New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 13, 1929, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN HERALD Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending July 6th .... 15,033 ESTABLISHED 1870 e ‘HOSPITAL PREFERS LOCAL GRS FOR TRAINING CLASSES naugurates New Policy, Virtu-| ally Closing Doors o All Outside This Vicinity JTUDENTS FROM FAR AWAY | OFTEN BECOME HOMESICK Tandidates From New Plainville, Berlin and Bristol to Be Chosen Ahead of Others—Authori- ties Decide to Insist on Rule Rc~} quiring Aspirants to Have Two Years At High School. A new policy on the part of of- ficials of the New Britain training school for nurses, conducted in con- junction with t al hospital, W by Miss Maude raver, directress in the statement that the institution girls for students. of nurses, benceforth New Britain does not Traver, that girls living outside this sity are barred. It anyone from this vicinity, Girls from distant points will be nsidered as in the past but whers sirls who can qualify are availaole from New Britain, Berlin, Plainville or Bristol, they will be given preter- The Miss T who are cl alwe haye where planted ments preters This Miss mean, according to means for this, according to is the fact that girls r to their own families are happier. When they afternoons off they have some- to go, They not trans- bodily into new environ- | s are girls who come from Massachusetts or even farther away. | Long For Home and Resign In the past the school has lost ons or two students who seemed to show facilities for becoming good nurses because of homesickness. These girl came from such distant points that they were forced by eir- cumstances to develop an entircly new set of contacts here. They were among strangers and the hospital discipline 1s such that they de- veloped new friends slowly. Home- sickness proved too strong and they succumbed to the extent that sev- eral gave up their training courses entirely and returned to their homes. In each case letters from Miss Traver were sent to the mothers expressing the regret of the reason ca (Continued on Five.) SEEK INVESTIGATION OF CITY DOG WARDEN Page Council Will Be Asked to Name Inquiry Committee David L. Nair and Molander Alderman Councilman William Scheuy will present a George and reso- meeting next Wednesday night, ask- ing that the mayor appoint a com- mittee of three to investigate meth- ods and conditions surrounding the work of the dog warden The resolution, according derman Nair, has been prompted by the general criticism heard in re- cent the dog warden in Killing, colecting, impounding and disposing of dogs which come into his care. The work of the committee wili be to investigate every angle of the ssylem used in this city and a report will be made back to the common council at which time, it is expected, such action as is necessary, will be taken The resolution, signed by the three fs as follows: “In view of the recent of the methods of killing, collecting. impounding and disposing of dogs in the city of New Britain, it is here- by resolved that his honor the criticism mayor, appoint a committee of three | to investigate the same and report back to this body their recommen- ion thereon.” Policemen Arrested in =% : Kansas City Robberies kansas City, July 13 (#—Domes- difficulties in the home of a {ansas City patrolman had resulted today in the arrest of seven police- men and a former police sergeant alleged to have tic Duvall, wife of one arrested, gave John Gib- son, an investigator information which led to the arrests. Charges of burglary and grand larceny filed against three of the men, Duvall, C. A. Paddock and ¥red Lomar. They are alleged have divided loot with a safe-blower, a brother-in-law of Paddoc The loot had been obtained from a drug stere on March 11, and was estimat- ed at § Six of Walker were the men, Duvall, \. M. Rust, Howard T son, Lee Dawson and former geant Julian Warnock, were ch ed with tneft of a quantity of cig end candy from a drug store ia Decen I All of pleade | leased ddock, s re- the men, except D not guilty Duvall w under a $10.000 bond, whaile | the others were held under bonds of $5,000 cach, | | | Mrethodist oo TORECEVE GUESTS Vew Britain Geu- | s announced today | weeks of the methods used by | participated in sev- | to| | B ———————————— Weddings Cost More || If Confetti Is Thrown Worcester, Mass.. July 13 (®— An extra charge will be made for wedding services at the Wesley piscopal church here if confetti is used. The announce- ment was made in the church cal- endar distributed yesterday. The calendar gives a list of prices for weddirgs and following the list is || a notation declaring that | “extra charge will be ma:le confetti is thrown upon church steps or walks.” - SOLDIERS PREPARE { Crowds Expected to Visit C. N, G. Niantic Camp Sunday \CHEFS READY FOR COMPANY New Britain Rookie Surprised to Discover Officer of the Day Out at Night—Company I Line Cheer- ed in Regimental Parade. (Special to the Herald) Camp Trumbull, July 1 omor row is visitors’ day in Camp Trum- bull where the 169th regiment, C. N. G. has been camping for the past week and it is expected that| hundreds of visitors will be pres-| ent. At noon today the boys were given a leave of absence from duty. Some went to their homes. but the majority stayed in camp where many of their friends from home will visit them. Because of greater interest occa- sioned by the unusual ceremonies of | governor's day on Wednesday, the regimental parade for Brig. Gen. George M. Cole on Friday of next week and the many interesting events which have occurred this week the people back home are more interested than ever and al-| ready plans are being made to ac- commodate a great many visitors. | Since the camp is near many of |the New London shore resorts va- | cationists who are spending the week-ends in this section are ex-| | pected to be here to visit many of | the guardsmen and to be their mess ‘Kll"qu Chefs Prepare for Company | According to the announcements| |of the mess kitchen sergeants. T |of Company H. Barrett of Compan T and Unwin of Headquarters com- | pany, plans are being made to P commodate more than 400 guests | and relatives of the guardsmen. Tn| |Company 1 Kkitchen it is expected fiMat between 154 and 200 will eat, not including the guardsmen. Tn Company H kitchen it is expected | that-175 will be present and at the | Headquarters kitchen where mem- bers of Company Willimantie, also eat, accommodations for ap- proximately 100 are being made. Company H Menu The menu for Company H tomor- | row will be follows: Breakfast, | corn meal, fried bacon, fried pota- as (Continued on Page Iive.) | et | | TRIBUTE PAID THO - AMERICAN AVIATORS | | Jution to the common council at its | Gold Medals Presented to!their premises situated on ¥ Williams and Yancey in Rome to Al- (M—An impre of tribu has two American aptain Lewis Williams, by Rome, July 13 sive demonstration been accorded the transatlantic aviators, Yancey and Roger Q the citizens of Rome. At @ mass meeting in the Piazza | Colonna last eevning 20,000 specta- tors, including many black-shirted I ts, cheered the aviators to the | echo as General Italo Balbo, undel ‘Srmdm_\' for aviation bestowed 's gold medal for acronautics on them Prince Boncompagni - Ludovisl, governor of Rome, conducted the fliers, General Balbo, and other offi- cial guests to the balcony overlook ing the square. General Balbo him- self pinned the medals upon the breasts of the two fliers, who flew their plane, the Pathfinder, from 014 | Orchard, Me., to the eternal cit with one stop en route, Santander, Spain | The prince spoke briefly to the | fliers, and embraced them, they re- | turning the salute. Then Yancey and | Williams gave the Fascist salute | with their upraised hand, the crowd | outdoing itself in applause. General | Balbo then spoke and embraced the | fliers. They returned the embrace. | The round of Jofficial and private | receptions contidued today with the | aviators making their plans for de- parture next week from Southamp- ton for the United States. 15th Victim Dead in | “Mock” Fire Tragedy | Gillingham, Kent, Eng., July 13 | (UP)—The death toll from the fire which turned a comic presentation of he Iireman's Wedding” into a tragedy here Thursday night S >d to 15 today when another fi nar. died from his injuries. GOING ABROAD Angeles, July 13 (P—LGloria | Swanson, motion picture actr has | cpplied r a passport “rance. | The actross said she planned to sail | on Aug. 2 from New York to join her huspand, the Marquis de la Fal- | cise. Miss Swanson _returned to| America moryfs agzo from several ‘I"x'z\nu' to make pictures here, ‘ NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1929.—EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS ANGELENO MAKES FORCED LANDING WHEN CLOTH RIPS Culver City Fiiers End Record-| Breaking Flight of 246 Hours, 43 Minutes AVIATORS AND ENGINE | IN EXCELLENT SHAPE, Man vs. Motor Battle Ends Suddenly When Hatch Cover Strikes Stab- ilizer — Doctor Surprised at| | Stamina of Mendell and Reinhart | —New Airplane, $3,000, and Valu- able Contracts Await Fliers. Culver City, Cal., July 13 (A—The | long flight of L. W. Mendell and R. | B. Reinhart came to a sudden end | vesterday afternoon when the tail | |group of their biplane Angeleno was fouled, causing a tail forcing them to land The fliers set a flutter and | new endurance seconds—a mark far beyond the 59 second established by Byron K. Newcomb and Roy L.| Mitchell of Cleveland. | An examination of the fliers and | their second-hand 220-horse power | Wright whirlwind motor immediate- ly after the flight's end disclosed that both men and engine still were in good condition and might have | continued indefinitely had not the tail flutter developed. “We have to give the engine credit | for everything,” said Mendell as he | clambered out of the plane. “Never | before has an airplane engine done anything like this."” Man and Motor in Draw And so it was with the fliers (Continued on Page 16) DENIES INJUNCTION AGAINST CINDERS Judge Traceski Denies Pe- tition of Remonstrat- ing Neighbor Judg: Stanley J. Traceski to refused the application for a tem- porary injunction asked by Giovanni Valenti restraining Nicola and Maric Bellini from dumping ashes and cinders on their property close to the division line between the Bellini and Valenti properties. Mr. Bellini is a contractor and | maintains a supply of cinders at his | home at 48 Franklin street for in laying concrete sidewalks. In his decision handed down day, Judge Traceski says: This matter was heard by the court on the motion of the plaintift for a temporary injunction and in no way purports to decide any other issues in the case. The evidence us to- | shows the following fac Nicola and Maria Bellina maintained and are maintaini large pile of cinders. which are used in the construction of sidewalks and in the course of their business, on uklin street, which cinders are piled close (Continued on Tage 16.) and United ving record of 246 hour 43 minutes | Jacques NIGHT CLUB FIGHT T ENDS IN 2 DEATHS Hotsy Totsy Cale Scene of Early CAUSE OF ROW UNKNOWN Body of Unidentified Man Found w early Hotsy sort v with two bullet and by hour wounds in the i t hee teken slightly wounded. T club Broadway street. | ndeterred by the Maj killed another police room of the club hour later three man at {he come the to be a brother of New i Sunday continued Sunday afternoon Casimir Kubala, States. ellonte arted later failure of their plar hopned off yesterday To make the attempt to offer to span t in thei exciting a I across Atlantic last single motor more rench plane, a re ke sea Morning Shooting New York Bar Room Second Vietim is - Left Hospital. 13 (®) another mn fight at Broadway York, July nd today in sy club, cause The of the own. body of an in the on the floor of the wounded died He had The later. man three Police said t from the v vietim v Wil f New York. third victim, said by m the He was He second-floor resort between 54th and into custody THE WEATHER Britain and - wa partly and vicinity: rmer tonight. cloudy and warmer, followed thundershowers on or night. Sunday night. local at T'wo men vounded the shooting was unidentified man wounds in the head back was found bar Less than a half men left a wounded I"rench hospital and - pirtetbawithentrevealing their identi- ties. an bullet head and two in the utomobile club and Cas- po- Cassidy, was only sy Totsy plane POLISH FLIERS START FLIGHT ACROSS ATLANTIC l o moosm——" Associated Press Photo dwig ldzikowski shal Pilsudski Dieudon Coste ar left for th 1 Save Two in Fjord Copenhagen, Denmark, July 13 A)—A Norwegian man and an obably owed t n Prince Olaf former I'r today royal couple in imminent ¢ near Oslo. Theiy lest its rud Iplessly by 1 the two people in a Fjord vh ger s beir > prince launched a and princess oat and rowed assistance, towing them quickly to to safety —_ SOVIET PEACEMAKER FLYING T0 HARBIN Sino-Russian Crisis Easi- er—Troops Gathered On Frontier Tokyo, July Ha was flying Manchuria the new patches from Mo breakoy to from to Sino-Ru over the cow the tlement of there mxiety M. Serebr ansports consider: .that the consent crisis have ser to all; much tuation there of 1kov menmber ion 1 doubtful, 1 Harbin authaeriti to negotiat th sastern question, was therefore that plenipotentiary would have v z to confer with is the 1 commissa t wa ver- would Chinese probable to pro- ceed to Dr. Moscow official Soviet reports pub, said i Man- news 4 today 2¢d toda that N LIQUOR A D One Arm Man in Battle With Soy jhington Policeman CROWBARS SMASH DOOR James 1 After When in Cel wart 1 with swooped James | rty on Libe 1 night, his home d win rged vs an 2,000 a The 1 Policemen G with the use, the bars wit m Forch a stubb mittod he Town h Policems (c New London 1:3 New to arrest Placed Under Ar “orchia Fight, Resuming Mostilit Authorities Try to Put H 1 ot Headquarters. July th artmer s of Southingt arn 1 revoly nd crowba the one- down on home wrnied 11 1 down the orchia, a ms str about doc nd tity Forchia was arrest with violation of the 1w ized 0 s puf 1 - -Londs trial in cou parly consisted Obere ting viding m hile two the windo other t h such tellin inutes they w ie. the police claim. put battle bef he hen, they immedi used the cro effect that inside ot su clai i in only in the Michael keeping Aft Santy ‘ontinu: 1 TIDES—JULY 11 b 502 pan. Haven 01 pom. im m el of an o'clock ors d, liquor of 1o in up b- m, consented to go-peaceably to the of & AFFAIRS Dawn B¢ cuer faig N AL X S — Two C“F‘s‘-'.‘gs.'gzg [ =% 7 SET 'EM UP FRENCH AND POLISH PLANES OVER ATLANTIC IN FRIENDLY - RACE TO AMERICAN SHORES s bl G { HEADS EASTWARD ) e e i e in Mark,"” W Yo Poli ski,” is a well k fliers Question ward th nown pilot POLISH FLIERS HAVE LONG PLANNED HOP Attempt Last Year Failed When Men Were Forced Down WERE MISSING 80 HOURS Both Men Were War Time Pilots— Prenchmen Also - Well - Known Aviators—( Has Record of Lotz Flight Par 1y ) Major ( Kubala and Ludwick ossing of the two yea Their 1 i her they own in the Atlantic 60 mile f Cape rre, Spain, isimir 1dzikowski, Po- planning a luntic by tempt ird er wert IPinis: mis Oporto, Portugal. la Years Old la is 36 y¢ in the A war, s, near Kubz or 36 Ma Ku ars old and army Polish - ldzikow- arned n army i won man known trian joining th Maj ars old and to pla who e as ain Coste, spelled often with nd and in 7 years old and with 994 hour ing the w He Honor, the the Croix de n e palms and two with a final s, flew uth America n October, 19 d States Bellonte W Mauri Prowess. - Pilot Bellont ni oper for o yes mnd v ALCOHOLIC CONTENT OF MALT TONIC GUT Government Ovder Called Severe Blow to Brew- ing Industry 13 (®—J rohibition co or 1 Milwaukec liscontinue at once the & r spoke of the orde July imi man malt tonics today most seve order, delive Yellowly, prohibition chief at Chi stated oug that tonics 18 per malt and cent alcohol 180, ely 1 um must immec o A m lerive than two per volume, The 18 per decrec buted as now All July from not more by the ed cent must product, be bot and same restric- the “12 made on or marketed 1t once govern such tonic 11 may be must ce 1 this me dollars tonic now ind the in p virtual junking in manufac- manufacture of machinery used in its It was pointed out by some brew- ers that campa has the brewerie to profit from it .000,000 Loss Expected Should the order force the aban- fonment of manufacture of the malt tonic, it estimated Milwaukee would lose an indu mors than £2.000,000 Man nationwide ended just wdvertising and that beginning ust was stry ear ually declared it ifacturers would (Continued on Page Idzikowski and Kubala Hop Of First, Closely Followed By Coste and Bellonte~French- men Radio Progress— No Word from Poles. Both Hope to Land At Roosevelt Field Tomor- row—Expected to Fol- low Azores Route—Per- fect Flying Weather Re- ported All Across Ocean. ance, July 13 (P— al airplanes, one bearing the colors of Poland and the other those of speading known, westward the first great from Paris to o riv Irance, today were swiftly, so far as over the Atlantic in air race weather that rivals of conditions the Polish and the air were well way, the Poles on a north- route d the Frenchmen on 1 Mo southerly one. Major Ludwig Idzikowski and his companion, Major Casimir Kubala, took off first in their plane, the Marshal Pilsudski, at 4:47 o'clock this morning (10:47 p. m. Friday, Fastern Standard time) while Cap- tain Dieudonne Cost famous IFrench flier, and Jacques Bellonte. followed just 45 minutes later at 2 2. m, Planes Reported Four Times By 1 o'clock today both planes 1ve heen out over the At- ic The French fliers were re- ported four times. In their passage Fra from Paris over the 1y of Biscay and finally at Santan- der, Spain, in the region of which two other transatlantic flights, ths Yellow Bird, and the Pathfinder, ended so recently. The men were sighted inish coa city at 9:20 w. m, time (3:30 a. m., eastern stan- time), having covered nearly iles in slightly less than four indicating a good averuge of more than 115 miles an save I'rench eir erly 1cTOSS over the 'he pregress of the Polish plane not so clear. No word had received as to its whereabouts this afternoon, Lut as it was last seen oing strong having made the azardous takeoff with its enormous load of gasoline, the presumption s it too was safely on its way. n too the Polish flight had not received as much notice as the Coste the Marshal Pilsudski with little at- been and have tion passed Seen Over Tours French fliers were sighted tilcs, once over Tours, the second by a fisherman off the French st due west of Bordeaux and the third time over Santander. While fiying between Tours and Bordeaux. Coste dropped a note say- ing everything was gong fine and he intended to follow the steamship lane. Both planes should reach New York tomorrow afternoon if all goes well, the French a little in ad- for their machine faster than that of the Poles. van is (Continued on 15.) GAR BARN FIRED IN STREET CAR STRIKE Wall Bearing Federal In- Junction Soaked With Oil Today Orle tors were July 13 (A—While expressing hope prospect of negotiating an end of the street railway strike an- other overt was committed by incendiaric Early today, night watchman at the Old Gentilly car barn saw three men drive up and soak with an in- flammable liquid a wall bearing a copy of the federal injunction pro- tecting public service property from violence and apply a torch. The watchman hurriedly moned the fire department as the men sped away and the building, where old cars are stored, was saved from destruction. Today the citizens advisory com- mittee, seeking to bring the 1500 striking union men and the company into negotiations, planned another meeting with the board of directors of the car company Charles J. Theard committee, emerging ¢ session with the board yester- stated that “while I have noth- ing definite to say at this time, I am very hopeful of the outcome.” Repairs were being completed on stretches of trackage, torn up in the sabotage of a week sumption of strect car morrow under the protection United States deputies and police- nmen armed with shotguns act sum- chairman of from an all

Other pages from this issue: