New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 21, 1930, Page 2

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2 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 21, 1930. HEAT GLAIMS TEN THROUGHOUT STATE Nation Hit Entire Fugland Cooler ZONING ACT HELD VALID BY GOURT quire n the relator trial zone dence zone Tt be argued t higher. ain might be n or attended dustrial zones zones. Tt is i this fact fron True, there subjects: b me sive as to conditions or as was in the minds of all framers of the ordi that all of the e erly be considered “Ordinance {s Clear” “Must we not exa the dinance itself to det stitutionality? The ordinance pressed in clear and c and, insofar as it me cerned. need no interpre does not in words discriminate even mention any pe persons. It does against or in favor of onc we gurn to the testimony to w ass or- its con- not district we find Pal~c Fire Call S LAST WA FNALTOASTHELD & ANNOUNGE SCHoL TEAGHERS' POSTS A} e BELIEVE IT OR NOT Sends Audience Into Panic dreseed o proof ot ansthing depicted b (Reg. 1. Tae STEAMSHIP Gova ™ ON LAKETITICACA - (2000 £££T ABOVE THE SEA WAS BUILT IN ENGLAND AnD SAILED To PERU 1T was carried up the Andes over 4 pass {7000 {eel high on the backs T ) of Indiens S (LUB E~ MRS MARY WICKHAM -of Tiplon, la GOT MAD And WENT T0 BED — AND STAYED THERE 40 YEARS . (On request. went with stamped, ad- velope. Mr. Ripley will furnish & Pst oOR) bim). BY RIPLEY ” “Fireside Friendship” |the well known aviator, | not | seemed lttle doubt | three titled led, among them the only two wom- |from the cabin and | containing S —— engeful Boy Floods Rabbi’s Kitchen Floor A six year old boy put a garden hose through a window in the kitchen of the home of Rabbi J. H. Aronson, 18 Talcott street, Saturday night and flooded the floor as a reprisal against the Aronson boy. Officer James Sul- livan investigated the case and warned all concerned to avoid such trouble in the future. SIK KILLED WHEN ENGLISH GHANNEL AIRPLANE CRASHES (Continued From First Page) war. He was the organizer of the movement in ingland for the United States fi) ing fighters. Lt.-Col. George L. P. Henderson, wag the pilot who was killed Two Women Lost The official passenger list had yet been made known at an hour this evening but there that at least folk had perish early society en aboard Witnesses said rific roar. The there was a ter- wings separated the fuselage, the passengers, fell straight down, while the other parts of the machine floated off fo som-= distance. One wing came to earth two miles from the scene of th | crash. The second pilot whose nameo MARBERRY [ - of Washinglon | PITCHED INSS But DD NOT PITC o WORDING ON A GRAVESTONE IN PULLMAN, Wash Aok Featurer'Syngicate, Ine. Great Beian EXPLANATION OF SATURDAY'S The Largest Watermelon in the World—This ley of Roc ed. © B. Chamberlain School olorado is fan dely known for size and superior excellence. Salmon, A Salt Water Fish, is Caught in Fresh Water—Th water the young e animals that can thrive in both fresh and salt n many rivers and bay located « migrate to the sea as soon as their growth permits. 1 0 water. in some instances at a great distance from the ocean. GAMES HA COMPLETE ONE / CARTOON 350 pound melon was grown by D. W. Ford, Colorado, and was shipped to Lgndon in 1898, where it was ex- famous for its melons and cantaloupes, and the melons grown at Rocky ough salmon eggs are hatched It is one of the Salmon fisheries are TOMORROW—The Child Calculator —— Home-Made Golf Club ] 111: Man in Acmdent Ma }") ALLIN[i WOULD BE JUDGE OF PROBATE Roosevelt School B nued From First Page) school in 1305. Tn No- of 1406, the firm of Klett & as inaugurated in New Brit- r. Alling as a partner. Wwas prosecuting agent of New n for from 1910 to and was assistant judge of the Britain ourt from 1 1 he was the repub- r mayor of New ten ve lican didate Britair Judge Alling h in the house of the general asse cal ed two terms sentatives in first in 3 Poppel, It Cithering republican st previous orney gen- was tendered the nomina- the state senate from New UKRAINIAN' CHURCH DISMISSES PASTOR ed From and is under the su Northend Schoo e, VI VI1-2; Marian (Cont Page) church of no bishop or diocese and there- pervision Margaret Mof. | fore i liberty to dis e pastor if ad | dismissal are found After Father Pashkiew performed the last mass ~fore noon mem filled the t uate reaso for School Helen Mae Putnam Con \\)—w 1II- h had vesterday Tomasso “rs of the nent of w Aln it Hill Schoa) non-English; AMembers of the to have told the con rs. Lillian 0. | the officers of the board were c n O'Brien, opun | before the grand jury and Cary, atypical I:|the first time they learned that some er, atypical | 2,700 ons of sacra ight-savink; Mrs. | were withdrawn for dietitian, they said Vocatlonal . School | The officers denied that such an acting principal: | amount was consumed during the industrial | year and produced proof that only ts for girls: | $25 from the church funds was paid academic sub- | for the wine, they safid. Members of C. Payne, physi- | the congregation voiced their opin- auditorfum recrc- [ions on the action that should be Glazier, industri.l | taken, stating that the pastor's work Mrs. Estella N.|had met with satisfact the for hoys: | whele congregation and he in every al educa- | way had proved suitable for tha pas- orfum for | terate, but the perjury charge and e ga lark their aut Rockwell church, | his connections with the wine with- | drawals were unbecoming to a pas- | tor and his resignation must be de- | (UP)—The | under the | nk yard law the last general assemhly in conviction here tod1y. Judge Harold L. Shaff impos- | will be placed in a Ukrainian news- el suspended 30-day jail sentencss | paper. ! The pastorate includes a sal- 1 Isadore Kerstein and R. Levine | ary of more than a $100 a month hoth of Fairfield, proprietors of the land practically all other expenses 1ced truck company on the Boston |are paid by the parish. Efforts will Post road be madc to secure a pastor who will Kerstein and Levine pleaded guiliy | remain here for at least ssveral t) operating a junk vard without a |yedrs. The first pastor, whom permit was suspend-d | Father Pashkiewvch succeedsd, re- when they agreed to obtain a license meined in this city only for a few 1d improve the yard's appearance. months. nanded, it as said. Applications for a new pastor will -called ssed b resulted |1 and in order to secure the most Levi O. Smith School capable pastor an Johnson. I: H Light, 71-1 e Kirshnit II1-1 Town Cash- Teanette Sentence kindergarten; Helen his | | be recerved from now until August advertisement | SERGEANT BULLOCK FAILS IN ATTEMPT - TOTAKE OWNLIFE (Continued From First Page) into his mouth. When unconscious- ness came over him, the tube fell but the flow was effective in the 1l bathroom. and in the opinioh of physicians he would have been dead had Mrs. Bullock waited a few more minutes before shutting off the radio Sergeant and Mrs. Bullock have three small children. During the ex- citement, Mrs. Bullock retained her composure remarkably well, and the children, apparently too young to comprehend, remained quiet #iroughout. Besides Officer O'Keefe, Officers Louis E. Harper, Thomas Tiern William O'Day. Edward Muszynski and Michael Brophy as- | sisted, a8 did Leo Grichtman, man- ager of a drug store across the street. nt. Personals & is vacationing at Pemaquid Harbor, Maine. Mrs. R. F. Frisbie is spending a few weeks at Vineward Haven, Mass. | S. Littlejohn left Saturday for 1 Branford, where he will spend the next month Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Porter have returned from a trip lasting two and a half months in Europe. While abroad Mr. and Mrs. Porter motored through Germany and Austria, driv- ing through the Black Forest and stopping at Oberammergau to see he famous FPassion Play. They ent some time in Pairs, also. Miss Mary Knapp. secretary to Attorney Thomas McDonough, and Miss Dorothy Anderson, secre- tary to Deputy Sheriff Martin Hor- witz, left Saturday for a week's | visit to Grove beach ! Miss Pauline Kulis has returned | to Newark, N. J, after spending a week's vacation in New Britain. Miss Estelle Kulis of 43 Booth street is spending a week in Newark, N. J. and New York City. Albert Carlson of 34 Cottage place was surprised by several friends and relatives at his home on Sunday evening at the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. Albin Carlson of Grove beach, the occasion being Mr. Carl- zon's 64th birthday anniversary. He received many gifts, Samuel Soroker has returned to his home hese after spending a week's vacation at Booth Bay Har- | bor, Me. Mr. Soroker spant one day on each of the seven islands in the | harbor. RANDOLPH HELD Stamford, July 21 (A—Rupert 1. Randolph of 174 East First strent, Mt. Vernon, N. Y, is being detain:: by the Greenwich police in the te- { lief that he may be Charles F. Cla-k | wanted in Los Angeles, California, on | a charge of jumping bail in that cit Randolph denies that he is Clars, but Greenwich police, from descrip- | tion furnished them, believe him (o |be the man wanted in California. ’ was believed to be Shearing, was one of the victims. The plane, all metal, did not catch fire. It was said the machine selonged to the Henderson Flying Bureau, of which the dead pilot was head, and had been lent to the Wal- cot company as traffic from Le Touquet today was partic rly heavy. Reports of the identity of the passengers said they all beloriged to one party of prominent British so- ciety folk journeying ho to- her from the French resor The bodies of the passengers hurtled downward together. Th all fell within a small radius in one orchard. The engine, torn from its . dropped into a nearby garden. A passenger reported to be a Mrs. Loeffler this evening was added tentatively to the death list. The full name of the pilot was Lieuten- ant Colonel George Lockhart Percy Henderson. He was born in Simla in 888 and was principal of.the Hen- derson Flying School Confirm Woman's Death Officials confirmed that Mrs. Henrik Loeffler, venor square, Mayfair, was a tim of the air crash Mrs. Loeffler was Swedish married tg a British subject had a residence at Le Touquet. her Mayfair home it was said the family did not believe there were any Americans in her party report Gros- vie- and She TRUCK DRIVER ARRESTED Rocco Mazziotto, 22, of 33 Julius street, Hartford, was arrested on Weashington street today by Officer Alfred Tanguay on the charge of driving an overloaded truck. The truck was carrying a load which was a ton and a half in excess of the weight allowed by law To Asmonstrate n Paris, recently, his new bumper, M. Conti, a French engineer, ran an automobile, carry- ing his wife and child, into a tree while going miles an hour, the device stopping the machine with- out injury to the occupant RESOURCE year. during July — you for the next series every dollar deposit independence bers. investment—a safe At | your dollars to grow. EW BRITAINCOOPERATIVE JAVINGIANDJOANALSOCIATION HATCH BUILDII‘\G Heat Wave Takes Crowds Seek ‘Stephen Mlynarski, 49, Dies of Hemorrhage at Mitckell Street Home — | Temperature of 110 Re- corded Saturday — Boy Taken Il in Park. Although there was sgme question as to how the week-end compared with similar periods in the city's| history, there remains no doubt but that New Britain people, those few | | who did not take to the woods or the | shore, sweltered and perspired in a | | summer heat that went well over | 100 degrees, While thermometers disagree on a | few points and there was a varia- | tion in temperature in different por- tions of the city, there has been lit- |tle change since Saturday, when the | mercury soared almost as high as it is wont to go. On Shuttle Meadow | avenue Saturday afternoon the tefn- | perature went as high as 110. Yes- terday at fire headquarters it was at 104. Qn the roof of the Herald building today an accurate ther- mometer registered 101 early in the | afternoon. These temperatures were taken in the sun. Most New Britainites who had cars or friends who had cars or who had the pricayof trolley or bus fare spent as much as possible of their spare time in the parks or at the ghore, Traffic on the highways during the | hottest part of the day vesterday was not as heavy as it has been on other Sundays but parking space at shore resorts was at a premium. At Ocean Beach near New London it was impossibie early yesterday aft- ernoon to find a parking place on street within a mile of the beach Ponds and Pools Crowded Other shore resorts were crowd- ed. Ice cream and soft drink stands did a heavy business. At Bat- terson park in Farmington, where many New Britain people go for bathing, there were literally thou- is during the day. at homes, without the means or inclination to travel any greal nce, flocked to the parks and vy spots were at a premium the wading pool at Walnut Hill park today and Saturd rowds were accomm ed. The municipal swimming pool at Willow Frook park also catered to an un- ually large crowd Saturday and n today, while youngsters at the any | street, ¢ gapacity | One Life In City " As Mercury Clambers Beyond 100; Shore and Countr)- | Washington school site look with | cager anticipation at the wading pool | nearing compietion there. Heat Causes One Death One illness and one fatality from the heat were reported in ew l ritain over the week-end. Stephen Miynarski, 49, died suddenly at the | home of Michael Zuk of 121 Mitch where he was a board Death was due to hemorrhage i duced by the excessive heat. H | was sitting on a swing under a grapa arbour in the rear of the house when he toppled over. Drs. Frank Zwick and John Purney were called but ha was beyond aid. He had resided in this city for scveral years and was employed as a farm h:md on a tobacco farm. Ssv- cral nephews are the nearest surs | vivors. Funeral arrangements are incoms= plete. Boy Taken IIl Paul Vorkol, 9, of 269 Washing- | ton street, was taken ill while play- ing at Walnut Hill park Saturday afternoon, the extreme heat affecting him, and Supernumerary Policeman Spooner had him taken to hiz home, where he was attended by a physi- cian and quickly recovered CHIEF NOBLE ANNOUNCES SHIFTS IN ASSIGNMENTS Maikowski Takes Parker's Vacant Post At Phone Desk—DMechanic Burke to Have No Assistant Chiet W. partment announced today the fol- lowing shifts in the assignments of the personnel, effective once: Robert Smith, for chief's driver, transferred to Co 3 as a hoseman; Stephen Maikowski of No. 1 ladder company to the tel- ephone desk. succeeding the late ward H. Parker; John Blair, as ant to Mechanic Edward G. to succeed Fireman Smith as chief's driver. Under the new arrangement chanic Burke will have no assistant, but will call on members of the de- partment when in need of help on the department apparatus. Fireman Maikowski, who was off duty five months because of a serious injury | sustained in a fall on a piece of ice | while figating a firc on Gold street. is at present on his vacation. He was injured while handling lumber at the central station a short time after returning to duty, but will be able | to take over his new duties at the | completion of his rest period J. Noble of the fire de- at several v Me- Vermont Man, 103, Readsboro, Vt. July 21 (P—Hu bard D. Oakes is dead at his hom: here, and many of him in life will find in ing something for contemplation For Oakes saw more than a cen of springtimes paint the countryside with lush greenery and a like span of winters frost the Vermont hills with snow He was born in Stamiord, vears ago, and the simple, life he led never caused him to re- |side more than 18 miles from his birthplace. Throughout the past vears the same roof sheltered him. Oakes was born in a log cabin. In his youth he helped his father burn charcoal 103 S OV ER The Unanimous Choice of the Conservative «.Yet It Pays EMBERSHIP in this 43- year-old savings associa- tion are open but four times a Unless you join now— must wait before en- joying the income of 514% on ed. - Hundreds of men and women are on the road to financial through plan. Over a million dollars have heen paid out to mem- It’'s the world’s safest In addition —Privile, this place for shares 24 WASHINGTON ST. PHONE 73 who never heard | his pass- | rural | |grandchildren and a score of grea’- for use in smelting iron at | $600 anytime with interest added. —Building loan privileges. —Definite maturity dates, 7 and 12 years. —Greater maturity ~ Dies In Home Where He Had Lived 75 Years |a furnace here. Walking was his |recreation. and there were fow spots in the region he had not vis- ited afoot | Shortly before his death he whimsically declared himself oppos- #d to prohibition, on the ground that it had thrown an inferior grade of liquor on the market and that he had been accustomed to drink- ing good liquor all his life. Femin- ne fashions also irked him, for. he said, shorts and bare legs were rob- bing women of their femininity. Oakes leaves four children, ten grandchildren. Nine members of his family, representing three gen- erations, lived with him. 000.0 0 this plan offers you: ge to withdraw savings value for

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