New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 14, 1927, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 BOBBY JONES STARTS WELL BUT RUNS INTO TROUBLE _ SHOOTS Cooper Flmshes in 74 and Has Temporary Lead Over Champion in Golf Tourney. Oakmont, Pa., June 14 (A—Find- ing varieties of trouble atter a flashy getaway, Bobby Jones, the defending titleholder, wound up with a 76, four | over par, for the first 18 holes of the 72 hole American championship hunt today. Harry Cooper, of Calif., hind Jones, scored 74, open golf below the champion, and gained a | temporary lead over the field. Coop- er, like Jones, needed 39 to get home after going out in 35, two un- der par. An agle” three on the par five n away flying but he began finding dif- flculties on the fourth hole, where he took three shots in a sand trap. from then on he had periodic lapse. particularly with his approaches and only some exceptional putting saved him from compiling a higher score. The champion had four single putt | sreens on the outward nine and two | coming home, ranging 10 to 35 feet. | After making the turn even with par, Jones went steadily until the 15th, where he took a six, two over var, losing another stroke to par on the 16th and a fourth on the home green, where he required three putts. Detail of Play Jones missed a birdie three inches of the 363-yard ond, hol- ing for a par four. He also was down in par four on the 42§-yard third, his first putt stopping an inch wide of the cup. . The Atlanta ace was banging his second shots, wood or iron, greens with deadly accuracy. On the 536-yard fourth, Bobby's second shot, a brassie, found the vdge of a trap just off the green. The ball was in heavy sand and Jones struck disaster for the first time, taking three niblick shots be- fore excavating out of one trap, then another and on to the green. He recovered by sinking a 13-foot putt, for a six, one over par. This left him one under perfect figures by (Continued on Page 18) SEEKS MANDAMUS TO GAIN BLDG. PERMIT: Azukas Asks That Ruther- ford Be Summoned Into Court Attorney Lawrence J. Golon will present an application Thomas J. Malloy in the court of common pleas this afternoon re- questing that Building Inspector A. N. Rutherford be summoned into court to show cause why building permits should not be issued to Julia Azukas for the erection of two two family houses, one at 175 Win- throp street and the second at 181! Winthrop street. Inspector Rutherford this after- noon refused Azukas permits after ' consulting with the corporation counsel. The zone, it is claimed, i now laid out for two-family hou but an application has been m for a restriction to one-family unit | houses and it is the claim of the in- spector that the appeal restricts him | from issuing a permit pending hear- ing before the board of adjustment. This contention is denied by Attor- T Golon. As far as city records | indicate, this is the first time the city has been summoned into court in an effort to require issuance of a building permit. Reduction of Troops In Rhineland Asked | Geneva, Swtizerland, June 14 (®— Reduction of the army of ou‘upmmn in the Rhincland, which still num- bers 70,000, and the question of al- lied ratification of the dismantling of | the German fortresses near the Pol- ish frontier which the Germans an nounce as completed, were scheduled for consideration at a meeting this | afternoon of the five Locarno pow ers, France, German: Belgium, Great Britain and Italy. Great Britain and Italy are par- ticipating in the meeting because guarantors of peace on the under the Locarno treaty, they are entitled to have a voice in any change in the status of the situation there, Greenwood St. Man Is Reported as Missing Harry Camp of 146 Greenwood street is missing from home, accord- | t ing to report to the police today by his wife, Mrs. Beatrice He is 46 years of age and has brown eyes, gray hair, weighs 195 pounds! and is about 5 ft. 11 He is a foreman in the William H. C 4 in. the in height employ SNOW IN KANSAS Kansas City, Mo., June 14 (P— A June snow in Kansas was add- ed yesterday (o a of weath- cr freaks recorded In the south- west this year. Light flakes of snow fell for a brief period yesterday afternoon at Ottawa, Kas. The thermome- ter there registered 50 degre Sacramento, | finishing a few minutes be- | two strokes | t hole sent the Atlanta amateur | to the | to Judge | Rhine | of | Allen Construction | 'NECTICUT, Water’s Tribute to Lindbergh A 70 IN FIRST 18 NEW SITE SELECTED ' FOR FARMERS’ MARKET Produce Exchange to Be| Located on Shurberg Property Removal of the farm produce | market from Commercial street will be effected in the early part