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

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News of the World By Associated Press NEW BRITAIN HERALD Circulation For 15,155 Average Dai Week Lndmn’ Sept. Tth ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1929.—TWENTY-TWO PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS 3,177 CHILDREN IN CITY SCHOOLS; oHOW_GAIN' OF 94 Senior High Has Largest In— crease With 72 More Than | During Year 1928-29 | ENROLLMENT GOES UP IN 10; DOWN IN NINE Principals Make Official Report to Supt. Holmes—Comparative Fi ures for Three Years Reveal Steady Climb in Total Enrollment —Increase Noted in Three High School Registrations, According, to furnished chool Supt figures H. principals of 19 schools at a meeting Stanley H. Holmes by | this noon, there are 13,177 pupils registered in the senior, junior and elementary public 100ls of the city, a gain of 94 over la oar Sep- tember enrollment | Ten schools have experienced a gain in enrollment and nine schools have enrollments which are below that of last year. Among those hu\»' Fire Engine Too Big For Town Fire House Chicago, Sept. 10 (P—Nothing much had happened in Hege- wisch since it sent Battling Nel- son forth to sock the light weights on the chin. But yester- y Hegewisch got a new fire en- gine. Hegewisch the engine; ing, and e was disco was too big for Some people have an ecasy problem like this; simple. The Hegewit ties now must figure SERIOUS FIGHTING AT BORDER TOWNS IN GHINA DISPUTE! { WRECKED CABIN OF T. A. T. AR LINER | YOUTH KNOCKED SENSELESS BY POLICEMAN'S STICK IN ~ ROW AT BROAD AND BOOTH LEAGUE CONSIDERS Jenek Felld By Blow was all nad fire erything ready ter house wall- Too late it the engine the fire hou think polit life, bt Open Battles Increase Alarm Tatives—Entire s by (lashes for D~ On Head After He get a too big engine small house. However, as i out, that's their problem. wo someone, pointed PLANE FLIES 368 Than Any Other Human MILES PER HOUR ‘English Aviator Travels Faster ouyIETS SEND STERN NOTE BRIAND'S PROPOSAL Enthusiasm Grows for Confed- eration of Europe Project VAST RESULTS PREDICTED Be OF PROTEST T0 SHANGHAI Heavy Loss of Life on Both | 1 Indicated Nides Meager Reports— | in | Chinese Oppose Russian Invasion In Vigorous Counter Offensive — | Statesmen Realize They Red Planes Drop Bombs in Flight zin 1o 5 | Over Enemy Territory, Japs Hear. | Are Taking Part in Moyve of Great London, Sept. 10 (P> patches from Harbin, Reuters des- Manchuri, to day reported that complete Significance — Optimism anarchy Punches Patrolman Coffey in Jaw — Re- covers Consciousness Hours Later. Officer Almost Out by Blow, Dodges Second and Wields Club Knocked | prevailed in Manchurian border | 5 P .. Effectively in Self De- towns affer widespread Russian air 3 [icti i se — BEATS ALL WORLD MARKS raids and artillery bombardments. Here is the wrecked cabin of the A, air liner City of San Francisco which crashed into M( Arist fense Victim Taken The town of Pogranichnaya was said | New Mexico, duari storm. The bodies of its eight dead were fourd in the cabin wreckag (Pictu ¥ T 1 . Y H {0 be infested with robbers and | telephoto from Los Angeles.) J 1 From Cell to Hospital Orlebar Streaks Down Straight | garauders of all kinds were over- i | running other isolated hor: ez nat 4 a. m. Today. Course 28.81 Miles Faster Than J Schneider Cup Winner Last Satur- gions. Many Battles Reported " Prof. Rogers of “Snob’’ Speech Fame NEW HAVEN RuAl] inereased enrollments are the ot 241 Brod high schools. Others on the| day. | London, Sept. 10 (P — Although | S P D N l G d S 2 e hington, Chamber- s 4 yeen rmal declara~| s t t ST A i e the Washington, Chamber-| o\ 4 pe Sopt, 10 (P--Driv- |there have been no formal declara- | ays rYesemnt I ay orma raguaies night and was " malley, Northend, Robert