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WHITNEY ESTATE I3 EXTENSIVE ONE May Have Lelt as much as Two, andred Million New York, May 26 (UP)—Payne | Whitney, 51, millionaire sportsman, | who died suddenly yesterday after eollapting during a game of tennis, | lett a 'ine of from $150,000,000 | to 820 .000, it was estimated to- | day. | Many friends of Whitney, who was | & brother of Harry Payne Whitney, were surprised to learn the extent of 1 holes before me. I was lucky enough his fortune, although in 1924 he | paid an income tax of $2.041,951, the | third largest in the country, being| exceeded only by the taxes paid by | John D. Rockefeller and Henry TFord. In 1925 his tax was fifth| largest. | It was also revealed thut Whitdey was one of the nation's greatest ! philanthropists, onc close friend, | ‘who preferred to remain anonymous, | estimatidg he had given away close | to $100,000,000 in the last 25 years. | ‘Whitney was a familiir figure at race tracks. Mrs. Payne Wkitney, the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1927. FLASHES OF LIFE: LINDBERGH AND TILDEN GOOD SOBRIETY EXAMPLES New York — Lindbergh and Til- grand jury against Mrs. Rose Svor- den are regarded as ‘“sobriety ser-!itch Gaboza of Danbury, who with mons” by Arthur J. Davis, superin- |her 14 year old son Peter, is ac- tend -t of the state Anti-Saloon lea- 'cused of beating and stabbing to gue. He writes that the perfect ma- | death Frank Vanco last January. chine- of Lindbergh's brain “has never been slowed down or marred | Hartford — Recent ralns cause | by the polson of alcohol” and Tilden |Connecticut river to rise a foot. has popularized the Tilden cocktail, | consisting of a large bottle of mln-| eral water. Hartford — Air passenger service |between Hartford and New York {and Boston will be inaugurated Fri- Hoylake — The Haley comet ot |day, it is announced, with three golft—Edwin H. Haley of New York "“O'Of"d Fokker monoplane *“Chi- —who beat Cyril Tolley — regards | cago.” himself as lucky. *I had to sink u.i four footer to beat Tolley,¥ he ex- plains, “and there were at least five Cheshire — Howard Taylor, 19, of |Grand Burnside, Charles Hofflither iof Chicago and Maurice Mahoney, to pick the right on: |22, of Waterbury, escape from re- formatory. Atlantic City — Riches restrict ' women's mating instinct, in the opin- HARTFDRD “Ew YORK AND ion of Dr. Goldwyn W. Howland of ) Toronto. He described to the Amer- ‘ ican Neurological association results of a questionnaire to men and wo- men asking what they would do if they were worth $200,000. Not one woman mentioned marriage. Dr. Howland concluded they did not re- act pleasantly to the prospect of men living on their wealth. First Regular Passenger Service Will Be Inaugurated On Friday of This Week Hartford, Conn.,, May 26 (P—Air; Rome — Beauty contests are dis- | |\ o coriice between Hartford BOSTON AIRPLANE ROUTE | FORD WITHHOLDS NEW CAR DETAIL Promises Speed, Style, Flexi-’ bility—Price Higher Detrolt, May 26 (® — The TFord Motor company will shortly place in the light car field, a new machine to ireplacs its present model T automo- bile, it is announced. The announcement, verifying long rumored plans of the company, was made in a statement signed by Henry Ford and issued through a national advertising agency handling }ho Ford advertlsing account. Detsils of the new machine were (not disclosed in the statement which said a complete description along Wwith the price will be made public within a few wecks. The date for the start of production also was withheld. Parts for the model T car will continue to he produced in view of the fact that there are now about 10,000,000 of these machines still in use which will require replacements and service, the statement said. In regard to specifications for the new machine, Mr. Ford was quoted as saying: CONGRESSMAN MAGEE, OF SYRACUSE, DEAD | Representative Since 1914 Victim of Heart Disease As He Sits At Tis Desk. i Syracus:, N. Y. May Stricken with heart disease as he sat |at a desk in his office, Representa- _tive Walter W. Magee, died at his | home here last night. He remained i consclous until a few minutes before | his death, which attending physiclans attributed to acute dilation heart. Congressman Magee, who observed ‘his 66 birthday Monday, has repre—; tland dis- sented the Onondaga-C trict in campaigns since his election to the 64th congress in 1914. He as a republican and a staunch ad- | crent of the administration. For many years up to his death he was | |a member of the commlittee, After graduation from Harvard in 11889, Mr. ) turned to the study of law, rved as corporation appropriations fore his election to congr I m Genevieve Wood, danghter of Brig. !Gen. Palmer G. Wood of California. She survives him. He Is also sur- tved by a hrother, Edward Magee 26 — | of the | 1895 he married Miss Sarah | — ] | Keystone lodge, No. 243, Free and Accepted Order of Masons of De- | troit. | Colleen Moore Walks Out | Of First National Co. Burbank, Cal., May 26.—(/»—Col- | leen Moore, wife of John McCor- { mack, who resigned yesterday as | general manager for production of | First National Pictures, Inc., today’| followed the lead of her husband | and walked out of her next picture, | | declining to be cast as the bonnie lass in “When Irish Eyes are Smil- ing.” She declined to say whether she | will appear in the leading roles for | three other pictures for which she now is under contract to First Na- tional. TO RETUR ! Augusta, Maine, May. 26 (®)—The | return of Confederate battle flags | captured by Maine troops in the | Civil war probably will be passed on at the coming annual encampment | of the Maine G. A. R., Jure 8-9 in | this city. The flags are now in the custody of the state and a resolu- | { tion directing their return will be offered. ¢ Charles F. Tibbetts, doorkeeper of | the state senate and a veteran, said today: *“I was surprised to find such | a unanimous favorable sentiment | among those I have talked with. | Those Who captured the flags will all | former Helen Hay of Washington. |5pproved by the Osscrvatore Romano proprietor of the Greentree Stables|organ of the Vatican. It regards and Whitney himself owned several |them as enticing many girls who Horses; | might otherwise lead moral con- Whitney was nation'l amateur|tenged lives into a vale of tears from racquets champion in 19£3. He Was | hich there is not exit. & member of the Yale crew in 1897 and 1898, and was captain of the Water Witch, J. — Must be ecight in the latter year. |something in a,name. Major Her- have passed before long. Soon there | will remain no veterans of the Con- federacy to appreciate the spirit of such an act. Now is the time if ever.” A of Groveland, Livingston county, | | “At present I can only say that|Congressman Magee's birthplace. jthe new model has speed. style, | Funeral arrcngements have not flexibility and control in traffic. | been complated. There s nothing quite like it in qual- and New York and Boston, the first regular acrial passenger routs in New England, will be inaugurated Friday, according to announcement | [made by the Colonial Alr Transport, { ity and price. The new car will cast Siaoee e {Inc. The three motored Fokker |more to manufacture but it will be ' Masonic Ceremonial for monoplane Chicago which was here | more economical to operate,” | Capt. Charles A. Lindbergh Saturday and Sunday in connection | i FIND ANCIENT POEM Mexico City, May 26 (A—A long lost epic poem of the ancient Toltéc In 1918 Whitney enlisted in the hert A. Dargue, who flew consider- with the formal opening of the quar- The machine, according to the! San Diego, Cal, May 26 (F— Empire (661 A. D.) composed more army as a private. i His son, John Hay Whitney, was | a member of the Yale craw last year| and this year is a student at Cam- | ‘bridge university, England. e is| now reported to be in Spain playing | polo. | Mrs. Whitney was in New York at a luncheon when Whitncy collapsed | vesterday at his Manhassct. Long Is- | land, estate, and she was unable to reach his side before he died. A daughter, Mrs. Charles Shipman Payson, of Long Island and Port-| land, Me., also failed to reach the ertate until his death. Funeral services will te held at Christ church, Manhasset, at 12:30 | p. m. tomorrow. 65 Million Dollar Loan | Is Extended to Poland Warsaw, May 26.—(UP)—Nego- tiations of a $65,000,000 seven per cent loan by American banks to Poland was announced today. A representative of the Chase National bank of New York was ex- pected to arrive here the first week in June to sign the agreement, and | the first installment will be payable before the end of that month. The loan will be marketed in the United States at 91 or 92, including | discount and a three per cent bank- | er's commission. An American “ob- server,” who also will be a director of the Polish State bank, will be ap- pointed to supervise financial condi- | tions. | American bankers will be granted | e 15-year option on all Polfsh state | and municipal loans. NOTED ENGINEER DIES Okemah, Okla., May 26 @ — Harry Devies, 60, classmate of ‘Woodrow Wilson, and an engineer who helped build the Statue of | Liberty, died here yesterday after| being struck by a speeding automo- | ble. | He is believed to have owned a| large estate in New Jersey. He had lived alone here for years, his only companion being a maltest cat. |mas awarded at first commencement able mileage tn South America, was forced down in his plane here. ters at the 43rd division air service, |C. N. G., at Brainard Field, will be lused and will also carry the New York — A messenger boy's | mail. smoke cost $13,000. An eighteen- | mpe route will be operated daily, year old youth, carrying a bag of |sycopt Sunday, the plane securlties for Newborg & Co., brok- | Hartford for Boston at 7:45.a. m ers, took 1t with him to lunch &t & | 4o uiieh'e’ sating time and leaving fo self-service restaurant. He met a | s New York at 8:30 in the evening. messenger friend and they went out | COTE S R L e pmn!e to Battary park to puff and watch the ships go by. Then they noted |\ € b the bag was missing. A surety com- | NeV York at 6:30 a. m.. stopping at pany has paid up. | Hartford and arriving in Boston at {9 3. m. On the south bound trip New York — John Whitley, British |the plane will leave Boston at 7:15 veteran, is never going to pay for a |P. M. and arrive at Teterboro at pips he bought from an American at |9:45, making the regular Hartford the battle of Ypres, but he will have |stop. ¢ tender recollections whenever he| smokes it. Looking for a f&llow‘Last Ot Rotal.y Envo‘.s named Boyle to whom he owed five shillings, he was informed that Lt.