New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 31, 1929, Page 3

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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1929. his 17th birthday is ineligible. [ Burritt Field Meet Field day eventg held sway over all other activities at the DBur: l(' Park Board to Inspect Sites For North End Swimming Pool i-it 5si st { Helen Bonney and Charles Hageariy Veedeshot Pond and St [J[P (YAT]C POSTS |ooiss e : Ty ider ‘ el e o INDERGD CHANGE good sportsmanship was evident on | mission. all sides. Separate events ware run off for both girls and boys besid:s some events which were open to | both. | The term field day seems to be a | misnomer unle: the usual hun- dred yard dash takes place. How- | ever such was not the opinion in| this case. Several of the young men in the playground thought that this | special event should be lengtieued to | two hundred yards. So a chall=nge | ensued between Dominic Vento and | i = y _ | stimson complete Nick Pinto. Nick's agile feet | SATS Rt mesting of, thy ! brought him in the lead by cight and | board which took place in City hzll. |tion of the diplomatic service only e Ll The proposed swimming pool in | five, at most, and perhaps only four |& NaIf § i | the fifth ward would cost in the| f the 14 1t would be almost next (o impos- neighborhood of $25,000, it is said. | O ° sible to give the different detaiis of Dr. Lash favors asking ‘the commuon | under C all the events so we will satisfy our- council for this amount at its next | their post ~ |selves in giving the results of all the meeting. However, it was the con-| =130y changes among the 41 min- | aoqvities sensus of the board that the counci) |i5ters ‘,‘;"""‘_"f'}‘i‘ to '::"*‘“‘““ 1 will not grant this amount. eign nations also will be made, but Another objection to the proposed | Felatively speaking they will not he location of the pool in the fifth ward | 3'”:";‘1‘ “““r‘;r‘liy”:"'*: ')10 ?1_ those in the was heard from Judge W. I. Man- | higher diplomatic posts gan, chairman, who said that it Twd Already Replaced would cost much money to keep the | Alanson B. Houghton already has pool supplied with water., The city hr‘:‘tn replaced at London by Charl he intimated, would not favor keep- | Gafes Dawes, and a successor ha ing the pool filled with clean wator | een selected for Henry P. Fletcher in periods of drought. | as ambassador to Italy, Mr. Fletcher oelNG os Consi | having decided to retire after a s 2 R & e expected {0 he accepted are were discussed. One of th~ sites is | °F 2r® expected fo he accepted ar k Jacob Gould Schurman, Ne in the Stanley tract in the north and | & 72¢ .,“,,i.\\.\.",,m ”;,,”'(.::,,,,,,“ of the city A stream runs through & ampasse =Ly i | Ogden H. Hammond. of New Jerse S s LER B W R s e s. road to Hartford, and it was the | AMDAS: 05 X g : | Culbertson, of Kansas, ambassador opinion of Arthur I Berg that this | uioctson. of Kansas, am . Popl vl asminimum Sctiexpendi G o e Tllinoi ture, | ambassador to Cuba. Charles Mac- Another site, Veagh, of New York, ambassador to vards from the inte Jeren ritt and Myrtle streets, was propose:l Senator Walter 1. Edge, of New iyioudes Mangan iHe s A G Bl e e A Myron used to swim thers e itTerriciilon QnioNis i asaans peoiinopn as Nesalesiol ponduA Ll o el i (el e s eony though he has not scen the poid for [ oo S0 B 02 Fletcher and SO T L I e U I o e i e cleaned out and made nio an | vetire still withheld ceptable pool. As an added advan- Grew Will Remain tage he cited th fact thet ¢l have been reports that Jo- pase ipcna s Blesne Ol RSB S DR eanons (e o LA feomngs SromiliroRshaingsin ol e iR transferred or 200 yards distan would resizn, hut these are without As a result o the discussion confirmation. Mr. Grew members of the ‘oard will man and has scen these sites in the near futm: state department full report will n= h : foreizn field nest meeting on Angust 13. The am For Children. Not For Politicians | asked by President Hoover fo re. | “After all, the swimming pools main at their posts are Robert for the children of the city aad they | Woods Bliss, of Washington, D, (. should not he used by politicians 1o |at Buenos Aires; Hugh §, Gibson, of further their own interests™ de- | California, at Brussels: Edwin v. Many Ambassadors fo Be Re- placed by Hoover That swimming pools are primari- ly for children and are not footballs 1o be kicked about by the two major political part was the sentiment| Washington, July expressed last night by Dr. Henry | president Lash, a fiember of the park cow- | 31.—(P) and —When Hoover Secretary their reorganiza- ambassadors who served vin Coolidge will remain at | (junior) | Boys” 50- h | Tomasco. Girls' dash Girls' 100 Boys' standing br Girls, Anna Just, Hov, skip and jump. hoys. Joseph Beamish; girls. Marie Brigandi. | baseball throw, Anna Jesabel. basketball throw, Vinceut | (junior), Anna Lucus, ard dash, Anna Grip. ad, Niel Doy gl Boys' Saukas potato race, Elizabeth Ryan. pole vault, Albert Alansias. Girls' pin race, Margaret Layden. Shoe race (open to all) girls, Mary | Lynch; boys, Robert Doyle. Blind race (open to all) girls. Angela Bella; boys, Thomas Carney During the remainder of the aft noon a rehearsal was held for the minstrel show which is to take ploce next Friday afternoon under the di- rection of Miss Bonney. The girls of the cast extend an invitation to the girls of other playgrounds to be presant at the performance on that | day. located about 100 ection of Bur- Washington Playground A few cool moments during the | morning gave the boys and girls at | the Washir playground an op- | portunity to exhibit their ability in | running and jumping 100 yard dash—1, etro. yard dash (girls)—1 3. Balicki. throw Sicila. br o ALe Are Drucette; 2 There Jobas; 2 Rose: Ball tolz . Running Omacuna; Ruming Kkows Rela Kubala: 2, Kos is a career service in the as in the inspeet ni A their (hoys)—1. | 3. Stasky. jump (girls)—1 Liz Sinko, n as well 2 broad Bedor (boys) - Groz. race Pacinda Relay race (girls) Madrick ak and Labis. Pole vault—Bogdanski, Gra 1ssadors who have been 3 Dou- Syzmanski. | Pac —— H Naval Reduction Peace Step” In Letter to Legion Answers McNutt C Parity of Strength Original Washington, July 31 (A—The | agreement between the United States | Nutt, national commander and Great Britain looking to com- plete equality in the strength of | their navies is held out by President | Hoover as an answer to critics of his | decision to postpone work on the | three-cruisers which to have | been laid down in navy yards nest fall. Quoting “our naval authorities” as | regarding parity with Great Britain as “a complete defense of the Unit=d | States in any contingency,” tha| president has taken occasion to set | forth the importance he attaches 1o the London agrecment in a letter r. plying to criticisms of his eru were race—1 # ed Dr. Lash. It is my conten- | Morgan, of New York, at Rio D tion that they should be placed in | Janeiro, and Dwight W. Morrow, of | Prag. pots ahout the city where the child | New Jersey, at Mexico City, Mr | Ball population is high. Bliss and Mr. Gibson are career men. | leski, Shoe Sacel Luty; throw (girls)—Granski, Za | | Bednay. | into this | children sider and “T do not favor goi while Mr. Morgan has heen at the | e | thing on a ward basis. The Brazilian capital since 1912, | what we should consider.” bassadors Culbertson at Santizgo | i | was pointed out that the two and Moore at ILima many other sites mentioned by members of the | changes in the diplomatis represen- | hoard were quite as near to the cen- tation in Latin America arc in pros- | i | ter of child population in the north- | pect. President Hoover determineg | ern part of the city as the site w ml‘-h upon some of these changes after he | ’ was proposed by Councilman Mly- | had completed his good will tour to L Add' ,, I [t t I narski a short time ago. the southern republics, and Secretary | egge 16556 1nstituie 0 The claim of James J. Toomey. | Stimson is understood to have deciy. | i : 154 West Main streét, 10 a strip of | cd upon ot SULGCLEL Co-operation at Meeting | property adjoining Walnut Hill parl, | | and which the city had claimed, was recognized by the park hoard. The | secreta of the hoard was truct- | r ed to write Mr. Toomey telling him that they recognize his title to the property as set forth in the deed at the city hall. It to Retire mong the changes in Atin-America probably will he the tirement of Charles C. Eberharar, | of Kansas. as minister fo Nic Gerhard A. Bading, of Wisconsin minister to Ecuador, and 1 Grant Smith as minister to Urug The “secretary of the board, Mr.