J. tions of war, Russian and Chine il hours aft- Vance, Benjamin Franklin and Stan- | ing a blye and silver seaplane that\ 00 % FE5 MO BEE R l i H - “ l f o t Old T N it Ir \'V‘M ’wnj‘~ S eonine o et shot through space like a comet, | o5 =00 open hostility at points Il e eclua y Ifl el"tor 0 ype ” ]xlun! Coff: EE e r&esl | AL 1L Ortebar, squadron lead on the Manchurian ~border, nor(h i wo Hurt as Cars Jump ails i Ligolicemer il b1l e pusild in captain of the British Schneider cup | castern A i i o 2! % 2 he dispatches told of serious 3 b Ve A i N ‘l'[ ll T 1 nc e e than last [team, today sped over a marked | S O proress| Massachusetts Tech Instructor Amplifies Remarks at ear Willimantic To ay ritain_General course of three kilometers here to | intarmitiently since' Thursday of i x! T I et b s titution he was break all world's speed records. He |week and which assumed some | i Lo & X \ ock morning reached & rate of 365.8 miles an | Magnitude Sunday and Monday both | Thinking Clearly, He Declares—Advocates NEITHER BADLY [INJURED tvine cover conscious. g % i e and | &t Machuli and Progranichnaya Hm‘ . > . . y headquarters. A hour in one run of the course and | L gor"oa anstern termini of the | Men to Train Youth in High Schools. r Thursday was or- averaged 355.825 for four successive | SN e AL SO | : et i ek’s case when It was tri It is this latter figure which [ ©1MN¢5® Tastern railway. | _— No. 46 Engine Runs into Sand Banl, order o0 T, 3 cavy Ioss of Life ) e ! L neIOE the ¢ such could 1 court tc e constitutes the official record. R et it e oses 1 B0y Mol el aRnor the [d t ir While Cars Narrowly Miss Station disappearing ¢ } runkenness, breach Clocked by a new (iming device, | ;yo anq property as a. result of air| . ocspread interest created by iples, i i rapidly pea nee, the results of which were announced | 1aiqs, hombings and heavy artillery| DS recent observation that too ithout which think- | —split Switch Blamed for De- | xg o £ the premicr Coffey's re more than three hours after the |firc, A Chinese report that the| MANY Women teachers had plac- T suggested \ ut as L wrles Weare wctual flight, Orlgbar's average for |fighting extending over the entire| ©4 American thinking ona fem- ) os lay in fact railment B $ AR four consccutive dashes over the | Manchurian border, was taken to| iMine plane, the United Press | that t T proportion of our | " cons na 1 10:45 oclock course on Southampton water Was mean that clashes occurred between | —asked . pro 1 school without t repr « 1 n d occasion 1o 55.5 miles an hour or 23.31 miles | garrisons at other points along the or of ish chu L gle E 19 K to four young men who were B by kb Then U Vet worlel A 0i e beon s Tnstitute of To logy, to s0 s The 1 o K nnecessary noise. Later, | record established Saturday by fly-| There was a tendency in some plify his vi 1s done | oy ed, i ons il 10l was seen staggering north on ing officer R. Atcherley, in the | quarters to regard the fig | in the following » Only Meld I t ¢ he was in Schneider cup race. he heralded Ryssian offensive unde A ago teac iior Question Vexes 94 treet, the four Iso Beats Saturday Mark General Blucher, new head the | PROF. T about N 9 T n t h voung men crossed the street to- Flight Lieutenant G. H. Stain- |Soviet far-eastern army. Chinese| (Write ) | tious ove 1 i ) im but the officers ordered | forth, who precaded Orlebar with a soldiers, Chinese dispatches indicat- The United T o tho re P 5 he s of to stay aw from him, et | Gloster-Napier , also bettered |ed. oppose Russian movements | ampl y in a speech ! in intel LONGH! gl of the European hey w south on Booth street | A rley rd with a mark of | ‘igorou he Chinese were said to | made business confer 8y But today dozens Agion Jjeren had 1 solve past econ 1d Junek continued in the oppo- [336.3 miles an hour. [have