New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 19, 1923, Page 1

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~TWENTY.EIGHT PAGES, PRICE THREE CENTS 19, 1923, ‘GIARDINO THREATENED WITH DEATH - UNLESS HE GAVE $7,000 TO GANG WHICH PAYS VISIT TO HIS HOME EN, EDWARDS I8 NOMINATED TODAY -0 San Franciseo, Oct, 19 General Clarence R, Fd wards of Boston today was nominated for national com- mander of the American Legion by usetts delegates to the legion's na- b e tional convention, Other nominees were: | wfv”fi' s'_‘u.wg ,,: %’"‘ ' Govemon Afier St rmy &”ion ! POBCG Net w TO toia, e % ‘v, | Pledge Dry Backing to Coolidge| Catch Blackmailers .. - Who Fail To Keep Ap- | pointment With Him on . Myrtle Street William Tealey, of {Former Hotel Man Con- Pennaylvanis. FT 'Meeting Becomes Tumultu-| HADDOCKS SENTENCED T0 fronted by Four Others Who Say He Will Get the report of the committee | “ous and Governor Parker 1§ YEARS IN STATE PRISON on constitutional amend- | - | of Lousiana Leaves High- RS e Same Thing as “That New: Haven Guy.” ONE WAN ROASTED T0 DEATH, FOUR ' OTHERS FATALLY BURNED WHEN 7 MAY BE SHOWPLACE, ~7ons or moLTen steeL oveRTuRN TDE T | Farrell, Pa., Oct. 18.—A crans oper- platform on whish four | pouring King Tut on Eaibiio * LUXOR EXCAVATIONS START they died in & hospital, when & cable | tne molten steel exploded, probably 1”2 VALLEY OF KINGS slipped and spilled seventy tons of | due to dampness in the fleor. The RSt ¢ molten steel at the Farrell plant of fiylng metal showered the four men the Carnegle #tecl Company last|on the platform, who were unable to night, eseape, Their clothing was burned Another May Die, | from them, and thelr bodies terribly | __The dead are Clayton Fisher of seared, Sharpsville, John Hoobler of Trouts Roasted To Death, | Corners, Robert Phillips of Wheat-| The orane operator, imprisoned in land, Claude Semlee of Bharon and|his traveling cage above the terrific Theodore Brown of Farrell, heat of the spilled metal, was roasted to death, Semles, the cranema’ WS The ogeurrence was UA: l; fatal hearth department, ha wn‘ 8 in the rnegie onto the glant ladle, ¢ State Library,) tast year won tona of steel heated to AV, Dopt., gl ered to all Carnegl As the load approache * Conn, VOLSTEAD ACT A JACK ASS STATUTE, SEN. MOSES SAYS AFTER NATION-WIDE TOUR 600 KLANSMEN DRIVE OFF Carter Hires Native Felpers at Cents & Day — Several Weeks of Work Before Real Burial Place of Pharaoh Will Be Disclosed. By The Assoclated Pross, Luxor, Egypt, Qet, 19, — Prepara- tions for lifting the 2,000 tons of eacth, stone and wooden joists that now rest over the tomb of Tutankha- men are proceeding apace. Howard Carter and his American Messrs, Candler and Burton, have re- ostablished themselves in thelr lonely concrete domiclles at the entrance to the Valley of Kings, and have made n prelimipary survey of the work that must be done before the inner tomb, believed to contain the mummy of the Pharaoh can be opened. Two Weeks of Work : ments, Ploads Guilty — e | |y Indiignant, Slaying of Waterbury Taxloab Driver BUSINESS HOUSES * COMPLETE MERGER | Home Banking and Realty Go. and | W. L. Hatch Co. Unite O an o Ot 19.—A formai | Torrington, Oct. 19—Harold Mad- e Prosident Coolidge | 40cks pleaded gullty in the superior :;:"I:,lllltnw::.':::m“nn in the r:, jeourt ut Litchfield this afternoon to forgement of prohibition was adopted | charge of m'nnnluu‘hu-r and was by the 15th annual governors con- [#entenced to 15 years in state prison, ference here today after a stormy Hin trial on a charge of murder in the debate, Adoption of the motion wus | first 'd.um was scheduled to begin accompanied by a tumult of shout- ‘ next Tuesday. | ing and stamping during which Gov- Maddocks was accused of sluying & lernor John M, Parker of Louisiana | Waterbury taxi driver whose body was left the meeting. found In Roxbury. Although the matter has been kept The archacologists estimate that at least a fortnight will be required to clear away the vast heap of nibble that now shields the king from the outside world. It is possible that a narrow gauge rallway loaned by the American Archaeological mission will be used to hasten the work. Attempt to Stop Initiation N. . SHERIFF AND PARTY Tockport. New York, I‘Nfl More Trucks Cross Cana- | dian Boundary Into New England Than Ever Were Trains Over B. & M. BOTH LONG IN SAME FIELD Personnel Wil Be Retained and Head- quarters Will Be Hatch Offices in City Building—No Maintained in The resolution was placed before the conference by Governor Willlam E. Sweet of Colorado with a demand for u vecord roll call. Its adoption however was by a volce vote, | When the conference met today Governor P, P. Baxter of Maine called for unfinished business and The sentence was imposed by Judge Arthur I, Ells, The victim of the slaying was Was- lie Trinyle, His badly battered body was discovered on the morning of August 2, Maddocks and his wife were arrested in New York several weeks later on forgery charges and extradited to Connectiout in connec- seerel by the police, the “Herald" lemrned toduy of u blackmall plot by which Charles Giurdino, a former pro- prietor of the Grand Hotel on Myrtle street, was threatened with death un- less he guve up 37,000, Glardino wus at his home last Fri. day night when the doorbell rang. His wife unswered the call, and he Governor William E. Sweet, Colorado stated the re-draft of the memorial on the prohibition question to be pre- gented to President Coolidge at the luncheon conference in Washington | tomorrow was ready for the signa tures of the governors. Blaine Protests Governor J. J. Blaine of Wiscon- bson, was on his feet instantly with objections to the signing of the me- morial, declaring that the ‘round robin is an unfair evasion of our rule against resolutions.” He urged a discussion of the methods for en- forcement of the Volstead act in-| stead ‘“of proclaiming from the housstops that we are virtuous men | and good governo “I am opposed to the 18th amend- ment, and the Voistead act and the people of Wisconsin know it,” de- clared Governor Blaine, “but there is | no criticism of the enforcement of the laws in our state. If we are meeting here to memorialize on the enforcement of laws we should neg- leot mone. This fanaticism 18 base hyproerisy." Nearly 100 of the native excavators who helped Mr. Carter uncover the tomb last summer have been re- engaged at stipends which make American union wages look Ijke for- tunes. Lockport, N. Y., Oct. 19—~Two men e o e hor. |Finds Sentiment Dry and e i waaty ot 300 'itu shus | Thinks Congress Would So Vote, Despite New Klansmen near Cambria center on the Baunders settlement road, five York, New Jersey and Penn, | ton with the Trinyle slaying. Indiot- |g004 hopying her. Without ceremohy ments of Muddocks on & charge of [y pyey, with their hands 1 3 n their | murder In the first degree and of his pockets, entercd, louving a Afth man wife on a charge of belng an wooss- o440 1y un automobile with the sory after the fact followed later. The snigine l'llfll;lvu; ‘;',:‘:"R“ aguinst his wite is still pend-) "y ' 000 got down to business tm- | d mediately, “The hoss in New York sent uas up for $7,000,” the spokesman said. “What d6 you mean?’ Giardino asked. “Just what 1 said,” was the reply. “The boss down in New York wants $7,000." “But | haven't any meney,” Giar- dino answered, “Well, you'll have to get it,” the spokesman replied. “I'm a poor man,” Giardino insist- This made no impression on the four, “You used to be a ‘bootlegger,’ " the spokesman insisted, “and you've got the money.” o s “I've loal all my money and I'm trying to get back on my feet in tha ice business,” Glardino said. “If you don't got the money the same thing will happen to vou that happened to that guy down in New Haven,” the leader of the four said, He was referring to the finding of the body of & man along the roadside near the Elm City, After further conversation, Gar- dino agreed to mest the men on Myr- tie street last Tuesday night. He then reported the occurence to Chief Hart, who advised him ro keep the ap- pointment. Giardino was on the apot, as agreed. Police were concealed éverywhers in Change in Policy, | The Home Banking and Realty Co. |and the W. L. Hatch Co. were today | merged, creating the largest real tate and insurance company in the and one of the largest (n the ate of Connecticut. The newly created company will do business in the W. L. Hatch offices in City hall building and the entire staff | of the Home Danking and Realty Co, b | will be joined with the Hatch stafr, Washington, Oct. 19.—A "jackass| mhat the Home Banking and Realty statute,” was the verdict pronounced| (o, was to undergo a business change on the Volstead act, by Senator Moses, | wag reported about the city for several of New Hampshire, chairman of the|months and rumors were afloat that republican senatorial campaign com-|the business would be taken over by mittee, when he visited the White|the Commercial Trust Co. House today after a swing through Officers of the Home Banking Co. twelve states in the east umil middie-|are: President, Frank H. Alford; west. treasurer, Harry G. Haneock; secre. Asked whether in his opinjon con- | tary, Normal H. Morrill, assistant sec- gress would do anything about it at|retary, Misk Eva C. Johngon its coming session, Senator Moses said Alford Started in 1872, it depended on “whether or not the| Mr. Alford first’ estdbliihed a real baleful eye of Wayne B. Wheeler, sit-| estate and insurance husiness In tthis ting in the congressional gallery and|city in 1872 taking an office in the sweeping the floors with its eagle|old Sayings Bank of New Britain. 1In gaze, has lost its potency.” 1904 the Home Savings and Trust Requested specifically to give his|Corporation was organized swith Mr. opinion of the Volstead act as reveal- | Alford as the principal smcklmldc‘er. ed to him during his trip, he replied: In 1908 the name was changed to the “Tt's a. jackass statute. Any law| Home Banking and Realty Co. and the that declares buttermilk to be an al- Ex;l::fimhn:muemceI“hp:?argfindl;it‘efid cobollc boverage of necessity 8 8|y Alford retired from the active HEi R SIS, # | conduct of the business, selitng most New England of his interests to Frank W. Holmes, The senator replied thus to a ques- Harry G. Hancock and Miss Eva C. tion as to prohibition enforcement in|Johnson, who have conducted the New England: Lusiness for the past seven years, “There are moré trucks crossing the Get 12 Cents a Day Each digger is to receive 12 cents | a day with a slight bonus at the end y of the season iIf the Pharaoh body is found within the sarcophagus. Most of the laborers are boys of from 10 to 18, but many of them are grown men who support two or three wives on this slender remuneration. But their needs are few. Thelr homes consist of mud huts. Their food is bread and b onlons, and their clothing a single garment that resembles an old-fash- foned American nightgown. Mr. Carter has again taken into his services six of the foremen employed | on the first excavations These men | supervise the work of the diggers, who, if they shows signs of lassttude under the terrific tropical sun, are en- couraged to further activity by the whips of the foremen. | These stimu lants, however, are seldom brought into play, for their appearance ia suf- ficient to urge the boys to their ut.- most capacity. | In removing the debris the workers | Tun in a continuous cirele, carrying | the small baskets of dirt upon their heads and maintaining the while a droning, rythmical chant to relieve ‘SUDDEN RISE IN GOST OF GOVERNING STATE Expense in 1922 Was $20,- 050,565 Against $10,711,- 548 in 1920 BY GEORGE H. MANNING “ashington Bureau of New Britatn Herald) Washington, I, C, Oct. 19 —Con- 4 | regticut's state government in the Rrings up K. K. K. | fiscal year 1822 wae conducted at an Governor John M, Parker of Louls- | ¢ynanie of §20,050,565—almost exact- jana declared he would resign frtv)m‘]). twice as much as in 1918, when it the conference of governors if & sin-|eoqt §10,711,548. In 1915 the gov- gle name were attached to the me- epnmental expense of the state was morial. *“The Kn Klux Klan is the g9 975 634, greatest issue in America today,” he| The average cost for each resident declared, "and that question demonds|of the state was last year $18.97, as the time and attention of this meeting | compared with $8.21 in 1918 and instead of mere words on the 18th|$8.16 in 1815 . This cost was lower amendment.” than that shown in the state of Texas Also Howls | Washington, which was $16.80 in “Y have, declared martial law 201922, $8.56 in 1918, and $8.87 in times in various parts of Texas to in-|1914; or in the state of New Jersey, sure law enforcement,” asserted Pat|$16.91 for 1922, §7.08 for 1918, and miles east of this city. Those arrested were Willlam Lazier, a toolmaker and Charles Tur- ver, both of Niagara Falls. Thirteen others, one a woman, were questioned at the district attorney's office and released. Lozler and Turver were held on an open charge. Sheriff Gould received reports from motorists late last night that armed men, garbed In white, were stopping automobiles on the road. The sheriff, with two deputies and three Lockport policemen, investigated. When their car reached the vicinity of a field in which a Klan imitation was purported to be taking place, it was stopped by two white-robed sentinels, Aceording to the deputies when the sheriff’s party falled to leave as or- dered, one of them was struck by a Klan guard. The sentinel was felled with the butt of a revolver in the hands of one of the investigating party, and both guards were en- gulfed in the rush of the deputies and policemen from the machine. Shouts of the guards attracted Klansmen from the field, and as the sheriff started to mdvance toward the enclosure, the little knot of officers was surrounded. Gould and his men retreated toward the road and made a dash for their car, which had been left with the engine running. As the (Continued on Rleventh Page.) | During that period the premium in- $800,000 READY T0 BE | PAD OUT I BHBERY * Federal Dry Drive in N. Y. i and N. J. Has Sensa- machine sped away the formation of Klansmen which had vance to the flield broke and a scat- tering volley of shots broke out be hind Sheriff Gould’s party. was hit. blocked ad- No one After the gheriffs party had broken free and his car had edged its way through the lines of machines at the roadside, some of which had Canadian boundary and rolling threugh the valleys of New England than there ever have been trains run over the Boston and Maine railroad.” The discussion which has raged about Governor Pinchot's suggestion that the president take over personal supervision of prohibition enforcement and Governor Pinchot's own efforts at enforcement also engaged the atten- come on gross business has increased 400 per cent. In April of this year, | Mr. Holmes moved to Tampa, Fla., to engage in the building business and Norman L. Morrill, at that time man- ager of the insurance department of | the Commercial Trust Co., succeeded Mr. Holmes and was made secretary of the company’ | *' Hateh Buiness Started fu 1850, | The business now conducted by the M. Neff, governor of the Lone Star state and it 47 governors refuse to sign this memorial, it still will go to the national capital with the signature of the largest unit of this republic. Presiden Coolidge has invited the gov- ernors to Washington to discuss pro- hibition enforcement and not the klan and we therefore should confine our- selves to the purpose of the meeting.” $6.58 for 1915 No other state gov- ernmental costs for 1922 have yet been announced by the U. S. Census Bureau. Revenue receipts for the state of Connecticut in 1922 were $21,815,841, or $15.20 per capita. There was therefore a surplus of £1.23 of revenue receipts over axpenses, which com- pares very favorably with the surplus of $0.19 per capita shown by Wash- th er. hit fo! {from the men. e neighborhood. If the blackmail- s had appeared they would have been surrounded and capturéd or shot. The police were armed and ready for business, Nothing further has been heard Charles Giardino and s brother Frank have been granted rermits to carry guns and, are ready r action, tional Developments started in pursuit he rushed to Lock- port with Lozler and Turver who were seized in the melee. The prisoners were locked up and the sheriff returned to klan gather- ing with reinforcements. Several au- tomobile loads of citizens followed, Arriving at the field the second time the officers charged the crowd at |once. The resistance broke nnd there | was a econcerted rush for cars | surrounding the meeting placo The | officers said they fired no shots ex {cept at fleeing automobiles which 1 had been commanded to stop. Firearms abandoned in the were seized, tion of Mr. Moses. N i “Governor Pinchot has endearea|W. I. Hateh Co. was organlize'()lI lv; himeelf to the hardware trade with| 1858 by Collins & North‘end, 0f \10 his talk of valiocks,” he said, “T preJ whom were connected with the New & will be & boom in that com. | Britain National bank at that time. E | Tn 1888 A. G. Butler and W. L. Hatch took over the business. In 1907 the | concern took its present offices in | City Hall building. In 1910, Harold | | W. Hateh hecame connected with the | | business conducted by his father, W. | T.. Hateh. The senior Mr. Hatch has | been in the real estate and insurance | | business in this city for 356 years. | It was announced today that there | will he ne change in the management | or conduct of the agencies. They will | { continue to represent the same insur- ance companies as heretofore, and in {addition fo insurance and real estate | | business will econtinue to negotiate| mortgages and finance ~antomobils | OWNS $160,000 VIOLIN o | LIFE IN PRISON | John T. Roberts of Hartford Comes| Ottaws, Oct. 19.—Judge Orde to-| | day sentenced Willlams Swimmings, Into Possession of Famous “Betts” | found gullty of rape, to life imprison- - | ment and told him that in some parts | ¥ 8 of the United states he probably | Soon Beauty Will Be Seen | would have been lynched. Evidence , i 3 at the trial indicated particularty bru- Only in Pictur tal conduct by the defendant. | | Biologist Asserts Text of Resolution The text of the resolution, which is| in the form of a memorial to Presi- dent Coolidge, follows: “To the President, “The White House, Washington, D. C,, | “‘Mr. President “Observance of law is the funda-| mental basis of American citizenship | and enforcement of law in the primary | duty of every official “National prohibitiom is now, by constitutional amendment, the law of | our land. An overwhelming majority of the citizens of the United States are ington and the deficit of $4.12 per capita in New Jersey. The net indebtedness of Connecticut last year was $4.21 per capita, a con siderable decrease from that of 1918, §6.56, and 1915, $9.05. In Washing- | ton, on the contrary, the net indebted ness was $8.72 per capita In 1942, againgt $0.62 in 1917 ,and 0.24 in 1014 New Jersey's net indebtedness | was $4.98 per capita in 1922, $0.04 in 1818; and the same in 1915, New York, Oct. 19.—Developments in the offensive of federal anthorities against hootlegging strongiolds of New vity and the state of New ders 1 last 24 hours include: Disclor . ol a plot to swamp New New Jersey beer to the exoli: the product of brew- eries in o peighbors tates. Arrest persons, mding a New Jersey stale official, . prohibition | agent, a warehouseman, four wealthy | brewers, two dealers in alcohol and b two alleged "go-betweens.” Charges by Federal Attorney Hay- ward that his agents, posing as “cor- rupt,” inveigled participants in the plot into passing over 380,000 in par"' payment of bribes that were to have | reached $800,000. | Disclosure by H. D. Esterbrook, | | special customs agent, that 60 rum | hoats, $500,000 worth of liquor and | 130 prisoners had been taken in a/ series of ralds on off-shore craft. | Seizure of three truckloads of New | Jersey beer brought into Manhattan | shortly after the arrest of the 11 a.l-‘Bron\vrs' pawn shop in the business leged bootleg conspirators, most of |section of the city today and escaped them at the Hotel Pennsylvania. | with jewelry and cash valued at $25,- || Hayward filed suit to evoke pad- 000, The holdup oceurred one block Hlock law against 54 saloons, cafes, and | from a police station. cabarets, announcing it is only a pre- Scores of persons were passing the liminary to the closing of 2,000 open- pawnshop at the time and one cus- il conducted cases in New York city. |tomer who entered was also held up 3 " jand robbed. | tnstrument was part of the R. C. Wad- :reenwich Prosecutor to ‘mmf(:';d ?:l:':eg:;fl:‘:;:f;h:;o';v:rn;-; dell vollection of Glasgow, scomng i : . 3 3 5, | v | Continue Shootmg Pl’ohe‘mm Stephen Stelionos, a customer, ‘:‘:‘;:)'F;:yw:}:‘o p\‘;:::?fi::rl::g“lf:r Tgr?n « v = ” Greenwich, Oct. 19.—Judge James were suddenly confronted by the | ooy i e e FOUND DEAD IN BED. ‘Our beautiful wWomen soon will Walsh, prosccutor of the borough bandits who were unmasked and car-| Seymour, Oct. 19.—Henry Richards, | cease to exist except in pictures snd | gourt will call on Milton A. Maas, |ried pistols. The three were herded | ;"’"‘"“{"{“"“’Q"',:‘”I;;"\”gfl"’,!‘:;”' "“‘?"’,:““‘“;")»" Mr. I“"'"“"‘ asserted. He | “hemical manufacturer of Asbury in a back room, where the bandits | o ang in bed todu PO e | Dased hin conclusion on the dispagity | New P | Park, N, 4, and New Yotk who was{bound them with ropes and iaid them | was found dead in bed today. Heart between the birth rate among .\mevrl-‘:\e“ Methm_’ Found- for |Gasoline Now Selling at shot by an unknown man at the home | tace downward to the floor. ‘ trouble was the cause, he scemingly|can women of the highest type and Preserving Fruit Fresh| 12.8 Cents in M | | having been in good health yesterday.| “that among low class jmmigrants.” Berkeley, Calif., Oct. 19.—Discov-| .8 Cents in Mlchigan | MASONIC LEADER OUT IN FIGHT OVER KLAN Former Head of Alabama Scottish Rite Quits Grand Council “ontiment 1s Dry Senator Moses concluded that he was convince from his trip that the country was dry as a sentiment, and that congress would act in accord with that sentiment even though such states as Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey would vote wet if a test were made. He said the purpose of { his visit to the White Houyse was to larrange for a conference later with | President Coolidge regarding the po- litical situation it ! ! PR | (Continued on Seventh Page) WILL SHOOT KLUXERS field (Continued on Page Twenty.Five) ANERIGAN WOMEN ARE. BEGOMING MORE LY 815,000 GEN ROBBERY Philadolphia Bandits Get Away With Loot—Robbery Occurs One Block From Police Station Washington, Oct Flemming Moore, sovereign grand commander of the supreme council and inspector general of Scot- tist Rite Masons in Alabama, resigned from the supreme council today after a discussion over the Ku Klux Klan, During the debate Mr. Moore was charged by members of the counell of using his weekly publication, “The Fellowship Forum,” fssued here, for furthering the aims of the klan. Although the publication has desig- nated itself as o digest of fraternal news from all over the world, Masona have regarded it as a Masonic publi- cation. Consideration of Mr. Moore's resignation was proposed. The council also is considering the resignation of Perry Weidner, secre- tary general who has announced that he desires to réturn to Los Angeles, About 100 of those who were elect- ed to the 33d degree will receive their “honors tonight. Youngstown Police OChief Says He to Kill Too, If Men Insist On Parading. Will Order Klansmen Youngstown, O., Oct. 19.—Develop- ments in the situation here in con- | nection with the Ku Klux Klan and the mayoralty campaign today in- cluded a statement by J. J. Moni- cholas, acting chief of police, that if | necessary his men will be ordered to | “shoot to kill" to stop a proposed Klan pamde here Monicholas said late vesterday that he would not grant a permit for the Kklan parade scheduled here for No-| vembér 10, that policemen would be ordered to disperse such a parade by peaceful means if possible, and if | persuasion failed would be told to shoot to kill. Philadelphia, Oct. 19.—Four armed \ motor bandits held up Kennedy | Stradivarius. Hartford, Oct. 10.—~The so-called “Betts” Stradivarius, one of the four perfect specimens extant of the work of the famous Itallan violin make, | is now the property of John . Rob-| erts of this city, honorary president of | the Hartford philharmonic orchestra, (and well known violin enthusiast. The 8, 30 YEARS IN PRISON Dayton, O., Oct. 19.—Pleading guil- ; | ty to embezzling $104,647.18 from the | Miamisburg Banking company of Topeka, Kas., Oct. 19.—~The Amer- ican woman is rapidly becoming ugly, | which he was president, John J.|Albert Edward Wiggam, biologist nnd ?Schwnr(z was senfenced to thirty years | publicist of New York, declared in an in the penitentiary today. | address prepared for delivery here to- {day before Kansas teachers. . Leslie tober 11| The bandits the B ) ; | :: ll;::!;‘lf;?:fnfi) |'|:::'v‘r'a?n|o§:yoto dis- | to give them lh’s“ Lfi.’fl.n":fiof”«'l"ffii Two Minetw Afe Dug Dut. of Utah. | — - “On an average one child Is born|ery of a new process by which fruit| Detroit, Oct. 19.—Announcement of suss the Incident. The anthorities safe. They removed money, jewelry | Apex Mine—Bodies of Two Others | ISAAC BLACK ELECTED. to every three of the graduates of our can be kept fresh for an indefinite @ decrease of two cents a gallon in have been on the point of dropping|and other valuables, ran to their auto- | Atantic City, N. 1., Oct. 19.—1Isaac| lcading women's colleges,” said Mr. period is announced by the College of |the Drice of gasoline, effective today, he case for the time being as there | mobile, leaped into it, and departed, Black of New Britain, Conn., today| Wiggam, “but one low class broad-| Agriculture of the University of Cali-|%as made by the White Star Refining 1as been developed 1o clue as to the i o B e e o “"‘"r-i";"‘km‘« y, Tat.chested, | stout-legged, | fornia. ‘The fruit s put up in & cold|company and the Wayco Ol coms 5 can rdware Manufacturers asso-| high-neck, stupid, ugly immigrant sy of 20 sugar to 80|Pany, two independent com it e e Horrors! Awny Without ciation. | woman will in the same time prrfihlre:g),-;‘::. o’, i\va(i?':s"do;,,:: by a|The new price Is 12.8 cents a :“':: 7 Chaperons, 3 Suspended“,,u Wine fast Bight after belds ons oy | three. By this process the American |process in tin cans which preserves Bridgeport Man Dies Fro m ! | — e & |woman is rapidly becoming ugly. . New Haven, Oct. 19.—Railroad ll'“ Wellesiey, Mass.,, Oct. 19.—Three tombed for 56 hours. The bodies of b With a decline in beauty (hvrf;fl\niyn ::o :;u:}r‘:;‘p:::rn:tu‘?l ::‘nr::h:o:::- § [angements for handling the Weat’wellesley college seniors have been!two olhers were located in the rock WEATHER comes a decline in intelligence. Every | gy vith devisi 'th | ‘(h d 5 ln)uries; w“ Hit by Anh Point battalion on its trip here for|suspended and one freshman placed |pile near the place where Norden and tlupusdloi Mamprisne + - wongy) Bridgeport, Oct. 19.—Joseph Wald {man of this city died in St. Vincent e | | decline in intejligence brings >- e me-#:5 j|he game with Yale, November 3, pro-| on probation for what is described at | Ratalaza were freed but because of Hartford, Oct. 19.—Forecast | cline in morais. The crlnfc “.:‘,ed; b e o ide for transportation of a lnrgerl‘ahp college office as a serlous breach |the immense pile of stones and tim- THEDA BACK TO SCREEN, | hospital today from injuries received R e : A g - o i - e A for New WBritain and vicinity: | | no mystery to biologists. jpody J an at previous games. | o e chaperon rules . eir names rs it was imposeible to identify them. Showers tonight and Saturday; “There is only one way out. The Los Angeles, Oct. 19.—Theda Bara,'in Southport Tuesday, w! was h: corps will disembark here at|were withheld. The young women | One man is still unaccounted for. The cooler Saturday, fresh to strong old family ideals must be restored.|ecredited with having originated the | struck b: an .mom’.;m."e;'flf:.. by 0:30 a. m. and will be at the Bowl were found to have been away from body of Dan Eden, the foreman, was role in motion pictures, ar- | John sm}w of New H-w-fi Coroner | =hifting winds. | The old American homestead with §ts| “vamp" pne half hour before the game be-|the campus in the evening without |removed soon after the cave-in which | good sized family or well-born chil-! rived here yesterday to return to the| Phelan will hold an inquest into the g | chaperons. entombed the men. case tomorrow. s | Are Located. Bingham, Utah, Oct. 19.—Joseph | Norden, superintendent and Josc Ra- talaza were rescued from the Utah- . WEST POINT-YALE PLANS. » THL % | dven must be rebuilt,” screen after six years away.

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