New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 19, 1926, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

News of the Wolld By Associa(ed Pre ESTABLISHED 1870 POLICE QUICKLY CATCH PAIR WELD INAUGURAL IN STOLEN AUTOMOBILE WITH TUESDAYATNOON | GUN, BLACKJACK, KNUCKLES Round Up Two Men ‘Within Half An Hour After Receiving Re- port Car Has Been Stolen. Katowski and Isaac Abraham Confess They Stole Elmer Feine- man’s Machine on Pearl Streef. Vincent Halt ¢ muel 1 police heady nllp owned by 7 Basselt stree Pearl strect, lour ifprth was notified at | arters Yhat an antomo- Plmer Felneman of had been stolen at 9:20 o'elock n rom thig forenoon, Vincent Katowski of “fremont. street, aged about 21, and [saac Abraham of North street, bout the same age, under ar- rest, the former on charges of carry- conecled webpon: omobile and driving without a, se, and the latter charged with omohile, George Moffitt, driving aatomobile, drove into Warmington avenus from Osgood avenue shortly after having received alarm from headquarters, the dlolett ¢ driven by Kato Dilgs= in the direction of Fermington oifficer overtook the car and no- of the young men throw into the road. Mtar vas found n he spot, ind the prigone xm\d to have dmitted ownérship. n th fear ortr S were Office police T a a found r , @ black jack De- ques- ad- ers new re metal knuckles. tective ant W, 1. MeCu tionad the men and ‘they res n 8 stolen the other offense r the gergeant soid. Bo! have police*records. T dgned in pelice court worning. THORAS ¥. FAGAN BlES ° AFTER LONG RESIDENCE Herved St. Marys 30 Years Trusiee it g men ey will b tomgrre lor as avenus thotas W, ars old, 131 Black died pday afternoon from compl ampMtation of Brituin #Miener T He w Mary's shurch for an eploye of 1 Clark company of years. Death two days frof the au- the death @f ago. 2 resider tl years during wh active member 3 ing & pew rent collector for o number of years und of the leadin nbers of St Mary's Holy Nau Even fu ix ndvaneed yesrs he was promi- t in the churcl’s activitics ornin Farm July 12 1852, Le received his early educs tion in 1blie schools of t town and lie ag 19 yes up his residence entered th Yrary & Clark for 30 years entered the insur- n occupation that o Rock 1 n- for h time city of velety, take He¢ cgme to Works. nd Mrs. “hristopher 1 His death sterday as his family bout his bedside. Fraternally connected ith the Bisgop Tierney assembly, “ourtii De, Knights of Colum- Holy Name society and itual Benefit ty of Works, Survi him daughiter, Mrs. Mary Henry Fagan; Lonzid, Virgil and Ray- Maguire, and a granddaug Miss Mary Maguire, ‘a teacher ton school. es will be dam morning at 9§ Mary's chinrch with a solemn requiem. Interment §y's cemetery. o¢ its being a feast tholic church tion ca iments of the of agaw, am 4:30 o'clock grouped was bus; the e M Stanley ng a arandsol mond T, al held o'clock priesis will ¥ that color. ( halles L l)'u'blo Drops I)cad at Danielson Today | 19 (A—Charles onar Ison, Dart rhic, spes April house of re dead shortly ug mills today. s, d mml ter entering” the Qu up ¥ was T tasks d and for of o tak his da He years rears 1 been charge inters of the plan He nd bad always lived ) Darbie 1 the was born Dan Mr urvived by his son after Lleutenant theft of an | volver | No ! + fostoncd on them | ('hurcl\ ; {ing committed and the or | only | Parade of sever: nmnx'xng 1 | 8he carried, “ her of Elpert L. | | the 25 representative . NEW BRITAIN HERALD ‘fig ":g a:" n“‘_l LI ) 'SEVEN CARS DAMAGED INELM STREET FIRE $1,500 Blaze in Automotive ' Sales and Service Garage Seven.automoblles, were new, were dama by fire in | the Automotive Sules & vice com. | ford avenue gbout 11 forenoon. Chief W, fire department ws termine the cause of the fi was sajd at the garage that a gaso- line tank in one of the cars explod ed. The fire department responded 10 lan alarm from Box 43 at | ‘elock and found smoke pouri from the building. It was necessary to fight the fire from the Hartford avenue end of the building and the tiremen were for to stund ‘ton- rable smoke. The ¢ with tops I and upholstery blazing, wewe rolled into the street. None totally destroyed, but some lost prac- ticAlly all the upholstery and tops. Chief Noble estimated the dam g water dar A numbe hed and o'clock this J. Noble of the unable to de- lhf buildin wewe untou slightly (irass i el at o'clock b; others water, vere Q:Mingm.«h il 508 Common- wealth avenue h\ Co. No, 3 at 11:47 o'clock and Farmington avenue by Co. No. 3. At 10:35 o'clock Co. No. 2 was called to a fire in tl illis street d\lmn HELD UP, BEATEN AND ROBBED OF HIS ROLL \vero Charles J. Smith of Stanley Stréet Tells Police of North End | Attack, o the as Cha strect from out o man giving his name J. Emith of 750 Stanley ted Officers Dombroski omquist about 3 3 norning and told them he wylaid by two men 3 him down draggdl i yard at Broad and High s oiled” himi, arvoski of 105 Broad t and Wulter Plocharczyk of 5 High street told the police they along as the ac- and whe Chia me alleged hig $mith said hi taken 1 for the and waymen ran a ts would have nd raoney but of Karvoski wa vateh i pear charezy of which two | i pany garage on Elm street and Hart- | but it | of them wern | A NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1926. —~SIXTEEN PAGES IN COUNCIL HALL b s {Winner at Polls to Take Oath of Office at Ceremony With Father Only Invited Guest 'NO BROAD HOUSECLEANING ' ON COMMISSIONS, HE SAYS (Changes Will Affect Salaried Posi- [* tions, Mayor-Elect Declare Mayor Paonessa To Extend Best Wishes As He Turns Over Ofiice o Successor, Ome Or City's Youngest Executives, incr C. Weld, who, in Apri, tended his last session as a ward representative in the council and retired from that hody, returns to the council chamber tomorrow noon after dn, whsence of five years, to be sworn in | 1 the presiding officer of that body and the cify’s mayor | Contrary to pre-inauguration ru- {mors, Muyor-clect Weld stated posi- tively today there will be no general house-cleaning of city commissioners and officials who; pointment s vested in the mayor v direetiy | or through commissions. Al zh it is certain there w ¢ principally aried appointive p democrats were piaced of the democratic nd also in the chairmanships now old by democrats, there will prob- 1bly be none for the w [two, tile incoming mayor |toda | Ceremony In Council Chamber [ The ret le af- tor four years of democratic control ill be marked with ceremony Gathered in the common council chamber tomorrow noon will be a | nnBbr of friends of the new mayor, e s of the won council, ey who have *d in the gov- crnment in past vears, 'present and past commissioners, Mayor-cleet Weld has issued no for mal invitations for the. occasior with the exception of one o hi v Willian Wald, Tie is 74 years of age and hs to cast his 5 election of his own fam Weld has never ticket ofher than the republic he was overjoyed in the fact that his son was the candldate who suc- ied in restoring the republican | contest with whose grip on ¢d to be the a demo- ! third common | will uTecting sal ns in which | the ontse administration, first k or icated | ™ of vepublican ol ser body and leasure v party to power i1 Mayor A. M. Paone: the voter was adm frongest ever exercise er 1 hy ed On Page (Contir 12) ’ Pages Of Hlstory Tasned Back | 151 Y ears In OId Boston T oday . - Lantern Flashes From Old; North Church While Paul Revere and William Dawes Again Avouse Minute Men and Gun Booms at Lexington and Concord. 19 (P History herg today. Toston, April back 151 Onee more two Warning beacons flashed their message from the tower of the North church— the British coming by sea, Once Revere d Daw their and ) spread nlarm Middlesex villag turned ye old were more a mounted 1 off to “through every and No harbor v . 8§ Clifford, and “William Dawes Jr.' lis companion rider, Sergeant George A. Deyarmond, and their ride was just part of Massachu. sctts annual celebration of Patriots lay. Out cre the olutionary yund the wor discharge of a s : bomb as cMizens gathered to pay tribute e Men who fell on Ft- horses the arm.” British tod: 1he Re nmenaced however, “Paul ant Geoffrey shins and Lexington sturdy countrymen of times fust clashed “the shot heard ined to tn Concord the to the Mir iie Green.” In Boston exercises included a nd march- and deco graves of Revere, in * the Granary buryinf | ground, and of Dawes in the King's | Chapel burying ground Last night lanters were hung ln the North church belfry by a | great-great-granddaughter of Paul Revere, Pauline Revere Auerhamer. the two beacons down e of the historic edlifice and climbed the bfeak-neck stairs to the steeple, where wit 1 of ti sexton they wer the mast William Lanier Washington, descendant of two brothers of George Washington, and her ry o general in the Society of the Cincinnati, took mn in exercises that preceded the cere " run end of lineal th a daughter, Miss Helen Darbie. ‘morv Ride to GARY MAY ETH%E U, S Steel Clmirman Likely to Quit, Stockholdess Think—No Stock Dividend at This Time, bert of thic New York, April 15 (P Gary i chairman "United States Steel Co the by oragon was foreshadowed, in opinion of wny stockholders, his remarks in Hoboken, he e g v said, “vet we | ural conrse of | 1 be time fap somc l e’ But what- | e tion | 1as- | ncement to wlders of and this without de- put fare.”” Gary notified stockholders ®ock dividend could he clared at this timgbut ind sgch a payment was pos future. | “I may say may Vhe just oting ough inte 1 vig- arous today, know that in t events it will of us to suy ever happ carefully built aind establishod stection rests and ine of the stock the corporation tirement to the that no de~ come ( and proper towards all in and safe to requireme he Steel*Corporation, to issu tional common ‘stock as a stock divi- | dend to common reWolders net a part of new improver zed to capita this amount cash addi- ents | | expen- | were done #es. Of course, would add 1o t cash dividends on the common stock, if and when declared, and might pos- sibly in times inter: rupt their continuity. | “1f' shofild not be done without painstakipg and ‘conscientious con- | erdftic It cannot be donc with ¥ at the present time™ of depression, ¥ he tStamford Man Fined $100 For Lottery Ticket Sales Stamford, Lprit 19 ( ty, Wililam Wwn Vatearo, all day when arraigne on charges of on the United a They were T d a Samuel Young gave that purchasers of might be prosecuted. head and Stamford, to- court ickets bal- weel a the | > eac and in selling lottery s treasury L] will not [powder ha chury —Thomas ¢ Wants To Be Head Of National D. A. R. PR[]HIBITIUN LAW STRONGLY BACKED ‘Retirino Head of D. A. R, Ar- ges Afiamsl Rmeal 3th SESSION ON TODAY | Mrs. Authony Wayne Cook Not to seel Reeleetion and Mrs. Charles White Nash and Mrs, Alfred Brosseau Are Cagdidates, Washington, April 19, (#)-—A plea for prohibition chservanes by Mrs. Wa tiring pre opening session today continental congress of the €rs of the Americgn Revolution, Mrs. Cook has announced that she seck reelection, and a vig- orous contest for selection of a su cessor ‘i already under way, with A Charleg White Nasl, the New York state regenf, and ‘fre. A'tad Brossean nwie onn, mong 1 candidates and hers enpected to enter N race, will be addressell to. President &oolidg was made Anthony avowed congress by Malkes Re addition to her appeal Mrs. Cookiin her urged dally reading of arian in public s vigilance ponents of radical & 1 their atiempts to make our and text books histor the Idren of the propaganda in stilentiak nmendations for pro- annual 1 1 tha hout hools, W comment, lest p docirines schools read by country support theories," ness for mational Are Amer Thers tive conduet in issue, school vehieles for PO defe At Cross Roads In she said, “we are to law en- can he no nega- relation to this great We law ment. nno! ’nu ment. or positive, elther for, or we a observance, and Lot it be unders pick and choose from among the laws those will ohey and those will nullity in personal conduct. “Dased upon a nation-v sur- uctod @uring m three- term of service now coming to gainst Taw vod {ha Wi (Conlin-. "’T‘dw\l") " HISTORICAL PAGEINT ELD INNEW HAVEN, 1151st Anniversary parture of Gov.s Fool Guard for Cambridge New Haven il 1st anni of the second oot Guard, under the d ot Benedict Arnold, for Cambridge in April, 1775, Eelebrated jay exer- 19 (@ — the Th ieparture Governor's rsary o company, comma the ric cere- ling t keys to the rom the first select- man. Governor John H. bull, his staff and delegations from other ancient military companios aygnd first of which = hotel Garde, a reception that followed John L. Gfison, former commander the company and Major Bdwa Judge, present commander, pr in introducing the guests e governor. After the was formed mony of T the events the Yuncheo ing Dur it Major parade reception ling to where procee e greer ding service, the prologue r powdcer house cér !\ the chaplain, Caps A Major sermon er h on tI mony, T} inual Captain M memorial exercise memoration of th® memb, command who have ing the r were hel Shortly after the ruffling of was s o ed, drums sou by urch he church ed ste the the trumpeter concly ct (Continued on Page 10) Daugh- | of De-| AMERIGA REFUSES TOTAEPATIN COURT SESSONS \Sends Formal Announcendent She Will Not Participate in beting at Geneva e ST “Dead” Woman Revives: Undertaker Then Rushes With Her to a Hospital racuse, April 19 (®—DMrs. Mary Taylor, $8, a neg “died” early this morning at home in this city, coroner's take DEPUTY CITY CLERK T0 BE NAMED AGAIN s, her but when the ived to morgue, life | DECLINES 10 MIX IN RN WAY WITH LERGUE | ;i s oot i st | | !| The attendants took her to the || | | [ sistants ar her to the pointed by New Mayor HIS FIRST OFFIGIAL ACT| Gossip In City Hall Indicates Plumb- | Under. | | hospital instead of the morgue. | standing Was That 18 Signatories | MAD BOG KIELED ON | ing Inspector Hennessy Will Be ) : | Gardner C. Weld's first official act .\',\rl];t] \‘;(‘;’("d] :’nv.'):' A cima (a8 mayor will be the approval of i the worid | Chases Man Into House |3tiss Jean Cochr tictpate court conference in l|.‘nnx;;;1’p;;“v:v‘lr;; Before Being Dis- patched Secretary Kellogg Repeats to Court Protocol Were Nations : ing Inspector Tormay And Build- ‘That Were to Conslder Proposed Removend From Office, ship of U 48 deputy city clerk. City Clerk Alfred L, T npson, {in whose office Miss Cochrane has a long record been sent the Berne for Delivery to | > of gue of nations, of service and whose she has been since Mayor A. L refused to approve the dog which oIl pointment of Harry A. Har- { mouth was shot and killed on Broal [ sreaves four years ago, will present street here this noon and | ‘*1 °r name at the close of the inaug- | 1% Cook, health ‘,m“, v(, Jum. program tomogrow. quarantine on n | The incoming mayor said today he o go into a |has no desire to bring about a health measu en | change in the staff of the clerk's of- running wildly ar vards on | He remarked favorably upon Broad strect, biting at trees and per- | rane's service in that im- forming generally nanner | pmmm branch of the @ity govern- hich led to the suspicion that it it and said he feels her work has as afflicted with the rabies. The | warranted reappointment, ’!'hurm‘fl were not and thed Cley Clerk Thompson called at dog was dis ied by two well- | the office of Mayor Paonessa in 1922 timed shots fired by Second Select- |and was gre atly surprised to learn man Edward P. T’ and M. J |that his deputy, Mr. Hargreaves, dld a local contractor. 'The |not meet the approval of the mayor, r of the animal is @ot known. e city clerk had anticipated nothe | It Is not believed that the dog |ing more than the formal approval bit any persons, aithough it chased | o¢ {he mayor, without comment, Sev- man down the and |eral days after Paonessa flatly re- home of Giles C. 1t then | fyged, the clork returned with the around on noreh of {name of Miss Cochrane who had was killed | oen genior clerk In thegoffice and | Mayor Paonessa approved at once, Dr. Cook believes th € ! Inner republican eircles today pre- have bitten other and as | dicted the displacement of Plumbing precaution ¢ spread of | Inspector Philip J, Tormay hy Olat bies has ordered t all dogs | A, Peterson who has ‘on several oc- | here be kept tied up or on leashes | casions acted as plumbing inspector, iding the result That Edward J. Hennessy, build- ton’ of the ad ing inspector for the past two years has been will also go, forecast, but there By gt rs to be uncertainty as to w AL atitcacatite several names be- L wm: mentioned with apparently an ual amount of bac "m: DUE HERE WEI)NESI]AYi HILES WINS HARATHON led gor the | rescrva- | conference was ¢ nsidering hed by the senate to| American adherence to the world court. The United States was in- | vited, but after conferences between | Sceretary Kellogg and President | olidge it was decided that Ameri- can adherence could be made fective only throught correspondenc tmm;n the state department with e 48 signatories to court pro- | Lum| (B > 1 Plainviil April Dircet Exchange of Notes is note e 1 that th ed sgnatory, governments to Indics this country the d ing the American reservations direct exchange of notes. “It would seem to me to be o maotter of regret if the council of | the league should do anything to | icreate the impression that there | are substantial difficnlties in th of such direct communication, Mr. Kellogg said. This government dofs not con sider hat any new agreement is ' sary to give effcet to the con- and reservations on which the United States is preparcd 1o adhere to the permanent court.” Reservations Are Plain ary Rellogggpointed out that rvations “are plain and un- 1, and aceording to thuir must be accepted by the notes between and each of th states signatory to the statute of | the parlidment court before the United States can become a party and slgn the protocol.” 18 necessary to United States an oppor- unity to participate through repre- sentatives for the election of judges, | hiz should naturally be constdered after the reservations lave been | 1dopted and the United States has | bgcome a party to the statute of permfinent court of International | Wasl | justice. 1 of spring “If the stftes signatory to the record statute of the permanent court de- sire to confer among themselves, the United States would have jection whatever.” COL, WILLIAMS SILENT or It strec Buell. the fi house u it by the selectman. dog rimal S Hartfor torms, »xchanga of Tnited States 48 Warmer | Yova Scotia Runner Also Sets N glve East to Have Weather—2 Below at Malone, N. Y. | World Record In the Boston Race | Hcld Today. | Boston, April Sydney Mines, N. 8., new world record for the mara- thon run when he won the Boston v race in 2 hours seconds. The Clarence Demar same course i urs 29 minu 19-—John C. Miles 9 (P one The re- of the spells is predict- burean n Unite test on W “It will be a lit lay and rguch id Forecaster C. 1 atter part of the ¥ by we for d States e old record, of Melros 024, -5 s¢ hy or the vas 2 conds of the caste 1o ob- inesday warni Miles appeared fresh as he broke he tem . after run- ds, the offi- clal Olymy Albin Sten- | of Finland, Olympic marathon | champion, finished second, nearly & minutes behind the er. Hig time was 2 hours 20 minutes forty sec- onds. }ORE DRUNKEN DRIVERS | above v prevalent all | rature is like nor- mal and warm weathe Declines to Testify in Own Defense (o the east. roos. is at present Relow vailed ge at Court Martial Activity To- day. south The coldest Alexande White Riv a military mum of 1 ation, re- | /1t s own Marine Base, San April 19 (P—golonel Williams, on {rial before court on a @arge of intoxi fused today to testify in half. The charge was preferred by V‘rigm]ivr General Smedley D. But Diego, Ca Statistics Show Increase in " ber of Persons Arrested for 11- The judge advocate, Hermie, asked 'Col. Willian had any stateMent to make [ court, “I have not,” said i Captain Hermle ned his brief argument, the effect that while xtrancous to the issue ed testimony the real ¢ Welliams was dr on the night of March tel Del Coronado—had ciently illuminated to pe court to draw its own conc With a passing rc “utter failure" ention that t i} rather than drunk. {: said he knew the court v influenced by camouflage introd and sat Leaps Five Stories to His Death in New York New York, April 19 (P—William Rogers,* superintendent of story building on First av leaped to his death from the top of #the bullding today, the eixth person in 10 days to meet h in this| T ner. Three other men and two women either fell or jumped from |* Ligh buildings. Rogers left several letie were found in his pockets, One was addressed to the pastor of the First erlan church. He was years olde legally Operating Cars. April 13 )— unkenn @ of rivers in H dily and years since v was two d many issues | Lreak today. ness wa4 cut 5 south £ fin last week issug e inc but be ity of to th con- s sick 1 Hermle Quanel \\ ith (-nl No P xeuse for \r‘cv'hnr: Oray \unr\uv n ex; fe of liquor ense, rable girl and 1 gue on car wher H Cleans 71717) Betting on 300 to One Outsider Parls, Aprll 19 P—G. Patat, er who was reinstated a short cral years suspen- ing at the Saint with an obscure The horse was tak period dea ter s New Bah\ Found Dead in (emetm\ .11 Norwich ols wh ear old also ran, furols i= a has 43 STAYS INSIDE Apr blowing DIRIGIBLE Lal t. N Hartford, April 19—Forecast wind for New Britain and vicinity: Fair and continued cold to- night; Tuesday fair with ris- ing temperature taken to po- 1 by es as | THE WEATHER ! examine Atity of the person or sons who placed the cemetefy were found lirigible removed shed to_ the per- | mooring ma morning in ypre- body in the | paration for .the flight scheduled 2 | for today. * to the ide | e — A x Miss Cochrane Will Be Reap-| €'s reappointment established | Exeter street club (58 Num- | < ran | 5 ev 5 1 a field of 19 in a mile | odds of | and | Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending 13,929 pril 17th . PRICE THREE CEN' BISHOP CANNON LEADS ASSAULT ON THOSE WHO WOULD MODIFY DRY LAW Declares Prohibition Should Be Enforced In Wet “New York Sector,” Including Conn., Regardless Of [Costs In Men Or Money. ‘I’resident of National W, C. T. U. Also Adds Pro- test Against Change, Saying 18th Has Had Fair Chance. Not Washington, April 19 () — T militant call to the American goy- lernment to accept the chalienge of |opponents of the Volstead act wax sounded by the drys today befor |the senate prolibition committee, Wet “New York Sector” Speaking for the Methodist Eypis- copal church south, Bishop James Cannon, Jr, told the committee th: aw should be enforced in the wet ew York sector” of the east ut whatever cost of men and moncy, {to protect other sections from con- tamination, The wets, he said, had taken ths committee hearings far afield dur- ing their two weeks of . testtmony before the committee, and it was time to return to the basic quesion whether in the country as a whole the Volstead method of dealing with the liquor traffic had not been more effective than any other, Seek To Upset Wets | Bishop Cannon, who is head the legislative®committee of the A |ti-Saloon league, was followed by other officials of church and tem- perance organizations, who present- ed data designed t§ upset the co tention of the wets that conditiors have grown worse under the dry laws, It was noteworthy, Bishep Can- |non said, that the testimony pre- |sented by the opponents of prohibi- (tion had come almost entirely from |persons living in “the New York |sector,” including N York, Con- |necticut, New Jers: vania, [ana Maryland. v states, Maryland ve utterly refused |to pass any state enforcement law."” he sald, * and vet the very men in |thise states who are largef¥ respon- sible for the failus to pass an en- forcement law, are the ones who ara |loudly and illogically denouncing the failure to enforee thegaw.” | Doubts Extent of Violations | 1 testimony he could not » that ninety per joring people of th country violating the gonstitu- [tion by the manufacture of intoxi- cants in their homes. “Ag an American T repudiate | Reviewing some of Ifor the wets, he to hel the said, e made |cent of " he ad- wholesale u,cnr'num on Page 12) MORE. RIGID RULES 10 STOP RUM SMUGGLING | Administration Plans to Tighten Effectiveness of Coast Guard Defense April 19 (P —Coined- wal of discussion with Great for curbing rum smuggling, inistration measure was ighten the ef- sent coast des e against contraband ligner. ire is the second plece wpitol this nt of As« in charge having the Vol- ndminise Wasl lent. with the renc further agreements Britain draw been stead tratio T vould right to ssels beyond the it exchange by the speed istoms ofticers to st motors h: hew flot tor sm condemnation of rmit the government A military officers nforcement work, and arrangement for- of merchandise hich is regarded ugi d men in e effect a reciprocs bidding importatio! into this country w as contraband Beyond s ade shortly t to stop g that a Is to a further agr flow of liquor 1 move arby possess| cials today would not nal phase of the by state department and treasury officials London is in prospect in connection with the dis- cussions which are expected to be held. Secretary Andrews, who will a member of the group, expecis to leave for London May 15 unless developments make his trip inad. visable. be

Other pages from this issue: