: All T learned was how to be crooked, and I've been told I'm pretty else- doing the if you would com- | delphia ha | days with been spending fe Mre. Clarence Hosford. New York her daugh- turned from a trip to state where she visited ter, Mrs. Samuel Camp. Mrs. Iidith Hancock has returned lafter spending a month trayeling | through the state of Maine: Kenneth Reddick L. | Reddick of Main con- cing from an attack of scarlet of son street, vale fever. good at that. The trouble | is 1 have a one track mind, and T| can't get aawy from the things I've been doing. “My whole life been one stitution after another. I with master minds in those places. It used to bé my keenest pleasure to learn & new trick in each jail.” Moore was interrupted by Judge William M. Lewis, who asked whether it was not possible for him to reform, the prisoner repli “No, judge. T really think the; jsr’t any reform for me. me -out of here, I'll do the thing again, It is the only thing know how to do.” “1 guess you are Judge Lewis with a shake of the head. “Society must be protected, so Fll send to jastern penitentiary for three to six in- me I right,” said sympathetic vou ik you, replied Moore as he w Recciver Is Named for Vanderbilt Newspapers Los Angeles, July (® — John H. Brodix of Miami, F has been appointed receiver for Vanderbilt Inc., by United States Jormick. The receive d to take immediate pos- all property of the cor- which includes the 1II- Daily W Herald of poration, lustrated here, and tl cisco and Tab at Miami, Fla. The assets of Vanderbilt News- pape > listed at $ while the were alleged o be in exc ,000,600. 100 ON POLICE BLOTTER Mrs. Mary Kalinowski Elm street reported to police 1t 10:50 o'clock last night that her 501, Teddy, had not been home ince noon. Officer William Grabeels found him at 2 o'clock this morning sleeping in a motoreycie body in the rear of his' home. The lectured him and took him home. The police are investigating a re- port that there has been dumping of rubbish on railroad property on \iyrtle street. £ Hartford police Britain deparment foynd in that city to Anthony G street, this cit A car which had been parked in West Haven for the past two wec was found to belo Fox of Johnson Hill. The West H notified the New their find. e Skat HAND SOAP New Large Size Can Highest quality for 20 years IOC Ask for it by name of the a notified t e that a car was which belonged Leonard Maple n department tain officials of to treet sociated | If you send | the | officer | aywoski of 91 Sexton | Poincare’s Financial Plans Coolly Received s, uly 28. P—Premier Poin- overwhelming political suc- chieved through the voting in the chamber of deputies yesterday s received with general relief, but his financial scheme arouses less enthusiasim. His critics among the Communists declare he will nine billion francs from fresh taxes, but that most of the money will conie through indirect taxation at the expense of workingmen while the burden of the big tax payers is through the halving of the | rate of the general income tax Economists doubt whether will suffice to or even really the and are inclined to look up in the light of a tem- porary remedy. sed the stabilize alance plan | fr hudg: on it rather e olunteers Place Wreath On Monument to Seeger Paris, July 28, (@) delegation representing the ociation of American Volunteers who fought with the French armies today placed h on the Alan Seeger statue on the place Des Etats Unis which was damaged yesterday by Nicolas srovenko, a Ru an laborer, A card attached to the wreath ex- regret of the veteran: a wr pressed the for “the act of vandalism committed | an irresponsible person. " Jarovenko said he mutilated ures on the statue as a demongirs gainst America because of var ious vances ranging from the | sentences of Saco and V i | Massachusetts to the exchange cri by tion !Texas Democrats Demand “Ma” Ferguson Resign Austin, , July 28 (P — Gov. i Mirigm erguson’s de in Saturday's primary and her an- ouncement that she will r iemm office this fall, has resulted in ands from her d nocratic op- | den 0 resign immediate- | ponents that she 1y in %igreement with her promist . gn. | made during the recent ca tire SWHOLE TOWN RAZED of 300 Houses Left Dy ¥lood in Austrian Village. Vien Austria, July 28 (@ - Virtually entire town of Waij- ska, in the province of Voyvodina has been pt vy by floods the swollen Danube river, have left only ten of standing. structures which re- s ! from | which [ hous | Among the | slsted the flood waters is t of Count Szechenyl, in which all tl homeless inhabitants of the tow hgve found refuge. About 100 000 acres of cultivated Jand have beer flooded. alace { SHIP TINE SALE FAILS | ¢ 28 (P—At the an- Withy and irman, Sir | Fre s, said he regretted Ito state that it had been found im- | possible to arrive at a mutualiy sat- v basis for the purchase of ite Star Line. isfactor the W WORCE R MAN A SUICIDE Worcester, Mass, July 28 ) — Despondency because of ill health and continued uncmployment is be- lieved to have prompted the suicide by hanging late last night of Fred L. Clapp, 65. His body was found suspended from the branch of a tree. FORTY YOUNG COUPLES TO ATTEND THE DANCE AT THE BALLROOM AT LAKE COMPOUNCE THURSDAY EVENING (Jupy 29) WHEN CAPTAIN LESLIE T. TEACOCKE_OF THE ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE CO. WILL SELECT TYPE: “FOUNTAIN TASILLO’S ORCHESTRA FOR THE OF YOUTH” EVERYBODY WELCOME Mrs. Charles Yeagar recently re- get | | smoke Warr where a the most unusual pictu of the BORAI REBUKES conflagration at its he Smith's Shadow were rebuked or Borah, republican » said in a t ore attempting to question ‘AL S : in A constar o politics convinei retir wholly ith's would vent that likely gram. “They a repeal ment : ! vote. Tl for its lose them started out to have construed in a dozen differen on the stump and for a candid for governor who had no view the prohibition question, ne a ny and never rgpublic to retire from Ry ould have a some of I different afraid to declare ith wer of it would y se them afraid to me lest it would the wet vote, so th to do two things: T ferendum were declare enforci a re at cou ver could have n was party ganized stand th tituti discretion differen the Montana Forest Fires Rage on Unhampered SOu Mont., July » wind and 1 n mpering their efforts, fir are mak ing little headway th flames that have stands of timber in of Mon 170 M Wi checking 1 for in consume national md Was ny 1 i head hav on wrter lost lives en s of a fire | Legitimacy shows $1 big oil ever tak of Son of h Nobility Upheld ® Says They Are Afraid of Al Jo B n ti John ing a gos y Hugo . Baron Ampthill n under the Russe paternal Hu zo R oil going up in ht 2g ost th 1 on 1, to ndf: fire. it gives a gencral view rig of ing One An of echo orc n declaration ght ither, of the now legitimac little Hon. d to held 1l sued his wife, hou in 19 of | of 5,000 the Order of Star of the East two od Supplies cept there on wer All houses the v landed ship ordered immediately from Rar- otong: church 1 inspection tou and a reli cre swept away and it was shifte ex r. |hol ef 1 s appointment under t New nd government as resident t and he and six other membe 1e family constitute the island |couneil w rules the little realm ‘Alnwl»l’ the British flag. fof ich HOLLAND CHOSEN | PALM BEAGH TODAY AS HEADQUARTERS | VIEWS WRECKAGE World Theosophists Will Have Their Amsterdam, —XKrishnamt ing “world t in northern Hol ters of the Theosophists. tuated on acres years ago by B Krishnamurt live at the c |al | dining tent, year. spect of th hat the 1 organized with t Adyar, Indi ydney fornia. ide p out aces > presen scmbles that camp meetin adjuncts, with t leeping fifty is asre in two to There I ¥ lephone office nd I a London agency lach night tt camp fires, chants in nsk Stat There Holland, July ti, young Hindu whom | the theosophists look to as the com cher,” has announced his intention to make Castle Eerde, nd, the headqua The cas a magnificent which was given aron Van Pallandt i declared he wou thrae months each Emphasizing the internation- he order, he point novement was beir four world center Ommen, Hol nd Ojai w. C These four centers will pro here the memoers may 1 be frained in spiritual work np of Ot an with n o oldfashion sorr n area of fiff 1l sizes, varyi ns frol each. lecture ppst ph direct bank, g tent, tehen offi 3 touri and bathing establiskments, here uging arour and Krishnamur rit. s « & 7 1, Western Conference of too lords, isions of t revol ked Speeding Up Trial of Tijuana Chief and Pals Tijuana Defense [ ment ponsi i vde ot he i Lower cutor: the 7 m for a € ch Calif counsel a ial harge ed orni d will of Audrey Veteet bruary which suppos pact carried ou and their s sai by the arents in t w of a lays the maximum o cor year tion a the July govern- Llanos 1 with attacks i empt ormer and re on ast two r San afterwards Governors Ending Today Cheys fir ference w e, we s of ms faced by Uniform state laws, and a debate on-made goods and their re- | on pri lation to the were sut this morning. frontier for the execut when