New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 3, 1928, Page 11

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" ONE KNOWN DEAD INSYRACUSE FRE Three 0il Plant Buildings Partly Destroyed Byracuse, N. Y., July 3 (UP)—| - One person was known dead, a see- | ond seriously burned, and threc buildings were partly destroyed to- day after fire broke out when two | storage tanks on the Sunco Ofl cam- pany’'s land exploded shortly before midnight rly today the fire was still burning but was thought to be un- der control. No estimate of the damage was made Fear for the lives of many resi- dents in the vicinily was alluyed when a number of houses w sprayed with water after being blis- tered by the scorching heat. The people had been ordered to vacate their homes but were permitted to BOGDANSKI FINED $150 ON TRANSPORTING COUNT Caught By Policeman Carrying Liquor Into Store On Lafayette Street Frank Bogdanski, aged 23, of 40 Horace street, pleaded guilty to the charge of transporting liquor for the purpose of sale and was fined $150 and costs by Judge Henry P. Roche | n police court today, on recom- |mendation of Prosecuting Attorney [Joseph G. Woeds. Attorney Martin F. Stempien rep- resented Bogdanski, who was ar. vested by Supernum-rvary Officer Zoceo in a store at 122 Lafayelte st t yesterday morning, the offi- cer having selzed a pint of alleged {liquor out of a full box carried in by Bogdanski while the officer, in plain clothes, was buying cigarettes. A {rolle was entered in the case of [ William Skoneiczny, aged 22, of 49 Lyman street, who was arrested ater by Bergeant P. J. O'Mara us the illeged proprietor of the store The case of Louls & Gilbert, aged | | return early today. |41, of South Glastonbury, charged Three buildings were afire. They were the Warner's Macaroni factory, the Gulf Refining Company and the Spencer Filling Box Compuny. Po- Wi jnolled Prosecuting Attorney Jo- | the New York, July 3 (UP)—For four months they have been saying that and the air were the only frev things on Broadway. “The Ladder” is the play that has been drawing a full house for the last 200 performances without mak- 1t has lost more money than any other theatrical production that ever ventured into New York. 1U's u $1,000,000 flop. Some persons, show business, Davis, the Texan who has been the “ungel” for “The Ladder, stitious and is afraid to Others insist he Then there ara those who will | tell you that Davis thinks he has a ing a penny. | born. with operating an automobile while under the influence of liquor, su | s | free june 16, on Stanley strec lice said the fire on the Gulf Refin- |sepn B. Griffen of Havtford police ing property was not near the gaso- line storage tanks, court represented him. A nolle was entered in the case of | The deud man was Henry Kap- {William - Wearne, aged 23, of 85, when he tried to turn off the stop cock of a tank car which was heing unload The night watchmun, James |made, tailed to appear in court Kunally, 60, recetved severe burns and was taken to his home. He said EFamily in England Is Kappesser was unloading the car but was not certain whether he was assisted Evicted From Cave I |n London, July & (UP)—Four per- 8o far us was known no other |®ons who have lived in a cave for s ars | should sce the show Persons were employed at night by [more than four and a half yeurs | #hould sce the show tare to be evicted. the Sunco Compuny The tanks purning were near a | string of loaded ¢ were hauled outside the cnclosure, ——— Ifor the ¢ tcouncil, owners of the chalk pit which the cave is situated, have 836 CHILDREN ENROL They have never paid rent und the latter [or tuxes during the whole of that period. They now ofter to pay rent | but the Kent county | 1 SUMMER SCHOOLS [+iiiin s moneh """ """ t In 1923 the Fones family—mioth- | er, father and (wo daughters—wore Registered at Cental and 487 | yieted fr their home in at Nathan Hale Since the Opening Yesterday., Accorditg 1o records to the two | Ham, London. When a young man I Fones had seen the cave and had thought of it as a snug little plac 10 live, especially as it was near the | Tilbury docks, where he was em- sumuicr schools a total of 577 pupils | ployed were enrolled yesterday, the open- ing day o1 school and u totul of 474 | 1 enrolled toduy. This number will be increaced greatly after the July Fourth holiday, the expect. Miss Kutharine Roche of the Cen- | tral Junice High school had 160 yes- terday und 207 today and Miss Dor- | othy Hughes enrolled 217 yesterday and 272 today in the Nathan u;m} Junior High school. This is the first year pupils from | the north and south ends of the city were separated VANDALS VISIT PARK Concrete settecs were overturned | and carried from their proper loca- by vandals, who also damaged (]n-[ drinking fountain to the extent th the faueet may have to be replaced, | Attacking a white girl late Sergeant T. J. Feeney was driving | | The third Jynching in four d : ac recorded RSiSSip) D ' b tions at Walnut Hill Paik last night | 2¢¢0 recorded in Mississippi today The family set up their home in cave, The London county coun- cil, then the owners, were unable to evict them. The Nutional Society Lwo principals for the Prevention of € uelty The eave measures 10 feet hy 10 | feet. Mississippi Has Third Lynching in Two Days |Narragansct Bay, the plane sudden- | Liberty, Miss. July 3 (UP) ”“'\1 (In’nlull Pl eTossstane and ad | Plunged abo L0000 fee ) the B sl i-Commander ‘Alford, aviation flag offic plane carrier U. who was strapped in the fter the exccution by a moh of Shug” McElwee, negro accused of g0 and it s said that McElwee of the scttees. Park Superintend- had been recognized when his mask including the labor. Dr. It W. Pullen, superintendent | ot health, complained to the police | . that considerable damage has been done .at the municipal abattoir on | IRocky Hill avenue. 1t is believed boys who gather about the premises after 5 p, m. commit the nuisance. The plumbing trad brisk month with 117 tions | Foadside. for permits, Inspector Olaf A, Pet- and made 26 water tests. The fees of his bureau of the huilding depart- [Iynched near Brookhaven Iriday ment totalled $161, he stated in his |afer they had been charged report filed today. ———e— [8eant Amos R. Anderson turned in o'clock today when he confiscated {910 gallons of grain alcohol vulued ar more than $8,000 and arrested J180 rum runners, one of whom is | declared to have threatened Ander- | son's lite with a rum ring reprisal [1oF his arresty | beating two white men to death. Sergeant Anderson Gets |Scheaffer, 25, of 150 Chestnut street, |Trenton, N. J., the driver of the truck, and Van James, 28, of 111 Lec | tor. |avenue. Trenton. The truck seized |was a brand new model which had been driven only 152 miles, a jour- ney admitted to be its maiden trip % Blount of Amite county arrestid the negro about 13 miles from town, | He attempted to bring the pris- |oner into the eity and was met U, @ mob. The deputy sherift called Ak [ for reinforcements but by the tim ST A [help had arrived the ‘men g |Sonator Joseph d a|hanged McElwee to a tree along the | McElwee recently had comploted | crson made 427 inspections, super- |4 Prison sentence for assanlt on a vised the installation of 716 fixtures Negro gir James and Stanley Beardon were with His Biggest Booze Haul Darien, Conn., July 3 ®—ser- 8 largest liquor seizure The men under arrest are Emil zood proposition, Seats to “The Ladde for five wmonths, * have been You cull at @ m., and get first served. v Davis announced he would remodel the play for the fifth time pesser, 19, He died in the explosion |Smulley street, who was charged [@nd re-open it on July 11 with the with breach of the peoace and as- | saulting his wife. Mrs. Wearne, on whose complaint the arrest was ular hox office The Ladder €0 it made little ssion upon the critics. us with reincarnation. he knows nothing | performances d determined that New York The only way he was 1o let people | That decision cost him §1,- ! wanted to or not. rates | could arran, pin fr Davis eun afford it. in | Wells in Texas, mines in Colorado. | I His favorite |ow he hung onto an oil well when | everyone elsc The well came in and added a sub- | stantial amount of cash to the Davis always played “Sometimes ince then [ have forlorn hopes, they fuil, but most of the time they Maybe *The Lad- der' will turn out to he a gold mine.” ,000 persons have bring back his §1,000,00 It won't take Davis long He probably morning of July to find out. 10 [ hy the | ehildren was informed, but no fault | could be found with the treatment | Nav | of the children. / Naval A It has been an ideal home for the | tamily, with their dog and radio, | uthorities Are Investigating Accident Naval authorities toduy were investi- gating a seaplane looping the attached to the |S. Wright Monday. | 4 s ¥ ilot's seal. . The alleged attempt to attack the V00" % through the”park about 2 o'clock | White girl this morning and saw the condition | companton, rred