of next | week when the Shurberg lot in the | rear of Mohican market will be taken over under a plaa perfected | | today in a conference at the office | o: Chief of Police William C. Hart. The movement to locate the mar- | ket at some spot other than a city treet was sponsored by Councilman amucl Sablotsky after the police and fire department protested aguinst traffoc and fire hazards at- tending trading on Commercial | street. At the last council meeting Sablotsky declared in favor of im- | mediate action anf insisted the scheme could be worked out within {a month in spite of previous fuilure part of council committees to | fon the obtain a site and perfect an agr ment which would be satisfactory to all concerned. The committee’s re- port to the common council tomor- | | row night will substantiate the sixth | ‘\\'ard councilman’s contention. | Chiet Hart will detail = pohvrrmanl to the market, whose duty it will be | Lo sce that each farmer pays a fee of 32.50, which will be Shurberg’s| compensation for usc of the land, | and will also allot the stalls and see | that every trader is in ris proper a marvelous view of New Y Lindbergh hove in view, numerable hoats shown st er Manhattan All in honor of one young man, returning via Was from which he started his epic flight to Paris. aming toward the waterfront—is this splendid spectacle! It's ork harbor as Colonel Charles A. ngton to the cit’y One of the in- Patter, official the low- the Macom, welcoming (NEA boat” of the City at the time. At the right center, its grecting. Below the fi York sight-secing attraction. lines is a part of the tremend “Lindy” a tribute unexampled in place. The board of public works | and health department will be asked 9 Farmers will be notiied of the change when they take ap their po- | IN MII]HLE WEST sitions in the Comm reial street market tomorrow and will be told when the shitt will be effected. | The principal objector o the pres- . . ent market is Chief William J. \xohlyHammofld wm Be FlI‘S( S[O[) e department, Uhict Noble | r P [l t 01‘ resident 10 DEDIGATE MEMQRU\L .l\mrl(lble in se of fires which would make it necessary for the ap- Party Will Reach Destination Latc | paratus to pass throuza the mar- ket place. The congestion brought about by the presence of more than | | 60 wagons and trucks gave the po- | lice department considesable con- | l'cern also. | Several sites were under consider- | |ation, including the plot In the rear | of Central Junior High school, but | the school committee at its last| mceting was almost unanimous in | | declining to allow that 1ot to be con- | verted into a market. | The council committee consis ! Alderman David [ | Councilmen | Thom B. rank §, Tomorrow Finishing Trip By Automobile—Postmaster New in Group. President Coolidge’s Special Train En Route to South Dakota, Cumber- land, Md., June 14.—{(P—Anticipa- ting two months of outdoor lif amid rustic surroundings in the | Black Hils of South Dakota, Pres- " lident Coolidge today sped westward ot (o U { through Ohio and Northern India to "Poli . {Hammond where he stops over this Police Release Suspect [atternoon to dedlcate Held for Investigation | Memorial park. Harold Clanfy, aged 30, of Spring-| It is the first trip westward the icld and Hartford, was sed | president has made since last |Il from police custody by ective [ and both he and Mrs. Coolidge we Sergeant McCue this afternoon, aft-|up early to view the passing coun- er having been detained since 1[tryside. Leaving Washington at o'clock this morning when Officer | o'clock last night both started m | William McMurray stopped him on|long journey by turning out the Main street because his actions|lights in their car soon after their -onsed the officer’s suspicions, | departure and retiving early for a The Springfield police have a rec-|long night’s sleep. The | ord of Clancy, they told Sergeant|party will reach its destination late MeCu dating back to 1908 when | tomorrow, detraining at Rapid City he was arrested for juvenile delin-|and from there traveling by automo- ! quency, and since then he has been | bile to the state game lodge, rested for theft and ny. Helsummer residence, 32 miles awa has no police record in Hartford, | where he has been living of late.| his desk clear and he was prepared rgeant McCue told him to be out|to devote the first few days away to v Britain in fifteen minut ;rwluxmlon. As a result reading as | or McMurray saw Claney| well as sightsecing was in order to- | Inokl!l'.’ in store windows and appar- | day and tomorrow. ntly wandering about with no ob-| Reaching Hammond jective. When searched he was|today he planned & two hour stop- ‘vovm:! to be carrying a flashlight. a|over there during which he was to number of keys, a police whistle | and a number of wallets. ed of rman Fay, John G. and Cadwell. lare (Continued on Page 8) RAILROAD MEN SUSPECTED . OF FLOGGING MRS. BOWERS, ]Arrests Expe.cte.d—High“ K JER"ME I"ES' School Principal and| w AS FAM[]US AU'I'HUR Foreman Now in' Cus- ‘ tody. Blmsh Writer Has Cere- bral Hemorrhage—Wrote “Three Men in a Boat” | | i June 14 (T—With sucd charging them with ting in the flogging of Mrs, | Ansley Bowers, 38, and her son, | Floyd, 15, early Sund the arre of Elmer Clark, a railroad condus A tor and Charles Thom ailroad ithorsied employe was expected :xu(horl-.l:“h'v‘( Loty Mr. Jerome, best known W particl Northampton, -Jerome K. England, June 14 Jerome, noted Brit- at a Northampton from al e cer who was perhaps the for his “Thice ) a boat,” was stricken on January 6 last | 2t Northampton w 2m & motor {tour and was placed in a hospital cre. While his condition continued | serious, reeent reports were to the that he lad improving principal of the High school near her Lowry, foreman of a fur- v, were sted it on gimilar char; and re- leased on honds of §$500 ing preliminary hearing. The warrants for the arre: four men were issued Floyd Bowers swearing that he rec- ognized them as four of the twelve | {men who took him and his mother | from their home near the public quare here shortly before daybreak Sunday. Both agree and Lowry de- clared they knew nothing of the af- Their cases probably will be nted to the zrand jury which ! meets carly in July. Mrs. Bowers, and J. Acree, nville T. R, niture fa and effeet daily. been The adventures of thr one hoat on a river holid England endeared Jero ome to the English-readi !the beginning of the neties, pla ling a elerk, who turned < hoolmaster and then author, in the front rank of F h humorists. For years the adv. “Three Men in a Doat” men in ' tures of Floyd were have been (Coutinued on Page 8) (Continued on Page Eight) the Wicker | presidential | the | Mr. Coolidge left Washington with after lunch | hem- | en dn | Liquor Smuggling Plot i Involves Madge Bellamy Names of Motion Pict e U. S. District Attorney In Los Angeles—Officials Arrested. Los Angeles, June 14 (P—The names of Madge Bellamy, motion ! picture star, and her mother, Mrs. \nne Philpot, were linked with a federal investigation of an alleged liquor smuggling conspiracy here istant United States Dis- George Channesian g«nll\r-rr! evidence which he expects [to lay before a grand jury tomor- row. Channesian announced that the een star and her mother had been ed to appear before him to an- swer questions regarding their knowledge of treatment and libertics cen federal prisoners in the Orange county jail during the past vear, when the smuggling conspiracy is alleged to have been in full swing. Mrs. Philpot was said to have sveral visits to a man in the jail who was serving a ientenr'evfor liquor law violations. No date was set for the appear- ance of the two women, znd it was announced that the time for ques- | suit the tioning would be fixed to actress’ convenience. A chiet deputy county, which adj county on the south, peace and three others have arrested in connection with the in- vestigation. Federal officers charge certain Orange county officers por- nmitted smuggling of liquor through their territory and reccived a “rake- off” for the privilege. Federal officials did the names of other persons who the d for question eriff of Orange ns Los Angcles not reveal “prominent” g. roat is Held firmly in check a justice of the ' been | 1id would be call- | : MYSTERIOUS CAPTIVE MAY BE ‘STRANGLER' 1 Winnipeg Police Have Man | ‘ Who May Have Mur- | dered Many Women | | Winnipes, Manitoba, June 14 (P— \L.ly police squads after a secarch lecovering range of sixty miles, re-| irned to Winnipeg late last night! with a man suspected of being the | “strangle ponsible for the mur- | der of Mrs. Emily Patterson, 27, and Lola Cowan, 14 year old school | girl, and a number of women and| |children in the United States. He| |was arrested while walking along! | the railway tracks at Reaburn, 35 | miles west of Winuipes, and brougit !0 police headquarters here, but de- tectives refused to comment. It w reported, that he was wearing a| gray suit and that his description tallied with that of the murderer. Armed with sawed oif shotguns, | revolvers and rifles and with a sup- i ply of tear gas bombs, and aided provincial officers and troopers from Tuedo hzrracks, the police | Istarted the search yesterday after-| {noon when it was reported that the Iman was roaming the district west | of Winnipeg. The hody of Mrs. Patterson, | er of two children, {@ bed by her husband. She [ heen strangled to de: T |5irl, who had been missing lier home for four days, w: | murdercd in a rooming house in the | heart of Winnipeg's business district. Police officers from the United | | States, in Winnipeg on the way to a | | police chiefs' convention fn Windsor. Ont., expressed the opinion that the murders were similar to those com- | mitted by & man described as “The | Gorilla” in at least half a dozen cit-| lies in the United State | The winnipeg poli up | more than 100 yesterday, | ng them later when they fur- | satisfactory alibis. The pro- incial government has offered a re- | ward of $1,000 for the of | the slayer. | moth- | was found undc from rounded suspeets ‘ 1ill WE \l'Hl ll | New Britain and vicinity: ! Rain tonigh ‘Wednesday generally fair, not much change in temperature. {vealed today {which [ bo Germany s found | | De Pinedo Ha: TALESHT TELLS oF POLISH RELATIONS : |Lithuania in Strained Atti- tude—Soviets’ Three De- mands Are Acceptable Geneva, June 14 (UP)—A state of ch August Polish forcign minister, re- war exists in Europe of wh world in general is unaware, the weski, in an interview with the in which he detailed Po- lanc Lith he said, still insists that war exists with Poland over Vilna, Poland acquired from Lith- nan Poland, on the other hand, Zaleski said, insists that peace vails between the two nations, pres: 1nia, “We recently sent a note to r,nh-: foreign minister said, | officially recognize ' uania,” the “asking that she » with Poland Our relations with all our neigh- re isfactor; 1 am con- 1 that the off's (soviet minister to Poland) as. sassination furnishes the ba amicable s as the so already been He said vine lement of that incident, accepted by Poland.” Poland's relations ere “fully normal” had been fully tin economic ones W that all stion settled exeept cor | “for which an amicable solution can be founa.! (Continued on Page s.) Ambition To Circumnavigate World Without Making Stop| June 14 Pinedo, flier, it ere Milan, cesco De contine stop i the Cor today A representative of the paper erviewed e airman stopped route to clona want to mai the world, not even once,” De Pincdo stops ruin the real ot flying. All rest (UP)—TFran- Italian four- Jires to @ non- around the world, Della Sera revealed when Lisbon, en way of B Rome by e a flight around stopping said. “These adventure days speil relations with her m‘lghbors.| sovict note on Voik- | of an | s three demands have | TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1927.-TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Service, New York Lmum) of New York, and Lindbergh was aboard ft In the right background is the Statue of Liberty. just off the Battery is a fircboat spr: Aauarium, famous > by police ous crowd waiting to pay the city's annals of welcome. } NEW HAVEN' ROAD ng s t ew 1 Its Gentral Proper\y URGED TO GLEANUP ure Star and Her Mother On List Asked to Impmve Appearauce U i of Those to Appear Befor: Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending Tune 11th ... 14,374 PRICE THREE CENTS LINDBERGH VISITS BUDDIES AT NEW YORK FLYING FIELDS AFTERNOON PLANS CHANGED BELLANCA PLANE | AGAIN THREATENED| German Doctor Tries to Attach for Bill Levine Owes Him Berlin, June 14 (UP)—Legal diffi- culties which threatened for a time to prevent the departure of the Bel- lanca monoplane Columbia on its trans-Atlantic flight again menaced the plane today. Only the hasty intervention of the German government, it was revealed today, prevented Dr. Julius Puppe, a physician of Krefeld, Germany, now in New York, from attaching the Columbia Monday for alleged debt. Puppe claimed that Charles A. Le- vine, backer of the Columbia’s flight and passenger in the plane when rence D. Chamberlin piloted it across the Atlantic to a non-stop dis- tance record, owed him 46,000 !marks, (approximately $9,000) for {medical attention. | Monday afternoon a German | |sheriff appeared at Tempelhot air- 1d with an order to attach the Columbia in behalf of Puppe. Offi- | cials of Lufthansa, the German civil | aviation organization, persuaded the | sheriff to delay action, emphasizing | |that attachmert of the Bellanca plane would create bad feeling in the United States. © 46,000 mark Puppe by Levine for medical services in 1925, Le- vine said he delivered this sum to his allegedly owed | Vienna attorney, Koritz, for payment | to Puppe. | Officials of the United States em- bassy immediately got in touch with the German ministry of transport and the latter even offered to ad- vance the sum claimed by Puppe in order to thwart the attachment. Levine's business Maurice Frenkel, meanwhile arrang until Wednesda lawyer, was en route