| Are Off for Europe Today New York, May 26.—(UP)—The Randolph Boyle of St. Louis had died |Cunard Liners Caronia and Car- in France. |mania were to sail for Europe at New York — Mrs. Edith Mae 10 a. m. today carrying the last of Cummings, blonde former telephone 3,000 Rotary club members and operator, who has made a lot of their families to the International money in real estate and aspires’to | Rotary convention at Ostend June be mayor of Detroit, prefers to be|4.10. addressed as “Miss.” She has two| Five Cunarders, the Mauretania, boys. | Carinthia, Samaria, Transylvania and Lancastria sailed yesterday Putnam — Rev. Charles F. Bed- | with the first contingent of Ro- ard, 57, for 15 vears pastor of St.|tarians. Mary's Roman Catholic church, dies.| Ppresident McKee of New York |board of aldermen, addressing the | Rotarfans at luncheon yesterday, hailed them as “ambassadors of the New Haven — Forty-seven diplo- {of Connecticut College of Pharmacy. | United States” and urged them to bear to Europe the message that Bridgeport — After waiting nearly | smerica 1s not a dollar-chasing na- six hours for Major Dargue in good |jon, wil flight plane “New York,” 150 prominent citizens eat without him | atter learning plane had been forced | down by fog at Waterwitch, i LEAVES FREAK WILL New York, May 26 (P—A pro- | vision that his body be cremated and !its ashes deposited in his gold ci- air | leaving | will leave the Teterboro atrport, near | Yocation in Memorial chapel. statement was designed personally ; Captain than 1,000 years ago and telling a iby Mr. Ford. Charles Lindbergh, the tale of the glories and downtall of | famous aviator, will become a mem- | ber of the San Diego Pyramid, No. | the mythical city of Tula, capital of | 32, Anctent and Egyptian Order of | the Toltec Empire, has been found dS Of AmhelSt Gnen | Sciote, September 3, at an all- | and translated into English by John California ceremonial | H. Cornyn, American newspaperman, Degree at Wesleyan | soutnern Middletown, May 26 UP) —The | which will eclipse any Masonic ini- Mmaster of the Asztec language and onorary degree of doctor of laws | tiation in the history of the state, | fOr many years professor of litera- iwas conferred by Wesleyan univer- it was announced today by Oscar|ture at the Mexican National uni- isity upon President George D. Olds | Holt, toparch of the local pyramid. | versity. of Amherst college foday at a con- | Lindbergh made out his applica-| The poem is entitled “Song to | tion for admission to the San Diego Quetzalcoatt.” : to | Pyramid on May 9 while he was su- President James L. McConaughy by | no “the ¢ Doan Erani B Nsholson Tns socat perintending the construction of his | President Olds was presented = 1READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS plane here. He is a member oli FOR BEST RESULTS “George Danlel Olds, Stomach Feel Hollow |the theorei . that three score years | {accomplishments,” was the greeting|is good and nothing disagrees Wwith| “Adlerika, in addition to its intes- aughy. J ! clements. Dr. J. Weaver: “In my 50 years’ Metropolitan contralto, sailed {or‘sla. and restless sleep. wedding of her eldest grandchild, acts upon BOTH upper and lower |inated from my system.” ture, Mme. Shcumann-Heink laugh- If bowels move daily. you will be| No matter what vou have tried for Bridgeport — State's tences given three young safe rob- bers who plead guilty to burglary; prison sen- | ers of the occasion were President | Olds and President Harry A. Gar- mathematician for 40 years, a leader | among your colleagues, inspiring 'and ten need not mark the limits of| “I had gas on the stomach and constipation, GAS bloating, indiges- a man's usefullness; president of a|Would wake up with a hollow feel-|tion or sick headache, ONE spoon- (ot President McConaughy as he con- | me.”