New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 30, 1926, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

I vere storm. i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY: 30, 1926. Business circles aré ‘¢ fessedly | had to play short out of the pit and City ltems —|CATHOLIC PRIESTS e s v st oo KT EY EUEDGHZED BAHAMAS STILL [SOLATED [SLES 160 Missing and Damage of $8,000,000 in Hurricane Nassau, New Providence Island, ; Bahamas, July 30 (#—Ravaged by ! wind and wave with more than 150 persons missing, the Bahama Islands remained virtually isolated from communication with the outside world today while anxious residents took further count of the toll of de- | struction from the worst hurricane In the recorded hisiory of the fs- | lands. | Sponge Fleet Missing The majorit: of those missing are belleved to have been drowned with the sponge fishing fleet which has not been seen since it set sail three days before the West Indian hurri- cane struck the fslands Monday | night. Several weeks must elapse before the official toll of death and | shipping and property damage is: known. While conservative esti- | mates place the damage at $8,000,- 000 reports have not been recelved from several islands of the group and communication with them may not be established for days. City Is Wrecked i Nassau, the beautiful capital of the Bahamas group with a popula- tion of more than 12,000 presented = picture of desolation. Debris from uprooted trees, wrecked houses and splintered boats washed up by the waves, cluttered the stately drive- ways of the ancient city where v tually all business has been suspend- ed. Abandoning efforts to repair | her ruin, Nassau turned first lol search for the missing sponge fleet | and to ascertain the conditions of other islands under her administra- tion. The outer islands of the group are known to have suffered greatly but inside the far flung line of 3 lands, and banks and toward the coast of Florida, the chief damage was at Nassau. Only three fishing smacks were left in Nassau harbor from 60 craft which were moored there Sunday. Between 150 and 200 | sloops are missing with the sponge fleet. 75 Vessels Destroyed Harbor officials estimate that at least 75 vessels were destroyed at Nassau and other islands not count- ing the sponge boats, some of which possibly found shelter on isolated banks or near uninhabited islands. Nassau had meager warning of the | advance of the hurricane. The Tropical Radio station near Miami radioed weather reports Sunday when brisk winds and a rapidly fall- | ing barometer indicated the coming of storm. The wind steadily increas- ed in velocity throughout the day and at midnight a gule lashed the {sland, tearing houses from their foundations and uprooting trees. Wires were blown down and public utility plants damaged to such an extent that the city was plunged into darkness. The government re- cord showed the wind reached fits velocity peak at 130 at 6 o'clock Monday morning. Seething Mass of Waves. Churning the harbor into a seeth- ing mass of waves, the hurricane | piled waters high over the wharves into Bay street, a.block into the city. | Soon a gale swept down from the northwest, meeting the onrush from the Caribbean, and ships were lifted the | Great Isaac light, Britain's north- ermost lsle of the group, was hit tull force. The roofs of the only two wooden houses were stripped oft. while the lighthouse showe large cracks In its side. The prom- ontary was stripped of all follage and was hardly more than a de- nuded rock. | North and south Bimini directly | east of Miami suffered likewlse, the wreckage on the small islands of- fering ample proof of the storm, while to the south lay the famous Gun Koy, termed the rendezvous of the bootlegger — now - hardly more than a waste. ' The northern edge of Andros was deserted except at Morgan's Bluff, it appeared. The hurricane played many strange pranks as it twisted fits path tortuously through New Providence, leaving in its wake a o of woe. The sloop Mystery J.. between Miami and Nassau, »d high up on, the shore and far into a rum ware- house where cases were piled the liquors. FORMAL REQUEST IS MADE TODAY (Continued from Firet Page) choicest felt sorry for Mrs. Hall. “The fagt that the governor has placed the state machinery behind the investigation would indicate that there is something real behind the charges,” he sald, “but no judg- ment should be passed on Mrs. Hall until a jury finds her guiit: He charged that those first con- ducting the investigation had “bungled” it