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BOJNOWSKI DECORATED American Legion Marching In Memorial Day Parade | | LINDBERGH WILL REACH NEW YORK "FOR ACTIVITY DURING WaR | iR TSI JUNE 14: DIPLOMATIC JEALOUSIES Prosented it Cros o NETEE KILLED IN EUROPE HASTENING HIS RETURN Honor and Citation | i Signed by President of AN“ MANY IN‘"JRED ’ ‘Ambassador Houghton Sl P | WML WAR DEAD HONORED ‘ Ruto Tragedies | ‘: fivoid ?v[;ending Dip- 9 New Briti Kiive Yemo- P : ' | lomats Whose Capitals THO DIE N HARTFORD i e ”’“‘*i o | P Wil Be Unb Motorcyclist and Onlooker Killed— S g | _ ‘ i i 0 VISIt. gre caune crune st o New Britain Boy Chosen For Trip ~ 1[] PERSONS SHOT 'vereravs v panang, — IN TAMMI“TIN[‘;“:"W“' Day Excrcises Held at Total of Nine ILdves in Three Ac- . | toDenmark As Typical Yankee Lad .}[T—Ypmm‘ ]}E1 ARl e entral Park and Court of Honor times of minor hurts in automobile |52 ¥ 5 lsi xYOlllldl’;d wm Pfll‘l 0[ Mob' accidents growing out of Memorial One of 100 American ! g Trying to Break Tnto Jail ' day pilgrimages which brought the| @ 2 4l 3 { held at the Soldiers and heaviest traffic of the year to New Youngsters Selected fol' England roads. | Railroad trains figured in three Visit to Land of Danes. ‘TROOPS N = 3 | gnd at the Court of Honor at the en- | rance to Walnut Hill pa of the crashes with an aggregate ed the cemeteries { . Honors U. S. Flier 1, Impressive Exercises, At-| I tended by 1,000, Mark Signal Honor Conferred |‘ on Local Priest. 'Coolidge Names Four Cabinet Officers to Pre- pare National Recog- nition for Homecoming of National Hero. A cross of honor and citation has | been presented to Rev. Lucyan Boj- nowski by Consul-General Thaddeus Marynowskl for the Polish govern- ment in appreciation of the local priest’s werk in organization of the Polish legion of the French army and for financial assistance given during the war. The citation is signed, by Ignacy Moscicki, president of Poland. Ac- companying the parchment is a heavy bronze cross attached to a ribbon of red and white, the national colors. An inscription on the em- blem proclaims the government's ap- | < cidents. Boston, May 31 (A—Nineteen per- sons wer dead, several others in- While Thousands Lay Tlowers on Graves of Relatives. n paid tribute to its r dead yesterday when impres- sive Memorial day exercises New Brit a ; KING GEORGE GIVES HIM FLYING CROSS loss of nine lives. Four Die in Crash I Eagle Scout Albert Loomis of |Infuriated Crowd, Determined to| preciation for the work of Father Bojnowski. Citation Delayed The award was recommended in 1918 being one of the first acts of appreciation proposed following the war's conclusion. Because of the strife attendant upon the elevation of the Pilsudski government it was single accident was taken near Con- way, N. H, where four persons met fered serious injury when their ma- |chine was struck by a Boston & Maine passenger train. They were residents -of Kazar Falls, Me., returning from a hollday instant death and four others suf- | The largest toll of the day for a| M8 ! | Troop 2, B. 8. A., has been chosen as | one of & group of 100 typical Amer- | ican lads who will be guosts in Dan- ish homes this summer and present American boyhood at its best to the people of Denmark. The group will be taken abroad by hour battle between Lynch Siayer of Five, Undeterred | 0 12y flowers When Sprayed With Ammonia— | friends and the day was Even Dare Bullets, Tampa, Fla, May 31 (P—A si police office Thousands v/ nd wreaths on the relatives and ohserved, | as never before, as an occasion for recalling to mind those who had de- parted through the gates of death. | The Red, White and Blue was scen at every point, flags being flown | | graves of beloved KING GEORGE V. { London, May 31 (UP)—Charles A. Lindbergh today announced he would {leave from Cherbourgh, France, on Saturday for the United States tahoard the U. §. destroyer Breck, ar- )rh‘ing in New York on June 14. Lindbergh said his plane, “Spirit of St. Louis,” in which he made his non-stop flight from New York to Paris, would be shipped from South- ampton on Thursday aboard the George Washington, of the United States lines. Lindbergh said he would fly from here to Paris on Thursday in a ma- chine of the British Royal