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ews of the World By Associated Press ESTAB LISHED 1870 SEVEN 70 10 YEARS FOR EX-PROSECUTOR W. J. Corcoran, Former Mass. Resolution Would Send Back. Dist, Attorney Sentenced GUILTY OF BLACKMAILING | " Egan, special counesl for the demo- Mrs. Theresa Duggan, Accomplice, Another Measure Would Place F“r'crntlc town committee which last METHODISTS WANT . TODEPORT ALIENS Those Who Violate Law EMANDING RIGHT l WOMEN D BRITA CONECTICUT, MO} HARTFORD DEMOCRATS " SPRCIFY 194 PERSONS Claim They Voted For Stevens While Non-Residents — Inaugural Plans | Being Continued. | Hartford, May 6.—The names of | 124 persons, claimed in the democra- | itic election complaint to have voted tor Mayor-elect Norman C. Stevens at |the recent city election while they | were non-residents, will be filed in the !superior court Tuesday by Wm. E. | | AMERIGANS ABROAD IN DAY, MAY 5, H 1924, —EIGHTEEN PAGES, SUBJECT T0 TAXES Must Pay Income Levy, Though Source of Money Is Foreign | — [JOY RIDE IN - ENDS FATALLY WHEN MACHINE HITS POLE ON LONELY ROAD IN NORFOLK Average Daily Ci Week Ending 10’ 48 May 3 .. ALDE PRICE TH R STOLEN AUTOMOBILE | i RULING ON SHIPPERS' CASE | Fo und: K. K. K. Suit; Waterbury Police Hold It for Owner Waterbury, M 5. —The po- Supreme Court Decides Shippers Not '\ BUILDING INJUNGTION ‘ Of Lawlor Street Kill- ed And Three Com- Liable For Differences in F. 0. B. Rates - Specified Sex on Boards of the Church—Civil Week flled in the superior court a petition in the name of Mayor Kin- Service for Prohibition Agents Like- :sclla claiming that the mayor was re- Gets Tive Years in ‘\‘omnn‘s; Prison and J. Warren Kane Gets | lice here, it was learned today, found on Cole street Saturday Unless in Con- ;La\\'yers Engage in Long Three and One-Half to Five Years, ! Cambridge, Mass.,, May 5.—William J. Corcoran, former district attorney of Middlesex county, was sentenced to seven to ten years in the state prison by Judge Whiting in the superior court today after the court had de- nied motions for a new trial for Cor- coran, Mrs., Theresa Duggan Warren Kane, convicted on Black- mail charges. Others Also Sentenced Alrs. Duggan was sentenced to five vears at the woman's ‘prison at sSherborn and Kane to three and a half to five years at the state prison. A stay of execution of sentence on all three was granted untll thé su- preme court passes upon exceptions. Corcoran, Mrs. Duggan, Kane, Mrs, Lilllan Hardy Reese and Theodore C. llearse were indicted last February for threatening to accuse Kenneth Merrill of Newton of a serious offense with intent to extort money, Mrs. lieese pleaded guilty at the opening of the trial and Bearse was found 'not wuilty, Corcoran 13 Accused The chatges against Corcoran grew out of the investigation by former At- torney General J, Weston Allen which led to the removal of Nathan A. l'ufts as district attorney of Middle. | ex county in 1921, Mr. Allen ramed Corcoran a sone of an alleged ackmail gang which had extorted money from wealthy men dured into vomprimising situations, Corcoran was indicted by a Suffolk ounty grand jury - on blackmail harges in December 1921, but de- anlted when the case was called for | ‘vial. He was arrected in New York tast July and extradited to this state. llis trial begun in Suffolk county, vas discontinued when the presiding udge fell ill, ounty, begun last January, was de- clared a mistrial when Hary Leven- son, a Boston lawyer indicted with torcoran, pleaded guilty and testified that the jury had been tampered with. Shortly afterward the Middlesex county grand jury indicted Corcoran and the others, THREE DIE IN CRASH F'atal Auto Wreck in New \'cri—(‘n Rebounds 30 Feet After Hitting Free—Motor Flies 75 Feet Away, New York, May b6.—~Two young women and a man, all unidentified, were killed and Alphons Marcoux of ltiverdale, was seriously injured early today when a four-seated coupe motor | car of an expensive type sped down Itiverside Drive and crashed Into a tree at 98th street, The car rebounded 30 feet after it | pell, Albert Rawiszer, A, Mason and' struck the tree, the occupants having been hurled scores of feet away by the impaet. The elght-cylinder motor landed about 75 feet away, The crash aroused residents in many fashionable apartment houses in the vicinity, The motor car, according to witnesses, had been going at full speed down a slight grade and around a curve. The dead man was later identified as Eugene McNamee, 20 years old. John Zanft told the police that Mareoux was his chauffeur and that he apparently had taken the car last night for a joy ride. A charge of grand larceny was made against the chauffeur whose condition was criti- cal, Nelther Zanft nor relatives of MeNamee could identify the young women. NEW HAVEN WOMAN KILLED Miss Anna Marshall Dies in Auto Wreck in Penn. and Two Com- panions Are Injured. York, Pa, May 6.