and that “a school- | child could have done better.” Phillips Also Held Somerville, N. J., July 30 (P) «— Willlam Phillips, factory worker, cratic Mrs. Edward Wheeler Hall in the county jail, where she was held without bail today for the murder four years ago of her clergyman husband and Mrs. Eleanor Mills, wife of a church sexton. Phillips, who was a night watch- man at the New Jersey College for Women, a few blocks from the Hall home, when the bodies were found side by side under a crab apple tree in September, 1922, was arrested last night as a material witness and formed investigators he saw the wealthy widow reputed to be worth $1,700,000 and her brother return home on the night of the 'slayings. Two Others Hunted State officials, who have taken today sought at least two other per- sons on the basis of “a mass of new evidence” revealed in a reopening of | investigations that resulted from an annulment suit filed by Arthur {8. Riehl against Mrs. Louise Geist Riehl, a fermer maid in the Hall home. Mrs. Riehl Denies All Mrs. Riehl yesterday denied as- sertions of her husband that she had been paid $5,000 for {8he is quoted, however, as having revealed that Barbara Tough, an- other maid fn the Hall household, Mr. Hall and | murder, saw the Re { ing place in Mrs. Mills at their try has joiried the 49 year old aristo- | held in $5,000 bail. Phillips once in- | the case over from county officials, | secrecy. | was oft duty on the night of the | high from thelr moorings and sent on to the wharves. Several blown to sea. Among the vessels known to have sunk in the harbor here was the 80 ton yacht Isosceles, formerly the Shamrock TV, Sir Thomas Lipton's famous American cup challenger, Tt lies under 40 feet of water beside | numerous small craft varying from | small sallboats to small yachts. Rum Flect Wrecked At the island of Gun Key, elght large rum running boats, heavily laden with liquor, were dashed to pleces by the waves. The crews es- caped, rowing ashore in small boats at the first approach of the hurri- cane, Nothing was known of the fate of the government 1 boat, Bron- | tes, which procsedcd for San Sal- | vador shortly before the onrush of i of the storm. The Albertine Adou with 40 persons aboard, sailed for | the island of Inaugua, a few hours | before the hurricane struck. It was also claimed among the missing | eraft. The mail boat carried 20 persons, Crew of the Munson steamship | Munamar from New York and the Canadian fisher from Kingston, Ja- mafca, which arrived at Nassau| shortly after the storm abated, told | of battling terrific winds and waves. Airplane Arrives Isolated from the world for three days with a crippled government wireless station, Nassau received her first word of outside damage from newspaper men arriving in an air- plane from Miami late Wednesda and In turn supplied first informa- | tlon of her own pitiful condition. ligror trade, one of the chief sources of income of the islands, has been dealt a crushing blow and the | probable loss of the sponge fleet will curtail for time the group's oldest and chief industry of sponge fishing for some time. Attempts being continued today to com- Miami radio stations, ¢ been done to the ers whose apped by the | {an abandoned orchard, and tele- WEre | phoned to Mrs. Hall. Mrs. Hall is sald to have left her home after- ward in company with her brother, “Crazy” Willle Stevens, and her | chauffeur, Peter Tumulty. Miss Tough visited her home in Scotland after the first investigation, but has worked for a New Bruns- wick family since. Stevens was at the home of his sister, when she was aroused from sleep night before last, four years after the slaying, to be arrested. Since then he has vanished. The whereabouts of Tumulty were not known. “Pig Woman” Repeats Mrs. James N. Gibson, known as the “Plg Woman", who testified four years ago she saw Mrs. Hall and a man quarrel with the Rev. Hall and Mrs. Hall's pretty 34 year old rival, and then the ghooting, was ques- tioned yesterday, and repeated her previous testimony. Gov. Moore has announced that the state will push the prosecution of Mrs. Hall to a finish, but offi- clals carefully kept secret their new evidence for the grand jury. Un- | less the April grand jury Is recalled {or Mrs. Hall gets ball on a writ of habeas corpus she faces the pros- pect of remaining in jail until a new grand jury Is called in September. rest was ridiculous, Mrs. Hall made the best of her situation. She was | given a bedroom with barred win- dows on the second floor of the jail, had her