New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 22, 1928, Page 24

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NEW BK. \IN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, oUNE 22, 1928 TROLLEY WORKERS ~ ELEVEN NEW YORKERS AR ! GUILTY BY OWN PLEA OFFER NEW PLAN | Plead Guilty in Boston to Charge of Would Refer Dispute to Gover- nor or Supreme Court - Smuggling Alcohol Into City. #® — Ex- 4y to submit Connecticut John H New Haven, June pressing a willingness their dispute with the company to Governor Trumbull or the state supreme court for settlement, the executive committee of the trolleymen’s union met here late today to take final action on the proposed walkout of car crews, power house workersand repairmen throughout the state. The meeting, originally set the morning, was postponed (ternoon’ when an officer international union who h 10 br was delayed John L. Suliivan of Waterbury, chairman of t authority for the st union would gladly to the governor of the state. 1t indicated will waive its dems tion and an cigh e day if the company will agree to give the men a voice in the disciplining of their hrothers. The final Perry was a witness before the militia committce of the house of 1epresentatives here last spring when an investigation was made into an | alleged attempt by the klan to gain | control of the first light infantry, an ancient chartered military come mand. At that time he was ade judged in contempt of the house be= cause of statements made by hime under oath, which were later cone tradictory and hecause he later failed 10 appear hefore the committes when ordered. boy for for until of the 1 expect- ed were committee ment that the submit its ca supren was, s The house passed a resolution ad- judging him guilty of contempt and issued a writ for his arrest. Perry Was not seen again in the state, however, while the assembly was in session, and the twrit was never served, was that union recogni- d the 000 | The secret indictment against him was returned yesterday by the grand Joe rry waived extradition, Three men, Frank Conway, Freedman and August Alksne, defaulted in court today. company proposal 18 with may strike act the this union plans, GANGSTERS MAKE THREAT °h was p Airplane Weighing | 300 Pounds Reaches Rome Rome, June (P Carlo Kaszala, Hunga n aviator, Ar- rived today in an 18 horsepower alrplane weighing but little more | than 300 pounds after a flight, by stages. from Budapest. Members of the Hungarian col- ony and officials of the royal air its Girl Reserve Delegates ‘ Going to Poland, Maine ! TAlthough Girl Reserve clubs do not meet during June and July nev ertheless, these months are high points in the Girl Reserve calendar, for it is Auring this period that girls answer the call to camp and con- Gl The New FEngland Girl Reserve conference is held at Maqua. a famed beanty spot at Poland, Maine, from June 30 to July 10 The purpose of the conference is fo give inspiration and definite 1deas for ¢ » work The conviction of the New Bed- | | Brand jury in honds of £10.000 and ford strike leader marks the first im- s prisonment since the walkout hegan | "ribery of pelice officers, The broth- ors are alleged to have approached on April 16, when textile operatives Patrolman Patrick Davitt and Attempt To Kidnap State’'s Witness, Diocese \e; Py i Police gro. 1< Prevented By Police Has Announcement of machines Arrival. i Kasz Chicago. 22 gangsters, dismayved grand qury's underworld tion, have made a the law here. Five men, armed with shotguns Arove up to the home of James Huff, regro, the grand iury's chief witness in the Octavins Granady murder case, and tried to fores an enfranes The arrival of police caused the men to flee, Huff was in the same with Granady when the litter, a candidate for ward committeeman, was shot to death on primary election day. He identified Johnny Armondo, a work- er for Morris Eller, Granady's op- ponent, as the slayer, and was sched- uled to appear again today to give further testimony. The attack last night was the sec- ond within three days. A similar one last Wadnesday night also was foiled by police. June (UP) by Chicago special Investiga- < challenge to 1 | 1, Hartford, June (P—Bishop | Nilan has announced the following Ichanges in tha location of pastors {in his diocese: The Rev. James