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News of the World / By Associated Press w ESTABLISHED 1870 . NO NEED FOR MORE JUNTOR H. 5. ROOMS, " OUPT. HOZMES SAYS Head:of School Department Files. Report With Educa- | tion Board | ACCONMODATIONS MUST BE " ENLARGED IN SOHE AREAS, fiversge Attendance Gain In Fle- { mentary Schools Nil, Making Un- r [ necessary Expansion in Upper § Olaases—Changes in Residential Zomes Reflected in Statement— | Average Cost Per Pupil Is $97.9S. t Because there has been no in- frease Ain attendance at elementary schools since 1928, School Supt. Stanley H. Holmes -does not believe there will be any need for increased accommodations for the junior high school students, he stated in his an- nual report which was presented to the school board this afternoon. The superintendent reviewed the work of the past year and recont= mended changes which, he believed, wouldebe to the advantage of educa- tion. Additional %oom for elemen- tary gwades at the Northend school _on Bassett street is greatly needed, _:NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT,, FRIDAY, ‘S‘EPTEMB/ER 12, 1930. —THIRTY-TWO LTSI e e Acid Thrown in Eyes of Dog Blinds Animal Frank Malczyunsky of 465 Ai- len street reported to the police last night that somebody had thrown acid into the eyes of his pet dog and blinded the animal, the eyes being eaten out by the acid. He did not know of having any enemies, and could not en- lighten the police as to the iden- tity of the person responsible. Lieutenant Matthias Rival re- ferred Malczyunsky toy the dog warden. _—m SEEHING WARRANT INYANKD HURDER Detroit Prosecutor Wants Killi a0 Held in First Degree KNIFE USED IN BATTLE| New Britain Man Accuged of Slaying Roommate With Sharp Blade and Fleeing w Cleveland—Prisoner Denies Guilt. (Special to the Herald) Detroit, Mich., Sept. 12.—A war- rant charging Stanley Killian, alias Kglska, 22 years old of New Brit- ain, with first degree murder will be asked today by James E. Che- not, Wayne county prosecutor. | he said. The Stanley school district is also in need of more building ac- commodations, he reported. Decrease in Six Schools According to Supt. Holmes there has been a decrease in attendance in th& Bartlett, Washington, Cham- berlain, Smith, Roosevelt and Lin- coln schools and an increase in the Northend, ®obert J. Vance, Benja- min Franklin, Stanley, Israel Put- Killian is charged with the murder of his roommate, Peter Yanko, 35 years old, slain Labor day in a con- fectionery store here, Body Found in Store Bearch- for him was begun after Anthony Satkowski, trip and found the body of Yanko, who had been stabbed to death be- hind a counter. Killian and Yanko, who had been roommates for somsetime, occupied rooms above the store. Labor day, Satkowski decided to take his vaca- tion and left the tenants of the up- proprietor of | the store, returned from a holiday r= SUPT. S. H. HOLMES nam, Camp, Rockwell, Elihu Bur- ritt and Smalley schools. The In- crease in home building in the ex- reme northwestern section, Stanley Quarter and the southwestern sec- tions i8 having its effect on tho school's enrollment, according to Mr. Holmes. Mr. Holmes figured that it costs three times as much 1o educate a Senior High school pupil as tt does an elementary school boy or girl. He estimated that it costs $75.16 for each elementary school pupil, §152.78 for the junior high school attandant, and $208.31 for the senior High pupil. The average for the en- tira school system is $97.98. Supt. Holmes' annual report, fol- lows: “This report of the activities, pro- | gress, prospects and needs of the cchools is submitted for your con- sideration.- It includes the usual sta- | tistics and also & financial state- | ment. : “A comparison of attendance fig- | ures in the different schools for the year closing in June, 1930, with cor- Tesponding figures for the year clos- ing in June, 1928 reveals signifi- (Continued on PAge Two) DRY ZEALOT WHL PREY ON CHILDREN Plans Seizing ~Youngsters in Homes of Boot- leggers Geneva, TIl, Sept. 12 (P—Through their children, State's Attorney George Carbary of Kane county to- | day brandished a new legal ‘Weapon 2gainst illicit home brewers, Filing information yesterday that the homeof Simon De Brock, which yielded beer 'and mash to raiders, was an inlproper place for rearing children, Carbary obfained - from Judge Olney C. Allen an order plac- ing the five De Brock children in custody of the county court. Widely known as a determined upholder of the dry statute since the slaying of Mrs. Joseph De King in March, 1929, during a raid by agents from his office, Carbary | was fou A cheek“ £lairs room in charge of the store. He returned about dusk and found the store locked. Knife Found in‘Chest Atter opening the store he found evidence that a battle had taken place. Further search led to the discovemy of Yanko's body. A kitchen knife, with which he had beeén slain, was protpuding from his chest, No :money had been taken from the store which precluded the theory that Yanko had been Killed by a holdup man. Arrested in Cleveland Searcl for Niilian began when it his clothing was missing. Iso revealed that he had borrowed train,fare from a friend explainin® hé had just killed a man. He was apprehended Tuesday in Cleveland. He was returned to De- troit after he waived extradition. Killian steadfastly denies that he Killed Yanko, and insists he left the store before his death. When he returned and discovered,the mur- der, he sald, he fled. SECOND MOTHER DIES IN FRANCE ON PILGRIMAGE Mrs. Grace W. Kinsbury of Kansas Succumbs to Uremic Poisoning in Verdun This Morning. Verdun, France, Sept. 12 (A—Mrs. Grace W. Kinsbury of Smith Center, Kansas, died here today. She is the second gold star mother to die in Fragce during the pilgrimages to the graves of war dead. Mrs.« Kinsbury suffered an attack of uremic poisoning Monday. Mrs. Kinsbury, who arrived a week ago, went to Verdun Saturday with others of her group whose sons were buried nearby. Her body will bo taken to America. The only other gold star mother to dile in France was Mrs. Harriet Bates of Portage, Penn., who died August 13, also at Verdun. Peru Scientist Asserts Columbus Record False Hamburg, Germany, Sept. 12 (P— | Prof. Luis Ulloa, director of the Peruvian Nationai Library at Lima, in an addfess at the Americanists’ congress last night said newly dis- covered documents shaw that Chris- topher Columbus visited America once beéfore 1492, the accredited his- torical date of discovery. The professor said that Columbus accompanied Danish Corsairs on a voyage which took them from Ire- land,to Greenland, Labrador, New- foundland and the American con- tinent. Columbus, he declared, was not Genoese ‘but a,Catalonian Corsair. He challenged documents heretofore produced, such as the alleged will of | CoMmbus, as falsifications. EXILED ARGENTINE PRESIDENT GAPTIVE N BOARD GRUISER Tnterior Miistr Says Irgogen Under Arrest and Not fo Be Allowed Freedom PREYIGUS NEWS REPORTS SAID STATUS UNCERTAIN | Buenos Atres in Doubt for Hours Just Where Government Boat Was Taking Aged Leader—One Story That He Was to Be Landed h\‘ Uruguay Denied—Statement Promised on Fate. Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sept. 12 (M —Sanchez Sorondo, minister of the interior, today informed the As- sociated Press that former Presi- dent TIrigoyen is under arrest on board the cruiser Belgrano and has not béen permitted to leave Argen- tina jurisdiction. 5, Th‘1 by the correspondent, ports that Irigoyen would be trans- grano or landed at Montevideo. The minister said the cruiser still {is in Argentine waters, about two hours from La Plata, awaiting or- ders. - The minister spid a bulletin would be issued soon regarding {measures taken in regard to Iri- | goyen and other political prisdmers. Mystery on Whereabouts Buenos Aires, Sept. 12 (A—Mys- tery today surrounded whereabouts of Hipolito Irigoyen, deposed Argen- tine president who vesterday, ill and feeble, was placed board a warship at La Plata presumably destined for | some place of exile. At noon yesterday, it was learned today. the Uruguayan consul cabled his government at Montevideo that the cruiser, General Belgrano, had sailed for Montevideo with the formeer president aboard. Preparations were made in the Uruguayan capital to receive him at 11,. m. (9 p. m., E. S T) last evéning, President Campistiguy del- egating his secretary and other of- ficials to meet him and make him welcome. But the General Belgrano did not reach Montevideo. It was believed here. that after leaving La. Plata it merely anchored in the roads out- side the harbor to await further or- ders, but in the absence of any gov- ernmental word whatsoever this was a matter of speculation. May Head for Europe Another suggestion offered was that perhaps the cruiser would head for Europe, since Irigoyen early yes- terday had told physicians visiting him that he would rather spend his exile in Europe and that thg new president, General Jose Francisco Uriburu, previously had expressed willingness_for him to have his way. Irigoyen was taken from the sev- enth infantry barracks at 11 a. m,, (Contigued on Page Three) WOMAN SPEEDER TRIES T0 RUN DOWN POLICEMAN Wild Operator Steers Car Directly At Officer and Escapes As He Jumps Away _A sedan driven by a girt or wom- ah sped through Broad street about 2:15 o'clock’ this morning. going across the road and onto .the curb as it entered Burritt street, then turning around on Clinton street and returning towards Broad street, again going over the curb. Policeman William F. Sullivan was at Broad and Burritt streets and stepped into the road to stop the sedan, but the driver} apparently determined to get away, steered di- rectly at him and forced him out of the way. As the sedan flashed past | him on Burritt street he caught a l:'limpse of the driver and sounded | his whistle for her to stop, but she ignored the command it she heard | | speed. Policeman Sullivan -caught thé registration Rumber and turned it into, Lieutenant William P. McCue, who was in charge of headquarters. Sergeant P. A. McAvay of the de- | fective bureau took up the investi- ard A. Brophy of 37 Winthrop | street, who safd his son had his au- tomobile early today but was oy his way to Holyoke, Mass., on busihess at 2:15 qiclock. The investigation was being continued this afternoon. Family of 11 Move i Without ever making application to the Polish Investment and Loan Co., owner of a house at 74 Derby s Into House But Neglects to Consult Owner s husband the home and moved in. Gryguc told the police he sought, |out Iskra, who is a salesman, and selected it and disgppeared at a fast rate of | ’ — r4 % interior minister, interviewed | Members of Dr. Gunnar Horn's expedition into the Arctic, where the last denied re- | eamp of the Andree balloon party was discovered, took this picture of the barren wastes near the site and unwittingly photographed a skull believed ferred to a steamer from the Bel- [to be that of the third member of the party, whose skeleton could not be | found. No trace of the third man, | | When the Camera Beat the Eye Average Daily Circulation For Sept. 6th . .. Week Ending 15,077 PRICE THREE CENTS ] v BRISTOL WOMAN BLANES SERUM FOR SON'SDEATH Mrs. Gesrge Hodgkinson Holds Anti-Rabies Inoculation Re- | | | | | | | | | | | Knut Frankel, was reported until the Associated Press enlarged this picture, showing: the clear outline of | | the skull. | hope that this will be the means of sponsible for Tragedy SAYS TREATMENT GIVEN BOY AGAINST HER WISHES Eleven-Year-Old Lad Was Bitten by‘ Dog August Fifth—Robert Gen- genback, His Also Assaulted by Canine, Feels No Il Reader Holds i Companion, Effects—Science Funeral. (Special to the Herald) Bristol, Sept. 12 —Mrs. George | Hodgkinson of Atkins avenue, whose | son, George Hodgkinson, Jr, 11| | vears, died at the Bristol hospital | |of human hydrophobia at 5:35 |o'clock yesterday afternoon, | | | al- | though badly depressed this morn- ing because of her loss, said “I only preventing others from going through what we've gone through.” She blames the administration of anti-rabies serum by physicians as | |the cause of her son's déhth Mrs. Hodgkinson remarked in an OPTINISTIC SPIRIT REPORTED GAINING (End of Depression Seen As Busi- , niess Tarng Upward | Buying Expected to Be Conservative | Manufactyrers Hope End of Dull Period Is At Hand. That the worst of the financial de- pression is over apd conditions will improve in this within a short | time, s the evinion of most ¢7 the | manufacturers in New Britain, ac- cording to a partial survey made by the Herald today. ‘While no local factory réports t receipt of any large orders or any particular quantity of small orders, there is a general feeling of opti- mism which makes business leaders beligve that the brighter side of the dark cloud has been turned and the silver lining «is coming into view. ‘While New Britain factories pro- ducing builders’ hardware will be among the last to get back fo nor- maley due to the fact that hardware generally is the last pugchase on a construction job, more Rctivity has been noted in steel products in gen- eral. Stating that he thought that ex- pectations were more substantial |than were “whistling in the dark” one local 4 manufacturer said: “While we have not noticed any change in conditions, except that they do not seem to be growing any worse, we all feel better than have for some time, and we expect w2 to see things begin to pick up con- | siderably.” - - Another manufacturer reported that although good orders may com: |in one day the -opposite condition is experienced thc following day and there arises some doubt as to how rapidly the change will take place. Everyone agrees that any change (Continuedson Page Two) 'STATE POLICE STOP NOTARY FEE RACKET lExan;iners Authorized to Witness Drivers’ Applications Acting on complaint of First Se- lectman George V. Hamlin, the state gation téday and interviewed Rich- | police department is taking steps to-| stop the practice of installing ne- taries public in places designated for examination of candidates for mo- tor vehicle operators licenses and put an end to their collections from | applicants led (to believe that the |service of these notaries is essential. | | Selectman Hamlin made his pro- |test to the motor vehicle department |and the state police after payving 50 |cents to a notary public who, it is |claimed, has made lucrative returns | | by, signing and | cards passing | Domijan garage | street where lacal candidates for A~ censes are examined. He reported today having been in- sealing application through the former |interview that the serum was inocu- |lated into her boy against her | wishes. She emphatically denounced |attending doctors. INVESTENT TALKS cicset = were delivering newspapers on | Farmington avenue on Tuesday | morning, August 5. The Hodgkin- | son 1ad was bitten on the lip, while | his companion sustained a facial | bite. The latter, except for a slight | cold, was in good health this morn- | | ing. The dog that allegedly bit the | | youngsters was captured and killed Gommitteeman Watd fo Propose New Curse for Pupils ORDERS ARE STILL SPOTTY | and Cautious For Some 'l‘ime—l within the next two or three weeks | on Washington | FAYORS LECTURE SERIES | Board of Education to. Hear Sug- gestion at Meeting Today—Spon- sor Advocates Meeting of Bank- ers and Others. Suggestion that a course in invest- ments be introduced into the pub- lie schools will be made at a meat- ing of the school board this after- | noon by Committeeman Joseph M. | ward. Mr, Ward has discussed the sub- |jéct with Superintendent S. H. | Holmes and the latter is sald to | have agreed that the project would be for the benefit of the children. “New Britainpas an industrial city, | has always prepared as carefully |as possible, for the future of its | children, believing that the majori- |ty of them would be connected in | some way with industry,” Mr. Ward | said this afternoon. “But wbk have | never taught them to i their |money. Thrift is advocated but | nothing has been said on the sub- | ject of investments after the ac- | cumulation of money by thrift. | No Text Books Available “When I suggesteg the introduc- |tion of a course on investments to | Mr. Holmes he agreed with me that |it was deserving of consideration |but he also said that at present there are no books on the subject suitable for the minds of children. t is my idea that the absence of | textbooks could be balanced by a series of lectures to pupils in the high school and in the two upper grades of the junior high schools. “I would like to see a group o men represemtative of the invest- ment world brought together consider the matter. We could have | men from banks and other institu- | on invest- trom project | tions which concentrate | ments and we might gain them {deas on how the fContinued on Page Two) REET BOND ISSUE T0 BE DISPOSED OF Judd Believes Market Is Favorable for Sale of Securities | | | A favorable market having been found for the street pond issue of $105,000 approved by the board of finance and taxation Tuesday, the |sale will be consummated when legal requirements have been met, Chairman W. H. Judd said today. City officials considered sale of the issue or floating of loans against the bonds, but decided in favor of | Chairman | Judd made it known that a deal in | |the former plan when the city's intereSts is now possible. Mayor Quigley has called a spe- cial meeting of the common coun- cil to be held at 7:30 o'clock next Wednesday to approve the action of the finance board and fix the rate of interest and maturity dates on the bonds. This special meeting will a | by Dog Warden Joseph E. Ryan, | who immediately shipped its head to the laboratory of the state de- partment of health, Hartford, where a positive case of rabies was diagnosed. Dr. Benjamin B. Robbins, shealty | officer, took_action immediately in |an effort to have the boys inoculat- |ed, but their parents objected so | strenuously that state health offi- cials were called in. On August 9, four days after the accident, the | boys were given serum by Dr. Rob- | bins, With following treatments in charge of Dr. Paul A. Parks | Neither boy showed effects of | rables until Sunday night when thé Hodgkinson youth was suddenly |overcome by a fever. He recovered | betore morning and went to school, |the opening of the term. Yesterday | morning he became critically 1ll |and a physician was summoned. | The case was termed hydrophobia. | Dr. Millard Knowlton of the state | board \of health visited the city to see what might possibly be dene to | save the boy's. life. l Doctor’s Views | Dr. Robbins took issue with Mrs. | Hodgkinson's statement. attributing the boy's death to the fact that the |serum had been administered too late. The boy's father desired. he said after his son’s sudden death last night, to send him to New York for treatment, but was told that it would be useless by doctors. He re- | plied in answer to a question that | “he didn’t know” whethbr or mnot the serum had caused the death. | Born in Bristol on April 30, 1919, | George had attended the South Sida | school and was a pupil in Miss Grace Hubbell’s fitthMgrade room. He was regarded as a brllliant pu- | pil. and was well liked by his class- | mates. He leaves his parents, a sis ter, Miss Gladys Hodgkinson, and a to (Continued on Page Two) | Trained Horse Resents ‘ | Thief’s Riding Efforts | Detroit, Sept. 12 (»—This town is | no place for horse thieves. Roland | Beruchman found that out when he | | tried to ‘'ride jaway on Hal . | Hal is horse No. 13 of the Detroit mounted. His regular rider, Officer prErTREr S e Andree to Be Buried Beside Mother’s Grave Stockholm, Sept. 12 (A—Salo- mon August Andree, Swedish bal- loonist explorer whose body re. cently was discovered 33 years fter his death, may be buried be- side his mother’s grave at Grenna, Sweden. Shortly before his departure for Spitzbergen to undertake the polar flight which proved his last trip, he stood at the side of his mother's grave and sai “No matter where I may be found after death, I wish to be buried beside my mother.” Mrs. Andree died April 29, 1897, two weeks before Andree's illfated expedition _started for Spitzbergen. WILBUR NEW HEAD ~ OF TRADE SCHOOL Torrington Principal Will Come to This City Soon SUCCERDS E. D. PACKARD Newly Chosen New Britain Director Has Been Active in Religious Life —With Stase Education System for 15 Years. H. H. Wilbur, director of - the state trade school at Torrington. will succeed Everett D. Packard ws di- rector of the New Britain state trade school, who has been transferred to Hartford. Mr. Wilbur plans to move his family to this city within the next week or 10 days. Mr. Packard, who H. H. WILBUR resides in Kensington, will continue to maintain his home in that téwn. Mr. Wilbur has been prominent in public affairs in Torrington. He is a native of Walpole, Mass., where he received his early education. He re- ceived his technical education in the Lowell Institute, connected with the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, and completed a post grad- trical engineering at Lowell Textile school./Later he went to Lynn where he completed a course in mechanical drafting. Prior to his entering the educa- tional field he was connected with (Continued on Page Two) REPUBLICANS 10 BOLT Woman' Says Wet Cannot Possibly Win Election Even if Nominat- ed By His Party. | Amherst, Mass, Sept. 12 (UP)— nomination for United 250,000 republicans will bolt their party rather than elect Eben S. Draper, wet, accord- ing to Mrs. Elizabeth Tilton of Cam- bridge, active drw. Mrs. Tilton spoke before republi- publican States senator | Percy Rose, parked Hal in an alley ‘while he went into a restaurant for a plate of beans. | Along came Beruchman and | climbed into the saddle. He took a| | short ride, mostly up and down, | and Officer Rose found him lying | | on the pavement with Hal standing [over him. At Recelving hospital | physicians said Beruchman propably | would recover. It was the first case of attempted horse stealipg recorded here in| many a day. can women at church here last night and declared that a wet democrat was preferable to a wet republican. “Dry women.” she said, “feel that ir would be far less injurious to President Hoover to send a wet democrat to the senate than an an- tagonistic and unsympathetic re- publican. How does Mr. Draper ex- pect to win without a dry vote, which is conceded to be at least 60 per cent of the republican party and which he never can have?" Society Arrives By | Ghostly white in the moonlight, there moved into Narragansett Bay | last night a princely flotilla of pleas- rure craft—schooners, sloops and | power boats—come to carry their lso | OWners out tomorrow to the great- [Mass., Boat at Harbor To Witness Yacht Race Tomorrow Newport, R. I., Sept. 12 (PLA; famous up and down the Atlantic |seaboard. But not only society. | For alonside General | Vanderbilt's Winchester, rode a lit- |tle 38-foot yawl that had been safl- led down from West Falmouth, by a quartet of sunburnt uate course in mechanical and elec- | IF DRAPER 1§ NAMED It William M. Butler loses the re- | the Congregational | Cornelius | POLICE STAY MUM " INMYSTERY CASE: * TWO MEN QUIZZED 1New Britain Residens Turned 5 Over to State At ‘ Night . NELSON AND GONDOLFO REMOYED T0 HARTFORD Efforts to Obtain Statement at Head- | | auarters of Local or Connecticat | Authorities Futile as Lips Ase Closed On Reason For Taking Pair | Into Custody—Report Points to Distilling Plant. Surrounding their movements with a cloak of strict secrecy, the state | police at Hartford are warking on a case of alleged violation of the liquor | 1aw ang yesterday and last night two | local residents were taken into cus- | tody by the local police, who refused | point blank to make known anything { concerning the matter. | Late yesterday afternoon Sergeant | 'T. J. Feeney of the detective bureau | took Nels J. Nelson of 195 Jubilee street into custody and turned him | over to the state police. About mid- | night Detective Sergeant P. J. | O'Mara and Sergeant E. M. Kfely | routed Vincenzo Gondolfo of 27 | Franklin strest out of bed and | brought him to the police station, | where he was held until a state po- liceman called about 1:15 o'clock |this morning and took him to Hart- | ford. Nelson ot Under Arrest All inquiries concerning the ar- rests were referred by the local po- lice to the state police and Lieu- tenant Paul Lavan, in charge of Hartford headquarters, would mot comment. Asked if Nelson had been arrested, he replied negatively. Ask- ed if he had been taken into cus- | tody for questioning he declined to |reply. His attitude in Gondolfo’s | case was the same. “We want noth- | ing said about the matter whatever,” | Licutenant Lavan said. “When the | right time comes we will release a story but not until then.” It was learned from sources in | Hartford and New Britain, how- ever, that another New Britain man | has been sought by the state and local police for the past three weeks or moré in connection with the | case. It is said a liquor fiismlinz plant in Granby or nearby has been | operated by New Britain bootleggers |and the state police are striving to | run them down. Gondolfo Dénies | Gondolfo is said to have denied to | the state police that he was connect- ed with the case in any way. Nel- son, who was a pioneer in the avia- | tion industry two decades or more ago, is said to have worked on the distilling plant as a mechanic, but | whether he had any other connection with it or not could riot be learned today. The local police professed to know nothing of the next move and |it could not be learned whether Nelson and Gondolfo will be for- mally charged and arraigned in | court, or merely held for further questioning. GURTIS WRITES WIFE OF HURRICANE SCENE i Letter Received in Bantam | Gives Vivid Picture | of City | | Bantam, Sept. 12 (#—Charles B. | Curtis, American minister to the | Dominican Republican, in a letter to | his wite, graphically described the damage done last week by the hur- | ricane which swept over Sante Do- mingo. An otherwise tragic recital of | death and ruin is relieved by Min- ister Curtls by several facetious references to the personal discom- | fort forced upon him and his neigh- bors by the hurricane. “I am considered remarkably lucky as T have at least two good ‘su:ts" Mr. Curtis said in his letter, which was written September 4. “Mrs. C. has one dress, Mrs. F. one | dress and M. said he was wearing borrowed clothes.” “ “I have not seen a single street through which a vehicle could pass ——corrugated iron sheets, doors, ma- sonry, etc., are everywhere. To say that 99 per cent of all the hous are badly damaged is conservative. Only the very few flat roofed rein- |forged concrete houses and very old buildings with very thick walls |have remained undamaged. Not a single roof to be secen from here. “There is now (since the hurri- | cane) a view of the ocean from the | front veranda.” On the morning of the hurricane Mrs. Curtis said he had gone home | from his office, “as it had begun to rain hard and blow a bit at 11 a. m. and I had asked Ramierez( le- sation clerk) to lunch. “The wind got stronger and the rain heavier, but the barometer re-' formed by the state police depart- mained exactly where it had been the night before—769 mm (30.28 inches). At about 3 o'clock, after we had seen numerous branches blown from the trees, we saw the roof of the Damiron house next door begin to lift. “Soon the wind was bdwing as I had never seen it blow before and hope never to see it blow again and pieces of corrugated iron began to fll the vacancy caused by the death |€st spectacle that yachting has to |voungsters in dirty white ducks. And of Councilman Adam Ziegler by |Offer. i |about George F. Baker's big white {electing Arno Kerber. . | Past Brenton's Reet lightship they |Viking clustered a score of smaller | [came into the quiet cove that is|boats—little cruisers and sloops, | Newport's Harbor and dropped some of them new, with shinin; i | ‘unchor near the green Shamrock V |black hulls, and some that looke THE WEATHER | | HIGH TIDE—SEPTEMBER 13 | ‘and .the slim white Enterprise. By |as though they had been painted 4 1 | |sunrise nearly 300 beats were ‘m'er many ‘times, - crowded into the narrow inlet, and | And while society gathered aboard more werg coming all the time. |the yachts and in the big houses er:fcly Out> En Throng |along the Clift Walk, other yacht- Society was, there—great namesl and vast fortunes—aboard yachts promised further use of the new enforcement procedure in his cam- Ppaign ‘against violators. The De Brock children will be permitted to remain at their home but will be under the strict super- vision of a probation officer. Should there be further' offenses against the drwlaw in the home, the chil- dren’ will be taken from her, Car- bary told Mrs. De Brock. De Brock was tined $500 and sentenced to six months in jail. 2 street, Frank Iskra moved his fur-|ine jlatter assured him that he |ment that the officers sent to con- niture into the house and lodged his | would not keep his family in the | wife and nine ohildren thete, ac- |house permanently, but would prob- | cording to a complaint to the po- |ably find another home within a few | lice by Frank Gryguc, an officer of | days. | the concern. | Sergeant P. A. McAvay of the de Grygue, upon learning, that the |tective bureau made a report of the | house was occupied, called on Mrs. |case to Prosecuting AttorneytJ. G. | Iskra and demanded to know by |Woods, who held that it was not a what authority the faffily was live [matter for the police and it the ing there, but she gave him no sats|owner of the property wanted isfaction beyond admitting that they | dislodge the family it would be needed a place’ to reside and her |necessary to take ctvil action. (Continued on Page Two) J * ~ * ki New Britain and vicinity: Increasing cloudiness follow- * ed by showers late tonight or Saturday; cooler Saturday. (Standard Time) N. London 12:09 a.m,12:31 p.m. New Haven 1:31a.m,1:53 pm. | | | | | | | | P * *! (Continued on Page Two) (Continued on Page Two)