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s T months making propaganda speeches agalnst the World war, When the Russlan revolution broke out in 1917 Madame Kollantay returned home and soon became a prominent member of the Bolshevist » head of Russia's Commercial delega- Bridgeport Young Man Shot |tion ana'tvo years tnter: sonen Nor- ” way recognized the Russian Soviet During Raid on Crap Game |slf'r in history, King Haakon recelved her with the wood avenue, who was killed during [about the Russian Legation in Oslo a rald on a crap game in Falpfield | which would indicate that it was not known according to the latest infor- mation from state police who are od by Medical Examiner Dr, Willlam WEEPS ANI] wA]LS H. Donaldson at the Bridgeport city ‘Fails o Practce Daring That | POLIGE UNDECIDED party. [Republio, Madams Xollantay was Bridgeport, April 26 (P—The slay- |same “formality accorded to male Saturday afternoon by ome of five | Presided over by a man. investigating the killing. morgue falled to disclose the bullet He Wrote About WHO KILLED YOUTH — In 1022, she came to Norway s | made minister, the first woman min- er ot Harry Fischer, 20, of Maple- | ;ninistors, and thers was nothing constables of Fairfleld, is still un- BURGLAR CAUGHT, The autopsy which was perform- which caused the death of Fischer. The five officers who participated in the raid were placed under arrest ll) State Pollce Sergeant Walter Lyne- lan of the Westport barracks lmhy\ on technical charges. The action | was taken becauso none of the offi- cers admitted firing the shot which | resulted in the fatality. The officers have been paroled fn the custody of Prosecutor Willlam A, Kinsell They were not required to furnish any bond other than that which they were already under as police date robber remains sclf-possessed when captured and cooly talks his way to freedom, Vincent De Pascal wrote in an article found fin his pocket, but when he was caught rob- bing the home of an Evanston brok- officers. | er De Pascal became hysterical and, Medical Examiner Donaldson | when the police arrived, broke down found that death resulted from a|and sobbed. hemorrhage. The bullet entered the ‘ De Pascal, who gained some publi- back of Iischer's head near the [ city a year ago while in the Elmira right ear, but was deflected by a ' state reformatory in New York when bone to the left side of the head. |an essay won for him first prize In a The youth’s mouth appeared to be | contest was captured last night in burned and there is an opinion that | {ne home of Georgs B. Willlams, the bullet made its exit there. When Sergeant Lynehan was asked if the | oom bullet had béen found he answercd | 1 Do Pascal's hotel room police that he could not say at this time. | gound 420,000 in bonds which the State pollce were all over the S¢eno | prigoner admitted were stolen in onv of the shooting today taking pictures | of soveral Evanston robberies and notes. They also questioned | po ppgcal's prize winning essay neighbors in the vicinity. G R i c ! stained 7 ening of his sentence The five officers held in the case | ¢ pueia iy e Bimira, woro tnterviowed. Constable H. . "0 0 cints Eloodisnlid Laxinion g dly. | Mmong Do Pascal's cffects, and also [vasicoming fromsanisn el 0t oo iar galman tityWlofiawelryifrom ferent direction and was nob present | ypien the stones had been romoved. at the time of the shooting. Constable Arthur J. Bennett s “I didn't firo a &hot and wr 1" ant of the shooting until some time after it had happened. It must have happened in back of me, for I di find out about it until T returned with some of the crap shooters who 1 had pursued and captured.” Constables George Larson and H. John Rull both denled having fired any shots at all Depty Sheriff Orville W. Holmes, who it is said, found the body after the shooting and called the attention of his brother officers to it, said that while he did fire shots, there were other shots fired and he could not tell whose shot had caused the deafh of the youngster. he weapons turned over to the te police are four thirty-two cali- e revolvers and one thivty-eight ibre, the last belonging to Ben- | nett. | Henry B. Gardiner, unsuccessful It is expected that the nquest will |candidats for the republican nomin- be attended by many peopls who are \ation for mayor last month, spent following the shooting wWih unusual |34 in his quest for the honor of interest. The crowd which collected [heading the G. O. P. ticket. after the shooting numbercd over| His statement of expen: 1,000 and was so unruly that police "m the offics of Town C! had great difficulty in holding it in |, Thompson shows that amount . The crowd threatencd Offi- {pended for postage and printing. r Bennett, o, it was thought :411 Three of the five who were mayor- the time of the Killing had fired the alty aspirants this year have not yet fatal bullet, but who claims he did [complied with the state law requir- t fire any shots at all. |ing a statement of receipts and ex- The six men arrested for gambl- | penditures during thelr campaigns. ing at the time of the killing will | x-mayor George A. Quigley has appear at the Fairfiell {own court submitted his, but Mayor Gardner were found married in 8t. Louis, iz in a Chicago | hospital suffering from appendicitis. Ue said he was trying to rob Wil liams’ homie to obtain money to de- fray her hospital expenses, In the article on crime, “Thugs of Yesterday and Today,"” Pascal wrote that old methods called De B mask, he related that tre modern robber is a suave, well-dressed, level- headed man who never loses his self- possession irrespective of what close quarters he may find himself in. he urged for the | which he said he e super-criminal, d to be, Gardner Spent $4 in Quest of Nomination filed X~ tomorrow morning, also Rudolf |, Weld, ex-Mayor A. M. Paonessa Arendt, who came o claim the car land Stanley Uchalik have not. abandoned the time — — 1. He wa rrested by e Elwond nud released un- | Cemetery Keeper D1 [ der "““‘_ of $15 3PP ] After Being Hit by Car S CiRambling | Concord, Mass., April 26 (P—In- juries reccived in d ing an auto- h of John L. mobile cansed the dos {Gilmore, 76, son of the late ernor Joseph A. Gilmore of New Hampshire and for many years su- perintendent of the Sleepy Hollow | cemetery here. In his haste to avoid |being run down, the aged man fell and fractured his skull. A charge of manslanghtcr was made by the police against Charles ¥. Larsen, 19, of this town, driver of the machine. AMERIEAN HOMEN CALLED EFFCIENT Soviet Leader Anxions to Gome' Here to Study i ON POLICE BLOTTER The police are investigating a Oslo, April 26 (P —American wom- |complaint by Patrick Naples of 118 ¢n represent the “highest class of |Beaver street that his house was efficiency, both in professional and |robbed ahout a month ago and a home life,”” believes Madame Alex- {bracelet, pearl beads, and necklace andra Kollantay and this is one of |taken, Saturd a garage broke the lock and drove away said. An automobile reported by Honeyman as stolen from Wolcott was recovered in Waterbury. Steinberg reported the the reason first Soviet diplon to the United € As Bolshevik dame Imn.m d like to be the tic representative ates. minister here, Ma- | rded the large (street, that has spent | Sidney ercial |theft of two bieyel m‘u' cen Soviet Russian and Arch street, Norwa rceently was recalled, | Louis Moore of 107 Hartford ‘T know so much of the United |avenue reported the theft of a calf States and the population from my {from the municipal abattoir. b visits over there—in all about elove The police were asked to notify @. montls [ have traveled [T, Michacls of 165 Woodland street tror 1 admire the |(hat James Norris died in Bridge- count 1d [port, The police were unable to lo- it cate Michaels. way of living appeals very = Ernest Kor k of 35 Austin me." |<trest complained that boys in the Madame Kollantay was seated in | peighborhood annoy him and among s she talked hair | other prank hung several in the Ia il |snakes on 1 5 nle, dark Parisian | James Chute 321 Washington divoreed und n t complain 1 man wear- in Nor ed and livi d a revolver at night | prowler was reported vicinity of Rhodes and Mar- day night. s mar Of 0Nl Nobility ral Domonto- | An owned by Robert ,m xon was destroyed by fire on Hartford avenue Saturday afternoon. |A short circuit is thought to have |caused the fire. An automobile owned by Mrs 1ke Meehan of Garden street took fire near the freight depot on Whit- street yesterday afternoon and fire department was called by from Finland and spent much of | vouth in IFinland vas there that she fi\»mp"l Finns and th party, with which 1898. Later she be- | a student Socialist liated ing Jarm from Box 228 at 355 Upon her return to Russia A railroad brakeman extin- took a prominent part in organ the blaze with a pail of the female industrial hag Fo: | rs in the Fish gnd Game | a pol < \ campaign for new mem- in 1 rs will mect tonight at § o'clock ana s 15 Main strect 0 |7 of the cam- 1 the co r nearly el i a | who found him hiding in a bath- | STROYS AUTOMOBILE | ‘lock the door. NEW BRITAII\ D\IL\ II “.\ID MONDAY,. APRI A OD HOLD THEORY BOY SHOT Y MISTAKE, Others Think Shot Killing Coles Came From Ambush Bridgeton, N. J., April 26 (P lice investizating the Lansing Coles, Bridgeton high school student, were working today on the theory that he was shot from be- hind. One of the detectives said he was convinced the youth had been | shot in ml; William Hanby, outside | home Coles was fatally carly Saturday, is held in connection with the c: with his uncle and aunt, Mrs. Souder, had token Mrs, to her home from I ake for another man, of whose !\ anby | idgeton in their | motor car and the shooting occurred | white they were trying to aroust 1 ie young woman's husband to un- Hanby, the police | said, admitted having fired the shot, |asserting that Chicago, April 26 GPl——The up-to- | were attempling to enter his I | knocking on the window of his | la clump of bu burgla ne m he believed and that he had discharged his through the window when he stumbled over a chair. “We tried to awaken him room,” said Mrs, Hanby, “but he would not awaken. Then we tore off the screen and opened the window. it on my husband. Then there was a shot."” Investigators expressed the beliof | that Cole's assailant was s ted in s directly behind the window which the young wife had opened, They on what grounds the | based or what led them to believe |the youth was mistaken for De Pascal’s young wife, whom he | of | robbery now were out of date. In- |tainous region in which the Druse {stead of the bludgeon and cap and | “Keep cool,” was the chiet element | |euttered heavy casualties during the k Altred | Max | s from a store at | some one clse. FRENCH TAKE LAST | DRUSE STRONGHOLD . Ga feway to Mountain Region Falls in Six How Battle Syria, Aprll 26 (P— gateway to the moun- Beirut, Soueida, the tribesmen have their last strong- holds, has been captured from the Druses by the I'rench forces. This principal stronghold ot the tribes- men was taken after a six-hour bat- tle Sunday morning. The tribesmen are sald to have fighting and to have abandoned two ficll guns. They numbered 6,000 and offered stubhorn resistance. The French threw into the offensive two columns, composed of 11 battalio of infantry, four batterles of uriil and a number of tanks and in |addition used airplanes. | The offensive started last Thurs- day simultancously from Ezran and Bosra. After a certain amount of |vesistance the two forces effected a junction near Soucida carly Sunday morning ard rds de- which was th tribal leader, I, Gen Andrea, known as a skilled str gist, commanded the Irench. This was the first largo scale fensive against the insurgents s M. De Jouvencl, took over the high commissior of Syrla from General It was at Souecida H\\l September that the French sif- red a severe reverse at the of- of the tribesmen and shortly wards withdrew from the Druse district and e the forces of Damascus. The French froops already a preparing for the task of enliving {into the momutzins in an en to clean up the territory before defeated Druses have a chance to reorgani ana now in his 824 year, holds distinction ®f ing worn the long black frock coat, popuiarly know s the P Albert, for sixty-c |years. H ks 19 it in hot w r and in his will buried in it terms in the state 1 f e ) declined to state | theory was | Po- | slaying of | | 1 got a pitcher of water and threw | Central Jr. H. S. Mago» T Mercury, a publication issued at central junior h and they cover their “beats” who e daily Standing, left right: 1')‘_’4;_ 13 Photo by Arcade I of the gh school, well, like professional folks arn their bread and butter accumulating news for the papers, Studlo uture editors, these. They comprise the Business manager, Maurice Ber- kowitz; boys’ athletic reporter, James Burke; eirls’ ath- letic reporter, Rosalie Dolan; exchange editor, 1ithel Bar- vett; joke editor, Francis Kelly; editor-in-chicf , Samuecl Black Sitting, left to right: Kiniry ; Mary Club secretary, Margavet assistant editor, Phoebe Ballau; literary editor, \ILCrmm; school news l'clmrt(- Mabel Neurath, 1., STUDENTS MY STUDY IN EURUPE Univensi dents From America “RIOT AT CHURGH White Mol Drives Colored ple From House [ ing Then Bumed. ties Kre Open for Sto- arterct, N. J church of t congreg April 26 (P—T First Bi which |were ari y a white mob —_— [burned to the ground early t York, April 26 (P—Sovera |, Tiace Hols were thre B RAen : : Robert T 2 n r old world universittes, for centurics | rogteq 1atc - the mecea of the Abelards and Eras- |with the fat « muses of every country, will rol, a wl bo mmer throw open their gates to | SOF ly ; G I e v 1 bands of western pilgrims i e Oxford will i o o ow of its “r ) When ATt oen woimon ri it ; leo graduates i | on the Amerfcan plan, will N St courses in English literature and his- tory at four of the women's colleges. | pary today the church Trinity College, Dublin, Will re-|covered in ¥ 3 cefve up to 120 men and women, [govera (o oinedl 1o At who may study the social sciences, |to save §t but were hampercd the humanitics su -1 ot water, clnding Gaelie. will be held July — — 15 to August 26 | M n Berlin offers to an 1ea | Bristol '}i‘" Found ] ea rd number of Americans in| At His Rooming House Gérman language and cuiture, or in| ($ ) 1 ) the country problems. *Our a educational and social| Apr 1 66 Bagle pplications have come from | every part of the count aid Miss 1 dead Florence Lovell, international secre- i |tary of the American Association of |N Med University Women, who in ca cal Examiner t tion with the Institute of Interna- was called in and proncunced {tional Education and -the English due to heart failure colloge authorities have arran Mr. Lawson led to ris for th first European summer usual time this mory N | schools. “Belfry, Mexico, ew York and New I New with “Women of all ad not put in an app Montana, and Las Vegas, have responded along e i anler Danicl to t was dispatched cuddy ages, from thoso and after breaki the door who have been teaching fifty years found Mr. Lawso [ to this have sho jours These departure tablish v to Oxford.” summer schools are a new g international graduates, eager to year's college wn themseclves body was turn I% O'Brien under far as can be learncd, La no immediate relati e in the whole plan of es- educational Early Hearing \\ned on relations, said Miss Katherine §, Lovell, secretary of the Students Teapot Dome Appesals Bureau of the Institute of Interna- on, April The s tional Education court was as! lay 1 “The plan has meant since its Atlee Pomerne, of i} - start immediately after the war, the oil counsel to adv ) i exchange of scholarship and fellow- carly in the next term begtnning i ship students, first cen this October, the appeal gra I 1 countr 7 1l o with | L. Doh sainst the lower ¢ Gormany, Cze vakia d Hun- clsi ng mt care Ioa El These summer schools, as they | s are not on a scholarship re 1 in fore competitive 1 P L i less limited scale the same of ) opportunitics of foreign to American students. “With the foreign cxchanges so — favorable to Americans, the price of MAKES DAY these s er schools is extremely | Vancouver, Wash, April 26 () moder Tames G. White, re prize for first al 1 Boston l'u Co.,) wil of dresse the coope played by sale at th resday. New B-ritainil’igk;cd to Send Musicians to Phila. New DBrit as committee in cha & licentennial at I \ eight singers to to the lo (VI‘P(\\I S 2 Store Style Show Sbidon, Have Living Models ton! t 30 o'clock on Store Donnelly of the He 1 nploye company here. cmploye, Ch @ 1 display a beautiful lin th s on living models. With 1 Electric T ration of one of Ame cart ling manufactur the B , 1025, atthe r in we ts of the the dresses dis odels will be or | and Wed- | | esday orus ¢ The 1 cal Chamber ot by Secreta s DANCING Ind., \ym 26 (P—Tara- his text “If ting meat nvm- offend, I will eat 1 “If dancing causes and kidney irregul ¢ to offend against righteous times a stimulant diuretic is help- laws, it is our duty as Christians to ful. Use Doan'’s Pills. Do stay away,” the Rev. Preston Pot recommended by ti: mus, of the Methodist church, op elderly folks. Are end e here Sunday a crusade 1o rid os- | home. Ask your ne. sian of 1} “contaminating influ- * of square dances. Here’s a New Britain S R Hum NEW MURDER MYSTERY eton Ay W Quiney, Mass. April 26 (P—The S a br or layer - n drag e hroc cated that the bod ged from a park ber Medieal Examiner PI' LS Oc . DOAN’S 11 Stimalant Diaretic to the | FoterMilbura Co., M. Cie i %33”'[ 5 HEARD of Worship—Build- | e ————— |counterca with a_statement saying u had letters and Hteraure showing | part: Anno Mawe, Dorothy Latham, 'nu the wets “ask for §300,000 for | Anna Foberg, Ruth Anderson, Ruth this Identical purpose in addition to | Larson, Margaret Collins, Dorothy the §300,000 which they elaiin they | McCrann, Anna Olsen, Helen Bren- we regularly,” The league's legls- | nan, Grace Schmidt, Margaret Pc- following young women will take PR RS ative committee, he added, *“has tors, Helen Nelson, Loretta McKeon, - |sent out an appeal for $60,000 to Charlotte Scymolian, Ruth Schade, offset this," f .nn- that "we ¢ Mabel Wallen, 8 tafson, Wheeler, Buckner, Codman and o ono’doline o about as far as | Elen Joimson, Vanate. Halmes 12 of theirs United States Attorney Buckner of | |New York, whose estimates of the |a of enforcing prohibition in th tu- |state drew fire from the drys, fo varded to the committee detafled memoranda to support his figures | Marion Hoar, and Helen Philtps. Miss Philips will be interlocutor, position she has filled in pre- vious productions, Hundred and Ten Men Are Otiers Issue Statements Washington and t Apr (R)—~The of the senate L b e hoave ceased UG (ho basts of theso he ealewtated | Caught at Cocking Main A R L P e that, with trial by jury eliminated,| White Plains, N. Y., April 26 (P — SnDRrentiy fare aaile the cost would 1t 20,0 7 or, One hundred and ten men were ar- e ottt ury trial continued, it would [rested whe \\‘H..h» police of Troop K T T 076,125, raided a cocking main in o barn on confident that some of the Lills | Buckner's Pigures the Sawmill river road at Eimford, favored o put more tecth fn | 1 also defended his estimate that (hear here, yesterday, Twenty-two T T ) cg business of more 1 8ame cocks wers ssized.. One oAtk UK. Koninte o wetg | $000,000,000 a year was based on Va8 found dead. contident that they had placed | ! n of industrial aleohol alone Ofticers of the soclety for the pre- g einet prohibition Mo | Taking the amount of denatured al. |Yention of eruelly to animals parti- ountry; they would be us great- ! cad In the flscal = year Sdnshe wold Ay BtcY oLl s e ot . P and subtract- | A fIght for “the champlonship of Al el i ¥ from it the output of a pre-war | NOW York und New Jersey” was in Al L S v multiplied by the normal rate PFOEFCss when the troopers entered B ) Dlished In that pe- |18 barn, which was owned by Peter ey a difforenco of 60 J. MedMann, Bets amounting to more o Shom e s (it | 000,000 gallons, which he held was |[1an §1,000 had been placed on the T et o gemeths. ML | ot rensonably required by industry, | % was suld, After surrounding n of the hearir began Satur- The National dent ,‘ : t el KL A continiicd i Bundas 1 with members o 00 coll o pe into a group, but none of ind co a2 Buinday, ) Canalhneans sy b en was armed and no resist- filist, New York, offered a - sug. |1l 600 institutions on the proibi ’ A n which he predicted would tion question through the Har 1 re from A":"‘(r“)' the prohibitionists to “admit “""]“ Shie b oxion Drinceny 1 m 1 \nnr WINS he prohibition law cannot be 10 Pres of the fedoration, adon, April 26 Sark stariing lat ondslor. elaven 1o four 1l was that Wayne R owing questions s prope nst, won the great international | b . do you favor prohibition in its i 2 Wheeler, sencral counsel of {he T eeplechase at Sand J 3 + director With @ stafe approved | D0 you favor the repeal of laws e A 1 E [ apy 1‘ selutiin o nioh e tarte! at four to one against. reme dry advocates” and au § S0 0 8 ain " rity to “do anything they des “Do you favor changes to allow St ',’fi’x ”"1"!!":" S to enforce this law” between the sale of light wines and becr o SIICIR SR SR Gl s alTb anin of three miles and Tanuary or Fehruary. ecler explained t 1, as he Tie winner was ridden by E. Fon- Dannis rode Great Span and Y. s had the mount on Winnall he did not 2d planned wets” plan to use by my Annual Minstrel \ho\\ o of tl Arys' time Cross eams- “ourteen ran i A3k wan, Hol Ceald) el OB & B W Glub e st e part of the drys' time was con- | The {1 al minstrel show meeting at Sandown, had a value of med by filibuster cross examina- |y 14 Professional |about $2,000. " Woman's club will ba given Wed-| White Park, fs a chestnut gelding Wets Disappointed {lw 1a ning in the Elks hall. The by Redmond-Lady Alwyne, James MacGuire, chief assistant | o Julian Codman of Bosfon, c 1 r the wets, had expressed disap 1 t that Mr. Wheeler did not ect himsclf to cross examina- or the Missour: Wt whose questioning of dry Th Ar ses added colorful p: ese e » the long record o stimo itor Reed, sald Mr, MacGuiro | e1 to question the Anti-Saloon . . . Foagie counsel about reports hat Supreme in Their Price Class s organization attempting to col- leet o million dollars to be used in The million dollar fund charge was ¢ Mr. Wheeler, who OAKLAND PONTIAC Franklin Motors of New Britain 449 West Main Street Phone 3696 OUR SCIENTIFIC | EYE EXAMINATION ; ASSURES RELIER - rantE. Goo'wn | LYESIGHT SPECIALIST Phone 1905 | Main Street fl\u 16 Years' Optical Experience e A complete il ! 4 newspaper i PRINCES, wars, conventions, the excitements of Eu- rope, foothall victories, the counting up of votes, church i '1 affairs, community weddings—everything eventful. Yet the newspaper is incomplete without the news that con- ; cerns you most. Events belong to unusual days. But day after day vou get out of bed, wear clothes, eat foods, walk in shoes. News of better mattresses for your bed, of bet- ter clmhos, food. shoes, at prices you like . . . is of more moment to you than the overthrow of-kings. Things of daily importance are talked about in adver- tisements. Shaving sticks, tooth pastes, cuff links, hreakfast foods. Here is friendly, intimate news to make your days more pleasant. News of things you know about and might like to know more. Conve- niences you once thought could never be yours. S Advertisements are the news of every-day things that concern you most. No newspaper would be com- plete without them. Advertisements are frequently the most interesting news in the paper. ‘ i Read them New Britain Herald OVER 13,000 DISTRIBI,'T—\‘ DAILY | The Herald is the Only N c\wpaper in New Britain N With An Audited Circuy,)