New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 19, 1928, Page 14

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)

ONDAY, TEXAS WEFE SAVES " HUSBAND'S LIFE Routs Prisaners Trying 10 Escanc Near ki PV he o app fir. whe on: othe i mac truck car, n Findir 1y injured ber car 1 About two m owers overpowerid BIm to a tree and Mrs. Cloud entor routed the trin the border were recaptu PAONESSA TO OPEN CAMPAIGY TONIGHT Page.) trip. pri (Continued from First ‘L,lm k at od M two years ago and took an active rt in the city election that year. tivities were s led after the eection. of & ront form- cors will be chos- e at tomorrow's gathering. Sandberg Candidate For Council Edwin L. Sandberg of 53 Conn tleut avenue will be a candidate for councilman in the sixth ward, run- ning on the republican ticket, he has informed Republican Town Committeeman Thomas J. Meskill Mr. Sandberg is a salesman for the Standard Oil Co. He not been a candidate for political office heras tofore. Vogel May Not Run Louis W. Vogel of 54 Vance street, whose candidacy for the commor council a first ward representa- tive was announced Saturda withdraw before the republi mary takes place. He said today he i8 considering withdrawal, but has not yet decided definitely Torello Enters Lists The first democratic candidate to come out in the fourth ward is Charlton Torello of 361 Church street, who will endeavor to the party nomination for alderman. Torello, who ran for councilman in 1926 and 1927, added to his formal amnounement today tion: “If T am clected, T 2 the taxpayers of the fourth ward, 1 will not a chair-warmer in th council. Disabled War Veteran Makes Homestead Pay La Jara, Colo. March 19 (®— James C. Pierson, a disabled war veteran six years ago, is now (he owner of a farm from which he earns approximately $5.000 a vear. Pierson was cd while serv. ing overseas and was discharged from the army in 1921 because of disabilitics. He took up a home- stead In the San Luis Valley, but his health grew and ap pealed to the veterans burcau for aid. Th au advanced him o Colorado he stud culture is farm Poo; he he bought a fev eral stands of Alth L large [ Pierso HELD ON MOMAN'S COMPL AN RODY MARSHALL JR., IS DEAD AFTER LONG FIGHT Wealthy Pitisbursh Youth Dies r NORA BAYES D AFTER OPERATY eral mor new theat Held Up By Robbers September 5 ! ira she foun1 holdup n her antomobils in tr End home. Her chanifeur lo was sh Iwer belicve paste jewelry act for valu automobils loot Mrs. Alrred E governor of New Emily Smit imong the I center gems, escq without obtain Smit of the York, and Miss her daughter, wers ndants at the mar riage of Misy to Mr. Friend- land, New York financicr and gar- | age owner, on board the Leviathan | in March Her adopted children are Norman, | 9 years old; Lea Nora, 7; and Doter, | 6. They lived with her in her New | | York home. ! Miss Bayes was a Christian Scien- | tist. > | Two Husbands Starred Two of her husbands had been stars with her. Much of her early success came with Norworth as | partner. They were divorced while appearing in e Sun Dodgers,” and two weeks Jater Miss Bayes married Clarke, who was also in the: compan During her long and active career there had been only one other oe- casion when she suffered a serious illness. In 1914 while Europe she was stricken but a rest cure at German resort was effective, | SKY SPRING IS HERE? |Only Two Days Away and East Digs co- Selt Out of Heavy Snow Storm Today. | | r New York March 19 (P—With spring officlally but two days away, were diggir the heaviest parts of the east to from under one of | snowfalls of the winter. | Along the Atlantic orm rode in on Boston registered a miles an hour. Further inland, hov was little wind and t blanket of 2 to 17 in the countryside, break and bushes but providing 1 a to transportatic e heaviest fall reported fro niles board the - which veloclty of ther s decp over ¢ down trees sver, snow syl depth from 4 ton there wa. v York city storm 1d Ontario for a collisi Trying to Settle Suit Brought Against Towers ra unded uth Main irth and fifth MOROCCAN S 10 FARM Parie, March » JEW «“ Prouius Russia o has s t among J The ment of Jew | . undred 1 ound ville ion when a gover ture shows Lieuter ding. suipped with L airpk [li we have cqual of n Amercan ory, or most foolish took." His motive added, men who ple, for t of the gov- llurry " that public an parly “must cver to think th ¥ scoundrel with the v repu ted in the oil land inc has ever n party il wi played a ern Jsues Statement : 1l yoor flord it who el and $10 con- 1an of : committee, $1, 85 b Summons Marsh Dome committee it V ,of ¥ summoned to appear before lay Wilbur W. the republicans in 1623 it neither they nor the democrats which he represented 2 report on contributions for t none was requirced Marsh has denied this, ve “contributed a- ake Kansas, former Gove ub- | lican candidates for the presidency o n floor leader; wic e e of 1 > peached it w ants Sopher and Roscoe with the snowshoes they would Right is Postmaster s it wa MARCH 19, 1928 verted 1 and ch., was ¢ h halt a ton ot m, Snell, who requested the flight. y * to take oft from the ice practically exhaust- Liohave Leaves to Patrol Northern Ice Fields on, M A —The U. 8. t guard c ave will put from the wston v yard to- morning for the grand off Newfoundland to take up its annual tour of duty on the in- ternation patrol along the thern transatlantic steamer Janes, he patrol blished after the iip Titantic struck an iceberg d sank in "April, 1912, is main- ined by the coast guard under an ement between the U ed States nd several other nation Mohave, the fi ship to go 1 this year, will remain out y until July when the cutter ¢ will tak its p W 10| CITY COURT The o tered today by ¢ the city court: Aintiff, $12 action of Leonard Albert Hoff. S, plaintifr, PENT s were Morris D. JUDG dama Cube: G. Casale in recover costs, min Myerson an of Hartford was defendant, Louis Y, couns T, BN R o i There are butterfiies as lar, u“ bats in the Philippine who, he said, ould have spoken | ke their pres. this com- out long since, and known ment.” 1z his plea for a “thor- | f repudiation with a de- find more cnting “lavish use s Sevator nudge of oil, ross the g 1o the citize Phe trail h corrup- ence bined moyv Combir o ns on was plain ting 10 the re- $160,000 in lib- out a campaign “this would huy him to loot the operator “ was and deseribed in the a cabi- tes with d previous- black nother oil conspirator.” pirator” hought ited ) Publicity the id the ry to s a law ount of for blican the Lo “con political fn- high position Coolidge ad national eom- National r ranking :fore' and Afte: th; Flood _Came NEA Los Angeles Bureau red the destruction wrought by the wall of wat San ¥ nCISCo canyon near Los Angeles,after ti ie half million dollar power plant at the fo Companics fornicr tured hetor an structure. i first building to be struck by the flood’s force, I8 pic f1 lisaster that wiped out the ponderous concrete two of the great turbines and the foundations of the building are visible. The S-4 l;anton Navy Yard (NEA Boston Burecau) Here is the submarine S-4 tied up alongside drydock in Charlestown navy yard, Boston, with her flag at half mast in honor of the two score men who died aboard her. The S-1 was raised Saturday afternoon from the ocean’s floor off Provincetown, Mas NAVY RAISES SUNKEN SUBMARIR NEA Boswn Bureau. Transmitted by Telephoto Deeply embedded in the mud of the ocean bottom, the sunken submarine S-4 for exactly three months defied the efforts of rescue crews to raise it. Navy divers finally succeeded in attach- ng pontoons, and the above NEA Telephoto picture shows how it was brought to the surface. When the water was pumped from the salvage tanks, the craft was floated high enough for the conning tower (left) to be visible. Thus the submarine s towed to port, where the remain- ing bodies of the crew of 40 were to be removed. * The Farm Market Is Active NOW! Take no chances—Farms are moving fast right now and every day sees Spring a little closer upon us— Whether you want to buy or want to sell a farm, the Herald Classified Section offers you the selection of buyers or sellers —it reaches over 60,000 readers daily. In no other way can you reach.so many people at such small expense to you. THE HERALD TELEPHONE 925 CLASSIFIED AD HEADQUARTERS

Other pages from this issue: