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ALL PLANES SAFE IN BIG AIR DERBY Mines Field, Los Angeles, Sept. 14 (P—The elements today stood victor in the non-stop transcontinental air derby, feature event of the national air race meet in progress here, and $33.500 posted for the first four finishers in the event remained with Tace officials. None of the nine planes which hopped from Roosevelt Field, N. Y., resched their goal without op, though for a time yesterday it was thought Art Goebel, holder of the ‘west-to-east non-stop record, had won first prize. Goebel, winner of the Dole air race from Oakland to Hawail last August, was the sole pilot to reach Mines Field, landing here at 3:20 p. m., Pacific standard time amid a great outburst of applause from the crowd, Bu: mpy Landing Following the outburst, however, and confusion attendant with his rather bumpy landing, Goebel re- vealed he had been disqualified by a landing at Prescott, Aris., earlier in tl y, when he grounded to ad- Jjust & faulty carburetor and to take on additional gasoline. He brought a story of a bitter battle over the Rocky mountains during which his white Lockheed- Vega monoplane met fierce head winds, and rain and sleet storms. The craft, the “Yankee Doodle,” bore evidence of the violence of the storm, one cabin door being torn away. Goebel landed 23 hours and 50 minutes after his take off in New York, which time, despite the hour and 10 minutes he was on the ground in Arizona, was three hours better than the east-to-west stop record o! 26 hours 50 minutes 38 2-b seconds set by Licuts Oakley G. Kelly and John A. Macready in 1923, Captain George Haldeman, Ruth Elder's pilot on her attempted transatlantic flight, was the last plane down m the derby, coming to carth at 5:05 p. m., mountain time yesterday at Albuquerque, N. M., on @ccount of gasoline shortage. A single sccident marred the race when John P. Morris, pilot, and Col. Willlam Thaw, 2nd, navigator, both of Pittsbugh, crashed into a fence after a broken oil line had forced their Lockieed-Vega plane down at Decatur, hd., yesterday morning. Both men were seriously hurt. Pilot Miger in his orange Buhl- Seaqul pline, was the only one of the contetants to choose the north- ern routs and ran into ugly weather over Wyming that brought him down ater he had assumed a strategic lead in the fiight. Jee Forms Crossng above Rawlings, Wyom- ing, yeterday morning after a long hard Wttle with storms and snows, the Spokane pllot was forced down with ce forming on his carburetor. He Ifnded at 9:30 a. m., mountain time, Aleaky valve on an emergency sastank forced Lieut. Jack Eise- mai of the Rockaway naval air sta- tio, flying Charles A. Levine's trssatlantic Bellanca plane, ‘The Ceumbia,” to descend at Amarillo. Tens. Emil “Hard Luck” Burgin of Mneola, N. Y, landed in a corn- 014 at Willard, N. M. Oliveer Le Boutillier of East Or- nge, N. J., returned to Roosevelt Field soon after the take off; Clif- ford McMillin of Syracuse, N. Y., landed at Chase, P’a., and Randolph non- | | Page, of Northville, Michigan, land- ' #4 8t Allentown, Pa. 9,000 at Field About 9,000 persons were on the fleld when Goebel landed his plane, the Yankee Doodle. Goebel and his passenger, Harry Tucker of Santa Monica, the plane’s owner, mad: their way to'a hut at the side of the feld and told how they had narrow- iy averted accident on the long hop “Several times during the night | thought we were gone,” Tucker said. ““There goes everything,” Goebel started off. “That's what I said to Harry when 1 had to set the Yanke: Doodle down in that Prescott. Bereaks of Weather “Just half an hour more gas and I'd have won. “But those are the breaks you get some times from the weather up there. 1 had two hours flying from Prescott to Mines Field and I had an hour and a half gas supply. I thought of trying to make it on my luck, thought for 30 minutes after we passed Prescott the first time, realized 1 couldn’t squeeze gas for the ‘Wasp' motor that wasn't in the tanks, .and turned back. There you are. “Storm ? Say the trip was just one whole storm. Why, I never had a chance to look at a map from the time 1 took off until 1 hit Wichita.” GREAT KeduL1d FROM COMPOUNL Read How This Medicine Helped This Woman Brainerd, Minn—“T read sbout Lgdis E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound in & news- paper and I have f'"’ great results rom its tonic action at the Change of Life. Before I took it 1 was nervour and at times I was too weak to do my house- work. I was this ‘way about a year. But now I do ali my housework and do chores outsidc aleo. 1 must say that Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound has done wonders for me and no woman should 5o without it. I sure can speak a word for it.”—Mzs. Jiu Saurst, R. 7, Brainerd, Minnesota. desert at ! and bruised. He told how he opened & door into the cabin to throw out a gas can. The wind caught the door, and Tucker grabbed vainly for it. The gale ripped it off, slammed it against the fuselage, tearing rents in the plane fabric, breaking several cabin windows and leaving Tucker to nurse a bleeding hand. “It was over the Alleghenies that we took the worst beating.” Goebel went on. “I never relaxed my grip on the controls, I'll tell you, The lightning would reflect on the sur- rounding clouds until I thought we were posing for flashlight pictures 1 was glad that Harry and I had parachutes.” Neither Captain Haldeman nor his passenger Shirley 8hort, of Chicago, today were able to understand word from Wheeling, W. Va.. that a tele. gram had been received there saying they had passed over Wella, Nev,, and dropped a@ message. The men said at Albuquerque they sent no such message. Haldeman said they got to Flag- staff, Ariz. but with a shortage of gasoline, feared they might have to make a forced landing on dangerous ground, and turned back. Plan Own Race Roosevelt Field, N. Y., Sept. 14 (P—Three pilots who were left be- hind in the non-stop New Yoix to Los Angeles air marathon today were planning a race all their own. Just for the satisfaction of seeing the thing through and with no prospect of sharing in the prizes, Oliver Le Boutillier, Clifford Mc- Millan and Randolph Page indicated their desire to again attempt the flight. Starting time was tentatively set for some time today. Le Boutillier. flying Mrs. James A. Stillman's Bellanca monop! North 8tar, was forced out of the derby because his especially built compass for the flight was stolen shortly before he started the race. He took off but was forced to re- turn. McMillan was forced down in his Stinson near Wilkes-Barre, Pa., by engine trouble and Page, flying alone in a Stinson Junior, was forced to land at Allentown, Pa., with a clogged gas line. The entry of McMillan depends on his ability to get his plane repaired and back to Roosevelt field from the farm on Plymouth mountain, Pa., where he landed. Page expected to fly his plane here from Allen- town in time to take part in the race. Captain Stephen D. Day, chair- man of the derby starting commit- tee, said he had agreed to act as starter although the race would have no official connection with the derby. Asks Further Delay On Havannos Estate| Having received no answer about relatives who went to Turkey 14 years ago and supposedly were mas- | sacred. Benjamin Papas of Provi- dence, heir to & $1,000 estate left by | the late Kashador Havannos, has asked for a continuance of a hearing in probate court, through his law. yers Robinson, Robinson'and Cole o Hartford. The hearing was original- | ly scheduled for September 1§, but inasmuch as he has not received any information as to the whereabouts of the wife and two children of Havannos, who left for their home town in Turkey and never were heard from, he asked for two weeks | grace expecting in the meantime to receive some definite information from the Turkish authorities as to what became of the heirs, who, he thinks, were massacred during the war. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1928 . — e s T T == Tucker showed his left hand cut robberies, but eacaped with Vas- | binder while in jail awaiting sen- DARING BANDIT IS (L0SE T0 DEATH Officer Slain When Killer Is, Cleveland, Sept. 14 UP—Paul Ja- worski, ene of the country’s most daring bandits of the last decade who has six murders and a host of robberies checked aganist his oper- ations, was near death in a hospital today. The 27 year old killer was captured after a gun fight in which one officer was slain and another probably fatally wounded late yes- terday. Jaworski, trapped in an east side residence, fought it out with a small army of policemen only to be brought down by tear gas bombs and shotgun slugs just a year from (the day he shot his way out of the | Alleghany county jail at Pittsburgh, where he was awaiting sentence for | murder. $10,000 Rewards Out With $10,000 in rewards hanging {or alive, Jaworski had vowed he {would never be taken alive. When a police squad located him in a testaurant yesterday, he fired with- | out a moment's hesitation and Kkilled | Patrolman Anthony Wieczorek, 32. | Another officer, George E. Effinger, was seriously wounded and Ben- Jamin Majstrek, 27, a bystander, was hit in the groin by a stray shot. Jaworski had been recognized in | the restaurant by John Zavworski, Plttsburgh grocery clerk. from news- | paper pictures. While Jaworski was | shooting his way out of the cafe, his | companion, John Vasbinder. 23, un- | der sentence for a killing in Pitts- burgh, escaped through the rear | door. 8till firing, Jaworski raced out the Surround House Flying squads and motorcycle of- ficers, however, had hung on his trail and in a few moments had the house surrounded. Five tear bombs forced him to come out and as he did so Patrol- {man Yaro Foudela let fire with a pump gun. About 75 officers then rushed inside where the fugitive had fallen and captu.ed him. Jaworski had made no attempt to use his gun while in the house, al- though he had plenty of ammuni- tion. Taken to a hospital, Jaworski talk- | ed readily of everything except his {companion, Vasbinder, who hid out with him in Detroit, Chicago and | Cleveland since their escape from the Pennsylvania jail. Jaworski admitted participation in |the $10,000 robbery of the Detroit | News payroll a few months ago, De- |tective Sergeant Emil Ziegler an- 1‘no|m(‘ed. One policeman was killed and another shot during a hold-up. Jaworski has a long record of Killings and robberies in Pittsburgh and Detroit. He gained his greatest prominence in the dynamiting and 1$104,000 robbery of an armored pay |car of the Pittsburgh Terminal Coal corporation at Coverdale in March. 1927, was other at Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Pleads Guilty He pleaded guilty to the Killings front door, over fences. and down | Missourl alleyways until he forced his way | Episcopal church u inta malunaccariod pesidense’ | charges of that denomination in the In 1924 and ‘25, Christmas pay-| I rolls of coal companies were taken | anl a guard killed in each instance, | {one of them at Moltenauer and the tence. In Detroit, the gunman was want- ed for three slayings and 14 payroll robberies over a period of several years. He was alleged to have kill- ed Ross Loney, payroll guard, dur- ing a theft in 1325, and of a pal Jack Wright, in a arrel over di- vision of the loot. Ile also was wanted for the killing of Patrolman George Barsted in the Detroit News holdup a few months ago. Says North Carolina Will Go for Hoover Wilmington. N. C.. Sept. 14.—(P— Senator Furnifeld M. Simmons, a democratic leader in North Carolina, yesterday predicted that North Caro- lina will cast her electoral ballots for Herbert Hoover. This prediction was made by the senator after a group of young men from Wilmington, who expect 1¢ vote for the first time this fall had called upon him at his home at Newbern to ask him “How shall we vote " “If T had a son.” replied the sena- tor, “I would advise him not to vote for Governor Alfred Smith, demo- cratic nominee, for president.” over his head for his capture dead | Wreckage Found to Be From a German Plane Tromsoe, Norway, Sept. 14.