New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 16, 1925, Page 1

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—m News of the World By Associated Press ES] l ABl.L HED 1870 LINEMAN “RIDES” POLE AS [}1-< TOPPLES 30 FEET TO GROUND; ESCAPES WITH MINOR BRUISES Joseph Waldron Has Thrilling Experience When Aerial Perch Gives Way At Lake And High Streets Corner. Wires Pulled Down, Break- ing Off Telephone and Electric Light Service and Blocking All Traffic. Held to a 35-foot electric light pole by a sturdy lifebelt, Joseph Waldron, an employe of the Southtrn New England Telephone Co,, figured in a sensational fall to the pavement on Lake strect at noon today. Waldron was working on the wires close to the top of the pole when, without a warning creak or movement, it began to drop. The lincman pluckily “rode” the pole to the pavement, a drop of 30 feet in- volving a 47-foot spin through open space, and he fell with the rebound 10 the pavement. Fellow workmen 1an to him, believing he had suffered serious injury, but they were re licved to find he had only had a bad Jult and minor bruses. The pele was imbedded in con- crete, Close investigation disclosed a rotted condition at the ground level, just above the concrete. It is be- licved the strong wind of last night tended to weaken the pole and when Waldron began tugging at wires overhead the strain was too great. The crash brought a number of wires to the ground, several of which were broken off. raffic at Lake and High strects was cut off for half an hour while a crew of workmen raised the pole and sirapped it to a tree. and electric light serv- was temporarily cut off in th lity of the break, but was re- stored after a short 1. m of time. PEASE FOR DIRECTOR OF STATE MFRS. ASSN. New Britain Man to Be| Elected at Meeting Wednesday Telephos fow lirectors 1 meet- fcers and four new be elected at the ann the Manufacturcrs' Associ Connecticut to be held in| November 18. The | of which Royal Typ ig the chair- | of Haven ninating on committee, Charles B. Cook of th er C Hartford, i, will submit to the membership | e T “Raise Mustache, Men, It's All Women Have Left Us,” Says Bishop Fayettovllle, N, C., Nov., 16 (#)— Bishop Collins Denny advises every man to wear a mustache as the last distinctive badge of mas- cullnity that women have left him, “Wear one,” he told the three hundred delegates assembled here for the North Carolina || Methodist conference. That's all the women have left us, They cut their hair and wear men's clothes but they can't wear a mustache, It is your || padge of masculinity.” “The || bishop wears one himsolf, I SUPREME COURT of German Payments (UESTION IMPORTANT ONE, | Case is Considered a Test Case and | | Probably Will Decide Large Num- ber of Claims Awaiting Adjust- ment, Washington, Nov. 16 (#)—p n-% war indebtedness in German | due an American from a German whose property was seized by the allen custodian must be paid at the rate of exchange which the marks property { prevailed when debt was due, the supreme court ruled today. The court also ruled that the American creditors were entitled to interest during the period of the war and in this connection it overruled the lower courts, Cross appeals by the y custodian and others Ladeenburg, Thalman & Co., Yorlk, figured in the case, e question is regarded 3 on which a large number of depended. and by of New a. test claims tion whether the Ame ) imants would collect their bills in | llars on the hasis of 17% cents per German mark, the exchange value when war was declared, or would receive practically nothing, should the 1ue close of the war be use( BRISTOL MAN HIT AND LEFT T0 DIE IN ROAD au following names, and nomina- s will also be accepted from the v presiden Vice-pr wsurer, | Kent Hubbard, | sident, John H. Goss. | Robert G Buell. | Windham county, agent, American Willimantic. at large, sresident, stamford. F. B or For livegtor of Curtis, or ¢ H. 4 Co. or direetor eph Yalo v & Mig. For director at large, “th, president and vrn Machinery Co., New For dircetor at large, , president and tre 1ain Machine Co., Ne officers of one four ye lire expire ne Co., Fa Haven. H. H surer, New Britain, | dircetors for a rs, ns auto- B. the the A. of ctors whose te this year are I of of Voard Works, New £ the ouse, ally vice-y mah chairman of ors of the Stanl §)] W M man Nt Hu‘:r"\! Diristol. 1l "0, INSTANILY KILLED \codbury Man Run Down by Ma- chine Driven by Emil Gouery of ‘This Morning. » Woodbury. ha was struck iven by Emil t. Meriden, | from behind a patch the 10:15 this morning. occurred th on Meviden Farly Nov. 16 Everett n- rbury, 18 ehinio) of ihout Waterbury- rm the bond pending tn- Pig Crowd Anxious to Become Naturalized | New Haven, 1l court men ¢ for Nov. 16 (P—The building overflowed v when some naturalization papers their witnesses gathered to ap- r before Judge E. S. Thomas. In morning 65 persons were admit- o citizenship, and it is thought 1 will be broken tomorro: 0 car a w » 1 ted season’s rec v court = The examin M and it proceedings had expedited by a cha which requires less talking but more paper work. Spellmar v treasurer, {John Daly in Serious Con- dition in Baltimore Hospital (8pe The He Baltimore; Md., Nov. John , 26 years old, of Dristol, Conn., arted near death at the Unis jital from injuries suf- ? ast night when struck by an \utomobile on the Washington bou- vard near Laurel, Md. Laurel is halt way between Baltimore and Washington. : While hospital physic! ing to save Daly te police with police 1 Washington are secking clue identity of the autoist < Daly and left him unconscious after speeding awz was Vineent Sokitis, vears old, also of Bristol. His however, are considered Sokitis told police of he and his companion were re- urning their homes in Bristol Florida, where they had gone work several week 0. funds, they 1% rides with pass- lie said to be ald.) 6. Laly e try- Maryland s to st on the Also injure road to from to look for Being without were walking or ci Htorists, is said Daly suffering from ures of the skull He and Sokitts were Baltimore hospital in G. Hoffman and both of their as well a broken leg. |brought to the auto of George B. Haddaway, ton, who stopped SoKitis pleaded Daly to the hosp ANOTHER VET GONE Major Lamb of Chicago Was One of m > to when w take 23 Surviving Members of Famous Princess Pat Regiment. Nov 54 a ma in the Great surviving 16 (B or in the Cana War, and on members of the Pat regiment, died result of war 1 the arles H n Chicago, H N and the Ki d exceptional wounded. He Vancouy from 11 818 Vic awarde poisor oria Cross poss Cross bravery i for enlist B. rman ft after private o escap Tsi been impriso: der t colony | had | ve | at am, Gern A1 overnor of Mindoro and tendent of the penal colony at I wan, in the Philippine Islands. supe la- RULES ON DEBTS Exchange Rate When Due Bass| | times bewailing her povert | plaining specially about her inability alfen prop-| Broadly, the decislon involves the | of the mark at the | Baltimore | who Washing- | NEW BRI’T‘AIN CONNECTICUT, uuo)) ‘pav | “Waq | B RTS URGED T0 WARRY 'Later Letters From Girl Hinted at a Rival Extracta from Love Jetters of No- vember, 1022, Show That Jones | Till Youth Was “Own Boss.” | White Plains, N, Y., Nov, 16 (#)- | The fe | Alice Beatrice Jones, daughter of a | | negro taxi driver, first sent to her | iy ort to Mrs, Jane Hughes, wife | Hughes, died about a fortnight ago. |t Girl Promised to Keep It Quiet |Her death was felt keenly her and six sons but more by Raymond, broken. or of the love letters which | P¢en erying of rything has been done parta ving Sobbing or to WED HER OR LOSE WER [ i ‘\I‘\ple street was taken into the Hart- v his life, whose and has been any food. husband, Leonard Kip Rhinelander, |f2mily to heal his grief, \d\ulm: their courtship, gradually |* {changed to an insistent threat that | | he would lose her unless he married | | her, Today's serles of letters, In!ro-‘ duced at resumption of the trial n{‘ young Rhinelander's annulment suit, lare filled with demands of marria land at the same time promise the | {greatest secrecy until the wealthy | young scion of an aristocratic fam- ily should have attained his m: Jority, Promised Silence On Nov, 4, 1922, Alice write you can't come home I will ha o away with someone ¢lse.” at this time that tending school. Two months later Alice was even more outspoken. "You are going to be mine, now or | never,” ghe wrote. “I have thrown down two chances for you. I would keep things a dead, dead secret. After you are mine I would keep quict until you are your own bhoss.” Moncy affairs also made their ap- > In letters today, Alice at | Com- | 1t | ve to | 1t was | Leonard was at- to take a trip to Europe, she saic ‘I often wish I was a rich girl.” Tn another lefter she asked Leonard to buy a ruby ring for her Emily. sister Fervent Love Missive Once the fervor of her first let- | ters eropped out in a ma ture contained in one The picture showed a couple em- bracing and nnderneath was w: “Len, stay with me forever, Alice.” In the body of the letter she “Tf you could only hold me like the picture.” of her letters. agaln The importance of Leonard's be- coming of age crops out in another letter in March, 1924, when she wrote: “When you become your own mas- your Alice? to take her? When are you going | BOSHKA UNDER BOND FOR MANSLAUGHTER |of these ain, He MONDAY, eurs, of by 1 ur leath over the demise Ray- of 1 ford hospital this afternoon in an ef- John | physician, the acut heart For two weeks the boy has | It is said that he is completely worn | ihle \o‘ml hy the orden is in NOVEMBER 16, 1WAS |GRIEF KILLING SON, CRYING OVER DEATH OF HIS MOTHER {Raymond Hughes, 22, of 24 Maple Street, Cannot Stop Take Any Food | uish. | since death stalked into the famil | by the r‘ U but all inot become reconciled | company trolley barns, Average Daily Circulation For Week lan(lmg Nov. 925, —SIXTEEN PAGES to the death of his mother. Day and night, he cries and sobs and his body has become racked with an- He has lost his appetite for food completely and has not eaten On recommendation of the family | Dr. Nathan Jaffe, he w aken to the Hartford hospital today, | There physicians will study his case | and make an effort to restore him to normal, mentally and physically. FATALLY INJURED | TROOPS CALLEDIN He is printer formerly in the | The father is the Connecticut by trade and nited States navy. t watchman at was n 2,000 Armed Men plodes in Elm ity INVESTIGATE ERE[}TlflN BOSTON COP SHOOTS OF UNSAFE BLEACHERS | HOLDUP MAN IN DUEL |Building Commission to Give Contractor Hear- ing Thursday harges law in the the Higl without ve Willlam ¥ the ring w the k. The hi ble been of ) school first obtaining : ill be iilding” commi cachers were cher: S t a a ssion violating the building ercetion of bie game s for | irday permit | preferred against Allen Construction Co., | building department, the nd a given that company this pronounced unsafe by Building Inspector Arthur N. be commu Principal High school. rning, w8 permi | ders of C! the scals zine pic- | game when it rtain, Chief 1 Y saic injcated that James C. In spite oceupanc tted, it is hief of Polic were vacated of lege nspector E 1 today no fact Moody AV ward permit to the st crford Saturday morning and Vies of the cond ands d, On or- Hart during the J. seared collapse was Hen- sought or issued for the construction And faily arges Unl changes it Mr, was n tion of th All ar been sent work beir 4. H nw stands, son w mit, | {Dri ning Down Berlin Man and Wife with manslaughter in conncction with the Bernhardt Ernest of Berlin, ank n strect 1500 bonds for 1 his arraignment in morning. Bos) of the machine Ernest on Main {night, causing a skull from which 1 norning at the New Farmin oshka, 23, of eld under next Mon police on court ika was the driv- that ran down street Saturday fracture of the 2 died yesterday Brit h pital. | Judge Wiltiam T {ed for Bosh Mangan appear- nd entered a plea of !not guilty to the charge. Prosecutor Toscph G. Woods then told Ju Benjumin W, Alling that all the v nesses of the fatal accident have not 15 yet been questioned by the police, ind he desired the continuance to permit the completion of the inves- [tigation, Ernest and his wife Main Britain ck Saturday night when Boshka came along ed of about 20 miles an hour and ruck the couple. He said that he 1 see them until he struck 1 not m them. Ernest was thrown to the a fractured pavement and X iped serlous only from ken to the to the b Mart crossing stre ile his wif severe hos: suffering st was ti pital and his wife lier brother-in-law, X 92 Sefton Drive nt Patrick J. O'Mg tigated tho accident, and Toshka on a charge of reck ing, but yesterday morning #ter ‘s death, the charge was chang- to mansla rgeant O'Mara will complcte tion during the week rnest was born in Norway on March 12, 1§72 and came to this country in 1861, He settled in New Haven. remaining there until about 10 years ago when he moved to Ber- lin where he entered the employ of the Goss & ‘Delecuw Ma Co., In He attended the Swed- chy me Ernest, a inves rres ghter. his investiga- Kensington ish Bethany Besides his by a daughter. brothers. wife, he is Helen, aged 1 Martin, of this city, nd Paul, Mrs. Karen The funeral held tomorrow afternoon | from the sh Bethany with burial in F three Hans Norway: Olgon of | will be 2 o'clock chu of Haven 1 ind one sis Forestville irview cemeter $3 EXTRA DIVIDEND Del. Nov. 18 (P f dollare a share 1y stock of Nemours and com- dividend ¢ s declared tod E. I. Du Pont De { pany. on the Vice Pri death of Hekon | Struction Co, done, () litio W is Iy the improved, Tempor put up in some of t ra at the ound nlike un, tonch with morning vas foun . first rs 10 l¢ Inspectc K]w‘ the ade were dis: not to be In gc himself ne ers and urvived | stands t concerned as eight of hy 1ve, principa to take one st the the building s meeting date, en sald stands exce his em by request t g done at t had no contra he explained, he should s neipal Moody h hers carlier in B. Wainwri declined, how sume T the park H and the ons at i Mem that t ny i catin i was 1 ary bleacliers . effort 10 1 owd Saturd hie and \ the o 1o ¢ s¢ o offn ontract met with period 5 when seve Nobody v Rut md cond fie vered tha safe. Prev had Such a permit, ald, Is required by the building laws | a viol which requires him to pr builder, is commission | | William H. [ Allen will be asked to appear before ter, what are you going to do with | that body Thursday evening. this afternon in the ting ploy assist nt | inso- had in rying he construc- VICTIN SKILLED MOULDER FUGITIVE MAKES ESCAPE Thomas Mcehan Believed to Be | yfachine Guns Ready For Use in Dying—Bottom Falls Out of Case Pellows is Sighted and Gives Grucible—Friend Rushes Ijured | pagle — Fxchanged Shots With Man to Hospital, Posse Yesterday. Himself Slightly Wounded But He Guards Prisoner | in Hospital | chances of recovery result of | an explosion tods mes (;r.p‘m AR Fellows, {ham & Co.'s brass foundry, where | Wi employedjes LTounE P ey who shot Constable George Dow fn Ashland a week ago, The 16 (A—Thomas treet is St. street s in St | ), gugang with SHED! | ornor Winant, in the woods on Me New Haven, Nov. Meehan of $4 Chapel Raphael's hospitul Meredith, N. H, Nov. 16 (A—A armed men, led by Gov- pounded the brushes »dith Hill today rch for Frank Tennessee jail | g 8¢ Boston, Nov. 16 (A—Three bandits were captured last night after a gun ker | prised them in ct to build | nd sa eck a W no D a requ iver Blamed for Run- ¢t the park department toy in week the ht he Allen work FIRST GIFT IS $6.000 New itial cc H phony or Lyon Phe dent Nov nof § ra. ¥ e ps was again ele Al as he sibility department on Con- was | Tonn a- he | bre |eral other workmen were knocked | rchers, grim in their determi | tion to capture the outlaw, retraced | down and bruised by the concussion, hut he was the only one scriously A Eteon A B enRrAd 3 Meelian was looking atlal erucible| teIT elepsiand prepized Sto-com contalning 150 pounds of white hot | th¢ Woods again, ass from the furnaces when the | ottom dropped out of the crucible, | letting the m into the | in the rch for As the moulten brass flowed in- [ while scores of men pushed th | the ing fight with a policeman who sur-| an attempt to rob a | in the Allston district. the men fell eritically wounded with bullets from Police- in Edward J. Daly's gun through |/ is chest, Daly, himself, was slightly cd by a bullet from the gun of Gagillo, the man | drug store One of of National | e guns aid- and Two detachments rdsmen with m I"ellows | fire. whom he |40 4ne pit under the furnaces a ter- |rific explosion ensucd. was the second drug store ho Ter s Txplosion | scor up of the night and police belicve A & | about e s S latio et All the other men in the room | that with the capture of ( the three S ot o T | were thrown from their feet. Some | they may solve a serie | robberies in recent of similar | " lof them were thrown a considerable weeks, The three men Harry C. Cummings e | it Windows and lylights | ot 10530 | vere shattered. Tho explosion raised | ok sk bt n nng | @ cloud of dust which prevented the | forced Cummings toward the rear | men soelng Sust whint Had harpened ) | of the store. As they entered the | store Daly who was on duty nearby When this subsided they saw | Mechan Iving on the floor covered with moulten metal. His clothes ime suspicious and ran to & Tear | \ere burned, the upper part of his EERAT ) body was severely burned and his Cummings, who heard him enter, | frea was badly eut. led @ warning and Daly entered | Tialted o MHospiia? His fire was returned by sillo whose compunions fled ashe | AD ambulance 8 | dropped with two bullets from the | Before it arrived. officer's gun in his chest. They raced | Workman took 2 o a car outside anl fled, followed | by shots fired by Daly who at- pital in his car. Te pected to live, las has a wife | tempted to pursue them despite a | return fusillade, [several ehildren. | Foundry officia | Two from the Iy\,.','l‘,‘f'lv‘\lf;f ”“m. speeding car caught the SoRE Patrolman Orrin Taylor, who com- |y © BOR mandeercd a passing machine and | oy oo forced the men to the curb where ot q o 0 were captured without r e They gave thelr names as ||, nanhle t J. Callahan of Cambridge and | ynder the furnaces L B [ignited by the hot Earlier in the night a drug store | Aaohan was in the Rox diEteictEasiraibed]| mat gun point by two youths who ! ciais said render and when the fugitive st forced the proprietor and a cus- | tomer into a rear room and took TRAWLER lN TR”UB[E that one of Daly's bullets caito, sungFellolisained.Arhe reed his left lung and another | el Hh ad lodged in his shoulder. His name placed on the danger list. Daly, wound was superficial, mount- ed guard at his prisoner's bedsi MISSING MISSES FOUND Isabella Bennett and Sarah nd cntting wind, rolled the muddy the countryside and guarded 8 exit the woods fugitive ex nged shots with a member of the man hunting | party yesterday. Dogs Are Used Two Doberman Pincher dogs, one from Taunton and one from Leo- minster, Mass, tried to ald in the carch but the he rain threw | them ofi the scent. The hope of the rested upon the ability of the | men to ferret out hiding place in the rain to of pogse rain- ever irenched possible y0ds. A sprink and ma n the n have | ers have determined to enter building in the 200 acres of surrounding Meredith Hill believed, however, patch about six of deserted ple sugar c orest and wh . a fe u to th man s not ex- mps ¢ he e wery land scene the el ws tention of wa of acres duri abandoned They now consider it s had nceumulated 10 that this we 18 & skilled | (o ind who was « man, offi- | (o reh, Pellotte had park lo at the side of a tree hen he returned s man trying to start the car. Pel- ofte called npon the man to eu sur- Have Gun Ducl 1t was in this patch that Fellows, closely resembling him, erday by Frank Pel- {al policeran of ed in the d his au- fringed w a 50 the wmee, man John o known a ecarcful tomol road to St it 'was Gagillo was rushed ¥ beth's hospl where hots ) o heard of d ar warning was given in automobiles load- ns rushed to the to the e village arm was soun 1 Disabled Vessel Reported Drifting Toward Nan- tucket Shoals 16 (A ul was received by the Wireless Te from the trawler cores of he woods. roughout cided to ask for Winant ranklin | the Cohen Tel . Ain § O 8. and it Nati mmediately from New York, Nov, 1. Governor 1 a and of New York Are Safe in Norfolk, Indey ti G cor respond Laconia lered out. ts ¥ Va.—Simply Took a Trip, » or i disabled ard shoal t Norfolk la Bennett usin of the and Sarab missing York city found here Aid Socic Tired Va., Nov. late Cohe from 16 (A wrs old, Presiden n, 17, their ¥Fri 1 g Tage 13.) COTTAGE IS DESTROYED Hard near the who T en homes in sinee ere TS by Another Damaged by Fire of In- pentant cendiary Origin at Silver Beach g word » heen notif ¥s e L Farly Today. The werr apartment he by Mrs tokes, ' ers 1 worker, 1 i e T Mrs runaw Har- society ey told tokes th 1 York Frid ternoon n t A @ etwe and start vin there rlvs W t money he u;,w““_‘. hi was own em exte 1 by lamage. owne slight Contractor Bound Over Tickets to Yale-Harvar CREL 0 A v ()n \Luhl.\lmhtcl Charge (Games Being Grabbed Up i Haven, Nov., 18 (# Harvard-Yale n t Saturday expee e at Cam- 1 to reas early the er to t erior court manslaughter in city He 1 © case grows out Aug. 1 of Jol hs old g by 1 o sup L wh . ooy A t 10rning. furnishe local r y o $1.000. T The Devitt a dem overruled. Fernand nd over g a D. 4 be s reser £ Yalr won of to the superior court assault with Mott. The case grew cas in Mott's room on F New York Organization’s Grill Room | 000 o inte to rob Jc Friday |jail in d of and Bar Will Be Scaled For the | : Next Six Months, T of $3,0 ) bonds. MAKES SPEED RECORD. ndon, Nov. 16 (P—Miss Eleanor today won Enrope THE WEATHER Tub of 1TorK, tod g ¥ b | Hartford. Nov. 16.—Forecast for New Britain and vicinity Partly cloudy and colder to- night: Tuesday fair and colder 1 ar will be| Spain, Italy and pated. room and bar of the !‘ locked n"l sealed. IN FOUNDRY BLAST, HUNT FOR GUNHAN 1150 Pounds of Molten Brass Ex-E New Hampshire Governor Heats, n gone through the | to | timber growth is heavi- | g tear through the foliage | England particl- PRICE THREE CENTS TOWER OF FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH THOUGHT AFFECTED BY EARTHOUAKE; FIREMEN REMOVED 300 LB. ORNAMENT 75-Foot Aenal Ladder Used After Building Inspectors Call on Fire Department For Assistance. » Fragments of | Stone Fall to Sidewalk— | Tremor Felt Early This in Hartford | and Other Towns. everal | i | | | Morning T it Is believed, to the earth shock this morning about 1 a 300 pound limestone or- |nament on the southeast tower of the First Lutheran church on Frank- |lin square, became loose 'med and pleces of stone, weighing several bounds each crashed to the sidewalk, The loosened ornament, approxi- mately 70 feet above the street, was %0 dan the building de- artment this morning with the aid of the fire department, had the atone removed, Other damage is suspected. 1e loosened piece was first dis- about 7:30 o'clock this en Miss Mary Bingham in square telephoned the department that something en from the top of the build- o'cloc Deputy Building Tnspector A. N. {Rutherford was notified and he and |Inspector Hennessy went to the church, where it was found that the jernament on one corner was loose. Chief William J. Noble of the fire department was called upon for help. |Chief Noble sent ladder truck No, 2 to the scene, hut the ladder being 100 short, No. 2 recalled and Aerlal Co. No. 1, with a 75 foot |ladder was sent in charge of Captaln | Victor Davis w. Mr. T er and derad it men removed the tower and by land puiteys, the heav swung free from its in & climbed ful ornament tely the the lad- inspection an al work in of ropes ament was and taken o lattice mea v or per the window. Tnsy used the ctors Silent loosening of 10t been decided. uist, pastor of d been in- 1other earth- it during the thought that There are ru- > in the remain- but the decline at this the churel formed th |quake shock heavy storm was the cause mor: ing s on of the tower, building inspectors |time to make any statement beyond the fact that a complete report will \be made to the building commis- sion. there last ni and he of it ight by | ‘1 am glad it happened today in- 1 of yesterday,” sald Dr. Ahl- quist, who remarked upon what a terrible calamity it would have been {had the piece become loosened and fallen while hundreds were leaving the church at noon Sunday. A crowd which gathered in front the building was given quite a thrill when Captain Davis ealmly Iked over the top of the ladder, pped onto the cornice 70 feet in and with a small crow bar, e over the win- side pulled of dow ledge as a firen it in, | Other Damage Possible { t there may be of a tower, with more serfous damage at that point, | is suspected. The building inspectors | neither aftirmed denied the ru- mor, simply stating that they pre not further t until making a report to » commission, T declined to what action be recom- 1, but expressed their app of the prompt and hearty co- cperation they had ived from hief Willlam J. Noble of the fire teparty The 1 ornamer £t nperstry the a buige in the wall a possibili nor 1 tateme to make any oy say would clation Joose was part build- ¥ will The $1, probal main 1 pairs may this mc 1 by to rning s¢ the lin uake the Iy was re- sponsible, Disturbance Recorded was put in | is proven intum ar- acts the same a8 & When Superintendent nam looked at the chart (Continued on Page 14)

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