they wa cowboys and cowglrls of the orm at the annmal Frontier day | e rodeo here. As law broncho was named for a state governor. In the plan to leave P even | lowstane park nine jurors, | would constitute ¥ Jeanne Eagles Picks L ng for 1 Coy, is now ) that ' and “The Garden of July New s Y who some into the ork, has tin: “The name bee ¢ 28 () - honeymoon- n with her roing out of Garden her ‘:ETl-iEL: Sportatively Speaking of new nalty would J of Eden” eann hubby E play. {this city, it was learned today {ing preliminary to arr | for the expected visit to Ame PRINCESS is the gue fall of Queen M Since the d Prince Albert the princess ha tirement in a deach wi Yates of Roch will close for a tour of the portion July 28 governo here today aft discussion of prol state executives. vo., 7. rn co industrial mark ts of the closing session t was born a this afternoc “top han wor we e ive atched a feature, each ou ing the goverr IN ROCHESTER 28, —Pri , of friends res ging d rie of Roumania. ath of her Ghika, last been livi w Yrok the Octobe g in city of winter th M ster, a close friend. 25, (p | Yards to a modern | of Yeu Roumania, ils this husband, and Frederick W | AFTER HURRIGANE 1 (Continued from Flrst Page) tottering house in a minute battle with the waves. beleaguered couple were carried to while hundreds of spectators cheered from the bank. Less than hour later a policeman dived ym- a bridge into the lake to sa: a houseboat owner who had been e to w S| dashed against the piling. ts strewn with wreckage walls and floats from the bath of the exclusive Bath and Tennis ciub, which was demolished 1| by the waves and wind. hg| Occan boulevard was washed out rs, [in a score of places along its 25 ; [mites course. In Palm Beach waves broke over the boulevard but failed to reach any of the homes fronting it. Sea Wall Washed Away A new sea wall being erected to protect the two million dollar home Mrg Horace Dodge Dillnan, formerly owned by the Joshua Cos- q was swept away in the first hours of the gale. The New Break- Lotel, half completed, was Itered when the sea walls were orced with sandbags. New walls of the upper carried away by the re 1d ! of s houses d ] & m reir 10 | flooring and st floors, were | wina ¢ 1l the Cs he eworth when y barg hundred foot the a thr severed the only town and the ocean A tract of municipal d land upon which course had just a great cost was a at reclaimed the rising lake ters in the first onrush of the tide. Business Suspended The commercial center here was paralized Tuesc Business w ispended, municipal activities ceased, public utilities were crip- pled. Officials of the power com- pany said it may be three days be- emergency can be re- stored along a fifty ‘mile stretch of the Handbills served for newspapers in the afternoon, while old fashion- ed presses in neighboring towns commandeered for publication news this morning. n- | b, er b- cen comple by ot w n il 1d fore service coast t- of 100 Mile Gale Jack ille, I July 28 UP)— West Indian hurricane which Monday crossed from the Caribbean sea to ravage the Bahama Islands, and the lower east coast of Tlorida, d today at the sea gates of the upper peninsula, Calm followed by steadily winds presaged the advent hurricane n- in t- | ham: rising of the s it swept into new terri- tory leaving behind it distressed shipping, wind and wave damage which may run into millions of dol- lars and paralyzed lines of com- munications. Behind a wall of gale swept seas, the fate of several ships o- at hurled from his helpless craft as it| wa- | s overdue at Jacksonville pany representatives believed the ship was riding out the gale. Pa | sengers from the Clyde line steam- {ship Seminole were en route to Miami by train today after leaving the vessel here last night. The Seminole, from New York to Miami, had proceeded past West Paln on its route to Miami yesterday when | officials of the line ordered it turn- ed back to Jacksonville. Two hun- | dred and thirty-five persons, includ- |ing passenger Wwere { aboard the liner i At several place hurricane winds ri of 100 miles velocity of 7 {caused damage estimat {tion dollars in Palm Palm Beach where househoats sank Ocean the kage o ftree strewn. Damage ront property. | Miami reported damage estimated at £100,000, Towns between Miami West Palm Beach were in dark- | last night owing to |wires and water damage. At Del |Ray the streets were inundated and |houses were unroofed. Excessive caused all business to be sus- ¢d in Pompano. Orlando. bring, Sanford, Park and other places, elec- telephone and telegraph was interrupted or paraly: The waters of the Indian river at New Smyrna were reported piling lout of banks because of the driving |gale and some damage was done by |the flood. the exception of a single which the Western Union Tele- ph company maintained to Miami Ithere was no telephone or telegraph |communication possible to the lower cast coast this morning. The Amer- ican Telephone and Telegraph com- | pany, reported all service south of {Jacksonville impaired but believed it would be able to restore service Itoday. Miami and West Palm Beach had been cut off from communica with the exception of the since early yesterday morning. Calm weather was reported today at Miami and in of the lower least coast territory. 1In most In- s torrential rains accompanied but cony by and crew s along the hed an in- per hour. A miles an hour 1 at a mil- and West v yachts and Lake Worth, rd and other winter playground and boats w w to s coast tensity wind {the ‘( “ 0 fo |Along sections of a wrec done {win pen | In | Winter tric 1i service most |stance |the gale, | Warnin Washington, July weather bureau today following storm warning: | “Advisory, 9 a. m. hurricane cen |tral 8 a. m. sast Flor- |ida coast betw usville and | Jacksonville moving very slowly north-northwestward. ~Center will pass close to Jacksonville today and quite likely move northward near or inside the Georgia coast line." urther information on the storm in the region of Florida was receiv- td today by the navy department from the naval radio station at Jupiter, Fla. At 9 p. m, | Storm P | issued the right plan and v ue Ruild And Help Build HAVE YOU CAR broken | - | proach at high speed. one | isn't so di COMmERC stort... The steamer Progress came into this morning fro mCharleston. The Blefast Maru, a apanese ship, 15 expected this :rnoon. The Kl Monticello is being held in port. Ships were warned to stay in har. Lor at the nearby port of Bruns- wick where all possible precautions The barometer reg- Brunswick at 10 a. falling. were taken ot and w 18t 2 at s slow CAUGHT IN PATH OF BUFFALD HERD American Explorers Have Close Gall in Africa m. Washington, July 28 (P —An at- tack by a surging herd of 200 buf- | falo on members of the Smithso- nian-Chrysler expedition now in | Africa, was described in letters from Dr. William M. Mann, director of |the National Zoological Park and | head of the expedition, to the Smith- | sonian Institution, and made public I tony | The expedition was in the Lake | Tanganylka region. The party was {on foot when the herd began to ap- When the | charging buffalo were 300 yards away a member of the scientific | party fired a rifle. This failed to halt |the advance and members of the | party turned and ran, pausing mo- | mentarily to discharge their rifles. The buffalo split then into two sec- | tions, permitting the scientists te |fight thelr way to safety through mud and heayy underbrush. Dr. Mann reported capture of six |voung gnu calves which are to be | brought back to the United States. | {Adjutant White Named Delegate to Poland New Haven, July 28 (A —Edward L. White, state adjutant and past department commander of the Am- erican Legion, has been appointed a gate to the conference of vet- ns' clations known as the t Warsaw, Poland, Septem- r 6 to 11. e American delegation will [number ten and will sail from New |York on August 25. Legionnaires today expressed pleasure that Connecticut has been accorded a place on the delegation. The Fidac is the Federation Na- tionaleé Des Combattants. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Mrs. T. Nelson of Osgood avenue has announced the engagement of her daughter, Evelyn Irene, to Er- nest C. Rogers of Waterbury. The wedding will take place in Septem- last night, the mt!'r:hr‘r. ficult; it is reasonable whenyou find the the right plan usually begins with the manage- ment of your own money. Out of our experience we make the suggestion—Pay Yourself First—from all money you receive and thus build a cash reserve for Success. This bank welcomes your business. Open Saturday Evenings, 7-8 D. S T PRIDE? How do you feel when your car is dirty ?—and a bright looking auto reflects favorably upon its owner. You will always have pride in sure vapor method at LAUNDRY, It cleans thoroughly and safely. vour car by using the pres- the TEN-MINUTE A Hun- ing in back of the Franklin Square Filling Station. ing in back of the Franklin Square Fil ling Station. Telephone 4100. F. E. R, Jr.

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