New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 8, 1930, Page 3

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CONTAGION THREAT ALARMS DOGTORS Cholera Ontbreak Evidence of Dangers From Disease ‘Washington, July 8.—(#—Cholera and yellow fever, old scourges in a new age, have made the tropic map a battleground for Surgeon General Hugh S. Cumming, of the United States public health service. It is a fight of many phases, brought sharply to focus by the seri- ous outbreak of cholera in the Philippines. In its broader aspects it involves rigid quarantine regula- tions by sky as well as by sea, and ultra-modern vaccination and eradi- cation mathods. To Organize Convention To Dr. Cumming has been given the task of formulating an interna- tional convention whereby the vari- ous countries involved in-tropic travel may enter a compact to pre- vent the spread of plagues by air- planes. bl Returning to regular desk routine this week after absences which in- cluded an international health con- ference on tropic diseases, Dr. Cumming found the cholera problem on Uncle Sam's own doorstep for the first time in many years. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1930. Sunday night. Main Street Flooded By Sudden Summer Cloudburst —Photo by Collomb This is what happens to Main street when Jupiter Pluvius flies into a rarre, as he did last | The illustration shows water several inches in depth swirling down the thor- | }Man Who Shot Youth | Rescued From Crowd san Jose, Calif.) July 8 UP—Res- R R e L o ] he had shot and fatally wounded | Joseph Pagliaro, 8, Antonio Colosi- | | mo, 33, was being held today on a | murder charge. Police said Colisimo | fired becau. Joseph and two other | |boys were disturbing his slumber. The boys climbed on the roof of | Colosimo’s cabin vesterday. Angered | at being awakened, Colosimo shout- | ed a warning and then fired through a hole in e wall with a shotgun. Joseph, sitting on a fence beside the cabin, received the charge in his back. |Take Summer Courses At General Hospital physicians are supple- | — e Colorado Seeks Help To Eradicate Bootlegger || | | Denver, Col,, July 8 (P—State prohibition enforcement officers today said they would request At- torney General Mitchell to take steps to cope with what they termed arrogant liquor gangs op- erating in the state. The request for special depart- ment of justice agents which state ’ officials announced they wou make through Ralph L. Carr, | United States district attorney, | was provoked by the slaying Sun- day at Aguilar of Dale F. Kear- ney, prohibition agent Investigators today expressed a belief Kearney was lured into ambush by one of his own under- cover men. e e of of education by taking ses during the summer Britain General h David Pouverman, 4 Mrs. Charles Pouver- of this city and now and Joseph Menousek, 'nd Mrs. Edward Menou- sk of 44 Cottage place. the New are medical students at the U sity of Vermont. | chemi genology at the hosptail. Bri high scho They are studying p t bacteriology 2 so! tion worth Thompser bank: $300,000 by J determir tempt of cou The notes Once Wealthy Coal Operator Must Raise §300,000 By 31st of July Uniontown, Pa more than former Faye er and coal operator, mu two estates h | John Niccolls, Thur; brought who is governorship of hout to I jail when his and obtained a they said, is wor coal deal of which he Both young men are graduates of | USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS cnough to pay his obli 42x36 PEQUOT PILLOW 'WE GIVE “Amfl ails of the deal Once were not revealed. r of vast acreages iroughout west- and sections of on failed for Climaxing tor and finan- r of a to liqui- the o of coal prope Pe Virgi lity rterests were allied orarily par- out the S TO BY FILED 8 (P—Briefs are y Deputy At- L. Averill in oil distributing com- st Governor John H. te's attorne: BRIEF trord, J 81x90 BLUE RIBBON H-J-Bonnelly CoIne. {TEL-480 - )> THE~BOSTON~STORE < EST-/878~ SHERE CASES A crescendo of Philippine cables, oughfare and covexmg the railroad crossing. The clearness o# the photograph is remark- each longer than the last because it able in as much as it was taken after the storm late in the evening. i told of more cases, more deaths, lay upon his desk. “Sounds bad,” he commented, with a rueful shake of the head, has hit many of the large islands— seems pretty much all over the Philippines.” Tosses Over Messages He tossed the messages across for fuspection. The speed with which the disease spread w: trail through the island of Cebu, about 200 miles Manilla. The first cable June 6, noted one death in Cebu. On were 8 cases, seven deaths; June 19 —53 additional cases, 28 additional deaths; June 23, 33 more cases, more deaths; June cases, 43 more deaths; July 7—14 cases, § deaths in the port of Cébu. The most modern note in cholera control, Dr. Cumming remarked, is the mouth metHod of vaccination, recommended at the May League of Nations health conference by Great Dritain, Rumania, Bulgaria, and Boviet Russia. In the fight against yellow fever, Dr. Cumming has sent Dr. H. F. Smith former chief quarantine o: cer of the Philippines into Liberia, its historic home, with the instruc- tion: “Eradicate.” Planes May Be Dangerous The airplane may be as dangerous in the spread of disease as it is helpful in its pointed out. “There is regular plane service to France from the home of yellow fever in Africa,” he said. “Flying boats come to Miami after skirting a long coast line where yellow fever | has raged for yecars. India, whick never has had the yellow fever, but which has all climatic conditions favorable to it, could be infested within a few days after a plane which carried the plague Ieft Africa.” DEATH BED WILL FILED IN COURT Woman Dying in Hospital Be- (ueaths Estate to Husband Suffering from burns about the ('YC" arms and body from a gas e flame and realizing as she lay a bed at the New Britain General ospital, covery had been abandoned, Mrs. Mary Cickowski asked that her will be drawn up. She left her entire estate to ler husband, Wilenty Cickowski. Mrs. burns at her home, 196 Curtis street, on June 20 and a short time after she was admitted to the hospital she ordered the will drafted. Martin F. Stemplen drew up the document, she signed it and two days later, on Sunday afternoon, she died. The witnesses were her physician, Dr. John J. Tokarczyk, Olga John- gon, a registered nurse, and Victor F. Piaskowski. Her burns were caused by her clothing being ignited by the gas flame as she was standing directly in front of the stove. Grandfather’s Savings Are Found on Runaway (Special to the Herald) Newington, July § — Disappearing from his home with $1,000 of his grandfather's $1,500 savings, Balva- tore Del Grasso, 15, street, Hartford, fled to the Pacific coast, where he has been picked up by the San Francisco police with $441 in his possession, according to word received by the Newington au- thorities. The boy's grandfathe vatore Del Grasso, of Station 6.N ington, had feared a run on the Hartford bank where he had his money deposited and he had with-| drawn it, hiding it in a trunk at his home. The youth was living with his grandparents at the tme. Prosecutor Harold Lucas has 10- tified the San Francisco authorities to buy a return ticket for Salvatore and to return the balance $441. Health Board Billed For Quarantine Guard A bill was received by the healt h board today from the police depart- ment, asking payment of $146 for the wages of policemen placed on duty to prevent breach of quarantine at 111 Lawlor street. After several warnings had been disobeyed, the department sent policemen to duty at the house and prevent per- sons from entering or leaving. A man who was visiting at the home when the policeman arrived, was re- quired to remain in his room for a week under strict quarantine, shown by its | by sea south of | June 10 there | 11 | 30—86 more | check, Dr. Cumming | that all hope for her re-| Cickowski received her fatal | Attorney | of 163 Front | do | New York, July 8 (P—A wireless | message from Captain Stuparich of the liner Saturnia today reported |that the glider “Clairbourne Foster" stayed in the air for eight hours yes- terday, believed to be the longest ocean flight ever made in a towed | glider. At the end of eight hours a faulty thock cord connecting the liner and the glider caused the little lying | boat to plunge into the wav from which it and its two occupants were saved with the help of a lifehoat The glider, named for the Broad- way actress who is sponsoring th« | venture, is being taken to Gibra for an attempted east-west flig across the ocean behind the Saturnia or a sister ship. On the eastward voyage practice flights are being made by the youthful owners, Hugh Keavney and Robert Lewis, to fa- miliarize themselves with ocean fly- ing. 'DR. WORKS RECOMMENDS “ CHANGES AT STATE SCHOOL i Resigned President Wants Depntl- | ments Developed—Explains ‘ Criticism Is of System. | July 8 (P—Dr. George of Hartford, | Alan Works, resigned president the Connecticut Agricultural college, | will recommend to the trustees of | the: college the inclusion of a sum | in the budget sufficient to provide | equipment and staff adequate not | only for the mechanics arts depart- | ment, but for other departments in the college which are declared to be unprepared to teach the courses in- tended. Dr. Works makes it clear that he in no way is endeavoting to spon- sor a movement for a state univer- With reference to his criticism of the state board of finance and its attitude towards the Connecticut col- lege, Dr. Works explained that he is not criticizing the present board as it is constituted. and individually he | finds the men of high standing. It is the system employed in the state with which he is not in favor, a sys- tem which gives to the board of finance power which, in his opinion, it should not have. | | Annapolis-West Point Examinations in Fall | The Unifed States civil service commission has advised Senator F. C. Walcott that it will hold competi- tive examinations for his candidates to both the naval academy and the military academy on Saturday, Oc- | tober 25 at 9 o'clock. in the federal building, in the following cities: New Haven, Stamford, Hartford, Bridge- | port, Waterbury, New London, Mid- | dletown -and Danbury. | Senator Walcott will have two appointments to make to West Point and one appointment to make to| Annapolis. Any Connecticut boy who has been | a resident of Connecticut for one vear or more will be permitted to take the examinations. He should furnish Senator Walcott with his full name, address and date and place of birth, and advise him as to the city in which he wishes to take the ex- amination. Given $222 Judgment ’ In Automobile Deal Alleged failure on the part of the | Beloin Motor Sales to deliver an au- tomobile to E. P. Lamphier or to Te- turn money for a car turned in on the purchase resulted in a judgment | for §222.12 in favor of Lamphier in city court today. The ruling was| | given by Judge Stanley J. Traceski | | following a city court hearing sev- | eral months ago. |~ The plaintiff claimed, throngh his attorney, John F. McDermott, that | but he claimed the new car was not | delivered or his mon MRS. FULLERTON New York, June 8 (A— | services for Mrs. Julia Marie |nn of Brockton, Mass., widow of | | the Rev. Dr. Bradford B. Fullerton, prominent Congregational preacher | of New England, who died Sunday | at the home of her son in Forest Hills, L. I, will be held today in Waltham, Mass. | She is sruvived by a daughter, Mrs. Katherine Fullerton Gerould, | writer, of Princeton, N. J., and »wo | sons, William M. of Paris and Rob- ert M. of Forest Hills. | September 8 at the home Glider Flies Eight Hours Behind Ocean Liner, Dives Into Atlantic START CRIME (P Mount Vesuvius Erupts; Danger Is Not Serious Naples, Italy, July 8 (A—DMount Vesuvius, perennial scourge of the Neapolitan count de, was in active and violent eruption today, but obser 1id not believe slopes Three fou lava yester burning entire platform of tive cone falling foe into the crater. The ecrie flam lighting up e ever-pre: plume of sr could be seen for many miles. t tory djrector, tive activity would probably solidify crater and would not the sides. ST0CK DROP BOOWS " INSURANCE LHANS in pour over ‘Bormwing On Policies Nearly 7 Doubles in Year d for severe last fall The unprecedented dema policy loans following the break in the stock mark is reflected in the tained in the annual i 1 ualty report of the C surance department which sued today by Insurance sioner Howard P. Dunham which covers the bus The report was compiled from the annual statement of the 42 life in- surance companies wl operated in Connecticut in 1 neluding the five Connecticut compar Policy loans in force in panies increased 33 the prev linost 100 per cent over the in- during the year ending De- wer 31, 1928, when the total gain was $151,405,069. was is- .and ss of 1929 .’).1 com- ASSIST NEEDY FAMILIES The Polish Women' meeting last night at the home of Mrs. Eugene J. Albro of 355 Monroe street and about members at- tended. Reports submitted by members showed that the organization is ac- tive in distributing provisions among the needy families and large quan- tities of bread and milk were dis- posed of during the past month. Refreshments were served after the business meeting. ‘The next session will be held on of Mrs. B Karpinski of 331 Chestnut street, 35 APPROVE RAILROAD PLEA ‘Hartford, July 8 (P)—The public utilities commission today approved the petition of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad com- pany for authority to eliminate dan- gerous conditions on state aid high- ways in the village of Noank, town of Groton, known as Main street and | Spicer avenue crossings. OPTOMETRY EXAMS HELD Hartford, July 8 (A—The state board of examiners in optometry is conducting semi-annual examina- tions in the old senate chamber of the state capitol for three days commencing today. The state board of examiners in medicine conducted tests today. There were 22 appli- cents. BETHANY PLANE CRASHES Torrington, July 8 (M—A cabin | monoplane, piloted by Russell Green of Bethany, was damaged when it of the | e made an agreement to buy a car | was caught by a down air current and crashed against a stone wall while landing at Cary field here late yesterday afternoon. The land- ing gear and propellor were wrecked. The pilot and two passen- gers escaped unhu SWIMMER REJECTS OFFER Los Angeles, July 3 (A —DMiss Helene Madison, 16-year-old Seattle school girl who bettered four world records in the jonal A. A. U. swimming meet at Long Beach, has rejected an offer to turn profession- al, it became known toda The offer, from a New York sportsman, was $10,000 for a series of exhibi- | tions with Miss Martha Norelius, statistics con- Commis- | fous year .This was a ga.n‘ club held a| GHICAGO CHURCHES (Ul Inquisitoria} (ommittee Sum- mons City Councilman for Quest today ration, official in- sination be- . July grand moned as its Arthur Albert, city c d to get a coun- n of Lingle's reported police officers and 3 held be- to permit a fr to go into th | disclosed by especially of reports porter was a * apone. The opening of the inquiries was ked this morning with the a ination of Phillipo, 4 shot down \’\\ ews e shoot- nists ,or a bootlegg said Geor; ced by some with the tion of Lingle, had fo “too hot” for him and gangland rumor, was goir ledo. He was said to have told frier he had a od proposition Ohio city The St according to Valentine day m s fired on wh the escort of a police d Gave Stock Salesman Drink for Market Tip Hartford, July 8 (P—Tt is illezal to feed liquor to salesmen in change for tips on the market, ruled Judge Nathan A. Schatz in the Hart- ford police court today when he fined Frank Diamond, 46. a t $150 on two counts alleging t kept liquor with * exchange” and with having t tation of ing or exch liquor.” In this respect, the court was complete accord with Prosec Attorney F. J. Carlson, who conc ed that while there was no & receipt of the coin of the r accused gair pa of C. or\"nr-nm‘ will carry fo balance of $882,244.92 to he a the annual prepared for Trumbull Ec commis: of finance and cor he s 1ent shows z hand in the general fund at of business 000.58, for construction