from Vienna to Berlin today. | ‘The incident caused an agitated (FRESH PAINT DEMANDED E:ftifi:i:‘fm“;;“;:.l o taita ('ondllion of Main Street and Untidy Arcade Railroad Officials, A< delegation of nd merchants on Ma of the railroad committec of council and representatives of ¢ Haven' road at city hall ving before R. O. the reccntly appoin nt of Watcrbury div criticisms that i ion, have ck: arcade, ther promise done |crossover at the tr: | cleanliness in the | ting arrange iheard Mr. O omething will the conditions made it plain, {could not make be however, that detinite will take steps to 1 st oan appre *h' to the wished by the spokesmen. pany ing about jat 1 ffairs | Councilman Thomas B. !man of the railroad committee, pr ided. ilmen W | Samuel | Nair, Chief W. C ‘pack, Dr. J. I, Kei Doyle, William € Morans, Kel D. Williams ¥ son of the chamber of | Mr. O'Hanley, Mr. Greer and | Cascy of the New Haven road. i i W. Green, slotsky, Alderman D. L. eny, Thomas J R. H. Ben- (Continued on Page 21) Crlileized 8t Puppe’s Interview of Business Men With property owners street north met with the | plane which is not Levine's but be- the common the | last d su- of the condition of the the lack of and the « they | that to improve complained of.” He he promises Ibut he believed the raitrond com- | ate of Fay, chair- Others present were Coun- adwell, rt, Henry Schu- City Engineer J. commerce, Mr. tates embassy. Puppe, who now is in New York, cabled Levine Tues- Crossing | day congratulating him on his suc- ful flight. Rickard Muelle! nepherw, is now representing nim here. Frenkel informed Mueller that Le- vine has $25,000 on deposit at the Deutsche bank, her and that $10,- 000 of that sum could be attached if necessary Instead of attaching the longs to the Columbia Aircraft com- pany. It was announced today that | Chamberlin and Levine would fly in a Lufthans plane from Baden- | Baden to Berlin Thursd: Ifly from Berlin to Bremen to meet {Mrs. Cha berlin and Mrs. Levine who are en route from New York. I. was hoped today that serving the attachment might be avoided settle any ‘1 bt which might exist. The Prussian ministry of justice reprimanded the Tempelhof district judge for issuing the writ of attach- ment without realizing that it would | nullify the benefit to German-Amer- jcan relations resulting from the achievenient of the Bellanca plane. Mecnjou to Marry Miss Carver Soon T.os Angeles, June 14 (P—The Ex- r says Adolph Menjou of the has disclosed that after obtains her final divorce decrec a year from now, jricd. Her husband is Ira Hill |New York city photographer. { Menjou's o8y final divorce de-| cree will be awarded in October, he said. 'MRS. LINDBERGH IS GUEST pre- | FRENGH PLANE DROPS; | ing for Flight to India This Morning La Bou t, I¢ | Captain ©or Pelletie noted French long dis and his navigator, M {1y escaped death today heavily loaded plane hopping off o \a flight to Karachi, Indi ance, June r Doisy, | @estroyed by fire. | The French plax {for the 4,400 mils afrmen had heped to broak the re [ord set up by Clarence 1. Chamber: |iin on his New York to |tiight in tie | biz Lafter it had taken 'downward a few ‘m; Le Bourget. wily loaded off nd ‘e moment the plane struck the {ground, the two aviators leaped from AVIATORS UNINJUREB; !Captain Doisy Was Start- with | and 14 (P— aviator, . Gonin, narrow- | trip by which the Germany Bellunea plane Colum- was unable to get much altitude nosed minutss after leav- AT REPORTERS’ LUNCHEON Mother of Air Viking| | Holds Fort in New York While Son Is Absent. June 14 @ Lindbergh, moth- of the Air, 1 dozen repor ew Y Mre Evangelin or of the the fort oin today ood mornin ting after they terview her | pose this is the inqui Coming into the dining room of the Frazee apartment she smiled casantly at the gathering anc hen took a scat at the head of the k. Lodge Viking inst ag a she said in| had finished in- “Well, T sup son. n crashed | yap1o on which were a lace spread labout two miles from here and Was o S of bachelor but- tons and pink carnations. She wore a green crepe dress. Rested by a good night's sleep, she [faced her questioncrs confidently. | Lindbergh, nding the board, watched her closely Asked about their plans, she re- {minded the reporters that “we know {nothing about the future." | My son’s flight has nothing to do | with me,” she added. “That's all his |own affair. 1| “How did you like yesterday's re- 1| | the cockpit unhurt. An exrlosion fol- | caption 2" lowed scarcely a moment later. The | litres cf gasoline |burning of 5,000 (Continued on Page Four) “It was a remarkable | said, smiling. (Continued on Page 18) comprises a bill| representative, | ed with the sheriff to delay action | ay and would | ince plenty of cash was available to | they will be mar-| 1d | side- | “How could T help liking 1t?” she | |School Children’s Event in Central Park Called Off —TIs Considering Tour of Country New York, June 14.—(#)—Charles A. Lindbergh made flying trip— by automobile—to Mitchel and Curtiss flying fields on Long Island carly today to pay an informal call on his friends the pilots, mechanics and officers who helped in his preparations for his New York to Paris hop. Slipping out of the Park avenue apartment where he and his mother had spent the night, Lindbergh got a about 7 o'cloci before the first newspaper reporters have ar- rived. He rode in the ear of “asey” Jones, Curtiss test pilot, and Casey” himself was at the wheelq A hard rain, which later necessi- tated abandonment of the school children’s welcome celebration heduled for Central park this ternoon, did not prevent Lind- bergh from carrying out his wish te thank “the fellows” of the airflelds for their courtesies not only at the time of his takeoff but on his ar- rival at Mitchel field from Washe ington yesterday. He paid his respects to Major Davidson, in charge of operations at Mitchel field, and then, as “just ane other pilot,” he chatted with mem« bers of the operating force, all of whom hurried to shake his hand. One of his acts was to autograph the funnel through which had been poured the gasoline that carried the Spirit of St. Louls across the Atlan- | tic. Leaving Mitchel field he drove to | Curtiss field, close by, where he re- newed acquaintances with his bud- dies of less than a month ago, and then returned to his apartment. The trip to the aviation grounds occupied about three hours of Lind- bergh's time. The program for the remainder of the day, in view of the | cancellation of the Central park celebration, was indefinite, but it was expected that he and his mother might take a short automobile ride in the afternoon, after luncheon at the Newspaper club, coming back to their temporary home in time to prepare for the dinner which was to be given Lindbergh by the city of New York at the Commodore Hotel tonight. Whether Lindbergh own plane back to St. Washington or Mitchel Ficld at the conclusion of the New York celebra- tion was still undetermined today. 1f he decides to hop off from Washing- ton, where the Spirit of St. Louis still awaits him, he will go to the capital by train from this city, prob= ably Friday morning. Receiving newspaper reporters in his temporary Park avenue home this morning, Lindbergh said that | no decision had been made regard- ing the return trip, but that a choice between the two points of departure | would be made later. Lindbergh is considering a tour of many of the cities of the country in will fly his Louis from (Continued on Page Four) FLARES MAY INDICATE NUNGESSER’S PLIGHT Signals Reported in North- ern Quebec by Forestry Employe yn Carver, his screen protege, | Quebee, Que., June 14 (A—The possibility that Captains Charles Nungesser and Francois Coli, miss. ing French trans-Atlantic aviators, may be stranded in the north of the province of Quebec was raised |today by receipt of a telegram at {the parliament building from a forestry employe at St. Germain {township, north of Saguenay river. The man stated that for half an {hour on Sunday night, beginning at about eight o'clock, standard time, | distress signals in the form of flares sent up at intervals of about three minutes, were seen in the mountains north of the township. The flares were seen by four per- sons, The flares used were modern and |it is pointed out that the Indians ortrappers in that would |light only fires in cas The Quebec government is exerts ing y cffort to get more | formation on the matter as speed- ily as possible. | Paris, June 14 (A—Thc report |that the missing French fliers, Nune gesser and Coli might be in North- ern Quebec, based on the sighting of | flares was discounted here by states I'ment that they left their flares bes [ hind when they hopped off from La | Bourget field on their attempted rans-Atlantic flight. | Babies in Jer Cii | Named After Lindbergh Jersey City, N. J. June 14 (P— | Two eight pound boys born yesters lday in" Greenville hospital have been named after Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh. Charles Lindbergh Rupp arrived at noon and cight hours later the stork declivered Charles Lindbergh Curley. HERRICK TO RETURN Washington. June 14 (P—Ambas- |sador Herrick at Paris «ill sail for the United States on June 22 for his annual vacation which is expesied to keep him away from his post untl) | sarly in September.

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