New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 9, 1927, Page 3

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— e e L AR NEW BRITA AL SHITH SCORES UNUSUAL ViCTORY Yoters Stand by Him in Re- fecting Election Amendment New York, Nov. 9 (UP)—Gover- | r Al Smith won an impressive vie- yesterday when voters of the ite followed his lead in rejecting to hold thé amendment governor's slections in presidential years and wproving cight other amendments sponsored by him One of the amendments permits New York city to borrow $300,000, ) for new subway constructior York city and the state over- s hielmingly defeated amendment No. 6, which would provided * a four year term for governor, clection in presidential \ vote in the city is esti- have been three to one ¢ purpose of this amendment was to increase the terms of office of the governor, licutenant governor, outroller, attorney general und state «nators from two to four years, and embiymen from one to two + would have be- the 1928 election. « in his opposition ot . was heartily sup- por wic organ: ion 1 the state and by in- ependent republicans and indepen- nts generally. Smith and his cohorts had argued that the coml. tion of st and national elections at the same time would prevent voters from paying attention to stat issues in € wted that amendment No. 6 will have nodefeated hy a wority in the state of more than In the city the democrats won the ories they inticipated fn the cotion of icial officials. The democratic slato von by a large A carrying an in- 1se in t ernor's salary from S10 to $25.000, s the city ithough it met with opposition up state. Late estimates ated that t had been approved is amend- ment also carricd an increase of the licutenant governor's salary from 006 to $10,000 and cach member the legislature from §$1,500 Amendment No. 2. which gives York cify it to incur 100,000 debts for subway con- struction i excess of its debt limit is estimated to have carr the by a majority of about 140 200 UNEMPLOYED START “MARCH ON LONDON" Workless to Call Great Britain's At- tention to Employment Conditions in Coal Ficlds of South Wales, wport, Wales, Nov. 8 (UP) 300 unemployed miners start- rehoon London” today ttention of Great Brit- unemployment conditions in the coul ficlds of South Wales. the Most ol marchers w e young en, although a few old ones hob- Wong with sticks. They intend making a demonstra- Trafalgar Square, and expect 0 send a deputation to the prime inister, calling attention to the fact 1t between forty and fifty thou- sand miners in South Wales arce un- mployed. Mz ot relief | Tuptey of loc ion a 1y of them are with- nse of the near bank- vernments, The num! of marchers had been limited to les 300 so that he size of the might not sccome unwieldly, Labor leaders have arranged to feed the men at icks and labor of march. The 1 ave promised that the men Will be handled with strict discipline. Salvation Ar Is along t Detr()it’ i‘?lcc[fl Lindy’s Granduncle Mayor Detroit, Nov. 9 (UP)-——John € 1o granduncle of Col. Charles \. Lindbergh, was elected mayor of Tay Detroit y ing out his vet opponent Mayor John W. Smith, by 9,000 votes Returns from all but nine of the cily's 606 precinets today gave Lodg 115,177 votes as compared with 10 021 for Smith. Lodge made no campaign what- cver, He was drafted by 50,000 citizens to run, and throughout the campaign he remained silent. On the other hand, Mayor Smith made a two-fisted speaking campaign, pleading for re-election on the ground that he was fit. True Story for December Out Now! Seventeen absorbing, heart-gripping stories of real life—the kind of narratives that have made True Story Magazine the favorite with over two million readers. Buy it today. '[rue Sto On Sale at all newsstands—25¢ ;Simple, Terse, Uniform Traffic | Code Governs Planes In Flight Rules Controlling Airplanes Afford Fliers Advantage | of Brevity and Simplicity—Regulations Similar In | Fundamentals to Automobile Laws. | ris : must Jand the ship against the wind L (This is the last of a serics of commerce or is noncommercial, OF | ana. save in an emergency, he is not | St Louis, Nov. 9 (P—The brutal i articles dealing with all phases of | in foreign, interstate or intra-state permitted to spiral down. Thus, [robbery and murder of an aged wo- : aviation in this country.—Ed.) nuvigutlon in the United States, and | the manner of stapplng a plano 1s man recluse of Zwingle, Towa, was 8 S | By FRANK J. CARMODY whether the aircraft is registered or | specified. | Unitorm trafiic regulations, only a | is havigating in a civil airway.” It | In the case of an aircraft in dis. “°'Vod liere yesterday, police believ- C l Y W dream in the motoring world, have | 1S by that there are no 100D- | tress, all other planes on ths ground | &% With arrest of two nattily aress- | GONCOIA'S Ouflg oman De- prevailed from the holes, th i ficl the it every ine that gets into to the the universal S arlal operation code, P of motordom's great- The motorist’s first rule of the shortcomings info an outstand- | roud, that of kecping over to the | . also applies in the air. The general right-of st knows, th rule that the river must flound 1oto f confli i vi Fas the right-of-way, also is th a i il as well as the |y nt in the rules governing 1 avia- |y > operation. As the most mo- tc ile of the aerial vehicles, the ' Lere t plane is r ired to give way to air- | I nowhere will he on in the regulat manner of his flyir and tie latte turn, mu vield to balloons, either fixed or free. The pur regulation is any, it would m that The most mane uverable | N0 necessity whatever for | craft is required to do the dodging. | traffic rules when there are only | nition of the fact that the \ few thousand planes using the vast | airplane is a fast-traveling craft air space above the United S to be found in the fact that none It is pointed out, in answer to il ept military and plant-dusting that a majority of those pla s may approach closer than seeing service lefinitely estab- 0 feet to each other It is inter- lished air e the same ai s to note in tl ction that ports and generally traveling much while op one plane numbers of motor cars to p over or under an- a po r highway. other, ons specify that it Eye to the Wy not do There 1s an unex- Then, again, the air traific 1 d in the aerial rules were drawn with an eye to the respect to passing an overtaken ure. At one time, there w 0 plane. Inste of going to the left, nor itomobiles than as the motorist does, the flyer must rirplanes today, and, unfortunate pull off to the right, there was no thought of uniformity Ihe ich to a maxi- of the regulations goverr their | mum i the air traffic u There was no ey o ) s is the minimum altitude guide the law mal it . An automobile is pre- tomohbile first 1 1 be da erous if driven at Tl A4, and, comparably, a 18 1 plar 1 if flown that tude to enahle and th { landing place result *or other trouble, Motorists who have attempted to no airy pilot wade through forty or fifty finely vt con 1 “parts of printed of the state in many cments exeopt | air assembly of persons. Iu addition | | brakes, however, the traffic regula- t the man on the | & IN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1927 S s e it is specified in no uncertain terms | that “no person shall acrovatically fly an airplane carrying passengers | plan of governm: fcr hire or reward.” | In Cincinnati, Rules for Emergencics l from the mur The motorist s told how to do| | cated the charte almost everything but stop. Beyond | dates for counci specifying the condition ot the car's | tions deal lightly with this phase of driving. Not so in the case of the | Gaggll]g Y]C[]lll plane. When practicable, the pilot | and in the air must give way for jts “d Yout ecified for the right side of the : and a red beam for the left They must be of such power as to be visible for at least two mil ies the nigh attemipt to land, LI (i There is a vast difference hetween | 214 Hurold Kramer, 10 o the lights of an automobils ang |'!I% Mont. Police found 3 se on airplane, as shown by s el ,“‘y'm,“ | the air traffic rules. Three hg: ’ nitted, nust be carried by all planes en- . 0% Youths admitted, 1 in night flying. A green light el 7 Police s bound of GRANDSON SLAYS ~«:ive Youth and Companion Tell of o= > said they were Leon- , To Great of t No- Clevelan wh candid 1 or of the | pe ons of any off-year, the manager | clared 2 ote ncomplete returns | gpe cipal eclection indi- | (e r committee candi- | (. I had defeated the GIRL GANDIDATE N. H didats « | Teated in Mayoralty Cheerful Nov. 8 (U'P would try ag: n waged by tor *“Althoug] sive drive, polled 4,464 votes. 'em next Miss Jones after had been counted. said ture r political were a bit indefinite r inittal defeat would by no means cut short I was rather co victory,” ng that I should be defeated so 1 is do a Miss Jones had conducted a ning nistration far tim the de- | final plans for | tics—esps but her career. | | view, and I gue: attractive young |€Ord Were afraid to “my defeat came as no | ¢hi surprise. It was sur- rday’s ely upon primary, seasoned ppOse my yvouth against me dfully conse two Mayor William H. Con- vative, resentative : total of 1 Haskell Mer Miss tio New the| The governor ¢ L over Go g Word was ived from police at At the re f the ship, as far aft e it Mrs. McKittrick as possible, a white iight, visible 3 %6 deaih ifn her for at least three miles, must be car- ar here, and her ried. as suspected as li These, in the main, are the only |isappeared shortly after the erime rules one has to know to pilot a Co sa his ndmoth wa plane in accordance with the accept- | hreath en he left her. Pending | ed conception of safety. What a contrast in their brevity and sim- apprise plicity with ths traffic regulations | trick i that to motor vehicles! Doubt- < time goes on and the )ecomes more numerous, mod- 1ditions may be made, the code will have the & of national application | h enforcement will continue to | further questioning, police air ot ifications or but ndn rcottag always ernt nt. h the to the tion's experience wit automo- bile is proving golden comer into transportation Ullman TFeature v Political Lineup Unchanged by Election nton, N. J., Nov. 9 (UP) The lineup of New Jersey Columl I re as changed ry little as apparently result of Oliio yesterday's | (oday dic the youths that Mrs, McKit- e confessions, Cota nned to rob the wo- RIS FIRST REBUKE Voters Crush “Pet Bill" Fathered by Drys i 11 cases, municipal, ion L ) permit of a omplete returns today showed in the vain quest for precise knowl- 1 Iy safe emergeney ng. public t two assem- | jus ‘ 5 1o how to «irive, would find 1 no case shall be less than | blymen and had 1ed one sena- oy t traffic rules an amazing r 7 At no time shail th This will give the republicans on in ind brevity ss than 500 feet exeept same strong control of both | in yvesterday's hallot con but six pages, four re it indispensable to an in s that they have he ity expected to apy 300,0 by seven inches, of the small hook ! operation, such as plant-| It was believed also that the $30.- | “{y10fficial returns today from let which sets forth all the regula- d 000,000 bond proposal for new roads | 475 nets gave opponents of tions governing United States ai ly 1d carried by a majority of ap-!ihg Anti-Saloon 609.4 commere i phases of proximately 20,000 Clurns | compared with a There are 1 n rfe for showed a defeat for the proposal | g, f the r ‘ s in T it when the more densely populat- The only o right down to bu to do with it shaties, de- | ¢ counties reporte ch showed a | p, chiropractors hill statement that “in or fined as “intentional manenvers not | heavy majority in favor of the 1ove the professi to prevent undue neeessary to air navigation,” are for- hond proposal. on hy medics was interstate and foreign air co n over congested arcas and ST ‘ vote carly today [ the air traffic rules are to the pl i at an altitnde of READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS 7.043 \ o 410,860 for th b er the aireraft is engaged inlless than 2,000 feet over an open- FOR YOUR WANTS i B 5 against, Ready for Immediate Delivery The New 1928 R adiola 20 in a beautiful This Includes R C A Tubes Speaker Batteries and Down Payment and $2 \\'e:k Installation console Complete A Radio that is outstanding in performance 1:30 to 10:10 Tt Continuous Shows Daily During Our Anniversary : W Ja ~4‘Lv ) SEIVES Jauraine (offee as well have the best : .3 3 s Come On, New ritain ! Come On, Everybody ! Come! Join the Happy Crowds! Who Will Come to Our First ANNIVERSARY Next Week!! Novelties Galore! Starting Sunday MARION DAVIES —in— “The Fair Co-Ed” With Organ and Orche: Party! Surprises! STARTING MONDAY with 7 ACTS ] Truly, A Show of Shows! when politicians, 1 still hope to be governor some ." she said today. pect to win all the time in poli- ally at the beginning, 1 was untried and supposedly {nexpe- ricnced, although I had studied in college with a political “One can't career In the people of Con- give me a Miss Jones’ confidence of victory election had been her showing in she eliminated former Flint and State Edward D. Haskell, 1030 votes which received in the ¢, she expected, would for the most part go to her in the election Mississippi Re-elects T. G. Bilbo Governor Nov. yesterda) T cent of the voting 1t to the polls, former odore 9 (UP)-—In in which G. Bilbo was g was only a formal- He was 11n the August democratie rnor Denn it al Features

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