recaptured Progranichnaya | ence . Wellesley, | cconomically and more Bioncineshadenlyly e ed by division ol site direction, Officer Coftey follow- Swifter than any human being |After losing it carlicr to the Soviet | Mass. There is need of amplificas traciive jobs arc o e the siding ) enstoms {ariff) ing hhre-and. calling him to . Wait, | has ever travelled the youthful Brit- | troops. The frontier city suffered | tion, for T was trying to condensc oman of hrains, and self- ! inck, according to the ofticer, |ish ace Orlebar yet failed to attain | Heavily by fire ant bombardment. | into 30 minutes my notion of the reliance. The 1 nt 954 round and called him vile m maximum speed which he might I '7 otests Voiced thinking characteristics of our more | of girls who want to teach will insist A i ) a4 when the officer, upon h:xm made had the visibility heen | T soviet Fovernment tHnonEN lintcllicant votne peoplekinonatiens | onl =oins &io Wcoll e ool gt e up to him, asked him what better. He believed he could make ‘n¢ German m dor protested | poitic social, ethical, and reli- | more, therefore, our normal schools P TALS ck wheeled about 2 "oy £ ) o 0 v ) 5 hool o : Glen Cove Men Alleged £0 | .10ut 375 miles an hour under fav- Lz””‘]” ”" """“]-“"1 M“Mx n | gious. hove et e erutt s s e t which caught the < 5 orable condition; OVeInisaFasalustiwhiat fovera e Many Have No Men Teachers whose cultural back il Have Set Blazes in Stainforth was also hampered by ";'\‘l"'_""“i':”‘(')’r","::"“‘.‘," ""‘”‘""k‘"‘,' On | T came to the conciusion that they ed and who, intilo can D 11 ew seconds, the offi- C ty poor visibility. His machhine wi o " _‘I ;‘I}]”"‘b-"“ tUS- | wore enormously interested in the | neither pass the « examina = et r shook oft ti effects of the ounty | frequently lost to sight in the haze '“f”n“"‘"] - "‘,‘I‘]’i;" ;'}n"t""‘ (’I‘,"‘I"' immediate practical applications of I in time to see Janek prepar- | e strealked ta e ae | Ve : he ese at con =il e B h At I o ~ B 3 z 2 to land sther blow. Grabbing |as he streaked along the course | IR 0 CLEERE (00t g | cducation. but not at all in the es (Contin g Avhitration Approved el e & | after fattening out from a swift || . i Sopt. 10 (P—The 1 pin his arms Glen Cove Y. Sept. 10 (P— | gico |Incur the gravest consequences, Pk e from striking again Fight volunteer members of the fire oAl A oundement ot thall The note stated that soviet troops ffitm:‘ et "‘( b res swinging and the department of Glen Cove today were g ahic ants was | Nad been compelled to take firm el 2 : AT elf defense, struck him ey British airmen’s achievements was | \50) 2een conipelied ' to g forward at the tenth assemb charged with second and third de- |,q0 Jate in the afternoon, after a |go 28 S OF &3 08 (00 F0 Dol i sions of L Jiead avitht his: nightstiok e connection with a || 1 tion of the Siberian frontie derailment. | fone. s blow krocked Jan- gree arson in conr v long session by timers and mathe- [ /08 & 8 5 AR 0N CE m oA mentl {Sct oelsiatesmen at SN knock series of mysterious fires in the | .08 g0 ¢ Besmiaren S e ']‘ F[]R HR PULLEN’ P 'l‘ m crew had e ik, He struck on " 49 They | MAticians. at the ad been 19 new cks A 1ense At PR county going back to 1924 They | ' jopar flew the super-marine |ju arience e ohe Wiy Soaoks > e main lin wnent court ndA¢as. Unable o zat ap: were held without bail for action S iR s SO 8 : e il e struck it, causing it + < v notiticd police head- Rolls Royle S-6 with which FIVing | o which the Nanking and Mukd ¢ the con f the Nassau county grand jury. b 2 - foatu eenanrngiand KC e St CIL c . The other was ¢ patrol was sent Ol » ¥+ |'Officer H. R. D4 Waghorn won' the |, ainy ot “were tully responsible o 1 as ¢ ST : The men, all prominently Known |« pia0” (ub race for England on FREGpon: v Loy > A0 = S % . ithat itch or S e noJanek