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News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 EARTHOUARESTILL " FELT IN CAMADA Latest Shock Ocourred at 8 0'Clock This Morning NO FEAR N WESI Chicago Expects No Thero—Theory That Eastern Sea- board is Sinking Advanced. Quebee, Mar, 2.——Agent Harvey, of the Dominion Express Co., at Mur- ray Bay, today reported that earth shocks still’ were being felt in the Saguenay River district, the latest | tremor occuring at § o'clock this| morning: Selsmic experts considered this as proof that the Saguenay | Eiver was the center of the distur- tance, Tremors were felt all day Satur- day and throughout yesterday and last night, continucd this morning, Harvey reported by telephone to Quebec. A number of chimneys were shaken down in the Murray Baydistrict, the express agent said, and wooden dwellings suffered some damage, The later shocks were of less intensity than those on Satur- day, Mr. Harvey reported, and while inhabitants were terror-strick- in when the first shoeks occurred, they underwent the later tremors ithout excitement, No Fear in Chicago Chicago, March 2. — While the eastern half of the United States may be slowly sinking and the western part is known to be rising, no serious earthquake has ever occurred in the middle section of the,country and none need bt feared, in the view today of & Paul Goods, professor of geography of the University of Chicago. Still, he sald, there is as much reason to believe that other earthquakes soon may be felt here, as the one Saturday night, as thero is to suppose there will be no others as severe for 45 or 50 years, The earth is not quiet at any min- ute, he explained, and there is a quake whenever the motion becomes | perceptible, ‘There ls, he continued, an axis uplift moving northwest- | ward through Niagara Falls, pro-| ducing a general rise iu the middle of the Greut Lakes region. . “There is a theory that the east- ern half of the United States Is sink- ing from Lebrador to Savanrah,” he mid. “Florida probably is standing still. But it is very difficult to measure this chan use the oc¢ean level of the east coast is in a state of constant flux and changes periodically. Trouble proj ItH dgr?'xsvx : T R AN, DAMAGE OF §1,000,000 AT REPAIR SHOPS BLAZE Queens Electrical Bufldings of L. 1. Radiroad Destroyed by Fire To- day—Cars Are Burned, New York, March 2.—Fife de- stroyed the Queens Blectrical Re- pair Shops of the Long Island rail- road today, causing an, estimated damage of $1,000,000 and throwing nearly 6500 employes out of work, Thirty-five cars, most of them pas- senger coaches, were virtually de- stroyed, Each car was valued at $40,- 000, Long Island railroad officials sald. The shop occupied a two atory brick building. The west wall of the structure was in danger of falling after the fire had been brought un- der control. Small explosions inside the bulld- ing were caused when air tanks were enveloped by the intense flames, After part of the roof had fallen in the flames and éparks rose high in | the sky, being visible for long dis- tances, A large crowd gathered in the vi- clnity of the fire. Only one fireman ' was hurt, his Injuries resulting from falling glass. . Long Island railroad officials an- nounced that the schedules of their road would not be interrupted by | the destruction of the shop. BRISTOL POLICE SEEK SAILOR AND HIS BRIDE Alleged Deserter and Yonkers Girl Reported on Honeymoon ° (Special to the Herald,) Bristol, March 2.—Honeymoon drcams of Stephen M. Poloski of 68 Williams street, this c and his bride, Miss Estelle Bera of 158 Riv- erdale avenue, Yonkers, N. Y., are due for an interruption if the Bristol police can find them. According to the police, they re- celved word last week that Poloski d deserted from the United States troyer McFarland at New York. They spread their net to catch him if he returned to this city., Without the slightest trepidation, Poloski came to town Friday night with Miss Bera and awakened City Clerk Thomas B. Steele, pursuading him to go to the city hall and issue a marriage license, although it was long after office hours. Their next stop was at the parp- chial residence of Rev. Bartlewski whom they asked to per- form the marriage ceremony. Father Bartlewski declined. Their last known stop, it is said, was in Terryville where it is re- George | AW BRITAIN HER NEW" BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1925. —SIXTEEN PAGES. DEFENSE PLANS DISCUSSED TODAY Use of Railroads and Co-ordina- tion of Business \MIGHT BE NEEDED IN WAR |Secrctary Weeks Speaks Before Business Men and Railway Trans- portation Officers on Need of | Military. ‘Washington, March 2.