—Mrs. Mary Noble. | ferred the degree. | Adlerika is a compound of the|tinal cleansing, checks the growth of intestinal bacteria.” | tinal Stasis, a disease due to mod-‘ |ern ways of living and which is|practice, T have found nothing to excel Adlerika Gertrude Greif, who is to marry a bowel, giving the intestines al Dr. F. M. P. (name withheld by Lelpsig professor June 15. “l use Adlerika in all garette case and sunk at sea is con- [ed and replied: | surprised how much more old mat- |tained in the will of John Joseph! “I want to keep on singing until |ter Adlerika brings out which may ur stomach and bowels, Adlerika | will surprise you. In New Britain ! Sturzlinger, filed for probate yester- day. He died in Washington May |10, leaving an estate of ‘“over §10,- [000” income of which goes to a sis- ter and .the principal, at her death, to charity. George Cotone, 21, and Anthomy Lucia, 21, get one to two yvears, and Frank Betcau 28, two to four years. Bridgeport — Indictment for mur- der in second degree returned by Eat this new rice food for health Ready for anything—after your breakfast of Heinz Rice Flakes! Crispy, crunchy, golden-brown flakes with a flavor like freshly popped popcorn. And their crispness isn’t discouraged milk or cream! Where does this popcorn flavor come from? Why do they retain their crispness? By virtue of a special process. A process developed, ownc. and used exclusively by Heinz !¢« « And there is still another happy result of this new process for flaking rice. It enables Heinz to use the natural roughage’ element of the rice itself. This imparts a moisture-absorbing quality which is one of Nature’s best eliminative aids. Now, for the first time, Heinz has devel- oped this corrective feature in a cereal food for you...Heinz Rice Flakes are good for chil- dren and grown-ups. by HEINZ Rice FLAKE TASTE GOOD —DO GOOD fleld of Willlams college who re- {teacher, affectionally called by your great college, n ar us geographical- | ing as if I had not eaten for days.' ful always brings relief. Following the convocation a re. best salins intestinal cleanser with| Dr. A. C. Curl: “I prescribe Ad- SAILS FOR GERMANY J. E. Puckett: “After using Ad- |REAL cleansing and bringing out | request): e you never|bowel cases. Some require only one I have at least one great-grand- | have been causing all your trouble.|at the Packard Drug Co. and other celved the same honorary degree ’ from Wesleyan in 1909, scholarly | (first name by many student genera- jtions at Amherst; demonstrator of 1¥. ke us in :cals, ahead of us in|Since taking Adlerika, my appetite| Doctors Praise Adlerika Dr. H. L. Shoub, New York, jception for President Olds was held | glycerine, buckthorn, cascara and| |at the home of President McCon- |other expelling and detergent|lerika with highly satisfactory re- excellent for Intes-|sults.” New York, May 26 () — Mme. |often the true cause of sour stom- Ernestine Schumann-Heink, famous |ach, gas bloating, nervous dyspep- |lerika, I feal better than for 20 Germany last night to attend the| Unlike most medicines, Adlerika years. Awful impurities were elim- When asked at the pier if she old poisonous matter planned to retire in the near fu-|thought was in your system. 'Even|dose.” child. | In slight disorders, like occasional|druggist | | Electricity And Gas, Hand In Hand, Lead The Uitilities The total capital investment in the eleven major American public utilities is approxi- mately $25,000,000,000. In estimating the total capital investment in the electric light and power and the manufactured gas industries of this country, the best au- thorities give a combined total of $10,000,000,000. Gas and electricity, natural economic partners in the field of public service, rep- The reason for this is that )3 s tanal many utilities companies conduct more than one class of business, and that separate valuations of gas and electric properties often contain duplications. We believe this fact is worth the attention of investors interested in public utilities. Out of our twenty years’ ex- perience in this investment field we can be of definite assistance to you as an in- vestor in gas and electric securities. Even more important than the reasons for this com- bined estimate is the es- timate itself. PUTNAM & CO. Members New York and Hartford Stock Exchanges 6 Central Row, Hartford, Conn. Telephone 2-1141- 31 West Main Street, New Britain, Conn. Telephone 2040 On Holiday Trips Comifort — Safety — Mileage With FISK BALLOON CORDS On Memorial Day and on all other days you will enjoy smooth safe rides on Fisk Balloon Cords. At the end of the summer when the mileage has piled up, you will begin to realize why millions of motorists praise the-long, long wear of Fisk Balloon Cords. New England Industries Support You Support New England Industries Fisk Tires are made and sold in New England “FISK SAYS IT WITH MILEAG CFISK( “After All, There Must Be Something in Friendship that is Greater Than All this Mushy Love Between Man and Woman” That was the opinion of Phil, the youthful hero of Idah McGlone Gibson’s great American serial “My Son’s Sweethearts” Both loved the same woman. One, hindered by friendship, worshipped her from afar—the other, care- less of her feelings, but sure of her love, depended upon the loyalty of his friend to protect her and shield him. Did it? Read the answer in Idah McGlone Gibson’s won- derful serial “MY SONS SWEETHEARTS’ Begin it Saturday and read it every day thereafter . exclusively in the Herald. '