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THOMAS':£~ WALKElf:-WltE.:
SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL AD
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To Speak on &filtolerance in Citizeri.s
Cla.s.s Day Exercises---ls Employed,
tori.al Department of Enterprise.

Thomas E. Walker.
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spent most of ,his time llere ·since
except when he worked in Boston
was traveling. He is ,a meinher ':.Ot
Brockton Lodge of Elk~. .. ·.
. ·'

Thomas E. ·vvalltc:;r, .. 7 Goddard
ro~l, this city, -cmj)loyed in _the

:or

s

editorial department· cf. the Enter-

pr~e~ - will deliver· t~e :salutat~1-y
add~ss at the class day exercises
The graduation exercises will be
of Suffolk Law .School 'in :Boston
held Tuesday evening with Senafor
Tuesday afternoori, .June 17. He : Simeon D. Fess of Ohio as:the orawiU speak on the subject, "Intor.
' ·
tol_erance in Citizenship:"

SIX WILL GET
DEGREES FROM
SUFFOLK LAW
_ _ _,e__ _

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Walker Will Deliver
Salutatory.

Mr. Walker maintained throughout his four-year cour·se in law a
gen~r-~l ayerage of 88 1-4 per cent
He was awarded a number of scholarships and ·prizes. In the freshman
year he stood second in general average for all studies Because of his
scholarship up to the close of the
third year he was awarded a special prize. One of the most coveted
honors which he attained was highest general average for the course l:n
constitutioilal law, With a mark of
94 5, one of the highest since the
founding of the school. 'The course
in constitutional IaW is considered
one · of the , most difficult of the
many. branches of law.
Fenner. Court. Reporter.
A ntimber of yeai·s ago M1~.. Walker ,
,va::; a net;.rspaper reporte-r covering
courts, and it was then that he first
became interested in ·the law as a
study. The press of work in those
days did not permit of ·much time
for books Later he entered the ad- ·
vertising department of the Geo. E
Keith company, and in·a few months
was transferred to the company's
traveling sales staff. He -traveled fot
several years, but gave up. that life
on the death of a brotlier, in order
to remain _in closer touch with -his
mother

A group of six Brockton and
district graduates will be among
the 255 members of the class Of
1930 of the Suffolk Law school
to receive their bachelor of law
degrees at the 21st annual commencement exercises at Tremont
Temple, Boston, to-night. U. S.
Sen. Simeon D. Fess of Ohio will
give the commenCement address,
which will be broadcast from WBZWBZA at 7:30. Degrees will be
conferred
by HonA Thomas
:J.
Boynton, former attorney-general
of Massachusetts and also a trustee, and Gleason L. Archer, dean
of the school.

Thomas Edward Walker, 7 God- ,
dard road, a member of the editorial
staff of the Enterprise, will deliver '
the salutatory address Mr. Walker
has made an exceptional record in
law school. The valedictory address
will b·e given by
Roger
Adams
Stinchfield of Clinton, Me.
In addition ·te> Mr Walker, the
district graduates are Major Cornelius Francis Dineen of 118 Forest
avenue; Edward
Spillane
of 72
Brook street; Raymond Eugene Harvey, South Easton; Frank Fialkow
~toughton; and Robert Latham, Ab~
mgton

(,)

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He

has . served

in

niari;:, _

editorial capacities, including city I
and· managing editorships
· ,- I
He became affiliated with the
editorial department ·of the Boston ,
Herald, where he was . e;mployed for
several years .. While there 'he found
the opportunity .to. t,,ike· .up the sys- :
tematic study of law which he .had
hoped to begin . y<'>ars befor.e, · b_ut i
which circumstances always pre.'."'
vented. Some time; , after . entering I
Suffolk :tavr · School. he left the
Hera1~, bet:a1ise hi~: ~uties _requ~red
nigl1t' work, and joh'l.ed,-the Enter-,
prise 'staff. .

Mt'. Walker was born in Brook-,
field, a sc,n of the late William and
Mary· Walker. He first came. to
Brockton several years ago and has
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BROCKTON MEN (
GIVEN DEGREES: '.
(,,

AT SUFFOLK LA,Wl
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Others
in
NearbyJ
Towns Are Among <:/

Graduates.·

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Six Brock~on and district gra~~ /
ates of Suffolk Law school receiy_~d.\
degrees of bachelor of law. at the 'i
comm~ncement exercises in Tre- /
mont Temple,
Boston,
TU'.esdaY f
night. They were: Thomas E,d- i
ward \Valker, 7 Goddard _;road, . a i
n1cmber of the Enterprise =editorial
staff, who delivered the s'alutatory
add1·ess; Major Cornelius Fra~c\S
Dineen of 118 Forest avenue-; Ed-~
ward Spillane of 72 Brook street;
Raymond Eugene Ha:rto:w, Sou:t-h'
Easton; Frank' FialkoW, Stong'h- \
ton; and Robert Latham, Abingc
ton.

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The afternoon exercises were in
the large theatre in the Suffoik i
Law school building and the even- ,
ing exercises in Tremont . Te!l1pfe.1
Atty Wilmot R. Evans of the board1
nf tr11stPP~ ry,:~<::~.rJ:":'A_

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::Soston )t.z.ws-<r:ltp ::Sur.z.au

::Soston )t~ws-a::ltp Y.,urcu1u

8

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

MASS.

TIMES, WOBURN, MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

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-- t'AG:!f; T:Vi/ELVE.

Law Office Romance
Leads Pair to Altar
--Atty. W. J. MacDonald and Stenographer,
Emma Marie Gies, Are Wed Before
Hundreds at St. Edward''s.

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Dc~la1 i11g that the Police
."
-are a fine boc1
of M1~cllc- J expected to sp,
~l(,,..1.z.ens and that nothin= ~kof upright ,1111ent, at -eve1y

,..'.3"-~,.,. County

_ton P~lice scandal wou1ci' co -e the Bos~/ and his dcfiniti
;1eighbo1~hood, Ass:Ue to D~st I is best conveye
.stant D1s- oreat p
.
I ,net At,orney V\'
:w·
varren L
B" 1
°
resident J
. -Idd1esex County brought .
is l~p c,f hearing at one t
~f ,enthusiasm in a tinieI fort1; Pienty tllot he went to
he members {]f tho .
Y ada, oss to 1, oar W
I
Cl
,._, Wobu- 1 K"
1
cot ro1.v ,
- ub and their guests at
1
I wa111s ,g1 cate.st PI ssidcpt
Hall, Yesterday
e K 0£ C. dc,finition of
: ,
t ~n- tlus

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lVI. LNTR ODUOED BY MAYOR
.
! natio,1, anr! in llic
n.1Bishop ,vas introduced b 1vr - i ~1:; go.ct his fe11o,v J
l: u Ip J
Gallagher Who d
Y
ay or i in the d,es-e1 tecl .
~lf.r Bishop ,vas th; fines'" ;clared thnt / Seas, Where RoT 1.
11c officlal lVho inerited (, cypc of puJJ- i alone
Not·, a ,.JJ
the district attorney~ 1 . promotion to I him vvhat t . d .::.,in
la=I
.
s llp. M:ayp G ,

o o.
o 1er said that he w.,as
" . r
a.- In1ent, he could do .
cornplin1ent becauc:e f
paying the . to do
But tl
. '
OJ
1
" ~ o a Past
. r
ic aay
ice le had ·with l\fr B' I
exper1- inson Crusoe's .· I
a Ve~
.

is lOp Who · I
1 ig
i Y su1cere, and straight' i,
in./ F1 id,ay's began.
I
manner addressed tI
fo1 .var,I Present a
o-,
Suffo]l- L
ie members of tb i
'
P0.1. sons
~
\. ai.v School Alumni, Lo ~1 . ~~ i s~op v.r,here his nei!::
c "8MJo>@J.er-belonged. Tl w.11c, :nghts o£ the neio1,'i
~;d ~:~1ared that his Practice
i i_n the statute
t contact hin1 With tl
. ,, 1'L1easu1c to fol'o
naJ courts tl
,
1e crirni- ' · 1o ,,
J. ,v
th
:
ierefore he was
.
/Jue ~e.:i, Police .and die
e con1pbn1ents With
payu!.; see that th,..
favoritism in the
out any ie·w of
.lu >'ii
is e
district attorney
eyes of the futur;;
_NiOT A POL:i
Mr B1sl
I
1\ir. Bishop returne
. IOp said tlu
ment to Mayor G ll
d
the
compli
. all candor that n
f A1a:_vor Gn1Ja,....h - .a a_gher~ stating th:tt c~1d ,he p}ay .Politics, 1J
rpiend1·,1 an l o e1
.,;vas renderin::r ~ tisan 7Joliticia11 a1•cl
cl unse}fisJ
.
._, c,. 1 .,.
• •
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citJ\ Which
1_ serv1ce to his/ P a.} pcllt1es \Vhen stc
IVice, and f was~ a _credit to public scr- i to administer justioe
f
1 .
or wluch the
. he ncve 1
1.lghly grateful
I\tir
. peop1e ure/ t
r lad a single
! Ly stating that ~ubr,...
?:1s:1op opened/ o e;force la1.vs, to m:
i of roses and the ro I..., I1fe Is not a bed I ~
s~1.er an.J cleaner 1
/ cult
But, he said adt w~s most diffi-/!{]. llvc
Mr Bishop ,
I tions he received
hav compensa- 11ght have a reput.atio
/highest from
b. lat he Prized the I a_nd being meiciful, b1
I f1 iendships rua~u ...be service was the/ s1ona1 crin1ina1, the g,ar
/
· C d1rou 11 it
H
man p
]
.
I that he Vi",~s 2'J d t
o

e s:t·id r ' '
eop e who make
for more ~!1ac,1a
o come to Ylobur11 1/ Who .put a gun in a m-one 1~ea
- mo
tl
. . c.
first one was the f1 ie
s~n, and the I .. re . u::.n gangsters, et
Gallagher, for ,v,h
ndsh1p to Iviay-0r// p~,.entia1 rnurderers and
est e'steem
I-:r· om he has the hlgh- hind prison bars for ,a 101
1
·e
i Pl uud of the Ma stated . .that 11e was/ , Mr B; 1
.,
.s.1op said tlla t h
, one co1npens t· Y01 s friendship nnd / o_f. a purported in.terviev,
I
a 10n that
tl
t1ce of ., ,
;/ could receive in
• .
1e
I,fayor ,i,.,
i...J.10 Supe1 ior Cou
,' Lhe friendships thar~~lc service Tvas.,';hus~tts,_ Judge Dillon.
PRAISED OHLm e made Possible./ udg- Dillon was a spk
, Another
=·F McCAULEY
/ but ho could J1{]t exactl
.
/ speak
reason,
continued
tl ,What ha sa'd if 1 <
Y
!
er, vras the f t
1c/
_
..
10 -vvas 1
~
_ac:. _thp,t~"-'"· to/·lC'Ct!y. Mr Bishop said

/

ATTY. AND MRS. WALTER
A law office romance in which
a brilliant young attorney and his
equally gifted stenographer furthered their courtship and became
engaged so casually that the senior
member of the firin didn't realize
...that Dan Cupid was getting in his
best work brought Atty. Walter J.
MacDonald, son of Angus D. MacDonald, 90 Ellis street, and Miss
,.Emma Marie Gies, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henr:· Gies, 860 North
Montello street, before Rev. Leo A.
.O'Leary on the altar of St. Edward's Roman Catholic church
lHonday afternoon.
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There were h·undreds of relatives
and friends, including Mr. Iv!acDon-

ald's law partner, Judge Herbert C
Thorndike, and other members of the
bar at the church. The sanctuary
was a boweT of floral bouquets, palms
. and . fernery, and the path of the

wedding proces~ion was strewn with
· ose petals.
The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Louise H Gies, and Atty.
MacDonald's brother, George E. MacDonald, was best man
The bride
was stunningly attired in ivory
duchess satin with appliqued net
yoke. Her veil, at least 10 feet Jong,
was of silk net with cap of Irish
point lace caught up with orange
blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the
valley. The only article of jewelry
· worn by the bride was a beautiful
siring of pearls, the gift of the groom
Her maid wore an attractive gown
of peach chiffon and net. ,vitn hat

J.

MacDONALD.

palms and ferns A beautifully decorated wedding cake was cut by the
bride and distributed among the
guests A catered lunch was served.
Atty. and Mrs. MacDonald received
a wealth of gifts from their many
relatives and friends in and about
Brockton. So costly was the array
that police protection was afforded it
during the afternoon and evening.
The bride's gift to her maid was
a white gold wrist watch and the

gromn

presented

his

best

man

i;f r~:~:

,

!
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,

a

wrist watch
Combination nail-file
and comb sets, monogrammed, were .
presented the ushers, who included: i
Bernard MacDonald, cousin of the '
groom: V. Peter Gies and Adolph F.
Gies, brothers· of the bride; Albert ·
F
Trosky, nephew of the bride;
George S. Whelan and Harr,y W
Sherburne
Atty and Mrs MacDonald left late '
in the evening for a motor trip
to Canada and the Great Lakes
They plan to be away two weeks
and upon return, will reside at 90
Ellis street.
,
Atty MacDonald is one of the most
popular and capable of the younger

law

practitioners

in

Brockton

He

is a ·graduate
of
the
Brockton·
grammar and High schools and of
Suffolk L a w ~ Since.· passing
the ~achusetts bar, he has been
a member of the
law
firm
of
Thorndike & MacDonald The other
member of the firm is Judge Herbert· C Thorndi.s:e. Atty. MacDonald

is an active · member of the Cana-

diail _ Club of. Bo§to.n~ I:liv. 1, . .A. .

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Y.,oston :,t~ws-C!lt.p Y.,unGU
8 BosWORTJi STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

TIM.ES, WOBURN, MASS.

\-'

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PRost:curoisPEAKS ~···1r

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COUNTY
1 l'tT THE WOBURN KIWANIS CLUB

Romance
Pair to Altar

ce

V

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t: s:cceed Ii
~

Warren L. Bishop, Candidate

Donald and Stenographer,:
.
Are Wed Before
G ies,
Is at St. Edward:;s.

fl

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Bu~lhneH P~afaes Police. \Vou!d
.,,.
1'1, -:i•
.::'.' 11-.
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C o&u.Jr.H.H8 .i c,.uce .:,c.::.tOO.a

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on Law enfoTcc- i <~
1e:;.,.pected to speak
I n1ent, at -Bvery funct1'6n he attends,/~
I and his dc,finition o:i'. law and libe,1 ty;
I
is best conveyed in the words of u / ~
; in this neighbor'11ood, Assistant Dis- l great President he l1ad the pleasure of
i trict Attorney Warren L Bishop of hearing at one tin10. JWr. Bisl1013 said!
11iddle-sex County brought .forth plenty' tlwt he \.Vent to Tremont Temple to/
of ,enthusiasm in a ti-mely address to 1 licnr Woodro1v Vi.'ilson,
one of the/~
the men1be,rs of the Woburn Ki1ivanis ,g1cutest presidents of the country. Flis I~
Club and tlleii guests at the K of C. 'tlefinition of l:..nv and libc1 ty v,-as fasci- / ~
--· ___ _
.Hall, yesterday.
!nation, and in his \Yonderful voice, he ,f:~···Y~?&:-;'...;::..,,.,:,...,c.~~
D~xlaring that the police of Middl0~
:ex County arc a fine Dody of upright
citizens and that nothing like the Boston police scandal would come to past

8

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1NTRODUOED BY MAYOR
Jmged his fellow men to go with him)=--,=.-c=-=
Mr. Bishop was introduced by Mayor ; in the dese, tecl island in the South the school and 1
Philip J Gailagher, ·who declared tlrn.t I Seas, wher~ : Ro 1Jinson 'CruSio{i lived Ipi.esent cti3trlct c.

Mr. Bishop was the finest type of pu1J- / alone
Not a single s0ul cDuld t::;11, tiring ta Pl iva te
lie official \Yl1o merit.Bd promotion to I him vvhat to do
I--Ie was the gove,rn- / vnlu;;d coui ::c of
the district attorneyship~ IVIayor Gal- 1,ment, he could clo anything he wauted !r::ishop said tllnt
lagher said that Ile ,~as paying the .'1 to do
But the clay Friday c.ame., RolJ~ ~ushno11 ,vill acce
complim.ent because- of a :past experi-; inson Crusoe!.s Tights stopped where · ~
..
ence he had ·with j\,lr. Bishop, who in IFriday's began.
It is the sa1na at J
~5 ll\!.
a' very sincere, and straight f.or 1 vard present, a person's rights come --t~c
1
manner addressed the members of the :stop V..'llcre his neighbor's begin. The 1
Suffolk Law School Alumni, to vvhich; i ight.s of the n-eighbCI s are Pl otectecl
lt'nts or 8t11d~brer··-be.longed. The Ma~;'- '.in the statute books, vd1ich give the
or declared that his practice of Ia.w / E1easure t.o fc,How anrl p1 OYicle fer

I

/!RS. WALTER

J.

:MacDONALD.

,

and ferns. A beautifully deco- ,
in whic!1 \palms
dding cake was cut by the i
,y and his
rated we
. ·buted among the '
.pher furbride and distn
as served.
nd became
ests A catered lunch w
. d :
gu
and Mrs. MacDonald _rece1v~ I
, the senior
in't realize
Atty ith of gifts from therrd mbaO\,?t
.
. his
a wea
f . ds in an
a
tti~al~';,r J.
relatives ang -~~~ly was the array
0
. D MacBrockto1;-.
t ction was afforded ,t
us . , K '
that pollce pro e
cl evening
' and ndss
during the afternoon an
aid was
:hter of :Mr.
The bride's gift to her m d the
860 North
h·te gold wrist watch an
a
L o A
a w i
t d his best man
Rev. e Ed.
groom presen e
b. tion nail-file ,
of St.
wrist watch com in!
med were ,1
olic. church
and comb sets, monoc.r~: inCl~ded: I
presented the ushelrd·s, ;ucin of the
.
rd MacDona ,
, d l h F
, of relatives Berna.
Peter Gies and A o P
.'
Mr. MacDon- groom, v.
. of the bride; Alber~,
,e Herbert C I Gies, brothers hew of the bride' ,
~embers of the
.J,;~lan and HaTTY W.
Che stncpt~~ Sherb1.1rne. M
MacDonald left late
ouqu.e s,
Atty and _,s
motor tnp
, paLh oJ: t~~ in the evemng
aGreat Lakes
,s strewn wi
to canada and
e Y two weeks
Th
plan to be awa
.
t 90
ded bY her sis- an1y upon return, will reside a
:nes, and tr_tty Ellis street.
ld . one of the most
3-eorge E. b
Atty MacDona bl is of, the younger ,
,n The . rl e
opular and capa e
ockton Ee
lred in ,vorl iaw practitioners /n
Brockton .
O
appliqued ne is a graduate
1 and of
.st 10 feet lo';'g, grammar and High _st~~:: passing
l cap of Irish Suffolk L a w ~
e has been
P with orange t11e ~sachusetts bar, h
firm
of
a shower bO.u-. a member of the !~~ The other

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nd 1 m e ,_. h --..,". orndike & the. f,r~tty Judge Her- I,
_f
.
MacDo_n~s MacDonald
;icle oI JeV s . .ember of
00

• ..ert
C Thor:µdike.
t.he Cana-"[' ,an active member o .
1 .A. 0
o,, . .
Club of Bosj;op.~_DW· ' ·-·

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did not contact hin1 ·with the cri,mi-; judges, police and district attorneys to
nal courts, theref-0re he was paying sBe that the la ·w is enforced.
the compliments without any iew of
NOT A POLITICIAN
favor ltism in the eyes of the futur"
lV.Ir. Bishop snld that he could state
di2trict attorney.
in all candor that never in his life
Mr Bishop returned the compli did ,he play politics, never was a par-1
~nent to l\tlayor Ga.Jlaghel', statin_g that tisan politicial1 and nOver cared to
1~layor. Ga1Jagher .vas re1:c1enng _n I play politics vvhen standing in court J
1Eplencl1d and unseI'fish service to lus I to administer justice. Be stated that
c~ty, ·which was a :red it to public scr~ I he ncve1 had a single thought except
vice, and £or w1ucl1 the people are j to -enforce la·,vs. to make the county
highly grateful
1\-lr. Bishop opened r a safer and cleaner vlace in which
1
Mr Bisllop stated that he
1 l,y stating that pu,blic life is not a becl/ to live.

i

I

1of rose_s and the rottd was mDst diffi- n-iight Jiave a reputation for leniency
c_ult.
Bnt, h: said, that co_mpensa-1 and being me,rciful, but the profos1
t1:ws he received _that h~ prized the/ sional criminal, the gangster, holclup-1
i lughest from publlc service was the man
peonle who make armed entTy,
; friendships ;made through it. He s::dd v.tllo' ,put ~ gun in a man's face are
; thnt he vv.as glad to come to Y{oburn more than gangsters, etc. They are
ior more than one reason, and the/ potential murdeJ e::r s and should be beHrst one ,vas the friendship to l\Iayor j hind prison bars for a long term.
Gall8:gher, for ·w-hom he has tll.e high-) Mr :Bishop ·said that he read today
est esteem.
He stated that he \Vas I of a pnrportod irrtei vievr \Vith a Jnsi proud of the 1\.-iayor's friendship 2nd! tice of t.hc Superior C::>tn t of 1V.£ass2i one co1nve_nsat~on tl:fl.~
the . l\.'Iayor 'cliusetts, Judge Dillon.
He declared
1 could
receive 111 puollc service ,vas Judr:e Di11on was a splcncliU judge
'. ihe friendships that he ,made possible ; but vlle could not exactly subscribe to
j PRAISED OH11DF McCAULEY i what he said, if he was repo,ted co~·continned
the, rectly. Mr. Bishop said that he did
[ Another reason,
! speaker,_ v..ras the f~9~ _th..~t_.J.1.,r,,,~:>-tl, _t_Q\ ___,_ --.... 1:-~~-, -.-1. --:. l\,_: ___ -1.--~---Hi_,

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! the C:::unbri<lg8 courthouS8 -in 192~, -, a. l be turned into an armed camp.

1-1e ,
green youth
He had neve,r tried a' .1:ia not belie"'rc the 1a,v had to be encriminal case in his life, and one of, ~:orced ,by the gun and bo1nb
1\1:T

the first men he met and with :whon1 i Bish-op said that
he cultivated a lasting friendship ·was

I. .:vould

such

enforcement

be all right in Slate of Texas

Chief Charles R. McCaul,ey of the Wo- t ;nd shoulc1 not 'be undertalrnn in Massburn Police Department That friend- achusetts, the Jaw and order state He
ship came, ,down through the years, said that the la'\v should be enforced
and will Ias.1: forever, Mr Bishop said, but suggested doing it in an ordB1 ly
:ts he found the local chief one of the fashion~ through safe and sane chan-

fairest m-en lle ever came in contact
,vith.
Tim polic,c of ,Voburn, and in fact,
V!iddlesex County a1e a fine body of
nen. l!erB- and N1ere are a fe.w sore
·pots; an instance of human indiscreion, but nBver with the Boston dis:race revealed in the Garret case be
evealed in Middlesex County, sait1
t1e assistant prosecutor.
,POLICE FRIENDS OF MANKIND
The polic~ ar-e a friBnd of mankind,
me of the· greatest contacts to sociity, the speaker declared.
The police
~efriend the little childTen, hB said,
ind in his daily trip ,f.rom his home in
iVavland to the Cambridge courthouse

nels, and not make every civilian a
police oHicer
Such methods would
be a crying shame of conditions
It
would be an indictment against the

court, and ad1nission of weakness, an
adn1issio11 that the criminal was su~
preme.
MIDDLESEX .AJGA1NST
SUCH METHODS
The history of l\1iddlesex County is
against any such methods. The professional gangsters are in jail fo,r long
terms, the speaker declar,ed.
Tho 1
prosecution of the caTba1 n murda1 ers
brcught the era of g;angdom to a close
in Middlesex County, Mr. Bishop said.
Just p:r io,r to that case, there ·were

1e ~notices the big burly police, o.ffi- fif.ty cases of arin2d robbery in quick I

I

:er leading tL.e childr,en, like a flock succession. Every day, w,hen a D2TJf chick-ens, to safety on the opposite son would pick up a paper, he would
1
;ide of the street.
The kindliness lind a story of a hold-up, but afte, the
,l1us displayed and the encouraging jury found those three men guilty of
:vords inculcates into the young pea- murder in the first degree, aTmed rob,le a wholesbme respect and admira- bery ce,ased in Middlesex County. A
jon for th€ police and the law and c:hange came over night, and Mic1dle,rith such a respect in the heart~ of sex County is now practically fu,e of
:he y-0llng folk,
they can not help this lawlessness.
:;-1 o,ving into law-a,biding
'men and
l\ilr. Bishop said that h!s office triecl
.vo1nen.
!to enforce la ,v at the least expense to
!Ylr. Bishop said that. h~ i"<:! ,,.,.~,,...,hp(l the tax payers. vn1en his chief, District Attorney Bushnell came into office, the budget amounted to $270,000
That was four years ago
A system
of economy ,vas inaugurated to cut
clown this figure. A :syst€m of -exami~
nation and preparation ()f cases befo1·e
, presentation to the g,rand jury was
: taken up, and all private detectives released. ,State and city police officern ·
1vere used to round up cri'minals instead anc1 at the ,end of the year,
$60,000 were turned back to the county
treasurer. The second year, $!20,000
n1ore was cut from the budget and
the next year $50,000 mo,re was ,turned
back making a total of $150,000
saved to the tax })ayer in t11r.ee years
BOLIOE SCHOOL INhUGURAT'ED
During District Attorney ,Bushnell's
regime, a lJOlice school 1vas inaugu- Fr,
rated, which was praised highly by
the speaker. He ,said that the -police Po
officer is a prof€ssioncil per.son and
should be trained like the lawyers and
district atto,rneys.
The school was
taught by noted ·criminologists, and
offered the opportunity for the officers to come to court prepared. M1
Bishop said that in event he ,is ele.cted

I

I

l

district

~;PPl-~r:fz'1"~

:}''01.lld~_§!)ntlnue

J96

~.-----!

::Soston )tews-«:ltp ::Sureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

:Soston -r -oureau
-11.~ws- ...._ ip ...,.

MASS.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS,
ITEM, LYNN, MASS

-------

:m '-o?- a~ venewian- c.:a-rn.1-val, an aquatic display illuminated by
firewo·rks.
A

--

GLOBE-THURSDAY, JU:N

JEAN''~UCHANAN BRIDE
OF S. F. CAULFIELD

SKETCHES OF PROMINENT
·MEN HARVARD HONORED

Miss

daughter

of

and Stephen F Caulfield, 28 Autumn
street, were' united in marriage Sunday
afternoon at 5 o'clock in st. Joseph's
chapel of St Mary's church
Rev.
John J. Watson officiated
The britj.e wore white satin, trimmed
with pearls, and a veil of tulle. She
carried a show~r bouquet Mrs~ Charles
Cody was mat.ron Of honor ana wore I
orchid satin with
h?~t ,tq matc.h
!
carried tea roses.
Charles Cody was
best man.
Following the ceremony a reception :

Judge Michael H. Sullivan, ·who 1,yas genius attracted the profound adnominated . chairn1an of the Boston miration of Secretary of the Treasury
Finance
Commission
when
Calvin :Mellon, who created for him the office
Coolidge was Governor, has been a of Undersecretary of the Treasury.
prominent member of the bench and
When Owen D. YoUng retired as
bar :for many years. He was born in agent general for German reparations,
Granville, Sept 15, 1874, and after be-

Jeall Buchanan,

:Mrs. Jessie Buchanan, 33 Elm streetn

a

(?ilbert, then only 32 years old, was

·s.·hel

was held at the home of the~ bride's
mcther and was attended by more than

I

gu~sts. An entertainment program
was enjoyed and a wedding luncheon
was served
Many beautiful gifts· were
presented to the bridal couple.
Mr. and Mrs Caulfield left later in
the evening on a wedding trip to. Niagara Falls, N. Y.
On their return
they will reside at 69 North Common
street.
The brlde is a graduate of Lynn En~-1
50

I

lish High school and' has been employ;d

in factory third-V, West Lynn works.
General ·Electric Company
Her hus-·band is a graduate of Lynn English
High school and Suffio+lo, It,
sehool.
Ee is employed at the Boston Business

""~t1!E~~~,=m...,."'-""1m,;;mi-._..,..,;,;~;;,.,;,;;;,;;;;;;;~

JUDGE MICHAEL H, SULLIVAN

SEYMOUR PAltKER GILBERT

ing graduated from the local s-choo1s

chosen to succeed him In thiS difficult
:9.,o.ston )tew.s-~h.jp :'$m·,urn
taught for a short time there, and task he .showed positive genius for I
after being graduated from Westfield business, finance and political tact.
8 Bos,...roRTH STREE1
Normal
taught
in
Holyoke
High Today, not quite 38 years of age, he
School.
He studied law at Boston is easily one of the outstanding attor- j
BOSTON
M~ss
University and has been a member of neys and public men of the United
the Massachusetts bar since 1901. Gov States.
Draper appointed him a special justice
of the Dorchester Court.
He was a Public School Association Frederick P. Fish
candidate for the School Committee
WIORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
Frederick P. Fish is a resident of
and served as chairman of the Boston
School Committee. He is a member of Brookline and a we!l-known Bo.siQn"-+~~------12,
the Boston City Club, Chamber of
hlm an honorary degree of doctor of
Commerce, Knights of Columbus and
laws two years ago.
Charitable Irish Society and an honorHe is one of the foremost authorities
ary member of the First Corps of
on insect life and is ·widely known as ............ ~-. -~ .. - -·· ·-~-Cadets. In 1927 he became a profes~
a lecturer. From the lives of insects ~ent st, .from Warren
' sor at Suffolk Law School.
he has drawn lessons op social sci- v; Oak st, Hyde Park,
~ ~ , , , . . J , ,..;
enc-es. Much of his life he has spent
·
Dr Karl ~aylor cOmpton
in New Zealand, in Northern Africa ,-:
re s to Bardwe
and British Guiana.
He came here r-~t, from Atlantic
Dr Karl Taylor Compton recently
from Mihvaukee and has headed the •
; !:iecame president of the Mass&chusetts
Bussey Institute since 1908.
Mrs IC,- - - - I Institute of Technology, succeeding Dr
Wheeler w":s _a_t one time head of. the MTERS RACE
Samuel w. Stratton, who became
vroman's d1v1s1on of the Republican 'RN STA

-r~ ~.:;~

dty committee

'

BLE SEAT

/

ton )tew.s-.X:lip Y.,ureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

OST ON

Y.,o,Ston )tew.s-<l'.ltp Y.,ureau

MASS.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

W GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

ITEM, LYNN, MASS

m OI" a- veneQan. <.;~ru.-rval, an aquatic display illuminated by
firewo·rks.

TH7=:Pt filSTON GLOBE-THURSDAY, JUN

JEAN,~UCHANAN BRIDE
OF S. F. CAULFIELD

SKETCHES OF PROMINENT
·MEN HARVARD HONORED

Miss Jeatl Buchanan, daughter of
Mrs Jessie Buchanan, 33 Elm str~et.,
and Stephen F. Caulfield, 28 Autumn
street, were' united in marriage Sunday
afternoon at 5 o'clock in st Joseph's

chapel of St Mary's
church
Rev.
Watson officia.ted
The bride wore white satin, trimmed
with pearls, and a veil of tulle
She
carried a show~i' bouquet Mrs. Charles
Cody was matron of honor and wore i
orch_id satin with a h?,t ,t0; niatch ·she 1·
~:~1~an~ea roses.
Charles Cody Was

Judge Michael H. Sullivan, ,vho Vi<-as

nominated . chairman

of

the

genius attracted the -profound adBoston miration of Secretary of the Treasury
Calvin

J\1ellon, who created for him the office

Coolidge was Governor, has been a
prominent member of the bench and
bar for many years. He was born in

John J

of Undersecretary of the Treasury.
When Owen D. Young retired as
agent general for German reparations,
~ilbert, then only 32 years old, was

Finance

Commission

when

Granville, Sept 15, 1874, and after be-

I

Following the ceremony a reception
was held at the home of the~ bride~s '
mother and was attended by more than
50 gu~s~s
An entertain!Uent program
was enJoy:ed a~d a wedding lu!lcheon
was served. Many b~a_,utiflll gifts· were
presented to the bridal couple.

·

Mr and Mrs. Caulfield left Ja.ter in
the evening on a wedding_
to Ni-

triP

agara Jilalls, N. Y.
On -their return
they will reside at 69 Nor:th Common
street
The br.ide is a graduate of Lynn En"'lish High school and' has been employ;d
in factory third-V, West Lynn works,
General Electric Company
Her husband is a graduate of Lynn English
High .school and Sufreiklt · t ~ rsehool

~~gJ~~::::)~
JUDGE l\IICBAEL B. SULLIVAN

,i
I

;

I
I
1

SEYMOUR PARKER GILBERT

ing graduated from the local schools ) chosen to succeed him. In thi.S difficult

;~rthtbef~; ;ratu :ledti~~mth~:;t~~ I t~~~n!~
0

Normal
taught
in
Holyoke
High (
School.
He studied law at Boston
University and has been a member of
the Massachusetts bar since 1901. Gov
Draper appointed him a special Justice
of the Dorchester Court.
He. was a Public School ..Associ3:-tion J
candidate for the. School Committee l
and served as chairman of t.he Boston 1
School Committee. He is a member of
the Boston City Club Chamber of
Commerce, Knights of 'columbus and
Charitable Irish Society and an honorary member of the First Corps of
Cadets. In 1927 he became a profcs-

I

I

. .s~~;:~e P::ltiv;ouff:-~fs tfit~

Today. not quite 38 years of age, he
is easily one of the outstanding attor- I
neys and public men of the U n i t e l
States.
--.
Frederick P. Fish _
I
Frederick P. Fish is a. resident of

BOSTON

i\L;ss

1

1

I

~efllift
g

Br

I
sor at Su~n;- .,L;;:w_
o_?1.
....
I
D:r Ii:arl Taylor Compton
Karl Taylor Compton recently I
, !Jecame president of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, succeeding Dr I
Samuel W, Stratton, who became

I



·--

a

wel_hk.now~o_,"it__Qn

and nine cornerdd tests:1
the Huds~~' the Harvard-Yale brJ
can claim the intensity ot a d I

,..... . 0 mpared to a

..
free-for-all.

'

if.iIORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, flIASS.

l'1 :~, f ,.; :~;ti~

,/

ue

~.~h-

EU Varsity Hard to Beat
This year, once again, the Harvai
,
Dr
crowd goes to New London with md
hope than confidence as far as ~1
i
varsity is concerned. The eighth
er crew, so far all-conquering loo
chairman of the executive committee
too good to be beaten even by ~
of the corporation.
vard crew which has improved V't-stl
1
Before his election, last March, Dr
since arriving at Red Top.
Compton '1vas head of the Princeton
Leader has lost only one r~e
: department of physics. He was born
Harvard-only four in all since cc
in Wooster, 0, Sept 14, 1887, the son!
~- ing to Yale-and with a veteran stro~~
of Elias Compt(?n, a Pre:::;~yterian min- :
; o~e of the finest in the land, and wi
ister and dean emeritus, acting presi- J
eight men who have had the a
Cent and philosophy professor in the
va~tag':l of rowing together wltho 1
coll!ege at Woester.
f~1Aftprs 1nce the season started bac:
11 , once again should be ~ Wl
One broth_ er, Dr
ilson M. Compton, is secretary and manager of the
ner.
National Lt;mber Manufacturers'
The Crimson, defeated by four er V,
sbciation, while another, Arthur H.
and victor over two, has im rovea.e
Compton, is professor of physics in
~ the record made last year b: the 1 0;
the University of Chicago and was
of. the Ed Brown-coached ei 1..;~
awarded the Nobel physics prize in l
Still, when Harvard arrived at
!
1927. A sister, Mrs Charles Herbert . pa Top, pretty much disorganized as
to j re~ult of various uncertainties t.tj

·,
L. Crimson chances against Yale did nil
1 cei l_ook much brighter than they ha~'
,
j an for the past two years, when the Bl
parades out of the Thp.rt

I

i.e
H~

I
As-1

j

1

I .

1

w_

I

I

gR

i

1

;He:~~:.

i

\., in

Since coming to Red Top

howeveJ

-. _L~1: .b~f~.~~~a~~~:.i~i:~ ~-1!~}:!!~ ~~~_:t~
---

----~~-----~-

'

x_;:-,.--'i"""----~

WILLIA S ENTERS RACE
FOR BARNSTABLE SEAT
WEST DENNIS, ,June 24--Percy F
Williams, long a . teacher in the Fes:
sender sc~ool at West Newton and for
the last nine yearS a mel71ber of the
Massachu~etts bar, announced today
that_ he will be a candidate for the Repubh9an nomination for representative
/ in the G~neral Court .from the second
J Barnstable <J.istrlct.
. Capt Francis H .. Perry of Brewster
1s the R:presentative and seeks to
succee!=1, ·~1:11:5e~f. Besides Capt Perry
W1lhams, Chairman Frank H
I.· and Mr ot: the Provincetown SeleCtme~
Ba~net_t
aIJ.~ ?ershom D. Hall of Harwich, are
Sears of Dennis
/ candidates. Dean
has also. announced his c'andidacy
Mr. Williams is a graduate of c'olby
J ~nd Suffolk . ~ School and has studied at Rffv'a.r"d
He married Miss
Rebecca Baxter of West Dennis They
/ have two children.
·

I
I

s:

pres1ue11cy or tne .amer1.c;
Telephone Company and ../;,..
and Telegraph C
He was president of the latt
,
:!?~ti~e ~911~:.hen he again l ~
He is senior member of the firm 01
Fish, Richardson &. Neave, a di,rector
of the Ne·w England Trust Company,
1 meniber of the corporation of M. I. ~.
' and a,fellow of the American Acaderiiy .
of Arts and Sciences ·
He is also a member of the Union,
St Bo·t.olph, University, Harvard and
Exchange Clubs of Boston, the University, Grolier, Harvard and Eanke1s'
Clubs of New York.
t.he

! Telephone

Dr William Morton Wheeler

'

Prof William Morton 'VVheeler is
dean of the Bussey Institution, the
riR KARL TAYLOR 'COMPTON

Rice, is the "VV"ife of the president of
Ewing College in Allahabad, India
Dr Compton is the. holder of many
deg1.ees, his first being a bachelor of
philosophy in Wooster:, in'1908. In the
1:Vorld War he was aeronautical engineer in the Signal Corps and later associate scientific attache to the American Embassy in Paris. He is married
and the father of three children.

\

r1

---------------- •

have ~een scarcely less important than
his first great feat at Kill Devil Hill.

!!~!f:gfl~~s~iit~o~~fy ~~sti;o 1:::::~
·

REV HENRY B. WASHBURN
After a brief period as an assistant i tory.

at St John's Cb,,rch, .Provi{len~e. and I
10 years as rr' 1-0r (?f St Mark's in I

~

i
~~ew~:;o C~~~ !

W,orcester, he was called to the theo-

~~;~ala!c~~~~et~~;9~1
mission, and he was later made sec1e- I
tary of the Army and Navy Commis~ 1
sion. He was made dean of the Epis- i
copal Theological School in 1920.
I
J Orville Wright

I

On Dec 17, 1903, at Kill Devil Hill, !
North Carolina, Orville Wright sat in I
a crude airplane, turned a few levers ]
and switches and then left the ground !
for a flight of one minute in the firi,,t
successful heavier-t};lan-air flying 1nachine
He reached a height of 900 feet.
~:~:~ ~~~nehi~or}!rt~~em w~i: :::ti:esJ;
When the world_..heard of this it gasped
before he ever left college.
·
in amazement and increduility.
The son of a police chief of Bloom- :
It was said that his elder brother,
field, N J', without financial back- !
Wilbur YVright, was the leading invenground or influential friends, he went
tive genius, but it was certainly Ort.o Rutgers College and was graduated
I ville whose daring spirit led him tc
at the head of his class
At Harva1d
undertake the first perilous flight
Law School he was graduated cum
Since that time Orville Wright and
Iaude in 1915. In New York city he
~ilbur Wright have been regarded as
became associated with the law firm
of Cravath & Hender.son.
the real foundt:!rs of the science of
Unable to enlist in the army in the
aeronautics. Wilbur died in 1912, but
World War because of a physical disOrville, lean, tactiturn Yankee, has
WILLIAM 1\LORTON WHEELER
ability, he beca1ne legal counsel in
devoted his entire life for the past
ORVILLE WRIGHT
ce:nne-ction ·with the Treasury's war school of applied biology at Harvard. three decades to the advancement of
loan operations. After, the war, hi3 The University of California awarded aviation.
Many of his achievements
His title, "The First Man to Fly,
has been recognized by high honor
bestowed upon him by more than o,n
Government.
S. Pri.rker Gilbert Jr
S. Parker Gilbert Jr has had one
of the
most amazingly successful .
careers of any American of recent :
year.s. He is one of those ·who.se brii- :

HARVARD '05 WATCHING BALL GAME

HARVARD

'05 CLASS WATCHED

THE ROUT OF ELIS FROM BEHIND THE YALE BENCH

J
. lr~iiisto~ ~ews-<Clq, )?,ureou

f~' ,·.

:S.ostort )l:~ws-'1:lip ::Sureau

8. BOSWORTH STRSET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BosTON//,t.

MA&S.

BOSTON

~~-<---"'t_,.
,_h,c;,._;

MASS

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

t,:;.


,.

t.
of,

F

FIVE ftESER\lEMEN ARE NAMED ;{6BY POLICE COM'R SWEEZEY
-

· - !I ffll!
f
~ .• e~ c~e y.

i"'ffl' !th

war

years.

'~!n~:'\:~~~~i~~·appointees named by
~af~~:;~ :~t';,t~
the week. The

I

Com Sweezey on recommendation of the
captain are:

Wm J Butler, 74 Russel! st.
Geo Talnsh, .172 Sylvan st.
'- · James 'J Nugent, 41 Presley st.
· Julius J Cuenln 2nd, 408 Medford
st. .
Cornelius H Buckley, 213 West st.
William .J. Butler
Reserveman Butler is 34 ;i,ears of age
and Is a native of Cambridge. He was
educated in Mechanics Arts High school
and went one year to Suffolk law
school. He has lived hete El!ifl!I! J~!hs
I
I ! f rn Medford, tho for some
time prior to his settling in Medford
he lived h.ere. He. Is a chauffeur for
the Hood Rubber Co.
Mr Butler was in the. Artillery during
the Vl[orld War and was in France for
18 .months. He Is a member of Allston
Council K of C, He is married and
has a wife.
·
George !l'.ainsh
. Reserveman ·Tainsh Is a native of
Malden and aged 29. He ls a brother
of Traf+ic Officer James Tainsh. He Js
em.ployed by Brink's express which
transports money from business houses
to the banks, under armed guard. He
was In the Navy during the world

Recentl:v
l\,Ir.

1dn

l\,Irs.

Charles

announcing

of

Hilda

their

Larnken

Lan1engage-

the

daughter,
to

Jacob

Miss
Sha.)r,-

n1an, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shactl"Han, of -Brighton, formerly
of
th.is ca:.v.
::\.liss Lamken 1 is a graduate of

,1

Jam.es J. Nugent

a~d

are

ment

and served overseas for flome\l
He 1s a. member of Mt Vernon~ i

lodge of Masons and the Legion and
:married.

s··w iliiF

l Shachhan~Lamken
Engagement Announced

i

William J Butler, George Tainsh, James J Nugent, Julius J(:
Cuenin 2nd and Cornelius H Buckley Will Be Sworn ln'i
at Once To Fill Vacancies Through' Promotions. Tainsb\/
and Bu.ckley Have Brothers on Force. Two of The Ap..]
pointees Are War Veterans.
-I
,it rol! cal!. this morning the 11-ppolntment of five reservemen was announced

.1111

Classical

1s':

High

school

and

Sim-

1nons college, 19294

Mr.
Shactman,
a
promin-ent
Boston attorney,
~~as graduated
f1cm the Suffoll< La·w school and
is actively identif" r :ii rttto;;reivic and
fraternal circles of Boston
Miss Lan1ken
will become a
bride on Sept. 10.

J
,

Reserveman NUgent 1s a. native -01!
Na.Iden and Is aged 23. He was gr,i.d.
uated from Malden High and. played
center on Its football team. He spenu
one year at Boston col!ege. He Is now:
a section hand on the .Medford branch ·
of the B & M .. He is unmarried.
;
Julius J. Cuenln

I

.Reserveman CUenln is the son oi
Mr and Mrs A A Cuenln and Is now a.'
SUl?11ller man for the Metrop0lltan p0lice at the Charles River basin. He
was born In Malden 23 years ago and;,
was educated In the Centre, Maplewood '
Malden High and Malden Commerciai
schools. He played end on the Malden!
High football teams of '23 and '24. He,_
is a member of the Quincy club and !s;
unmarried. He worked at his father's
garage before taking the Metropolitan
polli>e appointment and ·he will remain
on that force until the fall.

:$oston .)tews-'1:lip :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

Cornelius H; Buckley

Cornellus H Buckley 1s a brother ta
the newly appoi:p.ted. regular, Patrolman
John J Buckley, and is the son of Mrs
Mary and the late Cornelius J Buckley, 213 West st.
,
. Reserveman Buckley Is a graduate 0 ~
the Immaculate Conception parochial
school and attended Malden High. He
ls a member of the Shamrock club and
played centre on last year's semi-pre (
championship eleven. He ls a forme~
member of the West Side Boy Scout.!
and was a member of the band.
.He. ls With the Thompson Durfee Co:
Boston, as a chauffeur and celebrated
his 22nd birthday last month. He wa.s

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

v'

- ~ ar: tne Normal
,r school at Castine, Me.
Richard Ashley of South avenue
,e is reported making good improve·
te ment from an extended illness.
;,s
The Bostonians a d t e E.
field t.his evening.

8

-l - - - - - - i 1

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

~~ l'-fu
)f

8

JUN 2 o'!~'.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

~~

f,

n
Mi's. Philip Grushey and her c
t mother, Mrs. Emma .T. Barfy, .at- "
n tended last evening the graduat10n h
d exercises of the Rockland High v
i~ Echool, where special tribute__ was

::So.ston )tew.s-<l:llp :Sureau

EAGLE, LA WREN CE, MASS.

Hanover

MASS.

l- paid to Mrs. Grushey•s son7 Ph1hp, _a

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.I

AT

I

member of the class, who lost his
- life in the fire which destroyed the te
Clapp boarding house on Jan. 1, ~{
19 7
~ leason L. Archer and family, of

gi

Boston_;__nttt ts a'!iJHLd at their sum

Y<

Hif· verywas renderedchildren's evenexcellent
day
program
Sunday

h•
ai

mlft' Some on Stetson road, Church ~~
f:1)"rank V. Dolan, son of Mr. and Mrs.
··J&eph ,Dolan of 12 Centre street, received 0 the degree of Bachelor of Law
·>·\,tq.e~Com:me;n~~eri.t e~Etc~ of the
J s . M,..,.I held :rues.day even'ln :the Tremont temple, Booton.
A
. mber: i)f':relittjves and frien<is Of the
were present.when the de"'.as conferred upon him.
·•Do:i:an is. a· graduate of· st. Mary's
an<'! the . LawreriGe .high
~: ,· He •ranked.. yei,y. high ln his
· ,~c:at'. S.uffolk <ai.id:'".be:'· was prom. .fu th;i activities:: :,it; the schooL
ai:iy. IQcaI MendS ,.vish-' h'.fm success

LeBlanc, son of Mr; and ,
d . :r LeBlanc, 124 Dean<
harles . 250 graduates to re

I

of laws degree 8,1 i
hool commencement ex•
su!folk Law sc , , '" His parents anc
erclSW I
this city attende-:1
other relatives ,from till a. student a, i
Mr. LeBlanC,
p:ssed the b~r ex·.
the Boston
Maine last August. A1
,amtnations.
law office at west·
present he ha.s a.

I

- .0

'l¥f:Jis

s

ns

a~~:ror

s ,,, ,
ceiye &f'e ba

'· :, man

. ·r

l
'I

91~1' ~;~~:~!: ;;:~]t},~,;.,:•~..~ -·· ,

:~e
~!

;brook, Maine. ·--- -·- - - - ~ - - -

l
I

ing in the Methodist church, Church
'\ Hill, under. the direction of the ott1•
cers of the church school.
Due to the petition of Edward <.J.
Bailey of this town and other mo1 tor boat owners, the
.
rail·
ridge over
ver on a recellt Sunday,
0
and stands ready to do the same
whe.never there is occasion.

ti•
H
B

a,
pl

h:
u
e1

I tl

J,

r~;;t~~)ii~~;;.tfr
· 8 BoswoaTa s;.ii'
BOS'.!'.ON

'Y-toston ')?~ws-<!llp 'Y-tur~ou
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

ITEM, WAKEFIELD

MASS.

/

'

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

JUN 25

' wuss:

:c~:

·~ax;:nrNw:nli;i;;m
i

I

~~--~~~..;;;;.;.;.;...___.~~I
~----·--

r_lY_l~...._'o_M_o_n_t_e_l_lo_==-_

___..:]l

EMMA MARIE GIES BRIDE
'-i
OF ATTY.W. J.MacDONALD
··~---~~-~~-~-~~~~~

.
C eremony Performed
at . St. E d w a r d ' s
Church by Rev. Fr.
Leo J. O'Leary.
One of June's prettiest and most
impressive wedding ceremonies was
that performed late Monday afternoon at St. Edward's Roman Catholie church, when Miss Emma Marie
Gies, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Henry Gies, 860 North Montello
street, became the bride of Atty.
Walter J MacDonald, son of Angus
MacDonald, 90 Ellis street. Hundreds of relatives and friends gathered for the rite at the church and
200 or more' guests later greeted
the popular young couple at the
home of the bride's parents.
The. ceremony was r,erf.orme~ by
Rev. Fr. Leo J. O'Leary with the
complete marriage ritual of the
Roman. Catholic church. The sanetuary was a bower of floral bouquets, palms and fernery and the
path ot·the wedding procession was
strewn with rose petals.

The-reception rooms were tastefully
decorated with cut flowers, potted:
r,lants, palms and ferns. A beauti-)
fully decorated wedding cake was
cut by the bride and distributed
among the guests A catered lunch
was served.
Atty. and Mrs. MacDonald received a wealth of gifts from their
many relatives and friends in and
about Brockton. So costly was the
array that police protection was
afforde_d it during the entire afternoon and evening.
The bride''i'-- ft to her maid was
a white go1,i:-· wr
and the
groom presented his best m
wrist watch
Combination nail-file
and comb sets, each monogramed,
were presented the ushers who ineluded: Bernard MacDonald, cousin
of the groom; V. Peter Gies and
Aodlph F. Gies, brothers of the
bride, Albert F. Trosky, nephew of
the bride; George S. Whelan and
Harry W. Sherburne.
Atty. and Mrs. MacDonald left
late in the evening on a motor trip
fo Canada and the Great Lakes.
They 'plan to be away two weeks
and upon return, will reside at 90
Ellis street.

I

BOTH

The bride was attended by her
sister, Miss Louise H. Gies, and Atty' MacDonald's brother, George E.
MacDonald, was best man. The
bride was at!,ired in a gown of ivory
Duchess satfn with appliqued net
Yoke. Her veil, was of silk net
with cap of Irish point lace caug)lt
up with orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of bride
roses and lilies of the valley. The
only article of jewelry worn. by the
bride was a string of pearls, the
gift of the groom.
maid

wore

an

Included amoµg Wakefieldia,ns
who are to follow the legal. pro..:
~ession is V. Ric.Oard Fazio:,. So~'
of, Mr. and Mrs. .Joseph Fazio of
7 . Mclvi~ st, who was tra:,iua.ted.
with thIS year's· class at~n.·_·, .-,
Law- lifhliWI With t,he d e ~ · 11
&? · ~helor. of Laws}
Duri:µg his study, at Suffolk ·:i.J ,
took: an active interest in scho(;l : .
affan-s
·
'
· · ,. , · ·
' ' ·, ~e · ~!"adu.it~
Wa.keiieiii.
H,gh -with the class of 1925 ILU1l
en~red. Suffolk Law the following
year...
.,,
,
His ..g~er, Joseph F>!,2!0, wlisat one .. tune a member of the
Wakefield Police Department. ,

fro;_

KNOWN

Atty. MacDonald is one of the
most popular and capable of the
younger law practitioners in Brockton. He is a graduate of the Brockton Grammar and High schools and
of Suffolk Law school Since passing the Mlt§M!l:81!6!i@tts bar, he has\
been a member of the law firm of I
Thorndike and MacDonald. Atty.'
MacDonald is an active member of
the Canadian Club of Boston, Division 1, A. 0. H , _and the Brockton
Boiler Bake club.
The romance which culminated in
the nuptials Monday afternoon had
is inception in the office where Atty.,

THE ATTENDANTS

Her

WELL

V: RICHARD FAZiO

attractive MacDonald has worked

Y.,oston )l:ct,ws-<!'.llp Y.iurct.ou
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

since be-\

gown of peach chiffon and net with coming a lawyer. Miss Gies for sev-:
hat to match. She carried an arm eral years had been stenogra,Pher!
bouquet of butterfly roses.
in the office and a friendship"~e-,1
The bride's mother who· assisted tween her and Atty MacDonald h
in req~iving wore a gown of blue ripened into affection before many
turquoise. crepe with a corsage bou- of the young people's friends be0 i
quet of gardenias The bride's go- came aware of it. It was not until!
ing away gown was of blue chiffon a month ago that even Atty. Thornand lace with hat and chiffon velvet dike learned of the approaching
coat to match
·
wedding.
The wedding march was playeij Mrs. MacDonald is also a graduby Mrs. Veronica English, organist ate of Brockton schools and is one
at St Edward's church. Prior to of the cleverest court stenographers,
, the procession to the altar, Fred o. in this state. She is a member of'
Hendrick, tenor, sung "O Salutaris" the Twentieth Century Catholic club[
and before the bridal party left the and is one of the few women in'
sanctuary, he sung, , "Panis Angel- Massachusetts to possess the title I
icus."
of ~aster of
t
..

I
I

RECEPTION IS HELD

I

•-

rhrrcerx

MASS.

-~J

Mus.ic at. the reception was provided, . by a three-piece orcheatra.1

1:

-'?'("'1.C·...
1-~f-P:t.c
,j,..;

::Soston '1¢ws-<z:lt.p :Sur¢au

~oston '1ews- <!:llp :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

BOSTON

NEWS, GARDNER, MASS.
""' \.<

JUN e.

~

8 BOSWORTH SrREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

PUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.

,;'i;?.;_t;_,

"'····-

ATLANTIC

,f· ·

HOME NE~$.
-~;1.·{4,··. . ~ ' :t;"'li. ' . ~;
•·....·. . .

Mrs: W. A. Faust of' Walker street
was ,the guest of lier aunt; Mr•; Al 0
frecr'Wiseman of Brook-line, at lunch
in town yesterdaJY.
E. 'I. Shaw of Brooks street, who
is at the Chelsea Naval hospital,
where he under\,feµt an appendix opi _eration
recentll-". is- co·n-valescing
nicely, ~d is expected hqme in a.1
few days'.
I
The only Atlantic boy to graduate
from· the Suffolk Law school this
week was Rob_ert·~ne, son of
Mr and Mrs. F. K. Browne of Clive
stre"lt. On Monday night a number
of hi,s young friends tendered him
a party at "The Iron Kettle"' in Han- J
over. ;
ii

·t·Jtf;:, .. '_a. · dstreet, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs: Gunnar Erickson~
•[fJ'.j)'.tl
fi,•Oscar R: Anderholm, Stewart street,

'
I

~fareispeii~ing a week in New York

t;/'~ity.

.

•.

, ~;;":i •Attorney.. George C. Sweeney wait

f::'Qij~ of

clasS of 81 · al)plic~nts who
to "i>Fiictic;-i;efore the
('.!teire,ai bar!n Massacliusetts at Bostri:p: j;.¢stei'd ay. The class was admit. :tea by Judge James A. Lowell in
el.abor'ate exercises :in the federal I
1
court. There were only three 6ther 1
c~':Udid·ates from this cou';)ty.
a

it·~~re· atlniitt0d

f•

0

I

~oston '1ews-<!:ltp ~ur~au

~oston '1ews-(Uip ::Sureau

8 BOSWORTH STREET

Bos TON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

ifontou N.eurn-C!llip 1Sunau

MASS.

~~-2 r:,i'..'~
...

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

EXPRESS, PORTLAND, MAINE

UmbreJla sho~~t~~et--flo?r

r

'----,,,-1-1-1-----

I REP
I

;~W~stb;ook Lawyer.
!:
:·:·
G!ven Law IDegree j

ReprE:sentative Thomas H~ Carr of

r

~

ASH. CARR
GETS LEGAL DEGREE

ward 11, Roxbury and Jamaica Plain,
was among' those who received the

'Ar.mAJQ.

LeBlanc Receives
' Ho;~°;:.1(From ~uffolk School;
.,:Practicing As Student
.
.Armand o. LeBlanc, Westbrook at-

.

!

I

degree of LLB from Suffolk Law
School. He was one of the most pop ..
ular of his class.
The Representative attended Pud_ley
Grammar SChool 1 English Hi~ School j

'

• to<itleY was one of 250 students 9.L§.uf~.

'

, f-olk ~ h o o J Tuesday e'\_'ien1~ ,

~_e)~'einple,

Boston,

_..a.<.,bachelor, of 1aws degree.

to

receive

Mr.

Le-

' Blanc, while still a student at
th~
, Boston Law School, took the bar ~x~a.mins.tions in Ma·ine last August, anJ.
'.vfa;s.:·among those who were successful
M:r.. LeBianc, a native of New Bedford; Mass , came to
Portland
a:qd
..o,pened an offic'e on Exchange StrBet
!';e~~~1?c. ~pening his Jaw olfice at}
/ Mr. LeBlanc attende~ the pubii,0

1

l

I _schools at _New Bedford, graduating
1

fi'om-~-N<,w--BedfQr_d High _School

'.and from Sacred Heart ACademy

Central Falls. R. I

at

He then attended

Boston University college of busines.s
ttdministra.tion and later the Suffol~

,

Law S'chool.

.

.

By sl)eCial ~permission_ Of -Dean Geal-

·son L- .Archer of Suffolk Law School
Mr, LeBlanc was able to go to Boston
and

take

examinations

itei:lding classes.

without

Notice that 'he

at-

had

[:S'uc~~S5fulJ¥ passed the school exam-

inations making him elllble for

ihe

'.degree this I corh.menc~me~t <?ame
tO'
pill?:. a. .v.eek ago. He resides: .at 323



· · · l3tteet, Westbrook..

;. ,

Rellresenta.tive

and Dean Academy before enter!ng
Suffoik Law School.
In 1926 Repres e n t a ~ C a r r ~ a s a member of
the Suffolk County Apport!onm ..nt:

:~ard. ~e is npw servin~ hl9: four.!P
tear in .th~ H_oU:se of Represe:q.ta~(---~ . .

Representative Thomas H. Carr of
Jamaica Plain, who has just received
his B~chelor of Laws degree from
1' Suffiell; Tarr Sc?oo1.
..

j

~oston )?~ws- '1::lip ~ur~au
I

l

t
'

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

i&nntJu N.ewn-mltp i&urrau

,; ~oston )?ews~ '1::lip ~ureau
8

BOSTON

MASS.

'8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

ENTERPRISE, PEABODY, MASS.
TOWNSMAN, ANDOVER, MASS.
: t.Ji'i

• TRANSCRIPT, DEDHAM, MASS.

2 Saul Marcus, nna-=nu ·secrecary,

--

field, N. H.,....Sunday,
J a&#

.l:tariwwwn

Degl°ee

Miss i,.ifl Barton, fourth grade
teache~1ln~ e Riverdale school took
her pupil's on a bus ride Monday morning to the historical places in Dedham.

Conferred

La';.::'! J,V_,Ter b~ceived Bachelor of
~ ; e s uesday evening at the
graduation exercises of Suffolk L
hnnu:ll I

Max G ··

a

Tremont Temple, Boston

Al'-" .....

Mr. George Groh, son of Mrs. Rose
Groh, of 20 Hillside road graduated
from the Suffolk J,ew school, June 17,
at Tremont 'remple. He was presented
, with a wrist watch and traveling bag
by his friends.

~w.;5,c ool 1n

and Mrs. Michael M.

wyer, son of Mr.

street Both
· Dwyer of Summer
Class of 19{5un! mpen graduated with the
p o 1green is now empl unchard high sch oo1
d b
firm and Dwyer is em ofe
f a Boston law
department of the Arlhi ofed '1:Jhe efficiency

"L

------~

During:j;he moJ:1.ths of Juiy and Aug, ust th
iverdale' .~posit Station will
be ope d
esday afternoons between 2.
and 4.30. A good supply of
books for children will be available
/ including second year books.

Members of both f g ·fn m1 s, Lawrence
exercises.
ami ies attended the

.*

1

BOSTON

8

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

ENTERPRISE, PEABODY, MASS.

--- - - - - - - -

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

ENTERPRISE, PEABODY, MASS.

I

--

Y.,oston )?ews-<thp Y.,ureau

1Gnntnu Nrwn-(!J,lip iGurrau

8 BOSWORTH STREET

~~ii

. Am,J, &ios:
received
dtplo~~ from Su:fiplJ . r:tffi . schogf'
J~ne 17, were. David '!',nd Ee:riii.:tiii,
Gmsburg, sons of Mrs. Ben:~i:ll' I
Sogoloff, formedy of Clement ave;, .
and now ·of Dorchester. David Gins:.:
b~rg was chairman of the music c~m-·
, m.1ttee ;and Bernard Ginsburg led the·
) p1.ocess1on as
class marshal ·'i>avi'ti
1
' will_ b~ remembered as director of the
Jumor Y. M. H. A. for a number· of'
years,. while Bernard is a graduate of'·
Peabody High school, class
·
., ·" ·

--

iinntnu Nrwn-(!J,ltp 1Gurrau

'

ther Ankeles, treasµrer'.:"

;h~*~

1

son of Aubrey G p 1 ' -olgreen,
avenue and Wilfred TgrDen of Washington

··

rs.

MASS.

BULLETIN, NATICK, MASS.

\
)
I

--. -.."'.,~"~

Dgtt;
~
set

- -

.' ...............1

LAW
i
FOR SONIGAN
J oseph J. Soni
best ball player gan, Jr., one of the
Peabody High
e;er to represent
graduates at Suifofk ias among the
Boston last Tuesd o
:'I-FIi>_ school in
gree which perm .~Y ~~ receive his debar examination. '
to take the
ployed as a salesm
f as been em.
Years and lives at a~li~r the past ten
b<;rs many friends in °?· ~e num' ~ill rejoice with h.
this. city who
'..t:te yviJl be a credi;n; o;-h his success.
0
termty.
e legal fra-

:Ce ';'

date will be announced in the papers.
"Everyone is _invited to. come and an
enjoya\i.lEI till.e is promised.

'-I'

u~ *

* *

Samuel Pearl of Dustin st., was
among those who received their diplomas from Suffolk Law school.
C

~

*

e a tended a play Wednesday evening at ·
the United Shoe Clubhouse in Beverly ·
given under the auspices of the
.T ,.,H.,.~' Auxiliary of;the B':'v~.d!

C~_i::;,

__i

i



~~l}K

LOCAtf

-Harry Geol'ge Feld~~~:
of R. & L. Supply. Co., ~s.,a·:
of Suffolk Law School.
*Live'l,ouftry wanted.
lan·ey, Jefferson St., Tel.


, to her school duties at Brookllin¢;.
her period of convalescence £0:iio"
- - ,......._,....._.,._+;n"1'1.

.f!,...-

QTITI,.::J.TI~fl<P.i+.t~

',~~ws-<l:lt.p

~oston :,1¢ws-Q::l~ ~ureau

~~r~'ClU

g

s,:,i3o~w'~RTH STREET
MASS

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

SUN, ATTLEBORO, li'IASS.

MASS.

I

REYNOLDS~SMITH

:/·,

Ls-/}

Receive Diplomas

1

't 'X'ha.t Swa.mipscott was well represented in the leading colleges and

preu:, schools throughout the count.ry during tlhe past year :Is clearly
irho-yvn by the large num(ber o.t local
'boys and girls who are
receiving
4i:Plomas this week and the many

I

,

who

are

from

deiparting

yarious !nst!tut!ons O<f
-th& lai,;est ever,

learning 1s

Y.,oston )?ews-(!:llp Y.,ureau

·:. JSwamp,Scott's representatives trom

8 BOSWORTH STREET

t!ie Massachusetts Institute ot TechBurr111 street, Who received the degree of Bachrelor of Science. He

~

also com·missioned

a

second

1

l!eµtenaDJt o! engineers in th& Otflcers• Reserve grOup. During his

-~--

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

,fJ N 3 0 ',;3 f·

four yea.re at Tech he was a membe-r · ot the Civil Engineering
so-

ciety,
S •.

A

tl).e•,Arch!tectual society, the
E,, and the Archimedes

lUcl,.ard K Ph!lllps, son of Mr. and
.A. M, Phi!Ups, 25 Greenwood

l)
r

'Bachelor of .S.c!,ence fn engineering

-I

at-

.",,.te<i with many olas!! and club
- · t Tech.
Boston Oollege graduate
trom SwamG>.scott was
Dolan, SWamlP'!cott High
who was acUve 1n nume·r·
affa!;.s at Bo&ton College
ckerm.an, son ot Mt. and
li)ll Ackerman, 56 Walker

t el ht h ~ guests attended

Phllotn:~r:;~a;;~::

1

i

a ~e~~ptio: at the
1
Commonwealth avenue, o~ ~ enty-fifth ,
ning to help celebrate
e w
Mrs. i

r::e~:gT~~;;:~~ryof is ~~rn~~d
0

i
the

street,

:Sri hton. They were married at
ca&edral of the Holy Cross in 1905, It ,

which section they had been ,re1:t~: b
for manY years, Mrs. Brennan s
•~

I

::.:;:,_:.,:__________-1


__,,-\

1

!\'

in Boston and a military school in
New York. He is employed as manager of the Me.nsfie!d Lumbei:,f~ _
and is also a student at the~.--).
La'i: s& Jrin Boston. The. young ,1
couple were the recipiEmts of many W
~ifts and ~ngratulations. ·
_ T _1

I

Dr George F. Frazer, being one of the~
fi~t, !f not the first, dentist o! that sec- tion. Entertainment was furnish:~r:J
the guests. Some '()f the guests caDl
distant parts of the country, and durin~
day many gifts and messages o
felicitation -were- reeeived.
Mr and Mrs. Brennan are prominently
identi:fl.ed with manY Catholic societies.
Mr Brenn-an is a Suffolk Law School i
ra:duate, class 01'. •(t(, an!! ror ffl.mi:y,years
~ad an office at 99 State street. Mrs .
Brennan has been well known, in past

~ , the

as g~nted h1s dlplo·ma at
J.aid annll;al commencement ex,is of Thayer Academy in l3ra'f.T1~ (
f' H_& formerly attended Swamp- I ,

r

1

I

j

years, in State Child Welf,are work.
--

-~~

,_

:

~-

at Thayex::, _ he was a ·:rne~ber

ot .th<!'' Student council, captain

:the.

f



Silve~ Wedding Reception
at Philomatheia Club \

· _terr.~~e·, who received the degree of

, }!fh;Ie

,
I,-.·_

1

visii.~~engt~e.1.r sLaY abroa.

'.¥"'·

.c.:,.,·t High, where he participated
·.., football, be.,,ketlball and ba,seba!l.
<H;e WI<\" captain of the football
, -.f!'&11l In !Jjlls senior year, vice presi·c!·ent. -0<! the_ fftudent eouncll and
i,q:l'Sident ot the Dramatic club.

'$

~

Ayr,e~r ofliltM!
C
£0iP'"
Li e;.1. •
.
definitei.lb'~s as to the. places theY 1
..

Ar1o-ch Wentworth EricksOn,
'J..• 9Qn o,t Mr. ""!'d Mrs. A Went•
,Wdr~b Er1Ckson, M·onument avenue,
'Wa~ · &warded several hi•gh medals
'&zj:d ~eceived recognition in English
~~position e.nd other activities at
.Ill~\ I. T. The other Swa,ma;,S-Oott
·e;e,.Presenat!ve at M.
I; T,
was

also

,&.o'wi~fs.

Elizabeth
-rz
U

. ~IuJb.

was

~1'-':

~~~f--&mmonwealtc:O:" a:veri~v.~·s

M.

~~lstratiori. "·i,~B~

MASS.

BOSTON

JtoiogY were Jc,hn Anrdias. son o!
. ;Mr·. and Mrs. Louis Andr!as, 93



t

•tu,dents who received their s11.eep-lli.ktns during the past week. This
year's list of Swampscott boys and
Cirl!I

t

the ~ s t weddin:gs of
, ~rs~mmer season took place in St. :,
John's· church this morning at 8 ·
o'clock when Miss. Hazel' . J~lia , ,
Smith became the bride of William 1
Howard Reynolds of Mansfield. Rev.
Thomas McLean celebrated high
nuptial · mass, and the double ri~g
marriage service was used. Special
music was rendered during the serv- /,
ice. Mrs. Ethel Weimert, sister of 1
the bride was matron of honor and ~
Francis Fox of Mansfield was. best ~
man. The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jaz;nes P. Smith of 291 ·
South Main st., and the m:idegroom,· f
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie.m 1
Reynolds of 25 Rock st., Marisfielc,L ~·
Guests were present. from Providence, Taunton, Mansfield, Boston,
New York and this city. A wedding
breakfast was served at the home of
the bride's parents in South Main
st. after the ceremony, and later the
bride and groom left on an automobile trip to New York, Buffalo a~d
other points ,of interest. They will
reside in Ngrth Main st., Mansfield.
The home was attractively . decorated with cut flowers for the
breakfast and reception .
The bride's gown was of white
creI?e with long· tulle veil caught
. with orange blossoms. and she car: ried a shower bouquet of white ros·es and lilies of the valley. The matron of honor was attired in a dress
of yellow crepe and picture hat and
she carried an arm bouquet of pink
roses.
Both the bride and groom are
well known here and in Mansfield,
Mrs. Reynolds was born in this city
and attended the public schools.
She has been employed at the C. H. !
Eden Co. Mr. Reynolds was b.:-on in
Boston e.nd graduated from schools

local Students

r

,!

of

football t~~ and was a 1:£\,?m·

ber of the basketiball and baseball
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::Sos ton :news- (Clt.p ::Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

The Stevens school held a ptefiic,
the pine grove on Friday which i
closes the school for the·y·ear. Prizes ,.·
from the :Parent Teachers• association were awarded to Evelyn sailey·1
and Muriel Salley for per.feet at- r
tendartce for. the entire year. The
P-T~A. also awarded pi'izes to the,
child who made the greatest im- !
provement in writing during the ,
year. Those receiving these prizes
were: Barbara Bliss gra.de I; Dorothy Waite grade 2, MarJorte Norlund grade. a; a.nd l!lsther Bassett
·grlj,de 4. .
.
The foilowtrtg pupns had perfect
attendance for the month of June:
Esther Bassett, Rae ,Bassett, Anna
Blail', Barbara. Bliss, Charlotte Bliss
Catherine Brousseau, Olive Brous~
·seau, Alma Francis, Eleanor Hyde,
.1uliette Lacae:se, :a:e1en Mon1ga,
Mary Morgan, Beatrice !Q"or!.und,
, Marjorie Norlund, l!lvel;rn Salley,
' Muriel Salles,, Bal'bara smith,
lJorothy Waite, Phyllis. Waite, Eleanor Whatmough, Citlvln Cash, John
Fisk, Wallace
Ha.gar, Lucien
Hemond, Ernest La<;asse, John
Morgan, Ernest Ortelt, l'lenjamin
sailey, _William Vickery and Lawrence Moniga.

m

1'

Maynard o. Witherell of Tremont st. graduates Tuesday from
' Stiftolk Law scru>ol of Boston.
· "l"l!s ug &1£1'"':TU:ne meeting of the
Epworth league was held. in the
J;lil'le grove in the rear ot the church
on Friday evening. To the absence
of the president anti ti.rst vice
}'!resident, the second vice pr.esident
MiS!i aertrttde E. n.ounds took the
chair. li'or the short devotfortal ser~ I
vice "Blessed Assurance'; was sung
followed bY '":t'he Twenty Third
PsMm and the Lord's :t;>rayer in
conciert.. Plans were made for a
lawn party to be held. about the
third week of JU!Y and a cooty
patty. to be held next Friday evens'
ing.' Johrt n.ecord reported that he
would be unable to at.tend Rhochusett Institute to be held at Oak
Bluffs next week and Edith Knott
was put in as an alternate to take
his place. Following .the business
sessron a most enjoyable ti:hle was
spent· arottnd the eamp fire having /'
a' weiner and marshmallow roast.
This \Va.s in ~ at
ES!tiiij
t ; h ~ l l t '°-•
~en.·
· ·· _

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::Soston :news-(!;llp ::Sureau
8

BOSWORTH STREEr

BOSTON

MASS.

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.
Aa,ron ·Burr's myater_!ou§ ~:11:P'I'
.into a>e So11thwest :la th@ ~j'ec£·~;

-·-~

t· - mer-Medfordn Appointed To
Malden Force
One of the five new Teiserve·men

appointed

to

the

Malden police

I

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F

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S6h0ol foi;- · a

J. .
G-u,enin, w,ho is ·:servin~g ais 1a. slim-

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

..

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

year,

: mer re,servem,an ,for ,the Metropolitan
, fo_rce on the Charles iRiver Basin a·nd
will tal<;e . up his Malden duti<es in
the Fall. ·
,....._

I

::So.5ton )tews-(Clt.p )?,ureau

i

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while another ,ha:s been working "in
this eity for some.·<time.
WiUiam J. Butler, 34, was a resic
dent of M,edford Jio,r a number of
yeaJ'S before removing to Malden
three years ago. He is a gradwa,te of
Mechanics Arts High school, attended• Sufi§ 11



:

de.parbmeint is ia,-former Mie,df·Ord man

and has .been a c·hau.ffer for the
Hood Rubber co.
He served in
Fr,a,nce in ,th,e Artille•ry for
18
m•onths and is married.
James J. Nugent, another of the
a·ppoin,tees, is 23, is a Malden High
graduate and former fo,otball star,
spent a y,e,ar at Bost-on Oollege and
has recently been employed as a
section ·ha·nd on the Medford branch
[ of <the Bost·on & Main:e.
The ot'her three appointed are
Geo,rgei Tainsh, a, brother to Patrolm,an James Tainsh ,of the Mald•en
traffic squad; Cornelus H Buckley,
brother to Pat'l'Ol:man John ·J
1a
Buckley who was appointedJx week
a•g,o to :the Malden f,orce · and Julius

~--~-,,,.

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8 BOSWORTH STREET<

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BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

MASS.

NE)VS-TRIBUNE, WALTHAM, MASS.,MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MA:

l

::e,osto.n )tew.s-'1::hp ::SuTeau
BOSTON•

JUN 3 0193S

I

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MAss.

1MINsFIELb lccO!Ei

~ tj0~NS1NCEHl1

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
!

JUt..

.:t!~~~]li
~~--;-1/
Robert H. (Bunny) Ferrick
;.as gra~uated this week from VVal~ I1
am High made a record for
' ·
t attendance that 1>robably p~rJ '/
,er member . of the class can: ,
equal.
Entering scho'ol in
'f;oberts District wlien six years ;~~
! e spe?t the first four years i -i
I [fn':i!~h~~l in that· section and con':
l!and B
IS course at the Newhall:
obligedai::ks Slckhools, _often being,-,
:- •
·
O wa
the .distance from
', ,ihs· horn~ on Hartwell street, abou~
\ dmiles, when the blisses Wer .,
',1 e ayed by storms. Not on!
j
h
he never been absent but h )( hr '
~ o never received a tardy emar El:·_
lnd the only time out of the. r~guk\~ar school sessions was when h
attended the funeral of his grand .
other•. Then he went to schoo~i'i
:>d reg1stel'ed, attended-- th.e serJ:
i o ces a_nd an absent to his . buildin.l!i,, :
returne-d
:
a-..u:f1d
mark. You
errick, youni;;:est of al famijy ~·our cJ~ildren, is son of Mrs. Ethel , . · Ferrick and the late l;{eary F"erhrnk,-llil! father. havipg die·d when:
e was only four year~ of age All
f'?ur children, three boys a;,d a; :
gi:J• have been graduate from-,-,
;High Sch?,ol, the second boy~ I
,laenry, having just received his de~ · 1
gree frolil the $1:kfolk Law School.

. f1f

A :me&lin&t ..in the interest o; Martin
F ite!ley who -wil be a: candidate for
the DeU:ocyatic nomination for the:
:a:.oUse of Represe'Jl.ta.tives from. Ward
11 will be · beld tomorrow night at.
1540 eo11..tmbus av~ Re will ma'ke a.
fo~al ..announcem.ent of bis candida..CY;'
.A. caw.pa.ign c1JIX1Dlittee will be organ.. 1
ized 'Ur Kelley is associated with th& . ;

!

legal. department of at Suffo\lt L!LW ;:
::soston J!ll-\'
evated. and is "'. ,.tudent
-tll&

~I,

Iee

~1.

~ v ,Arthur T. ::SrooltstJM\llf;fl( .e ,
g§tret
ad~
e
T,ls
_nioTn_ing !~ a. ...~ri~p ~-.!!_le _ 'l'~~~:~d

I

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::e,o~ton

ji;;~.([:llp-5S'~~;~;;:-'-,

I

8 BOSWORTH STR~ET
BOSTON
,,/~-

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MASS.
'

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;::e,oston )tews-'1::Hp ::e,ureau
~- ., i

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8 BOSWORTH

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.
D eg ~ g first prize ~nd Helen
r · ··
'.Shep d
"booby". Owing to the
!'thun
·~nn" the ''lawn party"
:found 1:e:f~ in the house where re' i :freshments were served.

,

""' nurma~ ~~~ -otPu-J"!'
the
an of

-

: fortner police, received his degree of
L: L. B. :from the Suff!!Ui..liiiW ~':'11001
on JU:ne 17 at Tremonflemp~. -·Mr.
Wright has successfully passed all reand his friends in Sharon
I ~n~,a,.,,1,,l,<>t.P. hi mon the results of his
.v'.\'ft.~l,.;;:;;::.::::;:;:;.~-study and work.

'1en-

_1

J. Albert Wright, one o:f Sharon's

//

I

'f

SlJFFQLKLAW,§QJ!,<>OL
Boston, MaSS.
The school is one of the most widely
known law schoolsi in America. Stu-'
dents are no longer confined to the
New England states, , but are rece"ived
from practically every state in the
Union as well as from Canada and the
British iSles. The fact that one may
attend either the day or the evening
1

i~asfi';~

'::{!t1~~;n~gufh

'.~:b8c, a~~~,!

,otherwise be un:3.ble to secure a Jeglt"tl ,:
eo.Jlcatlon. Men· who occupy· important '
.positions 'in, their 'ho
- tea
superintendents of . 11
·
cers; druggists, publi

·

' aside ·th.eir

:E><C<Option to the remarks f F
~nck W. Mansfield, :presiden: of r;
to~ssachusetts Bar Assrioiation, w
L d th.e graduating class ot B
t
, aw School yesterday that "it
~as~ become a. xnemb

:~f th

. sa:ehusetts" was

i;
fak°e1n tt; b,

the f~u~t~n~::~:r~kere last night

1

folk La
in ·the

.Jf1uf!~P1

~

:f?.quet of the Su
.Alumni -4,.ssocid!!I!!

Dean GleasonteIL Arch
.
scribed Mr Mansfi~ld'
er, who dt
reopening of the Id q ~~~marks as
0
er we sliall have a:e
.fo of ~·whetll
democracy at th
a:r,,s cracy or ,
:president of thee ~ · haccused th
Associatio
f
.
a.se':1-c usetts Ba
the fact !h~t 1~siicer!ty ill; bewallin1
only fulfill two y ar applicant nee<
high school in or~!!s t~n ban f evenin,e

t

~;~~~f :,n

io ~::er~:

examination as
0
Dean Archer s ·a th t
,

:presented to th!' Le
which would mad
every ba
. .
e l

!

ltast year h•
bill
fot

1
·f snecessary
a ure a

ISChool eJu!.11J~~an~totthhave a high
said. he invited Mr M
fiat ~fme, he

u~.~~ ~ght f~r it."ans eld to come

the

first h:e~~~l'e:aiJ>~~~uf~i1;~r, "ls
ei~cher, offering B."" refuta.tion
bar in thl:g;t;ta\ adrtsslon . to the
declared tha.t · :rt s ni de too easy,
_MassMbuaetts bar
---- ." --- -.~--.------

otn;"h:

·~~~",!'-J~!. ~':,e '

the past 25 years he had reached the
conclusion that the .exaD'.linatiol}!3 of
today a.re much harder than those of
, a quarter of a ,oenturY ago. u,.a.t; mucb
more diffl.C\llt requirements are de..
manded than the time when "Mr
Mansfield and I were admitted to the
baT."

STREET

BOSTON

Dean Archer Replies
Suffolk Alumni Dinnel".

Thomas J. Boynton, president of the
board of trustees of Suffolk, told the
252 members of the 1930 <:la.ss attending_ the alumni dinner, "You. are every
one a free thinker as to the affairs of
this country, as to its laws and as to
what the laws ought to be. In this
ther"° is great hope for the future.
''You haven't been 'tniUed' through
certain ""Prescribed untversity courses,,.
he w,ent on, "beoause capitalists have
so df.ctated itr''
.James H. Brennan; past -president
of the sutrollt alumni. seconded the
sentiments. of the ·other speakers arid
told the graduates. not to let "these

men give you an inferiotjty com.plex."

He pointed out the nu:mero)ls Suffolk
graduates who have won fame 1n theit
profession and said that Suffolk m.en
challenge the gTaduates of any otn.e1.

law ,scb.ool in ability, integrity and
character.R. Spillane of Lowell, pres!·
George
de"nt of the alumni association, waE
, toastmaster.
His greetings to thE
senior-class were respond-ed 1to by thE
class president, Ja:rnes A. Glynn,

Other speakers included ureside~ts oJ
the various Suffolk Law S,chool Alum.n·
groups in ,comniunities throughou

Grea.te-r Boston.

::So.ston )t4tw.s-<Clt.p ::Sun:au

'.:Soston )tews-a:'.ltp ::Sureau

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

WORCESTER

REVIEW, BOSTON, MASS
'

-I

j
i

- :,;o'

Radio~New~
PRO-GRJ\M ljlIGHLIGHTS

11

Senator David I. Walsh will tell listeners of WTAC ,rnd associated I!
stations "How the NeW England Confederation Paved· the Way for a /
NatiOn," in a broadc:'ast this evening at 7.15 o'clock.
['
Senator Walsh will be presented+----

as one of. the speaker_$ in the series
•entitled Heroes and Patriots which
the National Broadcasting company
is broadcasting ·under the_ direction
r.J. 'Dean Gl'eason L. Archer of Suf14-ol~,-Lav..- scli.0·01, no@tbri.
=-- .~'
:!lenator Walsh_ wi_1_1 t. race.the ~!,!hilarities of origin between the .N~w
England Confederation in 1643 ai:id
the confederation of the Thirtfien
Colonies more than a century later.
John Winthrop. of 'the early ~roup.
and Samuel . Adams, of the Revo:
··; lutionary group, will be depicted,
f tog<,ther with their' chief associates
·. in both di" these nationalistic movements.
.
The, Happy Wonder Bakers will
present a new t;'j\e of program
! featuring Frank Bfaqk's Sj_oging
Violinia beginning with the broad; cast at· 9.3·o p.. m. The Singing Violin's is a groµp which simulates the
sound of human voices on the vio- .
!in. Black ls arrangei;.and director
The
instrumentalists
will
play ,
"Allah's Holiday" from Rudolph I
Friml's operetta success of a deSENATOR \VALSH \
caq.e ago, coKatinka.H

______ _
As another feature of the new series there Will be pre'sented each i
"o-.",- ·~;eek a medley of o~d sop.gs by ~ popular composer. The July 1 progran1;
features five I n~!"'.abers by Irving Bei:'~_in, ~ach of ,vhich contributed to I
·h~_stablishment as a mod~rn composer.
.
_
_
_
I

'.:Soston )tews-a:'.ltp ::Sur-eau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

~o.ston )tews-<Clt.p ::Sunau
8

\

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--m . t 2oae

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~ostorr tW is Boston, with a populalOil ~e\;)d at largely) of 776,000.

One of the most inteTesting spea:)
ers and writers of whom I have any
knowledge is Gleason L Archer dean
~f the S~olk• 1'.l!~-§.chool, wh~ bufilt
t P that 111;stitution against odds a1.1d .
who doesn t intend to allow anybQdy
to speak slightingly of the blu h'·
young la
s mg
WJ"ers of today-I ·und-erstand
that some of them do blush-and not
say ~omething about it. On Saturday
President Ma~sfield of the Massachusetts B~r Associatjon, addressing the/
grad_natmg class of the Boston University Law School, said that it was ~
too '.'asy to become a member of the
b~r in Massachusetts. That very evemng, talking to the Suffolk Law
School
Alumni
Association
De n
~rcher accused Mans:fied of insinc:1~~ f'"'.
sty and declared that, when he had
:presented a bill to the L
. 1 t

·
eg1s a nre
w ,c11 would compel every candidate
for_t11e bar to have a high school edu-~atwn, he had invited Mansfield
c~me up and fight for it," bnt he
haa_ h~ard nothing from Mansfield
,unt1~ h1s remark;s to the Boston
vers1ty.,s graduating class.
. That strikes .. me as very fair
ism. I do not know ,vhether it is too
easy to become a lawyer in Massachusetts, but I know that it is too
..easy to remain a la·wyer in Massa,chusetts, and I wonder why it is. I
under~tand that the bar association
,of which Mr Mansfield is the head,
.1s hot~se-cleaning as Mr.. Mansfield's
utterances ·would imp]
M
!:
.
.
Y
1 y
owni:
O?)H11on is that, if annually not more/'t ,1an fifty :per cent of the crooked law-I
y~ers c~uld be removed from competi- r.
tion with honest la"vyers, there would (
fewer complaints of over-crowding[_;
1n the profession
I ',"

F"

?e

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BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

'

z l&eieit-. ltf!ftt~jl'lrt rs~ 1i;.--tl;~-

MASS.

::So.ston )t~ws-a:'.llp ::Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

BULLETIN, NATICK, MASS.

NEWS, SALEM, MASS.
,,H,i'J

3

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BOSTON

MASS.

~~~

MERCURY, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

p,,r,-,;I. ~,-=-"id}
,~ .,..

., . ·.· . · ' . . . .

.

~'.~,,r~~~~~~r%~:~"~r;.•\'S'''";,·,, .·.. , f;)Jt} 'i,·:'<,

~iton.' :,?e~.s-·a::tlp :Sureau
s Boswi>RTB

STREET

I .\

;·1,' :So.ston. )tew.s- <£:lip :Surwu

·

MASS.

LEOMINSTER, MASS.

JUL 3

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

1~

MASS.

:4-

RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.

~,l·
l.

JUL S.

l·l:
'>·

f



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·~

/

I sinee 191'4, i:S vice presid~rit .. and
tr-'ustee of sU::th,lk Lavi School, a
n~erriber of ihffi Xff5@l ~?&II, ~~sa:
. tts ann Boston Bar Assoc,at10n~
c h use
.
state
and has served on 'numerous
a11:,cf natL:,nal co:rnmittees

: j

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.,/"

; :So.ston )le'(;~ilp :Sureau
;,1

'I

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

ADVERTISER, BOSTON, MASS.

~~-j}~ADV~J

FonMfR MAYOR

>\

Ex-Congressman ;J:,seph·F. O'Co~-r
nell of Boston has announced h~sJ;.
cajldldacy
the Democr·atic n?m"Ti
!inatbn for,· the office . of. United,,
stat:)S senator a'hd rhis wee)< opene;i
his campaign in preparati.6n for th!'·
Septclil.ber primaries .1 _ / i; ,
_
The candidate has ser;ved as .. a,
commissioner on unifori:n state lasws
__.
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Y.,oston :,?ew.s-a::llp :Sur¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

~NTERPRISE, BROCKTON,

JUN 2 0

FITZGERALD TO
SPEAKONGHAlN
·W'in Be Heard· Over WEE! in
Patriotic Series on Next
Tuesday Night
Former M!!,yor .John F. Fit,:-:
gera.ld, and now chairman of the
Bo~ton Tercentenary committee,
will
discuJs
··
"Patriots
and

Po<>ts ot New
Englanc_l'' over
WEEI
next
Tuesday, at 7:15

p. H",!· will be the
speaker In ,tp.e
H<1roes and :.~atr9its
s e·r·i,e!I
which is conqu,:ted by Dean .
Gleaso:a -

Arc:n;e,. .

F-0r;m11r Mayor
Fitzi;:11rl!-ld will
tre.!le in panorail}Jo
manner John F. Fitzg~rald
tll1i great con·
tr1butlom;, that Ma,;sachusetts has
:'lnade to the nl!,tion since the A~er·lcan Revolution, The noble <;omPltnY or patriot.s-Otls, Hancock,
S!!-m Adams, .JQl!n Adij.m,s,and t~eir
a~soclates-will lea4 tlie procession
of not11,ble figures to whoqi tril;lute
will be: paid.
.
t)ll' g-<>ld!'n age,. qt A:,per,can
·µri>· when a J;>,,n!@-nt

gt~~

!L\l.

·,.

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I'

~oston )te.w~-<tlq, ~"re.·
8 BosWORTB STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

MASS.·'•

BOSTON

-\-

RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.

TELEGRAM-GAZETTE, WORCESTER

~

"'\ft. "

SUNDAY

L

SECTION D

June 29, 1930.

ASSURES

Elizabeth Lennox to Be Guest
By Senator Walsh on New England
History Also r~ Scheduled
Notables of the conc<art and entel'tainment world, including Elizabeth Lennox, eont.ralto, appear on thia schedule of WTAG .next week.
Speakers are headed by Sen. David I. Walsh. Miss Lennox, and Frank
Lapitino, harpist, are to be presented
guest artists on the Mo.biloil
concert. ..,·,
'

as

0

0

~ll,:'y.

so~ght ~~f xra~io ~~a:'s!
m~:
lected by ~ prominent newspaper as

~::r11!~tfr P:;fJe:ia~i1c:oni:~:lt~e~~
0

beaid ~n many nati9nal progr~ms..
Senator Wal:~ will
tell listene
••How the New England Confede-rati9
Paved the Way tor a Nati9n/" Tuesday
at 715 p. m.
qenator Walsh wm be presented as
one of 1 · e speakers in the series en ..
titled "Heroes and Patriots" which the
National
Broadcasting,· company 1s
broadcasting under the direction of
Dean Gleason f archer of Suffolk T.aw
School, Boston.
will trace the s!m!laritles of origin between the New
England Confederation tn 164$ and the
c :ifederation of the Thirteen Colonies
more tP:,n a. century later. John Winthrop. of the early group, arid Samuel
Adamsr or the Revolutionary group •. :
will he depicted, together with iheiF
chief associates.-,-in botlt. ot these na
tionalistic movements. Thf~gs Few Persot:ts. Kµow
.. I'm patriotic, 0 says Ripley in
broadcast at 7.30, Mon~ay. ''And I'tn
going to celebrate tbe ~urth' .of July
along with everyone else, b~t.
"The De"clar~tlon of lndep~ndenc;:,e_
was not signed on July 4. John Han~
cock was not the author,, MassaChusetts is not a state.· In !a.ct~. th~te.
are only 44 states at t~e J)ies_e~t .~i:qie.
The Liberty Bell is of En.gUsh orJg!u,,
The Britisll still own a, par,t· Qf what
is considered Uni.ted stat.cs son. ,Washington's birthday is. :r...:)t really on,
Feb. 22.
There are spots in ,the
United· states which Volstead did not·
intend to make dry, and :_\vhich ·-heith~r
u s. federal authbrit1es ·uqr the state.
police can legallY raid:' .,

~-=

/ al!ur:: i~e J~~:::;,5
~?/eft~1:Y r~\~

. act_o:f "fhO is ~'le!id~.., of.'..,the bi:tp.~, to
piay ,- - song .. from.~ wliic.h t~e, word
~~i~l~"
origin.~

.ces-t', · ,,._

had -Its.

!~s!~!.1.";~~
,~.

~NDAY

TELEGRAM

~b~;-=-=---=~=--=--===-___::____::__::::~~_:_~~==~~~~:::::=

i.1rl ASSURES INTERESTING WEEK ON

-;u,.a.-vey
- ~..~ -.. ,,-...:.. __ 7
p; n
0
_othw_. clul;>: ,7.30. n. r

- _.....,..,wes• _Family; 8.30 p:..;_.ni.,
Saiit:,orn; 9 p. m., Dav.J.d l
9.15 -P, m.., -Rand311- Broadcast
ers; 9.45· p .. m, In the Ti~e
10 15 p
ro , : Studebaker Cl
10 45 p. ro , news.

Monday: 8 so a

m. Chee

ro., Organ; 9 30 a. m · Radio
9 45 a, m., Musicale; 10 15 a.
Sammy; 10 30 a m., Shutins;
Musicale; 11.15 a. m., Radio l
Institute;
11.30, Town 'l;'"al
Own Polly and Prue; 11.45 a
nassus Trio; 12 m., Regular :
grams; 5.55 p. m ... News; 6 p.
ball scores; 6.03 p. m, Dinn
6 30 p. m., "TJ;l.e Steel Trap
by Councilman F. H .. Washb
p. m ... U~le Abe and David;
Wor~ster Powers Coke_ Co ; '
Tastyeast Jesters; 7 30 p. m
Beacon Lights; 8 p. m , A
in .the Nation's Capitol; 8.30
& P. Gypsies; 9.30 p. m .• GE
tors: 10 p. m., Ovaltine
Dreams; 10.30 p. m., Sign of
11 p m , News;
11 10 p. 1
Tuesday: a.so' a. m., Cheei
gan; 9.30, Letty Marvel fash
9 45, Radio Caleµdar; 10. Mu~
lines; 11, Aunt S?,mmy; 11
Household Irnstitute; 11 30, '
Bakers Own Polly and Pi
canny Cook; 1,2, Regular
grams; _5, Lady next door;
Timers: fk1:.S,. Mus_icale.:_ 5.52.
Baseball scores; 6, Internatto
cast; 6 30 Worcester Buick
7, Miss Anne Go_yette, pia
Heroes and Patrtots; 7 .30, :
Sketch; s. Roper Hour; 8 3
Day~ 9; Mac!nnes Muske1
Happy Wonder Bakers: 10,
tick Song Birds; 10 15, L:
10.30, R. K. O. Hour
Wednesday~ 8 30 a. m.,
organ; 9.30, A message fro
Beauty Shop; 9 45. George
city assessor; 10, National E
10 30, Betty Crocker; 10 4!
Home Hour; 11. musicale; 1

te;

-Ho,isehoid I.l'.LStttu.·
i1.3o,
Bakers Own Polly and l
musicale; 12, regular noel
6, baseball score
l ner rnusic; 6 30, Arcadia
~ 1violinist:; 6.45, Uncle Abe
7, Imperial Male Glee club
of the News in Wa.shingtoIJ
nal Question:, 8, Powers E
8.30, Mobiloil concert; 9, H
Hour; 9.30, Palmolive Hour
Cola. program; 11, Mystery l
news.
Thu;r:sday--8.30 a... m ••
a.. m., organ; 9:.80 .a.. m ,
~"'5edding,--Stcresl:
radio ca.lenda"r; 10 a. m., m1
a. m., Aunt sanuny; 10.30
FOOtt'S' Round 'Table; IO 45Andrews. Fifth A venue l
a
m, Bon Ami ~adio~Jl'U
a tn.~ Badici Ho1,1sehold In1
a. m .• Town Talk Bakers
and. Prue; 11.45 a. m. Can
o'clock, regular noon progr
R-KO Hour; 6.30 p. m ·, To
p m , news; 6.05 p. m .• ba1
6.08 p. m.. dinner music;
Phil Spitalny•s music; 6 45
Abe and David; 7 p. m.,
ware, "Famous Composer,
7.30 p. m .• to be announ<
Fleischmann Hour; 9 p. m.
day Party;. 9.30 p m. Jae
ody Moments; 10 p m., R
p m, news.
Friday: 5 00 p. m. Lad~
5 55, News: 6.00 p. m. Ba:
6.03 p. m. Din;ner Music
Don Bigelow and his Hot,
tral orchestra; 6.45 p. m
and David; 7.00 p. m. Hel
son~concert pianist: 7 .15
yeast Jesters; 7.30 p
r.
Powers Coke Co.; 7.45 p
Gems; 8.00 p. m. Cities
p. m. Cliquot Club Eski
m. Fowler Hawaiians; 10 I
leigh Revue; 11.00 News.
Saturday: 8 so a. m, c
organ; 9.30, radio calenda1
cal h<'altnes; 10 15, WTA<
hour: 10.45, musicale; 1.0<
my; 11.15, Radio Househ1
11 30, Town Talk Bakers' <
and PrUe; 12 00, regula:
grams; 5.55 p. m • news
ball scores; 6 03. dinner
the
Jameses; 6 45, Unc
David; 7 00, to be a.nm
Phil Spitalny's music; 8.

f 5 55, news;

s

certs; 9 oo, TJ:ie Si1ve:r flu·

era! Electric; 10 00 Lucky
orchestra; 11 00, n.ews

DENVER BAND
BROADCAST

~oston :,?¢ws-(t:l4' ~Ur¢·
8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

STREET,

MASS l •

BOSTON

TELEGRAM-GAZETTE, WORCESTER

MASS.

-'\-

RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.

~\n.7

-, ,/('.wo w-e11-kll0wn·\.S0ngSte~ will
b~·-'featured this ev~:O.ing duri11.g the
Eltrify Rec'Ord radio', hour. They
ai:M May '.Blake, the•:popular wa:-bl~r
IDf "blues," and ~Fank Mac'hatio,
:Qf 13<?.§-ton's . f,vorite ,tenors.
:'th~~ .'.~tars have been heard
entIY oil _the air/and have a
"Of ~-:fans.... Othet's who will en-tc,ri this Pro'gr{tm are ·Irtring
~tbina,ry ~n4 "Little ~itzi." Ba.cl~.;.
lfal~ ~cores an,({ new~ flashes """Y.J!.l ·
.ils'<"iu;\m;f:be lllcluded in this b
··
~ ; -"'!~iClf W.ill come to ,y
WI!,e'l!I·at 6:3C' p. ·m.•, ... ;_ ,
.
· ~..
-·,
, The address-·Qf -~lcotrie to· the

e

~; ;n~tloiiil;l" "(!():ijvention,

'.!'T~ich

· · ·y: 0at,·AUantic· City, by
orgari. ·.J. ~arsen_ of Ne~
Jersey ·a:ncj. the reply by Walt_er P.
~dr.ews, grand exalted ruler of the
famous- frafern-al organization,· will
l>e' l;>ro,.icast at 10:15 p m. over
WNAC.

Paul Revere's severest rival~ the
tile Fri.nee of Wales, will be hea1·d
ever WEEI, WBZA and ."\VNAC
11:ihis afternoon at 4·:25, the -'feature
being relayed from LOndon to.......the
NB~ sys,.,m, _ _ _ _...,

be:::.

And" Colum.bus' severest rival~
Wendell Hall (who is hailed as the
c1i_Scoverer of many of the mo~t
]>Opula~· radio entertainel"$ of t0- clay), will be heard during tonight's
Shell program

SJJon
L"(ay
C01be

11nt

soufll
Iect"e,re
••the:'VAme~rk
hear<"T·
seiera

Eden Phillpett's comedy 9::! EP6lish country life. "Th:_e F;3.rmer's
Wife/7 will be broad-cast at 1.l:_30
a...1 m ... today over WN~C, with 'Mr~
11.!lil" 'Mrs .. _Coburn performing the,

"'How.it.
Pavectlat
at 7.1!>";(

m;

Qn," Tuesday

onf~~t~r e Walsh Will be presented as
titled "Heroe~~ii~r;a~ni \b! series en1-lational
Broadcastinr o _s Which the
broadcasting Under th! .. d<:ompany is
Dean Gleason t.... Atcher Of ~e~ron of
SC?.l"'&.Ql, Boston.
JJ elk I aw
mffi4 C&i Vf atsn will trac
laritles ot. origin between e ;he simt ..
:England Confederation In 164 he New
c ·.1.federation of the Th· t
3 and t~e
more ttii:>n a century lat!~ .eef Colonies
throp. of the early grou .
ohn WinAdams,.- or ·the Revo1ufi anct Samuel
"11~1 he depicted, togethe~nary _group.,.!.
chief associates.- In botl!t. t With their
ttonalistic movements,
o these na
..I'mThl;ngs_ Fe~. Persoi;iS Know
patriotic,
says Ripley
hi.
roadcast a.t 7.30, Mon.da . •• In ', s
:i,oing t~ celebrate the Fft.irth ;A~d JI:°:
c-:_ng with everyone else, but-,
u Y
The De'clar~tion of I d
'Was not signed on July 4 n J~E:n~_n'?"~,
'7as not the author: Ma~ac~:
s s not a. state.• In tact t .· .
are only 44 states at the r
•- h~l:'e.
~he BLiberty Bell Is of. EJ'g1~!~1;,,;i.T,;15 ... : '
e
r1tish still own a· · ·.
~s consictered Uni.ted Stat part Qf wha "&
1ngton's birthday i , . -~ .son. Wash-Fe~;. 22.· There a:e ~~ts re~~Y on,
tstates .Which, Vo~tead did
tr S fe~ mfke dry, and ,;~vhich ~neJ-ther
police ca~~~eg:~ih~~\~~~- ;n~r · the state

b

~~if

::i~-;::f

,

!~~.

- a!s~ur!s~ :_he broadc!'s~i Ripl~y Will
t _
d- Whltne,1, ·Veteran rad·
a~ _or \YhO ls ~'leRder'7 of' . the b
. 10
play a-. song . from·:· wh:lc11 th a,nd.. to
"'Grip.go"_ ·had :1~,s origin. · ~e_ • ;.)ll ~~~~

i~!;11f~lp~t .::~:~

. -~f~~}.\': :<~' .,:.\'-~ '

"'f"arfous roles. Mrs.' Coburn w'ill be
h~3.I'd ·a.#3 four different wain.en. all
wooed by a si~gle Devonshire farmer with wooing as a hobby. M.r.
Coburn will enact the part of the
wooing expert.

'·'· ~--<_

··<, ,~~;tjr~;; , . :· , ;'.>';

to~ ~lt~.$Zq::ll¥; ~Ur4ta'u

Y.,o;ton ~~ws-(tl\.p Y.,unau
8

8, BOSWORTH STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

I

: BEACON, DORCHESTER, MASS.

POST, B~STON, MASS.

... '

'

\

ESTABLISHED 1868
i.

O'CONNELL-DORSEY
tt o ASPIRE TO OFFICE
Ex-Congressman After Party Nomination for U. S. Senate
:~!::a~s Man to Run for State Treasurer-Both Are)
Two prominent D01chester men this 1 Law School, rece,vmg the degree of,
week threw their sombreros into the LLB. in 1896; married Novelnfer 2S, I
:political arena. Both seek Democratic 1910, to Marisita R Lenahan, daughnominations
Hon Joseph F. O'Con- ter of Congressman John T. Lenahan
nell wants to become United States of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; resides at 155'
Benator and John H. Dorsey, druggist Kilsyth Road, Brighton district of 1
and bank man files intentions to run Boston. He has eleven children, all of
for State Treasurer.
whom are living; is a brother of Judge
Former Congressman Joseph
F. Daniel T. O'Connell of the Superior
O'Connell has announced his inten- Bench. Mr O'Connell was elected to
:tion of being a candidate for the Dem- Congress, serving in the 60th and 61st
Congress; was a member ot" the Con- ,
stitutional Convention, 1918-1920; he
is a Commissioner on Uniform State
Laws since 1914, having been appointed by Governor Walsh and each succeeding Governor and is now serving

JOSEPH F. O'CONNELL
Ex-Congressman. of Boston
Democratic Candidate for the United
States Senate

on the Commission; has been elected
Vice President cf that Commission ,
and Chairman of the Committee on
the Laws of Commercial Arbitration;
served as a member of the arbitration
commission with Genel?al Goethals
and General Ansell concerning the
ferries taken over by the United
States during the World War; was a
member of the Charter Revision Committee of the City of Boston in 1923;
is Vice President ~nd Trustee pf §pf-~
folk Law School; ,s a member of the I
Aih@ifoKh BilF Association,
having.
served on the General Council; the
Massachusetts Bar Association, and
the Bar Association of the City of Boston; is First Vice President of the
American-Irish Historical Society, and
a member of the Harvard Clubs of Bos
ton and New York, and a life member,

s:icratic nomination for United StatesC
,Benator. He purposes to wage a v1g-!
·orous campaign
Hon Joseph F. O'Connell was born'
1n Boston, December 7, 1872, the son1·
of James and Elizabeth O'Connell, at-:
'tended Boston College, receiving the·
-0:egree of A B. in 1893, and Harvard!

r ttte .P.w~rei,tl;..!Jiul,l, c;,J...l?Q§tllg.

1,-._-

,?,,A

I

~oston :itews-a:lip ~ureau

~oston ':,'lcws-a:ll:p ~urcau
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

\

MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

?revJ-v_,,,,..___
)'OSTON )

~ ; MANSFIELD, MASS •

TRANSCRIPT, METHUEN, l\'IASS.

. FREE PRESS. EAST BOSTON> MASS.
'

8

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

.-;-_\..;,:

,..J.\.)

A.~·.ou_NCE.s

,J!;,ANDIDACY
\ O • FOR SENATE

RSENATOR
H

F. O'Connell An, dhces His Candidacy For U.S. Senate
-Well Known In This
District

Hon. Jose,pb F 0'0onnell was born
in Boston, Decell]ber 7, 1872, the son
o,f James and Elizabeth O'Connell; attenaed Boston Colle,ge, receiving the!
degree of A.B. in 18'93, and Harvard
La,v School, receiving the degree of
LIL.B. In 1896, he married Miss Marisita R. Lenahan. daughter of Congressman .John T. Lenahan of Wilkes"1°BaIT"e
Pa: He resides at 1515 Kilsyth Road;

Brighton.
He. has eleven_ children, /
all oif whom are living. He is a brother )
·of Jndge Daniel T. O'Connell of the

~
.'
. '
Many frie';,"as and relati'
ed the nuptial mass ce·iebra
John's Catholi~ churi!h in ·At
the Reverend Father McLean
urday morn:in,g at 8 o'clock
William Howard Reynolds·
town.JJ.nd Miss fI'!Zel J ufia •
Attlebor-0 were united·
The couple were, atterid~d b
Ethel W eimert, sister of the bri
acted as bridesmaid, and Fra
Fox, of this town, who wa'.s b"
.. After the sj:ngle ring, ' · · ·
guests returned to
··
bride's parents, ·llh'.
P. SmitJi_ on '$<11itl:f''
a recep€i 0 n was;
.,couple; follovya~,
, breakfast, .. pr~pai'e4
,caterer,
. .
.
.• '
/ . The riew ll;lrs, Reynol.ds. i§ a ·
! of Attleboro, . h~ving. r<lc~i ·.
· e<j.ucationfo tll,e.public s
·
city. Mr:. Reynold~ is.
this.ctown, having 'itten<l.l!
school~; graduating
1924 at the High Schoo\;'.:
attending Suff ·
· · ·. ' '
ton. Having for' son1e
ployed at the Maitsfi.;M,.L
he was recently.
t-0,'< ..
sition of manager for th'at c.;ncern: ;
After an automobile trip •t&.. Ne
, York Mr arid Mrs. Reynolds 'wili"
, at home to their many friendS-d.f
I July ,fourth at 89 N o'rth
in this toWn.
, ~ .":.- ,,:, .. ·

Hon Joseph F
o~co:n.nell
heaQ.
1:1ember of thelaw firm of Jo~eph F
and Jan1es E. OConne"lI located at 1i
Beacon st1 eet, Boston, Mass , l1as anPol!-ncect h)s candidacy for the Demo-

I
I

cra_tic nomination tor the office of
:r-,rn1ted States .Senator in the primaries
1n September next
l\1r O'Connell was born in Boston
December 7, 1872, the son of ,Tame~
:oi nd
Elizabeth
O Connell;
attended
I:.oston College, reCeiving the degree
oi A
B. in 1893, and Harvard Law
~chool, receiving the degree of LL. B.
in 1896; manied November 23 19J o
to Mai isita R. Lenahan, ctaughier of
Congressman John T.
Lenahan
of
Wilkes-Barre, Pa , resides at 155 Kilsyth road, Brighton district of Boston
:Y-:lt has· eleven children, all of whom /
~re living, is
brother of Judge
:eJ T. O'Connell of the Superior Bench
Mr O'Connell was elected to Congre8;
£f'Tving in the 6 0th and 61st Congres~;
,.
v,as a 1ne1nber of the Constitutional .

°inc

1

a

Con,o,,Hnn,

ms-mo,

Dan-1

he '" n

Com-

I

1'itJl.'"':'

pt'o~oted

M,;:ii' st'

1

-··.. - , , -

JOSEPH F. O'CONNELL ,..
Ex-Congressman. of Boston
Democratic Candidate for the United
States Senate

Su,pe:tior Bench. Mr. O'Oon,ne1! was
elected to Congress, serving in the
60th and 61st Congress; was a member
of the Constitutional Convention, 19181920; he is a Commissioner on Uniform S,tate Laws sinc_e 1914, having
been appointed by Governor Walsh
and each succedi.nig Governor and is
now se,r-ving on the Comm'isision; has
been elected Vice President of that
Oommission anid ·Ch3,irman of the
Com-mittee on Laws of Comme·rcial
Arbitration. He served as a member
'f the arbitr,ation commission with
General Goethals and Gene.. al Ansell
oncerning the ferries taken over by
the United States during , the World
,..- War; was a member of the Charter
Revision Committee of the City of Bos' ton in 1923; is Vice Presiderut and
Trustee o,f Suffolk ]jaw S,chool; is a

n

mem:ber of tH@ iffif@ilf@ith l:Jfftt"· Associa-

\

tion, having served on the General
Council; the Massachusetts Bar Association, and the Bar Association of the
City of Boston; is First Vke Fresh
dent oif the Ame1 ican-Irish Historical
S.oci'ety, and a mell]ber of the Harvard
Clu,bS of Boston and New York, and a
' life memlber of the Un'iversity Club of
ton.

n

'·,'.Gcw

i,

8 BOSWORTH
BOSTON

JOSEPH F. O'CONNELL
r:; :-.( i,~mg_,ressman~ of Boston
,t_,,.. / nnf~~d~~~Jf! the United
t".1issioner ?n Uniform State Laws since
1914, having been appointed by Gove1 nor Walsh and_ each succeeding Gover nor and is now Serving on the
Cornmission, has been
elected Vice
}--'resident of that
Commission
and
Chairman of the Committee on
the
Laws of Commercial Arbitration; seIVed as a member of the arbitration·
c:n11nission with Ge11eral Goethals and
Gener al Ansell conce1 ning the ferric':>
taken over by the United States during the World War; was a member of
the Charter Revision Committee
of
thf' City. of Boston i~ 1 9 2 3 ~ ·,is Vi'"'
I--'1 esident and Trustee of
~chool; is a member of the Am
ciation having served
General Council;
the
Massac ':~
~
Bar Association, and the Ba.\'
,

,

1

r· ·

dation.·o·f the City of BoSt~n;,£.i.'.·.':.: .::... _·,

Vice President of the Americ ·.'· 1-: .!:
liistoric~l Society, and a
me·: ··--:.:..:'...~:Ob-.

the fi"f°Ycard, (':lubsiof . Bo~to.n-·

·i

\

'

STREET
MASS.

Y.,oston :,le.ws-1!'.ltp ~ure.au

Wontou Nrwn-mlip Wurruu

Y.,oston ~ews-(!:ltp Y.,ureau

8 BOSWORTH STRJ;lET

8 BosWOl<Tl! STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

BoSTOJ:-.

MASS.

BOSTON

8 Bo:sWORTH STREET

MASS.

l

NEWS, MILFORD, MASS.

'MESSENGER,

MARBLEHEAD, MASS.

RECORDER, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

.~ . ~
::'.!<~
;(· I

T,. ..
.
. .

NNELI: ~IJmAT?

i 4, 1930.

..· · ,. .ffflFSENATE-iN-FAlL
:B\i~e~ii
,;L

.r:'.'E~n: Joseph F-()!'Connell was born :
;,: ,:re,
l

iiOm

_ _ _ _ . . _ PliU

·1··
'

~,f\;;~~F-H~~: JOSEP:-.
F. O'CONNELL
,

ill Be>son December 7, 1872, the son of:
·.,i,fue,s, 3.nd Elizabetb O'Connell; at- I
9ed Boston ·College, receiving the i
ee of A B. in 189·3; and Harvard
School, receiving the <l.eg1"ee of
: B ·i;,_ 18'96; married November
:, , ,1910, to Marisita R. Lenahan,
righter of Congressman John T. Len·~n' of' Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; resides· at
5 Kilsyth Road, Brighton district of
· · · ·n. Hejhas eleven children, all

-

Sl!l!lfll

F.' ~,cron~e·i1, i
ts
"' ,canili<;IJa.te f-0r, the IJ,e,IDJocratic nom,

:inati-on >fOr U. fS.: Senato,r, w.as bOr11
in Bo,s,tiifr, D<!ic ·1, ·rn1112, th•e son of
andi Elizabeith 10'IClonnelL 'He
att<l>ndiedi Booton college·, i:eooiving
l the ,diegreie of A. B in 11
819~ an<l. Har,.. V'ard Law sehool, T<'ICe,iv,in;g the <J!e<,. :grne of LL. B. in liS1916; ~rie<l. Nov,
L.213, I:9110, to, 1'4lari:::dta; ~ ~, L~'.nah'an,
:, !ita ughfor ..of Oongresrs11lllan J 1
ohn T
iLeqi?a:h1an! orf Wilrke's-:B:arre-; Pa~,
resi/h,s: ,at, 1'515 K;ifs,yth RJoad•, Brighto":

I· Jlames

I

l

~re living; .is a brother -0:f ,
· Daniel T. O'Connell of the Su.·
Mr
O'Connell

::, ·and' ,1Ylst Congre,ss; wa.s a mem•,m< :'the. Constitutional Convention,
.:t:920; ··he is a Commissfoner on
wn,;state Laws since 1914, hav1!".:,· .'\ · ,.;"-"'···~--=-,. -- -

.JOSEPH F. O'CONNELL
Ex-Congressman, of Boston
Democratic Candidate for the United
States Senate

-

\

1

Hon.

Joseph F. O'Connell was
Boston, December 7, 1872,
of James and Elizabeth
1 O'C'?n:iell; attended Boston College,
rece1vmg the degree of A.B. in
1
, , 1893, and Harvard Law School, rel ceiving the degree of LL.B. in 1896·
married November 23, 1910, to Ma'.
i risita R Lenahan, dahghter of Con! I gressman John T. Lenahan of
'/ Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; resides at 155
i Kilsyth road, Brighton district of
Boston. He has eleven children, all
of whom are living; is a brother of ,
1 Judge Daniel T. O'Connell of the ;
· Superior Bench.
Mr. O'Connell was elected to Congress, serving in the 60th and 61.st
Congress; was a member of the
Constitutional
Convention,
19181920; he is a Commissioner on Uni' form State Laws since 1914, havillg
been appointed by Governor Wa1sh
' and each succeeding governor and
is now serving on the Commission;
he has been elected Vice-President
of that Commission and Chairman
of the Committee on the Laws of
Commercial Arbitration; served as
a member of the arbitration commission with General Goethals and .:
General Ansell concerning the ferries taken over by the United ,
States during the World War; was
a member of the Charter Revision 1
Committee of the City of Boston in I
1923; is Vice-President and Trustee
of Swfclk._Law , ~ l ; is a member ol'tne· American 'Bar Associa- ,
tion, having served on the General '
Council; the Massachusetts Bar As- ,
sociation, and the Bar Association '
of the City of Boston; is First Vice! President
of the American-Irish
: Hi,storical Society, and a member of
' the Harvard Clubs of Boston and
'New York, and a life member o&
; the University Club of Boston.

i the son
born in
1

I

I

I

,;~~ilJ;ti~il~iililt!ff~~ited
i,di;trlci

appointed 'by 'Governor Walsh
\im:;ceeding Governor and is
ini.:'·:on the ,Commission; has
,t'ed, Vice Pre;ident of that

.
I
I

oiBIOs.ton, H,e ha& 11 •chi!-,'
,dren, aH of whom aTe living; is a I
i brotl:l!e:r o,f Ju&ge <Daniel T O'CIOn- \
': ne.Jl of the .. Superi-or Bench. Mr.
: 010onn,e,H wias ~<'leted to Oongress·,
; se•rving 'in the 60,th and / •611st Con, g,res,;; . w,as a meII11ber ,of the C;onstii tuHonal ,c•onventio.11,: 1~1•8·-,1920; he is
a comruissJoneT on Uni,form ·State
. Law:s ·since lffi4; having '-boon
ap- '
: :poiµte-d '-1:>y !Gov,ern•w .yrats,h an<l eac13i'
j s,ucceed!ing ~ovei;noT .an<l is now
'i seTving ,on the commtfsision; has· be,en
i el1e1cted! fVice .presid:eut of that_ co·Ih1 m:issfon .and, chairm,an .of the Commit. tee on the La.wsl of C:Ommiarcial Arb-i't<ration;"' sre,rv-srd.1 as a .m1e1mbe·r of the :
artbitration commd·ssfon
with
Gen-i j
e•rali Goeths;,1s, andi General
Ansel,! ·'
oon.c'erning ·· th,ei :f,erries tak,en over
by the Ullifod . 1sitates during :the'
Wf>rldi .war,; wa,SI. a mi,moor ,of the
CharteT RelVision committee of the
. city. o,f B,os1ton: in 1191213; is, vice p,residlemt .·and · trus'tee of 1Suffol·
! ~iehool'j . }§'·.a' miem,ber of th"e~~'m!!l!!!ie"'r"icanl,l!.~-li
f -:&)!i · ,-a.ssio~t~oµ; having se·ryed. ,on, ·
f,
·eioull0i1; th<> 'M:as,s1acb:u-1!
: ': I s,el;t:!" Ji3/a±:,.a,''i[SOCi8'.ton, ana the Bar as- \
' • ; soei<ali·a,1{"0,r'fue'".city '(if Boston<;' is, first 1
·, 1vice presidlerft''8Jfihe ~rican-Iris,'h '
! 'His1to,Iioal · s<ocii,ety, an<l. a member of 1
th BJar,vard cJufbiSI 'of iB10S1t-0n i,.nd
ew; )l'-0·rJr,
a; Wife. )lleml>er of the
.
voo'f:t? clU'b}t~J;Q:S!t~- .
· ... ••

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tfie, soen:e,;a:1,

,a~:

I

::Sostou )?ews-<tlt.p ::Sureou
8

BOSTON

ilni!n'it N.ew!i-C!tlip iluttau

::Soston )t¢ws-<tlt.p )?iur¢au

BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

BosToN

MASS.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

STANDARD, NEW BEDFQR~·MASS.
·.!
,'

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASS.

I

GETS LLB. DEGREE

MAss.

Birmingham., ,.

1,

~tlioot'~Bir

F.ftJext 3Y

.\I

I

I'

William J. Birmingham,·'.
came within 67 votes .of
elected to the scl:tool co' ·

1:

ll
If

/'
lj

l

t'

!I
/,
it
,,

1:
!i

Gershom D. 'Hall, Harwich, J/
Recent Law Graduate, Ii
Seeks Legislature Post )
:f

{Special to The Standard. J

Harwich, July '7-Among the 252 )'
graduates of Sutrolk Law SQhool to re- 'r
ceive LLB degrees at co1nmei'tcement 1
exercises were four who had already
passed the bar examination. One
of )
these was Gershom D. Hall of this
!age, who is now
candidate for the
Legislature from the second Barn.stable
district.
Mr. Hall and the three other students, ..·
with special pennission of the ba~ ex- I
aminers, took the tests in December
and passed successfully, thus being ili- ,
gible _to practice before receipt of their f
degree and completion of their college
course. Mr. Hall has opened a.n office at I
the Harwich inn, of which he is m_ an-1
ager. He is well known here, being a.
native of this village and for several 1
3ears conducted the G.D. Hall corporac.i
tion, a wholes1>.}!> candy busim,.s:;___••L
1

:Soston )?cws-<Clip ::Sur¢<1u

vil-1

a

8

)?io.$ton )tews-<Clt.p ::Surcou
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

1

1TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON,

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

l lllllllliilllillilllilllllllilllllllllili. .llllI

,,,p~u!~n~~.81.~~~! a., or·I

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

GAZETTE, CHELSEA, MASS.

MASS.

i

i

/' ::Sostou )?&ws-<Clt.p ::Sur¢ou

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

- R_
the ~sion Church parfah, will c~e- i

bl"atect his first solemn mass Sunday· i
morning at 8 o clock at ·the Mti:s.slon 1t ,,
Church. At 10 o;c ..ock Rev T1l.ott'as
Tapp, c. SS. R., will cek-brate his flr_s;_
so'le:m.n mass. Both young men we;i;e
orcffi.ined to the pl" thood Sunday,.
~une 29, at Mt St
p·,on.!!!us, Esopus,
N Y. They re:~e.i
t eil tra.Jning ~t
St Mary's Colleg
ennsylvf:Lnia.", at

[l!;,. ~d~e:1n1:°:i Alph<>bsus, Receptions
e k"t~~;t~;1!!11{!;:
' inary at Mt St
hav:el be~n fl,rrapged _in honor of the

newly ordained J;rie$!S
·
Johll J.;".Dunn, chair111an of the Democratic w'ard committee, !1as annv.ill.;:-ed
~is candidacy fot: 'Ute House of aet,1esentati'Ves- 111 Ward 11. He is a sett. or
at Suffolk Law School and has heen

I activ•·:~•t ~ e a{fair~. ~ a 4istrif't ·:

t
f'
1



!

1!h1.atnn NtUta-C!!li.p ihtrtttu
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
I
, I

!
BOSTON, MASS.

MAss:.

BOSTON

BOSTON

EXPRESS, PORTLAND, MAINE
TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

APR .3 01930
~

OXBURY DISTRICT
s for the annual outing of
.,Plain Board ~ of Trade ,

ge.ther

plE:'tion, o~e ,of the la.rgest
gs in years is expected to
1

)na.ke the ,trip. to Pemb_erton•. The prowill i_nclude· water and fiE:ld
' ~Pol{s· i with J.:iizes awarded to the win: ,:.:ners ~f the v:ari,ou con!,ests, after
: Whtcb·there will be
ih.ner and danc-

, r.am

' ,..,,,._; Transportati
:.fdr. inost of the ga
: )Will l,,l~a.ve~ by au

wJ.11 be by boat
g, while man.Y

. ile. The affair
uJy 16.
,' Blessed l;acra ent Court, 'M. C. O. F.,
,will h01d its reg;ular meeting tomorrow
, ·.:ev-ening. DHCR_Fitzgerald will _be ~res.ent. · Refreshments will be served.
; .:: John J. Dunn, chairman of the
;1!·Detnocra.tic Ward Committee of the

' 'will ,tali:e pli,,,ce '

ai·c·
S.eotion, has announced
for tl:!-e ~ouse of Rep- 1
-resentatives in Wars! 11. :Ele 4~ a 1
Senior.. at the S~f@I
School and '

'. '.·.J·.·am·oan'didacy
·
hiS... a. Plain

!~-an

;:,w
orkeJ;:.

ardent d1

-

I : · s·eorge Little, court ofticf!t, _ of the t
0

_ ' .l3t~c,'"

~.-.-hH,... 'n'

ni.c,+_... t.-.4;

,....,...,,,.;-.f'

.a-

--

Hay

.

r-ett. e1ght Perniallen~,------ten -call firemen.
The
will also Imm
advertise for sealed 'bids tor
~. e purc~hase a 600 gallon p\lmp·
of
1ng eng
a cost
of approximately 8
0

Man Takes

-

,_

GHT CANDIDATES
Saugu may have the unusual dis~
t!nction of· presenting eight candidates :for the House of Representa·
t.,,ves in th& coming primaries ot the
Rtm>ubllcan and Democratic parties
this September. From pre,...nt lndlca.tions five ot th&m wi1l seek the
Repub!ica,;i nomlnatlo,n _ witn thre<>
in a mad S('ramble upon t.h'! Derno·
cratic side of the ledger. The dis-'
tri1:.t include·s Sa:;ugus, Lynnfield and
VVards O~e, Six. and Seven of Lynll.
The fiVe Re-publicans will doubtless be WelcQ!lle W. MoCullough.
Central
str:eet,
Saugus
Centre;
Harry W ~ard, 72 Spencer ave·
od
nue, Eas
aug • ~alla.0& CamPbeil; 3i3
avenue, Clifton~

l

4~A1e~~~

bert C. Day, Emory street. Saugus

8

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.
'u\>

Miss Ida
Shulman'
And Herbert W~"
Rosen Wed
, A wh;(e· satill canopy with~a. profu-.ft
siqn of i5umme:r flowers decorated the
liv/ng .room at 'the home- of Mr. and

Centre.

BOSTON

1~ide.Here
I

\(

dale; C. F. Nelson ; Pratt, 3 Johnston terrace, Cliftondale; and Al·

~o.ston )tews-a::lip ~ur¢au

~tare-~,

The thTee Democrats are expe1Cted
to be Tony A.. Gcirofano, Summer
street, Baugus Centre; , Charles M..
O'Connor, Ernest street, Clittondale;
and M. Edward H~yes, Lincoln
.a.v.enue •. Cliftondale.
MCCullough, who niade the run
tor the Republican~(~.'omination two
years ago, came very.- -close to winning at· that ti
~ , -. He has .seen
many years o-f
'ice upon the
school committee
d is · generally
well known throughout the town.
Woodw..ard has .seen- four years o:!
service upon the Board o! Seleet•
men and .several years upon the
Finance Committee.
Campbell is serving his secon.d
yea. r. upon .the B. oard of Selectmen
and is a former member
of the
Board of Aldermen In the city <,f
Medfo.rd.
·- .
-~
Pratt is no,w oompleting
his
fourth :year of service In the ·.a:ouse
of Representativ-es.
lie has also
seen several years of service previously upon the Board of Sele<:t·
men.
Day has never held poUtical office in Saugus 'but Is fairly well
known throughout the town.
Garofano is now serving
his
seventh year in the House of Re:pre.sentatives.
He
is
well
known
; throughout ttl district and is un- Jdoubtedly the stronge~t of the eight ,

I

-) ca~~~~~t~~r fr!'smt!:u:~=~ent director ,
, of State Aid and Soldiers' Relief.
', Ue haS lived in Sauagus for m.an.ll
: years and has a wide acquaintanct;<.
'
Hayes is an instructor of ,civil
go-vernment at the local senior high
school.
He is a graduate of .New
Hampshire
ate University and oi
SU
sc-hpol, Boston.
:t the eight candidates only twu
are veterans of the World Wa1-.
', Th.ey are McCullough
and Ha.yes~
, the former serving ,in the army d·uring the war and the latter in the

~trne~~';?~,eih~s
t:ri~~heJt:
d~µght~r. Mis~· Id~ · Sh1.f.lman, becai.ne
1'he bl '-,e of Herbert \W. Rosen, son of
Mr, and Mrs. Jacob Rosen of Vine
Stre~t. Everett, - Ma:ss. · The Rev. Hyman Shapiro officiated, uslpg the Si.'l-,
gle ring service, and the wedding ,
ma.-c!),es were played by .Miss Anne 1
Sletnicl,
.
)
,
·
The bride wore a gown 1 of pink: .chif·•oJ1
fon with hat -and accessories to match, ,
She carried a shower bouquet of roses 1
.

~;1 tfw;!ss~~1~5 ~~;eetb;~arAeL~~: I
en

tr0;n of honor, her gown being, "Jf · 1
flowered chiffon, with hat an. d shoes!
in harmony She_ wore a corsage of
ro,es
1 Mr Rosen had a.s: his best man, h_is
Sidney Rosen. , of Everett,

':l:J~!!1er,

I An informal receptigfl and wediling
11:>reakfast followed the ceremony which :
/W'l;s _attended by about 60 immediate.'
lrelatives of,., the couple ::i,nd their;
! friends. Tlie dining room was dee-__,.
f oratetj wil.ih pink and white.
f
'I
.Mr Rosen a~d 1his bvide will go OJ1 3)
trtp to the White Il(ountains, Mrs. ·Ro~ I
j'sen ~earing an ensemble Of yellow and\/
black .for traveling. Upon their return r'
1they \vill reside at Everett, M;,.ss. ,
j
I Mrs. Rosen is a gre.duati, of ·the Port- .1·
! la,nd High School and Gorham Normal,
i School. For- the past few years she ha:I /l
'taught' in the South Portland schools. ,i
Sh·e has been prominent in Y W .. H. A •. 1/
affairs in this city. ·' ·
,
i
Ilri Rosen attended the McDonnell ·1
School ,of Pharmacy and was g,-adtiated 1
from_ the Suf<elJi
RJ 9 ]?ool. . He is/
promm,k,nt m the
nights of Pythias 1
_ order of Boston and BeWngham Lodge '
1of Chelsea, Mass., also being a rliember;
l of tbe executive board of the New Eng: land Y. M H A , and Y, W H. A, and:
i a trustee of the Library commission of !
Everett, Mass
He I.s associ ted with
the Legal Aid Society of ·Bos it.
'

fl

.
I- · ·
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--------i
Y.lo1>ton )tews-(tllp Y.iu,~au
1
8 BoswonrH bTREET
BOSTON

I'I/IASS

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

.tGt

1

STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

ADVERTISER, BOSTON, MASS.

~1

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

3-t•

JIIUL

::·. i~.°"

;,~·~ffllin iffeffi(?ffig, w1t11 tne e x c ~


-One son.
Mr.

·"'n~Who; was

seven

in his seven:J.had been in the_ mar'ket

b • 1 ess

~~n

gar

~:~h rs

and until his retire-

~mployed

1:>Y

Lock~

the Faneuil Hall district.

I

William F. Slattery Was an .
It
Employee of the 'J'.ranscri.pt ! /
who for some time : I
William F Slatte1, ~-Ith thu Boston I
had been eon1;ecte siness depa,i:tment,
Transcript in I ~ buthis morning at the r
died at an early

Ott_!" l

follow\ng a

brief

I

Boston City :ofp af~r this paper were 1·
illne~~-j
as nig1t ~1s fn1etie advertising departman
ment

was fifty years of

Mr. Slattery: wh~ton and was the son
age, was born in Bo
Slattery. He atof James and Mary
re and following
tended public sohoolsti.!1ee English High he
his graduating from Law Schoolo, from·
entered the Suffolk ~

AA EA TO OPEN.
LAW BROADCASTS
A series of legal discussions intended to acquaint the laym:>n
with the fundamental la"'.s th'."t
safeguard society wi.11 be given in
non-technical languages
lkDf;;
Gleason L. Archei;.•..Qtd-E-t.o·beginschool in weekly Droa cas s
t
ning over N. B. C. network nex
Tuesday at 7:15 P· m
.
"
The series will be entitled La'Y"s
That Safeguard Society" and. will
be presented by the Nat10nal

~i

Broadcastin=g~C;o;·=.,..=!!!!'~""c~~~-'-~

, - - - ·- ~ . . : : _ - - - - - = = - : t t i t t - -

~-

.
d since which he
which he was graduate ~actice of law.
had been active in the P friend'ships with
He made many stz:-ongs Surviving Th,:1r. f-:
his Trans<'rh;>t .asso~;ateFrance:;;. ~lattery •
Slattery are his
1"1isse,;' ~ris and
and t".'o daughters, He leaves .. ~ two
Frances Slattery.
Slattery -~d James i
brother~. Joseph L. loyees of the Bo~tonli
Ji· Slattery, both emp

:Soston '.Yt¢ws-<t:ltp :Sur¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS.

w7t'::e

,~obe.

:Soston '.Yt¢ws-<t:ltp :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

r

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

=su'rt:!

Atty. Albert Cole, brothei-; 'ot. J
eph Cole, secretary to tor-~er.. IXJ..~y
Ralph S. Baue-r, and
at' .P
S<>cretary o! the Public ··w
department, has beco~ec: ,. ·
with Atty. Leon M. De.Jan,:;,
general practice· .!3.t 1~:W·:0 l#'.:
curity Trust buil¢Jing. 'r~~·'b-e kno,wn as De·lano an.a..
Atty. Cole is:>~~EV~O:n· ·o~
Mrs.
Mich~el .' :.:.q.0. 1,e;,: 31 ·street. I--Ie graduat"e'4'.-{ at;
High school, class Of.· 1925, ~nd

I

HILL DIS;RICT

+f ~,

G " ~ _ ; n g , assistant clerk at·

!_heli~de~~ni~~pa~h';,~fe1;fo~~~ I
was m~rried this afternO'Qu to Miss
Clyde Marion Broaders at tfi'e home of
the bride, 22 Wolc?tt .~t, West Me~forp..
The marriage ceremony was attended
by the !µ,mediate famil:~s of the bride , ;[·
a.Dd , bridegroo.m. Tl}e bri~egroo;m, a
World War veteran, served as eaptain
In the 101st Regiment. He ls a grad- 1
tiate of the
L a - 0 0 1 and
last month too
e bar eXamination 1
!
for ad.mission to the Massachusetts I
Bar,.. He received a bl.!au.tifuJ electric !
clock :from his fellow
orkers at thet.'
IocaJ court on which was inscribed :
! "From ' Associates
of Charlestown :
l(unicipa! Court."

sk~

I

w.

AnvAln..~+ ...<:>.H...,_

£,,,.:o,_'f.Q.~n~.,,._aL_

Y.,oston. ':n¢ws-<t:hp :Sure.au
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.

-

"

flok L@·Wcc89bool .c·l.ass. .o-t~1.929,,_
ed the Massac:qusetts Ba1: early,
year and wa.s admitt~d t:o· prac
.A.tty, Delano, has be-en in PtaCti~.....
The other member of th-e -flr.µJ.;4
tor nearly 10 years, an\! ft '·a, ~i~~: !
ber of th-e Nahant Board ot ~el-e:c~"'. ,L
men. serving as secretary, o· t'{l~ ',
board. H<> is one of the· 8ible$t.' ·qf•

the younger la-Wy--ers in · Esse~· ;c9µii_:.;

ty.

·:.

. . ,.,. ; ~·

Atty. Ce>l<' is a
brilliant ' YOU!",\!''
barrister and has a host -of, frif~.I;La'..~:
In this city, and his futu.r.,, in _tJXii·
legal profession augur ~·~11..
~hf
brothe1, Joseph Cole, is also $. metn~
her of the bar and 'one ot t~'9 nio.St.
'efficten t and p9pula~ in th&···

-~~!1e _c~~ - '

f.ef~~~e

- ~··~- - r·~'

i

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

BOSTON

I,

MASS.

\,
RECORD, BOSTON, MA.SS~
REVIEW, BOSTON, MASS

-,----=-~~~L~--~~~=.....---xroor
t

----...cougir-ffie roo:f.
thing sllltouetted

has just finished at Harvard, a daugh·
ter is a senior at Emmanuel College
(Notre Dame), an~ a third son attends
1
Boston College High School.
Mr Fielding served for fifteen years,
Henry p Fielding, Demeer~ic can·
as a~sistant district attorn':y i~ Suf· \
didate for Attorney G~~era:I f>f the
folk Conn ty under three district at- I
con1 monwealth, has beell a pr~ticing
torneys including the late _Jos~ph C. I
Pelletier for whom Mr. Fieldmg always entertained a 11;1ost Joyal affec- :
tion. Mr. Fielding resigned volunt~r- ',
i!y under the administration of DIS· ,
trict Attorney Thomas C. O'Brien to
engage in the private practice of ~1s 'i
profession and now maintains an 1n- \
dependent suite of offices a~ 53 Sta.te
s:tI eet. v\.,.hile serving as assistant dis- G
trict attorney, in fifteen years Mr. i,
Fielding tried and handl~d many '.m·
portant cases
At one time he tried :
cases for the commonwealt11 almost i
continuously for a sustained period j,
of five years
He prepared many of .~
the Commonwealth's briefs for the J;J
Supre,:ne Court, and argued a numb_er !
of cases before the full bench. While 'i
in the district attorney's office, he
pei·formed a major part of presenta- I
tion of cases to the Grand Jury, and i
prosecuted a number o! murder cases, j
including the case of Commonwealtll ,]
v Dascalakis, which was before ~he /J
Supreme Court three times, resultmg
in final decision for the Con1mon- r
attorney ior over a quarter of a cen- wealth. While in the district attortury He is married and resides with ney's office Mr. Fielding disposed of
11is wife and children at 15 Montague many routine cases bY recommenda- ,
~. street, Dorchester. Mrs. Fielding is tion to i:.he court, and his rec~m.,~\ the daughter of Inspector J?hn W. mendations were uniformly accepted
• Deehan, retired, of the Cambridge po- by the Court without question.
,
Hee Department. One son is a che_m·
Mr Fielding has also sat as auditor ,I
ical engineer with the Goodyear Tire and master on references from the Su-\',
Company at Akron, Ohio; another son preme Judicial Court and from_ the Su'.J perior Court. In addition to his many
professional duties he has lectured on
tlte subject of criminal law and the
subject of agency for ten years at
8 BOSWORTH STREET

FIELDING'S CAND1,6~CY
FOR ATTORNEY C~NERAL

Igmus -and Intellec, whose quaint
spirituals and lively harmonizing
-Of popular tunes have won them a
large radio following, will combine
their vocal chords as the feature of
tonight's Daily Record hour over
WLOE. May Blake, who moans a
mean. blues number, will also be
heard on this prQgram, toge_ther
with Irving Zathmary, Ann Demirjiaq and Dorothy Paine. Fjnal
baseball scores and Daily R~cord
news flashes will coniplete the
hour, which starts at 6:30 p. m.



I

i

SJ,1!Io11r I aw a;chooL

.

He is a mem'Ser of the American
Massachusetts Bar
Association, Boston Bar Association,
Spanish War Veterans, Knights of Columbus, Bishop Cheverus . Assembly,
Elks, Charitable Irish Society, ~atholic Alumni Sodality, Boston Umver·
: sity Law School Association, :'uffo!k
1Law Alumni Association. Savin Hill
~acht Club and Boston City Club.

-

Rear Admiral Byrd may ha've
decided to go explol"ing iq New
Ha.mp.shire during his vacation. but
his exploits will still be recited on
the air when George W. Tennant,
chief eook of the J;!yrd South and
North Pole .expeditions, give~ a
talk this morning during the Can·
ny Cook program over WBZA.
George is a "natural" for this radio
:featured, sponsored by the National
Canners' Association as due to his
officiating in such inaccessible
places he has probably "pened
more cans than .any other cook of
his high reputation~
Chick Endor, vaudeville and musical comedy, will be the .-.tar in
this ev..ning's Mardi Gras which
WNAC will broadcast for the local

listeners.

c-:.l/ - -

ly watch the Daily Recprd's radio
popularity poll with eagl'\ c,ye,
judging froin many letters 1·eceived. · For instance, Agne"s Nich~las of Deering, Me , sends the ful.:.
lowing missive:
".I read in. On the Air recently
that Rudy Vallee was to be in
Boston July 28. If you are,.·talkto hbn that w>Y, please wish
hbn a happy birthday for me. He
co,mes to Westbrook to<bythat's only a littJe way from here,
a;nd you can't imagine how ex- cited the peopie ar:e. I'm following the poll very intently and
you can tell· who I'm hoping to
win. And don't forget to tell
every little item of news about
Rudy."

ing

Well, here's one little item that
should. interest Miss Nicholas and
tlie other folks down that way.,j
"What a Perfect ·Night for .Love,"
Rudy's late.st -:-- and they <lo sa.y,
greatest. - song hit, will be f0und,
words and music, with evci.y
copy of tomorrow's Daily :Record.
And no advance in price!
For
two cents you get tomofrow·s
Record also Rudy's new song,
which report says i~ likely to
~clipse even the St~in Song in pdp-...
;ularity..
_
,

Dance numbers fr.om the "first
Bohemian opera, "The Bartered
A~ selection from Vietor He:rBride/' will be playe~ ov~r WBZA
tonight at 10 by the Rochester bert's Indian grand opera "NatoCiVic Orchestra
·
ma" (one of the few s_uccesstul
-4\;:merican grand operas, by the
George Gershwin will be guest way) will be played by the A &
pianist and WU!iam M. Daly wlll P. Gypsies tP.i.s evening ovz-r the
be guest conductor Of the GenP.raI air.
Motors Family Party this evening,
As one feature of George's air
Dean Gleason L. Archer\ Of Boswork, he will play for the first time ton's Suff1b_k Law School, 'Qlrhose
over the radio several of his better talks are
wayi Sff~t and to
know_n numb_ers, including "Liza/' the point, will tell over WBZA-to''Fascinating" Rhythm" and ''\.Von- , morrow evening why no act can be
derful " He will be accompanied a crime unless committed with
by th~. ·Orchestra in this melange criminal intent. This will be tbe
of melodies. ·
third of Dean Archer's series of
radio .talks on "Laws T):lat SafeRud~ _~al~e·s neighbors_ evident- guard So"ciety."
· ·:~.:: ...... ~

,Bar Association,

MALDEN, MASS.

dark

I

1

MASS.

Tarzan saw

~o.ston )tew.s-<t:llp ~un;u~-~~ "··:<
8 ;BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

.I'
c.

/'

cJ /.

7/c,

..



'Y.;oston )l:¢ws,.(!lip 'Y.;ur¢au

':Soston )l:otws-<tlt.p ':Surotau

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOS'I'ON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS

MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, DEDHAM, MASS.

BOSTON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

:::r;w~S:ik;~;;d-~iii-gUtters. - Many ofthese buts were blown dow.n by a

atrong 'Wind.
In the public square of Arianq s1~
S;~gnaI Cor
1
essages 1n a m1 -1

&If.

FIELDING

:)

~N BALLOT,:;,

,I

(.
I

Former Dist -Atty.
13'ielding. of Suffolk
,:,;§led''f986 certified sign'.
Sey~tary of Stat,,

Dunlop Hits Back~ at
Bushnell Report

i-

8oj,'k for th~ Democrati

~i°;hf;.~~tfi~n!fs!:!e~~~:_:~·;,

lng or[· the ballot in the ·'
Although Fielding hal''

i'

practiciz:ig lawyer for

DRACUT, July 24-Speaklng at the
banquet tonight which climaxed th,e
i
;e nnua1 outing of the Suffolk L'.3 w
:·· :.:' . L J Alumni AssocJa'tion,- Kenneth Dunlop
;;_~--~~"...
of Newton, candidate for the RepubJi.
- ~\1:.·:_··,~./ can nomi~ation for district attorney
...
\

_



he lived for long periods in Wei
ter an'd U'iddleseX, counties, ·,~.
:ie has m:~ny friends.
'

I

took occamon to rep.!y =to a purported

,.', :!

Rt~=~e:~s~ei:~:Iy made by Dist

The candid.ate lives wit
,e 15 M.(intague $t.;. ·
They haVJ>• fqur chilidre
graduate of, M, I. T. and
a tire comp.any in Ohiof
who has,just completed·

·1

Atty

Ch~ging that Mr Bushnell, speak-.
.1ng ~n behalf Of Warren L. Bishop's
:·. candidacy said that other candidatP..s
..
'\Vere trying to ride into the office on
.! his reputation. Mr Dunlop stated: "I
, ;./ want to inform Mr Bushnell and all
1
1 others that I am .pot trying to secJre
the office on his name or reputation I
am standing solely on my qualificati-:.ins
and I hope thi~declaration will dispel
any report to the contrary."
Other speakers included Dean G!ea..
son L. Archer of Suffolk Law Schoor,
George H. Spillane of LoWell, pri:>sJ ..
. - dent of th~ association; Secretary AJ ..
\},
. den H. Cleveland of Boston, Jan1es
~"" ;
O'Hearn,
president Lowell
Syfl'uik
, ... I.... Law; Thomas J. Finnegan, vice presi..
·
dent of the association, and WiIJiam J
P-5esident of the Malden Suffc,;k
1
1
·~

more

quarter· of a century and h
g_ resident of B9ston for .?O ·,y

1
'

f :.-. ··.· ",

'

~

1

at l;{~rv?i-~di L9u.ise'. R.~.
Emanu.el·'.College, and

a junior at' Boston

school.
'
0;.
·¥e is a member of ~ ;
~a'.:r ~ssocia.Hon, MassacliUS~.t
Associ'ation, American Bar A
tion, United Spanish War Ve
Knights of Columbus, Bisho·
verus Assembly, 9th Massac
Volunteers, Catholic A~u;m?l.i .
lty, Boston University -Law S<;.h
Association.,
Law Alu
Association, ::k
ilAYacht Ol
0,nd Boston City Club ..

"j1

':~.,.'.o;

Sifn3*
n

i§- ~i~y,

During the aft.ernoo~ a program of
llports was carr1ed out, prizes ben-1, ;
~.warded . the winners. In the b~U
ga1:11e t.he single men captained
·':·'..:-''.'.;..~if:/:~-•\· Joel . Mlller of Boston, defeated t_he
~
':fi~~~dBo:~~. ~afJai~ed by Jamc,s
1
1
· I
George E. Murphy, Lo'Wen, won the
·j golf driving contest: Milton I. Smith,
1 ;Boston~. captured first prize in the lOO~
yard dash. Teams known as ·fte
Lightweights and Heavyweights en ..
.gaged in a tug of war with the .11tt?e
j-~~~!_Q_~s winning the cup. _ _ ____ _
,
;'/·~

J

~· ~ ~, , __ '\-.,1·

byl·:

,~{\"~ t:~:_.r-:- ,:,

:¥[}~~::f<

,

,,:_~~~'~t~:·\

/ :So.ston

I

I
.J

8 IFOSWORTH STREET
BOSTO,N

MASS

I

·1

i
'
1TELEGRAIIII-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.
l'
;

':So.ston )l:otws-<tlip ':SunBu
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

REVIEW, WINTHROP, MASS.

liigh academic -~1tan~ing at, Nor
Un~versity allowed him to enter

ex~'-R-l·lllitll· ----L-s-.
AMONG THE

out·

':Soston :i1ew.s-<tll:p ':Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STR1"ET
BOSTON

MASS,

BULLETIN, NATICK, MASS.

'Y.;o.ston. ".:Sl~ws-\!:llp 'Y.;ur~au

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

,POST, WORCESTER, MASS.
TIMES, WHITMAN, MASS.

,!IJl

1910,
23,
:married November
daughter
l\iarisita 'ft Lenahan,
Congressman John T Lenahan

~ e r men·may secure employment.-

\V1Jkes-Ba,r:re, Pa , 11:"f:,iclP.s a":'
155
Kiisyth Road, Brighton district of
Boston He 'has eleven children, all
of whom are living; is a brother of
Judge Daniel T. O'Conrn•ll of the
Superior Bench Mr. Cl'Con,;Hll was
elected to Congress, se;.·ving in the
60th and, 61st
Congress;
was
a
member of the Constitutional Convention, 1918-1920; he is a
9ommissioner on Uniform
State Laws
ein:ce 1914, having l>ee,n appoi.rlied
by Govern;r·-w'.;1sh ;._n;;i: each
sue i
ceeding Governor and is now serv-- ,,
ing o!l. the Commission;
has bee~
elected Vice President of that CoD.1mission 8..ri.d Chairman of the Con1mittee on the Laws of Commercial

. , O'Connell's Answ;;T;~ Post Questionnaire
Former
Congressman
Joseph
F.
O'Connell, one of the candidates for
the Democratic nomination for United
States senator who has announced he,
will remain fu the race irrespective of:
what decision today's conference makes,
is a native of Bosto.n and a graduate of
Bostoh College in 1893 and of ·Harvard

Law School in 1896
He served in Congress from 1907 to
11914, resuming practice .of law with his
!brothers, one of whom ~s Judge Daniel
1T. O'Connell r of Superior Court, when
·s second Washington term expired.
e spent three years, 1918, 1919 and
920, ift the Massachusetts Constitu~ional Convention and was a'ppointed by
he then Gov Davjd I. Walsh a>'mem~ er of the commission On uniform state 1
~~~~:iidge,

m~;~ti:7J::~id!te rir ~=~':itte4

'

:communic~tion

He is, 9: ~ember of the American
ar 4sso9~atl.pn and a lif~ member of
he A:\ne!1can Law Institute, serving the
last four ~ears on , the coinmittee to
draft a uniform criminal code · For_.:mer Congressman O'Connell is also a
e~b.er of the Massachusetts Bar As1;>c1~t1on, the city of Boston Bar Asso1a tio.n. the Harvard Clubs in Boston
and m N~w York and the University
~:nub of Boston. He is also a vice pre:1de~t of the American-Irish Historical
:society and a member of the Moose
. '[Elks, A. 0 H., and the Young Men';
Catholic Association of Boston.
Congressman
O'Connell
1_ Former
!Served~ with President Hoover when the
patter w_as secretary of Commerce on
!he National Sa.fety Council in 1927·
1
1:;c8-29. He is an incorporator of the
. !Suffolk Law S~hool in Boston ahd a
f~f hdef of tM 1DDernia Savings Bank
o Boston.
,,..
!
He is married and has 1i children.

the arbitration'.
commission
with
I .General Go~thals and. General An-

r;

-·.,,:··'".,,·,.,·_·_ _

s_t_a_t_e_s_s_e_n~a.t_e _ _ _ _ _ sell conce~ing the
_

ferries

taken ~\i.·;

\!' over

by the Uirited
States during" '. ·
the World War; was a member of! .

.,,;,.
June 26, 1 9 3 0. the C~al'ter Revision Committee of"
e:.Edi,tor Whitman Times:the ?ity of Boston in 1923; is Vie"/
\,candidate for the Democratic ' President and Trustee
of
hon: for the office o,f United 'Law Behool; Ls a member o
es" ~e~a.to~ in the Primaries in.1 MasS&i!li&?cL*,s' Bar Association an
~:iµ,~t, I ·felt you might wish to! the Bar . Assoc'ation of ~he City oj
'\~\.'.~:t: :~nd I am enclosin·g one: ~oston; ts First Vice Prestdent
o
. \With which I hope you mai be ,the
American-Irish-Historical
So
'').o· use·in connection with what• ciety, and a mem'ber of the Harvard
, '!l,tt~ntwrr you may- feel·. my· ,9J\\.!l.s q_f ~9.i;t9n a:nd New York,' antj
'iM¢y is entitled to·.
... ,
, f' life member
of
the
Uiversitf, ./
, is,, II\Y intention
to
wage
a 'Co~u-~. of Boston.
us campaign from this ..Jjme. \
·
·
· -. . .'. and I shall appreciate the' priv-·
/ fflElge of be!ttg allowed to send you,
\.from time to time, such
material
j~~D. ~x:µ~riig the campaign as I think
· J,,be·o,f interest and whi~~ you
8 BOSWORTH STREET
·, .'feel may be of sufficient pa,bl!c
BOSTON
MASS.
~rtit,11ce to carry in· your paper.
·,r .also in,clude herewith a brief

I

&ff~

I

. Thariking you for whatever coUJ:-

~sfes, yqu may e·x.t.end to me in this

UTIZEN, BELMONT, MASS.

l:

Former Congressman

O'Connell

I •

i'

,

j

,
t

\
·:

,

l

fa.. '

:vors repeal of the Eighteenth Amend ..
ent and the Volstead Act and favors
ftat~, control of liquor. He is against
he Hoov~r-Grundy" tariff which · he
char_ges raises the cost of living and is
, ~ak1ng enf:'mies of foreign countries. H
1~ also against alliances with other na:
hons an_d favors curbing the growth of
th~. chain store and the chajn bank
\ ;clam1:ing they are stifling the country's
1nd1v1dua11ty and growth.
1
He\ would read just and broaden the
iFede1~ Reserye Bank's powers that a
! financial pan1y
such as gripped the
:' country la.st fall might be averted and
1 he opposes giant consolidations of railroads. He would .also liberalize the. world
j War l..---- veteran t'reatment, ,----~-c,_,

\ '.·
)

I;:
i

' '
·

')

I

f,.

atter, I am,
·
Very respectfully yours,
,
JOS'EPH F o·t:oNNELL •'.
'.f
SKETCH OF LIFE
.
:.
}Ion. Joseph F. O'Connell was ·..
:!born: ,in Boston December 7,
1872,
\'the ,son, of .T_ames .a.nd Elizabeth O',:nnell; .attended/ Boston
College,
i'ying the degree of A. J:l.
and Harvard Law School,
tl;le degree of LL B

-ao~. vc1o;s a~~v~~c~v::1

,: ~:t. He served as national vice presiJ

Arbitrat:cf1"l; servli3d as a member of

''JOSEPH F. O'CONNELL

:2. ": ,JZ;;

:.-:

.. j

I
!

t

'

.

----~--

i

:Soston ".:Sl&w.s-'1'.lq, 'Y.;unau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

I

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
,, '.
/
!I 1

(

;•oher

!tte:t:jp

j

Bet

olk Alumni Dinner

;I

• Man,sfield, prestdent of', th:e
setts Bal' ..Assocj.ation, who
raduating class of B. U.

!

0

'

COURA:8T, HARTFORD, CONN5

Gleason L. .~che~, _,)Vhp ife..
r Mansfield,$ re~,- _as:'.' a.

WEDS

l

w~~f~~ ,!!!~

I
·l
'.1

ing of the IQ. q\leStion of ''w~th•

at:'

shall have an .ar i~toQracy or
..
'Tacy at the bar/' a,ccused the
·ent of the MaSlS'achusetts Bar

of Mr. and Mrs. George H Menut,
344 Merrimac. str~t, this city, and

iation of insincerity in bewailing

Edwin M. C French, Jr., son of City
and Mrs. Edwin M; C.
French of Worcester, were u-nited
in marriage yesterday by Rev. Edwin H. Prescott, at the parsonage of
the Baptist ,church.
I
The couple was attended by Mrs
Bert.ram T. French,. this city, sister
of the bride, and Atty. Norman •M
French of Worcester, brother of the
groom. The double ring service was
used.

·
Following the ceremony with the
immediate families present, a reception was peld at ,the home of the

1Messenger

act that a bar ~i;>;plicant n~ed

fulfill twQ y~ars ip. a.n evening
~chool ip. order to b& freed of
g a.u ElXamination as 'to g~~eral

I

tion.
ean Archer sai,cl that last y.ear he

.. :·JP\"~aent~d to the l,iegislature a bill
·i-;w}lich wo.uld made, it neces~ary for
· ' ·
bar applicant ot have a bigh
I -education. At that time, he
'he it).Vited Mr Mansfield "to come
d fight for ·:1t."
is," declared Dean A:reher, uts

e

rst

ue

~~·

.•

Sc ol yesterday that "it i$ too
t
become a membe~. t,f the bar
_
sa~se?/Jt~.·· w.as -!El.ken DY ~
e pr c a:t·
e~re last ¢ght 'at
e :rf
nnu
ba . u. et of t),a. e SufLa ·· Sch l Af mnj. ~s~clatlon !

·

MAss;_ .

BOSTON

f; NEWS-HERALD, NEWBURY~ORT, MASsJ

tion to ti,.e ~emarks of Fred-

Elks Hotel;' .

8 BOSWORTH STREEC

I

I

ha~ said about it.,,

J.

>;,{P;ean Archer, offering a refu~atlon
i:Jt'.. ·the eharge that admission to the
.);,3-l in. thi,s State fs ma.d~ too eR.sy,
a:red that after watching the
:
~r~xam!llationJ !or

h~e!~

25 years he had reached the
on that the ex.am.inatio:qs. of
a.re m.u-oh harde:r thari those- o:f
ter Of a. centur":V ·agO; that ·muCh
difficult require:tnents are ,de..
~~n.ded th&n the time when ·"~.r
Ma~~field and I were admitted to ,:the
as J. Bojrnton, president of th
of trustees of Suffolk, told the
;members of the 1930 class attendthe alumni dinner, ' You are every

// bri'.i;~~ ~~i,1.;t· is a graduate of the
j ,schools of this city, and of the Chan. c : dler Secretarial School of Boston,
,.·. ,, class of 1927. She was until rec.ently,
·1employed with the First and Ocean
, . , National Bank of this city.

: Mr. Freµch is a graduate of the
; ::::chooJB. of Worcester, a senior in the
Suffol~ ~ Bfeool of Bostom, aI)d is
a depa! F
JL4iad in the Pub!ic'Lib, rary of Wo~cester.

After a wedding trip spent In New
;Hampshire, the couple will reside at
cJ?.5-S.tar,!0'~d, ·Worcester.
· ·

4

:Soston )tcw.s-(t:lq, Y.,u-reu1u

a free thinker ·as to the affairs of
country, as to its Jaws and aES to

what the laws ought to be, In this
·there 1$ great hope tor the future.
·' '*You haven't biaen. milled' through

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

4

MASS.

~erta1.n l)t"eseribed uni'Versity eour::;;es,"

:sb went on, "be.c~µise c~pitalists 'have
11<> dictated it.'' ,
'
· . James H. Brennan, past president
of. th.e Suffolk ·a.lum,ni, seconded the
·sentiments of the other speakers and
tofd the a:raduate,r not to Jet "these

RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.

:fflen giVe-You an inferiority -complex."
Re potnted out the numerous Suffolk
gl.'aduates who have won fame in their
profession and said that Suffolk men j
challenge the graduates of any ot11:er I

la:w. school in al)ility, integrity and J
character.
gi, R. Spillane of Lowen. pre•!- ,
ot · the al.u mni association .. was
aster. His greetings to the
~e-niof' class we:re responded to by the 1
, . . class president, Jam.es J,.. Glynn.
}1:1. 0. th. e.r speakers included -presidents of

I

I

~1~ -~e various Suffolk. Law School Alumni

:.~fe,

:,fi.~~1:;- ~ost~~r:irnunitiei;;

$1, .. -·

.

thr~ughout i

__
··--~--~--,·~-'~ .1

:Soston )tcws-(t:(ip :Surcau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

CHRONICLE, READING, MASS.
.
,
•on
·,J;', received his degree of LLB
Uuffolk ~ o o l , Boston,, at
the annual commencement\ exercis~s
, of the school He expects to take the
Massachusetts bar examination in the
near future. At present Mr. Hersam
is employed in the office of Prentiss
& Parker, Reading, Mass.
Monday, June 16, Thomas F. Halpin,
16 Prescott st, was graduated· -from
tTufts Medical _SchooL
Mr .. Halpin
I <vvas·. awarded his, .A., B. degree· from
College in: 1926. He is now
· his'iµterneship. at St. Eliiaospitrul,. ;E\l'ighton, J)ifacss.

+ + +

..

' itsHol):~asf·If~Zg:rno(~~~F .
/,::,:. 10 :30) will be dedicated to. the. "~Pt.i~.
mists." A very wise, dedication it_ JS, J;ll;
our opinion, for only the optinus1:5 ,
have been enjoying most of R-K-0 s ,.
recent air shows. Even the presenqe.
of Ruth Etting failed to save last ,·
1
wee.k's.
.,

+ +.+
"Ignorance or Law 119 Derence, ·•an'
.
address by Gle:ljon.···~ ~tch~ over,
WEA:F this"'l!'!'M!w.d . . 1".~i, ~he
first in a series-of ie'g'al discuss~ons.;n~
; tended to acquaint· the layman w1tl;l>
: the fundamental laws that cafeguard
'society.
+ + +

\

Syndicate Radio Scenarios,

.

Radio scenarios w,:itten by well"·;
known writers, includmg Irvm Cob):>,,
, Albert Paywn Terhune, Wallace Ir~:.
: win and Samuel Hopkin.:; Adams are,
to i>e syndicated, -starting A ~ . 1,
to small radio stations, according to.
' reports. The Judson R!IJd1q J?rogra?/:
Corp. is organizing the servw~,- ~,~tented after· newspa!)er ~ynd1ca,te,s,
and the first effort of its kmd in t)'l<e<:
radio field.
. ., :
Judson believes a number of th~.
'.· .· 600-odd bmadcasting stat10ns O!],ts1de
the major networks, with thell' J
.,: \ cutlets will be attracted by the sYni dicate 'continuity_ idea. The range_ o~
1subject-matter W/,ll be compreher_,.srv:I'.,,
.. , and celebrities im many fields will ·be\,,,. ,c
· .J used. Included in the latter group ~~ ,.· . , ·
.
Vm-.
··I ready are Gene Sarazen for golf,Leon~. 'I !,',
cent Richards for tennis, Benny
':' \.h\'d for boxing Gertrude Ederle for , ,
iilnimming,, Charles K. Harris for ol!i":'
<t.ime songs, Burton .Holmes for travel, ..
) Charles Paddcck for field sports; an<i. .'
,f, Er.nest Schelling for c:a,ssi"!Ll music_;: t
4 , In addition to the scenario or S\ll'lP~
' ... form for the guidance·'o~ local .sta- 1'
\ tions desiring to stage their own pr~, grams th& completed programs will
be grven electrical trallS!)riptions o,n
,
~
1discs.

i

1

' :::-::r··

,. .,.

..

..:..,,,,~\11,-

_

3?1~~£. ..=,;t;
a,ga.!ns~

tl;te

'Vt:rl~S ..
~t

.:A~is~~cS,,'l f\it/·:.;t.{3--,

8

BOSWORTH

Bos TON

WASS.

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

<.:,~~.:p\,:

bre~!hed into ithis nation the b~eath of
11
~ ~ - - ~ - ~ -_ _______
__,
~~jfl.l'nes Otts spoke as a 18.'."'7er &nd

:::<;~\··\{/\

~1Sa h!~die:! ~~!\e:eci1:11: ~:~!-1'! e~ \.~~~~~/
0

sure by hi,st6riaris, as a. pa.trtOt of" oratorical ta.lent.
.His legal atta.inments
have b.een gl~sSed over oy th6se who
more k'eenty:._ .a,dmit-ed the' power of

!1;,~!~~s th~t__ "~a~e

S.nd <the

Judge

,.'!S FATHER .ofottI:.
:
\.~;'.·' ; ·.·,.·...
I

ti

gre,~~: !~r:etom'f;::
·:ritellect."

n paralleled Ot!!!

-~.

~

,

claimed
a,s the g

.

~u

was

"t:~.f~~!'tC::;ers,
m Harvar~ and
at Plymouth,

10

.

sp~,ker; ·
~

~

t
a._

at.tiong the
" h
t ~ ~ affairs,

11
n arranged
Gounty Bar A

by

the

. t·
ssoc1a 10.n

(Standard Gape Cod Bureau ]

l for. No judgment was ever pronounced,

,¥£~

-~.,:/ij
1.\:: ·~

htstorians disputing whether writs Qf
assistance were issued afterward

"Thus did Otis, the lawyer, establish

: Supreme Qourt, and Judge Daniel Theo-

i~

Idore O'Connell, Supe1'ior Court.. The
l Hyannis Boys• band provided music for
. Otis, out.standing Cape codder Of hisl.the ·dinner.

'1

"\~,.<

:-·. .: '"·-'.~-!

1

'

?:{ !dfu~~t:r,

w~1;

a~dth::1t!hero;.s !~~~1'e
):~/)jhor-e of' 'Y:C?Ur excellent neWS:i,,a.pers,. a
t-11eri~s of articles on the services which
~ }··James Otis,. the son of ~am.stable
ons In my own youth ~t:?·county,_.,ren~~e~ .to the Unjted States
· t· t-Od.8.y. I could never )f~." of ~Z:0~:I"i~ !ln !P-v1ng birth to the cause
g;;ta:lill,ed to meet the res ;,.,.. c f libert;..;;y.;·----1!1!11!!'~~"""'

*

~~iii!'!;t 1/t(Zkl:;~~,said.
1.:l:
· " · · Of .Arherica,'" he
they advocate iS
ted, the systeni of
Our ancestors won
ar of the B,,e--voluent Ori..
.
ofteld, a.y.. assfi;ta~
,:another speaker
· • as Wa$ Heman
o.f the Barnstable
n.

,.4.f.~net. -~as served ltf: the
'.S,.G~ut;; at-OSte.r.vUle, after

';,;ir'e · sl)ee6.hee · by Judge
·, .<>/ ·. us-ed '"The Si,itrit o:t:
·s'. ,Ji!ii title;· Judge O'Con·em«/•James OUs C\tizen,

r~{ot~~t~~:leFr:fs~rr\:
···a.Mer Welsh of ProvinC:e->
· ~s _.Otis O't Hya.nniS;t>ort, a
Ot :t;he ,than honored today•

Jt.\ii{i}~.~

"'

Hyannis, July 26-Memorml exei:_qlses
1
for James Ot.ls Jr , the Revolutlona.r;
patriot, and c:>!d Home day at Brewster
were features toaay on dape Cod. In the Otis memorial exercises,
services were held at 10:45 A. M., at
the· boulder in West Barnstable marking
: his birthplace. The program consisced
of a concert by the First Cadet corps
band, 211th coast artillery, which Is
encamped at south San.dwich. Then
~ d addresses by Heman A. Hardi ing;-pi-esident of the Barnstable Coun1 ty
Bar assocmtion; Dean Gleason L.
! Archer of Su<f,glk La~.school and Mrs
Emma Fall sChOhel&,1.ssistant attorney
general.
This afternoon at 2 P. M. !n the Oys' Ur Harbors club, Osterville, a banque_t
, was to be held in the memory of Otis.
: At this affair, attended by the bar Ol
this county and many other citizens,
! the chief speakers scheduled to be heard
, are: Judg_e Geo=e. Aill!:llst
·
·

: :!~~~E~~b~~ets~:'; tt~e~m~~ean~:~1:~~!
, adverse to Otis and tne people he spoke

f1:i( his mastery of mind and law over that
tr of Lord Mansfield. What availed it to
.. •
-~
England that Mansfield advised George
OJ'.fit .BJ~THPLACB
' ~ , III. and the Cl>,blnet that the writs
·i-'6~-1J·: .:, · ~"
:
.,.: I .: J were legal
Otls prevailed, even In a
~b ~~lilµie was staged at 11 .
} hpstlle: court. ·in · es'tablfshtng that_ they
C' ~.. ;'.1-~ulde:r at West Barn- .
, could not be .enforced. ·
1
\.e',.'jfJ<" .the blrthplac<> ofl.
j "The cause to which.Otis gave life to
~. I:' . u; COnc6'ft provided by
. , triumphed. The man who first saW the
. ~'1
~e ..Ft~- Corps of)
<j light of day at Barnstable, enllghtened
:osto:q. .comprising the mth 1
·,.y-·fj the world. Hts challenge, to' the best
~.
cllQorps. now enc amped ~t '..
..
l. legal
mind of England did not remain. '
ttbrm!i .. ~ohn D. W. Bodfish, '\i:Y ·, unans'\Yered It was answered. 1but in
d cbaJ:~an of the
~ v~in.
Might sought to prevail over
••
,1 right.
It· failed. Otis was th8 victor
~~ oyer Mansfield.
,
~- :i "I h{,>ti& some Barnstable county
: , man within my hearing, or the .~on or

. ,•

I:'

Wins In Hostile Court

_fi .Sup~~me - court and
, T. () CotJ.nell, of the

were

Me.:Oorial Se~vicE!s Held for ~\.
James Ohs Jr., Revolu- C
tfonary Patriot---Brewster
Has Old Home Day
1··

.."From that dkt:e the · 'l~ga.1 mind of
Otis was pitted against the legal mind
of Mansfield, for the attorneys who
before the hlgh@'t c6tirt of the colony
~gued in behalf of the erown, simply
sought to uphold .. principles of law
which the crown authorities in.England
said were sound and must be enforced..
Perhaps no othe'r court argument in
the history of America. during the
colonial period, or Since the establish:..
ment of the United· States of Am,,rica.,
has been referred to so often or
quoted from by historians or biographers as the argument of Otte ..
Judge o•connell told how the colonial
:Judges w.ere aw-ed by the majesty of
Otis" mind, th6 power ot too king, the

·c91pny

, tteh,

1

.. The courage of Oti~ found expression
ln his re~lgnation · from th-& office
charged with -supporttri.g the power of
England to enfol."ce. the writs of as-,
sista.nce. Ht, . 8.t once. became the advocate of the , people,
his
fellow
colonists needing a. fearless cha;mpion
to challenge -the might of ah empire
to exercise a questioned right.

~9-'Mrer~t>atri~~";;f.

}_

HERO'S MEMORY [

J

advocate general. ': '.·} i;;

gal 'Lights Honor

6

k

-RIY ::i1 ~t~J:~tf':~:~t~~t~to~e ::~rc: 'r;:r·
LIBE

·

1

ac-

~Eil8N6is ;

of law and courts ·ustlc& the courts

had been
after a. feW y

who

I

with

f t9ry, was.noted as an attorney and prer Revolutionary firebrand. Born In West
·:cBarnstSfle, he set the colonies toward
: rlibei!ion 1 o years before outbreak of
~evolution_.- - - - i·> ·:A complete report of this. occasion
I with the addresses of Justice sander"':n
and Judge O'Connell in fuU will ~e
1
l_~':':'d i~ The §Unday _standard. _ 's

/ :;tJ?,e

.

>c- HERALD, BOSTON, !!itl:iS.
,t•· ..

.A.U{;. ,.

fi.\~

OhiC(~;,,_'. ' . '~ Tel.l's ~~f:folk. Law Grl3.duates.
, Hoov.~r Will Gall Sep.ate in·S~ssion Next
," l ( .,, W~ekto Consid~r Naval, Treaty
.,., .

',

,,

.~

.

I

·, <nel
·S~

.,bhl.o

:J:~:~~A,;
W)fH,'¢,,...-IE:.LD
·~· . ..:ru,-,iE I

1
''\ BR'OC/<T01'l

ENTERPRI $E'

uvNJ=: n, 1900

l."r£..M

· -·a··ATSUFF-OLK
.. .'3l.D . :W-o-burn,.
Severi!

·)

· men '\Ver.~'
.~ong the graduates whp receive.d
th,e d<!grees at Suffolk
§sll'i,!?1
on Tuesday ·evEllling: Roger AdaJl!s,
,Stinchfield of Clinton, Maine,41~10w_
a :resident; of thm eity, delivel'.eq.
the varedmtory address. The o:th~·
Wob;ri.rn i:nen who received· the.fr
,h~pskins were E.d,wiird G. l3oy~,
Pµilip P. bevel'", ;rohn z. Doherty, ;
Royal R. Giles, Bernard E, Rob-:
/nov:itz, a):ld Ja.co•b L,eader.
'The ora't;or , of the evening was/
Hon.. Simeon "b. ·F'ei,s of · Ohio, :
Unit'eq. States Senator.

Law

Fess cf Ohio comes ~ us and tells our gr~li.~teS'
.L~w .School. that th.ese Leagues of Nations a.nd (
··
· · · · ces, do: not bring permanent pe'aff, \

;_,f
>th

to the worid.

.

Of course they don't. Pacts, in one form or another, are
:as old as history itself. They are label'4 in the name of pea~e,
; always. And always they are formed not for peace but either
. to conserve the spoils of the ,last war or to band Nation:,··
o, gether for -tlie n,ext. We have a law to brand impure fo s.
· :W-e oug-ht to have- one :for these pacts, reading:
·

"Peace Food. · Contains 99 per cent war and oth
del.eterious substances."
•:.
The unfortunate thing is that, men presumed to have he
llltelligeni:e of Senator Fe11 go on Toting for them.
.... - ~ - ~ - - - - - -

~

-

BDQ'rDN

-

-

-

M



-

--

--

J

Al'vJE:.RIC-11-N

J

W.,l3URN
uONc.

,"'f'l/v1E:~

/91 l"t,50

!

b\Vlf'tc-Y

Pvt3L/C

L..lo::DQ..E:R

-TUN/:::. ~Dl f &/3 0

..
. Rob_.ert i.atha.m o·fl!·/1.·ill street grad- '

ted from Suff~w school on

~ _!l!'~day _wi_t_!! ,th~ dJg:ree of L_!a•...:.B._

BRoc1-<ToN

vUNE:

r.:-Nrt=::.RP"'ISE.

~o.

Tf'\'IBUNJ,;::

CAMl31',tbf:f;;:;

J'VNE::. o(_ II

/ '?...30

CAMl?,RIDC.i=:.
J'VNE:_

19.30

~ /1

"r/i'/J3U!Yl::3:.
l'J,30

Bt>':::>Y'OH

P00T'

J"uN~ oio, l'i-30

NIE::.w r=.E: l)FDF?D 'r/Mt:;;;
vV /'/ I:::; ol11 J 1'<3D

~

L~' SclioQ,FGracfuate.

\~ank Fia.lkow; :Son of Mr. and

Mrs. Harry Fialkow of Pearl street,

was graduated from the s~_:Law ,
school in Boston yesterday · wlll'i an .,
LL.B. degree. A number of relatives ·1·
and friends attended the exercises
which lasted throughout the •, aft.~r-_
)!loon and evening. He will . ~i:6~1:>ly
(!i'.ke the 'Mas_sachusetts bar exa,~ 0
~fuiis_-1!,'t_ the clo_se ,of ~he.•fjar~ f.1:' j

CHELS,EA- MEN- '
LAW GRADUATES
. 1
'II
Four

young men, residents

of

this

:

city, were 'graduated from the Suf~
: folk Law School, at the ooni:~ement ~ held fast night in Tremont Temple. All four ,were awarded:

the degree of Bachelor of Law. There
were 255 graduates
The , local men were William Jo· seph Krawczun, Ralph Robert Musto,
Joseph Rubin and William Frederick .
We1!s.
. , ' , J

9t

pee:ia
1?,.0
ss. ot pon'3.\d.'
s.~~ Jo~e

~

aro.o't'\.'b, iron.\

June 17 _:._Walter. ,tr. :rvroo.sGeot'ge H€p.ry Lemay

ster.

,;ts. o~~Yio~~ ~~il~~~lb~~.~

·55

senio1s who were gract-

the

Suffolk, LaW--§choolt

'-1,a.tede<CJ'eniu.g. ,
The commencement ex- 1
,e1e ~
b:eld in '1;:'remont Temple
\ tb\S
. .et
. s\.n 1.eon n. Fess of Ohio, the
\:'~
et-. lt speaker
Wilmot R
\c
id.._ ~nt of the Boston Five
v\.P.'&5 , bank presided, over the
·. Ceil.tS. es pei "Tees wette conferred by
\ ~)t_et'C\~$. J. J>~s'lnton,, former attto..rney
', T'llot<l'r9-\ _ot ~ " sachusetts apd by Glea~~~eL· -~tb."-~' d~n_:>f the·

schosltr::!'!'

'·~

f

I

O

i:~e

\

/~ng 'the." yc;,ung , men receiving
1:lacllelor of: LaV;f degrees la.st evening ,
trom "the SnffAlj ., +i: school were 1
'William Henry . ui er, Sr:, Samuel
:1to1>inson
Ja.mes Ellner Callahan,
!Phllip Joseph 'Durkin, Philip Hurtwiuil and Jolln Francis Sullivan, all
}of S~6m; S,amuel Pearl and: Joseph J.;
tSOniga.n. Jr., and John Le.wrence/
!:Ward of Peabody; aJ:\d Charles Fran-.;
fci1s·Mannlng 'Of .• Danvers. Josepll J.!
fSoitigan,. Jr. of Peabody gave the!
~"""'- prophegy. c.. _ • ___ _

~~}J~tw
il e t:°,i;ram

t56Jji<_
),5

,~~-TliecliELORs or LAw -· ~ :

i1:~r::;;;,;;, --;£

J:>au1 R
this city, rece,vect a_ <i<:!l'ree from .SU~ l~ Law
school Tuesday night at the
COM":.:.
- ~ e n t exercises
cf' 2>

0st

or··
n

of :p;

aYf:~1:ni
;,,. . .
.
. of _ba;c!ilalo . ..
s, ,.. M;r< Rubinson is a graiiuatg · of:
, ~iricoln. grammar and Lowell high i
: ~ols •. Befor1a entering Suffolk La.wt
!bhoo(he attended the Bentley ·schooJ;
.of accountln,g and fl.nance for one year.:
. (At. P'.!'esent he is employed as chief,
&hemist at the Bay State Chemical<
l5e.i:µ1>'!3iY of Peabody.
·

L.OWE:L.L

r'.t . , < of · .Dean Arohe:r.
, ,,
l'.Br1>ther <
/.,-

~-

.

l ~ Awarded ·-De~re.e · ~
(-Honorary LLB Conf~on Clerk
i

\

of Municipal Court
1/:.'!se ~ e p s

A
la}:en by
Amer~can d_>legates at J:.he ,. ecent Lon-,
'~don.: confereriC'e,, a vindi.caµon of the '.

:

SVN

1

J'uNI;:;.

l"i, Jq.:!,O

~~1t;e1t;ted Ke_llogg Peace Paft a:1-d. an/

,-. • .· ernar,dO:s:' Resh of 3/i,:Z: Cresce:u:f'
i'litreet, ~roprletor of the United
'' '
. cl·~eP!nant· Compariy lqcat ..i,
7_MilodY·,stree.t,·wa,rla,st·nfght
d.uated, from ·the Su1'[olk .-Law.
ool,, h;i.:ving compleMU. tftll! !l'Hi.1 ·
''oui:se. He will take his ·bar
,.ia:kamlttations on J\'ne 2Sth.
Mr:
Resh/ -who has been a re·sident of
: this ci~y for the_past four years, is
I .•kffili'!'t.ed . v,ith. bot.h the Knights of
:·P.ythias and the Odd Fellows, be0 .
:"Ing
meinber of King Solomon.
. I,odi,es.' · oil-' Dorchester. ·,.He was:
: gr:;i.duated from the Boston Eve-··
: nilng· High School. ap.d is twenty-.

Te:xt

a.

Th·nr vea.rs.

.old-:k-Z--4=~~

-

WA'- T"HAM N'£.WS-T'f?i/2,U.N°f2.

JU>\>!:: /f,. 1 19-30

·LAW.DEG...._

~yi.6up:OLK SCHOOL •
~- S, Senator S. D. Fess of Ohio
Is Orator at the Graduai,;;,_ /$
tion Exercise.a.

~i'

~achelo/or Laws d ~ were eon-

i !erred on seven local students at the

' 21st annual commenceemn"'Jiifl!liil!!l!lf!!'.'I
Lew school at Tremont te,qip ,
;
Tu.Jll!&J 8e@l!ff!l!ir. ~- A class Q;t 255 mem-·
bi,ra was graduated at the exercl6ea,
v,thieh attracted a capacity audience.
,. i:'Unlted Sta~ Senator Simeon D.:

!!. co=.:i~:t

,,i,.!';t ofa~~~~e!~[,~
,from stations ;wBZ and WBZA at '1.30
#.clook, , The .. degrees· were. conferred
J:>y Thomas J.' Boynton; former attorney

f:i~~~ r 1:~~h'W:~;,t a~~ -ll:::.

.Boston banker, presided.
' Greater. Lynn.err. Who were -award,ed.
'he. Bachelor of Laws degree Included:
·; Arthur E. Richardson, 31 S]:J.erldan
'street, Lynn, a graduate of Lynn Eng9.!sh High school, class of 1922. Mr
Richardson 16 employed as a clerk.
Newman o. Durrell, 26 Lambert
street, Lynn, an assistant department 1
head· at the Lynn office of the United)
•,jShoe Machlneey Corporation.
;
·. · Louis Kobr.ln, 21 Shepard street,1
Lynn, a graduate of Lynn Classical,
High school. Mr. Kobrin 16 -assocl-i
ated with hl6 brother, Attorney Aaron\
Kobrin,
Lynford building,
Central;
square.
,
· William T.lmothy Murphy, a clerk or!'
169 Lawton avenue, Lynn.
,
, William Daly ·Harrington, f6 Sewall.)
si;;eet, LYnn.

Jf',u,eo A. King, 42 Carnes stn>et, Lynn.
·>j. Lester Morley, 26 Minerva sti:eet;
Swampscott.
.i
I
,I

ef'".

LYNN

IT£:M

JLJN£: Jg, 19..30

itl

'Outlines Conferendes

:i FOR LYNNERS Al.

,

as'Su1·8,nce that real progre~_s 1·-has been i
ma"de in 1:he direCtlon of laslirtg: world 'rp~ace were yontained in th~. ~ddres~ f
delivered las):' nig1:1t by S.~_nator'-Simeon,
!>. Fess of Ohio at the 'graduatioh' ex-j
etcises of Suffolk ~aw ·S.chool ,in T.remont Temple.
·· '
·
The'- American trer~~cs, declareq,.
Senat'Or ;Fess; are able:.· 'and pat~·ieiic"
men who, contrary to crtticism directed agairist them, would.J n6t i:,ermit
this country to be placed at a disadvantage in the settlemei:A of at~arue1:t
quot<i,s. Akeady, he said; ~tich 11.aff
been accoinplis~ed iri ti),e oul~iVA.tJ.Qn
Qf a will to peace.
·. ·
The Kellogg Pact, t:fie _sp~S.~&t poi1:1~"'·,
6d out, has· played a . pr6min-€:nt part
l:n. tlte _cultivation of this spi.~_it. "It
has been criticized as a g~§ttt!"e With
out force, u he asserted
"I admit
lias no force back of it other t:lJ.an
pu?lic opinion, but I·.w.);tf. n?t a__ gre~ ~liat
_it-has no significance. 1t is Ii long Step
'.:toward the lasting p,eace ot' t___he world;.

.1

{ ... senator . li'ess to~~ the graduating

1 6laSs of 252-_ members and the th:rong
; Gf persons .fi)l~ng the auditor.iti.m and
tl[tllerie~ flG?Ut.~ th. ~ v~ri6u~ :-,.Ciinfer .. ,
ences between me .World Powij
\ ginning With .the '\V'asbh:lg
, ence in 1.921- &nd 1922
rt
r
': i:h the form-atfbri 6f the
act. 1
F~~nbet!!
i Step by step he outlined
ac.- l Harry G Feld.man
C6mplished at the League of;.'.Ntttions, :a:enry 11-f Ferrick
the conferenc-e at Geneva and the sue- Fr.ank Fia}k~w
0
~~eding conferences, pointing out the'. £ ~n F Fm
difficulties encountered and the In.ix..
ups that sometimes resulted..
In conclusion he said: ~'In the culti- '
vation of understandiiig between na.-,, "5
tiOns and !he f-0.ttering of the wl.11 'to J
peace n?De h&Je. a greater infiuente : W

I

dit~ .f

1
1

1

f

:!t:1ii~f:ost~:ro~d ;~~~e ~:: ;-,€SJ1@.. t
1

Senat6r Fes~· ._ Sp9e~h was broadcast
, (}Ver stations WBZ-W"EZA.
Among those who reGeived their de•
grees f~om rrhon.1:~s J. B!)y:q.,'ton, prest..
r ~~nt
S:f the hoard. _Of trustees, and
! Gleason L, Arche~, deah and founder
1
e;,t the StUfolk Law Sqh6ol, was the
dean's bt'O:ther, Harold Norman Archer.
. An hOhOF'a_ry Lt., E dE!gree Was coli1
~frr::e u~~n~:~!~mcr~~~n~~~o1 ~ :
Evans, seGretary of the board of
l .trus~ees, was the .preSidifig 6:ffice:r, and
1 opened
the exercises With an address
. in which he warned the g"raduatei: against feelin-g that with their g:raduabar had
0
'_'.You have yet to i¢rn.', in activ;¢
practice," he said, '\th~ application 'Of
the ideals of y0;ur ,piofession a.nd ~he
ideals of public service.. It is a fai18.cy to say' that the fundamental thi.ng
iii the making of a lawyer is ,his edu ....
cation. YQu can't get real Cliar~cter ,
ttitining ifi school.
It is fa.t- bettet
fer you tG know how to be honest 1 .
Ulan to kt1-6w your Blackstone. It iS
, tar better to have the ideals of your
' profession at heart than the techI,iique.
. "It is an American boast that n0
man. is sob_igh. as to b~ ab~ve the Ia~.
I n11ght atld;_ 1n answer- tQ the_ t?:~nh• ,
ment of the Chief Jusbice in C:11-iCa.§Oj ;
) that no m~il is too low to receh:_g the;

I

I

t:

~~;1. e:pi:f:,t.~f>lon at the

I
1,

:t~~e~~~i: g;~~~iy:;~:;

r ~:e~!!er~~
i l~ this Government is to continue the'.:
f_ ~ h and the 10,~ alike must be sub- ;
IJ€£t to its laws.
,
,
t
At:cher attacked the g1·GWing
that self-educated men 1nusi:
.,
1V_ay to the univei-sity educated
1- ~ 'citing the examples: of \Vash- :
Jngton, B@ti.ia~Frank..!i!b., .A:n':'rgl:!l
I

J'UNE. }~, /q,30

Wi-ence R. Grove of Jamaica Plain,;
istant clerk of the Massachusetts'!
use of' Representatives, has justl
dved degree from ~ l k Law.1
School.
1

-::ro~s::.

I G~rshom.'D. Hfl.11. Harwich,
' Recent Law' Graduate,
Seeks Legislature Post

Po.s-r
~o

(Special to 'l'he sta.nda.rd.J

Harwich, July 7-Among the 252
graduates of ~
Law school to receive L.L.B-. degrees
eniellt
exercises were tour who ha already
I passed the bar examination.· One oft
· these was Gershom D. Hall of this vil, !age, who is now a candidate for the
i Legislature from the second Barn.stable
' district.
Mr. •Hall and the three other students,
, with special pe~lssion of the bat ex-·
amint,rs, took the tests in December
d ·.passed successfUUy, thus being ilicti
re receipt .of their
d c
n of their college
~ H
s opened an o!l:i&e at
...!itwichs inn, of which he ~ a n0
I ams,g. He ls well known here, belrig a
I nativ,e of th!;, village and for several
'3 ea'ts conducted the G. D. Hall corpor
~~~n, a wft<>l~ale candy business.

a.d1 1-,

·'SUFFOLK,'.LA W SCHOOL
/~\ .
WILL GRADUATE 252

-~~.ti

·:-·~i~
'1· \!

I

Suffolk ~aw Sc0-ool will gradua~e the
its history at the 21st

../f). ban~er cla:ss of

1~~ni~~:

;~~~fe t~~ig~-:n~e~~~t5241of
proximately.. 1200 started as freshmen
fo.ur years .ago will receive their L LB
, degrees.
'I,.- ·-The Commencement orator will be
·u~, S. Senator Simeon D. Fess of Ohio,

,... .:.
-: J .

·

'

1;1 ~~to~t ~~ta~6;st}~if~g o~~ttg~s :fi1 t~! :
l

-' '!·,,! ·~:~~'1X~st

from stations WBZ and:
,. ·.'', : '· . ,,,:;i:he presiding officer will be Wilmot
~ ~. .,.'.Evans,· president of the Boston .Five
Cents Savings Bank Former Atty -Gen

•.?.-;,..:·..·t.

'1
.--~f-

/'1€k/f3£!P FORD~ TA,ND4P()

,,,;, I ·'.i:homas J .Boynton, .chairman of the

:So.ston )tew.s-<Z:lt.p :Sureau

'~'board of tr:ustees, and Dean Gleason
, ·, L. Areher also will address the gradu. , : · ting class.
.-j
The class day exercises will be held
~ j
in the school aud1tor1um Tuesday after) noon. James A. Glynn, president of the
· .) 1930 class, will pre.side. Roger A. stmch, field of Clmton, Me, will deliver the
•. , . valedictory anµ Thomas E. Walker tho,
-' j salutatory. The class history will be read
:_,~: \by John E. Chisholm and the class ora, ·1
tion delivered by Charles A. Cusick
·
Other parts are class poem, Louis Tobin; prophecy, Joseph J S0n1gan, Jr ;
wiH. Charles M·. Rosenfelt; presentation
1of gifts, John F, Smith.
!
1

N

. ;...

,

~.

l)o,._t;;-o,v

HERALD

JUNE. 17, I "130

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MAS.'S.

·~ /~~· -ur

a

e,
y
>r
1•

,e
,i

~;ty.
am

.r-orestry- from -Yale.- Univer~
A i'ter July 1 he' will,' be at.
onomo
East· Bi,ew'ster,;

'y M.. Ferrick, son of·
Y:!
'M· Ferrick· of 9 · Hartw 1'
,(llhberts, w~s g~adu9:ted frO.m
the our year:evening course at the.:.
S.Uffp]Js iii[ ~c!)pol last ni~ht. He,
is a gra ua e rWaltham High and
is in the employ of tlie Boston Consolidated Gas Co. Mr. Fer,:ic,k, who
plans
take his bar examh:i,ations '
in the fall, was entertained· with
his younger, broJher who is tp be.
graduat¢ next week· from Wal- •
tham High, at a graduation lun.cheon at'the home of his ·a11nts.; the
Misses Margar.,e.t and Anna F'..e.;rp.·ck
of FUiier-street, where he•was pre,.1
se.nted ~Y- liis ;r~milY witll. a, g()ld ,
watc·h ,chain.·..
.
,
,:·Bernard. s. ;ae.sll..of:.~72:''q~sceirt'street, proprleti;r 'of tli.e Unitei:r'l'i,x:,.

,
, . aJ;..{J,<!mJ! , . . . .

to

!

,,.

J v L 'I 1, I e, :J ,,

'

L
f

::Soston )t¢ws-~hp ::Su.-¢au

,.

8 BOSWORTH STREET

·l

BOSTON

MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

?,

gr7nding a Week*~t""M~~t;;;r~'"iid Oth'ir
po1nt5..t.n Canada..'
.t

'-1-'"ftoxBuRY DISTRICT

-

Charles L. O'Reilly of, the Egleston
Sq section has filed papers for the D.;.zn_:
ocrati-c nomination for the' House~ of'
Representatives from Ward 11, com-.
prising the Roxbury and Jamaica. .Plaill.
Districts. Mr O'Rellly is an attorn,~
at law. He was graduated· from· .Btts-,:)
: ton College High School and receive(fi
1 his degree of LLB from t~e
La,y School in 1926. He has b
~;
t ~ h the affairs of the district inid
has served as chairman for seve~al·
successful Democratic cand1d~tes.
he --sons ( of
,,

i
, Th_~,_ jtftel:"nOOn · ~ercise~ '!ere in /
the · large • theatre . in, ·the Suffolk;
..Law. ,school building an~ .the <1Vert-l
·.ing •exercises ·in . Tremont Temple.
S:Atty:·.Wilmot R; .Evans\of the .board
of trnstees presided and gave a talk
in which .he· stressed the. :necessity of
t::haracter and ethical·· cohd.uct of a.
lawyer. Fornier Atty.-Gen. 'l;'homas!
J. Bpynton of the boa.rd of ·trui;~,
tees gave ··;,. pleaslng talk i:n which,
he sP9ke h;t a; fathE,rly manner tQi
the gradtiares, a,; one rich in . the i
experience'' o! a practlcjng ·attorney, i
Inviting'. thein to come to him at any
time for advice wHich he would be!
glad ·to; give without ··char&"e after
they entered practice.
Dean Gleason . L. Archer, LL. D,
founder; of Suffolk Law. school, ad~,
dressed· tl:\e · gathering, stressing. the'.
importance of :unrestricted educatio;H
al opportunities for all. :,He cited the'
ca,;es of Lincoln, Chief Justice. Ma;r-1
'shall,, Thoma,s A. Edison .and,. m~.ny;
.other outstanding figures, as men I
'who became gl.'eat. through their own :
.efforts . in ' spf£i,:'::o:f -lack ,, Of eariy l
:schooling at formal' studies.
.:
, United Sta~• Senator Simeon D.
'Fess of Ohi<Y'.WIIS the orator of the i
evening. He discussedrthe world-wide-'
movement · for· peace and' declarEX'[ :
•.that public op,ini,on would :prcive on~ 1
the, stro~t factors .· in ))ringing i
0 \about. H:E;· 1~oke .·at .length ·a!'><>u't J
1t
,th.4 Londdn ··ljil,yal, treaty proceedings,
ex1'1aining th'e 'aims of the co~ries
linv.!>lved. · ,At: the conclusion of '.his ·
!address diplomas' were presented to.
.255, gradua~_Lc:.~·= •
____

ce1vecI the-Bachelor of Laws degremee~t
~

evenlngM.· hY who is a lti'e 1~g resis'J
Mr.
urp ,
te 'in the·'
dent of Lynn, plans to comJ?e
d ~!
bar ei<aminations soon. lle is a,gr:,, u .
ate of st.. Mary's gramµiar a,;i,d cofu; i
II¥Orcial high school 6! Lynn,
,~
Knights of' Columbus ~hocl\o1 Ac-,
counting of Boston . a.ndd &utff 0
L~f
.school lle is an a.tten an. .
.
·
Mary'* churcl;l an<l; re~ides ,.1;_ 159' L;aw. i
:'ton avenue with' his s1stei: : ,
.
,~
1 ,He is a world War veteran and a1:J
: a.ct1'1e ,member Qi Lynn Post J 6,. Ame_ri '

1,i\

Schoen, Alumni assoc1at1on, the North1
Encf'council, Knights .of Qolumb?S of',
Boston, the Psi Bet,:, Mu club .of Bos:!
ton itnd the Wayland Country club or i
wayla.nd.
"

•.',,.

-==--i

, One of the "two Lowell men whQi
received the degree of bachelor of/
~ I~ws .from Suffg]k !Jil:»r: ,s.c,hool _. i~
\ ~f-Ston, Tues~ay evenirig, wa$ ~muets.
: '.Robi:z;i~on, son of Mf. and Mrs. Juliust

<

, ];,. _R?binson of 153~ Smith· street.
-.~F~ ~c(binson is a g_raduate of thfaj

Llnc'oln' irami:nar school and· of the,i
! +,tpwell
high school, and spent one~
: ¥Ear at 1:he B~ntley School of Ae-\
. counting before entering Suffolk Lawd

c.our-ui:;:~-cr,,z.EN :\
t"

/

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I q, 'I '1'-..3 0 \jvlt-1' ()'I

'

LYNN

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

.,
y.

:SUFFOB.'t"W -

. ·:

I

Ma,l~n grad~om S u ~ Law
S c h ~ week are:
t
Lou)s Gurman, 64 Faulkner s ·
saniuel ll Cohen, 9 Linwood st.
Wm F Galvin Jr, 54 Mountain ave.
1
Ell Goldstein, 113 :Boylston st.
James J Mccusker, 121 Elm ave.
&idney< Speigel, 126 Essex st.
I
: Walter T O'Donnell, 30 Wav:r~r, P
\ Melrqsf;.,Jtl!l" grag.µa,,~11c!,_ , < 'ii. - · - ,

\

1

M!'}LDf.: N
(JVNE:

N 1=:' WS

ou . their activl
its secret • .ice., _l:f.!.
. ·.e·;
emplo~~
had !;\!""_·n 41
..

Comm.q:'.

/TEM

Jct, I 't-30

\\ '. 3~MALDEN GR~UATES:

-SAM'9'EL ROBINSON ~3I
GETS LAW DEGREE

.J'VHE:.

-

iJVl\11=:°

~NTE.1'1.PRIS.t'.

::Soston )t¢w.s-~l4' Y.luT¢au

Can i:i:.region. His other a1$iliat1ons in-,;
elu~e. ·membership in. the _Suffolk· Law',

1

wVNC

LDWE:.LL.
.

I

1

uff
;gr sc);)QQl commence
!i ~~ont;empleJ Boston ;~.uesdal'.',\·

:9A

t.J·
,,.~

TCo~~;-;,.d!'d

ynn LL.B. Degree at Suffolk. .

'1

PJROCk,01'!

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A#:t

ctlvffiea.

· ···

BIRTHPLACE' UF ,OIi
HONORS HIS MEAtJ&li
Barnstable Bar 0o~du.cJ
Memorial 1:venf

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

JUL 2 71930
~~

to . I

~----~--"'""".........liiiiii.;;::-~'-

rNOTABLES:PAf)
I

MASS.

I

BOULDER IS MONUMENT /;
TO BARNS-TABLE'S SON-P

MERCURY, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.
I

i
--~~ - - - ~ - ---·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~----~

PAY TRIBUTE
JO MEMORY Of

G~~~!~

Exercises
Otis Jr. Monument at
Barnstable ·

!l!1

Prai?es Resound Over Land
Which Reared Jaines Otis
,
Jr. to Las.ting Fame

'g BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

HEARTTRIBUTE
CAPE 'HERO

/

Dean Take~· Occasion to
Score Efforts to Raise
Law School Standards
West Barnstable, July 26-'
The memory of James Otis ,Tr,,
the Revolutionary patriot and
greatest son of _Cape Cod, w;as
:recalled tod&y ·m, ·exereises ;i.t
the boulder· wJ.i.i•:;1? · niarks · his
birthplac'°'>Jl).ere ai,2. following a
dinner'· at· th~ Oyster 'Harbors
club.
Band Adds l\lilitary Touch.
Distinguished jurists, members of the
.Barnstable county bar, a~d citizens
joined In the tercentenary event to pay
tribute to the patriot who was born in
West Barnstable. In the exercises at
the 9t1s boulder,·approxlmately 300 persons gathered near the site of the
patriot's blrthplace to hear his praises
sounded.
The' scene, · overlooking the
great
marshes of Barnstable, with Sandy .
Neck ani;l ,the blue waters of Bani.stable .
,llarbor off in th~ distance, was sim- , ,
ple and impressive. A military touch l ;
was added by the band of the 211th
Coast artillery, National Guard, which
ls encamped at Sandwich; it gave sev~ral numbe~s as a prelllde to -the Speaking program.\

Bodfish' Introduces Speakers.
Speakers at the boulder were: Heman A. Harding, presltlent 'of the v;
County . Bar association; Dean Glea- - :
son L. Archer of Su~~flk Law ~ ! ,
Mrs. Emnia. Fall Sc Ofi&fu, J.~$4-it ~
~ttorney general, and Commander Ed- r
ward W. Childs of the Barnstable
County G. A. R. post. John D. w ,
.Bodtlsh of Hyannis intrQ,Auced the var- "
· iQu,s _speakers. AlJ the .speeches were
stirring tributes to the memory of the V
great Cape Codder who so eloquently r
aided his countrymen in gaining lib- erty. Former Senator Harding, in his ,t ,
address, traced .the history of the Pll- d ·
grims; their _search for religious free- 1t
dom; their Mayflower compact; and the re
great influence of Oti5. 4 'I love to
think•o! James ·otis," Mr. Harding said,
"coming back at the age of 18 to spend
two years in reading and study- of Otis
s.eeing. these very fields, this ;unllght,
the glories of early morning here and
the. long level height of evening, to go
to the outside beach for contempla":
t,ion."
: The memof;la:I service . at '. the . Otis'. ,.

~µId~

.~k~a~~Jlii:1:.¥s/1 · ···
:;

0
'

111na . .IOU!JII

·,.·

.

. .· )<A

a;a;::~!~~6lf,,

.ae "it_s:-·twen~y"..first

8UOq\iata;J.

e.nt• e:Xe'l"Cises to be held
eirit,le,:·thiS :eVelling. Hon.or. D. · Fess : of Ohio~ United
r., Will :give the ~orinn_encess, which: will be broadc~st

,-

·;·

:

·

~rc~er,. dean.

'II

1111,1,

'.lj<m.tis u~soa: .IOJ P•P"•l.l (·

[;p.lW?.h.,i~:

eti.r.

•ou.tn~~O ,i~n.t,L
Dqrehes.ter;

~~11:;:13:;~:.r~-- Jh~~\:~e·E.BrJtit{0Maurice A
nso~~~~1i1!;
Stj.·n.ch:Held, Woburn;

-.ta.8u1?p se SJ.'BJOIJJO a.1n: Aq pa.re1:;,ap SB.in

I
~'

~8,y eXercises Wei-e held this a1 Sualich, :Boston; "Eµgene:1 H. Sullivan, Providence
·.iri th0 ~~dftorium O:f the ~c~oo :~ufv~n~a.S!fem~ J~~~ ~r~n, s~1ihr';.~.s; J:~hnDe~-1·

ectlbn of Ja.II':es A .. Glynn, D_.or ham; William 'E. Supple. Charlestown; Jerome
0
. pre'sl~0!].t o~ tj'le. class _of ~93~ ~:if~~U
~;ri~~;M1~flri;e~e:r!:r:,
:.,Stinc~fleld of'Qhnton, ~e, -w11 Wint!l~OI?; LoU.is Tobin, Belmont; Josepn_ - L:/
:-«;l~liY~r}~e._valedi~tory arid the_ s~ut~~or: ~~~%·af~~c~e:.ii~~~~~~:lo::·
;__,~ip. ~ be, ~ive~ by Thom~s E. Walke1 Chelsea;. J,os_eph ,F. WS.Ish, Roslindale; Thom.a;~:
i_ ~r9c~ton-;.· _The presentation of the gU A, ... W~lsh, Jamaica Plain; John L~ Ward.
\'.~~;.~~'. ni.9:~e· b~ · Johll F. Fi~n, Canto~,:;~::,; Ji~~l~e;w~6~~~i~c~!}~~\l~~-h
J.. ~. ~:.~- ~h.·fsholm, Medf?:r;'d, w1l.l read t~ Jacob Whitk~n . .Rcixbury: VV'ilfred · WJld:,.
.
f J::li$'.i:Ot'Y· and, the poem will be rendered "I\ ranee; Maynard o. Witherell, Att~bor.o;'.
~\~µi~ ·:Tobi~, B~lmon:t. . Joseph J. 8()~'. fiig~~~ds~?s0;f~~;e~~~!~ t~v:r~i~h~f., Wint~i:o~
~-fg-a.n,/~r., Peabody, will give the prophec)-.
,
_
.
, _ . . . ;~
l ,T:he·01'8:t16li will'be bY Charles A. Cusick, r~ofy)il,ster.; and .the will by Char;es }'1,
-:So.ston ')t¢w.s-Q::li.p -:Surtau
! ·B,o~enfelt; Dorchester. Those on whom
8 BOSWORTH STREET
:l~::'~a~~r_ of .Lasw: de.grees will be con: {:terretl ·are:
BOSTON
MASS.

~6=::_;,

~tf1~=iF~-ti~1~~;r

S~l'""lll" PU1' saqoletU paiqi!n aeAI.e illl!
•AI.O.Iq;J. Ul s.ni:aoJd A.l.laq JO Ss.>uss.>1a.1eo
,
.
"p.tOJJlD ":ii "S (
1a1qo aindaa .zapun p:o'.l{.tOAI. uama;qJ iiod :
..1sa.M, 3'q,L "S5'a.t2o.td a{q'Baanou ~UJ~'BW
az'lr[q aql 1n1"'- 'II""" a1nn Jo paAoid
a.xn at:[+ JI.Oat.to o+ s.rna-:J.un10A pu'B uaw
•an.J JO ~SOJJ<I kapiaisaa UOOU Ol dfi
·paqs1nllupxa
seAI. a;qJ aqi a,o,aq '·w "d g oi ·w ·v
os:s mo,, aepmies a.iaqi pa'.l{.IOAI. pue
•iqll1u A"Pl.Y: auo •uoou,aire &ep1...r SJI""
-;-, .. ,.

'L

I

i

PAY TRIBUTE .
IO MEMORY OF
GAP-

,... ............. ,";"l'.T'<'t:

TTw;;,u:~ 'l.lod:'.1S3M

"S'.l3

(Continued froh?Page 1.)

MERCURY, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

JUL 2 r 'H10



"'111::)

·1n1ai-ea '
;i~otu aq s.1alt\>1d i,,,n is.>nba.i: SJ"JOlJ
·.zattl'llaAI. ..-1:.Ip 1l! os ..-l:JJe1non.t1'd ·sno

Roger. A.

f

01, l'SJOSdS]

Ss.>.IdX3'

-jo

Boston;

yings B~nk .w~ll. pr~sid
Sh~a.v:itz, Haverhill; 'Samuel Siegel.
· ill be cohferl"ed ·by ·~ono
;
/
J; ]3Qynton,. forrr.ier Atto Brookline; Samuel Sla.vinsky, D:otchestef; Joerla.l of MasSachusets and also seph J. Sonigan, Jr.. Peabody; Sidney Spiegel

~t~!i<r_G1~a:~01:1 L'

Pa91!0ii<> .IQAPP •attL
·paltBtuep atp'!lct S'BAI.

'l'l~Oll\'ll ssa.idxa poo adeo all.I'll!" i!u1 i
swotu "lt:l<J. -9 in.oqv~Bi: aJn!' ·u~'.l{ooia: is
1

~n-

BZ-WBZA at 7-30.
Wil·president of the Boston

:tfil&

pµ'll . :ia;.o patun;i. 'a!I!A>jOO.IS: 1ll qoua.r.,i:
:aue.r..1 10 · aouap1s.>i ~ql Jo lU<;>.IJ 1ll isoct ,,.

club Osterville, attended by about 150
pers~ns. After the dinner, the meeting
was adjourned to the blue room where
addresses by Judge George A. Sanderson, supreme Court, Judge Daniel T.
O' Connell, Superior Cou?'t~ and remarks
by Heman A. Harding, Judge l"rederick
C. Swift,- James Oti5, Judge Walter
\Ve1sh and John D. W. Bodfish featured \:
the afternoon.
The addresses of Judges Sanderson
and O'Connell were schOlarly su~ma:ties
of p~es of Otis's career as. a lawyer
and advocate of colqnial independence.
Judge Sap.derson,' opening his address,
said he had never In 17 years on the
Superior Court benc9:- had occasion ~
sit at Barnstable but regretted it; he
paid tribute to Lemuel Shaw, the Cape's
'great son who was Chie:f justice o~ l.V:l~sachusftts Sup-reme Court f,or 30 years
Judge Sanderson termed. Otis ~ne of the
''leaders In an a,ge of <U;;tingu!shed
men."
;,,.·
,.
Judge O'Connei1 ·confessed to an ar. dent admiration and long study of the
life of Ot!.s, and' touched -extensively On
aspects Of Otis's career as a lawyer.

·:,: ,
1

.i'J.~
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·/·.I.

;···•

•, 'j
,ti;_]

Relieve ~ Grea.t career.

-

The afternoon 'session wound up with
brief remarks by Judge Swift, Mr. Harding, Mr. Bodfish, ·Jame,, Otis, of Hyan·
nisport, and Judge Walter Welsh. In all,
the name of Otis was recalled, praised,
and hi$ great career relived for two
hours.
Dean..__Arche,, of Suffolk school, a fte.r
..
touchirig · l$6if Blidb$ Che tercentenary celebration_ and its signlllca:nce, took occasion to launch a ciiffesertation upon what he termed a
"dramatic struggle for supremacy between the principle of government l>Y a
wealthy and well born minority and
that other prir.-iple, so strikingly dem- , ,
onstrated at Plymouth, of a government
ol: the people, by .the people, and :ror
the people."
·
Atacks New Standards.

Thls thought was developed by Dean
Archer Into an attack upon the efforts
that the Association of American Law
Schools ls making to raise the standards of colleges or". law Instruction.
"Had conditions In my own youth been
what they are t\>(lay I could never
myself have qualified to met the re- ;
quirement that the association ls seekIng to impOse on the youth or America,"
he said.
·
'
"If it should come to pass that a boy
o i5 unable to go to college, either
because Of poverty Or because the colleges are so crowded that he can not 1
get In, If such a. boy is · to be denied ·
the right to educate him.self, the right .
to aspire to· greatness, the right to prove
his wo:rth In the great arena of life,

then 1:hls prlcele.,;s heritage of democracy bequested to u.s by· James Otis i
and the patriots of the Revolution has ·
b.een. taken from us,by the foes of dem-

OCr8iCY'." ·
..
, bean Archer turther said that "the

system. advocated ·b:y<, these college· pro-

fessors -:is the. outworn ,a.n.d' :.discredited system of privilege · tto:n whibh
'
n deJ,Jv~a.nce. Jn ~e,

'J;!!"

THE BOSTON tlEVlE\V
has Just finished at Harvard, a daugh\c .
ter is a senior at Emmanuel Collegl
(Notre Dame), and a third son attendl
Boston College \High School.
'
Henry P Fielding, Democratic canMr. Fielding s'erved for fifteen year&
didate for Attorney General of the as assistant district attorney in Suf~
Commonwealth, has been a practicing folk County under three district at-,
torneys includi~:g the late Joseph C.r~
Pelletier for whom Mr. Fielding aij\,
ways entertained a most Joyal affe
tio. n. Mr Fielding resigned voluntar ";,.
ily under the administration of Dis ·
trict Attorney Thomas C O'Brien t
engage in the private practice o)'. his!
p1~ofessiou and now maintains a'u in-'
dependent suite of offices at 53 State,
street. "\Yhile serving as assistant district attorney, in fifteen years Mr.,
Fielding tried and handled many im-i
portant cases
At one time he tried1'
cases for the Commonwealth almostj ::
continuously for a sustained period! ·
of· five years.
He prepared many of
the Commonwealth's briefs for the'
Supreme Court, and argued a number
of cases hefore the full bench. While
in the district attorney's office, he
performed a major part of presentation of cases to the Grand Jury, and
prosecuted a number oi murder cases, ~'
including the case of Commonwealth ,
v. Dascalakis, which was before the;
HENRY P. FIELDING
Supreme Court three times, resuiting
attorney for over a quarter of a cen- in final decision for the Common- i
tur.i-. He is married and resides with wealth
While in the district attor-/
: his wife and children at 15 Montague ney's office Mr. Fielding disposed ofi
many routine cases by recommendastreet, Dorchester. Mrs. Fielding is
Court, and his recom'i the daughter of Inspectof John W. tion to ,he were uniformly accepted ·
me;,_dations
., Deehan, retired, of the Can\,bridge poby the Court without question .
. Hee Department. One son is a chemMr. Fielding has also sat as auditor
ical engineer with the Goodyear Tire
and master on references from the Su[ Company at Akron, Ohio; another son
preme Judicial Court and from the Slli ,

FIELDING'S CANDIDACY
FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL

::Sosfo~' )i~;s~<rl4,'

i~-:ioit :.'·

8 BOSWORTH STiEET::
'.

BOSTON

',

MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

>

1

1'

. .-. ,, '''; f:\f \
--~-·-

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::Sos ton )?~ws-<t:ltp ::Sur~au
8 BOSWORTH SrREET

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~;:~::s~:::rdu. ~e:d!!t~:s t:e:::,.:t:~~-

- - - - - - - - - - ·_ _ ----1 · -- subject of criminal law and the
~ct of agency for ten years a

BOSTON

MASS.

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
~;,

;lk Law School.
.
r.>
is a member of the American ,
Association, Massachusetts Barf'
c. iation, Boston Bar Association, .
ish War Veterans, Knights of Cons, Bishop Cheverus Assembly, '
Charitable Irish Society, .Cath1Uumni Sodality, Boston Univer•
Law School Association, Suffolk ''f
Alumni Association, Savin Hill
: Club and Boston City Club.
[

. OODHUE-MURPHY
,.
A.Mi-nuptial mass, at 9 o'clock, i~
St "'Pef~r's Catholic church Wednesday morning, Miss Anna M. Murphy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs Thomas F.
Murphy, of 29 Vassal lane, became the
bride of Edwin Goodhue of Quincy.
The ceremony was performed by Rev.
Stephen F. Moran
The bride, gowned in white satin,
with veil of tulle trimmed with orange
blossoms, was attended by her sister,
Miss Mary G. Murphy, who wore pink
chiffon, picture hat, with blue shoes.
William Goodhue, brother of the
groom, was best man. Ushers were
John P. Murphy and Thomas J, Murphy
Solos were sung by Thomas !
Quinn.
Following the mass a reception was
tendered the couple at the Hotel Com-· I:
\, mander. The bride sis a brother of r
Thomas Murphy, Rindge football
coach
The bride and groom left on a
motor tour of the South, after which
they will make their home at 64 Gilbert road, Belmont.
Miss Murphy attended the High and
Latin school
The groom is a graduate of Quincy High and the
.,_, isahool. He is connected with
John A Conkey & Company of Boson.

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8 BOIIWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

- Wnfc GET
SIX
\DEGREES FROM

~oµc ~w

Walker Will Deliver
Salutatory.

~oston )t~ws-'1::ltp Y.,una.u
8

80SWORT~ STREET

BOSTON

MASS

Bos TON

TRAVELER, BOSTON, iVIASS.

MASS.

TELEGRAM-SUN, LAWRENCE, MASS.

J'UN. '

H-;fs1ield, ~ ~~~~or-i\

/

SIX TO RECEIVE
SUFFOLK DEGREES

·1

C.

ays War

:::~

Six G:re,a:ter La~renc,e y,oung" men
!'WiH reice-ive, Ba che1or of: Law ·degrees
at the" 2,lst .annual comm.e,ncem~nt
ex.er,ciiSea of the Suff-01'k La.W sch6ol

1

1

OhiJSen:~:~~:~=~s !~

. €,p,rp,1-e, Bostion. ev.e.ni.ng at· Tr.·e,m.on-t
be. hel.d. this
The:y
ar,e: Peter
WilHarn
Connors ,of
Lawre.nce-;

3

rank Dolan, of Lawre:nce; Wllf,red
he-0d-0r6, Dwer of Andover: .Ailbert
ani-el Fanning of La..-Wren. ce; Alan
he.odors Polgree-n of Andove1r and
~ flf.r~.. :l!Yi}cl, -~ ~~e.. ~ - L L i l
~...~~~- ~ - -~-:~_ ~· ,· .-.-·:

in

. Will Call Senate Session N e~t Week to
Consider Naval Treaty

.,.::O,.e P:,ndon naval treat§' will be con;JFess of Ohio declared in an address be. '• sic,yed [by the United States senate fore 3000 persons. at the 21st annual
--

J,p..~~

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

~~m¥1re~~6~ten,i,e~p~4~;f

5ession next week, -~enator

Y.,o.ston )t¢w.s-(l:llp Y.,ur¢O.U
MAss,

1
I

·

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

/

tmvriC~ch=-:i

.sa1d that the senate will be called into
special. session the day after adJournment of Congress
S,,nator Fess confined his a.ddress tc
the attempts of the world nations during the past several years to bring
about naval disarmament. He did not
mention the tariff. The address was
broadcast on the air by stations w!;zA
and WBZ.
.
. The senate and the House have about
· completed the program for which the



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Y.,oston )t~ws-(tl\:p Y.,ur¢au

1

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8 BOSWORTH STREET

h!p~~}d:}

:~e~~~~i~eas15 ~~rit~dag~~
the legislation to be considered in- ~
eluding domestic and foreign problems '.,
The domestic part of the program has_\

BOSTON

I

!bee~ completed and only, awaits the (
,signature of President Hoover Of the l
.[foreign problems all that remains is the
'.London naval treaty.
,
· Though it wa,s very warm the large
:audience of men, women and the gradiuating class of 255 seniors in their caps
!and gowns listened with marked atten- ·
~tion as the senator explained the vari- 1
jous maneouvres since the Washington '
it~aty .seeking meAn.s to end war and
in these he included t,he Geneva conference, the Kellogg-Briand pact and
:the latest treaty now , before the
ISenate.
i The class members awarded degree of
:bachelor of law follow:

ARTHUR E. SANTRY
' "', FATALLY STRICKEN
rBridy 1)ttna Floating' at

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'11~,_,A,,,f!_y_,/

MASS.

\

,.ToRPDh Aborn

\

Rkhard F Cronin
Joseph T Cummiskey
Charles J" Curran
Cha.1 les A· Cusick
Philip P Dever
Frank S Dewey ,
Donald S Di Buono
0
Corneliu~ F Dineen
/ "!~
John Z Doherty
Frank Dolan
DanieI Begley
Thomas B Donnell~
,var1en E. Benson
Joseph L Donovan
, Geore!'e Bernstein
Timothy J Donovan
: :l\-lonis Derzon
.1\faur ice P Downey
John P Doyle , ·
J
Bernard E Duffy· ; Edward G Doyle
Walter A Dullea
!Edward T Brady
Edv,,ard F Duncan, Jr
:George I Breen
N"ewman O Durell
Michael J Bresnallan
Phillip J Durkin
George E Brophy
Peter Dwyer
, Robert ],,! Browne
Wi1f1 ed T Dwyer
Thomas· J Burke
Isadore R Ectn:ian
John J Bush ·· ·
Abraham Einstein
Henry C Rut1€-r
Albert D Fanning
1
Vito Fazio
A
Carl J Feinberg
: Harry G Feldman
· Henr.v 3-f :F'errlck
, Frank !,'talkow

;Swampscott Man Was PersQnnel
,f:litef of United Shoe M~chlnery Co

,;~

MASS.

~ivFlr.tkouTH,

l

Fisherman's Beach

">·1:f,-,
'-~

Leon Aborn
Mark Abon1
Samuel Abrams
Thomas :B' Allen
Dewey_G Archambault
,.Harold N Archer

:~r; ~:~t~;

::

i£~~i~e7f B~J:ik

:iiii~~f'cf Hc!3i1fiii" Jr

-1.--I-;··1·~.]t~it;.;?
,: Ely H Chayet

· · John E Chisholm
' ' Julius B Clayman
Samuel H Cohen
1



·

Francis X Connelly
· Peter W Connors
Cooper



j

orf

i

0

Jos~:n
Ginsberg
Glynn

steJn

Jo'hn F Finn
Joseph J!'l.eri1ing
Gordon J Flink

Paul H Snow
Thomas R Foley
Louis Forti
Frederick Frank
Charles "\V Gaffney
.:ropn. H Gallagher
"\V111iam F Galvin. Jr
Ab'ham M Gan:i.ermau
Royal R Giles
Bernard GinsburgJoseph J Gottlieb
Ralph R Musto
V Neary

1?~ ~ls~gurg-'
W Nola.u,.,

·1foona~,·

The committee in charge of the
tercentenary exercises at West
Barnstable, which is chairmaned by
John D. w·. Bodfish of Hyannis,
has secured Dean Gleason L,
Archer of Suffolk.. Law' school, 11.nd
Mrs. Emma Fafi..b&ii81ieid, assistant
attorney general of, Massachusetts,
as speakers Oil - S~ttll'day 'July 26
at· n o'clock.'
"
The Hyannis Boys'. Band will
furnish mus\c and Honorable Heman A. Harding of Chatham will
aLso speak a:s previouslt a:nnouncedt
These exerciseS wlli't;ake piace ~
the vicinity of ~\~blet marki~
the site of the birthI>iace of J

Ml nun i.,
1
.

""111111

·-

'"fATALLY STRICKEN

i]3-ridy I~loating' at
Fisherman's Beach

F-"Fr~/ru·1;:,~~.0

,SwanJPscott Man Was Persqnnel
:Qldef of United Shoe Machinery Co

'

B
SWAMPSCOTT, Aug 3-The body
, of Arthur E. Santry. 49, o! 23 Minerva
i st, who was fatally stricken while
· ·-.J·.•.wimmJng th. is :morning at Fisher...
tnan!s Beach. was found .fioa.ting oft'

at the beach, attempted.

rto .resuscit~te Santry, buttowas unsuc. LceSsful~ He was
the Lynh

rushed .
· ) ~Ospital, w~ere he was protlo~nced
f"de~.d: on .attiv~
_
,. Mr ,sahtry well known in this
>sec~ion., havin'g formerly been asso-ci-,
'ated with his brother in a. law firin
\ . J_1ere,. . He was graduated fi'oni the 1,

~c·.:.

·. .•
.. ~.~~p~~.~o{.a::tit.n.·~.:·e.1
•Shoe ·..MacJ-ilnery Company, of which Ir·.
..S•-~,. o.l:.·..··La.!F·

, he· wa.S chief of personnel.
·
: 'l,l:e.dical Examiner Loring P. 'Gl'imes
:;Sa.id that death was-due to i:ia1;.Ural
>ca.~ses, 4,nd'.12ot drowning.~: Mr ~ntxy
had }?een subject t<? ~~· attacks, and
it is beiiev,ed that this w.as the caus~
of de"ath~.

,.,..\ ·.·\.': -: -. ,
_: ·
·
.Jl(r Santry bad,g.one sw!?nmlng with
twc,_ qt- .bis s~ns.}:ijf~~
Jng,·:'.&lld

JJ,sa

bish~

.
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J



~

TO SPEAK

The committee in charge of the
tercentenary exercises at West
Barnstable, which is chairmaned by
John D. w·. Bodfish of Hyannis,
has secured Dean Gleason L.
Archer of Suffolk ,Law' school, and
Mrs. Emma Fi,;h, §8Mtlei3, assistant
attorney general· ·of Miu,sachusetts,
as speakers on Satlll'day '.July ~6
at·ll o\1ock.' ' •. ,,· .
The Hyannis Boys• Band will
furnish m~· and Honorable Heman A. Harding of ·Chatham will
also speak as previously;. announced.
These exercises wU!i"take place ill
the vicinity of thfi! '.4'.blet markin{ir,
the site of the birthplace cif J

>shore this afternoon by three boys
J'who were :rowing. Dr Nathaniel Mar-

-~-ftin, · life.guan!

l\llro"CUS,

F. Pinkham to FrederigJt

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:Soston ~¢~~-'<Ct1.p':Sur¢~u
~ BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MAss.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR,

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, BOSTON

i,
a

After'l8 Years. of Night School at B. U.,. \
'X ~fJdwell Looks for Mo~~ WorK to D~.

. Eif!:hteeri years -ago Leo F. Caldwell I grammar school • • • it course in: a.I
of Arlington, Mass., decided that he 1· schqo1 ·to learn how to work. (Nowa-1
would .Uke to t·a. k~ .some evening school !}ays it is. b.usiness c.ollege.) A job a.s_·.
work. Seventeen years ago he decided order c_lerk, . . . . An office ~Y- . • ,, • ,
he would have some more. Sixteen An assistant ~o.".omeone, ~ithout too,
years, ago he thought ..1 · u
I'll · · .n,uch respons!bihty but with e_nough:
.. ,,

g ess
go to keep the:wmd up. . . . A new job I
. .
on· "'.fth_ this: And so on and so on. that "might turn into something 'i! \
And this year, at Bo~ton Unive,rsity_ .·yot1 work· hard ...· . ''. And then, night ...
commencement · exercises, It turned school. And n:,ore mght schooL/And :
out_ that . "co111niencement" was just st.ill more night school. And finally
. _ '/
th.e word to. api:fly to Mr. Caldwells mght school_ W?rk that was almo,;t
status, in.asmuch as he had come to I a )?rofession m itself.
.
_
;
~he conclusion, as.he received hi~ de- .- A man can get orr-'a ship .'fnd sail
gree of Bachelor ·of Business. Admin- around the world and. see. thmgs a~d
istration, that ·he, would. immediately people and learn a lo_t, But t_here can
e1nbark up<?n a new three-year ~our::.e b~ a day -whe? there 1s no ship to stj:it
which, in the end,
give ·him, ail- hrs pocket or his freedom. _But booiss.
ut~r--Master's- d¢gree ..In 1924 he'res A man can ·b~in to live .with .bool!:,s,
ceived his LL.B..from SJJftoJ!r l-aw ":nd t_he, learnmg they hold and his
, S~which he has found very use- hfe will not suffice to come to the end
, :l'ui,- for he is oc_c.upied Jn the legal .of -th': books there are for him."
department. of the Gillette safety
While Caldwell was at work. as an
J:;.azor 'Colnparty.
·
office boy he OV4:'rheai,d things; one
. -Now, .on the basis of. this new de- w~ said by a smgularly prosperous
ci~ion, ·Mr .. Caldwell is what the boys busmess ma?,, who remarked that. the
-wo_uld ·call· "set." For three years. But average busmess man knew too lltt!e
the balance of J?i'ObabUfty ·1s that, abou~ I.aw, and th~ average lawyer
after three years, there will be some: too IIttle ~bout busu;iess. And so L~o
niote· years for ·Mr. Caldwell and so <:::aidwell, ii1- case he should become \
he says now "I don't know what I either one of those men, began to go '·'
i ~hall . do then." Mostly· men, having to. ".c~ool. He doesn't go about mucih ) ,:
applied themselves industriously to advismg others to do likewise. But i ·
18 Yrars of night .sch901 study would what man has done man m:;,.y do. .
.cons_ider . they had earned the right
J:' ,, •
-~---- / •.
to. sit and gaze a~out with a ce,tain r
·<
c;legree of leisurely contemplation;
i
, I
1
'· Not· ].'4:r.· Caldwe!]. "I don't know 1
what' I shall do, but I won't terminate
my. _academic' work.'_' ·
'
, Horati<> Alger liked boys that were !
llke Leo. Caldwell whe_n he was a ·boy
...,,_
, An. errand. runner, .when he was ,in ,
.oo.ston .,,ew.s-<l:lip :Sur¢au
!'



will

:_j ,. _
.

r

:Soston )t¢w.s-(l::ft.p :Surwu.
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

~o.ston )tew.s-<tlq, :Sur¢<1u
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

SUN, LOWELL, MASS. .

MASS.

. COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

JUN 1

~; .

PUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY

'

.M. "' ..

AS:-

~oston )lews- (Cllp ~uf'eau

·;. 8

8

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I

REGISTER, YARlVIOUTHPORT, MASS.

MASS.

RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.

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tax li~ts)

.SAYS YIDD.ISH
WILL NOT DIE

have qU:alified to I!leet the requirement
HIS ME~ORY tha,t the associati~n is seeking to impose!
on the youth> of America," he said
'c
--;: ,~ !
:-Oory of James Otis, Jr, the
"If it ~hould come to pass that a bo~
:1 ;~evol tionary patriot and greatest son who is unable to go to college, either
~~,',Of Cape Cod, was recalled Saturday in because of poverty or because the col~:~~ercises at the boulder which marks leges are so crowded that he can not
;>" · birthplace at West Barnstable and get in, if such a boy is to be denied
owed by a dipner at the Oyster Har- the right to educate himself, the righ1
to aspire to greatness, the right to prove
,s club.
1
his worth in the great arena of life1
,
county bar, and citiZens then this PricelfSS heritage of d~mocracJ,
1
~ the tercentenary event to pay bequested to us by Jam,e~ Otis and th,
,e t9 ;the partrio~ who was born in patriots of the Revolution has been ta,
Barnstable.
In the exercises at ken !rom us by the foes of de~ocracy.' r
tis boulder, approximately 300 perDe::in Archer further sa~d that "thef
. gathered near the site of the pa- system advocated by these college pro-r
s· 'pirtJ;l.place to hear his praises fessors is the outworn and discredited\
system of privil~ge from which our an-j
:,Ejd.,.
.~ i .
E;:·-..~c~e;; overlooking the great mar- cestors won deliveranc"e in the American, ,
. -of :&~'.!'l'stable, with Sandy Nrck Revolution." He· closed with a plea for(
,j;ll!' blue -waters of Barnstable hi,r; lawyers to reject propaganda ~hich'
i~ ,t_}:J.e distance, was simple ~nd would mislead them into surrendering,
vJ, A military touch was added the legal profession.
Mrs Schofield, last speaker at the'
b~cf of the 211th Coast artillery,
l, .Guci'rd, whic:q is encamped at boulder, made some interesting remarks 'i
ga,~e several numbers as a on politics, and a plea for i:p.terest of 1
citizens in good government. She asked \
'to the spe'\king prpgram. 1
·..k,ers at the bould~r \liere: Heman that politics be considered ip. its true i

~
TO OTIS
ii' « T R ~PERPETUATE

a2-9-16

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-gli-

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IChelsea Man's Article
Is Reproduced
ffl-ii•

~ 7,i

:Eli L~vine Worked Dur~

I

I ing His School Days

,_;, 'ft:.

·. Speakers. All the speeches were
:!zig· 'tribtttes to the memory of the
t Cape Codder who so eloquently
his countrymen in gaining liberty.
, .: ;r' .$ie.µato1"
Harding, in his address,
1
d, the history of the Pilgrims; their
~~r religious freedom; their com·~;: .and the great influence of Otis
·~·
ov:e !tO' think of James · Otis," Mr
/.· in~ sa~d, "coming back ~t the age
~
.to spend, two years in reading and
/.'?",":; ,of, \Otis seeing these very fields,
- .unijght, the glories of early morn·; ' iftere and the long level height of
,l:ng, ,to . go to the OU tside beach for

~4·

service at the Otis
took about l'h hours, and the
, were made from a small rajsl~t.fdrm.._1 • ~ c:rm's length from the
e.r it8elf the ~ audience clustered
nd,
of th~ tercentenary fea,::~~J".)t'. dinner at Oyster Harbors
.Osterville, attended by about 150
,,~~ After th~ dinner, the meeting
"0'4':r:ned, to .the blue room where
'l?Y Judge George A Sande ~ e Court, Judge Daniel
.- S1J,pE!:rior Court, ahd remarks
Harding, Judge Frederick
: Js>mes Otis, Judge Walter
John D. W. Bodfish featured
oon.
esses of JudgE>s:Sanderson and

.>'A.·

w~~e

s~~J~~~.Y"'.. ~~.~ari.es

of
, ,9tis:s: ql/:l'.~.:=4:·la.w¥er,,an

dinner affair.
It reminded one of Lincoln campaign- l
-ing against Douglas, or of orators on
soap boxes, to, see the speakers at the
boulder exercises, perched upon a low
platform,~ surrounded by listeners. Perfect weather, a warm sun and a Cool
breeze typi~al of Cape Cod summer favored the affair.
The town of Barnstable aided the
:financing of the celebration. it was
sponsored by and credit goes to the
Barnstable County Bar association, and
its committee of John D W. Bodfish,
chairman, Walter Welsh, Heman A. r,.Harding, Collen C. Campbell, Paul M ,
Swift and Thomas Otis, all too well !
known to require repetition of th~ir \
titles.
A neat souvenir program of the day/
?carri~d a fine picture of the Otis boul- 1
)
der, of James Otis, Jr, and a short,
sketch of his life by James Otis of Hy-I
annisport, a kinsman or one might term f
it collateral descendant
of the sam€)
name
Otis, the patriot, had but one !
son, who died at the ag~ of 18 on
the Revolution-Ii
war.

ELI M

LEVINE

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Eli M
Levine of 81 Blossonl. st
who came to this country in Novem17, not
b er, 1922 ' at tl:)e age 1· of but de
,..
h
knowing a word of Eng is ,
, -

termined
~

!

t;

acquire

an

Amencan

<;dllcation, is a good example of_ the
unlimited possibilities m ·educational
llnes for ambitious :,,oung m~p- ....
In .fa:ilµa'ry, : f923;, lie , e:atere<l ·.~ne
day division of the Edward Devotion
selitol in Brookline, and_ wa:' the
cnly foreign borri boy who ~ractuated
that year. While attending that
school he washed dishes in ~ Broo":·une restaurant till late at mght His

1 .

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.}1r :. work did not, ht>wever, interfere w:th
·:v, ., ! his studies, for he graduated with
:·:,·.: ! high marks in· all his subjects He
I

then attended the Northeastern Pr~p
school, taking several courses _m
English an,l commercial law. While
• a• the prep school he worked hard
\ at his job in the :restaur,a,ni, and, r<>"
i ceived A'S in· most Of his P,8-pers·. ,
I In the fall of 1926 tie 1btadned; a
\ bpokkeeping position in\thi· city a:i,d
'tl:ien. entered the ui,skey .. mmerc1al

'I

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~~cllllt.the. \
ted.:

qol.lege·.·· ,a,nd college, com, .• ting
.'
in .l:u.,;ie,. 192'7
..
from the
.
:> ' b p o ~ g and typewri~

1

" 'He was, the first s,
' ,.
~"'!> i;.W"1>''

co

·

·.,~,~i

_,

~nd,

... ""J'-"'-"

.1,1.1.v~ct5ct.1J.ua

w.rucni

\9-~~ce, was simple
would mislead them into surrendering\\,
.A military touch was added the legal profession.
b'~ci''cir: the 211th Coast artillery, Mrs Schofield, last speaker , at the\
i .. Guard, Which is encamped at boulder, made some interesting. remarks\
c~; , ri ga,v:~ seve~al numbers as a on politics, and a plea for interest of
1
,~ ~o ··.~e spe~king prpgram. '
· citizens in good government She asked
:ers ~t1'.the boulder Were: Heman. that politics be considered ip. its true
\ '~ !):resident of the County Bar sense, an interest in good gover:runent, i
'';-~D~.an,Gleason L. Afcher of and said that James Otis was in the true f
l· Mrs Emma Fall sense of the word a politician as well,
'
·' '/1:o ··-. , ,'~.~sii~t~nt a. orney general, and as lawyer and statesman.
!
,,~~~,!"r ']:!dwa,:¢1' W. Childs of the I Many members of the Otis family '
:'.n"~~DJe _G.·~. ~. post. John D. W were present qt both exercises a:hd the
t.,/,r:tifisJi) Of. .'HYannis introduced the var- dinner affair.
\S~~~~e~~- All . the speeches were
It reminded one of Lincoln campaign.~~'. :tt,i~~e~ to the m~mory of the ing again~t Douglas, or of orators on
t G!aPe Codder who so : eloquently soap boxes, to see the speakers at the
his ~ou~trymen in gaining liberty. boulder exercises, perched upon a low
s~µatpr Harding, in his address, platform; surrounded by listeners. Perthe :µistory of the Pilgrims; their feet weather, a wartn sun and a Cool
·rE!:ligious freedom; their com- breeze typical of Cape Cod summer fa1
.and the ~eat influence of Otis vored the affair
,:v,e ,to think of James · Otis," Mr
The town of Barnstable aided the
~lihg said, ~'coming back at the age financing of the celebration. It was
;· .'· . ,fO<. spend i two years in r~ading and sponsored by and credit goes to the
1
. , <?~- \Otis
~~eing these very fields, Barnstable County Bar association, and
.,_ · ,unJight, the glories of early morn- its committee of John D. W. Bodfish,
a,nd, the long level height of chairman, Walter Welsh, Heman X.
·. ):iig, ,to go to the outside beach for Harding, Collen C. Campbell, Paul M
.. ,.ihP:p~tion.!'
Swift and Thom.as Otis, all
·fh~e~-,, ni'e.b.Orial service at the Otis known to require repetiti~n
took about 1 'f., hours, and the titles.
'
·~~~ '~ere made from a small rajs- · A neat souvenir program of the
~~t(p.rl_l?,,.. ~n arm's length from the )carried a fine picture of the Otis boul:
e,r ·itSl?'lf the "lo audience clustered der, of James Otis, Jr, and a
d;
'
sketch of his life by James Otis of
of the tercentenary fea- annisport, a kinsman or one might
s.. ~:a'. dinner at Oyster Harbors it collateral descendant of the
sterville, attended by about 150 name. Otis, the patriot, had but
of 18 on
'Afte;
di:nner, the meeting son, who died at - the
i;i'~ne~i; to ,the blue room where British prison shi.P
:by· Judge George A. Sande - lary war.
, eme. · Court, Judge Daniel
)5i1J.Pl:I~or Court, arid remarks 1
Harding, Judge Frederick
,. J,µnes Otis, Judge Walter
, John D. W. Bodfish featured
oon.
esses of Judges: Sanderson and
were
s·~aries ?f
. .(}tis'.sc.CIU+~~\&.s,4),;:.w.l'ei:..an

I

I

,

't

·

·J~t

~./~7~

· :.; i'.)i~l"e

the

·' ·A.,.

5:~?u0:{r'.·

.. . . , (

... ·. ·~:~pJ,E$:

. . w~ ;clue£ jtitstice;oi.Mass
·for" ~Q
anderson termed Otis one of the
an age of distinguished
.

/. ~u~~eme- -:·901l:ft·

;:r,ears.

;~J>,Nt~onnell confessed to an ar}l~.!firii:ration, and iong study of the
~{ Otis, '."'ii tou~hed extensively on
~ts
Ot~s·s _career as a lawyer.
\~,-.. ~~~~onl s~ssion Wound up with
, remarks by Judge Sw:ift, Mr Hard-;~· ~,o~, James Otis, of Hyanand Judge Walter Welsh. In
:z:i~e, of Otis was recalled, prais;his gl"eat career re1ived for two

·ot

. ~cher of Suffolk School, after
, g ·:· ~~on phases of the tercentenlebration and its significance, took
.·~ ~o la~ch a diSSertation upon
.e termed a "dramatic struggle for
?"' 9etWeen the principle of
ent by a we':'lthy and' well born:
and that other principle, so .
demonstrated at Plymouth, of
ent of the people, by the peofor the people."
'
}fought wa.s developed by Dean
~r ~to an attack upon the efforts
the '~s<:>ci.ition of American Law
}~~~-· is. making to rai$e the stand/:~: co1leges Of law instruction. "Had
ti9:t,1s. in my own youth been what
'today I could never myself

ELI M

LEVINE

Eli M
Levine of 81 Blossonl. st·,
came to this country m Novem1922, at ti,e age of 17, not
·a word of EngHsh, but determined
acquire ,an American
E';ducation, is a good e:'ample o~ the
unlimited possibilities m educat10nal
for ambitious Y.ou~g m~:1 .. , ..
.faiiiiary,: 1923,, he 0 e,,tered tne
of the Edward Devotion
in Brookline, and - was the
foreign borri boy who graduated
year. W):lile · attending that
school he washed di.shes in ~ Broo~restaurant till late at mght His
work did rn>t, however, interfere w'.th
his studies, for he graduated with
h'oh marks in' all his subjects. He
th;n attended the Northeastern Pr':p
school, taking several courses .m
English an,l commer.cial la'}'. While
~- the prep school he wor)ted hard
at his job in the restaui:an1, and, r~
ceived Ns in most of has JFpers,. ,
In the fall of 1926 i+, 1b~med a

t;

\t

boc,kke.e.ping positio1:1 in. t~· c.1ty. a~d
.
.
· then en.~ere,:l the Liii,Skey , . mJJ?.erciaJ.
oonege,'and in .l:une, 1927, g:~<luated
· from the collegE; . co~~ tmg; the
}'./(JOJ<kee:IAAg and t y ~ i ·
<;o,m:se,s

''.fie. was- the

fu:s:t ·

:Y.;oston :,t¢ws- (!:hp :Y.;ur¢au
8
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

BOS-WORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MA.SB.

BOSTON

ITEM, LYNN. MASS.

/

INDEPENDENT, FALMOUTH, MASS.

TIMES, WOBURN, MASS.

'.::i-.ll~
--&

~)J1e

\{;Ji)

. or1eans:---~--c<=

·-;~ -- -1

.

J0seph

1 - ;~

7,

·o

·-=~~--=~.n:::-:cn::er.cr~-.,
'
it is

!,

·s

.J. Lm..mie, ,Can.di- I
for .Republu.::a1._1_

Ii

.

.
.
I

State Comm1Uee ,

.,•::-,_

of West'- Barnstable, famous in bis! tory for his writs of assistance
'. case. Was recalled in exercises at

- . . ' - '1:

. 'd

We~t Barnstable and Oyster Harbors Saturday.
At the boulder
'inarking his birthplace, John D. w.
Bodfish., _Heman A. Harding, Dean
Gleason t. Arche.r of Suffo
·

} ..

Ir

:~1f§~ ?ftµsf!:n~s
1

:~r::e:

general~ i
were.sp~rs.~
__
~
A~ a dinner in Oyster Harbors t
club; Judge~ George A--. Sa.ri.derson
of the. Supreme 9ourt and Daniel
T. O'Connell, Superior Court, -w.ere
the speakers. All joined in desig: nating James Ot~s. Jr, one af the
greatest t?f patiiots who stirred the
colonists to wage their fight~. fi:m
fteedo~ from the mother couhtry.
He was' tel"med the greatest. of all
qal)e Codders.
·

I~
i

. I -.

I'

Among F~lmouth people pres,e-nt
were: Nathan Ellis, Sr.,
Sumner
Ci::osby and John P: Sylvi.a, Jr.
'

Republican
State
Committee:::rua.n
joseph J. Launi~. tod8-y fied ,,.p~p~;s ~1
fOr re-election with th~ Medford -c'ity !r{Clerk,
.
· , · ·11
.t l\Ir. Laui:tie serv.ed for many years as j:
the Republican City Committee, being
Chairman in 1927___:_1928, and has been ·
.active in Republican Politics for tfie 1
la'.st twenty years.
·
j 1\1'.'r. Launie was, born fn Boston, educated in the public schools, and Bur' de.tt
College;
Golden
Commercial 1
i S. chool, Boston Univer. sit~ Sch~l of..
business Administration and Suffolk

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

NEWS, SALEM, MASS.

I

i-i2,~'

§pbf¥11.

'

I

ficials-.said.-- ~. -

I
Ij
I

. Saritry ·Stricken
/ ·
While· Sw:i~lning

I

Mr. Lannie served f-or many years on

street, who_ ~a.s :rs.tally stridken whil'e

J .._

' An annOIIHl-ceiµent ·~s eX.pectede ton~ght~.b..l"t/,in.era.~y "o:t. ·1?he &1:%'ship
bef'or
h , JW'es :for ~ho:rne.

Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue,
n the Income Tax Divisio,n. and was !
head of the legal department, which
position he res;gned in 1928 to take
up •active practice of law a.t 53 State
Street, Boston.
- _:

- - -

- ·-

'

::Soston :,t¢ws-(!:l4> ::Sur¢au

E;hvru:npscOt't, Al.lg. ~Tb.e b:od.Y.·. ot
Arthur E. San.try,.· 49, of. ~ _MlneJ;"Va

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

sWinuil.ing yesterd~y :tnorn.lng at Fisherman's beach. was found ;floating qff
shore in the afternoon by 't~ree boys
who were rowing .. :Qr. N~thanle-1 M"!lrtin, llfe~guard at the beach,. a:tten,,pted to resuscitS.t:e Santr_y; 1:~ni,t was un-

successful.
He was · ru~hed to . the
Lynn 110Spltar, where 'he was pro-:nounced. dead on '."8,rrivaJ..
Mr. Bantry .wa.s ;w:ell l(;now.n. in .this
section, having :tor.m~rly been associated With h1.s brother in a. law fi:tto.
her~ H'e .was graduated ..from. • "tll-~
S.uf"f'oik· Laiw school in 1902.

- '. ··,

In 1915

i~~in'7'•fa~.!r~~-~ift'!t1~~r51
1Shoe· MaCbinery . com.'p.a~y. Of whie~-

}i~7i,1i~~i~
:C.~,

~

iri.str'Ueton.~ H e : ~ b.een · one ~ rJ~r Other -studeiit.~.- who \took ~~
coUT.Se for credit, -a.nd· su"ccess:eun:vpa.s,sed the examination.., During the
course he has ~... riti:ien two composi- ·

tions e-n Yiddish literature-. Prof'.
Rob:aak
commented :favorably on
both of the articles. HiS ·first axticle,
"Will Yiddish Die?", which is- logically arranged, scholarly •and lucid to

a
marked
the
Jewish
Prof

degree,
Advocate

appeared , in
last 'week.

Roba:ak took with him on his

recent 'trip abroad the sec·ond article,
and is arranging publication , of it

there

·,

:JV,TJ.·
Levine is 11.0,.w a student .at
the Suffella I
school, and is in the
wool waste business with. his fa,ther

MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
I

,I
Ir
:, 1

·\93D·

MASS.
-MASS.

BOSTON

LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

A ... <3 4 ~- ·i>&:\tJ!·

Asking Educational Questions
by Bar Committee Banned .

s

WHO DISCOVERED AM'ERICA

SEVERAL CHANGES _ I
AT SUffJltJ~. tA.WI

Special Group M;w j::xamine
on Cl;iaracter Only·

Review and Book Departments
in New Quarters
·
the interior of the "t>u!lding, providing
gre~tet: facilities tor the Students.
Principal among the changes is the
removal of the bookstore froin the first
floor to the second floor across the hall
from• the librJ!.ry and on the wes.t.•-side

o( the building.

The change was nec~-

Slt.a-t:ed· .bY the cramp~d quarters on' the

l.9w~.r · floor.·

l.e,.xger.... and more commodious quarters

-oit th~. gfouµd
the re'irie·w de~ :
s outg:r'oWn its '.
~~r revie;wers ?-_re,1
gaged i11 marking
:Wj.ng.

classes. ,



and will be better able to care for the

i

J_,_·o_f.. ~olumes in the .
,
been changed to
for the . stu- 1

. ess.
. ("/}t;t~ .
~

1~
,', ·,
,~, :·,. :
·-·,
1,. _,'""'_.,.. j
t ·$, }f.

\

r
!

,:iv.: '

needS of the students.
The rooms vacated on the first floor
wiU ·~e:-used by the review department,
which has outgrown its present quarters
Four reviewers are now :regularly engaged in marking papers of t'he growing
classes.
::;.~~-e a~rangement of volumes in the
libra":ry.:'a;If?o has been cha.nged to provide·.;.·easier access for the students in
····,uppef··Classmen returning to Suffolk
Law school will find several changes in
r~ading cases. .

I~.- - - - - - - - -

8

·, 8

The new· bookstore is in

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

BOSWORTH STRE:t;:T

- -

MASS.

MASS.

, EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
LYNN, MASS.

SUFFOLK LAW PRIZES
WIJRJYjiisTON MEN

-' .. I'

'-avenue

Dryde~e, Student
Receives Award

DOYLE A

CANDIDATE

Th.e ·candidacy of Jam-es Doyle of
·uffoik avenue for the offi("e o-f
coUD.Cilman f"rom Ward Four -was
allnOuriced toCay •
. · ·-~ ·w·ave of I'Ublic approv:-"!.l greet·ea· ·th1s a:Ji'.nouncement wh1•~h. co:rncs
· frOffl ... ·One of the "i,.oungest m~l1. In
;p~-~trict.
Doyle who wilL vote,
fot"- liis first. tim~ this yea!'"' i.: a
~.g,~a~'.tra:t:e-· o·f the Suffolk LaJL,-School
.m;o:re: 'tha':n one 9%«1 a.ad on.e half

~~1i~-

-;,.:;._.;~:,· ~--

:~

'

·-At

present. l>e is engaged
in
W,~t:"kii:;ig ,at h:--, father's ...;t:.ore
c,n
~:t\~it-a.~ay. Ml"'. Doyl-e be~ie7es ~l1itt
~a/3·gr-eat many. changes are n"':ected
J~1.r':th~

prope.:4

\~.•~bur· and
'.,ij~cted f?r

CE:velop:r-n,e.nt of VVard
pl-edg~$· h Js eff_or!:s . if

tl1,ei,f1*lfw~ent of 1:hat

!Or~- -~-:::_"'7i/J'.< ''" ,, ::-

,

'n;.
l
j
I

I

°'\,

~.~

-W.';.T:-__!X\

.

Y.,oston ':ncws-a'.:llp Y.,uTC'1U
8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

MASS.

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

NEWS, SALEM, MASS.

AUG l
B<

-A-- ~E·1i~rrR·y~-~
..··- •.
. t. ~fa11 l_ I __ Q,..

Headliners Today

'l

;

I

·DltOWNED A'f
_ff~SCOIT

BASEBALL
3:00 p. m.-WNAC.
Red Sox j)
vs. St. Louis, broadcast . from I
Fenway Park, reported by Fred
Hoey.
MONEY ON Dl!.MAND
9:30 p. m.-WNAC. True ,De. tective Story.
ADDRESS
8:30 p. rn.-W B Z - W WZ A.
Criminal Law, Cw
~- A.ft11er.
10:30 p. rn.-WNAC. , Fro rn
Washington:
National Radio
.Forum.
GYPSY MUSIC
10:00 p. m.-WNAG. Romany

I

i

'PaUeran. VARIETY
10:00 p. :m.,-WEEI. RCA Hour.
POPULAR
9:00 P• rn.-W~Z-WBZA.
Kn~x...;Dunlap Hatters Orchestra.

\

I

\wo (iredf~;~~

Bodi.Found·Ffoating at

I

1;
.

·

Y:fo;,

Stone; St~in Ensembl9: 1a-ra-m-t=~~\ass
Rondolien.;
(Del Ri.ego). soprano
The ~nd of ou $oi:d), Rondoliers,
\
solos,
. RCA Hour:

't,eno,;G,..,,,,
Love

E

i

: I

Fisherman;s BeachW as O;>nn~cted> With
0. S. M. C.
'The body of Arthur E~ Sant~y. ,;: qf
;23 Minerva street, Swampscott, - who
-1was fatally stricken whil!e switnming
,jsunday
m.orning
at
Fisherman's
!Beach, Swampscott was found float
ing off sl:iore Sul).day afternoon l•y
three boys who w~re rowing
Dr.
)Nathaniel Martin, life-guard at '. tl;le

l

jbeach, atterµpted tot resuscitat~ S~:t:

-

;,but w~ unsuc~ssflul. He wa~ rU~~d

· '

violin

\ to the Lyn~ hospit~l, ~here he

~=~c! \

l pronounced dead o~ arrival
.). "
1 / Mr. santrY. was well known in th

was/

·\ sectio~,. hav~:tig ~ormer~~ been 3:ssof \
-l . 3.ted With his brother in a law ft., n:!
l I in.· Swampscott
F~ w~s graduat~-d,
i f
the Suffolk L a ~ o o l .I 1
i
_:n 1910 h--'~qu.ls~e~. his~}'

\

~ !.;~;.- .

1~··

j i,I'aCti6~

. . . ~~~·., ... ,,;.!l!i1,~W"A".,.· ·.
'

chusetts bar in

has ,been principal
school u, this city i;!

and beca~e associate~ w~t~'

\th'e U~i;!~ ~)?..:,>e 1':1-a~htp.ery Co_r~ra.1;,;t?n_ 1
J·of-.Wh)c"lt pe. w,a.ir.cb1e~_.of_ personµe_l::'es c
i ¥edical Exam1n. er L~ring P. Gri:.·-i\
: sa:id: tha.t A~~th ,,was . d1:)e \o na;nt~
, ca~es, and not drowning. Mr.. S ind
had been subject to he~rt attacks,
I
it is believed that. t~1.is was the ,ca~se \ '

\ of ~:~~~;ntry ~ ha.~ g'.one swimmi:1~ W!th \
1
two of hiS so!ls in the morning ar;d \
. disappeared while swimming i~ , sh~; .
~ low water. He is survived by ~:us w . • !
cather.ine G. .sant1:'.Y• a~d six soj~' \
\i Philip, Thomas, Joseph, ~hur E. r., !!
( .John and Pryce S?,ntry ,,
\

--- ~--=---- ~-~~--

~---=-= ~--~

r.r'.HE BOSTON GLUBJD-

I

,,

QRUGTDDICTION
1
COMt,tlTTEE NAMED i
Members to Probe Conditions in State

-,

I

1;>~e~~ing :five

Yeats

pr~ncipft.l of the
~hool, P~~tiody._ His
PhU!lps. scho61 duf!lig i:,1;,
principal there, has Wo!l
host ef :friends and theu!n his ablllty.
.
·
. He is ,. graduate oi iiie
High sch6!>J and 1n la.ter, ~ ·

tie.ted from. Boston 09Uege .. ,
trait. COIU)'ii
a. degree or A. M.;
the s11:.;; ·; .: 1 ~001 w1~
J 9.! ..~ L. He 1s ma.:i: &l .anci
: gree of A.B.;

: s!ty with

, 2 Roosevelt tt>ad, tiits cltf
l

~~;:~r?~~~·t,.·::~. -~i·~.-:~~;t~~w~:t

:So$tOn )l:«ws-<!:h.p :Sunau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

TIMES, BEVERLY, flIASS
POST, BOSTON, MASS.
NEWS, SALEM, MASS.

.,.,.,,.--~---

·v

AUG J

~----------

-~

Today's Programme
For Post Radio Fans
+--~------------

Programmes East•~ Da)'llght-$avlng Time

Headliners Today
BASEBALL
3:00 p. m.-WNAC.

Red Sox

vs., St. LouiS, broadcast from
Fenway Park, reported by Fred
Hoey.
,

MONEY ON DEMAND
True ,De-

9:30 p. m.-WNAC.
tective Story.

ADDRESS

WNAC-WB1S-Bostett--(244m) 1230k
7.:4S a. m.-Newir.
8:00 a. m.-WBIS: Phonograph musl.o •nd advertising

talk,.

9:00 a.. m -A & P Grocery
9:15 a m.-Ralsto
9:3.&'a.m.-Btatler
9:" a. m.-lioyt's
IO;()() a, m.-From
10;30 a. m.-:Fro.m

8:30 p. m.-WBZ-WB"ZA.,
Criminal Law, G.l,u
~ JS l!ber..
10:30 P• m.-WNAC. , Fro rn
Washington:
National Radio
Forum.

GYPSY MUSIC
10:00 p. ni..-WNAC.
Pat:teran.
VARIETY

Romany

10:00 P• m.;--WEEI. RCA Hour.

9:00

P•

POPULAR
n,.-WBZ-WBZA.

Knox..;Dunlap Hatters Orchestra.

DANCE MUSIC
8:00 p. _.:rn.-WEEI.
Fleischmann Hollr.

Danae

11:00~.

);

-f~~4. ~:

ID-Wea~~; f ~
Rideout.
. ',
'
:
11 :05 p :m.-News; tlme.
wsz~wBZA-S:,,,1..9 , ..1.'aml BO;Ston-:-{~am) 9~0k7:30 a.. m:.-FroID WJZ, New Y01"k: Rise and' Shini,

i;: ::

~rz3tew

:.--=-F~
York: Jolly Bill a!ld J&n~
__ 8:00_~..Dl;:.-,from. WJz;, New York: Quaker~~

, ~ ; ~ ,;!'ff/"' n&~Wtt>
'

Y.,oston )lews-~l\p Y.,uno.u
.·~~:stc,,n )tews-<tltp ~u-re4U

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BosWORTB STREET

BOSTON

MASS

MASS.

, MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

'

Headliners Today

Tercentenary Committee totl:.:t;s ::~~;-;r :ra;1;; fi!!~c:~e;:,~ I
.
mittee,
,
WI·n Hear Argument S ; Igerald. accor<llng to chain;nan :Fitz-r

·;
BASEBALL
·.3.:00 p, rn. WNAC_:_Red Sox
i,,V.tt.: Chicago, broadcast from Fen/ w;iy·Park, reported by Fred Hoey.
: '
ADDRESS
1:: .8:00 p. m. WBZ-WBZA-Crim:::i~al- Law-.:.-Gleason..J- > em~.
" · l!).;60 p. :m.
WBZ-WBZAf A~ess by Charles E v a n s
Hughes.
, -#· J.O,,Qo
p.
m.
WNAC-Oldt:JF•Sbiol'1~d Town Meeting.
·.:o;'.< <·BAND CONCERT
·• ;:§.}p. · ,n. WNAC-Monster

I

-,-~--

I

o~a:d~~d

TUNES

I


:: ' ' VARI,ETY
."m, WEEI-RCA Hour .
. P• m.
WNAC-Wall

• I>; •

, a·gazine Hour.

1. The

f

tn. WBZ-W)3ZA-MaxoUse Melodies.

. ·m. 1\¢~C-Detective'

;

broadcasting <:Ol!'mittee report i
was furnished by Dean Gleason L. I
Axcher, who announced NaUonw!do f
h ~ Tonight at 7:15 Gov Allen
.
will open the series with a talk on
Reque.91:s of racial units for specific •1._Tohn Winthrop and the Puritans."
appropriations to cover expenditures .ij>ean Archer will talk at the same
for their pageants or other historical liour Tuesday, June 10, on "A Banpresenia.tions> in some cas_es running j ~~~" ~~n st~o ofC~~h~
into thousands of dollars, did not meet \ *s adventurous ca:ree:r in the Plyrnwith una_nimous approval at yester- -Quth <C0:1ony and in the settlement of
d·ay's meeting of the exe~utive com- 1 t:he Mas~chusetts Bay colony.
m.It.tee·. of. t_he Boston Tercentenary\ ::Mayor Curley. will _speak Tu-es:day, :
~elebration COmlllitt'ee.
~~~!e 11 ~~l~~r~e B~~~~!. /!f Indepen- .
~
There was an expression of senti- ;,
1
___,


- VB.1 and Band Concert.

i:

Broarlcasting Program

Report on Events on -Common and
,
Franklin Park Approved

i

-''-'- 'SHOW

f;

that electric: gas: &11~ teiepholle comp~ny offidals had been in confe1~ence, ,
a.n'd they would not only put on their ' .~
own pageants, but were prepared to
contribute a. considerable sum of
money to the committee, to help along ~
the Terc~ntenary celel;,ration. ·
l
George S. Mumford, president of the !

OPPOSE PROGRAMS
BY HACIAL UNITS

BO'.

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:-;."! ':i~:':!:-0 ~a"f~! 1~~;;.;"~~~~~ I Pageant Committee Plans t··"
Mrs ·Eva Whiting White':S pageant
0

racial units believe_d nec~s_sary: to cover
1 the e~pense of the~r presentations; express:lon that racial group programs
: sho;tild not have a place and that Boston·s Tercentenary program b~ Amer..
:: ican in ec0;pe and contribuboµs. of
. :, drama, music, etc, be not segregated
! as to ra-ces.
·,
· --

J

comm1ttee made its report yesterday ).
fa) the Boston Tercentenary. Cotnnlit· (.
tee, and the program met with prompt t.
and hearty indorsement. Mrs White j
a"Sked $6000 for the ev~nts on Boston 1
. Oommrin 1 and $2000 (to cover the -.,,t.~ '.
penses of entertainmE;!nts at Franklin '.
Park. Theee amounts were voted.
':
] Racial Groups to Be Heard , The pr?gram calls for 32 distinct:
: It finally was decided on motion ot presentations during July and August, i
:j Ch~irman John F. Fitzg~rald, that the ~~e first on July 16 and the last on,:
·: variou~ groups be given an opP?r- Afug .29.
_
l1 tunity to come to headquarters next
.Each chorus ~will contain. {rpm 150,
i week and offer arguments in justiti- ~ to 300 persons and there will _b~ th~ee 1
I cation of thei~ plans for . seprurate . C?~certs by the Handel and Haydn
'r(l.-cial Celebrations ·tor whkh the city c1ety on Boston Common and one at
lia aske_d .tq, pay~
Franklin Park; a chorus by St P3:ul's
The d,iscussion followed a reference Cathedral Choir, as well as various ..
to the meeting in' the office o! :Mayor \ pageants.
·,
\ Curley last week when representati\t.es
.
-.-jof Irish · and Jewish groups charged Program in Detail
{that the State c_ommittee had _denied
iTh detailed progra~ arrang d1 in- ::.
1the~ represen~ation. It was said that .. dude~:
, ·
e
/'
\Jewish groups want $25,()® to 'cover
' BOSTON COMMON
·,
!their expense and that Germa:n groups ~:rulY l6-Ma.vor's ,nii::-ht, .1. witb chorus and \
,have asked for $12,000 of the Boston trumoeters and his,torical pageant
.
'. cor.1mit:tee to defray expe~ses of the ti/n~l~ 3
Founda.- \
Iprvgrams they are preparing.
Jul:v 21-st ·Pa:ul's
Choir "Dres- ·
1 Ex-Lieut Gov Edward P. Barry be- e~tation of
ury."
J
'Hieved that the committee should re- ..
pageant. J
\CO!'d itself as opposed to appottioning
Jul:v 2n_:_GEl'l'man chorus.
:
Itnone:y: from, the general fund for the
JµIY 28 ao. Aug !-Handel and Ha.vdn i
'. spec Iii c use .of particuI ar. groups. J o h n Soe>eb 4-l{niithts of Columbus program.
Aug
J..ickson Walsh supported him in the
Aug ~Pla.virround noutis , in Mother ,
stand against units, and insisted! "We
i
t. ba...~ines. band and dancers '
are celebrating as Americans, despite
Au.e: 11c. A. t_roitram.
the fli,ct t~at the backgTl)UDd is of ..&i~i:-BJ;to .
ton Hk School o~geant, ,
many. peoples " .
.
.
reft-~ b1~~1'i-5g~tfil;.0Wi~h!~~sot:bleau
J~d~e Leverom s3:1d that various
,l\ug IS-Hawaiian orchestra and Balalaika

l
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So-1,

l

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J~;il111;fSugJ1

,,,

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/Jiitauoii3,,

1'

IGox~~

:~:~~~~rr;u!cs~!~f:e!d}~f

~;:o:reh~6J;

I

i

1
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di-I'

or'i~:tr~2o-Jordan.

Marsh

ni;:ht.

/[

with

a.rr-~nged pretentious programs Chair- chz.~~ 2~P\1t~fi.a¥..fra Chorus
I
! man F~tzgerald then interposed and
~f=f~~'a\i~oCh~rus.
, it was voted to have the various
Aug- 29--Interna.tional niKht with "Da£eant
1 ! groups
heard by the executive com- oi .many Nations.
~
' n 1 ittee.
/
FRANKLIN PARK
' ,
--.jgf~
a3tJlclidiJ'ltci~d Fife
Charter Cavalcad~
"0.\lu1~''ill=-Yrfti'r:;w nueant.
Regarding a. su:ggest~qn that 'Boston
Julv a.1-NewsboYs Foundation- ~d Ja-J>ancontribute $300 as it~ share, f9r the t eslu!Z'
.
econd Conirrua.tfonal
1

l

f~g

1?~=l~~~~n

;~~flg ~~o~ ~?em~~: ~tn~~8!;:
1

c9llth

Chx~i

boys'. band.

I


riv,ing in Boston, Jtlne 14, it was de- Gi::iu§couts.
lk Dance society a.nd)
clared that historians disagree in reAug 14--Plan;round nou-o·s in Mother r
gard to the accuracy of this historical
1i_a,!r t.
. &nd Russian orch~itra.s: (
featu~e. John Jackson Walsh ridicu-led
i_u: \\
-the Ca.vajcade, -calling it an exhibition
A~g 2
i:X:011>es and Hi.irhland:
of historical ignorance. It was gen.. d~ce.rs
1

Gox~

nti:lt.

:

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(>

~~~~~i~=::!1!!5!
I
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Cavalcade would be an interesting
spectacle, and tha~ Boston wonl!l. g<ive 1
, the $300
. . '--.
.1c.., ·· ·.

··1 .Tul!us'Da.niels.'~the:
·,:s
l,liat!ng ~i:mlf'i

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3 'J'A:;ft~lWl'.

L

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a!lAf?pi

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4

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::Boston ~ews-(l:lt.p ::Bureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

I

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POST, BOSTON, MASS.

/MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON,

f~
I

,-.2,,,-

""'~ ~.!,'.;.~

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS

J

Atty. He,!lly .P. Fieldiµg-,1!

~Qualifies as Candidate
\
Gov Allen Op.ens series
Goy Jr]:ank G. Allen will inauguritt1>,
a new series of talks; e_ntitled "H~rqes.
and Patriots,n over the NBC netw~~
including WEE!, at· 7:15 o'clock ~s~
evening.. His subject 1 will be "John
Winthrop and the Coming of the J?~l.-.·
grims. 11
,

_.-.,
1

The talks

/

wm

be based on urmsu,ff

and sometimes little ·known. incid,erifa-.;

:fam~s

9
~.

tu~f!~n!nd i~~~G1

r

- : e ~ i l l also· be hear~ d

::Boston ~ews-(l:lt.p ::Bureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

.MASS.

/

'j

HENRY P. FIELDING
: LoOking over nomination papets he filed yesterday, seek;1ng Democratic
nomination for Att0rney-Genera1.
~~~~

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Attorney Henry P Fielding of 15 Mon- sentin~he various counties of the
tague street, Dorchester, who served Commo
ealth
as assistant district attorney of Suffolk
In a d1t10n to bemg a practicing atCounty for 15 years:, yesterday was as- torney for more than a quarter of a
sured of a place on the ballot in the century, the former assistant district
September primaries as a candidate for attorney has been a lecturer on criminal'

I

~~~-~:~~~ratic

nomination for- Att?r-

~~:t a~e~!~eSu1IfjkJtDflicifl1?*~1f:r t~:.

He qualified to have his name go ~nto. served in the Spanish war and. is now
the primary by filing -~vith the Secre- a memi>er of the Old Ninth Regiment Astary of State's office the certified sig-.1 so-dation, as well as a number of legal
f 1~~t_u_res of 19~6 re'gistered voters~ r_epre- and fraternal organizations _··--~=-i

SUFFOLK LAW ALUMNI
AT ANNUAL OUTING

\

1Dunlop Hits Back
.Bushnell Report

at

DRACUT, .1uly 24-Speaklng at the
-: .: banquet tonight which climaxed th.o

~~)r~
...
i it.tn1,dn.:x_ aq1, 10 e.tnsora eq1- ..JaH.tl?a aq:1,
::1 'PU'B '&uaw.> 1-eauo:n,u•d ~H.fl QlUf t-no
pe-'nod An'O:'lfls-uo.> 2u1aq iit·.1:v suona.x;>as

: QT..1lll'e'8

'Ptt:11

poo1

esn"V.>aq

ayqJssod.

: JJ s.tnoq .tnoJ U!tflJA\ tuoo.1 .Sunw.ziH;lo
• 1 •ttl · ut Vena ~J'l{ e.&.-eq 01, s.1aJ~.td u.oalf
~~\ ..,:ma lit.f..L •Jeoln e·m Jo a.z'h.tdna: .1a11'8
·1 •.1µ.oq ti sv e1,w1 sv uo pe:re.xado ,.n ..taAoo
·-,, ! "'.'9~ a..•1,. 1ria: •4.t.aA.o~a.x .J.O sa-.,u-etr:> eq1,
•.t'R ?lll~ .. G'ql, UOJr~.tedc::,, eql, .I;)I{.Z:'8~

<

•ttit. "SUOJl'll_~a:~o pu,i 8!S0ti:8~JP ldW:O.t~
'il<?;.'.~)l,<l.$p.
pu.'8 . suom,.o~
,..ie«,;;.e~ti?V. U'l!tff. ,,no,niJht'!'it. _e.ow:. aetlf

A•"."l>.O"" ·

:,'1PflJ; '~ ,,.:.·,s-e

ou

e~,r

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

:,'°\G

\ 51d\

5ton )tews-(tl\p ~ut'e<1u

~oston )t:ews-<tti,tS!Junau

8 BosWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH ~TREET

MASS.

BOSTON

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS

..:HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER,

r, -

4UG
OOSTON

~;REAL CLASH
:>AVERTED BY
'.,FIIZ,GERALD
/·~ciai Groups' Pl~a
J' Threatens Tercert~
4

0

:

withstandihg the fact that our back.ground 1$':,formecI..,.b:~ many peoples."
1

Leveron.i:

P&f.'ds

for (iroups

Exception to the resolution wa1=>- voi~,ed
by Judge Frank_.Leveroni, who d~clared
that many racial ·groups had already
spent a great deal of money in arranging their demonstJ:"att()nS for the tercentenary and, that _they ~hould not now
be abandoned .... through the refusal of
the committee to apportion aid 1:o them.
Chairman Fitzgerald appealed tO the
members of the committee to consider
the matter in a broad way'and through
his inslSteri.ce the resolutio.n was put
o'ver until next -week;
A second dispute arose over the pro,.-

An important subject just now is
the Condition of the crops a.ff.I~e~ult
, of the drought and some estilpates
will be given this afternoon d~ring
th~ Natio!1al Farm and Home~flour i;
from
Washington
and
C~cago I,
through WJZ and associated stations.
Arthur M. Hyde, secretary of ag- l
riculture, in charge of the droughtrelief problem, will discuss the situation in a coast-to-coast hookup ,of the
Co}umliia system at 9:30 Thllrsday
1

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f ,.

poSal to grant $300, along with a dozen

,night.

other cities and t.ow:ns, t-Owards _the
~xpense ,of the Cha~er 9a.valca~e. which
will leave·· Salem on June 12 and arrive
here two days later in a flourish of
pageantry. depl-cting the carrying.. of the
original c};larter from' Salem to Boston.
.John Jackson Watsh rld1cuted the:
road trip aS historically e;rtoneous,
stating that the charter came by -water 1
from Salem on: the Arbella. Everett B. \
Mer-a, ,pointed out that the cavalcade l
conµnittee was well a.ware of ;the hi.sacial . groups demanding public· tory of M.ai!lsachusetts :Say and he 'X'e..'to finance their features in ~he ported that communities between Salem
and Boston Insisted upon -the road
tehary celebration here threat- pageant. As a r-esult, the Boston bomto split the Boston committee mittee voted the award of $300 to the;
feature.

The most beautiful radio artist in

America will be chosen prior to the
annual Radio Fair and she will be
enthroned at the fair. She will have
an exclusive suite, .chaperon, Chauffeur and motor car.
Olive Shea,
last year's winner, went into the
movies.

by former Mayor John F;
Progress in $300,000 Campaign
· raid at the meeting held last
Chail'rrtan Fitzgerald reported that the'
City Hall.
fina..n.c:e co:tnmittee was :M.aking progress ,

M:Q'n;d~~e.,t~e leaders of th~ racial_
11 -"~~o~,f~ wit\)..· the executive
m'itte:e ·under
Chairman
Fra.p.-k
utea:u Bi-own "to pre~Jmt their rea.S·. for iipecial recogn1Uon. He re~
te.if to the committee an account of
:.-. ,conference recently held at the
·s ornce ~hen lt was charged that
·Jewish and IPsh sociclies were
no recognition on the committee
d by ll{.s. W!lliam Lowell Fut-

Barry Voices Oppos,}tiott
1
' ....
~,._x,z.

1

When it was brought to the atten~~
Of \he executive committee that

Jewish group wa.s seeking $~000 fro{:1

_i;

..: fl.\~: ~ the tercentefia.r:9' funds an!!..,. ~ t
e
\ ·~
~ &nt'.lan ~oup wan.tad... lU....~0~ e 1
~
'~ f;;:'l~efray,th.~ expenses of th~\r 'Pt"O
~/.1/.-gx;f:ml'fl.eS, former Lieutenant-Gove:nior
.' -~~· Bart-Y voiced his strong opposition~
'.~~.:: ~.n.··'his att.em. pt to. place the con;,mittee
:f,,Oll':7J;"'6CoI"d as being op~sed to glv ng ou~
·'':µi.oti.ey along .racial Imes, he was ~P
p'brted b)" Chairman Jol]n Jae on
a..1$h of the. ~~ssachU.setts . •~~y
te.nary, J,nc., who declared.
te
bratin,B' · a.s

---'·-~

Arnertca.ns,

no -

1n the cEi]'.Ilpaign to raise $300,000 by pub•
Uc subs-cripti-on for the celebration, an-nouncing -that President .. _George S.
Mumford of the .Atlantic National
Bank ha.d agreed to a.ct 3s tr'ea.'5urer ot
the tund.
nta.t the public utility corporations
of Grea.ter Boston will make a. su·bstantial contri·butlort to the fund and
in addition. present special -pag~ants in
the programme was announced :by
.ruuus Daniels of the Ediso1J. company.

'~j1i:h:~ ~a!~:sstitu~t. ~lJ~!~~ °o~ 'f
c'rime
0

I
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To Broadcast Talks on Heroes
Speaking tor the broadcast commlt.i;
tee, Dean Gleason L ~ 1
2nnounced
that the Natlo~al Broad-Ca.sting Company will feature a. serte:5 of talks ?n
~~e~~=mftl:e !,~;=i:t~~~st~fo1!:Si~~t
worlt starting tonig'ht, when Governor
Allen: at 7:15, wHl ~ell of 0 John Winthrop. and :the Puritans."

!

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Listening to the surf at Atlantic \'.

I

ful to some during the recent hot \·· .. ,, :
sp~ll. The reception only made oth- :.:_·/ · ' 1•
ers feel the humidity the greater.
,
,

t. .'\

. , ... :- \{

,,.,,,<:.<~t:f':·'15_

1

' ,, ' . , \;·

Ir

! Federal Farm Board, the man who ha&
I been m the papers so much lately m

Ithe
brought

flghts oYer fai-nl relief measures,
to us here, through CBS'\V"NAC, proved interesting and also
,vas 'rielpful in explaining to tho.s-e of
us who know httle of farming
H1~

1

a1 gument tor 1eduC'mg "9.'heat acreage "

'

f .'

sounded reasonable

BY O. M. STATIC

4,nothe~.

o!

• • • •

r.}

those intt:resting, talk~.)~/.,
came from Dean Gleason Archer of the/,,,;
·1
It seemed to be Sort of a jaz.zy night Su«olk · Law School through W".}3~- t, ·\i
I Early in the evening the yVard;s Ti
WBZA., ~e ·~ak·es the ;see:rp.ingl~ dull,-,; : '
Club, CBS-~:'.¥AC, with,;. ,snappy subjects of law ~ive1y and e!}terta1n:.. l
'
1 !Top
· 1orche~ral accorriPaniment, "furnished
1 n.ew songs and some _not so new,;
l sonie
'
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~
In the more serious musrc of the
t:~~,';h!~e~t bJ
night ·we liked the martial · strains q1
· j'

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City over WPG was said to be help-1:·i ·

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The episode · of Frontier Days on :
WEA],'. and a group of other broad- '

casters a.t 8:30 tonight is to pro"V;ide ,
some action from Shotgun WHson
and. Hog Mcconn according to forecasts. A night roundup of wiltj. cattle
is c~rded.
'

Laurance Gratton~ the badman in
Columbia sket.ches, siays he, enjoys
. the villain roles because they pro- ·
1 vide an outlet
for otherwise sup- ::
! pressed desire to be wicked.
,'

An appropnanon or ool!() was voted t<:> .
the educational exhi~it, wh1.c~ wnl · be
h'.eld all summer at the·,l;(J.gh ~OQl ·~f 1
·Com:merce at Avenue Lotiis.: l'.'asteur, 1
·Fen way, undet the direction Ot:.the com- 'i
mittee on educatiOn~
.., ;_
\
r ..... Manager Franli. S~ Davis of the Marl.,
time Bure.au of the Chamber of Co.rnmerce suggested the appropriation ~of
$15 000 tor the use of a steamer with
w~ich to entertain distinguished guests
-on harbor trips, and former Mayor i
'Fit-zgeral-d urged him to talt, :the mat- P"
t.er up with the Sta.te Commission,~
which recently was granted $76,600 addltional for special teooentenary features.

--- -

.\

J Tribute will be paid to Cincinnati ,
'as a n1usic center on WJZ,-WBZ and
other stations at 10 tonight A litLJe
' symphony and band will provide a
program. De~~e'Yilf~ ~ Archer
will discuss "L
ilieftbard
1
Society" at 7:15 on WJAR, WEA].'/

at

f011owing' a bitter debate upon a
tion urged bY form·e:r Lieutenantor Edward P. Barry to bar the
)b."\ltiOn of funds ·'to racial groups,
m~n Fitzgerald averted a clash
O'I".dering 'the mea,sure ~bled until

·

"Oh Dem Golden Slippers" by James
\ .;' Bland, writer of "Carry Me Back to
i Old Virginny" and· other American
Folk songs, will open the Mountaineers' program on tne WJZ fan1ily
at 8:30 tonight.
,

t¢nary ·split

MEASURE TABLED

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J..;~a~::;. ~~e~C:::

f~=~~

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~~:ye~~°i;iie~~th~!1:ts~~1i~S:- t:a1~~;
R.C A. ,hour, WEAF-:WEEI:

And. tlfat '

.futu-r"istic sketch ri.ear the 'close of the
·sa.'me hOur Wa'.S. don.er in realistic· t-aS.hion. ·
::w~.-:;eI:f:io:t~<fi-i.~/ -·~,vJt~ all the blood~·

~ur~~~;1.~;·l

STRUT
BOSTON

MASS.

BOSTON

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

;, s for Today's

;1u1h.1P«. }Y~d,li"l ~!

:-"

The first of a series of ll.i,sto,rl<:.aJ. .talks
entitled "Heroe'srand Patriots," over the
1'!ational Broadcasting Company chain.
was given last night by Gov. Allen, who
chose as his topic "John Winthrop and
the Puritans " A Similar series entitled
""Found~ng a Nation," under the super...
vision of Dean Gleason Archer of the
Suffolk 1aw school were recently completed and the &Teat response from the
public led the. broadcasting company to
offer a second
The new· series will continue on every
Tuesday at 7:15 P. M until July 8. Dean
Archer Will again supervise and will give
one of the scheduled talks. The latest
serie~ will in a vivid manner portray
some of the great personalities who figured :i,n stirring events prior to the
revolution.
Gov Allen told tne sto'ry of the coming of the first Governor of Massachu-settS and the great Puritan migration to ~the shores of New England jn 1630. He ;
traced the development of Gov Win- '
throp's character in the wilderness, and
how he lc~rned to lay aside qld wo1'1d
ideas and· to acce'pt delnocracy.
He said ip. part:
~
4<The great Puritan migration that
came to t:ti-e 5:hores of New "England in
1630 · was one of the l1lost remarkable
! movelllents in the history of this con.. . ~
tinent For the first time, a completely) ' ·,
.
equipped colony was transported t>ver
;
the ocean and set down on the new
· :~~nd, ready to function in all respects
11 a., a self-governing state
..The Puritans were essentially a re- : ·
L~~g~?us ~~9~_:__ ,'.!'._hey. were c~:~_ed ~uritans J ·

~

Y.io.ston )t¢w.s-Q::h:p Y.,ur¢<lU
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

::So.ston )tuv.s-<l::tq, ::Sur~au

8 Bm?woRTH STREET
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

J3o.ston )tcws-Q::ltp ::Surcau
BOSTON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON,. MASS.

MASS.

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

,I

:r{1:g,~

V

speech mistakes, and for~:~~'~.:,~,.,
·, \.Vords a~nd names
This cour.e will be
~upplem; . ary, p1 obably coming one
·eek of the school

~le .
~.

I

year

SUUOLK LAW
:
Boston, Mass:~
,
onTM school wlll open its 25th year/
Sept. 22
Recruited from the ranks of the best
J)ractlsmg lawyers in the state the
faculty of Suffolk Law school boasts
8 '?;;1I'e of the best trained lawyers availe. E~ch professor is a specialist in
e subJect he teaches.
Dean Gleas<;>n L Archer, head of the
5
h<:bot°l, has gained a wide reputation for
IS . ext. books a~d case books -on vari?US s~bJects, wh1-ch he has ·written. He
~ ~!~~nally ~nown as a radio lecturer

'J'1

~§i.llim!J,,,l,A,~-·

Suffolk Law School, which opens its
fall term Sept 22, is gradually extendthe scope of its in~uence through ..
out the entire Eastern States.
For
years the number ~of students from
other . States, pa'rticuliriy New Eng- ~
land, ~s constantly growing and Dean
Gl~ason L
Archer, well known law
writer and 1 aclio lecturer, says that the
~umber from out ,9f the State this,}ear
1s unu,;ually large"
·
. Of course, .:vrassachu~etts is far ahead
I, ~~~z the numbe1 of students now entoll~ f01 the fall te1 m and Dean Archer
says that the fre~hman class this year
will, b,e of very high character
,
Suffolk Law School faculty, ~omposed
almost entirely of Practising lawyers J
will contain some new faces this year.. •

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The COll;rse at Suffolk covers a fouryear_ period_ with graduates being
awarded LL.B. degrees. The c6urse covers
ii'f!ry •branch of the law and specially
st_udents for general practice
Wh1le _the object of the school· Is the
i P:parat10n of students for. practice, the
isf d~nt .body c.omprises a large number
whose principal objeot in tak/ g .he Suffolk course is tq, provide

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:h1 mtn,

/ a,\ t~m in their present business or
tJ:iemselves
.
, _ ' .,! pro ess1on. with a know.ledge .of Jaw. , to
:thSeveral changes have been made in
' e school ,this year. The book tor
erJy located on the ground ~ 00~·
~ ,
een moved to the second floor and
.
ow housed ~ more commodious
, h ttefs. . The .rev1ew departm.en.t, so.me. •
'fer: on
~~ed_ for space in ,i~ old quar: cupy th· e-,gxyund floor,. will. ·now oc./ store-;
e, SP!l,ce ;acated by· the· .bOOJ:t

open for its 25th·"-"Ye&r on

22. ,The school already has
lflliluta.tlon for the tri,.lnina; ·
through the dlst!nguillhed .p
·its ·faculty, each profes,r'
specialist in the subjeef·
teaches. This faculty is
Dean Glea~on Il. Arclle,r;

known for text books :aud
which h& ha.a written
1
pects Of law, and for hie ra.d

on

on the eame subject.

The course at Suffolk

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~:e~w:Tl ~i·Yii,_~ .nt !e
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course cover~ ev~y phas'~;
peclally fitting the gra4ua.

-[:~i;.~~~!t;;~ i:c~d:~u!e)!
of ;men whose object ·m
~

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Wtth & d i s t l n ~
l)O'&Ctisln&' 1-a.wy-en and· a.uth
textbookB, the SU:ff<:)lk Law

l .
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oow:.-se ts to get a knoWJ.e
which will aid them in th
/
10r profes:Sion.
· '::· _, :.':'.
\ Severa1, changes have ~n:·~
thls year in. the .school. Tl)~
store, ;{orme~ly located <;)D th&:.
floor, has been t1:10Ve~ ·to tl;l~
floor &J?-.d giv~n more c ·
1
qup:rler.s and tl;le revi
which wa.a cramped:.,
014 qua.rte?,'.11, wl,I!> n,q ·,·

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~pace

v.acated

:Rjigistr~tion ·,iii
, .,., of. 19~~~-

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'.)t~w.s-<tlt.p :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET•

STON

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

GLOUCESTER, MASS.

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:l£!.S.5'

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Boston, Mass.

Dean Gleason L. Archer of the school
has been accorded ~he very great honor
of being chos~i:i b;i the National Broadcasting Company to gi'Ve the first coast
to coast series -0f talks on law ever offered ~o · th~· American public. Dean
Archers series. e:Q.titled ··Laws That
Safegmtrd Soe:iety," b,egan on July 15th'
and will b,e given on Tuesday evenings
1
for 1 O Weeks, except during the week of
~e American. .Ba,r As~ociati.on convenl·.
t1qn, whf::>..J1 Denn Archer will be .in Chi·l,
cago ':Fhe talks are given oveifStation
·'
WEAF m Ne\;' York city and go out over
f,~·'·.,
a network of iµore than 30 stations
1
from the Atlantl.c to the Pacific ~
,
Dean Archer. lS also continuing hiS
i
popular radio talks on criminal law ovel"'f-"---:--_J·
WBZ-WBZA Which have been a· regular 7,.~~···,.;':, '
~he ~estinghouse 1$t,~t~ns/or

/.,·

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.AL'ffl:AN IS
',
' .AGAIN HONORED t!

1

Au~ust- 1930 Bulletin issued
olk Law...al;rool, Boston, New
g~st-law school devoted
to :the training of men for
contains an announcement

Alh'.2

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Ib\
a
, l"

}4.\:·,\/;_.'.,:

. !~!~~re of

:~teres. t, to many local pe.o- I n
..
mote-,competition within its
: :r:ttnks~ and to reward those
·~
thernselv. es for exc~l\
· schoQI. work, Suffolk

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I·\-'_.~·:·;·,...;

':Soston '1ews-<tllp ':Sur~au
8

akes various awards in

BOSTON

s\;holarsbips

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BOSWORTJI STREET
MASS.

/·· <'·'+"\
\{,

);

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RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.
111!:NRY P, FIELDING
H-enry P. Fielding, Boston lawyer
and Democ~a~i,c candidate for attl?rney-general, today issued a state-

ment jn which he said, "I believe
that the o,ffi.ce of attorney-g,eneral
should be filled by a. 1iawyer Or ma-

i

tured. y-ears, judgment and ripened

e:x:p-eri.ence. I am
infor1ned that
one of my oppon.ents toir the Demo-1
c.rati~ 1101ninatlon for attorney-gen/
eral Jl'iS been a member of. the bar
f
for about :fiv,e years. I have been
an active practicing lawyer for 26 1 [
1years, wlth large trial e.x.perien-ce."

I
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Wh 1le Mr. Fielding has been for
the last 20 y.ears a resident o!f Boston, he
formerly lived
for long
1 periods of his lif.e time in Worcester
land Middlesex counties. Mr. Field1
ing served tor 15 ye.airs as assistant
district attorney in Suffolk county
und,er three distr1ct attorneys. He
I
is well known to the bar through- ,
/
out the Commonwealth. While in
the district attorney's office in Suf/
folk cou11ty, he p,erformed a major
1
pa.rt of the prsentation of cases to
1
the grand jury of that county .and
1

~:;~~~fs:p~~;CE~TI~:~

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conduc':ed a great number of trials
i~ court as well as disposing of rout:..ne case!! by recommendation to the
court, his
rcommendations
!being
uniformly 01ccepted by
the oourt
without
question. He
has
also
argued a number -0,f cases before
the full benph of the Su:prem& court
of tlhe Commonwealth and has also
sat as auditor , and master -0n nou~erous
occasions on
references
from ih Supreme Judicial 09urt al1d
from the Superib,r court. In addition to his many prof.essional duties
he llas lectur.ed on the subje·ct of
crimin,al law and tbe suibject Of
for 10 Y€a!S at Suffolk Lam

I

r~:!~ rri!;1~~ '25, a

:!r:,.d~-a~~ 4>f
Suffoll!; Law Sch'>ol, will be -th."
first 1:..,.tt gradifate to ente-r pohtics. He is a. cand\da.te for the
City Council.
Mary Q•'Sricn. '32, is touring

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~N~rea!~~ti!nn Ruth :McKec_n, 25,
and ·2. 8 res-pect-.-ively, are ta1:nng -an
ut~ tri!) to C':1:ca~o. '\-Vhere they

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':So.ston '::St~ws-<tllp :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

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ADVERTISER, BOSTON, MASS.

,...
AU·,,

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In the Spanish War M,r. Fielding
served as a private in Co. E, 9th
Ma.ssachusetts regiment, U s. V.
He is .a. member of the AmerLcan
Bar ass,;ciation:, • Massacnuse,t't~ Bar·
l, assO<:i~ti.oll> ~9~tori B~. ~s~ci<:lqon,
United Span· <''' \'Va.r Veterans 'the't' Xriig~ts' cit/Co iJl;m.'pu,s, }13y~ii'op '.Che.;



Orpen
Joanne Gibbons, ·~o. w1?,o wi~ enter
the novitiate of tne S1sters ~f St..
Joseph in the fall. was rendered
1 a
green shower by o gr'"'nP or

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By Joseph E

ARCHER O jjJSCUSS
'CRIMES ON HIGH SEA'
~Crimes on the High Seas" i..:5
the title of the sixth in a s~ries of \

I

talks ··on "Laws: '.l'h,at Safei::iard, So,
ciety/' which
be g1~~n 't!y1
·
leason. J,,; ~i;ter,,,o,y'\r ·stas\
"
.!'

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MASS.

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON•

BOSTON

MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

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i__~~-·-p-"JaeY--at
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TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

-d
..
the SC~QQ.1 8.lld is Open '"Ii
~general publ~c ~n~. ~

~~~~==~~==~================~================================~.at~e~al
w;\lI
~
Today's P fOgramme
For Post Radio Fans rJti:;~

.COUNSELOR,'.NA
. - tTSUF~?~

s,
~cruit.;;
prac-

:t~cu1ty

~~===:====~~1
I
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2 .35 P:

Programmes East•rn .Dayltght~SaYlng Tim•

\\!NA.C-WB15-Boston-(2Um) 1231k

i:gg ~- Dl~~1'-BS:
tftii~g talks
!$.-Phonograph

.
lDUBlc

D

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• u:~~f,l1..ochea.
~·=Fra~ w%t~e~~~~Band of Thou3.
e
/
20

=-=~=·

aper
ffg pEm.-Tea Wmers. talk

3 ;30

and adver~

. ::.

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g~ ::-~
p: m.=Agri~~=~=~!~e
:Jg:::=
:JMP.D1.

Grace

Janet
J· fsper,
.

0

tuif~~\:!Iks~ -WB

and

Give'Y

{anM~

•3:oog:1
PaJ:00 !'! ~:~ !nhJit~et~!:t::~:ed by Fred Hoey

:;~is~:-.:.:;1Ic!;~u~rNe~~~~

1 1

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~~!~a.P To;;~~ 1~!1(;r~s~~\Y!d~:a~~~u?f~
Parade; Far Away BelJ,s; My Future Just Paued i
~!:Chin!l~~i: th~ ~~da~ag~·rrJ!~dental Music- '
0

6:55 p. m -Baseb&ll ecores; weather.
DJ~: i;~J:e~ CBS, ~e• Y~k_.._FrojoY Novel~
7:29 p, m.-Time .

!

8:30 p

~°!ft/R!h:;F()~clle~~a~'
~:~~
team; "Chick"
character singer; Columbia Girls'

~b-: {~~!;-~:i:.i

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r}j·!

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G. Aaron Youbgquist, New Prohibition

-: I

Enti~~~n!.~~:n~;. Talk for Fall Trade Week 1

hUl·Orehestra

i~

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tt1~~=~tr~ Thrifty 1

8:30a m.-From WEAF, New York: Cheerio.
9:00
Hill organist;'The Thrifty Shol?per-~

9:15 a. m -Caroline Cabot's Sho pere' Concert.
a~_m.
Foods J
Round Table
oOO:wirid

Otchestra m.
un
10:45 a.

eelyAndrews,
·
pe

l

Fifth Avenue Fal!hions.
11 :00 a, m -Stock Exchange Quotations
!
11
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~=fr!! WrifA.F~tJe>;
R:adio HoW!ehold Institute
11:30a. m.-From WEAF, New York: RiMoTal~es1
Wbat Happened to Jane?
11:45 a. m-From WEAF, New York: Sweet a?Jd Low
Down.

1{;~ !.

~:t

12:00 noon-News.
1~:19 p m.-§TJocK ~~1;'~g~~ ;uu}~l>~:,,.ua;...

..-rn _ _ _ r

8

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to

worthy students over the first year
hazards.
A'tty
Williams is a
merilber of the Massachusetts and
~
Maine bars.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

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BOSWORTH STREET<
MASS.

GAZETTE, HAVERRILL,

~:w:,~h:~shT:: o~~:~
syEitE;!m is
assist

th&=iiEW

-···

BOSTON

MASS

1

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.~

T1~il~~ ~r~n;:!: b~S:eN~rt..~k-Detect.ive $tory ~ !
M~~~otn; ~.'!.Fr~:CBtt~1!:1Yo~t~tJ!ioay Magic. I i
r-'
10:30p m-FromCBS,Washington,D.C.-National

a m.-Beaeon
}&~~:

!,dents
I

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~O$ton ;Sl¢ws-<I:lq, ::Sunciu

L.._

I
m.-From CBS, New York-]{altenborn ,
Editldhe News.
:
Medley

Shopper.

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8:15 p. m.-From CBS, New York-Melody: Mu!ket-eers, Male Trio; Nobody Cares If I'm Blue; Minnie the
Mermaid; Blue Room; Take My Seat Lady; Ord Time

WEEI-Boston-<soaffl) 590k

of

...__\

~-le;ing;~J~: ~fs~~:_.~~':1k~$ymphonie 1 I
Interlude
.

6:45 a.. m-From WEAF, New York: Tower -~~1th
Exercises.
8·.00 a. m -E B. Rideout, meteoroloir;ist

;f~1:;/~11it

r

c1!:;oif~i:W!loco~~~;~ ~\~!aBt::ePtt;!f.

)
1
Broun's Radio Col~
11:~0 __p. m.-Fronl; y~s. ~~"' York-Quy Lombardo
and hte Royal c~i.nad1ans- ·
·J
12:00 midnight~Fr~m CBS; Asbury Park, N J Paul Tremaine and
12:30 a m -From CBS, N~w York-Nooturne:Eather Leaf at the Or1an

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Helen Nugent 1'fltb Orchestra; Is This a Zither? Brad
and Al $pecia.lty; Bless Your Little Heart, Cookies';
Parade of the Gendarmes. Tip Top Quartet; Love Among 1
the Millionaires. Cookies; Soln1!a of These D1'.Yfl, l~ne
Beasley; You for Me from Sunny Skies, Cookies; Roadways, Evan Evans with Orchestra: Something Comes :

f :;~ : :=¥~~~,=

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Williams,
...,,_=·-- Jerk in the
nited States Cour, Of Appeals
ere. has been appointed stupent

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l(~Pff~5: !dit!i.~°F~~ RC~$,' ~!!re~!;f_::fieywood

J."

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N:~!fti~ fu:G~!~~ly, Candidate for DemocraUc ;

Radio Forum

~k ~tore
iµ.d_ flQ-Or
: om:- ~
,,~<?diQt;1.s

Bt!esj

qherie .
!X~V-Boston-(141m) 2120k
~
NelYs; If I Had ;it Girl Like You; With ~ n " T t ' s , !. OO ~.00 P -Pl. -Teievl"Jon transmisaion
~pr1ngtime in the Rockies; Reminiscing Theme, Good~ 1 ;30.I0:'30 P lll-Tele'\'iston transmi!!Slon
New,.
·
11"'9"""'"1
·~.,,.~, •3 -

Endor,

·

, em~

P m-The First Alarm. .
n;o 0 ~ m =,~atlt? Organ-Lows Weir
11 .03 P !;- B Ime, weather
11~08:p :m -=1~1:b~;1 icore.s; Sport D.igest
P a ure

g
5:~6 P · m -Arch Culture Stylists
.
5:o9 p m -Time
0:00 P m.-La Laaine Melodistti Theme, Ma Cherie·
Broadway Melody; l Lo,e You So Much; Song of the'

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for M~1:!iy~~i:~r~

~';!e1:t.!--t

t/:~

...........

a. r~qiO

York-Phll.·

~~-°Th::.-

.~--------

>.~v~,i~

:ten He

/ fr!{tde in

f()~g

NeW

A~. Kenneth · B. ·
Freshman

'a four-

(

9:02 a m -A & P Grocery Men.
Ree·,e p. m..-Home For~ Decoratinr Period-Vella
9:1.>a m -Rall!ltonTreaaureHunt.
4:30 p m.-Hal Ka n' Or h
9:30 a m -Statl~ TUlsue·Mel?dy Kings
Ji:00 p m-Stock ~a:iomic estra
.
,
1!:15 p m.-TirreifEnsemble
a m.--=-.Hoyt s Peanut Jubilee
: 0 a DJ. ~rom CBS, NewYork-:--Ida. Bailey Allen.
o:30 p m.-Evening Echoes
10
&cJ··30 m.- rom CBS, New York-Busy·Fingers-5:53 p m.-•.\dvertising talk
JoanlBar!'ft~makets' Club Wallpaper ~
~
Reports.
York-Mr. Fixit.
6:04
0 ~:-i5va= m~rol{ CBS,
0
- 11!~;i =~Fro!
.
alley~~~
SportD~es·t
Tu~:l~d~FroLinens,
eeMen!:i&'
;Quartet.
.
Hll:30 a •• -m.-~om ·cBS,
w
ork:.__Tbe Party Andy. p.. JD.
ew Yor.k:-TU11e; Amoa •n•
~~5 Pain!~[~a:.
Lee a.n1:1 hu Gane
7:15 P m.-New Emtland Coke M Iod
llea.n."Noa .. mti f
Candidate for Repub- ~30 p. m.-From WJZ New
C k. th
~nator.e
. •
oo
e
12:00
7:~;rPM~12:0r J>. lll,:--Shopping ne1'a.
8:00 p." m.
12:06 p, ~~-News.
8:15 p m.~ PS:t m.-E'!C?JI1;_. CBS, New York-Columbla
8:45 p m..
.
for U. s. Senator:
blican candidate
. V1Deent ~Y.;fs::C>rohestra.
12 30
Tow~ &ch:t-;~~, .,CBS, New York-Manhattan.
9:00 p. m.-From. WJZ .. New y ork:-Knox-Dunla.p
1:00 p. m.-Todj)? baseball game.
I
from Like Kelly e'an;
8-Phonograph muaic
adver2:00 __p. m.-WNAC Women's Federation. Ernest Yo~
aManinaUnlform.;When
~old.a, United Sta.tea Civil Service Ta.Ik. Adrian When You're
y; Lazy Levee Loungers;
chan~:~· tenor; Alton Briggs, Fruit and Produce Ex- M:!fi!-~
ew Yor.k:-Maxweil Houae
1
p. m.-From CBS, New York-Esther Leaf at Chlllun; Turkey Jn
e tra . 0
es)JA®n!.ii:HaA::r's
m.-Baireba.U game broadcast from Fenway ~l::in~ng of the Bayou; Th:Birth of~e
Sbri~~

ii"

\om~ of

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

j.
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BOSTON

8

BOSWORTH

STREET
MASS.

BOSTON•

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.
.

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,.-,,,.,.-d"ls~p~1=ay -at the schQQl an.d 1s · op ell:&
e to the gen~al puQli_c ~ilY,.
d

~ w ASHINGTON TALKS
~ atlantic telephone service bet~een the
!~wW-.1,!t}i\_~ 1!,YJ:,~~!}~:

United States and Poland was inaugurat&d ·· officially today.
An annQuncetnent here sald Clarence M. Young• .A&-

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S11l1£qJk

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School

S ~ l ~ : w Sch9.o.l~ wi~J;l, a. natienal
r-ep
-~~o~ trainiµg \a~y~rs. - 'W;ill
ope.n ts 25th year on Sept. 22- Recruit.::
e.d from the ran~s of the best practisinif l.~~~E!~J;!. r:i;:i t4.~ ~t.~1;,~~ tl.1,e f%l..cu.J.ty.
of 8¥:t'f-Ql)c. l;.,~.w S.ch,ool l;?Q~ts i;;,ome of
the ~~~'t. 1;·ra.u;ted. la~y,.e:r;~ a..v.aJ.J.abl~.
Dea,n Gleat;;on 4, Archer, head Of: the
school, ha,s. g~Jned a. · 'Wide r6Pu.tation
for t~Xt· boo~s ~~d Q~se.:'~.q..,qk&. ~J:'l "v.a:ri_:
ou.s ~ub:!,ects, whic};l. he ha.s. writtEln He
also ia. n~tiqnall:y known ~s a radio
lectu:r;,ez:- on Ia.w.
,
Th~- ·~ourse. at S.u~olk covers. a fouryear
period
with graduates being
, awarq.eq. A. 1;3. degrees.
.
·
Several changes have been. riiade in
the s.c~ool !hit' year. T~e book' ~to:t""e
0
;~sm;!;~ ~~!~dto ~net!:c::~-~:or fl~~
::u:r~;s. l:t,ous~d in mote. cqmmqd~q,iis

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BATCliELDE.R
WHITTEMORE
COAL COMPANY
Phone HUBBARD :noo

-

:So.ston '.)tc,ws-a'.:llp :Y.>ui-c,au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

Bos TON

MASS.

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

L..:__
:Y.,o.ston ~c,ws-a'.:\4> :Y.,un.ou
8

BOSWORTH STREETt.

BOSTON

MASS.

GAZETTE, HAVERHILL, MAS~~,
~~.of-49-wes£-se1aonst:

i

WilliMis tp Aid

f \'
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v'suffo(k Students

Atty.
Kenneth
B.
Willia.m:s
fyorm.erly depa.rtm.ent clerk in th~
United States Cour\ of Appeals
here, has been appointed stu.tient
\ counselor fo!" the freshm.an class

~i S~~~Jt"'~~~~ol is Tf'oe ~~~;~

8

BOSWORTH SFREET
MASS.

BOSTON

worthy students over the first year
Atty
Williams is
a,

~azards.

inerilber of the Massachusetts and
.....__Maine bars_._- - - - - - - - - - - - l

:Y.>oston '.)tc,w.s-a'.:\4> :Y.>ui-c,au
SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

A!;,:_;

MASS.

BOSTON

TELEGRAM-0:W-s--

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.

a

m
.
possible date, as the; student gro11p,
tlf'e iriterest of. ef-=:ciency and prog1 es.s,

~=c-n=ore-...-n:Irp.m:j·-

LWeather report.

is limited~·---"-------

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,. l;uffolk Law School

~lth'.-.a.

I

/_.4o~a.:J_:t:sthool.
nactional
~-'tatton for training 1awyers, will 1
I
open its 25th year on Sept. ~ Recruited from the ranks of· the best practising lawyers in the State,_ the facultY
of Suffolk Law School boasts some of
the best trained lawyers available.
\ n~an Gleason L. Archer•. he,ad of the
school, has'; gained a wide reputation
for ,text,. books and case books- on various su,bj6Cts, ~hich he has written. He
also ls ~ationally known as a radio
lecturer on law.
'
The cour2e at Suffolk covers a ,four:vear periQd. ~.1th graduates 1'elng
,awarded A- B. _degrees.
.
Bevera.l Changes have been mad'"e in
the school this y~ar .· The book ,sto:r:e,
fo.rmerlY located on tlle ground floor,
has been moved to the second floor and
i.S now housed in more commodious
quarters.

! se\·enth

of his series, "Laws Tha;'J; Safe ...
guard Socie:t,Y" over WTAO, TUesday,

at 730 p. m
Such state or nation has ot course i
0
1
e1fe~i!!~e.hi~h:~g~t : ; ~~
I tradition from one state to another_ In
! such cases ts guaranteed by the Constitutii:::,n of the United States. But
suppose the governo.r of the asylum

I
(~m~~rtteJ

,I
'_e,,,q

\
;state
:

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BY

MASS.

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,uG ~""',

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1-A-,,I_·
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A-IL<A
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~
night was entirelY emotional and non-~
~ ~, 1
legal, . WBZA.
Wha..t gave us an 1
:
(j
.awful wallop was tne 'tragic aspects of :
/
2
\ the case of "The State ve:rsus Baker." l
{ .? j '

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1 :f~ea~6hi~e;eh~~dw::;t" t:~o~:daf~f; j
\_slde in the laundry.. Childre:n in the
: neighborhood came to the open door of
; the sh>"oP'.. a:Pd ,t'aunted and_ -h~miliated

!,: ~ri~iin

~

s~i~ing

refuses, as they sometimes do,
to ,-1rrende1" the fugitive? The law as

language.
I
Iand non-technicalthe fUg!ties ax.d .their
The kidnapping of
forcible return to
state wfil!l'e their
crime was committed is a very live
question for it sometimes results in
_international 011 interstate compltea..
1 ~ion_s
r

-- ---,,,7

tb!;~i{!~?jj~ ~.ith (

.another - ~ l < and hts i
o•f this..,~el baiting !

t

I-

it

/

\ of the term will be discussed in simple

\ ~

O. M. STATIC

j,..

~ to extradition and the exact- mean.ing

1?<.tJ

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Our interest
Gleason
I er's discourse in Dean criminal L. Ar~h- I
on the
law last\

POST, BOSTON, MASS.
r,r,1\',~

-

AIR TALK EXPLAINS ! EXTRADITION LAwl
t/.,0
_.
Dean Gleason L. Arche1· will explain

-

BosToN

.,::

the ddf[Culties that arise wh-eii a per:,
son who has committed a crime· tlees
into another state or nation ··1n the

.-~--·-- ·-· --·


th e R a di-0

.

, Dean Gleason L. Arcll,er in
Seventh. of Series
Tuesday

'IE~~~=~=~=~i=':i S~J _~<Zff-..
.,g
_
t N ; ht

8 BoswORTB STREET

.

~~~~ .. ~~~ :Ul::~!ai~ i

shop. su}:!PqSipg the boy l
rmento-rs, ,,<~t, fly the pail I
er Thattact was the ex- l
harassed ,~nd a desperate i
oy lost the sight of both '
1
e
d the woman went to prison for
a_ long term · We missed up on the
lega~ con·n.otation~ of ~e case but w_hat:

l ~~~-r:.it.wr:to!y;

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a

,1

8 BOSWORTH STREET
I

MASS.

BOSTON

, I TIMES,

BROCKTON,

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Sf:
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·~··''"'--~p:...='..

. j
~);a Wi~i ··'P.0-wers,
ed
str,:,et, h;yeas
· .ed her duties :
Baston,
er ·a vacation ·of
weeks. ·
/

-o~

-Lester Dorn, West

Bl

..

Elm

1

_ I race, has retu=~d from Ve-.mj
' : w,here he spent the sumf. G!i-1
. I· citmp. He wm enter Volk ,
'·\·.. school ,rt ,the e.nd-of the music I
· will continue -to stndY montli.'
, T. Fi;ancis Burke.
/

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-Miss Annie ~elly, of the.
, l!:elly Specialty iaMi>, 'h
l\fr
· ·
.
ook
where she was ';;>,e.;~ullst_of :Mj
'- "M~
T,..,J:,,'""' ,..
-.w
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ll

1

1
i

~o-5ton )?ctws-<l::lt.p Y.,urctau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

:Surctau

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON,

I
1.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

iEVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

'MASS.

i

GAZETTE, TAUNTON, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

''3•
SE.\::.;.,. ;:::d,...,
.J

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. ~-~r=~~e-~j,i

·._ -~-r-----==~

lectmen.• E,!mer Lane of Norton, 8:nd
Sen. J a m i ~ ~ i : 1 g

CHU6CH WEDDING .,~
'4N WEST FALMOUTW



~a'eir~o:o=:~~'. w:;. a ep
a/Ir•/~
I

:S}i~""

E

Yr:W

sq,~.,

L

on WMa~

o~

1
1
_
of t1;i~.
town was united i lp-arr1age to Miss
Sarah Maude Kelley, daughter of
Mr and M;rs. Ed Ward E. Kelley. of
W~st Falmouth, at an attracti:e

J.V{iss Sarah M.Kelley Bride
of M. E. Williamson
/

j

early fall wedding in the Methodist•
Episcopal church at. We_st Fal~,puth

Tuesday afternoon at 3. The ceremony was performed in ~he presence
of a large number of friends and
re:tatives of the couple by :i:\~v. M_r.
"Remis of North Falmouth, a cous111
,-f the bride
The bride entered the
~hurch on the arm of her fathe_r,
Edward E. Kell~y, who gave her in
marriage. The church was decorated
with orange gladioli and ferns.
The wedding march was played by
Mrs. GordOn Haman of Wareham, a
sister of
the bride
Dr. A. Dent
: Williamson of Mansfield, brother of
the grOom acted as _best man, and
the bride\ ~as attended by her sisterf
Miss Helen Kelley,
as
maid
0
' honor, and Miss Doris Gay -Of Mans\ field Miss Virginia Platt cf Troy, N.
!Y •• ;,nd Miss Lillian Warz:er of At: !antic as bridesmaids. L1tqe Rus• 1 sell
' Willi:imson
of
I\{ansfi~ld~
nephew of the grooi:n, w.as the r1n:o
: bearer,
and Martha Williams?n,
niece of the groom, was flower girl.
• Alton Williamson,
brother of t~e
groom and Mr. Bemis of Westport,
cousin of the bride, were the us_he~s
The bride was gowned in •white
satin wiih bridal veil of lace :1'·!1d
carried a bouquet of roses and hlle~
of the valley.
The maiC. of hono1
wore a gown
of pin~
tulle ~nd
horsehair hat and carried pink
: gladioli.
The
bridesmaids
·were
: gowned respectiv~ly in yellow, b:uc i
and
oi-chid
tulle,
and
carried 11
: bouquets of orchid, pink an~ yello~ I
gladioli. The little fl<_:>wer girl wot e !
a yellow dress
!
After the cereIIl;ony at the church, ,'
a reception was hef,1 at the bride's I;
home, ·which ·was attend~d by. over !
200. The couple :;were ass1ste_d i_n re-,;
, ceiving by the 0est man, maid of '
: honor and the parents o~ the bride.. \
The couple received amidst a profusion of gladioliiwhich were banked,\
\i, around the rOQlQ.~ 9f the home Re-}
\I fresbwer1B we:re served.
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. 1j .,The groom's gifts to :P.is best man I
-· .,. , ' · j and ushers were cuff Ii.nks, and th~ ~
I

bride.gave a tie to the t~ pendants1
: and· chains, her. attendan.rin~ bearer,
. and a bag to the flower girl. ..,The
'~X'oom s gift
to his pride
was a
pendant se·t with a diamond, and
chain, and the bride gav~ the gr9on1
a set of military brushes.
Mr. 3.nd Mrs. Willia~Son left on I
·:" j an extended wedding tri,~~ and upon
1
, their r~turn ·will re.side in Jamaica:
:.-,, Plain. 'The groom is a graduate of/
., the Suffolk Law S ~ l in·1929, and
' is exp.ployed 1n a Ytltfon law office.
'
The bride is a graduate of the
Bry~nt & Stratton Busines-s Colleger/
'and '"'r¢~entlY taught in T r o ~ I

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MANSFIELD, Sept 4-Mi!ton Edward William.son of this town was
1
united in marriage to Miss Sarah
Maude Kelley, daughter of Mr and Mrs
Edward E. Kelley of West Falmouth,
in the Methodist Episcopal Church at
West Falmouth yestei-day afternoon. 1
!The ceremony ~tVas perfornied by Rev r
.'Mr Bemis of North Falmouth> a (
,jcousin of ~e bride.
/
J ~ The bride's father, Edward E. Kel.. /
·aJy-, gave h_er in marriage.
/ The inter~or of the edifice was dee• r
.<orated with, orange gladioli and ferns'"/'
1 The wedding march was played by

l

-'!

J~ierG:fdt~ ~~:!~n.;;

<-·

E~=~~~it /

!Hamson of Mansfield, brother of the '
'.groom, was best 'man. The bride was

The talk by

r.:ttended. by her sister, Miss Helen Ke)-

~az!1s~ne~~; :li~~ ~rl~~!
;,..)Platt of Troy, N Y, and .Miss Lillian

. 'j~~;isa~~3!~

I

1

w&rner of Atlantic, as bridesm.a. ids .
Williamson
of
Mansfield,
of the bridegroom, was the
<,. )ring bearer, and Martha Williamson, /
1
•• ·" iniece of the
bridegroom, was flower l

Fruussell
nephew

·~:-J~~~eg~~~C:, ~~~a:;o~e:~thi;

,.

iiport, cousin of the bride. were the
]ushers.
-'J The bride's gown was ot white .satiJ].
:j~ith veil of lace and her bouquet con-

1.~~! ~~ t:1~:8tt~f; .

Y.,oston )?ctws-<l::hp Y.,urctau

:-. ~;e~.m°a;dro;fesh~::!r
- k.nd carried glad~oli.- The bridesmaids .:fwere gowned respectively in yellow,
. ~~lue and orchid tulle with similar bou- ,
jquets of gladioli. The flower girl wore f

,ja. yellow dress.

:J

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

[

A reception in the bride's home ~s

f

1 mttended by more ~an 200. The cou- l
· .Jole were assisted in receiving by the l
est man, maid of honor, and~ the

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

aren ts of the bride.
~ The bridegroom's gift~ to his best
,
~an a~d ushers were cuff links ..Th~
.bride gave her attendants Pen¢lants
and chains, a tie, to the ring bearer
.ltnd a bag to the flower girl. The bridegroom gave the· bride .-,. pendant set
with a. diamond and chain and she~ave her husband a. set· of military

~L

.l

brushes.
· Mr and Mrs Williamson left on an
iixtend~d wedding trip and upon t:\leir
.l"eturn will reside in Jifinaicil Pl~in.
0

0

tt

[~fro:itf°~ ~~h~~l aingr;~a!1id ;~
a
111111. office.
. The bride is a graduate of the Bry.
Jlnt & Stratton Business College and
re<:ently taught in :T.roy, N Y.
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SUffQlk,.Ln:wv S~oOi
Su1folk I.law School, .whose.
begins on Sept ao, ls graduall ..
ing Its Influence throughout,,the E,a~1
ern Uni'ted States, accordffig<to Dean:
Gleason L. Archer. In ·addftion":to- a
. Jal'ge number ot students from: Mas~:=,
chusetts, the number Of thos~ e·
tp.is year from' ~ther States, · p
larly New England, is larger
before. Other students are app
from as far as Ohio and.Penns
and are being assisted by the sc
procuring work in Boston to
them to attend these cla.saes.
. ,
The Suffolk Law _Sch6ol facui Y:t
composed almost entirely of ,practic!i:,g:
lawyers, will containi a number of new-··
members this Fall, according
Archer. Enrolment ·is now ~
for thek freshmen classes at. 2
st. Catalogues, may be obta,
writing to that address.
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VI-·.Drying Kansas

::Soston )t~ws-(tllp ::Sunou
8 BOSWORTH STRE~T

With a Hatchet
,·,,·,1

·''M.f'-from have eoma to sav~.. ''"
·. EN, ,,I a drunkard's fate you·
'1i- .

his

sister to receive. The twoahe ,considered "a hugging
school in,com_patible with a.. true
a.bout "the bar, look~d up. to '".'l" a t!',11 wonian." uI never saw anything '11•t
·but f{tocky woman 1n her fifties . str1d~ needed rebuke, exhorta,tion,, or work...
ing in through the door, w:av1ng a i:ng," _she ·said on one occasion, "but
hatchet, followed by a mob of women. that I felt it iny duty to meddle with
~~ake up your consecrated hatchets,'' it."
Though a vision, seen at a revlva~
~e·sh<?uted, ''rocks, a~d brick'bats and
everything tllat comes handy, and you meeting in 1884:, first gave her the idea.
can cle"an out this curse. Don't wait that she had a mission, she did not
begin her saloon smashing until 15
for the vote! Smash!»·
,., A wa.ve o:f the hatchet, and ·the bar.. years lat~r, at the beginping of, the
keeper rushed out the ba'ck door, 20th century. It started iri her home
white apron and all. A swe.ep, and .a town, ~edicine Lodge, Kansas. And
half dozen glasses went craS:hing to it worked.
~ansas at the time had,, Prohibition
the.·fioor. A tomathawk fiing, and the
g,4ass· ·mirror behind the bctr shivered in p.er Constitution,' but the ·law was
i~' p~eces~ By this titx1e the customers openly viOlated~ Carrie'&: ca.m.paign
hac"!. di_;sa.ppeaxed And the wOmen s_harp• caused the authorities great embal"..
rassment. Though she d_es~oyed mu~h
valuable property, she cl.aimed (with
a. show of: reason), she saw a law
enforcer. · And she, developed st,:ong
political support.
,Though she was. arrested dozens of
trmes, though slie op_enly de~ed court
decrees, though she . addressed judges
on the bench as "Your Dishonor," it
:. .·· .

-.. ~

SC!Jre

or

so,

expect

ate,P

!Ounging

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.
\

iI opens

, 'ISUFEOLK

ened their hatehets on the mahogany

UW

SCHOOL

·Boston, Mass.
widening influence of Suffolk
, · Law school, which opens Its 1930-31
I
1 term Sept. 22, is reflected In tile num- , ,
... 1 ber of students registering for the 1
freshman· class from states outside , ,
The

·I
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1

M¥'~~:u~:t~n increasing enrollment
from the New Engla.nd ,;tates, particu. Jarly in Maine, while some of the fresh' men giv~ home addresses in states as
I far west as Ohio.

J
. Several changes have been ·made at
1 the school this year to provide improved
facilities for tile students. The book,_-,1 'store formerly on the first floor is ~ow
• ,I located
Oll the Second floor opposite
: the library, while one of the class rooms
J, on the second floor has bee_n trans..:
formed Into an additional reading room.
i : several changes have been mad_e in
1
'Suffolk Law school's faculty wllicl;l
boasts one of the · finest group o! prac,ticing laWYer-teachers In the state .or

I

tion Convention greeted · her with
enthusiasm. Sile dried up Wicblta,the
wettest city bl th& Stat&, where, only
in this year 500 people suffered paralysis from drinking Jania.lea ginge-,::.
Carrie visited New Y<>rk, where t
BroadwaY named after her a. drink
with a peculiarly heavy,klek. John L.
Sullivan, former heavY'Weight champion of the wo1:ld, promised to "throw ·
her down the sewer," w11en he heard
that she was to pay hls saloon a visit.
Luckily, he was a.sleep when she .ar...
rived ~t his place. Generally, in New
York, she confined herself to remon ..
st:rating with .saloon owners, and with 1.·
at lea.st ,one keeper of a. cigar store.
Tile worst tpey <ionld do was to arrest
her for blocking traffic. .
:a:arvar.d students took comfort from
her Visit to New HaveJJ., which resulted '
in her 11tatement that Yale men were
the most unregenerate on earth. Then
she visited Cambridge and found ,she
had been mistaken-Harvard men were

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icoUlltry.

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his. soul.
,
,
; 13-uch were the hat-0het raid• which as bad.
1~nt far toward making Kansas seriWb.atever must be said of her :metilQl.i'Sly dry~ Such was Carrie Nation, ods, it must . be admitted that ahe
who· .signed letters, uYour Loving gave an. outlet of activity to a. move ..
ROme Defender '" Carrie's .first hus ... m.ent that made Kansas the dryest
·P~~' whom. she loved~ was a f:lrink.ing State in the country. Attacks of mob,
Jp,~n and died ~ar,y.
Her second. on saloons were no new thing. The
w~~m she did not love, .seems to have women of Rockport, Mass, destroyed
a bar in. 1856. Nor has Carry Na•
~~edt~e;r~~\yh.:he!e~~1:ttl~~~~
tioµs technique died entirely, at lea.st
-much' of a national figure.
in the eyes of criti-cs of certain Bos~
'She was always a peculiar woman. ton policemen.
Injunction proceedon· one occasion she '...rose in church ings are now 1>ending against various
al:ld insisted that the ,congregation offl.-cers, who, according. to those in
sin&_,ia. hymn of her choke rather than charge of certain premises, , raided '
o~ piek!:'d by the minister. When.. often "l\rithout warrant in 11earch 1
ever she saw a couple sitting close of liquor, and. finding none, carried
,ogether in a buggy, she stopped them, off a door each time in the hope of 1
outlined to the girl the horrors of the tiring the owner t.o auch as extent I
prin;irose -path, and reminded the that he woUld leave..
!
yoU;ng man of the treatment he would
Tomorrow: Th.ft Wet Weakness

'I

.· -"·

' Registrations will J>,e · .ace.
!school, 29 Derne street;i'B:
I the state House, <l,ur=,s •

~f~F

' · \_month o! Se$W\?.S5
, f"""S
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::Sosto~ )tew5-'1::llp ~uraou
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

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She wen1;, to Topek~, where a Pro~ibi•

a'urface of the bar. The leader, stdp•
piiig for breath, 158.W a drunk in the
· corner, and began. praying loudly tor

..

thi.S year on :3:ept. 24~ w

i first g,,neral assemblY ..Will be ileld.

;a~!:»:r::~ft~op~:!sth~~~~:ri~~:1; .
qf the law effectively against her.

I

MASS.

BOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

1

I

evera "·Changes · Made

I.

J.o. at Suffolk

L!!_W

Sc1:!ool.

The widening influence ~f ··s,;ffolk' LawJ-'
School which opens Sept 22, is ·reflected
in ths. 'number. of students registering for f :
the freshman olass from- State~ otltside
_Massachusetts
There is art incre~sirigf'
enrollment from all the NeW England
states particularly Maine, whne..:.so'me of
the· f;eshmen give home addresses in
Stat'?'s ~ fur ·west ~s Ohio
. '_ · .
Seyeral cha:nges have been ma~e; to p~O· ;•
, vide impi'l:>ved facilities. Tile ·'bookstore ·
forJ;,nerly on the flrst,floor, is now· on tµ.e
.,: 5 eco1jld fl. oor, oppc;,site t.he library, w~Ue
one /of the class rooms on the second
flootf has bee.n · transformed into ah addiiional reading room.
S~vera1 ·changes
:have been.. made in~ tJ;ie .faculty., Reg:listratio11:s will .be accept~,d µµring th~ ~nti.re ..
n;i,Onth of ~ptemb~r
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8 BOSWORTH STREET'
BOSTON

MASS•.

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

\

'WHISKEY passed as ourrency
at one time in PennsylVania..
.As their roads were poor,,
farmers In the western counties of the
State converted their corn iD,to drink,
which they could ttansport proflta.Uy
in less . bulk. As hard money W'I.S
sciu-ce, farmers bartered with hard
liquor.
some men ,.,drank Up their
money'' more literally than ~en do today.
A Federal excise tax, imposed in
1791, met wibh stltf' resistan~ in
WeStern Pennl§.Ylvania. and the $outhern hills. Haniilton led troops against
the Whiskey Rebellion .in 1794, but w ,
disappointed to discover a. grumble
rather than
revolt.

And

=~~~~~m,?e;i:;e:b::n~~

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rWilliamso11.~K,e'.lley

Mansfield, Sept. ~Milton Ed•
ward Williamson of this town was
.united in maniage . to Miss Sarah··
Maude ~eUey, daughter of Mr:·ajid.,
Mrs. Edward E. Kelely of West Fal-· ,
'behind
straw ' · organizations,
but
mouth, at an attractive early . fall :
everyone. .knew their financial basis.'
wedding in tlie Methodist Episcopi,d, ·
And . its salesmanship did it. infinite
political damage.
cl:jurch at West Falmouth 'J:'.tle.s~ ·
afternoon at 3 o'clock. Tlle' cere.;,,
·{
gof;,gKe~~ d~~~/~!.f...
~
mony was performed in the pre.i;ii,;ice,
mailing list for $500 t(? the ~eeley rn~
of a large. number of friends ·and
stitute. tor t};e cure -of drunkards• .-relatives of the couple · by Rev.
"Our custo~rs are your pr~spectlve
Be.mis of North Falmo.uth, a .cousin
clients, n said the sales.' letter. "'We
of, the bride. The bride ·entered the
j '. ',
church on the ann of her father,
liquor.,,
:
· .· ·
. .::: •
who gave her in maniage. The
Before the Ohio Retail Liquor Dealchurch was decorat.ed with ont'ng:e
ers w, 1912, a speaker urged that "we
gladiolus and fems.
·
, , : . :.·
must on,ate the appetite tor liquor 1n
The wedidng march was. played·
grow¥1g boys. Men who drillk • • .
bY. Mrs. Gordon Haman of ·ware:, 1 ,,
will die, and If there Is no new &Ppetite Crea.led our counters w,ill be
ham, a sister of the bride, Dr'i I(.;:. 1: .·
empty as ·well as our coffers. T11e. "Pen
Dent Williamson of Mansflei!lj' bro,:c f'.:)
field for the creation of the ap]i\eUte
ther of the groom, acted .-11,s 00besf.,· t
is an1ong the boys. Nickels expended ,
1man. The bride was attended,
in treats to boys now will return In '
her. si,ster, ·. Miss J;ielen .Kelley,: as, .:.
dollar! to· 3ro~ _tills after the appetite :'
maid of honor, MlSs DoriS, Gay of. :
has been form.ed."
·
A . certain gin company showed tte '
. Mansfield, Miss Virginia Platt. ot i
picture ·of .a scantily clad white woman
Troy, N. Y., and· Miss -Lillian War-t.1
on !><>t!;le labels.·Photographs of this +be;
ner. of Atlantic, as bridesmai~
• Orys .spread through the · South, WH.h.
,. 1Little Russell Williamson of Mans-. i
questions as to the combined effect ot"
' field, nephew of the groom, was the I l
ALEXANDER HAMILTON
the pictures and the gin on the color<'d
man. That these manifestations' Wf':6
ring bearer, and Martha W.illiam-' ,!
him :,,-!diculous and hurt him politically. tb<,. :work,of Individuals and compan,e!!I,
son, niece of the groom, was flow-,'
This experie:p.ce, together with - v~e and ilotoftheofficlalli(Juo'rorganizat\ons
er· girl.
triumph Of Jeffersonian pri~ciples, di&.- did not sa.ve the traffic fro!Xl public
1 ':rhe.·bride was gowned in white
coura~ed Feder8.l mixing in. · th.~. liquor odium. Extremists and, sa.Iesm~nship
, \ satin with b:,,-i!ial veil of lace and.
traffic until the Civil War.·
·
dug ·th~, graves of flle Jfquor busineiss,
,, carried a bouquet ot roseinn.)d~~::
, After 1865, the new United States tax just as the sl~ve•bolders, who, after the ,
i met the Same type .of reSista.nce In .Dred. S~tt.4ec1aJon, boasted that they:
· of the valley. The niai.d ·of····· hono.x.·
j many of the same communities: in ~ o- would auction · slaves on Bunker HUI. ·
I
WOre a gOWil 0( pink; tulle' . anc{;
tions of the Kent.ttcky bills . the people hurried th!' d'\featof their interest. And :
!
horsehair hat. and canied Pinki;:
long considered Federal revenue agents Jiquc,r a.ls() dt,1.g, it~ legal grave by fight- ,
,
! gladiolus.. The bridesmaids;. w~e;
' as public enemies whom a. good citizen ing regUJatio:h. A blacklistfssued by the \,
'
gowned respectively in yellow, bl:ge;
, should shoot at sight.
,
liquor intei,ests attacked the Bia.ch.- ,
and orchid tulle, and carried.· boµ-.i.
· This Is ,:ited to show that the pioneer •tone Hotel in Chicago because ft ,
Ameri~an imposed no social stigma on obeyed the Sunday closing law.
quets, of· gladiolus. The .1ittlE1 ,fio$r)
the manufacturer and seller of liquor.
Brewers all:d d~tillers were sut;,timely
, girl wore a yellow dress. ,'
- ·
Nor did his city brother. In many unconscious of the power against ~tham.
,~ Afte:,,-.the ceremony at thecehurcli;
,communities the saloon-keeper was a They. sootµed 'their c_onsciences by
a. reception was held at the bride's
most respected c~tizen, he took '\:are telling
themselves
their
poltttccU
ome, Wl:\ich was attended by over ,
of the drunks ancf .,,was willing to fore• methods were no worse than those ot
200. The couple were assisted':in· re-·
go s'ales to the clrunkar~s; pa,~r fam• other business interests.
'r(
ilies of th~ neighborhood· could depend
!t'omorrow-The Man on a Bteyc!e.
ceiving by the best man, maid
1
honor, and the parents of the-bride.
The couple received amidst a profusion of gladiolus, which was
banked around the rooms of the
home. Refreshments were served.,
The groom's gifts to . .
and m,ners werill cuff linksi:
bride gave her atte1;1dants;
and chains, a tie to the riiig, .
'er, and a bag ·.to the. flowe:f.
The groom's gift· to ;his bFi,de'.
a 'Pendant set with a dlamOtld,
chain, and the. bride. gaye ·:
groom. a set of mil~tl!-~ b;-~he&, ..; : :
Mr. and Mrs,, W1l11amson. left.:,on,.
an extended wedding. trip fi.n.d.· :riw'ii
their return' will reside ,tn J'amium14
Plain., The. groox. a...grad.ua.te e>f
I the §Jiff JI· I ti
ol m 1929:~ ·~~
• is employed in a:Boston law 9ff1~.
: The bride is a 'graduate,'of_l ·tn;e
Bryan~ and Stratton Busm~ss ' ~
lege, and recently taught in' Tr_o;t,:
1.N,Y, '. _
...-

The affair made tili;:1 °~:!~edcc!:fJ&Jdl~itihJew;:e,~,

a

(:

on him h1 hard times. Saloon-keeper, •,,
crowded sta.te Legislatures. At one ,,_:
time they numbered a. seventh-of Tam.- (
1
many's membership.
~
~ir~.:';~!d~o! 0f..!q~!,,~e9;: ,
result of the Ci.vil War· tax-<>vent- I
ually dtd away wit11 all this. Brew-. ·
ers and distillers bought out the·
c!!f:~
keepers, and if:estroyed liquor'~ best
friends in the communities.
:
Brewers and distillers lobbied, bribed J
and. issued propaganda, as dld.0:ther Jnteresta. Their power w-a.s reasonably! - corilplete until they met an opponent' "
who knew the ga,ne. Then a. latent
weaj!:ness showed. It is hard to fii,ht

"°:'Cr!'%•

~~:rp~,000 Y't:J1:iJ!t :.~=ei-1:t

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of

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r~e/l)!ida! party \ v e ~

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·,-------------"""~__. -c:.:.c.;:_~-"~-'···=·-~··=-~

\

8 80SWORTH STREET'

BOSTON

:BY

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

Weakness
·wHISKEY passed as ,currency on him in hard times.

Saloon-keep'ere
crowded Sta.te Legislatures. At one
thne they numbered a. seventh-of Tammany~s membership.
.
Th,. consolidation of ltquor and beer I
manufacture Jn · a £ew l;la1:lds-as a ;
result of the Civil Wa.r tax-event- 1·
ually· dtd away with all this. Brewers and distillers bought out the
saloons; eJ:Qployes of absentee corpoi-atlons · took the places of the saloon•
keepers, and destroylld l!quor'1; best
friends. In the communities.
·:
·
l da.y.
Brewers and distillers lobbied, bribed 1
A Federal excise t&x, f:rnposed tn
1791, met with st.1:tf resistanc.> in and, issued propaganda, as did other m• 1
· We.Stern Penn~ylvania. and the f$.outh• ter~Sts.. Their power \Vas reasonably :
,.;,, ern hills. Hamilton led troops against complete Ulltil they met an opponent'
the Whiskey Rebellion,-m 1794, but w , who knew the gaF.e.. Then a latent'
to discover 2'o grumble weajµless showed. It 1s ha.rd to #i,ht i
1 disappointed
. rather than a. revolt. The affair made a., well organized _mo~a, is~u~ with a·
thirst.
Liquor could disguise· 1t.,:1f '
··behind
straw/ · organizations,
but·
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at one time in Pennsylvania..
their roads were. poor.
farmers in the western counties of the
. State converted their corn into drink,
which they could transport p,:oftt&tly
In less . bulk. As hard llloney W'tS
s~ce, farmers bartered with h-ard
liquor~ And some Ill.en "drank Up theµ'
money'' l'nQre literally than men do to-As

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Williamsoi\~Kelley

~JY~t,9damage.
a~!:'ma~iJP ft~i'tc?f ~":t1:; 1
pol!ticaI

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'tt

A Kentucky d!stlll!ng eompany, on
going ou:t of business, oftered lts
mamng list tor $500 to the Keeley Ills
stitute. for the cure' of clrulika.zods..
uour custo~rs are Your prospective
clients,,,,,. sa.!d the sales letter. 44 We
can put on your, desk a. :mailing list of
over 50,000 Individual consumer11 of
liquor.... ·
:
· .· '
Before th~ Ohio Retail Liquor Deal•
ers .., 1912, a speaker urged that "we
must create the appetite for ltquor In
grow¥1g boys. Men who dri.it , • .
will <lle, and. ff there Is no new &Ppetite Created. our counters 'W411 · be
empty as well as our coffers. TJ:{e_ .>pen
field for the creation of the a.~etite
is an;,.ong the boys. Nickels expende.d
in trea.ts to boys now will return In
dollar! to your .t!lls a!ter the appetite
has been. forined. »
· A certain gin con,pany ilhowed t.l:e
plctlll°I' 'c:>f .a. scantily clad white woman
on J,otj:le labels.· Photographs of this •he

---------------· ~:ii~:!S::and the gin on the colort>d
~~~=b1~~~u!~ecr~i
tll e pictures

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.ALEXANDEU B'.AMll,TON

I

him ridiculous and hurt him politically.
This experience., ·together with_ ·~e
trium.ph of Jeff~rsonian: pi:inciples, dis.couraged Federal x:pixing in. the liquor
traffi<i until the C)vil War. . '·
After 18f?59 the new United. St~tes ta.z
1
/ met the· same type ot resistance ln

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~t:[considered Federal revenue a.gents
if :: ~~tui~~~ll!~i:~ 1:e~pf;
long

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,' as public ene.z:ttres whom a good citizen
should shoot at sight.
,
,
This Is <:ited to show that the pioneer
1
American imposed no social stigma. on
the tnanufacturer and seller of liquor.
Nor did his city brother. In many
comm.unities the saloon-keeper was a
most respected citizen, he took ,care
of the drunks ~4\was wjlling to forego s'a.les to the drunkards; po.~:r farn, llies of the neighborhood' could depend
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•\\t.

vn-··The··Wett

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·,

.ma.n. 'That these manif'estattons' Wf'~6

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Mansfield, Sept. 4'-Milton Ea•'
, ward Williamson of this. town w~
united in marriage . to Miss Sarah·;"
Maude ~elley, daughter of Mr.··aµd,
Mrs. Edward E. Kelely. of West Fa.1-::;
mouth, at ~ attractive early fajl i
wedding in the Metho4ist Episcop~
church at West Falmouth "I:l,les~..afternoon at 3 o'clock.. Tll:e ~refE
mony was perfo.~ed in the presei;ice,
of a large' number of friends ·a:p,d ·
relatives of the couple . by ~ev:
B.emis of North Falmouth, a ..cousin t
of. the ride. Th.e b.ride. her father,
churchb.on the arm· of · e.ntered. t~.e
.. who gave her in mari1:age, Th~,. ·
e

j

. •.. I u ·::io,:· '1'8 saciil.IJ, All'l{O,L. piI'B:
·uaqb'IPi aq'I UI
·
• MaJ
· ·f·. uum'ln.'8 :l{'Badsaq s.mnt.d pU'B
. -.rapra •sad'B.L'il Pt!& ·sayd(l:'8
'
·
.
.
•. 0.suo1 -Sl '.
·.;.2aa UA\O.til AU'B::>Ot pa::,pd IA
. ' -n'Ba'8 Jo ~sn at:{'I 'lnq a::11.td
. .. ,
Ol uaas a.I'S suxoo.xqsnm ·t:{2noua.io~

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tb.<'. work ,of Individuals and companies,

a.nd ilotoftheoffielall!quororga.nizat\ons
did not save the f:i'aflic from public
odlun>. Extremists and sale~anshlp
d:Ug ·the, gra.ves of fll_e Jfquor business,
just as'.the s~ve ..holders.who~ after 'thf'J

~~~1a S~~\i::,et;/~;;,sb~~s~~n1:::
hurril!d th<, d~ea.tof tbelr Interest. An<l i
liquor a,Iso dl,lg. lt11 legal grave by fight- ,
Ing regulation. A bla.cklist Issued by the , ,
Uquor inte.,e.stlil attacked the Bia.cl,.- ·
stone Hotel In Chicago because It
oi,eyed the ·<$unday closing law.
Brewers and df,stll!ers were sut?l!me!y
unconscious of the power against ~tham~
They__ soothed ·their c,Onsciences. by
telliilg
themselves
their
pol!tic.u
methods were no wor,e thatt those or
other business interests.
.,
TODtor:row-The Ma.n on a Bicycle 1
..

iii!f. "

· l i'8 ·::,z-t. t·z-1 Z 'l'.B SUOJUO .s:ap:'BA ~tp ,
:~napita uoiuo J.o :isn ~t:ll. P'.ll.·a·:c[···· ..:.q
. 1, -i'ioauuoo ·u.10::i tt'llM paunis sa(Y,J .
·
, I -O'I .to s.taddad pa:,i'Bq 'lsa»m;is:sa ..
. t U.100 MOt .P.IIlU{'IUO::I PU'Q sa ..
il O'l'BUlO'I pu'8 .1addad uaa.tlf 1a ·. . . ,
.raqvi ·qr '8 ·09-s oi da'ls p~<>P:
l;lpap1oap '8 :,iooi saopd .O'l'B1.ocl ~ ..
/ Ji ·s.'!a.1.qtj.00 uo .S:U'B.taua» a.t'IT· SU0lllill~
..
.. .."
fLl'\ -onb 'lsaa.01 am pu'B MOt aw sa:JI.u;fi
' l O~'Bl.Qd_:n,yM _lll,;f~
'!!<!!\.~
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~o.ston )l~ws-([:llp ~ u n ~
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

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:-5oston )t¢ws-<C!tp ::SuT'¢au
8 Boswo;,TH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
,

MASS:

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

1

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITO~,, BOSTON

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. p m.-V!olin and pa
,230 P m:--same aSWTAG.
9.15 1>. m -Same as WEAF.
9..45 P, m.-Same as WTAG,
10~5 p, m-Same as WEAF.

AN CANDIDATE
lltf'...i!tEGlSTER OF PROBATE
.e

W~LL CONTINUE
flRIES ON CRIMES
1

Dea1iJs .t?eeerir I

gua:rd. Society" over WTAG Tuesday
at '.7.~5 p. m.
:
'
The portion of this broadcast that
w!ll attract the greatest public in-

admitted to the Massachusetts Bar. the
same year.

1,.t~r~stofWill -be Dean Archer's .-th~~
_
discus:: ~ion
the legal aspects6t

sassination of President oar.fiel~. Iii
th.is case the mortal wo-b.nd- .:~as 1n- \,
tlicted in Washington, D. (x · July
2, 188J, and the President died th
New Jersey Sept. 19, 1881. Th,e ques-

~ion ot whether a man might be I
tor ,murddr. when
the victim did ·not die wit}l.in the
jurisdiction of the court seeking
to punish him was decided in this
case by the Supreme court of the
legally punished

United States, .,,¥>-other vexing question also "'ill''lf.,.-4)§!<USS.ed b;Y Dean
Archer, the e~\cs ot· a. lawyer de-

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·"',: -,c----;;-----'"·- ---··--

J.

Grammar School in Roxbury Mr Horan
entered the employ of the Globe as a.
cashi~r in the . Mailing Department..
While so e.~ye~ he atte~.'.".
fol~~E School 1n B o s t o n · ~
g . r ~ With honors in 1913 and was
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In 1915 he was appointed a bail com.._
for Suffolk · County by the
, Justices of the Superior Court, antt
held t.hat position until 1925.
Mr Horan is married and has eight
children, his two youngest sons now
·/ studying for the priesthood in the
1~m.inican Order. -His wife who was
/ J:ulia D. Walsh, . has '1,een 'connected
with several of the Irish societies in
•1 Boston and is well known for her work
1
in behp.lf of IrelanW. Mr Horan livea
, at 123 Nottinghlll. road, Brighton. '
Attorney Horan spoke a.t the ''All Bos-

j missioner

ton'' Women's Democratic Club meet...
ing at the Hotel Statler last evening
and w~s indorsed by those present.
Other s.peakers included Mrs Horan,
formerly. Julia S. Walsh, who urged
the nomination of her husband.
A m·~eting' to which all candidates
are iny:fttd to attend has been arR
: ranged· by · the club for Friday eve...

I

~:[are1: R. Burke !',?14 Jll,:a·,~l!~

,

n!ng at 123 N ottlnghlll road, Brlght9n.
' Entertainment has been a1Tanged. i
, Committee includes Mrs Horan, Mrs I
---i:-,:~

::Soston )t¢ws-<Chp ::SuT'¢<1u
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

::Soston )t¢ws-<Cltp ::SuT'¢<1u
ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

T FALLACIES

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sa~~en one examines this r~iJa1
proposition carefully he .ts· likely to
ask how such an illogical and mis•
chievous movs ever came . to be
made: The answer Is this: It was
made under the leadership of the
Constitutional Liberty League, a
leadership both arrogant and igno.
.
· J rant. Its arrogance is shown by t~e
declarations . made by its
tate~Wide Drive to Op- following as reported m the Boston
S
president
ose Repeal of Baby Vol- Traveler of May 20, 1929: _'We and
'
and most of our fellow-citizens wlll
P
stead Act
not submit' (to prohibition). 'We are
·
against the enforciment of any law
which we heartily cli~approve as Ull•
Addressing amass meeting at Corliss, just and unwise.' It Is shown also 'ill
, Hall in the y. M. C. A. at Newbucy- the oft-repea~ed sfat:men~ ·of l~a ue
;port on. Sept. 9, Prof. Edwin H. l;Iall officers, that nobotfy or practica
of Harvard University announced that nobody, wants tile _return of the
the Opposed-to-Repeal Committee saloon, a .statementwhic.h should read,
·
·

·ll
NobO'dy m our se~wants the saloon
between now i.nd e1ec ion wi c_on- back, our set never>having frequented
d.uet a state-wide campaign agams~ ,saloons to get theli liquor.
the repeal of the State Enforcemen,
"The ignorance of this leadership
Law with the ald of prominent lawyers is shown" ProfeS!llr Hall contlnuecl, 1
iirnf"ousiiiess men,1nwl'iich- the· 1egal "by the f~ct that ~· lawyers who are .
tmd business aspects of repeal wm be prominent in it haye tried in vain to
inade public
'
make an effectuaLreply to Mr. SampBtatistical and legal broadsides con- son's arguments III to the legal efta,!ning material prepared by suc11 fects of the propored re!'e_al. If the~
authorities as Professor Carver of Har- were. sincere whell!lhey imtlatecl this
vard University and H LeBaron Samp- movement they sllnply did not l<now
son of the StJ;tfolk Law Schggl will be what they were dbing, did not kn<,w '
used An illustrated list of fallacies, what the legal effects of repeal
commonly used by wets advocating would be.
repeal, will be publish~d, and public
Regarding the e'f/ects of repeal Prooral debates will be held under the fessor Hall said: '
.
"H. LeBaron Sampson, member of
auspices of "well-established and impartial bodies" such as Chambers ~f the Suffolk Bar, in his. most recent
commerce and Rotary Clubs In an- discussion of the legal aspects of the
nouncing this program Professor Harl proposed Massactiusetts repeal makes
said:
this statement:
"The Opposed-To-Repeal commit"'The proposed repeal' would have
tee will soon issue a broadside the following effect: (1) it would take
against repeal. This will consist in out of the statutes of M.assachusetts 'I
part of statistical matter, for which every provision which makes manuProfessor Carver will be responsible; facture transportation or importain part of a comprehensive discus- tion of intoxic!lllng liquors an ofsion of the legal aspects of repeal, by fence; (2J while; every police officer
Mr. Sampson; in part, perhaps, of an in the state w41ld still be charged
!llustrated list of fallacies commonly under the reinalning state statutes
,used by the wets in advocating re- with the duty ot preventing the sale '
peal . Furthermore, this committee of intoxicating liquor; he would be
has ~nli5ted a body of well-known deprived of an effective means of
men, lawyers for the most par~, who performing thls'duty which he now
will undertake to meet in public .oral has, namely, c11tting om the supplies
debate advocates of repeal, wherever of the seller; (3) the police of the
and whenever satisfactory arrange- State would be under no duty whatments for such debates can be made. ever by virtue of their office to enThis does not, of course, mean that force the federal law . against the,
these men, everyone of whom has a 1)1anufacture, transportation and imhlgh professional rep1;1tatlon, will portation of liquor and would have
agreli! to meet any and every person no legal standing which would enable
who may vol~nteer to speak on the, them effectively to interfere with
wet side. 'Satisfactory arrangements rumrunning; (4) all charges of
must lncluc!'.e the assumption by some manufacturipg, transporting and im- ·
weU estabhshed and impartial body, porting liquor; which may now be
sµch a~ a Chamber of Commerce or tried in the 75 state courts which are
a Rotarian Club, of resp'?,llsiblllty for available, would have to be tried In
conduct of the meeting.
one court the District Court of the
The speakers thus far enrolled for United St~tes "''
this service are J. Weston Allen,
This statement of Mr. Sampson is
Prof. T. N. Carver, Damon E. Hall, approved by other leading Boston lawJoseph Earl Perry, H. LeBaron yers, including former Atty.-Gen. J,
Sampson and Edmund A. ~hltman. Weston Allen and Clift Rogers Clapp.
Designating the leadership of the
Among the prominent men who are
Conatltutional Liberty League, which named as members of the opposed-tots sponsoring repeal, .as both "arro:_ :i:peal committee are: Roland M.
: : - . - Baker Arthur H. Brooks, Winthrop
)' )'•;," '.· M c;ane Jr., Col. B. A. Franklin,
., · Henry I. 'l{arr!mitn, Arthur S. John·
1son, the Rt. Rev. William Lawrencl!,
. .:\the Rev. J. Rothwell, Dr. David D.
. Bernard Ha·r·r·y Levi, Arthur Perry,
: Scannell, F. Golcjthwaite Sherrill an~
' Frank w. St;ilarns.

,

After graduation from the Martin

con·
tjnue h!s exposition of cl'ime_s com~itted · aci~s state houndaries in
~i~, se.ries en~ttled "L91ws that Sa:fe-

I ·fending a. kno" ,n ~urderer such as
' l Gu1teau.
\ , [

• Horan, who~s a candi-

ticed law- tO'r-17 years.

Afe.,her win

'-j;'11U

'·gant and· lplorant,'' frofessor Hall

date for Register ot Probate 1n Suf..
1
folk County, is well known ~oth in
the newspaper :field_, where he was cm..
ploye4 for 25 years and in the legal
circles of ~~is city, where he has pra,::..

n,:;tArc)ler to Discuss
Assassination of Garfield

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:::Soston )t~ws-(t:ltp :Sunau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

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CHRONICLE, NEEDHAM, MASS.

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Nominates Whipple,,_ Cole, L
Three or More Firm Rep
Bu,t Omits· Peters Fr

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and
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< !wedding

· Thursday
e
, August 28, when Miss K,t
'! Roberta Hall, daµghter. ci
. a~d Mrs. Robert I,.ane Ha,,
1 Stevens
rd., was unit
\marriage to Charles ~
<': (.i/Rothfuchs, Jr., son. of·
Mrs. Charles C .. Ro
.·.·..,.
est Roxbu_ry,·.W.i.th:··.·····.r
.
•,4•,,
uent reception at Jhe,

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His 50 Suggested Names For Place at Head of.
· Stafe Democratic Ticket
Sherman L Whipple.
Gen CJ>arles H. Cole.
Gen Edward L Logan.
Mayor · of New

M. Russell, Mayor of Cam,
1
--~dre.

CJarence R. Edwardo, \
1
A. Filene.
'
.J. Phelan.
B.. Carroll, justice of tke Su..
me .Judicial Court, of Sprinr·
_,
;,. J. £. Crosby, justic,e of the- Sue .Judicial Court, of Pittslield.

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Philip .J. GaUagDft'., Mayor of Wubum.
.John A. Kelilier, sheriff' of Suffolk·
County.
Edward H. Larkin, Ma:,ior of. Medford.
Thomas .J. McGrath, Mayor Quincy.
Arthu~ Lyman 0£ Waltham.
Charles S. Hl)ndin of the Federal Re·
serve Board~
Georre W. Anderson, juqe of the
Unite! States Circuit Court.
Charles S. Murphy of Worc:este.-.
. Gen Thomas F. Fol~ of ~ ~ e r .
eaaon • ,t 1¥ C Iller,
j;f.
Tolk t!lrw scnoJ,"'B3'ito
"'ve
ee.
T. Frank .Joyce, '9ice president, Booton
&: Maine Railroad.

=:__~,~::~the

F. Hanify, judge of the Su-1
]> J>ei.Iqr Court, of Fall River.
-.,J~'.J. O'Connell, ·judre of the Su·,' "rior Court, of·~orcester.
j Louis L. Keefe, M,ayor of w.,.tlield.
. John .J. Martin; president of The Ex.
· eha~re, Tru_st Co'!'pany c".Bosto~.
Joh.I:' E'. Swift ;f Milford.
:
Patri.c:k A O~Connell of Bofto1:l.
j Michl!,el'·A.·.~dera, MaYl>l' of 1,awronce.
, ~illiam .J,.•.Granlield, member. of C<>n•

_

Ilaclares He Refnsos
to Soot Any ,Offi.CB
Aims for HimseH
-Denied by Curl_ey·
Ely

A•niin' . Att·a·c·k 8., u;,av.n11
..
·cu·Dlllll·n·«o Scot!D(I .BI-, '
JJl'tJ ·.... :

..he b. ride in Needha.Iii,_.·
Two hundred .guests·
the nuptials, they com
r1any di.st<1nt cities, . ~
and Greater Bo:iton;>t
those attending ·wa.s· the:·
bid grandmot}:ler of,)tfi
rs. Georgiann~ Ba.11.of
. H., Prof. arid Mrs. P
Marshall Col_lege,
~
/Mrs. Allen Buttenck .. o
,!Island, ~- Y.
. ··
' Precedmg the entran<._,
l bridal party, Mrs. Friedl!
an aunt of 'the brid
" Because." The wed
cessional and: recession
played by the orga.nis
church, and Rev. H: S_,_
son officiated at the dou

Michael F. Ph..Jan, ex-Conirrennuin,
of Lyn.!!:,
!:,Ul
JJl J:U1
Thomas .J. Boynton of Arli~n. .....__
,
Chas. H. Taylor of The J,lost9n Globe.
Thomas C. Thacher, ex-Conwresoman,
. · ~:t]:' .
" of Yarmouth.
. . ·. .
'
.,.-.. ,
Thomas ff. Braden,. Mayor of Low'!'fl.
,;.•
Willian T. Dillon, Mayor of ~olyoke.
By ·JOHN p. :,.tE;Rltit;t,:.·
.J, Ml<> Sulli~,~ Mayor
~~d,y.
· •·" •
Dwia-ht R. Winter, -Mayor •of Spriq• . Mayo.'!- d~ey added last nfgiil:··Uf'
field.
·•
.
the "l!tefat,ti-l of the currllnt 1>0Ittlcal ..
M. Fred, ·.o•ccnmefi•.,
70,. of ·(jaftl~gnby sending out a statement
Fitchhura-.
ljl Whieh he defend'ed his aqitoa in
- Roland I( Sawyer of War.;..
John P; Kane, ex-Mayor ·of i.awi ."'· asking the Democratic voters, of the
, &lwa~ A. .M,:Laughlin Jr .;f Booton. Thomas .J. Corbett, ex-Mayor of State' to .nominate John F. Fitzgerald
: Willialtil P.- ·con~ery .Jr, membe;, of
Lowell.
for Governor in order that Mr Fitz.' . Co,nuess, .o'f Lynn.
.Joseph .Joyce Donahue of Boston.
gera14 m~ht then refuse tci _ uri,_'./n
7
I John F. MaH.;.y of Newton,
Joseph .J. Coi:bett, judge of the Land which case the Democratic . State
·,'~ward . P.. ~~rry 'of Boston.
J
Court, of Boston.
committee would be calleq on to ae- '·
'J..--.4&te_ the-"R""epUOIIcan nom1·na,;rm.--zo:r.
_f9r
"I did not Attend ·the oonfere~ ~eet a. candJdate in hfs, pl~e .. The
the state House of Representatives held at Worcester because I am· Mayor said that his positio~ was _UU•
frqm the 6th Norfolk District.
th
.
yst'
,
.. Mayor Braden g_ave j>ut. last night.": firm be!1ever in
e primary 6
I selfish and that his only desire Wall
d Wll- and, provided the health .oLJohn .
. .
.
statement In wh1c h h e m d orse
Fitz"'erald permitted.his continuing to help tlie Democratic.party.
liam A. Butler as a candidate for the
6
th t
Republican. nomination for the Uplted a candidate-since It Is admittedIn pass,in,g, the Mayor said
a
I Stat.·es. Sen!j,te.
.
everyone that he Is eminently· qu ft Wh$t Josflph B. Ely anµ John J.

.re...

·

'

·

"! 'f

. ,.~Ma

. ·, .

fled to fill the offi.-ce-I would ll(?t

k It

~

b.e . advocating his. nomlnl'Jil)n In
der.'that .a com·petent candidate ml!i
Mayor Curley w.:s asked ·whether he b,e _placed lt:i nomination '!,!ter the. P
knew that :Mr AV-ery was _a ,Repu~; ~aries )JY the D~~~tic S~1;~::ft.
llcan. "Th~t makes no .. d1~erence,
mlttee..
.

He Wouldn't Tfl e

M:r:·,:curley sai~; "he wou1d~-~~~~ .. a

·~---~~':~ s?,ted·-.

gocp Govel'!lor and that; is Whf J . . ha~. Jh,"1'~:IB·no
0

I
1

, ad<!ed him ·to my I.1st. . The .t\!lf<;> .Ccai:i.-:.
I~-, ·-: y.,_e_
·no~~. ~~v:e. :J?fenZ:·O.tlt
-~,
~~~r sI?-~~~~--,!!,~d ·h~_y

~ave

Emanuel clmi;:ch; '-W~st<

·1 bury was the sce:iie of a ciia'f

.·m·.. ·n'r '
Sta
Upo.n. ·. eo·om:'.

MAYOR CURLEY'S LIST

,

MASS.

.



., .

-.

· _

.,

c.umn:iµig'\ said· about each oth,er was
true, neither. would be a. strong candidltte 'for Governor... ·
.··· .-:~~·/..,·,
", :·. ·.· 4
,~.· -.'"

'.!!!'#!'f!J'\

l!;!i,vh:ig.

ec

:7'frgi'n

'1.1.ltn

~..- -

,.~-....

"'"'N ..-...~~' • ~"

·,: s<r ls.· " ·

~s,iifqs

)I'll~
Ul~!l)'e.J

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS.

S,Na:W
spuo;,as

CHRONICLE, NEEDHAM, MASS.

\
\
I

'

Emanµel ~i;:h, ~Wes~~.:.·
bury was the sce·11e of a c >•
wedding Thursqay· < e:.
August 28, when Miss K
Roberta Hall, da9ghter;'
and Mrs. Robert Lane H
s·tevens rd.,. wis urii
arriage to Charl'es : (;;
othfuchs, Ji:.,. son ofr
rs. Charlt':s C. ·R '
est Roxbury~ ~tll:,'
quent reception 'atc;th:·.
the bride in Neetlhani.;,
Two h_undred gue~s;:

i
J
f

a.
MAYOR SUGGESTS Th Cbe l St t --t
50 FOR GOVERNOR e ur ey · a

.·-s11ould
easY io select
gOodi uia.n one of the cand~dB.tes 'now kl.~)1t8~eol. .
from the li1st I have suggested..''
te,st 'become 1:be nomine& of -~O: ,l)e~io
cr¥Y.
_
"
\;;,;. ··.'~ '·
·. ·~A vo.!~ .castd :fi/r.· J'ohn erv,·"- d
Jf.· . .F!tz,/1'.~
e ....,..
ill
Mayor Curley's statement.• which ~:!J'::.'f;'"J'r~ies';':,on!;

j

to do

accompanied his list-of names~ ·ro~Iq,ws:
"It· is· most iinfoi'tunat~ • that the
- - - ~ ~ ~ - First Page
personal equation cannot: b.e set as,lde
in the present g'ubern~t:o~i8.l oon:test
.._the·,,Point of their pencil, within the Democrat-fo party. The·
iGii:~· would be necessary position ,t
\ely un·s:ct1ia'r:e,:w1th one's conscience
~t

t~f:1' . ,

~~~;~dtl~r~t~t~~f :!c~e \t~d~~~ w!>rking.'#i

ciuzimiJlgs, in Support of his' cotl.te'ntion, read quotations from the newspapers of that time.
Daniel H. Coakley added to the in•
terest·1ast night by a spe.ech over the
radio in wblch, he bitterly attac~d
Mayor C'1,rley. · _Then Mr :Coakley took
up the Se~atorial fight. ~e made no
mention of himself' as an independent
candidate in that conte$, but consl•
dered the candidates ro·r the Demo-cratic nomination. He praised EX-Gov
F4"SS, but s~Jd he could µot 1>e nomi-

:< ·,.

.~{ZJi:;~

_ai'~r p~imacy day by· th~ ~~a,ii),

·State Committee of ~ candlda~e who

lets..

c&npe. ~eleicte~,- a11,d the ..otb;el:. ~th.~
sutjng message tbat shou.ld;p1:9:Ve most
bene_,ficial to a_. yery si~k ..m.an".: w,p:ose
pi-esent illness m~y, be tr.a-c.ed to his
labors. iti 'behalf'' of the Democratic

P~;

Dem- party.'!
~,.
.
~~~t ~:ca:!e
°J~~!;'.i~nt~fe~a!:
ness of the Democracy."
ocra:tJ.c · · pa Y
ership Talbot Out for-:Eq,< paign. Thomas C. O'Btjen was disThe most- striking feature of the tl)r.~gh., which . ~ay b.e
Joseph''B. Ely on~·:i,i-tbe. candidaf.a.s_, posed. ?f on the th~ory that he is a
list was the omission of Ex-Mayor sa egua:rd,ed from
.
res..
· '
·Y

~ Rep'ubhcan Marcus A Coolidge's vot~s
An<4"eW . Peter's name. which has ~i~p., for which they ~e .f~'::P.~:~~.a:S·ure for tha,_Deiµ9Cr~tic·. 1;,~?~in_a~i.on i"or ~fOr <M'c.A.d~· ill the De~ocratic nation8.I
been me_ntioned as much as any other responsil;)le, . bµt .. beca'qse : qf'' ~AWh.iqh Gove_rnor, made a c~n~E:;r.vative address conventton of. 1928 were, br:o~ht to
in conne-Ction with the Democratic from time to time -thej.r famllies-~-are ovE:l"' the ra~io last Jl.'ight and did n~t. 1Ught' .a:gairi.. Th~s O~lY. Ex-qo~gressnomination for Governor. It is com- obligeq. to ~n4~e: _JLll. ~~y refer :to ;M:~yor Curley's latea:~ state- man Joseph F. O'Connell alone was
mon knowledge that the -present gz:~at hardship._ ·
;- .
'
ment.
.
. .
left. , Mr Coakley praised h,im highly
Mayor and his Successor do not think
. I assume th<il,_t Mr Ely:and Mr Cum...
Mayor Edmond P~ Talbot 9f Fall as.it._ ~t runn.ff:L-g mate !Or.Ely, who, ac"!'
highly of ea-ch other, but the fact that ming~, the .,cont;ti~t'1.ng, pemocratio ,can~ River came out .fo:r Kr Ely l~s~ nigl;t. Cording to Mr Coakley, will b~ nomiMr Peters' name was not in the list dtdates,- are. hqth. ,ho~est ~en. J;f .we ul,J~ G'l:tr~ey .is _trying to.clo~d th'l ~s-, nated·Tue~ay•. · ·
_
ca~ed comment.
Mr Peters, how.. , ar1::, to· ·accept .this assum.pti?n' it ~ill sue,," Mr Talbot 13:~id.
'
' Efforts to inVolve Senator David I.
ever, Subsequently ended further con· r~quire an elastic~ mind to v~te :f9r
Congressr:q~n William .;p. ConpetY,- Jr WB.lsh in the existing troubles of the
sideration of .his name when he issued eith~r UJ>?n ,election day. in view 0 ~ of Lyz:in 5;aJ4 .la'st p..f.ght: ,,"In my·1, Democrats in 'this St~te ,will Probably
a statement saying that under no Cir- wh~~ they ":.:ha:"e' .s~ia wi-µi r~fEr~nce, to . spe~~h:, ~t. ·. t~~- .1\7or9ester. ~emoc;_rattc Pe un~vailing: Th~ ~en:·ator i~ in Cuba,
cumstances would he be a candidate oile another~ •
· · ,·
.,
!c.o~fe:1;enee I decla~ed .that,~ had no and a ·messag·e received from H~vana
fo! public office this year.
!'lf we are 1to beli.eve. Mr .quµtn1~ng:s, pr:efer~~ae.for ~ny :parbcular c~ndidate ·,la_st night staied that he' intended :to
·,
___
M,r Ely is not oJlly a rairure as a:.~ote- for Go'7:erno~ or :U:z;:ut~d States Se~atqr, prolOngiliiS staY·t1:1,ere: He mity not reThree
More Republicans .
ra~ ~~d:~:~~ !:S.::sa':i':smt;; that I was interested solely in Demo, turn in time.. to vote in. the. primary.
A glance at the Mayo~'s list sI?,~w~d bt1l'k ·of the_ business o~, 1,b.~ ·power
s~'ii_~!~~a.;ti~f;nl>~~;;,~hai\i! At any rat~ he, will not b,e 'in Massa ..
that it contained the names of Repub- tru$t, not only in Ma.~ac~p:~etts, but De,moCi-atio . nom:inees: after primary chusetts !n .time_ to te;'Lke -spart i~ ~e
Ucans. One' story is that there are 11 in New Engla:nl:1- and ..caP:~P.a.
day-, :M°y positii,n J$ e.Xactly the same r&p
c,B,~·Y-1" going on.
Republicans on it.· There R. Edwards! and his fr1e1~.ds say ~f_ ~r\Cummings thoa!1vaey.•
are 'three at
"If, on t~e other _hand,· \r~1! Mr ]llly
theiri<'.lgoh tntq t. dbiectll!'tveewahn.y lheaaldlebr! earls.,· .and.she.:. . .
least-Maj Gen Clarence
0
0 8
• Edward Avery of Braintree and Mayor is true, he IS abso.JuteJy: unfit to, •fill the party nominees•. That is the sole ouquet of brid .
Braden of Lowell.
ev,en the position-of'·· inevs&enger a.t the right of the voters at the primary

·- ·
When Gen Edw8.rds was 8.sked how S~te. Hotise.
:;\ '.. '. <::.J··::--· '
Whoe.ver _iS _ Ilominated, on TuesdaY
..~t-~i:9:1
he felt abo'll:t the inclusiOJ.l ~f his na.m.e
.
~/{~....
;next on the Democratic ticket .will
·
in the list, he said: "i have been a Re- Believes in "tiniafy System
receive my hearty 'toyai support."
publican 8.11 my lifeo, bot of eourse I
· ,,
. · , '.;~
·: .. '.

--am highly flatte10<1 by the Mayor's
- Under the. cir;cumstances, taat Is, Lomasn.ey
E.ly's Si.de
s~ggestion {hat I am qualified for the p~ovld~ng both_ are__honest~and _I have
Governorship.''
no reason to a$sume. otherwis~, an4
Martin M:. Lomasney of t.J:ie West
;
Mr Avery is chairman of the Board that what they stat~ of one ·another Erid, leader of th0 Hendricks Club,
j_..,, of Selectmen of Braintre and ?, candi- is the truth-a no~i~a~.iQ_n secured by has come out for ·Ely for Governor.
4ate fer the Republican nomination for either would ~ean cerj;.-al?l defeat.
Mr Lomasney also supports ex-Dist
t~e - st.ate House of Representatives
"I did not .attend the oonfere1:1ce At,ty Thomas: C. O'Brien as a candt..
frOm the 6th Norfolk District.
held at Worcester b~cause I am- a d t
f
th
t
·
--Mayor Braden gave ~ut last night a firm believer in the, primary system
a :e or
e Dem.ocra ic no!llinatfon :
statement in ·which he indorsed Wil- and, provided the health of.:John w. !~1t:C~:nsu~~~:v~s::~\s ti!3eeis.1lftud;'!:
11am.. A. Butler as a candidate for the Fitzgerald pel'mitted ~~is coD.~inuing: ?,S the Hendricks q1ub, ·as r~:Rresent~d. h'l_ 1
Rep~blican, nomination: for the Upited a candidate-since U: is admltt~4: by Mr Lomasne.y, will add to ~l'.' O'~,ri~.11 8 1
.
Statef!! SenlJ,te.
·
everyone that he is eminently quali- strength i
th
· t
rt n*' th
fled to fill the office-I would not now State.
n_ . e wes em pa... ' -..·
• .He Wouldn't Tfl.ke It
he-advocating .his nomin!'Ji9n 'in orJohn J .. ,Cummings, th& oth~r candl·
MaYor Curley was 8sked ·wh~ther he der, that .a 7o11:1petent c~ndi~ate _might date for the Democratic nointnation
krte:w' that Mr Avery was a :Repu:b- ~e _placed in nomln.atlon '!,fter the.. pri- for Governor, spoke· last night
8 on
lican. "'That makes no _diffe~nce, '!
'!>Y the· D~~~tic ~~t~
bi_r r&!~~ in
1
~r·. Curley sai~; "he would\?:1)3:k~. a
'~:J:---~~":~ $te~'. · -.. '1D:-MY· ~pljl~ii:- .c~~f;y.,·
goq<Ji. Governor a.nd tha,t. is "\"h'lt£:h1>-'\'8 ,P.~•!B'no d.e
. lila.)Dat~ladL \Mr ·
··
'f!'."·
add~d .him ·to, my list, ',The ,t':l'g,,
·
·
' · ·
:did~tes. we have nOw -have. •be~
·-:. aiUiu11aer sl}p:w~l!\a.nil ·~
,we must

or

~;t~;

1~28

:;~d

Q,

....,

011,,

1

i'

:=e~·

:f~>, ·

}?µ~ .l39

~it~dfrec1id~
om : ·

~oston :,?¢ws-'1:ll:p ~unau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
Bos TON

MASS.

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

,; I~

-"~~~~~

- ._ADMmEDTO'BJ\1----:

/j

·.11ncement Made
··y Exarnin~rs ,
Today,,,,.

received . ilicreased
honors wheii seven
. Lynn young' men suc·passed the examina:.. "
'. • a.cl.mission to the
.,us~tts· . bar. Six of. a
,. e from Lynn, propel'.,1~
@~
from Swampscott/!¥
·::lire graduates of Boston
·sify ~chool of Law .and .l
,:from Suffolk Law
1.·
~-

1-..J

' ti_c

.

'

el. Bloch
51
Warren
Earl F. Cook, 69 lla'!·
str,oo.t; :JOI$ J,tt. .~~

11;2,·:-'\lfash:lngton

'~

, .,·.

:,·;;·

j

street;

.21

~bepar,:f' .~
li4,_ ll,lax Su4•rvsi.r,, :, ~ · ;( '

._., :~ti!~o:J;!:!: it':ers I ,

,l .

~

"
seven local young men, including six
I Lynners and one Swampscott resident,-------,
i
1
1 ~ e d the recent bar e:X:amina.tiODS
---,•cording to ah- announcemen1' made this
.{
,morning by the State Board of Bar Ex, '
(t
~
aitniners tnrough the office of Atty;
--,~.
:::,,
J'alllllS w. Sullivan of Lynn, a membeJ
,
ofi'the- bo,a,rd. Tile successful. candidate,
include:
lhetller it's beef
' Lynn-Earl F Cook, 69 :S:awthornt t? bfu on ha
street; Israel- Ji!lock;, 51. Warren str-eet, s':eep sfo:t\e,
Louis Kobrln, 21 Sllepard st:reet; Johrll-to-arms fo,I
M. Kennedy, 9·2 Washington street; Let1t the advai
A,. Etlng, ~.2 Ca~nes .street'; Max Sudnov,!l°
the t fact t
sky, 28 Johnson street.
~ur re a ~e1:
Sv/.am~o
· eke Milton, Rll,bino,, b" champion,
iggest Bn try
. . ·
ornament of n
---li,,;1111,'2'----Sff'..) \;:
te United sta/
ey- -Tallying cry s
• • t;;trf ln the royal .
t. ar west, the v;
,;;;,eaJind the slop<,s'

l

,, Ring, 4$ Carn"ll s t r ~

Jwli~.

One ·from
,Swampscott to, Take Oath,
in November.

ac-s p O

P

i:I ...

m,

/ff #om Ly11n and

/'.J: ·

I

ti;>~

Veterans who n(

~ qualifiers slnce ,

.an of Houston ;
their niblicks intO J
together With s
boungsters as. LawJ.
any and Howard
Y ' newcomers to t
i

i

The 'Pacific c~~·-_ .. ,

f~iled ,to break th~ ·· i•
s ore last Septenib
lil full force, head:
ijer-up, Dr. Oscar p·
on Moe, Bon fl"
George Von Elm '

.

ral Changes Made
Faculty a:t Law
School
ln the

Y:,~1!s~ho who be~i{

Boston University a ·' - . h "
member of Al h
w sc ool. ~e is a
n!ty and Plans Ptoa Tau ~mega !ratertice in Boston.
engage lil legal -praca
iS a graduat~LKobrin
school, class of 192innHClassic!'l High

,,at Pebble bei
.?~-.--·
- • ..
: ,,
.
i

L'L.B. degree from Su=n,'i,. r,;:eiv~ his
I~:----. .u.~.-...w school

th.,:go~/"1.f.r. ap..rrq -~ Wlll continue in
~JP"~ oq"; :at~:aa aq .rzpt"s P
.
• ar:iror.ri ll"q ,; PrroM rraa.r~ os paqoirct
~'P"1J1l1s aq s,j~oriorr aq
q16 aqi .Ia,>o
is'.I"J!Olil " s; l"Jrr~f::J'q
aJi!f ;qi .ro;

~ Prr"'I :aunP.,.

""1

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'J

"WPa: PaJ1'aJap
PU1' j; 'qo,,a7
lfSU1'!0(! "<>
-uollI,'11it"1{ Pa11'a.Jap·~n auo 'a:;,,,
',li
'L
lfOO.:) All.r1':l{
'.:) l'a11?3Jap SUPU'IJ 8 'JOIN>.1'
·r P
OSJu,a: .u"1S 'I
-qo!'II p~"".J"P :::2} 's<traq,a: PJ"
0
.cum: UZOJJ
·110.,j.,;P~~'I
x

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UOA:1, UOS[aN .8.>-e..,ao!~Ul

"znd •
II Pa1.,a1ap

u"AIJ ·.:

of;

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pr,., t
P · ins mr.r
Pa11?a1ap
_,,,p.;:," ~ 'qoi,.c7
·qoa; .
'I J., ·a::
"<>.r pa1.,a1ap M.o~dn ;: 'su1q

u,,q

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s

. S, PI0-111:l{
pn,, !I 'l!a.r
• , °"III IIJAi

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.

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P"1~.J~P;/

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;

r
DAILY EVENING ITEM-,-L

- ll08\11'01 S11Vl

Among Seven Local Young Men Who Passed Bar Examin.at

:stand out!

[ade

s Made
.Law
,I

EARL F. COOK.

ISRAEL BLOCK. ,:

LEO A

KING

SEVEN LOCAL EN I.
ADMITTED TO BAR
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONJ:;)

witz, 166 HumphreY street.
Examinations ·were held at Boston
l,<1:_te in June and the successful candidates will be sworn in as members of
the bar in October. This year's group
men 22 years old o,;
1three

~~=:.

Earl F. Cook
is the son of Mr. and Mrs samuel
Cook
He graduated from Kent's Hill
seminary in 1922 and '.l'eceived the
Bachelor of ,Arts degree at Bowdoin college in 1926. The _Bachelor of Laws degree was conferred on him last June by
Boston University Law school. He is a
member of Alpha Tau Omega · fraternity and plans to engage In legal--'
tice in Boston.
Louis Kobrin
. is a graduate of Lynn Classical High
:I school, class of 1921. He received his
! LL.B. degree from Suff~w school
/ last June Mr. Kobrin will continue in
: the office of his brother, Atty Kobrin,
Lynford bullding, Central square, with
whoni he h-as been associated for the

past· four years

LOUIS KOBRIN

MACK M

-,_

He is an active mem-

ber fo the Toynbee club' of this city and
is the son of RaJ:>bi and Mrs David Kobrin:
·
Israel Block
is 24 years old and is the son of ?4r.
and Mrs Louis H. Block _He gradu-

~e~g~f!nci'~ce~1:J5t'i,"; ~~cte~ gi
0

Science degree from the Boston University College of Libera! Arts in 1928
and the Bachelor of Law degree from
the Boston University Law school last

June.

He served a.s class day orator at

the law school during commencement
week this year and was a member of
Tau Epsilon Rho, national legal fraternity.
.
Max Sudnnvsky,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Baria Sudnovsky,
graduate~ from Lynn Classical High
school and' received his degree< from
Boston ·university Law school last June.
!i!.Js 22 years old. __ Sudnovsky was
schol¢ic
ety,'Jast yeflJ:, Fpr
the· past !Q
· he has spent his
summers In the o ice of Coughlin &
Jacobs, Grossman 'bullding, attorneys.
He has also engaged in the insurance

bilsiness.

Leo A. King, who is 21 years old, is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Barnet. King street He was
born in East Boston and was graduated
froni Lynn Classical High school. He ;
~!i:~o~\\~· J~:egree from

s~I

John M. Kennedy
,
is 38 years old and is a p1,1blic account- I
ant, connected with the Boston offices
"f the United States internal revenue
department. He is a graduate of Suf•
folk~chool.
Mack M. Rabonow.itz,

~!

~;,:;::;t,eo: ~J

~°!.':n~":,t1!;~o~t
Is It graduate of Lynn Classical High
scllool and Boston university Law
school.

\

RABINOWITZ.

uiicement Made

·. t Examin~rs ·

"'. 'Today '"·.: .
, '11. .received

ihcreased
seven
'.';Lynn you11g· men sucpas$ed the examina'( admission to the
·. tts· bar. Six of.
e:from Lynn, prope1)1
.from Swampscott.-/
'graduates of Boston
: ~chool of Law and
om Suffolk Law

. ij( :honors when

.w...........,

Bloch,
l F.

41

°"1\1<,

69

Warren

ltaw,

c::t:ilto:· .:;,;. '
carnei, stt~,.
4ll

~fl!I,

at

'!ihel)l\r1( ·'

#4. ~ Su4ovakY, :· ~ ·
sweei,~. . t1ie·.L}'llnera·

..

l

. nijnued ·ou .l~ll$J! T\vo

I

YJSo~ton

I

rilr.:'·r~OLK~N~AM~ES~!J~Give=n =Post~,
N=ew
NEW TEACHERS/"-'-·_at_Suff_olk_L_aw

~

RENEW. THREE
·YEAR ,,S[AftCH.
·-,

,,

.,

SI,•'

'1•

' Miss Beatrice Steele
1..a&t Heard of·
in Florida

al. Changes Made
i'7,F!iculty at Law
School



',

·,·,

ATTY,, TllOMA.S

~-

J. FINNEGAN

I

BOSTON

MASS.

I

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, HOLYOKE, MASS·.

S£1·
'the'ad..v

CURLEY QIJOl'B·: . . '·"

'0.MA.R AGAI~&il.t:;:. ·.

~-···\·'!···'

AlsoAnd Others__ at y.....::.A. .... ~.h.er•.: ·•
Raps Coakle. Rally- ,. _•·.1·.,:
··.-r
..
.

ben.u- ·:

Mayor Curley, continuin~ his
ous efforts to have Johri --P. Fit~ratd' :
l)am.ed DemocratlC candidate f~r Gov;..
ernor declared last night at a· .rally/;~,
the Statler , ;Hotel that Joseph, ~; ·. Ely\ .
..Signed-his Own political deat
·
't~,, ·J

~fa~ ~°4~: ~l:'-e i>~Ji~;a.tlc

convention•
·
· -; . ·,:
PrqcriiCl:h"'"g~-neWSp&pei-s QU9;filiig-~.-' ·
a~leged animosity to :t}le Ir:fsh~. ,.M&::y
0
~hic~~e.a~f~
The ~tving :fi.n~er ~tes..•\ and<'ha( ,, ~·
Moves on~ nor all your piety,
Shall lure it back to cancel1
Nor all your tears wash Out a."·
The stanza~ Mayor Cur~ey
peculiarly applicable in ,:the
EIY~ the candidate for
The rnayor took a.
Coaklev, chief Ely suppo
tioning t1'at in Coakley's
mayor, "the vote received
Coakley was one per cent~
cast, or actually less than
vote which is not recorded
Turning to the indorsem
the mayors of Fall River, Pea
tham, Everett, SO~erville aJi
Mayor Curley pointed to the I&rge
piled up ill those cities ·in .1922 for
gerald and the small vote for El:Y Other speakers at the rani ..
Obairman Henry E. Lawler of tbe·-B()S..:'
ton Democratip city committee, TramC
Commissioner
Joseph
Conry,
Dean·
Gleason L. Archer of the S 1% Jli la

fi;~~~.f/.~·-,::.

i~~a~1:

M'r.
and
Mrs.
Samuel BoW.ard
Martin of Melrose have issued irrvit~tions for: the -wedding'
of
their
daughter, Ruth Janet, and 'Wallace
K. Graves, son of Mr. "and Mrs. Wallace H. G~ayes of Lind~z:t street. 'J;he
; wed~ing is to take pl~c~ Satur~~.Y.
:·sept. 20, 8.t the 'Martin
horne , in

•e~-

j

j ~:1J 0 b~d~~~

r

~:mteh:~~er!~~~Y

~«tfJ f~~~~~:>i~~~;:~io~ ·

h=-:~,

.Representative Vincent Brogna; ''l'hQma1s,c
Mullen, director of the city pub
partment. ' Others oil the sveak
:form' were Mrs. Colin 1',{cDori

i.;'.:,.:'Yedding sppper which will fol-

l

~is~!~ ~~~~ ;sQ~:

'-~~i;i~~~r!~~I.; lf~~h~~c-.r

~~~

b~\~~:t::d!.~1:~
New York c~ty and .. her. cousin, ,¥rs.
'Robert Shanley of Chicago. W"alter
T. "Wilsol1 of New HaveD;, formerly
of
this
city,
will serve as Mr.
Graves• best man.
It is -of: interest
that Mr. Graves acted as be.st man
for Mr. -Wilson· at his -w-edding a
year ago.
Both young men ,vere
1 class.;.nates
at Boston U.niversity.
i
Miss Martin graduated frotn Mrs.
Somers•.. ··school, l\..It. Vernon Seminary,, ih -W,ashington, D .. C., and the
Katherine :Gibb Sch'ool in Boston.
Mr~ Graves w-as graduated from
Holy0ke High SchoOI with the. cl"asa
'of 19i9 and Boston University in
19 2 3; He then ·took pos·t gra,.duate

Tr~!~;e~~~u~~id~· ~ 6 ~ .

.j

w-ork

at Suffolk·: LaW School.

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

VVith a

Open its 26th year Oni~g
0

national
vvill

1

~-es~ec;tr1!~~
1
~~e~fl'"olk Law S~h~ ft~te, the faeulty
r:aw~°ers ~aa:1fia~~;e of
'Sch6ol, has gained Atche~, head of the
for text books and
a wide reputati01J
ous subject& Which 1:seh b.ooks on varl-

_!~:OeainshI!::!~:d

::.~i~~8;1Iy k;:owr;,.s ~~i:;e_~aJ!i
,j,~1:-r~. at ,$_uff-o~k. Cq.v:~r~ ·a__:{.f~~u'~~

~1:f~~~~

Ji

~ua,t~s. ,

..:...>

BOSWORTH

STREET

MASS

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~~~:::\V;~~s ~n~~ of. ef~e

The

-

8

Mr.

lawJ, e-rs,

-

BOSTON

L~~ School

re~1:ir::rtmL~:r S~~~o~,

i'.
.,

::Soston. Jte.ws-a:lq, :Y.;ure.au

Jt:

Suffolk

~'~ .,

hei:e because I respect a.nd honor
Cu,;ley of Bost6n. I regard'. hitn as t
ablest statesman in the De"inocratic·
~~Y in Massachusetts.
"lt ~lic-ve· the
medy he has suggested is a. wise. sug,-;

Graves isli'il!1fl!ii.@i::'!ECfi J¢le=tx the Ip.tern~t.i.QP-,al_~~ei__9_~m?it~y
:S~~ton. e
.

'

l?_~g

JN"afahua: h;~g'b ·~ch.9,01_.,:yv
'.C~a:~S -.0.f:
1922 an':1. ·from,_ t:tie.'
imball_ schoci:i ·

Lowen. with.., the c_1ass 0:r -19zs. - Sh';
has bt:en. employed in that"_ city .in
Office work-for some time. Mr.· .P'erry
w-ho is;a· g~adµate. of the Suffolk
schoo.µ. d?ban13.ger .. Of' the, ~
Stores· . . ch in L?weH.
·
·
The bride w-ore a, -wedding" go,.vn
.?f ivor.y
fashiop.ed in the
moyen. Perio~. w-ith a veil of tulle

;La...,;

satin,

la:e. • She carried a
bouQ. uet of
brides. roses
The maid of honor
w-?re 3; .. g-O~'n of peach-colo"red satin I
1

,he carried a
bouquet 'Ot peachth h""N:" . accessor.1.·e. s. .of .s·p. f.t. brovvn
">lor-ed gladioli.'
Th~ couple left during the day on
dd1ng. "':rip by automobile to New~k. They w-ill reside at 649 W-estl street, Low!:',]l.

~

I

BOSTON

Ii

,n_

'-<'>.SS
COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

_l

1

'-y~ ~c-£fo~
he.

'W'a.s

i~i~:!

bri.n.g1.n.g

:t,:i.oyee=::J of t h e city
- orts
to
set
aside
-vvha.t he called- _,;an
expression. .of t h e
voters
in the prirn.ary_
/
The ~a::vor•s_ a:pp0aI ~ a s delivered before a..n a.udi~_»q~·-:',of m~re t~a.n. 600 in
Chipman.
Hall. ·: ~_remon.t
Temple..,
to
~1ch
place ·.·the·:- :meeting.
originally

r:::-ii~u~~d, t~o~~~-~~~p.atb!~!u~ ~i -?!~t
0

of space a t
the_ hotel.
"VVith all his ~r~t.orica.1 povvers a n d h i s
- o n d e r f u l l y drama.tic s t a g e appearance~
the lVl:a.yor•s speech stirred his audience
to applause a.r1.-d · cheers o"n :seVera.T occasions.
·
VV"hen
he . referred
to
""W"hat he
f?a.},d
'9Vas E l y ' s bolt Or t h e Democratic p~rty
ln 1919 because
of the
action
of t,he
State
convention
in
adopting
a. plat.form.
p l a n k vvhich. called for..:_. J:~ser-yQ;tions iT\ the League of Nations pa.ct_ the
1\,1:a.yor roused his he a.re rs t<:," -m:os,e~_, enthue;iastic cheering b y br~ndin.g· Elyio. a:s
the a r c h ene:rnT o-L t h e Irish,· r,a.ce-.
·

Calls Ely Enemy o-f' Jrb;h'

i

j

Dnqi
Ier

,, ]

for

5'i

..
......_.--leader of the party
:\Iayor as the Jre~;mocrats should folwhum all go

'iiow.
1\

.

--

ELY RAPS CUJlLEY

-

He Is Bringing pressure on City
Says
tt
Them vote jot
Employees to ave

CURLEYLISTS 5 ,POTENTIAL.
CANDIDATES R iR GOVERNOR;~
~~· BRADEN, COR. ,~:::1JTT INCLUDEDf
=

\
Fitzgerald
~<.<',,Curley 1s seek~
\ A cha.rge . th:\~J';::~~ artment heads and
: ing to rorce c\J:1 their will to support
,, employees agaorts to nouunate John

\ hlm in his ef'f. .

]:i".

vernor, despite J!itz-

a!:al

\ Flt~ge;ald for
statement, was
\ g~rald s w\t'h
B ElY of Westfield, at
'., made by Joseph . k Ros\\nda;\e, Rox-

] rallies in }Iyde Par 'nd East Boston,
1·bu.rY' QharlestQWD a
}! 1<\st ~Jgbt. ded in all of his speecb~:
l Ely conten
Democrats of t,,

,: that the bu,lk of the d t);\at the .14ayor
t~ state ar-e with him h~n Pl~P- tQ. force a
l'. has wlth hiW {~a.tio~ nobody but the
c,, Fitzgerald nom
l city workers.
.

"¥': Mr. Ely sald 1n -pa~ in that the cltY
t.. "The· report fitl~e~~e put on the. Uno
t, employees are 1
to .forsake the direct
C! for the Curley Pan
ne· that a-1 great
. prlmarY and 1
be exercised to

:r!~i11

'';, cieai of pressur
1 that end.
primary and an
S ''But we ha.Ve ;h Australian ballot
r: Austr8-lia.n ballot. d \b».t when a man
t!,. was· adopted \n or er be may be alone
:~ goea _into. a
and no. man la to.

t\ :!~~ hls

0

a!\e°:~a.

~e votes. e \s no ""1/S.Y for
0;
''Furthermore, t!e~oVI he V'Oles; The
( any ver~on to ~nf1~wed the dictates ot
voter, having o science, ls absot.Ntely
~ h\s heal"'t and con ld That ls an anY
j clean ,V'ith t}l.e wor We are submitting
_t) ca,nd1date ca~ ~~- people in this fight,
~ to the will o
f the direct primary
~ under the la~ o b llot."
and the ;..usthan ____::___

.

~

·

~

Cummings Ra.ps Ely
~ ·

Picked'

He ls• the Caudidate
.
by Daniel H. Coakley-Also Hits,
'
t Curley and Lomasney,
a

s candidate for the

John J. Cummi~atlon fori Goverl)Ol',
Democratic notll n J
ii B. ElY as last n\ght atta,..cked
can~1:!te ~f Da.m.el ':·
the ''hand-~!ckeid s i.d that the Demo- ,
. H. Coa~leY' ;~~te a.will not stand for
crats of the to lead their 'Pai·tY in the
such a man
/
.
cQming
CoakleY, Curle,:, and ,.'
He also p
,, olitical scoundrels fo'f
:i--,oma.sney a~ p ro'fessional
re1Htious
• • indulging
m r t~e past go years.
,.
1
i propaganda fo t of Massachusetts,
A ''The Democr~ snow D~n Coakley to
· , h!3 said "w?l n~r tietrl-ct A.ttorneY ElY
hand pick o~:aa..t~ for Go-vel'noi-. ElY

cam::~~~d

a$ thejr can

le tool in ~he hands of

is onlY e.. plia,b oters remember Coa.kCoakleY · ~e v-with three former Uas-

ley•s o.onnecJ1~:rtot attorneys, one, m1lsa~husetts
and }llghlY respected, sent
"\l'ersallY loved fl.TI early grave, another
1tea.rt"J)roken to
O the tht-rd an exile in
. to St9,te pr)~on
Coakley, the mas. another Sta 8• . the impudence to want
ter rn.tn4, µa.13
or of Massachusetts.
to p\,cl{ ~ o,~ve,ffort of such ppUt\c~l.
"Tl'l.e unJte c6aldey, -Curley !3-Pd Lo~_
ch'1,TB,,ct~r~ -.a~ tng µ~ed to wr~ck ~t,.e
m"l:!!l{'¥ 1~ l):r~¥
~o .re-elect qoy"!:

~iue

.,_~J\«

i' .·,, ',)-

Declare He Claimed C....
for Veterans' Legislati~.
WWch She Secured>\~
si~·:

1

The political storm now ragi~-gi.'iri\
Massa,chusetts, mit.h Jta_ cint~.,d '\).
Boston, ·touched Low~f! ·o,:i- f.Y!,O ,:'
tinct .occ(u1ions yester~~y·-an.r:fb.rh:
residents of this. City into ·the f
rant of· discussion ·iri the state· i(
. '
.
'
,
national campaigns.
Last· evening Mayor James Curl
f Sos'ton named Mayor Thofflas
, Braden and forme·r-Mayor Tftomas~·
, Corbett of this city as· two <>'.·ttf!ei
men of, the s.tate -who.m -_h.o.', WQJ..llY,-':-tt~
=;.c===============lp==;::========r='="'f'IPrefer as g~:,vernor ~f .Mfs~~chu~e~~a-· 7
.:';
to. either Joseph B, Ely or Jo~n<r.
.Cummings, the Deniocratic. ,can~i:·,_.,. ':·i
dates~ Braden is a 'R,~pH,blican, C~r.~.
bett, a Democrat.
··,~ ···
. · · ),_:\:
Earlier 1n •tho dai, . "l:l<i: forpes ,oll':{
Eben S•. Draper, .Rep.Ubl.~an ca.r:i i.:i;;J..

·'t

ate for .tho nom1~at~'O:Lrfor

'°:'"'

tates senator, ace'.u,s.. d;~Willia~-:
Butler, his oppqqfnt... of .hll
claimed credit for ci•r.~au~ l!g11la\1q.11
in behalf of veter~·• which
Edith NoUrse Rogers. of this .c!t
aid to have initiated and joHi)'
through .to enactment.

l'..

<: .:',. .

win F. Hanify of Fall, Riv~r; Jµ'dge Dean Giei.so~
f
'oi
·,
,

· · · '·, Ia.it·§G1lliQ!."'. Edward 'A.very o · rainPh11Ip J, 0 Connell ~f Worce~5~r~ wt\;~ fi[li'lt, goyce, :vlcee . president
May~r Keefe of' Westfield; Jol)11. J, Bqston and,Mll,iiie'aa\lroad; Ml'q~ael
Martm, B_oston ,banker; John E. F · Phelan
LYnll .former C:ongressSwift of Milford, Patrick_ A _O'Con. m~ii; ,Thom11fJ. ':SQ:v,(ton; Arll'ngt,;in;
nell, Boston! Mayor Lltnd~rs . ?f. Charles ~!fayJqr, ot the Boston
Lawrence; Congr~ssman W1Uial)l J. Globe· Tho 8 c~.,· ',l'liacher of YarGra!lfield .of Springf\e.ld; Rev. R!)- ;outh,'·iorin -Con'gre~sman; Mayor
land _D: Sawyer ot Ware; Edward ·A, Thomas Ii: Braden of Lowell; Mayor
McLau,ghljil, jr., Park .commissioner Dillon of· Holyoke;. Mayor. Su!llvan
of Boston; Congre~sman Connery of of Peabody;
Mayor' Winter of,
Lynn; John ·F. Malley of. Newton; Springfield;, M'. Fred ,. O'Connell;
Edward P. Barry ·of Bosto~, former former mayor of Fitchburg; ..l'J>hll P,,
lieutenant governor_;' Mayor Galla- Kane former mayor of Lawrence;
gher of Woburn; Sheriff John A, Tho~as
Corbett, foriner jll1a,yoi- of
.Kelliher of Stiftoik, Cpunty; Mayor Lc\\vell; Jpseph J. Donahue of Boston
,Larkin of Medford: Mayor McGrath f "~" Judge Joseph J, C~rbett of Bosof Quincy; Arthur Lyman, of Wal- i ton.
··
tham; qtarles s._ Hamlin, Boston · ·,
. ._-_
.------, .. _. ,
banker; J~dge G.e<>rge yr. ;And~rso~
BOSTON, Sept. n (JPl;--'11,{aJ. · Ed-·
of the Umte(j States C1rcmt eourt,:, ward H. Co_qper,. who has b~~l'.l,Ul¥Fs.
Charles S. Mu,phy, of ~orc~~er, ing the state In the service men's
candidate for the democratic nomm- dugout on wheels for Eben s; Dranation for lieutenant governor; Gen-· per's candidacy for the Republ!ca,n
era! Thomas F. Foley of Worcester;· Senatorial nomination, toda,: ac-

of

!!ed to
. dldate
Hepuou

LEY

Lary

and an

,tralian ballot
when a man

be alone
oo man ls to

,ay

no way for
,e votes.· The
,e dictates of
ls absouitely
llat ls all anY
Lre. submitting

in this tight,
lirect primary

lid.ate Picked
iy-Also Hits

sney
od!date for the
for· qovernof,

eph B Ely as
date of Daniel
,hat the Derno·
not stand for

,ir party in the
ley, Curley and
scounq.rels't. for
ionai reltg1ous
· 30 years
·Ma$sac,iuset~s,''

Dan CQakley to
i<lt Attorney Ely
Governor. Ely
in the_ hands o!
remember Coak1tee fonner Mas,rneys, one, unlly respected, sent

grave, another
third an exile in
oakley, the rnaspudence to want
f Massachusetts.
of such political
Curley and Lo'd to wreek ti'!•
.to: ie,e!ept goy,

y

..,;,,,:-, , ··

The list in6luded severat;republicans. Those named ln tha. mayor's
list were Sherman L. WhiJll>Ie, Boston lawyer; General Charles H. Cole,
General Edward L. Logan, ll!ardus A:
Coolidge,. who seeks the U. $. Senatorlal. nomination; (mayor .Ashl_el". of
:Ne:w ,Be.d:tor<i; Mayor. , l),u~ell <>f
Cambndge, General Cla~k·· R.
Edwards, .a republican, Edward A.
- Filene, ·Boston merchant; James _J.
Phelan, Boston banker; ,Judge James
°P· Carroll of Springfield; Judge John
~ Crosby ot Pittsfield;· Judge Ed-

.

'

:r

cused Wllliam M. Butler, DraN(s
opponent, of claiming talsely ;credit
for vet<irans' Jegislation;c• ·_, . :
'Mrs. Rogers Given Credif;;:
.
• Cooper said Butler's 111eri,hil;d. bee!).
fol!owi~ the dugout 9n "".heels;,al).d_
distributing litel'atut'e clai_l)ling -th11t
Butler : while In the Seiiate: secured
certain legislation wher~as the credit
really belong to Representative Edith
Nourse Rogers of Lowell, Heney L.
Bowles of Springfield and others.
Among 'the , claims; . Cooper:;" said;
was,tiiat Btitle,. s-ecured Bed!o,;,d t!te·
new veterans' hospltaL In reality,
Cooper asserted, Mrs. Rogers SI!•
cured it. The same was true, he said
of the retention ot Camp Deven!I an,d.
the improvements there. Bowle!!, not·
Butler, he claimed, kept, the vet~
erans' bureau .offices in Sprln~eld ·
open.
. _.
,
Butler· for· 48· H'~ur Law. ,. _ , ,. ,,
\;:
Butler _. mOl\ll:While col).~ljlu~d•:'h'is..
advocacy':-of a. i:\ational 4g;~o11F.;l_!i;'ilj,
to meet unemployment -arid' equaJiz~.
labor/ costs throughout the country"
He,\SPOke: at' Taunton, w!ill~ Drap~r
waJ 'to1'r\ng 'T~h!lton, N~w 'Bedford,
Fall River and,-Weqster after deliv~:.
ing. another arraignmel!t 'of pro)¥bh:
· tion before the 'Cru~aders Inc., in:·
Boston. ·
, • . · .· ·
. _.,/
the Democratic camp Joh!)::~;)
Cummings; i:!ild/date for the
natorial nomi:'mHion, attacked hi.s ope''
ponent Joseph '$. E]y of Westflektj'
charging him with· bolting the tifket
in 1919 over. the '•League of Nat1oni,.
and Boston P<>!lce itrJke issues.
·.'
O'Connell H
t:oinasney,
. .
James E. QDonn<;Il, speaking f9r'
his brother, Jdseph, former congress,,:·
ma_n, candidate .fer the Democr.~\i,;
nomination to the Senate, ·sai4 · : : _ ,. .., . , ..
...
, ·, ,:, _ .,,_
..
brother was the pnly one of the···, iii'_ ag:iJnst. O'ponnell ,beca~~e
candidates in the p~rty .to ,hav~ !I"if. st~c,!i: 11p' ~~p:,I,omasnew,,
experience at Washington ,and th?,:t_ ·.13~.a~en:,Endorses Buile.t•.,
he was independent of the bosses an'd "· , ;.\mong · the ,' e,ndorsern
of the money power. He
P~.blf~ dµring the iiaz: ., ,
Martin Lomasney, Boston politician, fr01n May9r r~9J11fS, ~,, _. .
of putting Thomas ,O'Brien ,in the. ·,u<JWeU-.''):iacklng- Butler/.!~r
s atorial contest·,as a ~iiite .·_fight ·:ate. ·

In

gu~e,~,, •

,ts. at

accused

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS

MASS

[,,

MASS.

BOSTON

'MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

MAYOR TAKES

JµE STUMP·

.~.I~~;~.i
I
.in Big Dr e t Na
Fit era

t

.

'r=:;- Continued. lro
'f tletts, ~ at ~ne tl.me a Dem.of crat.

~:~of·:a~ss~~n«:,~f ! ;!~rf filt:~.1:!.t·~d:;:::i!;: :!:l :f
:· present ts a candidate for the
!1 er

0

0

0

; DentocJ.".atl-c:, nomination for- the

united· States· rs:enate.

f ~~~~1r~~1:r!1::~~fact
1r:
c~l~. o-verlOOks the
1



:. gal -

I ':th9.t- be ts an, id:ependent candl)date for Senator -and the only
• purl)Ose o1.· hlS ciindtda,cy is· to ati:1.
. ; the. ··:ttepub'llcan pa.rty' to retain
f : control of· ~ t ·sea',j;!'"


1

)in1a~;h~1
:Yj~~~it::.ep:s:re.1!~
fo~ :~thi.\~ Democt:a.tI~ nominatlQp..
IMa~t"··:·oui-1'¢-;Y' also .left· the name
l!Of Aihdrew. .J. Peters from· the list.
1
rt-he · latt,e~, ·: is <!onsidered . the

,::::itt~! lfJ:.~:M b~a.fi; c::!:
)it
0

3':0hn:'.F. )fj!tzgerald is no~ina.te.cl
Tues~ay
·
his With':1-t'awal

:from th

':PETERS

; Bui ·pe{er£l-;.iz'om!)HcateS matters
furthel" in a flat statement that h0

'could. ?lot be induced to ma~e .the

:run,-;8.g'.8,tP.~~ tt,.e Republican re-~ec•

Several changes in the fa?ulty at
Suffolk. law school to become effective
at the opening of the 1930-31 sch,~ol
term Sept_. 22 were announced ~ofaY
by Dean Gleason L. Archer.
.
Atty. Tho1nas 8'
·n;;g.;ra.n ?f Malden.
for· three , years instruc~or Jn sales: haS

I

F.ro{r~; \I. b~fui~~ \
0

:e1!u~~.~~Jnt;~
whQ :resigned beca~se'""o~ ill

A~t:y., ..

·ent:, part

People Can Be Relied On
. "'While the list ls impressive, and the
titles of the BUpporters are rather
overpowerin~ in a. sense, the actual delivery is negligible. The people have

~!~~ b1;:"~1!u~1te~~'::1~ ~s!1:i~ ~~~ ag! ·1
livery to anyone 1n the "futU1'e ... •

,

plea. .• ~



.. ~~~

4-:t•t~,

·~·

meeting:·

<#..Boston's.
1'-ttd; to thei

of ,:flle

'~e

,

end

ot~er a:n.4 at ga'ther-

;ings Of every character' at which. he

·hcu!l-appeared the· alldience have joined
with him in their rendition. I f every
i:odiv!dual !n :Massachusetts who sang
the chorus of one of these 15ongs as
the refrain was led bY John F. Fitzgerald, vote for him. 'I'ues<Ucy"• he will
w'n the primarles,'by a: la'.rger majority
than th~t given any :m.an previously in
the hiatory of :Massachusetts.
'"We go forth from here tonight with
the strains. of 'Sweet ~eline• and vie~
tory resounding in our hearts determ.~ned that on Tuesday next through I
out united efforts and the assistance of
the intelligent electorate of Massachu, setts that such cheer and comfort
shall' be brought to our can4i.date tb,a.t
he,. in the quiet shades of the hospi~.
will also be. found 11inging his familiar
melody.
- - ,
· . .
_. _
-".'J:n tl).~ city of New .~edfoi'd, a great
nemocratic leader, who held the office
of :Mayor for more than 20 years, was
·111 a similar ~ositlon, and during the
campaign he was unable to appear be•
fore the pu'blic and plead his own
cause, yet when the votes were count"ed,, Chal:'Ies Ashley · Of New Bedford
had been ·reelected Mayor and the news
of victory proved more beneficial than

the ~rvioea of 12.bpioiea and ~eoDa

·\

I

tlon> 0£,',Gov.. Fran;k G. Allen.
~~'· ·-view .of statements which
haVe appetired reclMltlY in the
newspapers, it seems necessaty
:for me to reiterate that I shall
not be a candidate for public of:fice this l·car under any circutnstances;• he said.
The Curley drive to nominate
Fitzgerald opened today with ra,llies
scheduled for many strategic points
].!ayor Curley will make his first
two: speechi:!s on the stump for the
di$a'blE:d p~ty leade~ in the whirl-

wind et:f-0rt to defeat EI:y and. ~um.-pl.ings~'

·

.

·

' '1"he Mayor wlll . address a.

'

~J!~fe~~e~~t:H!t:i: ;:~~em
0

:!a~~~~J:e~\~~!ts~lf~:.~~
ts:,.scJ.?.edu,l~d. to

· ·

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS

MASS
MASS.

BOSTON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

?r to :w!thdra.W' f:rom

;,:

I.

this cl.e·

.

,--,r·-----.iii--,_,.-__,
l

J:1t 011 Cup~m

By one of the ironic strokes of fate,

:h~
NB.S

}ummer with the Davis Cup squad but
1
1
5
~:eri~:v~ad ee~~s ~rd
1~d for inter:p.a~ional suprelmacy. Til-

a~~~:cc::-~t:i



*

strapping 21-year-old southpaw
·ti;µt.en all the way to Fran-ce this

l}iWVJ~

CURLEY ASSAILS'

leil, whom he defeated at ForeSt Hills
,"rlday, and Geo:rge Lott, who was
-rimmed in the second round by the

' Gd
J'

ex-champiop., Jtichard N. wnuams,
~re used in singles. In doubles the\
ilmer Allison-John Van RYn com,..:. 1ination, which was trimmed in the
mal of the national tournament at
3rookline, Mass, two weeks ago by
.A:>tt -and Doeg, was selected instead.
The U~ited States' forces had a.

INTENDED To·:
LIST FIFTY j
'ELIGIBLES'

,urc'.?asblg of food and commodities,
·lothf.ng, shoes; wearing appareJ,.,..and
i(ther necessities.
__ ... _.,._.,,.

:~!;s1~ s!~~;e'ti!l d~~n;' :ie J;=
0

-~;.veek many store buyers have been
1,-?oming to Eastern c.enters, and that
tfetail dealers ha~ now more purcha.s-)_ng rep+esentatiyes in the East than
6
1
9
;e!~:e 1inis asnJd
9 \-ioi) was due to the fact that buyel's
~mere· not sent in Augttst as they usual-~ are 9 but ·that the pick-up in public

';a::

~~lefu: !it~~:

s~;;nc:~d::::Je~od:ri~~c:oL:~;fe~;{

Emphatically Denies Omitting I
. Own Name From Roll
r•
for Governor
,,,, l

~~~

.s~leted s~ck!!I of goods. T:P,e impresdo11 is beginning. to \,revail t~a t there
1hould. be a. good improvement in rel business, this Fall.
In an extensive study which Mer:111, Lync;h & Co have been making of
~.
~ha.in store s.tocks over a. period of
rears~ they cOnclude that while chain
1tore companies as a class are in a
:>etter condition today a.s to assets and
3arnings than they wer.e in 1927. the
1.epommon stocks on ~ basis .compaTatlve
~gf,V'ith assets and earnings are cheaper
pt'l;OW than they were !n 1927. F. J. F.

By BERT FORD

o;STANDAl'tO OIL. RUNNING
HYDROGENATION .PLANT .·· ..' •.

BOSTON

·~! ~e~-~J:;:sey

~-J

ile- ,

9t{l ~o.M A'BPOl, et!IA.Iemos 10 .z.axtJ; .'. r:··1: \'
.M. 90U9.t1'J:J-tt
,das '':r'I:!l.M.O'I 1
. ' . ·.

·

'

' ;•+-9
'f4

a,:11HS S,NlilWl:13d'<fdSM3N
I
NO e:;i, '<f SNIM l:13XI~

'·. . , ps_

'"l8 _u'8

.I.OJ

s+oqs pa;'8uJ:al

'<-?~ ~:~~~li\Ipu.!, Aqµo.M.uax sStN ·A-ep
~.
-,
,o ·rr •p ·.M. ptt1'JSI epo
~U-

,f.-

::

Ylt11t

MASS.

Y9RX, Sept 14. (A,. F.)-The '\/\ I

•ptit_a:11dard qn Co~~~ny

l!:

'.'The point I wish
•.
said . the inayor "is
sti;ess," at
not .. a candidate' m
at I am at
a Democrat I am .
a.nd, as he
~ in the selectioZ:nOfr~~ted sole- /he
Jnan as nominee for th ...he !>alest '
Governor."
e of.f1ce of ~&
The Mayor's stateme t
moted by criticis
n ~as pro- , t
rea1;hed him . from m:h which had dlbecause he named
e Ely camp ··.,, ·
licans ·;h his list of :everal_ Re;,ub-[ld
Democratic nominat· 9 ehg1'ples for in
nor in case Fitz
. ion for gover- ~
confined in a h~~~~~i
is still '-.~Iy
ful in ~he p~imary.
success- ianta:
Mayor Curley sla
tlo:n,
his ~ly critics and P~d back _at Lame
H. Coakley without na a_t Da~1el li8t.
alluding to the "s" . t mmg him, . the
ME
1n1s er oracle."
3tate
ANT TO NAME 50.
lOlce
pe;:~:dsf~;,t thll,t only 49 names ap- ,ate.d
instead of t~; ~ayor's honor list 11.wal
whisperings that t:e g'7v': rise to' .
was probably the Ma n:,1ss1~g ,name
Curley made it cl Y rt himself. . ,tters
he supposed he had ear oday that ,t he
that it was· merely ann!~e~ _50 and ~ .the
Ing
Everybody wanted or in add- -eleewho the 50th citizen
to know
Mayor said beea _; was, but the blch
vertance the 50th us"' of an ina.d- the
listed.
'
,
man hadn't been :Sary
.John .J. Cummings El ,' .
. •hall
the Democratic rac ! f Y s rival 1n i, of~orial nomination '.' a! or guberna- ~umIn Cambrld e
'
a noon rally
the 50th ma~ w~~d~ fharged that ~inate
accused of "run ·
h·ey, who
raillies
sick man.''
ning Y proxy f r a ioints
The Mayor's st t
s first
"There is no a ement ~allows: ;:,t the
nllicance in th
particular slg- 1whirlare only 49 · e fact that . there
Cum-

J:

8 BOSWORTH STREET

n

!~: NEW

l: · .

Mayor Curley in a st t
/~
i11sued tQ(Jay flat! d . a ement ...
that h
y enlec'I rum.ors' · ,,
e would be a candidate f
I
the Democratic no ·
.
or
Governor in th
nunation for
F. Fitigemld : event _that Jol1111018
'l'uesday, ·
nonunated on

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

· -,,1
_, ,, ,- I
' '
:.t< \ ·~ t
i:J_.,'.

'r:o

am JO d1qsuo1dm'Bl{O emos.znoJ paxt '
eq+ ..10.J 011nzzac1 ao,e pu'B' eora: ·rx
~!~. . S.IJ\I pe+-eeJap +aUIOO'B'.J.BN JO l{oo:t

.me:J

lSUFFOLK NAMES I
I NEW TEACHERS

\

1

·I

Several Changes Mal'le
Faculty at Law
School
Several changes In the faculty at
Suffolk law school' to become effective
at the opening of the 1930-31 school
~1,
term Sept,. 22 were announced tot(ay •
:, by Dean Gleason L. Archer.
.
\
~
Atty. ~otil&S I s· QGg~n ~f Malden,
' 1\ for. th.ree years . instructor in s:al_.es. h_as \
, i ~eiu~~~~lnt;~of.ro1re:;;
; whc> .resigned because•of Ill he1tlth ,. ·
.

t. b~;r:; :tk~""t L th'::;::
. \..•J}t~;,m;;·~~~'r'and ,-:at.
!~~I~
I ._"F1'fendsc of EIJ".
,.. ,graduat!.~n,. 1.n 1925
J ;vicespr~sdent _of _t)J.e suti;<?ll:< .
c1a~10::P.·, . , ~e:,::,.

:e:!'e
·

.;!:; ' ·

,/

l

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

· HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

1

ICURIT~NAMES 49 vr
ames' of, tb~1*49' Maror
Says Eligile fot GpVern6J:\

FIT FOR GOVERNOR
Neither Ely Nor Cumµiings



"'
on List, Whiclt Includes
publicans-Peters ,Out.

Bedford.,

BOSTON, Sept 12.- James M
11
: ley, Boston's Democratic mayor, be-

lieves there are at least 49 Massa: chusetts men, any one of w-hom
would make a better governor than

~f~:~. ~~s;sld!efi~v°{h~ ~~~0c~~gi~
0

'

.~~

' Jl'.8l"L

~~!~.
. ~
'

'

_

With the close of the Amer!'

in· Chicago, Henry Upson Sims,

\)Ol

ulatmg his succesoor, Josiah Ma
·· mlngton, . Del., and democrat.le c

o,
h-

war~..

.

l
j 1ediscovery of America by Columbus
1

i

i Qj -la1t Bridgewater

•t,

L!:!~e!i1t~ :a~u~;ba~t~~~!· n:e~Td~~t -.,
j

f named three out-and-out Republicans
Ul~CVVc:1

l . .
; ~: SCHOOL SAFETY l l
I
CROSS WALKS! l
-~. ARF. FF.ATURP

"~•~"

--:--

-----.,

:if

· ··. .

,

folk coonty.

. t}t)cn1a

s.

.~

'j

\

Besides General E. dwards, those
named by Curley were:
Sherman L Whipple, Gen. Charies
· H Cole, Gen Edward L Logan, Mar,; cus A Coolidge, Mayor Charles S
1
, Ash1ey of New Bedford, Mayor Richard M Russell of Cambridge, E. A
Filene 1 James J
Phelan, Supreme
Court Justice James B. Carroll of
Springfield, Supreme Court Justice
John Crawford Crosby of Pittsfield,
Superior Court, Justice E~ward F
Hanify of Fall River
Supreme Court Justice Philip J,
O'Connell of Worcester, Mayor Louis
J Keefe' of Westfield, John J Martin of Boston, John E Swift of Milford, Patrick .A. O'Connell of Boston, ~ayor Michael A Landers
Lawrence, Congressman Wi~liam J.
Granfield of Springfield, Rev, Roland D Sawyer of Ware, Edward A
McLaughlin, Jr, of Boston,; Willfam
P. Connery, Jr., of Lynn, ;John F
Melley of Newton, Edward /P Barry
of Boston, Mayor Philip J .a-aIJagher
of Woburn, Sheriff John A, Keliher
of Suffolk County, Mayor Ellward H
Larkin Of }4.edford, Mayor Thomas J.
Magrath of Quincy, Arthur Lyman of

---,~ .. ',«?" ___ " - - -

'

i

,

8 BOSWORTH SfREET
BOSTON
MASS

I,
i

1

!
!
:
'

:
r

:~!~:fRe~::;!e~:ar~aml~~ of the
United States Circuit Col)rt Judge
George W. Anderson, Charl~ S Murphy of Worcester, Thomas \F. Foley
Of Worcester, Dean_ Gleason \L. Arc~::-: '
er of the Su. ffol k. La:~hool.~,IEd.wa.rd1
.

Avery of ~ e e , T ~
J.oyce
,of Boston,, ~Ch8.el F. Ph an:·.of·
Lyri~,
,P.D.)a'S ;J: ~oynto1:1 o
· ·

or

of

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

1

orl:

,

s.

1

r.i~

;:fes~rve board.
1

. ·-,

:

_,: ,·:·

;,r:



KELIHER, sherll'l i;f Suf- to~OSEPH J. COBBETT, Ju!lge .of th•
·,
Jand cOJJrt, of Bost~~-·-__:._ _ _..,

r-----

SlOn.

C

',i;,

Li\RID~{ :IDYOI',.;•

:~:t:~.Pa?tt.fJm:1;.if%~;:;r of Ld;;~ilPH JOYCE"DONAH'BE of !!-OS·

Wit~ A.

r

_

and eight other men generally lis
in the G. O P column. Among 'the ·
known Republicans was Maj Gen.
Clarence R Edwards, wartime comj mander of the 26th (Yankeei divi"

_ .

·H;

Boston, '" ·
~ ,
- ·
: Fitchburg~. ,
,
· ; v ,.WILLIAM: P. CONNERY,' JR.; mem- . 'JOHN P. KA:NE, ex-may% of Law:
1
rence.
- ..
. .,
~er of. C_oJig"ress, Lynn.
JOHN: F. MALLEY of. Newton.
Tlj:OMAS J. CORBETTi ex-~ayor ol

~a le, Michael Gl'ispo, Frank Baccari
!
le Ila, John Salsillo, Joseph Guidotti'
j ~ Columbus Citizens' club, Cicelo Vitil

i



EDWARD"

.c •._

gubernatorial nomination.
The third candidate for the nomi: n3..tion, former Mayor John J. fitz-,
' .e-er~ld of Boston, recently withdrew
from the contest on the ground of
poor health
Nevertheless, Mayor
Curley is rampaignin~ for Fitzgerald
and should the latter win at the polls

· , 'l'puar,t"'e

r.

>l

RICHARD M RU.SSJ;:LL, Mayot ~' , ' G:E.QltGE W. ANDE~SON, judge,,i/1
Cambndge.
. · ' ,: ' '·the '(!tiited States Circwt Court.
GE·N. CLARENCE R. EDWi\RDS •. - ·.. CH,\RLES s>MURPHY of wore~
EDWARD A:' FILENE.
. GEN('THOMAS F. FOLEY of Wor~~
JAMES J. PHELAN.
.
ter.
f( c
JAMES B. CARROLL,. JU.ti~ o.f Illa , ,GLEASON L. ARCHER, dean of\,~\
su]lreme judicial 'court, ·•.f.. Springfield.' . SU:trolk UJ! School, B-Oston.
.
JOHN C. CROSBY, justice of thl! su" · JlDWAiifu.,;ty£itrsof Braintree.:
preme .jiuiiclal-0our~, of:'Pittsli~Id.'
, 'T.. :FIMNK ·,rpY<;,E, assls~ant ,;foe.
EDWIN. 'F. HANIFY,· judge of the Sil~ presidetit, B-Oston: & ,Ml\il}e,railroad.;
);lerioi- Cotirt, of Fall River~
.. · · : .MJCH~L· F. PIIELA.I,I,;,~ex-coilg*.88•
. PHILIP J. O'CONNELL,:3udge of the man;. of Lynn. .
.. :
superior court, of Worcester:
THOMAS J. BOYll!TON,0 of Arlington
1
'·'"'- .LOUIS ·-L, KEEFE, .mayor of West•
C~'.ARLES H. Ti\Y~;of The Boo•
. field.
. ton Globe.
: . . ...
:
JOHN J. MARTIN, president .of ·the. ·. THOMAS c; THACHER, ex-1>1>1\gtess:
Exr.ha:nge Trust. Co_mpany.,,Of_.BQ:$trin: ·1m3.n, ,of Yar~Utb. :·, .'·
.
JOHN E. SWIFT of Milford.
THOMAS H~. BRADEN, mayor ol
PATRICK ·A.-,O'CONNEL:L of'Boston •. Lowell.
: .:
JIUCHAEL A. LANDE·&$, may1>r·.' of,, 'WILLIAM T .. D~LQ,l)i"'. mayor of Bo].
Lawrence.
,
-: yoke.
,,\ · ,,,,_,
·WILLIAM J. GRANFIELD, member
J; LEO S:ULLIAN, mayor of Peabody
of Congress.
·
.
DWIGH'.I R. WINT.ER, ma:yor ~
ROLAND D. SAWYER of Ware.
., Springfield.
.
EDWARD A. :McLAUGHLIN, .Jr., of
l\'.t. ·FRED. O'CONNELL, ex-mayor 0

[BY UN!TRO l'RESS]

I



GEN. CHARLE~ H. COLE;
'.1 Medford.AS J. McGRATH, ma~or)&
..
GEN. EDWARD L.''.LOGAN.
;
.
MARCUS A..poo,r:tDGE:
.. .
• R L~i\N of Waltham ••. ,
CHARLES SCASllI,EY, M!!tOr of N j \ CHARLiil\
Hi\MLIN of the

Several Regarded as Re-

1

,

.SH~Rill:~N L. WHI~J,'LE-;;

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

/'HERALD

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

I:

·---~-~-~-"'!

,'

'

I

~.·

I



!

~~N

DAILY ENTERPRIS~

r,

1

/CURLEY NAMES 49 /
FIT FOR GOVERNORI
Neither Ely Nor CumJllings
on List, Whiclt Incluj,es
Several Regarded as Re-

With the close of the Ameri'
in 'Chicago, Henry Upson Sims,

ulatlpg his successor, Josiah Ma
·· mlngton, Del , and democratic c

war~.

-last Bridgewater
~~: SCHOOL SAFETY l
~0~ CROSS .WALKS,
'is

,

'

'i

'.ay

En-

A FF,ATIJR J:·
RF.

,CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

: l' /

1

~oston )t¢ws-<I::lip ~unau
8 BOSWORTH SrREET

1

BOSTON

MASS

,

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

.~osto~ St~~s.-<L:lt; ~~~44
8 BOSWORTH STREET.
BOSTON

MASS -

i HBRALD NEWS.~:ALL RIVBR, KAS&

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

i:

-----:i...-

- - . ~ ~

FROM HERE
1 MASS. BAR
YO
:Soston. :,?ews-.Z:lq, :Suree1u
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

,CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

'

:The na.tnes of 234 applicants fo~'
admJ!l$ion to the Massa>lhusetts bar
hll>"e been recoll11llettded by the
bfilird of l,a.r fx:uniners and in:ctixded In the group are eight
Bt!lckton young men. The group
wall' selected from nearly 800 appli-cii,nt.$ who took the bar exam.lnatlon: In July, !ind the tota.I Is exaetiy 100 fewer than were recotn:nlended a year a.go.

-'rhe .locaJ young men who passed
the exalillnation are: Dexter W. Wllbar, 427 Pearl street; Willi:un A
Farley, Jr., 15 Bassett road; Kenfaith Il<>rn, 26 West Elm terrace;
Abraham. Stone. 37 Wheeler a venue;
il'r'ederick W Ganley, 63 Harvard I
street; Vincent J. Celia, 232 Pleasant :
street; Edward A. Cormier, 23,2 Court I
sti:eet, aµd Edward P. J. Splllane, Jr., I
4ll Huntington street.
!
· 1'redefick W. Ganley is the son of '
Mr. ·and Mrs. Andrew E. Ganley. He
111::at pi'~eht working on public acCdilntli:,.g a.hd will continue in that
lilt,l for . the present. Mr. Ganley
~" gtM.uli.tied frciin Brockton High ,
t'c:l'.t<ibl With the class of 192'4 and the '
Bentley School of Accounting and
F\lnance in 1926. He _then entered .
Nllrthea!itetn Law school and giact·utlted frQ?n there in June with lin
ti:!. D. degree lie took bi\r e:xal!l!na- ,
tiortt the· same month.
)
'Mt:., Celia. iS the son of Mr. and
t\'8. dleorge M ceua; 23!1 Plea;~ant .
;rl!el), a graduate of Brockton High;
4~ool ~nd. Suff-q]k TtHPf srbMla9;t?'Ie
hlls· beeh associated with Atty
ax
~e~r at 11 Beacon street, Booton,
ahd plllhs to contintie with him

I

ik:d~it,;;,ct ~1f:a:;;~b!

~:be~.e
~! the Y. M. C. A. and was president
of the Employed Boys' Brotherhood
far Massachusetts and Rhode Island
in 1928, He is a memller of the
Suffo1k Alumni ABsooiat!on.
OUiel'a Rtieommended.
-.~Mr. Farley. ls the i1Dn of William
A.· Farley of . 15 Bassett road. ·He
1s. a· gtadmtte of Brockton High
school, Holy ·cross and Boston University. At the present tllne he -is
unemployed but ls making plans to
eni!_a.ge in the law business.
.
Mr; Dorn ls the son of Mr. and
:Mrs. Henry Dorn of 26 West Elm
terra;ce. He ls a graduate of Brocktoh High and .Harvard University
While at Brockton High he was a
;,J.ember 'of the track team and while
n coilege he was on the track and
asketbail teams.
Mr. · stone ls the son of Mr and
drs. Morris L. $tone of 3"'- Wheeler
D.:veriue. · He is a graduate of BrocktQ!i High, ll:a.rvard University and the
:.'Karvard La.w school
He plans to
'il~d. allotit two years in the office
:,tif a -Boston law fil'.ln. He ls a brother
'of ·Atty;;Hsr;y It. Stone of the law
$!.rm oCFiet.cher & Stone.
;• :M'.r. Wilbar IS the son of Dist., . ty... •. a,·n·d Mrs Witifl.eld M. Wll?ar.
. ,ls.; a graduate of Brockton fl:1g_h,
' · tiii/):uth College and the Harvard
.!fliiw school. For the past year and
a. haJf he has .Jfeen associated with
hilt· father ahd ·plans to continue in

'i:"

his office.

Mt\ .Cormier ·is the son of Assessor
, lt,t\d :Mrs. 1lk!ward J. Cormier of 232
Qorll't street. It~ is a graduate of
, B~ockton High school and Boston
University.
He ls a membe~ of
~ville Council, K of c , and the
plub NatlohaL He plans to open
a.ii off!te in this eity.
·:_.·Eliward P. J. Spillane, jr', is the
-0t Mt. and -.;:.;rs Edward J
f 48 !im1'r,i1gton street. He
from SUffolk Law school

I

son

Mr. Spill_ane is a graduate 9f
Brockton High schot>l, class of 1926,
!Ind ha.s been employed at the South
Station post-office, Boston, during
his period of study in that city. He
}ll continuing his work at the p9,St6ff!ce until an opening in a Boston ot local law firm is located.

8 BOSWORTH STREET

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

BOSTON

MASS.

JOURNAL, PROVIDENCE, R. I.

CURLEY NAMES 5ft
MEN HE "PREFERS"
fi0VERN11RSJ1P •

'9Jl

Boston Mayor Says Ely and
:c. ,r, .
.:...,iiJ.'
Cummings Are Not of Right · ,
..a,

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

, Calibre. to Hold Office'.
Legal Notices
JUDGE

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

'

P~6;fgage

tained in aBc~f!t!,n to the Washinfto2
Maria A

were

"t!~s

!2,
mildlv

surprised to discover that ~ · s
list did not include the name ' of
fornier Mayor Andrew J, Peters "'>

Boston. However, Peters issued· a

statement declaring that 'under no
circumstances would he be a candif date for public office this year.
1/l

I/!
••

fj

s

1/
Excellency, a~ )'.OU vit!w the throng, '
And acknc-wle.d.ge t1l~ cra.wd's 3:p- )
plaui;:e,
it malte

Does

E

therefore s~ong,
Does it steel youf arm to ce>ftlbat
the wrong

you

humble

Boston, Sept 11-(AP)-Ma

· ~ Curley tonight thre_w the po
.
s~ge into an uproar by naming 50 men
including several ~publicans wl:1,om f,~
wo'uld rathef' see Governor than either
of the pres_ent Democratic aspir~nts· ~or.
tbe 6trice, Josep~ B Ely o! ~est.~elO:
Joh]). J. Cummings of ];3o~ton.
With only five days remaining u .·

~:~:;~~~rJ~;'

,
,. 'I>..

(:

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

1

and

When_ it_~sha~o-ws __ t~:.!..:... or

1,

t;,-, .,
r,'

t1::~:r-!~t~r!~Ih
leaders or the State s1rice John F. Fitzgerald. former Mayor of Boston, withi'
drew from the campaign because or ,igness Only yesterday a split develope9, ·
J>etween the Curley forces and tho~e- o:r.1
Martin Lomasney, Boston D!=!mocr~tlc !
~ader and considered one o! the. dZars /
Ot Boston politics Lomasney ca~ out
1h favor or Ely and opposed a plan ad-'
via.need by .Curley that the Democrats in':'•
sis't on Fitzgerald's nomination a.n.d then;.!
1! he declines to run :(or election, tI?-e /
~emocrattc State committee pick a can-t,"
.. :d1date
'ln a statement issued with his list,the
I M~ypr said neither EIY nor Cuml:!lings
i were o! the right calibre to hold the o!i ,flee of Governor and they had carried, ~>n
such a vigorous campaign agai~st eac:q
oJher their supporters. could. . n_ey~r: ?~
?tconciled to supporting the victci~tous
.c!lndidate in the prim~y.
.
The list included seV~t:"al Rep'-)J;:,lica~;
Those named in the Mayor's 11st were
: Si,1.Erman L Whipple, B0&ton lawyer.;_
1
Gen. Charles H Cole, Gen, Edward L.
Logan, Marcus A Coolidge .. who ~eeks
tl:le .United States senatorial nomination;
M;ayi:>r Ashley or New :ijed!ord. Mayor
R-µ,s~ell o! Cambridge, Gen. Clarence.~ ..
:mp.Wards, a Republio,.:m; 'Edward A iBoston merchant; Jam~ J
Boston banker; Judge James B.
of Springfield; Judge John C 9r
Pittsflel<:I; Ju~e Ectward'F Hanify
River; Judge Philip J O'Connell or W?rcester; Mavor K~efe cf. Westfl~~d·:.:· Jo~
J. Martin, Boston ban~er: ,~ohn E. Swi!~
of MH~or~; Patri.c.~-·A.. q;co~nelf1 ~S'ton: Mayor Landers of Law~e:q.ce; Congressnian ~i~liaµi J': Gran~eld of, Spr11;.~~' :
field; Rev Roland D. Sa?fyer c;,! \Vti:~~;
Edward A McLaughlin, Jr., Park Com~
missioner of, ~Stl?-I;l.: CopgreSsman. c~...
Ilery of Lynn;:.,Iohil F: Malley C?f New~?!l•
E4~aid H. Barry o:f. B~ton. ,.forme~ Lie:tttenant Gc'veno!; Mayor O,a.llagher bf wo . .

r~ :,
I;_•

'o

ip

Stage Into Uproar
·/

11'
I :

- The Governor.

1l

s

I

ON

Statement Throws

i

candidate.
·
t
In a statement Issued with his Us .
the mayor said neith.er Ely nor Cum- 1
l
mlngs is of the right calibre to hold :
the office of governor and that tbey I
had carried on such a vigorou.s cam- f '
paign against each other the1~ supporters could never be reconciled to 1
supporting the victorious candidate ,
in the primary.
.
The list included several republ!- '
can~. Those named in the mayor s i
list were Sherman L. Whipple, Bos- '

CRIER!i

0
:E
0

1

Republicans

Augus

ral

'----------~

Democratic leaders

dated

Savings Institut1dnd with M1ddlese
t
of Deeds
1926 and recor e
North District 4~ega~d~or breach o
Book 7 40, Page he;ein con tatned. an
the conditions t of foreclosing
for the purpfde Washington Sav tlg
mortgage, sa
11 at public au~ o
Institution
s:ereinafter descrbi
on the prem. the fou:rth day o
on Saturday, 1930, at 2 ~clock i~
, to_berJ-!-J;>:: ...... ..v comnn.1;-iee P1c

------~=------:;?:-=~.._ RIDAY,~ SEPTEMBER

a

HANIFY

8everal

)[ORTGAGEE'~ S!~~ale con
BY virtue of a
given b

I

1~-

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

j<·


I

1ene:

'c

J,tim

'·'·.:.

, ·

'

··',".

She~ifi,iT<>hn Ji., ,,Kelliher Of,, Suffolk,
courily; ' .. :Mayor . Lal'&in pf Medf9rd;

' . iia/ath' of

9ulncy; Ar,

Y.ioston '.news-(.t:llp ::Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

BOSTON

MASS.

JOURNAL, PROV!
! "

Kelliher of Suffolk county; Mayor
Larkin of Medford; Mayor McGrath
of Quincy; Arthur Lyman of Waltham; Charles S. HB.llllin, Boston
banker· Judge G<>orge W. Anderson
of the 'United States circuit court,
Charles s. Murphy of Worcester, c':'ndldate for the democrauc nom1nat1on
for lieutenant governor;
Gene·ral
Thomas F. Foley oi ,vorcester; Dean

M'ayor Cur1 of BOSton s Iects
. ey
e
y__~·
50 Men Qua1•fIed fo,r Governor
~
I•
dE M
c b L II
: Includes Mayor Braden an
x- ayor or ett of owe 6~~i~c~~/~~ ~~~;~~u:. ~iJm!~

n

~

n

I

"·1·

.

V

6
2
6

Gleason L. Archer of· ~ w
;~::h~~;,a~fceA;;~;!d~nt Boston
Maine railroad; Michael F. Phelan of'
Lynn, former congressman; Thomas
J. Boynton, Arlington; Charles H.
0

i,

0

::~,

6

gressman; MayOr Thomas H. Braden

:

In List-Splits With Lomasriey--Political Pot Winter of i.?Pringfield; M. Fred O'Con:a~i;v~~iu~:: ifD~~:io:1\~
Bo_iling as Result of Surprise An.nouncement
J~~;,_ t~Wa~e. :~;;, :r ;~y! t~rt:!:
rence; Thomas J. Corbett, forll\er
0

~~~~;

6

0

:

'I

8 BOSWORTH STREET

Bos·roN

MASS

~~

i1a:/e~t\;~~'ki~i~ ~: ~.,°!~;

pr~~/i\:/~~j~f\~f,:11~~~1n'1~r!
Office.
.
midst of a battle with other demo- of Fall River; Judge Philip J. O'Con·;,
cratlc leaders of the state since John nell of Worcester; Mayor Keefe of
:., . ;
, F. Fitzgerald, fo;mer mayor of Bos- Westfield; John · J. Martin, Boston ON
,LIST:
ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.
ton, withdrew from the campaign be- banker; John E. Swift of Milford,
cause of illness. Only yesterday a Patrick A. O'Connell, Boston; Mayor •
split developed between the Curley Landers of Lawrence; Congressman Menti
forces and those of Martin Lomasney, William J. Granfield of Springfield; Political
Boston democratic leader and consid- Rev. Roland D Sawyer of Ware; Ed, '
ered one of the czars of Boston poli- ward A, McLaughlin, .Jr., park com- •oar
tics. Lomansney eame out in favor of missioner of Boston; Congressnian -Ma
Ely and opposed a plan advanced by Connery of Lynn; John F. Malley of the po
-=~-----~--Z77":=,-.._
..
Curley that the democrats Insist on Newton; Edward P. Barry of Boston ,ming 50 men.
Fitzgerald's nomination and then, if ormer lieutenant g~vernor; Mayo; ans w~om ~e
SEPTEMBER !2,
he declines to run, for election, the allagher of Woburn; Sheriff John A. r than e!
democratic ,stat~ committee pick --a -.---;--- -1- ---y,.--~-....- y_,..,.,_..,uy -~·~------ aspirants
Democratic leaders were m1ldlv
candidate.
.
,
i, John J. Cummings of Boston·.
the o:trtce, Josep~ B Ely of West~eld:
is
s_urpr . ed to discover that C.ur.le;i,'s
In a statement Issued with his list i
With only five days remaining untJI
. list did no~ include the name of
the mayor said neit~er Ely nor Cum- f
primary day CUrley has been 1 t,l'{
1 former Mayor Andrew J. Peters ~
mings is of the right calibre to hold\
midst of· a battle with_ other Demo~rat'1~~
Boston. However, Peters issued al
the office of governor and that they [
leaders o! the State s1rice John F. Fitzs~tement declaring that under noj
had carried on such a vigorous cam- . .
gerald. former Mayor o! Boston, with·c1rcumstances would he be a candi-,IJ
paign against each other t~ir sup. ., "'
drew from the camp;rtgn because Of illdate for public office this year.
pOrters could never be reconciled to 1
,
ness Only yesterday a split developed
ti
th
'ct I
did' t
l
_between the Curley forces and tho~e of I
suppor ng
e v1 or ous can
a e
,Martin Lomasney, Boston Democ'ratlc'
,rj
rI
in the primary
>,
~acler and considered one of the Czars J
11
'
Th, e list included s~veral r~publi- , ·
of Boston polit!cs Lomasney ca~ out:
1
cans. Those named 1n the mayor's j
1'.n favor of Ely and opposed a plan ad·~
1
list were Sherman L. Whipple, Bos- i
'O'~:nced by Curley that the Democrats in-,
,
I~
si,st on Fitzgerald's nomination ind then' ,
'i
H he declines to run: J;or election, th;/
J/1:
: I?emocratic State committee pick a can~,,
l•d\,date
'-;P'

-----

~r:oAV,

l

, 'I,

/',

·
J'f ··
Tioiu.,N CRIER),;I
" .
e

o

T
he Governor.

fj

~

E
,?

:s



I

o

1

BOSTON,
Sept. 12 (JP)-Meyor ton lawyer; General Charles H Cole, m~tor of, Lowell; Joseph J. Dona1iue
1
James M Curley last night threw tfia General Edward L. 1,ogan, Marcus A. of;.".Boston and Judge Joseph J. Corpolitlcal stage into an uproar by Coolidge, ~ho .seeks the U. S. sena- bett of Boston.
. ,;!·
torial nom1nat1on; l\'i::iyor Ashley of " · - - - ; naming 50 men he would rather see New Bedford; Mayor Ril~t:1ii ef Ca~-. ,
,
governor than either or the present bridge, General Clarence R. Edwards, {S EIY' . a. nd.·. •
democratic aspirants for the office, a republican; Edward A. Filene, Bos-t
, - .•: : J,
Joseph B Ely of Westfield and John ton merchant; James J. Phelan, Bos-: of Rio.ht ·.: , ,\
J. Cummings of Boston.
·
ton banker; Judge James B. Carroll ·
·· "
.

·:1

s

0

1

1

1

Exeellcncy, as you vtew the throng
And, acknowledge tile crow"'s 3.p~ ',/
~

plause,
it ma~e you humble a~d':
therefore Strong.
Does It steel your arm to co!hbat
the wrong
\ 1
~~n__ j_~--~!l_ad~?"WS .- th& ,W_~.~~~ o_r
. ~ ____

~o.ston )t&w.s-a::lq, :Sun4U
8

1

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

Does

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.



>,In a statement issue~ with his l_ist,the· j¥:?

·
i,i:;L:..;
flee of G<>vernor and they had carrled on ;/'/\I,

j M:~yor said neither Ely nor Cummings

were of the right calibre to hold the of~ ,!}:;"1;.'·'(.

guch a vigorou.g campaign a.gai~st e8.C.Q. '1}:/§t::~J~:,'.
~fher thetr supporters could ne.yer-:-'pe ';,.··,~-~
rtco~cil.ed tn supporting the Vtctortous'

c8nd1date in the prima_;y
·
i1 The list includ-ed several Republicans:_
Those named in the Mayor's llSt wei-e

Sherman L

Whipple, BO&ton lawyer;

Gen Charles H Cole, Gen Edward L
L?gan, Marcus A Coolidge, who· seek:S
ti;i.e Unlted States senatorial nomination·
~ayOr Ashley or New :ijedford, Mayo;
~'l.~~11 of Cambridge, G~n. Clarence ·R.
Ep.w~rds, a Republioo.ln; Edward A. , 1..:
lene, Boston merchant; James J P
Boston banker; Judge James B. Ca
ot Springfield; Judge John C Cros~
Pitts:fiel~; Judge EdwardF.}:Ianf!y of Fa-U
River; Judge Philip J O'Connell or Wor·
cester; Mayor Keefe cf. We.st:t'l~~ct.-_ Jo~.,
J. Martin, Boston banksr: John E. Swi!t .t,
o! MH!or~; Patric~ · A. ofbo~nen 1 ~ston; ~aycfr Landers. of L8.wi:ence; Con.. ,
gresslilan Wpliaµi J'. Gran_~~ld 0! Spl'.iilj"'. '
field; Rev. Roland D. Sa'!yer <;rt Ware;·
Edward A McLaughlin, Jr., Park ·com.:,.
_missioner of B:o&t<~Hi:, Gon~Ssman. Con~
n~ry ~! ~ynn; . ?Ohll F; Ma.Hey of ~ewt~ii.:
EC:i:Y'ard H . .Barry ot Boston .. fo:nner Lie:U·
t~n,ant Go.venal'; Mayor Gallagher.Or W-o"..

!;>um '': ·..
• ·
:
•,
Shei:l!)':·;J'ohn ;\.. -Kelljher of"Suffoik
eoun,,y;
.. ,,• Larfin ·.of Medf!;(~d;
~)".""
• of. ~Uiiiey; __ Ar
·

·

\

rnTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

poor- health.
Nevertheless Mayor named by Curley were: Sherman L county, Mayor Edward H Lark(h of ·: Democrat!c Iea<k!rs
Curley is campaigning for F!tzger- Whipple,. Gen. qharles H. Cole, Geri. Medford, Mayor Thomas J Magrath surprised to discover
ald and should the latter win at Edward L. Logan, Marcus A. Cool- of Quincy, Arthur Lyman of Wal- 11st· did n~. mclmle··
-;
the polls next Tuesday it would ~ idge, Mayor Charles S .. Ashley of tham, Charles s. Hallilin of the former. Mayor·. Andrew
possible tor· the democratic State New Bedford, Mayor Richard M. Federal reserve board.
.:Boston. However, Pet
committee to name a substitute for Russell of Cambridge, E'. A. Fllene,
Judge George W Anderson of the sJ;atenient ·declaring th.
Fitzgerald.
James J. Pbelan, Supreme Court U. S. Circuit court, . Charles S ·circumstances .would· h<
In a statement Thursday night Justice James B. Carroll of Spring- Murphy of Worcester, Thomas F. ,µate for publi~ office·,
Mayoi:. Curley said that in case field, Supreme Court Justice John Foley of Worcester, Dean Gleason. ·
Fitzgerald was nominated the Sta.te Crawford Crosby of Pittsfield, Supe- L. Archer of the Suffolk Law School
1
committee would encounter no diffl- rfor Court Justice Edwin F. Hanify Edward Avery of B t a ~ r a n k
culty in finding a candidate stronger of Fall River.
Joyce of the Boston & Maine Rallthan either Ely or Cummings.
Supreme Court Justice Philip J road, former Cong. Michael F. Phe·
Boston, Sept. 12.-(UP)-James
Supporting his contention that O'Connell of Worcester, Mayor Louis Ian of Lynn.
M. Curley, Boston's democrat- there was no dearth of gubernatorial J ... Keefe of Westfield, · President
Thomas J. Boynton of Arlington,
le mayor, beU,,.,es there are , material, the mayor published a. John J. Martin of the Exchange Publisher Char\es H. Taylor of the
at
lea.st
50
Massa.chlisetts list of 50 names of possible candl- Trust Co., of Boston, John E. Swift Boston GlObe, former Cong. Thomas
men
any
one
of
whom;.-, dates. Democratic leaders were sur- of Milford, Patrick A. O'Connell of C. Thacher of Yarmouth; Mayor
wouid make a. l!<otter governorthani .prised, on perusing the llst, to dis- Boston, Ma:11or Michael A. Landers ',I'homas H,. :Elraden of Lowell, Mayo,t
Joseph B. Ely or John J. , Cum- . ·cover that Mayor Curley ~ad named o! Lawrence, Cong. William J. Gran,. William +·: Dillon of Holyoke, Mayor
mings, candidates for the demo- tpee out-and-out republlcans and field of Springfield, Rev. Roland D. J. Leo Sullivan o! Peabody, Mayor
cratic gnbernatorial nonilnation.
eight other men generally listed 111 Sawyer of War"
Dwight R. Win~r of Springfield,
the G. O P .. column. Among the
Edward A. McLaughlin, Jr, of former Mayor John P. Kane of
)mown republicans was Maj.-Gen Boston, W!lliam P. Connery, Jr, Lawrence, former Mayor Thomas J
The third candidate for the nom- Clarence R. Edwards, wartime com- 'of Lynn, John F Malley of Newton,! Corbett of .Lowell, Joseph Joyce
lnatlon, former Mayor John F. Fitz- mander of the 26th (Yankee) di- Edward P. Barry· of Boston, Mayor Donahue of Boston, Joseph J. Corgerald of Boston, recently Withdrew vision.
'
Philip J Gallagher of Woburn, bett of Boston and former Mayor
fr_o_m_th_e_c_o_n_te_s_t_o_n_t_h_e_g_ro_u_n_d_o=f"""=B-es_l_des _
_ ae_n_e_ra-'-}~Ed-'w_ar_ds~·~'·. those I She!,if! John A. Kelliher of Suffolk M. Fred O'Connell of Fitchburg.
..'-,

CURLEY 'NAMES-50 'FIT TO RUN
FOR GOVERNOR'
~

~~-;1:t;;;~n-;;m11.a-nt; James J

\

'

Bos'ton be..nker; Judge Jam.es B
o! Springileld; Judge John C f
Pittsfield· J-udge :roctward'"F.Hanl
River; _JU'dge Philip J Q'Conne
cesrer· M.avo!' Keef~ of. W.
J. MUt1n, Boston 'ti~?~er; /,
o! Mllford; patrtck. A.

oq

ton; Ma:y6r Lande~. of L~ ~

gressnian wpliapl ~. Gran;~
fietd· Rev Roland D. Sa.~11
Edw~rd A. McLa ughlln, Jr ,1

mtsstoner of. ~st(?:J:l: ,. con

MtY of Lynn;,John.F, Malle
Eilwa.rd H. :BalTY o! Boston ..

tenant o-oy~nof; Mayor ~a;1

bu:.;rl~ .

J,.

eou,,t,:v;'

,ta~~y;
,.o ' .., '•.

K~llihe

~oston )r~ws-itli.p ~ur~au
8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

-.-.-vu..1.~

-..,.----,,~------"'~"B 01Spat4

'

Ton

and Its ·Reaidt

~hea:

He wa,s born in the North End, has y
spent_practically all of his life in East
Boston. 'During the last presidential
3ampaign, he served on the East Boston Italian Al ·Smith •Club. In the
Mayoralty fight, Mr. Statuti served'
I
on the James M. Curley Club in East
, \ Boston;. and in September, 1929, was
one ol the first to lead the . fight /' --:-·

II

:J

I

.:: \~sHUA, Sept. 11.)_A pretty fall
:.) ·!_~edding' waa held _Wednesday mornfrom St. Patrick's church when 1
·~ranees Elizab.eth McLaughlin, '
.Pf Thomas MeLal!ghJin of
, · ''w8.S married to
f LPwell .. Rev. Mat?. R;, officiated be~
g'athel"ing of 1:el~tives

against the erection of gas tanks in

MpLaughlin,

:f

ning weddingthey will reside at
a which trip to New York,
estford street\ in Lowel1. :Mrs.
was a ,"'graduate of the 1922
of the High 1:Jchool here and
en einployed at the offl.ce of the
:;j ~rican Mutual Liability company
-r--,~~ ~,;'Lowen, recently.
Mr. Perry at-

.

.. I'

. . $

·'~'

iMr. Edward ~ l d r !to,rmerly :~f :·
W.inche~ter, hut a reside~t of th;is ei~
since his marri~g~, was o~ of ~
successful applicants in th~ rece~j;
Bar · Exaaninat~on.
Mr. Boyle wa!" graduat~ fro;,. Wit
. ,ehester Ij'.ig.h, Class o.f, 1~1,2, attend<i\:l ,
· : ~entl'l;Y s~.hool of Accoun~ing and
fraduated from Suffolk ·jr.aw · Sch~ •

w~ '.

Orient Heights section of East Boston,
arid took a lea.ding part at the five
,
0lass 1936, Qeing; 1$@832!~ · 6~ ~:
· mass meetings called to protest
1
plass; ;Ile is at present··$ Auditor-&(
against the petition for the erection
of these gas tanks, he also appeared
fhe Atl,ntic National Ba~k
13<>sto~;
0 t
City Hall, in this matter, ·before
i ~fr. Boyle, now resides at 11 Valley
the Street Commissioner. 1:n April,
fl,oad, this city. He is a m&mber . iii
1930, he was one of the first to oppose the plan of the •Boston Elevated,
, ' {" .Z' }'he Clj.Illpbell Post America:,; Legioll°;
to· place" one man cars on the Glad", : · , :>\} Charter member of Winch0$t<i)i. :
stone S,treet car line.
·
·: r,odge of Elks, and Past Grand.. Knigltt •
' - '
Mr. ,statuti is the president of the
Orient Heights Lodge Sons of Italy in
.
I' .If Wincheste~ Council Knights· of_cof!
America, was president for 2 years of
,
~mbus.
., '
the Legal Circle of Boston, an organization composed of Italo-American at'',~.s
; " ' _ _1
to:rneys and law students, Board of
Director of the Italo-Americ·an Cit·, izens' Club of East Boston, member li
of the gast Boston <Suffolk Law tF
~o.ston )rcws-a::li.p ~ur~au
Alumni Association, membti:!""'Sf" t!'ie fd
St. Lazarus Holy Name Society, and Yi
8 BOSWORTH STREET
f<
e St. Lazarus
b.

~

I

II

~

,
~

,
~-.;.,
\tenQ.ea the Suffolk.. I em scllo_ol and
' '~~ .;.; ";p.ow ma:q.ager of the Standard ,
;1.,.
of Lo
·~1
't

, .

..

,_ •11

of

McLaugh-l

Miss Mildred
o,f the bride, act~d as maid
Philip

- -

1

-i,

of tlie bride, was best man
ers were --Fran'l.;. Guest of this
~i:-eif:~taos and Frank
'fter a wedding "breakfast at the
of the bride's father the couple

,~
1 APPL1€ANf.-'

;

American , and Italian activities, ' fol" p
the Democratic nomination for th-e t:
- H ouise of Representatives in Ward 1, Il
is gaining added impetus every day. H

Richard Perry of1!
·.•... · ,. - · St. . Patrick's
-Lowell at J
I
,.r_;.:::-·· ~ ·
Church
:

r, and

t0CALa~ :_.~,

t 4.

The candidacy of Charles V. Statuti, t
attorney 'and well-known leader in i:

';~ARM!NG BRIDE!
---;-

.

'-¥:..,

1

[Neds

TIMES, WOBURN, MA.ss.

-cruly,
Camputi

Sta11tJi Is A
Strong Fae

... ,ISS M AUGHLIN. ;
'L

.,.,

BOSTON

FREE PRESS. EAST BOSTON, MASS.

LEADER, MANCHESTER, N. H.

1

_ 8. BOSWORTH

MASS.

MASS

-a!._,,

MASS .

BOSTON

~oston )t&ws-'1::l\:p ~una.u
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

:Soston )tews-'1::ltp ~ut"eau

MASS.

8

CITIZEN, BELMONT, MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

;-

MASS.

Y,,1_,(..,\.:

:CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
l

i



-E

\\.ct

~

S e&AR EXAMINATfON

the

~sful

-~,\

candidateef\

A mong
h bar at the e:xam ,
\'for ~dmission to t J:ne, tb.e results of'

I
-

Jr

-- · Mogavero and famil:Y of A:- eorge
returned from their
dr1ch sti"eit·
v~ Nahant where they

summer'il>

a

'

have been spending the season.
Curry of 41 Ashfield street
J 0hn J ·
th S u f f o ~
has recently enteredher! he 'p'!ans to
school of Boston, w
. . 1 law
take up the study of cr1m11;:~-.
t :M: Elliot h~s returned'

' • -;r·••.

-r~~._:s'hp-r a~~;:P' i.;,_ Maine and will r~-:

ina~1on held -~~1t been announced, was',
wb.1cb. b.ave J
f 72 Palfrey rd. Mr-1
Karl w. :Baker o esident of :Belmont:
Baker hasa:te~~:e; years He gradu, i
·\ for the P
.
d College in 1923 and;
i ated fr~ff
Scb.oo'l in June ofl\.
from u O ~ e passed the Ma&
this year. .,
ination for certified\
sachusetts exam
d was awarded
Public Ai,co~~!a~t,:;s~~husetts society!
~f~ee~'ttne~ Public Accounti:nts
eiving the highest mark given l
c
.
.
For the past two years
t!"':~!aii'i:,;. as:,o~te~~i:dci!~r~s
F. Rittenhouse
St;;,te st, :Boston,
Accountan~, 89 ember of the Massa·
:Mass.. He is _a m of Certified Public
chusetts ~oc1':;X of the Nashua Coun
Accountan
intends to combine the
try C!ub. f 1a·w with the practice of
practice o
'public accounting.

~;s::w

;o; [;~

~!

"Y.ioston )l:¢ws-,rtl.p "Y.iur¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREE'l

MASS

BOSTON

BOSTON

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

7

playing

.A dist11nguished assemblage 0Cc-1ipled
l:'raj Gen Walter E. Lomba.rd.
the Court of H_onor during the t~T..
mdwin Markham.
centenitry ceremonies.
Margotti, Consul General
1
The actual re.viewers of the pa.rade
:Or Daniel L. Marsh.
N:,~n:iea McConnell 1 .a'!ayor ot Sydney,
Yard; Gov Fisher of Pennsylvania,/ coi F. c. McCordick, Mayor of St

Archer, Dr Fri

~1;.

;~~~~;fr o"'idfh~alJ'ha.1:i~~i!r~n,;~~Y

~!~J::~~H;i~~un~e~ ~~!:"a~~nMt~ I

C1k~!ri~dri?:\-.

English Visitors
at Greatilt''
._._,,

Peters.

~~erc::1e:,u~~!.~!Ma.~~~~ G:!~~1:;rH:tl~:w ~r~~~~ict~eutenai,t
and her f-riend, :Miss Nancy Brimmer.
William A Mossman, Urugu~y ConBouquets presented to Gen Logan, su!.
--1 -chief marshal, a.nd Jam.es. M. t.."'ur..Enrique Naranjo, Con.sul of Colom~
j ley :Jr ea.used some commotion amon,g bia.
/ the horses and tested the skill of '.t,he
Rear Admiral L. ?f. Nulton. United
riders
States Navy.
The first sign of. parade activity
Pelayo· Garcia Clay, Consul tot
a.long Tremont s! was the appearance Spain.
of John McNary, a bell ringer, in Purl..
Mon Herbert Parker,
tan edstum.e, who hiked along the
.Commander Rtchard F. Paul, Am.el',
.Street in advance Of the paraders.
ican Legion.
Guests in the court of honor includJohn Peebles, Mayor of Hamilton,
ed:
Ont.
Senator Gaspar G. Bacon.
Pericles J. Polyvias, Consul of
:Prof Joseph H. Beale.
Greece.
lion R. B. Betinett, Prime ::M"inister
George N. Prift!, Consul of Albania
of Canada.
T. W. L. Prowse, Mayor of CharMr and Mrs Frank Chouteau Brown 1 lot.t~town, P E I
w G Clar:k, Mayor of Fredericton,
Mrs William Lowell Put~.am.
N B
J. H Reurs, Consul of the NetherSecretary of Statei Frederic W. lands.
Cook.
·
.
Gov John G Richards of South CaroLieut Commander R. O. Davis,. Ima.
lJ s. N.
. . Congressman Edith Nourse kogers.
J. M de Almeida, ,consul for Brazil. r·- Jacob Sieberg, consul of Latvia.
Hon Pedro M. de A.lmeide..
Kurt vou Tippelskireh, Ge!'i<1ab
City Treas Edmund.L. Dolan.
1.c;onsul.
se.Jam.es H. Dolan,. S. J , Bos~9~ s.t~:lvio Vitale, Roya! Italian vice con-

I
I.

cJfe~.

Hon F. Harold Dubond of WateT> '." Ralph H Webb, Mayor Winnlpag,
ville, Me.
.
Can.
Emnierson of Dlinof~~ 'N~~lter w. White, Mayor of St John

1f1~n~~~b:S.

__

-k Curley Prese.Pf§. H,
Allen a Pilrture,. of,
.
By A ;r .,pru
"I am amazed at it al
Salter, Mayor of .Bos
turned to Mayor ·Jam
Boston, Mass, after
Allen had been rev.iEl:V.Vi
n of hours
the great ,
parade from the Court o
Common yesterday after
"I am speechless,''
a. Lee of Coventry, _Eng

:_--------n,-

Ay CA

.Pl
l M.AIOA, L. I
jj

co~~~n:t!;,inG.CA. ~w~s.
Greeter Thomas J

I

depa.~e~. (;-uiime schumann-Heink.

Johnson.

Sl;f~1Jr ~~!~~~sson, Royal

'.

Kirkland'
Otb ers Held 011;
'"'
d rd
; of Giving In e~

1

Mayor Small of Bath. Me.
Mayor Dow of Montpelier, Vt.
Dean Gleason Archer.
Dr Fred L Bogan.

j

----~--~~ ~,~---~-!
1
Y.,oston ;l1:cw.$•(!:ll.p "Y.iunau
I

~

;;

=~~{e~~i:.dt~~ ;!~tiea
it

tEET
MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

(,((-: 29,930

character of that human
flowed along Tremont s
grandstand with flags and
the strains of music from
bands and in the. full
perfect September a
There have been
.Boston. in the past,
equal to this one
nes~ed., a par~de:-or
this dty. Naturally,
best as'
passed the
As aeeµ. from th~ ,Gov.rt
whole scene-the crowd
parade- was unforge.tta
tainly was a patient, gOO?"
thui.iastic crowd. ,
Lots of lnfereitil'lg thi
in .that Court of H6llor
afternoon. ·
,,
,
In the firs-t p1ace, Mayor
good nature was contagious.

)?.ut'eou

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON



Mayor McGovern. of Ellsworth, Me

Vic~ ~-., ::~~; ii~~t~:saffc!t~~!.1~~: Me.

Lieut Col H. E. Laviguer, MP, M~yor
of Quebec.
·
Gen Edward L. Logan and Mrs Ed.:
ward Logan.

:!t\t.!1;u~!f~~~[ ~l~~~n!';

~

M. de Bettencourt Ferr•lra, con':
Hon Richard B. Wigglesworth.
.Frederick W1.nthrop.
G_ov William Tudor Gardiner of
Roy A Young, governor Federal Re.
Maine.
serve Bank.
,
,
fa~.o~s s~· Gastonguay, Mayor of Mal_i,.. · :c:~i;.~~ai~oz~e~:~~s~taft'.
~rfQ~nnanc_e.
Hon Frederic B. Greenhalge of
Gov John s. Fisher of Pennsylvania ~-=--.:_
Lowell.
· .. J C. Joseph Flamand, French con~ '
J

sul of Portuga:l.

ne~~bisewii!.! 1!;~!!f~~~~er
e Englishmen just abOut ·ex
feelings of all those In!.
e Honor as that wonderfully
d parad~-,rolled by for silt
thi~g was hypnotic Peo
e Co"qrt of Honor just stoq-d

C11'
IJ l

~

the start.

A

1ea~~~~~

free~an

~ :~~~~~e J[~r~n~!sj

MASS

, swprd dance, in

;~ o:~!~lie~::t~t1.1!i~t ~e~£~1

' p at

~n

t

L did the red-robed 'Reu
of Boston, Eng, and W

f
3

'~~i~s;,~n!
court:.

HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

~:~:::if~ .Q·thet:S,Jn;

HAS,,~O FRESHMEN I
uffolk law schOOl has enrolled 900
freshmen, it was announced yesterday ·
by Dean Gleason L. Archer. The list
includes two secretaries to Mayor Our-

I

.

Let's look over a few-,...of ihOse .w
in the coUrt ·b~.id~ tho
~
TP,ere Was. Mtl?-e ~ch~8.ii
(.,
there was : CouncUor Jam.es
l , former M~yQr of Bost9'n, ;Eng.:
j. the parade was, the greates~
the kind p.e had ever
' E, A, Bailey, t
Boston,.Eng, and'his wjf

,~

~:~~i~~~d~n~

to . s~~ .~nything
, ;ve , he'a;;ct, somebody
.-:. ~111 ·an irOn I man··. I
'Of s'.:. eI." ·
~standillg featu·l e~ in
t,ic~d f;i:o.i~
.review.the Aleppo, TEl1nple
en's. Band, U;ie .Fr.e:r:cll
.an fl.oats, the Chin~se
, the Orient8.1 masks,
~ully pi.cturesq.ue fl9at

r

the

~~~n~~t:

i\~1:. Sh&u~~.,_-~t~ton j
;r,

~~y_. :,rhom~.,f~f

f

e
t
r
·

i];:~~a~i:J

v~

And the .court was: ero:w!=f

Glie;ts in the Court.·,

SEP 2 51930

0
:;

:~th~ir .colorful floats
~µiJetes-Li~hua·ntans-.:..tumbling.
-, ~p1~ndid ybung wO~en
,creat~d a great d'eal ·ot
amollg the
Englishmen.
~.>s~iq. he w~s deeply ,im;..
the., way, in· which Poth
!P and ~e · J-;OU~g 'Yoz.n/~~

::~e~e~g~~
and mana:ger of the Linc
daf.;1,. H.e got alm0;s~ eno
after~oon to fill the vOlu
to Write ·about this vtSit
ba.c~ to ·England. Today·
at what h!:' saw is putt
Then there was Com
otti, the Italian consul
Mayor of Frederfoton·,
E·. C •. Eddy Of Kidde!'.
P. Jones of Stourbridge, '.Erig:
was James MCCOnneU, MaYO~:
ney, N'S; Adj Gen Stevens of
His LO:cdship Henry Osw.~Jct~
justice of the Supreme Cotitt"'
Brun'sw1Ck ; Hon · Louis Ga£
Mayor of Hal
'
'
HowaJd of the
ways, Xhomas :J. A.
ofµ.Cial writer; Pres
of the State' Senate,
Carl Dreyfus and,
.
,
Fernando w. Hartford of 'Po:H.s~U.tl;l,

:e~ :M1:;:;rD~~Goo~erMoc;;t;~~::~t~,
--

- - - ards of ::Rockland~f';M:e';:..'Bev::

.£11~ ';~~1!:,~\orc!i~~1~·.
n~ . ~yrian floats . a.i$O
deal of applause in the
~o, the Lithuanian floats

ts.

otgtrls all through
parade also caught

~ their ha~ds fµll tryboy~ from climbing up th•
;· ,the· '-'Jra.ndstands-as it wa.s
'o~'.of them .got over.
~~{·:~---.
-.
·:.. -,- ~-

..

.. -

-.-

Kirkland' an1f

Emmerson of Til!nots; f."';'alter w. White, Mayor of St Joh:
Allan Forbes
N B.
:r. M. de Betten=urt Fette!ra, eon': Hon Richard B. Wigglesworth.
sul of Portuga:l.
·.Frederick W1nthrop.
Gov William Tudor Ga.rdlner . of
Roy A. Young, governor Federal :R,e .. ;
Maine.
,
serve Bank~
,
,
fa~o~s s~· Gastonguay, Mayor of. Malt- , · :~~i;.z:ia~ac;~ozt~:~~s~aff.
H::in Frederic .:a. Greenhalge of
Gov John S. Fisher of Pennsylvania
Lowed!
.;f C. Joseph Flam.and, French con~
Capt Alvin C. 'Howes, depar:tm~n.~ ! . ~1.
commander, G. A. R.
· ~, J :• Mme Schuma:nn-:Eieink.
1 ::Sur¢Q.U
Greeter Thomas J. Johnson.
'.
Mayor McGo'Vern of E1Isworth, Me,
suf~~r ~~;'~~;.nsson, Royal Vice C~-~.
::~~~ ii~r~~~~s
Me.
tEET
Lieut Col H. E Lavlguer, MP, U~yor
M;ayor Small of Bath, 'Me.
MASS.
of Quebec.
··
.Mayor Dow of Montpelier, Vt,
Gen Edward L. Logan and Mrs E:d,;;.
Dean Gleason Archer.
ward Logan.
- Dr Fred L- Bogan.

-G;;v-LOu!s L

,•=~~·-----'---~

£fc~:~:.1~::
0

I

---- ,__ ~-~- ---- --1
Y.iostcn '1ews-<tltp ::Sureau

.

29 \930

8 BOSWO&TH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

Bouquet's'
bouQiietS to so·r.
he ret:;j;iVed a. fi

. .t..lien, from pas
The Chinese un
v~rnor ~r.d the May1
nd this colorful un
plause;
'
Far ,ri;Sbl I'.ep.rod.Uce
f Boston· in such
e ~ deep -impressio
Salter of, Bostoi
units. fr.om nea
om .Syria,. Greeci
·· H~' .s'l:lid thes
bla power of as

·g~i:: ~f'°~o::r11cth~

l~a'f 'out of, th·e ·.A.ra'.tiiai:
~.~~i'r Colorful floats
~thJetes-Ltt;huanl,ans.:.

aft' ected Gov All-en jtist as

the lake, sinec a strong southwest wind
has been blowing. ·

SEP 2 51930

perfect September aftern
Tp.ere have been. gr~a
Boston :In the past, bti~
·equal to this one Was.,
Staged in . the citY, and~'"'
such c'rowd of peop
·
nessed, a parade"-Or
this' .city,
N8.tU
best as' it passed tb
As seeµ, from the ,Cou
whole scene-the crowd
parade- was , unforge_tta:
tainly was a patient, gOQ9.

k did the red-robed 'Reuben Sal
~ of Boston, Eng, and Willia.in
~ 1 Hear::it and Rear. Admiral L. :u
u. s. N., as it dU.d au the Qthe ·.
court. And the court wcis: cro'W

==mo-norm on- me easoorn snoreo1: -

HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

bands and in the· full s

thusiastic crowd. Lots of lnferestihg thin
in that court of H6iior
afternoon
.
''
' .
Ill the first place, Mayor
good nature was contagious.
of offi.ci~l dignity that usualljr:
on a reviewing' stand Went o
at the stan. A free-and- ·
and-take spirit Was in the

-I

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

2,(;::

~~~a~ve~

flowed along Tremont s
grandstand with -flags and
O ,;_ the strains of muslc from

Others Held d
of Giving In e~~
• ~~rfQrma_n_·_c_.e~·---,

l

;b.a.';;:;fer w;f1.eth:t

eluded Joseph Tekus,
u
,
Royal Richter. Wasbington Isla.n ·
Arthur Eters, Milwaukee, and, J.
Johnson, Two Rivers, Wis

Guests in the Court.

Let's look over a l~w--.9t; .t.hOse

st/1~J!~g./oung wOixieIJ
.Cre·ated a g.reat aeat ot
. a~ong · th>e
Englishn'ienj
er.. sl.tid, he ,w.as deeply dm'•

.

.,w·J?t

!!~~~g~~~:nt in the court ?e~Ide!3· tho.5e,.

J

i
~ HAs-,,ooo FRESHMEN .

uffolk law schdo1 has enrolle4 900 ;
freshmen, it was announced yes.terda.y
by Dean Gleason L. Archer. The list
includes two secretaries to Mal;W, Cur- :1

~«:i:ni~~: ;°!~e~e~g~~%f~-'

to write· about this viSit w
ha.cl;( to England. TQd ·

at what h~ saw Is pu
Tllen there was Co
otti; the Italian cons
~ayor of Fredei-foton·,
E C. ,Eddy of Kid
P. Jones of StourO
Was James MciCOnn
ney, N"S; Adj Gen Ste
His · Loi:dshi p Henry
justice of the Supre
c B.ru1fswfok; Hon : Lo
Mayor. of Halifax,
H6wajd of the Ca"na
ways, :r'homas J. A
r official writer; Pres
of the State' Senate,
:>. Carl Dreyfus and, Mrs
:>. Fernando W. Hartford
N H; Mayor McGove
Me;· Mayor Dow of
s 'Mayor Richards of R
i Ft Dore of Boston C
, I ~ugh Havelach MeLea
. .
;; wick,, COl Guthrie,' Frank
~ .~ke.,'
_ Colllmissioner Joseph Conry,·.'St'.9::nd1S:h

; Gleason;;e'!.: Archer -..ef S &" ,1.iaW"
wgi~ix L ~~%~~l ~~~i~/jj~~.

the Mayor, and heT friend
Prof Joseph H
R. B. B~nnett, Prime Mjn

I

'
·

·,

t ;~~~n~Sec~:t~
~ Cook, L!eut Corn

l U. S N.; J M. de

:~::uJa!isn

t

1 College;

.J:ed

Hon F.

1
ifi1nl;~: ~llan1.

::t:;1

'

(

'··

1.

• ,,

s::. e1,, --

and mana:ger of the Lincolns
datd, H.e got almost e,noug'.
afternoon to fill the volume

; 1 School, Miss Mary C,urley ·



':ve ;!eafrtnf.~~~~

the kind he had ever-Seen.
E. ,A. BS.Hey, the Deputy :.
Bost(?n,.Eng; and•bis wife: T

t 1 Brimmer;

~

,-Said:,

}..~~ _ to . se~ .~ny:thfag

Tflere WaS Mme SchU,iriltiithe1:e was : Councilor Jam.es
former M?,yQr of Bost9h, ;Ellg;·
th~ parade was, the greatest

S~QJ K ~ ' SQIQQI,

:.~.a~ath~p:Y.~;~:;,.cto~!!

~ s ' all over one of the

de Bettencourt Ferriet"a.
ti..tg!aI; Gdv wm,am. T~
Maine, Hon Frederic B
Lowell, Capt Atvin ·c.
ment commander,: G.
Johansson, Royal 'Vi
Sweden.
MB.j Gen Waiter E .. Lo
.Markham., Dr. Daniel
' 'F. C. McCordfok, ~ay~
e:rines, Ont; Hon Andi.
WUliam A. Mossman,
sul; Enrique Nar~tJ.jo; ·,
lombia; Pelayo .Garcia
for Spain; Hon Herber
mander Richard F: · P
Legion; John Peebles,,
I Hton, 'ont; Pericles J'

l f1~~~:~e~~;rgt.NPr
Charlottetown, P E I
Lowfll ;Putnam, J a:.

I
I

the Netherlands;. Gov
ards of· South C3.ro]ina'",
E.dith Nourse Roge1:1s,. :Ta
Consul .of Latvia; Kurt'

)~~~:G:;~in-~:e~~l~C~
Whit.e, Mayor of St. J1
,Richtl,rd B Wigglesw
Winthro~ Roy A.: ·Y'
Fe,deral Reserve l3arik;
Allen and staff, Gov· ,
of Pennsylvania,,.
'.,0./'.3'
and. French ~ Co:o.suJ; ,Ma

.:r:

of 5a1a1s~ Me;·Mator:sma·lPof ·

'P_'.:_-LJ!J

ndh\g featu:i e~ in
n:o_ip ~he .i:e.v~ewAleppo. Tein!)l&
and, U:ie .Fr.er;C:h
ats, the Chin.es&
:OrientM masks,
Uy pi~turesque fipat
Chinese
children.
shoW'• for a :whJle.
~yrian floats , also
- of applause. in th&
, he Lithuanian floats

.Uo.ats..

:S9hool&'Jrls: all. tttrougb.
:tJl_e parade also caught

::Soston :n~ws-<!::ll.p ::Sur~au
BOSWORTH STREET

8

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STR.EET

MASS

BOSTON

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

,I

MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON,

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

J
"'l!!~·~.:iiC:=tr,m;:,··_,,m;;·edad.iiaaltW.elv--.:hA-abnJiEl.; ,,.
dences of t~o A;rnericans were searci
::::
by British polic·e todaY during :raid~

(!TATE(! \
CURLE ! Q_-.- ·- ~.Q ..
~
RE,1\ LIQT ~ift1~~rr~~~: i~ir~ J4-:~~J;
. -· ·..llf --·

several parts of the city in conned
with a.n unauthorized tlews sheet p

I

V

lished in defiance of a' vice-rega} o:

nance.
The- homes of N.

&

w.

___ _!

Keit and Ha,

'l:\e Somers, both in the fashionable qt
ole

r:ai.;;~i:;~;:~. them

th

ca.ref~

Ul•

were seized.

Offices of the Red

J1

wiay Unio;i, the Young Workers' Union~

Bo:mf\
11

m%••

the private resid'E!nces of Miss 9h}
Padhyaya, head mistress of

y;en
Ci ,~s
Scan
Arlp-

~irls' School, and· Mrs Nambia,

~!;~h;J"_ Mrs Serojini Naidu, also 1

Mtot.

an:n4

\

Working Toge;there

B
,chi

T;·ach.ei--:-What do you want
when you are a ma_:p. Charlie?

ley

tci.:-\,

th,eiUr

Charlie-A-hot-dog man an.d ea,·

a.Jo

!ommy'-I' want· .to be a police~

all the hot dogs ••
\
rid
'])re . Teacher-And you, TommY?

of ,e~ an beat up ~harhe for eatin:_' up
~usines~.-Brooklyn Eagle..
..j
tan

ttr ·
G

ed:

S,

of~To Our
THE
V.

NI

s,j'

Coo,
L<

u. :- \

of Fall River, Judge Philip J. 0 uons
nell of Worcester, 'Mayor Keefe of
Westfield, John J. Martin, Boston
Designates· 50 '·o Cheese banker; John E. Swift of Milfor.d,
·· ·
. • . . . ~-.·. .
P.atrick A. O'Connell, Boi;ton; Mayqr.\

Can~date<tiii.,Opl:
Landers of Lawrence.

··
Congressman William J. Granfield
...,.....,.~
of ·springfield, R.ev. R.ol.a.n<i. D. Saws\
yer of Ware, Edward A., McLaughs
$0:ME l{EPU Bl,,!CANS lin., Jr, park commissioner of Lynn,
.
:. ·.. . . tpn, congressman tonnery of Bos-\
Johp. F. Malley of Newton, Edward \
p .• l3aITY o! Boston, f. armer lii,uten."
..
ant governor, Mayor Gallagher of
W 9_µlcl Rather S~e Aqy o~ Woburn, Sheriff J()hn A, Kelliher of
Th§ID Governor Thall Suffolk county, ·Mayor Larkin of
Medford, Mayor Mcgrath of Quincy,
:pr~§en,t Q.aJl.d,idate§
Arth1ll'.Lymaia '9.f Walt.l>.am, C.harles
s. Hamlin, Boston banker., Judge
gn,g Qµ.iµming;;i.
George
Anderson of the United
States circuif.i:ourt, Chades s. Mur~AA~on. !pePt.. w,-.,.<AJ',)=1~la¥~ P.hY of \Vorcester,;candidate for. the
democratic nomination for lieutenant
fame!' M· Q,µ-ley ta.9t :¢.!?!ht. threw th~ gavl)rnc,r·; den, Thomas P. Foley of
~tical ,;tage into an t!Proi.i: ~ Worcester, Dean G l ~ Archer
na,ming 5.0 men. in!'ludiµg s.eve,!!c\ ;e, of Suffolk Law school;-il:dward Avery
publi<:ans, wb.01,fne would rathm: see
l?resiqent of Boston & Maine railgoyern.cir than either of the present road:· Michael F. P~lan of Lynn,
democratic aspirants for the office, former congressman;- Thomas J
Jo.seph B,. ls.lY ~' Wes:l;.~'.\f! ~lli!. ,!QP.!! Boynton of Arlington, eharles H
<:raylor ·o,r i;he Bo,st9n ~e,b,e, T,hoJilas
,1, 91W11"ings ¢. ~~,ii, '
e. Thacheh of Ya,1¥outh, rormer ,
With only tour·days·remainW,g l!n,
Braden·of how-\
tll m-ima1'Y daY, QurleY ll~ b,een in congres.sman; May.or Ho~yok,e, Mayor
ell. ¥ayer Dillon of
t;l,111 inidst oj a P"'ttle ytlt,h pt);le:i- d.,t;I, s11ll,van of P,eab,ody, ¥"!Yo, Winter
ocratic leaders of i;h.e ~taj;e ~in~e ,Jphn of Springfield, M. Fred O'Connell,
])'.
mayor. of Bos, former mayor of F.itchbur<,; John P.
t9,
~B" iia,m~i~ be, Kane, formJ~r ~aror of Lawrence;
ca
.
Th9ID.¥ J, Co,rb,ett, form.er m,ayor of
~nly Wednesd\l<Y a s~t develol)e\l
J., D.c;mah\le o.{ Bost>et~~e~ t11fl:i¥\e¥ fqr<;~ a'.\ldd<:.mo, Loweii; iJ9seph Jo;&eph J. qo:r~tt of
those ton and Judge
of Martin Lomasney, Boston
13.qa~~n,~~~~~~~~,c--cratic leader and c9nsidered otle of.
the . czars o:C Boston politics. Loe
riiasney cami,out in favor of :{sly and
ow<>i;ea a p1an a.ivanciact 1>¥
that the democrats l.mlist ·aµ· F.tz;-· /1 uis
gerald's ·nomination and then. .:i he / !Ji:9t
::Soston declines to run for election, tl;>I dem, 1 %99
ocir.atfo state comµlittee pi~ a cari- 1 Ms
8
didate. · ·
09
BosTi · In a state,i;,.ent issµed v1th !;}.is li~t
, the ma:l'(lr said neither :111Y nor Qµ.,;n,381
mings were of the right caliber tp "2llz
hold the c,ffici of govemo:i: i,.nl'l they jfts
iiaif cai:;i;ied
,i; vigor,;,w; c.a.m~ :jfj:g

c!L\.SON

I

:!m,y,

w.

I

H<
Ville

Go

_J

AI


•ubi to visiting Slattery's
M~~ 1s being celebrated.
fax f newness; a 1 ·
"
Fi.o::>
ways so

ca}ys so much to choose
eoc~'}iis condition more e.viar
.
suL~' Displays to which we
ofG~;J.SpectiOn,.
Low,

cm ~uch

HERA]

'Y.:oo5tott :ncws-<!::l~p ::Sur~au
8

°'"'*';,

'.Jifi!

ward



.
,.

i

J.

J.

~

·

'

In other sectio.ns papers, private i
respondence and copies of ha:ncft'

ce

:'.a.~:.:.~t_;u~::~a!Jh;:a~;.,,~~.
~t.o~ \

J'FER

ter of the city, were entered by poJ.

;he

republican; Edward A. Filene, Boston ,

.!

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

i~~l~t~i\iftt ~~t~~~Jtie4~~, ::::
:t:r
~uooor~\i:fg ti.<;. 'victp;vio11s, ca:x,qiqa

m the primary.
· , 'fz
':fhe li'\t i,;ic1u5!ed sey.eral rep,ubl\• ffu.
ca,ns, Thos.e na,i:ned iµ tJ;le. t!,l,\\YO.r 1'
{;,st· Vl;~e 9herw.aA L, Whipp\!)., ~.\ls .
t~~ lawyer; ~en. e,1w,r1es, :s;. CJole/ ~:itt
63
Qcen, ~c;ward :i;,. :r..ogan, NJ:a,~t!s
the Jak, g~q\\gge, wh_o '\ee~ the lJ. s .. s~
~t
has bee tor\~l µ~atjo.n; Mayo, A,slll<aY ffs/
eluded ~ew ~ed~r<'\, ll.!l;a:Yo.r. R uss!!ll \lf. ganil ur,
.
Royal
b.<idge, aen. C.lar~c~ ~ lj:c;lW'l,rc;l;,, st

i ,;

MASS

HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

A.-tnur

SEP 2 51930

., .... ,, · · -· - ·'

·

·

·

.:...,

Johnson

'nzt·oij:~r

n

. _. ~tl

1

~YffPIK W. ~" FRESHMEN 1r-rJ11~-r,-....;.;c:......_,.~i~
~Q.IQQT.
HAS-f~O

f

~I
shmuffolk law school has enrolle<il 900

re
en, it was announced
te d
by Dean Gleason L Ar. h 0 - yes r ay
includes two secretar'i.~s ~o i~aY.~ec:!

i1
I

i

I'

I
!

I
,_i,

,

I

::Soston '::!t.tws-~l!..p ~ur.t<1u
8

iilnstnu N:ews-Q!lip iilur:eau

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8

MASS.

BOSWORTH

BOSTON

MAss.

STREET
MAss.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

REGISTER, YARMOUTHPORT, MASS.
NORWO(?D, MASS.

Samuel Pearl·

;. -Only Peabpdy
.Boy T(>'Pass Bar

e'gisterl,
Sim.pkins~

. .:...·T_ft ___ _i
Repairs Made on,oe,
evel~nd ~r:_,,/3tiild,f:;,g'

Praper Anet,,.
' ·Bur1er;
1 •

, Std

.,

'.

f~ij1

-

Samp.el 'Pearl, a. prominent lo<ml young m.a1:1-~· was very recently
u:otified that he-:'"was sUccessful in
the exarm.inations held last June:~
for admission to the bar. Of the

Colby Colnuner hotels
g

:my

I:

col-!

four-years
ual a'ttend.:..

., . ~

J~:;:Jjr~

nt of, the

f

nn,fkut; i
e---•
_I;:~,

"'

23ff fortunate law ·students to a.tain their goal, Mr. Pearl was the.
only Peabody man.
He is the son of Mrs.
Pearl of Dustin street. Mr. Pearl
graduated from t~e Thop:ias Car~
rOU SchOol and attended the Peabody High school. Later he grad-.
uated from S ~ Preparatory
school• with the degree of Bachellor o f ~
,For the past year Mr. Pearl has
~en associated with Attorney E~
.A.. Hershenson <>f'_this city.. ___ ~ - - - - ~

Itis~ne~

After TtI~sday, Wit~,~
tiop.s settled, the ·~wO pa;
-~way. w~th clean decks::
er battle.
· , · · -~

"Y-,oston '::!t.tws-a'.:lt.p ::Sureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BoSTON

MASS.

!

Finnegan of
Malden and 40 court st will take the .
place of' attorney Harry L. Thotx1pson,. who resigned .fr~m the facti!tY
because of· -sicknessAttorney Finnegan, a~istatit' professor ,in sales for
three year;;;, is a. graduate pc Boston
Colleg&'"" · High, and Boston College,
class ·o:t 191~ and of - Suffolk La.w
Scl$0oL · He. is vice presl?-en_t of t_he
su:trolk~·:~W SqchOOl 4~umn1 ~sE!oc1a-t ,

ti~t~t;

particular 1 local
een _·Frank · )3. ,1
enn~tt, both of · !
ocra~.:C, nomi~a,,..
.,.

. '

LJ.i

olors _,in the la.St / ".•
oub., by a p.a.,;:-:- _x

witp. e:~1t1;~eJr . .c

I

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

SEP 221930
.
'
/!.
,,

<

IE:

:So.ston )te.w.s-4l::lip :Sure.au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8

MASS

BOSWORTH

STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

REGISTER, YARMOUTHPORT, MASS.

Samuel Pearl·

s :,
t

Only Peabpdy
8,oy To Pass Bar
1

Samuel · Pearl, a_ prominent locail young mann, was v ~ recent~y
notified t'hat he~ was successful 1n
the exaniinations held last June'

for admission to the bar.

.1

Of the

230- fortunate Ja:w students to atain their goal, .Mr. Pearl was the
only Peabody man.
. .
He is the son oI Mrs. T1lh~
Pearl of Dustin street. Mr. Pearl
graduated from the Tho:_mas CarrOll School and attended the Peabody High school. Later he graduated from 8 ~ Preparatory
school, with the degree· 0£ Bachellor 0£ ~
For the past year Mr. Pearl has
been associated with Attorney E.
A. H·ershenson o ~ ~ · ___ _
/

8

BosWORTH STREET
MASS.

BoSTON

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

Y.,o.$ton )t¢w_s-~ll.p Y.,ur¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

MASS

MASS.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

REGISTER, YARlVIOUTHPORT, MASS.

~ENGER, NORWOC>D, MASS.

~I

' TO THE VOTERS OF THE ,
'
/
SECO'ND BARNSTABL
, twenty-one years at the
Fessen
E DISTRICT School, West Newton; and "':ore recently
~ a ·candidate .for Represent
t was connected w1th .. Sea Pmes School~
the State Legislature pr1'm ·1 ba ive o Brewster While teaching in West New.
ar1 Y ecause
I
.
I am deeply interested in public and ton, stud.\1:.1 at the Suffolk Law School,
community affairs
~
.and upon, ~uation in 1 9 ~
Being funY .aware of the duties of a .t_ed to. the~ Mt,ssachusetts Bar I pracRepresentative, I know that I shall like ticed _la~ along with 'lny school work as
the work
my lime allowed; but final!y left the,
. I believe that my training and expe- ed1:1cational field to devote all my time i
r!ence has been such as to qualify, me to law, practice.
for the position
PERCY F WILLIAMS
lr_was born and brought up on a rocky'.
West . .De~is.
y
Mame farm
I attended when I could /
' ' ~......t..Jl.e..J;,1,JjiiQ....t~
the district school and prepared fa
1
lege at Colburn
Classical I
co - for 1930 is $23 40 on $1,000 The valua1
Waterville, Maine
ns ute, -f- "'l"' t"h,:,_ ,to:wn_fo,r this year is $9,383,1
-I worke_d my way through Colby Col- I
;
--- lege, waiting on tabJe in summe h
and tea hi
. r otels r
· c ng one Year during my col- f
lege career, completing the f
c
.
our-years
ourse in three Years of actual attend- /
ance
Thirty-one Years ago this fall !

f

\

T

f.L iJ

---.

r

r

:.t

If

i/

I came to West Dennis to teach
ta;:gh.t here two Years, met a Cape .girl
w o is now my wife, and have been
/
summer or. Permanent resident of, th: 1'
Cape ever since.
/
1
I tau ht thr
'
g
ee years in Co7ticut;

t '\. .

--'-·
---~~ ==:.jj ,'~~j-~'
__ - - 8

BOSWOE<TH STREET

iVl

BOSTON

1.SS

I

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

FACULTY CHANGES AT
, SUFFOLK UW SCHOOL
Glasses Will Be Resumed
l)n Monday

'-f

1

230' fortunate Jaw students to at- f
ain their goal, Mr. Pearl was the
only Peabody man.
.
He is the son of Mrs. Tillie
Pearl of Dustin street. Mr. Pearl
graduated from the Tho)llas Carroll school and attended the Peabody High school. Later he graduated from S ~ Preparatory
school· with the degree of Bachellor of Lm..
,For the past year Mr. Pearl has
been associated wrth Attorney E.
A. Hershenson of this city.
·

tiean Gleason L. .Archer alli:iouneed
today that at the opening of the sC~ool
term on Monday, several changes in

8

the · faculty of Suffolk Law School
will become effective.
r
Attorney Thomas J. Finnegan of J

Malden and 40 Court st will take the .
place or' attorney Harry L. Thompson, who resigned from the fact:f!ty
because of· ·s-ic~ness. · Attorney Fin.. I:
negan assistant professor .in sales for f'·
thre6 'yea.ii;, is a. graduate ,of Boston t
Colle.ge· High.. and Boston College, Ir.'.
class of 191~. and of Suffolk Law -.l
Scll.001..H.e is vice .Alumni ,11.ssocla-..
Suffolk. Law School pr.e sl':1ent of. th·e'

r

1
ti°.fitor.ft~~ :Alexander Smith of th .
IaW' .fi.rin' of'~~Fre'n9h & Smith, State st, _
a~$nt · ·P,~b~S;sor in deeds, J;llort-~
gage~; and ~a~~ts. for several years,!
will :. ~.~
..1~ ~ · re.al prope~y,
suobe'"ed
deric~ O .. Do~n-~s.

.

'

president

J. Ele

BoSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

SEP 22193!)

Y.ioston :nuvs- (t:lip ::Sur¢au
~ston )t¢ws-(t:ltp Y.iur¢au

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
[NG GLOBE, BOSTON, lVIASS.

SEP 23 1930
i:1stalling suite will be headed by
1_ lard D. ,Essman. Colton G. M~rr1s ~W,!~
alled as senior co~ne1l?r, and
a
n P. Thackeray as Junior
coun or. William T. Davis Jr, re .. ,
tiring councilor. will be presented a
pi-.ist mencii:or's. jewel. Mem-1
bers ot
alde · AS'sembly, Order of
Rainbo
. will be guests.
1
The marriage is announced . of .Miss
Frances J. Mehegan of 28 A van st, this j

bAY, SEPTEMBER

tl VITEllA JO l
lRADE TONIGHT

!

,city and Joseph M. Doody of 35 V\.l'"i~k- J
?ow av, Medford, the c~remony having

bitell perform.Pd at the Immaculate
Ccnception Church Sunday. afternoon
by ,llev Dr John J. O'Lear~. Fo!Jbwing
a wedd,ing trip to Maine and New ·
Y<,rk Mr and Mrs Doody will reside at
- 38 .Mun·ay· Hill Park. The br'1de i~ a

Boston Man Wins
mination by 7 Votes

~

i~:;!u~e

~n~~n~l~~a:ei~h ·:h~oJ!:!;~i~:
of Capt and Mrs Eugene Mehegan of
Queenstcn, Ire. Mr _Doody iEt a gr~Cuate
late Concettion
attended Malden
lk Law School , He is .

Selvitella, well-known attorpresident of the East Boston.
mt Association, wh6 yesterday
1 was officially awarded the
1
:ic nomination for the House
\1
l by seven votes following the
m·, unt at City Hall under supervision
..
n-~e Election Commissioners, is the
P Italian-American to be so honefi in that section of the city.
The
r ..tunted vote stood: Selvite1la 2059 1

attander Sullivan 2052.

,,

P'
/.;

r

a
K. 'f!Pi'C. and past
president of the Quincy Club, and is j'
employed as a clerk at the South
Pesta} Station.
_
Rev L. W. Longfellow of Man-chester, N H, will give an address to_morl"<Jw· eVening at the official board night
-~~---the Center Metnodist

!

.,

ITEM, WAKEFIELD, MASS.

_$:,~~:

. ~e:--------------.~-----.-----·

~oston )t¢ws-a::hp Y.iur~au

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

ENTERPRISE, MARLBOR0 MASS.
1

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

~!

MASS

SEP221930

MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, HOLYOKE, MASS.

f~de
a~=

SEP201830

Jta-,.._~._..;.;;;,;;;;;:;;:::,_;,;;;::::::;::;::;:;:::;::;
ta-;
/
,ast'

fl11-V-s of his vi-ctory was re,ceived with
pn~ne appro·bation throughout the
by his large corps
os orkers, who immediately held a
cf ing and made plans for a victory
de of autos through the district tot. The procession will form at 7
-ck at Boardman and Saratoga sts,
nt Heights.
r Selvitella was born in the North
-.,~, , Boston. He was edti.cated in the
lie schools of East Boston and -com-

f"u.1di parti-culariy

IJ

10:is:~iu1ffg!'3{%

ill
n,

dsc~~ol~eg~~ :~~~:~
school by ·-~elling ii.eWspaperi;;
shining shoes.
Iring· the last Presidential cami b Mr Selvitella served as secretary
. ~Jts'e Smith Italian-Amer.ican League
(h'tt: assachusetts and organized sev~ed Italian clubs for
Gov Smith
ha- !ghout the State. In the last Maytid-P' campaign he w~s in charge of
1 tofames M. Curley Workers in East

~oston )t¢ws-(t:ltp Y.iuHau
8 BOSWORTH STREE.T
BOSTON

t!,~~~d.ent of the East Boston Bet-

~~W:eetfsi~~~tl~fme ~~

1

las

• Pents, and
often aided needy
financially.
·
,r1awelvitella is ~arried and has two
~peJ;'~n. He is a member of the BosiJ.&!etr Association, Lieut La wren-ce
~am~erty Post, A. L.; Sons of Italy;
11Qst~ Council, ~- of c.; St Lazarus
Jforerame Society, and Federation of
j
\ Employes
,
1

i tn\s

NEWS, GARDNER, MASS.

sEP2.2i91,)
l

1



im&k' ' ' ,,.- -----I

MASS.

p~~iic1tr:li~

I

In t~e presence_ of over 200 guests
~ho Will gather in the Martin homt:.~
xn Melrose ~his evening, Miss Ruth
.:i:anet ¥artin, daughter of Mr: and
Mrs. Samuel Howard Ma_rtin of !t
st:atford road, will become the
b:1de of Wallace K. Graves of
Linden street
The ceremony is to
performed at a candle light ser ..
v1ce;at 8 o'clock'by Rev. Henry T.
Secrist of the 1-yfelru:se Unitarian I
, Church. who 1.vill H.,.,.. n .. _ -•- - ,
.

b:

-

r-1

E'

a1

school by ·selling tj:~Wspapers
shining shoes.
ring the ]a.st Presidential cam11 Mr Selvitella served as seeretary
s ie Smith Italian-American League
ht:Hassachusetts and organiz.ed s~v~ed i Italian -clubs for Gov Smith
?-a- ighqut the State. In the last May-

l

rnttlY

tfiKEMONY

----.c-n,.,

0,,· ~ - , ~ -.....,_.w

- I

-::&cston )t¢.ws-<l:lt;, -::&ui-4.au
8 BOSWORTH STREET

~id-r' campaign he w.:;i.s in charge of
: to;ames M. Curley workers in East

MASS.

BOSTON

hat1n. -"'"'""'
tn.e-:Pr~Tdent of the East Boston Betleg~lnt
Association
Mr Selvitella
nuslfreely of hi time to public im1 ;
often aided need;y-

1nrse~~~:~:uy~s

NEWS, GARDNER, MASS.

~tial?elvitella is ~arried and has two
1.peJ:m. He is a member of the Bos~e.re'ir Association, Lieut Lawren:ee
!!.ain,erty Post, A. L.; Sons of Italy;
Fiost\l, Council, K of C.; St Lazarus
·\for~arne Society, and Federation of
~'°t: E~plo:'.~s
'
. ..,_ _...
~

I_ _

sEP~i2t91!D
\

W>;---•

•,.

; 1~ the presence of ov~r 200 guests
:Who w:ill gather ill the Martin hom1:"'!
1n Melrose this evening, Miss Ruth
f.anet ¥artin, daug:-hter of Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel Howard Martin or ,
Stratfo1 d
bride of

road, w-ill become _the
Wallac~ K. Graves of

Lin&en street.

The ceremony is

to

be performed at a candle light ser ...
vice, at 8 o'clock' by Rev. Henry T,
Secrist ot the Meh ose Unitaria:.n
i Church~ who will use the singfo ring
, service.

The· ceremony will take place in
the living roozn, where one end •will

be

banked

with

cedar trees and

f smilax and nearby will stand large
urns filled with gladioli, dahlias and
lilies.
An unusual feature of th~

decorations will be th~ lighting effect in w11ich seven branch candla9ra will be used
The music for the ceremony and

~!~:t:~~Ai::;:~J}: !~? g~~~ fci}~?J'o~l~,:
1

1

SymphonY· musicians.. ,

I is

Miss Martin
to be attended b'I>'· her' silite~:'Mrs:

John S Allard of Bronxville, N. 'y,
its matron of honor and the bridesmaid will be her cousin, Mrs. Robert K. Sh;rnley of Highland Park,
Ill. Walter T. Wilson of New Ha-

ven. fo,:merly of th~s city. is to serve
as best man for Mr GraVf'5.
Miss Martin will wear a beauti ..
fui" weilding gown Qf cream satin
de.s.igned with simpl.e lines and a

long' Court train edged with tulle
and her veil is to be of tulle and arranged about the head with bands ot
the same material. Her" flowers are
to be orchids and swansonia arrang.
ed in a. gorgeous mass.

The bride's attendants are to
wear turquoise blu~ crepe designed
perio.d style an~ carry large arm
bouquets of autumnal tlowers. At•

t~s,t·
.P .~~~~~
ti-1P not &nnouncing t1;leir deStination and they ~·il.l return to make
th_ejr p.ome at 34 Sali_sbury road.
Winchester. where friends will be

received after Nov 1.
Mrs Grav-es graduated from the
Melrose H.igh School with the class
of 1923 and Mt. Vern.on Seminary,
Was.llington, D. C, in 1925, and later .8.tt"e.~ded the K~therine Gibbs
Sch.Ool -and the Pierce School in
t Boston.
Mr. Graves graduated from Holyok.~ H~gjh School with the class of
1919 and from Boston University in
1923. He then took
post graduate
course at the S ~ a ~ o l .
He is connected with the lhterna ...
tional Paper Company in BoSton.
Among the local guests who wi!J
be present at the wedding this. evening are' Mr. and Mrs Wan~c·e H
Graves, "Mr and Mrs.: Charles Messe:pger Mr and'. Mrs W. T Wilson
and M;. and Mrs. Kenn,eth Chaimers.

a

___.....,__

::Soston '1cws-a::lt:p ::Surcau
8

:Soston '1cws-a::lt:p :Surcau

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

urst. <,.

MASS.

/ti~:,Y~te
President

,T,·~ Compton, _.~:!a"",.
,._
_

worla

s~ri;· Ellen
College.

fttlRLEY IN
~A-1:L -YPON
----COLLEGES\

c:if:~~e~

0

L.

:~~

I

I

,1

~~~~~--~~~~~-,-,..-,-,,,.,,-,-~.,.

Ii

-~ext-Thursday"

Conference - Is Slated for
-...

I

eJi::::.~ion

\a

"

-·s~to lend their aid.
~fif.:",_;,".·,--;
~ .-.·_· · ·.•

;'!~~~ ~~~~n~~!;Ytl~;t~~;~!~~~nc~:!t!

:

an

emergency unemployment fund
use of money appropriated

through· the

for the. extensiQn of. ·the · airport, the ,
l' entertainment of the American Legion. i
i
American Federation of Labor and :
11·, ,
other c:Onv. entions and the c_ash. be.lance
. in the treasury.
·
Under its plan the Unemployed Coun-

I

'I

°: :~~!;

11
: ~~e-;ii:e :r~;~~~ ~~~ r~V:::itsu; 1
0

rthe.

unemployed

wor!-rnrs,

who

would

'1\ then receive not less than $25 a week,
with $5 additional for ea·ch d!:lpendent,
11
as well a:s free rent, free· gaS. t,ree elec1

i:

,.
~V'a.$ion ot ina'Ustry by 10,000,000 WO•
'
wark;ers., inVe·ntion of labor-sav('.l~vices and pi;.omotion of efficiency
~trl~e:t~~i~~r:g S8;;~iz~~bbi:
"-'OPP.'Ol°tunity to· eaTll a livelihood and
'. --~ure peace S:nd comfort for their

!~:

-J'.al)l!lies.

tricity and free food and Cl.othiri.g,. They
would als~ fPduCe the salarieS -~f., .9ity I
offlc~als to Ill• t, more than $5000. a year. 1
Members of th~ 9ity Council stated !
last night that ullder existing' laws, i
they had no authority to -carry out th0
wishes of the Un~ployment ·council.

I

· , ; ~e task of providing a panacea has

~;~~~/-, -\l>'.e,n.:,. q~egated to organized labor
"i.t,t.;;:\-:~ k'1lon~,; ~e said~~ adding tha:t the time

i
,i
1

':Soston '1cws-a::llp :Surcau

1

i?·:>it·:1;~::~~0~rr;;ef()~O~nt~'~e b=~~r~ r:sre~ci!h: I
. ·: -, ·:,. ')5~lution of the menacing problem
• • '> The Mayor declared that through the
e.r. ship Of Bay State cttizens sub- \
ially every great problem atrecthe welfare of humanity has been
d during the past 150 years, and
~clared that this would be an appro_.1:i?-te time for Bay St?,te leadership,
~si:n.u.ch as the American Federation
f ·Labor ls coming to this city for its
,.atio~al conve11:t1on next month

8 BOSWORTH STREE1
BOSTON

A selected group of distinguished
Massachusetts educators have l1een
Invited" by Mayor James M. Curley
to a prellm,1nary meeting at the
PS.rker House, Oct 2, where unem.:..
ployment, termed. by Mayor Curley [
"the most ·important problem con- '
fronting America," will be co.nsidered .
In a letter to those Invited Mayor
Curley said that various theories and
programs have been advanced with
a view of providing a solution, but
up to the present til)le nothing- really
tangible bas been developed.
Labor-saving devices, efficiency
programs and the invasion of industry by upward of 10,000,000, in the
opinion of the Mayor, make the
problem sufficiently acute to warrant the serious thought of· 1eaclers
in every walk of !ife, rather than
the delegation of the all-important
work of providing a solution to organized labor alone.
Continued on the Fourth P.age

.l1

MASS

l

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

SEP 2919~0

Those Invited
e o.pening forum will be but a pre-

a'.r.y session for conferences to be
, possibly weekly
To the first
heon the Mayor has invited but 33
e · presidents and 'economic exas a nucleus ot the proposed

l

l

· Iiti:ellectual leaders of the State
, the ·moneir now in the city tt:easury for
\ij.):>i.grafted to work out a solu- 1 '.
among the unemployed
?f t_he un.emplo.yment pr.oblem at !I
The'group, which.ls affiliated with the
· · nization forum to be held ,

!i

1

._,..w,

Mayor Says Labor Shpuld
Not Carry Entire Task

Co'lincll of B9-st9n, with headquarters
at 22· Harrison avenue, to turn over all

noon at the Parker:· House
·· gg'e.$tion of Mayor Curley~
·
·icins sent out to the prt'SLCf . ecori,Ortlic experts of the
.
educational in$titutions of
·'):ttS, the Mayor last night
., the Politicians had £ailed to
remedy for economic de. ·,:ani:f ca-He.d upon the SC:i;

of

State SUininoned

Unemployed

'.pemand,. w~s in~de.. upon the City
Collncil yest~rday by· the Unemployed

.

-CURLEf-',CAlLS: ,
I Joevss PARLEY:
Leatg Educators

Want AU: the Money in the City
Treasury to Be Turned Over for
Dist.ributfon

/-.'

,."·.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, l\'IASS.

Pendleton •. WelleSley \ ""
.
Edgar Park, Whea~on

l
Invites Their Leaders/ I Demands by
,,

',.

-

President Harry A .. Garfield~ Williams
College, Williamstown.
'
President ·, Rall)h ·:ma.rte, Worcester
Poly:teChnic Institution. . . . . _
ProfeS:sbr W~Ilace, B ·. D0nham,. Harvard School of Business Ad~in_i~tration.
Roger BabS0:0, Babson Irtstitute.
Hugh BanCraft, Boston News Bureau.
R. w. McNe~l. McNeel's Financial
Agency.
Professor Josehp H Beale, Harvard
University~
, Professor Carroll W. Doten, Massa..! c~usetts Institute of Technology.

__.,....·

. • to::i:;:~n-

J

chuSetts Institute of, Technology~ ·i · · ,. ' . ,
·. ·pre·sident Mary E. Woolley,' ~.:M--b·
HOlyOke College, South Hadley. · · , . I
President .Frank P. Speare, North1
e~~e;:·~~~~r~¥MacLean, ;portia L3.W
SchopL
.
'
Miss Ada L. Comstock, president, Radcliffe College.
PI'esident Heriry Lefavour, Simmons
College.
·
Pi-esident William A. Neilson, Smith
College, Northampton.
1 Dean G;leason L~ Archer, Suffolk Law

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS

BOSTON

~~=li~ut eln

1:r1anent

form as they are


I

::Soston )tews-(Cllp :Surcau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

MAY~S SECRETAF:ilES
ENROLL IN LAW SCHOOL
John J. Shaughnessy of Roxbury
and Stanton· R. White of West Rox·

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

buzy, secretaries, to Mayor Curley '1.nd

Arthur v. Corbett, former secretary
and now a Transit Commissioner, are
I among the soo t ..·eshman enrolled at

SuS~~}!aJ'f(li\M~;~~~~ tt~~ fae::ity

have
been announced by Dean Gleason L.
Archer. Thomas J. Finnegan,_ Malden
att6~ey, BQSton College, '14, who ha's
been· an ~nstructor in sales for three
yeS.rs, h~s be~n made p..:"ofessor in
"pankruptcy~ Ale::r...a.n~er Smith, an a~~
t ' · · ··

9+ the r7,,.1t1,a.m

City
·. >'."al, pr9p1>rl,)h,. I~

es.~p.4~~t
···ro·i

SE? ?.. 5 \<3'3('.;

JOURNAL, SOMERVILLE, MASS.

SEP 26 f930'

\

were especially sorry to
injuries, and hope for her a

._ covery

/ )\
V,-tJ

speedy re-

W',EOOINGS

'I

-o,.'S'eil-Cairnes.

The wedding of J\Iiss Helen Philippa.
Cairnes,
daughter of J'Ir
and Mrs [ )i,
Edward Cairnes, of 10 1\.Iossland street,,'
and Bernard Francis O'Neil ,of South

Boston,

was

solemnized

on

Saturday,

n:1orning at 9 o'clock in the Church of
St. Catherine of Genoa, Spring. Hill, in,1

Ute presence of a

large

gathering

of 1

irelatives and friends
The ceremony
1
1was performed by the pastor of th1J
c.hur.ch., Bishop John B Peterson, who ~
was also celebrant of the nuptial mass ,

s

ay

afternoon. David P. Sweeney of. the
water depa,rtment repaired the break.
_..._ _ _ ___,;._ ff..,,,..c:,;.,..,... o-r +"ha T'.\.'ff"a-

:

that followed
In the sanctuary dur-11
jng the ceremony and the nuptial mass .'.
were the Rev Fr. James V. Cronin,
Rev_ Fr John M
Manion, 'and Rev 1
F.r. Thomas }.II Foley, all of St. Catherine's
Church,
and
the
Rev
Fr .
Thomas Lane, of st John the Evangelist Church, "\Vinthrop
The b1 ide was given in marriage by l
her father, and was attended by her, '
sister, Miss Rose J. Cairne.s, as brides-,•
maid
John Francis Sweeney, of Bost.on, was the best man
The bride was
gowned in white ivory satin with flowing train, and c1=1-rried a bridal bouquet
Df calla lilies
The bridesmaid was in
nink chiffon, with hat to match, and
~arried a bouquet of pink roses
Music
was furnished during the 1nass on the
.church organ, with harp, 'cello, and, 1
violin accompaniment
The soloist was' i
Mr Burke
The ushers were Joseph
.and Francis Cairnes, brothers of the
bride, 1-Villiam J
Dee, Jr, of Boston,
and John Gaffney, of Cambridge
(
A wedding breakfast and reception ,
.follo\\ ed the church cet emony at Long1
wood Towers, Brookline, which was
.attended by 200 relatives and friends \
Af.t.er the
reception
lv"Ir
and
Mrs./
,O'Neil left on a wedding trip to Ne:V f
York and v\-.,..ashington, and on their (
wet.urn
will
reside
at
12
Wendell I'
street, Cam bridge
'.rhe bride is a native of t~"is city
and graduate of .St Joseph's Girls' High I !
',chool, Union square. She r-t.~ a sister 1
f :.Hiss Elizabeth J
Cairnes, a memer of the Somerville School Commit- 1
~1
ee, and of Brother Gilbert, principal of ii;
fission
Church
High
School,
allA,
;rother
Samuel,
of
the
Xafefian
,
h others. The bridegroom ... is a gra d u- ·,1n
..
te of Boston Latin School, and of
:uffolk Law Schoo1,f and ~ ...eofl.Il'ected
vith the Xfi!irrtt~ Natio. nal ~ank in~
'

~

I

- - - ~ ~ - - - ~ - - ~ - -------------c... _ _ _ _ _ _, _
.

:I
j,
,I

::Soston )t¢ws-<t:ltl' ::Sur¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

8

'

, ~t"P

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

2 51930

cB_,£.

L

f1~; -~

l

1

~ e r l"ti'SigiiatiOn-<Yn- Jilly~,

/,

to become . egecu"i"e Oct. 1"'!
Miss
J\ltnt has a.cc~pted a position as secretary to the principal of a select
gfrls' school,: the Westover~ sCliool, in
Middlebury-, Conn.
'
_ Miss M. Lenore Flint

u"

overI N. H.
.here£;euse to.....teach,
and in. l\fe .i. ith,
• H., { here she
visited~ ' rien~ f . Sm
ashington, has i ; . t l y
e to
ookli11:e,
where sh~ i ~~ gu~st pf friends.
James ~- ~Ughn \ of North ro_ad
entered s. olk _Law school for his
last year th s all.

z

1

The 20th annual communit
o( Bedford Grange
. .
cen' ·

n

.,,. ·
er-

buff and red

colors co-operating with the Massachg;e~~ Department _of Agricul-

!l:
1

::Soston )t¢ws-<t:ll.p ::Sur~au
8

·I
I
1

Constable- Lang.

JR Whlt;;-~f

I

··>-

MASS

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

hµndred freshmen e n r o l l e d ~ ,

I folk Law this year.
Se\l@Pll.t ~11&1 .. gl@s in the faculty have i·
been announced bY Dean Gleason L. 'jl
j Archer_ rrhoma..c; J. Fip.negan, Malden at- ;
torney' Boston College, '14~ who has been
an instructor ill sales for three year~.• 1
I has been' made professor in bankrur;cyt
Alexander Smith, ~n att;~_rnt:;Y,.,,._pr~ enh
of tbe Waltham City Coµnc1l, ,,.-"11.. ,~~t l
:! real property, in addition to ~ed;,iiggins~ \
gages and easement:S. Leo
d assist.. !
Quincy attorne¥ • has. been n~~eed Pro- ,
ant professor in earners to s
1
ferror Downes, resigne.d.
!

I

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

0

st;,~~~n
West Roxbury; -se retaries to Mayor Curley, and A~thur V.
Corbett, fo:oner secretary and now a
I Transit Commissioner, are among the

!nine

MASS.

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

1

·I

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

Ii

I

(,?,!

:~?¥~ 1930

!. I

JOURNAL, SOMERVILLE, - MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

--rnam-__ fr"ierlc.isl
_:
\

I

~~re_ especially sorry to learn
.1.nJur1es, and hope for her a

.,.Nve:';,~
,,

W

~he

{_____)

~EDDINGS

wedding

of

:l\Iiss

Helen

Philippa.

Ca.1rnes,
daughter
of
Mr
and
Mrs I ,
Edwa1d Cairnes, of 10 ~'Iossland street J, 'l,;,
and Bernard Francis O'Neil ,of South'
Boston, v.-as
solemnized
on
Saturday
___l;Xl._0.X.DiD2'"
9t
O
'c,J
1

~~-'="-~'
'-;chool, "C'"nion square
She "1¥l a sister! : 1

mem-1 '

I
t"

f
:\IJss Elizabeth J. Ca.irnes, a
er of the Somerville School Commit- L 1
~e. and of Brother Gilbert, principal of!-,
lission
Church
High
School,
anA. ~'.).

I

;rother
Samuel,
of
the
xa¢erlan
t1 others
The bridegroom ... fs a gradute of Boston La t:i_n School, and oF:~f'folk Law School,f and ~ ..eo:nn"'ected
v1th the Xfiaif'tic National Bank 1n

s

I~,
~
-

::So.ston °.:1t¢w.s-a::ltp ::Sur~au

-j

Consfable-

I,ang.

8

;

·aiuisa JB'"H ~o ares s.aalfu~i.iow :. ·,
l-S-9'6l-dOS

·ossi::

, ;;H)~"85jl.:tow

'9Z' .1eqma1-ctas

_ ·et~;i_:~~;~e~~~~:ri~l suuel- .1e~n_o

~:~~jJ~f/

I

8

:i:

BOSWORTH STREET

-~

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

>>
·,: sent" in :tier rEfsign~tiOri on- J'µry------z~

MASS.

.
j

'

to becotne .egecti"i'e Oct. 1.'ll
Miss
~int has acc~pted a position as sec\ retary to th~ principal of -a select
· girls~ school, :~:.he "Westover~ ~~h~ol, in
· Middlebury~ Conn.
·
Miss M. Lenore Flint

,;

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON. l'IIASS.

MayoJ's Secretaries
Enroll i:n La-.v School

::So.ston °.:1t¢w.s-<I:l4> ::Sur¢<1U

'-J ()

,I

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

Johh J. Shaughnessy of Roxbury and

MASS.

Stanton R. White of "W"est Roxbury, secretaries to Mayor Curley, and Arthur V.

'

Corbett~

\ 'Transit

f'ouner

secretary and no-w

Commissioner,

I~~r: ta~~\~i~
s~e@tki

are

a:

arn.ong· the

i

i~~~zuen enro~led ~ i
L!fM;ges i_n the faculty have ·1

j

l~~~er~n.~;~::i~ J.b/1n~!~n.~~~~ a~:t

I

I~~q 1::!~~~deinpr~fe!~o;0In t:;:ir~~;.· \f
Alexander Smith, an.att~"rneY,-pr~ident
torney, Boston College·, '14, who has been

1

I'·

of tbe VV"alth.am City Coµnc1.·1de~~. ·mlrt- !
real property. in addition t-o •.wl11. 1:-~ac.h
· gages and easements. I..eo G. Higgins. j
Quincy attorney. has been nan1.ed assistant professor in carriers t.o succeed Pro- \
ferror Do'W'nes, resigne.d.
___ -~ _ j

1,

MASS.

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I

::Soston °.:1t¢w.s-a::l4> ::SurCU1u
BOSTON

::Soston °.:1t¢ws-(t;l4> ::Sur¢<1u
8

BOSWORTH STREET

Bos TON

"SS'BW 'a111A.ramos
<-:Jee.1:is .M.oa: g
'e'.p:q.M. ·r ~01.1ep.).:c,.g:

'.A++v

1,

ay

afternoon. n&vid F. sween.ey of the
water ___.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ .......;t,..- df. th~ bre*.
de~~ent repaired +-~- T'._'\.'1'1'..,.....
-

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

c:e~ ,'-r¥~ 1930

I

TIMES, BEVERLY;{

SEP 23191)

:f~,{~~

--/~,;!

;/ ::.1assach1>setts, which has alway,, I Clerk uni~,ers1ty, College of the_ Ho.Iv
led tht>
'ror edu~atwn irom it, Cross, College of Om-. _Lady 01 , tnc,
.
.
.
/ Blms, College of Phys1c1anf and S J.l
! earhe~t ._.df.!;YS, has 251 four year semc1 J &·eons, Ear,tern N:1zarene college, E111
I public high scr,iools and 183 junio1 e»son Coll"ege of Oratory, Bmmu.n:..ie1
high sehools ilf its 355 municipalitie;s ( college, E!Jiscopal Theological semh1
~t is estimated that there are . 275f1 ary, Gordons College of Theology a_nd
fr~~1:11e.ntary schools p,erparing p_upl!~ Missions,. Ha1 vard univ ers~ty, Hebr:'''"
f-or· Iugh schools The number of stuv Teachers' l!ollege, International Y. ,1
dents enrorled in public sChools of tho l C A. college, Jackson college Low.;,,t:
commo.nwealth is 744,246 and it is e,;. .(.Textile sci.1001, Massachusetts Agilcu!
~.imated that_. there are nea1~Iy 100,0uv J tural eOllege, Massachusetts College M'
·1n private. schools and universities.
Ost.eopathy, . Massachnsetts College qf
That, ,l\1assachnsets
facilitie-s fo~· Pharniafv: l\iassa.c~1usett_s departi:ne-1u,;
educatip~ .ar.~ uneXeelled is g~anted Uy of education, ~Iassachusetts Institui,:
educru;ion,al le~e.rs1,It has; 44 institn
0,f --Technology, l\!Iiddlesex Qollege oL
tions t,hat c,or,if~r, degrees. which i.~ l\fedimine and Surger3,, :Mount HolYl•l 1
more than 51n:y;. other . .:ii.tate in the Un
college, N-ew England Consen atory of
ion
The.s1:- . . ius:titutions are Americnn Music, Northeastern university Portrn·
International college, Amherst colleg<', LaW- school, ·Radcliffe college, the H<c:·.
Andover Theological seminary, At:i gis c9Ilege t'Or: .. Women, Simmons col."
sumption college of \Vorcesier, Atlan ,Ieg·e, l?mitil cOii"ege; Sufffl:l]j I iilar sAfkoo:
tic Union college, B.Oston college, Bo~
the. ,Newton Theologocial serninnrv
~on
Ec~iastical
s-eminary _ (St. Tu~~s. _college,
Well~sley
College•.
~,
,John'"S")"; the '.reachers' eoilP,e,:P 0f th,:, Wheaton college, Williams college ar.C.
---------ict~-· of Boston, Boston universit.:,('.'woC€ster Polytechnic institqte

l ' '

I.
I

I

GEORGE L. BJ;G.E."LOW OF MARLBORO

___ o,
L.

!lepi 24-Lambort an<I ~~~ti:~l';1~n!;ho~8J',.,::;,.:1:'.i:/
l!!IQ.DS of ~r and Are connected .with: a number of other i

w, t,vin

wasi

Bigelow of 83 Pleasant ·musical organizations.

Edward
t _bega~ their studies at president of the high ~op! d 1t;tnf{J

4

W School in Boston. The team last year. He e onge
l
graduate~ of Marlboro th.Lee te~sia emptoyed at the~ Marl-I
s,,re. attending
even!ni;
House a.,id_ Edward 1!:_•m-,
school.
_
at tho
savings pank,;

e

1:he

j!i'ti} a1::ri!ci~k

bor!"'D;e
ployed
Ma.Tlboro
-~~~f!;..t.:oij'~;;.:!it;. sophomore :,

~ton ')1¢ws-<!:llp ~Ut'¢4U
-----

8 BOSWORTH STREETr

MASS4CHIISEITS HAS 251 FOUR
- - YEA!lt SENIOR HIGH SCHOOlS
, AND 183 JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLS
II

~oston "1n•s-'1:llp ~Ut'¢'1U

MASS,'

way

-- \- - ---- --- ----- - ------.- - ~

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

RIJiuNE, WALTHAM, MASS.

SEP2019:l1:

SUN,. ATTLEBORO, MASS.

11

8 BOSWORTH STREET

SEP221930

BOSTON

\,

MASS.

--..-.,,,.,,.,.c---,.oecn::r-ur -~.flowa

o had an operation for the
.of tonsils and adenolds,
the
as

Cannistraro

of

~F;R

22/]~,\

TIMES, BROCKTON, 'MASS.

1
]

SEP 201930

26

-h ·. avenue, _class of 1930 '

· High School graduate, is
-.to enter the ~ Law
t,week to take up studies
. Yer. He 'fas one of_ the
ininent members of the
·g ·:class, playing the 'cello
061 orchestra, and also
:t:11-e band.

I

'•

'or. Justin McCarthy and Charles
Crowley attended the Braves-Cu~s
baseball game at Braves field th~
afternoon.
Henry Rotenberg has eni:?lled at
the Suffolk §Cb l fl11""Law m Bo~_--ton andnas left to- take up hJS
studies.
· · ·
·

·-----

-ivi:ountalriS,

.
1

_....r-"'I""~ - - tteet
--:7' Main s
'
,,,.-_ ,
-Fr~d_'cDonald, d at :Nantas·
e weeken
J
et
_; ·
-- 0 of M,r. and
iDorn sonwes~ 1er~
-'Les er Dor~ ot ~ w school
111,s. H~n':nter Suffo
a~uated in
o
ace, will
He was gr here he
l \on Monday. High scho?l : ymen1ber
June from man. He is
M H.
was a track C A. an<!. thenetn Dorn
o! the -Y: · 1\'li,rotner of K;n state bar
't A, and ,s a tlY -passed t e
\ 'W~_o recen

', ·n-,spl

1-':::ms,

,-

_

¢ --

,e!

ot_

.r

BOSTON

:Soston )tews-i.tllp :Sureau
TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

POST, BOSTON, MASS,

oc1·3 ,~

MASS.
I

I

i!

SEP 3 O1930

FREE PRESS. EAST BOSTON, MASS.

1 c.-i::rnn:c.-.n,-~-~~cr-«tt;"'---l:Ht:J"

S.fP 7_~11~lri
1,,

.1

i :I

,.;-

Ci

f'N

',

I

/.iy
o~-':-ctscuan11~ b§

1
I

~~ei

t;;!~t:i;'e:;,a._:~~:n~e
.
n Maz,,..f'~om
....._,
1 Ca!J!ori;,la'\

.~;~;~;

I :
j

I
I ,

\..J.,,

'

I

Miss Loring Is a graduate of Mount st'
· Mary Seminary and of the KatJ,arlri~
g/bbs School in Boston. Mr. Williams

'it~

Recount of the ball-Ots cast in the
recent State primaries produced the
first upset Wednesday when Henry
Selv.itella of East Boston was returned
a winner over Alexander Sulliv.an in
the contest for the Democi,atic nomination for Representative in Ward
1, a strong Democratic district, where
the ,Parity nomination represents positive election in November.
Wins By Sev.en 'Votes
In the initfal taJbulation made on
primary night the S'eat in the House
was given to Sulliv.an by a margin of
9 votes, but when Election Commissioners at City Hall late Wednesday
completed the seeond counting, it was
rev.ealed that Selvitella, for the first
time in the history of the district, had
broken into the combination to win by
seven votes.
Both Selvitella and Sulliv.an had
been prominent in .the activities of the
· East Boston Betterment Association
for the past sev.eral years, making
sev.eral bids for eleetiv.e office which
finally resulted in Selvitella's victory.
As East Boston y{)'tes now stand
in the' final count, Representativ.e William II. Barker· has 3105 for a toµ!,
: Representative William H. Hearn,
! 2447, and Selvitella; 2059, all three to
take their ,P1aces iJ:l the 1931 Legislature.
··
Selvitella Aotive
Mr. Selvitena was born in the North
E,nd, Boston. He was edueated in the
public schools of East Boston and
comlpleted his legal education at
folk I,,;m:J:\chool. He earned his tuition
to t h e ~ o l , .by selling newspapei,s and shining shoes.
During the last ,Presidential cam!}aign Mr. Selvitella serv.ed as secretary of the Smith Italian-American
League of MJassachnsetts and organized seveml Italia · Iubs for Gov..
Smith throughout
Htate. In the
}ast Ma)'oralty ca
he w;.as in
charge of the Jam
Curley workers in East Bo&ton. _-. ,.
As president of ~~ East Boston
Betterment Associailion Mr. S~lv.ite!la
gave freely of his time to public
improvements, andfhas often aided
per,sons financially. ,l
.
Mr. Selvitella is;fm~e.d and has
two children. He i,fli~member of the
Boston Bar Association, Lieut. Lawrence J. FJaaherty Post, A. L.; Sons of
Italy; Aus1onia Council, K. of C.; S;t.
La2'arus Holy Name Society, and Federation of Federal Employee:.:.s·;.__ _ _,

d11-Ien Loring, to James Leonard

Wil-j

1

Ii/ml~, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin .A. :
W'.illla111s of Williams road, Conco·fd

1~_.,.a senlor at the

Suffolk LR.W

·College
With Mtyor to·See
.i Cure

§&1i.(>ol in ;

:i~t::-,,_ ~;- date has l'ffle!I' planned tor
01

"""'...,..,.~.~""
-'----';
:Soston )?e.ws-<Z::(t.p :Sure.au

WOMiN EMPLOYEE

8 BOSWORTH STREET,

c;ALLED ON.E~ .7

MASS.

BOSTON

l

RELlE:sF
WORKLE

i

!

1.

.

'

Sel. .itella Declared A :
Winner By A Margin. /
Of 7 Votes Over Al
Sullivan In Representative Contest

GAZETTE, HAVERHILL~ASS.

OCT 4 -19,lU

, e ry J, Hill was 1
troduced to scouts by Scoutmast
Harold E. Turner.

Pointing out that worn
mo~rn day machinery h ..
vital,Actors in ·th'e displac
men in the matt~r .of em
.Mayor Curley yesterday ~f
a• confttence of l~adirig B
cators called by him in t.
House, warned that "sotn .
bi. done immediately in re
unemployment situation if
can Republic is to cndu'rc."

ce Man Files..

~ Papers For Sheriff
A E~URY-Republican nomina- '

tion papers !or co~nty sheriff were

filed with the board of registrars here
yesterday afternoon by John E. Foley,
403 Andover street, Lawrence,

1

a na-

tive of thls to-..'11. They were the only
papers filed with the board for certification.
Born in this town, :Foley received
his education at St. Joseph's school
and Amesbury High school. He is the
,
.
son of Mr. and Mrs Thomas ,Foley, 1 J: .: ; .- , , ;_ \
11 Osgood place. Foley was graduated
"· ·· · • · .',.

1

1,

.

C~ord People Become Engaged
Cards hav.e been sent out by Mr. and
1' Mrs. John E Loring of 9 Upland road
We.st Concor.d. announcing the engage:
'"1-011U>f_!~r~ughter, Miss Mary Mag-

BIG UPSET .
. , iJ
USE RECOUNT_ /'./

\

CONFE

W.l:U Jc:tliU-

in France and Plan te-· motor to Spain

1

1

1

~-~-

from the Suffolk

years ago all&

rvhool

a few

terene&.

___ ) .•i'1.vo·.ting _fear_s toproblems, . tn -:t~eo
....
tf and ,economic-' th.·e ·s·t.ud·y· ot.·f~4
· ".· 1ast; apply their . knowledge '.to
c: l~bo~•. ·

1

~'
Jl[(i..'_,._

.. _"

·

~-- , ~--/_

Contlaaed. o• Pace ilt'-l"ollrili

MASS

BOSTON

d~part~flli Ji~

from_ ~reater Boston attended.~e
The group was a4vJsed _b
. Mayor that It Is t!J11& educ!ati>r•
-~->-~'··:,;>_ 1_ atmJJar ~genctes_, w·l.fo -have~. b.~eJJ.c
o

iHit~ Connected
with the law Offices of Edwin J Mes ~ Vey, Lawrence, for the past four years;
Foley has also been a constable· for tau
!2:;; years. SSL. ___ _ '. ~ :

1

COLLEGE HEADS MEE1'
Ne~l'ly 60 college

1'1LLvU.:.u;u ,'. '

/

I

ocrs·1g30

;~·
]1.

r1:I

c~itt;tfMrs:-iathe;i;;e. K~lley,
107 BelJfrjde ave.nue, Roslmd~le will
• serv~·"·a committee that will care
for . '1'.'jjoljption of delegates at the
term1n,~

------

Stanton R. White, of West Roxbury,
one of Mayor James M. Curley's secretaries is listed among the freshmen
recentJx...ll..W:olled at the Su~,Law
schoolor Boston.

Must Use Brain Po:wer

II

The Mayor continfied tha.t no ~&et. oi. the country is richer in brain po~
._ than here, referring to the colleges~_a. _
schools and their professor.s and
dents
He urged that this brain P
bo put to work t~ help solve the
lem. · Characteri$ing the. s.ituat,on

I
~

serious one, the Mayor sa1d that
present wer~ better qua.Iified )n
respects to help oµt th~n ~0:ts o~ ot
' ''A,.merlca in_e:idental_lY.u · t]?.e ~
\t.~d. ·'h~~, _!lo.~ ..mOj:e we~lth,
v;er pef

.
'
a
.

lp

~Ut"¢(1U

TREET

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS.

SEP 3 O1930

)STON, MASS.

aurnnuqns an

rin

7~

i;;c:cnn:t";- -rv-..-- -a.-ocrrp

u.?1 va.a. --:i: ii-t:y

\1\1 ..t.u

!
1

"--V'

I

1

::So.ston )tew.s-<l'.li.p ~ur¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREET,
BOSTON
MASS.

:t

I,

GAZETTE, JiAVERJilLL~ASS.

i'Votes

idential camved as secreian-American
~ 'and Organtbs for Gov.
\tate. In the
1 he was in
Curley work-

OCT 4 -19""
1

,

enry J, Hill was

traduced to scouts
Harold E Turner.

by

1

Scoutmast

,nee Man Files..
;,, Papers For Sheriff

I
Prominentoston educator
!em. Left to rjll:ht: the Rev:
stock of ad~1ff{ Profjsso(

AME'M:iURY-Republican nomina-

tion papers for county sheriff were

filed with the board of registrars here
yesterday afternoon by John E. Foley,
403

Andover street, Lawren·ce, a na ..

tive of this town. They were the only
papers filed with the board for cer-

I

Conttn

tification.
Born In this town, Poley received

son of Mr. and Mrs Thomas ,,,Foley,
11 Osgood Place. Foley was graduated
§Shoal a few
years ago arid 11£ &en Connected
from the Suffolk

rw

· with the Jaw offices of Edwin J l\icVey, Lawrence, for the past four years~

Foley has also been a constable for
years.
!!!.. ,:.

!2:!:;

~au

J BL}!.!.

ocr3·1g30

f,wbe~ngf ~h!

Lieut. Law, L.; Sons of
C of C.; St.
ty, and Fedye~,

,•

c~itt;;;.t;'M~s~-Kather"i-;e. Kelley,J.>':
107 Bel/r;\de avenue, Roslmd~le will .
~ serv~·
•,a committee that will care
.
for . ·.,.,'Mption of delegates at the 1
term1n. Jtrd

------

d~t
,-/

' his education at St Joseph's school ,
and Amesbury High school. He ls the ·

,\

East Boston
fr.· Selvitella
,e· to :public
oft'en aided

::...:·~.

I

I

ots cast· in the
, produced the '
y when Henry
>n was returned
der Sullivan in
alfiocratic noni- 1
~tive in Ward
district, where
'epresents posi~er.

; in the N ortn
ucated in the
Boston and
;ation at
ted his tuition
selling news-

ue:

dalen Loring, to James Leona'rd Wil-/

IJ~s. son of Mr. and Mrs, Martin A.

:ive

'

---:zas ma,~ .

lll.!'At..Q~ thel~ughter, Miss Mary l\iag.

1

Williams of Williams road, Concoi-dj
dared A
Miss Loring Is a graduate of Mount St.
, :\\!an· Seminary and of th<> Katharine '
A Margin
' <;l'lbbs School ln Boston. Mr. Williams
the
in
Over Al
BQston. No
has
ahned
I is a senior atdate Su~@k@fi/'ftlpolfor I
Represen- . 1 :the wedding.
~
.
-~rr:~--=---~~,.ir:. ist

Sullivan had
ctivities of the
1t Association
,ears., making
e office which
tella's victory.
es now "'1:and
sentative Wi!f5 for a tota],
1 H.
Hearn,
9, all three to ,
, 1931 Legis- \

,

ap•u1 s:,!.lq1tJ :isau!:J aq:i
;J~- su·
'"ll?O!:l..ta.4.0 JO UO!'.l:>~UO:> :S:Sa~.!
.. nuem an .a.M. sieo:,.ra.A.o ~

Cards have been sent out by Mi-. and

l\irs. John E Loring of 9 Upland road

J West Concord. announcing the engage:

lECOUNT'

pu-e'

-v.a..iaSUO:, pu• '•:rvo:, uvlli_:
pa:asea.iq .. a1qnop pu;v a18u!s

, I

I

-

Co~col'() People Become Engaged

aM.

·•iqllr,oa'

UJ
u•ms pq:e- 08.nr1 'sa_::ntJ ~
vuren 9.111 S:>!.l<t~~ :,8~!U~t

+~or ~~ through that country They
1
i
bc~~!Wif@& !BJ hi*I~om
i Ca!JJ;ol"!:l!a.r,,
.

:



'UVJ. JO B<>p,!'{S fiV

Franc(;!
motor to
I Where theyand plan ta-· some time SI>ain
Will spend
on r:_

--~
,tion m:ade on
G in the House
>Y a margin of
!Ction Commis1te Wednesday
)Unting, it Wa.8
:, for the first
he district, had
ttion to win by

• •

.tlitlcr

Stanton R. White, of West Roxbury, 1
one of Mayor James M. Curley's secretaries is listed among the freshmen
recent~_fillrolled at the Su~Law
school o!"Boston.

"The Legion and the Amefican fed_i
eratfon .of Labor are to have ·c0ri"1::(:i~
- tions iil this city next we~k/' .:
-: Mayor began~
"Both have been\,.1
· factors for the <!ontlnuance o-r ,
· I. American republic,
We are, gla ,
ha v~ them here and possibly they_
. bring with them ideas for the sol
of the present period of depressiq
that America may be preserved -:(r.
dole system and· from the destru
o! initiative and fndepepdence.
;,It's , pretty near tim~," the Ma
declared "that a programme for
. solution' of the present Situation _ "·' ._
developed by agencies other thap, .:.~~ganized labor. Organized labor_ ha..1:1; 9:?~-~
a mighty good, job, but. it appE:a~s -~f.
th'is time' as if outside help were ~~d
Every programm-e in the na.t:ur,~.~
form legislation on our statute ~~~.~~
practically has been effected thrq~g~
the efforts of some branch of Org~~
la,~~~rs was a coura.ireous expei(µ;i~~t-·l?i
government. Respect for'laW:.l\.:l~·
sarr for ~its continuance
TH'e i
ua1, who loses a job in which
been trained and if$ obliged to.'~
i'1 a new field of ·endeavor is C
,
with a condition that is serious ¥> ~a_ .
and safety, This man becomes :the R~.!
: of destructive forces "
}

Must Use Brain Power
The Mayor contin!led that no sec_t or the country is richer in brain P
than here referring to the colleges
schools ahd their Profes.so~s and
dents
He urged that this brain -.
bo put to work t~ help solve the P ,
'. lem. Characterizing ~he_ situat_io~ · a
1
serious one the Mayor said that .t~o
present we~e better qua_lified ,in ;n:_ia
"respects to help oµt than)~ts Of :oth.e
''A.merf9a, in_ci~entaJJ.Y.'' ~ ~Z:.e
, "ha~ , }\~:W :m~,re. , ~e~lth

'.\[,

bCTOBER

3,

j·. ' ,,

i.

\: !

'

;Heads Gather

~)flepiployment

:-:·•·'

...,,,.,,~\·

l

·.re :~eEifr1'·11n
':-?r¢stlJi'n~
.
- \. .0-f'

.e.'rs
' "'S..t When 18.bor-,

~yeZ:,ot~~ ~~ ":'u~!; \

is.· cr.eation O.i: unen1plqy:qient..

not Ito along unguarded."

resenting

President Ada

L.

-·em~ta!"~~du~:a~ -!!.:ge~r:1~~ j
t_a;c~~-:···a .. stark, deadly and dangerous ,
0

qu~1jt:v,·

proP0.$11~;0.n

f~~: i!hee!~~~;~~ie~h.~t .;;:; j
con-1
emphasized that no

gramme !cir the solution of
yment has as yet been

j ~. · ,;_._~petition in Europe
~ ~ ~ l a y Warned that there are
present $Orne 1700 branch manufac-

itt:

j

I

qirin.·~'..a;g. e.ricies o.perating on mass pro-1
:iucUi:),i):\., Principles in Europe, with the

~eshft-~tha:t

American industry 1s bound

to'fee1·:-the result.
\'..'J?'.~_Siite;n,&'r-comstock told the gather!)J.g '.tl$~,t ~adcli:f'fe has actually felt the

~~:~ti~.0~s~e s~rdrr:;;~t
'per,cellta.ge
of

older

ti;

I

p~l~dye~~
j
students return- \

pt,·~o- coll,=,ge, has been th& smallest in

I

thE! . ,~titution's history.
She attr:lbited ·,, this directly to the inability of \
cli.e..gfr.'.1.$~· parents further to finance the \
;tudies., Qf their daughters .
.. May
.."'~r _Curley then spoke with refer-1
)ilce . to the Boylston street subway

.

,i

Disct:tssfon.,~
,,

WALTHAM,

>rt

,1
"lfUZZ[t<rBE--'---·;5

t JANl}IDATETHREE
IN .
WARD
t:~ •·-

. Alf~d R. Guzzi of 8_ Mague pla!le,
'West Newton, announcedStoday that
he will be a candidate· for' ward
·1J,tderman in Ward 3 at the coming
city election.
· He will oppose Alderman_ Ches; ter A. 'Pl'ior, who has been ward
erman for the past three yeiirs
, will be a candidate'.for re-?lecn·.
At the last twe _el~ct10ns,
ermall Prior was unopposed.
A meeting of Guwi-'.s campaign
minittee will be held at his home
:
s evening for the purpose of_ for-

J

I

-· ::'a~!~:ingWas born in West Newton; -/.··:.:-.

:.;,GuZzi plans for the coming c"i:'~
/wa,i graduated from the N_ewton 1
, !fl~ih School in 1927 and attended
. Su\ffolk
~Choo! ,for one year.
'He; was reasu~r of, his class at
' Newton High.
'· ,He Is the first citizen '?f Italian
extraction to );le a candidate for
the, Newton Board of Aldermen. He
reqeµtly won- a singJechanded fight
ot:'.eiiht years' duration for the con~
sttuction and acceptance by the city
of Mague avenue, Mague place and
Thol!ilas J,tree,t.
. Nomination papers were takeri
· ·out;; i~ Guzzi's behalf yesterday.

,aw

..- The naml!S·,.of 234 appllca.nts f'or ad~1ssion ti)' the MassaChuse~ts bar have
been rec'onlmended by the BG>ard ot
Bar Examiners. The ~C;>Up Wal? _seJected fro.m nearly 800 aj;lplicants who
.tcok the bar examinatiC?n:in July..
-Only 13 of tho_se recommended ~re
girl.S a.hd the total is exactly 100 fewer
t.ha~ Wel'e ::tecomm~nded ~ year ago.
li
The applic~lits will be exa~ined;. indi;.idually: .,by tI:te county._.co_~mitte~s_,o:n.
ch':t:r8.-Cter 1.;bt:we~n- now and Oct 18 and,
if... ne Obja°bttOn. is. piade, the exa.n:D:Ier~:_
Will report to_ the Supr~m.t, Cour.t that
the candidates are quahfi~~_

~riie.neW 18.Wy~ra wi-11, bes.worn i~.on
Wed:qes~Y,. '):>ct ·2?, in the s_upr.~me
.:r-,isc;l,,lii,ii..J ;~Urt. ' 'P'!t' gl'.O-qp, WIii take
ti,; -~tli;sat 9 :30 in: the ll'lO',lling and

30
·11lst ann0unc6':1 !a_st
~ollis -:Et. Bailey, cha1rma2:1-,
!n~- Ge~ge· s. T~ft, s~re~ary: o:f. the
Board of. -.:.;Bar_ Ex~miners, ifollows::

fh.~Ji!~~~~i\~
i ht b

u

~p~1~s

s.

ohn Barnes
G . .Barre:t,t.

1f
·,t;

. '\

:Soston )t¢ws-<l::tlp :Sunau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

:Soston )t.iws-<t:llp :Sunciu
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

(1t;T 1 1

<930

MASS.

,.·: .·

'"

,:--<

I'

WALTHAil[, MASS.

t

11ffizzt TO~E~~'-~"',

r

JANDJDATE IN ,

WARD THREE

r;~··.

: Alfg R. Guzzi of l!, M)tgue pla!)e,
'West New'ton, annbunced'.,today that
jle will be a candidate fo'r' ward
, i(J°derman in Ward 3 at the coming
~lty ele.ction. , · ·
He will o»Pose Alderman Chester A. 'Prior, who has been, ward
· erman for the past three years
t .. , , will be a candidate· ·for re-elecl fon·.
At · the last twe .el~ctions,
'. ·dermall Prior was unopposed.
: 'A meeting of Guzwl/s campaign
: · timmittee will be held at his home
' this evening for the purpose of for, 'IIlUJating plans for ihe coming C/tjni5aign., ..1.
.
,. : __ ...
! ·)GuZzi was born in West. New~on/
f~~s graduated from th_e N.eiwtqn
! Hi,gh School in 1927 and attended
siiffolk 4{i'% ~chool ,for one year.
' He, was reas ~ of his class at
Newton High.
·
·
·
"
He is the first citizen of Italian
' extraction to pe a candidate · for
the,,Newton Board of Aldermen. He
receµtly won- a singJeshanded fight
ofefght years' duration for the con~
sfruction and acceptance by the city
of·Mague avenue, Mague place and
· ThO~as stree,t.
, Nomination papers were taken
i~ Guzzi's behalf yesterday.

·oit~-

)!:-··

t

l
i,

~o.ston )t~w.s-<tllp ~unau
::&o.ston :1tew.s-<l:llp ~ur-eou

8 BOSWORTH STREET

Bos TON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS

BOSTON

MASS.

HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.
CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

OCT1 o
Lah:-"""
dee,,

9

"
"~fi.=consequently ,
to be fitted With sails to ,
~7'ce, but t11at work has b'
'Should see the 1· t .

<,

E.

Erll,.et.:
B
cha,

E

e~~
man
thea
the

~~!'
:';,."

1s

or1c craf

That bhe Will again sa/
lS- 1:1.oubr · .'1 because· of.. th
/
sufficient she to ~~:i~ t~,'
th_ at she will be towed' .to
1
sig 1t of the gallant old
o,f the peopl_e With
the memory . L f lier
enemy.
.

Y.,ostott )tll.ws-\Cllp
8

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

Bos TON

MASS.

OCT [

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

i

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

-1930

OCT 3

MALDEN-NURSE

ES BAR IN /
MINNEAPOLIS

5j'ffrscuoo r

t~ON.~~~~t

B~yOFF

~ r of Dr C F Lynch, ~comes Bride of Thomas E Regan. of Mattapan. Rev Daniel
Reardon Officiated.
:

/ miah Savage, 142 Palfrey st, Watertown, beca:rne the bride of Atty '!'hos E
Regan of· Mattapan at St Patrick's
church, W..aterto.wn,. last eve]J.ing- The
ceremony was-perform.e.d .by Rev Daniel
Re1:\Tdo11; the pastor.
Lawrence Regan, a brother of tlie
g.room, was best man, and the bride's
Dorothy F Regan~

.

I

was

·

::Soston )t~ws-\Cll.p ::Sunau
8 BOSWORTH STREF,T
BOSTON

MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

.

SEP '2 y 1S30

.. GURLEY

I

I

~!.1te{;m:fJ~s

CRISIS WITff

I
I
.

Miss Mary F Savage, nurse at the

i office of Dr C F Lynch, 44Q Pleasant
st, and daughter of Mr and Mrs Jere-

I

_I,

1 College Heacjs at Luncheon t--.(·.:
OpenJng Unemployment
·''

1

Relief Campaign "

The bride was attractlveiy .attired In '
white lace over satin with tulle trim-1 <
m1ngs. She wore a veil caught up with
orange blossoms and carried a shower
bouquet of bride's_ roses and lilies of the
valley.
'
The bridesmaid wore turquoise lt!ue
chiffon .and satin with blue velvet bonnett trimmed with pink and she carried
an old fashioned bouqllet. The ushers
at the church were Dr Ll'O 'F Lynch
of this city and Joseph Regan,of Mat- I
tapan, a. brother of the groo:rn.
'
A µcept10n followed at the home of
~he bride and the couple were the recip- ,
1ents of many remembrances. Late in : ,
the evening Mr and Mrs Regan left for J ,
a honeympon and on their return will 11
re,s1de at 8 Fre:rnont st, Mattapan. They J ix
, w111 be h?me to friends after Nov 15th. ,
r The bride is Well. known here and is a C
t g~adua te nurse of the Boston City hos- ' ii.
~ital
The groo:rn received his train- ~
mg at Tech and Suffolk .........,hool.
g

I:

f

.

. .··:: .··

,:,?::::;;. .

I,,

i

IM.MJGRANT YOUTH
ADMITTED TO BAR
.
---,

Samuel Pearl of .Peabody
Earned.,Ow:n I;duoation

Sp~1at Dlsp~teh ~ the Globe
PEABOJ?Y, Oct 28 - A Belgian
?"o'lt~, ~~o ccime to th~s city as a poor
1mlU·1grant boy and worked his way:

SAMUEL WiARL
Recent~ Admiped to Bar -

~hoqi~ i.s. amb~
· ?i:n~Ys-.- ~f,,-:this

th,e

n.e~

St~te Who
'or: .'5:fflc..; ae

1•

St~· '$OD of l4r1''

ll.el ·:p,.'arJ.

·

. ~a/<t,: Ju,:ie.

'



I

I,

'gr,~\1,&.ted f!"om."~ ! .
~..

lo~al

l

;,.:'l

Boston'!> fa~OlIS educational
resources today were thrown
'info the campaign of : Mayor
.Curley to obtain relief from the
unemployment situation.
, Nearly 50 prominent educators.
'representing most , of the , univer
sities and cpUeges. in the Greater : 1,
Boston a1·ea, pledged their assist ; [; ;:
ance at a luncheon t:_endered. by the;·.',.- .
mayor yesterda:; at the Parker'
House.
.
.
· The gathering was devoted to = :
quaint!ng the "ollege heads. prof~s- ,
sOrs, a.iid research workers with :
details of the unemployment s\tua- i
tion" and· its consequences ~~ th\s '.,
district. A second luncheon wl:ll ,
be held at the Parker House' next '
Thnrsdav at ~h.!~11 silggtlst~o~~ f':>r ,
a relief program will b~ adv,anced ; ,
and discussed.
LABOR LAUDED
.
In addressing the gathering .
Mayor Curley ·1auded labor ,for its
accotn:t,lishments in workers relief :
He declared that nearly every bit.
of reform legislation designed to
aid the working man co?ld . be
tra,Ced to some labor organ1z_atio~
· Edupators and others who have
been viewing the problem from th,;,
seclusion Qf their studies must now
come. forward, wtth definite assist.•
arice. he 8.Sserte4. if A~erica is 1 to
be saved from· tlle dole system
Mayor Curley. declared that the
widespread influx of women into
industry. and the phenomenal de
velopinent of mechanical equipment were resPonsible in a targem.~aSure for the unemploym~nt
crisis.
SURVEY STARTEP
Gen. E. LeRoy S'\Veetst,ar, State
Commissioner of Labor and In,dus·
try, ,said his depar~ment wa:~ ,eompiling data tro~ every- section of
the country for an 'exhaustive studl{
of the s:t.uatlon.
Dr "J;obn A, . Cousens, pres:dent'
of Tu~ ·._Cotlege warned industry 1
again4', ~ . ign~ring
the
h a v oc
wroug~V;·by lay-offs of hu~dred ot
men at ·a time.
President ~da M Comstock, of
Radcliffe Co Hege, declared that.
the effects ~f Jhe t1nempfoyment
a~tuation were el'ear)fl'visl'!/le:'1,:i,c;tl!'!'
clalasr
, ., •
1,aid, 11'\any· 6ljier.
:g
able.~oret~~'.ifi;,,,
,c
f 'the, ,drain .. ·C ,

\

'.-"['?~~~~~~

J5oston )?¢w.s-.Z::hp ::Sur~au

Y.>o;ton )?~ws-(l:'.llp :Su.-~au

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS

Transcript~ Boston, Mass,

GAZETTE, HAVERHILL, MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

ocr 151930

ocr 171930
VIVJfiN GRAY AND

EDUCATOR.

~~RL RYAN ~ARRJE/5:

Mayor's Group of E..d ucators\
.
Would Broaden· Sc,:,pe of
Une:.U:pl~yinent Needs

I

s~=·

a

s,

.

I

groom, was best men. The ushers:
s were Joseph Lennon of Haverhill and,
George Gray of Portsmollth, N. H. 1
,
The decorations at the church were I
cut flowers and palms while at the
s Portsmouth City club, where the wed,_ ding breakfast was served, the decora- ,
,tions were in autumn colors. The
single ring service was used and the
wedding march was i;>layed by the,
1

1

Present at the conference were Frank i
Speare, president of Northeastern!
1 Tniversity; President John A. Cousens·,
qf' Tufts College;· Jeremiah EL. Burke, suP

i

1:i ~~~ !

and Industry; Professor Harry A. W--oo_s-,
"boa.i=ds that work- could go on tµUnter-

ruptedly year after year. - ·
Miss Sara Landau of Wheaton College
, made two sugges.~ions.·to meet the ,industrial emergency , Her first suggestion
was that the ma'.yor and his department
heads take account of stock as to What
public works could be started at once and
tha:t in carrying forward such improvements the work be not confined to any
particul!\r group as was the case at Gov, ernor square; where veterans are, pre, ferred. She sPoke of thousands of young
' men. who were rnere. boys at the time of
J the signing of th~ armistice who are now
'; out of work with families to support,
men Just as worthy of employment as
any other gr
second· suggestion
aden the scope of
1 ! was tha_t t,he
his con.feren
ing leading bankers and man
to :meet with the
others to see
k: · cannot be speeded
up. Another
t'from Wheaton was
that long~time programs of employment
be mapped out for submissio:n to the
Federal planning board, if appbinted.
Mayor Curley deplored the fact that so
much time must elapse from, the time a
·project is ~developed to the actual time
of starting, illustrating his thought by
refei-ence to the East Boston tunnel, When
months elapsed before permission of the
Government could be obta..ined. Though
Boston was more fortunate than other
1

ti~=~·
t:l~e:ei:~h~~!r~:s
a.re almost unbearable
In Boston, he
.said, plans were under way to prepare
for ·the winter and he thought the governor should call a conference· of Other
mayo~ and selectmen to see what ·, is
being': planned; so that the Legislature
·might~ave all possff?le a.a.ta on its as·sembung./1-:Q. Jan\J,arY.
It :Was Professor Doten who thought the
~onference sh.Ould go a step. f.artber ,than
the l,t'ed,era1· Planning Boa.rd ide.~, by rec1
'.ommend,iilg· .a planning board for Boston
J.a.nd other:-:places::~

TO CLEARWA:Y'F
LEGISLATI\'E AC

~. Herbert~tk brbther,ot the gr~:~,:i
!e~:~ L. Ryan, ~1~ -.;:~ bride-

..i:

~:~;n!~~;~a;:i~~~~n~h1:~!~ir.n~;;°a~f\l ,
necessary data to meet recurrent periods

;:1e~e h!rfe

~

r

c::::etb~~r:::
..:; and lilies-of-the-valley The bride was:
attended by Miss Lucllle Gray a.s_ the i
maid of honor.· The bridesmaid wo,re !

ernors of State.s. be- ,requested·'~to· eStab--,

it:!rnete~d~~! ~fat~c~:~t!~!t

Urge He ConfeJ
·
Mayors to Plan Ptib1ie'c;
Works Program•i· ,.

- ~ ~~': cc:~:; :~h:!!r

~eq_ue'.stll
that Governor Allen call a conference of, \
mayors of Massachuset't.S ci't.ies and s'elect- i
men of towns for discussiqn: of a general i
program,," qf . Public works to meet the :
industrial depression· an~ that th~ gov- ·,
the

of distress. were passed at. the third
corlference ·of educators a.nd other leaders
called by Mayor Curley at the Parker
House this afternoon to discuss a course
or procedure to allay suffering.

J~B~E:jt=.

Miss Vivian Gray of Islir,i.gton street,
PortsmoU th, N _, H ; and Earl EdWS.rd
Ryari, 10 Dudley· str.eet, were mar;ied
Saturday morni.J;i.g by Rev James H
l Brennan at a high mass in the Immaculate Conceptio?l church, Portsmouth, N H
The bride wore a white satin gown
ill period style with a veil of chantillY
1

1~ionon. Labor!

embo~y:{ng

GOVERNOR .

Ceremony Performed Saturday at Portsmouth

1Asks Governor/
I for State-Wide

Resolutions

MASS

~~::!

ta:~

~;n;:;t 1~ethc~u~:ii~l
of Haverhill, catered at the reception r
The bride's gift to the bridegroom!
was a silver cigaret lighter alld 'to the (
bridesmaid a crystal necklace. The t
bridegroom presented. his bride with (
a ~tring of crystal beads in a platinum,
l setting, and to the best man a gold 1
Piece. The ushei-s both received penknives.
.
,'
In the re(?eiving liile at the 'Ports:.. 'r '
::iti:d~!~:~ ~~er~rr::1 rec:,~;,
Charles M. Ryan, father of the bride-

t

I -i

:~=~ L·'
l~.

~~o~~ ~~~eMrtr~u~~ay~~a[;
in se"al brown crepe with hat and shoes
of the same. color. '
.i
1
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. I -

!~~Tit ~r:{ s~~o~t~~~e! !h;r~~~; }~ '
~Jh~~i -~3Je n1!~t~t:J 1:;:~~:;d·~i1;,1:1! f:''
vate nursing. She is a member of the
Massachusetts state Nurses' associa-

j

~

tio~~ Ryall is graduate of St James f ·
High and attended ~oston College two ~,
-f~1~rsLa!es~~~L~a~!~~ f r ~ - . :
m1ffi.18@1 81 die ·KµightS of ColumbuS, i
Suffolk ~w School Alumni ~.ociation, !
~~e~~~--~J;!s{e8fsger o~ th~.Catho~
The ~l~i,:_gotng away gown w3.s a. 1
blue, tweed,'· ensemble .trimmed with,
gray_ fur. ·:':"She also wore. a blue.vel-' . . .
vet hat. 'l:'.ti.e .cou.Pte w~ll visit Canada.
0

i

:~~

w11~wre~~k b~n t~eei~o~~~;~~~ 1:'>'.~ ,
by autotnobile. ' The· couple will reside
in t~new1~urnished apartment at .'.{

('!,f ·. ~

J~,~"

T •·.·i.~.i'.i.~.l.i.'.:~.
< . -;

~"~:~{
,:.,

/

Go"V Allen will be asked 1?.Y,,
of educators co-operating. :
Curley in a. study of une '
invite the mayors of all,
cities alld selectmen of t ·
the wisdom of the forni
dividual progra:i;ns of pu
quiring legislative autho
it is intended to obtain aS
possible after the opening
session.
At the third of a series
ences at the Parker Ho.uSe
there was unanimity of opini
intensive concentration on
should be continued
For the first time, a W
tor offered definite s
particularly specific
Sara Landau of the· ·eco
ment of Wheaton, ,P'leadi
consideration for Youllg '
not old enough. to enter the··
service during the world war •.
are now suffering from unerfl.p!'
provoked no discussion.
' ,,
Privately the educators conce '
¥1-5s Landau had opened up a Q
affe.cting the right of war veter
preference in public employment
must be recognized She ca:
tion to the fact that men
years of a'.ge, w;th dependen
are feeling the effects of unemPio'".
as severely as are war veterans ' · S:na ·
while she offered no criticism ;0f·,_ the
Preference extended to veterans,_ ~hf
Voiced a plea for recognition of ti13:e: pje.:(
dicament of roen Who are denl~cf· .,8/
chance to wOTk because of Ia.dk;'.<Of'.
status as veterans
0

TO URGE U. S. BOARD

,

.

Mayor Currey reveale,d.tbat at:·a·QQ!i~t._
ferenc.e with President Ho
·
"
ranged to attempt to sever
tape· which prevents 'the · tra
Governor·S island to the· citY~ ·
•possibJe the proposed extem;lion
airport, he Wil u,rge. on the Pre ·
·~t})e- advantagEiS Of a federal plall/
1;:>oard, which the conf¥erice of \
cators
strongly r~~~ffielided :1 depiessioll- a
,, .
.
week.
., , .
.
\ fact that many-,~- .
.
. -~
Other suggest~c;ms ,~t y~terdS:y•s m~ in previous periods, of ~epress1on, ~~ve
ing incl
'
iridust\ failed to achieve results because_ o~.
:: pl:3-nning
~ lack of permanency. He expressed_ ~~
'i~ _ ?lose
' belief that unemployment or indu.sr,pa~
~_!:d:
conferen~es should contin'-:_e af~er 1'1:1~,.
nes recovers from depression, in or~~
that adequate provisions may be m,~ge.
to meet recurring situatic:>Ils when. P~t::.,,
ness cycles swing away from pros?.e~i'!:&~-·
He believes that constant planning.: ~Q.
cope with unemployment whe11. ; 1,.t
occurs is the solution of the recu?"1ng
situation
· ·
HITS BUDGET nuY1"'G

Prof Thomas N Carver of Harvar'd. -·
decla1 ed that stabili';.>y of indus~ ,)~
dependent on stab~lization of ~~rch-a.s,ing pOwer HE: offered the op~,on t.h~~
too mucb,, auy.hig on the bud
~n is
one of the fundamental reasons It_~
disappearance of the purchasing po
~ the public
"Buying what you can't afford ~tlh
money you haven't got" was the Vf'a;Y
that Prof Carver described the "'orgy
of instalment buying "
He also deprecated the polk

~oston )t~ws-(!;Lip ~ur~au

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

8 BosWORTH STREEr

! Hill more then the widows an,

MASS.

BOSTON

I persons

MASS

BOSTON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
1l1ERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

REVIEW, BOSTON, MASS

3

"!:', !i;.j~I"

AUG.

for whom he fought
\ the burden of local taxation b~
ing the exemption on property b
\ ing to them from $1,000 to l
Iu fact wherever he found bt
'~es ting heavily on the people he f
o lighten them.
His labor record is such that
working man and woman iii-hi
trict should feel it their dut'.
to the polls and vote for him
they might be assured of cont
progress in labor legislation.
The bill to increase weekly
pensation under the Workmen's
pensation law to twenty dollars 1
ly maximum was a big step for
and sponsored by him.
Equally important to the thous
employed as domestics was his bi
bring that class of work within
veekly payment law.

~:

OCT 101930

TatloiiSt~O f1awks today,-but

REP. McDONOUGH'S
E~CTION ENDORSE-

the~~!

wo~ld. att e ~ to regain the ~ecord
..
uom him and Mrs Lind-

:~;:.~ J:i~

Edward .M. Long. -_..

I,

· lo Seek Seat
From Ward5

---

The candidacy of Representative
Timothy J. McDonough of Jamaica
Plain, who has served the people of
the Eleventh Suffolk House District
so conscientiously for the past four
years, is one that should interest
every voter of the district who believes in progressive representation
Since Representative McDonough

·Dean Gleason L. Archer (\; t:Ue Suf..
folk Law ::;;chool will head
g r ~ J l . g Sunday to attend the
~er1_can Bar Associ3.:tion -convention
1n Chicago Tuesday.,, ·
, Ex-Congre~sman Joseph F. O'Connell, a candidate for the Democratic
iSenatorial nomination, will be a member of the rarty. It is understood

Edward M. Long, 437 Broadwell kno,vn r.adio speaker an·~· his candidacy for Alderman
W.ard 5. · During ~he past year
Long ,has spoken many tilll_es
· radio on subject& of Na1 'and international interest. His
t talk on 'the New Tariff over



, . ENT OF HARD WORK

\...Pn

80$T()f LAWYERS GOING
TO BAR CONVENTION

I

/-1-

:

,;that Mr O'Connell· will present to the
\. conference a. request that the UniLaw Commissioners recommend
o all other -Stat~ of the Union _ iaw
a.
to :make uniform. the hour·s of labor so
that whatever the laws in Massachu...
setts ~ay be, they will be exactly the
same 1n other States.
Other members of the convention
1 party are Ex-Atty Gen 'J;h:omas ;r
i Boynton, Ex-State Senator' 5ames
Brenna:n~ George F. Hogan, members
, ~{ the Suffolk Law School faculty;
rof Joseph H. Beale of the Harvard
Law School a~~~--H. Bailey.

:orm

\

-

I

,

Still seeking to make, the worl
Jot a little better he demanded leg
tion to provide guards and elev
men in the State House with unifo
~t the expense of the Stat-e. Believing that those who take u
themselves- the responsibilities of
z.enship are entitled to the benefits
!ought for legislation to compel tl
~reference in employment in State
stitutions.
He sponsored the measure to c,
pel the Boston Elevated to maint
better street car transportation fa<
ties within Boston It is interestin,
note that Governor Allen recer
called attention to the fact that
should be improved.
Representative McDonough sou1
to prohibit the use of steam loco,
dves within a certain radius of B
ton. This would do a lot to abate 1
smoke nuisance
There was much benefit to the E
toring public in his bill calling I
a reduction of fees for the regist
tion of certain types of automobiles
Representative McDonough ds
able proponent for legislation givl
Home Rule to Boston and he h
worked to that purpose continually.
He seeks the suffrage of his cons
tuents this year with a record
service that represents four years
hard work
It is a record of accm
plishment and progress
Representative McDonough led
fight, in 1929, to have the Elevat,
structure on Washington street, whic
he considers obsolete, removed
Chapter 306 of the Acts of 192
which allows the Commissioner <
Civil Service, at his own discretio1
to appoint or employ persons co1
victed of misdemeanors such as mine
automobile infractions, cases wher
fines were imposed under $100 an
cases where sentences served wer
under 6 months was enacted fror
his bill
He fonght hard to obtai1
its passage and was successful
He has been favorable to all legi,
lation benefitting the Veterans am
has worked unceasingly in their be
half
The question the people of his dis
trict have to decide for themselve,
is whether they will endorse his goo,
work by approving its continuance 01
cast their votes with a degree o'l: un
certainty for an opponent who would
be four years behind Representative

p:

I

_- -Y.;:ton >l,ws-<fitp :&u••••
.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.
iOn

AUG 2.l ~ ·

over

·country.
'
Att•y. Long has received his edu·
ion at Harv'a,rd College, . ~wffoi; I
Oollege -0f the Spoken.·
or . :
... •
18 a ·memper of the Boston. Bar\
'\.ssociation an<l the Mass Bat. At
. ').\Ole present time Mr Long •has been '.;
r~~~
over two hundred voters \
1

TIMOTHY J. McDONOUGH

~- y

M, o. A. CAlYIP AT .
.
NABNASSET CLOSES 23R.
SEASON WITH BANQU.\.

da

!?1



\3'.

------

\

CONTINUED

th•
an

· ·t·e~~·
- .
t various activ1 I
otld the 'Winners o
seasOn. Those I
sil:.
ing th& ca1:X1P cu s were as follo;
won the loVII\g
~ . Edward Tal, in@
Singles in. tenr:1:.k Liebert~ jtll
1
cadet class' ~ k.er senior cl~
da2,

class;

BOSTON

Paul

uc

' d A

Tennis doubles: E~~-~r ..., 3

tb.3

O

clt:t;

MASS

OB.~

GC.1 1 71930
f:i$lt&4Ahll' ,. fl'Hf fAii &tt&ff; '. -

0

H Crockett, of 478 . , • ,
Edward
• .
is the only Lowell
er street, this c1tY ! list for the past
man ?n ~the de~.:, school in Boston,
': year a.~ Su~nouncernent t,;,..om t
according
· sterday.
Tl).ere ~
that .1nstit11tione1r'men in attendance f,
are s~vera.l Low
~
a.t tl}e _school.
who thus bq:comes e.

l'IORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

, :Mr. crockett,

,

g:

.:&!>.·~·n···lz . iwork one the Typographi~
·1~·t,.
d at for time was editor
"11'.'.·

'<J~

er Labor Bulletin.

tl:ie.

:~:i<-FO~K LAW SCHOOL

'

. I J!iUSTEES

<;:,~:\. '

CONVENE
::·':'~,; nion!hly dinner meeting. of the
(J)~~~. ofs. trustees of the Suffolk Law
l ·was held in the Parker House

I

'•·

t.

those present Were Dean
L. ~her o! the Law S<>hool
hers o! the boaTd~ Pre$
~
Boynton, former Attorney
,Gen:era.1;, Vice Pres Joseph F. o'Con•

·: ·_
. ~,a



()Tt"l'.~J_ <"f
..::il:!o.~....l....:"::.----:::=-E, 11.
, KL1tm;,E~'S LIST ;
SU!'!' 0
W'Jd

8 BOSWORTH STREET

=!I'·

retary Wilmer R. Evans,
: 'the Flye Cent Savfngs Ba.nk.,

:ty. Gen J:ames A. Swift and Prof

I

,

first entered the House in 1927 his
time and energy have been at the complete disposal of his constituents
He is rated as one of the ablest
Democrats in the House andlhasltaken
part in every major legislative battle
in the House this term, as well as be·ng responsible for much minor Jegisation of great importance to those
it helped, which he has guided through
proper channels himself.
Representative
McDonough
has
aided in solving important taxation
p1oblems as a member of the committee on taxation arid is considered
a conscientious worker
He rarely missed a session and no
one could be more attentive to the
demands of the people of their district
than
Representative
McDonough
Many times a day he met people of
Jamaica Plain who came to him on
matters pertaining to his district and
he was always courteous and willing
to give them the fullest measure of
service
His evenings have been fat
from his own and much of the time
that should have been his has been
spent solving problems of his district
Representative McDonough led the
fight for an investigation by a special
commission of ways and means of reJieving traffic conditions at Forest
Hills and his fight has resulted in a
decided improvement in the regulation of traffic at that point.
No one realizes the good work Rep' resentative McDonough 'did on-Beacon'
1

.1, Arch~.-•.

I

-·- -. .· . · /-_, -r
/


\

I
•••
1

.:...:-

J

~c:..:..~-'---'..-"-.-"----__:_.:__.:._:~:.._---'--'~--"--'-'-~-'-'-==~-~---~~~----.


McDonough at the s t a r t . ~ ~
One of the rewards of legislat
service is the experience gained .;
without it a district has hopeless r
resentation.
Ambition is a sterling quality

snouut never oe a1scouragect out

::Soston )t~ws-\L'.li.p ::Suuau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS

Transcript. Boston, Mass..

8
BOSTON

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

GAZETTE, HAVERHILL, MASS.

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS

ocr rs 1930
VIY_¥.,N GRAY AND
,,
~:RL RYAN ~ARRIED

1--'

\ Ask.s Governoi:./
.
\ for State- Wide
!~fion on Labor
l\layor's Group of Educators;
Would Broaden Scope of
Un~m.pl~yment Needs

1

ocr 171930

Resolutions embody~ng the requeist
that Governor Allen call a conference of'
mayors of Massachusetts cities and select-,
1ne11 of towns_ for discussion of a general
program of public works to meet the :
jndustrJal depression and that th~ goverrtors of State_s be requested to establish industrial ·planning boards that would;
have always at hand the machinery and i
necessary data to meet recurrent periods l
of distress. were passed at the third
conference of educators and other leaders
called by Mayor Curley at the Parker
}-louse this ¥ternoon to discuss a course
ot procedure to allay suffering.
Present at the conferrence were Frank
J:t
Speare, president of Northeastern
1 ~niversity; President John A. Cousens
o!' Tufts College; Jeremiah E. Burke., superintendent of schools; MisS H. Adele
Howe of the State Department o! Labor
and Industry; Professor Harry A W-oos1:ioards that work- c6uld go on tltninterrupted1y year after year.
Miss Sara Landau of Wheaton College
made two suggestions,, to meet the industrial emergency
Hei- first suggestion
was that the mayor and his department
heads take account of stock as to what
public works could be started at once and
that in carrying forward such improvemeflts the work be not confined to any
Particular group as was the case at Governor square, where veterans
ferred. She sl.)oke of thousands of young
men who were mere boys at the time of
! the signing of the armistice who are now
out of work with families to support,
men just as worthy of employment as
any other gro.
er second suggestion
was that the
broaden the scope of
his conferen
·.-viting leading bankers and manu
ets to meet with the
others to see i , . , rk cannot be speeded
up. Another thoiig"ht from Wheaton was
-that long-time programs of employment
be mapped out for submission to the
Federal p]anning board, if appointed.
Mayor Curley deplored the fact that so
much time must elapse from the time a
project is 'developed to the actual time

are, pre-1

of starting, illustrating his thought by

reference to the East Boston tunnel, when
months elapsed before permission of the
Government could be obtained. Though
Boston was more fortunate than other
:itres, whel".e the elapsed time i~ from
a. year and a half to tWo yearsJ the~elays
are almost unbearable
In Boston, he
said, plans were under way to ptepare
for the winter and he thought the governor should call a conference of ot~er
mayor.s and selectmen to see what 'is
being planned, so that the Legislature
might have all possible data on Hs as:sem.
bling in Janqary.
It was Professor Doten who thought the
conference should go a step farther than
the Federa'l Planning Board ide~. by recommending a planhing board for Boston
and other places;

ED
G

Ceremony Performed Saturday at Por,tsmouth
Miss Vivian Gray of Islington street,
Portsmouth, N H, and Earl Edward
L Ryari, 10 Dudley street, were marl'.'ied
Saturday morning by Rev James H
Brennan at a high mass in the Immaculate Conceptio:O. church, Portsmouth, N. H.
The bride wore a white satin gown
in period style with a veil of chantilly
lace caught up with oran,ge blossoms
She carried a shower botiquet of roses
~ and lilies-of-the ... valley. Tlle bride was
attended by Miss Lucille Gray as the
maid of honor The bridesrnaid wore·
.. a coral Pink satin gown with a bl3.c)t
velve.t hat, shoes ,and black gloves.
:i Herbert L Ryan, brother,oI the bride·
~ groom, was best men.
The ushers '
s were Joseph Lennon of Haverhill and
George Gray of Portsmouth, N. H.
The decorations at the church were
cut flowers and palms while at tbe
Portsmouth City club, where the wed1 ding breakfast was served, the decorations were in autumn colors.
The
singl,e ring service was used and the
wedding march was played by the
~ church organist as the bridal :nar~.:
entered and left the church
La~
of Haverhill, catered at the reception :
The bride's gift to the bridegroom
was a silver cigaret lighter and to the
bridesmaid a crystal necklace. The
bridegroom presented his bride with·
a ~tring of crystal beads in a platinum:
setting, an!'.! to the best man a gold,
piece The ushel's both received penknives.
In the receiving line at the Ports-'
mouth City-club, where the reception !
was held, were the bri!ial
party,
Charles M. Ryan, father of the bride·
groom, and Mrs. Susan Gray, mother i~
?f the bride. Mrs. Gr~y was gowned:
m seal bro.wn crepe with hat and shoes '
of the same. color.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs
Susan Gray and attended the Ports" :
mouth High school She is a graduate ;
of the 'Gale H06pital Nurses' '.'raining [
school ~nd lias been engaged in pri- '.
vate nursing. She is a member of the '.
Massachusetts State Nurses' association.
Mr. Ryan is a graduate of St. James
High and attended Boston College two

,

HEAD JEWISH

RE BOSTON: HERAL

JOy
Urg

M

of ec

Curle
lnvit,
cities
the 1
dlvid
quiri1
lt ls '
.
'
' '
' ' ' ' :is·
possi' f:':'ei,Y_i,nf
'!'e,r room for Diam~
session
- --~ l a f + : . _ . f ' ~ r o
At the third of a series of
ences_ at the Parker House 3
there was unanimity of opinion
intensive concentration on pu
should be continued
For the first time, a wom. ,
tor _offered definite sugges~~.' 'bU:t- a i
particularly specific declaration of Miss·
Sara Landau of the economics department of Wheaton, Pleading for som~
consideration for young men who 'W..ere
not old enough to enter the mi~tary
service during the world war, but'. who
are now suffering from unell'l.ployin.'ent,
provoked no discussion.
,
Privately the educators concede that
¥iss Landau had opened up a question
affecting the right of war veterans to '
preference in public employment which !
must be recognized. She called ~}~n- 'f
t!on to the fact that men up to'- 28
years of a'.:ge, with dependent families,
are feeling the effects of unemploY:lD.ent f
as severely as are war veterans, and :
whlle she offered no criticism of the :
preference extended to veterans she
voiced a plea for recognition of th~ preJ'
dicament of men who are denied a
chance to work because of lack of '
status as veterans.

!11

/

~~1~\,a;;•s~~~rl ~~a~:s\~~ f r . ~

!

nifflhb@f 0£ i:M. Knights of Columbus,
Suffolk Law School Alumni association :
and vice chief ranger of the Catholic''
Order of Foresters.
-.....
The br:ide'~ .going away gown was a.
blue tweed ', ensemble trimmed with
gray fur. · She also wore a blue velvet hat., The couple wm 'l'isi t Canada
and New York ori theira honeymoon
and will return by the Mohawk Trail '
by automobile. The couple will reside i
_in t;tie~.~ewly !u~_!~~-~artment atJ
1'

TO URGE U. S, BOARD
Mayor Currey revealed, that at a con~
feren~e with President Hoover, ar-,
ranged to attempt to sever the r~}
tape which prevents the · transfer Qfi
Governor's island to the citY~ to
·possible the proposed extension of the'
airport, he wil u,.rge on the President·
tlJ_e advantages of a federal planning
board, which the conf.~rence of ed.ulast
c3.!'ors .strongly re90IU.lllended
Week
'
Other suggestions at yesterday's meeting included the id~a of an industrial
'planning board in every state to work,
in c)ose relation.ship With a fede,rall
!Joard.
-~~ ';~1 • r

ma~e·.

./

!
1

1_ _::

~f·

r

-~.,~,

·

/

r~.~1~ili!.!lll'.~t1.~.~~~·~~~~;__~~~
1· ::So.ston )tcws-<l::li.p ::Surcau . f ~(

~o~t~~":ii~~.;:<f~"~'itr~~~ ·
8

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS

Transcript • Boston, Mass,.

'

'

I

Mayor's Group of Educators\
Would Br~aden Scope of \
Unemployment.Needs
Resolutions
1

embodying

the

.r.eque'st j

that Governor Allen call a conference of
n1ayors of Massachusetts cities and select-'.
n1en of towns for discussion of a general :
program, of Public works to meet the r
industrial depression and that the gov- ,
eniors of Stat.es be requested to establish industrial -planning boards that would;

have always at hand the machinery and

l

necessary data to meet recurrent periods l
o( distress. were passed at the third
conference of educators and oth'er leaders
called by Mayor Curley at the Parker
J-Louse this afternoon to discuss a course
ol procedure to allay suffering.

Present at the conference were Frank
P
Speare, president of Northeast;.ern I
1 ·niversity; President John A. Cousens
or' Tufts College; Jeremiah E .. Burke, su- i
~erintendent of schools; Miss H. Adele (
Howe of the State Department of Labor' 1
and Industry; Professor H:it.rry A. W-oos- i

'1:>0ards

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS

ocr 171930
I

EDUCATORS ASK
GOVERNOR PUSH:
JOB~RELlEF
~ ''*"'

Ceremony Performed Saturday at Por,tsmouth

\ i\sks Governor,/
\ for State-Wide
~~ion on Labor
t,•.
-

MASS.

c}c".: 1 4 1930
VIVY.:N GRAY AND
4:RL RYAN ~ARRIED

tt

8 BOSWORTH SFREE1'
BOSTON

MASS.

GAZETTE, HAVERHILL, MASS.

ocr rs 1930

1

::5o.$ton )lcws-\i'.::ll.p ::Suuau

BOSWORTH STREETt

work- cOuld go on ~ninterruptedly year after year.
:Miss Sara Landau of Wheaton College
made two suggestions.., to meet the industrial emergency
Her first suggestion
was that the mayor and his department
heads take account of stock as to what
public works could be started at once and
tha.t in carrying forward such improvements the work be not confined to any
particul3.:r group as was the case at Governor square, where veterans are, preferred She sl)oke of thousands of young
men who were mere boys at the time of
1 the signing of the armistice who are now
out of work with families to support,
men just as worthy of employment as
any other gro,
~er second suggestion
was that the
broaden the scope of
his conferen
I\I\Titing leading bankers and manu
· to meet with the
others to see i
rk cannot be speeded
up. Another thotight'from Wheaton was
that long-time programs of employment
be mapped out for submission to the
Federal planning board, if appointed.
Mayor Curley deplored the fact that so
much time must elapse from the time a
project is ~developed to the actual time
of starting, !llustrating his thought by
reference to the East Boston tunnel, when
months elapsed before permission of the
Government could be obtained. Though
Boston was more fortunate than other
~iUes, where the elapsed time i~ from
a. year and a half to two years, the'11fte1aYs
a.re almost unbearable. In Boston, he
said, plans were under way to prepare
for the winter and he thought the governor should call a conference of oti:ier
mayor.a and selectmen to See what is
being planned, so that the Legislature
might have all possible a.ata on its assem.
that

Miss Vivian Gray of Islington street,
Portsmouth, N. H; and Earl Edward
1 Ryari, 10 Dudley street, were married
Saturday l'!!Orning by Rev. James H.
Brennan at a high mass in the Immaculate conceptiol\'. church, Portsmouth, N H.
The bride wore a white satin gown
in period style with a veil of chantilly
lace caught up with orange blossoms i 1
She carri~d a shower botiquet of roses i
~ and lilies-of-the-valley~ The bride w8.s
attended by Miss Lucille Gray as_ the
1naid of honor The bridesmaid wore ·
• a coral Pink satin gown with a bl8.tjc
velve.t hat, shoes .and black gloves.
'! Herbert L Ryan, brother.of the bride; groom, was best men. The ushers
s were Joseph Lennon of Haverhill and
George Gray of Portsmouth, N. H.
The decorations at the church were
cut flowers and palms while at the
Portsmouth City club, where the wedding breakfast was served, the decorations were in autumn colors. The
single ring service was used and the
, wedding march was played by the ,
l
church organist as the bridal nar:tY..I
entered and left the church
Lan!!\
of Haverhill, catered at the reception .'
The bride's gift to the bridegroom
was a silver cigaret lighter and to the/
bridesmaid a crystal necklace. The .
bridegroom presented his bride with·
a string of crystal beads in a platinum ;
setting, and to the best man a gold ;
piece The ushei-s both received penknives.
In the receiving line at the Ports-', '
mouth City-club, where the reception
was held, were the bric:lal
party,
Charles M Ryan, father of the bride- i .
groom, and Mrs. Susan Gray, mother /' .
of the bride Mrs. Gray 'was guwned) /
in seal brown crepe with hat and shoes!
of the same . color
\
The bride is the daughter of :Mrs. ·
Susan Gray and attended the Ports" i
mouth Hlgh school She is a graduate ;
of the Gale ~o.spital Nurses' '.""'raining f
school ~nd has been engaged in pri- ;
vate nursing. She is a member of the
Massachusetts State Nurses' association.
Mr Rrall is a graduate of St James
High and attended Boston College two
years. He later graduated fro,1,i'!;,;,
folk Law school in Boston
rri'll!Rll@i 6£ 'ffllr Knights of Columlimi, '
Suffolk Law School .Alumni association,:
~~e;i~~ ':~:!.{e~~ger of the Catholll,.,,
The bride's. going away gown was a
blue tweed ' ensemble trimmed with
gray fur.·, She also wore a bltle velvet hat. The couple w!ll '\>isit Canada .
and New York on theira .µoneymoon 1
and will return by the Mohawk Trail
by automobile. The couple will reside I
_ in tp.eir .;iewly furnished~ar~~~nt_ at J

~

bling in .Jan~ary.
It was Professor Doten who thought the

l.,0.·

TO CLEAR W AYF~' :~
LEGISLATI'1E ACTI@N
~

Gov Allen will be asked by the .gi:<icip·

of educ.ators co-operating witlt-M~y~
Curley m a study of unemployri:ien:~ to

___

--- -----~---

,

.

invite the mayors of all :MassachtIB<itts
cities and selectmen of t~wns. to discuss;\.
the. wisdom of the formul;a,t*.o:n'.;or• in-·,
div1dual programs of publid. wo:irks re.;.
quiring legislative authorization which
it is intended to obtain
qu!ckW
possible after the opening of the 1931
session.
At the third of a series of
ences at the Parker House
there was unanimity of opinion
intensive concentration on pu
should be continued.
For the first time, a WO .
a,:.
tor offered definite suggestj~s 'but, a
particularly specific declaratftfu' 'of i!lSS·
Sara Landau of the economics .department of Wheaton, Pleading fcir so.me.
consideration for young men who. wire
not old enough to enter the military,
servi-ce during the world war, but··. w~o" .
are now sufferi11g from unem.ployin~nt,
provoked no discussion.
,
Privately the educators concede that
¥iss Landau had opened up a question
affecting the right of war veter;inS
preference In public employment which
must be recognized She called atten- '
tion to the fact that men up i,;,·· 28
years of age, with dependent fam!l1es
are feeling the effects of unemployme11~
as severely as are war veterans · and
while she offered no criticism · of the 1
preference extended to veterans she /
V?iced a plea for recognition of th~ pre.! 1
d1cament of men who are denied a. .i
chance to work because of lack , of r
status as veterans,

as'

as

to

TO URGE U.S. BOARD
Mayor Currey revealed, tl).at at a con;..' ,
feren9-e with President Hoover, ar-,I
rang:ed to attempt tq ~ever the.: r·ec1 !
tape which prevents the · transfer··. pfi
Governor's island to the city, to -in.B.ke: 1
· possible the proposed exten.$ion of ·the·/
airport, he wil u_rge on the President r
:t}:l.e advantages of a federal plan!ling
board, which the confe,_rence of edtlca!:ors strongly reyonilllended last
week
·
Other suggestions at yesterday's meeting included the idea of an indust~ial
'planning board in every state to work,
in close relationship :with a !,~.i:ral(

.=_~!rd.
__._:__::.:....,

<

Curley to Seek Federal
Planning Board at Hoover
Conference · ·

(i

-

·-;

,,.

I

conference should go a step farther than
the Federal Planning Board idea, by rec·
:ommending a planning board for Boston
and other· places:-

•; -:

Urge He Confer
Mayors to Plan Public
Works Progra,ni · ..,,.."'.,,;

-v,,·t:.



~
~

Y.,oston ::5lews-(tllp Y.,ureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON



MASS.

NEWS, SPRINGFIELD. MASS.

:
I=

,,~
l OFF THE
'ENNA
I
AN T '

ex-1

f

Two- waiters hurri~d to ckar a dinner table lined by 13 faces, each devoid of expression, in a sma.i: restaurant of l9wer 1'.Ianhattan. A miniature of the Great Sphin~ of Gizeh
would have seemed at home with
them, these 13 blank faces.

But that was When the waiters were
present.
Eyes beamed and mouths
were fratned With smiles as the men
began talking. just· a.rter the waiters
departed.
Apparently
these · men
maintained silence _before strangers;
apparently they sought a quiet refuge
for their dinner.

And so it was. It was the weekly
dinner attended by 11 secret service
detectives of the National Surety
company,· a police department sergeant and, lastly, a former police reporter. The latter had a pad of paper
and pencil at his fingers• tips.
"Well, Detective Harkness," said the
former newspaper man, .. I undeV"stand
you are to tell the story of your twoyears' search for .Jflllee, who stole
$20,000 from a London business house.
Sergeant Connolly and the rest of you
gentlemen can elaborate la,ter"

Detective

Harkness and

Sergeant

·Connolly, you may know, are the two
major characters ,vho broadcast for
Nationa1 Broadcasting company lfsteners~ each Wednesday night frOm
7.15 to 7 30 o'clock. They relate actual
secret service stories from the files of
the National Surety company.
And each ,veek these deteetives and
the sergeant, all faµiiliar with many
old criminal cases solved by the com~
pany's s-ecret service force. meet with
the former newspaper man.. And the
latter, Stuart Ayers, now continu~ty
writer of the National Broadcasting
company, writes their story for the
weekly broadcast.
The weekly crime-story program
was first broadcast, in the latter ))art
of August, 1930, and has gained many
zealous supporters since. One radio
columnist termed it the ''best criminal
story series on the air," shortly after
its inception.
Much of its success is attr~buted to
these weekly dinners. Ayers sits at
the head of th'e table, at not infrequent intervals questions those astute
secret service story tellers, and goes
away full of notes. And then, too, he
consults ~he files of the company.
The Natioi:ia

0

J~!}~~f

09

0

Whl'

"\"\?'ing's two children. Lorraine an
David, inspir~d the characters by th
same names in "The Toddy Parties.'
Recently this led to f~mi1y difficultiesJ
Lorraine, being an accomplished litt14
actress, protested that she should pla~
her own part Her father could onl~i
insist that her school hours at Darien[
Ct .• the Wing home, would not Permit'.
As for David, Efi,,~ new pair of skatei
soothed his injured feelings.
·
As • Uncle Toddy,'• Wing has re,
ceived more than 35,000 letters front
1:ety company's offi... boys and girls in the past fou;

/'

one

cials, in instituting the program.
months. During
week he received
pressed the belief that stories of' long 5810 messages.
There are quaint.
man hun:s as conducted by their se- childish requests. such as ''Pleise send
cret serv1c,e department. would tend me one of your story books," or
t? discourage crime.. Their rec_ords .. Please give me a good name for a
I s•-:.ow that 98 per cent of all cr1n1es girl puppy.u
1 Wing decries the fact that children
coming under their jurisdiction have
been solved and the criminals appre- are known everywhere in the verhended.
nacular as ''kiddies.
Such a term. he
To these 11 Secret service tnen who protests, could only have been given
meet weekly there iS one truism famil- by some childless Aunt .Matilda. To
iar to each: .. The trusted man must Wing it represents an elderly term of
be l\ atched; he is fn a position to com- condescension, a thing which children
mit forgery, theft, embezzlement:··
resent.
In thelr opinlon these same trusted
Wing spends his idle hours sailing
men are not criminals at heart, but his sloop, Pampero, along the New
first bow to temptation by taking a England coastline of Long Island
small sum.
This is soon i:_-epaid. sound.
"It's a care-free spirit.'• he
Again tr1feY may embezzle a slightly says... that one acquires sitting at the
Jarg'er sum, again repay. And each ! tiller of a sail boat on salt water.
time they cover the shortage in There's the high seas before you with
manipulating bookkeeping
records, , no traffic si~nal but .... the wife and
but the temptation to take a large c~ildreu are waiting at home...
sum to~ speculation or gambling leads
to their ultimate dovynfall.
Dean Gleason L. Archer; whose
talks on ·•t·i"'W$T'1r:i~S~Uara soPaul Wing. who plays Uncle Toddy ciety'• are ~rd each Tuesday night,
in the National Broadcasting com- had the unusual experience, a short
pany program known as "The Toddy time ago, of receiving a radiogram
Parties.'' which is heard every Thurs- from ~e captain of a steamship out
day afternoon, expounds" the "living on th1 Atlantic, _who had picked up
e
cycle" theory.
the broadcast quite by accldent. The
This theory. he says, was nurtured sea captain had been a student under
from his · own experiences.
As a Dean Archer at Suffolk. law school, 15
young man. married and with two years before. His message was: ""Rechildren, he encountered financial diffl- ceived fr_eat kick Hstening to my old
culties and was often unable to keep dean
on the Atlantic.''
the pantry well supplied. Then he be- f
gan writing children's Stories.
"When my first stories were published/' he relates, "! fancied that my
troubles were over. But the more food<'.
I bought my children the more they
grew, and as they gTe,v they demanded mOre food, and this required a
8 BOSWORTH STREET
greater volume or stories. And that
BnsTON
MASS.
is the 'living c?tcle/'"
Today Wing writes his own stories
for .. The Toddy Parties program. He
has published many of these stories
POST, B0S'f0N, MASS
in book form. al).d has written such
children's books as "The Did and
Didn't Book for Boys and Girls
Should But Don't" and 'The Boy Wh
Bti.rned the Bridge to Buncombe:•

IOV 2 91930

1
~

yi~e·~"''SUC~C'ee'~

=--"---t

yo~ a1;e looking for something different m film fa 1 e, ~ere it is
If

DESK AND CHAIR
.,,.-,fORJOSEPH COYNE
.A /e};k-and-cha)r bi igade of friend
m".aded" the hoI!1E: of Joseph Coyn:
at .2~ ..Br?~dwa)'., Cambridge, last night
and ~ho\\ ered him With congratulations
fn ;;;s recent appointment as secretazy
o. ayor Richard M Rusia:€ll of Cam
bridge. Mr Coyne succ€eds H.alph Ho:
bart, \Yho was appointed bv G .
A~Ien as dfrector ot the hiv· o: e1 nor
Necessaries of Life
1s1on of
_Mr. Coyne is A.,..graduate of the Suf
folk L . a . ~ 1 . class of '28 and wa;
a. football i!ltar at Boston C~llege.

- - - - - - - ~ - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ --- - - - -

":Soston :,-tews-'1:lip :Sureau
BOSTON

8

MASS.

BOSVVORTH STREET

s1

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS•.

OCT 301930

l? 193()

,Ju

ID

STATE-WIDE

May Result From Meet-/·. I;/
ing of ' Educators Furthered by Mayor Curley /

I

REV. FR. SULLIVAN
rlf'
JS SPEAKER TODAY

.

i

!J

Special Dispatch to The Gazette
BOSTON, Oct. 17.-A state-wide 1
discussion of the wisdom of formu- {
lating individual programs Of public
works requiring legislative authorization, to be participated in by the
mayors of all cities and the selectmen of all Jowns in the commonwealth, may result from action yesterday by the group of educators
co-operating with Mayor Curley in a
study of unemployment in the state
The gathering voted to ask Governor Allen to invite the mayors and
selectmen to the conference. One aim
of this discussion will be to obtain
as quickly as possible the authorization necessary
for
construction
l)rograms, when the Legislature convenes next year
Rev. Fr. Joseph F. Sullivan, S. J,
ot Holy Cross college, Worcester, was
one of the speakers at the conference
yesterday which
was
held in the·
Parker house. It was the third the
educational group has held on the
subject.
.
MiSs Sarah Lan'dau, ·c,oJt...the ecl:Jnomic
department of Wheaton, opened up
a. subject for discussion when she said
that some consideration
should be
shown for young men who were _not
old enough to enter th~ military service during the World War, but who
are now suffering from
u~employment.
]¥layer Curley said that at a conference with President Hoover relati\re
to expediting the transfer of Governor's Island to the city, for an extension to the BO.Stan airport, he would
urge the advantages of a Federal
planning board, WhiCb. this conference
recommended last week.
Other suggestions ,yesterday
eluded the idea of an industrial planning board in every state, to work in
close
relationship with
a
federal
board.
Pro~. C. W. Poten of M. I T. spoke
on the need of permanent conferences on unemployment or industrial
depression He said such conferences
should continue after business
recovers from depression, in order to I
make adequate provisions against the J
. time when the swing in the cycle Js
awa:y from prosperity
Budget Plan Decried
Prof. Thomas N.~Carver of Harvard.
declaring that the stability of indus• try is dependent on the stabilization
of purchasing power, decried the
, present system of ~uying on the budget plan. "Buying what you can't afford with money you haven't got"
was the way he deSC!ibed the "orgy
of instalment _buying." He also denounced the policy o"f manufacturers
in calling a large group to rush production of orders and then dis'cbarging employes. ~e contrasted tp..ts

i

~- :)[Q~;J I I IWFlr-,,

Mayor Curley in opining the ltiricheon:
in the interests of unemployment ::oelief today at the Parker House outlined
his recent trip to Washington:and de"."
voted considerable time to the ~'billioit..
. dollar" Mississippi River ·project. ' Th~

1

&FOR
-o C. CITY SOUCITO~
Richard
Evarts Resigns on·
I

Account of Pressure of Pri- i
vate Business-New lncuinbent Takes Office Wednes-,
day-Charles F. Gadsby Ap- /
pointed Assistant

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'to President Hoov:e-r for the develop,.;.
ment of an inland empire with .... great
power possibilities _ ancf\ deepening r·o-r I
the river bed, making possibie low..:, •
cost lransportation and helping r.elieV'eindustrial depression.
·, ·
Prof Frank P. Spee.re spoke on tM:a~·
'latter project is the. one he -presen-te"a,

°fud~st~~\iO~,:~
Wh1cli ha.s· Worked out a- })Ian of ~i:...:.'·
1':1anent·' e!llpiOymEii1t: · . ,
' '>\.-.

van.
At the conference were: ~ n k P.
, Speare. president
of· NOpheastern·
university; Supt. of Schools Jeremiah
E. Burke, Prof~ Harvey A. Wooster of
Tufts, Miss H Adele Howe of the
State Department o! Labor and In-

ct~~~i, i~iv.;q

0

fsti&#.~ra~a~f11~.:

on University, Ar,thur' W. MacLean
nd the Rev Francis J Driscoll of

os};?;? ~...o!!.?.~~

::_1:3-_

ii 1 ~
~1,,,

THOMAS F. SULLIVAi1~
IS,;NAMID BY MAYOR i

Thomas F. Sullivan, president of the·
Harvard Square Business Men's Association, a lawyer '\\Qth offices in the 1
Brattle building, Harvard Square, has \
been appointed by Mayor Russell to
be city solicitor to fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of Richard 1
C. Evarts submitted to the mayor October 3, to be effective October IS.
Mr. Sullivan will have as his assistant Charles F. Gadsby, son of John!
F. Gadsby; of 71 Fayerweather street ,'
Mr. Gadsby is a graduate of the High i
and Latin school and Harvard Uni-:
versity and Law school and is an in- r
structor in Suff~;;;_s:ehool.
(
Pressure of private business is giv-,
. en _by . Mr. Evarts as his ,.i.:eason for i

I

'1 i~~d~~~:~~l 1~ !.~~{~~~f~~~~=rc~~!;
!by

mergers. He cited a rec,ent bahk
: merger which put 400 m.en on tlle:
street.
Th0 fate of the middle~aged woma~.
thrown UpOn her: own ··re·sources,_~·~
said, is a grave problem. Prof Speare
spoke of a great _cor,nbi1;lation '.about t:o,
be formed which would throw more
persons' out of eniplOymerit ~Ud .. ii_
causing him grav_~ concern.
· · ··
Miss Emily C. Brown declared that
Boston and Massachusetts nee_ded Co~
operation <>f b.usine.ss men, chambers
of commerce, w.elfare departments and
unemployment C<?mm.!_ttees in a. practi.;.
cal manner~
~
.,. ~
Prof Roger ,Babson was the g_uesp
Speaker.
Among those present at.. the lunchec;:i:n
i were: Dean Arthur w. MacLea.n.,-.

·~§!_Klallafs

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o~.·p~~;

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~~:o~c.to~i;t,~~~::r
I Welfare; Prof T. N. Carver, Ha1vard
_, Univer.Sity; Prof .John J. Murray., Bo~ton University; R. W. M.cN.zel, ~Ic ..._
Neel's Financial Servic,-~; P1:"of.. Sa1·a.
Landau, Wheaton College; Pr.of Morx:is
'Freidberg,
Simmons
College;
Pr_of
Emily C. Br.own, Welle. ;:3ley College;,
Prof Roger Babson; Prof Frank ~.
Speare, Northeastern University; Pat...
-rick T. Campbell, assistant. ·superin~
tendent of schools; G~n E. LerQ.Y.·
Swe~.tser, Albert :Morris, Boston. Un~ve~~ty; Pr9f Harvey A. W.<>9ster..Tufts College; City Treasurer Edm1,1n~
L. Dolan, Dean Gleason L. Arche.r-,,
S;uffo~School, and Payson Smit~;.
artme:ht of ~ o n . ·
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:Soston :,-tews-'1:h.p :Sur~au
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BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I

MASS

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

QC r '.M 1930
?-I
ng IJ8<'!·"
.
D'ANA C.
MISSING
.
FROM'WEYMOUTH l::fOME

BB.Ear

WEYMOUTH, . Oc£

20-Dana

C

Breed, a. student at Su:ffolk : ~W
~~!°:\,fBohsiton,i dtisappearea. CJILKhe
.
s s s er, 21 Clinton ·road

Wednesday, members of his famuy-ap:
nounced last night.
Fear was ex~~~s:~ bic~~£hat he may have met

1

r:i~~d ~i~~H~~::1

1

if·

2s

Speaker Tells ·of Plight of
"White Collar Men"

ro~rt;:d

j,:,::

,--1s'l900'

UNEMPLOY:MENT}
LUNCHEON HELQ

1

P~JBr~ ~r~,a~~~~I I
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MASS.

BOSTON

TELEGRAM G.1&! IE, WORCESTER,,

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O&o:?:;:::;~"'!'.:;f~:"'tij .

:Soston :,-tews-\1:ltp :Sureau

BOSWORTH STREET

8

ta11'fe i.ds 24 _years old, 5 f'eet 10 f_ricb.es
an weighs 145 pounds. When ast
he was wearing a. light ove oa~
suit, a grey hat and tan hoes.
He ihad been out of ez:8p10
nt :for
shome ti~e and when he' left home· said
e was go~ng to Joo~ ·:tor a job• ,
:

b!en
ue

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-·~. :-~: ,.:;·:·;;:*~ :.~":{·7:·; .. -.

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'~~ws.:<t:l{p ~tin:a~

Y.,oston )l~ws-<t:llp ::Sure.au

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::S6ston :fte.ws-<t:lt.p Y.,ure.au .

8

8

MASS.

·t

MASS

BoSTON

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

STREET

.,,._j,--

BOSWORTH STREET

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AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

OCT f

·,.

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MALDEN NURSE

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,.,,iP..1$5.:·
.

w::

Willi

E Du~Product of the
Side Schools and Suffo}k
Law Reaches Goal
Stu . Y
West. Was Prominent 1n
State Legion.

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th~~;:
of !'aC::.!t ;,:;,·!

) :i(j~

I __ti.o~e ls a charter member
1 m· nunne left here f~;er;~
0

b1idesmaid

is

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::Soston )le_w.s-<!:llp ::Sure.au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOS~~~[) MASS.
1

SEP 'i ~ ~~
4

e,

Eddi~"~()_·:S.;~ G~;£e
Keefe.

V

Lbn~~ ~:~~ \
i

and ~rs . e

1

;;DefiT FROM PALESTINE
. -AT SUFF0&,.1'. LA~C}iOOL ',
,

s1~d~~t1!

,. Aouney Wafa Dejaney, 19,
Palestine. is one of thft'otk Law•,
-wl\,o'" has enrolled at the su
and 1

-HUI

ti!::e y;i9;;r place \
of Y~'::r,_g ~:.!~~

~hool t!oflts~i~s~}~1o

anio:g

the le~ders

,;'t;!dieci~atci~:nJ"pe;.~

Fer;:,:!

~~rdinal
COUege in Palestine and last ~ar Col•

\ a. student at the S1J.oam. Spr ngs .
8
1
Washinir~
,
d
1 e of Law at Washington,
c6~pletion of his course at Su~olk an
later take a. course in Englf • Uy of
ah't. arid hisyoungestisof a. am Wafa
is the
i
father
youssef
~j.ney representative of the i;cuum
Oil ~omPany in the. district O
.. jordanla, and a.lso vice presid~~~f -~
.1Jerus«.lem ·~ambe~ o f ~ ~

tete fnfe~\~ni~ ~nter

at

·

a';fJ;

white lac
s.?- satin with tulle
mings. Si 1° Jure a veil caught up with
orange blo Jstnns and carried a shower
bouquet of bride's roses and lilies of the
valley
·
'"
The bridesmaid wore turquoise blue
chiffon and satin with blue velvet bon, nett trimmed ·wlth pink and she carried
an old fashioned bouquet. The ushers
at the church were Dr Leo F Lynch
of this city and Joseph Regan Of MatI tapan. a, brother of the groom.
A _i:ec-eption followed at the home of
~he brid,e and the couple were the recip, 1e:nts of many remembrances. Late in
the evenL~g Mr and Mrs Regan left for
1 a honeympon and on their return will
1
' re.side at 8 Fremont st, Mattapan. They
will be home to friends after Nov 15th.
r The bride is well known here and is a
I g!adua te nurse of the Boston C_ity hosL!1tal.
The groom received his train'I
ing at T~ch and Suffolk ~ h o o l
. -

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\.
1c
f.
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e
v
g

'...z.,,.

Samuel Pearl of Peabody
Earned Ow:ri Education
io the Globe

PEABOD¥,
Oct 28 - A
Belgfalt
YOJtfh, w~~ came to this city as a poor

immigrant boy and worked his waY.

ra.

--- --

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t

SAMUEL ~ARL
Recently Admired to Bar

through s-choql is amOng the new
group of attorneYs of ithis State who
~a-ye·' takell th,::, oath ,of· dffice~ .He ht.
S,am.~el Pei;r-1,"· 1 D:u.s.tih st, 'son of Mra
Til:~e.and tp.e late_·.~m:Uel Pearl.
'
· _ Attori:uiy. - Peal"l ·'Was graduated f"!"om
Suffolk La.w Scho~ last June. He-~

1

-~<;~h!:ndw:fgh ~:~ 'i!!1t~rt!

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~~~

t..indlng: ttje PJ'.'~ratocy..;.achool ot Suf;'""'"

..

_-____ _

folk Law-, Wher-e he prepared for hia"'
entrance to the Law School.
The new- attorney is pl:atining to 1

open .an c;:,ffice_in this.clty_a.nd proposes
to aid 6.~ancial!y in , edu-cating !ll_s
younger brothers and sisters~ .who also
came to this country with his family
f~m Belgi'!-1~·
,.

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f

' Boston':, famous educational\
resources today were thrown
'info the campaign of · Mayor
.Curley to obtain relief from the
unemployment situation.

IMMJG.RANT YOUTH
ADMITTED TO BAR
Special DJspa;teh

PURLEY
I) .

College . Heatjs
Luncheon
Opening Unemployment
: Relief Camoaign ..
,

trim-1

1

I~

t},jg,

The b r ~ ' . s attractively attired in :

the son',
~ t o 1ocate in MinneaP 12 4 Ada...TI1.s .st.
:
.' - ·.Af wrs MtrY. DU~~~-·· _· "&¢fit .
_
,

..

CRISIS WITH

J\:Iiss Mary F savage, nurse at the
office of Dr C F Lynch, 440 Pleasant
st, and daughter of Mr and Mrs Jere- ,
miah Savage, 142 Palfrey st, Water- ,
town, became the bride of Atty Thos E
;
Regan of• Mattapan at St Patrick's
church, Watertown, Jast evening
The
c;eremony was perform_ed by Rev Dani.el
Re&-rdon; the pastor
Lawrence Regan, a brother of tlie
g.room, was b~st man. and the bride's
sister, Miss Dorothy F Regan, was

Wm E Du~e. ~1nneapo1is, Mi~
former member Of. the NEWS s~!m...
t;·· -now· a pract~ing attorney and a
~
the. Minnesota Bar.
f Malq.en
r"··· Mr Dunne, is a _graduate o and re. ?J. High and : Burdette - college't
Suffolk
~ ceiv~ bis legake tr;{~in!on:ec~·:
::- L a ~ a t e Departmen~ of
in the ~irst year of its orga

1~

51J'bl scuss·

Office of Dr C F Lynch, B;,comes Bride of Thc,mas E Regan of Mattapan. Rev Daniel
Reardon Officiated.

o!

in

OCT 3 193o

+
!~yo!s~~~.o~~:!

ES BAR IN O_Ll,,.,,.S)
, -·'4ti MINNEAP · ...

'

-1930

~

~

NearIY 50 proininent eduCators,
'representing most of ~he univer ,
sities and cpll,eges ~n the Greater
BostOn ai~ea. pl~dged th~ir asstst 1
ance at a luncheon t_endered bY the '.
mayor yesterda:i at the Fark@.r.
House.
The gathering was de,roted to 'l.C
qua.inting the ~oJiege beads prof~s
sOrs. and research workers with: ,
details o~ the unemployment situa ; ,
tion and its consequences in th.~s ': .
district.
A
second luncheon w111 ,
be held at the Parker House next
ThnrsdaY-.at wq._!-_g-~ sugg~stio~s for
a relief program will be advanced ;
and discussed.
LA:BOR LAUDED
In
addressing
the
gathering
Mayor Curley lauded labor for its
accomplishments in workers' relie~
He declared that nearly every bit
o:f reform legislation designed to
aid the worl:.ing man co~ld . be
traced to some labor organ1zatiop.
· Educators and others who have
been viewing the problem from the
seclusion of their studies must now
come forward with definite a.ssis'"·
ance, he 8.Sserted. if America is, to
be saved from. the dole system.
Mayor Curley declared that the
widespread influx of women into
tndus~ry and the phenomenal de
velopment of mechanical equip.
ment were responsible in a largP
measure for the unemployment
crisis.
SUJ?.VEY STARTED
Gen. E. Le.Roy Sweetst~r State
Cor.nmissioner of Labor and In_dustry, said his departm-ent wa~ co~pi!ing data from every· section of
the country for an 'exhaustive stud~
of the s:tuation
Dr John A Cousens, president
of Tufts CoJ.lege wa1•ned industry
against
ign-::,ring
the
havoc
wrought by lay-offs of hundred o:t
men at a time
President Ada M. ComstQck. of
RadcUffe College, declared that
the effects ('f the unemJ)loYme:1t
ai.tuation were clearly'.'Visible :·1n th~
classroom
She sa!d many older
girls. had Deen unable to return to
college becau~e of the drain on.,
:farn~ly f~Iian.Ces
.
.
>t--

. nean .<Hea;ion·.:L.·. Archer,
,

~~!ltlo). atSo said that ·t
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etirO

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'

WALTHAM, lVIASS.

;ClJZZl TO BE·
.

'y"'_

· ··

_\Ci,.,·'··;.·,

I.

Chosen' Fr~m About 800 .Who·'T~ok . Bar Examination in
J;Jy~Only 13, Girl~ in List-JOO Fewer
Approved Than Last Year

1

£AND1DATE IN

.0-'c

WARD THREE

Alfred R

Guzzi of 8 Mague place,

West Newton, announced today that
he will be a candidate for· ward
alderman in Ward 3 at the coming
City ele,ction..
·
He will oppose Alderman Chester A. cPrior, who has been ward
lderman for the past three years
nd, wi. ll be a candidate for re-elecon.
At the last two eilections,
ldermall Prior was unopposed~
A meeting of Guzzi!s campaign
Ommittee will be held. at his home
this evening for the purpose of. formulating plalls for the coming ca:µi-

J
1

paign.
.
, ·.
· GuZzi was born in West Newton,
;was graduated from the N~wton
High School in 1927 and attended
Suffolk *t~lf:.~.?-ool ,for_ one year.

He was reasurer of his class at
Newton High.
·
He is the :first citizen of Italian
extraction to be a candidate for
the Newton Board of Aldermen. He
recently won- a single-ha11ded fight
of eight years' duration for the construction and acceptance by the city
of Ma.gue avenue~ Mague p.lace and
Thomas stree.t.
Nomination papers were taken
out i~ Guzzi's behalf yesterday.

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"Y.>oston ~cws-'1:ll.p "Y.>urcau
8

:So.ston ::,lew.s-,I::ttJ, "Y.>u.reau.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS

BOSTON

HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

OC11
L;,b,';;_<~u, ':uv<,nc-,~l . - ~ : ~ dee

; Mrs
A. B. Edmond;;
s Edna.T hornpson, Mrs. Charles
E. Cook, Mrs. V. E Macomber~ Mrs.
El~ery W. Chace a ~ Mrs. Harold
Brittan, groun· lpade113 will
be
in
charge o.f the,4!.e2:tlis~ •

---==:...._·~::::··'
ENGAGEMENT been made of the
Announcement has ANNOUNCED
engagement of F1ederick H Laurans,
manager of the Para:mount Publix
theater at Westfield, _a graduate of
th_e B. M. C. I?urfee High school. and
M1ss Fan!1y Shuster, daughter of
Mrs Jessie Shuster, 32 Allen street
Bedfo1d.
Mr Laurans is the
of Mr; and Mrs. Abraham

~;_w

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MASS.

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.<~"YEW:_LAW

FIRM.---:-,

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~ / : e e n fot·n1ed £0r i
Laurans of Ca~br1d_E:;e.
Be atten(l~E:~. 1. { fir.m nUme: of. ;
e
New York U7;ivers1ty ~n.9- Jate1· the
-. ""'"-ith: a·u office·
Suffo.lJs..~ S c h o o l
h11ss ~nu.ste-'-·
1430 Massaeh1.i.-·
,vas grJtO"t:ated from h. e Ne1,v Bed:The senio_ .r meniford High _school.
The couple plan
; is· a Cambrid.-,·e;
~1fernik~rlb.~/;1" ii~~~e!·1Ji!1tu.re
Rin(lge ·Tech;,a~d:-:
city or NeW Bedford. .i
r in
s
}:,·ty Hfue,.·htla.>se·.,_.;bepa·es:'t,,
~

·~d A.. Keoh.an Was l
REL
~ Ctn rs TC }117:tP
il.d, a.nd .is a ..grad-,j
Richard Borden Woman's Relief
ke. Jiis father
corps -w-ill meet Monday night in G
.htional schools of
A R h?-11. Mrs. Mary Burke, pres-· f Nally graduated.
ident. wishes all .mez;nbers to be pres- p.lso froin -I-Ia.rv3:rd ·
4.nt at 7 for reJ:"!.earsal for inspection. ~w -sd1ool, and:hhs
-__/ business scs.,siqn
follow.
~i~~e:8°;\.~J~~r

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Wd

is/

P~iil"i~

wiU

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h_

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~:::=::::._-_ __

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been sworn in as an attorney by .,:l:1-e

!-

Supreme Court.· He was graduated ffrom Suffolk Law School in June.
!
is also a graduate of Portland· High ;
Sehool, the School of F~na~ce and the- j

f1-e

Univ-ersity of Pennsylvania.
He is_.,
26. years old,' _the so~ .. of ,Mr and Mrs ,

·solo:rnon Karhn.

1

;.nd their telep~'?~e

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·y-":

-EWS-TRIBUNE, WALTHAM, MASS.

.

':':''.·.··''''"'·'''

Chosen Fr~'.m About 800 _Whri'.T,ok Bar Examination in
· J~ly-·_Only 13, Girl~, in List-100 Fewer.
Approved Than Last Year

:Guzzi TO BE· -~ -~ ')
. CANDIDATE IN
0c WARDTHREE

. Alfre'd R. Guzzi of 8 Mague place,
West Newton, announced today that
he will be a candid3.te for; ward
alderman in Ward 3 at the coming
City ele,ction.
·
He will oppose Ald0rman Chester A. ~Prior, who has been ward
lderman for the past three years
nd, will be a candidate for re-elec1on.
At · the last two e,Iections,
ldermall. Prior was unopposed.
A meeting of GuzzFs campaign
Ommittee will be held at his home
this evening for the purpose of. for, mµlating plans for the coming c;:t:p:i-

l

paign.
·.
· GuZzi was born in West NeWtoil,
·was graduated from the Ne,wton
'High School in 1927 and attended

Suffolk ft~~Jz.~f-ool ,for_ one year.
He was reasurt9r of his class at

Newton High.

·

He · is the first citizen of Italian
extraction to be a candidate for
the Newton Board of Aldermen. He
recently won- a sing,Ie-handed fight
of. 0ight years, duration for the con...
struction and acceptance by the city i
of Mague ave.nue, M. ague place and
Thomas stree.t.
Nomination papers were taken I
out i1,1 Guzzi,s behalf yesterday..
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~oston :ncws-(Lllp ~urcau
8

'.:eo.ston :n&w.5-<CU.p ~ureau

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8

MASS

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I LOUIS t·KARLIN, ROXBURY.

!

MASS.

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HERALD NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

l

SWORN IN AS AT(ORN~Y.
Louis , I.

Karlin of 2980 Was_h!~g-. i

ton st, Roxbury, who was recen_tly. ad- i
mitted to the· practice of law, ~~~'.

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

OCl 1

t,

.r:.;;;;~ ~~-~'T''-f\;'-consequently
..~ .
E. (._
Elle·
Brit
cha1

E

e~~
mar.

the a
the

~~~~
;;,';,,"'

,
to be fitted with sails
ance, but that Work l1as b'
'sl1ould
1
·
·
see tie historic craf

That ::,l1e "\Vill aoain s :
is -a.oub< - 41 because.
the a
sufficient si,:e to ~~::ui,,.-n~ th,
th_ at she will be towed' to
1
sig lt of the gallant old Wal
Off t11e peop~e ,vitli pab:iotif
the memory L f lier gallant,)
cnen1y.

............ _,, ...........

to

:f

A NEW ,l.,A,W i<'IR.W - ~
a-

A

,v Ia,v firm· has been f9r~ed £0r,;
~raetice uncle.l"-~the firm uame.-. o.f;.,
\~f'Keohftu..& Kally; with: an office;

:, ~~tts ~~: ~~~~;a~I1?~~- u·~T~!~~e~~;s~!~}:,

f

ber, Patrick A. M.eutoh~ is .a Ca.mbritlg~ 1•
l <f?-r boy and a graduate of l{_inclge ·T.ech;,::arul;
.

,<

1 ;~
I nt
) ~bde

~~;cfr::i~.f11or n1ore lW,\Z ~ity 11;;,. hJ,S.,·-~e;::
h&o 2Th
two years
David A. Keohan Was.j
0

in
tre
ipor

born in ,vater-forcl, Ireland, and is a 'g~a<l-J
uat4-r of De LaSalle c,ollege. I-Iis fat 1
1er is/
a professor in the nation.al schools of
terfqrd . •J.
Nally gr.a duat.ecl/
at Exeter, .~lass of '17. also from ·Harvard'
college and Harvard Law ,sclhool, ani:1,-h:8.s
practised his profession in Bo13ton previ-

~

us ·to coming to Carnbridg-e. !'J.".beir office
wtll ·be ~pell. evenings ·and their teleph'o.E-e
.n_u~ber 1s .. J·::l80._f~rter.
_
-· ..

or

''•'a.

Echvar.d_

<~~- ~-

LOUIS I. KARLI~ ., , " - / -' ..

·,,...

been sworn in as an attorney bY.· J.l).e
Supreme Court. · He w-as graduate.d ( ~
from Suffolk Law Sc~ool in Jun~. lie j
' is also a
of Portl~nd High l
I Sehool, thegraduateof FJna1:1-ee and the I
;
School
University of Pennsylvania_ •
He i~.-.
26 years old; the so~ ..of Mr .and Mrs l

,
I'Solomon Ka:_rlin_.
(

·

j

~~~l!!il!llil~c:<;,:-,c--=-o.-"ll(..}_~~

7v ~oston ~ws~¢:llp.~umu~
8 BoSWOR'fH STREET
MASS
BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

MASS

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

JOURNAL, REVERE, MASS.

,.. _,930
.')

'

Temple

t"iac(

SHANAHAN WINS SEAT
LONG HELD BY G. 0. P.

r

First Essex Senator-Elect ':
Breaks Tradition There

f Mayor Casassa appointed Mr. G

CHARLES GILFIX CANDIDATE

1

FOR COUNCILMAN AT LARGE :fl< as the :first Chairman of the Ii
j vere Traffic Commis~ion, whic~ i
Charles Gil:tix of 102 Campbell av-· stituted the system of traffic bgh
enue who has been a resident of this ' and ordinances, which has :result.
city 'for the past 16 years, has an- ' in promoting the safety of Reve'.

(

nounced his candidacy for the office from automooile nazards.
-0f Councilman at lar!e.
His an- J A~ Chairman._of the w_ard Two :It
nouncement has been hailed with ex- , publican Committee dunng the pa,
treme pleasu,r ,in many quarters, j two yea-rs, and for many years pric
since he ha
'<';,,. urged for many/ to that, Mr: Gilfix has spoken .o
O
years to run "i ,r office; but has in- many -0ocas1ons at the. Revere Cit
variably declined because of the greit/ Council and on Beacon Hill, when
pressure of his m. any business inter- ever the c!vi'I interest of the City o:
, ests. In 1928, during the first cam- Revere was mvolved.
: paign for Mayor~ Andrew A. Casassa, · Mr. Gilfix, is a director in man,
Mr. Gilfix, allowed the use of his! civic and business institutiOris in
name as a · candidate for this same i Greater Boston and Revere, includoffice, stating that the city required lng the North Shore Finance Cora sacrifice on the part -0f its loyal poration, the Revere Credit Union,
citizens for the community's welfare, I Nautical Gardens, Inc., and the ;First
seeing in the candidacy of. Mr. Cas-1 N at_iona! Ba:'k _of Revere, • of which
assa an opportunity to restore Re-/ he 1s Vwe Pres1dent. He ,s also an
vere's financial c_ondition aiong mo- activ~ member of numerous social
and fraternal organizations, including'
the Esgies, Odd. Fellows, Elks, Masons and Mystic Shrine. He is also
an horrornry member of Revere Post
~40, Veter.ms of Foreign War!f, liav1ng thus been h<:mored for his many

Soeclal Disoatc~ to the Glo:be '

LYNN, No,_; 10-:'Th~ e1ect1ori. ~f Wil..
liret'n. F .. Shari~han of Swampscott .a.s

State Sena.tor dn the J.st Essex District
over the pres~t incumbent, Frank P.
Osborne, mar~s the- ··first time that a
)

'
t

WIL:LIAM ;~:~~~"N'AlT.A.N

Democrat has been ~osen to this post•
tion 1o-r more than. 'SO years;, and the
first time that -a. .Democrat has repre..
sented this distriCt. ·sine& it was re ..
districted, 20 ye.a:J~-~~o.
Senator-eleCt ' Sl'i~l'lahan two yea.rs
ago lost to Mr Osborne b:y 2000 votes.
He kept a.t the ~_pa.i,gn and was sue..
cessful this year, · winning by more
than 800 votes.
·
Ex-Mayor .Asa T. Newhall w.as the
last Democrat in thS State Senate from
this district, 35 yCq,rs a.go. At that t1me

acti".'ities f.·n· the i.'.'terest of the ex'serv,ce men of this Post. Mr. Gilfix is married to the daughter of Mrs.
R L. Aisner, one of ·the oldest Revere residents-.,. and has two sons,
r o _:ttend the local high -~hoo!.

the dt;strict included only five wards

of X..ynn. When it was changed· over..
Ward 6, a Democratic ward, was included, along with Ward 7, glving the

Democrats a little better margin but
never enough to overcome the strong
Republican vote.
Senator-elect Shanahan attribute.d
his election to the independent vote.
He ha.s made no publ.ic a.nnounqements
as to bis policies, merely maintaining

t~

'. ~~t
~~; v~?ri,f:{ ~l ~:as~:r!~~:
I wealth and its citizens.
.

1

Mr Shanahan was boni In Rocklan

but bas spent practically all of his life
' in Lynn and Swampscott. He was
graduated from Lynn Classi~al High
School and in 1913 from Holy Cross

i

College.

1

CHARLES GILFIX

In 19~ he received a degree

~h~mM~'!!~Mti - ~ ~~! ;;::~
later.
He: was one of the fl.rst employe$ of
the United States Treasury Department to go.. to :S.o.ston, where the regional o_ifice ot the w..- Risk Bureau
wa.s established, and wa.s prominent tn
assisting wounded veterans in obtainlng'·com.pensa.tton.
.He · has been .engaged tn the-. lnaur,,.
atj.c.e 'business a.s a broker and· since

r::~ig t~! o~~~ ~aA~~ar:a;!~J~! '.
6

d'Ward B; O'Brien,

'

,,

dern business lffies
It was noticeable during the whole of that campaign that Mr Gilfix was more in-:
sistent that the voters elect Casassa
for Mayor than to send him to the
City Council, with the result that /
although a candidate for the first
, time, and hardly mentioning liis own;
name, he received the handsome vote 1
'of 2891, coming in fifth in a freid of'
eight candidates of whom fOur were i
elected
I
/ Mr. Gil~x is 4·0 years of age, and '
·a g1adu~te of the .. Newton Grammar
I cmd High School~. and of H~n~vard
j ~o~lege i.n 1913, wher.e he specialized
f m the science of .gove:i- nment. economl lCs, statistics, business ad-miilistratio11 and accounting
He is also a .
,graduate of_ the Suffo~ •L?"'!:'.'':wol,.i
ih~u:i...,-,,. - ~ , , , ~ ~ ; ~~ --~"'-!p

'

-

- --- --

-------

---------

-

/

i Y.,oston

)1¢ws-<I'.l\J, ~Ul"¢4 u

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

g BosWORTH STREET

MASS

MASS

BOSTON

t.AZETTE, NORTHAMPTON, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

OCT 2 7 19~f'

001201930

::r:r.-1

-g~tvfo

-roads-1:~--t--,;.;;t t~~u
a~ampton and North- -;
~
f
Among 'those who appeared be- i
fore the Massachusetts supreme
court in Boston on October 22d, 1.o
be sw6rn in as members of the
Massachusetts Bar was Claude S.
Hartwell, formerly of Northamp- (,
ton. Mr. Hartwell, the son of Mrs.
\Villiam G. Rice, formerly of
B1idge street, attended the public
schools in this city. He also went
to Williston seminary in the class
of 1921. He received the degree of
Bacheltfr of Laws from Suffo
l a ~ , Boston, in Fe
1930, when he graduated .'with
honor, having maintained tl\e :S.:¢,C~
---.oriel highest s~holastic standing.·1n
the sch001 !or the four year period. For ten years Mr. Harh•tell
bas beeh associated with tlfe Paper indD;Stry in various 'New England cities .·'a:nd is wen knO"\Vil -in
the Paper Trade of t ·
States. Mr. Hartwell in
gage j.p the practice of

l:rok~ a
ampton.

·----.--

I

BY HOWARD FITZPATRICK

;,~!d~d~s~~r ":it:/i;':,,;!§'!~d' lfh:v;:~~1
%,

A' Methodist preacher in a little judging from the progress he ha~ m3de
town in Maine, the victim of an acci• to ·date. Some tJrne ago he resigned
dent which. It.as confined him to his from VVEEI to take charge of piant
1

bed

for

several

weeks,

recently

I

/
0fid!~a~ehew~f i~oi~1 1
t;~~~ /

operatio_ns at WTAG lll Worcester, now

wrote the Chicago offices of the ~~~e~ !?heer':
1
NBC complimentinc them on one of new duties with station WWJ there.

• • * .,

;.~eil'.' broa~ca•ts, and aclm:itdng that;

i

he had ne•er been so tliscouraged in
Six cities in the country on six differ; bis Jif'e as he was during- his illne~s, ent nights ln the week fu1ni:;h late evenuntil he heard '"Lead, Kindly Light" ing dan('e music over the Columbia
com- ,.-r
rad,"<>.
Bro:adcasting System. For e·xample. on
...
"" n
Monday Sammy Watkins and his orchesThis particular hymn he wtote was tra is heard from Cleveland: Tuesday, 1
responsible for his rapid comeback even Mickey Alpert and his Cocoanut Grove
more quickly than his docto1s predict• Orchestra from Boston; Wednesday,
ed. "Radio is a. miracle," he concluded, Raymond Paige and his KHJ orchestra /
"a much greater one than any of us f1om Los Angeles; Lloyd Huntley and i
realize. I'm sure I can never thank you his Hotel Lowry Orchestra' from .Mi.n-,;<!
enough for what it had meant to me neapolis on Thursdays, Friday br1ni;s ,'
during those da!'s
il!ness "
~hoe~fr:e1~:.0 ~n~o~!~t~~nngd
Lillian Morton, youthful prima dona evening Jae:~ Denny and nis orchesh a .
!~~:t:i~~ M~. Royal Hotel,_ Monti eal,
1
0
e
The new Chk;g; h•eadquarterS of the
~~ltE:r Dam1 oseh who has achieved NBC houses the largest broadcasting
success in grand and comic ope1 a, on studio in the world: Six studios occupr
the con-cert stage and in the radio Ileld, more than 240,000 cubic feet of space,
has only recently returne_d from a tour with 5S,OOO square feet of sound-proof
around the world Jn tlte South and material used to insure quiet operation.
West l\fiss Morton is a prominent figure ln this modern ra:-dio plant erectetl atop 1
on', the air for ber ir,iterest)ng pro- lhe ,vorld's largest building, the Mergrammes
ot - semiclassical numbers chandise Mart. a staff of 200 emplo~eeS
interspersed with popular releases of and 400 artists and entertainers find
t!-le day
eni}.,loyment.
1

0

L·,.

I

-;kea!~et, a~ to~;~:e~!p:e~~c~re;!~~ .'
t!ri;.1:We v:~inf a~h:Br!~:; ~l~~~l t~f

. . "' "'

:~:~eN~~h~:~~or~;a~~e \l~;~~te;'~~~;?Ists, concert masters, and orchestra
leaders "on their own hook,"
Ross
Gorman..can perform exv.ertly on 21 instrumenlS,· Andy Sannella is the master
of 17, whilt'! B. A. Rolfe, direCtor of the
orchestra, is an accomhlished cornetist
• • • •
Roger Ellis, formei lY operator with

---

~Ul"<UlU

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

Bos TON

i

!

. Speeches

.....

delivered
1

over the air by

f ~;:rn t~!ea~~ C LSy~;

ea~~uT~~=~;;

evening on "Laws That Safeguard Society," a1e w1·itten in a little log cabin, 1
,ne.ar Norw.ell.
The. d,ean of Suffolk
Law School, B.oston, spends much time 1
in thiS ideal spot, for when not writing
l1e i.s' fish;ng in his privately stoc~ked
trout pond or entertaining prominent
statesmen

---------------------------

1'

-

Y.,oston )1-,iw.s-'1:lfp

!:~~\~rJ;;·j

.°f.,

Many members of the Lucky Stt ike

1$.l.,\;,.,;.-_....................-..

\

-

1

-

OCT4

I WEST ROXBURY NOTES

.
-As usual, 1 the Choir is arranging
and planning effectively for the new
year They a1 e publishing a program
of fund rai?ihg activities, choir parties, bustI!ess meetings ,et,c Mr. Nelcon Raymond, choirmaster, and Mrs
Rehling, organist, are working en~
th,usiastically One neW feature is a
publ'ic business meeting, which is
open to all. Lars Svensson and Clemens Fischer, chairmen 1\/Iiss Miriam
Blake, '1.ostess
LLght refreshme·nts
-Dr Summerbell spent the vacation
in the · Reserve Corps at Fort H G:
Wright, Fishel 's Island, and at the
Chicago University Divinity ~Schoc~l,
whe,!e he specialized in the P.sy-9hoJc,gy Pf Religion. He se,cured from it
·tne- · idea: of the great teaching· 'Vvork
tJ.1.at c~n be done by parents He ex:.
pects · tq. ha'.Ve, an organizaticll of par·
ents that will consider the.ir prob, lems and study the best al,1.thOrities
ori the subject.
___:,Sta'nt,on R' White, secret~r'y to
M\i.yor Curley. is one of the 90-0 freshm~n enrolled at S1M]olk
achoo! '<._
,-;Mr. Waldo J. 1 s. ;@;. WWi'"known
oIP.t~~ian,, was on· Se!)~. 25 ele:cte(l as
'sQrgea:11.tLat-arms of tlie .· ..M:assachui •.,

La~

i

t s,·,2,i~~~~7qt~-~~· ·._Assq:c~t2£Jf~~}:

· s1
-------~-------- - - - --

- - - - - - - -- - - - - ~ - -

'

)5oston ~~ws-<tlip ~UT~au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

~oston ~~ws-<I::lt..p ~ur~au

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

r

8

MASS.

BOSTON

WEYMOUTH
GAZETTE-TRANSCRIPT• E .

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS,

~~J!J

t

~
~---

to- aetecffvesquadS - an

~~

police~e_i:i: One item was a ~21.:i; dona~}on to a. church.
A

~

_.,.,.,

y OUTHLAW
STUDENT MISSING
·e
outh police last ·: ·night were

Y:(} f'

.

)M

~~r.lE
,ss

SWORN IN AS ATTORNEYS ~!f$1
,,-,~ml
E • d
p
• L
• M ·

· ·
.
F ar l ey, C orm1er, D orn,. ·.C e 1·
ia, G an l ey an~ Clil)..to,:ii,.·;i:d.-'i;,
'J[ane nt.tJe to ractice aw in assa- young man
Wednesday;
Sp,
cltus~tts---Take Oath Before Judge Pierce ,wttha sud;;
ii& _h,o'me· i
-minated his
in Boston.
town~ BOston
bjcome "~!
Aniong the 211 :voung men and
pany. He-,

::Soston ~~ws-~llp ::Sur~au
8

FRIDAY, O C T O B E R ~ )

.

J,:,.-ft

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

~~~,o.._~~--

SIX BROCKTON ,MEN ARE

as ed to help loCate Dana C. Breed, 2'4year-old Suft'oJk Law School student,
reported ~ o m his residence,
21 Clinton road, East W"eymouth, since,
Wednesday afternoon, when he left
home presumably to attend his classes.
So far as cari be determined by police
he ha~: but little money with bim when
h"'

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

MASS

It

Tran script - Boston, Mi§~.

,bed as

women who took tJ1e oath as attorney and counselor-at-law, repea.tiil.g the oath as read to
them by Clerk of Courts John F.
Cronin, Wednesday in Boston before Judge Edward P. Pierce were

six Brockton young
A. Farley, Jr., of 15
Edward A. Cormier
street, Vincent J..

being'\

t,~»f wteighs

, o:e~el:v:ed by\
,t ·Breed hlld
.ud they tearJ
~:me strl<;ken I
of hl.<s hq:me

men, Willian1
Bassett i'oad;
of 232 Court
Celia of 232

Pleasant street, Kenneth Dorn of
26 West Elm t=:rra.ce, Edward P.

suffo1'-"t;i_w s~t'oo1

~"'

, , /,,
·



.-

Trustees Convene

.

--- '

·

of the

The monthly dil:fe: ~~~~~gwaS held
trustees of Suff,olk a A .._,on.,,.. tho.Se presin the Parker House
m .Archer of. the
\ ent were Dean Gleason L
f the board
; Law. Schcol and ~e~~~~to~, former at-

'\

1
\ President 'T-~~~ \ce president .Joseph F
\torney gener:J, v
vv·i ot R £vans,
O'Co.nnell; secret~ry, Cen~~Sav. ings B.ank: '\
\ president of the Fi~e .J n1e-s A Swift, and

I
\"rrb~:~~~:;:~ i~~~~~- ~~·n~ .....-~.....
ex-attoirneY gE-ner! A~cher
Professor Hiram
·~

. ~ _"'"~""~~"'~,",,. ,
1-a'

Spillane of Huntington stre~t, and
Frederick W. Ganley, 63 Harvard
street.

Edward J Spillane is ;. graduate
of the local schools and the Sufa
fqlk t'\\W-scnool.._c;Ja,lj~ of l.930
is @illPlUJ eel a.a,..~ mail clei'k · at the
South station, Boston.
William A

Farley, .Jr, is the son

of William A. Farley, 15 Bassett
road. He is a graduate of Brockton
Higb school, Holy Cross and Boston
University. He passed the bar exams
VINCENT J. CELIA.
last spring
Among New Lawyers.
Son of Assessor.
Edward A. Cormier is t~e son of
Assessor and Mrs Edward A cOrmier teaches appl'eciation of music at 'f;.he
of 232 Court street He passed tlje
bar exams several months agO and
will be engaged in the practice of
law with City Solicitor Thomas w
( Prince He is a member of several
French orga111izations, ·including the
Club National, Garde d'Honrieur and
the St. Jean de Baptist society
Kenneth Dorn is the son of Mr
'and Mr~enry Dorn of 26 West
Elm ,tetrace
He graduated. t:.rom
Brockton High with the class of
1923, Harvard College in 1927, where
he was . awarded an A. B degree,
and from the Harvard Law school
last June He passed the bar exams
two weeks ago and is associated in
the practice of ·1aw with Judge
Herbert C. Thorndike. He was a
track man at High school and for
three yea.rs represetited Harvard on
the track. He has won two scholarships, one at High school, the other
f at Ha+vard.
He is a mein.ber of the
Y. M. C. A. and Y M. H. A. and

y v:ce!t ~- Celia, son of Mr. and
:Mrs George M~ Celia of 232 Pleasant street, is a native of this city
and former president of the Emf!~h':i~et~soy;~d
Celia is a graduate of the Brcckton
grammar and High school3 and re ..
ceived bis bachelor of laws degree
from Suffolk Law school in Febru•
ary, this year
He was trea.sure1
of his class and one- of its mos1
popular members.
Atty. CeHa for several years ha.,
been connected with a Beacon street
Jaw firm and intends to engage in
the general practice of l~w in Boston --and this city.
Frederick w. Ganley is the son oi
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew E Ganley
of 63 Harvard street. He is a gradu·ate of Brockton High school, the
Bentley school of Accounting and
Northeastern University. At present
he is engaged as a public a-ccountant with offices in Boston,

.\ -~~-----

B~~~~~h~~1!n~f ~ft~

CY, MASS.

::e.oston :,-?¢ws-(t:[lp ::e.ur¢au
8

":Soston :news-(t:ltp ::e.ureau

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

8

::€',oston :,-?¢ws-(t:lip ::Sur¢<1U

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.
ENTEltPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

·-->.S

t

~d'l'!'e'IJTS

policemen.

t;o- -

dete

~

One it ec ive

-

squads

GAZETTE-TRANSCRIPT, E. WEYWTOUTH

,• 01,\ \ ~ '

\)\'., \

ail

tJ-~n to·a Church. em.,.was a ~7.51J dona-

-~Vol. L

V ~-

:-

u;, I"IO. "t"-

\V~YOUTHLAW

e
1 ed toou~T~~~f~T l'flSSJNG
as
loCate D ast . n1~ht were
year-old Suffolk L
ana C .. Breed,

DANA C. BREED
MISSING FROM
SISTER'S HOME

help

2'4reported ntt •
paw Sc~ool student,
8
21 Clinton road
hJs residence,
Wednesday affernoon
ey{:1outh, since.home presumably to ai:te:d ~- he left
So far as c3.ri be deter _
is classes.
he ha,.: but little moneym1:1tehd ~Y police
,-...,, J.ofr.
WI
hnn when

East°W·

Law

I

Student

Disappeared ,

Ten Days Ago. Illness
,

Believed

''

Cause

An intensi'Ve search for Dana C •. ;
Breed has been st~rted in the prdn- ;

cipa een1terS in New England a.nd New
1:'ork

Breed who

is a

S

olk

~,"8.tudent has been :miss
8

BOSTON

·, .

the ·home of hi,s sister7 21 C1intouEast Weymouth since last We_dn.iSd
Relatives fear t:hrut the - yot.ii1g m.8.ll.
inay have become stricken -with ~ sud~.
den illness.
" -'t
,
Breed formerly made his .hoome- 1"2 · Arlington and !had just ,terminated his

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

Transcript - Boston, M~§S,

a,fflliation'S with a well known--Boston
concern and waS about to ~~come eOlD.nected with another company. H-e 116
· 24 year,s old and is described as being
5 fe<l't 10 inches ]n helght,and wleighs
,about 145 pounds.
. · ·'
. ..

;' 1930

N
ot a word has· been o:-ecei:v:ed by
j relatives to indicate that Breed 'had.

:

i gone on a vacation trip,and they f-.r. ·
f th1<t · 'he ma.y !have become striQkeu:
of his h~me1

! w!Uiin a short distance

Suffolk Law
·1

L~e~.

c ool
Trustees Convene

The monthly dinner ~eeting of the·
trustees of Suff,olk Law School waS held
in the Parker House Among thoSe present -were Dean Gleason L Archer of the

,___ --~

:Soston :,-?¢ws-(t:ltp ::e.ur¢4U

!

8

i ~:~i:ec:t00~~~!~e~~~~~o~: ~~:m~~a~~.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

j torney

I

genera I; vice. prcsiden t Joseph F
O'Connell; secretary, VVilmot R. Evans,

I

ex.atto,rn.ey gE.neral James Sa.v.in.gs. B. a.nk;
pre. si.den. t of.·ch·e·· Fiv·e· Ce n. t.s. A. Swift, and
..
Professor Hiram J Archer



L-,~"h::··~~:~~ A;.;~;~~ n~.:..:=:=;-L.~.

PUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.

::e.oston :,-?¢ws-(t:llp ::e.ur¢au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

ATLANTIC
COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

0

• """•-u: .Y
.1.. "-":~--.rlt.no
is a t:w
. a~aeo nas ct.n
E u g ~ car g-ara"""
~ . Y.ers "Was ~;I1eupgorn t:he lot I
LE
~ a n tor.
~

NOVICK IS
SWO.R.N AS.

Leonard Novic.
ATTO.R.NEy
Mrs Abraha
k, son of
street "Was ni NovJck of 7o :;r. and
at law bef sworn in as a
or<'ross
Supre~e 'J or~ .Justice Pi n attoJ>neyc"husetts on ~c1a1 court ~ce in the
.Attorney 1v e~nesday 'of tht Massathe Loweu hig~Vlck is a gradi W1•ek.
or 1926,and
b SChooJ With
ate or
!aws degree /e eiV""ed his b the class
in Bosto.n,

Wi~;:rn

S~.trolk L achelor of

the c1'ass o:~1001

')

in:~f~'!..i!n~\~;;::'

ar7:;1;,}~.
wher/Je r_~s teaching in tl;i<i; .m~ti;;
su,pervis:or's course - of· .:th<> ·Staj)e<
Teachers' college.
-Mrs, Ne-.i~¥rll'.
was•formerly Miss Alice Crawford 'of
Colby road.
· ·
\
· The Junior league o:r the Atlantic M~ E.. churCh meets
at 3: 30. . • Recently eiecte
are . ;~lean.or P:randy, - p
Edith' Dartt, tre1<surer, arid- Lilii:a;n
Larsen,' secretary. · Girls ,·.: of 'the
junior age are· welcome to at_t$d
the meetings.
. ;
, ·, '
· - ·" Jos·eph_ Farringtoii, of''.'
street, entertain!S<l.: g\ies'ts/
wichport tl:le f.f~st ot. t
·
'_Atlantic arld'-"Quliroy
be- glad to kDow.r·
Ward Whitcher · is:,
co
'
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BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

NEW~

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BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

MASS

MASS.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.
EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS.

,..y

j

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OGT241930
o n : ~ mark.et.

BOSTON

The

19aQ

OCT 3 11930

'
policy~!

, com.pap.y is, slowlY and systernatlcally

manut:actured, at present, rather thar...
adding thereto."

Samuel Pearl
Opens Offices

For Law Practice
i

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,Samuel Pearl,
who
recently
passed the bar examinations, being the only Peabody young m.an

to successfully complete the tests,

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LOUIS I

KARLIN

. :

be;n sworn in as aµ attorney by t.he:

~r~~e~eqo<fi~!:w ~e

w.~i~

J~~~uat:~

!

is also a ~ U a t e ~ o r t l a n c t ·High~

t~: i

!~~~~~s;~e- ~~h~i:!~ri~:0!-:s:s:~.
I ~l1r:i~z: K.1:;.uft~e

<l:~e
son Of Mr and Mrs

'.:eoston ~ews-c.I:ltp :&ureau
, -g

BOSWORTH STREET

Bil.sTON

~)·""

't-~

MA.BS

.;..~

-"'cc-=~-*,.J

/"
1~.,---{~

.t~

SAMUEL PEARL
has this week opened up an office
for the practice -0£ law in
this

city. He will make his quarters
at 24 Main street. Mr. Pearl was
formerly
associated With E. A.
Hershenson. He is the only son of
Mrs. Tillie Pearl, 0£ Dustin street, I
and graduated from the ..cs~--""'I
school a short time ago.
ecffl'l!'!t'!:'e'B" in the Peabody
scho{lJs.

'.:eo.ston ::s?ew.s-(!:ltp '.:eureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

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Arthur ~onin Jr., Who
Received Diplom~ •.
Given Patty by
His Parente .
._::.\lla.rlh-or-O~Arthur.~in~

Jr-~-

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··'\V~~>t

i:~g~iv~~;~~~::- .·~~~~·tJ!P~;.J
,.

~C1se.s 1 ~ ev€lllillg~.!,$'"fi,B -tender~L
a 1e,ception. party at Willia~s ".f'av,,.·
ern toi11.owiil.g the- graQ,ua'tion.
A;
!firge: ri.uinb~r -0f
ri~atiy~ . an..:i't
friends were present When a.:'1n'o1::n. !
. ~.'9.Y~Pl~ .so;e.ial _time~ wll<S he}d: :·.A,

"9'-1'1,'i~er w.as· £t'rved by the l;iosts ... --: 5
,c Wiilfa:m Ken:ned;y~ tqa.,it. i

~t;~

act_ed

:·~:~~~~~;!~tr~~a~:i~1t

w~:::~:~w.tlir,'
<-~~.

sp-eak'mg, .. 1<·:olio,"allg . t'J:ie

, , - - - - - - - _ _ _ 1 _ _ _ _~ - - - - - - - · -

- -

:iii]
A~·th:UF .- .

dniner,

,{ .. ~~,.,:GU>~Ps ;sfteet ..._He

~1-~!eeff~1a~a"~~1 t~~i~~1e~1i~.;

in CfaS•s eVen·ts-· ',dUrin:'g · Thi$' H)gh
.::;c.:hoo:l- co.01..i::i.tef. Be 1vill enter stltrolk
Law s·OhtjQf ,in the f'a.lL" .
~
The guests- v.~e:re: .l\'Ir. 8.nd Mrs
...4...rthur Bonin, ~M:r-.
al;l.d
Mr.a .. A.
Rougeau. '.:\!Ir. and
::.VI.rs.
Eid.,v-Rr<l
Kelley. Mr." and .:.\irs.· Tim Hel~·itz
of D-0rchester, Mr. a_nd l\lhs ..Qeoi-ie
.oe1nard o.t Woi.ce..st~ir, Mr._ and M11:,.
Archie lVIa,c•Donaid · Or Hu-dSOil; l\'I-.·.

~:~~i!

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~I~!~

~~~::~de~~:;n;_r~a:;

Can1bridge,
B:e'.rbert
baierello..~
_i;-"'1 ank Helvitz of :Do.1;.cesfer,
lVIr~.
~ua ..."lelson and Arthl.fr ~D..in,:_Jr.

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BOSWORTH

BOSTON

flinstou Nrws-C!J:!tp fliur:enu

STREET

8

MASS.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

OCT 251930

Mayoralty Campaig1 <toUpen______ _
_Jn Earnest Next W ednes_day;
'-i 1,/
Mc Vann To Start Fireworks

BOONE~ HAS BEEN ,·
ACTIVE IN THIS- CITY

Council President Promises' To Inform Citizens Of
What Has Been Happpning in City Hall
The big news of the week in the
mayoralty campaign now going on
is that things will start to hum

directly after the state election.
next Tuesday.
Candidate James
E. McVann told The Times last
evening that he is going to challenge Mayor Sullivan's record and
go after him strong on
several
matters that he thin.ks the average
vote~ ~~l_ b~ in_teres~ec;l in.._ ¥r~
Ii,Vann-spent quite a -Iittle~rlihe
;resterday in city hall, part 0£ it
-with the city treasurer, Elmer J.
Foley, whom he said co-operated
· with him in digging out the information desired, and the remainder of the time with city auditor John A. Lynch, who was also
helpful in furnishing data as the
candidate asked for it.
/
Mr. McVann went to city hall
with a long list of items in w}:i.ich
he desired accurate information,
and when he launches his, campaign next week he will use no
hearsay information, he saYs, but
only faets that he himself has ver' ilied by personal interviews with
city hall officials, such as the auditor and treasurer.

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' 'I will conduct a clean. but vigorous campaign.,'' was the substance of Mc.Vann's interview
with The Times, ' ' and I believe
tha..t the mayor's record for the
pa~t two years is open. to criticism
in. a great many spots, and I will
go after him hard on. his record
alone, avoiding personalities entirely.
/
,
Mr. McVan.n filed his nomination. papers yesterday, sen.ding to
the city clerk only two hundred
signatures out of the fifteen. hundred his workers had
collected.
Mayor Sullivan will probably. file
his today, and ex:peets to file Just
enough out of his large collection
to assure his name being on the
ballot.
The primaries ~re Novem~ 12.,
, the day following .Armistice day,
and interest in the coming city
con tests is increasing daily as the
time draws nigh for balloting.
Organization work haS
occupied
the attention of both mayoralty
candidates for the past several
days, and both men express themselves as much satisfied with the
way things are going. Mayor Sullivan claims to have practically all
his £ormer organization intact, and
held his first meeting last evening in the new headquarters over
Woolworth's store. His campaign
manager is Fred Shea, as last year,
and his secretary is Edward B.
N"eenan.
The mayor in.tends to
open branch quarters in.
every
ward in. the city, the first time
this was ever done, which m.ay be
taken as an. indication that he
realizes he has a hard fight on his
hands.
The
McVann
committee
is
headed by Wilbur Merrill as
chairman., which signifies that a
veteran in things political is at
the helm. The several ward committees will be organized this evening, at the
McVann
meeting
which is to be held at 8 o'clock in
the campaign headqua:Pters over
the Royal candy shop.
Mayor Sullivan claims that very
'ew omissions from the ranks are
oted thus £ar, and states that the
_

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MAss

BUDGET, REVERE, MASS.

OCT 3 11930

few who have left his crew are
the ''regulars'' who get on each
n~w prospects bandwagon. every
two years.
Councillor McVann is
m.uch
pleased with the ine..reasing expressions of confidence in his candidacy, and it seems to be a £act
that each week the McVan.n sent~ent is stronger than the prev-i.ous week.
;.New names £or the council race
al;].nounced since last Friday are
Timothy Dorgan, who nearly was
elected four years ago; John Devaney,
James
Linehan, former
member of the board of health,
:Arthur Teague ' ' the electrician,''
and Bernard Nangle, who has
made the run a couple of times
before.
The list now numbers
abou~ nineteen, of whom ten will
qualify a week from Wednesday.
The eighteen council candidates
are Tracey, Harrigan, Tumelty,
Craig, Brown, Regan, Nagle, Dorgan, O'Shea, Cassidy, McNamara,
Husein, Duggan, Clancey, Puska,
Linehan, Teague and Devaney.
The school committee list remains the same, and all had filed
their papers yesterday, namely Osborne,
Birmingham.,
Hallowell,
Isaacson, Ryan, and Kiley.
The time for filing nomination
papers closes a.t five this afternoon.

We Might Mention
William :F'. Regan., council candidate, first ran £or office when he
was on the slate £or member of
the gove;rn.or's council, and p_olled
several thousand votes.
He was
in city hall as secretary to Mayor
Bakcman for a long time. Mr. Re~
gan was graduated from Peabody
B:igh school, St. .Anslem's Prep
silhool, Burdett college and-..S_uffolk Law school, and passed--rnll'bar -a l@W J a.ES ago.
He is a
pra~t~~Wg attorney with offices in
Peaboay···square.
Mr. Regan has
covered the city with placards and
should poll a handsome vote.
Morris Isaacson, · well
known
Peabody business man, is making
a vigorous campaign for the school
committee. He has a host of wellwishers who believe he would lend
strength to the school board.
Mamet
Husein,
Americanized
TurkiSh-born
council
candidate,
has filed his n.omin.a.;tion papers.
Friends of Daniel L. Tumelty
predie;t that he will be one of the
first five to quali£y as councillora t-large candidates, as his record
while in the council before was
0
mii~;;tlf:r ~ame has been listed
with the candidat.es who are seeking the office of
coun~illor
at
large in the person
of John H.
McNamara.
"Buck Mack"
is a
name well knoW""n to the sporting
public of this city, as he managed
the Peabody to-wn team composed
of local men for several years.
Friends of this popular young man
have urged him to seek 'the offi<:e
which the citizens award to this
corning election.
Mr. McNamara resides at 10
Little's lane with his -w-i:fP ......... ;,i 4
children, and is a member of Post
153 American Legion.
If elected,
he will be fair and square with
matters 'that pertain to the Cit~zens
0£ this city.

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~MM.\.Y/,f//

BOSWORTH STREET

BoSToN

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Frank Bodner, caridid~te tOr Councilman froin W8rd Tw-o, rs well
know-n in this city w-here be has resided for m~y years and where he
has taken active interest in · civic
.affairs.
Born 1n Boston on September 7,
1897 and educated in the Boston
schools, Bodner th~ll went to Suf..:
folk Law- s.c:f?.ool, w-here he ·receive
his aggf@e·of L.L.B. in 1920 and·was
then admitted to pl"actice laW in
thi~ Cominonw-ealth in 1922, having
offices at 24 School street, Bostbn.
_Since bei.ng admitted to the bar he
has tried cas·es before : all coUrts 1 in
t~~ Conim.ol'.1:w~alth_ a.hd is__ · ~O~sfde~ed a very experienced tri-itl IawY-,
er.
He -was a candidate 1!or--the ofllce
of Councilman in 1924, and after receiving approximately 942 votes was
defeated by less than 150 votes. He
withdrew from the contest for the
sake of harmony in 1926 and 1928 .
.He is a member of the Republican
City Committee, of the Law Society

FRANK BODNE_R

:~-f-.-M-,a_s_s--o-f-.-t-he · Ch.-c.-el:-.s._e_a R_e_v_e_r_e_B_a_r
.•
___
.:Associati,on and - was · P,r~sii,dei:it of
th~ Educational Center' in 1923...1929·
and. is at pres(;'.lnt chairlllan. of its
Board of DirectOrs.
·
Mi-. Bodner iS a Past Chancellor
pf the ~nigh.ts of Pythias,· Cres·cent
L_odge of ·this ?i~y anQ ·is Deputy
Grand Chancel~or, having juitis~ictio~ over Crescent Lod-ge and the
Winthrop Lodge.
He iS a member
·of the Revere Aerie of Eagles, and
has been a: resident of W-ard Tw-o
, for 11 years, always actively affi.iiat,i~d in civic and Charitable organiza~
tions in the city.
· ··
~
During. his :r:eSidence here he has
~ev~ted his ti~e. energy and expei;ie~ce in aidi,ng and assisting the
needy an._q . prior wlio were in need
of, ~ega!- ~ssista:J?-ce: ·
; . Mr_. ~<5ci'ner iS · mari'!ed ~nd resides
r ~t. 6 , F~tzhenry- sciua·re.
He is the
, tather ?; ~w~ boys, one _four and
on~-~alf ;years old and the· other tWO
~n~· one-h~~~- Y~.a~r~ Old.
·

·1

r~if Open {:Tonie
ForD. A. R. Par~y

:Soston Yl¢ws-a:li:p :Su.-~au
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BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

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MASS.

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Cont~butora to ,
-:.coJum:n., are·
to use bre~f:Y'. in,. t;h~fr, coin.- [
:rnu~icat:ion.s.
Occa.5Io_~all~· ~vef-~ong
UE:"ged

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

~~tts::c:-e ;;:~r:;:t~-~~';: ::o~! '
the bett.er---:.a.re recommended~. ·'

F ~ M 'DEAN ARCHER,.•.
, To the Editor of the POst:
, - .·
Sir-It. is unnecessary to explaiz:i -to.
: my radio audience that t~e lett·~r -pub:.

TO GIVE DETXILS
OF EXPOSITION
-.

~s:;dm~~ni:hg~- !i;7.;~e~ ·. ;:~~~riof{ltlW;;:'
St.ories,'' '\Vas entiFelY in~~curayte(.-a::U'd;
~~d:~~i~hob~\d:f~o:hJ!s~e~·7&i:· .-~~ ~'Y:;:~s '
as in the inte:r~St$ of' truth,
Wish·· to .
0

.'.-T.

,f """"-

v· '" .

make this correctioll.
· ·. , .. ; . : - . .
1
The letter. st.ates that a1~· .:.the...'U]!us- ~

Mayor Will Outline Plans
For Great N. E. Fair at
Luncheon

;~~~r:: i:oe!aJ>fs~

.~~.t!~:~,~:r.: !

m~e:~
stories.
Tfyis w-as entfre\Y ina·cc~r·ate: l
since but one case 'W'aS discussed -where r
Pat and Mike w-ere -menti-oned.
I cited
the ~ase 0£. Co~m. vs. Eagan; .103 -Ma,ss.
71. in w-hich three persons Were accused '
of' assault and-battery upon a neighbor.
The head of the house . -was ~named
Michael and I· jestingly referred to him
as
"Mike,"
an.l, remar1'e<'l: that th~
neighbor might w-ell have..- be~n :'P?»t,,'·:-;
but I
certainly ~ad no _intentfop; ·~of~
reflecting upon the splendid Irish race,·
for w-hich I hi:t.ve a very sincere admiration. Many .Of my best :friends, c~r:tain

~;~~!r~a~

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T

the

STRAU.Ss p""oTo

__

-~~-=-;:k;~::i

·~aptrer

~-~-----=------ ~
. ~.L Pro.nnnent ;;!~~~~

of

DaughtE:rs of the . American

_ Revolution

will _give

a

benefit

bridge party next Friday. Mrs. Peck

j =~~ ~ £::e:i~~~~e t~!

faculty

1

~! an~=j:4):.ry: , ~~ :/
.~1:~~~i·
I

~~~o~r°~dd
are. pf that

~o~~v~n~~~~!a~

~~i~t~::_~e#:
be guilty of such bad taste as the letter
imputed to me.
Very truly yours,
GLEASON L. ARCHER..
j

~ in question

are the bene
·the Spinner'

!_il;irArthur

i'oa!f:e~ec~uu OJ. 1,u<::" ~ . : : ~ 1 ~ -Law- Scho?l.

--~-

.

fJ71h:rri~ea~! ~ k ~ ~ e ; t
j
of the parties are to be used for the
organization. ~

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:Soston Yl~ws-a:::14> :Sureau
:Soston. Yl¢ws-a:::U.p ~UT¢4U
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BOSWORTH STREE';r

BOSTO~.

M.Ass.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

REPUBLICAN, SPRINGFIELD,

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E

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B

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L
L



!gol"d

omf:!SOn
~Tucl'l:erman -•
r_,rndike

~i{;~~t

iorl~J,,~i~

Jl>rarcus L Urann
Felix Vorenberi;:
R

-~7an Urnrnersen

Q.~~n.: ~o*~teMll

,v s -Whelan
E A Westfall
T~ c

-Wa_~o~

L

P
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::Soston ::n~ws-<I:ltp ::Sur~au
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~tt·

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET

8

BOSTON

MASS

BOSTON

i~·~:

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

~iDVERTISER, BOSTON, MASS.

;i

JUN 2 9

'."}3\l,

ENTERPRISE, MARLBORO; IVIASS.

J~~0

J ••••

'an~m';
beg>finiiig~
12:45;..: .over VV~Z-V..:'"BZA.

!
.

.)~ s ~
:::::=a·~,..,., .
ON

~·;. :'WALSH TO GO
'--ON NETWORK

an

I

from

;~-m.,o ... ·
Jo.hn

1

1

Boston

.

at

*-··

Wu1throp ancl/;

,I no':I:}:.i.~e~~tt'/;;r fhdd~es.s,

as _previously antalk in a new e
~itia.l ~BC hh!tOrica.1
and .Patriots" seres entitled, "Heroe~ i
serie.s Will be GIOther speake-rs i11 this ;

. ~R.:o~ff~Ik: Law
.1

~~~~~I ~n ~~~J

In ihre:rn~:a~- <;ur1ey_

j

~~-n

t



land Sketch Pia ~bzati_on~,. the Socony; story, "Shavin : 8.:s wiJI give the entire
by ,Joseph c
L~ •
a Cape Cod 1nove1
radio
dramas n~co 1n
The first of these ,
0
W.F.a,.:;r, at 7 : 2()
he. heard through ,
nf
Ted ""\Vinslop~ m • will open the Btory
maker ·
• Quaint, lovable toy.$0:ho-p, t'f.:e a
viII3:ge In his workhere the ma
ge g?ssips gather, and ,
O
,' unfolded.~ E~~'i,_ portion of the story is :
I presenta Hon
i
of these three '""eekly
complete dr;;_"" s so arranged a$ to b~
whole story ~~Fl, ..
'-".'hen finished the , been told over t_:1e ai~v1ngs'' wil~ ha.,e J
J

n ext
7:15

at

,~f1:sfde

p, sX::;;_a.tOr' Walsh

.. be

NBC=:;rork

/ the Purjtana. ,., n

I

. Da;.id I. Walsh, will tell radio
listeners over· WEEI
''How- the
~ew E:11-gland Confederation Paved
t~e. Way for a

Nation;~

I

TUESDAY

.

~ r n o r Frank G. AJlen w-ill ad'. dr-ed;he New England radio a.udi! ence twice during the day, the first
'from WBZ-WBZA at 5:20 on a programme commemorating the third anniversary of the Safety Crusaders
/
~ith Ma.yor Dw-ight R. Winter of
Springfield and Lloyd A. Blanchard,/
exec. u~ive secretary. of the Governoe.s
cornnnttee on street and highway
$&fety; the: !\econd over WEEI and
i

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Tue$day,

1;

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Be Heard Over WEE!
..-c-n=t- T'Uesday·as----sf)eal<er
in Patriots' Hour

pt e-

sented · as one of
t,he speakers in
the..__ series
en. ti.tl.ed
Hei-Oes

I

,(._ :~i f.ca~ritoht:
.

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ADYE'R"'I

:ju. S. SENATOR

\~1il

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~"':it

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N~_ttonal .Bz oad. i~Qasting 90.. is
;\Dr O-~ d Castin.?;
.under the direc, ·tio.n ; o~
Dea.n
· .Gleason
L.

8

Archer: Of Suf-

~w ~ I .
w~rn~r~~e at~~

folk

MASS.

----- - - . --- --·····

Senator Walsh
simila~~tie"si of origin between the
._New England Confederation in 1643
i anA
the
confederation
of
the
· Thirteen Colonies more than a
: ceritu.ry Jater.
John Winthtop of
1
th_~ early group, and Samuel Ad;,ms
, o~ \he Revolutionary group, 'Nill b~
,/ ~·f:1·:.P-!~t.f::-d~ together -with their. _chief
'. ~sociates in both ot these nation:-afistie movements

TELEGRAM-GA-~ WORCESTER

1

':~oston.

BOSWORTH STREET

BnsTON

::Soston :,?ews-<I:lip '.:eur~au
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MASS.

SEP2 11~
NEWS, SALEIVI, MASS.

:tt;.;;_(t:ll.p Y.>ur~au
~ e r - e r r -pr=--------- ___ _
\ years out of college, he. can i09K a
on a career that has been virtually
a whirlwind in - its progress. Lo;oking

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

130STON

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

forwa

L

. ~tribi {On _

e

(?-ld

of 1

stage.

1\DVOCATE, ARLINGTON, MASS.

NCV?

\

i
1,

WOMEN'S CRIMINAL
LIABILITY IS TOPIC

ve Passed the
· •
!'.Bar Examinations

tl

v..)

Dean Archer Series
WTAG Tuesday
The 10th in his series of talks on
"Laws
That
Safeguard
society,"
D-~~n Gle~on L.;,.-- A r ~ will discuss
the criminal
liability
of
married
;o:~n over WTAG Tuesday a,t 7 15

'f
i

,

i
j

The word "obey" in the marriage

.

covenant was formerly of such significance that the law recognized obed- 1
.tence ot the wife as a valid defense
-to crimes committed by her as
a
confederate or ller husband.
Dean
Ar_cher traces·, the dEl'veloP~ent of the
.1.,~."' · ·g.~ve.rnl
.. ...
/0i.\:.,m.ahied .. J?.g t.he- and offerslia,bility ! ,
women~ ~rim~nal
a very
·dll;l.liniri.ating ct'.tscussion a.s , to· coer(~_'tt,."~f t~e '~ll:sbahc:( .as ~ ··defense 1;-i ,

1

:(~~~~f~~-~- .cas.e~~--- .<. '. .

11

. --

_J

e.,.___ !ollOwing Sa.I.em. B.nd Pea.body
Young men lla.ve Passed. the bar examinations:
·
John A • .Barn-es. 23 Cross street. sa.1-em. 26 years ""old; gradua.te of St.

::Z:a~~legal department ot the
ta.8:'~ooI.5;~ei: se!;;':
tary .1n the

Boston ~ Maine railroad.
-4
Harry M. Harpe!, 4
Saltonstall
parkway_. Salem, 22 years old; grad-

ft~ ;:u_::;:i1fy ~f! S:c1::t~i. and ~Philip

12%,
Daniels
~re:!rr:fie~~.;1sl~~t old; graduate
Moses :r. Sim.on,
271
La.fayette
. ~treet.. Sale:zn. 24 year&. old; . graduate

·,ffn1=~

~~,.;;;g:x

imd · ··B'os on
' ', ·sa.~uel P:earl,. 1 Dustin street,.,. .Pei-·.
; ,~dy, .?~ years -~Id; gradua..t,,e
'. · ·• '- ·
toil<:

~

Hurwitz,

I;,n1wn~1· .

.

~

~o.ston ~&w.s-<t'.ll.p ~ur&au

s

8

Bos-woa"l."H STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSTON

MASS.

PUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY,
MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

TELEGRAM-SUN, LAWRENCE, MASS.i

OCT 2 51930

NOV 3 - 19~

e
.·.·.r.··~1

IMMIGRANT YOUTH i
ADMITTED TO BAR

1.

I
I

I'

:ISTRl~eEP~~~ Sf.
QUINCY COUNCIL, K. .C.> , :~ I
· - ANDREW .J. GOREY';,'
; Quip.Cy. cou-ncn~ ':K.. o1lc:l ~ \~ort;n-J fl.,

I

nate in having for ,its Dis:trict·Dep~ty. tl· 1
Grand Knight this cOming yeat~- a ··1

Samuel Pearl of Peabody
Earned Own Education

~~no~1!~.

h~J1~~~-d~o~~~e~fli!{}: 1

jurisdiction
chusetts

over

district.
11

~¥:inB~a1~fr~:
Special Disvateb. to the Globe
PEA?30DY,
Oct
A
Belgian
/ ;vout_h, ~·ho came to this city as a. poOr
,/ >mnugrant

boy

and

W.<b~~~ay

Rep~ Th.o•mais J. Lane~ ca:.ndlda.te
for ree1~C.ion in. the, Sixth
E&S~x
diet'rict,.
CO'nlpri.Sd.11$ _ All>d:0-ver · and
'Wrid 6 in
S0,Uth· La,Wienc.e~
has
served the pe,o,pLe·.' of ·· thie.
distriict
foaitt;iftilly -and w~ll "'-duriilg hie:, two
t-errns · in office.
.
As a. memp-er ·~.t the state Ieg1sIature dll;ring his 1:,W~ t~r,m.s, in office'.
Re.Pre.sen.ta.ti Ve· Lane vote-d_ for and
cha.nl!plo,n,ed the··r:olloWing m~8.sureS:
Th& reCoz:istruction.lng an.d £he· wid'...
enihg ot' ~ol°'f:h.. · Main ~tee:t in th-e
.,toW~ ~-e _Ap.ddve,i: .. fro1m. Andover
square t'o-. and' including: ·s~i;hpson•s
bridge; the placing of La.wr~·nce and
the tO'lwn of AIJ,.dOV'er in t..h~ san1e
telephone
dislrict· . ori
o-l"d-er
t.O
eU:rninate the five, ·cent toll charga;
' t-he, a.boli.t.ion of _t_he- ~~rker. stre1.:..t
' 0 :.:u:d_
c:c aain:g• :RoProc,anta..tiY,E;> Lan
s·trenuously Suppo:r;-ted the_. .pas~e
of the old .;:tge pensl6n, a.nd a;l~o favored a l:"eductio,n in the ..a.ge fJ;"om 70
·year:s to 60 years of age ·for wolnen
a.nd 65 years fo-r r.ne:q, a.net. f~vored
a,_ res.olve

f-o-r

t.he :oaymcnt

o~ $~00

to G.old Star Motb.-e-rs; supported thr
bill t-o authorize, cities ao,d to•wns 't;O
make' approipr-iatlons for· a.~v~rtisin.g
the ~dvantages of their· munici,p:ality;. he, 'also ap,oke i!l., fo;vor· oi" ia.n
order for .a- s,p,eCl.a.l cO•mrnission to
in ve::,ti!;'3..te the b-u&iness depres.s1on
and unemployment no•w ex:::.ettng :..n
textile cities·: he. a1so •op,po.sea the
rais:::.ng of the com•pulsory.-· ,sc:p.,t,vI
age, a.nd the. bill to co,n:1.J?~l ~tse:x
county tQ p,ay i.n ·the a.ppor'tionmcn.t.
of of' Cost ·on the Nortlietn Art,e.ry.
Retpre.'senta.tiVG La.n·e filed the follcrwin.g bills at the: 1ast se:,s_s;.._on_ o_f the
legislature:
Bill to authorize th.a- Depart1µ1.ent
ot P_u,blic. works to trtsta.11 traffic signals at Wils,on•s corner; bill_ to m~ke
SaliSburY. b.ee..ic~ a. sta.te reser-v8it~on;
bill to cha.nge ~nd incre.ase the: tlnle
fQr· e'ttt1ng. at S\J:per-ior court for civil
bu.s(_n,e.s~ ,a,t Lawreno.a in the c?unt,y
Of __ ~s,_ex· bill t,o exen1pt from :; P<).!.l
-;fa,?' ?.,.il._ P~.~~oll..S{ over the, age o,f GO;
Mr La.ne vigorously opposed the rePe,al o~,"the .4:.S hour law and also the
le=islation extending the hours of
1a.bor fol." worn-en and child:ren in t~e
textile. indu.sb:·y. w-hic?, bill ls ~~]
f6uld, compel wo,meri ii.'11.d children to
"Work in th·e. mills unt:il 19.: .o'Cloick
in the evenng4
As a ffie1mb-er Of
1eg1e1atu:re.
he
"W"as· a.p,polnted to the coITlmitte,es on
Cities' cOD.s:truct.1-onal ~ l<LW. ari'd a.Ieo
a.cte·d e.s clerk on t:tie ~pecial recess
commission making a. study of th.e
4

Sa.lisbury and

bt.isbUry

be,ia..ches

Massa.::

ra--

la.tive, to the est.G..blieh.tnen.t of resei.-vati9.n.s; he als,o w,a;s honor_e.d' by being ~·appointed se,creitary a.:r;:td treasurer of the. Essex county le,g.islat,ors.
Mr. Lane is ,a,ffi.lirut-e,~ _:.v-i.th the
follDIW"in.g -org.a.niza.t~onis: Lru.wrenc~
Council,
67.
K . .ct C.;
~a..wr~n'=';'.A
Lod,ie. of Elks, 65~ B.: p; 0.; E.; D1v:.Sion · 8. A. o. H.; So•u,:th ~a.W"rence
_-A. A.; La.wre.noe ::S:igh School".A1um. ni.

A.merican Legion. _Sui+:_qJ.Js.._~~,ening ~J;1.~l;•....§.£hOOl .,A.Iu,mni ... pa.W1renc2
Ear As.,,.....c,,ciat1.o'rt;· Massach-usetts Ba.r
·Asso•ciation. Merrimack Va~le,y Hun!.
Club. Eesex Cpun~ty ~p,ortsmen"s As-~oci,a,.tion, Lawrence Brltish., Clu,b ~nd
0:M'.errimack Va.Hey Country. cl~.·

Mr. Lane pledges hirnseu;_ to' pursue in the. future, th:6 .srum.e, _co-u.rse ha
ha.a in the past -tor sound., lb~r~l
e..nd· progresJ:!iVe Iegiela.t:!,on. • 1

-'1

includes

-,.

Ia~n!w~ ~ffi~i;e~tis1:~:·ff!i~::11:::_. <:.~.
:Sos·ton,
and re~icles, a~~.'s~r
stre'et~ BQst~n.... ,< ]:J:¢' :·,
was .. born in Marlborp~ his t'-P.a-~e~t~. '. ·J
street.,

Thomas P.

Gc;,rey

and. -~~~*~~~¢:.__M::_ ,:~

.:~ i

L

..

-

27th

wliicl;t

Westmoreland

J
:1

'

the

·c~~~1~~aa~l~~i~~ . ;

co~nC!J~-- all
aqtive--.- ,; OQ:c}J'.l.i~~k 1:.-:i
Brai:p.tree council has bee~--1,1~~~ h~- :a
direction •the Past_ t~o year~~.. ·:~,,.-;-,:.-,:./~ \I

2s -

R ~.. ~01\IAS ~i.. ~

M.

(~1

I
I

,,i
SAMUEL,
PEARL
Recently Admitted to Bar

through school is among the new
group of attorneys of this siate. who
have taken the oath of office.
He i~
Samuel Pearl. 1 Dustin st, son of Mrs
; Tille a.nd the late Samuel Pearl.
1
Attorney Pearl was graduated f!".O!U
00
10!!.~
grammar and High School before ..,-_t.' tending the preparatory school of Sufi :folk La-w-, -w-here he prepared for his
j entrance to the Law Scliool.
. .,._
1
The ne,v attorney is plannino- te.
j open _a.n officS" ~n this. city and prol,'.)~,s~s

~v~~!\t ~~;v &~~ 1:Jird~~ii J~~e.

!t~u:::/~r ~~;t~~:~ 1~n~0sis~:~~a~~!; a:l::

·: came to this o:::>untry wi1:h his fan'lily.
) ~rom Belgium.

i!cJt~~1ij

; Gorey.
; ; : " ' ,;~::::~ ,
' uate of Cathedral school; HJgh!Sch'(;or
Coip.m.erce., Boston couege;; ~ _ · i~-"
·.

, of·

( t!:i saJ}twl~~1!~:-~di:n~::~~~i~~~
tice in March 1921~ He w-a:a:
- ·
·

1

-~s~~

I

-with the law offices
ot · :qavi~:, :C-.:
-wa:1sh tOr eight years. ':A,-t ~-Pt~s~~J:;;
he is connected with the ~~~':. o~ ;
0
M'ii!~1!nad
Ji~r of Bostoh
!
K.
C.;
Francis G.
~~~t• · '
American Legion~ Cathciliq: iA',lun;t~;:
Sodal~ty ~t. Bosto:µ. Cot.l~gli::!; i"ea.uiC?~ic,1 ;

of

'I

~~Iil

-~b~~~l'i(,~

~ane ·_

~r~:1~rf~!~ t~:~-J~f;;~t~~~1-?li;::· ~·
He w-as a represent~tive
th~, ~:en~8

eral Court

of

iti

Mas.saC~USf::'tt=:; _iµ.: ;923::-.

:St~·- ~ren... ·
din's parish. Ashmont.
: ·· '- ,
, Mr. Gorey is an ar:dent ..gQJ~r .. ~cf.;
serVed as chai~m.an of th.-e. ,~a,tio~'l:: \
1:924, and is a. member· -Of

of c. Golf. tOUJ:'.'D,_8.~·~n:t::~~~~,d_);~:;
"\Vol,aston dur1ng the sUl)'J.'.:e'D:l,~ -'C~~~ \
vention ill A:u~ust of ..this . Y~Jt~,· ·_;jtn'9,::_ :

K.

is. chS.ir:¢.ari ..of .thee ~assac~et:t!3;_;
Stat~ Council Q-ol'f· coµimitt~~;; - ·~~,, j
played in· t~e golf toUJ?ll~S):1;1;.,,~P:Qt;l-.. _~
1S0red by· Quincy oq~riCi_i._.lS!S.~ ~~lf.;~

at the' Scituate Cou~tr:y 'clU:P·

e_'~-

·_. ~ .. / '

C

He is ·alSo a moto1:Jst ana.-:'a._'. &tp..:;.·, ·:
'd~rit of hi~hway ~c;,~d:itionS~-- xn.·:the.. ,
1
Legislature· he was' a m.in;iber _0.f-f:he,_
~~:icl~\}.e~ o~ Hi~hWay~ :~~~---~-~~f~.~ j'~

f~

. ...;.~l'.:!:!.C.t-:Peputy_:g~pa~. ~Brtict..:,

! i

st - Boston, Mass.
SEP25 1930
'

-

- - - - - - - - -----· ·...--~~~=-~=,--.-:-:;; _____ _

BOCi'

1930

,-

ILLI ON A YEAR
'FOR CITY STREETS\

-~
::e,-;;-;-ton :)?¢ws-<!'.llp ~ur¢GU -

I

BOSWORTH STREET

8

BOSTON

MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.:

I

'! 0 1930

50 Leaders 1n Every
Activity to Consider His 2 5 ·_year
· ·Plan at Luncheon Thursday
-1
, . yor Invites 3

·ble~

have----:i~i.1..1.

er1y· and united -,_ay.
UDENT MISSING.

+--~--~--~--~--~--~~!

We:ymouth,

Oct.

18.-:---Weymouth

ofl

police have .been :isked · to,, help lo-

I

cate Dana C. Breed_,_ 24-year-old
u:ff o l ~ c h o o l Student. reporte
missing from his 1·esidence, 21 Cl~ri-

ton r9ad,
East
Weymouth, since
'Wedne~ay. afternoon, when he left
ho~~

presumably

, classes.

to · attend

his

~-. far as can be determin-

ed .by .Poli~ .l;le ~had but little money

wv;h ··111~:.~~-'~h~ _left.

i""'-,.,; _ .,-"!<S

E. St.one. Frank A. B.a.Yrd. Wf.lson Marsh.
(Messrs. Fay, Corbett a.nd Ha.rr1_ma.n on another list).
O. D
Fellows. eng:ineer.

~~~e~clr:1~1 1
:F::
rea.u-Joll.n T. S
M¥J!i>1:,_ d~~ec

ia~~':ine~b1~fl.:Tn~:
d
Thomas A

·:a

L~f=t~

Rourke
Cit:v
c:tt.a.irma
rad. Na
M. Herli
su~~~n Central Labor Union-(Nathan
Sidd. oresident.. is on another list). P. Harry
Chamber of 'commerce--Henry I.
Harriman, oresident: Eller~n J. Br~ha.ut.
mirr.
Civic Bureau:
Melv1lle D.
LJ.ming,
se75:;:n_8:"rr_ of Public Works--Frank E. Lyman. Sta.'te House; Ga.suar G. Bacon '.Lever'bt.Jm~ftf:e~stg-Jt·Highw-a,ya ~Boston Chamber
.§i<J.~mse:;.~l~ar8c¥fn/Jt B~~e, chair
street; E
X.
Da.venx>oJ:"t,. Me
~ir

J,:ijt;=,~~':i

g6

m anyJ!ko'fss.FJ~kSi~if::i

Tii1:

i~~lor~t~_ehompson,
ichtner Co.; Morrill W1ggin,
19
Tr~e Board--Georg-el B. Johnson

; fri'cii1~

B~ofomi_~~'ii'.it~~illiam

St.an ey Parker. president; Fra.nk,A. Bourne,
chairman committee on public- imorovements.
United Improvement Association--Ca:ptain
:1\t J. Norton president: Wayland P. Do:rethY, secretary.
Team O'wners' Association......:...A J
Wilson '
President 135 High street; Joh:t:t H. Gilbody,,
secretary, 60 Sta.te stree\,..

/

L

r

l
'<---------~- -

Ol!J~~noJ~Vvenitty.
Doten. Technology_
Beale, Harvard.
Jackson Technology,

'
· d, H ~ a r d School of Cit:v

::&o.ston ~ews-<Cllp ~ureou

,::&o.ston ~ew.s-<Ilt.p ::&ureou
8

8

B0swORTH STREET

Bos TON

::So.ston ~~ws-<!::lip ~ur~au

BOSWORTH 8-rREET

BOSTON

8

MASS.

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

Post - Boston, Mass.

Orrs

10:00 p m

<...A:)

SILENT

a\/

It was six months after his birth

BY HOWARD FITZPATRICK

befoz:-e a given name was definitely

At least three great American Legion ceremonies to he staged in Boston the week of October 6 will be
brqadcast by the NBC over a selected
croup of affiliated stations including

assigned

territory.
Foremost'- of these events
will 'be the address of President
HOover the morning of October 6 at
11: 30, officially opening the Legion
Convention here.
In the evening General John J. Pershing will be the featured. speaker at
a dinner tendered 0. L. Bodenhamer,
national commander. This address. the
first in several years whiCh the CQmmander of the A. E. F. has made to

I

f

:

• • • •

Featured on the WNAC Noon-Day
Revue programmes for the remainder
of this week are three talented artists
in their own line. TodaY Miss Freddy
Rosenthal, Boston soprano, ha.S been
billed; tomorrow, Mickey Alpert, popular Boston crooner and leader of the
Cocoanut Grove orchestra, will perform accompanrea by Joseph 'Solomon,.

~~i

G~:c~h~~r~i~0

~ra:a!u~~~~P

iiu1_i~fa/~~d

.

. ...

GLEASON

ARCHER,

J



Law School .
. PHIL COOK, 'the
~uaker Man, has a brother, BURR,
iWho writes the continuity for the
NBC "Harbor LightS" program . . .
'TOM, DICK AND HARRY. the har1mony trio. W'ere once associated
with
the
Ringling circus • • .
'BENIAl\:fINO GIGLI. heard tomorrow on the Atwat~r .cCent hour. is
,know-n as
the ... Babe
Ruth
of
Opera"
DAVID ROSS traveled
2,000 miles to act as announcer of
the Lutheran program
... FREDDIE RICH'S career as a pugilistic
direc;tor has fallen a bit flat. Fred's
protege, YOUNG LYONS, lost his
first fight the other night. .. • .
The trombone·s in B. A. ROLFE'S
orchestra have descarded the derby
tor shading tone and now use ailk
toppers.

ihe m3.ny fri-erids of
Burke, son ~f rt1:r ~nd .1v,n:~~-::
J. Burke of Bigelow av.en:li
be pleased to learn that.''
1

.:

l

th-t:i furniture store ·Of\
McRoberts, former!~
Rice .co.
., . _
Mr. Burke, Who -"iS --~'-fi(
k1
·1 in this s'e(;tion. as,/
lete of much promine~~e; i~Ji
du& :,e of the . public

',i.n_f ··.:

schovl_s of his native· town,~·; attending evening· s~sSipns of-<
: ton Univ,edity, where h:e·-,
: ated in 1925, with ·; il~ .
) BuS'iness Audm'inistrati;~~ ~
'He also ,a,ttended' .S,uff61k
school and graduated f
s t i t ~ i n '1929,
the
division, with a degr:.e:e·.:~o~:,
or of Laws.
~~:i
·
Mr. Burke during h'.is
fhe various jnsti;.utioris
·-~1 1ng worked as a la1,1~:.,
W"\'Y mai1 c1erk, pub-Hciiacco
'"".'nd ;lis clerk in t.he finartee{uffice/
m the Boston Water ,department. ;He is eminently qU:a.lifie·d ti> -'~r~
ry Or:\ the duties of a ,-1,twyer anifi
his rrlany ~iends i11, thi,; '~1><;tio1h:
wish him ever.y, su0:o.es~..
\

.in

!

l

8

guns o;f warships stationed in Boston
thunder a salute to her..

to

the NBC legal ex~:' ToO"~'TlflifiY
relatives wanreci the child named ,
after him, and finally no one won
~ut. Dean Archer who was 50 the
other day, is the head of the Suf:f9lk

either WEEI or WBZ-WBZA in this

~~elU~~g:.n~:i~i!:t bfr~r!~::; ~;_~~u~~

,...,

C.b.;,.rles D. Burke,
Young Man of Rtickla,nd
uate of Boston UrtiVersi"l:fi.·f'
Suffolk Law School
'' ·

Personalities

hall of the Hotel Statler over WEEI
and another national hQIPk-up.
The breakfast to be given in honor
of the national and State commanders
and adjutants Tuesday rnorning, Oct. 7,
at the Boston Chamber of Commerce,
at which a man prominent in America
f during the war period will be the
principal speaker, will also' be broadcast through · WEEI and an NBC network.
i As the t'S.mous '"Old Ironsides,'" or
th& S. S. Constitution, recently reconditioned at the Charlestown navy yard,
leaves its mooring and sails d'Own Boston Harbor the afternoon of W ednesdaY. Oct. 8, the ceremonies attending
the rededication of this grizzled old
man-o-war will be heard through a network
of
statlons
including
WBZWBZA in Boston beginning at 4 o~clock.
While under po\Ver of her own saU, a
squadron .of army planes will escort
), .. Old Ironsides/' down the ha:~o~,2-

La~ Office (~
G,la<!ston~ .
·.

RADIO

WS~H._?c.)~'~-"'C'--~~·->~~~-

MASS.

STANDARD, ROCKLAND, MASS.

NOV 1 _ 1930
--6:-4sP,.:-Jll =--Bi=oa~ii~;-u~til

80SWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

i
I

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

~~~nii~t~

~i~c~r!f::t, lf~uieii:~~~tz

Louis Mason, who has the priFJ.cipat
part :In ~·Moonlight and Honeysuckle,u
and is featured on other NBC programmes, might never nave been the
actor he is had he taken an old schooJ
teacher of' his seriously. When Louis
was a small boy :In Danville, Ky., he
used to be given minor parts in school

~~~~~!ca~~e ~~s

0

o'::: i~:

t~e:s:he;ia;'s~
marked to him, after a particularly
;~;.~lu~~~erj't~- aO:-a~f:;__~;}ing,
"Louis,
••

.c,;



Beginning TU:e:;;day evenin8'. Sept. 30,
B. A. Rolfe and his Lucky Strike
Dance orchestra will be on the air three
times a week over NBC networks. The
Tuesday broadcast at 10:15 p.. m. will
be of 45 millutes• duration.
'
With this new programme Rolfe and
his band Will present three and threequarter hours of Lucky Strike p· ,_
grammes each week.
one
hour is
heard Saturday nights over WEEI at
10, another on Thursday evenings via
WBZ-WBZA at 8 and repeated again
from midnight until 1 o'clock for Western and Pacific Coast listeners .


id fQQ llygh he
transferred to the · Pacific
be a.issigned to one o! the
e submarines, now stationed
go, Calif.

LEO~ARD NOVICK PASSES
STATE BAR TESTS
Leonard No.vick~ ot 7·0 Norcross
, street, yesterday }"eceived notice from.
the state exa~1ners th.at _h" . had
passed the s:t,ate bar ex3:-n1:1nations.
H
will be sworn. in on Oct. 22~ and
later practice in this city.
He
is t.he son of Mr. a~d :M=rs. Abraham.
N vick
and
graduated from
the
i..~w,en 'high school in 1926, and f r o ~ -

'W711

~~·- ~
-·n June of the
ffoll;. -x e "i'I' schoo1 1
.
.
s:esent year. where,; he. received b1.s
i !egree of bachelor o~ ___ia~s._
-, - ~

\

.

~

*1 • •

B~~to~~~~

~;a~ch~~~31~n
; ;0 ~
e-ach Tuesday evening over an NBC
, network, earne~ the necessarv monev
for hfs 18:W education by working in
\1:aine lumber camp at the age ot 13..

a

i

8

BosWO!tTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

NOV 4 -1930

I

/ on -Ly;~fleid~i~t. caPast'w;:esid~~ ~f /
0

6

l Father

Mathe-w- C. T. A. S.
..Tames ..T. Duggan
Ma.king his first bow- in the political
I field. Employed as conductor and mo-/
torman for Mass. Eastern for the past I

I

I

25 years~ bee~ president and legisla-,
/ tive agent for the past 15 y~ars for I'
j the street car men union. Endorsed
Central Labor Union. Is a paSt /
1 by
!_president
of
the
Peabody
Fa.ther

I

Mathe-w- Society of ""7"hich he has been

I

a member for 31 years. Belongs tO
---~------,,,,..,,;;?'-----..,.,,~~1111'"""'""'""~~-:-;---;'11 Peabody ~lks. Ta~ks dry and votes,
.·.··.",',·.$>"
-'.. tfa.-' _..,W
1/ dry.
'I"'~
~-----~--_..c=~. Good Married and lives on Margin st. I
debater and w-ell p. osted. Born/
,1; and educated in Peabody.

·
,
Cornelius "\V. Clancy
/ :
Affable and efficient sta1."ter for/
Mass. Eastern
in Salem.
Married
with Rooseveltian faniily.
Lover of/
children and their idol. Made a good
try for seat in council from -w-ard 4
tvv-o,.. years ago. Great leader of com- i
mittees and a close student o:f politic$ '
and municipal business.
Gust .T. Puska
Operates a taxi; despite his crntches
n.ecessary -because of infantile paralysis. Possesses plenty of ambition 3.-nd
has .ahv-ays -w-orked hard to get ahead.
Is 36 years old, lives .at 59 King st.

i/ '
ill.o::st.o:u Neu1:s-ffiltp i!lureau
s BosWORTH STREET

I

i\1:ASS

BOSTON

ENTERPRISE, PEABODY, MASS.

8

BOSWORTH

STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

TIMES, PEA~ODY, MASS.

1

£~~l~e~~u;~~ :!1~1ie fs 1;?e'!r:2bO~~n
Timothy F. Dorgan
,
of ;;;,y~f'f.., -,Pame near bein~ elected -f:o <:_ou~<;:il / j

It&

ar'les - 0 rcft.y election
!ors-at-large and school colll- ~our years a.go th:is fall ... ~:in~1ng :in t
and library trustees "W""ill be eyery :Vard hut: one. Enl.1s~ed in ma- . r,
~dnesday, Nov. I2. Polls open rines :in W,?"rla War . .g:iv:ing up
5.~5 a,..An to 4 p. m.
/ g-rocery 1?usiness to J~1n the colors. 1
Thumb nail sketch 0 £ each candi... Took. business .courses in Salem Co1:1-- 1
,
date .for city council in the order they/ merc1al and
1.n Boston.
I?ealer 1n .:
"Will appear on the ballot:
upper leather. ~ather o:f tvVin dau!,fh- ,
cou
·

.r

I

J~mes ~- Linehan
_ ~~io;/\}c:Brid~~\f!~ers~iois~a{~!~ i
H!,jri;:~d b!i~g Y~t~irmo:-n
Chestnut s \ Has real qualific.a- ;
92
Familiar vVJth mul"!icip~l affairs as a
Henry .J. Brown
:y_ res.ult of h1s ~erv:ic:;..e 1.n the heal~h
Never says die. De-feated t'W'ice :fol:"
office. Is a -sk1lled leather w~ke-r 1 n council, is back in fight vVith fine recthe e~ploy of the L. B. Sou.thwick Co.. ord as publicity man :for tercentenJ.v.{arr1ed, fathe~ of four ch1ldren. Be- I ary. Ts. an _expert account~nt, hp_Jds
longS to Georg~ ~eabo1y C~urt,_ Fo;-1 respons1ble -position at A. C. L. Co.
esters of _Amer1 c~. Rei::,pdes 1 n L1.ttle s Married and father of four children,
lane but 1s .a na.tr":e of the East Ipnd .. home on Oak st. Likes printer's ink
Made a good sho~ng- 1.n the counclllo.r and has a clever touch :a;t typew-riter
race. tw"o years. ago. Has good quah- in turninR" out ucopy7, for the papers.
ficat1ons -for off1<:_e.
Is correspondent :fe;r Salem Sunday
Atty. Daniel L.. Turn.~lty
.
paper. Served as co1.1ncillor in Salem.
Has served four years 1n coun9-1.l
James A_ O'Shea
from v.rard 4 !"etiritig; last ye~r -with
H·andsomest :rilan in the race :for
a . ;zood r:ecorct.
Independen.t, h.as a councillor. Is associated -w-ith brotherm1nd o:f "!:ns ovvn.. ~oyal to h1s :friends/ in-la"W" Charles R. · Coa.n, Main st.~
.and making R"ood as an attorney. Is a haberdasher, lives at 17 Stevens st..'
bachelor brother ?-f ~uut. P . .J. Tum- Member o:f Democratic city commitelty of !,he "':lectr1c l;-ght plant.. Well teE. Married with :family. Working
ve!"sed 1.n city aff~irs and -w-1.thout member o:f S. A~ S. Club. Fine per- I/
ta1nt.
. .
sonality.
W:il~1am. E.. Tracey
William. F Reg n
_Has served t~o years in,.the council
Good looking you~g at:orney vVhO .
-w-1th much cred1.t and deserves a sec- served as secretary to former Ma or '
ond term.
Is, :f1:equently. on t~e floor, BDkeman. Ambitious.
y
I
and_ expresses h1mself w1th p~nse -and
Bernard M. Nan le
logic.
Has earned the sobriquet of
.
'
·
g
t
. w-atchdog o:f the treasury. T--wo o:f bis
Tw1.ce de:feate4 for councillor-.at-1
I brothers w-ere killed in action in large. .Stag·ed Sunday football as
' France. Is man~er of the Foster St. first go:ng inanager. Ow-n_s a true~!
Filling Station,- opposite the En"ter- :i:..::1g ~us1.ne~s that earns h1:n -doll:3-rs. :>-Prise~ :formerly being in employ o:f l\t1~r:r:zed wrth .a large fam1.ly. L1.v.es I
National Calfskin. Has built up good on L;-ncoln pl. ~as 3;n engag1ng sm1le i
-business by close attention to budget and 1s fond of h1.s children.
f
details.
Married. £ather of two cliilSchool Comm.it.tee Candidates
I
dren left motherless several months
As they -will appear on ballot
I
ago. Is a broth~r-in-la~ of John and
Thom.as E- Ryan
f
Paul Gallagher, prom1nent Peabody
Lives at 3 Kin.if st., :father of threei
n.

.

al\

.

::f

DANIEL L. TUMELTY

Daniel L. Tumelty , _se:rved as
Councillor from ward four for -5
V<i!ars, and -was never de:feated £or.
that office. He -w-as president 0£
the board 0£ trustees of the Peab- 1
ody ...;nstitute~ ~erving
on
that

~~aJ:""1 5~) ii!:.

I _

I

I

1

I

_

)board for six years.

He was pres-·/
iident of the Emeralds £or
twoi

1

!terms, and president on the East·
1End Improvement Society for two:

terms.

Iwas

:ated from both

Peabody

the ~ ~ ~ I v e yea,:S'.

---- --

Y->o.stcn Yle'W.s-([:lt.p - ~~.,.~~~~ ~
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I

MASS

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

..~~Q

1

~!c~b:i~~;

1!~i =-d ~eff~jk ~a~. IH!Jdfiba~~t~~,!ii~
auditor :for B. '& M., resigning to en-/

0

~a;~~d
~~h~a~ali~ik
loud.
Good "family 1:Y.Lan and :father.
David Craig
City councillor from vVard 5 for
eight years 1922 to 1930.
Fearl.ess,
independent, clever in debate, strong
in epigrams and wit.
Several times
a grandfather. Father of re-organization of fire department by ordinance.
Served as president o:f council.
Was
candidate for mayor tvVo years ago.
Who's Who bas unjustly slighted him.
Was looked upon as sort of' helsman
for council during his service.
Lives
Qn Andover st.

1

.
Thoma~ l"- Meane!
.
Res.1dent of Mill st. ~nd 1s a skl.l~ed
Ieat~er ~orke":, marned and , w-1th
family, his ch1ef conc'=:.1:1·
Ha~ fol, lo-w-ed
Peabody s
political
".tustory
closely.
~-~
Charles V. Cassidy
Son of Crow- Village, -whose Dad is
the dean o:f Peabody tonsorial artists.
Lives at 20 State st.
Graduate of
Salem Commercial and holds diploma
as undertaker.
Has been engaged in
the ice business.
Married with £amily.
Clean; vigorous and ambitious
with a. background.
.Tohn P. Devaney
Leather w-orker and bowling alley
·

1\/r".,.,..,,..; .... .-1

...... ~.;-1--"t-.

-"'-~~-

-'1-.:1..l---

I

gage in business with brother John, '
OvVners of Standard Auto . Supply-, l i
Central st. S. A. S. Club got 1ts name
"t~ere: One of the sons of Mrs. Mary
~1.rming.ham of Church st. Unmarned. Likes books a~:3- reads them.
: ,
Harold Kiley
,j
_ Holds pos!tio~ in. veter-3;-ns bure.aU I'
l.n Bo_ston., Active in Leg1.on. affa1~s,
and lives on A born st. Mak1nR" his l)
first bid for office. Apt to poll-good I :
vote.
M
.
,
elvi.1le Hallow-ell
i

i

gr~u~d c;!1J~asa\~~!:p~:~hre:f~~ ~~fi~=
ical campaigns for the- other fellovV. :
Operates a taxi service that pays
vVelL Formerly in g--rocery busi.ness. ;
Father o:f three, ~ith home on Bee- ,
kett st. Post Noble Grand o:f Holten l
Lodge. Past 40.
L
· Morris Isaacson
j
Treasurer -o:f leather concern on
Railroad ave~ ~~ormerly in vegetable 1
trade in -w-hicn' · he R"Ot his sta.rt to!
:fa.me and vVealth. ~-Opular with larg:-e
acquaintance.
Bg.~-':,ng"s
to
Peabody
Elks. Believes Ch~ -lie Teae-ue should ·
be kept as truant -officer till he can
no longer cajo~e indifferent youths.
:;g~d.~1:!tV;,::.peF;;t;:1-J~ ~ostii1;P~ id!'I~~~ '.

I'

I

(

high;

school and Sn#folk I aw-scl}QQl, and
: has practised law in this city for:

8

men.
Daniel F. Harrigan
;~~:~~id~v.rw~ Pfu~e:f:?i~ th~s i!!;
Supt. of St. Mary's cemetery w-hich surance field .and later Super at the:
~ he has greatly improved by his super-1 Ry.an sh6e factory, owned by his
vision. L~ves on Lynn st., ~ather (?f brother. . Lived on Abbott st. .for a,'
penmansh1.p teacher D. Fran.c1s ~arri- long per1od. !Ilas a pleasing persongan. Has been in the council for four aiity and has positive ideas--on con-:
years -where he has sho"Wn ability duct of schools.
!
sufficient to rrierit his re-election. In- v
Louis P. P. Osborne
,J d~pendent;and ha~ go_od business judgMig-ht-._ have been post;master of!
nien~. Fa1r play is h1s m<?.tto like~ that Peabedy-, but p"I_"eferred the leather:
of his colleague Tracey_
.
trade in v.rhich he succeeded his late (
Mohammed E.. Husse1.n
father Calvin a veteran -w-ho made a·
Born in Turkey, came to AmeriCa in fort-qne in 'th~ cr.af"t. _ Is Lynn ma".n- .
1912.
Naturalized in 1927.
Attends ager for liability insurance concern. i
South church regularly. Employed at Active in G. 0. P. circles and is a
A. C. Lawrence Co. for long period retired captain in national guard.
and knovVn as good w-orkman.
Not Married,. three children, served as asniarried. Lives at 9 Lo-w-ell st.
sessor. Has served several terms on
..John H- McNamara
school board and proved himself a
Was at Camp Devens -when armis- zealo1:1s · and capa,ple member. Means
tice came. Is in the insurance field as to be reasonable 1n debate.
'collector.
Married,
four
children,
William. .:J. Birminghant
home 10 Little,s lane.
This is his
Came near landing- on school board

During the 1920 census he:

assistant supervisor for thei
'.Essex County district. He gradu-'.

1.;;:;.~~l!':""fi~~-P~nt.
P'

• ;~,;~;;~

Helen

y.

s~~~D~r!i
t~~-urer.

Ne-w-bury__port;
ns.

Bea.ch

Bluff':

p'rOgra.x.n

a. Katz. Dorchester.

·

Pro£. 'Carlos F. Weiman
to Address Suffolk .Aiu:rnn,i

are

Tb.e results that
bound to fioW :trOtn '
the recent revolution in Brazil arid the

r~p::!fn~iJ!~e!h:i t~°ell~nf~e~\~e~ff.;t~ ~I
bo discussed
Professor Carlos
"Wei- (
~nmt6;!1
~1fu~n~u:.~tc!":S7 ~,l1;~:
b:.V

~~~~

F.

night. Pro:tesSor VV'~iman. -w-ho ,'.was
born in Sao Paulo, the center of 1;1ie- ~~­
ce"nt revolutionary :n1.ovement -w-hi9h over,thre"W" the administration of President
ro'W"

:X~/:i!~i~s~~s·t;! ~~~;J ~e~~~f~~
S:uSines,s
graguate , o~

- --

_olk

.:Adrn.in:.fstration~- a
J;.,a-w- ; Schoo1" and

O

Ja..si

s~er

·a .stttdent at tl;te-. tnte·r·national

t'. ,

-~:W. :

~~t- ::id:rh,~. ii~~:d. ~~ii-~~;;:~/:~: ]

-/~~ "-'- iti" '

,~ -: . ~~-' .·-·.- -:~i~~~~;·::,~:·;<,;. -~~~

8

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

1\1.ASS

BOSWORTH

STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

EN'TERPRISE, PEABODY, MASS.

- a.rres-ror'city election o:f U'lay():kl:"~~y- Jors-at-Jarge and school com- f-t::it?J. o+ paua I
·
·
and library trustees w--ill be
a
u-aes
)f_ I aq prnoo a;:.n s~...:rau 8 i
b' . JVvi,ednesday, Nov. r2. Polls open :'...l:d
aq u-e:, +! ~sas-ea amos ~Ul ~1
0 + U-M.Op .2uµ:ad1::q- ~.a-epoi
5.4'5 ~ to 4 p. m.
;
I aq+
I
Thumb nail sketch of each cand;,- q::,. a...:ro'C.U +ua;:,..:ca-d;" pa...:rpunq R sa;n.td
'
date :for city council in the order they · pas13qa~nd suprs pue s,3pnr t.rir
n::i:,
9
.r will appear on the ballot:
q
d"B't(s ~ poo..O Ar..:q-eJ: Uf ~uruUrw: aJ~ -p<_
..Jaines Jw Linehan
_ µo+a-e,J: . an...:r.r,
".8urs-eard :i-TI.q 2unn.
Cl
Served six
years
on
Boa~d
of"U"e 8 ! A-epo+ uo!+t?n+rs .:z:aq+:ear et{.L
.l:f .
Health,
being
chairman
in
1925
* * * _
w:
Familiar -w-ith municipal affairs as s

-.-r
1y_
result of his servic;e . in the healtQ.sqns .2ursn
u
·sa+n+ ~~<!
O
office. Is a -skilled leather wcn:ker i:t._ pasr"e..'t +0-u sJ:
+ -a'.J.Xa aq+ o+ &;:,µd a~ •
the employ o-f the L. B. Southwick cc· o-e · u: ,
"elf :JIU! pa..::r .l:apuo.M.. "e s-r pu
Married~ .father of :four children.
yo.id .8u!q+ou ..:ro an.+n pa2R.-raA'B ~!.t
longs to Georg>e Peabody Court~ Foz:,

086I O'.J. 0661" UI~J: S-..I:'B'a.A OI ..:q
esters o:f Americ3. Resides in Little ,if
Affe!ouuuy ~o-eq aux.oo. o+ s.::raa:ug+ ;>a
Jane but is a native of the East En,u-eu:c ..I.OJ=- S.J:t?a.A Ua:JI-e+ s-eq +I ·..:ra "ea
fRr
Made a good show-ing in the councillP suori-ernurnoo-e dn asn O'.J. s.z-ea.A q+
l +si.
race tw'o years ago. Has good qua)[ ·Aut?o1.pt?..1: padd-0.1:p saor-:tcr .
JfOO:J. s,If
fl.cations for office.
t?u.rs pu'a a.8.i:-er -a Aue'C.U ·
u.raouoo
Atty. Daniel L. Tu:melty
q+-ear qon"tU 0 8 q::,.r-M.
a
pau!n.-r +r ..xa
Has: served four years in coun,us aor::,.sz:uz...:rg a +J: l a.:t.aM. s.-rauUR'.J. ap,:from ~ard 4 retiring- last year -w-ig.M. ...:ra - -e"'a a
r.r+ ,:l'[.Ug;:, uaqx ·p@sn ..ro.
a Jrood record. Indenendent 1 has US' sa-:f-::J. l .-raq.M.. '1-Uauzd!nba 4UU:t? !It? ;:.or
mind of his oVvn. Loyal to his :frien
sau.;ceq "sa.olJS .l:OJ=- .z.eq::J."E?~I aonp E.:Z-0
and making- g-ood .aS an attorney. Is:,o.-rd + Uodn pau"eo a.-ra.M. pounoo aq:i 20 -.bachelor brother 9:f ~unt. P. 3. Tu :3no.rq+ S.l:aUUt?::J. ..Z"e.M, Pl..1:0A\. al{+ 2u.r:.xn
.-rm.
elty of the e1ectnc hg-ht plant. w:..iauuB+ aq+ paA...:r.as st?q +r s
~ a ~g
versed in city affairs and "W"ith<:O..tf sauiq. p?.ra.Aas ~a.ra.&1. .., .raa
9T

taint
o q2no """·
--,.! su .l:!Rdsap
X:-.
William E. Tracey
ur :t.atf+!:t.;:+ u;,ox.~ '+! .'.a:u!,.8uµq '.Lqsnp
Has served t-w-o years in-the coui: 1 "[ ~Mo s S""B
r uµa::,.soJ: U! aout:?+.:toduq
a.q
Vvith much credit and deserves a ~ · ·
q
If r_ounoo s,..xauue..r. aq.r,
~~ ,
ond term.
I& frequently on the fl·o:3:n ....ra
-.:c.
and expresses himself with poise
logic.
Has earned the sobriquet.
ss ·
· watchdog o.f the treasury. T-wo of
at:at' I brothers w-ere killed in action
~

_
·s· as
France. Is Ill.an~er of the Foster St. _.rs
_ J5 :r..u.
.Z:.::Ck- !
Filling Station~- opposite the En£er- u_ig 1!usine~s that earns hi:U .J .11:'ftrS);'
prise. £or:rrier1v being- in employ of 1\-I~n.:ied w-rt..h .a large .fam1l_y. L1~es !
National Calfskin. ~ s built up good on L:,ncoln 1)1. ~as 3:n engaging sn-ule i
-business by close attention to budget and IS :fond of his children.
details.
Marrled. father of tw-o cliilSchool Committee Candidates
dren left motherless several TIIOnths
As they -w-ill appear on ballot
l
ago. Is a brothrr-in..:Ja:V' of John and
Thomas E. Ryan
'
Paul Gallagher, prominent Pe3:body
Lives at 3 King st-~ father of three/

r
I.?+

C

DANIEL L. TUMELTY
Daniel L. Tumelt-,Y ..served as
Councillor from w-ard :four for 5
y~ars, and was never defeate·d :for
that office.
He was president of

!~

I

::1

,

-!,

the board o:f trustees o:f the Peabody _!nstitute~ serving
on
that

B~-air s{

--==---~=~-~_______.;,.__

:!

3 L.J_Jm~,
--=

I

I

ii

-

!board for six years.

Iterms.

ri;;!![

loud.
Good
~=~ and father.
City councillor from= w--ard 5 for
eight years 19-22 to 1930.
Fearless,
independent, clever in debate, strong
in epigrams and wit.
Several times
'a grandfather. Father of re-organization of fire department by ordinance.
Served as president o.f council.
Was
candidate for mayor tw-o years ago.
Who's Who has unjustly slighted him.
Was looked upon as sort of helsman
:for council during his service.
Lives/
on Andover st.

------------

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1

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school.
ZACK'S +HANKS
J
Re-presentative Michael Zack issued ! the £allowing statement o:f apprecia-1
ti,on to the voters of w-ard one, for
their gener'ous support on election

day.

·

HWords :fail rrte to express my gratitude to the voters of "W'ard one~ Pea- \
body for the generous su~port they.
gave me on election day. I am elat~Q
over carrying-the ward by a substantial plurality. I assure the citizens of
t.he ward and the entire city o-f Peabody that I -w-ill continue to give them
~he same loyal service during my
next term~ ~!'=:. T n~-u-oc. .;,., +1,,,,,, ..... "',,.+

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

~9,?J,t:
~ -

... -

tornorrdW'
nt,- Here:n v--;
,
to1.:~ vice pre
, Gert..
r u d e ~ , B.everly; secreta.ry, )?a.n·i·e.1
R.
e:
, New-bury_port; t~EJ_-ureri,
John
ns. Bea.ch Bluff'; progra.n,
direct
Mo~s K.a.tz, Dorchester.

'Prof. Ca.,.los F. Weiman
I
to Add.,.ess Suffolk Alumni
The results that a.re bound to floW from '
the recent revolution in Brazil a.rid the

r~pi:!fn~!!~e!h~'i tit:u~ni~~~\~e;tr~~~..
ho discussed by Professor Carlos F. -W-ei
~~~i ~n2nt~!1~1fu~n~u~d~2ta=::

~!

~eJl•~.

row night. Professor "Weiinan, 'W'ho ~as
born. in Sao Paulo. the center of 1:ne- ·~· :i
cerit revolutionary niovement 'Whi9h. oVer~
threw- the a.drn.inistra.tion of -President
Washl~on Luis, is a. former instructor
tn languages in_ the Harvar~ Sehq£?:l. o:t
Business :Adrn.i:ntstra.tion,· a. gra9,"ua.te ., .Qf
Suffolk La:w School~ and last suxxuner 1
student at the international law
n
of th-e ~eagu:e of.. Na.tl~s-. Jn
eva.: unde"'r a H.arvaJ:"~d- .!::!Chota::r:~~ ~

"

H

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11

3"ohn P .. Devaney .
v~~~~~:rinc!b~~}1j~t~e;~~{ih,: w~h:~
Leather w--o~ker ~nd bowbng _ alley •o.f education.
Father ~ o::f three and
o-wner.
¥arrH~:d WJ.th Tour children. 1ives at 69 Central st. 7 next; to High

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TRANSCRIPT. BOSTON, MASS.

I

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,,_ ------------------------ ------ ------,,

8

BOSTON

I.

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:So.seen Y?ew.s-!Ilt;-~ur-;a~.;----

;~:~tofu fb~sf~efs 1!:ithes~~~lh!r ~oh~:/,
owners oI Standard Auto . Supply-.\;
Central st. S. A. S. Club got its na:me
t1!,ere: One oI the sons of Mrs. Mary
~lrmin~ham o:f Church st. Unmar- ·,
ned. Likes books an_? r€:ads them.
,•
Harold Kiley
,
. Holds positio~ in. veter-3:ns bure.aU. / i
1n Bo.ston.,, Active 1n Legion_ affa1rs,
and hves on Aborn st. Making his !
first bid £or office. Apt to polkgood/ I
vote.
Melville Hallow-ell
i

I

(

'has practised law in this city fox,the past twelve yea+'S'·

0

_
Thoma~ J". Meane!
.
gr~~d c;~~ghasa~i!p~~ri;,e£1~ ~~Ii~=
Res1dent of Mill st. 3;.nd 1s a sk1l~ed ical campaigns. :for the other :fellow-. ,
leat~er ~orke~, married and '\,V"lth Operates a
taxi service that pays
£amily, h1s chief concE;:~·
Ha~ fol- '\,"\Tell. Formerly in aTocery business. 1
,lo--wed
Peabody's
political
history Father o:f three~ -with home on Bee,closely.
kett st. Post Noble Grand of Holten l·
---~
Charles V. Cassidy
Lodge. Past 40.
l
Son of Crow Village, Vvhose Dad is I
· M?rris Isaacson
J
the dean of Peabody tonsorial artists.
~reasurer of leather . concern on
Lives at 20 State st.
Graduate of Raxlroad ave. ~~ormerly 1n vegetable 1
Salem Commercial and holds diploma trade in -w-hicti · he g-ot his st.a.rt to
as undertaker.
Has been errgaged in fame and "W"-ealth. ?opular with larg-e
the ice business.
Married -with fam- acquaintance.
Bs}:.>ng-s
to
Peabody
ily.
Cle:in - vigorous and ambitious Elks. Believes Ch~- ~lie Teag-ue shou1d
w-ith a background.
be kept as truant officer till he can

supervisor for the[

\Essex County district. He gra?-u-i
,ated £rom both
Peabody
high;
'school and Suffolk I aw scbg_ol, an.a;-

I,

I

During the 1920 census he1

1was assistant

1
men.
Daniel F. Harriga~
Pfo~e:-i;: ?Jsth~s i!~ ,
Supt. o.f St. Mary's cemetery which surance field and later super at the!
~he has greatly improved by his super-, Ryan shoe factory, o-wned by his;
vision. Liv-es -0n Lynn st.,. father of brother. Lived on Abbott st. for a· '
pel'._lmanship teac_her D. Fran_cis E;"arri- .long period. H!ias a pleasing persongan. Has been 1n the council for four aiity and has positive ideas- on con-:
years -where he has sho-wn ability duct of schools.
I
I sufficient to merit his re-election. In- v
Louis p_ P. Osborne
·J dependent~and ha~ go!>d business judgMig-ht, have been post:ni.a.ster Of!
:men~. Fa1.r play 1s his m«;>tto ltkE:_ that Peabedy, ·but p~eferred the leather;
o:f h1.s colleague Tracey·
.
trade in w--hich he succeeded his late :
Mohammed E. Hussein
:father Calvin a veteran w-ho m.ade a i
Born in Turkey, came to AmeriCa in fortune in -th~ craft. Is Lynn ma".n-'
1912.
Naturalized in 1927.
Attends/ ager :for liability insU.r.ance concern. i
South church regularly. Employed at Active in G. 0. P. circles and is a
A~ C. Lawrence Co. for long period retired captain in national guard.
and know-n as good -w-orkman.
Not Married,. three children, served as as-'.
married. Lives at 9 ~w-ell st.
sessor. Has served several terms on
.John H. McNamara
school ,board and proved himself a r
Was at Camp Devens when armis- zealo1:1-s · and cap~b~e member. Means ;
tice came. Is in the insurance field as to be reasonable 1n debate.
· collector.
Married,
:four
children,
William .J. Birminghalll
home 10 ~ittle"s lane.
This is his
Carrte near landing- on school board
maiden appearance on the ballot. Has t-w"o years ago. Is ~aduate of B. U. !
13- good vocabulary and can talk out and Suffolk La'W".
Held job o ftraveling

\

t~of

iterms, and president on the East;'
,End Improvement Society for two;

I

;~~1;.?~ia~w1~

He was pres-[

\iden.t of the Emeralds £or

7~
-c'

.:C-=~-

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/
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!-·'2t~~
~=====~==="""""""""""~ai:==c::=:':
J.l~.Jhf-'••.

,,, ;

' fi.itstnn N i>ws-C!Hip Wuuau
BOSWORTH STREE'T
MASSBOSTON
8

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

NOV 2 - 1930

COUNCll,

~~~~~~~;s

Mr. Regan was for two years
secretary to Mayor Bakeman. ~e
is a practising attorney, w:i-th
'.offices in Peabody. Eis education

\

DEAN GLEASON L. ARCHER of the Su~olk law school, who brings
something novel to the radio. His tal~ educational as well as entertaining, are heard by an audience estimated well up in the millions--<he largest
audience of any New England radio speaker. Because of the popularity
which his weekly law talks over WBZ gained, he was invited to be the
guest speaker of the National Broadcasting Com.pany over its nation-,wide
network. He now speaks each Thursday night at 7 :15 from WEAF as the
key station on "Laws That Safeguard Society."" The thousands of letters
coming in from all over the country testify to the popularity of his talk~-

includes diplomas from Peabody,
St. Anslem 's prep, Burdett college and Suffg_U,:, la,y -~~ehool. A~though but a young man, he is
recognized as a keen stll;de";'t of
polities
and has an intimate
knowledo-e of the workings of city
a-overni:ent. His position on the
ballot is 17th

GUST J. PUSKA
Editor of the Times:
Dear Sir:Fully appreciating the use of
the space alloted by your valuable
paper to candidates I wish to m~ke
the following statement regarding
my candidacy

8

BOS\VORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

,I

.0/

-7

(/

NOV 3

1930

for

councillor

at

large. I am 36 yea,:s of age and
have resided at 59 King stre.et fo,r
21 years. I was educated in the
Public Schools of Peabody and
Suffolk J aur &bool. I have been
in business 15 years. In ;so ~uch
as the tax rate is based on the annual expenditures of the city, :co~petent and matured judgment is
essential.
I believe I have such
qualifications and promise if elect. ed to give the people of Peabody \.
an honest administration.
;
GUST J. PUSKA,
.
<,,...
59 King _st., Peabody
\

.• /;"~[1';,~V' ,.

11,,,-

'"J}: ·:·~

~~~~·-·~; ~.~~~·~..tiL~-~··'
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~-'""""-'~_....,1;/j,__::..~--~---1

~oston ':St¢ws-(Cltp ::Sur¢au

i!ilnntnu N.ema-<!!lip iilur.eau

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

8

8

BOSTON

BOSWORTH

STREET

BOSTON

:

<

MASS.

TIMES, PEABODY, MASS.

~1

~

=7:r=~!:::::==p:t;;jl.,IC::!:aEbF=IV=E=C=E=N=T=S=

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JOSEPH P. KELLY
DIED MONDAY
P

Kelly,

of

25

Walnut

road.

Somerville.
died
Monday
morn.lng at 9 30 at h'is home after

one week's illness.
Death was due
tO lobar pneumonia. Mr. Kelly was
, widely known -throughout Charlestown and the news of his death was
received in this District with pro: found sorrow and regret.
He was born on Lawrence street
39 years ago, the son of Jeremiah
: and Catherine Kelly but during the
greater par:t of his stay here Jived on
· Summer street.
He received his
early educa:iion
in the Harvard
. Grammar school and was a graduate of CharlestoWn High School,
Pace Institute, Walton School of
Commerce and Suffolk___!.a.w School,
1928.
He b e c a ~ t i f i e d public
accountant in 1915, and was adIlli:tted to· the Massachusetts bar in
.January, 1929.
Mr. Kelly had offices at 40 Court street, Boston, and
up to the time of his death had en1
, joyed an excellent repu:tation and
wide. practice as a lawyer and accountant.
,He served in the Navy
during the war as an ensign. Before
retiring from the service in 19 2 O he
was promoted to the rank of lieutenant.
In 191 7 he married and n1oved to
Milton whe1e he resided until four
years ago, when he moved to his late
address. He was a rnember of Post
19, Anierican Legion of S01nerville,
and a former n1en1ber of the Catholic Litera1y Association of Charlestown.
The funeral took place Thursday
morning from his late residence with
a solemn requiem high mass in St.
Anri's
church,
Somerville,
at
9
q clock.
Rev
Fr. McCar:thy was
celebrant of the mass.
He was as1 sisted by Rev. Fr. Barry, as deacon,
j and. Rev. Fr. Frawley as sub-deacon.
Rev. Dr. Mark C. Driscoll, pastor of
St. Francis de Sales' church, was
seated within: the sanctuary. Intert- was. in .the_ family lot a,t Holy
Cross Cemetery, Malden. Prayers
were read at the g1ave by Rev. Fr.
Gately.
The
pallbearers
were:
Mayor
.John Murphy of Somerville; .John J.
McCarthy, John :F,13,nagan, William
C. Bradley, George Elliott and Lindsey Caldwell
The latter two were
busiriess associates of Mr. Kelly.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
> Adelena Torreano Kelly; 1two daughters, Amelia, 2, and Theresa, 4; his
\ Parents; three sisters, Mrs. Mary E.
Johnson, and Misses Margaret and
... .Julia Kelly, and a brother, Bernar.d
f
'~ {Kelly.
·
\:; "";·' ,'_'_
- ~ - ~----\. -'

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fJ1

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to bring him home a winner.
. If elected to this office he promises to treat all issues-fairly and
(flliam J. Birmingham, candid te :for School Board, is the son to be ready at all times to do his
capable
o:f Mrs. Mary P. Birmingham, o:l; duty in an. honest and
manner as his education qualifies
18 Church street, with whom he him to do.
1esides. He is a graduate o:f Pea- f"".....,._ _,,...________.
body high school, Boston univer-

IAMJ~IRMING~

sity, where he took an advancefr
course in English, and
Suffolk
Law school. He was :for
b"t± 0£ :,ce,.rs a traveling accountant for the Boston and Maine railroad, resigning this position
to
open the Standard Auto Supply
Co., at 26 Central street, Peabody, where is is associated with
his
biother, John L . He is a
young man of sterling character,
honest and efficient and his legion o:f friends are working hard

Native of Charlestown, Well
Known Lawyer and C.P .A.
.Joseph

ft·

8

80SWOftTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

::Soston ':Stews-~hp ::Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

BOSTON

11930

1I

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS •

NOV 4 -1930

act-

was for his--beiiefit Then came his
mission to the Cambridge .Hom.·e. f·o. r the
Aged and Infirm. Nqw ~o~e.s ~is death

~o~i~:~~I

Natfve of Brazil to ·Discuss
Recent Revolution There
The results that are bound to flow
from the recent revolution in Brazil arid

a,::,

...
He- - - - served in the av1at1ou--xorct:.-.,, i v i
a short period during the. world war,
being stationed at -camp D1x. He had
~Ase raiing of ft.1st, lieut
t~
' in charge of athletics at the. camp. · "''
Mac€ was a native of Cl:;telSea, M~s
Thi
and .~~o daughters survive.
~
John P. Kelly

F!"w

1 his home. 25Jf:~1YYe:i!~~;Y ~~iiLfu.~bl!t'\
ac~~~~r.- Walnµt road, Somerville
'

the opportunities that soutn. America
offers to business men of the United
States will be discussed by Prof. Carlos
F. Weiman of Harvard at a meeting of
the SuffoUr Traw §cheol Alumni in the

He was 39. He was a gradua.te of the
Pace Institute and the Ba.f!folk Bchool
Qf._~~~-·_puring the world war he was
a ~ - i n the navy.
He became a certified public acco~nt1 ant in 1920 and a member of the bar
: in 1929. For the last five years he was
, a member of the firm of Gove, Elliott

Prof. Weiman, who was born in Sao
Paulo~ the centre of the l"ecent revolu-

I s.~e income taxes.

alumni clubhouse tomorrow night.

tionary movement which ove-£"t-brew...-t:
administratioh of President Washington
Luis, is a former instructor in languages in the Harvard school of business administration, a graduate of Suffolk law school~ class of 1929, and last
summer was a student at the international law session of the Leagu€ of
Nations in Geneva under a Harvard
SCholarship:
_.,.., ----":'"....;.

J

te K;~, a~er;_~il~ri~bl~ji ~~d~~~lta~ci l
i ... MU:e"f~ t

Pai!Yf

---~
11

MASS.

~r,s.
!1/r71&,·

POST, WORCESTER,

LYNN, MASS.

Senator Shanahan
If 6, Won Against ·Odds
-:-.-·-

\

Outstanding amonsg the -political
victories of last Tuesday was the
election ort Atty William F. Shana' han to the State Senate. Waging a.
battle a.gain.st tremendous od,ds in a
district 'which has always sent a. Re~
pu'blican to the senate, Senator-elect
ahan wenf,, after this seat of
honor
anne·r which. aroused
the ·en.tire el
orate to action
1

e!:Jt;~~~J.!;n.J~J!s; oiidoine~~~

quent speaker, Mr. Shanahan attracted hundreds to his suppo·rt by

/: . :i~o:r::~;i~~i%p~:S~nf~~s ~~~t·rf:;
His energy seemed inexhaustable,
for beginning imm-ediately after the
primaries he labored
from
early
mo•rning until late into the night
His analysis of his op.pone:rit's
1 ecord

was merciless an'd sever-e, and
yet he conducted a clean and dignified campaign Senator Fr:ank W,
...- Osborne, his opponent, has b-een a
'l esident of Lynn all his life and has
held public office for many years,
yet Mr. Shanahan., piled up a plura1ty of nearly 22100 Votes n Lynn, and
ntad-e important inroads into his op•
ponent's strength in
Republican

I

~fe~~nJ~!na;;-ra:q;~;J~~:ii~b~~resne;~o;;
the entire Democratic ticket and it
:i.s not to be wondered that hl.s brilliant and popular victory has been'
;,~iinff;k b~~ ~~; ~~ifre L~~~nm~~~
wealth.
Wiiliam F Shanahan was born
in Rockland, was educated in the
public sc-hools there, and was
graduated from St, Josep~i's High
school in Manchester, N. H, being
valedictorian of his class. He entered Holy Cross college and continued his brilliant record as a
student, being gradllated from that
in.stitu. tion iri 1913 with the degree.I
of A· B
S u f f ~ o o l graduated. him ari(lwconferred upon him
the ,deg~ee of LL B , and he was
adtl'iitted · to the practice of law in
the coll.rts of l\.!assact.1 usetts H,e
1i as made a splendid record as
practicing atto.rney and is, asso----_ -· _ ~------,:

wffiUAM F. sHANAHAN

cla.ted with Judge Edward B.
O'Brien. :Mr.
Shanahan is w-ell
known locally as an accomplished
musicia~. and at preset is organist
at St John the Evangelist church,
Swampscott
I'D. 191:8, Mr. Shanahan waR associated with the Bureau ot~ War
Risk •Insurance in Washington, D~
C, where he was stationed for several mo~ths. He was appointed to
establish what 'is now th.a Veterans'
~ureau in Boston, and was the first
regional di. rector of that bureau,
w.here he served With distinctlon.
. Mr .. 1Sha~~han is a member of the
Lynn Lodge of, Elks, Holy Cross
club of B.oston, Boston City club,
O:':fo~~
club, and the Tedesco
·Country ; clµb ,He is also ,a meroher .o.f .t~e )IJLssachusetts and Essex
County'Bar associations and of the l
-executive committee of the Lynn ,
'I
Bar association
"
; 1 · Mr. Shanahan has had an unusual
'.· opI)o:rtunrtY, .for travel,. having vis-,1
f+.ed every ~ate, in the Union wnen
conne<:ted with the U. S govern-

/

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Uxbridge Nurse,l,:
To Marry.B()' :

j,lf

smdria'l Hospital Training School, a11,<t·,
.. · • WKeating,
Clerk of Suffolk Superfo;r Cotl:i;,,'.to ·wed .

I

'

I ment and having had an opportun1ty
0

: l to go to the ]fa_ciflc coast in 19 2 6 as :
' del1!~ate to the Kiwanis conve,ition.:
.Last year Mr~ Shanahan acoom-'
_)}anied a party. led by His Efilinellce I
Cardinal O'Connell to Rome, where i
he was granted a private audiencel
with the Holy Father.
.A.t thi:sl
time Mr. Shanahan availed himse fi
of the
opportunity to travel ex-!
tAnshely in Italy, lf'rance, England1
and Ireland.
i
Hund1eds of con~tutatory mes-\
sages have been received by Mr :

/

1

~~::a~~~~tfori~nf~o:e J1o~~~~~c~ej~:j
seph B. Ely. U. s. Senator-Eleoti

'. I~~:sl Awa?st~:rdg_t

b~r:ht

:.Y



s~i::~;:

·1·s predicted f?t' this young man t-y\
all who know him. -

i

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,

1

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1,

POSSessed of a splendid eduoatfon
and'blessed wl!l:h ·gt:'~t natur~l at.n-·,
H:.y, Mr Shanaha11 wj.pl _
serv~, as sen~ttr'· trom. the ,,lffir~t E,~ex distri-c~'

\· ·~f:~~ · h,~~07/a1{c1;:f ~1~~~n?":1o!J,

I

~~~·~~-

C

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C

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':, •" ···~1:0>~/' ·,.

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

,,

MASS.

~

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

ofC5

~

\?/~,;;_,

. s , p to Europe. In the photo she,
is :wearing the dress, hat and pul'.se,
made by her~.lf, with which she won

the contesj-

l

TUPP'el

g .

MIL y TO
MARK OLD HOMESTEAD

The r_rupper Family Assopiation, lnc,
met at the Women's Republican Club

!1~;;:~t~o~~: ~.diI~r;;era~i ;!~~=

·/

line prasided.

Plans were discussed fcir placing •

· permanent memorial tablet to mark
the site of the old; Tupper hotn,eistead
at Sandwich. Ru.Ssell E. Tupper of
, Salem, the last member of the family
i to live tn the Sandwich homestead,

1

' was appointed chairman of the memorial committee,
'
The 2peakers were Dean Gleason .L.
Archer of the Suff!'lk Law Schoo,, G.
Frederick R o b i n s o ~ t of the
Watertown Historical Society, Frederic
A. Tupper, formerly principal of th&

___ Brighton High School, and Mrs Charles
.

r!1:;t s:;~~:rb. 01.t~ ~~sf~~a~~:t:~i

:Soston )t~ws-~[lp Y.,ur~au
8 BoswoRTli STREET
BOSTON

[W
York,
The
prge W. Tupper.

toastmaster ,:waa
,· ~

/

~i:uiaurN ·l!fttfF~_-: ,'.'"""·

MASS.

Y.,oston )t~ws.(i:;hp Y.>unau
RECORDER, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

S

.._;· ftt!

, on dti.ty in San Francisco in
the tilne earthquake and fire
dE!strqyed that city He rnarAnn'a.cM; Murphy, a graduate
ston Norm~l school, in 1909.
have a daughter, Theresa, and

urray, a sci!diet''tn the 6U

y, at Fort Ogle!.ihorpe, Ga

an· eye on West Point for 1931;
·member of company "C," 101s1
'M, -N. G., Who has similar in
and Arthur, who hopes·~ bi



1'4a,j. McCabe is starting oll th)
at· leads to a general staff a£
ent, he will be abundant'ly satis
u· his future career is one of r...i..:
0

~
~tfv:,\~~~~~/~~e:~
'"" - .tI_;t_E:_ !Eie~~s.

~EWS ITEM

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS .

.Jos~ph Coyne, who was recent~y
! ap,pointed director of the municipal
[ employment bureau, was given a surl prise Ia,st Fliiday evening when a '
group of friends called at his home,
299 Broadway, to tender -congratulations and present him with a desk
and chair Mr Coyne is a graduate
of the Su~:w,._ School in the
dass of 1928 and is now filling the
place left vacant by the a;ppointment
of ex-Councillor R:obart as director of
the division of the necessaries of 'lif.e
at the state house

Y.,oston )t~ws-\!::llp Y.,unau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MAS~

CHRONICLE, BROOKLINE, MASS.

~-~

2 ~ ;930

K111:,,uu, ,,,,.._. .. ,.,~ ~ - · - - ' -



\\rilkinson __ £! ::J:1,,.~,_..MeruN.ay"; ,,,_:fyi1ss
~ - " ~ s graduated from Snnth College last near and '}..fr Wilkinson is a

Brown .;f~ate of the class of 1925 and
now a~s'tr..jctor at Andover Academy

i.

MASS

Announce Engagement on Anniversary
In connection with observance of
their twenty-third wedding anniversary,
Mr and 1vfrs Philip Finn of Mayflower
Road announced the engagement of
their daughter, 11iss Charlotte Louise
Finn, to Bernard Shore of Boston lvfiss
Finn tS a graduate of the 1fadame
Achard School in the class of 1927 and
).Jr Shore ,vas graduated from the Suffolk Law. School this year and is "'v7ce:;.
p~~it'".()'f the Publix Oil Company
The wedding is planned for next June

DEC 5

'[lJ!;tfflr_;_ ,. . .
I

IF"""~

,wr<'R'1t··~-::St~n ~¢ws-(.tllp ~UT¢'1U

~oston ~¢ws-(.tllp ~UT¢4U

\\

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS,

MASS

Bos TON

RECORD, MILTON, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

CITY POSTS
FOR YOUNG
LAWYERS

TURN TO SELECTMEN
,1=

I ' Rumors Of Vacancies-One
I

Mayor Appoints Two
Assistant Corporation Counsel
.\
\\

!i\.ta;y of the Boston Colleg.e Alu~1111

i Association, w;;ts appointe<l las+..m~ht
! by 1-I.ayor Curley to serve a5 a~su,tallt
I corporation counsel in the c1ty law

·tr~;ied7 th~~ ,law, : and

fnc'-'·.PropiietP;~· of
:~-·-.;.,• . . , '-.-

J

to the Selectmen and the electorate /
began to ask about the intentions of
the members of the present board I
Messrs Johnson, Babcock and Wi;, 1
glesworth
Usually about th. t' o I
\ the "ol_d boa:ct" makes announ~em~1!~ //
I
of rf_s 1ntent10ns but tlle time appar-1/
' ent rs not rrpe for this disclosure
There are, however, persistent runrm s that one or more members of
t~e present board will not be candr?ates for reelection and that they i
wffiH soon nrake announcements to that
e ect
Anth.J1,.1ating v lca1 .es, ,,, 1ans, ::it/
1
1
1 ea:t. foui: candidates are re.ported to/
be 1::,l oonung though only one so far
I tne ria~i~~i~iin~:,~ on Page s)
'!
lias se1
smce
J. Ellswm th O 9
,,
organ1zed A
Milton rs to ~e...,5 Eaton st1 eet, East
place ,
a candidate for the

At the same ti.me the Mayo-: ~n·
nounced the appointment to a s1m1lar

I

position of Attorney John A a~:::::.:
Both
.

05 1
i;

~~~cfs

~ legal fratern~~fl:ge young Sullivan was

Ved

I

11: '"'~v;:

~.,.._,~

~oston )1¢ws-u..u.p ...., .. ,..;ou

d~ba;!nir=~~!~it~l~~

"'ell as pres1d:n\ ofh~ editorial board$
:oel~::t p~blications
~niversity Law_
:'U:elTtber
,vas graduated mkl~ S~ciety comprising
of the ,voolsac
'
honor students
• ,

Both Active in Fratermhes

i!?f~e\ Ja,~ · _has .been.

At h:J=!i:t~1!

~e'en niug.h:·a;ritation in recent :t.im~.liue,t!;'.t/t.~e·i a~palling n'umb.e,r· of··J1n<taali,1i''BJ%.,
;)i,teri:<:'YJ;,,0 ~.:regal,'d. the adm·is~,f.?n. to}~~-tl'

~:k~:~·:f9 ~;{;~i~~n fit:i~;~~~~-~{;~- ?;'

/~e:¥L~th:

wi.thout' wo1~

The··ig~a,}s·:~iia· ·

. trllditiohs ' l).pan ' 1rh1eh any ptotess1on

~i;;f~'./'h-a~.;s t~~~~f;t~;~o~~~usa;i:
I J:)r.,:itessiajl, ·'as a whole-, down through
i

;t~i:!;f:"ai1~f~:tiled to 1
ecognize

:1

this

;~;; <·/-~~fi~f~-~~on_ in .. t>ang~r"
J_•., •;~r.·:tl}e · clis·h·o.~est of incompet~nt cir
'tt~,W9_rth'Y. 3-:c\s, of a few, a whole p10-

!1 f.~Qh:m~is; i'r~t1uently jud~ed, and when

,, t~ei; ~e~, b;eoome. m~ny the prot-essioq ·i13 :

F_'a}?ulous reports as. .to the r
~asy'income o( I~w,Jers, of fortunes to I
~/m.ide ;by' .l)Iacin'g one''s feet upon a (
d'el!fk -a:nd · lying back in indolent ease
,.. ·
cl~i;s rush in to place their ,
·.¥in the S/il.fe, have dec~h'ed and

:i{l":,-~a:J'.1,~r<

'!ho t;~J:~~~ppe~f neir;./:::~:~
ethically to· handle affairs of

f Attorney John F.
He is the .s<:'n o
7 Alveston strt;et,
sum,an, residing at.
h"s admission
Jamaica plain, and s1~s~~ia~ed witb: At•
to the bar has been a ham in the tiractorneY James M (?ranow but 28 years
tic& of la\'\'
~le; is
his alumni acold and in add1ll0~01i~ge he is a 'mem•
tivities at Boston Bar Association, B
ber of the Boston
t M C O F ;
A A-, Bost<;>nia C~1~\ 1• K of c, and
Jamaica _Flam C;>':i so'cietY
the charitable Ins .
counsel BrenAssistant Corporati~n
Suffolk La,v
nan was ~1aduate~n rs:~er~g cle~k
Schoo_L-a.n-d has bel rk of the superior
in the office of c eas been acti\·e as . a.
Civil Comt. He h k r HHl council,
member of the B~n e a.ud ,Hamilton
Knights of Colu;
38 married a;fld
Court, M C o A , Bren~an,, ."Jr., res1dhas a son, John
H"ll street CharlesIno- at 2S2 Bunker
i
,,
to';:n
t this morning for
TheY ~il~ 0;~~;~tion counsel Sam~~~J

ortance; sometiines involvi~g

;Jy/t~r',the· purpo~e ?~ pro!i.~ e~i~~{~~t ~ole~f}~1f:!t:;tf!e!!~i~I~f to !ndividual
1
J,r_Qu:t;ij~rs;' b:ave :.s:Pr1:1ng u~ ·through the
ci)·µij.t:l"'Y"·, py' the 'scol'e.s: . Their _aqver~
dd,'n'f~~ts·. h~v~ Jed· many a young man,_

1
1

~,ir:lt::: ~~~~rche~l~a!;a~~ -~t::.~~~;
h1f·!tuitiO~·.
the gr~at~r part of which

Wtllt ·to the: rir.oPri~tQ:r
t:·Qil,;

---.rranu. -co"li,Spiracy-~stea~ itnd-f
Con'ti~d 01:1 Pag~ Two
/

ftannhlg Will
tPractice Law

~!·

~~~~!~~an

'ait~gether too \. ·,<

:~!'r:f1~¥ Ot. t~e.- character and abili~:y ¢... !
,t4,esf·admi~ted1to its 1anks The:r_e li~{i_ 1,~

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

Sc11~~t/:!~

I

I

l

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

afdth:

Mayor J. Fred Manning has
declcled to hang out.· his shingle
as a. barrister and will do so
within a few daYs. He will enter
the office of Atty, James · E.
Connor in the Lynf<>rd build·

1

-~·!

in~, .: 25 Central square, one of
- ·• the-·leadnig lawyers in the city.

The· mayor ha..s been a mem..
her of the bar for a. number of
years, but n~·er before Was
E>itablished In an office. He is

S~lJa

a··::....gr.aduate or
Law
school. When he was e
"d as
ewer executive of th~ cifY, he
had planned to start a law
practice, but owin,g to the pJ.'.('Ss

,-: or

c1iy

.bu#ness, :Wb1c1, kept him

·[~{~'"'·~,,·:~,
;
1

011

the ~ob·,~ -~~nr, a ~1 he

.

t. t

\ ·. ,~1S!n\e1!., -~.;s -~-J;?e.;tk~pg _ be for~ ;· the /·
j''?,$t~Jl.-Ch~P_ter, Nati,on~l Associatio~ of!.
~.ii.st(~~ou.~t,nts at the Hotel Bruns- f(
,:\\,'ic~: . .'on the lJhases of ·accounting he 1·
j.h. ~~.:, c~?t~~c~. ~ith while county prosecu- \:::·

--

,,,..--."~.......~

benefited ontY

such law SchOols~ \

i,,,~;l;AW "Too· CARELESS"

I

BOTH APP01NTEES Y,~UNG

a AJ~:doe~torn. the

'b'tisiness

1

i, department, at a salary of $45QO.

1 tions J)Ut have es

stho'o,is'f which l,e charged ha,;e· ied I, -

!)!any• young men away' from other f ,·
for. wliich they are better,_:.'

New Candidate In The
Field And Three Others
Are Reported To Be Considering ~ntering Race /
Political interest this week switched j

A.ttorney T. Burke Sullivan, secre'.

of Charlesto\\n, brothe;r;~n:n
councillor James H
0
\ ] appointees are quit~;1J~~~~f ~ 8

· .•.!"ftl'm~,: District Atiorney Robert i
'K :Bushnell la.st, night took a fling i ·
it \v-h'af:·h~ ·<Jeclared to be the low :
J~nd~"rd~ ·,. ·of ad~ission to the bar, i,
al1d,':"w.hat he termed "mushroom la~f: ~

VOTERS AWAIT WORD
FROM THE OLD BOARD

9f the school,
by,' a. Sy..$tem . ot c:can;ming. become

~P~lfl_. :t;i> J:l~ss·bar~examina!iol'!-s

'

of a mo-

~~fi;!~~~'·a ~h::.er:t ~~at~~ ~~~a~h!'~Q
,:',ijiis' ,~tin_g Which your profe~s~on has
~,-cm in. e_:X-istence,' th~~ of ace'efuntants.
~:V:1! b~ffff tlirectlY·}e~ponsibie, °;Or.~ bK
t~~

-·s!ns· of om_is::iion than comm1ss10n.

, 1...:~~t - I l
All A Pr0h"b"tiOB andTh·en Some
uuu

I

ai'I

method may be ta:ken; ·tli'at
well. and at the
same time eliminate'-the"c-0
'the Zutas and the
-, Tlle Boston News Bureau asserts that for years, those rest of their Sicilian r_e
tog~her' a~d sensibly ' i
or/ng prohibition have set up a claim to a sort of moral
If the 48 States ar
be reacheq. But the i
µpel'iority over those who dare question it.
consider the matter
n:l!,fcp.y, so far as the 1
: : : The News Bureau, we think, confuses temperance Roosevelt and the Mo;tr:
'is puerile to suggest
prohibition in this inference. The person who favors issue of temperance is, _
l:\ol shall call on the
temperance undoubtedly holds a super~or moral position to that the State desiring to pro
·nst laws made by
_,;:inewho favors intemperance.
_ Federal Government" to assist
,-- · · But, prohibition is not the only way to secure a larger that same government. · · _
)n'easui:e of 'temperate living. Intemperance carries on in
None of these statesmen S ·
.~ny other ways, s.lso. Many excellent people eat them- tions, prejudices and ~ittei.:n,
,!3elves. to· death. Many others indulge in wasteful habits dared to offer any such subs
1besideii those of eat and drink, and rob their community of iii trying, with fair results,
tlteir greater usefulness.
Without persoi;,.ally su
ing it as a substitute, what
; The News Bureau hails with some show of reason the tion that the Federal Gove
~cent addition of President Hopkins of Dartmouth to the introducing something simil!!. 1;11ber of prominent educators who oppose the present
Suppose the Federal Gqv·
em of warfare against intemperance in drink. Dr. Hop- control the sale of all alcolio.li
s adds respectability to a cause that the News Bureau able or unreasonable?
:i,_~t tlu3 Federal Governers has hitherto needei:I it. And it HAS needed i't, beSuppose someone su
'ptoved purity, at prices
-ailse people do confuse Temperance with prohibition.
ment supply the beverag
'ii! e)':ceedingly e,xpensive.
\;· And, herein lies the weakness of the "repealists". They i most unreasonable-in ot
eeps them out of comepµtent themselves with seeking the repeal of the govern- i At present the high-cost o.
·'does not go to humble_
ment attempt to control the traffic and offer no better I mon-distribution. The bo ·
stuff-certainly no far:µiethod, · To begin with the whole issue amounts to a broad i home or to the factory to s~.
es. He wants to deal
,\social question viz: either keep the hands of the Federal ! ther than the office of the. e
j'J-Government wholly off the entire matter; or else keep up with the well-to-do, only.
the effort to control. They doubt the constitutional right 1
Make sales a matter of.
record. List the purIfj 4ilVe_n to control, a right that we exercise in respect to nar-J chasers and enable the publi
n_ f_orm itself of the pur':D':cotics, also.
chases. Charge very high p
put the profits into
if';;
Of course, prohibition of alcohol succeeds fully as well! road-building; not into col
_fo:('tun!ls for Al Capone. 1
: ·the prohibition of morphia, heroin, opium etc. In some The answer would be probably
t the nch would buy and
,•;
'Jects it succeeds better. Control of beverage is easier by the poor could not buy. But tb.,, rich can buy $1,000 ~urir'.,.
.)ran control of drugs, which come in such small pack- coats; $50,0?0 ~iamond broocl;1~tand $2?,000 automobiles.
· ;,., ·we make no contention over the right of the gov- And the desire 1s to prevent bU!J·•,mg. Nme-tenths of the ,
ff
',1t to control the distribution of opium. We make no kick would be taken O]!.t,-.o:f.'th \_ possession of beverages, 1·_t
. _-itional objection to the control of immigi;ation. But when all it means is purchase in·. pen-market. A g?od many I ,
,_~; · _" "·ao con!en? th~t there is a right, inherent in the peo- J people get their kick out of ~oa,stln.g_ about their bop ti egger,) ,
t, c;, .:o have d1stnbut10n of beverage.
J just as they boast about takmg li.-.b~th.
.
. i.
,t- , ,_Passing over that question and assuming the right of I
Another answer is 'that bo_iotleggers, would still exist/
( the Government to control or prohibit manufacture sale I and would cut prices. But the do':ernment would then be
'
t_!~-Jld transportation of alcohol, we overlook tiie real is~ue ofl in a position to hunt bootlegger.;s!w_,1th al?proval of all the ,
__
,___t_.~mperance in assuming that the question is prohibition present-day objectors, wh_o ·cla1_m_,_,._· :the right to. have what/
~ ·and anti-prohibition. We do not believe that PresidentJ 'they want. Their posi~ion ·w;q~l~ __ be offens1v!3I~ nasty.
_ , p~ins advocates free ~nd unlimited .manufacture, sale, Think of it! Law-breakmg for: ~he sake of savm., a few
,llfstr1bution etc of alcoholrn beverages.
,
dollars!
'
, "t;

' . , _ ',fhe excellent I\_f1;· Roosevelt of New York proposes to
All this is mere fancy on 6W p;,irt. :13?-~ IF the people
,:dW back to the conditions before the Volstead act. The ex- 1
want temperance and do no_t w!jnt proh1b1t,10n, they must
: ruiUent Senator Morrow of New Jersey does the same.
work out a better way than prc;>lljhition:. We see no pro;.·- This is a very doubtful procedure. We have certainly gress at all, in the matter, of ~th theing the present laws, or
'._,:'$een_vas~ improvement as to temperance among wage-earn- of modifying them, as our priblst at ten, especially th!3 politi_ffirs, m the past ten years. We have thought that one of the cians, handle the matter. Sur:• •~hey must perceive that
u~es o~ over-product~on is the grea~er efficierrcy of work- the present law, economically, lur~d, been a blessing to the
.
.1n mills and factories, due to sobriety. No one who ran wage-earner. And under the),st ~t. system, local or State
~
printing-o~fice thirty years ago, need proof of this; nor option prevails as it is propos~d\ndlle·~lans.of Gov. Roos~r_does any officer or paymaster of a cotton-mill. Help has velt and Senator Morrow: No_(:t.c<JJa.mumty m, ~wede~ rs
··,:.1l)C9me steady.
forGad to have places for gove;rn11!_'en:j:. sale. And m!ract1ons
:<, The ONE great fault in the Volstead act and in abso- 1 of the law, become acts ag .
_ State and Nation, that
, _t_e prohibition is in ~h-e brood of law-breakers it _ha_ s cre- 1 were serious matters in the ol_ _ _.s of ~-aine enforcement, 1
__
_,;ed. If you read "Chicago Surrenders" you perceive what and would be the same under
__onal ltcense.
!
\¥,V:ll\mean. This amounts to a _cancer in the social system.
-~---' C:::
, - hi!! Js undoubtedly the occasion for the withdrawal of such
Of course, this is not the lasfday on earth, tho it is the j
· a<;iologists ~s Dr. H<;>pkins, from a support of the Volstrad latest day. It is a very narrow v4ew-roint of what civilizaLaw, Certain morahsts also feel that the people who pur- tion needs as regards temperate,.Jiving, to insist on any I
chase liquors do so, in protest against the law; thereby be- ONE way to ll;eep one's neighbors sober, to the exclusion of
_,-0oming lawless, and teaching lawlessness to youth.
all other ways.
Think the entire. system of· control over and one can
Teetotalism may be very i,ij.~~m,t>erate, and temperance
),llardly say that it fails. as a reason_able effort. It works may be altogether too teetotal;t<Y,bettolerant. The most in-: fully as well as laws '.'-gamst theft'. - It works better than 'the temperate tal_k is niade by i;haH,oi,v thinkers abuut the pres/ tnarcoUc act. But ~t· I;as created_ an army o; underground ent laws, which would be id
1w.' uld the people accept
- r !aw-breakers, who ms1st that they are not <:mminals.
them. It has generally be ·
~red good practice to go
; /'' · Qne .~ust perceive that a duty lies v,ribh tbose who are around mountains and ar e,
f deeitiriation by a littie
1
-I Jn. opp~s1bon to tI;e law, and the 18th amendment, to find longer route. What is _ _ _
ogi:ei,s in temperate liv- a
somethmg that win work as well and eliminate the boot- ing, decency, lawful-behavior; a _ bedience. Justice.is the m
}egger. ~nd they stop short of that. Granting the funda- goal; and justice is _the lal'gesj: ,iasure of personal liberty, cf
1
e~~~!ight o~ ~ r a ~ Gove1:1ment to ~ ~~trol, w~at consistent with the. rights,of :<?!; "s'. _
_ UO'.\,..,.,, ,-~·,- , -,.,: '._

._

_mi

I

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l

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I

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""i - ',.qo,a:_,pu'B &,nos -, - .. "o>!SU'St<>M. '8\:tal)'"A

SUOJlDH_lSUJ JO .Iaq
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\a:niu6a"r 'B:\OP0
:,ou:."as:-~a101A)re""
\1aitni:i'0r:t ·'Sp?<':I · .~tt . , uiltuOo. "e,ttL

\~'II? ".;'l"'•o alll'8T!l°'"\;:'sion~ i,arnv"
,

,

bU'B UOSlli.\0~

h"Jto1h\o.1qos:.

'-cgT.fTA.U'B.tOUI~ a1.&.0H.,
•1aqS<£1t'80 ~13-:

D.tt0 f .- *'

Zli,:1~;:. cuo~J.t'Biij'BS:..,Pt~ ~

,

\ t~~~~-~~.,.~~---·
-·-

---

- -- ------

-

------

~-17,

:S1S~~~~~ia•,i"ff~
.,
.z,.-i:=.,~
N';". ~.U'T:-e4U

i:~;.i '

-

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Jj

8 Bos.woRT& s ...
BOSTON

M.A..ss.

)

. ! 'STANDARD,

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

~a=;:;;:;;z;;;;;;;;;:;:;:::;::;;;;;;;::;:;;;:::;:::;;;::-:,~-w~·~-'~th-;::'-_~:M;:;:';i=s=s,-,R~u~t~hji
1
0
~ 'sorority w!
-with· Miss Vera , ,'
.!?~reet., Lew-iSto~.1

f~

......,_.....__________...;._,>

I

.l

~1ii.

Guest to be Ent ,
Miss .:Dorothy 1
burg. Mass~ .. a. c
Dpris Cluff w-ho
~
house guest
home on Orcha
,vu1 be given a
Fi:iday evening
Nasson. girls ar
Miss Crocker.
and Miss Cluf:C
<;lass o.f •29.

--_,...... ... "f..11'

CLUB SPLIT BY VO
AGAINST DISPLAY OF
J,~ PORTUGUESE FLAG

A-u.bu.r:u. -u~on1.an

I

Th$ president
C<:iunCil - and Mi

Maine, Mrs. Ch~

.Auburn. vvill g
19-23 to
ntten
Ip eeting of' th.-e

t.endents, Mis:sio
and
American

B,oazd

of

th

ONE FLAG FOR HllVi -

1

~.

Reconsideration Sl~ted
Meeting Called ·for.
Next Thursday

church.

at

JOHN B. NUNES .
DEFENDS ACTION
' Two Member~ Resign, frotests Pour 1n on President Moniz
\1 A vote to on1it display of the

I

'

\ Portuguese flag beside the United
I States flag at gatherings of the
Portuguese -"-\.1.neric:an Civic :-as..:..
sociation was passed by the club
II at a 1neeting last Tuesday.
A special J.neeting to reco31\ ~ider that vote has been called
for 8 P. l\L next Thursday, at
1
'I l\1onte Pio hall.

"'

t

NUDe!II S~nds His Gr~ttnd~

I

the motio:'° agail;:ist dis.Play of the Por·tuguese .flag , with the Ame-ric'an. on the
_ , _ : gro.nnd that it symbolized a divided al1 legiance. stands his ground in the fac~
of a sto1·m. of protest which has r(!sUlted
in the call for a .special n)eeUng.
Some of thm;e at the meeting· Tues\
\ day evening expressed dissatisfaction
\ with the vote, and one re.aigried ill pro\ test at the 'tirrte
Elias De _Barros Cam.ara, an.other member, has re~ign_ed_ am~
,'\ Mr. Camara
inserted
a.
notice _ 1n
\ ThllrsdaY's Diario de Noticias, F'ortu-

..TOHN B. NlJNES.

BOSWORTH STREET

8

BOSTON

_

John B~ Nunes, attoriley~ who made:a

MASS.

I;

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

\r:e:; ~~1
%~1::~! ~r~i:;1:p:cU~t:1
~h!

I flag of his mother country. Claims are

·

-----

J~~=
the

"i! ~;~e t~:a;ll~;~iy a3~~~~l-ll~~seb~t
\ sentative of the sentrtnent · of

~~ - , .. - -

$'J',.,,..-f.A..p{IJ.J\.R,Y 18,~ 19~\ or~'.'tf~~tii~tallation of the newly elect.. · ---·- --.- --:_--·- -_-- ·---:---··
. _ ·---·-4 ed offiCers 1·ecently. it ch9:-nc_ed that the
··
.·1~ HON'OR ~~< r::t~~jir!3'!10~:id~0\h~ispi~:~c~~
PLAN B '-::J
.. - . . .
.
flag.
A member
arose
during
the

I~{

1

A:r~ evening to ask if ·he might ask a ques-

To REP MURPHY

-l' 0 •tion offered by Mr. Nunes, who.in.a

_.

..

_ . · __ · !! .

· ···-·

-·- -·~

__

.

, _ ··- .

- -- -

'Qan(JUe1; @d R~c~ption ou
'\Vednesday Night

~ i~~e,

~e t~J;1t~::::e~n ~~~:

~~e~~'!ui:~d
ansy.rer he received was that it. w:;:,.s
tati not a matter to be Considered at that

~ The

:s,¢time, but mfght ·be brought up· at. a

~ou

o'f the

regular· nieeting
_association
R..$-ViThat
meeting
-was
held
Tuesdaiy
l':r.evening la.St, res~lting in a vote to exTho1clude ~he Portugue~e. flag on tll,e :!!1-~"'."
F. (tion.
When he received -that prrn..i°.lbrief statem.e.nt said be consid~red 't1:°l'=;-t
,1n·taking 1 1 . i s - ~ ~ ~r:·A~ei"?-can c1t1-

'z.eri



- ~ - - ~ - - - ~ - ~---- - - - - - - -

be -ow~_·- :~·:1:.~Jf~~P'?~

to nO

otJ:.,.er

,,rafir. Nunes gay.e 'to ·The Sta.n~d !:,o._
'Cay this state~n,ent:
"
;,I haVe no -statement to m.ak:e: Th~
, atter i.s · to be Sett"ied in the m.~etin-gs
iof the Portuguese Ai:ner~a~ Civ1.c a:·sociation.
I have _nothing to retra~1
fand nothing to deny. l: ..st:rll hold thav
}mY oath of allegiance to the An'le1·1.can
flag is binding, as I .intended it tc,.
be.
No man can serve two :masters.
With me the1·e were no,mental reservations."
.
PreSide'nt John· Mi:>niz sa:id··today he
had been ov.erwhelmed with· 'telephonR
calls and pers01.'ll;l.l visits on th~ part
pf members of the a~sociation wJ:io de..:
sire to go on record opposing the exclusion of the · Portuguese flag at th~
meetings.
·
PJ;esiden t Moniz sai<:1- he .- had r~:ceived many telephone.. calls from. inernbers of the club protesting .agai~t ~he
action taken at the Tuesday eve1:1ng
1neeting. He said he had even- rec~1ved
a number of calls from ·those w~o ·v<?-te.d
for the motion and who ~ow desire t.o
retract their former stantj. .
.-, As the presi
nt Of the a~p;i~tion,
I have :no state ent to make as bind-

_j

(Co

ed on P3.ge ~)

~~~~:,f
I

STRn:-r'.

. !

Bos TON

MASS.

,f'II

! 'STANDARD,

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

µ;;;.;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:;;;;:;;;;;.;;;;;;:-l~V>".~.i~-t.h:;::°~J\1:;;;;i:s:s:-;Ri·~u;t;:j~

f

~,.....;.;....;..;.;._...;._ _...;....;._ _..J

pi;i e'sorority v;t
0

I

with Miss Vera

.Jeu

l

:;,freet, Lewlst,o~.

i

Guest to be Ent ,

1\1:iss Dorothy '
burg, Mass~, a c

D.oris Cluff who

~s house guest
home on Orcha
·will be given a
Friday evening
Nasson girls ar
Miss Crocker.
and Miss Cluff
class of' '29.

Auburn ~""on1an
ThE, president
Council and Mi
Maine, Mrs. ChP
Auburn. will g
19-23 to
atten
l'.peeting of the

tendents, Mi'ssio
and
American
Boat.d
church.

th

,of

Variety
Mrs.

·- ... Niel

prise showe1\

-

:for .:MJss Lydia

-

her marriage to
takes place Satu
ard was led to
bell in 'V\~hich we
lovely gifts of gl ·
other useful Htin
The dining ro

ly

decorated in
centerpie
Suspended over

~ith a

buds and

other

1Jhe guests.
W
cake was cut. Mi
cilred - the butto
the heart; and
the thimble.

Bridge was
Miss Eleanor Mc
high score and 1\.

-'--------------

Staples Chase

I

I

c0nsolation. Th
to Iviiss Lydia.
Zlfrs. R. B.
F
s~nted ,vith a ca
birthday.
Miss i
c;l:a!-1.ght-er of
Howard of Aubu1
Conti
d I

I

Mr.I

I

MAINE\

i

Homer Samuels
Serenade ••.•.•......••. Brahms
La. Colom.~:3--Arr. by U'.\1r~
,
~~
·
..~.
Schindler I
o:BlJ!.e Danu'i'e Waltz
'
Strauss-Lieb ling
·.
Miss Jones
BEEB
- Piano·. duo-Hy1nne~ , March and
a\-Ladison, Jan.
· ~~=-n~eef:::_mB.!~';!r: _· ~:~dii-iif~~:;~ received in Anso
,.

·

.Curtis Fowler

Accomp_anist~ Miss Helen Bellner,

JOHN B. NUNES;

'Y.'loston ':5tew.s-(Cllp 'Y.'lureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

bf€J11QJ

[JhUOJiQ..

zd

LL

t



~o~to~tj;;~Hi~p~u
8

BOSWORTH:

STRUT '

BOSTON

M4SS.

rt~~~

~i!'"'~-------....;...;._J

1

I

'STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

::::r~;:I

with Miss Vera
~~reet, LewiSt.o~Guest to be Ent
Miss Dorothy
burg. Mass;, a c
Doris Cluff who
~s house guest
Q.'ome on Orcha

I
I

I

JAN
;::rf!lf

8i01.tOJ

[Otta ~

\L

m

tt

,

.!I

.

1

'\V.:ill be given a

Friday evening
Nasson girls ar

Miss Crocker.
and

Miss

Cluff

clasS Of "29..

Variety s·hower
Mrs.

-

... Niel

prise show-er. v"
:Cor MJss Lydia "
;tier marriage to
takes place Satu
ard '\Vas led to
bell in ·\vhich we
lovely gifts of gl

other useful thin
- The dining ro

ly

decorated in
centerpie
Suspended over

-yvith a

buds and

other

tlhe guests.
-w
cake was cut, Mi
ctlred · the butto
the heart; and

the thimble.
Bridgl=l was
Miss Eleanor- 1\ic
high score and l\
C!=>!lSOla tion.
to 1\Uss Lydia. .;r

•I
I

.-::-'--=~"'."""--------., SQngs: Ruth Staples
.- Mrs.

1

r.rh;

Mrs. R. B.
F
st:~ted vvith ~ ca.
birthday.
Miss f
When. Chloris Sleeps
J c}a!..1.ght-er of Mr.~
,
.
Homer .samuels Howard of .Aubu
S~renade .. • . • • • . . . . • . • • Brahms
Continued

I

---:;J

- La. Colo~~;-Arr. by I~i~}ndler.

B1J,,.e Dahu'b:e Waltz
:,
Strauss-Lieb ling
.
Miss Jones
Piano· duo--Hy1nne, , March and
0

· ~f;;,n::r~ferimB!"~~!r· •~::diiiffd~!J~
J

-.

· ·curtis F0wler

C.

A,.c_companist, Miss Helen Benner,

I
~

MAINE•

JOHN B. NUNES .

BEEB

Madison. Jan.
received in

Anso

Y.,oston ~ew.s-<!llp Y.,ureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

---------~----~~

'18,-- 19Jf

'

.

1-,:night

·~fiCall Leof · ..Allst:Oi:i1

Af · ,Polumbus; and· ~
niernb~r of Division 14, Ancient Order

~ourici~ ·

~ifi':ht.s

'}t g!bE:ni-!D-Jl~~· · :ffcir

t~i

h'e ~as 'been a stud_ent
School.
_ ~ ----

~~§1:: ·tw.o f~?,i:S

at

S~?-W

.:f~hii :f. qt~n~n is pres~de~t of the

~:,,13{' .d;ti:p''~um1u
Y.,oston
«ws .
8 lfoSWORTH STREET
,
BOSTON

MASS

~oston )t«ws-(Clip ~ur~au
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS

·\

Ot}.: -

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MERCURY' MEDFORD, MASS.

~I Big Firms'. ·•· .
1

·

NEWS-HERALD, NEWBURYPORT, MASS.

:Find Brtgllt

.

\ .
I

OEC5

"I'

Prospects

;

liJ \ \,,

MASS

.J. E. Chisholm Opens H .
.
Law Offices ere

;r 1930

I

. \!Inform Mayor Curley They
1 .Expect No Layoffs a~d See
Prosperity in Sprmg

I Optimism Urged
L_
· · · •
· /Mayor Tells Econom1st s and
.
Others Faith. Will Solve
'I
Country's ·Troubles

r1

:I

:
I

/

--

ot
Reports, rom come. .. ·t rthe largest
"'
vi
lnforming
'firms in Boston and
<:tm L

, i

to ~~~

\Mayor Curley ,that they expecte.d
, ~ffs o[ employees during the wm_ er s in

t:

were looking forward to good busmos

I

, the sPring.. were read bY Mr c.urley
~
group of thirty or more colle:e
1 Jnists and -social wpvkers at th
b
j the luncheon-conferences instituted Y
', the mayor, at the Parker House today. 'd
I "So you see," the mayor adde! : : , ,
applause, "we are not so badly o
se

fl;;; if

all

J

!

As I said at the beginnipg of the d

.
all that .seemed to me neede
::t~~!sb~ishmen\:a:~"t::re.h.~f1';,;e:- .,
fear. I wish to rh~dfa~fn ourselves,
now:--If we all a r and in God, we
I
in our city' our count. y ng the period
,should not be exepe~e~~~ay
1 have
of unemployment o f these econom1C
passed through three o f Boston and :
disturbances as mayor. 0 f all When- r
this 1s the least d{stres~~ul ~ituat1on and l
we come to ana y~ d cheer we reall}r I
observe the signs o~he~~ful " •
. . ~
have cause to be tit a large sem1-c1rcu-

l

Mayor Curley sat

h

1

Dickens

lar table stretchjd th;o~~~rt~:nt at the 1J
- room and the ad omm fessor Joseph H.
i
Parker Haus~. with ::o right and ProfeS· ]~
Bea.le of Harvard on l
f Harv3.rd on
l.
sor Thomas Nixon ~arvt~bfe sat severa.J,.-::_ 11)
his left
Across \. e es of institutionf.{ t
women repr?sen:u~ to reheve the di~--- l
which are domg
t Representatives ~u
tress of unempw~:~e· department wez:..e/c ~
of the P'Ub~ic
e the gathering what is
present to mf~rmh d by the funds of th~e~
being accomplls e

:;a•

city.
di
the mayor re- ·
In Starting procr
Boston 1s con- ! ~
: marked that ."so lit~fe cause fot worry " i q
, cerned we have . . ,
he -h~ caused ~
,'. He :t?enadre~ i!1:si~~~=e~. rcles. as \fo!}owN~:
I. to ·be m
e m
C
Pany Inc o
!
i p-rospeot of 4l. Ja:y'"O o~mplQyeeS; bu~J.· J
Walt:~r Baker _&fr
r
·

~

·1

Ia.:i.
ta~~~~~turlng Coft!~ . f
Me~T~;;;1st'l-',;_ctors purchased by too j
, pany
.
Pitge Nine ___ , ""' · 1
:1
Oonttn1'~<>
Speare, dean 1
,
1 P"·-----· ·--·-· ·
·1I of Boston University; H arvey A Wooste...' !
'. professor of economics, Tufts College; i1
William R. 'Taylor, board of overse~s of ~
: 1 ublic welfare; B. M Selekman of... the I
ewish Philanthropies; Simon E. 1;,e~~it, 1·
board of ov-ersees of
u c
R O. Small, State Department
of Edu~ation: _Professor T M
Cuwer,
I Harvard· John Van Vaereneyck, Bostfrn
: C t al Labor Union; Mrs _William
,
'I Gendr n 1.Vomen's Mun1cipa} L.eagu.e; Pro-//
or o , :J
.h H
&ale of Harvard;
fl;l~sor
'.:epMullln -Of I;loston, Commer-/)
I~dustr!al Bu 0eau:, lvI~u!~i~ii
S Tudor Presjdent omen s -.
,
League; Margaret 'fjesm~n, ~ins~n_i·~~
: League of Massaehuset~, · : treasurer;
i ne~s. better t.han

I

.

~ t!
~.-rp

If

/
,~:l~!:1
I

I~a~".:~~
I

~

~, ij)ley; ,Edmu.
/ Professor :l;oh

, versJty; :mra

: ,t

.

''°Boston
..

Uni·i·f1.
e":p.,.
1
.

U\..

:m·

·CHISHOLM

I John Elmer~Jm has ~pep.ed'f
\law offices in the l\fedford Bu:l~fj
IJ;Jedf.ord Square, for t~ish~lm fa
practice of la,w.
Mr M
Ken'neth I
lthe sou of Mr. and
rs
- ~
t
1

Ch v,holm with Whom he res1de'S', a
66 '"Bradl~e Road, Medford C~~t~r

f~26 I

He attended the Medford "{
;yraduating with" the class o
en f
~
Medford High School. He th
ed Cushing Academy, graduat-,i
n~ with the class of 1921
Afte1 attending Boston_ Colle~e,
/.lr Chisholm became associated w1~J1
iis father in the wh_olesale dirygoo -s I
irm of Sparrow Chrnholl:1 C~.l ~nc.,
IVhile still engaged in thic~~ln~~s,
le entered 'SJJ:ffO]J I
8c
in
e
all of 1925, graduating with the
;las,; of 19 3 o; of which he was Class '
;nstorfan.
·s well' ,
i The new Medford lllWl'.:0T !.,,.
rnowri in the ~jtr~ :ri,a,i~g. :be;,n : (

:~~~~

I

;orJr

~esid6Ilt Of )\i!B£!f9r,~ ,.al} hl~ :ff 11
Will be: x;13mepib~~Bd, ~::.;, •' ·;::; :()~'fet ~·

<'ith the Colum)Jus i;>,r;i1;1ap~J(,c {
;nd wi~h varfo:'f deJ>ati'?-g
!his city ~e iS" .il niemre6o1u&bns'.
!or.d Council, K~ight.s 0 .. · . Suffolk
...
l!edford Lodge of Elke, t.he ... '
..
f
AJ.umni Association . a!'d,. t/1,e
3~:;:on College Alumni_ Association.,

.t",1,;eg.

I

Councillors Arthur J. Smith .an
James W. Ryan are seeking re-e1e ·
tJon, and on the school board Nor··
man Russel!
candidate.
election. PeterisI a Lawton ·. for re•
of the board fOT a n
decided not to again
test. A light vote is
The Cll!ldidates With

. of each are as follows:

Ward I
James W. Ryan, 26 MB.\lisonist,;eet,c

fa completing his first term in ,thl,

city council, and seeks re-election.:
He was boin in the lower-ward, and·
, has always resided there. Mr. Ryan
has been engaged in the gTocery
business on Madison street for ·~Ve.r
ri:al
Years; is a member of the Ne~e
Veteran Firemen's and Newburyport,
Shellfish associations. He is married.~
Herbert W. Silll!llons, 260 Wa.ter:C
street, is dra wtender of the Plum Island bridge and a clanuner He 'is ·a
son of Mr.. and Mrs. David Simmons.
He served in the common council ·uri.der the Old form of government from
Ward I, is a Republican and a member of the city committee from ,the·
lower ward Mr. Simmons attended
Dummer Academy, Hebron and Kt>nt'I!
Hill schools in' Maine anc1 Pllo/ed
football on teams of those institutions.
He is a member. of the Neptune Vet- .
eran Firemen's, the Newburyporit :
Shellfish associations and Newbury-. s
Port Lodge of Elks,
Mr Sinuno:\18 · ·
is also interested in the reopenJng /of. ,
the clam flats.
,
·
·
,
. , ,Ward 2
. ·
T.homas J. Coffey, 27, 24 Beck. stre.et,.
was high man in the primary election .
in
. He was born in this ·
city
always resided here. :
He
in the public schools,.
and has been employed at' Kennedy's ';
store on State street for several Years,.
being recently made its manager. He
is president of the Newburyport TW,i
lig-ht Baseball League. He has alwa 0
taken an active Part in sp
ng
events in the city, and for three:
Years was a member of the N
i>uryport A A basketball quintet
is his first entrance 1nto 'politics.
is married and has a family.

th:';;[i;~t !w~~~;~fii

~~fct~~·i;t~'l,6;/

primary election, is a bookkeeper by:
0
§~e a;trJ~{'/1
-Re was em.ployed sozne time in a)
· · ·
·
a,Jar _Jfosl;:,e

~~';;C;;i~"ort bg!'fag;~~

hree of the~e econo:~~
mayor of Boston·,;qhen.
listressiug oi'. all_
an~
l1yze the situation eaut
of good c11;~er, we r
·:

1\,
\

~ f~~e~i~~ge se:mi-circU~ tl1.rough the ~ 1~~~!

jonung apartmen
h Ii
nth Profes~~ra"{,_~~ofes:
Harv:ird on
on h
table sat severta,Jr_
:t~ti:es of institution~
much to relieve the di:i!:·

t
Representatrves
~~=~e department wet"e~
·m the gathering wh;\~s
shed bY the funds o
,e

i 0

I~!ci~:d bg~td ~~1ro~~:
--! ~~~;a~~k!!.t'

\

ti

i::!::gof

t:

i\

1,
t

1.

~"
y

roceedings, the masor reso fa.I' as Boston is co~:

e little cause
the sut'veY he

._

q

~{:_r

""cO:~!ed 1 ~.
~:fonows: i

~ la~a~eu~:ctu~n~ co~
~ra.6tors p1.1rCha~ed: by t

""'.I!I
J

fl.,,~d ..,. n,_ge Nine -··•
.:.:.:~. ::--@i,,,,.:uA'. p Speare, dean
,:e:fsity; Harvey A Wooster-: 1
economics, Tufts College, ;
aylor board of oversees of 1
e; B.' M Selekman of.., the 1
lthropies; Simon E, Hecht, ~
3,:rd of oversees of Public .
). SmaIJ, State Department
. Professor T
M
Cuwer,

l

van vaereneyck, Boston
r Union; Mrs Willia~
en's Municipal League; Pro- /
h H. Beale of Harvard·;
'.lullln 0 f B oston., Com. m. er· 1 ·
..
.

H.11

f -

~st.rial Bureau: Mrs Henry
resldent Omen's Municlpa.l

1

g-&ret Wiesman, Consumers

J

l[assacb.uaetts;. Mrs

W

l
~;•I·

Z.

nd:, L Muroh.Y..of B~ton U2:)'~..
n . ~ •. Do.!"".· cl.tY.. tre.asur.e
cis' ~~ ·Fen.ton:, 'Boston. C.~~

~~li~J:~~Ftr.:p~~y t
"'<··• ¥~ffl·Leag,Ta)ec,
r~

;::,==-~-· .... -

lt::_;;~:~-~ ,-

!

School

sgg~g

6
i1~a~::' ' ited in the pubhc schools and 1s a
s ~!e~~~~~J f~~t;~e7teR;;{~ctit

st!![~ktd~Wt!~t1rth!
land bridge and a Clammer He is a 1
son of Mr and Mrs. David Simmons. f

re~ \1i:e~J1}:o\~ ~~~~e1:n°ril~~t
0

1
~;;~

Ward 1, is a Republican and a member of the city committee from the
lower ward. Mr. Simmons attended
Dummer Academy, Hebron and Kent's
Hill schools in' Maine and played

bus:e~0
:~c!~.asJ'nc' -No
~!y~off of einplqyees; busi-

~

.........0 "'• .n. ~.
&; A. M., ..King Cyrus
-~--...... ,., __ onutn .~~-~ -hapter, R. A M., Newburyport Lodge
v_i<t.mes W. Ryan are seeking re-elec•"::'..,, _f Elks, the American Legion, St.
tlo.n, and on phe school. boa.r.d •. Nor--:.·i. aul's Men's club and is an alumnus
man. Russell 1s a- candidate·. for re• . f Colorado college. He is married
election. Peter I. Lawton, .a membet:,, nd, ·has two children
ti°;,ta~u:_~:r: -of years, ? ~Board . Cand:ida.tes
test. A ligp.t vote is pted c ed.
~: .
. . uc1e., 34.__ woodlanq.
of
a brief s~tch
e , pn ~:kl~«fh~l
i~y h\~
,
· opted city. He was a canctiqate
Ward J.
,, !wo years ago, i:mt failed· in election.
. J~unes W:· Ryan, 2,6 Ma<;lison, st.l;'eetr .t e was born in Northhampton and
1s completing his first term. in tl;te "}. ~ been a resident here for 12 years
city council, and seeks re-election:: ;1 .·fA. foreman of tbe Cashman-Con,
He was bo1n in the lower-ward, and' , .-;, Motor Company, is a member of
has al~ays resided there. Mr. Ryan'/ .,:'" Newburyport Lodge of Elks 3.;nd
has been engaged in the g'l'ocerY J !gbts of Columbus He is married
business on Madison street for several · Jd has three children of school age.
years, 1s a member of the Neptune
iNorman Russell, 52 Woodland
Veter~ Firemen's and Newburyportt r
eet, is one of Newburyport's wellShellfish assoc1at10~ He IS married. l. ,-own citizens. He was born here and

iJ~\~a~Firemen's,o the Newburyport
~e:b:s 0l lh~i~~rt~~t~!1~
~~~llfi~g:s~~~1~s~ a~~- ~i=~i;
eran

ih!l~1a:te/i;1~~ in th~ reopening !of
,
·
' ,
, ,Ward 2
Tho~as J. C<?-ffey, 27, 24 Beck str~et,
)VS.S high man 1n the primary ~lectia;n
IJ?- the ward. He was born lil this :
city. and ~S: ~ways res19"ed here
.He was educated m the pu}?hc schoo1s1 •
and has been employed at Kennedy's
st(?re on State street for several years, ~
~e1ng recently made its manager. ~e
1:3 president of the Newburyport Tw1..,
'11g-ht Baseball ~eague. H~ has alwa
taken 9:n active . part 1r; spo ng,
events 1n the city, a~d for threeJ•
years was a member of the Newburyport A A. basketball quintet lt~·
is his f~rst entrance into 'l?olitics. He ·
is married and ~s a family.
Forrest E. Colhns, 10 P~rsons.street,j £
;1;fm':..~erel~6'ifiri~f1/i ;a~:tft~e~~r
t
occupation. being employed at the
Newburyport Garage on State street
8
50
ca~~.,1;};Y~~th a"1;.ri~"t'iis~e,._ai'
b:~~ehas
j

tg;.t'~

:,;,n!:
~:J;~tnp~buf~1\1~

fi~ver

Ward 3

Bernard Jacobs, 115 State street,
is assistant superintendent of the local branch of the Pru_gential Life Insura11ce Company. He was an agent
0

sl;

/

I
I

ll1ozta~1i,.n~kbei~tir!~~P~~p!n~
j
this city. He is a member of the I
American Legion. and Newburyp.·ort J'
Council, Knights of Columbus He is
married.
·· ~John S Robinsqn, 21 Essex street, 1
was born in this city. He has been r

1h~

1

~:~:fte~q~;r!1}~r
p~ \;~o;:a;~ J
He is a so:p of Mr. and Mrs. Walter j
24
:o~~~i~d. ifeM~r~m~~mt!;e~f
i
Loyal Order of Moose and Newbury-/

iii.1

.POrt Council, Knights. of Columbus.

He was a candidate for election as
councillor-at-large a year ago.
Ward
Arthur J. Smith, 574 High street, is
the present representative of the ward.

I

~d w:-sfa\~; ~~ \~e;i~hiJr~~~ 1
has been employed as a foreman at/'
the Walker Body Company in Amesbury. He is 45 years old
,
Ward 5

Edmond H. Kelleher, 20 Warren .
street, is a son of Ex-alderman and·1
Mrs. John J. Kelleher is a graduate
of the Newburyport High school and
will next spring complete a course at
Suffolk Law school. He was employed. at 611€ tttne as local correspondent for the 'Haverhill Gazette. He
is single. He has never held a political office.
Fred L. Page, 6 Warren st1 eet. is
ti.le other candidate. He was born in
this cit
n of Oliver Page, formerly
a~s~~c\°{ig
of
~e. is, I
American Legion, is married a~dpg~ 1
_!our childi-en.
~~ J

a member

::s :ig~n:~ /

fA~gt~~:;y~r

I

Ward 6

1

Clovis. N. E Fontaine, 384 High )
street, w11I run on stickers, not having
filed nomination papers. He was
born in Lawr'ence, Oct. 20, 1887 and
attended the public schools there. He
ent~red the naval service of the coun .. i
try at the age of 17 as an apprentice.
He remained in the service about 17
years at the end of which he was fur ..
laughed to the reserve with rank of
lieutenant He is a World War vet-eran and past commander of -Newburyport Post, Americaa Legion. He
is a past chancellor commander of
Lucullus Lodge, K of P , past junior
warden of the I o. o F. and a memK
ber of the Old South church He ii:>
a .Republican a~ chaitman of the
constipution, by-laws and resolutiof!.s i
c9mm1tte~ of the _Essex ·county coun-;
ml, American Legion. He is employed ,
ife!~iir~~;tti~ry dJ~:stment of the

l

st~{ i:i~a~~nJn~Je~nl

p~!~~1;~~ l

resided for many years at the soutti l,

f

aduate of Newburyport High school,
9
1
e was a candidate for mayor in 19~1
nd was defeated by a small marg1_n
f v~s by Michael Cashman He is
· ·eeking · re-election to the school
ard. He is a member. of .many f:ra:-

~a1~l flo6riaif~ul~a~oli!~~r

8

n:1 ~~ks~i-~~ii~~~~~:~; :3treet,
o!le of the city's leading phys1ci~s.
~ in ~i~ce'Y;;rb6t~e[~~ :tJ/lig
!;;11Z~~~~1xgi~l1~1 t~~~s!~:1~~J

le~i~;=_anfi'it iifa ~~~1!1rer~f
Anna Jaques hospital staff and
medical
5 to many leading years agoso....
He served a few
as
her 0f the board of health He
• ·d
I) Titcomb is married and
on Ashland street. He i.s a
Albert A. Titcomb, 34 Milk
He was born in this city an(\
aduate of Newburyport High
He is one of thEi organize.rs
f th L
al Boosters that heloed- to
e oy
f
hthl t·
at
age _the comeback or
e ici k0 1iite~~th~ 8;1'::'a~t£~rs
ne
el'taining to the schools. He is .a
ftlesman in the New England ternory of a large lumber concern of

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te

~Ig!c;f~

York.
...,...,_..,;;~~~~~--~~~-!
lew

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ADTV

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::Sost.;.;'~~ws-\l:'ii.p ::Sur,uiu
8

SoswoRTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

~oston )tews-<Clip ~ureau
8

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O"''·'

}Tud Brjght
Prospec~s

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MASS.

::Soston ~ews-.<Clt.p ~ureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

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ii Big F:ms,

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80~WORTH STREET

BOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

BOSTON

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

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NEWS-HERALD, NEWBURYPORT, rliASS.

J. E. Chisholm Opens Here

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MASS.

Law O'flices

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'
Inform Mayor Curley They
Expect No Layoffs and See
Prosperity in Spring

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Optimism Urged
, .[Mayor Tells Economists an~
1- Others Fa~th Will Solve
,I
Country's ·Troubles

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'\, Reports from
of the largest
>firrns i2:1 Boston and vicinity~ lnform.in.g
'1:1\:fayor Curley that they expected no layoffs oL employees dufing the winter. and
were I.coking forward to good business in
·\ the spring~ were read bY 1\1'.r. C_urley to-~
group of thirty or more college econo•
! rnists and social WOFkers at the fifth of
the ~uncheon-conferences instituted b~
l the may~r, at the Parker House today.
.. So you see," the mayor ·added amid
applause, .. we are l'lot so badly off .aftG!"
all
As I said at the beginniµg of these
meetings all that seemed to me needed
was the .bariishment of the psychology oit'
fear. I wish to reit.erate that sentimen:t.
-no-w:----1.t we an liaCf 'faith--Tll ourselve~.
in Ol.lr city. our country and in God, '\\.-"e
.should not be exeperiencing the period
of
unemployment of today.
I
have
passed through three of these economib
disturbances as mayor of Boston and
' this is tQe least distre.ssing of all. Whe:i;1 we come to. analyze the situation an~
ob~erve the signs of good cheer, we reani~
have cause to be che~~ful."
·~
Mayor Curley sat
a large semi-circu:-, lar table stretched through the Dicken_s
; room and the adjoiniJlg apartment at th'0
' Parker Hou.so:?. with Professor Joseph H~
Beale of Harvard on his right and Profe~~
, sor Thomas Nixon Carver of Harv3..rd o~ l,
his left
AcrOss the table sat several,.--; ii
women representatives of institution~· t\
which are doing much· to relieve the dis-- ij
tress of unemployment. Repre.sentative~ u
of the Public Welfare depa'rtment were i~.,-~·
present to in!Orm the gathering what
accomPlished by, the tunds of th!'··

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I~ff:.g.
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In Starting proceedings, the mayor remarked that .. so far
Boston is con·
cerned we have little cause for worry."
He :then read the· survey he ·h~ .caused
to be. made in business circles as \fopows:
Walf~r Ba:.ke:f' & Company, I~c.-No
Pros:peot.. of *1< lay"-~ft of eEQplpyees; bus~.ness· better than last year.Mead-Morrison
Manufa~turlng Coll:!. pany-Th'ree tractors ··purcha~ed by tM

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0011,tinu~d •
PIJ,_ge Nlne _ _.,
··
~1.7-·P. Speare. dean
of Boston Un. iversity; Harvey A -Wooste?:",
professor of economics, Tufts College;
"William H. ,.Taylor, board of oversees of
r public welfare; B. M
Selekman of.> the
I Jewish Philanthropies; Sin:,on E. Hecht,
~ .... A._y--~-

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! ~:f::;:~ R~ i~~Z::!.u ~~~~:esDe0!ar:r~!~~ !
0

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of Education: PI"ofessor T. M. Cuwer, /J
Harvard; John Van Vaereney"ck, Boston
Central Labor Union; Mrs William H, j
Gordon, \.VOrpen's Municipal League; Pro- ·
fessor Joseph H
Be8.le or Harvard· /
Thomas A. l\,I1:1Ilin of .Boston, Commer~/'

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'I ~~al T~1:i!r~n~~=~r~~~?3U:!~1:d·sM~"u~~t~r:i
1

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League; Margaret. ~'ies.m an, Co. nsu.mers
...
League of Massachusetts;, Mrs. W. z.
Rij>ley; Edmund L .. Do.18..n,· Cit.y treasurer·

u.,n1=·1

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! verslt:y.;. Fl"'apci$.. . · F.e~f~.: 'Bo's'to', n'..
...
· :r.·rof_es' $' o.· r' 'Jo'hn :r.·._.. ~.·ur:p.h·Y.._'Qf Boston . ce"fu .
:~tral La,bor.. ::U
·M:cNeel,,

,- .~~~:r:~~{}~\ , .:

~ · tt:~~~.PJ9.j·?

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1ao3

~3UI
I

J. E" CHISHOLM

.John Elmer· Chi-sholm Iias oP~ne-d
1aw office,s in the +11edfor!l· Bu_i~d1ng,
1
Medford Square, for
the .gene?aJ
p!"actice of laiw.
,Mr. Chishohii. i-s
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ken'n'eth
·ch:l'ciho:Im. with whOUl he· r·eSideli, at
66 Bradlee Road, Medford Center.
He attended the Medford_ ?c-h6ols,
2radu.ating with~ the class 6:t. 1920
ilrom Medford High Sc;,hoo_I. :j'Ie then
!ntered Cushing Academy~ graidu~tng with the class of 1921.
After attending Boston College,
/.Cr. Chisholm became ass"oci~ted witl1
,is father in the wholesale ctr'ygoods
:irm of Sparrow Chish-olm C'o.. ., Inc.-.
iVhi!e still engaged in th'i,,,' bu.sfness,
te e~tered iJ?Jff?}Z. I
"-~ 8c:1r&;cr-l. .. in t~e
all of 1926, graduating
with ,. the
:lass of 1930~ of which he was Class
;Iistorian.
'The new Medford law:yer iS we!f '
~n<?wP. .. in the ~;itir: ~R.7illg~ }:i{~n. a
·esidellt of .Medt;or~. al! his life; He

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1

W111

9e; i:B1:11e}lit>~red.

f...

~ s .... :wofk

.-ith the ,qo1umpus pratnati'lJ;:qMet:f
~nd with various debating tedms rif
fhis city. He is' a :m:eni1>er q'f .M~d~
:ord Council, Knights of Cohitnbus,
>ledford Lpdge _of Ellis, the S_r.:'ffolk
r,a,w AJ.umni As.sociation and· the
3oston College Alumni_ Ass'ocfo:1:ion.

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:So.ston )tew.s-c;!:Lt.p ~ureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

CHRONICLE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

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J\IOV 2 L
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'8¥1111'"
-:Soston )1¢ws-<!:li4> :Y.Jur¢au
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BOSWORTH STREET

Bof.TON

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MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS

MORNING G~~B;, '\

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MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, Bl.

MASS.

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b~tion act' -by On1ted STa~s-,;:,=.1.=~s1on1:r Jenney in Federal Court. The
hearing was set for Dec ll.
·,
~oseph Constantino in connection
with the .same case 'Was held in baU '>
of S?OO on the charge of transportation
of llquor. Saturday night the prohiblOalt

, con n
"a m.onth of giving/' tom.arrow~ with
a sermon in the morning eervice on
"The Willing Feet. 0
In the evening
servi~ at ''t:30 p m.. bis subject will
be 1''W.hfi @Jt;.9A.MJ!il ~MWJr!,-!J~

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!i

Boston,._llf_ijtters' Meetings

.s;!a.1t~fo~

~ ; a ~ c ~ s winLbeArt't.heer
Mofta g
orning before the weekly
meeting of Methodist niinisters; at 581
Boylston st. His subject will be "The
Law and the Gospel.° Congregational
ministers. :meeting in Pilgrii:n Hall at
14 Beacon st~ will be a~dressed by Rev
Rayinond Calkins of Cam.bridge, in a
pre-Christmas devotional service. The
Baptist tniniSters at their weekly meeting in Chipman Hall. Tremont Temple.
Will hear Roy Cushman, of the Bos-

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~o.ston )l~ws-<!:ll.p :Y.Jur¢au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSTON, MASS.

-i

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G-loe,e
i

i (~Mfi~1 ~f ~!,!!! !~~!!~!:,

he will
Spl"I'.it."

preach

on

.. The

White, assisted by Rev Lyzna~ Merrill
a.s. deacon and Rev JainesJE:ami:ilon as
aubdeacon.
The churor,.'Was filled,
th.rise· present including fellow 'WQrk-i
D1en and fellow m.embers of fraternal:

~

and labor organizations in which Mr
xµrphy occupied -tm.portant ()ffices.
I
There was a profusion of bea.utifuli
floral pieces.
The pallbearers 'Were
nephews of Mr Murphy, :Francis Fo-:

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Iey, Gerard Hawkins. Mfohael and
·~!!i~~;:ha;e. and Cornel.~~. ~r..d Eu-.
~..Interment wa"S' in Holy <?ross Ceme
r 1:E'ry. Malden,_ where prayers wer.e rea
1
.,by'Rev1 Da.n.iel Donovan of Our Lad
'. -of Presentation Church, Brighton,
eousin· of Mr Murphy.
Mr Mui-phy is survived by his wife
Mis Bridget A. Murph'y; a son. Jam.

1

:M. Murphy, a law student at the Suf
i'olk Law School; a daughter,
, l\l!ar:,,-e-. ~ y , who is attached t
"'t.}le.. pl~t department of the America
1

~~tt;fcf";e ~i~eT:~~~!:" ~:1f!:!Ysi~..
t.ers, Eugf!;nt, Cornelius, John. Timo

' -t:ny and Dennis Murphy. and Mrs Jul~

c;:ohB.ne aild Mrs An;na. Hawkins. a.11 of
N.brwood.
,
1'ilr ·u~i'-phy had resided in Norwood
an~ removed to Cha.rlestown ~bout 30
ye-a.rs a.go. He was employed as a ,clerk
·by t;he·'.Boston & Maine f'or tnany yea.rsi
..an.d was a. member of :Ka.xnilton C9urt, 1
:U:·•. C .. 0~ it'., He was recording s~re-1
, 'tafy of both Division 5, A. o. H., and i
1~ ~ter~tion:l ~ngs~o~emen's~Jli~n~\

R U,11-oy_ D.D!Jc~
,

I came out of .church Friday after- 1
noon as the shadows were lengthening. We .had, ·an of us, by our presence indicated our regard for him 1
J who had gone beyond and there we
' parted, each to go his different way
to take up his separate task.
·
I turned the corner into Mason
street, bound home. I can visualize
that I was taking no uarticular ate

Christma;

.f'i~~ ~~o~ei!ll~~
l

tf:n.tion of a:qything· that was tran~-

':152;' o~Cordis st, Cliarlestowh 7 Wbo1
J. d~ed ~ai;. the Relief' Hospital, HaYJnar, ket.· _sq, of inju:ries received Tuesday:

:evening 'When he "WS,S_stritck by an au-:
tom9bile w-bile crossing Warren st at
Monument a.v, 9harlestow.n, took place
· ti;ils m.orning.
· "'
~
A- solemn requiem. high mass was~
eelebrated in ~t Mary's Q-hurch. War·ren st, at 9-_o'clock by :Etev Andrew J.:

I.EST€

KILBY W;,, SHUTE.
A Llttle Boy's Opinion of Him..

~fi!~~ R~~~r::~i~fs~!~a~~;:flyR~~
"The Music of Christmas." At 11 a m.
~ws·"ift.ffiERS A T - ~

1

tji~'Jg~~~ew;~~iJ

~o
the splendid eulogy of the minister.
whose cultured words were a fitting
j Rl!:.u'diction to an unselfishly useful
I was aroused from my thoughts
0
1
tlr. ~.;:~;,~~ ~Ap~~r:
~~!Yx=eil1 ~;;
'em?" I said, "Yes, sonny, I
was
and I feel p. retty bad.'" "Say, mister:
he was a fine man that 'Kib' Shute
wasn't he?'" And I said to him
~yes, ~e was." He looked up at
with big round eyes· he couldn't

t
t

stle, the cheers I. i
4
l
my Navy Et m. e '_II I
da· ·
,
:, ,
-i_

.

'I,,

t

.· g··,11,.·.· ·,_· '·
Ill
·
.

,

.

·

,

!1!i'i

me

have been over eight

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~---"IL •=-.-.'-~-'I.a..--..
~- "'11:.:1[_7"_.Y'.'1,__
·.Auuduio~ ·"E.1.ado oJAl~
. o2tu::>in- etTTl 10 uonuluasa.1d a 1~aaM .i-et
~~
~
d
'
01
;~.s~z~~~;i£~
~ 0
·tu~
•o.S'BI 'Ul"ettJA tcnn s-e x.noo.1-eN-1uu-eA pu-s
\a;n.M. srtt •auot.Uapsaa s13 01znw. '8tpn-et;::>
•a10..1 ann a-ql
u1 -i:113qs.xuw sa1.113q;:)

w~nt horn~ and sat down to think

~~~~!'t~.113:~

l

i...t,

:;i.fq··~

!:~~tii13~~q a:~

.. ..

Earth and whose worthy soul was
th;en with his Maker, was a
good

friend to me
And as I sat ,back in
j' the old easy chair my thoughts ran

1

the

north ~nd
south where
th~ be_st O~ SGUlPt(?rS and artisans are

to the

~h1sellmg _
,n tµe imperishable grari 11te of theu- giant hillsides the pic/ tures of great men, thus to perpetu-

~

l !1te their f~me throughout the com/' ing generations:

attl' JO .lGl.{0.1:V

e.M.

tn~

1_q,:~tcll,lltEl;'.:.~l

·r:r

qo§

,onouns

UOS'B310

no&. mw. eq -poo.. ,_.;~;;; .:

,,.•'1lt'B~p.JS;}l01J~ ~eu;/1:N'~ .; .
, "· a;N ~~.. .'.~liSlltllJl:W:l

:\.

to

country, but 1~ 1s a lo_v1ng, discerning,
my opinion

Gloicester will never
8

1

.M.'BT

thought

loyal part of It and In
little

forget "Kib"
boy was right; he was

~ truly a :qne man
U133Q ·~.10~1,au ~4~
OQN 9-q:J. .:te.A.O 1,s'Bap130.tq 'l,uaoa.x ¥ ~l:1:t ~~ \

pe.t.ta1,a.1 •uo:isoa..,...'1

And I

myself, "Kib"
Shute; he wasn't
a
great man as the cold, sordid world
figures greatness, but he was a good
man.
Glouc~st~r isn't the wbol~

I,
;7~t~1: tf~~ _ 1:r~:·

-UJ At..1'8tnan.11?d S'8.M. L, 'a+o.1.M. Ji:au.101+'8

j~

years

f

'tlll.M. ,:oualOu 'E.Xacio s.Jp.taA ecidasn10
;
• • • •

•. ·as-eo aq+ ut ~
s.taA..M.'Et aq1, ;i:O auo uaaq aA'8q 01, pauad
-d-e:q I s"E? •atdoaa: aql ·sA eAo"I ;,:o
as-eo attl Ol aou3.1aJa.1 .tnoA u1 Palsa.tal

~:,'fl·

nine

things over, because this man whose
body we had consigned to Mother
1

;laa,,µ

Or

~~8~,,of the day, "You said it; vernacold and he remarked in the he :;urc

.1°;!_~

j

t.

School in Harvard Uni- {
~. preach tomorrow morning r
ape!. At the noon service
.6 to -19, inclusive, Rev--Mi-lesHa:ris:o'n of -the First Church in Roxbury W111 ):>l"each. On Monday, Dec 15. ·_. l,
at 12:15 p m, Raymond c. Robinson
will give an organ recital.
, "~
At Central Congregational Church, .~.
tomorrow :morning, Rev Peter A. Dunn
Will p'reach -0n the subject "As Little
Childrenh.~nd at t~e afternoon service.
at 4 o'clock, the topic will. be '"What
Contribution has the Scientist made
to Life?" The music in the morning'
will be Ave Maria (.Henselt); "As the
Heart
Pants"
(Mendelssohn' and
Sonata No. 3, First Movement (Gllilmant). In the afte~oon the program
-for violin and organ will include
"Priere"
(Caesar FranCk);
"Arios
(Bach). and "Largo" (Handel).
~he colored choir from the Fo'Urth
Church in Boston will sing tomorrow
evening. at 7 o'clock. in St Mark's
Methodist Episcopal Church in Brookline. Under the direction of Mrs o. B.
Quick, they will present a Christmas
gical

lLY PLANS
DI NER CONFERENCE

The Tupper Family ASsociation of
America, Inc, will hold a 'dinner con ..
ference at the Women's Republican
Club on Thursday evening.
Speakers
for tq..e affair include Mrs Cha1·Ies !
Nash, secretary of he association and 1
regent of the D. A. R. for the state 1
of New York; Frederic A. Tupper,
educator an4 genealogist; G. Frederick
Robinson. presi~~nt o~ the Watertown
Historical Society, and Dean Gleason I
1
L. Archer of Suffolk Law School.
Pre-ceding the ~ o n f e r e n c e the
executive committee will hold. a. meet.ing.
The officers of the asSOciation
are _George ViT. Tupper of Brool{.line,
president; Mrs N.ash, secretary, aiid
George C. Tupper of Wakefield, treas-,
urer.

ton Council of Social Agencies;
Dean Willard L. Sperry. DD, of the

-::e.o.

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TUPP

A. L. M .

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~:F':"j

':Soston '.:1tews-'1::l~ ::Bureau
8

BOSWORTH

STREET

Bo~TON

MASS.

f\ -. '. ·1
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-.Iad aql pua •.i:aA°iaDQ..x a
ut st

;~;--s-c~-

I ~::;l;..JJ.:a!lin:':"'hto~.u'.'.','.';'.-:a~f~t!-;c1t~~o~i~c;l7:Zt ;~~
'~;-eE_,._E_T C_L_U_ :8
__
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0

~

~R1·k

~~dee
sion

a

v!:'Jo~~

8tJ.eet

Club

,!f!e~C:,~';1;,~
uphe'd

tlie

the

E::i.1

iti.

·~ra::-:,.-.:tchuseit8,

Should Be Raha;ed," at the <1ebate la.st !
evening that·featu1.ed its :i:;7(h m,,ntl)~
mee;tin;;::- at tlie Boston City Cl.ub.
. \
Though
not
one
oE
the
(1<"hat~r~.
Dean Gleas?n_ L. -~ 1·chP1 _ of the ....:-~ 1

10
•~1:-:,ns~-J~ i ;c;~~~~1:~(~e~~~1e~~·~~; !,

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Speakei,.;
fn1
the
::l.ffi1n1ati,·f1!
"'·Pre :
"'\Villian, 1<~
Co1 k11n1 of. \.\'e~1 .F..oxbu1 y 1
and ).liehael J. l\luH-:e1 n ot Ootl.'.lv~;c;tel·
Tho};e fot the 11e.':;ati, e \, e1<" J-1 "nt, x. :
•And•e'-VS c:,r' l\J~,d10.<-:e
Y.li-:;hh>nclx - :ctn<l'
W,il~~.:un H. _ Ta~ lol of South 1-;o:::;ton.
J

fi

.1:w

.JO spu-sq aql

f

•1sn.x:i. aq,L

bition act by' Pnited Stat:"es~-cn:.1..=nr~....:..._
sionE:r Jenney fn Feder.al Court.. The
heating was set for Dec 11.
·.
:7oseph Constantino in eonne-ction '
w.zth the same case -was held in bail '
of $500 on the charge of transportation
of liquor. Saturday night the prohibl-

· ooost Ol oooct ttto.q .8u12u-e.x
.,Eq.1un,. aq+ uo s1uau:cA13d 1-en.red ap-eur.
0A'e'l.{ Ot.{.M. s1:2os..tad JO s+urBtdmoo, uazop
-e u-aq+ a.1ou:r paAJaoa.z a,:nr .xa.A.M. l?S

.i:w uon'B2nsaAUJ. srq
-I'l:?'.}.SUJ

negative

of applicants to 'tll(~ bat

•pa+-e1s .1:a4.M..'BS

.11;~-er~t~~ru: i

ui

aq1- uo tuaq+ .2uJAnq a.za.M. o-q.M. : I

Oak

suos.xad. Uio.:rJ 0:cuoo aA'Bq SlUll:?tdt.uoo
aq+ +nq 's~oo1-s 01q-e:J,nda.i: aq1, P;"3AJaoa.i: 1
.,s:n:un,. .XlEH-Il .:to.J P!'"ed A1a').a1duroo oq.M. :
suos.1:3d.
asoq,I,
·su.x.a-.,uoo
a1q-e1,nda.x I

~~u~:~ioiJue~~ii~1da~~~e~~~:euA<;~:/.:~
to

MORNING GLOBE, BQSTON, 111.

MORNING GLOBE, BO~TOJX, MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS

and

pu-g uM.o·tn1-naM u1 s2uJprol.f .s.zasl?qo
-.Ind aql o+ 2uJaa+u-e.ren2 •000•1:i::g: .Io
000'0-tS .xo.J. .,s:r!:an,. tt'3s 01, «pJas .xaA.M.'BS
.:rN •1,sn.:q.

0l'.Jl.

TUPP

·31aa.M.

The Tupper Family Association of
A.rnerica, Inc, will hold a. "dinner conference at the, Women's Republican

-e a.zoUI.

.l'.o OOOtt
paAJaoa.x
'qoseuaa:
'qdIOPV
pu-e UJUI."aJ:°uaa: Aq paqsHq-e1-sa •+sn.I:J.
0q1, Jo s1-ua2-e '.xaAM..VS ..1:w: Aq paui:-eq. :
-qo UOJl'at.UJOJ:U! a-q:,. 01- 2UJp..IOO-OV . \

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ti!! ~~~~:d~~cr:~~i~rs st~~-~!!

'

!':t~i!~!i~!pa.r;~ .~~~:1a~q~~oPaJ!tlal r

1

L. Ar-chel:" of Suffolk La-w School
Pre~eding the ~ o n f e r e n c ~ the
executive connnittee will hold. a. meeting.
The officers of the as.Soclatio11.
are _George Vv. Tupper of Broo~llne~

·sassaU'.J.T.M. ;

ee.:::-.i_+ pa.M..aJA.ral-UI ~ q Ap'Ba.::z:r'B pui:? sA'Bp ·
01:._':ts~d.. 5;),U"l .:tOJ: .:r:a11'ei:a auL2U:t'J.:.!:?.2q:s::aA...

:Y-.oston '.:1t¢ws-'1::li,p ::Bureau

president;

Mrs

Nash,

se<!retary,

aiid

<.;:::r~ge C. Tupper of VVakefield, treas-

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

I

0 5
~~~~!~~.a;~e~kl~8:{ [J iJeGvfa.i:~:~~~ . 1
;
Historical Society, and Dean Gleason I

•a:oou.:ca1):1:1 ...C1:?p.:ca1-sa..C .

8

I

;~~b
l
Nash, secretary of the association and
regent of the D. A. R. for the State
of New York; Frederic A. Tupper-,!

pa.wanaa snufl procr·;
~~-

lLY PLANS
DI NER CONFERENCE

Jo ao:n:::>'l3.:cd <ciq'.J. s-eM. lI

-:::----

f

~'

-------,-~

-

::Sos ton '.:1tews- '1::lt.p ::Bureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

Gdooces7£R
BOSTON, MASS.

&n-,~,U::0c~

KILBY W~ SHU'l:'.E.

"'EPiThws·fflfiERS AT- .. -

'i·, J.AM1i_$'1,'I. MURPHY FUNERAL

(~;'!M~Jis0~t~~~~1::to~~~~/
i'>.d~ed at the ·Relief Hospital, Ha~art k~t· Sq; ot inj~es recetyed Tuesday'.

.J
_..,"'"'""-1

·
.

!

"

:

,_:/.!
_.

~~

~vening -when he was s:truck by an au-1
i:om.9bile w-hile crossing Warren st. at
Monument av~ 9harlestowµ, t.ook ~lace
tl:i.ls morning..
·"
.,A. solemn requietn. high inass W'8.Si
celebrated in ~t Mary's Church. war..
ren st, at 9- o'clock by ReV .A.ndrew-. J~
Wb.ite, assisted by Rev L.yni.a.J;1 Merrill
a.s deacon and Rev Ja:tnes.JHami1lon as
.a~bdea.con..
The churor-, w-as - filled,
those. present inbluding fellow- W'brk-i
m.e:n and fellow rnem.bers of fratepnal"
an!,!: labor organizations in which Mt:i
XjJ.t-phy occupied important offices.
~ere .was a. profusion of beautiful
floral pieces. · The pallbearers werei
nephews of Mr Murphy. Frallcts Fo...:,
ley, Gerard Haw:kins, :Micha.el and
--~ Dege::i~~rophha;e 3:-nd Corneliu_s ar..d Eu..:.
'.__..:tnte.rm.ent W'a'S' in Holy di;'~)s;, Ceme
_t

,:;~:a~f~!:ref~!o~:-~e~!"f ;;-:;e~:

'.Presentation Church, Brighton,
-eousin of Mr Murj>hy.
~ M_ul:'phy is suryt.yed by his -wif~
>.11s Br1dget A. Murpliy; a son, Jame
M. -Murphy, a. la"W' student at the Suf
:folk Law Sch~~; a. daughter, :ffl!'is
i Mar,,-e::- ~ y . -who is atta,ched t
,,. 'the ,pl~.t ~epartment of the America
~hd Tete·graph Company i
Cam.bridge; five brothers and two sis,. t.~2. Eugent, Cornelius, John, Tltno
' . tny and I:>ennis Murphy, and Mrs Julla
Coh'ane all.d Mrs .Anha. Hawkins, all of

; -of

'

' Telephone
N.01."WOOd.

_

,

- .Mr ·y~rphy had resided in Norwood
: and removed to Cha,rlesto.wn about 30
y.ea;s a.go. He was em.ployed aS a. -clel"k
-by ·the Boston & Maine for in.any years,

;:_~c~~~both Division 5, ~ o. H., and\
aF~eg:~:! ~~~\~: ~u;:!:\
~ o:t
! ef" l:~ter~tiona.l Longshore:men'sUDi~n:~)

;ran::::~re of
nand
tister.
i~tting
seful
,._..,;;.,,..;..~~~~.,-.,-~~~~..,.-~~ ghts

F,1r~f

.
ATRICK
BY HOWARD FITZP

\411 metres 1s th& frequency of this sta....
t1on.
was,
The entire nation will be blanketed
There is a. tre:t in •st~re tor the night
I
this afternoon, beginning at. 1.2:30, owl or t.he DX fan Sunday morning
·th the play-by-play description of from 3 to 4 o•clock in the form of a spe- m,e
;~e West Point-Annapolis football. eta! broadcast dedicated to Amer~t~
i;
a.me broadcast· over both the ~a-\and Canadian listeners fro~ the s!tton
~
al
d
Columbia Broadca.sbng corporation o"f Puerto R.1 0°,.
re i
tion.
an
WNAC WKAQ in San Juan, on 890 k1locyc1es.
Systems.
Herc
locally

di' Th,E) u{anagement have selecte:i this nk ;
1
O
WE.El and WBZ.-WB~A will ra
1:our because the ~;~1:it~ow;~eey s;~; ;:~ ~
the affaiy, which i.s bei.ng stagi=df b~ tion~ u:\~ r~~~i!Ycomment from listen- ras
the Salvation Arm.Y
t!i_e
1.:gh.. \:~::s to bow this broadcas~ is receivedf qct
the poor and unemp oye
ro
The progranime planned will consist io lil
ut the country..
talks on the advantages of Puerto R co :tn
o _;f'rompt.ly at 12:15 Ted Husing will d~e as a re~ort and Spanish m.usi-cal selec- re

Jr~•
im, l

:r!
ac-1

ffr

th

r:

':~~~l

hear!=1 ov~e
a;io~~:uo~sB~i th; tions..
• • • •
sc;;~in~idshipmen and the armyycad;ts
Graham McNamee is not the ont;; ~n
ass in review on the
an
·b adcaster that. is ••in the money, 1;~a~t~~ p Grounds.
a~~ording to a.
~
~~
1 llater.a~v~c~!!: :;d Billy Murida; R~dJf
earns $100,000 ·~
16
heard relating the pre-game, a.eye~~ still _resides with h~
d
tivities.
• • .. ..
in.
.t~~~~nt, :o!e Marie:
n k
;vn au
~aze1i,n,a as this child star is kno~n .~
Joe Mitchell Chap:ple, ·v.re - no,; f th - in home \ife, the daughter of an Italian i
thor .and lecturer and a?ostle aok oVe;
not read or
1
h"losophY will spe
aJtd a Polls.shhe imsonthower,.,ncavnaudeville and•
~c:_IBdZ~n_=;BuZeAp t'his afte"rnoon at 3:30 .on
ite ye4;-,
vv
....
wr ar. ing for the talking pictures. While
«Golden Rule Week...
trre~
Rose'$_ family r..ave not ipoved
th8 ••sJurns... their apartment ~s ;For tJiose holcakye_Ybyf_apnlasywhbor=ouanf:;::a~d.f :tiU.ed with pretty curt~ins ~ndd;1o~,;f~ i
F
h.
p
an4 in' ~ose Marie's ov:;1 .wor •
~nd third. pe-i;.~:s ~~c tlle sw.ell stuffed :furniture..
, ca.n~dten~Ne;0 :-~ki:-~:iitreal will
.;rc;,m 9 _, t,o,. 1.a~~ . t.Ontg~t
- .
.. etwee~n th.
ods

ee

F!~t~nBZ~z;:£~

• .. • •

'. u::n~eco:a

:=sa:~t

story

!

~I~hbe

l>~~e;!dto~!.t)

~r E~I;. s~~:

t~ni.

thM~ie1::

s~;:

a~!~~n.;~

I

i
':1te.ws-<l:lt.p :Sure.au
8

f'

BOSWORTH STRE:ET

BOSTON

8

I

MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

I

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

Bos-WORTH STREET

J:!OSTON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

JAN

U--0-

)

~\·==~,··

l

NEW LAW FIRM
IS ORGANIZED

SENATOR SHANAHAtf .)/
B~'i§S HOME BRIDE /

The jewels ·fou-nd in her safety deposit box wer~,. t~)te because Rex Bell,
Clara's act.Q,r if."l:k,,y friend,'.' -w-ouldn't
let her see ffl'ss Bow a.nd give them to
her. MisS De Boe a~erted.

CJTY CORPORATION
COUNSEL AIDS NAMED

Swampsoott Man Weds. Ii
Miss Harrell of Virginia , ·
SWA'MPscOTT, Jan 2(}.-.Follow-1.ng ·
an a.nlloun-cement, today at the St.ate' J
House that Senator Will!an:1 F. shana- f
han 0£ thfs town ~nd Miss Ella :M:aie :
Harrell of Portsmouth~ Va, had been :
married Saturday in Ne-w YoTk city,/

Sullivan and :Brennan Get
Law Posts

Judge Thorndike and
Atty. W. J. M,Donald Become Part-

t::!~~~ :: .

. Attorney J. Burke Sullivan of 7
.A.tveston st, Jamaica Plain, yesterday

!!~:o:::e~Z:;::o:::~
a.nnouncelfl.ent.
-

...:...

w-a.s appointed assistant corporation
. counsel .a.t $4500 a y~ar, and. attorney
John A. Brennan of 282 Buinke.r :a:n1 st,
Charlestown.
assistant
corporatio'n:
counsel 'a.t. $3500, ~y Mayor Curley.

UD!-1 .
: : ~ = e ~ :~:t~e~:t:i:::1~!a:::s b:::: i

is a

:~~nd:e.:::a;e;t::ln::::rs~g:h:t
Springs, Canada. At tha.t time Miss i

T..he 'Wedding was

by

no m.e.S..~s

c?;:~: i.

stififv::.u~~::ri::iJ.!;, :O°co~rtJ~rn :Ei~
graduate of{F'~tfJfn College, 1924,

~.'.

\

Harrell J was S'i"creta.ry for the N~rth
C.ar.olina. . Pine Ass_ociation. 0£. NoTfolk, Va...
.
·
Senator Shana.ha.n "W"as t.he first
Dem.ocra.tic Sena.tor to be elected 1'ro.rn
this district' since the el~ction · o/ Asa
T. Newhall :more than 50 years ago.,

~~ffX:~Y

'/ .
/ ,
l ',
i

i

Jj
1'

1913~r:~:;a!~
~~s;~ J
~X:n!!:4• and has p r a , c t ~ in Lynn J

:!;e~

8

lie said tc._..:!g:ht,· -whe.n inte. rviewed. /
that he thought i t best to ha.ve a.
pdvate ceremony in order not , to iiiterfere with the 'WO~k he bas- to do in
the Legislature.
The.Y pl~n to postpone fl1.eh• wedding trip.

StT;t[p~';:".! ~~~1;i:
JOHN

:B.

A. Courtney...

SULLIVAN

.JUDGE

H.

C.

O. F. ; 3"amaica Plain" Council, K. of C.,
and Charitable :IriSh Society.
Mr Ere~nan wa"s graduated fron'.l
Suffolk Law; School and is .a ll'l.ember

THORNDIKE.





. l

!

set of the new year f'onned a. det•

"f.3.o'sto.{~...ws-a:::llp :Sure.au
8 BOSWORTH
BosTON

r

inite · partnership.

""9-,tty. Thorndike, a. special justice:

i~~heillBr~c~~rt:'isit~ci.5f~~. ~"t!-.
17, 1879 and cam.e to Easft. Bridge..::_
'.

83~=~~

I

~=iuset·~ ~io~d

ciation, _Comm.erclal Club, University.
Club, . B~oc·kton Country Club and
;Harvard · Club.' He wa.s married in
April of 1908 to Bessie Ellsworth
Perkins of East Br"id"gewa.ter
Atty -Mac.Donald was born in
Brockton on April 19, 1899, the son

I

Angus D. Ma.cDOllald, secretary-

schoOl,

class

of

17,

a.nd

was

of the Bosto..~ 1

oston..

.'
.
c}°t~:0i~P~~1;
9

:for sing clerk.
f
B-µnker Hill
amilton Court,

some time employed. in ciVil service
department as a. stenographer at
F!ore~ River ,and Boston ·anriy base.

!!ioo~t;;ufJ;: a!~ ~as!tre~°i\~1;~.~~·
~as~_iir----..........0

s

hU.se.~

~

in

the

.same

year..

S nee October or 1924 he has bee;>

a. sis.ting,

in

the

office

·{C~~PC?iid~ce.'",.

~e '. ~a.dua~ :rrQni

~H~ar~<~Vf!rsity in 190:?'alld :f'roni

904
fH~~~::-~r~~~~ 1n~~ ~·. East
ron ~eb. 1, 19(?7 and opened an Of=
Bridge-Water but came ,to Brockton
YiCe in-·_the ·Bryant: ·block.

-He was

.appointed a. special justice Of the
local court by Senator David I.
Walsh, then governor of the State,
in 1915
Atty. Thorndik~ is a p3.St president Qf the Brockton l3ar Associa-

tion: and a member of the Plymouth
County Ba:i_- AssOciation, the Ma.ssa-::husetts Bar Association and the
'un.erican Bar Association.
He is
lso a -member of the Harvard Law
chool Associatio:p., I O. o. F.; Grane-e.

--.:::=-

--~ -

- - -- ·-- - -

o.;--,oc.

Schirmer,
Athert.on .:;,; 'C.
The couple plan to ; mar
and will ~nd. tbe~ wedding
abroad.
,,.t_ t:£

·

Miss Swain
1 Suffolk LawEfugaged
Student

To

"pSalem

.stre_e_t~:..~·'~f.'~_fiel~. _have

;
a.n-

~=bt!r~ ~ ~~~l.~~1;;&1n~~to',tbeir
of. ¥.r~. fl,U~;c

,W,. ,,Jacobi, of.. Syr.,.,.,.,. .N" ·
.

I

une
p

[ ., Mr. a ~ ~ H . 0. ·swain of 840

-.J-.coib& Jr~· - ~

Atty.

. orndike.

,.Atts•. Ma,cDonald was
ied on
23 o!. ls.st yea.: to,Mlss
o:t ,..l!,.ey.er

MASS.

ii=::::::====

tre~urer of the La.sters' Union, B. e auditing deand S. W. U., and th.e late Agnes /J.igh.s~ool~ and
B. Mac"Donald.
He resides at 90 w-ith t.µ.e FedEllis street.
, He iS -~ graduate, of Brockton High

STREET

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

water with his parents in l'lf~-f:~'F-"==7"'=~,=?'~~~~~~==~:':':::
has resided
in East
Bridg~~~r ,.
,
lfi'

I o:f

'.\

Mrs Arth.ur Guthrie. a

-classn1ate of the ~ride, att!==nde~ her~
and the groom was attended by. ¥rs
Guthrie, who is a.. New York a.tt.o:rney.
~i'he bride is a graduate of a Southern
university.
Hundreds o£ congratula~ory n:i.esSa.ge·s poured into .th".! SeJ:1ator's horn~ lasi: night and open house
was held to all bis friends.

and Boston University LaW School,
1927. He is a :member of Boston .1' thletic Association., Eqstonia. Court, 1.£. C.

Altbou:gh since l.924 they have
been associated :In "the practice o~ ,
Jaw in Bl*ockton, At.tys.. ll;erbert
C.. Thorn.dike and Walter J. · M~Donald, two ~ 'the d.ist.tict's . best
known la"WYeJ"S, ha.ve at the out-

i;. t~;e~~f11~,

-"".,

~.

·\

·urea:u

.... ,.•:. -r,,c

8 BOSWORTH

BoswoaTS: :.

STRE~,-:;-~:':>~
MASS.

BOSTON

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

GAZETTE, HAVERILL, MASS.

- - - d1Spa
----u - -Colima - --""tc'hesk; todaY eoUm.a t~
of state<S
h\t the semi-a~ti.X,e vo1
ik:oand that th
~

been 'belclun& b~i gs
The volcano\
1. were low rum n tith of ceborlM'O
about_ 200 miles "'hich 1ast.week._ •
sl>•
dormant volcano ~ activity.
ed signs of renew
;
Quakes Registered at Geori:etown,t
17 ()P)-Earth t;re
wa.shingto2n5o~a,nn1iles from Wash
ors a.bout

the seismogr
lton ·were reco:rdediv~;1sity 1.ast night
:,., of Georgetown un12·30
Fa.tner SO
tween s•si:,nd at g·:58:35, witll.
d~t~bance about 10:10. '

I!

\

LAW STUDENT
-~ES SUDDENLY

,-

lt
~! :-it~1;e~
~~ \Ocean Brine ·
;

a

e
n

1

\i~~\t ;::fug.

a~i

~~ :1
m,
1



av

fg ~:

'. c~
i cht

AMESBURY-James Ryder Feeley,
a senior a£ th6 Suffolk Jaw school,
:Boston, died suddenly et iiCUI V e1ouble
yesterday afternoon at the home of
his parents,, Mr~ and Mrs. Richard
Feeley;. 84A Friend street; H-e was 23.
Born in this town in 1907, 'tbe youth
attended and was graduated from st.
Joseph's Parochial school and
the
Arilesbury High school. . After graduatiori from the high school, he became
identified with his father in t,he Richa,;d Feeley and Sons, real estate and
irisurance business. He also studied
at Suffolk law sC!hOOI and was prepa-ring for graduation tram that school
in June.
' .,.
During his high school days. Feeley
was popula'r among his classmates and
in · his junior and senior years was
elected treasurer. He has served as
alu1nni treasurer. The death is the
second within three days in the class
ot 1926. Raoul Lemoine, who died last
Saturday, was a member o! ·the class
and .a neighbor of Feeley.
·
He is survived by his parents and igi.
brother, J. Richard Feeley.
Funeral servlces will be held from.
the tamily home, 84A Friend street,
tOinorrow mornig at 8:30 and at St.
Jt±iseph's church at 9. A solemn "'.high
mass of requiem will be celebrated.
B'urial will be at St. Joseph's church.

(Continued from page t.)
b
forest :fires in t
was impressedh ;vent do'W?'l: t,pe iOa
vicinity,
g~t to obse~e the

n

C<

James R •. Feeley Collapses
at Parents' Home

To Curb Fir

s
~
n
r

ci

u
Points in Bi1L

ota.tion covets -t

I

'l.'11.e

fol~wfcJgM~uo·Neil's bill:
0
m~~h~ department of con~e~~1; ~

0

!~ hereby authorized {;! ';;J;.~rta.ted,
Ian ~s. 1 as m~¥ her~fte~illlon dollars
O
nee :;
f~g a period of five ici:~s. pr
thh ~
construction of P~~ ~£1a~Ons. reservoi
sure tanks. pump d tl\er appara.tus
t dtst11ling plants an o x &ent to ma
Fil ne maY be necessarY it~~s e
the A.tla.nl
cor. 8 1 available the w urpose of preventi·
vek ;~ fu~t~er f~~v~is
fire and drought
par a_ cape Cod.
t maY take 1.J,n(i'
repc c:3.
«paid departmen
l Laws su
era! ~: chapt,er 7d9 r~~h\1;e t~~1~ as ro:.y
a. vi '."P. \ 1and an
ut the purposes 1
~~ td necessa{y t~ ~~Yc~-opera.te with loc.l

pefu. i

\~~~

Jr

gf

rthisac

an

\:

\:
I

lwA1 WJDEA

koADi···

DI:" JIL'U TUI(! V

'

1

.

j

1
1
1

WAS SENIOR AT LAW
.
SCHOOt

\

JAMES RYDER FEELE;Y

\

:So.ston :Yt¢w.s-<Cltp :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

\

.4 nnouncin,

NEWS-HERALD, NEWBURYPORT, MASS.
i I

NEWS, GARDNER, MASS.

..,.

w a.~

v.1.l-

.rtn,--W--d:"y---I;O

will erealr · t :z

JIJ,v 2 7 793~
J.VLaynaru-wJie:t€, ne1
••

festivities which started today,. PhJ.iif!'iJ
ip Wargel_ill.-~~st received hi_s de-)
gree of .Ai..:WUm the :University of,/
Michigan ~ n n , Arbor.
/
Mi,Ss_ Rose Shore, of Boston, for- J
Of t.h~~ city, was marr!ed in_!
\\,ston last Sunday to Jacob Rosen- i
. _ , f Boston. The
couple will ;
lllfe their home in Bos-ton.
Miss 1
hore is .a.. sister ·of Mrs~· -Samuel /
,Cane, 183 Lawrence, stroot, this city. ,
She was graduated
from Gardner j 0
· ,_igh school in· 1929. Mr. Rosenthal
I
, a graduat,e of :Suffolk La~chool,. ,~_.oSton, and is
emplofe&
y the 1
tCkson Furniture Cq.
.l !

J ··\,erly

I

,~-~~--~::.

_c_... _ _ _ ,.

.

=l._,.

} CJ

1931

I

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

I

. u

GAZETTE, HAVERILL,

MASS.

~JiWij~P_Jt_i_~~RESlbr:·T~~~~1 Bill, Introduced by Taunton Man,

Preposes\!ENLY

Maze of Pipe Lines, Distilling Plants and ~!I
.
·
1
T owers to F 1gl:it F' an d D rQugh t with'!lieapses
ue
Distilled Sea Water
·
1!
\ rr Feeley,

,
/1
a

1

;,
.,., · 1 ·
'
· 1
/.I c
,,',g 1t,ng Cape · C oc1 f ore;;t fi res wit 1 ·wa t er d. · 11e d f rom th e \\V school,
1st1
~bl
s~ acljacent brine of the Atlantic ocean is the hovel idea suggested home 0 ;
{;,'. in.a ;-'~llfil,e,d in the Legislature Friday by R<:_P..:.:_~entative James !Richard
, ;;; I'. t) Keil, I'aunton._
·$>·
. . -.
.
,, was 23.
tu:
i Ch;

:
le Youth
..
· ~
ba'chelor of _law~ degree .from S
olk rom St
1~\,~[;1:t~~iig1 ~;~• rrtl 51s.· to ~ th~
r:ctlaf!3;t b~;~~

TQ .Harness Flood;:,-

Ca

0

~va~~ll~~fu1';;21P;ro~o'k;

lat1 ::if the Atlantic oc.ean ~ the nov~l ide~ : get .sonie .legislation

st~r.ted to help fradua-

nec sugge&ted in -a bill filed in ·the Legis- meet the Cape Co'd: •forest .fire· .situation. ~ecanie
thi~ ~.t~~N~l~~~~~Wto;;.epresentativ~ J~mes
u~n
~~

::r1~u:'tt~:s

r!1ri~;; i~~ebm:

0

:Rich-

The 1l~1tless floods of the s~a would hopes to focus
attention
upon the ~e and
m.ove inland to delµge bunn.ng: for - necessity for action and bring about .tudied
ests via a network of "pi~ lines. tow- some concrete t\ssis.'tauce for Cape Cod. l"eparers. pr~ssure ta~ks. pumping statiC!ns.
T}:t~ sponsor pf tha bill stated that ?,Choo!
1.·eservoU"s~ 0 t1istill1n~ plants. and ..otner he has read books on forest fire con.. '
apapratus? according to . ~e picture trol and co.tlterred with fire wardens i'eeJey
3u!~~ "igeblx~:~ep~~v1;{i~~ a~~~ a~d_otiher. p~sons w~o mig}?:t be termed s anct
~¥[f.
dertaking would be met by a. proviso experts on t~e subJect.
He, declin~d... was
that the state Department of oon.ser- ho,'?"ever~ ,to cite anY names~
:d as
vation may spend as much as $1,000,. ~fter seeing forest fires :roour on the the
000 a year for five years "to make avail- l Cal?e year aft~r year, I have been im- class
able the water of the Atlantic. ocean \ P.ressed that. a great deal needs to be ~ast
for the purpose of preventing :further Oone, bo~h m tl).e way _of prevention :lass
ravages of fire and drought on Cape and
control."
said
Rep~es~ntative
Cod:~
,
O'Neil. ~·we h;ive valuable ·forest re- d #t.
After the project has been success- serv-es there that should be protected.
fully worked out foor Cape Cod. the and other property is also endangered oin

~!1\.:ci~d '~~~;h:11~~:~~~;n;~~~~; :;:r s~!r vio~~t·st!~g~it i~.o~d cg_~i~
like operations in other parts of the relieve th~ un-employment situation."

co~~ 1bilia~~" filed

'

iet,
:~

s:a.~

0

by Representative Ea!':P~~~6~ti:~-oi:!;~;:~d:lth
~d.
O'Neil on a, petition signed by Willian, drafting the bill,Mr. O'Neil said. being. ih.
P. Coughlin and George F. Murphy, Interested In the Cape Cod situation as
Boston, but he infot;.med The Stand~rd an occ3.Stonal visitor to the cape. Mr.
today. represen~ _ hlS. own initiative Coughlin and 1'Al" Murphy, f:riends of
towa.rds re1nedyu1.g a situation in which Mr. Sullivan~ signed the bill It is Mr.
he has a .. strong ~ersonal interest . o·Nen•s in1.pre.ssion that they may be
through
1·e~1dence
111.
southeastern conversant with fire control methods
Massachusetts and summe:r visits. to through their own business. or thro,igh t
Cape Cod when forest fires were raging friend.sh;p ~th .specialists' in that line~ \
First Year in Legislature.
H!;~ic'?i~i-~ ~~id1 55 ~:r\n~s~irl~r ~
Mr. O'Neil is serving his first term !
WSI in the Legislature and is practicing law
.
CContinued on_ rage ~l
\.
ln Taunton. having been admitted
the bat' in June, 19-29,... and received lu.s

\

~i

; "1:, __;

~.~ ~

to\~.--,

1

,_,

..

·- --··- -

HER

ALO,.

NEWBURYPORT, MASS.

I

'f

lp Wargeliri -~:tarted today. PhJl··
gree_ Of ~Bf, ~ S t received his
i
Michigan in.Ann Athe :University of !

de.

rbor.

·

.

Miss Rose'. Shore

I

/

of this city • of Boston, for- ,
oston last Sunday :,as married in r
Boston
Th
Jacob Ros<>n- r
it'lre their ho;,,e . e
couple
wm
bore is a sister ~~ Boa,ton.
M:lss i
Cane, 183 Lawrence t Mrs. Samuel/
S!3-e Was graduated s ;eet, this city.
ngh school in 1 929
;om Gardner'
\ \erJy

.._,f

' a graduate of Snffol~~~enthaJI/
oston, and is emplo
ehool,
tckson Furniture Co
Y the,

-=-=-=-===--··..,,,___

f

: '

---'·---~_i_}

---~·--.:...-L____~---

------

:"w,, iiirtJTE.

. . · . ;i:·'.i:i'iJ>ute.

,

/

as·sing ·of a mai;i,,:as P.roniinent
late K:ilby. W.· Shute - brings
tq. tlJ,e·, eritire. · Community;
_
. . . is proini_nende: ~as _, b~sed no:t
'orily· on his gift for·' l<Jadrrship, -:as,
evidenced by the ~number of · oflice.s
he held, but was foi.tnded upon · the
sincerity in. ·friendsh~p · which made
everyone with whom he came' in
1

· W ell~I{.nown Bank Man and Prominent
Leader in Welfare Work Succumbs
After Illness Since October 31

i

Kilby W. Shute. ca.shier of the
: Cape Ann National bank for nearly
'30 years, passed away at the Phillips
: House of the Massachusetts Geineral
: h?spital, Boston, at 10.30 o'clock last

· \ night.

was

He

62 years of age.

was treasurer and particularly active
1n the recent Addison Gilbert; -hos.,
I pil'i~. 0 ~J't~gi~· survived by his wJfe,
a daughter Natalie, and a brother,
Frank H. Shute.
.. -"i~>·c- ..

I
1L
1

Mr. Shute has been ill sin.ce October 31; when he was stricken at his
~~~n. following
his return from
He was removed _imniediateiy_ from
his home, 53 .Summer street;, to the
Addison Gilbert hospital and recovered sufficiently to . be taken· to the
Phillips House, where he coUld receive special treatment.
' Mr. Shute was born in Glouceste:.
His pa1;ents were Henry Sh~te of
Newmarket, N. H., and-Adelia (Witham) Shute of this city. He became
0

-

-

'Y-,o.ston '.:n¢w.s-a::ll4" 'Y-,ur¢au
8

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

NEWS, SALEM, MASS

!U

· . ·ey . Pli1i1p , Hurwi~z '.11:115
0
tA &dice .ln The Newi, bUil<t1
~
~ Will; .eng.~ge. in
.the
Pract1-ce ot I~w. Mr4·-Hi.trw1tz 1s Well
known ih this ~itY; ha.vlllg _e. host.of
t'riendS. He W ·
rn here in 1908
·
bltc schools. He

g~;'g~:i;t ifu~f;~

.

-------~---

~O.$tOn '.:n¢w.s-(t:llp ~Ur¢QU
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~i~cii

~ie;.e.:~dh~~~r
shows the apprecia~ion which his
trustworthiness and ability inspired
One of the monuments he leaves is
J;>..avenswood
park;
tµrough
his
trusteeship of the S'\wyer fund for
preservation of the park, and through
his love of the beautiful, it was plotted out with the grace and artistry
which is vis.ible in its ,vinding roads.
The development of that p~rk was ,
one of his treasures. In his, boyhood,
Mr. Shute was a born woodsman; his i
vacations were spent in fishing and
hunting, his favorite relaxations.
He entered the Cape Ann National
, bank, then a small institution, as a
teller under Hiram Rich. He was promoted rapidly, and bas twice aided in•
making over the bank. To some extent he was its architect, for 1:te kn~,v
all the details, and helped in tne
planning of its enlargement, and
even followed the contractor's work
as it progressed. Mr. S]?.ute w3:s _.a.
gifted
draughtsman, with artistic
talents. On the walls of his home
gfsnfale~i; poa~~t~g; s~ii~~1t fi;~ti~{h~~
a field of haystacks, new rhown, · re-vealing the nature l?ver and the ai:tist at the same time. One of his
paintings hangs on the walls of the
Cape Ann camera club, of v;.rhich he
was an ex-president.
Long summer nights this pRst seasou were spent in pla!)~ing a. sys~en1.
for the Addison G1loert hosp,tal
campaign, of which h~ was trea~urer. This year was his fourth 1n
Suffolk law school, which he at- 1
tended to make himself n1ore yalua- '
ble to the bank for which ·he worked
so
indefatigably. After the
day's
business hours, the time which ma~y ];
men spend in _rest o~ p}ay, was u~1l- [L
ized by him 1n ach1ev1ng the high :
standard he attained in his clas:5es at ,
the taw school He was ever adding to
his store of knowledge.
Added to all this, he was possessed
of a fine social nature. 11,;rhich made
bi .c_Qm..P_~nionshi much sol,_!ght, -~n(!

... ") I

~Attorney
· pens Law Office

~~ptbeAi~dig~mciu'.:
bert hospital
He was El. regular. attendant and an enthusiastic s~.-port- er of the First Parish church, ._pnitarian,· .and was clerk of the society.
; · He Was active in cotnmunit.:v welfare work, being pr<?minen.t!:1!1'l<ldentifled with all the. importa'tlt, · cam_:paig'n:s, for a quarter of a centttry. He

-

/

I

time after completing his education.
He became cashier on September 20
1901 and began a career of :farreaching influence throughout the
community. He has been a directo:of the bank for about 30 years.
He was president of the Massachusetts .National Bank Ci!shiers' Association; member of Tyrian lodge, A.
F. and A. M., of William Ferson,
Royal Arch Chapter, and of. Bethlehem Commandery, K. T., and a tru.stee of Ravenswood Park,. also an ex-

-

1
1

I

affiliated with the Cape Ann National bank on January 1, 1897, a short

·-·

\

t6;1i~~

~~8u!\~l~~~Jji

--

I

· co~tectctt~T~a~tc;1t:t6::-~iit hff1.his ute'
was the· desire to help others; his
u~tiri:r;ig endurance made it possible
for him to carry out his thought,
, and that is why not only a beloved
: family, not only the employees of the
I ~:P~tn£r~!~~ona~d b~;;:hie~f
many years, not. only the church and
, the clubs of which he was so faithful a member, but all Cape Ann sorrows at the loss of one who has devoted his life to the betterment of
his city.
His sphere of influence was more
I than local; he was made president
j this last year of the 'Massachusetts
· branch Of the National Bank Cash-

friendship even more highly
J prized He was a fr!end to everyone,
J< in every walk of life
His high standI ing in the Unitarian church, of which
-1 h~ was benefactor and constarit at - ,
tendant, in Tyrian lodge, A. F and ·
A M
and Bethlehem Comman.dery .
I
PHILIP HURWITZ
,:'. '·\ k. T.: reveals again how ,videly hiB
received his LL.B degree_f_ro_m_·--'~=-uf-loss will be felt.
Boston. June

The home which he was renovating
WWhlle a.t la.w scl:i:ool, Mr. Hurwitz
\l for his wife iB- still in the process of
m.aintaine<t a. high. sclio!S.:r.9.lµp aver[[ completion, and his task is finished;
age and ·was~ pl.aced on the. dean,'&
but the love of all those to whom he
honor list, a decided compl1~ent to
~ gave so unstintingly will endure, a:q.d
h1s ability. He was admitted as a.n.
· ! the good works that he has do;ne will
a·ttopiey
t~e supreme Court ot /
i~ remain as ageless and beautiful as
this .state
. 22, 1930 after. passing/
:1 the ~rees he loved, in Ravenswood
the Ju
examination..
1
He 11
his parents, Mr. and!
i)_~ark. _
__
\\ his

l
j

1

t~1~~1.

·1

I

*:rf,:

Mr~. Ba

choseil:.'

wJ.tz of this City, tw<>l

~f:he!Ucce~i:5 t~~
·

;,i;t!:

::e,o,ston ~¢,,..,._(t::Jt.p ::l?,ure"au
8

BoswOR'l'fl

STR~E'T
!'v1ASS.

SosTON

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.
0,.0S'-

ore

IE . BOSTON

- .4-fti

DtS, \ 1 \-,~•"'

193L

HERALD,

DytKWlIIEG1

THl.

Appoini:f!d

lEGAL M~NOS DIFFER WIOELY;

J

TARR TO CONTINUE FIGHT

--rhe
Ne",~ Je·1 se_y
Vederd.1
Distrir,t Court decision;; Jhat
the Eighteenth j\1ncndn:1.cl~-t is
invalid, n~ay tie a
Gordian
knot i~_-1 federal prohibition enforcen"1ent in ~1 assac.husetts, it
4

· "as predicted today.
'1
The probability of appeal
1

fT.om
every loc.3 I court. conviction, and
delay of many cases until the United States Supreme Court passes
upon the New Jersey decision, -was
seen.
-Att.01neys .-v..rho have liquor cas~~s
])ending in th(_:;! Fede:t~l _cou1.t here
"W"ere ju~il~t ovc1 the ·prospect of
a legal ?tiarl which could not 1-i2lp
but a.id 'them,· at least postponing
until fin~l decision of the United
States
Supreme
Court· the
final
judgment of t.heir case~.

I

APPEALS

INEjVITABLE-1

The efforts of 16Cit.1 p:rohibit-i.on
agents and of the Unit ~d s:atP.3
attorney's office here '\-Viii not :tiO,V
be affected by the decision, it ·.v:1s
said, but appeal ft om cou1 t con-... ictions resulting from 1.hcir efforts
~·as almost inevitable
.F~eder::i l j1cL<l.gce ,:;it.ting in Boston
withheld comment upon the decision until they ha-ve had an opportunity to study it
I f th.ey should
dE:clare
themselves
in
agreement
vnth the interpretation of the new
legal poir,it raised, they could refuse
to _he~r any liqupr cases.·
U
S
Dist
Atty. Tarr took the
s:;tr.nd that the United States Supreme Court already has decided

tsn;,~~~=

1

~~ntl" :.~~ai~~lyti: J-=ijs?orI
such time as reversed

1ng u~bl

OPINIONS

,

DIFFER

_United Sta.,tes Commi"ssioner Ed"1"1n C. Jenney pointed out Massachusetts is a _Separate and distinct
Federal district and is not affected
by the decisions of other districts
until they have been upheld by the
_Supreme Court
Herbert Parker, e~-a tto:r ney-general
of
Massachusetts,
declared
that it -was his opinion that if the
matter 'vVe:r e taken up again by the
Supreme Court, without the merit-s
o:f P:'1-st decisions, the court would be
so 1n1.pressed that it :might reach
the S':lme decision
safcicting Atty ..-Gen
Roger
Clapp

'"T!"1-i_s"'"c de'CiS:ion by a
judge o-r
'thE': _l'e~eral distric,t cou.rt, vvhile
in"fer~st;i~g-. academically, ls ln no

se:q__se~.}~·:1-t,P,oritat.lve.
no1;; it. is

well

,.t.9;r. .. ~ - to s~:y.

"Whe-t?her. or,

considei.·ed

is :not

It.s novel~y Js its.,.

in~: fea.~ure.
ts

0

• • ,, . .



·

follo~:

:.;-li?,s· ,~.~~li.

SAYS

ALPERT

/

PROF. Z. P. CHAFEE, J:R., of Harvard
La-w
School:
After
the
United St.ates Supreme Co~rt has
applied the 18th amendment in
25 or more cases I would be very
much
surprised
if they should
sustain .Judge Clark
If they follo,ved him it 'vVOUld be very surprising" to r:ne
It would be a
gre::it relief to President Hoover
if they did
F~ORMER
ASST.
DTST.
ATTY.
GEORGE
ALPERT-----' Federal
Judge
Clark's ·opinion
on
the
prohibition
question
is
logical.
It's a. v C!-Y able presentation of
facts
based on la-w
interpretation
He. is one of t.he able:o:t
fcde:t al district cOlH t
ju:r i;.;ts in
the
country
I
do
not
knovv
vvhethcr the United States Supreme
Court
will
uphold
his
opinion.
The
:g:r eat
mass
of
,.,.-ater has gone oYer the falls.
millions of dollars hRvP h,-,.,,,.,.., ,...,..:.;r1

1

z,

1!~th~:ti;~~n°gf :h:e;.~~:rfirou:~~ l (
decsiion.
Judge Clark's deci£ion
i
-which brings the issue before the ~
a~1~~dl~~;;e again, should be the a-,

J

,.ROF. •TOSEPJ,J, H. B"P.:ALE, Hatvard La,v School:
The
United
States
Sup:r en~e
Cou:r t
has
al-

~~a~~e p~~;ite~~f:
There is nothing
Clark's decision

c'
·

lh~e;;~~;;r

nevv
His

s;

d

in Jud6e
ruling is

t'

i:

::1°e1:t j~1!ti~~p~;~at:e a~u!;icii>1:.~
court had made It

r

YC:rif!f}~\~l/~'I\L~~r ~ · 8d;t~u~! t
!~~:eall1~~-ai~idi~~ c~\~~~c;t~ t
Amendment is invalid because,0f l::
~~~n~et~~d ko;o,!_.ts 1tdt°l"ietio:eti::
But, off-hand, it seems to rn'.!
very u1"]_1il<ely that the Supreme
Court vvill agree ,vith the :r ea ::;o:ning of the youthful judge, i f ii: i2.
:"1 S
<?.nnou:nced in
ne-wspapeT.'cl.
It
iPi
significant
that
every
a mcnd:.nent adopted . durin~ th~
past century and a· quarter has
been ratified by the legislaturl"..3
of the states and neve.r by the :i:1J:ternative convention method
Of
course, the E_ighte~nth Amendment differs some-w-h"Zl,t from others in its
h_![.~hly.:_. .controversial
character
Tl;le- ,l.eg'islature-;
of
every state in ·tp-e.:·=t:Jnion for a
centu:r:v have been Wrestling vdtl'~
leg;s'!ation on the same topic The
legislatures
that
ratified
the
Eighteerith
Amendment
-v:.·~·:r:e
elected by teh people ,v.ith the
.kno-wledge that this question vva.~
coming before them for ratifi<!a..tion
Vv~e are living under a Y-ep-

J
C,

the

ie~~n~\~~lv~e~or~h/:fh!o~~Cf~e~~
verse the principle in this ~a,:_;e
&ind say that the representF.tive;::,
of the people were not qualified
to act 1n their behaIT but r~'tnire
the people to elect a- dif:ferent set.
of men to hold a convention expressly for this one topic.
ACTING
GOVERNOR
"l'.-OUNGMAN: No one can help bein= ext:emely intere:3ted in conte~plati.on of the social and political ef_fects -which would .J?esult i f the
decision should be~ confirmed by
the cou:r t of last-4fesort bu·t it is
useless to make a gues.s as to the

~~t~f~~e

iiri.~t~u~\a~:~~;1$:~=
Court does . . The amendinent- ...11.r;:i.s
ratified in Massachus~tts by. tl>,e
Legislature, not by . ·conVe'iitt9U;.
, The Hou~~
... on, Marc}?: 26.:, 1~'.{8
:). X<;,,ted.' 145 to 9iL, for.. ;'.r~.:ti1:"1..c::t.:t 1-ou

·~i.t;;~} t~ :.;i:t;2
,,.;, 'J:, '
J

:Y F. HU

LOGICAL,

vvhich the latr-er as attorney-gen-

1er;~1i~°yro~h;h:t~i~hf;~~[1i0~~e;~=
ment. the Supreme Court upheld



'

~C?-~cl.l~. ·

.

.'-

.,,~.,-,,•,o,,.-,,c,

I;

every local court.. conviction. and
,delay of many cases until the United States Supro9me Court pass-3s
upon the Nevv Jersey decision, -was

seen.
-Atto1neys .vvho have liquor cases
pending in the Federal ~ourt hetc
""'°ere jub~l~t 'over the :Prospect of
a. legal s~arl vvhich could not 1'1.~lp
but aid 'them · at least postponing
until fin~! decision 0£, the United
States
Supreme
Court-· the
final
judgment of their cases.

al-1 ['.:
I9'f

States
Supreme
Coui.t
has
ready passed upon the validity
of the Ei.ght.eenth Amendment
There is nothing nev:§ in _Jud6:e
C.lark'.s decision
~,.._ ,' ru~1ng 1;;
a bout
as
impo,,- tan.t_: as
1f_ the
chief
justice
of
the
municipal
cou1 t had made it.
.

~~ 8d:i_a7!u~!

,t~-!;r1:1isLt~

5

! i:'
t
r:

Ii

!!~~eallth1:~-~~idi1:i! ciiii~~!e-:;I; t·
t
Amendment is invalid becau!,'e_0f
, ~~~n~~t~~d k i o ~ s it~~~eti ;etf!': ·i
0

APPEALS IN~'ffTABLE-1

0

· But,
off-hand, it seems to T!'.lf:!: cl
very un.Jikely that the Supreme
CoUrt will agree wHh the reason1 ing of the youthful "judge, i f it i.:;
be affected by the decision it ·.vas 1 lJ s ?.nnounced in the ne'VV"spaper.:s.
It
is
significant
that
every
amend~-nent adopted . during· th""
past century and a quarter hns .'
"-'·as almost inevitable.
_F~dere:,l jµd._goe ::;;it.ting in Boston
b8eti. r~ t~fi ed by the legisla turc-.s •
W1t1ihe1d comment upon the decisof the states- and p.eve.1: by the R,1- ,
ion until they have had an opporternative conventiOl.'l. method
Of ,'
tunity to study it. If they should
course, the E_ight~.~nth Amend- :,
d~clare
t?,emselves
in
8.greement
ment differs some-What fr.om. ot.b"VV"Ith the ,nterpretation of the new
- ers in its bf[.:;-hly,_~. ~o'ntrov.ershll
legal poir,it raised, they could refuse
' character
Tl).e- _;J,e.g"i~latU.res
of
to he~r any liqupr cases.·
every state in ~tP~:::.-·'Bnion · for a
l.i S
Dist
Atty. Tarr took the
centur:v have been· v.4-e!'stling -,,vitt
stand- that the United States SulegJslation on the sain.e topic The:
preme Court already has dE!cided
legislatures
that
ratified
the
on the validity of the dry amendEighteerith
Amendment
v.·<:~re
rr~tnt and that the decision 1s bindelected by teh people --with the
ing u1ttil such time as reversed
knowledge tha.t this question 'VV"aS
' coming before them for ratifir:aOPINIONS DIFFER.
tio.n
vi:.re a:r~ living under a r-e,presentative form of gove~b.-lent.
United States Commissioner EdI
cannot see why he sh"11!old r<"
n"in C. Jenne::y- pointed out Massaverse the, princiPie in this <"!a<=;e
chusetts is a Separate and djstinct
and say that the representr,tive.'='
Federal. district and is nOt affected
of the people were not quali.fiet.'i
by the decisions of other districts
to act 1n their behari, but rP-rp1ire
until they have been upheld by the
the people to elect a- different s0t..
~upreme Court
of men to hold a convention exHerbert Parker, e~-attorney-gen; presslv for this one topic.
~ral
of
Massachusetts,
declared ACTIJ,rG
GOVERNOR
°1'.-0UNG,tha t it was his opiniori that if the
MAN: No one can help being ~.xmatter "W"ere taken up again by the
tremeiy interested in contemplaSupreme Court, -vvithout the merits
tion of the social and political efo:f past decisions, the court would be
fects Which -would ¥esu1t if the
so inipressed that it might reach
the same decision
·
_ f:~h:}i::rts1:,':ui1st~~~~f[t~:(1t
A:,.cting .- Atty.-Gen
Roger
Clapp
'useless to make a gu·es.s .as t<? the

The

efforts

of

16C01

prohibition

:rt~~-~cy~t~fI1~c t:::ret_;r~-~i~~o~::,~~i

I'

~f;~~ b;:1e\~l~f;;l :::::.: ~~~1: ~~~~:;~~ j

I

~~

sai;;'I?h.:i,~'.d~ii•..o:n by a
judge o:f
"the :,:f~deral dlstric,t .court~_ while -

l

1

~~frer~s_ti!Ig~ academically: is in .no
s~~~.e-._,,::.·:~:11:,µor.itative.
Whe'.'ti:h.er. or_
not ·..it· .ls. well

· 1,__,,_,,-9.T:__,~_:J;o... s~Y-

,',

.

considered

SAYS

ALPERT

t

PROF. Z. P. CHAFEE. JR .• of Harvard
Law
School:
After
the
United States Supreme Co...,rt has
applied the 18th amendment in
25 or more cases I vvould be very
much surprised if they should
sustain .Tudge Clark
If they fol10,;ved him it -would be very suzprising to me
It would be a
;g-rea t relief to Presi,:J.ent Hoover
if they did
FORMER
ASST.
DIST.
ATTY.
GEORGE
ALPERT-----' Federal
JudgP.
Clark's ·opinion
on
the
prohibition

question

is

logico.l.

a very able presentation of
baScd on law interpretation
He is one of the ablc;c:;t
federal district cou1t jurists in
the
country
I
do
not
know
vvhether the United States Supreme
Court
vvill
uphold
his
opinion.
The
g1.eat
mass
of
ter has gone over the fails,
millions of dollars have been paid
ln .fines and violato:is of the law
have served sentences in jails, all
of vvhich s;hows that the opinion
Its

facts

,...-a

iM~~~}~;;:I~i.8n:

A;is;:dJJii~ar;;_
I
applaud the coura:ge of Mr Justice Clarke
I
I eel t9ere can b,e
no harm done in having a fun
hearing. of all the issues involved
and in having the case decided in
such a ,vay ~s to leave no ,._question open.
ALEXANDER LINCOLN. director
or
the
Nation.3,l
Association
Against. -the Prohibition Amend- .
men-t:
In
national
prohibition
cases the United ·states Supreme
Court held that the .Eighteenth
Amendment was valid.
Whether
they w-ill reserse their decisivn
on account of the consideration
advanced
by
Judge
Clark,
it
seems to me, must be a matter of
considerable consequence.

'i

LOGICAL, B U T - -

ATTY.

CHARL:ES

H.

~~t~fr.~\':~ ~~t~ut\a~:;J~;~S:~::
Court does . . The amendin:en.t· Vvas

t~~f!f~t~~. M!~~a\h;~~~t::v:xt\tb~

is not

I:ts novelty i:5<i-ts:..

:n:gr,,~~;26d.i:./_~!~-t~::.--::,,·"

( LOGICAL,

[

SAVAGE-

.;:~:.~~JuiJgef~~rkf~t~.y:_ho~!hits ;;:
able juris~ and his opinion undoubtedly -vvill have great v.reight
in bringing to a focus an issue
:..hat has been discussed Ior 12
years or more
Personally, I fee1
that Judge Clark knows what he
is t?-lking about - VVhether his
opinion ,vill be sustained by the
United States Supreme Court is
problematical

.JOURT "DRY M I N D E ~
ATTY.
tTOSEPH
FTN1''"EGANJ"udge Clark h,3s raised rather a
deep question, but a very sensibic
one,
in my opinion.
Tt seems
that the Supreme Cou;rt, which
as a body, is prohibition-minded:
has gone so far as possible in up·holding the validity of th_e prohi-1
bition amendment
In the case
of Rhode Island vs. Palmer. in

I

-------·---

1

.The

~fiY)~l'ftJfi;~,f::l8;:

*8

::Soston )t¢W.$-'1::ltp :Sur¢au

::So.$ton )t¢W.$-'1::h.p ::Sur¢au

8 BOSWOR°W:/ STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

- '

~~~~~-~===-~
'
·:}Co~tl~ed on Page Fouit~:':!.
rerse, ,written.: by Mrs, Arch~~ ciurlii~:he PMt two._y,:,ars., As pointed out"~
~e. . foreword ,,b;v, __ M rs. G.race Hast.in.g.s
;harp, ,wld(!W.. ¢'...·Prof. ,Dallas· Lore
,harp, ' these · transcripts of, the poet,,.
>wn life are . here thrown upon the
:creen with ·purpose to uPil!t, , to stay,,
:o _stimulate, to soothe and quicken
',
·_eader ihto better thinking and hi
ivlng. The mother's guiding counsel
lEre,. th~ crusader speaks out· the wisft I
~ial tactician- gives a valuable 'do"-'
tV1th an invaluable 'don't.' n 'The author'·!
leals With 8. wide V@,riety of SUbjec_ts !
md the•-phra,;Ing Is everywhere marked
>Y settjed .conviction. Those who have
>een !ortun,i,te enough to receive the '
rolume confidently predict a. brilliant !
in the realm of poetry fot- Mrs. !

'l'l!Iat
Stde_h

MASS

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

NEWS, M~LDEN, MASS.

-

.

~~

1

-::~·'",~

New Presjden~:of .
Law School Alumni'·

!

i~~'::"e'i-.

\

Another dlffer~etween John D. •
:?ockefel~er and the rest of tis Is that
,t becom!'S front page news wh~n · he
~'-!Otes Nixon Waterman's poems to his
;riends.

.i.:i'm:.1 .ii.irdwo::::i ·::,pq-eJ !
A.I.JA.J .IOJ £m-enb .irq-e.i::,,

i,f ___ ~ fl-e;+i;+ }i:{tJ!~AI!~:~

:A

Jan?al"y announcement that brings
_special JOY to Emilie Loring and her
.,-t'!iany fr_lends Is th'at the first· edition df
5,000 copies of "Lighted Windows" h~ een enti:ely sold and that; a. seco:m
large edition is now on the press.

· 1

----- -------

:Sos ton )t&ws-'1::ltp :Sur~au
8

: _Mrs. Winnifred King Rugg, author of
;'l;Jnafraid: A Life or. Anne Hutchinson,:•
will speak today on Bo,:ton's pioneer
feminist before the student body· of the
j:loston University school of education.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

( There are several Concerns that d~i
i>ute the' distinction of being the bigg.,it
~n>ong book publi.shirig houses. but the

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~:µly on,e, so far as w·e



_:,

Ynow; to claim

'1

fhe honor of being the smallest is 'the
p-or4c;,n

Press

of

POrt

Clyde,

):'hrough. it John Gordon brings tjut a

L

of the

'

JVJIP . T?T£.1or~~

Jnique 'llttle

' it

I vet-

Women's City Club; Rt Rev \irliet

1·MAN NAMED EY VICTIM
- 1William LaWrence. DD, retired bishop, ~ _set.
OF MOB OFFERS ALIBI and Rt Rev H. K Sherrlll, DD, l>_ishop \~~~~
OMAHA, Neb, Jan 12 (A. ,P.)-Paul
(HS1:-ike") Smith. a Negro, said to
.
R
d
. t d b
~ave been imp 11c.a. e
Y
aymon
Gunn in the _mur~e;r of Miss Vel1I1:
Colter, near M~;ryville, Mo, on Dec . •
was a:"r~sted h~re late tod~y by pohce

president of Mt Hol_yoke College; ~da
L
Comstock. president of Radclrffe
, C~llege; Thomas J. Boynton, ex ... United
\ sta.tes district attorney, president of
Suffolk Law School, and George S.
Muirrro'rd, ~ident of Atlantic Na-

de~~i:~:sWho ~8,id he .came . here _on /"ional ~ank, Boston.
.
Dec 21. denied any conne~bon witl\jr -~
-in I a blue moon some
Miss Colter's death. He said that o~1
' ..

:

~·!~ !.t· t~:~o!if o1r ~~~t~~!t,~ u°:; ~~ ,
:Maryville, helping her,
\ F. Smart,. of He declared th~t '.¥rs 1
with dinner.
Luther Forsythe and :Mt;s Edwin co;-

don of Maryville were at lus aun s

home from 3

1

600 IN

ould

=-: ~ ory.

E
URG

.STATE
G WORLD COURT

I

. .
.
'\
Among th_eJlOl) c1t,zens m 11>!assachu~etts- who -nave signed a pet.ition urg- 1

, .

ing pr.ompt and f.av.orable actxo_n by the!
Senate on t,xe World Court protocols I

are two Admiral&, two Generals. 24 'I
bank presidents. 13 other bankers. 16
prominent manufacturer~, 35 attorneys
~ and 20 leaders in busines.s, it was anr.' ', nounced yeste:t'day by Raymond T. \
Rich. se.cretary of the Massachusetts
~ Citizens'
Committee on the World
i Court.
·i
Th~ petition originated, acco;-ding to
f Mr Rich, with the National World
I Court committee of which Maj Gen
John ~. O'Ryan is chairman. In this
St,3.te the Ma.ssac_husetts Citizens' Co~mittee on the World Court, o! v.~hicb
Roland Boyden is chair-man, took no
for'mal action on the petition,_-believing
that decision regardip.g indorsement
must rest with~aCh iu~,v_ i_dua_ I ~ember
of the· Massacffusetts g_roµp.
Ap:long the sig~er.s':--·:lfl. t~:ii,;. State are
Charles_ F_ . D.. :B~l,.don~._~!~R;a;r1an of the
j Bosto~ P_1,1.01ic Lib:raTy:°·;· Ellen ~·\ Pen ..
. I dleton, pr_e~iden~ ·q(~, yV'eUesley qollege;

t

'!
I

l

I.'

of Massachusetts; Mary E. Woolley, Pen-

l

once -

&~~~o~

\nt~d

Law

School
Hold Annual ElectioQc ,
of Officers

f
,

fess
1uct\

1

1

tand
a'.n::i
['n13:

I

}_·

r
enter:..
·

-1

1!

Atty. Thomas J. Finnegan of ~de.n·:
and Boston, professor at- Suffolk 19/W',
i B9"hool, was elected president, of the
' su;g:qik Law Schoi Alumni Association I
at a, meeting at t e ·Alumni Club last·,
night.
. .
,
.
. <l
Atty. Finneg!'Il, who hal!. l)een vtce-. f:'/
president of t!ie alumni assoclati011 during the past )lear, is a graduate o! Bo/F
ton Col!ege, class of· 1914.
. .
Other officers elected were.: Vice-;
; president, Fred Gillespie, :prominent

'. [

~~~::r;; :e:::t:1 t; :::ir;o::;~

i

her of illustrat1ons. Thus r,udwig LewI
!sohn's new ri.ovel, "Tl:le L~t Da .s of
.Shylock," just published by Harp~r &
Bros.; has a dozen beautiful drawings
by Arthur Szyk.
. . ,

·-1;~~~f. fh;u~~~d1$~blg~ea~m.;fl'.
0

<i1'. scien_ ee_ in contemporary· England ·,

":ith numerims books·on biology and
zoolo,p·t<> his credit, He Is also author
of
Afrlca:n View," published this ,
mon"t:b., by Harper &

Bros.,· which" is

the . resul.j; ot a·journ.ey he made thi.·ou.gh.
Africa on behalf of the British goveminent. ·
.:· - _ __
,

·
r

_ _

__ _ __



~

,

/j

mont; executive committee, Maurice H•..

C!~ will

,,
_•

,.

' M1/i,1;:J~!"nru~,;;;e~!~
'ta}e
, office 'immediately 1S ,J)lanning. an in~
tensive· membership drive ,and. an ex-.
tensive social program during · the rea!ning winter months.

.

·- - - · - -

1

Prof .A<>charlah.

, 1itrhi.v!'J,:&if,~,~~r8f

. .•, .~,f!~

f

'

liar..tar4
~a~~~t-

'::.:'.=''".·=-i~~~~'.-~)&'$,~C:::-·.

~~~r ~~ ~~~~i!n~7r\~::~!~e!~tt,
Martin W. Powers of Boston and· Beb

Cavanaugh of Somerville and Joel L.
, Miller, president of the Dorches.ter--

I

I

FINNEGAN HEADS•
SUFFOLK ALUMIUf

Me.

\'

Y.,o.$ton )t~w.$-a:lip ::&ureau

Y.,o.$ton )t~w.s-a:lt.p ::&unau
8

8 Boswoa're

BOSTON

BosTON

MASS,

MASS-

Bos TON

8 80SWOR~ STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

MASS

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

'

.,/

~--:_:_- ,-., '1 ~

I

le}bt€e:i"n IS SAID
IT

fl1't.:e
0

0

retie, wrlt"teni by Mrs, .Ai-cfu,~ d.utii:\.g
:he. P"'!t two. y~s. As pointed out ;tn;
!'e. !ore.wor.d ,,b31;.· .~s. a.race Hastings
~harp, widow. <Ji!...
-Prof. .Dalla.i, Lore
3harp, "these· transcripts O! · the poet'g
?wn life ar~ . here thrown upon the
,creen.w!th purpose to uplift, .. to· stay,
:o _stim~e, to soothe .and quicken th.;;.
·.eaaer into better thinking and high~
1ving. The mother's guiding counsel~·
1cre, th~ crusader speaks out· the w.isJt ,
~Cla! tactician, gives a valuable •i:ip<'.1
Nlth an ~valU~ble 'don't.' " The a:uthor· I
leals with . a. wide variety o! subjects /
tnd the' phr"'¥Dg is everywhere marked f
>Y settled conviction. Those who have {
,een fortunate enough to receive the l
tolume confidently, predict a. brilliant .
,uture in the realm o! poetry for Mrs. ;
~rcher.
·
,

t~jt

~l:;,~et~~d ~!
~ : t m o l Alumni ass'n.

la~hai:,;ayj:::t Cbel~ke of Maldon, Eng- /
'
en unanimoq,sly
1
:~;,~Yby the oounclllors of that ven!~:

-

.

I
,

·/

That Charles L WOOdside fo
. c1>:atteirman of the Republican Clty ~ " :
m1 e, has developed on
f th
collection of lamp~ Ne: Engla;d~est

f

. That the enrolment t th
'
a
e Com· mercial schpcl is 1
of re 1st tl
arge and a number
Who ~vn{a otns are on file for students
· en er n~t month.
-

\

Another differ~etween John D.'
'tockefel\er and the rest of us is that
,t becomes front page news when he
i1~'::s.Nixon Waterman's poems to ~is

so That it has b;;;,;-;,uggested amon

th:: l!e:hro d~~is t1hat they reduc~
Years S.go 1n order' to ey were a !ew
. era1 depression and
relieve the gen-

I

: A January ann~ment that brings
.•Peclal joy to Emilie Loring and her
~any friends ls th'a.t the first· edition of
5,000 cppies of "Lighted Windows" h~ "" '
een entirely sold and that a, seco&
,arge edition is now on the press.

__
unemploYment.

'MZ,~:!,~

the firemen_ at the
,lLadder two s~~!:i'nth Engine two and
1in any one ,
e record for runs
- -~60,000 feet Y;t'i;.;si:,9 runs and used over
1930

::e,

.

!

l

! Mrs. Winnifred King Rugg, aufuor ot
!'J;!nafraid: A Life of Anne Hutchinson,'.'
will speak today on Bo.~ton's pio~eer
temin1St before the student body· of the
l3ooton University school of education
i. There are several c·oncerns tha.t

' That Rt Rev ~
.
/
has been re-electeff! a RJ~hartd Neagle f
Home for Destitute
ire_c or of the I
a Position he has hel~afhol1c _Children, ,
generation.
or more than a

That Dr F r a ~
died in Philadelphia sJhodmpson Who
some time a memb
ur a.y was for
MOF Six Republican coJ;,1 th~ ~Id Ward
1{e
ed at the same tim
e emg electFrank Schumakex::___'.'. as the late

a;tif



:

l'i

pute the' distinction of being the bigge~

r

,

/

I~

~
)~~~-~!\~"!;
I

fences of the gOO:d old days.

Dec 16 from 3 p m until 9 p m, he
was ai the home of his aunt, Mrs B.
F. Smart,. of Ma'I'yville, helping ller i
with dinner. He declared that Mr8 ·Luther Forsythe. an?, M~s Edyvin Cb~don of Maryville were at lns aunts
horile from 3
uld

s;r~TE

urg-1

Among ~h-~ __900 cittzens in ~~ssachu-1
~ett-s-- who nave signed a petition
~ ing prompt and favorable action ~Y the
Senate on the World Court protocols l
are two Admirals, two Generals,
' bank presidents. 13 other bankers. 16
~ pi·ominent manufacturers, 35 attorneys
and 20 leaders in business, it was announced yesterday by Raymond T.
1 Rich. secretary of the Massachusetts
Citizens' Committee on the World

241

..:J

k

Law School Gradua.t
Hold Annual Electio¢
of Officers

I

Atty. Thomas J. Finnegan ,of Mald~riand Boston, professor at Suffoll!; ·1a,w,:
school, was elected president, of tlie
Sut!_oll< Law Schoo~umni Association i;. 1
at a, meeting at t e ·Alumni Club last
night.
. .
, .
·.:
Atty. Finnegp.n, who has been.. vice-. J.
president of tne alumni association dur- i
ing the past ;year, is a graduate o! Bo,s-·
ton College, class of 1914.
·
· · .

-4

'
I

FINNEGAN HEADS.
SUFFOLK ALUMNlf
' .

jn .1 a blue moon some enter:.. ~ /
prising publisher reverts to the good old
pustom of giving a novel a goodly numper of illustrations. Thus I,udwig Lew/
Jsohn s new novel, "The Last Days ot
Shyla.ck," just published by Harper &
Bros., has a dozen beautiful drawings
by Arthur Szyk.
,
·
l""S'.1~.a~.u. U.l. W.uc- ~.!tal.u- -.....,.-'"...,,•.:u,-.,
~
I ls one of the n:,ost distingu!shed"ni_'eri
of s. numer!,us books · on biology and
..
with cien<ie·. In contemporary ]l;nglan.d .
1"f'l~p to his credl.t. He is also author '
,o
African View," published this
month by Harper & Bros which- is~
i~e .resu.lt of a, journey he made thi,ough
r1ea on behalf of the Biitish gove~ent.
· .. ·
,
··--' --------··-· ··_
.
j Once

600 IN B.M\
URGE
·1
~ G WORLD COURTi
1

'1

f.

' \\ "I
~

,.

!

tmong book publishlrig houses, but the
nly o~e. so fa~ as we k'"now," to cl~in1.
f
1
,he honor o! being the smallest is· the , 1·
~ordpn Press of Port Clyde, Me.
/ch.rough. it John Gordon _brings out a
!
imque 1 llttle volume. "Confessions o! , t
Sandy McWhiffle,, Famous Inventor."
~
Mie aut~or and .Publisher, who is 11; veti'
f~an pr1nt~r with numerous earlier
~ooks to his ·credit, tells us that he set
rY hand this book, which runs to . 96
eages, and t.hat the numerous woodcut
ill1!stratlons were made with his pen1
mife. ~ o that the book was printed
l
~n a se".en .by 11-foot power t,ress.
,r
~ven so, 1t would ·cto credi.t to· a muc·h
lno,re i;,retentious establishment, and
fh•-re 1s much or quiet. humor an::! .1
~uamt philosophy in Sandy's reminia~ ;,/ I

ap~lf~!n:ru"rothe ;:,: irovides that all~
who a.re over ·"7o . r men•s licenses
w~thout cost there siall trtoeceive them ·.•
Phcant for
f
- Ye
be an apclerk's office~ ree license at the city .

I

New E'reS:iclen.t.of ·
Law School Alumni'

.,

1":~i~!;.t, :IT~:~

1

0

~I1l~;~ie~e;';:~m::.t· . .
lawYer an~ lumber merchant; secretary, r
Alden M. Cleveland; treasurer, Atty/,
Martin W. Powers of Boston and Bel- ;
mont; executive committee, Maurice' H~ {f
Cavanaugh of Somerville and Joel L. ,Miller, president of the Dorchester- i
M~~~~ru=e~:.
tale ! •
office 'immediately is ,l)laJ:lllil1g. an .in~
tensive membership drive . and. an extenstve social pr'ogram during · the reg winter months.

J

C;,~ will

\ICourt. petition originated, according to
The

,

1
,

Mr

Rich,

with

the

National

World

0

committee
which
·tr Court the O'Ryan isofchairman.Maj Co??:John F. Massaqhusetts Citizens' Gen
In this
St~te
~ ~~,~~d Bot~~n~~r1:ha1~;:-;;, {o~I~hI~~
0

"f
f

I

'

formal action on the petitiont -believing
that decision regarding indorsement
·1 must ~est w"ithf!NaCh i11~1.vidual ~ember
,·t of th_e· Massaclmsetts gr.ey.p.
{ . Among the s~gI?,ers~:.iri: ~i$·~ Stat~ a.re
> Charles F. D. B~\don,~ ..!iR~a..rian of tl'_le
·\ t Boston. :Public t.Al:>ra~:1·}· Ellen. ~- Pe;n~ ~ l dleto~~ presiden~
eu:esley College;
i
P.rof Aechari~h.
.~r. ~at'\t~:rQ.

I

--~-,~,
/J.~~

,jhJhiVj>1:Sit~;:~i:a. .., .

~W·}

~/11/ii'!'~t.

--I

-·----,---~~~"""""""""""""""3'....__ ~-~

~>,_

eawa;w.aarnw·J:&d'if@iMC/

\'
-'
.1

,\

.

::Soston )1¢WS-a:llp ~UT¢(1U

::Soston )1¢ws-a:lq, ~unau

g BoswORTJ'l STREET
8 BOSWORTH STREET
8 Bosw~RTB STREET
MASS.
BOSTON

BOSTON

~-/

MASS

MASS.

BOSTON

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.
NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

r:t215ff¥i

CJATTER . AN.· · ~l:_·15MM_ENT r~~~1~;~•.Mrt t~~~ ~:1:
'p
.

\

. / t..

·

CIR

"-" · V

'



·



:By JOHN
MINOT
one of its
There'.· Is' ;,,U<\h about what may be
·
most e.ct!ve and interesting :figures !n icalled prehl.storlc •New England in a
the death of Mrs. L. Adams-Beck. She little book, "The Indians of the Winnedied in tba.t tar ea.st where she has pesaUkee and Pem!gewasset Valleys,!' by
·
lived most of the time !or many years Mary A. Proctor of Franklin, N. H.
and which she has tried ln many of her The author began her ~k pt!roarily
books to Interpret to the west.em :world. with th~ purpose of furnishing local
Her books 1n this field, both fiction and historical material for tl1e school chUnon-fiction, appeared under her own dren of Franklin, but it chas grown far
name. She was even better known to· beyond that scope. Her father, when
the readmg world by, the. name of E. he was a smaIL boy, began hunting for
Barrington, under W:hlch she wrote that Indlan relics in southern New Hamp;;emarka~e list of ,?>1ograJ>hlcal novel&- shire, and pMSed on to his children the
-The Divine Lady, wltb.-Lady HMnilton:. Interest in that hobby M.iss Proctor
as Its,. cen.tral fig'UI'e; . "The . Glorious:· has seen her own collection grow from
APollO: ...built around th~, ca,reer of Lord a handful of specimens to more than
Byron, The Thun1erer, with Napoleon 500, and during the process of making
~ the .leading role, and,,more recently it has gathered much information about
The Duel of the Queens, In which she Indian life and lore, which she puts
told the. story of Queen Elizabeth ancr together in this volume
There are
f Januaty "'nnouni:ement that brings
Mary Queen of Scots, wr.iting as "' warm · many Illustrations. The 'scope of the special joy to Emilie Loring and her
partisan of the _latter, :;!he was less work often extends beyond the writer's many friends is th'a.t the first' edition o:t
~~-o!ii~:~e~~a:':Jfe~ ~~e~ft~: native ~te.
---·
.~fi;!fy o~~;~igt~~ t;;:1/?d~w;~~
1
:cfvef.ar;\i!!n:\i::;dw~i~~ ~~e!f~i:
It ls strange, considering the deluge large edition is now on the press.
of the "sh1ll!ng shocker" type. Fields o! novels each year, that the titles of
·_Mrs. Winnifred King Rugg, author or
of authorship more utterly diverse than. ea_rller novels are not more often dupli''lµnafraid: A Life of Anne Hutchinson,:•
;~:~b~o~;;!,~
K~~ cated. Am~g the early 1931 •novels we will speak today on Boston's . pioneer
begin; her literary career until she was note . two titles which_ have recently feminist before the student body of the
on the western slope of middle age li"o.t I been. used by other wnters. The new Bd,;ton, University school of education.
infrequently broug-ht out !n a slngle I Upton Sinclair novel, "Roman Holiyear thr~ books und1'r her three dif- ,.day," has _a title that Don Ryan used
There are several concerns that dW
ferent names
~1ast year m .a novel publLShed by the pute the distinction of being the biggest
·
'
--·Ma.c.a.ulay Company. "Fiddler's Green,"
The Scientific Book Club _makes "l by Albert R. Wetjen, which is on the among book publishing houses, but the
new departure ln_.·book club Policy whe spring Ii.st of Little, !3rown & Co , has a only one, so far as w·e Itnow; to cl?-in'l
it selects a single work
serve as 1
ac}";,: Y~~;c~!~. Sears of U-/is the honor of being the smallest Is· the
Gordon Press of Port Clyde, Me.
offering for two months. However, the
--booik: chosen may iven_ serve that doubl~
It ls of special interest that "Gentle- Through it John Gordon brings out a
pu~e, and no· subscriber is likely to men All," by William T. Fitzgerald of unique 'little volume, "Confessions o!
Sandy McWhiflle, Famous Inventor ~
complam. It is "Tlie Science of Llfe," this ', city, ls one of the novels that The author and publisher, who is a veta ~onu.mental. w_o.rk 1n two· voluJl!eS . Willia.in Lyon Phelps wlll discus• In_ eran- printer with numerous earlier
which the tireless H. G. Wells has writ·.
· .
.
·
boolts to his credit, tells us that he ser,
ten .with the asslsj;ance ·of his son( 1
Stemert hall thLS afternoon m the third by hand this book, which runs to 96
George Philip Wells, illld Julia.ii Hux" 11':')ture of his course under the aus- pages, _a_nd that the numerous woodcut
Jey, This work, which the clufr make& p1ces of, the Women_'• Cit)'. Club of illustrations were made ·with his penIts chQlCe for February and March · w!l-1 }!oston. Other novels on hLS llst are knife. Al.so that the book was printed
\ be published Jan., 30 by Doubledayi '.'Years of Grace," by Margaret Ayers on. a seven by 11-foot power i,ress.
Doran & Co, . and .Prof. Kirtley p, B"'.rnes; ''The. Waters Under the Earth,"
. j Mather of Harvard will review it'·Sat-1 by Martha Ostenso, and ''.The Open ~ven so, it would 'do credit to a much
and
I urday, Jan. 31, for ··Herald ,readers. It secret," by Oliver Onions. His non- more pretentious oJestablishment; an ct
tb,are
. is expected that it will do for selence fiction . list Will lnclude "Daniel Web 0 quaint is much in quiet . humor
philosophy
Sandy's reminisw~t Mr. Wells did for another field ster;" by Claude M. F.uess; "As We cences of the g o o ~ days,
. of scholarship ln his· "Outline of :il:is- Were," by E F. Benson; "Sidelights on
1
tory." It is a much longer work .and Quee~ Vict~l.'ia," by F. PonsonbY; "Joh:p
once in J a blue moon some enter~
the publishers tell us that' Mr. Wells Wesley," by J. D. Wa_de, and "The Mys·
h~s been ,engaged on· it for ti.Ve year's, terious Universe/' l;>y Sir James Jeans. prising publisher reverts to the· good oJd
though he has managed to give th_e
·
custom of giving a novel a goodly numworld a bopk or two -each year durin_g
Friends, of . Eli~beth Glenn Archer, ber of illustrations. Thus I,iudwig LewisHi! ~!e:~ ~!~~~~a~~ wife of ~an Gleason
.Aif.!l,her of ~ isohn's new novel, "The Last Days ot
compara~ive phykiolcigy · at University ~ l ~ o o l ; are In receipt of a ~~K;~cJ;;~ j::."tdJ'z~~li'\;'e"a'iitl'lu1HJ';f~~
'. College; Lbn_don; . ,Jillian Huxley; '·lt handsomely bound little volume of. by Arthur Szyk,
I grandson of .the ~eat Thoma,; Huxley, ·
·
/ is one ot the mo.st distlnguisned men
t:1t-~1ct~;:,_t,
am~spie.- - pronuiien"'t-ir-c----ot · science in coritemporary. England,
fawyer and lumber merchant; secretary,
O

The world of booka

l~~

I

'JJ?UEl 'Jt.l[dlUO::) •:,pqEJ
Al'JA'J JOJ £.m11nb .l{qE'J:l!

JO

sps

2u!q:l}EUI

3l;JI

_•JE2 Oh\l £.nq ~11:, £n11;1i

the fo;eword ,:by_ ~s. Grace Hastings
Sha,rp, widow of. Prof. .Dallas · Lore
Sharp, ''these· transcripts of· the poet's
own Ute are here thrown UPon the
screen with ·purpose to uplift,. to stay,
to stimulate, to soothe and quicken the·
reader 1rito better _thinking and hlghef,'.
living. The mother's guiding counsel-is'
here, the crusader speaks out; the wls,i·
social tactician- gives a vaJuable 'do''
with an invaluable 'don't.' " The aµthor
deals with I,, wide variety or subjects
and the' phr"'1ing is <iverywhere marked
by sett\ed .conviction. Those who have
been fortunate enough to receive the
volume confidently predict a brilliant
future ln the realni. of poetry for Mrs.
Archer.
·
Another dltrerence between John D.
nockefeJ!er and th~- rest. of. us is. that
It becomes front page news when he
~uotes Nixon Waterman's poems to his
friends. ·

!;.~o

~oston )l~ws-a:U.p ~UT¢'1U
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

JP,r.! l 3 'l8§f

~~g~r:·

l~se

~if; J!'.,1

to

:J~ Pii~~·

L
.

v-n~ii'

=~J~'i;~~r~i~•H~n

~~~hl ~~ ~;;:~:nii

is b!~~S:ut~i .
of "African . View," published this ·,
month by Harper & Bros' which' is
the . resul.t of a· Journey he made thro)l.gh
Africa on behalf of the British government.
· • . ..
·'
- •

·

-

I

'

· '

-

·-- • -

- -- -

' -

:::::!iici 1;!f:"

mont· executive committee, Maurice H.
Cavanaugh -Of Somerville and Joel L,
Miller, president of the DorchesterMattapan Suffolk -Law Club. ,
.,..
President Finnegan, who will tas:e
office· immediately lS ;i,lanning an ins
, tensive membership drive . and· an ex-.
tensive •ocial program tiurlng :the · rea!ning winter months.

IJ

0

\

Y.,ostc-r. )te.ws-i!:llp 'Y-iure.au
•,o_'.

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

'Y-ioston )tews~<tllp ~ur!>'.;:au

MASS

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH 8TRlilET ~

MASS

BOSTON

MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.
ENTERPRISE, lVIARLBO~O, lVIASS. I
......_

~ ~:~·~

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

,)

'~·
JifilJLB

Finnegan Heads Suffolk
1
· Law Almnni Association
~ ~
'
t Mal<;l.en and i
Tht>'n~as ·J Finnegan o
l

l

THORNDIKE AND
MacDONALD IN
P~TNERSHIP i

Boston, professor o-f sales and ba.;1~ruptcy :

at Suft'olk Law. tt,·as Q):~~ea. Pf~ident of:

the Suffolk Lav.... Alumni Associ~..tion at a
n1eetillg in the '?-'?~i club ' ,;A:ttorn:~

Finnegan, who ha!s"~~~ . vie~ pre-s1den~ vf

tll,e alumni assOGi:a,tfb!;i\the ,Past year, is a

1

gra<luate of Bost6ii. Qo}10ge,C. c_lass of 1914
0

Other officers elected were: Vice president, Fred Gillespie; secretary. _t\..lden _
l\f.
Cleveland; treasurer, ~Iartin W. Powero,
Boston and Belmont; executive commit·
tee, Maurice M. Cavanau'gh, Somerville.
and Joel L. !\.1iller, president of the Dor·

I

Atty, Herbert
C. Thorndike,
sp,ecia'.l justice of the Brockton dis-1·
trict court,,,and Atty. Walter J.
MacDonald, prOminent young lawyer, have joined in Brockton's latest l~w partnership tO be known as
Thorndike & MacDonald.
Atty.
MacDonald
aJ1d
lttty.
Thorndike have been - a'.ssociate<I .
since shortly after
the forme~
passe~ the. ba:c in 19}4, but the partnership was not formed until the
k. first of thls1''ye·ar.

·cbester-Mattapan Suffolk Law Club.

_:..=..

~

!." - "'.'"' ''

i ,

:Soston )tews-<tlip :Sunau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

I

MASS.



MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

JUDGE THORNDIKE

Judge Thorndike has been practicing' law iu .this dist1ict for about
27 years and since 1907 has had ·'
offices in this city,
i
Judge Thorlldike was born in
N.ewport, R. 0, Dec. 17, 1879, but ini
1884 moved to East Dridg.ewater, !
wh~re he now resides.
He' was '
graduated from the East Bridgewater High school In 1897 and after
working for newspapers in that
town began his study of law.
In 1902 he was gi,aduated from
Harvard college and, two years later was· graduated from Harvard
!,,aw school. Arte:r p~acticing Jaw,
m East Bt"idgewatet for three y'ears '
Judge Thorndike opened an office?
here.
In 1915 Gov. Walsh appoitlted,
Atty. Thorndike as an associate
justice of the district court. J11dge
Thorndike is a member of many
organizations, including the Brockton and Plymouth County Bar association, the Massachusetts Bar
association and the American Bar'
association.
,
· He is also a member of the Harvard Law School association, the ',
Odd Fellows, Grange, Masons, the·
Southeastern Fish and Game asso-:
ciation, the Commercial club, Uni-'
1versity club, Brockton Country
, club and Harvard club.
On April 22, 1908, Atty. Thorndike and Miss Bessie Ellsworth
Perkins of East Bridgewater were
J
married.

"The .New Parole System, Its Or· 1
ganization, ~ b and Prospects/• as
ect
operated i~ ,
Yor-k State, will be
discussla, f,
ederfok A. Moran.
ecutive_ "ttf:'ec or of the New York
state Board of Parole today at 2:15
p m over WNAC.
Dean A:rche~s Law Serles
1
Dean Gleason L. Archer of Suffolk
Law Schoo.I,. in continuing h i s ~
u ~ t Safeguard
ciety,'• will

ex-1

I

discuss the right of a ro~ce .officer to

kill one who resists arrest. in a tal~
over. W_~:!S(;:t,..i!b,~tl,'tl!t !IUl!!l111J-·
~ ~ - - B u r n s • Son.p ·
The next and final broadcast in the
present s-eries of Sandy MasFarlane I'

:;

r

and his Chimney Swallows will be de- 1

-·-

·----

'

-~•-:!'h.-~.~·I
,

~ .......-

...

u

....,,_,_

'Y-ioston )t¢ws-i!:lip ~Ur¢au

'-j'
,.

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

ATTY. MacDONALD

CITIZEN, BELMONT, MASS.
.. .
:. ' -

·

-

"&&:t 'I"" 1'l.81u-01 9'\as uns
'N "d gg:z PU'8 'N ·v

ii'J:z, 'I"" 'K.ia: spi.izzna: 'ap11 t.t.ll!H
,;' :
,
'W: 'd gg:g PUil
··sz:s 1"" 'uQ'lsoa: •apn 'l.ll!H
S 1"" 1qll1u-01 sa10,{{aA I!"" ;qll!'I

f

. 10'. ,v~.·
'

_,
ai

I

lli

si
o.

racrr~~l e f ~ ~ u . ~ -.--~
\ 11 Warwick rd,

this week for a stay of two months
at St.
-On Frida,;y and Saturday,' Feb .. 13 "'
and N, the.
y ''Grumpy" will be giv- 1
en at A~l a
.
s Church, and with but
few ex
i
by the ,same cast that
produ<:ed t two yeal's ago.
-;,advt.
-llV!r. 1Martin W. Powers, 3.5 Win- •
throp ,rd. was 'elected - treasurer at 1
th~ meet~ng of tbe Suffolk Law, Schoo1
Alumni Association helf F ~ i I a"ght
at.the Almµni Club, Bo_sto:o..



' i,ste<i:\)il the ~oni~ittee :'for t e
huilili'din'i'ii!r of 0 the JoY,ce Kil·

,;:.;.,..a.\»·~~n1.-r:~w .4<Mi~,~~~~~-~

-

-- ~ ,~,J;_ " ':.,:~~

,
1
.1

l

Atty. MacDonald is one of the
leading young barristers of the ,
city. I-le Was born here April 1~.
1899, a:nd is a graduate of the
Brockton High school, class of 1917.
Following completion of his High
school education he was employed
by the governn;ient as a stenographer at Fore River and at the Army ,
base, Boston. He was graduated '
1 from
tbe Sa«ont Law school in ·
1924 and a few months later, be- :
came associated with his present
partner,

He is a member of,_ the Brockton '
Bar ~elation, the Canadian club ·
of Bos'ton and Div. 1, A. 0. H.
Atty. MacDonald and Miss Emina
G!es, then secretary to At;ty. 1,·porn,d1ke, were married June ·:,23, 1930,
Atty, MacDonald is the son or· Angus B. ~acI:>o~ld, secretary-treas,
, urer of the·.I,a,;tel'# :union, and t'IJ;e
late AgneJ:1:' ~ · ,:;M~cl)on,ald. '·

1

- ..L __ _ _ ,_ _ __
.,,

l~ -,: -

\

~

. . BRtbE.
. , . .___I,

-,·

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l'l:a'-p

,

~10010-,0 8 1-e ':p.y~·iuo1 If'ITTI uo:;;nn~

ur. 'tt0.1n;qo ·m.- ·w,
IV

A'B[<l
~Ul:}!

I!!-M.
JO

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Jo •ssvu::> "lltlv

·-

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-

1

'.I.Util

9:J q~JU[}D--"UOg:pftlf

Atty.

Herbert

C.

l

Thorndike,

sp:,e~ial justice of the BroclrtOn dis- ·
i
trict court, .and Atty.
Walter J. 1
MacDonald, pi.~ominent young
1
t:ri:k.:~~~n
Thorll.dike & MacDonald.

law-,
!;

!:[·1:w·a· v;a~~~;ihl.;

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

11 !

·- · _·__

PARTNERSHIP I

'.::e>o.don ~&w.s-<Cli.p '.::e>uree1u
8

T ..,.:r-· -·

THORNDIKE ANU
MacDONALD< IN

·J F i ~ of MalQen and
Boston professor o'f saleS and ba,n1-5ruptcy
at Suff,olk Law.
elected P;rf~ident of
the Suffolk Law Alumni Association at a
me.eting in the ~\u!!i-i).1 club. ',_Attorney
Finnegan who ha;s..~e:D. vie~. pr-e-sident of
the alum~i assocta.j:~-':'t~e__past year, i~ a
graduate. of BostdTI. -G:ollege.-,, class of 191~
Other officers elected were: Vice pres1~
dent Fred Gillespie; secretary, Alden . .l\J
Clev~land; treasurer, ~Iartin W. PowerH,
Boston and Belmont; executive committee, Maurice M. Cavanal.Igh, Somerville,
.and Joel L. J\'1iller, president of the Dorchester-Matta.pan Su~olk Law Club.
~ ,,

,~-as

~~,:.,,-0...,.._,.,cr-~---..

'"'sa-q..r.
sreA!.I pe'.J.I.:qds a.t'e S'l::a't?lal
cM.l a$'~trl s11 JOJ p.:nroor S! am'Bg
a1-s·1Equo~ A1aS!OFJ put?" poo2 A.zaA v

~-~-- --....---- Association
, Law Alu:n1.ni

l¢'i:1.·11bfn.as

~

.f'

.l'B'f{

............

MASS.

Atty.· MacDonald
8.nd
A.tty.
Thorndike hav-e
been associated 1·
sitiCe shortly after , the
formet1.}assed the b~r: in 19.2~, but the partnership was not fo'rmed until the t
first of thJs\(cye·ar.
JUDGE. THORNDIKE
Judge Thorndike has b0en practicing~ law in .this district for aQour ,,
27 years and since 1907 has liad ·
offices in this city.
i
Judge Thoi;p.dike was
born in i
7
0
s

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

k.



fl}~~P~~·v!cinow D~~;t Il;~J:~:~\~:1: j
t:;
where h,e
resides.
He was'
1

~--·-,
'.::e>o.stoR ~~w.s-<Cl~ '.::e>ur&ou
8

°:; I
I

g:~r:a'ho~~'bbJ:i:n:y~~~PecI:-S~ ••
operated i u . ~ York State, will be
discuss"'1 f,
derick A. Moran.
ecutive "l!f:'ec or of the
New York
state :Soard of Parole today at 2:15

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

ex-1

MASS.

p

. ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

:rn over WNAC.
Dean Arche~s Law Serles

Dean Gleason L.. Archer of Suffolk

Law School,. in continuing h i09 ~
s
u ~ t Safeguard Spciety
will

I
1

j;··~-

discuss the right of a 'f'()lice officer to
kill one who rasists arrest, ln a tal~

/

---

~

~L,.t!.iKH,Y-.-:~

ilofi:Is-FUNK°"\.

1

f) WEDDING RITES
#'l
.
;v.JT HOME HERE
,.To
1-

Reside
in This
City After the

:.~~:i::~:!r. i::Ubr11:!s. c,til:a:.
.J.
Highland ave-

; don

rc.4rs.

· '?1 -~h~

Flink of 43
Cam.bridge, son of Mr. and
Gustaf Flink of Marlboro.

ce~e:rnon):" wa.s pert
~ - by ReV. Bbrace·~F.~$01
;_..-,1he yOti_ng CO)lp1~~:-.,~'
i ' . y Birger G. Fllrik 'of 1>

1

-

~~s~~; ~~~~e~r s!:.f1~~s~Tr~!t.....,_,_.\,
~!~
. ···- '
-----'-•..l"-.... _ ..... ~---"--".:.!- ,,.. ......":'.-..

~ostoR ~¢ws-'1:llp '.::e>ur¢<1U
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

_a.t

D.:

ea.

il.'

:, W!tb~~c1M~1!;1'£~t:~~~~< ~
•· _t,,r of"t.he gr<>om, ;w\th, lJ,i!i.•C~n•...
pttle Miss · Evelyn· Oiotrand ·of:
·
·eld,: a 0ctinli:: as -J:ing~1,ea.~; :

city~

nhffl."_

.

~g;;th':!~f;;~ ~:t_n!~d ~t:~~s~::: '

elation, the Commercial club, Uni-!
versity
club,
Brockton
Country
club and Harvard club.
1
dike and Miss Bessie Ellsworth
of East Bridgewater were

CITIZEN, BELMONT, MASS.

a
11 Warwick rd, left on
-..a.~ ..
this week for a stay of two months

at St.
-On Frida¥ and Satur'day,' Feb.· 1.3 "
and 1'4, the play ·~rumpy" will be giv- 1
en at A~l a"1is Church, and with bµt
few ex
icM' by the ,same cast that
produced · t two years ago.
-:-:;s.dvt.
~M~. 1Martin _W Pow~rs, 3.5 Wi.n-: ;
thr-0p ,rd. was elected treasurer at
the-meeting of the Suffolk Law Schoo}
Alllmni Associatioll helf D · 7 z
ight
at the Alu'tll~ Club, Bo;'toµ..
ed.;:on· the ~-0nimittee :'for

t e

U)-+-i~i:r'.rlclA v1'f~d9':v;:,TJJ!'°~~

:-~.ot.):l:. young People ar~ .natives of
, B~ktOn · and are graduates of the
I 10Ca.1 _High · schooL Mr. ·Fliril:c was
'a1so· ",gr~q.uated from S i j . ! ~ w
·scnoo1 ~-at · Boston. and is empleYetl
a,5'.,,Secret9.ry in the Custom House
offiCe- of the co~st guard.
Mrs
FUnk·is well known here as assistant
in' the ·studio of a Campel!o photog-

to~n fg~\a11.ehi~as:u;~a;~ai~;· from
Harvard college· and. two years later wa·s, graduated from
Harvaz:-d
Law school. After .PI".~cticin"g law i
in East Bridgewate·r for· three years ·
Judge Thorndike oi>€ned an office'i'
here.
'
In 19i5 Gov. Walsh appoillted ·
Atty. Thorndi~e as an assop:iate
justice of the district court. Judge
Thorndike is a member of mariY
organizations, including the Brock~
ton and Plyl'.D.outh. County Bar association, the Massachusetts
Bar
as.sociation and the ~merican ~a~:<
association.
·
, '
He is 'also a member of the Harvard Law School association. the

j Perkins

'o:a,]f'dinner of 'the Jo:l(.ce lei!·

-:.,.:·chiffon
·: 'l"Ilnk'is
bride ·wits a. ',itring' of
:ryst'al beads. Tl>e best man . re,etv.ed a set of diamond cuff links,
While Mrs. Flink. :presented
her
. bridesmaid .with a platinum necklace.
Th"e nng-bea.rer received a string of
crystals;
A buffet luncheon was served at
the ·receptio.n which ' folled when
numerous gifts of linenj electrical applia.l'l.ces, silve:· . and cut glass were
on , ·display. Relatives and friends
were present_ from Philadelphia,
·'ashingtOll, D.._ c., New- York city,
Marlbor<>, . Springfield,
. Westboro,
B,roCkton and· surrounding towns
IIIi:m'ldiately after ·the · l'.eceptlort, the
couple 'left' on a wedding . trip, after
which they · plan to reside In this

,I

graduated from the East Bridgewater High school in 1897 and a:rter
working for newspapers
in that

On April 22, 1908, Atty. Thorn-

MASS.

·'

In a pretty
cerem.ony a.t hel:'
,. home, 182 G]:"een .s~eet, .Saturday
~ffernoon, Miss Alm.a E. Hollis,

-·-:.c nue,

~dt*i~~~~:·

The next and final broadcast ln the ,

-',/

Honeymoon.

~

~~~D

.
r

marrie~TTY. MacDONALD i
Atty. MacDonald is one of the
leading young barristers
of
the,
city. I--Ie Was born he"re April l!:t,
1899, and is a graduate of the
Brockton High school, class of 1917.
Following completion of his High
school education he was employed
by the governr:pent as a stenographer at Fore River and at the A:rmy ,
base, Boston.
He was graduated '.
from tlla, Sd:enr 'Law school in
1924 and a few .months later, be- !
came associated with his present 1
partner.
He is a member of._ the Brockton
Bar association, the Canadian club
of E\oston and Div. 1, A. 0. H.
,
AttY~ MacDonald an~ Miss Emina l
Gies, then secretary to Att~y. TP.orn- ;
dike,,... were married June · ··23, 1930. ·
Atty. MacDonald is .the son or· An·
gus B. l,'dacpo:p.a.l,d,, secretal'y-trea~urer of the- :i;;asteT~ u:iiion, and the
late ~gnes:·~'{M!j;cDo"!ald.:
··
- - - -'--,i·''' " -'-',~- ~--- --:-cc;;.)~'
1

1

I

MASS.

BOSTON

,,

.

l 9 '\93C

'

Former Bondsman, Jailed With
Him in Ritz Case, Still at
Deer ·Island
By BERT FORD

Release of Nicholas J. Cockinos, former Watch · and Ward
agent, from the House of Correction at Deer Island, stirred
lively speculation today re1ative
to the stand he and Albert K.
Sidlinger will take at the trial
of Oliver B. Garrett, former police raider, which
is
set
for
January 5 ..
Rumor has it that overtures are
undc~ ,~7ay to recruit both Cockinos
and
Sid.linger
as
'Witnesses
for

Cockinos

f.:3i,-_1ingcr

"r .-eutr.al "
~

.:tid

is

hostile,

admitted

Counsel

be

l,.Ire~ey,;:;.1",l~il

for

but
.vas

Garrett is

.fl...

neither as a

government -witneos.
"'They are not in o.u.r. case.'' said

a~~l ~iii~o.;t of

~-ILES APJ>OlNTED
M

f

S:.1 ..££

_111_

a.-

~!

of

f.£~!d fJ;xn~~

the·

\

·~.,.

'V

was

-

I

~

..a..tttmni
b

ti

.

J

of-;
been ro a on-w-a:'s
Court,
s7:s1:1fi1j!~e;}!on~fda~~~ed~r- ~fci!_~;n~u~t:
\~~:,Ic\~. cases ~ndD-=a~eP:~perlo~ r. Sp1la1ne

) ROXBURY~ JUSTICE~- ~~
~

1

that he had

~irict.:!t~~ey~~
:~~!!~ 1~

1
~
o~~e·c~;.
1
r:e~er~o~Jeti1~to3fu~~
al a1]_?-oslh~fs t1!id." consequen~~£.
Named by Governor After~!;! vn.11 not.. be trl~d"~;.~~~n!nd i f _it
M .
R f
p
, . t -Atty. Edm"f p-ossed. already, will
- : • • ... ..C:IDS
USeS
OSt
as .
today. Thed Cfr~~"e
--- -d?.st~rbing the peac1.te~;;~ the haltP'rank.1a"nd W. L. Miles. Roxbury atgument whif~.r~~ch1ne by the !,r'affi~
t&-ne# lttrd president of the Roxbury ing of thed ~is demands for his ucens
=c1"6g~d«;~~eA1~~s tKei~:d;Ksi6.~~11~f ~~Je~e:~t,ration;"~
~-speaial ...Jnst1ce in the Roxbury district
o.ourt.
Under the rules the nominati.on ~w~,:,e held over for a week by the
~ ;t"t,u4n
Jc:'\~

'Zr_
,,.
executive- council before taking formal
,.,..,1,..,lJl e'- <!JJl:'!U:t1t:lll '\!'._L)}:'"/ll}fi~~LJ!lf



e

~.!

n.OJe~lie~ir~

I

vof~sEo~fi~1!1a:~~- submitted to t ~
" c,..'.fr:._;1'r kfter the man originally pickea
.:for trye position, "Walter R. Meins of
~R.·oxbtlry; had declined the appointment.
Ml:. :Meius requested that his nomination
~
withdrawn because the duties
involvel:i:.:1.vould conflict with his 1present ~re.sponsibilities and work as state
inc.c:itt.r«:.. t?tx assessor.
Mr. Miles, whose home is at 103 Walnut avenue •. Roxbury, is a graduate of
Suffo~ law school and has been a. p=raeitiai.ng... a::;torney seven years.
He is aciti~IY'
with Ameriaan Legion

·

}a

(A Bui/

· "

der of PresLzge)

CZJ;Jr.if3~1
Where Schools are Selected
Where the Transcript is read

l .
f zn the horn.e

«Both Cockinos and Sld-

linrre-:.· have records now.; and .I'm
S.'...dlinger told a Boston Evening
American reporter a:t Deer Island
that he could "tell plenty. n
"At la.st I alU in the driver's
seat," he declared. '~ £ear _no one
al'ld am cou-rling £avors from no
one. I never spilled :my :full story
and certain persons in Boston
wouldn~t care to haYe me n1ake
it public. I keJ)t my m.outh shut
t':..t th..,., Sf'.af;e Htnts.a hearing beC~'!.H'.e I didn't; like the looks of
things. NO"W" I ' ~ neutral.''
F-S:IENDS AID COCKINOS
''Niel--:" Cockinos left the harbor
institution yesterday, having completed the two-year sentence imposed on him and Sidlinger in
March. 1929, for alleged qonspiracy
ta .. shake dov.>'n" John F. Sullivan,
then proprietor of Hotel Ritz on
Columbus ave.
Friends supplied ~ $500 to pay
Cqckinos' fine imposed in addition
to the two-year term, but Sidlinger
vvas unable to meet the fine, and,
at m~dZl.ight last night,
to

1.d~tified

0
~

\nari~~:~~d:;~raf~\~~J

o~0~~

bei.icir'l~r. Miles.
:r:ra-st .H'tfte, it was disclosed yesterday,
he f'igureci in a ..run-in" with a Stoughton police officer which grew out of a
rniho~ 11:tfraction of the motor vehicle

laws,~ as·'a result of which he stood
trJal i~ f:>t~o.ugh,tdn court and was found
guilty of operating at night with a tail
lJ.g1JJ;~.'O.nlt1shted and also of distut. Ping

0
~-

-

~:~:-~=--::--l-=.=--~:-i-,I(''
w .s- "- t.p

8

.r., u

re.au

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

~oston ~¢Ws-.r.lt.p ~ u r .. au
8

80SWORTH STREET

HOSTON

MASS

GAZETTE, WORCESTER, MASS.
j...--,

"'7;th a. heavy heart, glad for Cockinos. bu.t grieved to think he -would
have to -work out the extra time,
when hC longed to poin his little.
de!:. ,on. Albert:. for Christmas.
'WIFE DIED .LA.ST 'YEAR

ca~~~.~~~{i- ·~n;puc~!~f~r~eJhto~d1:m.an· ~<:(g~ra.,
o{\.~~;:fhJ
·
1
'.·

~ r · wept 'like · a: .1ch.ilq
D...,..puty·· Arthur J
MCCa:,;thy' b:~okc
the' new-s to him on Christi.nas
C?Oi-ping.
'.This year his only child. Whom he

f --- ---- ·-- - 1
,
r~~~h~fsi4it~::\~::r~)1 w~~~ ~e~~- , operation. per:forming a
tu.re b!'i'ore
urve ,-vnlked the floor 10 nights
bpy/' said Sidlinger. uAlbert 'Was
taken do,.vn with double mastoids
a "le.._~, TITeeks ago. The authorities
at Massachusetts Eye and Ear
Hospital had i;t') have :,ny signa-

_:-:_,

,

~

'- - - - ~ - - ~ ~ - - - ~ - - - - -

began
se~rtu!~:rdd:~t~t1
eta~~ckinos ~go

i1c] a. ro"W u,orrying over my baby

/
1

I

affairs.
,
Harassed motorists who have had the
lllis,fe.rtune to run afoul of the law for

:no-t i:n.-"t~~ested in theni..••

:,f~~~ chrt't:

J. Sargent Addresses.

-witness :for

Dist Atty. VVillianl J Foley :.;aid
today he positively would summ::>n

Fo!ey.

IA.

vron.rn--oi: l,-XJ.e L<al,-nx=i

to be anxious to induce Sid-

Hni;E!r to appear as a
the defense
OFF FOLEY'S LIST.

~ The attache,11 notice
appeared in ti/~ '-Transcript

drarand many South end business ~::._i:: 1:
wh.c}:.::. lCt:e- acquainted witli condition~_
· -- -- V
tho <Ustl;l~;;t
th(ae peac~.
He
James
y o;r~hea
om,..tter charge, w
en'§..
mittee W9!:k~ with the
aced on· file.
.

,1

I

Gar>:·cit.

,.,_ -

. ~ - /.:.e# ~2~0.

f

EX~AGENT OF:
WATCH, WARD
NO'W FREE

I,

V-

r:

... 1 8 'i93Q

G-1\RREr,
~

\

11}

MASS

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

DEC

BOSTON

critical

SA'-V SON IN HOSPITAL
"Penal Institution Coinmr. WUIlam G. O'Hare and Maj. George
F. A. Mulcahy, 'the DJ.aster here,
generously allo-wed me to see :my
son and to sign the necessary papers on Nov. 23.
I was in the
city :four hours.
"'My child, who is the only thing
I have in the w-orld~ came through
the operation all :right and is
slovvly recovering.
usomeho-w I have won strength
and heaUh here in spite o-r. :my
w-orries and I can thank Commi.ssi.oner
O'Hare
and
Master
Mulcahy and Deputy McCarthy
am.d the otheJ;"s :for it. They have
been kind and humane.
"I have had many letters o,r
sympa,thy since my boy's illness
and after I lost :my wife. LUtle
Albert is a pupil at St. Joseph's

school. I just mailed him the last
$5 I had in the vvorld. that; is I
sent it to those "'ho are caring
£or him to
buy
something :for
Santa to give bhn.."

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

]
<;?

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 B~WORTJI STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSTON

MASS

The attached notice
appeared in the Transcript
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

~ - /,,(., .t"Jl'::':!'b.
A. J. Sargent Addressee:, , ,.,), ·J
Suffolk Law Aiutlini

\

l

-

'·1

Albert J Sargent, chief probation ·of-I
fleer of the Boston Municipal Court wa's
guest speaker at a meeting of the· Suf.!'
folk Law School Alumni Association at
73 Hancock street. George H. Spilaine
presided.

----

EX-AGENT OFl
WATCH, WARD
NO'W FREE

--

jlc£ffo!.lll t!il!ltniu~ @Ir11llnt!$im:pr1:

Former Bondsman, 'Jailed With
Him in Ritz Case, Still at
Deer Island

(A Builder of Prestige)

By BERT FORD

Release of Nicholas J. Cocldnos, former Watch · and Ward
a"'ent, from the House of Corr:ction at Deer Island, stirred
lively speculation today reJative
to the stand he and Albert K.
Sidlinger · will take at the trial
of Oliver B. Garrett, former police raider, which is set for
January 5.

Where Schools are Selected
Where the Transcript is read

Gari:-clt

Zinger to appear as a witness for
the defense.
OFF FOLE-PS LIST.
.
.
Dist Atty. William J. Foley :..;aid
today he positively would s?mn_:,:n
neither as a government w1tne.:.~.
•:Th2y are not in our. case," said
Fole:r. "Both Cock.i~os and S?dline-e::..· hav~ rec.ord~ !10'!:9 and J: m
not int3!"es..;ed 1n th...,ni.
d a Boston Evening
8 , . <Y
Am

tha

'""
aft

on
an
wt

it
e:t
C::'!I

,/WJq 8AJ!i' O'.J. 'U!J.U'US
.tOJ 1tu1qiawos
Xnq ~ WJq .roJ
~UJ.tt?a 0.11? Ol[A\ 0Soq1, O'.J. '.J.J !}Uas
I SJ i"lf'J ·p1..:o," aqi u1 puq I !/$
is"! aq,i lUJq pa111nu isnf I ·1ooq<>s
s,qdaso.e ·is t" ndnd " SJ ia:aqrv
01n1'I ·an.,.. A:ru iso1 I .l"'JJ1' pu"/
ssaun! s,A:oq Am aaa1s Aq1,udU1As
10 s.ra1,1,a1 Auum pvq aAvq I,,

·autJwnq puu
aA:'81( ..(aqX,

0

PUP{

ua.}q

'.J,! .t:OJ S.IOl{'.J.O OlfJ. PWB

e, Xt{'.J.l'.1'0<>.W A<)ndaa pu1< Xq1m1nw
FE .1a-1suw puw a.tuH,O .rauo1ss1m
,( -woo :lfU'elJ:l u13a J pun SaJ.t.ZO.M.
ins ...£1U so ands UJ a.zaq 11:nuaq puu
lf.J.~Ua.I'.J.S UO.M. aA.131{ I M.Oqamos.u
ple
·2u1.1a.A.oaa.1: AfMOfS
po, SJ puv !J.112J.x: 118 UO!,'J.U.rado aq-1
q.Sno.zq'J. aunia 'PI.IOM. aq'.} UJ 'aAl?l.J I
;lUJlfl A'.(UO 8t{'.J. SJ OlfM. 'PUlf.> Ant,,
th
·s.znoq .zno1 A'.'.J.J.>

:i

~"tll ug--qA\.

-~tI.S

:Soston :,?ews-(C{tp :SureO:u
)

....~~ ......
'--· _.

~

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS

----------~----

:Soston )?ctws-(Clip :Sureau
8

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

i:IOSWORTH STREET

HOSTON

MASS

GAZETTE, WORCESTER, MASS.

....

)

On their twen~y-third ·w~d~ing ~~niyetsary on WedneSday eve,nin.g; ~r.. ~:n:.:d.~
Mrs. E. Pbilip :B"'inn, 24 Mayflpwe;r-, road~
Chestnut Hill, aniiounced the· e~~e:lneiit
of their daughter, Miss Cliarlotte' Loui~~;
1-i"inn, to Bernard Sbor.e of Boston. . - '\ .-.
lVliss ''Finn is a graduate Of Madame", I
Ach~l"d's.SchooJ, Brookline, class. ~J 19~.7~,- ~'
Mr. Shore is a graduate of th
~Law s.chool, class of 1930. 3:,-u.d is yiC~1·
presrcfe·nt of the Publix Oil CQ '-Th~
wedding is pla,.nned for next- JU.ne~
I

_
·pat1;::>ct~~

-;i:U9p!OO'B

atuoq .ta;J;f'~O'.f · 2uJu..1;.n.p.r
·~UH'l(OO.lg

•·+o..

llO'.J.dtu~,

Anw-eJ u -.Aq,·- P.I;ww._,._...._~·
'~~'"SS;w

. •. Tl( .-2U!AH

_; , ,
_
•£-ep9°l :}.1n90 0Ut{
~l{oo.zg, ~! .ti?ad~-e IHM. ·ia:I-I ·~a'.}.q2n-e{s
:'l:J.:U,tu JO_ a2.t-eqo 1-e~Jt::;o;;,1- -e uo '.}.'11<:l

/

~~ ~V~n ·u-e8a'H· P.ao~e:1C,: ·'uon.'b2n.sa~\.
".'.'Ut .".J..l9-~S. -e .laJJ'B '•.a-~u~d ~.itH~<?"~xg-

1. ~~~~:r~~~i~1~1k

-~~~

j

'

~--'""' ~·sanfiiJns·J..aS1,uo
~1?11\.

l
j
1

Cockinos is hostile, but

admitted
he
w~s
·'r .Cutral "
Courisel for. Garrett. 1s
c: ;1.id to be anxious to induce Sid-

the home

ln

l
l

Rumor has it that overtures are
under ,vay to recruit both Cockinos
and Sidlinger as witnesses for
{.,;fr- 1ing.cr

i.

f



MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS,

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS

i

#•,

R

xOX"Wb

99c II

s and
een.

tional

.1

A~TIQUE

1

Infants' Sw!' i
pink, blue
:~m8fit~¥;rs-;:;'1

5



I

,t Coat
I 1 to 8 or aUp-over
::vear9;I Children's J
Jt All-wool aweater• t
t'

99c I

1:~

"

1

ggles.

cer
Ro

Sizes

99c I!,
.
99C II ;:~.
99c !

The return of Dean Greason L.' Archer
law ~ 01 t 0
in ti..!;;·;;
:\YBZ
series of laW tallcs -ft'0!¥ r:h~f another

~

Tots' Bloomer:'

U

Novelty print bloQ~
dimities, Iawna.
f!.

l!fllite in

JerseJ
Jerse7 broU

red~

tan.

al

t

sizes 2 t~ 4.

F.

Boys' Knickf

DESMOND

f(

~f ·:;·~e union at the co:nvention in
~, Toro:t1to; Can, six years agQ, died Yest··· terday ·at hiS .p.ome, 35 Allston st,
C~arlestown, frbm a shoc1F suffered
( \~-:;1
ad b~j?n/ in poor
~:', 'Mr. DeSm.ond was born ln Charles..
i..-: ~t-9:.W..u-:,:sa year.s· ~o,,. He was, ,,educated. I

b

~e~!!

~

:t:e if!_~.

!d

and his actions last Tuesday wE
i:g. effect, ~ disgui:;;e.
f
The two nights that Ca.pone was

~0~1ri~1-

f: •
le

i

- received a warm greeti'ii
.a ~tation,
'. the amount of fa'n
Jli~g1ng by
last few days felicititinS, re:~ved t!-"1e
. dean on renewiJ,.'lg h!s appe~raiie g;rua1
; fa New England station i
~ ~??m
Dean Archer's return~ comes almost'
I on the anniversary of his first law t Ik
That
a
1 over WBZ
1 last month b t . was only a year ago
he has traVeI~d s~~f that first lecture
r radio fame.
over the road to
:
For the last nine months h
/ one of th_e features on the
been
work, g1v1ng a week!
. .
net//' over a nation-Wide d'et!~r;:s 0 ';; .!~Iks
ws That Safeguard Socie"ty ., Lett ~~
' / rom all over the c0untr t . .
eis

tftait·

I
.I

~-

'f

,11

~ici

' ta

popularity of th·

I that NBC

.

JI' . est1fy to

the

is ma~1n~e~fX w;th the result :
0 ~ ih~n:ea~~r!~ in deft-

:I nite contin~an~e _

~~r~1\re hkn::~~~
ri:-:1·
:a::i s!~~~~ai~!ec!~:~t~~ f~
liquor business have been sc tlnf~

)~ ~states _Government printing shop at
:· ·'.W~shingto?- for. 12 ·years. :i::teturn•ing
tO .. Boston~ he .went to work on the
tj .:C~J~b~ _wbere, for th~ J>ast· 25 years,
,!, ,;h.:e :has been einployed..
l;[ad he lived until next SundaY', Mr ,
-and· :¥rs Desmond woilld ·have

!

r

ob-1

d

.l'

:~;~;:e ;:;vr: s~~i;:~t~7 h~; ~u~l:

0

}

by the

polic~ on private occasio!
~!~~e, however, felt h,imself s'
---

,----- ~~~-

i

Conferred in P1·ivate Ho11111, !

}; th~\~: a~h\~g!>- ::n i~h:i:s ~!:~j
0

Nellie F. (Downey) I?esmond, a daughter,' Mrs Alic6 Sullivan of Charles~
t,o~~;:~nd six sons, Francis X., and
.;J~~n'~~~~- ~oth employed in the Globe 1
c.:;,m_po~.<r:opm; Matthew I., a studet,:lt l


:t

s~~e~~~;J~u~~e~f~o!;~)
\
nierce, al;ldc .J'oseph A. and Rich·ard 1
pesmond. bOth pup~ls of St Francj.s
de Sales School, Charlestown.

I

;re1::r!!atls~fsu~v~:;;_~;ro~~r~ii~~~t~~r~
resident of the state of Washington,
,:an.~ Ri-chard D~smond, a. resident of
M:~dfoi-d and two sisters, Sister Mary
~tthew of the;. :P,ominican Order, a
teach~r ill. St.J"o~·n:'~ High School, North,
Cambridge, ~-nd Mrs Mary Murp~ qf i

Hi~::i>.. i:s~~~:

EJ;i

f.c;,r 1:,tOston p~Uce officer~, it was

, ·;W'hich he was employed· in the United

!;J~~;ry
~ett~~!
a. COU'Sin of: Rev JanieS"Leary, S. J., of
St. MaTY's t:hurch, North End. :~he .funeral' .wil~ be, held_ Wednesday
:m,orni11g fro~,hls home, with a solemn
,requie,in high ·mass in St Francis de
Salea-~·Church at 10. :aurial will be in
~?ly ;_-9foss cemetery, Malde

mtxtu;J

ln

.( }~. .th.e school~· . of his district and
~- .l~~r?ed the ttade of com·positor, after

it
:1,,,

Fully-lined

; ~iiie~: 'tf&3;s W1f
SUMMER OR llEDFORD ST. ENT!

;f::;.

1of the Su,f(Q]k
Wednesday night

or novelty vatterntf

blue or tan.

All-wool

;.:SOHN

~~

::--- ·~

DEAN ARCHER TO HAVE
NEW SE~IES ()N .WB:;~

lmets
,a.ther
.1:.Com~

·~.--

covered th
~?Ul .ar~tcles we have ·
the stucten~ ~~tuire~~nt ts, pr ·a plane for
..
. pr1va e owner, the ad ...
pow
·
lane, the
/ plan
try. for the pr :va
requ
ainer type and the speed
artic
JUch a plane. In the next
tions from th~
the actual instrucIng of the motor on.
1

~

F ,~i~

1~e--1as&-

! /

M: White,

.

\,,.;'

a.:,t.

ChinesJ ,

ized scarfs, 16x4S. /

I

;~'193(:

i
I
1

~

b n·. ferenc~s with the three Boston mi
to Thursday, after two nights in the ci~
r5_ Ca,pone rode nonchalantly to 1:Pe Soti
Ir:y Station and went directly back to N~
~e Tork, where he once mor~ felt ~
a~~ • security of his gunmen at 4is b~ck;
~~
-;t'h~t Boston's bootleg business h_
of'-~~~~~~..-..-~..-~~~~..-...,

:~!~~:~

iu~ •

~~ ----

~---

Nothwithstanding his extensive law
practice attorney Miles mana"ged to find
time to play fir.st base for the Dudley
Street :5aptist baseball team. last season.
,
The entire Boston Braves' roster is
personally acquainted with attorney
Miles, for he is one of the-most ardent
supporters of the team. In fa-ct, a.ttorney Miles playeQ. ball with several
of the Braves in exhibltion
games.
He never played baseball professionallyi,[ho~ever.

BOSTON

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS

!,?

t:\'.''
~

SUFFOLK .LAW OFFICE ·..,,!}•·. '
EM'I>t~S'Ai" DINNEtf'

gan as Ba,nk. Clerk

w~~xt:\1;e -;;1!;1~~;.:

\;:I

,
,

Attorney ~iles wae born in Bro'ckton, the son of Mr and Mrs W. P.
Miles. His - father is now in the real

·1 ::t~1:db~~~:s~!11
' ing the war.

\ait:,

~1:,.."'

.

~

I\1ASS

j

Miles attended Shl.lrtleff Gram.mar
S-chool in Chelsea and was graduated
from Chelsea High Sehool. He attend- ' 1·
: ed .Boston University School of Liberal ('
Arts, but was forced to forego further \.,.
educationar plans,· as he felt it. incum-1 : :
bent upon himself to aid in the t:fll.p- t
port of his family.
_
· ·
1
For a tirne he was employed .as a
.
clerk by .tlie Federal Reserve Bank il
and later rose to become one Of the
12 department headS of that bank,
having aupervis~oll. of more than 100 /..:

l

A d~e,t '.bl". Mrs Gleason L A
··,;.'
Wife of t_he dean,~f ·suff-0lk la~ 8
and their da~ghter MW 'Ma. .
~
student at eo11:1y: cOnege teatU:-;dntha

~1;.~~r• ·,

annual dinner ·Of offic; em 1 ·· e
Suffolk Jaw last, night at
House. Beside ea~~-- plate was, il;. gift'. ,'.
ot .gold f!om Dea.n Archer, While a
chest of ~il~er w~ presented to· 'D
and Mrs., . Archer·. by tl).e em Wean
0
ul;el" Vl',Ma Dei1<)ley of, ·Pale.st~"!"
res man.,a~ Su.ff<:,J.k~ gav~ a.. talk .Gnl .~
th~. relat~ons: .of Ar.~bs ancf Jews in his' .
Miss Catherine._ c · _
..
- ~a~v~. co1.p:1try,
rt:i"titta":g'e 8
etar:y 1p the: dean; i W"-S.
-·:,!f
9
~ng~ment:s;, .

th1:,. ,:<;,;k;t

f

"f

--+
/

./

.~ ~B0SW0R;1.'I{
BOST.ON

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS..

;:SPECIAL JUSTICE

, BASEBALL PLAYER

HERALD, BOSTON, 1\'IASS

employes, disclosing e~cellent execut:Ve ability.
·
. d the sp·eed
With a vi,.e-w to broadening himself :n. the next
mentally, Mr Miles decided tu- pur.Sue !al instru.ca course of law, and matriculated at ~ ;motor on.

~h!~lk;;_~tft~~~d~a~~efn ~9;~~ ~ci
decided to en_ter the practice Of law,'
severing his connection with the bank.
He loca.ted his. office at ,144 Dudley
st, .Roxbury, where be still i~ and.has
become a most successful lawyer.
Miles enllsted in. the navy .shortly
after the outbreak of the Wo~ld War
Attorney Fra~kland
L. :Miles, re- and made several trips Qack and
cently appointed special justice of the forth ~ross the ~ t i c on a. convoy.
Roxbury Mtinicipal Court by Gov Allen, IU:rs Miles Church organist
Wi!J. be one -of- the youngest jurists in
has
Commonwealth when he takes his 10Attorney Miles·wife been 1narried fol:'
years. His
was the former
seat on the bench late this nionth. He Louise-Grother of 57 Blue Hill av, RoxiS just 34 year&: old, yet is soundly bury. The couple now have two chliand John
versed :In the law and i.s of the type dren, Frankland Jr is qganist Grother
Miles. Mrs :Miles
for the
that would m.ake a most jud~cious trial
a!:P:~~l~~;,;;111!:r:o~n
justie~• Attorney :Miles Will
Keystone Chapter, o. E ..:" s~ She was

HAVE
N<,.WB;>;

Frankland W. L. Miles of
Roxbury 34

·.bi

the

:!!':i~~e

l

:terday

t

,~9-W.;s;;i-;::_59- ,year..s ~o..
;1P,: :the
school~ of

J'

at

his

home,

35

Allston

f:;~~~~~D~i~~~:ew~~eborn
it

t ,lea~,ned· the

in /Charles.

He was: .educated
his district and

l

t~~de of eOmpositor, after
I{ /'f.o"h1,ch he ~as employed·. in the United

!"' ~states ..Government printing shop at

·Washington for 12 years. :E?,eturning
: : t;o .· Bost.on. .~e .went to wo~k on thP;

\;: \~),-b~ .. _where, for .tPe . past 25 years;
f .;he, :h_as been ~mployed.:

:E:;Ia~ he· lived until next S~ndaY, Mr
·~nd,·. _¥rs

,Desmon.d

would

have

ter,

~r~d ~lf~e·s!~l~i":r:n~fs

I
1

ob- 1

s..er.ved. the silv.er anniversary of their
,.marri~ge. He is su'.rvived by his wife,
Nel~ie F. (Downey) :qes~ond, a daugh-

~~r!~~

FRANKLAND W. L. MILES
11

l?oth employed in the Globe 1
CC?Di.P~
. ·rOp~; Matthew I., a student I
at the SU:ff'.olk Lm,w School; Gerald A.,'

a:" s t r i _ d e l l ~ ~ ~ o l of Com-

al)d-~.Joseph A. and Richard
both pupils of St Francj.s
de._ Sales School, Charlestown.
He is also survived by three brothers,
, ;reremia~ of Washington, Timothy, ~
. resident of the state of Washington,
,,an~ Ri-ch~rd Desmond, a resident of
M~dfo:td and two sisters, Sister Mary
~tthew, of th~;.; I?.<>minkan Order, a
teach~r in St_":'.,..ohn;"~ "aigb. School, North
Cam?ridge, 3:.;t1d ¥rs Mary Murphy ~f
, Everett. He· was the son of Mattliew
· 8.nd ,¥ary ('Paul)_ :be_~mond. He was
a. CO~'S~ of:xtev Ja~es-Leary, s. J., of
; St: ~ary's Church, North End.
,
_..q,he .fun~rar .will be beta Wednesday
1
:, :m:ol"ni~ fro~--}1:is ·honie, with ~ solemn
; 1req~i~ high mass in St Francis de
i Salesy'Church at 10. ~urial will be in
t ~o~y :,,;Qfoss O~~et~ry, Malde

before the Governor's. Council tom.orrow for confirmation of his appointm.ent.
\.
,
Since bis appointment several da.ys
ago attorney Miles' _office · has been

::~~~f!t~it~e.~~l;::ar~m a~e~~~~;
of the bar, business Inen and fr1en<l:s,
hiS virtues and wishing him

nierce,

pesmond,

~'~S>.''

"·'··· .'·!·

s almosi' •
Jaw -talk
year ago

tti\

t

i J.~~~. ~::~1;;:

st

·..'Cl;larlestown, from a shocIF suffered
-,~ .:two weeks ago. He h.._ad bejn in poor

=~!~~!!~

f1~td~~\i~~1:he::;a:_~~f
side at 53~Wa1Ilut av. Roxbµry. ·
For 17 years, Mr Mile~- has been
most active in Roxb~ry _~aff:S,irs. He is
a member of many .fz:aternal or~anizations in the section a.nd is also a Inember of the ~oxbury Historical Societ.y,
~o:x:bury. Civic League and Improvement Society and 1$ president of the
Roxbury Board of Trade after having
served several terms as vi-ce president.
Friends 'of attorney :Miles are most
pleased with his elevation to the bench
and are loud ]-in their praise of Gov
Allen for appointing a young man of
such outstanding ~bility.
Attorney M~es is one of the bestknown attorn¢.'ys before the RoX.bury
Court and is known as a· skilled trial
lawyer and ll(>ted for hi.~.' forCeful arguments in pl~ading a case.
The Roxbury Court is the busiest
court in the> qommonwealth, outside of
the Boston Mµnicipal Court. Annually
more than 15,000 cases are disposed of,
requiring th6 services _of three,, and

Nothwithstanding his exi;~nsive law'",
practice attorney Mile~ Iilallaged to find \

~

I
Ii
,I

:
f
'

M~:e{?B!:Jstfir:!s~~!f1 i~~!_h!a~u~!~ '
son.
,
. The entire Boston Brave$' ro·ster is
personally acquainted with attorney
Miles, for he is one of' the most ardent
supporters of the team. In fact, at- ,
torney Miles Jllayed. ball with several i.
of the Braves in exhibition
games. .;
He ;iever played baseball professionallypt;ho~ever.

1

r~~CJur~

1as been
3C net1f talks
n

:,e,Ut'l?.au
t~T

v1AsS

MASS

2.... ~a'X\J

!

~ ~ ~ •

\;;:J""'

~~V

warrant" on~·--n.e.u; '"f"r. v,r

The cusw
·· · ;· ,
,-· ,tts:b~l~' ~ J ' 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ c e 4 were fraudulent. . ""°~ t' "· •, ,
.
owned as. t h e ~-"""."- • ru:c;,k IS ]} .t
·
by a Bos · _.f .
. - .,g;; wopl
indicate
signed f o ~
vehicle 50]~~"

[·~!m...,,~:;,'.If
, .~~~a rum

egan as Ba,nk. Clerk
Attorney ~iles was born in Brockton, the SQn of Mr and Mrs W. P.
Miles. His - father is now in the real
·1 estate busin. ess in R'oxbury. -His m.oU:i.er dieQ. while he was i_n the navy dur: ing the war.
'
Miles attended Shtirtletr Grammar 1
School in Chelsea and was .graduated
from Chelsea High School. He attend- -,
ed .Boston University School of Liberal c J
Arts, but was forced to forego further \,j
ed. ucational ~lans, · as he felt it incu!ll-1 );
bent upon himself to aid in the· ·sup- t
port of his family.
.
· ·
l: I
For a time he was employed :as a
clerk by :the Federal Reserve Bank
and later rose to become one Of the
'
12 department heads of that. bank,
\ having supervis~oll of more than 100 ,~.,

i[

--4'
/

./

___ l

•'The

Letters
' to t.he
e result
indefl-

so~;:i~;~J~~l1:i1g~~ d:ff!;ney MV ~
was a. most popular one in Roxbur~
~,

.,.,.
1 1

I

l~ anOfher
:t station
J~ging
e1ved the
le genia1
ice.$ from

w.

·~f, )·the union at the convention in
~· '+'oront~,: Can:. s~x years ago, died Yes~

ArCher

l .L.

·'to- WBZ

- - ---

---

---

_,_·.

was derunning

,_,,:.:.•
':1··'' __:
·:

,

,

. .'

~~:;~,'

,,.,.~E!CC--'---'---'----'---~3!WT;

~

::Soston )?ews-<l::llp Y.,ureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

:So.s(on )?ew.s-'1::llp Y.,ureau

Y.,oston )?ews-<l::llp Y.,ureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

MA.BS

BOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

JAN 8 ·-1831

I

DEAN ARcffa4ro
ADDR~S FORUM!
4~ () "1;
.,
OJkns w'ee~ly. Meeting Series
at West End Ho.use

The :first of a series of weekly forums
to extend f,q.r a. period of 10 consecU:tive Mondays will be held Jan. 12 in the
West End House library. The speaker
will ~ Deah Gleason L. Archer of
Suffo~~J;,,gj;il, and his subject will
be, •i
airig Youth :from Temptation.'" Joseph Don ousenoff, chairman
of the forum committee, will preside. A
musical program will also be held under
the direction ~! Henry Bernard.
'
The forum Committee, under .Joseph
Don Gusenoff, consists of Mac Love,
Leon owal, Al Feldman, Edward Biller
Max Goldberg, Nathan Nason J:rvtni
Rodensky and Da:vjd Woods.

.

X
'4~{) Dinner Td'night in Honor
of Boston W oDJ.an Attorney

The fH·.st in a. ser1~.S of wtiek~y fOr\H11s
on teil CO:l'tSEH!titiVe Mottda:Y!:i Will be held
ah. 1.2 il'1 th,; Jlbrary lit w ..st lllrid llous>e

\

A dinner in honor of Helen \"Vest Brad·
tee, attorney. will be given at Longwood

tf/o

i

---

chait'J:11.an of the fe,r~m. obIDJ:l'iitt~o~ will
presid<e. A m_uslc1tl ~<>.ift'Mn _-wilt b<, given
under the direction ut. ll:<!ht'Y Bernard
, • Arr,,.ong the speak.,..,, w111 · be: Thomas
! C. O ~t'!ert, _Cai:) M:. BpenccJ.·, Dr. Charle;:;1
i F. Wihfi~kY, Alexen.der Brin, Senat 0 1_
! Gaspa1
C"" Bacon, Professor Robert ~r.
I Rogers, Judge J. :topiah and Lee l'"'ricd-

}man ...
f

1

, \dents from aarvard. Boston UniV'ersity.
Northeastern. S ~ and Portia Le:.,
1
scbJ)o!S.
l
:il!lss .Teanfle,S. Brody, a.s the chairtn&J;l \
of the dinner committee. will be ass!ste<\
bY Mtss c. Brad!ee, Miss Sullivan: :Nj:iSS \
Ford, Miss Catherine Murdocl<. Miss
1 Helen Mowles, Miss Grace Fl~rfna, Miss
Lillian Newrnan and. Mr. and......_.M.rs. L. L.
Glazer; also by Walter Shaughnessy.- 1

I

i "

.,,,_,«;';

A 2

!

.I

l
t Towers, Brookline~ this evening. bY 150
• members of the fall session of the Bar
1 Review classes of 1930. which include stu•

wilt

l'he speg,k@t'
b" I>Mtt· Gl@uson L.
Aro11_€'_r ot Sut(gl}S Law school '.and his
subject_ is "S,l;rngua.i'l'lffig '¥""1th ·from
'l'emptatictrt."
Jos,,Ph. Don· -Gu...,non:.

I
I

George' A. Rocbford, Samuel Jaffee.
Philip Fleischer, Map.rice Collins, John

I

Fenton, Dav:d Lemmelr1.an, Willia .:1.
I:Iershrnan. Henry Santosuo$SO, Timothy
Donovan, Martin Durkin, William Suth·
erland. Sidney :;,petgel and .Tames Mullen,
the latter acting ~ t ~ r of c~rem.onies.

1;

l

oi:&_if.;

~e~ Archer Will Open
W eet End: House Forums

#-

Prospective speakers include Thomas
iH. O'B1:ien,. CarlM Spencer, Dr. Cha,;lee
IF. Wllinhsky, Alexander Brin, GMpar
Bacon, Pr<:>f. Rogers of Tech, Judge
Ja_~o!> T. Kaplan an_d ~....;- Friedman.

.

s:'-ujhton ,and family.

Y.,osli:on )?~ws-<l::lt:p Y.,ureau

\

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

' ,

TIMES, BEVERLY, MA~\

::Soston )tews-4llip ::Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET

Y.,oston )?ews-<l::llp Y.,ureau

MASS

BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

NEWS, SALEM, MASS.

-i

r.s.~!f
· · ~trroR~

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

1

- '-~1 -i_:EW ·. ff;

1
Boston. Followin:g't
w!ll be the annual bust~'
en reports ot the V1t.:.
. :,,w~ll; ~;&'Ivel)-

anf

LLEGE .. Ni:-&B'i ct.....v
Atla

! annual

lodge :r O O
college :b.1ght "1n

·cicid ~lfl

'
its

,!i~ll Wednesday night. It is a~ ~~
al custom. o:r the lodge alt
11 ..
Iboys being invited to at~nd c ~ege

r

we~ not many ot the boys • preseC:{{ '.
ll10.St Of them were obliged to re-: I
urn to college a:rter the Ch 1st
,
holiday. Noble Grand
r
mas j
welcomed the guests and turned tlie
Chester Carey
.
.
1
meeting over to Harrie A. Coffin A
entertainment was iv
·
n
· slonal talent. The !,u::e Woy~ro~::
ent were Stanley Doane of w1fi1am.
tndrth.Mary college; Edward Cudihy
0
ea.stern;
Wallace
Fle

Bentley college• William D
mmtng.
11am
and
Ma.ry· H
oane, , WilBrowri.; George ReYna1ct!n~tc?"raver
1ersity;
Edward
ston~. Sy~e~
f'.ITY Trefry, st. Stephen's· Rich d
·,Walsh,_~~~•
_ .ar j.

r

l:' -·

.Law

Head of· City
Department · Hai Served
Four Y~~r~ · Previ~us-

_ly_j,n ..P<>~ition

·

ran

Thomas S sun·
Solicitor by. Ma 1
appointed Clf_v
served for fou Y r James A. Tori ev
head of tll
. r years previously as
1917 tO 192e0 C1~ Ia:w dep;::t.rtment fro1n
came to Be~erlye ;.~~nbo~n in Salyrn.
educated in th B
a youth, \i\R3
uated from th! F:~frlit_s~hools, ~rad1
colleg19 and the ~ ff O 1
~~r bus1ness
has been~ ·a
....,u
k law school. He
tw-enty y~;_rs
J§l
'#5ttou1ey fo1·
?ircies in ~ssex ~~u:~Yll l(!por'Yn in_law
1s a member
f B
· · ~ . Sull~van
and of
B. o
everly lo~ge of Elk;;
Columgus ever~y council~ ; Knights of
Dane stre·e:ie lS married, tesid43S at 18
l He is tl:ie
three ~h_ildren
! lations t a
,
. many congratu.
o ay upon his ~P_!?ion:t;ment.

::~c-~·

r·eci;~nia:f

!

.....

-~_,.

.....-';

~.-..

MASS.

~~~~'"-

~:1:lL __

I
1

l
!t'
1 '

STREET
MASS

BOSTON

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

TIMES. BROCKTON, MASS.

TRAVELER, BOSTON, !VIASS.

JAN
1-une

3JS3J

,;
-orga.£UZi'd.l,J.U.Il.

i

'-

or· sat~d.ay~eaff~ir ;
Ch./~: ,·\ \.,.~

.

Anri

AL A HOWS
THE BRIDE OF
GORDON FLINK

.YfM. H. K.. FORUM
t~:-Ol>ENS ON MONDAY
... :oean Gleason L. Archer of the Suf-

!

folk 'laVl7 s9l1ool will be the :first speaker
f tb.r'cburi<e • opening Monday in a
'~eries of .forums t<> be held at the V1;est
:'$lhd;>Yciung .Men's Hebrew A,ss0ciat1on,
''il'i Mt. Vernqn street. He will talk o':
''Safe~uar(1ing Youth From Tempta
;·ti , ,.,;. Joseph Don ousenoff. chairman
... on. ·"' forum committee, will preside •.
er speakers expec.ted to a,ppear in
ourse include the Hon

Miss Alma E. Hollis, daughter of
and Mrs Alvah E. Hollis, 182

Mr

Green street, becan1e the bride of

Gordon J. Flink, 4ll Highland ave-

Thomas

nue. Ca1nbridge, Saturday night at

~rien
Carl M
Spencer, D'r.
. F'. 'wnHni!kY, Alexander Erin,
. Gaspar Bacmi,, Prof. Robert
s; Judge Jacob::J. -~aplan and

;:;c.,s=-Fr~··~·~ - -

her home. The ceremony

8

8

The couple was atten.ded by :\Ii s.

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

RECORDER, GR8ENFIELD, MASS.
mo"1NG GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

JAN 9-19~!":
Y.

~ris~,:;-;r

~bfi. $: s:;:w.Bi~~fi

·a:a 8: t~nt~~·r. E.

I

l

1

FINNEG N HEADS SUFFOLK
LAW ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

Tll~mas J. Finnegan of Ma.Iden a.nd ,
:Boston. professor of sales and bankTU_Ptcy at Suffolk Law School:, was

-

1

elected , president M" dt6 btnflilk La.w
Sc..~PQ-l Alumni Association at , a. meetIng In the alumni club last· night.
Attorney Finnegan, who has been vie~
~- ,prestdent of the alumni a~ociation the
,;.';.~""\!-.~a.•.t year. is a graduate o~ Boston
'Jt College, class of 1914.
·
C"the~ officers elected were! Vice
f,:
president, Fred Gillespie; secretary,
:,t'
Cleveland; treasurer, Martin

1

1

the
d at
ld.

Alaen M.



?:1~~!<,!'8-w~
::s?>oston ~¢ws-'1::hp ~UT¢au
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

Mrs. Marie Shalhoufi--or-·Jersey

'

· -a

Orange V ot~
On Sun
Desiring to Oper\
Here

ORANGE, Jan. 10-An
Rev. determine ..the sentiment ofarticler.
the
The
,iority oft.the ·townspeople concenj
at
has the showing of rn.oving., pictures\
vine Sunday in the town hall will be ,
n.on, serted in the warrant for the anti
I
the town meeting Feb. 2/
The question was given prominel
),kes
lday by negotiations by an unnalj
i oon. operating company who have \
l a.t plied to the board of selectn
3:me for . the privilege of showing l
fter talking pictures in the town .1"i
!1
I :iers The company, whis,h Town J\l[an31
will E E. Lothrop declares is a reput,j
triP cpncerns desires t<;> operate 14 sh~
i
will a week, and .have promised to &
re- Orange people the highest grj
1
or screen entertainment obtainaj
ll"Cll· The plan has the approval of 1
am- loca1 l!).erchants' association, and
to is hoped that townspeople will ,
and ,wle to see and hear the moi,t ,:
~ 3-U~ tp-date entertainment without· 1
a ;re- trouble of going to surroundl
larger towns for it. The _remain\
' of the warrant ii, confined mainly'
a, 1ter the appropriation_ of money for d
-~L <;>f
ll;lar ~xpen'!€S.
i

r.

NEWS, GARDNER, MASS.

i

I

L

lJ !;;~tf-:1:~~J;~i;~: ~~~Jce:mJ~tba:!:
:;~'f?:~Jo~er~!len:~~~~~a:!~~ !

BOSTOl>I

.

r:l!? Application by Comp~i,
Made to
lectmen

i"\t..;

:,; "
J

IH-J1~

tion,:.11 church

::Soston ~otws-<I:ltp ::Sur.tau

I.

BOSTON

"\-Vas

formed by Rev. Dr. Horace F ..Holton, pastor of the Po:rte1 Cong1 ega-

~oston ~,nvs-([:ltp ~unau

I

MASS.

Bos TON

City recently returned to her home 1
a1'.ter v~iqn~ fiir. and Mrs. J. Heiow, \

West ·s~e.t'tlwf

'.~-;;··
Robert :sunonds, son of Clerk of
·- ' · :Com:ts and Mrs Robert W. Simonds, 11
· ;;J.!$.Jii,ell. s.tree.t, re.tur.ned to. Boston j'
ter.day to, resum'l• his studies in
Etutfolk -~)" S<;_b,0s.9b
. ___,
'1

I

a·er-

a,tte-

!U;y

.el,d

New Pastor To Preach
i
. The new pastor, Rev. Stephen '!
:Talbot · will· preach .at the morni
- ··-...

'

,:.<::ll..L-~~-:;.,.,...

\

,. • .,·--~-

Catherine S1nith of Westb010 and
Birge1 G~ Flink of Philadelphia,
Penn • a brother
of tlle
bridegt oon1
The holne was ciecorated in pink and ,vhite, gree1iery and
1white bells Following the ceremony
1
t11e couple received· under an arch
'of ·wedding bell& and· 1 oses Guests
, were J>·resent from Atlantic City,
, New York, Spencer,
Spiingfield,
/ Westboro, Marlbo1 o, Boston, Can1l bridge, this city and sun ounding
'I towns.
'
The b~ide wor~ a blue chiffon
' go,vn, tnmmed w1th Shadow lace,
( a:pd carried a shower bouquet of
!J roses Her attendant wore a nile
' i green ch.iffon · go'"Wll. and can ied a
, bouquet of roses A cate1 ed supper
1
..
J ,vas served f6llo·wing the ce1emony.
i
Th~ i::t:id~groom presGnted his ::1tl tenda;nt, ···;w,th ·a pair of
diamond
1studded Cliff links, ·and the brides>1
'i·m~id' r~p?iV~d · a platinum necklace.
\i 'rh~. fl_o~er girl, Evelyn Ostr:.1nd of
1/ S~,l)l~.J$f.1eld, a cousin of the bride.I groo"'n::I:., received a
string of c1 ys·:1 tals .. '. ·.
---~--·)

1J::-r~}·,6·~p1e r~ceiveii 1nahy beauti-

f:1-1 g1f1..s, 1nclud1ng cut glass, silver,
!1nen and electrical appliances Late .
1n the evening the couple left on a,-short ,vedding trip, after which they ~
1
>will reside in this city
Mrs Flink is Well known in this .
eity 1:vhere she ha~ 1 esided for a :
1
number bf years She 1-vas bo1n in
Holbrook She is employed at the
Hudson studio, 1144 Main streel.
1 IV.fr. ~linH:- is a native of Can1briclge
2.nd 1s employed as secretary in the S.
. Coast Guard offtce in Boston
He

_graduai;ed from S u f ~ c h o o l :

1

i last

.JurlB.

_~------

I

,I tife

death, among them Mrs. fj/i:i'~~i't.l'-··
and her- husband, cteorge Bargft'ede, and

I no"be't't

F. ;t.ia.ngd.ort, a. poH.cema.n whose
heat I ~ the Llm<!ri(!k_hOtn<!,

I

Thomas C. O'Brien to Speak

at West End House Forum

'the second speakei' lfi th<, West End
lt.Oust, forum serie~ wilt be tO:tttl.el'" t)tg...
trict Attorney Thomas C. O'Brien. \'ilt~<:,se
topic is "Admifilstratlon M the Criminal
Law.'' The lecture will be on. :Monday,
Jan. 19 at 15 .P. M. in the library of
the West Efid House, D!o!lsotn st.reet.
and Ii• @en to all inter-ested.

s

At th• or,etilng- session ~li>Al!on
+tslJ'lr of th<!> ~ t..aw Slf>l\001

t.. 1

&~ittfi~.,','Sat4!g~Youth.

~rotr,

~1.Mf'HOWs . j
THE BRIDE OF /.

,;:~, ~ai:i i::;'Heason L. Archer of the Suf-

,~~lkt~~~.. :~n~tht:~i;,;~~ke!
,~seFf:~¥JJ~:u=n~~ ~e&~! ~«~tt\io~:
;'..~~s:r~:;ri:,.cr ~~~ii ~ o ~1T1:~~~

I M,~~~~~ ~~~.

'J:ton'..?Ji<' f~E,_h c~~~1?i1:~~ffi g~fde.~n

r spealt.ers ex~ted to appear in
rse include the Hon. Thomas
Carl M. Spencer:, Dr.
. 'wnJin~Y. Alexander Brin.

:~~~a: J3;~~H.·~~~iila~ ~1j
L
.

Mr. and Mrs Alvah E. Hollis, 182
I, Green street, became th~ bride of
Gordon J. Flink, 43. Highland ave:j nue. Cambridge, Saturday night at
! her honie. The ceremony was IHH.,i; for:rned by Rev. Dr. Horace F :Hait?n, pastor of the P~tei CongregaJl tional church
The ~ouple ~as attended by .:v.1 13.
/! C-:tt;_ler1ne S~1th (?f VVes~boro aud
1 Biro er G. !< llnk
,
of Philadelphia,
.1'.

0

-~i~a:n~

::Sur..au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

r
i{

::So$ton ~~ws-<t:14> ::Sur~au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.
,I}

:Z~~~-

aT;;ot~~~e o~a~he

cte~~~;t,

';/ !'it/f~ ~~~~ a:iu:!!~iunder an ar~h ,
f;:~~~:~~~i
the cou]?Ie received ·

RECORDER, GR£ENFIELD, MASS.
GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

of ·wedding bell& a'.nd roses Guests'
were p,resent from Atlantic City, r
New York, Spencer,
Sp1 ing.l:ield
, W~s~bo10. Marlboro, Boston, Carn:
! bridge, this city and surrounding
to;;:!;s 1 _

1
....i.....i____~fon

I

JAN 9 - 1931

!

---·

X

-~~--!B~~-~~;~·~'J~~~~~~~~~~~',6ri'.f'1-:~
II
Daily Radio Program
, il i~

per·

NEW :YORK, Jan. 10 -

(AP)

-

I

(All

"rhose fUilD.y men of the stage for .a
half century, Weber :and Fields, soon
~ -to oPen up with
a
network
broadcast.
.
It will not be their first r~dio ~x];)e];."ience, for they· have been Pl.3;:y1ng
WOR, Ney: York,· 9n Monday m~l;lts.
'"for some tune and h3.ve been heard
over W ABO and stations on an oc-

Time

is

Bos To~

MASS~

NEWS, GARDNER, MASS.

la;

\'ey ~

5 :45-Evening Sfa~s

~liS .

6:00-Weather.
6:03-Dinner Mµsic.
6: 15-Rivel'Side- Ramblers.
6:45-LoWell T~mas.
7:00-:Anios ',n' Andy.

a,:
in

he

6 :3D-0rchestra.

west as Denver.

BOSWORTH STREET

.ttier,
ate

5:i5-String Ensemble.
5 :30--Stocks.

planned, 'Yill include stations ras :far

8

·ys-:

5:00-Uncle Bill and the Twins.

c3:~ron .a regu~arth~ir first weekly
r: ~~~- be hookup, that, it is
stunt

::So$ton ~ .. W$-<Cltp ::Sur..au

de.-

P. M~

WBZ - WBZA,
4:00-Fam.ilj, Party.
4:30-Air Castle
4:50-String Ensemble.

The distri}?uting group will be the
WEAF network at 8·p.-m. (];!!ST) on
Sat:urdiays, the start to be made Jan.

,CL
g(;;l

he$.

7:15-Tastyeast, Jesters.
7:31-Sandy MaCF'larlane.

8:00-Circus.

31.

:re:

ol I

.

I

8:15-"'Rin-Tin-Tin Sketch.

s :30-0rChestra

PreIIlier Beni.to · Mussolini of Italy
was well pleased .with his New Year:s
bxoadcast to America ;from Rome, 1t
was indi.C3.ted by a .radiogram to M.
H. Aylesworth, pr~sident <;>f the National Broadoasting· co:rn.pany, made

9:01-WBZ Players.
9:30-Musical Doctors.
10:30-Civic Opera.
11 :OQ--Weather.

al'li'Wih?--

11 :03'-orchestra.

ede~ Bnd
l'i

pu:~c ,!,,~~Y;'We wish. t.o, tha.1;1k you WTIC-Ua1'tford ~ (282.8 :m.) 10&0 k;
,
:for the Won.derfu~ co-operat1on~. of [. 1:30-Knights 'of Melody.
2:15-Game Prqtective Ta).k.
your com1'a,ny which -i:n.ade possible
for me to

speak to

the

2:30-Pianist, Soprano.
3: 00-0rclle.stra.
4:30-Choral, Club.
5 :OO-Ensemble.

American

~~~: r8t:iver~;Pfe°c~t~~~~;e:~

Ideal reception ~~kec;:). tP.e !>road.cast which -also was heard 1n the
Ha.-v,;aii and
~bilippine islands.

_t*

Try

,6:15-News :...,... .Sports.

6:3'~~ologi~

these"T~Y your riadio sets to-

ni~Ik~by

· .JZ-New Yoi-li:- (3!l4~ .m.) 76,0 IC-.
:1 :30-:-V,inc,e-nt 1LQp~z·,1 X>,rch~StTla.

wi1~.gr,e~n. preSident

of the American Fe4~1.;at1~n: .qf Lapo~.

on, ~·oVerc9 · · ·_une~plfY~7;:~ :1~, '
0

':e~T:: ~~-\~

' .-

Cl,'~:,·;tlta~~
been· m.oVed , fri>m. . Tu.e·Sa:ay night, at 1
7:1_5.·Qn·:;wE~~~~d chaj.n,: followed at·

7'~ f.,Y,.!n~e~~d ~~~~
0

the

gx,and

. ·):1i~

·1~~-

·7:.15-Ta.styeast Jesteys_
i'it1s.:..:.p: ~~str,i.. · ..

' r:~~~~~~ ~i1i;':t!';:~s,

jlll,"y,· .ail.Ot~er- 8equel to the trial· of
Vivienne Ware, to WJZ on~y ~t 9, ·. 9 : 00--::Sket;ch.
with the network stations d1str1but- , 9:30-Musical' Doctors.
ing the Oarnpus, a college life sketch, 10:00-,-Chicago .Oper,a, _
11 :00-String Ensemble.
at the same tim.e.
The .Natiqnal Radio Forum, W ABC 12:00-Phil SJ)italny's Orchestra.
network at·~ :;30, presenting ·a talk by
se·!lator Gel.".ald .P. Nye on "The In- ~LW...;Cincinnati- (428:3 in.) 700 k.
ffuence of Money in Political Cani5:00-Music.

...

Pai,~~:~of the Qper~ '~Mefistofele" in
the Chicago Civic Opera. hour. at. 10
over WJZ and stations, beg~mg,

with. act 2.

-~

i

~~ft::=g;~~!;tr~eatre of the Air.
7: 15:-Tastyeast Jesters.
7:30-Saturday Knights.

9:00-Character Readings.
9: 15-Sports Talk.
'
10:00-Civic Opera.
11:00~0rchestra.
WOR Newark (422.3 m.) 710 k.
5: 00-0rcheStra.
5:30-Talk, Evolution of the Moon_
5:50-Hillybilly Songs.
6:00-Uncle Don.
6:45-Ch.ats on English.
7:01-Dance Orchestra:
7:30 and 8:30--Concert Ensemble.
8:15-0ne-Man Show.
9:00-Character Readings.
9:15-0rgan Recital
9:45-Yillage Orchestra.
10:15-Dance Orchestra.
~
10:45-dlobe Trotter.

11:03-Dance 0rchestra.

,

....--.~

11 :3.0-MGonbean!S, Musical.

1-~-'" Sllelhartie
0--Mr. and M'"r.--:

,eak
orum
1

.6:QO-Children's P!ogra.m..

~"'

~,.,,,,_--p-,,-~---,--------<®

W-hQSe

Stations Associated with NBC Netw-orks

-~
KDKA

KFAB

KFI
KFKX

Nebraska Buick Automobile Company,

Lincoln, Neb.
Earle C Anthony, Inc., Los Angeles, Cal.
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Ill.

(Managed by Chicago H!rald a.nd Bx<!minei")
Airfan Radio Corporation, San Diego, ~al.
General Electric Company, San franctsco, C~l.
(Managed and operated by the National Broadcastino

KFSD

--{:I«iq;

Or~;:~i=~ ti~lishing Company, Portland, Ore.
Louis Wasmer, Inc., Spokane, Wash.
General Electric Company, Denver, Colo.
(Managed and operated by the National Broadcastlno

~~f
---KSL
_'Ksri>
----;.lC'TA,R]
KTHS

KVOO
KWK

KYW
,:: -

Fisf:~p:niie~d-~tation, Inc., Seattle, Wash.
Hale Brothers and the San Francisco Chronicle,
San Francisco, Cal.
Houston Post-Dispatch, Houston, Texas
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis, Mo.
Radio Service Corporation of Utah,
Salt Lake City, Utah
National Battery Broadcasting Company,
St Paul-Minneapolis, Minn.
KT.AR Broadcasting Co., Phoenix, Ariz.
Hot Springs Chamber of Commerce,
Hot Springs, Ark.
South'Western Sales Corp., Tulsa, Okla.
Greater St. Louis Broadcasting Corporation,
St. Loui.s, Mo.
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Ill.
(Managed by Chicago Herald and Examiner)

____

~:WAPI

WCAE
WCFL

Alabama Polytechnic Institute, University of Alabama and Alabama College, Birmingham, Ala.
Consolidated Gas, Electric Light and Power Company, Baltimore, Md.
Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Carter Publications),
Fort Worth, Texas
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, Springfield, Mass.
Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, Boston, Mass.
Gimbel Brothers, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Chicago Federation of Labor, Chicago, Ill.

WCKY

L. B. Wilson, Inc., Covington, Ky.

J

WBAL

----;,
,,..,-00

\VBAl:'J

WBZ
WBZA

WCSH
Congress Square Hotel Company, Portland, M e . ~
WDAF- Kansas City Star, Kansas City, Mo.
- J ~ E ~ N a t i o n a l Broadcasting Company, Inc..

'

Ne= York, N. Y.

·

_.-.."'"WE.BC
11,__

---

WEEI

WENR
WFAA

: -----(!NW
WFJC

Clear'Water Chamber of Commerce, Clearwater,

Fla.

Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, Pittsburgh, Pa.

Earle C. Anthony, Inc., Los Angeles, Cal.

Head of the Lakes Broadcasting Company,
Duluth, Minn. and Superior, Wis.
Edison Electric Illuminating Company,
Boston, Mass.
Great Lakes Broadcasting Company, Chicago, Ill.
Dallas Morning News, Dallas, Texas
Strawbridge and Clothier Company,

Philadelphia, Pa.
W. F. Jones Broadcasting, Inc., Akron, 0.

Ownership

STATIONS

O'Wnership
STATIONS
CKGW Gooderharn and Worts, Limited. Toronto, Canada

(Managed and operated by Florida West Coast Broadcasting Company)

I

WGN

.-+--WGR
I .--~wcfy"'i
I
I

WHAM

1 _;wHAS,
I

1-{wHo
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

WIBO

WIOD

-- /WJAR1

_,W:iAx'

·wJox
WJR

WJZ

I

1--·-wi<:v
I

I

Tribune Company and Liberty Weekly, Inc.,

Chicago, Ill .
Station WGR, lnc., Buffalo, N. Y.
General Electric Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
Stromberg-Carlson Telephone Manufacturing
Company, Rochester, N~ Y.
The Courier-Journal and The Louisville Times.
Louisville, Ky.
Central Broadcasting Company, Des Moines, la.
Nelson Brothers Bond and Mortgage Company,

Chicago, Ill.
lsle of Dreams Broadcasting Company,
Miami Beach, Fla.
The Outlet Company, Providence, R. I.
City of Jacksonville, Jacksonville, Fla.
Lamar Life Insurance Company, Jackson, Miss.
WJR, The Goodwill Station, Inc., Detroit, Mich.
Radio Corporation of America, New York, N. Y.
(MIS'h,aged ;;JZnd operated by
Company, In.c.)

the National Broadcasting

Oklahoma City Times and The Daily Oklahoman,

(Oklahoma Publishing Company)
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

I

WLIB

Tribune Company and Liberty Weekly, Inc.,

i

WLIT

Chicago, Ill.
Lit Brothers, Philadelphia, Pa.

:ti

The Prairie Farmer, Chicago, Ill.
I
Crosley Radio Corporation, Cincinnati, 0.
Memphis Commercial Appeal, Inc.,
:
WMC
Memphis, Tenn.
I
. -----y--'WOAL Southern Equipment Company,
San Antonio, Texas
I __!'wo-- Central Broadcasting Company, Davenport, la.
Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Association,
l

I

--iwo~-

Omaha, Neb.

1-i.cwi>"fF-:'
~:__Ylfil,'._/

Durham Life Insurance Co., Raleigh, N. C.
Radio Corporation of America, Washington, D. C.

I

WREN

I

WRVA

Jenny Wren Company, Kansas City, Mo.
Larus and Brother Company, Richmond, Va.
United States Playing Card Co.

~WSAI

I
I
I
I
I
I

(Managed and operated by lhe National Broadcasli-Nfl
Company, Inc.)

(Managed and operated by Crosley Radio Corporation,
Cincinnati, Ohio)

WSB
WSM

The Atlanta Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
National Life and Accident Insurance Company,
Inc., Nashville, Tenn.
WSMB Saenger Theatres, Inc., and Maison Blanche Co.,
Ne'W Orleans, La.
,...
.
-WSU!'f_, St. Petersburg Chamber of Coininerce, Clear1
'Water, Fla.

I
I

.. -

(Managed and operated by Florida. West Coast Broadcasting Company)

:-, ~1i- WTAM,

__r,WTIC_J Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Conn.

__,_--- ~~-TMJ
I

Inc .• Cleveland, Ohio

(Managed and operated by the National Broadcasting
Company, Inc.)

I

!

The Telegram Gazette, Worcester, Mass.

WWJ

The Milwaukee Journal, Milwaukee, Wia.

The Detrqjt New•, Detroit, Mich.

~

t0,9~~ /~ ~

:r:t:,i;

,even1ng. 'QVe"r'
his
50th

last

Y.

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

oc i 281930

-~~~
'

l

'':"'."""'.~j-*;;

.t.::a

.w

1
dress, Self Criminating
! . . munity..Baths," is. to be E ~ c e
delhr.ered
;: I ·~y D~an Gleason L Archer of the •Suffolk

1 .!..,&~ot:~1 (~ver the National B r ~ t ing Co~pan~ c_hain tonight at 7.15. Dean
. Archer is g1v1ng a seri~s of talks on
: '"Laws that Safeguard Society "
Tbe
broadcasts comes through WEAF .and

j

-W.JAR.

1

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

OCT 2s 1930
wo~*rtna~

easily.i

"-"

...

-------------.._

Old Dean Heard by Students.

Dean
Gle,ason L AT£1Jet,
whose
talks on Laws That Safeguard Society,
are heard each Tuesday riight on an
NBC network, had tfie unusual experience, a short tune ago., ot: receiving
a radiogram from tbe captain of a
steamship out on the Atlantic who
ha~ picked up the broad~ast quite by
accident The sea. captain -had been a
student under Dean Archer ~
Law school 1 15 years before His mes-

DEAN GLEASON L. ARCHER of the Suffolk law school, who brings,
something novel to the radio. His .talks, educational as well as ent~rtain~
ing, are heard by an audience estimated well up in the millions-the largest
audience of any New England radio speaker. Because of the popularity
which his weekly law talks over WBZ gained, he was invited to be the
guest speaker of the National Broadcasting Company over its nation-wide
network. He now speaks each
night at 7 >15 from WEAF as the
• key station on "Laws That Safegua
Society." The thousands of letters:
coming in from all over the count
testify to the popularity of his talk!'.

sage was: "Received great kick listen ...

ing to my old dean out here on the /

Atlantic·."

/

1(50
~-rL~,,<pµ_~

~+..-..\t:..(

· ~ w · · ·__
...

OFF/~MP SCHOOL

The

·

-,
LOYES' DIN NER/1
.

ScllooJ Office en,pJoyes

night at~~~ t.heir anm.io:1 Su_tr~Ik La-w i
persons afl'erker House. du.nner last/·
a1!as~~e~n~ti<,~det~ D.A.
from J:.Q:e • rcher of a ea.n ~nd Mrs
Dean A. e PloY,es.
chest ot sllver ! '
Piece to
a ·t
/'
/ CatherVJe
n P~J t of a gold
• secr~~~~t. Miss '
, dean.,-wali in char
:V to the f
/ Aouhey Wat'. 1 ge of arr
a .freshmafl at a,peja~~Y o~n~ements. /
anuneda
w-Je law
aiestine
land. Hen,
1!- talk ~~hoo_1, a Mo:/
I Atr<?uble in Paie~ti discussed
native I
raps,
ne betwe
e "recent I
en Jew-s and/
- - - - : : : : - : -- ~ - - I
,

.,,._
-I

I:g

Blue . Moon barber shop on

Ih

t.nrn:::<1ri~l

lf!'ve_

I

'1

.. ;~t·reet is following the 1e,ad of
,.·.

~e~ti~: t!::·

I

onds who recently trans- I
from Ohio Wesleyan Univerthe Suffolk Law School of
~ is spend @ the •biiristmas
n With his pafents, Clerk' ·of i
and Mrs Robert W. 'Simonds, ·
el! -street.,.;.

P•Qt~.hH<:!,hn,Qol11h:r ;;-,

J1s

~oston )t,iws-(tllp ~unou
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS.

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

axcer entistrn~ - - ~
The _cooperation of all residents, m~ 1._
ehaX?ts. and _organizations, during the ,
, comm holida season ·, is asked by
1

1

~wners ·a.r~ requested to take ·special· '

!

mo~ingj

·

"'f

I precautio~ during this season by :re•
fire hazards,

Files Protest · Against

j

FOXBORO

Nominee for Roxbury Bench
I __

Mr an_d Mrs Benjamin F. Brown of

. South st announce the engagement of
: the.i; daughter, Loa. Be11 Brown, to
WallS.ce L. Giles- of North 'Main st,
:Mansfield. Miss Brown was graduated
from the Fo~b.oro High School, class
of '25, and is now employed in the
offic6 of the Foxboro Company. Mr"

Represe11t:itive Jo]m P. Connolly

~!{:s :i~ ~~~~edc~:mofth~27~~~d

of Roxbury yesterday filed formal
prptest With the Governor's Coµ,ndi

T'att:1:n~~y:ie ~n~:sfi~~e\~~

agai1m Gov~rnor All.en's re~ent ap,
pomtment of Franli:lai,d W. L. Miles,
~ox bury attorney' to be a sp~cial ju,!j~
t1£e 9_£ tlie R<>xblli; Pistrict Court,
chargrng that Miles 1s not qm!lified by
lei.a) or §o~i;il tninini,, or jµ<Jida!
te:mperament, for the pest.

O'\flled by hie father. No date ha$' been

!se

f:~t~;r~~di:gChristmas tree and
. co cert for the children
the Sun~
: da school of the Union cha el in

rr

of

Sout

.

" ,

.

N:ew officers of the M-i.zpah Class of
girls of the Baptist Su.nday School

!

i

[I

are, MiSs Hazel F. Brown, president; ;
1
~Miss .Loa Bell Browl!, s_el?f~:?tr_v: JVrii::~
.·.·

~;:,.··

A ~CARPET-IU.<i<ifiR~

··-·····

I

Miles· ·Wl;l,S app.9jtJ~ aft~r W €1.Jter t,

\

Ministers . Vhte to H8it~
Meeting Called

I

~-

DEC 28 1930

'1

~0

THE BO~TON SUNDJ\.Y G

J~

LL THESE NINE STATE -OFFICIALS BE :" \

/

Every Acµo ~--- epubhcan Members Made Life 1v11serable For Democratic
·"
•,
'
'
Governor Russell-Body Usually /Looked on as Fifth Wheel 'On
Coach, But Will Be in· Spotlight For Next Two Years .

~ The ~~:~~::d~~Co::~1~.~~~~:., !~~ ~~~,G~:~:
1.


I
f

~=======i======:!:!!::::::========-======ii===~.·
~~b.,,L
1 '

--

..::...:.111_ 11•

1

~'ha Lieut,Gc,~ is

~SQ'

a

1.

~oston )?~ws-<Cltp ~unau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

RECORD, C~ELSEA, MASS.

NEWS, MANSFIELD, MASS.

Dfitc I

ILOA BROWN, FOXBORO,

TO WED WALLACE GILES

I~

Mr. and Mrs Benjamin F Brown of
South street, Foxboro, announce th/;
engagement of their daughter, Miss
Loa Bell Brown, to Wallace ,L. Giles, I
young_est son of Mr and Mrs. George
Giles of 172 North Main street.
Miss Brown, a Foxboro High school
graduate in 1925, is a member of the
' Eastern star. Mr. Giles graduated
from Mansfield High School in ·1927
, atte1;ded SuJiil,11;. 1 - School, Boston:
and is a member of the First ~aptist
Church !\" o date has been set for the
1 wedding.

w_.

'!

"

NO\f 13 \930

J

\F~J

I

mo

NOV 7

9 f9Jr

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

Representative. - e11:::c"

Shaughness

BRENNAN TO i>
:J. SPEAK HERE
1

:0

.

.

\

·''

Invited to the Y.M.H.A.
Congress Sunday

Aft~rnoori.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
SEEN FOR SOUTH AMERICA
Carlos F. Weiman, professor of
Spanish at Harvard University, addressed the Suffolk Law School Alumni

Associatiori.

la'SV~ight.. on

South

America.

Prof Weiman told of the results to
be expected from the recent revolutions in South American countries He

said th~ opportunities

for

business 1

that South America offers are bound&
less.
The speaker was jntroduced by

~re;:;fza~~nSp~!:J• A~~~!~d~~\ho: S;~~ ._

folk Law School also spoke, .as did : ,
James H, Brennan of South Bosto~ ~ .,·

member ,_of the Govern?r's Counc_U.

_Q_

"'F'

I,

~oston ~ctws-<Cltp ~ur,'

~oston )?ews-<Cltp ~ur~au

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS,

PUBLIC SPIRIT, AYER, MASS.
TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

'/930
are interested
.
.
.
s
the~rof-to comes to the Brockt
Satu;derot. ur days only, starting
fill

• .-•'ti

,..
.
I
ENGAGEMENTS
' OF 2 DAUGHTERS
ARE ANNOUNCED
NORTH EASTON
and Mrs Ed.win
' Dec. 26 -Mr
nolds st~eet anno!~~luft,d of Rey- r
ment of their daughter 1..rlengage:rnest Carlson son . ~! Jl.;ne, t~ :
rs Nils Carl;on of N r an .'
Miss Arlene Haglund i
orwo?d· I
\ know ·
.
s very well ,
\ 1-Qlive~ I~ town, is .a graduate of the !
B .·
mes High school th /
/· fldg~water Normal school ' d .e
!~ SGhool .teacher in Holbrookan MIS
arlson Is a graduate of the· N r. ,.,
w High o dnd Suffolk. Lor- ·,
~ schoo
school O

~ aw
. nd Mrs Edwin H
also announce the
aglund
their daughter Gath~ngagement of.
: Everett Hall 'of BrJck~~lunct,. to I
Harund is. a graduate of the ~\~~
fre s~:sofHM1gh school. Mr. Hall is ·'
r and Mrs Albiri H 1 ·
former resiqents of this t . . . a. •J,
IS very well known in
and
where he is a member f ampeHo,
!odges
o several

I

3wn.

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''f
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f:'.

1

JAMES H BRENNAN
The second sessidn of the Y. M:
and Y. W. H. A. Congress will be held
Sunday afternoon at 2, in tbe -build·
ing ·on Cresqent ave
The chairman of the 00 .ess.
Jeremiah Kamens, has obt
Councillor.elect · James H. Brennan
bf the fourth district whlcli 'includes
Chelsea, to be tlie · speaker at th~
•Congress eounclllor-ele_ct Brennan
:will speak on· "The Work of tlle

iHouse and Senate."·

, Hon. J. H Brennan served two
i terms in the senate and three terms
•: in the House of Representatives, !_?::a
Ing the youngest member· at ot=t
time. He was a member of the Con,st!tutional ·Committee · and chairman
,of the Suffolk appropriation board. i
He is also a professor of Oonstitu- L•
tionaj law at Sulh11 II aw ~ l .
. I
It will be of interest tor .everyone I
i to attend this congress due to _the I
speaker's knowledge of legiS!at!ve i
work. A speaker will be elected a_t !
,this session and everyone J.s lnV1ted I
:~end.
,
.
, __ \
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---~}~{!~~~:i{it~:·~tlr<tau · .

:'.d:l~~~r~~u
STREET

BosToN'

8 BOSWORTH STREE'r

MASS.

BOSTON

lmoRNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~Ji .

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· 1··.s;o~ton.~i~;s:'1:lf¥i~~i!au

f

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

MASS.

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

RECORD, CHELSEA, !IIASS.

Jf\

{;·...,...

-~·~=·

__ __ - ------.1.u.ur..----sr.-Mollday night.j
with<J/Ut the con.sell/t of the owner.:
~he car was recov:!Arllngton: :

I
Aldermen Organize
Coming Year

,
I

Mayor

,.

Murphy Reviews Main
Achievements of City

Somerville Aldermen, elected a ye:ar
, ago for a two-year tenn, last night

: o~ga,nized for 1931 by electin!';' James

/

~· Stynes, Democrat, of Ward 2, presl:<Ient and Leo B. Havican, Democrat,

1
1

{!._f Ward 4, vice president.
The boal'd unanimously reelected
;city Treas Joseph L. Murphy and City
i

r

·===========================:::===

.~.~~~Hffo!;!1!0.:~.~

~,

Glady1j 13irns Engaged
To Wtfd~rominent
Newspaper Man
Of Boston

.JAMES L. W. REYNOLDS
James :t..- w. Reynol<lS, .a former'
Ghelsea resident, died yesterday at
12:30 p.m .• following a short illness.
Stricken · ·sunday af.ternoon with
acute appendicitis, he was treated
by his family doctor until Christmas
eve, when he was removed to the
Cambridge hospital. where an operation was perform~ He rallied, r
but had a relapse Friday noon andr
passed away.
Mr. Reynolds was born in this city
and was a graduate of the Shurtleff
school in the class of . 1907. Scion.
after leaving school he entered the·
employ of the Eastern Storage co. '
as an office boy and steadily grew
up in the warehousing business.
'
At the time of his death he was
: a direotor and clerk of the corpora. tlon, having. been 23 years in its .
i employ last July. His .sterling quali-. 1
· •ties, hiS pleasing disposition. ~d his
Christian attitude made for him 1
countless friends who mourn his loos. I
He was ever ready and willing to aid f
others and was extremely modest
about doing these kind acts.
He is survived by his mother.
Mrs Margaret Cecelia Reynolds, and.
two sisters, Mrs. Patrick Doyle. or:
Cambridge and ,Mrs. Patrick Lan~.
ders of Watertown.
:
He was a graduate of Bentley/
School of Accounting and Finance ·1
and for the past three years had,
been attending Suffolk Law School,!

Outstanding among the engagements of the North, Shore announced during the Yuletide .season was that
of
Miss
Gladys
Burns,
attractive
daughter
ot.
Mrs. Catherine J, Burns, - 80 Wal·
nut street, to Joseph W. Blake,
Prominent Boston ne,ws,paperman•
Miss Burns, & gi-aduate of .EngJJ~h High ecbool. class
1925, is
aftHiatE:,d -i·n t-h-e PubU-c Bealth DeJJ*-rtme~t at the State House, BostO~, and 1s actively associated in
Social circles of Greater Lynn.
~r Blake, son of William E.
Bla~e.
~6
Washington street.
Charlestown, is
a
graduate
o,f
C~~rl~stown High school -and at.
t~nded Suffolk Law school, Bos-

ton~

._,,_..:-

._,..

~ r the ·past eight Years he has
!been af'tiliated with the
Boston
GlQbe newspaper, as night police
reporter and is '"~ell k-nown jn dub
circles o! Charlestown, where he
h'olds mem;J)ersh1p in the Bunker
~i.11 KniJ,;"hts of Columbus, Council Bachellor and Indians club of

that city.
No definite date has been an-

noun1eed for the wedding

,,.;...;;...;;..;.~.~ """•~.•n~•~'"*"""'~
....

::Soston )tews-~ll.p ~ureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

He was a- member of Council 74 ,

II
.IO

~------ _

M.arneY

........................

• Of Mourning

~6.,._"':'" ....._.- .... -

<3:e:rtrude. F(Hey pianisf and stu...
(i@4L .or Xihllli
WUrjpy. the
~v~ning ho~tesse~~
/ 1'

f '"I~..H~m;~..··1f.

for

JAMES F. STYNES
Elected Pre~ident of Somerville Board of
j
·,
'
Aldermen

-~i-nnro.~.n

K. of C , of Cambridge.
'
Funeral services will be held from,
St. Patrick's church, near Water- I

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

9.:

town sq , Monday morning at
Burial will be. in the family lot atJ•.
Holy Cross cemetery .

1'

SS'a Gtf:J. .M.Off6' 01, lU0J.OYJnS

a-:reui1xo.1..Id13 JO .2UJA"eS -a
~ -P
M. '.J.'l?q.r,
•aJ:n2g: li?t.Il .:rapun
~
:J.Uao.t~d t .TO f! pU'8 '000f!$ .lilAO 1

tS

-- :Sostcn )t~ws-~ll.p

-asoq+ Jo 1=:a1.reres ~tJ.l ui +uao

ArqJSS'Od aat.{'.J. 1.A.t'BfBS s,.10.A:-en
iuaa.rad ot 10 1,na 1l paaw
; ife11s I li..t'"essaoau s1 +n~ '& .JI,,
,;,,
·.toAl?]'i Bt{l pres u"U.tdV

:s·ur~-

ties on~ risks in indorsing notes

BOSTON

~~~t~u! PJ~~~~J;f!.1
'!s~a~~:J
~~a: puno1 aq_ prno'{s
1

:n -!~;.,n

ooo•gt

.. pnq +nasa.td aql PJ1:?S AatttsV .toA'BN

due.

MASS.

I

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

I

.

I
A ea
sex and Centre sts. was reported to the
Street dept by the police at 4:45 am.
Patrolman ·Jordan_recovered a. fl(\1<.
st

I

3'.t.n:q:;) · mµ.!iIJd 10 Aa1a.,.tf) -~ ensa"I

.

'

·1

The first of a. series ~f weekly
forums, to extend for a. period of 10
consecutive .Mondays, will take place
Jan 12 ln the Rouse Lib,rary or the
West )nnd House., The first speaker
w~ll be Dean Gleason L. Archer of
Suffolk Law SSC.hoot ·a!;ld his. subject
will l!
f2 7 guarding' Youth from
Temptation .."
Joseph Don Gusenoff I
ehairman of-the forum co'Inmittee wni I
preside. - A musical program win' also,
be ct;trried out under the direct.ion of ;
Henry Bernard.
!
This is the first time in the his.tory 1
of the House that a series of lectures : _
will be held as ra.rt. of the Winter's

_progral!l~

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A

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• •

cqm-l'

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[

· ~e. members of the forum
: .mitte!& are Joseph Don Gusenoff, ch~irm~n;,·¥ac Love, 1..reon K~wal~ Al Feid..
man, .Edwa:rd Bille,;,
Gpldbe~

. 'Jllq, :\#A1>.td .., paA1.onoJ 'A:.ua.r. •v
ttJU1p11 'eo-m:o Jo 'tf'J.VO
.·.. _l,WUnoO, tlOUUlll?O .

be sued ·tor the balance

WEST END HOUSE WEEKLY
FORUMS BEGIN MONDAY

_. .
·ooo~us +n-a si -qo1tt.A.\.
4"s.!t~M.:q2rq wo.tJ .!Jup:,q ;sa2.t'BI aql
"slT._l'&Wµ~dap ~noJ.t1?A wo.zJ s;unotll1?
.ll . .2:e1 saOU"Sl~Ul '-~tUOS UJ. PU'B ·ooo'ott
.. a·~
'"000£i 10 sq.nzi. .6'.'.q ep~tu sr .::fuJA'BS eq.r,,_
.
~.&no a:q} Jo
?,9s-tt;,dx~ llttt:t;iun;,: aql, UJ A-ep. "8' OOo!t' ;;r.o
µ:on::>npa.t v re.xn.'Bn'Bul srq u1 n passa.td .
"".'" ..Aat,t.tSV. .10A1?N S'8 .10 'O.S6l }o se.1n+ J
"'JPQ:adxe aq1, Uto.I:J'. OO(J496f!t Jo uona~p
~a..t ··11· .;r.01- su'Bo- ;r ·s~s-ee.1.>ep A.t'B{'~s
-,,;LOj U""e-0
lOU tU..M
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1l~l(1?A, ttf 000
JO uono-npa..t 'B 'll+t""'
·~~A ~~d aq1,; JO l,1i'ttl Sl? aw:es •og·stt
10 a+"e.t. X'Bl 'B uo paUU'Bid Sll.M. 1a.a'

If

he left no 1.state from which to col-

8 BOSWORTH STREET

alll

~f:ci~~o8:i~~n, Irvi~g

~~·~~""3" '."tuii I

Max

an~

~odensk~,

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· · qong . U,,,, futur& speak
~)lomas C. ti/Brien, Ca.rl M.
I;>r., Char. le.s, 'SJ'.' Wll!nsl<y, "A
..
Bi-h:~.~·'· Gas~r Baeon, Prof R

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t'the Counci"o-.r

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ld yet ,there's a chance the '"'
., •. ~ii.ell niay play the major /

G- --- ~E-1!\~;\t" ;,,._,, •."- ·.;~Ruv'ec -on·rt~fi~~11:i:f~~~i~rJv- i.f
ov ..:,-· • .a:1,,101L
.,;n1d.Jl
&.I.kV&&&

n:tJ!.-1,. -·

.

Pol,n~ee concerning whom there Is st
doubt, or to bring the members aro,
to his way of thinking on some adm
istration policy that must be appro,
by the 9ouno!l.
Educated in the publ!c
Gen Butler's Battles

;

1

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,

- .mJJtin
olitical history of
Lieut Gov Youngman
r years ago.
.g p
Brookline Republican :a n in Penn schools. Treasurer a! Lynn Gas &
State during the next two years. ' sylvania in• 1872. Gradu~te 0~f Ha.rva~ ! Electric Light Company. Member of

I

Gen Butler•s experience with l:.

I
1
0
Can play the role of Mon~ey t1!d 1:i"'t~~e La: School. Oars~~ ~::m~~~s~~u{i;_~ ~ 0 ~~!~e~!': ~e
I ~~~;~bl:a;gh~o~t~afE~~ ~a:1s ~~;
1n~h jn, Governor Ely's adm1n- J urei' Lieutenants G!~~°:-Iio:tate T:a:" .§ District sin-ce 1927.
the appointment of Edward G Walkei
ltjOn if it wishes.
a. colored lawyer and a Democra,
0
Tables Turned Thls Year
Edmund Cote
Joseph O.. Xnl)x
j~:iek:
'
·
C
il
Fall--'R.~er: Republican Born in can
Medford,
Republican.
.Born
fn jected becaus£> or his politics, BuMe?
rtl.en the Gove~no~ a1;1-d
ounc
ada 67 ye~s ago. ~i~no manufae: Charlestown 52 ;1ears ago. Graduated I dainied, aml he submitted the name
of the same party, b"obody pays turer. Member of Board of Aldermen. froin Mechanics Att High School. of another cclored lawyer, Ruffin, by
attention to the Council. It is
-~:fsi~ffresa;::~~m~~~~erfo~r t~~ f~~ii:r!!ci.ublican, who was promptr'llup ot glorified "yes men."
Chester I. Campbell
terms. Member of the Council from
Gov Russell's three terms were
- t this year the Governor is a
Quincy .Republican. Born kt-Provi• the 6th District.
marked by sharp .ria,sheS with the
u

, dence· 61 j,ears ago. Manager of 1ndus•
Republican Council ~er appointments
a.ocrat and seven of the eight , trial exp()#tions. Mayor of Quincy in ~
Walter E Schuster
and removals of State officials His
lUCilors are Republicans. It can\ 1915 .A member of the Council from
·
most notable contest with them was
, , u ,
,,
the 2d Dlstrlct s1nce 1927
Republican, Douglas. Born Jn Adams. over his attempted removal of Pol1ce
~ group of big no men.
Mass, 55 years ago. Educated in the Commissioner Osborne of Boston,
The. Governor has to have the
public schools. Woolen manufacturer. whom he chal'ged with ustng his of..
ent of the council f():r prae-Esther M. Andrews
Town treasure?' of Douglas for six fice as an ~djun<~t to the Republican
ms
Brookline, Republican. Born in Man~ years chairman of the Selectmen for ;;tate machine. It was a long drawn
cally every executive action he
h t
E
d
d 12 yeru'B. ln the House of Representa- out dispute. The Council stood by Qs..
He must have the consent
c es er, ng, 68 years ago. E ucate tives in 1925 and 1926. Member of the borne, but a.t the expir~tlon of his
Coullen
~~rR~1c1f:: ~l~~~um
Me;:;~t. B!::: Council from the 7th District since term, they confirmed Robert Cla:tk,
.
.
"ember of the eouncil fr-0m tbe 3d 1929.
'I Ruasell's. appointee, an ofinoft'enst~e
To. make every appoIntmen t ;
.ix.1.
__
Detnocrat. Sevel'al other
Gov Ru.aDistrict since l927.
,
sell's appointments met with vigorous
' To remove anyone from office;
To grant ,pardons;
James H. Brennan
George D. Cha.m.berlain
oppoiition, and somt: of them were
1
To sign all contracts for con•
Springfield, Republican. Born fn I reJec ed by t~e Cguncil.
Boston, Democl'at. Born in Charles· Troy, NY, 72 years ago. Edu~ated in, The Councils tl"'eatment of the young
truCting State highways, bridges,
town 42 years ago. Educated in the the Springfield Collegiate Institute Ac-,· and popular Dem?cratic Gove~or
llstltutions, etc;
pMuebmlibcesrchooof~.s.nT~osuusffeol11 ta11.s.cehn~~l~ couritant Member of the Comm.on made a good campaign issue for him.
'TO authorize any expenditure of
u
,.....
courtcil fo.r two years and of the Board and Russell u.sed Jt effectively .on. the
.
tives in 1911 and 1913 Lawyer. Rep- of Aldermen for three years. In the stump. ?,"he leader of the opp.ositton
HW:!te mo!!--~Y.
-.t
resents the Council in the 4th District, House of Representatives from !913 to was David :Eiall Rice of Brook.:.ine, an
'{any other activities of the Gov1916; in the Senate from 1917 to 1928. uncompronnsing Republican. One of
.Jr have to be approved by this
Eugene B. Fraser
Member of the Cou22cU from the 8th the Rep~blic_an papers who, took the
0
cfont body Which Was never deLynn, Republican. Born in Lynn 61 DiStrict since 1929.
, ; :~;r~ .;J!e a~n11~ : ~1
.~aed

I '
I

tth

-- ·

fo! :::1:;:r~o~~~

t:::~:

l
I

;1';;..:

&oil

3;:;~~~!

;ned tOr. ~u.r ippdern American

I

i~v

R~:s:iis f~~~~:in~!~!11!i:~fi;
l!tfoal scheme-but was planned !shed_ hl:J;!!, enough of them voting for was put back again in the second tween the council and himself sayin~
meet an entirely different situa- I Isaac B.- Allen, a well-known colored a,nd bas been retained ever since. that the Cquncll was "for advising- th,
R
bl'
J't"" ·
t d f t S I It I
t f
p I
C
II i
Governor, not for tieing liis hands not
• 238 years ago, when the "'Gov- epu ican po i i'C1an o e ea
u s a sor o a r vy ounc
n a for dictating appointments; nor' fo1
·,,-was a feared and dreaded livan. For the first time in many Republican form of Government, exercising
coordinate
and
equal
s@t over by the British King years the Council was solidly Repub- transacting most of Its business be- powers" with hlln.
Masssachllsetts colonists be-J. lican. "Ike" Allen was the first of hind closed doors. Only two other
Gov Russell's Views
~
his race to be elected to ,such a higl:ic States have retained the Council, -"I 8.SSel't," said Gov Russell, "that
t S
rted Allen
office in Massachusetts. Mr Sullivan Maine and New Hampshire. The ~~:t!"!!i::::·~~~;,Yrn~'::
.nocra
uppo
aecepted the situation gracefully and former, having been a part of Massa- sisted the attempts of the Republican
,as been Intimated by high , arm In arm escorted his successor chusetts until its separation in 1820 candiclate for'Governor and the Repub11follcan a11thorlty that there will to the hall of the Representatives as clung to the idea
' !lean Executive. Council to usurp this
0
10 di_spOsitlon on -the part of the.-~is the custom, to hear the Governor
Advice lt.arely Asked
}
e:t?or's Council to hamper the \ deliver his inaugural address and to
In :Massachusetts, the council has nominations, adtnitted by them to be
dlli~tration
Gov _Ely by refus ... , take the ?ath of office. Alie~ was de- 1 ~~';~q1:i~!t!£e~tfi~f?sJ:at1::S:e: ;~: ~~~dqii~ffi~~~~!t~ej~~~rs b~~e,i!
~9: ~onfirm hzs appointees on poll- feated tlre following year by Mr
spectable burying ground for those un- (. dictation. 1 I believe that the Constitl grounds. Republican Chief Ex- j livan
'
able to make the higher political grade. i tution make$ one and not 10 Gover.
1es
not have to worry on this
· 'Dates Baek to 1692
~~
c~Je! ;~i~~ ~~~s.co~~~n~n7o ~';~r:U:~t!~ fodv~~~
~, a.s the Council is always over,
i in these days, of $1000.
vise in par<lon cases to audit accounts,
ningly of the1r party and almost
The Executive Council, the legal
The councilors . .a:re charged with to act ~ suprerue returning board in
..
,
·
.
n
f th Go
, C
il h
the duty of y1s:1.tmg the prisons, 1 the election of State officers." He de•
riably r~bber stamp the appomt- ame O
e
vernor 8 ounc ' as :t,.ospitals and other institutions of tho 1 clared that he believed in the confirm•
ts"'of their titular leader. During been a part of th.e frame of the Gov--! State, with keeping a sharp watch on 1 ing power, "Jf not abused and made a
a.st two years , the Council has ernment of Massachusetts from early.;!with treasur~ ofthe vote east at elec.. !on the Executive'sand 9oesn't infl'tnge I
th.e
. the Commonwealth, power to dfot~te
p
.
. .
tabulatmg
responsibility."
n µ.~animous in its su.r,port of the ; Colonial _times datln~ back to 1692 : tions. They meet once a week and i one of the few times. tilat the Ooun- 1
;i-:er;ior ,
\ and yet many know llttle about it or j 1Un-ch at the expense of the taxpayers.' cil arrayed itself against a Re'publican I

.
d t·
d
d d th ! There is no question but that the I Governor was when Roger Walcott 1
;f~e sole Democratic member, i 1ts u ies an . are remI n e
at councilor~
perform
certain
pub- i sought to dismiss Gen A. P. Martin, I'
iaµ.tes H. Powers of South Boston, : such a body exists only when it dis- J 1~c service and can be of as- : chair.man· of the Boston Police Com..
i~~ been an enthusiastic supporter agrees with the Governor. Originally : ~is;fnc; t~e thp~b~iv;~:es~n
[f1;; mission. the testimony before his acThe G~vernor based
O
···· .
.
.
,.
~
.
: u
tion on
a
,
>f, Gov Allen, pohtically and person-, it was created as a coticession by . argued that these dutie;.. could be per~ re hear!n""" by the qo.'llncil on C'harges
·
the mother Country to the colonists.! formed by other State officials a?-d niade by uci,r• Roger F. Scannell, a
1.11Y._
!thus save the States the c0:st {)f mam- -~·e.!-known political figure 3.nd manu. ips successor, ..James H. Brennan i The King o:t ngland appmnted the ; tenance of the council. 'From time to ·:'acturer of soda water, who alleged
Df Charlestown is a militant Demo- fl Governor, Lieutenant Governor and. time movements have. be~n started to that Gen Martin used bis office to
1
1 0
1
LU"at,· a°;d GoV E1y. will, it is believed, the Secretary, and alloWed the peo.. I ::~l~hfr~~ ~~~n1~·
:~cru~t
~t;!3:rani:eth!~ ~e
i~:~!e:1ifct~!
have in him an able defender and . ple to elect the Councilors or, as o_ffiee. ln the eonstIJuUonal conven-, dealers and .lJ'"~wers to take stock in
ctiai:npion In former days the sole they were termed, BOard of Assist- bons of 18~ . andt 185,th therte· was vig• the company. The commissioner's son majority of the members before the j selecti
.
orous oppos1 110n o . e con muance 01 . was the agent in some of these tran.. - lU~etfng day, He institut(fl the uopen elemer
Delll.ocratlc member of the Council ants They played an important part the council, but in both ~nstances the\ sactions. Gen Martin admitted that dOor'" palicy at the State .,~ouse. Cards him ar
I in,. watching legislation and often eonvention v':itei to thretaihn that b4~ i he had been in.discreet. · but denied were not necessary to get iu to see' sons o
froni the Boston district usually was
·n· ou· tstanding member of that party, ( prevented •the passage of laws re· loondgtheetogroo!!cht poa~ere ~t~nihe ~er i that ~ e ootrim ss onerinbl;ldsh!dutile& the "old boy." He did his fighting trivial
he_ was infiuienl-ced
;

as
y.
s n• with the Legislature and. kept both Wal.sh
a
1
but since the_ direct p;rimary that garded as inimical to the best inter- Executive.
· terests in 11col" Scannell's business sb!ga!chaensd bvuest~esd,lsbcuutssblngtrhealstedmtehse- I, cadarvelfsue
0
5
,, onor has been won by less distin- ests of the colony and ,in advising the brn 0e lattter convedntlbon BthejCoulnnc!! opp()nent,. The Council refused to con.
h. . .,.·
.
.
a o11tion1s s were 1e
Y en am ~ sent to the removal of th-e commis• Council with deference.~ · QnJy one of· sive to
his judicial aippo'"ltrnents failed to/ Inv
:gutshe·d· members. In 1896, when the \Governor, sometimes without his Hallet. 'one of the prominen11 Demo· sioner.
Democracy was torn between the sil- sollcitation or invitation.
crats of his day_, w)lo wouid have the
Foss, Douglas, M'"alsh
~~~t~astl:itfla,~
re~~!:~r ~~: ~:!ti;
-.,: 1'> ID:'en and the gold bugs, John H.
When Massschusetts broke away ~~u!;"t~~vth~r:~::rm~~ ~!we~e~~!~
Gov Foss got a~ong swimm ngly with nominee himself after & hearing by encour
•van, the Democratic member of from kingly rule and set up a Gov- gubernaU!rlal nominations to the Sen• Ms councillors. When he had some• the Council.
with C
. d t f II
~--.:..
th
t Of ·t
th C · ncil w
ate, argwng that the people would be . thing he wanted to put over in the
Gav Walsh, Foss' successor got along [ :tnents,
Jm.""'11, - dee11ne
o o ow
e ernmen
i s own,
e OU
as better 1~epresented in such matters by I council he matd:a:~ed to get his side , fairly well with his hostile Council, but I a Der.
flag and the Bryan men pup.- dropped ln the 1lrit Constitution, but 40 """atora than eight councmors,
of the case ,In privately before a i was obliged to us-. great care In the fight t,
1

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8 'iidswo~TH STREET
BOSTON
MASS.

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

NEWS, FRAJVIINGHAJVI, MASS.
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

-----___'..~-

'

8 BOSWORTH STREET

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASSo

: j

i


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J...

Dr. Staley C~aching
"feg 0' My Heart'?'

I

I

35 TO GRADUATE ~.~'\:1._~w

-

,,)
When St. Stephen's "'llralnat .
· • ' / Assn. thought of bringing Dr. Del~
;.ioi MaN 2ur'2pri.c :wsJu:e~p~wy

Prof Harry Bloomberg of ~
Lav,. School is to' speak at the Beverly ;
H e ~ . Community Centre ~uild111i; l
at Bow street tonight
His subje~;:
will be "The Old'L.aw and the )few' r:.
short statement of the changes whi':h /
caIIle abo~1 in the Law in the Ia~:. I
centurv. Prof Bloc-:nber,g is a g1actu
a'te of· Ha1·vard College of the class ot
1907
He wa'i formerly connected a::::
Professor at the University, of Califol
nia, Harvar"3 College and at present
at
Law
c
i:-;
professor of Munici1)al a:1:.d PriY~• le•
Corpotations,
~onstitutio11a]
Law,
, To~ts ond contracts. !1 is it)so, ~~~
~ ~f .the, review clepart111:!2'nt.....'.:'1_;~...!J_'lt'11~s
I · -·,.quc:sfro_n:-; ..ror e..xan.11nation~ ~.t ·,.$141

DOLAN

'

~ I . For Drmnalic Assn.

&m;a

'?rof. Bfoomberg Spe'aks
1
~'~b~ew Center'

ROBERT M

~·~

:1 SECURED'· 'FOR
e1
·
...
• COMIN11 ..:DI AY
e,i
Q {L

MASS.

'

..

..

~/ABLE DIRECTOR.

:Soston )?~ws-<Cllp ~ur~au
BOSTON

.

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.

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·

·1,iqs,apun, si.q

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ATSUfEQlKJAW/
Mid-Year Commencement,:
I
Exercis-es at School
/
Feb. 18
/'
Mid-year graduating exercises of Suf- ./
folk Law school win take place in the
school auditorium Feb 18, when LL.B

I

I/
f

degrees will be a warded to 35 Students /I
who have completed the four-year

Q1¥t~Y vri~~i~!~~a~a~efo~ts~-m~;~~~ j !

of Uewton,with Stephen A. Morrisey of 1 J
West M$1Way as salutatorian.
/
The folJpwing committees have been
appointe~t.'.PY President Dolan: Budget,
Harry E~~ner and George ~- Coleman~ J
photographs, Frederick Liss, Jacob 1
. Rosenbloom and Samuel Horwjtz; cap 1
and gown, Samuel E:van!' and William/',
~~~i~~itJ~~~gn.i~te:r~~~
O'Donnell.
,
At the commep.cement !=!Xercises there ,'
~.rill be addresses by Former Atty -Gen ,
Thomas J. Boynton, chairman of the· 1,
board of trustees and Dean Olea.son L,
~cher for the school:
·
1

1

MJ!t:l~kanl ./

~

"··

·~1

J

. ~ J.-f,/C(.J/:.
; Suffolk Law to Hold
Old Timer's Night
Old Timer·s Night,

co~~rt M. Dolan of Wakefield has I
been elected president of the graduating/1
class and Harry Eigner of Brighton, sec- ~ I
1·etary-tr~asurer. Robert B. Manning of~,)

.

The attached notice
appeared in the Transcript

8 BOSWORTH STREET

including· classes

BOSTON

from 1909 through :!917, will be held in

the lounge of the SuffoU;: Alumni club·
house, 73 Hancock stret, next Tuesday,
at T 30 for a smoke talk and get-together
Entertainment and refreshments will be ·
provided by the association
Past Presi- 1
dent George A Douglas, '09, defendant
atorney in the VVaitham car bar.n case, ,
,vili presid.e. .Pres.i.dent Thomas J Finn~-/1
gan vy·ill ske.t.cl:l. briefly the history of the
association and Hs plans for ] 931 Guests
will include;. Judge F Le:=::lie Viccaro, '13;
:Roland E Bl"O'-vn, '09 fhst member of the
Bar from ,fluifol~; Bernar .J. ~Hlion. ·10,
:Boston; Piltrick B Broderick, "]2, Fram·
ingharr.; A Lelyveld, '12, Rockland; VVil:Uam G Dolan, '12. Bost°'1; Charles S .
G'Connor, '13, South B.oston: James P !I
Heron, '12, Lowell; Hiram L Skinner,
'14, Brockton; Harry E. Burroughs, '15,
Bosto:g.; Thomas F Duffy. '16, '\Valtham;
George F Hogan, '15, Lynn; John H '
Dre,v, '15, Boston; Louis K McNally, '17;
Melrose; Julian D. Rainey, .-.'17, Boston;
Joseph A ParJ.~. '17, Boston

I

STAR, WINCHESTER, MASS.

i

I

I

1

J\oll'fom Ub:enin~ irlllln~rri.l!lt
(A Builder of Prestige)

1~;\s'~-::~.:~ r·~.~
~:

>F '~

. Mrs. El_Ja K ~ . who has been / ''
sci-10usly
·
,
.
.. ·.. i.
·1
/ proved. Ill at her home, IS much Im- '!··.·.:::±;.:):,it
John Dunn~ is plannin"' to attend ·1'
cl.asses at Suffolk Law SchoQJ begi
·- .,:;7,,,:: ..:)
I nr~~i Feb.
~
n- ' . ':}f'Jt·: ~'~·,
· f · J mmy Halev, who has been home ii::1~@§..•1
or a WPek from New Ha· t
,1-::,,1/{;;,.,_l:f. -,1
turned Wednesday.
mp on re- /' .
-- -~
. Selee_tma·n Harris S. Richardson is .•
>'
h1slome on Mt. Pleasant street
M '.. wE~r Berry. Jr.. son o( Mr. and
rs-. ·· W. Berry of Stratford
/1',om<, .f!<>m Norwich U:niy,
i•

I

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illiJ

Where Schools ar~ S~lected }
\Vhere the Transcript is _read

in the home
,

MASS.

-~'iF''·- -----

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~oston ~ecws-'1:lt,p ~urecou
8

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

NEWS, FRAMINGHAM, MASS.
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

--~--r ,
~-

MONiPY:

~TABLEDl,RECTOi{ .

~oston ~ew.s-'1:lt,p ~urct.<1u
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

:1 SECURED.\FOR

MASS.

:1

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASSo

,JJ::,_j\:
.............,.,,,,.,,,.,..,,::
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effort

"\.Ve--:,_·~

(.~ge-,'" . shE:

8..11

not

see · ;i_ : ~ ,

~

declared.
,

...

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-..,_

k

?rof. B.loo~herg Speaks
1
·
~~brew- Ceriter '
Prof Harry
Bloomberg of ~
Law Schoo~ is to' speak at the_ Bev0rlj," ;
r-re~._ Community Centre
~uildu,g !
at Bow
street tonigpt
His
subje0c.
·will be "The Old"La,v and the :-re,v'· ,1
;;hart staten1.ent of the changes ,vhi-:: h I
ca:rhe abo~1
in the Law i:1
the
la:-..__ J
centurv. Prof. Blo~:uber,g 1s a grarl u ·
a'te of· 1:-Ia,...vai;-d College of the class ot
1907
He -waS formerly
connected a~
Pro:fessor a L the University of Califo•-·-

I

ni'a, ·Harvar~ College and at
at
o
aw
c o

·

35 JO GRADUATE

,

/
1

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1

Y·{ ~ ~bert

1

class and Harry Eigner of Brighton. sec- U ,

retary-tr~asurer.

Robert B. Manning of~·/

!:' ~-\f·.!:·

Q1!f~?? v~~di~!~~ia~a~efo~A~s1_m;:;~~~ ~ ·
of Uewt~n·1with Stephen A. Morrisey of l
w;~e11~\V!ln: c6~~tff{!!nhave been f
appointei:{,-~Y President Dolan: Budget,
~~~ggrl;W!s~r a;~d<:r~~rcge i:1ss?01 e~~~~ i
J
1

5

j

.Rosenblooin and Samuel HorwJtz; cap
and gown, Samuel E:van~ and William

~~~i6~it~~~-~gn1¥,~f-ie;'r~~~ ~!r:v;;kanl

O'Donnell.
'
At the commencement exercises there I

;i!~!!s a~~r~i;~t~iJ., Fi~~~~ty()fG~e I
board of trustees and Dean Gleason L.
A,rcher 1'-or .the school.
·


~

dent George _4... Douglas, '09, defendant

.
,

:i1\~:~fi~i~~n:!·p~~~}!\i:de~~r:;:~~~
one who sees the play on Feb. 16.
From the largest
to the smallea;t

-- '

__

,.____,_ __

in the home
1

• :)·('

::/r;:;,:

<(

-~(
•,,
-(J

bate, Fair fie
tary Academy,.

tional director,
profef",sor of public

speaking, voice and Bible reading,.
Novitiate House. Te-wksburY.;
be-

sid-es being a rea. der, lecturer and
author of inteFnational note.
Among his n1.any distinguished
:: graduates and f'ormer pupils are ~
Ho. n. Alva·\~ Fuller, ex-Governor

·.

J

<\:J·
:_
,

~

~~~1s~~Yi:t~~;Bo~i!\

~~~~ ~:

, •

1 Fielding, LLB • form.er
assistant
district-attorney, Bos~on;
Madame
Mi:r:p.i
Aguglia,
~oriel-renowned
1
tragedienne;
Ernest
Sherburn.
Christian Science Monitor; Alexis'
B. Luce,
Belasco ~tar;
Albert
Spaulding, great American violiri.ist; Mme. Schuruan-Heinck;
Professor Felix Forte, A. M.,. LL. M.,

I

Boston Universi:ty; Hon. William
H.- McDonnell, jUdge of Municipal
Suffolk
county,
Boston;'

j court,

l in the "I'll Say She Is', company;
~:{e'ii~ 1iJ.~~d;e~r~!1"!tu~~~r~:~!t

0

rs

~, \~',...:~

< ,..r.;;:;i?,..-.,. ~

i _c..uf:J

A., Cambridge;

l
~=:~~r

t nd

Frank Farrara, stage manager and
director; Jane Gormley, teacher ot
English and spoken
word. Dor-

\

e.

gin-

1
tea~i!1: ~P~~he°: ~ o r ~ . e r t ~

/ bury High school; Theresa A. Da·
1 oey,.,..
superintendent sp~ech depart] ment in the PU~lic schools of,Bos.:.
J ton; Philip_~aplan, business man·

flte: a~~ f i ; i ~

fi~~:~er~~~-o~:

ome

I re-

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ics.

.

~s

·~en"

j;~~

president of board of trust~es,. Oliv·
et Univerri,1ty,. Chfca,go.
One of Dr. Staley's most recent
large
productions
was
William
Butl~r Yeat·s :modernized English 4
yers1on of the ancient Greek trag- ..
edy, Oedipus Rex,. which was presented for the fi],""st time in America. ~
Before an audience, W-hich filled ev- 4
ery seat_ in Symphony hall, Bpston,
and flowed over into the aisleE"",- an
able cast presented what ie said to
be .the greatest of Greek tragedies,
wr1.tten by Sopho~les, in a finished
manner, that
won generous
and
prolonged applause from the aud'ience, and great .Praise from. the Crit-

,...

7 ; ___

t:::r},:

; I backgroun,d :~;J;iat.-..fi..e can. For nlne
years he ."":"a~;.:~ t-)'.i:r.O~f"i.3~;of voice
trainin_~;,,;,:Piii:fii<f :.,sp·~aking, and Bib~e reac;I.Jllg, at :~t. John~s, Seminary,
~ston;-rsenic oratory at s
I,.
Boston; coa
~s s"Ocie-·
ty, BroWn

~~~t:;~;J~~~a!I~r1~y :8~:: ~:1~h;~; I

Where Schools are Selected }
~here the Transcri~t
!'::ad

~

;I

j

..

1- '.~-.~fJ

0
'.:'\ r ~;r-~:~r~st:~:: :~~g::d~!;:J:Jif!
i { inculcate a re~ection of personality to the high.· e.st·.. d. egree of exceli Ience in each m'ember of the cast.
!
Few, in Dr...' ;.,.si:;\ley's particular
) profession, ar.&-:-=.~~. -to offe1~ :t-h

}.rloJ51t!Olll ~tl'.ttilllll~ ~ir,mn:$0:ip'l

-----·--

,:.

-.f'

1

George F
Hogan, '15, Lynn; John H '
Drew, '15, Boston; Louis K
McNally, '17;
Melrose; Julian D. Rainey, -'17, Boston;
Joseph A Parl--:, '17, Boston

(A Builder of Prestige)

1

builds

{

the

atorney in the VValtham car bar.n case,
v.-ill preside. Presi.dent. Thomas J. Finn~gan will sketc~ briefly the history of the
association and its plans for J.931 Guests
will includ:e';. Judge F
Leslie Vlccaro, '13;
:B.oland"E )3i-:6Wn, '09. first n1ember of the
:Sar :from '43u'ffolk; Bernar J. Killion, ·10,
:Boston; Phtric-1'. S Broderic_k, ·12, FramJngharr.; A · LeJyveld, '12, Rockland; v'--il·ljam G
Dolan, '12, Bosto'h; Charles S.
K:,·connor, '13, Sout.h Boston: James P.
Heron, '12, Lowell; :fIJram. L
Skinner,

stars

Personality.
is not content
with
tea. ching :fin~-E$PUn t.heori~s but. sees
the wisdom of
developing talent

Law to Hold
Old Timer's Night

b.y

the

This ~,eemed to express the



,

Old Tin:1er'~ :=--;igl1t., including classes
from 1909 through 1917, -will be held in

l

beneath

1!!ii! !~~ ~i

~:!~nil~fsl!i'eit~u~o:Cte~:rre~o!:=
ing productio:n.
Dr. Staley,
a man of magnetic

l

. ~ .'--{, .... / .. "7 ;J'. /-~

!

builds

l9w.u

1 ·';\:,·':~:

lB

I ~tn~~~~~a\~~~l~t"l~;~~ t~fr:s~~~~~-: ~~~fre ·,
provided
the association. Past Presi-

i:

~Yo~e~;:bte~e;:e~i:~=~~

v-· . ){,.'.

present

lounge of the Suffolk. Alumni clubhouse, 73 Hal1.cock stret, next Tuesdny,
0

I: '

-when
St. Steph~n;S .-~J::>Fa"i:O~t . : ,/.
.
Assn. thbught of -brin~ug· Dr. 'DeJ__.,
bert Moyer · Staley to Framingham -4...f:to coach their :f:irst play,
~·Peg o~

t~\\~

The attached notice
appeared in the Transcript
i Suffolk

I
l
I

.~ · 1

A1SUFF~!HAW/ ~~ . ~
Mid-year gr~dUati.·ng. exercises of Suf- .1
folk Law school win take place in the 1
school auditorium Feb. 18, when LL.B. J
: 1 degrees will be awarded to 35 Students/ ,
-1 who
have completed the f"our-year
0
l\!L Dolan o! Wakefield has \,
been elected president of the graduating r/ '

I

:I 'fo70~:;!ti~~:~1:,.
. - . ".

t ·.-: ;
; . :;-.. -:

~(<itk:It~~~~01'Z~~,:T? ~~,~

Mid-Year Commencementli ·.
Exercis:-es at School
[
Feb.IS
/.

••.,

j
,~,1'

:'.¥-.··.~\ .. ~

professor of
M-UniciPal .i.r:.d
Fri Ye> tc::'
Corporations.
Constit.utio11al
La\'r,
! -- -~ Torts :::ind contracts: IT is :tJso. ~q_ ~· ~ of ~the review (lepartm~nt u,~~?Ltn~s \
'
i l ' ~ o n : - . (or (?'.X~m111.ations ·a,t )~:~1:.1

ROBERT M. DOLAN

.

Dr. Staley CoaJhing

- :
&

COMIN·t{.PLAY



~

I

8

/

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

}

TIMES, HARTFORD, CONN.

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

\

FEB 5

<:Photo by A. P.". Eoaton Traveler)

MISS MARJ:ON H. McCLENCH

I

CITES'IUSINESS
WOMAN'S NEED~

L

:::5o.ston Yl~w.s-(tltp :::5u.-~au
8

-

~oston Yl~ws-\!'.llp ~u.-~au
8

"f

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

HOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, JlllASS.

Marion M~cch~ B.P. w REPUBLICAN •. S. PRINGFIELD, MASS.
Head, .
es
0 1'931 __~
I eal
,

iJ,

.

BOSWORTH STREET

, :· .)

FEB s.._ i931

NEW YORK, Feb. 2-Mlss Marie
McClench, president. of the d NProatl~n:
Federation of Busmes.s an
e,
sional Wom,en's Clubs, has given hi
idea of the characteri.st!cs of the !de,
business woman. This is her con~e1

(~ ti'!~irst, good grooming, a pleasa;
c1a smile, an ap_~!_?~'2E..a}~t:

m~R~PT".
. .~ompleting three years ·and ·Nicccill§ has
~gr~:J:k~g wr~~o~1~~1I1o!~!~~~ t
:
Str. CJ<Iand, · whose

term Ls comp;let!ng

, serv:ed two terms ·or six· yl;?ars~ Tl)ey are
O:PPose~ by ME;ssrs. ~~rchard, ~~rra,ge

t ; ;~::-~w~~~:it~!nd~~~J;g1~~!f01~1bt~!

Old 'l"'hner·s Night. including classes
fr,;:nn 1909 through 1917, ·· ,vnI · be helJ} in ,
the· lounge of tl:i'Ef Su_ffolk Alumni clubhOuse. 73 Hancpck ~~reet, next Tuesday,
.7 .30 for ~: sm.oke-t'a.lk 'an~ get-together.
Entertainlllent tin'4 1.·efr~·shn1ents Will be
ifrovJde<:f. b. Y the· .-~~spci~~on
Past Pre~!-

N!ccolls heads· the sub<comm!ttee . on
. -~~!l~~Ju~~h~l'l?,<:,olhf~~;~~";l. B¢h

at

Mr; Burchard· is a ·member of ihe
playgrciund commission '·and is· a;~town
, .meeting member. pr. Burrage has been
i a ·resident of the town 'for nf!ar1y··10

r

. . '

,k~~k1tii a~d~ ~i~~is~Jd PiU~~ii~~h~
m~n is a lawyer and a 'former ·,town-

meet!ng member. He has resided in
town for ·34 years.
.
Two vacancies have occ·urred in the
J:?oard of assessors. o·ne - for the · two,
:and :one., for the three-year term. The
; Can~idateS for the ,two-year term . a.'re
,
George W. Delano,. lifelong resident of , ·
the to~n; Fergus J. ll;ickey, reai e~t:eite I ·

~~*~nt1~;:nJi~:i~6.f~r r!~I' !:!t~,
1

·j.,·1,~~r·:::~~~,r~:f~!~~-.
.
: '-broker, who is .running on ·a. platform

!

......,.l

dent George A. Doug.las, ·o~. defendant
a.ttorneY ill the Walt~am car barn case,
·wtn,,reside Pi~esident Thomas J. Finnegan will ~ketch briefly the history of the
association and its plans for 19~1. Guests
will include; Ju~e p..,. Leslie Viccaro, '13;
Roland E. Bro'-';n~ _~.Q.9,.,first member of the
Bar from &µffOlk;, · · ·
J Killion. '10;
Boston; PatricJ.~ ff·
ingharr~; .A· Lelyve
lfam G ·Dolan;· '12,
O'Conllor. ··13, South Boston; J.iriles P.
·l.J:.~ro:p, '12, L(?well; :Hiram ~'..
·'14' ·B:t"ockton; ~arry E. Burr
.. ·~omas ,". Duffy.

'it,;,;:

·Ercn;an, •15, Lynn;~'·'stol'l; .Loui:S K. JY.l;c-_

· · ,r;;,

~

'

R.aine:v'. · ;17·
ks;'~1:7 .- BOStCm,~',

; .f ..\,:;-. -

J .. ·~ .. '

0

l
I

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1
i,.
~I

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

TIMES, HARTFORD, CONN.

\

FEB 5

ffii,ookline

Caucti

oinm'ltiee .on lhe

'The' ·Le"gis
Judiciary. ga
bills to aboll
to authorize
study 1the .sit
m.endations t·
Rep'reSeritS.:tiVe
Saugus, proponen
ures~ quoted Holy

j .,f4ominate Slate Tuesday

. 31 Candidates- in Field for 14 Places-Active Cam~

iligs yesterday on
puni~bment a.nd
commission to
make recom .. ,
t L:egislatt.ire.
'Nelson Pratt of
ne of the .1neasure in arguing

against

capital
Zaoh~riah Chafe
faculty suggeste
v:esttgate the e

paign Being Waged by Their Friends-Election Is March 3

ishment.

Prof

of the Harvard

'

mission to inof the dea.tb·

..

1it~~~ . i:ri~n~ho:}~~
ra:;ii;,edo~bstB:~-~:t~~~ 1~~~n. w. i

~~!~!~d

lBurnstead of t~e Ma:ssachuset,ts .Civic
Alliance, op~oSe:~ ~£'~ring _t~e present /

ladcin.1ns

Graham

·'of.·

th~

Nai10:na~ /,

~ !:reittt4tu~~1t:tt~ri;~ti:~ ~ fntrci~~~~~ f

, ··by'Ur .Graham.from DJ~t Atty Warren /
·L.· · Bishop ot Middlesex County, ~xDist '~tty Rob~rt Bushnell,. Jo;hn J.
O'Brien, ·Belmo~t chief .of police, and
Damon E. Hall, a Boston l3cwyer. Dll
favo
retention of- the present law.
Atty, Ralph W. Stearns of
ounty called, attention to
, end . of payroll holdups
·,'ccirbarn murders'' were

I

0

vel"al .z.e~~h~~ ·of Suitolk

!bgff~1~~~t~h:-!k~~s~~ '.

the f~ilies of th~ mu,:d~cd ,
· they seem to takl,, :1n l!Jle~

~---'=---f~i~,:_._:~'-_

LElc~~~-\~

1

Y.,o.$ton :n~w,s-\I'Llp Y.,uuau



8

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS,

BOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, IVIASS.

FEB i__ 1931

I,
Old Tin.1.er·s Nigh.t. including classes
fr~:n:p 19'0~ through 1917,· wiU'be heltI in
the lounge of th'~ Suffolk Alum.ni clubhbi.ise, 7~ Hancock s.tieet. next Tuesday,
U:t 7.30 for a smokc·-t'alk: and get-together.
Entertainment an'd 1efre:shments Will be
: prov7de~ by the
Past Pre?i·

,~li:'IY~,~n

~ent Geor~e A .. D~ug.las,·

·o~.

attorneY ill the ~ralt:Q.am car

defendant
barn

f
;

(

)

·i2.

l

F.

1'

.,

~

lu

.,,. ~

·1·

?ase.

wnr-preside
P1~esident Thomas J. Finnegan w.fll l?ketch briefly the history of the I
association and its plans for 1931. Guests
will include; Judge J:i-, Leslie Viccaro, '13;
Roland E. Brow~ _;p.o; ~rst me1nber of the
Bar from $µ.ffQ-1k;:,. · ·
;r Killion, '10;
Boston; Patrick S:.
rick, '12, Framingharc~; ,A. Lelyve
Rocl{:land; '\VilIlan1 G. Dolan, •12.
ton; Cb,~_x:les S
O'Conbor ··1-3 South Boston; Jame~ P.
~~.ron,
Lowell; :Hiram ~- Skin:p.er,
•i.-4.:' Rt". kton; ·~arry E. Burr~~Ji;s.~·/15,
· homas
Duffy,
og&n, •;t-5,. Lyn.~;":

-

.,.

,i,'

';~·</;
rewdv·- ·, -

'16>,;.

. :.I,ou.l~ K,. ~c.

:r;,f!?~y ~~~;:~~·.? ~~\~ ', ~,
.

·

. JOURNAL, PROVIDENCE, R. l.

\
~\

lf~E SEEii~: Eµ;ClION

\

~ ,AS NAlf!N · SELECTMEN

Veterans Phillips l)elano in Race
.
.

With Deveney,,

n and Haight

---~ '

sh

wome!?- J.•
ae

~""' ._..,..,vc-.,

,01a

~\l?",;.d' .. ~ tbat dea.Ung

;;the student dep3*'te~ o! citizens

___

.,.,_.

li<

NVW V'10fNO:ll
.lll N3:Al!> S3:'1dWVS 3:3:'ll.i

lil
"'J.I~nv~..
0.1,\JdA::> SlS!il:l5n.1p )iu!p-ea1 Aq p1os S!
~lOfUO){ "'etOfLlO){ lnoq-e
O.J. :;nuoa
"\illM ;;isoql ~uq;;i;;iw: S! ;;iq AI!eP ;;i.1:;,-q.M.

'tSE

t\lOViOH

';;>nnbs Al!no=>s ';;i.IO:J.S .8n1p

\!.Ul'J'.).Sd3:.

t'i

:re S!

Ul?}'{ ~tOfUO)l

Is it

with the ;per&0na~ ~ laytna.n b.aS di!fl:- '
any wonde"I ~h~
clear picture of h1s
culty in obtaining a,
. 0 w 11 rights'?
1"
occur in the practi, ":Many an~>1na 1es
statutes :For e}t\ cal app~icat1onh~~l~~om.e upon an ot'fi~ ample, if yous witl\ a prisoner, you
cer struggling l retuse l1is demand for
', could not legal Y
h !t e:s:posed you,
l assista,nce, even. \l::1ol~~r with a growing
'\ a peaceful house :an"'e-t However, ii a
faroilY. to grave mi~and you to :nelp
, fireman should co- h a:Pd walk on-that
11.iU'\., you could 1~ug ut ~ome srna~1.towns
\
\\is 1n 1ord1nan~efoJ!utng up t:1.reincn
n o~t places volunteer all. citizens.,\
..
'. have
to lend a han
. theY have the
"ManY :tollts beUe~e tn.eil· home e-ven
le.gal right .to df~i.~s c::.peci.ally if theY
.
- ~ _,
aJ$ainst: poll~e, o ::E. ,

·lJOIS'I:>dp S}l.ll pl.8;:>J. JdA'JU mM no..,).
s;rJ · ;;i'.q:i. o+ -e1ofuo}I ~nd pu~ • · •

1 a1rio JO s:;,:rn;;ip;idxa att+ Aq ~gold

'3U0p seq

{}

,,ts!l!i!nlp u-e:.!.1.:iruy JO spu~snoqJ., ·:i.t
>U~wruo;).>.I ot p-e1~ ure. I pu-e 's~ai l~ ,:
:;,4..J.

n-e SdAJ~S:;,p 'UO!U!dO

'-eiofuo)t. ·~mg .Suo( -e

l

1

JOJ

AUl

u;

u~q:i. .1;;i1~aq

here next Saturda:9' and although there
ue not many items of paramount tm•
portance in the wan-ant there are eev•
era.I interesting contests for town offl•
1

t
f:

has been a Selectman1 is not a cand1· I

date

i

rOr ?"eeleetf011 tibia

year, but there -

are five candidates for the boa.rd of
whom three will be eleeted, for oneyear terms.
Charles A. Pl1llllps, who has been
e?ected to the board every year since
1919, with the exception
19:M; f ·
__ _1 again a
candidate, as is Leon M. De~
, lano, who has been a member of tb:e
ton and is a member of the Knights
board since 1922.
The three new ca.ndida.tes are James b:t Columbus and of the Maolis Club
J. Deveney1 Thomas A. Finn and Fred
t~~h~~h
f1~~
st,
:R. Haight.
· iAud 1s the father of five boys.
He has been a. candidate tor election
Conunended by Long
-· the Board of Selectmen the part
:Mr Deveney was born in
, Wo years.
and for more than 50 years has made · ·
d R. Haight lives at 131 castle
hif.l home here. Starting as a carpenand has lived in the town !or

·====

of

I

t

~r:u~:;an

:~~o~\ !~~~1v:~s~Iy~ic:~:fo!e~:~!! ' ss 1fi;;n, 1!~d1and Lynn. He is
~:1\~!~d .a.:i::~;;
and tor several years has been a con~:
Utics in Nahant

;(~61 puE 'p;;i:pd.I.10:> Se.\\ U?!l ..
'."edqsttO) ll~l{J 'pa.\O.Idtu~ dl:Pd<h~ A l"l: ; '
,dd}.

eers~
Harry C. W!lsonr who for 25 yeaTS

m~:e::

'\0 [UO)I •~~ljAl • &OU'[ Ail~np~ JOU AOqJ
'e{OfUO)l pu;;iruruOJ'J.I '.).OU pfTIOA1

)}P.

,)Sl'F!Jd

town meeting and election will be held

~- ENTERPRISE. MARLBORO, lVI~R \

aq.1

1
·~

1 • • .'8uqU<HUt.TddX.:J :i.m()

JAMES ~ DEVENEY
NARA.NT, M~ch 11-The annual

:•10! uox_ _;l.11't:it~ U.;@i'-ll----L ;_,;i.u,.C"u.o<.>S.~--

struction superintendent and in charge
member of the School Committee
of many large New England bu!lding
d was a. candidate twice for the
operations. Since 1927 he has been ·. House of Representatives a.nd received
located in Boston in the genera.I build• the largest vote ever ·given a candidate
Ing and appraisal business.
· or political office by the residents
He has held several town offices- ' t the town.
auditor, School Committee for aJx
·

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

ch~,;":r

=

!!~r6.a!eb~~..
~~
Of Assessoi:_s for the past two years~

aight Politically Active

·ae is a

.

graduate of the Lynn Eng•
: ~~~nof b1~~1!1~!rs
o:ing~e: , lsh
School and attended Rens ..
i handed instituted an lnn"'ovation in the , ~ iilaer Polytechnic Institute and also
l workings of that department and per~ · ·'
n University.
' sonally conducted a survey wlliclJ
Xr Haight is a past president of the
unearthed maµy acres of land and. &
a.olis Club. He is snarried and has

r!ai~:\e

number of buildings which '\!Vere 1CQn-

&picuous by their absence from· the
valuation book of the town.
, ;....
Appraisal and revaluation or real
estate increased the list total so that
1 a ~ tax rate was succeeded by One"
J of $34, and last year the ra.~e dr
. , to
$26, the lowest !n many
Henry F •. Long, State Tax Co
1
1

\ ~~~n~!~ ~!;i:1:s~1:a!s~!!~dMr~~~

I Finn Twice a Candidate .. . .
1

I

He Is married and makes his ho,r, ·

on Sunset Hill with his wife ¥d t'W1;
children. He is a member of the )!:o.S"'; ,
sachusetts Association of Asses~rs~,
the Essex County .t.ssoc!at!on of Ml•
sessors, the Maolia Club and the· N 1
hant Golf Club.



Thomas A. Finn was furn in. Bost.on'.
a. resident of the toWJI.
for 12 years. He is a. former ~~~1 ,
and has been

ber of the School Committee,. ~d ·, i~

~ ~:~:~:'a~~::ii~:ala1f,ull'fir ~~

,

mgh

e· child.

·

There is no contest for the office of
Wil'.'moderator.. Fred A .. Wi!Son, who
d that office for many years is
s is also William S.
for town clerk, Charles Cabot
L!btorawnry ttrureasstueree,r,JaFrmeeds A.J

for assessor and Charles A.

:~rif:a!!s<:~1:emfuss~:e~~ld for
surveyor, including A. Stacy
ell, who has held the offi.t:e the 1
George H. Green and 1
h. Pasterlno.
1

:··t,wo- years,

... tree warden there are two ean- i
.ates, Hubert Coles, who has held '
ce. for ma.ny years, and Joseph

JOURNAL, PROVIDENCE, R. I.

r'

,i , ... nctg~~~~,.. 1uuaay
at:'termron a
!home~O: st1eet

i

PERSONAL RIGHTS VAGUE

1

Statute Re;.;-arding the Defence. or One's
,
Ro111e i8 Clted as Example.

Gleason L Archer, dean of the ~
, Law School of, ~oston, ha.s found tlie,
, \lstatUCe§ lfivo!Vii1g persona.I. rights 111
many cases so involved and vague that
they puzzle law students quite as much
as they do laymen-a.s wa5 s~own by the
,. i words of a student who was 1n his office
1when I called upon him 1·ec-ently, .says
: John Griffin in the American Magazine
"The )aw on burglary/' the boy was
\ a·ying "states that if a man breaks into
1 ~'our. house, threatenin~ your life and
: Property. you ha,".' the Tight to kill him.

te!her ·:·

As a. histOrian. and
of la"ll'"
Gleason. ~~d~a~-·:of. the Suffolk Law School, Boston~ is . w n
thtoughout the nation for bis instruc•
tive and interesting weekly Satm da)~
evening" broadcasts on technicalities of.
the law, and his equally intetesting ac•
c~unts of the hel''oic days of Plymoutlt
Coloriy each Sunday afternoon over.
WBZ.
Last Year when, Mr., Archer dedicated
a series, of historieal ta·l~ts , to school
chHQren over the NBC System, the

I

1

1
:
1

,

,( .. ,

.

...

_:'

r~i

His legal discuSsions dver WBZ were

so favorably .received by the radio puiJ ..

~r it

~
1

lk tha.t the NBC conceived the idea of
i making it a sustaining feature for the

k~~~n!p~fy a:5~~;

network
Saturday evening over WE:EI and
the- chain Mr. A1cher has selected a-s
, hJs subject, "Excusable Efomicide-Ac·, cidental Killing of Another," in hi~
)series, .. Laws, that Safeguard Society••
1n this broadcast he will discuss in•
teresting ca~es r~nging. from the killing of a b;rstander while shooting a.
mad dog to death resulting from auto ..
mobile accidents, by way of illustrat•
,'ing the distinction' between justifiable
i'and excusable homicide.
Dean Archer's recipe 'for a happy and
useful life is motoring, farming, wrJt,ing books, running a great law school
-with 1900 students and talking to mil•
lions over the radio.

,

I
l
,
'

·
'.

"The most· obscure section of ~~e ...
United States ~nstitution," he told~ ,-as the student dep~ted, "is that dealing
with the personal rights of citizens Is it
any wonder that the layman has d.iffl:culty in obtaining a clear picture of h1s
own rights?
"Many anomalies ~~ in the practi-

; cer struggling wit11. a prisoner, you
; oould not legally re!use llis demand for
! assistance, even t}:l.ough it exposed you,
a peaceful housel1older with a growing
.\ tan1ily, to grave danger However, if a
'\ .fireman should command you to help

-·· ... ·-

.
.
Do not be alarrried this week whila
listening to WE.All', New Yo_rk, to heal"
during the H second station announce•
rnent period, the call of station WTIC.
'Hai tford
Beginning this morning
WEAF and WTIC will synchronize in
the same fashion as WBZ, Millis, and
WBZA, Springfield, are at the present
time
Up until now WTIC has been
alternating with WBAL, Baltimore, on
1060 kilocycles; the former on the air
!om nights a. week until 1 a.. m.
Under this new arrangement, W't!C
may operate seven evenings a week;
'Sunday, Mi:inday, Wednesday and Fri"'
day on 1060 kilocycles, and Tuesday•
Thursday and Saturday in synchroniza..
uOn w~th. WEAF on '30 kilocycles. On ! '
the latter three +venings, WTIC will9
'of course, relay .the entire schedule- ot 1·
WEAF, the keY Eltation of the NBC red
network, btg'innfhg at 4:15 and con ... 1
· tinuing until 1. a m. Each WEAF sta ...
tion annotl.nCement period will be split,
between New York and Hartford/.
seve1:_1 seconds being a1lotted each :sta7
1
__ , tion ~o idei:tifY •th:~se;;ves.

(

!

Ric~1cf ~unter-man ai
the C~
";ttended th,,
wrestling' .sho"r in the Bos,(-0n
Garden last night

'~~h.

Lamibe1 t H ' Big:elow, :Student
1 o'f Suf1
f:ollf I a -st:hool, anendect
the s~~o:' of tl1e Middlesex Conn'
\ ty-_ Superior Crimina1 court yEl.,;t<:1 i)ay amernoon in Cambridge.
1

~

I
,I

-----

• EVENING GLOBE, BosroN,

a~MP.

~1ngSuffolk Law School, died this morn•
at st Margaret's Hospital, Dor-

RULE DISCH§§IO~·

chester. He made his home with his
biother Joseph P. Normile, a police
officer 8.t Station 15, Charlestown, a.t
130 Howard av, I>o~ichester.
Mr Normile was operated upon a

,a, s_ecie,s_ - 0 / ~ J . [

Pirlt· square . offices for a nlllllber of , I
\ years, und"'7'ent an operation for ap, I ,

~ee.li:. a.go..o~ e ,leaves .hJ.s , '.
H
..
.sister,

)

I
,

I

J5, p)ila:rlesto· ·

MAsi

llAptf- NORMILE. SENIOR

}.tkJ. ~~!!],L!<,~~~

I

=
··==

·
'JI1
'
~

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, /'. ';·\·,·
e

s N V<J
'

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Akvcrnop aSaj

i

;

r

,

r

l

T. liHieltry, Tremont street

....

f

I
ti VJlX V
WM

;

X:irN.Nv-a:001
4

OOl,g p.1vq Hfl/f auo"d :.'r.:
"J
1
1

\

,

f
nq,,
...,,_J

All radio programmes do not run with
locklike precision, a$. station press
pa.gents would have us believe, for th&
tiWashington NBC studios recall the tiine
ilwhen President Hoover was kept wait·
ting 15 minutes before he was "given th~
air." The President was scheduled to
broadcast at 9 o'clock one evening but
unfortunately the programme in a.
tlWashi:qgton auditorium, where he was
ito speak, was completed 15 ·minutes be•
}:fore nine. The network was, however,
!not available to the chief e,cecutive at
rthat hour, ·and upon being so informed
]grac}ously consented to wait 15 minutes..

,_OSeph cP•. Nonn

N·,·

'

ENTERPRISE, MARLBORO, MASS.

L_-.

!Mra. Ma -

)'

-S".
..,. LI \I
~

11'17'i
..

,

,

to 1enct a 11anct to volunteer t1remen
"Many folks believe: they have the
legal rigl1t to dcfel1d thei1· home even
__agai~t:. poli~e, of~jrs, cspe~ially if th.ey -~-

Radio announcers have their trouble,

.
I (mo ·

.' I

~im, you could laugh apd walk on-that
in most plac-es _Bu~ some small_towns
, have ordinances---calling up all ·citizens,

! 13

splutteritlg tongue~twisters as we11 a:;
the average listener. No doubt some
~all .recall 'Frank Knight's dilemma re~

!it.;P'!!"t'f:g;t!B ~••
l

//

'1

1

ti

;7'

\ ~~P1~;Jt~~~~h~~1f~~ti~~~ ;:~roi~=;

eently on the Arabesque broadcast when
instead of saying ''tawny tlger," he
stuttered "Uny tawger." As the an'"'
nouncer o:t the "'Early Bookworm"' pro... 1
iran:une, Alexander Woo11cott is fear-,
refer to him as "Burley

ls
,-

'th
That i&
froe Out aa.nsearch warrant not long
In
Ea.stern State
men entered the home ot a

tthe wall' before·shooting. Now, what 1{
poU~to had inflicted a. minor stab 1
there isn't a wall handy? Do you j~t a or~ on: a, feUow worker. The man, _ _ _ _ _...:.:__
, have to tb.!ow up your hands and w~
woun
a. .stairway 1eading to a rooro '
'. 1helpll!:.55ly for the fellow to l;.ill you'?'
st~ndi~i:lfe lay ill ordered the police
"The wall mentioned. the!e," Dean w ere_
holise. wh'en they refu.sed, h,e ~~
· Archer explained, "has _been 1nterpre~ed out of th~t n at them, kiling one S~b. as being merely fi.~rat1ve.- It rneans, ?-0 fired a
spite of strong public opm; ~~t Yif~~!~rtoifvct°~s
:~~~nl"f~vor, he
sent to the elec'! attack takes P1ace ,in your own home " tric chair "

i

0

~~,s:@f!ii. ~f

'PJJRfJ.. o.~·

-

. Then nere 1t says that When a -perso~6 ar~
life is threatened he roust '1•etreat .0 no

i

f!:'~~:J ~~e~tending:1trolll coast tohl~;:; l
:~~i~e~ ~ ~i~:cr:\. coast~
audience

i~~j;!r~:C:r!1.~~ht

RJJf PUE' l

1

1

1

~oston )kws.(t:[i ~
.
P .r.>ureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON
MASS

t,'

BAR EXAMrNETis PAsS "j
·· \./OH~Y199 OF 754

1

GAZETTE, HAVERILL, MASS.

.i

- J

• Larges~ , Percentage .of~' I
Failures in Years
··
Fontame~~. ..,.._-o----~·~--s
.
to recover the car but when she arriv"ed
there was no ~utomobilei A complete

1

New System in force-29 Women f
Among ThDse Recommended • '

'

:~:::huof the

/ - Only 199 a;:;icants,

&i\ZETTE-COURIER, GREENFIELD, MASS.

including

I'

I

.

'

candidat~s

s
T_he failure of 555 ;
pass JS believed
be

i

r the 199 candid:~ ot ~~ qual~fication of e J
/ Supreme Court ~~ 'X.111 be g1ven to the 1' a
be sworn in by
0~~·thef ,e
ew ru 1es governin th e admission, > I
. a3:"
'k
---2:...
Continued on the Eighth Page
:J~

w¥J

th~rin~:t

·1

I
I,.I
1

;:iw~ys been an active meIJF(;: and 0 }~
fleer of. the Hendr!cks Club and or1e
of Martin Lomasney's intimate friends. ,
\ He was graduated from Su:fh.Wi.Law
1 School after af four.year course dur f
1
~~t!'ts.liitli Lime he was a, ,cle~k of t

I

11
:if

.

)

i

fL. V. GOSSELIN FUNERAL

O

iihe

i

list of successful candidates !

ows:

I
CONDUClED AT MILTON
:MILTON, March 24-The funeral off

I-

Louis v. Gosselin, well known in the1
printing trades of Hoston and for 45\
years estimator for the printing firm
of Wright & Potter, was held yester·
day afternoon from his home, 3 Bun..

n

,to:e¥~i'ces were conducted by Rev Hor·]
ace Robson, pastor of the East Con·1
I gregational Church, and were attendedi
·j by Milton and Macedonian Lodges of1
'Masons as well as Lafayette Lodge ot':
Roxbul'y of which Mr Gosselin was a\
fOl'Dler ~ember. Burial was in :Milton \
Cemetery. There was a wonderf~l pro·_
fusion of floral remembrances, 1nclUd·
tng a number of handsome set pieces;
\ from the Masonic lodges and the:
printing fir111 with which he had bee11
co~~e~~!~elin was born in Montreal,;
bllt had uved most of his life in and\
around· Boston. For the past 22 years l
he had been a resident of Milton. He.1
always, had taken a keen interest in
the town -affairs of Milton and serYed':
· as a Inember of the warrant Coxn~it~t
tee and a ·member of the To:vvn Meet-;
ing Committee from Precinct 4 .He\
died last Friday at the Deaconess E.os"'!
pital Brookline, after a fa11 Thursd.aYj
evening in
he dislocated Bi,
r,houlder.
i
>·M:r.}}osselin i~ survived by ~is ~~~~;
i:M1( Emily- H. M. GoSselin; a ·soU.·
!Lo ls L. Gosselin of this town; ~
da' ghter, Mrs George Hopkins oti
~Washington; three grandchildren; twOf

h

I

which

i-~!l:~:~.M:~dc~~~Ii~~h!i~!~~1fc~fG1;1j \
of Cetiter Falls, N Y, 1and two broth.i.

l

:·~ri;,, John Gosselin of;' Eliot, Me, au~

,e18;ren~~ ?~_sse~~~- of ~hton.

__t

Stein, Magison, Shyavitz
and Hanscom Included

I

,i

"'1\

BAR EXAMINATIONS
ARE PASSED BY 199

I

to
I
to
I oni~!!~e::ges, percentages in Years.

1

not in

754 who took the \1
setts Bar Examination in the
er part or December, have been ,l
I ~ecommended for admission to the Bar is
R was announcea yesterday by Holli~ ,1 • l
• Bailey, chairman of th B
•d I
Bar Examiner
e card of/ r
i

-~ latt

MAR 241931

~e,

m~he
;or:d re:ei::·~Y ::.1 police;
was lil.f e,, by a woman whose name i$

26 ;

'l'Wo Haverhil!l men and two former
local men were among the 199 men
and women who successfully passed
the bar examin,ations taken in December A total of 754 men and women took the examination
Of the
199 who passed 24 are women
Motion for admission to the bar of ap~
plicants will be made in Boston Friday, May l
The :percentage of candidates who passed, is about the same
~s in other years
Each ,candidate
took an oral test in addition to the
Written test, this b_eing the first time
:he oral test was triecf out
:Maurice C Stein, son of Mr. and
Mrs Hyman Stein_, 2 Boston road, and
Moses Shyavitz, son of Mr and Mrs
Joseph Shyavitz, 2-14 River street, are
the two local men who successfully
passed the examination
Earl H
Magison, 107 Summer
street, Malden, son of Carroll E Magison, 88 Laurel avenue, and Homer W
Hanscom, Boston, son of the late
Homer Hanscom, are the two former
local residents who were successful
Mr Stein is a graduate of Haverhill
High school and Suffolk Law school
He has been assodate!ff Wltil His Grother in the shoe business since graduating from law scho.ol.
Mr. Shyavitz is a graduate of Haverhill High school and graduated
trom Suffoil{ Law school last June
Mr Magison, a nephew of Atty
1Frederick H Magison, is an employe

. of the registry
I Boston postoffice

department of the

1 BE!fore leaving this city four years
\ ago he was a clerk in the local pmst, office Born in this city, Mr. Magison
lived here all his life, with the exception of a brief while he spent at F-ort
Lauderdale, Fla • until he moved to
'Malden
He graduated from Northeastern university
Mr Hanscom 'has \been living with
his· steptat:rer and mother, Mr and
Mrs. Laurence D. Poore, Boston, since
moving from Haverhill. They former~
aj1' lived on Colby s~eet, Bradford, and
Boston road, Ward HiLl
j

1

l: HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

;'.;s~:J;~f~p5fr
)?,ostOR )l:~w.s-<tl4' )?,uU4U

-

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

GAZETTE, TAUNTON, MASS.

SUN, WATERTOWN, MASS.

1 ne ,oest.

trv-er

----rs--cu~

IU.~~j,.
,

.JJTc:u.1 -----ur-i:rre-

.t;oiu.:mit:£.ee-irr cl1a1 ge. CJ.;.a.ttsmen and
Ufriends are co,rdially i n v i t e ~ e n d
,,

-----,-----,~'l------:--

~John A~"iviur;ay Candidate
,'

··

SUN,

'\

.'

For School Committee

John Murl'ay is seeking a place on
the Democratic
ticket for
School
Committee
Mr Murray was born in
Watertown, educated in the public
schools, and was graduated from both
Suffolk Law and Bradlee Law 1Schools,
of Bostoit"' For a number of years he
has been a member of the DemoCra tic Town Committee and active in
Democratic circles
He is now employed as credit manager
for
the
Gensler~Lee Jewelry
Company,
of

\fAR~:ws ARE

LOWELL, MASS.

FEB I t 1991



i

NAMEt,OR STATE POS

,

1

Bo~;.onivrun ay is deeply interested in
the problems of public school educa-

\

isn, 'Uietp

~OJ: PU1'UI6~~

t'· ,.'
I .·

f

·A'O's

George E Murphy of This ,
City Appointed First Dep-, 1.
uty Siate Auditor

I ~.,._. \:

L

...:aq'.J. •ua'.J.SH 1,up1no.M. e1do?d JI

iYJ.. 2u1q1ou aA,Aaq+ uaqA-\. s-aArasruaq·.J.

George E. Murphy, certified public
accountant and attorney of this city,
has been appointed first deputy state
auditor by State Auditor Francis X.
Hurl<>y of Cfibridge,
He succeeds
Daniel C. De~ston and the salary is,

:

sa.1dxa 01, sp~10.M. puy _o:i A'.nnqu ..1:Jat.n
PU'B 1Il'B'.J. Aatn agqM ~u1qi Ol .A:lnJqU
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s.1ote-to :isuJReu
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thrlaAa'U Sf .IO'.).'e.10 Uli! '.).li!t[l puy I J:I

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1.&U:-g 113 ..IO '.J..I'8"'.j.S Aetn a.tOJaq A'BS 0~ .2U!
4-q:i:ou clA'Bq S.I-0'.J.U.IO J:O '.J.OI V
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:Jqqnd aq-p1no.'"- 'B sdBOJPU"Bt.{ ".).S.IOM
~ql 10 euo q:gA\. ure I a.iaq-:i. PU'B '.&i:;.s
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pa+oa.ctxa Aaq'.). q.2noq+ ii
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n-e aas pu'8 dn PU'B'.J.S r .1aAeuaq..M.. ,
. +nq 'saqoaeds e~um oi peJSJ. VA,I .

i

·I

1

I
I
1

1
JOHN A MURRAy
1
tion
He has been making a study of :
the problems arising from t?-e length-

"' ~~?-~~-~~ ~* * *

ening of the school da~ w1t\1 superviserl study, and is taking his stand
in favo1 of shorter hours
Ile also
favo1 s giving p1 eference to the e~ployment, in our schools, of Wate1town men and women, whenever we
have them qualified to fill the vacancies.
Mr Mu1 ray wishes t? assu1 e
his many friends that he _is r~a_dy
to carry out to the best of his ab1b.ty
all that he believes to be fo: the interests of a progressive public school
system
\ -- ~-. -----·-- . . .
,

*

.~-1

~}fB~ ;J.,U'B;>

8 BOSWORTH STREET

l

.w~~:_. ·

or

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

"

ti

Among newcomers to the city

·<>{ /i

at ·178 Chestnut. st., op))Ol!ite th,,e:

s~i

Ghelsea is Atty., Mrop,ae! J. Watman-;
W!octk..:iwsk!, whb n;ais take!).. over th~
p.ra,ctlce of the late Joseph B. Burek, /
Jr , witl:l offices in the same location ,
1

Stanlsl:aus Polish church.
·' ,
xG)M.ztri:tI'_..'!l'l1';,~ljr' l6j"~d~.J!.-

:• * * *

:?a~u;~

;;1

'!/!!8~":11: u, as,rnoa uap.rnrj.
ui ,3<11<dpi<J.mct c,j1

<r~ttt ~

-~;!'\ sa.A~u~,i.r
P.M
r

riwor atn

'

:r,~::::i::;::::~!::;:-~~ ···~

New Attorn¢y Has
Opened Office Here i

.;

-

lw

MASS.

RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.

oneer'

confirn1ation l;>y the executive council.
Mr. ofurphy is head of the accounting fil ,n of George E Murphy & Co.
of this dty and resides at 15 1-2 .Belmont street. He is a graduate of L6well high school, Wood's business college, Northeastern University · School
of l<'inance and Sul);gj~ J
school He
passe<:t the bar exam: na ion , on. his
first attempt and passed thi,-' public
acconntant test in both l\:Iassa.c·h.nsetts
~nd .New Hampshire.
~ '
He is widely known in this. s.ectlon arid holds a second Iie,U:tenant's J

)?,oston :,-?e,ws-<tli.p ::Sure.au
BOSTON

$4800. The appointzil:iant is subject to
!

·,ri::c~J~

4lP.t.rom:-01 ?'.-¥'It

- - -.- .-.:; ;
I
~~; ;~;;;JJ~G~T

rar.ul"t"OUS blessinit!ltLc
.uu.,:,,1,a..A~th1e t1k.its~~~f our owri fn
.. e
.
; '·

Heaven for

AT SUFFOLK

l,AW ACH,90l

f 129 Wilson road,
George F. Hogan o f the class o~
Nahant, a memberLa~ school, will be
1915 at the ~~ff.t~ers' night including
~ through 19t7 to )>e
a guest at O
classes from 19 0
of the suuµffo~_k1
held i!' t1hu~h~~~~i'uesday.
·
Alumni c



,1iJtfr·

Y.,~ston ~¢ws-<:tl4' Y.,ui-eou

Y.,o.ston )iew.s-<t:llp Y.,unau
BOSTON

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BoswoRTH STREET
MASS.

MASS.

Bos TON

MASS

BOSTON

GAZETTE, TAUNTON, MASS.

SUN' LOWELL, MASS.

SUN, WATERTOWN, MASS.

FEB 11 ~
1'
I

fl,

r ne yesL

.ever-

rs---c;·ne

vrau

~John A~"""ivtu~~ay Candidat;-

:

...

---or-i;rre-,

0 ' 0 : = - e e - r r r ~ t s m e n and·

irnends are C?fdially invite~_tend
"

For School Committee

John Mutiay is seeking a place on
the Democratic ticket for
School
Committee Mr Murray was born in
Watertown, educated in the public
schools, and was graduated from both
1

Suffolk La_w and Bradlee Law 1Schools
of Boston'-- For a number of years h~

has . been a member of the Democratic Town Committee and active in
Democratic circles
He is now employed as credit manager for
the
Gensler-Lee Jewelry
Company,
of
Boston.
Mr Murray is deeply interested in
the problems of public school educa-

IFARROWS ARE '

NAMED fOR. :STATE POS
~6,-.

\ GIVEN HOME
COMING PARTY

Were Married at Mt.
Vernon· N. York,
Recently
A large gathering of joyous re!a1 tives and close friends gat];lered at
the'· home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred C.
Farrow, last evening, to attend a
" reception. given. in honor of Mr. and
lv!rs Raymond M. Farrow, who were
. married at 'i\ft Vernon, N. Y , by the
\ Rev. R. Phillips of t1le, Trinity
church
1 ].\)lrs Rayn1ond Farro,v, formerly
f\ 1\1:iss Elsie Leli.ek, is the daughter of
1\:lt·. and l\1:rs. A. Lellek.
She "\Vas
formerly a resident of the North End
but during the past year she n1.oved
with her family tO Mt vernor1
Up ~
to the time of her marriage she was
employed at KoChi & Co., a large \ department store in New York City E
Raymond Farrow, is the son of
Mr and Mrs. Fred C Farrow.
tie
\ attended the Taunton high school,
Bristol County Business School and J
.I th~ StrffrsUr T@W §r}>ooJ A.._nd is now i1
associated with the Mayflower Confectionery Co., as salesman
M. rs. Adeline · Lellek, sister-in-la~,
of the bride was bridesmaid and Ira
Sher:man, a· cousin of ·the gro. om .:was )
-" best man
The single ring cerelllony was observed.
Th~: ha].JI)y L _
couPle
honeymoone?- ~t~roughout
\
1':-~e,v York and New Jersey.
l ' During the evening, vocal· select tions were rendered by Miss R
Begnoche, accompanied at the piano
by Miss Madeline Ives and Thomas
\J J;[ughes.
Walt~r Ires entertkined
,vith the cornet.
:
.
· A mock wedding ,~ras performed
\ with l\1rs. J\1. Thurston 3.s best man,
Harry Sherman bridesmaid, Charles
, Ives, bride, Mrs
Em~a Hughes,
t gi'O._om and l\tliss ~va Carmody as
1
· flower girl.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess.
The following were present:
1\tr and ·Mrs. Fred c. Farro,v'",
E[oward Farrow, Mr and Mrs. M.
t·BUrns, Mr andcl\,Irs. W. Woodward,
' Mr. ~nd MfS. _G. Thornton, M~. and
1
· Mrs. C Ives, Mr and 1'-Irs. H. ~sher'ia_an, 1\1:r. and Mrs T. Hughes, Missf
~~ ·oliver and Eva Cari:nody, Alb:'rt
'IVes, Walter Ives,
Miss lVI:adehne
Ives, Norman Hugh€'s, Ira Sherrrta
1-Iayward Dexter, Lloyd Dexter, _Mis
.J. Marjorie Dexter, Miss Beatri?~ Hal
• Miss R Begnoche, Albert Brenna · 1·
0
1,.V1; Ch~rles O'Connell, Mrs. Albe ,
p.r~Cro·okes, 1\1:rs. S F:eder~cks,
1\'lr
J
John Cavanaugh, Miss Eileen Cava-.
naugh, Mr. and Mrs G Thurston,
Sta1 Miss D.orothy Thurston, Mr.
and_
1 JV,[rs. Allen Burns, Jr, Ja~~s Calla .. "
X'l!phan, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Farrow.

Geo:ge E. Murphy of This
City Appointed First Deputy State Auditor
'
George E Murphy
.
accountant . and tt , certified public
has been appoin~d
of this city,
auditor by State Aud ·t
deputy. state
Hurlt;J) or Cfibrid ~ or Franc1~ X.
Daniel c. Denffistonge. d He succeeds
an , the sal~ry is.

o~~=r

/

I
l

JOHN A

MURRAY

tion
He has been making a study of
the problems arising from. the lengthening of the school day with supervised. study, and is taking his stand
in favor of sho1 te1 hours
He also
favors giving p1 eferenee to t11e employment, in our schools, of Watertown men and women, whenever we
have them qualified to fill the vacancies
Mr Murray wishes to assure
his many friends that he is ready
to carry out to the best of his ability
all that he believes to be for the interests of a progressive public school
system

l

I

ar·

.

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~-·


GEORGE E:;."itURPHY
i_.
, $4800. The appoint :} · t ·
· ·· ·
' confirmation by th men rn. snbjeet to
1\.1:r. :.\furphy is ·h=a~xe~ut1ve _pouncil.
ing th m of George E ol\! the accountof this city and res·d . urphy & Co.
mont street H .
' es at 15 1-2. Beli ell high schoof
~!;d;ate of Low~
0
lege, ~ortheastern U .
uslne:ss color l<'lnance and Suff~nrers!ty Sc. hool
passed the bar exa0I
school. He
first , attempt and pas~!d10~: :<;>n,; P~s
acc01.ntant test in bot'1 1\-f -. -~· J?'Ub~1c
and 1'<:w Hampshire. •
assachJisettJ'I
He is widely kn 0
.
tion arid holds a
~ n in tµis s_ec- J
cOn\mi.ssion h{ the s~cond lieutenant's 1

I

i.
11.



't~

II

-tr-

~:ston

a~

~

;¢:;:l:c;:~n::~ --, /:]

J

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

-,
I

I

~u-n:r..t:'vrre---grar;~rt..oU:S: blessirig1ill.C
Heaven ·ror the frq.its-~'G,:f our own fn

dustry "-L'Estra':1;· ( j

I OLD TIMERS' NIGHT
AT SUFFOL~Ol
Georg~ F. Hogan of 129 Wilson road,
a member of the cl~s of
1915 at the. Suffolk Law school, will. be
a guest at Old Timers' night including
classes from 1900 through 1917 to )>e
held in the lounge of. .the suuuffoll<1
Alumni clubhouse Tuesda
Nahant,

'

i

.f
8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

\
NEWS,

MASS.

BOSTON

SALEM, MASS,

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.
'•

Ff 8 1 1 1931
--.J:1~0110--w--rn:5

.,s:.r-o=;

The aueged -orreD.der wastaken

ii

.

1

nur::1 !i

---(KSgJ.Yn:T,\

-

.,.

dinner, the cbild~en and the
went tO the auditoriµrn t~ see

:l.

as guests, of the Y. M. C, I., whic

- mllsical co.inedy~·,·:r..,ittle Nell.le Kelly,•

:3~;:pp~1!sJ~;

l
!

W8.y Co. d
Perhaps the most enjoyable a.Y
-.. he year w:as Christmas,_~h_en a ~
), ke"Y dinner was ·provided a.nd

0

e~;~:ti::ia~~u~~il $!~~0 ~~n~:::-

1\fr. Denniston l1a~ ·been first deputy
: ·~uditor· for the l)astJ eight years and
)1as :l;teen in th~ --~lai~.-service for 20

"yer

~

ing. F,tP,fil.
uipl'l:y'.,·~rs; head of the
ng firm of George E:
, u;i:p~'&c
with offices at 309
afrb"u1;p, _building in this city. He is

f ·~raduate
'f.

:,.

ST
1
i~

of the Lowell high school, hi

,yvqq_?,~ bu~ines~ co~!eg~, ~ua..,_Northun1:vers1ty s ' 8 l f 0 ~ commerce and finance? class of 1920, from
which he r~ceived the degree of B.
C. S. lie is also a gr.iduate o:f the
sµ.go!i'slir"-~SJl.ool. class of 1923. He
:succe
u y passed the examinations
, for ~he .bar on his first attempt in
that year. H~ is a certified public
.ac.count~nt under th~ laws of both
:.1\i~.§jSachU.setts and New Hampshire
,all.a~ holds a second lieutenant's comn1iS.Sion in the orgailized re·serve"s,

,,

:!
c1
t7'[
s

al

~

,,*

*

*

*

*

M

---------~
·\ ~o.ston )ln1•.s-Q::l4> ~uuau
,

1

~831

~UVENILE COURT CLERK
1

·J~n T. Lane, 31-year-old Neg1'o
attorn.ey of Boston, yest.erday was
nominated by Gov. Ely t\\ be ,J.i,l;erk of
the juvenile court of B8·~.·. n, ,.}l~e was
named to succeed Char~Jiiri"'ll~
also a Negro, who died a;' month ago.
For five years Lane has Ptacticed
law from the
office of Jnlian D.
Rainey, assistant corporation counsel
of Boston Lane lives at 531 Columbus
avenue, Boston, and has been active
in Democratic politics for 11 years.
He was born in Virginia, received his
i _ ~law degree from Su~l]f ,1f!w; •.cJl,ool
· and was admitted to the bar in 1926.
:He is studyi·ng for' a master's degree
, : at the Boston U;,,iversity college of
'business administration.

I

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

·~

>II
u

'

!

/J Marcelli11g
THE STATE HOUSE
BOSTON, Feb. 11.-J"ohn Tbom-

as

Lane,

Boston

negro ·&ttorney.

wa8.appointed by GoVernoJ:'..~ly -to.day as cle~k of the Suffolk, County
· ju'Venile court.
' · ~a~e. who will be 31 y,e~~ old_
neX't ·MOOday. ifi,_a. :native ~J. Vil"g}nia. E;;e ~tten,de~ sch?o,{ :r(:?~~1S!J:.·1hgton· a.nd ROston,·
" tin~::~,
Jaw
d:e'gr'ee : fr':)m.,

1926. :a;nd'..

z.;1:q. • .

·,

Jou

:.

::. ';,

:

_,t /

ELJ;_NAMES NEGRO

,,·,

TRANSCRIPT, HOLYOKE, MASS.

MASS.

---------~~=== -

~11t~~~


BOSWORTH STREET

~- _ , tt.

Rev. Kenneth R. Henley, • o • of
the Maple street congregational

'

BOSTON

TIMES, WOBURN, lVlA.SS.

5 CVPll~H?

!

8

I

~o.ston )l¢ws-Q::lip ~unau
8

*

••

university. Washington. D. c ..· and
Su!frilk .Law.. school~ I believe that I
poSSes'stne"nec'essary background :ror
the. proper consideration and solution of scholastic and educational
problems
Toge:ther with the foregoing I have had :rive years' b:US:iness ,
and legal experience with stone &;
Webster, rnc.. of' Boston .
The most 1m.port~nt problem. con...
:fronting the schol committee at this
time is to bring about a. considerab,le
reduction in the cost of education
without impairing the high standard
now enjoyed by our schools. :r pledge
mysel:! to that end.
As the :first candidate publicly to
'fa.var Danvers applicants for Danvers
positions, r wish to rea11'1rm. mf
stand o:t last .year on this point.
·
During 3 school committeeman's
term of office, he is confronted-"'it,th
various problems that he did not
consider before
election; on such
problems :r 'promise the citizens of
Danvers pr0per and unbiased consideration 1
along with conservative
and constructive policies.
r assure the voters of Danvers that
if elected to the school committee. I
will work :ror the best interests or th~,
taxpayers and children. and will at
all times and on all matters ha.ve the
welfare ot -the town o:t Danvers at
hea~.
Yours very truly,
James H. Sullivan
...._,ss Maple street.

.

BOSTON

*

J

JntW,j_f_ing tHo CQa~bridge and. Somer-ville circles is the annou,
Y
r.
1 1~m
• u1nn o~ the engagement of his da?Jghter, Loui·
e~~e, to Mi;-. Jam~s ~- Harrington,, son di Mrs.. Mary Harrington ~
bndge. Miss Qumn 1s a member of the J;>roparvulis -Club. h
uated. from the Cambridge High and Latin School an·d / he w:E
College. Her betrothed· is a graduate of Cambridg H" h 1
dsLer.
attended the Bentley School of Accounting, _ _ .
and isea~i~8,t ,
School.
.,

a.te of' the local sc.hoolsa Georgetown

I

f

,~! ;~:.

rreJPf
b

o~e voters of Danvers:·I desire
to submit for your Consideration my
name as a. cii.ndidate for election to
your school . committee. As a gradu-

J

if

l

. dSCHOOL C A N D ~

p

t ken .of by. all the children. Prev!o
t~ this -an entertainm~nt :,vas g_iv
by the children eJU't.led... Ourselv
and Others.'' which was follPWed
the distribution of g!tts of cl',;.th1
t1
nd toys, "Vhich were abun an
" rovided fo\i...ea~:i;~~...~· ,..,~~!": n_f_ t:¥
· oiieCia:1 -tcrtne 'courier-Citizen.)
v BOSTON, Feb. 10-State A{i.ditor :
Francis X Hurley of Cambridge to.. i
,night announced tlle appointment of
?eorge E .. J.VIurphy of_ 15% Belmont ·'J
.s.tr.eet, Lowell, lawyer and certified
public accountant, as first deputy
iuditor, succeeding Daniel C. Den- .;
niston,
Salary to 13e $4$00.
1
lviurphy's appointment was sent to
l..

.~ - ..-..:,co--....~..... vr-crre--;,cuoo1 ol n,usnrcs~n):.u
siry. and the Bentley School of A:ccountancy.
e Kiwa131s Club of Medford and 'is associated with the
enry RJsman-and Sons.
'

u.i=i=,

:~:io1!scl:~:~ - ~ ' ! ~ d
!
through the he.11. When questioned f
by the police ofti. cers wh9 were called
;he did not know where he came from
befol"e arriving at the hospital but
i t was evident that he was not sick
and
id not ,~ ~·
t
"
e po ice e -··

f
d a ]:lappy ending to the holida
:. ;:a:SportS:tion w8,S prqvided by th
;- Eastern Maf!sa.quusetts Street Rail

),
'
'
.,
,e
,~

:!l'om i

Hunt
Memorial
hospital
into i
Which place he had wand ~ a n d i
....
parked himself on the ben~n ·the:
hall.
I
Mr. S!l.-a., the nurses at the Inst!- (

;'; ,;.sr,>uy: ·:more al!/

mA\ Sttitt1A-WAa ,l'.tt,11, UOSlla.t <>u aas I
',.&.tQ1.0'E"J:Sf.pra renq.nm n£ ~oua.;ai,Jttoo
aqi '!Urtrl I
sasuadxa ,,tiuno:> .llttf.~~"
Jo A~"j.ssaoau ,a-qi Jo ~M-alz\. .l'f!.O 1U1tr 't.l~Jh\
pa!lSJlC"!P a.i,. ;PU·? '000'£.$ ~a.llpnq uon:,i.x
o....,._-~~ ~A.,..,·· ::ti-,.~~"~~-n-> T-"'l.."'"~.,.*=

l)tt'B

I
.'\

f

· ,f·~ f
.. ,,.,,..
-::e.oston ~¢ws-a::li.p -::e.ur¢au
8

'./

·-~oston :,?ews-a::li.p ~ur¢<1U

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

8

MASS.

\
NEWS,

t
I

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

'

SALEM, MASS.

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

..., AN 2,6 1931 .

POST, J:tOSTON, MASS.

_l;__

FEf,3. 1 1 1931

0.

.~?well Man Appointed
ltl:·'. Deputy State Auditor
IGe~e E. Murphy. Accou~ta~t and Attorney. Nominated

l
1

for $4800 Post---Replaces D. C. Denniston, in
State Service 20 Years

I'
r
_

~I

11/
~~H

-~.. )
; 1:11::1

tt

~.Mi

u~

·(Special to. the Courier-Citi;en.) BOSTON, Feb. 10-State ·Auditor ;'

Tl

~ran. cis X. Hurl.ey of Can1.bridge to... ! .
ni.ght announced tl}.e appointment. of

I

r

I

.

:::;~e ~~!~~rf!~Y:~ ~5:! ::::::: ·? \
\
P.ubl~c accountant,
as
first deputy
auditor, succeeding Danie~ C. Den-

·niston.
.

~~lary to 'Be $4S00.

t,

·{

- -

j

·.

1:
Murphy's appointm..ent was sent to \ :

the e*ecutive council for confirmation.
The salary is $4800 •a year.

i~-~~~~r;i~it:.

..?-U~.
:::t:~~1:itfi~~ta~~p::~
,·lil!LS : been in the . &tai~.-service for 20
1Y~~~
.

:·.hJi:adS A-~t,

::e.oston ')tcew.s-<Lll.p

-::s:>,oston ~¢ws-a::li.p ~ur¢<1U

~ur12:a.u

8

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

inSI. F:t~.
urph:¢, :~iS. head of the

ng-finn of George

,

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

TIMES, WOBURN, lVIASS.

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

E;

. ufv~with
offices at- 309
airliu1.2].._building in this .city. He is

{ ·~~~~~uai;~s?;e~';,\' c~::fr~ ;,coh~~l,
university $ ~ ~
- of
c~m=

h:~t'

-· ~ , ,,:. !831

i.s.

·.J_,

__ '

...J

-~

FEB 5

-- -_,1 /

~erce arid finance, class of 1920~ from
which he received the degree of B.
C., S
He is also a gr.:iduate of the

~u~~Wf~}; ~!S s~d ctl::se~~!~!~tio~:

EL]'; NAME.S NEGRO

0

~ , for -"'the .bar on his first attempt in
yec:p:.
HI? is a . certified public
ac.countant under the lavvs of both

that

:,~~Ji~~!~s:t~~c~::~

n~~~~:_ !::cti~!~

~UVENILE COURT CLERK
o

j

l Mi~~,

~o.ston :,?¢ws-a::li.p ~ur¢<1U
8 BosWoRTH
BOSTON

MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, HOLYOKE, MASS.

l

,
IIniOnnJ!. da.u8"hter o! ~ s

Much interes_t is' cgntere'd about the
com:i,ng marriage o!' Miss Aurore C.
Ad~Iia DiOnne,

220 .Wood street, and si_:ster of

1
JC:A.S.si~t- J-

_J·
._

all.t ~U. s. Attorney Oscar t . nto:qne, I
I to L!!f.onard. 01:ivi~r. soµ ..9l_J\t.C.-. ahd, Mr~. 11

::~~e;'l!;ie~l'le

I

7~r:~1:J~~n cf~:e\h~ !I

montl:l.. i"rom. Suffolk Law school, :Boston.1 l ·
The c:eremony is to ta~e pl$.ce 1n st_

, ]at the

Boston U~iverSity
'business administration.

_/ ) Marcelling

;~~~p>:~~-~~~rc;:e;t ~:Ji:~ ~~~~n~~~ !

c1a.tlng
Acting as attendant.$ will be \
the bride's brbt_her, Assistant u_ S~ Attorney Dionne: the bridegroom's fath~r,
.. ,.
Mr;: ()liv1er. and _M_lS§ Dona.Ida. :Q1.onne
~;.

I

I~f~h:~:~~~~::m~~t7!~~tb:~~~

A~
··

dren of Mary'. Sod.a,Jity_ ..Mi~ Dionne.is
~ meln.~"r 'of. ·t~is · Onijt~tiqn: -ariq:_··-r,he
mai:Ra.ge ~ Will··· be- per'forJn.ed.,. with:. its

:~:i1~·~:,~~b:ria~ci//·. ~ ~~·---:~?~~· ~:~ng

~-~~~~:.!tf:~~!':f~i~~--~~!nJ~~:
o-r ~e·'..btide's )n9tb,er, 220·.Wood·:street,

t'·

}
e¢1"iY ·1n the:: afternoon 'the ·.cou~e
wUl l~&Ve~.f'Or ~tori :Whel."'f!"-~edri8Sciay. ,
Feb. ·18, Mt.-~ Olivier·· ;1g J:.c>.·· rec·e1Ve a:
bacnewr Of 1a~:c1e,rree'.f'rQm. the·~u~olk ,

and·

i

~~~~ :.:,~~~-v!~\?;~~ l~--~---

lj .:

n. c.. on :their hQneymoon
.
,Bot~ 1'4iS,s ~onne- jtn(l M1.- ·O~ivier .~e
11.atives !'.f. .this-~ city_ and ,~a"\•e alwayl>
liv~v here

: Miss .Dionue-~ •'.fa:ther, the

j·~~t~h;- c!~!8Jn ~::n~~i a~a:h;>~~~~e~~

: h~s death's.bout· 20 yea.rs ago. ·She was
j si;radua.teO\ lro~ s_t_.-A~thol'l.y·;R ·-p~rochjal
school a·n.~ ~h. e-. Ac~~emy of' ~Tes~ M•ary.
..
Fall .Rive.r, a1::1d .ls. a. -:rn.~mber .of the
~a-risi$.n . c~Ub:, ·this·. ei:t.y.::. :.
: :

I

.Mr. blivier was gra.duat..ed TI;':om. St
I Joseph'~ .boarding· :s~hool. fpr .-boys.

I

.

1

l

I::!:.~~~~;ecl JifghQ~~~~faj~~tf ~i~ I

(l
~

~ua.cy:. 192_7. - . Hi ::zias c-o·mplet~ a
course o.t• the Suteolk La,w s.chool. · .· .

L

:o _ r __,,,,,,

--

1 _ 1 ann;i ftii.hh •._,
· Hoston; Feb: 5 (~~Fire tOda.y de-1 ·
,.-.-..u...d · nets ap.d ot,~et" :tlshing gear and

- -. ;m

----"

_;.. ··-:..-

-'-:::.

-

of

I

Auror;-q: ;Qi<'>nnc;, ,Will

ri:t::\:1t2tj,~_.
_' pJoi_:!s':.!::1o1k ·

STREET

THE STATE HOUSE

L a ~ y e a r - o l d Neg110
Boston,
yesterday was
, nominated by Gov. Ely -t.o be ~.erk of
the juvell-ile court of B&.~n .. ;,,.~~e was
named to succe~d Ch~[i;)Jfo-o.~
also a Negro, who died a<month ago.
For five years Lane ii.'iis practiced
law
from the
office Qf
Julian D.
Rainey, assistant corporation counsel
of Boston Lane lives at 531 Columbus
avenue, Boston, and has been acfive
1
j in De~ocratic politics for 11 years.
1He was born in Virginta, received his
~l_aw degree from Su~lJf ]a;yg ~ l
:and was ad:o;ii~ted to th.e bar in 1926.
:He is studying for a master's degree

a.ttorn.ey

1f!~':'en~:t~P:!:~ ~

orgarlized reserves.

1
T

r.TRn

t71

college

of

I

Has Hotel Manager Guessing When
Q~arters f~r Mare Are Qemanded,
but.
_....,___ Things .Are ,Adjust~d.
'

Once Burned Midnight Oil
in Office of Atty.
Frank Kee:,;er 1
If Owen D. Young, chairman of the
board Ot the General Electric Co , who
once read law in this city, and who iS
fr~quently mentioned as the next
Delllocratic c3.nd,.id.ate for president ()(
the United States, · should be nominated fc,r that high office he will get
at ieast one Republican vote in this
city.
_ _,__
Atty. Frank Ki,e,8"r, 134 How
str~t. lecturer at Suffolk Law ~hool,
Boston, in whose office 'the nationally

C

I!-------=,~==-·

known business exetutive and leader

once burned the midnight oil poring
over law books, has never !Ost his regard tor Young and says, "Although •I HRONICLE,
have always voted the Republican
ticket, if Owen Young is the Demo-~

CAMBRIDGE,

cratic candidate for president, -:r, think .
Attorney Keezer, <1
who regaTded Yourig very highly as a
young law st1:1dent, still
retains his
admiration for the me.n who has now
a~hievetl na.tioD:~l fame and success. ,
Attorney Kee~. who now has ah
office with Joseph Hennessy.,, at 3 - .---~-:-"""'""'
·
..~~,.. ... ,~ ......,,., ,.,- ... ,,
Washington square, in additlC!n to
ard st.,_ the .b:~!~,C!c ~yilJ..!~,;,th~~r~;

I will vote for him."

REUBEN CURTIS AND BLACK BESS
. teaching low in oBston, had an office
y
k
·
in the Davis block
1.; came to t. h C i i street, when Young at 204 Mernmack
fron1 · Chatham Four Corners, ~ew
or"·
:--1<;
availed himself of
I-Jotel flt"1.1JlSw'ick s~eking shelter ·':for. ~nan and beast."' 'fh. C hotel had _some '. the ~portunity to read law here about

.
I Reuben· Comes


.

,I

I

O

little t1°ouhle arrang1t:!_g __f9i.:_ J:!~~e:.:.:. _
,
-:11
"Wen, I reckon )'OU flllwili pm-BeSs'tll
i
.
.
C
. d "B
"
,
t
up.
My Pap told me reckoned I'd best
urtis an.
ess came o come to this here tavern
I nev~r
:J
Re1.1beri
· town yester.daY, anc:f'what a sat.Chelful know'cl h~m to say wrong afore
Re !
d'
"
d
put up some 35 year ago and !olk hel'e i
of woe they d.epos~t~
on the
oor- i tool,: care o! Nell."
\
steps of the Boston _police department
When Nelson had recovered his as·
t
· h
t h
i d' -r: th f
t
and Hotet Br11:nsvdck officials! Chat- t~~~s ;:;ben e :-a~s
~~tu~ned e fr~~
ham Four· Corners 1nay be tucked the Brighton stockyards where he had
0
\ away in an obscure corner of Co- ;~~d r~5
a:~~h iJ~:stt~:~m
~~;:e h°o;;: I
1
lumbia County, New York State, but in New York State, a. distance or 275 1

i
I

'.

'. -. · , ;,

I

fi: f

~~r!'e{1 ~{~r~~nrs~:!cihhep!~~l;e;~t,
m~1
~;"
cat e for Rube's mare th~ new· g'uest
grew Jndignant and declared the tavern
NO PAP'S ADVICE
was compelled to
He demanded that
FOLL~Wl
.
.
he be taken to the "Chief Constable."
Rl!,be m_et "Chi-ef Constable" James CompletelY nonplussed, the clerk caned
J. Walkins
In fact, h~ did m?re than ~Ianager J. Edward Down~s.
When
~eet him. he told the Walkins man the story was explained to him he in•
, \ things. . .Up aro~m: Berkeley street t ..t:e structed a bell boy to escort Reuben to
~~~~1n~o~~ti,bo~e 11e~~:~r~~s~apt~~ \ police headquarters.

' before Rube fi'nished last nfght h.e }:I.ad
Rube Was Right
thrown the headquarter.a, -staff into a
He was greeted inside the big bronze
furore, h8.lted traffic on one of !he 1'9ain doors by Patrolman Dick Southworth,
1
~~i~~~~~sst!7ckst;~e:;;~n~
t~~
~~g:~!i;~u~!~
cover~
wick.
Patrolman Southworth dodged
T
-the issue and 1eferred Reuben to CapI

~~t~:::~t;;~kl;~ :~:e

RUBE. H:NOWS LAW,
GE.TS BESS PUT UP

l

I tam

I

b_right,

Walk,ns

The

situation

developed

even

.

~,.

ed By' T..t.,e'
'For C1"ty Tre·a

th~i!~~n~. ~~urp:te~sab~~;~~e ~~,
an office alOne at 204 Merrimack
street Attorl'ley Young, who was a
nativ,e of Van H-ornesville, N. Y., where
he was 'porn Oct. 27,. 1874, studied law
at B~ton University and While there
became a close friend of Via Gold-waith, a Haverhill yout4 attending the
same school.
"Via Goldwaith brought Young to
my office."-' Attorney Keezer said.
"They went to law school together
t~~;tc!!.ey~~rsm~g~i:~d ~v~~dni;!:
I don~t remember how many months
Young continued reading law in my
office. It was less than a yeaT:
"Owen Yoµng was. a very bright
young .man.
He w~ exceedingly

, \, when the.ir sons go out intO the world
~ -gosh, all hemlock!

!~
0 i:~:1y

F orrest · •' UO,'Q 'H:
L O, ,> • ";i

33 years ago. Attorney Keezer ~nnot
,
,Il
reme~ber the year th~t Young studied 1
in hLS office~ and neither can he !'e-.
,
member ,exactly how long it was that ~
(},, '
-·--.
the 't'V">"Slble Democratic candidate travo-r.r•st L. Gould, of 109 No
-i-''"""'
"'
u
ell!!d dai!y back and forth to Boston.
Mayor ·R.ussell's latest. nom.~ri~e.
1
Attorney Young graduated !from Bos- office of ' cit-y treasurer 1. is a ·Ii:
ton University in 1896 and it WM
Capibriq.g,e, 35 · Yea.rs : olc1, ~rq.llr'
probably in 1898 when he was a daily I
·
visitor to HaverhiU.

~f(

l

Ii~'

more

m

fact, the smartest young fel-

low I ever knew.

lud,crbus when the captain Iool,ed up

I said then that he

would make his mark in the world

the law and found that Rube was right,
and he ~ certainly has. He traveled
'\ . Contillu~t:l ~·ron• Fi:r"'t PaKe
that the hotel license se.t forth that \ back and torth between Boston arid

,

T

the hostelry was to provide fodder and
Haverhill every day so that he could
It all happened like this.
\'\ ait a lodging for its guests, and ••stable, hay
read' Jaw After leaving here he studminute, it's really due to the fact .th 3 t and provender for horses o! the guests.''
·ect
-.
1 .in a ·:eo5to n -Ou.1,Ce .e..nd a ft er gra d ftube'.5; "Pan" 1eckoned as how Rube I Captain vv:alkins was aware of the
~hould ~eek f~dder and lodging ~t that I fact that this law has never been
u~Jlon practiced law in Bostop.. ..
theie Biu,::isw1ek, _an?- Rube, bemg .an changed, and he tried to diplomatically
Owen made h1S st-art and go ... his
.
"'; ,,·. :·
.. ,
obe~ieni boy, he insisted on following suggest th~t ~ube stable the horse in 1·: reputati?n as the :fi'J:"st lawyer to br~g
~~~~":~·' !.0~1~,1~1~r
~~·
Paps orders.
one of the big stables on Northarnp-1,I suit ~amst th~ _Boston Elevated wh1~h , '1 · , - ·
, ,
Bess Was Outs!de
to~. Malden or Pitt ~treets.
II had_ Ju.st built its el~vated tracks, es- ;.
:. - < .
.,
...., ~ · ~
.•.
·
·
Rube couldn't. see Bess being so far tablishrng. the. tact tn,at the racket and I ha.s; ()'.n.e son, FqrreSt.. ~e 1:§
Ben1y Nelson was clerking tn hjs away from the tavern, however, and noi.se mad~ by the cars was a nuisance of the Ha1~vard qram~r scfioo
,
usual efficient manner behind the de.sk he didn't hesitate to- tell the ·•chief a.nd he collected for his clients.
and the. Su(f.olk L~w. ~~h.ool whe
at the Brunswick when Rube strolled in, constable" what be thOuglit of the big ,
"He was a diligerlt student onf? ,~vas p-resident 6i? t'tffi4i.f£~h.at.'. g:rad
•·.aeckon I'll put up h;ere, stranger," city.
that could tell why a,,.'thing w~s 50 \- 111 Feb!uary, 1929~. ~e ~¢J:Y~d,two
1
tf~~subb~: !l~~~t:;v~~t s~~~n~!
"\Vhy don't you sell the horse and The ordinar.Y fellow lodking at a. doo;- '{y~ I y1ne m~~ths (?,Y~r~~
Rube scrawled a.cross the register, and ~flki:~. automobile?" asked c_aptain , would say, "That's a door.' No_t O~en v~rd \1~~li~al
Clerk Nelson 'was staring at Rube's
..1 reckon I'd kill someone and you' Young. H~ would take ev_ez:ythmg into ~ase .hospital.NC?.· 5i.'.
satchel.
folk "vould all be the :first ones to come consideration, as to how 1t·came to be rive 111 Fr~nce. 1,,n ~1:
••Now where'll I drive Bes$, :stranger'?" along after me. Old Bess"ll hold me, I a door.. He v.;01-1tld .visualize that the
For nine yearev,h
.. What's that?" and Nelson wondered reckon..
I door was once a piece of lumber and age~· for the Iriclust'
if he was hearing things.
"Say, Rube, how old is Bess?" that a tree had to be chopped down, SiU;ce last Jun~ ·1
"Besi::, why. tbere she ~re, .. and :Rube queried one of the reporters.
lumber sawed and planed and joints plS:n~g...er _for N~w '. .,,
pointed out the big bay window.
Bess
"Oh, Bess, she's coming on seven made :to put, it together. He Over- ·mut N,at~om;1.l ban~~
:was none other than Rnbe's mare. tied years now, .i; reckon."
looked nething,
_hFdge V<?St,, ..~~
~n~ ,~li~~;;:t.ric 1
~i~~e
"Say, tha~ .. horse is. 30 years old or;
"It was not enough for him. that a
Ha,rvard

I~

·1

4

,r;~.-

I
I

i~~~:·;

~
~!:li 0
;~~~0~:s~l ~!:f l ,\\ eat,. her.
18
.
i:~~~o~ta ~or;~~~ i;~n!~g t~!I es~%eih . I_ r~.~on you
1

offiCer's

of tlte traffic
whisUE!
•'Why., I'm sOrry, Mr. Gurus,

ii



t~orses up."

,. rJ

~---·-

~.

.

thing was so, but he had to know why:

~h:~n;;~.: a:; -~r;d

:~~n~i-

on

I
1

I

'

~~ft. ~,

better all c0:m:mence , it was so:- He never took anything fo'!" I
0
B:isu~!~e
.~x l
~ .. .
e. ·was thorm~gh in ~ver.y~ j
·
·
·
·----...
1 thing. In the s or, . ,..... , .
, .
Coming:
47
_____J Ing law !ri my otnce' h~ •ihowliid to ine i.
.1w.,_01d 'ax-e:~ii~ ~ e ; ; . ?;;; · - :
that he was: a brnuan~ student."
,
: ,l
f:)h rm comi:Q&" 47 year .or so.''
,
Attorney Keezer has not seen Owen f
, ; ;.Reu1;>en. ma,rried ye:t?'~. ct.ues.-1 Young sinc·e the latter left Boston _in'.
'd another.
·
'
1913, but he has never forgotten him
~Not. yet, .no telling, though, how I and c~erishes the memory of the stuscon. You got ~ome fine gals here in dious days the famous man spent in
his ·office.
1 Er:-otnn"
1

] ::1

_\ftC'l :-0(;\(!~tl hn111:-o of , ll:1,,:'n·2; I)~,\:
t1rl fo1 th thP tnattrr "H.:~ ::P,1 I 1Pt1 n1<1.cc- :

I ~l:~·~~:~~:t'~},\\,~'"' U~>l!~lnr~:~1tt1;~~\

\~8

n/~i~:~'~.

1

..

Base.~·'-'""'""'..,."""'""..._,..d

'~!·.·

Last ·Night ·}~

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

MP.R 2 \ 1931

oii th,e Radf:o
BY 0, M. STATIC
Something in the interesting talk last ·
ight of Dean Gleason L. Archer, ot

SA TUE

the Suffolk Law School, indicated the
importance of consulting- a good lawyer

1

View

.
)N
_

0 ~'

Niagara F~~o!~1!ct:"~11t

(F-r~p~red by the National Geographic

society Washington,

s~~~ti~~s

a~n~nin;~:~d:~~

!.1~~~e,th';!' !e:r~s, o;h;~~~gho~e

!~~

D. 0 ·>
shooting at "qim out ·o11 the. lawn, makes
IAGARA FALLS, which. los_t
slibtle lega~ diffeirence, WEAF-WEE~.
part of its rim on the Ame~i};y
s;~et!~
can Side a few we~ks ago ~n he curious .mental phenomei:i.a that
g1gantic cave-in, has
~:~k!~:~of~~ ~~:a~1:i~s~:~:1~ra~~t;~
· two rivals for magnitude an? to ·es
n the effort through the centuries to
eur, according to Theodore ":'V · wa~er~ efine the soft niiances between wha.t
,v~as vis. ited the outstanding
.s right and what is wrong.
~ falls-o'f--..the world. The two s~lect:d
There was even the question last night
to , rank ,Vith ~iagara are Vict?rl~ l~;~~~ hoon;~ a~~g!:a:jei.s
s~ool~;
'F8.l1s iJ1 the Zambezi river: Afnci:' t an intruder in that place man-.
;nci tlte Fa+l&. of the lgU?-ZU 1n B~azil. lauihter or defence Of the home. And
In describing° Niagara, :Mr Noyes s v~ ~e~';;[, fnn~~
~ays •
yrit1t' a. burglar after the death~dealing
.. "I~ the interior of the North Amer- :>ullet h;a.s done its work? Self-defence_.

.
t
b tween Lakes Erie ~ou _lea~, is a term with :rnanY"
1can continen ,
e
. .
b. ct- ineamngs.
and Ontario, oYer a prec1p1ce
is:
' ~- . • * ..*·~ •,_ .,.,.. ____ ,.
ed by the United States-Canadian f
- ·--~-boundary line, falls ~iagara, the
world's most famous cataract.
"
SUN, LEWISTON, MAINE
"A million springs pour half the !
fresh water of the ,vorld into t?e bas- \
ins of the four great lakes wh1~h are
L.. ·..-:
Niagara's sources
As the vast 1nla:1d
.sea of Superior fills and ovet fl.ow_s 1ts :
i_ basin, the ,vate.rs descend and. m~rrgle ]•

o~e~fm-!'-:~~~~i~!~~~

a

c;:r;.~y

r~:l

r

<

WNAC-WBIS-Boston (244m) 1230k
~:

::t;:

e
Y

I

:~~h

,

fa~;~: :o:~

t~h~os:hr~~
~~;h~goa~~ :
~ ._.,, ~ ~,:i -Ao.nil of their overflow into Lake
three years behind in their work It is

, ,V

3 - 1931

~~-

'I,

,
l

"~

MAR 11

f

1

I~N TERPRISE, BROCKTON. MASS.

I,:

bass: Orchestra

~

Arc~,

DRAMA
10:00 P• m.-WNAC.
H~k Simmons' Show Boat presents Fanchon
~ / Catbedra!, ProleSBor William
the Cricket.n
University
.
COMEDY
f }~£...~:o~ds~~1:i JJ=~~!;a~l/;;s Oreheatra
IO :00 P• m.-WBZ
"Cuck.oo, n
~ 2:00-CBS-Artist recital. Marion McAke, soprMto I burlesque skit, with Raymond Knight.
1
l I tM=8~~~~~~nai~1:~ra;~a~~bfec::-:i~ Tourna-'
SYMPHONY
.
~ I ment, broad~ st lrom 7th Regiment Armory, reported
9:00 p. m.-WEEI. General Electric
~ s:&'-1e!rHR!bt{t Playlets
programme, with Floyd Gibbons.
,t. 5:05-Adventures of Tessie
MISCELLANEOUS
1
0
~!d tisa1c~;!er (hrng
11 :30 p. m ..-W~lAC.
Americ
'
5:30-The Merry Go Round
]fowling Champ1onsh1p.

,tr' W:-11~rNW~th~~hRian.
f, , 12:15-Noon-day Lenten Service,

l

rrom St Paul'aU
Lyon Phelps, Yale/I
.
i

,I

I;

absolutely impossib1e to have an acci- i '
dent case tried before a jury for three '1 1
RADIO NOTES
years, said Judge Hayden, and in that i /
On )Jonday evening the Necco
time the entire evidence in the case :I . qan~.?' Pa1:!Y pres_ented "Bringing
r Up lather, a rad10 dramatization
could easily vanish
/ of Ge01 ge Mcl\!anus' famous earJudge Hayden welcomed Judge Miles
toon.
'rh~ program will be heaid
to the judiciary
He declared no apover Stat10n VVN"AC Boston each
week, at 7 45 pm.
'
'
pointment in recent years had met such
high approval
Dean G l e a ~ , legal
City Councillor John F Dowd pre:;,age of the NBC series "Laws 'rhat
I
, Safeguard Society," now dean of
sided. More than 500 were present
i the Suffolk Law School in Boston
Walter R Meins of the Roxbury Hiswas _at one ticne
/ torical Society c;mplimented Judge ::: /i Lewiston .Journal.a reporter on the ,
/ Miles
Other speakers were Rev AmI
' brose D. Walker of St Joseph's church, l I 7 30 - Chiclets~rogram-w.!
only.
.
' i
Roxbury, who represented the pastor, a I 7 45-Daddy and
.
1
Rev Charles J Ring; James H Bren.
nan of the Governor's Council, Dean
·Gleason L
Archer of Suffolk ~ :r-- -- ·--~-----·- - - - - ·
School, Ex-MayOT Malcolm E:':''l"fichols,
~ h t Gaspar G Bacon of the State ~
Senate, President Thomas F Phelan of ~PUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.
the Mt Pleasant Improvement Associa.
4l'Jll'!H
tion, Rev Dr Arthur T Brooks of the
m.:JI
Dudley Street Baptist Church, Capt
.Joseph McKinnon of the Dudley Street (l:
Police Station, Mr and Mrs William P
Miles, parents of the judge; Mrs Louise
Miles, wife of the judge; Henry Lawler,
.representing Mayor Curley, and Representative John V Mahoney.
I
Mr Mahoney presented bouquets to )
.Judges Miles' mother and to his wife
Judge Miles was presented a library
desk by Councillor Dowd in behalf of
those present

I

t:

0

11:30-CBS-Crane Cnlder

12:00 noon-News from The Shepard Stores

.:,;

-

TENNIS TOURNAMENT
, 3:00 p. m.-WNAC. Men's Na~ollal
'indoor matches broadcast from Seventh
Regiment Armory, New York.
PHASES OF HOMICIDE
7:15 p. IIl-WEEI.
"Laws That
Safeguard Society," Dean Gleason L.

t!~
ker.
10:00
rio; Viriinia Arnold, pianist
it~g:~~d~el~~ ri!tle~r:~s~~ry.

~=~~bi[~s~~:uJ:

I

"':

;;ft~N~w;-~i!~!r;.eiodies.
~30-Y.M.C.A Morning W$.tch
r:~=Recor
' ·
lk:Ooor
9:15-

frn=¥e~

.!i;n=~~~

5:45-The Saturda.-y Nighters.
Si1~~:;~~~~=s Mc'.odists
6:30-Musical sport.;; rt:view with Ralph Gilroy
6:45-CBS-Crime Clult.
Hill Murder"
~l~h(')sr3ir:1~::tra

'Beacon

~;~g=g~~=X~!i~~r~~e!!;df!d

8:00-CBS-Arthar Pryor's Crem( Military Band
r1&=2:t=w~11~J~eysS!~~s%!h: Leaf organist

9:30--:-0rgan recita, by ~rank Mahler
1'J:D0-Jaques Renard's MaJ fair Orchestra
U:30-News
IWUJUI - m_e_t,..,,. ..,.~!''"~.f'>~~ __\ 0')/\1, ~n -:, ••
j ~;

(

;; ,:

an<l
Franks:

t~~~!~o!rtoih~~~:·~;ade
Mark "
~
:J:30--CBS-"Feder&,
Programme for Yoca)iona 4
Education," Edward T.
Ii
10:00-CBS-Hank Simmon:;' Show .Roat present 5
"Fanchor1 the Crick, t." Cast: Landry Barbaud, t,!
H .... nk Simmons; Didier B;,,rbaud, Happy Jack Lewis· 'i.
Father Barbaud, F Miller; Old Martineau Joe i'
'I Carroll; Ett.ierme, George Morris; Madelon, Jane 1:
:I McGrew, 0\d Fadet, Letti< Simmons; Mother R,r1
baud, M~ Simmons; Fanchon M2.yb He
(
ll:00-Time, news; weather
t
: 11:1.')-CBS-JHck Dennv ,;nd big Urcbe'!tra
f

r

, 1:2:30 AM -CBS-Nocturne Ann Leafhe~t; organ
i~:!~~~!!;;tt~8BaS!B!~Lo~!~ffr~ at the
;
0

WEEI-Boston (508m) 590k

1
')..

)
f

'- _

..

'I.'!···

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

Last Night )~
the Radfo_

on

tM~R 2 \ 1931

MANY AT BANQUET 1
'P"' TO JUDGE MlLES
'

.

t

1

of Esteem and Affection Shown Guest at
Hotel ·Bradford
~

I

More than 400 attended a testLmonial
An entertainment u;,as presented by] ,
·banquet to Frankland W L Miles, re- Jacques Renard, an old school chum of
cently appointed associate justice of the Judge Miles
Ro>1bury Court. The banqm,t was held , The committee included Dr Leon B
Tu~sday night at the Hotel Bradford · Balicer, chairman; Charles H Savage,
The principal address wa::; made by 1 Esq, secretary; Morris Eltennan, treasJudge Albert F Hayden of the Roxbury Iurer; William J Barry, Jose\"h G. BaxCourt
.
· ter Albert Blank, David M. ·Brackman,
Judge Hayden said juries may h~ve to 1 Feill Carroll, Edward v Donovan, John
be drawn by the District Courts m or-' F. Dowd Harry Haddock, Nathan Hafder to help out the situation.
He fer, wnliam Hasson, John F. Kenney;
pointed out that the D.istrict Courts Matthew Leary, Max N Lebowitz, Dr . ',
under the law have jiµ-isdiction over Julian D. Lucas, John v. M:ihoney,
many matters now brought before Su- Walter R Meins, William F. Messinger,'
perior Court tribunals. It would be John
c. O'Donnell, Bernard
F .
comparatively easy to have additional O'Rourke, Rev Charles L Page, Henry 'ti,
District Court judges appointed and I Pearlman, Thomas F Phelan, Louis E I':
give them salaries commensurate ~ith I Restie! i, Georre E
savage, Charles : C:,
the work they would, perform, he ,said. !!warden, Constantine Voss
1.S
The Superior Court civil sessions are j, ~
three years behind in their work
It is T
absolutely impossible to have an acci- i\
dent case tried before a jury for three :1 ,
RADIO NOTES
years, said Judge Hayden, and in thatli/i / On ~Iondo..y even 1ng the J\~ecco
thne the entire evidence in the case 1 I sandy Pa1:!Y presented "Br1ng1ng
could easily vanish.
t I ~P 1'ather, a t'ad10 dramatization
uf Georfe 1\!Icl\lanu::;• famous ca1 Judge Hayden welcomed Judge Miles ·. i toon
'Ihe prog1am will be hea1d
to the judiciary
He declared no apover ,station VV~AC, Boston each
pointment in recent years had met such
week, at 7 45 pm
'

i

If

'

1

,
I

high approval
City Councillor John F Dowd presided. More than 500 were present
Walter R Meins pf the Roxbury ::iiis1 torical
Society complimented Judge
Other speakers were Rev Am/ "Miles
,._ brose D. Walker of s·c. Joseph's church,
Roxbury, who represented the pastor,
Rev Charles J Ring; James H Brennan of the Governor's Council, Dean
'Gleason L. Archer of Suffolk ~
School, Ex-Mayor Malcolm E"''llrichols,
P r ~ n t Gaspar G Bacon of the State
Senate, President Thomas F. Phelan of
the Mt Pleasant Improvement Association, Rev Dr Arthur T Brooks of the
Dudley Street Baptist Church, Capt
Joseph McKinnon of the Dudley Street
Police Station, Mr and Mrs William P
Miles, parents of the judge; Mrs Louise
Miles, wife of the judge; Henry Lawler,
representing Mayor Curley, and Representative John V. Mahoney
Mr Mahoney presented bouquets to
Judges Miles' mother and to his wife
Judge Miles was presented a library
~esk by Councillor Dowd in behalf of
:i.~::, ~hose present.

i';,+. ,r:=_____ --··--

l 5 193\

--mas:t:er-vacat1on S}lenv-nt!re wnu::_ ~
parents.
'

'I

"cJ

Dean Gleason ~ . legal
sage of the NBC senes "Laws 'l~hat
Safeguard Society," now dean of
1
1 the Suffolk Law School in Boston
f ~as· at one tiime a reporter on the
/ ewiston .Journal.
'
l' / 7 ~Onl-;.- Chic1ets
Pro.gram-:--~
I 7 45-Daddy a n ~
/
8
, ...,._-",,,,,
~
-·_____ _
I'---- -

1
;

8

'

'

,Sj18Jl0([ NI
lNM O J NIA\
lf
I,

i'
f

.

NjWHJNjlf1

C

iPUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.
f
c
c

MfctR 'I 7 ffl31
MERCURY, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

l

MAR f 4198i

\

.MO.lUlillG .MEROU.B.Y,

RADIO FEATUitES

---, I i

4ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

.i

/

'

Sdf3U!5 , lOJ
hda 1ddw 01
i

,,

"Kitty Wel~," a, typi,,al hill-bill
song of blighted romance, will be the
feature of the ·Pickard Family broadcast from Chicago through an NBQ_
network today at 6:45 P. M.
Dean Gleason L. Archer of Suffolk
Law 1:;!,l:l~ston, In' h ~ e s ,
Laws 'l'l'l'it""Safeguard society, wll~
discuss "Homicide In Defew;e of La.rid
or Goods" over , sta.tlons associated
with NBC tonight at 'l:15 P. M.
. JDix!es Circus fans will meet Tom
Dix, f!ctiona.l movie hero, and his
talented horse, In. the Dlx!e.s • Circus
broa!ic.:St over an NBC-WJZ netW<)rk
tonight at 8 o'cl9()k. ,
··
·, . A P!'DBioned .
e "Bin·

flit

Tlmiler" ti,

be broa.dcasl th1'.

~/:F\>IJZ • nt!tW,6rk tonight "

~:;·~··

,,._,,

BEDF

.,

a. r uards in t h e ~ ~ E
broadcast from Montreal over W ABC·
(i)olumbia 12:45 P. M., Sunday. Fea.
f.11,.."'.~d__J~ ·~-s:~e _concert which urlH ho

'

- -

·,;t?~·:~r
w.s-<!'.llp

~U~e4U

::Soston ~~ws-<!'.ltp ::Sur~au

STREET;

MASS

8

8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

-

BOSWORTH STREET

~---~

MASS.

MASS

NEWS, SALEM, MASS
[EWS-HERALD, NEWBURYPORT, MASS.

FEB

319:.l!

1

FEB 11!- ~931

.

..

_:;s

!

_MARBLEHEAD MATIERS ete DJnt 1
Everett R~ Campbell Ne····west Cand.idate for Se- ~ I
1
i lect:man; Y andLuck~'.':5trike Bow!ers Br4:ak \ '-'.L~f

$7![. N~:~~

BUILDERS OF

i

\

.ver

Even; Woman's Club Guest Night Friday; Lenten Servic~ the Cfy1rcbef
Marblehead. Feb. 17-Everet,t. &yd.er\
B,A.PTIST SERVICES
Campbell. 7 west street. ClU:ton. well
The First Baptist
known Lynn attorney. will be a
i"'""rvi.r-""c:
unusual inte:re5t
didate :for the Marblehead board of
or
,
1
selectmen. and his notninatlon papers 1
1.~
are being circulated
1n the down
~.... 1
_

10
"\ Clifton is no stranger in the older
g,a~.n.p.;;!~t. n;:°.·1tiii~.:,;.,.w:
~i

=',~;,t

~~

l

6 p· .
u.e

!

;~
13. !
,- i

!- ·
,e ,
~-I

1
afi~. '

'· Boston unive
and S1)f~lk La:W ·
s c w s m HE: ·prep3.red
for4.i£ffl! 6'a.r
un
e tut.e!age of Charles Innis \
of Boston. He received h.1S degree a.t
the sufiolk. school and was,admitted
to the par in 1914In his· early
he was associ- '
·,. ateci .with-'· the firm of N11es. Stevens, \
May~ & Underwood. 'and the Massach~tts Bonding and Insi.µ-ance cmn- \
: pe.ny. of Boston, .in the legal depart- 1
m.eint·. Later he ope11.ed an. .office in\

career

'il~~k~::g;~o~~e~t1

:

chu~§c~h~w;i~ll~h~o~l~d~'~!!~~!!!!!!

r-.- I
ts

\
11

~~~1o~6~~/h~i~wnGe~1:u~ife
\\
,daughter ot the late William H. Da.y,
and Mrs. nay. who now makes her \
home with .• h erbe!e,i
..
'daugb.ter. knownDa)I' I
The
family :nave··.
well
in '
Marblehead· ;or many years.
'\
Mr. Campbell
.a. native of Lynn
~!es.c!::!~~

,~~. J~1 :n7!~i .

1

I

can-

during

DOLLARD
.AYS, lr'-.

~

·

.
_
ii

..

'j'

--=----- ~ -

.

~,



··

,

-·-

I::;}~·- -~~---····

-. .-- · · ·
-

-----

--~1

::Sos ton ~~ws-<!'.LJ..- ,-.. 1.tr¢<1u
8

BOSWORT~·

BOSTON

,,_-

MASS

i!~ f! ~l~nH~~ \

11

,Neil Barney's <;ongressional fig}1.t.
l
·H'e iS 8, member o:f the Esse~ County '
~ Ba11.l~( . ~t1:,ornies association and the
,; ,Ma.sa.S:cb. us.etts and Essex Bar
-,. ions. · Hf:' is, also junoir warden o:f
..
· el lodge. A- F. & A M., of\
d a ll"\ember at: :the Oxford
the Ionic club 01'" S~~p- i

,;

associa-



POST, BOSTON, MASS.

::&o.ston ~&ws-<!'.ltp :Sut-¢<1u
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

.;,;) ~R,;J
'.:Soston :,i¢Ws-cl'.l•- ::Sureau
-r
8

BOSWORTH

BOSTON

STREET
MASS.

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

FE3 I 8 1931

~
:,z,

CHARLESTow·····

j

\
\

I

·~·f'£~~~,·
. 5

_(!:[Lp ~ur,u1u

~oston ~¢ws-(!::h:p ~ur¢'1U

S'J''REET 1

8

MASS

8

MASS

MASS.

BOSTON

NEWS, SALEM, MASS

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

[EWS-HERALD, NEWBURYPORT, MASS.

FEB

1

3 193~

~

vofC

NO. 9

_)

I

BUILDERS OF
J J
CHARLESTOW
When
the
average
citizen·
Charlestowri turns in his mi~d·,:
que'si'ion as to w-hat men of his c
n1.uriiiy may be termed great.''
measured in s€rvices rendered
community,, his mind ;nat1:;1-rally
the name ,of James H. Brenna
sE'nt member of the Gov"ernor:s
cil, in that categ_Ory of Chiriesro
up-lifter-.
Every rol~ Mr. Bren::g:
I1as played in 'CJ:t.arlestown poli
has been repl.efe with m.eritori'
.good works·· d.ori'e in the interests
'the rdistrict "'which has repeate
elected him to public office for t
_past twenty years.

,
§,,t!

.
i.,

• -i

r

MOR}
------~-___.___---,

lsu~FOLK LAW

l tf;){ADUATES 40

~oston ~¢ws-(!::l1.:p :Sureau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

Inc)

MASS.

' Degrees Awarded a! Mid- ,
Year Exercises
j

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

FE 3 I 8 1931
.,,.

Degrees ot LL.B. were awarded to ,{O
1nCmbers ot the .senior class a.t the annual mia-,-~e.ar commencement exer.cises
ot: Sufl'o1J.;: Law School last night. Dean
Gleason L. .Ar~er l)resented the- degrees and addressed, the graduates at
the exei cises which were held in the_
school a.11ditoriun,;.
Former -AttorneyGeneral '1~homas J. Boynton, chairman
of the board o! trustees of the school,
presided.

I

da~~Pd~~fve:,~d ~~i;;iS::1:t~for':/!~d~ees~- ·
Robert M Dolan, president ot the class,
spoke .for the g.raduates.
The valedictory. was giv the p).edge A. F.ar:rp.er of
..
Kewton and en .. by Louis to the, flag by
Hai'ry Eigner of _Brighton.
were awarded to:.

I

I

L~

Degrees
i B:~i!~ g~r~!~!;; ·1;°:.:~~~; I.a~!y1;:
~'::t:r::er<Sa~~:;;~~~~1~11!~;~1ri~
ola.n,. .
ake.field; Job,n ,A.:. Donoghtie,.
Boston; Harry E~
er_..-·sr~h~n;- Albert
'W.:' Em.ina:ns,.. Le ~ngton; .:Sainuel s~
1

Evans,., Bi-ookline;\ Lollis A. Farmer,:'
Ne-wton; Harry H.1 Fisher,.· Roslindale;'.

Jacob G~rber,. Lynn; .Richard E. Goo(l...
ale, Dorchester; Frederick B; Hayes.
South Boston; John J. Hogan, Lowell;
Samuel W. Hurwitz, Ma.ttapan; ThomE. Kelley, Stoughton; Joseph J.
Kelley, Boston; John F. Kenney, Jamaica Plain; :f<"rancis E. Killcoyne, Beverly; ]frank 1--I". Lane, Medford; George
Leary,
Boston;
Frederick
N.
Liss.
Quincy, ).I:urdock K. MacLe(?d, Beln"lont;
Robert B. lVIanning, Quincy; W-illiam
!vlanovdtz, Boston; Richard F. Martin,
"\Vest Roxbury; John J McC~rthy, w-inthrop; VVilliam E. Mellen, Lawrence;
F'rank P. Me-tcalf, Medford; Stephen A .
.M.orrisseJ, "West Med-way; Patrick J
O'Donnell, Dorchester; Leona1d Olhder,
Kew :Sedf()rd; Nathan Parnes, Mattapan; Jacob N. R9senbl!'.)o.n1. Be,eriy;
James R. Rourke, CheISea; Paul H
T•hereault, Lowell; Joseph H. Vahey~
VVatertown,

as

,~
If~

i

s~
j

Mi<

"Jim" Brennan was born Dec ..:
18 8, on Benedict street, in the c.. •

heart of the Valley se"ction w
_produced many well-known per
ities now famous in different wa;
o~ life. _Among Jim?-s. ela.f:!smate~;
the Harvard sch9~1. of that df~~ ~
were numbered ~
·
- ·
....Tohn P. Buckley, y,"Ohn Maho ·
Sistant-secretary: to Mayor
Bill Cummings, rnainten~c
neer in the ·B:-- & M. -R: R:;-· ·
Jen, clerk of court, and Ed C
popula.1 local druggist.
_
2

,J
.J

i1!h;r:;1::

Ch~le~!~na~~ec~:d
the Jegislat. ure, th!3 yqung~~t' m.~HP.,.,.
of that body during the years I9.
and 1912. While serving in this
pacity. he immediately sliowed
ability to procure necessary.:-.im.p
ments for the district that ele
him.
He was the author of the
wb.ich transferred the care and inai

~oston )?ews-ct::ltp ':Sure<1u

~oston )?ew.s-ct::ltp ~ureau

~o.ston ·'1.ews~ ct::lll) ~un<1u

8

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

;\:.Ll
~:···}!: ,::-.

., I._\

c0

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

ITEM, WAKEFIELD, MASS •.

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

BOSTON

MASS.

j(l/'.ll'.,

,;;;:ii,J

'

/J~peaking at
~,.,\.,· Law School

:

~ s . a ~r~1dent at the ho --... ;.;~
~~f:~ ;.~~z ~,liyed the pr

SVFEQLK !,AW.SCHOOL

SUFFOLK. LAtw SCHOOL .
A WARDS 40 DEGREES

Stephen A. Morri~sey Gives Saluta-

Arie•:

'1a. Graduation
11

/JA)

f

Forty- mem~rs of th2; senior class of
Suffolk I i . ~ ! Were awarded LL.B.
degrees at tne annual mid-year commencement exercises in the school auditorium. Ia.st night. Thomas J. Boyn/ ton, chairman cf the board of trustees

,<

)tob't M. Dolan of Murray St.
" ,,:,fP,~esi1ent of pass . . }Getting :LL. B. Degree

.

(To Be Continlf.~'d Tom~rrow)

~11;;

I

pre~ided and with Dean Gleason L

::;;i~ter.resented the degrees to ~ the
The salutatory was given by' Stephen
C-· Morrissey of West president,followed
Medway,
Y Robert M. Dolan.
speak-/ u;ig t9r the clas-5. r The valedictory waa
_ give_~ Lows A. )"armer ot Newto';

I

l

0

'ditorium la.st night Thomasof trustees
Boyn-board
presided and with
L
Iton, chairman of theDean Gleason the
Archer presented the degrees to

l

J.

~

J

~

1

:
:
"

·:.\
gr;,.~a~iutatory was given by S t e p h e n · ~
..._____
.JJ.......!_
ing for the class. '!'he valedict
A ·'Morrissey of West Med.way, followed. given by Louis A. Farmer _of N•
,by Rob~rt NL DolaJ?,, president, :s~eak-

I



__ J
':Soston )?e.ws-U::llp ~un<1u
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I:·

tory, Louis A. Farmer Valedictory
Forty meinbers :Of the seni9r class of ,
Suffolk Law School were a.warded, LLB

-j ~!~~:sm:it ~~r~=ii-i f~~..!~h6af ~ : l

~o.ston )?ew.s-ct::ltp ':Sure<1u
8

:,:
AWARDS 40. DEGREES ,

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

BOSTON

MASS

HERALD, EVERETT, MASS.
AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

FE3 l 91931

FEB 1 9 193t
;::;;:;=-=---- ---=-=-=--~- -...,,_
; Sala Hear{'•&J
1tt !uftol Law

/to

_...

"of . th•

North Adams
Elks,
Wyman A.
Arbuckle of

~~~~t!e;

~o.ston :,?e'fll's-a:lll) ~ureau
BOSTON

M>.ss.

m

r -,.,.

~oston )lews-U::li:p ~u~e<1u
8

I
i
\
" I

pattern making.: He ,attendee] §pffpJk

,Law_~ and the Fisher Business
Sclhiiiir."'"He is now with the Jaw of- ,
flee of Jacob Abramson, Boston at- .
:torney;
·.
.

t

. arinzENo

IN LINE.....,.
Patr~bpall:" John Q~rleno, _:"'7.I!,~

,

BOSWORTH STREE'T

BoBTON

I

~

man.

ter· is the 1'eW"

·tre,asu~er.
Cl!.gen won natiOttA. Sala
al honors in the
Gamma ch~pter in 1927.

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

~

.After the wedding a reception was
h~ld in the home of the groom, 59
Rich. st. The newlyweds left on a
honeymoon tour to New York, Washington and Florid.a. Upon their return they will live at 7 Wilbur st.
The bride was bo1'tl in this city.
She is employed as a hairdresser in
a beauty ~arlor on Broadway.
Mr· Carbone is a graduate of the
Senior Hig1: School, specializing.

~~:

president of ih•
class.
Saul J.
Ca'gen of Bev..
erly was ~lecled
secretary a n d
J.oseph F, De
Caro of Worces-

8 BOSWORTl'I STRIIIET

the ~ i t

t
~ CARBONE-LEPORE
Miss Phyllis Lepore, <laughter of Mr l
and Mrs Ralph Lepore of 4 Chelsea
pl, was married to Salvatore Carbone
Jr of 59 Rich st, son of M~ and Mrs
Salvatore Carbine in St Anthony's
1
church, Sunday.
Rev Fr Lino Buggini, the pastor,
officiated. Mrs Gilbert Bernard of
Lynn was ma.id of honor and David
l:'c·rcaro of 56 Bradford st wa.s best '

Roger A. s ~ ~ o r t h Adams
was elected president of the 1932
class t Suffolk Law. School yest
terday. He is &
p,a s t
exa.ltetl

-ruler

r ered

the aldermen once more. -

MASS.

TELEGRAM, WORCESTER, MASS.

fEB 2 o \931
beduled, for l~st nigh ~
A number o{ peti:- i

n or liens are sched1
d"etatton.
4
D-£~--~---c• :)

/.

/"'-..

'\

I:

~F

BOSTON

I

MASS.

BOSTON

MASS

..

~i~

'

f\$peaking at

\J 't l'
;;JI

.;-,,,;;'\,,
\;;i:ii,;'

Law School
Graduation

:/ ?a,

SUFEQLK LA:»: fiCHOOL
~ A WARDS 40 DEGREES

Abie s Irish ROS? ,,

SUFFOLK LA!w SCHOOL·
AW.ARDS 40 DEGREES
Suffolk I,..'a.~ol were awa.rded LLB.
degrees at tne annual· mid-year com~en~ement e.xercises in the school au ...
d1torium la.st night. Thomas J, Boyn/ ton, chairman cf the board of trustees
pre~ded and .with Dean Gleason L
:r~g::_;teiresented the degrees tO ·. the J

I

The s~Iutatory was given by' Stephen
A. MorrISSey. of West Med, way, followed
~Y Robert ~I. Dolan. president, speak--

-· -

~g f~r, the c1as.s. r The valedictory wa.
Louis A. Farmer o! Newton,
.,.,,
. '

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS

HERALD, EVERETT, MASS.

FTJ ! 91931
FEB 1 9 193t

I
·

"?tt Suitolk L ~

Roger A. s"al'a of ·North Adams
was elected president of the 1932
t Suffolk Law. School yes,.
terday. He is e,
p .;a s t
exalted
ruler 'of
th•
North Adams
Elks.
Wyman A.
Arbue kle of
Braintree
wa«
c h o s 'e n vic'epresident of ihe
class
Saul J.
Ca"gen of Be.v•
erly was t;!:lected
secretary a n d
Joseph F. De

ii•

L

~I ;:i:foi,ert. M Dolan of 5 Murray st is [
~ving the distincMon today, not only 1
,:·i;}e.c~h:tng h.is L.L.B degree' from lR.
§chool, but, as president ~
.
1
o,sr~~ Pass, _5}f de~ivering t~e chi~f 11

·

1 ·,',

'

~~1k·,~aw

,


jaddt~S at graduation exercises 1n 1 '
jtne. school auditorium
Dolan is one of 40 receiving ·
! ,!egrees today and with the coveted 11·

I

J il'."4 .•,Mr.
r

·; paper 'in his possession thus ends • , ; four years of faithful study for the

'.l'~,Jpar.
·f:··; · He

Caro of Worces-

f

ter is the new
,treasurer.
C,t,..
gell. .won natiOltA. Sala
al honors in. the
Gamma chapter in 1927.

!

received his grammar schoo1
i Ii; .education in schools in Lynn and : •
' '-, O:Xeter, N. H, and graduated. from
'. Exeter High with the class of 1917 ,
1 His home is in Portsmciuth, N. H.,
wllere his mother, Mrs Ernest Lord,
:makes her home He moved to Wake- 1!

j

}i~sii~

~r!;:Us mrlrfoc£001.,1n th~
··An o;en house ~r members an~

ien,is wtil be 'held, at the Old D.~rt~
' 'lib. lt\storlcal society sun
·aft. .
.
• 'y
r · ,,. hittaker.. Mrs. William C.
..'....;.. . -"'

· - ----- ..,,...,1

1\A'.,-,:

Ar-

MASS.

TELEGRAM, WORCESTER, MASS.

!

I,
i

I

• i

FEB 2 o·\931

,.L

h-ectuled :ror last nigh ,
. A ri.umber o{ peti.-j
ion o! liens are sch~~ j

, ..

~

OFFICE~<.,

,j

_...:__ _
a_e_ra_t_io...,.n.
DE CA~O

The Junior"

'.I,

Patroltµa11,,

8 BOSWORTH STREET
Bo::=:;TON

I

ec'. :~hoot' auditorium tonight• •

I

QtiXilENO

":5:,oston )tcws-¢lip ~urcau

I.

9

i•l:'

c

r

~;,, CARBONE-LEPORE
Miss Phyllis Lepore, daughter of Mr l
and Mrs Ralph Lepere of 4 Chelsea
pl, was married to Salvatore Carbone
Jr of 59 Rich st, son of M:,; and Mrs
Salvatore Carbine' in St Anthony's
church, Sunday.
Rev Fr Lino Buggini, the pastor,
officiated. Mrs Gilbert Bernard of
Lynn was maid of honor and David
l:'c·rcaro of 56 Bradford st was best '
man.
After the wedding a reception was
held in the home of the groom, 59
Rich. st. Toe newlyweds left on a
honeymoon tour to New York, Washington and Florida. Upon their return they will live at 7, Wilbur st.
The bride was born in this city
She is employed as a hairdresser ;,;
a beauty parlor on Broadway.
Mr' Carbone is a graduate of the
Senior High School, specializing il:l
pattern making: He ,attendetj §pffrJk ~
,Law~.QhQgl and the Fisher Business
Schcicir.'""He is now with the law offlee of Jacob Abramson, Boston at1:orney, .,

t

1
~tii~o~: ~<;,·:r:1~~s tsihii
/1
job'' · at
the
Heywood-Wakefield
Qompariy, where he has worked for
iive years (including a period at the
Boston office of the company) when
not studying law.
Mr. Dolan, who is 31, is a memberj
of Wakefield Lodge of Elks
I

~Z'""'atiiC lffi"or'lrered
..
;;;;;€'to the aldermen oncethe pe-ri,it
more.

=---- --~--=--------·
Sala Heag Claoa ,..;

ii

==T M no=

MASS

BOSTON

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

it,

---

~oston :,?cws-(i:tlp ~urcau

»o.$ton :,?¢W.$-¢llp ~uTee1u

.

.:IL--.

......:__

i

.

cuss
class

fit

el~Ct~

an

.
:
:
1

I

1

J'

:

1

:

:


,

~ The
1

.

valedict

A -MorrLssey of. West, Medway, followr ing" fo~;to~- Farmer of Ne
bj Rob~rt 1\-i . Dolan, president, ,_sl?ea - .::_. . n .
,
.

g1v~~

BOSTON

i

!

~'ii~a~~iutat.ory was gi';e~ by _stephen·.k:::=:-

!
~

--,-

'

Stephen A. Morrissey Gives Salut'!·
tory, Louis A. Farmer Val~dictoiy
Forty meinbers of the se~or_ class of
Suffolk La W School were a warded LL B.
degrees at tne annual midi-yea:r cOmmencement exercises in the school auditorium last night
Thomas J. Boynton chairman of the board of trustees
pr~ded and with Dean Gleason L
Archer presented: the .degrees to the

Forty members of the senior class of

;:Rob't M. Dolan of Murray St.
Presicjent of pass . p,e#Ing ·LL. B. Degree

i

(To Be Contin11~d Tomorrow) -

,.gcrests, a resident at the ho-- ~ Jo~ F, ,Webber who played the pr· '
Ul

MASS

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

ITEM, WAKEFIELD, MASS.

,,iJ,"

8 BOSWORTH STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

i:

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

~O.$tOn :,?ews-¢14,, ~uTee1u

~oston :,?ews-¢llp ~ureau

~O.$ton )l.ew.s-¢lq, ~uTee1u

'

John

IN LINE .....
Qu;,rleno, _-,-----.•·-r-; ,
who

193i

~ni,Jlsrro~ ·GLOB~~DNE~~AY;MA\

SOMERVILLE ACTING
.

4

~AYOR rs ONt Y30

'/ 500~-AT ROXBURY PEOPLE'S
BANQUET TO JUDGE MILES

L

Stynes One of Two Youngest to Serve City
James F. Stynes, 30, p1:esident of the,
So~ervi1le Board ot Aldermen and
acting Mayor in the abf:1cnce of Mayor

------ ...

--

_____...

\

·a1qe.11sap aueuojlda:,xa auoA q:>uJ-6£
siqi 3l{ew su.1aned pa{'tls a11n1rineaq puu
Al!Ienb .1aaqs .IUJ.tl "l{aaM SJql· saJOlS :>J.1qe.!{
.1no ui 1apow u aq pa.&:erdsip pue sassa.1p
OlU! dn apeui ;:,pqeJ (llJJmeaq S!l!i aas

J~hn . J
Murphy, who today leaves
M1am1, Fla, fa:~ Ji:a V?,na, is one of the

two youngest men

.{

to serve in that

J san1eA a1qe1j.1ewaH:
·su.1aned l:lu1.1dg [Il.JJlneaq
•.inau 3ql UJ SlJI!S P3lUJ.Id
snowe,!{ ·Al!{Bnb ape.12-q2JH

:I

,.='d~J~ )JI!S
JAMES Ii'

NOSNI11VW---

STYNES

capac~ty in that city. Th~ record was 1
estabhshed la,$,~ year by Representative
John J. Crowley, 29, then ':ice president
;e!.\~r~oard, of which 9e is still a

j

".Actin~ Mayor Stynes was born in
S0merv11Ie, attended St Joseph's Parochi~I Sch.ool, was graduated from Somerville High in. 1919, Boston University
C~ege of Business Administratio:t:;1 and
Su:tro;k_ Law Scho~I in 1925. He' is
practlc1n~r. He is a member of
Mt .Bene~1ct Coun.cil, K. of C , of Som..
JS married,
resides id

S:

1

;.:~~et

s:,1.1qvd Du1.1.ds
1v1:,z,ds a~-'l/.L a.1. v a.1.aH

\

and

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, ROSLINDALE, MASS.

**15
ITEM, BRIGHTON, MASS.

Last Night
on the Radio

~LVL.1.v.,.------.---____

l}Y Q. h,1. STATlC

1

There is residing on Stratford street

haVe developed. :(rom, the d'eC~1ogue to

fr:~r~~~;~rtnth~=~3:ct!~~ei!~tti;t::~:
deft.Ile- the 66ft, nu·ances between what
1:!~r!

':i~};0: ~{"i)...~~... :':·4, .\::,::

!

1

1

i;

I

!

cf Miss Sally
of Mayor James d
M. Curley, to Stan ton Reid \:Vhite of b
Beston, has been annoanced by Miss h
Curley s parents, 1\!Ir and Mrs John L
Curley
Miss Gt!fley is a graduate b

::ti~:

1

1

is right and wha't '·is wrong. - -

w~e~;e~e~~~~~~~1!:-t
htiri,.e and if so is the shooting
o.f ~··· ~trUd~r in that· plac.e· man...
; siti:~~ter oi:. ·defeD.c_e of the horri.e.. And
iS, ~. itier~ly angry - neighbor. come-. to
, ha~·e· it out, ~n,, the,- 'Sa~e ~l~~'e~tiO:J;l.,
de~~-deal~~
Y.O'U< . , :· ~. _: :ts .: ~. ·; 't~rn;t:"'. ' ......

t~f3'1

Charles S. O'Connor a native and for- !
mer resident of South Boston. Mr. I
O'Connor was a former member of the
0
Boston School Committee, represented
I
i!\h~ ; ; : :
C!u~h:ni:
South Boston in the House and Senate, i
the Riding Club, a talented pianist
was a candidate for Mayor and has
and one of the most popular of th~
been for years a professor of law conYounger members or the suminer colnected with the S u ~ . , & h o o l , ·
ony at Hull, w~ere her parents have
and a renowned lecturer on the plat-J
a summer home.
l\tir White is th"'
form for many years in New Engson of l\I;r and Mrs. A. E White ;
land. M_r. O'Connor is an orator, well 11
student at the Suffolk La~ Sch~ol
versed m many of the great subjects ,
and a member of the sand?"'Burr
of the day and is busily engaged with!'.
the many enterprises in which he is I
c_cuntry Club. The date of the w~d' interested. Mrs. O'Connor is well I'
ding has not been announced.
known for her interest in the many rl,
organizations she holds membership [
in in other sections of Boston
jJ

I

1

<

i:

a recently moved in notable, the Hon.

~:e~~i~~: ~!::r:f. ~h::~:1~=~~:~:;

.:~~~h::~~= ·.~it~t,;~~,.

L•"""'"""'-"'"""'~'l·'i

\.:.,.

consulting'

of

~

n::~~bLe~:s

~st number of ne-w
~~tt~~- ·r~
d1,finite period was given by Deputy ti
I-Iign 9hief Ranger Francis J Han- :
niga11./ ; . )
:

Noted New Resident
:
i The engagement
v "iOn Stratford Street i[i r··.J~.~.Ela Curley, niece

prospects of shoriting at an intruder.
because, it seems, shooting at him
within th:e wans of your home ,and
sb,ootip.g ~t him-Out on the lawn, m.akea
a. sub:(:le legal difference, ·WEAF-WEEI~
Dean .A,.rcher ,help.$ · to ·clarify ~ the

,~;:t~:r
one·s

~-tP/? 7

~

; Evelyn Stephenson 75 65 62;
Mabel Woodward 79 75 and 62.

Bene

.Something in the i~tereSting tal~ last
nig'ht of Dean . Gleason L. Archer, ot:
j the Suff..2,!;!f.,.""+:,,,aw 'S'Mi16ol 1 indicated the
importance o:f
a good lawyer
in the event one has· any immediat•

0

__

::.;~::r

~'
C,

g
F

:
a

·TH

SOMERVILLE ACTING
4

I

Stynes One of Two Youngest to Serve _city

1

James F. Stynes, 30, president of the,
Somerville l3oard ot Aldermen and
2.cting Mayor in the absence of Mayor
.J~hn .J. Murphy, who today leaves
M1am1, Fla, fm~ Hav{lna, is one of the

JAMES F

1

r500 ~
AT

MAYOR IS ONtY30

('

two :,youngest men. to

STON'GLOB~WEDNESDAY; M:At

ROXBURY PEOPLE'S

BANQUET TO JUDGE MILES
\

Ju(lge Hayden ~dvocates ·Relief of Superior Civil Docket
By District Comts·

serve in that

STYNES

Th~

capacity in that city.
record was .!
established la!?,~ year by Representative '
John J Crowley, 29, then -yice president .
of the board, Of which Pe is still a.
1

.q:ieinber.

\

.

· ':Acting Mayor Stynes was born in 1
Somerville, attended st Joseph's Paro ..
chial School, was graduated from Somervilie High 11;. 1919, Bos.ton University.
Cdliege of Business Administration, and
Suffo;k_ Law School in 1925. He is a.
practicin~r. He is a member Of
Mt Benedict council, K. of C , of Som•
erville; is married, and resides itt
• Ward 2.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

if

J

.. to: -- -

**15
MASS.

193)

Last Night
on the Radio

,..._v''

..

,

'·.

'

-

1..He -rdrg--

lers within a

~ by Deputy
.A plea. for relief of the.'Clogged BU• Rev Charles J. Ring; JamE::s l!. Bren.- tl.cis J Hanoerior Court civil docket by utiib;ing- nan of the Governor's Council, Dea:tJ
PROMINENT PE'RSONAGES AT BANQUET TO JUDGE MILES

;~1c~:.

'r';
t,
n
8

-

i;
ih~ District Court system was.: ~a4~ / ~~~~~~~m;':~a~~1i!uf.
~y
SiA'l'JC
b
last evening in Hotel Bradford _by Jus- Pres Gaspar G. Bacon of the. state
Mlss Sally l\
_Something in th~. lntereS.ting talk last !./
tic~ Albert F. Hayden of Roxbury Senate, Pres Thom.as F. Phelan of th~
night of Dean Gleason L. ArcberI ot. ·
Coll.rt, at a testinionial ba,.nquei t~ll.- Mt Pleasant Improvement A,.c;sociation, Iayor James d
'. the S u f t ~ W S'MirOol, inQicated the
•id ,Vh!te of b
importance of con,.su.lting a good lawyer
dered to Judge Frankland _w. L. Miles,
1
0
in the event one ha.s· any immediate ·
a new member of that tribunal.
McKinnon of the Dudley-st Folice Sta- ced by Miss 1J
prospects -0f shociting at 3,n intruder.Judge Hayden said juries IDay have tion, .Mr and Mrs William P. Miles, J. Mrs John Ir
because, it seems, shooting at hitn
to be draWn bjr the ·v1.Sti-ict" Courts i:ri I parents of the judge; Mrs Louise Miles, a graduate 11
within th"e wans of your home _and
order to hEilp out the situation. He I wife of the judge; Henry Lawler, ren·
sb,ooti.ng at him~out on the la'Yn, mak~
my
She is s
a. SU:btle legci.l differe~Ce, "WEAF-WEEI:.
\ pointed out that the District C.Out~ !
ra~~orv.o:-!~n~~d Repre.
ld Club and c'
Deab Archer helps to -clarify ~ the
under the law b~ye jurisdiction over 1 ._Mr Mahoney presented bouquets to
~oµietimes be:Wi-}dered lay D.1.1~d: :aom.Elt"·:O~
ma~y matters n,_ow brought before ~s-g.- 'Judge Miles' mother and to his wife. lted pianist,
~~: curious· menta'l. Phen-9111~~~- tha..~
per1or Court trlbunals. , It would be Judge Miles was presented a ~ibrary [Ular of the c:
ha"v~ developed ~.om. the ~e:~~log~e to:
i ,comp:1-ratively easy to. have ·additional desk by Councilor Dowd in behalf of Sum1ner colBl3.ckstone. and Musa,chusetts ·statut~
~.1str1ct Court judg~s appointed a._nd those present.
·
in the · 'ertOrt- through· the centuri:es -to
g.1ve them salaries commensurate w1tb
An en~e.rtainment was presented by Pren ts have g
defill.e the
nuances "between what
the work they woul4 perform, he &a,id. Jacctues Renard an old s ... hool chum :h!te is the J
is right -and wl_taJ '-.i~ Wro-ng~
T'3-e Superior C?our~ civil _sessions ~re of. Judge Miles. '
,
,
,_T-b,.er~ w~ even the .<.l~estion last night
1 ~hree years ~eh1nd _'in their work.
It
The committee included Dr Leon B. Fl White, a F
Wbethe·X'" olle•s vegetable :shed. !&. <pa~
1s absolutely ;mposs1ble tq have ~n ac- Balicer, chairman; Charles H. Savage, ~-~hooJ a
of''On-"e's hO~e and if so is the shooting
cident ca~e tried before a jury for three Esq,
secretary;
Morris
Elterman,
ot, . ~-· intrll:d+j!ri in that' plac~· man...
y_ea'l's, said .J':1-dge ~ayden, .and in that treasurer; William J'. Barry. Joseph ;andy Bnrr s
2;iau.@ter or. defellce ·of the_ ho;me.... ,A.nd.
time the _enbre ~vidence in the case a. Baxter, Albert Blank, David M. Pf the ,ved- a
iS · a,. :fuer~Jy angry n~igbbqr,. ~Orne . to
cc,uld easily vanish.
.
.,
Brackman, Felix Carroll, Edward V. ,bed_
ha.Ve- it out, tn,, the, ml~' ~~3'.~'.catlon--:
Judge
Hay~en_ weleomed
Judge Donovan, John F. Dowd, Harry Hadwith a. burglan .JL~ter, th~; de;~t!;l~de~l~n.b
'"Aolle 'its work?'
Miles to the JUd1ciary. He decla~d. dock, Nathan Haffer, William. Hasson,
~
"t¢rin·~
no appoint1=1-ent in recent y ~ s had John F. ~enney, Matthew ~ary, .Max
met such high appr9val.
N-;. Lebowitz, Dr Julian D. Lucas, John
. City Councilor John ~. ::powd "Pre- ¥V. Mahoney, waiter R. Mein~. William
-'~~ ,~
0

o. ~-

:;vsfr~ef"~!~~ J·Jfi~r~~~ ~~:~ ~::b

1

1

I~::1~~~:
I.
I

I

I

-sort.

·

'i_

· ,-~ · a , _

. . y'
0
' Sl~~ltet1~~ ~~ ~tb:0
:8~Jih{ie;~is- !;,r~e,;:n~~r~. CR«;~D~::.;i~sBer:, ~------s11'1;~j~·.'$~jjj'-'.'.11'li1i;_,·.;'"""'~"'·""'··'"··,,-,/

-J

torical

Society

compliment:?d, Judge

:~::~o?::fk:=~~;rsJ~=~i.::~1u-=:
Roxbury, who represented the pasta~,

Page,

Henry

~!~~~~-·.

Voss~

Pea:i;lman, Thomas
1
~~1e:·~~~t!~:

F.

'c~;~:t1!;

,·;,_~'--;-°'''.":;re,~;:. ;1-

aitierous
By David Brickman

J FOB. AGED PEOPLE

14

'

t.aye4 for 22 years. Only eight aou
,e provided for at
club
: Mrs Annah F • osg
en she was
___J 8 president u.ntil
hime which

'.

J

~!t!er~~eihe

J9tO• t:,!1

;

,ken sick a.nd d e k ~ for as foundel'
b.e loved and. wor e ·
Carolyn E,

,

i
nd first president. Mrs as her suc:ell, .a.rst vice presiden~lu~ until 1919. \:

.

,ss.or and se~edi t~iratlon the war ~
a struggle to keep JJ

r:a,:
~~~:J~dn,or

rilli'uring her
on and

J-.1auras
, lUai!

but before she retired \

another ro0U1
admit another person.

·.\ ·•n>,r
l~-~l
__.. ,
· au.. ibstaele• overcome

&Q, &5

I ~

f

~

Ni~holto::e:v!r,

4
; -t<oa:Mra Maud )4. B,
~
'. u.Jrs Bell ~dbtto:~d t~ithout funds. ,
, ".J.
,avily ln e
v rcome boW•
i WAbeae obstacles
were o efund Was es..
u1 ,..er. and a new buildingi
left which
. \blished, aided by lega-cuci:us for the

f

~

{;frs Ll~!fid~d;s\sev~~~g. apacioua, ta
--t~unded
tut-f.A-1'!7'~

with growing trees a~d \

-.:.1A..,. ..- " ' - ~ - 4 l f ' -

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i~

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1

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d~=

~:i~r!,~ufc:i

Ari Early Decision

The Reason

"An early decision Jn Massachusetts,"

~·:~:si~';t~!~:

"Anything that ~ends to break down
the co:p.fidence of people in those who
are pl.aced at the head of institutions
charged with the responsibility of spiritual and ihtellectual leadership should
bel carefully scrutinized
Informatio11;
c;'!~~~P~::e r~f
:;ii~re~P~~~-: given in Confidence is a sacred trust,
and ·~vith the possible exception of
hence the evidence was admissible
treason or an attack upon life, should
"It is clear, therefore, in view of the be so considered. I, for one, should
current of decisions in England and in be sorry to see anything happen that
this country, that in all States in which
~~~!W~:dofD!.~~'t
by a defendall.
embers of his
own church,·
htpn he had been
called for : r
jg,.~ admonition.
could be _used against ~ in a court of

l~:··

lit

itfi~~!

0

Jr;~:a~~u~!tt!t~~u~en/
~\ai!~)~ { .
a clergym~. 1 .
: 2 obli;ed _to testify~
1
~~;obn;i~e;;~~~h~~~e~un~~; ~~u:a~: ~
true of all clergymen whether Catholic Ii
or otherwise
"It is apparent from the language of
the judge in the Minnesota case that ·
secrets of th_e confessional are protected 1.

1
i

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of their patients to the court? Th~re
is ho law of Massachusetts which

.

1

savs they c.ian withhold it.
"Aside from law, however," concluded i
\Vhat can be_ done?_ \\That's the D~an Arch~r~ "we ~annot . .f~il to ad- i
reaction?
\¥hat is the law here, mire the sp1nt that 1s mamfest by the j

i :::;rf:~:h s;ft~so;is ~:Jfsr~~~e~~ shI~u\~j

_.- """Tnt onl;y-:profess1,onal s-ecr~t~ that unfortunate that no statute exists to.:~
j

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HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

.
are regarded as ~?sol1:-tely privileged protect him in this matter v\""e shoullf:1
at commorl law,
said Gleason L tal.:e heed in Massa'Chusetts and speed..; l
Archer, de-a:11 and foupder of the' ily enact a statute that will exempt':
Suffol1" Law School j 11 commenting I clergymen of every religious faith an4
011 tl;~ Rev. Swen~on case "were denomin_ation from discl?sing . confi~
communications made by a ~lieni to , i::s~~~a;m:aa;~~~Yt~ them rn their prq:his attorney \\ hile consulting him in I T. 'Everett Fairchild a :miriister who'.J
professional capacity. In all such 1 has ghen up active p~e.aching- in' 01der-i
cases it ,vas contidered imperative that he~ might devofte all his time to:
t~a-~ th.r.P.~}~12 ·s-eel~ing advice- s..hould~I assis~i?g :1?r._ I?~!lr~~ -~ ~f3:rs.h, pre~id~J?\l
4 kt"H--me<?·to "sta:te- h(§'-· cas~:ft1UY, :a'1fR1- ~tc.P,Ps.¥r1 ~.I:1-i> ¢,r1 1
1i·
!.}, .'7'!t\. ~:t- ~fl\?:t1

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a

ELY NAMES NEGRO
JUYENILE COURT CLERK

t~
trn~

T. Lane, 31-year-old Negro atof BostOn. yesterday was nominated by Gov Ely to be cle~k of the
juvenile court ·of Bos~on .. ,.He was
named to succeed. Charl.~s \V1lhams. •. also
a. Negro, who died a month a.go
For five y(!ars Lane .has practiced law
from the office of J'Ulian D. Rainey,:
.
.assistan~ ·corporation Cfillll:~.e.·l o~ B oston.' 1
..
ta.tie um at· Q.31 Oolllllfbus .avenlle. _2'.nd
hits 1r~fr active- 11;.· Dem.ocra.tic . politics '
· for ·1t·years. He wa,, porn In .Vu-glnia,
received
law

I

1

.;-~\;~,1

/\~tnk).Y·; \:~:ithm;t." ffla~f '6J :·_$,11~:~~t'j&~ih Ft\~rc.!r;:};~~}1~:u~-r~~:;!~~~~~!::~~~cj:-,j
1

CXpos_u1;_;l'PY....the

P~J.:~O±!

.cogs.~t~sl~-

J:i~t.

c.o.fil!e~l}lJ.s:Q. .Yi.fl:

~pio,n>-ot,~·Mb.\.~

His Reason

!~l

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. .
Admires the ~pint

Dr Donoghue said that a
Minneapolis incident was c
seemed· to him as if the
have been tactless, but he
the law in making the mir
or judge him in contempt c
... I don't believe such a
happen here in lHassachus~
judges have considerable
he pointed out "Yet I C
that any law should be ena
doctors and ministers exei
testifying in courts what
found out in confidence frc
tients, because it might be
is worse than the disease '
quack doctors and frauds w
protected by sU.ch a step
"Up until now, ,ve have
n;eed for such a law and 1
sonally, feel that beC'ause i
on the bench may be ind
: tactless enough to force :
.minister to testify or sufft
·for it, there is any necessi
lation in' the matter
M
justices are brilliant and ~
'and they would never, I t
minister or doctor t0· div
sional confidences unless
dences bad a very gra \ e an
ing on a. case
"In such an instance," cc
Donoghue, "it would be
vantage of the community ~
the professional man divul
knows, and after an that
law aims to achieve
l
1 judge may
have been tac
action, is no rsason wh)
1
should be p'assed. , For yo
'rect tactlessness by statute
~'Rotten!" exclai~ed Pro
lermo Ball, well known an,
pe1 ienced Boston sociologis1
ming up in one word his
reaction toward th-e fini
Lutheran minister for ref1
the court what his parishioi
fessed
"I don't for a moment
a thing could happen anyv
Minnesota," he continued
could not happen here ir
setts, for, fortunately, we
'be~h ill this Sate a group
, think in straight lines ar
0
tsoen:e~i~i!ri:e;?·~~et~
cdnfi.dence. and revelatio,n tc
a lawyer, are matters fovic

~~c:t;Jif:ct~~n \~a!tf!~~1:d ~~\ifu~\a~;
confessions to Protestant clergymen I
A.ssu?T'ing this to be the law in Minne- 1:
sota, : ·1e clergyman in this case would !
be gu..lty of contempt of court and lia- :
bl~ to punishment accordingly
:I
is ~~nft:rn~~. tht~J:; soefe~~as~~ch;ese~~
statute on the point The common law ~
rule applies and our courts apparently :
have no right to oblige clergymen of :
all denominations to disclose confidentiaI communications made to them in
1their official capacity by parishioners I
A?d _doct?~s, too, f~el that there }s :!':e~c~~~~ t~a~~u~ha~~;~r t~!~ ft°tm~:~~.
a ppnc1pal mvo_lved with them. Will not be under extraordinary circum-:
they have to '?:1vulge the confidences stances. .
'
_

w?~}-~-:?""r~--- -: -·

.

Would force any person,
dergymari or a doctor,
otherwise.''
Although he expressed
that he thought it was and
~ac;;~~~ste~tior:iz:t a ~u~~~f~
him in his professional cf
also that in some cases it r:
fa'ir and brutal· to make a
·away information which he
in his professional pursuit
!e.ss it seemed like a good t
tz~mp~~~~re;~at~ t:;ct~~~r~~
said Dr Francis D Donogl
·adviser to the MassachusE
ment of Industrial .Accident
A Doctor's Vie,

I

fi

Rev. E!11il Swens.on d e n c e o~ . the
~ound that. hi~ duty as a mtm~tet
dtd not pernut him to do such a thmg.
So he was adjudged in contempt of
court.
New England iS as much stirred
ove.r the decision as the rest ?f. the
United States, for now a minister
knows not how . he stands.
So!Ile
States have f:pecific statutes to give
minister·s privilege from revealing
conf,..ssion but Massachusetts is not
one ~f th;m 1

__!:ld

.l

neapolis judge in fining the Lutheran
minister Who refused to divulge the
confidenc~s made him by his parishioner
,
A C1ergymait's View
"Every c1ergyman, in-i:he regular put. suit of his duties," stated Mr Fairc;hild,
"is confronted fmm time to time with
th~ necessity of: adYising th~ member~
of his parish wto look to him for help
and leadership in their critical momen ts
"As a result of such contacts, he
f~~;-:~i~~n c;~is ·s~~~~d P;:!:~si~~
vulged except by the person '\vho gave
it to. himr At t~ same time the person in need would never have come
to him ualess it was believed that the
c1ergyma1fs
position,
professional
ethics, arid fine sen'se of values would
guarantee that the information once
~~:~~- w~~ldtatee ~~!}nsi~~c~es;riit~;
to rob the clergyman of one of the
most distinctive and important functions of his. office, and to sharply cur ..
tail his sphere of usefulness in the
::m~ni;i~·e:;~:t t;~!r~~ ott;h;:~r!;;=
trator in educational institutions, who is
~:~~~~n~rre~~~edan~po~e;;;b:r~vi~ef \ti;
faculty in matters involving the utmosi::
privacy

I

~~~di~~~' th!~s~~:
man had come to
the· clergyman f?r
mental atd and m
strict confidence.
The Rev. Swenson had refused to
reveal the confi-

~&

Exempt

"The lawyer could not be compelled to
I tE:stif.Y as to such confi~ential com:nunications, although he might_ be obliged
fJe:i~;a~i;h~u~!~1::il;au°Jw~!:tn~i~~td
reveal such other items of knowledge
'that could not' be saia to have been
gained through the confidential relation
I of attorney to client
"In. ~he absence of statute, therefore,
;~~;~~ar; re~~al ~~e;!~:~~~ c1;;~mu:i~
cations even though such were imparted to them while they weie acting in a
professional capacity," Dean Archer
explained
"A case exactly similar to that of
1
;i\:~!~l~nJni;'1:1i;~eaf: ~ d'T:trc~e~~~t_
between a couple, man and wife, the
vicar of the church was obliged to testify as to confidential communications
made by one of them in seeking spiritual advice. The com t 1 uled that the
e':~denc~ was admi.ssible. .
2
caJen if':;a~e:s~~t!~ia~"t~ 0 ;ro~e ~u:~~~
fession made by the defendant. to a
major in the Salvation Army. The court
beld that if the major were to be con~~;~mp~1tvil~ed c~::uf~~~;
was no statute in the State on the point.
The common law rule prevailed here

fession,
he
insisted
that the
Rev. Swenson re~
veal what his
parishioner ha d

1

e,g·:1..ve the offl-cers a. n
~s~.,unda.tion of a. new hWom:.urlburt su,c..
es,.· In 1927 M1·s Arthur
• .
u the
•At.. eded Mrs Nichols, keep1n\ .ft.1m:u.
..lf'i'ork a.n!i adding to the fu~a' Club J.,f
;nted by a. gift from the
1930, Mrs
, S'\t\Ot'Chester of $500, In A~cc0eded Mrs
~ a~bel Boger! ~m~:~U:gust following
( u~x,.urlburt a!\. ..,... Qn Melville e.v was pur•
·)1.ie home '~'!';~,......
~.,.ased.
'
rte4 In the Fall
1 t
Alteratioas wer~ta ork of ma.king
· last yeaf' a.nd
e w the needs of
Jlirer the \1,c,use to 111:~\shed recently,
1e club tohda0 ~8;,d, Mansfield worked
Y
ra Blanc e sg
Th ugh the
t~1t the color sc:e~~rts 0 A. Neill
- ueen interest a.n of the founder .. presi..
,h~goodt gra:d;onQsgood the new Dort(nt, Anna
,
f r~lshed,
1ester home was F 'bsgood Home for
The new Annah •
d to the public
i1eiged People was openeda afternoon,
ilhir Inspection on SkuU !ge4 perso11s
).'u,arch 1. Next wee
to give the
1111 be taken In.
f "It is our a.im and deslre
.. aald
ed all the comforts o! botqe,
\

~

fession, but since
~ Lutheran was
involved, and the
Lutheran Church
has no formal con-

d i

.A:re Sa1

Persona".

+~~~-~~~~~~~~~~+~~~~~~~------~+--------.:.--r
Lawyers

As an ominous silence settled over
a courtroom in Minneapolis, a few
days ago the judge leaned forward
on the b~nch, 1ooke~ squarel:y at the
defendant before him and, m clear
tones, said:
~·1 judge you in contempt of court
and fine vou $100"
This sentence, simple and unimport.ant as it may seem on the f~ce
0 ! it,. has brought a storm ~f . 111 d1gnahon from all over the Umted.
States and has caused doctors, lawyers and ministers throughout the
country to rise up in defence of their
rights.
. ,
. .
. For the }.Imne~p?hs Judge was ~n1ng a Lutheran minister for contempt
ot court becau?¢ the clergyinan, the
Rev. Emil Swehson had refused to
testify in a divOi:ce t~al ,vhat the hus1
hand, one of !l.is parishioners, had
told him. in; c~mfession .I

The JUd?"e. ,_!1ad said that 1f t~e
Lutheran mm1ster had been a Catholic
'
. priest, he would
n"qt ask ~im to reveal, . th~· confession -be~se the
Catholic } · Church
H;s form.a:-1 con-

1

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A Sociologist's Vl

'·.

"In Massachusetts ther,
exist a tacit understandir
not actually recognized by l
confidences of an individual
la\vyer, or priest a1e not to
It would be preposterous fc
ask a catholic priest in Mi
fo:r example, to reveal ~
made to him in church I :
;t: -a pricsf Were plo.CC:d
duress, he would rather ta
.iail .sentenae in c6ntenipt_ o
tell what 'had been gi\·en ~

·~::~i~~~1:~~Ui=f"~~::;
r~s.h! in !.efu~4)S:

~Q

gl~ 1J1~

.

(.

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.,

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'' ~

)

.Lea,krs Sa~, Woutl:t1eveµt the Fi~~ fa, l)°-[eiic;) ~'~He irefuled lo bi,,_
dose a Confidence~~~Criticism of Minneapolis Judge, Now StormCentr~

;

+•~~~~~~~~~~~~~+·~~~~~~~~~~~~~+-~~~~~~~-'-~~--~~-+-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

neapolis judge fn fining the Lutheran Would force any person, much less a his parishioner had confessed to him
Lawyers Exempt
minister i.vho refused to divulge the dergymari or a doctor, to 'treat it
"The judge has jeopardized his own
silence settled over
"The lawyer could not be compelled to confidences made him by his parish: otherwise.''
Position by holding the minister in
-inneapolis, a few testify as to such confidential commu- ioner
· Although he expressed the opinion oontempt of court and then fining hilll

f:~

·.judge leaned forward
0
A Clergymait's View
;:~~e~! ;~~;:,~;o;t awf;d;~~o~~~l1t ~~a~
:i~cfi;~
lqoked squarely at the ric~~~;;i f~~h~~!~ti~; :Jg~~ biu~~i:gt~ ·
0~ ;:ie1~a~o;;;;e~ed s
re ,him and, in clear ~~~~~iys~~~ C~~t:~s it:~:w:ri~o~id:~ i "Every clergyman, ilt"'the regul~r p~t- ~immi;~s~rs ~e~~~;si~n~fn~:~~~~Y,gi;~~ p;~~:~:or d~arl S~fTh~ha;~~we~X~~ai~i~

t1°~t

that could not be said to have been : suit of his duties," stated Mr Fairc.hild,
in contempt of court gained through the confidential relation "is confropted frem time to time with
·
of attorney to client
the necessity of: advising the members
e, simple and unim~
"In. !he absence Of statute, therefore, . of ·his parish who look to hi~ for helP
h f
Ph)'.Sl'Clans or clergyme;1 m~y
b_e and leadership · in their critical mO~y- seem on t e ace obliged to reveal confidential commumt
ght a storm O~ in- cations even tI?,ough such were .imp.art- m~~t a result of sucb contacts, he
all over the United ed to t~em while t~e~,,were acting m a 1 frequentl:Y comes into possession of
caused doctors, law~ pro{e~~1-0nal capac1t),
Dean Archer information that should nev~r be di,.'ntj~ister.s- throughout the e~p a1 ed
. .
vulged except by the person who gave
:':i;'ise up in defen·ce of their
A ?a.se e~actly simila.: to that . of it to him, At the sarne time the perthe. minister m. Minneapolis ';"'as deci~- son in Med wo\lld never have come
1893 In a divo_rce smt to him unless ft was believed that the
'Nfintle3.poliS judge was fin- ed m England m
. .
b:tween a couple, m_an an~ wife, the clergyma:r\'s
position,
professional
, Cran.,tmmster for contempt v:1car of the church .v.:as obll,::,ed_ to _tes- ethics, arid fine sense of values would
1
'_,;J,:ecause' the clergyman, the t1fy as to confidential. comm~mcat~o!ls guarantee that the jnformation once
~1 -Sw~hsOn,. had refused to made b}'. one of them In seekmg spirit- given would be held in strictest confi··: · '~iVtj~Ce trial what the hus.. ua~ advice The cou:t ruled that the dence. T6 take away such a trust is
6£ l;\is parishioners, had evidence was admi.ssible. .
t
0 b the lergvman of one of the
1922
confessionl
''In. ~ew Jersey m.
m a murder ::.os~ dist:incfive ·and important func·;hid said that if the ~:::1~~ b:::e .:;,at:~~ald~f:;~~/\~on; ti~ns ~f his. office, and to sha:rp~y curis'ter had been a Catholic major in the Salvation Army The court tail his. sphere o~ usefulness m th_e
'
· priest, ,he would held that if the major were to be con- comm:-rnrt.y V\'.'hat 1s true of the cle:'~3'sidered a clergyman the communica- man 1~ l1kew1s: tru: o; t1?-e admm1~n'~ ask him to re- tion would not be privileged since there trator m educational 1nst1tut1on~; who 1s
confes- was no statute in the State on the point frequently called upon to adv is~ stision: 'be~se the The common law rule prevailed here
f!r!:\~er~ni~v:i:::ef~e ~tm~sl
'lath 1· 1'4ch
h
Ari Early Decision
privacy
~·,.. o lC ;,'"t urc
Has forriral con"An early decision ,in Massachusetts,''
The Reason
fession, bUf since ~~~!~~i;d0 fD!~~- 4
i:~~~:e~!~:
"Anything that ~ends to break down
.;1 ~ Lutheran was
d
't
b
f h"
the copfidence of people in tbose ,vho
by a efendan
em ers o
is are placed at the head of institutions
involved, and the own church, bef .
. ~ he had been charged witJ:.l the responsibility of spiriLutherari Church called for reproof. ~¢!. admonition, tual and intellectual leadership should
has no formal con- could be used e.gaiIJ.St lj.ij:n. in a court of bei carefully scrutinized
Information
fession,
he
in- law, The Supreme c01rrt declared that given in confidence is a sacred trust,'
sisted that the the common law rule would apply, and "'ith · the possible exception of
Rev. Swenson re- hence the evidence was admissible
treason or an attack upon life, should
,"f'al what - his c~?r~~i ~~e~~c~~~~f~~e,~~g~~; :!at~~ be so considered I, for one, should
parishioner had this country, that in all States in which be sorry to see anything happen that
told him despite there is no statute forbidding it (and - - the -;fact 'that the ).\Iassachusetts is ~ne of. these State.s), 1,
'

100"

ve~~~~-)~j

#:;~~Y

ma~ had come to !s c;~r:::~{~~ntial c~:U::i~~1,;~tib~st:~!! \
the cl~rg;y-man f?r to him by a. parishioner This would be ij~:
::i~ia~o~id~~~e~n ~~u~t~~/~;}s~:ergymen whether Catholic
The Rev. Swen•
son had refused to
reveal the confid
th
0
.
enc e
e
~ ,
1
1~ duty as a m m?tet
h1m to do such a thing.
as adjudged in contempt of

0

A D

'

V'
octor s 1ew

8

Dr Donoghue said that as far as the
Minneapolis incident was concerned, it
seemed· to him as if the judge may
have been tactless, but he wa:s within
the law in making the minister testify
or judge him in contempt of co.urt
... I don't believe such a thing might
happen here in l\fassachusett~. 'for our
judges have considerable discretion,"
he pointed out "Yet I don't believe
that any law should be enacted to give
doctors and ministers exemption from
testifying in courts what tbey have
0
0
ife~~~.
t~!;
:
is worse than the disease Think of tht
quack doctors and frauds who ·'would be
protected by such a step
:
"Up until now, we have not felt the
n'E/,ed for f su ch ha law and I d~m't, per:;;ona11 Y, ee 1ht at bebc.au~e some, ersond
P
on the benc may
e mdisct'ee
an
, tactless enouph to force a doctor or
minister to testify or suffer a penalty
·for it, there is anY necessity ;tor legislation in the matter. Massachusetts
justices are brilliant and sensible men
and they ,vould never, I think) .;all a
minister of.adoctor tG divulg~ prof~~1
11
~~~nc~ s ~~~ ~ ~~~s g~;~~s!nl ;\eal ci;a;:
ing on a case

lJ~~1~s~ 1~f~~~~~

H

is Reason

"Kow, the laws :,vhich a judge in the
state of Minnesota upholds are the laws
of the state, and not of any chut'ch.
Yet he says he recognizes t~e law of
the Catholic church which definitely
says that confession is part of the life
of the Catholic and must be considered
inviolate.
"The judge in this case admits he
recognizes a. canon of a specific reli0
b~'Yte';h1~~t~~
;.~~
he refuses to recognize the duty of a
minister to his flock and the law of
public opinion insists that the confidence of a parishioner to his minister
must not be violated
"This judge has indicated nothing less
than religious discrimination He lays
himself open to attack as an adminjstlator of the l~w .who will discriminate
in favor of one church in preference to
another; he laYs himself open to attack
because he indicates that he cannot
think logically, and he lays himself open
to attack because he is attempting to
~~~~~~:ema~1:~o-!!~o;~lat~~~~ciple of
"A lawyer receives a client and is told
~~!~fsonin ,,<:ro~\~di~i~~~n;'!oi~e!!~~eraii

!~ ~h:-

~!t~~~~::~e~~

l

~~~i;,0

0

1

~
f:~~i ffle/n:1 t~;~ fse .;ta~t t~!
law aims to achieve
Because one
tactless in his
1 judge may have been
action is no reason why new laws
.should be p'assed., For you can't cor'rect tactlessness by statute!"
~'Rotten l" exclair:qed :professor Guillermo Hall, well known and widely-ex-

:
!,
1

[i

'
I

:
t

0

~fe ~~;i~~n~~h:~~~mic~o r~i~ g~;t and lia- /

:i~:n~~d i!

~it~~~~n

I

0

e° ;~~1° ~f~s;'.tt~~~~e s~~d

0
~~

1

\~~

~~l~

I
!

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I

;:~e hc~~tfd{ntee;ft~e5:;;~n:·o~~
court could make them, under any
dures~ . Certainly a minister who~e
duty 1t 1s, because of the nature of h1s
calling, to aid the mentally ill and receive their confess.ions, would never
and should never gr:·e ~>Ut t:> anybody
what 1:as been told him m strictest con-

I

fi~.~~c~!1e courts _tri.ed to extra.ct ~he
1
f~~;~~st~~;/~~~f~sii;n:r:e;~i~~ee ~:~~;
from all of us Such procedure would
constitute an attempt to undermine the
sacre?ness of. sp~ritual law. and-·:a!ly
step m the direction of forci
~mste.rs, d?ctors. or. lawyer~ to
l
for~at10n g1Y~n them ~n
their professional duties
checked promptly,
''Wh~ther a c;hurch ~oes
re~o.gnize the col'!-fess1onal
point The ess~nhal duty o
is to ,aid those ,\r<:~b~~d._so
hbely·p1a,.;,f tthheen 'femg;asltesrt;Pssnought to·' .b,e

~;~;ter
r~1:Sfng 0[
0
the court ,vhat his parishioner had confessed
"I don't for a moment believe such
a thing could happen anywhere but in
Minnesota," he continued
"It certainly
could not happen here in Massachu'setts, fol', fortunately, we hM'e on the
bench in this Sate a group of men who
ithirik in straight lines and have the
:goo_!l sense to appreci~te that a confession to a minister of the church, or a
cdnftd.ence and t",evelatio,n to a doctor or
.~ lawyer, are matters· i'n,violate

is "Sc~nfca:rn~~. tht~1J:; :Je!~as~~ch;ese;;~
statute on the point The common law ~
rule applies and our courts apparently I':
have no rigllt to oblige clergymen of :
all denominations to disclose confidential communications made to them in
their official capacity by parishioners I
The fact that such power has not been
exercised ts no warrant that it might
not be under extraordinliry circum-.
stances. ,
.
,,
·

'
• ·•
1

of ,Massachusetts which
Adnt1res the ,.Spb:it
Gan Wit'hhold it.
".Aside from law, however," concluded
can b, done?. What's the Dean Archer, "we cannot. f~il to ad- I
i.
...
What is the law here, mire the spirit that is manifest by the l!
' A Sociologist's View
~~k:;e t~h~~~~e:;io~~~e h'fs0 i:;~:=t~ni;ai~
0
' .,.._.....-. · -- .... ;~.
\ ~:;;~:fh s;:t~so~s
s\~u1~
·\
"Tn ~assachusetts there seems to criminal," concluded Professor Hall
1
ofess1pnal SC"Cr~t? that!1 unfortunate that no statute exists t o B n
e~~sta/tu~\~ycitrec~tg~~~!tda~dyiff{v,~~~~~t~ 1·:
~s ~~sol~tely pnv1leged [ protect him in this matter We should,j
law, said Gleason L, tal;:e heed in Massachusetts and speed"'.
confidences of an individual to a doctor,
and foupder of ~he, ily enact a statute th~t. will _exempt. I
la,vyer, ot priest are not to be le, ealed
~chool, in commenttng 1 clergy1:1en of every rel1_g1ous. faith an?·!
It. Would be preposterous for a judge to
ask a Catholic priest in Massachusetts,
S ·e son case "were denomlI~ation from discl?smg . conf1.~ !
w n
' . ·
dences imparted to them m their pro~ l
for example, to reveal a confession
0
ns ,made by ~ che?t ! i fessional capacity"
~ade to him in church . I am sure ;hat
]
1
h1le c~:insultmg hun m
T. Nv:erett· Fairchild; a .miril~ter WhO'.~
, if;ia priesf Were plaCe!d under: such
capacity, In all suchJ has gh.-en up acfr,e preaching in· order J
(;I.Uress, he would rather t;:1ke a fine pr
considered. in:iperative that he- might ~ev?te all his time to!
jail.zentenae in c6nten:ip\ @f court than
h;4S"~eking ad.vi.cc, s..hould. ·.assis~ing DI' ·oanre1. L .}.:ta):".sh .. p~esid~n.t.,l
..
~ell-what ·had been giVen him in str!.cJ

~

~~;Jf:~~~e~~

~

I

I

,
1



'•h,cyj~~St~~z:t~}}~·,;~ru,. ~~·{!f;4to1):~fJf~i~({lj;J;:!~~~~Ar~\;1tl
~ ?f ,).ib.,p,11f~ntl'-tlts•ntie~~.n:.'l~~\{:H'1J:~'4l,-~l't".f.t.-Of:·-U"t<:t>\t)i-ni:f'd

..1.~.~ .p~r!?O~ .cogs!!!P;~~

Ji"-~-~~ _µii? ~yiqn· 01;': ~ ~~il\.~;

~

0

~~
"',;,-u-1,
refu§4)~ !:~ iin

.~.;~,.n,,fi,.~.~r·._•.f,1~.:.~~1u,1.·ai;;:;,··,.~.~-~~:,f.t.~.~-~.;~t,'y(
rn

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;.y.'"-1,

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_,,..,~,

~O:~fY.<11-~

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information which seemed to have so t
much bearing in the divorce suit

i: J~:~r

His Reason

0

01

"In such an instance,'' concluded Dr a patient goes tQ his doctor and tells
Donoghue, "it would be to the ad-, !1-im .abo1;1t h~ms.elf in co?fidence, that
vantage of the community at large that] mformation 1s sacred 1'0 la:wyer or

I

"It is apparent from the language of
the judge in the Minnesota case that
secrets of the confessional are protected
by statute in that State but that no
such protMtion is afforded to voluntary
confessions to Protestant clergymen
Assun,ing this to be the law in Minnesota, i ·1e clergyman in this case would

also that in some cases it mlght be un- vious 1 11 the first place, the judge who
fair and brutal· to make a doctor give passed the contempt of court sentence
·away information which he ha:ii gained said jhat if the minister had been a
in his professional pursuits, nevert~e- Catholic priest, he would not press him
less it seemed like a good thin?: for the for a reyelation of the confidence becommunity that the courts did not ex- cause the Catholic church recognizes
tend privilege to doctors and ministers, formal confession.
Then this judge
said Dr. Francis D DonQghue, medical ,w<:!ht on to point out that the Lutheran
adviser to the Massachusetts Depart- church does not recognize formal conment of Industrial A c c i d e n t s h sdsionno arn,. dghttha,t twh•,.,hm i ndisttehre, trheeqrue;it~~
fe

.-~~ehti

.

.·[''f'':··r· :
'"
......·. '1.l\?n·' · to0,RS'
,v\~.

by. the
meiican (' ~ln;~
· ·nollticing al'.'"J'educti9D.: "o:f ·~he.' millimU.lll

'A-'

rate: of the" March 28. Easter ctnt_s0· to
the West Indies by the· S. S.-. Reliance,
effective MarCh 11, the ste~ship com-

g::r,J

) of
in~

the

rest
eler
11.-e11-

1gth
·hile

Shepard's FUR '/'RIMMING
SHOP-Second, Floor

acnot

ives
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~,tion
All
~
,
.
.
:
..
"

'DISHONORED" NOT ART,,~:;;
BUT AN ENTERTAINMEN';ff
that
uled

Aarlene Dietrich's New Picture Deals With WotriWar in Fascinating Manner
,es

.-~~~~~~~~~.;...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_,~ton

proster
1ese
and

HOLLYWOOD IN PERSON
By MOLLIE MERRICK
!pecf&J Dispatch to tbe Globe and the Nortb (

American Newspaper A.IIiance
HOLLYWOOD, Calif, Ma.rob II-Mu•
ene Dietrleh'a new picture."' Dlsbon•
.>red," viewed here, ti a swell evening'•
1ntertainment.
It'• interesting,
:orially diverting, and deals with that
~erennlally fascinating subject-the
1py system of the World War.
On the other hand, It's entertain•
nent, not art; possibly because of the
~lements above mentioned.
Had It

plc.-

10

~e'!.:io~e:~1:r·e!J!J :1tt

5

I;~~e:e:i~=e
I

dJ!a: :r f
,

p'f'a~cat:1o3':

1

tite
a bea utftul woman at the hands of a
fl.ring squad in the bat>e. 'snowy
quadrangle of a Viennese prison 0 I
would have gone forth hideously de.
pressed I felt tine. You've got to
charg~ such things up to the picture.
Mar,ene Dletrleh Is otlll the girl cal·
eulated to give Greta Garbo the closest
run tor leadership which this film
colony can offer.' Her work In "Die•

honort:d" ts excellent.

to one of the scenes. Von Seyfle2:
v.-a.s tntended by fate for a stern n intalre. The picture doesn't bother "
other women. and doesn't need ththis
This one is enough to keep you intter
~~.:::!~hin~n:,
angles of It wlll not make It' 10re
popular.
~ee
-to
Not !lo Mn. . of • Blok
jer
Only a very clever or an ex:ceedlll.fwo
indifferent young man would vent\he

1

Her beauty le

teJling..
repress19nHer comedy touches adeft. her
magnificent. She ts woman
of provocation, of subtlety. She shines

Ware Praises French
Line for Hub Sailing

S.S. "NEl'I
Ap

r-

The Republic of the United States
Lines sailed from Philadelphia yesterday on its fifth and last West Indies
cruise of this season
The Republic
again ~a,iled ,Vith a capacity list, and
with many passengers who are residents
of New England
Among those from Greater Boston
are Mr and Mrs Hayward Wilson,
Mr Ralph VV Menard, Mrs· .Joseph M
Turk, :Miss A }.f Turk, :Mr. and Mrs.
J .J O'Brien (Mr O'Brien is chief of
Police of Belmont, Mass), Mrs. Charles
McAleer, Mr John Fitzgerald, Mr. \.Villiam R Coleman, Mr. John E Maloney,
Miss Miriam Maloney, Mr. and Mrs
Edward D Raymond, Mr: Frank Carroll, Dr. Louis Gross, Mr P F. Herbst,
Mr. and l\:!rs A H. Hovey, Mr. S. A
Muldrew, Dr and Mrs David E H.arriman, Mr_ Charles. P. Eccleston and
Mr Roy P Ecc;eston

_

wds::

t

1r1u11t~
. cfZ'.3ermi

Halifu $16 50

10 State

Sailings &om India Wharf, Boston, Mon. alld

fr~!'Y:!~~~/"f~!~~~~~~;~~~te~.T1r:f
Std. Time) For reservations apply 1nduL Wharf
Office, Tel. Hancock 1700; 50 Franklin St., Tel.
Liberty 5586 or 443 Boylston St., Tel. Kenmore
0228-0229.
.tf.tmntPWtiom for .A.11tomobila.

or any A:utl

-<ff)b@

BOSTON-YARMOUTH
of the Eastern

LINE Steamship Lines

Washingt~
Better Gradi

~

Spring Tod

~

Escorted parties
May,

.---

all expenses. Optij.
Ian~ic City, Hotel~~

~:\'!

HOTEL Lo:!*~~E

Pad,
43. Boulevard Raspail
.
Good Fare--Perfect comfort-Old Wmes

A

CARMANIA AND CARONIA
-,
ARE FAST CABIN StHJtesJ, 1
Statistics on speed averages dur1~~~~ \
1930 show that the Cunard liners Cid. be ,,
mania and Caronia made an avera1olic \
speed for last year of 17 77 knots, a
1
17 20 knots. respectively, very .fast ti;e of 1·
!or cabin liners
that
These popular 20,000-ton liners hacted
been in the cruise service to Hava: no "
and NaSsau this winter They are tary !

:~~~~~

t~ th~a~~:~~:la~J}fi;:r.;~cec~~~. I·
8

ELY NAMES NEGRO
. ~YENILE COURT CLERK
·
T Lane, 31-year-old Negro att· rney of Boston, yesterday was nominated by Gov Ely to be clerk of the
juvenile cou_i't of Boston. : He was
named t::> succeed Charlzs ,villiams, alsQ
a.
wl!,o died a mpnth ag<>:.
.

Negro,

{. ~tcCl·tt~i.··e>t6'-1$ta'.tt, 'hXs- CM~':ft1UY .;G='~

I

fr;::,.r n~: ~itfc! L~feji~:Jr[ti;~~:~:

~S:rf'if{e:olf;~tig~1~b~~:1a~inBostonci !
ha~ be'&xi' active- ill,...Democratic

·tPi. ll':' ,. ears.

Week .. End Partt~:~ !

I
I

~:;~t~~~~s ~~r~:

by

his attorney "hile consulting h1min
a. professional capac1t3In all sm
cases . it was con~ei ed 1111perat)r
th~t th{'. _pe.r'son -seeking advice- sho1_

~e was _born in:.
law degre~

.



jranld~,

v:ithout:'"'°fe';f{ <'8'£ ·' siriJ':fc.f-:j:ff

-~pOSUj~\;'~~ _th~

tWin:~~rfct}i~~s~~: ~fent~;"·b!~t~~~~ho(~
at very reasonable rates.;The Inn is iderl
all-the-year-round affair. and gue~ to I
can enjoy delightful spring and :sumn?-~n_t.1
"'.eather in a health~ .locatio~ . Vn(.;\;.llj:l'I
the ,:ourt:-01;1s anr1 eff1c1ent managern~~a...
~n~1 ha\ i~ade

i

ii~i:.eo~ \:t?.!ls~i~51~:> t:1~:;_rm~\~
··--,:;-_.-;'""--::-'··-

~~~

BERMlil'f

Special all-ex'1
$69-up S1.1nd'~'9

I

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

€J
:N1

;~ii~fSt c~e;uJ32 ~

~~;J~c~:f~nd ~ft~~=o~~~t to:~~
Q~ded
the Washington Birthday week-end, tad-\
Inn was filled to capacity, and t the i
guests epjoyed to.boggauing, skiing, hbuid 1'
.ing, and other , 1,-inter sports, and ,vit is
the continuance of winter weat}l to,J
guests have continued to enjoy thel'.luld-i
at common law,'' said Gleason
selves at this, sport The Inn is ideaeed.;:;
Archer, de,an and fou11der of :h located, just isufficiently far out frcmpt:
Suffolk Law School, in comments- the main road to place it in the he~and·
0
~~m~~~n.i!~i~nss:~nle
c~se~li~::~ ~;r t!~1ecs°~~Y~i~:~e;~1

-,-----'~,

visiting-

t:7:fr-:i,~~:;u~1

The \Vrenmore lnn at VVrenthaight
Mass, has been having a very goum-.
season, with many guests from Bost · ·
and vicinity, and from Providew

"'-I";;:;;======:=;:;;;;~:;

Daysi
S.S. "DO!\j
March 14, A~

FARE TO YARMOUTH

for

··

21

T,ransatlantic luxury and
train connections at Y ar- •.
mouth dock for Dominion
Atlantic and Canadian
National Railway points.

and Liverpool from Boston on Marould ·
15, and the Caronia to Plymou Ha~ ,
Havre and London from New York
March ~1
~etts
For stateliness and graceful lit no
they are ahvays admired as they slaw "
up the ba::,, always looking much Luntly I'
er than their 20,000 tons register.
1 of
denWrenmere Inn' Winter Sports
1 in i

j

gated Into the fabric of the tale bul
T'

TO YARMOUTH, NOYA S~TIA

Republic Sails to West Indies

is ln motion picture inaktng one should
never be reminded of hltn The sound
effects, too, do not bf'C'~n~'.".' .,,..

i:;~up[

YARMOUTH

Charles E. Ware, Jr. president of
George E. :Marsters, Inc , emphasizes
the importance of the announcement of
the French Line in berthing their beautiful de luxe liner S.S ''Mance," in
Boston,' to take passengers for their
Mediterranean-Morocco sailing, :March
21. This is said to be the first step toward the establishment of a regular
European service by this line, so that
the people of New England should ,vP-1come it in no uncertain terms For the
balance of the cruise season Marsters'
are featuring the West Indies cruise of
the "Reliance," saiiiilg from New York,
March 28; the Meditez ranean cruise of
the de Juxe "Carinthia," sailing from
New York on April 14, and the 14-day
club cruise of the first class Cunard
liner "Caledonia," sailing from Boston
April 15 to Bermuda, Nassua and Havana. On the latter cruise the George
E Marsters Co will ha Ye a personally
conducted tour

!i!Tp1~fth ~n:e!?ec:~~g;the very '.,
f;!a~~
mlnded forcibly of the fa.et by

dlssolves which continually
throw you Into the angle of the artl·
sa.n; and lndtspenaa.ble as the artiea.n

1r in ,

·s·., HO· u· Rs··. earlier :aaf:hiii
· ,; .
1r1l
Vta the fiast /iner St.Croix
St.'Thmnas'.

From lta Inception you are never
allowed for a moment to forget that :-

obvious

r:.·)"·i.l

n~~n::~3\:i~.d~h:~~l:iils:rr~~~~ir~~:
in the rates fcir its Summer. Crriise. of
the S. S Reliance to the northern· wonderlands and Russia. and for the 1932
Resolute world cruise
,The new rate is the lowest minimum
rate. -for a. wor~d crui_se o!fered bY, the
Hamburg-American Lme smce the company re-entered the pleasure-cruising
field after the war. The cruise, as
announced, will be of 143 days duration:
30 countries will be visited, and a distance of more than 38,000 miles wiU
be covered by the passengers on land
and sea
Drastic reductions in the
rates for higher priced accomll\odations
on this dS Juxe cruise ship, carrying
first-class passengers only, have also
been announced.

forth even 1n the very theatrical moments of the picture-and this picture
~",,!;!';roughly theatrical from otart to

8 0
~

!'

~f[~i

154 Bot,';ro':;"st',;~
.

8

STREET

BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

MASS.

BOSTON

BOSTON

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

FEB 201931
1>\
-.l~,
'RIDX~1~EBRUXRY ~


71

__ ,

FEB 2 O 1931

J1}: ~h:~:fs.~\?~~[ie~~JJ~;C:atrn~~
bids :for t

~~Ji{ ~~

:l:e;: I

c s~. veral schedn_k·s ,vill b e ~ ~

~:&S1rm~:1~A~}!,l :r!~~~~i~f

SUFF,Q!,,J&.LA w SCHOOL
PLANS 5-YEAR COURSE

OLK LAW...SCHOOL
NOES ANNOUNCED

Suffolk Law school will inaugurate a
five-year course~ starting Sept. 1~ and
will replace the present four-year term
now in effect, it was announced last
nightby Dean Gleason L. Archer.
The present lecture periods Will also
be increased 30 nlinutes making them
two hours in duration. It was pointed
out that these changes in the curriculum. would answer the proponents of
more preparatory school tr&ining for
candidates for admission to the· bar .
. He also announced the acquisition of
the Wheeler preparatory school founded
4
ears a o.

.,~ectur~~rk Per Week to
Be Increased a Third

, :ii'heeler Preparatory School -to
.lrafn Students for Courses

I

I

1

~Three cha~ges of , ~ ~ ~ e e '-we.re
ti _announced yes1;.erday by :Oean Gleason.

·1 L. Archer of Suffolk Law School.
become effective next sePt0nll:;,er.

to

in
connection with the 25th anniversary
: of the founding of the school.

!

:&oston ~<>.w.s-'1:lt:p :&ur<>.au

!cr~~t;~y ::::!hr::. :~~1:-:J!~ ::u::

8

for all excei:,t honor .students will be

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

I:::::::t:~e:::ai-:;-:;::~:!e!:es~1

MASS.

3i-;>OJS l>A!'"J

required, and the "Wheeler Preparatory Schbol. recent}~ :acquired. will be

- ·-· ---- ·-- ···-

!

MESSENGER, MARBLEHEAD, !VIASS.

J candidates for eniri~c~ who nave not
a complete high schopl. education will
be sent to the pr
· '
~ a,chool and
will not be ad:m.it
until they have
1

s~~~ nr~~:~;

_
Is

. lows:
'
"'For som.e titn

FEB 2 0 19311

a.s rol-

1:eacliings o~u-::.- -~-

~. . .

ties have been -'d
lecture periods
half to two ho
Begl:b.ning next

~~f o°i,1::!te a:;:di.

-hour sched-

EVER:ib~f

ule, thus receivi~g
percent m.ore
instruction ·than pr
, classes have
enjoyed.
This will .Pf=!!V.tnj_t rnore time
; for- revle-w and d1scuSS1oni, of illustra1 tive cases than ha,s bee possible here: tofore.
All this will be accomplished
: without increasing the tuition rate.
! _HTh.e seeond change 1:n contempl.a' tion will be to rearrange our schedule

/

f~~a. ilk:t1:,~~~ ~!~ri~!

way

in

majority, of
1

the

worl.¢.\.

~ur. st~~a-,.

~i~w:c:~:~elht~1:t:~!,

1:o:J:rt::frig!:,r!t"; o·
our regular enrolmen
1

While

.

_ -.·. ;

~s::!~j, ::!ca~~~ ~of ito:~etf~~r::.~:

;~a.~pi~ ~fup~~f~!!FrYqfs.°Ti:~~s~~~

training.
We ba've lil~erto · had -no
. means of giving the~ that training ln
a -regular preparatory school. But now~
, as one of the plans for q ~ great 'lt.nniversary celebration, We· announce the
acquisition by Suffolk L~w SchouJ of
the Wheeler Preparatory School.· This
school has been in operation Cor 24
- ·- -J

h:-% h~e

ft~~t

ai

:;:~~~~<;t~~~t
~i!t 1:!::e~:s u°af
the necessity of rec-eiving special stu-

dents.
"This preparatory department will
nave as its headmaster Carrol
N.
Wheeler who has been its leading
teacher since i t began and under whose
name it has operated for many yf'!'ars.
The Wheeler Preparato~y Schpol w-Ul
continue to train students for the !ong
list of colleges that i t has hithert.o
served and it will rnaintajn high .;;1tRndard...:; of Scholarship. - But i t is being
reorganized and its day and evening
program of studies revised under the
advice of the most competent experts
in Massachusetts •
.. This new preparatory deparltnent
w-111 have a ~pecial building of ~ts o-wp
but a few rods from the la "W schqol itself.
It will continue under its own
na.zne but it will be the official .Pi-19paratory Department of Suffolk Law
School.
The headmaster of the ne"W"
department will be a member ot our
new- committee on admissions to the
law school 1tself.u

be:::.

h±:ave
years.
or many
H M_r. Campbell is a native of Lynn i
S
Is 1 a graduate of Classical High
-c oo .and Boston Universit
~ok special courses a-t the §uffa1ll;
t
Ha~
chool, Innis Law S c ~ d '
~ Law School.
He wa
d i
.. m1.tted to the bar in 1914
s a - i
cia\~dhi~[hr~-tareer he ~as asso1
Wood & Mayo, a~'J t~!el!;!J znder&en._l of the Massachusetts
open~u~~ci Co~pany_ Later he
?uilding In L1;~~- IHet~~ :eyengren
inent part in the Hon N 0 ·1 a prom'
congressional fight Ii. . eI Barney's
theEMassachus~tts
z~~~er
Ion,
ssex Bar Associaitio
aEs~ex. County Bank Attorne n~, and
sociation. He is also .
.
Y
Asof Mt. Carmel Lodge JA,,.n1.F warden
f ~"ubf
mdmber 'of the· Q~0 ~
' Swa~ps~~- aHe ~~: ~':i~icd~1~h of
~h~~. Lee, who attends the 9'1~!~2;

i

.•

... ·1

------

-~-----.,,,,...;;:
:&oston ~.. w.s-c:t:llp :Sur<>au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS.

I

Bo!d~

i"!

t.he

0

.. .

po;tio::~ ~;

~~Yft~:~~~ ~~ti!~~:i~

:ve been

.

.

J'

~~~:~e,10
o~~~~f{>~ o;!;.~~e~~~!t_!,1-~~
average~ will aut9i;natie?,Ily go !.nto the
five-year class
e so:rnetim:es
disastrous ex per
a vlng to repeat one or n:i,or
s of -work, as
is S<.., often the ca
:e~ our present
schedule.
·
"We are also
faculty to ensure
work and efflclenc
our students.
·-.:,~~ - _
.
"But there. is another great advanc,,,_
that should make memorable this silver jubilee year of Suffolk La:w
-School.
The stjiool, frc>m. i~ inception has ever been the militant champion of the boy who ha.is to· make his
own

.

,!

M

si~~~eiif: .;;Jf

-~~r~:ri~~esso
somewhat more
evenl.y distributed.,.
Under the ne-w plan e,very student -wb,o t
r demonstrates during the ftrst two years i!
i that his d~ail;yJ~ pl.oy.inent so limits ~
•.. iµ.
f his q.pportunii;Y. 0 study that. he needs
f five years pro~
to mast~],"' the l~w
'
,

:r~t~~·}:~1:1~&~i,U:~

:got ~aU'SUI.iati Priiio.1: .reax ·!1'.\?ai:i:i
.&aiti €J.'13tf41. _ .M.Oitjy. Pt:re S':J.U~_tirn.r.tsrit
'.J:Sctl l:L!a~~c,~11 µ~6-~q:.M.,,~itO'.·~~iP'
-airl. p,:nt, aono:e;cd ut pa~~J~x:a_ A:1
-ti~no.x<>iu.-::'"NV~ ,roi:11il:ra:s Oic:r.t~
.. s~.tNVM ;ri:m :r.tvw ..
iuiirmA01cim3

MC~MPBELL

~ECTMAN CAND-IDATE
Everett R _C _ _b H
_
street, Oliftoii, ~~ ~~0 J5 We~
be a candidate for th M crblerhead
ney, will/
Board of Selectmen
although a resident' ofr. c1:l}~pbe.l}.,
~e
e older
Miss Gertrude Da
was the former
late Willi
H
daughter of the
who now ~~ke;
M~fth Dhy,

I

I

. -4===~=---

ligious s W ~ ~ ~ ~ . . . , , , _ r e from Holy Writ
I s
eparture

:~:ta~.-

.

· - .r,t ·jt¢ ~ ~1 s.;,j>~

l

I

I
1

eB!ra

tynn,

.

0

..._
"~~-~~~~--,
, ·::
-? _. .

. ' ..

- _c3¥.u.~L~-L..:."----__:.:

PUBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.

''~~

,,} ~'oston )riw.s-<Cltp
8

:Sure4u

~o.ston ~~-s-<tltp

-T
8 BOSWORTH STRE-

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

I

1

MASS.

BOSTON

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

FEB 2 O193l

FEB 201931

....

-~-J:

,.,..i$ili'ii7t Z?W :t'ifttiti

7~~GMT@'l l

.j~
1

'

"\.,

'

'RIDX1?';-,~ 1¥EBRUARY ~

, OLK LAbHOOL
ANGES ANNOUNCED
iectur&-~.ork Per Week to
, Be Increased a. Third
cit/heeler Preparatory School -to
Train Students for Courses
fl

,
[

MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

-i

:Su::rz,;z,r:~':~r~

]~~ nI~i1~~~cf11~'.~~~--·;vl.t.§~~pc<,mc:anonsfor 11r-oposa1s. -'gf~'f"'""'""fl'fl'~W, ~"""~'11
ho
bids for t c several schednh•s will be ope):) .,
arnl f rt e.c,~orm3t1on "·ill be. fnrnished OD
appli t· n.fto ·
W. HALL Director.
",.,._,
febl 7 18 ID 20

-,

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
PLANS 5-YEAR COURSE
0

Honored

Suffolk Law school will inaugurate a
Ifive-year course~ starting Sept. 1, and
will replace the present four-year term
now in effect, it was announced last

nightby Dean Gleason L. Archer.

The present lecture periods will also

be increased 30 minutes making them .

two hours in duration. It wa.s pointed l
out that these changes in the curriculum would answer the proponents of
more preparatory school trq,.ining for
candidates for admission to the-bar.
He also announced the acquisition of
the Wheeler preparatory school founded
24 1:ears aJ.o·

".",Three changes of ;J:~~.nce wel"e
.announced yesterday by 1'ean Gleason
L. Archer of Suffolk Law .School, to

become effective next sePteml)er, 1n
connection with the 25th an1:iversary,
· of the founding of the school.
Lecture work per week will be in, creased by one-third. a. flve-ye·ar course
for all except honor students will be
required, and the Wheeler Preparatory Schbol, recent~~ :acquired. will be
substituted for tp.~: .school's present
I Summer prepar8.t9ri'·depa.rtment. All
candidates for entrit:~c~ who nave not
a complete high schopJ education will
be, sent to the pre - ·
, sCh9pl and
will not be admitted,
until they have co ·'
school requirements.
Dean Archer's st
·_ ts as fol.lows:
'
"For some time
ties have been ·d
lecture periods f
half to two hour ·
Begihning next S
man class, and
will operate und ·
ule, thus receivi~
instruction 'than·
lasses have
enjoyed. This will ~~mt.t more time
for review and discU.sstons of illustra..
tive cases than has bee possible heretofore. All this Will be accomplished
without increasing the tuition rate.
''~e f!l~~nd c~an:ge _ in_ contempla.-

I

Y-ioston )t~ws-\!:llp Y-lur~au

'I

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

I
I

MESSENGER, MARBLEHEAD, MASS.

o~-s~--1.- -~~~~~~~ ~~., re1g1ous state takes- 'if· -. d~,,.-'-1-,~,.
from Holy Writ.
s
epartm-.r

tt

EVERlt'J!il
CAMPBELL
~ECTMAN CANDIDATE
Everett R. ~ b e H 25 Wes,t
btreet, Clifton, Lynn attorney will
Be a candidate for the Marbl~head
oard of Seleetmen. Mr. Cam bell
although a resident of CJ"ftop . ,
stranger jn t~e older po:tio:::i
~ own. His wife was the former
f:::s J;1~udHDJ5, daughter of the
h
m
· ay and Mrs. Day
w o now makes her home "\Vith her!
daughter. The Day family have bee
;e~/nown in Marblehead for man;

ili

~NV ~OA~ l.N3113::>X3-

I

.
/

f8aa p•wo:>

M_r. Campbell is a native of Lynn '

i'.'ok spee1al courses at the Suffolk
, Ha;" School, Innis Law Schlffi!"'and ,
~ Law School. He was ad
m1tted. to the bar in 1914.
-

SB3G100HS,

...,.uoa
fHB MD8H

~1

~h ool aand Bostonof University High -1s
graduate
Classical
c
and

sa

. \n his early career he was asso

c1a ed with Niles, Stevens Underwood & Mayo, and the legal depart ment of the Massachusetts Bondin &
Insurance Company. Later h g
opened on offic . th B
e
build·
· L e m
e
eyengren
·
mg m
ynn. He took a prom
ment part in the Hon Neil B
,congressional fight. He is a
~'!' theEMassachusetts Bar Associa-

i~i;,,;

J.SY0

E1on,
ssex Bar Association and
s~ex. County. Bank Attorney~' As-

dWOB

SS8f8U08 ~ · ( ) ~

r

RQGER A. SALA IS
. ,
CLASS PRESIDENT i

teacliings

i1

~sa,

Roger A. Sala t>f ;tfils city, Who has !,
been elected preiitlent of the class;
of 1932 of Suffolk law school in : (
Boston.
...,.._.,...--' '.,

FEB 2 0 19311

~tcMtoC. He is also junior warden
-'M f. L armel Lodge, A. F. and A
/ Cl b Lynn, member of the Oxford
,S u ,
ynn and the Ionic Club of
wampsc<>tt. He has one dau~hter
Nahncy Lee, who attends the Glover'
~ 00.
1
.

S
...._,

,

_''~~~'}:'~-~~~~

i Honored by Juniors at f
''

S~,ffolk Law §sbso!e

f__.,. ,.

o~f~c,;~~~~11~. ; · ·
school in Boston. ,
e that officers have
peen el~cl by any but the sentor ,
class at the S{)hool and Mr. SaJa's 1.•·
victory in a keen competition ls regarded a.s a signal honor for him.
officers Just elected will serve until
they complete their course.
In order to participate in the elee' tion all students had to be in good lU
'scholastic standing and candidates
for the presidency were required to
have an average of 80 pe_r cent Or
more. Tl'le campaign was waged along
the lines of a r,e,al political cam,paign
with posters and rallies ancr.furnished considerable excitement for the
student body.,
,
ASS
Mr. Sala ls
North Adams'

best known young men. After studying in local elementary schools, he
worked for some years in Hunter's

·one of

ma.chine shop. Of an ambitious na-

ture, he desired to •better himself and
took up the study of law at an age '-'
considerably rubove that of the averag~law student. He was in the office
c;t,;c fonner-Senator
William
A.
:Q'Hea.rn for 'three. years before en-

tering law
· l arid.'also attended
the priva
. ' conducted by the
late I. Fl 'c'
superintendent of
many years.
Mr. Bala
.
y prominent
in !rate
,circ e , h.ere
served as chief ranger o
ers, president of the
club ami exaltest i:uJer 'of
ams lodge of Elks: He also se
several yea.rs as .an election,
Ward 1.

1

-- ,!

. ,j"!
;

8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

BOSTON

::So.ston :1lew.5.(!:ltp ::Su.-e<tu

MASS

8 BosWoRTH STREET
BOSTON

·1

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

MASS

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
TRIBUNE, LAWRENCE, MASS.

did, in an atte.tnpt t -- o lVrfting he
of hitnfj,
o make a new :man
' witho,11
~
be bootlegged out,
tie'-f
now edge of the authori-

tad tf

ROGER A. SALA HONORED
BY SUFFOLK JUN/ORS

.Roger A. Sala <>f Boston was electe,d
, president of the junior class at S .:ffolk
~aw ~ooJ last night, Others e l ~

:i~~e



p~~~nt
"jrbuckle, Boston,
J:orcester, treas:.irer,
~Caro,
everly> secretary,
'
aga~.

~~1iauI

·---- ... ·-·- - -·

J

::So.ston :1lews-(tl4' ::S1u~au
8 BOSWORTH 8'1'R&ET

::So.ston :1tew.s-~ltp ::Sure<1u
8

8 BosWoRTH STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

BOSTON

MASS.

MASS

BOSTON

MASS

: STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

---7"
J...J ,

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

;EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS •
.

....... ..5.. .

/

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1

·.fJ

I MISS DIONNE "' 1

l

TODAY

Anna Case, one of America's most
noted sopranos will be co ..featured at
9:15 p. m. over W·EEI on the At..
1

Tv, o folk~songs, t.he Bonnie, Bonnie

Banks of Loch Lomo.ndi and Dal Polska,
Horsman's "Bird of the Wilderness";
Slumber Song by ~acDowell; Corby's

• \''Ill:.-.
-Ambassadol:" P:nif cfaudel of France,

-

tts i~~~~~ I

0

-~~/
~~~i
, Slemp will respond in a special broad, cast over WNAC at 9 p m, presented r
by . Scott Furr~e;s • • •
i

Sax Rohmer's latest mystery serial, 'I
"Yu'an Hee See Laughs.'' a story of·
the Orient, will begin in Collier's broad.:.
cast (WBZ, 8:15 p. m,), W'-ith a cast -of 1
,J ~1~s.kni;n

H~!,~dst;,_~\feui~0 0 \
0/ Ji~

I Hopkins _
University and Ivy Lee, pt.1,blicist, will be the guest speakers on the

hour

;;

ts

ISMARRIED

Given Away by Brother,
Assistant U. S. District Attorney

Summer and You; Gounod's Jewel Song
from "Faustn: Eland's "Carry Me Back
to Old Virglnny, and . Speaks' "The
Pray'er Perfect" wHl be Miss case's
contribution to the programme while
Nad€au will sing Massenet's "Vision :
Fugitive" from "Herodiade"; d'Harde- :
lot's "My Message"; D. ix's "The Trum-i
peter'' and "To Marry" by White.

b:~;;~\~~~hr:;!t.

;

Be.comes Bride of Leonard
Olivier in' Ceremony at
St. Joseph's Cht1rch

Kent broadcast with Raoul
Nadeau, New Yor~ State winn:r. of
the recent National Radio Audition-

water

1

·;

RECEPTION AT

/

Much interest attached to the marriage this morning, at 8 :30 at St. Joseph's cpurch of Miss Aurore Cecile
Dionne, daughter of Mrs ... J,. _Ernest· ,':!':
Dionne, 220 Wood street, and Leonard --~
Olivier, son of Mr. an~ Mrs. Istael ,
Olivier, 70 Irvington street.
The double ring ceremony was per~formed by the Rev. Willia.m Smith.
The bride was given a way by her
brother, Oscar U. Dionne. United
States assistant district attorney and
former representative. Misses Donalda
Dionne
and -Germaine Maranda,
cousins of the bride, were bridesmaids

/> . ,__

Vocal atid Violin Solos Giyen.

Ntt')).tial

lst

mU§ic by the church orianbY vocal solos ty

was"'\augmented

Miss

BI.8:..-arhe

Payette

and ·!renee

Dionne, uncle< ,of the. bride, and a
t-·iolin solo by Iv.r.i.ss Beatrice Moreau.

:Palms and :flower&... adorned the· altar.
· The bride lll~ :s,. gTa.Ceful picture

:ff~:.

P~~eS:hi:;c~F~rofve'uhit;
silk net. bor4ered · wi~ \~encon Ja':ce
and caught w.Ith orang.• b,J.os, OIDiS. She
oss.
carried an arm bquqrtet)it-t.,.talla lilies
a~~~li~s of the v~l~y· .,· ~

.
Left to right, Miss Germaine Mar;
· ~rd. Olivier, who Were married .this r-: 1
~d :Miss ,Dona.Ida Dionne~ lUrs. r
the .nUpt~ls in,

• moire

A wedding breakfast and reception f]___ ______ ~
a.t 220 Wood street followed the cere-1
mony.
After a honeymoon. to be spent ln
New York and Washington, D. C.,
Mr. and Mrs Olivier will be at home
at 220 Wobd .street. Mr. Olivi.er was
graduated from St. Joseph's boarding
school, Berthierville, Quebec, Canada, ,
and New Bedford High school, class I
of 1927. He has ccmpleted a. cour~e

I

1

atJ'r~~Mi5w!~ ~~r°~dua~ed from st

Antllony's parocllial school and' the
Academy of Jesus and Mary, Fall
iver.

1

M/1.R
MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

- - - ---,,------L....,.__

REINSTATE
Heitr!igs .on Disch\r~e by
1
/
State Were Long
,,;
I Institute of Krigger a graduate, who "
Anselmo
Massachusetts
Teehn.ology

.DISCHARGE OF STATE
EMPLOYE IS UPHELD

I

CourU~~lares Removal of
Krigger Justified

ll-ad been employed as junior -civil engineer in the Department of PuJ;11io
Works at Commonwealth Pier in the
employ of the State, was denied rein~
stat-ement to his position in a,...decision
·:
handed down today by Judge Thomas
i
! Weston, in Roxbury Court.
I The petitioner is 38 yea~s old He
·
is colored and live$ at 39 Forest st,
}
Roxbury. , He .had been in ·the- e:n1:pi,oy r-of the State from 1917 until Nov 14.../
:19aQ_... whe_n he was p.otified of his dis-\·J
acJ:1.~rge on the
t he had been .;
, ,
i"nsubord~na
riors.
:·,: , f:'
,
Mr E;r1gg
applied for a 1· ,_i;:;;,\
hearing bef
arks Commis-

-~

I

Negro, Law Graduate, ,. National
Guard Officer, Conducts Own Case·
Anselmo

Krigger,

38,

Neg~().

of 39

Forest st. Roxbury, formerly junior
civil engineer in employ of the Stat&
Department of Public works,, Com.-

;:~!~~~te~~~~~!~

, granted a
/ ~~~ ~v~i

';!~~~'!

0

~os~.a:n
1
~day by decision of J1-"U.ge Thomas Wes;,' 1
:-,ton in Roxbury Court.
.
1_)_ Krigger had been previously gi.ven.
a hearing • . '1-t his QWn reguest, by 1
1 Frank E. Lyman. Public W.orks Co~- :
·.missioner, :~ho-:decided ~~at "the peti.- !
tloner•s remo~~l was jusufied.
·
• J:n accordance with the la-w ~igge::l."' ·
then appealed to Roxbury M~nicipal
Court
where he acted as his own
, couns~l. owing to his having gradu; ated at Suffolk 1 ...a:w .Sch.ool, though
1he has not "l,een ~ to the bar.
1
Krigger exam..ineq. witnes_ses in court.
' yesterday appar~tly with a vi~w to

:: Frequent Ah-senoe_l:i Fro.fi "\Vork

1.

It was brqugh_t". ·ou.t ··at the hea? ing
: tn court t}:t~t ,Mr Krigger. a second
' lieutenant in~· tlie :·"M'assacuhsetts Na• tional Gua.:i-d, ~ ; a·t Camp Devens
! from July 21 un:tit'. ·,Aug 4, an~l thereafter ~as absent from '°"·ork frequently.
/ sometimes for half a day and some~ times for a whole day.
'
Asst Atty Gen Charles F: Lovejoy
appeared :for the Commonv.-·ealth
It
was adduced by the Commonwe~lth
that due to Mr Kri.:,;ger's absences,
work being done by him was not fast
eziough It was necessary, it v.·as said~
to take the w-ork away from him and
have other merl per:form it .
. Mr Krigger was notified by Commis,1 s1oner
Lyman of con1.pls.inb:; made
.! about him. and a sho1 t thne aftc-r-,;;ard
,.I Commissioner Lyman sent hln1. £0:-mal
n.otice of his di.scharge, ins1.ibo::.dln.it1on being given a~ the ground.

l"'nd _

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_

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.

HERALD,.'BOSTON, MASS.

~

i
1

S,

unicipal Court
of Suffolk Law

1
saf~~'.;r ~~~~lll·e ~;~:~h~y;;~.i;,/lfio~in:ff

'/
( I ConJ.m1ss1oner Lyman,I
heard the "\vitnesses.

MALDEN, MASS.

!

!

and ··:I

have

commissi-one:r ·s· decisio:rt, find: ut_at. the
re~o.y_i.,l1g th~
petitioner fron.1. his position aa'::fun'ior

, i civil engineer in the Public ,y(,0),:k.S De-:
1
I I p&rtment, ~·as fo: a proper ;,~a"1:1se and
w itl'l:out bad 1·aith, and I.:..there£01.e
..

, -in ''INSPIRATio~--11,
vay"

_

I'

/ a'.ffirm tha'.t decision "
Mr Krigget VI. as in court today.-----=::a....._

L.

i

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

J!;5ELLSWA Y

'\

TJiJ Morse's NEWS Agency,
fi{ystic 5093, to have the NEWS
deft at your nome every day.
tf
, /' Rev T• J Golding. pastor, -will preach
/ the Lenten sermon this evening at St

; -1Francis of Assisi church.

·

\ Miss Elsie Foster was the leader and
Carl Thorsen the speaker at the Ep-

1~~t~d~£a~~~rcf;e:~;;_~a:tev!1:i1n:.ir~t
1 .Mr and Mrs Stavios Chopelas, 99A

Third st.· have named ·th~ir new son
eor~· Cristos.
3

te:- a~_ysP\ri~ t~e::J~-:a~;:_
1

6

n ~:
._ ; hiIBdelphia.

;:

·

1
k_es!nJ

T)le women had charge of the eve, ;j servic.e at the First Methodist
y,,' wit~ Mrs.,~ ~- Terrill
Mrs.}
'
,MrS:
uii;a
eci

.r~~,

~'N'ati6nal ·oangers arid Natioil;al De~ence". Miss Amy Wakefield had charge
of the ushers.
Frank P Metcalf of 7 Magoun ave.
was among the graduates to receive the
degree of bachelor of laws. at the mid ...
year Commenceffient exeI'cises of the
SufWJ I liM .School.
The fourth quarterly conference preceded by a parish supper will bl? held
tomorrow evening at the First Metho~ t church..
IIGffl;f!P.mf... ~ ,• .

fi·:

11

c~~ ~~j~; ~ii~ed

.o:•--

i~eri?~;;saihe~~ f

~ e ~ ~_<~~n .'ci$e~er T°i;~~i~1;i /:,
consumed eight'. .~a.ys;, ·
The petitione~:. ·questioned all wit- r
n<:'sses in t~e f~~e .· very closely and
attempted t? s_p.pw that the office
where he had
·
d ,vas conducted
in a more or
.lax manner and
that employes O
ft the office with:/ o.ut reporting· t:. ~ s~periors.

Je~f
..a
f·that,_ as, a result, som.e of Krigg1c,r ..s ,
1 work had to be done by other me~ :·ithat, after due notificat:~o-~,
h,_e.i-.~~_~,
i,ha~ pee':1 discharged by Co~~~s1!?., ,._:__i

---·

~:tte~~c;;;_~~~
ing in the R
Mr Krigger, a

m.::sa~~1~~e~:

T931

J;f:t

voluminous tes- --/"
Lyman
ruled
Oval was fu!Iy
as made Dec 12.

!

I

c:1$ffl~:,•.-s-.--1>, •,'"C,c,, i

l~,'.-';.

After th
i timony
C
that Mr K
i justifi.zd. This

and f&ilur_e· of employes i:her"e to report
to superiors when leaving the office.
I t was·eharged that Krigger. wh<> is
second
lieiitenant in
the
National
1G u ~ , after having been at Cam~
Devens from July 21 till Aug 4. 1930.,
had afterwards been absent frequent ....

I1YA:~~h.1It;

was a ~en,gthy
17 days, froo.n

i

!

: :::~~iel~t~i;{~nth;~

1· '::;:-

e ~~~u~~d ~?!;::,. ~~\~i- .

i ~~or~~r i!~·a:

monv;;:ealth Pi~, but d!ischarg~d last l-1No.r.ember.• after. ~3. ~ears• servi.ce. 'Jfor 1

MAR 7 - '

'1
!

.•..

,

'.i~

ADVERTISER, BOS .

\?,':3'\

'

TRIGGER Dl,IU'm
REINSTA'TEMENT
'.I'

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

'

i

He!rings on Disch~rge by
State Were Long

f

8, Negro~ of 39
formerly junior
loY of the State
dlischarged

~

last

rs' service. ,for
n~ w.a.s r~.fused

position yester~
,~
ge Thomas Wes"."
request,

by

~d that the peti•
justified.
I

~ted as his own
\~ having gradu- ,
0
~~~

ihett~~h

witnesses in court
with a vi~w to
e management of

1

tt~e!u;t cte~J:

4.
absent frequent""

t

.;i;f;~~;~·~a~~!~~<;~~

from July 21 un:t'il "Aug 4, an,l. the::..-e ..

after was absent from work frequently,
some.times for half a day and some.

,

e by other men. .-·\
.e notificat'ion, ~~\

t ~b~- c:~~i~~
---,
/

'
-Both photos by White,

1



i Frequent Absence.S FrC??h l-Vork
It was brought . out at the hea2: ing
in .court tp.at ,Mi- ~rigger, a second
lieutenant ·in· the ;·Massa.cub.setts Na•
tional Guafd, 'W.a,~, a·t C.=:.mp I.k:vens

National

a whole dayo ·.
.. Lovejoy claimed
ome of Krigge.r'"s

:

' that empioyeS! o~~~ft the office with/ out reporting to··_·f:· .~_i'.r s~periors.

eaving the office.
f.lt. Krig-ger, wh'l is

the

!

-">\

sioner F
derEld his
granted a
one, cover

: :he;e i::ireha!r

e was employ~d.

es t:heie to revort

in

J

Nov 24 un

(blic Works Com-

!~:r~'ir~f~t~

;

After the
timony Cc
that Mr K
justifi-ed. T
as made Dec 12.
In accordance
i~ ri;::;-hts in. the
-<m~tter, 1\1:r Krigg~r~~
pplied ·for a b.e'a:i; ing in the Roxl;i.iy.r~
, unicipal Court
! Mr Krigger, a.gr~'9-· a:le of Suffolk ~aw
: Sc.llool, but,....":tlo_t,a.,~~mber o f ~ a r ,
~ e d his.' -'o:~1:J- c?,$e~ The hearing
consumed eight' da.Ys:- .
The petitione:rC. ·guestioned all witnesses in the ·rcl;lt._.se very closely and
attempted tO S:fy.oW that the office

~Previously given
~wn

~

'he1:.:1n~

works, Com•

1c

Anselmo Krigger, a Massachusetts
Institute of TechnOlogy graduate, who
had been employed as junior civil engineer in the Department of Pub'Iio
Works at Commonwealth Pier in the
employ of the State, was denied reinstatement to his position in a ,decision
handed down today by Judge Thomas
Weston, in Roxbury Court
The petitioner is 38 yea!'S old
He
is eolored and live$ at 39 Forest st,
Roxbury. He had been in the-~m·p,I.oy
of the State from 1917 until Nov 14,.
193Q... when he was notified of his dis_;
-cP.~rge on the gro
,at he had been"
i'nsubordi

times for a whole day
Asst Atty Gen Charles F: Lovejoy
appeared fo1 the Commonwealth It
was adduced by the Cornmonwealth.
that due to Mr Kri.3"ger's abs-sn.ces,
work being done by him was not fast
euough. It was necessary, it was sa.,id.
to take the worlt away from him and
have other merl perform it.
Mr Krigger was notified by Commis.sioner Lyman of con1. Plaints n1ade
;! about ~i?:1, and a sho,·t tfine aftC'r.,·<Ud
Comm1ss1oner Lyman sent him fo::mal

.
!
l

r

·t

SALLY PAULA CURLEY.
~
engagement to Stanton
_White is announced.

fi~~c~ef~g h~siv~~sc!i~rf~e

i;:~~i~d.!na-

sa1.¥~S:;I ~~~~ 11{ e~i:~~~h~t~'li!/l~~intf

Con1mis.sioner Lyman, and ·;:I have
heard the 1.vitnesses. I find --tliat the
/ commissl-oner ·~-; decisiO!l, 1 emqvi).1.g' the
; petitioner fron.1. his positic~'l· a·s~·J.unior
'·) civil engineer in the Public yVO+ks De-:

~
1

$, MALDEN, MASS.

~-~~ii:itt,b~as /ii~h~ P;~~ex i~-;\\~:e~:~
ll SffirmKrigg~t" was in " court today •
tha:t decision
Mr

'.,1

\I .

.A
1

vay"

:A.,

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

d,

FELLSWA Y

t~

T;,;r'Morse's NEWS ~
· fetystic 5093, to have the
i .'1eft at your home every di'

~

-~-

in "lNSPIRATIO~;;_

:

Rev T, J Golding, pastor., ,wil~
the Lenten sermon thls evenin

;'
\

Francis of Assisi church.
Miss Elsie Fost~I....
';W"'7~1l_e.

~rt
'

STANTON REID WHITE. whose
bride will be Sally Paula OurJey.
,

SALLY CURLEY TO
BECOME BRIDE
The engagement of Miss Sally
Paula, Curley, niece of Mayor
James ]..!. Curley, to Stanton Reid
White of Boston was announced
last night by Miss Curley·s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John Curley.
..
Miss Curley is a graduate of Mt.
St. Joseph's Academy and the Mt.
Ida School of Newt·on. She is active in the New England Club and
the Riding Club, a talented pianist
and one of the most popular of
the younger members of the summer colony at Hull, where her parents have a summer home.
Mr. White is ,the son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. E. White and we.s graduated from the Villanova Preparatory School, ·where he played on the
football tea:m. He is a student at

~ff[~!~ ~!ii1c~~~t:v ~~:~er

The date of the wedding has not
!>een an.1:-oun~e~.· _Miss 9Urley and

MAR? - '
· B. Pottle, MT~Martha Tuiner

a~

~1

Mrs ss ,Lucy rienneT will play se
j
tions on ~~he v~in and tea will be,.~
served
.::__. {£__
,
·;

FORMER LYNNER ELECTED
TO SUFEO.IJU:J,ASS OFFICE
Saul J, Cagan of Beverly, a former
resident of Lynri, was elected secre-.
tary of the crass of 193~, at Sufiol.k
Law school at th~ an:p.ual, electio,Jl,$
·{ hel!i_at ~ . college last w~ek.. · Roge'i(

.9f

.

,.

·,·

;

~

.....--~--'-'"--,__..:.J~~'""""'"""-'-

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

fil~DanieS-of the three, who are
\ said tO live in Cam.1:?ridge~ have not
:i:~J'~b~fn:nd no cnarges have

(

.\ ~!::

'. ~1 ed a
died in

i\ .v.iUe,

~, '

a

Iat the

robbed a

l

n

Lo9I Young Man
i..f1eceives Degree

1

.own him bef.;,.re l;ie

al · Hospltal, Some:r-- ,
fU"ee .young m.ep """:~o

ot him_ 1~· ~J;le gas station

Among t11ose~ eceive the Degree of Bachelor - of Laws at the·'.
C~n1n1encement- Exercises
of
the,.
i\f1dyea1 Class of 1931 at ~ : ;
; ~ o ~ ~ l Thursday
Feb
19t!!fii:ll.K~etcalf of 7 Magoun ave-,.
'J nue, this city.
;
It is interesting to note that l\Ir-.
,
M:tcalf was also
membe 1 of the
n11e1.3. ea~. graduatin~.g Class from l\IedJ
I fo:!'d Hj'gh School in 19 JO
:
:
~r. '?11etcalf is a brother of the
-{ •
well knbw~n da1_1ce.r 1Y!iss Sally l\:ret.
--1 calf no,':""a.1.)Pea11~_g with a New York
1
producti.ou.
-

corner of Mystfa- av· and Shore

Drive, ~/>merville.

.

\: -~'

-

.., I

,,

, MISS $ALL'LP. CURLEY TO
.
WED ST~NTQN R. WH}TE
~P.e engagement of Miss Sally ~~,:u-la

Curle ,
stanto1l

. I
:I ,

1_1~ece _of ~~Y'.~!.__-~U~~-~1-P
White of Bostcixt,,)las · \ .

Reid

been announced by Miss Cu;rley",~_·p~r-

:L}

Acadeniy and the Mt Ida School of

.j

0

~~~ie~S !n!r~:afe ~~ :t!if~;~?~~;: ~ !

a

l"'------l!Oii--!i!!l!ffl!!l!!!'l!~~!""'~~'.t:f>_:#4.i'
ltenanie Forest an,d _
~-;

LEADER, MANCHESTER, N. H.

· ··j'

xrss

SALLY

N~wton.
Slle is active· in the Ne'\V
England Club and the Riding Club.
:Mr White is the s9" of :Mr and ].1rs
A. E White and was~ graduated from
, the
Villanova .Preparatory School,
he.re he played on the football team
Jle is a student at the Suffolk ¥1.,aw
~i~;o~ 0
c%~~ber of t ~ y
The date of the wedding has not
been announced. Miss cui'ley and her
1- mother left last night for a sh~;-t stay

l"'.

NELSON F. HERMANCE
Candidate for selectman in the coming Milton eleCtion.
I

PAuLA)·'.CuaLEY

I



I

~1:,_t,;

\ !n Florida..

j
i

·

\;____ RECORD, BOSTON,MASi-1'

I

\ N°elson F Herma.nee, law~~er and :Pub- [
1lie a<'count~nt, has announced his candidacy :for Selectman in the. t.own of
l\Ulton at the election to be held
Marth 7.
He
Ch·ic
MU1ton asfaa lctive in of th~ aJ'fairs in Com!
me1nber
Parkway
: mu~ity Council, the Tu<"k€ir School· Association and ¥ilton :Post, Am~rican
Legion, He is a veteran of the World
! war and is a lieutenant in the U. S.
air resen-e force
He was graduated
. fr(')m Sout.h Boston High School, Boston_ t;~iv.er~i~Y, .· StJff.nJk ItilWa ~ch9ol,:
Co,rn.eU ·.l!nhr~rsity· ~.chool ~ .of Milit8,ry
, A~ron~1:J-hcs, .U. S. Army: School pf <F:ire
\_.and t4e , ?:: S,. -~rm3_7·. C?bseryeI'.s' S~l:loO-r;
1

'~~1,,, 4v···

-· ~ ·",.

GAZETTE, CHELSEA, MASS.

fE_g 2,QJ ,;:;~k

PAY TRIBUTE lO

1

ROBERT J. GILLIS
Noted Editor Who Started

Career in This City Laid
to Rest
Loyal friends of Robert :r. Gillis,
hate assistant managing editor of the
Boston Evening American and L
th·e of this city. returned here today
::, 1 tcr paying last tribute to the be~o-.rcd editor.,. who -was laid to rest
yc;;terday in Evergreen cemetery at
~-r-ighton, Mass.
Scores of 11.is ne\'vspaper friends,
aPd in addition numerous civic, state
a:~<l fraternal dignitaries attended the:
f'nlcmn bigh requiem m8.SS which was,
R:.tng at St. Mary's church of the As8<.1111.ption in Brookline, by Rev. Daniel F. Herlihy
T!l.ey inclw:led pra~tically the entire office staff o.f the American as
y:cll as acting Mayor
Joseph :McCt·ath, :Po1ice
Supt.
Michael H. :
C1owley~ and Chief As.sessor Henry
1

1

L1'.~i~I;~er peop~e who we~·e at the i
1 unc:ral included
Commissioner of i
Motor Vehicles John F. Griffin, Jo-,
~eph Nolan. 121:omas Fellows, Patrick

i.p.g,1n J.93",J:. ror-;i:;-lle"J..rrsr: r.i~uu.tu
SUS

subject. Anything which relieves~
nerv.ous tension incident to worry is
.·-·
·
- · . be
es m the field and sc 'pe
loyment ~nsurance in , the
t future.-Greenfield Gaz~
urier.
James .F. Rourke, president of the
Che~sea Firemen's Relief Asociation,
received an LL.B. Degree at the mid-

r------.. . . .

year commencement eXercises of the

!3uf£BAl,,lc I

1 •

.£.::1:!ooI which w·ere held

ost9n last week.;;

-~.,,s:

Dowd, :Miss Mary Gleason,
P. L
l\1:;;::.cCiellan, and Mr. Gillis' two sist~rs, Misses Eva and Mary Gillis.
:Hr. Gillis, Who began his career
ns a printer's assistant on theJ Manchester Daily Mirror 28 years ago,
1 o:::e irom the ran~ to ~ foremost
po;c;ition in New Eng'I:atid journalism.
./\It.hough he left Ma.n.<;fi.ester 24 years
he had a., host o'f friends in this 1 .

~-fl~:.

Besides

his

sisters,

wife, the former

he

leaves

a

Mary Connor ot:

Manchester, a. son, Robert J., student
~~1. ~~~~fr8Brhool, ; and a. daughOthers attending the funeral :from
here were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F.

McLane, Mrs . .Jam.es D.
Catherine Maloney.

Cash and

ui-eo.u

Y.,oston. )te..vs-<.tl4'

8 BoswoRTH STREET
MASS
BOSTON

jston. )tews-<.tlip Y.,ui-eo.u
8 BosWORTH STREET

TRAVELER, BOST

MASS.

BOSTON

ON

'

MASS.

', ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, f!IASS.

FEB24

D CHELSEA, lYIASS.
lECOR •
s ·r:·~i

_EB "' C •'•''-' I
!-

-

OBS

--

.----torney and Lester, who is a Jaw tions in Brockton and other cities,
among them being the Odd Fellows,
Rebekahs,
At the anniversary party friends of Brockton,the Congregation Is~ael
the' Beth Is,ael Hospital
and r:ela.tives from Brockton, BrQC>k- of Boston and the Y, M H A and
line, Dorchester and Boston wete
presen~ and in the group were many Y.M1:;, ~;;, is also a member of
who att;ertded the wedding eeremony the committee of the Home for the
of the 'couple 25 years ago.
Aged in Boston and the. :Roxbury
A mock wedding was performed La-di-es' Aid and Fuel Society
with all the appropriate ceremony
arid Mrs Dom wore a wedding gown
very similar to that in which she
was married. The house was beautifully decorated with American
,:;
beauty roses and cut flowers of all
kinds and the couple were the recipients of many gifts
__
The sons of Mr. and Mrs. Dorn
\ ' 1
furnished entertainment witl1 piano
selections and violin solos,, and Miss

E25TH

student at Suffolk I:aw §ChrnJ1.

ANNIVEKSARY
OF MARRIAGE

... i."::f . l,

4 ..· ~

Mr. and Mrs. Dorn
Are Recipients of
Many Gifts.

8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

---

'.

\

Mrs:'~riorn is a native Ot Roxbury
and Mr. "Dorn a native of Johnstown,
N, .: Y~,. where his uncle, Abrahan1
Harri.son, was formerly mayor. They
f ha~~ two sons, Kenneth, an at-

J~ ·,

GAZETTE, CHELSEA, MASS.

S-

Refreshments were served by the 1
hostess.
_ _.,,.........,..~
During the day Mr. and Mrs
Dorn received many telegrams and
cards of congratulation from their _ _ _ _ __,
friends near and far away
,
The couple are well-known in
Brockton in the c/othin;; business\
and have been owners and managers
,
of the Ladies' Shop on ,Main street
for many years and of the_ hat sj,OP
On Centre street since their coming
to Brockton.
They belong to several ,organiza-

live4 ·m Brockton since that time~

MASS

I·.

ESther Daniels of Dorchester sang

Mr. and Mrs. Henry DorJ1 of
26 West Elm terrace entertained
ft,
host, of .friends - -and relatives
o~ Wednesday night on the oecasion of their 25th Wedding an~
niver~ry. They were married in
Bostion, Feb. 18, 1906, and have

Y.,o;;tcn :n~w;;.([llp Y.,ur~au
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

MASS

I

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

----

, ,.;u

Oj

-nIS--W!fe,- ],{i~l\,l 7

Eva Ford Campbell, and a sister, ~ s
Grace Campbell

f

'

8 BOSWORTH STREET

1

_ __

De11th. of Roh 't J. Gillis
1./.,A' of Boston American

I
I

,

---

'

MASS

ROSTON

NEWS, SALEM, MASS

''

Robert J Gillis, assistant managing
editor of the Boston Evening American,
died early today at Peter Bent Brigham
1
Hospital following a short illness He was
., forced to givP up work several weeks ago )
~ and ad,~ised by physicians tb talre a long l
test. Acting on t.his advice, Mr. GiUis \
,vent to the hospital for treatment While '.,
; '.' there he seeme' ' \ gain strength, until j
/

I

!i

, last night' when he suffered a .serious re- I
lapse
'
'
Besides his wife, ¥r. Gillis is survived ;
Dy a son. R9bert J. Gillis, Jr., a student 1

~ol, and a d!':_ufhter,
I ~is~u~@~~t~;r~1
N

Mr.

Glllis

was born in Manchester,/

H , and receiv~d his early education
there; Later he moved to Worcester,
where he became a member of the staff
of the Worcester Telegram. Aft~:r-.sev.-:
, eral Years there, he came to the Bb.Ston,
Evening American, ;about flfteeri years,,
ago
Through successive step~ he ad.. ( ,
vanced from the positioll of copy deSk I
man. assistant city editor, city editor and,'
~~a1ly asslstan~ __ma~~~1n,_~~J!?~~ ,

~:he :r~~,'ng' &e?~ q ps ;the
·:1'~·-1/··. '.1 -~--///·-(/

Of 3, ,· ;~

st

t

. '1•c:~T LAW DllGl;tEES
Two popular empioye~ at the ~actory have received thel:r degrees of

~~~Y Z~emFr~:c1:ff.i1!~~~i6i~~~ ,

man at B-3-38, who has been em,..
ployed at the facto:ry :tor ·15 years.
coming to Beverly from Lawrence and:

•f!r0 d~p!;~~:;~o:h~! :~:-;o.~~;
s~b

t

i~c~~: t1~::a~:~!! !~i,1!;: ::1 l
::e l
Charlestown Na.v

;



-----

'

I

~)

»oston )?~ws-<!hp ::Sunau

8 BosWORTB STREET

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MASS

BOSTON

MAss.

BOSTON

TRAVELER, BOSTON; MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, )JASS.

RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.

I

:c

FEB

I

FEB24

l
pte

\.u~;,y-,~~"-

j 1

••

.lties

~ · ~ - J. Dona~. re~
·~ his
at e'lty hall todaY:··.
a\ lQI,.
s' illness with an at,
dl'\t,fle • we at his home on

,k

!elf ,rt.
L

,'








\ltz, instructor ot viol!h ,.1h the
'~a ptl.blic schools, on the · planQ/
J.y at.· the mid-yea.r commences,

xero!ses <JI

WOW,

.

_ -t-~z

,ons.

I

Census of cats that's to be the meow, f
Tabbies and Tommies wm be tabulate(.
Toughest of alley cats not ~purgated.,:

/,. , .

Sutralf,ig11(, School,,

he played vtollll

,

CATACLYSMIC,

;
Boston has thoug~t up a new one, {



'~h l;llotnl.ck, ola:ss of 1922, Chelf
'tiglt school, a.coompanied Alvw:

Fluffy and Fifi will get in the boo~, ;
Nocturnal tenors- also get theirs took,f
Catalogued., classified, in expect.a.~on /
Cat.aclysmal advance in ~he Hub's pop!
latiou
.

,

_wrnJr~

1

2,

::So.ston )?,nv.s-a'.l;~ur~~::--8 BOSWORTH
BOSTON

a

01

STREET

ca
nl,

MASS

:t:c
Mi

ana

GAZETTE, CHELSEA, MASS.

N . .:.~

Harr.

~~
·'

'

CATAPVLTVIG 'from the rrdj
page is ti:,.e news that Boston!
to have the first cat census of a?city in the United States, if not :
the world. Cats are to be cat"fhiz
by enumerators who Will Visit allef
draWing rooms. backyard fenc~s a;
other social centres where the ct
nip sniffers, refined and.- tough, foJ
gather at 3 o'clock in the m01-n~·
The census of Boston's cat pop ,
tion when compiled by private ag .
cies 'with the help of police, fire .,'.

scavenger departments, will be ad/
to th-?. firulT'"'~ ~T'~it':O t.nibf-.J:Jt;ll):.

,,--~--~---

::Sos(cn ) l e w s - ~ ~ - - - ......, .J;;.JUr-eau

8

BoswoRTB STREET

BOSTON

!Robert J. Gillis Dies
I
Suddenly Jn Hospital
Asst. Managing Editor of ;
Boston American Was
Reported Gainin~~ ,.
''·':Wt£:· :

_
}Robert J Gillis, a.ssistant managing
~tor of the Boston Evening American.,

dfecl early today at the Peter Bent
Bfi%ham HO$pital His death came at r
flie height of S:-itew.spal)er career; &nd
was a shock to hosts o.e ittends .
He was forced to gi:e 9~_\Vork ~Se:!~,~}·, ,
· weeks ago and wa., adflsed' by physic
ci~_ns to ta.ke a. long rest Ae·t.ing. Pa.
..,·
tlµs advice he went to the hospital for·
treatment While th.ere he seemed to· :
, ~in strength un~i]. 1¥t night, when ..he
sqtfered a: seriol,fs 1:¢:~pse. P.hy.si-cia:llS~
· S~mmoned his Wlf,e to' the bedsi<!e, She'
a~ived before he· Passed away at 5 :{o
A,M

Besides his widow Mr. GiliiS is· s~'vired by a son, Robert J, Jr., a. student
at,, lhe Sul!olk
:'lthooi, . and
,tjlj,ughter, ,Dorothea, ,He· Wa., born at
·Manche:Ster, N. H, and iic"eived his'
early edu~ation there Later· he moved
to Worc·este.I'; where he became a mem ..
ber Of t.iie staff of the Worcester
gram After sev-eral years there
came to the Boston Evening
,
approximately 15 years ago.
Through successive steps he adva
from the positi<;>n of copy desk ·
. assistant city editor, city editor
finally assistant managing editor While
~ssistant city editor and finally city editor he was responsible for the estab·"":
lishment of the Cambridge edition, the
Merrimac Valley, the Lynn and 'Nortll
Shore editions Of the Boston Evening,
American
Perhaps the most outstanding of his
characteristics were a keen sense of
news values and abilfty to translate his
idea.s into instant action, and above all
ever present humanity and feeling anda desire to hell) the other fellow ine the
n:iany difficulties incident to every, day
life; Many a cub reporter owes · his
start to that feeling of responsibility. for
the other fellow that was a part. of
"Bob" Gillis, and many a cub and
many a hardened old timer will feel that
a true and understanding friend ha.s
put away his last edition

Law

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

·-~

*'

i{:So~fo~ '~~~~!cE;~' ~liflcili''
8 BoBWORTJi:

STREET
MASS.

BOSTON

Af!IIERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

~,-

it/'

,

'f,:

I

·-'~t

~ 0ROBiiTJ. GILtlS~ ~~

~~/~Y,
~7c

~•• ,~Managing


.
!

-:81~~~~th, co~ing that the height of
at
a newspaper career
had stam.ped

it~}f;-~delibly on New England and
-· es,p8~a.lly ]3oston journalism> was a.

....... - · 00 M,:,,"'· '""""·



l
I

f

I

I
.

Career Ends

'AMERICAN DIES
AT HOSPITAL

Editor of
:Boston American

Robert J... Gilli~, assistant managing
edito:r of the Boston Evening America'.D died early toda:£' in P~ter Bent
:S:riihalll Hospital~ following a sho'rt

FEBRUARY 24,

ff. J. GILLIS OF

f~t~; ·., ,,. DIES IN HOSPITAL
._i

NEWS, SALEM, MASS

f£BUL'931·

:IYENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

Robert.J. Gillis-, assistant :managing editor ot the Boston Evening
American, died early today at Peter
:Sent Brigham Hospital, following a
;shert 11lnf)ss.
·
,.
, 'ffls death, coming ,.;1: the height'
of! & :aewspapei- c ~ r that hlf.d'
sta,mped itself indelibly; or, New
England and ei;pecially lBoston
journalism; was a distinct shock to
hosts ot :friends.
He was forced to give up work
several weeks ago and advised by
phYsicians to take a long reSt.

ii

'I

s

s
C

Atcing c;,n this advice, Mr. Gillis
went to th"e. ,,hoSpital for ~.reatment.
While there ·he ~eemed to gain
strength, until la~ last night when

he suffeied a set:i.Op.s relapse.

Phy-

sicia~s summ~~g,~~hjs wife to the
bedside, She · atfl\red before he

passed away at 5·:40 a. ~-.
LEAVES XWO ClllLDREN
Besid(!s his 'WidOw, )!Ir.. Gillis is
survived by a son, Robert J., Jr., a

..,,uuu11•0IIUU111,r

yv: mlolf. Uu101t1IH1m,~UUl!U<~"~"""'"""""'"I\"""'""""'"'

ROBER'! ,,- GILLIS, assistant
managing ~ditor of the Bos-'
ton E,ening American, who
died early today in Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital.
·

---{(,

student at Suffolk L ~ o o l , and,
a daughter, Dorother.·
I
Mr. GIiiis was born In Manches-1
ter, N. H., 46 years ago, and ob-J
tained hi~ early education there. I
On graduating from St Joseph's!
High School he entered the newspaper business as an apprentice j

~~~Pf:l!~rs~ftt~!; ~~antll~es!~fto~l:il
department.
From the Mirror he went to th~
Manchester Union-Leader9 one ofi
his colleagues on both papers beingi

1'

0

G':rn~~~e :E::i:;i

:i~si~~!~en;oh! ~.r
ha. moved to Worcester, ·where hei
becan1e a member of the staff ofl

the Worcester Telegram.
,l
After
twelve
years
~here he-·cam~ to the Boston Evening American, approximately 13 years ago
Through successive steps he advanced from the position of copy
desk man, assistant city editor.
city editor and finally assist~nt
managing editor.
While assistant city editor, Mr.
Gillis was responsible for the establishment and subsequent success of the Cambridge edition. tbe
Merrimack Valley and the Lyn!l
and North Shore editions of this:
paper.

HELPED OUT M~NY
Pe.L~haps the most outstanding
characteristics of Mr Gillis were a
keen sense of new$ values, an
ability to translate his ideas in to
instant action arid above ,all an
ever present humanity-a feeling
for and a desire to help the otht>:r
fellow in the many difficulties incidefit to everyday life
Many a cub reporter owes }tis ! .-.
start to that feeling of responsibility
:!01 the other fellow that was pa?.·t 1<:ti
of "Bob" Gillis and many a cub and I ;;
n1any a hardened old timer will feel :
ti:1at
a
true and underst~nding' I
friend has put away his last edition'.. r
f f i e ~ nfb , Q ~ ~ U G maxx P-",
.t· .{>f the ·Clleisea Firemen't. .
wli8 one. of 40 w]W .

Mansfield/ Feb. 23--An attractive
home wedding took place on: Saturday morning at 10:30 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. i
, Brown · on South st., south Fox- ,
, boro, when their dauii<l;1.ter, Miss ·
Loa Bell Brown, became· the bride
of Wallace Lilburne Giles, son of
Mr. and Mrs. George w. Gile& of
North Main st., Mansfield, which
was attended by over fifty relatives
and· frieritis.
The double ring ceremony was
performed bene>'tth "' fioral arch by ·'
Rev. Frank R. Dcig~e. pastor of the
First Baptist chtti:cl;l of Foxboro.
The bride was given ih marriage
by her father.
Miss Lucille Giles, sister of the
bridegroom, was bridesmaid, and :,
1 Delos

N. Brown brotho",~~~~,
woJJ. a!)ue~nsuJ .,('n.q no.< ua1.1M

3~NVlIOSN'

j~:

.

'ton,

.. an. x.µ3
··

· · ··

<i~gi'ee at .~e

··

·

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__-.:::_

--

s

BOSWORTH

BOSTON

j.;

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.



t,l

NEWS, SALEM, MASS

fES UL'\93\ -

!;.·.JENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.
'.·.•

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r

TUE~DAY,

F;EB
annu

Gou
be

BAse,
i
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-,LLARI

I

bers In the class and Mr. Cagan has
the honor of being t:tie :first on t.he
dea.n•s list for the') past three yea.rs
I In addit~On to t~~ he has won tw~

schoJ~ut~:

ac~~c{!i\t~!e

••

1

A~ p~esent ·he ~s a.n. e~:thusiastic work.:
er
promirieD:t in the
of
BeVeily Hebrew Comm.unity
I.cluan~.'."J7.e.ry. ved on the buildingaffairs
I
.
comJ

1

~~

, mt.

· . the Beverly Hebrew Com.-

mu

i$enter.

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~osto~-)tcw;-<I:lt;, ~urcau
8

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

iz~, fine mu. slin sheets,. at ,the IoWest _J
ARS! Mail or ',phone orders filled"~
bard 2700.
,
·
!

1
.

reet
cted
secretary ot the junior class of the 1

I~ffliiJ*i~CJ~£t~rfk~:J~n~e~:

,NNON S
: ROBERT J. GILLIS

/Mrs.

1

/. ~~:;:ay;~~,w~e~:~

·'

t 1360 Size


SAUL J. CAGAN HONORE

,Saul J. Cagan, son ot Mr. an

Charles.
I won the Cagan of 49 P,ierson
distinction o:f being

~ class of '27. WhUe in High school he
was a. m.ember of the student council. president of the debating society
a.n(l .~h,arter member o:f the National
i h~rior society. Gamma chapter. B. H.
!: S. 'Mr. Cagan, is a. member of the

.· .

/Great

I

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d. ~ egiont?,aires

I ;i:;~at:! ~~ver~; ~~

-.<.·:-·,:; ..;. ;.: .. :: .·....,;. __ .. _ ..

•• • i

a

I ~:~ni1',g

MASS.

11

He ·wa.s forced to giye up work sev~ral we~ks ago and.

.ad.yised

by physi- I

'cian.s· to take a long res!;:..
.
Acting on this adyi~ • .Mr Gillis :went 1,

·.,,

1

tt:~eli~ ;f~~f~ !t1:t~i~~~~: i)
0

,
1

til late. last .~ig'h_t when ,·he. suffet'ed:·. a i
se.tj.ous ,;.''.ela;;pe;, ~: .Pu.ysici':':-;n su~mo.ned
..
..
.
·hi& wife to the bedside~· .1 She ~-rriv,ed
b_ef'Ol"e··he ~ssed··S.way at 5:40_a. ~~'
i
. .~.:;.~~sides his widow. Mr Gi~lis. ts- fl.Ur- i
,y-ived by a son, Robert J

-:!.-~~~--

r-

Jr, a student Ji

~a,..§chool, and a. daugh-

M r Gillis was born in Manchester,
..
, N H .. and receivea his early education
there. I.,a.ter he moved to Worcester,



f!t/~f 1ITie ~oa:c1:st:r ¥1ei~~'!.~.of the j
---

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- - - - - - ----- --~--

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t

~ston )?cws-i!:tip Y.mrcau

1

8 BOSWORTH STREET

,

BOSTON

MASS.

1.

IJ·!(
~
• ,I
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RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.
fc,;_(c;...\'

'

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1-1-

, ~~J::ufelf1;;r 1~fh: ~6:~i :Jffi~':11~

ties incident t~ ~yery,c;:lay life. . ..
:~ : .Ma.nY a cub repdrter owes· his start
l ~ to that '(eeling of r~sponsibility ·-tor. the
\.
1 othel" · felloW that was part of ·~Bobu
1

.

'.

~":~~~ ........... ~

ur reqwem Will

rh:%~!i:I1~~ ~-h~c£n St.

't Born 46 years ago at· Manchester N
H,~ he. received his early education'. in
that city He later moved to Worcester
'>w1?,ere he became a. member of the staff
'>~. -tl).e Wor_cester Telegram.
He came
;.he Evening American about 15 years
···

-

.ad.' ¥¥1ced from
.
..

~,ti

the position o! copy
t~ S..SSI{itant city editor, cit¥"

~~· B~~ ~~"t~isf•n
,esf.ab!p;hed edit!
· · urbs.

w~q.~.S

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Mansfield/ Feb. 23-An attractive
home 'wedding took place on Saturday morning at 10:30 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F •.
Brown on South st., South Fox- i
boro, when their daugl;lter, Miss •
Loa Bell Brown, became· the bride
of
allace Lilburne Giles, son of
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Giles- of 1
North Main st., Mansfield, which /
was atte.t1<;led by over fifty relatives
and friends.
The double ring ceremony was
Performed beneath I!> fioral arch by •
Rev. Frank R. D6qre, pastor of the
First ~aptist ch§i;,. of Foxboro. i
The bride was g1ven in marriage
by her father.
\
~is~ Lucille Giles, sister oi the
br1degroom, was bridesmaid, and
Delos N. Brown, brother of the
bride, acted as best man. The bride
wa".' att.ractiv~ly gowned in white
satm with. bndal veil · of tulle and
lace. She carried a bridal bouquet
' of White roses.
The. bridesmaid
":ore a green crepe gown and car~
r1ed. a bouquet of Pink roses.
A reception followed the ceremony at the home, guests being
Present from Foxboro, Mansfield
Hartford, Providenc.e; and other
places. •
.
·
The bricle ls a graduate· or·' the
.,F_'~xbprCI; h{gh school, class of 1925,
8Pd IS·& •mg~ el Ees~e, Cha
·
1.~r 47~_,9,, E, ~- ·• Tlle bridegroom
1•gradu,;,;~<;l .ifro,n the Mansfield high !
: 'sch,:iqi;"jv,Ittt:' the flass of 1927, and
also :took.. a three<yea.- course a't
I the S u ~ I a1r,chool. He is Le.:.:_·-~~'~ _
,
-i connected at the present time with
his father, owner of the Mansfield
News, a weekly newspaper; •
Mr. and Mrs. Giles left on Sat·
urday afternoon for New York on
a wedding trip, and upon their re- ,
tu,:n will take up their residence in ;
their newly furnished home on l
Linden. and East sts.
j
W.

I

I

bi~. .~;J;:

Mary's o!

GfL -BROWN

I
al:i.PP<j 's:
e:tiet '~a.1e~b,;: ueu11 µ:is.I

'

i

.esteem. ~
en.

,!

J

Jlel,ed Out Many
Aft¢r several yea.rs there he eame
-~ '. ~ston Ev.erring .Am.erican~ · ap-:
·- ately 15 years. ago. T.hrough
e steps he adv~nced. from t,h:e
,
!:ton :'of ~.PY de~k man, assistant
i!ditor, city editor and finally as~
slstant tnanaging editor.
.
While ·as.sistant, cio/ editor, ~r Gilhs
wa~. responsible for the establishment
and subsequent success of the Camb./:1dg.Ce e!,1.iti~n. tHe Merrimac Valle;v
.~
North Shore ed1Perhal)s the most outstanding characi"terlstics of Mr Gillis were a keen
a~tl.S!!: . of news values~ an a.bi~ity to
tran.·;,, ~te his ideas into instant action,
and a:bove all an ever present human~

~~:a;we-Hlve aw1c1e· c r
g· ~old them in high
h

:1
•I

Revere

.all

cou:ncu ohamlber of
or~!
ganizaltions of .the city, the pm,pose
of which is. fi9'.;fmm.ulate. plans for a~.·.·'
ente,~~tf,ei'iifilJI '.I'he proceeds .will aid\
the un . l<?Y<";• • • •
fe

·:f

I.

I

GAZETTE, WORCESTER, MASS.

FE8 1 91931
GAZETTE, TAUNTON, MASS.

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

/

: ;Ji!!"Jffi?r~ WT!'<!:
I qE CARO IS NAMED .,

in M

• TREASJIRER .OF CLASS ·
f



'~

' ' '

An atractive home ·wedding took
place ~n Saturday mdrning at 10:30
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. BenJa1Uin F. Brown on South street,
: South Foxboro, when their daugh1 ter, Miss Loa Bell Bro,~n.
beQ~.:me
1 the bride Of VVall~ce Lilburne Giles
son of Mr.
and 'Mrs.
GeOrge
~U~~- of N?rth .. ~ain.- street. ~
.field,; which w~s attended b y ' ~ r
"ru_ty.: relatives . ap.d friends
'l"'he double ·ring ceremony was
perfo.r.med beneath a floral arch by
Rev Frank R. Doore, pasto1~ of the
, First Baptist church of Foxboro.
j 'l'he brid-e 1.vas given in marriage
by her father,
Miss Lucille Giles, sister of
the
brj.degrrom, was brides1naid,.
\ and
Delos N.
Brown,
brother of the
bride, acted a$ best man. The bride
was attractively gowned in white
satin with brid,al veil of tulle
and
lace. · She ca_rrie-d a bridal bouquet
ot 1.vhitei roses.
The
bridesmaid
,yore a green: crepe go ..vn, and ca11 :ied a bouquet of pink roses.
A
reception followed the <;;erer:nony at the home,
guests
being
present from Foxboro, Mansfield,
Providence
and
othe7

IOHOR OF BOSTON
. AMERICAN DIES
.f~

t!i~

:::~~~rd,

· o.r. He leaves is widow, a son, S
ho a a student at ·R~berti.
,.t,.~r-;;c~ool, _a.rid· a .daughter, :Doro- ,

i·t.

-

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8 BOSWORTH STREET
MASS.

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASS.

~

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r-

The .bride is a graduate of the
.Foxboro high school, class of 1925, ,
and is a me1nbe1· oi Eastel'n Chapter 47, 0. E S
The
bridegroom
·
,graduated
from
the
Mansfield
'
high school viith the class of 1927,
and a1so took a three-year course
::at tbe Suff-Qlif..:.J'rH ~ooL
He is
cOnnectetl at the present time with
his father, owner of the Mansfield
Xews, a weekly newspaper.
' 1\1:r. and Mrs Giles left Saturd.::..y
afternoon for New York CitY on a
\v edding
trip, and upon their return will take up their residence in
their newly furnished home on Linden and East streets

:So.ston )t~ws-(Ctq, :Su~¢au
BOSTON

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Boston, Feb. 24-(.lP)-Robert_ J
Gillis, 47' assistant managing e~itor
of the Boston ]1:vening American,
died in a local hOSJ?i~al tOd'\'-Y ·
had remained at his post un¥~as
few weeks ago, whe~ he
stricken with a severesti11n:\r he
A native of Man_c}l~. er, ·. ·that·
b!'gan his newsparet~t:~~r t~n on
city, first .tta;f
the Manchester
-g'~io~:"£'at"er he became city editor
of the Worcester 1:e~egra.""n·
came to Boston and JomE>d the s
.
of the Ame.rican fifteen years ag~
and advanced through var1'?us poi;
to that of assistant managing edit-

tb.y.

BROWN-GILES

i Joseph F Decal:.o, ., s~n of Mr and
i
Mrs Cosimo Dec'aro of 19 I '
: avenue, has bee

ng eside
th
j
.
n elected treasurer of
sC::(JaJ u;1;;~lass at, Suffolk Law
an, average of ove:1~o has ma1:c~ta1n~
,t)l..1:"~e ·years or stud per cent in his
~~(!.ed Commerce
hand has atn U~i:Versity H
school and
oiy,., Name ; i et s a member of
t. CarmeJ c oc e Y of Our· L!idy
o! Italy.
hurch, ,•nct o! .the

·i

Hr·r

I

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, BOSTON

,Si-~;hl"'i"£;;rd ~fLi!Wbr~k -- 1-.'iis,~\\
Manr..ing

J!

IIigh schoo;ademy and the New Eng-

i

Cut ville

is ·,f:t

graduate

of

s:;:i~ us~i;:01 ~~~ -~ ·!~

ry of .1\'Iu.si,..

1

Saul . Cagan Wins
Honors at Suffolk

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FELLSW A Y
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~1s~l~~Tn1!·

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._.society,
· Gamma 1 a with pneumonia, is improving.
a
· i!
Frank H Lane, 51 Marston st, and ,
1 .. =,,.;,h ,13 chool " .
Chapte~ ~ev~r~ Y\::rJ~:!?:: :' e1. ot De~olay ·= Jtt.?~l;t· P: ¥et,ca.lf, 7 ~.~o~n. av~. were '.
!
ti
cagan li$ ~ -~e1?:.b · . ·
. , .. ··A..
JJ1embers _of a. class·--Of 40 who ~celved ·
and was very ach,re _m .Y. :M· Ji:,.·,· _ their LL :El degrees at the annual !nid•
1 , v:o.l'k
At
Suffolk.\
! tic worlcerpresent. h;e. !.s,a;.n. 1 n ,.il;~:, __. 1-:>-~ I .year .. gr~dua.t1.ng. exercis·e· s of. . - . . ..
and ·prom1!1ent -~~~.• ~~.a. .. s La.w sc~l~
~f:-.
fairs of the Bever!~ ','Hehre,v Cp'\Jin)c"':·~
,.:f,@
1/<!tyices for M!sB .Catherlne \
ity club. He al'soiserved. on· the· d,-_
J ~!>Vries, aged, ).7 daughtet of Mr.And 1
,!
··committee': · of. the . Bever,Iy · ,. 114r,._John, ;peYtl _of..,.6_4.MYl'tle st,
..
'
1 N tio~al'

.
1

Irectory··
'. Hebi-eW

Col'Um,unity '~E;'nt~r ,buil9"ing,'
:..and· has::;actP'd. aS. 4f.1E?%a.t~ ;rom ~~er,iy ~t .'::t'n:~nY :.ZilJ:nist cOnven,tion.~. , }~.1:?

l

~ir; ,. . ' .•· ' ::x-;~;rt;f. .
·1

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~ews
"

?;;\fls

':,.·;

·

pf Law to Expand j Jl:'f>
~\
Aone-third increase 'ln weekly, lee- j

\.£,. ,,

! 3 '

.
Saul .J Cagan, son of Mr and Mis \' , ~
I Charles Cagan, 49 Pierson street, _th1 > .! / _ '
,,#.
c, ty won the distinction_ of bei~;'! 1 ·-~
1 ()
elected secretary of the f Junior cL:lS'
\ suuz_lk L a ~ l in Boston At the s
Tel Morae a NEWS Agency,
present ti~e the,·e are three h_;mdrcd
My ti 5093 to have the NEWS
, nd fiftv-s1x 1nembers 1n the
Junior ii!
S C

c!ass and Mr C":gan has the distin~- ,~ left at your bome every day.
tf
tion of being first on the
Dean~
A son ~as 'been bOTn to Mr and Mrs
0
:1on0r ~·i:'3t for th~. pa:~t three yea:"~;. . ; I
;;!:'oit~t~f Wolcott st,
1n add1t1<?p. to th.is _he ha-s won t
!
];las been ·quite· 111 at the Lawrence
1
scholarslup:3
.
, .. :.,_
,;
Memoria.1 hospital-.
.
..,
Mr. Cagmi~ !">~··:graduated.-~~ j
Mr a.nd Mrs Gustave Moberg of ~ - I
\ Devel ly High sc.h~,?J c1ass ':t,7. Whl.f". Ei plewood have take~ a new_ home at-"93 :
,. .
.
1
I in I-!igh schooJ ..JJe ~:·wa_s a mem_ber of , a Farragut ave.
t the student
- ··
pr~sident ·of clc- '. I
P.atroltnan Wm Fields, who lt&s '.IJe~n \
1
• ~+;~'"'" ""<JciP ·
barter member of §: confined to his home on Washington st

ture work at the Suffolk Law. School,
a five-year law course ·and the acqui" ,
sltlon of the Wheeler Preparatory
School were anIJ,ounced yesterday by
Gleaso..n L. Archer, dean of 'the Suf.folk Law School. This announcement
was made In connection · with the
school's twenty-fifth anniversary. ·
The freshmen classes, and perhaps
all classes, Dep,n Archer sa.id, will operate on a dally tW-O-hour lecture
· period schedule, instead of on,a·l-¥.a-·
hour program, There will be :no ad-

i

vance in tuition charges, he added~

Students who do not maintain cer-·
tain scholastic standards 'Will be re-·

quired to take a five-year· law course,
he declared. This will also be avail-·
able to those who show· after two
years· that their daily employment
affords•them little time :for study. '
· The· Wheeler Preparatory School,
the deaj1. W!>nt on; will be used as· a
training school for those' wb:i:>: b,av;e
not completed.'
schooL This, lie
..

iS

<:>lkLaw

_;
,

,

'

B~v~w Seys ReeeivJ"'
L/
Law Degrees

--1
u\~stnoot
D,E-GifEES' FOR
LOCAL Y{)UTHS

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·Robert E.: Manning and F.'
H: Liss Holiored by
Suffolk

1.v~~~:cis J. Killcoyne of 19 Whitney
,
B
and Jacob M .. Ros"enbloom of
., 8
ennett street, both of Beverly
: ! ~rer~ mem,bers of a
class of 40 wh6
,! tecerve~ their ~LB degrees at the an.l ~u~l ~nd .. year graduating exercises of
J l ;~f~:,tw
Schog.l in the school au!! r orrum last night Form.ct Aty Gen:. ;ral Thomas J Boynton, chairm.an of!
'.' he
~oard of trustees
presided ·ln.c'
! : ~ave an address to the n1c1nbets~ l';
: the class telling them of s01nr· ot th
,' i p1obl~ms they. will ,encounte1 in tl1• [
11 practice
of la\\r
Dean Gleason I ,
1 : Arche1~,. whose J.~adJo talk.s on "La'"~ !
I That Safeguard Society" are heaiO
throughout the country · ~v~ 8 klv Dl e 8 - . i
, ented. t~~ ?,,~?re.~l:?~. _.· ·--- ·., :.~~ ...,,~. ___ _ f

!

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~obert B. Manning of 350 ,East]i
Sq~•antum street and ·Frederick lr.1
Liss of• 11 Hobomack road, both
: Qu1ncy were ·amj:,ng ·the class ot i
(o to re,;elve''tb:,"H,: LLB degrees at/
the ~nnual mfd:yeii;,; graduating,
e._xerc1ses. of . S ~
. .:., · a.w''S·c. hool in1
[ the sch~( auditoY , ·... ·
night.'
\ Mr. Mann\A!f· -:was -.tl!o cla.i<s
r.!,

ITElVI, LYNN,.. MASS. _

·ot\

Shal ..'" ·.

·

~,.,...:,~- · "./'

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1

. ::ro,rin:er

JOHN J. HOGAN
' John J. Ho~n of 379 Beacon street
_ .a~~ Paul .H Thereault of 161 ~it. Ver...
' ~9P. street, both of Lowell were
\ i,;rnembers of a class of 40 who re(.~i~red their LL B. degrees at the
'.~ ~nnµal mid-year graduating exe_rcise~
of Suffol}{ Law School in the school
audiEOi idiii fftst' +"'night. ~~armer-At, torney Genera] Thomas J. Boynton,
! phairman of the board of trustees,
\ i;-ave a, short address to the members
\ of the class, telling them some of the
i problems they Vlill encounter in the
practice of law.
Dean Gleason L.
t-Archer, v.rh.ose weekly radio talks ori.
'. t•Laws That _Safeguard So_cie,ty" ?,re
l heard throughout the C(!Ui1.try pr~- ~_ __,_,,Gi,c.e::.:n=.t::c">:.d::.tlte d ~ ~ s to !J1&_zr._a..d:u.a:te

G~ n era I!
Thomas··
airman
the boar(l
..the school.
presided .
. .
ort. add.ress
· to the cla~s·,· ·.wli.;'ch he·· outlined
. some 'ot·t.1fe'.".\;u-obleni{that will con• i
.
fro!lt the,if Jn the practice of. the ·
BACHELLOR A
-~
Jacob Garbe - T-LAW DEGREE.
1 lii:w.
Dean' Gleason L; Archer, 1
Central avenu!' with J.n_ ?ffice at 23
'
· ly radio' talks oit "Laws l
uard Societyu are ·heard · Washington str~t'nd i res1d1ng at 205
who received mid• was one of the 40
t the country was the I • degree of bachelor:it~f a wards of the
. speaker · and also 1ireuation Wednesday nl
at the grad~d the degrees•.A large ttum"'' folk I!ll_W school
g, at the
._ ..r .of rel!'tiVEls an,d friends of. t)i~:i
rtt-&t;I'On Of tI'fra~· . The presri,
was by Dean
.. 11,rl!'~uate!' · attended the exerc~s~-1, Gleason L Arch

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,

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a

MERCURY, NEW BEDFORD, MA:~

t

t,amore;:;;;-M

• ~;vJJ<
rstt:nd.Fred

"'7

s.

$

0..d. M:nr. Jl!.me. H. Adams had

awi""fit,tl'l~the!r
·

,


Mrs. Ch.as. A!.nsle!gh, Correspondent:

,....,,~

·

~

hoiol and
. . afternoon
l!,.·t
.lo& i.t her home.

11'"""'" . . ._ .
-~
~ pve..
......nt

da.Ul!'hter,

~ . m hO~or

<>[

Miss

Mr. and Mrs. Earle V. Butt<>rfieldi ii----~ · ~~t••. W!lha~•.¢p.
·
~ ··"'""'- .. :i: week._Y,i~ one/I
.....
.
of . 69"._,Sharon road entertained a l
~
· · · ·- ·
··
few fr~ends .at their hom. e Sunday. \
nightTheir guests were Mis'!
REC
Catherine Melindy, Mr. Eugene
ORD, BOSTON, MASS.
Butterfield, Mel McFarland, Evelyn •
Keough, Roy and Nissi Fosburg of
Do:rche.ster;
Joseph Brett,
and_,
-Lawson Butterfield. The evening
waS spent with ·gai;nes'.and music,
Mr. McFar:land playing the banjo
and.
Melindy tjle .:J!iano_. fl,e:. '
,·fresli.iiie:htS · w6re ser'Ved
by the
hastes!'. ·

I
.Wai:d Jones of New Hmven,
r Coi;t.ri.:~ :Wa'S the weekelld guest ot
·h.!s aunt, Mrs. Edit.h L~. wia. of New-.
. bui·Y' avenue.
,
'
Among .the gradu;ates of the S \ folk Law school· iu Boston'·· st,
\ nigh( 1Yiis Roberk:M,;.an:nin$, ~on'o.
! Mr•. an.4 ·Mrs. .'ii'. , A. l',$annmg

Miss

····

!

··

L!.

~!'1·.

: "Paur~-,
~ t~19 Jfroadcast.s in
the iir.
a
fifty-eight
ll!j;

_

hours on

·*
L Dean Gleason L* Archer of s

. 1k

T~!t sc5h9.9J~.~.2.s.ton, In his s.eriesd:
a.reguard Society
·11 .~s
the necessity of "Good Fatth . iscusf.i
Defensen 'over station WEAF tm ~elf-

at 7:15 p. m.
- - · ~""m
...

o-mght

CS$*

011~".lelr $nall' has been ill for

Tel. Granite 6061

·· ··

- !'

llurrow.s, 11,lr•

. ~ ~ s a t COtUlt on Tues-

µ.a ·

,.--.

{/-

Mr-$. 1lben

• -~ . .

- lElits~



of

, "'"':"'nd a. turkey bai\quet

I

ri.

_1~---~--- _

TIMES, HARTFORD, CONN.

,



1---------------""' - -

.
met at :the Kaoeyti.n c1u1>
:!Ill.' 't1\ ~~;U$Y to register voters
t"-Ur e
town eteet/on in. Maxch.

'·1

~TLANT·1c·
.

by Thomas J Bo~ J.:he address was
ney g.eneral · Rel 1Jton,I former atto.rMr. Garber were
v~s and friends of
bly that w:ltnesseq th .he large assemOarber already is e ~ac;uatton. Mr.
accou'ntant.
a. certified pubfic
--1-

e, :Pei.. 18-'l'he brd

~'~UBLIC LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.

tf

~~

:,="'IP'~ r- s:::,~"..
C!...-~~~-

-- ~ ----=-------==RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.

--------S:-----J., of J::Soston College during the

~atholic. Truth period on WNAC

~;,,!le~ ..~if!"ifo~l!~esi\~~
at
the organ.

,_ 1

I)

.

Dean Gleasvn "L. Archer wni cUs.- f
cuss "The R i g l i ~ f e n d Thir<l I
~rsops,". ~uring his serj~s: "~Law's
.+'hat Safegu9:rd Sopiety,", to· be 1
cas~ .o;y~r WEEI tonigQt at

l

~ / . ~ '- - - · · · · / ' ~
;'~.;?~,,,,.,._/,_
............ ~
The attached notice
appeared in the Transcript

~

I

.1-1.,.

7 J)

Suffolk Law to Hold
Old Timer's

N~t·1

Old Tin1er's. Night, including classes
from 1909 through 1917, ,vill be held in
the Jounge of the Suffoll~ Alumni clubhouse, 73 Hancock strBt, next Tuesday,

i

at 7 30 for a smoke talk and get-together
Entertainment and retresbments will be

~:~;i~~o~:~ t~e

~~~~f};~~69,P~!}e:~-=!i~

atorney in the \'Valtham car barn case,,

Finne-I'

\'Yil1 pres.ide
President Thomas J
gan '\Vill sl~etch bliefly the history of the
association and its p]ans for 1931 Guests
will include; Judge F Le"slie Viccaro, '13;
Roland E

Bro1,,vn, 'O!l

first member of the

Bar from. Suffolk; Bernar J. }Gllion, ·10,

Boston; Pat.rick ·s
ingharr.: A

BroderiC'k, '12, Fram-

Le1yveld, '12, Rockland; '\Vll-

liam G Dolan, '12, Boston; Charles S.
O'Connor, '13, S.outh. Boston; James P.
Heron, '12, Lowell; :Hiram L. Skinner;"
.. 14, ];Jrockton; }Jarry E. Burroughs, '15,
Boston.;· Thomas F. Duffy: ~16, Waltham;
George F. Hogan, '-15, Lynn; John H.
-~<i,_'.§.ostm;,; Louis K., l',[cNal!y, '17;

Melrose; ;.Julian ,fi., :tt'alney, ttT,--:Bbstan;
J:oseph ~4.:" Parl;::, '17, BostO~-.

}ii\tWi!Jlln J£btuin9 mir/illm:$mpt
(A Builder of Prestige)

Where Schools a«: S~Iected }
Where the Transcript 1s read

in the home

.,.

MASS.

8 BOSWORTH STREET

MAR 3 G 1931

Jr
IJ:l /) .

MASS.

BOSTON

--~-----~-- .,. -~-.---- . ~-___L_.,'.'.:_~~:_:.__::..__:...._c......'...::..-~f. .r!~;

.1

BOOKS SENT BY MAIL

WILL BE PROMPTLY Rl<l"URN!'r,

TIMES, WOBURN, MASS.

G"1831

I

ONLY 199 OF 754 PASS

STATE BAR EXAMINATIONI·
.
I
Percentage of Failures One of Largest 'rn Years- 1
New Syste~ in ,Effect
Only 199 apnllccints, includi!:i 26 4. eceiving congratulations from . his j
women, Of the 754 who took - !be frienrls on passi-Qg t~e bar exam1na~
tion.
Massachusetts Bai Examination in tile
;Mr Irving wa.s graq.uated from the
latter part of December, have been Suffolk Law School in June, 1930.
He
recom;mended for admission to the Bar. was" ~ n Charlestown, ~on of Mr
it was apn0un,cec..: yesterday by HoUis ,c1nd Mrs William D Irving of 98 High
II
R
Bailey, chai.n;t1an of the Board of st.
Hi:'3 f.athe1~ and uncle were members &
Bar Exam::ners
The failure of 555 cf the old Charlestown Cad_ets, Co A, l
-candidates to pas~ is
believed to be (1th Regiment, M. V. M. He became a t
one of the Jar~es oeicentages in yea·rs.
'
Oflici~l fit:tice oi the qualification of
I
the 199 candidates will be given to tbe
j
;
Su c1·em€l Court on April 28, and they
·wil~l be s·worn in ti-., the court on May l.
New 1ule.s gov.::rnjn_g" the admission
of candidates were' in effect dL?-rip.g this
cxemin.E>.. tion for tlle . first ~ime
In 1·aC dition to the written exa~inatl?n,
the;. e \\ as also ':.ln oral interview _with
n1em/Je.1.s of the £oar<1 of Examiners
1
and certain ca.n:!·dates were_ calle~ be-.
I
fux.e .the ooard twic~.
It 1s be!ieved J
I
th:s fU,c(,Or may have had something tQ I
~
do \'\ ith the un•l.:>ually large per-cent- 1
af.~e who failed. In recent years, the
..,p;icentage pas~f-!d has averaged at
~east one-tt:1h:d 01 tl1.'?.$C who took the j
I

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j

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}!~~~c!~i;e

,.

;;~;~\;n~;i~~~
thl~r;e~~~n a
I/'
Wll!lam M. Prendible, one of tho.se J
;passeG, is first assistant to Ch-:rk /
GEORGE E IRVI:NG
1
Jol111. R. Campbell of Suffolk Supe.rwi· member of Co Bin 1912 and was gradCrin.1.inal Court, and_ has be_en clerli I' =-1ater1 f1.·om the Massa~husetts Tr_ainat both Garrett trials
His hor.ne ing School and was made a second
is in the West ~nd where he !:}as 'lieut~nant
al\.vays teen an act1ye member and ofHe served at the Mexican border as
fleer of the Hendri~k~ Clul> and '-<>_he second lieutenant of the 5th,Infantry,
of ]..ia-rtin LOipasney s 1ntap.a,te frien:ls
and was transferred in· July, 1917, to
B'.e was g1·aduated from S u ~ ~ Co B 101st Infantry, serving 18 months
School i:_t,fter _af four-year cours.e, dur; v-,ith 'A. E. F.
.
/
ing ,vh1ch. time he was a. clerk a...
He was twice wounded and sent to!
car rt<>
·- --~--he hospital, and each time requested
o0 be sent back to his· company.
~---~-•a·.t::ni .tad' Mr Irving always avoids talking of~
•rat:i:snq 00 O'.J. s1aqsnq Qt m:o.q Ptar.& U.to;) tis service in the war. He wears a. ff
SJq as-aa~;)UJ O'.J. ';:) .N: 'A:°'.J,uno.o UOS.tacr JO •ronze button which identifies him as J
s.ta.a'o"R .A:o'H p-3[q'eua 11zapadsar Jo es.a I. World war veteran, but he is en- !
T

I
i

-

who resides at 101 Salem street, this
city. received notice, today, that the ,
Board of Bar Examiners has passed·~'
him for admi.esion to the Massachusetts bar
Mr Doherty. is a graduate':i
of Suffolk Law School, class 'cif.. ,1930,
"and Miss Bradf~'B'ar Review course.
Attorney Doherty has. ·been em3c}·Y. e-d 1
for the past six years by the - .. ':don'[

,:an~/

Guarantee and Accident Co1:°"
Ltd , of 141 lVIilk street, Boston, in'
' the liability adjustment department. '
i At present, he, ~s senior adjust.er foi- '."
that firm
Attorney · Doherty
served in the,
Wobu!n City CouncU for three years,
retlring from abtiv,e politics in 1927.
· He is a past deputy grand kniglit of!
. Woburn Council 77, K of C., a former-\
treasurer of the Council. Mr. DQherty·r
: will practice law in ·Woburn,_ w_herei
' he will open "an office with Attorney[
'Edward G. Boyle of Valley road,

as,f ':'

a.::,:ssociate,

,i

. ) :, )

;G,

I

:Soston )?ews-(l:(Lp :Sureau
8 BOSWORTH STREET
BOSTON

MASS.

t

;~~~d~°ct :~~rg~:e~il;:re:a~!~n Of the
Capt Irving took part in the Chat.eau~
.
"ll.t'BcI apAH '...C.t3'.J. [11.ierry, Meus~ A'rgonne a1;1-d St Michel
-aw:a::, ~.I'BAI'~C> 'PIO UJ eq_ lUM. 1-ei.xnq tattles, being· wounded 1n the first
pua 'a2p•..lqw-e:::, tfl.ZO.N 'qo.tnq.o s,uqo.r ;wo.
+s 10 i!u1u.1ow .M.q..t.totuO'.J. 6 '.J.13 pap~.tq He was appointed an assistant clerk
•ata • aq IHM~tUaJnba.r Jo SS'BW' t{2fqt>V Lt the Charlestown Court eight years 1
"pzayali-eM, 'Uo'.J..to,N pa.t.a: S.tN '.t,a:j;q.a'n-ep tgo.
He is a member of the Army :
-Pu-e '.:rr "£1 a.&ioap pu"e" ·v SJ.ou-a.i,tJ: 'suos ind Navy Club. Re attended the
I
! (,::}lf:.tna aa~), uo1s..Suix "..L ~J!lc:IN ·iS.tN Bunker Hill and Cbarlestown High
1
PIBJ.3, u.1:00 pasVQ.1::JU:[

,-

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p~;1,o;;,_~:;..;~'l§_ p c h ~ · ·

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.
I,,

f{

,

l9 1-[~~d apAH 1UJ U.toq S'BM. 3H "UOlSOS: . ~
••
!f SI l"U""n.11.A.Jl.U . _ · · - - :
1
·1~udsoH Aau.i:e.o aq:,. i'fl"; A'Bp
_!&> \..m J3~~d +san1f -aq,.r. '){Ooro.o
-.tn1-es P3Jp 'p13'o.tu-s:a uaAllH Ma,N° aq1, 1-a qo..1nq:::, s,A:..I"BW lS uJ Apoq -e UJ UOJ

.,.

1,nnos

~~~::;i-;u:;!Jo;:o~~:a::i~~s~1J~;:
puauoH 8Sl 10 .tg uo1s.Suix ·.c·a~°pO'BS
9'!boa{) ·

:;.;~:;~flo~::;i1:..I~~J;~V,{~;;~
eq.r. "H"BH p1ay..Ia'.J.1?.M UJ ..5'uJu..Iour. A-ap
-.ta:J,Sa~ :J.S~J}t'ea.tq UOJUilWtuoo J'BilUU"e
:).V eq llJ..M. l~aw.1a1u1 pu11 'A'epsa'uPaM 1· S'.J.! p[aiq ''.O 'JO ·x 'n;)uno.o .ta'.J.saqouJ.M.
uo ao-e1d aJI-a:J. IU.M. 1w.zaunJ aq..L~. . ·an
'
·auq.M. '8 .toJ A1np }!Sap
'PU'BJ'.J..IOd t{l,nos 'Aauoq-an "l?JrJoa:::, ·s.r:Ji\:: op IU.M. aH
·.tat.Uwns +s-ar ;uap100-e
'..Ia:JSJS PU'B 'an 'sp.:rOJPOO..M.. 'SU'eH PU'e a10A~.lO'.J.OW 'B UJ pa.znfur S'eA\. -sq 90UJS
1
U-aJ:J,3J.tt{;:) 'S.t&t{;J.O.tq ! .tazren (lUl?.i:{)) awn :J.S.ty aq1 .10.J 2UJU:lout SJq:J. A1np O'.J.
tat{l::Et S.tff 'a.HM. v Aq paAi,•\..tns pau.tn.1a.1 U"B"20H ".ff uqor u-ew10.t1-ecr
Sf:: aH
·a.Sppqw:e:::, ' N ·y !§' \..!:( ·v
•punoJ ua;-;.q S"Bq sqwoq asaq1 Jo
'a2p<>"I w-e1qna '-'J'O· ..faqwaur -e sa,14. OH auo l'Bttl ,raa.M. -e UJ awn puooas aql SJ
·.ta}l"Bq 1? sB~ -.pua 'SJ.Sr 'or AON }-1.t"etU sJqJ.,_ ·uon-e1s aonod 3q'.J. 01, :n ltt2no.tq
-uacr UJ U.toq. ~~M. "*H
·1-a11dsoH uoi PU"B aru0:q .taq o;. 1uaM. u"BuooN "H uqo.c
-sog 1l :J.'8 uooa.tau-a .A:e.p.x~:q.saA paJp ':p~ ~.8.1as ·a~oq .1aq _.t'e'au qruoq r-er.za-e u~
9
IdWaJ., Ot '+l? P9AH ?"q.M. 'uazl~P.i[·uqo..r
puno.J aqs 1-aq1, A-ep.xa1saA aonod
,
·A-apo:,. aomp n~H An::,/ 01 pal.toda~ 1s uaq{y JO 1uap1sa.z
sJq :,:e S'8..M. '~ddJ.t.8 Aq }laa.M. 1,s-ad a~n
.
"SJJ;aa.M.. OA\.'.J. ;.n /.
aw:oq SJt[ .01, ~'.au~,tt~ 'A.~d~nN .tOAvK I Jilt :u-tn+a.z. IIJ..td Aa_q.:r, _ "S3!PUI ,J .;p. .
· .
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"P&l,'tJJQllJ.(?..}.ZOl:S:~cLf,~~l-·s4f>:··~s.Jn.xa_
}l~,-,Ul1:.lOJ Ar.,1\tl-

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/



/

HENRY J MULLIGAN

it~~~~~, ~~v~~~-!~~

f Mr and Mrs Henry E MulllgaJ.l~ is
~mong the class of candidates who h'ave
successfully passed the bai: examiners.
He is one of the youngest 1n the class,
being 23. He was born and educated
in Malden, graduating from the Cheverus school and Malden High, and took
his law course in the Sn;ig>Ni J@w~ool.
He is . unmarried an
1s w+
the
Lloyds casualty Insurance Company.

'./J_o:_J!loq. \a~r~:lf,.
'

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APR 4-1931

,r

~~
.
-1d .' , =i
= ,, ~
!

-----

'-'j

r1:~:~ir:r
--~'

~l

Krawzun H a d

F e w

I

Spare Moments to Him-;.
self While m School

I

lem High school_ and S u f · ~ ! ~

\::0~1. At Salemt:;gr- :grieam th~t
I:~-rullback on the 9first time 1n
beat Beverly for
even. years.
.
chool Mr. Cal.s Since leaving Hig~
in the Boston
lahan has been loca eShoe Machinery
o:f'f1ce of the Un1!;dpractice law here
co. He\ intends Bo ton after bis adnd possibly in
s a 1
~
rit1ssion to the bar ~1.Y Callahalh. has

1

ATTy

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

WLLLIAM J

KRA WZUN

William J Krawzun, 011.,e of fev~·
am•on.g several ihundred applicants
'who successfully passed the recent
bar examinations, worked his ivay
, truough 8~1<: Law and Chelsea
high sc:hool..'j·--z:rr..-or~o obtain the
! education Which fitted him for be! coming an attorney-at-law.
' Of Polish extraction, Young Kraw .
. zun attended the WiJJiams junior
lhigh school and entered Chelsea high
'in the fall of 1923
He secured a.
'Position With the A G Walton Shoe
· Go. about that time and worked for
this concern after &ehooJ hours eacn
afternoon.
~
He was graduated ·in 1926 and en
tared Suffolk Law Schco1 in Septemoor of that same year, taking th:,
1
night course. He remained With the
A G. Walton Go. in· the meantime
~and is at present employed in the
credit deipartm-ent. He receiv~d his
law degree last year
'
Atty E:rawzun is the son of Mrs r,
Eva Kawzun and resides with hlS
mother at 90 Sha,wmut st. He has;
1
b~others and t:wo .sisters
Hi.3 i
' t':Vo
!father died about tive years ago The;
1

1

i

family formerly resided in

Lowell,

moving to Chelsea shortly after the

i fire Of 1908.

------~Q.~

t

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___ ______ -~----,

~-~----

-

'

mu:~~·

;!,~~;

\ . 1Asn ~ 0 ::eati~1:i~1on io
1
of~1oun1st o-4' a.bi;~\;es~~~ that bears
the popular o

f

\ his n a m e · - - ~ - - - - / = ·

'ii.....

- --~

, EVENING GLOB E ' BOSTON, MASS.

·f/!;'
/{T,
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f-R-E~C-0-R~DL,-'C-H""CE"'"CL-,S.:,E~A ,-M''A.,.-S~S...,_,,-"--~~...

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NEWS, SALEM, MASS
11

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APR

0

I

4-1931

APR 6-

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~naiiy. tit ;7:3V P. M~.,~: -A
~=======~~:-fER,1'.
·11 ~ _Microphone E;ents
UPI

-:-J

Lily Pons. who a.l)peared Unheralded uals and favorite concer~ songs as
on the Metropolitan Opera stage, only) guest artist of. the "Garden Party" to
to face a triumph witnessed by few in pe tran~mitted Sunday afternoon art.

:-if;· aPg~a~~at

I,

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tJis i~:1'2 a~d ~;;~chronized s~,-

-Iim-

tiC:~~ ?oi:rb;n sf!~~i;~nfo':~';~a:t!:~;
compa :ative unknown and winniiig
from 300 contestants the coveted New
York Stadium contest. This. gained
her the right to sing with the New
York Philhannonic orchestra of the:
Lewisohn stli,l,dium of the College_"of thE!;
City of New York Since then she-·
appeared in concert with singular s
cess, both as an interpreter of. tq
racial songs of her people an~ a.s · a.'
singer of the world's finest oper~ ·a~¢!
concert songs.

:~t r!~fous~e~~fP~iie~

ool

*
Bainbridge Colby. secretary of Sta.ia:·
of the United States during the ,W1l
son administration, will be speaker ,of
the evening during Radio_ hour, -o,yer
WBZ-WJZ network, Sunday, at 8';!5
p. m.

*

*

(

*

"The Resurrection,' a sacred sel~ction composed by Dana S. Merrim~:n,.
former u1usical Q.irector of · statiort:,
WTIC who is now associated with the
National Broa(casting company heid-_
quarters in Ne:w York city, will ·be ·~ea:tured during the Melody hour slated
for 8:30 o'clock ~ter morning fro~
station WEAF. Alma Kitchell. con•
guest artist On the program to be heard tralto who has been guest soloist Of
over an N. B. C.-WEAF network Easter WTIC. broadcasts, Will be the soloist of
Sunday.
this program.
The voice of this new coloratura will
be brought to radio listeners between
A program of spring and EastCr:'z;uN
7:30 and 8 P m.
-.
music will be played by tl1e Detrcii't:i
In her radio debut, Pons will again symphony orchestra. conducted by ViC:·:·I
give her famous _._rendition of . ·.~,;faro tOr Kolar. during the concert broa~--i fev;:
Non.J.e.'' Opera: goers. in the next five cast _at 9:30 p m. Sunday over t~!t-,bants
~f;rs~o:!~t::~b~~lJ;_.~e~~aierh~e,mi!~! WDRG-Columbia netwm:k.
.
. v_::i""cen t
;.c~~;:...~~;;;,.;.,,-.,~'-"'of -the Metropolitan R~~~_P~~~=~v·~-ll E~:te~peri~er~~~ vvay
library for want of artists to sing them. originally' published under the title cif elsea
* * *
"La Grande Paque Russe." whi~h the
La1;.e!~ot;ft;i~;,· 1:r~~e!e,~!s-,~~1!!...,,iii!lls+tttooa:7,fptf;eieu~~for~]ss~~k~~n~~~l be7

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

r

·~=der at ~n{~~~et~;w~i~ve~~~~:~ the Easter season in the steppe cpun1
tion WTIC-WEAF to-night at 7:15.
try.
* * *
*
A cho::us of sixteen feminine voices
"East Lynne;• postponed f1·om Feb- will, augment the instrumental ensem.~
ruary 7. will be preseI?,ted aboard Hank ble in a special Easter presentation to
Simmons' mythical show boat, "May- be staged in the studios of statio:11,

:;'i1~0 f:o~

J.
p.~

·_:J;].a

~
l3c

:;i~~

Ja\v\nior
high
d a
5.hoe
for

~~!le~aft~~w~~~a~~!;~:
~r1n:\o t~~cl~~:c~~~!~ ~~~~ :ach ;
10 to 11 o'clock to-night. Although Rubin Segal, Hartford violinist, will
considerably cut down for the hour's also be prese11t as a guest soloist.
eemn~
b,:oadcast the piece will be given a real
* * *
old-fashioned interpretation.
Napoleon Bonaparte will be hailed_ :the,
*
before the radio bar of justice Sunda'y 'the
Reasons
for
Preside:p_t
Hoover's night to face a charge of murder. llis ime,
pocket Veto of the Wagner unemploy- will be the seCond a series of uFamous thement bill will be explain-ed to-night Trials of History."
- his 1
by Secretary of Labor Wvliam N. Doak
In the first of this series Benedict
in an address in the National Radio Arnold was tried for treason. He wJis
forum, arranged by the Washington prosecuted by James M. Beck and de- :!rs '
his
Star and broadcast ovel" a coast-to- fended by Clarence Darrow.
:_
coast network of the Columbia Broad.:
The radio trial of Napoleon also will; :1as
casting system.
see celebrated counsel partiCipatJng. H:i-s
Doak will explain plaps for expan- Dudley Field Malone, assistant .:secre- 'he
~t~~~;~h~fi~~e t~=b~· :;:_:~: ~~~t ~u~1:~ea;~ ~~teaara~;!r~~Ef~!: ell,
ment, decided upon following the pres- fend the Little CerporaL Arthur Gar• )he
ident's adverse action on the Wagner t'!eld Hays, distinguished leader of t}1.e
bill and expected by him to outdo plans New York bar, will prosecute him.
proposed in that bill. ·: Enlargement of
WTIC and associated stations·. of t~e
the bureau is made poS.Sible through National Broadcasting company wnl
increased appropriations for unemploy- broadcast this unusual radio feature
ment relief.
beginning at 10: 15

:fo~i:e~~

*



*

*

I

When Jolly Bill and Jane ope:n th~ir
early morning juvenile program over
,
an N. B. c netwCrk Morida_y, . Aprh,
6. at ,-:45 o'clock. the occasion w!,U>--_,
mark their third anniversary on the
\
air together· with their numerous
,
mythical characters.
Jolly Bill, otherwise William Steinke.
cartoonist-humorist,
estimates
that
during the past three years he and
Jane, Iittl:..: Muriel Harbater, have a~
* *
peared together in 1,000 radio per•
Marian Anderson. ~olored contralto. formances. to the tune of approxi•
will be heard in a program of spirit-_ mately 1,650,000 words.
The first game of the round robin
to determine the season's championship
Of the Indoor Polo association will be
reported over an,N. B. C.-WJZ network
from the Squadron A armory in New
York to-night: at 9 0 Cl<;>ck. The Pessimists of New York, led by RaymQnd
Guest. and the Commonwealth team
of Boston, captained, by Tim Clark,
_
wel1!m·u m_beatt hne-. ~oantctehst_ants in this class A
10 m
3

- -1
!,

I

I

.
:
,

,j

ll'RANcrs C. O'BB.IE:N



those Who J>ll.llse
this, week
~. d the Bar- e><"-lnlnatlon
• .ne was bor,, I C .
to..,,, and W&.$ gralluat.,i
n harles-

~I

High Sch

from Medtord

He wasoo I In th& cl~s ot 1918..
,,
lege In
-T¢ts Col- ,
School In l9ao H 1
Su42_Jk ~

'.~~~~=~~--

192lZ'u'!tu~~!, %°:'

~~ger -~or ,;

.Bo:toh ass~st~~~~

~ - - l ' ~ { ~ - ___ :.

-

The

Alumni A:ssoCiatioeo Pfoym

.will



-



~r- and ~rs A!den ·

SS<,_.,,

"-'

lrffl'!7t1ffi11

k?o

1i/ a / ; ,

1

on

'
I,(~~•

iir~~

~ I i s s E=vangeline ,·Benio,
Thatcher court, Wednesday.

APR 4-1J,31

obsurejl

b

--

-

-

--·

-

----·-·

-

-

26 1

1

~

.-'Cb

~~-·-··---of who9.1 have proved
tent 't;t~b¥Jdlers

John P
Hooban of Brookline was
among those passing the State bar exan1ination a week ago
Following graduation from the Boston University School of
Business Administration, 11r. Hooban attended the Suff~.':Y School and completed the course last year He is an ac"Countant and has been in the employ of
the Cambridge firm of Lever Brothers
- - ~ ! ,V~~~t- ~t;:~1:- x.,e<;.1:s_. ·-~-- ·-

served by the hostess.

Leon P. Reservitz, a student at
~ w school, and his sister, .
MisS Rose Rese1vitz, 22 Old Colony
square, will attend a jun;,or prom
tonight at the Copley Pla'za hotel 1

___ iu_.!3_os~_n=

...

_ - . ___ . .

then,sel~ve,

LOCAL MAN AMONG THOSE
PASSING STATE BAR TEST

op:f:st.ioJiadys Parker, 21 Sheridan
street
entertained a
group of
friend;, at her home last night The
house was attractively decorated 1n
yellow and orchid
Luncheon was

IJ_ ~- .

-h,,...n.,._ _

~-·=---~-

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

CHRONICLE, READING, MASS.

had/

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

· .

EAST OF MAIN _STREET

the

ter:S~~}i~Ch~~~

uf-

obs_e:rved

I

T}:le ne~ meeting Bi/' tht_~_J/ayett~I® --wm , _
be l].¢ld ,,~day
niglft in Club Natil'.>E'at~,m
1
The Cheerfi;,I, - H<c!i!efers of.' the
Wend~U· .AY:1;!µ.pe
Co~gregat1onal
churc~vi.lP·<IDeet "\Vednesday ~t
the cmrgl!
A doughnut sale will
be conducted.
Miss Mary Lyons, 20 Ma1t;:1
street, is recoveri~g at the BroCK·
ton hospital follo,vua..g an appendix

a1n

,t~~e~fl~~TtOn:l;~~~0 1
,·:,i.ct:p:1
~oscJated
with
the
An1erica::i.
1
:S~.1:."'c-e~'l:?'" Oompany of New York, as 2 esi,_3-~;,:;.;: i:::.;;;~i-stant .secretar::,·
He is a n1e1n~.r o;r J.~ing Solomon's Lodge, _c\ F ani'i
-A_ 3LL.,. ~a:aa the "\-Yest Somerville Bat.):::::.ist l?.--:t>.r.:.1r.eh., v. here he is the assistant
~.SBrp-e!J:1.11:tendent of the Church School,
..-.'.l.nd
vice-president of the Br own

Archer,

,

CHRONICLE, BROOKLINE, MASS.

I

'~~:;~ 0

Gleason L

~~~~~~---

BoMti J:{enneth Ttt)lor Passes lUasNa- I
1
__..f!busetts Exnmination.
On ..,Ma-re"h '30 Robert Kenneth Ta, Ior
•:2r thJs c1-ty,
notified that he ·
tlhe Massachusetts bar examheld last Dece1nb.er.
Mr Tay- 1
~>"Jr~ Q'rh(ll' is a graduate of the Somer, y1:.1e .$C.ha>o1s,
attended
Boston
Uni.=-~~l''$·lt;:_·:v~_ ::-xna ~eceh·ea his Ba~heJor of j

was

Dean

foll,$'l:', -.. §';'hool, )Boston_.

Ir

s anniversary of his series ot ,
1 the
f law talks oerv NBC networks
last ··,:
' week
Dean Archer interprets the ·
fundamental. la"\vs,. many of
origin,
which
guide our courts of

,gJ\

)
•/'//,

!J Pi.OM,ITTE~ THE. BAR

~~-~~!el:i~r ·

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

,_:the. 'f~iTeC!'t'\J.G:o Df inMiss. school
H.azeI- . G.·. ibSon,
~:te-;nc:"!~.,.,e:r '6f music
the

~ttf}h.,

now

farm, Wn1 be brought to radio H:steners by Russell during
his
Mo
a
broadcast.
Following Russell's ta ·,
Fadiman will re,view
Lathrop Stoddard's latest bond ... "Master of Man-

Thomas J. Boynton, Mr an
s· ·rt
1 seph :F. O"Conn-ell; James F,
Wl d
:Mr and Mrs Martin w. Powers an
.

1

w~o
said,
little

! garnished by months q,f m~xing with
Ameri'cans in the
city
and on the

ner, Councilor and ~rs William rr
Brennan, Sen_ator aif .. t d States .A.tty
n1 e
d Mrs
Gen George R, Farnum, M~ ~rs .To-

-~"'----c ..• - ~ ~

O~i!HU..SJ±o1n

t

Shanahan; ex-Asst

---L.£.•!!, >L:>.tJc,.,._,-._.,_ ......

~-

I

"th~Y:-,'a4?.!~.~ liked th~ eleP:hant
saw the, ·Wtc1therless chickens and
'I Wn1 be' ·mother to th~ poot;-,
things and lay down on them.• ·,
This scintillating
vieWPO-int,

l

'
-S(

may

CU trit~i,~.·eJ;tg.ineer and scientist came·.

~ to thei>\~ a#{, of the depressed farmer-~
· creati_ng !ili. ~ production R~ssell s~s

pi~~! fl:tel

last night at the
P e
rese.rtt
with several _hundred cou~~:nf of the
Thom.as. J · ~~:seg;~~!r:~y chairman,
1
1
Fred Gillespie and James
E
Bagley Jr
d d Py
.The list of patrons was hea e
!
Dean and Mrs , Gleason L. Archer o the school, ~tt~ Gen Jos:p~:me:1aH:

··.f
!

JOURNAL, SOMERVILLE, MASS.

"""TiH::k-e"M

,Ola.

. L W ALUMNl
TAGE ANNUAL PROM 1
annual , Suffolk Law Sebo;: j

I
I:::r:t:J i,1;;
!

.an

... -..,,,"~

s of , r:,

SUF

I,,,._ ~-1:>_~~ues Prprl ,>t t.})e };oJ. l
stadium in Des Moines, Iowa, will pick
up
eyewitness account of- the...tr8,\)_l<
and field competition during the
Drake university_ relays this afternoon
oter WJZ's network at 4:30 o'clock.
One of the novel features of the relays
be the varsity football lettermen's
relay race, which will bring t~ether
on the cinder paths some of the great
backfield quartets of the past season.
Carideo, Schwartz, Brill and Kaplan
will carry Notre Dame's banner, While
Northwestern 'Will enter Russell, Hanley, Leech and Oliphant
Lea.ding authorities in co~rv~tion,
forestry, .and wild lif-e, attending the
Izaak Walton league convention in
Chicago, April 23 to April 25, will be
heard in the Na..tional Fann and Home
hour: to be broadcast over an, NBCW JZ network today at; 12:30 P. M.
Paul G. Redington, chief of the United States Biological survey, and Major
R. Y. Stuart, chief of the United
States Forest service, will be among
the speakers to tj.iscuss preservation of
game and ·fisheries
Selections from Delibe:s' ballet "La
Source," will open the program of the
Black and Gold Room orchestra to
be broadcast over an NBC network today at 6:i5 P M.
,
I Dean Gleason L. Archer of~!_.k
Law school, Boston, will spea.r··on
"Murl'll!r"·by Poisoning or Lying in
wait" in his series, Laws That Safeguard Society, to be broadcast over
an NBC network tonight at 7:15 P. M.

APR 3- 193.i
--- ...-.=-

THE REA/

I

/
ILocal Insurance Man
Succeeds in Bar Exam
I

~~

I'
I

V.)'

o..u~

.JaC.R:Son:-string ~
.

'

"eWi .

ton Cen~, first violin; Alice B. Zen
f,
'33, ~i!'°ster, second violin: Elizabeth s'.
Peabo...,y, '31, Brockton, viola; D. Eliza'
bet~av:\ '33, Montclair, N. J. ~c~Uo,; !

Su:ffollt.._Law Alumni
Annual Reception Th~rsdav

Richard B. Hers~m of Stoneham, em-1
ployed at the Reading office of Pr. entiss
I · Suffolk: Law a l u ~ i l l hold their· a:
and Parker Insurance Company was
! nuaJ prom and reception at the Coplev~me of . the few candidates to su'cceed
,
Plaza Thursday evening''l,homas j
in pas~1qg the state bar examinations
Finnegan, president of the alumni assn~
acc<?rd11:1g to the announcement made
elation, is bonorory chair.~man with Fred
~arller 1n the week He will be sworn
Gillespie and James E. Bagley', ,Jr., chair~
man and secretaary of the committee on
1n 0~ May l, in Boston \\--"h'en the
superior court comes in.
1
l~:rangeme_.,n,,,t=s·"~'""'"""""'""''.,.....,."""'~~,,
Of the 754 to take tl:,e examination ' :
last Dec_ember only 199 will ,be admitted /
to practice Mr. Hersam is a graduate
of_ Suff<;>Ik Law School, having re-·
ce1ved lzfS' LL. .tl Jast ,June.
.•



I

I

'r

\.

I

i

.

. .

~O~NING ,:RCU.RY,

;~~~J:f::;ft'~'.;'

·--.::l,

--1 ° RAD1ri£ATDRES . :Tl!E

f

NEW lBEDFC --~;;;:

r~~~~a~~~!d1~

,, i", .··;.·

Alumni .Associaboeo Pf0y Plaza l{otel
last night at the
P e
resent
1
With several hundred coui:;s
of t'he
J Thom_as_ J ..~.nnega~;!,~~s; :tairman,
1
1
j :::?s~
~illespie and James
E Bagley Jr
h
d d t,y
·The list of patrons was ea .;:

I
I

on the cinder paths some of the great

backfield quartets of the past season.

w"'

-

Wa~-

1

.1

,I.\CL

Chicago, April 23 to April 25, Will be

-

heard in the National Fa.rm and Home
hour' to be broadcast over 'an NBCW Jz' network today at 12:30 'F. M.
Paul G. Redington, chief of the Unlt-

-

--·-·- ,

!

Gleason ,L. Archer,

Dean

~~~~:___
~ i s s Evangeline ~'Berrio,
Thatcher court, "\Vednesday.

network to-

uf- ,,_

___ ~

-

...

--

·--·

--

...

26-1

EAST O F ~ STREET

_•-~"-::;-:-:---

JOURNAL, SOMERVILLE, MASS~

.

/-~

"-f-:t,~( . _,,.
~L-~,e,~,!J"'-::._ ..,,--u... ......-

d.n-etrt,ion of
Miss
Hazel
~:tcac~er 'Gf music in the school

Gibson,

°"ihe

Tidc-et;S

'"'•;~!tff!h..

~2bi@lPW!ihJrom

!'.~f!.? \"3!) &2
1/(

~~:t'"~
I

'-'

n1ay

~

,.

s\;:Y~a.t.,_

be, on

l

(

'

8..>M.y:t_ l~enneth

...ehu.sett.s

the

)
,

/~I

'//

(/ PI.DM,ITTE~THE

BAR

I

an:,

Q.l
I

- ,(

I

The IJ,eXit meeting &: th~ _L.<,fayette'.#100/wm .. be IJ:i!ld ,,~day
niglft in Club Nat~i,,a.,m
1
'J'he Cheerfu,J - H~!,fers of , the
\lVendeU
Ay.eµ-P.e
Congregational
church,,. w.ffi. IDeet \Vednesday ~t
the c ~ . A doughnut sale will

-rw~ ~ve proved themsel~vetent {2"~h¥1dlers

be~i~~
Lyons, 20 Mart;n
street, is recove1ing at the Broc~ton hospital follo,vi:rag n.n appendix

--- · - - ~

LOCAL MAN AMONG THOSE
PASSING STATE BAR TEST

u::1Y

op~:stioJiadys Parker, 21 Sherida~
, street· entertained a group of
, friend~ at her home last night Tl;e
house ,vas attractively decorated 1n
yellow and orchid. Luncheon was
served by the hostess.
Leon P. Reser v~tz, a stude1;1t at
~ w scho?l, ~nd his sister,
Miss Rose Reservltz, 22 Old Colony
square will attend a junior pr om
tonighf at the Copley Pla'za hotel
- - __ i:1=~-os~on_". -·--_
_ __ .,_ -h,,-..nf-

I

T.qylor Pnsses

21".las:-ia- 1

Ex:uniuntion.

his

Bache1or

of

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

---~~-...- .._,.~

J

~:'l)(;.<:y:,.
CL.-so.sciated
With
the
An1erica111
$:;n,e)::;.? C,ompany of New York, as resi'. l'8,.:::·;: C"--!S~i·stant secretary
He ls a men1- .•
1.U.ng Solomon's Lodge, --\ F

and

:

-..A• .:t'.f_,, :a.nrJ. the \Vest Somerville BatJ- /
::.t!St t-::J:w.1.rch~ ~ here he is the assistant/
o~ the Chu1 ch School, /I

~ai;:~~'x:i:t.en_<lent
,~

lr

APR 3- 1931

··-a;:~~ ~c~~e~~:rtZ:1~~~~?h1f,eI:s»:~h~ch~~~ !

;::i~

I

graduate of the Somerattended Boston
Uni-

o;Ele
.$C.hmoJs,
,=,~l'~'it:;p-~- ::.i.:na recelvea.

0;1_·

John P
Hooban of Brookline was
among those passing the State bar examination a week ago
Following graduation from the Boston University School of
Business Administration, Mr Hooban attended the Suff.lll.l.,_L;,w School and completed the course last y'ear He is an accountant and has been in the employ of
the Cambridge firm of Lever Brothers
- ~ 2 , pa_~t- ~-~Y~_ x"e';rS ..,_,

CHRONICLE, READING, MASS.

'Gt: tli""is ci-ty, was notified that he had
;;2£~ei'.i
tfrle Massachusetts bar exam.::-na1..tt:n:1 :held last Dece1nb.er~
lvfr Tay-

::~.r

~~~~~~~-

I

· e,.~ :-'E.a.-rCh ~U Robert Kenneth Ta3 lor,

r~~t~ ".i¥h.,:,, is a

r

.

Pean Gleason L. Archer of..,;ilillf!ol.)<
La"L school, Boston, will spe · on
"M)ll'"lffir by Poisoning or Lying in
Wait" in his series, Laws That Safeguard 'society~ to be broadcast over
an NBC network tonight at 7:15 F. M.


\

CHRONICLE, BROOKLINE, MASS.

Black and Gold Room orchestra. to

.,.,....,,.T.,

I/

l
I

ed States Biological survey, and Major

!

production. Russell s~s

1

R. Y. Stuart, chief of the United

be broadcast over an NBC
day at 6:15 F M.

·°ivf~

saw the, 't):,i'@'.therless chickens and said,
'I Win be mother to the poor. little
things and lay down on · ~h"3m_; ·•
This scinti!lating
v~eWPOint,
now
1
ga~nished by months q.f m~xing with
Ameri'.cans in the
ci'ty
and on the
. farm, will be brought to radio 1isten. ers by Russell during his Mo da
broadcast.
Russell's ta
1'Jl..,adiman willFollowing Lathrop Stod-,
.
review
·! dard's latest bond.~ "Master of Man-

/ '.folk~'fi.t - School. )Boston, observea .'
...
the f s a~;ivers~ry of his series ot
1 law talks oerv NBC networks
last
week
Dean Archer interprets the
fu. ndamental, la,vs, many of obsur:J/
I origin,
which
guide our courts of

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

States Forest service, will be among
the speakers to 41.scu.ss preservation of
game and fisheries.
Selections from Delibes' ballet "La
Source," w!ll open the program of the

creating

"th,;,y 'acJ~.c llked the elephant w~o

1
Dean and Mrs Gleason L Arc
the school, :Atty Gen i£sep~~es H·:
ner, Councilor and
r~ William 1-I.
Brennan, Senator a~ !trd States .Atty
Shanahan; ex-Asst
n1 e Mr and Mrs
t Gen George R. Farnum,
Mrs Jo~
1Thomas J .. Boynton, Mr andF.. s'wift
seph F
O'Cox-eJ.;n J~meiow~rs and
~rr aanndd ~~ss A~e~ ·:M:. • 91e_ve_land.

,LV.L
,

Carideo, Schwartz. Brill and Kaplan
will carry Notre Dame's banner, while
Northwestern·-~11 enter Rn••aII, Hanley, Leech and Oliphant.
.
Leading authorities in co~rvat1on,
forestry, _and wild lif-e, convention the
attending in
Izaak Walton league

,,_ i

f

:J ~j ~!i

I

will be the varsity football lettermen's

relay race, which will bring ta;gether

./

-CU1fi:irai· etlgineer and scientist came·
to the{·:,~ ai4~ 'of the depressed farmer,·

I

!
I

up ,an eyewitness account of-the._tr~~
.and field Ccimpetition during the
Dfake university relays this afternoon
o:Ver WJZ's netWork at 4:30 o'clock.
One of the novel features of the rela.ys

,.

Briehl~..

1

_-:--:--:--:-~~-------~LUMNl

Microphones installed at the~ lncluded in_ the Southland Sketches NNUAL PROM
stadium in Des Moines, Iowa, wllfp!ck
The-- an",fu~rTu:a:oik mLat~ok s~t;;~

, . , . '..

,nce-~_?t

of

the

B1owu

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, \\TASS.

APR 4-1331

THE RE.a.Ji

ILocal Insurance Man

/:

I Succeeds in Bar Exam/ •

I

ii

-

Richard B. Rersam of Stoneham em-11
ployed at the Reading office of Prc;ntiss
,
and Parker Insurance Company was
~:>ne of . the few candidates to su'cceed
1n pas~u~g the state bar examinations
accC?rd13:1g to the announcement made
~ar1Ier 1n the week He will be sworn
1n o~ May 1, in Boston when the/
superior court comes in.
1
Of the 754 to take the examination ' '
last Dec.ember only 199 will -be admitted
to practice. Mr. Hersam is a graduate
of_ Suff'?lk Law School, having re-·
ce1ved lzfSZ LL. :B Jast .June.
,

I

' ;.i,.«;;;;·h;·-;,iten~ect -the-Bruins-cana- I
dien hoc

~tJ.t:,

Ja;C.R:S~Striiig~

ton Cent.r-, first violin; Alice B. Zen ew1
· fi
'33, W~ster, second violin: Elizabeth-·s\
Peabo9Y, '31, Brockton, vJola; D. E1fa~.
bet~~avis\ '33, Montclai~, N J , 'cEt1Io · 1

I•

Su:ffoDi...Law Alumni
Annual Reception Thursday
Suft"olk: Law alumni will hold their an
nual prom a_,nd reception. at the CopleyPlaza Thursday eve~ing'.
Thomas J
F'innegan, president of the ,alumni association, ls bonorory chairman, with Fred
Gillespie and James E. Bagley, Jr., chairman and secretaary of tpe committee On

l!':'rangeme~n"t''s~,._,,....,.....,_.,,,._ _ _,,,~,

\

---~,~-------- -- --------- - ~ - - -

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r Chandler Fairbanks

\

'ts home on Washington Street. _,
;h trouble since last fall and in eli
kal treatment which afforded sc
bnued activity in civic and bush,
'physical ability. His last effortj ·
f in behalf of the proposed Rei
Uter upon which he was working)

--i

·a0j1snf JO s:pnon ..zno apJn2
am:,sq'o JO AU'Btu 'SA\1'!

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.rnq;,.ry

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1s.1y eq1 paA.r"sqo 'uowoa: 'tootl"S"""'"'1
l[Jo~.- - JO: '.re,p.rv,, ·'J uosua10

the ;Bulletin,. he alway.s beµe-:_•_
_
\ · ommun1ty service and througlj_ .,
is personal efforts, he "Was ab]¥i
I eative town. He was always V\
I "'-""'-""~~"trlWg t_ook ~

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,~---:i;ht~~d~v42-100(6"'s:42) f_eet~O
...

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October 20, 1910, and recorded witll
said Registry of needs, Book 458, Page,:

':_

( 2.00)

I)' ~~;,ni~~~ncfanf" ~t:;£~
0

feet

to

Marsh

1

t~~

0

~und:-t!~,

~svw 'x::n.tvN 'NI.L3:'I'IOa:
-------------- -·-

Street; , thence

:' westerly a.long said Marsh Street about
I- four a.ad 38-100 (4.38) feet to a ooint;

~i.

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11

f

thence northerly along the westerly
location of Marsh Street as shown on

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ariui

0

~l~~tee~e~~da1;\
(19\{f)e2"eet
point; thence westerly ·about sixty'
~ ... and 29-1,00 (60.29) feet to the :stone
:~ ri:nth:-t ~JiiePOi>1:~~fsebsegJ~~~~lbed
t-

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,


Bi;;',

deed from Almeria L. Boynton, as ex-',
111
0
to ~a~~~l ~
:S:a~rriSMdatf!iaNg.: '.
vem,ber: 1, 1909. and recorde.d with said

~;:i:~x.

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pa1:~f1e c~~.:

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2
-To6r~o~~~o~k

L£:t'.ight

8

Stfe:\~ea
To Mr and Mrs
Christos Ca:
lianis,
347
Market
street,
daughter
3-To Mr and Mt s. Alfred Bedardr 1_.

l

•/11

ToH~;a!~d su;:_t,F~a~~~gwe~a~ori.
North
a son
, ,~

Billerica.

'~·.

~

Sprin!l: Pruning
':''
,;-/'
1 Before your shrubs and trees bre~k ,--:;.,::~W,
\ jnto leaf, the dead v.rood should be C:µt :i'-_:.:,.~';J
\ .iaway.
By prunieg carefully, you c~1i :· <::f!f:i1
ishar,e them as yc.,u prune.
._ >':'.!~

said Registry of Deeds,
Book 458, :
Page 503, and the parcel ta.ken by the
CitY of Lowell to lay out· a portion

of said Marsh Street under resolution
passed May 24., 1910, and shown on
"Plan showing land taken in laying
out Marsh Street,
11. Mass., April i
l.91.0, George Bo
ineer,"
recorded -with s
Book of Plans- M.
Ian 53.
Said premises a
veyed subject
to the rights of an
awfully
entitled in said Marsh Stree ,
subject and to hav~ the benefit ot all
passageway rigbts mentioned under
said Deed from Samuel N. Harris to
1
Je;eo~~
f:nihe Cllov~ pr~mdses

/

.

._

Tod~r~h}~~ Mr·~- !-r~~~a~--·~~
32 Rutland street, a daug

1

3;~:!i~h 20, 1910, 5and recorded with
~;y~tl-i!n t~us~ir·d~~t1!\!~,
October

\,

6ld'!:f

z~

described 1n deed from Sam.uel N.
Harris to Jeremiah. Moynihan dated

r

NOTICE

Li ,~;
-~

We sell loam for yonr garden,
and to make your lawn, We sell'
crushed stone and stone ~dust

1
1

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to

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''1'13:A\O'I 'NOS

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f''

,I

-PARTIES),

Lowell

'l. ·

isnp'< auo,s pm, auo,s paqsu.w
·«MU[ .1noK "ll"UI o, puu
'' ··uap.IUa .IllOA .IOJ IUBOI nas "M
O}

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·aun.:td U'J.,~ S'B tua1r.1- edBqsl '
t):13:a no A 'AnnJa.1130 ;a ~nun.1d &s: ·..'\'.:'8'.M:el' \

q.n;> aq p1nolls poo.M. p-eap a1r:J. \rea1 01,uf
,'·

:!I'ea.rq saa.r-:i pue sqn.rqs .rnoA fUOJGH

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.-

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uos -e •-eo1 rnn1s: 1.n..10,N
l\(\,_ SIOU"B.t ..>:I "S.IJf\I pu-e ".I:W: OJ..
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'Q U'BUI.taI-! S.I}i\J: PU'8 '.IJ"1: O,.L

·.:c,:q_q.2n-ep

NATICK, MASS-:-- --

-~

TIMES, WOBURN, MASS.

:

APR 2. 5 \931

I J;:I; ,. ,
~

BRADY - BIGLEY

r

Attprn<>y J<1hn J. Brady, former
chairman of the Board of Selectmen I
and Miss Mary M. Bigley, daughter ,
of Mr,s. Marga,ret Bigley, Wash/burn
Avenue, Wellesley Hills, were married
! Sunday afterno,on a,t 4 o'clock at the ,
rectory of St. Mary's church, Newton '
Lower Falls by Rev. Fr. Flood.
/ They were attended by Miss Con,stane Manning of Wellesley Hills as
brideS1111aid and Policeman Leonard
Clinton of Framingham as the best
man. The bridesmaid was gowned in
antique ivory satin trimmed with priti- 11·1'
cess lac<>. Her bouquet was of calla
' \ lilies. The bridesmaid's gown was of '
turquoise iblue chiffon and she carried
, a bouquet of talisman roses.
1'
,
A reception followed at the home :
· 'of the 'bride in Wellesley Hills after
which the !happy couple left on a wed- /'
ding trip to New York, Pennsylvania
and Washington.
On their return,.
I they will reside at 153 Arlington
LStreet. The ,bride traveled in a dress-I
2
i·of ashes of ros<>s silk and a beige coat
< with hat to match.
Mr. Brady attended the Framing·'Ji ;ham ,public schoo.ls and graduated,/
'' :from the Sufl'.2!!< Law School. Since I
his admission to- ithe -Mffl!'slrchusetts
:Bar he has ibeen engaged in the l)ract:ce of Jaw in Framingham and main- ,
tains an office in the Hemenway build- :
ing. He is a mem!ber of the Elks, '
Eagles and American Legion. He has
', been prominent in ,town affairs, has(
thrice ,been the nominee of the Dem-I
ocratic party for representative and
he served three years on the Board
of Selectmen, t.wo as ,chairman, retir- 1
ing in ,March when he declined to be '
a candidate for re-election. Mr. Brady 1
;,v.as chairman of the town's committee
1in charge of the observance or the ,
, [Massachusetts Bay Tereentenary.
i
Mrs. Brady is a graduat<> of Wellesley High school and has been a
secretary at the Broadbent Medical
Company in ,Boston.

I

I I over

I

_

ii,;:;,.

Gleason L.··Archer, ·of ~S,lk
La v.,__gchool, Boston, observed the :titst
I anniversary of his series• of· aw·. ta,lliis
I
.. ,
NBC netwo1ks last '-"e<}k,fs:Il<>an

Archer interprets the fun:dam·:·.·ental
..
laws, many of obscure origin, :which

t

guide our courts of justice.

·

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/

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

~PR 4- 1931
;l

,I

PARTIESJ,

:7iit'e" ~J[~~t

Lowell Couples
. -i'o;r~ally Announce Comin~;¥:arriages

't

. 'r.

_Parttes, formally announcing the
,. -/ ""0'ftgil.gement of two prominent local
; ,. 1 couples are being held this afternoon.

1
At fJ, luncheon-bridge at the home
·.
o! her mother, Mrs Edward Savage, o!

, 105 NesmJth st, Mrs. Frederick Avery

' , :A

S.n-;;~~~~-the

fatter, "~s- tO
engagement
~\:;_., -~ ~ h,~1; ..... daughter, l\1;iss Mary Eleanor

l't-0bfns, to Mr Malcolm Dockrill Ben~r-:t_ , t,. soICOf Mr. <}.nd Mrs. Edward L

jrt

J}et~e~~t; ;:;.!vit~~mf~:{~t. socfa1l~
--.
·t}:iis city, Boston and Lawrence
:Mr.? Benn.i=tt having been a forme;
~Jo.· J1:e.st<}e~t C?f the latter twO cities.
pr-~·; :{:,. :Miss Ro'pins was graduated from the
.\y.M.oreY gr~mmar school, Lowell high
-,.:
}sCbool and will graduate in June from

I

<f:l.ogers Hall, where she has been

a

·i~opula1: student in school activities
:and the Kava club. Mr. Bennett is a
, graduate of the DeWitt Clinton Heb· ... ,~ berd s91!.,Q.Q.l in Newton, an~ attended
,_
t college, i~
Geneva, N. Y,
he was pledged to the Kappa
P .. ,a society.
He is a prominent
!;Omber of the Vesper Country club
:and William Sewel Gardner lodge o!
,-¥a~olls. He is associated in business
with his father, Edward L. Bennett,
,,l.OCa.1 ·mortician
-ltl.Vitations to the announceme.nt
•party were extended to 16 personal
-~r!endil of the couple.

'_'.: ·
j

"'-,~r~~,-ii~!~~:rh Garvey, of 10'5 High. · fl,n,d' ~venue, announces the engageellt of her daughter.· Miss Marion
ar.vey, to Hugh Frederick Downey,
s_.q ..,.at a tea. in her daughter's honor,
ven by Mrs. Thomas B Rafter
i\Sa~nders-:UeCiellan
? ·~nother engagement of particular

TIMES, WOBURN, MASS.

~.PR 2 5\931
:J-

r

I

-- ---

wr

.i;i#~

\ ~:,S ·;;ileason L. "Arc~r. ·of ~,Olk
ILav....School, Boston, ol!>served the tlrst

I , I anniversary of his. series ot'. 1:aiw, taalis
! over NBC netwo1ks last "\'i.~k.,.:Ilean
is t.hat
daughterot M~·ss; ,I/ I
of Mr. ,·

i_•.. i_·_n.te.rest. in th.is city
.. "Terese K. McClellan,
J.and Mrs. Charles McClellan, of Fall
. ~ n n o u n c e d by her pareri.ts t ·
...
_·rwe_:::;'
·ek; . to Mr. Edward .T. Saunders,
f'E),iq., son o! Mrs. John F Saunders, of
?103 'Andover street.
Both are :well
;_known in this city, :Mr Saunders be.' ing erigaged in the real estate busi-~ l n_.ess here. Miss Mccie_ nan is a grad~ uate of Framingham Normal school.
took sp,ecial courses at Harvard
~_and Cot1:1mbia univP-rsitie!=;
ShP is at
(t:~e present a teacher of ilnmesti~ anO
'f"household science in Fall River junior
Lhigh schools.. Mr Saunders hetter
!:1t:1?pwn ;;!C::: "NPd" tn ::I hO!=::t of f1~i-"nf'ls
; i,s .::r--"?r~rh,µtP of Hnl.,T G1oss college
! and SuffQl~w schooL

f~~d

1

J

I Archer

',
1
1

_l. !

I~ II
11 ,
~i, !
, !:
. '1 ii\
,
I
,

l

· interprets

the

l

funda°meinta1

la~s, many of o_bscure origin,:'w.hieb,
gu1de -our courts of justice.
.

--

--·-\

I'

/

''

MASS.

/

NEWS, SALEM, MASS,
8

1

~oston
8 BOSWORTH STREET

BOSWORTH STREET

BOSTON

APR

MASS.

~

- ·::,31

~1[;:,~·

ing
the syrlancmouy.
by the name of.Khoury. The m.urd.er,
which was attributed. to various

ENTERPRISE, MARLBORO, MASS.

BOSTON

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

J,iAR 3 D i93l

~.;c;,;a;.;uses.-...,a;niiijd!lliimiiJenil!!tiit~oiiiniiiedi!!!liias!llloiiifimipiiioiiss~lb~l~
-much interest here.

Chas. F. Manning,
nvers Resident, ,. ,
Passes Bar Exams

>~MASS~·

~ f the recent successful appli-

!or admission to the Massachusetts ba.r ls Charle& F. Manning,
30 Chester street, Danvers. and who
is today receiving the congra.tula ..
tions ot his ma.ny .:friends.
Mr. :Manning ts employed by the
Salem Five Cents Savings bank and
is very popular among his associates.
He 1a the son o:t:: the late :'.'Tank P
Manning and lives with his aunt.
Mary E. Manning ot De.rivers. Whlle
he resides in t~~ neighboring town

'BAR EXAMS· 1
i
)onald S. DiBuono ,
Notified of His Success Today

/

TAKES OATH

ON MAY 1•

I

Well K~own Marl~oro \
i

;

;

Man 1s Now Office ~
Manager

,

/

; Marluoro.-Doi1ald ' s. rlrifuono, ;
j:;c;e}-t- -1:1101.1.·u----Ma.F-lboro young man,
; nd son of ~fr. and Mrs. Joseph
j)iBuono. 137 south street, receiv·. ,d notification today that he has
'.mccessfully passed the· Massachu;etits Bar exa.minationis.
He w:11
·;receive the oath of a.n attorney at
'1aw, on May 1.
He 1-s receiving
·;congratulations of
.his many
'friends.
Mr.
D:Buono. graduateu from
Suffo\li; I 2-•hool last year. On
Decem'6er 30 he took the ex.amin-1
ation He was born and educated
in this city. He entered Burdett
: Business co.Ue~e an~ received the f
degree of accountant in June 1926 I
and entered the law schoe>l that l

)

CHARLES F. MANNING

, he is ·perhaps better known amorig:

1 Salem people. He · received his edu; cation in Salem. and is a. gra.dua.te of
' the Salem High :School.
,
His admission to the bar comes after four years of study at the Suf-

~J:11awz£:1Jf.City Aerier:ce~:mber
wrr:~ ~e o:t Eagles,
the Witch ·
of

Salern Y. M. C. A. and the Danvers
Court of Foresters. He is also a
member of the planning board of
Danvers.
Mr. Manning pl,ans to actively enter the practice of law in Salem ff:
the near future

fa1:iie has occupied the position~
as officer manager at ,the Marl-\
boro Shoe Co, .for several year:s,
where he is still employed. He be-1
longs
to
Marlboro Lodge of
Eagles, Sons of Italy and Marl- :
boro Fi,sh & Game, AssociaUon and!
is active in athletics.
'

NEWS, SALEM, MASS

1G3i
NEWS-TRIBUNE, WALTHAM, MASS.

TIMES, WOBURN, MASS.
rew uays.

n

.

·;O~l

n, 1VlexrcJtaOt '"'n·hou. :break~ -·--·- · - He
t e ·""t..LC<l"'· there.

*

reet is entertainiilg her sisd b'rother-in-iaw from New
R c
· e, New York.

A.
* * *
i
_:;,Blialhard S. Resh of 2 Maple f
terrace has passed the bar examina- \',
tion. Mr.. Resh was graduated from f
Suffolk Law School in 1930, a:q.d last :
sulliillf!t atteride.cl71he Harvard L_aw ,
School. He is a membe~ o~ I<.1ng 11

·e<>I"



I

SUFFOLK LAW ALUMNI
TO HOLD RECEPTION

~-·--.

-. Su(,fp]k ]@~ ~?!J.ol a1umni will hold
their ftllnuaGN?m and
receptio 1~
Thursday at the, (;opley: Plaza ,Hotel
.ballroom. The hbn'orary•:,chairman is
Th,oma,; J. Fht11jl$afi .. Ja,:ue~ lj]. Ba.g.. l.iet,Jr., ts ~ecr~s\r;Y 9f U1e com.m:tt.tee

~:f?~?4t~t .•. . ~z

..

-

an At·my on detach<ad }erthe Marine Co:r,ps.
·

-I

resident Of North ~ ·An
.He is .s.ur. vi
Helen. and two~sollS'
o .
Andover 1-'ft-llfl Carel··
b
Maine.
.Y-{l ~-: ··.
ADMITTED TO Tl'IE.BAR;
Four Danversites have. be~h.
fied th,at they have passed t
nations for admission. to the
chusetts bar. Two of the' four
•successful candidates · are'. w·
and it is probably the first ,time"
vers has been. favored with, 1a.W
den~s of the fe_minine gender.
, :_."'_,
MlS6 Catherine E. conroy of l«·J
Charles street and Miss Rita Wh:eel4\
right of 55 Centre str~t are 'the''!
women lawyers. Both are graduates:i [
of ,the Holten, High school.
Conroy attended Boston University~ :
Cpll~ge of Business Adm.i.nistta.tion.{·, i I
and both attended Portia. law scho61,; 1
Miss Conroy for many years W&S eni...:
ny years.

.

1, __

omon n Lodge., .I 0 · 0... of Pythias,
Salomo.Lodge, Knights F:,.-Kmg. s 01-~··
... ..
..
and of the Waltham Chapter ?f ~he
Young, Men's .l:I~b~ew. ¥~?t1;ati~n. · .,
He.is ·in business at .48;7·, Moody
street.
Since his mamag~ two
Years ag«;> _he :a~:d, his !'7'ifE?.:1 ~!~· An~a , ,
Gould ReSh, Who . ~s :pi:on:3-~:ne~t 1n. t
t~e V\7ialtham Jewish ..qrcles, h;t'\'.e I
made their home. ·here .. ~ ., .J~.e :a,s. !

,:;,~:::.

~-,~:;;:;1

M:1$·.r ('

ployed by _the late W1!11am B. su.111~

van in Boston and Miss-· Wheelright

-~:,S

~eeji in the office of E.

c.

:Jel\~

'

POST, BOSTON, M~SS.

V
_____------.:JQ,:£Q..: -

_ --~e--m:y-posltio?l- on Thomp,so

~pubUcan and
Ot a E>emocr.at-'" and s ~ s ' tAd. saying it
was better no
-~ment on a.
!&al political qu tion. ,

. wEi CORKUM HEAijS
I

r

PARK STREET CLUB.
The ~ark Street Club, said to be th&
:Oldest parliamentary and debati:utg society Jn continuous existence, had tts
42d annual reunion and banquet at the
City Club last night and elected Wll•

!\

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ll am E. ==:::::nd Dean

WILLIAM E. CORKUM

William E. Corkum Was Elected
President at Annual Banquet

~ Jng committee, Ex...Pres s. Paul Town..
- ! &end, Newton Highland~, chairman;

! William

W.
Clark, Melrose,
an~
G. Arey, Dorchester, we\-_e

Florian
elected as follows:
Presiden1t, wttifam E. CorkUm, West
Roxbury; first vice president, Gleason
L. Archer; second vice president, wu..
Uam U. Sherman. Dorchester; secre...
tary. George F. Deroo, Winthrop (rQ'elected); treasurer, Albert E. Rei•
man, West Roxbury (reelected).
Mr Corkum is an attorney, a. member of Eliot Lodge of Masons a~d past
secretary of Loyalty Lodge ~f Masons,
'-both of Jamaica. Plain; formerly clerk
of the Central Congregational Church,
Jamaica Plain; a member of Daniel
Hersey Lodge _ of Odd Fellows. the
Intercolonial Club and West Roxbury
Post, Am.erican Leg1on. Re ls a
I director of the Jamaica. Plain Co- J
and treasurer of the
:Mr Corkum saw eervtee tpor 19
moriths in the World Wa.r 1n tbe Navy
(with mine sweeping and submarine
1divf,sions. He ts marrted, has !two chU,, 1
fl

,

~~b~

-'

~!~es at Ii ~ : :

1931

krst AV~~~~;re~~a~!t

J

Sherman of Dorchester was

: elected second vice-president; George F.

I

'I

!

Deroo of Winthrop, secretary, and Al. bert E. Heimann of ~rest Roxbury,
'. treasure1.
fhe
reti:r;-ing
president.,
Jam.es D Thumith of Dorchester, presided at the meeting

1

MERCURY, MEDFORD, lllASS.

of

APR3 ... 1931

'LeRoy A. Anders.on
Weds Miss Edith H.
Townsend of Brighton

·i
----~--------

I

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

11 VVilliam U

Suffolk la w school; ~econd vice, presid€11C, iJVflllffffi>U. Sherman of Dor-:, chester· secretary, George F. Deroo o!
'WinthrOp, and treasurer, Al'bert E. Heiman of west Roxbury.
President Corkum is a Bosto~ lawyer,
memb8r of the West Roxbury post,
American Legion, and lives at 5 Lasell
street, West Roxbury

1,

I

~~:_:_:~.1

.' of v\'e:::;t Roxbu1y was elected pre~:ddent

j ;~~o~e~G~~tS:O~.

: vice-president, Gleason L. Archer, dean
1

1

·:~r;:-~:s~Ir:i~.

! Boston

William E Corkum wa.s elected pre<i.; ·
: dent at the 42d annual Tl°' 1
'banquet of_ the Park Street•
. ~.1.t!'
City club las. t night. Retirilte: ·.Presi- . :
..
dent James D. Thumith of Dorchester
presided at the business session and'
Edward F Flynn was toastmaster
:
Other officers are the f0Jlowing: First '

by a nomin.a.t-

president of the Park Street
Club last night

: At the 5:1:0th 1egular meeting of the
i Paik Street Club held last ni~·ht at the
City r,1ub~ '\YiJli;:i_m E
Co1 kum

PARK STREET CLUB
OFFICERS ARE :ELECTED

..1
:.

, 1 Officers recommende~

WILLIAM E. CORKUM,

! Elected

Gleason L. Archer o~ the Suffolk Law
School first -vtce president.
," .: The retiring president,. .lamb D.
· Thumlth of Dorchester, presided. Ex.1Pres Edward 1f..,; Flynn. wa.a toast,,l master.
{
. ,.

, ...'

\

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

h?R 3 ~ 19~1

1

--JJQ

SEVE~

~,..........~...........i;~'"""'""""""'""""""''"""~,~~"'."~C.-.-. . . . . .. . . .
Medford High and!
Tufts Grad Passes
[
Massachusetts 'Bar
I
1

Francis C O'B1ien of 36 Su·m·mer
street son of Mr and Mrs. P.:atriick
O'Brien, -was o.ne of those wh0 ·pass~

ed the Bar examination this ,~eek.
I-fe was born 1n Charlestown and~was
graduated
from
M'edfm d
High
School in the class of 1918

Hi'Was graduated from Tufts,College in 19222 and from the _6.1!fc
0

folk~,School

.in

1930.

c".EI~:

as~istaii'fcf.iim manager for a BOs·~~~n insurance, com~~-!-_______

. gn Saturday~ernoon . in t.he
Brookline B~ptist church, M1ss Ed1'1!!Helen Townsend. b,ecame the '\vtfc.
of Le Roy Allen Anderson, of 43 Cherry T~:ee~"eremony W"'as perforrnted by \
Rev Herbert Handel, formerly direc- ·
tor of Young Peoples' work at the
First Baptist church. Malden.
.
The- bride ·was attended by her .:;1st er Miss Clara Townsend and Harold
Anderson, the groom's brother. '\Vas
his best man.
.Mrs. Anderson wore a go,vn of -eigshell satin with a lace cape cohar I
. Her hat was of horsehair in the same \
\ Shade and she carried pink roses and
1
\ gardenias.
.
l ·
I
Miss Townsend was 1n . pale b ue
lace with pink hat and earned a bou- ,
1
quet of spring fl.o"".'ers.
\
A reception -was held at the ~ome
. of the bride, 22 Wade street. Brighton, immediately after the. ceremony,
I on\y
the immediate. famthes of the
1 brid~ a d groom being present.
Af111
i ter
May 1, Mr. and M:s. A:nderson

I

I

"'rill b~_____at borne to their friends at
1

1Y
I ·uos -

..-,ll

,
·p~1'

.J~ ~-.. :!'r,~,d;;, ~i~~~J;_,,_,

~ - - - - . - - --------~--

.-

FINUS POLICE ARE

;;.J.

wards are very tunny a,s the .
of Tibbett.
fIn addition to
icture and stagef: 1
show the thea
ta the usuaJI
program of
shorts.
~
0
la Theat.er.
/
Cyril McLaglen in "Jaws of Hell' 1
and Mary Pickford in "Kik!" end to ' ~
day at the Olympia. "Trader Horn' '
And "The Single Sin." start tolr.l.orr
!or :flve days ending next Wednesday.
i,.als

·NOt :INTELLIGENT
1

~/'\--

William a,;' Thompson, Counsel in
Sacco-Vanzetti Case, Declares
They Lack Mental Qualifica~
tions to Combat E.xpert Criminals-Dean Archer Opposes
Board to Study Capital Puni:mment.

,



i

BOSTON, April 23. (lP)--Opponen~
and proponents of capital' punish>
ment Joined, ranks today, with b'ut &
few dissenters, in favoring a legisJi,..tive resolve for a. special commission
to consider the question o! a i1eath:
penalty in this state They spo1te>a.t
ilo~'.slative hearing at the .:.sta:ti,·
Among the speakers were William
G. Thompson and Herbert 'B. · Ehrmann, lawyers in the Sacdo-V[a.nzetti /
case.
Thompson said. the· w.i~... of
today lack the men ta! qualifications
to combat successfully with· highly
trained criminals wj th the result thll>t
the
prosecution system, as far .S.S

No,v Showtng~All se;

r- ,

1

GE!f
The_!

: counsel in the Sacco- Vanz~tti case, ;
: in favoring the resolve c~ling for ~n j'
. ·, investigation by a special comm1s- l 1
I sion on the merits and demerits of !

: the present system of ,capital pun- '
ishment.
Highly Trained.
~ A prominent group of ciitzens, including a trial la wy~r in several mur' der cases. appeared before the con;i.mittee to support the legislation,
'which in various forms has been be,fore the General Court for many
years and so far has been unsuc- \.
ce::;sful o.f passage.
Mr. Thompson f~lt that the pres~nt
sy.steni is inadequate to meet modern
'">ohditions by reason of the fact, he
that police have not the m':?'ntal
1ualification~ necessary to con:ibat
~uccessfully the activities of h1ghY trained criminals. with the result
'·hat the prosecution system, as far j
is Inurder cases are concerned, has '
:Callen down.
Wep_dell P. Murray, Boston trial
lawyer. ,vho
has
handled several
mu1 de.r cases, a,ppearing in favor of
;thEt. investigation, called attention to
,,the )Valtllam carbarn case in whic_h
'three·.young men went to the electric
'chair and the !Ourth, captured later,
received· a second degree sentence,
'althO-ugh, according to the speaker,
'the ·-eJrcumstances in the case were
'
~iJar nature
·.,;lided a• Trial ..Lawye_r.
'
rbert B.-. Ehrmann, also one of
the counsel in., tti-t Sacco-Vanzetti
case, call~d attention to;the fact t~at
the propOse'd commissfQ:O. ·would b~
appointed '1?¥. the gover;i?X:· . "Govt:_rnOr ElY," he s~id, ""is a brilliant trial
laWYer and could be depended upon
to select the right type of men for
'the commission."
B. Loring YOung, former speaker
of the House. ,vho alway~ voted
against abolition · of capit~l punish:ment when· a member of the legislature, S+\,.\d that he, had don€: .s~ with
misgivings and now th.at~!:'- plea for
an inquiry has J:;,een starte~ he favored such a course.
Dean Archer Opposes Study.
Dean Gleason L Archer ofJ..il~!!/'1!&1oili
L.a.w; ~chooI.,~trongly opposed t e creation 4::,:r ~ ~om.mission to study capital punishment.
__
"You are asked," he said;. "to delegate to a comnifssion • . • one of ,
the greatest questions now before :
the American peop~e-the problem of I,
coping with the gunm_an <:'nd the
murderer.
u.
..
• It is short-visioned mercy
that _C@.r,t_ s.ee only the criminal in the 1
o.qck , aild ·fail to see '"the ~esolate?
home of h.is victiins or tfie ~elfare
of the general public that should be
our chief concern.
"If by : executing a
worthless
/ scoundrel wt;i ~an save to societY valj uable citiz~ns, I believe it is our duty
1 to do it. I appear before you as an
J:'c advocate of the right of the public

ln

l

withj

And. \\-oncl

1 Criminals Too

MARTINELLI-RUTH

Fl'f ·

;aid,

'"'j
'\?J

the oQ.lY ,veapon t_~at murd~re~s fear
-the death p e ~ - - = a - - - - · - - •

murder cases are concerned

I

~ ,!41~- ·

Jen down.
He clalmect that, .police, ,
under the pres.sur_e of aroused p~bl!c !
sentiment, convict the wrong nuµi~' .in·
a,. murder case /ff they are unabl~ .. to
, convict the rii?;ht one. Ehrmann qll()t..
ed several opponents to the abolltiot:1
·, of capital punl.shlj1ent, a.s being in.
favor of an investiga~on to defhµtely }
settle the question in this atate. , \· i
B. Loring Young, former &P!>!!,li:er i
of the house Who a!Wl!>YS V o t e d ~ r ;
abolition of the death .penalt:v;,; .siid' I
he favored an investigation and Rev. 1
Spence 1Burton, a former prison cha.p- ·
! lain, agreed with him. Father Burton said he favored capital punishment until he came in direct contact 1
with murderers a.bout to die. u1 f
ound", he said utha.t murderers a.re
not especially interested in death,
either for themselves or others. 0
Dr. Samuel A. :Eliot of Boston a.nd .
Dr. Winfred Overholser, a. deputy ·
commissioner in the department' ot
men ta.l d1.seases, both favored a
commission.
Sena.tor
Newland
H. Holmes of 1
Weymout11 and Eben W. Burnstead of

I

the Mas.sachu.s<>U:.s Civil Alliance felt,

an inve..stigation was unneceSSS.ry.

1

1

- - - . \ to defend itself against ~urderers by

-:

·. CAPITAL PUNISHMENT

't~NTER'l'AlNirnN'rS.

means this afternoon by William G
Thompson, prominent Boston lawyer,

.

./; FORM CO'MMISSIONIYN

I,

TWICE;.

))--~

·/VEN~G TRIBU~,.:""".-"'"''"

Sfa~ Theatre;
_
f. '.
· Wijl Rogers will open at the Stat.!, '
iheaf.re Saturday in his masterpiece!",
"A Connecticut Yankee."
'"'Threi

(Special to the Courier-Qitizen)
,c
STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, April ~
23.-Under' pressure of aroused public J
'sentiment.if they are unable to con- i.t
vict the right man in a murder case,
'police endeavor to convict the wrong ~
one, was the charg'F' made before the J
legislative commitfee on ways and J

---

a1J1HJ.

·3H~

,,s.1a:Jq.8n1?Q

u-eq1 a..tnt~!d ..1

iAHVSl:1/
SSt'IHiaH .LOH :tlH.L
S.I.NIOcl 11..;:,~I.i. 311.L VI

spua:

I

the irunman and thf
1
" .•• It l.s short-vlslot).ed .w.er.c
that can see only the criminal in
the
dock
and !a.l!ed , to see the
deso.la ted home of his victims 'Or the r
'"'.
welfare of the ireneral public that 1
~1
should be our chief concern.
1
"If by executing a worthless scoun- ASS.
drel we can save tQ society valuable
r
cititzens, I believe it is our duty to
do it.
I appear before you as an
advocate of, the right of the public
to defend itself against murderers' by
the only ,weapon that murderers fear
-the death penalty." ~ - - ...... ~.::,------~===cnr-..na-aunn.

I

SSt'IK'l:iIH.LUVU UHVHOni '.
A'EPO,L

Dean Olea.son L. Archer. of SuqpJk,,
L ~ s t r o n g l y 'oppose.a'. tne ere- :
ation or· a commi,53ion to study Capital
punishment.
1
·
' You
are a.sked,'' he Mid "to delegate to a. oomm.iseion •.. one of the
greatest questions now before the i
American people-the problem of ,
coping with
murderer.

·o:~e:a:v:u~J' aNy o:":tla

ti

Thomas Taylor o:f the American Le.gio~

~~~MJr;~;~· ,s
.

TO
'
. WED EMIL N. WINKLER

Ml' a·nd Mi's Phiiip S •..Befk of :erook•
1yn, N YJ-have announced the engage-· I
ment of their daughter, Ann and Emil
~~e~in~I~; ~~ ~ ~~g_lt;wood av, ~~efO~-:

.
l

: ,•Mr -Wi~kle~ be ,a, graduate of S.U:fr01k
Law School. and the_ College. o ~ i nes~inistration at Boston Ui:i{-

versity. Miss'.~~~ has appeared \"Q.

S!~i~

I '\

concert,;; and .~.~t~ur theat;rica.ls
i;~;ln~~me :ity.
~~~hig i»·; .)'.,~
radiQ

'I

.\
1

. ,. ~,:t~\~~fi'.,,:"~f1i..,F·.t'~:,r. '~r ..1,W/i
COURIER.:.CITIZEN; LOWEl'..L, MASS.

APR 2 4 . .

J

A.Pft 24~

,/
!

--- - - - - - - - - ----~ -

FINDS POLICE, ARE'

DEATH PENALTY DISCUSSED -,,~
AT LEfilSLATIVE HEARINfi
.

NOt;:INTELLIGENT

I

Will~~Thompson, Cfo~nsel in
Sacco-Vanzetti Case, Dec~are~
They Lack Mental Qualifications to Combat Expert Criminals-Dean Archer Opposes
Board to Study Capital Puni,:hment.
(Special to the Courier-Qitizen)

r

committee

on

-w_ays

Opponents and Proponents of Capital Punishment
·Join in favoring Investigation-Other Hearings
at State House-House Sustains Ely's Veto of
Bird-Baiting Bill.

""')~:.'t,

~nd

. ri.. Thompson~

in .favoring a
resolve
.qalling f'or investigation by a. special
, commission into the merits and de_j Jllerits of capital punishment, declared
) today befOre the Senate C91nmittee on
-i Ways and Means that police, under
·1 the pressure of aroused public sentii inent, endeavor Hto convict the wrong

~

1
,

1

;

f:~~t~;;!:!t!ht! ::err:i:::~y~~~
: i ditions because. he said, the
police
·1

~~~~~!·1s

'

Too Highly lri!lined.
.
A prominent group of ciitzens, including a trial lawyer in. several mur. der cases. appeared be:for~ t~e c<:~.mittee to s,upport the leg1.slat1_0:,
which in various forms has been b :fore the General Court for many
yea.rs and so far has been unsucce~sful o.f passage.
Mr. Thompson. f~lt that tbe P. resent \
sy:ste:r:n is in.adequate to meet modern
::Qhditions by reason of the fact, h~
- -d that police have not the menta
;,~aiiti.cations. necessary to
co~bat
:ucceSsfUllY t:he ac'tivi!ies of h1g~t
y trained criminals, ,vi.th the res~
.
'..bat the prosecution syst:em, as
ar 1
~s murder cases are concerned, has

.

J,'

___ r

I

Se:!to;'hJ~z:'~nw:~nq~:t~~~en!>l

:e:o~~~h~f j:.~ic~om:r;~~~:~ ~ ~
inore swift and certain in England
than in the
United
S.ta.tes.
Mr.
Thompson replied that the situation is
due to the .fact that conditions in this
country are 1adically different.
..We cannot em.ula!,e _England unless
we make fundamenta.1 · changes/' l::,aid
Mr. Thompson. · ''In ma:n-y of our
.states the system of justice 1s- antiquated and a played-out one. - In addition the personnel is diffeient. Until
you can get first-class men handling
cases- here you ll.ad better not risk
capital PlU1.ishment--an irreparable
a~tion"
Recalls Trial o~ Tongm.en.
We.ndell P Murray~ Boston lawyer

vored such a ~ou:ss':s Study.

who has appeared in several murder
cases, ip. favoring 'an
investigation~
cailed attention to the Waltham car
barn, case m which three young' nien
went to the electric chair and
t4e
f9urth, captured later,..
received
a
second degree sentence> although accbrding to the speaker~ the circuIUs:tances in. the case were of a simUar

'pa ,sap
·•uoq...,punoJ 21utptnow
I

~ J eq~

. 1.:as.

pal-l-lJ

U3't""' 'Sa"!{

eA"t<P"

OJ

7

lf-){4

' \Jx,, '.t"" .,.,..q~

iiature.

\niissa.>p lilulP.--X

;t!

I

L

'<\i·· \·

't i

...,;

· J-Ierbert B. Ehririann, also one of the
cb'Unsel in the Sacco-Vanzetti
cas~.
called attention to the fa.ct that the
-~ proposed
investigating
com.m.ittee
\' ~ould be appointed by _the governor.
ov.er~or Ely.,'.'· h.e.· .sAid···· .·.·1.s· a b;ril,{t liant trial lawYer and cOuI
de,,.....

~.s-~~~-

" ,·,,

·,J.

:\J~l:~.iP.'-::~~-~-JJ

""---'"-'"==-=·=;,-='·=:~~~=::f=.~~-~--~·:@':.,,: -~--- '.:: ·., -

: .\

I

th~ c~~~~i~~~ng. former speaker
of: .the House, ·who alwaYS; v':te~
aga:inst abo.lition of capi.t!)-1 . pun1sih':".
rnent -..vhen a. member of t?,e leg_ sIature, said that he. hit.d done -~~a"W~~~
misgivings and now th:a.t .. ~ P
f
an inquiry has been s~arted he a-

;~a.1°.10:, 'B .JaAO

was sentenced to th-e electric chair ~ea.pon

Gl;.~;re w~s a nian 'found guilty and
the verdict later se~ aside/~ said At-: L
torney
Thompson.,
"'If -no other f
reason were advanced for the beginning of an investigation of the subject
this alone would justify such action.u

-~s§f;t~::dB~-~Ei,~~1;.-::.w;_;:;,f~~id't:~:;

_
·:a.

J!O

?~~.~--

.

-

.

~ 0 ~prc·e~~ ;;;::::··~ l)eil)i !!~~~~
~!u{~eJ:J~tir:~~~~

·r!~~t!~~h t ~

death penalty.
·
senator Warren asked the speaker i f
he believed "that gunmen should be
::: knocking o:{I gas .station employes and
- others anq. getting away-·with it?"
"Well.'' Erhmann replied, "'the people of Maine don't believe. in gunnien
knocking off people
either, yet
the state does not believe in capital
punishment and the murder
:rate I
there, as it is in New Hampshire and

there,

Vermont is low."

''Yes,n interposed Senator Donald
Nicholson of W.areham, a member of
the con1mittce, •'but don't the people
there come :from a different stock
than those in the more congested sections? Aren't they less agreed with the
senator and suggested this would be
a :fruitful subject which the investigating committee n1.ight inquire into.
Dr. Samuel A. Eliot noted that in~s.:!:~!1Y'~as~~~~~~j;!~;311;~

~<>~~w~';,~1;:_

die.
J: f
:!!l'ers are
ln

death,

.ie-rs.u

~tan a.nd ,
,

de~uty

~,ent

!

that

murderers

ena\g;".
,

of

vored

0
ft!.e:ea:~~~t ~!~ef~:ll~Y 1h!e~~: ~Imes

· ~::;1 :!Y hW,, "£ ~:';.n ~:St~~~ty ~';~

~e

t;o study ca.pita.I de(W~Y

dock and :fall to see the desolated
home of his victims or the weliare of
the gei;ieral public that should be our
chief concern..
''If by executing a. worthless .scoundrel we can save to society valuable
citizens, :t Oelleve it is our duty to do
it. I appear before you as a.n. advocate

;1~!:in,0~h~~~:~~;1 r!!:i~~rt!a1nge~J

J.V[urray, Boston - trial
·who
.has
handled several
urde; C'aseR, appea:ring in f~;or of
·investigation, called attention. t~
:::hi-VValtha.m carbarn case in wh1c.
three:""-young men -went to the electric
ch.iir' and the f()urth, captured later,
recefveci'' a second degree sentence,
althQ"'U:S°h according to the speaker,
the ''-c;irc~mstances in the case were
'<>;t~~i,J.2..r'~ nature
,
one of
th~_ counsf:l'l· in,, t't1~. s~cco-Vanzetti
casE:: call~,d a.tte.J)ction. t~,_the
the pr-opos.e·d co~m1ss1q!J, w
inted:Oy the govern?r· "Gover:~~oE!lY," h'3. $:;~J.d, '"'is a brilliant trial
lawYer and cou1.d be depended upon
to select the right type of men 'for

~;:=e:tth~·1;;1;: ~~~~-

~
.......g ewirica.thnthpeeogunpl~!1;.e,.pnrdobtlheemm.o~~-t:;oper:,""'oni!-c:J:.,!:_
.... __....
.......,:d
er.
ler Bur•.:,,,. *', '"' It is short-visioned mercy P!,lllishthat can see only the criminal in the it contact ,
0

one

~a~:!'n!;:;;,'np_

'

ished and later aga.in put on the stat- 1na.ble. to '
utes~
/
1.-nn. ql.10:C-

asked/' he said. Hto deleL
gate to a commission • * * one of the !d ~.a.~~,{;
~:~:ss!?: tt:-~om~!~t!1eq~~!~~J!o~ -greatest questions now . befm;e 'the ~ltY,·.~ '$lift: , .

of prominent citizens appearing before
the committee in support of the proposed legislation which,
in
various
forms, has been before t.he
general
court :for several yea:t's without success.
Referring to the Gero and Gallo
murder case, 1n which Cero was con-

'la-.;\,·yer

I

said q.e felt that conditions in ~ a - IS 'f#,..,~·
chusetts are sa.tu;,factory and abould h31J,, ,1'4\,1-:e

I
not be changed. Mr. Burn.stead read a.!-~, ,J?Qlipe,.
list or other states, Where, he said ·!d p~})Jtc.
ca.pita.I pun1.shlllent had been abol- r m.an" ,in :

p~~~m=~:·

j highly-tra"'ined criminals. The result~
':-'.'j he maintained, is that the prosecution
· 1 system a.s far as it concerns murder
l cases, has :fallen down.
:
Mr. Thompson was
of a
group

J

'legisi;,;:.;

in the past recorded in t11e ~ a f::.e-~be~~h~~:;:~~cre~!:

/ ~:~· ,.Jf ~~y T~~iJP~i~vi~~!h~:;g~~ La~e~h~~~~ni'iy
. • j defense cotlnsel in the Sacco-Vanzetti atioii'o:f a commiSSion

!~: r~:~~;~

~i~!~:

f~l~~

~--------------

1,
· -. Boston, April 23.-Attorney William

~f
,. > :· "'...--';..;

.i-

means this afternoon by William G
Thornvson. prominent :Boston 1:'3-'wy.er,
1
ri~ng
:;f1~~~\:o~a~~
investigation by a special co~m.1ssion · on the meri!-S and de~er1ts of
tbe present systenl. of \capital pun-

j,one~~

~

-~,

' s-entiment" if they are unable to convict the right man in a murder case.
, police endeavor to convict the wrong
one. -was the charg~ made before the
legislative

J

.l

STATE HOUSE. BOSTON. Apr_u
23.-Under'_ pressure of aroused public

"'.

fear-the L~

of,!
1

J

-. .

j

=============~
·
·
·.to·:pi.:ia

;

q-;:n:ra q~JM.. a~J aa.XJ [ ..

J
•sqlUOW: aa.tq'.J. UJ
,ea~~J.c!_UlO-? 0elt? S;J.UaUl __ ~

_a

-~

"'' - - '

.MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

'
-~-~-,---~·===~=-==er,
Thomas Taylor of the .Attl.erican Legio~
1
~~;

~;fl'."Bm~;;· IS TO

..·. ·

WED EMIL N. WINKLER
·xi-- a:nd Ml:'.s Philip s. ·B~k- o:c' Brook-

~
1yn,·N·Y.,..ba.ve announced the eng-?,;ge- '
inent of their daughter, .Ann and ~
i1°z7i-e~in~I~~ ~~ ~ ~n_g,l~>wood av, ~~~~:·

• M'r W'iakler is ..a, graduate of Suffolk
La:w School and the Colleg& 0 ~ 1 nes~min.istra1:ion at Boston Util•
versity. Miss ~erk bas a.,ppear>e~ jn
radio concerts and ..aznat,,eur th.ea.tricaJs
in her. home city. Sb.& is, vW~g -,..n·

l

_B-:°°~1n~.

,.

~ - __ _____

I \.,.
l

-~F·\

. ~;,,,_ 'j;,
/\,

ca:se.s, nas Iai,1en aown.
_,
Mr. Thompson was one of a group
of prominent citizens appearing before
the committee in support of the proposed legislation which, in
various
forms, has been before the
general
court for several years without success.
Referring to the Cero and Gallo
murder case, in which cero was convicted o.f murder, in the north end of
Boston, the speaker recalled that Cero
"\\<-as sentenced to the electric chair
and finally was given his liberty after
the crime had been fastened upon
Gallo.
uHere w~s a -man :found guilty a.nd
the verdict later se~ aside/~ said A:t--=·
torney
Thompson.
""I~ ~no
other
1.·eason were a-dvancied fo.r the beginning of an investigation of the subject
this alone would justify such action."
Mr. Thompson was questioned. by
Senator James Warren of Lawrence,.
a member of the committee, as to
reasons why justice appears to be
more swift and certain in England
than in the
United
S.tate.s.
Mr.
Thompson replied that the situation is
due to the :fact that conditions in this
country are radically different.
••we cannot em.ulat,e _England unless
we make fundamental· changes/' said
Mr. Thompson -'''In miµ::J.y
of our
states the system of justice ,.is antiquated and a played-out one. In ad.:..
dition the personnel iS di::ffeiElnt. Until
you can get first-class men handling
cases he:re you had better not risk
capital punishment-an irreparable
ac_tion"
Recalls Trial of Tonginen.
Wendell P. Murray, Boston lawyer

•uoH'BpunoJ llu1p1notU
s
.J:a.i\..O pal-~lJ

-~t::'J

::,a.J:..IO:t

·.
•.

eqi uaq""' 'sauu
s· aM>N"" oi 'P!A
I,, '.lt'BS a~aq~a.A.9

\nussaJP l!U!P---X

~

who has appeared in several murder
cases. ip. :favoring "an
investigation,
called attention to the Waltham car
barn~ case m which thYee young n'.ten
went to the electric chair and
the
f9urth. captured later.... received
a
second degree sentence, although, according to the speaker, the circumstances in the case were of a similar
:O:atuxe.
: ~erbert B. Ehrmann, also one of the
co'Unsel in tbe Sacco-Vanzetti cas~.
c~lled attention to the fa.ct that the
proposed
investigating
conun_ittee
Vi{Ould be appointed by .the governor.
_ .. Governor Ely," he· said, «.ts .a b;rilIiallt trial :wyer a.nd CO
~'::- !

..dis
. ~ttorn.ey
of WOrc~ter bpunty, ~-being m·tavor
of the -invest1gatio?J,S _even though he
still belieVed in the!- retention of the
death penalty.
·
·
Senator Warren asked the speaker if
he believed «that gunmen should be
:.: knocking otr gas station employes and
· others and. getting away-with it?"
··well," Erhmann replied. "the people of Maine don't believe. in gunmen
knocking off people there, either, yet
the state does not believe in capital
punishment and the murder
rate !
there, as it is in New Hampshire and
Vermont is low."
"Yes," interposed Senator Donald
Nicholson of Wareham, a member of
the committee, "but don't the people
there come from a different stock
than those in the more congested :-iections? Aren't they less agreed· with the
senator and suggested this would be
a fruitful subject which the investigating co1nmittee might inquire into.
Dr. Sam.uel A. Eliot noted that inasmuch as countries such as Sweden,
Denmar:k and Swit.zerland have ~bolished capital punishment Massachu..:
setts at least should go as far as in.a.king an investigation into the 1nerits
of the question.
B. Loring Young, forn1.er speaker of
the House, who always voted against
capital punishment abolition when a
1nemb-er of the Legislature said . that
he had done so with misgivings and
now that a plea, for an inquiry has
been started he favored such a course,
JMr. ¥oung said that._ his .work tt.s a
member of the b6ard ·of ·parole and of
the state board -o'""f. probation had impressed hi1n with the fact that the
deterrent effect of capital PUJ1.ishment
is neglible. Mo.st crimes, he felt, are
com..m.itted either in the .ll.e~t of passion or because the offender cannot
seriously
weigh
the consequences .
.. The men who calmly plan a murder
and deliberately
comm.it
it after
weighting the consequences to themselves are so small that they. might
well be ignored," he remarked.
Herbert Parsons, chief of the division of probation, flatfootedly in opposition to capital punishment, :felt
that the Legislature had indulged in a
suflicient number of "annual bouts"
on the subject and that a committee
should be named who could hear the
views of persons qualified because of
their callings to give well grounded
opinions on the subject. .Such men,
such as judges~ pri.Son officers, etc.,
cannot come before the Legislature
because of the nature of their work,
he said.
Rev. JVI.i-. Spence Burton of the Cowley Fathers, a former priSon chaplain,
said that ll.e favored capital punishment until he came in direct contact
with prisoners. "I found," he said,
"that 1nurderers are not especially
interested in death~ either for themselves or .for others " Dr. Winfred.
Overholser, deputy commissioner in
the Department of Mental Diseases~
favored the investigation. Dr. A. Warre)::i Stearns, cmnmissionei of Correc'-

Ji~~

~~9~n~fir w~e:=~te~-in
of
·~·Wf"'Vmouth, in cppo.sition, said the in.
is ab.solutely needless and called
.:;ion to the few /votes in favor
'! abolition. of capital punishm~t

that can see only the criminal. in
dock

and

the

-e<>nta.ct.
0

to see the desolated die.

:fail

I- f

home of his victims .or the welfare of
the gei;iei-al public that should be our
chief concern.

•·n by executing a worthless scoun-

drel we can save to society valuable
cit.Izen.s~ :r believe it is our duty to do
it. I appear before you as an. advocate
of the right of the public to defend

itself aga.in.st murderers by the only
;weapon
that
murderers
fear-the

~a}g-'"

-

i
'

~
·.i:o,p,.za
i q;nra tfHM aof aa.t..i[--:J
•sq+uou.r aa.i;q+ U!
~azlcJ,fd:"oo-:a__;i:-.. S+Uaf.t!

,

J

~

3i

I
,J

________

•MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

r

---- ~--- -·~-~~»->

w~=ca--.ronn,

Thoma.a Taylor of the American Legion

;~;'H;I~~~~-

IS TO
. --WED EMIL N. WINKL'l::R

'l~~ii~~ ~~e ~~~~:~~~er~;f e==~;~: r
~~~~:~l!e~ ~~:;r:w~na!~i~~'
~i~~ -"W~~~Ie~ .is ; , ~~~duate o~ s~;oii/

.Law School and the College 0 ~ 1 -

l

nes~inistration

at :Boston Unlvers1ty. Miss Berk has appeared in,
radio concerts and -an1.ateur th.eatrlcals
in her hom.e city. Sb.& is visiting iu-

B.;°°~in~

~

___ ~

I\
t

--~};':';:,~
·;,,;,.'';',

GAZETTE, HA VER HILL, MASS. \

r r

:-..rcr

y1

NEWS, SALJl:!Y.i", MASS.

241931

,

GAZETTE, WORCESTER, MASS.

. . ,:ir-t

2sa,

/,?R 2 4 1931

CLAIMS PO.LICE ;
CANNOT COMBAT ·~
11

~f!!m~!!~~~:~1i

ABOLITION OF

State

~ouse.

B6ston,.

..A pron11nent gz:oup

~:(s

p~~~hom.pson. felt th,a.t the present
~ystcim _is inadequate to meet mod,ern
conditions by reason • ~ the fact, he
said;. that the police have not the '
'm,ental
qualifications
necessary
to
combat successfully the "activities of
highly trained criminals, wi~ the
result that the prosecution system, as
far as murder cases are concerned,
has fallen down .
..., Wendell P. Murray, Boston trial
Ia:w·yer, whn-has handled _sever~! n:urder cases, in favor of the mv-estigat1on,
.called :i.ttention to the Waltham ~arbarn. case in which three young men
:Went. to the ele-ctric chair -a,nd the
fourth,
captured later, received a
;;econd degr-ee sentence, although, ac~rd.'in.g to the speaker, the circum3ta,nces in the case were of similar

Dean

'..

Gleason

L.

Archer

o.t

the

:*4'ma.M r t t h = . . ~ 1 ~ p o . s e d
He declared. in part:
.. You ~r~ being asked -to delegate

!

i?~s. ~o=~~e:! ~nh~ =lll~::
wealth With re:terence to one o.t the

I greatest
.

~mril.ission.''

questions

now

i'. =r~!;a;tt~~~;e--the

J

'

be:tore the
problem o:t

Gunn:r.an and -the Murderer
,
.. Now who Are urging you to do
- !this? ·Why the Identical group that
/have been :fighting J..n. season and out

1
l

I

-~I ;~~~:~r ~;i;bc;;~nt:!y'~&c~~! :
bet'ore

you

and

a.re

de.rea.ted.

But

i they will not take no :Cor an answer ,:
)Do you think :tor ·one zninute that i '·

:::n ~~~~r~~Ici1ie~~e~je~1h!~ :

clamor? - No, indeed~ 'Then we mu.st; ,
, conclude "that they" see- in the con:i.- !

; n:itssJ.on a hope o.t getting a question ·
, into a. corner,. o.t 'overwhelui1ng the

' conuntssion with eioq-uence. and .securing a deciston :ra vora.ble to their
, contention.
·
0
Re1neniber. ge.ntle.n:t.en~ that this
group is org~i~d. 'rh;ey are. carry, ing on a., niore .or:·less _pra.cttca;,._ belie:!

:i;.~a&Ssacl>~~t~~~1~:5;
:

)

!

l.

f v ~ ~ n /o;"ht~ge.~~1fti~~G~fa~~~
1.nishment,.
Every year they come

-~wili~~~e~~o ii:e~:~s:e't~-

l

,:>:;yoti ·think for one minute that an
.: . _..:tve-rse :riport of their project· by a
pmn:ilssio:h would _&ilence their clam:·:-,_,·.~?' No!. indeed
Then we must_ c?n':~: ~_gucbe ·that they see in the com.mission
sr:-:-:i· 1hope, of getting the question into. a.
·~Orner,. ,of overwhelming the commisSion with eloquence and securing a
Q,ecision favorable to their contention

{

)
\

!.-

de,is.y,S: a'l;ld

,

.

'

.

•-'o ...

_:lnv~ir::;

i~; ~~~~~~Jias~~-oh~~f!f~~f::
: un.ta.ry ' de..fender,s; Ui:Lle..s.s the legls- '
i'

j lt'L~u~e ...s~:ands:. b~~we~n, i t a.nd. any. in:-~it~ev~6fy ";~er:ublle interest
"Li:fe pnpru;on.ment is a. sardonic
Joke to the .n:t.Odern. :in.urderer. He 1s
sure o~ a vacation :Cree :rron:l. care or
responsibility o:t any .kind. The cold
and hunger and hard.ship that honest :folk are obliged to endure in
these lean years o:r depression inean
nothing at· all to the non-pa.y1ng

~J
t

,r~~r::~m~;~n~!~tl~y ;~atcaJ:1i~
;Ing on a. more or less practical belief
;;that Massachusetts made a mistak,e
~ome years ago in electrocuting Sacco
they fought

.:through long years of legal delays and
::eonun1ssions of investigation. Remem?:_'&er aJso, gentlemen, that. the public
:;has no one but volunteer defenders,.
"'!Unless the Legislature stands between
.)t and any interested group the public :
$1.terest must inevitably suffer "
/

-~ails and prisons
'i\ "Racketeers and gunm.,en and m.ur~21-erers have already organized them::-,Selves in many of our great cities
:?ihey are waging organized wa:rfare
:m many of our great cities. They are

;r~i::e!:J:

0

course.

,r

,~wi~ct~e ~~~ii~ ~d~1r~~~ ~~~~

are obliged to endure in these
~,ea.n y,ea,.rS of depression mean nothing

tn-,

I f~P~;!:~~b~!~~~
1s a brilliant trtal lawyer and could
: be depended upon to select the right
type o.r m.en to -the conunisslon...
J3. Loring Young• .:form.er speaker o'L
the bou.se. Who always voted. against
ca.pits.l punislunent a.boUtion. when a.
m.em.ber o"L the l~tslature. said. that
, he had done so with zn.ts.givings and
now t:hat a. plea..· "f.or an lnqutry has
: been started J:le .:t'a.vored such a

I

Ehrmann, ali':O one of the
the Sacco-Vanzetti case,
~alled attention to the fact that the
:>roposed commission would be ap:>oin ted by the Governor
"Governor
~ly ..... he said, "fa. a brilliant trial

~t all to the non paying guests of cur

citizens..

1

B

~':"folk

or

na~~..er-t :s. Ehrtt1.&nn. also one of" the
j ~~~;.t~irt";~i,_ f!ct~Via~i:atcaJ:'~

hounsel 'in

~o;~i~ t~P~~n~u~~:er sar~~ni~

special coll1nl.1SS1on

eluding a. trta.I lawyer in eevera.l xnurder cases appeared be1'ore "the eon1.JXJ.ittee to support the 1eg1slatlon.,
whieh Jn various t"or.tns has been be:fore the; gene-rat .co1:Ut -Lor .tnany yeara:
and. so, :ta.r ha.s been unsuccessful O!
passage.
Mr. Thompson felt that the present
systeD1. 1a. ~nad.equate to D1.ee"t :znodern
cond.1tlons by reason o~ the 1"act. he
as.id, that the police have not the
m.ental quaJ.1.fication~ necetsSary to
cozn"bat successtully the acttvltles o:t
highly trained criminals. with the resul"t tha-t 'the prosecution system, as
:far as znurder -eases a.re concerned,
has :tallen down ..
Wendell P. Murray. Boston trial
lawyer. who has handled several niurder cases. in ::ravor o~ the inv:estlgation, called attention. to the Walthttzn
carbarn case in which three young
' men went to the elec'tric chair and.
' the :tourth. captured. later, recet--e-ed a
second Clegree sen:t;ence. although. aecordln.g to tJ].e speaker•. "the · etroum.sta.nces 1n the case were of stm.1Iar

Thomp-

~~!;o~!il~ili~;c~f0!1n;r~n~om~:r~Q~~
:and hung-er and hardship that honest

tJGARDEN HOUR

on- ,t;he :z:nerits and demerits o.f the
preSent syste.zn. O;f capital punishinent. '

which in various forms has been bet-ore the g.eneral court for many years
and so· far has been unsucoessfu1 of

;:;;itlld Vanzetti for ~·horn

~ti , lt-~1.-1<, -'l.'i.Y:...41111 !r:-:.
....

:cavorlng the resolve calling :ror an in- ,

".SY~!1mp~~~f;f~\a~fo':i~is~;i~~ens, in- I
eluding( a trial lawyer in se'V€ra1 mur- !
~~~asefo ap!u~~~ betiJ~re 1 1;,:=;~~ i

t~
I

'lo.so
n:

24-- ·

yesterday a1"ternoon by Wllli8Jl1 G .. ,
Thonipson,. prominent Boston lawyer.. ;

committee on ways a-nd means yester-

,

April

counsel in the Saceo-Ve.nzettt case.. h:t.

.,;on, prominent Boston lawyer, counsel
"iin the Sacco-Vanzetti case, in fa v~;1ng .the r~lve calling for an investigation by a. special commission on the
merits and doemerits of the present

i~;·:

~ra.m:

~~~~::i;:e:i~~cU:1:'Yn1=:!'r :=;,!

vestigation by a

:,;._'''

~hes1;

endeavor to conv!Ct the wrong one,,!
was the charge inade before the legislative. con:untttee on ways and m.eans

(Specjal -to The Gazette)
STATE
HOUSE;
Boston-Police,
: under the pressure of aroused public
sentiment, if they can't convict tbe
right man in a murder case endeavor
to convict the wrong one, was the
charge m:ide before the legisla tlve

/, B:. Loring Young, former speaker of
~he House, who always voted against
;apital punishment abolition when a
n-s:n1ber of the Legislature, said that
b.e had done so with misgivings. a:nd
;low· that a plea for-an inquiry has
)een .started, he favored such a course.
Dea.n. Gleason L Archer of the
3l,lff JI I z s:;1:J0pl strongly opposed
·,;he -creation of the commission
:ae d'eelared in part:
~•You are being asked to delegate to
" com.tn,ission a part of your d.uties as
aw makers of this commonwealth
7-ith reference to one of the greatest
:\uestions now before t.he Am~rican
.-eo:Ple-the- problem of coping with
b.e g_unman and the murderer
I_ "Now who are urging y.ou to d-O
"f:is?
-yvhy the id•en tic al group that

;er;

Police,. ul:lder"the pressure o:r arouaed 1
i

Dean Carver of Suffolk L~w
S~hool Tells Legislators
to Beware

p:ai1!~~rt

fohn

Investigation
of
Capital
Punishmen'.t, Says Prosecu~,
ting System Aas Failed
:

DEATH PENALTY
URGED;OPPOSED

day afternoon by William G

l
Jhee·

I

g~;~~Ite~~~ !:~s ~1:i':nf~i~~~rinurderers have aJ.ready organized theznselve.s in many o:t our great cities.
They are waging organized wa.r:!a.re
in znany o:r our great cities. They
ax:e waging organized watlare upon
society. Soon we .znay expect them
to :rornt a. national :tederatton with
Al Cspon.e ~ president. They nl,lgb.t
suitably name
it
the
"Anl.erlcan
Brotherhood of Bandits~ or •Anlalga,......._r_,., .Association 0 :r A&ss:1.su:;,h--,.,, • ..

I

TRAVELER, BOSTON. MASS •

cc·

MASS

NEWS,

~ ~ . , ; . , ; , ; ; ; -----.,,..,=-. ............------ - - - - - - - - - - -

by the constitution made final judges
qualifications of their members.
Wold said there was no way for such
constitutional c
·
the

1

of

..

Nine Greater
Salemites Pass
:V~ State Bar Exams

----::......_

POLITICS
Notes and Gossip
About People
You Know

Nine Greater Salem law students,
in.eluding one girl, Miss Catherine E.
Conroy of. Danvers, have been notified that they have passed the examinations for admission to the Massachusetts bar. The successful candidates at the recent tests were as follows:
Harold E. Kiley~ 63 Aborn street,
Peabody, 35 years old; Peabody High
1914; Salem
Commercial;
Suffolk
Law: Peabody school committee.
Charles F. Manning,
30
Chester
street, Danvers; Salem Classical and
High school, 23 Years bld;
Suffolk
LQ.w; Ebner w. Liebsch's office.
~ Pill, 30 Summit avenue, Salem: 39 years old; Tufts college; B

1

COUGHLIN TO RUN
Capt.. "Bill" Coughlin, editor of
the
East ,Boston
Free
Press,
appeared at CitY l:'Iall today a.nd
ar..nbunced that he will be ~ condi~
date tor the city council :"'ron1 that
tj.,istrict next fall. "Bill" has J~en
-~ lifelong resident of 1"1odcl.ie ls. land, and -while always int~re5tt.!d.
'.in politi.cal a~bairs has never be'fore been a candid~te for public
.office.

Tax Commissioner Henry F.
Long, one of the bu,siest officials
in state service, usu·any finds the
day too short to do his work. Frequently he takes his uncompleted
work home with him. But this is

James H. Sullivan, 83 Maple street, :
Danvers;
Georgetown
universits,:;
Su~foU. Law; Stone & Webster.
Rita WheeUVrlght, 55 Centre street.
Danvers; Danvers High school;_ Por. tiit Law school; E. C. Jenney's office,
Boston
William H. Butler, 6 Ba.rr street,
Salem; 22 years old; Salem High;
Suffolk Law; insurance business.
James E. Callahan, 52 Broad street,
Salem; .Salem High; Suffolk
Law;
United Shoe
Catherine E. Conroy, 16 Charles
street, Danvers; Danvers High school;
U

tion;

no hardship; he maintains, as his

·work is also his recreation.
O'BRIEN GRANTS PERMITS
, "Joe" O'Brien, Charlestown or, chestra. leader, is employed in the
· permit office of the public wOrks
department in City Hall,
CORBETT STUDIES LAW
City Transit Commissioner Arthur Corbett is now an. evening
S u f ~ 1a:W...,S.chool.

c;~_ent at

----

college Business AdministraPortia Law; many years with

w.

J>

'LONG DOES HOME WORK

U. Law; teacher ln Hebrew school.
Melville Rowand.
Columbus avenue, Salem; 37 years old; Amesbury
High school; Salem Commercial; N f
~ie~8;:;olr~c:.ears in superior court !

B

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON,

~a':fo~A'.__

---~~

Sulliva1.1~~~~%n: _ PLY~•i'= ..

B.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

APR

0 H33l

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

!',rR 7

'i,
ieome a

193:
'~

p-onceman and when h6 fa11~to pass the eXamination ha/d been bit- 1:·

-. ~"'""

terly outspo ·e

.1-.

j

J

M;~tltifg':,lhe

25th

~~Y of t1?-e1

,

1
\

founding of Suffol~ Law School; th~ a~-· /
nual pro?µ ~nd reception was. held la'E"t: . I
nfght in· the main ballroo1n, pf the~ '

,~{~1
;;-~~i;:ik1:1~~~
sociation.

charge.

Ro

boulev . • · nd Robert A. Shea, 11
Ja~es st; reQen~.ly passed t~e Massa-:~
chusetts l3ar examination. Both are'
graduates of~ the Som.ervUle High
SchooL Mr Taylor req.eived hia degrea
from the S u ~ I.a..li£.._ School.
He l&
a metnber o f ~ g ~mon•S Lodge. ot
Masons, assistant superlntede:ti.t of th4'
Sunday school of the West Somel'ville
Baptist Chµrch, ~d is vice president..
of the Brown Class. Mr.Shea received
degrees from Boston CoUt?g~ and Bo:..toD. Untvers-ity Law SchOol.
_ ~ e & -'~~A .~.1J_¢@.§l2!16 Club; ;M

the committee.
The pati-Ori.S- an9,
' patr!=,nesses included D·ean a:t:id Mrs:

r~:¢P~n

l

1

:

E.LW~~rco!~~m:;Y;fd~~i-~L: i
.Iam~s H. ~rennan, ~eifa1;.or' and~~;;.,-~, '.
~ William II. Shanahan, .and former.,.At-r.
if%;:f;;.e~eral_ a~d ¥r~_;. Th~mas :_J: .. ·~
. --.
.,.. --- - -~ -- --.:;__- ~

'
I

....-

~~*·~
~ E R TO SPEAK
Gleason L. Arcf1.er. dean of Sutf o l k ~ w i l l address the Reveretf.,
've\f''.) club ' at its meeting i_n
But
. ha1i, Masonic Temple, Monday
!ght, April 13. Dean Archer
is a. ~pe:µter. of note, who is frequently ,called in· an an authority on
q' u',eStions ·~f l~w and' law e:r;iforc~-r
mei;t:t~ :Hon. Frank :P.
:o~ will
presi
·.
, ,,


~~~~~! t!~u~~iP~t~

·, '
, .·
·. I
1
¥any prominent i.n ~.t~_te, city, j~dft;:fa..l i
and bar circles were ~mong the guests,
who. numbered n1ore t~an. ~00. Attorhey. 1
1
Tqomas .J. Finnegan, "president o,f\the l,
alun1ni association, was chairman of': '

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS

,§'

olice and

;;TH ANNIVERSARY
, OF SUFFOLK LAW'. ;

r ge and
House
M:aee,...,_,.._,m,,.,
Lyons

-,-.~--.-- --~,

·

._.-<t;_.-

r
I

'.':'.~---··_··. ~

~

Nine Greater
Salemites Pass
·J; State Bar Exams

POLITICS
Notes and Gossip
About People
You Know

ins:~:in~r~::e~i~~1~ss1~:t~~~{i;:1"~:
Conroy of, Danvers. have been noti-

COUG.HLIN TO RUN
Capt.. "Bill" Coughlin, edit.o-.. of
the
East
Bostpn
Fre~
P;ess
app~ared at City 1::ia.IJ today a.nd
announced that he will be -condi.d!l-te _for the city ,council :"'ron1 that.
tj.1st:z-1ct next fall.
..Bill" has Jt-'!e.n
'1t hfelong resident of No'l.,l.ie Jsr land, ~~d --while • ab.ivay...s Jn.t.gre ,;t:•.!d
iin pohb.ca1 a~batrs has never be- .
fore been a candid{Lte for public

:!ied that they have passed the examinations :!or admission to the Massa-

chusetts bar. 'rh.e successful candidates at the recent tests were as fol-

lows:
Harold E. Kiley. 63 Aborn.
street,
Peabody, 35 yea.rs old; Peabody High
1914; Salem
Commercial;
Suffolk
Law; PeabOd.y school committee-.
Charles F. Manning.
30
Chester
street, Danvers; Salem ClasstcaI and
High school, 23 Years
i'Hd;
Su:ff'olk
I...Q.w; El01er W. Liebsch's office.
~ Pill, 30 Sununlt avenue. Salem; 39 years old; Tufts college; B
U. Law; teacher in Hebrew school.
Melville Rowand,
Columbus
avenue, Salem; 37 years old; Amesbury

:.igfa:~\~I~e!'r~le~
clerk's office.

'.office.

LON.G DOES HOME WORK

!

i

6
~ii~L .J-Jr:iv;;~~r~~t. ~ ~iJ.~!er~treet, I
Danvers; Danvers High school;, Por- I
"ii~ft~~ school; E. c. Jenney•s o:t:r1ce, /
William H.

Butler.

6

Barr

street

'Q~BRIEN GRANTS PERMITS
HJoe" O'Brien, Charlesto-wn
chestra leader, is employed in the
permit office of the public wOrk:;;
department in City Han.

j

:~~~~k ~aJ;e~u~~~ce8 ~~~ne:!:gh£ I
James E. Callahan, 52 Broad street. J
Salem.; Salem High; Suffolk
La.w· ~
United Shoe
'l
Catherine E. Conroy,
16
Charles

~~~;:~; B~ii!!:

~

Tax
Com,m,issioner
Henry
F.
~on!.?., one of. the b1f,siest officials
,in state serv1,ce, usually Jind8 the
,daY too short to do his work. Fre9u_ently he takes his uncom,pleted
·work ho?ne with hi-rn. But this is
;no hard8hip, he m,aintains, aa his
,work is also his recreation. _

~~;~~cia~~~ f

James H. Sullivan. 83 Maple street,
Danvers;
Georgetown
univerSity;

---~

, EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASR

I

1

~t.reii.'
~!!i~l~i;'~:
tion; Portia Law; manY years with I
W. B. Sulliva1:_1..!...!!?~;;;st,..<z-,.n'","'--=-"5!<,

:.--

CORBETT STUDXES LA"\V
City Transit Commissioner Ar: ~~ur Corbett is no-w an even in.,,.
, ~ 3l~~ent at Suffolk; Law ..School
e-

--~~;e~C:~

--_-

,

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, BOSTON

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

APR 1 0 193\

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

0

e r names· fatniliar throughstu

service

in the

~'I:

B. U; · Woodrow · Wilson,
a. tie1ho&ait!e- :faHed fr,
Pr.esident, she says, gave women more en and: /··"
,
.
ce b~t-

EVENTS TONIGHT
Free public lecture on Christian Science,

Fine Arts-"Le Petit Cafe'" (fllm).. Continu-

4 wr ;

~hr~ffa1;,_k s~i~iicf B~~r: 'ofmi,~~~~e~:ipT~~
ci~isi';o~~f!nt?s~~rf:• B~~n~i~;,sf!':i.~~tt~:
under the av.spices of First church of Christ,
Scientist. Marlboro;
:In First Unitarian
Church, corner Church and Main Streets,

P=o!~g~.~!~tf/,f;k~· a Holiday/' 8:30.
?f t~e~ .f
Sh~bert--Ed Wynn ~u:~!im.ple Simon," 8:20. ,~
f
Paine Hall, cambridge---Ha.rvard university
th~-- '
Orchestra, 8:15.
'ice:s· :
--·.,Ak_. :

Bandmasters Association: Din:
~:~Ocf!~f~. bi>a;:g;t~~ ~1£!fc~~~~ei.r~:ective
Copley-Plaza Hotel: Dance, . S u ~ La.w
Alumni Association, ballroom and foyer, 8
to l:.
Dinner, Associated Industries of
Massachusetts, Parlor suite, 6
Dinner, The
St-a.dents Laundry co:, parlor suite, 6.
la!1:r;::iio~'i.iv~r!~i~fc ~e:i~~frin1:e:oo~e~~;
illustrated lecture, "Changes in Electric
Ughting in the Last Fifty Years, .. by Pr~f. A,
E. Kennelly; new indoor athletic building, 8
1
1
11:~al~a.r;;rrheCl~f!!~fJs,•f ':.,1;,; t'r~t·e~
Weir Smith; Tutors• Common Room, Lowell

Women's E::x~l~:ryT~:i'!.r8;,1!'.:::: Memorial:
•·, ,{;
;~~:!~f~~r~:i":''i_ Church of All Nations, ·a1
~
Appalachian Mountain Club-: New England
:1 r
';t"'ra.il conference, 5 Joy street; 2~
:1 :
Lowell Institute: Eighth and last i1$.•lecture
series on ~'New Conceptions of, Ma.tter," bY
Prof. cnarles o. Darwin; .. The E~lusion
Principle,.'' Huntington Hall; 491 Boylston
S~~ild:.;n•s .Museum of Ef~ston:: Il!Ufti;ra_t;ed'
lecture, "Jungles," bY Prof. William H. Weston Jr~. Harvard- l!Tnivers1. t::v; C!>lmstea.d Parle, .. ,. -_
.1a::::;:r~~a.1fliitersit::v: Fourth in lecture
J._
series on. "Telephone ~gineering.~• by Dr• . ::.

IH~~~~ic!ii
1

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN,

-'-- ~Jii!

MAS-S ~-,

(140

Lee-

Ho~sev/· c. A
Clar~ndon Street) :
ture, "Books Everyone W!3-nts to Know
: About .. bY Miss Celina Lewi.s, 7.
wottlen•s City Club o:t Boston: ntustrated
lecture ""\Vith Beebe in Bermuda," bY Miss
Gloria 'Hollister; Ford Hall, Ashburton Place,

i!~~

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! ·,

~~:gfe1!:·

02

~r!·
~~~~o! 0f ~'i{;:,.i~l~·~'; 4:~o~etl: h._
cal Activ1tY and Configuration,'' bY Prof. Karl 1
Fteudenburg, University of Heidelberg; Mallinckrodt Lecture Room, 4:30.
1
"Boston Museum of Fine Arts: Egyptian Art,
:Mrs. Sayward. 11.
7·45
' American Association of University Women:
, ·y· M
c. A
(Huntington Avenue Div.I- .''International Relations and Fellowsl;l.tps
n): Fenowshtp dinner, Roo~ 100, 6:30. DayH; breakfasts, meetings, luncheons and.
cture in "Art of Living" series; "How to e:thibits, Statler Hotel, .all day.
"
e~ Along With Other People," b.Y Frank P.
'.Copley-Plaza ,Hotel: Meettpg. Howell Whist
~ee:iJ:~lt1~~:;::,~. {!~!iu~~ivt;~~ro~~Ura!'.i!~· co~;~J; ~ p:::~~~s•
1
~~~m.cfU.b~;R~~ertoo~ u~,
Slf~a'.y~"r curley•s ttincheori. to nl". Fl"i~dr1~b.
R·00 {n 2? 8; ~illage A. c. Club, Room 2, 8; w. von Prittwitz und oa_ff~n. state suite,
8
i~li1cR1~~a~: .Lecture, ..Lit~rar:V Co~:it-P~~~tui:;teao~munity: Ladies' Party
:~~;1:-r:tns. 1g1c:iira~:ct:fed ::rt~1a;~Y1st~~ ~~~b. :r;:11n,ies and members of Highland

v~~i~\. R~g::n ~. '

~~if::

:::i;

f~1~rncf~~:

W~~:t6:!

j
-

--

_ _-c.

jsti,~'i;~/· School of Mu:iic: Open h_ouse;
1
1mi~~c:. .~giir!~J f.~m:;l.i'blh:viJ~~';t presented bY Concord Players, Veteran Hall,
1
co::gi[odri ilf[~~;.ibf~!}k ~il astronomy, ••our
Place tn the Milky WaY Galaxy," bY Clyde
0
0
Fi~1!_~b;~~: t!1ci~aito~ ~eT!~~::::;~e~~~re.
··Teachers as Citizens," by Dr. John Dewey;
8
1
~::~!~i~~ A~~~:nii'fe~f irniversitY women:
Pageant, ballroom.T~ot:~:tatler.

I

Majestic-''Trader H:;n° {film), 2:30 P- m.
and 8:30 p. m.

Copley-"The Last Hour,• 8:20.
--..........

ints1:1H~i:rsri:!trtm:~~e~~

c~~;~;

::_s~i:it~~=s~::t

~u!?:1
J~re1heii!tt1~~. 1r;~1:tt~~va~~ ~
meetings, Hotel Statler, afternoon.
Exhibitions
Museuni. of Fine Arts, Huntington Avenuer~et ~::kgt~~!n~~o~ :het~af.: W'1,.:a,,;:;.:..::_.,,
k)eries every_ daY .except Monda.Y at 11
'.rXf;;~~tct:leci~~e~~!bif~1~s.
b:i
lw:~~W~~d,H~fii:t Bd~1:.!;1~~~. e:a~\';.it\~~li~;. ,
1
J~k~vi~f\:,h~r1~or~Ja.tl';.~ ~~~~~ ~frt ti.;;
drawings by John. s. Sargent.
Fogg Art Museum. Corner Quincy Street and
Broadway, Calll.bridge--Open weekdays, 9
to 5; Sundays, 1 to 5; admission free.
Water colors and drawings b:Y GabrielCharles Oleyre. Loan exhibit of water
colors bY Margaret Laighton. Through
April· 15. Loan exhibition o:c still l~e painting. Through April 30.
,
Isabella. Stewart Gardner. Museuni, Fenwa.y
Court-Open on Tuesdays, Thursdays -a.nd
Saturdays from 10 to 4; admission fee
25 cents; Sundays from 1 to 4, admission
free.
Robert C. Vose Galleries, 579 Boylston
Street-Paintings
bY
Colin
Campbell
Cooper, N. A. Through April 18.
Casson Galleries, 575 Boylston StreetPaintings bY 30 American artists.
Doll &
Richards Galleries, 188 Newbury
Str-eet--Paintings bY Marian :P. Sloane
Through April 14 .
.Jordan Marsh «opportunity Ga.llery"-Oils,
water colors and etchings bY Boston
artists.
La.::;::-t-- a~::bc~~~rs~~!f:r!i-idS~~a:t:!:ti; !
~
Thomas Thorne and Ray w. Skol:field.
:';chervee Studios, 665 Boylston Street--Etching.s bY artists specializing in architecture,
~or other exhibitions see Monday's Monitor.

,;~:~J:!~1s~nl

~~ri!!tf~!i!s

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TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

; ma. 13o§11;; •., .,. ·. · :iiens wrU:a
1:Hilh, ··c.r0S$e4,~,.Iayfi1g:
',i·

..

·c.-'

.~-..;'".. '. ,.· .. hff Wou1dti't ha.ve .to_ I?~~ , . ,..
-\1:~~?- S:c> ·· ··to the hellh~use Jn.«'E!.e~~-~
i th e are 8J1Y' eggs.
s;e
~o1:-CT:Ossed
bs.s lafd s;_e wiilk& up to ,"!30Yd a~

hi;

~ says,

T

'

~3

••Ed,

rve laid an..__ egg.
... ·
;a •The big wind back In :May,
1
¥,irieya.rd gaven is recall~<!:! a
'cident. Capt Jere~ ~ting •a.
\Ilg skiPl?":r, was fre Jie had it lashed
I boiler to tbe islang. lt o! his schooner.
ramldshlps on ~ia.c:.c squall, the win4
and slapped him
1caught tn a.
, took hixn off the ~opd c! that ~!er.
~e.__aga!nst d f . ~ ~ -years later, the
;'Y.V~~ ~a.dee i~ Taunton'' w"e;e still

.:i~ 9 -

I- --moutli;-v,;:;;-vra
e a

=•·

"93~
l
I

...vauau,o ""'"'"''"'"'

I

~----7'-z,,:u.

Co:tkpm N~w President
?f Park Street Club

til,

Eliot Press, Inc.
1

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AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

'

t

u~: ~ar;;

~~· Hu~b~ra,

w~o liv::
I
0
line, has been ha"\l'ing t le hone epn ..
life listening t°th:':,.g~e
they were I
versations :omeShe says she got: two I
thawed ou d 1 i the first three hours.
weeks' scan Br. n
. rwu't'st had the
_,. As usual. YaceKLive He Was telUng
flo~X' tat :~1::;!1r~~nc:nhe witnesse.! dur~
William E. Corktlm
f:uth! Civil War. "It :a.!sa:::an~fng,
.
\ fierce battle, the ene11:y ,.,
they ran, street) west Roxbury, was elected presi·
-cotning north, shooting
sp1:a.ng up dent
Retiring presiden.t James D.
"when sudden1ya S~~ngw
ltlit1Utes it; Thumith of Dorchester presided at the
1
l from the_norti:;da~ep:1 :etting stronger. business session and Edward F. Flynn
w~s terrific 8';,id he suddenly saw evecy was to.istmaster.
1when M~e
bel ranks fall over dead.
Other officers include: First vice presi· j
i man in
r~alking about the a:ffai': dent, Gleason L. A®-er, dean. of Suffo~k \
Re stoptgh to borrow a plpeful of to Law ~hool; second vice president, Wil·
lon~e~~om a bystander. Then he ~:..
u. Sherman of Dorchester; secre~1
,,b!~ed his story and said that u1: n th; tary, George F. Deroo of Winthrop, and
5
!esUgation it was found ~it bullets treasurer, Albert E. Heiman of West
enemy fired. the w~nd ble~odi~s
Roxbury.
""';&,.,
right back into the1t· own
R~ndletl ~
~? ~
.At one ti:me Old _aarrisoJ The es..
-i
tended store at Epping, N er °thing intablishment sold mos~ e~ai bother<>d
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.
\ eluding grai~, a~';. Rundlett declared
,..g,;;eatly by Ta s.
d 1 ded upan old
.. J W'ar on th~fiiode~1e;n T:~-but let Old
, -lmusket wi
po
.
If•
"I see the
~trison tell it himse ·
l grabbed
ti!gge~t ole, r~t
I hedn't
the gun n
rabbbed a. handful uv
no shot. so I g d tem lntew the gunt
I seed peas, poure
a er and up
'r_gxnmed ;~,, a
u~e!t p off like a
'n' J.et fl.1'v,1'. .. er.
lntew a bag ..
i can~on and set : , \dao;:n.baout th·~tty
1 }(et" of eggs an
ru\ r I hed got
\ dozen of th~~tet"fb~t couldn't find I
, cleaned up I
t
'ba.out s1x weeks
1
thet rat. Wa-a-1• P 'll., i 'n'~ye wont
\ later I seen thet rat afa~ struck dead
·.
bleeve this, but may
t ez 1 tell i t (~:,t.
! this niinute dif 0'\ai~!t jb.sed a pea. vine 1
ij,!·.
, thet d.umm-e . e
rauting from~
~;'.f
, }TlOre'l'l tew feet long ~p' ods ori. tt."
~ - .~__i].~- back with blossoms n ~ ~ ~ - - -

af

~;n!.~.";:~~:~:

td
!\,v

:d

/ Park Street Church
1

.A,.f a meeting of the Park Sheet
I ClU.b jn the Boston City Club· last
J night .Atty. Williarfr--.E .Cork.1::.m nf

1 West Roxbury was -el,e'Cted nresi1 dent. The q.ther officers efocted
i were: First vice-president, .<J:leascn /
L. Arc.!1~; second vice-president,
Willi8:,m U. Sherman, Do1-chc.<;t€1 ; :
secretary, George F. Deroo, \~Tin-,'
throp; treasurer, ...,'\.lbert E
Hei.:'1
c---~-:T~_Wes~ Rox~~-~~~
--"~

lliam

MORNING GLOBE, ..BOSTON, MASS.

:e:::b:~:d

\}>":!;.

'

Other officers choS'eri · were: Second I
vice ... preskl,f!nt. William U. Shermah;

Winter Why, Ed Hag res but before
his }l.ouse t~ !o 1t~e b:~ his toes were
he could ge
-" d tc'.» jmnp u~and
frost~bitten. He i. ..e b t the'ftrst jump
c(owp to warm them,
u
a1
It toolt
he to?k he fro~~/~th!!:s t:·cbop hiln
the hired ~anwar~er now, and Aunt

',,'f'c

f.

]~[:!~arJ: :::~~~ ~~~i!~~d~:~asurer,

~=fty ~~1f~t1!111 \1ii~lnh::~:i~u~a!i I

I

'

IO

William E Corkum and Gleason L,
Archer, dean of the S~Ut- Law
ScJiool, were respectively elecfea'"'president and vice-president of the Park
Street Club at the forty-second· annual reunion and banquet held in the
Boston City Club last night. , Mr.
Corkum is an attorney as well as a
director of the Jamaica Plain Cooperative Bank and treasurer of the

doy:~

0

c,o-wa;ccn--

PA{lK STREET CLUB
ELECTS ITS OFFICERS·

At the forty~iiecO:iw. anh.ual :reunion and
dinner of the Park Street Club, the sec~
0 8
ond oldest parliamentary and debating
1
-:, ~e seen st~~n-~!_b~ckford1
societv in this country, la;st night, Wil~
- A.sy wood, stilld:;~~d iiJge, but still \ , Uam .:E. Corkum, attorney, of 6 Lasell
R I, at quite an at the :Flatiron Build· \
spry, helped ;eek
He was putting
ng at ?)>¢W
ar • f when the wind
' shingles on thei:oofelt himself going
' ttlew him offh :.as 80 surprised he
and at first E:
out But at
could hardly ttunk th1
~mad~ a plan
a.bout the 10th ftoOr e
second floor
and when he got to th:,indow where
he looked for ~n
a. pile of shav~
the carpenters a
tnade a quick
ings on the. flo~.r do..!1ellt on the shav..
twitch in the WJ.n
'
ings and saved his life.
e eo ... \
\ With th• advent of Spring, tha<\J'auy
,ple of Salem, conn,
of the

I

J.Y.LCaU

public notices regarding the time when
'
'
'
·
. He does
not ex
's will be before

ws~e

APR 1 0 1931

I'

~~~
PROM PLANNED

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

cussio of
hers ,va ed

·Protection ag~inst rob .. tile school, .Atty Gen Joseph E. Wa.-,
y M:r Chambers..
ner, Councilor and Mrs James H..
Brennan, Senator a,nd Mrs William H
SUFFOLK LAW ALUMNI
$hanahan; ex-Asst United ,States AttY
-STA~UAL PROM Gen George a. Farnum, Ml' and Mrs
The annual Suffolk Law Scbo.-,J 'l,"hom.as J; Boynton, Mr and Mrs JO<!
Alumni .Assoctatio:a prom took place seph F. O'Connell; .Taxnea F. Swift.
a~t night at the Copley Plaza Hotel Mr and Mrs Martin W. PQwers and
i
with several hundred couples prese.pt. Mr and Mrs Alden ¥. Cleveland.
· ~Tho. mas J. .Finnega?l., president of tbe
Clerk (hopefully)-I have been 1Ji
association, was honorary cha.inn n
assisted by Fred Gillespie and Ja;e; yc,u1· employ 25 years today, sir.
E. Bagley J-r.
Chief-Is that so? Wba.t a. fine clerk
The list of patrons was headed by you would make if your memory for
things was as good.-Passing
Dean and Mrs Gleason L. Arch~r ot

i

Event Tomorrow Night
Opens 25th Anniver.sai·y
Celebrations

J

i

Celebrations niarking the 2.5th anni- I i
--- -· - -- r . ---- versary of th::: founding of Suffolk law \ J
, - school will ope:i tomorrow nigh.t wit
,.,
! the annual prom and reception at t h l r _ . - ~ - - - - = - - - - - - - - - :_Cop1ey-Plaza Hotel conducted by the
the association and their\
'Suffolk Law School Alumni As.socia- wives, Dean and IVIrs. Gleason L
tion.
Archer, Atty.-Gen Joseph E Warner,
Manp persons prominent in state, city, CounCilcr ahd Mrs. James H Brennan,
'judicial and bar circles will be among &nator and l\!Irs William H. Shanahan,
the guests at the annual event which is fqrmer Atty.-Gen. and Mrs. Thomas J.
:~~m~~ ~~iend~~t impartant on the :~~~~~ni:ra~g_n~n
, Atty. Thomas J. Plnnegan, pr_esident· Mrs._ George R. Farnum, Wilmot R.
, :?:t .tbe_ .alumni: association, is honorary. Evans, Atty. a.nl;l Mrs. James F. Swift,
ich~irma11- a'{ the committ~e in cliarge former 9ongl."essmari and Mrs. Joseph
0 .(:wlth. Fred QiJllespie and James E . Bag- F .. Q'Connell, Atty; and Mrs. Martin w. ·
11.ey, .-!~··.·.c.h·a·lnn¥· ·.and _se.cr. e. tary of• the Powers, t:ueasurer, and At.ty. an~. M.rs. f
.
'it;om:putt.ee 9'!!-.. ~ang.eme.nts.
..
..
Alden M. C1eve!an~ s-3Cretary of the
.!'~~r.?z~d ~ti:_oness~ 1n~1~de a1u~;.1 associat1cn.
.
_

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@'Mttti#

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~kh~~r:::i~~ t~~d

I

.Li~:'h~
~f "-~ ' ;':"';~f.

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,,

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I.,

~

-

;.f ' "' ., ""'""""""'"'"'"'""'"'"'""'""'"'"'~

PA.

s • ?;Dial Twists •

· :/M~iiit_o_r~·-~E~d-itorial

JI

'"""'"'"""' B:, Elisabeth Ball uu11m1n...J

For Drunken~e~s

D

EAN GLEASON L. ARCHER ot
the Sl.UIDlk ~~ School, Boston,
observed last week the first anni·
versary o:f his. series of talks on the
fundamentals of law whioh he gives
over an N, B. C. network .
. Ernest
La Prade, who used to be a ·violinist 'in
the old New York Symphony Orchestra

f

{ Prosecuting Cou~s~l Declares)
-Pres1dmg Magistr :
~
to Five
'
e

TRU

SPECIAL

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IQ't"O'Q

nf

rh•nnt,.,:o,TITiaeoe,,

.,.Qa,-l a

1

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I~:~~!!;::aui; iihr:wt;3/.~\~:ic~:-t1::t;:

ments explain their furi.Ction~ in a.n- or-

chestra, and in the o
alled "Marching Notes," the not
es present
an ei:position of m
books are
built around the
of "Alice
in Wonderland '' .
n Ted Husing, Columbia s
OUI).cer, de·
scribes the even
Pennsylvania
Relay Carnival t
orrow after·
noon, he Will be w
all over the
field carrying a m·tp1atur,- tr8.ns~itting
set in a knapsack betwe~ his shoulder
blades
The apparatus _:~ends- out his
voic~ on short waves, w~.i.ch are· picked
) up 1n a booth in the gxandstand and
amplified and re·broadc~ . .
The
'. !9immons program.s over'.;.::.--WA ~ have
1ntroduced into radio ......... rul.allllk eti·
: quette to accord with the weekly ap:pearance of opera stars .. · _The proc~u"re
i is something like thi,&;:-:--the orchestra
1
rises when the guest artist e.nters the
stu_dio; the singer or p1ayer-4s introduced,
upon which the musicians S.pplaud; when
tl:ie program ends the artist thanks the
orchestra and it returns the compliment
'With considerable applause, the violinists
tapping the backs of their .instruments
With their bows and the other players
'crying out the traditional "bravas "
Who, we wonder, is to be the Mrs. Post

I

·-. .

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~ L . . : , . __ _

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

ltr!!S'Sll'H-0.I'.lS'nV I,'
? Uf EM.Of JO are!

~
·s.xa.£'Bid 'BUIJq'B 'e.

~q 2uns a.r,g s2uo ll
I tmOl'.).Jl)'Bl'.).

aqL

n

><rn 'doJtin1'0 Pl t
~1fM. SJOUOt[ 2tq'.lQ
\ PI.IO.M. a't{'.J_ pa.tt?p

,!OJ '':JUEUa'.).nan u1:

J

"spt:: aq'+

SB

•uapg~
.

N::i!Cf01-

>

I

.

NEWS, FRAMINGHAM, MASS.
f, " " '
t-et"''"'rti

,-. 1
~ 1 191;>1
1 ~-1

=

'\.

10

MARRIAGE

I'

I~i~·r:~a~ !t~~d~!~~~~n~~mpre norto-j

-~- <1epenos---enn.rery

.t.pun. .-.~.,;,=~...
r
B.onner and lll•hat his exa.mfnation ,
discloses.
____ . . . , ; ~ . J
• • s ~ o f Mr. Va~tghan:~
_J~ c;nat he sufteied a mental :
_,. . collapse due to overWo.rk."

L<J,gf!f)udent Finid ,
:;/too ";,n Rum Charge
I

Rocco Mirabile, 26 of Cottage st

l l J a . ~ t former'law student
Bosto

at

Suff
w School, was fined $200
in
ast Bosto~ District Court to-

~ay for keeping and exp.osi11:g
11quqr ~or sale and giv~n· two
months 1n the House of Correction
for destroying a: sear~ warrant
displ~yed by the · police whe·n. t~ey_.
entered h~:S premises.
·
·
'. ·
H~ threw t~e wa~rant .. ,ir;ito··a fire ~ nc~qrtjJn~ to
~o;ltCi: The po~~i~-

-

1 cl

:~qlln1'p "ll1

:sµa uuµ:~snv t '

1

·- -· "'-'""""'· "'""··' .. -·I
.
Sentenced to Jail'·.
1
·i+,ofor Warra11;t Theft 1

t~e

I

<,<.~.,,~~I

:.r-ee-r Ol 1a.1!Ja.i: IHA\
"H ·auroq Jaq 1" n
3.I_ 2UJaq A.rnru;
aq
aJJ:o.rq ~ mo•.tJ: 2upa
>11'.M. JO . n1?as1.1"d .rn 1
"P.IOJ!!:W JO U1'?l[1'?U1'1£ 'S.I

I
I

Rocco Marabile of 12 ~ottage street,
' East Boston, a foat1:er ~tudent at t~uf~
' folk Law Schabl, was ·sentenced"' to t:W'o··
mon~hs'~~ouse o'!; Correcticin by !
Judge ..
. Barnes !~ the Eiist Bos- I

1

: ~~~ c~~~~ ·

0

p e~, tto~

~\:~!~e~r~~r~~; 1

rant, valu
_ $1 and the property of I
the-·.East B9.$t9h Distdct Court He also/
was 1:lned ·.$1~0n a charge of keeping and I
ex.posing .liqUOr'' for sale. On his appeal l
~0 was held;, in $300 for the Superior I
court..
I
$ergeant Frank E Gilman of the Bos!.·
e· · (_i~partment testfied that he
':
other police o_ffi~ers .went to
s hQine March 25 with a search)
p_lalliiing to look for
·
,
·,wa_s··1ocked and bar:ricad
e·· .in. and after Gilma
, .. ed-·his.--warra~t to MarabiIE!;, 'ff
,
'.~~_tossed~Jt fn the fil;tchen fire, the off ·.·!
;~·st~ed. ' Gilman said, that a quanµt~
/ · 9f liquo! was found--hid~en in the kit9~e;~A
L

-

said : they ha-cl; . tp: ~l;>atte-.r dowri,'1'. a·

J 'l rj"1'r" ~,

•n.1 "'" do.nm"d 11
U'B?f Jo su011~ '.'
rqi l~ .I~~'Bimt~ h

h

- - - - -

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

1

------'' r~

f

~f r~io?

I

was

====~'i;
s,u, ),

Chautauqua, N Y, is now assistant;[
VValter Darnrosch, and a regular N~,
~
orchestra conductor
In . additio
1s the author of t~o music books fo ~:
juveniles, the first of which, "Alice in

_J

'

The House sustained· Gov. Joseph
B. Ely's veto of a bill which would
make lawful the baiting of birds. The/
prohibitory law was passed only last
year.
.
'l;'he bill raising the maximum age
, limit under which delinquents are )
; classified as juveniles from 17 to 18 I
;-years
passed in· the senate.
• . The bill authorizing the City of
Boston to borrow money for con,. _struction of a municipal building in ,

1

t a.t
l to
j B.
, he

l,:,nO't.h

t'lt!es and towns should be per-f\
manently relieved of all expenses con·:- - nected with construction. and ma!n- f.
,. tenance of state highways, a large/':
,._, group of leglsla tors told the Le. g isla- ../
..
. ~ive Oommittee on Ways and· Means .
.~ ' yesterday. They went a step farther i
., th3:n the bill ~hey were supporting, i
,· · which seeks relief for the municipali- ,
.: ~ ties for a per.jod of two years only.
'"
Senators Donald W. Nicholson of
Wareham and Cornelius F. Haley of /
Rowley, sponsors of the measure insisted that municipalities were ~t a ,
distinct disadvantage because of the
maintenance assessment for state
roads which are constructed, not for
the residents of those municipalities
only, but also for motorists all over
the State. The expense should be dis-- tributed throughout the State, they
declared.
Legislation to extend rapid transit
facilities from Harvard Square to
Arlington and from. Lechm. ere Square
to Davis Squaue, Somerville, was fas
vored by the Legislative Committee
~~ls:'ransportation iµ reporting two i

i

f{:: o'::te::~t~I~;:dPJ;;;i~t;eo~~~~~~~.

'l'O THE CHRI

.
RO, N S , April 23-The proseutmg Counsel D
MacLellan .
olice. cou.rt here, yesterday,
le trial of a citizen arrested on a

d~riZ:I

\

'I

i

'

-

.

•.

·'_;c.,.,j

+

!!l!r!,,,;,;,,,,.,-""~~~t~·.......,,...~:-:=::;:::;;¥~~~7~,~~:-:::....:.~~~·~.~·~·-~

-11:
PI(
·::i.u

-ni

1i1!'

·uof

;~

J<>i

·'.IOi

.Ua]
--'='

.z:1~,-•.__.,.s,0"'1Sl!'li.,O~N'"' "E~e"E~1'i~~Il

t·"~~:;·.;::~:;:"'"':."""i· __
.....J!j
11

MUNIc. PALJTJES .
1
ASK RELIEF FROM
STATE ROAD COST
v *~/ J

Dorchester was substitut~d for an

adverse con_imittee report and given
a first hearmg.
,

~ or
An adverse report on the measure
oston,
providing state reimbursement of ~t annismall towns. for loss of taxes on prop- on the

f

I,
1

erties used for charitable, educational ~ E giv~~
and .religi_ous purposes was overruled "~i:~E;in j

by the House an~ the measure passed ~chestra i

'

to

,l't· ,- .•

I
Legislative Comnnttee S
Told the Two ..Year Plan
Should Be Extended

Je!~co~1e!:~~-

Suffolk Law
against

of _the

Archer
School spoke forcibly
0~ capital puni~h-

aoo.neron

~sm~~~~i I
ssistan~I
ular N. !

:~~!ea~: ~=~~pt:~Yifa~cth:":!ng :X!t~~r·i
~i:f1aft!,tt:~ t:! 0
~~e!ea~~; ~~P~_;;:{~!lfi~ '
law that racketeers feared.
3:1 1.nstrnt"ltfes and towns should be per-\'·---- cll~~~~ae~~1;-n 'tf;~r ~::a~~e;1:.;~r~~=
manently relieved of. a)! ~xpenses con-~
ing Not'.es," the not~'"' ·
s present
1

I

0

.::.. nected with construct~on ?Dd main. tenance of st~te highways~ a large
.::~ group ot legislators told the ~gisla- j'
tive Committee on .Ways and Means ,
-, ... yesterday. They went a step far~her
.,._ . thaz, the bill ~hey we~e sup~o~tmg. ,
1 which seeks relief for the munic1pali- :
• ~ ties for a perJod of two years only
~._:
Senators Donald W Nicholson of .'
~ ... Wareham an~ Cornelius F. Hale}:. of,'
· Rowley, sponsors of the measure, insisted that municipalities were at a
distinct disadvantage because of the
maintenance assessment for stat~
ioads which are constructed, not for
the residents of those ~unicipalities
only, but also for motorists all. 0 ":er
the State. The expense should be distributed throughout the State, they
declared.
.
. l
Legislation to extend rapid trans1t /
facilities from Harvard S.quare to.
Arlington and from Lechmere Square
to Davis Squa11e. Scm1=:rvllle, wa~ favored by tlle Legislative Comm..ttee
on Transportation iµ reporting two,:
bills.
·
.
The House sustained Gov. Joseph
B Ely's veto of a bill which would
make lawful the.baiting of birds. Thel·
prohibitory law was passed only last

an e:iposition of mu.Bi,
booJ;-,s are
built around the c'.b,:ild
of Alice
in Wonderland." . ·~':,,..,
Ted H~sing! Columbia
ce~;,an:
6crlbes the. even
rr~~ afterRelay Carn;Tif1
over the
11
0
1 ~ fdn, ~ i n g a
mµ:tiatur" transmitting
!
a knapsack betwee,ii his shoulder
' blades
The apparatus ;~Sends- '?u~ his
,voice on short waves, which are picked
: up in a booth in the ~~ndstand and
amplified and re-broadca.StJ,f· . . ~ The
Simmons p_rogran~s. over,~,:..Wt&_h:;i
introduced mto rad1?~rn_ kl
a_
;quette to accord :~1th th;h;;~oc~u:'e
'fsea~~~!tifn;pel~e8 ~~the orchestra
''rises when the guest af~t. e,nters the
studio; the singer or plaY4r:Js introduced,
upOn which the musicians. ;8,PI)laud; when
the program ends "the art1St thanks the
orchestra and it returns the compu.ment
•with considerable applause_. tl_1e v1ollnis~
tapping the backs of their .instruments
wit!1 their bo~s a~~~~n~\he~.b~!~}~,~~
cry.mg out d e is to be the Mrs Post
Who, w~ won er,
" ~r r~io. _

ye~e bill raising the maxiinum age
limit under which delinquents are -'
classified as juveIµ~es from 17 to 18 1
years
passed in the Senate.
· . The bill authorizing the City of
..., BoSton to borrow money for_ co1;. _struction of a municipal bu~lding in {

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, lVIASS.

I:
1

1
1

s:t i;

*

i
!

'

Funny things have been happening
to radio the past few months
Long

~:~s ~~

1

~:1~~e11.at f~~:etc ~!!e:J
radio commissioner, whose topic will be
"Present Extraordinary Radio Reception-and Sunspot\"

Helene Madison, champion girl swimmer, w111 be the guest speaker on Ted
Husing's "Sportslants" at 6 p. m tonight over the WDRC-Columbia network.

=-·

.

I

ii

Dean Gleason L Archer of Suffolk
Leru
b 1 Boston. will discuss
I Atrocity Element in First Degree Murder" in his series, Laws That Safe
,
, Society, to be broadcast over WEAF
'net'_Vork to-nig_!,1t ~t \ 15

l,q.1/)'1$)udent Fined
92/JO
Rum Charge,
Rocco Mirabile, 26, of Cottage st., /
E a ~ t former law student at I
Bosto
Suff
w School. was fined $200
1

on

,
I

Leopold Damrosch's orchestration of
' Schubert's "March Militaire" will be
presented by the conductor's son and.
! successor, Walter Damrosch, during a'
· concert over the synchronized stations
! WTIO and WEAF to-night at 9 o'clock
1 This composition suggests the bright,
I joyous, parade-ground aspect of war
rather than the bloody and gruesome
· battlefield.
1
Damrosch ,vm include also the finale
I from Cesar Franck's "Symphony in D
Minor," the only work in this form

In
ast Boston District Court to- 1
day for keeping and ex:p.osing
JiquQr for sale an.d giv~n· two
months in the House. of Correction
for destroying a search :'i\'.'az:rant
displayed by the police wh~n .~P.ey~
entered his Premises
·
'. '
He threw the warr~.~t·into 'a fi:'~·~
J:ll.. f!cCq!cdi,?1:g to the- I?~liCe; The poM,ce
:;;a.id . they had 'to ,!?,_att_er down;i- a;
~ door_ tp :~et i.nto, t:h~ 6:9~s:.•·:._ ____c,

. ·-~·-··

i;~~!~

1

Oepenas enTirezy --uvu,,•-~"'"'....
Bonner and what his exalllination

;J'' .

n8;~~

raviry°i:ei~s
is to blame,
but only Old Man Ether, now on one

Pacific coast stations are heard in thP
east with clearness and loudness unexcelled since the early days of broadi casting
. But from all parts of the countr~;
l1Steners located thirty to fifty mileE!.
from stations report annoying "fading"
I and also "mush" distortion and garbling of voices and music, for a few
seconds or minutes at a time
How to diagnose these troubles in
your set, and the relation of these
curious phenomena to the present sun.:spot cycle, will
be explained ov;
WDRC and the Columbia Broadcasting
1

r~



distance reception is now the best ever
in the history of radio
Midwest and

r

di~•S1:~;~.u



Has your radio set been acting
queerly lately? Have you been blaming the broadcasting stations and the

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

~r v~:~ghan
~e,a,r""'tfiat he suf:tered a mental
-· collapse due t.o overWork."
·

·-.

1

I :ri~ut:f1~~r ae1:;~~;~:a~~kei! ! su-

l

was

,a
Pennsylvania
and shoemaker, Who used to
of ~ time away from the
', at the bar, will be the
the radio ·mass meeting of
sq_ciety during Tom Noocast this Sunday over

I

\1
\

'::'t?

~:~f

~ .. , ~~a~~~ic B;~~1a~f ~~~!\ so~~rit~ in~
~ eluding a long and stirring crescendo:
,;.;:
"My Jim," o/"T;e dirl He Left :Se-

ra1;1!·;~ to;a~h~laliasce1~t:~~;u:~o~dh!

semi.:Cla\

~~~~fedbtet~~ahf~ L:ii;d-c'~i~mb~
:~~~o~ii~;s c~~!~~k f~~m~~s'toSh~~

~b,,~:"···:'~'.Y.;;.,11111!"!S!'l!-!!'!!!!.i:'.':"-::::::;$;..ll;!;#:;:.;:.:::.::Y,.... "'""."'.~~-?"'.

~~es\
~!~~-'.~

o'clock to-night.

*

:

Hans Hanke, noted German concert
pianist, will be the guest artist during
the program featuring Jesse Crawford.
poet of the or:g~n, scheduled on WDRC
1 and the Colllmbia chain from 10 to
10:30 p. m. Sunday. Hanke is also
well known as a linguist and connoiS1 seur of the arts.
,

I
\

*



*

"Love in April" has been chosen as
an appropriate feature of the "Tone
Pictures" program to be transmitted
over a network linked with WJZ of,
New York city at 8 o'clock Sunday
morning. It is a composition of Chris, tiaan Kriens, Dutch-American musician who is musical director of Station
WTIC of Hartford, and will be sung
)Y Mary Merker, soprano
The program will emanate from the organ
studios of L,ew White, who will offer
several organ solos
Curt Peterson;
~. ~. Q.. .singing a~ouncer.J. ,Helen,

tured -3ol
-Com.pose(
tions wi
concen;. E
an N. ~~
9:15 P< :t;
posed of j
'
·-

...

contralto, heard -in
adcasts, the GondoGus Haenschen and
m take part in the
al'' slated for 3 :30
afternoon over the
stations
WTIC
and

~-=-"''' .

.·,~."'

~

~,,,,.,!"1~MiiiiiP-?~f '·"

,

'

<',

POST, WORCESTER, MASS.



~

I

I

APR 24 ma,·

!

*'-~'

~~..a.=.;;;a==,,;;:;;;:r.i'i,;='i5vl~c nosp'l-"--Ta"'c
,];'1:,I_ ·~?., .
-'?5?SCQn .Liyh...o --:-·~
. . lM
r.· -- Vieno Lehtinell has completed
;v!JS}!; . e efarial course at Burdett m

l;,o

J1:1,,I).l~_r s er

.

, pe

~ls~· 'We~~is McCarro1:,_ of B]js\~ \ of

at her sutnmer hom..... on u
reet 'yesterday
·
·· htf l
, W . 0 band gave a deng , u
oii~!rt
evening in .V?"ainol~ h6~ :

\ ra

:;yed until mmmght.
L o o J:<
Tho young ladies of the
'. ' jn
lub ~and friends sp.en~a:St emg~~~s':'.
veek-end o t camp in
;ekrs Leizer Jones of West Glou~ester. visited friends herf

I

::t.S

V

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~

fter which g~~e;al dancing w

le
i•'

BOSTON,

w

h~~ter~J1.- ·1l·
! .few days of e
be in charg~

I

' :Mi_~o!~c:ec~~t1; ~~
:ner.chard Barry will

i

0
H:;.\,;'~s:utW~iyfo\; \ ~ ; . \

oh!~ S!/,cred
b~fi~e i:fbio.6n1

1

abo~t' LanesvHle, I :.:~j
which are very attractive . . 1 of t\ "/
, ,, Leo. F: He~re:~iid
va- . ,.
.,La~e school, Wl
his hon1e in Ja- i "t;

1

f~~n~ri601

k rt

..,vat1on ne><t wee

.

\

The church

Junior ""

.

will meet tonight in the churc

h

a \

I

"J;wkie" Wisutsklof ~sto"h,I" ~;;, \
~~1~;\~rti~a~ini~st. kaf,., stree~ \
· Carolyn Jacol;)s, dJ!~~f;;erof ofD~is '
a.1;1d Mrs George
=
h'. .
't'> \
S.treret, is confined to. her
qme Wl J. \
the. mumJ?S.
Bl chard who has
'1),1,[rs. Al1~n:\,he ~inter in Boston,
~een spen at the home of .Mr. and '

SATCJnn

p,::,C1~L'4. Y
.c..
<"1

T9,,,_
~ ....,

:\!~=~i,~!1;;:1 ~ ~eJ;1y~ 1:~t :C~ \

>'el°J"

fc
1'1:,~dso,,
th
t eqn;,:::.,,"'11'o"t.abJe .B,-ong-1:,,._
charles Rich who a~:tt~e~ble~
J '>ew "';":......,, -..,.--l_t1, l-f<11,,g -<L,
guest of the ~.rs t:e past week. has,
ll-es, Pe:ri- .
ca,-,
and her daug . er,
. Spr1'ngfield. I
ect returned to h1s home !t;l
. fined to,
-oto,.
Forrest E. WEonstop.~!inco~reet bY I I
$ '>

' f 0 r the summer months.
\

l>......,

his home on

as

'>5

.

<, <,

~

·

illnMess and Mrs John WisutsJ!;.i. nee .
r.
' · · h.
of Boston· wer
Madeline Wit amt d' with a' littlf
Qp,,::,
;;:::: ·-<
~ recently
~resen e
.c.N' .£ ,
~_,,.,_
' : dai~h:ic.irby of Flint, Michi(san. fo'e
....,
"V£.NJJV~b ~IN
! t ro'erie· of· East Gloucest~!· 18 he~
.f. 1
l
·~ ;fSM
0
~/
1 ®ili over statid'n
< ai;i·d·n°fi;.~ ~~i'"ke';,":"c,:ackles. Mr
;:§
}1~"a:r~ed Miss Georgia Pars~ns of
r
members of the pnmar:
C,4.1)
t artment of the Ea.st Glou
/Lr ~
a t:ethodist Episcopal church a
-C-L,4.
,
vlted to attend ,th.et par~
orm r.,__
S.,\LL,£
in. the church ves ry,
a ·
c,,.DZL
:en
,
" ternoo:h at 2 o'dock
w,;, "':t.A.c "'111:o ~ " ' .

MASS.

·

LL
"j,~\{'i..ett:,_"r,;/1//////flfl//lft.
.K'~1///fl/lft.
ZZ'lll/f/
//fl1///flfl////~ ,

·WJJ

~~==~~

"'~fr·

t:Jr/

;!

~:
ti

-""G.,,,

~~f:,,,

ROCKY NEC

t:

-

;:'1:;ig!;
s~;~,,.~w
s,;ow T~;u,,.,,, x.:!:!'s, ~osW:r:~o·
·=:ic :tz.,:;;:' ~ '.!' o.z,,

k

ii ~:itffu~~rrV~~t:!;;

1931

e~

The highway departm
m ing a sidewalk ot;1 the r
of Rocky Neck aven~e.
The Mayflower WhiS
of tertained yesterday af~t
ag Isaac Brewer.

--,, 0 '.l'lV

930

a

l>Ao.rc.,_
7-:iu

~~'?

,,,,!;; Sl:n.u,

1930 13t,:z;

II/ /1

,<;::,,.°;',,':f:"'
, =rt

6 ..

19ao

.r;lJ:oeo

-oz,ston,
--

~··,

SJ!b.u,

~ ~All,

-Pass., 7-3a
1930

!I Iii



,

Cl!:-~
.sertea
~ .S.£'n
' rreo ,,.1:, '4l'l".lCAJl.o
eeJt:n~

1930 1",t 0

\

i

8J1lD
.
~

""<t

now that a plea for at



.r.... e

1931~

~ haCl Clone so"wffi>.-:m
be~n started he !av,
course.
Dean Gleason ~:_-A~~

C,tn~O V-sl!' ~ -

1930 O,tn,.,.. .
1

Among the speakers were William
Thompson and Herbert B.. Ehr-

I the

I
i

EAST GLOUCESTER
,,

G

\ to combat successfully with highly
ti alned cl'iminals with the result that

ves- I

tcy'ihe cli:µ.rch cho_i~ vtill also h'old
rehearsal this evening

HolLS€

1

\
: , services were held at tl:le F1nr:;!~ '
:L theran church last eyen1:;i.~, w
\

'\the pastor delivered an 1n:spir1ng ser,·moI\ to a large ~on~reg~J~h).g circle

I

.\ mann, lawyers in the Sacco-Vanzetti
Thompson said
1 case. lack the mental t,he police of
tod,.a.Y
qualifications

\,

·tffiaica Plain
' F'inwsh Lutheran Chw:ch Notes.

April 23. (JP)--Opponents

and proponents of ca.pita! punishment joined ra.nk.s today, with but a
few dissenters, in favoring a legislative resolve for a special commission
to consider the question of a. death
penalty in this state They spoke at
a legislative hearing a.t the State

I\,

i,Oct;y (6) s,,,,.,~
Sl>o~'.!'
••
-

·

Al\/:o

ALTY
'HEL&
ff
.,

[!ec'L~~§~~

prosecution system, as far as
murder cases are concerned has fallen down.
He claimed that police,
under the pres.sure of aroused public
_. sentiment, convict the wrong man in
a murder case if they are unable to
convict the right one. Ehrmann quoted seve_ral opponent.s to the abolition
of capital punishment as being in
favor Of an investigation to definitely
settle the question in this state.
B. Loring Young, former speaker
of the house who a,lways voted against
abolition of the death penalty, said
he favored an investigation and Rev
Spence Burton, a forr:n,er prison chaplain, agreed with him. Father Burton said he favored capital punishment until he came in direct contact
with murderers about to die. ..I f
ound", he said "that murderers are
IJ.Ot especially interested in death,
fither for themselves or others."
Dr. Samuel A. Eliot of Boston and
1
a:>r Winfred Overholser, a deputy
!commissioner in the department of
J mental
diseases, both favored a
l c<;>mm.ission.
l Senator
Newland
H. Holmes of
f Weymouth and Eben W. Burnstead of
1 the
Massachus-etts Civil Alliance felt
an investigation Was unnecessary.
Dean Gleeson I , AatM'er of Suffolk
Law school strongly oppos-ed the creation of a commi.$,sion to study capital
punishment.
''You are asked," he said "to delegate to a comm.is.s,ion ... one of the
greatest questions now before the
American people-the problem Of
coping with the gunman and the
murderer.
" . . • It is short-visioned mercy
that can .see only the criminal in
the
dock and failed to see the
desolated home of his victims or the
welfare of the genera.I public that
fhould be our chi,ef concern.
"If by executing a worthless scounrel we can save to .society valuable
citizens, I believe it is our duty to
do it.
I . appear before you as an

advocate .. of the right of the public
to de~end' itself again,St murderers by
the .0;11~ w~aW!\- t]J.at murderers fear
_;_the :_!ij>a,}h pe,i,.a.ltY.,''
'

RECORD, BOSTON, MASS.

#\PR 21 ~19'3.'\

' ,.

,

\ \~·-~:!J';/>:~ ·-

MORNI.NG GLOBE, BOSTON,

APR \ 3 \93\

GIVE LAW TRAINING
OF VARIOUS STATES,
26

Ask More Education
T.han Masi:raohusetts

HERl\
OF C\

!I

Equfyalent of High School study
Demanded fn Some

Includes

~ty-Bix: St!ates and the District of
ColUD1bia. requtre n:t.ore education 1'roni
'!e~:diu~!'!!~~.~c!'~n.t!1~~:
:nual :review- o:f leg&! education. just
issued by the carnegie Foundation For
the Adva:ncen:J.ent o:f 'I'eac.h.ing..
:&ra.ssachusetts requi7-ea the <eQUiVa.lent of two. years in an evening high
- school.
The Axne.rica.n Bar
Uon. require a · the eq uiva.lent o£ t.wo
Y'eara: in. college. sta.;e.s ·th.at r.neet. this
requirement a.re ~Ole?
··~Connecticut,.
Kansas. Montana..
Wisconsin and 'Wyontlngi
l D:J.eet i t
in l.933..
-_ :··
The equivalent
cation.
.Ls
de:a::n
District
of' ·
Co

ohn
Toastmaster for
That Evening

Time
Fan

.A.sSOC1a.-1

.Louisia.na,. Maine.

i

Odds and ends of interest:
Day-i
light savings tin1e begins in Massa-!
chusetts o!l Sunday, April 26~ thisi
year • .. • Under the Constitt.ition,1
since 1780, only one Governor in this
Commonwealth has resigned from·
office • • • He was \Villiam B. Wash-,
r,at''l.'1,l' ~ 1 - - . •• _.,_.,,,.~-...,._., __
aio::>J-nJ.. ·lb J:
ed

($Hl·t~l"Jt. Sl1J"l$')

Ma.s.sa.c.hu.setts evidently .follows th.e
request of .the ..A.Ul.erica.n Bar Association by adn:J.itting .menibers only after
exa..zn.iliations by a. central board.
It
is ~ course ixnpossible t.o co:m.pa.re "the
difficulty of these exa.2nina.tions Pr the

~!..~0~~°!t1~~irh:;:rre!:~t~fu ~::

t{S!U.l'J';\ t{S!U!,iJ >1'!;[

01i·zs tt•,u-'"A<>A·!'!::> ·r""

~sn

Le11al. Education

aJ?!$lnO .1o.,a:
ot·£$·ttsiu.111A .,,,4s ·11?:il

aa. difficult to pla.c. this

State with regard to th• legal ~uca.tion. .-quired. .M~sachuaett~ require•

y.a.ra .full tune under p.roper
direction. :£or those who atudy in offlcea..
th.-..

, I

~

follow t.he request ,~.C. Qi-e Al:oertC8.?:1,.--Ba.:r
Aasocfation that such. ~ ( l ~ o d 0£ .study

bo not a.d:intt.ted.
,
·~"""··-'·: :
Certain. States do : n o t . ~ t admt•-

law

·

'*
*

s£·t$· """P.l ..-ettil!l,>,:J;

'"'o'Y.,..,•.,. • • · · ..,.,qqn~
qsn..JiI"

I
!

I

tt::>U:!-I~
uf-l"S i:

96 • $· · • · · • • ·tt•!"-'"A uv•v
am!<nO ·;bi:
(£l·J$--<>Dl'*A S£"tS)

qs1u.111:A

':i:n ~!!e :.~~;:in.;~~il~:'a!~aha;:~ _-,~
:~~=: ::xle:~!r!i~~2;: ~~!JPC:: ,~· :
be inter.Polated :l,nt,o .. tho
aehool

va.ca.tion.

'

-1-'4 "1"$)

(s.A:•Q £

I

~~~- ~!;~~ ~~":!:°:n~we y:;:g1s8t!~

of this di,strict, and the only De·~<>cratic member
of
the Governor"s
! Council, next Thursday evening, April
at the Hot~l Bradf~rd.

· £1.ls

.{e:r~i!t

~ct~1..law !JChOOl ~ d
in, general,. when on& at.udJ.94 :for th•
bar in & laW office &lon.e0 'the Ka.a.a-:
chuasetta period' ;Ia tho average. though
befo.re he begin& ~~:.....1!_u!,ly. Colo:r:rado.,
Kentucky,. "West. V~ia.":~d Wyoi:ning

dered Honorable Jam.es H- Brennan
r

u111:is qstu.Jll A

pa.s~a; out !Of 754,. or ~ ~.e~:t., ·
.It ia alznost

ngr'

..,.'.£,.

Minnesota.,. .Missis
Pen.nsylva.nia..
Carolina.,. South
Vermont. Wa.sbingto

A testimon·ial banquet which will
attended by more than a thousand
people. among them civic and a,tatewide personages of note~ will be ten-

asod.tnd ts..Jau.>f>

·

This is a unique affair in that it is
the first time that Mr. Brennan has
consented to be feted by his many
friends throughout greater Boston ...
But on this occasion they could not

·v9·ls
ctt..tea s
ares)

New York deina.nds six :m.ontha in
an o.ffl.C& for those who have •tudied
in a ;full-tune day la. w · school. In the
three-ye~ training d..n New Jersey a.t
lea.st .l.2 n:t.onths m.u.st be in a.n office
an.d tho rule :la th• aauie in NJ.ode
Iela.nd..
··
·
·

~~!4:d

sz·g:$ .... ,i)::tPd

.:i:-er~.Sa}J

~ ...........

Three Years ~ e d

•·xeM. .>:J.St?d
~p ue::, ·q1-*

iuoq::

'},~~,;~

i:

ori:$· · • • • · ·qs!~~1an1f°},i

J:n. genera.I the trai~ing for day and

i:

or

.full -tune la'W schools required is Ulree
yearsp as in Ma.ssacb.usetts. and for

night or part-titn.e s-chools four yea.rs.

The .AJ:nerican Bar .Association aake
three yea.rs of .:full th:n.e or a longer
c ~ s e equivalent in the :nu.m.ber or
working hours of pa.rt-ti:ne study..
The Ma.ssa..c.husetts d.a.y law scb.oola
-w-hich
prepare candidates in three
yea.rs a.re those of Ha.rva.rd. 0 Boston
:University and the day ,co.._u.rse at .Bos-

•.•••.. ~1~':i"!i\

(t,9·t$-Dl"A S1Z"Z$)

qSJtUU A .tOOJ.!;}

a2::J.u1::efii:;

{ .;:r<;~!;:!eth.;'1!.~1:r-:!!~
~
schools ~t Boston. College. Northea.s;l

!

~ - Up!y~rsity. Portiit. Law School (for

~;;~:n:::: ·;;,.1;d N~i~~: ~~~si~;
'Scl\~Ol
oz

:Wo~e.ster.

La'W
.'

at

Springfield.

and.

1
I•

.~
-- "i

L:
JA....'"!\£lTIS H. BRENNAN

be denied~ and Jim will be the re<:ipit
of
considerable
well-mer1.ted
~~aise in recognitio_n of his lon:.
yea1.s of public service to tl_le com
munitY and to the Democratic party
as T~~\roungest member of the <"?overnor•s Council, Jim Brennan,. enJoys
the distinction of being a close personal confidant of Gover_nor Ely. He
is also the only lawyer 1n the councilThe speakers for the occasion include Governor Joseph B. Ely. U. S.
Senators David I. "Walsh and Marcus
A Coolidge, Mayor James M. Curley_.
Distri~t

Attorney

"Wi,l~iam ....
~-.. ~-~;~~..:

c •.

J/

MORNI.NG GLOBE, BOSTON,

_--_-_.--iiiliiiiiji/
!\PR \ '3 '\93\

,,,,,,,..=====-.:.;=·=·~=·=======-=i~r

GIVE LAW TRAINING
•i
OF VARIOUS STATES,
26 Ask More Education
Than Mass•aohusetts
Equivalent of High Sch8ol Study
Demanded fa Some

Includes Everything From Daylight. .,
Tim~ and Aquarium Fish to
~or
Farming and Prison Cost
· , rsnsn.
·T
-

'.l"w'enty-six St!ates and the Dtstrl:ct ~
ColUJ:nbia. require more education ~ . t n

in~~.

!e~~~:_!~;.~c!'~nt~~~:
nua.l ;evie'W of legal ed.uca.tion just
issued by the Carnegie Fou.nda.tio~ For
the Advancexnent o:J: Teaching..
·

,.,..

le~~a~~s;t;:r:~u=s.!!!~~ j
.A.ssoeia.-1

.school~

The

,An:terica.n

BY GORDON BARRY

Bar

~~!'rs r~~:ii!ge~·.s~~~:t~::!t ~~
·· Connecticut.

· requ.iren:ient a.re qo1
Kansas. Montana.. .

Day-'
Odds and ends of interest:
light savings time begins in Massachusetts on Sunday, April 26, this:
year • • • Under the Constitution,\
since 1780, only one Governor in this'
Commo1nvealth has resigned from
office .... I-fe vvas William B. Washburn and quit May 1, 1874, havingr
just previously been elected a United/
States Senator • • ..
.

rk. "Wiscon·:.wu! .m.eet 1t

sin and Wyo~g~~-

in 1933.
- ;"' ·
·.
The equlval
! eduiai:
q.e
laware.
District
or
entucky,.
.Louisia.na,. .Maine
iga.n,.
Minnesota.,, .MiSl3i
exico,,
:f'>ennsylvanla,,
&outh
Carolina,. South Da.k.o
es.see,.
Vermont. Washington
Massachusetts evidently .follows the
.request of .the .Azn.erican. Bar Association by admitting Jnembers only after
exa.zn.ina.tions by a. ,central boa.rd..
It
is of course iznpos.si:ble to co1npa.re the
difficulty of ,t.hese exa.ininations tpr the
'5-trictnes• oz their n:iarking. Tho last
bar .-x.a.nrl.nat..iona h,ere fesit,.ted. in ;199
pas~a: 01.;1.t ,p~ 754,. o:i: 2fi ~.e!!~

cation

,.,,

1

WHERE THEY WERE BORN

~;t~r! 1A~~tb~;~

\

J:t ia -alm.ost as difficult 'to place this
Sta.to with. regard t.o th• legal *1uca7"8,,r•

.tun

tu::no

under

~c~~i~~~.

proper

t:our at a .uiB'ht achool ..

BUc.h.

ut.'~~ :'I;

in

:!1°~t:::011!=s

vacation...

~:;

~Udy

here's

~~~=? ~i;,d
~<?o~·

~

at

1~

&JJ.<I.

·"Wo~~--:er;·~~ijif~i:'jii'i[ii(ir.;;".;~J\
L
D:~,JJ,l~l'l

·1~

get

t
\N:

a.qgry

1

·2111:~}[ tl~~~~-I~~f j

Gives A way Salary
A

Logan

of

1
j

~~~~-i~~tl,;:P;~!! t!!!"i!c~:x;ri~o tl~ef fi[i~! I

Harvard Medical Unit-killed overseas
. • • City Councillor Clement A. Korton
o-r the I-Iyde Palk distl ict, 11.a s four
college degrees •
. he acquired all of
them over a. period of .::lO years ~..-hen
attending night schoo'!s • . • also, Norton gives every cent of his $2000-a-year
salary as councillor to cl"Iarity . .
It ,va.s Horace J\Iann ""'-ho so.id • The
comn"Ion school .is the greatest
disco.-ery ever U"Iade by 1nan" _ •
often
after finishing his da:1,'s duti€s at tbe
State House; ·uo'.-ernor JI:ly v.. al ks back
to 11.is suite at ,the Copley-PJaza Hotel,
to refresh. bi.ms.elf. . . • and it's ::;u1·prising, too, · ho-.v :fe-w passing pede-strians
1.-e~ognize hi.-ri1 . . .
F;p'd"'t,f'~-fi'<T<>

,-,•f·,,.~

•••--"

,. _ _ • - -

• •---

uuJpUUBQ

aq'.J,.

i1:nr oqA\.

Puu

pu"Bfn"u~ UJ a.t..n ::J.OU p1no;>

•uos .:ra~unoA paJB.:i2S1:P auros P!P
a~~q-l :p: A.i:.ru.-:, fa1n1voo sno.1n+uaAp1J:
mos PICT. 4.S..10::,.1..1:.Ia+ unrl?UI PIO aq:J..'

!q.M.

b

\ap~uj-"1_ ut s.:i:-suao ..t:apJ;:)

U!

:aui:au1s

SB.M.

.M..OI q;:>:io::>s u "ssoR ·n ·.ftA
"li.'..'.J.'.J.lP .l."Blla;> u S'UM +1 a.xaqllt\..
mpuor:r
sauroJ" '.l! .IOJ: .2uos S!lfJ.
~ U!2"J.J:O ;,:nn '.J_noqu :iqnop ou SJ a:1aq~
"Ul3H LUUS SJ. aUIUN Al~n SJ
R:131
',q:J. J:O .xoq'.J.U""B ~s:a:anr un.&.'"I :3-0 a+u+s
/Al'.J.UU aq.J. 'llUIOqup[Q UJ UA\.OU"'{ U~M..
a;>uaq •1saM.q::i,nos aql UJ a:J.J.H:~A'B.J.
z10 UU uaaq aA.uq 0:J. pfl3S SJ q;>Jq.M.
,~u 1d sri:n ;i:o s:auos aq+ J.O .I.}'Q.'.\.OUV
l"s.Mo.I!3 uaa.1~.. sp.:ioM aq::i, J:O uondn.i:.:io;,
~ :; SJ .,.sao2uy..t2n •sau;>J.xawv .i:0,1 am"BU:
/"'"\u;>"Ixa:rq aq'.J. '.J.'Rl.l'.J. pua:aa1 ~ SJ a.1a11l puu
1- 0 • •saqsn-a ~:nn .M.~.1.0 u~a.:1-0., '.1:~~
!~~J""IX~l\L aq:J., 2upnp .~.1:a1p10-s UlJ:;>J.I.aarv~q+ • q:gA\. .1:urndod :auos 11 ~uno_J: aq .&:nu:c
~.uaJ"S;)P J:O aun aq1- u1 a.1:aq..M.amos ~duq
'.xad 'OS J:I u."S0-qSU'H aq;J.--.M.O.l.~. -U~0,.".' ·-

ln:nPawo;
VS-L

UJ

wo;,i

m.M.

~:J.l ·saJ"U.Il +! ::,:sq:,. uo1u1do atJ.+ pa~u~~
\; 13 q ~n:1.1:J" auo ·.&:n:.xnJ"sqo ~'!. p~t~~A ,s~
\n.fluo s:u ·suoriu.1:aua.2' .-ioJ. +sa.M..:q.;in.o.s-~~n- tll :auns uaaq S'Bq qJ"Jq41. u's;:.~u'"I.'.}q:J. ""-0.1-n uaa.:co,,. '2iuos u W'?.XJ:
sai{u::,. aAoqu ·tq pa.I.Iaa:a.x ~u,14

1
,-;:rr

!~~~-~a~~J~t~~i-s·e_l~~ttheir Goyer.noi--s '):.Q .s!'lrve :for :four years
.
. n.nd only one elects for a three-year
term • • • .that State is Ne"W Jer-sey . . •
Joseph

..1:0

:cuaod ,~u.ing :i..xaqoa O'.J. l[;>UQ. ~:i.s~;:.;°:u:'

:Uiaverick squa1 e in East ~o~ton is
nan"Ied after San"IUel l\,Iaverick, the first
settler there • • • Residents, as such,
of vvashington, D. C • do not enjoy the
franchise to vote on na tlonal or local
n1atters • • . the same holds true regarding yoting :for President



District Attorney Thomas F
Aioriarty
of the ,, estern Massachusetts district
v.-as one of the greatest :footbalI pla.) ers
Georgetown University ever had . . .
You can call Los Angeles on the telephone any day tirne and talk three minutes for. only nine dollars
.


Atto.rney-General
Joseph
E
V\Farner
te.:cL_Ch~s c o ~ t i o n a l Jaw at t h e ~
.f~chool

.
.
he has been
doing this the past seven )'·ears~ in fa.ct



of th-e total of all ve~~ta ble:s,
exc,a,p.t.... pot t"?es
eze: -eEl
I
D.o.":lton,
over 35 'per cent are trucked in' 'from
1·arms within aPProxin,ately e. 50-niile !
1 a.di us of this city
. . •
.New Yorl-c suite pays the high.est
gubernatorial salary o:f any of the 48
States in the Union • _
the arnount
is $25,000 a year .
. . and t11.e 10,vest
paid EA.lary to any Go,·ernor is in South
r.>aH::ota



the an"Iount there is
only $3000 a year

incJdentally,
:.',l of the 4S States in the Unio11. provide
executive mansions .for their Governors • • • Massachusetts does not, of
course • • •
.
,
T"Wenty-four of the States, including I

n.epresentati.-e

aln

2ll'!S +s.rg ':J.sud
iuuca u :inoqu pa:-crsu a.-ra.M. suonsanb ou
µa1.vk.\. ;ia-q.uo.1:J. UE~1.:x.aurv aq+ Ol pay.

I

~n~:!a~~

(.UO.I.IU\'.U1q

t' s~uuq aql · :auop3 n

Eas"t Bos1:on Mavericks

aai:ne in :Rhode
··
·
·

Springtleld

doesn't

~ q;>Jq.M. 'UO"!S.10A qS1{.a"U'::E[ tBU!2i!..:10 aq'.J,.
o.:cJ: pa.'au1nF> snq:a·w,; •uo1s.xaA .1:1awl s;
puB a2UU.I 'BillOqUPIO aq:,. uo :n: !1'U13S
uo s.&.oq&o~ ~Hl+ +na
t s..M.oa:~ auo

y·oung~
graduate of Harvard College:
e.nd ot the Harvard Law School • . . '
Youngman, by the way, ~ as born in
~VHiiamsport, Penn.

B:~~: :8~~:s1:;

Law

she

~~~~!~~~t-G~!e~i~~

Three Years ~ e d

~

hoping

n.an is a

lea.st 12 n1.ontb.s must be in an office

In general the "training for day a.:nd
.full tinl.e law schools required is three
years., as in Massachusetts. a.nd for
-night or part-tiln.e schools four yea.rs.
Tb.& An:Lerican. Bar .,A..ssociation aak.S
three yea.rs of full tizn.e or a longer
course equivalent in the nu.znber or
working hours of pa.rt-time study.
The Massachuset.t..s day law sch.ool.S
-w-hich prepare candidates in three
yea.rs are those of Harvard. Boston
University and the day eo.._urse at Boston College.· Those w-hich require four
yea.rs· are the afternoon. and evening
schools. at Boston College. Northeast~ Up.iv~rsity. :Portiit. La'W School (£or

~;11

"W"ith us :(or that one • • • legally it's
Graves Lighted and not Graves LWht
• • • Congre~sma n Pehr G
:fiohnes of

~:;:~;~:::each°:~
·

rule Js t.he

js

under side

.
.
all other species o
flounders are white underneath,


.
In case a ~ body cares, the :safety pin
~as invented in 1854 •


Congress'W"oman Edith Nourse Rogers of Lowell
"W"as born in Saco, Me. in 1881




New York deznandl!!I six moJ;1tha :Lu
an om.ca £or t}l.ose 'W'ho have etudied
in & f'ull-1ti-zne day law· scliool.. In the
tb.ree-,yea;l" training tin New Jersey at
and tho
Island,.

so

0

Certain State• d.o lllot perinlt ad.mi••
sion tp the bar to c:andid;a..te~·..who have
no offlee training. . PeD.i:i1)~tvan1a. requires a.t least six.· _Dl.t?ntp.s work~ an

J

1

4
~u:J

!:J~ t;;~~~1;f~1,}.nfar as
t~°eut::ni1;os:~;-chokeJ
captivity.
known, ii$
!~!~!;st~~this "tto"un~~~ colored on the
the
1!~~-~!
one of
variety

1!

before he begins ~~;'1Bt1:1~Y.. Colo:NJ.do,.
Kentucky,. Wes~ V~~,.a;id Wyom~g
folloW" the request ·~f. ~ . ~ e ~ : a a ; i . .

.:-.ss=a.~:im:t

;~fa~;o _e~ch_ i~

j

;rad •• U! U~H:[;:>:n:a ~;:>Ug: J.O ·.&u;;q.u~P!;:>UJ
,uui::i:i:.:co aq::J.) 'suap..1uu :,.uaAo:::) auu"I,

on~e~"I~~~crt. forLi~~~;~i;ra;~~
Switzerland . • •
[
There is a total ,of 253G fisll., represent-I
:Ing 66 different varieties, at the Marinq

J:n, general,. when on& •tu.die.-. :for the
b&r in dL 1&'W office &lone,. the Kaaaa.-:
chuaetta period' ,ta ·t.he average. though

~r~. !;:~~•.~~u,:~:~ey~~:giS~!

~~v~~
i:1!h1\~{:fa;: d~y- i~
:foreign lands and 21 in other State J
• • . nine of the Representatives v, er
born in Canada • .

six in Irelan
and the same number in Sv.reden • .
!f~:s.e~~ng~~:im:~ [
1

tio:a. ;sequired. M:~sa.cl;luaett~ reQuire•
direotion .f'or thoa. -who atudy in om.cea,.
tJJ.re., yea.rs at a da.y law ~chool ~ d

~

os :,.6u-s1 siq'.J. •q:ano-i.n ·.....::nrua.:r UI
•.&.BPO'.l- &.UA\..PUO..-I8. uo ;auns 2U!0<\

·l .&s..M. sn puy :auos s1ql P!P MOH .
u·s:nq,. SJq J:O 0UO SU.h.\.
'UBH mus s1 aw:uu AJ\I,. puu c.s1uuap

One-quarter of the 240 membe1 s of th<:!
Jl.fa:5sachusetts House of Re:Presenta.,

Legal Education
tbr..

ft - ----~ ~n

I


-a.x

•s.1a~.1:0M.

~Ao~~~~

,,.

P-ao.xn~.i:

ai:a:13:a

~-q.L

~.&:1a~p:~ads
o~2au aq::,. .p~u:

a~u!;l~~~~[~~~i~fl 66y~l1_fGar-

rett B_ Kiley, Joseph Blake, D
Mahoney; music and talent, Jos Shanahan (chairman), Thos Powell, Harry
Murphy, William Magner, Jos. Leahy;
invitatio.p.S. James Gilbride (chairman). Daniel McBride·;· Jos. Hurley.
Hugh Ma1aghy; ti.ckets, John Cashin
(chairman), John Lea1y, John
Kelle)', .M..i._.chael McNamara; printing,
John Dohe.rtY l:clr~l'an), John MCTier,n.a.,;,.,

_ --·

.• r-' ·

~~"."'/

-

:J.:

J

!:

26 Ask More Education
Than Massachusetts

~

... -

Equlralent at High Sclrool study
Dema'!ded In Some
4!l"wenty-Bb: S-tes and the D:lstrlct. of
Oobunbia. require :znore education .tro:r:n.

!e~~'!:"!'!.!~!.~C:~~a.nt~~~=
nuaJ. revie-w o:f legal educa.tion just
issued by the Carnegie Fou.n.da.tio~ For
the Adva.n.ce:r:n.ent of Teaching.

Includes Everything From Daylight. .,
Time and Aquarium F.ish to
~or
Farming and Prison Cost
.
+
.vhich will

I

le~8:~a;!:~;;::r:~u=•Ba.r Associa.- J,
e!!:;m7~
school.
The A.n:le.rican.

BY GORDON BARRY

;i:~r;:i~T!g~•st':..E~~!f~!!t ~ :
requirem.en.t a.re ~olor'
Kansas. Mon.tan~.
sin and Wyo:m.irig~

,....,

··

!D.T3:;3;quivale~t·:i'
cation 1a: denia.nd
District
oJ: Col
L.ouisla.na.. Ma.Ine.
Minnesota.,. .Mississi
Pennsylvania.., Rh
Ca:rol.ina.,. South.
Vermont, W-ash.ingt
aska.
Massachusetts e-vidently .follows th&
request of. the .A.J:nerican Bar As~ocia.tio:n by a.din.it ting me:m. bers only ai"ter
exa.Dl.i.n&tion.s by a. central boa.rd.
It
is o.f course il::npossible to compare the
dlftlculty of' these exa.niina.tions Or t.b.e
&trictnes• o:f their m.arking. Tb.,e laat
bar .xa.min.ations h,ere fesuj.ted. in l.99
pa:111~.K out 9f 754,. or: ~ pere_ep~ ·

--

WHERE THEY WERE BORN

\

Legal Education.

J:t. ia -a.li:n.ost a.a difficult '1o pJac. this
State -with regard to th• legal ~uca.tiou. Jr:eQ.Uired.o M¥S&C4uaett• :require.II
three. 7.ara Kull timo und8r proper
direction. :£or those -who atudy in office.a.
~ yea.rs at a
day l&'W .school and
~our at a :night ~chool..
· ..
' ·
Xn, general,. when one atud.1- 'Kor the
bar in & l&'W office alone. th• U-aaaachuaett.. period' ;Ia. the average 0 though
som.e Sta.tea require f'our years. and
others requir• the- .c,:a.nd.J,date to register
before he begin.a ~~~-'.'Jl!'f,;µ~y .. Colo::tra.do.
Kent-ucky,, W'est v4gtn~:,a.nd Wyo.tnin.g
follow- the request 9'£. th:e ...A:.m.erica.n.,-Ba.:r
Aaaociatlon that auch nie:tliOd oC .-tudy
•be not admitted.
· ·'\..,, _,.. ·
Certain. St.a.tea do :ilot pe'Tm!t; admi•-

sion t.,, the ·bar to candida.t.es..who have
no

office

~:~:~
be

training.

:PelinS:Yi.Va.n.~

re-

:'ix1e:!!r:1xpe~?~~-~~!if1C::
1:nterPolated Ulto .. tho la.w ,scb.ool

vacation.

·

New York dei:n.a.nds six month• in
ome& :£or those- who have 111tudied
in. a. f"ull-~e day Ia w · school. In the
three-yeaF training d.n New- Jersey at
lea.st .12 n:iont.hs znu.st be in an office
and the rule 1a the aai:ne in Bhode

.an

Island.

·

·

i

- !I

In general th~ training for day and
f'ull t.i?n.e law schools required is three
yea.rs,, as in Massachusetts. and for

-~:!t ~~=;;itn~:c~~~i~':in.y~~:,;
!~':e:v:,4~v:ie!~ i n ~ e !~t=g~
working hours of part-tune study.
1

0

f

The Ma.ssa.chusetts day law schoOia

l

-which prepare candidates In three
yea.rs a.re those of Harvard. Boston
:University and the da.y co..._urse a.t J3oston College. Those -wh:lch require four

l

~

i I;:~~s~:t 1:"!st~~e~~~e~n:o~!::l~
Up.iy~rsit.y, Forti& Law Sch<>ol (for

! ,~:~~?
~~or

~:i1Za1:;
Springfield and.

~~d ~~~M:

o.:f'

:wo:~e_ster.

La-w

a.t

n~.µn~.n
5Lcec~-..._:___c_ ___ ,' _ : : \

=--~

_

1t>e at.tended by more tl~a~ a thousand
people, an1ong them c1.v1c and statewide personages of note, will be tendered Honorable James H. Brennan
of this district, and the only Democratic member
of
the Govern.or's
Council, next Thursday even.in~, April
16, at the Hot~l Bradf«=!rd.

"

I

j

One-quarter of the 240 membe_rs of th1
l\-Iai5sachuse~ts House of Representai
tives were not born in this State • •
36 of them first sa \V the light of day i
foreign. lands and 21 in other State
• • . nine of the Representatives "\\,'er
born in Canada .
.
.
six in Irelan
and the same number in S\veden • •
tJu1ee in Germany and t"\Vo each in Rus
1Si.aj, E:p.gland and Poland .
• not t.
niention one apiece for Italy, France
Scotland.
Den1nark,
Lithuania
an
SW'itzer1and
• •
There is a total of 2536 fish. represent
fng 66 different varieties, at the Marin
P~rk Aquariu1n in South Boston . .
.
e.nd, incidentally, the only hog-choke
in captivity, so :far as is kno\vn, i
there, too •
.
.
the hog-choker is
species of the flounder and is the on]
one of this ·variety colored on the
under side
.
.
.
all other species o
.flounders are v..--hite underneath,
.


In case al"\,YbOdy cares, the safety pin
-w-as invented in 1854 • .
• Congress~oman Edi.th Nourse Rogers of Low-ell
~vas born in Sa.co, Me. in 1S81



here's hoping she doesn't get a11gry
"W'ith us for that one • • • legally it's
Graves Lighted and not Graves LWht
• . • Congre.ssman Fehr G
I-Iohnes of
W"orcester -was born in Sweden
.


Lieutenant-Governor ""\iVillian1 S. Young:rnan is a graduate of 1-i:arvard College
e.nd of the Harvard La -w School .
• .
Youngman, by the way, ~a.s born in
"Villiamsport, Penn.

'-

~ I'

''1
".'
~

East. Boston Mavericks

·

Three Years ~ e d
r

-C'

Odds and ends of interest:
Day-l
light savings time begins in Massa.-i
chusetts on Sunday, April 26, ~hisi
year • • • Under the Constitution,!
since 1780, only one Governor in this
Commonv..·ealth has resigned from:
office . . • He was VVilliam B. Wash-,
burn and quit May 1, 1874, havingrju.st previously been elected a United States Senator . . . .

n.necticut.
-Wisconl n1eet it

t;

''

.l\.iaverick square in East Boston is
nan1.ed after Samuel l\t!averi-ck, the first
settler there • • • Residents, as such,
cif "'\Vashington, D. C • do not -enjoy the
franchise to vote on national or local
rna.tters • • • the same holds true regarding voting for ]?reslden t



Distrjct Attorney Thomas F
~.1oriarty
of the western Massachusetts dist1:ict
v.-as one of the greatest :football pla.) ers
Georgetown University ever had . . .
You can call Los An·geles on 1.he telephone any day tirne and talk three minutes for. only nine -dollars



Attorney-9"enere..l
Joseph
E
VVarner
} ~ i i o i _ - 1 a 1 _ l°:w 1~t 1; ; : : ~1
-doing this the _past se·ven ;years, in fact

• ·•
of the total of all veg~taJ:~les,
e x ~ potnt s
_e=e! eel
l t
Dotlton,
over '35 'per cent are trucked in" :from
:farins ·within approxin1.ately a
50-rn.ile
' 1adius of this city • ~ •

)

I:

_,
!

g~~:~:na~~r:1 :!~~y

po~y:n~heof h~~~e::
Stntes in the Union • • . the an1.ount
is $25,000 a-:- ear
.
and the 10,vest
paid se lary to any Go, ernor is in S0ut11
TYakota
.

.
the an1ount there is
0

j

. ;_\

I

•·
~ig;:;·
/

U1~~;:!d~1;~:..VJ~ b-.~'""--"'"'m"'"~"'-~

~{'I,;~ :~~4Sa si::ers i~ t he •
executive mansions for their Governors • • .. ,Massachusetts does not, of
course • . .

Twenty-four of the States, including
MassachU.s~tts, ·elect
their
Gove1nor
eve1y ·two-··y:eai-s • - .·• ·23 ·or them ·erec-f
their GoyerJ1.ors t.o s~rve :for :four years
. . . and only one elects :for a three-year
term • • • .that State is New Jer.sey • • •

JA..'1:ES H. BRENNAN

be denied, and Jim will be the re~ipien t
of
conside.rable
well-~er1ted
praise in recognition of his long
years of public service to the community and to the Democratic party
as well.
The youngest member of the '?overnor's Council, Jim Brennan., en.Joys
the distinction of being a close personal confidant of Governor Ely. He
is also the only lawyer in the coun-

Gives A -way Salary
RepresentatiYe Joseph A
Logan of
Hyde Park ,,as right next to the first
Ame.dean private-Oscar Tugo of the
Harvard Medical Unit-killed overseas
~ • • City Counci1lor C'len1ent A. Norton
o-f the Hyde Paik district, has :four
college degrees •
• be acquil ed all of
them over a period of 20 years "When
attending night schools . . • also, Norton gives every cent of' his $2000-a-year
salary as councillor to charity
•.
It "\l\"a,s Horace .l\:.1ann v.-·ho said • The
comi-nou school .is the greatest
discovery ever 1nade bv 1nan'' . • • often
after finishing his day's duti€s at the
State House; 'Go'vernot" Ely walks back
to his suite at the Copley-PJaza I-I.otel,
to refresh,. bln1$elf.
. • and it's surprising, too, ho-w f'ew
pede,strians
recognize hil"l:1 • •
1
0
ci~.,.t~1;:tyc~~em~;;:,se:1
~~;;~l1ti~r ~~::
ning schools . . • theJ.e are ut pre~eut
25 502 .) oungst"ers attending kindergartens throughout the Commonv,,-ealth • • •
F'arming in Massachusetts has dropped
of'f considerably in the last 30 years • • •
Dr. Arthur VY. Gilbert, State Agriculture Comrnis-sioner, points· out that in
1900 there i.vere 37,715 farms here . . . in
1910 the nun1ber v,rcnt do,, n to 36.917 . . .
10 year~ Jater it had dropped to :.:2 001
.. • • and now there are only 27,0().) farm,11
in 1\1 assa-ch uset ts . . .
·
1:--Io,v much ,,·ould you guess the per
diem Cost of n1.aintaining one prisoner
at the State Prison in Charle::;to,Yn?
~
• • ,vell. the answer is 43 cents a
day • • . this covers everything ,such as
food, clot.hes. equipment and ,vhatnot
• • • as of .A pr il 1 th"'fu1 e was a total of
l,08·1-,777 bool..:s in the Boston .Publlc Libr~ry in Copley square . . .

passing
~i

I

cilThe s-peakers for the occasion include Governor Joseph B. Ely, U- S.
Senators David I. Walsh and Marcus
A. Coolidge, Mayor .James M. Curley.
District Attorney William J. F~ley~
senator John -:f°· Buckley, C~unc1llor
Thomas H. Green, .Judge H. Charles
Donahue, Fire Commission.er Edward
Continue~· on Page 4

_,

lPR 1 2HJ31

1.(

1 tfL

dbitions of the Wee

~_:_FIFTY-SIX

PAGES

ar

te



TWO

* * * *

!i

1tings by Colin CampbeU coop
~m~~h;~:~n~~x~7t\~iob:
Galleries.

C1\'TS

CONRY CALLS HULTMAN.
!.~~~:1r:~~::~~ -,
1 ' 'MATTRESS \fOTER'; HITS
A1
. ..
RAIDS AS '~U~lCITY'
'Ii'

••

the Guild of Boston Artists 1
~1laneous exhibition o.f me1nb
through this ,v~eli:

.....

Sloane's exhibition -of
landscapes
continues
thro

t'·ian F.

~Jc:;.t oils, 11~v3.;,.te: c.,olors and pri 1
w~1~ b:ni
of

!.

~on

J

!ntings by 30 Arr,erican artists
tle Casson 9-ant::ries thro~.;b_
.
"'
'
nd.Scapes bY the late Edmund
·ett of Boston are on exhibition
TWeI,\tieth Century ./,Club thrQ

,1 1:5



"

,./~/

a'.ter colors by Agne~ ~\-. Ab
i of the art-department of ·\Ve

e:.~rl -

TR A.rr1c CHIEF

'.I - -~:.°'J~,:>";J'.ff"'.e' - .;;, .:-,,,, ·;,;~ -:;;·;;,,,c ,,;;:;; It{,i_
~
employc of the :SO.Sten Elevated
Duxbury declare the clams dug there to
and the present affluent condition
be supl'eme, and that the name Duxbury Igq l/rfre ~..,,,1
1
i:"f~::i,;Ii'i::1!:!f!fE,,}'t~•;f: f;'oConry sa1<:! in ope!1mg h1~ attacF:-·c~~~ lfqi l, - -"f!~1~m'.;_uscl,;",;,'h,o clk~age"':!
tl,;•~~a
entitled to a pensmn of $1300, out
of the slender treasury of the EleA certa1.n public offi.c1.al, police
c <:}n~
tl4td

FOR BOY

,

~

RIDICULES ACTS
OF POL'iJCE HEAD
I

I

vated, the same pension granted to
a police sergeant on his retirement.
By his own action he establishes
a'h;~l\~c;!~~r~oth~e
i9cs at least to colle?t the pens1on ?f sergeant of police..
;.dev~e~o~~ife~-:;bl~rti~t t~11~~
;,of controversy, anct ridiculed the ponce

!VI, BRIGHTON, IVIASS.

P,?R 1 i

commis.sii:iner of ~Boston, unable to
answer public criticism of the conduct of his department. said he had
;~tr!~~;:y
engage in newspaper
In .:reremiah, a book which l read
many years ago, in my early days of
B~\;t~c~r!~tiv1~ho~l~u~~thhea
-~~~~6JeX:tt~it~eJ ~~in~~~taf~,'i':g

-l

by Boston men, Adams and Otis
1
,_,
riois· associates that

m1ecf.wi~

1931

se~:

J?

wi~~~

~~iiJ.7

htS~€inoOn-

- - ----

~~~--"lt~trES{~ti:~~; D

,;;~, ew England ".;,~~spa;~

"1·

.,. .

.s :~::_Dermott of Garden

,,, those who suc,cessr
e recent bar examina~cDermott, a life-Ion
,f this district, attended th g
~ols and continued his stu~
Su~!;!.?~. School, from
1
~
gfaduated with
1

r;:
l

-· -----.--_

1

·-. •

)-,leath A_t_G_x_r_e_at Porid ~

Th; death of Mrs Edgar Mcini:ri .
; on the 16th, marks the passing Of
member of the oldest family of
1 community, the last of the -Tild~n
·\wnnams family, and lineal des.cend\ unt of Joshua 'IV illiams, a soldiel' in
\ the American revolution, who founded
1 the Williams settlement, so-called, -in
J 1810 now Great, Pond
'.
Mrs ].[c!ninch was general be': loved !Or her many beautiful traits '
'of character, always on the alert for'
every goad work dt:i.d active in the :
soCial life of t11e community wb.~re ,

",, i

;ed th

\!

:~va:s

A.PR i 2 193)

i\

~~e a':t~!tb~f g~~ct{; t~~~:.d·

I
f

.,
1
I

i

.

/
rm

. '

branded his. associate on thi' o
~attress votei-or.e \,:;:;
·/ cal~ apnoint... Cl :v ::or eligibility for Politi-

I

~~~~!"

0

64

s1,erwood

,;~:

~

\

i\

ar

M.edfotd
918.
1

}:l1gb

,1

, ne
1·9222. and frlo9m30ne ls \
\ 1ege in
i h ol in
.
tolkJ 9:Wo manager for a Boa- \
''·., ~~n';.,.~",;';,,,roJ13,DY·
_'
~ ~su ~ ~ .
..
_

1

t .

r~_

,

.

'

-

;o

;r~~~~0!;.:~.;hich Gov

Ely

we.,

I

t

of

sCh·Qo1V:-:s:~;rii~~:;ed from 'T~~~s ~ \

1

1

His .re_marks concerning the police
,comm1.Ss1oner clitnaxed a long standing
feu~ between the. two city offici8.Ls rersul.tmg · from differences over the cooper~tion of the police in enforcing
parkmg regulations
Earli>?r in the day, after the traffic
! conu~ission's meeti11g, Mr- ConrY 1'ln', nounc~d he wiil maI.::c no further state: m~t,s t? !}"le }.).I,",ess unless his associate•
1
, c~~:c1: ·
At the Cxecutive szssion.-Con.~y
1
is sa1.d to·' have been "censored" ancl
".sl:lenced, '_ by other members, among
them C0:m1nissi6ner Hultman
~. A more withering attack on the po..
$rce commis.sionei was contained in a..
I release .se_nt by Conry a.s an abstract
I of the address h-e wa.s to deliver at th~

ed the Ba.r e_xa 11.a1·1estown and '':a~ :

I

me.it, but ,v11

c~ntre :for the tleli;h~ e:~r~/~;

made m the course of a speech,

Massachusetts

fle w·as bo1'n inro~
graduated
f

t~:

;~.::timonia1 dir.ner at the Hotel B:ad:
_1d
James H Brennan of the Gov ..

;---B of 36 su.m~eT \ i
·iell
Franc1s C O ~
d Mrs pati:1ck .
street fOn of l\lr. ~nthose who Qass- '. :
0
O'Brien, was on_~ination this _week \•

I

,.,

CLil\lAXES FEUD
1 The _t1 af!ic commissioner's attack wai:
:

U

~ ~ .

:11~

i liv1::: ~~

l

J d "H~ is an alien of class, not race; hei
oesn t know the city of Boston and is
, now too old to learn," declared Conry

d High and
J'fts G-ad Passes B
.a.

?r

Me.

to the residence at 1

to. Johll

1
r

/

.Rock Glen r o ~
Karl V wotsey__:__J
__

$620

i~g to :B!'Qwrt'2 I.,ett~r~,, Xnc.
T}'le
~Ucbi~e.ets- .a.r~ ,W~dsworth, a:u'bbard a._ 1 -

..

r

j_.

~'!'RAC,;-AWARDED
\
ce~traot ll.as };)eep. a:waJ'ded to George
,:a H. Macomber Company of Boston

tdl make' alt_erattons

~,,,.,,.mond,

'

Traffic Commhsioner J o.se h
· l"Y~ 0;fficially .silenced
,, P A Co,n. ...
after a heated meetin;~;r~~y UOJ?:ni
, burst out anew la.st night in l.S • boa~~
i ;~~m~U:rrel with Police Comm1:!: 1::~;

''

There is a .fram~ house and 2986 feet
of 1and, t~~tte-r t"ated at $1200.

MiUia of !(rs James .Jackson, accord-

I

Attended by Ely
"--------------

'

1 (',

sti'_fet;_--

I

Attack Delivered at DmneJ:1
To Councillor Brennan

'



1s~

·
easies

RAPS APPLICATION
FDR EL PENSION

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

&

~a1ue

--~

Batt~red in
Still Doing-Business,_
He Charges

rr

-

\.

. EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~t ~'"yt1u·tt•i~~I

Speak

,

(By

I

g1·andchildren
At the funeral services Rev Mr~
Tupper paid a. fine tribute to ti:ie de-.
ceas_ed and ~poke WOl'dS Of CO-tni'.Ol t .to :,
the bere~wed There was a great pro.- :
f11Siop. of bee.utiful floral tributes In•:
te-i;ment was in th;e Hillltop cemeterY'• [

,LD, BOSTON, lVIASS.

:

trnfint this
J!lodevelop-

\Il

She was ,

,

1

.

l

b~ ~

c. E. Buttetlield_;Associated
Press Radio Editor)
New York. At1ri\. l:l-(l\. P >-Nocturne, the W ABC program in which
Ann Lea!, organist and Ben Alley,
tenor, appear each night, goes to a
coast to coast netwhrk starting April
j 27. Bea.trice Belkin, soprano, who has
resigned from
the
MetroPolitan
Opera Company, is to devo.te all of
filr time to radio and concert programs Dean Glooson L Arcfl:,.~~bo
! delivers a weekly talk on-WEAF and
otbers on laws tbat safeguard sol ciety, celebrated the first anniversary
: of the series Saturday.

Besides her husband

_.~----~c ·

C3'\

t :q 1

~ . _, -· -

.
!;

she is sur- !
' vlved by her sons Lloyd L,. Bracey ot ,
Great Pond and Capt._Jl'rank E:;trl
Bracey light-keeper at Seguin There [
are 11 grandchildren and two great, '
1

Yr:;zo

. (

------

0

1

fG GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

,

.rr, MASS.

WV-.·:J.S.:J 11

------

J

/ Brennan dinner
a In this ~tatement Comy cited "till ee
.,,rand achievements of the police ct 2 ..
partment'• under the Hultman regime.
PREPAR~D ADDRESS
In his prepared addre.ss, which hs
on:inted at the dinner last night, he
said:
Tht;:

th1ec

grand

achievements

of the police department may be
1eactily summed up; firM t.her£ wos
the dashing raid on the dark tenement down here behind this hotel,
the gathering of the movie pictm e
batteri~, t11e glare of colored
lights, ti,e slaedge m::tn to the right,
t.he reporters to the left, as the
comnti&sioner burst in to discover
the art of making undiluted and
non-syn the tic gin.
The picture was printed in an
the papers It is rumored that a
former Gov,e1 nor of Massachusetts
purchased the original and is having it done over, enhn-ged to he1 oic
proportions to be placed in l1is imn.,.,.·., 1 "'""''"'~····- - .

'MATTRESS VOTER'; HITS
RAIDS AS '':PUBLICITY'
\';'1Jr,~ .
M~IC CHIEF
.

..t~e police• comntis.sione~ was""~ ·,1"' .;;-.:;--;;;;, 'the clams dug there to\I
· - ,,,oo. •• ·-· t1J Duxbury declare ~ ;:,:·,,.,. ,.:;
employc"

of

the

Boston

Eleva. e

and thG- present afflue~t cond~tlon
of that ve~er~ble relic may_ be

is syn"°ony~ous with clam.
And who
ever knew a clam to engage in con-

traced to b1.s 1nvalua.ble services.
He _himself consid~red
';';~i

Ll

t

entitled to a pension

iha$r3~6,
o

?"

ro;;~~~- said in opening his attack:
A

of ,!~e t;1;!0 i;~Jr~:~~gn°!r!~~~1~;

t ·n pub'ic official

police

comm'I:~it~er of __j~~ston, ullable to

va
!
t
h" retirement
~:o~rse ~~e~~,ui~ h~ establishes
his own qualifications to be en-

EM, BRIGHTON, MASS.

answer public cr1tic1.sm of the con-

duct of his department_. said he had
"no dt';sire ~~ engage, in newspaper

i~~:dalf 1:~rt tt>o ~~f1C:Ci' :~: s;~:
co~~rJ:~~~iah, a. book which 1 read
:
~~nirt1 !~5::s~t gf ~~icellight Conry :~~lcrfa;;ti~1iy.~ fo~ri~ri~ed~;r~;
\,.: '
::det~~~r~~;;~~r:~1e i:\%1:ul~~ \i~ ~\'i;e _.:~~:rs<;r;,~fh~{t~\~!1ti~3;;~~ ~t c~~
.;··_._t
------~ , ,- ~-i i~n~~~~~J ;1;:;, ~J:~~r~~n,J;i~
. qOflegians n '· ":· . ·' '
_
--- •
•.~,-, H"
associates, that

,:?R i 11931

0

.--

~S~~o!]--:- ~
ng

many

~Yt:Ut~·,·..,.,.,"'""'"J ,

g_din,',, New Engl-and w'·,01n1 spao,._

:t

fe; · t,./

er

E. M-cDermott o:f Garden
ras among those Who .suc-cessssed the l ecen t b~r examinaY!r McDermott, a life-long
of this district, attended the

lOols and continued his stu-

he Su~~a,v~ School from
hooI he waSgt'aduated with

_o.f.__:_1 92.n _ _~
_

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/
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--~!

:NG GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

AFR

i

2 1931

I

f,· ·

D

"""~ --· · _,,
•"

. \
\

Mclnin
: on the 16th marks the passing of
·1 member of 'the o!dest family of tx:i-e
: community, the last of t,he -Tild~n
i Williams family, and lineal descend ..
unt of Joshua W illi~ms, a sol diet in
J the .American revolution, who found~d
: the Williams settlement, so-caned, -1n
i 1810 now Grea~ Pond.
·\
Mrs. M.cininch was general b~ ..
'. loved !Or her many beautiful traits
'of character, alway5: on tb.e alert for
every good work ~1.1.d acti~e in the
social lile of the community wh~re
she will be greatly missed. She was
1 an artist of :much talent.
.
..
'\
Besides her h.usbau.d she iS su:r
, vived by her sons Lloyd L_. Bracey of
Great Pond and Capt ....J<'rank Ea,rl
Brac.ey light-keeper at Seguin Tl:te:i;e
are 11 grandchildren and two great

(By

1

4"
~

.)rj

1
a,

:

r,!

t.. · ~ s Stetso.;n attended Sim-·
llege ,and Mr Brooks a.tt~nded

EVE~iNG GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~~i}J!:!tba!nbdee!us1!~:

,. i

iALD, BOSTON, MASS.
is~ $6200.

T

j



·

mnelj
o ouncillor Bl:!ennan
Attended by Ely '
C

,(

hc,r time to radio and concert .pro- ,grams Dean Gl~on L. Ar~w:µ'~ho 1

I

'

- - - - -

; Attack Delivered at

: delivers a weekly talk on-WEAF and [
' otbers on laws that safeguard so\ ciety,· celebrated the first anniversary
) ~f ~~ series Saturday.
__

Traffic c o : ~
, ry, officially .sil-"'ns;~~er Joseph A Co_n...
,' after a heated "'
. yesterday noo)lj
I burst out anew ::;tm.g Of. his boarct..
vate quarrel with p ,~1ght in his Pri1 Hultman
°~1ce Cormnissionep
.r
,' • I-Ie branded bi
.
\
! 1?:ission "a ma~t~:oc1,ate on the com/ lives in the cit -~
. '. ote1--o:ce Wha
'i cal _appointmc~ ""C::-u~llglbilit.v for Politiother c_entre f.;r' t
w~o P1 efcrs an/

life "

he dehghts or social

~

an alien of class, not race. h~
mow the city of Bost
, , :
now too Old to learn,'' dec1a1e~n
JJf

J d;:e t

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

cl::,~~

I

CLil\fAXEs FEUD

. rn!~e l~a:c commissioner·s attack

~ a.1
~

te.stimonial ~i:~~:s:t°~ha ;:eech at
Sb=eet.

1'. D.

value

-

; RAPS APPLICATION
FOR EL PENSION;

:Jl,,;;.,,.;..,.-<iii

st.ercl'.1-ty in hon0;r of the en-}

--r,qel.lT.n'-'cu~e

• Spea~easies ~~~~red in
Still Doing-- Busin e.ss,.
He Cha1ges

ij~~!~~~

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1

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:rf;-

1

E.

,

·

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c. ·
Buttel'~eld~AssoCiated
Press Radio Editor)

l

R
lDJCULES ACTS

OFPOilCE HEAD

I\.

.G~\
,

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l

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~ye.rf MASS-

4:S.)n
Jf10

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New 'York, AP.ril 13-(J\.P.)-Nocturne, the wABC program in which
Ann Leaf. organist and J3en Alley,
tenor, appear eacil; night, ~oes- to ~
coast to coast network starting April
27 Beatrice :Belkin, soprano, who has
1resigned from the Metrop0litan
Opera company, is to devote all of

'Mr aa{l 1,{l:'s Ste;tson at their

;·. ~~:!t-0<;::red~·w:x:

0
-:::.

TR.

.

hp.

r-

gr~d~~~d~~!eral services Rev Mr. \
Tuppe-r ))aid a fine tribute to the de ..
ceased and ~poke words of comJirt -~~ i
the bereaved. There was a _gre pr
f-uS!on of beautiful floral tributes In .. I
\ t~~·en t was in tb;e Hilll top cemetery• !

e son of
~ announce the.
en.gage~
. ughter, Miss Vera .Mae
i: Russell Everett Brooks,

t

) S'. •4 ,:1
'ti [d M.a
?i ftr13
Ptrln Ji
·

t

.'


ri~S

th At Great Porid ',

( ,
ea
l ~- .: t!-..
---'. The death of Mrs Edgar

~-

be sup•·eme and that the name Duxbury: gq d[-e "'.- . t /'
'-l{ UA::1,

tb'..

Raym.0I1d>1

shenvood

64
ck G1e1'1 TO" ,~

ford to James H B
e
ote1 Bract ...
- ernor·~ Council, at :~~~:~~ the Gov ..
J the Pnn.eipa1 speaker
Ely w;:i.'J'
His remarks conee1 ning the
.
'commissioner cli ·
POhqi,
/ feud between th:n~:ed ~ lcng. s~nding
,' sulti.ng from di.ff
o city off1c1als rei operation of the ere~ces ?ver the coiP.arking 1egulation.~l1ce in enforcing
/ c Earl.ie~ it; the da.y, after i1:,e traffie
'n~m1:11Ss1on s meeting, Mt Conr"y an ..
'
uncect he will make no further .stat
me~~ tp, t!~~ ~r:e.s.s W11ess his associat;;
?0 17-c~r. At the Cxecutive sc.ssion,.con 1,-v
~ilsa1d
have been "cen..,o.1ect" ai1.d
enced, . by other n1embers, ainon
them ~mmis.si6ncr Hultman
;;<
~. A more withering attack on the po..
J:rc-e commissioner was contained in ~
release .sept by Conry as an abstract

tr:

:.e~~a~d:~~e!'.te wa.s to dcliVer at the
In this statem-ent Comy cited "tl:u ee
gra.nd achievements of the police d 8...
partment'• under the Hultman regime.

PREPARED ADDRESS
I~ his Pl epared add1ess, which hs
~;:{~~ted at the dinner last night, he
Th~ three grand achievement..s;
of t~e poli?e department may be
readily summ0<l np; fir,,:;t there w:,:,;
the dashing 1aid on the dark tenement down he1 c behind this hotel,
the gathering of the movie picture
batterie.s, the gla1 e of colored
lights, t:i.1e sledge man to the right,
the reporters to the left, as the
commissioner burst in to discover
the art of making undiluted l:l.nct
non-synthetic gin.
The picture was printed in aJI
the papers It i:,; rumored that a
former Gove1nor of Massachusetts
purchased the 01Igina1 and is having it done over, enlarged to heroic
proportions to be plq.ccd in his im• .
pe1 ial cmpo1 ium as a centre of
taxicab distribution
The scene Changes and the next
picture show's the police commissioner in pe1sonal command of four
men besieging the castle of Beano
de Breen, · but the castle 1 emain.s
intact
Third
Bi1t f:1P- fiirnl pictw:e .
,<;:hows something akin .:i.nd parall~ ,,,,--

~s~~~_::~~;::d;;cn~t1

/

t~~~~r

just 150 years ago and impo/
as that was in American bi'$
am::I proud a.s we in Massacf\11

-~,M-g;~ °/bi~1 /i,~;t g";~aft;:e
tc

fe~ ~t .smks into ins~ oax;Jftn~!~'tc1nt;:1~ef~~~urf~o~ fe "9~~~~

~%tj;~i.ss!~~!~s wif ers~it?hed
0

(Continued 011 Page '}'cl\)

tne

the yoice Sarah Milfer, the pian1st o
the programme, also came through ·wel

• * ••

Last Night
\on the Radio
\
BY
:

t1:

ste

I

M. STATIC



Some nights music seems to
dominate on the various programme
·a~d again it is oratory! Yesterday thee
13eemed to be an unusual amount of tie
latter, beginning with the Prince
Wales early m the afternoon and go1
en to the Harvard-University of C Something of a more strictly classic.
cago debate, the story of the Associat
nature than anything we heard earlii
Press and other matters
1
in the evening came (WEE!) when U
* "' * "'
; General Electric Orchestra ~·ent on , U
But
notwithstanding,
t:here w~e
many' tuneful melodies Pleasing
air
Walter· Damrosch introduced sele1
listen to was a programme in the ea
tions, declaring that wherever peop·
evening over Station WEEI Margue
go, no matter whether they like it c
Porter, soprano, with a voice t t not, they are bound to hear jazz The
:sounds melodious even in its big_ r the orchestra played what Damrosc
range (something that not a11 r 1
describe~ as a "novelty"
The pie·O
sopranos accomplish) sang "Melod f ~ounded to us like slow but glorifle:
Jazz, the time being accentuated b:
My Heart" Stanley Benson,
the drums
But for the most part th
played several obblig'~to~~ the
furnishing beautiful accomplishm ,•
programme was purely classical,, wj.tl
such composers as "\Vagne.r, Haydn am
DebussJ featured
-

·f

r

).

112
le

t..

o.

''A1ound the Samovar" (WNAC). Th
name itself · suggests the · music tha
might be expected on this prograrnmf
Yes, Russian of course, with all th
plaintive quality as well as the fire o
the melodies played on strange lookin
stringed instruments capable o! muc
expression in the hands of a skille
performer Somehow this writer alwa1associates Russian music with Russi;3
dancers wearing' boot:5 into which the
trousers are tucked, dancing on the
heels with nimble skill and abando
~ussian .music seems as t~pically Ru
sia_n _as the, mi;isic of the steel string1
guitar i,n Hawaiian

....

vi1'

* •••

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

£:\?\'\ \ 3 '(:..'3\
1 ve ra:
read
. weet's strong point this
has been the further development of his change of piwe.

· Club -this aftern-oon
.
f..
represen Ing -~~""'·~.,...... .S,.,~}1_eg1ans
.
many 1nstitut'f"''""·~,.,,,.v~
. ,l earn1ng.;,i?-\ New En
~ons o,,t:
-ticipat\: ')
gland WI!I par- ,
• I

Walter E. McDermott of
~tr:eet was among those
Garden
tr ll11y passed the
Who suc-cesstion
l'vir McD recent bar examina1

ermott a !if 1
".r~1dent of this distr4 t,
e- ong
fJocaJ schools and co~:: atten~ed the
J'>iiies at the Suffolk L mued his stu~hich school h ~ ,.;~-:?' School, from
1
~h~ class_o_t_ 19,,_,,_ s graduated with __

f,~.{ MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

.A.PR. i

2 193)

i'i ,: , ~ f t e o n F. Stet'son Of
Bl,_~ announce the en,gage~

.jd .0~1=:an

'.1.! .r.p.en

f )?,
,.d,aughte:r, Miss Vera Mae
. ..- S t e t ~ o
}:tussell Everett BrookS ,
son of Mr ,and >Irs George A. Brook~ ,
lstf?.?,· Ah. iaj',f,rmal dinner ' was;
by Mr, ~n(l Mrs Ste:tson at their:
e .y'est~rday in honor of thf;' en .. l
~
e:r_nerit. ¥iss St~tso.n attended Sim..1
. ~. t·: ~c>ns College and Mr Brooks attended
; , \. Boston Uniyersjty and Suffoik · Law
!·Sch.col. No dat! has been s e ~ e

MASS.

V;: ))eath At Great Pond

,

1
\.t---\
I The death of Mrs. Edgar Mclnin

on the 16th1 marks the passing of
1member of the oldest family of the
\ community, the last of the -Tild~n
Williams family, and lineal descend-ant of Joshua Vv'illiams, a soldie1• in
the American revolution, who found~d
\
the Williams se_ ttlement, so-called, -1n
1810 now Great Pond.
'
Mrs. Mcininch was general be\ loved f6r her many beautiful traits
'of character, always on the alert for
,' every good work dnd active in the
sOCial life of the community wh~re ;
she will be greatly missed. , She was :
l an artist of much talent.
I Besides her husband she is sur- 1
: vived by her sons Lloyd L. Bracey ot i
Great Pond and Capt ..l'rank Ea_rl
Bracey light-keeper at 8eguin. There I
are 11 grandchildren and two great
gi andchildren
At the funeral services Rev Mr. :
Tupper paid a fine tribute to the de•_:
,
ceaS;ed and ~poke words of comfm t .to 1
the bereaved There was a great pro-- 1
fusion of beautiful flora:! tributes In• 1
tennent was !n tb;e Hillltop cemetery, I

\

1;

(By C. E. Butterfield-Associated
Press Radio Editor)
New York, April 13--(J\. P )-Nocturne, the W ABC program in which
Ann Leaf, organist and :Ben Alley,
tenor, appear each night, goes to a
· coast to coast netw'ork starting April
127. Beatrice Belkin, soprano, who has
resigned from the Metropolitan
Opera Company, Ii to devote all of
lwr time to radio and concert pro- ..
I grams Dean Gleason L Arc~• .who ,
1 delivers a weekly talk on -WEAF and !
others on laws that safeguard so- I
ciety, celebrated the first anniversary
of the series Saturday.
~-- .-------- -

,I

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EVENING-GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS •.

\~~

I;

f

I

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

street.

64 s11erwood
Raymond,i
W l Y Rock Glen ro· ,, .
Karl V
o se '
)

T. D.
.

'.
)'

Med{trd High and
ufts Grad Passes
'\
Massachusetts Bar \
\...,1 :\

\

Dean G l e ~ Archer (WEE!) Ir
"~aws . t1"r?t't ~afeguard Society," gavi
his radio audience some legal facts ir
r~gard to what might be expected i:
some person in defending himself fron
an attack, retaliated with more vigo1
than necessary
He indicated that ~
person has a right to defend himseH
to ~ certain point
Beyond that point
which mu~t be determined by the nature
. / of the attack, danger lurks for the per·
son who may be too strenuous in his or
er defence
As we understood the
oadcast, one may only use a deadly
apon in defence if such a weapon is
"d in the offensive In other words,
are circumstances where.[':'!. peray be held for manslaugh1f~ even
~,
the other person was $ ~ in

of 36 Summer
Francis C O'Brien d Mrs Patrick
street fOn of l\1r. o~nthose who "P.assO'B1 ien, was one . tion this week ,
d the Bar exannna town and . . . . a~\'
~~ was bm·n in c11arl.:;edford High
graduate<'!- from
t91S.
\.
s'Chf\ol ln ,th~. rlas; ~ffron1 Tufts col- \
He was g-r.adua e d from the ~ '
l~_ae in ·19222. an_
1 930._ He lS ',
\ folk~~l.a:aae~ for a ·BOS-·,:

' ·~~~~~a~;~.,,:panY,

.·· ____ >:

e:~:~~: w~:

t h%~~a~~n:!~r:~g~~
her used several citations from
to illustrate his thoughts

' ~v gs

~ter; • * • •
\r\:.. ~
Strike danc~ orchestra
\
.. bag full of snappy, jazzy
\
1
ight,- played with that
..df/
kes dancing so easy to
~\.\t\''
One thing we listen for
~"O-"'
' like a musical saw.
1!fl~
tore window one day
.o'l;.-te
t the Rolfe orches· ~ -te the saw Player.
s.~
•"~c.V- >,str_umen.ts of, high
e,: .
~~ /-...
~"'0-- 'not a SiIJ.gle saw
~~~~;•-t fro~ the' dance
:'.~l"'-"·'"' was played by Lou

'""-~--

·

-1

~:Pe!ST; ISV~l'Ul'I·,. 111a,:,.:,,
f .,...___.,._........~~-:;a.

THE

attress Voter',

Conry ID Attack
commission~r ror his refusal to engage
in a public dispute

V

BOSTON

"Those of us who know our city love
controversy as we love the city," said
Conry "Those of us who live in the
, ery delightful rural districts· of the
r many years
state know that those who come from
·oner , was an
Duxbury declare the clams dug there to
ton· Elevated
be supreme, and that the name Duxbury
uent condition
relic may be
~~e?k~~\vm~usc1:!htc°1;~ageA7! ~~~
uable services
troversy?"
d that he was
Conry said in opening his attack:
of $1300, out
ry of the Ele~
co!m~!!itg~~r ~~~~6s~!.ci~~afu~lii6
ion .granted to
answer public criticism of the conhis retirement.
duct of his department said he had
he establishes
ns to be en~
"no desire to engage in newspaper
co¥~r~~~~:i:h, a book which 1 read
.:qt[0'8lU aq'.j. O+Uf qurnos10n of'&.S~"a;.Uti Of police
many years ago, in my early days of
!non::. 'i'l,Tf,Y
In his address o! last night Conry
political activity, I found the words
tdevoted considerable time to the value
"The Great Jehovah hath a con"' cf controversy, anq. ridiculed the police .:~~versy with the nations" It wa1
t~ni~~f:J !~~ ~J:~;3r~Jn·J;i~
0llegians
and their illustr!QUS associates, that
ended in the establishment of the
i'Fo'n's'""clJ' 1 [ ;: J?_eath At Great Pond;,
American republic,-some 30 or 40
\\-'ill par. :'-•;
\
years later it. was controversy in
Englar.·d that led to Catholic emanI The death of Mrs. Edgar Mclnin
cipation, it was c~ntroversy carried
' , . on the· 16th marks the passing of
on by_ Bostonlmen thatAled to thiet
Garde,i
·.·: 1member of the oldest family of the
abolit10n of s avery in menca,
.s?c-cess.'. community, the last of the Tilden
~a~~n~~o::~a~T!~~~~.~~a~~~b~1
~~aminathought in Massachusetts, that wm
, ;i Williams family, and lineal descend ..
lead to the repeal of the 18th
ife-long
·1 o.nt of Joshua ·vvllliams, a saldiet in
amendment, it was controversy that
ded the :
! the American revolution, who founded
made Alfred E Smith tl1e foremost
l:iis stu-, .
private figure. -in America's political
i the Williams settlement, so-called, -in
history, it was controversy that
11, from
1810 now Great Pond
made James M Curley mayor of
1
ld With_~-:-J
Boston, it was controversy that
Mrs. Mc!ninch was general be- ,
made Joseph B Ely GQvemor of
11oved for her many beautiful traits
Massachusetts and controversy that
made you± distinguished guest memof character, alway5: on the alert ~or
N, MASS.
every good work d:t.1d active in the i
ber of the Governor's council
A man who is not prepared to
, sOCial life of the community wh~re
engage in controversy to answer
she will be greatly missed. She was i
I an artist of much talent.
'
· others on laws that safeguard so' Besides her husband she is sur~ l
' ciety, celebrated the first anniversary
vived by her sons Lloyd L. Bracey of i
Great Pond and Capt __,,!.'titrank E~_rl
j ~ft~ series Saturday.
__ _J
Bracey light-keeper at seguin The~e !
are 11 grandchildren and two great :
::>JJ Auooreq .'auot

si a.taq.L "i Auooreq
+ uo i.&uooreq atn uo,, 'A'...:l:a <4 ua.?I
q pm? '.JU3tUOW: 'B .IOJ .8U!.tc>atp S'.j.J JJO
~r apJsq.no .iuo.11.ri. '.).UdJ'fBduq atLJ..
·AffWBJ S'[t[ +aa.t21 o:;. .rooy puooas aq+
1 '!qua.uq.red-e 1t:Ao.1 am o+ ctn paµJnq
rn .mo aq+ moi.r ~BJI ~tq}! at['.). '.).nq
OAt'H ancI ate+ pawurn~ pMo.ta '.j.'83.I.&
tfl.Oua ra+oq ~Lff pat(oBa.t ii'.atn uattM.
·pawooq_ s:+q2nqsay: 'po.n:rq su.tot( anq
tuCY.j.n13 •q.m~ .aqi wo.11 ~.ta::>qo spN.o.Ia
fOl! a1n O'.J. a'.JTIO.I ~nn .'auore nv
·µo::,sa .aoH
d '8 purt[aq yo paAow: lt::J a1.n s-e Scl.&.a
.:r µa~ro puB q:eas at['.). q.sure.'a"B ::i:o-eq
l13S dtJ: uonow:a .'\q dlUOO~!A~"'1?ISD:.!~O'::
'B

, ........-..,...-_

1



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oiiof
g<a.ge-

I

L.Mae

ookS, I
~Qoks ,I

was.

I

their
;i· el'l-i
Sim,1

I_

anded!
Law

r

,.

ss.

.)

\

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

.

I

--'---

home of

.

I EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.:

!"'!he

:>f o_cean

gr~~d~~~d~~~eral services Rev Mr. !
Tupper paid a fine tribute to the de·.!
ceased and ~poke words of comfort .to ,
the bereaved There was a great pro• I
fusipn of beautiful fioral tributes In• [
torment was !n th;e Hillltop cemetery. I

st~
T. D.

d
Ra-ymon ;,

64

HERALD,

charges against his departtl].ent, ha&
no place in the public life of America.
Boston is the sacred centre o!
controversy
The police commissbner of Boston is not a Bostonian,
therefore he does nov understand
controversy. He is what we call a
mattress voter, one who lives in the
city for eligibility for political appointment, but prefers another
centre for the delights of social
life He is alien of class, not race,
he doesn't know the city of Boston
and is now too old to learn
ELY PAYS TRIBUTE
The reception and banquet was attende1 by more than 1000 friends and
guests and more than a score of dignitarie.s.
Gov. Ely said that he was p!eased to
pay tribute to Councillor Brennan ti.ecause he typifies what the Democrats
have wanted to see for a long time, a
young and vigorous member of the party in high political office He said that
Brennan, at the Wednesday conferenc.es, helps him to "understnd the intricacies of a metropolitan democracy,
because up in the sticks we have a lot
1
~e ~~~~in'::l,e .tinffeJ~af:s!e';!nc~{
publicans to come along with us. And
we're not so bad "
He /tr~td g1e ho~ tha~!n h the
: : r H~~~e an; s!ri!.feraa~dw~aid t~!i
then "there'll be sane and constructive
legislatton."
Concluding his remarks he said, "1
have learned from a short experience
you get more of a kick out Of a Boston
audience than anywhere else in the
state. I might say that i! the evening
it~tel~t~~gm!~~~~n/" do not believe in
Other speakers who eulogized the
guest of honor included Dean Gleason
L Archer of the Suffolk law school;
Fire commissioner ··~.,..,.,.'.P."'.d.McLaughlin; Asst. Dist -Atty, David Lasker
of Suffolk county, Asst. Dist.-Atty.
Daniel J. Gillen; Mrs. Esther M. Andrews of the Governor's council; the
Rev Dr. Mark c. Driscoll, the Rev.
Ralph W. Farrell, chaplain o! Charlestown state prison, Senator Joseph J
Mulhearn, Atty, Ge:q.. ,Warner, Con-

sherwood

f,

FRIDAY, '.APRIL 17, 1931

Many Yale Students
Seek Summer Jobs
NEW IJAVEN, April 16 (AP)-

Unemployment, according to the
Yale Alumni Weekly, has spread
even to the Yale ca.mpus, resulting
in increasing applicatio.ns to the
bureau of appointments for parttime employment durring the school
term or for summer employment.
"Each afternoon anxious undergraduates, including many men who
had previ'ou~Iy spent the!t' sllmmers yachting on the, sound or i;-olf•
ing at the 'Various- expensive resorts, form long lines outside the
various offices of the ,e;mployment
departments in the ..i'earch for
the sum•

r

VI

meeting appearing rather
and said, when pressed for a
"Any statements from me
on will be from 'Joseph Cot
citizen' and not 'Chairman
th~ traffic board.' " Any i
on the meeting, he said, sl
from the '"man next door'
sioner Hultman's office is r
traffic commission rooms
While the greater part of
ing was in executive sessi
learned that the fireworks w
around Conry's charges o
failure' in police enforcemen
regulations
Commissioner
entered the rooms with an
data pertaining to the e!fici
department.
It was also learned that
voted to conduct a thorougb
tion into the charges of t
commission against Traffic
John F. Hurley The chairr
finance commission, Frank
win, had asked the traffic: 1
who contracts were awarde
than t~ose bidding the lowe

SNELL SAYS LIN
ON TARIFF f
gre5sman McCormack, M~yor John J.
BEEN REA
~!J:;,.n F.f a'r:~r~a'wa.s toastmaster and

Henry P Walsh, chairman The presentation speech was made Howard V. Red·
gate.

REFUSE

p ARKING BAN

Traffic Board Vetoes Hultman Plan
For Province St.
While the traffic commission was
voting that statements of the commis~
sion would in the future be is.sued only
by the. f1:Lll board, the board also voted
Comm1ss1oner Hultman's resolu~ion·
that no parking be allo~ed in Province
street and the, street be placed ~n the
restricted area. It was congestion in
Pr?.vince stre~t that brough.t the in-.
qmry from Mayor Curely and the subsequent tilt between Commissioner
Hultman and Conry.
Chairman Conry emerged from the

I

(Continued from. Pa,:e

(J

sage o! the Hawley-Sm
added:
"I have never belonged to
:a!~~~i;h\:::o:eeli~ve~e:a.~
conditions by increasing
rather than increased savin~
is the American tendency t,
am waiting to see the outcc
policy,,
Snell said, "There is & gra
ening of the economic and. s
ture of this government,"
the attentioii of intelligent
"problems that so vitally am
nomic structure that they sl"
fo,l~dations"

.~~~~~~~~~~

· . Death At Great Pond 1
.,

, - Walter E_ M-cDermott of Garden
~· i_:~t;~et was among those who .success
, _:J t,)11Iy passed the recent bar examina=
- \, t10~.
Mr McDermott; a life--Jon
\ ,1;rs,1dent of this district, attended
):!al schools and continued his stu- ,
es at the Su~Lav,,- School from
-hfoh school he was"graduated With i
e class _of_ 1Sl"-<'----~

th:

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

i

2 193)

·. L

:.~·. \:'Scho~~I

.1£r~iyci~~tt~a!n:ee~u!i1~o£L.ft,_':

eddiru.!..__ -

-

-

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

/.,.

\,

. { member of ;the oldest family of t1:e
i community, the last of the Tilden
! Williams family, and lineal descen~ ...
nnt of Joshua Williams, a soldier in
the American revolution, who found~d
the Williams se-tt}ement, so-called, in
18 10 now Great Pond.
M.rs. Mciuinch was general b~\ Joved for her many beautiful traits
: of character, alway5: on the alert ~or
, every good worl< ltlld active in the
sOCial life of the community wb~re

(By

I

l

:\ she will be greatly missed.

I

c.

E.

l3utterfield,-Associi,.ted
Press Radio Editor)
New York, April 13--(4,f'.->-Nocturne, the W ABC program 1n wJ:lich
Ann Leaf, organist and Ben Alley,
tenor appear each n;ight, goes to ~
coast'to coast netw'ork starting April
1 27. Beatrice Belkin, soprano, who has
', resigned from
t~e
Metropolitan
Qp~ra Company, is to devot.e aU of
her- time to radio and concert pro-;·'
I \grams. Pean Gleason L. Ar,:,~i:r.,.,who t
\ delivers a weekly talk on-WEAF and i
otbers on laws that safeguard society, celebrated the first anniversary
_
~J: the series Saturday. _ _ __ _

1

i

;.J __, , . M~ an« ~ri*it. Stetson - of~
'ij O~ean .Bl,·. ~ announce the engage~:.., inen :f ,h~ ~.d;aughter. Miss Vera _Mae
Stet~O ,r Russell Everett BrookS,'
sbn pf ~r ~nd ,.Mrs ,George A. Bi:ooks ,
llstf)n. Ari. in.f-0rmal dinb.er was i
n by·~:Mr a~ Mi's Ste_tson at their·
.e. y'est.erd8.y in honor of thJ!l en-~
;f
_merit. · M.iss Stetson attended Sim-'
*.~.
s College- and Mr Brooks attended

~

I ., ~h~·· death of Mrs. Edgar Mclnin I on the loth,marks the passing of_-

!

1

I

She was

l

'_
l

an artist of much talent.
.
Besides her husband she is sur-- l
vived by her sons Lloyd ~- Bracey of '
Great Pond and Capt.....J"rank E\l_rl
Bracey light-keeper at Seguin. There I
are 11 grandchildren and two great,

1

, orandchildren.
M
o At the
funeral services Rev. ... r.
Tupper paid a fine tribute to the deceased and ~poke wo1 ds of comfo1 t;~~
the bereaved. There was a great p
fusion of beautiful floral tr1butes.tln•
- te~ent was In tb;e Hillltop ceme ery.

\

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

J

~~

shenvoocl
Ra,mond, 64
1
...
~1e1~ . r o ~
a ct.
WolseY, Rock
Rarl V.
J,

'·\:"b-!e_\:i.
\

d H"gh and
,'
Me?-.or f~rad Passes
\
- Tu tsM as sachusetts Bar i
.,

i..,.;. ,",

-

f 36 sumroer \
~r~~cis C .. o·,Bri~ct° }Jlrs. patr,ic!- .

street Fon ot: ~1r. of those wl.1.0 P.:as1'. \

.
was on_e
.
this wee
t
0•B1 ien,
r e:xan1inat1on
and wag\
ed the Ba
c11a1·lestown
1ligh I
He w·as born in
Medford
I
d
tedfrom
1918
- '.I
g:ra_, ua. '.the ,.Jass of
Tufts col- I
school ,n
- , duated tr<>m
~!
'He :was
and from thel{e is;
'\ 1ege .1n l i§c))..,001 \u 1930- a Bos~\
- folk,.;.
clairo manager for
\.
j>ns>1,ra'Ilye"'cP1!'1P~~:- _

~-iz.
Jf

/

~=-~~~~~l;;,~;J~·.

,/}r •;~'1~:~EWS'-T~~:!!:•~:;:LT~:::

. ICbURIER-CITIZEN,'

M~:~, .
APR 16

APR

!

.,/"!

I'/

BRIDE-TO-BE
~IVEN SHOWER
v o AT BRIGHTON

lf

!l

J,~

Page Nine

Completes Law Course

1

\¥ftJ·
·-

High str~e~,

Th? hall was pleasingly decor~
;~ldw~~d fi:J~?J:1s and novelties in
of spring flow~rsandM~~~ aJi~fdance
;a~ presented with gifts of ~f":1e~~
. a1 e, cut_ glass, electric appliances
1inens, kitchen utensils and m
> ~;
other !hings.
·

any;
Dur111g· the evening there Was a
:;ogra~ of vocal and instrumen-;
a,. music and social dancing was
enJoyed to orc11estra music
R .
freements were served. The pa::
Y
. a~ planned
and
successfully
i~~~~te
the ~i~ses Lucille,
ters of Miss M· ~ne C1r1gnano, sistl
B .
aiy.
A graduate of
le
_r1ghto11 schools, Miss Ciri -

o~;db3:r

nano ~s daughter of Mr. and Mr!

of

Ciriguano

5

Callaha~

6a':.~:,;,_-I 11 a amprn1, who was g Mrs.
Mrc. Ca':',]:'isi, son of
d

frn~

~~t~~e
W~Ithan~ High sc{~ol
third ve
5 dass, is no,v in his
The wed~r at_~,'.~~2H<...L."'w School
ing is __':__~d

____

for_June

CHRISTIAN S C I ~ MONITOR, BOSTON

Sut'fo~vy_;,chool. and will take tr.o
examination for admission to the bacJ'

'

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.
their WOrK
J.d radio.

lrUl.U 1,.u,._, b---

,,
I

'."S.

a year and he was orde'"red to :r;-eport.
to Probation Officer John Landis
:of the Balt?:n=ore federal Court. He
"IllUSt also m
.
H
profuse in his thanks

II. the use of talking motion pictures;
~&t 1t1astaa; E ·
fl rsee~

I

1

et;fJ;

a.l:~tn:d~
5

.....wi'ien p_resented the •'purse."

DEATH CHAIR IS

..l~~Rf,~,~~ ),

,be~c.~~ Se.nate ways and ~·ean~
co:mn1ittee, vigorous1y opposed ariy
prcposa;l that would result in the
abvlition of capital punishment in
M•1~sachusetts.
He was speaking in connection
v.;ith a hearing on the question of
cre,~.ting a . special commission to£tuay capital punishment in Massa...
c!:i.Usetts. Dean Ar:cher argued that
crin.dnals do fear the electric chair
but do not shudder equally as much
a?:. the thought of going to prison
.for life.
Atty. William G. Thompson. who
'favored a resolve calling for th~
.cxeation of a special ~ommission to
study the merits and demerits of
the present system of" cap~tal p'Un,:lish~~I?,.t.<.charged that polic~. under
the pr_essure. of aroused public sent!men t, wol:lld cQny!ct. t~~-', w.rong
man in a murde;i;· 'l.Jlse if 1:hey could
not apprehen!l the :-rea.1· 1'.illel'.
ln: t,he. oi,inion '1<:¢'.::• ~~ · Loring
~.?u:qg, fq~m.er. sp~a.~er_
Mas..,
. :l'a¢l\:)l~et~ H<1use ~f ·:·•

(Special te the Courier-Citizen.)
BOSTON, April 15 -The appoint.:.
ment of George E. Murphy of L6well
to the position of first deputy state
auditor was approved this morn,ng
by the governor's council. The appointment was made by State Auditor Franc1s x. Hurley.
He Succeeds Daniel C. Dennis'ton .of Waltham, who wil~ become assista:n't to
the director of the state di'Vision Of
accounts.
l\.:Ir. Denniston•s a:ppointment to his new position was ap, proved by the council at its session
· today. 1\.ir. Murphy was swo~n in by
Governor Ely this afternoon.
The action of the governor's cotl.ncil in approving the appointment of
Mr. Murphy is of more than otdinary interest. Shortly after_ taking
office. State Auditor Hurley ap'l;>.ointed Mr. Murphy to the pof;ttion o!
1 first deputy auditor. The governor'S:
~ouncil questioned the-le. gali~y of the'
action with Mr. Denniston already
holding the position. The matter
was taken to the Supreme court/
which ruled that Mr. Hurley was
acting within his rights in appointing his first deputy. The salary for
this position fs $4500. The positi,on
to which l\ir. Denniston was 3.ppoil'Jted carries a salary of $3180 a; year..
l\.Ir. :ri.rurphy is w-=11 known in L- ow- .
ell. He graduated from the Lowell
high school in the class of 1916 and
later graduated from Wood's buSi-·
ness college here. He receiv~d the
degree of bachelor of comffi-ercia;l
science from Northeastern university
in 1920 and in 1923 was- graduated
from the Suffolk La'w school. He is
a member of the bar "'aiicr a certifi~d
public accountant with offices in the
Fairbu~n building in Low~ll.

.
l

1 -

in June.

-i

1

PAUL H. THEREAUL T.

The many friends of Paul H. The.
reault will be pleased to learn th:G
he haS completed hjs course at ..thO

.1:·
TAKES UP DUTIES ··
I

iho;er was ~iven last night in the

c;_ct\v10

--·----,~.· .....'["' •.,

Lowell Man Sworn in as Det>uty,
State Auditor After Confirmation by Council.

·. . Spun S1!k Hall, Brighton for
l\I1ss ~ary Cirignauo of All;ton
~vho will s<;w_n become the brid
f
20

-

GEORGE E. MURPHY

With an attendance of oVer 200
depresenting most of the towns of
reater Boston,
a,
miscellaneous

~!fth~~:p1s1 of

LOWELL

+ •• +. + • • • • •

Grandmother Gets
Her School Diploma

NEWS, SALEM, MASS.

Among those who were graduated
f'.rom the evening class of the Joseph
E. Barnes School in East Boston last
evening was Mrs. Emma Saperia of 14
' Chelsea Street, whose three grandchildren attend the day school. Diplomas were presented to 829 students
throughout nearly a score of Boston
evening grade a;nd hig~ schools.
1
The oldest graduate of the Roger
Walcott School in Dorchestilr was
Mrs.1 Lily Borison df 10 Hildreth
Street, Mat.tapan. Mrs. Borison has i
1

i two_sons, one of whom is enrolled in

the Su,ffolk I am Sollool and the other
at Boston University. Mrs Borison not'
only ranked high\ ip all her studies;:.
but took ·a· leading part in the class (
play and in the exercises. She ·plans \
, to go to high school and then to Bos. ton University.
Mr. and Mrs Hovhannes Mugrditch•

.

1".e:Q...C~-ot+-

.3

1u.1Aa.1cl 01 Al? A\_ 1no
.
,
Slil!Ocl IllnUa~ppg ":) "0 ".JQ

i

-. ;

'
(

·,

i1"

i

I

1

1

·.\:?~{:.:(.~~<:'"4;f=;!t

. <:· -

'BOSTO!i, MASS..

,!,\'?R 2. 4 \S'3\

APR24 1931,
,--·-- --~·=-----:~~rn=Ez/--B'.".'os_T_o_N;;;;;;;_H_E;;;R;;A;;:L;;;:D;.::;;:i

Death Penalty-Worst Fear of Killer,

''<CPPOSED TO
.ABOLISHING,
THE CHAIR'

~;ays Dean Archer in Scoring Its Foes
s'!}:le death penalty is the one punish''Remember, tientiemen, that this
llle11-t that IIlurdereds fear, declared fn°ufu.
%.~~:iz~
Dean Gleason L A~cb.er of the SJJ~ that Mas.sac·husett.s .made a mista.ke :
Law School.. yesterday in urging that some years ago in electrocuting Sacco,

1:

les~h~a~~rc;ti!i~i

( tlffi SLate§el!a,'Q( committee on ways and van~tt!., t6r Wh<>m they fought I

and means report adversely on the petiI tion. fer. a resolution calling for an in/ ve.st1gat1on by a specla.I commission on
e~er~\5 ~~t~fmp~~~~~e~~~ present
,
_e took the opposite view ex]}r~sed
ea ier in teh day by William G. Th,o.mp-~--,-so: ltwyerin the Sacco-Vanzetti case.
1
~~;5t\o

--!~f

J

"'

through long yea.rs of le~al. delays and,
commissions cf investigation Remem- !
her ij.lso, gentlemen, that the public has i
no one but volunteer defenders
Un~,
less the ~gislature stands between it_:
and any interested group· the public in:-

terest must inevitably suffer."
He said that in Boston alone in the
last 12 yea.rs, 12 }'}Olicem_en h~d .been
murdered, a~d in not a smgle 1nc1dent:
to convict the right ma.n in a murder . had _the killer been tnade to answer for
: case, with attempting to convict -the ,1 the crime
.

:~J
aroused

I

i; t~f:!~~~!k;8
by public eentiment and unable
t~i/ ~f

;!?P~f11£~ m1;:~!r~~h!fct~ske

in be-

l!i:

Declaring that there is a ''carnival
niurder'' going on thr~ughout the
n:frg, Dean Gleason L. Archer of
Suff9_l~S_chool appeared late
e~dayat"tern~on before the Sen7
;\'Vays and means com1nittee and
,;~· ·.; )Vi&"orotlsiy oPPosed an)" proposal that
f\'Y.puld result itl. the abolitio_q pf, ca?punishm~1i~ in this COniUlc;m,"'

~-¥~}
:(wealth. ·

.' bi,

Mr:J=~ wRi~~~~~~tti;: Ar~n~:~ a~:
r:lifii:sogif!am ;t

qu~~o r~ asking
r!~fitig~~?.;:;;
1e!!~mf~~~op:i1~~~j
the identic
that has been fight- Chie! Willi.am J Quilty of Springfield-'
in season·
or
for the also the resolve, WM :tead.
t~:t~.heT~~1!1i:n
defeated: Bl.it- t,hey Wilt not take 'no' cases wu inadequate for pres.en~ con-

I
i

.sea.son

;:~:lt\h°eY,
lefo~~is~en;~:v:~!
~{g;t~h\;~~:~ ~~irut~o~~ki1~iic1~i:
hope of g~:fl-i:!}.g th_!? question into a cor-

oio1ia1i~rjn~o~~~n:1

f~~o~~e!~~us~e~t1

;

------·-'--~--

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS .

SAYS CHAi~ IS FEARED

.

i~~Eif·:Et"!~~::;1:i;~~~°nnn£i:1!~a~~ta~
lpunishinent ~fassachus"?tts. The
0

hear-

iii

('"lil!linals'o,a~.·:l;.ea'r tl1e elec' ({Q' n;~·a_n A1ch1?1
not shii:d~r: eq_1,1allv

i.ng·tasted_ the e!}t:i.re

; arg-qed that

.~?~fi:~:~t::~!:::~.:::1·~i:;~.:·~~i;;t~
1::~g::7de:~
:··~~::n~...::~tlt~~=rv::it;'
\;·tr~c-· cbai..r but do

~,~re~~-~i~e

~~~~iftc~~~s n:

combat successfully the activ:ties of the
n1:r, . o:t ·.~rwhelming the commission highly trained criminals This has rewith eloqifen~~and attaining a decision sulted he added in the collapse of the
[~VOl ab!!_to-:" ~it;~ C?Ontention.
system of prose~tlting murder cases

~~~~-'--a;;~cl:;tf.~!oi;g~~~

·PUTS POLICE ABILITY
BELOW CRIMINALS'
"Thompson Speaks on Bill
for Death Penalty Inquil'y

'I

No-te:. This Sheei' is Ruled 5.Sp~cesio the inChi

Oniuersal. Atlas. C~m.ent Co •.
Suk4{zary q.f'.Ohired J't'at'es Steel Co"."f'O:"t'ton

..

Aila.s Portfancl Cement,. UniversalPortlahd Cement,

,AtlasWhit('.Portland Cement.Atlas L'!"'7'nite Cement.

STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

BOSTON

POS'I',

SUNDAY

MARCH

'

---·~

~!
MERCURY, NEW BEDFORD. MAss:

Last Night
on the Radio

lf'

I
y

BY 0. JI;'[. STATIC

'

3,s:50.00
3,517.1'1s.03
(day)
6.S7f
,ut. (day)
6.05
,ant (day)
5.50
5.50
5.06
,y)
3.57
,y)
32 •.,0
,ek)
27.50
iek)
22.00
,ek)

Somethihg in the interesting talk last
~ight ef Dean Gleason ::r;.... Archer, o~
the Suffolk Law School, indicated the
importance of° -consultin&" ;;i.. good Jawyer
in the ev.ent one bas any. imxnediata
prospects of shobting" at a.n intruder,.
because. it seems~ - shooting
at
hitn
within the wall.',): of you'r_ home and

:hi~t1fi:Archer helps : to clarify w';~;~
1!!fi~i~~1\~~!\:11~:.:;: to the
· Dean
Sometimes bewildered lay mind some o--r.
the: curious
mental
pheqomena · that
ha.Ve developed· from t.he decalogµe t.o~lacksto:ne and Massachusetts matutes
"in the e:ffoi-t through the centtirles to
de.fine . the'· S'oft nu·an6es b:etWeen w~a.t
is right and what is wrong.
Tliere Was even the question. la'St night
-whe~her one's vegetable sh~d 1S part
of one's. home and if sci is the shooting
, Of an intruder . in that plaCe" . nian,1 .~la._ug~t~r or defenc~ of the- hom:e:' And
,;.s. _a merely ~ngry n~ig-hbo:r~ cozne to-

. ·~ir !t b°u~1;;1l: :ft':rs;~~~~:::!:~Ii~;
,

buHeJ; ha§l _ci_c>ne·- its ""?vOrk;?. Self-defence.,
yon learn,.- ·. is a
t~nn . w~th :many

l.·Jnea~ing$..,
.t . ,___ .:;_,..·'
.

--:, -

--;.':':

_ .· •

f.~~-~:-

· ·

..

.

-

'

sou h

Dartmou

1~

suspended, registrar

op
~

reason. to

lieve he is not· a p~9pe~ persqn _to
permitted to ope~·\,: . - ·,.
SECRET

~x@

b~~
b~~

~Opi'{CED;

So::h:~t!?estif:;:,~;~

Lydia E. ¥arbo~~ ..... ,.dat.Qfl;rter ·of.:,
Mary Barboza;, •36~
89.uth
street, were secretly i;narr.1.ed ~ B ro. ok.
..
line, August 24, 19S0~ it was_ l~.arn.e
yesterday. They ha':e taken, up :re~i
·dence at 9 Irvington co~~- , ,· _ ·_ :-· ..
The ceremony was i,erf&i-ri;ted PY
Rev. Thomas P. ctar1:it~ at .. ·S:t.-' P,J.~ ,
dan's church, and · a · rec~Pti,on fol-:= _!
lowed at the home of Prof.·-. P . . )M.ft
Staley~· lS2 'Babcock stree~~ Brook~e~ .j
Miss ·Barboza was,. secretary to ~~!¥,;
¥ . era_ at th:~ brideg .. , ~ w-ere·
·"ti!~:e ~~~ed..di.O.g.; B,<_)t~.
.
bride and
vacations and. th ~~~owe.<:l the
_
· g with a. tour; ,..c.u:::ough_.'N,e.w.

I

th.el

Tli;~td;~~j~;, ~~;:t}{x~t~d ~~j~~ -~e

,";,;~~;&~_l!;dl;~,iiii!lli&!I\I! Bedf°Qrd

::!

-

. ''.

High sch00l in 1929"~ ·8..t;t4 .a.fter graduai;ion becanie s,ecr'et9'.ry t? .Mri
Vera. She ·recently resigned that 'Position and will be associated in 'busi-

ness with her husba.:qd.
.
Mr. Nunes is a. graduate of Newj
Bedf0rd High school, clS..SS of_ .Febr_1:1-

1

~~ie~9~;,l~~esu~o1!:uf&tf~:OWord
in 1929. Xn High school he 1was ,president of the Alpha society and· captain
and president of the Alpha debti.ting
society. He wa.s born in Madeira. ?Dd
came _to NeW Bed.ford in 1915.
'He
had been making his home with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Maii.ueI Nunes,
197 liarwich street. He was admitted
! to the bar in. -~~£2.,I?.;&;J",.IJ.ll,i.._ _ _ _l!l,ji

/

f~~,~~
I

~

/J-u~

·~

··~.



STANDARD. NEW BEDFORD. MASS.

i
i

BOSTON

John B. Nunes, Secretly
Married in August.
Makes Home Here
Miss Lydia E. Barboza,
Former
Secretary
Frank Vera, Is Bride
John B. Nunes. lawyer, an!i
Lydia E~ .Barboza. daughter ot
Mary :Barboza. 368
South
street. -were .secretly married in Brook;!. .line. Aug. 24, 1930, it was le~rned. to1 ~Y- The cOuple last week took up i"es-

ideµ.ce at 9 Irvington -court.
The c~remony was performed Py the
Rev. -Thomas F. Garrity at St. Ai:..
da.n•s chµrch •. and a - :reception .followed at the home of ·P.ro!'~
P.
M.

=~Y13a,;~~a=!~t;:}y,~:,°~;;:fn,:. .:ii,!,;....;;.._;___:_.;;:.;;:.;;;
vern,..J',)',the :tip}e qt l < b @ ~ ~ ~ . t .
'vaJ;.~~~&~;~tour through New YoTk
~h~~~'llo~J··'.~~~~l~~
ding with a.
e;::

1

state. •

J

Bride J:s Graduate

Here..

Miss Barboza graduated :from New
Bed.fci:rd High school in 1928 and after graduation became secretary to Mr.
Vera. She recently ~esigned that poSition and will be associated- in business with her husband.

o?fFef:r7i~

Be1[.;rJl~~~1.'~~:Z~~~~
92
9 lfhe;r'~po~~~~~;~
,j~l~ge
in 1929. In High school he was president of the Alpha society and captain/
a.nd president of the 'Alpha. debating
society. He was born 1n Madeira and

~~ie;.

SJ!5

came to New Bedford in 1915.
He
ha.d l>een ma.king his home with his

parents~ Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Nune.s.
197 Harwich street.

He was admitted

. _to the bar in_ March~ 1929.

J

POST.
,

MARCH

~~~~============~dil "" _

---~==~~=c=l____i_lffli,~.

LAWYER WEDS I
~N BROOKLINE

su·NDAy

~.. 1'931''

__c!--_;_,•D,.l[ClFi!JPw;;cc,1;p~n~¥;...,,,.,...,,-.,,:;,.;,-,!i!)W BED FORD,
.

WEDDING REVEALED

r
l

\ TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

APR t 4 1931

APR 14 f93i

DRYS DO HONOR I
TO DR. CABOt
-~A)

--

He Thinks Anti-Saloon
, ..League Should Be PoP.ular
Even With 'Wets
COURTENAY GUILD
PRESIDES AT FEAST
,Dr. Richar.d

c.

Cabot at a. luncheo.n :

.glven---f+r- his" honor yesterday at the /

chamber of commerce, .4eclared _!'hat he
·held "one of the most :fortunate posi, tions in the world N( president o! the
Ma.ssachusetts Anti-Saloon League."

1

"

Courtenay Guild presided at the Inncheon which besides honoring the president of ~he league ha.d. u its purpose
: .tho outlining of the "'cfry program ' foi:
1

thls state, and the financial supaort
needed,
.. The statem~nt by Dr. Cabot that the

"'"18th amendm.ent ·ls not~ in · danger of
.repeal in spije of Mass~ch~etts voting
~rrong and being wet," met With con-

,:J

.,f\,·~~-s
..

,·~

tit C.oats, $2.95
;~n Coats, $1.95
i~Bonnets, 79c

ITEM, BRIGHTON, MASS.

APR 16 T!J31

+. :~:·:...:.·....- - - - - - - - ,

:ff.ennis Shoes
j~ 11Yz-2,

/ Seller, daughter of Mis L- -Andre,v

, :i} Boys
' ,.JQ
· .'&.•• or suney.

' ~ s z 'lffit&~~~#g 31 Bf818'AJMM
ket street has 1 et urned from a ·week's'.
visit af· ~. rth Andover where she '
1
was t ~ ~ t of her alint, Mrs John:
Bcy!e

: ··~bber trim. ~rds. E;x·
1

'



I

a:q.d inner

/I

·ti

Ioc:i- attendants at the

atic'";"i;rom a'iict reception, held AprH
9 at the Copl~y Plaza, was Miss Ma1 y
i E Ring, teacher of elocution

·,: /-·
' ~

ITEM, BRIGHTON, MASS.

Amcng the

Suffolk Lav... School Alumni Associ-

J_..,.. ,, '·

·,~·,.'.'l,.·

'

_,----

OCEAN BLUFF ~t~:~::t1t:i;nUiii:t,
@il GIRL To W

'

1

\' '· T RANSCRI~T. BOSTON, MASS.

;\US vu~;:_~ .. -..._ - ·rreellP ..._.:8:±~r1
SH at
.pdl they "V9'ill come, home

--&•

stay ab~ad, an
early in July.
___

t~=g

1\/Ir and J\.'.Irs George A Brooks of,
Pratt street, Allston, ·were among the
guests at an informal dinner party

1\ir. and Mrs. Leon
Bluff anno~f:s

.lTIOJ :;i: 0 +uamdoraAap 'E? s1 +sn al[+ u1
8
i nidy urni, popad OT[+ '.aupnp
panss1 a.raA\. S+Jfil.18d 2u1pgnq au1N

,:j-i
"·.: :,~------

F Stetson of Ocean
a ement of their

I
I

Jae Stetson, to I

~~~iie1kere1t. ::~~:·an ~r:to!~"· ; : \j
:Mrs. George.
at
informal din-

-JOJ.'\f-:i.i:-h-uf .1\---H.'q'""' Pv fl°V<lv '-<\...._~ -i--lt'.~~t-

o,

1

Former Simmons and B. U.
i,J'. ~ Studen.ts Are Engaged

ENGAGEMENT DINNER

1

0
0~

news was' disclosed and Mrs. Stetson. at I

ner given byM?J!f-~- Stetson attended Sim- '
their home.
is~ Mr Brooks attended
mons College an
. th Suffolk Law i
Boston University aW4nd 'f81'. !he
• e.

I,

s.........._No ~te:;S

'~

Wedding.

":7:,YJ~;}jtt;.,-;~,:':,:

..

, ....,,.. - ~ ~

,-...

siderable cheers. APP!al.lSe also :(ollow!>d
the remark of lils address that ''the
l>l"ivlleged class which. ls -0pposiBg prohibition has created the Iawlessnes.. of
Which it now pomplains and which it lflves as the . rea'.son· for. repeal!ng. the
181:e. amendment.".
.
. . .
·
1
: 7'.he · •ll!1<>intrirent o! a finding commita-ee was·"a.sked-by·Dr, Gabet te devise
some means of discovering "why the
blg
in bu.siness men· o!"th<! tountry believe
gers~;ohlbltion and patroI)~e. bootlegs
Dr. o..bot's address, 1n part, was:
I feel that I am in the most fortunate position :In the world as
president of the Anti-Saloon League
of Ma.ssachu.setts. · This league
&tan<Js against the saloon, and It
(Bo·1ton Herald-Asl!lo(
should be very popular, for tOday
Rex Leue. m.otf6n picture actor, a:rid hb
every one stands aga1nst the retrlrn
). player, who were ma
of the saloon_ The ~ets have taken
this J>O&ltion, and we Mnnot' Meuse
helped to banish the saloon ~ould
them of lru;II)cerjty lllltil. they have
be very popular.
J)l'Oved themselves In.sincere
The
In spite of Ma.ssachusetts voting
~ · have always held that position,
wrong and being wet, the 18th
..,eretore the · organization · Which
amelldment ls not 1n danger of
being repealed. The danger ls not
'ta 'the, amendment, it is to the com______.. mun:ity from the reign of lawlessness brought by the wets.
Among those who s,ttended the
luncheon were: .JlM.n Gleason -L
ENT ERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS. Archer, Mrs. Rola.nif"W. Baker, Alexa.n:~ Bill, .Mrs. ,Chai:les Sumner ::Sird,
C. 0 Blood, Mrs. Julian Lowell Coolidge, Miss Frances G. Curtis, Mrs. w.
S, Da:y; John C :r.,. Dowling, Miss
Eugenia B. Frothingham, John . L.
Grall.din, Courtenay Guild, Mrs. Francis B. Harrington, Professor and Mrs. i
Lewis Jerome J1>hnson, Miss Lucy i
•Nourse, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Peabody, ,
enry C. Scott, Seth Sears, F. Goldhwarte Sherrill, Mrs. Charles L. Slatry and Mr. and Mrs. Irving o Tomin.son, Mrs, H. B. Johnson, Mrs. Isaa,,
.114
prague, Henry M Williams, Mrs A A.
ffi J"Jl,
hurclltf, Mr. and Mrs, W. T. Rich and
1 ··v
'
~ 1ss Allee Tapley.
Mr and Mrs. Leon F. Stetson Of ,~
Ocean Blnff announced the engagement of their <laughter, Vera Mae·
Stetson, to Russell Everett Brooks,
son of Mr. and Mrs. George A.,
Brooks of Allston, at an :Informal,
dinner at their home on Saturday.'
Miss Stetson Is a graduate of•
Marshfield High school and attend•
ed Simmons College. Mr. Brooks. was
gril<!uated from English High schoo!J
Boston University,.and is a membei'- ·
of Beta Kappa fraternity. He a~tended Suffolk Law ~ool, ,and .is,
at. presen'l:-, awe laffl!!l!'"with the accounting · f;i,n of·. Foster, Willis , ~
. Comp,al)y oJ, ~ston. No. qa);~( h~ I
yet,.beeit set\j?r tlle W,e;d/llllg, ,, ~
:.",,..,:-~'-'" . ~-,

l

'<

'

~ ~

. ;;,- -- -



"lljr

I

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

t~PR 141931

DRYS DO HONOR. I

====

TTOllOred at' fare andofficials appear as and yetI many1 and Mrs. William T. Rich a.nd Miss Allee
safety measure,
of their
wets.
think Tapley,
lDr• Cabot fl

h

AT.

'U---unc eon

SCORE MORE °THAN 40
YEARS OLD GRADUATE

Dr. Richard C.

~ told more than ',,,1 I~:'1""6abot

said that the Anti-Saloon

·-· __,..,1,,-·-·-~-

'

\loon

Illar '

hundred pro.m.inent men and women yes- League stands against the saloon, "and
terday a.t a luncheon at the Chamber of it should be very popular. for today
Commerce that he believed that he holds everybodY stands against the' return of
"one of the most fortunate positions in Ithe saloon .. The wets have taken this pothe world as president of the Massachu-1 sition, and we cannc;,t accuse them of in- I
setts Anti-Saloon League," The luncheon sincerity until they have proved them-~
was given in Dr. Cabot's honor, its pur- selves insincere The dryis have always
pose being to greet him as the new held that position, therefore the organizaleader of the dry forces of Massachusetts, tion _which 'helped to banish the salo9n
to list-en to the program that the drys should be very popular "
\
have outlined for this State and to secure
Art:Pur J Davis, State superintendent I
· financial support for tl).is program. of the leagtie, said that t~e danger to pro- bheon
Courtenay Guild presided and introduced hlbitlon is not in the presidential ~lection, t; th.·e

-Grandrnot~ong 829 \

. nits

r

b ·D
part of the program of the drys Should!
y rys : i>"ros~hl~~n"u!n~e:_t:~~.:~':iebe:::

ST

~f\~~ -:~~~r:h~~~m;~:cr:noe;a~i::h!i°~: at he

l~i~· ;:~r!~s~no~~:f of the time.:i~e~~
-~~afh:g
social Welfare figures
0
0~~

the human system. Delcevare King of posiDr cabot was ch·eered when he da. Quincy made an appeal for wider fl.nan-,! the
1 clared that "the privileged class which Clal s~-port of the league program, 'to ~gue"
is opposing prohibition has created the 1· show enthusiasm in terms of d_ollars and mch1

j

~~1e_:.tf~~s it°fgi~~c:s iten~:as~°r~~:1! io ~~:gurh~! wi!~ft~~d~ist~ :eQtlng presl0

peaUng the Eighteenth Amendment.~· Hejwere: P~leason ~ r . Mrs.rpose
was ag3.in cheered when he stated that Roland W.-Baker, Alexander Bill, Mrs. sl · tor

~r::

'

1~~g~;g:ite:e;~al ~ :
!f ~a:~h~~ J
~=~:~
setts voting wrbng and being wet." and Curtis, Mrs . William S. J;:,ay, John C. L. t th
also when, he asked that a finding com· Dowling, Miss Eugenia B. Frothingham. )r 0
i mittee be appointed or some means de· John L Grandin, Courtenay Guild. Mrs. )ting
( vised to discover ,•why the big business Francis B Harrington, Professor and ;con\ men of the country believe in prohibition Mrs. Lewis Jerom~ Johnson, Miss Lucy,w~
[ and patr:onize bootleggers."
Lowell, Miss Mabel Lyman, Mrs: John F "'the
"They know," said the speaker, 0 that Moors, Mrs A L West Movius, C. Au- pro ...
1prohibition is essential for the business gustus Nonvood, ~'Iiss Annie Endicott
1and economic welfare and progress of the N<;>urse, Mr. and J\1rs Harold Peabody, ss~
1nation Recently I talked to a personnel Henry C. S~ott, Seth Sears, F. Gold-: '.rnq~.
director bf one_. of the big corporations. th:waite Sherrill, l\frs Charles L Slattery, 'B.td~.
: He told me that in thU: corporation l\:'Cr. and Mrs Irvin?" C Tom11nson, Mrs._ OS'UJ!t
nearly all the personnel directors were in H. B. Johnson, Mrs Isaac Sprague, Henry· . A.ta~
0

0

f!1~!;:sL:!:fbo~n~!~.CM~s

paort

f

f

I

favor o! retaining prohl'bltion as a. we!' M. Wlll!ams, Mz1!. A, A. ShUrollff, Mr.

a,,--= --ry

-ff'C,--c-~ -- -·-·---,,-- -

·-, '1~>1Pu:i
I
·o 'snuo}i ~ ""'lW

! : uqoL' 's,w · u ~ ·7 ·v
,.. , 1<1:an7 ""'11\r 'uo.7 !3qll}\I SSJW '!!OA><l7:
, , ·s.1:w: ptra .IOS'Sa O lltI'!".C awo.ta.r SJ&atJ!
11 -u'B.td ·s.1w: 'Pn~.;1 i.:Xol2iq:.µ-e¥ ··a: s!~fl
" 7 mtoL' 'W'Bt!flu
~.m?O uw,ni,o:
-,, ""'!W '2UT!A\
. llllOJ;,I
s: mua2na
"M ·s,n , oa ·7 ·o uqQL' '.ai:a ·s
i ;r~oo na&~~it.r s~~:~
SSJW 'a:§p(

ITEM, BRIGHTON, MASS.

P IS: ,auwns sar:re110 ·s.,w· , rs: o o,
-xary •,a,rea "-M.__p,
• 1HS: ~u,i'
·or-uo"'"3ro v.~"-"!01,. S.ZW •,a11a.rv
ain. p.pu~i'B - oqM. ~~ ;;~~ounr
_...,1
aq1 aq l'lllno,q ssa~
10
i - - ~ ~ ~ J a . 1 , aqi ttro.IJ A+µrnw

i I Seller, daughter of Mis L Andrew

"'"! "1.~:

''.1....___
1

:~q;J

·,w ·as.mo'
sn1sn2nv'
·s,w 'SJ:oon ·..rf

PU-.
poOAUON

~ i s a ~wtr?,ada;5$1Ptfffif§ El 3 £ ~

~"'"""i"~=~"""-"'~ .....

,v,

'

ket stree,t has 1etu1ned from a ·week's\
visit at/ ~rth Andover where she·
\Yas t ~ t of her aunt, Mrs John

IBcyle
1

']

~'f

\

and

rea swe\

that th

women

\:::J no further

.

_

,

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, IVIASS.

Amcng the local attendants at the ·
Su_ff~ Law School Alumni Associ-

1 at1cn prom a'i'rd reception, held AprH
-:/, 9 at ~he Copl~y Plaza, was Miss Mary
, \ E Ring, teacher of elocution
--~;·:.:!>,·.--:-,-.. -:,,:
,:,

ITEM, BRIGHTON, MASS.

ers ~-;:ad~~i;- ;;,Y~o~.,~~

1

;;:·~t·I

passengers

danger

ENGAGEMENT DINNER
n.1r and !\:'Irs George A Brooks of
Pratt street, Allston, were among the
guests at an informal dinner party
-~1.""1X"U;i.-<l'y--.,.."q...,._flvl~av -"'(\""--t>-r~-..s.±.P~-

.InOJ Jo +uamdora11.:ap '"8 s1 +sn aq+ u1
8 01- z n>dV mo,, popad a111- .aupnp
panssJ a.ra& s+1ru.1ad 2u1pnnq auJN

I

I

fOCEAN BLUFF.. l

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

,vtrs.

s:H rt

vuo..uuu-;-co

Tl

- _

ia 11 min E11.

·fea

fl¥:_

-1
,,,.

stay abroad. and !hey vnll come homei

early in.July.

___

ff OGI~L TO WED

l

I

Former Simmons and B. U. l
.i:;I Students Are Engaged

J

l\ir and Mrs Leon F Stetson of Ocea:n
Bluff· announce the engagemen-t of their
daughter~ Miss ifera ~ae Stetso_n, to 1
Russell Everett Brooks, son of Mi:. ~d
Mrs George A. Brooks of Allston~
. e
~ew"s was disclosed at s.n informal din- \
ner given, by Mr~ a~d Mrs~ Stetson. at \
their home. MisS stetson attended SimCollege' a;n.,:i, :J\[r. Brooks attended I
:qriivet:sicty· and, -the.
olk Law !

I
'.<

fg:;.n

s~Nodf,te,

.:wedd~g.. '·

Mr. and Mrs. Leon F. Stetson or'
Ocean Bluff announced the engagement of their daughter, Vera Mae
Stetson, to Russell Everett Brooks,
son of Mr. and Mrs. George Ai
Brooks of Allston, at an informal'

dinner at their home on Saturday.'
Miss Stetson Is a. graduate o~
Marshfield High school and attends
ed Simmons College. Mr. Brooks was
grMuated from English High schoo!J
Boston University,, and is a rtiembeil- ·
of Beta Kappa fraternity. He attended µffolk Law~ool, -a.nd-J/l
at, p r e s e n ~ w i t h the ac.:counting 'fi~ of Foste,, Wl\lill,, '!'
;Co!llpal:)y o;<, ~ston. No ?••J;~,;,~a~ I
~1>t\,l~r ~t11,~,'i'.~l\ing. , )J
s_

,~~tg,~~~'

.....

I
i TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

APR 1 4 i93f
----- - - - --.-.-~.

»Rrs DO HONOR l

TO DR. CABOT
'JA) ~ -

SCORE MORE tHAN 40
YEARS OLD GRADUATE

:He Thinks Anti-Saloon
J.,eague Should Be PoP.ular
Even With ·Wets

-Grandmother Among 829
to Receive Diplomas

COURTENAY qUILD
PRESIDES AT FEAST

and Joseph and Charles Campochiaro.
The sisters were Clementina arid Jose...
phine· SaJ;ro, and

afl .M~[ fhe

l Certificates Awarded to 8450

Filomena

T,

and

, .Dr. Richard C. Cabot at a. luncheon
the
chamber of commerce, 4,eclared ~hat he
beld "one of the mos~ :·fortunate positlons in the world as president o! the

Brooks Elver;ing
. School in Roxbu_ry, thre~ memb~~l:? o:f
one family re.ceived diplom.as.
They
were Samuel Mittuish, 22,,and· his Si:!..
1ters, Rose and Sylvia Mittnick, ! a.ges
That age is no dete_rrent to persons
a.nd 17~ respective~y> o:f _33~ Blue
ambitious to lear-n Was proven once H;}~!v~econd member of a family ·of·
more last evening, when 829 boys and four, which came to this country but
girls a~d men and women, were •pre~ a_ few years ago, to gPa.~uate fro~ eve ...
s~nted diplomas for ,com}>letion of ele· n1ng school was_ a.warded a. diplo~a
mentary and high work at graduating/ :from the Franklln E_vening School 1:n;
exercises marking the closing of the tho:: South End. ~1s was. E~el R.
city's. evening schools. In addition. j Feiler, 16, whose
David, was
c:,r!~r°ci~\r.s of proficiency in study
Of
receiving
elementary the same school.
~
S<:1>oo1 diplomas, about a score were Husband a·nd w;fe

l

Sa.Ph1iups

.gh'°en"-fn- his.. honor y ~ d a y at

. ,. Closing of bening Schools

118.

Massachusetts

r--

0

'" The statement

'

LDON,1

1

U::~n~~~~~il~~~ari;q'42~~~11cf";//~ ~POSl1
"
I;'.
attending day school.
,
Exhibitions

!

0

0

work.
·
A number of pe):'sons. prominent in
the. community life , of the c~ty addressed the graduates and presented

~
SS.

fl

;r~oo ll""'O'I U'B!!ni' ·s.rw

.ss,, ,..,,

b~!s~~ri!~! !~tet;::;_nr; :X':fo1~f .f:: i

"

T RANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

a

~~ool ~~d ~:si!~:;on fg~i*1!i'i'atT:~:
Though born in ~ew York. she never

~:!gt1llie ~~:;rn~~ldtoing~ }~~fit;.
0

t

00
~;

22_

Though ambitious, she had pu
herself in the background until . her
sons, now· 26 and 22, had their start.
She inte1nds to go further. She says
she will go to, high school and then to
Boston Univers;ity. . __ . .. ·
One son, Bertram, 26, tea.ch;es piano
at the Boston Music Settlefuent S:chool
In the West End and goes· to Suffolk
-.ye La:w Sc!hool.
Irving, 22, goes to Bos.1no t011; University. Her husband, Ric.hard,
• . _ts
foreman in a ashoe
8 Bruthers .and Sisters

a

P

;factory.

A checkup of similar names on the
t ~~e o!b~id~;t~~t~e';,~al~~o:::r~ t~9:d

1

,
. ~
'. ..
:-~.
...
..., ...,
·._:/
~.....
::- ( ·
·"_
'·-c.. :r...._::_
.

sisters.
·
.
The Joseph H. Barnes Evening t
School had fo:ur Siets of brothers, eight
ln all, and two 'sets of
four
in all, among the gr.aduates.
The
brothers were Ralph R. and William
C. Mira.hello, Andrew and Michael
S~!e?'!¥', Joseph ~nd Ralph Sim~elli,

sisters,

·~""'

"trl

A:q

~q2no.rq ssau

'

fftJ GIRL TO WED

0



a2p1

fOCEAN BLUFF l

E. Ring, teacher of elocution
''._;';,\'.:' .:::~,:,
.. '
,.
- - - - ----,~-- -

1

1,

'PGOrii'.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, WI.ASS.

!!ift!ngr;~~~::d:::::ci~~!· :~in~; r~ts
:
,J

PU'B A.I.a,:{

-- ___.,~!~~~1!J~~!fuoo.Al~~

~:trc~~l!~~f:l~S~~~k ;~:·

1

·.t.w

P~1a: .r"uums W[iI'BtJ'.O ·s.rw· ·r
o 01
-x"rv ·~a,rea: ".il<I...~-..-1;a. .S.IW '.1atr~.rv
..P"""'=·
rm:~""'
·rr-uoB'B'3fO
ii
a~ P.PU~'.J'B O'tfA\ ~t~ ;:;6~~I

kriown elementary school graduate was state Senator Mulhern, Nicholas .PetroMrs EX!,'lm.a Saperia, 56, of l.4 Chelsea
s:t,.---'-Es.st--Boston, a. ,grandmother, hav- celli, Prof Agnes Kn9x Black of the .~il!tM
ing four sons and three grandchil- Boston University College of Liberal
dren. She
aduated from the Joseph Arts, Vincent Brogna. member ·of the ; a v;eek's ':
H. Barn
g S-chool, East Bos- Board of Overseers of the Public Wel;;. :here she
ton,. in·:·
at tota14§d 56. One
~IS John
son and
ddaugbtera of Mrs ~~~X:~r
TJlough it is usually the _pa.rents who:li
Saperia. at en
aY school.
The second oldest to graduate was
Mrs Fannie Pollack. 54, a. mother,
at the
who received her d~ploma from the procedure was reversed when the ~n..
Washington
Evening ,School, West dren of Mr and Mrs Mugrditehian at- !i Associtended the graduation exercises a.t the ·
.
End.
-~~ FJvenine:- School. t.'; "'p"" hnth .eld Apr1"1
_
9 at ":he Copl~y P'1aza, was l\tliss Mary
Woman
6

~.t.W Pr'3

S'SJW ,
-,'BN S'SJW 'fla&O'I;
·s.rw PU"e ..1oss:.!1~suq~r a.uzo.i:ar SJ.tnari[
-Utl.Ii!{ ·s.rw ' J -lcI Uo'.J,.8uµ.rBH ··a: SW· I
''I UtJ'.Oi' ,Jf~lnD A1'Ua'.).tlloO 'U!P1:z'B.rf):
""IW 'l!Utj&O<J: tJ'.~::!'l:70Jd:
·a: 'B]U<>.!ln:;i
' ".M. ·s.rw ;sri.mo ·n s~;:)u~,ii.css-r'A'.Bq: ·s

0

1
B~\1son1:1i!~ ~te:i i~fci~!:~e'stt1"~atf!_:

l~I

' aon'I

~;;~~cik)~· Ed~~~- ~!ifagh~ :a::tl- I
ter of Deeds William T..- A. Fitzgerald, Ii
Asst .Atty Gen srbil H. HOimes, Judge /.'-A~n-d_r_e-,-,,Thomas H. Bilodeau, Paul Cifrino, E;X"' '

pan. attained the highest grades possi•
bl~ in all her s"Qbjects~,
She was
termed an exceptional student at the
Roger Wolcott Eveni_;ig School, Dorchester, w~ere she ha~ a prominent
part on the graduation program,. -in ad•
ditio11: to-. taking a. leading part in the
~Jass play.
.

-~·'-''--"~~;,,,...,;;,,;;.::.n,c1

puu tJ'.O!~ .;, "M 'S'.I}\f "A:,>!d~J:, <>OJlV SSJN
·v ·v ·s.zy,r •suz
puu .IN \yrr:,.mtrs
O'B'l?SI ·s.:z:w • 'Blllr.M. ·.w: A:..tuaa •allau.:z:ds{
-uzo.r. ·o .!lu uos";!or ·a: "H ·s.zw 'uosun'

-:J.'BIS "'I sa

<>f work done in dr:ess.. ~ -

~~~Js,d:!~~~fr~{:; ~;~i~ig:bi1'ff; 1:i
perform certai):'l phases of oonunercla]

Cabot that the

·PloO ·.,i: ,J~ s.rw: J!JJ.raqs a1r'B&tf\
I 'aPoqua.r p o.re ;J'i"B noog ·o A'..tuaH,~
· noo1pu:;r a 1buvHSSJ~.lJ1poPm, ·.rw 'as.mo.111.:
·o •sntAow ~a • • ~M..Io.N S"n:Jsn2nv
utroi' 's.rw •u,,:ffi,:;./\,,! s.rw 's.roow ·.r,.

1

r:~~iJ1~·,:~~:i:~daf: ~~~rmcg::s~; l~!

by Dr.

siderable cheers. Appla!JSe also ti,Uowi,d
:the remark of his acld;ess that ;,the
1>rivileged class whloh 1s -0pposiF1g pro-

wife, Beatr~c~. 33, who ·a.re:O! Armenia~ [
desc.ent, :finished their cours.e in one
year. The couple have three -children

,1

the financial 6Upt?<)rt

18th amendment ·is not~ in : danger of
.repeal in spit,~ of Massachusetts voting
':-70ng and being wet," met With con-

A husband and wife

those graduated from the Cotnin
Evening SchoOl, Roxbury.· Crossing..
Entering Theodore Ro~sevelt Schoo~

1

i

dent of !-he league had a.s its purpose

• 1hl& state, and
needed.

were

, _. . ""· . . .

League."

1

!

J the out!lnlng of tne ·ru:y ·program· for

brothe:r;.
~itu~~1re;~~nae:r~1sl!:.· ~fJ~.e~r~f:

those

Anti-Saloon

i
I

\
,

Courtenay Guild presided at the lunch·
eon which besides honoring the presi-

I

::~e

1

,vi.rs. vuo.,h,.. .. H-=- ~- ·11 ell· ·'E9JP:rrft;;!:~~
· s:t:reM b TbeMtd=~&~hey will corne bori.lei
stay a roa •
_
early in July.

---

I
J

Former SimIUons and B. U. I
,.,;' .~ Students Are Engaged\
l\ir and Mrs. Leon F. Stetson of oce9:DBluff· announce the engagement. of the1r
a.aughter; Miss ~ra Mae Stetso.n, t~ 1
Russell Everett Brooks~ son of Mt. an
.
George A. BrookS of Allston. T~e
Mrs. was disclosed at an informal d1n· \
newsgiv ~ b
Mr and Mrs.~ stetson. at\
f:!"t.r ho4::e. ~MisS stetson attended
mprii:; College; ~nd Mr. Brooks atte~ :
Bos:ton _Uriiv~rs~tY a~d:. ~
olk
~ ',

!

0

s.......,...No~te.
~-·~~d.i~g . • , _ . ,

. , ::-1f~i{l;iil_,

Simd]

Mr. and Mrs. Leon F. stetson of
Ocean BIU!f announced the engagement of their daughter, Vera Mae,
Stetson, to Russell Everett Brooks,
son of Mr. and Mrs. George Ai
Brooks of Allston, at an inforrnaL
dinner at their home on Saturday,
Miss Stetson is a graduate of:
Marshfield High school and attend-:
ed Simmons College. Mr. Brool!cs was
graduated from English High school)

is.

Bosto.n U.niversity,. and
a He atBeta Kappa fraternity. rile. mbeJi.
tended S.!lffolk Law...Jill{lool, :and -is_
at p r e s e n ~ w i t h the ac.counting · fi"l,31 of Foster, Willis , &
. ComP"'W o,\ ~oston. No 4'>1;,;·,.lias
J'.z~;,J:le~, !'etiv~_r _t:1le; W,~ping, , ·,
of

I
I

1i

APR 23 1931

-:-=-:

i

N~ ~ , - - - ,

"' "''

l931'1

d
DOES THE TOOTHPASTE iJ

BREAKDOWN

USE BEAR THIS ACCEPTAN:

COLGATE'

BY VAUGHAN
NOW IHEORYI:
.
I
Believe Missing Bank f

"Creates Situation by Opposing Prohibition" Say~Dr. Cabot; "No Danger of
Repeal" He Declares
'
Boston. April 14--Dr. Riyha,rd C.

ltlbbonDentalCr-

1

' Cabot told more than 100 prOmineut
m.en and women yesterday at a
luncheon at the Cham.her of 6'om.merce that he believed that h~ holds
"one ot the most fortunate posittQ.~
in. the world as pre.sitj.~nt- of '·'t;t:lce
Massachusetts An.tr.::SalOoll.- league."' .
The luncheon was given in Dr.
Cabot's honor and its purpose w:as to
greet him a.a the new leader ot the
dry forces of Massachusetts; to listen
; to the program that the drys have
outlined tor this state and to secui:1!':
financial support for this program .
Courtenay Guild presided &t
the
luncheon. and introduced Dr. Cabot
as one ot the leading men in h1s·profess1on and one of the greatest social
welfare figures of the time.
The affair was in the nature of a.
social gatheril:1:g a.."l.d many ~en &J;l~
women whose names appear in th:e
social register were present. Dr. ~oot-·
received an ovation and when ill the
course of his address he declared that
"the privileged class wl].Jc~ is opp~ing prohibition has ere·~: ~d the law-.
Iessne.ss or which it no'\-"\:_,_ complaJ.ns
and which it gives as th~reason. tor
repealing the 18th amenchnent," he
was greeted with a burst of cheers.
He was again cheered when he st"ated
that the 18th amendment is not · 1n
danger of repeal "in spite Of Massachusetts voting wrong a.nd being
wet."
Tremendous enthusiasm wa.s shOwn
1ty un ti! they have proved •....e!_ _
~~e1
selves insincere The drys have a?1lle
held that position, therefore th 'iin
ganization Which helped to ~ s '
saloon should be very PQPulU
is popular with me because my. 1 ':;:
terest for many years ha& be
n ,
1 up with the les,: privilegede ~ l ~ \
~h~ country Which prohibition
e Ped. As a physician and teacher ot
;z:a;e had the necessity
ha
orced upon me t
ha:e b"![_~t to meet anyone Who5,e job
th
• ught him face to face with
1 1
no! ~~
1:£ed. ~lass who ctoea
"The wets anct drys a.re f a ~ ! ~

Filene.

1
"

1

Men's
blue
serge
suit,
.. $15

Receiver in Nervous' /
Collapse

1

t

so~~

'Al?p [



'.under h:is receivership had been tangled
IThe new receiver has not ha.d tim.e
;learn whether t.her.e e.xi~ts any short•
:a~~ i~ the banl..;s• .~unds, and if there i.S
;a .shortage, h6w long · it has e~isted.
: Two ~f Vaug:han's
aSsociates

in

t;

f

OJI

IOQ

pu"

I

teso-.r


1

.affaio'Clif!,r

1are ~aul J. Cotter, who cal'!
:Merrifield, N. Y., to attend t '
k
1 L ~ o l , anQ George W. Masta:glio•
;Jr, who carne ·rrom 1Hartfo:rd, · Conn •
!to the same school. Both were gradu...;
:ated last June, and both UVed with
/Vaughan at 24 P-lnckney street. · where

91{:).

. t !=>lI'.J

'\

,working wlth the new receiver
to .straighten Vaughan's

.s'ut r

illaa~o
tons:
troos
•1Ssy
lh~

I

IUOJS

""· aq1
I OU.ta

uv

rop~=r~

;they wor:k~d with hini in handlillg the
·affairs of t;he five banks for which
!Vaughan W8.s receiver.

'.1au-

.taH
.
l:).S''BLU·..•..

:.,_·

A bill int.r~·d_uced in. the .Missouri Leg..
;islatui e w9uld makC chicken stealing
by day
'night

as

serious

offence

an

as

, A~e,

a

..

:).OU;

"l
,q

--, - - - - - - : - : : ~ - ·l!t;._=~-i!iii~P,:I;?-~-::-'''""~~
I

ire

suaz, '

by

i SJH
!.L,; ,.

·us

ro::J < -

>w:

1xna

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

san

onod

I;t I

N ..

:-;~while- t h e - w ~ - -

,;orth. 31.6 -per cent more

/

than in

"~"
n ..

I

APf-i 1 5 1931

H.{SJf

lll"f
UOJ!:f

NEW BU\lOIMGi
WORK Pl~NNEil ·
Contract 'has been awarded to .
John C Pitcher of Boston to make!
alterations to the Pr eparato.ry Law\·
School on Myrtle and Hanco~k sts '

I

aw -

Boston,, !Or the Suf.fg}k I
tzrr:6 \
according tt"~rown's Lette~s, Inc' I
construction report's,
~rch1tecl is\
'.R 1· h T Jackson of Boston.
C~ntract has been awarded to
, .
H Macomber Co of Bo~f~orf~ B:rnake alterations to res1- \'
o
t Millis for Mrs. James
4ence a
atin has been awar~- :

I

Jte

Jackso~
Whiften Co of Bos~on
ed to
k t Lord Elec- ['
:. and the electric wor Aichitects are· 1·
\tric Go. of BHost~'f, d & Smith ol .

1

~o~~~:~rth,

_j

l1i1\.''

to purchase about\ :

~J

,_/.'-'-~~-'--~·~-~~-~~--~~~·~·'~··~··--I
I
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

:n~a

:1926
.
ce is that a man who .
Th~ne )':lllndred dollars to spend \

~\!J/1' able

has]

;~~i~~f5 0
th;~:

u

~r ,.

. .. .

• %' ~.

"'"~
d
--~~

·:=.:.....-~-::-_---~--- - ~--~-::,·-

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

I

TESTI

i

A large num~~ ~f friends of James
H. Brennan, a. ·member- of the FlOY""
ernor's coun~i~. ·.a.r.e ,to ,tend~r ',h,1m a.
testimonial dllll1~1", a~ ~he Hotel Brad•
:ford tomorrow·eVening.· ·
,
Speakers for the ·occasion include
Gov
Ely,
United
st_ates
Senators
David I. Walsh and Marcus A. COolidge, Mayor Curley, Fire Commissioner
Edward F. McLaughlin, Dist -Atty.

Foley, Asst.-DisL-Atty. David Lasker,
senator John P
Buckley, councillor
Thomas H. Green, Judge Ch8.rles

~~na:~· M~~n

,;.·

',,,..;·'

;a:..

E~~~J1'n.L·&;Jt$~:f~

w. Mccormack, Joseph J.
Mul!J.ern, Howard V, Redgate and
Stan1ey W. Wisn;osk:i. John F. Q:il-

man John

, more, Jr.,. will. act ~~·:, mast~ ..of. -c~e·' mmiles. :Henry P'. · W:!tl,;h is· chalrmaJ;l
c:if t.he general com.mt
-;~~='c'-·,:,L.'.\..

-~.

NIAL TO

JAMES H~ BRENNAN

,:,J)

~<·'

I

APR 23 1931

\'' --~----;:;.~---;--,.;. ,.,)
19;3:r

--------~---,

----

i. BY VAUGHAN/;
BREAKDOWN/_,

"Creates Situation by Qp- ·
posing Prohibition" .S;e,;y;,_
Dr. Cabot; "No. Danger' of
Repeal" He Declares
'..:
Boston. April 14-Dr. Richard
0-:

NOW THEORY/

Filene•

1

----.-

/, J_

Men's
bhie
serge
suit~

$i5

Collapse

i
,-Sl;lJ \

u
.·:w

rr:_,;n f;



,r

,

A

~ ~iz-e
)UOJS

:;;.raf

fop~=,--•.rau
•:J:S"Bt.U '

zaH

'night

as

serious

a.n

offence

as

,

1'

;s:;!t

b:Y

,ou

-,_------.-::-~.::._.~ , ~:!(:~~-rrw~'~··*'~·'".~-,~.'

t 9!H
[,L••

-, _

aouer

'""

I

1xna

Blan

AMERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

OJIOd


d,.OU~

isoa:
> JO
'U"E'lU

,,.,

; SJ

'e

St*

a~a

n ..

>BO

I '
an.1·
tqs:J

zna{"

!:~11

t~=C--

C=~-:~-~~

J1j

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

The a:!!air was in the nature o:f a
social gathering and many ~en and ,1
women whose · names appear
· ;. ?
social register were present. Dr.-'
:· 'i

1
~~~e;;:~r

l"t_
,.
-l'
Al eration Contract on
i
S11Jl,Q!lf la lb '"Preparatory

Contract 11as been awarded to John
C. P_itcher of ::e,oston to . make alteration~ to the Preparatory La,v School on
Myrtle and _Hancock street_s, .Bo·ston,
·' ffo-r 1..he:

,l?lk,.La~v Sch;o

·

t9,,

0

e.:: d':;~1~7:e_~

a~is !~~~e~
a.t ,
.. the pri vlleged class whic-ll. is. oppos:"'
ing prohibition has created the_ 18.'W'-::: 1
lessness of which it now corn.pla.,.J:JB
and which it gives a,s the reason, 1:or·
repeallng the 18th aznendtn.ent,
he
was greeted With a burst of _ch~ers.
; He was aga..in cheered when he st:'ated.
that the 18th all'.l.endmen"t is "not in
danger Of :repeal .. in spite Of Massa.~ ~ t t s voting
wrong
tl,D.d
b.eing
Tremendous euthusiasni was

.'

sliOwn

~!~~~~o~~!:8e l~fc1!;~~~~e o~~

that· a

when. Pr. Cabot asked
:finding'
con.uni ttee be appointed
or ' ~O:p;l.t'
means devised to d!&cover whjr! the.big business men o:t the country ·be"':'·
lieve in prohibition
an.cl
pa.t:i.-oWzi;
bootleggers.
·."They know," said
the
speaker,..
uthat prohibition is essential for th~
business and econ.om.le. welfare
and
progress o:r the nation. Recently ·x
talked to a Personal director of .C?ne ~
o:f the big corporations. He told :me
that in this corporation. nearly all
the personnel directors were in favoj;
o:f retaining prohibition as a welfare
and sa.ie"ty measure and yet ~~
their ot:ficials appear as wets. :I ~ink
part. 0£ the program or the
drys '--i
should be to .smoke out these ni.en.
who believe in prohibition ,and t>l;l.t~
ronize bootleggers •• Dr. Ca.bet said in
part:
..I 1'eel that I am in the
Most Fortunate Position
in the world as president or the Ant.iSaloon League o:f Massachusetts~ The.
Anti-Saloon league
stands
ag~~St
the saloon, and i t should be
very,
popular, :for today everybody s t ~ n d s
against. the return o:f the saloon.. ·
wets hdve taken this posi'tio~pe
we can not accuse them. ....o~ Jnigton.
ity until they have proved
___
selves insincere. The drys haV"e a'
held tha't po.sitioll., there!ore.
gani.zation which helped to
~1~1
the saloon should be very pppul"'
It is popular with me because -my. in

tr~

, ~;e~}.:;;r

re_.,.n,,-.::er-rrg!;~Lcn--verrrcres presenr-rnefF)
pershfr~
r
erty tax receipt~.
!

jntroduced Dr. Cabot

- ;!!ii~ a~~~!!! <;,~ ti;:;_egr:/~:~t,- ~~_"_1

0

,..·. aq-;i

-w-hfcb

g:,1:~~~!y s~t1:i~t :':!s1l1::t ~~S:~e·

es one o:t the leading nien in his:pro,.:..

J

lroos
'•!SSV

bill intr.;-d·uc.ed in 'the Missouri I.,egvv9uld Tn1'\ke chicken
st$aling

iis1atu1e
by day

eqi

~"11
~a.ro
~ons::

afl:ai:r:;,.j'C:Ji~~f
for-

t

. PU'B

, las_o-r

w:a.s

luncheon. and

0

gozo t
·...cap f

:Under his re-ceiver.ship had been tangled.,
The ne_w receiver has n-c>t had ti:zne to
,!earn whether there e:x,:1s.ts ar~.Y. short/age .in the banI-t:s• .funds, a:p.d if there is
;a _
shortage, h6w- ,long_ · it ha"s e.xisted
! Two
?f Vaug:han's a'Ssocia'tes: ar
;working W'ith tbe new receiver
.to .straighteu Vaughan's
jare Paul J. Cotter# who cai:1
;Merrifield, N. Y .• to attend t ·
I;;;
1 . . ~ o l , ang George W., Masta:glio.
L
1Jr. -Who came from Hartford. Conn .•
!to the same school. Both w-era gradu..;
:ated la.st June, and both lived with
)"Vaughan at 24 Pinckney street. where,
.,they work~d with hini in handling th&

b~~

0

j

Believe Missing Bank'
Receiver in Nervous'

;affafrs of the five banks
1Vaugllan ,"i"as receivEr.

Ca.bot told nl.OTe than 100 prO;min,e~i

~~~h::: a.'; Z:::

I
c~:n~e~Yof
' merce that he believed that h~ llolds
! ·.·one o:f the most :rortunate p9$i.t.i~in_ .the ~or~d- as_ J.?l;Ssi_tj.~J:!..t-~ O:f: · tp'.e!·Ma.ssacnusett& A'.nti:-Saldon. league.~•
The luncheon was giV'en
in.
D;r.
l Cabot"s honor and 1ts purpose
to
greet hhn. as the new leader. ot· :t;b~; ·
dry :rorces o:f Massachusetts; to, listen
to tb.e pro-gra.n:t 1ih.at the drys. '.ha.ve
outlined for this state and to secure. ·

~:ure~ea;:1!i~g~e~~~

the .country which prohibltio'.l:L .:liU
helped. As a physician and teadher o;t
social ethics I have had. the neCessity
:for this re:form :forced upon ~n::a.e~ I
0
~:~;;;
the less privileged class who does
not hold as I do.
/

=e

b~~~g~t ~T!; f~ ~~

~fi:

"'Th;._~~!:a:e~i ~s o~efz!~~ng~~· --/wets. are asking repeal because of th6
lawlessness
brought ctrys face f the -1,c;~-·r
pri v1legect class.
The about by t:tie
:facts o:r., the great good that prob.tbt..:,
~i~~- has done' to the less privileged
,"'The
task
o:r
the
Anti-Saloo:r:i
, , league as I see it should be divided.
into two parts• .first to make a. niuch-=
needed , survey o:f why the busin~
~~2:t1~i>. tt,e as;,.a!~!~~{~n!n!h';;e1J~~

~:;s~~~ ~!ws:a~rst~~~:v:;;,,
erz;1ed by business men are wet. Why
is it tll.at we do not :find
business men
who
are
today
reaping'
financial benefits w'.hich have co:zne
from closing 1;he saloons. s1;ancung
!or this law.
we face the' neect or
understanding the strange st.ate o:f
minct o:r these men who believe in
prohibition
and
believe
in
bootleggers-.
"The next job i.s the age-long;, perpetual job of education.
I
do
not
know what the drys can do that i.s
inore in keeping with tl:l,e spirit o.f
this country which bases
it.s
1'a1th
upon education, than to continue to
give the :fa,cts about the nature and.
e!1'ects o:f alcohol to the ,people a.ti~
give them an understanding of the
bene:fits that have come f'rom the law
even imperfectly en:forced.
"In spite o:f Massach u.setts
voting
wrong and being wet, the eighteenth
amen-dment ls not in danger of being
i:epealed..
The dange'Z" iS not to the
amendment~ i t is to the comm.unity
:from
the
re.::..gn
of
lawlessness.
brought about by the wets "
The next speaker was Arthur J.
~avis, st~te superintendent o:f the ,

g~~J

our

~-,

l
,j

- ---- · -~

.u=~ su.ur .naa time to

whether there ex1sts any short:~ the banks• .t:und,s, ·ap_d if there is
•rtage.. hO'W" long it ha"s existed.
'
of
Va.ug:han's
a·ssociates
ng· 'W'ith the ne"W receiver

. ......
1

l::
i:t,.1..1.lcW..C was in 1,ne n~t;~e .\
::' social gathering and many i;:ien
. won:ien whose names appear !p:
social register were present. Dr;'
·1 received an ovation and wh
course of his address he decla
"the pri vlleged class which is Op'p~,.
: Ing proll.ibition has created the law-

.tv
I

\

~!ft~ 6;t~:;:an~h:ff~!r.'.i'~:!::llillif'"...f

/!.~:1!-S:1c~the 18th i!s ~iJ.: r~~;~
irhg}';,~s
an1endn'l.en.t, •., he

: repealing

'ield, N. Y .• t:o attend t
le
~ o l , anq George 'W'•. Masta:glio•
,ho

came

from

same school.
'ast

June.

Hartford,

Conn •

Both were gradu-

a.nd

both

i ;:,sw~e:!~~n ~~~er!ab~~~~

lived

J that the

~ith.
an at 24 Pj.nckney stre~t. · 'l.'lrller&
vork_ed '\Vith. ·hinJ in :nandlii:r.g the

of the ttve banks
an· ,vas receiver.

for

aS

serious

an

offence

£e:c:ea~!~

Tremendous enthusiasm wassliOwrt; ..:·

wbfch

!~!~~~i;o~!rse 1~;1~;~~;,,~~e o~,,~i

l introduced in the Missouri I.,eg~·ould rn:ctkC chicken st~ali11g

s
Y

0

18th amendment is ·not in.·
danger of repeal "'in spite Of Massa.~~{.~tts voting
wrong
and.
being

I

as

When Dr. Cabot asked tha.t a f1n~;ng
committee be appointed
or
~
means devised to discover whyi t . ~'

,suaz

b:Y

j

Aug

t~~eb~!n~h%if1oit t~!dco~~%~~.' ·
bootleggers.
·
"They know." said
the
spea.ker., r
"that prohibition is essential for tb,e
business and econo:rnic welf'are
a.net
progress of' -f?he nation. Recen1:ly t
talked to a personal director Of one
of the big corporations. He told n:ie
that in "this corpora.tion nearly aI;J.
the personnel directors were :ln 1'&.Vo~
of retaining prohibition as a welf'a.r:e
and sal.'et;y measure and yet ,=a.n.,,.-,,-t"
their o:rnciais appear as wets. I "t;~ink

I sou
! SJH
IJ...;
~.OU~J

f EH.fl

lxna

MERICAN, BOSTON, MASS.

r san
P!IOd ,.

=

f:;;;," •.

;J.sog
~ JO

)~t~

ri~~cirb:h:o ~~~!lno~f tii~se
who believe 1n prohibition ,and v·'!l-tronize bootleggers.·~ Dr. Ca.bot said in
pa.rt:
··r feel that I am in the

l)JqM

"

s,
~.taci

n ..
>BG
~

Most I<"ortunate Position

1-

ian.r

in tlie world as president of the AntiSaloon League or Massachusetts_ 'rhe
Anti-Saloon league
stands
agliin'St.
the saloon, anct 1t .should J:?.e
very
popular, for today everybody stands
against the return o:f the sa.loo
--- -wets h~ve ta.ken th.Ls posJ:tio:.g;;>e
we can. not accuse thein _
_of. ifrigton.
i ty un ti! they have proved .....___
selves insincere. The drys have a]

)tlSl

zne
>,01

)ee.-:r:
f-Q

I

r
~-=-~---..-;:.::-:-:--.

~=;~z!f1~~ P~f~~n~h:~.!'cifo[; · t ~ ,

j

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

, I It is saloon shouldme becauseWP."til~
the
be very
popular with
-x,tJ.."Sf;' 1-;;::I·
terest tor many years has b e e n ' ~ ·
/ '.: fife ~~~nf;e ~~fcifr~i;!;~f:;~ii~as h~.;

;;3)

I

·I
~~~~c~~fiJv~~; 1:·~rC:!~ef;;:enr-rrre1r1:

i
i

'I

-,,.,1-

Alteration Contract on
/.
. SnJfoJk iLan"'l'reparatory J I
Contract

has

been .a'Warded

1-\

to

John,.•

C. R,itcher of Boston to . make altera.- (
:: tion.-;; .to the Preparatory L,a.·w S. cl1o~I on

'.!Myrtle and I-i:ancock streets,· ..Bo·sto':t1,
ffor t.he: Su:t'(olk .. La-..v S~ho.ol~ ~~c;~rc;l

1\

t<:.; j

/

helped. As a physician and teacher ot
social ethics I nave had the necessity
:for this re-rorm :forced upon ~zoe.· :t
have yet to meet anyone who~ .,jOb
has b-=.-ought him :!ace to face Wfth
~r1;1~:.ed. e;1aas who doe~
"'The wets and drys a.re :!acing · ·s:n

; }

"!~~ :i;:~

I

wets a ~ : e p ~ ! ~ : 1 ' · ~ - - r ~ : -: /,
lawlessness brought. a.bout by the . ,,'
privlleged. class. The drys· :face ! the ;.~ ~
facts of. the great good tha.t prob.1b11
tion ha.s done to the less
privileged.
cl~;b.e
task
of'
the
Anti-Saloon'.
.,. , league a.s I see it should be diy!d.ed.
into two parts, first to znake a much, needed "survey of why the bUsin~
men of the state, knowing that prohibition is an economic and welfare

'I

"'-"=-L-...c_..cc..,~~;s~~~

~!wsp~~erst~~~~v!~~

~~~-j

en_:iect. by business men are wet. Why
is i t that we do not find. our bu.sin:ess men who are today reaping
financial benefits w'hich have come
from closing the saloons, standing
for this law.
we .race the neect.. of
understanding the strange state of
.mind of these men who believe in
prohibition
and
believe
in
bootleggers.
"'The next job is tll.e age-long, perpetual job of education.
I
do
not
know wha:t. 1:ihe drys can do that is
more in keeping with t4e spirit o:r
this country which bases
its
:taith
upon education. than to continue to
give the f'acts about the nature and
effects of alcohol to the l?'eople an,d
give them an understanding of the
benefits that have come trorn the law
even imperfectly enforced.
''In spite of M::t.ssachusetts
voting
wrong and being wet, the eighteenth
amendment is not in .danger of being
1 epealed..
The danger ls not to .the
amendment, it is to the conu:n.unlty
:from
the
re~gn
of'
lawlessness.
brought about. Dy the wets."
The next speak.er was Arthur J.
Davis, sta.te superintendent of the
league, who said that the danger to
prohibition is not in the presidential

t~:tii~~~

=~~~i~~n.k~~~ino;(t;~!
:rec ts of alcohol on the human sys~ern.
He outlined the
educa:tional., plan
which the league· is putting on in this
state 9,nd which has attracted nation;.'
al attention. At the end of his briet
speech, Delcevare King of Qutncy
made an appeal for wider 1'.1nanc1al
support of the league program to
show enthusiasm in terms Of dollars
and .to back up Dr. Cabot in his work;
"'The thing that is hampering prohibition today," he declared, ••1s the
business men who are benef'it!ng by
prohibition and will not acknowledge
their indebtedness to it. The ·National Economic league, in a survey, reveals that business nien of the country believe that prohibition is the
greatest problem of today~
The a,ction of this state will help to detar~~egrte1!.~ ~~~~ of other states ~n
Among

those

who

attenct.ed

th-e

j ~~~~~~~~rs~~i;,~~nJ'P.Aa.[#.'i"ffxak~
~ ; Mrs. Charles Sum.ner Bird.
c. O. Blood, Mrs. Jul!an Lowell Qool1dge, Miss Frances G. Curtis, MrsWillia:m. s. Day, John C. L. Dowllng~
Miss Eugenia B. Frothinghazn, John
L.
Grandin, Courtenay Guild, Mr.s~
Francis B. Harrington, Prof. and Mrs.
Lewis Jerome Johnson, Miss L't).G3".
Lowell, Miss Mabel Lyma.n, M:rs, Jo,b"n
F. Moors, Mrs. A. L. West Mov1us,r C.
Augustus NOr'WOOd, Miss Annie Erri;licott Nourse, Mr. and Mrs. Harold. Pea.body, Henry C. Scott, Seth Sea.rs, F.
Golthwaite Sherrill, Mrs. Charles L.
Slattery. Mr. and Mrs. Irving c. Toznl!n.son. Mrs. H. B. Johnson, Mrs. Isaac
Sprague. Henry M. Williams, Mrs. A.
A. Shurcliff, Mr. and Mrs. Willia.n:i T.
lcll. and Miss Allee Ta.pley.
'

}t

'

_, :1

[23 1931

. .J:IrdREAT --

llreakfastTab/ePaper
.1 ~~ , ...... -""•.,,_,,

EW ENGLAND

1~====~!::::::~~=================================::::::=======~===========
17 1931. **>I<
f
'] sl

' t,

KDOWN/
lUGHAN/
[HEORY/
~ssing Ban,k /
1

i

/lapse

FORTY~FOUR

AGES-TWO CENTS

1lCALL HULTMAN
'DUXBURY CLAM'

i

m Nervous

Established, 1831.

'

j

P. had been tangled.

,s .not lta<i time to
exi~ts any short.
ids, and if there iSI
~. lt ~as e~lsted

s a·ssociate.S
receiver

7

n's affair',-..,,,h_,_._

who ca_._...._,....
,ttend t k
rge W.: Masta-glio,
!Hartford, Conn ,.
Both were gradu ..
both liV'ed with
oey street, where
1 in handlillg th&
oanks for which

the .Missouri Leg..
ehicken stealing
n offence as by

IOSTON, MASS.

Hultman Declines·· to Reply---·
Not lntere:sted in What
· - -· -/CtJ~i;Seys

/

=-----·--mt more than in

1

~at a man who ,
dollars to spend \

o, purchase about ( '

JllOING

1

UNNEa

JI/

1

NIAL i heWithinsupposed hours "gagged~' by
a few
of the ~ I
was
to be

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

JAMES H•

been awarded to

of Boston to make I i

e Preparatory Law :Ii
and Hancock sts , i'

i

~olk Law s

tmt 1
ow_n's Le.tters, Inc., 1
1
>arts. Architect is \
1n of Boston.
1:
been

awarded

1

to

1-comber Co 'of Bos-

i

!

tlterations to resi- I
; for Mrs James ]1
~g has been award-

reg1::s-cerrr~ . :oru1. 'Vtonicres presenr tf'ielrT :

Pers.JD: I

.

r

.

erty tax receipts

--·-· I

I'

Al·, e;ation Contract on
J I
S1it(Q!k las u Preparatory I
f

1itten Co of Bos.ton

work to Lord Elec-. !
.oi,.. Architects are !]
tlib.~rd & Smit~ of

i

J~~- ·.

Co~tract has been awarded to John .
, C. Ritcher of ~ol3ton to make altera- J '

'. tions ,to th~ Preparatory Law Scl1ool on
J\iyrtJe and Hancock stieets Bo·sto'n
(fo~ the.Suf!ol~ Law School; ac~o~d
'
··'.)Bro
tte-rs, Jn(' ,,. 9"(.msf · · ·

!it.:

I

BR

fellow inem~er~ of the Bost?n
Traffic Comm1ss1on, Trafhc Commis ...
Ablarge num~;: of frie1 sioner J'oseph A. Conry last night
J H • ..i;;,,rennan~ a. member_, i
, ern?r's co~n~i~ •• ~e to . ti renewed his warfare upon Police
testunonial dlru\er; at the: Commissioner Eugene C. Hultman
1ord tomorrow ·eVening ' ' ' .
.
.

Speakers for the ucct .with a vengeance, calling him a
gov. Ely, :onited Sta1 mattress voter, and referring to ~im
1andF~ar/ as a "Du~bury ciam."
Edw'ard F. Xilci;ug~l~n~ In renev,iing his attack upon Hult·
Foley, Asst.-Di.st.-Att.y
man before a large throng which
Senator John P Buckle
Thomas H. Green Jud p~cked the ballroom at the Bradponahue, Dean Gle~ ford Hotel at a testimonial dinner to
~vhnMWarkME DrisCq James H. Bre1111an of the Governor's
'
o
.
cCormao C
·1 Conry caused a sensat10n
.
1
Howird v. ~ ounc1 ,
1 Mt.;J~ern,
Stan ey W. Wi.snJo.ski. ; when he opened his attack, not as
Tiaffic, Commissioner this time, but
~f the general
· '·
as the official representative at the
dinner of Mayor Curley.

ict:;idM;y:ab~

i

::n

\:~:ies,~r.H!~~ a~\.;,~=

Continued on Page 27-Tlt.ird Co].
1

~,v~ HT1R TIN

----i-·~.'



APR i 7 l93lc

~.\.PRIL 17, 1931

iNDMOTHER AND SCORE OVER 40 W
SWEET GIRi

foqo COMP' L[TE:fl~I
UL il
NIGHT CLASS
STU y
n
U

~RAT)_ .J\I S.t=:

1

l:
,I

I

1

,,JOURNAL. REVERE. MASS.

i 8 1931

;,,~

, 8450

Awarded

of

Certificates

Exercises

,

~

at

:::J l

A total of 8450 certificates c

'i

in

study

were

als

I
I

awarded. The grandmother wh
was graduated was Mrs. Emma s,
peria, 56, of 14 Chelsea st. Ea.s.
Boston, Who has four sonS an r
three grandchildren. She was grac

i

I
/ class that t9ta1ed 56, One son an1 I
Itwo granddaUghters of Mrs Saperi,

·i

elementary and high work at

in

P~~f~~~~~:i

proficiency

, men and women more than 40
:, years old were among the 829
,. given dipomas for completion of

e'fercises

Certificate:

:e::::~d~:~:::;

A grandmother and a score of

.:·graduation

Awarded

given dipomas for completion 1 /
elementary and high work ~
1 graduati9n exercises in th /
\ city's evening schools.
i

of Proficiency at

[,,.._,,.

a-·rrrl.ft"-''I'. ~,- ~-

8450

i !:!!~!r~clio~t~i~:~P~o~~:a;:~

the

city's evening schools.
A total of 8450 certificates of

i~!~~=~cy

attend
Mrs. Saperi
I was alsoday school. known elemen· t
the oldest

i~~fi~~· !~ of ;!! Cf~~~·~:~~ E:;J

,, ~ary school graduate.

j

, HAS SON STUDYING LAW

/

in study were also
The grandmother is Mrs. Emma.
0

three granr;l.children Ruth Saperia,
nine, proudly surveyed her grand-

<

The ~econd oldest to g.1:_aduat' i'
·u

"~~'/j
'S3NIVH "WM/ ;;II
&1U3S3J~ Je.<ew-u'-p109·0.JJ31\1

(Grant school.
'
i Mrs Saperia went to school for
)six years, f6Ur Of Which Were
day
school, two afternoons each week,
I and two years to evening school

.~

-.1S-AVMb'ON

at

Ithree

~

'

;i~~~u:t~~~~:" ~~ss~ser::Ifth:o U
h~r

HOT

!

!I

mother's diploma this morning be-

11

times a week

'JI____...,;;..~~

;e /

if.: i

•f



•.
I
' : 1~s \
1
/ ·.V

i.t

She was the

~~d~!; :~e~::o~I{ st~~ol graduate,

, .

' s~uaruasuruv
'
"a·re.!J s,u-e~.anuan v ... )

t

'a~+ '.Sa.rn+"BaJ ::i;'JO:.' ~;'~~':o~;"11 '/ uJt
1~%.~ :.~1;r, q' ! .zaqit.nu 11 ;~

:.' H~!eS~!':o!!u~:eisNtGtoLAgWraduate

ienced

~ I:

.

4AV' $St1'J'Y

~ ui ~3J\"8td a·.:tUJS Stnt aqs _. ",

,v:l.S
54, a
Iffom Mrs. Fannie Pollack,diplomq.
mother, who received her
the Washington even~ g

~

'-uarsA Arow1r s-env,, uJ waq\

r

PdJ~add"'B +s.111 pu-e .ra,re.w.,,
i1
swuAff 1tffar:{
-PIO {)-0 .1 + u~
J

f

] school, West End,

--~ LiiyhBo~~!~~.attained f~~~~~';th~:ts: ~ l,~~·:</::\~;>:C;L-~·'l~f~)-~!i___f~{ ~~~~:
°i~e~i
Mattapan
the highest

!. "· collapse like a house of cards. The

PRESS HERALD, grades possible in all her subjects

underworld is a seething volcano
ready to break out if enforcement of
'laws stopped. Men must surrender
some of their personal liberty for the
b(lnefit of all other men and women
The welfare of all the people must
take precedence over that of the few
c!JoQf;leggers would have to stop busi- ll
ness. if their customers became law- l
<l.'&iding citizens
Every }person is .I
- entitled to :protection from the lawless.
The Boston :r>olice strike of!
19.19. was an inst.ance where law was!'
,:eleased a~ amounted to an invita-_

She was termed an exceptional student at the Roger Wolcott eveninr~
school, Dorchester

l

Mts Borison is the mother of two iNING
boys who are attending Suffolk !
Law~ool and the Bostoii'i1ni ..

'

'



~ College of Business Admin~

____
'

GLOBE BOSTON MASS

_ istration. Though born in New
':· .-,----·-- York, she never had the opportunity to go to school, being the

lDA~·1

oldest child

;;====J.~·--

herself in the background unti1 her

family of 22. ~
she had put ~ - . . . - . s c h o o l b~di~g:-Mrs Es:.- .,
ther
addr0s~ the mem..
akeJ SOnS, nOW 26 and 22, had their I bef'S
entertaitlment Will , I
start. She says she will go to
folloW°a
win has chosen for i
,las ] high school and then to Boston her su
Id Nutrition." All
Dt>rese' University.
pat~nts are urged to attend this lheet.. I
in

a

- - Though ambitious,

i

Special

lef!a\\u~out

MAN AND WIFE GRADUATE

!nfie&n Gleason L, Archer of' the Suf,

!~e~!~~olJf:,!6 tiu?!nm~

for avisit 3-lld

th~ Ji~~c~u~r:Ju!~1;1;1~!v::i!Jsth~~
hf there were about 22 sets of brothl'v!a.rlene )f t] ers and sisters

/

TJiu~~1a~c~e

Hall Masonic .Building, last evening,
on ,:I.aw and LRw Enfor
ent." - A

donation of $10 was JJl
to the Relen in "Disl:906 those ~r:Juat~1:id f~~~ ';;~e
Yere Visiting Nurse.
ociation. The 'I
evening school, Roxbury Crossing.
May meet~-w:lll» Ladles• Night, I
E
With a ba
et., -~ea.ker and enter• .I
~''"tir>n5 for 1931
ntering Theodore Roosevelt school
tainment. \ · 1
')
the Glee Club, branch near Egleston sq. 'last fall,
Rev Cato lck, pastor of the First_ 1
.....
C
h f
th6 ta.st threi'Y 1
p.1esents the Oli Hovhannes Mugrditchian, 42,. and
B·.-ad." in the,, his wife, Beatr,·ce, 33, who are of
=ethodist hur-c
.
OT
'
""'"
........ m . bit W1' "l'il."'F8Ji!M1 bY . 1 r
day eve·iling,·1,t, Armeni~n descent, finished their:,, kew Inglin!
selected cast ani course 1n one. year
The couple i Albert 'l~&rtniniello, &.1,1.d ., Dant/}.
uses have r~!:!at have three children attending day _ - . .,..:;...; ~~Z
school
Atte~ded by the entire member-I '
,
t??. '
, ship of the Superior Court bench
fi
and delegations from every legal
society in Massachusetts, the body

'
of the vete1an jurist will buried
---~-- ~--·---- Itomorrow in the family bep1ot in 1
FC?rest Hills The burial wiIJ f61: low a '"sol~mn high mass of requiem
I at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross
A h

Frb°':{ of t1.tht~
-

b

d

·f

C~~i~!

'"'rI

IL · ' "' ·
com~. . ..

-=--·.~·~---~

---~----- '-

'~

--

1

I

AMERICAN,

/

~t 'Evenlng Cireuliitio

r7

~s;~2i ~OMPLEH
NIGHT ClASS
S Y
ttJO

GIRi

8450

Awarded Certificate: 1
of Proficiency at
Exercis~s

A grandmother and a score c

r

l

I
I
--------L

~
.,
~,
r Dean of Law Scho9l
Addresses Men's Club

·~

·.·· .

----,~--

-~-------~

r-c~~-~-~----,-;_~---'----:..,.~

r,

-

1 AMERICAiil, BOSTON, 1 MASS.

I

:~:(_,_~.

!

t~

I

/

APRIL 17.

BOSTON ·EVENING

1931

DMOTHER AND SCOR
ta 29 C M LETC
Op
c.!n,::rr~:'-:
\

GIRT

8450

~warded

of Proficiency at
Exercissis

1

r
.
1

A_grand.m.other and a score ~ ,
men and women more than 4
years old were among the 82
g.iven dipomas for completion <
elementary and high work ~
graduation <1'{ercises in tb ,
city's evening schools.

I

REVERE, MASS.

:c' ~'/;

·

! 8 1931

I

A total of 8450 certificates c
proficiency in study were als \
a~arded. , The grandmother wh. I
was- graduated was Mrs. Emma Si 1

l

peria, 56, of 14: Chelsea st. Eas
Boston, who has four son~ an
three grandchildren. She was graO

1

class that t<;S~l_ed 56. One son ani
two granddaUght_ers of Mrs. Saperi;
attend day. school. Mrs. ~aperi:

I

uated from the Joseph H. Barne
evenjng sc?-~o.t.": :;East Boston, in ,

was also the oldest known «Hemen
tary school graduate.
,
HAS SON STUDYING LAW

-

,

gra-du. a~·

The ~econd oldest to
·u

I

.

n

I

.:/

- S:INIVH "WM; 1,j:111

1,i
" ..

~ ,

I

'

i, ~l~w

----·"~""

HOT

J/

EIAV"S'SV.W

~~~~~~~~·~·:r·t !
/·.ii
IS~
·---~\~

• · · •.:a1".i1: s,u"w.anuan v,. ,
,,a:nM qwJ,.L '.}.I'Bd,, -- ~IOifeS

'B

I t,

, (

-t

a.xaM. qorq~ P,-:; }ua.>a.t lf / :ij~
~sa.1n:p33J JO .xaqu.nu '.}l u/1'.

.hl3'.M.,.

ienced
coDUort
hot; w-ater

c1v111za1:mn woult
collapse like a house of cards. Th<!
underworld is a seething volcano
ready ,to break out if enforcement of
'laws stopped.
Men must surrender
some of their personal liberty for the
benefit of all other men and women.
The welfare of all the people must ,
take precedence over that of the few.
Boo__tleggers would have to stop busi- 1
riess. if their customers became law- 11i
~ding citizens.
Eva-y !person is I
entitled to protection from the law- 1
less.
The Boston police strike of !
19.-19- was an· instance where law was/
released arj amounted to an invita-,
/

I/".
1\1

il~?s:MI Ja.(ew-u-'Mp1os-o-J;aw

- .lS'AVMi'-fON

=:=::::::::::;.~;.~..:::::::::==2:~~Ll/11
E
1
·

a~l
~ Ut p3£'B{d aO_U!S S'eq aqg,~, .,',

~

~uaye.A A:wwJ£'
p<;).readd'a 1,s.1u Sl3HV,, UJ ..\'.:~W'"'
pu-e .ta waqt
SWUAH 1!1!"'1:
-p[O !:)-0 .I l

l :>·f:~t;;f)±;<:. )fi~~) ~13~.

t1

U~

: ~ _/>l~: '·

. PRESS HERALD, PORTLAND, MAINE
~op;

l,,

Air f\ - \..:

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

~. ~i,

i\l

193,

lD~~RNING, .APRIL _1_0_,_1_9_3_1---~~~-·-:-.--_

_LI~: •~
7)

.Es~-

i==="""=~=l======"""=="""===============;=============================::3:========;t~n!'!:nr1:V~i

Bath

Far and Near Missionary Society of
Corliss Street Church Friday:.
Attorney John P
Carey, Jr,
has
Soedal Despatch tO The Puss Herald
been in Boston ,attending a meeting of
Bathy April 9. Miss Phyllis Bowie the alumni of S ~ a w ScJ;iooI, of
left Thursday for Washington, D. C , which he is a graduate
for a visit.
Deputy Sheriff
Norman Curtis
of
Paul McCole was a Portland vi.sitar Bowdoinham, familiar -at every term of
Thursday.
Sagadahoc Superior Court as co:µrt

'\as chosen for
All
tend this :meet..

Sutritlon.,,
t

,

th.er of the Suf-

at the me'l!t'!l!g
iClub in Butler
~' last evening,.
)fore ent." · A
I

Marlene Dietrich 8.nd Victor McLag .. 'Q"ier, was a local vis.ito-r ~~
1
to the Re~btealD eyf
Mi hllnoiE, first craft
ociation. The
• ,launched this year by the Bath Iron
Ladies' Night,
One of the outstanding amateur pro... t=
ker and enter•
"7,,,..tj(">T'\1'; for 1981 may be expected when
~ tam .
t
the Glee Club of Morse tifigh School I
R!:"iato\.i>ick, pastor of the Firlilt_
p1 ~sen ts the operetta,
"The - Belle of
: :Methodist Church for the last. thref•1
Ba.gdad~' in the :.scho.ol auditorium Fri- I
:.....,..,,,
braJenW:ma_,nnRJ_
'bY_ I .r
day eve:c..ing ·it 8 ,o.'clock~ . A carefully
New icnglam! ' C ~ .
_.
selected cast and several colorful s,h_ors
__
,
i". Al:b~__ 'l'~rminlello .,_ ~~ .:.,:~ii):
uses have :t:~¢arse4 for the past month"-.
---,-,
t..
e ,c!irectiol,'.l :.,;,r ¥~ Carrle . -- ::~'
-~
~
len in "Oishon.:ired" at the Opera House

Friday.

!

-

r~ --

~i-

rtea.

:{j f/

.___._.

___

;

.

-- -- - - - - - - - - - - - -

'-·

'.t


ONLY>i99'0F ·754 PASS;

,,

·t
}

'

STATE BA1t EXAMINATION)

l

Percentage of Failures One of Largest in Years-/
New System in Effect
f;

h,

f~

199 apnl.kants
inoiudirtg 26 1cceiving congratulations from
his
of t11~, 7t.4 Who · tCJolt the friends on passing the bar e:-tamina• fo
tt
.M:a.s;::;ac-huset,s Ba, Examination in the tiort
Mr Irving was
radttated from the te
latt.;ir oart of ri~ee~bel", nave been Sufflolk Law Schoo in une,
e
1ecVJ?-Jmended fo, f!dmission to the Bar, wa.s born in Charlesto"Wn, son of Mr I.:
..--;r---------~
it Wa$- a.nu )unce;-1 t'eStel'day bY Bollis :td !"lrs V\filliam D, Itving of 98 High
r... Bai!ey chai.1 •nan of the Board of
Hhi father and uncle were members
Ee.: E:x.arn·nel'.S:
':f'he failure of 555 of the old Charlestown Cadets, Co A
in.
C.
cand.i;;lates to ps,;;.;, is
believed to be Mh Regiment, ~ V M
Hl!l became ~ St
OnW

FRANOJS1

on

i

rJf the la1 ;,:es

bercentages

in years

i~~

<.'1

21,

as
po

_,,11e l'.ot,1rt un April 18, and they
l>t. ,,-wu1 0 in t, 1 the court on MEly 1
ru11os go 'i.c:!rnin_tt the admission
1;<-<ndidates W'c"J!f:' in effect dtlz'itii ~is

e.
a
L

lld:EIDFORD, April ~ - Franols
O'Brien ot 36 Summer •t, eon. ~
and Mrs Pa-trick O'Brien, was o~

57:

e,:. LiaJ ndi>J' o:t the qua"Iilicauon: of
U1s- llHJ candidafos. will be giVe'n to the

JY

O'BRIEN
.
PASSES BAR1 TEtii

_:1i11a.::hm to~ the first time,
,,0u to the wt'itten e:<fan:H.tuthon,
" t,.-.:,, aJsu c1t• ot·a.1 interv'iew With

S

L

do

l

.rnl

:L

~~

is

-~,.
~

01

Examiners
~rtr~sca~!ifev°:d

the E'oard of

,;~~,:c:;u.'.~~t:·\~~~=~

v,· may Have had so:ttJ.ethifig to
\'\ itlI tt'.e u11•1sw.a11y 1arge perc~rtt..,
. i.• -

~~ ;~~\~~r~~,,!;,,i~~d~~{ Jn

:::eU:vli•~i:c1 t~~ !

~~~~,~Li~~t;~~~rd 1t n,t~ft't~e wr::ireto~:ar~h=

~o\tt~!. ;_/n t~.

1-ffe1~~~gf:.

(

t~! ~Et~hose I

pa'><'1C'-". i.s first assist.ant to ~11.>-rk
.Jo~1n :H. Campbell of Stiffdlk St1per!o1
C1hninal Co. urt, and has been clerk

I

..

..

I

.GEORGE E

IRVING

1nemDc.r ~f Co. .B hi 1912., and ·was grad;iateil: from the Massachusetts Train ..
?ng ~Choo! artd was maae a second s1
neute~az:it.
.
n
He se~v~d at thE: ;M:exica;i. bOrder as t,
se-cond lieutertan~ of t?e 5th Infantry,
and_ was tr'ansferr_ed ln J'"uly, i917, to
!3;;~~hi!~erfi':ne o~:--y;!~ c:u~~:~k u:~
r;:antr)' ~ serving 18 inonths 8
courts,
ire was twice wou~ded and sent to h
II'he list
the ho~pital, and e~ch time requested .l
;follows:
to be sent back to his c:om.pany.
Mr Ir:ving always avoids ta1king ot '
his service in the war. He wears .a
bronze button w_hic:h i.dentifies him .as
a World War vetl:!'ran, but he is entitled to wear the silver button of the
Wou:ri~ed and: ga.ssed:vetera.ns.
Cav:t Irving took ~rt in the Chateau=Thiia_rry~ Meuse .Argonne and st Michel
Q.attles, beihg' wounded in the first
at J::oth Garrett trials.
His hotne
is in the West End wl:;t.ere he fiaJ;
always been an ac,:tiVe meihber and Of.fi.cbr . df the H_end:riclts .C:lub and ot.e
of Martin ~m,asiiey's intimate fflell::is,
He was raduated fr
uffOlk La

l!'R.ANC!S 0., O'BBJEN

those. who pa,esed the Bar e-~ln:,..
this week. He ,.,-a. lborn in Chi
town and was graduated from. xeJ
High School in the class of 1918.
He v.~as graduated .from. Tuft~

~~d:·1?1it

I

two.

He wa_s appointed an assist.ant clerk
at the Cliafiestow:n , Court eight years

!f~·

B

:fte~:edA~~!

N1!~¥is Jiu:em:::r
Hill and GharlestoWn •High

rc1!!i!

1WOBURN

.EX-AL.cDERMAN

··-J ;;,~~l;~ !~r~h E$~~~~1!!~?a~
I

JOhn Z

I

lege in l922,. and

:h-om

the Su:ffolki

School" in 1930. He- is assistant
manage!'" .for a Boston: inSuran-ceJ
pany.
i

I

;iS:1~!i::~ss-~ State Bar Examj.,

W

l

1

BRADY, 22, of
Somerville, who started in the
~ditorial department of the
Boston Evening American as
an office boy, was among the
199 to pass the bar examination. 'rhe exc.tmination was
taken by 754. (Staff photo.)

PASSES BAR

Nine Greater Salem. law stu.ct.ent h
eluding one girl, Miss_ Catherine r-.

f1e~r~&af\h~;n::;!• ph!:dbte:: e~ot 8
ina tions for admission to the M
~

"

chusetts bar. The succesaful ca.ndi
dates at the recent tests were as fol

lows:

t,

Harold E. Kiley, 63 Aborn stre
Peabody, 35 years old; Peabody Hig
1914; Salem
Conunercial;

Dohert;v of 101 Salem st has

p:~sed the M&sse.c.hUse~is ba1' esa1nii:-

!J
~

~a~~bO:y M~~~ln~~~ltt~heste
street. Danvers; Salem Classical
High 'SChool, 23 years Old;
Suf:!o

anf

1

L8:fok~~~ll~3()L~~b!:~~ ~~e~u~. Sa
lem; 39 years old; Tufts eollege;
U. Law; teacher in Hebrew school
Melville Rowand,
Columbus
av
enue. Salem; 37 years old; Ames.bur
High school; Salem Commercial;
E. Law; 16 years in superior courq
clerk's office.
,
James H Sullivan, 83 Maple street:l,
~~~~1~s;Lawc;e~~~~':: We~~~~rstt~y
0
n~J:rs;*te~~;~h~1~it :::~~l;st~;~
tta. Law school;' E. C. Jenney's of!i
Boston.
'
William. :a. Butler, 6 Barr stree
8
~~~~ajic i~J:e8f~u~~~ce ~~~ne:!:gh\
James E. Callahan, 52 Broad stree

r

I
I

:,:,ai;~f~; ;;oir:::i:';~;1W
B. U
college Business Administr
tion; Portia Law; many years w1
W. B Sullivan, Boston

ermont
'II" T

_
r
UI.,th,at

.c::!

ooses

'

-:C!i~-.,1.:--.-. ...of.-

\

Contrnueit'troiii'~ ~rl" , ··~~,

h.e'. ow,d. his. su-ccess to h~,! P-!'¥r--.

·, -t~: ·i;t!\;:!:i~;. a;3s:~~:~;t .·
1

- 1~

~'e:ry
graduate 0 £ _~ynn Cla,ss1cal High
~h~ol class of I 918, and is 28 years
ld
She graduated.
from Radcliffe
\ College in 1923 and is employed. by
G~nn and company publishet"S .
,
Lester B Morley, 27, of ,26 Mlnerva '\
street
Swampscott is a graduate of
Swa~ps~'ott High school and Lynn
Burdett - College
He s.tudied. 8 ; t ~
folk ~ h o o l and is in the income
taXH~~~\d.eE Kiley, 3'.S, of 63 Ab~rn
·street,
r ~ ! e d __from P.eab~dy High 1
,.d,oo--r:-~ass of 1914
He 1s. also. a i
graduate of the
S:e! 1cm
Comme,;c1al
school and t:re Suffolk Law schoqb He
is a tnember of tFe Peabody school
committee
Joseph Pill, 39,
of
30
Sum1n.it
a, enue, Salem is a gradU,ate of Tufts
College and 'Boston Uni.ve-rsity La.w
school
He is an instructor in a Hebrew school.
:r-.folville Rowland 37, of 111 Columbus avenue, 5t:1,lem graduated. from
Amesbury High school, Salem Com , mercial and New England Law school1
i I H,.. l,;,is been emoloved for the p_ast 16

Two Lynners, Jacob Garber
of 205 Washington street, and
Alberta B. Derry, of 157 Beacon Hill avenue, were among
the 199 students wh,o su=essfully passed the bar examinations conducted by the State
Bar Examining bOJard.
Seven hundred and fifty-four
students took the ex:nmination.
Eleven
Greater
Lynners were
among those who p:issed th.e examinar.:ion. Four are of Salem, four
of Danvers, one. :is of Peabody,

one of

Gloucester

and

one of

Swampscott..
Friends and. associates of Jacob Garber were deluging the young tnan with
messat?"es of congratulaUon this morn! ; ... ..,..

H,s. :;,. f'"h•

""n"

n.f M1:1.x

Garber.

lc~:»L cme:-tHud

;it/::~i~n~~
H :.1 am

1
~~~

<)J

th?se w_~(, took the

1r··

1;r~ia!~~~e ~:rte~~~" a ./ .
1

M. l-'rendible, one of those

J)as,,s<.:, i,;, first assistant to Slli'tk
.Jo.irn i-L G_ampbeU of Stiffoik Supet.!or
Cl'ln1fnal Uourt, and has been i:!lerk
8.t toth Garrett trials.
His borne
is in the \Vest IDnd w'be:fe he has

h,
GEOltGE E

1
I 1nemO.CJ,".o~.

b::~ ~e!JI;~~~sm:;~iera~~d 0~:; he:;t:::.:;d at
~!:1;erf1~e o:ry;:! c:u~~=rk ui~ ';,~~:·1?11l
He_ was

courts.

tt'he

:follows:

·raduated fr

h

_
Co.~ in _1JU2, ~nd w.:as_gr~d:1aterl from the Massachusetts Train'"
1ng $=:lchool and was niade a
second

!~:;y:f

of Martin Lomi.s:iiey's intimate ffiell~s.

IRVING

I;}
ir
sl

FRANOJS

the ~exic:n border as I~

ffblk La

and__ was transferx.-ed tn .J"UIY:, 19i7, to
1;:antry~ serving 18 months
He was twice wounded and sent to
t1?-e hospital, and e~ch time requested
to be Sent bacJt to bis company.

list

h~~~e!~~gi:lthaf~w:;~id~eta~~!:fs

o:

bron.ze butt.on w. hich id. entities him as
a Wor1d War Veteran, but he is entitled to wear the Silver button of the
'Wou:".lded and gassed·veterans.
Cairi'. Ir'ving t6ok part in the Chateau ...

o.,

O'B&lEN

those -who pi&,9sed the Bar ~ i n ; "
this week. Be waa born in. Che

second lieutenant of the $ti)_ Infantry,

town and was graduated :from Mel

a

High School in the class of 1918.~'
He v.·as graduated !"rom. Tuft
Iege in l922.. and h-om. the Suffol
School" in 1930. He is assistant ,'
manager for a Boston 1nsuran-ce1
:pany.
I

I'
I

n [~f{:::· ~e~~~e ~rffu°tJ1e~ a~: 8th!'1 1i~!{
two.
He was appointed. an aSsistallt clerk
at the C~'f'.Iestown . Court eight years

li

.I

EDWARD T. BRADY, 22, of
Somerville, who started in the
editorial department of the
BOston Evening American as
an office boy, was among the
l 99 to p-:iss the bar examination.
The examination was
taken by 754. (Staff photo.)

I

1

B

!f~' N1!_~/s &u:em:::r :fte!i~~dA::{
Eunke.r Hill

Scho6Is

and

Gha:tJestoWri

-·---·--

1WOBURN EX-Al.,DERMAN

_

.

High

' ,;

I J'l~~;t~ !tr~h E~:!~~1!!!,?a~ I:<
IP:~~e~ ~-~
I .John Z

Dohert;Y of 101 Salem st has h.
Mass~~hUs(:~.ts bar eJ>iami~-

S

I

o,ntfuuOO"'tro;.~e q:ne ~ - -:~

_

~ that he owed. his success to h:5 {~~
and :Miss , 1 t H 1s a crtifid public accountant.

1§.urn High

....... __ ...,

I

b

~

I

The other Lynner, Alberta B , erry I
is a graduate of Lynn Cla-1-sical High
schoool class of 1918, and 1s 28 years
old
graduated
from Radcliffe
I College in 1923 iand. 1s e1nployed. by
Gi,nn and. company publishen-.
Lester B Morley, 27, of 26 Mmerv~;
street Swamp9Cott is a graduate or
Swa~ps~'ott High school and Lynn
\ Burdett College·
He studied ~t ..:E,:
folk ~ b o o l and is in the income

1

·;,,,.

'Alherta

H~~~\';tE

Kiley,

35, of 63 Abc_,rn

·:~~:~:~~~~-z.;e;I &°ff
graduate

of the

al:~g: \

P~:b~~y
S;!.lcm
Commercial;

school and tre Suffolk Law school;

He

is a me.mber of tef Peabody school
committee
Joseph Pill, 39,
of
30
Sum.m.it
avenue, Salem, is a gradua-te of Tufts
College and Boston Un!versity La.w
school
He is an instructor in a Hebrew school.
Melville Rowland 37, of 111 ColU1n.bus avenue, 5l3.lem graduated. from
Amesbury High school, Salem Commercial and New England. Law school,
He has been employed for the p_ast 16
years in. the Salem Superior Court
Clerk's offi~·e
Willi.am. H Butler 22, of 6 Bart
street, Salem. graduated from Salem
Classical High school
and
~
1
Law school. He is affiliated w ~
I
t insuraiLcb ,ffi,mpally
>
James E Callahan, a resident of 5 '.
Broad strei!t Sa.letn, is a graduate o
i
Slem. High. 'and
t~
Suffolk
Lm
' school. He is employed. by t&i=,Qii.1te1
, ~ompany
1
Charles F. Manning
23,
of 3
Chester street I;)anvers, is a graduat
of Salem Cl,a,ssical High school an
the Suffolk L.aw sc!,._o9-l
He is a
em.plo~ii" -·~lie- Office of Elmer \X

'I

I

Sullivan o.f 83
Map/
street, Danvers
is
a
graduate
c
Georgetown University ,and. the Sul
folk Law school.
He is employec:f"""E
Stone and Weg'ster
Rita Wheelwright
of
55
Centt
street, Danvers, is a graduate of Dar
vers Hli;i:h !:Chool .'ln.d the Boston -U:n
versity College- of Busit}ess Ad.m.-u1
istration
She is a graduate -of tlPortia Law school and has been en,
ployed for se\eral y11:ars with E
C

Lijb:~~: H

Jec:~he~t,.: 1t°Conroy
0

o.f 16 Charl,
street Danvers, is .a graduate of Dar
vers 'High s-:.hool, Boston Universi1
College o·f Business Administration an
the Portia law school
She has bee
em.ployed for many years by W. I
Sullivan of Boston
Hilia :r..1 H:i.rrnaala 23 of 5 Em.e
.:'l.ld street, Gloucester is a gradu~te <
Ponia Law school
She is employ<:
by the Stanbon, Nye and Hill Con
pany of this city

:.n;w-ar&~.

ft..,,;.. rlU Iii

Deny

Jacob Garber

She

ta*

\

.

and

Are .··

,-~ot?tie~-~ --· ·

Two Lynners, Jacob Garber
of 205 Washington street, and
Alberta B. Derry, of _
157 Beacon Hill avenue, were among
the 199 students who successfu~y passed the bar examinations conducted bv t!he State
Bar Examining board.
Seven hundred and fifty-four
students took the ex:nm.inationEleven
Greater
Lynners were
among those who rv..tssed the eXam·
inar.:ion. Four are >0f Salem, four
of Danvers, one 5s of Peabody,
one of Gloucester and one of
Swampscott.
Friends and associates of Jacob Garher Were deluging the young man with
messatres of congratulaUon this mornI ing.
He is the son of Max Garber,
I one of the most prominent real estate
m.en in this City, arrJ/,a highly re·
spected citizen•
.
Young Garber is a g~ad.uia.1:e of Eng\ glis,h High s:.'hool, N ortheas~rn ColIege, and the Stuffolk Law school.He
1 holds the' degrees of L L B- and B C
S He is treasurer of the Mutual Ass~da:teS- ~nd. _in a _statm.~_?.t to~ay he said

I

' }'.~il
I

I

n~~.-.~·~~-~-11
. ..
!

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RECEIVER



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puu iuaJap 'lasaum zuµq pu,.
-t{µ!ua.xis puu .~.xaua d'lls
uowad;~uoa. mo.xi: suos;od at{l
uauo isow: 1nq • • • t[Znoua
p.zvq .&.xl A'.at{,L . ·pa.z;i •' s.i.V.M.
-1u a.xv A'.al[l asn vaaq ;no :.iui
-sot e.zv ot[,o, uawo,o, puu u"w:
• • • .,S{{!l]; ,\'.SA\.0.Z([,, al[l ;aalll
no.t aJ!I ifO X'XV.M. ;uraAli[ NI

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c'pJS.IaAn:I,, aaun'eUI h'ep.1n·.feS pU'B
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EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS~,

b
µ.

01 l~S UV jOOl 'p130.t re.sat e-q:i. 2uora l
ssa.M.b.Id siq la.t~a.1 ol aS;n"e.> p13q .1aso1 '8 A.1;113'-µt :i.aA •.xaA!A.'El S'B_.M.. aq U'Et.{l .I0:).0'8

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s~.M. J.aultqM 'ltOH p.113qo1a

·saAa .7:aq u-1 ;i.a1t~:~s1,ux }.O
at~.1-eds -e pu-e asou AtaAOt .xaq uo .tnoy
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'B U! U01S!A a1q-e.top1J U13 Aq p~madO S'efA.
.ioop a"ln. pu'B' · •:i.aa;i :Jq.s'tl JO n.xnos 'B
• .•quappns •pa}{oaqo ansJl-IM A.13.8 v ·iooP
aql · :re pa}{oou]i pu-s ~u-a~ aql dn aui-e~
u-e:w 2unoA .2uptoo1-A.:reaM 'ffEl 'B uaqM

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.su1urqs 13 pa:i.s13oq aouaJ l<n101d £:ut.S.S-es ,
Il" ..tun aqJ:., ·moo.t 0'.l woo.I wo.11 paoqoa },
.. 'p{.lO.M. ~"lll q+1M ao'Ead +-s pua: Add'l:ilt{ ~
•1-11.S Jiuno.i -e JO .2uos .surnn eql :auor

\

\S

~~fniJee s.~~-e ~~~Al~~o;~:Mp~~i°~~ ;~1~;

-+ny sap-eu-eo panb!(dd"B arnn A111s t.n.t.M.
i.:un::q.1n::)
'.}1 ;i:o 1nos a-qi. 'aJn aw+ st:=A\.
T:J?lI

SUFFOLK LAW JUNIORS

t~'ft~ Pv~!t~Eth~Oj~n~~?..f

o.

I
1

aul

O]

! S' 5.~U'Ht.{M.

".Il\I_

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL MA"S
/
APR 26
'
.s ·

.e Suffolk La.~hool will hold ,

~t~ hop an~jubilee at tbe Hotel Som r

set.

H:f:C,~d
J

·
chalr:nliJ.U of ·~~

1.
ecommittee,

D. Stee~e, will be assisted by

. 4. Hutchins .and Leonard Shein.§

Ut

H'

)i,

J'OSEPH F. DE CA~

- Class treasurer ,

.....;,,,

' .s.o4liNDERS-MeCLELLAN
M r. Edward J

.
younger busine· 8 aunders, one of th~
a1:d Miss Teresess men of the city·.
River W-ete marr~dMcCiellan of Fall
church in Fall R'
at St Joseph's
' nuptial mass wa iverl yesterday. The
Thomas Gunnin=s ce ebrated by Rev.
bridegroom at
a classmate of the
1922. Miss El
oly Cross College in
ter of the ~~~~r. J. Sa~~ders, sisoridesmaid and t~groorn, was the
Attorney Jam
1e best man was
city, a busin es F. c_orbett of this
x,
Mr Sauna:::. ~~oc1?-te
/ ~he real estate bus? is e:1gaged in
ls the son of th
iness 1n Lowell
Saunders and hf e late J\Ir. John F•

f!ld~ Joseph DO~. Gu~enof!' is chief of
a ~sj. ~ssist.ed 1:>Y Laurence Capidilu o
~1.llla~ I<.1ars1s .Jr ,Harry R C hp •

tester:-Jam~Son,' Edwa,rd F"ole; a~1!i
ise~::sure~r~1;e~i1~?s~ :F'; De Caro
Guests will include D,.ea·n i,and M
Gleason L. Archer, Prof and M~!
Thomas J. Barry, Prof·· and M.rs Wilm.ot. R. Evans, Pr9f and .Mrs- Thomas
F. Duffy, Prof. and Mrs Harry BJ.
berg and Prof ~e_orge A. Doug1°a.°sr:1'-

\:
'\

·/

0

-~ic~:·~~:~1:~ers

~~!~H;,-;: ~;tl;I
t\ · £tppt:)lJ pm,
::, sd:):)'[ 'Ut1:)p
l!tp :l:)lJltlJ 2u!

dCf=~-"~+

·:s=i1
J.wnb tl-:)JStl.M.
ApUt1'.)SUO::> ::>.ltl s:
:so 2unoA:-ut1mo,
U'll::> no,C '!U!lJl l, u,
Jnoqt1 ss=ip:st1::> :)q <
UtllJl :l:)'{:>!nb :):>Ula
!

¥



1
i

BOSTON :BV

POLITICS
Notes and Gossip
About People
You Know·

Shanahan of Swampscott are getting quite chummy.
Their col1eagues would riot be surprised to
see them getting out the 8 ounce
gloves.
MURPHY ON JOB
John M. Murphy of Hyde Park,

newest member of Governor Ely's
office staff, is a for~r Georgetown fOotball star.
Thomas M
Ray of Lynn, who went up a peg
when Murphy wa,S! taken on, is
also from the same university.

\'l'OM:AN IN RACE

LEGISLATURE'S SCORE
The legislature this year. insofar
as committee work goes. is exactly
at the same percentage ft was a
in the number of bills
,The percentage is 85

y
n

e
e

/

"FLIER" MAN·ION

___J

EVEN

"Charl'ie)' Manion, chauffeur to
Mayor CJ.urley,. 'f!.9'[ie$ 'to:'Qe an aviator some day~ .. · He.. P~ns to enroll
at a flying sofu:xi)f:ar th!' East Boston Air Port ct~id '{Jeli'3Ves he will
ha,;e little diffic1<lty in getting a

p'ilot's lice1i8e.

·

·

COUGHLIN N.AVAL MAN
Capt "Bill" Coughlin, candidate

, fira~i~dc;~~;i.~f;~~ ::s!r!o:~~;
-,-o------

SU

Tl

ter of the 1naneuvering boat of ·the
target pra~tfoe fleet in Long Island
Sound for a numb.er of years. *'Bill"

is confi~~nt h e ~ e -elected~

o!
KOCH MAY RUN
it.S l
Rob.ert ~ordOn , Koch _of Forest
· · t Hills 1s being ·l!.f'~_q, PY: his friends

-seT to be a candidate..._fot"'··(?ity· Council
Hai from Ward 19. ~~-~_is'_.,a,.:recen't gradJ. '. uat~ of. Sµ\i9]k·. f:~·.l,":$~001 and is
i active. in t e. ~fa~rs>·-O~ St. James
, • Council,
Kn1gh.t$ <.·~·( · C~lurobus.
~ City Counci~or Pete-;/A::;Murray, incum bent, will seek' re:-election..

1

(.,.;>

I

!l PAGF;S .PLAN TR1:e
~:
Vacation plannlng

iS

on

full

swing at the State ·Rouse. House
, pages are t.alking of a fliver trip
to the West .coast. But those who
have listened to plans of former
pages year after year are bettinothey won't go.

~

SENATORS CHUMMY
Senator Donald W. Nicl}olson ot
Wareham a-nd Senator William. F.

A·cRc
JO~~a!1s

~~r~:~

feJd. Joseph uon~cuseno:ff is chief of
aid~, assisted by Laurence Capidilupo,
Willi~ll1 Kia.rsis Jr, ,Harry R. Cohen,
Lester A. Sa.mpSon~ Edwa,rd Foley and
Bernard Hurwitz. Joseph F: De Caro
is t;"eastirer of the class.
,
Guests Will inClllde D,ean · and Mrs
Gleason L. Archer, Prof and Mrs
Thomas J. Barry, Pro!; and Mrs Wilm.ot. R. Eva~s. Pr9f and .M:rs Thomas ,
F. Duffy, Prof and Mrs Harry Bloomberg and Prof <;;e_orge: A. Douglas.

MARRIAGES

SAq8NOERS-McCLELLAN.
1\:rr. Edward J Saunders, one of th'e
younger business men of the city
a~d Miss Terese K. McClellan of Faii
River were married at St Jo~eph's
chur~h in Fall River yesterday. The
nuptial mass was celebrated by Rev.
TI:omas Gunning, a classmate of the
bridegroom at Holy Cross college in
1922
Miss Eleanor J Sa~nders, siste~ of the br-ideg'room, · ·was the
orid~smaid and the best man was
~ttorney J~mes F. Corbett of this
c1ty, a business associate
.#1
Mr Saunders, who is engaged in·
the real estate business in Lowell
is the son of the late ~Ir. John F:
Saunders and l\1rs. Alice J. Saunders,

~.,9ft1't,"..!4p'6\fi!<N
lUf TI;)M. .l;)t!l"I
.\. ·..{tpp,;)t:[ pt:11?
:, Sd;);):l{ 'U1';)p
1itp .l;)tJll?I llu!

1

droo.t"l M:bi'!i~;>',-sra,,i...
. ,l;)l
l.l1'nb 'E-;)lS'EM.
..{pm,JSUQ:) ;).!1' s:
.m $uno..{-u,,mo,

l

- - - - - - - - ~ - .-~-.....-~r.cW".,.:,;;.....,._,__..,.~-

~~,.

_________ ______________ - - - - - - - - - - - · - ---·-·-1_,

Ul?:>

noC:>fupp l,U,

Jnoq,i SS;)f;).!1?:> ;)q ,
Ul?t:(l .l;):lf:>!Ilb ;):)U1'

r~::e,~-z~r~~~itJ.~f1!~~\, o,: .•. }'.f'1
MAY 6-1931

1.---,.

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-.~

!

----1

~in .NewEnglani.l
,i

!=I :34i#iii. 1 =.·=::·z::,z:.-,:::;':=,;;::->=:,,::
_:;:::· __ ito.~'(Z

:kECEIVER

j'

I

OF"5BANKS

~,N NEE

I

1

=:::;_"='
-1

·='

1

ISMISSING1,\
.

Accounts in Muddled
Shape- Huge Sum
-Is Involved

I

'Guy L. Vaughan of 24 Pinckney
street, Beacon Hill, With offices inj
the Exchange building, who was re- \
moved yesterday by the Supreme ;
C0urt from ,his· receivership o. £ five .'
defunct private banks, and whom the :
bank commissioner declared to be
issing, was reported last nig'ht by
his family i:h Melrose as ~eing" in
Washington. )
' · .. __

,\

'/

\

gh;~;ccounts ·in the 1ive bank
rece verships were found by the bank
commissioner to show an in termingling
of assets, and a generally involved <=;ondition, but no charge was filed against
bi:rn.
Frederick D. Bonner of the law firm
of Hill F~errick & Bonner was appointed temPorary receiver in his place, with
inst1 uctions to straighten out the tangle and take whatever action might be
found necessary.
rl'he five banks of which Vaughan t'
w:as receiver, and whose accounts now ;
are in a muddle, according to the bank '
co·mmissioner, are the Andrea DiPietro .
Company of Boston,. the First Bankers
Union, Inc , of Boston, the Nonantum
Bankers Company and Amato Pescosolido & Co. of Newton, and Fabrizio
Pitocchelli of Lawrence. The liabilities

S':luamasnmv

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

C

SUFFOLK LAW JUNIORS

~

ff?~ ~~n~n~Eth~Oj~n~o~~?a!

of'l':t:' Suffolk ~ h o o l will hold
its hop Rnlf""'jubilee at the H.otel Somer-

~et.

The

.

I

-chalr.m.#-ll

I

of

of . the committee,

J. 4-. Hutchins and Leonard Shein-

said~

v;~:h~~ni~~ed

in
hiiu;eom}tr;Jivii~~~~~;:
street, where his principal living quar ..
ters was a. large studio, and where he
maintained a Japanese i:µal:!, servant ,

] ;
l

He had lived there three years, mov~ng
0
;~oomh!h~v!;e!i~a~is
ts~v:r:1~~~
[- Mrs. Robert M. Vaughan, at 83 Cedar
e park, Melrose.
ii
The bank coml'llissioner, Arthur Guy,
p in announcing to the court the absence
~
bf Vaughan, said that .he had been

~ire~

I

,;::c!t~!~

:::~i~~u~i~c~r 1~~~
that crumpled papers, ostensibly pertaining to the records of the defunct
banks under- his care, , had been found
in his .Beacon Hill apartments.
ev.
:he
R.eported in Washington
Vaughan was said last night by his in
father to have been in Washington a lsmonth on .business, but was ill when he
last heard from
His address there was as
not known, the elde1 '\"augb.an said, and tis
although it was confidently stated he
would return as soon as his business in
,vas. finished, no date had been men- ,u,
tioned in Vaughan's letters home.•
Yaughan is a graduate of the S ~ k F.

!·nd ~

,-

0

'

·s,
~~~o;!~~~dm'T:%s ci~n~~:\!~a~n~r~: 'Ip

feld. Joseph J:>Oii - Gusenoff is chief of
aids, a.:ssisted by La.ureJJce Capidilupo, I
William Kiarsis Jr, Harry R. Cohen,
Lester·A. sampSon> Edwa.rd Foley and
Bernard Hurwitz. Joseph F; De Caro
is treasurer of t1::te class.
,
GU.eats Will inc.l'U.de. Dean · and Mrs
Gleason L. Archer. Prof and Mrs
Thomas J. Barry, Prof' anQ. Mrs Wilm.at. R. EVRl':lS, P,r9f and Mrs. Thom.as ,
F. Duffy, Prof and Hrs Harry Bloomberg and .Prof c;;e~o't'ge A. Douglas.

fession in Boston. 1;Ie is only 35 years
old
He had .assisted Henry O. Cushman, the liquidating agent, in winding
up the affairs of . the Cosmopolitan
Trust Company. He had been awarded
a fee of $18,000 for acting as counsei
for the former· bank commissioner, Roy
A. Hovey, in the liquidation of the
Hampshire County Trust Co~pany in
No1thampton, and his ability was -recognized generally.
Bank ·Commissioner Guy informed Su•
Pi-eme Court Justice Edward P. Prince
yesterday, in petitionin,g; for the ~ppointment of a
tempo-rary
receiver
to
str~ighten out Vaughan's bank recorO.s~

I

that. an i.nvestigation into them, ma-de
reCeipt of a' complaint, showed
evidencE: ?f ne~lig. ent management and

,Iupori
'.

.~'---~L-~ - - ' - - - - ·- - -

closed_.. _,h--l[U'l~-e:.

Lived In Fine Style

,



Harold D. Steele, Will be ·assisted by

the

~!~:;~;;t~~sb!~!de~o7~i$~~~~~~.

1,11

/

maladm1n1strat10~ •

oi~,
M.

s:

' o,

,u,

'IS

'

~

.,,:..J

,a...:~/ ;~;nt~·

JUN 17'931

JUN 2 21931

·;jj,.!l'!itlj ~~;;;-~I

',,---\!i

1.uuay-

rREUBVE~EG~-, AT

In the evening there wa~e;,

recwif~~et;oup1e being assisted in 1
of
e1r three sons, .Edward
0
1
M. I. . and
J. Anxr1i:n'd Jr of
0
daughter Be tty of
M.
T and their
Their ~ bridesmaid a~c life Acad~my /

I

ftY"c

;!":~f

I

153


best man, Clotilde

.

Georgiann

ton, were present at this r of ArHng ..
.Four prominent oun anmve~sary. / \
istrict received tlie1r
do,. th1s

hit;n

I

t:tom Suffolk La~chool th~ egrees
They a1'e,,,,.lienr E
is Week

r

Knowles Real )lJstat R;enan of the
ward F E:an1on ~ e
ompany; Ed~
and .Harold D ~ '
dward G :Kelley

I

I

active in the a Mullen, All were very
stoo_d high in tffe~~r~t~~i~~e1r class and

M1ss Alvera

c

Wr

a

Mr and Mrs Jose~h Waoa, daughter of
1

~~ East A~~~~t~~. ~n~~;

u..,..,. v;..,,.,'
--

0

1"1~

P

Of Tgrpers Falls, son O r
,,., ,~"'"'"'1'.n"'ii!L.i._
_:;g.;.._..

ENTERPRISE, LEOMINSTER,

·

I

~':.csb~~~c~~atr~1 ~;"~hel!s{~!~ hi~h
=~~:_excelled in all his studi-,.s and school for nine years. While at Suf-

JUN 17 ;~:
TRANSCRIPT, METHUEN, MASS.

i

"t:l>fJbt, ~ ! ' ! l ! H .

I

' ·:;;;i
wrklini,,

MISS MARY F. BRADY
Miss Dotot~"" ""''. .
bussei\ w/1 · ...axun. The time .....
t1w
later~ ~ " e Wi1I be annoiiilced "From Judge Francis P Brady ot j'
North Main Street, Uxbridge, comes
-Am911g tb. .

the announcement of the engagement
degree of. "ha.cheio!'b.f fe,ceived the
of his youngest daughter, Mary FranCOlll/llencement
o, · aws :tt the
Law Schooi. '· . . mses of ~
: ces, to Francis. J 'Fox, son of Mr and
T.empli, last =~n, at Tr_emon~
' Mrs Thomas J Fox of Rumford Av~ - · of. this ;it was: :El1c_hard
enue, Mansfield.
mencement
t· · ·· Y 1:b.e .com-.
Miss Brady is a gradate of Notre
un·ted · · · O 101:J. Wa,ll delivered b
.ra
Dame Academy, Roxbury, and Erner•
• .. . States .!',en.at9r Warren y
Hastmgs, of I:!t)laware, whJj . .. .0son College of Oratory, where she l'egrees were a warded b ti' e the decei ved her B L I. degree. She is a
on L. Archer wb. y. . ean Gleas-.
1ember of the Kappa Gamma Chi
Sorority and the Emerson College
tb.e school The Cl~,t:. Sll.!)ke _.for.
Club. Miss Brady, who is a skilled
took place du · ·
· Y !!Xercises
/ lmusician as well as a reader, has cont~e schooi au~f~~~- afternoon ii,
ducted schools of expression in \iVoI·
1 cester and Uxbridge,
.'
The bridegroom-to-be is a graduate

ex.et

'~~

1
1

rHUEN TRANSCRIPT, FRIDAY, JU

1

GRADUATES
FROM SUF-EQLK
LAJY --5GHOOL

1

HOME SECTOR, MELROSE, MASS.

's-ll!r. and Mis W -ici: V~ale ·-oCl
.<'ding road are rece1v1ng con.§.tulations on the birth of a daugh.far 011 Juil~ {~th at the Melrose Hos-

{Jital ,
I t l
-M~~intentions have been,
. filed by Hal'old N Crnss of 118_ Al. bion st ' SomerYille to Helen L Humphrey, 43 Winthrop st.
-Mr. Elmer E George of 78 Florence avenue was among the gra~uates from Suffolk Law school, receiving the degre1' ef L L ~' .
-Richa1d William Darns of 14,
Simonds I oad, Meirose, graduated: i /
from the Mass State College at Amherst, Mass. on last Monda
a

1

GAZETTE, TAUNTON, MASS.

Elton K

\ of the Mansfield High School, class
( of 1925. He attended Boston Colleg~
. and Boston University College of Bus·
,~' i_Qe_ss A<::J.ministration and will be graduated from the Suffolk Law School o1
Boston this ye~ "!'M §igtrra"~ho
.Delta ·1s his fraternity
'
Mrs. Richard H. McDonald of Wor1 cester and Mri, Emmett W. Barry ot
Whitinsville, aunts of Miss Brady as~
sisted at an engagement lunch g1ve11 ,
\ ~Y Miss Katherine Dunleavy, anothe::: 1' \:
1 aunt, in her ·home in Uxbridge Satur- \

I

_day.

_

I

. ----, _ __

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

Winford S

Tuesday night and Winford graduated
from Northeastern
He was
one
of three. in a class of 5 0 0 to be gi \·en
the highest honor in the school, that

of being elected to the Senate,

"--

J. Kirb~Ang~-BuSconi, Rita'

j

¥:CHat..

Jaquelin Sanborn,
Iton, Emmett Carey. John, Eugene
and

i

\.,,I

IWE DING TODAy

I

1"?~~~--"!!.\$.4n1J>J;<Jl:&'1f
~ss-ew ·~oolct\OH

'+~at'l~~J~Jl 0·~~

:, ~~ J?os H!? ;;A~uf!~qM

h:J,asu •,ossa,p £u~,1oq,n11
" ,~•'• .-~-;;:-:-,~-~-z-"L. .

-.

l.iotls . ,quo
v-:,rws

\'I

~OJI J\) I

' ,

J

'MAY~

program, Which
wm be given at a meeting of Maynard
Grange at Grange Hall tomorrow
night, was ;rehearsed at the hom~ ~of
.Mrs Adelaide de Sims,lecturer,last night.
Leonard Kelley, son of Mr and Mrs
Mark Kelley, Pumping Station road,
Who was ~raduated from S ~ v e ning Law School with the clMs of
1931, iS~Iso a graduate of Maynard
High School, class of 1927. He was a
baseball and _football star. Re is emA Children's Night

MARSHFIELD. June 20-'Ihe
wedding of Miss Vera Mae Stetson,
daui,hter of Mr and Mrs Leon F.
Stetson of Chicat~ubut avenue,
ocean Bluff, and Russell Everett c
Brooks of Allston, was scheduled
at 4 today at the home of Miss Stetson's grandparents, Mr and Mrs
George H. Tbomas, Ocean Bluff.
!
Rev William L Halladay of the
First Congregational church was
·\the. officiating clergyman, and at·tendants were ljlllen M Stetson and

,

1

--'·- - -----EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

AT OCEAN BLUFF

Briefly Told

Nowell, and

Nowell of 71 Lowell street, both well
highly respected local
known and
young men, have attained signal hOnors in theiI respectiYe colleges and
graduated with high ranks
Elton
gr actuated from Suffolk
Law school

ployed in the .Assabet Mill.

A whist party in aid of the Girl
~~~1:_:_!:~~~~was _!Ield. ye:,!:!rday at t~e

lstln~
n the

secretary of the class finance com- his colle e car

- i ~~!t~tn~f1~s;?m~fJ;~u~~:~y:g J~7-

MASS~ I
!

~;--E:-:cra;v.,,,-.., .
ROSSier, Geor;· ~.HU~

1

SUFFOLK SCHOOL

sf ~~~~e, and their I

Monier l!,f North C~

/

attained a place on the dean's lhat at I folk he
graduation He w.~s. also acti~e as ~ainin'g

mittee and deli;ered the class
prophecy at the class day exercises
which were held in Tremont Temple
yesterday. For the present Mr McAmong those whi> graduated last Laughlin will remain in his st;te ponight from Suffolk~s,hool in sition .
Boston were three Lowell men, HuMr. Barlofsky, who is a well known
bert L. McLaughlin, son Qf • Mr. and local grocer, is also a graduate of the
Mrs. Hubert A McLaughlin of 367 Lowell higb school and of the Lowell
High street; Arcbie Barlofsky of 71. Textile Institnte, holding a degree of
Dover street, and Ralph P. Coates of bachelor of textile engineering. His
Chelmsford Mr McLaughlin however high scholastic record at law school
will not receive his degrM until June , kept him on the dean's list for the
22 because he is not yet 21 years of: major part of bis four years of study
age, wbicb is requisite by 'law far tll.e
Ralph P. Coates, who resides in
reception of a bachelor of law degree. Chelmsford, has his business coonecMr. Mc1'.,aughlin is a graduate of the tions in this city. He is a graduate
Lowell high school and has been con- ot. Easthampton higb school and 'of
nected wltb the state department of Bates college where he received the

f"

1li

.. _

/

f

frANDARD, NE'l,V BEDFORD, MA'lS.

r ELY APPOINTS MORGAN T. RYAN

i&, MOTOR VEHICLES REGISTRAR

I

I.

M. Carr, 24 North Pleas' was
graduated froU\

w School at graduation
e~~I'Cf$es ·held·, Tuesday~ with the
d~ee of r..r,, B
.
..A.\~et-fer · a

Gov~rnor Names His Assistant Secretary.
to Succeed Parker-Raymond J. Kenney, Lowell, Promoted from Chief Ward.t'
en to Head of. Fish and Game Divisioi

by

e

_(!hi~\ af' Police _MerriU D. Aldrich

.

l

'

!Special to The Standard J

\'.

Boston, June 25-liforgan T. Ryan, 33 year old Boston at.
torn~y and one of Governor Ely's a§_sistant- secretaries, was.
uo~1P1ated by the governor yesterday to lie re"ister of motor
0
vehicles.

/

Kenney Succeeds Adams.

~· -Day tabley and
fit~if

'His name was submitted late in the
afternoon to the Executive council assembled in special session after the

lI

their ass.istants was

~~~!fntgr :e~~u~~~a~~~e~7;1 aofh%;~ t;
0

held
p\eparations 11":ere mad':'!
for Sa1h.ida~1ane 27th

o·-lI

Former Congressman Joseph F.
Connell of 15 5 Kilsyth road, vice
president of the board of trustees, ,

presided at the- commen.cement exer- r
cises of the SuffoJ,k.J.aw School, held 11
1
in Tremont Temple on Tuesday 11
night.
_ I

pomted Chester E. Gleason of Pitts- \

field to the Industrial Accident boa~.,1.
Kenney has been serving as ch; ,ef
;i;d~c~~e~heheC::J~io:e ~n'i~~~e~}a
Director Williaam C. Adams whose
r~si~atiqn, ~upmitted to accept ~'
similar post in New York states be.:.
COf?es effective next Week. Representative Et:nest J, Dean of Chilmark was
a candida:~e for _the game directorship
Ryan worked his way through Boston _college, Harvard. and Boston univers;ty schools as a private chauffeur.
HIS employer was a New York
millionaire. ''who .liked to. get there in
a hurry;" but. Mr. Ryan filled his job
so capably that he was only arrested once for spe ing That was in

-----~---·

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

,,.,, t")~ ' \ ~

\u\~

i.

,vere ?lotified, "'t'tle L) llH pu1,._,;;- .-.--..t'""~'"ed thR t the c.a. r de.$:Cl i bt-<l a closed
one, pai~ted green, 1?-ad been seen P::l.;""8ing .thr'?ugh tl ·
· · ·
·
·
~
, . .
1.e Salem pOii'Ce · have in-. 1
'formation w~ch they think may If'~ult :
i~,t~e.~~~~~bber~.

,

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ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON; MASS.

t~:c:~~~~:!)::!n t;~~Yb/i;~~ !

m;,v;;1: fi!pe-cial

committee on grading
and other ·work at the .JliniOI High
School voted la~t night to feC!Ommenct
the awarding of a contia{.'t !or tllt:
wOrk to .Jame:-: l~ G1av of {..'ambridge,
who ,va::: third from Io~Yfl:~t. bidder, at a
cost' of -'iil;';,'.!:H- 90. The lo'\'v bi.l'der W3S P
J~ 0 -J.oyce & Sari.' ot Cambridgi:', with ~t
figure of ;t:1.429 47, and the :.1econd µi,1der was'· tne
\Veltesley Excavat.,11g
Coinp.any, $}3,9il_l 60 · The dif1N•e11e.~e

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1

in Knight of Columbus circles when ~-----=--'he won the oratorical contest conduct- \
ed by that organization in 1922.
· ' \
Following :J;lL3 graduation and admission to the bar, he took up practice with B. H. Gr~nwood. He is a
\ n1ember of the Massachusetts Catholic
Order of Foresters; Phi Delta Phi legal
fraternitr, and Boston College Alumni
association His recreations are golf,
tennis and swimming.

\
·

Mr

:

'

r;:esG~tL ~.~~ y~h=~ ~ i1.·~~'O~U~~
?51!~.
1

ran and Jame.s F

1n ':.fQ.VO:C

s'

\.Of

the

}6

1

the administration of the fish and

(t:~~i"dent of War·ren av repo1~red to

boys
injnred
f.~ot thefuneral "ereMTci'l::iel Fl.::iherty.The
of

01

t-,mp)O) e of \he

'I

morning, with 'Will be high ma:'ls
Bo_sto:°- & ·M.3:jue, soh'!mn h~ld·. to.mo·,· 1..d
..
.t reqµie:n,1. in. St Charles' Ch\n'ch at ~
B\lr:i~I will be in Calvary Cem€te1 y
.
~he· ·engagemeht of Mi!":S l\llary- A .
1' She~ran of 16 CHnton st, daughtf'r or
1 Deput;Y ~jre Chief Frank £(
Sll'eieran

\1

).Q,.f_,_;_i9!L Ao_5!tQ.~

l

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Eire .ne:o.i'\~~~f''}~.,~""·....,.

'tit :~

\We$t

tired, t:o Edward ~T. ~n.a11ue
BoWers st.. Lowell, bas been a1 ..
~~.;~;:/ ~ouncyd ',b·y • ·Miss Shee1a.u's .fati'lt>:·:
~ , Miss. Sheer·an t'i-: a gradur.1~e. of 1!:)i~.;
DaJ;lle ~.o\,cac~en1.y, 21ul ."N11~s L:i M·1
kihd~rgarten at._ Cambr1<lg~. an
...
Don~.li~j. -is - a ~raUualt '!f .No1·lht>~~;
et-P -:U uiver;.ity
8 nU
Suffolk
ool.



-

the public .schools of I

~i~: ! '

i \ being graduated in 1926. He then took
: a. postgraduate course in advanced ac ...
1
counting in the College of Business
; Adniinistration at :Northeastern university .and is now a. meml "'r of the
junior clruss of the Su4ru_k L a ~ l '
, where he is preparing~·for admission

!

~:

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~

in

i ~f~~c~~ir~n:;~ %~g!ghln

1

ro,, !

:'. '.cj.

~--~';.> f ·
·,

t<

beginning

Lowell, including the Hig'h school
from which he was graduated in 1'915
with honors. He was graduated from
the Lowell Textile ·school In 1917.

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f,.Police that hi,i;i <log 11:;apE3(1.· on t1\o
Y,$ who were pass.ing thi'ongh' th .. j
.. )rd, ·but he did uot ku,.nv '"'fret·lH':l' v l

.· i 65 -l?rospect. st, veteran

{:

May 26, 1898 .. He resides at 1 West
View street, that cit;v, and is sln"gle,
He has had an extended education,

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the activities, of the state supervisor
of Marine Fisheries and the state m..
specter of :fish.
·
Mr Kenney was born in Lowell

:Mr ~\'JC-

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·~aug)Uin finalJJf
ted ill flivo1 ol ;
·_ :··~arding to Mg""
. • The· '.'ot~ i;,: jn
,. '·e for.tn of .,ra 1ta. ..•0111.n1r>ndafi'on to I·
.1yo1.' P1:teu:on, who will ·at'l'91'd 111,.,.1]

,



game laws, controling four game farms
and six fish hatcheries, aild diTecting

i

c:baughlin being

,•bidder

I

a salary of $3,100 His promotion to
be chief of the division means a. substantial increase i11 income, as the
director's salary is $5,000.
He will be in' complete charge of

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t~,~;e~;a ~h$1~~~Y8~l?~dte:et; ~,;:n~e-~o~~

ing of the contl'ac:t. The sesf!ion ol. .tile
co~mittet; lasted
for
ne13.rly t}Us,'e
hours, Chairn.1.an Jo
R .:(oyce a.nd

Kenney Is Chief '\Va.rde~.
Kenney is. at present· chief

11
11
; : ~ ~ n°:p!~im~~isiir Jin:~::r~n~ a~

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drawn, out\,.di.scussion Over tbe ~,,-aid-

(Cont

~

City· 'work.men
started
today dis- i
.ma·nt1in,g' the heating equipn;Hmt in 1.tH•
o'¥d!" City· Hau and Poli..!e _ 8tation, '
preparatory to tearing the bt! iJ.d_ings
down. '.""£he . .radiators· in tht- Poli~e

t~e .he1:it:;.e~:

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!IIORGAN T. RYAN

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WOBURN

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accept the position. The council will
a.ct on the nomiila tion next week.
~arliel' · in the day at . the regular
council meeting the governor nominated ~aymond J. Kenney of Lowell
to. be director of the division of fishenes and game in the state Depart~E::nt of Conservation. He also reap- :

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to the bar.

Employed by Bank.

Aft~r his graduation from Hig.h
schoo_LML..J~.~D,l)~y _eJ:).tei·ed the employ

g~n~hfu ~;,~fF:,~ i:1 i~~J:
ii~5

secre'tary of the chemistry department
of the Lowell Textile school, remaining three years.
In September,

1918,

he entered the

employ of the state as ass:istant to the
chie'f deputy under the old Board of
Commissioners ·on :Fislieries and
Game. On June 1, 1921, he became
deputy chief warden of the present
division and June l, J 930, chie
~arden i-!-'1 charge of .enforcement ar

on Page 2.)

:o,
-ot -th~~ l.8..;t.

..
,,. <npwap.aYs no ·
~ars'' irt politics .. J...1,...
r,s:t~fe'.:-'. MS.Ybe this ought to be an ofl: year, becc1,.u1::,
.·there· is no election in it; but it is nOthing of the
kind. DoWn at this end o~ the state, certainly,,
politics is seething, in both parties.
Over on th.e DemOcratic side opinion is divided
as to whether or not Alfred Emanuel Smith of
New York is to be 8. candidate for the Democratic
nomination for President. t The strongest indication that he is not in , the race-that is, that
he will refuse to let himself be considered a candidate,-is the open activity of certain influential and ambitious Democrats in behalf of the
candidacy of Franklin Delano Roosevelt-who
also has not yet said that he is a candidate,
though few doubt it. When James Michael Curley
comes forth in active championship of the Roosevelt cause, and When such a. group as the new
Roosevelt-for-President League of Massachusetts
files its list of officers at the State House, it is a
fair inference that the Smith candidacy is not to
be
The best that David Ignatius Walsh, than
whom no Democrat could be more cautious, could
do at the luncheon given by -Edwa:i-d Mandell
House at Magnolia this week, was to say lP.at "next
to Smith, of course. I am for Roosevelt " Senator
Marcus Allen (not Aurelius) Coolidge is in a slmilar frame of mind.
-£--

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It's a Smith State
Now, there is not the slightest doubt that this
is, Democratically ~peaking, if not more so, a
Smith state. If Governor Smith allows the use of
bis name as a candidate, there will be no two waYs
about it in Massachusetts, and the Roosevelt boom
here will blow up like a toy balloon. There is
every indication now, however, that Governor
Smith will not allow his n8.me used. Hence the
activity in behalf of Roosevelt in Massachusetts.
A good deal of his strength among the Democrats
of this state comes from the WOTk he did in Al
Smith's behalf.
Meantime, what about the prominence given
to our .own James Michael Culley in the national
arena? There are some uRoosevelt-Curley" buttons still around Geographically it looks bad, of
course, as the May6r Was quick to point out in
undertaking to squelch the talk of running him
secolld place on the ticket Still, you never can
tell.'. These are strange days politically. Meantime
we may recall, despite the Mayofs sincere con:..
demnation of the Roosevelt-Curley boom as
"unwise," th..e engaging story, which we may have
told before, of the parishioner who warned his
p·astor that so much flattery as was showered upon
him might turn his head. «+liere's no danger Qf
that,'' said the good man. '"lt all runs off me like
water off
duck's back."
"Sure," said the other, "but the duck likes it."
That politics is warming up is shown by the
tenor of some of the speeches and addresses we
have heard hereabouts lately. For instance, when
Mr Curley spoke in the Charlestown armOry' On
the eve of Bunker Hill day-a patriotic and presumably non-polifical occasion-Pe took the opportunity to whack_ the President Also, when United
Stat0s Senator Daniel Q. Hastings of Delaware,
Republican, was addressing the g1 aduation class
of the S:1?':f,?H\ Law ~SS~.2?~-likewise a presumably

a

--i;;nre-e---ur-rcn:rroa11ots nave7?ta,1J~d p-...

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ident Hoover, the idea ·ai:,t,arently befu_g_ t'iiii't- Wbuld stamped~ the conVentio:0:.- _µ,ktyb~ it )
uld, maybe not.
'.PATRIOT LEDGER, QUINCY, MASS.
An inference has b_een drawn from Mr. Coolidge~s speech a.t- MariOn, Ohio,, to the effect that
his warm Praise for President ~oover meant that
h~ is not to be considered at all. It's risky work,
drawing inferences from what Mr. Coolidge says
in bis speeches. When he has anything definite to
say he makes himself very clear. We cannot find
in the reports of his Marion remarks anything
that necessarily means he is irrevocably out of all
presidential consideration. Of course he would not
allo'w his name to be place~ before the conYention /
against Mr. Hoover; but that's quite different from
refusing (by quick telegram) iJ someone should
rise on his hind legs among the assembled deleSeveral young men on« the 122
. i ·ty were ,am b
gates and shout 40 Coolidge and Prospel'1ty .''
and. vie m
received bachelor of
All of which is not idle chatter, but a transseniors who
t the June gradua·
lation of a good deal of talk that is going on
laws degrees; !,aw school in 't,,earound among the fyequenters of various p-arts of
tion of Sufiol Bosto11, last night.
the St.ate House. The ,;nly unsympathetic interrnont Temple,
nt oration was
pi-etation of the Marion speech t'hat we have heard
The commen~e~e d States senator
delivei·ed by H n;ti~gs of Delaware
up here is that his rathe!' generous praise for
warren o.
a
L Ai:cher spoke
President Harding won't do him (Mr. Coolidge)
and Dean Gleason .
any good at all. Warren Gamaliel Harding is dead,
for the ~chool.
ived degrees a~e
Those who rece of Quincy, Wiland he was President of the United States, but
\ Richard J. Barry d John H. John·
there is no great glory in e:xtolling him for what
\ liam H. c;r~ia:fon
Charles H.
he -was not.
son _of
.o
Vic\or B. Johnson
The weeks roll around: and still the state regisJayes of M1It;on,
and SidneY G
of East Bramtreel h. J. H. John·
trar of motor vehicles continues to register. It7s
Fletcher of Raf!~ !ecretarY of tbe
a guess if the savage att-ack made upon him by his
son also serv~th -past two years.
predecessor in that office~ Frank Goodwin, will or
•31cl~
will not expedite the appointment of a new regis\
trar. The best guess is that it clinches Captain
Parker in his :post for a time-at least until the
dust settles. If Governor Ely were now promptly
to put a new man in C-aptain Parker's place the
word would certainly go about these Beacon Hill
corridors that Frank Goodwin had pushed him
NSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.
into action. Governor Ely is a hard man to :push.

Lt \tEDNESD:AY E\

.AWARDED DEGREES

\

BY SUFfQ~~!

Hard for an "Ex~• to Forget
lt is a c;.,::~ious fact of politics that one of the
hardest things for any man who has held public
office to do is to forget that he is no longer in that
office
Frank Goodwin, a man of exceptional
energy and the most positive opinions, quite naturally finds himself thinking aS; registrar of motor
vehicles. He can,not help it. There is the even
more notable ca~e of former Governor Fuller, who
undoubtedly chafes at ina~tivity, and who has
demonstrated frequently that he still thinks with
a gubernatorial mind. Another notable instance
this year has been Henry Shattuck, one of the
ablest men who have sat on Beacon Hill in this
generation. lie showed during the session the
eagerness of a former ruler still to :rule.
Frank Gilman Allen is an exception to this.
He has been out of office nearly six months, but he
has avoided every opportunity to say a word on
the way things are going in the State House or in
the Repti.blican party. We have heard him make
several addresses since his retirement irom the
governorship, and in none of them ha,,e we detected even the slightest political 1lavor. Maybe
this is good judgment, too. The whirligig of time
works political wonders, and though there is not
a vestige of any present sign that there will be a
call fot the 1 e.:entry of Mi Allen, this' is entif'ely
possible.

::'lt···'ii~ At lj\~~il!W£~~~''/
Mar~ret Delano Engaged

\,f
Mr.

· to~ f o r d Lawyer/
and

Mrs

OU

I

Brookline have ·ann ver H
Pelano of
~ent of their daught~~nc~1 the engage-

.J.v..1_ary Delano to J El •
ss Margaret
of Mr. and Mrs ·
mer Ghisho1nr, 8011
Medford. ·
Kenneth Chisholm of

Miss
fooney'sDelano is ~lgrad~ate of Miss
SChool of
.1ne
Mr. Chisholm
ocution in B:·ook·

law in

Medford
. has b~en practicing
from S u ~ I:nt-w- ~inl:i~ ~Ls graduation
No date has b

\.

c oo1 in 1930

een set for the Wedding

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·~··

RECORD, CHELSEA, l'/IASS.

. tl~l!itl 'q'"~tMt,fii>~· 11.J!•lbl•r<t1t,)~f!ri,11i•tt1<i:<:-

r

lC~l)ER SUNDAY TELEGRAM..,

JUNE

21.

1~31.

Tele,

· Luce to Face Dallinger
Battle Royal in Prospect for Republican Congressional
Nomination as Result of Redistricting - Politics
Warming Up-The Roosevelt-Curley Talk

tiNGER WINS' '1~
~4] CONTESf.
Gives Local A. Z. A>"
Head Right to Enter. ·.
National Contest

~

Alexander Finger, president of the;
local cha,pter of A. . A. was a,wa;rdec:i · •
first prize in the annual es.,a.y ?:on-' ::
test of the Y. M. and ·y. W. H ..A.'s _
of District No 2, according to · a•1t. '•
announcement· made at, the .mo.nthl:W: ·
meeting of the district held.· in.. the: :
Everett community Center Sur:iday. ·
evening
He is now entered in the New England competition whLch entitles_ the i'
winner to be entered in the national
contest
"The Future of Judaism in
America" was the subject of Fin~~
thesis and in it h8 expo~nds th-e belief tha.t even thoµ;,;h the three reccgnized divisions oi m,odern 'Jewry,

By BEACON HILL
BOSTON, June 20.non-political occasion,-he prophesied a RepubliFrederick William Dallincan victory in 19 3 2
Incidentally, why do 'occasional Senators and
ger is back from ten weeks
'spent in observing various , Representatives join in the\ chorus of swatting
matters in Europe, posCongress?
After ex.Pressing the thought that
sibly the political problems
''nothing could be worse for business rfght now
thereof, and though he haa
than an extra session of Congress," Senator Hasissued a
pungent statetings added that it might not do any great harm
ment regarding the redisit the next Congress did not meet at all.
tricting bill which tosses
Congressµian Joseph William Martin, Jr, not
him and Congressman Roblong ago expressed his antipathy to the idea of a
ert Lu:ce into the same disspecial session, but forebore to say that Congress
trict, he has not a wo'rd to
ought to quit altogether. Congress:inan Charles
sa, about any plans for
Atlbrey Eaton of New Jersey, however, improvising
his entrance to the lists as
on the same theme, went farther and a5:aid that
contender (a) for the lieu"'it would be a great advantage to the country if
tenani;-governorship or ( b) the governorship.
we could omit the next regular session ot Congress,
What wiJ] happen In the district Is this: Both
let alone a special session."
Mr. Luce and Mr. Dalllnger will go before t,he
We have had an abundance ot presidential posvoters for the Republican nomination to Congress,
sibilities in and about Boston lately, - Franklin
1 and the voters will decide which is the one to
~oosevelt, Newton Diehl Baker, John Willi3.m
j remain in Washington
There wil} be ll\O with- . . 1Jltvis, for instance. Also, Dwight Whitney Mordrawals, no diversions, no digressions 1 no ""~romorow. And of course Calvin the Silent we have
tions" and no bargains.
ever with us
,,. Well, why not? Here are two men particularly
Senator Morrow has been up at Hail.over gathfitted for the offices they hold. Mr Dallinger has
ering in an honorary degree from Dartmouth: been ~ontinuously in Congress from 1915 to date,
LL. D. There's a good Story of Senator Morrow,
I except for a brief interlude when he was one of that we commend to any man who has been
I the three i:.andidates for the Republican nominascoffed at for fo1getfulness The story is that Mr.
' tion for the Senate-the others, it will be recalled,
Morrow was traveling on a railroad train in New
' being Frederick Huntington Gillett (we hope
Jersey and could not find his ticket. "Oh, that's
you'll accent the first syllable, because: that's right,
all right, Mr. Morrow," said the conductor, "you
or used to be) and Louis Coolidge. It will be also
can let me have it some Other time. It's all right."
recai'led that the successor to Congressman Dallin"No~ it isn't all right," said the Senator, "I've
ger died soon after bis election, and that Mr. Dalforgotten where I'm supposed to be g<;>ing "
linger was then promptly :re-elected to his old seat.
There's a lot of satisfaction in that story.
Robert Luce has served in Congress since 1919.
Boston's Bid for Convention
It is a queer freak of circumstances that these
particular two men should,. now have the disagreeHow far will Amos Taylor get with his plea
able neces~ity of facing each other, one to win,
for holding the 19 3 2 Repu b!ican convention here I
one to lose; queer, because they represent quite
in Boston? There are three reasons for hope, that
similar ideals in public life. Both are of conspicuused not to exist; The city has an adequate audious integrity, exceptional ability, and unusual
torium in the Garden. It has added hotel facilities.
dilligence. Both are dry-and neither is a fanatic
It has demonstrated its ability to handle a great '
on the question. Both have been dry since long
crowd, in the case of the American Legion gath- 1
before there was any special political significance
ering. It may be added that Boston's climate is
in it. Both have written authoritative works on
endurable in .June-which is more than can be
government. Both have held important committee
said for some of the places that have been picked
positions. Both have large influence in Congress,
for conventions-by both parties-in the past.
due to their personal qualities and to their long
It has always seemed too bad that political
service with its consequent familiarity with
conventions are held in conditions of physical disnational legislative probl"ems.
comfort, as usually is the case. If it is of any
·so we are to have what may faitly be ca.Bed
valu~ to keep the nerves of delegates reasonably
a battle royal. It is at least a gratifying thought
<;alm, a-nd their health good, why not pick out a
to the Republicans concerned by residence in the
Convention city with that thought in ~i~d?
new di~trict, and to. the state at large which they
Perhaps the possibility that the name of Mr.
also ·serve, that whichever wins, he will be emiCoolidg~ might come before the convention may
. ,;tent1y .;._,orthy of the office.
operate a g a i n ~ s t o n <'.1' n•~"- That P~"jS~l>ility
stlJl ·exists, and
· · ---~.gs: - -

Orthodox, Conservat.ive and }:teform!

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No ••(.(~11!:~ars', Now
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may differ widely in the ritual Pel'.-..,
formance of Judaism. nevertheless·
they still :maintain those ethical and
moral obligations which ev<;,ry . Jew
assumes, for its :ba.ck,ground, and '
these moral and ethical obligations
will never fail 'to bind into one com'-,
mon brotherhood the three differenf;
classifications of .Judit-ism.
·
Finger is a sophomore in the H'\'brew Tea,chers' COilege of Boston and
is a second year student in the S"'!'folk Law School
He is a ~ n .
e x t r a ~ l a activities in the !ors
mer in.stituUon, having served on the:
student council. He was a member
of the Chelsea Maccaibee Club, which
-v,hen in existence was one of :the·,
outstanding intermediate clubs meeting at the local Y M. H A.
He was a delegate to the first Easts 1
ern Distr.ict A. Z. A convention held
in Springfield a year and a haM ago
and for the past six months has .beeJ:i.
president of the local cha.pter.
It is interesting to note tnat a·
precedent Is being established. in ~he
local chapter by the president bemg
a v,rinner of one priz.e or . an.othe~ 1
Last fall, Harry Cushing, at that time
.pre.5ident of the local c}:,a,pter of
A z A , was awarded the Harry H. ·
Lapidus Award for being the 011tstanding communal worker in th;e
country, taking into consideration his
youth and eX,perienCe. Fin.ger now
follows with an essay pr.ire which
points to possil>le success in the fi:tture -competitions.
He is the son of Mr
and Mrs.
Samuel Finger of 9'1 Sixth st.

-THE BOS'l'ON GLOBE-S~\._TUHDA Y, .~MAY

'cHAPMAN-BROTHERS AMONG 185[~

~DMIITED TO PRAClICE OF LAWi
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Judge Ed'W'ard, p_ :Pierce of the Supren:u:' Court yesterday a.dmitted to thE?.
practice of' la~ in Massachusetts i&"i
men and "\l'VOYnen vvho recently passed
the bar examinations. The. oath v;ras::
· i t
d t
th
... att
i
a d min s ere
o
e ne vr
.
orneys n

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BR07'HERS ADMITTED ·To PRACTICE OF LA'W
Philip A~ Ch..apman (left). purchasing agent for 'the City o:f Boe-ton. aiid
...
John J,. Chapman



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Former B. U. football ula:ver

f?Uf-r

{

toil, Keen.an spent evenings a t the
Northeastern University School of La:w
fi~l~~~f' h~~~~l~~t~ut~C:e0 ~:~s~1~~ ~~~- "Was graduated vvith the -class of
b-Ooks unt!l long a.fter the midnight
· For the paSt eight years he has been
hour, inspired by his 'lll.?ther, "Who

·
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cheered h1m -when the strain of study!
..
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.... .. ·
became intense.
He -vvas born and reared in the Rox-

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bury section. He is a graduate of the
Mission Church Parochial School.~ He
i3 a charter member of the Mt Pleasant
Improvement Association. He excelled
in shovvs staged by the dramatic class
0£ St Patrick's Church, Roxbury.

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Gal~

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'W"illiam F,. Galvin Jr., 54 Mountain
av, Malden, former city Controller of
Malden and former deputy controller

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_SOLLY THURMAN

~!aJ~!t?'~~er~~ff~ti~! ~~;~~1
has bee~ prominent in tRf'Iitics for the
past 10 years.
He was a. member of !
1
;,~~ ¥9~id~~dc;!-lrv~u~~i1cit:; ~~\ro
from 1927 to 1931..
f
Prior to holding that position he "W"as

i!n~

/

/

1~!; I

l

TUCKER.



Dorcll.ester

:::1::: ~!rl~3~f<g~d~; :f ..fr.ib:Z.::i::!: / ~:frt~~hi:n~t:S~~n~

the
Supreme Court at the
S1:1ffolk
County Courthouse by John F. Cronin.
clerk.
Among tho_se S'W'orn in W'ere 25 vvon:1-

;~::it

, en.
Among t..he men "Who were adn:iitted to practice -w-ere William M.
Prendible, assistant clerk ,of the .Suffolk Superior Criminal Court; MelviHe
Ro"W"and of Salem, assistant clerk of
one of the courts in that city; Philip
-A- Chapman, purchasing a.gent for the
city of Boston, and his brother, John
J. Chapman, and "William N. Beggs of
V\,Toburn, w-ho is blind.
·

;!~:

I

Drot.h.ers NO"W' La.-w-yers
There "Was rejoicing in various d«=pa.rtnients at City Ha.II vvhen Philip A.
Cha.pin~n and his brother, John, returne~ fro2-:t the Courthouse after being

---

Solly Thurtt1.an.
Solly Thurman '-Vas four-year letterman in football at Boston University.
Thurm~ri, played under Coaches Reggie Bro"Wn, Hilary Mahaney a..nd Ed
Robinson.

sw~~~i~n fss ~e~!~rs ~~~~=
home J
~Ith his -w-ife and one · child a t 47 \I
Sudan st., Dorchester.
John J.~ 'Who is 33. is sing-le an~
lives
-w-ith
his
:mother,.
~rs
Delia
Cha.pr.nan,
and
sister, Ruth, a.t 83'2'.'
East Third st. South Boston. Another
sister, Mrs JM:ary Benoit, lives at 846
Ea.st Third st.
1
The brothers graduated from the
Boston English High School, Face In~t~\~-~te0fa~:so:he S u f f ' : : ' ~ v v ~ o o l , . , .
Shortly., the Chapman ushingle" "\,Vill j
b<> up.

b~!;

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Williani J. O'Neill

William J. O'Neill of" 74 Or-chard st.
~Ca:tpbridge .. is a. graduate of the cam-

1

iJif~e~ff;s

-2:t

f~?J"~~gea~dati~a~~~<;~l~
School. In a competitive examination,
during his first term a t LaVV" School~ he
'\.Von the graduate school scholarship.
He is an active member of the North

I

. ---

HARVEY D

~~;,.1;:edH:i;h a t~!stF;~:~~l k~~t.t,_~n~: 1 ii~1l:cJ!!ar~t;1nt ~eA~~°u~nJ:~go, !~~
~~ i~ t!:e ~~~:;
St Jos~ph's Catholic Club a.nd Malden I of Boston Chapter, Order of DeMolay
~~~~g 3:J;e s ~ : < ; n a : h ! C"o~~
j !~u~n!; _:~~.the Brotherhood. Lodge,
neer Infantry.
He is also a ::member
~lenth:nf'ef;!;r~};;:: :-s~::;!/:.!r o~f~~; ~ Donald S .. DlBuono,
~[a Iden Democratic city comn?tittee for I
Don8.ld S. DiBuoho, son of Mr and
the past 10 years.
Mrs Joseph DiBuono, 137 Beach st,
Marlboro, ,;v:as graduate& from Suffolk Law School last June.
He has
Harris Averbueh.
be'l!?'r offl"?!"'e manager a t the Marlboro
~arris Averbuch is a. son or Mr and Shoe Company for the past four years
Mrs L,ouis Averbuch of 1144 River st,,, and has resigned from that position
Hyde Park.
to devote his time to his ne~ profesHe "Was graduated in :1.923 from the sion.

WILLIAM F. GALVIN JR
·
J.\-1:alden

Fr.p.:n.eJs R. Keenan.
F'i"ancis R. Keenan of 104 Mt Pleasant · a.v, Roxbury.. studied law- four

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l·~~m&~<!fi!

~o~:i!1
;~~d ~~h"1{:i.~~~~:
0

ersh~m Commission~ having been recommended by :a Harvard Law School
professor for this post.
Mr O'Neill -w-ill open offices in the
Fall in Cambridge . and Boston. He is
the son of Thomas F. O'Neill,,, Cam-

HARRIS A VERBUCH
ECYde Park

Hyde Park High School and ""\Vas va.Iedictoria.n of his class. He "W"as gradua.ted from Harvard in 1927., and received his degree cum laude.

I

sh~~. vv~n ~~~~es~;:~~le~fe~ssc~;'J:~:
-man, a
Schimmin as sophomore and !
a Francis. .A.~ Burr as junior. He "W'aS t
graduated :from Harvard L.a.W School

I

last year.

Harvey D. Tucker
Harvey D. Tucker of l..6 Strathcona
road, Dorchester, is the ~econd :rne:rn.b-er I·

~~dt~nfa~il~sJici~~~~~! ~ e

~;:~~ti~! I

~e 1;;:-m~1:'!,nh:::uir;~;.erp .A11·red~

•I

FRANCIS R. KEENAN

.Roxbury
years

"While

ea.ming his

___ _

living

at

an

exacting business. Finishing his daily

..,...,,,,...

in

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Mr Tuch-er is a membe:r of a "W"ell:.. 1'
knovvn South .Boston family and lived
in that district up to a. fe~ yea.rs ago.
He
was born there and VV"as well

kno-w:n as a newsboy 1,p his yout.i:,.. He ,
v.1as
graduated
:from
the
:B1gelo"W'
Grammar School in 1918 and·

Boston

E~11"!: s:Ef~~~i!;hi~!i!i.2!,s1s9 !~bjects and

accounting at the Boston Audit :tnstiMr Tuck-er rn.atriculated a t the

tute.

I

·bridge

.
J. o~NEILL
cambridge.

11

WILLIAM

superint~nden.t _of sew-er~ for
lifelong resident

nearly 20 yea.rs ?-nd a
o"f North Ca.xn.br1.dge •

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. [ •.• ===~=e:====f,= - ===="'=<=~=====<=====>===
; [ · • ~ Massachusetts Women's Clubs at Work
~-~
,_.;· (!

-~~~-~·---~--~-,·-~

-~

jFusin~ New Citizenry with Old-.
! Ways, for a Future Worthy
,

XXIV-· <..::oncord-XXIV

; and 1netal \\ a1 e. jev.-eh) .
! a~d lacque:r, gardens and dE
ing and sculpture
Prof
took the class on a visit io
to see exa1nples of these
sign
Ji"'or three yea1 s the ~
ha.s also arranged trips to
see the collection of 1 are
and· em.b-1·oideries in the J
C. ,I-I
Blackall, the Bost,
whd is the father of Mrs 1
lei-, retiring club president
:i.\Irs. Fre.derck \V. -A-,lle11. h;e;
fall· of a course of lectures <
anpe, an appropriate subject
of 1nodel homes.
Experts
gail A. Eliot, dil eetor of
Street School, Dean Gleaso
of 8uffolk Jt3w School. 1\lh s
bott of the Judge "'"":Ba.Ket
were obtained as the 'speal

of Concord's Past
By Rebecca Farnham

9vv times do cha.n.ge:

Thirty-six
ye"Etrs ago Concord' was so l'ar
from Boston for all p.~actical
purposes that the VVoman's qub
of that to,vn was forme:i by J.\1rs. Edward
C Da.m.01'.!. to sub-ply for tl1.e 184 charter
memben:: a fei.,v of' the c-ultural'and social
advantages of the big city Today automOb:!.les, busses and improved train service
have cut the distance to a fraction Trip-s
to Boston theaters and concert halls no
longer need be occasional treats
The
original object-to furnish "educ.itional
n.nd social" advantages-is outgrovn1
And Con::Ord has changed, too Alcott,
E1nerso1'.!., I'horeau a1e treasured 1nemories, and an arist.o-cracy of Ne,v England
letters has given wa:1-~ to an aristocracy of

H

g~: ~f~e
1

bf:~~ i~~·~:~~a~f:i:~et J:r~:~
that nothing to do \V.iih ti-ie ::>rice of
stra\\'"berries and aspar<1.gus?
The vineyal:'ds of Itaiy. the berry flel,:Js
of },"inland DHd ~~or,vay J,ave contributed
good husbancimen
Peoples ,vho have n,
"genius for 1naking things grow," as adn~iring Anglo-Saxons c.ften have been
heard to comment a.re no,v represented
in large numbers in this prosperous cominuniiY
The inevitabl~- problems -of adjustn~ent result, and in trying to solve
these the "\Voman's Club has broadened
its n.im to add "philapthropic" to the
"'education:3..l a.nd social" object as originally stated

+ +

+ + +

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::.\11.s. E<lwaxd H
James chairman cof
inter,racial unity, whose husl;>and, nephe-w of "\Villiatn Ja1nes, is in India as an
aide to Gandhi. watched the infusion of"
rich peasant blooO. fron-i countries where
aft has flourished for centuries
Vitally
interested in PI eserving and cultivating
the new values which had come tb Concord, Mrs Jan1.es influenced the cluq
along lines of A1nericanization "\York.
First the Concord night school came
into being in 1923. It was the Concord
"\\.'"oni.an's Club which established thatnight school and furnished volunteer
tea.chers fron-i its o,vn members.
Ruditnents of history and English~ -U"ece~sar:1,"
for passing the exaininations for United
States citizenship, were taught
Fr.:,m
an en1 ollment of about thirty-five pupils
to begin with, the school rapidly grew,
welcoming the foreign-born from bot:1
Concord and ·,vest Concord
By 1927 public attention had been
eat;ight an<! public conscience aroused to
such an extent that the school committee
sent the volunteer teacher, Miss Emma F.
Clahane, to Hyan1;is for a summer course
in methods of teaching the foreign-born
Upon her retun-i she "\-Yas put in charge
of the An-iericanization classes under town
n1ana.gen1ent
The club's responsil:>ility
·wru:; at a.n end
Returns from the investment are now
beginning to triC"kle in
Women gradu.
Some of the New Officers of the Coucocd, Massachusetts, '\-Voman's Club Just Elected for the Coming Ycir
ates of the night school are, invited to
Are Shown with the Retiring Presid<'ut, Mrs. Hans ,v. l\ililler Front Row (Left to; Right)-Mrs. ll. Whitte·
join the club, as soon as they have won
their citizenship privilege
La.st Year
in.ore Brown, Recording Secretary; Mrs. George S Kel'·es, First ,·ice Pi·esidcnt; and Mrs. George F Root, Corthere v.~ere ti.vo new members .from thL;
responding Secretary; on the First Step Are the ~ ew President, .Mis Leslie R- Moore and the Retiring Presi·
source, l\Irs Pina Colauri and Mrs Fran
dent, Mrs. MIiler: in the Rear Are .:\'Irs. Ray1nond D. ""illard, '.rreasui·ei· and l\Iiss Xaucy E Carkin, Assistcesca Rizzitano
A third new citizen has
'
ant '.rreasurer
just accepted an invitation to join
Per
haps, as Judge Forte says, America can
not be a "melting pot," but the Concord centei: and its vv·omen se1:se the va:lue 0f :'\lcott hon1e on Lexington road. ac~o1d I: tains and he,gan to_give n1q,ney in vai-yclub has
ideas of its own on that fostering and encouraging .::-:rt 1n all 1ng to club records
Twe-nty years ago Ing n.rnounts to n1ake it possible for more
subject
forms.
Again Mrs James's influence the house h'ad fallen into deca;y and was n1ountain children to attend the school
+ -1was shown. La.st year a crafts exhibit, rapidly going to pieces
It was owned After ;:,,1rs Rolfe's death ten years ago
especially for the foreign-bo~. -\vas in- l;>y Mrs. Daniel Loth1 op founder of the the yea1 ly gift becaine a .men1orial scholEut "vhat. about the parents who haven't t.roduced .as an annual. featu1e ·of the National Society. Children. of the Ame.ri- a1ship under_ the name of the Abb.y F
the time ,oi- inclinailon tp go to_ l)jgfJ.t _cl_ub.~rogram.
....
. "
.
can Revolution, and-'a ~membe1 of the B.olfe SchOiarship Fund
The money is
:ichool and learn Er.:i.·gUsli? @hildre_pf:(r:@).
·Mrs. ¥· "\Vhitt~!llore_-~own was lll. club.
··
raised l>Y special rneans, such as the
ltaliah-speaklng , home~ · enter . prj1J1e,r,y ·charge Of _the secb)'td - ~xll:ib1t, this_ past.
Grieved ~t the prospect of this cher- va'!deville show this i,asi year, and it
1
~t~°i;o~fab~:rt°ap:n~~r~:;ttd
toe_:;;~f~fl ~f.~e~l';;n~~~~e sr:-::~~ f~~in;rg~~;i~a~~~;~:
:tu~~n$t
"~h;e~;~: :e~i:~
:;ituation that puts them.· in an inferior erY, ,veav1ng, dyeing, ch1na-pau1tlng and and individuals. appealed to the sc1100J 1:n. touch with its p1·oregee by 'mait and
::,osition, they c.ling together in ,d-ep.ant :other- crafts
Judges were '!Jrought fron~ children and roused--.such sympathy foi Often ·receiYes grateful letters from her
ittle bands
The "gang_spirit",is bo1:,.n. 'euf-Of-town
1.'.Ioney ·prizes ,ve1e offered the cause that cont•1dbutions f!O\"\ed in
-1-IWith some. such theory as that i:i;,. _1nind Th~ response was all that could be ~e .,from all parts of th.e country and from
'
·
:he club opened a kindergarten two years sired and the airn of the committee that England and othei places besides
It
Othe1 featu1es of the club" life v,hich
i..go_
It was designed to remove some these women from other l?1nds should Was possible tq restoie the hou:;;e and l1a\-e been n1ain-•ained continuously since
lf the disadvantages under which these not lose the skill, the _art 1:'n_c'.!- lovi_ng maintain it from the~resulting fund, The the sta1. t, includ9 the study c:ass~s
In
·
~hildren ente1 school and to keep them ,vorkmanship that went into ti-ie1r nat_1vc club undertook the ,vork and had charge the ear Ty , ears there '\vere classes in
)Ut of gang-breeding street life fo'r at craf.ts, seems ,veil on the ·way to being of the house for several years until the a.11 an-iazing ,2-1:ety of subjects-current
east a few hours a day
reahzed
job became too mucI-i for it
Th€n the events literature civics, child study
"£he ·response viras so great that it wa!'l
Louisa ::\:lay Alcott l\Iemo.zial Assocla- cutting and sevting, orni~hology, botany,
}:~es~~~~ ~oea~~en Tt~ot:;1~~n!~~1de~~~~~
That is the ne•x Concord, with which ; 11 f~on -wa; /01~1ed and t!;~. 1 ub was re- ;:;iker~d ~~,!;:p~:~~ a\'.!:;!;-~~~o~IutJ
1
0
0
1
>:ctrtially borne by ihe club, gre.v heavie1· ~fi~=~~ Y~~~-i~:::e:' ~~:~~t'; u{e!:! b:~~ ie;~~~ ,;vo~~~v::.dr~~~~~~ ~ S~ember of classes in e\·ery imaginable field. acco1 d'3ut, in two years the need for such pre- more ago the club ~-as more interested the club. is no,v president of the asso- ing to the four ·n1e1nbers ~-ho acted as
:chool traini~ had become so generally in old Concord "rith it& historic homes ciation and anothe1 member. ::.\IIiss Re- sPOkemnen for the club
The various
ecognized that again the club was able' and literary shrines
The late Mrs I-fen- bekah Briggs. is heaq. custodian
Club con-im.ittees inste.ad of being responsible
o convince the school authorities of their ry c Rolfe, whose daughter, l\1rs Wile n1embe1 s are admitted to the house f1 eP. each fo1 a progtan-i during the year, proluty
In fact it recently "put through" lia.rn. M Cole, is now a member, was the of any charge.
Froa1 J 4,000 to 16,000 vide classes in their respective subjects,
0
11
0
:~i~~:;:
i-~~C~ \.~-i~i~~~!~:~e:~; f~~~~;e~;:!:r~;: all:~:o~al\/~~~i~;~J ~:: ~: l:;;:i~ri~~e t~~ml~o::t:::.:
~~~h;~r:~i;:;e~~:i~-:a~t~t~~0~~-1!.!~. charge
n effect as part of the to,vn's educa- nnd from 1904 to 1911. ivrrs. Cole remem, sh1ine for the countless adn-ihers of
This year under the art comn1ittee, of
ional system
bers that when she ,\•as a little girl Mr-•
"Little
VY01nen·· ,vas brought to ih€ '\Vhich ::vrrs Osca.r E. B8ckvold v.-as chair-,
u~;~e/~:ss:J:~~d P~~~ieoswr }1~~1;
Damon often came to the Rolfe home to club by the pnsident at that time ~Irs ~1j;~~ ~~~Ju~~:~
~l?~oi~s~fe~t!n~~ d~0
3
ergarten youngste"rs and their pa.rents,
Rolfe her pliins fOJ \ At~i!g ~;;eloue·:;,, fl.1st t.ei.n.1 os Plesi- Seavey, of :\T I T, a docent at the Boe!'

'r11er e 1' as ,the usual Bible
Lent nov,· becon1e an insti
years· standing nnde1· the 1
e1 ship of the ne,,- president
R
::.\'IOore.
l\irs ::.\ioore bou
has enrolled such · dis.para
Christian Scientist. Ron1::Ln
n1any varieties of Protest1
class and neve1 ha:,; knovn-i ;
peace and conco1 d an1ong" UYear by year the cla~
through the Old Testa1nent i
and this yea1 regard-ed the
the viewpoint of "F'indi:i.1.g C
the
Beautiful."
unde-r th
1nusic, sculptu1e, poetry. di
ing and architecture
At th
1\fiss Sara:h S. Gocdwin condu(
through the Gardi1er :;,\'luseu1
to top off the expe1·ience
her fellow clubwomen say. ha
of 11.1.aking people want to lo<
for then-iselves and as a 1--es·
in the class contributes -son
or bit of knowledge
This year all study class~s
h·ee to J:nembers and. a.nyon
side n1ight come as ·well b
small fee. This the club wat
complish by carefully paring 1
of the year's progran1 to be
propria tion allowed. Even .s
hers ·were able to hear Sund
Gandhi and other able s
travel, architecture, garden ·
literatu1e, sociology, as '"veil
a. 1nusicale. by guest a1 tisti:::
are held in the high school 1l
,The- literature· committee
l\irs l\Ioori;: "'-as chairman Ia~
duc;..ts its classes in the su1
Tercentenary book, "Builders
Colcny," by Samuel Eliot M
chosen as the thnely subject f<
season As yet plans for this
t:1.ot co1nplete

I

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e;::,; ;~ ~

~~~~~~d; ~~;s~

;~~ir:i;:1e~~
:_

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150

~::':c;1~i~~~t~\~!11

s

+

+ + +

~f

f/!~\~;

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~l~b~!t~1 ato<;,h~::~:-~ t!r:::k ~t:e i:a~~~
requent calls in the hol:lles of the forl~~=oi~if~E~~-!1\~!i~~:0:

t~~l~o~~

In the immigrant homes are pieces of
mbroidery, ,vea,ring 'and other treasured

r..

:~C!~~ Of c!;(~!\~C~~~a:;,

S~~~:~:.:ir:i~ ~;i~~ ~~i

~~:a:i;~~~'~i,;~ Je-:.

th!}

t

;;~~g~~r~bo~~l~~:
Next

\)U:n~

r~~~~:il:n ~~i~l~~ l.~~~m~: ~~~~0~~~1al~~~e i~~~e~:i;!~~ ;~~o~~le

~~~s!lu~~~~d~~ i;~l~~it;:::.

+ +

-!-

S01ne distinctions in litei ah
isn-i .and art have con-ie tv clu
Mrs. Lothrop was Margaret l
wrote the stories of the "Five
pe1 s " ::.\lr<;i ::.\tiller. retiring 1
a ne,.-spaper woman on tile <,'1
nal;
l\'Irs Allen French (El
Roberts) founded the Concord
and receives· gratifying atten1
paintings of Annisqua1n
).In
A
Bosley (EmiUe Sohier) ls
artist of n,::,te
Her husband,
signed fron1 a position at the .l
School to open a school of
Piern-iont 'S H , in th<2 sun1n
ton in the ,...-inter-.
Still another -painter, Alice
wvn a scholarship at the Bost
for study abroad. She was a
hibit at Jordan lvinrsh Cotnp
during art \\. eek this past 'I.vii
vited to contribute to a collec
traits of th.€: vario"t:s go.-erncr
chusett.s
In. State and county organiz
t,,-o members have l>een outsta.
George :\·! Baker president ft
1917, \\as president of the St.
tion fron.1. 1919 to 192:3.
v,as chairman' of the ...VlidcJJe,
"\Voman·s Christian Temperanc
Soln3 ys.~::ir,s
Anyone regardless of residen
the club
Among the 390 mer
are some from Bedford, Acto
Carlisle, Sudbury, Billerica N
!ll.other in New York is a n
though she nE:ver lived in Cc

~~~~~~~~~s ~~fuo;~:it;;~i~
no 1estriction on the length
the president
In thirty-six ;
'"'-ere only t,velve pre~dents,
cates some rather long ter'n1s
been changed now to res'!"rict
dent's service to not more th.a
1 0
~e~:!;~C~~6~ : Jni;-or;;~r!tf~
see1n to flgu1e very la1~gely in
this Iibera!-minded club
th:e~~!"~s 0 ~h;!~~,::;:~ f:g~~: ~
"l..€.ave the Chaff and Take tl
0
0
gi'a~~:e~~~t~!~: ;rr~: ~1:- ::~~ i;rt:i;!e:l~~-;~
H Orendorff, who was the firs

s1.1111a1111t,
..,11uu1rrr!flldllllta!lllyln11~111-111111111111\,\,111111111Tuo111111m11111111e1111l,.,1_i11~1su«ui,I,.,t11111a11111m1~11a1!11n111111111c11111111mu11111bm_1111110u111f1111111B1111110•1111s11ut1111011111n11111111111111111tt11!!::;"==··

.

;~i~:1~1~:i£1i~!"::~lr~

is wheat and ,vb.at is chaff i·
But, from ,vhat ,ve have se

=iWIIIUllllllllf;;:-1111111111111111111111!11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111\µllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1llllllllllllllllllllllllllll1111111lltl!lllllllllll!IIIIIIIIIUll1111111lillllllllllllll!IIIIIIIIIIIU11¥.'

~;~~ted"\.-e

th.ink

its

judgmer

,e
V,

...

Melville Rowand. assistant clerk of

~~rt:w~~~

tit;; as ~~tyaf~r!!~xbe%1;.~
00

~~ the suprem.e judicial court at Boston
'd

r

!~sti~1t~! ;o~n~~:c::n!;i! ;~!~{~~

~~

law in the Masonic Temple

Mr-.. Rowand will be associated with
William G. Clark, Esq, former district

attorney

5 ~il~~t

for

the

county

of

Essex.

bae:1it~er~!i~~\mh~!· ~~;

1915 and has been employed by ,the
county of Essex for the· past 16 years

Because of his experlence in the office
o! the clerk of courts which has
br6ught him in dally contact with .the
courts, he is well qualified to enter
the practice of law.
Another
mitted

Salem

young

man

ad-

to the Massachusetts bar be-

,fore the supreme
Boston yesterday.

judicial court in
was William H

Butler~ Jr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-

liam H~ Butler of 6 Barr street.
Atty. Butler is 23 years of age. and

ls· f:l, graduate of Salem High school in
t~e_ class of 1925_.

He graduated from

~u!(K~ Ifrad~~~~ 1ir~: 0 ·the

local

H~gh school, Mr. Butler has been en-

gaged in the general insurance business With the ,Boston Insurance company* 87 Kilby street. Boston.
After June 1 Atty Butler irttend.s to
take up the practice of law in Bos. tOn and Salem.
£&.!J!Z!!Ll_L__ ltf!£1[• -

MAY 5
MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

:'JN

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2. \ \93{

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' 'rH.SSENGER, NOJ;tWOOD, MASS,

FIFTH ME~BER OF DE ROMA
FAMILY BECOMES ATTORNEY

'

,1

~RS RUSSELL :E
She w
.
• BROOKS
b
a.a 1i!1ss Mae Stetsob.

ernaon



I

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i

pastor, ol rhev ":°i1liam L. Rau d
/
Church
e First c
a ay,/
ter EU Of Marshfield Thonr~gatt.,,na}
hoii-0r. en M. Stetsdn, w~s r~:~~ sisThe bride's b
.,
ot
~rooks of Anst.%other, Warren A..
ushers we
G n, Was best

:'! ,I

~delphia.

a.Z:-: Ge~~rge BCUdhea

of

JOSEPH DE ROMA

Margaret ~ De Ro ma, 40 Front two oldest, Prisco and Anthony, own
street, Walpole, was sworn-in with full electrical shops in Norwood and Walpowers •to practise before the Massa- pole. Dr. Edward R De Roma is well
chusetts bar by Superior Court Justice known throughout this section as a
Pierce at the State House last Friday prac'tising physician Joseph De Roma.
Miss De Roma, who is 22, was the a graduate of Suff~w School
youngest in a group of 199 to qualify passed the bar in 1929._in the recent state exams She is a
Margaret ,.v1ll establish he:c~Jf in the
graduate of Portia Law SChool, class of general practise of Jaw w,tth her broth1930, and has been an honor student er, Joseph, under the' ·name of De
both in high school and college.
Roma & De. Roma1 . 'I'hey will - 'haye
The Walpole girl is the fifth member offic.es at 40 Front /street, Walpole,
o\:'er fa_mily t<l__!ain.?istinction. The I and 105 Central street. Norwood.
1

1:ii~1t

s 1!med
ge rooks Jr of Alland
fate relatives f
Jg:tiest:. sman circle of o fri~~~s fa;tn1Jy
1

~

The bJ:>ide is

uated With

a native here a

tvere

chooJ in 19 honors from the l nd grad ...
d Simm 27, after Which sh oca1 high
a graduat:n~f C~~~fe Mr B~o~~;tt<J;

I

attended Suffolk . ~n tlniverstty and
a
b~r of°"'Beta ~_:hoot He is
.....
Je:ft O
O~Wlng f4e Cer;m~~ fratel"Jlfty,
fl at horn. at wedding trip ~ the couple
t~t Con{!~td~ : : friends ·at!~r ~~bi

I,_____

;"!f

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'EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

/

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--~

soui BOSTON DISTRICT

-I

Columbia Poat, A. L., will meet tomorrow evening and the headquarters
uom.nuttee will report on the new loca.-

on, which is in the same building
With the Maj M. J. O'Conno• Ca,np
formerly used as a firehouse by Ladde; f
~hn We~t 4th st, near Dorchester st.
ere Will be a report of the MeznorJaJ J:Jay committee, because the post
Will join, With the O'Connor Camp
~ 5st,.
V., and the Michael J. Perkin; .
L., in the ceremonies this f
~ear. f CoDUnander Joseph Balla.way
~pea or tla.e largest tun:iout of memrs ID the history of the local post.
John H. Burke of Medford PO'lt wlll
1 !!'t1:'s ::T1!1!._Work ot National Con..
.awke was adjutant oJ
~e llWd<llesex
unty Council of the

l

'l



I
I

--.:ig OJJ for sev

l

years

'l'ha nov.e.tja., devotio~ in honor of

~.,J;'lt~Fj>] , held in SS Peter and
~•
every
last ~!h, "Ja !nought to a. close the
"' be Wednesday eve-

tr!duu,n wij{'beY of May, A sole,nn
b ·
· preached in the church

egl!ln!ng W:edn~y evening, May Z1

/,

I

!~~i:.!~28~~sday and Frida;
lir&Jlk ,A.I~ :f 4 ~· at announces
his candidacy f<Yr the City Council. He
;.,;eu known throughout the district.
o~g his graduation troin the
lstoca.l High School he engaged in the
udy ot law at the S ~ w
8
1
-wthich ~e 'Will complete shortly

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· , .... ~a

!:

:&'!~8fll:1<1 Post;_A~;

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~~-URY, ;;;~~-;~FORD,

M'l•~rcrm~--~;--,~--~,~--,,;-!~~-,-!-~;--;;•;,,;·~;;~--=-=-~'':'.':':5!!!!"!'111'!"'/"""'~'~Ui~!'.t"~'~-_:j~~~~~:'.__~--I
ITE!\'I, LYNN, MASS.

JUN I a ':':! 31
.
~

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NOTES
.A.bout 200 River W
i!l'uests Will enjoy the ~rks foremen and
mg at Raymond's S th .Annual Outin Amesbury Sa unny Ridge Farm

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

leave the Ri~er Jurdiay.

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1

-,

-

..

··J::e:11et't:T'Hf¥lif:.:..,~c,;.,·~~1

Five Medford
-'·
Young Men Get 'I
L/,.Suffo~Degrees ,I

\

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~:r~- '·

TIMES, BROCKTON, MASS.

W. Frank Welch. store manag.er
of the Mailman & Hanlon do. store,
was married this morning to Miss
Cecelia R. Connors, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Connors of
Canton at St. John's church, Canton.
The couple was attended by Miss '
Mary Connors, sister df the-bride, I
as maid of honor, and the Misses ',
: Marguerite Connors, sister of the 1
: b_:dde~ _and..Bes.sie..Maihews
Gl1J..

J>L_Can-1

"tIS!.I'BO: aq1 J:O .I0.1US139,l'J 'A-es

·n

PPJ!!M. .6'.q .6'.1Jpuns 90\A.,as
2TIJtuom 8t['.J. 1-e p'Ba.t S'B~ ,'l.1-01,sat[;)
·WCT JO allpa.z:nDi U\AI.P:lI . stnnoq.r,
·sxw pu-e · xw Jo xeq-qlln-ep 'allpaint:ii:
-eooaqa13: ssiw o, 'Li "unf '.6'.-ep.rn1i,s
llU\ppaM S,U'Bill'.>[OACT ·iw pua,l'B Ol
·PU!'I

( .10'.J.S'Bd

'U'IHtll{OAO

, -pai.;r 'A"'H)

sriisn2ny

tl:s\J:'Bd qo.rnqo

]l:lJ.X9

·::tr ·w

lf>3.I+S l.I'83d <>'ll o,' .U<>Jl'.B'.l,fAU! UV
,.nN.10.a.:t.M.

s. }.l'O r-S~-:--~---~.

JOURNAL, AUGUSTA, MAINE

w 1ho

tDonald

recently

JUN

s.

~¥g~n:u_~~t:1 ~:i.e~(~"Doiiaid-JOhnSOn

irestgned

his position as tthe offi.ce manager
of the MarH,oro Shoe Co , where
he w.as employed for sev-e_ral years
ha;s 'O'J)ened a
Jaw office in the
Temple Block: He was the recipieDJt of a, testimonial by a large
ntlmber of his, friends wiho psresented hLm wth a purse of gold at a
dinner pamy in Mo.ose Hall, Monday.
Atty. D1Bucn.o 15 .th.e.- son o.f Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph DilBuono, Beach
SJtreet
He re;,e,ived his degree
from Suf.fo'lk Law .§g.j.\pol th-is past

Maxwell Johnson, Wilbur Thomas'
W>!,lter
er. cedric Hewes.

~bert

. Marjorie Chase. The
~~~~is, ~ d a.Ma~¥;i
ne.
.

~:

Turner-Emerson
John Kenneth Turner, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Turner of Ha.llowell and Miss Nathalie Sophia Emerson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
William V. Emerson, of Gardiner
were united in marriage Saturday
afternoon at 2 o'clock, at ·the Old
South Congregational church, in

sprlng. ~ - i s ~ a g:riadua,te 9f

Burdett College and of ;Mar1'bor.o .
high s,chool.
Tb:e tOastmas1t:e.r of the occasion
was Atltorney John Gannetti, who
presented Associate Judge ,W!in:field
Temple as the speaker of the eve11in.g. Jud,ge Temple paid a trdbute
to the efforts, and abiHty of the
y9ung attorney and congratulated
the ~rents of Mr. DiiBuono a.nd
he .·!J).i-ed:icte d· for
him a 1&rge
measure of su'Ccess in the profes
slon of \aw.
Ot:h!e-r speak-ers
were Rev. Fr
AleJGander .Scapigliatti, pastor of
St. Ann's Church; Dan,lel Bruno,
,
presfdent of the Sons of Italy 1
Lodge. There were also represen- l
tatives from the Grand Lodge of
the order of Sons of Italy, among '
the 1•50 friends" and guests pres-

the presence of numerous friends

l,

1

l

ent.

and relatives. Rev. Walter P. Bradford officiating, using the impressive
double ring ceremony. Mrs. W. P.
Bradfgrd was i'\t the organ.
Tlt~ church auditorium was sirii..;
ply _but beautifully decorated with
spring flowers and ferns, masses of
which were used fur the altar. The
aisles were marked off by long bows
of white
ribbon,
topped with
bunches of daisies. The young people were unattended. Mr. William
V. Emerson, father of the bride
gave her away. She wore a travel_:
ing dr~sso':)~

I

1

1

30 years;

:8'w /

Friends at Testimonial
To Atty. Donald
S. Di Buono
Madboro.--.At-torney

IS THE BRIDE \
OF.W. F. WELCH'
:..J ,_ -

an

f

OCCUPIES NEW ,
. :i lt LAW_ OFFICE
D~oniq,,

JUN 1 61931-

bet::::; 1f

50 yard dash bet

li~

~ sun~;:n~o,mmence,ment oration w~s ,

. de!i'vered .by United S\tates Senat.o-r .
of
Delawa~':
. ·warren O. Ratings
, w1lile - the degrees were a wardedals~
Dean Glea.s•on L. Archer, who
ke for the school.
.
spoT1he 3.nnua:l c1a:ss day e~erc_1ses
took pla·ce in rbhe siChO\Cl au~1toT1.um
and were witnessed by ~ large num, ber of relatives and friends of t_he
! raduaites. \:M_r. Sa,vage was vice
' gresident or the class and. had a
__ J_;rol?i1:ent part i~ the -~xerc1ses ..

will

35 yard dash;
ang 40 years; .
and a twenty ya.rd d ha't,,, 50 Years; ,
and over· wheel bit as
tween 51
legged ra~e; mi~iat~w race; threebaseball game, quoits, an~!h contest,
~~ race offers a first and ~~~~
E. G. Backun- build'
secretary of th6 Outi mg second 40, Js
ng Committee.
Notes Personal
J. A. Linehan reatif" •

factory has completed
d<tartment
course at Suffolk Law Sch e I our year
J. E. Doyle, 2nd D I OO ' •
resentativee. js a thi dndustenal repon the Suffolk Law r Schear student
and will c o ~
ool course
!hE>Jali.'.
studies there in._
, fir t Q.
, Production ilepa.rtnien
] pa~m~nin~.;;,:a ZQeigler, drafting de/ their se,,,;nd year of tf:ave, codmplet-"__d /;
. a,t.~'.'e 5l'!folk sch_ool. ~ s:u Y of

Fiv/' Medlford young :men ~ere ·.,
a•mong the 122 seniors who re;,erved \
bachelor o,f laws degrees at the Ju~e.
I
g-raduat1-0n of S ~.,, . ,., ~-'o
· .scb\O<Ol 1n
Tremont Tem,ple
ues _aY :night. •h
They are •Charles W Dick, Jo n
F. :X:. D~nahue; E-d:w,ard v_ • Maloney, .
0
pat:ick J. Sa:vage and 1

!

T~y

gate house, promptlorks Western Ave.
George Dalton Y a_t 5! 20 AM.
cp.airman of the ;Por~ild1ng 74, -.is
s1sterl by Messe
committee, as- ,
ing 40-G, Geor~se LI) Callahan, bulld- ;
and W. Johnson bui~~· bu5ilding 74,
Members of th
. mg O.
George Ohute b~i! t!cke.t committee,
man; assisted 'by G d:,f 31, Chair31; and E G Bia kli odes, bUilding i
T1:1,e spo;ts Progrim. n, b~ilding 40. r
putting contest
obst. I Pipe
race,
yard dash, bet;een 18ac ed race;
75 ,

,

1

- !Attorney DilBuon,;, is receiving
tJhe !)es( ,wisq,es and '
r.tions, ot- his m,any_ frle

~,~\le, En'}:e!J¢~::~~~li!,-•·

1

~s------}

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• · ;iaurealS u-e!{"BlI , I

am ,,o

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·.&wuaA!Ufi' ! '
as'Bt,O u.mqpoo.M. ~~~~ .,
.&5).
"9:.J;·w:
CI ptt<B :&mq<i&.r,,I'
"V:: p.xeµoa'i !.xa:1-"""

p:1:j'I

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. ·,·._-c.·c£_~.'.:;a"'"·

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JUN , ~..,
a

.

1:,3
"' 1

'

ffney-Dulong

A 't>Otty church wedding was held
on Wed morning at 9 o'clock when
Frances Louise Dulong, daughter of
Mr and Mrs Peter R. Dulong of 83
Eaton st, became th€ bride of Henry
David Gaffny, son of Mr. ad Mrs
Patrick H
Gaffny, of 72 Park ave
VVinthrop, at a nuptial mass in St'
Agnes' Church Rev Dennis W. Brown,
pastor of the church, officiated
The bride '\Vas given in marriage by
her brother, Arthur Dulong. The couple
were attended _by Mildred G Dulong,
sister of the bride and Francis Gaffny,
brother of the groom The ushers were
John E. Williams of Winthrop and 1
Fra:nk Colburn of Somerville
~;
Mary Cummings was at the organ an
.
Mrs. Bella Rose was the soloist
:
.The bride Wore a white satin gown I
with a tulle veil of rose point lace f'
which was caught up, cap fashion, with I
orange blossoms. Her bridesmaid wore
a dress of orchid chiffon with a white
picture hat. The bride carried a shower
bouquet of white roses and lilies of
t1:e valley and the bridesmaid carried I!
1

-MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

--

,.....__...;~~·-~·
"~...;_---.. . i

five Medford
YoungMenGet
0

Five Medford Yniors who re-ceived
a,morug the 122 se
rees at the June
bachelo·r o,f law·s deg
w scmo,ol in
~ aduation o,f s,qJ!olK L@:.,.,,._., .. ht
er

.

1

4uescf!\.v

n1g

/

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i\

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ent oration was

:

~-he commenc:iid Sttates senat,o-r ',
del1vered hy U!: 1 .,
of
Delaware
, ,varr~n 0. Ratings ere awarded by
, wilile the degr~s .:rcher, who also
Dean Gleas•on
·
1
spoke fo_r the " 0
day eocercis<JS
Tthe ann:-ia;.~' c ~1ch01Cl auditorium
took pla;ce i_n .the d by a large numand were w1~nesse d friends of the
l ber of relative~T a~a,vage was vice
i graduaites. I~· class and had a
-p. res,den't of . :' .. the e.xercises.
prominent__'.'p~a_r_t~i=n===----=-=---

f°s~ ·

_J

TIMES, -BROCKTON, MASS.

I'

pink roses~

Tremont Temu> e l " W. ·.Dick, J<Yhn \
They are ,cha~_;;.ard v. M'aloneY,
F. X. Donahue,
and Joseph B.
'. -- 'i•talm'
\ Patrick J. sa.-vage

\ Sullivan.

2g

:;::e~o~b

m~n. ass1sted by o. Rhodes

,

,

,

After the wedding there was a recep- '
:
tion at the, home of the bride's par- j
ents and thle couple were assisted in
:
receiving by their parents and Mr. and I
I
Mrs. Arthur L. Dulong The decora- i
tions at t.he church and the hon1e were
of cut flowers •
Mrs. Gaffny attended Reading High
School and later attended the Girls't
Trade School in Boston Mr Gaffny
is a graduate of Milford High and Sufi
!olk Law Sc~9ol and is now a p r a ~ '
;
rng~.
·The bride's gift to the groom was a

military_ set and the groom's gift to the
bride was _a diamond pendant Trie
bridesmaid received an aquamarine ring .
1
and the ushers were the recipients oft
·
fountain p·ens. The cou:Q.k: received
many beautiful and useful gifts from ·.
a wide circle of friends many of. --whom J
were present from Reading, Winthrop,
Somerville, Malden, Wakefield, An}
dover and Lawrence.
After a wedding tour to New York,
Philadelphia and-Atlantic City they will
reside in Somerville.

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~E
ra

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Marrboro -,IAttorney

ll)onald

s.

D1:B1'ion~. w ho recent!Y iresi.g1!ed l
his position as tihe of;f:1.ce miana.'='er !
Of the Marlporo Shoe Co., where f
he was employed for ~.ev'.~-ral. ye3:-ra ;
1

JUN 1 61931,

IS THE BRIDE I
Of ,W. F. WELCH'
·:-/

L•

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w

Frank Welch, store ma.nag.er
of the Mailman & Hanlon Co store,
was married this morniri.g to Miss

Cecelia R. Connors, daughter of
Mr and Mts. John P. Connors of
Canton at St. John's church, Can·
ton.
The couple was attended by Miss ,
Mary Connors, sister c,f the-b.ride, I
as maid of honor, and the Misses
, Marguerite Connors, sister of the
'bride and Bewa_Mathews .D.f__Can·
a"l.IJ~ • •qs-pt?d - aq'.J. JO .l0.ITIS'88.I".j. 'A.'BS
-pn1"'1

·n

PPJ.H.M.. Aq A:epu:ns ao1A,1as

:au1n.1om aq'.J. :re p-ea.r SBA\. ,'!..1-a1saq0
·JOO: JO a2pa.t.+'.1Di U\M.P:1£ S'8UI01I,L
·siw pu-e ·iw ,o i<>+'!lln-e-p 'a:.lpainni:
'BOOaqa-a SSUi\I O'.J. 'LZ' auu.r 'ARp-.In'.J,'8$_
2U!PP""'- s,u-eur'!C>AQ .".t.lill puane o+
( .IO'.j.S'Bd

'U'trW'lf:OACT

SU'.J.SU~RV

'lf:OJ.19

-pa.I..ff A<>1f) '[S\.I'ed 11:C>.I.IltIC> ":1[ "Ji\I
,aa.I+S l.I"'"d "11:l p'l'. UOJl'B'.J.JAU! uv
0

n.N..L00-3...M· s.}:fOl:S:w'.7'··~'

~

h>1;s '<l'I)ened a
law office in b?e
Temple Block: He was the recip:
ien<t of a, testimonial by a large
ntimber of hi.s, friends wiho present- i
ed hLm wt.h a purse of gold at a '
<l.inner party in Mo.ose Hall, Mon·!
day.
!
.Atty. Di'.Buc.uo 1s .th_e, son of Mr
and Mrs. Joseph D>Buono, Bea,ch
>Ytreet
He rece,ived his degree
from Suf.f<ilk Law §!!.]:\pol this pas~-,
spring. ~ is ~ a g:riaduaite 9.:.
Burdett College and of ;Mar1'bor,o ,
high s chOOll
.
l
The tO.astma.s1te:r of the occaslon
was .Attorney John Gannetti, who
presented A,ssoclate Judge ,Won:field
Temple as the s-pea-ker of the even·
in.~. Judge Temple paid a tcl.bute
to~ the efforts, and abil'ity of th<>
young attorney and congratulated
the pll,renots of Mr. D~'Buono ,nd
he -~-red-icte'd for
him a large
measure of success in the profes
slon of 1aw.
Qtb1er

speak-ers

were Rev

Fr.

Ale:,cander ,Scapigliatti, pastor of
st Ann's Church· Dan,lel Bruno,
pr;,,,fdent of th~ Sons 'of It,,;1,y
Lodge; There were also rep.res-au,·
tallives trom the Grand Lodge of
the order Of Sops of Italy, among;,

.
1

, . .... ;.. 1•50 friends" a,,nd guests pres·
:
. , !Attorney Dill3ilon<;> is
· tlhe 1)es,( ,wis!hes and
fJiottS; O<j'.- his_ m,apy, .t,:i
1
11~:~··
~~~

f"t9}

bUild.

G. Blacklin, buildl
~~g ,
TI?-e sports program.:
Pi e ng
· 1
putting contest, obstacle 1:-ace· ~7~
yard dash, between 18 and 30 'ea .

1
--·~

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31. and E

j:

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Suffo~.~e:e::

About 200 River Works foremen
,!!'uests will enjoy the 7th
and
,ng at Raymond's Sunny~ualFOutm Amesbury Sat d
ge arm
leave the River w:i.::YWe 1'hey will
gate house, promptly at 9
~~ Aye.
George Dalton
buUd·
.
c;l"lainnan of the ;ports co::~ 7 4, --is
M~ssers L. Callahan~t~{i1

eorge Dear, building 7 4
and W. Johnson, bUilding 50
'
Members of the ticket co.
.
Geo~ge <?hute, building 31, m~t!fre~

i3 Jard dash, between 41 and 50 years:
yard dash, between 31 and 40 ~ea:~

an a twenty yard dash between 5i
and over; wheel-barrow race· thr
legged race;

miniature golf 'conte~i-

baseball game,
put'
~!. race offersquoits, and shotsecond
a first and
E. G. Backlin; building second 40 ls
secretaljl' of the Outing Committee'.
. Notes Personal.
J A. Linehan, rec,f;ifier de.Partment
factory has completed the four year
course at Suffolk Law School.
J. E. Doy.le, 2nd D, lnduste:rial representativee, is a third year student
on th~ Suffolk Law Sc'hool course
and w11I c o ~ studies there In

[c1h~~rlmen ·
, first Q. and T. E. Zeigler, clraftlng de~
i partment, second Q. have completed
their second year of the soudy of law//
, at. !'.'e S_!lffol!<_ school.
_ _
. i

JOURNAL, AUGUSTA, MAINE

JUN 151931
--among

W.l~J.LL

.::I,

...............

.....~ - - - - . ,

---

The guests were: Donald Johnson.
Maocwell Johnson, Wilbur Thomas.
Wl!,lter
lier, Cedric Hewes. ~bert
rjorie Chru;e, The

1!~~fres, :Sd a.Ma~~

Turner-Emerson
John Kenneth Turner, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Turner of Hallowell and Miss Nathalie Sophia Emerson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William V. Emerson, of Gardiner
were united in marriage Saturday
afternoon at 2 o'clock, at •the Old
South Congregational church, In
the presence of numerous friends
and relatives. Rev. Walter P. Bradford officiating, using the impressive
double ring ceremony. Mrs. W. P.
Bradford was at the organ.
Th'.ijM church S:uditq.rium was sim-

ply but beautifully decorated .with
spriiig flowers and ferns, masses of
which were used tor the altar. The
aisles were marked off by long bows
of
white
ribbon,
topped with
bunches of daisies. The young people were unattended. Mr. William
V. Emerson, father of the bride,
gave her away. She wore a trf!_yg_ling dr~ss

~'1i!~S-- }

. . ;i<>Ul~3lS u~n-elJ :
\

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\.

,,UXBRIDGf GlRL~'l3'
: WED FRANCIS FOX

'.

:

tlrJ
BJtM'hal of- Judge Brady's
I ~t~::;eo:i~o!i:r!::~unced

Burke ;J)Onbles lJ~Because Alfred F.

: Burke, director of
ation in the
public Achools, has een c
,her
of the art pilg1.•_ima
staff whiCfi
to Vienna in the su
1932 he $.
doubling up this .s·ummer o
.
'
giYen by hirn. -at fhe B.oston college sum-

.Ii

mer school. ".fhis ~ummer he will give ·1 r
two courses, one <:>n art education, an<'\ 1
1

Judge Francis P. Brady of Uxbridge
will anno11nce tomorrow the engagement of his daughter, Miss Mary
llir.ances Brady, to Francis J. Fox, son.
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Fox of'
Rumford avenue.. The announcement
l.
w.ill be made at a luncheon given in
Haley Graduat~s-Fonr members of ,
the fiupily 0£ Mr. alld .l\ilrs Maurice F. /
honor of Miss Brady, by her aunt,
Haley, of 1.:>78 Cambridge st, received ,,
Miss. Katherine Dunleavy; with Mrs.
graduation diplomas tlris week. Two 1boys ['
were graduat~d from the
}
Richard M:acDonald of Worcester and
school. one, girl from hjgh school and the /
Mrs. "Barry of Whitinsville, as assistf o u ~ O 1a girl, from grammar school.
ing- ~~stesses.
Maurice L. and Lawrence G. Haley received their' diplomas -from. Suffolk ·Law
Miss Brady is widely known as a
school; Fiorence was graauated from
Cambridge High and Latin school, and
dr_am·a.tic rea.der and has con_ducted 't_
..
. _ Sch<><?l of ExJ?ression in .U x_briclge and\
Lillian was among the last graduating
class of the Harvard school.
All are
Worcester.
She is a: graduate o:l'
grandchildren of the late James LivinnosNotre Dkme Academy, and Emerson
to_n, form~r editor of the Cam britl'ge r
Times, a ,newspaper published in the city
College of O~atory of Boston. She is_
~ome years ago.
La ,vrence Ilaley the 1
a member of the Kappa Gamma Chi'
oltle.st of the tw? prospectiYe' lawye~s. is
, an insurance ad.Juster and Maurice is a
sorrority and 'Emerson College Club.
()~etter carrier attached to the
Mr: Fox is a graduate of the Mans-'
0
1
f~mtfv~
1
field High School, class- of 1925; at\"£el. his thircl year at Suffolk LaW schoolA,
tended Boston College and Boston
n-slJr::[--.--,Q.!:>-;-;rnt(:JOUU Jo-:prdpfS<J.l U 0'.J. '.J.UO pi) I
University, C. B. A., and Vl<i.11 be gradL~l?':1,!ll snA\, ~! t..\ot{ •aaJ s.::iaa:nlP:: ~0'0~$
uated from the Suffolk Law School of·
Boston next year. ~ of
the Sigma Rho Delta. Mr. Fox conducts: an insuranCe business and also,
.assists his fath'er in the management
! of the oldest men's clothing store in
Mansfield.

the oth er on the historv and appreciation
~of art. \ The -courses will be helpful to all
teachers of art and to those teachers interested from the cultural side w,ho wish
to get a f-0undation to understand and
nppreciate aesthetics.
•\
.If, ~ ..

,
1

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j

~(fi1e~ ~!!ib!!t~inthe J::i~:

Central
1!' n~i;

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STAN-OARD, NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

)
)

i!Stt.t!F!,-,_

-~.-

t,/~iddlehoro
Middleboro coun~il, K. of C elected officers 'Thursday evening: Grand
knight,
William Sheehy;
deputy
grand knight, Frank J, Maddigan; re ..
corder~ Joseph R Hyman; treasurer,
T. Francis Begley; chancellor. William J. Coughlin; advocate, Luke F.
Kelley; warden. Robert Kennedy; inside guard. Manuel Rose; outside
guard, Man1.1-.e1 Paavo.; trustee, Joseph
Robideaux; clelegates to state con~
vention, William J. Sheehy. Thomas
H. Kelly; alternates, Charles Giberti,
Fra.nk J. Maddigan

\

The annual reception of the senior
class of Memorial High school was
held last evening in town hall with
members of the Junior class as ushers. oancing was enjoyed ·until midnight. The ,grand march was led bY
Stanley Benson, class president. and
Cecelia Paradis. followed by RandolphGamrnons. and Doris Baldwin
and other members e>f the class.
Victor Landstrom. Barden Hill roan
has received hi$ LLD. degree from

FREE PRESS, MELROSE, MASS.

,: :·-

\

;~{~.
~-. j

.

~~fkf~Ljfn:~~h:h: ~:~ii.ett, will
Esther Spooner and M. Alice Jones

·1

attend the sessions of National Education association in Los Angeles,
leaving next week.

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~~IGAN; BOSTON\i' M'Ass;

·.

JUN 20 \93'

POST, WORCESTER, MASS .

.

:IYORiiECE·=:
IS BRIDE IN
ROXBURY

,Th~ong Attend Wedding

of
Miss Curley to S. R. White;:
1000 at Reception

'Six women fainted today in a:
crush of several thousand, per•
sons_ who crowded into St. Pat-.
rick's Church, Roxbury, at the
wedding of Miss Sally Paula
·curley, niece of Mayor Curley,
to Stanton Reid White, son of
Mr.' and Mrs. A. E. White of
Boston.
,The crowd, containing practical1Y every ~ity official and man·y
other notables with their families~

Overflowed to the church steps and
the, sidewalk, while a detail of poli_ce kept traffic moving.
MAYOR IS PRESENT

The six women. caught in the
of the church, were overcome
bY the heat. and were carried out
_anc;l ;I"evivE!.d. The services were not
interrupted.
l;I<jaded by the mayor and Pres•
:~ent Joseph McGrath of the city
' /c;eUnCil, the entire city ,£overnrnen t
.: a~tended the cere:".llony •. together
:!'·

~boay

, ,:With Polic'e

Cominissioner Hultma1t,
·TraffiC, Commissioner Conry, Supt.
· ?of. Police Crowley and many others.
Nuptial m3.ss was celebrated by
t:he_,Rev. William Casey. Miss Margaret T. Curley, sister of the brid~,
was maid of honor, and Mrs. Har.Q~d___I!.~avage wa~ matron of honor,
·BRIDE'S ATTENDANTS
Other attendants were Mis~i~s
Rita, Mary and Eileen Curley, als-.,
s.iSters of the bride; Eleanor M.
·.·Mlll:'J)hy, Brighton; Kathleen B.
Mahoney, West Roxbury; Mary D.
Curley, daughter of Mayor Curley;
;Mary'·, G. Murphy, Roxbury; Frances, X. Curley, Arlington; Margaret

,,,,,,..,

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

c

with the

ii

I

A tag day was held here Saturday
in connection

1

~sonal

ber of youths busily engaged inl playing at the allcient and honorable
pastime of golf. A trip to the local
links showed him that not only the
old and· infirm were what has been
known as "pill chasers " The number
of. young fellows and girls was sur-

Mr. an<J. .. rs. George.H. Crown are
spending! e day i;>: Bt>,s'ton•.
Miss ftit1l Jiewell' of.Newton spent
th
'enct··~e home of her
grandmother,r,'f·, Ad<i,foNewe!~ on
Bridge street. , " f I. •
·
Mr. and Mrs. peet'ge Marshal! of
Millbury have been spending a few
days at the home of Mrs. Marshall's
mother, Mrs. Lucy Martin of Ashfield
street.
Gilbert Hunter has returned to his
studies at the Suffolk la~ ~hool after spending""1'he II c@I!(. ,r,: at the
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
· J S. Hunter, on Mechanic street.
Miss Helen Woodward, R. N, of
New York city is spending _some
,tirile at the home of her parents, Mr.
,and Mrs. M
__
1

prising and then to top it off he has
seen a number of youths these spring
carrying golf sticks to

a -

Salva

Army.

has been
,
SAUNTERER late to :poterather interested\of
the.nµm-

days

i

or_ the

The SAUNTERER

school

wi'!;h them and practicing putting in
the 'school yard. Truly, thinks Saunterer as he :recalls his own school days

. were-l·shunned,

w;hen g9lf players and. racq:u,et wield'ers
considered something to be
things are changing and
have changed.

Man f"rom Paxton Says:

I

·Richest blessj.ngs often spring
from heaviest burdens..
F any .city of like size has two more 3
ardent mountain climbers a1nong
its inhabitants than has Worcester
in Asst. Registrar of, Probate Carl E.
Waihrstrom and William E. Elander Of
the Registry of Deeds then friends of : ,

I

the two would like to know about it
about all t~e ~

,They have climbed

~~~t:~J ~e~~tst~}e·~:Y~~1!!a:id

Mr.- Wa.qlstr.om..JJ.as_ done... uo. a few _of

s

EXPRESS, PORTLAND, MAINE

MAY 5-1931
ONE

Sedgewick Man
. Admitted Today
To.BarQf Main~

Gargan,
Ashland,
and
Audrey
White, sister of the bridegroom.
1:'a1:,1.l G. Curley, son of the mayor,

·Wa$·best man. The ushers included
;J.· Bll.rke Sullivan, Richard H.
Nolan, William Doyle, James Al-phen, W. Arthur Reilly, Leo Curley,
;Jamaica · Plain;
Lieut.
Bartley

Hogan, ·u. S. N., Washington;
/Frank J. Long and Eugene Doherty,
'.BrightOn;
William
J
Bulman,
B!ockton;

Cornelius

o·callahan,

Dorchester, and John A. Sullivaht
1).i;:,rchester.
1000. AT RECEPTION.

----After the ceremony the parents
of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. John: J
Curley; gave a reception at the
,Copley Plaza, which was <1ttended
by 1000 guests.
~ptorcycle officers escorted the
bridal' couple frorri the church to
the hotel. and fire apparatus along
the line saluted them with sirens
Th~ bride, wJ+o lived with her parents in Winthrop st., Roxbury, i,s
~
_graduat~ of Mt. St Joseph's

Academy and the Mt. Id;, School of
:rfOwton. She has been active in
the New England Club and the
Riding Club oil the Mt Ida School.
Shr.t. iS prominent in the summer
· coiqny of Hull, whore her parents
have , a summer home.

Mr.: White is a graduate of the
Villanova

Preparatory

Where he played on

School,

the football

team:, He is a student at the Suffolk Law School and a member ot:
the Sa_n~y _.$urr Country,r:~ub.

Charles A. Ka.he
C~a.rle.s A .. K ~ Sedgewick w,as
admitted to the practice. o! ·1aw at -the
M~i.ne bar toda,y before Associate Justice Sldne:i: St.-. Felix Thaxte~ in Supreme · ·Jud1~ia.l Cour,t here ·
Mr._Kan,e, the ~on Qf ¥r.s,,Scott Lymburner of Sedgewick,. .was gr3.du3. ted

at. Sedgewick High School and attend-

ec;J. the Un_iversity of Maine. He ·studie'd
law and wa.s .graduated at the Suffolk
Law; School·~ Boston. He ,was ~
ted· today upon motion of Arm.and Le-

:i,llanc o! V'J'estbrc.ok His plans .for the
prac_, tice _or law are undecided. but q;_e_·
iD:t,ends to practice in this Eitate
j

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

CHRONICLE, BROOKLINE, MASS.

f:.AY 9 .. 1931

,,
Girls in NewYork Citya-;d bel?ngs to
-rtt~~giie'<'>f,.ffe'l''ho_,aL¥- Mr.
Cosby w;/:sfj,member of the class'of'
192 5 _it i~tn 1 University . No plans
have ~
e for the -wedding

\rt:n,ngageme~ been announc~d
of Miss Rose Pello of Hadley p!a~e
I to Attorney John E Quigley_ of. E :
'I erett.
Miss · Pello has rnany Jnends,
I in Medford arid Malden.
.
~r. Qui,1~·~ey has an office. at01 9
H!
. , Pleasant street, Malden. He ts
..
, ! of the yotiniest world war vet~an.5
and is a member of the Ever.,...At- =!-,
nd a-f--the Ma}den
menV. F. W. a . ,., · , d----fed from the
can Legio~; .n.e.h~Fl_ ua d from
.
\I Everett High-_-Sf 9 ':th afhe 1927 class.
Ifolk ;I,,,1,i,:.i.)2cho.,::e,:i;er of· the Everett
He iS--a1so a
Board of A!)peals.

:I

Engagement Announced
,
Mr. and Mrs. Philip S Berk of Brooklyn, New York, have announced_ the engage1nent of their dau_ghter, Miss
Berk to Emil N. Winkler of Engewooci Avenue. Miss Berk has appeare?
in radio concerts and a111ateur. theatr!cals in her home city
Mr. Winkler is
a graduate of the Suff...k La,w School
and the Bosto_n. Unh,:ersity· College of
Business Adm1n1strahon

Arn

l

lH

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, l\TASS.

••

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MERCURY, NEW BEI>F<;Hfo, MASS •..

MAY9

MA'rs---1931

IN PLACEMENT
BUREAU WITH
BOSTON UNIV.

I

J

The fourth a.nnual outboard motor !'broad.;;,st over an N:SC network toboat race o! the National Association !night at 11 P. M.
of Engine and :Boat Manuta.eturers, ' The air from Bach's orchestral
,y from Albany to New York will be !_U~ in D, known as the air on the
00
broadcalit by WOR at appr~ximately
'"''"' because of t~~ ~i~lin arrange~
hv
10 A. M. today. The course me&SUres '.
135 miles and ls regarded as one of

W~n E. Benson Is
Named Director.

. . -.,......°'"'

warren E Benson of Forest Hills,.
son of Mr. and Mrs. John T .. Be~

'· the most difficult in the United States

son- 242 Forest avenue, a natn·e of,

ca~pello, has b€en appointed di-;
rector of the placement bureau of
Boston University and wm assume
·his duties July l, The following colleges will be under ,his direct!o_n as
regards placement: Law, medicine,
arts business ·administration~ practicai arts, theology, religious education and music.
Mr. Benson is 33 years of age and
is married, his wife b€ing forme:lY,
Kathleen F. O'Brien of Forest Hills.
.,-~----~- -They have one. · son, o. Robert. He
is a graquate of,
O,~!!!lrd school,
'12, and Brockton.· H;igh '16 and at
High held- class offices, was football manager and was a member of
the Launfoal :fraternity. - ''
.
He was graduated in 1920 with
the degi,ee of A. B. from the College : of Liberal Arts, Boston, and
from Suffolk Law school in '30. He
was in tli& lrt!iVY Ki dfrery, officers'
camp during the World war.
From 1920 to '22 he wa.s sub-m?,Ster at the Reading High school and
from then until this year was manager of the Fisk Teachers' Agency
ill Boston, a national organization
with branches in New York, Chicago,
, Syracuse,
Philadelphia,
Cleveland,
.Pittsburg, Kansas City, Los Angeles,
'Portland, Ore , Portland, Me , and
Birmingham, Ala.
He is a member of the Laun!oaf
fraternity, A. F. and A. M., 'Kappa
Phi Alpha, south Congregational
church and was founder and iS president of the Little Screen Players of
New England.

:i

tii~

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,

t

because of tide rips, cross. currents
and shoal waters.
Speaking from Berlin, Franz von
M~ndelssohn, incoming president . ot
the International Chamber of Commerce, will be heard by Amerlcan
radio listeners this afternoon at 1 p.
M. Von Mendelssohn will be speaking
particularly to his colleagues assembled at the international conference
of Chambers of Commerce at Washington, D. c. His speech w_ill be· carrted over WEAF's network :In this
country.
The dedid'atory ceremonies Of the
new Institute of Human Relations at
Yale university will be picked up from
New Haven and broadcast through
WEAF's system at 3 o'clock this afternoon. The speaker's list includes talks
by Governor Wilbur L, Cross of Connecticut, former dean of the 'Graduate
-~l'JQOl at Yale; Dr. Ray Lyman WU."

I

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A1ID1T01tiURLEY \I

---..__ -JlJJStJ>:ATRONAGE .:I.

~

t-

tJ.:STATE O E
FFl•C

l
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:~:~i~o1a:~~e!tate
1

rt/

.. ~'-,.-,.

~H.i lS
1
r
,-e Ill Sta e Off• !
ice
Law Hinders . . _ :
'. :

ii~·.•

'·LT· ,

LOW1'Jl,L co,J_mTIZT<N,
!_!_;_,a-;;-~-.-.J.J-.a-~-1-::"'nc.,';_:'_'0-':'-d-~-~-!-~-r~-G-:_;_;_;_\_F

and national ·D--e-m
___

The speaker char.iCteri.~ed Al Smith H. f;;pillane;, Dr Michael A Tighe,
as the "ablest man in -Political life Edward J. 'Gallagher, Frank p Mcin the western Wor1d 0 ·and- said that G1Uy. Judge James E. O'Donnell,

Sats Civil 8
.
El
erv-1ce
he was. -like Governor E-1y, "~ D~mo- .Prancls x
Hurley, DeWitt c.
. ected Official Becaus
_ ·
, H!'at tf?rrt· !he t_o?,,"of hi~ :11ead to the Wolfe and Daniel J Kelly
Gives Rim QM

e . It
ize th_at the ru_l~r knew what he was 'soles _o~ h'1~ fe~t.
lte showed that Among the Guests.
Pred · .
, ll1Ce Filled 'Wlth :-:- talking'~aboUt~ ·who, so the .story goes, the_ governor was an ~r~e~t admirer
A_mong those present for the
ecessor s Appointe
hty
.
.
, of Smith and ••as Joyal a-supporter of 1cas1on were:

_.

n

:r

o<:- f1
:::
t_o1d his son tltat the thing which I hmt _as- the_re,_.is in the state"
.
J. H Flaherty, J E. Carroll, Peter 1 •
Mf would amaze the latter most
Conce:i-ning
the
governor's
Clancy, William F Smlth, EU-\
ulty w.as tl:ze sma~l amount ,of intelligence: comp·l·iithm.ents .in o~ic.e, he Mated ge~e Queean, Paul Roane, James E

in li~e

es.

DECLA.R
_

I

l

De- \

ES GOVERNMENT

NEEDS
k!~
. .-SANER -METHODS bofDehvers Criticisms f Red

ac-\J.

~~k f~\°w~P!:~;!s

:~:"\i!:::'

7;:: ~~~:~;!1'~x

r~i!e;!~t~ g-~Jfux:1~~~\.t
!~!~t-~c!Iv~
~-oh~~~r~~ntpoh~u:"ards of private business were en- any predecessors in twO yeal's and ran, R. j Bigbee, Ray Caffray, Wil~
<:1e- forced in the 0:tHcial service, th:e. co~t tlli_s i?, ~.pit.e of; .~n antagonistic legis- liam Moore1 A F Smith: Dr M A :
a..t Ba
~:
Tape S' is of gove~~ment! so, far as personnel ia:tur~, .. Mr .ne,volf lauded the abili- Tighe, Dominick Molloy, Jame!:>
G
:11quet lfere Itt Honor of/'. ce- 1s concern~d ~otlld be ·. greatly .re-~ ties .an d 1!l~complish.me;nts of the guest Markha~. Joseph Sullivan,. Danie.1
..
· eorge E'. Murphy ' n
.
upon duced
.
.
·,
of hqnor· and shoWed that his youth S~llivan, Frank Goldman, Mauri~e
O.on:Hrmed
' Aecentlyt.
''The c.". uses .are n.ot. hard. to. d.is- i's an asset although some consider Barlotsky, Thomas '.B. Higgins, John
0th
as
Assistant_
cover. One has already been hinted it a HabilitY.
F
Roane, Thomas M A. H1gglns,
~rs Laud New De
·
.ows: at-the appointing to positions of Efy Working Hard.
.Ta,mes Mu:phy, Robert Watson, Ter,
_
puty.
t for importance in the :public ,service men
tn conclU!don, he said that the peo- rence
Riggins,
Jam!s
Cassidy,
/ Fi:-ancfs )( H:
1st of wh? / have co~peted in the fl:eid of We of Mas$'.achusetts are "passing Charles Slowey, Josel?h Gormley,
la. st night
ur:Iey, state a,,uditor ,r, al- pohtic:;;, C!.!}en witp.out much success, thr.ough a terrible time; one that has Thotna.s F. Duffy, J J. Bruin, Hugh
ev:i.sio.Il&
f struck out at Polit·
urphy and are then placed in position$ of not b~n over-estimated" He said Downey, Leo Callahan, Daniel J
and scot:edo '. the Civil se_rvice ~:~ .l_e the 1ei3:ponsibility which t~ey are in- th~re are ~•no -words to describe the O'Connor, Arthur J. Dion, J9.seph
of un
• as Well, ,the appointm t ts and capable of administering properly suffet"ing about us" and that the con- McCm;ker, James Droney, Thomas
1
f: imsuccessf.uI politicians to pl en . I felt Another cause, perhaps, is th. e cir-- dition "is a disgrac·e· to us all., He Te?,gue,. Gerald O'.Conor, John . .J
ment portance in the state g
aces ,istant. cumventing of the Civil Service law. $tated that Governor Ely was doing ~alsh, Francis Haggerty, Joseph
ere·
'I'hese factors, (le cI~;;rn- .:1.an of I have seen this in my own. office, a,nd everything possible to meet the cir- Dinneen.
. l.a~gely responsible for the . Eld,~ state the effect is not only disrupting, but oumstance$ without playing politics ( John J Walsh, Dr John F. Boyle,
0
r:.::~~ty of reducing costs of nn~ ! have almost fatal to good p\lblic service.
-:peputy State Auditor. Kelly said. Edwara,, McG11ly, Geor:ge Campbell,
~ cerned • so far as pe:i:sonnel iS ~v . what
"A still further cause is the that affairs in ,hi-:f' depar.t~ent Were ~ful ~ Donnell, Daniel McQuaid,
on- ;e st.a~e atrociously low salaries which are a '"mess" when taken over by Mr
ias
cQuaid, Frank Gl'oves, Pau\
"'!:~ Demoerata Honor Mur
e pos1- paid to some of the people in the Hurley an9" intir;na..te'd that an e:X:- ~':smon?, c. J. Desmond, ~ohn ConThe state audito
phy.
.
state employ
Top heavy with rules posure of conditions was post3ible nor, Walter Connor, J. ~- McNabb,
speak(Jr in Libert r Was the :principal c .hfe a and regulations which leave very lit- within six months
.T<:'hn M. Haggerty, '\\-,.ilham McCul150 prominent D Y hall, "'?ere nearly to real- tle to the discretion of the departMr. Spillane, a former instructor lotlgh, John Flynn, Edward Boyle,
tion gathered f'oemocrat~ in this s e c - ~ ment 'head. th~ state service offers o~ Mr. Murphy at the- -Suffolk Law---~ames F. J:?onohoe, Russell H Meq-uet to G-eo.t er a. testimonial ban-==!!5-, very litt.le.-: t.o.. t.. h· e m. an. wh<.> would &l?SO] p.pj~ tribute to t..-e . .
l>e;rmott, ,M~,chael H. Donlon, John C
city wh
g
E
Murphy of this
!
advance''h.i.mself· by his· oWn initia- n'onor. Re brought he -said greet Far.rington, Edward Morris, Frank
dep~ty ;t:t:S lece_ntly appointed first
11'
tive
In, my own office r· hav~ a ings from dean and faculty' of th; Mc~~lly, Dr. J J 'Yal~h. Thom.as
w
_
auditor
Mr :M:ur h
World wat" veteran who iis married school to :Mr ·Murphy
Fitzgerald, Charles ON.ell, Dr. ¥Vil' E~a~~es;nte~ a tt-avelin~ bag Pb;
I
and has four childr.e11, ~Ild who is Tierney C;fls for Harmony.
W~.m. -Collins, S!ephen Flynn, John .
th
.
T~erney, toastmaster
f::,.._
incapacitated in the use of ohe of
Toastmaster
Tierney spoke
at Delmore, ~edenck Desmond, James
O
e e;enmg
his a.mis because of a wound he re- some length on the advantages of .a. Cusick, Ro1?ert Desmond, Tho~s J.
in Besides Mr. Hurl~y, other s
_
ceived during the war.
The Com- unified party and apJ)ealed to his Cprbett, : Joseph Harvey, Willi.am
eluded de Witt c, d,e Wolf peakers
rtionwealth of Massachusetts pays hearers to assist in furnishing the Desmond,
Thomas
Dowd,
Frank
tary. to Governor Jose h e, secretl\at maJ?, "'the H).a~ificent salary o"f co-?1:3eration which would result in T Batnford, Daniel Coakley, John McDaniel J. Kelly, deputy
_B :Ely;
$960
y~r~ a~d_ be.cause of official pollt1cal strength Re d~scribea: Low- Ca~thy, Cornelius Lynch, I.ieo ,McqarGeorg.e H. Spilane
ditor, and
, ;i;.~d tape ,th~~ salary. can only be in- ell as the "best Democratic city in thy, A. W. Bradley, John Farley, Harof the .John Banc~c:eneral n:ianager
creased'~a'tter co.nsid1:)~~ble.,::d.:eJ~Y and t~e, state, in proportion to popula- old Ready.
.
.
an~. an instructor
Insurance Co,
a lot <if.·~pl.anation'," altho~h the tion'. and expresse~ .the h.ope that.
.Edward J. Tierney, .John ~icGuire,
s_ch~ol wh~re l\t at the Suffolk Law
:i;>erson 'in ·qµ:estion is vex.Y <:8.P;tble Democratic victories of the last state John Regan, John Dillon, Louis
Each '.speake -< r. Murphy . studied .
A:d hon.O~able:--Jlrivate employer :W:ould election wo. uld be repeated in. the Blank, Michael F. Murphy, Dan
took· occasion-: t:nd. the toastrnaster
hang his 'head fn shame if he paid future
..
O'Dea, Frank Scannell, :°aniel T~
the Democ·r t·
plead for un1ty in}
that man the, same salary under the
Mr Murphy was the final speaker Sullivan, George M. Harrigan, Dansy greater ~~~itr::ty ?-nd ~o prophe-1
same circtlrostanees
~e th~nked,,the men,.wr-esent- for their iei J. O'Brien, J. H.. Gilbride, J.

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in ''The Dem.ocratic party. ol)portunity
power will have an w hi.le it is
to break with this folly of the past
and make public service a responsive
and intelligent thing

urn electiv
ffi.c
i
hi h 'th
1
should b, ·a
~ des n, wf c .d, et"e
e
g
egree o confl ence
~:t7;:nd~~:r~~~ie:.:e~;ds~~~l:et!

h.e.xt state e 1ecti on1 than in that the
.
.
victor1e:5 in of
Ia.st ·fall
APP<>in:tee~
. .
, ,·' ;. .
• Ability Lauded.
~~aise
the gueat o:C ho
t' ose appointment was the
nor,
~:r- the banquet~ was VoiCCd reb,cison
:speake:rs, who coiym
. Y all
CO'..
~ e n d e d his years

interested in. h.lm .3:-nd .~xp. ressed hi~
pfeasure at working undeT Mr Hurley. tn the i~troduction of _his short
talk, he said th~t .he owed the
greatest P~~. 9~ p.i~. success to ·-his
Lather, who was present, and asked
him Jo stand and make himself
known
,
The b8:,n~u,et, which wa.s served
1
no applicationoftheCivi~S.ervkelaw. ~!n!!: t;:d~ \;!~~i~:e C~;~;a: a~f
9
What re.sponsibiUty can.-. b@,'.-~sked of Tho~~,-'.}:~~ 1 Dufty, chairman. Ter ..
a. man :f he is fore~.- to ~~.e. em• r'-:nce H!g.~s,- ~~ E Carr:0ll, Dan
0
~~:o~~~e~n b~u~s a:re°!~:ss"':~ ,~~~: 0 Dea a.Jl~ Edward .T. 'rierney.

to:

.
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CITY To GfT $48J000
·
FROM "GASJJ TAX

-=

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~TINUE~A'GE FOUR

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Frank Co.~nors, .Tames Thomas Mur-Howley, J. J Gilbride, D. ufne. y, .Paul
Phy, Dr. J B,: O'Connor,
Charles
Riley, Dr. McNamara, Frank Lawler,
Edwar<;1 Donohue, Robert Hart, William Mu,:-phy, Jo·hn Dewire, Jain.es
O'Dea, P. Joseph Duffy, Edwat'd
Cawley, John Townsend Frank J
Dalton, .r Warren Flood: Joseph

J:

::=:: :;;::;t!A!~~=: :·

~1:i:e!:~
Barr_e~t, George Bateman, William
~nan and Day;a E GOPPQf§·
·
. .
~

he ~ay have d~.feat·e· d. S:ft~f.;.,. bi..tter _~G:u:e;sts;·;:·::at:.t:b;e;hi.•;~~<j;c;ia:b:l:e:lnjc:lu:d:e;d~R;e;a;d;;.
C;o:u:r~ie:r~-c;·;it~iz=e=n=C~la.:•:s:ifi~e~d~A~d~s
political campaign? In such a 'Situatlon it is logical to aSSullle that the
employees will be none·-.too :eifiendly
and it is obvious that- no matter ho~
- -- .:_
sincere the eleCt~d official ~)'"· be, he
cannot be an_y more sucf.lesst"ul in the
administrat_ion of: his office than his
inherited staff ~ill anOW him to be
such a condition is incompatible
with any theory· ·ot governmental responsibility.
..Personally, I believe in giv-illg the
head of any department, the work of
which is not of a routine nature, all
the power he wants. We must a$sume that the t1eople have ele<::ted a
man to. office ~ecause they be).ieve in
him and . that his ·record, should he
~gain seek political hpl'lors, will be
scrutinized to see if he has made
good
This may be a re.:statement
of the 'spoils theory,' but even though
it is, I fully believe in it That belief)
caused me 1:0 appoint Mr. Murphy
and to bring to my office as much
ability and :fidelity .as possible. Nothing that has happe"ned since I took
office last· ·.January fras' in any manner caused ~e to change my -0pinion."
Ely Sends Congratulations~
Mr, de Wolfe-brought the congrat-t
ul3:tions of Governor Ely to }.fr MurphY ·and his well-wishers to the Democratic gatht:ring.
He recalled, his \
last vi.sit to Lowell, nine years ago
and sketch:'t,i 'briefly so~ oi th~

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MAY 2-1931

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::;: 1

MERC{!RY, · NEW

i

BEDFQ

RADIO FEATURES
Excerpts from opera,; by Golclmark,
Balfe and Planquette mainly comprise
the program by the Black and Gold
Room orchestra to be broadcast over
an N~C,.network tonight at 6:15 P ..M:
Dean Gleason L. Archer of Su:tfolk
Law sch~.,.ql, Bo.ston, will d i ~ _ e
par't'""pl,;yed by circumstantial evidence in establishing guilt in cases of
first degree murder, in his talk, "Laws
That safeguard society," to be broadcast over NBC tonight at 7:15 P. M.
Two.n~unbers po-pular some seasons
ago will be re-introduced on the Tastyeast Jesters program, over an NBC
network tonight at 7:15 P. M.
George Gershwin and Viet.or Her· rt will be represented on the FUller

1 Road",

along with Siberian prlsoll
uumbers, will he sung by· the tenor
soloist in the Troika Bells program to
be broa<;1cast through NBC Sunday at
10:30 A. M.

Extremes o~ emotion are exptesse4

in Mme. Geni~ Fonariova's solos, to be

broadcast on _the Nomad~ Program
over an NBO I)etwork Sunday at 11
A. M~
.
.
.
D~lor:;s Cassmelh, soprano, will sing
O
Lollta, . dedicated to and sung by. the
late Enrico Caruso, m the Neapol1ta.n
Days progr~m over an NB(? network
Sunday at 11 A. M.
A. pro.gram of popular· orchestral
music will be presented by NBC over
an extensive network when. the Ro- (
chester concert orchestra with Sher-

~P~==~====:~~~~~~~:::::~~~m~a~n:!?!~~-~C~l~u~t~e,~,~dir:·
ie~cting, is and sun-·.-~.,,._,...._.
een 11:30 A. M. heard 12:45

'.,31

~

TIMES, BROCKTON' MASS.

(
/

MAY 9
, I

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To Wed J. Lee Hughes of Lynn at Nuptial
Mass at St. Edward's Church June 13~

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Miss Geneva Reed, daughter of'!Mr. and Mrs. James Hugbes,\9 E ...

i ! Mr. and Mrs George F. Reed, 97 sex street, Lynn.
, i Elliott street, will be an early June
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~!~eM':1;.s1a~k t;;al~1;~~ghter of Mr.
Joseph Hughes
of Waltham,

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The ceremony will be performe4 '
at a nuptial mass at St. Edward.,;
church, by the pastor,, Rev. Thomas
F. Brannan. It will be followed by
a wedoing breakfast and reception
at the tommercial club.
Miss Betty Reed, sister of the
bride elect will be maid of honor.
Miss Mildred Reed, another sis_ter,
will be bridesmaid.
Little Miss
Betty Jane Skahill, niece of the
bride elect will be flower girl. The

tf~ti!;t°1:nt,,:';.

I

wt~· ~~iu~!

0

~~~:st
Parker Reed and Jack
Skahill,
brother and brother in law of the
11
/
bride elect, Leonard Dunn and John
Donavan of Lynn.
Miss Reed is well known in this
city. She ls assistant to Mae McGee, dancing lnstructress, and was
one· of her most talented pupils.
She teaches at the Ashland school.
She was graduated from Brockton
High school in 1925 and from the
Bridgewater Normal school, 1927.
Mr. Hughes was graduated from
MISS GENEVA REED
the Ly
.
.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~-::-:-:::J.~"":'~u!l;.:o~l~ki-!l~""~JIT~ school of Boston.
, I bride. She will marry on Sat
He is .ctlnnected with the Travelers'
I
i;Lday, June 13, J. Lee Hughes, son or, Insur"j~~o. of Boston.
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MAY 7 = 193':
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.I:~~ Port. of Bo~ton J
·.,By JAMES J. DELANEY

.1,.

~HOOLSHIP SAILING
-. Prepara.tions for- the annual sum2Per sailing of the Massachusetts
Nautical Sc!'1oolship, Nantucket, are
.t'lOw· being m~de. The vessel will
l!lt3.rt May 14 on .%1. 11,187 mile voya.ge. She will be gone until September.

REILLY PROMOTED
, A~pointed messe~ger to Collector r
'of the Port Wilfred w. Lufkin,
Thomas A Reilly, 26. of Oak st,
CI.iar.;estown'. has assumed his new l
duties. Reilly ,$UCceeds John Gor- 1
ham who retired 18.st week a:ttiar a /'
lQng term of service The new ap- \
po. intee was formerly employed by 1

I

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Judge Joseph A. Donovan of the I
Bt?ston Muni0ipal Court. A; gradtiate of Charlestown high school

/

'W'ith the class of 1927 he is now a

student at Suffojk... I see
Scfiool.
Reilly is a. member of Bunker Hill
Council. K. ·Of C. and the Howard

>RESS HERALD, PORTLAND, MAINE

.AssOciates.
~

RECORD,

MAY

'

-BOsroN.JnA_s_s~.---

\i fW i - 1931

'rill! meet at the First Con-

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,~l ~Urch in Ellsworth

~ext

.
C
l!

~~fr ·:G~¢as0n L.· Archer of the Suf- ~.

, -~aw School; ~ w a s in Ells- r
~·, . th on_ Monday, being called here by
;- 'th~"'.death of his aged father,
~r~l?,~! of Great_ Pond.

John S

/)

/

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··-~-~c._.- . .

~~~~,.,.'-c-'-'"""".......'i-,':;-~~-~-~--~~--~-\-~,

ITEl\'I, LYNN, WIASS.

LOWELL, MASS.

-.

JUN 1 i

(t ,;JUN
,

·~1
SUFFOL iAW
GRANTS DEGREES
TOTWOLYNNERS

0
.~,;;...

of Melrose and
I Pomona
'

The

re
e

bee

for

The

class

Tuesday

day

exerciset:,

afternoon

at

POST,

BOSTON,

a .. $1.i.x rw

i!

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··

central

}iemical E;ngineering. ,~'
Carroll,
94
'Har-vard
enter TwftJs thiis fall.
·
- J se,pJA ·iDeBella,
53
Dexter

ho>

f

,

Congregational

church

· s•tree

~ , :i:s n_ow in the en11ploy of a

Me-QJf(}rd butcher.
-----'T,hB
1M·edford
1C.ollegians of
South MedJford, com.-posed of Tufts,
Harvard and M. I T. studenlts, defeated the ingersoll Independents,
"&lsio of 1S'outh J\riedford, in their in-

itial stafi of _the season ToUL Carroll, 94 Harvard street, pitch~_d .~_,._,n

.ro_P-

H
ent, ~!

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.

PROPER SHARE 1
~JtJEMPLOYEE

der tha.t others less fortunate may not
be left in want ..
His address was deliv;ered atter de1 grees had been awarded t"O a. class o'f
161 rnembers.
The gradµates, headed'
by First Marshal Ernest ;s. Coveney
and Second Marshal John Joseph Mul, downey, entered -and took their seats
· in the main aisle of Tremont Temple.
amid. loud applause tron1 relatives and
frie!l.ds;
crowded the main floor
and the two balconies
Joseph F. O'Connell was presiding officer, and Thomas .T. Boynton. president
of the board of trustees, spoke for his;
associates.

:

who

-----------"'-~--~

LJ

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W. H.;, A.

ReTervitz Is Law
School Graduat~>
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A_:o-~------~----~-

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS~-

uia Wharf.

~ni!:e~o fo!i:e/i!~~~/~!fu~hso~~d o~~

.<'>_<'>

Central Congregational will be held
Sunday morning,_ Jutte~ 2S: _ ,. ~
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MASS.

Admitting that there are many diffl•
culties presented in solving the economic depression, Senator Daniel o ..
Hastings of Dela ware, in an address to
the graduates of ,§2!£.olJi LaJC §Gb0~¢'1'
1 ~n Tremont Temple, last night, declared
\ that the "employee in m!'-ny instances
! cloes not get his proper share in the
: unusual and unexpected profits made
' by his employer during the prosperoua
years"
• The en1plo~ e1 ," he continued, ''ought
not to answer that he could get men
to do the s.ime job for less money. Op-port;.unity plays. a. large part in life in
An1-erica, and the man who is employed
by· a prosperous business conce1 n, and
who 1s faithful and does his work well.,
Should bEI given · some opportunity to
share in the profits of such business.
"It the wealthy business concerns
would refUse to cut wages or reduce
the number ·ot employees in times o~
depression, i.t would do much towa:rd
bringing us back to our normal post•
tion' They have already reaped the
benefit of an unprecedented prosperity.
0

s

street, ·has~ecoVered fr'om a severe 'l
iUnoos.
~
~Fran,ci-s F,o,,t-umHo, 80 Stanley i
a,venue, student at S u ~ . w I

rt
l.t:.

will

· ;

Westford street.
rrhe children's day exercises at the

I

Senator Hastings" Advises
in SuffolK Law Address

'

. n:i lysis a~ a part o{ his '

Middlesex-Essex

meet W~dnesday afternoon at the
home of Mrs 1-Valter ~E- Vickery.

auditorium.
The Lynn , graduates
will czmpete in ~he , next' - I ? . ~

~]~in~~--~

ot

RalPh p ""COat~s. Of Worttien stre/~
will receive his degree from t
utfolk T aw sch'?Ol, Tuesday, having
completed tihs th1 ee years' cou1:se
there.
Mr Coats also has the distinction of being on the honor roll
of his class
He was for some time
submaster at the Chelmsford high
school. leaving to enter tl:le ha:~dware business with his father-1nlaw Ervin E Smith, in Lowell.
The Women's Association of t~e

school

---'S:alva:tore Politi·,
9-6 Harva-rd.
'Street; ·student at M. I. T., is taklln-g;

a ,
e own in rmary to ay
e of 85 years. 1'-1r. Whitd been a re~~dent of the tow_n
y·ears , and had m~de hJ.S
the/ i~tf'rmary for th~ pa
_

home 1·
seven ear~

were. :tield

the

--~-----ing -cam11.

AJ.l.gi~r L Goodwin,-pas~ m~ster\-

1

James J. 0~ Valeri, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Francesco Valeri> 24 Pleasant
street, and Louis Letvak~ 73 Bookaway street, were among the 122
seniors who received Bachelor oi
Laws degrees at the grasjuation exercises of the Suffolk Law school in
Tremont Templi?; Btmtllil, i&EMiaJ.
night. B.oth .Lynn graduates ranked
high i??- academic work.
The commencement oration was
delivered by U S. senator Wan,,.n o ..
Hastings of Del~ware. The degrees
were conferred by Dean Gleason L
Archer, who also sppke for the school.

151931

Leon P. Reserv:itz, 25, of
Colony square, was graduated Tuell~da.,Y afternoon
fr(?m , Snl·faJl{ cl t~
school in Boston The comniencement exercises were cnducted ·in
Tremont Temple, where a. class · of
122 received degrees.
·
Leon, the only student from Brock! ton in the graduating class this year;
was a favorite among his classmates,
, having been elected class proI?het.
1
Mr. Reservitz attended the local
i schools here, being graduated :from
Brockton High school in 1924;- lte ·-is
employed as ,assist.ant manager of
·., the Enterprisi! Dry> Goods store o
j Centre street.
·

Mary Teague
Reading,
c
edley March.······· .Meru
Margaret j3}\nn, Mary Te_ ag_ ue
Ma.J:!al!).g-1),Qer, Anna Seanne!l
It's Tim~ Tell You All Goodbye,
Muriel Gagnon

GRADUATED FROM
SUFFOLK- LAW SCHOOL
Graduatedf~om-;;;Qlk Law school
this week with the degree of bache~or
r law were Ralph P. Coates, vice
;resident of Ervin E. Smith & Co.;
Archie Bar,l_ofsky, owner of the Econmy Grocery at Chelmsford and Shel~on streets, and Hubert L. McLaughlin, 367 High street, e~ployed at the
slate house in the offi~e .of the department of 1____ ---~----

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:.NEWS-TRIBUNE, WALTHAM, MASS.

2

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

JUN

t

7

o,~--.J~~
rnMr GRADUATED ,
FROM LAW SCHOOL 1:
Simpson B. Alpert, Royal P.
Baker and Kenpeth L. Page were
among the 122 seniors who received
bachelor of laws degrees at the
June graduation of Suffolk Law
school, ·Boston, in Tremont Temple
last night. The commencement
oration was delivered by United
States Sen. Warren 0. Hastings off·
Dela ware and the . degrees were ,
awarded by Dean Gleason L. Arch- '
er. The annuai class day exercises i
fook place in the schoo_l auditorium 1'
during the afternoon,
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ARE filVfN
~EfiREES AT·
SUFfOtK LAW

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John Joseph Callahan and William A. Viscounte of Waltham are
the 122 seniors who rec<::.ivca
bachelor of laws degrees· at the
June g,:aduation of Su4elt,., lJl!W
~l--~n Tr,ernont Temple,o~toni
IaSt~··~" night/ T1.1e ·comn1enceme11:t
oration . was dehvered by Uniteu
States Senator W-arren O. Ha&rings,
·
of Dela_wa1~_e while the degrE:,es·wcre.
a_wartjed by Dean Gleas.on
fJ~ '.
Archer w.ho also spoke for th<11!
sch(?Ol. The class . <las.., €.Xerices· l
were_ hel~ :in __the· afternoon iu 't})e r
school auditorium., ,
,
a111011g

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/' I gradua
e

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f B -=--'-'<y.uu.n;oe;---msLr1:uurqt•Toston, at the end ·Off
o~tern1. Miss Dclan
..,..~

e wr I ' dfor
;~
.,Is a

ex

~o},I:··

.)f ;_
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Cla- -Edward ,r{,inlon'71,,H_,~h-~ - ' !
o_f 1931-of L 'c/
'
Arl'ncrton w·ll I .ajie street,
to re~eiv~ .the~; a~?nlg th7 ,graduate~
1P o.rnas,
c:r - A

at
th.,,
.-,1a~uation exercises Of i-h
C::u++,._ c ,

L ~ o o 1 to be h fd :._ e ..........,..J,k :

Temple O"'n Tuesda"I, ~ e l~ Tremoi1t i
16th
- - . ___ _ . ~·' ven1ng,
_:
June .'
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STANDARD, NEW BEDFORD,

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EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

JUN 1 8 '.i8:3":

1R7!'.-y ow::u-,.,.,...festiv~ll~nin Whist
strawberry
or
oJ - - -

-d

A

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

171
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j Woburn, r~~ge wdas a: well atiended.
i Hall l ~ ~ t an w

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LYNN

0 Valeri so:i;i of Mr and
James j ,
. Val
i 24 Pleasant st,
:Mrs Fra~ce~?tvak er73 Rockaway st,
and L,ouis
l h
i22 seniors who rewere amoigl t e f laws degrees at the
ceived lbac e Q.1." 0 .
f
the Suffolk

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

~ - B . l h ' i J- - $ 1 . . ~ ~

---

graduate of Burd -Park st.,
accepted a· P . . e
he
wort;h- ~
ositio:t:1 at the ---,
~ ;,., ore. _
·~-

JUN

the s~::'oµc-1;1;:t, a S'raduate c
examinations for :~obol is to tall
on June 22.
ar ,at Bosto

gradua;~~noof.xe~~t~s fo~al g r ~ e s ,
Law
hi h in academic work. .
~
r........,.th!n 100 relatives ~nd. friends
More
r and Mrs Joseph Trimble, .2
honored Mt
the occasion of their
,Webste:dd~- , on
gr f llll I
35Zbtil
d
38' erou:=; gifts and congratureceive num,
rin the day. Mr
la to~y m~s-~~fe ,iereg mar~ied in this

.-r

d

~~t

_..._.

~r~896r1y R:v
____ -""-~-- z.1!.~:l;!+ J~;;fi~f.
-

Fr-;;;-

: Miss _Elsie
a ve who was takch <>t 77 Elmwoc
'~al..~tr - en to the Sturc
automooiieacifJ:f.t..te!la ilt8' a
J~:!i~c;p.N

~,..,,i __i:,_~kon

,-

.

NEWS, MA~DEN, MAss:=--

~~N~(-·~·-f_:~-

+'\..has.bE:_€n rf

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASS~

LOCAL NOTES

193;

Mrs Hannah Galvin, 160 Hawthorne
st, is at the Se& View House, Kennebunk Beach, Me, for the = e r .
Daniel J Moffitt, Harris st, is reading the NEWS at Lakeporj;, N H, for
the sum.mer.
Bishop Edwin H Hugi:es ar.d fa;mtly
of Chicago are occupying their sum•
, mer place at Jerusalem. rd. Co~set.
Elmer E George of 78 Florence ave.
was among the graduates of Suff....Q..lk
Law school, Tuesday nig-ht, receivirii
~degree of Bachelor of Law.
Frank D Stevens has sold to Miss
::n:r1~:d~n.H~sen_: of uaPle st. a La
: Marriage in~entions have been .fiied.
by ,Bernard T Raymond, 33 Maple st,
and Miss Dorothy DeLorenza of East

B.oi;_to,P

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JBE, BOSTON, MASS~

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

e::iftent_/Of ~iS-inJury was -uncret:.erm1uea;·

BAN'O~T TENDERED
ATTY FRANCIS l<EENAN
A'tty Francis R. Keenan, of Roxbury, was tendered a banquet last eve-

!

ning on the

1

40

$howboat" by a

group

of associates. He was presented with '
a set of legal books.
More, than 100 persons attended the
banquet including -classmates at S.uf- !
folk Law School. William M u r p ~
1

Lynn ~toastmaster. Speakers in- :

cl\lded Edward Sharkey, Myer Wolf
and Bernard Partecetll.

High -School•. Re was.'admitted to the
A. tt.y . K.een.an.~\>.t.ten.ded···B·osto·n ·Co·.·I!·.the
...
ba.r -several weekg ago ·after passing eg.
b.a.r· exa:rninations in Dece,mber. He ts
; -;t:rea,n~rer of ~e ¥t Plea~t ·.Improve;;., . -,\tP.<t;P:t'~ . SP";i~'99~.~-~~,::._-..;->,_., _

e

I

MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS.

MAY C -

.. REVERE MEN'S OLUB
G'~-e~.~n L. Archer. dea.n of tm.G
tfolk ~a: .. chool, gave an inter.
o the members of the
ewer,
Men's club iii Butler hall
.
Zl;it!ht H& discussed
la-v,rs
aW enforicement an,d ariewered
. _ons.
He mentioned the ta.ct
~ a.. result of his :talks over
. , raio he
receives ma,ny letters
:t,rp,~ all parts of the count.___ry, indi..;
:93,,·tJ· ng th~t th. ere Js a. lively interest
in, th,e qu~ti~n of la.w e~orcement
on: t..hC:l part of law-abiding citizens. 1
H~ P,ila received letter:.s even
from '
. as ... t:a:r.:- a'W,-y- as Scotland, Berm.lid.a,. 1
and South Aimerlca, he said.
Th& club voted a donation ot $10
'to 'the. Re_vere Visiting Nurse assoeia.t:fon and decided that the May
meet1ng be observed
a.s "La.dies'
Nightu and a banquet be held.

.

Speaks at Suffolk
Law Graduation

I

I

The Revere \.'v'omen's club is observing
Conservation
Day at its
meeting this afternoon in the vestry
ot the First Congregational church
.4-n interesting talk by Edward
H
;' . U'O;()d is sc,heduled. Jos0phin-e Far:,..ell is slated to render vocal seleoti'ons. },.frs. Harriet E. Spl11vavn
:s
.!iostess of the afternoon.

SENATOR DANIEL 0, HASTINGS

SEN. HASTINGS
EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

tives; wn.1. ..~it::~~ui.. uJ.t:: awuiu
ners. \_Jf-'tFL.~~~~~~~~

HERALD-NEWS, FALL RIVER, MASS.

MAY 11

-c;o

win-

SENA"FOR HASTINGS TO
BE SUFFJlU( LAW ORATOR

ml

Un~ted States S e n ~ Daniel o. ·
lia.stings of Delaware will be the
Cominencement orator at graduation ,
exercises of Suffolk Law School jn:
: Ttemont Temple, .June 16, at 8 p m.
.
1
Senator Hastings, a graduate of
; George Washington University School
or Law, has been deputy atto~ey 1
general, Secretary of State, associated
Superior Court justicep special counsel
for the Legislature, city solicitor for
~i~!~~~e~nd Mun~cipal Court judge
Class Day _exercises wiIJ be in the
school auditorium on the afternoon of
June 16, and the .following officers have
been ch?sen: Ernest B. Coveney, West
Somerville, and J. Joseph Muldowney
N?rth Andover, marshals; Henry
V1egel, Wat~rtq_wn, class will· Edward
) A. O'Donnell. Boston, orato;; Irving
Shap.lro., West Somerville historian·
:X-6~':.-ir:cyX:· McLaughlin, Lowen, clasS

r..:

The class officers are A. Ralph Vaccaro, Somerville, president; Patrick
Savage, Medford, vice president• JOhn
H. Johnson, Woliaston, · sedetary·
F:ra~k Foster, Melrose_~ :trea.,.,-'l,trer.
'.,

!

j:

TO SPEAK HERE
To Be Su~Q!k-Law School
Graduation Orator
June 16
United States Senator Paniel 0
Hastings of Delaware will be the orator
at the graduation exercises of Suffolk
Law school in Tremont Temple, Jun:e
16 at 8 P. M, according to the announcement today by Dean Gleason L
Archer.
·
Senator Hastings, who is known as a
very forceful speaker, has held ma_ny
important offices in Delaware A nat1ve
of Maryland, he is a graduate of George
Washington University .school of law. He
has been deputy attorney-general, secretary of state, associated superior c_ourt
justice, special counsel for .the legislature, city solicitor for Wilmington and

Im~~~~a: :;JrJi~i!~vill the afternoon
take place ~
the .school auditorium on
0

of J·une 16 and the following officers
for the event have been chosen: Marshals, Ernest B Coveney, West Somerville and J. Joseph Muldowney of North
Andover; class will, Henry L Viegel,
Watertown; orator, Edward A. O'Donnell Boston; historian, Irving Shapiro
of 'west somerville, and prophecy,
Hubert L. McLaughlin of Lowell.
The Class officers are: President, A
Ralph Vaccaro, SOmerville; vice-president, Patrick Savage, Medford; secretary, John H. Johnson, Wollaston and

treasurer, Fr.ank Foster, Melrose.

i~1AY t 6 1931

SERVICESHELD

11

·1

1;

FOR JUDGE SWIG,

.,.

I

Taunton Bar Association Attends in Body
TAUNTON, May Hi-Funeral services
were held today for Jil.dge Louis Swig,
justice of the. di.strict court here, first
at the home, 14 Exeter street, for meml>ers of the family, and then in the I
sYnagogue of the Congregation -Agudath ,
Achim. Burial was Mt Nebo cemetery.'
The synagogue was thronged to the /
doors. Attending the services there were : f
the entire membership of the Taunton: Bar Association, of which Judge Swig/r
was a member, and members of many
other crganiazitons with which he was
affiliated

!

th;a,i~8;.~igu~n~~6t~ddb:e~~~ /'

rit~~l
Samaritan lodge

The remainder of t~e

!

-~~v~~t~:e o~on~~J:int ~s~~fe~~~ I

Rabbi Ramin and by .Cantor A Aaron.
Eulogies were delivered by each rabbi.

The active bearers were Judge Samuel
Barnet, former' Asst. Atty.-Gen. Albert

Hurwitz, Asst, U.

s, Atty. Elihu D Roop,

Dr. Samuel C Mintz, Frank P. Cohen
and former Ass,. Atty -Gen. Jacob L.

Wiseman
:
The honorary bearers included A!:ty,- r
Gen. Joseph E Warner, Judge Frederick
E Austin, Judge William S. Woods,
Judge William J. Davison. John H Sullivan, Noah Lemaire, Abe Diamond, all
of Taunton; ~ayor Hodgman and Dr.
Andrew J. McGraw, former mayor, ·of
Tauntcn; Judge Jacob J. Kaplan and
Julius I. Burns, of Boston; Judge Jacob
Asher of Worcester, Dist.-Atty. William
C. Crossley of Fall River, Dist.-Atty.
William J. Foley of Boston, Mark Duff
of New Bedford, former member of the
Governor's council; Dean Archer of the

3,.Y Taunton high school, and Henry i
~~~~fo~,1·~~t.g.~~1;:£i~~i~cipal of

F. Stevens of Hull.

.-

-1

TRANSC~IPT, BOSTON, MASS.

1;8 , .

established
cusfom,
n~-;;;pa:p~~
were not permitted to r~port what
res

Low:.t\.,W~i.

t!J.e. princ!pa

er at ~~ t"91&ht.

LAST TRl~UTE PAID
EX-JDDGE SW'IG
TAUNTON, May 15-Funeral services
for Louis Swig, former judge of the
1st Bristol Distdct Court, were held /
today at hfs residence, 14 Exeter st,
followed by servfoes at the Congrega..
tton Augath A,chfm, on Wi~throp st.
Many men prominent in the official
life of the State, county and ,city
were in attendance.
Rabbi Jonas Kamin condu~ted the
ceremony at the ho:rne, w~;~h ~as ;
attended by members of the 1mrnediate family. At te synagogue, Ra~bi
Louis M. Epstein of Congregation
Kehilleth Israel of Brookline, officiated, as did Rabbi Kamin. The ctan-

Sedgwick Boy Making
Rapid Progress in Law;

I

to~~!~sA~f~g~d Samaritan Lodge,
o. o. F., conducted the Odd Fellows• ritual. Eulogies were Pr<:>nounced
I.

byB!~~~~s w1;~:t;~ndg~ia!~~linBarnet,
former Asst Atty Gen Albert H_urwit2,
United States .Atty Ebhu D.
Stone Dr Samuel C. Mintz, Frank P.
Asst

Cohe:d and former Asst Atty Gen Jacob
l..,.H';;~~~:.;nbearers designated for the
funeral were Ex-Gov Eugene N. Foss.

J

0

0

ji;;!~er'fce:
i~s~in~ Ju'X::~·111~~d1~
Davison, Judge Jac?b. J. Kaplan of
Boston Dist Atty Wilham C. Crossl~y
of Fali River, :Oist Atty Willi~m J.
Foley of Suffolk Co~nty, Hon Mark
Duff of New Bedford, Mayor Willis K.
Hodgman Jr of Taunton, former Mayor
Dr Andrew J. McGraw, Dean Gleason
L. Archer of Suffolk Law Scho_ol,
Daniel H. Coakley, F r e ~ a ~ n cipal of Taunton High School, John H.
Sullivan, Noah Lemaire, Henry F.
Stevens of Hull, Julius Burns of Boston and Abe Diamond of Taunton.
Ushers were Samuel Ruboy, Maurice
Cohen, ,Hyman Berkover and PauJ. J.

CHAS. A. KANE

The many friends of Cha,::les A.
Kane, throughout this section will be
pleased to learn of his continued suc-

c~ss in his chosen professiOn of the

G~~:.~!1;s of the Taunton Bar Association attende~ in a body and there Ii.
were representatives trom various orgar.rt'zations wiiJ., wJ: ?h. Judge Swig ;
<cad been· affiliated, :f 'Ur1,al was in Mt f;
Nebo Cemetery,
\
1

laW. He was for two years a state
highway patrolman on the Bar Harbor route.
·
Mr. Kane's early life was spent in
Sedgwick. He graduated from SedgWick high school, attended the Uni1
versity of Maine and took the degree
of LI. B. from the .Suffolk !all\ ~ghEl(!)l
in Boston. He w,as' lffll!! of
e four
to pass the Bar examinations in
Bangor and was admitted to the
practice of law in the superior court
in Portland, May 5th, oofore Associate Justice Sidney St F. Baxter.
Mr. Kane is now in the legal de. partment of the 'Maryland Casualty
Company but plans to enter general
practice in Maine, in association with

a prominent law firm.

Sen. Hastings Suffolk Law
vJ:.1 Comme~ment Speaker
United States Senator Daniel O Hastings of Delaware will be the orator a.t
the graduat.ion exercises of Suffolk La'\\r
School in Tremont Temple, June 16, kt S
Cia'sS Day exercises will take place in the
school auditorium on the afternoon uf
June 16 and the following officers for the
event have been chosen: Marshals, Erneet
l B. Covce;ney, West Somerville; J. Joseph
l\1uldowney, North Andover; class will,
Henry L. Viegel, \'Vatertown; orator, Erl·
ward A. O'Donnell, Boston; historian,
Irving. Shap-iro, West Somerville; prophe.
cy, Hul;>ert L. McLaughlin, Lowell. Class
officers are: President, A Ralpfi Vaccaro,
SomeFV"ille; vice president, Patrick Sav.
age, Medford; secretary, John H. Johnson.
Wolla_.ston; treasurer, Frank Foste:r. Melrose.

---- --

--------

r

. eners from Etc- '.
_y missjng_ t?eir J~Yorite. nro- '

COURIER-CITIZEN-, LOWELL, MASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.
rELEGRAM, WORCESTER, MASS.

;:)AY 18 1931,
I

ILEGRAM.

7 193i

Listening
Post

MAY i7.

,J=~=

--R.w

HANDSOMIIE:L~Y~~~~~~~
entitled "Laws ~
ciety," ls now
button o·ver th co1:
s a
compilation of
io talks by
Dean Gleason L. Archer of 8\!il.9lk
J....aw School, whose Saturday night
leg-a-1-ttdks (WEEI) become more
pOpular each ·week. Dean Archer
broadcasts
from
New
York
(WEAF), but was ~irst discovered
(as are so many radio luminaries)
l;>y John Cl~rk, keen student of ..radio talent and pro.gram boss .Y.t
WBZ, right here in Boston. -

C!ATtj9

·uoJS"8000 aq1 .IOJ' ~riawa.5uuxi'8 P;¥.Ja1ct
-moo pu13 moo.I aouaxa1uoo ·oo .t'B2p:a:
S<ltll'BL' aq1 l" UOOU.I<lU'B t.:'BP!.r..I iau.t
t.:Bpsan.i. ixau .iaddns aq1 10 a8'a>1q:>
a.h.'Bq O".J. S! lv'!t:[.M. '"H JO "d 'a2U'B.t0"'
UQ!\>!00.lff UIO.IJ '*'1l!Ultll00 'B pU'B
oU'BJaa
aoB.rD
·s.1li\1: U'BUI.t!'BqO·t.:ar
-Mos: t.:apa.r Jo uonoa.11p aqi .1apun
l"l!.l!Ju t.:BP!.Id !'BS.I'B"q".r 'B p1aq •uo1.l!a'I
U1'0j.I<lUIV '1S0d UQ!\>!00.IS: "l!l!M P01'B!llJ:
-:re si noos t.:oq Jo doo.11 aqi t.:q I'BI.IOUi:
~ali\1: .I'B.M. aqi l" H aun1.' paiuasa.rc! aq
oi 6'0qs j<l.I1SU!:Ul aqi ll! SJ'Bd!OU!.Id-

..

PRELIMINARY tests at Camden,
N. J. (R. C. A. factory), were satis1

l

'ti.At.:-_

··-a ·v ·a '.1a1d"BqO
A'Bli\1:
'o.1oqa1PP!li\1:
·s11:!loM;io ·11 ·v ·a 011oa:11'Iamw

paZJU'll.l!.Io S'Bq
1"'.l!S'BtU<lN-'91

:1~ii~yt~! ~B~eet!1e!fso~s r:;~1
~o~

"SOll\!00\fl l\fOOl

8

·uapJV ·o qi!P:il: pu-e
alI!:Jil'Bd '>!O!.LiaH :3' '3.l!!I
aO'B.ID saSS!li\1: aqi apn1aup.

? Wing installed in New York for

the transmission of television that
begins with Columbia, June 1.

""'"'""'-'*""...,...u.

Sh-.:r,-...C.:,.....,rn:.t'"_,-,.;11_'

TONIGHT AT 9:30 (WEEO the
voices of Bernice Claire, soprano,
and ·Alexander Gray, baritone, wpl
be heard ren,dering songs they sang
tOgether in film versions of "No,
N(, Nanette" and "~iss Me Again. '
NAMES IS NAMES: The above
Ah1xander Gr~y, always dresses in
gray,. except on formal occasions,

or

course.

N. F. T~

The attached notice
appeared in the Transcript

j

t!Ju..,""r

I rf; /

?J!.

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.
;0

MAY j 61~

Sen. Hastings Suffolk Law
,:v,
Co1nmencem,ent Speake.._:,
United States Senator Daniel 0. Hastings of Dela,vare will be the or.i.tor .~t
the graduation exercises of Suffolk La.\.v
School in Tremont Temple, June 16, at 3
Class Day exercises will take place in tl'l e
school auditoriu1n on the afternoon .;i
June 1.6 and the following officers for the
event have been chosen: Marsha1s, Ernezt
B. Coveney·, West S01nerville; J Joseph
l\tluldowney, North Andover; class will,
:Henry I.. ·viegel, Watertown; orator, EdWard A. O'DonnelI, Boston; historian,
Irving Shapiro, WE;st Somerville; .Prophecy Hubert L. McLaughlin, LoVv-ell. Class
officers are: President, A Ralph Vaccaro.
Somerville; vice president, Patrick Sav~
age, Medford; secretary, John I-l.~ Johnso~,
0Vollaston; treasurer, Frank Foster, l\le1-

\,

rose

- .. --·----·-.,.---------

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.
/' i

l

MAY 24 Sffl.

/

-a;~a'nY.

Holland an~ Belgi~m .,wll~

The party will complete their trip. pj,
spenaing se;er~ days in England, v1S1ting

LonM_~)

the beautiful Shakes-

co_,~,,.,,'-=-------DEAN ARCHER TO
CONTINUE LAW TALKS

peare

'/

Self-control and its bearing upon
crime will be discussed by Dean Gle~f~n

l;;oih~fe~fofh1!1"es:~s0 ~~~';1°i~

"Laws That Safeguard Society," to be

broadcast over an NBC-WE.AF network
Saturday evening, May 39; between 7:15
and 7 :30 o'clock.
Dean ~rcher's particular supject that
mght .Will ·be "~nslaught,er/' and! he
)11 .d~fille t:he cri;minal ,liabi~i~Y.
S.:
~~~~n.,,~µ.o_,1::.uses. ~-~~c.~s~rr ,~~~:~,, ~ ,

of

·~,,~""~--' -·~~7t~}~~~5~~~:.· .·_ '\~~:,;'·. ··~c~;,;;~·:;:.:~i}~'f.~1:_;,iLi~·,
~

- -

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

ITELEGRAM,

WORCESTER,

~ ·.!fb
· · ·

;

iLEGRAM.

MAY

~

"·l

t:r'el!l!l~er. gave resumes of the yea?":f
~t1v1ties.
Mrs. Charlotte o. Jepson wa.s chair·mb~ 0 ~ the arternoon,theprogra=e
emg m charge of the PublLc..ll,!;!llth

Ll•S . -··.-.·• • •e,
p Q St

i7.

r

I

I



ee

New

at St. Edward,s
Church.

of

89

E~

'two little altar boys, Jack and Bo ie
Condon, nephews of the bride-ele,:,t.
They are sons of Mr. and Mrs. John

(as are so many radio luminaries)

J~!~n~la~d k;~:g;~~en:o~! ~t

Con,don of Crescent street. The ce're-

WBZ, right here in Boston. -

PRELIMINARY tests at Camden,
N. J. (R. C. A. factory), were satis-

i fa.ctory last week as a result of

11.hich the CBS televisors are now
instane·d in New York for
the- transmission of television that
begins with Columbia, June 1

~ing

j

TONIGHT AT 9:30 (WEE!) the
volces of Bernice Claire, soprano,
and ·Ale;x.ander Gray, baritone, will
be heard ren,dering songs they sang
tOgether in film versions of "No,
N<l Nanette" and ",l{iss Me Again. '

,

'.rhe above
dresses in
occasions, !
N. F. T.

h

ug es
·

tor, will officiate and there will be

York

(WEAF), but was first discovered

NAMES :rs NAMES:
Al(,xander Gray, always
r;ray, except On formal
of course.

H

street, Lynn, has been set for e~ly
J'une.
The ceremo~y is to ta.ke
plac~ on Saturday, June 13, a.t a.
: nuptial mass in St. Edward's church.
,
--i Rev. Thomas F. Brannan, the ~a.s1

Dean Archer

broad.easts

1

ea

Mrs. ·.James Hughes

popular ea-ch week.

,

W ·J J L

The wedding--:; Miss Ge~a
Reed, daughter of Mr. and
· s.
George F,' Reed of 97 Elliott st
t,
and .J. Lee Hughes, son of Mr. a d

ciety," is now
button over th
compilation of
Dean Gleason L. Archer of SyUplk
T...Aw School, whosP- Saturday night
Iegai.,..tl(lks (WEEI} become more

:ro

o

I

HANDSOMELY
entitled "Laws

from

T

j\

mony will be follqwed by a weqding
breakfast at the Commercial Cllij,.
Miss Reed will be attended by '1er
sister, Miss Betty Reed, as maid \of
honor, and by another sister, Milss
Mildred Reed, as bridesmaid.
The
flower girl will be little Betty Jahe
Skahill, daughter of Mr. and Mts.
Jack SkahilJ of 48 Hillberg avenue .. '
Joseph Hughes of. Waltham, brpther of the intended groom, will befbest
man, and the ushers are Parker Reed,
Jack Skahill, Leonard Dunn and John
Donovan of Lynn.
· Miss Reed is popular with a wide
) circle of friends and prominent in
c., many local activities. She is assistant to Mae McGee Holmes, dancmg
instructess, and was one of Mrs.
Holmes' most talented pupHs. She is
a teacher at the Ashland school and

.

'!.,,,,z_...

during_ last summer was a supervisor

TRANSCRIPT, NO. ADAMS, MASS.

MAY j 61~1
<

of playgrounds here. She was graduated frcm Brockton High school in
1925 and from Bridgewater Normal
school, class of 1927
Mr. Hughes was graduated from
Lynn English High school and Suf,
. fo~ L~w rl"'lwei· of Boston. ~ - ,

,' cO

ec M with the

ance Co. pf Boston.

.,,.,4"fflrw

1

_i

Travelers' Insur-

.

r oar d

Iris

l Enter.tainment;l for the

'

~•=oo Rlcr-J.v.~ ~ •"-nv ,,,._vc .,, .,,,,
school auditoriu1n on the afternoon ..:;i
June 16 and the following officers for the
event have been chosen: l\1arshals, Ernest
13. Coveney·, "\Vest Smnerville; J Joseph
l\iuldown.ey, No1.~t11. Andover; class will,
Henry I., "'\liegel, \Vaterto,vn; oiator, EO.'ward A. O'Donnell", Boston; historian~
Irving Shapiro, W~st· Somerville; .prophecy, Hubert L. McLaughlin, Lo'\v-ell. Class
officers are: President, A RalpJ1 Vaccari;,,
SomeJ..·ville; vice president, Patric!{. Sav~
age, l\'Iedford; secretary, John B::- Johns-on.
).,Vollaston; treasurer, Frank Foster, ;I.\1e1rose ·

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

l
/

I
I

MAY24

DEAN ARCHER TO
CONTINUE LAW TALKS

I

~ll l l l l ~A~~!~~ll!~~!!!~~I~~~~!
·
;,·.'"

' mmgton High School, and
,' dent o:f the SuffQ).k La»:;
' the,Junior Prom held

"''------~--

'Um.

Self-control and its be:iri.ng upon
crime will be discussed by Dean Glea-

f~n}~o&"i;1e~fofh1!1es~:i!so~~:~ho~
_,:

"Laws That Safeguard Society/' to be
broadcast over an NBC-WEAF n~twork
Saturday evening, May 30, between 7:15

and 7: 30 o'c1ock.

1

1.tl.t /

Dean Archer's particular subject ,that
night .will be "'Manslaughter/' and! h~
define the criminal liabi~ity;
a
~rSop. · ~O:'i-uses _unne;cessary force , 41:-

J11
of
~ \{fi~{ff~~~{ :_·:~~-·4ii~~·r:,:·,,;~t,i+~/~;l;~;lti~--

i,

SUN, LOWELL, MASS.
HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

. \N 11

!UN f 8 i93i

\SS'

tiieY ha:Va,

i)'

60ug'ht- aro/

"D.It

~

. ,

st. ea,Ct.. i,:f ,~
..
12,. Whic~'· U.i &y frad bitfgai"riict !Qi._:__ .
' .}..

FRAM~ L. DULONG GAfFNEY
. ' .'
. _,WE'.f;)S H.ENRY D.

Galvin lingered nearer the car whi
forged ahead to discover · the body,
th~ edge of the road Graemiger's
move was to go to the home of J
e- Platt and telepbo:ne a report to

Iy but\~~~i:;;e~r;:~ a;~· "~~;t:r:a\i~u~
fo0
the victim's head fay at
slig

ij~

~EADZN°G~ June 18-Miss Fl"allCt!S
LouiS& Dttlbrig, daught.er Of :.Mr 8.:nd
Mr~S Peter PulcinJ,t of 83 Eaton st, and
Henry D.ivid Gaffriey, son of Mr a.rid
Mrs_ PatriOk H. Gaffney of 72 Parlt av,
Wii.tthtOp, ' were married yesteraa:t
mo.fll.irig at a. nuptial ma:SS at St
Ag~es• Ghurch. Rev Dennis
Brown

EDWARD T. DONOHOE
IS LAW GRADUATE
Ed,vard T. Donohoe, of 16 West
Bowers street yesterday received his
degree of Bachelor of Law from Suffolk Law School, Boston. Ml:s,,,llonohoe, ~ i S 8.ssitant treasurer and

different angle, while the clothing,

before, was d1.sarranged, the coat fo

w.

was the eSlebta~t. Miss Mary H. Cull?-•
':~s~lif~fe
tiee1feu~g:!

ing a pillow for th,e head

S €f~

After that the trOOper went to
le Winwa1 d house nearby to make anot
a telephone 1 eport Then he returned
id the body and remained on duty all i
ts without relief He found Mr. and 1\

~~qesto~sfi_hf~e r68:e~ie1n~

e_ consent of the attorney general, .Gr/
mige1 turned o\·er to Atty Hurley

e

~L

counsel held a p1 olonged parley scru

'
1

.
0

ofF~1
ushers were Johri E. WiIIia:tns of Winthi;-9p a:hd Frank Colburn Of Som~r.;.

to art ange the fatal date Joseph Eug
Roy, a comparative youngster, descri

.Follo~ing' the CeTemOny, a receP,t-i6n
was lleld at the ho:me of the tirid6's
'Parents. _.After a wedding trip tO J!l;reW

8
}. wifu~~sc:e~~~~e~~d ~f piJfire ~}met ·
kat
way employing devious social

pro

the

plac

re~ ~~ ~~]:n:t?1i~ri~g

eleCs

I

~;o~~~~rs {hft1~{~~!~ot.p~! /_

izing tl1ese penciled Ol iginal record

r

!

!3fe~e~f 0 f:;

vane·-y~ · ;Her maid of honor was her
sister, Miss ~ildred G. Dtil6llg, whO'
wore or.chid chiffon and white picture

c~~~t~tiJ~tri!d ~h~e~~fe1
i

~\~~or!~t~~

e,

I

the sofoiSt.
The bride wore a gowri of white satin
with rose pdii:it lace and veil of tune
with_ ·lace C?a'.P, '.'!augh~ with oral!:ke'

;- Pl~itthe~i~:he~e~~a~~~. wf~?1~~t~! :)
D~

~!!

M:s

~i~t!

I'

ret officially

recorded

viJlc.

S;!1i!~\i~t~~;;
lonesomeness

j

i>en All Day Today, 9 A.

~

iii~:\vfif~!~1:lJ>~~a s~~~r~\}!~tic GitY
g~tte1:ialtd {h!ect1:fs~
0

H~e Jtl~~l.is~ufd
Tr~q'.~ School, Boston. The groom is a
lfradua,t.e .of. Milf_ord High Sc1io01 _R:iid ,

,' -rf2f~~~~~:µ~~00l

,~;£mJ.O_VF~ l

and is a p:i'ac~

I

----RECORD, MILTON, MASS.

! usual

wave of prosperity bei-Jre the ,r
campaign begins.

:l J~eew~!:

lth~T:.1ee-o~U:~r:t
~dU!°!~!,establishments to bring back prosperity
a wet reason rather than an economic
ne," he said
"While it is true that
aw materials and labor would be emi,
;:I.oyed, .I am not sure to what extent
: he economic benefits would be offset by
: ncrea-sed drinking."
,

~

HITS EXTRA SESSION

, Nothing would be worse f9r business
·: right now than an extra session of Contress, and it might not be a bad thing
·or business ''if the next Congress
'idn't meet," he said, with a smile. He

EDWARD T. DONOHOE

1

/

ioffice

manager for Dan O'Dea, Inc.,
local Dodge, Packard and Plymouth
dealer, holds the degrei:, of Bachelor
of ·Commercial Science from North: eastern University and was cert.ified
: as a Massachusetts . public account, ant last February. lle plans to take
'thP. state_~:m,inations· laterthlE!l

I

l'

McL.EAN-DACEY

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

j

ssailed those senators who are con·18.Iltly pandering to the grandstand

usiness men need nothing so much as

be let alone to work out their prob'\ tns' at the present time, he added.
f'I expected business to pick up as
1

1

n as the Congress adjourned," he

i

:

d. "I looked for a somewhat more
lid recovery than has actually taken

man

e. Consequently, I am a little more
·tant about making future predics. There can be no question but
business men are filled with a spirit

denied
Kasu-

essimism which should be shaken
They should hire more workers.

~
,

can afford it. 'J;:'he n1an who is
ing a house should not fe~l obliged

GET DEGREES FROM
SUFF~..,SCHOOL
Three
young men werr known

e next yeai".'."

locally v\~ere last night amon.g those
graduate?- :from the Suffolk Law
School in Boston
They are Hubeit
L :McLaughlin. son of 1\.Ir. and Mr·s.

Id up the work because of a.ppren concerning the future I look
20 per cent. inc1 ea.se in- production
'

1

l DECRIES TARIFF
,1re is no chance thatFOESSmo~tthe leaders
the
! ey movement successful, he sa1d
.,
tariff will

arf~a~o~~ti

lob

1

Hubert A McLaughlin of. 367 High
street; Archie Bar:ofsky of 71 Do-..·er
street and
Ralph
p
<:o.'1t,~ ~
")"
Chelmsford.. Mr. Barlofsky and Mr- /
Coat~s 1ece1ved theh- <,r 1 1.·i ;
,u: /
Mr. .McLaughlin. youugPst rn-.mh-, !
of the class, will l!-ave to wait until

against
be

' ~s questioned. whether many of the
t~s critics really wanted it changed.
~~
i~ern~d
'Wit cheap foreign goods, but those
J;ve;~;fstii,~, thei,~~iti~~8
at
J:a Ve· been much worse if the tariff
ad not been passed, he decl~~f:<!· "

w\~ h:b1~

!g3J.

June 22 bef01~

I~<'f'ivi .....~.

hh

,1-'."' .... n•

~'4

,

a

-

,

·

r"

.0,/'

~lj_~ta~~::fedt!nfn E~i~~k~ 00 %-:3/fej

phone or call; 20-00 rugs to be sold!

t
p

_,.

~

-- -

--- - r- -~------

an announcement of thi

1a

tittle. ~·)
G i ~ o r n ln_Engla.nd:.

--#e

ft-

i

-

8

1

at onQ~~~Gi?~

!

CANNON,

Mill Agen~·o-:ucest~}.-JJ:~~~~ Green St

i

s~rfND S Ht~r~~re~r~Jtur:rer~~.~~u
st. •:
.
I

.

M.USICAJ~ 1NiTif'"U1"1E.N'rS
EMERSON-"'.'Square piano ·.$12

;:~D<::~;1:~~;!~~;h6 P$s:·
1:

'"$94

Steinway square. $15.

,747 Me.rrhna<.~k $t.

try;
Cal :r,''

Playe

j

i
1

o~icially as ihe, law does not per-

m1t a person to receh·e a bachel01 i"
of law degree unless he i,; 21 Vf'~r:1/
old
·
.i,

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

--

Marriages

"-

---

Terms

At St Angela's Church in Mattapan last Monday Miss Dorothy Rose
Dacey, <laughter of William I. and
l\fary E Dacey of Aberdeen road, was
ma11ied to Paul Revere McLean, son
of Mr and Mrs John McLean of
: North Cambridge.
The mass was
i celebrated and ceremony performed
by Rev. Edward '\V. Conroy, an old
friend of the bridegroom.
The bride was attended by Miss
1V1ary :McLean, a sister of the groom,
and Frank E. Dacey performed a like
service for the groom
Miss M-a:Fi-on
Dprothy ))acey, niece of the bride,
:nia'cl"e"'T~~aa1nfy flower girl and her
b1 other Billy acted as ring bearer.
The bride wore a white satin and
lace dress with a lace veil caught with
orange blossoms and carried a bou, quet of white roses and orange blossoms Tl1e bridesmaid was dressed in
pink taffeta and large light blue hat
and carried an old fashioned bouquet.
The ushers were Thomas Ahern and
Edward J. Sullivan of North Cambridge.
Mr McLean, the bridegroom. is a
graduate of Su,;~..La~1ool. He
has been employed in t'Iie" departme
of Audit of the Boston Elevated Rail~
way Co for a number of years. The 1
blide, a graduate of MiJton High , School, also has been employed in the
isame office.
A large delegation from the depart! ment was p1 esent, as well as friends
from Cambridge, Somerville, Chelsea,
! South Boston and Worcester.
' Miss Yvonne Fortin sang several
hymns including Ave Maria and 0
Salutaris during the mass, acccompanied by J\Iiss Munier at the organ.
The reception was at the Lotus
bungalow on Babson street The couple
will spend their honeymoon at New
York and ,vashington and will reside
_M _Milton.
,:
11

1

·e>~s~;;::c~~
flERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

!UN f 8 193,

-\N\1\9'

FRA

L

.

OULON'G

- . ....

·ws.os HENRY D. GAFFNEY

;a:EJA:D:i~~. .iune 1~:Miss

SEES BIG GAIN j
IN-PRODUCTION
,.pl)
.

w.

Sen. Hastings, Delaware,
Also Predicts G. 0. P.
Victory in 1932

l
I

~

W

.,~d ;~o~~~eih~~ :as

a~i:a~: t:~;~

50

e. Co~equently, I am a little more
·tant about making future predics
There !!an be no question but
business men are filled with a spirit
essimism which should be shaken
They should hire more workers.
can afford it
'l;'he man who is
. ing a, house should not fe~l obliged
1
<;;. ~n!~~ni~;kt~!cf~{Jre~f
\ ~ 1 p.er cent. inctease in production
20
\ ,e. next year'.u
'. i D:ECRIES TARIFF :FOES
', Jre is no chance that the leaders
I e movement against the Smoot)
y tariff will be successful, he said
.11\.s questioned w:hether m.any of the
t.ifs critics really wanted 1t changed.
"~who have interests abroad would
lik o be l!ble to flood the country
'Wit cheap foreign goods, but those
lVh ave invested their money at home
do ct want it.'~
Conditions would
ha 'tre,' been much worse if the tariff
had not been passed. he dec1~:i;~4- . _

~Pfigk

EV~NING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

0

Schoo],

~radu~~e

Bo:.st6n.

The gr<><?~ i~. a

of Milf9rd High ScliooJ ~rid ,

t{~~-~-~-~~~ch~: :~ is_a_p_r_a_~--,_
RECORD, MILTON, MASS.

f ~~:w:r1:

)th:T~e-oi;J~f~t o
~dur!\ne
establishments to bring back prosperity
a. wet reason rather than an economic
one," he said
"While it is true that
a'W materials and labor would be employed, I am not sure to what extent
1fhe economic benefits would be offset by
· Jncrea.sed drinking.'~
I
HITS EXTRA SESSION
Nothing would be worse for business
,•ight now than an extra session of ci;mrress. and it might not 'qe a bad thing
br business "if the next Congress
idn't meet," he said, with a smile. He
s.saned those senators who are con1a.ntly pandering to t~e grandstand
usiness men need nothing so much as
i be let alone to work. out their prob~S' at the present time, he added.
'f'I expected business to pick up as
:>n as the Congress adjourned," he

Yqrk 1 PJ1i1,a.delphia and Atlantic Qity
they Will .i-eside in Somerville.

Hijte J!l~~l isa~ g~t!~t;d {h!ed~}s~
Tr~cfo

1

0

l

hl~!o:;.e J:f• c;:rifk~a :l~~e~rb~t~

j

1

I

quet 0£ W'hlte roses tind lilies of th,.e
valley~· ,Her· maid of hon_or _was her
si.~te_r,. ~iss Mildred G. Dulong, whet
wore orchid chiffon and white picture
hat
·
Francis Gaffney of Winthrop, brother
cf the, g'room, was the best m'an. Tlie
ushe1s were Johll E. Williafus of Winth~·op arid Frarik Colburn Of So·m.e:r.;.
viJlc.
!
.F'ollo~illg the CeremOri.y, it. re<!eptiOil '
was held at .the home of the bride's
'Parents.~ .Afte.r a wedding trip to Ne'W'. 1

DRY LAW A MINOR
ISSUE, HE DECLARES
A 20 per cent increase in industrial
production within the next 12. months,
the relegation of prohi'o1t1on to a minor
place in the 1932 campaign, and the
· election of a Republlc~n President w~re
, red1cted in an interview yesterday w1th
'
nator Daniel O. Hastings of Dela} are, He was a. speaker at the Suii,Qlk
~ sch~l gradUA,tion
exercises at
remont Temple la.st night.
The Republicans will be victorious in
1932 "because the people w1ll be afraid
of something worse," he asserted Prohibition
will be overshadowed by
economic issues unless there i.s an
! usual wav.e of prosperity beiore
campaign begins.
.

Frances

Louise· Dtil?ri.S°, daughter Of Y~ an-~
MtS Peter D'ulong· of 83 Ea:ton st, a.,nd
Hen:r:v_ D8.Vid ~a~riey, son ?f ~. a.rid.
Mrs. Patri-Ck H. Gaffney of 72 Par"k av,
WiilthiOp, were married y&Steraay
moftliri~ at a nuptial ma:~s ~t St
AgPe,s• Church. .Rev Dennis
Brown
wn.S the -ee:le~iant. :Miss Mary Ho Cu~.:.
ming'$ had -charge of the mu.steal part
of the rria:.ss and Mrs BeUe Rose was
the sofoi.St.
.
The bride wOre 8. gow:ri of white SR.tbi
with rose poi.rit lace and veil of_ tu1l~

I

EDWARD

i, local
office

manager for Dan O'Dea, Inc.,
Dodge, Packard and Plymouth
dealer, holds the degree of Bachelor
of ·Commercial Science from North, eastern University and was certified
as a Massachusetts , public acc~unt1
, ant last February. lie plans to take
thA st.ate _bar examinations Ia.t..e.r_th1s

l'

Marriages

",---

1

McLEAN-DACEY

'COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

At St. Angela's Church in Matta- 1
pan last Monday Miss Dorothy Rose
Dacey, <laughter of \Villiam I. and
Mary E Dacey of Aberdeen road, was
married to Paul Revere McLean, son
of l\Ir
and Mrs. John McLean of
: I\Torth Cambridge
The mass was
1
celebrated and ceremony performed
by Rev. Edward \V Conroy, an old
friend. of the bridegroom.
ith his fist after the man
The bride was attended by Miss \
"d him names
denied
Mary McLean, a sister of the groom, t
t ~ any money from Nasuton
and Frank E. Dacey performed a like .
service for the groom
Miss M-a-Fion
Dorothy ))acey, niece of the bride,
GET DEGREJ!;S FROM
nlitde--a ,-aa1nty flower girl and her
SUFF~.,SCHOOL 1 brother Billy acted as ring bearer.
Three young men we!! known i t
The bride wore a white satin and
locally ~\ere last ni~ht among those,
lace dress with a lace veil caught with
graduated from the Suffolk Law
orange blossoms and carried a bouSchool iii Boston. They are Hubm t
quet of white roses and 01·ange blosL
1vicJ...aughlin, son of iVIr and Mrs
soms The bridesmaid was dressed in
Hubert A McLaughlin ot: 367 High
pink taffeta and large light blue hat
1
street; Archie Bar:of.sky of 71 Dff\·er
: and carried an old fashioned bouquet.
street and
Ralph
P
C0:1t:" ·
,,,, ,
' The ushers were Thomas Ahern and
Chelmsford. Mr Barlofsky and Mr~ /'
'Edward J Sullivan of North CamCoatts 1eceived their c,('. 1.·r ;
,u:, \
! bridge.
Mr ·McLaughlin. youn~?St m-·mb-, 1
Mr 1\![cLean, the bridegroom, is a
of the class, will have to wait until
1 graduate of Su..ft~lJ•-L~1ool
He

J~JN

He

I

1

~~e1:n;e1::nt\:, 1
:~ei~-:e: ~°atch~~~~~ p
June 22 befor~ r0Csivi...,.c

hi,

of law degree unless he i~ 21
oldM
M L
.
.
r

c

aughhn

1s

a

(,"'."r i·P

j ~f~~~~f

oefmJ11iy;isi~u :ie~~~!~t~:il-

way Co for a number of years. The
>·ear,7
l ,: bride, a graduate of Mi.lton High
,J...___Si;.ll__oQl._'sll§P has ])e_i,n_ em,;i]Qytl_ i
he

graduate of

1

i

----===

......--

the .r. . oweH _high school, with the class I grocer He is a graduate of the Low- j consistently on the dean's lis
of 1927. S1nce his graduation from Jell high school and dur'ing the past) high scholarship and he will re
the Lowell high schoo1, he has been fouz years of his study of law, he the degree of bachelor of law.

I

'/ connected with the State Department bas been on the dean's list most of
time Mr Barlofsky 1s also a !~everal
1 pursuing his
study of law at night 1 graduate of tbe Lowell Textile In- / nd
O
At S?ffolk Law sch?o1, l\tir
Mc- st1tute and
hol<:s the deg1 ee of ~ccom~
Laughlin has excelled 1n all branche$ '\Jachelor of textile engineering.
/)rgan
of study ,and was. one of the few on / Ralph P. Coates, who, although ht.~ ' Lotus
the de'7n s first list for graduation / is a resident of Ch.el.msford, is a couple
He delivered the class prophecy at I prominent local business man He is
the G~ass day exercises held in Tre- / a graduate of the Easthampt~n higl; tt N~w
_mont. T'empl~ yesterday an?
school, with the class of 1915, a'nd of reside
,. 1ng the P:tst year~ he ha·s bee~ secre- Bates college, where
he'
received , -··--""'~
..
1 tary of his class .flna~ce c~~mittee
the d.egree of bachelor- of arts, in ;
·
Mr. _McLaughlu~ will _continue his 1i 1-9i9. Fof nine y~ars. Mr. Coates was
. work 1n 'the ~tate Depar.tment of:. assistant·. ~rinc,ipa,l of · tµe Chelms-.
r; tabor and In:d.~stry for t~e time be- ·1 ford. high.. schobl
·

/ of La?oi; and Industry and has been ) the

tll!'•• /id'&
1 a Gi~Morn !n England.

-; ·.:

'~·
OLLISTON SELECTMtN
TO BE LAW SCHOOL GRAD
, . OLLISTON, June· 16'-,-SelectlllaD

.1


'

,
'.

a.rles A~ Adams, J.o:s~ph Haley 'a~~
\,is. Rubinsky of this' town "111 be
\dUated this evening from the S~,-

\ f.!;a'~~f!~,.Ql, ·~~~C?~Ol

_,. -..:"'~...-- :

·~"~~:~ii~.~~~~--~--

1

'1

I

dur-1

.--~i1 ::::i~:r~~;;~:¢i'ri;a~n.!;~!1r~~t"~?;~~J~~~ Joe~;s~~a:u~;~t-~ ·~: _ '.~--· ·~·'-· ~~ >
c ~ir-:,

1

J

J

1
· )

BOSTON, MASS.

MASS.

JUN f 5 -

'Cli>~~r~·:;.:;_·~/

JUN 7 1931

r·"vwv'1eeirrJe.-.=n=--~==

~

will .b.e a meeting
fn. Th&r'eV. Army hallTuesdayot the !
U.
Auxll!ary
night
rand
at g ·o'cloc'
0~

1

'

fh1thb a. short entertainment aft~~!
1
e us1n-ess- meetfng.
The graduating class of the H i ~
~~ho~ Is to hold a .class banquet at
ed endall hotel In Framingham
W e nesday evening.
\
S Miss Dorothy ·Banks' ,Sunday-;
c~~ooi class of the Congregational
{c. enjoyed an outing at Norm:n ega park Saturday.
1'

he!r~r.=w:~1sac. ~~:'"°!imt·
ho'tohred
daughter' fa u •. · ,,
er
d1,1ring ths - m . Y. a11d .wl!I remain ,
1•1:i:, an~ ,Mrs.,
P.attersoii ~~dlll?ler. .
·Ma.. · · ·
· !'<>Rs ar.l;! visiting bi'
me a11d attending Mr Patt son's college class reunion.•

er-

Mrs. John Sul1iva11 and Mi
Mary, Purcell o , Weymouth w ss f
Su1day guests f Miss Mary Sup:{:
will ~:r!lar
etlng of the w. R. c:
at 3 o'cl
omorrow afternoon

;u

~f~~

;r:ere
i~ff1'!~io-!r:;d
bi/m~ s
at~s. d{J.a.ns will also
nivers
f th e~,n ng the 45th anDel
.
e
!ford corps
state test~''cl c~ure ':"ilk from all
Holliston,. for 1~~, q;!rta\docaround
il). 8 <luart cans. Try it ;.nd b quart
vinced.
Phone Holliston 62~9 eo~so,?~arles Adams. Church st,:eet
f Mrs. Annie Adams will b •
f,raduated tomorrow :fronI. Suffolk
_ aw-c;J;iq_e_J__in_!oston. ~

NEWS, SALEM, MASS.

if '',

JUN

r Five Medford
oungMenGet
.o Suffolk Degrees
~

'

FiVe Medtf'Ord youn,g

men

were

Mr.

and Mrs. Welch
to Reside in Mon"
tello.

\

W. Frank Welch, store manager of
the Mailman & Handon Co., was
married Tuesday to Miss Cecelia
Ruth Connors, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Paul Connors of canton,
at a
ceremony performed in St.
John's church, Canton. A reception
at the Wampatuck Country Club
followed the nuptials.
Edward J. McCarthy, a member of
the Mailman & Hanlon firm, was
best man, and the maid of honor was 1
Miss Mary Connors, sister of the 1
bride. Another sister, Miss Ma.r- '.
l
guerite Connors, and Mi.Ss Bessi~ '
Matthews of Canton were the brides• maids, and the ushers were John M,
Welch of Portland, Me., brother of
the groom, and James J. Hegarty of
Somerville.
. ~.· Following a fortnight's wedding
· . trip Mr. and Mrs. Welch will live at
North Main street, this city.
The bride attended tJae Canton
· schools and has been employed at
Filene's, Boston. Mr. Welch was
graduated. from .Boston English High
and spent a. year at Sll!fo:lk Law
:: school. __ . _
__ __ ___
_ :

'. \990
1

I

Tihe commence,ment oration wa~
,delivered :by United Sltates Senatc1
, Warren 0. Ratings
of
Delaware
while the degrees were awarded :by
;De~n Gleas,q~ L Archer, V[ho alsd
spoke for the s:chool.
' i
, "lihie annua:l ·,c:la,ss · day eocercisei
took plroe~ in ,t•he s!Ch01J1l .auditoriu;J
;8.P:-d were witnessed by a large numJ
:J~r ofc relatives and friends Qlf thEj
JlY".,(r. Sa,vage was
.,:g;radt1,aJtes.
l, presiden'l <>1' the class and had
·~.c,.minen1t l),a~t --'~!1--~~e~ _e;xel'!C:if?6S.

vie,

Juvenile Crime
Caused By Books
On Crook Methods
Bos.ton, June 16-Dean Gleason L

Archer of '1ihe Suf.foU!;

Ip: =:ti.col

add r e ~ the Alumni assocta.tion :fol-

lowing its dinner in the Hotel B:rad.ford, last night. said: "Boys and girls

atar:ting out in a lif'e of' cr1me read:
books and in.agazines witll the lead- inrg articles written by ifelons 1n prLst1:tJi~~~inaJs at large on criminal
·. "I believe t,,b.is is the p-robe,ble clue
juvenile crimes. Should a person
~ ite out tihe .instructions Qf fo crime
i'or, a. fboy or girl, he would be pun-

isl';~ as an accessory.

"G"AnZ""E"'"''f~1~.E~.~AV ERHILL, MASS.

.But through the medium. 'of tale
·boOk, the magazine and tihe screen
the same author is allowed to seli th~

instrnciJ.ons._ to t,he:_ v~,1-t,b..~- ____ ,, -

JUN 171931

1
of the golf team, but did n 1 1
s riior year. He is a grad , \
... ..,,.•• ,..::...rhill High school.
Johll. J
ph Dondero, of Haverhil.
was among the 122 seniors who re

ceived bachelor of laws degrees at th
'June graduation of .Ev:tioJ}rJ HW §SlJQf
: in Tremont Temll,le~ston Tuescla:
night. The class 'day exercises t<?ol.
place-in the sci.001 auditori,um durin1
.' t,l:ie · afte~noo:h'.' Dondero ,. paduate,
· fro,n Haverhill High ·school in 192'!
and was awarded the Washlngtot
l\'iankllri medal for proficiency ii1

--~~---- ------

WEDS IN CANTON
!Ul
.

ADVOCATE, ARLINGTON, MASS.

w:

j

STOREMANAG

I

,:a.m.-on;g the 122 Senio-rs who received
bachelor of la.w·s degrees at the June
graduati,on o.f S•uffolk La,w scb;c•ol in
Trer~1:ont Te'.·miple ,f~!§t ltfghi.
/
1
They are iOharles
Dick, Jo1hn
F. X. Donahue, Edward V. Maloney,
Pa>trick J. ,Savage and J.oseph B
Sullivan.
-, i~l'l~i~~

~~dee____ :_:__--~ s

-~-

, !_7',

SUFROLK LAW GRADUATES
POUR-ARLINGTON MEN

Arlington was "\Yell represented
in the 22nd annual commencement
exercises o,f Suffolk Law School,
held Tuesday evening at 7.30 at
Tremont Temple. There we,re four
graduates from Arlington and the
president of the Jschool is Hon,
Thomas J.
Boynto11 of Foster
street. President Boynton a11d De,;:J
Archer presented the de!grees
LLB to the grad11ating class. Tli~
Arlington graduates were Edward
Frall.cis Hanlon, a former resident
of Cambridge and graduate of the
Cambridge Schools, who is employed by the Ginn Bookbinding
'Co.; Harold Daniel Mullen of 115
I Varnum street, formei-ly of Cam; brtdge and a graduate of Cambridge
schools, employed by the H·ood Rub'· , 'ber Compaii.Y; Edward Gerard Kelley, formerly of Cambridge, graduate o! Cambridge Schools and Boston College and employed by the
Universal carloading Company, and
1 Henry Edward
Keenan, of Palmer
·street, graduate of Arlington High
School, class of '21, and now with
J. W. Knowles, Inc., real estate,
7R1 _MA"S'S_ axenue

r/

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,,

,,...__

-{~a

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I

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

l

KELLY BEING
URGED AS REGISTER

OF MOTOR VEHICLES
'
•...,,
- 1 ... ·

-

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[, SUFFOLK LAWGRADUATES 122

I

\

Ward 15 Councilman Has i
Had Interview with Gov-,
ernor Relative to Captain \1
Parker's Job
\\
Friends of Oocmcillor Francis E KelIy are urging hiin to accept the pos1tion of Registra,. of Thtiotor Vehicles th~t

~ o r ilastings of Del:ware _Delivers Commencement Oration

I
t

TREMONT TEMPLE
SCENE 'oF EXERCISES

II

it is rumored about the State has this
week been offered to him by his close
political friend, Governor Joseph B.

Bachelor of laws degrees. were award. ed to 122 .seniors at the comm.enceinen:t

~~~~~~~1:1t~rt1~ ~~~=

I

I
I
c

~~li-~o~g!by his employer ~x~~~=
~~~~is a!fi~t
profits made
during the

FRANCIS E. KELLY
Ely, in

keeping

with

his

campaign

P1:0mi.se to ~Ve ro!-lng ~E::~OC~a~ m.a'I

ie;l O. Hastings of Dela.ware delivered
th¢: commert.cement oration.
Senator E:ast).ngs said in part: "r a:m
cl';mvirlced ~ t we must find a. way to
have a more even distribution of t,.he
wealth of .the nati.on. Our Prosperity depends largely on the ability, o:f Vo'."hat is
commonly - the wage-earner, to maint~In himself, and his family
"He m.ust ed~CE!,te his Children and
fJxJ;1~.sa~~1eit~Tree~t;r t~e-c~itn~
should afford. Under normal conditions
we hear but little complaint, but when
the. depression comes, .and production is
reduced, somebody loses his position,
and then trouble begins.
"'The inequality in my judgment is
to be found in this: The employt does

prosperous years.
"'rlle employer ought not to answer
~hat he could get men to do the same
Job for less _moi::iey.. Opportunity plays a.
large part 1n life- 1n '!America and the
ma.~ who is employed by .a prosperous:
bus1nes5: c~ncern, and who is faithful
a~d does his ""'.:ork well. should be given
some oppor.t'!Jn1. ty to share in the profits
of such b~1ness:
:rhis sugi?;e.stion .. ~
cou~se, carries with ~t many difficulties.
.There are .znany things to be said on
the· other side.
_
u~ortunes that have been invested in
blJS:iness ventures h_ave ~en lost, ~nd.
phe wealthy man in such instances is
:m. no better position than the employe.
---o,.

1

i

jor Rl)pointmen'ts.
It· is · understood
that one of the conditions o_f this offer
is that Kelly resign i_mm~d1~tely_ from
office and politics which it 1s said the
Councillor does n~t like to do because

I
!

I he is determined to seek re-election for
a second term and further feels that he
'should serve for the full two Year term ,
for which the
people
of
his
war~ '
elected him
' It will be remembered that Councillor
Kelly was the first man holding a public office in Dorchester that came out
openly and supporied the present Governor in· his hard fight for the nomination last Septe:r;nber. After the nomination. he toured the entire City and
State in the inte:rests of Govern1?r Ely's
election.
Councillor Kelly has had a remark- I
able caree:v· both l-.-, his .private and political life.
Altl:tough but 26 years of
age when he R::n..:.,..;,[',. t..-;.e position which
he now holds? he made a fight against
tremendous odds,,. haVing very strong
local men for opponents and further
than that, he had to oust a
popular
man in the person of Thomas W McMahon, who was holding the position of
Councillor at that time
He has the
further distinction of being the young- I
~si!ym~:i1:~ ~ver elected to the Boston
1
He was born and has always lived at
24 Topliff street, and is the second oldest of a large family of nine children.
When he was but fifteen years of age,
his father died, leaving him as the
main support of his widowed
mother
and this large young family.
He continued his attendance at High School
and managed to establish a large paper
route which he worked at every morning, night and Sundays until his graduation from English
High School
TP.rough the income derived from this
newspape1· route, he was able to sup
port the large family and to see that
they also received the same education
that he had managed to obtain.
He then entered the laundry business
for himself in Dorchester and,
while
driving a laundry truck, he worked his
way through the Suffolk Law
School
evenings until he finaiiy. ¥-eceiVed ·tile
degree of L L B.
He has devoted all of his time since
election in assisting people from his
district who were in trouble and has
set up for himself an enviable record
as a Councllor, having brought many
improvements to his district as well as
fighting hard on the floor of the Council to k~ep taxes down by voting against ,
expend1.tures that were unnecessary.
I
He is a member of the Robert Fulton\
Council, K. of C., Old Timers' Club and
Suffolk Law School alumni
Governor Ely is to be commended for ,
remembering Dorchester and offering to
this leading young Democrat from our
district such a position and it is hoped
by the people of Dorchester that Councillor Kelly will see his way clear to accept this important post
1

1

I

rh,t ;};.ti;!~

t~~e1dsd~t.r~ia.ie~~r!ug:
cessful corporations, would take the po.sition that when the profits are more
than normal all employes should have
a substantial part paid to them.. in proportion to their lenath of service, and
salaries. i t would go a. long way in niakin~~~;>re ~:::=m~~t,ri~~~~b.
F.
0'90-nnell, vice-president of the board
of t-rustees presided.
Form.er Att.y.Gen... Thomas J. Boynton, president,
spoke for the trustees, whi!e Dean Glea'~;...+'-,n::her .spoke for the .sch,ool. Degrees were con.ierred. b.,Y Preside.nt Boyn...:
ton and Dean Archer.
T_he class day exercises took pla.cedur1ng the afternoon in the school auditorium with A. Ralph Vaccaro of
~merville ;pre.&iding.
The folloWing
participated:. Salutatory. Arthur X.
Koerber;
history,
Irving
Shapiro·
p_rophecy, Hubert L. McLaughlin; ora:
t-1on,. Edward A~ O'Donnell; will, Heftry
L . ....Z:tegel; ,Presentation of :national colors, Patrfck J. Savage; receptioll. of
col.ors, .Roger A. Sala; presentation of
class gift, Frank B. Foster· tribute to
departed. classmates, Cha'I'le$ H. Jayes;
valedictory. Leonard F. Williams..
The following received degrees:
Bernard N A bra:r:ns
Charles A Adat;ns
Theodore F 'Alcareiz.
Si:mpson. B Alpert
Josepfi L Avan
Roya). P

oates
Cohen
Cohen
Comerford
Coveney
J Coyle
J

Coyne

~---=?~~~.;...._~

£:red

_o~~«r _

.-~IY'-·. ':·
·"'··'
-v"i' , •.
A··s·s·· ._·, .-.,_ •..,,.,., - .
11;1 AY

a_

1 7 1931

i

--·=----~-.. . . - --~ .~--~

distinguished career"

When ..asked as to whether her coming appearance befor~ the micropho:ne
Wa.'.5 frightening he~,· Miss Yurka repJied ~it1:
O
Y. e~~
in the radio microphone I am depend-

e,~c roti

• ~ e r Puhlishes

I
· .. · ~s of Ra.dio Talks '

ing on my ~ruin Stage appearances
ss
to over com i.. if.. .1·
the legendary fear
that seems· '" ...-gr . SO;lllany artists when
t:ley first al!)pear over the alr ..

_ "
W's That Safeguard Society," an
illustrated volume, containing the first
radio talks on that subject by Dean

ARCHER'S· LAW TALKS
NOW IN BOOK FORM

~~i-t~~~n is Lbei"!;ch:i~n::" t~°f;e~a~
subscribers to this "Memor"ial Edition"
throughout the country'.
This yolume was compiled at the demand of listeners-in on Dean Archer's
broadcasts. Almost from the start of
the. nation:wide hooky.p, requests for

"Laws That Safeguard. Society," a.
handsomely boul}d and i1lus·trated volume, containing the first 36 radio talks
011 that subject by Dean Gleason L.

~11~"J t<gi;s~~ktJ!i-;u;,,~f~~si"t;"i~

:~/'~~Ii~~?~,

~:~s a°n~ h~e!!~kir~~!~~
impossible to comply wit:!t all these requests it was decided t0--1"t'l-Oli!':!~ the
talks in book form.
PhotograPhs of
station officials and of the announcers
who "put" Dean Ai-cher on the air at
the New York NBC studios each week:
are contained in the book.
:F'ollowing the. r~dio talks is an abbreviated biography of Dean Archer t
, by ~ohn L. Clark, programme manag'er)
of_ WBZ-WBZA, who discovered Dean
i Archer as.,a radio speaker
I

"Memorial EditiOn" throughout the
country
Tile b :ok is considered novel----:-the
:fi.1.::t s:::·ie:; of law talks ever broadca.8
to ·a nc.tion-w.:.dc uudisncz.
"L~.-7.s Th~.t EafBguard SocietyH was
co~11p:l::::j ::it th:J insistent demand of
_ list:r::Jr.3-:.n en D:::an Archer's ·broad-

r::::s~f ~~
c~;}:.::::; cf his t:::l:::, began to pour in. on.
1·r.::J :-ncl D~.::::1 .t-... rcher, but finding it
i ia.1:;:::-':::i'lb t:J c::rply ,vith all these r<:t~~~~;~~ :ni~ b;'o~;
to publish. th*·
i
OL-:.~.:313 cf NBC and the 37 stationa
· ~.croc::3 the country ,vhich carry D·ean
1 A1cl~:r'.1
Saturday night lectures,· of
wh:ch W~EI is the Boston station, gave
; : cvc::y 2ss;3tance to the dean in the
' corrpilat:.on of his book. Photographs
cf tl1::;.s:J cfficials and of the announcers
1 ·who "put" Dean Archer 011 the air at

~~1~~~~--/i~~cJth;~~~~~:he

1

I

fg;;,_~~ect

-'-----=·



- - -- --

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

(!~-~ ~g;;~afuerf i~Bfh;ti;~~~ ~:~fiewi~!
: fron'J~piece is a fine picttlre of tha0

--+-~~~lf:

I

"

l%S"'_

7.

1,,.6¢,"'"'

f'LIT~~nrpntj"

l The

Viking

.LV~

ry;esr

.Y-.;;,c;q.-.:,.------.-n:n-..-

:i..-.;..-..,4-.----

as

I DISCUSSES

SOCIETY AND
JT,A. L'I.WS FOR PROTECTION
~Mws That Safeguard Society,"
by Gleason L. Archer, LL. B, LL. D
-By the Dean of th
Suffolk :r.,a,w
Scho'ol, Boston, this v o l ~ c ~ o f
t ~ radio talks On legal subjects that...-1:he author has given. ·.r1:ie
first of these talks was given Sept 29,,
1929, and proved so popular to th-e
radio audience :that he later continued
them, with incr"e8.sing interest shown
by the listeners-in. While these talks
have greatly interl3-sted students of the
law they have -b,een in such popular
form thal: the general pub~ic '.pas~ bean
just about as keenly interested, as have
students. Now these talks· have been
put in permanent fo'rm in the pages :
of an interesting book and they deal '
with various phase of crimina~ !aw;
""~hy such l~ws are necessary, punishment of criminals, the m..eaning of
criminal intent, difference between intent and motive, criminal responsibility of insane persons~ injury and death
in different States, criminal liability
of married women, and many kindred
topics, all made clear by examples
and stories.
The book is illustrated
with portraits ,of radio announcers
Boston: Suffolk Law School Press.

I

,

I
"~

B~~~ri~offi~~~~~;;NT

SERVICE f.'OR GRADUATES

J;n or~er to ~id universjty ~duat•
tu find1n~ pos1ti~n~ ~fter gtadu,atio_.ia;.:
a Pla_ceme_nt S~ry1ce, to b"e operated on.
a university basis w:ill t5~ oi>ened at
~stoJ?, Universit_y on··~uly l/ with of•
ces 1n the Administra;tion· .' B_ uHcUng,
at 675 Boylston st, Pres Daniel ·L.
M~rsh has anno1,2nced.
· ·
·
Warren E. Benson Ot Bi:ockton has
been named the first director
Aa
1
the service gets under way it~ fl.rill
rur~o~e. ~ccording to university au"'
· .hor1_ties, !S to cooper~e in fi.-Jling va•
anc1es with public school officials anti
0 ~Uege
administrations
graduallYJ
' ~-oac;I.ening out into all fields iriClud.-.
Iaw,.medicine, arts, theology prac.
n l ar~s, religious education 'musi.Ci
' ie business administration
'
,'
O"e 1922, Mr Ben.son •has beeD;
of
the · Fisk
,:"eacher••
, t\.e1:~c,er
< Y·
For two years previous to
~~ he was submaster of Readip.gl
,
School_.
He is a grailuat-e :oil
on High School, Bost.on UJlk
~ , t College of L,lberal J\.rts and!
------~,-r
Law School.
·

i
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fn

POST, BOSTON, MASS

\:t

";hO~•ere- ·
old, arid secon.d to pro
ork for the unemployed
Several
'thousand, men, he stated, wOuld be
giyen ep'\>J.oyment under the board~s '
neu~ructio~ prog1 amme

ADVERTISER, BOSTON, MASS.

i 100

r
I

S'CJ'li'FOLJJ I A.W SCHOOL

ALUMNI BANQUET
0

1

Am TALKS OF DEAN
-, ARCHER PUBLISHED
"Laws Th3..t Safeguard Society,"

,

;..s,. ·. volume containing the (irst 3G
::$.ad-io talks on that subject by Dean

!

.;' ¢-~easo~. L. _Ar che!1 of S u f ~ ' : ' f

'.::::;;~~~;~~:r~e\~gthl!11,7:rJ:~rra~~Edi
r ~ ti~n" thI'Oughoµt, the:,.C-oUri-t
->..The ~ook is_ coJ?.13~d,,

I..

~ff:~ro~,

L~;anSc~-~~~so~iS~~s:e~ch:{e
cheap magazine.s. the radio and the
movies on juvenile minds in corinection
with the. crime wave, at the annual
banquet of the alumni association of the
la W school in the Hotel Bradford last
night
It was one of the largest ga therinis
of its kind in years.
More tha:n 350 ,
gradua}-es of the· sch6ol now practicing
law attended. Other speakers inclUded

I

0

i~~~F{i~-n;r~~1:

;~:g;.~a~k~f:e~ie!:
J
of the" ·GoVernor's Coun~iJ. forµie;r -A,t-. ~'
torney~Generil iJanies ~~ SWift and for- .l
!) ~er. scp.Oo_l 'Committemait ~ Charles s, 1"1;
1 _ o~connO'r..
,
1
C

~-~---.--.-"-"
..

....

POST, BOSTOj!, MASS.

J£ \93\

,· ·l\l

F--4-

.J ·J\~

Next 1\,
,s.tata

·uo1sc
pu-e 1
UIOJJ

Card Again iPostpon
Larsen of Quincy
Portland in Main

S ;Jlll!l 1S.I!..
.J
s amn 1s.t!.>I
am!l 1s.t!.'1
am-!1 1s.t!.'1
am11 1s.1!.>1

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

BLAMES A~TlCLES -··\
iiyrrEN BY FELONS,
1

Dean Archer Scores Publications "\Vhich "Sell" Crime
Dean Gleason· L

Ar~her o f ~ -

, tol.k..:1A~W. school addressing the·-,oumn.i

Associat'i'oil follow!:f1g its dinner in the

Hotel Bradford, las~ night, said: uBoys

and girls starting out in a life of crime

read books and magazines with the lead-

ing articles written bY felons in prisons
or criminals at large on ,criminal

methods."
"I believe this to be the probable
clu'e to juvenile crimes. Should a person write out the instructions of a crime 1
for a boy or girl, he would be puiti.s'hed ·

as an accessory.
''But through

the

medium

o! the

book, the magazine and the screen, the
same author is allowed to sell the inI dructions to the youth."
'
Among the other speakers who addressed the group were James H Bren- J
nan, class of 121. and member of the
Governor's council; Associate Justice
Frankland Miles of the Roxbury court,
clas.s of '23; Judge George N. Poland,
Nantucket probate court, and James M.
Swift, iormer attorney-general and
1nember of the board of t_rustees.
,
Th~ toastmaster was Thomas J Fin-.;
nega,n, pr,esid~nt a; the aS?ociation. -r:he
graduating cli:1,SS was guest at the din-

ENTERPRISE, MARLBORO, MASS.

JUN 3 ... 1931
~JONJ:... ::S, TVS-I.-~·«'~

1

~er of ~ll& e.,:;9J)l.a.~n. • _ ,___ , - - -

roPENSLAW
I
~lFFIC~ :HERE/
I

I

-

__..._

I

DiBuono Concludes Services With
Shoe Co. -"""qur-u·rT.
---~~
- ~--.. .,.,,_......._

Atty.

iias .IoJ 9An<);>]1a a.I1' ,quaUilUTOO
:f'8 aSl>tjJ, ·"Iootps a-q, Jo 9luapn1s
.rµI' . .10; .lOl:>n.q~, j'BQJSAq<I 81? pe

1u1o4([11 """' an-ex uaraH ssyw Pmt
9q'.>t!&l ap-eJ~ IUfOadS' 'B S,o {>3lUJ9d
s11M ..:arn:-eH anµaq1,ex <l'SJW

1

fI'B"

i

·.:rnn>nnq rpo-qas ql!'JH n1

k,i~µ,nmoo rqmps. aq1 JO l!'nnaam.
i1>µ1'~.I '91ll l" .ltq:inaAa. lWI na:!{"1
~ v : 10 uruaa.1 1?• S>? 8I~l{as :inq_n,i;
\.IoCff=JII a'q1 'J:o;f ;'.is-TI a1'n Ol J>ilpp1?
i-ta'JA. s.1a.qi>ua1 <>M.t -OJO(!P1?W:
I

-~~~-

.

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... ,__ .· .· . '..·:-... _d

t;1fRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

I

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I

,.,UN 15 1931

jLJN 5 - 1931

T~ n g 13St~€e::J·'
~ly' ~
. nternatiori.al NewsI

\ reel

.)

Swlde-rsk:1,- lf'U:I;

Ga.rden.

.

·

Wrestling---Jhn Londos ~s

Tiny Roe-/'

j--b~u:::c;:,:k~·-r,tI•i:.,--..,.!!!!!-------

!

,---T

JUN 121931

/

:::it'd

n,~:J'f~ ,:;e Q~,:1';:~ie:'o~~~ncement reception,/
0
19~eil~~;;~er: :l~inn~~mH:.1f~~:l\~~o~1asi a°o~ i

,

I

hat Is Going On

'

/11

ING· C NG
[l.LI
[.
"a LAI's T[ ST i: f~;;~~::::::::!~~':!.;!fr}~:~!~n::::~: =~.:_=!I
E'

·, \ f".1",.[
f\

1

!Iii,

lj

.

.

}3~;:~n 'Yb~r!ddH!~sse,by8 Arthur A

1

.,.
ii'
While nearIY 100 n:ten at the ~
-:



P-

nlght with an examination on th:
law of real property a large r>ar,
of the ceiling thundered down about
their ears.

!' ;

1

~;.J___!"8H~ohue~tt,e. ~ut.u~-~-~~ra.,:u~
,,

ne;~~~?~.e plastered students, after
a sketchy bt ushing, began scratching and cursing ov~r. t_he. same . ex- I
amination in an adJ01n1ng room
Three students reported mi.nor
cuts and b1 uises
They were B<'n- 1
'je.min Leeds of 103 Endicott ::tvP. ~ i
,Revere; :Harry L Mars.hall of Ro~k j

.

,

pany:

~~~~i::l~~a~fr f::;lh~ft~s~~d~~:~!~~ ~·\'
He
er-; at
Carney
g~:·t, 8~~~~~~ ~~1e0 ~~ afn g;;~uaat:~ ~i ·,

New Ocean

s~:_~e:co;:: ~u3ri~Y. Jr, Court,
meetin;-. Hotel Statler, 8

M

C

:);---~

•,.

, ~

.

F ..

,a.re

d in the nature of things. ~

tlJi ;LA,.)Y.,SCHOOL
,MNI DINE TONIGHT
Speakers

and

guests

include

I,

ow Su e . .

Francis J. Tull?mons, Esq' Who~
has been &,ssociated With Assistant
Att?rn~y Frank E. Smith,
·since
, beginning the pi actices, of law has
~\1f~n$d. an office at 29 Mairt st~eet.

nT~;t

1

30
fo~bo~w s!:~~it~aih:1:ie~erfas~f
at the Parker Ho'use for thE;ir final
meeting of 'the year. They ·r.1.et to
peruse for ti:ie last time the list of
those in the graduating class and to
strike out the names of those wl10 had
failed to qualify for a degree
.
Dean Gleason W. Archer pres1ded,
assisted by his secretary, Miss Cath ...
erine Caraher Among those faculty
members present were Atty G~n Joseph E. Warner, Asst Un_ited States
Atty Gen A. A, Cbesl_ey York and
Judge Michael J. Sullivan of Dorchester.

"fl-,---..:....__ --

and·, Mrs.' Louis' Picard aof ~ LovJ~
:field. street. for:lwo·'\·,eeks.
Miss
Han.num. retur~
)'este~d·.
m W,:tteaton ,epJ:fege.~
.:> }If. · .
Guar· Jett. 'last night
,· for a
sit w-1,t,h relaUves ;ii> 't'ianada. ;.?''
,t.:' :
·c
'.
~ Rutl;i ,Ooafes goes tomorrow tt<? ,: Cl:feimsford to visit her
brother, Ralph, She Will remain a
few day:3 . to attend her bro,ther's
graduation from the Suffolk' law
school,. Mr. Coates is o n ~ h
18
~ p u p i l s who are to grad:
uate June· 16.

The funeral of John •Swiercek
of 59 Emerald place was, held
from tl1e home at 8.30 o'clock
. is mo:rning and was foIIowen hv.
·t: '- ..... . .. . ,.. .: ., f

.JF;:t,_

- -

''

1:~:I:. _:'·.'
~\~},:

) ~.rfr. :1um_mons is a graduat~ of St. j ''.,

I

.v.rary s h1gh school and fitted h.
1
;elf :tor the legai Prof?tSsion·
: ·ro.vidence College :and the ~ ·
.:.
'folk ~aw School, where he o..btain- '.
ed._ h1s degree.
, .

·r'

I

1

--~~·

-·~.

JRNING GLOBE, BOSTON, fllIASS.

JUN 1 5

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS-.-

1931

- -C:Oes-ter A. JVJ.ernu ano J;!.awara w;-- ~m. our ;ere mem.bus of the 58WW:Mi.-' L
1

I

ALlll6!AoF SUFFQ.Ld( LAW I

l

t

I

I

ii
l.1

{ TO l'foLD BANQUET TmrffiHTi
f

a
"'I wouldn't P-li:now a vacuum.

tbe from 'e,it irl.ier tube," he replied.
:,

(,2193,

ringers.
.
M. iss M. ary McCarthy, a student
nurse at, ~?hie hospital
West-

1Jy

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J

1

f o.ne point he-covereil Three oouo1e

i

.:;<.{

'.,:'_1•:
"'

~.

.I

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL
F A ~ HOLD SESSION

GAZETTE, NORTHAMPTON, MASS.

, JUN

·,

.

~

i;echnl-

- - _..,



JN 5 _ 1931

I

/ly, Judge George M. Poland,
,'rankland w. M. Miles, Frederick
LS James H. Brenna;n, member
1
Governor's council; Gleason L.
de.an of the su:(!olk Law school,
'h.omas J. Boynton, president of
!--_ larQ,__aj°__j;!'µ_stees. _ __ _

~

'

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

I

'nnual banquet of the Suffolk
~Col Alumni Association will
'
right In the ;Hotd Bradford at

'

"J

I
way
f experimental liv~ng.
elf-control not bY -imy some necessity 'Yhich

U~.lllct~ll(;l~!
'

Beth Israel IIospita.l Sch<?ol of Nursins-: (?lass ,1
Te~ple Israel meeting house, S
/

i

~ \ - o r °pe"d!fle
·
more succes.sful

~

'

:/

a· partially paralyzed lip
He was c1r~
rested at' t-11e"\ time on a charge or
drunke$e~·v:1d sentenced to two
months 1te_-th"e :House of Correction.

t'_";a.ssi;-;·~11kr~u;;~

J:i~
,,

~· 1H?••! .uf Cu:;1111c: ::e hi

party,

port and S<):hn _F. Sa.ntino.
/
---~.------;-;:-~-o----.-,-,-,- . -,-....---

,y

-

1 lie .Hi:..:,!.1

'{/GAZETTE, TAUNTON,--ltlASS.

House, /

O

9

1

J fi.:•1:1
! ~;.!3~
l

~~. ~-'

,

Convention banquet,

1~ ..,

l\fR1a~hy is 25

i

I

Within an instant every student
was completely plaster~d, so fat as;
is known it is the first case . on
J
record of future barristers reachl.ng , J
1
such a state during a final exHm .. ·. i
Well-pressed suits ·were covered { ·:
with powder while the occupant .3 l ,l
of the suits prepared t~ lea~e th.e i ,
building
via
the
windows
1f

ri::~~~~o

1
~:~

Ji

c~:;ert, auspices of Cfvi.~A~~cla '
! / tion •.. ~ewton Center Playground, 8, (weathe;/
. i I i:,,erm1ttms-).
i
Suffolk Law
§ehool
Alumni
Association:/
i_. Annual banquet,
Hotel Bradford, 6 30.
·r~

I.

I

\

1

I
i . : .st;:!

_
1 3 "'t,.

f o l ~ ~ o o l were g-rappllno ~ ·,

·/.·\ · 1
l

.

Ballentine,

0

0
toTfh~
o;:! ~a;v:re ~~1::;ff~~
at the annual "'night before'* Bunker -'·~; · Hill Day banq·uet in•""'1:he State Armory
·
in Charlestown, was selected by the · · 11
celebration committee yeste_rday in the l ,
persOn of Hugh R. Maraghy, attorney I·. :

Harvard senior spread and dance
Low II House 9

e j
Phi ~eta Kapp~, Harvard Chapter: Anniver- i'
sary d1nner meeting, ~ ~ - U n i o n
5:3 ).
,
0
Boston School Committee: Meeting, 15 Bea~//

,[

Maragny Choice for
"Night Before Orator

The manners of the bar are imIneasurably superior to what they were
50 years ago, and the best lawyers
have the best manners, in the opinion
of Judge George M. Poland, judge of
probate for Nantuc~et County, who
addressed the alumni of Suffolk Law
School at their 25th annual banquet
held in Hotel BradfOrd last night.
"l:t has become fashionable to talk
of the decadence of the bar, but in my
long experience I can find no evidence
of it," said Judge Poland ..
Other guests and speakers wer~:
James H. ~rennan of the Governor's
Council; Judge Frankland W. L. Miles,
newly appointed judge of the Roxbury
Court; Judge Frederick H. Davis of
Dukeis County Cour~; Dean Gleaso?, L.
Archer of the Law School, and Thomas
J. Boynton, president of the boa.rd of
, tru~tees of the school.
Thomas J. Finnegan, ~esldent ~f

"'··

-

--~--~~---

--·

I;

;s nan

.(!f

I

~e Gove~or's CouncU, .t,eallj

·e Gleason L . .Arehe:r- and· . Thomas J.
Boynton, president of.. the bOB.l'd o!

t.r
liS

trustees.

Attorn~y Th.om~ J. Ffiuie_,_.

.y :::,;idJ:~esid~nt Of· the

,;llunint. will

I

--

TELEGRAM, WORCESTER, lVIASS.

I

the. :a,sso_c;:ia:tion, was t9:~sJ~.~~~--. ·--

,v

celebrate the .silver anniversary of'. th•
founding of the school.
.
·
,Gov Ely has been fnVlted w speak.
e Others invited include. Judges G.eorg•
,r ¥. Poland, Franklin W. L. :Jlil08 and
y F;rederick H. Davis, James ·l:I. Brfl!n""

SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOL;
At'.t'.fMN-rffOLD BANQUET

f~

The annual banquet of the Su1f0llc
'La.W AlUmni Ai;;:sociatiqn wi1l be held
tonight at 6 :3.0 i.n "H:<itel Brad.ford. Th$
banquet will be . the ·second a:ff&tr .in
the series of events· bei~g a:chedU:led to.

JUN 5

_

-

~-------~-

BOST~, TRAVELER,

.SUFFOLK LAW

HASTINGS ADDRESSES
SUFFOLK LAW SCHOOli

en;,itor Hastings of DelaDelivers Commenc~..
ment Oration

i

Bacheior of laws degrees were awarded to 122 .seniors a.t the conunencement
exercises of Suffolk La.w school 1n Tremont Temple Ii.st night. Senator Daniel O~ Ha.stings of Delaware delivered
the conunencement oration.
Senator Hastings said in part: "I am
·convinced that we must find a way to
have a. more even distriQution of the
wealth of the nation. Our prosperity depends largely on the ability, of what is
commonly the wa.ge-earner9 to m.aintain him.self and his f'am.ily .
..He niust educate his children and
, at the same time enjoy some of the
f luxuries
which life in this country

Unemployment in this country _is far [
from a temporary phase of. or.~· 1ntlustriaI life, as it has been made "more
er less'' permanent by mode::-n :1'1a:chinery, declared United States Senat.or
Daniel o
Hastings of De~a"vare last

/

night, speaking at the annual Commeneement e:-:er-cises of the Suffclk
I.,a.v.,: School, held in T.··emont Tel'nple
As a remedy for the conditions existing today
the Senator advocatBd

less

hours

of

vvork

for

each

day

~

or

for each 'VVeek, a system '-Vhich he believed could be. carried out v.ith no
cuts in '-Vages, and ,vhich ,vould be
instrumental in i;;etting "a more equitable distribution which I th.ink is so
necess2.-y ''
The fii-st speaker on last night's program ,vas Prof George H
Spillane,
n:iar.shal, vvho delivered ~~- address
for the :faculty. He v1ra.s rouowe,d by

;
~~I.pr,:i~ii;~~~rJ:~~· ~~s~f:11 \·o~~f0~f
trustee&;:
and
Thomas
J.
Bayn ton,
pr~j~~~~ ~~ t;~h!>~a~~~n and founder
of

the

school,

was

the

nex!

speaker

After an orchestral selection, Senator Hastings was introduced

:1,·1 ·•

.GRADUATES 122! -

!h'ges -;~ort;'-Work Day\
to Aid Unemployed
f

(

WEI:

1 Y;~:,~~~dliRkd~~gf~~t ~g~d~g~
~~
0

l the depression comes, and production is
1reduced, somebody loses his position~
a~%:,t1!enint;;~i!'i1Ybe~~Y judgment is
jto be.found in this: The employt does
1not in many instances get his proper
1share of the unusual and unexpected
1
profits made by his employer during the

!

; prosperous years.

/th;;ri~ ~~~a=>y;!t ~:;;e ti~o trh:n~~!
;job for less money. oPportunity plays a
large part in life in America and. the

~tiJ.~0c~c!df.
~h~
and does his work well, should be given
some opportunity to sha±e in the profits
of such business.
This suggestion, of
course, carries with it many difficulties.
There are many things to be said on
the other side.
..Fortunes that have been invested in
! business ventures have been lost, and
i the wealthy -man in such in;stari.ces is
: in no better position than the employe.
But if the great industrial leaders of
the nation, the heads of great and sue, cessful corporations. would take the position that when the profits are more
than normal all employes should have
a substantial part paid to them in pro, portion to their length of service, and
salaries, it would go a. long way in ma.king a :more equitable distribution.
10

1;~

kr tiit~1~t.
0

I
1

o·~~=fi. vTc~1.:~!~:I'e~1£

ofJih.etf\oaid i'of trustees presided.
Former Atty.' Gen. Thomas J. Boynton, pre.sident~~
' spoke for the trustees, while Dean Gleason L. Archer .Spoke :for the school. De- r
grees were conferred by President Boyn..,
ton and Dean Archer.
The class day exercises took place
during the afternoon in the .school auditoriuni. with A. Ralph Vaccaro of
Somerville presiding.
The following
participated:
Salutatory, Arthur X.
Koerber;
history,
Irving
Shapiro;
prophecy, Hubert L. McLaughlin; oration, Edward A. O'Donnell; wil~. Henry
L. Ziegel; presentation of national colors, Patrick J. Savage; reception of
colors, Roger A. Sala; presentation of
class gift, Franlt B. Foster; tribute to
departed classmates. Cha:rles H. Jayes;
valedictory~ Leona.rd F. Williams.
The following received degrees:
Bernard
Charles
T_heodore
S1mnson

Leonard F' Kelle:y
George B, Keough
Arthur X Koerber

~~fb~mE~~°cfs\~~~s
Nicholas S

Laiv.·Iess

Jii~~a~

~t:n11ta1
Charles .A Linehan
Sidney H Litner
John .F' Lombard
John J

I

l

Bernard N Abrams
Charles A Ada.n1s
Theodore I<' Al.::a.rez
Simpson B ~~ert
er

---------~ - . , _ ~ - --~-~_:<:,f
Oh
1th
Daniel :r Sullivan

Joseph B Sullivan
George F S-wasey
Xarl Tris
William J Tuznmon.
Harold D Ulric,b
Angelo R Vaccaro
James J O Valeri

William A Viscounte
Frederick D Walsh
James L Williams
Leonard F Willia.ms

Henry L

'

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<

1-

!

i _.

1,i

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"~-~----------------

i

TODAY

"FUESDA Y

,

The
relative
meriis
of
W.
L. / ·
In observance of the introduction
uYoung"' Stribli:rlg and Max Schmel- of its new inodel•, the Nash Motors
ing, principals in the COQ'l.ing world'• Cc;nnpany sponsor a half-hour over
heavyweight ch~mp:onship fight at WEEI at 9 p. n:,..., entitl-e<f HParade
Cleveland Friday, "W'i:I be discussed of Progres$::o. featuring Max Benc:Ux,
over WBZ, at 9: 15 p. m.,. on the World~s Fair bandmaster of the ChiBayuk
Stag
P.i:.rty,
by
Tom:rny cago Ce:nt:ury of Progress of 1933
Loughran.
This Philadelphia Iig'ht and an al!-st:ar 35-piece band.
·
h.eavy is now- h~mse!f a

contender for

During this broad~ast some of A1neri-

t~a.:i::~~\-t~j=~~~.;:do;eti!:es::~t:'J
.
S h

I
·11
'I
f

I 1ng-:_ c me 1?8' me ee,. "W'l
te...
of h;s own r.:ng experJ.ences.
Marjorie

!

a

C~!te~~stL::!it?~~:~a~ce;:.~1 i~~l~:;::.!
Rtde, Roosevelt at San Juan, the first
:flight of the VVrig"ll.f. · airplane at Kitty
Hai.vk, "Lindy~~ at Le Bourget field,

ew

~iolinist, _ ?~tte1 . ~fl~isbea~·~e;;a~r;_~i~a.lbi:.:We:astt or~~~~

,;os"'seit,.~

~faoi;s~ :-:<:en~:ri~ck ofro~~e a .B ~~~~~1;t
tour of Buenos Aires, :ftio de Jaqeiro,
Santo$, San Paulo, Trinidad and n 1 any
other South A1nerican cities, niarks her
return to the air O\.er V'VEEI at 7 p m,
accompanied
by
het·
i;;ister,
Gladys.
Vv~hile in Buenos Ailes, she ,-va~ invited
to play for the Prince of Wales and
11 is brother as a result of her broadcast o, er one of the city's stations.

and stage st~rs
The ~econd National J<.::.du·cation Assoelation broadcast from Los Angeles over
WEEJ, at 5 p. rn., brings to tbe ··mq..:.-e'•
the
f'ov~v,rin,g
SpcaJ.;:ers:
Edwin
C.
Broo1ne, superintendent of Phqadelphia
so·cfhotohles; N•~:rts,:onHa:'gChoBngra,·edsfsorao,,f. P~asr;deennt;
- ,...
i
and Teachers,
antl, Howard :W.hipp]e,

I

Graham-Paige

off

~ig·ns

over

'\VNAC

I

rii:-~;;~t:~t

,

I
I

of: ;the Banl~ oi; Amertca, \



nt 9:30 p
n, ,
for the season i.vith a
'i'

*
fare\vell
progran1me
of
selections.
Philco's SJ•mphony p;rograinn:1es con1e
plac, ed
in
pa.st
broadcu.!c;tS
opening I to a close over vVN..,\..C at 9:30 p. m.,

j

:1t~t" c3f;~~;~s ~::ft~m.fr~~ir C~rr~~i::,:t~~:;:~ ii~~a~usiC; 1~~;1r~~~~••o( ~;:~~~! ufis:~~1; f
ham-Pajge Legio::i March "
Auvther

of

'Walter

Dan.1ro.scl~ .s

"Me.!_sten,,"'inger, ",
an-d .
Isolde ..
This series is
con-

0

n1usical

place

of

the - .. At;water

ensembles each

week. _

;-

.."\'Vh~ I Am Returning to China," i.$,
the subject of an address to be delivered;
over '\VNAC! tJ.t 10:15 P- n, , by_ Chao-"
Chu vVu,
;vho
recently
resigned. as ·
Chinese minister to t--be United S t a t e j
because of differences with his home
government.

* "'
Dr. Lai.vrence * P "' Jacks, principal of
l\i!anchester College, University of . OxforQ, is the featured speaker in the
CBS internat:ionaI broadcast from Lon~
<lon over v\,-_<\.AB at 12:30 p. m, discussing "The Moral Ci isis of Our Times;
a Call to Flay the 1\-Ian "
In

• Tristan
and
to be replaced

;;{usf/ :;·a::~i;.e~r6~.e~ti=~c~vit~nfeat~;;;J/

certs bY the San :F'1 anciscd .Sj,mphony
()_;_chesi1a, at the "'\Vooaland Theatre,
1.-'Iillsborough, Cal., ·will be heard for a
half hour on1y beginning at 7 p
n1.
through v\.,.EZ

Events leading ,up to Abi"aha1n Lincoln's :famous "Gettysburg ·Address,"
to be d1·amatized bY the Soconylanc

Ke:i:it

hour, that concluaea last Suntlay, 0:sc&"l:'

Pnl----Yet-S--'-('VVEEI'- 7-:-SO-p., m.), ..-pring--o~·

Strauss, co1nposer, will direc,t a
large
symphony orchestra in a programme of
his o-wn music over "WEEI at 9::15 I). n'l..,
assisted by Gladys Rice, and Fred Hufsmith, as soloists

interesting incidents
Emancii:>ator's"
rule
that time

of,
as

·'The
Grea·
Preside.nt ·a
·

-J-=--.-:!:::.r::==·~==·=-=-=-"="=""========- ~
.
9

WE~~~SDA Y

The ••stenode ' radio circuit, recently
developed
by
Dr.
Robinson,
British
scientist, will be discussed_ by Volney
Hurd,
radio editor of the Christian
Science Monitor, over -WEE! at 12:15
p, m , In an interview ,vlth Sam Curtis

In an inter.view,. based hu:-gely on. c~rrent ator_~es and music by Georg2
t.he Stribling-Schmeling . .fight, -'G~n·, Earle's Orc~~-~ra.
t.le:rnan Jhn" Ja·nies 1 J. Corbett:, form.
,;, "' ,;, *
er heavy"W"eigh-t boxing' champion who
Through
,his
farrious
.. knap-::iack"
defeated .John L. Sullivan - in Ne:w ~~~r~ftt:-u}str~:aeffca~~ h!s ·~~~kke~i~c~
Or!ea.ns will face th~ microp~one for stroke description of the Xationa.J Open
a
short: interview ·over ·WE£1 at Championship golf' n,:Hc-hes at the In10: 30 p. m.
Other features· of this verness Club, Toledo, Ohio, over VvAAB
MONDAY
period will be selectioDs by an all- from 5 to 6 p. n.1
Aft.er having consistently refused
A group of 12~ ~ 1 u~i~fans directed by
all offers to broadcast: for the past string orchestra conducted by Guss2ven years, G~raldine Farrar, int:er- tave Haensche~ and solos by Vaugh lv.l;ilton Schwarz\vald will play a nu1nber
de Leath, the origin.al radio girl_
of pat<totic seelctions during the RKO
nationally famous prima donna, has
Theatre of the air broadcast ove1· vVEEI
finally gone the way Of tn.any other
Lel\.Iayor James l\'L Curley in ·his second at 10:30 p. m. direct from the S S
operat:c stars, and will broadcast, for broadcast since retur.ni:i:ig :(ron1 Eiirope viathan
the first time, on the inaugural Pack- svill discuss "What an· -6-.nierican l\.I:ay
a:t""d programme (WB,?", 10:30 p. m.), Learn
by
a
European
Visit,"
over
SATURDAY
sh,ging four selections.
These selec~ w:-;iAc at 2 p m, dhect from his office
What a Fcurlh of July is pl~.nned
tiens inc:lude HHabanera" and dSegui- in Cit~ ~a_IJ
for the air.
Fo!lov.ring jg a. bric~
d;lla/' a~ias , £!:'en'I. Bizet:' "Carmen/'
The first of a series of four diffe1 ent
Dvorak"s '~Songs My Mother Taught
tfa;.~e raio events on Inde- j
p1ogr~mn1es to· detern1ine the type of
Me" a.nd Tcba:kovsky'g "None ,But radio entertainment the a\ erage listener
Though -WEEI at D p
m
Flo) d Gibt:he L~nely Heart."
likes features the -Ward Trail Blazer bons speaking direct f1 on1 Jndepend- I'

;::ck::!:

The prelude from ''Carmen," WolfF'e11a1i's overture to "Tl1.e Secret of
Suzanne"
and
Tchaikovsl;::y's musical
de.scription
o-r
Xapolen s
n1arch
on
Mosco""W, ••overture :1812,'' vvil1 be played
by an orchestra under the direction of
Kathaniel ShiU-.;:ret
/

* • • "'

The Argonne A
..,.\... outdoor boxing
boll:t bet·ween Samm~ Fuller and Steve
Ha1lako of Bu~alo 1s to be ~roadcast
fro1n Braves. Field thr'?ugh WAAB at
10 p n'l. , bY Gerry Han 1son.
The u
s. Nav: i:ai~d.•assisted by Mar-

ii~~

fi-i:jf:

R~J:!~· A~:=;:
tseo:::n~;at~~!
1
the Fan-~n1eric~n concert music of alt
the ~~mericas, to be ·broadcast through
WEE.I at 11·15 P
m., from the Hall of
the
Americas,
Fan-Amer1can
Union,
Washington, D
C

*



..

...

• ::u~r1~'aTh-;;~;1~~d;tnds~pd·~~~1n:l~~~~~
fron1 the ··F1refly," and Everett Mars~:_ll,
baritone:....... s1n-='_:n:r _ Mas:s:PnPt-'s:

Or-chestra under the directioU of Josef
Koestner, playing pppular melodies and
special arrang"kriients of 1nodern music
over "\VBZ at 9:30 a
m

Columbia. Ca1np Concerts, a summer
extension of the American. School of the
Air, v,rill be inaugurated ·over WAAB·at
4 :30 p. m , in an effort to reach more
than 3,000 000 boys and girls at suffimer
can'l.ps and parents '"'·ho leave the city
for their ,acations.
The opening programme consists of ,the rea.din""' of a
poem, ~·e-Jection.s_ b,'y an orc1?,est;a and

I

~ielBer~s:, ;;:~~~~nanio:;y brief talk by
Mrs
Nancy c* :x;:]\.fcc'ormack, Ameri0
can portrait scUIPtor, starts a series of
1nt1n1ate talks on. sculpturing and othe1.·
subjects on the VVomen's Radio Rev1e\V
("\-VEEI, 3 p
m ).

I
-

* .......
THURSOA y
Evelyn Herbert,.
-

ol

-------

:rnugic co"1.edv

______

- · - - - __

I

;~~~o

~~IJ·ie:~.:na!~;:in;,t;;~1/in!"e11fa~~:
concerning the signing of the Declaration.
I

set

1

L!';an
::~~on B~<.;to!,rch;i~c~~se~~
~ n of hoi.v _1nuch breaking an intrudei;- 1n.ust do -to ma;J..:e himself lin:ble
for burglarY (7 :15 !). 1n }. At 7 :30 n. m ,

~u~~~gr~!ft

1

b:a~~;;~ : : ~?:o?ft:d~f~·ll.;J~\~~
Ind_ependen~e Day events, puring _.,hic!1
the Declaration of Independence Y:l.11
be . read before a
musical bnc!;;:ground 1
of the note of tbe Libertc,- Bel.I song~
of Stephen F'oster, -famed compo:c;er o:f
American tunes dedicated to the <:olored race -..viU be n1emori.a1i?ed in a
pro'gran,me, coin.memorating the JO:itll
a~ntyet·sary
of hi~
birthdac,
Di1·cct

~~w.

~~~l:~st~~i: ~~~a~!d:nde~~n1~1~1~~\
pendence · i.v·a~ signed 155 years ago
dresses Dy Sol BloOn1. ReprescntR..t~ve of
~e~. ~o:·k: _a"nd Mayor Harry Ma.c'.;::ev

nd-1

The

relative

:rneril:s

of

W.

L.

"Young" ·stribliilg and Max Schmeling, principals in the COIJJ.ing world's
heavyweight chqmp:onship fight at
Cleveland Friday, 'Wi:l be discussed
over WBZ, at: 9: 15 p. m ... on the
Bayuk
Stag
Pcrty,
by
To:nnny
Loughran.
This Philadelphia Iig'ht
heavy is no'W'" h:rnse!f a contender £or
heavyweight l::.onors, and besides giving his expert low-down of the St:rib.•
ling-Schmeling melee, "W"ill t:e!l a fe-w
of h~s own ring,i, e:p,:r~er..ces.
Marjorie
Fosselt,
violinist,
better
known as "l\Targe," of the Friell.dly
::.V.Iaid.s, recently back fron1 a
c.Oncert·
tour of Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro,
Santos, San Paulo, Trinidad and many
other South A1nerican C'itie;:;, marks her
retu1 n to the air over W .EEI at 7 p m.,
accompanied
by
he1
sister,
Gladys.
v;,rhile in Buenos Aires, she ,vas invited
to play for the Prince of Wales and
his broth.CL' as a result of her broadcast o'\er one of the city's stations.
Graham-Paige signs off over v\T:,.;T ~<\.C
at 9:30 p
rn , .for tJ1e season with a
fi1..re,vell
progran,n1e
of
selections
played
in
past
b1 oad<"a:,;ts
opening
\'\- ith. 1:<--;1gar's "Pomp and Cil·cumstance,"
nntl closing with Arthur Pryor's ''Graham-Paige, Legion March "
Another of "Walter Dan1rosch's coneerts bv the San Fl'ancisc,5 Symphony
o~ chest~ra, at t11e "\Voodland Theatre,
Hillsborough, Cal., -will be heard for a
half hou1· only beginning at 7 p
n1..
through. "-'"'BZ

..

"' "'

Dr Lawrence p
.Jacks, principal of
Manchester College, University of - Oxford, is the featured speaker in the
CBS international broadcast from Lon~
don over Vv~_,\__.,'\._B at 12:30 p. m., discussing 'The Moral Crisis of Our- Times;
a Call to Play the Man "
In
:()lace
of
the - .... A 1.;w-ater
Kei:i.t
hour, that concluded 1ast ·Sunda"Y, 0-Sca~
Strauss, co1nposer, will direct a large
symphony orchestra h1 a programme of
his o-wn music over "WEEI at 9 :15 p. m.;
assisted bY Gladys Rice, and Fred Hufsmith, as soloists.
The "Sten.ode" radio circuit, recently
developed
by
Dr.
Robinson,
British
scientist, -will be discussed_ by ·volney
Hurd,
radio editor. of the Christian
Science Monitor, .over "W"EE1 at 12:15
p. m , in an intervie,v ,vith Sam Curtis

In observance of the introduction
of its new models, the Nash Motors
Company sponsor. a half-hour over
WEEI at 9 p. :rn., · entitled- ••Parade
of Progres:;,'"- featuring Max Bendix,
World's Fair bandmaster of t:l,.e Chic::atz'O Century of Progre5s of 1.933
and an al!-star 35-piece band.
During this broad.-;a.s_L some of An1erica"s most historic8.l scenes, including
Custer's
La:st
Stand,
Paul
Revere~s

fi:~1~'t : :

!t!!K~ft:

0

:i~;·e~{·r~fifa;ir~~:tnn~
Ha '\VJ;;:,
'Lindy~•. at Le Bourget field,
Paris, and Adnlira_l Dewey a:t Mnnila,
will be reenacted 'bY::a cast of radio
and stage st3:r:s

'l~he io:econd Nnt.ional E;dw~ation Association broadcast from Los Angeles over
-WEET, at 5 p. i:n , brings to the '"mi~e·•
the
f'o\}~viring
speakers:
Edwjn
C.
Broo111e, superintendent of Philrrdelphia
schools; l\irs Hugh Bradford, President
of the N::ttional Congress' of' Parents
and Teachers, and. Howard Whir,p1e,
of :the Bani~ of; America,

-~}i:-TJ:;;~f:::.t

I

....

i
I

;~~~a~u_sic, i~~~~r~~~~,pt; Y';·~!~~~!ufis:~~~
"Me_i:;;ter:,,--:i.nger,'\
and
' Tristan
and
Isolde "
This series is to be replaced
by programt)J.es Of d&.nCe
and
ligh 1
n1.usic by nev.: ~rchestr3. '\Vith :feature /
musical ensembles ea.ch week.·.
-~

I

Philc'o•s Symphony prograinrnes Colne
to a close oYer -WNA.C at 9:30 p. n1..,

«W·h~ I Am Returning to Chin~," is,
the Sl.!bject or an address to be delivered .
over "'i,VNAC nt 10:15 P. m., by. Chao-.
Chu '\-Vu,
;vho
recently
resigned. as ,
Chinese minister t. o t.):le United S t a t e j
because of differences with his home
government
Events leading up to Ab:;;ahn,;"J."J. Lincoln's .famous ''Gettysburg · Address,"
to be drama ti zed by the Socon~ lane
pn.:cy,-a,--g-('VV.EE,J:

7-;"30-- p. ;. m.), ,bI f n g - - ~

interesting incidents
Ema.ncipator's''
rule
that time

of
as

"The
Gres:
Pre:side.nt ·a
·

WE~MBS;A y

l ;;,: . .

_ In an inter.yiew-, baaed largely, on
the Stribling-Sch~eling. fl.ght, ••Gt;cn-,
t:leman Jim." .James ·..J. Corbett. former heavyweight: boxing' ch~mpion who
defeated John L. Su3.liva.D. · in Ne:W'
Orleans "W""ill face th~ microp~one for
a
short int:ervie'W over WEEI at
10:30 p. m.
Other :feature ..- of t:his
MONDAY
period will be select:i.oDa by an allAfter having consistently refused string orchestra. conducted by Gusa.II offers to broadcast: for the past tave Haensche~ and solos by .Vaugh
seven years, Geraldine Farrar, inter- de Leath, the original radio girl.
nationally famous prima donna, has
finally gone t:he way Of many other
Mayor Jani.es .l\lL Cul·!ey in his second
operat:c stars, and will broadcast, for broa'dcast since r~tur:ning ~ron1. Eii1 ope
t:he first: time, on the inaugural Pack- ·will discuss ""What an ~q._merican l\,lay
a1""d prog::.•amme (WBZ, 10:30 p. ni.), Learn
by
·a
European
Vi.sit,''
over
singing four selections.
Theze selec- vv- _::,,..-Ac at 2 p m , direct from his office
ticns include "Habanera" and usegui- in City Ha._ll
d'.Ua," arias from Bizet' "Carmen.''
Dvorak's "'Songs My Mother Taught
Me" and Tcha:kovsky's ••None ,But
the Lonely Hee.rt."
'J he p1elude :fron, • Carmen," ""-'-011'Fe11 a1 i's overture to "'J..'he Se~ret of
Suzanne''
and
Tchaikovsky's musical
desc1 iption
of
Napolen s
march
on
Moscow, "Overture 1812," '\Vill be played
by an orchestra under the direction of
:--Jathahiel Shilkret
/

I

uu,

current stor.ies and music by Georg:
Earle's Orchestra.
"' * ,;. "'

~1:ap~!t

0

tr;~~~~ft~r
t~s hi~·~:;~J:i/a~~~;
1--Iusing
v.rill
broadcast
a
stroke-bystroke description of the ~ational Open
Champjonship golf n1atehes at the Inverness Club, Toledo, Ohio, over VVAAB
fron1. 5 to 6 p.. m

""''

"'
1

""

"'

1v.1,fi"tog:oS~h:~r;;~.n.\:t:flt~~a:i:e~~1~b~~
of pat-riotic seelctions during the RKO
Theatre of the air broadcast over vVEl:<JI
at 10:30 p
m. direct from the S
S Leviathan

SATURDAY

RECORD, BOSTON, l\lASS.
HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

--

-·--

--------

--

---

.-........... -......,. I

"Four Horsemen" team. of ,24_ Jim
Dooley, an outstanding guard and
teammate ,or_:Ge_org~ Gipp

1;,~ th;

!
1

toastm_~-=,t,...._._.,,=-~~,------::,,-,--

Youn est Ever to Give
Response to 17th Toast
'.!'he honor of being the youngest
man ever to respond to the annual
toast at the night before ba:r;tquet
in Charlestown state. armory went
y~_!:rt,erday to ..Atty.

aghy,

t~:ern.

t.

Hugh -~. M:ar-

25, o~ ~arney st., ~r\es-_
~he .:.,to~.S:t will·:~ d.elivered· 1
astmaster - Edward. P. MurW:e: ~ , r a t e . "

'

~~~->~t-,·~~

NEWS-TRIBUNE, WALTHAM, MASS.

JUN 2 7
by the -wrrfing~ a"nd

Circles of

·

.

King's

Gciod - cneer

Dag.ghters

in

""lll'&mll~ Wll.,.haye

died.
'IJ'i<;>se on
September
6th
will be -,'for Hugh A. and Karl J.

'Sch~~u.\l'_:~~~,~~~~~~-

Meuse-Kelley
Palms, potted ferns and garden
flowers gave St. Charles• chapel a
colorful summer dress this morning for the 9 o'clock Wedding o·f

:::r1 ~~~:~~a

i!1:

W~t~a\1.K~\:~·
ley's marriage to Ja1nes Henry
Meuse, J1. of 30 Blakeslee street,
Cambridge, , was
solemnized in
cerem.bnies performed J;,y the Rev
Peter J. Walsh
The double ring service was
used, and the bride was entrusted
to the groom by her brother,
Frederick J. Kelley. Frederick G.
Meuse and Miss Eileen F. Kelley,
brother and sister of bridegroom
arid bride, attended the couple
Mtss Agnes JoseDhine Burke played the wedding march and accorupan1ed George Dolan, vocal soloist.
Harold E
McGann, a cousin of
'the bridegroom, and Edward J
Hardigan
were
ushers
at
the
church, where guests 1 epresente'd
Ne:w York, Baltimore, Philadelphia,
Connecticut cities and towns,· Hyannis, Cambridge and Waltham.
The brid8's gown, of white s·atin,
floor•length, was patte1 ned after a
late Patou model most becomingly draped. Her tulle veil was build
up with white horseb.air in a
pleasingly original design, its ~ap
banded with orange blossoms, its
train sofue four yards in lengtJI
01!:chids, white roSes.; and valley
lilies were used in fashionirig the
bride's shower bouquet· ·
Pink chiffon, floor length, w,ith
paste'! blu~ .satin jacket was worn
by the bridesmaid whdse slippers
alld · piCture hat were o.f a pink
rnfl.tcpinr: .tbe. CQ.J.O
....... ~~. ".~ . _
.:;irk· 3.lld blue flowers' m~de 'Ul;)},t:p_e
?at ~rimIIling, and the. b~idesmaid's.
bouquet was of premrnr supremes
.
and ·forget-me-nots.
A reception and wedding breakfast at the home of the bride's
mother, Mrs. Jennie J. Kelley, followed the ceremony, 175 guests being entertained at the' home
Mr.
arid Mrs. J Henry Meuse, parents
of the bridegroom, assisted in entertaining.
Mrs. Kelley wore a
flows.red chiffon frock with picture
hat and C.orsage bouqu~t of sweetheart roseis.
Mrs Meuse, wearing
blue chiffon and picture hat, had a
corsage of ;the _.same flowers.
Many gifts for the new home
were on display. The bride's gift
from Mr. Meuse waa a platinum
bracelet. Mrs. Kelley remembered
her bridesmaid with silver rosary
beads, and from the bridegroom
the best man and ushers r_eceived
attractive writing sets
After an extended automobile
trip Mr. and MTs. Meuse will make
their BOme at 221 Warren street,
Allston.
The bridegroom, a graduate of
Cambride Latin Scho.ol and ~ ; :
fQlk Law §.~hool, is employed as ~
sales ·manager.
Th8 bride attended the Waltham
schools and has been active among
young people in St. Charles' parish.

I

I
1

UPIIALS-]EJ---'
~ FOR JULY 4
s Eleanor T. Macknight
[(\\ to Be Bride of P.
;, . , Bert Taylor
~

mony

at, · Episcopal

t} 11rch in St. Stephen,,

i

.New Brunswick

~1\~:;~::m~}!~;::!:;:;:;!
, ~ t a ceremony to be performed
1
lll at the home of Mis.s Mac-

I

-lli,f;l parents, Mr and Mrs Harry
~~<lc).zht, St Stephen, New Bnms.1 Canada. The Rev. W N B.vers,
r of the Episcopal church in St
hell, will officiate
,elatives and close friencls will atid the ceremony. The couple will
ave on an automobile tour through
ew Brunswick, Nova Scotia and
~uebec, returning throuih New York
state to New Bedford to make their
home here
'
Miss Macknight has been connected
with St Luk.e's hospital for four years
and· is very popular among her hospital associates. She is· a graduate of
Halifax Ladies college and Dalhousie
university, Canada
:Mr Taylor. secretary to Police .Chief
Samuel D. McLeod, has been connect-.
ed. with the Police department here
for 12 years·. He is a son of Mrs. Martha Taylor, 137
V:/esleyan aVenue, I
Providence, a graduate of the Eng- l
lish High school, Providence, Childs
Business college, and of the Suff0Ik
Law school, Boston, holding a
e
of bacr;'.efor Of laws from thaf. school.
He is a member of Post One, Ameri-

can Legion, New Bedford Rod. and
Gun club and of Sippican Pomona
grange.

1.1:z~'fu
. ThPolt'is· 'a ~
1

i

( has, presente';i· ::t&:Ub ~ e r e t t Rlgh
~kwood with a haJ;fsome ~fal W J
A new order for th , . { d watch.
it,\,
d~l.e,..,ark is ·soon to be wdror: on GlenestI.niated C t
e
awn ~nd the
Of
is in the neighborhood
purchased . th.
Ward of Chelsea has
0
rd, Everett, ir!n; ~ ~ aRt 3T5 Evelyn·''
,
Belmont.
·
aylor of
Willard P Lomb d
·,
a ·member of the aiaw 0 ~.~mpshire st,
Sweetser & Lo b
uu, of Stover
.1 J'
---the facult of m ard has been added tO
' The announcement of the engageWill teachy"Do!~~kB.~~?"l and/
ment of Mary A Sheeran of 16 Clinton I
t 9I~a~o:,~ of P":radiso Enrico, i2 Park
street, Wobur.n and Edward T. Donaand !rnedlmtrithe absence of the
,::,
1
1 +h
e ec c iron razo
hue of 16 West ~ower.s street,. Lowell, 1 t ,~
C!._~~es ~~~m~~Sk
:
r and
was ·mad<e at a dinner party given f01. ,
.__
-th·at pur,pose at Manning Manse, Bil.-'
POST, BOSI'ON, MASS.
le_:f'i_~, lwst evening. Miss Sheeran is/
the ·~aughter of ]"rank H Sheeran, re1
til*e~ deputy fire chief of the Boston 1
Dep.,b.T•tm:ent, and Mr Donahue is the
soll: or" Mrs. Delia Donahue of Lowell./
Mhls Sheeran is .a teacher at the
Ltns~tt School, this city
She at-/.
ceremony was peI'foI'med in the Map1e.;.
tended the Woburn schools and is a J
wood Congregational Church, with the
gr.a.du3.te of Notre Dame Academy at
pastor, _ t ' ~e~ ~Y E
Butterfield
Roxbury and
Mi.ss Leslie's Kinder-g~rten at Camb1idg-e
Mr. Donahue
; : ~ Law Sch~~l
,
is a graduate of the Lowell Schools
Alumni on Outing
'
and Northeastern University with a
Mem_bers of the Suffolk. Law Sch+1el!
degiree ,of B S C. He is a C PA. and
alumni, 250 strong, took part in their
fourth annual outing yesterday. Boardgradua,ted from Suffolk Law School in
mg the steamer King Philip at old T
191U.
He is an accountant.· for
a I\
wharf, they were taken down the har08
• , Lowell firm.
0
8

"IRL IS I J:~'.o~:\
LOCAL \J , '
ANNDIJNCED I I
(:~

;

I

\

,4,

y

I

,::m11y

/ ~:i~. a!~rtj~~
i'JE~~-;N;E~;~~;;:~;~;~;.,- M~Ss.ri~g.

fustfeaf~!{ { !•cfoc~ ~~:

to dock at 6:30 o'clock.

I

].

_I



i

,.PtJN 261!lfi

en

·'

MAYNARD

ee-year-old son of Mr
enjamin Gruber. Sumter
, who broke a leg, is
e)nvalescing at the home of his
aren'ts.

t

, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dyson,
' )oncord street, Spent several days l
1f the week at Atlantic City.
·
1

- The senior class of the high !
1
.;chool held an outing at Lake/
Whalom in Lunenberg. last Thursday
Miss Arlene -----;;-,lest of White-j
Pla.ins,. N
Y , is spending the !
summer months with her parents.
Mr. and Mrs
William Priest, I
W a 1 c o t t street.
Miss Pri~st
teaches in the schools of White I
Plains
Mrs. Evelyn O'Brien of Buffalo,
N Y., spent several days of the
' week as the guest of her sister,
Miss
Mary Callahan.
Prospect
1
street.
Mr. and Mrs~y Duren. Main
street, are spending several days
of the week motoring through
northern New York and Canada
Leonard Kelley, son of Mr. and
Mrs Mark Kelley, !"umping Station road, was graduated durfng
the week from Suffolk Law. -school.
Mr. Kelley wi!F'be a1'i'ii'~Those
who will take the Massachusetts
bar examinatioris on June 27.

\

,

/'

'r

FREE PRESS. EAST BOSTON, MASS.
/

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.
SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

ON LE~~k_

.~~~'";
I

Of

garden J.u.... --- _

Mr. and Mrs. Hallowell WllJ. .u.--,.,--~
So.uthbridge, receiving their. . frien~s
after Sep'J. 15. Mr. Hallowell .s..tudied
at Milton and Phillips Exeter 'acade,nri~.,
and also at the Harvard busin~ s~hool.
His bride was presented :in New York
sel_"eral yearS- a a
aitj.uat1o~

ring;ton.

itJ·:t:r.

. ··

FEENEY-uu·GifEs

·Attended by her six_,si&t'ers. l,t.Ii.s.s Ger7
tl'.'u<i~~..A Hughes, d~Ugtiter Of, Mr.. ,RI!.~
St~phen W. Hughes of 24 Stone:...
hurst street, Dorchester, was. married
yesterday to Atty Johri s. Feeney, .:;;:on
of Mr. ,and Mrs. Patrick Feeney· o:t; .22
Greenbrier street, .'OOr-Qhester.

The Rev. John A: Coughlin, assistant:

:Mr...~

§~~r ;;fn.8 1e1!b;:r:~i"~~rii~p:ra1~;.:fol:iowing the ceremony.
,
·

bri~~ew:: ~~e~1or:U~/~:;~_.t1';~a!~=

]II High School Box

j

late.·

By Maurice Verstandig

It's all over with! !~School!
Now
for a nice long cool vacation-and
how! It's funny though during school
time we'll never look at a book, but
t during the summer, when it's not compulso1y, ,ve read more books than
1 ever! (Yeh,~Street & Smith publicar tions )
Well, I shouldn't say we're
all going to have a cool vacation. For
l instance our most popular "trick"
senior, Bruno Velona, is going to continue his famous researches in sumn1e1 school, after which he'll clip hair
for his college tuition

er of science at South Boston· high·
school, whc was· 111aid of honor; M'i.%
Kathryn A.. Miss· Belen S. and Miss
Eav~'fut"Yif:h.1i"f:a1;?ra:;;J
cis · P Carroll, -member of. th!?' w.at.ertown school cq:zhmit:tee was best ma:ll..
,
Virginia Barry ;W~- flowe:t . ,girl : and

---DNCE ENGAGEMENT

Paul Tobin,. ring sbearer. ·.Th~ U$h-er.s.
were William· J: ~µ&'hes, b.rbth·er .oJ .t.i;le

tended . the · wedding' breakf"as
Chester Plaza,

~UU).ford av~; this _town •. to Mis~ 8
n
Judge Frapcis P. Brad.Y of Ux:bridge,. was announced. tod!'Y ~y
Judge'. :Srad.Y at a. lunc);leon _given 1n 1
hon.or .of Miss Brady by her au~t~ <
Miss· Katherine Dunleavy, w11..h c
Mrs. Richa.J;d' MacDonald ·of y,roreester and Mrs. BarrY of Wh1tinsville as ~istant ~ost~sses.
Mr. Fox is a.· graduate of_ .the
Mansfield High school,
class of
1925. · He · attended~ Boston co~lege
and Boston universi~y. C.B.A • ~d
will be gradua ed from. t~~ suf! .
w.·
_ - Boston ·nex ye~.
e 1s a member o:f the ·s1gn1a. Rho
Delta. He conducts an: insurance
business and also assists his fa'ther
in the- management of the Th~mas
J ~X Clothing store for· men.
~The bride-to-be is-well known as
a. dramatic - reader an<:1- -has col:!--,
ducted a. sch9ol of expression m
U:xbridge and. Worcester,.. She is
graduate o:f Notre Dame .Aca:demy
a.nd Emerson College of oratory,.
:SpSton. S~e. is a memb~r f the \
}s:8.ppa. Gamtp.a C~.i sorority and
ttie'Elt\"I'SOXl· College club.
'The'da-tP /of t:'hP.· weddinit has not
yet ),eey

I
al

Penta is another chan store "swipe"
S'allrite boys,-you're making the
"dough"
The honorable MBr Frank V Bonzagni, who ·,,vrote last week's headliner, will study at the Harvard Submer School
F1 ank is looking forward to next year's English prize
Sam Sugai man, despite his t1 ying
efforts to avoid Summer school will
attend after all
Tina Vasquez will go to the hot
house to b1 ing up a few "C's" to "B's"
Tina will make a fine teacher with
he1 high ideals! She enters her senior year with 95 points!
Gaetano Tedeschi Will take a P G
11ext year and enter Tufts Medical
School "Teddy" has "ba1 king" ideals
I f my ears did not deceive 1ne, I
heai d that :Maira Sacco was getting
a job at the Peter Bent Brigham hospital

"Jake" Aaronson, who v.·on the battle a few nights ag'o on a decision,
will train at Jim Toland's gym .Jake's
manager picked him up out of the
"slums"
Eli "Einstein" Abramovitz will enter Tufts Medical School in the Fall
As for Joseph Todesco, he will
spend the
summer scanning
the
"Want" ads
Wish you luck Joe
Little Buster
Don't you cry,
You'll grow up
Bye and Bye!
And I wonder what Buster D'Anna
will be "when lie grows up "
Louis Tanner will keep his job as
Mr Merrill's assistant for next year.
"Charlie" l\tloran will also keep his
job as Mr Bussey's assistant.

Mario Uu1ana is going to make more
dough than any of us ever made! He's
going to roll in the dough for Umana's
Bakery
Norman
Sorenson
will
try
to
squeeze llimself into a newspaper office
Norman is going to follow the
newspaper profession.
Pauline Maggio is going to join with
"The Dancing Tootsies" revue for the
, summer. \Vhoop! \Vhoop! Whoopee!
As for me rm going to spend the
summer begging the editor not to
fire me from my most dishonorable
High School Box
Now Billy please
Don't fire me,
I'll fix it up
As you shall see!
"T'heck with you and the "High
Stool Box!"-"Aw Billy,-please!"

l

l

I

I

l\.To-w

i:lon't. llT'2'P him on!

:

M.aX)I·' _:e.ir~ces Braq,Y, d~ughter o_

Harold Nealon will help the chain
store to "gip" Hs "ignorant" customers
'

The "flying" Western Union will
hire plenty of our boys for summer
Wolk

~

.
ent: of Francis J~ Fox" son of tl:
~ and Mrs. .Thomas ~.. Fox _of: Ji

Severio Cedrone is going to sell
ice for Sandler in the day time and
"jerk" soda in Stone's in the evening

;~~fJi ~;t~veJii~~i ~ei:-1:.ma~ ~-:\ J;i.tzAbout· 200 relatives ·and.. fri ·

.

=.~"·ld. LUNCHEON·J>.AitT~
, .AT· June 20-The en·•
~:Jc

1\/Iartin Seeran is going to lease an
ice cream box and "I Sc1 earn!" the
summer away

~;:eyL~m~ulr~!~

~~~~ beitween 'the 1v
._
~BleacherY and United Choco-

11

1...1.au1o n1s tamous researches in summer school, after which he'll clip hair
for his college tuition
Martin Seeran is going to lease an
ice cream box and "I Screan1 ! " the
summer a·way
Severio

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

Cedrone

is

going

to

sell

ice for Sandler in the day time and
"jerk" soda in Stone's in the evening
Harold Nealon will help the chain
store to "gip" its "ignorant" customers
'
Penta is another chan store "swipe "
S'allrite boys,-you're making the
"dough"
The honorable MBr. Frank V. Bonzagni, who wrote last week's headliner, will study at the Harvard Submer School
Frank is looking forward to next year's English prize

rip.;,ton.

~· t·

FEENEY-HUGHES

·A·ctended by her six sisters,

.Miss oe:r7

tru<ie:· A Hughes, datlghter of' Mr. ari.(1

Sam Sugat man, despite his trying
efforts to avoid Summer school will
a ti end afte1 all

:Mi-.:..;·

istephen W. Hllghes of 2:4 StQ.ne·hurst street, Dorc,P.ester, was married
yesterday to Atty. Jch:q. s. Fe~n~y, '.?On
of Mr. ,and Mrs. Pa~ri-ck Feeney o; :~:L
Greenbrier street, .'Dorchester.
:
The Rev. John A: coughlin, assis.t~t
pastor of st. Petet':5. Church, Meetitjghouse Hill, celebrate'a 'the nuptial' ~ s
~oliowing the cere:mony
.
·'

Tina Vasquez will go to the hot
house to b1 ing up a few "C's" to "B's"
Tina will make a fine teacher with
her high ideals! She enters her senior year witl1. 95 points!

'I'he :;i.ix sisters vrho. surrounded .. tb~
bride were Miss Florence Hughes, t~.ch'.".
er of sc"j.ence at ~outh Boston hig·h
school, whc was Uiaid of honor; 1\.fi~

Gaetano Tedeschi "\vill take a P. G.
11ext year and enter Tufts Medic.ell
School "Teddy" has "barking" ideals

Kathryn· A., Miss Helen S. and Miss
Agnes L. Hughes 'and Mrs. Margaret
Delorey and Mrs. Evelyn White. :F'ran·Cis · P Carroll, member of the-- W~r-

town school corhmittee was be.st. man. !
Virginia Barry was flower .·g1rl,.·a~d:
Paul Tobin,. ring Jl:~ea!'er. ,· The u.sn.-er.<;..\

If my ears did not deceive mo?, I
heard that Mairo Sacco was getting
a job at the Peter Bent B1 igham hospital

~~~e:ftil~~~f-~~fi~~sT~6~~;r.J)'~~: '
geral/$ e,nd William.. Ahearn
: .:
About· 200 relatiy~s ·and ~frie:µcI,¥ .~t-wed<ii;ng' br,eakfast a~ ..:p:orCh~ter Plaza,
.followi.n

tended the

Do~h(;':ster,

"Jake" Aaronson, who won the battle a few nights ago on a decision,
will ti ain at Jim 'l'oland's gym Jake's
manager picked him up out of the
"slums."

,t.];te

Eli "Einstein" Abramovitz will enter Tufts Medical School in the Fall
As for Joseph Todesco, he will
spend
the
summer scanning
the
"Want" ads
Wish you luck Joe.

Little Buster
Don't you cry,
You'll grow up
Bye and Bye!
And I wonder what Buster D'Anna
will be "when he grows up.''
Louis Tanner will keep his job as
lvir Merrill's assistant for next year
"Charlie" 1\tioran will also keep his
job as Mr Bussey's assistant.
The "flying" Western Union will
hire plenty of our boys for summer
work
Mario Umana is going to make more
dough than any of us ever made! He's
going to roll in the dough for Umana•s
Bakery.
Norman
Sorenson
will
try
to
squeeze himself into a newspaper office
Norman is going to follow the
newspaper profession
Pauline Maggio is going to join with
"The Dancing Tootsies" revue for the
summ. er. ,vhoop ! Whoop! Whoopee!

,

As for me I'm going to spend the
summer begging the editor not to
fire me from my most dishonorable
High School Box.
Now Billy please
Don't fire me,
I'll fix it up
As you shall see!
•'T'heck with yon and the "High
Stool Box!"- ..Aw Billy,-please!"
Now don't u1ge him on!

I

Jean C1·ocher is going to shade herself under the palm of her hand
Silvio De Piet1 o is going to scout
a1 ound for a knee cap for his knee
Zaphe1 ana will enter S.u.ffolk !,.a ,v
Schoo~ the fall
I hope some of our girls ,vill be
fortunate enuff to receive letters of
fl drnission
to the Teachers' College
this suminer

l

l

SUN, ATTLEBORO, MASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.
~

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[,

-i

JUL,3-~

[\

JUL ·~-t931

I

~~==o:r ,.,.-i.ro-e-a:; coach oi'

;"3;1;;
I

0

Feeney-Hughes
A pretty wedding in which six sisters
of the bud~ we1e the b1ide's attendants
!r took place 'l'ues<laj mornhig at St.
Pete1 's church, l\feeting House Hill,
hen ).11.ss <.xe1 ti ntle Alice Hughes,
da!1gJ1ter of i\fr nnd Mrs Stephen W
i~ Hughes of :::!-! Stouellurst st, was mar1 ie-d tn. .John Stanton lfee-uey, son of
3:h tllld .Mrs J:»atrick Ifeeney of 22
Hreenhrier st 'l'h<~ nuptinl 1nass was

'l'h.e m8:ny frien(]s of Mr Richatd Mc-i."
Cau}e), who 1ecently received his de-1:o
g1ee of LLB ftom SuffeM~ &ei;"~hool'
gathe1ed at Bernice Hall in honor of.!
thiH occasion the past week.
'
M1. Rkha1d is the eldt'!st of' four sons·
of l\,!r and ~w1s James T McCau,ley,
of 4c1 Newman st1 eet, Sou_ th Boston .'
' lifetime 1esidents of the section
'
An intere·sting and varjed musical'
f programme was Pl esented by talented
1~lat~ves
~nd f1i.ends,
fono,ved 'by\
1 1
~ ~:1t~afurnished by th~,
1
1

le "'

I

~a ~m:ot-;~ob

Amo.n~ the }Crtists 1ep1esented were:
Mrs Helen Shea in vocal selections;
Mis James 'l' McCauley, mother of
the houo1 guest, in 1 equest numbers; \
~\11 Clement Mndeh 11s in novelty num-f

cPlellwt~d by Hev .John A Coughlin,
,vho performed the wedding ceiemony
He\ .Ifrancis J Kenney, pastor of St
,;.\lonica.'s Uhtueh of South Boston, and f
He,· '_fhom·!s J o·connor of Haverl1iU OC(•Ul)ied seats within the altar rail k
'l'be bride was escorted bv her fa- f
tlie1. \\ ith :;ix sisters as ai:te1Jd;u1ts
The.r were met :-1 t the aHa1 r:-1 il by the

f

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GAZETTE-TRANSCRIPT, WEYMOUTH

I.
_______

bi i,Jegroom all(l his best man, :Sc-hool

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(Plea•e turn to page 4)

·1

A I eeeptwn and breakfast for 200
followed at Dorchester Plaza
'rlie couple receivcO: rongt'qtulations
while standing under a ~oral canopy
1Ihtndng nrnl ;in .entertainment were
ProYided
·
The brideg10011) i.(;.. graduate of Boston College· H:ib'h and Suffolk Law
S~'"lie is fl; melnber of f'1e MnSsa! c?~setts -~r 11zg: assistant clerk of the
I c1 nl sess10n of tlie Boston Municipal
I Court
,
Mr ,,nd Mr/ Feeney left in the evening for n t:iip alo_ng the const nnd on
i rhPir 1eturn )vill mnke their home on
Welles av, Athmont.

JUL 3 ~ 1931
. BERCSTRO
APPOINTED NEW i
BANK TREASURER1
:J'i)
-I
~liver T. Bergstr~m, of the First!
National bank. Boston, has been chos-,
en treasurer of the Weymouth Trust
company, to succeed Willi~m W.1
1
Grieves, resigned. Confirmation of _the
appointment by the board of directors, 1
1
is expected next we,ek.
1
I
Mr. Bergstrom is a graduate of• ·
Boston Uni'versity and SuffQlk Law ,
school He has been afliiliat~h. :
the Boston bank for about nine years:,'·

be1:.;;

a

h:-n rnon.\·

).fadehos, .N!1
1

:j )f~ia

~{;i~iiani

ti io

;.v.i: 1 . !

inC'ludlng

Edwazd and Mt

Rich8.rd\

com-l

_;\,frJchen headed the
mi1 tee f;f arrangements and presented;
, a ?e_a11t1fui )louquet of 1o~es anO. del-1,
phm1ums to _MrF McCauleJ· while Mr r
James Fenton made the Presentation; /
to Mr Rieha id of the pm se of gold , \
from relati\es and friends and a hand-!
some watch f1 om his father and \,

1

i

Iguest•
1

1

~0 MR. .
: ,
RICHARD M'CAULEY-.i;

;:::vations at Cluny .
Reveal ~hoir Pillars



'J"(
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------~--~--~-~PATRIOT LEDGER, QUlNCY, MASS.

1

EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

Engage1'ent of ·Maryetta
'Polk at Woodward lnsti•
tute Staff Announced

'JUL 1 31931
EVENING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

.)\\\. \~ \~\

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1
'

MEDFORD

James G. Lane, son of Mr and Mrs
Martin J. Lane, 51 Marston st, Med.
ford Center, Lind secretary to Pres
French of the Boston & Maine Railroad, was .m.artied yesterday to Miss
, Ma'l'ion Burdett, daughter of Mr and
Mrs Harry Burdett, 529 Ma.in st, Winthrop, in the rectory of St John the
Ev-angelist's Church, Winthrop.
On
their ·ret}lrn from their trip Mt' and
MrS Lan~will reside at 51 Marston st.
Tho bridgroom is a graduate of Bostoh
High School of Commetce and Suffolk
Law S-Ohool, has been a resi~of
t h ~ seven years and connected
with the Boston & Maine five years.
The bride iS a graduate of mast Bos•
,tOn High ScliOdl a.nd has be:ert_ a"?tive
1in junior social activities in Winthrop.
'-·- -----.-.-_,_____~..l·--... -"".._

,..'!I

!t!J &!I

t,r

WINTHROP
' ~S.fltltat :M:idsumIIler cartlival of
the
ciWci Metcalf Pbst, V. F. w.,
will o
on the post grounds on Win..
th!<;P _ Sh?re Drive, ll:e~r Sturgis st,
ton1glj.t a~ w!11 ~On~ini,le evexy night
tor ~he next .t~o :«"0e'ks". Many e.ttractive features h!3,ve been arranged
~nclud~ng a h;Jgh-di-Viiigs tunt. Dr Jo~
seph F. Fletlliilg iS chttfrtnan of the
-committ~e. The proceeds will g 0 to

f

the post• s_ gen~i'al fund .
Mor~ th~n 100 ntenibets

or Winthrop
c.o;ttt1cll1 H. of C , enjoyed the coun ..
cit s annual ou.ti~g yesterday. 'l'he
p~ty took . off from the Winthrop
Y~c:z:it Club at 9 :so· ~· the cruiser
Dreattte:_, enjo'jred a do · .e;h.bu;t's' deep
~eakfishing {tnd then _ anded at Pedoc s I.sla_nd for spOTts. .Fr'ank Mc..

~![1;1l

Was chairman pf the . «;ln~

f

J.

r
:•/

:Miss Marion Bul'<i,tt of 529 M:aln st
'
became t~e bride of Jamss G. Lane of
I
_MedfOl'd 1n the re:etot-y o~ the Church
of St John the Evangelist- yesterday 1
afternoon. Rev James S. Kelleher of..
ficiated. Mrs Lane is the daughter of
Mr and Mrs Harry Burdett a:b.d is a
graduate of the East Boston High
School. :M:r Lane is a graduate of th"'
High School o--r comm.ere~ and sur: .
folk ~cltool of Boston. He ;£""1'1'!""
vat:e- secte'taty to Pres Fretlcli of the
:Soston & Maine Railtdad. After a
hafi~ymaon Ur littd Mts Lane Wl\J 11-ve

:•ln ¥edfqr!l,

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert James
P,olk of Wollaston, announce the
engagement of their daughter, ·;
Maryetta to John W. Beverstock lf'<>f West Roxbury.
t
-Miss Polk is a graduate of 1_
Woodward Institute, 1922, and, t
Jackson College, 1927. While at
Jackson, Miss Polk was treasurer (
<>f he<' class all four years, vice f
president of Masque, the honorary
dramatic club, secretary o:f the ,1
class day and commencement com· "
niittee, and a member of Alpha Xi i!
Delta sorority, For the past four
years she has been teaching his- 1
tol°y and science at Woodward 'In· ~
stitute.
·
~
Mr. Beverstock is a graduate of 4
Suf{.Q_lk Law .school and is a mem- ~.· •'
ber ol ihe Mash'$usetts Bar asSOciatlon. At present he is employed, ·cl
at tlte Shawmut ~ational b.ank· in
Boston.
.6

r· . -

s,
and h3f been '7'ery active in m.unic1p
and -sdcih.l affairs.

Ruhng of Supreme Court 1n ,
Plain-Right to Arrest~.·H9w'.· ever, Disputed :. . (
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~J:i

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;JO;!' 8-oNS FEELS THE URGE.

Dear Editor:May I have the courtesy o~ .Y~~r
columns to announce my candid~:y.-for_
the office of Councillor from W~?(".3.
I was born in Cambridge ·
cated in the Cambridge publ ..
I am married and the -~.it
children, th~ee of wh9~ al:'e,a~i'ng
the Cambridge public schools. , I am 8:veteran of the World w_ar. After the, ;war, I studi€d law at Suffolk Law, ,
Sc ool and received the ~ of i
.
. i was admitted to practice as
. an attorney in 1;he courts of the Com-5 ·
, monwealth of :fylassachusetts ·on AP'ri:f.l
! 15, 1924, and was admitted to practice
j as an attorney in the District Court,
- of the United States on June 1, 1926.1
I have been in close contact with city)
'affairs for a nu.m.1ber of years, having l
studied law in the office of the City['
Solicitor before my admission to pr:1-c--tice as an attorney and later acting\
i as law clerk for the Cambridge Law
! Department for approximately six_

jllot the usual practice to sena 'i:o "tnis
urt a

copy of it, where the jurisdic-

1

•1t!~nn~t~~u.!1~f;er~·c.ord

Alth.ough controversy still rag~d
v.:e ~u~t .asin1 in legal circles yesterday over the re- tme tha! the court had JUr1~d1ction. '
t?, cent l"nl-lng, by Judge Albert E. A_very t~~~ti~r~alw:~ ~~~~~sta:a:s s6a1a_e;. ~~
1
~ ~ in Q'-:lincy District Court that a pe~- can seE;, J?-O _qu_est,ion was raised in
10
a'i son might be taken from his . ~ed 11:,r~;~ ~~:1
Te~~d~ri~~
p· 1charged with drunkenness, a dectsion ~ted a convicti~n of tp.e offence
b~ of the '"Supreme Court of ~his State arged
.•• "
~~ ~as cited 'to b.ack the rulin~.
Judge A,very Under Knife

k

ti; fhe

~!~:

1

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some sma1t memher or--ffi"e.. bar will be
able to upset the ruling of Judge
Ave1).
'The law plainly says: 'Whoever is

~~~~!

~~~!

1

Judge Avery_ unde1went an operation,
in · a Boston ho~pital yesterday on his
1 eyes
The ~~ation was pe1formed by
_Dr. Harold l3
Chandler of Beacon

~~~~~

~~aie. s:~t~s oio~~~o~:a:~;
in a' state of intoxication committing a
breach of the peace or disturbing others
by noise, may be arreste:d, etc.' IS"ote
l that there is no comma after the sec, ind use of the word 'intoxication' It
as plain as the nose on one's face.
runkenness is a sin, bUt no crime until
; disturbs others. The Legislature so
1tended it," Representative Moore said
\tst night

-!

Disagrees With Judge

~1~e;~;·eit~~ ~:;k,o!u~:s;en~~l~!ea
time.
WHiiam
H.
Lewis,
famous
local
authority on the "Volstead Act and constitutional law who participated with
Attorney James A Cress-well in pressing the "liquor buyer" case to a
victorious conclusion in the United
States Supreme Court, said last night
that technically speaking he found no
objection to Judge Avery's law, but that
~:f~~~ul!~~~~s~~n:el~1sin:p::i~nqu~~~~~
home drunkenness~
Cresswell
is . among
the , Boston
!awyers who believe that a mans home
1s his castle and !hat _he c~nnot be ar-

lone prominent Greater Boston disfict judge, who said that he did not
Oject to his ideas being published, al~ough he did not want his name used

I

t

~eg:Je ~h~=m~1~~ ~f :~~r!~~~f;~r~:
g suspicion of a felony.
Drunkentess 1s a misdemeanor and no felony,
Ge said.
.
,\ Still another D1stnct Court Judge,
,amuel R
Cutler of Chelsea, 1n mak-

~ Maine

Jurist's View

'Y==

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\

One Boston lawyer quoted a Maitie
Judge, Justice Peters, as saying that a
man was drunk mote the width of the
sidewalk became when important tc;> hu:n
than the length.

,

~

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TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASSe

~·~f :o~!~o~n~e~e:~
::::i~~ninv!i;
0
1g
gentle and Iamblike when the officers ,
lat all- drunl~enness is no.t criminal-!.. called no arrest without a
warrant
rcoming criminal only. when a defen- -would apparen~ly be justified," Dean.
~nt becoJneS voluntarily drunk, and Gleai,;on L. Archer of the Suffolk Law
'1ing d1 unk in a public place, or ~e- School co.mmented last night on the
f in a private, place, made a dis- home drinking situation
rbance of the peace
Judge .c1:1tl_er,,
··A man's home is his castle which he
0

I

;:nni~~t ~~fa cf~ :t In 1927, but that I~ya~t:=~~~!1 h:g~~~~t w;~~gf:! i;;;::!~1!
;~ :~:s~~:~ti~~ ! tees this right- to all law abiding citiquoted correctly
1

\ ,lid

n;:>t

c~re

to

comment on

I

the

:. i5ent sitHua:;nLaw neads
0
\
n..
on 44 of chapter 272 reads:
.
oeyer in found in a place, or In- I
is a public
Sta_te Of . is
1::-a,uon
r~.... in any place in a state o.f . in-,
fa:tion
committing a
breach
ot

~

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0

.

~~t

\! ~!~sb~!~us!~~ihs~~,;{;7, fd~~~s;\r:i~
Phys1c1an:,,, was quoted as say1ng

iS

i

Although not an offi~ hold.er, I),
have -worked faithfully 1n the inter-;
C'-sts of the people of Ward 3 and shall;
continue to do so if elected to repre-,
sent them as their councillor. I be-!
lieve that I aim best fitted by my train-;
ing and experience to represent the
eople of Ward 3.

1

~~~~:~ t~erre bl~c~~~~;b~~~:x~~a~~: n;~~~ 1
bors or 111.::ehhood of harm to h1s fam1l:y I
through the intoxicating dnnk1ng

0

~Jte~f tl~~~r!e~a~ ct:1~g~of "i,e;Yt'.a:e~
rom h1s home as a drunken person
less the -officers had been 1nv1ted

I

L

I

0

\~e ~r:'~:l:~b~i'fho i~e:sw![ra;;ttj

zens, but if a man commits a crime in
1
~i~!ff~:go; c;
~~bt~m; c:i%1~
nal, officers of the law have a right t~
invade that home and make arrest.
therein law has come down to us front.
"This

i~!. ~~

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- - - - - - ~ ,,f

Bx-Mwwr-::;!r Ed
man of tJ!'te QOard
f

o

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':riJ~flc~~~u~;;d st~~i\nco~i:ro~;
1 ~~===tan
11table place until he has recov- ,
from his mto:dcat10n "
orney Albert I. Burgess of Quwr,rho practises in Judge 1 Avery's

\ g~~1:.::~~gfo:i! ia~~wn~~1 \ i n t!t~ .,
Post reporter that drunkenness
,: :it~ ~~ee. l~r:a~ti:l J~:ti~=a~;._reus t

~~~ !'c!~:o~x:~~ J;

-

1t~.

0

.
~frr~1:
..--, ._Q.·.u. inC:Y c_ourt I
d~r·>t'1e ,I.a_w to-! f
·ot::'the, crnne of
. · ,~~--~
.,
::

.

-~~-· -

.:;_2~.{-_{~~~i. ~~~I

] fy

~ir- j

~

K~llo j
g,

M~;:j.'d :\f rs.~1ef\,}

'1

·
,, ~
· ,tre street, whO have
rge_' ,'rffjjS·U~t~ gh~~4'_,t·g(_US~', p/~tn
.,_, ,_


mat

ancient times and_ is abundantly .su_p- '!
ported by. decisions in this common- '

~~~~t~n

'

/,

~

m,aei ,l
JI~

~,

w~a~~~d

h_

~

e, Guying/_\: he
1

--

--

month

c~t~~

lra~?~~~h11 'pri~/hf~r
highest marks in constitutional law
at the SuffQLk_.Law= School
T Earl
Dick, of t h i ~ ~ n seco~ld.honors
in the freshman class and was a,0\-·ard-

.t __~ed

t!_Je _ Gle~so~

1:-~-_:.:_h~~

,

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B!SJEF!JN,

ttW·

SEP5

ITEM,

'mt

'i

'Lowlton, in the case ot the Com-1

I ,

~t~~s

~~1!~.e·a.-1·~-~ns~-r~c~l:!~
::~
been set aside. The woman was
l'U.l}kenness in North. BerkiCt -Court, after it was testi-1
rrested in her own home.
Court sustained the lower
g and the case was carried \
eme Judicial Court

j~S!

'

~~i_~i~Jl aPJ?e.ars i~ volume 1$4,
·and 1s da.te,;1 in 1903 It follows:
'R .. L. C 213 S 39, one may be
· ..'Pf-) drunkenness ~Y. the vol'µ:;fo'.' Ot -1nto:X:icating liquor,• althe offence -was'· 'committed :in

,·,!_,'.'.

I

::;;;eft:

F~n;;'/~~~t

~~~~lteif a~~r:i:~~n i:r!~
11 e on March 21, 1903, under R .. L. C 212
~. charging the defendant with drunl,:ness by the voluntary use of intoxiting liquor- at Korth Adams on March
1903. On an appeal to the Superior
,urt the defendant was tried before
~hofiela·, J, who ruled as st.ated in
,e opinion. The jUry returned a ver,ct of guilty; and the defe_ndant al:ged exceptions.
"'P. -T. 'Moore, for the defendant.
••,J F. Noxon, distriet attorney for the
Commonwealth "
·~
Decision of Chier Justice Marcus F.
Knowlton:

Lying Upon Couch
••At the trial upon this complaint "f.oidrnnkenness the def-endant offered no:

I ?~~;n~~~;:t ;~1q~h:e~J~~~~~~\t: r1:,_1:~;
fendant could not be convicted.'
The
judge refused to so rule and instructed
the jury 'that if they were satisfied
upon all the evidence that the de~
fendant, when found in this roo:rh,
.,Vas drunk by the voluntary use o:t intbxicating liquor, she might be convict'ed under this complaint '
To the refusal and to the instruction, an ex,'.Ceptiori was take;n
"The evidence tended strongly to

""i ------

WllJS SUFFOLK LAW

. 'f,· ~.

1'tc·a;:~;;~~a~6{f~i__~ ~~-~:o.~t caus:
defendant iS b:rolfgh':li· r€igularly
1
&kenneSs
t.~fC~-~~i9~~;
)ater-ial uPon the issue of . his guilt·
;ther he was ,arrested legally, or -was
,ested at all, bE,fore_¥ the complaint
';,made . • . • ·
·

I

f

'".: l

SCHOOL SCHOLARSi'§!tJ

In t_he class _of 1933, of Suft:otk-~w,
School, Harry Vvheel•el" of~Uatnn
has won se~ond hon~~ O~- a.11. .... ~-"VJF-i
ate of 87 11_:-14 per cent:/..._e...._ti~l-i~,il
him to the G leas.on L. A.rche:r s,choI~

l;.______~c.;__~~--__:__---------~~-~----_:_--.-~L---.:..c.~~_.,.==------

I,:.

f'l

i
GS l.1-an1rroc:,;n ~o- .,,.a.._,..

\l ter of Mr..,. and Mrs VVilliam Hall.~ .
gan, f~rmerly of Shepard street. . ,;:}l J

l

·: ··l)f"~~e Court Decision

i

I

~<:h?!~:ship_

_

~

lone prom1nent Greater Boston dis-

..... ~._-..

... ~ ....... ,-,.:,u<e;,

£U.:,

;

J:-'UUV.U

,:O,l)'VU1.

lict Judge, who said that he did not
b;tect to his ideas being published, al...,.

ough he did not want his name used
~ t of courtesy to .Judge Avery, askrted that a man could not be taken

is his castle and that _he cannot be arrested for becol!ung 1ntox1cated there
unless there 1s disturbance to his ne,gh-

Although not an office holder~ 1~ ~
have ~worked faithfully in the inter-(
es.ts: of the people of Ward 3 and shall'. continue to do so if elected to repre-:
~ sent them as their councillor.
I be- i_
lieve that I am bes.t fitted by my train- i
ing and experience to represent the i
eople of Ward 3.

home drunli::enness~
Cresswell
is . among
the • Boston
la,vyers who belleve that a mans home

~~ss hi:heho~:ce~~

fa_e;egc!>Je
J fh~!rn:i~fi
fig

::;;usp1c1on

1ess 1s a

of

a

~airu~:ee:
~f

11:i~~~~

~~:r1:f1~K;r~= I

felony

Drunken-

f;:~~u~rh

,

/

Jurist~s View

I

~ Maine

One

\

hi~~1ht~~x7~at~;1 dt;!m1;:~n!aunl~

Boston

lawyer

quoted

a

.M::s>r.:e

~~~ - ~

misdemeanor and no felony,

Judge, Justice Peters, as .8aying that a
~e sa1d.
man w-as drunk when the width of the
,\ Still another
District Court judge, sidewalk became more important t9 }um
amue1 R
Cutler of Chelsea, in mak- than the length.
1
\t.g a public speech in. 1927, address1_ng
If a person 'Were to get drunk in hi!
lie Mai,;sachusetts Society of Exam.in- own home, and 'Were to remain ve1 y
'".-. Phy. sicians, was q"?oted as _sa?'1ng gentle and latnblike when t.he officers.
1at. all drunkenness 1s not criminal.?... called no arrest without a
'-''arrant
;coming criminal on1y. -when a _defen- would apparently be justified," Dean.
mt beco1nes voluntarily drunk, and Glea::.on L. Archer of the Suffolk Law
,ing di unk in a. public pl~ce, or ~e- School com1nented last night on the
r in a private_ place, made a dis- home drinking situation
f'bance of the peace
Ju_dge Cut~erpl
"A man's home is his castle which h•

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

I.

),

I

::nn::~~. ~:fd
\

I

I~~T,~~~~;s a
I

.

invade

~oe...-er is found in a state of 1nf,~tion
in a public
place, OI
is
&i"tf;n an:Or!!i~:ini;

:

that

Fx hfeawr, ::J, Ed

man of tJ:te Ooard
/

:!, hh~,!'~r!

0 ir~:ee,1

home

and

~i;~t1ti;
make arrest• ,

therein
I,
"This law has Come down to us froIJl I

;~~i:~t i:m~!c:';~!n;.·s i;. b~.{;.i~anc~in;!~~.= , 1

si~~eac~f i~f

~~~~t~n

0

~t:r;1~;::~b~!\ho ~~e:sw!ira~ttj

'eriff, deputy sheriff,_ cons.table ?r press a
!:l officer, and kept' In custody 1n ,
litable place until he has recov~. ,
from his intoxication "
orney Albert I. Burgess of ~uill- .
~~:st::cf~~~: ~nne~u!~:.IeAo:er~= d
drinking row last night by tell-.
!eif1~t a re6r~1;!~ !~~\iedr;:a~~~ness Ji
903 the late Chief Justice Marcus
tOW1tOn, in the case of the Com-r
~alth against a North Ad~ms womade the precedent 'WhICh has ·
·,been ~et aside. The woman was

,

f

~-~1!~~~ ifc!~~o~x:i~ 1:

'.

' A

_,,::

·-- --- : __

w;~-~glf:!
tees this right'-- to all law_ abidin? cit_i•
zens, but if a man commits a crime 1n
his ho1ne or fl'ees to his home after

How Law Reads

\1?tion 44 of chapter 272 reads:

1;~::!~1!

! ~Ya~t::~:~~ liaeg~~~:

c~~1:,f ;~ ::!sii;!:a_t1~~
~ ~uot-ed correctly 1n 1927. but that
i rlid not c?-re to comment on the
,sent situation.,

1931
._!--.~

('<..~ j:_,

l

(.,...:l -

- :F ~~i~- j

--

···J

·

r,

JamefSJ

m"'

;}::ti
~e ,,

e

h
.

Ou:gh1g,{

-- .

I

:;=.,.e.1~.-.)

1\~1Jld ~Irs
K
of
tre street, vvho h a ~
=,'r. es.um,11:'r
gh~:f!::_Lus.t, p',5 'n
a
,:o,~

.ri..,,,...,,_,,

\he

I

I

month

-_/

· ,e,legali.t.Y·. of the.··1

Harold F i1cD0nneI1, of this cit),
won the Bradley cash prize for the
highest marks in constitutional law
at th
SuffQil,;:_.Lq._w_S h l
J E I
Dick,e of t h i ~ O n c s~~o~id honi;s
!:
in the freshman class and was award.t_ J~e<!_ t~=~ ~le~so~ L ~rc~er ~_:hol~~s~_iP __

th·e arre::.-t
inC'Y court I
..the: law to-/
liC, c.t'irile of'
._

f

.\~~·~~~i~rt~s:ri~r
-

ft

~:s ~:;~:
0 ~i::; !I
rh~
1

0

r~~ie~uis~a~~!d
and the case was carried I
e Judicial Court

Co~rt D~cis!on

'.

t

on -al)pears in volume 184,
~~s dated iri 1903
I t follows:
·L. C 21~ S 39, one may be
•of", drunkenness by the vbl-1

,

uSe,"' of intoxicating hquor,• al-

th,e offence was committed in
cii.us-l

e
liC dwelling house , :n::'ithout
tlisturbanc'e:
'• ,,

I

efendant 1s broUgnt regularly
to....answe:r:. ,to_ a_;complaint for
ness under R. L. C 21:j!: $ 39, ~tt--1s
'latena] upon the issue of his guilt

1~:,n:~~;1
:;~~

i~~=~ h:t
ar;:i:i
j;c made . • • .
,Complaint rece1ved and sworn to In

w:{t

- --~---- lreD~\~t~:~c~o2~:i90;~ u'"~~~h~rnL. BJr2~2
it, charging the defendant with drunb;:iless by the ,oluntary use of intoxiting liquor, at North Adams on March
1903.
On an appeal to the Superior
>Urt the defendant was tried before
~hofield, J , '-''ho ruled as stated in
,e opinion. The jUry returned a ver.ct of guilty; and· the defendant al:ged exceptions
·
"P .T. "M:oore, for the defendant.
••.r F. Noxon, distriet attorney for the
Commonwealth ·~
;
Decision of Chief Justice Marcus P.
Knowlton:

Lying Upon Couch
''At the trial upon this compiaint for
drnnkenness the def-endant offered no:
evidence but requested the judge to rule,;
'that upon all the evidence, the defendant could not be convicted.'
The
judge refused to so rule and instructed
the jury 'that if they -were satisfied
upon all the evidence that the defendant, when found in this roorh,
:\Vas drunk by the voluntary use of in:tbxicating liquor, She might be convict"ed under this complaint'
To the re·.tusal and to the instruction, an ex;'.tieption was taken

I s~~~he th~~id~~~e a~~~:~:n'tst~~!Iyve:;
much
intoxicated
by
the
use
of
whiskey at the time of the. original arrest, although she was lyJng upon a
couch and making no noise or other
disturbance
The exception presents
the question -whether one can be convicted of drunkenness 'in a :P:t:ivate ,
dwelling house, where he is n1.aking :
no disturbance and is not exposed to
the public view.
This question is answered by the language of R. L chap- :
ter 212 section 39.
The offence made ;
punishable by this section is 'drunken-.
ness by the voluntary use Of intoxicating liquor,' and the place 'Where the offence is committed, whether public or
private, ls not an element to be considered in determining whether an accused pe:rson is guilty under the la'W.
None of the cases relied on by the _defendant bear upon the construcUon of
this statute.

IIJegaJity of No Effect
"The defendant contends that her arrest \vithout a warrant 'Was illegal, and
that, therefore, she could not be convicted upon the complaint
The legality or illegality of arrest does not in
any way affect the offence with which
she was charl;"ed in the complaint In
Common"Wealth vs. Tay, 110·· Mass .• 192,
it -was held that the Superior Court had
jurisdiction on appeal to try upon a
, cc,9ipialnt for being an idle and disord-erly person, one arrested without a
warrant, whethe1:: his arrest was legal
1 or illegal.
"So here, if the defendant was regularly brought before the court to an-

li ~~i~h

ttia~ cb::!~la~\y fo~:~~n~!~n~!~
I ceived, it was immaterial
upon
the
i question of her guilt whether she had
been art ested legally -or illegally, or arrested at an, befo1 e the complaint was
made. The record shows that she was
'brought befo1 e said court by virtue of
a complaint in due form of law, issued
by Said court,' and riothing in the record indicates .that any question of jurisdiction 'Was raised, either before the
District Court or be!ore the Superior
Court. Although the warraf!t Is not set
out in the record, we infer that a· warrant on the cornplnint was <laly ji;;sued
and ser"\ed. Inasmuch as the wa11ant

!,;.,.,_c:____=,ci-·ci·if:SSC,-.cc-~--'-----------'--'-""-""""'--'---'---'-'-"----"-

ITEM,

BSf'P'SN,

SEP5

. ;,,,:;,• \·'';:',,, ·,.· _,:.2j;,1., :,

·,c>';;"7.~4F-""'""'illff~'Y',~'' :•"

rEVENING GLOBE, BOST(lN~SS.

' ,·: '

j ,·

'''.'~",("(

• ·,~

TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

st? 2
AUG 1 61931
r-

?""' ~ ""··

:·~·eq;u_:;ru:-i_u_,_~a:ncr--m~y oe-_

Ge~R. - B e e ~ t

\
l).ad.:.

T.en~, of the arrest.

~c . emic 1:e:r si~progress, both the 1'\''
~:P';.ilh~~gi;,~~1s~!~
tio · is already 111
0

for

,crltninal law. Contracts L will be. glv•n

sult in a. rearrs.ngement of :sopb.omore
subjects, -but such changes -will not go
0

peration until September, 1932.

----

--·-- - - -

MORNING GLOBE, BOSTON, MASS.

ISUFJ;.QJJ( BEGINS 26TH YEAR
uw. SCHOOL
!

of

aopb.omore

2,ubjeotei,

but

such

,ohanges will not go into operation un ...

ti! Septsmber, 1932.

-.---------

' ADVERTISER; BOSTON, MASS.

I

1. I Capture Three Scholarships
for Past Year
/

Two brothers won three scholarships
ac
( / cording to announcement~ by Dea 1/ Gleason L Archer of the Suffolk la n
sch?ol The two are Lawson and
w
:ngh~ of Toronto, Can. Lawson won
:.
e. Thomas J Boynton .scholai-ship the
Steinberg scholarship and the Br~dley
: cash prize. Byron won the D%Vid I
, Walsh schol3:rship.
J ~arl Dick of cambrid
ond honors in the fr h ge won secwas awarded t
es man cla.ss and
: scholarship Hahe Gleason L. Archer
. won th A' h r,ry Wheeler ot Allston
mores. e
~~h~~arship for sopho'// the George _l· Fr g tn of Beverly won
Ralph 'Y Wilsonos w~~hoi~:Shi_t. and
scholarship for juniors H
cher
1 Donnen of Cambrid
arold F Mc/ ca.sh prize for the
~on the _Bradley
~!-ttional law.
es rank 1ll con-

I/ and two cash prizes for 1930-31

'I

I

Sa~I ,/!t

gg

wa;

:i:~~r~u;l!~.

.

i,

·Su1rolk La.w Sohool will begin its
: 28th ~cademi,c. ·year on sept 21. ;aegistiitlon· is ~1rea-dy in progress both for
the ·1a.w sphool alld the new preparatory 11chool.
A ne:w plan goes into operation this
year applying to the ,cla.s~ of 1935 and
futuTe classes, calling for s. slight '
change 1n program. During the :first
se:mester tbe freshman w1U have torts
1t1troduct1on to the study of law and
crlminal Ja.w.
Contracts I will be
given ln the second sem.es:ter of the
t:reshma.u ye.ax, Contracts II in th·~
first semester of the sophomore yea!'.
This will result in a. rearrangement

. BROTHERS TAKE
I :I . ')Sf FFOLK HONORS

j!

1n the second semester o:f th~ :freshman
year· contracts I:.L tn the first aemester
o:f the aop,homore year. This wlll :reinto

'

SALEM, Sept 2-At a nuptial rna!'ls
fn St James Church today, Rev Rich~
~rd :a:awke officiated at a ceremon
m which both bride and' groom wer!
teachers at Salem Hit.,l:t' School Miss
Irene c;a.therine. McGrath, who becam•·
!he bride of Richard Henry Rockett
is th~ daughter of Mrs Mary A M •
G~ath and a sister of City Council~:M1ch~el F McGrath, who gave her
marriage The groom is a resident of
Marblehead, and a son of Mrs Alice
P Rockett of that town
The maid of honor was· Miss A.""nes
'T McGrath, sister of the brid; ""'a1td
: brother of the groom, Edward R,;ckt~, was best man A niece of the
bride, Mary ~ouise McG.rath, daughter of Councilor and Mrs McG1 e1fo
;as flower girl. Ushers were Joseph T•
1 F cGrath of Salem and Lawrence B.
ennell of West Roxbury
'
'+.he g~wn of the bride was of ivory
satm, s1.mply mad\'! and worn with a
tulle veil, caug~t at either side and
~t. the back with dusters of valley
hhes and orange blossoms. The maid
o~ honor wore a ruffled gown of pale
pink and blue, and a hat to matc·h
a_nd the flower gill's costume
long-skirted frock "\\""ith.

J

· semester the :freshmen w111 llav• torts,
introductlOn to the· 111tudy of la.W and

\ i

in..M~d~f

MISS MCGRATH WED
~HARD H. ROCKd°T

1

la.w school and the new preparatory
. ~chOol.
,
[
A new plan goes into O\l~Ta.tton this
year, a,.pplyi:og to th& 018.ss. ?f 1935, and
l future classes, calling. tor ,a. .slicht
.change in 9 rogramme. purin•c th& 11.rst

'

. Breakfast for the immediate families was served .at the Hotel Haw• i
thorne, afte.r which the couple left ,for
the moun_tams and Canada.
D The bride is a graduate of Notre ,
ame Academy and Emmanuel C01lege, and a member of the Aristos,
f~ub of Boston. She has been teaching!
;1story and civic~ at the- high, school.'.
he groom, who ls a Latin instructor
1ihe school, is a graduate of Boston i
o ege and the Su~Lafw ~hool
will live at 6
s ,
ar'ble- :

I
l

\'

tt

~::J"

~-~----

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, M.ASS.

ce~-

Salem Teachers Married

AUG

A

6193i

if

~t M orning Cer,emon")
...

~

This m~rning at _St~ Jam~s·s Church in

ll

t

· Salem, at a nuj~~al rn"ass celebrated by t
i Rev Richard Hawko. Miss Irene Cath· l I
I erine McGrath, ·i!aughter of Mrs. Mary ; [
i A McGrath of Beach avenue, Salem, be,
).. cam:.e the bride of ,Richard Henry Rock'f
of Mrs . .AliCe P Rockett of Mar-

~i!h.!~~-

The bride was attended by her sister,
Miss Agnes T. McGrath, and the bride·
groom bY his brother, Edward Rockett
of M;arblehead
A niece of the bride,
Miss Mary Louise McGrath, da,ughter of
City Cou~cilor and Mrs. _Michael F Mc·
G-rath of Salem, was flower girl. A wedding breakfast followed th~ ceremony at
the Hotel Haw_thorne·.
The bride is a graduate of Notre Danie
Academy and Emma.nuel College and is
a member of the Aristos Club of B.o.stonu.
The bridegroom is a graduate of Bos· ·

~~l~e~e~~~s

~~'*:

;~th
t~:in~~
of the Salem High School. They··.are to
make their ho~e in Mar]?l~he~~ ~

J
,I•
_ _ _ _ _!__ --

.

I' j
I

I

, A

I
.1

ll

l

l
I\ll.V.1.'<.&:.o.._

- --

Jowe.st rates and cosL~ ~">·--_
Holll.s Arnold. Realtor, 104 Orosvepor Bldg
YOUR·PROPERTY-Is it adequately financed?
We arrange satlsfactory mortgagel!I -011 desirable properties Libei·ty Land Co Gaspee
9578.

Wanted-To Borrow

41

SECOND MORTGAG:&-$3000. wanted on new
property worth $20.000
Good investnt~nt.
good location: B<;-C interest and 10% bonus.
title "Policy: first rnortgage $8500 Addr~s:i;
C-135. Journal Office.
$2500------First mortgage, city p:r.·operty. taxer\
:
$4200; no brokers Address C-140, Journal
OfTice.
·
$4000--For n'-r-st~m-or~t-g-,g-e~a-t 6% on onf'" ...
family 1 esidence. no ,::ommissions
Address
R-138. Journal .Office.

\

'l
'

Instruction
Local Instruction Classes

43

1

DRF..SSMAKING-Take advantage cf our
spring classes; eight lessons, $5. Day and
e,•ening. McDowell School, 335 Westmin~ter street.

Musical, Dancing, Dramatic

44

B ~ u i t " R r . -:Hawaiian guitar, 'mandohn.
ukµlele, modern progressive methods. Hib_bard A. Peny. 195 Clifford st. De>::_~:<~ 81~_?·
BANJO-Ha\vaiian guitar
violin. mandolin,

~t~~sri~°C~~~·rv:"t~i;;, ~is~~ti~e f~t~!~:

pee 0790.
·
DANCING-Ballroom and Rtage; clasl!:e.S forming now: also singing and dramatics Barlow Dancing Scl1ool 116 Dorrance
P'lanta tions 9S49.
7
DANCING-M-od e_r_n~b~a~ll~r-oo-m-,~!o-x~tr-o7t.-w-al~t-z;
i::eason's latest steps. Private instruction.
Gray's Studio, 95 Andem st. West -3378-J
JAZZ-Piano. banjo. saxophone; 20 easy private ]es.sons: booklet free. Christen.Sen, 513
Jackson,. Bldg
Gaspee 0277
I:.:istntments
rented.

45

Private Instruction

AUTOMOBILE DRIVING-Best instruction:
moderate rates; traffic experience; license
preparation. Laporte Auto School, 271

A:;~~i~::· D~~:JJG7 3T_R_U_C_T_I_O_N___
i~~~son

dual pedal c.an; R. I Auto SchOol. ·R'a.;ymond
Cyr. instructor. 23 Ardn1ore~ave. West 4196.
BARBERING, BOBBING-Chain o! school&
and shops; earn while lear'ning; day-evening. Vaughan's System,·15 Chestnut st.
BARNBROOK
SECRET..ARiAL
SCHOOt=Young ladies only; 28th year; shorthand,
bookkeeping. , individual instruction: day,
evening.
87 --Weybosset.
Gaspee 5981.
BEA'\U'l'Y
CULTURE-All branches taught,
day, e\'eniug classes; our tr~ining prepares
you to pass State examinatig_n; employment
agency connected with sch ··!·
Write for
rate$. terms
.Rhode Island 'Academy o!
Hairdres;;ing ~nd Gosmetic Therapy. "'Approved School,'' Rooms 512-513, 290 West-

minster.
CONTRACT-a.nd auction bridge,

-accredited.

fi~~hili~~~cPlaii\~i1~~!li091:udio ·at

R

Way-

I. AC.~DEMY-6f BeauiY Culture. Inc. All
branches t'aught practically and scientifically. New England's largest school~ und,;;:r
State supervision; also employment ~g~ncy;
8
~fO~k~r c~;~~i-nfie~r;_\~i~r:;[g~·
tations 8243.

J~~. Jf:!:

,\

j,
/!

~r· TRANSCRIPT, B<;)STON..,,.M.ASS.

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTCN, MASS.
POST, BOSTON, MASS.

AUG 28 l~l.

SEP t

.....

C ~ i g " h . t o:f the Eagle.'' "Which!
was ~ ~ d - b y the ~~at o.f ~indbergh.
'.

,

Brothers Win. 'I~hree :
Suffolk Scholarships,
Dean

Gleason

L.

Arche~

of

Su~lk

honors in. their respective classes.

o PR1ESrOOOo:.

.~n.,I"-\
.$

Be-

'1131

BRAf)Y·LEAfESf;
TO STIJDf .EOii-

!

Law- Sch.o6J today announced that. ·for,
the first tinie in the his.tory of the school
t..vo brothers, orie a sophomore and the
other a. fresh:tnan, have carried off' first

=

1

tween them they have. won three schol- .,ool
arships and t"WO ca.sh prizes for the -the·

!~1:io~Y;::;;r~:13:h:
La-wson 'Wright,

1

~f ~:o.Ynt=:;~eC~n~w-son-:i~~- ·
thirty;._two years o~ :;1,Uy

~;:· l: ti! :f~f;!m!:aY~:sw~ia~~:tdh~~; 1~~~'
!
Da"vid r.· 'Walsh scholarship and a cash'I~
prize for the highest mark in contracts
the year.
This year he is being,

:

for

:~~t'~~'; ~:v~~ ~:1ltafn°~n\~1*r;l!~t
0

general scholastic a,verage in, the sop'homore class and has also been_ a-w-ai::ded
the Steinberg scbolarshi~. -which is offered annually to the stu.dent w-ho mainfains the highest scholastic averaS'e in
his flrs,t t:w-o years of la-w- study. -He h,as
also .vOn the Bradley 'cash prize for the
highest average in the subjec-t of real
property in the sophomore year.
His
brothe.r,
Byron
'W"righ_t.
aged
twenty-nine, ,vas a.varded the David I.
VV~Ish scholarship .f~r J::iaving maintaf~e.d
the highest ge.Qeral average ill his class,:·
and,the Bradley cash:prize .for" the highest :tnark in co,n tracts as his brother
10
s~t:i::;hi~s
are as follows: J. Earl Dick. Cambridge~

vvon

be~;: r:~n-~!eol'\~:

;~.~~, ~:_;c::in~a:.~~~;~J; t~~ of;!:~:f1~
Archer shcola'rship. ·' Dn the cl~~ o:r
1933, Harry VVheeler, Allstori. liaS· -w-on
second h6nors, entitling him to t:ne-·01eason :r;.,. Archer scholarsh,ip.
In the class
of 19R2, Saul J. Cagan, BeverlY, -was
awarded the George A. Frost· scholarship
fur having maintained the highest scholastic average.
Ralph vV. vVilson. Lyn'.!1-,
-...von second · honors in the junior class,
entitling him to the Archer scholarship

~~;k

,
')

.!;~~hb;ic

Br:d~~~s~i~~~ioi;.,_t°;_fela~r ~ : :
Harold F. McDonnell, camhM,:;lge.

NEWS, SALEM. lliASS.

. _

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

·7------ -------Y,,o
f
CALLAHAN CANDIDATE FOR
.7
COUNCIL FROM WARD 3
U h;e:r~by wish to a1::1nounc_e 1ny ca~didacy- 'to the Carnbndge city council
fron~ Ward 3
Many of my friends have assured
me their full support in this undertaking.
After much deliberation I
have decided to enter the field.
I was born in Ward 3 in 1908. . I
was educated in St M~ary-'s Paroch1~l
school
Cambrrdge ~ High and Latin
school' Suffolk L~w school and Boston C~llege ~~l
..
My policy will be to give the citizens of \¥ard 3 the capable, able
leadership which they deserve.

!'---- zosE_P_I_I~~L~~!:J:AN.

SECOND WEDDING
SCHOOL TEACHERS
· WITHIN A··WEEK

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

AUG 3 i .'!931
_,

/

r ;aftacis

·ssolAI

"uo~
Auvdwo:> '8 ai!n_:

:,.J

-,":... s"tN;;:

DNY'19N3 M3N. ·

UU:l;h:•s

)f"tlOd Hs:n,

CJN~i
A1sno!-=>!fap osr:
''

)f~Od HS3~:I CJ3SS3~CJ
3:HS3:U..!l ..!10
H.J. S3:)IV.J.
•N •sazq .. ,i
x..:zo..:r u:1: 1uu2

1

SU qsa.>J-"{.JCOc/
.M.aN ->A!aaaar 11

TRANSCRIPT, BqSTON...~ASS.

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

AUG 2 S i~l _

SEP

~~~~. ight of the Eai;-Ie,i;WhiCh
. e

was ·

·

d"by the feat of Lindbergh.

'

-

,_
:.1

;
'

.

I been· rtamed ·staff surgeon. and the 12

Brothers Win Three ·
Suffolk Scholarships,
---

,

Sull:<>lk

1
ja~:-;er:;;. 0~ ~~idgeport~~;

~

I

Dean Gleasc,n L. Archer of

r ""8

! physici
I the s

1

t

aw School
·scholarship Announcements

I
1

Law Scl;:a.o61 today announced that for
the first tinie in _the history of the s~hool
,
two brothers, one a sophomore and the
J
other a freshman, have carried off first .4:~·
hon.ors in their. r.espective classes. Be- ·' 1.1'.'
tween them they have, won three schol- .,<lOl
arshfps and two cash prizes for the .the·
school year 1980-31. They are Lawson .;1ng.
and Byron Wright of Toronto; Can.
µow
Lawson Wright, thirtyl-two years o! l.1,lly
age, in his freshm:an Ye~r won first hon-!~ -1.~
ors in his crass a:~1d-was awarded the_' · 'i
Da'Vid I. Walsh scholarship and a cash
,

/

t

· s or the town will comprise
al staff
,

I ,

II

1

~~nt:;:t:;,

f~;zet{~r ;:aer. hig~fst ~~: ~~
a-Warded the Thomas J. ~oynton .scholar-::
ship foi- having 1naintained tn'e"1:highe.st
general scholastic average in. the sop-ho1nore class and has also been awarded
the Steinberg scholarshi~. which is of·
fered ar.inually. to the stu.dent who main•
tains· the highest scholastic average in
his fl!'Sit two years of law study. ·;He h.as
also wOn the Bradley cash prize for the
highest average in the subject of real
property in the sophomore year
His brothe.r, Byron Wright. aged
twenty-nine, ·was awarded the David I.
Walsh scholarship for having maintained
the highest ge:Q.eral ·averaie. ill his class,'·
and the Bradley cash P;rize fol:" the highest lllark in contracts as his brother' won
"J?efore ~im the previous year. ·.
1.
The balance of the scholars,hip...Jl.l?l,r3Xds
are as follows: J Earl Dick, C~mbridge,

;~~s.

:I

t:: l
r

~~:t

are as follows:
J. Earl Dick or Cambrldge won second honors in the freshman class. and
was awarded the Gleason L
Archer
scholarship on an average of 90 23 per

f

Carryi_~g with hiin the prayers
a.nd best wishes of his re-latiVes
an,~ many friends, J"ohn F.' Brady,
:fr., 21, son of Ml",: and Mrs. J"ohn
F. Brady ·01· 339 Montello street
s,ailed from Boston Monday arterl
noon for. New York on a· jburney
that· will terminate in Loretto,
P~~,
where he will enter ~-~
Fr~ncis C9Jleg~ for a four-year
course' prepll,l"atory "to entering the· .
Franciscan Seniinary at Paterson
N. :,.
!,:I·,· .
'

·

I

virI!~! ?;!f:~ce or the scholarship awards

Gf::::t

cel;t. the class ot 1933, Hiarry Wheeler
ot Allston has won second honor:s . on
an average of 87 11-14 per cent, entitling
him to the Gleason L. Archer scholarshi:: the class or 1932, Saul :J Cagan of
Beverly was awarded the ?eo_rge _A
Frost scholarship (or ha v~ng maintained t_he highest scholastic average
in ,the juntor year (91.3-14 per cent)
Ralph w. Wi\son of Lynn '".:on second
honors in the junior class with ~. ~eneral schola~t~c '!lyerage of 89 5-7 : p;_,r
cent entitling hi_m to the Gl~~sop.
Archer sc_holarship.
.-. :·. hTb& Bra dleY cash prize for th_~ h;lg :~'est'."' mark in constitutional law "'W·~Y(:,~on
:byc--i(arold F. McDonnell or C3.:m1:>,:1d~e
, --·fh...-. an average o! 93* per cent in

w:~

TRIBUNE, CAMBRIDGE, MASS.

1

11

~~~e·;.~a:~hi~ar!: :;uecr;.ge,n~
also won the Bradley cash Pri_ze for
the highest average in the subJect of
real property in his sophomore ~ear.
!:tis younger, brqther, Byron Wr1gh_t,
at the encl of. his freshman year, 1s
being awarded the Davi<! I_ Walsh
scholarship for h~ving maintained 1he \
highest general average in his class
(91 5-6 per cent); also the Bradley cash l.
prize for the highest mark 11: contracts, ,
as his brother won befqre him the pre-_

~!~°an~a!~~:~dJ:; t~e
Ar'cher shcolarShil)~ .' nn .the cl~~ ot
1938, Harry. Whe.eler, Allstori. lias·,1 ·won
second hOnOrs, entitling him to tbe Gleason L. Archer scholarsll;,ip. In the class
of 1932. Saul J. Cagan, BeverlY, was
awarded the George A Fro.st scholarship
fur having maintained the highest scholastic average. Ralph W. Wilson. Lynn,
won second· honors in the junior cla.sS, \ '
entitling him to the Archer scholarship. I
The Bradley; cash prize for 1he highest
::~~1Jn F~oi:~i~~~~~~ l~rn~~~:.on- by·

a;;~i~:ri!~e~!r~r~a:;a;:i:~st~~~e-1~~~.~t )
Law~--0n Wright, the elder brother, last
year won first honors jn his class, and
was awarded the David I. Walsh
scholarship; also a. cash J?rize for the
hi""hest mark in the subject of contr:cts for the year. This year- he is
being awarded the Thomas. J. ,:Boynton!
scholarship for having n:ainta1ned. t1!e
highest general scholastic average ,n
the sophomore class (94.4-7 per cent),
and has also been awarded the Stein;.:
berg scholarship, which is offer~d ~n.;.)
,.uually to the studer_it who m=:-~nta1~s·~

···u ···

t.

·

.~

·Young(srady ~ second' Brockton bciy''to forsake worldly pleasures
for the rigorous life of a Franciscan
Rev. John Gilligan, a former Brock~
ton city engineer. who was ordai:ned25 y,earsc ago, now ti<)ing engaged in
r missionary work in Chiriii.
- · ·
William Eagan 6f South Boston, a
graduate of Boston College High
school, accompanied the local boy. The
pair expect to arrive, this morning
, 1n New York city.
· ~r: · Eagan gave up a responsible
position in a la,rge Boston firm after
making his· , decision · to enter the
, priesthood. · Long years of study face
Eagan a;nd Brady before , they ·are
blessed with the oils or Holy Orders
in ordination. They must.go through
1
a four-year
college course, study I'
[ to1:1r years in th¢ seminary befQre :f
f go,ng
OUt to teach for two years
1 after ~hich !hey
return for finai J . '.•.
j ~~11%n.m the seminary prior to ordi-

r'

:wm

Was Honor Stndent.
'-·- - - - Mr. Brady, an . unusually retiring :l.
youth, was graduated .w~t.h._ honors
from st. Patrick's parochial grammar Mil'
school and Brockton High· · school, II!
studying law 1n the S u . t ' t ~ w
ischool the past two years i'fe'"was"n'lr
:several years an altar boy' at St.
•Patrick's church. He has been employed by the city highway department during past summers. He was
~iven many ~arewell parties by relatives and friends .Prior to his departure.
In. eluded iri the group wishing him
Godspeed Monday afternoon'. at the ,
do.ck in Boston were his pa.rents and ,
his s.ister. fytinnie, of 399 Montello
street; Mrs John Monahan of 155i
West Bartl_ett street; Mrs. James M.
McCormick of 155 West Bartlett
street, mother of Edward McCormick ·
who i., studying for the priesthood at
Little Rock, Ark.; Mrs. John Coyne~~=-'--of 119 North Montello street; Mrs.l{S:1n14 .i
George Coyne of 23 Farrington fJ.Qu~ '·
street; Ray Breslin of Union street; · ·. :''<..,
M:s. Mary Flynn of Bartlett street; .lOi!f. tUMD
Miss M~rf Keenan of Union street; al""' .r
Mrs. William Desmond of 405 Mon,. -.. · nc
tello street, and son, 'John Desmond :Jsnm-a·
_an_d Joh.1;1 Mccarthy of Main street. ' •~o ·
!

1

!
1

ITEM, LYNN, MASS.

,TG

as a member -Ofthe- 1ue1 and· sllggestion committees.
Mr. King s surY
.
.
.
.
'
CAt'.£AHAN CANDIDATE FOR

COUNCIL FROM WARD 3
U her~by wish to announce my ca~didacY_.~~to the Cambr1dge city council
from Ward 3
Many of my friends. hav~ assured
me their full support 1n !h1s 1-!ndertaking.
After much dehberat10n I
have decided to enter the field.
I was born in Ward 3 in 1908 .. I
was educated in St Mary's Paroch1al
school, Cambridge - High and Latin
school, Suffolk _.Law school and Boston College J';ll:;\\' scFiool .
. .
My policy will be to give the c1t1zens of Ward 3 the capable, able
leadership which they deserve
J_OSE_P~H-~AL~~N. _,

i'"•-...____

/ERS

EEK

CJJ

NEWS, MALDEN, MASS.

AUG 3 1 '1931

, ,_
I fa.r,1·,,· .f.ra.ra m
. " SJ· lJ •11aa

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!

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i

UlO.l.J

.ro3

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n

QA!{U

saa1oq3
u1q:ip1

; oq
. If '[.ZOd · l{Ba.l.!f
0
~ 3
•pa.roAuy

.raurmns .rno.fI
::>

(S3_1_aV-l3f1.'
_
Z~=>!CfM ssauu.i
_ l;

(Se .Sf

')l~_Q

10:1ss3~0 ON
.J.~,/flj/"
n,.1';10

•A,•. Al;,llf,.

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S£p4

--------~~-

.::,.::,ec

.1n -ura~

me to serve the best interests of the cith1.

"ens of ward 11.

.Johtt W. Lyons Candidate
_ /
For Councillor in Ward

Bterest t~
SAYS GROVE ·IS f/1·
VE@Y MUCH OKAY 1._

t,,;•

in Camb;ridge and edu.cated
in the Can1bridge pu1?~i~ ~chools. . I am
married alld the father· ~f. five ch1ldren,
three of ,vhom are at1;ending the Cambi id.ge public schools
I am a veteran of
t11.e world war. After the ·war, I stu:lled
T.

Ntr 1 titf';Q9.o! and

1

ece1ved

I

-.----rnu.u:c-.a.~eli·-32zo.

-

L

-1~~i~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~


1'

,,M Edward Viola Heads
·
New Boston Law Firm

the Thomas J. Boynton .Scholarships the

~~i:Jea11 ttt::

I

of Italy and Knights of' ColHe was a .candidate for reprec
last election. ·

~

Two brothers won three scholarships
and two cash prizes for 1930-31, aec I
cording to announcement by Dea.ti I
Gleason L. Archer o! the SUifolk la,r
sChool. The two are Lawson and B__yro11
Wright 9f Toronto, Can. La.wsoh won

Steinberg scholarshi:i> and the Bradley
: cash prize. Byron won the David I.
; M Edward Viola of Everett, formerly!' !.walsh scholarship.
'>! this city, is the head of a newly or- i J. ·Earl Dick of Cambridge won secJaniZed Je.w firm, Viola, Singer & Cen-,
1
tracqh!o with 1aw offices at 294 Wash-( J~~
~r:~s~~L~1~rc~~
fugton ·st, Boston. Mr Viola practices! scholarship. Harry Wheeler of Allston
~xteµstveJy in the Malden court.
, Jwon · the Archer scholarship for sopho.·(He was graduated from the Cam-,; mores. Saul J. Cagan of Beverly won
the George A. Frost scholarship_ and
·- Latin school and SuU:gtk.=I,,aw
been practicing for seven years. '~alph_. W. Wilson won the Archj,r
- 'er, also ot the firm, resi~es in.
ip for juniors. Harold F. Mccambridge won the Bradley
where he ·has been actlve--;po--'
and socially. Anthony A cen
for the best rank in con- l
. 11aw.
'
· the other l)lember of the fir
vin E~~_<>s_!_on and is active i _
1

l"

fairs for a number of years, having -stud-

\

'I

J

, a:~-~~.

Jaw at SuffpJJs

the degree ol' £L.B.
I \vas admitted to
J)ractice as an atto1ney 1n the courts of
the corr.m011\C\ ealth of Mass_achusetts on ! c
Ap14l 15, 1924, and '\Vas adm1t_ted_to prac- c
1
tice as an attmney i.n the d1.~tric_t c.ourt/1
of the t.Jnited States on Ju1:;' ~. "? 1~26
I c
have been in close contact ,"1'1:h_ city af-

th

i1 .J,r':";

·:-,·,-:.,::\;'"'.

.

fl~~;:,1't0:n

i

'E'··--o--

'°'

1
31

Septembe1 2, 1_931.
Edito"r Chronicle: May I ha, e the
courtesy of your columns to announce. my
candidacy for the offi.9e of counc11lor

+=j

No.t-Afraid to Acknowledge
Great Work of Pitcher~

J Bf!!F!ff"'l!!!(;;::;;,. ,~•

-

B Foster of BrewFrank 1· Admitted to
er s
To Bar.

:;~~~ALO,

N.

Y.,

THURSDAY MORNING,

8EPTEMBEi 1, ,1927

~8RM LAWS FOR la.~ t4A
-- '~~

.

SffK-MODlflED
QUALIFICATION
TO STUDY LAW

.

'

Interesting Personages ,Address Bar Oonventio,n

Two-year college training require-.

WHITMAN HOST .
TO BAR GUESTS;. 'RESOLUTION
AT REC E TION:
P

ment ~S:n c;::teconven-

I

PREPA~D

Dean Archer, Boston, to urge mght
cour!~y te:ear~:rees

Nearly 2,500 at Consistory func-· no~;s;~b:~!i::n~~n~io:e!;t:i,/:n::r~
. tion; Shea's Buffalo players
ican Bar Association at this morndelight with program
i ing's session in the ballroom of the
---- -

.

· Statler were forecast last night with

ic:!_e~~: }!~ic:fi~!e:!do~~!i~ ~fv~~ ih~ announc_ement of a ~roup that it
1

attended the· most Important social
function held jn connection with the
conference, the president's reception
at :the Buffalo Consistory last night.
The outstanding reature of the
varied program was the actual reception of the delegates by Charles S.
Whitman, president of the ··assocla·
tion; Lord Chief Justice and Lady·
Hewart of England; 'Mrs. ,Dana B.
Hellings, wife of the president of the
Erle ·County Bar Association; .Wllliam J. McCracken, assistant secreta.ry of .commerce; Mr. and Mrs.
John Voorhees, and M. Bokanowskl,
official representative of the Paris
·
bar.
Bokar.owski Speak
1

would submit a resolution from the
floor relating to the educational
standard~ required of those seeklng adwsslon to th<l bar
·
This group, headed by GJeason L
Archer, dean of Suffolk law school
of.Boston, and Edward T. Lee, dean
of the John Marshall law school of
Chicago, seeks modification of ·the
resolution adopted. by the bar assn·
elation Jn 1921. which requires all

~pplic~nts for admission to the :bar
t h · h d t
· 0f
II

oc .. ave, a
wo years·
co ege
~':.k. b.efore beginning the study of

Speakers at afternoon session of American Bar Association convention in Buffalo Consistory. Left to right,
John W. Davis, forme'r ambasSador to England arid Democ;:r'atic' candidate for President at'the last election, who
presided ~t the meeting; F'rancis ~awle of Ph{ladelphia, one of the two survivors Of those who organized the
as.sociation at §,aratoga, 50 years ago; Charles H. Butler of Maine, who' _.escorted Rawle to the pl~tform;. Moorfield. Storey of Washington, veteran Jawyer, ~ho r~ad a resolution . makt/ :g Rawle an hOnorary life member of
the association; George K. Montgomery, K. C., battonier of the; Montreal-: Bar, who gave an address, and Frar:ik
H. Mott of Jamestown, who spoke an appreciation of Grover c·ley!_lan~~~

Notable Visitors Here
Wary of Loose Speech

Committee Fails ,to Meet

They say that they will bring the
The program opened with M. Bokanowski's speech. Nearly every re·sofution before the entire convenseat in the spacious Consistory au- tion, because the scheduled meetditorium was filled. · Following the tug of tiie committee on legal ducaspeech, the delegates formed In line tion and admissions to the bar, of
wlifch Silas H Strawn·· of Chicago,
who'· ls slate.cl to' b'e the next presi(Continued on Page Nineteen)
dent of the association, ls chairman,
' was .not. held on Tuesday.
Dean ·Archer and Dean Lee contend · tbere will not .be sufficient
time to give full consideration fo.the
.prdblem,at the· dinner meet11fg'.to be
held' in the . hotel this evening,,, and
-,voic.ed a suspicion that , failure to.
hold the scheduled session might' in·
dicate that those In. charge of the.
section do not dt?!sire· a· debate oti the
suf>ject.
.
Il'l a brief, acc~mpany!ng. thf res'?:
lutlon, whkh he will seek to present

lt. thiS

morning's

sessioti,

Lord.chief justice carefully weighs his 1,1tterances;
McAdoo mum on national politics
·

I

Arrival iii Buffalo this after.noon the Can~dian . B. ar' Association a,
of William

Howard

Taft former Toronto 1n which h_e was quoted, a~

President of the United St~tes and
chief justice of the United States
supreme court will complete the list
of notables he~e tor the 50th annual
meeting of the American Bar Association.•
There· seems to be' one thing In
common among the illustrious lights
of the countries of the United States,

When asked for comment on the
political situation, Mr. McAdoo parried the question by ,replying ~ t
he is here in his capacity as a. lawyer He added that he is here~ to
listen and n?'. talk and .hl\d no com-

,Eng"Iand and France and the Ameri·
can pdssessions, ·who have cpnvened
here for the. assoGiation meetings.
They .are n·ot· desJ.r:ous .of lb.aking pubDean lie utterances except throµgh the

ment on pohtical o~ .legal matters
During his stay ·.in ~~tfalo, L~rd
·Hewart~ who will adc'!,re~s .th~. evenM
Jr.Ag session of .the as.soc~atto.A<~~~-~the
Conslstoq tomght, will .be t~e ·g,µ~st

medium of prepared speeches.
Archer says:
''In' order to. safeguard the rights
Beg to Be Excused
of the ninety-odd per cent of young
Two of those, who willingly met
men of America to whom circum:newspapermen yesterday; but who
stallceS deny' daY. coI~ege traintp.g, ,we
must'· provide some effic_ient substi- begged to be @'Xcused from , intertutidn the nature of a boua fide eve- views, were the Right · Honorable
nilig• coacge. This· doe11; not mean ~ Lord Hewart, lord chief justice of

criti~iz~ng the press.' Beyond that,
he d_eclmed to talk.
.
McAdoo Mum on Pollt1cs

at the home of Frank B. Baird. .He
attendee\ the morning session of the
convention yesterday.
Maurice Bokanowski; French min~
ister, arrived in Buffalo· Iate,yesterday afternoon; and after a wnner at
che horne of.James MeCo,mick·Mitchell, departed for the Coasistory to

commercial course for :special stu- England, and VVilliam G McAdoo, make h1~ address at the ·evening·s~s·
He expects to leave Buffalo
dellts, now so popular w_ith our vari- former cabinet officer and prominent sion
ous:'universities, but a "bachelor of as a Democratic candidate for presi- today
It is expected that Nicholas Longdent.
arts. clli·ffculu,~.
,.,

Lord Hewart consented to state vorth, s.peakei" of the House of Reptha.t he had been misquoted in re• :resentatives, Win attend some of the
(Continued oh Page ~!neteen)--- ports of a speech he made before ,~onvention sessions.

,"Such a venture requires state or

(

I

ff MORNING, SEPTEMBER 1, ,1927

LAWS FOR AL~ ~~TIONS
Interesting Personages ,A cl.dress Bar Convention

j

fRANCf;S AIR
CHIEF SOUNDS
NEW KEYNOTE
M. Bokanowski pleads for Lridg•
ing of space between United
States and Europe

;~ITES LlNDBERGH FLIGHT
!Aviation triumphs bringing coun-

diplomat
I tries closer together, notables
tells Bar Association

I

.he

That need for uniformity in inter, national law has been ,st!'essed by
the flight! of Col Charles A. Lind- '
bergh from New York to Paris, open-

it
he
tal
Speakers at af~ernoon session of American_ Bar Asso:ciat~on Convention. iri Buffalo Consistory. Left to right,
~k- John W. Davis, former am~assador to England. and Democratic candidate for President at the last election, who
presided ~t the meetin_g; Francis ~awle of Ph~ladelphia, one o-f the two survivors of those who organized the
as.sociation at ~aratoga, 50 years ago; Charles H. Butler of Maine, who ~scorted Rawle to the pl;atform; MoorL. field. Stor.ey. of Washington, veteran lawyer, ~ho read a resolution mak1/ ,g Rawle an hOnorary life member of
101 the assoc1at1on; George K. Montgomery, K. C, battonler of the Montreal: Bar, who gave an address, and Frank
:in H. Mott of Jamestown, who spoke an appreciation of Grover Cle~eland.
of
"---.-Ile

~1i

ar

~e

ol

~~
,t-

Notable Visitors Here
Wary of Loose Speech
Lord. chief justice carefully weighs his 1,1tterances;
McAdoo mum on national politics

a>f
O,
Arrival ili Buffalo this a.fternoon the Cali3:dian . Bar' Association a
:i~ of William Howard Taft :former Toronto 1n which he was quote,d · af
o, President of the United St~te; and criticizi.ng the press. Beyond that.
1- .chief
justice of the United States he d.eclmed to talk.
.
Lt supreme court, will complet_e the list
r McAdoo Mum on Pol.lt1cs
of notables here tor the 50th annual
Vi.hen asked for comment on the
,: meetiilg of the American B~r Asso- political situ~ti~n, .Mr. M~Adoo pard elation.•
·
ried tl1e question by replying ·, tl).,at
· There· seems to be· one thing In he is here in his capacity as a Jaw0
1. common among the iilustrious lights yer
He added that he Is here, to
e of the countries of the United States listen and not talk and .had no ·com·
e E)ngla~d ~nd .France and the Ameri: ment ?ll P6!iti~al or..legal matters.
can possessions, ·who have cpnvened'
Dunn.~ his s,~ay ·_in .B~~falo,: Lord
,- here for the. association meetings Hewart, who wlll address the e_ven·t They are not desirous of making pub- ii;;g session of the. a~ociatio,tt ~a,,t_he
n lie utthances ex,ept through the (::onslstory tonight, >ylll .be t~e ·g,u~st
medium of prepared. speeches.
at the honre of Frank B. Baird. .He
s
Beg to Be E~cused
~~~:ea:t1o!.h~:s1t~:~~ session ·Of the
~
Two of those, who willingly met
Maurice BokanOll;Ski, .French min,
e newspapermen yesterd,ay, but who ister, arrived in Buffalo late: yesterl- begged to be e'X"cused from, inter- day' afternoon·~- and after a ·dinne).-- at
,. views, were the Right Honorable cjl.e home of James McCormick Mit~ Lord Hewart, lord chief justice of chell, departed for the Consistory to
l- England. and William G
McAdoo, J make his address at the evening sesformer cabinet officer and promine1;1t sion. He expects to leave Buffalo
as a Democratic candidate for presi-1 today
dent.
It is expected that Nfoholas Long·
Lord Hewart c.onsented to state vorth, s.peake;r of the House of ·Rep~
t?-,a.t he· had been ll1isquoted in re~ r.esentatives, will attend some ?f the
-pOrts of a speech he made before ,~onvention s~ssions,
-

I

ing up new means of communica.tion b6twe~n countries which are
binding the peoples of the eart\l
closer together, was the thought expressed by M. Maurice Bokanowskl,
minister of commerce, aviation and
telegraph, at the session of the American Bar Association in the Buf~
fa.lo Consistory last night.
M Bokanowski paid high tribute
to the members of the American legal
profession and brought to them the ,
greetings of officials of the Frencl).
government and bar. He said that
it Is their duty to co-operate in the
1 drafting
of uniform
international'
' laws and to aid in the bridging of
the space that separates the two
countries.
Chance for Great Service
"As the function of lawyer has
grown prodigiou~ly In importance
and in dignity/' he said, "as nationa~ 1
life has become more civilized, as
might has gradually been eliminated
and right made to triumph, so In
International life there is an unum:
lted field in which Ia wyers may ren,
der equally great service to mankind~
"Henceforth no country can _hope
to be sufficient -unto itself alone; DQ
country can reasonably aspire to
splendid Isolation, for every day the
progress of science and industry fa
bringing all nations closer together
in our constantly shrinking world. ~
"Only a few weeks ago, as mlnli
ter ol aviation, I. hail. th~ pleasure
and · privilege of welcoming your
heroic fellow countryman. Charles
Lindbergh, who brought the magnlfi.
cent inspiration of a victory M hu'
man will and human energy ovef
the blind forces of ~ature Every
daY invisible waves carry the wrj+·
ten and spoken messages of' mankin,:·
through boundless space.
New Means of Communication
1
' \Vhat problems are conjured 1
by these new rileans of communic,
ticn between the peoples of the eartl
What other and grater problems wil
arise tomorrow?
"How often have I been faced, i'
private practice and in office, with
difficulties arising from the diversity
of terms; o! legal conception,, of na
tional laws dealing with , everyda:
( Continued on Page Twe!lty}

.~~;iiER VIGORQ~$ LAN~iil ,

rather -

' . ·This: piay be r~g'arded as

oious Ja:pgtiagi,, ifot it is ·au 'the· rt:io
impressive because it Comes :frOl'll s ·
Ii
an m:stttution as the- American Bar (
But 1 consider thJ.s, also: ..
or th.ree henators, in .preventing .8, V.ote,
..
...
...
.
are exercising a greater power than the
chief executive, whose veto. could
~~
over-r.ldden With a two-thirds Yote~
.
Moreover, the President can hold a ,\
bill but 10 days, While a committee can
·
hold one forever. There is no way of
preventing this cppressive conduct e:ir• ~
By FREDERIC J. H,\.SKIN
course debatable
Equally ~! course ceptl through a _righteous public resentWASHINGTON, Sept.. 1-complaint no or;;_; will ever know. :tor in the pres~ :,':;
organization to be:
s been made frequently that there are ent highly organized status of the bu~i- I In line \vith the latter idea, the com- 1
1
·0 many lawyers in Congress._ T~e im- ness and industrial world it is unth1:ik- ,! :
i;:;o~~:nfts iJ~1a:u:i~e~~ :c~~!;'
, cation back of such complaint 1s that able that such a. law would be Pasf~d. municate with his senators and con ·
e legal profession gets substanti.ally r Had it been enacted in lieu of the .orig- gressmen urging prompt action on thc~:J
hat it wants in the way of legislation, inal Sherman law, It might have proved . ~fll, and that such state bar associa' I
bile other groups or business interests j abortive•. or it might hav~ pro:ved such coo:~ifte~~vew~fJ a!_Te!~~t~~e
o not fare so well.
a disastrous check to the business de- a~d a meqiber from each congressional\
·\
4 GR4 VE CH4RGE
velopment of the country that its district to co-operate with the commit-:
, It has even been charged by extrem- prompt repeal would have been necf>s- te}t0 the natto~akiassbciation.
i
1
\ ~ that laws, federal and state, are so sary.
·
~ mitte:s ~1:!~Ff~nctio~ J;~~st~~~tk~0
amed, thanks to the predomin.ance of
It has also been said that the insert!~n dep_endent campaigns with reference td
...
i, 1 1 i r!
~th 1 g! ·1ato
of the word reasonable" in the law ell't... their own senators and representatives I
"l a
,um na es a.rnong
e e s
rs, powE:ring the interstate commerce ~ - and it is stated that "certain statesme~
, to make business for lawyers~ and mi~1on to fix rail.road rates served -p~ are not only refusing to observe the'
' t court processes have been made manly to open the way to endless lit1ga- recorµ_mendations of their state bar as.;,I
~. uly
;
mplicated to the same end tion and correspondingly endless busi-- socia:t1ons, but are using their in,fluencej
, ,
C(?
.
ness for the l,awyers That may or may to preyent a. report by the two jud"ciary\
largely through the same 1nflu- not be. true, as that the omission of_ the comm1t~s"
1

.
word might have r:esu~ted I in the law's . A furthei: recommendatiOn is, th'Sl.t au 1
~: ~ statute frequently cite_d by t.hese being held unconst1tut1onal.
,!llemb_e1 s of the Bar Association persist I
t- cs is the Sherman ant1':'"trnst law, But whatever the facts may be as to 1 1n dmng all that they can to increasir.
~T ·,di~~u11;1bg;;:r:~~~mr~1!~;Y w~ni~ ! !~~iv~~~~;n\riaft tb.:n le~~l st;,~fess~:;; j :6v!~!~i~t of the secular press in
~· frame
would effectually does not
from / "The com1nittee
.lrd :nt the a law that of tr~sts it could II Congress always get what it wants fight I importance of the would impres::;. the
formation
Instance, the 14-year
aid of the secular,
: ~n \'written it in a few simple words which tpe American Bar Associatioil has pr.ess. both editorially and reportoriall:Y', .,
_ : , effect that it should be unlawful been making to procure the passage of that is now being generously given ,.
. , '{~ o.e corp6ration engaged in inter- the uniform judicial procedw-e bill, safys the rep::>rt. "It is the, only . ho:Pf!
' :· ' ' ommerce to acquire or own, di- the purpose of which is to give the su- 0 overcoming the deadly infl.u~nce Of
,ad or indirectly, in whole or in part prem:: court of the United States the au- powerful senators.
The English law.
it ck of another corporation.
thority to make rules governing the en- r~rs achieved_procedural reform through\
_1bb
a law, it is contended, would tire urocedure in cases at law to thee co-<:_peration of the daily press after
193 isinterpretation or varied inter- same extent that it now has power ~o
i!ear_ ot~' sLrugl?;le with an obdurate/
~-wa n, and compliance with it or regulate the procedure in equity, ad- I ar amen
1
pr1 of it would be easy of deter- miralty. and the bankruptcy courts
At lhe approaching_ session of Con- .,. .
:LY- •
It would afford no opporThe bill failed at the last session of ""!';.ss he bill . will be introduced in :th~f
B or long and involved battles in Congress despite the fact that 92 Sena- S · ate by Chairman Norris of the jad1c1-I
.eet. ts, with a growing mass of Cte- tors and 80 per cent of the members l Hy comrittee of that body, and 1n the/
k.d1a ! and opinions that serves to of the House of Representatives favored m~ri:it~ o~e1~:se~tat%es Mon~gue
Al
~er. \'ich new case more complicated. 1t, and had so committed themselves in
r
.
. ena
comm~ttee fa*,
.i1er- \\ it has been said that under ! writing•. and t~at President Coolidge had ~r!h~
~t :a.1a11 b~t t'?i.ha1 ~masn;
aw only one case would ever ! recommended 1t.
m ·ttee
ori Y o
e 1iouse---; h carried to the supreme court
· There ought to be some way of co -~~ _ oppose it
/.
nited States--one to test the overcoming a personal legislative in~
constitutio~ality-and that a fluence of a cn.aracter that ca.n defeat
t
'
1unt of llt1gat1on would have a majority, the public will and the ad\
,
11-~:::=:::::::===::;;::;;;::::::=:::::=::::±z=:;::=;i;

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' rsocia,t:tOri..

merican ~ar Association for 14 Years Has Been
Striving for Passage of Unifo~u,·ial
Procedure Bill
e,

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:· s;~:!~ b~ri~~~~! i~~r:'°a~~
h money.
Incidentally, of
lawyers of the country would
d a tremendous amount of
table: b~siness.
FECT DEB4T,\BLE

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~ _;u~~e~e::n:o~~~si;.av~s~e~~

:~a

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000 000 TO ,
27Rll;SUME STIJDY I
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:i~is:;a~g:m~itel':~~~ysbrh;~;h~~~! 1
elation's committee ...'The way to bring
·about the passage of the b!ll is to impre.S& upon Congress that the judges
and lawyers, as well as commerce, a.re 1.
~~i'.';,tl~~g~dl~~d
!i'ste!

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Public School E_xpen~)f()r
New ·year Estimat~ ·
at $2,000,000,000 ,
Sear.smont, Me., Wants
- ----.
WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (UP)-Mor,e
Resident Physician
than 27,000,000 boys and g1r1s throu111h~
out the country are preparing f?r th'e
:'
openin~ of another school year, acc~r~.;;.
I
SEARSMONT. Me., Aug. 31- Some lng to an estimate by the burea~ of.educ
a.mbitious young medical gr~duate loolt- cation of the interior. Of this num;..
\ find here a regular practice and steadY ber, 4,000,000 are high school student~~
come. c. H Cunninghalfl, the villa~e the other 21,000,000 elementary st1:1-·:li ealth officer, has announced
Res1- -dents The school ranks will be further
ents of this pleasant Maine town. 10 swelled bY, some 2;000,000 c~ildre:n in
mlles from Belfast and 12 miles fro~ private elementary schools, and ab9ut ·
Camden and Union, are faced with tl_1e, 250,000 students in pdyate high scho9~
\problem of finding a doctor who will of all kinds,. bringing the total above
/uve here the year aro1:,1nd. They are 27,000,000, according to the bureau's es! trying to solve it by vqtlng a. bonus timate.
, .· .
' c,f $600 a. year to any' satisfactory phy- It will cost $2,000,000,000, an a~ount·
I atcian who will $,gree to make Sears- equal to about one-ninth of the -=total
rnont his horn~. ·
debt of the· United i;,tates, to provide
. ijearsmont's future doctor ;sho~ld have educational courses for a year fo.r · ~be.
no competition and should quickly be- ,25,000,000 children in public schools.
come a leading citizen. for there is ~o This comes from state and municip~l
physici~n living in any of the adjoin- ,taxes
tng towns.
Some of this will go in salaries to
·' the 800,000 public school teachers, who$e
average annual salary is estimated by
the bureau· a,t $1260.
·

Public school property in the UnitE!4
'\
States is valued at $5,000,000,000, ·equ.,al,
to half of the total foreign war debt, t6 ·
the United States There ee ~ow
about 250,000 school buildings in' the
United States. After the w8d."· there w:&,S:
.. great activity in erection Qf p
~ school buildings."" , ·
. it\g ·1:or a place to begin his career. will

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::'.:}(@ffe;@~,,~~;~9 -"LA;.__,,Lr,,JQJ.i'7~;;z:_~~---. ---· · ~--,;,;

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·~i•~'*'

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

POST, WORCE_STER, MASS.

--

GAZETTE, WORCESTER, MASS.

f::.UG 2 5 ,:;-,,.

AUG 2 5 ,3?'

-

-.....:~---

-

/

------

JOHN F. BRADY '

TO BE PRIEST r,
LEAVES SEPT. 1/i.'

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..._- '"~,

.

~

.TORN F. BRAD-Y, .TR.
To Enter Priesthood
John F. Brady, Jr., son· of Mr
and Mrs. John F. Brady of 399 i
M?nteUo street, is· tc study for the
Priesthood,
entering
st.
Francis /
College at Loretto, Pa., early in~
September :for a f"our-year course
P!9eparatory to entering' the Franci.scan Seminary at Paterson, N. J.

L~UGGESTIDNS
I CTO HALT GA IME/
I

:

~f MADE BY BOARD
•m
be,

'12

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Bo •

~\°

(.:roq'B'J:)

~

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F.

p;J:O'[

Recommendations by
Wickersham Group Need
Legi;slative Action and
Change in Constitution

~f70 HELD AS NEW YORK
rr, OPENS GANGSTER DRIVE

The. starting ~ ~ p t . I for st.
Fra1:1cis College by Mr. Brady will
reahze an ambition which he has h~ld for many- Years. He graduated ·
w1th honors from St. Patrick's Paro; c~ial Grammar school and Brockton
H1gh school and w~ for many years
an alta3: hoy at St. Patrick's church. /
.on h1s gradua.tion f"r<;>m Brockton /
High school in June of 1928 he entere~ Suffg}k I am school, where he
~tud1ed ior the past two· years Dur- ;
1ng recent summers he has -been em--- ployed by the highway department
of the City of Brockton. He was
~~n~~'!.,ya n~~~-{ise party by frie.nds

I

'UIS!UO!Ufi 9pt?.XJ,

I-~H~-~n~ St?H- a10
POST, WORCESTER, MASS.

---~~~-..,,,.~-.,,."""""'

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

~~nouc 1..,aw school in l924. Hei taught
hi C1u:! r:.aw1thce- public schools for
n:early nine ye·ar, and was faculty
manager of athletics at the Lawrence
High school for fl ve years
'He is
register
of deeds
for the
Northern Essex district and is "&he
only elected Democratic off~cial . in
E~~e c~~~;K~;a;:;~~t i~1tc~tyo~~:i~~
at 10 o·cI,_ock was devoted to r.ou1?ine
business and addresses, the principal
of which was that by State Treasur~r
Chai-les F. Hurley, who is a .m.em"J?er
' of ihe order
"It is my OJ..:>inion. • he said, "th~t
the board of bank incorporators' duties should be enlarged, if they_ have
tl).e power, and this is_ no refiE;ction
on the bank commissioners off~ce ..,that if we the bo rd. of bank 1.ncorporators have th
wer to
grant
( <;;ontin ed
age Two)

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-w:op~axr .i:OJ

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Boston. Mass.

Devonshire 8033

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qs13p al'S~adsa-p "'-a"G:.L_

l 3~~~~-:1-J~~~:,wv-t:nJ,1.it-4

- ------·-~----:--,r~-

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Mary Frances Brady, youn~t:
daughter of JUdge Francis P. Brady Of
~xbridge, is engaged to marry ·Fran-

ClS Jo1;3eph Fox, son of Mr. and- Mrs ..

Th9"mas J F~x of Rumf'ord Avenue,
Mansfield Miss Brady is .a graduate
of Notre Da.me Academy. Ro~btiry,

and Emerson s School of Oratory ,with

B. L. T. degree. Miss Brady is. ·a irfeni'~er of the ~appa Gamma Chi. S0r0X'1t~. Em.erso!l. College Club and~ is_

a

skilled mus1c1.an as well as a :read-et"
-!18-s conducted schools oi eIOCU.::
t1on m Worcester .and- Uxbridge.. Mr.
Fox graduated from Mansfield · High

a:nct

School, 1925, and from Boston· College
~nd Bosto~ ~niversity College of Bus.'.:
1~ess Adm~1stration.
He completed
hIS course i n the st~dy of l a w ~
~ - - ~ c h o o l thJ.S year.
1ilty-i:s'"""Sigma Rho Delta.

I

His~1

-

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ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON,
GAZETTE, WORCESTER, MASS.

f:.UG 2 5

AUG 2 5 1J?'

I~~,.

It.\ .

i.0

NAMED PRESID.ENT. .
BY HIBERNIANS '. 1t

· · ·· ·

:· · 1 ls
p

Page

One)

bished, but I say th8.t~ if it is sho'Wn
~o them in lang_uage t'O:r;-c.eful eJioµgll
~hey will see tlie wisdom of spending

public money in poor times and cori.serving ir\ good times."
,

Speaks of Public w·orks

'

The gover.n0r stated that' '].'eports
last week in the construction of

~~~i1n1~~0~:h~o~f~wt~~ ~;_Jgg~:~
-had been given employment.

·

"I wisl1. it had been 100,000," th~

.governor said.
"If the I.,egi.s.la_tu1e
had peen all Democratic, I. think )t
·migfit have reached that fl.gU.re," he
'added, good humoredly.

"MasSachusetts has Q.one better
than any state in the Union ,in its.
efforts to relieve distress. lf every
L.state had done as well as Massachu:-t2s,ooo., P.etson_S Would have been e~Ployed . in the United, .Stat·e· s ... Tli. at
means that 625,000 families would
have been benefitted, and· that is
.~nly on public works""
. "I am 1:tl hopes that in the next
· three months we may se·e what we
used to call •normalcy" in MassaI., Chusetts and after the return of such_.
'
2; condition a curb will be put on ex:-.!
II
. enditures antj. relief from taxation
,:1 · urde!!S . Will be sought for the peo- ;
ple of Massachusett_s "
>f Mr.
•1 The governoi declared that he had 1tf 399
1 not severed his affection or allegiance ~r the
I 1to those whq served the common- l"ancis

.
i

JOHN E. FEXTON

STATE A. 0. H..-NA.MES

r

FENTON PRESIDENT

Lawrence Man Elected To1
day as Convention Comes
to Closer

I
I

Atty" John E Fenton, of Lawrence,
w~s _ etected president of the Massa, chusetts state branch of t.b.e Ancient
Order o! Hibernians this afternoon
at the close. of the
two-days' bi~nnial convention of the or:der at Hibernian hall

o~c~=k~:~~~~ v7::e~i!f~:~~~

F ~~f:h

Jamee: H Ivory of North Brookfield,
secretary, ~nd Michael J Ahern off
Boston, treasurer~
.·. The selection O'f the next convention city was left to the discretion
of the incoming state board
It is
generally
helieved,
however,
that
Springfield wil( be given the preference among 'the cities of the · state
Attorn~y Fenton
was
graduated
from the Lawrence High st;!hOOl in
19:16; Holy Cross college in, ~~20 and
~u:ff.Olk La.w school in l924 He taught
itf Ch@ L;it WI em;&- public schools for
nearly nine year, and was faculty
manager of athletics at the Lawrence
H~gh school for fl ve years
He is register of deeds for the
Northern Eissex district and is t.he
only elected Democratic official in

~;sl~e~~c~~~·

:'ctaJr!!~~~ttetop;i~~i~~~
, of ~hich was that by State Treasurer
' Cha!t'les F. Hurley, who is a mem1)er
of the order
·
'
"It is my opinion," he said, "that
the board of bank incorporators' ctllties should be enlarged, if they have
tl).e power, and this is no reflection
on the bank commissioner's offfce, -,that i:f We, the bO r(l tOf bank incorporators have th
· wer to
grant
(~ontin ed
age Two)

I

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in

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tlur-

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POST, WORCESTER, !VIASS.

f

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~~f~~t;yo~!~~~

Es~C:e c~~~~;o~i!s~~t

;

1:~~lthw~~~th~':llyh;ir
~~~ Jy
spoke "with pr~de" · of the young in.en ourse
, -he had appointed to aid him in his ranadministration
• J•
He emphasized further that he was
1 p.ot present at the banquet in his ofi flcial capacity as a representative of
[the Commonwealth, but was Just
tpassing through Worcester from the
Cape, en route to his home in Westfield,
.
"In view of the fact I spoke at' a ~ears
ethodist
meeting 18.st Saturda'y ~rch.
down on the Cape, I felt that I !kton
1
J •should say a few words here at your
en;banquet," he 5aid laughingly. and:. he
the diners aplauded the sally.
"
, Rev. Edward J Fitzgerald.- P. R., of ~m·. t . .John's "'church, county Chaplain, ent
'"Spoke on "'The Church"
He out- as
i '3.ined what the Catholic church has ds ,
:performed f'Or humanity. :f{e stressed
.
/
,the efforts of the church to termin- ,
J
·ate slavery. its service -to the poor L
. L_

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LieV:.r-

a_c ~m~c
S~!oo~ewill begin it~ 26th
t1on is already in progpt. 21. Reg1stra!~:oof.choo1 and the
bp6:ehp:irt~~;

!NO.XYH

~e:!:

A new plan goes int
year, applying to the

.

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O'Peration this
future . classes, callin~ as;o~f 19~5, _and
l
change 1n programme D
,
a shgh t
\
semester the freshme·
.)Jrmg ,the first
introduction to the ~ V\J~ll have torts,
\ criminal laW. Contra~t~Y o.t law and
in the, second semesters L will be given
/ Year; Contracts LL
freshman/
/
ter of the .sophomore
rst :3eme_s- i i
f rest:lt in a. .r.earrangeme~~arf This ~111
0

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t subJects,

but such

._
_!~t_o~ ~pe~a:1:i?:l.l·.
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Suffolk Law School

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:s_opho.mor-e
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'"'-""'""-l1il"'-· ~c..w'c.:si:l"~::;.';. ;·~.:.IL!!:EC::'!VI'. !'·:•.·,::::ffl!!!.lVI!!!lAi±>::i;Jst;::JJL:te,~·,;·=>=·
N_E:i".

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f\UG '2. S '93'

-----

:-SC-

·,ANWINS
,?blW· SCHOOL
. SCHOLARSHIP

WINS ANOTHER
SCHOLARSHIP AT
, J SUEFOU( SCHOOL
0

1
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~he "Geo1ge A, Frost Scholarship,"
1.ig'.tl.est undergraduate honor pestowed
the Suffolk LaVI.;. School, 11a's been

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1

~)3.W?, r~.€ld. to is Mr. J Cagan the .Be"\'"erl·Y. \ '
..
Saul
.Cagan of highest..
.-Not ,only
; ranklng member of Ii.is class for the
·'st . school year, but he is foremost
f./g£!Jc-.. th,r-ee yea~§.'-- ;rJiis i,s_ sign~I
hpl.ast.ic achievement in a b6~:Y 'th.at
b'ered' 451) at tbe beginning of las.c,
,
,.junior year
Ralph W. Wilson,
'

I

rue-tor of commercial la"v in a Lynn

., ;c::ti~(?ol, was given the ·'Arc}?.er Scholar'. ~hip..,- for main,tainlng the second higl'l:~c!5-t_ -~~erage.

l'

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,::''Itr

letter of

congratulation:·

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,
'

pleasure in in;:::::- ~ou

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b~l1alf of the Trustees and Facof Suffoll< Law SShool I taKe

i

For the third consecut_ive year,
Ralph W Wilson of Vine street, Annlsquam has been awarded a scholarship for excellence in studies, at /
suffolk Law sct>,.ool, Boston For tne
scmlffl""Yeiir. just closed, tne "Gleason
L. Archer Scholarship'' was awarded
the local man for maintaining t_he
sec.Ond hi
honors in· the 3un1or
class witJ..
neral average of 89 5-7
-\ per Cent
scholarship, equal i.n
value to
alf of the regular tu1\J tion for th~ 'senior year, is based_ up- ,
,eoosd
W-

I~s ,mo•~''°

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that you [

have been awarded the 'George A
Fr_ost Scholarship~ for having mainta1ned the highest scholastic u.vera'°'e
1n the Junior Class (91 3-14%) 1durl;g
the school year of'. 1930-31
Plelse accept mY since4e congratulc..tions upon
your success
To have thus distinguished yourself in so large a c1ass Is
an acfhieveruent of which you should
be proud '

Cagan has risen stea1l.1Iy
In
t;reshman year he stood third 1n
~he ,Glass, only a fraction of a point
~elt~nd _the leaders
The next yeat he
~as, th1_rd again, but with the stand1ng of second for the two years
'I'bis

was in eyery

I

RAf:.Pli W. WILSON
wno wan Suffolk r,aw ScholarsniP.

1

had nearly 500 other members of tne
junior class with whom to compete.
Mr. Wilson was the winner of the
1\"Stein.berg scholarship" a
year ago,
, for maintaining tne nighest general
· average for his freshman and soph.omo'TE? ye~_rs in ~ ~lass of over 800 ,
nien at Suffoll-c, while two year~ ago,'.
· he was awarded the "Archer Scholar- J
snip" for finishing second in a 91ass !'
\ of nearly 1000 meIIlbers Tnis 15 a ,
record on which fie is to be congrat- ',
ulated
.
:
. . Mr Wilson is a former Times
per ,boy, having had a large route m ',
\ East Gloucester; was awarded the I

'1

I

·H'~r

p~-1·

:-~":c~~ialf,=i£'ia\~~

GJf~: \

I

I

I

\I

i

~aa;sun~;::sJ

Graduating
fr
·
school ln 1927 M ~ Beverly High
thy record b;hind h~gan left a wor ..

mercial education, and a~ _prese~nt.

head of.· the _busi1J.eSS adm1n1strat.1.on
department at Burdett College at tne
division ..
·.

. _LE

WU.LBJ!: M

ave been sent out tor'ct:he
E,<-COUI!Cilman Per~ J
.tone ave;:-to Miss .,41ice
' ·of Mr and Mrs

REVIEW, BOSTON, MASS.

rrl·r:;? ~> -"~~r
, . J ,.,. - a 1 ~
.

I

~~·------~~~-

' buy
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lt

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;r-------

FOR SCHOOL BOARD

Edward Jackson Curley of 23 Grampian Way, Dorchester, will be a can~
didate for school committee this fall
" .-.......-=-=----~"-"'-~-=.:i' _-..o::,...,_,±._~-=-

. , .

ci::s

Pf~.;'~
\ cester high,' }ed his class ill Burdett
College; was graduated from the\'
School of commerce and pmance of !
Northeastern University. w. here he I
was granted tne B. C. S. degree. :ae
has also had several courses at Bos- :
on untversitY.
.
,
\
He is educational advisor on com-\.

. ••Ii""''

:~~~::. ~~~ g
highest average. 0-.J

tained a rating~O:!f '$,!.,._~ . , .. ;-main ..
two units h!gb'eri ~~~ .. ;pent,
'.· competitor.
_if'~ .·nearest
1
Dean Gleason'i1:i
Law school sent_.·.
man a. letter ot ·~ ·
fo~~ows:
,
.{,.
~., .~ 1 , n as
In behalf Of th1" this
•c
ulty of Suffolk .Il ~ and fa.cpleasure in inform~ri scli9~1 I take
have.,.been awarded fh!01;1; that you
Frost scholarship'" tor"h feorge A.
ta!ned the high tav ng ma!n!n the junior
(sif';1i!<,stlc averagf
durl~ the school
,.~14;: per cent)
Please accept
~yea:r:. Of 1930-31
1 tions upon y~Y sincere congratu1a.:
thus d.ist1ngu1s~e~uccess
To have
large a class 18
yourself in so
which you should 8f;' achievement of
Mr cag
h
e proud/'
treshin.an ;1!ara~!i!~n steadily. In his
class~ only a :fra ti ood. third in the
hind. the leadersc ~ or a point bewas again third.· b
e next year he
ot second tor the' tw~t with standing
ft~~~ he was in every

Ii

way un-

Gr~duating from ·Beverly High in
192'.7/~ Mr. Cagafl. left a worthy record
~eh1nd him
He wa_s a member of the
Stu~e~t Cou_ncil, prE:sident of the Deba~1n~ . Society,
lieutenant
of
the
Safetz ~~~·~Ol, and held innumerable
minqt",~~l;~~s
He is a charte1 men1b~~. ?f ~t9}f ~everly Chapter of the Na~ ·tJ'.:~n~~
Society and a n1ember oi
;,;.,,_f!~·~1. tY· .. :Pti:apter, Order. of DeMolay.
' ... w.·hen his class at Suffolk organized
la~t :February, he was elected ils sec. , .. fetary, which office he now holds.

~'?'

: bered 450 at
! his junior
structor of co

'1\

Mi~

~~::ure~arfir~~-

!_

!I
1:1;

L, _h~~

l
1

=

1

Mr. Cagan maintained n I
· '
91 3-14 per cent, t,vo units
}:l}S _nearest co1npetitor.
~~eason L. Archer of St-i'ff0i'R: 1
f.eJ_a,".\'"
c:hool sent the Beverly younS'

1i ·";,fi~w::



,'

member Of the stud.e

f-·

He was a

f ident of the Forensi n8 council, pres, a3:1t of the safety pa.~ fiety.,. lieuten,l( nUll'lerable minor
~ ~ and held inr charter membe
' off1 ces. He is a
.~ ter O! the Natl,;~{ the Beverly Chapa. m.em.ber Of Fidelffonor society• a;nct
of DeMolay. When
cha~ter. Order f
L ;folk organized last Fi~ cl.ass at Suf- '
elected 1ts secretary• !r{i~~ryoft~e

,fi

l

w~:

TELEGRAM-NEWS, LYNN, MASS.

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, lVIASS.

1,t~i

C -

·o

\~'3,

jSuffAlli ..J:o,~.School

_ -,~,

\ ~<) ~unior ,Pr~ni ~To»1or~~;
i'

'l~he Suffolk- .Law., School Ju11iot ))~~~

J will

be he!di tomori:bw eve_nln!;I" . in H9,~l.,

f Somer"'1et.

Roge,• A. Sal~ ·class -1>resld~'ti',
has appointed ~aro~_d, D. Ste.ele, ,'as·
'cha;i'Pn1an · <frld J'osePh '. D.on "Gue
oha.trman of aids
Wyma,n 0 . .Arbu.
'Yi~e president, Saul J' Caga:n, secr,e
and Joseph_ Ii,. DeCaro, treasurer,·
jri.vit.ed the' following as. patro
so,r ~ntl Mr:;; ,,VilJn~t R. Ev?,
and Mrs. Cl'Ieasop r;: Arcn¢r,.Jitn«

1

~Qr .Thq~~1:$. ,~. '.Ba~Y:,·.

(

.MORE ABOUT
BAR MEETING
(Continued from Page 1.)

\

; tor the occasion. Reports of their ad•
: dresses will be found. elsewhere in this
·, iJ edl tion.

:) noon session was 1 unanimous ap ...
th~g~~·e~!o':0 the
!l ~r;~~~!::;1
°a~~e~=

pro;val of the resolution submitted\ by

!~io~~m@1 ~~ai~::~:u:::;; ~dJ:; r
\~

of New York City. The effect of the i
proposed. legislation is to eliminate red i
" tape in the enforcement of judgments,
,,· in federal districts and states other:.
. .~
than those in V(hich judgments are

I devoted to proposed reforms in federal[! ,
In general the Thursday meeting was1

'· rendered.

.;,

~ ·1

to result tn:
g1;eater uniformity, to advance he in .. !
terests of justice and administration of'
the law, all of which were approved.
'.
Following' a sharp debate, a resolu-'

'.; and state laws designed

.;1:

t.

,
~.

J

:~ :~~sd!~~~:~Y

t~n~e~!i~~t uaS:to~ey ti~ i

i .. those who are actually membt::rs of the :
bar. was adopted by a sweeping majorlty.
Amendments to the internal revenue
act of 1926, relating to the payment of
Income taxes. as urged by Hugh Satter1
;: lee, of New York, and the committee on

1

.J :~!!~\i~~':t!~~~o::te

also gi~en the
Under proposed legislation endorsed
by the delegates both money judgments
and equity decrees of sister states and
of federal courts may be made enforceable by mere registration in any part of
the country where relief is sought to be
obtained.
uncertain at the pre
.
The re'port of the comnuttee on com: 11nercial law and biiikruptOY~ Wh~ch
w. H. H Piatt-sof Kansas City. Mo, ls
: chairman, also was adopted, with the
recommendation that all State and
local bar associations use their best
efforts toward adoption in their respective States of uniform legislation upon commercial subjects.

j

1

'l

Adopt Piatt's Report.
A resolution requesting the secretary
of commerce and the commissioner of

b:;~~!1

[ f:i!:1Ji~ pr:~~!e
~ie r~!~~ti~~
1 flee to limit the terms '"attorney" and
"patent attorney" to those who actually
are members of the bar, was carried
almost unanimously
It was pointed
out by opponents that the proposecl ,
new regulations should exempt laymen !
but supporters of the resolution held
that to permit anyone but an attorney
0

j

!~c:!~o;::: c:J~e ~s e~~~;:.ary to the
0

,

The

committee

on

the

asproposed

canons of professional ethics was divid-'
ed and a. minority report was submitted. An anticipated clash was avoided
when ,the chairman announced that the
committee des1red :further time to
study the matter and did not urge its
,approval.

·=::: ·;

Cuv1111er Presents Resolution.

- j be'f!-: tf~~:~~en~foJi:~~:t~:!e~~fy~

,,

man Louis cuvill!er, of New York~ ,
prominent in the fight against the '
national dry law, introduced a reso\, lution asking the Bar Association to
-> : support the convening of a con.st!-.·:··.r~, fu.troi+aleniencimellt tO;- repeal or nloo.1~

·~~~·

r

:~!i:~cf\i:ere!~l~tti~ :~;;Id 1i;e ~:~ ·

ferred. to the committee on ethics :for
study and report next year.
Maurice Bokanowskl, who spoke at ,
Weclnesday
evening's
meeting,
left :
Buffalo, late yesterday afternoon for
Montreal. He ls minister of aviation,'
conµnerce. industry and telegraph of :
France and told newspapermen. that he I
plans to visit West Point September I
6 for the Lafayette-Ma1:ne celebration
and to see the intern·ational tennis
contests in Philadelphia on september
9, sailing for home the same day so
that he can take part in the openiwi
Of the American Legion convention. -1
Lord Hews.rt, it ls expected. will leavel

I

the city today. Justice Taft returned

toi

the Clifton.House at.Niagara Falls 1m- 1

mediately a:tter his a d ~ last night\
tlle_.!!1lfl"alq Consistory.
1

!::'..
j

,The

c11fl'te.stan£s.

ca~:npi=f~re

the

udge_s one by one.
The boys were
ex.a;rnned and studied. Questions of gen-

I

~~a su~1:-Ct!P~~~~

!1:!~~e_,on a v~rie•

r

BUFFALO

EWART ATTACKS -,.
'
f
'
NtEs
''GREEDY', p , '

·-H'

s,,

'

I

[tbe bar, re:·· angustae led him into[

l , JournaUmn :ror some years as a re-

1

l I porter in the gallery ot Parliament.,
wbere' doubtless l!ke Samuel Johnson
1n his reports he was able to improve
the style and English of the deba.tes.
This experience aided him much to

NEJWS:


.

j

Business Office Domin.
Weakens Pn

Icatch- the

1
ways and. t.emper at the
:Advertising or business office dot
IJi~use &nd.~ become the ac O
11 h d
newspaper's editorial department break
Tee11ng of a.nnoyanee reta;ne~ by Lord they any special obligat!o~. 'lr !1ab~l1~ ! p.arliameri.tarian .Of hit! later cy:~ ~a: ..
function of a free press,, declared Lord
Hewart since his attack upon the press, ties. The right of freedom o1 speech is, tween the time he cam.e to th b · tlt
England, in hi.s notable address before t
while addressing the Ca:b.9:dian Ba.T Similarly, the right. to_ say ~ythtn1! in: 1902 and the W8.r, he won
eeat~n
Thursday night.
association last week, which was warm- pUbllc or private, which Js,;not e .. th:r \ marked su~cess and soon recame ~
On this point, Lord Hewart s.aid:
ly answered editorially by the New York se<;!ltlous or blasphemous or .defamatci:yJ leader. Entering parliament, he de-.
1
"The other matter to which I shou
Times and the Canadian ~ress.
{ of any person.
. . l veloped a strength due to the sweet
is a certain change which seems to have
Lor~. Hewart heard· himself. referred I ''Now, the a.dxnlnistratlon .of jusvic~.; and convincing re~sonabl.eness ot his
and the aims of much of the newspaper ,
to as a, .. repo:rter in the ga.l~ery of . as you do not need t,o be reminded~ is i argument, .instead of the sledge ham"To put the matter the other way ro
parliament, ".yhere doubtless, like Sam- { of greater importance to a pe·p·· ple ,th~ I mer unpropltiating assault of oppoof treason against th~ political sovere
uel 'Johnson in his !eports, he was able anything else, and it is confidence in~ nents He became a pillar of strength,
the public, either by active misrepresen1
to Improve tlle style and English of the admlnlstratlon of ju~l.Ce whicb.,; 1 to the goverillllent or which he was a
pression?
Thirty ,years ago and more
the debates:• a.nd la.uded as a lord clllef beyond a.nythlng el~. inakes ,a peo~l~ ! member. The only obs.truction to his
many newspaper offices of a contest f<
justice and as a t5:..;.eat law o!flcer of contented and happy. Where ~h.ere a.l"e ! promotion to be the Lord Chief Justice
may be called the editorial department
the crown by Justice Ta.ft.
just laws, admlnlst~red ~t~gut f~ar was like that which delayed Manswhich is to a great extent the advertisit1
Other high notes Thursday eventng or favor, by tncorruptible a~. 1m.par.- _field-the UJ?.wllllngness of the prime
were tb.e action of the section o'n legal t1a.l judges, there is not much~cause 't;b· minister to part With his service as a
side.
education and admission to the bar fear popular outbreaks or re'volutlon. great law officer of the crown, and 60
"During the interval, the contest s
refusing to sanction less<!: than t,yvo years It ls, you may think, prinolpa.lly tor it \Vas that Whe1,1 he was finally raised·
and, in. an enormous number of cases, d,
pre-legal education for candidates tor I that reason that the treacherous to his pre$ent office, the query of the i ness department. · It. was an expert in tt_ll
law school, but urging all states to propaganda o:t Communism, so clanger- _curious was not 1;fhY he was elevated I said long ago that the real power of
create a board of law examiners similar ous In many other countries, can ha.veJwhen he was but why he had not
suppression."
to the New York state regents and op- little effect in the United States o:t ~been so elevated bet'ore.
~rate a college similar to the College Great Britain. It ls beyond the bnag••rn welcoming our guest, I c n not
-o:r the Ctty o:C New York~ where boys ina;tlon ot any sane person that Am.er- forbear a re.terence to the count~ and ods of procedure~ and preserve the hap- currieu
-and girls of this state may receive tca.ns or ·:Englishmen would Wish to the people from whom he comes I piness of our own commonwealth by changec
~f'ree collegiate training; and th,e address change theli free institutions. for th-e am prompted to do this 'by the d~bt maintaining liberty when effectively
WhllE
of Sir Thomas. W!lles C.hitty, king's ghastly, t.yra. nny by ,which t~e. peopl·e·. ·w···hich can ne. ver be. paid, that we ow~ regula~ed by law
ing in
--r~m.embrancer. and chief master of the of Russia are~ after a. fashion~ ruiea.. , to. them !or our law and our form. -0!
uwe have heard occasionally from of Cor
royal courts. before the members of
1\tadC Part of Constitution
'- government. The happiness we enjoy hostile observers au·d prophets a sug- their h
the Phi Delta Phi, national legal :fra·· •
. in our llberties comes trom the re re..
the....Sta1
ternity. in the Lafayette hotel.
''You have madC!. ~he fundamental- \tentative character of our O ular P ,;.. gestion that the Engllsh nation is de.. presider:
,
prlnCiples of~rty part of your ~it•. Stituttons as we derive t
p P
in cadel}t.
Such comment betrays the tion, to:
Strawn Elected Pres~dent.
J ten constit#:lOn and have entrusted· land.
Without thi · hem from Eng- ~.crass ignorance o:f whS:t makes a great of New .
, For the first time in the history of I the Supreme. Court. a.s the guardia.ti of woUld haVe \been illl s, our progress nation.
Not in ma.teria.1 and tem- SerVice
the association an unoppo~ed c~ndi-1 the Con"titution. with t:he duty of: see- pa.rture trd'h:i. it in t:~~~~;e~~ll d~- poracy: prosperity is the strength of presided
date, Silas H. Strawn of Chicago. was ing that the various legislatures dO: .. ~~'. t'ull of danger.
OUr
roblei.ds ha.v: a people. but in,. its moral fqrce and !ts of the
unanimously elected president of the violence to its principles
It folloWS l;>een somewhat di!fere!t. the varia- endurance an~ p.ower o! res;sta.nce in peals w:
American,:a,ar association at tbe Fl'iday t.bat you h~Ve .1a.ws. w.hich can be t1ons have required some Chan e's in e.dv:ers,ity
address
tnorning session. Mr. Strawn was .born Changed only by an fl.1:llendment o:r .t~~- g9_vernmente.l structure but theg or in
""The fibre of, the El;l.glish people so m2ll ha·
9n a farm near Ottawa, Ill. and was Constitut~on itself.
That is. a great a.1'd esserice of it we 'must trace ~i- often proven. but especially dur.ing the legS.'1 pr
admitted to the bar in 1889. He is a safeguard against hasty and. 111-con- rectly to our English descent
tong and awful years
of the great strength
-member of the firm of Winston, Strawn sidered innovati()n. a.n~ the p~en~':'" .
Praises En,
·
World War, by its endurance and s~ern
Frank
and Shaw, in Chicago, solicitors tor the ena.l success of your '3'0.pstitu~ion is n~ -. •
glish.
willingness for sacrifice, was but toastmae
stat.es of-Indiana and Illinois and. for doubt closely connectecf: wtt;h that sys... En~~ strength and Pharacter of the sbortly thereS:fte. r capped by the cour-. dinner 1
many rallroads. He represented the tem.
_,. g ~s
people, devel
~ under that age S:nd nerve with which it faced and The prin
United States as delegate to the eonD1fscusses Press.
.
senta.tive form
gove:nm.ent, overcame the tl:).rea.tned dissolution of B. Burd
t"erence respecting Chinese customs
"The other matter to ~hiCh l shoul.4',. Tho 1~ contl'ue to
insplraticr.n. its society in a general strike. In that included
.tariff in ~925, and was sole co:mµlls- like very briefly to reter is a certa.til· . 3 . ii ~odel o! ,the! radmlnistration of was shown ingrained 1n it, its cOm- / Michigan
stoner from the United States on the ·chan e which seems tO hS.Ve ta~ezi'.: us ce, exempll!led,wherever "the Brit- mandlng respect for law, never ex- instructo
commission investigating extraterritor- ple.cegin the. character :a~d the alms o~·
:ioats in its equity,. efficacy ceeded and never to be f<J:rgotten. The
Judge
1a.l jurtsdiction in China.
tnuch of the newspaper.'p~ess It goes.· r
P :ch, Should stimulate us to future of such a people is not in Jones of
Willia~ P. MacCrackeri. Jr., Chicago. without saying that 1:t ,e:elt-govern111:~~ n>:provem nt and reform in our meth- doubt"
<?harg~ bf
'Was re-elected secretary, and John H is t6 be a real and a 11"1.ng thing, the
.
nl of th~
Vo.orhees, ·s1oux Falls, Soutp. Dakota. citizens who share the resp~nsl;>lli.tY,
..
1'J. Wade
,was re-elected treasurer. Jam.es C of governing. ths.t is to ·!Say all the cl~,-. .
Court !-0r
Rogers Denver: Oscar C. ~ull. Detroit; izens, ought at least to have access ·,:to :
prlncipa~
.Prov!n~e Pogue, Ciµ.clnnati; Raiph:- Van in!ormatto.ti Upon pup.11~ affairs. wp1c;ii
dre~Sed t
Orsdel Omaha, and Charles A. Boston. is both accurate a.nd @dequate. One
Grimm, o
New Y~rk were elected to the executive of the instruments .for t}iat purpose ,s. ,
·.
.
..,'
P. Laffey~
·com.mitte~.
·
or at any ratey~~g~!nt~h~;· e~h:ec~ef:; _,To overcome strong opposttton that school of Boston. who waS th~ parent !:~e ~ein~
, l\':tr. Strawn. in -a brief speech Of a,c.. pa.per press.
th jur if the evl had <teveloped to the rUle requiring, of the cr1ginal resolution on blgher
s
ceputladncd.~o· a.hss urdeudt,i,.th es pares~o
dc!!natg!o nfflcheer ~ght vfrdlc\ f~o~y
Jiuarely lai~ all applice.nts for admission to the bar educational requ1re!Jl.ents tor bar apThe Ya
., 8
..,1
ence s no
a
,:.
, to take two years·~work tn college. the pl1cants In referring to the split that charge of
0
W0
15
-regardless of where
any
individual be!*";' itut the -matter,the other- waY;_ .section of legal education and admis .. never
ly
developed,
President Alum.ni ai:
'member may reside, and promised to
~P
it
t
a.UY a kind of; slon to the bar of the American Bar Strawn
hat as the warring parties ed includ
do his Utmost to further the program round. Is
nti l'e Utt 1
verel~,; association
Thursday
evenln~ In.- had be
efraucted of a battle he I Ansley W
of the association.
treason aga:tnst
e ~ ca so
bll \ augurated a mo'vement for free
suggest
y visit- Chica o when the and other
'
deliberately to mislead the pu q; leg1a.te training _of law students in next great Contest is sta
referrin accordanc«
Agaill breaking precedent the mem.. either by~ active Irtls:r!~j~senThta~rotyn
states where no au.ch provision is made to the pugllistic encounfer •schedule~ included
~ s o c 1 a . t 1 o n a,n<1 their wives calculate'ti suppress vii._L_
·1at the present time.
for his home city
University
.: · . ~ · ·
· · ether Friday night at t.he ago and more there Y ~ alr~ady st
~
When the retiting president, Silas H
·
University
annUai<. ..c...finer of the Bar assoc!&.tlon in many newspaper offices of a cpn-,; Strawn of Chicago~ called the section
Lewis Elected President.
S1ty of Ch
in the Elm.wood Music J;lall at 7 o"cloc~ test for supremacy btween what ma together at Hotel Statler, it was supFormel' Governor Charles S. Whitman be called the editori\l\ depa.t-tment oiil posed the most Important tight of the
As a companion piece of legislation
_Will
presid~.
Nicholas
Lon_gwort~, one side and the b;t.Siness. which ~ cpnvention woul-cl take place. 1,tnes a resol~tion Wtls ottered by William
BAR M
Speaker of the House of Repr_esen- to a. great extent t~ advert1Slng d4'-.. had been cl6sely drawn between mem- 1 Draper .....ewls, dean of the University of .
tatives; Jul1an P ~lexander, of MisS1$- partment, on the otblvr side.
~ bers favoring abolition of the two-year .Pennsylvania law scho61, Philadelphia,
sippi; John Proctor Cls.rke. retired jus••During the inte al the contes~ college rule and those insisting upon th:a.t the executive committee o! the
One of
tlee of the Supreme couP't 'of New s~ems, to have been ~~~d~ and. •. in &Ill,
educational qualifications
sec~n, be requested .to take s.uch. ac- convention
YOtk·"state, and John Lord 0'13rian, of enormous number o~a:ases-declc'\.
)~·Pplicants 'to th~ bar. With a full tion as. w111 enable.'the co~ncil to of.the Dls
the l;3utfalo bar. will deliver addresses. tavor of the buslne• cl~~ar~m~nt.
k~owledge of tbe importance of the organize a.:b:. ~xecutive ·force atj.~quate to came Thur
Consider Plane Laws.
was an expe,;t in thf 1;>uslness
qu~stion involved, seyeral hundred at- carry out its· ~ut1es ahd help~ully co- Chi'~ La.be
0
The delegates col'l.sidered legisls.t1on xnent who sfld not
th~t
.:~rneys ·attended the sessi~n ..which in I opera~e with bar ~ssoclations, par ex- stltu~io.nal,
e arding hazardo'U.s S.irplane flights; 1 real .Power o tb.e pr.~ 8
e P<>:Wer.
.p~!~us years drew a h$ndful.
amlners, l~w schoots. and other agenpies bureau in ,
incorporation ot the Bar aSsocla- r suppression
.
, . ..'I'he surprise came when President for the lmproveme.?tt ot existing c.on~.1-1
tiOn und~r federal statute
and the
.
Chain Ow~ershlp..
at the very outs.et o! the xn~et- tions, by appropriating .a surn sutttcWnt
The FlbrJ
pr. positiOn to cha..nge the .date ot the . ~•stde by side,witl'li~is it J,.s 11µ.p
~sen:t~d a res~1ut1on. provict.ing ~or", ~ba.t p~r:pose; This resolut~on. Ts tend a.n in
p 0 Side.D.t•s inauguration at the ses- sible not to observ~:a-~otber deve~
e ~dUcational .. method$ .a~d a.t adopte~ unanimously
-·.;_:;·:·
committee,
re
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f
tb · ment-I mean the ssiernatic ~nd. 1
e t1me t"'~ta1n1ng the two-year
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~pit.~ Friday.
In the .a ternoon
e creastn concentratiGl.:· of t.he ~oi:lt,
req_Uirement that'. had beell
I~ order that the .Pro~m o~";it~·slst- .atio:tl ~o ll
, children of the delegates will be en- . f
g!;,a.t number O .·µ.ewSpal)ers ·
into the law of tlie associati
·ance to nppllcants for a~mi4S~~: to the Tampa, Fla
te;rtai.:ned at an elabor~te P.~i:ty in the ~ ao e and the saml h&ilA A· m;:1
on ba.r might be carri~d. out ~ong'th.·e ll.n.es John B. Su
·.
BuffaIO· Conslst?TY-· Af~r the busi-j er n
·ui~S~m.:
·
.
, indicated by the two resolµt'.fpns; the bar.
ness sessions .. c~ose. Fr~d!i-Y afternoon milllonare. ~ ~t.1c(. '.o:r hts
.,~.~-t~ ~earl!__1:7.11.an~mous. .
council e~iMc~~~"m _otj.,J:f8r ·LeWJs.
..-. . ..,.~
the "delegates .~111___ take ··an. _automobile b~~. noi~is. bect.roo. · ,1an.~a.·Si.
·
o~~ti>.11 _y;,as. "·1.~.o_st ·unanitilous of ..:t~,~ u .n , .•, . : : \ ~ ~ ~ ~ . 1 ~•.. ~.·
.
..•.
.sonii:k~.·.
tour of tbe city. · Saturday the entire r

· h
~ . ll~~l?-.. ~c9n~. ~Y . Qleason:· succeed-"· P ~ · · t":St'ra.wn whose :term versity ot F
1 h ~~ d 5 i ~, '.\f;. ..,
)~aay Will ·i:,e 'Spent sightseeing at: the ~he ~omiJ?-a.,
' , ~ -~--~,sii-rw....1tk.. ~~-~"'~;;--,,:· . ·1 ··'·'d''··. Ith·. ·t-i..'"'·:.-:;-,' ! ·, •, .. ,·.,~. ..
, -.;
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, of ne.wspaper.s sta:n e..t a.tten
..
.-·,.,, .. . -,..,~r:-t.-" _,, _·
.· .;1.,1..~ • .uaw. exp.re .w
.ue sesson..
.
'.! says, now. h.,
:,

(Continned from Pa.&6 One)

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PLAN ·FREE COLLEGE
TRAI'NING IN .THE LAW !
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·tor/

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'l'Yl:o/""Pfµ.sed

a ies<>lutl.onr-:!1:;;..
De-1

:;~~~wp~~;~ch,
to .authorize. t.he
to represe.nt an
Commerq.e to prohibit vidual opinioll
ce~nlc' fl~gbts 1~ the tacks or defe~

~~~"."'!Th".'"e".!.\I;.'!'jd~e"':·I.•'.-:,g\'.'.a,t,.t~e;'s~p~·t~iiilijii!!i
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f ~~~r~es. ~h-~r,
Women lawyi
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SEPTEivIBER

FRIDAY,

::e IJomi~_ation ·
akens Press, Says Hewart

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' J;;OuiS Marshall, de:i'aga~ to~,~
association convention. arid in
the law fl~ of Ouggenhe~!3:r• myer & Ma.rsha~l. who ad
:dn"ess office domination or influence of a
epartnient breaks the influence and exalted I Rotary club tn Hotel Stati
day, is one c;,f the most a'qle
,,, declared Lori! Hewart, lord chief justice of
the bar. A member of scores o:f
address before the American Bar association
ttona.l committees. his latest ·
worthy -act was , the persuacll
I Hewart said:
to which ·1 should like very briefly to refer I Henry Ford to cease his bitter at·
,h seems to have taken place in the character i upon the Jews Of America through
E the newspaper press. * * * , newspaper, .the .De~rborn In.dependMr. Marshall said in his a.dd.-l"e8$
the other way round: Is it not really a kind
fbre the Rotary qlub . that ·:the b
political sovereign deliberately to · mislead
legger could not uve were 1t not
,tive misrepresentation or by calculated supthe Patrop.age ?t the so-c~lled •g
; ago and more there were already signs in
citizen/• He said the pro~i~itton
s of a contest for supremacy between what
was not whether the Untt'ed
rial de·partment on one side and the busines~,
would be wet or dry, but wh.ether~~
mt the advertising department, on the other
zens would support the oonstlt'U ··
Among the things Mr. Marshall ha·s
·al, the contest seems to have been decided
done in his career ~ay be mt;tntiOne.d
tmber of cases, decided in ·favor of the busihis leadership In the movemeht ·~
l.S, an ex·pert in the business department who
abrogate the treaty with ·Russia:; xri.edlit~
·real power of the press is the power of
tor ot the claokmaker 'strike in· Ni.
York; chal:rma.n O:f tnes commtsstoxi,: to
t1.x: the p?'tCe of bread; counsel :tor GOv:'..::
ernor Sulzer, in his 1mpeachm.Etnt pro'
,e the hap- curriculum is being changed to meet ceedings and president o:f· the 'Am.erlcan
lwealth by changed conditions.
Jewish Rel~ef commission which- · -·
·effectively
While the Harvard a1um:n1 were din- lected $65,000,000 tor the relief '.ot ,
ing in the Georgian room, the aluzp.n1 !sh war sufferers.
··
1ally _. from of Cornell University 'Were· bOldlng
ets a sug- their luncheon in a 'nearby parlor of
~ion is de- the.Statler Judge wuuam L. Ransom.
etrays the president of the Cornell Law associaltes a.great tion, formerly judge of the city cour't
and tem- of ~ew York and coUnsel tor the Public.
Service commi~On of 'New
trength of presid~d. Ju,rJ:fCe Cuthbert York city,
w. Pound
rce a.nd its of the New---~'Ork State . Court o:f Ap;1stance in peals was the principal speaker. His
address dealt with the place Cornell
people so ~er,. l';tave won for themselves 1n the
ciuring the lega.'l profession and of the growing
~he great strength of the university law ~chool
and spern
Frank~F Williams, of this city, was
was but toastmaster of the Michigan alumni
the cou~- dinner in the Millard ,Fillmore room
fac~c;i and The principal spe~aker was Judge George
olution of B. B~rd of Buffalo
Other speakers
e. In ~hat included W S Foster ~ t Of the
its com-1 Michigan Bar assocta'tfoll~ seyeral
never ex- instructors in the university law school
otten The J Judge Jesse Miller and Dean H. C.
1s not in Jones. of the Iowa College of Uw, had
?harge Of ti:ie luncheon given by alumni of that institution. Judge Martin
I
'I J
Wade. of the United Sta.tea District
Court' for the Southern district was the
prin'?ipal . speaker.,
Oth~rs · who ad..
dressed the. luncheon were John M
Grimm, of Cedar Rapids, Ia .• and John
· ,,
P. Laffey, of Wilmington,_ D~h.e lat;he parent !:~e!~in$' co~nsel tor t~e
ont in-

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·;v1d,:in-:h1'$

hunt :tot a st~ry. C. and the, only woman u. s. cU~to~s
:~¢r;b~ ·track~ it down, he investigating agent. They went to Ni-~.,,.,~st&.urant :tor a cup of a.gara Falls.
.:~ c&,;t · ~~ ·aiscovered without

:~a9tual census, Thomas Penny
· ·a10...is.. ' t.J~.e youngest. lawyer
·'cQn::v~ntlon. He has· been
f6r three years.

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b:;g!;: Icharge Yale aIUmni lunche~nthe "Y;'ale
The
- was in
of Lyman M. Bass ot

~n
split that
President
lng parties
battle he
when the'
, referring

Alumni association. Those -who asslsted included JU.s't;ice Charles B. Sears.
W. Sawyer, Theodore ·
k
and others. Other. luncheons
1n
accordance with time-honored
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scheduled

~~i,~:!,~fty tt~;e scc:Ioofh:ndNi:!h Univer1:

nt.

sity of Chicago.

legiSlation
William
1versity of
ilad.elphia,
ie of the
s:uch ac:_oilncil to
~etjuate to
pfuHy cos, bar ex•
!r a'.gens;:1es
lng ~-ond~s~f
u P..

IBAR. MEET·~'""E-L-,a-_H_T_s....·j

Un~versity Law school and the Univer-

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o_;;~~st..
the
· lines
the
ev:gis,

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One of the la'te arrivals at the bar
c9nvention is Miss N:IJ.a Allen. member
of the District of Columbia. bar; who
came Thur~day. Miss Allen before the
Child Labor law was declared unconstitUt1onal, was head of the Children's
bureau in Wash1·ngton.
,
• • •
The Florida Bar association will extend an invitation to tl:i:e executive
j committee of the Americari Bar_ associ.ation ~o· hol~ it~'.- winter· session at
Tampa-, Fla.., this coming season, says
j John B. Sutton, president of the state
bar.

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Som~ri'lo,:e l[<6Qut ',Flortcia:Y ·The Unif:'~~·, _:t!l"tf.: ve,rsttr~ ~f FloridS., one. o~ ,i;ts ~ctu~:tes

., ~, says, is theh.first time men law s_tuc1e:nts.
11 This now_ as.two wo_ in !ts history that
~ w~~n have been·. ellrolled.~ in th~ la.~

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ou_r~es ~here. The state )?.as ~~y few
~:_~ !~Wyers
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fourth consecutive time Mrs.

The American Bar Q.ssocta.tion has
honored: women by eiecting Ml~ . Clara.
Greacen, Washington, and Mrs. Emma.
Falls Schofield, Boston, members ot
their state . poullcns o:f the 4,mer1Can
Bar association This is the first time,
the association has elected a woman.
for the councll of either state.
Miss Greaoen i~ a speci~l ~ttorney in.
tbe comptroller genP.ral's office. Mrs..
Schofield is an assistant atto¢ei gen.:.
eral in Massachusetts~ in charge · ~•
contracts and ~onyey~ncing and repre•

~'!::;~h

11 t;:;

edict Gessner
has been ~~~l~~!1 t~~C~~~
u:de~
-~.u!siana delegate~ as state Massachusetts workmen's compensation
dent of ~be Arilerlcan Bar as:.. act.
0

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f the lawyers seemed to heartv:e o:f Chief Justice Hewart•s

clatlbn ot the wicked .methods
}Bensational press Thursday eve-

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·t~-;,]T,f~r;:r.:~:~~~£fa:; I~~;:z~fs~;1:d;: ~:1a·::r:::!"th~;~;~ ~o:r· ::~ibi:ef£:~tu~! I~:1:ti:~~;sari;1~7.r1o~~t~: esc~:d··
:.

to risk their 11v:es needlessly i~ a "V~in I preV'eh'(; newspape;rs r<;>m ~eing t~eated
cl outlU;>.e procedure in a6tton$ as' an· 1:-n_ctus~rlea:. the ;,t>ndoif Oham.ber of/
to. in debate on the subject I they were so muo
..
to cb(ef' trials. str Th.omas Will,.es. a. court· ot arbitration. In th1S m.a.nout ~:~.e.cO~e ·f.·amo.us. . . They. /as m.er.e coin.m.el."cia · mil'iod1 tl~s,. a.·s···if :Chitty spee:dy.:rnas'ter in the royal court,; Commerce· going .so far: as to
soap .. \ on o:r
or
,~hat Colonel Charles /\.. ,Lindbergh con- tinned meat. But
at of the dignity ·of En8'ianci~ suggested when he, spoke- rier much of the work of the courts•
~urre~ ·111 their resol~:tion
o:t the press a.nd. . e : clat:i;ns of the ':t'hursda.y e.V:en.11:J.g in ·Hot~l ~a:fayette is lessened. the heal"iligs ~eing conduct·~:;, L0rif": Rewai-t re.Verted to his attack_ pU~lic? And can
spapers be he_ar~ before Pni Delta Phi, national legal ed before boards of men skilled in the
OpOn 'tne newspa.p~rs after referring to say that .these_ t. ngs ~a.Uy do not traternity.
practical operation of the trnde or l
:".With _gret1.t fri~ndlinesS
the meeting matter if nobod:Y' .Y. lpnger ts ready
as would su ersede the business in which ·-the. dispute has I
WhiCh. ·th:e American_·: ~a:r association to. accept a n. ewspa~.er-s. ~ta.te:~ents or
. Si.r Thom f th sta'.tes a.Ed allow the arisen. He said he was wa~hing the ,
']:ield in. E~glfl,nd thl'e·& 'years ago
is . willlng to pay . ' atteµ.tion to its legislature~ ~h
wyers themselves to etforts of the
Americah Bar and 1
·, H
;~d the Magna cal'ta upon which op1n.1o_ns.? Here, to~ thel'.e is need, l:i courts an t ~ a urt iules as 18 the merchants in arbitration pl'oceedtngs ·,
;.the. e .;:. lish common. Iav: is
bised. there not, for ii;tcreapng vigilance? And c;,::t1n aE~e la.~d. co

with much 1nter~st
,·guarant!ed to everyone com.plete lib- if newspapers are i*1eed to be treat~~ c
~
.
Morey C Bartholomew of the Buf~~rty of ~peech and action· provided he as znere articles of ~ad~, ~f e~eira.~~nto
, \Vould Hav~ :aar Make Rules..
fa.lo Bar intr9duc~d Sir. T.ho.mas. and l
does not bre. ak the la.w. on the ther
t~h~e
t~e:1:ra.b~ power
"I can nOt understand ~ow. o:ur .house Colonel .:,'l'homas _W · 1 Sheitoni:> -~ogoi1:-·
:);:).and, ... the treedom of, the press," ac- of mere money in:' public·- affairs~ ls of commons. for instance, could give Va.~ to the members of he ht . e a.
Cording to Lord Hews.rt. consists "in
_
tsoe'\l'er· Wh
in us a set of court rules as does your l?hi .Laurence W. De¥uth, at or1:1-ey,
..the right which every person has to !!;r~e:,;1:Ct r:;::a!!i ·the law· sl'~u~d legislative bodies:• said S1r Thomae. ~enver, national secreta:i;y ~f t~~ fr~-1
·publish anytlllng he pleases. as long exhibit any special te~derness towards' ~'Should it attempt to do so. :r should ternity, was in charte of h~h ~~Q c
as its not a !lbel:''
th m?
.
cotis1der it absurd and probably just I which 'Yas attended y more:
an l
I
coinn:ion Law Privileges.
e ,
!'~
C
I what we do not want
It seems to me members of tlle B1;1~falo Bar ~nd !1e
·1
Hopes for E'Verlastlng Pea e.
_. the courts and -the lawyers learned in gates to the convention of "the Ame •
· "'Our ,most highly valued liberties and
.. I. have det:a,ined _you too long. Ut the le.w should be the one~ rel3pOn$1ble can ~ar. ~sociatlon
... 1
'1},'t'lv1leges are. as you are -well aware, me Conclude by expressing the hope. f r the conduct o1'. their ce.ses in the lawyers ser"."ing th,e briefs upon each j
'"4'erived fror.p. the com~on ~~w." he con- and· the fervent h~pe, that nothing P urts..
·
.
other Instead of requiring the court to.
'tin·ued
.. Magna Carta dld not crea.-~e ever will be allowed to happen which co51 Thorn.as as master disposes of from wade through a mass of t·estimonf after
~ny new rights· It ~as mere~y a d:ee- m~ght seriously tmp_~ir the friendship 40
50 cases in a single da.y, he ex- the hearing is actually completed as ls
· lP,ration of principles of , the com- ?etween our two peoples. Th8.;t friend_1 ined because Eng'lisl'l jurists are not the case in the United States.
,Jnon law and a
solemn pro:i;nise ship. as we are .a.l~ c~,nv:inced. is the
a uited. to rea.d the briefs of ~pposing
He said the English courts were lean1?:Y King John to obse:rve and to gov- greatest security for the pe&ce and the cbiinsel after the trial or bearing, the 1n,s towards boards o:f arb:J.trat1on to
;ern in a.c~rd~nce with those prin:-- progress of tll.e world, and it ts di:ff~Cipl~s:· It is ~ fundame·n~al TUle of t_h.e cult to conceive thai any greater ca.'COmino:h laW 'that ··everyqne has com- Jamity coulq. befall mankind than that
,~jjlete J1~1ty:o! action ahd ~peeCh, p.ro- the people of the United States ·and
v,ided that he does not break the :.a.w; the British people should' ever \Je seri,'~hat is to say. he has the right to be ously in conflict Nothing. I venwre
governed b~ the law alone.
At to suggest to you, ls more trµly calcuCommon law newspapers have no spe- lated to keep a.live and to :foster that
Specia.I to the Bu:vl"'ALO E:vENING N:m'Ws
:ta.des with the lapse of time in the
:¢al privile'ges in· the matter of publi- friendship than the comrnon love of
YONKERS. Sept. 2 -Prevented by ratio in which the manufacture and
¢a.tion, though by statute th_ey are freedom a.nd the devotion in common
i)!l.pecially protected with refere11:ce to to those great principles of im.partiS.l illness from attendlng the conventi6n distortions of facts are .~de safer and
the pubJ,ication of reports of proceed-: justice whiCh a.re the .toUnda.tion. and Of the American Bar asso_ciation in more prone to success
--:~~gs in: courts of justice and. .. public the sure fpundation. ot tlle common Buffalo, sa;muel unterm.yer made pu~~eet~nga. No_r. on th:e other hand, ha_Ye 1a.w.••
·
UC ·from his horrie here Friday a letter Ch
.
M th d f T eaC h"lnQ
he wrote to former GO".ernor Charles 1
.angmg e O $ 0
s Whitman president of the associa'
.
tion, as a ,,'.,eans of presenting to the
1scussed bY H arvar d Al umni
·
conv.ention his views on '"tlle g:rowlng
The changing methods of teaching
evil of the law's delays and its t.w1.n 1-a.w. due to growing importance of corsl.ster. ~he increasing. prevalence Ot' per-I po;l'ation la~ and legislation affecting
jury.. These are the most important public utilities was the subject of adsubj~cts. tn Mr Unteirnyer's oplnlon, dresses m.ade by sever~l speakers at
tllat will come bef'ote the meeting.
the dinner of Harvard alumni. held
The pl:'osecuiion•s- side o.f the case of fairminded. capable official who ha.s
To speed justice. the lawyer suggests in connection with the annual meet~acco and Va~e:,t~i_, radicals whose given unst1nted11y of ihmself' in his the weedil'lg out ot .. :i,asele:SS and. dl.s- Ing ot the American Bar association.
of.flee.
·
executioP. in. the State of Massachusetts
At other dinners and luncheons held
Sometimes
eye-witness
testimony honest legislatiOn° by cl:l.arging tue unmurder _stirred up worldwttle .pre>":" will ,be :inlstaken and SOmetiµles cir- successful 11t1gant with the complete b;r alumni ot tamous law schools of the
~sts, was ~xplait&.e~ by
Arthur , it:. Cumstantial e"viden ce will IeS.d to 'WTOng cost of the actton instea.d o_:f assessing nation, advanced rnethods of .teaching
Beading~ attorney· general for
tha.t QOnclusions. Mr. Reading declared.~ but h1m tot only a traction of the real cost also were discussed.
William D. Mitchell, soli?itor general
state. at·.a luncheo:p. o:t' the Shrine ciub he asserted that he never knew of 8,n as at presen:t,, a. practice that .. puts a
iii Hotel ,Stat!-&"' Friday noo:r:i
Mr. instance where the two kinds ot testi- premtum. up<=!n dishonesty and compels of the Unite.d States, we.~ the surpri~e
~a.ding ;s attet;ding the sessions of mony. considered to~ether, were proved un:fa.1r comproi.ntse o"! honest claims··
guest at the Harvard dinner. which
th8' - convelltion ot the American Bar to be wrong. The Sacco-Vanzetti verTo reduce perjury, he re1terated the was attended by nearly 200 attorneys
&Ssociation.
dict was baSed on the testimony ot suggestion he made in a statement last and which was held Thursday after,. uwe
of
Massachusetts offer no eye-witnesses and on cirCumstantial Sunday that juries and courts be re- noon at the Hotel Statler. He spoke
~Pology for protecting the cit~zens of evid9n ce, he as':lerted
quir~d to state, in ~nnouncing verdicts, of experiences a.t :wa~hington and com~e state," Mr. Reading said
uwe in"Anlerican justice is not on trial, whether · t,here has been any willflll plimented the members Of the Harvard
s;tst that ours shall be a government but is subject to attack by men :\\rho false sWearing on either side, this flnd- fa.culty upon their institution, its imof laws and not· of men."
have always been opposed to law and 1n8' to be passed on to the district at... portant place in edu~a.tional circles
· Mr ead.tµ.g declared that every len- order a.nd to the American system of tOrney for 1nvest1gn.t1on and action.
and upon the successes gained by i~
iency Under the law was shown to the government," he said. ..Many of these
0 The administration of just~ce. whi~h
gr~duates.
convicted radicals. and be praised Gov- meii are guests within the b6tders of i think
will all agree is the crucial
Philip O Wickser. a local alumni of
etnor Alvan T. Fuller as a ·patriotic. the United States."
test of a given state of civUization, is Harvard, was toastmaster and wore
with us the weakest link in our cha.in the Harvard medal which, with its red
ot, go\'eri:unent.'' M.r. Unterm.ye! wrote ribbon. has been displa.y~d tn legal
In. every other departro.ent there has gatherings all. over the world.
The
be(!n steady progress. We are not only m.edal has been worn, at different
a:'ta.ndtng still, but tn.ovlng backward. times.. by legal luminaries a.t ga.the~The courts are barely :functioning, ow:-- tngs of the greatest import 1n world
tng le.rgely to the congested state ~t history·
, Chief Justibe Tat't spoke as f.:>Uows: I we have had with us I:.Qrcl Hald.ane, the. calendars, allowing in rtuf:C'1cient
Professor Sa.muel Willins~on, of tbe
••Lord Hewart conforms in every way Lord Birkenhead and tb~ present 1ord tlme for' patient hearing and due de- Harvard Law school, in the co~rse of
the type of those who ba.ve- filled chancellor, Lord Cave. Our guest o:t Uberat1on,,
"'"
hls te.1k, outlined the ancient methods
tonight had at schoof and ther~ter
..There ts no such thing e.s lea.den O! teach~ng law as compared with the
~s great office--;....Mansfield, Ellenbor- an exceptional classical training. 80 footed Justice. It ts quite as much of ever-advancing m~thods of today. He
ough. Tenderden, Campbell, Denman, tllat his knowledge of' the law 1s bft.;sed the essence of justloe that it be swift tc;:>ld show the greatest le~al mi.nds ot
c;.ockburn. Coleridge. Russell of Kill- on schol&rly culture in. Latin and and sure as that it shall be blind. the past had never dreamed of the
o:wen, and Reading. It has been the Greek and English, peaW.larly adopted These intolerable delays are the plague important place that cprporation and
gOod ;fortune ot' the American bar to to excellence in the learnJng of our spots where perjury and other miscar- public utility laws would- grow to ooreceive Lords Coleridge. Russell and pl"of'ession.
I rie.ges of justice are bred and flourish. cupy in the jurisprudence. ot the land
~ead1ng, while of the lord chancellors
"After OX!ord e.nd before coming t,o . 'J'he memory o! the 1:l.01;1est witness &nd ot how the :a:a.rva.rd law school

.:~d

'"&.· tt"E-.m.p:.t·,
'Potb.ted

eStabUshl

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:~?a.!1:1

l

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;r

f

.i

UNTERMYER BLAMES
- COURTS FOR PERJURY
1

l o·

Si\CCO GOT FAIR DEAL,
. PROSECUTOR ASSERTS
to~

we

."fAFT

GREETS HEWART

,INNAME OF BAR ASS,N

'it>

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I

;q z_,)
Bar Association Hears
American Lawyer Praised
'

I

Foreign N otab1es Laud Efl'orts in Interest of
Humanity-Whitman See Promise of
New Labor Agreement
'

'

BUFFALO,

N

y.

Tributes from Franc

L.

the 18.wyers of the United States a.1:,d an
outline of the wo:rk that is before it
marked the opening today of the 50th
a.nnllal convention of the American Bar
Association.
Maurice Bokanowski, French minister
of commerce. paid France's tribute.
That of Can~a was delivered by George
K. Montgomery of the Montreal Bar
Association and representative of the
Canadian Bar Association. Both lauded
the efforts of American lawyers in the
:interests of humanity.
Charles S Whitman, president of the
association and former Governor of
New York, set the wheels of the con"Vention in motion witl1 his opening address, in which he cited as a work of
ou'$standing merit the accomplishments
.
of/recent conferences between members
of the bar association and the American
'Federation or Labor.
BUSI'NESS SESSIONS TODAY
Although three sessions were held, the
:actual business of the convention was
left for tomorrow.
M. Bokanowski sketched the part
lawyers have played in the form.ation
e.nd development of the United States,
citing Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, John Marshall, William Howard
Taft and Elihu Root, as examples of
lawyers who have played eminent roles
in the nation's affairs
• HGentlemen,': he said, "the glory of
t;he American bar, the equally high
standing and gn~at influence of the
legal profession in the United States
··1•..d in France is no mere freak of fate.
- .n every civilized community the
~tl.ence of the bar is in constant and
.Jlrect relation to the growth of civic
liberty and the dignity of citizenship."
LORD HEWART ARRIVES
Lord Hewart, lord chief justice of
~gland~ arrived today."' He will be in1duced by Chief Justice Taft. when
speaks before the convention to'monow. Recent experiences in Canada, where Lord Hewart said he was
••grossly misquoted," led him to refuse
;interviews to the press.
Hope t..bat recent conferences between
Tepresentatives of the American Bar As-

sociation and the A.nlerican Federation
of Labor may bring about legislation
that will permit interstate commerce
labor disputes to be settled by modern
methods was expressed by President
Whitman
The former Governor of New York
declared it his belief that "nothing on
the horizon of federal legislation otters
greater promise
"These conferences," Whitman said.
"were initiated by an invitation which
I extended to William Green, president
of the American Federation of Labor. at,
its convention at Detroit in October, 1
1926, to appoint an approPriate committee to co-operate with this a~sociation's committee on commerce in drafting legislation on Unes l&id down in that
committee's report in 1926."
Whitman, reviewing other activities of
the Bar association, said that another
important work being done by the various comm'ittees of the organization is
that of the legal aid department, whlch
has devoted its energy mainly toward
the drafting of a model statute to facilitate the prompt and ines.pensive collection of wages.
1

NEW INAUGURATION DATE
Discussing congressional delays, Whitn1an said:
"The failure of the 69th Congress to
enact important appropriation bills, and
the jeopardizing of vital public interests through lack of available funds, are
1 egarded by the special committee on
the change of date of presidential inauration as :further proof of the desirability of changing the date of the commencement of the Cong1ess and also the
date of the inauguration of the President.
"'A congressional situation created by
constitutional limitation which can result in the suspension of many activities
of government, including the orderly
cond.Uct of tne terms of the court of the
federal judiciary syste;m, plainly Indicates the necessity of the reform which
has been advocated in behalf of the
American Bar Association:·
·
As the result of work done by the
national conference of commissioners on
uniform state laws, Whitman said that
since the last meeting of the c·onference,
45 uniforn1 acts, nine of which were
amendments to motor vehicle acts,_have
been adopted by various states Ten o1
these acts were ado})ted with substan"'

tial amendments_

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,..

.
;
j:fif-Chief Justice Tells Bar As~ociation
.;

(,

/Business Office Ruled Newspapers
'..

Menace Free Government.

:;.>,i'~wspaper combinations controlled by ,c>ne man and
.Y pub]ications directed· and operated through commercial
er :than editorial considerations are a mel:lace to demoic institutions and should be subject to regulation by law.
'Lo:tid Rewart, lord chief justice of England, baron of
·,, reputed one of the greatest legal authorities in Engt<:>ok this thought, which he propounded at length, as
keynote of his address Thursday evening before the dele·.s · to the American Bar association in the Buffalo Co_n- i
:-Z~rd ·Hewart was 1introduced by William Howard Taft, '.
.Justice and former president of the United States, ·=ho!
,;,,re<;l. a wh.rm eulogy of the· English jurist's attainments
1
:·Jawyer, justice and former newspaper reporter.
- 'r Gove;r;nor Charles S. Wnitm.an,j
·'
:t; o:C the American Bar
ELECTED u ..· ·s • BAR HEAD , 1
od uced both
Chie:f
Justice
-

associs.-1'

Lord. Hewar~
Chief Justice
tly less rotund than or yore.
D.g his geniality to a marked
s greeted 1:>y an ovation :rrorn

·. ~h~=:;/:;;~:;;p;;;:;;~:; I

·; in v-o'lume, the Chief Justice
';l~~g~t~r b?' waving "sit down.. '
._s-!'hands
·
~

'.,: T~t~

I

Eases Anno~ ance.

I

ti_ wasted

no time in readch, calcula,ted. to ea.Se any
~rinoyance retS.:lned by Lord I
ce his a·ttack upon the press. '
reSslng the
Canacuan
Bar
last week. whlCh was warm
.eCUtorially by th"e New York
the Canadian preSs
·
.art heard htmself referred
•,reporter tn the gi;t,llery of
'where doubtless, like SamIn his reports. he .was able •
the style and English of
•• and lauded as a lord chlef
aS a ~eat Ia w dfficer of
y Justice Taft.
!
notes Thursday e-venin;J /
ta.O_n of the sec:tJ.on on legai 4

~e~~~ !
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' ~~~~~~m::;;ofha~ ~;~e
uza;t-ion for candidates :Cor
urging all states to
-..boa:i-'d: 0::f" law e~~m~ners similar
..
e-w. York state regents and op,col],ege similar to- the College
J.:.. bu-t

,

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--~{~~:!~~ t:i!w s!~~k, :a~e~;ec~~; /
a~ii~~;~ ai~~~~:

:;;to~::a1:;:;re~
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·11

-~er, and chief master of ·the/

1i~ b:~tre~atf:~~.:fer::::tsrri:

~ s·~AS -~; STRAW~
Sil.as ~- -~t:ra~ Chicago attorney.
:f'orm~r pr~s1..dent-.. :of the Qhicago Bar
f ~ss9qiatfon an_d'. the Illinois Sta:~e Bar
l association.,.:. was ,.,µ.i:t.,a,n.imqusly
elected
i·pres_1den~ O'!, ~.f?.E:( American Bar asso-

1;ib.e LS:fS.y~tte · h?.tel_.· ·
-.
.
. ·. · .
. ·.
EleC~ed. .Pre:s~d~nt~.
,.
1.~ :the .history of
noppo.13:~d~ :.c~ndi_-:-.

~~.:1::!1~~~~~fjfl~~~:·to:~~r ·~~~~ili,~f.

- n ·.at the·~ridiay] of New .Xork.
~~- Stra.wri. was born\
.
.
\
O:t:tawa, Ill., and. ~ s
~ r in.,. .;iaa9. ~He iS a publish·. ~nyt~tng .. he p~ea~e~. as long
1
: : : a ~ ) as its ~;!.:m~!~ {aw PrIVi}eges.
a alld Illinpis · and :for.
"Our most 1_1i~,hly valued liberties and
He ..represented the privileges _are, as you are well aware,
s delegate to the con- r derived frC?m the common law,", he con~
Chinese
customs l tinued
"Magn,a Carta dl<i not create
, and was sole co:inmis- / any new rights.
I~ waS merely a deethe United- States on the laration of . principleis of the com~V1J?;Stigat,1ng extraterritor- 1 mon ..1§.w
and
a
solemn
promise
n in China
by Kint: John "to observe and to g-0v·MacCracken Jr., Chtcag-:--, ern ln · accordance with those prln-

I

lf~~~ ~ffcl~~~

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t~~d:~~~~~er~:s ~o~~

~;e~:iJ~ryS:~tt J~~:~:· / ~~1:;,_~on~\!;a
10
1
a~!!rof~-:
~~:~tyhit:d~~!
·, Cincinnati; R~lph va~ th~t.
to say, he has 'the right to be
~j>
and Charles A Bbston
governed
by
the
law
~rone.
At
~~~:w,ere .elected to the execu,tiv~
1f!';s nihw~b_~P%_~t~!rveo:f'~;us6t.1:

:i o!~S:~e~uif

I :fi~~~

~0:~~e~!i.t~h~ ~~~

is

~f:i1i;~~

~;!_~~~i.iYth;~;~ct!~' !~%~.teret'!~exice ~~~
the publicat1on,, ·9:t .. reJ>orts of proceed,il.'lg/S .,,1µ.(, ,cgl.11'.:;~_;-'·
,
ee.:.._,a.µ.~ pti_bl.fc
Jneet
th.er band. hn.Y~
8

a

t'~~n •.. in·
brief 'speech. qf ~c.'.a..~~ed,.the
~s.sgcia.tion
he
!~s ·.,;:1-.'U~~. ~s p~.esi.~l~g · ~:f'fi,~~r
of" ;JW:~¢r~·: ~~Y.
P.=11iv1~~

~.y,·~~~\;eft,J:fa~~i !t~
·
n

1~·e~~1t

:~~. ···erifft~

sedifi;Ousr0r bla~h

1.1,na:

de:f'a~atcl·y
01
..~ ~ : o f r~~d,~arnf.:!!c1a1;!on I , :•~dw~et~~~dinfnistrati~n
.m_w.ood Music hall at 7 o'clock. as you do no.t, need to be
5
1
6
,ffi~~=~no~l<;;~~~!:~
J
e 1~£· ~;,_~n~;.
~o~fcf~~c1:=~~
'.~;7:;-:oi.,? the House of ·Represen-1 the administration o:t Justice which,
~;-1if,~lj.-a.n P AleXander, of Missis- b¢yond anything else,, znakes a people
~~teF;r~~~o:e~~ar~~~~:t.i~~d
Where there are
1 contented and happy
0/ /
, . , ~b1!_';
d~~f1er0

Lo':!\~~~~

J~~~

i~

re~iJ::~~c:~

-tc1!~

~:f!_':;~~o!t ~h: e~!~~~~l~s P,Z!,~y ~~ ~~;
Iftf:LIO':' ·~on.sistory.
A:!ter the bus1~s_ .~~sSions close Friday afternoon
, ·~el,r;gates will take an automobile
r. o:f' the city
Saturday the entire
· ',W:nf be Spent sightseeing at 1- ....
ls~·-. ·
O,rd. Hewa:rt

-

~~::::::r

?ci1;;;,~'se ~1:s~a-!~~.s,pya~::;;;:i~B;iew~i:~ui~i:~~

on.sid~r :Plane Laws. .
_·ia,_teS_ conside~eci legislation
.hazardous
alrpl~ne flights;
:,
por:atlon o:f the Bar asso.,ciar. federal
~):atute,
and the
n to change the date o"'f" the
.:......,!~ept~.~: 'inauguratioil at 'the sesl.~;.:·F.rld.ay.
In the a:f'ternoon the

""~·-

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~;2c!1ei!1~~~0~

i It is~ you trtay ~ · principally t:or'
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(Continued on

Page 13. Column

1..)

11ulti-tude Turn_s Out To See
Premier Aviators Of Northwest Disport In Aerial Circus

Gi:irieOus in - cOlor, Stil"rlng 1n

:112cl~';.~d. ~~~;s~1}~ 1n!~1rl~ai!

(Cori:tinued From Page !t)

spectacular climax of tee American
B~r Association .convention

ports off the morlltllg programand also to result In itS defeat.
R.ogerS proposed that the associa
tion favor 8, new copyl'ight law,
which :would make it poss~ble for
the'. United States to enter the in-

~PEAKS FOR c1T·v

KLEI HAUER PROLOCTO~

t-ei-national copyright convention-

, MaYor· · F'rallk Edwards spoke
1riefly for this city, congratulatiJlg
he countY and the board '·on · the
eveloptllent of the 8.1I'port; Whi6h
.e d·ecll1.red one Of the finest in· the
fnlte<', States.
.
Thf r'ormal" d1!dica:tory 8.d.dre§'ls
ras. ·.deliV'ered··bY Thomas D .. Stimon. chairman of th0 con;tm1tt.¢e,
nd also governor for Washingtcin
t tI:i-e ~a.tiona.J,. 1 Aerc;,nautic A.S$(?.Cition. He' extended to the board
rid to Managef Hyde the congl'&tu·
1.tions of the a.eronatitic aSsbcfa[On· upon ·the deve~opineD.t of '.aoe1~ Field.
Tetegra:rns w.er.e. Tead
~om P6rter Adams, pi-esiderit o:f
!Ie N.; A. ,A~, ahd ·.others; exte~.din:g
:l1icltS.t1oDS to Kii:tg County. ·and
eattle. -, C~)li.~Iu.ding. St1ms~p, for1a1ly . proclaimed the new atrport
~00.tttg Field.'"
"
,

- It· was the first time that an er.:. ~n<f: hfs fi!Uggestion seemed to be in
fort ha:d ever been made to drama- a fair way of winning afteT he had
tize the signing' of ~.e· instrumen~ announced· that Chini and Russ:ia
::Uf~;~~~x~~da.fratliJ~!sket;t~nJ: were the only other major coun-'
erty-but; no matter how ambitious ,t!ies not ~n the convention .
the project,· it was proclaimed an
'But a in.ember of his own secµnqualified success by the applause tion-0. Raymond -Barnett of Chi- 1
1
of the thousands' who packed - the cago-upset the al:)plecart by tell- 1
auditorium. ,
The I,tev. Clevel~.d E::leihauer ing- u£e con.· ventlon that this would,.
was the; proloctor. The print;ipal mea;p that Americans, who copied
roles wtire eriacted by , Daniel JV.· anY'thing'. E'ven if not marked copy- :
Rosenbe~g. Ray Dumett, Harold right. would, render themselves.}
Bassage. A.rth~ Harris, Clarence liable to prosecution, as the European·nations have
whicli auto:r.ratt ltili, Howard Mollestad. RaY; :,~}!~a~l~·~d~~~~~ht all UterarY, and

deep ¥ignificcinc~. the p~oduction
of ·Thomas Wood Stevens" pageant

ind Mana·ger H)'cfe 'a'nd speaking
lr"lefly on the contribution King
~oufltY has .made. In -the founding
,f the flefd. to the ~dv~nee!'1ent
if commercial aviatior,.

~~
1 ·~~;{t~",~i:-:dci~~

::.rt~rf~fa

PR! FIVE CENTS.
''

IS WCOMED TO
- CIFIC COAST
Felicitous jdreas<is Made at •
Ope:iiu*ession of the ,
~ie.tion

-:--

COMM!~

ttesponding. w. ~.~ Boeing. Seate
alrpla.D.e manufacturer, for
11.01µ· the field i1ras na.Dled, spoke
n: the topic : ~"Boeing Field-An
Eonoi' and Art Inspi.ta:tlon."
Wlll!am P. McCracken· Jr:, aststant secretarf . of commerce, in
narge· of aeronautic~. concluded

. wov:1!! ::,~:~ct~%n~~:St"i::'cr~~
r:::n dr~~f ·:l !iot:~. ~~-=- ~I~~~=
.=1 :::~~~~:!ft! «:Ia,1_~ ~~!~'te':
•••ur••• tom.••

,rri ::1u1bfl~'t''t~1.aif;,i £'!caJ:i BAR ' VETER. AN ·.
. . . .. . . .
.
commercial .·_avia~on~ dee1~7Ing

•'air-~1:p.4~dness" b¥ pl~nning

l'tnlla.r fields. ' ·

W. w. Conner of the Seattle chap~r ·..unveiled. ,a Plaqu~ · com$en'l~
Uing. the dedjcation,. designed by
,udlel!'. Pratt, Seattle· artist. · . Xb.e q.edi,Catory. .exereises .were

EW SHIP TRIE.D .

ol'le· of the highlight~. of th_O_afr

~!Q·rt~~ ~;: ~rs~e.~e~i~~ftl!~c;tt:!

,hieh Ed Allen, vetetan ,nail 'i>llot,
foaritty . fl~ytFlights were t.~.1~~~,-by
Jn . .b.eJg,hJ,.- ma.de at_.
and Point.

0

-:-e;nbt?td a

:~~Yeofog~-:::ro b•llt.UUfut

wttb.

Ttie PWC<:'1"410,,f th.e morn1ns •e•· :::'."..~~:0 ,.7•.:,,1•;1::-:;/.;;';):0 '!::!
a.s:urca or. t11e ,. do•ire to do them

honor

u

:f:£t~n

, -,

you
I ti5:~!t!.,,,,~£~~=t::::f~f{i1;;~::!

~,:•r~:~~fr-~: ~-:~~!;~

'>c1l1JA.
.

6

an.d palm• andt, 4,,..k• .:if the

Memories of a past that has been
:~"i,'::r\t"f1~ f..w':er:1:it~h:
11 b t. forgdttell i~ the rush and
"W~. - ........ )'.,.n .o"r b\&tllt1te .,,,,..,,
.Off~o~··crowded d(rcades
&Ive
-~lco... dOWorke~.~ h•
.w.-m.~;;.:~@:~ened y~e:terday when
'_th~·w.a~·ra.-:~.eun~on _-of lawyers wh~
~~':' ~:_ b~t:J!i!PToiho~1 ~: t:;._:...
'a"'tferi'.ded th~ first convention of th~
Alilel"ican Bar Association in Seat
-QllbJp and tbe)h... ty.,. ot mant1e-frOiil August 25 tO 28, .in 1908.
::~\:.n4~ ~ho: ':tf."ot tbl• Cit)' er•
There were only 313 delegates at
aue,- "''"~c,i ...... ,.....
that qonvention, l:j.eld in asbfugton J - ~....io'ilii"•."iii''i.'
. the .theD ~ i;ii'
~

ester Towe.rs, Boeing ,test pilot.
.
ha Ve re~Is machine; the t;,stest sing!~8
tater scout turned out by the Boe-- "t- ·
,
~
ber
t!1 com~~ny, fur:11ish-ed thrills
· ..
·1a11aa· d]:t .i- 6
·n·
-Plenty for the crowd •. ;.
Slll u.o ~1sn:w Jo e~auon -? '"".''·~l'lt3 .a;irport, Du~aJ:1?.lSh Avenue. ;i:o·s-.xaA'8td ,.&:q µ9auoo~ 'if .ID~
i-, western sJpp~ or Bea.con H 1 A'RJ)t.J.:![.--'::petifBl.ia+ua eq .tu~ ._1-0au

~1nrf;~~l.th~a1:£:1~ w~; ! m1!ss~

p ......... , ....

!?~~n1~~rll~~~~e<?wft~a>tl~=
e,,;-·

·

ti:b:e !i'~p6~':m°;r,l!e· i::Iil! hlistii-

Q.'a:pter-y N. A. ·A .• ~:tuJ. Qi¢ .Q,ti:z;ens•
dvlSory ~otµm~t1;ee.
~·.';

0

tt·aLa REUNION

r the inspiration it''9Vill give other

ommllfliti~s · that. are ·disJ)laying

APPOINTED'

Ma:,:oi !!il!Explolts Greatu..u
: •of the lfo~.•t
·


s

~:s!?fuk1 0r:~~:!!e~n t\1!;
!t1~~

art that ~e: Joe~ airpOrt wi~l play

l~ir

-

AMERIO BAR

ioElNG .RESPONDS

1''

1

.9 ~,:}? ita«I
.

pV<1H-P .

I/---I

1~1',
\~~l<l~s~p '.P~ .,~;!~~·u;
:J~t
i1
'
_l!p;~\
13

9_~!?C-t1¥f, MON, ~\fl;~·P\)l! I
11 1
~

~-

.~±,,j

,J·w·--·~"-··~·,."ii!IIIII•

~:;;:fl~~~al:;z150Y~~i~:· s~f::.

L~~:::

M~~~ces:T~:!!~~: Ja~~i~n
Rob.ert Beilman, Bert :S. Hansez;i..

I~~r <f!~!!i-d,G.D~~~:ld.A..G~~:
Donald, ; Betty Stewart, Harold
Job:nstrutl, Harold .Kavanaugh. Al0
!rl!k
t·a!d:S:e?:t~le:ndF~~=
ald Jordtµl.
w.=-.1T'f:'O_RO KAN-~· 'olREC,.OR
Whitfofd Kane WaS .director, wi~
Alb~rt Lovejoy as ¥s associate._
Jobn Conway was -technical direct-.
or;. while Elsie Mattison ,was in.
charge of the war4robe.
The association's pageant commlttee coinPrtsed James' Grafton
ROgers. cbairman;'J. Weston Allen
and Silas H. "strawil, piesident. The
local committee compriSe;d Alfred
J. Schweppe, chairman; Loren
Grinstead
Glenn J. ~airbrook.

1:r~~.

r;

and

la'!Ns

The copyright report waS disto
provoke deba.te were made l)y:-Justin ·Miller ot Los Ahgeles On crim~
.~~P~~w La:-:iscr::.f1~~1 1 11
the American LaW Institute; Judge
;;~
i
A. Miller of Des Moines on uniform state laws.
The association commiited itself
to approval of a uniform public
utilities act, a uniform business
corporation act. a ·uniform .recipro~l tra~Sfer: tax act and a uniform veteran$' guar~ianship ai.ctSome of the· other reports con,sidered by the- .convention were on
Aroerica:n citizenship, by :r. Dumont Smith, Hutchinson, Kan.; on
~~ ~aiin
0
Cheyel;}:tle; international law. James
-.:frowi;i .Scott. Washington. D. C.;
re10oval , of g~vernment liens on
real estate, John T, Richards, Chi·
cagp; jUrlsprudence and law r&
form. Henry w. Taft, New, York;

apgi~:~d r%o~t~lo:~~c°J!·e. failed

~!~~ ~f! ~1::

ti-~;uc?t~1!it si!uJri.w!~~· J:~;

~u.11!.~s c.ndKf:~~jz~f

~~aly~~tf~!t~'tgb fa}!ii~::i
0

judges, A. ~- AlldreW.s, Raleigh,

N. C.; a!lmiralty'and marltbne l~:w.
Charles R Hickox, New YOrk; co,ml!L~rce, Rush ~- Butler. Chi¢agb;
commercial la-w- and bankru;pte~,
Jacob M. Lashley, St. Louis; use

f!y:11~1~r:d~t.t~1!i~f ;r!t~!;1~a;i l
7

ethics and · grievances, Thomas
Francis _Howe, Chica.go, and sup:t,lements. to canons of protesstonal
ethics, Charles A. Boston. New
York.

'~ .. Schedule. Disar:Wli~r,-Fights ·oe\'.elop
Eleftion Today

cR~~n

; BE CHIEF
:i3~ulri3meflt C:iash Post-'
T!frotigf: Compromise.;
' hf Plan Is R~jected
'f'ij;t.mlous · moD.ster which
·~'·,$.'t,,i niiny of the se:3.ts
. ' lifted its head yes. '
to
e Ill barrass
· an·d li8.ra,S)s
ihe· deleg'ates to-the

e·O' nvention
Of :the A:m.., eJ;'ICa.Ii . ]J'ar

atron.

~.~,t.

J,.aw.,t

·;tt::1as!~ci~~0

;.· uon
with
the . · Rssist: ance of' th.e,
-~ C-0

n

S

e-l"Va-

LtN tiOn hoal'd
-a:nd, ··t:he

OR.T REJEC,Tl~P

, by,.;iJ1teiieing the

:: ~ar··t

dest~ned

: -~- Patent, trade·
t·' law

section,

l.rmii.n. E~_ward
~-·_c1:1,1cago·•. c.a,ul:'.>~d ·a
· (e_s.t-:·whi.ch la,s_~eJ~.. I.on~

f~Jt;1::r::rt;~:c:~:

:.:..~:::""'='ll';i';---_,.::.~~:.....::__:__:__;_::;:::._:.~:::._:::.:..:.:...:...19;;.:2:.:s:.:.'_ _:s::..·.;.._..;......;;._;_ _...)/'_H 1..;;.R..,.T--,Y
__
_P_A_o_E_,s ' --,--~-..;..;;;.~+~...;;._;-+~~--1,.
__

Ill.I SDI.I,·. st,·s M'OIIEB:
.

,

I

!

BAR BATTLES
OVER Oil LAW;

POOLS 0. K'O
~ssqciatiQ!l's , Schedule Disarr;inged Wher, ·f;ghts Develop
On Reports; · Election Today

--·-'-

CALIFORNIAN TO' BE CHIEF
~oll.e'ge Requirement Clash Post-:
pciried Through Comprornise;
Cppyright Plan Is Rejected

,

,

,

,

HY M
lNU·fitTl

I

• Night Ses~ion Adjourns Befor~
'Little. Group' Has. Opportu\' .
. nity To Present New Program1'

. .

. I

A gallant fight. but
~ doomed to failure. was
1
1aSt night~ meeting • of'
e~u?ation sect19n of the

one fore,.~
made lit f
the iegil i
American\

jB~r Association i:q the Olympic Ho- ~
:tel against. th~ associatio_n· stand- \

,::;: ;;;f::::gr!:0
1:;a~:ti~~~~:~I~gi- \
Undismayed by the obvious- ho8- [
, tility of a majoritj, of their ·hear... '.\
ers, Gleason L. Archer of Boston, !
and Edward T. Lee of Chicago- :

,:ft~h=e~~:.t'we~~~i"fe~j~h~~h<~t;~: it
two-year standard dtscriminateS

\.

against thetn and their stude-nts- ;
argued- eloq~cntfy against the rule. i

I

HOUR AGAINST THEM

But the hour of the meeUng was f
against them. It didn't start until )
7 o'clock~ and .everybody wanted to/
get to the civic auditorium for the i
general sessioll at 8: 30. So they f
finci.lly had to submit to being)
ruled out of order and accept. 'the/
suave P!Omise of Chairman Wil-/
liam Draper Lewis of Philadelphia~:1
thB.t they will be acocTded full oppoTtunity to be -heard...:...and, incidentally; answered-at next year•s
meeting of the section. : ,
FIGHT TODAY

Lee, hqweevr, annoUnce" th,at 'he!
0

0

;;'~'~r h:,v:h: :~~~~flo~ t~~y

~J:~ \

, LeWis pr~sCnts t!"i~ sectiO,n report..·:
1
Lewis was _reelected chairman. of!
'the section, with William ·A. Rayes : ,,.of Wis~qnsln as vice ~halrpl.ap; 'l ·
:J_ohn B. Sanborn -of Wisqo~sin, sec- !

:~~~:ti•

~n:r:~~ii .

Of a:~odeTt:i~te
\Andrews of North Carolina, as ad-.
· ditional .members of the council.

·J,"

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Ir
.1

_:i
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/
c~ro~~.;:-

he

. Whne
·';;li~t~:rs ~~icked,
1· \ , .
Ieared three-quarters o1 an ·acre of
tnd
He visited th,e old Plymouth
heeSe t.a.ctory with Mrs Co(?lidg~. Ee
:-rhibit.ed ~h~ ba~? c_aJ,:~..,ag~_i_?- ;;:_hi.?~}.\~
.

STANDARD, ROCKLAND, MASS.

HERALD, BOSTON, MASS.

jUL 161911
I

-

I North

Hanover company .u"~
spkmdid outfit of ladders an~
_F_•_.R~I-~-~-::{)-'Y~'~-J_U~--L~Y-~-~~~~~'~llj~~u~-!l~~~~~.....::=:=~~:"."'.;-::-~;:::-~s;t~o;v~e~r~.=:a~i;u;d~g;"c:a:;;';d~l:.da~thiteie-,_f~~;"t
BOSTON MAN STUDIES
His o~-~ 11 ne -published in couxt He was a Y oi Middlese:>.
~.
of the 1a.w of district-attorne
i
I NEVADA DIVO.RCE LAWS
;';:~e sc_noo1,:v~:
Willard .P. Lombard Obtaining Data bard _teacljic relat1
various
For Massachusetts Law Society
Ing the d.vs
dt interest to
Willar.d P. Lombard, member of the stat..s, andls a e state.
BoSton l&w firm. bt Stov_er_, Sweetser & hJs missioriveSte~Y solicitor of
cl . f . S ~,te 1
~e~:cs has~~~
fa'.'c'::1t~~ 1s
R~no,. ~I'v:.
associated rig.-G,e~-~' o! the
state'.$ dlvor!)e' !)_&')Yfo for the M-hu~ Sweetser,
e . JU m.·tssioner .of
,setts •Law, ~c!ety,;. ·,made up .of. judges· Malden co ate co~ol Willis W
and_13'.~f5'.c.:,
Ia~r and 1 , and _ · ' , _ _

~~~n~ft

J'J

The members of t 1he Church Hill'
Improyement Association met in
the Community building last evening and enjoyed a su,pper. After
the business meeting John F. McJ enn<,tt of Scituate made a presentation of the · theory and praetice
of Town Zoni'ng.· He thought that
----:-soq <>t{'t u-! q.:anou'a-Ap,t[q..tLr F ~a~p
aup!p,>tu · ';i:o aaH,m.Id pm, £pn1s
aq+ u; q2'!1f as0.1 oq.M.. 'p~tO..[ opl~
-uv 1<>nqa!w AJCT ·,>~uap!AO.ld •"
At1p.:caq.sa:{ At?M.t? passnd '.rnn;rnt?J /
11.1? a..1-e -a.M.. qo;qM. tf'.J.!.M.. sauaus a.1n I
~UOUI1' lj1110A ~!l! JO SAnp AJ.Ina
j
,uads OljN. 'unur u.Ioq pu,appo1:r V · I

L b d t::

0

,t;:. .

«::

slu~Ji-\1i'i Ev~:-:a:~ri;
~th.


MASS.
RECORD, CHELSEA, MASS.

JUL f 4 ~ ·

"ll•

~!J!!!!!J!!!!!!!!"~-:;~"e---.:an--oug"'Ji
~
' Sw:immbt:g."•
~
Her favorite
GIC?V9" · ·. .. !-" a d i o enter., ~:a.th Etting and Moris her favorite male

.,:?,b:t, Wh;;tie

£ilps;>upaA\.
~o I"l!dsoH, pu"l"'I .>poqu iv
""-l"V paSS1'J-PU:JlPP01[ JO .>AH"N
1

'. '
-·:-··--, \,' '.
,??ugp!,A,Q.ld; l}? p~~n

·.

.

r

. o.'~/tr .ii ut wi~ Adria·

·
ue B<icker ot.:
ave .. announee the en.:
their daughter L'JJ'
,r
zow, son o.f Mr , d i ian,
'1'v.1:azow o,f
an Mrs. ,
· ty. No d
,
.Walnut:
-·ng 'has ,,;;;::;te <late for_,
-to~be is in . ~t. ,The '
-•the_ ·. Suffolk .:
his senior
". ·.
'~SOhool

T• ••

.,{1

,"' >

\$attirday
for t~o
~~~ · G~eason .t. A~cher
"hopped" a t r a ~ r New
to give his law broadcast
· ·'.' -• stlldio release.
Quite ;
;t'~ of the dignified dean ....
R,y

•s1::(i,Ll,J&~~~~i~~~

449

· if television does not arrive

932, one Boston radio. editot
never again feel so confident,
staked so much on that
ophecy. '

TIMES, BEVERLY, MASS.

POST, WORCESTER, MASS.
~ot-G101rPlanning- a sped'1al
. pester c:t..r: lb' a-.. ..,._.
fligate on M h
dinner aboard the

.,

noon.

JlJl 1 5 -

~-

Broadcast
Briefs . ~.,

Busy Under
ICupidtate HouseDome of
The Golden
_ _s
in Bostor.
-

Dean Gleas.on L A
~_..a \V Sch 1
~
rcller 05,.,-Suffolk
' L a ~ Boston, \Vhose t a ~
en !',,,rBC feat Safeguard Society" are
l school of fi~:;e,. each summer trains
On his Massachu~net~he laws of nature.
11 undred.s of speckJeds farn1 l1e teaches t
hamburg steak -f
tr_out to ~at red
~]'.-,~t~
'
atten1ng the1n .for ·,
The fish lea
~s the steak s!a~:t scores at a -'ti
they've been tauo- s the fvater. After
red, the dean sn~ht to eat anythinf- !
baH as ro'Se ~ ~ r~s them With· SU<;
Each, When i?;ra~~~edor ·<.<.Pple· Peels

I

I

I

table,

pound.

·weighs

t1

to

the dinner:/

iree-quar ters

·ot ·a

\

I\-'
~'



0

studied at Lowell Textile and C?n- .
tinued his studies at the Morgan:
School of Accounting a1:-d Finane:e,
and Northeastern University.: He 1s
preparing for the bar at the SPtf~
T .........1 ~hool.
He was chief war
' -r- = f
many years and had ta_ ught.
0
1
:M:a.nus of Brookline, will be married Sc~~e-!rn ~i.tiee\s being built fi'l Bel1
;ea~~~~:nilp!ned~~~~ mont.
I
the State House is. a native and lifedome.
~
Mi$$ McU-anus
• long resident of Brookline and an
P,l'dent sportswoman. , Sh,e entered
the Fish and Game D1vls1on as a
clerk In 1921 and organized and has
since 11erved as head of the permit
(Special. to The Post)

BOSTON, July 15-Raymond J.
Kf!nney of Lowell, recently appointed
direct.or of the .,Fish and Game Dihi f
EI Y,
d h~vision by
"'
e
clerk, Miss Gov.
Gertrude anTurbett cMc-

I

: !~~n!r

se'iii~~tor Kenney

~s

33 and has

1u.vn.1,.1..nu ULVD~,

llU.::)lU.N, lYIA:S~.

JUL 1 5 lSSl
MERCURY, MEDFORD, MASS: -

JUL 1 41981
3TON, WEDNESDAY

MORNING, JUL1

~OMANCE UNDER
THE GILDED DOME1
,

Lane-Burditt Nuptials
Take Place at Winthrop
ppn:,-<'l'~Ltfvfqhl.- UVfn[7Vi::i---r°'°'q'-';c,

!

I

Raymond J. Kenney, New Director
Of Fisheries and Game, and License
Registrar, to Wed in Fall

aq

<-1-<>~n

EH{:) .!OJ SU'8Jd 2uppo.M. 'tlq:J. ..!OJ prad
aapd aq:J, .<auip.ra29.i: s-e.M.
.iaAa .iw palJ.s'I? uonsano .Arno eq.r,
O'.J. su& eq

1

,n;!!~~~

. suonsenb .rn&su-e pyno.M. :J,nq
1-uama·p~'.J.S ou p1:rq 011 Pf'ES SH ·1iram1
i -Sl'e'.JS 'E 0JfBtu O'.J. pa.ruo aq JI P0ll:S'E
PU'E .'aUJUaAa ·a'll:'.J. 2UJ'.rnp uodn parrim
S'E..M.. puu •1uasa.1a S'E..M.. '.1aA'.a v ·w
:
•s.1a.M.suu
~.I'l?d-a.rd O'.J. amp '.).U0JOJJJllS U0AJ2 Jl
:lJ:S'I? O'.). pa.rrsap - :A'.aq:J. suoqsan b Au 13
1
.ra&ITTr'e' pu-e ':J.sanoa~ .IJaq:j '.J'E,_. p.r-eoq
eq+ a.wJaq .t'Badde O:J. pas-eayd eq Prno
eq Pres OSJ13' .ra:nar aq'.).- Jo .re1-r.1M..
e-q.r,
·.1aAa V ·w '.J.daoxa Au'l?duioo
.iaAa aq+ ..roJ :ll'E'ads oi pazr.rm:n.nu
su.M.. I'l:?npJAJprri ou ::req:J. pe:J.13'.).S ·u ·pa
-1upd aq l! :)"Bq:J.. isanba.i:: t? qlJ.M.. A.i::no
-.iaw eq1 O:J. Anaa.rrp '.).uas ueaq :aur J
;At?t:{ '.A1sno1-Aa.1.d pa:qsnqnd s-eM. -qjJ-qM. \
oo .1aAa V ·w aq1 mo.1J uon-eamnw !
-moo \? JO ~n:Jp-ea.1 atn su.M. p.i::1:wQ att.'.J.· !
e.roJaq amoa O'.J. ssauJsnq '.J.S.rg aq.r,
.'
llOJlt?arn:nmtuoo spua-g
I

I

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·pessu~u"'!,_q'llil&_ ' n = '
TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

,.,,.,.--"'- ... -·~""'."

- .·•,;.~--:. ·-;;:-:~.--:--

f lefi.

-~~. . ~~..""'*~.

BOST~'ifRAVELER, WEDNESDAY,

l

RAYMOND

J.

KE:h--'NEY

MISS

GERTRUDE

T.

McMANUS

:~v~

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

-JUL 16 m,

the

'f

o

.

~.

!Director Kenney to Wed~":

Cupid has been at .:.ork in the S ~ - House and will soon unite Dire,

:-y;:;;::ri;; !:inn~:m:r a!ae
license clerk, Miss Gertrude Tur
McManus, it was learned by thf!' G
Yesterday.
Engagement of
couple is
to be announced by the parent
the prospective bride, Mr and Mrs ,
McManus of 47 Bowker st, Brool:!
The romance between this co
both State employes of many :!
standing, is one o:f a number of y
but was kept secret from. all exce:
their most trusted :friends.

-,"""'

;JULY ·15,

-LOWE

I ·Fisheries' License Clerk
! Head of Department Mar" ries Brookline Girl

ft I

I

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I

in Autumn

"

I

A romance at the State House. will
culminate in the wedding of Raymond
J . Kenney, director. of the div:ision of
fisheries and ga,me, ar..d Gertrude T ·
McMa.nus, his chief license clerk

I
I

,
,

MARRIAGE IN FALL

The, marriage will take place in the
fall
Formal announcement of the engagement is expecte<l soon from the
pa.rents of the bride-to-be, :Mr. and
Mrs. John McManus of 47 Bowker
street, Brooklirie.
., '
Kenney was appointed tlirector of the
department of fisheries and game a
few ·weeks. ago by Gov Ely upon the

Ir;si~.at~~es°farifia::es'i

~i~~msstre!t~
Lowell, an<l is a graduate of Lowell
tixtile scl;.tool and Lowell high. He is
a student at Suffolk law school
He
was chief warden ~ Cl t lt:U .IS.kn several
years.
·
Miss McManus was educated :In
Brookline, Where she was Porn, and is
active in all outdoor sports, particularly
hunting and fishing and golf · She has
been employed in the <livision of fisheries and game 10 years, starting as a
clerk.
i.stering the system, issuirig licenses to
She became registrar or Hcenses some 120,000 outdoor sportsmen and collecyears ago. Her duties consist of admin- tion of revenues from this source.

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TRAVELER, BOSTON, MASS.

JUL 17 1931.
is-~em;---r,-eauouy; :c,yrr.w.rezu,-

and ended In South Midd1eton where
the
·
woods. ated 9:.r al'.tti-- took to the ,

\JfQjDINGS

[GETTING DATA_:_-.. · J ·
- ON RENO.'MILL'

CROSSMAN-MARSHALL
Announcement has been made by ;
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Crossman
Walnut street, of the recent ~ar- :
riage of their son, Ralph Crossman :
former high school and Cushing
and Dean Academy athlete, to Miss ·1 ·
Ellen Marshall, of Somerville The
bride is a. gra.duate of .Holyoke high/
school and Northfield Seminary.
The groom is a jUnior at Suffolk'
La\'Jlr S 1 se:I, Bostonf F o l i o ~
wedding trip ~o Niagara Falls, Mr.
and Mrs. Crossman will reside in
Arlington.

asl·

Willard P. Lombard of '
Boston Studying Nevada .
Divorce Laws

j

Willard P. Lombard, membl>r o! the
Boston law firm of Stover, Sweetser ·&
Lombard, and of Suffolk law school
faculty, is in Reno, Nev., studying the
state's divorce 1aws for the M~acl:l,usetts Law Society, made ·up. 9{ Judges

REVIEW, WINTHROP, MASS.

and Ia.wsers.

j

t

.

CAJ•,rn

~DRDITT~·--

Jo~!.:1~ Sun~ft-:rnoon in St
M~".angelisl: Church at fou;
1ss
Marion E
<laughter of Mr and M
H B ur ct·,tt,
ditt of 95 Main st
rs
· !Jl· B1'.rmarriage to Mr James w;s L united in
I pastor, Rev. Jan1es
. ane. The
. 1 formed the cerement Crowley, :rerm!te ~ride: who is ~ery petite and
satin c arm..1ng, ~as attired in ivory
veil a~~d c~:s?, Joint lace, with a lace
decorated
attended by h
.
e was
Burditt
e_r sister, Miss Mae K
, as n1a1d of honor
h
.

o'cl::ck•

\

.

. -~

His observations will. be pitblishEfd in
the next quarterly · iSSue of thEi'., law
journal. At Suffolf law school, Lombard teaches domestiC relattc5'r.l.s~volving the divorce IS.ws of the various
states, and this giv·es added Interest to
his mission in the western state.
Lombard was former city solicitor of-.
Everett and for many years has been
associated with Brig.-Gen. E. Leroy
Sweets-er, one of the judges of the
Malden court and state commissioner 'bf
labor and industries, and Col. Willis· W'i
Stover, a judge in .. the Charlestown
court. He was a candida~ for the office
of district-attorney of M~~~~~~~K·---"

i,,.;;; pr:y!~~~~:nt:ibbon

~~:~ :~¥i!~ti~~J~

"~!~

~i~~hm~~1J/d
and
.
1ng acroses. The best carrying
talisman
. Lane of Medford
t1:!su!ii1;;r!1artin
I Mr. Frank Lane, brother of the
r:;re
! tahned b111/; Willard Burditt, brotier
J
riae.
/ th~ reception immediately followed
- , bride cerehmony at the home of the
' w en the newly wedded
!et~eived the ~elicitations of the1~i1i
1-ves and friends
After a honeymoon spent in W t
!
Beach, Flor_ida, and Havana, l\~~, t d Mrs Lane w,u reside at 51 Marson street, Medford.
toJ'~. bride is a graduate of East Bos. igh School and business colle ""e
;:;~l<~:, the groom ~raduated from s7,f'. •
._;:,"( School m the class ~
9 .;
1 ceessories

·1

~a:

'::i:

";:Im

S!IM!itir

;;
I'.
/

-.,
.,-:

/

\

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

Weue~1e-y;:.,graduate aX\d iS~ noW st~dYing
nt the .:Johns J-IopkinS Medical ~c,ipol "in

Baltimore._

Mr. 'King,

?,

::S:al"V

-

ege

School:

No date has:" .'b~b:_'. S~t .,:for; tt!h~
wedding i /' "'.'~ _ _ _ ,. ·
-... ' ·. ·

,../.,,,4~~-·

Daughtei• of Judge Brady
: En.gaged to Francis J. <Fox
Jlldge Francis P. Bra:dy of 1.Jxbridge
bas announc~d the et:i,.g-agement- of his
daught_e·r., M.1.·s. s M arY . FT. a. nceP:
..
Francis ..Toseph Fox,· son of
~~~;sif~~mas J.:.Fcix ·~~ Ru_mford'

:Brady, · to·
, ourigest

I:;:ei~t~;

Miss Brady is a g'.raduate Of. Notre
Dame Academy, Ro::itbu1~v. and ·Etnerso"ll
College of Oratory, _With: B. L. I. degl:ee:
She is a member - of · Kappa, · Gamma Chi
sorority and Effi:ersOn College Cltib.'. MiSs
Brady is. a s~illed musici.a.n., _as: w.~n ·as
reader, and has conductaa·.sChools Of elo-

cu~~J~x i:~r~~~~~af:~f i~~f!!~¢-~Ijege
I! and Bost~.n. L.Tni':"ers~ty (:.;o.lle?e ·of, Busi_:
ness Adrr.:m1strat1on and \Yas- a graduate

~~:~~e;:i~~

r:,. :i~~kR~T°~~~ol ~:

i

I"lis

(Photo by Bachrach)

"

/

Miss Mary Frances Brady

The Engagl!rnent of Miss Brady to Francis Joseph Fox Is Announced Today
by Her Parents, Judge and Mrs. Francis P. Brady of Uxbridge. Mr. Fox
1s· the Son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Fox of Mansfield

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

,!\UG-

~

. '9ali1

I ~ frHUJ
I 3 Scholars!:i:i:t £;;]l

,-~~--<---:cc···. _____ _

....,...,..,..,r"""r=~=--c=-:,'{,~
...
A.J.;,.pos

1-e.>.quo1'{ ,

l~in~;;;~"'-~

·

EngU.rid i:'l'HURSDXY:,· WUGUST
·
· ,
,

THE TIGER A

'

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Ut?!plme::j tp~°M
J . j put? llldU!Uioid JO

f

:~n

Orace '.Arrives
Simon

j.u,ria o.i. ~;I.I.OA:!a ~- .

·1 ' nu

THURS ~

CK

100

/~=--~~
No ·ss~nn:rnlf

(13:fl HIVaQ

·-+==N=V='3:=S=ll=fl~1·1

llt?J~

couldn't...
"0, but he

ng:

The next meeting will
the home of Miss Wand

Mans., A&. 7.

/l

·----~

---

-

J•

By

E:lisabeth Ha.lI

t

~

Dial Tw-ists

augura.tipn

111111111,1i1111,11~

this

autumn.

.

_.

.

John·

McCormack admires the conducting oi;Nathaniel Shilkret so much that he even
Offered a sum from his own pocket to
secure the NBC director's services for
his reoent -West Coast brqadca.st.
But

H:1k"'£!fgi-~°!

plays, ''Sir Roger de Coverley.~~
··;--·.:·
--:..

--~---..c J 1

"CHURCH OF THE AIR," _representing Protestant, Catholic arid
Jewish beliefs; is planned b-- t.he
Columbia Broadcasting System for in-

~~~~;i in. ~~~~b;;:~
.Brockton. High school in the
class of 1~31 and at school he was

prominent as a. me~ber of the/
Business Administration Club and the
i;,ramatic Club. He had the leading
part , .in one of the Dramatic Club

s· ~

,

A

:sar e~~KS'~~'°f

m

!

iiullnltnnlfflHt

BrOn
·_
Mr.
and M s. :i:-eter Ba-rtkevicz. 42 Vine,

:is.gee

S~t.

th~

¥,Htrrllnnmu1nn11nn11unuutnttn111nn1ntn1nm11u1n111:E '

I



Brony P. Bartkevicz
'f-,fnter a~, "'~ch~I

I

safd

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

;}(-

be h

can,..

''.You ·can etqp :fl2J1fi.~J1ins;-tilat..ca.nnou...

- ---

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

the eve

r.~~~lMl!"'~Wi:~~~

Boer ca.zne lowe,"X"e
slowly
s a
-cause Ora.ce was ca.rrying the enorm:O ,
revolver which was his pride a.nd joy;,
and that fearsom.e weapon w-as wavill$'
In a. gentle sen:,.icir-cle so that it cov.ered everyone in the room in t ~ .
Orace leaned on the windowsill, -we11.
pleased with the tin::i.eliness of his entra.vce and the sensation it" had caused.
"Snoldup, .. declared Orace brightly.
"Ni jus• oom.e in the nicker time• .:Lools;.
like
a
dangerous
,carrickter.
too.
Orfcer?• said Orace, with a
lordly
s-weep of his free hand, ••you •ave the
bra.-celets, Do yer dootyl',
''My good fellow--••
Orace
-waggled
the
blunderbuss
threateningly in Bloe:tn's direction.
..Lay orf 'm.e good fellerin' > ttJ.~! 0
comm.anded. Orace ferociously. ·•caught
in. th,e · yacht, that'& wot you are, an•
jer carn't "WTf.g.gle out av, it! Con-_
stible ! Wot the thunderln' 'ell a.re y-_er
wytln' f.or? Look ,51lppy an• claJ.) the
joolry on 'inl! .An' jew jusurryup an'
Jeggo that popgµn, or I•ll plugya.!u
Bloem let the autom.atic. fall. and··
t.he Saint picked it up. in case, of acc':-dents ..
• 'I can ezplatn,... peraf.sted Bloem.
ucorse yer
can,••
agreed
Ora.ce,
scornful. 0 Never knew: a. _cro6k . ·'"oo

.ldH SAl?'l llld9
-l?d ~ wo.13 UO!PdJUj.J

----

LOEU whe
excla.J:nat! · • £or the interrtip

B

svs11

i

;~~

k;!\t~~n;:::!r!r;.;!i:;

e~g~~m~!~e

is none other than the Jack Miller who
P~<:1-YS ~~~ · piano and sings in his «.>vvn

i!Jf:::~~!!w~f:!"c

rout pond at his sum
y fried morsels of _those -· that~. h~ht.:;~t~~~~\1!;':~:
g the ~ysterious_·equat_orl __ _
1

_t7.1c~~'!'~'.':'!til~o

,Afr;ie&
hy- bool\'.s':

-~'i'..

Il::a.te.

"

-~!:e ~!~~£a8;~---~~~~~?~~~::,•~---~-=--c-/
hea.rsals and broadca.Sts, tw-o ShOws a·.,
da.Y a1: the· Palace Theater (where sh:e" 'is ·I
reported to be creating one of the vaudeville sensations of the year). recoz::dings.
benefits~ and a few miscellaneous appearances.
• .
. A checkup on territo~
covered reveals that CBS no-w- has outle:t
in thirty-eight of the :forty-eight Stat<
in this country.

.
.
Boxing demo
strations are the latest innovation te·
vision is offering • . • And ma.gicia.~..
w-ho have been clamoring to perform
over the blind ether -w-aves, are now able·\
to come to their own.
.
.
Vaughn
de Leath's country home, "The Hitching.
Post a (.a. former parsonage) lived . up lo
its name a few days ·iiko W"hen two Oif
her friends w-ere married there.
*

Saratoga, N. Y, now d~nces to· the mu:::dc
of two famous radio orchestra. leaders~
Ben Bernie and Smith Ballevv.
• .
.
Va.cations break into broadcasts a little
mOre urgently this month.
Here are
some recent choices of NBC artists: the
morning serenader Lew Conrad is defying all hot-weather tradition by motoring
through the South.
.
.
.
B. A. Rol:fe.
l,::,.:c,,'l,::,.-r

c,-r,..,. ...

A,,.

.-..

1.-+ I



r

I

THE TIGER A

Af~.d

:_! __

Ut?!p-eu-e:j 1.P!'H
put?· :iu.;,u!wo.xd JO

.Oraoe '.Arrives ;n:
Simon

B

LOEM:w
excl.a.ma.

"!l!flfMt/jffif,ii~

Boer ca.m.e f: low e'c
slowly
s
cause Orace was carrying tlle eno:

revolver which. was his pride and

and that. fears:on:1e weapon was waving

in a gentle semicir-cle so that it .cov.ered everyone in the room. in t u ~ :
Orace leaned on the "Windowsill. well
pleased with the timeliness o:f his entravce and the sensation it- had caused•
.. Snoldup/' declared Ora.ca brightly;.
uNi jua• ,com.a in. the nicker time. :L,ook
Iik,:3
a
dangerous
carrickter,
tOO..

Or£cer,.. said Orace, with a
lordly
sweep of his £ree hand, "you •ave the
bracelets. Do yer dootyl'•
"My good fellow-••
Orace
waggled
tlle
blunderbuss

(13:tl HIV~(l

NO 'SS~lll:IH
NV '~SHfl
-+·=============:!

lJeJa

f
y
~:r ~~~~~~:;;l;s ;:,_°t_t :;u 1fre·c!:~, t
stible! W'ot the thunderin' •en are yer
th;.~~t;n~~l;l:y;~ ::~o~m.1erf!~;'i>o~~!"
0

comm.att.ded. Orace ferociously. ••caught

o.zq

/~ leg-go that popgi.in, or I•ll plugya.. P'°!!f;....
p~;;;· ::r~~~n,s~!~yj::~i
8
;sao

i!

l i!!t:~t.. ..
;TB
~~~~1:f:

the a.uton:iatic fall. and·. r
picked it up. in case of accl.'."' [

Eloe:tn.

let

:;~~~!

e~~ C:n~a~!ef'1°b~B.ce, ,
Never: knew a cro6k ·'oo :

n.q

(L

L,.

uo,

but

111

he

~A,.. uxn,11.·ca? etqn

ENTERPRISE, BROCKTON, MASS.

\.

1

can, .. safd th~ Ba.int-~, _
flRPfi.~hipg.~ca.niio:z,,,,

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

, tmnnnntntn11111J1uuntutn11ntnn,1unn111uun1u~

~

Brony P. Bartkevicz
T~lnter ta~,,.~chool
,,

.~~i..~F,!k-

Bron~- Ba1°'"t1€e'vf"ez. S"OIY"' Of Mr.
P.
and M s. Peter- Bartkevicz, 42 Vine

, .-·':'·<?.:J

street,
·1_1 enter. the SufW)fi ~W"
school in Se-ptember. He is· a gr
""'--=s:t@ lSt .Brockton High school in the
class o! 1.931 and at school he was
prominent as
a
tnember ot the
Business Administ.ration' Club- and thJ'
J?ram.atic Club. He had the leading
part . in one of the Dramatic Club
plays, "Sir Roger de Coverley.''

. ,- ·~,[?~--,.:

. ;,-,'" .- -.

-

A

r

Dial Twists ~

Hfl.lllflfl

Jl7" ~ t h :lla.ll

''CHURCH OF THE
senting :Protestant,

11111111111uru_ul·

AIR,'' ;repre-

Catholic arid"
Jev.,-ish beliefs~ is planned b-- tbe
Colutn.bia Broad.ca.sting System for inaugura.ti,on this autumn. . .
. JohnMeCorm.a.c:k admires the conducting
Nathaniel Shilkret so much that he ev.en
Offered a sum from his own pocket -to
secure the NBC director's services for.
his recent -West Coast brQa9-cast.
Bu·t
otller engagements kept Shllkret in Ne)Y
York.
.
.
.
Kate- Smith's accort1panist
is none other than the Jack Miller who
plays the piano and sings in his ~~?,
C
ds. . . . A
ts is called "The C

o;

th~• so~n~e~~w;'°~e;f~ii
t pond at his summer

:fried morsels of those

hat·
the

~

la~hew:~t~~~i1:: ~;

invste:t:ious ,equator!.
,~~C8, i~C0~9!:!~':'.J?1~C4 ,

0

'.

0

=~s!~tani~~~-ra~,;/
hearsa.Js

and

broa.4cS.sts~

tw-o

Shc>w-s



daY at the Palace Theater (w-here she·-:fs"
reported to be creating one of the- vaudeville sensations of the year). reco:r,:dings,
benefits. and a. fe-w miscellaneous appe~r~
ances. . .
. A
checkup on territory
covered reveals that CBS no-w has outlet
in thirty-eight of the forty-eight Stat£
in this country. .
.
. Boxing demo
strations a.re the latest innovation te:
vision is offering . . . And magician..
w-ho have been clamoring to perform
over the blind ether waves, are now abl,ac
to come to their own.
.
Vaughn

I

de Leath's country home, "The Hitching,

i;~

~~s;,:~~

f~r~~ J>:;:?~~e~~;!d
her friends "\Vere married there.
.
Saratoga, N Y, now d?,nces to the Inu::zic
of t"Wo famous radio orchestra leaders,
Ben Bernie and Smith Balle'W

.
.
' Vacations break into broadcasts a little
mOre urgently this month.
Flere are
some :recent choices of NBC artists: the
morning serenader Lew Conrad is det'Y·
ing all hot-weather tradition by motoring
through the South.
. .
. B. A
Rolfe,
rotund dance band leader, spends a lot
of t:iime on his yacht at Atlantic City.
. . . Billy Jones and Ernie Hare a.re
now in the Maine w-oo""a.s
.
. Phil ·
cook. com.mutes from Avon ..by.the-sea,
N. J . . . . Le~ vVhite takes a.n occa-'
slonal "Week•end cruise.

. Robert
Simmons, tenor, swims w-ith his wirehaired terrier in a
lake at Highland
Falls. N. Y .• near "W'est Point.
. .
Andy Sanne.Ila is spendin .... a mont1;t
his farm at VVarsaw-, rndiana. . .
~
And the radio happy-Vveds, Frank Crumit '
a.nd Julia Sanderson, still use their all- ·
year.round resting place in Springfield, :

!,_~



oti.'l

Mass.

,

J

MORNING GLOBE, BOSlON,

POST, BOSTON, MASS.

(!}

AUG ~:'

!{d•'

;,,,::11

·~---···

I ~ , rr:a;uRSDAY,

'AUGUSTi '5,

_:---

· 13 Scholarships Are Awarded .to Newsboys

1
;;,,;:y,,.~~~

~re

ci-

s au

' c.a.rrying the enorm.,

', was his pride and l
me weapon was wavtng
o.icircle so tha.t it .coV'.,in the room in turn'.,

·n the windowsill, well
'e timeliness of his en1ensatlon if had ca.used.
,clared Orace brigb.tly.

Photo show;~~!~~~~~:;1:~ !?t~?~~~!t:J!!n::~~eE:fthe scholarJacob Levine o/ iuorchester.

+

.Announcement or thls year's winners
o:f the college scholarships awarded by
the Harry E
Burroughs Newsboy's
Foundation was made last night after
a distinguished group of leaders in pro~
fessional, Judicial, public and private
life had sat all day in an effort to select
the deserving newsboys.
/
Ordinarily only 10 scholarships are
awarded. This year, however, President
Burroughs dedded late in the day that
instead of liiniting the number to lO
this year he would award 13. This decision greatly aided the judges in <ietteersmt '..nir.g t1?-e winners of the close con-

--.

~

.

-.:.
r7s"'

I

-p.

"

Jaq~
~GtJ.'.J
e.M
.t.a
~!M.
,9-.4c1.

l

,:.:,~';.~~sci E,;~~~nt:~1 01~~~':;1
\,•i1~
1:,..;:';";.° ·
;;'!:~~s. were 24: candidate;s for th~ /

TRANSCRIPT, BOSTON, MASS.

i;7·
i

5· . ~

Mattapan, Eriglish High School, to Bos•
ton Uniyersity.
Those serving as judges were Henry
P .. Kendall, Judge Abraham Pii;ianski,
Frederic° H
CurtisS. chairman of the
Federal Reserve :Sank; Miss Franc~s
G. Curtis~ Corporation Courisel Samuel
Silvei-man, Sidney Winslo:w • .Jr , .Tames
J. Phelan, Philip A. Chapman, Boston
sUperintendent of $UpplieS; Senator John
P
Buckley, Sen'ator Henry Parkman,
Jr • William. G. O'Hare, city penal institutions commisi;lioner; ChaTles r... Ed-

ga;h:ndc~~:~!!~t~· ~a~:np~~~Ore tbe
judges one by one.
The boys were
examined and studied. Questions of gen~
eral and .specific na.ture on a. varie-'
of subjecl.s were asked ,

I

--~--- ---

..a--.J:\

J~""""""'"m""'""'""'""""'""'"'"'""'""''"~ .
~I rm«,

i I ~ ~ Dial Twists ~ I
~
---!r.;1'111''W)JH1:i
I

l

S31~~;1

1

a~::de~l)~~a-he~:!~ ~:i~~~sr,il)}a~~! t!
street. Dorchester, wbo was graduated g
ifi~ :~: .;>i~rc:;:e~r:s!!~~! ~~~~~!sft~: b
and Pa vid Esselson, 19 Sutton street,

b

!>lun~er usa

picked

A~!r~~dof~~nCa:::o~te~: ~.
Harvard Un~ver.sity; Louis Tobin, 17 e,

~

th?

threateningly in Bloem s direct1011. . ,.
•'Lay er! 'me good fellertn•' m.&1
coznmauded orace ferociously. "'Ca.ugh1;,
in the yacht that•a wot you are, an
er carn't m1ggle out av, it! Con.._
i;tible,, Wot the thunderln' 'ell are yer
·wytin; f-0r? Look #dippy an' clap th';
·oolry on 'im t An' jew jusurryup an
~e
tha.t -popgµn, or 1 111 plugya.!"

~~r"%~i~~~

Poe~~~~le~tr;~~oJn;"t8!cc!~~in!~h~~~
Israel Woll, 30 Stanifo.r:d street, Eng- .Jish High -School, to ·Massachusetts In- ,e
.stitute o.f Technology.
,s

led

k

-1

I

..iowWe:$

~em let the automatic fall. and

,S

Boys who received scholarships- were: ,
Louis V. Bona:ceto, 7 :Oean street, Dor- :
chester, of the. Boston Tt"ade School,
who will enter Wentworth In~titute; I
William Fishman, 328 Harvard street, .Dorchester, Dorchester High School, to
Boston University; John F. Hurley, 10
Dawes street, Dorchester, High School
o:! , Commerce, to Boston U:q.iversity;
:Noel 3ackson, 88 Hez:-resho:r street, Rox-,
bury, EngliFlh High School, to North-r
easte1 n University; Jacob Levine, 378
Norfolk street, Dorchester. Dorchester
High School,' to Franklin Union.
Louis E
Katz, M North Anderson
street, ,Bo.stt:Jn Latin School, to S ~
L~chool; Kenneth J. Pezrow, 30
Josephine street, :Qorcheste:r:, Boston
Latin School, to Harvard University; ,
Joseph Raos, 11 Fenelon street, Dorchester, Roxbury Memorial High School, r
to Massachusetts Institute .of Technolo-

0

vra.ce

~.,~~a the Saint
1t up, in case. of a,c,e.1..
( ......+ dents.
i!Jn
•'J: ca.n esplatn." ~ s t e d Bloem~
e,
"Corse yer can/' agreed Ora;-e,
iL
scornful. •'Never knew a croclk oo
couldn't."
t
1
"0 but ha CS.Dtn safd tb~ S ~ ~.,
A
'
t
fl
I J;l.inP-" that ea.n:ti.Oll-J
fi uxnn CflD 5 QPO!,:J~ ~,
,

11

The 13 winners will enter eight different institutions thi.s fan. The in.stitu.
tions are the respective choices of the

~

~1£:.~;rfp;:.·,~!

ship winners at the Bur"roughs Newsboys Foundation. The winners; left ~e }land, ''you •ave the
to right, are W11liam A. Reardon of Dop~ester, Joseph Raes of Dorchester, :rer dootyr,

1

pue.ra

VUOJ

pu•.1a

Now,v!\

3.103U'3

,

I

c::, /

I"~z ,--~'t·
"Jj

esowAoJ
,. pa,qW,. ~~.,,~• *

,V.l~~:a.N'~' ~!l-f~{~J:T:-d

______
.

I

,. __

.

tri~v
h

1

du"ti-dean of the faculty
e vacancy that -was created
appoint-

~~nt - 3J~llaX{~t';"~odrich's

~/~ Law

IT GOESTORANDOLPH li
I.

School

in 26th Year on

/

I

Sept. 21

j. Suffolk La-w School w-ill be in
1-ts 26th academic year
Sgt

e1

g'u~ts present from. this
and Mrs Sa.muel F. J:iUd:-

id~ was graduated from. south-

t j.

--f:~~!g~~dI~~~:.t ~~~·~~11: t\

I
I

l~;,.~;:.tecl 1'r~ ~'~
:·pTfn
cJt1:i-&=!' at Carnegie
o:t Technology 'in Pittsburgh.
8.nd Mrs. Palmer will spend. their
.·oon niotortng through tbe South

31J[Jt

1[1}9f@§!I:

J

21
Registration alread;n is
Progress both for the law- .schoo~
and the new- preparatory school
th~ new- plan goes into operation
19~~ year B Pplyin.g to the Class of
f0
and
future classes callinor .a slight change in pro""ra~
;;;_uring_ th~ first semester, fresh~
t
W"lll have. torts, introduction
l~w.he study of law and criminal

I

I
,

I

.,

i'

er

:1~·~=~~1
r1·

f

10 A. M. to 11.30 A. M.
4 P. M. to 5.30 P. M •

1

I!

EVENING SESSIONS
6 P. !Ii. to 7.30 P. M.



II
/ ,
/ Cyril D/Norton, Chilmark,
to Teach English
and History

'I' !

[I
1

',:;!

------~~.

P. ~- to 9.05 P,. M.

Re~ieter now for f'all term

Catalog upon re:qu~s«
Gleason L. Archer~ LL.D.
Dl!csn

20 DERN E STREET

MASS.

BOSTON

[Special to The Standard ]

Chilmark. Aug 8---0yril D. Norton,
88, has been appointed by the School
committee of Ranq.olph as teacher of
English and hi.star~ in the Stetson
High school. to assume his duties the
coming term.
''
Mr. Norton is a graduate or HarVard :
and Sn:tfo]k I pm school and has had '
13 years• ,e~perience as teacher in
, E~glish and history in Great Boston
' schools.
,
He. is llla.rried and has. one child,
I Valerie. In the summer he makes· his
home with his mother, Mrs. M
M.
1 R. Norton, Chilm"ar;ir, and in the wini ter
with his
mother-in-law,
Mrs
G-eo;rge West, Allston.
_ ~

/

7.35

.
'

(Renr a./ State Hou 3 e)
0

'~

rekphon.e:- DAY~11rket 0836

f

I

GAZETTE, HAVERHILL, MASS.

~UG

1

o

their joy
makers
"A.

t~J?lb

by various

types of noise

lthmrn:h the town ~ee~s to ha_ve

If'!!;~·,,.,
NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

JOURNAL,PROVIDENCE,R. I

·Norton, Chilmark•
to Teach English
'
and History

,
.

AuG 7

=

.

[Special to Thi"! Standard J

Chilmark Aug 8

~31

. .

38, has bee~ app.oi -Cyril D. Norton,

1

------~~,

Callahan-Burke
g.I:,\i~jaj,.e of tll:e prettiest w~d,di:.igs of
rt.~>~eason lt'bSS Helen Loulse }3urke,..
···daiighter of "Mrs. Catherine T. ]3urke,
,of 17 Wellington ,:d, Medford, be-'
·canie the bride of William G. Calla1:ian, son c;,f William T. Callahan of 14
';\~?'~~~§-, st.
The ceremony was per..
}foymed i~ ~t,. James' church, Medford,
tlast Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock by
Rev~ .-_Fr. Brennen.
The single ring
.'4?etei:n.ony w~s used. Only members
J '· '
innnediate families were pres-.

f

committee of R ndnted by the School
English and h~toro_Iph as teacher of
High school to
~ in the Stetson
coming ter~.
assume hU: duties the i
Mr. Norton :is a
and Sn#'Q]k I a,w gr~uate or Harvard !
13 years•. expe . school and has had i
English and . h;;ence. as teacher in
0 1;Y 1n Great Boston '.
scllools.
lie is lq.a.rried
'
Valerie. In the
and has. one child
home with his .sum.mer he makes. h~
R Norton Chillll:mother, Mrs. M. M.
ter With •his
ar.k, and in the Win
George West, A~~!~~r-in-law,
Mrs:

GAZETTE

f\UG

---~~---.i

1'

- --- -' HAVERHILL • MASS.

1~~~~

I--___

~ing ai-tenna1
g~ a.llow.ed Wi}IJ

COURIER-CITIZEN, LOWELL, MASS.

AUG i O ,j;:,,

¥'"-'"'D>•

__ _

t.wS bi$f

E

Ji~,

FOJJrMER CITY
':~~ OFFICIAL DIES
'
\.;,

0

Andrew J. Casey Dead at
Home in Brighton

bridesmaid wa's Miss Mary ~ \
.......
f'.B."urke, a· sister of the bride, and .che 1
·J:>est·man -was Edward .James Burke, a \'
1
: brot:t,er of the bride.
:
.'·The biid.e wore a gown of blue
;~ c~~fon and a picture hat o:f delicate

'?0 piµ.k. She had a shoulder ~ouquet ci \

I

·&i.. fi-Iilies

of' the valley and white garde... \
~,;;,lnias. The bridesmaid was dressed in \
i' ' ~.· ·:., ";- pink chiffon. She wore a picture hat.
'
J a n d carried a shoulder bouquet of pink

t

~:.l_'

'S F_~µowing
l., ·~ \roses

the ceremony there was

r,:· ~~·.·~~cep~i<?n held at the Ca11ah_an left.
westminst~r
~}:\ ~:-~~l. :Mr. and MTs.
+-/. :4~;~~.the

reception for a wedd1ng trip
. gh northern NeW York and Can•

1

1

',

!'by
rs~,

auoo.
\
9a.l.1ahan
graduated ~.:from:
High School in 1925 and \
-'e11 known both there and in :Med''d. · ,'~:r. eaiiahan graduated :from. \
neha.m High in 1925 and attended
fts·. Col\e~e- .. He is at pl"e!"ent at•
jp~ __ s~~ I rw S?hool 4,d~~ing 1
evenings, where he is in his third
sy~'r. iS'{;;... Calk>.han has been employ.
ed at ,the :McDnough market for sev-

'·iestown

L

~~1 Y~!!<TS..



, ,··}rh.e fouiii eOui;>le will maKe _t;b.eir<h'.eni.e
17 Wellington rd, Medford~
They will be at hollle to their friende,.
)atte'r.August iS.

.ai '·

\

~._

, I

-

--~___________;

------"-------- -

,,

201931

!\UG

m
S

!:""-""1»-a.nttmnJ"wi'i~,
directions If this lesson hot

1
I

II_ i .I:

"1

11

:---"'-'-~'-,-----1

I

'

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I
I

:-

t~ I
G

sin> l
.la~ /
.3 1

"\ I
~.1·
-uc
_

t

0

.e

II

.1\
,

~

~

u-1
s(

1
+

' '· I

hut?

"'P""

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DIES SUDDENLY

Judge Thomas H. Bilodeau Succumbs to Heart Disease at
Summer Home in Hull--Funeral at St. Mark's Today
Funeral services fOr Judge Thomas H !Lawrence High School and after gradBilodeau of the west Roxbury Court, uation moved to Boston. He maITied
who was stricken at his summer home Alice L McAloon of Roxbury and there
in Hull in the midst of his promising are two children. Thomas Jr., and
caree: in public l~e, will be held t~is Eileen The Justice was graduat.Pd
morning from h1s home, 32 Roslln
--.street, Ashmont Members of the judi- from Suffolk -~a~ ~~hool and the~ entered polifics m iJorchester. Dommating justice guided his conduct. He was
Ipatient and firm, faithful to everybody
and eager to be just in all things. As
a mark of respect to his memory Dorchester Court and West Roxbury Court
will adjourn today until after the
~un~al

com
e~o;n b!h~o;;c
dimes an ·q
book at the end of the w
hot weatla.er especially, w
woman can be blamed
wanting to spend more tim /
kitchen than she has to, th~
be a temptation to pQ~tpon 1
t!ie cheiper cuts U.~til COOl.
arrive. It it is necessary
omize this may mean a
cutuiig down in the tamil
raUon.
This is not as it should ~
foods contain so many f
nece.ssary food ,elements

\ ~ : ·1:

====='

DoRCHESTERJ FJIST

1

well learned and taken t there is no reason why
steak, chuck~roast and all t
less expens1ve cuts of b
lamb should not have Just
appetite appeal as the mor
roasts. steaks and chops
The most important of
points to remember is t
seasoning should be just ri
of the seasonings used
bl~nd toge.·ther into a har
whole, and their total effec
be to bring out and point !
full, rich flavor of the m~
this conne<;:tion. it is wise t_d
hint from European cooU
long ago learned that al1
amount of sugar, used as
the seasoners, serves to bl~.
flavors of all the other sei
and helps greatly to ace~
natural meat flavor.
i
It is true that the chea11
take longer to ~repare th
atio

_J

THOMAS H. BILODEAIJ

ciary and bar as well- as representatives
~ of many civic b(?dies and personal
friends wili attend- the services which
will be held at St Mark's Church,
Dorchester a venue and Roseland sti:.eet,
at 10 o'clock.

The honorary bearers· include Gov.
Joseph B EJv.-Mayor James M. Curley,
Attorney General Joseph B. Warner,
Congressman John W McCormack,
former Mayor Malcolm S Nichols, Maj
Gen. Erland Fish; Speaker Leverett
Sa1tonstall of the House of Representatives, Samuel Silverman, city corporation counsel; Judge Harold P Williams
of the Superior Court, Judge John Perrins, Judge Bert B Holland and Judge
Frank S Deland of the West Roxbury
Court, Judge Richard M. Walsh of th<
Dorchester Court, Postmaster William
1E Hurley, Ex-Congressman Joseph F
,O'Connell, Harry H. Ham, Ralph H
Willard, George W Doland, District
Attorney William J, Foley, Judge Den•nis D. Sullivan of. Middleboro and Dr.
Frederick G. Hampe.
·
Active· bearers are· William H Taylor,
Joseph Keiley, Perley P Hamilton, Edward T, McHugh, Vincent A, Bolger and
James J. McNain.::ua
Judge Bilodeau was a
prominent
figure in Boston politics and on Beacon
Hill for years. His death was a distinct
shock to hundreds of his friends which
came a.ftP..r ~ s.hnrt_~.Ul.r.k. Prior_
,Iq'BUOJqS'BJUU S'B ::>y:re.I'.l UJ ,.2UJ':j.'Baq.?,.

I

put? '.J.U!'RS u-e1i I
·,pmq~
. -u1ua'J +-e s-,o
\ "'ll JO aouaroy

"I

u

NEWS, SPRINGFIELD, ThIASS.

A,JG 17
W~ are

i&•

M,~~i ~:ck1

derini:r if- :vou -~ar~ ON4VV1!
Th1W·s s"tation ot1erates 9ti .'
e do not know 1ts

t1mea~id so we are unable to

r

EDWARD CURLEY TO RUN
,, F()JI SCHOOL COMMITTEE

i

,hours

~erify

et!I,

c ~ ~ \ : e l y few and thinks that tne

'1.QOtfQ.~ 2~effdhf;J;Ri1J[J£ 2£tJgf8lo9%§

-.~!;!ward· Jackson Curley of 23 Gram- I

J:?orchester, · filed applica- ,
w1th" the Election Commis- I
~ty Hau for nomination ,
-the Sch?ol Committee. He

~

0

a thi~3-:e~the pre·sent 1
~\u°Je~f~~
At
0

1

School.

1

is ~ged in the dental su
• -~ ·nt,
usiness on ~oylston st, and re~
.
1 . . ed that business last
'~'.'b'

FORMER GILBERTVILLE

I

!

;~he Bo~ton .Tercentenary _Com~Tft~e on
st .Ja,n;es
'.
a es, and has been active for
,se~~rtt.1t years in Boston. politics. It js
:q:n ~s ~d that he will recei , /th
of most, if not an, of th:e'Dor~ /
8
_~· members
the City"~:~/-~
. A~clis tpast president of the

.b;elf:l
~_,f

1

I

l

\thl~D) GILBERTVILLE

I

Mi\N HEADS HIBERNIANS

Gilbe1tnll~. Aug 26-Much mte1est
is being fi:,It in town over the election

of Atty John E

0:!

Fenton of

Law1ence

as state president of the Hibei·nians
at Worcester yesterday
He is the
son of Mr and Mrs Eugene _Fenton,
.t;Or many years 1esident of tlns town,
Mr Fenton having beeh overseer of
sewtng- and mending for the George
H Gilbert Mfg Co

AttY Fenton attended St AJoysms

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lUtl:l.Io a+aJes esa101qaA ne Jo uoi+oads
'u1 .t'8tnita.1-s':}uap1::>o'B JO sasn'B::> I'BUOS

pat'ochial school h~e and graduated
J
from Holy C1 oss college m 1920 and
Suff lk Law school in 1924 He taugh~
'
, ence for
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AUG 201931

Tnrr----:rv IH:riro

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:'Str1cken Last Night With
,, ·.·
Heart Trouble
'

Ct

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"·11

f"ITH OF JUDGE :/
( "~1. H. BiLODEAll!

-,-----ana·-ru -=nr=-:,-~,v~
directions If this lesson h,f,
I
well learned and taken t
there is no reason why
steak, chuck~roast and all
less expensive cuts of b
I lamb should not have just
I
appetite appeal as the mor
1
'
roasts, steaks and chops.
The most important of
1
points to remember is t
seasoning should be just ri
of the seasonings used
1
... ~
blend together into a har
G
whole, and their total effec
be to bring out and pointi
$'U1> l
full. rich :flavor of the m
.i:a;.
this conne~tion, it is wise t
,5 ,
hint from European cool(
ux.1
long ago learned that al
}li
amount of sugar, used as '
-u~
the seasoners, serves to bl1
-~t
flavors of all the other se1
:r~ !
and helps greatly to ace(
~
natural meat flavor.
'
., 1
It is true that the chea
take longer to prepare th
s(
·
atio
.t :
es in the itc
co
for by more '
dimes an q
:i 1
book at the end or the w
L{l
hot weather especially, w.
woman can be blamed
, .A'ut? qµo-.~ ~ ,
I
wanting to spend more tim "Y.
ooo·o . kitchen than she has to; th
. -•q!s JO si- \
\t:'i:!t~ou~stou!Kt~~~ I
1! Sf awop 1-e..r.1. ·~
arrive. It it is neciessary
1
1 sa1qn.1 uonn •_ 1
omize this may mean a
1 1 J.add100t{'.J.f& · \
c11ttJD~ down ~ the fam·
11 'UO~.llU[tjStlM_>
:ration.
This is not as it should
!I u.::q+. a.rom, j foods contain so many

ff

I

Judge Thomas H. Bilodeau Succumbs to Heart Disease at
Summer Home in Hull-.;funeral at St. Mark's Today

!

I

Funeral services for Judge Thomas H
Bilodeau of the West Roxbury Court,
who was stricken at his summer home
in HUll in the midst of his promising
career in public life, will be held this
morning from his home, 32 Roslin
street, Ashmont Membets of the judi-

u-1

Lawrence High School and after grad.ua tlon moved to Boston
He married
Alice L McAloon of Roxbury and there
are two children, Thomas Jr, and
Eileen The Justice was gradua~
from Suffolk Law School and then entered pol1l'.!cs 'f'rf''!5orchester Dominating justice guided his conduct He was
patient and firm, faithful to everybody
and eager to be just in all things. As
a mark of respect to his memory Dorchester Court and West Roxbury Court
will a_ djourn today until after the
f_U)J_~~~·- ___ . ._

:: I
\

:' 'F>""

~I>GE THOMAS H

BILODEATT

::a:lJJ;..L, Aug 19-'1,'homas H Bilodeau
s~~ci~l justice of the West Roxbur;
~J.~t.r1ct Court and a resident of Dor~~~s:ter, died at his Sunday home, 16
~~ghland av here, at 8 :30 this morn•'-: .J~g., Judge Bilodeau, apparently in, ·"
\_\:,:fJ excellent health, was stricken with

·, J~eart trouble

wi!,e_-:~

.

one time as L1en·

--;..-;;;;,. tb.e city ~e formerlY.;:;_~t and
EV~ati-Ve counsel 8th Suffolk Di the State
ator fJ'OIU :e;resentat~ves ifrom wards
was also
resentat1ve
goused oJ4 ~~eral tife~e was verY.tt~;
21 ~\le i!l the ~e~~ ~he sub~~f;tuTe
~ 1t.iV'e and serv;28 to cons1.deI1waY.
Li Wila.p~\nted i~~ Elevated~aoath of office 1
ab~i;of tbe BOJilodeau took o~ntroent to the i
1~;;,i~:cexnbeT a~~!~Ptencb P~~ !f
west sosbu1:i1.e was a roe~anizations,1
·ce.
d social orth par1t-St
:Os a~l'esident. of Cl:b. :sostonl
been 1;tecip-roc1ty
1
cl*tbe
gyde Pal'k
xnetnber of th;man-Sq ltn·
S.s arrtade, tbe. Co f porchester

=i
ED

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nece,ssary rood ,elements

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i~! ~~~~Ul:!_~
NEWS, SPRINGFIELD, MASS.

. ~
...... ~

coffiparatively fe.;,;--and thinks that

I

FORMER GILBERTVILLE
MAN

can:ie....aftP..r

l'!'BW

~-,·'

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-

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'H'e~giater-:or-:u.eetm'~--r: the

!iu~~u:a:i~

:i;~~e~~i:~s~ t:!~~~~e
Kni""ht of Columbus. secretary for the

past"° y,ears of St Mary's Holy Name
society, present jud9e advoC:ate of
Lawrence post, American Leg1on, esteemed leading knight of ~awrence
lodge- of Elks county president of

~

Prinr _

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p,mlJ:o &)a;itls 'Bsa1o!llaA ll"' ;io uonoads

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andJJ:(e.,-_l..99.1.~~aised $~7~.~.
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.c:.hn-r-t. h~~T"t ~tbir.k_

:Uoo am dn }lO'Bq pue }l.10£ 1uuon.uonpa '
:;>npuoo O'.J. At;J.Junruwo~ AlaAa UJ uon:az

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•_,i::~_r,~!_;::-~~--r--='~

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t:ne \

ed@PfiOP pf.th~ QQ@P f@WW&fWT 2§§
Ito two weeks has caused lliem -fo

.of
_A.ssociat1on o .A,.ssoc1at1on
'\thi~nn,,.·-df~oGutlLBby EhRunTVtersILLE
ent\on1al Clll.'b· H.e was a mein,
~g~ A,.tnerlcan '!~~ociation, and
t1te'.SOS~~
t
mber of the 1aw
\
P.lx,, us
erly wa.• ....
& :snod•:~ 1,aw1885
1
~ute
of '!,!a.l)l, T teb 3,
'
HEADS HIBERNIANS
the Bos
was \)orn
wrence gigh Sch0°
thiS
He is
e attended Lauon moved t,,..\~on of
Assoclat
a 'after graduaa t,,..hce l,.i. Mc nildl'en,
several
:a.e inarr1e
ba.Ve two c
:a.e
Gilbeitvill~. Ang 26-Much inte1est
~derstood c Y·bury and the~i\een E,1l~if(!~~ 1
is being felt in town over tbe election
ua.eking of :g,os
s Jr and
tn
suff
n 1
,,
L
rence
ob;ester meii\T)l.oJD.agraduated freontered pod Ul the
of Atty John E Fenton 01
aw

~ ;:~ool and tb:nwas einploY:nd UP to
as state ptesident of the Hibe1nians
~ ...rcbesterfo:1" ....-.anY yepa r stotlice worl;.a'!: Worcester yesterday
He is the
~
:.- ~~·
d 06
son of Mr and Mrs Eugene Fenton,
~~~ represente
.
by i
(.or many yeais tesident of this town,
<;,~a an at\~!:~!a th1S :~:~!1s~aent. \ Mr Fenton having bee'h overseer of
a.Jsata'Itlauh, a suGin sweeneY Do~
sewtn~ and mending for the George
d pr Jobn
arnineT,
H Gilbert Mfg· Co
.
~
' an 'the -xned1c:Jn~~nced deatb
,,fl.tty Fenton attended St Aloysll,!S 1·
• peteTsen, ep,
_,_ ~ pat'ochial .school h&J,e and graduated
ea.s
\al" 00 ~~·
from Holy c 1 ass college in 1920 and
eart d1S wa$ a regu noxne to Suff,u~klaBU s_chool in 1924 He taught
11oa~agu\1 sununer lS aut1es.
tn
c\,scbools of Lawrence 'fol
in i,.is y court for b aent of
over nine years and was faculty m,:m- fi,
:aosbUl' su:rn:rneT resi urvwed , ager of athletics at Lawr?nce fl:\gh (.
been a ears- }!e
tnatn of 'school for five years. He _is a mtm- I
T wan~ Y V111l1a:ro.
u
ber of the executive committee of the l
North Essex council, .Bo.Y Scouts of
~ ';;f A.rilerfoa. ap.d 'o/as campaign mana;er
for th~ 1930 Community Chest drive
·f in Lawr'eRce which raised $150,QOO

j

THOMAS H. Blt.ODEAIJ

ciary and bar
~efr as r~presentatives
of many c1v1c bodies and personal
friends will attend the services which
will be held at St Mark's Church,
Dorchester a venue and Roseland stteet,
at 10 o'clock
1.The honorary bearers include Gov
Joseph B. Elv.•M:ayor James M Curley,
Attorney General Joseph B, Warner,
Congressman John W. McCormack,
former Mayor Malcolm S Nichols, Maj
Gen. Erland Fish; Speaker Leverett
Saltonstall of the House of Representatives, Samuel Silvennan, city corporation counsel; Judge Harold P. Williams
of the Superior Court, Judge John Per.rlns, Judge Bert B Holland and Judge
Frank S Deland of the West Roxbury
Court, Judge Richard M. Walsh of the
Dorchester Court, Postmaster William
E Hurley, Ex-Congressman Joseph F
1
, O'Connell, Harry H, Ham, Ralph H
Willard. George W. Doland, District
A}torney William J, Foley, Judge Den1nis D. Sullivan of Middleboro and Dr.
Frederick G. Hampe.
··
·
Active_bea-rers are William H Taylor,
Joseph Kelley, Perley P Hamilton, Edward T. McHtigh, Vincent A, Bolger and
James J. McNamttra
Judge Bilodeau was a
prominent
figure in Boston politics and on Beacon
Hill for years His death was a distinct
shock to hundreds of his friends which

!~~:

'ro~

1

pug uonuu
aq+ 'a;:iyJpa A\,
sagd uonum
.tatad U! poo
u a.raqM spm~
pu-e +u!,gS u-en,

a
1

I

! 'B

) . Judg~ Bilodeau, whcse Winter home '
J1s at 32 .Rosli_n st, Dorchester, h_ad been I
, ·-t~er~ with his family
There was no !
. ~Jn~1c.ation of any sickness, so the news I
1 f his death wiU be a great shock to
. dis tfriends in Boston. He was appoint·e
o the bench by Gov Allen
! .Tudge Bilodeau is
·
is-

J

rt.

:s;f~I r::!a:~:-\~

ssa,dwi

,,.rad'BdsM.au
;,·

--

t= ·
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pt

DORCHESTER J _tISf
DIES SUDDENLY

SI

·I

§.~

800

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apn1ou1

asaq.r.

..10J _ ~~~!'.}Sa!~~~

i

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