New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 29, 1927, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LOSE §2,300 NOTE, ENTER HOOCH FIELD - Gouple Try fo Recoup by Open- ing Home fo Trade City Items Pres Prompt, ription service and at The Fair. economical.— 179 ! ken leg Il down s nwood als at Cr A new « r viola (uor laws was 3. J. Monkiewicz, ting t d by represer ind his wif ry’s Ladies T. A. a meet 3. hall this e EX-SCHOOL CHUMS, S DEAFMUTES, WED + Romance Which Began 17 Years| ~I Ago Gulminates at Altap Bastek in poiic gainst on olled ome time ago ible Joan 1at his w ome while he ctory, the attor tion of a ance started hool took place 50 in the American S t to the f in Hartford, when Nellle NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1927, 350 Children m——_;fl: t Enjoy Salvation Army Christmas Party iNflT[I] DEMOCRATIC LEADER SUCCUMBY | {Gavin McNab, 64, Dies i| San Francisco San Francisco, Dec. 20 (P—Gavin | McNab, 64, noted attorney, demo- |cratic leader and celebr: |conteur, is dead. He wi with apoplexy in his office day. Bench, bar, ldom, and the 'general public téned to pay tribute to the lawyer who started his career as a clerk in a hotel here and |became one of the best known at- |torneys in the United States, win- |ning fame as counsel for Mary Pick- ford, Jack Dempsey, Charles Ch |lin and the Doheny ofl interests. The climax of his career in poli- | tles came when, as head of the fornia. delegation to the democratic {convention which nominated John W. Davis for president, he was largely instrumental in holding the |delegates from 12 western states sol- idly behind William Gibbs McAdoo in the long deadlock between the McAdoo forces and those backing Al offl out from Old Rome in the | Wreckage of | found off These three set Orchard, Me, for monbdplane Old Glory. their plane later was Newfoundland. 19. Capt. Terry Tully. 20. Lieut. James Medcalf. Almost at the hour the Old Glory was sending an SOS. these two fliers in the Canadian plane Sir John Car- ling left Newfoundland for London. | They never were sighted. 1. Mrs. Irances Wilson Grayson. - Omdal. Brice Goldsborough. Tred Koehler. While this quartet can not yet be | definitely added to the list, likeli- | {hood that they will ever be found | decreases with cach passing liour. CURTIS BOOSTED OVER CHRISTHAS Kansas Senator Takes Step Toward White House Dee. 29 (UP)—Poli- the Christmas 3. 4. Washin, tical jockeying over | holidays had, ifl the opinion of poli- |tical experts here today, enhanced | CHILD IS FOUND; ABDUCTOR SOUGHT {Oakland Girl, 11, Safe in Hands of Police San Bernardino, Cal, Dec. 20 (P— With 11-year-old Evelyn Smith of Qakland, the victim of Californla’s cond kidnaping within the last iwo weeks, eafe in the hands of county officers here today, a search was under way for her accused ab- ductor, Ernest Arthur (“Robert”) McClelland, a paroled conviet. The discovery of the girl at the home of Mrs. Emma J. Spence at Redlands near here last night re- vealed that she had been there since Monday night throughout the time when the &warch for her and her Kidnaper was most intense. The girl's story told of an auto- mobile trip south from Oakland be- inning on the afternoon of Christ- !mas Day when McClelland obtained consent of her parents for hLer to accompany him to Pasadena. He aid his “wealthy” mother at Pasa- dena would adopt her. Although Evelyn told the Red- ntly purch under a b In view of al the assur not be bother the position of Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas, one of the two an- nounced candidates for the 1928 r publican presidential nomination. and g ' - ,: R % 4 . . | Smith. slizzi of this city, both . Tl ; 3 5 3 W | He became clerk in the old Occi- married at 9 # : : |dental hotel here, then famous as ¥'s church by Rev. the political headquarters of the w violation in 1 s Led i dy | |clty, and studied Jaw at odd mo- ! Developments brought Curtis into | » attorney > of threc years, | f8 