New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 18, 1926, Page 1

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NEK wug) “proyjey “ydaqq JAPY AIRIQYT 9)R)S O1I3UNC) FINAL EDITION W BRITAIN HERALD Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending Sept. 11th ... 13,233 ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1926.—TWENTY PAGES. PRICE THREE CENTS ent EUROPEAN WELFARE AN OF STATESHEN Briend and Stresemann in Pre-. Sa‘ liminary Agreement MAY POOL ALL INTERESTS‘ Ormiston’s Mother Begs Her Son To T ol Truth in McPherson Case‘ vation Army Meeting | Blames Said to Hamper Traffic | Lynn, Mass, Sept. 18 (P) — Meetings of the Salvation Army held on public highways consti- tute an obstruction to traffic and no city or town in the com- monwealth has the right to pe Standard 0il Co. May Abandon Stanley St. Plant and Erect f01‘1 Leading Her Son Astray —Parent of “Kidnaping” | 'District Officials Reported to Be Dissatisfied W Treatment Accorded Corporation By City Evangelist Victim Arrested for Con- $150,000 Station at Clayton SOUTHERN WATERS DAMAGE IS MOUNTING INTO LASHED BY GALES MILLIONS IN FLOODS THAT _ SURGE OVER THE MID-WEST GAPITOL THEATER 1§ Whole Towns Inundat- COMPLETELY EHANEEU ed, Railroad Tracks Weather Burean Warns of Storm | ol Hu lI‘HCu[]e Pmpomons | FOLLOWS PATH OF OTHER ith mit use of the highways for spiracy and Latter Is to ficta o Standar “o0.) branc yeen maintain Belief Also Goes Ont That Gradual| purposes other than traffic, ex- pptac ; i s w '“:““"bo”d:)"' ot o oranch has been maintalfi- | Along Florida Coast Shipping 1 Wept Away And | cept for transmission of educa- ; piEnare iaCericons Ceratinn MDRNCON her aoor cher A Sl g . - ° . Reduction of French Forces in| tion, knowledgs and the 1ke. | D€ 1aken Into Custody | [ % ¢ i tocar prant on Stan- | Planation of the motives promp(ing | n Danger — Norweglan Vessel Beautifully Designed and Crops Are Ruined In German Territory is Agrecd| DS upIL“1;-1:1\\\:.s ;‘:i\'rn u;da;v by | Soon street and construction ©of & | pejier in ircles that dis-| Battles Storm Which Takes Toll Attractively Decorated dge Ralp Reeve In fin Y i 1 , = L : . o] el w branch at ayton, near the ' satsifac: onditions here e ‘ R = Tpon. [ 1—-';4‘ spRinel, Ton B = Now Biltaia town: Hine Sared ieie5 of One Life — Opens Tonight Many Places In u ’ A | nd of the Lynn corps guilty This information came from the pany has had little success in ob- i Danas ) eva, Sept. 13 (P—France and| ot obstruct cting_trafric, San Francisco, Sept. 18 (P—In an | yartrord qistrict office of the com- | taining permit fc > placement of | ral Communltles. L] Germany through thelr foreign ml"» (interview in the Examiner Mrs. W.| pany today. For several weeks re- | filling stations here, the most ent d as the pe ot Connec- eet liminary agreement for an EIC”O(‘J 0O iston, declared she was any planned this change adjustment cetin Wednesday < . . between the two countries, not only | of all this deception” and call e ::,:“,:]I "}.fi 1 (( ‘:,M'{n - z;'wff proposed Clayton plant is sald ration set in the center | e itini b vn'«nrnfnhftmo;‘r?;oi' 1;"3-}‘53\11 S S[]UTH SEA ISLAN“S on her son to tell the authorities | Ciayton g is being glven | to involve an expenditure of $150.- industr | Watery * Grave When < 5 7 S st the truth concerning his part in the arnest consideration. LU may be mutually interetsed. | L Sy + | e | B ~ The preliminary accord, which| A Bempla S MoEherson Sdisap=H NSNS S | S e S Bridge Collapses at Hull, st be placed before the spec- . pearance | 'm]‘: 'g: ern \oni'ql ré:rac: pm:;ap L1< Oregon Couple, Four Chil- ‘With this great mass of evidence | s Ia.—In Some Places Vol- ; showing Mrs. McPherson was h ik o corsiid TG S e’ dren and Friend Start s oS0 s v Grand Army Men Have Ten Years cles as meaning much for th politi- q Dot Manonnd ShI e wattants imced - as talterations” yunteers Struggle to Stem cal, and especially the economic de- Perilous Journey e e e e 00 it which actually has resulted in i . : velopment, of Turope. It twas o shmotienilotynic neraindel ore ¢ ct]vlty eader Avers to reconstruction, nas been| Rising Tides of Rivers, reached yesterday by Forelgn Minis- | is true, Mrs. Ormiston s i ’ out. | ter Briand of France and Forelgn| Portland, Ore, Sept. 18 (R — Tn | [irer M4e OF = ° | Etiesemann Worl Germany| Jeess ittt Dl e i ot cremsselan fo dony sominoag Sept. 15 (F—The miadi iring a privato luncheon on the | “7EEL O B ) ot Mrs. McPhe This is Commander-in-Chief Inman’s Reply to Reports m > movle booth at the| =V ,r & b O": "' the Jura mountains at|" ¥ ie ¥ pvESd o i west mounted guar oday over {ts phinetacroad el inespen | Gor e eenalisn ot men 20 o That This Encampment is to Be Last—Looks For grain field treasury, further men- ce. The luncheon was an-| a's civilizati > Tandloss, | g o then ther nd was blowing. aced by floods sv ; ¢ & ! 4 . e = T o v blowing ced by floods swollen with new rain the “getting down to brass| his wife and their four children n le. W Parade in 1940 Though Vets Ave Dying At Rate of . ok e . e tacks” conferences the two states-|the company of another Poriland- " e L Danger to Shipping e S IEEI NG COUTRY R i men have been holding recen er, Leroy Rappe, 17, e dropping 17.500 a Year. 1 T | Skunk river through southeastern though nothing officlally is|down the m river to the Towa bundles of green corn stalks known of the questions discussed, |Sea today fn their 40-foot gailboat i Ll tai e B | were pressed into service at places the bellef prevails that gradual re- I arl H. hqfl“ for Ta in 51 SeIERTICES on the levees, sacrificed to save iction of the French forces of oc- | South seas. They left Portland yes- ill augment the visitors to around ° ; By, ;00 cupation in German a possible ferday with two m s' provisi 0,000. Although the survivors of higher flelds of the bumper crop as pooling of economic and financia aboard, us in cor e war of lying at the ra yet untouched by the waters. rests, based on theory that what In a haven of the southern s first bro: of 17,500 a Mr. Inman be- Patrols ned the embrank- lurops most needs is economie pros- cific Handloss says he will contir cation lieves : n 194 ments, wheer the corn was welghted perit e among them. Mrs. Kennedy Arre down with sand bags, on the lookout Study All Problems Los A s t of Civil War veters amp- for first signs of such a gap through An official communication fssued Mrs. M would be of cen- which water flowed to submerge by the foreign ministers said they v once more v will form €~ | 5,000 acres south of Burlington, ad examined all problems “suscep- 1 and once I's guard.” s1gN | three to four feet deep. tible of intérest to the two countries a ) ‘oronto, Gyg City is Inundated nd that they sought the best com-| The little craft has one sail and ia, Dayton Across the Tllinois line, men wha on means of solving no motor. With t one sail Hand nd Portland on have have labored ceaselessly since Wed- in the interest of F pilot his vesscl along tl » command nded Grand Army an ir inamo bay Ly 5 nesday patrolled a thin wall of sand Germany and in the epirit of the Oregon coast and in a few number of tion for 1927, ed T Agenoo iniared SO IEH by the |} standing between Beardstown tr s a xpects to turn in at San Fran- Hh e LoNn RN e re the [and the Illinois river, swelled by o s t cisco for t goodbye to Amc BN bove, | torrent from the tributary Sanga- succeeded in harmonizing their 1. From then on s, only |, l e & ‘_‘ e T h is | mon. Much of the city of 7,000 is of theze questions and if their view- — - i I ‘1 lik break in the dike would probably pointa are approved.by thelr gov- F o " " : bove: All make futile efforts to restrain the “in order to achieve : S ¢ vaulted | Residents of both the Skunk and s —_— night. One sailor in old | Minois valleys scanned clearing sidefed’ es o gaod Uentucky Farmers Mi: I Take Stump Through pricounier Violmt Winds which | that th having carried oft en the 5 2 it Ne Sept. 18 (P—Violence (oD the wall mu ord breaking Septem- ds left t take Auto Party for State of Illinois in His Yo now ¢ ill, had passed crést stage. Bobby IR A A 1 Jowa bore the brunt Bobby Joncs mls in Sec- : . ) m said the & A Watermelon Thieve: Interests deluge in the mid- ‘yet no whiter eral Crisises in Morn- t gth and breadth of r inmost souls. cen swept four times he French and ng Pl 18 P—A| O 18 (A radio by torrential rains. it the 1 ing Play ) o e epted the 715 saieto i s | Girl Washead Away s A e i i o | The most recent flood fatality was > il Short Hills il Loy om the political d on Page 11) reported from Hull after a storm 3 Stre ""1‘ . G L - ‘mothers arm is torn by 1 Geor 1. Brennan ol over the section late yeste An - i ekl cd e buckshot and two men ves; thercfore she is going to ) 11 year old girl in a group of home- : i 5 of th £ g b B S | ward bou school children was { 10 be of the first n ing slight wou lusband i i, 156 D, 2 round matc S s e democ nor L senat washed away with a small bridge. - lsaune B «gu 1ck last ni 1emocr lomix v senator - f Her companions were rescued by an i s bR et v watermellon thioves, | Hawarden was swept by flood wa- 1 ) 1 0 o " ters when the rainstorm swelled : for unpion, Mr ar a4 on a road \ W , ; an preblem.” e S e i Dry Creek to overflowing. Occu- S ot e el e st ot ! : : Doctors Wa pants of homes along the stream on s 2 son fof the f me n n SH CO STR E C > ness section was inundated and the last night to ,:m»w - tional tit Ir ] Tiinoie, in t BRI“ AL K dition of “alll town lost electric light and power rem of 1 ive for v co S5 . . v when waters flooded the utilities < NOT NEAR SETTLEM NT ille Child e Ll from L1 D CRSOR Gy v ————— | Fields throughout the area were g2l o] linyg haeniTigard Savesys The candidale's cond s y . {1211 waste and railroads suffered = "»w present “q:] < ohniThe ed today by physicians as ¢ Minces Apparcatly Have Turned £l Miles 6F TEARIE et lement of the outstanding ques- il Lt by ant oigl {5 1 e : = o Dronosals Viv 5 washed out and a frelght train was i between France and (f:r\»rl.‘xvm S bl ennan, who declarea she Deaf Ear to Proposals of : & vailed last night near Hospers would go far toward stabill (R onE s D A me a politiclun by marriage, be- Stanley Baldwin. Brit when it ran into a stretch of wash= [e Europe politically and econc BaLrontasolgstite, ¢ t ved that the time had c for ‘ G S ed out track ! Debt Issues Arise N to help out, and she made ar- lowin o hile Damage Reaches Millions — 2 1 reported to | the in y-pin - wh ]fl One of the questions report | A e ts to join a flyir N on e Only gencral estimates, which run have been discussed oIy om Q cers to be s Hee t Cennetn | well into the millions, are availabls commercialization of the debt’ L RO i FARE, Ll T \) Ennanihead Garmbrid e, | on the extent of damage to the mid- T if presunn I‘V'vvs h;’l ‘0‘*""““-" Ei e e R ks of the Ge F. Cook was called by | West's crops from two weeks' down- —_— proposed sale on tho op ! 8 Jcs as cch will b hurricd the child | Pour. of German railroad bonds pled iy i ityad (o ety tives and Late Summer Vacation- Soptember 25, with ; an Xeray | Corn is suffering from both actual P fojsecure coayInan o als | winning ‘the sacond Hole in'par fans. ists Bid Goodbye to Presidential , and Thomas F. ) . DLWnG and TR £ France is known to desire to r b . n of the democratic sta Deriiios | development. Much small las a8 eariy.as ‘m.njl.l l:ufl"mm.,- down the center with Party This Morning ed when it was L stalik s (e RelX Ui & esn alazoofttis nende Salertiotor rful tee shots, Bobby's ) § L. Mr the way. 1 rked off the books. R s ;,ppmrml_ little ..I b . n e e 2 M Gabriels, N 15 (A an opponent, wi observation durir At Jacksonville it was estimated S posed to a ch in vvlzi- lnv*‘v‘ Thaitar e ev. ' Babby's il o it and Coolidg ere ihyiding nouncement X-ray photographs | tt storms have cost thres ) agreement which would alter the [ 1S 8T WeSIer s dnll o sial train 7:40 a. m., castern iesue, is holdin to deicrm the ois counties more debt. from a polltical to a commer- | TAtRD TPTIEE TG hatt, while indard time, today, o ir return with Cook county irney pin. It a r ; cial oblig It is thought M.