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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
VOL. XXXIIL ~No. 147. - Metropolitan Long Island, Nassau County, N. Y., SENATE TOVOTE - . DN VETERAN BILL DESPITE HOOVER Roll Call Today Assured As! Leaders Refuse To Admit Defeat In Face Of Opposi-| tion Washington, June warnings of an impending presiden-| tial veto, the senate today approached | w vote on the world war veterans com- pensation bill with its sponsors con-| - fident of enough votes for passage. Administration _ leaders, - however,) declined to admit defeat and pinned] their hopes of enacting a measure suitable to President Hoover upon a substitute plan prepared by Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, Roll Call Assured A roll call today on the pending measure was assured by an unanimous consent agreement entered into last, week. It had already been passed by the house and with the senate vol- | Ing its approval, it would go to con- ference as it was considerably modi- fed by the senate committee, In - vigorous - fashion, | President Hoover set forth his objections to the bill in a letter to Senator Watson, the Republican leader, . which was iven out at the white house for pub The Queen and her compunions for the fight. ication today. staff; Miss Ruth Darling, chaperon; Miss Dorothea Maisch, Queen of the Carniv He criticised the measure as \UD-/the plane. bund,\ and opposed to the best in- terests of the veterans themselves. He warned that its enactment would ® L U .% Flying Conditions Ideal al year is to be avoided. mseal y Bill Is: Criticised Communications from Secretary “Queen Leaves By Plane Mellon, dealing with the measure's “reed Gn the budget, and from Direc- too' -For Atlantic City Outing were attached to . the President's ctter \4 a (s & . hunts: \W the beanmce Dorothea Maisch Flies From Scene Of Long o Popular Resort; Trip And Vacation Sponsored By July 1 to the utmost limit of our possible receipts, and have even in- curred a probable deficit principally for - the - relief a; mfmployirrlarcn hrough expansion of public consifu6- % :lon,\‘Mr lIzmovex' said. \Every addi- Renew tional dollar of expenditure means an mdditional dollar in taxes, This is ho time to increase the tax burden of \ay that such | Atfantic fl'u'fim‘fi: Island Triumphs with our people were the needs Of OUT) with Miss Maisch and her chaperon: veterans the issue and were we deal- \Atlantic City, N. J, June 23, 11:16 a. m. . Ing with sound . measures but as \W. Lane Dily, secretary Atlantic City chamber of commerce and General Hines presents, there ©t€/ A, Conrad Ekholm, past president of Affiliated Exchange clubs of New conclusive reasons for Opposing N| Jersey, as reception committees, were at airport here unsound measure which is against the| Maisch, Long Island's most popular girl, and Miss Ruth Darling, her chap- best interests of the veterans them-/eron, when they arrived by plane from Valley Stream, selves and places an unjustified load \They left the airport immediate} upon the taxpayers at a time when|in their honor at the Hotel Traymo (33W effort should be made to lighten it.\ 'The President said the bill WOUld|now away from the scene of her Long Increase expenditures for World WAT|tsland \triumphs for 10 days of rest veterans by $102,000,000 during th¢/ang recreation in the salubrious cli- first year of its operation, With {h¢/mate of the World's Playground. < additional expenditure: totaling $225] A\ wright-Cessna airplane bearing 000,000 in later years. The Present/tne royal party took off from Curtiss expenditure he set at $511,000,000./rieig in Valley Stream at 10:15 o'clock der the bill as passed by the BOU8®/tmis morning, following a farewell To Atlatic Ci By Airp Left to right, Art Eggleston, feature writer of The Review view. Staff Photographer lax—va ,,,,, QUEEN ARRIVES AT ATLANTIC CITY and het garly at fie-“h feld, e morning in the following files-rim, tions would carry \but little Art Eggleston, Review representative, who made the trip in the plane greet Miss Dorothea y after arriving to attend a reception The Queen of the Carnival today