New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 27, 1929, Page 9

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DIBATTISTA FAGES DEATH IN SLAYING (Calmly Takes Vordict of Thres dndges in Hartiond Hartford, June 27 (UP)—Convict- ed on his own word, Frank Di Bat- tista, 25, calinly faced deatn on the sallows today for the murder of a storekeeper during an attempt to obtain money for & “pal.” Three judges round the swarthy, bow-legged defendant guuty iate yesterday and sentenced him to die at state’s prison August 15. A mo- tion to set aside the verdict was denied. The hard-faced young slayer, who apparently expected the verdict, was unmovad as sentence was pronounce ed by presiding Judge Christopher L. Avery. Judges Avery, Isaac Wolfe and Alfred C. Baldwin tried the case. It was the first time a de- fendant was found guilty of a caps tal offense by three judges in Con- necticut, ENGAGEMENT DONE MRS. COREY SAYS “Rbsolutely Finished,” Divorced Wile of Steel Man Insists Paris, June 26 (®—A formal statement today by Mrs. Mabelle Gilman Corey, divorced wife of the Pittsburgh steel magnate, said her engagement to Prince Luis De Bourbon, cousin of the king of Bpain, was “absolutely finished.” Her statement said: “The entire press will unani. mously agzree that I never have sought publicity. As it was in the past, so it is today. People know more about my private affairs than 1 do myself. “I wish to state that my cngage- ment to His Royal Highness, Don Luis Ferdinand Marie Sacarias Bourbon is absolutely finished and I have nothing more to say on this subject and 1 wish people would cease speaking and writing to me en this gubject.” The prince’s dissatisfaction with ils of the marriage settle- h the former Broadway willing to make with him was understood to be behind the rupture in their romance.- HOTOR FAILURE BLAMED Death of Two at Roosevelt Field Caused By Engine Defect—Second Man Victim of Crash. New York, June 27 (UP)—Motor failure and the subsequent stce- slipping of the plane was blamea today for the death of Francis Phil- lips, 21, and Henry Goldsmith, 21, @t Roosevelt Field, Shortly after they went up yester- day in a borrowed Gipsy Moth pt- plane, the motor failed and the craft crashed, catching fire. Efforts to extinguish the flames were futile and Phillips burned to death, Gold- smith died last inight in Nassau hospital. Phillips, £on of John Phillips, who @ied last year just before he was to have gone on trial for conspiracy to défraud the city in Queens sewer contracts, was married. His wife and small daughter have been in Philadelphia recently but were to come to New York today. May McAvoy Weds As Stars Fill Pews Beverly Hiils, Cal, June 27 (#— With motlon picture cameras and #ound devices recording the cere- motlies, May McAvoy, film actress, was married to Maurice J. Clear; Los Angeles banker, late vesterday at the Church of the Good Shepherd here, i Celebrities of flmdom filled the pews of the church while crowds clamored outside in the hopes of getting a glimpse of the bride and bridegroom, a reception followed the wedding. The couple will leave shortly for the Hawaiian Islands for four weeks, end late in the fall the honeymoon will be continued with a trip to Europe, GENERAL GOING TO MEXICO Mexico City, June 27 (®—Dis. patches to Excelsior from Tapachuir, Chiapas, today satd Augustino San- dino, former Nicaraguan insurgont leader, and five of his staff officers had arkived there en route to Vera Cruz. Sandino later will peside at Merida, Yucatan. Aching, ° Swollen Feet Money Back, Says Fair Drug Dept. 1f Emerald Oil Doesn’t Do Away With All Soremess, Swelling and Distress in 24 Hours, No sensible person will continue to suffer from those intense agoniz- ing throbbing foot pains when every well stocked drug store has Moone's Emerald Oil and sells it with an ab- solute guarantee of satisfaction or money back. Your feet may be flamed that you thin other step. Your shoes may feel am if they are cutting ht inte the flesh. You feel mck all over with the pain and torture—You'd give dhything to get re- lief. wouldn't you? Then do this: Two or three applications of Moone's Emerald Oil and in fifteen minutes the pain and soreness disappears. A few more applications at regular intervals apd the swelling reduces And best of all any offensive odor fs gome for good—It's a wonderful formula —this_combination of essential ofls with camphor and other antiseptics #o mar- velous that the Fair Drug Dept. and every gooR druggist guarantees Moone's Emerald Oil o end your foot troubles o money back. 0 swollen and in- You can't go an- JOHNSON WILL, SPEAK AT REPUBLICAN OUTING Assistant Attorney General to Ade dress Young Men's Club at Saybrook Saturday Asasistant Attorney General Ray- mond Johnsofi of Manchester will be the speaker at the annual outing of the Young Men's Republican club which will be held at the Pease housh in Saybrook, Saturdav. According to plans which are now | complete, it is expected that more than 100 will be present. Automo- | biles will legve Franklin square at| 12:15 o'clock and dinner will be served at 2:30 o'clock. Guests from Hartford, Bristol, and Manchester witl be present. In the afternoon athletic sports, | the feature of which will be a ba: ball game between a team repre- senting the three lower wards and a4 team representing the three up- per wards will be played. The