| ~ TTeltiortine o s aaaton b in? " to Washington from their vacation y reput T s an operation will w romise of' brief relief Briand may have held out the |the right of t e £ X in the been set for § sary, Dr. Cook red this morn- |today in fair and warmer weather y = French |&reen. The champion ran his ap- ¥ e P e ] : forecasts ovel st of the mldwest prospect of an _carl i e I e ; six m from White | tnat time the tribe . = £y MG forccasts over most of th . evacuation of the Rhineland as an | { o8 PR R0 BRI I E, 8t O e Pit . which was for over stead plank will be inserted in otor fs still holding out but more rain and dropping temper- inducement to Germany to ch; Bl second putt for W U whils | Tudes Tasie weeks the summer White House “! county platform, J will take a hand |atures were rally predicted for he o nteralliec bis i s 2 e and Mrs. Coolidge found natives ar operation ¢ k-end ) UL e 1{ o ,-,J:.”,',,(!T.i States | Von EIm was down in the regulation | prosecutor u s ,Y ‘,‘ e : R Paran i ) AT Relcqsall fi e e They halved the third hole In par| waitten Ly DITR Byl o5 s ie Sason, ‘; ROk PRICES NOT FIXED \Iloucd I‘laud Forfeits GUBSeCcs | fours lind Long Beach recontly | oo Ll = = e . = Details Confirmed. S6: oot iriven oy I fio ho i et owle the applause, wr That the Franco-German accord | Perfect drives "1 Tk both fkliled in an ident- | irectly to their observation car, ar e T e oty A s ) e S e tesa e el ffd, bt the Atlantan f ! in a few minutes the train left e Admission to Army Game at Chicago | I e T Mm‘rvlnr‘l ':"m‘ the pellet of Von Elm. Their sec- th t 'y‘ !v \; i ‘1“ 1 ‘\‘1 t )”‘1 : Pere s ne AR Dan 2 Geddes Has Cledr Field Will Be Determined By Anction '© man describing him- e man spokesman. “'” 15 struck the green within 2 hawk and Hudson river valleys over| Heavy Fog and Mist For ‘h(‘ iff in \ Hd\ B o ot R 00 Hoxes: I ollgan, MALmIGE Ho o et e Both France and Germany, he 5 "', % | 5 5 " York Central railroad to| poiyoit, gept. 18 (P—The ar New Hav § with the Fisher Body com- uec Page 16 | (Continued o age 17) e o P o 1 ( 18 said, desire to transform the exist-| (Continued on Page 16) ontintted on F ) York city. and | gipigiblo .1 e i 1 ‘ Sept. 18 (M S e i TR ing system of pledges growing out of adelphia 10| o0t here - that the c { seats to be p Motors corporation of Flint, Michi- .o~ the treaty of Versailles into a friend- | CIVIL ‘NAR VET AT 80 VOW’ WA"\T TERSSICE iting the lifting of a heavy fog, - Geddos, re be for the Army-Navy ¢ gan, failed to appear in court on a 5 1o tartasrinin roby they would \| and ¢ or the ride through the e e o T November 27 wil wrge of obtaining money under combine t | ’ mountains Nz air mast, proceeding 2 will n by rot rom a public tion | fa pretenses. The sum of $100 tinued occupation of German soil by | Worcester Trench Digger |Tha fog was so heavy when 1he T ! to bring about $2000. . |King, Bassick company _ execule. French troops could only prove a . ST limp arrived that it coull not t G ction will be held within and which was found on his person continucd source of friction, and | y- g 5 e Is Smothered in Cave-In rted from the ground, The te the primaries for it was announced by the |when the man was arrested fin ikl hh Qhconing Baver e e Nebraskan Asks Court to Let Him Plead Guilly to Worcester, Mass, sept, 15 (7 fon at the airport o3 election of rtes to (he repre-|South Park boardse which controls|Stamford Wadnasdas, wasdordeesd consuming desire to get the I'renc “Q - . s " One man was killed and two otl cation h the ntati 1 just of the p Sol Field, scene of the coming |returned to King. had to gef the Germans out of their | —Forget 1t, Says Judge. sult of & cave-ln of the walls of as reporte y customarily are held in the choice seats, other than in the Mys, \[a, hall Comfortable territory after the war of 1570, J € trench in which they were working | Tha dirigible afely moored Octoher bosies, would cost at least $10 but |“pon 0 Ll South Works of the Ameri-| (o the Ford airport mast at 7:30 . = = the commissioners hoped to be able ]0 owing an Operation Berlin, Sept, 18 (A—The Geneva | opooio city, Neh, Sept. 13 (P t to eat but every onc hil | and Wiro Company ! SR e e e Marvion Talley Slightly R s A lv‘vll Sept. 18 U correspondent of the WOME bureau, | oonesiance stricken because he had | and a stray shoat. or i he dead man fs Ern-|cariy afternoon and then pre il in Wreck |, The tremendous cost of br om arshall, widow of the semi-official Ness agency, Inter- [ o 4 H 0o 080 b e Civil war | onr T et Laperriere, The names of | geirri 6id, A pakticipate it the Injured in Train Wreck |, cuets and midshipmen to Chica. | the former vica-president who un= preting the statements fssued by |4 gegiring to “square accounts be- | f rtatlons as many two men who escaped were not jcrial circus being given by the| Harvard, Ark, Sept. 18 (P was given as reason for the i operation here was re- Foreign Minister Briand and Dr.|g,re ff 4 too late,” Tim Crook, 80 |os the next one. They say that a¥l | 1€ lala of the plant. = farmy first pursuit group to raise| Marion Talley, grand opera star Was|pign dmission. _After the boxes L SUNE ContGHERISE TR Stresemann after their conference,|vonr old war veteran who lives in | is fair in love and war, and we were s working in the bot- Is for army relief work ightly shaken up early today wWhen ayctioned, the other seats will be Dr. O. G. Pfaff, attending sur- expresses the opinion that emphasis|tne Hjl| county near Minersville fighting lots and eating little, and |tom ©f a 12-foot trench at the 14 fast Frisco passenger train num-| .. tya market geon, said the operation was one of must be laid on their unanimity that | Nep,, went before District Judge | maybe it was all right but I ain't | Works when a high pressure water| .~~~ gel| BEnyAYe ARG IV KNt AN SppRlat; — 2oMme Rerlousing a general solution of all outstand- | I‘v‘"ln here and asked to be allowed | falt right about it ever since. W main burst flooding the trench 1 T lr ing between Memphis and St OBSERVES 76th BIRTHDAY Marshall arrived here Wed- ing problems was arrived at. Dr.|to ‘'plead guilty.” . this bread and water sentence bus. | trapping Laperriere. The other THE WEATHER | ran into an open switch| George Steele of Greenwood street |Nesday to visit friends after a sum- 5 Dl ft Stresemann, the correspordent ob-| Judge Begley, however, fust|iness at Tekamah eame up. T de. |t in time. After | | Sagees: | was given a surprise party last eve- Mer spent at the home of Mra. cerves, always has maintained that|smiled and told him to forget about | cided that if they was gaing to be hours, three gangs of New Britain and vicinity— fireman and engin WETe| ning in honor of his 76th birthday., Thomas Walsh at Bar Harbor, the goal could not be reached by |, | that rough on poor fellows, violating | m e able to free the body of Generally fair tonight and | |injured scverely. The engine crashed | The home was decorated in pleasing | Maine, She was enroute to Stock- solving the problems individually, | “You see when I was in Company | the liquor laws, in other parts of the |the dead man, which was uncovered | | Sunday, Rising temperatures, into a box car and turned | colors and supper was served to the |dale, Arizona, where she has been — % A of the Tenth Kan, Infantry,” | state, that maybs T had done |in a standing position in the bottom around by the impact. No cars left guests. Mr. Steela received many |living with her mother since the n (Continued on Page Seven) the grizzled veteran said, “we didn’t | wrong” |of the trench. | % # [the tracks. | presents trom friends and relatives. | death of her husband, »

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