| Willis C. Cook has resigns Bers. was also instructed to’ con- | minister (o Venezuels ang o fer with the corporation council con- | becn some talk of a successor fop | Malor inter || cerning his opinion to the ad-|Jefferson Caffery in Colombia, One | ©n¢eS Of officials of the American visability of paying the hospital ex- |or two other changes both in South | (OUON ETOWers' exc Tanee nd che penses of ~Savacco Gaetano, who |and Central America also are look. | S P Cotton Growers' —association with the farm board members here. Baton Rouge, La.. July 31 (P)— After discussion of the economics o | cooperative markefing generally led | members of the federal farn oard, the American Institute of Co operation today turned its focus on the problems of the Natio Cotton Growers' organizations. aragua; | | 1y, | st centered in confer as oover Reiterates Belief That riticism By Pointing Out That sive claims to have heen ruptured whi in the corpora Judge Mangan doubtfy decided Gacta compensation 1ken out by the hoard of y When he reported his in- mission iy on he had previou not in Mr. F the ma he q employ of tion 1l cz in favor 1o was not June 29 received it ly effect. Ber tter to the juestioned 1 council, when the the board. The |ments are likely to | the ministers in the according has said that it is a . but that it should be of > city covered | insurance 9, he he le re vl hout thre insurance gal ri w < com- 2 that wer was in favor of referring claims committee ght of the park board to settle the matter Anothe; tion co expecte pen r opinion uncil will he d that the from t sked 1im tion will be settled at the next | meeting of the board. NICARAGUA CONSUL * SHOOTS HIS FRIEND -~ Pafalyzes Man With Bullet— he an for com- Sulfered Hallucinations cisco general risle acti ing the Leon De D) Perez, bl of a crowded . recently separated from his ed the car dur. rush F times, ve wife, hou mid-day three Nicaragy bullet e of le n acro: ca years, The an- consul « ot bullet paralyzed him from the br expected down cover. Polic tion of l.eon h fused d Until consul ore from ment azainet platines 1ty tions T Aloniz | Ford's He is not said the shootir ad “insulted etails, few a gent consul fo emala 1gency ived wildly. Pe sai whom she 5 Virginia have collection at days gene had Perez's only was that him, o e n T a Proces to three carr heen | after the govern- | under 14 years. information i he ex Per atems fo pr rel t r husband. | had heen contem- | unde di S0ns, rlages ioined Way He to re plana- D re- was ala as Nicara- | ntative move: hat he ha cina from Henry nn the | scently | ks was the here | ered the spinal | Iso | testant ind many v:;”\'.f‘sl‘)lyz;'ir'] “1:";::;} Alexander H. Legge, chairman of o e | the board, in addressing the institute iy last night declared for expansion and | strengthening of the cooperative | movement rather than the arbitrary raising of commodity pri Prices, said, determined by basic Playground Events | | economic conditions.” | | {_“What the board_hopes fo do.” | — % | Mr. Legae said, "is (o assist farmers 0 becom able to compete vith other groups in the markets of the nation the world. It ex- | Wit WHI be held at Memorial Kicld. | pécts by aiding in the development | Willow Erook park on August 14, | of cooperative associations 1o make Playground dircctors are priming | possible cconomies in marketing an their stars for the vvents and rivalry |stabilized marketing conditions and | is keen amo the children, to farmers to obtain their | ack Mect | re of the national income.” | S5 I RETING SECRECY Michigan Senator Discloses| Lumber and Auto Rates under 14 years — | rand Far | e are better Annaal Playg round Meet The tenth “annual interplayground , shz Events 100-yard rd dash dash 1 7 contc C -yard dash, 1 contestant, 60-vard dash, 1 contestanr, open. Girls" ribbon 14 years and ove Girls' ribbon r 3 contestants, | under 14 years, | Boys' high 1 open. Boys’ running broad | open Boys' open. Gir race, 5 contestants, Washington, July 31 (A—The :.r.\'! |open break in'the wall of secrecy | surrounding the tariff rate delibera | fions of the senate finance commit- {tee republicans has disclosed a ser jump., contestant, 1 contestant pole vaule, 1 contes ant, |ics of reductions in schedules votec | by the house. Lumber, shingles, logs and aufo mobiles were the commodities affect- ed by these decisions of the commit- | basketball throw, 1 con- | open. | Girls' baseball throw open. Girls' running broad, 1 contestunt open. | Midget 1 10 and Obstacle | 14 vears. | Girls' three 1. | ants, open. Boys' three stants, open. Boys' relay ri contestants, open Girls' relay (220 testants, open. Girls' shuttle | | | | | B e disclosed, witl - out any intimation as to whether | they reflected a general trend of the | committee’s activiti by Senator Couzens of Michigan, after he had | 1 contestant, nn.er | SeTved notice that he would no long- | |er be bound by a secrecy agree- | ment. He withdrew from {i cement, | which was voted by the committee- | men when they went into seclusion i week ago to re-wri the house tarifit bill. because, he explainel | | many of their preceding decisions | had “leaked” to “lobbyists” or rep- | resentatives ot concerrs interested in the rates affected, r. sulting in fre | quent demands for reconsideration, He let it known that shingles {and all logs which were transferred from the free to the dutiable list by the had been put back into un- | list by the committecmen | counter-vailing ,provis- | on lumber had hecen ptofor a 15 per cont flooring designed cent tax imposed by race, under rac contestant, ged race, 2 contest '"TACHED TO E B°N legged race, 2 con- [t we (440 yards), 4 vards), {4 con- relay, 7 coniostants, | ai httle relay, 7 rs and over rooster 14 vears Roys' der 14 Girls der contostants, % M, 2 contestants, hous suek year 1 contestant free nd that ion applyin eliminated duty on meet o ‘anada sack race, 1 contestani, un- 14 years, Any Toy hinh cehonl Any who has compl ted ¥ M, boy who has r naple per to is | in in- ched eligible, ached a basis of equality. | Dawes and Gibson, now concerned president expressed his | chiefly with establishment of a new, opinion that it was better to estab- | comprehensive formula for m lish such a relation as that repre- |ing the strength of navie sented in the parity agreement than | demonstrated to “resign ourselves to contin ferences with tempts to establish it by rival con- | state iction programs.” and contir “We need not th t (aside from the capital itatic under the Washington aty) competitive building ha been in progress on both sides sir t ha parity 1-will Lurdensome Is “Tremendous by his frequent high officials of department who are kept he detai snce Probable nt London conversatinns long way toward preliminary naval conference ar the s to consider not only t destroyers belief of a meeting necessity for under h on arms - con- the in- disguis, fact ship | The re possible mitation world powe and submari here would eliminat calling a terms of t Is Goal—Sticks to Theory. and ¥, not rui It is the such the ates postponement actior by Paul V. Me- expeniic the | tUTe. & constant stream of ill-will and by 2 suspicion confere Washi American Legion. misinaprsty Morcover, naval strength we stimulats fear and out Yot constant exj can not ill-will the wo both of us, and thus defeat the pu well ¢ cet of the L B ees Forward Step He describes the agreement “the first step of the renewed con- sideration of reduction of the excs- world naval armament” and holds it to be “a forward step of tiwe first importance,” reiterating position that defense is all that t United States is s McNutt's criticism was that posi- ponement of the cruiser buildin tended toward disparity rather than parity with Great Iiritain and that the Upited ates, should move to u fail tation tre as through- | l.ondon is looked upon th the ex- ry conference, since MacDonaid would be the i} and the 1 toward i prelimin Min most likely pect Prime i to issue poses which you have so ssed as being the ol Agr his of J Fran to the W consideration h when you uniformly will make rtain cgion sy L for n king. 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We accept full 1 sponsibility for Trojan performanc TIRE AND BATTERY COMPANY 39 WASHINGTON STREET, TEL. 900 ur- | , 18 being | |Heat Blamed in Three Bridgeport Suicides | Bridgeport, July 31 (UP)~De- |spondency aggravated by the intense heat was the finding today by Medi- cal Examiner H. R. Deluca in the | deaths of three Bridgeport men who committed suicide in‘ the past 24 hou The dead are: Harry Kos- by, 51; Degr -t Steven Kilcinskas, 46, a restaurant proprietor, hoth—of whom took poison, and Edward C. Trode, 3, who was married two weeks ago. di¢d after inhaling’ illu- minating gas, $200,000 SALT | MIDWAY ATER SWIMMING | o N E: i/omcz;l) uopinDaNcE RALL AT ROCKCAFE

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