about a week | ne Commander William Butler, Jr. Island naval air base, [reeeived injurive which caused ent Ellingwood said toduy the dam- [slipped from his face. A mob sought | gouth at '8¢ may cost $10 or $15 to repair, [him at the time but was unable 10 | hours later. | find a trace of the negro. j Phe plane, badly damaged, was r Late Monday Deputy Sheriff I3 Robinson Having Busiest Days of His Career Rock, Ark.. July 3 (UP)— !eratie vice presidential cxperiencing some Idavs of his carcer. nator Robinson was ¢ | grams of congratulation | varts of the country and reading a | huge stack of mwail. nomince will be a of the American Legion post and tomorrow evening will go to Hot ®prings to rest formally of his nomination. He plans a vigorous campaign fol- | lowing formal notification. (B. L. Young Out for ‘Lieut. Gov. in Mass. | Boston, July 3 (UP) — Benjamin Loring Young, of Weston, speaker of the Massuchusetts house of representatives, his candidacy nomination for United States sena- the fifth candidate in EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 3, 192 LADDER WIL NOT BE FREE S00N 'Plan {o Remoled the Play and| Charge Admission SWEETHEA By IDAH McGLONE GIBSON Author of “My Son's Sweethear:s,” “Confessions of a Wife,” Etc. Copyright, . by Central Press Association i G David fount a tewel and proceeded fo wipe the dishes, s he had done ever since he was 34 and Lynda 10 OREWORD s him forget.” oher givls have, 1 want to Ol Traditions Die Hard [ it makes hin e land dunce and g0 10 the movies and Although a man’s idea of woman dreent. I you ask i 1 e | have a new hat now and then, Why, has ehanged much in the last half 5 05 10 busin 2 o1 . glils at the offl b important occasion s | dressed like rich men's daughters. century, especially since the war, graduated from high school tw 3 or sweethearts, ' thought there still are muny men who hons | departments at once. I don’t believe | David to himsel He owns oil | estly, I unconsciously, beleve that [ @nyone clsc. boy or garl, ever hasi eDid you tll that all women are weak, and that the | done that hefore in this town, e inguired good woman is the woman who las | (hen joh the very not been tempted—at the right time, | That's almost too much for one lit- in the right plice, and under the|Ue black-haired girl.” right circumstances, [ In his pride and admiration David Tho father ofliyhida Fenton dsi.coma over-and restod Mishandionil & it i i i s drinking. | one of thesc [Eandatsshauiar, St He said today that the minute a girl He is a periodical drunkard, and l ‘ :-'”‘ Rl ok i Sl [, BOCS into the hns world, so when in his cups he always s ‘“__“‘l““-”“ At much quicker she's lost to decenc presses upon his daughter that ever the woman is the slave of her emotions | Your shoulder? and her love of material things, and | "No. {was not fastencd in the hack, ultimately she will sell herself if the | “Well, 1 dnly ¢ t V19, |y vonned. aft har shovider and: show. compensation happens to please her, 1f 1 did. Did you pull away 10 b e i Her Fat ‘s Words I et me know yvoud grow: The Doy's oyes m‘m.;l.' 1t ‘befope Some women insist upon mar- i i 100 pulled the opening togother, riage as the price,” he says. *Others | boce LLEer Lok Tav e his S whagshats Tam P ha erled want money or power. Whatever it [show, are you? I IR 0 Cariing . towird. lir. DAy s may be, the man who is enamorcd 10 1 conld, hut -cighton, 1 il o0 ° | of & womun, must pay, and pay, and | Siles manager, happened 1o stry pay.” the town 1 was working 1o cheek ny i has told his danghter, ever| 0N me and 1couldn't Juave. It woul she was old enough te know | have cost me my joh t words mean, that she cannot The boy looked pe the terrible dictum, Men will | gricved that Lyvn desire her as they did her mother better tell the t hefore her. who not only deserted | me in, 1 himself, but also her baby daughter, | dis) s sai for some man who could give her | David followel love and luxurious surroundings in- [ en, where the t cluttere stead of the comparative poverty | with o ms that he had given her Jeen searecly touche Lynda IPenton, because of the in- Hov'd you get along firmity of her father, had grown up | fice today, Lyn ; ; in solitary fashion. Out of her en-| “Oh, all right, T zuess,” was the . i vironment, and her father's constant | listless answor. Davie i Dadlgpie {iteration, she had evolved a theory | Keeps on drinking. you know 1 can't of her own in regard to life. 1f she ! Keep the place. He's a dear when | e fated to