New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 10, 1923, Page 1

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News of the World By Associated Press APET 1S GIVEA TUBERCULOSIS WORK Full-Time Physician Engaged by New Britain Rehet Sociefy SECURE DR SAMUEL DELANO| Clinic in Booth's Block, Medical Work At City Sanitarium, Nutri- tion Work and Fresh Air Camp in His Field of Activity. A full time physician to look after | tuberculosis patients in New Britain , will be engaged under contract for one year, with the possibility of keep- ing a man engaged in this work per- manently according to a vote taken at a meeting of the Tuberculosis Re- lief society yesterday afternoon. Dr. Samuel Delano of the Hartford county sanitarium has been engaged and will assume his duties probably about September 1, or sooner. No salary has been mentioned, Dr. Delano will take full charge of the tuberculosis clinic in the Booth block, conducted by the board of health. He will also take charge of medical work at the New Britain | sanitarium, formerly the Rocky Hill sanitarium, will supervise the nutri- tion work at the fresh air school and will have charge of the medical work at the New Britain fresh air camp. Dr. Delano Harvaxd Man Dr. Delano is a Boston man, a graduate of the academic as well as the medical courses in Harvard uni- versity and has been at the Hartford county sanitarium for the past two years and a half. He has practiced in Europe and is a Phi Beta Kappa member., He is said to be an expert on tuberculor subjects and is the man who first started the general medical clinic at the Boston city hospital While no salary flgures are avail- able it is understood that Dr. Delano is coming to New Britain at a salary far less than he.could earn elsewhere because he is interested in the tuber- culosis problem and the methods used in fighting it in this city, The nutri- tien classes and the Fresh Air camp are features of fighting the dis- | ease which are not met in all com- munities, Heretofore the work of supervising the health clinic has been in charge “ of Miss Ventlie Logan and Miss Ber- nadette Labarie who have had charge | of the fresh air school and its nutri- tion classes, as well as the board of health clinic. Miss Logan also is re- | sponsible for the nutrition periods at the fresh air camp, which are con- | ducted under the supervision of Miss Freda Lund, another nurse who stays at the camp all summer, One of Dr. Delano's many duties | will be the examining of ehildren for | the freeh alr camp, work now being done by volunteer physiclans in the city. | LAKE BEATS SWEENEY ONE UP ON THE 19TH School a day’s Play, Defeats Mor- rell of Greenwich (G [ 10.—Great golf was | Shenecossett course | i this morning in thg first round of the| tournament of the Connecticut Golf Association. Jarvis of Sequin, in de- feating his mate, Jackson, of Green- wich, went to the 21st hole to win having an eight-inch putt on the 18th | green. Harold 8. Lake of Hartford, won one up at the 19th hole, won from Sweeney of Shuttle Meadow by | inking 40-foot putt for a birdie| three at that hole. * Narramore of from Austin of Norwich at hole. The morning round was in getting under way and it was early | fternoon-bhefore the round turned in its cards. Burkoski of. Naugatuck, aged teamed against Morrell of Greenwich had a comparatively easy time with a | 4 to 3 win. He will meet Dewing o Hartford this afternoon. The gallery was expected to follow the Topping Merriman match, however. Seeley beat Walsh by default beat Jackson one up on 21 hole. MacDonald 4 and 3 ramore beat Austin one up 19th hole | | Groton, July sghot over the who | Brooklawn, won the 19th 20, | 1i .lar,w the Nar the vis on Clergyman Wants to Aid with the purpose of the England committee to secure a New- England system of railroads and w the committee's proposed policy habilitation by cooperation not yet had time to ce: the committee for re; feasible or desirable. giving special attention preparatory to making a statement at | Stamford tinelli, city, tion | truck bit “,,p.m”-m de | board of another 16th pair in the| " | ter that he was in any accident, truck about the He says he knew death of flxr‘ Wo. “cutting in" | failed to have a of his car. him and entered tion of the traffic laws and then they! came to the conclusion that his was ithe trnck they heen looking for| | since yesterday afternoon |ber on Sentenced to Die " Can’t Understand What Court Ruled e Chicago, July 10.—Mrs, Sa- belle Nitti Crudelle, convicted yesterday of the murder of her busband Frank, remains un- aware that the verdict carried with it a sentence of death by hanging. She does not under- stand English and it was ascer- tained this morning that no one has had the heart to tell the woman the verdict. (e e e N. H. DIREGTORS IN FAVOR OF MERGER Approve of “Consolidation Plans ““In Principle” Today STORROW REPORT HELD UP Formal Approval of Committee Plan to Put Through Recapitalization and Consolidation to Be Considered Further. New York, July 10.—Approval in principal of the plan for consolida tion and recapitalization of New Eng land railroads was volced by direct of the N. Y, N. H. and H. after a meeting today. Storrow committee plan to this end pending further consideration. Approval of the was withheld, however, The directors statement said: “The board is in hearty sympathy joint New 02t various means | in voard is the report later date. PLANS T0BE MADEFOR | BIG LEGION CONVENTION | Committe Chairmen Meet Tonight to Discuss Finances and Other Im- portant Subjects. Preliminary arrangements for the| American this city will committe o'cl [)I“llil‘u\ill items will be made to determine how much nmne\ will be needed and how it can Legion staté convention in September 18, 14 and 15 be made at a meeting of the chalrmen tonight at 8 Finances will be ong of the discussed. A survey ck. :nt to best advantage. \hawnwn of the committees who have been appointed by Maurice H.| Pease, [ vention committe, rade, Burkoski, Star of Yester- ment, Rodman Chamberlain; traffic, | Arthur Podts; { Jackson; | Hellberg; | publicity, venirs, chairman of the general con- are as follow Curtis L. Sheldon; Harry C. luncheon, Cliffor ] Stanley Eddy;! William W. T. Squires; sou- Herbert A. Johnson: Rawlings; program, staff; finance, Wal- quarters, parade decorations, Col. dges, George 3oost and Pull” r Milkey. TRUCK DRIVER ARRESTED | Man Hid On Charge of Driving Car That Brushed From Another. Causing His Death. Stamford, July 10.—Joseph of 438 Stillwater avenue, was held today on the alleg: that he was driving the n|n!m which yesterday afternoon at brushed off the running truck Dhimis Word- | of Cos Cob, resulting in the lat-| s death. The police that while denying Martinel- says he was in Riverside with nothing about the rden boy on another truck Martinelli was arrested because he marker on the front police had stopped complaint for viola The had The num- marker correspond- ' the rear Man Who Assaulted H]m‘rd with the number reported to them |as Dr. John | pryshed off Worden Sharp Declme in Bn‘th Juy 10.—Rev., H. Kerr, pastor of venue Presbytetian church, DBagoi lyn who was attacked yesterday by a| vurglar armed with an axe today sent| essage of forgiveness to his as-| lant He soil he was willing to) extend the helg hand to New York, 3 Arlington £kull Pawn shops searched oday Ly the police hope that the| burglar would attcmpt to dieposs of | 3 wnme of the §1.5 ¢ worth of vainables stolen from the rectory were in the Two Springfield Truckers Arrested as Rum Runners EStamford, July De of Long Ui and Eugene 3 tlat city were 100 gallen still axd key on an automoblle truck. were turned over to federal tn be taken to Rridgeport maaring. 10.—Dominick Springfield, Mass, youg of Water street irrested today with a a quart of #his- They officers for = Ieo for Massachusetts He has a possible fracture of the| public here today. year there were 87,636 births as com pared with 92,207 charge d'affaires here last evening by two former Belgian soldiers who followed him legation to his private house ing the vestibule thg men attacked the diplomat and administered a se- vere beating. The assailants arrested and released on ball. having been on the car that Rate Reported in Mass. 10.—-Vital statistics Boston, July for 1 show in 1921 numbered 32,683 in 1921. Death r and 47,780 in 1921. ial Beaten By Two Belgian Soldiers. By The Assoclated Prees 10.—The German was assaulted July from the Enter- were BRIflEfiRflflM S[lAKS GLERGYMAN ON JAW Resents It Because Divine Had Given His Bride “Patenal Kiss” | (EX-NEW HAVENER 1S VICTIH, Lieut. Wesley M. Hague lg-rmns1 Outstretched Hand and Sends Right to Chin of Rev. Payne of Boston. George Lyman Boston, July 10.—Lient. Wesley McLaren Hague, v. N. admitted today that he had engaged in a scuffle with Rev. George Lyman Paine yesterday in the course of which he knocked the clergyman through the glass panel of a door in | the offices of the greater Boston federation of churches on Beacon street. He said his anger had been aroused when the clergyman, after admitting that he had kissed the lien- jtenant’s bride of two months, had in- | sisted it merely was a display of 1a!her|y affection Gave Him Thrashing “I believed he rveeded a thrashing {and I gave it to him," said Lieut ‘Hugufi “T considered the matter had ended right there and wanted it | to end there.” Rev. Mr. Paine, who is executive secretary of the church federation, caid that Hague had attacked him | through a misunderstanding of oc- w TALES OF GRAFT AND |Chicago Daily News Prints |loaded with fruit. §IX AUTO BANDITS HOLD Dr, Cook, Explorer, Indicted in Ohio | 4 As Fake Promoter || | Yty | Blind Driver By Use of Red Pepper Then Bind Him and Throw Him Into Ditch. Cleveland, July 10.—Twenty- ||| six oil promoters, including Dr. { Frederick A. Cook, former: Arc- | tic explorer, were indicted by the federal grand jury here to- day on charges of using the malls to defraud and conspiracy to make fraudulent use of malls, The indictments were returned after federal District Attorney A. E. Bernsteen had presented scores of wit- nesses to the jury in the gov- ernment’'s drive to stem the flood of bogus oil stocks, Cook and 28 of his associates are al- leged to have defrauded Ohio- ans through the sale of the stock of the Petroleum Pro- ducers Association, a Fort ‘Worth, Tex., ol promotion en- terprise of which Cook was “president and sole trustee,' Milford, July 10.—Held up by six| automobile bandits on the Devon sldet | of Washington bridge early today, An- |tonio Cuzzaerea of Orange, the driver | |of a motor truck owned by Nicholas |Cimino of 30 Olive street, New Haven, was temporarily blinded when red | pepper was thrown into his eyes, and | | was then gagged with a handkerchief, Itied hand and foot with rope and [thrown into a ditch alongside the Mil- |tord turnpike. The bandits after holding up Cuz- |zaerea on the pretense that they were police who wanted to see his license ! papers, took him with them in their high powered motor car. The leader of the gang then directed one of his |men to drive the Cimino truck to- | ward New Haven. Cuzzaerea made his report of the affair to the Milford police after he was picked up by an automobile driv- len by John A. Ramus of Bridgeport. l‘he police have not apprehended the ndits nor recovered the truck up to ythxs time. The automobile truck which was |stolen is described as a five ton ma- ’Chlpa, with a red driver's cab, blue body and brown canvas cover. It was | WEALTH FROM LIQUOR Alleged Expose of So. At- | tantic Rum Running | KIRKWOOD IS LEADER ~ * UP TRUCKER AT MILFORD|, | Kinsman. |Kinsman and the girl are Avel Week Ending July Tth . ... 9,113 | FOUR GUILTY OF RUNNING RUM ON PLAINVILLE ROAD; _ FINES IMPOSED BY COURT GIRL HoLD-UP OIJEEN BALKS AT MURDERING 119 Year Old Detroit Miss| Accuses Two Accomplices | Of Slaying Victim Detroit, July 10.—On the strength | of a story told by 19 year old girl| police here are holding her and three | youths in connection with the killing Sunday of Lawrence Rickard, 22 years | old. One of the youths is said by Lher police to have confessed he shot| Rickard through the abdomen as he, shouted for help when two men held | him up Paul Da Roche, 19, police sald, con- fessed after Peggy O'Nell, satd to be | known also as Watson, told her story | to the authorities. With the girl an? Da Roche police also took into cus-| tody Edward Jenkins and Emerson Da Roche and Jenkins are charge while| held as! members of a holdup gang. | According to the police Miss O'Neil declared she had driven a bandit car and asserted the gang had participat- ed in 28 ho!dupn rlur|ng recent weeks, booked on a slaying Kukish, Mikowski and Pavano Assessed $200 and Zawadski $100— Thirty Day Jail Sen- tences Are Suspended Attorney Danaher Bitterly Criticizes Police for Shooting and Beating Pa- vano—Accused Men Deny, Transporting Alcohol. George Kukish of 86 Sexton.street, Henry Mikowski of Lafayette strest and Jossph Pavano of 969 BStanley street were fined $200, Jack Zawadski of 70 Bellevue street, Hartford, was fined $100, and each was given & 30 day suspended jail sentence by Judge B. W. Alling when arraigned in po- lice court this morning on a charge of {llegally transporting liquor on &he night of June 29, 1923. Prosesutor achieve | By The Astociated Press. lN I] AY S [il]”-‘ MAT[;H Chicago, July 19. — Rum running | | along the south Atlantic seaboard has assumed such tremendous proportions | that the inhabitants of poverty-strick- en little islands have become rich al- most over night and the section has | ~rrences while the lleutenant was on duty at Baltimore. He officiated at v anarriage of the lieutenant to Miss Priscilla Redgrave of Baltimore while { he was assistant, rector of Christ | Episcopal church; Cambridge. Short- Heads Morning Qualifiers| With 2 Under Par— { William Greenstein presented the (PAPLARSKI AND KOWALSKI | eoresriss b Miormeyc. - et NOW HELD FOR BURGLARY her of Meriden and AttorneyRu F. MeDonough of this ecity. Rutherford First Witness. Pa-| entertain- | Boy the ! hour of the accident. | He recalls | ly before the arriage he baptized Miss Redgrave and he said that when he kissed . after this ceremony Lien &‘ did not offer any pro- ut for a Stroll. ‘utenant was away ook Mrs, Hague for & ride to Belmont He . that while they were strolling .nrough a meadow he kissed her on the cheek, but asserts that it was merely a paternal and friendly act and that he did nothing offensive to Mrs., Hague. " A Right to the Jaw Yesterday afternoon T.ieut. Hague visited the office of the church fed- | eration, ignored Rev. Mr. Paine's out- stretched hand and swung at his chin. The two grappled and the clergyman crashed through a glass door, suffering several cuts about the head and arms, The lieutenant apologized to others in the office for :crea.tlng a disturbance and departed. Formerly in New Haven Mr. Paine is married and the of {Wo sons at Harvard. He |is a Harvard graduate, and was prominent in athletics while in col- lege. From 1911 to 1918 he was rector of St. Paul's church, New Haven, Conn,, and during the war did Y. M. C. A. work in France. Later he taught at Berkeley divinity school, | Middletown, Conn., coming to Cam- | bridge in 1921, | "Lieut Hague for many years lived in Chicago and his fgmily now resides in San Diego, C‘al. He was gradu- ated from Annapolis in 1919 and from | the Massachusetts Institute of Tech. laa{ month. He is a naval construc- tion officer and will leave in a few ! iays for duty at the Bremerton, Wash., navy yard. | Rev, ! father ! ly process at the ballot box is being| systematically by | said. | un-American but in many cases anti- | American propose to establish a con- ! ditlon of nullification of the prohibi- tion law, | LIS | | REPORT OF THE ELKS \If‘mhl‘nhlp Now Is 8206.825—Total sets of Grand Lodge Amount to $1,099,912.25. 2 | Atlanta, ‘old south™ ¥ the the first time in 25 lodge of the Ben- for grand evolent and Protective Order of Hksv‘r) demand that all political parties shall declare for prohibition and against any ling dL! ** | opened the business sessions of its} 59th annual convention today. | Interest centers in the selection of| | the new grand exalted ruler. It gen- erally is expected by the delegates that the 1924 convention will go to Boston. | The annual report of Grand Secre- | tary Fred Robinson showed that the| | order now has a membership of 826, 825, an increase of 14,168 since last meeting. Fifteen new lodges were | last numbered lodge 1,470, Total income for the May 31 last was given at $413 |a net gain over expenses of $10 and the total assets of the | lodge were placed at " HINE WAGE DISPUTE 438, ! | Turkey and Greece bar | pointed out | Operators and Miners Organize Sub-! Committees to Consider Demands | | gullty | =on to a cot in a barn age was sente | During Grinsavage | and water Precented by Unfon Workers, Atlantic City, Jnly 10.—Operators miners of the anthracite coal organized a sub-commit- j tee to consider the demands present- | ed by the union men for incorpera- | | tion in the proposed new wage con-| tract Atbar a1l \the demands! Ravh heen | reviewed the operators are expected | to refuse all save those that !‘Phya\ to the 12-hour day and calling for| | speedy decisions by the umpires to| whom deadlock questions from the board of conciliation referred. | [be operators yesterda and flelds today their willingness to abolish the 12- hour day so far as practicable and | can be dore About || 3,000 are employed 12 hours a|| day. men STORE New York, July “ALES GAIN 10.—Sales of prin- cipal departm: it tiores of the =oun- ‘ry in May averaged 9 per cant injl excess of a year ago. become known as dise,” day in a copyrighted article deseribing conditians along the Ilorida coast. Nassau alone the article said, official | clearings of liquor United States gallons in 1917 to 1,340,443 gallons in 1922, ors, vou can buy all the whiskey you want a as only flooding the United States with liquor, | some of it from American dlsullerloa.‘} amount of graft,” the “you can clear out of a thousands of cases of whiskey billed to a legitimate point, unioad it on the American coast, sald ship and receive a landing certificate showing that you arrived there with the very whiskey the Uniied States.” in this coast,” and 1 brought it through the Key West and sent it to Chicago through the mails. Nassau and landed it in Miami at the municipal pier.” said Glasgow are sending booze to Ameri- ca, in bigger rum ships that the Bahamas ever dreamed of before.” enforcement of lits violation July 10.—Meeting in thelpy gubtie jests, false rumors and dis- torted facts. ‘Bluglar Alarm in Church the | By The Assoctated Press. chartered during the vear, making the | have | Aegean; she will not be thtottled, de vear ended | clared 02.75,| view today in connection with the out- | come of thr grand |ence at Lausanne. signified | | * “bootleggers para- the Chicago Daily News said to- Bird’s Score Is 89 In the Bahamas from the city of [ By The Associated Presa. Inwood, N. Y, July 10.—Joe Kirk- wood, the Australian star, led thsv morning round qualifiers of the na- | tional open golf championship with a | card of 70, two under par. Kirkwood went out in 37 and played the second in 33. His incom- ing card was featured by five threes, | Kirkwood's 70 was *ew course | record in competition. is cards: Out .. 44454335 5—37 | In 4335333 45—83—70] | Jess Sweetser, amateur champion, | had a card of 78, 1t follows: writer said, | Out 545653 5 4—42 port with| In 4004 644t —re—T8 | ~ Gene Sarazen, the defending cham- pion, led yesterday's qualifiers with| 148, The highest qualifying score was 160. Chick Evans was the only amateur to qualify. Scores for the first 18 holes in to- day's qualifying test: Jack Forrester, Deal, N. J, 76; Tave Spittal, Toronto, 78; Eddle Mur- phy, St. Joseph, Mo., 80; Eddie Towns, Pittsburgh, §2; John McKen-| na, Bayside, N. Y., (withdrew); Em»‘J met Freneh, Youngstown, 75: Ru dolph Knepper, Sioux City, Ia., James A. Donaldson, White Plalnw! 83; Alex A. Bird, New Britain, Conn,, 89; Frank W. Clark, Asheville, N, C,, 79. Jack Dowling, Roslyn, N. Y., 8 | James A. Kennedy (amateur), Tulsa, Okla., 88; J. J. Rowe, Philadelphia, 82; D. Williams, Westfleld, N. J,, 7 J. Ford (amateur), New York, 8§ | Andrew Campbell, Wallingford, Pa.,| | 88; Walter Chinery, New York, 8 | George Heron, Waterbury, N. Y., § | Willle Hoar, Chicago, 92; L. \ners, Providence, 87; G. F. Lamprecht (amateur), Cieveland, 81; D. D. Hackney, lawrence, Mas! | Clarke, Pittsburgh, 80; Frank | Gllman, Augusta, Me, S86; C. P. Nichols, N. Y., 88; Joe Sylvester, St. Albans, N. Y., 77; B. A. Conroy, Ar- cola, N. J.,, withdrew; Louis t‘onto!lo.\ Baldwin, N. Y., 86; Harry Hampton, Rochester, Mich., 78; J. 8. Worthing- J ton (amateur), Mount Vernon, N. Y 83; 8. Covington, Wethersfield, Lonn., 88, the | 21 bound for increased from 37, Miami, first stop of the investigat- was described as “a city where t $5 a quart.” avana and Nassau were described | two of the ports that were | “Upon the payment of the proper | into the afore- | with an empty sail legitimate port you smuggled into “In the course of our participation business on the Atlantic the writer continued, “Terry bought booze in Havana, customs at friends in | United States| We bought other booze in “Bahama rum runners,” the writer “‘are’ sore because London and 30,000 to 40,000 cases at a time, “Prohibition, establishes by order- impugned and denied the statement not simply | selfish interests” “Allen influences, | Charles x desire to weaken the law to encourage to incite hostility to it ““These men, > *“The Christian people of this coun-| full enforcement of weaken- | prohibition | o | | DANDONE QUESTIONED Bridg(-port Coroner, With Court Sten-| | | ographer, Takes Statements I-'rom‘ of national XXX the Traps Alleged Burglar: Confessed Murderer of Hultz. | July 10—Tt became known | the | today that Coroner John J. Phelan of Bridgeport, came to this city late |'vesterday afternoon in company with |T.eonard W. Coggswell, superior court| | stenographer, and took the state-| | ment of John Dandone, self confessed of George Huitz at Topstone, May 4 The result of the examination in a position to|©f Dandone by the coroner has not to the sea he|been disclosed but it is understood | ‘flw' prisoner was questioned concern- ing the statements he had made in the Bridgeport jail last Saturday night | and afterwards signed The state police have not been en- tirely satisfled with some portions of Dandone’s original story. Dandone, whe had been confined in the [m!l(“? station here during the day, while the state police were checking up some of the details of his story was taken to Bridgeport last night ‘ ) —~“Bulgaria must Danbury, to Sofia, her July 10, pr nnnsod outlet in inter- Premier Zankoff an Near East peace confer The action of the in giving Karagatsch in the | s'aver e district to Turkey had put Bulgaria's way FATHER 1S JATLED. City, Ta., July 10.—Found chaining his four year old Carl Grinsav jail days, bread Stoux of d to 30 days in and last five receive only the will \Ilhtarv Funeral for Lieut Roth, Balloonist Cedar Rapids, Ta K July 10 —The | | body of Lieut. Louis J. Roth, who lost | Inis 1ife on Lake Erie will be brought |to Cedar Rapias interment, his | |father, former Mayor Louts Roth said | [today. The flag on City Hall was at| half mast today. Funeral arrange-| ments will be in charge of Hanfor » | pOSt, American Legion Danbtuy Firvtm:'?re Does Damage of $20,000 | Danbury July 10 —<Firq of un. nown origin early this morning HIGH TIDES BT 1! (Standard Time) Haven— 05 2. m.; London— 28 a. m.; July At New 9: At New 7 9:04 p. m. re 7:38 p. m. = THE WEATHER e Hartford, July 10.—Forecast for New Rritain and vicinity: Unsettled, probably occasional showers tonight and Wednes- day. |to the factory of Osmar and Brennan, hat manufacturers at 9 River *. i . Alleged Anto Thieves Arrested By |in many years early today. [ter county authorities | | | Southington and Unionvile Police | for “Breaks” There. Bruno Paplarski and Ignatz Kow- algki, brought to New Britain from Boston yesterday by Sergeant Mich- ael J. Fiynn, were arraigned before Judge B. W. Alling in police court this morning on a charge of stealing an automobile valued at $800 from John Smyko of this city. The cases were continued until Monday of next week with bonds for release fixed at 31,000 each. Following court they were re-arrested by Southington and| Unionville police officials on charges of burglary, one of which is alleged to have been commlitted in Unionviile on June 11 and the other in South- ington on June 14. These two young men, with Joseph Dionne and Joseph Kowalski, were ar- rested in Springfield by the federal authorities on charges of violating the Dyer act in reference to transporting a stolen autontobile from one state to another. The four are to be given a hearing in the federal court at Boston Thursday morning. TERRIFIC THUNDER STORM Engl..nd Experiences Awful Flectrical Disturbance — Many Fires From Lightning. By The Associated Press. London, July 10.—England experi- enced one of the worst thunder storms It lasted from midnight to about 6 a. m. In London the fire brigade respond- | |ed to some 40 calls occasioned by fires through lightning striking vari- ous houses. ROUND UF OF VAGRANTS Be Arrested in Search For Slayer of Dorothy Kauffman. [ Scarsdale, N. Y., July 10. Westches- have ordered [that every vagrant found within the | county’s bounds be taken up in the| search for the slayer of Miss Dor- othy Kauffman of Westover, Md., governess in the home of Magruder Lra)ghfad The girl was found hacked to death last Wednesday. | Frank Vendal of Sorel, Canada has been taken into custody as a suspect. | The search continued today for the | spider-gaited negro Arrested in Stamford for Auto Theft Down in Penn., Stamford, July 10.—George Cart- lidge, alias Dr. Harrison, who s wanted in Pottsville, Pa., on a charge of stealing an automobile, was ar rested at Pear Tree Point this morn- ing. He was brought to Stamford and will be held for return to Penn- sylvania. Cartlidge who has been known here as Dr. Harrison has been living in New Canaan 5,000 Fire When 500 Gals. of Gasoline Explode Long Beach, Cal, July 10.—A loss of approximately $175,0 resulted from a fire started in the Signal Hill oil district early today by the explo- sion of a 500 gallon tank of gasoline the Gilmore Refining company's| plant HOLLAND PLAYERS OUT By The Assccisted Pres | tbourne, Eng., July 10. — The| panish lawn tennis team in the| Davis cup competition today eliminat- | ed Holland from the European semi- final by winning the doubles. The | Spaniards took both singles yesterday. | the club grounds. BOOST COAL PRICES. | Bridgeport, July 10.—Retall coal| today. The new price is §$16 for household sizes and $14 for pea size coal. | and handcuffed Zawadski. Special State Policeman ArthmeN. | Rutherford was the first to be called upon to testify He sald that on Fri- day night, June 29, he, with State Po- licemen Gorgas and Brendt and Po- liceman Patrick O'Mara of the New PBritain police department went out West Main street in an automobile«as far as Wooster street where they parked from 8:55 o’clock untll 9:46 o'clock wher they saw an automobile come from Plainville, turn into a dark alleyway on thJ north side of the road at the entrance to the Ap- pleby farm and turn out the lights. The state policeman then testifted that he got out of the car, walked across the road, and followed the ma- chine into the alleyway. He sald that Policeman O'Mara was a short dis- tance behind him. Kukish was at the wheel of the Machine, he said, and Pavano was standing with one !oot,m £ the running board. v e Pavano Shot While Running. Policeman Rutherfaed Policenan O'Mare {olo fhe men not to run. At this, e said, Zawadski and Pavano storied to run with Pa vano going in the direction of ihe = driveway At this time, the policeman sald, Policemen Gorgas and Brendt were coming into the driveway and he shouted to them to stop the man. Pavano refused to stop when com- manded to do so, PoHceman Ruther- ford said, and Policeman Gorgas shot at him. Policeman Rutherford, in W ;;-unu.nm ; | reply to a question asked by Attorney Danaher, said that he believed three shot were fired. He said that he fired one in the direction of Mikowskl. Witness said that the other shots | were fired by Officers Gorges and Brendt. After Pavano was shot, the policeman said, Brendt came back Then Pa- vano was taken to the hospital after a call had been put in for the ambu- lance. “You punched Pavano,” Danaher said. “I did not punch him. I did not lay a hand on him and did not see anyone punch him,” Policeman Ruth- erford replied. Upon further questioning by Attors Attorney (Continued on Twelfth Page) PRIZES SELECTED FOR. CHARITY GOLF TOURNEY Many Entries Expected to Boost Fresh Air Camp FRESH AIR FUND 2P Previously acknowl- edged .$83,219.80 Given to treasurer 42.00 C.D. Ellis ... 2.00 Virginia Bodley 5.00 $3,268.80 e In preparation for the second an- nual Fresh Air Golf tournament which will be held over the Shuttle Meaddw club course Wednesday, July 18, and is open to any golfer in this vicinity, whether he is a member of the club or not, upon payment of a $2 entry fee, nine prizes were selected yesters day and are in the process of being engraved. They will be on display the first part of next week. Needless to say it is not the lure of the prizes that is expected to furnish the large number of entries in the tournament s but the stimulus of attractive awards should add to the pleasure of the event. A day of good sport for ones self and the pleasure of giving to the, Fresh Air fund at the same time will’ prove to bring a large number out “ There is absolutely no entry requirement whatever, i.- | yond the entry fee the whole of will go into the fund as The “H |caused damage estimated at $20,000| prices were advanced $1 a ton hereald” is furnishing all prizes at cost through the Porter & (Continued on Fourteenth ._

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