A.' gatton drive, has returned home | Broderick from Terryville to St (om Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Feter's, New Haven: the Rev. Wil-| wpora he is a student. T N oot im & fieree |OUF. but the 18 sai to be resting | H. Robbins of Plymouth as sheriff of *ight hour fight mear Las Puertas, | comfortably. | Plymouth county to gucceed the lata e Sherifft Tarl P. Blake, who wam ham J. Judge from Waterto®n to| = yyeq Florence Tomkine of 56 Mur- | St. Thomas' church, Waterbury; the e R drowned recently M & Officials said {wo priests were co- | fiap ntly in Moosehead lake, leaders with the bandit Rodolfo g ray street Rev. Thomas J. Picker from Hazard- | ° vhere she wil smaid e N ML mhaxa sheiwilL ibs rideams Loza on the rehels' side. 22 a has as w Britain alloted three delogates follows: Edna Keiffer, newly elected president of the Owakeya High School Girls' club, Doris Barber and Mary Mautner. These girls with Miss Amalie Traut, Girl Reserve secretary at the loca sociation. will motor to Maine. Mamp Aya-Po. the Hartford Y. W. A. camp at Somers, offers an ex- cellent opportunity for all girls over 12 to aftend a Girl Reserve camp. Tt is situated in the hills of north- western Connecticut on a lake. Ac- tivities there will include, dramatic heen e L —_— Radio Station” Threatened, Ac- Be Somewhat Nearer Realization raigned in Providence On Secret l cording to Senator King. | ’ | of Plan. Indictment Today. Rev. Thomas F. Lynch Given: Husband Granted Divorce Today One Attempis fo Resist But | ing against “‘a wholesale execution of 5 ern rallroads appeared to be & stel tan John W. Perry of th N From Evangellst nearer the four-trunk merger today Succumbs fo Police [ Y T e AU SR York men pleaded guilty in the fed- {radio commission, Senator King, e f | i ey cral dis 't today 1o conspir- |democrat, Utah, today urged the — prepared 1o Tesume. . eonferences > i rall distriot ‘conrt foday 10! conspir o h y urg Which were interrupted two weeks oot Dongdor the Rhode Island authori- 1 : New ‘Bedford, Mass., June 22 (U ties will be arraigned i i smuggling alcohol into Boston on the | Bristol, June 22—Rt. Rev. John | vestigation before ordering the dis- rgajer Smith of Darien was granted — the negotiations were halted i P s Ll mship Cretan in July, 1926. San, Nilan, bishop of the Hartford |continuance of any of the smaller |q aivorce from Gypsy Pat Smith, in- (cpmorarily when the New York | Vere arresied today in renewed dis- | Secret indictment charging him with § turbances at the Nonquitt mills, | perjury. 2uggling gang which maintained appointment of Itev. Thomas I.| Asserting it; would be a crime 10 | judge Alfred C. Baldwin in superior fajled to agree on the disposition of offices in New York and purported | lynch, at present assistant pastor permit the forces of nature to be|court today. e Contral rallvoad of New Jersey, | Joseph Cabral, said to have been the leader of the picketers, attempt- | 600, and Samuel Kaplan, another 'the pastorate of St. Joseph's church | ment of a radio trust, Senator King sideration of the report of Senator Tday's mecting was called in the ier, $500, New Hartford declared there was evidence “of a Matthew Kenealey of Stamford who offices of P. E. Crowley, president of Powered police. Fred E. Beal of the Textile Work- atrorney, Joe Kalatt, who was office "f‘llmlg where he was horn Decem- the control of basic radie patents mittee. The divorce petition against those expected to attend were J. J the concern, was given a |ber 7, 1887, He attended the schools and licenses. He charged that there the internationally known Evange- Bernet, prosident of the Erie; 0. P. Supporting the cause of the 25,000 striking operatives, pleaded guilty in day in prison and placed on proba- [seminary, Hartford and was ap- tion of licenses and that a group of to Judge Alfred C. Baldwin today W. Atterbury, president of the Penn- tion for a year. Two of the ship's pointed to the American College, at | high powered stations affiliated with through the report of Senator Mat- sylvania. charges of disturbing the peace, and was senténced to 30 days in jail. Anderson fined $100 cach. Six [philosophy. He was ordained in tained if not a monopolistic share at cently heard the matter as a com- insist that the Jersey Central be- me of the crew were fined $25 | Louvain on Jusuary 13, 1913, by Rt. | jeast too large a portion of the na- mittee, come a neutral line, and are pre- al said th police found guilty of Feating strikers wonld be prose- ries Marino, William Patten, Gus |iary hishop of Malines, On his re- | e report later in the day. the Wabash to the B. & O. to gain 2 lergenson, krank Tcasen, and John |turn to America, & ved as assistant | . The content of the report by Sen- that point. The B. & 0. Is said to rrest followed the convietion 0 Clty Items : day of William T. Murdoch, The Cretan was raided at a dock gh”r\\ur_\' and the Immaculate Con- until such time as the judge passes hera by customs officers who seiz- | ception church in Baltic. From officially on the matter. Wabash. niftte, an alleged padloel creahiza; ¢ was held last night | 3 1. ¥, Loree, president of the Dela- | fion which has endeavored to organ- s later sold to hospitals and to [ ed as an army chaplain in France. 192 Mrs. Smith is the daughter of sons holding permits for its usc pon his return he was assigned to | 119 Smith street at the home of | Richard Thomas Tdjader, big game Bartosiewicz, trunk line through to the west, sentenced to two months in the house of correction by Judge Albert ‘l!m\sfl‘rrv‘d to St. Joseph's church, lof friends and relatives of the Kllf('l Smith is a World War veteran this city, Father I 1 assume ' of honor, who will he married to ', S = |4 city ather Lynch will assume and is said to have heen horn in a tenant Thomas . Connolly of the Held on ( harge of Roston police told the court that e . : | Bribing Policemen e el | Cross chureh. Aduring the war and was wounded in PASTORATE GHANGES | The police were notified today of | 1316, coming to this country where . | | brothers, today were held for the £455 3 | geymonr street and Charles Niczo-| It was while on this work that he Bishop Nilan of Hartford wic of 345 Arch atreet, ! met Mrs. Smith. auit their in protest against a 10 per cent wage decrease, | (180rge Roissonanlt and to have of- Several Transfers, |ihe absence of Chief Hart, who is force greeted him. P : fered them money in an nnr:nr'v to iattending the police chiefs conven- Because of its smallness, T. Hadley ;and Mrs Clarence Derrick of 1% ' = 7 e ; : {Gov. Fuller Nominates 22 Rehel d 10 Federal Arthur Twining Hadley, wife of the Ply 5 22 Rebhels any e |president emeritus of Tale univer- lymouth Sheriff " Soldier But Cannot Afiord fo Stop fo 2 | v 5 Tl] @ P [ [ Twenty-two rebsls and 10 federal |nature of her ilness has heen given | council the nomination of Charles L"SES “‘S [;UR ATE “Wholesale Execution of Small! L']NEER M ARR'E“;:.sum Rallroads Today Seem to | AL[EEED PI[;KETS Grand Titan of K. K. K. to Be Are Washington, June 22 (P—Protest- | New York, June 22 (UP)—East- Providence, June 22 P—Great Ti« Boston, June 22 P—Eleven New | P, in New Hartford 1cmau radio stations” by the federal ¢ | as[omm 10 New al'lO as the presidents of leading lines | 3 arrested last night in New London, to violate the tariff act in (Special to the Herald) commission to make a thorough in-| gridgeport, June 22 (P—Klein ago. 2 —Xour more alleged ragical pickets | court here late this afternoon on a Bernstein, one of the leaders of a | diocese, announced Thursday the | stations. i ternationally know Evangelist, by Central and the Baltimore & Ohio { i during the city's great textile strike. | to be a realty concern. was fined |of St. Joseph’s church, Bristol, to ' monopolized through the develop-| The decree was granted after con- yhich they control jointly. cd to resist arrest but was over- On motion of an sistant U ¥ather Lynch is a native of Wa potential radio monopoly” through recently heard the matter as a com- the New York Central. Among gk ers’ Union, who has been active in spende entence of a year and a |[of that city and later St. Thomas' | had been favoritism “in the alloca- list was submitted in superior court and M. J. Van Sweringen, and W. superior court this morning to officcrs, William Stern and John M. | Louvain, Belgium, for thelogy and , the so-called radio trust, had oh-|thew Kencaley of Stamford who re- ~ Officials of the Pennsylvania will In a statement sucd yesterday al hey Chris Werner, | Rev, Anthony De Wacheter, auxil- | tion's broadcasting facilities.” | Judge Baldwin will act upon the