eventually sell herself, | he's sober, but—uweil, you know how would be v¢ eful to get the | he is when he's full of liquor. One Dot worry about that, Lyn. Of | highest price, and she was not sure wonld never believe it would char course youw'll keep it. You don't have | that this was to be marriage. him go. He says Armitage & Son |4 (o] me how you've worked to fit That theories are worth nothing | gave me the job hecause I'ni 800d | yourself for 1t. You've been a beic until they are proved workable, and | 1o look at.” Don't I know how many times your that then they are not theories, but | Lynda biushed as she said this, | facts, Lynda did not know. | and hurried on. “He suyvs T look like What She Learns Mother, which means ruin for me. 1{gick, Youll stay with Armitage & During the three months of which | wanted fo make him forget about | son, thats a cinch, Why, Il bet this story is a history, she lerns | niother, but he would talk of noth- | vau' will be young Armnitage’s sccres [this, and upon these few weeks |ing else but her deserting W for tary in 4 month or two. They say hang all her future hLappindes or [some man with money. the old dame his father wished on i “T tried not to pay any attention | iy, IS o A aas How it turns out, and what it 1o him, but he talked on and on. He with six or Seven kids, and that'il means o her, depends entirely on | had brought home a bottle, and al- e your chan. the unconscious character she has | thongh I asked him not to drink 00 > you think Tl get on developed in her solitary childhood | any wore hefore supper insisted vly inguired Lynda, i and youth, for it is a sad fact that upon pouring another glassful remark about young niost experiences come too late to | filled 1t to the top and tossed 86’8 Becretaty bring anything but regret. down, then he lurched toward the lidn't #ecnt so hard tod The crucial three months of Lyn- table, and would have fallen i€ 1| yoaiiy it didu't, 1 was. -ust sonred da Fenton's life problem begin with | lad not caught him. Tle almost | o (.ath wiien 1 first went to work. the end of her school life and knocked me down with his weight, beginning of her work-a-day | and worst of all, he tore my even usking her, said 1 had done ence in the office of Ralph Armi- | dress the whole length of m o {very well with the copying.” tage. The history of these three| “At this I began to ery, Davie. “That's enough. You do not need months is an important human in- | couldn't help it. 1t's the only thing Lo suy any more, Lyn. Now I know terest document, for sooner or lat- | I have to wear to the office. | you're all right. If Gallop said that, er the problem has to be answered | *Sit down and eat your supPer. | \gur work must huve buen perfert. by every woman. Nature always in- | I didi't do it on purpose.’ he Lynda had been picking up her sists upon some kind of an answer | growled. You see he was still sobor hes and placing them into the from them, and to the momentous *nough to be ashamed of himsclf. nk. As a matter of course, David question, what price love, the fol- | but he couldn’t cat a thing. Then e lowing story is the answer. _ | staggered out, and I haven't won CHAPTER T | him since. When he went outside 1 THE WAY HER MOTHER WENT | took off my dres and “You know I didn't. 1ven when father is sober he thinks I have enough to eat and wear; and 1 do, after a fashion. You can't talk to At th: oment the apron, which , no. 1 told you he was falling hold of e ) suve t matter, my sleeve 10 he had fixed my s0 I couldn’'t have worn it to- tomorrow, I'd st heen throug! “Daim I David Ken- o 1 15 vatl 1] Knew n to have that connnission. He and saving that s purchase “You can mend it he usk- to hold the job if Dad Keeps o getit. L just ean’t live if I have to wive up now." father threatened to take you out of school and you still managed to wipe them, just as he had done ever to your fath- | know I'll never be | on drinking, and 1 worked so hard | but tonight Miss Gallop, without my | found a towel and procecded to | since he hud been fourteen and | cloth?” he asked. She found a piece of thin cotten and David dipped it into the water, hut us he was about to bathe the whing shoulder, the door was kicks “d violently open and Lynda's fath- er staggered in. CHAPT 15 HER MOTHE BE HE Lynda Fenton's face became scar- let, and she looked piteously at her | tather, as if to beg him not to hu- | miliate her betore the boy. As for David, he started toward the man who-had insulted both the giri and