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CLUETO GARRETT FOUND BY POLICE Missing Boston Cop Reported |« Seen in Car Near Nantasket Boston, July 2 (UP)—Something | rike a really substantial clue to the | | prehension rippled over the crowd | ‘whereabouts of the vanished Oliver B. Garrett, former ‘“czar” of the Roston police headquarters liquor and vice unit who defaulted in §13,- 900 bonds on the morning of his e tortion trial, private searchers today. Investigators received reports rom three towns that Garrett, who has been sought from New York to Canada and the maritime provinees, had been seen in an automobile. The | ¢car was reported seen in Salem Willows late yesterday, an hour and a half later at Weymouth, and an hour later at Nantasket. In each ase the registration number of the eutomobile was the same. Detectives from the district torney's office regarded as at- sig nificant the fact that the machine | ‘was registered to a Worcester young woman believed to have a cottage near Nantasket where Garrett him- gelf had a cottage at one time. Tracing the passage of the auto- mobile from Salem Willows to Nan- tasket, police considered it unlikely that it had passed through Boston where Garrett is know to almost every policeman on the force. They suggested that if the machine had really contained the former liquor er its driver would doubtless circled the city rather than almost certain arrest UGLANOV RETRACTS STALIN CRITICISM Labor Commissar Recants Accit- * sations Before Reds Moscow, July 2 (P—Nikolai Ug- Sanov. the commissar of labor, who preached against the policies of Jo- seph Stalin, today before the congress of gStalin’s majority party humbly re- accusations and anjured ccond time his right-wing How completely the right and ignominious- My wing opposition in the communist party had surrendered to talin and his central committee was summed up in Uglanov's abject hu- Anility I consider,” pleaded the one-time power in the communist ranks, that “one of by greatést mistakés Was in the struggle against the party line I atiempted, in conversa- tions with many party members, to represent Stalin as the person chief- ly responsible for. the situation cre- sted within the party Praises Stalin “Comrade Stalin. proved his management of the party, that he s deservedly the leader and a firm follower of Lenin. I deelare solenin- before the 16th congress, that I pudiate and decisively condemn all { ! my former m "Henceforth T wiJl try, as a Joval Ishevik, to correct these mistakes d take a active part in the ruggle against the activities and ieology of the right wing." Uglanov admitted flatly that he formerly opposed the policy of the varty on development of state and collective farms, believing the solu- tion of the country's grain difficul- ties rested chiefly in development of ‘ndividual farms and in preserving Kilak farms, “Therefore T str increased assaults against the cap- italistic elements of village and sowns. T did not believe in quick de- velopment of state and collective farms and opposed severe measures azainst the Kulak. I did not believe o the possibility of executing the rapid industrialization program pre- scribed by the party. T believed the tempos must be adapted to the level {nat during d against the of development of individual farms. | fought against the party's policies but now admit these polic were right and led not to a weakening but 1o the consolidation of the commun- ##t: movement abroad.” New Haven Baseball Team Sold by Weiss New Haven, July 2 (A—Claude B. Davidson former Brown univer- sity star and organizer of the New England league, today was in abso- e control of the New Haven club the Eastern league. Announce- cnt was made today after a con- between Davidson and Ken E. 8. Bronson and Yeorge Weiss, principal stockholder, and directors of the club, that David- son had taken an option on the cluh under unstated terms. » Full dctails of the transaction are expected to be made public within a week or ten d. No major changes in the person- gel of the team are planned Mr. Davidson said. A strong possibility that the control in the club might result in the inauguration of night aseball under floodlights was-seen s Davidson has been an active ad- herent of the plan and the majority of the clubs in the Eastern league have indicated willingness 9t night. 329 ARRESTS IN JUNE During the month of June the po- {ice made 329 arrests, 16 less than i June a year ago. Violations of %he motor vehicle laws were respon- sibje for 104 arrests, almost one-half the total for the month. There were U6 arrests for violations of city or- dinances, 29 for theft, 25 for drunRk- enness, 10 for drunkenness and breach of the peace, 10 for improper conduct, 10 for breach of the peace | 41d assault, and five for violation of | e liquor law SHIP GE 4 Philadelphia, July Munson line freighter which went aground on Brandywine hoals in Delaware Bay yesterday, S OFF SHOALS 2 (A—The confronted police and | strong man of the so- | akes and activi-| to play | Mundixie, | HUNTER BROTHERS AT 500 HOUR MARK (Continued From Page One) played more nervousness than ground crew. | There was manifest relief as the | “Big Ben” finally mosed into the air and dropped its line aboard the en- durance ship. Another wave of ap- the when someone thought he heard the motor of the “City of Chicago” miss- ing, but the 190th contact was achieved without mishap. Drops Joking Note telegraphed to his sister, Miss Ma- belle Hunter, who is ill in a hospi- tal. It was an answer to her mes- sage delivered by radio through the | medium of her mother which she expressed worry over their speech and health. The note read: “What do you say ‘Boy' (May- belle’s nickname). Who don’t know how to break a record. Well we have close to 500 hours and the motor is running fairly good vet. I don't know how much longer it will last. Beans, (Kenneth) is fretting and wents to come down at 520 hours, but I want to stay up 'till Monday. “It has been tough but nothing like the other flight. We are feel- ing fine and although Beans is get- ting pretty sleepy. “We go out and work on that old | motor as if 1t were on the ground (boloney). catwalk this mrning at put a new breaker in the magneto. ow don’'t go worrying about u because we are all right. We can still talk and to prove it, we will all come down and make a big speech { for you.” Bad Cylinder Repaired Chicago, July 2 (P)—Two Spartans —the Hunters from Sparta, Tilinois— stood today at the Thermopylae of the skies. Repelling the wild tide of time and mechanical fallibilities like Leonidas and his three hundred of |old, Kenneth and John Hunter at 2:40 a. m. ( zoomed zestfully past their 491st hour aloft—nine hours away from the coveted half thousand. The engine purred retort to reports that the flight of the “City of Chicago” would end shortly. Earlier, a conference of Al- bert and Walter Hunter, the crew of the refueling ship “Big Ben,” with others interested in the flight disclosed .that three cylinders of the endurance plane's motor which had not been getting oil for three days had been fitted with new pipes and were now working smoothly. The refueling ship was also pro- nounced in good shape, but as a pre- cautionary Hunter brothers of the ground said a new plane had been ordered in readiness from the Stinson plant in case the ‘Big Ben" should gq awry, Lindy Congratulates Old Pals Among the congratulatory mes- sages received yesterday was one from Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, who, in the days when he was “Slim” and an air mail pilot, barnstormed several times with the Hunter brothers. The mark of 500 hours held no satistaction for the brother-pilots— now that t have surpassed by scores of hours the record of Dale Jackson and Forest O'Brine, set at {420 hours plus in the *St. Louis Rohin.” The Spartans have repeatedly de- clared they would be aloft until the Fourth of July at least To Stay Near Field In view of the 20 days' wear on the motor, the ground crew said the “City of Chicago” would hover close to Sky Harbor airport so that a landing on the field could he made in the event of motor trouble For the record to be recogni an indignant ed by tion, the landing must be made from the takeoff ficld The bull market has swept over Sky Harbor; dinner in the only available restaurant nearby has been hoisted from 75 cents to $1.55; the fashionable Russian rendezvous, the Petrushka club’s roof garden at the airport, plays to constant night crowds: the purveyors of hot dogs have cluttered the lot and a constant watch of sleepy-eyed newspaper re- porters and photographers portends the end of the flight Chicago Man Chief Backer The managerial and financial back- ground of the flight was publicized vesterday. Wilson Herren, of Bar- | rington, 111, Walter E. Conroy principal backe . of Chicago, the To date, between will tell you this—and he will medicin a whole lot of healthy, happy crystal-clear bottle! NATURES John today dropped a note to be | is flight manager and | HEN you are brimming with pep, energy, znd optimism, you have a real whole- hearted smile, because you feel so almighty good! People are glad to see you; things seem to! come your way. Here’s the secret, learned by thousands of happy people: Clear the natural poisons out of your body regularly. Your doctor x:ighc way to do it by the Nujol treatment. When you cleanse your face, you don’t harshly scrape it with sandpaper, taking the skin off with the dirt. If you want to clean the poisons out of your body don’t use habit-form- ing laxatives—use internal lubrication, which your body begs for, just like any other intricate machine. Nujol—colorless and tasteless as pure water—makes you feel like a million dollars, yet it costs only a few cents! Nujol is not a ; it contains no drugs. Start the Nujol treatment tonight. You'll find 193 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, $30,000 and $35,000 has been vested in the endurance altemp! No contracts of any kind have | the brother-pilots, Herren said, The ground crew brothers were contract- d at $100 a week, each, and are to receive a 10 per cent | fight's profits. The Hunter brothers evinced no fear of losing their new laurels at the announcement from St. Louis ‘thal Jackson and O'Brine planned to | take off July 13 in an attempt to Murpass the mass of hours piled up | by the “City of Chicago.” | “After a note was sent up telling them of the St. Louis flight, the | brothers dropped down the following ;no(e addressed to O’'Brine and Jack- n: | “Thanks for the congratulations. When you boys start, we wish you |luck. Probably sce you before you take off."” Frees Rudder From Debris Thousands flock to Sky Harbor daily. Last evening they were given a new thrill. Kenneth, the wing- walker of the olden barnstorming tours, crept from the cabin hatch as the plane soared along 300 feet above earth, and slid down the fuselage to the dder controls, freeing them from collected debris that threatened to jam the stabilizer. It was his second trip aft Mother Hunter and Sister Irene saws brothers John and Kenneth at | close range last night. They went |aloft with Casey Jones. observer for the National Aeronautical association who lumbered his large Curtiss Con- dor alongside the “City of Chicago.” “I couldn't see the boys distinctly, but I saw them waving.at us,” the mother said. |been signed as yet by the backers or cut in the ru But T did go out on the | 2 o'clock and | Getting $1,401,600 a Year Chicago, (p) The Hunter brothers now are being paid at the rate of $1,401,600 a keeping the “City of Chicago” the air Their current earnings were in- creased today from the $100 an hour that has been paid them by an oll company since they broke the endurance record last Sunday to 160 an hour. The dollar-a-minute increase came from a malt concern and prompted Al Huntér, one of the brothers attending to the refueling end of the job to say “It may be a long time. T don't know how John and Kenneth will fecl about it up there, hut when they figure out that total salary they may decide to stay in the air until their beards get tangled in the con- | trols — and Walt and T'll be glad to h ! | To Broadcast From Plane Chicago, July 2 (UP) John ! and Kenneth Hunter will broadcast from their endurance plane “City of Chicago" twice dally as long as they stay up, it was announced today by the Columbia Broadcasting System . | They will be on the air at 2 p. m. {and 8 p. m. E. D. T, talking over a nationwide hookup of stations through a microphons lowered to them from an army bombing plane. Early Celebrators Hurt In Fireworks Accidents Bridgeport, July 2 (#—Two more | victims were added to the growing list of casualties in premature Fourth of July celebrations today bringing to 16 the number of injured since Sund Alfred and Herbert Sokol aged 12 and 11 respectively suffered powder burns on their faces and hands from an exploding fire cracker and | treated at a hospital.” The police have begu paign 1o entorce dinance against premature tions. were a cam- or- celebra, CONNECTICUT SAILOR MISSING Asbury Park, N July 2 (P— Mrs. Edward Lewis of Allenhurst to- day notified the naval authorities at | New London, Conn.. that her son, M. Case, reported missing from the U. S. S. Mississippi at Colon, Panama, had failed to arrive at the ship at sailing time. Thvs information, she wired to New London, she received in a cable from her son who =said he was stranded at Colon. He is a member of the naval reser MAIL PLANE BURNS Chicago, July 2 P—A New York- Chicago air mail plane, piloted by P. Hopkins crashed near Middlebury, Ind., at 5 A. M. today. National Air Transport offices here learned the plane was flying low and probably struck communi- | cation wires, crashing and burning. | Plane and 850 pounds of mail were | destroyed but the pilot escaped with- out injury. also tell you the Natol is sold in all drug stores {n sealed peckarss only. trader *In- smiles in every @ war | claims of the United States - U, 3, MAY GLAIM Tydings Wants President to Act On Byrd Exploration Washington, July 2 (UP) resolution which would pit aga those of Great continent of Antar senate action tod Senator Tydings, democrat, nd, introduced the which would direct Presi ¢ claim to Brit American lid the departmen ms rman Borah foreign which did not cl of the committ > would bring rly action tion would precipitate hich the state department stepped ar when hole d antarctic ned by Gre Great Brit effering By ng a. copy o the Hoover AWaY T which naval redu r the area te with a plored by Captair claimed by B conferen the state departme nized, was m of Australia Find College Freshman In Massachuflett: \\ oods North Dartr vtfl\fjo!\n B. fresh Mary was Wordell been beli a breakd Boston e said. ed for finding SHOUSE TO Boston, Jul son society Jouett Sho lemoc speak dinner Brown society. STOLEN Mass., July 2 len BARB Malden, pole o Main street, front on (. ANTARCTIC AREA JUNT H W OF G. IS FREE FROM ANY DEBT ~ ON FRIDAY NIGHT Secretary Benson Makes Report Brilliant Illumination Specified 10 Divectors Today RALPH H. BENSON FIRL DEPT. RECORD AL HOLIDAYS OPEN N?GNTS NEW LOW PRICES Marathon Runner Cords 29x4.40 . . $5.95 30x4.50 6,15 30x5.00 8.60 3(x5.00 830 20x5.25 9.95 3ix5.25 . .$10.25 32x6.00 13.00 23x6.00 (3,75 J 30x3!;, .. .84.95 3ixa 8.95 32x4 - 9,65 32x4!2 13.50 35x4'% 14.60 Order by Mail , CENTRARX, TIRE STORES 436 MAIN ST. Opp. E. Main Street Plenty Parking Space Telephone 838 Open the ith and Saturday START FIREWORKS SHOW RIS, Your Kitchen Is Never HOT by City in Contract on Baking WOMAN REPORTS LOSING POCKETBOOK AND 8295 Mrs. Anna O'Dell of 15 Main Street Had Money for Landlord but He Did Not Call If You Use a CLARE JEWE], Gas Range! a cooler haking, and economi- and we are vour old stove. . 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