pared to turn over their holdings in cuted by the Textile Workers' Union. Phingst. | pastor at St. John's church in W ator Kenealey have been withheld have demanded exclusive control of the Jersey Central as well as the ary of the textile mills com- s gallons of alcohol. Thi: nuary 1918 to July, 1919, he serv- A stag The Smiths were married in April, in honor of Caesar Mieczkowski of ware and Hudson, recently aban-(ize the strikers. He was found doned his attempts to get a firth 8uilty of disturbing the peace and |the Church of the Assumption in | (Grorge 34 Sihver 'hunter and companion of the late Ansonia and two years ago was et, attended by a large number | Theodore Roosevelt on African trips. | - | IZ. Avery of the superior court. Before senfence ed, Lieu- he duties of his new pastorate on | Mies Genevieve Kopee Wednesday gypsy tent in lingland. He served Thursday, June 28, morning, June at the Holy [as a chaplain in the British forces Murdoch had been avvested twicedin | Boston during the Sacco-Vanzetti| 121l River, Mass. Jund 22 (P — : | Fugena R. and Joseph R. Vital, the suspension of the operator’s li-| he aided in the victory loan cam- -4 |censes of Edward Quelette of 13 paign. Made Traffic Sergeant J. J. King has e — | heen detailed to desk duty during MARATH[]N nANElN[i © M 5 | purchase protection of a liquor bus tion In Colorado Springs, Col. ja'w plane has been cated e Mrs, Arthur . iness ? Tanps b Hugh Reid Derrick, son of Mr aerfal motorcycle | Is at St. Raphael's L | o | Nex Haven, June 22 (A—Mrs ) \ Killed in Fight siv. is a potient at the hospital of | Boston. duna 22 (A — Governor Mexico City, June 22 (UP) 8. Raphael. No report as to the |Fuller today sent to the executive New York, June 22 (UP)—A rev- olution i 3 {at the wedding of a cousin. Miss e e e O ar | Tomkina who graduatel from the Akl 1 enman tromy | New Britain State Normal school D e At Marya| Lhenday, hasiobtained a position s |chureh, East Hartford; the Rev. |® kinderss teacher in Terryville. | l PRkt 2 E Miss Elisabeth Fox of 140 Fair- | Cornelius P Tuelings from the 2 A | | 2 view street and Miss Trene Haigis of | church of the Sacred Heart, Water- | IOW ftiaet a0 B 08 F00e e for |bury ‘to St. John's Wattertown; the | 125 Columbus sreet 150 fo08y o0 | Rev. John 3. Brennan from Ansonia | Storrs. where they will spend f18 |48 Hmearduille; the Rev. Thomap 4. |1ext twe weeks as lealers nt s ¥ ¥ B m Tiristol to New Hart. |conference at Connecticut Agricul- | ford tural college. arts and crafts, music, nature study, | The Rev. Francis . Misy Marjorie Gibney of 441 f‘fllfk e % [hnen mppointond aunistant street, who was graduated from the Jiking, land sports and dancing. | Mary's church, Bridgeport. New Eritain state Normal achol Camping periods are from June ! = thin week,ihag isacnred onsoaohing 20-July 13, July 13-27, July 27-Aue. Kaw Indians to Have \vx‘:“;?: in the Dloomfield public 11 girls tnterested in going showa | Celebration Next Sunday | suit for e o e e | e Oty Tan, | June s S(UR) by ldohniEita sgainst Blvesterand Registration blanks may also be se. —Next Sunday has been chosen by | Paul Lukaniec, Enowiycaise oAy cured from her. ¢ {he Kaw Indians as the date for Ukaniec, through Attorney M. . e e | their celebration in honor of their | Stempien. ' Property of he dpend z ! tribesman, Sen. Charles Curtis, re- |ants located on Pulaskl street wag Amos B. Moore Named | ,ubiican vice presidential nominee, Aftached today by Deputy Sherift Defendant in Suits ' Tribal chieftains met yesterday \““A'""';" 7"*’5";‘“_“; S New Haven, June 23 (P—Amos and set the date for the celebra- | o ":" ;‘," boseeuling o EReN, 2 : - . M. Greenstein is in New York B Mense br Madteomlle X tions which will be held in a me- | W' M. tenced yesterday to 90 days in questered grove on the banks of ONE DAY MEETING New Haven, June 22 (@ ,day meeting of Connecticut post- | | masters of third and fourth class | post offices will be held tomorrow | Postmaster D. M. Case of | Beach will preside, <4 car has broken out among the PR oy { The governor's reappointments to- day included William C. Adams of .| Newton as director of the division of Sound |fisheries and game, department of | conservation 13 couples left in the international & dance marathon at Madison Square Garden, but none of them has time to quit dancing and storm the office where Milton Crandall, the pro- moter, sits counting his ever-increas ing gate receipts. The cry of “fraud” sounded above the blare of the orchestra at the he- ginning of the 13th day. Twenty- | four contestants insisted that the two ofher survivors were being al- owed to loaf on their reputations as the winners of previous marathins. | Tommy Nolan and Anna sz.‘ Pittsburgh champions, got a $1,000 | guarantee before the u\arathon; started, their rivals said today, and also charged that the judges,, walk among the couples and keep them moving, allow Nolan to stand still on the floor while his partner takes a nap. Nolan didn’t bother to reply. He was too tired, N PERFORMS Columbus, Neb,, June 22 (UP)— An egg measuring 10 1-4 inches by 8 3-4 inches was reported by George Drinnin, Columbus. An ordinary sized hen's egg measured about 6 by 7 inches in circumference. At 3 He Likes a! Good Cigar the un AUTO PIONEER DIES Buffalo, Y., June 22 (UP)— |Col. Charles Clifton. chalrman of the board of directors of the Pierce Arrow Motor Car company, and one | of the pioneers in the automobile . industry, died last night at his| | § | home here. He was 74 and had been | ' ill only a week, Dem.; "Will Hear Singing Mayor RADITCH FAILING Belgrade, Jugos ia, June 22 (B has | —Stefan Raditch, leader of the : | St ! Lawlor s Croatian peasants’ party. who was wounded hy a government deputy during a session of parliament on Wedne: to- day. His physicians con- gestion of the lungs To Have Special Service For Excommunicated Woonsocket, R. T., June 22 (UP) —The Reverend Joseph F. Bennette, pastor of the Church of the Assump- tion of Bellingham, Mass, has an- nounced he will eonduct a special service next Sunday for the benefit of Elphege J. Daignault and 16 of his friends, who were recently ex- communicated by the Pope. Daignault’s excommunication fol- ' lowed his controversy with Bishop Willlam F. Hickey of Providence, sday, was losing ground feared 400 was brought today | Mrs. Francis Riordan and Miss concerning the use of parish funds. S\\'tdisl;ifixpress Wrecked And 14 Persons Killed Stockholm. June 22 (®—The death list in the wreck of the North- for his alleged treatment of a mag- azine subscription crew, was namel defendant in two civil suits, each for $3,000 today. Irank Zaremba and Alexander loscialpe, both minors, of Paterson, N. J. filed the suits through relatives or friends. | the Arkansas river near Kaw Cit i i Ackans DEAT. enevieve Terhune, of 258 Sisson | :’.’lll’“":‘";" "’P‘(’l‘h"”t’“d‘"" tribes . enue, Hartford, left New Britain | DR SODOTER i s \General hospital today in a private Although the celebration will he [FEUCRE TSP oo Sere injured in his honor, Senator Curtis will be [\CLEUN i i an automoile unable to attend because of the |.iuqh at the intersection of Stanley press of campaign duties. | SR Allin atreste: an actres: publicity Meanwhile, Miss Winifred Barr: who has an aversion to had the law” on the dance marathon and then reluctant- | Iy Crandall, posed for photographers. i Miss Barry obtained a writ for | charging that the ma AIR MAIL PILOT KILLED Lebo, Kans., June 22 (U'P) Pilot Wayne Neville of the Chicago- Dallas air mail route ran into a se- vere wind and electrical storm near here today, crashed and was Killed. | His plane fell in flames, John Sei- | Zaremba claims to have - been heaten in a hotel room here on June 18 and Loscialpe alleges that ' he was struck on five occasions. Complaints made to the police by members of the crew several days ago resulted in the arrest of Moore on a charge of breach of the peace and are szid to have disclosed a situation which amounted almost to peonage The boys in the crew were given a quota of subscriptions to sell each day and those who fell below their quota are said to have been beaten with a leather strap. Principal Touis P. Slade of the | Senior High school will spend the week-end with his family at Tiver- ton, Rhode Island, where their sum- mer home is situated. ern express near Rollnas was placed at fourteen late today. Tt was stated that there were no foreigners among the victims, First official accounts said that the express wrecked when an extra engine left the Bollnas station too soon resulting in a collision Both locomotites overturned 4 four hos telescoped and burst into flames The dead included hannson, leader of party and the engineer and fireman of the express train, The of he other also 3 ved ed, | buhr, farmer, said. 1 Seibuhr said he believed the plane had been struck by lightning. | thon was inhuman, and then began a campaign to enlist recruits for her cause. Peggy Hopkins Joyce joined. | $o did Charles Ray. Ned Waybourn who makes his living teaching peo- | ple how to dance, agrecd that| incing could be carried to ex- tremes and became a crusader. Cor- | nelius Vanderbilt, Jr., viewed the| contestants with alarm, and Arthur | S. Roche, in his best literary man- | ner, delivered denunciations. i Crandall grinned, for he doesn't have to appear in court until Tues- ay and by that time one of the couples will have won the §5,000 | prize. There were two prize fights in the Garden last night. Jimmy McLarnin whipped Phil McGraw in the main | arena, and downstairs, where the | marathon had been moved tempor- arily to make room for the bout, | e . . Miss Mary Goddess, one of the Wh R k f “ M “ wlll T B k H i ona astiman loyer her ere Rockefeller Millions urn Bac| istory partner, Irank M. Quinn. 7 Miss Goddess said Quinn was a | quitter. Quinn said Miss Goddess | was a quitter. They exchanged slaps | nd then quit the marathon. Hercules Mary Promitis of Pifts- urgh is keeping William Bush, her pariner, awake by alternately tickl- ing him on the neck and putting ice down his back. Miss Promitis is nding the pace well, having soak- ed her feet in vinegar three weeks hefore the marathon. | WRITES OBITUARY TO PEACOCK TLondon, June 22 (UP) An obituary notice of a pracock which had been a friend of the Bishop of Worcester and his family for some vears, recently appeared in the Dio- cesan Gazette, (s | ‘l S PUMES FATAL { Bridgeport, June 22 (8 — James | M. Saxton, 76, former member of | {he city planning commission and a iunior warden of Trinity Episcopal |hurch, was found dead in his bath | this mornjnz. a victim of accidental gas poisoning. The gas had escaped | from a small heater. was Queen of London Night The appreciation, written by the Clubs Is Sent to Prison hishop. concludes: | Tondon, June 22 (UP)—"Moth- “May T add that his disconsolate 'or* Kate Merrick, queen ot London widow, being of the varium et mu- |night clubs and mother-in-law of tabile sex, would, as she fclls me, {two peers, was sentenced at Bow welcome another partner if anyone 'street police court today to six has a peacock to spar | months' imprisonment Sor sclling intoxicants without a license. | ™A additional charge against Mother” Merrick was supplying liquor to her night club patrons out- |side of legal hours. Mrs. Merrick's two daughters — the Countess of Kinnoul and Lady De Clifford—were in court during | the hearing. {Moses Predicts Hoover Will Get Women’s Vote Washington, June 22 (UP)— ator George Moscs, republican, H., today predicted Herbert Hoov would get 2 1-2 democratic wom- en’s votes for every wet republican that goes o Governor Alfred Smith, | anticipated democratic nominee. Moses after a conference With Hoover, said the democrats had al- ready begun a “procession of mi: takes" and forecast that the 2 1 to one odds that Smith would carry New York state would drop to even money. were Johann Jo- the peasants's | E. Shepherd, who has won nos in convention halis throughout Texas and Oklahoma as “the singe ing mayor of Wichita Falls,” will ba soloist with the Old Gray Mare band lof Brownwood, Tex., official band of the national Democratic convention \in Houston. He sings in full cowboy regalia. crow helie GRADUATED FROM BATES paam Ayl 1O pPauUTAM Miss Dagr arlson, daughter of fieonorad sea yovy eyows yr| Mr. and Mrs, Edward Carlson of 774 ‘4 pue g 1B ‘oum s4ayjodq asayy| East street, was graduated from 10 au0 5| 17 ‘Avp T 5amS1d anoy syy | Bates college at Lewiston, Me., this 2A®Y 0} STy Ay Inq ‘g A0 1 “p N | Week. She reccived the degree of ‘yav. 40 UOWN(A [BUIN S1NYL| bachelor of arts. engine MARRIAGE INTENTIONS Marriage license applications have | [1een filed by the following: Charles Gaffney of 26 Hart strect and Bes- 'sie A. Sullivan of 112 Greenwood street; Steve Mallookis of 222 Kast | Main street and Christafla Jissis of Clark street; Paul D. Donnelly 303 Linwood street and Mary icrtrude Luddy of 37 Bassett street. WANTS MORTGAGE CLEARE Claiming transfer of porperty and the discharge of a mortgage Anna Brown today brought suit against Joseph and Tekla Tetz through At- | torney Monroe S. Gordon. states that October harles now deceased owner 1 as Whiting st and that on the fol- Mrs, Hoover’s Place | ; Filled in Girl Scouts ' iff was appointed | estite and found | York, June 22 (UP)—The « held by the de- hoard of directors of the & oxeented in Girl Scouts announced today that ims that fhe Mre, Nicholas 1% Brady had been il bt that cleeted chairman of organiza- e 1he tion fo suceeed Mrs. Herhert Hoov- Mrs is vice president of o resigned Air Partners v on Brow of 1 known lowing " ) national w Iy the he dis Hoover nization and n April 17, i —_— | <o oo Youngest Delegate: ot Smith Man 1] termined SR 20 Virginia’s Votes Are To Be Uninstructed Toanoke, Va. June 22 (UP) — { Virginia's votes at the national | democratic convention are in the hands of an uninstructed delegation. The state party convention here yvesterday was fe atured by harmony. |1t adopted a platform denouncing graft and corruption in government and endorsed the 18th amendment. Governor Harry ¥. Byrd was clected national committeeman and Mrs. Robert C. Watts, national com- mittecwoman. | Boy Risks Own Life to | Save That of Pet Dog | Erie, Pa. June (Up)—Harry id, a 19 year old lad and a good swimmer, unhesitatingly leaped into a rain swollen ereck rday to save his dog from being swept into a cement tube which for nearly thr miles is buried under this 4‘|((v's streets, Both dog and boy | were carried inte the tube and half an hour later the hoy emerged with | only bruises and minor injuries but «covered with mnd and slime and without some of his clothing the young- The dog was rescued hy a fire- Zoing to the national MAan who himself narrowly escaped at Houston. being drawn through the tube when |a rope broke. er. I for fhe e and exclusive by the chairms property plain Noted SurEeon b;t to Attend Wounded Man Vienna, June 22 (A—Professor Gustav Singer, eminent Vienna phy; sician, has been rushed to Belgrade | Dy airplane to attend Stefan Raditch, the wounded peasant lecader. The | condition of Raditch s understood | to be causing greal apprchension. | A peasant upheaval is feared if their national hero dies. (Latest reports from Belgrade in- | dicated that inflammation had de- | veloped, causing serious complica- tions in the condition of the peasant | leader, whose wound is located in the abdominal region. Further com- plications were fearced on acéount of the existing diabetic symptoms.) | no es| Hear Studebaker Is Merge With Pierce- N. Y., dut Arrow falo, (Ury To Investigate Mental Condition of Womlan Stamford, June 2 The men- tal condition of Mrs. Ethel Swi who several weeks ago shot her di- vorced husl Ik Swist, is to be investigat a sanity commis- sion named Dr. W. M. Thompson of Hartford, Dr. E. Brod- sky of Bridgeport and Dr. W. H. Pyle of Bridgeport comprise the commission. | Mrs. Swist is being held at the | Bridgeport jail in lieu of $20,000 {homds. She will come hefore the su- { perior conrt on a ch with intent to murder, September term Swist has re-married shooting. It Sweden to Send Boat To Hunt Amundsen | ‘ nd Here are some of the famous old buildings of W illiamsburg, Va., which soon are {o figure in the greatest historical restoration ever attempted in America. The entire town, rich in colorful memories, is to be rebuilt just as it was 150 years ago. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., will finance the project at a cost of more than $4,000,000. Upper left is the already restored George Wythe home, where Washington and Lafayette planned the victorious Yorktown campaign. rze of assault | Conter is Bassett Hall, built by a nephew of G eorge Washington. The old prison, where during the | Blackbeard and his men were executed in 1718, is pictured at the right. Below is a drawin (e | of the old Raleigh Tavern, destroyed by fire in 1859, which will be restored. Here, it is sai more colonial history was made than in the capitol itself. Harold B Schoeneeker, 24, of Mil- cankee, i believed 1o b delegate Iemocratie convention He 1s a Smith supporter. Mged, ar hoan ex poof the in Pallin. | fhe you iatrix o » o s below o1ty d l an here since

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