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e R e A AT T T T e R T T T T T e T BRI Pt R e et e ——————————— News of the World By, Associated Press — e —————— ESTABLISHED 1870 BRITISH STRIKE 1§ GALLED OFF FOR TIME BEING Owners Withdvaw Notices and Walkout, Slated for Mid- night, Will Not Occur GOVERNMENT WILL 6IVE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE Minc Owners Promised Ald Until Full Inquiry Tnto Mining Industry Has Been Completed — Miners' Federation FExecutive Telegraphs All Men To Continue On Their Jobs. By The Associated Press. London, July 31.—Prime Minister Btanley Baldwin informed the pub- llc today that a provisional agrec- ment has been reached in the coal Industry and that the mine owners have withdrawn their notices for two Weeks, thus averting a countrywide trike which was called for mldnight onight. The notices that have been with- Em\\n were those posted at the pit- eads informing the miners that new Ponditions would be effective at mid- hight tonight, insview of the inabil- Jty to arrive at a new working agree- ent supplanting the one that ex- g;ren today. Aid Ts Promised These notices hurried the decision ¢ the miners' federation for the na- on-wide strike called for the mo- ent the old working agreement nded. It is assumed that the min- rs will continue at their jobs under he present hours and wages, With he government giving financial aid o the owners until a full inquiry of he mining industry has been com- IPT')-.:] agreement which Baldwin nnounced, is subject to confirma- on in the varions coal producing pstricts of the country. The executive of the miners’ fed- Protion has telegraphed to all local nions, “notlces to strike suspend- d: continue work.” The prime minister did not am- lity the bare announcement which km{ made five minutes after the set- blement was reached. He sald he Mould leave it to Winston Churchill, Ehancellor of the exchequer, to give put the detalls tonight. Wages the Same 1t s understood that the miners’ will continue at the existing fcale for at ieast nine monthe. The trades wunion congress has Nried the threat of an embargo on 1l coal movements In Great Brit- Bin and has announced that all pnions will continue at work. A supplementary estimate in con- pection with the coal settlement will be in parllament on e presented THREATENED PRESIDENT Man Arrested in Tampa Accused of Havinz Sent Threats to Coolidge —Has Several Aliases Tampa, Fla, July 31 IM-Nor‘man Jein, known also as Norman Kully nd George Kelly, is under arrest :r;- charged with violating a spe- pial act of Congress, pro!e(‘(lns the 1 the president of the United Klein, taken by agents of department of justice, 1s beinz incomunicado on Bharges of .writing letters to Xv‘r Rent Coolidge threatening his life. Dopartment of justice agents eaid Klein had been under here for three months. ed here after a chase 311 over the country. [ s that led WWednesday and discussed Thursday. | specific | N wruo)) ‘projusHl . \ i B8 g NS I o e F0G ADDS T0 TROUBLE OF EXPLORATION SHIPS Radio Dispatch From MacMillan Ex- pedition Tells of Difficulties Encountered. | Washington, July 81 () — Addl- tional detalls of the blocking in by | Judge Thomas Finds for Rem- | ington Cash Register Co. were recelved at the navy depart- | men today from Lieutenant Com- ‘INJUNGT[ON mander Byrd, in ~mmand of the | naval section of t' “ition. The |, location of the t the Peary | National Cash Register Company and the Bowdoln, en as about 20 miles southeast of . pe York, the northern tip of Melville Bay. After describing how the ships ran into a heavy fog and a solld field of pan ice, Commander Byrd sald: | “Walked on ice mile and a half to castward but found no breaks in ice field. Walked to westward where a L"f]‘i‘; ,“;::5'(‘::“:hl:}“",,p;i'}‘,":my"l“: trict court today filed with the clerk able to get into that lead by follow- ‘M’ the court his opinion and order ing backward lead she reached this |granting an injunction in behalf of spot {n. Peary will not however get |t Remington Cash Reglster Com- underway until fog lifts as it seems | pany, Inec., of Ilion, N. Y. and oth- futile to attempt to find a way out | g against the National Cash Reg- of ice in fog. Personnel well and ister company of Dayton, Ohfo. planes standing very well exposure | g order restrains the infringe- to weather.” “n\on[ of patents for improvements e machines NEW HAVEN'S CLAIM I ment by the National Cash Reglster | company to the Remington com- | pany of damages amounting to sev- Road Fights Commuters’ Injunction, But Decis Is Reserved MILLIONS FIGURE IN COURT RULING Found to Have Violated Patent Rights—Accounting Involves From One to Five Million Dollars By The Associated Press, Hartford, July $1—Judge Edwin 8. Thomas of the United States di |eral milltons. The amount is vari- ously estimated from $1,000,000 to $5,000,000, Opinjfon Is Lengthy The case was tried before Judge Thomas In New Haven, lasting from ovember 10, 1624 to December 9, 1924, during which thera were 15 | days of testimony, with two days of argument on February 9 and 10, [1925. The opinion comprises 122 White Plains, New York, July 31 3‘“““3’ ]znd I8 the longest ever fled ; |by Judge Thomas. Its preparation UP—Declalon was reserved today by |y, i & (MONAE, e RECPY G Supreme Court Justice Tompkins on judga. of more than six volumes of the application for an order com-|court records, briefs and exhibits pelling the New York, New Haven |the broad &cope of which he men- & Hartford rallroad, to fssue refund |tions in his opinfon. slips to commuters while thelr fight | The epecific charges in the bill in for a rehearing of the recent rate |equity filed by the Remington Cash increase {s being prosecuted. | Register company were against ma- The court said he had no power to | chines manufactured by the National compel the issuance of such vouch- [Cash Register company and sold in ers but said he would render a de- | Connecticnt, known as class 1700 cision on ths application for an in- |and clasg 2,000, of the Natlona! junction against the increase elther | products. tomorrow or Monday, and such or- der probably would cover the refund | point. {elalms filed to be valid. 'The Willlam T. Barnett, representing |fringement found by the judge was the New Haven, asserted the com- |in the use of cerfain devices for a muters had gone to the wrong court | plurality of fotalizers 1in adding | for redress. Only when a rehearlng | machines, devices for clearing | has been had. he Eaid, could their |totals and grand to and methods ion All Claims Valid Judge Thomas found all of the case be concerted in the local tri- {for printing and recording euch bunal. He called attention that no |totals. | application for a rehearing had yet| But in a masterfully exhaustive been filed, Mr. Barnett safd the in-|analysis of the mechanisms of the creasa had been delayed 16 months | various machines involved, by varfous efforts and the raflroad’s | Thomas concludes that the Reming- loss durlng the perlod had averaged |ton machines embody new and pre- 863,000 a month. }1"':‘"5’\' unpatented devices and that Charles A. Van Auken, ecounsel |the Natlonal machines though per. the application was being prepared |have adopted those devices in vio and explained the delay by saving [lation of the plaintiff's patent rights. no notice of the increase had !‘MnE S — STRIKE IN BRIDGEPORT given him until 10 days after vho[ | | 500 Hod . Carriers publie service commission's order. | Justice Tompkins sald that if the i raflroad would voluntarily issue re- fund slips to commuters, pending the rehearing he wonld take no ac- tlon on the Injunction sought by the commuters’ commlttes. Counsel Rar- nett, however, rofused to make such | a promise. Auto Stolen in Hartford Recovered in This City A stolen automobile was recov- ered at the entrance to Walnut Hill park this morning by Supernumer- | ary Policeman Michael Lucas. The | machine haq evidently heen aban- | doned by its driver. Howard Kin- ney, proprietor of the 1. C. §. gar- iage on - the Newington turnpiks claimed the machine today and sald and in Demand for More Pay Bridgeport mately 500 members of Carrlers and Bullding union stopped work at noon today on orders from labor leaders as the demand for a minimum of 65 cents an hour had not been met with up to that time. All the building contractors are affected by the strike stated to- day that no ofticial notice of a read- justment of wage rates had been made to them. The first they kne of the pending strike and demand July 31 (P—Approx! the Hod wha that it had been stolen from Asy- was what they saw in {he news- lum street In Hartford last night papers. |Dayton Klansmen Plan QI COMEANYARROTESTS % Plorre, S T, July 31 (P—As| legal representatives of ene oil com- pany put finishing touches on plans for a court fight to restrain | Memorial for W. J. Bryan | Dayton, Ohio, July 31 (A—In a pald advertisement today in a local its % 5 newspaper, the Ku Kiux Klan in- | (he slate of So 56(“\5 Father's Slfl."el' \hmipn‘m public to “attend a me- ‘w h n:r;'cr:rx\;;‘l\-l,"(“'\yrms'r:tn“y:)v;l]\ 10 Years, One A]'l‘estedkmnr\a! servie and cross hurning | rushed Its work of arranging for Dalton, Ga, July 31 UP—A vow |for William Jennings Bryan. 'The |opening of more than a score of B “”‘ {0 bring to justice the ceremonies will be held tonight In filling statione to bring tt price of N ent ot his father has resulted in |® feld near here. ATl Klansmen are !the product down to a “reasonable fi:mm: incomunicado Wil Joes, | urged to “bring your robes." figure. tharged with the murder 26 years| ____ R e A agn of Chief of Policc Hannan. . 1. Hannan, son of the dead ;F Gr d C . C h hinf, was sponsible for the ar- e Gt | X EWETarade Lrossing Lrashes T whence he was brought to D 5 . 5 ulton. The arrest ended a search F t S M f Y bl e v sk uring First Six Mos. of Year Jones has made a stalement to | als coneerning the slaying, but | 7 er instruetions of Jodge Tarver, he was d incomunicado. and newspaparmen here not permitted 1 verse with him Yale-Harvard Team Is | Leading British Rivals | ewport, R. I, July 31 (Pl——’rhb: combined Yale-} ard tennis team Report Shows But 73 Such Accidents — 10,564 Cars Counted At East Main Street Tracks in Plainville Without Evidence of Carelessness, Showing Drivers Are More Cautious. Hartford, July ee accidents 31 (P involving Seventy- motor 1 se actidents for . aside from tr went into the lcad iIn their tourna- | opicieq oceurred at railroad grade |age involved, were fourteen persons ment with the visiting Oxford-| . ,cngy of the New York, New | killed and thirty injure n in Cambridge team today when the |y, on ang Harfora Railroad com- | crease of two deaths and a ease Americans won two of the three | .,y quring the first six months of jof 16 persons injured as compared singies matches played thia morning | T & a6oreiit ot EHE Sror L with it period in 1824 on courts of the Post Casino. | ng record of the first half of 1924, | The motor vehicle department re- The teams divided the six match ccording to a report furnished to ceives regular reports from the played vesterday and the tourna- |y, gtate motor vehicle department | rafiro: pany on observations ment standing now is: Yale-Harvard | po t1o railroad. v ZeTOus Ccrossings every 5: Oxford-Cambridge, 4 | Fifty-two cars were struck by |Saturday and Sunday and on holi = 3 s and twenty tralns struek by | days. These show that a larger Unemployment Insurance o8 in the first halt of thia year, | percentago of drivers are carctul to > 5 7 s against 59 mobiles struck |look in either direction before at- Bill Passed by House trains and 19 trains struck by | ten railroad tracks London, July 31 P—The unem- automobiles in the corresponding the case in the past rent insurance bill was pas: period of last year. In 106 cases North avenue crossing. by commoos today aft- | er a labor motion to reject it was e house o automobiles crashed through pro- tecting gates at crossings and one 146 a single instance of dridgeport automobiles crossed withou defeated by a vote of 263 to 98, |crossing te r was struck this | carelessness during " a period of The measure was_one of the most |year, whereas 91 antom ran | ¢ at Fast Main street, Plain important projects announced in the | through crossing g one 10,564; at Ferry road croasing. recent budget presented to parlia- | tender was hit from January 1 to |Saybrook, 9,610 and at Glenbrook ment by Chancellor Churehlil. June 30, of last year. enue crossing Stamford, 2,500, NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, JUL IS GRANTED in- | sub | Judge | for the commuters, refterated that [haps different in form, substantially | Building | Vaborers in Park City Walk Out | Laborers | > property dam- | e T College Att ts During 1919-25 B ge Attainments During -25 By Graduates of New Britain High School Btudenta Nbo. abgve No. Name of Institution from No. atn '& No. doing meet. No. NBH.8, awarded work of Ing the obliged Bept. l;:NV st good ave, require- to Boston University, , 2 2 - = Bowdoln Colleg . ] 3 e Carnegle 2 = P e Columbla U ] 1 1 -~ /| Hamil 2 Qe 1 1 1 1 - T ' 1 - sbury Colloge ..., A 2 , University of 1 1 - L enn, University o ‘e i+ =% ! "urdue 1 1 [l = r Colleg 4 4 Vermont, University 3 — o University L 1 3 1 = - Totals LrAS 158 1" “a 0 2 13 Percent P L3} 25 37 3 L] No Animosity Toward Employers ‘Men Agree They Have ’[:ONFESSFS MUR“ER Been Treated Fairly But Demand Recognition of Their Union. i i : i Merrimac, N. H,, Man Says ! The brick in He and Brother-in-Law Killed Them Berlin'e claim |te recognition in the fiel L | pxistent one yard has continued s ac Y 31, 1925, ~TWENTY-EIGHT Shown by Striking Clay Workers OF AGED SISTERS PAGES. GRADUATES OF H. S, SHINE IN COLLEGES 168 Register at 44 Institutions in Past Six Years MANY WIN HIGH HONORS Principal slade Recelves Compli- mentary Replies to Questionnalre Sent to 74 Schools, Indicating Efficlency of System Here, A little more than one-eighth of the graduatés of New Brituin High schiool later matriculate 8010 recognized college, at according to es- timates yesterday reloased by Louis P, Slade, principal of the school, who stated at the sume time it was a highly pleasing | on the etforts of ti teachers of | New Britain High echool that of the number going to colivge six and half per cent have L the highest honors attainabl colleges they have been att 1s basing his findit a questionnairs s sent out to 74 leading Ameri- s and universities, re- s having been received from the majority with the discovery that | durtng the past six years 168 | commenta awarded New nded 44 different institutions of higher earning. hese figures, however, are not altogether com- | plete, Mr. Slade pointed out, as a | few of the sehools queried have plicd and others no means fetermining the have tsoever of graphical location of their students’ homee | During the six years In question, 1,368 have been graduated from the { local High school. Win High Honors to co According replies recefved hy Slade, New Britain High school | students have 1 astonishingly | well at several leading colleges and | universities. Harvard Univer- “4',\“ 8chool of FEngineering, three have matriculated, one winning the | highest honors and | above the another with r t the University ur have matricu- number two have being average | less distinction, of Pennsylvania, {lated and of t¥ lafter recognizing the National Clay | shua, N, H., J capturing the highest | Workers' unien, something B "1 ~lombard of Merrimac have entered \‘]‘ L ; % i to the police, that he and his g the highest honors. 0" °\ *j“h‘_” of the manu ’-"'l""’~|» n-law Charles Lefebvre, | Of the 188 New Britain High we vowed neyver d Helen and Georglannia |school students whose college records The brick shed ritain High school graduates have | not | ;W BRITAIN HERALD SEVERAL CITIES HOLD MEMORIAL FOR BRYAN Ilags In Some Places Half-Masted And Business 1s Suspended ‘ In Some Others, | Little Rock, Ark., July 81 () — CGovernor Terral {ssued a proclama- tion suspending the state business at noon today in respect to Wiillam J. ‘];rjz.nv | ety | Oklahoma City, Jul ing Governor W, J 31 (P—Act- Holloway issued an order closing all state offices he [tween 1:30 and 2 o'clock this aft |noon during Will ton. fune services for m Jennings Bryan at Washing- Des Motnes, Towa,, July 81 (P — I on all state bulldings were at | half-staff today, honoring Willlam | Jennings Bryan, following an order issued by Go nor J | n Hammill. | Phoenix, Arlz, July 31 (P—Gover- nor Hunt {ssued a proclamation ask- ing the people of the state to pay |a silent tribute to Willlam Jennings | Bryan during the hour of his funeral and burial in Washington today. STHNEIDER NEED NOT DAY HIS WIFE'S RENT {Supreme Court Rules for J Man Separated From j Wife | | The supreme court of th State of Connecticut has issued findings in two local cases brought before the | conrt on appeals. | In the suit of Morrls Cohn agalnst | Samuel Schnelder, which was an ac- tion to recover rent for a tenement in a building owned by Cohn and | occupied by Mrs. Schneider during |a period of separate from her hus- band, the court ruled that recovery | of the rent cannot be had, | The period of M Schnelder" | tenaney was in 1 Schnelder re- fused to pay action to collect. The city court ruled he could demand payment of the rent and Schneider appealed to the court of common pleas. Judge Dickenson reversed the declsion and { Cohn brought (Fe case to the state's and Cohn brought an | Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending 12’005 | July 25th ., DESTINY ENACTS LAST EPISODE IN CAREER OF BRYAN Re-united Family, Called From AL Paxts of Land, Gather at Bier Today PRESIDENT AND WIFE SEND FLORAL TRIBUTE Mrs. Bryan, Bearing Up Under Strain, Plans Details of Services—— Many Flle Past Casket for Final Look at Great Commoner—Bir. mingham Clergyman Says Prage at Grave, Washington, July 31 (—In the half light of a drab, sunless day, destiny wrought today the final eplsode in fho colorful earthly ca- reer of Willlam Jennings Bryan, The church held his body for yet a little time for the simple serviee of the faith in which he lived and dled. Then the government which Lie had served in war and in peace clalmed him for burial among the eat company that sleeps at Ar- lington, Reunited Memily Gathered around his bier at laet was a reunited family called from distant parts of the land. The widow, who has borne so bravely this sorrow heaped upon her own affliction, was joined early in the day by her only son, William Jen- nings Bryan, Jr., from Los Ang:les d another daughter, Mrs, Grace B. Hargreaves of Deverly Hills, Cal, Arriving here with the son and daughter to complete the family circle from which the commoner parted so suddenly last Sunday were Mr. Bryan's two sisters, Mrs. | T. 8 Allen and Mrs. J. W. Baird of | Lincoln, Neb; ¥. Milison of Lins |coin, Mr. Bryan's nephew, and Colonel P. H. O'Bannon of Sherry- ville, Vt., a cousin To Have lLast After the last of who moved with through the New Farewell thousande tread Avenue the solemn York s e illis, aged sisters, who: bodies ere turned over to Mr. Slade, 11 |highest court. Justice Howard Cur- | Presbyterian church for a last look o8 DR L were found last Thursday in their [have been awarded highest honors, | S 1 no error fn the lawer|upon the face of the crusader had '\'»I d.;,},t”:}, " ,‘ 1"" LT of ome at Hudson. Lefebvre, who 1s |43 (or 251 per cont) have n |conrt's decision. Jndge William F. | gone their way a littls span of time L gt {6 b expected |15 yvoars old, was employed as chore |above the average with more or less | Mangan was counsel for Schnelder. [was set aside so fhat (ha last of e en sl e e il noyibvithe aatery | distinction, 62 (or 87 per cent) have | In the suit of Willlam Prendergast | the members of the family to ar- e = bt 7;"‘ ol o o SIS | dol hod ave work, 33 ¢(nr 23 (ozainst Margaret Drew, an action | rive here could visit the church and (2bien a0 Bocabsedthe mangiaciue H | 1 he m ements, and 13 | by the father of the partics to the | Mrs. Bryan hersalf decided not fo [ A e [ {or & per cent) have been forced to| defendant on the ground that fraud | join the circle. She preferred to S e withdraw, f |and undue influence was exercised, | preserve the memory of her L L qointer) [ Woonsocket Man Arrested, With Many Study Fngineering the suprema court found the trans- | panion of many crowded years as ride. They hav Aot ko Wife, for Stealing $2,000 From Tt is slznifica too, to note the | fer ;\'rn-rmr and refused to set aside | he was in life and not in death. |10ads of the fir oot Wt | number interested in engineering | the deed Many View Remains ing out on long journevs to ail cor- | His 74 Year Old Mother {and similar courses of instruction. | James Prendergast. now deceased. | qy o o0 aisioneh of the hour nors of the United States and have ; W 3 Y Rensselaer Polytechnic TInstitute |fransferred real estate at 11421186 o %00 "o loging the portals,of the st hatea) that the | Woonsocket, R. I, July 31 P—|irads every other in attract. | Stanley street to his son. John, and [ 25 AT € ORI R dear ones, |little town had a place i the sun |A/Phonse LaFrenais and his wite, |ing New Britain 19 have | M8 daughter. Margaret, in 1920 just | o ©0 00 kaning in the procession and was furnishing a much needod | Maria, cach were held in $3,500 bail six years, bofore he went to a hospital for |t inoge who filed solemnly by to building preduct here this morning, charged with lar- \d the nam- (an eperation. He recovered from {1001 ypon him in death, From noon But «ithin the past woek all that [€¢ny of nearly $2,000, the savings y have drawn are as follows: (the operation and ded four vears until late last night the [nas cha Cranas of o of the former's 74 vear old mother | Woreester Polytec Tnstitute, 6, 1 Through Attorney Frank |4 hadlcome land. gone intaR et or [from the monthly vl Xagshchus I of T Cavelln. William made his allega- |\nnroken line, and from the moment er at favor 1% |4s the widow of Narcisse LaFrenais, | nology, 4, . flons in a sult brought in superior |the doors were opened this morning over the strike en {Civil war veteran lstitnte of court. Judge Hinman found 1o [the sad march went steadily on. 1800 or more men ont of worl | The complainant alleges that on |vard University ud or improper Influsnce and his | \any walted Jong in the soft rain fare loval to their un nd 1 i her s invitation she moved her |gineering, 2. m pheld by the supreme |outside for the privilege of a last {in a sense. fo their former empl furniture to his home and nt |lsast Donald Gaffney was [tribute. Meantime the mound of |Never a word against the mannf there to live when she became i1l | human endea | for Mrs. Drew. [floral offerings grew momentarily rers i heard ufter s during that time he withdrew | Prajse N. B. H. S. Graduates | ————— |until it almost buried the littls [that the manufacturer money from the bank In two| Officials at several of ¢ =5 TIQRS pn;(!F nF (Ag q-mw |chancel in a bower of fragrance, fair and square and t re willing {sums and placed Ht in a Worcester | queried by Mr., Siad e Uk TAD YLUYEL | Among them was a spray of roses ta do the san [institntion. He has refused to re- |mented on the Bue for atinenis n [ |from the President and ra Cool- he 1 or s have [iurn either the money or her fur- Jeclarin R;ATS WE UNGONSCIOL ge. Mrs. Ruth Owen, a daughter Inot { niture, she claims. lof the commoner, went to the church gi = head of other members of the fam- COUPLE ARRESTED | feeling | | They calmi 15 Year Old New Haven Girl and {no more work X Is hizen Man Caught In Vacant Houee- | % | Evervthing at tI She Tries Suieide |the emplovers' busin s n Haven, July 31 (P--TLaorett giten Ve ing ¢ g vho was in city court to- i fil 1) v on a chargs of frespass strike 1 werc il 0 drank a very small quantity 1\' t Jartaihs cptic fluid wi g a | plant vitness seat. She 1 just entered| . | From t ths of t room itk policewoman Mrs, | turers comes the stater Ve will Exeving ar ation off Edith t give in.* Irom the moutl Seranton was geen to open her | e workers comes th | han take out a vial. Ther “We will not give in £ - ntents an [F5st i o A i imed. Conrt proceedings W orses and mulos, fai ed while the girl was taken out |stand the welcor espit OM | and sent to a hospital in an ambu ‘nw\\\fi ors, rest in d in thed r stalls, The t Xtir | guished in the | v eon| \n | | roadways whi |many trucks ¢ ¥ workmen ra 1 in charged with their Sunday best and attend icer sald there taEs adlh oy ler | any charge 1o be 1 Rut the ma h g st Ellison, in a hospital ton the appea expected y draught of |happy days at 1) « Lot took Tuesday night. He ha Ined. They to T ® | plained that he was despone strike lightly. but they ai GNP e e R the strikers their w Offi ndp ot d. Mlison w | office help at t | ight by his la finished up their 1 } here recently from ning to sp Tt | ¥ According to one man 1 0- | = = % ts have not heen great | so consequently losses w v . = - Ty tt 1 - | 1 ;\' 8 Siclen : ‘ HIGH TIDE - P e "t 9 | Ersctnnyiks ierent e s ‘ | Angust 1 (Standard Time) tlon work 15 going on awas .| At New London, 6:04 a. m.; |is & n e led comy 10dity 6:30 p. m. At New Haven, jing of houses and mas | 1 %:22 & m.; 7:49 p. m. progress 1 1 is rumor at e — —_— * * and ma re t | that there is a strike | THE WEATHER | Non-union workers will suffer the © most men, of 1 ¥ Hartford, July 31.—-Forecast | thrown heir fa ] for New Britain and vicinity: ous problem. They familivs Showers tonight and Saturday —_— I | (Continued on Page 14) i fow of t They are | been well prepared for - work ATt Holyoke inffiriatéd at Los Tawlor Street Woman, Badly Furt, Taken to Hospital—Hushand Caught After Chase 1 Solkolski of Lawlor t was taken to the New Rritain hospital last night fn an us condition after she is to have been assaulted by her husband fn their home. Ac- rding to version of the affair 1 by police, the woman | 1 had ent Sokolski his wife over it eney tisappeared ind had i taken to the Sokolski brief but Mot ves place ot ATgeS anult. s of Favorite Pipe, Philadelphia Man Runs Wild Seventy-Year-Old Fighter Holds 40 Policemen At Bay [ For Two Hours — Throws Tear Bombs Back At Officers—Finally Dies After Ten Bullet Wounds. Marin censed at missing a \ his wife said, 3 e street w a olve ng wildly He retreated as pol rived. and btarricaded himself in & pool room in the basement of his house. With rain b s at all who ap- An effort to rout him with tear bombs ended when he threw one back, dispersing the police tem- porarily Two patrolmen we slightly wounded before several po- licemen, by exposing themselves, irew Marino's fire as other officers raised a cellar door and shot him a wn Nelghbors stated Marino had hitherto been & model citizen, known * @ half & @ozen weapons he kept up a [to be fond of hunting. floral funeral stor of the the pieces in ily to arrange eparation for {1 . Joseph T. Sizoo, ch, and long a friend of the man, was chosen to conduct the religious service, and at the re- of Mrs. Bryan, Dr. Georgs Stuart of Birmingham, Ala, was sked to say a benediction at the ave at Arlington bearing up bravely under tha tand sud Toavy afflictions vears, Mha auest | dout of her gr n grief and the » has known so many bur an fo stre h to ar- |range wit igions comforters ind the circle of close friends of her 1d husband the lagt details of the Iservices. It was by her wish that [the brief Preshyterian funeral serve es arranged by the Rev, Dr. Jos- eph R 20, pastor of the church, |were expanded to incly hle pas- |sages that the dead man had prized |above all others, Tt was she whae told of the hymns that had brought |1im comfort and peace in the long |ar companion. duons years of their lght amid the encir- | “Lead thou me on The night is dark and T am far from home “Lead thou me on Like President McKinley Mr. Bryan, also like President Me- Kinley, found his greatest peace in the solemnly uplifting falth of the old hymn and it was his desire that t should be sung when he had pass- 1 to his long sleep. Thus it was that the strains of hie hymn, led by deep volce of a great pipe organ & by a mixed choir from *he 10ft above, were selected to nsher tn the simple and impressive service tor the Another old hy band's heart can of service Mre, and dead. mn dear to her Rus- next in the order van had approved Sweelly Solemn Thought™ and the passage selected by Dr. Sizoo for the opening of the religious rites was “T am the resur- rection and the life." the foundation stone of Christian faith, Rible Pasages Among the Bible passages Indfeat- 4 by Mrs Rryan as her husband's sources of greatest comfort and (Olllll':l—‘l- Page 21) Tt was ne i