propriation, leaving tk above to be carried forws years. The $6,050 on June 30 is AULT JUDGMENT Aa judgment in plaintiff was given in Pearl E. Hz Josephson in city perty involved is on Stew ion was given by Jt xe. Tl'»‘ original note was October 26, 1925. T has until August 4, 19 the property GIRL SCOUT CAMP OPENS irl Scout day cz y will sday of this . and | all girls who x\‘u\ to go wi this affernoon at the 1‘ office. The first 16 make up the can ch girl must bhe her scout knife, lun » group will leaye t r\f’\\l‘ at 8:30 tomorrow r the leaderst Neil and Mrs. M stants. }fee for the camp. 3lc i) ‘WW"REDEMPTION STATION IN OUR STORE <=5 $1.27 Wednesday Morning Specials! e Wednesday Morning Specials PECIAL ICE M SODA . TIAL B. AL ¥5C RO CHOCOLATE WAL N UNDAE ICE GIRLS' SUMMER UNION SUITS nown Torest Mi Suits in fine wh Button shoulder Sizes 2 to 45 10 years . (4 . each CORSETS and GIRDLES —Back laced corsets and front hook girdles in flesh only, e M. & P. make. 85‘: At EXTRA SPECIAL ALL RUBB KIDDIES' PANTIES n white and flesh; small, medium and large. 1 6c Ventilated sides. Each ALL WOOL SUN SUITS Tor Tots 2 to 6 Years —Reds, greens and orchid § BATH MATS of colors and pat- y double Terry; slight imperf e 51,25 MEN'S FANCY PAJAMAS —In slip-on and coat style; sizes A B C and D. Reg. $1.19 value . 88¢c GORDON’S HOSIERY —slight irregulars. Full fash- joned service weight. All want- ed shades and sizes. $1 00 SHOES In a Special Group at $3.85 Were $6, $6.50 and $7. To Close Out at $3.85 ALL TENNIS SNEAKS Values to $1.75 To Close Out 98c At o UINE U. S. KEDS First Quality with some sli soiled . $2.98 PLEATED SKIRTS For Wednesday Morning —43 silk crepe de chine skirts to go at this unusually low price. Pastel shades. Silk bodice top. Front and all around pleat. Small $1 79 and larg: zes . MUSLIN BLOOMERS and STEP-IN: —Never before and never agal will you get such a bargain. A limited quantity. White and pastel shades. Regular and so extra sizes. 150 Valves to 9Sc . MEN'S HIGH GRADE SHIRTS —All neat patte Majority are woven madrases with that non-kurl collars. Whites in- o Each 95C Sizes 14 to 17. —This Store Closes at Noor Tomorrow !— JUST FOR WEDNESDAY 50 LARGE MORNIN SIZE SUMMER DRESSES $3.95 PRINTS AND PLAIN COLORS Sizes up to 48 ALL SALES FINAL AGAIN FOR WEDNESDAY WINDSOR —Mahogany finished. We doubt if you'll ever see any- thing like this again in Windsor. —Each CHAIRS $1.89 —There will be no more at this price after this lot is sold. MANY LOTS AT COST AND BELOW COST! SO HURRY! CHILDREN'S SOCKS —Odds and en b sofled. Sizes Value to 50c pr. LINEN CLOTHS —Colored borders. Good qual GIRLS' SILK KNEE SOCKS \ close out. Values $1.00 and §$150. Solid colors; a variety of shades Sizes 5% Pair 69c DIMITY and Y and BATISTE —36 inches wide; 39c value Variety of good 5 vard 25¢ patterns . AUTO SWINGS For Kiddies —Heavy canvas with heavy chain, for any make $1 24 car, Special COUCH COVERS —Just like the last lot that sold so quickly, Deep flounced s . $1.00 At . CRISS CROSS COTTAGE SETS AND RUFFLED CURTAINS —160 pairs in this lot; cut full width and length; $1.08 value Just half price. Set .. to 10, Irish linen Usually HEMMED LINEN DISH TOW FL\ Colored borders w Good quality linen sually “WM. ANDERSON'S CHIFFON VOILE AUTO SEAT COVERS Last C el §9 84 98c J‘lt‘q\mrd l'l'mnf-l Back OIL ( LOTH Looks lik “Wm. Andex:on‘ " PIQUE and BEACH CLOTH S5c. 3 §] White and Colored FELT HATS Extra Special 54c each —Some slightly soiled. $2.98 and $3.98 values. GIRLS' NIGHT GOWNS for Wednes- crepes and sook. Bizes 59c¢ FINAL CLEAN-UP WASH FROCKS —Dimities, Broadcloths and FANCY GORDON'S GOLF HOSE and BOYS pla lengt 24(: rer sheer ma- and pat- r $2.95 each \\ OR}\ HO\E blue anl TRONING BOARD PAD and COVER [} aj B WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECTAL Turkish Towels 20x40 size 21c —Attractive colored bor- Usually 37c each. , absorbent. HEAVY RAYON mited quantity RN TABLE CLOTHS New Linenized Finish arly $1.5 i3 1ires no Non- e e e e e —_DOUBLE 4% GREEN DISCOUNT STAMPS TOMORROW!

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