~Ralil trans- portation officials and business lead- | lers met with war department officers here today to work out plans for na- tional defense by which wartime en- |deavors of business, transportation ‘rnmi the government may be coor- dinated into a workable unit, The gathering’ was addressed by Secretary Wecks and Major Gen, John L. Hines, chief of staff, who outlined the defense plans tentatively | mapped out by the department and the part assigned to transportation and business agencies. Secretary Weeks emphasized the {vital need of transportation to the | |national defense and explained that | armed force depehded for its effec- tiveness upon movement “an indis- |pensable element of war.” Cooperation Needed “If your armed forces should be | compelled at some future date to de- fend the continental territory of the {United States, the rallways of the |United States would assume prime |importance,” the secretary snid. “You know as well as T that 1t will not be possible for the raliroads and [the army to cooperate effectively limmediately upon the occurrence of |an unfortunate emergency unless | they spend some time together pre- | paring and developing plans for | |such cooperation, That is why we | thave asked you to be here, | “You are here to lend the bene- |fit of your expert advice &o that our | defense plans shall be in conformity | with the actual capacities of our transportation lines. to learn what our defense plans | might require you to do. You are |here to adjust your ideas of war- time endeavor and the war depart- | ment ideas, until the two fit closely |together in a workable unit.” General Hines described more in detail what services to national de- fense the army expected the trans- portation lines to render in an emer- | gency and peinted out something of | |how they would be expected to fune- |tlon. | Railroads In Charge “Our field service regulations,” Gen. Hines sald, “now definitely as- s'gn the operation and maintenance of railroads in the theater of opera- tions under the control of the com- You are here | ‘Washington, March 2.—In two dectslons today the supreme court denied the right of the states to in- terfere with interstate passing over thelr highways in motor vehicles. It held that Maryland cannot re- fuse to permit such vehicles to use its highways, and that Washington cannot refuge to grant licenses for Pacific highway which lies within its borders, Maryland had insisted that the “certificates of convenience” or per- mits required for the operation of was a valld exerclse of its powers, Those attacking the law asserted that such carriers in interstate coma merce conld only be required to police license, Justice McReynolds dissented from the Maryland decision, assert- Ing the states should be permitted to refuse licenses in the orderly regulation of the highways. In the Washington case. Juck was refused operate a bus line between Portiand, Ore., ang Tacoma, and Scattle, un- der the state law prohibiting the A T cense in the same territory, The lower federal court decided against Lim, and 17 states presented briefs during the appeal proceedings. Pointing out that half the states SCIENTISTS TRY T0 PLACE QUAKE Central Point Near Northern U. 5. Decided (ORIGINATED IN FAULT | Dr. Reeds Thinks Trouble Started at Point Discovered Three Years Ago—Damage Rattles Severe in | Canada. New York, Marel {tually declded that last Saturday jev ening’s earthquake originated in a !sub-strata rock movement in the ex- treme northeastern part of the | United States or in eastern Canada, scientists today were endeavoring to RFERE WITH | BUSSES ON INTERSTATE RS RIVAL'S REVOLVER commerce | motor buses over that section of the | motor vehicles for hire over its roads | take out the ordinary automobile | permission to granting of more than one such li- | Having vir- | have laws supervising automobile transportation companies, the state of Washington insisted in fits brief that should it be held these regu- Iatlons could be nutlified by locating one terminal of a route inside of a | | state, so as to constitute interstate | operatlon, greater confusion of au- | thority would develop, | Hartford, March 2.—~The decision (of the U. 8. supreme court that stutes cannot refuse to permit motor | vehicles for hire as common car- | riers in interstate commerce to use its highways is of exceptional inter- est in Connecticut at this time as | the general assembly had before it, as a problem the matter of placing | motor truck freight lines under the | jurisdiction of the public utilities commission, The Connecticut chamber of commerce is conducting a referen- dum among its members on the question. Linked up with the prob- lem s the question of permitting foreign motor trucks to use state highways without contributing to their upkeep by payment of license, The question of jurisdiction of the public utllities commission over | passenger cars doing an interstate | business already has been ralscd. There are a number of bills before the legislature committee on roads, | bridges and rivers dealing with for- | eign-truck-on-state-highways and |interstate passenger vehicle condi- | tions. CONTRADICTIONS IN AIR CRAFT CASE Patic, Mithel and Weks in w Gontroversy CONCERNS PERMISSION Mitchell I Produces Letters From | President And Patrick Says He | Understood Publishing of Matter | ‘Was Approved. dis- Gen. Washington, March The ipute over charges that Brig. | Mitchell in lishing a recent series of magazine articles on air power became |tangled today in a new maze of con- |tradictions and counter charges. | Seccretary Weeks has told Tischeyed orders pub- the en- LIVED IN FEAR OF {Yottari Explains Why He Shot and Killed D’Angelo | Judge Alling Finds Probable Cause After Hearing Today—Priscner Appears Terrified — Refuses told Chief William C. Hart and the other policemen downstairs about the shooting, so I don't care to say anything h the statement made throt preter by Glovanni Vottari when he was arralgned Judge Ben- i n W, Alling in pelice court this morning on a charge of first degree murder for the shooting of Joseph D'Angélo as he lay in bed at his before | | DECTECTIVE P. J. O'MARA | home, 66 West strect, on the night | of September 28, 1 Not certain | whether the prisoner meant to | waive hearing, Judge Alling ordered | Prosceutor Joseph G. Wa8ds to pre- ! sent enough evidence to the court | to establish prob cause s0 Vot- |tari could be bound over to the term |of superior court opening at Hart- | ford tomorroy. | Appears Terror Stricken ! When Vottar, who arrived in fhe | city night custody of Po- | liceman Patrick J. O'Mara from ada where he was arrested last Friday night, was led into the court- | room by O'Mara, flanked by several in | oth ot emen, he BOUND OVER FOR MURDER to Speak Through Court Interpreter | inter. | Aveage Daily Circulation For | Week Ending Feb, 28th .., 'MAN HELD FOR BURGLARY IN - MAINE TELLS OF GANG PLOT - FOR DELIVERY OF CHAPMAN CARDINAL LEADING ~ CATHOLIC PILGRIMS First Official Holy Year Group Arrives at Naples Thomas J. Hill, Aged 19, of Roxbury, Mass., Said Crooks Ml . Conference In Spring- | field. - The Assoclated Pre | Pri gt 4 iples, March 2.—The first official Prisoner Met Bandit in ear pilg ge froi Al il [ United States «‘j:::n:‘rlfllug P \'clw Boston and, Living at England Catholies, led by Cardinal | Copley Plaza, Posed as ” Dashing Society Man. | O'Connell, one of America’'s four princes of the church, arriyed here | this morning on board the liner Ohio | after a splendid voyage from Bos- | ton, All the pilgrims were in good hm\.lm and spirits, ‘What may have been a plot to re- T'rem the moment she passed out |lease Gerald Chapman, alleged mur- of sight of the American coast until | derer of Policeman James Skelly, she steamed into the Bay of Naples | has been uncovered by the police of | at dawn today the Ohio was favored | Portland, Maine, through the arrest with brilliant weather and spring- |in Gorham, Maine, of Thomas J. 11,9331 lke breezes. A reception was given the party by representatives here of the ples and Cardinal O'Connell an- swered in Italian the addresses of welzome. “T am happy to be in Italy again,” he said. “Ttaly has always been sin- cerely and deeply beloved by me. Although I was not born here I re- ceived the better part of my edu- cation here and spent time of the happlest years of my life here and in Rome., I am proud to return to { Italy and Rome leading the first of- ficlal American holy year pilgrim- age. They bring to Italy the greet- ings and salutations of their fellow | that after their brief sojourn in this lovely land, they too, will return to the continent discovered by Colum- bus, lovers of ITtaly.” Cardinal O'Connell remained in | Naples today, receiving representa- tives of the American college, the lioly year committee and other de- putations, visiting Pompeil and San Martino. He will go to Rome by automobile Tuesday to pave the way of the pilgrims, who will remain here until Wednesday. During their ay in Naples the pilgrims will visit | Capri and Pompeli, taking advan- ’t.’u:o of thetraditional azire sky to | make a toyr of the show places. | “We will begin our visit to the Ba- | silicas in Rome Thursday morning,” | said the cardinal in outlining his | plans. “I. will conduct the pil- Ttallan nation and the city of Na- | ountrymen in America and I know | | Hill, aged 19, of Roxbury, Mass, Hill, held on a charge of burglary, says he and several others were planning to liberate Chapman, whose trial will open on March 24 in su- perior court at Hartford. Whether the plot was to try to free him at the trial or to effect his escape from state prison at Wethersfleld is mot known. According to Hill, he first met Chapman about three years ago, and was a short time ago summoned to a meeting of the gang at theqHotel Cooley in Spripgfield, Mass., to per- fect plans for the robber’'s escape. Hill had also begun to make prep- arations for the escape of two pris- wloncrs from the Newcastle peniten- | tiary in Wilmington, Delaware, he admitted. He had been trying to obtain money to purchase pistols to send to a taxicab driver there. These admissions were the result i'M an all day examination of Hill by iSherirt Graham, Deputy Philip W, Wheeler, Post Office Inspector Fran- |cis A. Pearson and Railroad Detee- tive H. A. Russell, Emile Ronarge, 23, of Lewiston, Maine, and another |man whose name is withheld, were l(‘,:ulght with Hill in Gorham and are | being held also. | For His Mother's Sake | Hill's reason for making these ad- to an admission that he broke inte the post office at New Gloucester and |also three stores, which reads, “I am making this statement as I want to | make good, 1f not for my own sake, | for my mother's. I know it does not pay to do wron, missions is contained in a postseript. 4 r pol ppeared terror | grimage on these trips. My visit to ricken procecdings. He | the Holy Father probably will occur ! was poorly dressed, being clothed in | next Sunday or Monday. Later I {the same ents he wore when | will present the entire group to His | chart the epicentral point more ex- |}, yqq afrcraft commiitee that the | actly. farticles were published in violation Sorm lof an order by President Coolidge. { shook a lari Today Gen. Mitchell advised the “On the other hand it is definite- 1y known that ifornia and the western part, of the United States ported they prevalled upon a clergy- |mander-in-chief to the railway en. man to unite them in marriage. It {gineer troops. On the other hand, it is apparent that the clergyman did {is proposed that the actual opera- Hill says that he is the son of ' Harry Hill of 160 Hillside street, Roxbury, Mass. He was scheduled to held that the tremors which ea of the continent are generally riging. As a matter of fact, it is known tiat the Rocky | mountains rise about four fet a cen- t The ocean level of the west eonst 13 going down, | “In this middle -cction no ous quake ever has occurred and it 1s probable no scrious one ever avill occur. In southwest Wisconsin there are pinnacles of rock about six feet wide and from 20 to 20 feet high, These have been made by river erosion and have stood for about 100,000 years, It is pretty sure that throughout that time no quake haa touched this part of the | country.” Not to Occur Again Ann Arbor, Mich., Ma ly recurrence of any earthquako | such as occurred Saturday night in this section is extremely uniikely, in | the opinion today of Professor W.| H. Hobbs of the geology department | of the Unitversity of Michigan. | Records of the university —selsmo- graph, will be sent to Oxford, Eng- land, where all records of the d turbance will be studied | Professor Hobbs that the middle | west has been under a misapprehen- | sion in belleving itself immune from | earthquakes. Although predicting no early of Saturday's carth tremors, h 1, that the tory of the region indlcates that other carthquakes would be expe fenced. repetition West Goshen Post Office Is Robbed During Night | Torrington, March ~The West Goshen post office was robhed dur- ing last ce was ef- focted by removing glass from a rear window and smashing in through two inncr doors with a plckaxe. All of Saturday's post office recelpts as well as money and artielas in the gencral store connect- ed with the post office were taken. | Tha burglary was at o'clock this morning by the veteran postmaster, Charles F. Green, when he went to the place to for business. » state police vestigating. night. 1 o discovere 5 open | are in- Kills Wife, Shoots Daughter, Tries Suicide | Pittaburgh, March —Samusl | Kish, 40, a steel mill em shot | and killed his wife, 38, seriously| wounded a daughter 12, and prob-| ably fatally wounded himself in their | home in Woodlawn today. Mrs. Kish | was bending over a washtub when her husband fired. He then turned| thé pistol on his little girl as she ran from the room, then shot him-| self. Police sald they had learned | the couple had beep quarreling over | the question of moving. MARTINO ARRIVES. ashington, March 2.—Baron de Martino, new Ttalian amb dor to the United States, was given an au- dience at the White House today to ss: | bull present his letter ot eredence to Presidont Coblidgs . not realize that the Bristol license was not valid in Terryvill After the reported m: disappeared. But the Bris are preparing they can n where the honeymoon is being spent, fage they tol police {tlon of the railroads in the zone of | the interior shall be in charge of the railroads themsclves under such a plan for unified control as shall be | a house warming if lagreed by the rallroads and the gov- | I (Continued on Page 13.) Bingham Plans Entertainment Of Trumbulls On Connecticut Executive and Guests to Watch Parade, See Coolidge and Attend Charity Ball. BY_GEORGE H. MANNING. u Bureau of N. Il. Herald) D. C, March 2 Complete arrangements have been 3 m Bingham for a full day of entertainment here for Governor John H. Trumbull of Con- neeticut and his family and staff n they arrive Wednesday for the ation of resident Dawea. Mrs. Trum- Washintgon, made by and V Governor Trumbull, and their two daughters with governor's st nd his execu- tive seergtary, Edward L. Kelly, are scheduled to reach Washir Wed The party will proceed at Hotel Pow- latten, where the governor and his nd daughters will be the guests Senator and Mrs, Bingham. The s are making their home at the Powhatan Other guests of Scn Bingham from at *will be State Chairman J. Henry Roraback, Mrs, J. B. Russ and Miss Catherine Byrne, the repub ce-chairman of Connecticut, and Dr. William H. Verdi, of New Haven, one of the lead of the state, sometime o performed a difficult surgical operation on Senator Bing- ham, and Miss Josephine Foster of New Haven, a personal friend of the 1y Senator and Mrs, give a breakfast at hotel at 9 o'clock in honor of Governor Trum- 1l to wich all their guests have veen invited. Governor and Mrs. Trumbull, the governor's staff and the Connecticut friends of Senator and Mrs. Bing- ham will witness the inaugural cere- monies at the capitol and will later go down town to the reviewing stand across from the White House to see the parade from seats reserved for them by Senator Bingham. After the parade is over Governor Trumbull and his staft will be re- ceived at the White House by Presi- dent Coolidge. Iz the afternoon Governo¥ and Mye Trumbull and the other guests nesday 1 the tor and Mrs. Co; surgeor Bingham will President Coolidge | gon early | who | Inauguration Day will attend a tea given by Mrs, Hert of Kentucky, vics-chairman of the | republican national committee, At 8 o'clock in the evening Gov: ernor and Mrs. Trumbull and the other guests will be the hosts at dinner given by Senator and Bingham, Senator and Mrs. Mclean {and the Connecticut members in the { house of represetatives have also | been invited. i The whole party will attend the | charity ball at the Mayflower hotel in the evening. This ball which takes the place the state in- augural ball of past vears, before pleasure and soclal affairs were side- tracked for economy, will be a great affair and one of the most sumptu- ous and Drilllant soclal gatherings | that has taken plkce in America in years, of | | | | Catholic Church Falls [ In 'Quake in Quebec —The Roman . Hillarion, 60 bec, was demolished hquake of Saturday s reported here today by Marine & Fasheries at the left | Worshippers, who had filled a few moments before fore the quake so that {one was Injured. The building was lonly two ¥ old and was cong of the finest st nada, churet just be Supreme Court Upholds Pardon of Grossman Washington, March 2.—The presi- dent has a under the con- | stitution to pardon persons held in contempt of court in criminal cases, the supreme cot 4 today. In a decision unholding the pardon grant- ed b President Coolidge to Phillp Grossman of Chicago. | The court orderrd Grossman dis- tcharged from the Chicago house of | correction where he was semnt by Judges Carpenter and Wilkerson. He | already is out on bond, granted by | the court pending today’s decision. ority Des Moines, Ia., Marc ¥, Barton of Des Moines announced Mrs. | {sharp in Quebec and Ontario {the city of Quebe | broken and a few small shacks were | shook | was the safest | known | Woolworth tower Satu | Morrison died at hie home ¥ | were caused by a slip of rock in a | great fracture known as the fundian | fault, which lies deep in the Atlan- tic's bed off the Maine coast . Others placed the center near the | mouth of the Saguenay river in the | province of Quebec. This region lies |in Logan's fault, a geologically rest- css rock formation that extends down the Appalachians from the St. | Lawrence basin to Alabama, | Still other experts declined more {than to approximate the center © ha disturbance, saving that it had !been 400 to 600 miles from New | York, apparently in a northerly di- | rection. | Dr. Chester A. Reeds of the Amer- {tcan Museum of Natural History said his caleulations had placed the quake in the fundian fault discover- {ed three years ago by Dr. W. D. Johnson, director of physiography at Columbia university. This fracture, Dr. Reeds sald had heen dormant for @ long period at the time 1t was charted by Dr. Johnson, but then it soon exhibited signs of and was held responsible for quakes in the Aroostook valley, Maine, on September 20, 1924 Dr. Recds found support for his theory in the severity ef the quake r . especially on the Massachusetts co: On the other hand Canadian ex- perts who inclined to the Saguenay valley location remind questioners that the tremors had heen very Tn windows were thrown down. Tn Ottawa the walls of the Royal Victorla museum were cracked and every chway was damaged. \Montreal and Toronto Iso reported violent disturbance New Yorkers were assured their city of skyscrapers and enough subways was safe from carthquake damage even though the | most recent quake—sald to be the Hudson's vlsit, &0 vigorously that thousands of citizens became alarmed. Architects hastened to as- sert that the modern office hullding type of structure led the remark of 1an on duty in the day night there h third since Henry the huildings and rec the night watch When informed that been a quake, that gentleman said “Quit your kidding.” D.J. MORRISON DEAD Hartford, March 2—Den day. He served in the first United ates Infantry as a sergeant during e Indlan campaigns. He command of the detall that brought ng Bull” to prison following the acre was In THE WEATHER —0— Yor New Britain and vicini- ty: Fair tonight and Tuesday; colder tonight somewhat war- his acceptance of the position | of national adjutant of the American Leglon. mer Tuesday. } * movement | house aircraft committee that the president had given his consent, | conditioned upon that of Major Gen. | Patrick, the army air service chief. which subsequently was given. Dut Gen, Patrick, in turn, declared he |nad consented only because Mitchell told him the president ap- proved. A copy of a letter from the pres dent sent to the committee by Gen. | Mitehell gave assent to the public tion only i approved by |perior officers.” When advised o the statement of Gen. Mitchell tha such approval had been given him, Gen. Patrick sald he never saw ti irticles before publication nor was he shown the president’s letter lea Ing the decision to war department lofficials. “All T know about the incident,” |Gen. Patrick said, *“is that Gen. Mitchell told me he had been to t! White House, that he had been given permission by the president to pub- lish the articles. I said, of cours: if the president has given permissi {there can be no objection by t office. | “After that conversation with ¢ | Mitchell T heard nothing more abc the matter. The articles were pul lished before T ever saw them.” Mitchell’s Denial Rrig. Gen. Mitchell, { chiet, today flatly contra retary Weeks' statement that he had lisoheyed presidential orders ir ishing certa magazin: without war department In a letter to the ho committee 1 had “in no v s gressed a known order struction ti fumiiiar wit | It would seem,” his letted ¢ “that if I had violated orde attention should have been drawn to them the present time and action taken accordingly.” Gen. Mitchell's letter was r the comm alrman La ust before Rear Admi Fisk, retired, took the his opinions as to th of aircraft. An editor of the Post, the general sai last November to w articles on power, and panied him to the White H lay the project before the president “The president reiterated his great Interest in aeronau has always shown,” the tinued, ‘and said he considered a s of articles on this subject to he hene ficial, and that T should obtain the permission of my superior the chief of the air service, “I {mmediately reported to the £ of the alr service wh curred and requested the permission to write the articles. He gave per- mission then for me to write them. No mention was made at all about submitting coples.” Gen. Mitchell attached a letter he sald he had rece lent Coolldge saying firming my co = you this morning I do not know of or 8, T long before to Sat which he latter co: seri t had oc- a copy of ived from (Continued on Page Four) Gen. | se to | officer, | tlon with | j surprised at the Oshawa, Ontario, | house in which he was arrested by |the Canadian provincial police, ac- {companied by O'Mara. ~The mus- tache whi ! ad when he lived in this city missing. Clerk, E J. Danberg read the warrant ging Vottari with the murder of D'Angelo as the prisoner stood in ths 7§ apparently not comprehending the mez words Danberg read charge had en T | ordered th entered, 5! After d, Judge Alling t a plea of not guilty be and Prosec (Contir ¢ HOSPITAL FACILITIES Bill to \ppr\prin’lrlri;I;T.Dll‘r,n(m Ad- ditional for the Care of World War Veterans is Passed by House. to Woods | Holin | addre DAINTYS AND ORVIS ~ ARE HELD FOR TRIAL s and make the presentation Little Girl's Death Bed Statement Involving Trio Admitted As a result of revelations concern- ing the fafal iliness of twelve year old Mary 1 of 93 Arch street, who died at the New Britain General hospital on the night of February 22, ! her father, John E. Dainty, 55 years | Albert L. Dainty, Charles Orvis, 22 her brother, and 19 years, years, +|Judge Benjamin W. Alling in police - court this morning and were bound MRS. REED DEAD Sister of Late James Allen, Novelist, Had Not Heare His Death— Roquests That He Be Uninformed sister of th nove in Man! ist, two week Mrs. Reed had been i er told because ago er { announcer me of he her brother nc | suffere | iliness. Mrs. Ree Lexingtos | the A I prother was b I's Ky er 18150,000 filéz}: Damages | Block in Salem, Mass. lem, Mass, March 2.— Da nEe stinm 5 : he over to the term of superior court tomorrow. Bonds for the set $10,000 each set for apening intys were bonds of § while ,000 were ada by Prose- r 1s and the po- failed to bring any evidence to ight t) 1d justify a ch of ce being directly re- her death, it i itor Woods had present- inst the trio, 1 Attorney the fathe nt of the gir G Woods he cir ed Attorney C urt cannot pass of a defend- > was g r Jok ctive Sergeant amir In Page were given hearings before | {be arraigned in municipal court to- | day, for robbery. Robarge is held on the charge of being an accessory. | _In this case, as in many others, | Hill said that Chapman took a liking {to him and lived with him at the | Copley Plaza, Boston, acting the role | of society leaders. Under this guise | they attended several soclal tions together, he sald. Of the long list of “jobs”, in which he has participated, Hill sald that the largest one was the looting of a bank at Mldsville, Ga., in 1922. He |was later arrested and, after being incarcerated in'a prison for severa! ‘momhs, was released. 'FILE, APPEAL AGAINST | HART ST. APARTHENTS Residents Ask Common Coumefl for Hearing on Building Permits Owners of property near Hart street lots owned by Miss Julla Napies and Mrs. Anna Lee, both of whom are planning the erection of two tenement houses as a result of favorable action @n their applica- tions by the building commission. filed notice today of an appeal tc he common council and will ask o ring. commission, a recently adopted ordi- otified owners of property dius of 500 feet of the applications and a hearing last week., The com- on's records show that 75 per of the property did not go or ord as opposed, and the permits ere issued, whereupon the ag prope owners met an ied to app: Under the ordi peals nade with pur- to Naples grieved the first appeal he ordinance and n council will sit not the bu taken ur the enti to jud dings wi her or ) triment to the meighborhood TRIED FOR FORGERY i Yung Hsiang, Former Yale st dent, Brought Bark From Wash ington, ts Bound Over. 2—Chi Yung nt at Yale who ack frou swer charges of ction with a cheek ecged to have ob- ocal bank, was police court here as bound over to the t under bonds of 83, om a the t he forged @ account of Pref of Yale University. ce was offered today An the waiver of ¢he accused. func- -