himself. Lynda, however, | held him back. Aren’t you making a mistake continued b ther, in an ugly i voiced You can get more for your Wwares from young Armitage, who is & willionare, than from old Ldodied U ST 0N CUOS S adowu Lynda had been holding David's sleeve, und begging him, in a low voice, not to row with her dad. At this, however, he broke awuy from Ber and strode up to the older man, I'who cowered before his clean youthtul vigor. “Take that buck!” the drunken figure buck, you beast. You don't deserve to huve u girl like Lynda to Keep N old rattle of a how for you." n, abjectly. That'll do for you, you lying cur 'umuuht it se aplendid whew she had she had but it on the firat gone to Armitage & Nen's. night 8. like her hopes, scemed impossites 3 “At Jes=t it's plain,” she told here Iself. with the promise that beforq the dress was worn out she woulq {buy another more in keeping with | her newly-developed appreciation of | fashion and good taste, - She thought of the other girls, independent and amured, whom ghe {had seen that day in the office, Surely they had asked much for | themselves and were getting it. If ishe had 1o sell her ability, or even | her virtue, as her father intimated, she would demand the highest price. didn’t mean it stammered | | | | She sighed, As yet she did not know | What the highest price would be. Only one thing she did know—it wag | not marriage to a drunkard. | At last, when her only dress war | caretully mended and hung up, wnd { ker shoulder bathed agaip in cold | Water, she crept into bed. | It was then she thought of David Kenmore. Davie, whom she had known and played with ever sinee she hud knowa how to play. Until | tonight, however, she never had | thought of him as being different { from herself. Now, thanks io her father's insinuations, she found her- self blushing as David's pitying face vame again before her, (To Be Continued.) I would knock your head oft your | oid body after breaking your | ' FIRST NEGLIGENGE SUIT for your insinuatious, if you Lyn's father.” ase, please, Davie, don’t stay longer,” begged the girl, trying push him toward the door. “I'Il Is Based On Death in Airplane you tomorrow. My shoulder will | Crash—Filed in Supreme Court i Al right." teluctantly David left, Fenton sat down heavily, appar- cutly going to sleep in his chair. Onee e opened his eyes and said: “I don't want thal young snipe Sce that he doesn't show up | thier, I'm going to bed.” “All right, all right. Stand up for IUAF you want to, but when you've e to the devil like your mother dont come back here asking me Fenton went to her room ing the door, threw herselt bed, shaking with sobs. had com romt work that day | tecling very happy. Ever since she | Was fourteen years old she had vorked for the job that had a few duys ugo been given her. David had promised 1o try and get her a pob With Armitage & Sen as soon as she was graduated, Lad suffered insults and Ities, but never lad lost cour- She had been hungry and cold at times, and had made no friends, e: coot David Kenmore, who had heen lier pal and companion ever since they had started school. Tonight it seemed strange that slien s had a chance to put her mother's sordid story hehind her, live her own life, and make some- [ thing of herself, it had all come back aguin: stff and stark the leton, which she thought she had safely locked in the closet with licr childhood, stood beside her. “1t's no use. Your father is right,” came through its grinning jaws. “Its only o question of time when you'll yicld, as every woman does if | she's tempted long cnough.” “Mother, Mother, why didn't veu take me with you?" Lynda Fenton hysterically asked. *There must be | some explanation. T don't and won't, belicve you went wway with another man, as father always tells me, “Come back and tell me you had 10 go uway to escape father's eruel tics. Oh, why didn't you take me, | Your helpless little baby, with you?" Lynda Fenton had. never forgiven her mother for deserting her. She could not excuse her for that, even if her father's theory of all women were correct, | Ever since she could understand what her father was saying, he had told her that all women have their | price. That price might be position, hame, sccurity, a sop to vanity or weakness, but it was usually mone Whatever it might be no woman, if the temptation came at the right | time, and in the right place, could | resist it lLynda had thought much on the subject, as her father always had Kept it before her when