New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 10, 1927, Page 26

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1927, tomary ennul over spectacles and' [traft with the boys after the ar- receptions and become 80 enthusias- | the informant made his tic over welcoming the fiyer that | | pearance and was greatly surprised | that the officers had already made in the singles division. Shields, the 16 year old star ‘was put out of the tournament yesterday afternoon by Nell Sulilavn of Philadelphia. LETT AND BAGGS WININ TOURNEY Former Playing “Brilliant Game in Hartford Hartford, Conn,, June 10 (UP)— Miss Sarah Palfry, 14, of Brookline, Mass., was defeated today by Miss Alice Francis, of Orange, N. J., in the semi-finals in the women's singles for the New England cham- pionship. The scores were: 4—8, 6—4, 6—2. Mrs. Alfred H. Chapin, Jr, of Springfield, Mass., defeated Mrs. B, F. Stenz of New York, 4—6, 6—3, 6—4. The temperature on the court was over 100 degrees. Miss Francis collapsed at the end of her match, Mrs. Stenz was on the verge of col« lapse several times, Mrs. Chapin will meet Miss Fran, cii for the champlonship tomorrow. them. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn MG E 127 Main St. Phone 1409 aviators intend to visit Mn- and Vienna. They will fly to pital of Czechoslovakia, visiting the interna- exhibitlon as the rial club of Prague, is anxious to make a part ot his Euro- me as an tour | “T fee jcan possibly be Fternal 1ncd n by n mcitizen, built piane designed and feel their reception also is considered a | 6 9 | uN menace to Lindbergh's safety. So| |the capture. o far as the polico [ the authorities today were engngr.‘\!’ know, he was not implicated in any Y in perfecting plans for his protec- of the burglaries but he knew of —— i i | —_— | | iamahi [ (Continued from first page) [;I]MES BY AUT[] Along the parade route, the po- Mflfl F0lllld Defld in GaS'Flufl Bold Burglar Breaks Down p] p tD e lice authorities have urged that chil. After Sergeant McAvay concluded 5 - work.” dren be given the front places by the . . (}ldfl at W]]low Brook (Continued from First Page) |protecting ropes in the bellet that| HOME Friend of Ca[’neg]e Attorney Greenstein asked Ference Americans from all parts of Ger- | 5 the whether °"h“°¢ he “Pfi: '; say any- Bl | many were flocking %o Berlin today | pilot will receive plaudits and trib- {youngster in any attempt to set | thing to the court. 0" he re- | utes of a proud nation, such as have | close to the aviator. Colonel Lind- | % 5 city champion in the Herald-Junior |the American club tonight in honor | never bergh will be surrounded by mount. |story of a one-time brilliant mining | Cr ‘3.2,’,°“$‘,T{§‘,.}‘“{J"3.;’;’f§'.'"3‘.$f :’::tdc”te:;:uheto?x.ri:;e‘n};e rfi::v l:‘e’l‘:‘ Achievement marble shooting tour- | of the trans-Atlantic fliers, Clarence , Private citizen. sd cavalty apd police during the [SNEluser, Who Js Eald 1o bave ammsect %ot oy e n minutas allotios, |fuliyedl at: the NEactroma Iqele 2 it nament will take place at 10 o’clock | Chamberlin and Charles Levine, | Cabinet Officers parade and when he reaches the ¢d a fortune as an early associate of | " ', v 1 y o |to say. Judge Hungerford told him)day when George Lott of park. promised {0 see the climax, of their |members, Secretary of War Davis, | procession will be deployed around 98y in the death of <,harlos‘|ra_n.cls‘h°a I ahsabiodly: Ureschratate's| saa Tred B“‘f e Y‘g:‘c:“(‘; All boys who have Won scliool uisit to Berlin, from the social stand | Secretary Wilbur of - the navy and |the official reception stand to pro. King 70-vear-old rectuse, who lived | 18 B GO 00, FRCH DWSI 40 e PARER 0 oW Work city championships are asked to be on|point, was a gr hanquet by the | Postmaster General New, Colonel|tect both the aviator and President °" 89 ¢ents a day in the shadow of < " - - " eventually became convicts. Tru-;York in the third round which the Herald is donating to the | |,urgomaster was fo preseni (hem hundreds of thousands in & parade Aviators Big Part i ]hnol\\"\lfls) ”;e ""}-“rr:‘n'an Iy, Aleeping Avay from home and|| met's dorbles booth oot ‘;"m“‘iz champlon of each school in the ity. | with special plagues. of soldicrs, sailors and