runway of the airport, attended by a large group of friends and socially) prominent Centre. Tesidents Rockville In The Royal Plane In the Queen's plane Dorothea Maisch, who was declared Queen of the Carnival for the benefit were Miss @i || 916 «irs parked and \Bud\ Fisher, pilot of ATLANTIG GIMS MAYOR DIES IN Anthony M. Ruffu, Jr., And Executive's Machine The tragic death of Mayor Ruf- fu and his party this morning will cancel plans for Miss Dorothea Maisch, queen of the carnival, to be officially received at Atlantic City. Miss Maisch carried a let- ter of greetings and introduction to Mayor Ruffu from | Mayor Charles E. Richmond of Rock- ville Centre. . --Mayor Anthony M. Ruffu, Jr., and three other persons were killed early today in a grade crossing accident on the Pennsylvania railroad in Absecon The four met death while returning from a party given the mayor, who was recently cleared of charges of using his office for personal gain. An Unguarded Crossing '- were. parked. CROSSING CRASH Three Others Killed Early Today As Train | 'May Latas, Atlantic City, N. J., June 23.-(M)| yop | | 60,800 PERSONS AT STATE PARKS SUNDAY More than 60,800 persons used the recreation facilities at the | seven parks of the Long: Island | cording to an announcement this morning by the park commis- 1 sion || _ The attendances at the various | parks were: | Jones Beach-25,000 attended; { 8,000 went swimming: 3,300 men and 2,500 women used bath hquse - facilities; 4,200 cars were parked. _ Valley Stream park-11,000 at- tended; 8,000-- went swimming; 3,000 used bath house facilities; 700 cars were parked. Belmont Lake-4,000 attended: boats. Hempstead. Lakes-4,000 at- -tended and more than 1,000 .cars | Heckscher State park at Tslip- 8,000 attended; 1,500 used bath Wildwood park, Wading river ~800 attended; 300 went swim- ming; 220 cars were parked Sunken Meadow-8,000 attend- ed; 1,500 used bath houses, and HEAVY TRAFFIG DN car overturned at Sunrise highway the South Nassau Communities hos- Thomas L. Maguire, Brooklyn, injured yesterday, is in critical condition. Taken to the hospital were: Alfred Krulin, Baldwin. Merrick. Frank Belloscririgo, Locust Valley Thomas L. Maguire, Brooklyn. Julius Schweitzer, Astoria. John Travis, Brooklyn. Charles McCarthy, Brooklyn. Charles Russell, Brooklyn. Louis White, Brooklyn. Ernest Bennett, Brooklyn. Others injured were: Mrs. Julia Lutz, Hempstead. Charles H. Mangels, St. Albans. Louls Mangels, St. Albans, Mrs. F. Timmeman, St. Albans. Mrs, Florence Belloscririgo, Locust Valley, , \ Anthony Belloscririgo, Locust Val- ley. Jofn Mamy, Woodhaven. Mary Dill, Brooklyn. Mrs. Gertrude Dugin, Farmingdale. Monday, June 23, 1930. |-state-park- system - vesterday, nc= | 0:5. TMESLEA: ALISON SWAnrs MOON. AUSTRALIA | Two Texans Polish Off English Opponents At Wimbledon' In Rapid Order; M'Auliffe! Loses To Lester 600 cars parked; 1,200 used row- | | | \| houses and 100 cars were parked. 1 | I | | 20 HURT. TOLL OF | Wimbledon, England, June 23-(P)| -The United States got off to a good! start today in. the Wimbledon tennis! championships, Texas taking his first match. from Australian, Wilmer - Allison Edgar Moon, straight «sets, 6-1, 6-3, 6-3. Thus the tournament started with) an upset, Allison's three straight sets eliminating the Australian champion from the tournament in. three-quar- ters of an hour, Leads All The Way The Texan led all the way and opponent with a NASSAU HIGHWAYS 10 Go To Hospitals After Automobile Accidents; Only One, T h o m a s Maguire, Brooklyn, Seriously Injured | polished off his long game. In the first set only the third game. |__ With the count there to one against) § 1 him, in the second set, Moon shamed is service, having the American'at 40-0 and winning from 40-15, but Allison responded to his opponent's spurt and) won his own service. After dropping the next he again| took his own service, and followed by! breaking. through for the second set Moon third set by win- ning the American's seemed to be threatening him with three games to one, scored some spectacular point-win- mers he could not control his length or keep out of the net, fta Allison dropped signs of aggressiveness and The heavy automobile traffic that leomes to Nassau with the summer {season resuited in several accidents with a total of 20 hurt, 10 of whom {were taken to hospitals. Five Brook» lyn residents were hurt when their Merrick, No deaths were reported but service and pital this morning reports that while he five straight games| , won the set 6-4. . H. K. Lester of Great Britain beat the American, Eugene McAuliffe, 6-2, -3, 0-6 and 6-4. rkeley | Gell forces Ohta, Japan, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1, 6-2. Four Escape .~ :2 12 Pages & - - | LEAVES TONIGHT magnons of In CAPTAIN KINGSFORD SMITH towards its. goal, Halt a _ dozen big-hearted (South Fair Tonight And Probably Tuesday; 5163 NOW: ROSTER Slowly but steadily membership In The Review's Four Hundrcg club, an Yoshiro Organization dedicated. to the task ic in % ne ik {of saving the roof that shelters a crippled widow and her aged father PAPC he chased her through the and mother, was climbing today |MOUS®. the police said, Mrs, Pilgrins Shore residents took out memberships In- the club over the week-end, Deat e utO boosting the total that has been giv- 9 % |en to the project to $163. more than 35 per cent, of all that is needed to v. Hoover sald, the increased: ex- Knditure would be $181,000,000 rising r to $400,000,000 a year, Statuary Mellon said a deficit of more than $100,000,000 was in pros- pect for July 1, 1931, and that, if the reduced income tax rate is to be con- tinued, present estimates forecast a dificit of $180,000,000, - These figures, he added, do not take Into considera- jotn experiditures necessitated by the veterans' measure of other. additional legislation, s “tunes objected ' particularly to the istons of the bill extending from 1925 until 1930 the per|1d In which disabilities Incurred mre'to be pre- sumed to have been the result of war- time service. . This provision he said would affect some 100,000 cases and~was \mani- Testly inequitable\ to the many more veterans who could not claim com- pensation under its terms, . ,, 'The question is, he said, whether the nation is going to assume re- sponsibility for disabilities among the four and one-half million veterans ordinary incidents consomme MANIAC SLAYER IN DISGUISE, POLICE SAY Man In! Woman's Clothing Now Being Sought New York, June 23-(P)-A man in woman's clothing was sought today as police began the second week of their search for the mad slayer Of two men in Queens. distributor, Meyer Newmark, recelved be returned document \U J. 4-3-4\ This, the ninth letter purporting to have come from {ife maniac, followed wn alleged announcement Saturday that his mission of deaths was ended and that he was returning to Rusila, Police were uncertain as . to . the authenticity of either letter, The theory that the maniac has donned woman's clothing to elude the police was advanced today after Mark E. Brown, Manhattan, reported that m person at first thought to have been a woman accosted him and his family as they were eating a pienie lunch in Queens yesterday, and maked for m ride to New York. They Invited the \woman' to lunch with them, Brown said, but as their guest look leave, they noticed trousers under the skirt. 's I Today's Index| If - - ~---6 British filer to start tonight . 20 hurt in suto mecidents .... Queen takes off to Atiantle City .. Atantic City mayor killed ,,.... Pour near death in crash ,.... Bay rescued from drowning \400 chub\ grows steadily . Americana win at Wimbledon . Catholle school has graduation News of Freeport party in the Queen's honor on the (Continued on Page Twelve) ELIZABETH PARSONS Village: Clerk Eugene P. Parsons of Hempstead, died 'at her home, 362 Washington street, Hempstead, yes terday morning, from heart discase, following a long iliness, Mrs. Parsons had been a . life-long resident of the village. She was the daughter of the late John H. Alley, who was a prominent business man, and was a member of one of the best known families of the community; and painted both in ofl and water colors, Her work had won many prizes and was often displayed at the Mineola - fair,. A member. of _ St. George's Episcopal church, Mrs. Par- sons had been an active. worker of the parish, even when a semi-invalid. She was head of the former women's exchange 'of Hempstead, -which -was! conducted successfully for many years. Jeaves three daughters, Mrs, Mildred Prebbien of Moore avenue, Hemp» stend, and Miss Evelyn L. and Miss Betty Rose Parsons. She is also sur- vived by her mother, Mrs. Phoebe A Akley of Hempstem afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home. Rev. John 8. Knish}. rector o; fl! ° George's church, will officiate. Bur Meanwhile a Brookly® oin \bo in Greenfield ietery; mw letter threatening his death unless!\ even though only for a week. want to keep in touch with your friends at home. Baldwin commencement .......... Future bright for artist .... Boclety . .+ «Women's page ... Fditoria) Angelo Patri Bunday sermons . A Nice Girl Comea To Tow | \tend to the details, or lation Department. DIES AT HEMPSTEAD Mrs. Elizabeth A. Parsons, wife of Born in Hempstead 55 years ago, Mrs. Parsons was @ talented artist esides her husband, Mrs. Parsons Funoral services will be Wednesday To receive the utmost benefit from your vacation plan it now, and to fully enjoy it, arrange to have Boy Rescued As Drowning Death Looms Richard Siebert, Dives To Bottom Of Canal And Saves Joseph Timm, 11; Also Ovaalimure Bellmore, Just on the verge of being snuffed out, the life of Joseph Timm, 11, of 805 Nassau street, Bellmore, was saved afternoon, when Richard Slebert of 901 Newbridge road, Bell- more, dove to the bottom and pulled the unconscious lad from 15 feet of water--in the-canal-at-the foot -of Ocean-avenue, Bellmore. yesterday Siebert was going swimming, when #!0¢ Was almost upon it. an unidentified person told him a boy, who had been playing on the water's edge, had disgppeared into the canal. the place where the boy last was seen and dove in. He located Timm on the bottom and pull- ed him to the top and ashore. The first precinct, Nassau county lice were notified and Patrolmen clt and Matthew Bach- the lad to the station Here with Dr. C Siebert tan ank God man rush house at Merrick. 8. Carler of Merrick, in attendance, the police with the assistance of the physiclan and Slebert started to work on the. unconscious boy. with an. in- halator, After using almost m tank of ox» ygen and working on the boy for half an hour, he was brought back to con- welousness and apprrently none the worse for \his experi¢nce. he was bundled in blankets and taken .|pital came to a successful close Sat-| Well-Known Short Story Write with the exception of the coronation of the municipal building on Pront However, Emil L. Hansen, Westbury. The other dead were Mrs. Margaret Siracusa, 37, widow of a brother of GAS the mayor's wife and aunt of Assem-| AND BELL BUOY | blyman Anthony J. Siracusa of Atlan- WILL MARK HARBOR tic City, and Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wiley. \Wiley was a bus line inspec-|Present Can Marker To Be tor of Atlantic City, as F The scene of their deaths was on Auxiliary Signal what police said is an vnevarded ~n4 By GEORGE H MANNING unlighted crossing over Mill road. View (Washington Correspondent. of the of the tracks, however, is clear tur a} e mile in either direction. s nat i Alle tle City mt 1:08 a. m., from has agreed to put in a the bodies came more than two hours|Side of Port Jefferson harbor to mark Passengers, many of them suffering|ter marker, and some time ago Ba- to Atlantic City In a relief train sent/look into the situation. of Engineer Hires and Conductor Al-jtold Bacon. It will be maintained ENDS SUCCESSFULLY) navigation in the vichity,\ according nel gas and bell Buoy No.1. MELVILLE D. POST, WRITER, IS DEAD On Closing Day Rockville Centre's four days of car- nival and festivity for the benefit of the South Nassau Communities 'hos- urday night with the largest attend- ance during the entire affair. er Has Relapse Oceanside And Garden City/ Crashes Into It As. onlookers: gazed in mute horror, a four people.sat in a coupe stalled on! 2 The trash tore the mayors au_| Washington, June 24-After railroad tracks at the Carm@n|fever nogn want in her nic\ \*\ tomobile to pieces and tossed one of tiations with Representative Robert/road crossing of the Long Island “Wing/l? 15331?\ bZfifiéegn Lgirt I?“ would the bodies as far as three hundred) { MACON :of Westbury, extending/road, Belimore, vesterdry to see the day when tne public feet. 'The engine was crippled, * long period of time, G. R./with a fast freight bearing down 9@|would have to be called \pon to passengers in the train, due in Adam Putnam, federal commissioner Of|them, but Just in the nick of time I bell the occupants of the on; scrambled said. hia, were shaken. Identificati new gas and buoy on the east/out and escaped unharmed. s Tas tho bours The machine. gs otnerami by M’an' after the tragedy. They were made|Ube arbor. Toliner,. 65 Sch street, Oceansize Tirst througnnpzpen fluttered with| At present there. is a can was going south when It stalled on! clothing hundreds of feet away from|marking the harbor, but there has/the tracks as a west bound train was the wreck. been a widespread demand for a bet-[coming. Finding the car would not start,) from shock and fright. were brought|con. requested the commissioner tothe can buoy will be maintained all year.[« to Putnam. \'The official name of the Drecinet, */ _| Patrolman 'George~ H. Morgan, county arges! endance Turns detectives and an ambulance were L ‘t Attend T Out new buoy will be Port Jeffe rushed to: the scene. FREEPORT MAN, 72, SCALP LACERATED, Every organization In the village\- Clarksburg, W. Va., June | ich. led to} contributed \to making. the opening Melville Davisson Post, 59, well- [NK the, Ciroumstances Wn para e ~ mea | the finding of Charles T. Baldwin, 72, ) the exception of the coronation Entnhmflgxflgg. writes, wd'y‘cl 40 Morton avenue, Freeport, on| {the back porch of. his home shortly | | While riding a horse on June 10 atl mignight last night by his wife. | MWS Of Madura, Kelthan, it was He was suffering from a severe la ceration of the scalp. to a hospital here, Blood transfusions The police were notified by neigh-) procession, - After mobilizing. in front lat his country estate near here, Post] was stricken sudenly and was brought | Improved his condition, but he suf to his home, Slebert was compiimen for his prompt and rescuing the boy. HONOR AWARDS AT fs tak Hempstead Clinton | avenue to the THE NASSAU DAILY REVIEW mailed to you, You will have leisure for reading and you will * Your carrier will at- phone Rockville Centre 1800; then ask for Cireu- curing sdlee w w Rll By Mail - Monthly -75¢ f Ezzegfivs Eileen Mars, 10, of 18 will hold its regular meet- was sent to the tomorrow noon 'in. CiaMor -res.|within, wurnnt, Long Beach rumd, according! County Detective Thomas Bonanza her in|io announcement by accre- masigned to duvestignte the case n PM wan ‘l‘: to i Thome poms sal Tuts avenue, and' South on Post was prolifle contributor to noted. for. sio, y no lor: m: s ries, them was \Uncle Abner\ series, \Walker of the Secret Service.\ Mis wit _ money was for graduation purposes The Oceanside Businese Men's ms-/The marmuder also broke a panel out lof m closet door but took nothing from I | . County detectives today are prob» bors. and Detective Thomas Bonanza fered a relapse last Thursday, Varl- ston high school in. the interest of The line of march was College| CORE Ytifs of the Jpn-mun with com- gig‘tmgme‘tfiz awaiting; \ape Ghandi program. He engaged in place to Village avenue, north to| PMposPNS the Of 63h, |tne scene. Baldwin was tremted nt: America tern The | scene [the station house where five stitches many aP , I Counts Sinn s is | were taken In the wound and then stitute. h t was more than ever determined to mymwmk: ”a. $5,111,232.” continue bull figh despite two him home. flrhfl this season, Incy Prank New Porch Jes of introducing bloodless bull- Furniture . . -. If you need ||Apend this year in Spanish 'rings new pleces for 'the [porch or lawn -and haven't the money Cash for White\ Elephants is the biggest thing the 'little Jomes estimated at from $2,000,000 Want Ada do. to $5,000,000, Byiter was indicted on i be Has 80th Birthday Last week the elderly mother cel- advanced years Is able io ao noth- Just Before Fast Freight/ing toward helping her danshter sup- port the family except by mading In|When she denied having taken the small household lasks An American born woman of good keep the roof over my mead,\ she \Maybe It would hare been beiter if I had died before-tais hap- pened.\~ r ~ life, when she had plenty. she a= ways contributed to such causes her- » self. A few years ago, when her husband was younger and driver . and . three. . Dast°DECTS/employed, they contributed #25 scrambled out and got out of the way Reg gleam ole year, during “mum: from the resort. The train which] The new buoy will be placed in po-a second before the freight bowled th¢/when an especial appeal for funds struck the automobile was In charge|sition in the near future, Putnam|car Into & mass of wreckage. Others in the car beside the driver bert-Sharks:- Hires said ne saw April 1'to December 26 of each Were May and Ruth Tollner and W.|is more infirm than his wite, machine on the tracks when his en-|year, Putnam sald, and the present(E; Stratton of Garden City, The ©D-|does not realize that anything out Digefll-do’f'ge T\? was nggg Mc- lof\ the ordinary is transpiring in the . Placing of the gas and bell buoy|Don@ld of Ronkonkoma an ©on-[lives of the small family group, Com « ductor was Otto Zack of Mortis Patk.\fortably housed and well-cared. for HOSPITAL CARNIVAL will \meet (all 'the requirements 'of|dUCIOt W%8 OMO Zack of Mortis Park, y was. being made, Nassau county police, and (Continued on Page Twelve) ' American stock, never befor: in her life has felt the touch of poverty. € Police reported, Continued Warm: Price Two Cents =z BRITISH FLIER PLANS TAKEOFF TONIGHT IN . TRANS-ATLANTIC HOP , Weather Favorable For Start | As Captain Charles Kings ford-Smith Completes Prep- arations For Long Flight MACHINE GUARDED BY ARMED TROOPS Plane \Southern Cross\ Re- built From Two Formerly Used By Sir Hubert Wilkins, Polar Explorer - Dublin, _ June - 23 -(P Captain Charles Kingsford-Smith, . the - Au- stralian aviator, plans to take off from the Port Marnock runway for his flight to the United States about 5 o'clock tomorrow | morning - (mid- night Monday, E. 8. TJ Captain Kingsford-Smith\has been waiting here for more than two week but has postponed his attempt repeat- edly because of bad wenther some- where over the Atlantic Ocemn At first-he planned to take off from Curragh, where there is a long run- way, but later he chose Port 'Marnoekk for its even longer runway and con- sidered that he thus could take a greater load of fuel and be assured of getting off the ground. The Australian arranged to take the Southern Cross to Port Marnock be- fore darkness fell, ahd the machine will be guarded by troops with fixed bayonets When the start is made civic guards and soldiers will line the long run- way * The Irish wireless society has ar- ranged. to listen in through the flight and will issue bulletins of the pro- gress of the Southern Cross, which is rebuilt machine made of two planes . a {formerly used by Sir Rubert Wilkins, {the polat explorer, ARM SLASHED As | SHE EVADES MATE “Dc““Tfl-MPMJ Woman - Refuses To Save Widow's Humble Home“ Subscribed; Mother| Aithough her left arm was terribly Austin, Texas,] Has Birthday staged a strong finish to defeat A. W. Vinall, England, at 5.7, 6-4, 6-3, 6-1. Gregory Mangin of Newark, N. J., scored another victory for the Ameri-] To Press Charge jout while she was fleeing from her drunken husband, according yo Hemp- stead police, Mrs. Margaret Pilgrim, 28, of 12 Grove street, Hempstead, de- clined to press any charge against ‘hvr spouse Frantically trying to escape her hus- ran blindly Into m glass door. 'The [flesh of her arm was slashed open by [broken glass. Fifty stitches were re- {quired to close the injury. . When police asked her to sign a complaint so they could take action against her husband, she said she had no wish for rested According to the police court, the couple are man and wife under com- H | pay off the delinguent tars which \EVEDe and did not want him ar- Taln a TAS mesace the humble bousshoid. ebrated her 80th birthday. She is MON, 12%. The husband, Peter more than ordinarily metive for a Residents - Leave - Machine | of that age, but due to her |DJbt, under the influence of liquor, [Mendes, came .home late Saturday |the police said, and accused Mrs, Pil- jgtim of taking: $20 belonging to him. {money, he threatened ber and, as she [fied, chased her through the house |until-she collided with the glass door, Patrolman Philip Koski, who was sent to the scene, took the injured (woman to the Professional building, but there were no physicians there. She was then taken to the Nassau hospital, where her arm was sewed up. She remained at the hospital over [night. But she recalled that during her DIVIDEND DECLARE BY LYNBROOK BANK Announcement was made today by the Lynbrook National . Bank: and Trust company that at a, meting of the board of ; directors held . last Thursday a dividend of 3 per cent per The aged father, two. joars. older, share -and- an- extra dividend 'of 4 per He|cent per share was' declared for six ending. June 30. This divi- “10nd is at the rate of 14 per cent | per annum. The declared dividend is pryrble after June to stockholde:. of record June 25, 1090. ' MISSIONARY EXPELLED FOUND ON PORCH (P)-The Rev. Raiph Kelthan, Amer Jean missonary attached to the Christian colony of the . American mission at Madura, has been expelled | from the colony by the mission and also from India by the district mag- aileged, engaged in propaganda c- authorities, Rev. Keithan, It was sald, gave talks to his pupils in the mis- similar. activities. in the theoloml‘ seminary -and teachers' training: in- To conmnu® riontmo Ital, \however accord-| Madrid, June 23-(F)-Baying he . the Brooklyn matador, returned to Madrid today almost recovered , from the alight received. last week. \I am in fine shape And fee! wamlwflinkflfln'mn , buil,\ Pranklin said. The last goring was received at Algeciras, Pranklin ts now negotiating contracts for new performances, He atlll clings to the fights in New York but plans to ®york npiCrep tivities in the opinion of the mtuwn\ s New York, Juna 21-(P-A grandi & . . here a tip that will help louts 'has bem retorned you out,. Think i + + {against: Harold Russell Ryser, 33 aren't there some Aetes .of || year-old partner in (Woody & 'com-| housthoid goods now stored in. || pany, rupt brokerage firm, it. was the basement, the atte Of the \| |charges grand larceny in the Ari de- garage? Remember,. getting | wer grin Y ' | gree. | The firm falled last Thursday with | WwaDC, ; int £1 John 'Yamnac gf gm lolding ., Who \de« mony \r toa lWorld News GondensedT ressestiomrssd | alleges he gave the firm to buy stocks Madura, Madras, India, June 23-| Which were never delivered, GAS TANKS BLAZ Marcus Hook, Pa., June 23-(F)- Fire today caused about $50,000 Git- age In the No. 7 plant of the Sun | Oil-company here. Four tanks, three partly filed with gasoline and one with crude oll were badly damaged and about 15,000 gallons of cil des- troyed. Twenty families in nearby homes {fied. ALLAN HOOVER WORKS New York, June 23-(P)-Allan Hoover. second son of the president, donned overalls today and started to work in: the Bayonne, N. J., plant of the American Radiator compan In bis second year at the Harvard oul of business, Hoover like most 0% his Classmates, is spending the summer learning: the manufacturing business from the ground up. He is being given no special consideration, com- pany officials raid, and ax far as The company ls concerned, is just Ane other college boy trying to get some metical education. y did. not exactly what his salary was, but said ¥ was not very large. TO RROADCAST FIGHT New York, June tene round heavyweight fight between God- frey und Carners at Philadelphia to- might will be brosdcast by m to-const metwork of the Columbia broadcasting system. 'The bromdcmat will open at 9 p, m. and close M6 #:45, with Ted Musing at the micor» phone, The station list follows WABC, Waxx WEAN wNAG, WBZ, Wixat wWOOA, WMAL, WHP WIA WLBW WMAK TX wKRO wonP, WPBM. WMAL X, KOH. KMBC, WICN, woco iw, wOL, WEED, WMT, WTAR, WDBJ, WiRq, WHIP. WDOB, WLAC, KLRA, WLZ, WY1, WKPU, KOL, WNAX, WDAY.