New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 10, 1929, Page 1

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Av erage Daily Circulation For miom] NEW BRITAIN HERALD [ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 192).—EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS y ESTABLISHED 1870 HHOD “Paoy) repy THIEVES GET GEMS VALUED AT $130,000 INHOME BURGLARY Sydney Hutchinson's Beverly Mass., Summer Residence Rilled During Night $100,000 DIAMOND NECKLACE (S INCLUDED IN PROPERTY \rs. Hutchinson Awakened By Beam ¥rom Flashlight, But Intruders Escape Before She Can Summon Help—Break Biggest Lver Report- | ed On North Shore, Massachusctts | Police Say Today. Beverly, Mass., Aug. 10. (P—Jew- sls valued at §150,000 were stolen arly today from the summer home | >f Sydney Hutchinson of Philadel- onia. The loot included a $100,600 Memoniar 150, “Extortion Plot” MACDONALD FLIES T0 CONFERENCE OF STRIKE PRINCIPALS Makes Dramatic Trip fo Inter- vene in Cotton Stoppage, Halting Vacation Plans EDINBURGH NEGOTIATIONS EXPECTED T0 BEAR FRUIT Million Workers Involved in Vast Lancashire Walkout That Premier Hopes to Scttle—Belief at First Expressed That Official Might Be Going to the Hague on Debt Troubles. Edinburgh, England, Aug. 10 (P— Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald moved dramatically today to bring about settlement of the Lancashire cotton industry stoppage which fs causing idleness of nearly a million (TWENTY ILES OFF ROUTE "7, = Crook Steals Watch P ] GRAF ZEPPELIN ARRIVES AT BASE IN Chicago, Aug. 10 (P—The na- tionwide reputation of Patrick Roche, former federal intelligenct officer and now chief invstigator for the state's attorney's office, failed to frighten ore Chicago crook ant State's Attorney Benjamin Feldmen which had been thrown LR WO WARNS OF SNOWDEN INSITS MEN H15S TUNNEL; FOREIGN FACTORIES 0N DEBT DECISION DRIVEINTO HARB[]R 1Deplores American Investments English Delegate Presses Hague | i Manuiaoturmg Abroad Conlerence for Action Negro Deowns When Companion | S Mistakes Dock for Tupe | SHOWS INSTITUTE: DANGERS CRISIS FAGES GATHE RIN'" Power and Ma- Recovery of Confidence Early in Day terials Used In Plants Drain on By Postponement of British Issue : 3 American Efforts in Same Lines, Shattered By Firm Stands of Couple Plunged Into Water When He Declares in Talk. Leader. _ 'RECORD BREAKING TIME OF 55 HOURS Beats Westward Cross- ing By More Than 40 Hours - Huge Throng Greets Dr. Eckener en Birthday as Ship is Anchered. Dips Over Paris in Passing —Arrival at German Field at 7:03 This Morn- Reckoning of Driver Goes All ing, Eastern Standard workers and 1,500 factories. Williamstown, Mass., Aug. 10 4P| The Hague therl 1 E | H jve| Astray—Gates Left Open During ) 1 Mrs. Hutchinson. ‘Yl.m\\lln;: 1_,os|:\nman_flr:. his native b, = | Matthew Woll, vice-president of the /P—A slight “"‘l' The reflection from a flashlight ) 3 Yilage byjairplanetwithontannounc BN i T T T ey e i ; This design for a “Memoria\ te Motherhvod,” lofty in structure and |ing his destination nor the purpose | i general discussion of wwakened Mrs. Hutchinson. but be- | purpose, lies in the background of un alleged $270,000 extortion plot in |of the flight, the prime minister| yonkers, N. Y. Aug. 10 (B—Tywo | 1ressing the trade relations confer- | was resumed without ore she could summon a: Washington, D. C. Mrs. Clarence C. Calhoun, upper right, capital city | reached Edinburgh at noon and im- es who set out by | ence of the Institute of Politics to- |a8ain upset befor | . upp ight, cap 3 E M- | negroes who set out by auto from | i H he!hurglflr ;\r ';n;xr ar's esc society woman, caused the arrest of W. Clark Noble, well-known sculptor, | mediately went into conference With | white Plains for Newark, N. J.. to- | day, said that the United States had | G8Y'S Vital mecting »ral rooms had been ran: \iamond necklace, the property of | Time — Average Speed for Journey 75 Miles an i The Hutchinson summer home is | ocated in the West Beach section of Reverly. Police termed the robbery he biggest jewel theft ever commit fed on the North Shore. The Hutchinson home was that of {he second wealthy summer resident visited by thicves within a week. Last week burglars entered the sum- mer residence of Godfrey L. Cabot and escaped with a considerable amount of cash. Related to Banker | Philadelphia, Aug. 10 1/?)—.‘)‘41\'\."\" Hutchinson, whose summer home | Beverly, Mass., was robbed of/ $150,000 worth of jewelry, is the son-in-law of E. T. Stotesbury, head of Drexel & Co., Philadelphia ban ers, and a member of J. P. Morgan & Co., New York. Mr. Hutchinson's wife was Edith L. Stotesbur It is understood here that Mr. and | Mrs. Hutchinson are in Scotland | with a party of friends, and that their | three children were staying at summer home. The children are Mrs. John I Tyson of New York Miss Franc Stotesbury Hutchins and Edward S. Hutchinson, REPORTS COLLECTOR’S STRONGARM METHODS Man Says Dunning Agent Detained Him With Blackjack Detained at the point of a black- jack until the store manager could come ana see if he was the man who bought the suit on credit and had faller back in his payments, Frank Brunskas, 30 Hartford ave- .nue, complained fo the police that Mike O'Brien, a bill collector, had woefully mistreated him late Friday afternoon. Officer Harper, assigned to th case, found that John Cook, 42 win place, said that Brunskas had | the suit. O'Brien went to see Brun-{ sk nd he denied ever secing the Brunskas complained that the | collector forcibly held him until the | manager of the store could come | down and look him over. N BUSINESS 38 HOURS ARRESTED BY RAIDERS| Southington Man Has Brief Career When Police Learn of Alleged Activities (Special to the Herald) Southington, Aug. 19 DiCaprio of Lim street ¢ of labor in the Southington ardware Co. yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock. He went home and ate his evening meal and then procceded to his place of business on Noith | Liberty street. He turned the kv) in the lock just after 6 o'clock. Three rwards, five members of the Southington police, paid him a | visit and arrested him on a liquor | law violation charge. A small quantity of alleged liquor | was seized in the place and Di | released under bonds of $300. sign for the memorial had by of which Mrs. Calhoun was a sporsor. | payment for it anyway. Noble, it was alleged, WIFE DISCOVERED BURIED WITH SON Eloped With Friend New Hamipshire I'ather Gets Anony- Motorman Says Auto, mous Tip That Crash Victims Are Missing Mate and Baby—Woeman's | Lover Gone, Newport, Vt.: Aug. 10 (A—A sor-| | rowing husband. was here today to!persons reclaim’ from thelr graves at Reardy | {nree probably fatally, Stanstead, Que., the hodies of his wife and two year old son, buried | fatally injured. | The man was Frank E. Quimby of chine | Enfield, N. H. He has identined as|an hour. ais wife the woman who untit terday, was supposed to have heen | v, the two years old vietim of the tragedy. Auto Mits Wagen Both the atter reccived their in- juries when a horse drawn vehicle driven by a man whe gave his nam as Isaac Forton was in collision with: | an automobile opcrated by John R Allard. an automobile salesman of | Coaticcoke, Que., at Stanstcad a week ago. Forton, police now agree. was Isaac Fortier, 26, of Enficld and Le non, N. H. who disappeared sim ultancously with Mrs. Quimby iast May. Mus. Quimby left behind her two sons aged four and seven years, while Mrs. Fortier was left destitutc with a two year old hoy and is re- ported to have since been cared for Ly the town of Lebanon. An anonymot sent newsp cfipping referring to the accident at Stanstcad which was mailed to Leon Copp, police chief at Lebanon, fur- nished the first clue to the real identities of those involved. Copp requested Chief George Newton of the local police to investigate. Chief Newton established the facts to his | own satisfaction and brought Quim-| by and his attorney,John H. Noonan | of Enfield, to Starnstead where they | made arrangements to have the bodies returned there. Fortier Now Missing Forticr, whose injuries did not prevent him from ing at an inquest where Allard was found re- | sponsible for the two deaths, h since been missing. He will now he sought on a warrant from’ Lebanon charging desertion. JOHNSON WILL NOT REPLY TO MINISTER CAR HITS TROLLEY: a HURT, 3 FATALLY: Hushand Identifies Woman Who Machine thges Head-On Into | Boston Night Electric BOTH KILLED IN AGGIDENT MOVING AT HIGH SPEED Side of Road, 89 Fast He | Glare of Light Before ! 10 (A—Five | Charles river. was going close to 60 on the wrong side yes. |Of the bridge and smashed squarely into the trolley car which was bound Isaac Forton and as his son, |for Harvard Square. The injured, | Dorchester, were: Miss Theresa O'Neil all of whom lived in 19. fractured fractures of lacerations of ht'\d‘ skull, legs . Cunningham, 2 , fractured skull and | broken back. Miss Agnes O'N Theresa, fractured skull and internal injuries. Miss Ellen O'Brien, head ¢ £ Arthur Ellis, tions and bruises. multiple lacera- (Continued on Page | and three others, charging that the four attemnted to blackmall her and | eight representatives of the cotton | gau misseq the entrance to the Hol. | § gornuiitas Sy s her husband under threats of revealing mill employers' negotiating commit- tees and Sir Horace Wilson. perma- | nent secretary of the ministry of la- bor. Conference on Recently Wilson has been in conversation with the parties to the dispute in Lancashire for several days. He and | yo3050n es ped from the B\lhmclzud the employers' representatives left Manchester hurriedly this morning s MacDonald left Lossiemouth by | plane. Their meeting with the prime min- | ister here is watched closely as prom- ‘vsmg some immediate development toward settlement of England's most | costly industrial dispute since the great general strike of 1926. MacDonald's flight from his north | coast native home received even | Jnnre attention because of the great | concern in Great Britain over the | state of the deliberations at the| | Hague. The prime minister's. only | on Wrong word was that he was going on | national” business - amd this fm- | mediately gave rise to reports he In-| | tended to hop across the North Sea {0 join Toreign Secretary Henderson | auestion of possible immediate ter- | For and Chanéellor Snowden at the| ! Hague. Leaves Lossiemouth Lossiemouth. Scotland, Aug.-10. | ®P—Premier Ramsay MacDonald | specding automobile crashed head- | yag 2/ under assumed names after an auto- [0" into a trolley car in the middle | mobile vident in which both werc ‘Df the Harvard bridge across the | Witnesses said the ma- | inerruptod sharply a holiday which here at 10 a. m. (4 a m 3. §. T.) by airplane for an unan- nounced destination. His departure he had planned to last for some time longer. The only word which could be ob- | tained as to the yremier's destination | here was that ne was going on *n. tional business.” There was no inti- mation even to give foundation to rumors the flight might be to The sulted in an international crisis. In well informed quarters it was understood, some time after his de- sister of | barture, he was going to Edinburgh to meet Sir Horace Wilson and dis- }1:u§s steps towards settlement of the cuts on|Lanchashire textile strike. Sir| | Horace on behalf of the government has been engaged in discussions | | looking to end of the dispute. Shortly before his departure the premier received some official docu- ments from London. Hol- | roached a period where it must view | Philip Snowden, British char land tubes under the Hudson river “our developing foreign investmest | of (i wachequir by 20 miles and drove their car off | yslicy as involving a menace to the | e declared that he the city pier here into the "Hudson. ‘\\dl being of our masses and the Lis case befc One of them was drowned. o | security of our national future.” |could mot wait much The two motorists were Matthew Much Invested Abroad Gecision Fracson, 31. and . William Henry | pointing out that between $300.- Cannot Permit Delay Thomas, 21, both of White Plains.|00,000 and $400,000,000 of Ameri- “I don't want to spend the rest an money is at present invested in|of my days Yo Hiie ho idse | stocks and bonds of manufacturing | clared. ~We must come 1o gHps oo companies in Europe and that ap- | the questicn at issue. My resc Just bought the car and early tod1y | proximately $50,000,000 is invested | tion is still before the committee invited - Thomas to0 -go to Newark|in American branch plants in that |1 cannot permit delay in action upo Wwith him. ~ When they - reached | continent, Mr. Woll declared. *we it much longer.” Yonkers just before dawn they mis- i have come to a sharp turn in the| The financial committee mectin took the New York Central bridse!road. We face a new problem.” this mor was first devoted to a over the road leading to the city picy “This new movement of money is | 8¢neral discussion, W. Graham, pres for the entrance to the Holland | not a loan.” he said. “It is an in. |ident of the board of trade statin tubes and drove on off the pier into | vestment of ‘American money in |!hat the system of deliveries 1 the river, | manufacturing plants owned by | Kind had affected British trade a A gate which ordinarily guards|Americans in foreign countries. [n |CAUsed unemployment. The British the road to the pier was left open | wanted them abolished or limited to car, but Thomas was drowned. acson told police that he had | those plants are made commod | ¢losed shop in' the motion picture in- | roll stays in the foreign count | Actors’ Equity association. The or-| property tax is | &anizatior. plans to vote on its future | countiy and | | wWhat had been done at these meet- | | * Hague where the stand of the Brit- | lish reparations del fation has re- = “Inspite of*all our vaunted pros- last night. the shortest possible time 3 L Henri Cheron, Irench delegate Equity Decision May originally were made in this coun- S3Y¢ # great number of f try, most of them are patented here which he held W'”\"“ that C ¥ Be Revealed Tonight and they find - their hat omaris | B2 was getting more out of i Hollywcod, Cal., Avg. 10 (®—"he | here, Young plan than the Dawes plan Chancellor Snowden expressed sur- prise at discussion of the re: ations ums, since the morning was to h. 'Y, Wa i 5 | been devoted to the question of de- dustry, Was expected fo be answered | The power Used ia'developed and | liveries 1n Bing. & He coid. (hat bo here tonight at a meeting of the paid for in a foreign country that might be called American com- modities, since nearly all of thein Materials Used mination of the fight to establish | “But in every case the wage pay- he | would refute every figure and every paid to oth>r' | statement the I°rench minister mad raw materfals, at least |Lut that he could not wait much In part, are bought and paid for in |longer for action on his resolutior another count regarding the revision of the Young “Finally the commodities a-v|plan. He didn't want to remain in- gely shipped back to the United | definitely in the Hagu States to be sold here in a markot Crisis Not Relieved | that has been bereft of the wages The feeling of pessimism which { paid in manufacture and bereft of a had prevailed yesterday had been | hundred other benefits of manu. | Somewhat less this morning by news | facture, in a market that extends its | of Irench efforts to find some way governmental protection to the | Of satisfying the British on the qu , | commodities in the form of patents | lion of deliveries in kind. After and trade mark protection, Chancellor Snowden's intervention It will be said that the profits | iD the commitiee, however, the gen- New Britain and vicinity: | | (rom these ventures come back fo | Cral sentiment was that the crisis | Partly cloudy tonight and | | Americans, but these profits, if ani | 1as been in nowise relieved but thar Sunday; not much change in | | When there are profits, return fo |the issue has simply been postponed temperature, the stock and bondholders and not | Until the beginning of next week % — % | to the masses of the people, TR Unemployment Problem policy toward film producers. I'rank = Gilmore, president of | Equity, indicated that result of the four secret conferences with the as- | sociation of Motion Picture Pro- dueers, Inc., weuld be placed before ‘e members, but refused to divulge | ings. The producers likewise have remained silent. THL WEATHER Show Down Today The H , Aug. 10 (P)—The su- perity we have the problem of PIIO S of8hamcontorencegt HIGH TIDES—AUG. 11 creasing unemployment and un. [the governments on application of | B der-employment. Until this prob- | the Youns reparation plan was due p.m. lem is solved the custodians of the | 1042y With the vote in committee .m.,5:$8 pm. | [national savings. whether they be [FOOM on a resolution offered by Philip Snowden, British chancellor of the exchequer. (Continued on Page 15.) Snowden’s ‘resolution presented Thursday stated for the third time THIS WEEK'S AFFAIRS emphatically than ever Britain could not ac I plan unless it accorded her Snget by Knight er share of the German reparation payments. The r t proposaid XCUANGE CLUD VES (DS A FiNe OUTING AT COMPO a sub-committee to arrange a revi- sion of the Young plan to that eni There were no indications today to seek a solution of the stalemate provoked re British stand had softencd attitude cither of Mr his colleagucs, or of French, Italian and Belgiar delegations who have been just as | irm in their position the Young (Continued on Page SEARCHER FOR ITALIA SURVIVORS IS KILLED DU MUNICI P4 P?ngegq\‘m% S:Ev: | Polar Bear Attacks Party and Ac- WAY MAZK — NOW | cidentally Discharged Gun Fg’&sflz%u$u\‘50 | Fatally Wounds Guide. UAS A 'PLANE LACE TO LAND/ that the single day's recess allowed | 10 (#) —The talntic airliner Zeppelin, a ord breaking crossing of ic on the first leg of her round-the-world flight from Lake- J.. landed at Friedrichs- p. m, ( ble slowly circled clin works while thousand spectators gathered in the rain below and the grounding crew stood Ly 1o receive it. Crowds hu: rica fiom Fricdrichshafen toward the Zeppelin plant to welcome the big ship. Time 55 Hours, 24 Minutes rhe | ship made the crossing 1 just 55 hours and 24 minuies, having picked up speed as she ap- proached the coust of Europe. The hed earth at exactly fter 1 o'clock nd Ip of the landing crew s turned around with her nose or was kept running slowly to help turn her. The motors { o minutes later and he began the task of pulling the Graf into the hangar field seyond the Zeppelin plant. The fence was lined with —enthusiastic spectators, I % s 6lst birth- of the ¢ Zeppelin so long before sle had b > informal birthday rd the ship just before she the more enthusiastic. 40 Howrs' Better Mark The Graf's time of 55 hours and 24 minutes on her eastward voyage 1s about 40 hours better than her westward journey to Lakehurst and 13 hours and 22 minutes better than last voyage from Lakehurst to Friendrichshaten in October, 1928, The Graf covercd approximat 0 smiles in the 35 hours and 24 minutes that she was in the air, thus covering the entire distance at an average o es. a brilliant per- formance in opinion of aviation the spectators rly arrival that neral feeling thal if record was « good en the accomplishment of first long hop on her orid fiight spoke well for ances on the remaining th Voyaze Remarkably Tast Behind it lay probably the most remarkable 3 of its career—a crossing m Lakehurst. N. J., to Paris, Irance, in the unparalleled fast airship time of 48 hours 52 minutes aving Lakehurst at 11:39 p. m. Wedne I .. the' € f took 1 course almost due east along the 42 parrallel until it was half way reross the Atlantic, when it cut northward to near the English coast and crossed the channel to France 1t a point near Cherbou 1t reached Paris at 6:31 a. m. (Continued on Tage 15.) STANLEY WORKS BUYS PHOENIX, N. Y., PLANT Purchases R. L. Carter . Aol The raiding party consisted by Po- | Alderman Changes Mind | sy . e Rome, Aug. 10 P — Tragedy licemen Santy, Cushing, Soucie, Fo- 1 wirk e | | which stalked the dirigible Italia ley and Douglas. in Sunday Shows / "fif‘ifie ) | polar expedition from the f DiCaprio was in business about | CONTESTS / continued to the footsteps of rescue three hours. Contmversy SR \ | expeditions. S ] {~ lermictovs On August 7 a famished polar Marcus White Retunr e THIkioned : bear attacked some members of the | 1nc. of Phoenix, N. Y. near Bk Although he announced yesterday | e Whaling expedition of the steamer | cyse, by the Stanley Works of this Home From Hospital |that he would reply to charges made 7 z “Sucal” which has been searching |city, was announced today by Sec Principal Emeritus Marcus White by Rev. Samuel Sutcliffe at the S north of Spitzbergen for possible |yt Ernest W. Christ of the Stan- 5 & 06 2 ; of the New Britain State Normal|meeting of the Rotary club: Thur s | survivors of the Nobile expedition. | 1oy Works. | An Ttalian guide named Guidoz. The Carter line onsists of eletri- Co., Makers of Elec- trical Tools Purchase of the R. L. Carter Co school returned home today after|day that the hearing before the v 7 VPHOLDS 3 four weeks spent at Hartford hospi- | common council ordinance commit- ’ ‘Qflg‘;gg{sv i Wwho had participated with great | cal portable and semi-portable tools tal. He recently completed 35 years |tee on the Sunday afternoon movie Atseecia /) % | fortitude in a march of 500 miles |inluding planes. butt mortisers, lock of service as principal of the school |question was a “set up,” Alderman e \ S853ON~— R 2 RS - |about Northeastland, seemed in|mortisers and allied produts. Tt wiil and retired at the close of the last |J. Gustave Johnson stated today that AR ; ; I\ £ S ik |danger and Giannine Albertini. | round out the Stanley Rule and term | he had changed his mind and would | \ 7 7 | head of the expedition, ran to his ' Level division line. The ompany e ———— |1et the matter drop. 1 laid with a rifle l'employs 50 hands COMPLAINS OF CROWDER “Yesterday 1 fully intended to re- | | Albertini unhappily fell into an| Mr. Carter, who has been head of A man by the name of wulski, | PIY to Mr. Sutcliffe, and T coutd | i A . lce crack and accidentally dis- | the firm. has been successful in 14 Belden street. is the continual |Dave pointed out where he wus| > | charged his rifle as he fell. The | developing his products and the Car- cause of trouble for Metso Karbonic, | WFONg in almost everything he sal y 4 7 7 7 |shot hit Guidoz who although | ter trade name will be retained. Mr. 34 Ouk street, who complained to |but after thinking it over T have | 7 E a7 7 | transferred immediatel, to the Carter will continue in office, Officer John Kennedy last night that |decided that to keep stirring it up | TDonaTIONS Pour (N | whaler, died three hours afterward Ired O. Fuller, who has been as- ‘g: when he drives around the streets at | Would not get us anywhere and T | TUE GOLF CoURsSe \S Tcee conditions prevented the | sistant to Mr. Christ in the Stanley &% night he is always followed by Ban- | don't think it amounts to anything | ) AN ASSURED FACT ¢ whaler making for land. so Guidoz | Works purchasing department. has: ulski, who tries to crowd him off the | anywa [Rev. SAMUEL- SUTCLIFFE FIRES HOT SHOT AT et K 2 was buried in the icy sea, wrapped been sent to Phoenix to manage the streets. He believes that an officer | This was the only statement Ald-\ ROTA e — AY SUNDAY SUOWS, eTC CLiEE ANGUT = > in an Ttalian flag. while members | Carter branch. Mr. Fuller's home is should talk to the man, erman Johnson would make today. of the expedition stood at salute. on Coolidge street,

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