—(P— Two pieces of airplane wreckage, which at first were thought to be relics of the Ilatham seaplane n| which Reald Amundsen and five companions were lost, were found yesterday south of this port. An ex- amination by experts proved. how- | ever, that instead of being from the Amundsen plane, the wreckage was | trom a German machine. This latter plane few days ago and was re The broken parts were thrown inta | the sea by the workmen, TO SUPPORT NO WETS Shelbina, Mo., Sept. 14.—(M—The conference, Methodist south, including state north of the Missouri river, yesterday pledged itself to “support no one for president or any legis- lative office regardless of political amendment and the Volstead act.” MOTH WORMS NEVER TAKE A VACA- TION KILLs MOTHS The Way Young Men Would Run A Clothing Store That's the Way We're Running This Business. Plenty of style; the models the university lead- ers wear; the best dressed suits that you see worn by the young men on Park Ave. and in the smart- est London clubs. Prices That Fit Young Purses $35 0 45 $50 Many With Two Pair of Trousers An early selection is advised while stocks are complete. GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE Cor. Main and West Main Sts. New Britain party, who is opposed to the 15th | | | | | | $1.00 BOYS' BLOUSES Sizes 6 to 14 Made of Percale, plain and fancy Broadcloth. Saturday, 59 c $1.25 BOYS’ SHIRTS Sizes 1214 to 14 All new Fall patterns, in Pongee, plain and CASH YOUR FACTORY PAY CHECKS HERFE fancy Broadcloth. — Saturday, _—eBeN ...k 790 You will find what you need—complete stocks, selected quality at lowest-in-the-city prices! COLORS RUST BROWN BLUE GREEN TAN BLACK JSUAL HIP LINES . . SKIRT STYLES . . . NEW LIKE COLLARS ... AND DRESSES FOR SHORT WOMEN AND STOUT WOMEN CHILDREN’S CENT SALE NOTIONS . 5¢ SEWING COTTON Ia(t::“:‘:ale 2 for 60 4c HOOKS and EYES T?(E:rrlttla&)‘,ale 2 for 5(! 5¢ EMBROIDERY FLOSS e 2 for Gc 1-Cent Sale ... 5¢ Spool MERCERIZED COTTON Saturday 1-Cent Sale ... 2 for 60 10c SPOOL SILKALEEN ey A 2 for l l C 1-Cent Sale 5¢ DARNING COTTON 2 for 6C Saturday 1-Cent Sale ... 10¢ E:,ASTIC Sl[;lK BRAID Saturday yards 1cent Sate for 11¢€ FANCY DRESS BUTTONS Buy 1 dozen at regular price. An extra dozen £or l (o . VARIED Only at Raphael’s Will You Find Such ¢ Great Display! CAPE- BOWS. 1495 and GIRLS’ NEW FALL RAINCOATS—sizes 4 to 16, with hood or cap to match. l Green, red, tan and blue. Saturday Special . ; NEW FALL MODELS WOMEN'S AND MISSES’ PLENTY OF LARGE AND SMALL HEADSIZES ON SALE SATURDAY Women’s and Misses’ Clever Felt Hats All new styles including SKULL CAI'S—NEW POKES and OFF-THE-FACE style. $l 98 New Fall colors. Saturday .... each . A GREAT COLLECTION OF New Fall Hats In large and small headsizes. Slashed and folded brims. Also the new poke efi'ects. $2 95 Every wanted color. Saturday . New Hats of the Better Kind Including the popular effects—Off-the-Face and poke effects. Colors are claret, beige, English green, brown shades, black and navy. Saturday, Choice DRESSES FOR OF THE DAY IN EVERY POPULAR NEW FALL MODEL. TIONS OF $25.00 DRESSES — SEE THEM! HMATERIALS GEORGETTE TWEEDS SILK CREPE VELVET SATINS EVERY OCCASION REPRODUC- . $2.98 CENT SALE TOILETS 20c Sizz PEROXIDE Saturday for 21 (o 1-Cent Sale 10c Size DONA CASTILE SOAP g | 2 for l l C 1-Cent Sale 25¢ Size SANITARY TOOTH BRUSHES Saturday o 2 60 1-Cent Sale 15¢ Pkg. LUX (large size) — 2 for 160 1-Cent Sale 7c Size LIFEBUOY SOAP by o 2 for 8C 1-Cent Sale 10c Size NAIL BRUSH et 2 for l l (« 1-Cent Sale 15¢ Size Pkg. Bay State TOILET PAPER 2,000 sheets Saturday 2 8 16 c 1-Cent Sale MAVIS TALC POWDER Saturday, 9 c Per Can — NEW FALL NOVELTY — PUMPS AND OXFORDS CAN BE COMPA FOR WOMEN AND MISSES Styled By Raphael’s 4,95 Why Pay More! Suedes, Velvets Alligators, Satins Kid, Calfskins RED WITH FIFTH AVENUE'S 810 VALUES