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e . News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 MUSCLE SHOALS IN DOUBTFUL STATUS Coolidge Believes Bill Killed by His Pocket Veto BUT NORRIS SAYS NO Nebraska Senator Claims Congress Not in Adjournment But in Re- Transcontinental Aviators Land In Ohio After Being Forced to Retrace From Harrisburg, Pa. Record Smashing Time of 15 Hours for 2,200 Miles When Fog Makes It Impossible to Continue, Columbus, Ohlo, June 8 (VP)— | With a non-stop record flight acros Undaunted, 1d Tucker however, Shoenhair 1 they “%:‘m contin- the country within their grasp, Lee ue to New York as 50 as the cess—Says Therefore Measure Has | Shocnhair and H. J. Tucker, Tlos ther cleared and then try a non- Angeles, were forced down at Nor- stop flizht across the country from Bocome Law, ton Field at 9:45 a. m. castern New York to San Dicgo. . 'P)—The |Standard time today. | We'll make it from dawn to sun- Weshingion, "_""{“ SR WRI=The Starting at San Dicgo, Calif., at|down this time,” said Tucker, who Muscle Shoals bill held doubttul | \o% T "o dorn standard time |is @ millionaire sportsman. “Our status today through failure Of {Thyrsday, the Apir had flown as far | plane can siand it President Coolidge to attach his :\.m Harrisburg, Pa., within 800 miles | Tucker, who is backing the flights, signature to the measure by last midnight, It was authoritatively stated the president believed he had killed the measure by “pocket veto.” Senator Norris of Nebraska, lead- ing proponent of the bill, maintained on the other hand that it had be- come law. He plans to make a test, by inserting appropriations for con- duct of the work in un appropriation bill next session. This would throw the matter into the courts it the government contested his action. ‘The measure, designed to have the government manufacture nitrates, develop and sell power, and produce fertllizer for experiment at its war- time plant in Alabama, was passed by congress a few days before the end of the recent session, : 0 . il e tomorrow to fly from here to Od |0 BOCIER i Ten days, excepting Sundays, fol- N ms ds d | Dog Tal U P vortation lines in this city where it | g : he wind af that time had s slening o veloing the meashre, The e 4 enter a bus. He folt that fn- jtran '“:m'l: ,-‘“V"'\ Jes, co-pilot of | It with indications that ther. was ¢ y f st t| of making rules or ordinances | Captain Arthur Argles, co-p P llile probability of its s ther - ays e e ast d ! D Pe. s ving 4 x ton A e v "= I(LAIMS T0 SEE FUTURE ON VISIT TO PLAINVILLE |5 “aodicion o trone s i it [ Cotumbia, tlcphone:i th YN g during the day. This made it un- Mocs ot tha\ il s na rorgond close | the policy of the police should be to|ficld this morning saying ”“f' "% | likely that a hopoff could be mi 5 AL o —_— | insist that bus operators park at the | Would inspect the motor this after- ;oo "o s ot the earliest, o to the president maintained his o s ot the street, and that | 100, but that the flight would not | o o0 0 o 1 to litt the failure to act during this perlod con- (H. H. McLean of Hartford Claims |Tiny Fawn Comes to Town to Sce B e o) iha & o, naithun noan et dhatsns QIEn ol ey etrong wind is needed o i 7 o the buses move In and out of the | mder wa ek plane and its heavy load of ful stituted 2 ket vet | - | ¥ " . N e pulsd o ocket .0,“,{,’,’,:,},‘;,,',‘:':{ Vision Told Hip Mow to Grow | Whats Going on and Puts In|stion more prompily, i e ; Wanthiar aonditions changed Jitie ation. They bas " 5 Choference Silssastal eaten by Fog - |auring the forenoon although the on the U, 8 constitution, which | pair on Bald Head—Predic ted | Mectic Time Trying (0 Get OUL| cpajppan M, W, Bannan said he| Miss Boll. who was disappointed i | o a5 i oo, (RN HA® reads: 5 8 . | = her first attempt yesterday whenthe | 450t oy 5 ouin but continued too If any bill shall not be returned | T, 8, Wonld Enter War, | Again (Continucd on Page 27) plane was forced back to Roosevelt | jjp 't pe o any help In an attempt by the president within ten days| 0 e e iaisi vo e dheeit S ficld by fog, had a long sleep. She | (Fo 9 0O ter it shall have been presented i H, Mciean o oC WHOSC | inville, June $—A tiny young left orders that she was not 1o be | " i o0 of the oil tanks was not to him, the same shall be a law fn |time s divided between the gnin. | D70 June S uny vouss 1HARVARI] Bflfl“ PRIZE disturbed. Neither Oliver Le Bou- | itelietion of the ofl ianes was not 1;)(’,\ "\;;:\"nr as if he'md';m‘ned :’! istry and the foremanship of a ' ingth cume into the center of | ti rxmrArv{lllvxx";Arull-m lllflul'q of the ' ;0 opinion that no attempt would unless the congress by their ad- ! s slainville tc he sights carly this plane on its flight yesterd WAS WP Ly made to fly today, evin if the {street repair squad, is back in New | Plainville 1o the sights 3 | be mad o fly today, even i fournment prevent Ms vetwrn: in g 0 sve tathor capacity after |Morning but was disiivsloned by an | rly. Before retiring Miss Boll sald | i 4 56010 hecome strong cnough waich gasuill anall mot e alle an abscnce of about two years unpleasant veception and soon fled | WU o [#he wae too superstitious to start|,, ronorig of conditions over the At- Norris contended that the end of | ™\, Tag v % ek & leomstd | N0 the woods cast of the town ' anywhere on a Friday. | (AniAG 3 aes far From Bivoratis: this session did not constitute ad- AR % with a dog in cl pursuit. The A difficulty arose when Tieut. | AT Chnantalfs i P clergyman, prefers not 1o use the I a dog P . After repeated failure 1o gt away journment but is only & recess. ;. upevorona,” and is content to |dcer, Which was a young doe, came | (Henry B. Clark, in charge of Ro0se- | .. i rquy u leak in one of the gaso- Therefore, he said, the president'n | o 5 o FIERCL BRE R CORIERE B rom the west end and was rirst | Banker's Som Wins Highest | vt rieid, saia yesterdays tako-ote | Fom“phay u leak tn ono of the giso- “failure to sign’” made tha measure BHbor from the wuloit by it '”‘l sighted about 7:30 oclock in the - | from the field's runway had been | o evening and the flight had to be & taw automatioally, fust an It the | [0 T0 K i vard of e Plamville Lumber and | Undergraduate HOnOX | without nis permisaion and | ne “V7H0E a0t ten deys had clapsed at any time | pepon, iy most notable achicves | COM Company. Frightened by a dog ¢ B.H.S that I necessary force would bo used | "SRl U0 e while congress was sitting. ment, and Incldontally - the. eng It then ix reported to have tried to a . H, D, horeatter to keep “Intruders” off the | ¢, gie ~EE 0 IRE TEE R (R Norris Explains which brought fhm (e preatest | 160 through @ window into the va- field. However, he sald 1 permission | (ohdNE Beil R Morcover, Norrls explained, he | [f0 00 PPUERE sl s et | eant. factory of the old Plainville | . % to use the runway were asked With | opynio “ang third member of the has found a supreme court decision UD“P Sty ”’ Biice i ‘]"" C7[Mre. Co, but it enly succceded in | Francis Colsson Kelly, Jr. son of |proper formality, it would beloray ana ho esld everything ap- which affirma the president's right | (0 O En ,,.:,‘,’ n\l " Made SOV hreaking several pains of glass and | Mroand Mrs, Francis C. Kelly of | granted. Tihe feld 1z a private ene | peared 1o ba shipshape for the take- to sign a. bill during a Christman re- | (00 Y&l Betore the 1ro0ps Went |g,git.a trom the attempt. |23 brady avnue and a inember of land has the only runway Which|oer Another inspection to I cosa lasting moro than the 10 days | J01 10 the troubulous zone in | ™o e troush a driveway, | e Sunior class at the Scnlor High | would permit takeoff with | yyage, Nowever, just before the start. | allowed by the conatitntion. ;h’mm’ l'n;;:ml % nee ;ug ;,r.mm» the doe found itself on Whiting “W’l 'm'; been awarded the . m'u‘m heavily loaded plane. : Find Solace “I have found that Preident Wil- | /oo w0 in wha developed | yirect in front of the post « ce. [arvard Book prize offered by the May Hop to N, F. The fliers found some soluce in fon wam advised by his attorney gen- | -0 e World war, Mr. McLean {qpe traffic on this main highway |} ird club of Connecticut to the | A pogsibility that the Columbia fp i\ 8~ get away when they that he had the right to sign |2CCLU" OF his successtul prediction | wus yot 1o her fuste, and she holted | boy of the junior class who Las the [ yay be planning a hop 1o AT e A bills during a recess and notify con- 'o:”-'::""l/"u)rwy‘_q] )‘,;m»' wan Wiy yfw(l.,w the dvive north of 1Y, L. Ben- H.lfil;r\t in;l u,';- tn ,-.'m’mvx'_ $ | Grace, N. s the first 1og of 18 |y " Gotion aid de they 18 got gress of his artion when 1t re-nscom. | QI0U0 4 predicting the eniry of |y house, then crossed Maplo | ThIS i the highest honor an un-liransatiantic journey in place of |\t sichy with the leak undiscovirs Fled, and that he so signed many the United States .mln the l-nrn]ut.i stroet and Muattercd about gion dergraduate can receive. It shows O1d Orchard, Me., was seen In an- ed it probably would have uited » a > Antl-Baliness Care in Vision green for a while his average in studics in his first and [ pouncement that six casks of air- shortago el cing the bills,” Norris said i | | in a shortage of fuel, forcing them He added that to deelare the | 1T Melean less than one month | Secking to loap a fence in leaving | Junior years s higher than any other | piane gasoline had been landed there Muscle Shoals bill dead would be to | 2E°. had his hair cut for the fiest | (his plot, the deer butted her head |bOY in the college preg ory [ rrom St. John. The shippers of the } —_———— . e time in a great many years, not hav-| into rec ating the perform- | 8roup. Gunnar Carlson, now a We fuel refused to disclose the identity | nullify the constitutional provision |y,0 " 1ua" o vestize of hirsute adorn I hef K fom | 1'oint stident, won the honor in 19 f th haser. 1 q e 2 ad e of sute adorn- ! apee ral vimes before ~isdom |10 ¢ « hong of the purchaser. :'”~l'"'“ho‘"‘:;’ll'~'r; o ’l;:\:n’::p:)':\’v prr“:;'- |ment aince a young wan, Mis head | overcume its bewildercd brain and | Last Year Sten Flygt was given the AL LR 4 > a eSi- {was rememi by the interviewer [ o4 1t to move along and leap the | book | : | & having hew 1y bald two years | fonce at an unobstrueted place, 1t [ This year's book, “Dean Griggs l4 GIRLS ANI] 3 B“YS (f'on!tn\tod on Page 14) £0. He voluntecred the Informa- | then procecded along Park and [by oW, Brown is given to “that RE[;EIVE" INT[]M fl = e tion that he was given heavenly nd through the back | YOUNg man in the junior claes who is | Buidance in his sleep as to how he s on Woodland street. Here a | K0ing to colluge, who in the opinion |might grow hair. Not being inter- set upon it, and the handsome [0f the headmaster enjoys a reputa- sted, he lgnored Q. The .w:-nm’\,,uh ninad thed castward towards [tion with the teachers and fellow Impressnvc Ritual Takes |came so persistently that e finally | Sunset rock, disappearing into the |students, and who is considercd the | ; TIM applicd the suggested remedy, he | woods most worthy by virtue of his high | . “ Place Today at Home |said, and the resnt was krowth | peer are quite common about |scholarship and character.” Descrihed as “Confessed of Daughter of hair which necessitated the visi Plainville th year, It has been ! Thie year's winner is 17 years old ” T, Dr. V ! —_ reported that they have been cating [and has lived in this city since his Reds,” Were Arrested r. Von Soshock Himself (Continued on Page | cabbages and other greens In gar- | father Francis €. Kelly came here | H Y 3 i s §; y — i | dens in the southern portion of East {10 heconie cashier of the City Natiof | in Communist Ra d Nearing her 90th birthday, which | Said to Be Afflicted With ‘HUSBANH C[]MES HUME | street, while in the Ledge road dis- al bank, His father Is treasurer of — she will obscrve next month, Mrs i trict they are said to come in and | thebank at present and a member of | 5 y ; e o i i 4 . China, June § (P —Four-{Adecline 8. Davis this afternoon pass Fatal Poisoning | {n.m, 1 peacefully with the herds of | tie board of finanee and taxation. ,”“”:,‘f"i e t'ner» A e e | cows. Several motorists have met | When he attended school in Larch- s ¢ & . 