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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 31

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
31
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE JUNE 1947 Thirty-One RKAD THE M5A58S (. It A I' I Mt 4 'il Hi ions fcX-Cosill ca liu-ial, 2 Daughters Piane Victims NEW YORK. May 31 AP Dr Dr. Grille was helu-. he re-Kaphael Angel Grillo Ocmnpo of turning home from Montreal, wfcgW ban Jose, Costa Rie.

former presi- dent of the Costa Hican Congress. hc br('n observer at a meet-and two teen-nge daughters were mg of the International Civil Aero-among those killed in the crash of nautics Organization, an Eastern Air Lines plane yester-l The airline said he was accom-day in Maryland, the line disclosed panied by his daughters, Teresa, 15. today. land carmen, to. Pooch 1 ries Phoning for New Home All Pup Gets Is Wrong Numbers, So He's Waiting Ife ft JK Jem lwIb 0 x' jB fedftS Coward' I summer-smart I in genuine i The sign on the desk read "This ir not a public phone." But when a little black-and-white pup wandered in yesterday and asked if he could make a call, Russ Connaughton just couldn't say no.

Besides, Russ had never seen a dog use a telephone before. "Spike," the pooch, explained that he would have used the phone in the drugstore around the corner, except that he didn't have a nickle on him. Coincidentally, it was the Animal Rescue League's shelter on Albany st. where "Spike" had stopped in to make his call, and, he told agent (Photo by Paul Connell, Globe Staff) ANOTHER WRONG NUMBER Says six-weeks old "Spike" sadly as the pup starts to dial once more in his search for a home. Connaughton, he was looking for a MRS.

DOROTHY P. B. CARUSO Widow of the great Enrico Caruso, pictured at her Sudbury home. new home. "Spike" pawed through the phone book for prospective dog-owners, and dialed a number.

But the pup Fire 4 Die Boosting Caruso Continued from the First Pope Step nut on winrd fret meaninft. We arc trying now to collect in Massachusetts another $100,000 to aid the distressed Italian people." Gloria, now married to Michael is only 6 weeks old, too young to 'read yet, and so the telephoning was a hit or miss affair. I "Spike" kept getting wrong num-! bers. He got through once, to a meat-market, and dropped the I phone in a hurry. Agent Connaughton stepped In then, and told "Spike" the league would give the pooch a place to Had Rico lived to see this day," Goodale Visits His Grandmother in New Hampshire Aged Mother of Russ Father Shows Effects of Long Murder Trial Hunt Murray, ex student at answered Dorothy Caruso, "he -J A.

Ik. W.r,t..r r. 14 Continued from the First Pane ond floor, whose mother, Mrs. Ruth Carlin, left them in the yard while she visited the office of a nearby doctor. When the second alarm was sounded Fire Chief James J.

Evans and members of the department who were attending funeral services for Pvt William H. Duncan at the Henderson funeral home, a half mile from 45 12 spend the night until someone who wanted a pal came to claim him. "Spike" doesn't ask for much 'i? a be makiriR a concert tour to Codidge Hil1 road, Cambridge, but week-ends and Summer days money to hclP hls people. He Carusos grandson Eric Angli- would have done as Toscanini is cised from Ennco) tugs h.s Utflel gfrfr Jf? Jg red cart through the garden inand both such good men. 6UComletely secluded in her 1 Aura for Glamour Undimmed country retreat.

Dorothv Caruso! Good like the bread would apply has spent the past year writing poetically to Dorothy Caruso, for her l. L. I. and caught back with just a blanket to sleep on and a bone to gnaw once in a while. He's still at the league's Albany- -in a shoe tluit does you proud under the summer sun.

Destined in a foot-slimming, foot-flattering wing tip style in cool, genuine buckskin matched up with smooth calf. And you II ivelcome tfie extra support, the extra comfort of famous Coward features built into this shoe fnr walking plea' sure, ff'ith ''Airman" in your wardrobe, you re well on the way to a well-dressed, foot -free season. hite huck.tkin ith hron ti tidf trim Charles Russell Goodale and his st. shelter, waiting by the tele- phone. Number, please? hair, wavy another book.

golden combs, is ripe-wheat color, Her first was 'Enrico Caruso, and her light hazel eyes taKe a His Life and Death, published goIden note iTom the tawny tints two years ago. This one is not yet which she dresses. Today she titled, but general might be was wearing a blouse of gold satin "Dorothy Caruso, Her Life." When with a tan gabardine skirt and it ic don' shp and Marearet An-' cream-tan wedgies, with a blush- parents are in New Hampshire today, where they motored Saturday morning to visit Russell's paternal grandmother. His father's mother is a particular favorite of the26-year-old Navy veteran, and in the last month of his imprisonment in Plymouth County Jail he painted the picture which his parents sent to the elderly woman for a Mother's Day gift. The elder Mrs.

Goodale is the only member of the family who has been spared the publicity resulting my voice. I sing and it is over, i Ashes, Doro'." But Caruso could not foresee the (tremendous development of music reproduction after the First World War could not know that his golden voice, recorded on the first, primitive wax records, would be i preserved on modern records to de derson are going to France next P'nk sweater. Huge pearl stud ear- the blaze, jumped aboard engines and went to the fire. When the children were found, the firemen returned to the funeral service. Meanwhile, Mrs.

Carlin, notified of the fire by a neighbor who was also in the doctor's office, rushed home. The blaze was discovered by seaman Paul Vietro, 18, United States Navy, visiting at his home. 14 Henry st. He called the fire department. The house is owned, police said, by Frank J.

Kinnure, occupant of the first floor, who was out at the time. The fire, caused by careless disposal of a match, started in the kitchen of the first floor, according to officials. Damage was estimated at $2000. rings, a brooch of pearls with ru N. E.

Holiday Toll to 12 New England's holiday death toll was increased to 12 yesterday by the deaths of four in drowning and highway accidents. Adolph Josephson, 71, of Kinrose road, Brighton, run ovr Memorial Day on Commonwealth died at St. Elizabeth's Hospital. In Johnston, R. 9-year-old Albert Muscarelli, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Peter Muscarelli of that town, was drowned while swimming in Memorial Park Pond. His body was recovered in eight feet of water. A 15-year-old youth, Roger Cour-noyer, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Eugene Cournoyer of Willow Woon-socket, R. died of a broken neck after being thrown from a truck in North Smithfield, R. when it collided with a trailer truck and overturned. In Woonsocket, R. Joseph Nault, son of Mrs.

Exilia Nault, 177 Circle was thrown from his motorcycle on Hamlett av. in tnat city and killed. State and local police throughout New England cautioned holiday drivers to exert extra caution in returning to their homes on crowded highways today. Sparkling weather drew crowds to Revere and Nantasket beaches yesterday, but a brisk, offshore wind made bathing chilly Picnickers roamed the Blue Hill Reservation. The weatherman promised another good day today, sunny and warmer than yesterday.

The tide will be high in the late forenoon for those who make bathing a must on the first day of June. Autumn. Faces Caruso Photograph Dorothy Caruso writes at the re For comfort' sake eur Coward, and 1 live on eatjr feet bies, emeralds and diamonds, and the great solitaire diamond that was Caruso's betrothal gift to her flashed as she moved. The auro of glamour that Caruso's adoration threw around her life has never dimmed. "Love lasts." she explains.

"You never lose it even when someone dies. You have it just the same-It is fantastic, unbelievable, how people remember Enrico. I get let- jfrom young trial, and I friends of the Goodale are anxious to protect her from public curiosity because of her age. Coward Shoe fectory table on a portable type-i i er. facing the first present1 Caruso ever gave her a unique ulver -framed photograph taken for "I wake up around 4:30 in the Bornicg and make myself some 30 WEST ST.

light children born after his death. After Caruso's death, Dorothy Caruso spent the years in the glittering society of France and Italy. She married twice again; each time the marriage was dissolved soon. She has a second daughter, "Jackie," a stepsister of Gloria Caruso Murray, who is now Mrs. William Hamilton Porter, wife of a young Navy lieutenant graduated from Annapolis, who is about to be relieved of active duty and become a master of mathematics at the Gilman School, Baltimore.

There is a little granddaughter, Dorothy Caruso Porter. coffee I make delicious coffee! Russell mother, she has been terribly upset by all that her son and his family have been through this past 10 months," a close friend of the Goodales in Onset said last night. "While we understand that people are naturally in- t. k- ters still every day. You cannot 'terested in the family's plans, just now they need a chance to rest and i be let alone." writing When Margaret and I feel los something you have loved, hungry, we have some sandwiches.

I 4Tht'rs1, a rom.an4ce for, 8 a of milk and go back to The great tenor-the writing About 4 in the afternoon. most marvelous voice of the age-e go for a ride, do our market A wealthy courted on all sides 56 teg. and cook dinner. The evenings yca.rs 'd' mfel Shy for work? I JJSXr. 'l trained their pupil.

Doro- Mrs. Goodale, according to this intimate friend, is showing the effect of the past months now more than during the days of the trial. If she isn't permitted to rest and i.i uiy i .4 1 of ii iiiiiuii 111111 ilia to see people: our old to see people; go ivew iorK. 10 rope won uh ihu respect our 1. a Iriends Know and try to forget this experience, she mmm." vr vwm Left Italy In 1939 In 1939 Dorothy Caruso left Italy left the villa at Signa to her stepsons, Caruso's children, whose mother was an Italian opera singer.

In France until 1942, she then came to New York; bought the Sudbury property a year ago. "I left at two days' notice," she may suffer a complete collapse, some of the mother's friends The estate among heirs was estimated at $5 000.000, was reluctant. But they eloped and were married in November, 1918. Gloria was born in 1920. Toll royalties still roll in from the recordings of his superb voice, but Voices Singer's Credo "He taught me everything that makes life worth living." she said JJorotny Caruso has no servants, does all her own work and cooking.

She and Margaret Anderson transformed a screened porch overlook- today, remembering. "If I have 8arderl, into 8 "al French triends, if I have found peace rtro" it complete with red and Navy, Cub Planes Crash in Mid-Air; Two Men Killed RED BANK, N. May 31 (UP) is because Enrico taught me how hite checked table cloths, floor itQ UVe. and big peasant sideboard painted blue, peasant china. Warmly I various Continued from the First Page The fatal accidents included two collisions between automobiles and trains.

A snother and her child were burned to death in their Boise, home. Two Chicago boys drowned when their motorboat overturned in a lake. A Pulaski, couple was killed instantly when their car was hit by a train and dragged about 400 feet. Two persons were killed when their cub plane collided in mid-air with a four-engined Navy transport plane near Red Bank, N. J.

He was the only person I ever met in my life who was absolutely good. He was a man of faith. He never said unkind things about people. He always did things for people. And.

above all, he gave himself unstintedly to his work. His voice he considered a trust to give happiness to other people. A small private plane and a four- engined Navy transport collided in 1 In contrast, the living room. Wslli il floor to ceiling on three side? with well-read books, and furnished with the cherished mementoes of the great tenor, is warmly His formula for the world today. T5 I I- 1 I mid-air near here today and the smaller plane smashed to earth, killing the two men aboard.

The Navy plane, a military version of the DC-4 which figured in the commercial airline disasters of the past three days, escaped with slight damage to the wing and re etanneV-pieee surrounding the fire- feuf: 'k. 2 "ay as 1 Place. Italian majolica urns are 52 explained. "It had been getting increasingly unbearable under Mussolini. When Hitler visited Florence they pasted placards on my house, ordering us a1' to stand at a certain place, applauding as Hitler passed.

They took all the Jews many of them my friends and put them in prisons and insane asylums for concentration. "Then, In 1939, they ordered me to take down the American flag on my property. And the last straw was when two wretched little boys in filthy black shirts escorted a Fascist colonel to select sites in my olive groves and vineyards for antiaircraft guns!" Dorothy Caruso spent three years in southern France, working among refugees in the village of Auri-beaux, near Cannes. She is still indignant because Mussolini sent her white donkey to fight for Franco in Spain. "It was a beautiful donkey.

It belonged to my farmer, and evenings I would see his daughter in a red dress petting the donkey. Then they conscripted my farmer's son and the donkey, sent them to Spain. The boy wrote home that they slaughtered the donkey and made him eat its meat for rations. A small thing but it enrages you to take happy, laughing country boys like that, and slaughter them, with their pets, at a dictator's word!" 1 L. "ii 1 I llWl ZT3Z ZZZJLTZJZL i con ourselves with the affairs 1 of the person next door, we must JlW- not warn something all the Ume bES Jig last illness after a blood SoSS be vessel burst in his throat Dec 11,1 1920.

while he was singing "I'Elisir mot- at the Brooklyn Academy Avers Tenor Was Melancholy Music. He died at Naples. No one knows yet it is too early 2 1921 He had insisted he would to ascertain whether Caruso's be his beloved Italy. i grandson, little Eric Murray, has Mrs Anthony J. Vollono of New- inherited the glorious unique ton Center, chairman of Ainei lean larynx structure of the great tenor.

Relief for Italy, talked of Caruso's But hc has Caruso's features homeland with Dorothy Caruso. Re-' "Our dearest wish is that Eric minding her of Caruso's pet phrase be as good as Rico," said Dorothy of endearment, "You are good like Caruso. "I almost hope he does not turned to its base at Flyod Bennett N. Y. I The two men killed aboard the smaller plane, a Piper Cub, were Francis Cole, 26, pilot and instructor, of Middletown Township.

N. and Willard Ivins, 2D, Rumson, N. who was taking flying lessons. There were eight passengers aboard the Navy transport, i Lt Charles Hayes of Martha's I Vineyard, pilot of the Navy i plane, said he" first saw the small plane, painted yellow, about 1000 feet off his left wing. Then it dis Family of 4 Die in Fire A mother, her two children and their stepfather were burned to death in their home at Brookhaven.

N. A "just married" sign fluttered amidst the scattered wreckage of an automobile near a railroad crossing at Munster, Ind the scene of a collision between a Pennsylvania Railroad "holiday special" and a car carrying a wedding party to Chicago. The bride and bridegroom and four other members of the family were killed in the accident, which occurred only a few hours after the wedding. orwo. mjr uuiu.

mis vuiiunu innerit the voice. It is a hard life it was an oia, old nea- a lonely life, that of a ureat sineer. i expression. "Desnite tho vivoritv inlrv appeared into a cloud bank. When the little plane emerged from the cloudst was directly in the path of the am transport.

Hayes tried to lift his rifht wing but failed to get it up in time to avoid (he crash. "The Italian peasants have been' Caruso disnlavoH th I Dairy Continued from the First Page Boor for so long, fought in so many was at heart a melancholy man- he wars." said Mrs. Vollono, "that felt all the world-sorrow in order to bread is a symbol of life very pour it out in voice that moved people so deeplv mkSammJmWdA I i ao often, after an opera, with perhaps 15 curtain calls, and an audience thundering applause, Caruso would come back to our apartment for a quiet supper, alone with me. of soup, a little chicken and he would say: It is all ashes, my Doro, ashes! Fritz (Kreisler) has his violin, hi niann I nnlv Business Unaffected by Plane Disasters, Say Airline Officials NEW YORK, May 31 (UP) Airlines spokesmen at major terminals across the country said today that there had not been any wholesale cancellation of bookings in the wake of the tragic crashes at LaGuardia Field and near Bainbridge, which took 93 lives. Commercial airline disasters in the past usually have resulted in a Mood of cancellations.

Or. Hill, Surgeon-Dentist rM mm P. S. Nottis-Plate Technician, Ine. I DENTAL PLATES A Specialty Plates Repaired and Relined 175 TREMONT STREET 4th Floor, Room 409 The boys, aged from 6 to 9, were rounded up by police Lt Patrick Coyne and Sgt Mark Folan.

They were later released in custody of their parents while Chief Lydon prepared to confer with the state fire marshal's office on the disposition of their cases. Traffic on Route 1 to Providence was delayed 25 minutes by the blaze as hundreds of motorists stopped to watch. State Police from the Wrentham Barracks cleared the jam. The barn is located on Neponset only 100 yards from the intersection with Route 1. I I-J'FOX WASHINGTON STREET 25 Head Led to Safety Five of the 30 cattle housed In the milkshed perished.

Farmhands led the rest to safety before the blaze forced them from the building. The fire department arrived too J. FOX master craftsmen will RESTYLE your fur coat into a smart, new 1948 fashion late to check the blaze in the 2Vi-story wooden structure. Flames spread to a smaller barn several hundred feet away, but were quickly extinguished. Flying embers crossed Route 1 and started a wood and grass fire adjacent to the airport.

The West-wood Fire Department was called and soon had the fire under control. 35 W-y 1 tmmm and anoabwc additional skina extra or as little as Cef Our Free Ettimate 16 Small down payment, halanrt in 12 monthly payments. FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY WITHIN SO MILES OF BOSTON The barn and milkshed were! owned by Leonard C. Fisher, operator of the Neponset Valley SCOOPED WAY OFF-PRICE FOR YOU BY OUR CHICAGO BUYING OFFICE There's one thing that a city-summer-dweller can't do without and that's a provocative' dark sheer a black sheer that's so cooling to wear, so unflustered to look at. And, naturally, being so important a requisite, our buyer in Chicago spared nary a minute to dispatch these utterly bewitching hocks to us in Boston! Here they are in a diversity of styles with ingenious rayon satin detail.

In junior sizes 9 to 15, each and every one is a value-plum besides being a fashion exclusive! I. J. Fox employs more skilled union master craftsmen than any other furrier in America. Your coat undergoes every important step right here on our premises two entire floors are devoted to the care of your Measured fur coat. Phone HUEbard 5000 arm.

Our aklHed eraftamen rebuild, restore and repair each piece to look like new acain civinr your art double life, beauty and new appearance. Our decorator will gladly call at your home with a complete line fabrics for you to select from. No obligation. A'o charge for alteration Upton Tax Rate Up $3 to $55 for 1947 mt a 150-tHile rnd'us fnr your coat Wtt Mail Coupon or Phone A Ft I or ASP. 169 1 P'ease i.end representative with sam- pies of fabrics and further inlorma- I tion.

I I NAME I nnRFs i I-J-F0X UPTON, May 31 (AP) A 1947 tax rate of $55, an increase of $3 over last year, was announced today by Chairman George E. Bradley of the Assessors. VkAIMCTON STSiil I CITY ON SALE TOMORROW 9 A. M. TO 9 P.

M. AT MORTON'S.

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