Afr forc After saying farewell to Paris, he will fly in the same machine to Cher- bourg and embark on the Breck. Dr. Sven V. |and infuriated civilians that counted [ rrom public building and homes as Knudsen, noted explorer and prof = Il persons wounded ended this ,p jndication that, while the day was sor at the University of Copenhagen. | 1OMInE when a company of one et e for honoring those who %o i o y : iundred national guardsmen took | ~qve their lives in war, the spirit for T¢ will be accompanied by the head- | up g position hehind machine guns .nieh they perished is still alive in masters of several prep schools, a|and tear gas bombs, in the Hills- <o hearts of their countrymen. | nurse, and Dr. Knudsen himself, | borough jail here, Veterans of three wars marched in {leaving New York July 23 and re- Sin et arade it i s hornine: (ihe Another Crossing Tragedy turning about the middle of Septem- 2MOh, Btorms al). Fm.,,‘ Tegion having the largest At Falmouth, Mr. and Mrs. Wil-| b8 : | ver. | Throughout the night a mob of 2.- tation 114 Mersrl davain liam Beillig of Lawrence and Mrs. : | Each boy will be required to con- | 00 Persons had stormed the jail in history of the local post. Beillig's sister, Mrs. Elsie Achilles, 2 tribute some American spert or oth- | A1 attempt to get B. F. Levins, con- 1y TLlcn L N 0T Gnaal by Mavor met death in another grade crossing er avocation. Scout Loomis will enter '©55¢d murderer. Despite assurances o oo "6 \weld, members of the accident. Carl Achilles, of Cam- |scouting, swimming and diving, 0f Sherift Hicrs that the prisoncy ment marched in large bridge, driver of the machine and | bugling, boys' orchestra work, and | 'ad been removed to another jail, Headed by Mayor Weld, husband of one of the dead women, {tennis. The older boys will present |!N® Mob persisted in their attempts his overscas hat but in- | wus taken to a Brockton hospital. baseball, golf, foothall, track, glee 0 Preak into the jail and were not arching on foot with In the third crash involving a s, and President T'ro ot signed at that time and its de- livery has been held up until now. It had been the wish of President Moscicki that the presentation be made by Jan Ciechanowski, Poland’s ambassador to Washington, but the minister's absence from the country resulted in the duty falling upon Consul-General ~ Marynowski. He came here Suday evening and in the presence of more than 1,000 mem- bers of the Sacred Heart parish, panned the “Polonia Restituti” on Father Bojnowski, employing the full court rite which included the im- planting of two Kkisses upon the clergyman's cheeks. Gr~teful to New Britain iconsul Marynowski spoke feeling- ¥ of the homeland's gratitude at tha response made by New Britain Poles and their religious leader. He called attentlon to the fact that the Sacred Heart parish sent 906 men to answer the call to arms and of this number, 600 went into ihe Polish Legion. As an evidence of Father Bojnowski’'s thorough- ness in holding down the costs of | war he pointed out that men were | sent from New Britain to the train- ing camp in Canada at a cost of $6 a man whereas the average eost was between $20 and $35 in other citles. He lauded the congregation for having raised $120,000 during the World war as a fund to care for disabled veterans, Out of this money every returning veteran re- celved a $50 bonus. Several fam- ilies are being given financial aid, ‘ some have been restored to health through payments out of this fund, and one veteran has been given passage to his homeland where | Climatic conditions ‘are better for his health. Poles of New Britain | have also, he reminded, subserined |20 Others Missing in Tenn., for more than a half million dol- j lars worth of Liberty Bonds. Va., and Ky.—Damage | Father Bojnowskl is one of two orpe | Connecticut men who have been May Be Million given the “Polonia Restitutl,” the other being Dr. B. Smykowskl of | Bridgeport, who was associated with Herbert Hoover in handling Poland's economic questions during trip to the White Mountains. Mrs. Harold Day, her eight-year-old daughter and Mrs. Gerald Spring and her infant daughter were killed. Harold Day and Gerald Spring, hus- bands of the two women, and two | sons of the Days were injured. MYSTERY PLANE SEEN OUT OVER ATLANTIC Only Explanation Is That It Was Army Plane, nt From Warship National Celebration Washington, May 31 (UP) — A truly national celebration is planned for Captain Charles Lindbergh upon his return home from European triumphs. With word today that the destroy- ho wor2 New York v airplan Cunard lin May 31 (P—A mys- | sighted by the ! vivania yesterday | about 450 miles northwest of the | Azores, headed eastward, said radio advices to the line today from Cap- tain David Bone of the liner. er Breck will bring him across the The ridio message, received at | Atlantic, the president named a spe- midnight, said: | cial committec of four cabinet mem- “Our position latitude 45.47 north, | bers to a national celebration in longitude 32.29 west. Observed air- | his honor. ane about twenty miles south Secretary of War Davis, Postmas- ring fo eastward.” ter General New, Secretary of Navy No planes are known to be in that | Wilbur and Secretary of Commerce vicinity. The only trans-Atlantic flier | Hoover were designated by Mr. Cool- Commander De Pinedo is still at the | idge to meet immediately as a com- Azores where his machine is under- | mittee to determine the celebration going repairs, | plans. The plane, when sighted, was di- | rectly over the established cast | bound trans-Atlantic track and about in mid-ocean. i The Transylvania left here and is bound for Antwerp sEow. | i \ W A smali sedan travelling at a fast rate of speed careened off the high- way and into a tree near Athol with resultant death to three Gardner youths, Leo P. Landry, 16; Edmond J. Willlams, 18, and George Gilletfs. A fourth companion was believed dying. Tn another accldent which claimed | more than one life, two Stockbridge | Sedan Hits Tree | Invited to White House It was also announced Lindbergh would be invited to the White House, The president desires to present May | personally to the young flyer the dis- and ' tinguished flying cross hut will abide Gla by any arrangement which Lind- Irank Tichenor, publisher of Aero | hergh or the committee from his Digest and trustee of the fund raised | home town desire to make. The to send an American plane to New- | pregident, it was announced, will of- foundland in search —of Nungesser | fer Lindbergh whatever hospitality and Coli, suid he believed the mys- | he will aceept. tery plane had not flown from land | Thy special cabinet committee is but was a military plane shot into | expected to meet at 4 o'clock this the air from catapult of a warship | afternoon. This committee will be for practice in night maneuvers. |in charge of all preparations for na- “That's just a guess,” he gaid. | tional recognition of Lindbergh. “but no plane is known to have left| \fr., Coolidge intends also to pro- cither shore of the Atlantic for such | mote Lindbergh to a higher office in a flight. I believe it will be found | ihe reserve corps than the captaincy tha. the plane was shot off by a| e now holds. Forelgn Jealousies Washington, May 31 (P—Fear of Ambassador Houghton at London _(Continued on Page Four) DEATH TOLL GLIMBS T0 16 IN BAD STORM of Veterans, Women's Relief Corps and other feminine organizations did | not appear in the parade. The Red Cross nurses, with their plcturesque | uniforms, were conspicuous by their absence. New Dritain’s milits an organizations and |turned out strong. There was no dearth of cars and the G. A. R. had more representatives in the parade than it had a year ago. Commander H. Woods of the G. A. R. stated | that there were 12 men In parade| yesterday from Stanley Post as com- od to 10 a year ‘he platoon of police was Sergeant Thomas ALBERT LOOMIS. The loeal boy reccived this oppor- | *°red is deputics to open fire on the | met instant death and his ten-year- | tunity in a fortunate manner. j erowd. > 3 | liam H. Judd more than 50 per cent old daughter was fatally injured | 1 11 Persons Wounded lof the members of the elty govern- |taken to the Boston scout jambor Nine men and two women are feet by a train. Ross’ wife was seri- | at which guests were Dr, Knudsen!known to have heen wounded. Re- | estimate of Town Clerk Alfred F. ously hurt but was expected to re- and Donald MacMillan, American ex- Thompson there were hetween 60 cover. had not been confirmed this morn- nd 70 city offi 1s out of the 125 |sponsored by a Massachusetts scout “or the first time, probably since | department, were resorted to by the | the organization —was formed, the {received camping instructions under | officers but the mob refused to di Meriden and Wallingford | Harry Jordan, famous rcout guide | verse. Some took up a position in a in the line of march as were the e o {and trapper and a nd of the other members of that organization. | Resorts Visited by State the jail and from that point of van- | Boy Scouts turned out strong. Boy % i % ., |lage re e = | .. and Margaret Goodwin Loomis of | use as battering rams ugainst the ‘mw» a striking appearance. New Haven, May 31 (P —Thirteen | 90 Lincoln street and will be 14| walls of the building. lrteRsint s it iy { persons who were summoned to ap- gt Down \Yall marchers, members of the wome: | pear before United States Commis-(Pupil at the Central Junior High SrEanations Lthe Tadtea Aeilary |sioner. Robert H. Alcorn fo give | %chool. His progress in accuting was |in breaking an opening in onc of the Y exceptionally rapid after his joining | walls. Two of the: attaske fell | 3 the South Il:;fi‘;::. fi:’fe:’“o; ‘,'olaflh“‘,“}(::fi:?_;hroop, and he advanced to the gu-|alcly arrested and placed in cell of eagle rank in less | With daylight came the gvardsmen. -5 |than a year. nen | fion to the jail. There was a tem- C“"”HVE ST“RY B”l”]INfi ':porn v lull before the battle broke |out again. Sharp shooters for a time i ot B o | deterred even when the sheriff or- |train, Otho Ross of Pine Point, Tem. of the Common Council, Wil- Two | = — years ago, as a birthday gift, he was | when their machine was hurled WIMANY_R“A" HBUSES lN ment were in Jine. According to the | norts that others also hal been shot | plorer. He made the acquaintance ot o participated in the parade. la chemical squad of ths local fire | exccutive. He was known to have : Girl Scouts drum corps was missed tiegro chureh across the street from | Loomis family, and his Eagle scout ! P . Police Over Week-End cout marching four abreast carry- olice Over W eek-En | ties. Others secured heavy timbers to Due to the Iact that they were { years old his next birthday. He i In one attack, 50 men succeeded to the Sons of Veterans, Daughters bonds and have a date set for hear- i | S onineats Congregational church | through the hole and were immedi- of raids by federal agents Sat. | Preme pinnacl alle by Ietoral agentelate Bab; | | Piling out om motor trucks and au- y and veter- They were James Ceriani, ire tighters Melone, and John Joss, his allege ! Eavtonder Toier Umne“d‘e: "{Irzi‘;: {resumed their firing. But the appea Hill Tan,- Otto’ Titner Bartendes: |ance of the soldiers and announce- Edward Welssgraber, 1711 Club, o ] ment that two more companies were Meriden, Theodore Jackson, barten- | ondie ey foithe moang Jrom Lakes Ider; Harris Mitchis, Derby Talls| Nerrior Dok nt Wi Martin) far fo nn, Philip Reilly, bartender; Philip | ' New e e B o R the i ey SRl mdm;Rapllael to Erect New | ;s served to cool the anser of the D g et Jordan, parten-) Structure in Business REvelantylotalanesaa Mevartiiney oo e bt d s oy ! ; oy became quiet and although | pecney. ern, James Recady, bartender. ny continued to mill about the| The picturesque lines of school ago. warship, cither American or fore; and probably foreign.” Tichenor said that such a such a in J. Bristol, Tenn, May 31 (P—At least sixteen persons were killed during Sunday night and Monday as rain, wind, hall and electrical plane ly have flying the war. Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war, also possesses the cross of honor. After the priest had responded to the remarks of the visiting con- sul Sunday night, a check for $500 was presented him by the commit- tee under whose supervision a minstrel show was given recently, and school children presented him with & like sum.of money from their personal savings. These funds will be used in the building pro- gram of the parish. House of Commons Stops To Cheer Lindbergh Tondon, May 31 (A —Another fumultuous welcome was given Cap- tain Lindbergh when he drove up to Westminster this afternoon for his visit to the house of commons and his tea with Lady Astor. After acknowledging the cheers of those at the entrance, he was es- corted into the house and taken to a storms swept sections of three states —Virginia, Tennessee and Kentucky. More than twenty persons were re- ported missing. Early estimates of property damage places the total at $1,000,000. Mountain streams, swollen by heavy rains washed away home- steads. In some sections hail added to the damage done to standing crops. Kentucky, with ten deaths and more than twenty persons reported missing in the vicinity of Preston- | burg and Garrett, was the heaviest hit. Virginia and Tenncssee each { reported three killed. The dead: Kentucky, at Royalton, three drowned. Mrs, Agnes Bailey, 80, her daughter-in-law, Mrs. T. D. Bailey, 40, and grandson, Willard, 11; at Roxana >six drowned, Mrs. Chester Fields, Mrs. Green Cailahan and her two children, and two uni- dentified persons. At Ellscole, one drowned, unidentified. Virginia—At Gate City, three Of thirteen warrants issued by the | commissioner for the ralds, only sev- | en were served Saturday night. Sev-| enteen arrests were made as a result | of visits of the federal men to uwu‘ places at which alleged beer and as- sorted liquors which filled five trucks were seized. | From an unofficial source it was| learned today that the evidence on! which the issuance of the warrants| was based covered a period of more| than three months and had been ob- | tained, in part, by two Yale Divin-| ity school students who are working | their way through college. ! Hearings before Commissioner Al-| corn will probably start Friday of this week, the commissioner indicat- | ed, and continue for several days. | The proprictor and alleged bar- tender of the Long Hill Inn, Wall- ingford, where nearly fifty quarts of | alleged liquor were seized, had not appeared to post bonds at a late hour today. Saturday. | 1orts. Work was razing of thri owned by Lout site for a new five story house stores, begun Included is the Stevens which has been s half a century, and the Lee block, together with the smaller building which stands between. frame structure in the rear will also be removed. Mr. Raphael the detail of his plan for what will be one of the most extensive central blo | District : | | business blocks but the general out- | line are now being made for tructur The Stevens block housed Hudson lunch and a smaller store for several y Upper floors have the cent month ail, no further immediate disorders were anticipate to [and is allcged to building 10 [ ijlled Herman Merrill, his wife and business offices and | tyree children | heads with a heav Confes: ourth child Washington, May 31 (P—The fed- eral trade commission case against | has been worked out and plans;ihe Eastman Kodak company failed | new | today in the supreme court. Upholding the position taken by the highest tribunal that the Kodak in was report d To Killings levins was arres by crushing railroad tool. A badly injured. | ;s Levins said he killed | the Merrills thinking they were an- frame | gther family against whom he held Al grudge. ve confessed he | their | plause has ot announcea| Eastman Kodak Company | = children carrying flags and bouguets, {a feature of the old time Memorial | Day parades, were missing y ! day. The Boys' club fife and drum corps led by the instructor, Peter | A. McCrann, was greeted with ap- i all along the route. The | Philharmonie and American Legion supplied the rest of the music, | Theodore A. Johnson, past de- ‘pflrlm»'nt commander of the 1'nited ‘Sp:\ni\l\ War Veterans, was marshal, {and Harry C. Jackson, past state { commander of the American Le- lon, was chief of staff. At the exercises at the er- | Central | Wins in Supreme Court | 1. monument, Mavor Wela spoke| the ' jower courts, decided had They were not served | poon only partially occupied in re-|threc ext to the north is a | produce motion picture films, violated no law laboratories compa acquiring equipped any to {as follows: | “Once again we are permitted to| | gather in honor of the men of the| 1G. A. R. who gave their lives in | that great conflict, and the living comrades with whom we stand shoulder to shoulder in awed rever ence of the t of Memorial Day. Time may change the histories of the nations, but it can never efface ag would e radius that it might be visible to ti Transylvania when its mother ship w: over the horizon or out of sizht in the darkn RETURNS T0 PROVE SKELETON NOT HIS Charles Sadis Gives Family Ample Evidence He s Alive Determined that he would return to New Britain and put at ease the reports that the skeleton found in Mountain View, Plainville was his and that he was dead, Charles Sadis of Clark street returned to his home this weel to prove to his family that inability of Captain Charles A. Lindbergh to vis | countries might prove em lin dinlomatic circles is unde | have prompted the amba advise the New York to Paris {to return soon to the United States. Great pressure has been brought to hear on Ambassador Herrick at 'aris and Mr. Houghton hy other diplomats who desired the young iver to visit their capitals. Real- | ization that extension of Lindbergh's {tour hevond France, Belglum and England would virtually require him to visit all European countries lest | his omission of some countries be misconstruction, is believed to have jinspired Ambassador Houghton's proposal. The state department, which has had no hand in the conduct of Lind- bergh's tour is understood to have made no objection to Houghton's suggestions that Lindbergh return, although it has been realized that {the young aerial ambassador had | done much to cement America’s front seat in the distinguished strangers’ gallery, where he listen- ed to a discussion of the govern- ment's trade union bill, He was accompanied by Lord and Lady Astor, who explained the \ house proceedings to him. He re- {mained for some time engrossed in that he ls alive, | friendly relations abroad. He was in Massachusctts for sev- | Vice.AAdmiral Guy H. Burrage, eral months and when he returned | commander of the American naval to Connecticut the words, “You're | forces in European waters, noti wanted in New Rritain” were flung |the navy department today that he at him from acquaintances Who | had directed the destroyer Breck, read of him in the papers and who [now at Plymouth, England, to pre- heard his description through Sta-|pare to return Lindbergh to the building partly of frame and part-i The commission had sought to v of brick. The basement was used | compel the company to dispose of as a shoe store and the sccond floor | the laboratories which its contended by William J. Fallen’s restaurant | were acquired as a threat to force blameless by Coroner J. J. Desmond ,nq another store. 1lts upper floor |the Allied Laboratories association in a finding handed down today of | yae heen unoccupied. Stores on the | and others engaged in printing films the death of Charles Anggles, 6, of | it floor, o pool room on the sec- | for exhibition purposes to purchase New London on April 7. The boy| on the third|the raw films from the Eastman con- drowned, unidentified. Tennessee — Near _Elizabethtown, |two drowned, Mrs. Ruby Robinson and child. At Johnson City, one man electrocuted by a submerged live wire. The storm broke in the wake of a season of rains which already had ! from the memories and hearts of true Americans the significance of Memorial D “Comrades of the G. A. R.. the | love, the honor, the tributes that we {owe to vou, are debts of a grateful | I'nation that may never be repudiated | nor laid aside, and the very slight- DRIVE Norwich, May 31 (P | Harry Graicerstern of Baltic is held ond and clubrooms The debate. His presence caused a <tir among the parliamentarians and occupants of the galleries. oning Regulations Are Ipheld by Supreme Court \washington, "May 31 (UP)—Zon- ingregulations requiring new build- ing8¢o bet set back from the street in #ine with other buildings on the bloc) were held constitutional by thefnited States supreme court to- dagin & case appealed from Roan- okfl Va., challenging the validity of th@f clty's ordinance. ‘ PPPROVED AS EVIDENCE shington, May 31 (®—Liquor ipd by the coast guard from rum ers outside of the 12 mile limit be introduced as evidenced in W trials of the rum runners, the sufleme court decided today. left rivers and streams in a swollen condition. Few details were avail- able but as reports treked in from stricken sections over crippled com- munication lines today it was feared additional deaths and word of even greater property damage would be learned. Available reports slides that blocked highways and way lines and said that “more | than sixty houses, in widely scatter- ed areas were either demolished or badly damaged by flood waters. Eight slides between here and Ap- palachia blocked tracks of the Southern Railway and cut oft rail communication between the two cit- ies. Other alides were reported in castern Kentucky and southwest Virginia. In some sections high- days were reported inundated to a depth of from one to three feet, told of land was killed while riding a tricycle when he was struck by a truck op- erated by Graicerstern. FIGHT POSTPONED New York, May 31 (®—Threaten- ing weather today caused the post ponement of the 10-round welter. welght match between Al Mello of | Boston and Ace Hudkins of Nebras- | ka, scheduled tonight at the Queens boro Athletic club. It will be held | tomorrow night. | Police Sent Off Beats To Have Shoes Shined | Two policemen were sent oft | their beats by Sergeant Stadler | last night, with orders to have thelr shoes polished before re- | turning. In the opinion of the | sergeant the men's, shoes were | not in presentable condition. | | flooor make up the tenancy of the cprn. | Lee block. It is expected that wbout one|U, S, Legation at Peking month will be required to remove the present buildings after which the new operations will be commenced. First News Reels Showing Lindbergh Landing Arrive New York, May 31 (UP)—Firsf pictures and news recls of the ar- pating a Moved Nearer the Coast Washington, May 31 (#—Antica- possible increase in dis- | turbances in northern Chino, Pres | dent Coolidge has approved department plan for transferring the Peking legation of the United States | to some port nearer the coast. rival of Charles Lindbergh at Te | Bourget field and at the American embassy in Paris arrived today on the White Star liner Majestic. The pictures were printed in to- day's editions of the New York papers and the films in movie houses. The pictures and films were be- ing distributed through the interior by alr mail. * were shown | * THE WEATHER New Britain and vicinity: Unsettled, probably showers this afternoon and tonight. Wednesday generally fair and cool state 1 Tl | | est we can do is to join with you| {in solemn commemoration of the! day that means so much to everyone {and especially you men of the, (Continued on Page 12) Whole Family of 10 ‘ Il With Diphtheria | Abington, 8 ay 31 (UP) AL members of the family of | Arthur E. Nash of this town to- | day were confined to Massa- | chusetts Homeopathic hospital, in Boston, victims of diphtheria. i Nash, his wife and their eight children, ranging in age from 1 to 18 years, were tak:n to the liospital in three ambulances after health officials here had found that the whole family was . affiicted with the disease. in Koenig. tion W C, Hartford. Shortly after the skeleton was found in Plainville, Sadis’ son-in- law, John Moskell, an employe of J. M. Curtin company, began an investigation which brought him thought Bloomfleld, Suffield and other places where Sadis was known to have worked. He was within a few miles of his father-in-law Bloomfield but thinking that he would not be in a thickly populated woods nearby he did not drive to the place where Mr. Sadis was liv- ing. BABE HITS HOMI Philadelphia, May 31 (UP)—Bahe Ruth hit his 15th home run of the | |season in the first inning of today's _|double header between the Yanks and the Athletics. His drive brought in | United States. No mention was made whether Lindbergh's plane, the “Spirit of St. Louis,” would be brought back on the same vesscl, which is unsuited for such purpose. Admiral Burrage also transmitted [two dispatches ,he had received from i(‘npmm R. D. White, American naval jattache at Paris, regarding the fly- er's roturn, and a copy of his reply to these messages. The first message from ‘White read: “Captain Lindbergh desires to g on a destrover but believes his plans j will not permit unless a destroyer {can be especially dispatched for him {in advance of the regular salling date, Similar fnvitations have been extended by the United States lines and the French line.” Captain l (Continued on Page Fowr)