5 i e —t wrrested in e st rald 1 de- S FIN"S WIFE SUI[;"]E‘”“ m on the road and have been [mont, N. Y., e won an esay con- | 411 ‘I‘ ’v"“'“":'r:',:'r"_:',::;mulr:‘fum“l:,. | standing on the banks of an impro New York, June 8 P—The New | forced to slow their machines in or- | test. which was conducted among | “Cribed as e vised “river,” was formally admit- o N cxecuted today. 2 :’ur:g ’In:':) says today that Dr, 8. e der 1o avoid striking them. school children throughout the s The group died bravely firmly an- |ted to San Matteo Swamp, Military ;;nur:.'.l » Uuib".'})q' hi::w-n::rturl iy ouncing thetr belief, that the fu- | Order of Lizards, a branch of thn . & hic s ;) 3 * HIH < A000 8 AR RNGR Tt bey e Mrs. George H. B'“"‘Kh’ B Gln and Alcohol cache Ralded Uire succes of comimunin would ke | [yqivs' auxiliary, U. S, W. V. o : ) : aided by their martyrdom. | The ritual took place at the home :‘:fl’vmml:’ ath, s a victim of his own | Chestnut Street, Ends lg A group of 300 students and | FUCTES S S ‘“m L : 3 teachers near Swatow also apt e, SRR T S M RO SR8 The paper says that although the i i 1as P l B I lt w w k Ba The U o8 { 79 Shuttle Mcade doctor was vetioont o falk about Life With Gas 0 [ce elieve as 18 s S@ |1 :ted at a communist meet The rles May of 79 Shuttic Mcadow himaelf marks of the inroads of - ness were plalnly evident. His front tecth are gone and his fingers up to the second knuckle are black, the | result of radium necrokis. A count of white corpusc ot hia blood taken within the last two months, said the Times, disclosed only 4,000 to the cubic millimeter, while & normal person has 7,500 to 10,000, an effect produced by dium poisoning among other thing The paper says that radium first took effect on Dr. Von Soshocky in | 1920 and only because of his ubility to keep an accurate scientific check | : health appareitly, | violation of the liquor on himself has h hle to with- This morning he locked herself | Sorgeant T, J. Feeney and Officers stand the discase. o he iy her bedroom and turncd on the | William MeMur ind Bugene has been forced to go to higher alti- | gy, Dr, John PPurney, deputy medi- | Kieffer had ralied o tenement at 66 | tudes to recuperate., ok miner, was called and Overiook avenue and seized The doctor has frequently risked |13, ¢, Porter Sons, undertakers per- | quarts of gin in bottles and 23 gal- his Jife i recent years to treat | triends with radium, Dr. Von Soshocky brought to this country with him scveral years ago the formula for the radium paint, He became an official of the United 51 Radium Corporation, in whose plant the five New Jersey said 10 have acquired radium poison. They recently a settlement with the con ny for $10,000 each, a lfetime an- nuity, of $600 eu and insurg for their relatives when they die. “I can't discurs the case >t the women in the radlum suits because they have nothing {o do with me and I don‘'t want 1o discuss myself. the Times guotes Dr. Von Soshocky as saying. “If T admit T am trying to find a curc the publle would want to know more and there in nothing now that would interest them.” | to her hom of New York, their goal, whin a heavy fog made them turn back. one onts ures of the of the anding aviation Shoenhair, coast. 'tOnanls John McCready and Oukley | - | Kelley, of Dayton, Ohio. | (Continucd on MINISTER BOSSING DOE TRIES TO ENTER STREET WORK GANG| FACTORY WINDOW (Labors on Week Days, Preaches Bieaks Several Panes When Fly From San Diego to Keystone State Capital in the‘ They reached Marrisburg at 7:15 | fornir army flier, piloted the planc, la. m, and were confident that had | Tired by the strain of the all- the weather been good they would |y light, Tucker and Shoenhair | have made the flight in 15 hours, hotel 1o sleep. about elght hours under the 26-hour shy they had to turn as | non-stop record now held by Licu- | as Columbus from Harris- POLICE BOARD HITS AT BUS OPERATORS (Criticizes Double Parking af Center Church Station (FAST TAXIS CRITICIZED | Inauguration of Boulevard System, Giving Automobiles Right of Way on Principal Traffic Arteries, Will e Considered, Operators of buses and taxicabs in for criticisin at the rame meeting of the board of polics ight I b abuses of Ui {front of the ( commission- ors last at and the former least w that notificd reported parking privileges in uter church on Main discontinued. rowas street must 1 | The mats brought before | the meeting by Commissioner Marry L. Morton, who said he has seen buses parked abreast of each other during rush hours and he has also obscrved that they cause congestion by remaining at the station longer [than seemns necessary. He and Al- {bert T Schilling, a former commis- sioner, went into the situation per- taining to buses at some length, Mr. Morton s 1 it was apparent that the wers no sid streets suit- {able for use as bus stations. He obsehved also that few cities have the convenient arrangement enjoyed by patrons of public service trans- When George H. Billin of 146 - | Ohestinit streat soturncd home for| MAN Rccently Fined $200 | his noonday meal shortly after 12 | oclock today, e found il the doors | in Federal Court and! locked., He mianaged 1o g in a bedroom window where he found Woman Occupanl of his wif Mrs. Emma V. Bilhing aged 43, dead, the vietim of suicide i o8 o e e Tenement Arrested. had beon sick for some time | rela ,and had | 0 confined to the Hartford ctreat until a !l Joseph Wisk, aged short time ago. She had returned | Grov. strect, was arr and enjoying good | 1:30 this morning on t mission to propare the remains for |lons of alleged alcohol in five gallon burial, |cans and smaller jugs. According Besides her hushand she leaves a [ to the police, Wisk has been nsing | danghter. She was o member of [the tenement a9 a base for alleged the First Congregational ehurch. — {llquor, taking it out from time to Funcral arvingements are incom- | time, plete. At the time of the raid last eve- i e ning, Sergeant Feeney notified Mrs, H Sophic P'ictnik, aged 37, who occus lnd“ Timber Nlerchant pies the tenement, to be in police WVins $1,310,000 Lottery numm.y, British Tndia, June 8 O ing the liquor 1aw. She pleaded not -~The Evening News states that | guilty, as did Wisk, and their cases Ibrahim Laweced Kazi, a nmhur;“., continued until next Tuesday merchant and raccliorse owner here, [on Wisk's request. He was released has received a telegram from W. I. lin $500 bond and the woman was Webb, employe of a Calcutta firm, |releascd on her own recoknizanee. informing Kaz that ho had drawn| Wisk has a police record In this court today on the cha of violat- Felstead, winner of the derby, In ety but was never convicted of vio- the Calcutta sweepstakes, lation of the liquor law in the lecal It s understood that Kazi pur-|conrt. At a session of the federal chased the ticket from Webb, |court in Hartford several days agoe which wins the great prize of $1,- |he was fined $200 and costs for - 310,000, legal possession of alcohol. |6 MONTHS IN JAIL Men Caught in Hamden W ien Sren | Goes O After They Robbed | Cheshire Store Wats y, June 8 (P Jarges | Apuzzo, 30, and Anthony Squillo, soth of New Haven, were o the sentenced New Haven jail for terms of months each this hy Allyn L. Brown sn- perior eriminal court | pleaded guilty to charges ary. morning of the when they of hurg- of Squillo, Judge ) In the case Brown informed hiy coun may be placed on prolation hefors ‘l)u expiration of his Be- | havior at the jail warrants the at he his term if trial. The men were charged with King into the electrical store of Edward Doolittle in Cheshirc on the night of March 10. The men were driving from Wa terbury to New Haven in Squillo’s car when they passed the stors hey used a spring from the anto- mobile to pry the door open. The opening of the door caused the lights in the store to flash on and sound a siren. The men were ar- rested in Hamden and arraigned in the Cheshire court and bound over to the local superior court. A letter was read in court from 8quillo to a girl friend in which Squillo sald “he was trying to break into the big dough.” NEW BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, JUN s 5 8, 1928, THIRTY-TWO PAGES Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending June hd ves 14,856 PRICE THREE CENTS SOUTHERN CROSS REPARTS POSITION 489 MILES FROM BRISBANE, AUy .~ TERRIFIC STORMS: MISS B0 annw i ta, i ept,, Wa Cony, MEETS “Queen of Diamonds” Who Hopes to Beat Miss Earhart Across Atlantic Plans Get- away From Curtiss Field. Air for Lon Stultz, Gordon and Mi Lack of Wind — Plane nd it was and relief pilot, slept late not until 7:20 o'clo local time (6 a. m., Bastern Da ght) that any of {them left tieir bourding S At that hour Gordon appeared Curties Ticld, fred He rowed out to the plane and pre |-m\~ monoplane with MISS| o0 504 1o make another inspection of I Mabel Boll as passenger will p | the oil tank in which Wly make a second attempt at dawn | oo P SG) N. Y., June Columbia repaired a ary. New Britain and vicinity: ST I — Mostly clondy; Saturday NO NEW CARDINALS | showers, not much change in Romo, June 8 (A—No new car- | temperature, dinals arc expected to be named at | the coming secret and public consis- W e—— % | (0ri68 Which Pope Plus will hold. [ \ i Weather Stil Balks Attempts of Monoplane Friendship to Get In g Flight to Europe s Earhart Held at Trepassey by Not Expected to Take Off Today as Atlantic Conditions are e . Unfavorable. Officials at Roosevelt Field - 7] H fer | Trepassey, NoF., June 84— |down somewhere in the Atlantie. ‘\m{e'cd“hen Glrl Flle' and a southeast wind pre- | Denial that their cagerness to get 5 i 1 e | vented an attempt carly today to | away was inspired by the desire to n (hamlm'h“'h‘me‘lm the monoplane Fricndship from beat Miss Mahel Boll across was | the harbor here and start for | made by Miss Amelia Earhart, Bos- Bellanca Monol)la“e | Europe. The three tlicrs, Wilmer |ton social serviee worker, who s €o- e | Stultz, pilot, Louis Gordon, mechanic, | pilot of the Fricndship, s Runway Without [.na Niss amotic et r| “I don’t wish it to be inferred |that this flight is in any way a race ith Mabel Boll,” she said flight is be wrried on independ- ent of any other." | Wind Light Lig! shifting winds yesterday Kkept the heavily-loaded Friendship from starting her occan flight. Stultz made three attempta to take off, but the smooth surfuce of th harbor, icting as a suction on' the big pon- toons, deficd the pull of the three powerful motors. When the last run across the harhor had failed, Stultz taxied back | to the moorings t could not by freshencd. The itions continued into the The sky was clear. and announced that made until the The residents of this little town the extreme eastern foundland, have shown nent over the prepara- tions for the flight. Only a handful of persons, including the magistrate who wits host to Miss FEarha t, were at the shore to sec the futile at- tempts at a takeoff. | Say Goodbye The three fliers said goodbye to the ew present, stepped into their row- boat and were taken out to the They were in good spirits but exuberant. When they returned from their unsuccessful attempts all Dliane not three were plainly downcast. They eagerly received the news that Miss Tioll had been forced to turn back by fog after her takeoff from Curtiss field, N, Y., 10 comment other than larts denial that they wi the “Queen of Diamond | Two hours later Wilmer Stultz, pilot, Lou Gordon, mechanic, and Miss Amelia Earhart, passenger and relie pilot were still in their board- ing house. It was believed they had [oberrved the unfavorable conditions and had decided to take the oppor- tunity to get more sleep. Pll]NEERR R, WORKER 15 DEAD AT AGE OF 78 E. F. (‘ole Was Employed by Old Providence and Frisco Line but made Miss Ear- re racing Edward Franklin Cole, Sr., one of Connecticut’s ploneer railroad men, for 50 y until his retire- several y ago, had been N. Y., N. H. & H. sors, died this 46 Maple of scveral who ment employed by the ars railroad and its prede morning at his home, ter an illness He was T8 years old. Mr. Cole first entered on r more than a halt pag, was small and Ho worked 13 Istreet, months, | When la rallroad ¢ century the hours the long. police heard of the gathering from & [avenue, in the prescnce of a large | ‘“v”l’h(i" a8y h»’\’. ‘*ll"l‘rr":‘;"" l"""xlzilf‘“ { panic-stricken student. Informer Who | 4,3 per of members of San Matteo | ,li T l’:‘ “r“:l\r,;“,") Later the com- was said o have drawn a lot'to Kill | and Frisco railroad. Lu e con | Swamp, the first to be organized in | pany was taken over by the New s parenth snd insead ran 16 99- | oonngotions, and which already has|Xork and New Bugland eopd and liee headquarters, {a membership of 31 women. then it became the New York, New South China has been the scene of | ™ (' Davis, who akes her hor Haven and Hartford railroad. He ! bitter clashes n recent months be- | o F RS SR R tioned at Hartford where he tween communists and the police | Ao P s T t firal & porter and)tiien bags withorities. South China, partieu- | Lii 0 T L i o master, larly the provin Of Kwangtung, | 0100 06 the ordor as she atoodiin | axo he came to this city to lias been the scene of communist dis- |\ "y oo hanked with small trees, |take up dutics at the old railroad turbances for more than & Year. . forng and rocks. Over the |station which was situated across or a short time the communists |y oo " 0 greens and pl which | the tracks from the present station. [guined the upper hand in Canton, | sarved as o throne for Mrs. J. 1o was baggage master, but later but eventually were driven out and | u4orcon gila monster of can in caller, a place he held the Canton military suthorities e luwamp, and Mes. Kate Hills, su many years, waimed control of the situation. | preme ghia. monster 15w framed | To the older residents of the town Powerful communist groups, how- | portrait of Samuel Charies Davis, | M1 Cole wis @ well known figure. [ cver, still continued tn existencs and {ton of the new member who Toot hp 1 was one of the railroad’s most i unremttting warfare has been in lyige i the Philippines. o the | = o progress hetween the authoritics and | of the picture were photographs, in | (Continued on Page 27) the radical my uniforms, of Francis M. Da = o ]'n1 e h l;;‘vu much Aghting 10 | vie, Henry Charles Fuiler, Prancs| (je0rge Bernard Shaw which hundreds —of persons were | Davis Laurence and ITrvin Diavis Filled and these battles invariably |grandsons. A gold star decks i Reveals Self as Speeder have been followed by many execu- [scrvice flag of the Davis home in| larrosate, Eng, June 8 tlonx. Women have not heen spared | memory of fhe last named young | G'orke Bernard Shaw revealed """' in the reprisals and reports have [man, who diecd while at Camp Dix. | 5011 @5 @ speed bug and @ habitual frequently been received of thelr | Adding to the patriotic atmosphere | lawbreaker to the Chief Constables exceution. Previously dispatches [of the occasion was the presence of (#ssociation which 18 in session here have told of the execution of two or | “Miss America,” a role taken by |todu three women, but 14 exccutions, as | Mrs. Theodore Johnson, whose at-| The noted dramatist confessed reported today, Is an unusually large | tire was in the national colors, that in 20 ycars of motpring he had number, Mrs. Davis, a native of this ecity [never driven without breaking the and a member of the Baptist church M for more than half a century, has| “1 hope nothing I say here will held no fraternal interest but that | be held against me,” sald 8haw who THE WEATHER of the Spanish War Veterans' auxil- |added that he had been prosecuted only once—for driving 27 miles an hour—and that he was lucky at that for fust previously he had been going 50 miles. Throughout Shaw's talk there was A note of sympathy for the police and thelr troubles “Our | unfavorahle | night. | | WITH TWO LL i0 HOP TOMORROW | \Ship Pulled, Twisted | and Bounced Through Air as Tropical Dis- turbances Are Met on Route From Fiji Is- lands. Plane Drops Over 400 Feet in One Fell Swoop, War- ner Radios, But Aviators Hold Grimly On Toward | Destination. Honolulu, Junc 8 (#—The monoplane Southern Cross was 459 miles from Brisbane, said radio message received from §t at 9:15 m. (Pacific Coast time) today. The latitude given was 24,42 south; | 16138 cast. the longitude San Francisco, June § (A—Riding |out the worst storms encountered in more than 6,000 miles of ocean fly- ing, the monoplane Southern Cross today roared on along the 1, | mile course from Suva, in the to Brisbanc, Australia. Radio messages from the plane told of battling violent tropical dis- turbances that pulled and twisted and bounced the ship. One drop of “over 400 feet” was described. Weathers Storm But as on the first leg of the flight, when the ship was pulled downward by air currents between OQakland and the Hawaiian Islands, and agadn caught in storms on the se ond lap to Suva, it straightened out and continued 1o soar above the threatoning waves, The plane started from Suva, Tslands, yesterday afternoon prospects of fair sailing it | Islands, with ahead. There were 1,762 miles to cover be- fore the four airmen, Charles Kingsford-Smith, Charles Ulm, Harry W. Lyon and James Warner, two Australians and two Americans, should s the m waters of Brisbane harbor, They cx- Captain | pected to cover the distance in about landing at Brisbane m., 19 or 20 hours, about §:30 a 2:30 p. m. Pac Howtchd. .tw szd The flight went smoothly nightfall enveloped the plane, ‘Weather Bad Then came a message fromn Radio- man Warner saying “We are run- {ning into bad weather. It gave their position as being approximate- Iy 425 miles out from Suva, altitude 5,000 feet. At §:15 p m., plano time (12:15 a. m., Pacific coast tine) the ship gave its position as approximately 490 miles from Suva and remarked the pyweather was bad. Radio operators along the coast added the information that the planc's signals were “swinging bade 1y, indlcating that the craft was riding roughly. Didn't Want Worry Nothing was sald about the tense ity of the storm until the 9 Australlan time, Coast time, today, until (Continued on Page 18) FIVE IN ONE FAMILY T0 BECOME CITIZENS W. S. Tait, Wife and Two Daughters Examined Today Among the candidates who were to receive their preliminary ex- ninations for admission to citizen. ship today at city hall, were five members of the Tait family of 286 Maple street. United States Com- missioner Thomas N. Spellman con- ducted the examinalions. The family consists of M. and Mrs. William Stuart Tait and two daughters, Elizabeth G th Tait and Janet King Stuart Tait, and a son, James. They will, through the |course of their journcy into the ranks of the citizenry of the Unite States, renouncy of their allegiance to the king The Talts from Glasgow, Scotland. Elizabeth, a graduate nurse, was the first to coms to this city and admiring the environment ew Britain, she soon persuaded sister and mother and father to join her. Janet is employed in one of the local factorles as m packer while the father and sire of the household, 1s an engineer. Money-Making Machine Is Costly to Its Owners Meriden, Juno 8 UP—Benjamin Mano, alslas Willlam Manatak, 28, of 446 Columbia avenue, New York; George Condos, 35, of 430 West 3Gth atreet, New York and Charles Mar- tin, 28, of 265 Main street, Hart. ford, were each fined $100 and costs when arraigned before Judge T. P. Dunn in police court teday en charges of sotting up & @evice te detraud “s mouney beg game.”