drinkine, which lately had been most of the illll 2, That night, as she lay there, a d cision, that long had been taking { form in her mind, was made. | 1f her mother's destiny were tp be hers, she would demand the highest price Poor child. She did not realize that she was making herself accept, { to believe when sober. jas true, a drunken fancy of her ! father’s, which even he did not seem | She heard her father stumbling | around the kitchen, and then go to Lis room. Finally, when from the stillness she thought he had fallen asleep, she arose to mend her dress, between Trenton and New Haven, .m‘e reputed destination of the al- | . cohol. | GIRLS' WINNING James, police say, made the ELECTED declaration to Anderson, that he wus CARD § | “erecting his own tombstone” with K today’s seizure, since James was a Movie World agrees ;\}embpr of a “Tough Gang” in renton. chief allure ‘ is smooth skin! Elkins Pulls Tendon H ! HOLLYWOOD, CAL. — Nfi s Municmall 21.1(1(.)8"” :&Lfigl«l | }‘r"}}:i.:hhl::m - zlh“dti otoy |3y 3 (UP)—Fait V. Elkins, New | S mmmev m“”'fifl York A. C. and American decathlon ;7 'fi.:d ponsdly h.ve—ue:nyooth, champion who was the favorite in | et v Ty with |that event in the Olympic tryouts | n”‘w e Higgins, Pathé Do Mille | here. pulled a tendon today in the | wwhu declares that “It is first event, the 100 meter run. | thfi‘cmm X ness of their skin '_rne injury may prevent him from et b °m"“ girls of widely |80ing to Amsterdam. sy ‘the most_ populsr Elkins, however, continued to the m'm ‘the world.” tape, limping badly. He was injured i south perfection that the |about 20 yurds from the finish, but . Klieg lights reveal in the close-ups, | continucd to the end, placing third. | eannot be faked by make-up, It Elkins is permanently out of | ood. It must utlully-{: the decathlon the American chances | as fine and soft as it locks.— of winning that event in the Nether- | “Studio Skin” they call this ex- lands will be decidedly decreased. ! quisite smoothness; and guard it In his dressing room, Elkins said he Teaberry Won't Disappoint You Here’s a tasty Chewing Gum that you are sure to like. The minute you try Clark’s Teaberry Gum you'll realize that it is dif- ferent—the most refresh- carefully. Blanche Sweet says, |would try to compete in further | “My first thought is always m; events, skin, for the camera is all-reve —Lux Toiet Soap keeps & | Former Assistant to i Hoover Takes Own Life | Waushington. July 3 (UP)—A note | |saying. “Excuse me. Don't be fussy | with m=" was found in the room of William R. Snyder, 41, bond sales- man, former assistant in Secretary of Commerce Hoover's office, He had killed himself with gas. v A little figure clad in a rumpied bungalow apron burst through the door of a shabby licuse which stood back from the road, and ran down to the sagging gate. Here I.ynda; Fenton looked eagerly up the | street; then, shaking her head, |crowned with its shining, satiny { waves of black hair, she sadly turn- ed and walked back to the house. She threw herself upon a rickety, weather-beaten chair on the lean-to porch, and dropped her face into her arms,-which sagged despairingly on the porch rail. | Suddenly she raised Irer head and | wiped the tears from her eyes as | she heard a blithe whistle. “Davie, Davie,” she called. “Are you home again?” | At the sound of her voice, David Kenmore quickened his pace, and | presently grinned into the purple, blue eyes of the girl who had again run down to the gate to meet him. “How does it feel to be a grown- up young lady with two diplomas, a new job, and everything?” he asked. A mist of unshed tears clouded ! her eyes. | “Davie, Daddy is drinking again. ! He did not even come to my gradu- ation exercises.” | “He always manages to spoil any little pleasure you might have,” said | young Kenmore. “Some day., when | T have a little more money, I'm go- | ing to take you away from him en- tirely.” 1 could never let you do that,| Davie. Really I couldn't. You know | Dad is wonderful except when he is idrinking. Poor dear, he says it | “You poor kid,” interrupted David. on something else when I started to gct supper,” returned Lynda Fen- ton, quickly, who could not help | being loyal to her father under any circumstances. “It has only pulled | away from the scam and 1 think 1 cany mend it easil “Yow'll be able to wear it tomor- row, then?" ’‘asked David, as she turned away to wipe her eyes. Onl. he could appreciate what that dress meant to Lynda, who had been sav- ing for it the last six months. “Yes, it'll be all right, Davie, but | tather is angry because T went to work for Armitage & Son withou! | telling him I was going to. He wanted me to stay at home and keep house for him, He docsn’t seem to understand that I want things that ved me right for not putting | | with pain. “Let me sce it. Maybe | | sote cold water on it.” nda had been ten. Her tears started afresh for. after here are ovdles and ooodles of | sceing the smart frocks worn by the | New York Today. New York, July 3 —What s be- | lieved to be the first negligence auit bused on a death caused by an air- plane crash was on file in supreme court today. | | _The suit was Lrought by Carl.C. | Stoll of Louisville, Ky., as adminis- i!mlor for his son's estate against the Curtiss Ilying Service, Inc. He aske | $15,000 damages | In his complaint, Stoll alleges that | the airplane which crashed at Cur. {tiss fleld April 14, 1927, killing bia Ison, Carl, Jr, a passengers, was “carclessly, negligently and impro- {perly handled.” His son had pald $5 for the flight. | John Parke Andrews, pilot of the | plane in which young Stoll was killed !also died in the crash as did Mrs. Mary Seaman of Greenport, I.. 1. another passenger. Thelr plane | sideslipped to the ground when only 200 feet in the air. The coroner whe |made investigation said that the . |pilot had done everything possible to prevent the accident. ' BRINGS SUIT FOR $1,500 | Morris Poliner Claims Frank Liman. 1 sky Defaulted On Payment of i Principal and Interest On Note. Morris Poliner brought suit today |for $1500 damages against Frank {Limansky through Attorney Morre | D. Baxe, charging the defendant with default in payment of the principal and interest on a $1500 promissory jhote. Papers were served by [ Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Horwits. | The writ Is returnable in the court {of common pleas on the first Tues. |day in September. | A $550 suit was brought today by Wladyslaw Turley of Newington ainst Oscar Larson and Edls rower of suid town, through Attor |ney Francis J. Fahey. Papers wers im rved today by Deputy Sheriff Mar. tin Horwitz and the writ {8 returp- ble in the court of common pleas on the first Tuesday in September, Suit for $400 was brought today |by The Economy Auto Supply Ce., | ugainst the Air Line Garage through Attorney Albert Greenberg, Papers |were served by Deputy Kheriff Mar. tin H. Horwitz. The writ is return- jable in city court on the third Mon. | day in July. | The Carbo Brick Co., of Kensing- {ton is defendant in a $280 action brought against it by Cambris, Roth & Cambria of Middletown through Attorney Bernard A. Ke- sicki of Middletown. Papers wers erved today by Deputy Sheriff Mar. tin Horwitz and the papers are re. turnable in superior court of Mid- dletown on the first Tuesday in September, A $200 suit was brought today by | Blair & Brobrib against Nina Courte vey of Newington through Attorney [ Albert Greenbers. Papers were | served today by Deputy Sheriff Mar. | tin Horwitz. The writ is returnable |in city court on the third Monday Curcs Sfalaria and quickly relieves Billousuess, Headaches and Disxl- ness due to temporary {in July. Comstipation. girls in that big room, Davie, and 1| other girls at the oftice, she had | Aids climinating Toxins and o know they won't keep them all | ye alized how flimsy the material and r the £pring rush. Do you sup- | how ill titting the garment. She had pose T'll make so good they'll keep e “I'lll say they will” said the boy, | unconsciously resting his hand on | licr shoulder. 1 “Oh, did I hurt your shoulder again?” he asked, as she winced you ought to have a doctor. You've got to do something or you won't be able to type tomorrow. Il put silently Lynda pulled the apron down from her shoulder and show- ed the welt. which was beginning to turn purple. Tears came into the boY's eyes as he looked at it. “Where can 1 find a cleap Retain Your Good Looks Caticura Will Help You Every-day use of the Soap, assisted by the Qintment as needed to soothe and heal any irritations, does much to keep the skin fresh and youthful, the scalp free from dandruff and the hair healthy. Cuticura “Talcum, smooth, cooling and fragrant, is the ideal toilet powder. Soup e, Obutment 5 und e Tulewm e Bod osery- EgEaTRE=] | 2T Addvess ... highly esteemed for producing copl- t-vs-0 CThe Largest Railway System in Amevies Plezse scnd me your free boskiet o The Mighioads of Oncaste.

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