—Miss Anna Marshall of New Haven, Conn., 41, was killed and Mrs. Chauncey Yost and W. C. Kraber were ‘njured when their automobile last last night went over an embankment along the Sus- quehanna Trall near Strinestown. Kraber, who was driving, was unable to make a sharp turn at the northern entrance of the bridge, Goes to Jail With I. W, W, To Get Material for Book Berkeley, Cal, May 5.—For 18 memths Professor ¥red R. Wedge of | the University of California, depart- ment of education, has been a mem- ber of the Industrial Workers of the World in order to obtaln first hand material for a text book on the 1. W. W. which he is preparing, it became known today, stevedore, lumberjack, seaman and railroad workers are among the occupations he followed. He obtained interesting data, he said. while lodged in jail at San Pedro with other 1. W. Wa. Farm Relief Will Be v s Given Right of Way Soon Washington, May 5.—Farm relier sislation is to be given right of way in the senate after the taxes and re- maining appropriation bills are out of the way, under a decision reached to- day at a conference of senate repub- licans. In order to specd up the program with a view to adjournment before the national republican convention at Cleveland it was decided to hold night eesslons beginring tomorrow. and J.| A second trial in lhut] wise Is Recommended. Springfield, Mass.,, May 5.—Depor- tation of all aliens who persist in vio- ldting the prohibition and narcotic !laws would be proposed by the Meth- | odist Episcopal general conference in a resolution introduced today by Frederick A. Hazeltine, divisional chief of general prohibition agents in the state of Washington and a dele- gate from the Puget Sound confer- ence, The resolution which called al- so for the placing of prohibition agents in the civil service and the creation of a national prohibition en- forcement bureau, was recommitted to the mover for reconsideration. The ! conference defeated an amendment | proposed by Samuel! A, Bright of New Mexico, demanding the disfranchise- | ment of American citizens guilty of the violations mentioned in the reso- [ 1ution. Women Seek Rights. A movement to place women on | the boards of the Methodist Episcopal church was started in a resolution in. ! troduced by Miss M. Madeline South- ard for the southwest Kansas delega- tion. The motion was seconded and sirongly endorsed by Dr. Frank Ma- son North, corresponding secretary of the board of foreign missions and a prominent church official. It was then feferred to the committee on temporal economy. “f'he absence of women from the church boards is a left over from paganism,” Miss Southard declared in support of the resolution. *“Women outnumber men 62 to 38 in the whole church membership, and why should they not have a place on the boards, where all important action on church affairs is decided? We are willing to help and want a chance to give evi- aence of our willingness.” BRISTOL JEWS PURCHASE | BUILDING FOR SYNAGOGUE | Property at 756 Laurel Street Bought This Afternoon and Will Be Remodeled. (Bpecinl to The Herald.) | Bristol, May 5.—A three-tenement | brick block at 75 Laurel street was' ]purchmd today by the Congregation Beth Israel of Judge William J, Ma- lone, executor of the estate of of Fan- nie Stewart, at a price said to be §15,- 000. 'The bullding will be remodeled and will be used as gogue in Bristol. The purchase was made by the | board of trustees of the congregation, | consisting of David A. Lipman, chair- | man; Albert Josolowita, David A. Ap- 1 Leo Gross. MEETS TERRIBLE DEATH Providence Prisoner Fither Suicide or Murder Victim By Being Burned Alive in Prison. Providence, May 5.—~Augustus Cos. ta, a Cape Verde islander, serving a '15 year sentence in the state prison 'at Howard for second degree murder, | was either struck down by another | prisoner and then burned to death, or | else, after striking Kenneth Haywood, | another prisoner, committed suicide, by setting fire to a pile of brooms and | burning himself to death, this morn- |ing. An autopsy will be held to de- |termine the facts, Haywood went to the storerootn for some soap this morning and In a few minutes returned to Steward James . | Curtis with & long gash in his head. |He said Costa had struck him. The steward ran to the storeroom to in- | Vestigate and saw smoke and flame inside the room. He sounded an plarm and the fire was quickly extingdished. Then the charred body of Costa was |found among & large number of | brooms, which had been ignited. lM»tller and Two Bien Held For Kidnapping Daughter New York, May 6.—A 21 year old mother and two men were arrested early today charges of kidnapping the woman's 27 months old daughter, The mother, Mre, Alice Rabonowitz, wife of Willie Herman, lightweight boxer, from whom police said she was | separated, was arrested in a Yonkers botel with William Del Veechio, son of a Bronx shoe manufacturer. The baby was with them. John Campbel], a chauffeur, aleo was arrested but de. nied knowledge of a kidnapping plot. Herman, who had retained custody of the child, told the police that his danghter was walking with women friends yesterday when a motor ecar drove up to the eurb. A man, iden- tified as Del Vecchio leaped out, grab. bed the child, and the automobile aped away. ENDORSE COOLIDGE Dalias, Texas, May 5. —President Coolidge was endorsed as the republi- can nominee for president and R, 0. Creager of Broonsvills as the nominee for vice-president in the republican preciset conventions held in Texas 2 | Saturday, C. 8. Bailey, director of the ' tepublican organization. announced today. Coolidge and Creager were on. dorsed by every precinet, he said, Te. vublican county conventions will be the first syna- | elected because 305 illegal republican | votes were cast. | The republicans are planning a brilliant inaugural ceremony for Tues- day noon when the new mayor will be (sworn into office by some official who ;will administer the oath in the ab- sence of Mayor Kinsella who with- drew from inaugural plans when the | petition was filed in his name last| week. ! The mayor who suffered a fall Sat- | ‘urday when evercome by a fainting spell Is denied all callers as the doc- tors say he must have complete rest. | BRISTOL INN T0 BE " CLOSED UP FOR GOOD !Alcorn Gets Injunction— " Canton Inn Next in Line of Drive | | | I Hartford, May 5.—The first lear- ings in this county on any of State's tAttorney H. M. Alcorn’'s applications for an injunction close plnvcl\' [where the liguor laws have been vio- | l1atea, came botore Judge W. M. Mait- | (bie of superior court today and will tesult in the closing of the North Side (hotel in Bristol, which Mr, Alcorn [characterized as one of the worst | [places in the country. Judge Maltbie !considered himself disqualified from | the applcation for an injunction to close Charles )\, Stevens, Mountain View Inn in Canton, and that matter | ‘hn gone over to Friday noon when it will be heard by Judge Frank, D, | Haines. John Hotkoski is the owner of the | Bristol hotel which he bought not long lago for $38,000. County Detective Hickey will go to Bristol tomorrow and close up the bar of the hotel and the roomers In the hotel will be given (two weeks in which to seek other |quarters. Then the place will be closed for an indefihite time, unth it appears some good disposition can be | made of it. EIGHT SENT T0 JAIL | Wilhmantic Police Court Judge Metes to Out Punishment to* Those Guilty of Selling Liguor., | Willimantie, May 5.-<Jail sentences were imposed by Judge Curtis Deane in the city court today in the cases of eight persons arrested here for liquor violations following raids April 15 by {local police, assisted by county and [private detectives, Appeals were en- tered In all casel Eva Goldstein, 4% Jackson Place, after trial, was fined $100 and costs and sentenced to thirty days in jail, Following confercnce of counsel de- murrers were ontered in the seven other cases and belng over-ruled, Ce- cilia Chasen, 44 Union strect and Jo- seph Kanell, 23 Bank street, charged with second offenses were fined $200 and costs and sentenced to thirty days each and Caroline Kasek, 15 Main street; Vrank Aranos, 112 Jackson street: Arthur Boufford, 411 Valley street; Louls Brettschnelder, 120 Chapman street and E. John Connors, 27 Chapman street, were each fined $100 and costs and sentenced to 30 daye. Fourteen ralds were made resulting in 13 arrests. Four were previously sentenced to jail, while one was found not guilty. SIXTH mp ALDERMAN Democrats to Meet This Evening to '4‘-:1 Successor to Frank L. Con- lou—Two Candidates in Field, A meeting of the domocratic mem- bers of the eommon council from the | sixth ward will be held tonight to nominate a candidate to succeed Al- derman Frank L. Conlon, resigned. Counciimen Stephen A. Lyneh and; John ¥. Maerz are gligible for pro- motion and it 18 belleved that either one will be recommended to the com- mon council Fish Take \{mg Path and Thousands Are ¢ Pembroke, Mass, May 5.—Hun- dreds of thousands of herring flopped about in puddies and mud today be- cause they had taken the wrong road. When a careless employe last Satur- day Jeft open the sluice gate leading from Short Brook into a big eran- berry bog the fish swarmed into the ditches. Today the water was rufining out of the bog. leaving the herring stranded. The proprietor of the bog hired extra help to gather them wup and announced that they would be given away to any one willing to come for them TTLE il"1? FOR A 4. sSLOPER Oniy siight hope is held out today for the recovery of Andrew J. Sloper, president of the New Britain National | | Lank, who is a patient at Roosevelt hospital, New York city. Mr. Sloper was operated upon several days ago, Mra. Sloper and their son, William T Eloper, are at the bedside. | | Charles J. Elsenlohr, night a shoe hox containing what is beiieved to be the uni- form of an officer of the Ku Klux Klan. It is being held at police headquarters awaiting the owner to identify it. Ineluded in the items in the bc == new white shirt, a piec “loth forming the emt tract. Washington, May 5.-—Americans re- siding aboard were held by the su- | preme court today to be subject to federal income taxes upon Incomes derived from sources within another country. ) e i The question reached the court in | ;z?:"l;r“w';:;?'“r::}; ¥ 9guyg Tha kil e ¥ (| night it was left intact until to- for many years has resided in Meéxico. | day, but upon being opened this He contended that this government morning the outfit was revealed oould not compel him to pay taxes on The regalia is belicved to ‘\.’!\1" income 'N?n‘ hroperty jocated out- | been worn in the ku klux klan side the United States, but the fed- | 3 : s ceremonials held in Bethany eral district court for Maryland took Saturday night. < a contrary view, X ; « 'The Shippers’ Case | Shippers are not liable, the supreme ccert held today, for differences be- | the amount aecnsty muia en o MIDDLETOWN POLICE MAY HAYE NEW MURDER CASE shipments, unless it is specifically provided for by contract, | Tiw case arose out of shipment of | coke from Holt, Ariz, to the Great | Western Smelters Corporation at Mey- Body of Man, Standing Upright in er, Ariz, and was brought by the! lLovisville and Nashville raliroad | against the Central Iron and Coal company, | The railroad company contend that | the Smelters company to whome "'e‘mnn's body taken out of West river coke was consigned was not solvent | o .. pore marks which the police wlhen the suit was instituted, and 5 sought to hold the Central Iron ““d:thouxm Indicated that death was due Coal company, which was the con-|to violence. On the forehead a signor, for the balance of freight bad gash and the left eye discolore charges due, but the lower federal| The body was upright in the water courts took the view that the railroad about 65 feet east of the railroad must look to the consignee for any |trestle. The feet were in the mud shortage in the rates paid. which accounted for the body's posi- Justice Brandels in delivering the tion, Railroad men first saw the opinlon today said the liability of body and notified the police from shippers is not fixed by law and is Berlin Junction. dependent upon any contract under | Medical Examiner J, Francis Calef which the shipment was made. In'was of the opinion the body had not this particular case there was no been long in the water, contract, the court said, which made the shipper liable, Other Court Dectsions The supreme court today refused to review a case involving the question | whether the trustee In bankruptey of | Bridgeport Man, Driver of Death Car Edward Dier and company of New | a York can recover stocks whieh the| 0 Middietown Fatality, Blamed in firm on the evening of closing its' oroner' doors is alleged to have delivercd to( o ¥ Report. Mud, Found in West River This Morning. Middletown, 5—A Conn,, May HELD FOR BROTHER'S DEATH Middletown, May 5.—I'rank Polke, The supreme court today dismissed | ¢ Bridgeport, was held eriminally re- for want of jurisdiction a case brought (g el i by the city of Buffalo, N. Y., .nmu‘npnn-lhla for the death of his broth. i the public service commission of New ¢ Michael and Miss Mary Nemette of York state and others to determine | Stratford, through upset of their auto- the power of the commission to fix mobile on Kaster Sunday by Coroner llr:"l car fares in Buffalo, | Lowndes A, Smith, today. 1t was 'he supreme court today aflirmed " shown that the machine whieh Frank the decision of the lower courts that | ngixe way driving ran into a diteh. naval “'!k'"_' are entitled to thelr qpe hrother died from injuries while Matutory naval compensation when on |y o young woman drowned in water leave of absence with permission to in the diteh. Witnesses said that the engage in other work. machine was travelling at a 36 mile FIR'E‘ l" ATTLE—BoRo an hour rate that the driver made no effort to slow down and that he drove fully 125 feet into the ditch before the Star Theater Burned and 34 Tenants machine overturned Frank Polke has $1,500 bonds. He will have hearing later, 4 under a court been out In Same Building are Forced 1o Flee MORE iddnds HOANS Aroused to Street, Attievoro, Mass, May 5.-—The Star theater, used for motion pletures and | stock company productions was burn- ed early today causing a loss estimat. ed at $25,000, Thirty-four tenants of | apartments in the three-story wooden bullding were driven to the strect, but the flames were confined to the part of the building housing the theater, The building is owned by Edmund | Reeves, proprietor of a drug store on the ground floor. FIGHTING FOR BARING Lawyer for Defense Tomorrow Wil Make Effort to Get Accused Chem- Ist Liberated. White Plains, N. Y., May 5.—Coun- sel for Clarence . Baring, who Is in | the eounty jail eharged with having attempted to murder his wife with polson and germe, announced today that a move would be made tomor- row to obtain from County Judge Bleakley a copy of the grand jury minutes, with a view to seeking dis- | missal of the indictment. Baring’s attorney said he also would ask that the trial scheduled for May 12, be adjourned until two week from that date, as he had net completed preparation for his client's defense, Although authorities still were without word from iss Mildred Leam, the Elizabeth, J.. high schoo! gymnasium instructer., whom they have sought to question as a friend of Baring, they sald the prose- cullon’s case was sufficlently com- plete and suspended search for addi- tional evidence. Citizens of Downeast Town Last Night By More Startling Sounds Coming From Nowhere, Moodus, Conn., May 5—Groans were heard here at 9:15 last night which were attributed to the “Moodus noises.” The earth vibrated slightly and those who pulled ut their watches or looked at the clock on the mantle sald that the tremors were three in number two minutes apart. The “nolses” which are not unusual although of late years they have not been frequent sound like thunder and the earth trembles, Two or three panied the “groans” shook buildings slightly, COMMANDERY MEETING Knights Templar of Connecticat Hold- Ing Two Days’ Conclave at Narwich ~Business Meeting Tuesday, Norwich, May 5.—The 37th annual conclave of the grand commandery Knights Templarsof Connecticut open- ed here today. The first formal gath- ering was a luncheoh given to the past grand commanders at the Wauregan House. A strect parade followed with the review by the grand commander. James C. MacPherson, and bis a ant officers, together with i 1 Commander Charles R. Hunt of the grand commandery of Massachusetis and Rhode Island who also represent- ed the most eminent grand master of the grand encampment of the United States, accompanied by E. Sir E. Stan- ley Swift, grand warder The visiting commandeties we tertained at dinner after the parade Tomorrow. the business session of APPEALS FOR VETERANS— Washington, May b.—~Charactoriz- ng the veto by President Coolidge of the Rursum pension bill as “cruel and unjust,” Gaylord M. Soltzherger, com- mander-in-chie! of the Grand Army |, | andiep y e o the Repubtle, appeated by Wire to- | oo S50 SOTRARICHY Sl be held tn day to senators to overtide . s TS Bt &€ the ety No. y— grand officers. THE WEATHER —— Hartford, May S—Porecnst for New Britain and vicinity: Fair tonight; PIRATES KIDNAP By the Assoctated Press, Hong Kong. May 5.—The passenger motorboat Oporto, sailing for Canton rom Kongmoon, was seized today by pirates, who killed the Portuguese skipper and an Indian guard and — s kidnapped forty passengers. )d;p "“!I-h. ; months ago the tremors which accom- | 4 which i the host of the | Arguments in Kilbourne- Kolodney Row | In a case in which daylight time, standard time, interpretation of the the the ces, statutes of ’f'fluu:’);‘)p v and ¥, B, Hungerford veral wordy battles the action of Raiph Kolodney, seeking to {have an injunction secured by E. O, aining Kolodney from erecting a cobbling shop on his prop- erty in the Belvidere section disolved, was heard before Judge B, W, Alling in the city court this morning, A large number of residents of the Belvidere section were in court and practically all of them recorded themselves as |aguinst the action of Kolodney in at- |tempting to erect the building, Counsel for Kolodney attempted to prove that an appeal taken from the rermit granted to Kolodney was il- |legal as the clty ordinance stated that an appeal from a buillding permit must be taken five days after its issu- ance and as Kilbdurne had not taken the appeal until about 12 days after the issuance of the permit the appeal was fnvalid. Counsel for Kilbourne contended that the appeal was taken A8 soon as knowledge of the permit issued to Kolodney was brought to his notica and further contended that Kolodney had acted in secrecy in se- curing the permit and attempting to erect the building. After further argument among counsel for both parties Judge B, W, Alling gave as his interpretation of the ordinance, “That a building permit appealed from, conld not be used as a bullding permit for the erection of a bullding, while an appeal from the ermit was still pending in the | Kilhourne, ros The case was further continued to give counsel for Mr, Kilbourne time to file an amendment to the appeal, INVITED T0 RUSSIA Widow of Lenine Asks John Dewey, American Philosopher, To Teach in Public Universities There, New York, May 5.-A letter from Mme. Lenin, widow of the soviet lead- er to John Dewey, former professor of philosophy at Columbia university, inviting him to come to Russia to teach in the public universities of that country, was brought here today by Charles Recht, a New York lawyer and legal adviser to the Russian gov- ernment, who arrived on the Belgen- land, tering the political iife of the nation but was working toward the upbuild- ing of a public school system on the American pattern, She had been a school teacher for twenty years and he declared Recht sald he spent a month in Russia, conferring with the authorities npon legal aspects of the Russian vol- unteer fleet which he said now func- tioned in the Volga river, in the Black and Caspian seas and in the Pacific | Russia, he asserted, would not enter the North Atlantic trade because of an agreement with the English steamsirip lines, The lawyer said the ling \in Russia was that Germany should be made 10 pay the reparations to the last mark He characterized as ab eurd the statement in Parie of Grar Duke Nicholas that the soviet govern ment was on the point of disintegra- tion and asserted that Russian mon archists thronghout Furope generally | admitted there was no chs for a | return to imperialism in Russia. FARMER A SUICIDE Suffickd Man Pound Hanging in Barn ] “~Had Son Arrested and Became Despondent Because of Fact, | Sufficld, May Peter Zelinski, 61 | retired farmer committed suicide | hanging himself in a barn in the re of his home. His body was found this morning by his wife, Medical Examin er Caldwell sald death by strangulation. Mre. Zelinski thought her hushand had become despondent r the arrest of his son the father's complaint had by ¢ was ¢ from worry ot vesterday on young man son 1= to L the assanit charge nited 14 that the mim. The ourt tonight an CUBAN REBELS ROUTED Reporis From Official Sources Indivate | that Revolutionaries Are Dodealed at Every Turn, New York, May & rebe | have been routed by | troops in all sections of the island ex- cept the Cienfuegos district, according 16 a telegram received today by F. By boada, Cuban consul general, from the Cuban embossy in Washington. President Zayas has gone to Cienfue- gos the message added The consulate is in receipt of orders from the war department st Wash- ington releasing army supplies for use by the Cuban regular army. The ma- terial will be shipped Saturday. ihan governmental cticut, and Attorneys P. | | Louis Michaelowski Mme. Lenine, he said, was not en. | in recent years a trainer of teachers, { . panions Injured Early This Morning. I‘John Partyka Held for Man- slaughter—Vincent Ku- Fred Lugi and Are towski, rested Here. A joyride in a Stolen automo- bile by eight young men from New Britain came to an end about 1:30 o'clock this morning in Norfolk when the machine sideswiped a pole and threw the occupants into the road causing injuries to John Ryan aged 21 of 41 Lawlor street from which he died 10 minutes later; Henry Medric, 19, of 80 Lawlor street, Quinto Lugi, 17, of 222 Clark street and William Stahalek, 19, of 33 Lawlor street are in the Litchfield county hospital. Me« dric is thought to have a frae- ture of the skull. John Partyka of 137 North street, the driver of the automo- | bile, has been arrested by the state police and will be ar- raigned before Justice E. A, Lucier in the Norfolk police |ecourt tonight on charges of manslaughter, reckless driving, and theft of the automobile, The state police say that he has confessed to taking the nga- chine, Theee Arrested He Vincent Kotowski*of 132 Tromeont stroct, who escaped from the accident without injury, was the first to res [turn to New Britain and he was placed under arrest by the local po- lice on a charge of taking an automo: bile without permission. Soon alter he was placed under arrest, Fred Lugl of 222 Clark street and Louls Micha« lowski of 122 High street appeared at the station and gave themselves up to the police. They were also locks I up on the same charge, Others 1o Be Arrested, The rest of the young men in the party will be placed under arrest by the local polbee, and all will be charged with taking (b machine without permission. The wutomobile in which the youths were riding was the property of Charles Parsons of 7 Lyon street and was reported by | Mr. Parsons last night at 9:30 o'clock as having been stolen between | and o'clock, from Lake street where | had parked it. It was compietely | demolished by the accident Liquor Found in Wreckage, When the state police arrived on Illll‘ scene immediately after the ae- cident, two bottles of liquor were in {the wreckage and the members of the fatal party showed signs of have |Ing been drinking. According to the of the sl fair told by the returned men, . lautomobile was taken after 11 o'clock llast night by Partyka, who drove ¥ around and picked the otfiers up 16 'go 1 They claim that they did not machine wag stolen aceepted ‘the ride, and Partyka did not tell them that | he the machine until @ (short time prior to the accident, and they said that they were too far ol | o story had stolen to leave the machine then Auto Went 45 Miles an Hour, After getting into machine, they said that they went through Plainville and © through rrington, When the accident happened, Ryas, Kotowski and Partyka were in the Ryan sitting on the outs B e machine was thought to be travelling about 45 miles an hour when Partyka scemed to lose control and it swerved to the side of the road « pole, throwing them road. 7T wachine remained Ryan was seated the neals re the machine was struck and he died before dical aid could be reached. [ was emy 1 as a lock ass sembler by the | & Erwin com- He was the son of Mr. and Mra James Ryan and besides his parenth, be is survived two sisters; Nonle nd A wnd four brothers, Bdward Micharl and William. . The funeral arrangements in charge of M J ¥. undertaker, are incom- It i said that Partyka was scen 1§ this city as late as 11 o'clock last nigh) inviting friends 1o go for a AdG the front sat, W sideswiped upright est 1o whe by the v pole m pany James Kenne \\'nlerh;lry' Man Is Held For Performing Waterbury, May 5.—Wiliiam H. Daniell of 52 Knoll street. chargel & with an illegal operation and Wwith rracticing medicine without a was bound over to the superior in city court here today under of $3,000. Daniell was arrested week on order of the depuly after that official had received a port to the effcct that & young married woman was In 8 eritient dition as the result of the allegel |legai operation.