committee in charge consists of Martin H, Horwitz, chmirman; Wil- llam Regan, Ernest Eppler and Wi:- liam Coleshaw. The latter is i. charge of transportation, FORD SELL ROAD ABLITY SALVAGED Auto Magnate Disposes of Trans- Detroit, Mich., June 27 (®—Suc- | cessfully terminating his excursion into the transportation field, Henry Ford has sold the Detroit, Toledo and Ironton raflroad to an undis- closed group of investors belicved to represent the Pennsylvania Yail- | road. The sale was announced late yes- | terday by officers of the First Na- tional bawk in Detroit, through | which the sale was made. Ford of- | ficlals had announced Monday that | negotiations for the sale of the line | to the Pennsylvania railrond were | “almost completed | Purchased in 1920 to round out the Kord program of controlling every step in production of his mo- tor cars, the Detroit, Taledo and | {Tronton later was so renovated un- der the motor magnate's adminis- | tration that it became a paying | {business in its own right. | CATTL ECUTED | Douglas, 7 (P—Word reached here yesterday of the exe- cution by Mexican rurals of Chueco Costello, charged with cattle rust- | lling and complicity in the slaying Tuesday of Roberto Elias, 20-yex |old cousin of Governor Irancisco {Kllas of Sonora. Ellas died a short time after a gun battle with alleged | cattle rustlers near Fronteras, Son- ora. He fatally wounded Julian Mar- tinez, one of his assailants. MOVIE STARS INDICTED Los Angeles, June 27 (M—Ray- mond Griffith and Raymond McK: film actors, were under indictm by the federal grand jury t y charged with defrauding the gov- ernment in their tax returns tor 1925 and 1926. Edward H. Hayden. | a tax counsellor, also was under In- | dictment in connection with the preparation of McKee's tax retura for 1927. s i | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS e ] Feel Like Something the Cat Brought In| 1t you wake up these mornings |vmp.‘ weak, dopey and all let down, you don't have to look at the calendar to know that Spring is here. What is there about spring weather | that makes you feel terrible like that? Well it isn't so much the weather it- self us the clogged condition of the blood that seems to go with the meason. The thick blood discharges its druggy poisons into a body no longer able to fall back on the cold, bracing weather of_wint o correct this_condition start {aking | McCoy's Tablets. You will note an amaz- ing differ in 30 day These safe, | pleasant tabiets contain a wonderful in- gredient that will bring back your pep and strength by first purifying and en- iching the blood. The beneficial effect even after you stop taking M- y'se. Get it today at the Fair Depart- ment Btore or any drugstore. TIRES are an important part of our business. See know tires, and we know how to give good tire service. Let our automotive experts select the right Fisk All-Cord for your car—you'’ll get more mileage than you ever had before, and you’ll be sure of your tires under all You can’t beat Fisk Tires for quality, s and you can’t beat us for tire service, e RUDY’S BATTERY SERVICE 186 EAST M Make Our 3 linto storms off the South Carolina pomfim ]n[em[s | Nearly 400 Employes of Two Divi- | |nic of the | panies will | tory NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1929, German Grocer’s 18 Foot Boat Wracked Off Carolina Coast as Owner Has Night of Hardship Muller Crossed Atlantic In Frail Craft, Only to Crash | On Rocks — Swam Toward Isle 7 | Miles Away. | Charleston, 8 C., June 27 (P — |I decided 0 sct her afirc as u sig- The beach at Kiawah Island, 20 Pal for help. I poured what was miles south of here, today held lhl‘j:::_k:'!‘::i} ‘i::"':::, Rethguer, the battered and burned remains or‘lhe; S Sasand Sitead ‘\\lialiorl.sflfz:’i; ';"‘;‘U‘r“ ‘;]";::'m‘ ;‘,‘1”‘ When no help came, he related P he began swimming for Johns ls- 3 [1and, scven miles away. where he The young skipper. who arrived | could sce a house. When he had here after the shipwreck and ' covered part of the distance. Fritz night of exposure, told the S1Ory giroebel of Charleston. drakn by the of the « rous end of his Ham- | fire from Johns Island, picked him burg-New York vovage. | up in a rowbhoat. The sea had grown Beat Way Up Coast | rougher and they could make their | Beating his way up the coast| Way only to Snake Island, which | from Miami, where he first touched | IS uninhabited. Shivering in a {the American shore, Muller ran |blowing downpour, the two men spent the night ghere. coast. Late Tuesday, he said, a squall struck the Aga, tore her sail to bits and tossed her on the rocky Kiawah shore. “The Aga began to break up,” said Muller in halting English, “so With clearing weather the next| day they made their way to Charles- ton and food. Muller is staying with | Stroebel until he can make ar-| rangements to continue to New | York. | . . STANLEY WORKERS QUTING | “Spieler” Is Beilert, ‘ : Mother Tells Doctors A 14 year old boy, living at 1 Sefton Drive, wus admitted to New Britain General hospital yesterday morning under the name of Erncst Spieler, but later his mother visited bim and told the hospital authori- | ties his name was Ernest Beilert. sions Go to Lake Congamond for Day of Recreation. Nearly 400 men and women em- ployed in the offices of the Stanlcy| The boy, who was run down on | Worlks and the Stanley, Rule & Ley. | BEAVer strect by an automobile driv- | o 3 e > |en by Joseph Richards of 52 Gladi- ¢l Co., are enjoying the annual pic- ola strect, is under treatment for a | plants fracture of the skull and abrasion: to both arms. He had a fair nignt | but his condition is critical, it was | said at the h at Lake Conga- afternoon. The com-| furnish speed-hoating. bathing facilities, refreshments and a dance orchestra. i mond this FINDS SIDEWALK UNSAF Patrolman William 1%, Sullivan left & report on going off duty this morning, abcut the unsafe condition of the dirt sidewalks on West Main Water sports will feature the ou- | ing but dancing until 11 p. m. is cxpected to attract large numbers. The arrangements were made by the the following committee: General. The arrangements were made by|Street from the Universal Coal & George D. Rawlings and Wood Co. office to Black Rock Hanes I ronsrostation G bridge on the north side, and also mond, and publicity, Gerald Fle on the south side. o, Pedestrians choose the road bhe- o cause of the holes in the walk and < . |the stones that make walking un- | New Corporation Buys °|comrortable, and last night several | Shirt Shop Equip:ment people were almost struck by auto- | % [ mobiles, the officer stated. Tie Dresswell Shirts, Ine, of 80|, ¢cr was turned over to the pubs Broadway, N. ¥ sferred to the New Br Co., all ma lic works d rtment. chinery, office cquipment and f fixtures located in the Livitain Co. plant at 266 Arch |street, according to a hill of el DISCUSS PULASKI DAY The Pplish Literary Guild, which is composed of nine Polish clubs (i varaed Initns il yiolerits o] ok and organizations, met last night at | _According to articles of incorpor-| 8 o'clock at the Falcon's hall on | ation of the New Britain Company | Beaver street. ‘Albert Gurski, pre the authorized capital is $50,000 and [ dent of the organization, presided. | business being conducted with| After routine business was trans- [$1,000 capital. The incorporators | Acted, the membera discussed mat- lare Mark Merman. Brooklyn, John | térs concerning Pulaski Observance {1*. McDermott and Ethel L. Johnson, | day, which will be held in this city {both of this city. in the fall. ENTLEY S AND CCOUNTING HESE are names that suggest each other wherever the character of the work of The Bentley School of Accounting and Finance and the success of its graduates are known. Some of the largest firms in this country come to us each year for men to develop as i e Mo Engiod Trined You | vantages of industrial opfortun executives in their organization. A Few Facts About the School Men only admitted Two-year intensive course * No correspondence courses Tuition $250.00 a year xcellent dormitory accommodations This is the largest professional school of college grade in the world devoted exclusively to training men for specialized positions in account- ing and finance. We do not employ solicitors. Send for catalog H. C. BENTLEY, C.P.A., President ™E BENTLEY SCHOOL o ACCOUNTING&FINANCE 921 BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. us first for FISK RUGGED ALLCORD i-The finest tife ever made, O i, = bap Bfer K Temarkabie velue, AIN STREET TEL. 708 Battery Station Your Battery Station HOPKINS WANTS T0 | USE COLLEGE MEN Leaving Section, He Says | | | Hanover, H., June 27 @ — | President est M. Hopkins of | Dartmouth college appeuled today to men trained in New England | colleges and universities to stay | and help build up New England's | industries. His statement was made in comment upon a rdsolution | passed recently by the New England [ Council making a similar appeal. here is not a single state in New England,” said President Hop- Kins, “but that has colleges, or a | college at Jeast with a national reputation. attracting students from all over the country. These men come to New England and spend four years in college here, but 1| think that New England does not | keep the proportion of these men that it might well keep if the ad- in New England were made clearer to them. . . . New England industrialists as a whole are neither offering oppor- tunities for learning a business, nor are they offering opportunities for salaries- equal to those offered by concerns outside New England. . . . We ought not to be selfish in this matter. but neither ought we to he blind. We neced a larger proportion of these men than we are holding.” MAN IS ELECTROCUTED Pittsfield, Mass., June 27 (UP) George W. Goodrich. 18, formerly of Milo, Me.. was clectrocuted Ashley Falls late yesterday when he came in contact with a high tenston | wire while on a ladder spraying | trees. | | | A. Pinkus Ontometrict Glasses Fitted to Suit the Eyes Satisfaction Guaranteed 380 Main St. PHONE 570 Heres salt that !_f@mgh@ at rainy weather / INTERNATIONAL SALT is not just a “fair weather friend.”” Not at all. It’s as faithful when the clouds come close as when the world is sunny. Damp days don’t daunt it in the least. Most salts, you know, get hard and lumpy in a moist, humid atmosphere. International Sale never does. It is guaranteed to be smooth and fine,and free-running always. Fill all your salt shakers with it and you’ll never need to pound the dinner-table again! Best of all, International is as clean and purc and savory as salt can be made. It’s inexpen- sive too. A big box costs only 2 nickel. Ask for it at your grocer’s.

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