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3 > — 1,800 MILLS CLOSE NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1929. MARSH WINS BATTLE | PRISON RIOT ENDS; for fear of hitting Osborns and Ryther. At the gate the convicts hurled bombs at the two guards,| temporarily blinding them with al Wise and Smart Fail To Live Up to Names BUSES TIE UP TRAFFIC —e— Police Investigating New “Canary” Murder The St. St. Elizabeth’s Circle To Have Shore Outing Elizabeth Theatrical cir WHILE DRIVERS ARGUE | Jams On Main Street During Busy cle of the Sacred Heart church will | hold its annual outing tomorrow at |savin Rock and Lighthouse Point. | Buses will leave tomorrow morning |after church services and proceed (o | Savin Roek, where the members wili amuse themselves on the conces- sions there. About, noon the members of the circle will teave for Lighthouse Point nd enjoy bathing and water sports. Tollowing the dinner, which will be served at 2 o'clock, short recitations .. |will be given by a few members of Wilcox street, forced the car of Ed- | (o circle. ward L. Hayes, 76 Elm street, to the curb causing him to run into another car, is the report made to| the police Sunday afternoon. The accident happened shortly before noon Sunday. Silver m Of Kaczynskis Aug. 3 and Mrs. Alexander Kaczyn- 242 High street will celebrate Medford, Mass., July 29 (P— Police here today were working on a new canary murder case. During the absence of the fam ily at the home of Isabelle S. Perce over the week-end a bur- glar entered the house, left 12 dead canaries on the floor, and stole 80 live birds and even took the collfe watch dog. Miss Pence Is a canary breeder. spray of ammonia, and ran through the gate to freedom. Inside the battle was mounting and out of the melee e.ierged War- (Special to the Herald) Bristol, July 20—What's in a name? The local police are seek- ing an answer to this query and the reason is this—Last Saturday Joseph Wise failed to live up to his name when he was convicted of keeping beer of more than one-half per cent alcoholic con- tent and was fined $100 and costs and given a suspended jail sen- tence of 30 days. And this morn- ing Albert Smart, who failed to live up to his name, was fined $200 and costs for violation of the liquor law. ROBIN NEARS 400 HOUR WARK WITH ALL GOING WL (Continued from First Page.) AS 500,000 STRIKE IN ENGLISH TOWNS (Continued From First Page) 70 OUST HOTEL MAN| CONVICTS SUBDUED (Continued from First Page.) (Continued From First Page) den Jennings as a hero. Gripping a s | pistol in each hand, the warden, catered largely to persons of British | Throughout the city yesterday's|Who was an officer in the World war, relgn of terror was at an end al.|'ellied a band of guards and waged | 4 a counter attack against the supe- of Bradley though there were many who would | jor numbers of the convicts. The | not breathe freely until the four \ h ad h Gt fury and suddenness of the offens- {convicts who escaped during the riot | v i 5 of Kelsey street and 8. Crandall of |Fon i T camtired, fve drove the main body of armed 193 Main street are among & number | " Tn he north cell block, where two | hemind o aile of Jumier. - Bhes 1o of local members who are stock-|and more prisoners were in each FAR S ) At s i bl |cell, sullen murmurs testified to the | the walls sniping at the entrenched Three years ago Mr. Marsh, then a | dissatisfaction of the convicts. Only | prisoners, eventually forcing them Lo [ newly appointed member of the na-|a few of the celis in the south block |surrender. tional finance committee of {he | were occupled, the roof of the build-| Bullels failing, other convicts re- organization and one of the stock- |ing having been bhurned. Only in the |sorted to torches. Flames climbed holders of the hotel. disapproved of (cells in which the suspected ring | the side of the prison workshops and | for the walkout squarely on the|ihe way finances of the hotel were leaders remained in solitary confine-|spread to the main buildings. Jen- shoulders of the employ He said | heing handled. | ment, was there silence—the silence | nings attempted to send out a call the workers throughout had offered | pa ipyestigation resuited in Mr.|of men awaiting the penalty of a|for help but found all wires leading to submit the issue to a court of ar | \arsh heing elected a member of the | violation of prison regulations. out of the prison had been cut. Ap- bitration and to accept the decision |poard of directors and being placed Work to be Hurried | parently the attempted outbreak hac of the court. | on the finance committee. He found | A check-up of the property loss | bheen mapped thoroughly. On'the other hand th that the hotel had an income of [today disclosed. according to Wa Not until the residents of Auburn were alleged to have refused to|3$440,000 a vear for 340 rooms, or den Jennings, that hastening of an|saw smoke drifting above the prison withdraw their notices or to awalt|$100.000 a vear more than $1,000 | expansion program planned for the |was the outside world aware of the | the result of a government inquiry. | per room. Other hotel men told him | prison would be necessitated by the | war that was raging behind the | About 250,000 weavers and 230,000 | that a hotel which could maintain |fires set during the outbreak. He said | walls. Calls for help were sent out; spinners were affected. an income of $1.000 a room was a |that most of the buildings destroyed |soon state troopers and firemen The ministry of labor, guided by |bonanza were to have been replaced by mod- |from the surrounding country were Miss Maggie Bondfield, its minister, | He learned, he festified in a sub- (¢ plants and that this work prob- undomx‘:. me‘.prlmn wn\l?. rontinued today its efforts to recon- | sequent suit before the New York |20ly would be pushed forward now.| — We rd Wacfare Begins cile the disputants but it was con- |supreme court, that Mr. Balk, while|Meanwhile, the shop in which the rghondnge tnsind Syvanfars Re sidered & hopeless fask at least for |under contract o turn the business |2utomobile license plates for the |strange blend of medieval fighting 5 the present, There was a possiblity | and lease of his rooming heuse over |State Was undamaged and the work jand modern military tactles. A fire | s 1o fight has become so monoto- 0 Premier MacDonald would attempt |to the hotel, and while accepting | O the plates could go forward. CHERG WE BECLSE S0 SUaies ca 6 that evidences of frayed nerves |Forestvllle, was the worse for his t i i 2 i Accepting | " dreds of tourists who had re- | battering ram; it splintered itself |nous that e he | tipple Sunday morning at 11:30 fol- to harmo(m;fl the _s:mingv payment for the good will of ”“’!mamm overnight in the city, many | against a section of the wall and |aloft and on the ;:ruundhsupgllt’;l tm: lowing ‘an, accident at the intersec- ot i :errsk:‘n‘trl\g 55t Drobable L??’;:Zifl??fii.fi.fl e . |©f them massed outside the prison i ey i bllteher ;,“:,;";'é?fé‘f"“‘idi?d ert 8t LOUI l4ion of Droad and Washington BIoit orithe stielon olher Tnons |Ths o Iaieie T ot e o alle fresiimed thelzHonrneya todaydl in YES D eV AT el sEd I HINE (8 Ch AN e e o JatKuon) anil | Atsete tries, estimated 80,000 to 100,000 | to Marsh was waiting to buy u ma‘w'm anotherginteresting et on s xs”‘m e O'Brine rather roundly “panned”| DBelanger, it is said, who stopped bleachers, dyers and finishers wouid | hotel stock nt a bargain after s e S et ot e ;\::\?nuendm: newspapermen for “crab- for 2 = lshtsat 'tzo?tr:r:;?;?é be thrown out of work shortly or|smaller stockholders had been frozen fmiwn officials, however, vesterday's |sending bullets spattering into walls | bing” about sleeping on cot beds in 'm 'C‘gr ’U;’“‘_;‘;R]F‘s ;rodmfl’ . Lk e A [outbreatc was something more than |and bodics. tante i fer ntreet, Belanger was found mot The greater part of the 66,000 tons| No financial reports had been [an incident. Auburn prison was New | There was even a fouch of Ar-| Some of the reporters, reminded e e et S S tiBinG of coal used in the mills each week [ made for two or more years. and | York state's first penal institution, | thurian chivalry for Captain Pat by the filers that “sleeping on a gas obenthenmom ora will cease depriving miners of their | when a report was made. Marsh al- [and in its long history has had sev. i i P - sccupation while miners and rail- | Hour Caused By Long Speeches. During the busiest traffic hour of Saturday, the busiest day of the week, two large buses were in diffi- |culties in the heart of the city. An Arch street bus turning in front of the city haH on Main street and a small car collided near the curb. The damage consisted of a ripped fender off the smaller car, an argument following. Later in the evening Act- ing Sergeant George Collins saw a |Connecticut company bus standing at the south end of Central Park |without a driver while literally scores of machines on Main and | Church street were held up. The bus driver was found on the street argu- ing with the driver of another ma- |chine although there were no signs v their silver wedding anniversary Sat- |of an accident. Collins ordered the ! | bus driver to move along. No names |Urday, August 3, at their home. Thelr | to "were marriage took place in the Sacred |aregiaken Mandsh aanss Heart church August 2, 1304, and Running him up and down the |Since that time they have made their 2 home In this city. sidewalk to see if he was in & Bonl drunken condition and making him | A reeeption will b g;::y’“{:“‘;:g; g Uing &) stoop to the sidewalk and then rafse | o (58 (Rt hieR ARy ErieniH PERE N R up again, Officers Kennedy and|go,; cniigren, Pauline, Celia, Edward a matter of fact, the perfection | Doty tried in vain to convince them- 34" [iorence. selves that Charles Belanger of | descent. Charles S. Clarkson In this event the operating spinning i & SPINMINE | i reet, this city, George E. Whatnall section probably would ask for re- thelr was expected the haif sumption of negotiations on OWNn acc . | mill owners would meet them way. Minister Blames Employers A statement issued by Sir Horact Wilson. permanent secretary of the minister of labor, laid the blame MAN DIES OF BEATING Portland, Me., July 29 (A—War- ren Guevin, died today of the effects of a beating received at the hands of Thomas J. “Black lom Mulkern of 29 Centre street, on Wright's wharf yesterday afternoon. fulkern was charged with murder and held without bail by Recorder Frank I. Cowan. 2, Mr. ski of employers except for some “bumpy" air early last night which today had worn off into smooth sailing again. Always Safe! Fere s CASTORIA Children Cry Jor It/ A pure vegetable preparation to re- Jieve common baby ailments, such as constipation, colic, gas, colds, etc. Genune Castoria bears the Signature of, KING MAY VISIT POPE Vatican City, July 29 (A—Rumors that King Victor Emanuel is about to make a call on the Pope, althongh denied semi-officially at the Vatican, were received today when it was learned that the papal nuncio to Italy vyesterday visited the pope while the pontiff today held an hour's conference with tht Italian minister to the Holy See. King Victor Emanue] is now in Rome, although the rest of the royal fam- ily is at the mountain retreat of | Morrissey of the Auburn fire depart- tank fan't so hot, elther,” replied |and was Wlowed to procced, = eged ths p bt was re- ment was seized by two convicts as|that the gas tank might be prefer- ‘ ; i ey e Il s s b e e en txey eralidlsturbe ntes ghut mone (ofthy e Main street and trled to turn into affected. The heart of the British cotton Industry is faced with probably the worst time in its long and frequent- Iy troubled history since mediation by the ministry of labor has fafteu. Figures on the number of mills con- tinuing to work at the old rates or in which the workers accepred the cut were slow coming in but it was estimated at noon that not more than a score of plants were operaf- ng with any degree of effectivenesa, Hear MacDonald Interested Even today Lancashire hoped that the government will be able to re- | onen negotiations. It is reported here that Premier Ramsay MacDon- | 1ld himself contemplates personal | ntervention. Miss Bondfield also issued a state- ment this morning. “The minister | of labor has received a report of negotiations which took place last week in the cotton trade and has considered the present position. She is watching the situation with the greatest anxiety hut feels there is no action which the department can helpfully take at present.” At noon it was stated the major- ity of mills in both the Cotton Spin- ners association and the Manufac- ers’ association were idle. They were made up as follows: Master Cotton Spinners’ Federation had 650 mills, 55,000,000 spindles, £0,000 looms, 200,000 employes. The Cotton Spinners and Manufacturers’ sssiclation had 685 mills, 5,000,000 spindles, 500,000 looms and 180,000 employes. In Preston six mills were working 15 well as eighf others in surround- ing villages. Some workers arrived 2t the mill gates this morning with- out intending to work. At one mill 100 weavers went to the looms only o be told that the machinery could not be started for so small a num- ver. No Negotiations Planned No definite move for reopening ne- gotiations has been made. H. Booth- man, secretary of the cotton &pin- ners operatives, stated a meeting would be held Wednesday to con- sider what steps can be taken. G. Pogson, secretary of the Feder- ation of Master Cotton Spinners, said: “We are willing to meet the operatives at any convenient time for further discussion.” Thomas Ashurst secretary of the Catton Spinners and Manufacturers’ assoclation, declared his association would meet shortly to consider fts aititude toward mills and member- ship which were continuing on the old wage basis. He expressed readi- noss to meet the workers when they wished to negotiate, Market Reacts Liverpool, July 29 (P—The lock- out in the Lancashire cotton indus- today caused an uncertain appre- hensive atmosphere in the Liverpool cotton market, members fearing that \ts effect would be quickly felt on prices. It the dispute is prolonged it will ect workers on the river Mersey and the transport trade generally There are 150 Liverpool transport Arms engaged in cotton shipping, many of them dealing only in cotton. Nearly 8900000 visnted the Monument persons of Washington have top e —————— Then Suddenly a Clear Complexion Came |, “The itching stopped and the pi ples began to disappear, and ‘ebout & month they were gone, writes one woman aft i Resinol. There are feuw jon faults which will not yiel | this simple treatment. The Oini- ment at night! Then wash off with Resinol Soap in the The Soap, too, as a dai plexion aid. 4¢ all dritggis For free sample of each, writo | Resinol, Dept.84, Baltimore, Md. | Resinol | {a zone ported to he $11.000 when he had {magnnude of yesterday's revolt. proof of one creditor alone seeking | Escape Early in Year colection of $28,000 and that the| Farly this year, three convicts concealed indehtedness of the hotel |scaled the walls but were recaptured. was over $100.000, In 1926, James B. Durnin, principal With an income of $440.000 and ikcepflr. was stabbed to death by a the manager reporting a loss, with | convict and a whelesale prison de- | stock dropping from $25 a share to |livery was narrowly averted. The| 85, at which price Mr. Marsh he- |prison has been in use for 110 years! lieved the Sid Blake corporation was |and in a little used store room lies attempting to buy it in. the New }lh:‘ state’s first electric chair. Sritain director received an offer| News that the convicts had cap- from a hotel corporation to lease the ':réd ‘lhe nrl§n§ nr:‘ensl ndnd trmt’d house for $160,000 vear, stati themselves ‘with rifies and sub-ma- that at ‘u:th nrice xhiv)‘zgcldflrfi(flzzJ""‘"P guns added to the terror of $100,000 profit. = | residents of the city yesterday. Today There were 21 directors on the |(he countryside was being searched hoard, all but three being friendly to fOF the four escaped convicts. Blake. Mr. Blake at one time during i the controversy resigned. His resig- nation was accepted. Later he re- | i called his resination and was again | e ot Spnmren” dror benbied made manager. Three directors | . e tod P d ended the fighting for the stockholders were | o o g biace 1008y AN New Marsh, Charles T.. Meurisse of Chica- | gory siains olyoreas in any New s York state penal institution. i;«:f-":s::\p:.{ham H. Sharp of South | warden Edgar S. Jennings an- The stock of the hotel is held by | "0UNCCd SHOTtl befére dawn that DA 6(000 erions F{"a““v thyifl“ but four of the 1,700 prisoners thres Girscion ’W ey ©|who attempted to battle their way presenting 3,800 | oyt of their narrow world of walls stockholders took the fight to the|yesterday had been accounted for. supreme court, asking that Blake | The four men apparently escaped. be ousted as president and manager They are: George Small, New and that the board of directors be | york City, serving a 12-year term dissolved. |for second degree robbery; Joe The supreme court ruling Satur- | Catricio, 20, Rochester, serving 20 day states that “The majority of the | years for robbery; Arthur Barry, 39, directors were incompetent and im- | of Nassau county, serving 25 years provident." | for burglary; and Stephen Pawlak A receiver will be appointed until |of Buffalo, sentenced to life im- such time as the hotel is on a paying | prisonment as a fourth offender basis, under the Baumes law. The Cornish Arms Hotel corpora-| Dawn found state troopers speed- tion has 28 stockholders in New |ing acrosa the roads in search of | Britain. the four men, while 400 troopers, ' The annual state convention of | national guardsmen and police the American Order Sons of st |guarded the smoldering ruins of George will be held in Torrington, | Auburn prison. Two investigations August 13, according to an an.|Wwere scheduled in an attempt to nouncement made today by Willard | pick the ringleaders of the revolr, A. Crandall of this city, state grand | One was to be conducted by Warden president | Jennings and the other by District Herbert Swift and Edward Lister | Attorney Ben Kenyon. of Sir Francis Drake lodge are dele Prison Death House gates. James K. Chapman also of | Death and terror were behind | Sir Francis Drake lodge of this city | Auburn's walls today, for two con- is a candidate for office, Mr. Chap. | Victs were killed, 11 injured and man now is grand chaplain. | several firemen and guards hurt in | Although the members as {nai. the second prison outbreak in New | viduals are vitally interested in the | YOk state in less than a week. Guns on Walls | Auburn, N. Y., July 29 (UP)— | |2 deep silence, with newspapers | there reiterating stories of ‘“atro- |cities” against soviet citizens in Manchuria and denying negotiations between the two countries for settle- |ment of their differences were under | way. It was reiterated also that Chi- nese troops in the neighborhood of | Harbin had mutinied. Neutral Zone ( Tokvo, July 29 | patches today from Manchuria said | ated (P —Press dis. building, followed at a short dis- tance by a band of convicis. The trusty leaped at Merle Osborne, a guard on duty inside the adminls- tration building, and overpowered him, while the convicts who had followed crept up on Milton Ryther, another guard, and overcame him. Keys were seized from the two men and the convicts sprinted to prison arsenal, opened the gun cases The supreme president recently 1g. | PAnnemora. | Buffalo in 1927. DISTURBS LONDON v e o 5 o man, overcome by smoke; Patrick left leg; William Dempsey, guard, early vesterday afternoon when the | from Manchuli said Chinese vronnz‘ Mongol invasion which would cut and carried out a supply of fire- had withdrawn both it Cornish Arms hotel situation, any |13t Monday three convicts were | discussion will be prohibited during |killed When they broke for free- meetings, Mr. Crandall said today.|9om &t Clinton state prison at sued an order to this effect. Those killed in vesterday's Aght “There will be a lot of discussion | "¢ outside the meeting rcom, however» | J0%ph Cirringone, who was serv- e et et i ing from 73 to 15 years for arson. He was received at the prison from | George Wright, who was serving INVASI[]N 15 vears fo first degree robbery. He | was received from Buffalo in 1926, Warden Jennings declined to re- veal the names of the 11 convicts i jured are: | Charles Lazey, a fireman, shot in | (Coatinued From First Page) | the left leg; George Searing, fire- man, back injured in fall from wall; George Stewart, Syracuse fire- Morrissey, fireman, finger shot off lof left hand; Merle Oshorne, guard, finger shot off and suffering from gas Inhaled when convicts threw a bomb; Milton Rither, guard, shot in shot in left elbow: Eugene Farce, uard, shot in abdomen: Thomas Wallace, guard, overcome by gas fumes . The attempted break occurred |that Russian and Chinese troops | prisoners were assembled for their oth were withdrawing from the | regular Sunday baseball game. | border and creating a natural zone iRty PAGRCRA (G uasd in order to avoid clashes. | The guards failed to notice a Rengo News Agency dispatches | uipysty’ | Sunday morning started to withdraw in the direction of Khailar, leaving | 2 small cavalry force at the border. There were reports the withdrawal was motiviated partially by fear of n off in the rear. The Rengo ispatches did not mention Rus: movements but Asahi Shimbun's Harbin dispatches said military cadquarters there announced th | Manchuli and Pogranichnaya undes ordars from Moscow. Asaki said the withdrawals of ahout 35 Chinese li 12 miea the | Russians Out into the prison yard ran the armed convicts, fossing pistols, rifies and bombs to their prisoners. Bullets flew and convicts, bearing dewn with their superior numbers, were winning the skirmish. Then two prisoners, who had been |left with Osborne and Ryther in the administration building, forced | the guards ahead of them and| walked out into the prison yard, Shielding themselves hehind the | zuards, the two convicts worked | their way to the front gate while guards on the wall withheld fire left hout between two forces. GLASSES FITTED FRANK E. GOODWIN Optometrist Phone 1905 ! Main St | fered a compound fracture of slip into the administration | arms and ammonia-gas bombs | he fought the flames and was car: ried away. “You're too old the convicts told captive. For five hours the battle ranged up and down the prison with the| steadily increasing forces under Warden Jennings beating back the convicts on every front. Eventualy all of the prisoners were driven to- gether and placed under guards. Jacob Reese of Albany. who was drilving on a road near the prison, said two conviets halted him, forced | Yis wife and 4-year-old child out of | the car. Bullet Hits Roll of Bills “They then told me to step on the | gas and take them away as fast as 1 could,” Reese said. “I drove at top speed until I almost reached Port Byron. One of the prisoners got out. 1 did likewise and started to run. The men fired one shot at me as T fled. The bullet struck a roll of bills in my back pocket and did not hurt me. I looked back and saw the two men were driving away | in my car.” | Buildings at Auburn prison de- stroyed by fire were the plate shop, woodwork shop, foundry, machine shop, and resaw shop. The south cell block was damaged by fire. Fasce was said to be the only one | of the injured whose condition was | serious. to mix in this,’ their struggling ENDURANCE PLANE CRASHES TO EARTH | shattering the record of the Ange- {dropped Sunday. able “at $2 a snore!” Jackson and O'Brine are earning extra flying money at the rate of $116 an hour, and have amassed an approximate total of $15.000 since leno last Tuesday. Sponsors of the flight, comment- | ing on the testiness qf the messages | from the plane yesterday, said they felt the matter should not be taken too serlously because of the terrific straln to which the filers have been subjected. “Hello, hunch,” read the last note | “How's the weather down there? “Sure is fine at 5,000 feet, but getting a little cloudy. We are pass- ing through some of them, and they are sure bumpy. “You can bring up 75 gallons of gas at 4 o'clock, and don't forget, and 100 at 7. We now have about | 30 in tanks. “You sure had a bunch of early callers this morning. (There were about 2,000 at the fleld when thel morning refueling occurred mat 6:30 la. m) “Red” Takes a Nap “Red is getting a good nap. Mo-| tor sounds good to us yet. Can you hear a rattle in it or not? “OBIE. Major William B. Roberison, sponsor of the flight, said aftc reading the note and hearing the voar of the low-flying plane he could not see that it sounded any different from what it did on July | 13. | In the first note dropped by the Robin Sunday, “Red and Obie” said: | “We need 60 gallons of gasoline | AT HINNEAPOLIS (Continued From Kirst Page) He said at about 150 feet the plane seemed to get out of control. The| crash came instantly. | In the six days of fiving, Pilots | Haugland and Crichton had covered upward of 11,000 miles on 1,375 gallons of gasoline. They had made | 18 successful refueling contacts. 1t was Haugland's sixth attempt to set an endurance record, and| Crichton's first. At 12:12 a. m. to- | day the Minnesota had passed the previous mark of 149 hours, achiev- ed by Haugland and Thorwald John- son, last June. On that flight Haug- land and Johnson were forced down | by motor trouble. | Previously, Haugland and Gen Shank had attempted four times to set an endurance record, but each time were forced down Doctors later said Haugland suf- the kull and possible internal injuries. They expressed doubt that he would recover. Haugland conceived the idea of at- tempting to establish a new endur ance mark soon after the army plane “Question Mark" set its rec- ord. He tied up all his property, mortgaging everything he could, to | purchase two cabin planes, one for | the endurance attempt and the other | for the refueling ship | TInaddition to his aviation interests, Haugland owned a gasoline filling tion. He is a veferan of | World war, having served in t tillery, He began flying in After completing his course, started flying by taking Mrs. Haug- land to a Marion, 8. 1., hospifal each week for She is para- Ivzed | treatment REPORT INFANTRY DF SRTED Budapest, Hungary, July 29.—(#) —The newspaper Magyarsag today published a report from the southern frontier station of Kelebia that an entire company of fantry, consisting of 80 Bosnians had | deserted with their equipment of | rifles and machine guns and enter- ed Hungarian territory. Official quarters had no information on the the | subject HOUSE WARMING PARTY About 75 guests of Mr. and Mrs C. M. Shine visited them in their new home on Pentlow street, Saturday fellow [night, for a house warming party. | the They formerly lived on Beaver street, | They received a number of gifts nd luncheon was served. Music and dancing were enjoyed. CAPTAIN PASSES TESTS Hartford, July 29.—@—Accord- ing to orders issued by the adjutant general's ofiice today, Captain Harry W. Generous of the 118th observa- tion squadron, 43rd division avia- tion, has passed his tests and is now rated as a military airplane pilot. lonly a Jugoslavian in- | and oil. Don't know of anything else. So so and by by. Was that the same gas last night?” (The reference to ‘“the same gas" was not_explained.) Then another, reading: “Tell those damned reporters we are mot running without lights be- cause we want to, Our battery lasts | little while and then the lights go out. If those birds don't | know anything about such things | there's no use printing those things. Flying in Circle | “T got a big laugh when they tried to smooth it over about our| speed saying we were bucking head | winds. It's the first time I knew the wind blew in a circle. (The| plane flies a 10-mile circular course |over the field to be in sight of offi- ial observers.) The remarks from the alr irritai-| |ed the newspapermen, also under a | great tension, and a photographer hurled rocks at a tri-motored pas- [senger plane which kicked up | |huge cloud of dust into a group | watching it take off. ‘ The pilot of the plane leaped out [to remonstrate. Fellow-photogra- | |phers and reporters gathered |around, Thus reinforced, the ag- | grieved photographer made bold to |say he'd “bust you on the nose for hat,” whereupon the pilot climbed {hack aboard his ship and flew off ' in a worse cloud of dust, LEGAL FIGHT SEEN ~ INPC00K ACTION (Continued from First Page.) member, returned early next month | trom Europe. That the special session would not include in its business any attempt to validate the 1925 McCook con- demnation act was indicated by Judge Raymond A. Johnson, house majority leader and assistant attor- | ney general. It is considered prob able that the tuberculosis commis- sion will be authorized fo proceed {under the general condemnation of the state. Fat Man Rescued in Four Feet of Water West Brookfield, 29 (A—Alexander West Warren | | vesterday to get relief from the || intense heat. Alexander, who | | weighs 300 pounds, stumbled and fell as he started to wade into Lake Wickaboag and his face dis- appeared in four feet of water. He was unable to regain his feet and was saved by several men who were among 100 onlookers. | | He was revived by Kenneth Wor: ! cester, a life guard Mass., July Wanski ol went swimming Beaver street, Andrew Hagopian, 138 L ™ 5k Qorrv Stanna di Valdieri. n Sl QA/, e 0. L UNDER THE SAME OWNERSHIP AS USUAL THERE WILL BE AUGUST SALE of FINE MOTORS O intelligent woman be- lieves that a “cut” price is any guarantee of value or that 2 $100 fur is worth $150 simply because it was reduced to $150 from some higher figure. We do not hold so-called “sales”’; we never raise our prices in anticipation of cutting them 126 WEST 42nd ST. during January or August. The regular Shayne prices, which hold throughout the enure year, are as low or IOWE[ than most periodic sale prices. The in- erinsic value of Shayne furs is guaranteed by 2 63 year record of scrupulous business honesty —NOT by a “cut” price. NEW YORK