did not regain tn Glen Cove, and the charges| . o o S T ewiston, Me., Physician Joey Vetri Convinced This . n ¢ o'clock this ¢ each R LLTeC o e S G e e Heavy Fighting Reported ¢ - : M. J. Flyan call ainst each are: Second degree ar- g 5 L cCary gD S S - T with 1 expectation that el A Eon v ey irncr oo an hout SITERNER GEEO T L (P—Dispatches to to Be Interviewed World Is Nice the sid i e ird. who had him D us 'S e ¢ e 2 8 e ageney, from o ho t o ‘homas Moore, Adam Stern and | il B AL D) G L e Mo e s rospital. Acting Ser- Lawrence Kreyer; second and third | cOntinuous flight. If more (han |Manchuli today said heavy dighting Next Week Place A i Collins and Officer s ' and | four were made by the pilot. the Ihroke out Monday afternoon near L ; cated the four young 'l‘“ i moer Aniealics irson, | Dest speeds for four consecutive | “Eighty-Sixth Station.” The casual- S L > Avere on the street when red Boxey hir arson, | i 5 2 3 3 : " in the slrec N | oo each direction, were o |[fies were G l:n!rm-*vv; With but one more personal inter- w Britain cops aren’t so bad : v occurred. They are: An- They are charged specifically with Lt i A . [flew jover:the istatlons.and SCrOPPEC iy aesiived, members of the board least that's what little of bula of Booth and Broad EneY b e ive which on | The pilot passed the starting and bombs ! strects: Frank Partyka of 54 Booth “"1"?”‘]~1 ““‘f‘”“ (',"‘ ’_'“wl the houge | (Nishing lines in a horizontal flight, | A Harbin Rengo dispatch said that | of health meeting today 4 that as Joey, ; ! John Novick of 78 Booth J:‘("I bt ol Ty the 1ate John | {07 600 yards before crossing the | Chinese refugees arriving at Muling | the problem of = sele L suital shine hoy 1K coaches reet; 1 rwikowski of $2 | starting line and during his e |related that a Japanese had been | . o - S Joey is 10 years old. Hic : Looth st T. Pratt of New York and o-cupied i 2 R reateiln DanEses ®1 | successor to Dr. Richard W. Pullen | oyl years old. I it it it e th et over the course his altitude was not injured fatally when a soviet air ocs to the Smalley school and dur- At the hosbital today. it was re- at thetime by Henry Folger, h";-‘ilvflf | to exceed a height of 500 feet. Else- [homb struck the Hotel Rurope fn |t the salary provided. is a baffling f"tho ‘summer he helped to fecd menteapdistingesa el nipate Uy gelagnienton ko ported that Janek did not appear to th',', ‘"'“"1 (fm 2 f,’,,,‘;\:i‘:ll,\(” K- | where his height was not to exceed | Progranishnaya Monday mornin one his nine brothers and sisters by earn- | [¢¢t, coming to a n llenulesiio nudishalpracttes > seriously injured and would prob- eading o h Pl 1,300 feet S Out of 55 applicants, only six were ing money as a hootblack. When of :sand and bury ‘ ) s Xada ) I e le to laave shortly yaived & torneys for the efght | oy Wrolorg which Stainforth mrl »ss v:as good he carned from $1.50 (7 P Within the last 24 hours at Gene men at the hearing here before City | oy PG00 N AP SCRIOTE &Y Bridgeport Flier Qetg ected for personal interviews. S e va, both Ttaly and lovalk ‘ Judge Willlam J. Cocke. Police offi- | LTehar BFoxe today was sot +d | Others professed to have na interest o 52 45 R o t YflUTH fi cara, Mowaver) saia)themen had con- | 7108 OMiger L/ Doihe atcherley, { World Altitude Record Others professed (o have o Interest | husiness was at the office of Put- P ; s | Mithe mariot s miles an hour | poiceno Gopt. 10 (P—A world | I pos : paic nam & Co. Here he won the friend fessed to se E“m h in two laps of turday's Schneider | % - year or more while still oth W ship of all his customers by his po. stroyed the Pratt home. lcup races. Atcherley was disquali- |altitude record in an airplane pow- | climinated because of ady e Hied et e NAUHATU[;K A’”‘A[;“ The fires in connection with ]““‘“‘h fied from the Schneider cup race |ered with an OX-5 type motor was | or lack of experience carn money t LI ‘“‘““H‘l" "‘,fimn his individual lap record was al- | acknowledged today when Milton| Yesterday it was announced that Howe Joey id look for La 0 4 fio en ast prl aC to 1924, the last one being in o604 to stand by the officers. Hamon, manager of the airport three physicians stood forcmost in | ward (n school enthusiastically. Po- = 2 f th They include amon, 5 D ruary of this year. YRinange | Broke Existing Record here, recelved word from the Na- | consideration, but today's meeting |liceman Peter wski, who was l( Edw f | X A e eceived siders . bu lay's ting ¢ owski, who wa Sdward | son W the bathing pavilion ~|‘” :h(,,.(”il In winning the Schneider cup for |tional Aeronaufical association that | indicated a lack of interest by onc known to Joey as . the cop,” From ELrope uns Ot er at 0oC “dward Johnson Woundec beach, Fraternity Inn, th ¥";"“ NCCS | England Waghorn broke the 1 his flight on August 24, was recog- and disclosed that the second cannot was one of Joey's best customers and —Brother Resented offB iBartelHall, “;"‘l'f’“':”“““”fp' = | nized. Hamon piloted his plane to | be located at the address he gave. friends. He found out why such an | Love Affair ghegtanpan Eouse, itheaiolL Uetiols (Cdntinued on Page Two) | a height of 19,593 feet over this city. | Dr. Dumont, heaith officer at Lewis- | cnergetic boy as Joey who was not 10 (UP) ricked. “*You fool Love Affair and the Moskow House 7 | | A afraid to work did not want .to go A You —_— — = | (Continued on I'age Two) to school. It was not that Joey did . i) ' 1l me my ) 10 Lose Lives as 1s Boat C . d M d T k P . | Shiis not wont to learn, it was because |his hon N, Conn., last oS T ~Hawarg ‘., w1 | Joey did not have nice new clothes. | \pril from Dan myself, I'll kil W _ave Explodes Near Norsky | LODViCte uraerer laxes roisen |Rocky Pass \amcd S R L i el ; ough both Kharoslav, U. S. S. R., Sept. 10| < s s O S : ct by ; peri, 18, on An- o Avol ecution September San Diegn, Cah, St 1o st o i : N e i with their families, numbering t | depression in coust range of e SR g 550 DERIA : s morr Canaperl jumped in- was believed lost their | meuntains east of “here. throusl(ine Talace BArber Shon, what Teto, son’s automobile after the lives today ten miles| Springfield, Mo., Sept. 10 P—Ad-| Adams killed three people in a|Which the German dirigible —Grai | A€ S0 T S PR Hnein to th § Lk 1ade good his escape ALl when the steames | mitting that he deserved to die for |mad frenzy after he quarrclled with ‘frr\p(}“l\n tnu\\l- :;n ‘u.\ trip r‘mm i\vv.. oo end it o omnienion whom n : Slaet Ceain od ife ; < s | Angeles to Lakehurst, today bord T start the sc year | 11-day bellow g exploded. __ [the murder of three people, Newell | his wife. He went to the home of his Figs e e hon. | off Tight ha i i inaperi. who was Nine members of another tanker, '/ i wife's parents June 16, 1927, tp find | the name of Iickener Pass, in hoj KeniTaey has anoiher frisndiTon Lo Allerton Iarms. Grom, which was standing nearby, | "Dobbs” Adams, under seatence 10 |pig wife, who had left him. His|OF Of the commander of the globe- e “hv " {‘n‘\ ‘I'( -\" ay 8 20 ! son was treated at the office were gravely injured and sent to [be hanged Sept. 27, was dead today. | mother-in-law, Mrs. Sarah Whalin, |8irdling airship e S his I do 2 (eUNE o a local doctor and then taken to hospitals. Two government com- |He swallowed poison tablets which | 45, refused to tell him where her| AR army plane carrving Major) W G0 L EESLOR0 IORE I SO | mot lown complote L s Waterbury hospital where his missions will investigate. | he had kept hidden in his cell in the | daughter was and he shot and killed | Carl Spatz, army aviator, and Cap- | “7¢ BV I 00 bers” 0 Fserd “"”",‘\ O s e || Conditiont IaFrin i HallavanL Lo be/uss e | Greene county jail for nearly a year. | hor. He then went to the home of a |tain Von Arnauld De e o e m‘y 5d, my hoy, my boy—he (¥ T 4[‘) }‘\‘I'_ : OIS ‘l‘ C ] o : eserved to Die friend of his wife, Miss Zella Sin- | Mas e German cruiser Em- 4 ZE ks doesn’t know me.” Sl el i B >olice A nanen om ‘(po les Near ‘ D d to Di el ruiser Em- | i oo B e e Canuperl siey T .| His dying words to Sheriff Marcell | clair, 24, forced her into a taxi en, flew above the pass yesferday T Mixup on Board Ship T e Johnson ted with John- 'ug in East River wenarix ana his wife. Mrs. Meada [and attempted to make her nd dropped o parachute to which b Pl = The mother, Mary Capp, longin e e Kesslog Hontie New York. Sept. 10 P—A homb, | Adams were: “I did not deserve fo |where his wife was. She refused and |the American and German flags hat | DI€men lanc‘\\ ill ot e Bt S A pleni e i with his sis s dropped today by an unidentified hang but I guess I do deserve to [he shot her, inflicting a fatal wound | been attached. This was the cera- | Start This Afternoon |from their home and taken to Dan- ot el e = person from the Manhattan bridge |die.” He retained consciousness to |from which she later died [mony ot dedication. | New York, Sept. 10 (P —Captaia |48 by a former boarder i PR CATORS ARRIED into East river, exploded within 10 the end Kills One Detective e Zeigenbein, of the North German |had become hysterical d W 10 (& feet of the United States tug Ruko| Adams called Sheriff Hendrix to| Adams then went into hiding S — s | liner Breaen, today wirclessed the |Mix-up on hoard ship A X i Blanche 137, and sent a shower of water over [his cell_and thanked him for the |Three detectives went to his room ship's offices here 'that the mail|could not find boy e ; or of French its decks. None of the crew of 50 treatment that had been accorded |to arrest him and as Detective Fran- | | oEE THET S : smoftng 1 12d of photogr ! enc | | THE WEATHER plane she carrics would be Jan's parcnts and the e pictn andi at Bites was injured and the tug was un-|him. The officer had just left Adams | cis De Armond stepped inside, | | e | | vulted from the liner's decks off Iire |sccured his return werd to voyas i ind Arthur F. Gilbert, pri damage when he was summoned by ilor | Adams fired. killing him. The other | | . i haeteg i o 3 i SO S el Sle R magec | o wi g New Britain and vicinity Island this afternoon the Estonia when it docked he been the hero of the i Parker street schooi here, The incident was reported o) who told him Adams had collapsed. |two subdued him and removed him Lair 2nd cocler tonight and | | This supercedes an earlier mos- e lelayed then o | sh took place in Parls, 3 G Rear Admiral Louis de Steigeur af |The slayer had hoasted to other |to jail. A mob gathered and Sherift Wednesday preceded by local sage to-the ¢ town, Mass. navy | Meanwhile the nurse took the hoy from Capt. An ! 1 today. The Gardmbne the Brooklyn navy yard. Marine| prisoners he would not hang. His|Alfred Owen spirited him away, thiindesnowers B (hEaTters |1 Notn et oe e DT nravnt tha | e i St e i | e e " o loday. Thilgerd iy police and detectives of the bomb |suicide came less than a week aft keeping him in some wocus south of ncon and tonight. plane’s takeoif. The plane took off | mother came aboard |}hl no Jan | m Stef: ! 1k e SEeth A s pa e o squad are investigating. No frag- |Goveenor Caulfield had refused to Springfield until feeling cgainst oh O e n ecE BRI e clme Aot TR W, SN Arroniserent on August ments of the bomb were found. i i 5 i : L 2 day, but was | was to be foun oted most of her time to caring fo. | 8. Parisian friends of the bri e .mt'(r\cne in the sentence of death. Adams died down. * # | forced back by fog. ' “Give me my baby, give me my | im. | were wit es. e N \ ; i

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