marines past | _American aviators are to play a {10 DHERROTAOOR & FElOrY 814 10 ooty thieving lead to burglary and | playing brilliant tennis and many Very rainy weeather will postpone| the capitol and along Pennsylvania |chiet role in the tribute to the for. “M¢nt section of Brooklyn, the aged n | nich 10 e 118 ABY ) cerved, and he did not know that it S chan Pl L SR EnOR DO nIOEs iy o | ment. |there be the escort of nearly 100 el %‘“‘n““: ';‘,‘!':;:‘Cz“:iu:‘,r:r;:zf\\'ould not be just as well it Ference 0¥ o inext reday There Prasident Coolidze will ex- planes on the last lap of his voy- g8 (8 BWE | went to prison now as later. Men- The champlon marble shooter for tend the welcome of the United |age, including the crack Selfridge b wnd e, complel ervy , an awin, PRt e e pin | 2 had scen newspapers delivercd daily, |1 Unnerved the youth, and drawing et on his breas - fers, ck Lindbergh w v = e B e y : R pHty 7 his breast the government high- |ers, but at the dock Lindbergh Gllins: 3b0n Llhats dseraton. is slccve across his eyen he cr pie e yardleloutine fin il ast award for aviation achievements, | puss through a double line of several | and sobbingly. asked s for sapother national tournament. oW ritain |the first distinguished fiylng ¢ross hundred fellow birdmen, many of 'windows and doors stuffed with | h " v Y 0 highest : dor of gas per.| Committing him to the reforma- el ke R by enel i e tha] Other Honorary Mcdals laurels in flylng. Z’f,',’f(”i;,f"d @ faint odor of gas per-|, Uy dge Hungerford remarked ‘u‘or:\z"b'.‘:.:; T B O S Clsees S e The fising cross s ‘but one of | Among those will be Commander ; 3 there 1 th 1bil 3 t of } ayers he birth bt many decorations which will be con- | Richard E. Byrd, the North Pole giploma s : - O R I e h d of the boy ir e £ diplemaiahoning Kink hiad graduat ity that confinement there might ac- Iax:ln‘g s onian Institution has awarded himiof the first trans-Atlantlc flight of |Framed certificates Indicated he had | COMPlish some good. The authorl vivi ontest to date, [the coveted Langley medal, given|tha NC-4; Lieutenants Erik Nels bachelor of arts and bachelor of whoever becomes city champion, Honors and gifts of a kind and 7 i e 3 Nelson |won bachelor of arts and bachelor of | T |only to the “founders of aviation." |and John Harding, of the army science degrees at the same school. 'n';)::‘r':vp‘;““af:j““&'sdf};‘f'}:z'"fi::: that he will represent the city well in Germany continue to be onterred the Hubbard medal, the |ng ; y | r contained | % % on the famous boardwalk marble d on Chamberlin and Levine | COnferred the ard | . the | Maughan, the dawn to dusk trans- (books by King on mining engineer- ' " St thev landed on German soil | d#coration reserved for famous ex-|continental pilot; Lieutenant Oakley |ing. Papers showed he was a life _‘t‘n"s g"’he‘m““m CitizengitoRE meels | Plorers, and the United States Flag | Kelly, coast to coast non-stop flier [member of the American Society m’:‘ In reply to Judge Hungerford, Reguirements . minister of communications, Herr- tion. his testimony, Assistant Prosecuting Dinner Dance Tonight. the crowds will not endanger The final games to determine the | for a dinger dance to be given by | New York, June 10 (M—The life Plied and took the witness stand. Harord, [June A0\ The frat | before been acorded to a fr. Snael o { id he did not k hat | was completed sh z tomorrow morning at Willow Brook | Another feature of a day that| Met at the dock by three cabinet |monument the soldiers from the |Andrew Carnegie, became known to- | the youth sald he did not know wha p ortly after noon to. e 5 ath taken by other youths who|York and Everett Smit v hand to be presented with the medals | jnunicipality of Berlin, at whigg the | Lindbergh will be the cynosure of |Coolidge. | Brooklyn bridge. P y h of New the event one week, otherwise the| wenue to the Washington monu-|mer air malil pilot. Noteonly will man was found dead in the d!ngy"('""" prison, Judge Hungerford ob- | look to him to win the championship ik tion of a prison sentence complete- 1927 will be sent fo Atlantic City for States to the young birdman and pin | field pursuit group of 21 singlescat. slahiang dmd amelled . gos [policeman was called. He found the | 219 SO0 can be assured this year that it will 1 owe it o Bellanca ¢ it | CVer to be struck off. whom also have won the On the wall of one room hung a |that the institution is a school of been materially increased within the ; e een materially increa red upon the aviator. The Smith- | qver; Commander A. C. Read, chief 'ed from Lehigh university in 1850, | Ities who have tried to help Ference the municipality can assured | profusion rarely hestowed on indi- : 1 don, ' the National Geographic society has i % i fns o e Nal grap world flight; Lieutenant Russell A well stocked library o o e Sy their trans-Atlanfic flight. | ¢ ] SHUT I]FI: ENfilNE jdssociation will present its cross of |ang Captain Hawthorne Gray, holder | Metallurgical engineers, WHEN GETTING GAS Failure to Do So May Result in, ve they heard their by President Von Foreign and other officials, bnt that one of RBerlin's Hindenburg, R res: n they learned stre planc—"Columbia strasse.” Cham- herlin received word also that the management of the principal brew- ery of Pilsen one of its brands of beer after him subject to his approval, and to pre- Secretary | is to be named after their | has offered to name | honor for glorification of the Amer- ican flag. A continuous round of honors and receptions then will await the knight of the air for the remainder of his Istay In Washington until early Mon- | day morning, when he will fly to New Yorlk. flight Plans Indefinite Although his trans-Atlantic air- plane, the Spirit of St. Louis, which of the world's altitude record. other person at the dock a Paris to An- will be Robert Nungesser, brother of the French ace who was lost in making 'w York flight. Death of Emma Borden Follows Sister’s Closely , Fall River, Mass, June 10 (#— Attorneys for Miss Emma Borden, BURGLARS CAUGHT IN TREETOP HUT 2 (Continued from First Page) | Ference said he worked some time | 'ago in a local factory. He left | school ahout two years ago, and has | not worked in some time, he sald. | Asked whether or not he knew of any job he could get if allowed his youth replied nega- not have left | school for five years to come, Judge | Hungerford remarked. NOTED PRIEST DIES. for the Graduation Outfits White Vests and other Lingerie White Corselettes and Corsets White Brassieres White Hosiery Fine of $50 |is being brought on the Memphis, will be immediately reascembled by navy aviation mechanics upon fits arrival, Colonel Lindbergh has not {vet decided definitely whether he | will fly this machine to New York. [ There has been a suggestion here he pilot an army amphibian plane White Crepe Dresses White Middies and Skirts to match . Jewelry and Handkerchiefs R G 3 . Handsome Lingerie, Hosiery, IQ k [k Burses, lfiong White Kid Gloves, %IQMI resses, Negligees— oomers FOR THE JUNE BRIDE are alwavs o Gitting e |sister of the late Lizzie A. Borden |time constructing their hut in the | Hoboken, N. J., June 10 (®—The today announced her death fn New |tree top, and to add to its safety | Very Rev. Felix Ward, %3, former market, N. H. this morning. Miss |they encircled it with a stout belt. | provincial of the Passionist Fathers { Borden has for many years led a| The original information leading [in the United States, died yesterday life of seclusion through illness, to the apprehension of the pair was | of a heart attack. Pope Pius XI con- | Her sister who in 1893 was ac-|glven the police by a boy aged |ferred upon Father Ward the medal quitted of the murder of her father |about 15, who had seen them going | “Pro Ecclesia Pontifice” tor his serv- Andrew J. Borden and her step- |towards the woods behind the Shut. | ices to the Roman Catholic church. mother, died only nine days ago. [tle Meadow club, cafrying the cook- e e Her will cuts off her sister from |ing utensils and the tent. Sergeant POSTMASTER CRITICIZED share in an estate valued at $1,000,-|0'Mara scoured the section until he | New York, June 10 (#)—Postmasy | —o0 bending, sitting, standi 1000 because she felt Emma was|located the °camp. It developed” ter General New ‘“is making a New Bathing Suits for Women and they xé:pt themselves to provided for adequate [later that the lad who turned over | mountain out of a mole hil “by his|\ M Cpidren every movement. ithe information made it his business | announced investigation of the e Trim and stylish for eveaing UNFILLED STEEL ORDERS !to tell the pair that the police were | transportation of 250 letters to Ger- ———— wear—comfortable and free ' New York, June 10.—(®—TUnfill- [on the trail, but he did not say any- | many in the Bellanca monoplane At $1.89—A very pleasing as- for sport or general wear. o4 orders of the United States Steel thing about having hetrayed his | Columbia, County Judge George W. N sortment of Dresses for Children Modesily Priced Corporation on May 31 totalled 3,- friends. Martin of Brooklyn, stated today. sizes 6 to 16 " Incottons$1.00t0$1.05 | |050,941 tons, against $3.456,132 on | Yesterday. while Sergeants jies 1 o116 years. Tn Rayon $2.95 to $4.95 April 30, a decrease of 405,191 tons. Avay and O'Mara were at the gy ZRE sent him with a tankard of honor. | Alfhough they have been in Berlin only a little more than three days, the American embassy where the fliers are stopping, fs filled with gifts—cigars and cigarettes, golden cigarette cases, and silver cup cases of cha ne, wearing appar- : h el and floral tributes. As neither s to land in New York harbor smokes and Chamberlin only drinks |and thus avoid the danger of the or occassionally some of the gifts | CrOWds expected to mass at the land- ire destined to find thefr way to |ing field on Staten JIsland. Another hospitals and other institutions. pilot then would fly the Epirit of St. The airmen were welcomed at a | Louis to New York. tra at the German Aecrial club yes- 100,000 Visitors terday afternoon where they made | In Washington, emblazoned with ntance of most of the liv- | flags and bunting and pictures of ing German war time aces and last | the aviator, the 500,000 population, nigi® they were guests at a gala jaugmented by more than 100,000 dinner given in their honor by the [visitors, has turned from its cus- Hartford, June 10 — Complaints have reached the state motor vehicle department of repeated violations of a law, compliance with wWhich is a simple matter, while failure to obey place occupants of cars in a dan- gerous position and subject to hor rible accident. This is the regula- tion providing that the engine must bhe shut off while gasoline or other fuel is being put in the tank of a motor vehicle. Failure to comply creates the haz- ards of fire and explésion, usnally ‘both., A maximum of $50 may be ‘imposed for violation. Both the per- son allowing his engine to run and the person filling the car while the engine is running are liable to pros- ecution, Several filling station owners have complained that certain patrons will not comply with this law even on | request, but go to another station when it is insisted that the motor be shut off during the filling process. | the acq Me- | v | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS‘} Intolerable Cruelty Charged in Divorce Suit Intolerable cruelty is set forth as the grounds on which Domenica Belfiore O’Andrea is petitioning for a divorce from Peter D'Andrea. The petitioner is represented by Attorney 8. G. Casale and the writ is return- able in the superior court the first Tuesday of September. * Constable Frank Clynes served the writ. The marriage took place in New Britain on August 27, 1913. The petitioner seeks, in addition to the divorce decree, custody of an adopt- ed child, allmony and the right to fesume her malden name. Dallas to Hong Kong Hop-Off June 23 Dallas, Texas, June 10 (R—The first hop-off in the proposed ; to Hengkong flight contest is uled for Tuesday, June 23, Wil E. Easterwood, Jr., donor of the $25,000 prize, announced tonight on receipts of official ent from Licutenants Ben St Windham, of Memphi two fliers will use an I plane equipped with a W wind motor. Stops will be permit- ted at San PFrancisco. Hawaii and the Philippines but Hongkong must be reached in 144 hours to win the prize. LACQUER AS BEAUTIFUL AS THE NAME IMPLIES New Quick Easy Way to refinish old furniture 0 and woodwork yourself No “Wet Paint” signs are needed with Peacock Lacquer! It dries in 20 minutes! No dust or lint can collect. No brush marks sags are produced. 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