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WIFE T0 BENEFlTi Flagler Heir Young Woman Aid- | ing Husband in Studies Chicago. July 15 (P—One of the three heirs to the $15,000,000 estate of Mrs. Ida Flagler, who died in New York last week, is the young wife of a medical student who is working his way through school. She is Mrs. Ruth Tavior Pontins of Evanston. Her husband, John | R. Pontius, has two years of col- lege to go before he gets his degree frs. Pontius was graduated from Neorthwestern university in 1923, e of music. Previously :died at the University of Washington and at Whitman col- college attle. Wash The voung couple live in a est three-room apartment are in New York now. having ried there after learning of death of Mrs. Flagler. The other heirs are William Tay- lor, a harness-maker of Nora Springs, Ta., and George Taylor, a| house painter of Rockford, Il | Mrs. Flagler, daughter of al clergyman, was the divorced wife | of Henry M. Flagler, who made mil- lions in oil and the development of Florida. She had been in a ganitarium at Spring Valley, N. Y., for 30 years. At the time of her divorce her husband set up a $ 000,000 trust fund, the basis of the present mod- Thev | hur- the estate | GOLF FUND T0 BE USED | 100 at Deno and 106 at Sacramento. | T 13,000 Passengers to Saill Tomorrow in Nine Liners from New \ork Cit; New York, July 15 (A—The peak‘ of the European travel rush thus |far this season will be reached to- morrow with 13,000 passengers sail- | ing on nine liners. | About 2,000 passengers each will be carried on the North German Lloyd liners Columbus and Bremen, | the Leviathan of the United States | lines, the Cunarder Berengaria and the White Star liner Majestic. | The others will go on the Ham- | burg-American liner Hamburg, the | | President Roosevelt of the United States lines. the Drottning-Holm of the Swedish-American line and the Bergensfjord of the Norwegian- American line. Keen competition among steam- ship companies this summer has caused a speeding up of schedules which permits the ships to get in an extra voyage during the season More Hot Weather in [ Store for Pacific Coast San Francisco, July 15 —More hot weather was in store today for | the far west, which has been sizzling | under temperatures well over the | century mark for three days Slight relief was forecast for por- tions of Oregon, Washington and Tdaho but continuing high tempera- tures were promised for California | and Arizona Huma. Ariz. reported a maxi- mum of 114 degrees yesterday. Needles, its California rival for hot | | weather registered 110. Fresno and | | Phoenix each reported 105, as did| {Red Bluff, Cay. It was 104 at Boise, | he Los Angeles maximum was 93. No deaths or prostrations were re |date to bring hi mout alive. [ pointed !rapid torrents to forge | dying condition and | both of th NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1930. MEDICAL STUDENT'S | ~ThiveL Pk RAceeD - il DERNESS STILL CONCEALS AVIATOR Rescne Parties Fear Jungle Wlll Thwart Their Efforts Rangoon, Burma, July 15 (#—The Indian wilderness today still cloaked with mystery the fate of the young British aviator, Eric Hook, whom his companion, Jimmie Matthews, left on the banks of a river near |here atter a plane crash in the jungle. Rescuing parties penetrating the jungles feared that even if they did eventually find him, it would be too It was out that they had long stretches of high hills to climb and before the area could be covered. The torrents increased in force the past few days by the monsoon floods while the flat country rapidly is be- coming submerged. As bad as the | weather has been in the area under search, worse was expected with a new storm rolling up from the Ba of Bengal. Hook and Matthews were on a fllxht from England to Australia | when their plane cracked up on a bamboo clump. Hook was taken very ill before they could get out of the wilderness and Matthews finally, was obliged to leave him in seek help for | says. m Flashes of Life ] L | By the Associated Press \'assar graduate and member of !l\&‘. | Junior league, has been married to | Hanley, Hermann Pieck, fourth officer of | the Bremen. Broomall, Pa.—Lombo and Fluffy have been put to death because their mistress could no longer care “er them. The jet black Belglan shep- herd dogs were buried in the yard of the home from which Mrs. Ada 50, is removing. | New York—Dr. Hortense Powder- | maker, 28, anthropologist. has re- turned form a ten months' visit| alone to New Ireland, a reform-d | cannibal isle of the South Seus, where all there is to divorce is re- | turn by the wife's family to the hus- | cept | cppies th |of he | band of a string of shells he pa.d at marriage, where children smol at 3, where there are no drinks water and cocoanut milk, where it is improper for men lu‘ dance with women. _ Guantanamo. Cuba—The age la Thaurance, negress, Monday, is recorded as of 3 who died 137 —The latest in excli- e Cloud club, which oc- th, 67th and 6Sth floors hrysler building. It is 1 luncheon club for business me Harold E. Talbott, Jr., polo player, is president. Asbury Park, N, J.—One must play contract. All auction coni- petition of the American Bridge League was cancelled because only one pair appeared to compete. army turned up for contract. New York—Mrs. Helen Moody has won a Wimbledon cup four times but has never seen 1t She doesn't know whether there is h a cup; she thinks it must o aginary “Anyway.” she add-d, ne plays theoretically for a cup d gets someth much nicer in ing the way of a bowl or a picture the simply Wills | filed Hall, Dun rthur Sykes and 5 p yesterday and at e was still winning 2 h as 500,000 m PAPERS ARE FILED BY GRACE CHURCH SIX DEFINITELY - GONCLUDED LOST Yawl Disaster Victims Drowned in Adlantic S(]U&H : ) -1 Grace ai;r;- Will Be e i o ey ;_ Issuein Steel Action ! ingsto 0., July 15 (A—The DIANOND HELD IN ROBBERY CHARGES Body Guard Alleged (o Have Been in Newark Case < was 5o heavy sent for enable 1t to 6.000,0 heavily the exact not Articles of Association Recorded t State Gapitol es of no, but lo: hough Ar! association n the office of the seer state by Grace church of D ain and that §ody nov corporati unded a Boston sea when the one afte loop for hou g men lost he D ort time ago and has | been holding meeti 1 Junior O | U. A. M. hall As ed socia as Steel ted to beco SR in the docum on the tolloy te of as- ng of the of God the Lord slowly losing slipping into arch though depen 1dep s Jennie Dolly Winning Mo At Baccarat M HELD ON TECHNIC m, which is much better for the home. | e | 5,000 Running in State Primaries in Montana James Whitecomb Riley ported All Teams Are Tied In Blue Ridge Loop Frederick. Md. July 15 (A—An unusual and almost unprecedented situation existed today in the Blue | Ridge Baseball league—all teams| tied with a percentage Four | wins and four defeats. The league cldest Class B league in the country | is operating this year with four teams—Chambersburg and Waynes- boro in Pennsylvania and Frederick and Hagerstown in Maryland The league operate on a split son basis and at the close of the first half July 5. Waynesboro and Cham- | bersburg were tied with 31 victories and 24 defeats for a percentage of | 564 Washington—Weather bureau rec- ords show that the weather of t | next forty days will not be deter- mined by today’s, but the old verse runs: St. Swithin's day, if thou dost rain, For forty days it will remain; St. Swithin's day, if thou be fair For forty days 'twill rain nae mair New York—Maureen Lady Stan- ley, daughter-in-law of the Farl of Derby has come to make money ani admits it. “I am going to work no for the first time,” she said. “T! gover is taxing us out of exi ence and everybody has to get o and work.” She is bound for Holl wood to supervise some English tings for Samuel Goldwyn Bisley Camp. England—Sergean C W. Foam of the Black Waten mmm——— Montreal, is well able ot teach the WANT AGED TEACHER voung idea to shoot. At 900 yards Hartford, July 15 More than | with a service rifle he made a per- 450 signatures have been affixed to a | fcct score. plugging the bull petition asking that Miss Florence |ten times in a match |N. Bullock. 70, principal and teach-| New York—A girl is the | range er at the Wilson street school, be al- | bride of a German steamship offic:r | At lowed to remain at the school in-| whom she met on a transatlaniic | lstead of being pensioned trip. Miss Mary Davis Landstrect, cepltal Helena, Mont., July 15 (A—Mon- tana's clectorats went to the polls primary today to select slates of candidates from a fleld of 5.000, one for every 44 qualified ‘Will Begin to Realize on Bobby When tempted to over-indulge “Reach for a Lucky instead” THE BATTLE CRY OF MODERATION! Be moderate—be moderate in all things, even in smoking. Avoid that future shadow* by avoiding over-indulgence, if you would main- tain that modern, ever-youthful figure. “Reach for a Lucky instead.” Jones' Donation. In polis, July James Whitcomb hosp 15 Riley (P—The Children's al will shortly begin use of the Bobby Jones fund, which the gold champion raised in an exhibi- tion match here in 1926 in the de- velopment of a playground for the crippled inmates of the hospital, the tee of the institu- Besides Jones, Gene & Walter Ha ‘Lighthorse’ ry Cooper participated in.the match. Although the exact form of the playground has not been decided. it will bear the name of the famous Atlanta er. voters United States Senator Thomas J.| Walsh, democrat, and Congressman? Scott Leavitt, republican, were un- opposed Chief interest in the election Ctn» tered in the race between Albert J. Galen, associate justice of the su- ‘preme court, and O. H. P. Shelley, | Red Lodge publisher, for the repub- lican nomination United States senator. | for rea- for | ITALIAN SOLDIERS TRAIN | Moncalieri, Italy. July 15 (® — The aspiring young infantrymen of the Ttalian student officers’ reserve | corps gathered here today to begin a two mont course of summer training in opean order tactics, bayo- net drill, and work on the rifle 2 l-\lLII'[l IN BTS Prague, Czechoslovakia, July 15 (M—Two passengers were killed and many others injured, 17 severely, when a motor bus crashed into a milestone. The chauffeur committed suicide society girl Lucky Strike, the finest Cigarette you ever smoked, made of the finest tobacco—The Cream of the Crop— “IT'S TOASTED.” M Strike has an extra, secret heating process. Milan another group reported this morning to undergo similar in- | structios B. C. PORTER SONS Connecticut's Best Furniture™Store OVAE RSN TSN E YRS F AR S SR O RUGGED DEPENDABILITY Everyone knows that w @Y heat purifies and so o ret2iled asses® 20,679 physicians say WITN 3 that Luckies are less ir= 75 VARI-COLORED RAG Oblong — Round — Oval’ shapes. _ ritating to your throat. STAR BARGAIN NO.8 RUGS 1.00 EACH [Watch for the Star Bargains] Many formerly priced as high as $4.50. OUR GREATEST MID-SUMMER SALE NOW 1 “Coming events cast their shcdows before’” PROGRESS REDUCTIONS 10% TO S0% OPEN WEDNESDAY ALL DAY. OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT. CLOSED SATURDAY AT NOON in Keeping With Our Usual Summer Business Hour Policy During July and August. o o N Your Throat Protection—against irritation—against cough — ——— —— *“There is only one remedy for fat, and that is eat the right food...There are at least one hundred so-called “obesity cures. None of these is permanent. All of these are injurious,” says Vance Thompson, Ph.D., in his famous little book,“Eat and Grow Thin,” published by E. P. Dutton & Company. We do not represent that smoking Lucky Strike Cigarettes will bring modern figures or cause the reduction of flesh. We do declare that when tempted to do yourself too well, if you will “Reach for a Lucky instead,” you will thus avoid over-indul- gence in things that cause excess weight and, by avoiding over-indulgence, maintain a modern, graceful form. TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dancs Orchestra, every Saturday and Thursday evening, over N. B. C. nerworks. © 1930, The American Tobacco Co.