New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 9, 1930, Page 2

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2 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1930. FRENCH PILOT IS~ FORCED DOWN IN ATLANTIC CROSSING CARDIVALS DEAD ATY AMERICANS LOST INPLANE DISAGTER Other Rescue Possi ilities Well Known EATON OFFERS 120 FOR STEEL STROKS terday by hy Sheet & holders tion. ampbell sai “very large” but definite figure: produce the figure ed the w Financ eral million gether fight tha Tube sh tness ¢ rembled BELIEVE IT OR NOT ©n dressed envelope, Mr. Stresses Testimony LANDER T0 PAY SETTLEMENT /\ request. eent with stamped. ad- Ripley will furnish oroof of anything depicted by him). (Reg. U. 8 Pat Of) BY RIPLEY K. SPRINGER ATE /44 SOFT BOILED EGGS IN & MINUTES Knapp, Wisc 1930 AN SHOT AND KILLE EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S Jackson Was Killed By His Own to shoot were encamped. g of the hostile camp, when the Confederates r 7 in accordance with his own orders. TOMORROW—An Onion Is a Lily WERE 3 BIRDS ON A FENCE ONE OF THER HOW MANY WERE LEFT ? A PATIENT IN OMAHA RAN A TEMPERATURE OF {71 DEGREES G 1400, F.og Featires By roops, and his own orders, ¢ any soldier approaching f But at the end of a v Tne.. Great Brearn CARTOON Men—-Thomas Jonathan cto “Stonewall” Jack- se about in the following man- ym the opposite direction to ious day he was returning stook him for He died May 10, 1863. EiEITISH ADMIRALTY BATTLE PREDICTED eft for Service Adopts Replacement Plan ed it de- lopt a steady 1 and therefore was proposed in the from rited many, CK CHARG the gowns| New Ay the wed- | of pas ° hless checks e talk of bank Mrs. for Ruth Collins ) on a here, weeks. befor: advance of Ursu i AT day was held in bor in towr was arrested last wee s of 31,000 for court nex t Mon- | ~ PLANS NAVY WORK ONFIREWORKS LAW PIPER BRODK JOB HELD UP BY SNAG Scheuy Opposes Project MAN TARRiED \\D FEATHERID Jong, when ae the lie result of ru De Jong in a sca was the VOLCANO CONE WIDENS Naples, Ttaly, July 9 (UP) — TI eruptive cone 1 had widened tod: of contin COMMISSION TO LEAVE Washington, July 9 (P~ Samoan comm hich is to draft a bill of rights for natives on the Pacific Island, will sail from Los Angeles on t -r Omaha Sep- tcmber 6, returning the latter part o0f October. Senator Binghan Connecticut, rhairman mission which ccmpr two s tors, two representatives and threc Samoan chiefs, said today the group would hold rings in Honoluia and Samoa. Since the island c: under the control of the Un s it has been ruled by a nav officer without a con tion or u bill of rights. The republics of the ¢ | SENATOR BLACK INSISTS SECRET PAPERS NEEDED influ- group which act were willing to vote asure in- of the for- of the Robinson Amendment At his Urg: ator Robin- te to the oposed an approved k Mr. the docu- fered accept the ame involved the usual a vote on precedes the vote on the resol as no expectation in the would com- +in the event of te McKellar res- McKellar said the matter ended if president clines to give over the docu- the r. Hoover has relations commit given the foreign some of the doc withheld. ed be- tween the state department and Am- bassador Dawes at London. There timations they were not re commi because of e language used by ambassad T lican, Penn- member of the delega- London conference, has show opponents of the meseages in question ¢ they have refused maintaining they are en- documents for such use see fit to make of nts. the pict the outspoken tion to offered to the this offer titled to tr as they r them. Added Worries Appear Sponsors of the treaty were given added worries over the problem by keeping a quorum of the senatc present today by the departure of two democratic members, Barkley of Kentucky, and Connally of Texas, for Europe. Two quorum calls revealed embers, o be | tant yesterday each one over the The at- shifting, how- ation leaders were confident other senators would be present today and in the future to offsét the departure of Barkley and Connally. By GEORGE MANNING (Washington Bureau, N. B. Herald) Washington, July 8. — Senator Frederic C. Walcott, of Connecticut, called on President Hoover at the White House today. While the scnator refused to make public the detafls of his ta with the chief utive, it is known that they dis- ed the controversy in the sen- » over ratification of the London naval treaty and took up as well the movement to force Claudius Huston from the chairmanship of the na- ional republican committee. Senator Walcott is a very intimate and particular friend of the presi- dent’s and can be counted on to support the nation's chief in what. | When HEASINGTON Tms | Conscientious Autoist Rides 5 Hours to Court New York, July 9 (®—In these days of disregard for law, read about Erna Griminger, a 20 year old miss. In order to answer a summons for parking for her uncle, Otto Haugh of Endicott, N. Y., with whom she lives, Miss Griminger arose before dawn, took a five hour train ride and spent $10 in railroad fares to appgar in traffic court here at 9 a. m., and then the case wasn't called until noon. After paying the $5 fine, she de- parted, lamenting the unpunctual- ity of New Yorker: _— tional mentality. John, though only six years of age, was to have entered the second grade of the Percival avenue school |at the coming fall term. He was | deseribed by his former teacher, Mrs. Fred Crane, as a child of ex- | ceptional brilliance. She also stated that he was possessed of an artistic gift and was capable of drawing pictures that might put to shame one of more mature age. Besides their parents and grand- parents, they are survived by one brother, Willilam: and four slaters. Alice, Mabel Amy, and Olwen Chapman, Want Pound Closed Residents of Kensington and Ber- lin alike were shocked when news | undertakes. Their friend- back into Mr. | dential days. into the Walcott | “S" street. ever he ship dates far Hoover's pre-pri the latter d White House. leased his old home on B | (Continued From First Page) joining the pond at 400 or 500 yards east can Paper Goods Mfg. Co. As they passed the plant they are said to | have waved to some of the employes | who were at one of the windows at | the time. All three tots were clad in little bathing suits. Hears Child’s Screams The first warning that anything | was amiss was had when Mrs. | George Sullivan, who lives on Main | street in the house next to Lloyd's | hall, heard the frightened and hys- | screams of a child. Rushing 1 the house and in the direction | of the sound, she soon met th h' tle Ellsworth girl, who was frantically towards the house .nvi‘ screaming in an hysterical manner. Stopping the child, she was able to gather that the two little Chap- man boys had slipped into the pond and had disappeared beneath the The child said that the ger of the boys had gone down nd that the older brother had after him to save him. She fter the yhad gone down ey did not reappear. an did what she could child and went to the immediately notified Prosecutor Charles F. Lewis, who is employed at the Paper Goods plant. | A force of men from this factory was soon on the scene. Mrs. Sulli- van also notified W. H. Fitzell at the Berlin Construction Co., and he also sent a crew of men to the scene as well as notifying the New Britain police and fire departments of the tragedy Resuscitation Efforts Fail The little bodies were pulled from the pond shortly before 5 o'clock after they had been discovered at a spot about 25 feet distant from the shore in approximately ten feet of water. Prosecutor Lewis secured one of the bodies by means of a grap- g hook the other ought to the surface by Dona cQueeney after he had located 1 diving. According to the story of Mrs. Sullivan, who based her judgment on the time that she had first heard the screa Sllsworth the bodies most an ho a point some of the Ameri- before they red. Despite this fact, Dr. R. M Griswold, medical examiner, and others from the New Britain police fire departments who were at e scene worked over the children til almost 7 o'clock in the hope ¢ might be revived by arti- al respiration. he father of the children, who i employed in one of the New Brit- un factories, was notified and was arief stricken when he reached the scene of the drowning to find the little fellows dead. The mother was prostrated when she learned of th accident, as were other mem- bers of the famil | Chosen As “Perfect Baby” James, the younger of the two rhild was chosen as New Brit- uin's perfect baby at the recent “Better Baby Contest” conducted e 15 months ago under the aus- pices of the Knights of Columbus of New Britain. Tousled ite hair 7d sparkling eyes made both of the children exceptionally attractive and they were known to bhe of excep- cove | tests | already | morrow | Thanksgiving of the drowning began to spread throughout the town, and loud pro- were heard against the availability of the pond to small children. It is and has been felt for some time that this pound should be closed against trespass, as it has claimed many victims. The place where the children met their death was on the site of | one of the town's old factories. The | depth of the water at a point so near the shore is accounlt‘d for by The double funeral of the little victims will be held at their par- ents' home on Percival avenue to- afternoon at 2 o'clock. Samuel Sutcliffe, pastor of St. Episcopal church in New Britain, will officiate, and burial will be in West Lane cemetery, Kensington. PLANS ARE BEGUN Rev. Mark FOR ANNUAL BALL {Firemen’s Pension Assn. Au- | thorizes Naming of Committee | At the semi-annual the Firemen's DPension and association last night reports of of- ficers and committees were accept- meeting of ed and President Peter Nuss was au- to appoint a committee to for the annual ball on thorized arrange eve. The association realized a 400 profit on the last ball, of which $800 will be turned into the pension fund maintained by the city and $600 to the association treasury Captain John C. Connolly reported | for the committee appointed to ob- tain information relative to the workmen's compensation act as it pertains to firemen. He had an in- terview with Compensation Commis- | sioner Leo J. Noonan and learned a number of facts on which there had been doubt in the minds of the fire- men. Captain Connolly explained in detail what the commissioner told him and a general discussion fol- lowed. | The report of Secretary Barnes showed an unusually heavy drain on the finances of the association dur- ing the fi due to illness and injuries sustained hy members. DENIES FIRM INSOLVENT New York, July § (P—B. G. Dahl- berg. president of the Southern Sugar company of Clewiston, Fla., 2gainst which a petition in involun- tary bankruptey was filed July 7. in Tampa, denied today that the firm was insolvent. He attributed its difficulties to lack of ready funds The Southern Sugar company was laced in receivership June 30, upon the request of creditors represented by the Weir Kilby Corporation Mr. Dahlberg released figures to show that his company’s assets are approximately $20.000,000, as of May 31, while its liabilities, includ- ing long term indebetedness but in- clusive of stock, arc about $4,500,- 000 Mr. D: small cre petition. berg blamed “disgruntled itors" NCTION pringfield, TIL. L. Lewis, international president o the United Mine Workers of America d other union officials, today were d guilty of violating an injunction ed by the Sangamon county cir- | cuit court, to restrain them from in- terfering with activities of the Tlli- nois mine workers, in an opinion prepared by Master in Chancery Frank Trutter. Special Offer by the New Britain National Bank easy | Relief | t six months of the vear, | for the bankruptey | ° July 9 (P—John | BONDSMAN AGAIN PAYS FOR DEFAULT Leopold Maniredonia ~ Finds Business Poor Boston, July 9 (M—To Leopold | Mantredonia, professional bondsman | life has one default after another. Manfredonia, who posted a large part of the §12,000 bali for Oliver | B. Garrett, defanlted former liquor raider charged with conspiracy and extortion, today encountered fresh grief when Suffolk county coliected 0 from him. Tast fall Manfredonia providel bail in that amount for Charles i, alleged lottery promoter, who r defaulted. Pacci was unsuc- ully sought by Attorncy Gen- | eral Joseph E. Warner, because of a statement he was alleged to have made that Garrett was the man be- One” lottery. District Attorney William J. Foley has started suit against Manfredonia and his fellow bondsmen in the Gar- rett case to obtain forfeiture of their bonds. New Attorneys Will Start Practice Here Two of the six New Britain at- | torneys who passed the bar exam- ination taken in New Haven recently have already located in this city. The other four are undecided but it is reported that some of them may practice out of this city. Attorney Algert Politis will be aasociated with Attorney Harry Ginsburg. Attorney Samuel Googel “fll be in the office of Attorney n'nld 1. Dunn The othersare | Attorney Robert Halloran, Max Reicher, Harold Koplowitz and Charles Covert. . become just NEW YORK WANTS DOLLARD New York, July 8 (P—Police an- nounced today that Thomas Dollard, New York broker, arrested in New Haven, was wanted here on charges of appropriating to his own use $1 400 given him on June 19 to pur- chase stock with for an unidentified client. The technical complainant is Wal- ter Derham, acting under power of attorney for the actual complainant, whose name the police did not dis- close. Dollard was arrested at the New Haven railroad station yesterday while buying a ticket for Providence, BOURGET GIVEN PRIZE Paris, July 9 (UP) — The "100,- 600 francs Prix Osiris for the most remarkable work in science, letters and industry was awarded today to Paul Bourget, member of the French academy. Second prize went to Marcel | Gley, member of the Academy of Medicine, The awards were made at a plenary session of the French in- stitute. MANCHESTER MEN HURT Middletown, July 8 )—Two Man- | chester men were injured, one seri- ously, near here carly today when their automobile failed to make a turn in the highway, and was wrecked. Thomas Boland, 38, 37 Lancaster road, suffered a possible fracture of the skull. The driver, Joseph Farr, | 34, had several ribs broken. Both | were taken to the Middlesex hospital here, where Farr was placed under arrest on a charge of reckless driv- ing. Police say I'arr was driving at a high rate of speed around the curve. | WILL OF H. N. BODWELL The estate of Henry N. Bodweil is left to his wife, Lillian A. Bodwel, according to his will which was ad- mitted to probate court today. The will was drawn up on October 12, 1812, His son, Harry T. Bodwell is ex- ecutor and the witnesses were Yes on J. Stearns, Herbert N. Lockwood and George W. Andrews FURNITUR ) Boston, July 89 (UP)—Frank Bar- rish, 26, of Roxbury, was arrested here today on a charge of stealing $4.659.95 from his employers. Barrish allegedly manipulated ace counts of a West End furniture con- cern where he was bookkeeper for | six years. One 5x7 photograph (without cost) of any child 5 years or under for whom a new account is opgned through OUR Pocket Dime Savers which are Free and will help you to Save Your Dimes and watch them GROW INTO DOLLARS

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