meals sent in, and spent considéerable time with her lawyers, Timothy N. Pfeiffer of New York, Robert H. McCarter of Newark and Russel E. Watson of New Bruns- wick. Carleton Hoagland, foreman of the April grand jury, sald today that that body could not possibly be con- 1 in less than two weeks. It be called at any time up to or impaneling the Septem- ber jury, but just now most of the jurors are away. on vacation. Supreme Court Justice Parker, who is the one to issue the call, is himself on vacation in Maine, whe xpects to stay until September. Prosecutor Bergen sald that no request had yet been sent to him to convene the jury. i More Arrests Likely State police admitted today that more arrests are likely, but no in- formation concerning the names of those being sought could be gotten. It was also known nesses were belng sought for ques- tioning at the prosecutor’s office but the names were not made public. gome were rte repair hav rnment thick steel ribs we hurricanc inunic with some rewn into ! like shattered temperamental s of broken wreck- | waterfront from ti eastern far to the edge of island Hal L Leyshon.of the Miami Daily News, and R. P. Mitchell, Miz correspondent of the Associa Press, were the newspapermen who pierced the wall of silence betweer Nassau and the outer world. Their flight by airplane was not without radventure. Foiced down on a de- serted island when fuel gave out, they were rescued by a chance sea- plane in search of a missing yacht which supplied sufficient fuel to re- sume the flight to Nassau. Arriving at Nassau, the newspa- permen found the wireless down and were unable to communicate with radio stations in Miami, The correspondent’s plane subse- quently flew through the outer is- of the group, several of western | PAWTUCKET MILL CLOSES | Pawtucket, R. 1, July 30 | Three thousand employes of the J. |and P. Coats (R. 1) Inc. thejlarg, est thread plant in New Hngland, will be idle from August 13 until the end of the month. Notices i posted today in the eleven mills. This will be the third suspensfon of operations at the plant within the past ten weeka \ disclosed if | 1 ! Although she insisted that he ar- | that other wit-' | DEWOCRATS READY " FOR CONVENTION Rooms Already Engaged at Hotel Tait in Elm City New Haven, July 30 (A—Party headquarters for the democrats were cngaged at Hotel Taft, this city, by Secretary A. S. Lynch of the state| central committee today and the| rooms will probably be taken over week after next. There is no indication yet as to the call for the democratic primarl, in the state to choose delegates as to the state convention which prob- ably will be held about the middle of September. Thelllast meeting of the state committee empowered State | Chairman J. J. Walsh of Meriden to issue the call and it 15 expected | shor If the convention is to b held about September 15, the pri- {mary call will issue before many | days. Republican Meeting. | A meeting of the republican state central committeee is expected to be held next week to issue the caucus |call for delegates to the state con- | vention which it is thought will be |held in Hartford about September |15, | While nothing officlal was known {here as to the time of the meeting it was thought by some committee- men that it might be held next week Saturday when republicans from the state generally will be at Savin Rock | for a shore dinner. i | As the gathering willsbe a week- ond affalr with everybody leisurely { present it is thought the occasion | would be opportune for a meeting. | | Also, United States Senator Bing-| | ham will be present at the gathering |and Governor Trumbull has accepted | |an invitation to be present. | | Al other potentlal candidates for | |places on the state ticket will be| handy. As to the time of the party con- | ventions it is believed that neither will hold theirs in Labor Day week | which may throw both into the week following although the democrats | may choose a week later. | In advance of state conventions | candidates in variops senatorlal dis- | tricts on the part of the republicans | lare now coming up for discussions. | —— Toronto Police Arrest Six More in Booze Case Toronto, July 30 (A—Six addition- al arrests were made today of men | |indicted yesterday at Jamestown, N. | Y., on.charges of manslaughter in | | connection with the sale of poison- | ous. lignor which has caused the | | deaths of eighteen persons in Ontar- {10. | Toronto police arrested Max | | Wurtzman and Henry Goldstein | while Hamilton police arrested Ben | | Kerr. Janies Sacco, John H. McRae |and Willlam Herbert, were arrested at Nlagara Falls. 1 All six were held without bail on | charges of manslaughter. | i“Rowdy” Elliott Will Manage Pittsfield Pittsfield, Mass., July 30 (F—Xeal 1 Ball, manager of the Pittsfield base- | ball club of the Eastern League, has |tenedered his resignation. He will be succeeded by Harold (“Rowdy”) | Elliott, former Brooklyn National | League catcher and now with Pitts- | field. The Hillies have lost their last |eleven games and have been In the cellar practically all of the season. | Ball has glven up his lease of the Pittsfield Baseball club and the club reverts to the Pittsfield Baseball as- sociation, which has held the fran- chise in the Eastern League since 1919. The club will be operated by the assoclation, |Harvey Makes Suggestion: For Modified Dawes Plan | Williamstown, Mass, July 30 (#)| —Revislon and extension of the | Dawes plan on a more practical basls of reparations payments in goods, rather than in goods, was suggested by Paul Harvey, formerly editor of | the International, interpreter, au- thor and leoturer on international relations, before the opening ses- | sion of the Institute of politics y | terday. | It reparations are made by a| transfer of goods, he sald, there is| grave danger that the recipient| country will suffer more than the paying country, whose economic status will be improved by the' ex-| tra stimulation necessary, while the | recelving country will suffer from | |over supply and unemployment | conditions, The recent coal strike in Eng- land, he sald, was caused largely by | the transfer of German coal to| that country in accordance with | reparations agreements, i The fnternational chamber has therefore worked out a plan where- by the debtor nations pay-in :pro-| ducers’ goods, so that the indus- tries of each country are mutually ! stimulated. EDISON SU ON Radio Company in Brooklyn Ac- cused of Trading on His NG NAME Reputation | Thomas A. | New York, July 30. Edison, Thomas A. dison, Inc, and the Edison Storage Battery Co. all of Orange, N. J., started injunc tion procegdings in the federal court in Brooklyn yesterday to enjoin the Edison Raglo corporation from con- tinuing the use of that name in its | business 'at 807 Flathush avenue, Brooklyn. . The plaintiffs also ask compensation for whatever benefit |the radic concern may have de- rived thusifar from using the name. Use of gthe name by the radio company, ‘(h'- plaintiffs aver, has created the false impression that it | is an authorized agent of the plain- (tiff concerns. The radio firm is towned by Saul J. Shapiro, Jacob J. | Fischer and Evel Krasnoff. SUES Y. M. C. A. FOR $25,000 Waterbury, Conn., July 30. (#— Janes Carew, whose skull was frac- | tured by a bowling ball which ped out of another player's [ Wands in a church match game | here, today brought suit for $25,000 | money.— Adv. | tion | tend the sesquicentennial The Connecticut Co. has 'been sued for 3350 damages by Joseph A. Rutkin of Waterbury as the result of an auto-trolley collision. Don- ald Gaffney issued the writ. The people who have bought lots of the Carr Land Co. have all made A hearing in the bankruptcy mat- ter of M. Bayer & Son will be held on_August 6 to allow the creditors to pass on the 20 per cent composi- offer of the bankrupt: Hun- gerford & Saxe represent the bank rupt and D. L. Nair is receiver. Attend Fine's 25c surprise pack- age party. Last day in business, 321 Main street. Richard Gorman of Elm street is about again after being confined to his home from the effects of an operation. Deliclous Sandwiches at Crowell’s. —ady Ambitious students will start Mon- day, Aug. 2, at the Connecticut Business College.—advt. The people Who have bought lots of the Carr Land Co. have all made money.—advt. Charles Burkarth of 293 South | Main street is reported to be rest- ing comfortably at St. Francis' ho pital, Hartford, after an operation. Carab Counaris has purchased the | truit and grocery business conduct- ed by Luke Sinskie at Main and | Elm streets. | Officer Dombruskas reported vo} 1 police headquarters last night that the glass at fire box 23 at the cor- | ner of Francis and Carlton street | was broken. The report was refer- | red to the fire department. | The people Who have bought lots of the Carr Land Co. have all made | money,—advt, Israel Rose, a Willow street b who was seriously burned a fe: days ago while playing with matches is slightly improved at New Britain | General hospital. | The people who have bought lots | of the Carr Land Co. have all made | money.—advt. i Peaches stolen by boys whose ages average between 12 and 14 years | from a freight car on a siding near the Elm street crossing were recov- ered yesterday by Sergeant Patrick O'Mara and the boys were turned over to the probation officer. PERSONALS | Mr. and Mrs, A. Paul of 6 Lenex| Place left today for, Oak Bluffs, | Mass., where they will spend two weeks. » Miss Loufse Hawley of Walnut street and Miss k abeth Gramitt of Brook street, will leave Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lind-| quist and family of Wakefield Court for a week's stay at Lukl‘] Champlain. The trip will be made by auto. Bdmund J. Stack and Misses Jus- tine and Elizabeth Stack of Harri- son street will leave Sunday for | Philadelphia where they will at- celebra- tion. They will later complete their | cation at Asbury Park. ) — ! Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Parker of | 1584 Stanley street left today for | Chatham, Mass,, to spend a two weeks' vacation. They will stop at the Hawthorne Inn. Shurberg of Franklin | street left today for Los Angeles, Calif., where he will visit his son, Abraham Shurberg. Solpmon Dies Short Time After | Having, Shock in Auto | Carl Larson, formerly of v | Britain, suffered a shock while rid- | ing in an automobile in Munson, | Mass., rday and died shortly afterward. Mr. Larson, who was 31 years old, was born in New Britain | and was well known here. He was an instructor at the Munson high school. | He is survived by his wife and one | child in Munson: his father, John | Larson of this city; two brothers, | |Emil and Leonard, and a sister in|day to eat only Berlin. He was a member of the, and a member of the Crona society. Funeral services will be held Munson on Sunday afternoon. ASK POLICE PROTECTION New York Porto Ricans Complain | of Being Attacked Washington, July 30 (Pl—As a result of complaints to him that armed bands were abusing members of the Porto Rican colony in New York city, Cordova Davila, Porto Rican resident commissioner, has made representations to the com- missioner of the New York police department. Mr. Davila said the Porto Rican Brotherhood of New York had in- | formed him that conditions between [ 110th and 116th streets required | inimediate action. “It is reported reliable source Porto Rican women abused and | Porto Rican men wounded,” the | message to Mr. Davila gaid. “Pro- tection authorities urgently — re- quested. ‘Have also received several | letters complaining of conditions.” TAXES FORCE ART SALES | Cited by Bromley-Davenport in Lon- | don Sale of Romney Portrait | Londor, July 30 UP—Heavy tax- ation s blamed by Sir Willlam Bromley-Davenport for the sale of the famous Romney portrait of his bgreat grandmother, Lady Daven- | port, to Duveen Brothers for about | $300,000.° “The utterly appealing character | of modern taxation,” he said today, | “makes it quite impossible to live in | big houses under the old conditions, and such sales are inevitable. The picture has been a prized family | possession since 1782, and modern |:conditions alone led to its sale.” In peculiar contrast to the price paid for the Lady Davenport por- trait was the sale today of a Rom- ney portrait of John Wesley for six guineas. Photography without plates. or films is declared possible by means of an inventlon which takes ple- tures directly on sensitized paper damages against the local Y. M. C. A and develops the image within a few aeconda. L vid !the military 10 QUIT TONIGHT (Continued from First Page) it to modify its policy Three successive sets of directors of the league have' been arrested, charged with inciting the people to acts of disorder. It is certain that many Catholics intend strictly to ad- ere to the boycott idea, although it |is impossible to predict whether it ! be universal, or how long it will | endure. Terms of New Laws. The new religious regulations pro- that only.priests or ministers of Mexican citizenship may officiate at religious services; that all church property is confiscated on ground that it has been held by churches unlawfully for 50 years; {severe penalties will be imposed for religious instruction in schools, and sectarian publications are prohibit- ed from making any comment on or | carrying news on national political affairs. Labor Backs GOvt. The regional Confederation of La- bor, the strongest labor organization in Mexico, has taken an unqualified tand in support of the government and declares it will fight on the gov- ernment side, particularly the pro posed economic boycott, Which with the strength of its organized work- Ing men, it can render fnoperative. The confederation, together with groups of labor and soclalist mem hers of congress as well as other po litical groups and government em- ployes, have planned blg parades [ for Sunday in Mexico City and other citles as a demonstration of their support of the government's poli All vehicular traffi¢ will be sus- ended in the capital during the pa- de. No Demonstrations, Meanwhile the -Catholics, under instructions from the chur author- itles, will not be permitted to stage counter-demonstrations. Instead they will besexpected to assemble in their churches for prayer. The police have begun a careful watch upon all Catholic churches, fearing thelr treasures may be taken away. Yesterday they arrested four youths who twere taking from a ckurch a typewriter and other per- sonal property of a priest. The youths téd the police they were taking the property to the priest’s new residence on his orders. Assailant Reported Slain Special dispatches from Puebla that Garcla Farfan, the aged |grocery man who on Wednesday at- tempted to shoot General Amay commandant, but in- stead wounded General Sanchez in the hand, was shot and killed by un- known persons while ‘being trans- ferred to.the military prison. Soldiers escorting Farfan said un- known persons attacked the auto- mobiles in which Farfan was being transterred and killed him and then made their escape despite the fact they were fired upon. Farfan shot at General Amaya, when the military comihandant. en- tered his store to investigate a poster pasted in the window which was described as religlous propaganda. Newspapers Warned Attorney General Ortega has is- sued a private warning to the direc- tors of the foremost newspapers of the capital to be cautious in their treatment of news regarding the re- ligious situation. He said? that the situation had been magnified and that the news- papers and newspaper men were causing a grave and troublesome |situation for which they might be | held responsible unless they mended their ways. No official orders in this respect has been issued. No specific refer- ence was made to foreign corre- spondents by the attorney general. Wants Less Pay Now A servant girl employed by a for- eign family and receiving a modest money allowance for food today in- formed her employer that she would require considerable less money after Friday. Inquiry elicited a statement from the girl that she intended- after to- barely sufficient beans and bread to sustain her life | First Lutheran church of this city (until the religlious question is set- |tled. She declared that all her rela- | trap with 10 yards more distance. in [tives and acquaintances Intended to | i the | ment enterp uries necessities. MISS COLLETT 15 (Continued from First Page) the match on the fifth and w on the next, Miss Orcutt came back to square |the match in her turn and then took the ninth. Twice on the home trip ")(rs,. Cassriel evened matters when ‘her opponent was leading. It was all even when they teed off at the 18th. Miss Orcutt's five for the hole jand she saw her name chalked lon the board for the finals. Large Gallery Present Despite threatening skies up | gallery mostly women were on hand {when the first round started. Miss Maureen Orcutt had the hon- ors and got a good drive of 200 ards down the middle to the bend lon the dog leg fairway. lett was equally as straight three yards longer. Miss Orcute pulled second slightly but was on ole high, while her opponent was just on with a like shot. | They halved the 345 hole in par |four. | On the 384 yard second Miss Or- |cutt gave an opening by slicing into the rough and in getting out went |into deeper rough !high in two good shots, ards to the left and ran which was uneasy over the proposed “econom- |was barely home in 3. Ki(‘ boycott” of fhe Nafional League | for Defense of Religious Freedom, |above the flag on especially theaters and other amuse- | and dealers in Jux- |run up, while Maureen nearly holed and other things not absonumj WINNER ONCE MORE (on the 481-yard 12th while Miss Or- vas one better than her opponent's | which | again took three putts and was four {had poured rain all night a large |down. Miss Col- | and | Glenna was hole | up | t short while Miss Orcutt was | 20 feet away. On the |missed and halved in par fives. Two good drives gave Miss Col- llett a three yard advantage in the “3?7 third, but she lost it on the {second shot, falling 25 yards short |while her opponent was all but one. Glenna overran the putt 20 feet {but Miss Orcutt sank ~ in a birdie | four, losing the hole to be one down to Maureen, chipped close and sank. Both were a trifle to the right with their drives on the 208 vard fourth and Collett's ball landed on the hill Jon which Ifes the green, while Miss |Orcutt was in the bang past the flag. From a bad liz, Glenna was 25 feet |short while Maureen overran 30 fect. |They halved fours. Miss Orcutt had the longer drive on the 49 evened with the brassie |ahead with the irons but {feet short of the pin. themselves five foot putts for | fives. Both sunk for halves. her iron just short of a trap at | corner of the green, while Glen wag nicely on, 30 feet from the lole &he pushed her run up ten feet to|yard 17th and her opponent got 200. the right, while Glenna putted close | Maureen played a bold brassié over a par 3| | and won the hole with squaring the matches. Miss Collett poled her drive out|yards the latter pitched within three of bounds over a stone fence at the | 446-yard seventh but hit a good one for her seeond shot, | Maureen's efforts by 50 yards {the latter skied her ‘ball. lett alm {while Miss Orcutt brassie and massie with a good cup both | ard fifth but both were yard drive | under 200 vards. Glenna more than | while Mies Orcutt was and kept|pulled to a trap under was 30| Maureen got out well, but was 60 They left|yards short. par | at the edge in two. At the| 162-yard sixth, Maureen shankened |while Maureen failed he | was only one up and two to go. out stepping | Orcutt missed the longer putt and as|Glenna squared the match with a Miss Col-Ihirdie four. got home with a brassie | was elght feet|Miss Collett was her 38rd 20 feet the side hill feet short with her Maureen put Glenna .was 9 A DESTINY'S AN Founder of National Grange Extolled at Memorial (A—Clive her fourth. | Glenna bobbled the cup for a five and lost with a six to Miss Orcutt's | par 8. | Miss Orcutt- became '3 up at the | |431-yard 10th when Glenna got in | a trap short of the greenm, in two, | pitched qut short and took five. Washington, July Miss Orcutt pitched to within four |Hudson Kelley, founder of the Na- | feet ‘of the cup in three and got her |tional Grange, was the “man of des- third birdie [iiny as far as organized agriculture her | in America was concerned,” Louis J. on 170-yard 11th, while|Faber of Columbus, Ohfo, national 30 |mer Illinois state champion squared [Glenna was 25 yards from the cup.|master of {he order, declared today as 1 up | |te Miss Orcutt overran the pin 10 (in dedicating and accepting, on be- et nd was within two.feet with |half of the grange, a granite monu- her third, while Glenna was five feet|ment of the Kelley family lot in short in twn and bobbled the cup in|Rock Creek cemetery here. three. They Lalved it in four. & Governor Robert P. Robinson, | Three down and seven-to go, Miss|Delaware, treasurer of the national {Collett sluiced her drive 200 ‘yards|grange and master of the Delaware state grange, unveilled the memorial | which was presented to the grange [by W. H. Landvolght, executor of the Kelley estate and for many years secretary to the founder. Taber reviewed the life of Kelley from his birth in Boston on Jan. 7, 1826, through his emigration to a Minnesota farm, his employment as a clerkein the department of agri- |culture in 1864, and his organization of the grange .in 1867. This grew out of a study of agricuttural condi- tions in the south in the previous |vear. Taber also paid tribute to Mrs. | Temperance Lane Kelley, wife of the short in three and pitched to win |founder, who devoted her personal seven fect and laid a dead stymie. |fortune to carrying on the organiza- | Maureen playad around and went [tion when Kelley, discouraged at x feet over. Glenna sank a bird- |apathy toward the order, had given ie five, her first one, and was three jup, declaring that- “the American down and five to go. farmer will not listen; he will not Startled by Horn {save himselr.” Miss Orcutt had a longer drive| This sacrifice, Taber declared, en- by 100 yarddwon the 418 hard 14th. [abled the order to carry on to the A fog horn from the mouth of the |present, Thames lelt out a blast just as Glenna made her brassie shot and | she sluiced the trap beside the | green while Maureen stanced a |y D, Vo pretty brassie to the carpet 50 feet "(',‘,’,',‘,,g: ’l:'”:f'n"m:"tf“umi" short of the cup. C 5 E 3 Miss Collfett got a good out but | pa';miai?;ti:}a:i‘c‘\fi:;;:n‘;:;:r: too strong, while Maureen ran up £0 | 2 syubstantial cut in the tims o four feet of the flag. The fog NOIN | trajng to California beginning Nov. got Miss Orcutt as.she putted and |14 rhe Los Angeles.Limited and ?ine missed allowing & half 1n|(he San Francisco Overland Limited ves. 5 3 willl cut five hours from At the 125 yard 15th Miss Collett, | sopaqules, reducing the the run’f.’fi.'é pitched hole high thres feet to the | yime 1n "each direction: 'between right. Miss Orcutt’s mashie hit the | Chicago and the Pacifle Coast o edge of the green and rolled back | gixiv three hours. An extra fare of off the carpet. Maureen was 18 feet $10 will be charged from Chicago to over in two, while Miss Colllett over | cujicornia. with proportiosate putted 7 feet. Maureen almost got | oysrpes to intermediate points f her three, but lost 4 to 3, tWo UP | " 'On the same day a new all-Pull- and three {o go. man Limited, will begin service on Miss Collett w{mlh*dw | a sixty-eight hour schedule, the at the 353 fastest now in effect. No extra fare will be charged on this train. LIGHTNING KILLS BOY Iflfllt Strikes Youth cutt was 230 yards down the middle. | Glenna almost evened up with a splendid brassie. Maureen Wwas ten | feet inside on her approach, Glenna |being 30 feet short. Miss Collett On the 550 yard 13th Miss Orcutt | drove 220 yards, while Miss Collett | got only 200. The leader got' a poor second while Glenna got away a beautiful landing 100 yards ahead of her opponent and got home in three, but fifty feet to the right of the flag. Miss Orcutt was 120 yards CUTS TRAIN TIME TO COAST out a 225- vard 16th, 220 yards, the, bank, While Glenna was just Albans, Also Destroys Two Buildings and Cripples Light Service, dead in three, to sink, and Glenna chipped at St. Miss Collett smashed a 22§-yard drive down the center on the 418- St. Albans, Vt.,* July 30 (P—Light- {ning killed a boy, destroyed two |buildings and temporarily crippled |telephone and electric. light service |in northern Vermont last night. | Lucius Smith, 17, of Rlchford, dled |instantly when a bolt of lightning struck him. A large barn belonging to Smith's |father was destroyed by fire started by lightning during the same storm. At St. Albans Hill the farmhouse of trap at the green and almost got ome as did Glenna. From 30 feet of the.cup, while Maureen was 15 feet short on the right. Miss Miss Orcutt got off a good drive down the center on the 18th, but 10 yards longer from the cup in three, She sank a|with a pulled shot. Glenna slapped birdie four to be one up again, al-|her iron on the carpet 35 feet to the |though Glenna pitched dead for aright of the flag, while Maureen {par five. ’ |caught a trap at the corner of the| Miss Orcutt got 200 yards on the|green, Miss Orcutt chipped out 10 |eighth which is 389 yards grazing | feet from the cup in three, Glenna 'the edge of a sand pit stopping on|putted three feet over on the right. a side hill and Collett was straight|Maureen bobbled the cup for a par !and a trifie longer. Standing below | four, while Glenna got down and the ball Miss Orcutt sent her ball to|won the hole and match. | !the gallery on a hillock above the green. Glenna got home with an |iron 20 feet from the flag. Miss | Orcutt overran the green with a|ence of miners' delegates was de- | | niblick shot to the rough and five |cided to recommend acceptance of |teet over In four, but halved the|the peace proposal suggested by {hole in fives, while Gienna overran |church men of the Anglican and |four feet and missed the returned |Free churches in the present coal | putt. | tie-up. The proposals will be sent On the 421-yard ninth, Miss Orcutt | back to the districts to be voted | | pushed her drive to deep grass, 200 | upon. | yards while Glenna pulled to a deep | MINERS TO TAKE VOTE | London, July 30 (®—The confer- | READ HERALD C /ASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS Miss Orcutt was on even deeper |and burned down. Joseph Gere was struck by lightning Mr. Gere and his family escaped injury although they were in the house when it was struck. TAX. ESTIMATES Paris, July 30 (P—Deputy. De Chappeldelaine - who -drafted the chamber finance committe's report on the government's financial bill, estimates that the field of the pro- posed taxes will amount ta 2,458, 000,000 francs in 1926 and 9,19 000,000 franes in 1927, CASE IS CONTINUED Bridgeport, Conn., July 30 (F— The case of George Brown, 26, of 122 Seabright avenue, New Haven, arrested here last night on a charge of operating without a license, was continued in city court today until August 5. ETHFEL Th; eternal feminine

Other pages from this issue: