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The Corbin team will travel to Mid- dletown temorrow afternoon, to play the Independents of that town. The lo¢dls have heen defeated once this season by the Independents, A local boy will wear the ueitorm of the Middletown team against the l.ockmakers tomorrow, in Phil Bloom, who s playing a 'whale of a game. It was mainly through-Bloom's hefty stiekwork, that the Independénts put across the victory other Johnnie To- bin's charges two weeks ago. A record crowd {s expected to wit- ness the battle between the Kaceys and the American Chain company teAm at Bt. Mary's fleld tomorrow afternoon, The Bridgeport team has always proven to be a fine drawing card in this city, When the next boxing card {s ar- fine thing for the matchmaker to se- curé Jimmy Proto of New Haven and Yeung Sflverberg of Ansonia. The | bout that these boys put up at Mer- |iden on Thursday night will keep the | fans talking for some days. | The bout between Johnny Dundee, |the 130-pounds champion and Danny | Frush, of Cleveland, will be staged next Tuesday night at Ebbets Field, at Brooklyn. Frush for a time was traveling along at a rapid clip, until he stacked up against Johnny Kil- | bane, the featherweight champion, ‘xnblne just rocked the Cleveland | boy to sleep, |other aspiring contenders title, for his Besides being a joke Johnny Wilson i{s somewhat of joker. With any number of chal- |lengers seeking his crown, the mid- dleweight titleholder comes forward with the announcement that the man he wants to meet is Harry Greb. champion, Dave Danforth's return to the big show was a brief one, the Browns management having announced that the pitcher who cost the club eleven players last spring, is going to be re- leased on option. The bout between Billy Miske and Fred Fulton, scheduled last night at 8t. Paul, Minn., was postponed on ac- eount of an abscess on Fulton's arm. The followers of “Kid"” Kaplan, the sensational Meriden featherweight, would like to see him in action with | Johnny Shugrue, of Waterbury. While | the Brass City boy seems a little too heavy for Kap, the pride of Dennie MeMahon's stable, would make it in- teresting for Johnny. After watching the big improve- ment in} the boxing of Kaplan, one cannot help but hand Charlie Pliking- ten some credit for the manner in which Kap handled “Kid"” Wagner in last Thursday night's go. % Pilkington will get a chance to pick up some dough tonight, when he faces Nick Foley dn. a bout at the Queens- boro A. C,, New York. ON THE FIRST BOUND ' .WITR CLERKIN, |ranged in this state, it would be a| like he has so many | A | Campbell, who has entered into bus! ness, | The chess match between Jose R, Capablanca, the Cuban champlon, and A. Alechine, the Russian expert, re. suitéd in @ draw in the ninth inning, in the international match at London yesterday. pr=ige Next Friday night has been set as the date for the postponed ten reund boxing match betweén Billy Miske, Bt. Paul heavywelght and Fred Ful. | ton, “Gavvy" Cravath, veteran major league and American Association out- fielder and one-time champlon home run slugger of the National league | | and the oclation, has finished a | long career as an active baseball | player it became known today. i SR B b HORSE BRINGS $128,000, Whitney Sells Whiskaway to Clark at a Very High Price. Baratoga Springs, N. Y., Aug. 12.— Whiskaway, the three-year-old colt which twice took the measure of Morvich this year and which won the Kentucky Bpecial, will change barni Harry Payne Whitney announced yes- terday afternoon that he has accepted the offer Tor the colt made by C. W. Clark, son of former Benator W. A. Clark of Montana, and that Whisk- away will be transferred to the keep- ing of George V. Barnes, Mr. Clark's trainer, in the morning, The price is $125,000. This {s the third highest price paid in American racing ' an- nals. Tracery was sold for $265,000 and Rocksand brought $150,000. | Inchcape, which now stands fourth in | the list, sold for $115,000. Whisk- away is by Whisk Broom II., out of Inaugural. BOUT WILL BE HELD. | New ¥ork, Aug. 12.—Jack Demp- sey, world's heavyweight champion, and Bill Brennan, Chicago veteran, have been matched for a third ring clash. The heavyweights are sched- uled to battle ten rounds, no decision, | at Michigan City, Ind., on Labor Day. This information was dispensed here yesterday by Dan McKetrick, eastern representative of Jack Kearns, man- |ager of the champion. MeKetrick made the announcement upon re- ceipt of a télegram from Kearns, who is in Chicago, stating that arrange- | ments for the match had been com- | pl.ted with Promoter Floyd Fitz- simmons. FINAL GAME TODAY Mrs. Mallory and Mrs. Jessup To Meet At Glencove. Glencove, N. Y, Aug. 12.—Mrs, | Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, of New York, national women's tennis cham- | pion, and Mrs. Marion Zinderstein Jessup, will oppose each other today on the courts of the Nassau Country club, for the metropolitan singles championship. The same pair met in | the final a year ago, ‘and Mrs. Mal-| {lory was the victor, 6—1, 7—2. | | The Norsé woman who has not met | defeat on American courts this sea- son, won in the semi-finals from Mrs. | the free bridge into Trenton. MAN, SHOT INCHEST, FOUND BY ROADSIDE Slayers Evidently Had Thrown Him From Auto Alter Robbery Trenton, N. J, Aug. 12.—With hardly a clue to ald them, the police of all towns within a radius of 100 miles of Wheatsheaf, Pa., are seek- ing the alayer or slayers of W. C, Allen who was shot to death early yesterday morning neéar Wheatsheaf, between Bristol and Morrisville. It is belleved he was the vietim of a hold.up, 7he body was found I clump of bushes along the roadside by two men on thelr way to work. It apparently had been thrown from an automobile after removal from the scene of the shooting. An examination of the body showed a bullet hole through the chest. The coat was buttoned but there was no hole in the garment. The place where the body was found is near the Wheatsheaf Inn, which was raid- ed a few mopths ago by the state constabulary, Look For Taxi. Acting District Attorney Calvin 8. Boyer of Bucks county is investigat- ing. He called for state troopers, and a séarch is being made for a closed taxicab whieh he believes took the slayers from Trenton. According to information in the possession of Chief of Police Sackville of Bristol, four men stopped at a lunch wagon on Bridge street, near Warren, at 2 o'clock yesterday morn- ing and called for a taxicab, Two hours later the man in the lunch wagon saw the same taxicab stop in front of his wagon. The men got out and gpparently were engaged in a heated argument. Finally they re- entered the cab and drove away at a rapid pace. The district attorney has rounded | up witnesses who say they saw Allen walking toward the Wheatsheaf Inn at 3:15 o'clock yesterday morning. A possible clue was furnished by a taxicab driver, who gave to the po- lice a business card bearing the name of John N. Matuza, poolroom pro- prietor, of 833 North Second street, Philadelphia. The card was 50 feet from the body. The police have learned that about the time the body was discovered a high-powered automobile raced across There were several men in the car who seemed to be intoxicated. Trace Rclatives. The police of this city are trying to find relatives of the victim. of one William Allen was found, but he left Trenton two years ago. The dead man was dressed in a black suit made in Trenton. His watch was missing, but a fob was found beside the bedy upon whieh was inscribed the name W. C. Allen, on one side, and ‘‘presented by the Trent Soclal Club"” on the other. A picture of a woman was in the fob. The name of W. C. Allen was tattoed on the man's |arm, The Bucks county authorities had the body removed to the Morgue at Bristol. found | Trace | And Theodore Roosevelt ought to take to water—as he does every hot day that he’s in Washington. l (UARANTINE ON MONDAY | ‘Cl.nlnes After That Day Must Be On | Developments— NEW HAVEN STRIKE MEN ARE SILENT Leash, Muzzled Or Must Carry Tag Indicating Anti-Rabies Vaccination Awaiting National Road Claims That it is i Monday, at noon, the quarantine or- Steadily Improving dered by the commissioner of dom- New Haven, Aug. 12.—The mags | 0Stic animals will be put into opera- meeting of the striking shopmen of tion in this city, and after that hour | the N. Y. N. H. & H. railroad today 4088 not on a leash, not muzzled or was a quiet one the men being in an | not bearing a red collar tag, showing expectant attitude and eager to learn |that they have —Dbeen vaccinated of any information from Washing- 28ainst rabies, will be brought to the dog pound. Veterinary surgeons have been sup- ton. The daily statement of the road sald that there was a continuance of | Plied with quantities of anti-rabies the general improvement previously | 8erum and are administering it to reported.” canines in large numbers, they report. | The statement also said that the | COnspicuous collar tags are being | managemeft wished to impress upon Placed on the animals so treated and the public including its employes that| they only will be allowed to roam “its responsibility and desire for nufe"""“m“' a muzzle or leash. equipment is supreme’ ST SN | It also added that repairs to loco-‘, }mo!\'eu and cars were being made so | S as to permit a continuance of normal| Cloudy Weatner Tonight With Mod- | operation of passenger and freight| [ service, Tn addition to the reserve en.| Crate Temperature Says Forecast New Haven, Aug. 12.—For Con- gines which have not been taken out necticut: Cloudy weather with mod- | of storage 12 new heavy engines hnv-‘ | been received and the locomotives|erate temperature tonight and BSun- MAY RAIN SUNDAY sent to the Baldwin and Amerlc‘ln‘ day possibly rain on the coast fresh | locomotves company plants are be-‘ northeast winds. 1 ginning to return. | Conditions: The The statement says that as freight cars there are less in bad or- genarel condi- the last 24 hours. The pressure | the Rocky mountains | en on the Atlantic Coast from Massa- | chusetts to Florjda. The greatest re- | the day the strike was called. to | tions have changed but little during| is | der as of August § than on July 1,|high over New England and low over Rair has fall- YOUNG LIFE SAVER 15 MODEST ENOUGH 12 Year Old Lad Credited With Throe Rescues i . —— Hallfpx, N, 8B, Aug. 12.—~Harry Me- | Denald, 12 year old lad llving at Fairview, on the outskirts of Halifax | hag to his eredit three rescues from | L ning, all within the past three years His lat feat was the saving re- cently of Ave yeqr old Teddy Moller when the smdll boy fell through a hele in a Falrview wharf. Young MeDonald had to dive over the whar! and swim a distance of 20 feet among| the piles. The young Mollér boy was| going down for the third time and| was unconscious when reached, but| MeDonald clutched him and then helding to one of the piles directed the remainder of the saving opera- tions. These were carried out with the aid of & cod line passed down the wharf. | Questioned about hia first life sav- ing exploit, Harry said: ? “Aw, {t wasn't nuttin's at all. The O'Brien kid what lives on Stanley street, fell off a raft down by the shipyards and I went in and pulled him out." The description of the second ex- ploit when he rescued Arthur Meth- am, was: ’ ‘“He was my chum, so I had to get him back." It was not until after his first two rescues that the young life .saver learned to swim. In the first instance | he plunged after the “O'Brien kid,” into the water over his head, and managed somehow to get him back to the raft. In the second he went to his chum'’s rescue partially support- ed by a stick. Harry is describéd as a ‘‘Regular Boy,” even to having the proverbial | “yaller dog.” One of Harry's ambi- tions is to become a Sea Scout MORE DRUG ¢ | —_— | Officials Have Found 850,000 Worth | In Rag Bales Near Fulton, N. Y. Fulton, N. Y., Aug. 12. — Charles| Stevenson of the department of cus- toms took charge of the examination of bales of rags at the plant of the Arrowhead Mills, Inc., on Battle Is- land, three miles north of this city, which has resulted in the seizure of more than $50,000 worth of narcotics and which may lead to the round-up of a band of smugglers. He is being aided in the search by local police. In the meantime a statewide search is being made for a suspect who reg- | istered Sunday at the Hotel Clark as Julius Rendsburg, New York,” and whem the authorjties believe to be the agent of the “dope ring.” Documents |and letters found in a suit case left |at the hotel by Rendsburg when he | fled the city Sunday night, and later confiscated, furnish evidence which! probably will lead to his arrest with- | COURT SHOWS THAT PRETZEL IS RIGHT Wehster Backs Judge When W4 Qugge tions Correctness of “Bretesl” 6 Complaint Drawn By Clgrky New York, Aug. 12-~The e against Joseph Schwarts, who ber fore Magistrate Reynelds, yestérday on charges preferred by a food in- #pector, had it that in Schwarts's shop at 451 Alabama avenue a barrel “bretzels' had been found uncovered. “What's this?"' demanded Magla. trate Reynolds, "B What do you mean, p. “No, your Honer,"” replied court clerk, “‘they were b-r. bretzels," “They were p-.r.e-t-z-e.l.s when I went to school,” insisted the ceurt. “I have never heard of any change ‘Worth paying attention te." “Neverthele insisted the elerk, “they are b. -2-¢.1-8, Degging your Honor's pardon. “Nonsense. I've eaten my share of the dainty things and they're nething but p-r-e-t-z-e-1-s. Please change thip complaint to conform to the rules of orthography. “Certainly, your Honor. But weuld the court consider wagering & cigar upon the verdict of a dictionary? ““Make it a box,' said Magistrate Reynolds, “and fetch two diction. arfes.” Isadore Kallet, a lawyer, rushed across the street to a law office and found two dictionaries. Both spelled it p-r-e-t-z-e-l, “'As for you,” said his Henor te the hitherto ignored Bchwartz, the flge is 82 for not keeping your p-r-e-t- z-e-1-8 covered.” ' TELEGRAPH SERVICE SUSPENDED 5 HOURS Attack of TIrish Irregulars on Dublis Center Post Ofice Cuts Oft ‘Wire Communication. London, Aug. 12, (By Assoclated Press). — Telegraphic communication between London and Dublin whs re- stored at 3:40 o'clock this morning after a suspension of about five hours as a consequence to the surprise at- tack by Irish irregulars on the Dub- lin Central post office last night. The attack resulted in temporary cuttin off of communication net only wif England but apparently with other parts of Ireland. Meager telephone messages during the early hours conveyed the newsy of the attack to London in only the briefest outlines which reported that the damage and the consequent inter. ruption of teiegraphic eommunication were due to the firemen's hoses 3ap much as to the incendiarism of the raiders. The building which was attacked is the substitute for the unrestored office which was burned during the Easter rebellion, located in the same | in a short time, the authorities say. The 120 boxes of morphine found Wednesday afternoen at the Arro head plant were added to yesterday, when officials, on opening additional bales of rags, came across 300 boxes| of cocaine, 300 boxes of morphine and | street. A traveler arriving at Waterford |from Cork yesterday evening was ‘quo!ed as saying the national troops were in complete possession of city and that firing had ceased. the Over in Bristol last Wednesday, a baseball game was staged as a benefit for a Bell City man suffering from a | broken leg. The contesting teams were the New Departures and the Old Timers. Judge Malone was on the mound for the veterans. After pool-| ing several of the opposing batsmen with his slants, Judge was heard to remark, “they did not do that in my day.” orted was 2.38 inches at Hatteras., . C. Pleasant weather prevails in the | THIRTY YEAR LEASE Mohican Co. To Occupy Three Stores | rising slowly in the Lake regions. Conditions favor for this vicinity in Shurberg Block On Main Street— | unsettled weather and slightly higher | May Sutton Bundy, while Mrs. Jessup OR(‘Am RKLAN eliminated Misg Leslie Bancroft. i 400 tubes of heroin. | | | | LOCALS WIN Defeat Travelers STUTZ CARS TO BE CHEAPER |[eague Formed At Chicago Plans Sehwab to Be Active in Company—| . Nationwide Drive. | temperature. Announces Price Cut. | Chicago, Aug. 12.—A nationwidg Grocery, Meat and Bakery Business | < | Indianapolis, Ind, August 12. .__jerfon_ to curb the activities of the Washington, Aug. 12.—Weather|Charles M. Schwab, chairman of the Ku Klux Klan was announced hers outlook. for the waek beginning Mon- Bethlehem Steel corporation, an- !}es!er_dax with the formation of the day in north and middle Atlantic nounced here today that he would |American Unity league. Bishop Sam- states; Considerable cloudiness temp- take a personal interest in the operatijuEl RRs loNeiolatisabsicTmed RPN erature near or slightly below norm- |tion of the Stutz Motor Car company c_ova: church, was nnmeq honorary [al; probably local rains middle of the|of America, Inc., which he and his chairman. Patrick H. O'Donnell, § week. " |associates recently bought from the Chicago attorney, is chairman. |before the game between the man- 3 & 1952 and Is one of the longest term ik |Guaranty Trust company New ! ‘A national conference on campaiga REA L s TO ERIN | York. Mr. Schwab said the present Plans will be held here September §, JANFORTH GETS THE AI |agrs of both teams as to the suprem- 3 % e G T 0 s | officers of the company would con-|t0 Which delegates from every state |tinue in oftice and leaders representing all the racial | St. Louis, Mo, Aug. 12.—Pitcher| | ‘ -'and religious groups in America .are IS : |that he had been forced to play the| : il Price cuts effective immediately rligious: group! . ) The Worcester club has made a bid | Dave Danforth, for whom the 8t grs game with the local team under |Will have a grocery and meat busl-|p (o0 1100y George Extends Sym. |were also announced by Mr. Schwab, being invited,” said Mr. O'Dennell. of $300 for Jim Thorpe, the Iamo\ls.l‘o"" Americans gave Columbus "‘h'uhe handicap of some of his best ness combined with a bakery in the - ? s “While the league is non-political, - , .| players last spring, will be released ; _|Stores and the proprietor, Mr. Shur- | Indian, suspended on Thursday by | 4 i Bus! M B h;players being absent, and was posi BRER i ThRice a1l hee kAT o aTeE Clarkin and Co¥ey. Jim Clarkin, |Under option. Business Manager Bob/¢i.e that he could bring an aggre- | (°F L sary altera- it will oppose candidates who are to 7 7 i Quinn, of the Browns, announced; . however, asks §1,000 for a player who |sattoncof splayers toxthis ety that]=Soy C rantal ‘ot Chie three: mtores for| be supported by the 27,000 Klansmen in Chicago in the fall elections.” late yesterday afternoon. Danforth | = In a telegram addressed to th % : v |would have an easy time of disposin & 8! * B g LA e Iaid" not depart:for Chicago: with' the e s et POSINE | (he first five years will be $7,000 per | 2 year, for the next 15 years $9,000 and | Last night's exhibition by the local (£t o8 I8 A0S B VERTE SAIT ,meeting this morning Bishop Pallowy Browns last night. Although Dan- maidens was one of the best exhibi- Ao B PROTESTS COMMISSION now in California said: “The Ku Klux forth has been pitching fairly good ! the fions ever staged by the girls on the Senmator Underwood Attacks Action of LINEUP OF TENNIS STARS Philadelphia, Aug. 12.—The Spanish | L tennis players who will meet the win. St. Mary's ‘ ner of the Franco-Australia match v i Second Time This next Thursday, Friday and Saturday| —me For the Second Tim in the final round of the Davis Cup | tournament at the Germantown | Cricket club planned strenuous prac-| St. Mary's girls defeated the Trav- ”hc"| ‘°diyl in Bn_relm": '°’Sh]5“°J "“{e]ers’ girls in a fast and exciting their sea legs. he Spaniards, ose . Alonzo, his brother, Manuel Alonzo, (82M¢ at St. Mary's playeround last| rar, ived h |evening by the score and fi‘;‘;"t" d3rOomal ety T® | There was a great deal of discussion Girls The Mohican Co. has just taken | over a lease of three stores in the| Solomon Shurberg block on Main| street for a term of 30 years. The| stores as told in a previous issue of the Herald, run from 391 to 401 Main street. The lease itself dates from | September 1, 1922 to September 1, Season—Locals Superior. $100,000 wofth of baseball property was slightly damaged yesterday when‘ ‘Willie Kamm, the San Francisco in- | Mfielder, purchased by the White Box for the above amount, was lald low | when hit on the head by a pitched | ball. of pathy on Death of Arthur Griffith,| EGG&? NOPE, EGGNOGG ! K turessing fDeop: JtaR1 LA Agents Say Crates Contain Whiskey | London, Aug. 12 (By Associated| So Rotten An Fgg Would “Bust. T) Detroit t headed by th Press).—Premier Lloyd George, has| New York, ‘Aug. 12.—General Pro- he Detroit team headed by the great Ty. Cobb,uwill play at New Ha- | ven on Sunday on August 20. The Olean, N. Y., semi-pro has opened negotiations for the serv- {ces of Jim Thorpe. | telegraphed Michael Collins, head nerhmon Agent Appleby sent seven|ilan is a menace to religious freedont R T b P the Irish provisional government ex- [agents vesterday to the Manhattan » source of danger to the state, and [action is to give him a chance to | Sinmoun Seseny berning bod mie pressing his deep distress on learn- |Malt Shop, 00 Second street, where [it growing strength should be eurbe [“come back.” il Ld Ing of the death of Arthur Grifith, ithey seized sixteen egg crates, injeq through the united effort of all ] st [ArC L SERADEICIERICERIE nzehe. Tead | Mr. Lloyd George's telegram said: |each —of = which reposed eighteen trye Americans regardless of creed, i throughout the game and although “My admiration for his single mind- |quarts of alleged whiskey, and one | uce or condition in lite" 4 BIG EV |they were threatened at various times ed patriotism, his ability, sincerity legg crate which held twelve quarts, i Aug. 12.— they came out of the contest with a and courage, had grown steadily sinceé | Three domijohns of the same stuff ' AT SPA TODAY. Y. SARATOGA DRY AS CHIP. Saratoga Springs, N. The New Haven firemen defeated | Twelve entries, including most of the clear cu victory. the smoke eaters of Hartford, b to yesterday afternoon at Yale field. Albert Novak, of Bridgeport, been secured as the gol pro at the Weatogue club, to succeed George |leading two-year-olds in training, | were ready to face the barrier today |comprised the battery for the a six fur-'team and this palr were largely has | long sprint for juveniles, and one of strumental in the resulting win. visiting battery Cooney !and O'Connell was also praiseworthy. [in the Saratoga special, the season's most [for this class. prominent events Helen Lynch and Catherine Ttoman local work of the The U. S. Administration in Agreement|1 met him first less than a year ago. His character made a deep impres- sion upon the British ministers who Washington, Aug. 12.—Formal pro-|Shared with him in those unremit- test against the action of the ad.|!Ing labors In which he was 4 ministration in constituting an agree. | UPON to play such a testing and dif- ment with the German government|Cult part. His loss will fall heavily for esablishment of a joint commis. | On Ireland, but I trust his work will son to pass on American car claims|80_ON to compiete success. against Germany was made today by| [he premier also telegraphed his With German on War Claims. in- condolences to Mrs. Grifith saying: called | {and a gallon of rye whiskey extract |were also selzed. The agents arrest- |ed Otto Braun, the owner, and Samuel | Cohen. According to the agents the egg crates exactly coincided with twenty- [five cases of whiskey which they had contracted to buy for $47 a case at |the Malt Shop. The agents said the | place looked like an eggnogg factory. |No eggs, they said, could have been New York, Aug. 12.—Sad news for race fans with a thirst arrived from Saratoga today. lzzy Einstein, rum sleuth extraordinary, {s there, A communication from him reached state enforcement headquarters today saying he and his partner, Moe Smith, had rounded up 19 places and served sunmonses on their proprietors. “I'm here to make Saratoga county dry,” Einstein wrote, “and I'll stay here un- Yo Ho! For a Life on The Bounding Wave! Senator Underwood of Alabama, dem- ! ocratic senate leader in a letter to! Chairman Cummins of the judiciafly | sub-committee. The sub-committde | has before it Senator Underwood’s bill for an all-American commission to| adjudicate car claims ! Senator Underwood in his letter | challenged the contrention of the state department and White House that precedents existed for the ad- ministration course “I am certain Ireland will flwayu‘“ bad as the whiskey, however. reverence his memory as one of her| most loyal, gifted and courageous | sons." I HEADS CATALOGUE DEPT. |t I do.” VOn 6000-Mile Mapping Flight Elizabeth FEggert of this city, Ap- pointed to Official Position in MORE STRIKE Brdgeport Library. RIOTING |Great Northern Special Railroad Agent Shot—Others Are Beaten. Superfor, Wis, Ang. 12.—One Great Northern railway special agent was shot and seriously wounded another | SRIF GEPETT |severely beaten and four others Py o " bruised at Saunders, Wis. seven miles | Miss Fagert started ‘ber nbrary from here early today when a mob [ 0lf Pt ero AT T ey of alleged strike ~svmpathizers in-\, .} 0\ ¢ the Drexel Institute in Phil- tercepted a carload of non-union ers. | o B Vg HUIC FRNTC L doing ployes en route from Minneapolis to similar work in the office of the sup- Superior. erintendent of documents in Wash- Jul) sl bl ington, D. C., and some time with the {number about 30 were then kid-|p w. wWison company, who issue napped and taken into the WoodS| pariodical indexes, reader's guides, nearby. A detachment of police and|ere . ar New York [ deputy sheriffs are searching lhe, i ged — voods fi the 9 | ittt A ,Enough Soft Coal for The Next 290 Years \ Harrisburg, Pa, Aug. “12.—penn-| LIEUT. CHAS, WEBbL.LR (LEFT) AND LIEUT. VIRGIN HINES sylvania's soft coal fields contain 43,- Lieutenant Charles Webber and Virgin Hines, military aip- court today to answer to a secret in- (830,860,000 short tons of recoverable men of Rockwell Field, San Diego, Cal., are now on a 6,000-mile dictment charging larceny, conspiracy'coal—enough to meet the demands of mapping flight. Srl\eduled s‘.ops are Sacramento, Salt Lcke City. to commit larceny and keeping a buc-'the next 290 years at the present rate | A yiadr . - T ket shop. He pleaded not guilty and 'of ¢onsimption—the state department Denver, Arkansas City, San Antonio, El Paso and Nogales. Thay furnished $2,509 bonds. |of internal affairs announced today. are flying in a De Haviland plane. Miss Elizabeth Eggert, daughter of the late August Eggert, of Park and! John streets, has been notified that she is appointed head of the cata- logue department of the Bridgeport employes fald to PLEADS NOT GUILTY Boston, Aug. 12.—Clarence L. Hay den, of Higgins, Hayden and Co., brokers, appeared in the superior Two stories high and traveling 30 iiles an hour without a traffic cop in sight—some sport for these three San Diego mermaids! #And some strengti for the men who carry the pretty burdens. i ¥y - e