S P ik | ments. favor with the so-called independent Judge Roche speech. Nel- | 4 4 S 1o o | McNab never held office by elec- [group which had hitherto favored S sterday that | Ao d ¢ | tion, except as delegate to the na- c George Norris of Nebra ence of 30 TEHL G dTlice tional conventions. By appointment choice. rking t 2 while Miglizzi | | he served in many capacities. Presi-{ Norris had Leen in poor hea onside an auto- | dent Wilson named him as a mem- |cently and his fricnds 10 loss of hear- | ber of the industrial labor confer- | would not be able to make 1 vears later | |ence which sought to end the steel |campaign ontside of Nebras d the school in Hartford | strike, and during the World War (like Curtis because he voted for the ol n e Photo by Jolmson & Petcrsop |he was on the aircraft board organ- | McNary-Haugen bill and other In- 07 G LSRR | E |ization committec. He was also|dependent measures although he e e Gl | named arbiter for shipbuilding labor |was republican floor leader of the {that \rv‘ kota independents jed the death this morning of John| Some similar plans were then came to New Britain and \\us}l.’ paign bu wve been sent by Two weeks ago, he was taken sick | Anna Kounaris, Mrs. Julia Nuche- m :ated the New Bri Rifle club Nellie ame fast | | disputes here. [5en were always together | et Tn New York this week Senator| | were 1 plans to pledge the for v,m.mnr Sorlie as a favorite son |Ondrick, 55 years old, of 33 West proneacl MongRa i !street, veteran employe of Russell |States of the northwest to a residgent of the nortliern scction |liis workers in Kansas and now are for the greatsst part of the time. being distributed there. Tt was| and he failed to rally. His condition became critical on Sunday and when more of Philadelphia, Mrs. Mury Martindale, Miss Nellic Ondrick, and st evening at vh(‘ local arm- match was close, botih nd Mrs. Flage, who | Nye, an ardent independent of North PNEUMONIA VICTIM whose ch of suceess were not |& Erwin Co., and a resident of this [Out the present tangle sti A member of the Greek Orthodox (doubtful whether headquarters | CPaTE®. death came today his wife and|Albert F. | Miss Susan Ondri ons, well. Middle Had- n caused mer- | | Dakota who has been working for 18 that some day | Norris, announced Curtis would not John Ondrick, 55, Lived Here or| | generally regarded as good as those Las[ 35 Y&’U‘S of Curtis. It was said Curtis would IL» amed City for the past 35 vears. |cause of Norris' failure Mr. Ondrick was born In Austria- |Bimself as a candid church, he was activo in several of | Would be epencd formally for him the church socleties. YFor the past|Ouiside of his home state, at least M"] HA““AM BESTS Mfg. | eight children were at his bedside. | Dr. Waterman Lyon, medical exam- | |John Ondrick, J seph, and | | Michacl Ondrick, all of this city; a new team in the league cores were as follows: | be objectionable and he favored the | as second choiee, and the delegation Hungary. He came to the United| Cnrtis doing Tittle about 23 years he was employed by Russell | until near convention time in June. President, and Mrs. Alice Hilliard Baby Oi Nmmeg League Shows iner, viewed the remains. |three brothers, Georze Ond aih New Britain Nowington lands police she was attacked by Mc- Clelland Sunday night when they spent the night in his car in an open ficld near Bakersfield, a physician who examined her said he found evi- dence only of an attempted but un- ault. told the officers that her first knowledge of the kidnaping came yesterday morning when she read of it in the newspapers, At that time botia the girl and McClel- land denied she had been kidnaped and declared that she was his small sister whom he was taking to visit his mother. Fear that her kidnaper would carry out threats made during the trip south kept her silent, Evelyn told the officers when at last they won her confidence. McCielland’s mother and his wite, who also lives at Pasadena, Loth de- nied having any knowledge of his whereabouts. His mother, however, told authoriti=s that he disappearsd with a 12-year-old girl of Parker, Ariz, several years ago, under eir- cumstances similar to those in this No charges were made in the Arizona case, she said, when the palr was located at the home of friends. Wher confronted by newspaper accounts of the kidnaping McClel- land flew into a storm of denials and Spence home 1in his “bor- rowed". car , declaring he would “straigliten this thing out,” and re- turn at noon to “tell them all about Mi wor SEg successtul Ith re- sc! searched the B; m. on December eived com on the ' Needy Families from th the houee, Nelghbors of the in court, he 1a had seen liguor n on several occasions, | estimony was not needed be 's plea of guilty the c cre disposed of, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney W. M. Greenstein moved for condemna- | yoq ™ They Calion i aonves uoprorgshe otk eniby e na. s through this medium and from ice, and Attorney Monkiewicz offer- | fionachip their relations developed 4 no objection. Judge Roct b «d it destroyed. After court, ; isked Sergeant ('Mara for of the liquor before it was bk nin but the sergeant told him ihe |poqged their assent when he called police were not allowed t 1te | o fhielr (nnEwers confiscated evidence ~6E6 attennen. by Blames Drink for Row at "()ml\ e e SR T John Cunningham, aged 40, honor, and Tony io of East Main street, pleaded ;;ul',\ best man. F Lenz the charge of breach of the and . both of this and assaulting his wife. Mrs. Cun- | city E % ningham testified that he has been i "oce, drinking heavily for the past several days and yesterday he assaulted They have been married 22 ve: Cunningham admitted that dri the cause of the troub factory where he 13 employed shut down for 10 days and he has bad time on his nds. Ju Roche imposed a suspended jail sen- ence of 10 days and placed him on obation, Officer George Mofiit wrest about 3 o'cloc rnoon on comy Drives Cycle Without License Robert Ross, aged 17, of 459 4 loyed at t ot, s of operating a mot a i nd v a4 $10 and osts. He admitted that ever d a license although he 1re he was required by one, Officer Hanford Dert testificd that & was notified about 4:3 afternoon that a motoreyc cd by Ross almost str Arch street and for his license the 10 produce it. CITY FROWNS ON SNAKE A5 DRESS Budapest Says Pink Povwder and Serpent Isn't Costume Dec. 20 s clothing ar riment by remar o friendship lasted the 11 years during which they ended the school together. They wght to read and write and form words with their lips and understand others when they po- served to t their “ause of for at- i state | case, order- stek shot e 1 marriag 1 F r Lyddy's lips Pneumonia, which followed com- being | dependent aighten | ed up he- to decla I\ Miss Clara Delbb ! 1d o Elm Hill to a He dld not return and Mrs. Spence called the Redlands pollce, Mrs. Spence, as a social worker, lad corresponded with McClelland ;at the time he was serving a term in Jolsom prison on a forgery were bridesn: Daniel Toce nd lh\m nic A rece mony served ption was held following th ind a wedding dinner was | noon to more- than 100 Supper was served at 6 isic for flancing was fur- \oon and zion or- | he American Li Miglizzi's will make | Miglizzi's | i Francis A. | lizzi of Lee strect. Mrs. Mig- | employed by the American | 11 her husband is P. and F. Corbin 1 Mrs ne wit made t Mr. and Mrs. Corbin, Union Co. mt is Co. . Corbin of this city and | n e Hilliard Smith of 1 West New York city, andi Auburndale, Mass,, were married to- day in New York Dr. Gordon hington offi Corbin has e without | from a usually reliable source here few complimentary ballots ! plications, is believed to have caus- | or Soriio Holyoke, M . for two years. He | ranging the North Dakota situation, health during his life in this city. Anna Ondrick; five daughters, Mrs. The Middle H'uldam rifle team \umuous l*nes Cause | Suffering in Japan | ) (UP)—An unusual ructive fires coincided ering In ated. been ma Burritt 1 wife Tokio, De to causs today storm razed 500 hou in distress. Thir- 1 in the Dainichi were en- m Hako 1 Maru, a 1766- Kawasaki dock- | aground near | s of his |Kansan. The United Press learncd would go to him after wsting States 37 years ago and lived inj| idacy and had no hand in & Erwin, He had enjoyed guori MANJPAGT Smith Wed in New York. . Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Up well in Match {foreman at Russcll & Erwin's; Jo- death |seph Ondrick of Chicopee Falls, de | Mass.; and Stephen of Hadley I'alls, | Masms. He also leaves a sister, Mrs. Fanny Ondeck of Windsor. The funeral will he held morning at 9 o'clock at the Holy Trinity Greek Catholic churc | Burial will be in Holy Trinity Greelk | | Catholic cemetery. ATLANTIC CROSSED m ation .-\HHL | | latter term as president of the ¢ club and is active in the New Britain club and Shuttlc Meadow Country club. During the World war Mr. Corbin gave almost exclusiv of his time serving as ch fonc of the local draft bourds under | the selective draft act. Mrs. Bmith is a native of Bosfon. | Her former husband died in 1918, | The couple will sail soon after the | lden .. first of January on a wedding trip | around the world. | H. § e | L. Hale ‘Pohce Sergeant Die e Suddenl\ in btamford Hou Stamford, wu_j oli . Hale geant \\mmn . MeM Hou: ied to court duty here, House .. of fecling ill shortly after court |L- Cavanaugh |opened today and repaired to his| home where he died a fuw moment fter his arrival. He old Sergeant. McMahon had been a : - member of lh": n;:y;:r(xllxfl fi'rr“ 7»“‘ ‘Thous‘x‘:‘ies ?\fagillil:l Ashore years, although not consistentiy, He | appointed to the department by | Deal, Eng, Dec. 29 (P) — Thou- {Homer 8. Cumming, then mayor of jsands of lobsters and perhaps mil- onaon: Deslidn) (Pr—Bichise ta| L M. Mouneyres. | Stamford. ’Ihu last time he joined, |ifons of star fish have been washed ing [ashorc herc by a gale which has his pa E ch, disappear- R e is that the need for the independ. | This pair, also ;f‘“‘" adEaoneets [ mch iy atter ha labov party—purely soclalistic |S0 atter leaving Sencgal on May ) jbeen out since 1889, been sweeping the English channel past four days. ot the labi ovement—no | Pound for Brazil Alfred Phillips, Jr., | for the ”\l\:l« l'In(],lrh Snowden, fore| 9 Miss Mildred Dovan. -d him to the rank of sergeant | Villagers and country folk are wcellor of the exchequer, has| o Ausie Pedlar. {in_August of this yea {coming miles to take advantage of from the party 7. Vilas R. Knope. | Two sons, Dr. Frank MeMalion | the prospects for a great feast which den, who has been a member | These three, in the airpiane Miss and William 1. McMahon, Jr, sur-(the 111 wind blew in for them. Batis 108 54 years, saia that | Doran, entered tho Dole race from | vive him e beach from Sandwich Bay to the labor party peeeitted in-|San Francisco to Honolulu on Aug | down literally is covered with sl tnemberahip nid hdopted w|10: They mever zeached he lglaud tar fish, while lobsters, some welgh- nite soclalistic basis it adequate|9oF did they return to the mainland. ing five pounds, are scattered here s all the purposes for w rost. and there along the shore for more | & Jonn W. lependent labor party origin| 9 Gordon Scott. than tive miles. Nisted. Saturday Houek H. Kalish ormick Belkin . | White 5 Holt ARG : 2 was eves 176 . 182 178 n & Peterson were toppled rupted and, | in | RtRTE) honses service was mori | pread of disastrous firss was wide Six re to death in Asakagun, Iu- L pre cial reports 3 ho been destroyed r o at M Shimonoseki. | made Despite the fact which on Saturday gave children of these It was one youngst hegan sereeches attracted safety of the brick “It was th Leon A the cedy (.um[l- 5, 350 of the to the Middle Haddam The and the all on Arch cries, y Fredricks e cver ) reluct 0@ and street . che ar clure. ses had d b, lundred persons were s by the bl n for a fiv uye 3 board, (Continued from First Page) re on chairman of the o These | ) [ advisory =01 four men W ties follows Yoy funny songs | 1. Capt. Charles Nungesser. 2. Capt. Francois Coli. ties in general, 2 Christmas carols by The aviators, Frenchmen, nd Nn by the city aut at o when a lone s litre sketches, m-mpl ined | too oif from Pagis for North America on M 8 in their “White Bird.” They passed Ireland and werc at various times rumored to have been sighted | in Newfoundland and Nova Scotia ST e but no definite trace of them ever | Philip Snowden Quits was’ found. Independent Labor Party , 3 Capt. St. Roman. PR German (vmernmcnl May | Rephrm Dr. Bernstorff e Ger- inderstood to 2 replace- mnt von Bernstorff as international costy were HILLS ATTORNEYS | SEEK TRIAL HALT * Lawyers Tor Mleged Matricide ‘ Tiy lo Is.,‘ Gourt was years | ely that would ' 11, was overruled it was i tallation of officers on January | | | jnrors | th legal of of choo: ly that t work ¢ hers she clothing ared a ing taboo wonld fig E cour from the rman-Rue- owed his rday's entive ' D dernstorff w sprcity o ment again ters duri 1, 2 the pr ting 11 of | . shiccetion to f the KILLS WIT Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 29 (UP)— Tevi Goughenon shot and killed his wife, and him- self today. A daughter, Anna 13, was the | Erwin. {only other person in the Thouse. | in- Kin was Two other Dole flight entrants | who failed. 10. Capt. William P. 11. Alvin W. Eichwaldt. These airmen sought to missing Dole Planes. Th of their craft was an § 11s. Stepfather of First Irish President l)lcs N. Y., Dec, 20 !/f' -1 STONE COFFIN FOUND London, Dec. 20 (UP)—A stone the girl ran from the coffin, which may be 3,000 to 4,000 find the | second fleor and saw her mother |vears old and contains apparently last heard ying ncar her Christmas tree. Her (human bones, has been unearthed on AVZ. | father lying in the kitchen with by building excavators at Rainham, according to the Paris {a revolver in his hand. Essex, the Star said today. or Le Petit Journal . Princess Lowenstein Wertheim | wo long silk: stockings 13. Capt. Leslie Hamilton breeches and was not long | 14, Col. F. I°. Minchin. in discovering that the cord which Aged Princess Yost ld them in place was dangerous| fThe trio, in the British plane St. for ghe circulation of the blood. 8o | Rafael, sought to reach Newfound- el he wont towork and, between [jang from England on Aug. 31, but philesophic tomes, invented the | were not sighted after flying a few hundred miles. The princess was 63 years old. 15. Paul Redfern. Flying alone, Redfern left Bruns- wick, Ga, on Aug. 26 in an at- tempt to fly 4,600 miles to Rio De Janeiro without a stop. He was not |seen after hz passed a steamer 165 miles from Venezuela. 16. Lloyd Bertaud. James D. Hill. 8. Philip A. Payne. GARTER INVENTOR FOUND ) —(UP)—Tmmanuel | and recondite Ger- r, was the inventor | Hearing shots, Jehuda Halevi Lodge Elects New Officers Halevi 1o el rs, WOMAN SHOT ON BOATL Yo A Kint Independent | with ki Bnai B held its ar nd election of officer at Grotto hall. 1. Gold yresident Viee Tryir Those Who Know use and recommend Rumford, the baking powder with real food value, for all baking. Your cakes and biscuits can be just as good as theirs if you use the same ingredients. was ¢ 1 Croll; s etary Alfred LeWitt; three years, Bernard Cla Albert ( cnhe B. Gordon Jue nd Ha Milkowi! delegate the na 1s a Preseription for we grecs be 5 tion at nce, Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, 10 maximum, and ey ‘ fny. Bilious Fever and Malaria. : J ; It Kills the germs. TODAY ey t record wae -z RECO WEAT I g niodern garter, \sure assistant Morris were tional | Ri L, [ENIINESE Stope ted Stap your suffering—use 1o tempera Provide low The Wholesome BAKING POWDER today nents for with the | n making arrang in connection ioldm said pipe, T e s PAZO bmrMElvr JAD HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS banquet la

Other pages from this issue: