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“STRANDED WAIFS HELD AS BURGLARS Boys Caugltt in Springfield Al- most Melt Gops’ Hearts The police were confident today | that four recent burglaries will be satisfactorily cleared up through the detention of three boys in 8pringfield, Mass, as stolen arti- cles were located a few days ago in the cellar of the home of one- of them and he has been missing since. Detective Sergeant W. P. McCue and Sergeant P. J. O'Mara drove to Springfield this afternoon to bring the trio here, and it is ex- pected that some of the mystery | Which has surrounded the numer- | ous burglaries in this city will be removed by nightfall, This forenoon Captain Kelly was notifled by telephone that boys giv- ing theirinames, ages and ad- dresses as John Piada, 15, of 171 Broad street; ‘Stanley Plada, aged 13, and Joseph Piada, aged 10, of the same address, had been picked up at the Springfield passenger station, and had told a story of having left this city last night with their 18 year old sister, Ethel, to visit their stepmother in West Warren, Mass: They said they were brothers and in the mixup of ghanging trains they had become separated from their sister. Captain Kelly detalled Motorey- ele Policeman Strolls to go to 171 Broad street and notify the parents of the children, but the officer re- ported that no family of the name given was known in that section of the city. Then it was suspected that the boys were runaways and when Sergeant P. J. O'Mara re- ported, the captain asked him if he was looking for boys answer- ing the description given. The ser- geant did not recall the name but ho said recovery had been made of flashlights and cigars and cigar- ettes in a cellar at 170 Broad street and he would not be surprised if one of the boys was the missing suspect, Sergeant P. A. McAvoy has been active in the investigation and recovery of the loot. Captain Kelly had this informa- tion conveyed to Captain McCarthy of the Springfield detective bureau and in a short time, word came back that the boys admitted they were not telling the truth when they sald they were brothers on a trip to West Warren. They gave their correct names as Walter Malyarski of 40 Clinton street, Joseph Bula of 28 Horace street and John Waseliewicz | ©f 170 Broad street. The latter was | the suspect Sergeant O'Mara had in mind, and it is believed the others are confederates. According to the police, Waselle- wicz knows about the burglaries at Zaleski's store at 237 Broad street, as the cigars and clgarettes found in the cellar at his home have been identified as having been taken from the store. Flashlights found in the cellar have been identified as having been taken from Rondeau's gasoline etation on Glen street, and it is be- lieved that the forced entrances into the office of the Willow Brook Ice Co. on Myrtle street, and Tomas- zewskl's Coal company office in Barnesdale were also made by the | same gang. The police said it Isi possible that the burglaries in two Bouth Main street stores, and that of . H. Chesky & Sons, fruit and produce | establishment on Seymour street last week may be cleared up. One of the | boys was with two others' whcni Officer McMurray saw them about to engage a taxicab during & rain- storm last week. Two garages were broken into yesterday and last night, according to reports to the police. Constable Frank Clynes reported at 8 o'clock last evening that a garage on Good- win street was entered and a quan- tity of tools taken from a car he had under attachment. Joseph Gorfain of 58 Talcott street reported that his garage at 51 Willow street was en- tered but nothing was taken. He told Officer Peter Cabelus the lock on the door was broken. Today Captain Kelly was notified that three tires were taken from an old car at Kennedy's automobile cemetery at Stanley and East Main streets, and Paul Clancl of 846 Stanley street reported' that flve bunches of laths and one-half a keg | Hartford, died yesterday afternoon City Items New Britain Nest, Ocder of Owls, will meet Wednesday evening, in 0dd Fellows' hall. All fixtures for sale. Hudson lunch. 284 Main St—advt. George B. Cowles of Chestnut | street underwent an operation at the \ew Britain General hospital this morning. He is reported as resting comfortably. Supt. Stanley H. Holmes of the school department s {1l at his home at 41 Buell street. | The junior members of the Cath- olic Daughters of America will meet Thursday evening at 7 o'clock at Red Men's hall. Applications for membership will be received and plans for the initiation to take place at the next meeting will be dis- cussed. | Suit for $200 damages has been | | brought by Vincenta Jukewicz of | this city, through B. J. Monkiewicz, | against’ Paul and Helen Semoyle. | |The writ is returnable in the city| court the fifth Monday of May and | Constable John 8. Recor served lhu rapers. William Smallwood of Oakland. Calif., spent today as the guest of cretary Ralph H. Benson of | Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Smml- |wood is general manager of the Oak- | |1and Chamber of Commerce and was |here in the interests of his organiza- | tion. RESIGNS AT HARVARD Dr. Walcott Retircs as Member of Succeeded by | Corporation — Is Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Cambridge, Mass., May 17 () — The resignation of Dr. Henry Pick- cring Walcott of Cambridge as a member of the Harvard corporation, composed of the president and rel.{ lows of Harvard university, was announced today. The resignation was accepted at a meeting of the board of overseers which ratifled the clection of Jeremlah Smith, jr., of Cambridge, as his successor. Dr. Walcott, who was born in December, 1838, and graduated from Harvard in 1858, was an over- seer of Harvard from 1887 until | 1890 and since then has been a' member of the corporation. He was acting president of the university in 1900-'01. He obtained his medi- cal degree at Bowdoin _college in 1861 and practiced medicine in Cambridge for 14 yeays. He is a| former chairman of the state board of health and a former president of the Massachusetts Medical so- cloty and of the American Academy of Arts and Sclences. Mr. Smith, who was graduated from Harvard in 1892, is a mem- ber of a Boston law firm. He had been nominated as an overseer of | Harvard this year but his choice as a member -of the corporation makes him ineligible to that posi- tion. Deaths [C——— Miss Alice Duss Miss Alice Duss, 18 years ‘ old, formerly of this clty and late of at a state sanitarium after a long ill- ness. She was a native of this clty and |attended the public schools here. She was a member of the First Church, Hartford. Her only surviv- ing relative 13 her father. Funeral services will be held to- morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the funeral home of B. C. Porter Sons at 19 Court street. Rev. C. Clarence Lund, pastor of/ the First Church, will officiate. Interment will be in | | Fatrview cemetery. S . ! Funerals _— Mrs. Demerise Routhier Funeral services for Mrs. Demer- ise Routhier of 42 Beaver street, who died at the home of her daugh-. ter, Mrs. A. LaFlamme Sunday, were held this morning at 9 o'clock at St. Peter's church. A solemn high mass of requiem was celebrated by Rev. Charles Coppens, cclebrant; NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1927, SUSPENDS EXECUTION IN NAPLES BUILDING GASE Woman Escapes Paying Fines Amounting to $300 for Not Razing Burned House. Judge W. C. Hungerford suspended execution of the $300 which he imposed in policee court scveral weeks ago in the case of Miss Julia Naples, charged on two counts of failure to obey the orders of the building inspec- tor to remove debris from the site of the house on Hart street, about which considerable controversy waged and which was destroyed by fire. Judge Hungerford found Miss Naples guilty and fined her $150 | and costs on each count. Suspen- slon of the exccution of the fine is made with the provision that the costs of the court, amounting to $13.97, be paid by Miss Naples. ANOTHER RUMOR ON MISSING FLIERS Rum Ship Reports Secing Plane on May 9 Lynn, Mass, May 17 (®—The Lynn Item prints today a story of a large plane having been seen oft Cape Sable, N, 8., early in the morn- ing of Monday, May 9, by men on & rum running schooner who landed here last night. Neither the names of the men or the schooner are used, in conformance with the request of | the source, but the story said the | men were positive in their state- ments. i The schooner, according to the story, had been flying in the vinicity | of 40 miles south of Cape Sable for nearly three weeks while making ar- | rangement for its cargo. At 7 o'clock Monday morning, May | 9 the lookout heard the sound of a ‘ motor. He called severals others on the vessel and they were soon able | to distinguish a large plane fiying at | an altitude of about 3,000 feet. It was headed southwest from Cape | Sable and, checking it by their own | homeward course, it was pointed straight for Boston Light. Then a heavy fog bank shut down and | sight of the plane was lost. today | fine of INJUNCTION DISPUTE | Lawyer for Plaintit Says It Hu+ | Been Granted But Defendant De- clares It Has Not. It a more specific statement of | facts is filed, asking for a perma- nent injunction prolbiting Joseph Bernstein, proprictor of a gasoline | station in Belvidere, from carrying on repair work at his place OI; business, such an injunction may be | granted, but there will be a ne- cessity of a hearing for both p:\rllos‘ before anything definite iz done in | the actlon of Dora Kolodney against Bernstein. That statement came from counsel for Bernstein. Yesterday the Herald stated that the injunction had already been granted. Attorney Edward A. Mag, counsel for the plaintiff, said today that yesterday's story in the Her- ald was correct and that the in- junction has been secured, although it did not take pffect at exactly the time the story ‘was printed A few minor details must be attended to before the formal injunction goes into effect, he said. FACTORY WINDOWS SMASHED ‘ The police were notified today that | ten windows in the Union Manufac. turing Co. factory were broken last | night, presumably by b Her Winning Smile {annulment of mar SEEKS ANNULMENT OF HER MARRIAGE {Wile, Married at 17 Declares She Was Coerced Claiming that she was forced into wedding Sebastiano Fidruco, suit for age has brought by Carmilla druco, through Hungerford & Saxe. The plaintiff complains that and Fidruco were married October u8, 1925, when she was 17 years of age and Fidruco, She sets forth in her complaint that they were forced into the marriage by her aunt and his father, who caused them to go before a justice | of the peace to have the ccremony performed. Mrs. Fidruco further states that her husband left this city imniedi- ately after the wedding, California. him since, according to her com- plaint. He has neglected to fulfill any of his duties, such as support- ing her and living with her. The writ is returnable in the supe- ror court the first Tuesday of June. SLEEP WELL IN CELLS Both Mrs. Snyder and Gray Fail to Show Effect of Decpression at Sing Sing. Ossining, N. Y. . Ruth Snyder | Gray, slept more than 12 hours their first night in the death housc at Sing Sing prison and scemed re- freshed when they arose today, | Warden Lewis E. Lawes said. Mrs. Snyder and Gray were brought here yesterday, where, un- less Governor Smith or the court of appeals intervenes, they will pay the penalty of death for having i murdered the woman's husband while he slept. Warden Lawes sald both were in splendid health. Gray was report- ed to have eald that he was glad “to get straightened out here.” “I lke this cell hetter than the one T had in Long Island City,” the dapper corset salesman said. “It scems so nice and quict here,” Mrs, Snyder told Mrs. Lucy Ma the matron. Mrs. Snyder romphlrv ed that the mice had bothered her in the Long Islamd jail. Both were scheduled to he taken from their cells to the prison yard for half an hour of calisthenics during the day. May 17 (UP)— a Paonessas Celebrating Their 25th Anniversary Ex-Mayor and Mrs. Angelo M. Faonessa are observing their 25th | wedding anniversary today at their ! hotel, “The Lakeside House,” at Lake Pocotopaug, East Hampton. ‘With the exception of considerable time during the past year spent at East Hampton, the Paonessas have spent their entire married life in New Britaln. ' Berkeley Divinity to Give Degrees to Six! Middletown, Conn., May 17 (®— ix degrees in course will be given at the seventy-first commencement exercises of the Berkeley Divinity school here June 7 and §. he graduation address will be delivered by Henry Goddard Leach, editor of the Forum, New York. TRUCK DRIVER HELD New Haven, Conn., May 17—Leo Fazcone of this city was held crim- inally responsible for the death of |3 year old Yolanda Sebastiani, on | May 8, according to a finding handed | down by Coroner Eli Mix today. child was killed by which the coroner found he was r)p- erating without maintaining a care- ful outlook of the highway. Faz- cone had turned to wave at an acquaintance when the little girl toddled in the path of the truck. APPEAL ON LUNCHCARTS ‘An appeal to city court is antici- puted as a result of the building | commission’s ruling against lunch- { carts, specifically the cart for which been ' Miilardo Fi- | she | 20 years of age.| going to; She has not heard from | 1 Henry Judd | Wall Street Briefs —_— Members of the Natural Gas as- sociation have vote unanimously for amalgamation with the American lG:ls association. Consolidated mem- ership will consist of 650 operating ompanies, 450 manufacturing com- panies and 5,400 individuals. Formal action by the executive board of { American Gas association will | taken in Atlantic City on June 3. { World production of copper in April s placed at 134,901 tons by the American Bureau of Metal statistics against 137,427 tons in March. This is exclusive of 3,000 tons estimated each month for non- reporting countries. | TFreight and traffic on the Chi- icago & Northwestern for the fi 14 days of May amounted to 97, car loads, against 92,401 in the same perfod last year. Profit of Producers and Refliners’ | corporation for 1926 was $2,308,- 1 699 before depletion and extraordi- nary charge-off, against $1,235,797 in 1925, Directors of the Federal Mining and Smelting company have rescind- led the policy of paying out half of mon stock. This action is expected to terminate litigation in Delaware ferred that dividends on the ‘should be omitted until had been accumulated. & reserve | Directors of American Ice Co. on y common stock, four for one, and is- I probably at $100 a share. About 107,000 she outstanding and the additional stock { will bring the issue to the authorized limit. It is expected the split-up shares will l\t\ placed on an annual | ! gividend b i present rate GONDITION GRITICAL Caught of $2 to $2.50. The s $8. Terryville Man, Between | Car and Bumper and Banged Against Tree, May Not Live. May 17 P— ’CUndmau of Aaron |ctor of a dry goods store at 63 | Main street, Terryville, who had his his car while cranking it yesterday and was carried 400 traffic along Main and Maple streets Terryville before the machine, which he had left in gear, finally crashed into a tree, was reported as very grave at St. Mary's hospital in | this city today. Simon’s leg. was so badly crushed | between the machine and the tree that it will probably be necessary {to amputate it. however, he has sunk so low that Dblood transfusion will be resorted to this afternoon. {0ld Time Minstrels For St. John’s Parish An old time minstrel show fea- turing some of the best known | singers in the city as soloists and 'the pick of black face entertainers, will be given Friday evening in the Y. M. T. A. & B. society hall on Main street under the auspices of the | Building Fund association of the Church of St. John the Evangelist. his i3 the first movement among the members of the assoclation to. wards the realization of a new church for the parish. A chorus of 30 voices has rehearsing under the direction Joseph Haftey with John J. Crean | at the piano and a diversified pro- gram will be presented. Daniel Sullivan will be inter- locutor. The soloists will be James D. Donahue, John J. O'Brien, James J. Sullivan, Francis X. Egan, Neil Murphy and Harry Shahanian. The end men whi be Billy Cormier, Bob | been Billy Humason and Georgn Camp. bell. The curtain will rise at 5 o'clock sharp and a concert will by rendered by Sullivan’s orchestra from 8 o'clock on. Dancing will | follow the performance. be | cach year's dividends on the com- | jcourts, which was brought by pre- | stockholders who contended | common | {May 24 will consider a split-up of | suance of additional common stock | es of common are now | mon, propri- | leg caught in the front bumper of | feet through | In the meantime, | of | Doyle, George Scheyd, Frank Clynes, | MANY ISSUES GO _ UP RAPIDLY TODAY Rises of One to Five Points in Numerous Stocks May 17 (A—One ot the most comprehensive buying movements in recent weeks took place in today's stock market, with | more than 100 issues selling 1 to & | points above yesterday’s final quo- tations. Easler money rates, despite the calling of about $10,000,000 ad- ditional in loans, and the unexpect- ed decrease in brokers' loans last | week; provided the background for New York, ‘ the advance. Special buylng again developed in the railroad grbup, the demand for the Van Sweringen {issues reflect- ing hopes of the interstate com- merce commission’s approval of the revised merger plan, while the brisk accumulation of the western Maryland issues was based on un- confirmed rumors of buying for the account of the New York Central and Baltimore & Ohio roads. Talk of higher dividends accompanied the rise in Reading to new high | grounad. About a dozen specialties sold at new high levels for the year, or | longer. The list included such diver- | sitied shares as Worthington Pump, Purity Baking B, Simmons Corpor- jation, American Sugar preferred, | Electric Auto Life, Eureka Vacuum |and Liggett & Meyers B. Oils developed a firm undertone | | despite the misgivings in the oil |trade regarding the success of the | proposed plans for the curtall- | ment of crude production. The ! ! sharp rise in the pipe line shares | apparently had a sympathetic ef- fect on the steels. Rallroad equip- ments were whirled upward as a resuit of the $7,000,000 orders plac- ed by the Erle Railroad yesterday. The optimistic statement on busi- ness of the head of the General Motors Corporation brought fresh buying into that stock and tended to check liquidation in other motors { which had been Inspired by recent | price cuts. THE MARKET AT 2:30 P. M. (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) High Low Close 140% 139% 140 |American Can 47% 47% 47% {Am Car & Fd 1067 105 106% Am Loco .... 115 112% 114 Am Sm & Re 15013 148% 150 Sugar ... 90 0% Tel & Tel 16535 Tobacco . _— Am Woolen Anacdnda Cop Al(‘hlson vees '!31141 Loco .. BAIL & Ohio. Beth Steel {Calit Pet |Can Pac r De Pasco Ches & Ohio 184 CM&BP.. 24% C R I & Pac 98% Chile Cop ... 36% Chrysler Corp 45% Coca Cola 113" Colo Fuel Consol Gas |Corn Prod ’(‘ u Steel .. Dodge Bros A 21% Du Pont De Nem ... Eriec RR Erie 1st ptd |Tam Players .11014 Rubber ., 173 Asphalt . T4% Genl Elec .... 87% zenl Motors ..1851; Gt North Iron Ore Ctts ... 19% |Gt North pfd . 88% Gulf Sta Steel 50 Hudson Motors 85% 11l Central . IndO &G . |Int Nickel . Int Paper . Ken Cop | Kelly Sprin .chigh Val | Louis & Nash. 138% | Mack Truck ..114% Marland Oil .. 38% lid Cont 31 To Kan & Tex 47 Mo Pac pfd ..105% | Mont -Ward .. 67 ;\ tional Lead 203 Al Che & Dye 4515 1813 8% 607 60% 182 983 363y 44k 111% 83 36% 45% | 113% | 843% | 2403 54% . 69% |Genl 98% | mra. | Bristol B Ci PUTNAM & CO HARTFORD OFFICE We Offer: Burritt Hotel Bldg., New MEMPBERS NEW YORK We offer: We do not HARTFORD Tel.2-7186 We Offer: 100 Shares First Bond & Mortgage rights.. Life, Indemnity and Other Compsnies | Aetna Casualty & Surety Co, Aetna Conn. ife Insugance General Lif Co. . Light & Pows Power Co., . Power (o | Greenwich W cit Hfd. C HMd. E Li Hfd. Blec. Li Holyoke Water Powcr Co. 5. N. jrlcphux\o 5y ) pfd. Acme Wire Co., com. | Acme Wire Co, American Hardy Hoslery Co. c Refrigerating Co. (The Edward) Co. | Beaton & Caawell Mig. Co. Bigolow-Htd. Carpet Co, com. Carpet Co., pfd Bililuga & Spencer Co, com Pillings & Spencer Co., pfd. s Corp. . Lockwood & Brainard Co. t's Patent Fire Arms Co. . fir Bearing Co. r Brush com., class A . Fuller Brush com,, class AA Fuller Brush, 1st ptd. Hart & Cooley C ord Conn. Trust Bldg. . 108 m 5 | New Departur 88 Members New York & Hartford Stock Exchanges 31 WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN TEL. 2040 6CENTRALROW TELEPHONE 2-1141 Phoenix Insurance Co. Price on Application Thomson, 1fenn & @u Britatn AND HARTFORD m -cluun Donald R. Hart, Mgr. Aetna Casualty & Surety Company « Price on Application. accept Margin Accounts. EDDY BROTHERS.& NEWBRITAIN BurrittiHotelBldgs Tel. 3420 of Stanley Works 7| 8| Interfational Silver Co., com. .. 170] 175 Insurance { International Sliver Co. yJacobs Manufacturlng Co. ewell Belting C : Jewell Belting Co., pfd, . | Lauders, Frary & Clark 0 | Manning Bowman & Co., class A class B (. R) Co, com. o (s ) tional Marine Lamp C Machine Co., co h. C % pfd. Mach. Co,, clus$ B8 ptd. Mfg. Co. pld. New Haven Clock, com. ... ‘0. com. | Sin-Bement-Dond ptd. NHMvhnmvm-l"ond Co., North & Judd Mfg. Co. Omo Mfg. Co., com. “ 'F»mo Mfg. Co., ptd. Companies 1 Thomas 2 h Thomas Clock Co., yth Mfg. Co. ndard Screw Co, ndard Screw © ey Securities ¢ nley Works, com. ey Works, ptd. or & Fenn Co. . ¥ Steam Turbine Co. rrington Co. * Union Mfg. Co. . . Envelope Co., com. S. Envelops Co., pfd. Whitlock Ceil Pipe Co. ckford-Sweet C sted Hostery Co. prd. 'I'RFASI'RY BALANCE Treasury Balance $178,715,089. LIE LA U LI TR B Y TW ., « ey e, L ATURS 2 riaa U 3 . St ZATE il &3 IS LR 38 AL L ey SE3 1) « + e gy WE S e ¥ TR AT i N LRy R Rev. Eugene Bolllard, deacon and i i |a permit was sought by C. F. John- : [N Y Central ..150 Rev. Danlel Massee, sub deacon. |som, lessce of a portion of the former ©of nails were stolen from a new INYNHG&H 49 Los Angeles Man and house he is bullding at 530 Allen street last week. A boy said he saw man carrying the laths and nails | away. Hits Official’s Auto, Sasses Him, Drives On ‘The police are Investigating a eomplaint by Building Inspector A.| N. Rutherford that as he was drivin, south on Franklin square about 9 o'clock thls forenoon, a car being driven in the same direction hooked his fender and when he spoke to| the driver, the latter called him names in an abusive tone, and drove on without ascertalning whether or not damage had been done. Mr. Rutherford gave the police | the registration number and Chief| Hart detalled Motorcycle Policeman | 'W. P. Hayes to drive after the car.| It was learncd that a New Haven resident owns the qur, but Policeman Hayes reported he was not at home when he reached New Haven. ARRESTED FOR ASSAULT Sergeants P. A. McAvay and P, J. O'Mara arrested Frank Avella of 34 Talcott street about 1:25 this after- poon on charges of breach of the peace and assault, 'on complaint of Hyman Gitlavitz that the young man assaulted him in Gitlavitz's automo- bile accessorles place at Elm and Soymour streets. Gitlavitz told the police he had ordered Avella, who is a truck driver, to remain out of the place, but he has not done so and today when he spoke to him, Avella struck him. Avella, however, denicd | the charge. Pierre Gosselin sang *Crucifixus” as the body was being borne from the church. The pall bearers were Joseph Arbour, Delphis Beaufre, Romeo Grise, Soctance Valline, Sen- efa LaFlamme and Peter Sylvain. The flower bearers werc Ernest Sorel and Gideon Cote. The three priests conducted the ommittal service: Burial was In t. Mary's cemetery. Mrs. Robin A. Vredenburg Funcral sorvices for Mrs., Augusta M. Vredenburg, wife of Robin Vredenburg, an Instructor at the New Britain State Trade school, will be he|d tomorrow aftornoon at 1:30 o'clock at Stanley Memorial church. Rev. Raymond N. Gilman, pastor, _will officiate. Interment will be in Falrview cemeter Friends may view the remains at B. C. Porter Sons funeral parlors. Mrs. John A. McNefl TFunecral scrvices for Mrs. Anna (Donlon) McNeil, wife of James A. McNeil of 387 Main street, will be held tomorrow morning at the home of her sister,” Mrs, James T. Mc- Grath, of 458 Main street and at St. Mary's church at 9 o'clock with a solemn high mass of requiem. In- terment will be in St. Mary's cemetery. E ] Joseph A. Haffey DERTAKER Phone 2. Opposite St. Mary’s Church. Residence 13 Summer 8t.—1625-3. ! confiscated en air rifle which street and vicinity. | street, learned that the boy's father recent- |1y settled for similar damage in other house. |eral visits to the boy's home la evening but faled to find the boy. | school as the furnish street, site of the South church parsonage {on Washington street. The comm Ision has adopted a policy of deny- ing permits for structures of b type on the ground that they are a | detriment to the localities in which | they exist. GETS RIFLE BUT NOT BOY Officer William O'Day t nigh bos has been using without discro o according to the police, in Sexfon 60 Sexton it home of Mrs. Grip were broken, at and was n- The officer made AMPHION CLUB SHOW The comedy “Johnnic's will be presented by membe Amphion club at the Senior feature of the pro- gram of activities at the schoo of the High annual class day bazaarr. Mrs, C. will be the director. Guilford, the club’s super: Al Basney and his orchestra will the music for AUTOMOBILE RECOVERED The police were notified this aft- ernoon that the automobile report- ed stolen from Vincent Doolittle of 347 on May 15, has been recBvered in Stamford. JFarmington avenue, this city, BITTEN BY POODLE DOG David Karbonik of North aged about 14, reported to Stenographer Found Dead | Nor & W ..179 Los Angeles, May 17 (®—George | North Amer. Windows in the | dancing | which will follow the entertainment. E. Powell, Jr, vice president and retary of the Discount Corpora tion of California, {and Margie Pike, 24, believed to be a stenographer, were found &hot to | death in an automobile in front of the girl's residence here today. The first surmise by police was 1t Miss Pike shot Powell and hen Killed erself. bodies were found by a taxi- eab driver. | Pe ving in the house sail they hmlrd two shots late last night. N 'R BY TRUCK Howard Goodrich, aged 18, of 3 Raymond stre Barnesdale, fell [from an automobile truck owned by the Plainville Creamery Co., by whom he is employed and suffered 1 injury to his Yight leg when the the truck passed over him on Wooster street, this forenoon. He was taken to Britain General hospital for treatment, and it was reported this afternoon that the leg is not broken, although the injury is winful. He was riding on the run- ning board of the truck, delivering milk, when the accident happencd. AT BRIDGE Mrs, Alvin Carswell of Carlson strect entertained two tables of bridge 2t her home last evening in honor of Miss Winnie Conrad who will become the bride of Edward | Brot of Hartford the latter part of this mon were awarded to Aliss T well and Tearle Trusloy. / ow a lecal concern, | North Pacific. ’ack Mot Car Pan Am Pet B | Pennsylvania 611 | Pierce Arrow.. 161, Radio Corp .. 46% Reading 1183 Reynolds B ..1227%; inclair Oil outhern Pac . outhern Ry tandard Oil .. L 1TH 1121 cco Prod . Union Pac United Truit . USCtlr ki U 8 Ind Al .. 1" S Rubber .. 1 S Steel Wabash T Ward Ba Vest Elee White Motor . Willys Over . Woolworth HART ()lHl STOC (Furnished by e EXCHANGE ddg Bros. Co.) ey, 623] 635 165 300| 268 450 ial Trust Co. ver Banking ational Bank tna_National mn. Trust Co, Land Mortgage & Title 480 Phoenix State Bank & le Trust Finance Cor., T TR 5 o AR TS P 2 NEAT T NCE S ST ROPOT W 4 i —_———— Little Dorothy Wihr of Chi- €ago is just bursting with happy pride; and why not? Dorothy has won seven medals for remark- able performances at the Illinois Athletic club, although she is only seven. Some day, her coach says, she will be a world’s champion. Captain Kelly this afternoon that a poodle dog bit him on the leg as he was passing the building next to 110 Lafayette street. BOY RUNS INTO AUTO Irving Engebretsen of 83 Linden street notified the police at 8:30 last evening that as he was’ drlving on Beaver street, Edmond Recene, aged 10, of 20 Beatty street, ran out of Beatty street and was struck by the fender of the car. The boy suf- fered a scratch on the hand, the @rivey said s Finance Cor., pfd . Security Trust Co, | Bankers' Trust . | Capitol National Bank . { ¥irst Bond & Mortgage Fire Insurance Co Actna (Fire) Insurance Co. Automobile Tnsurance Co. Hfd. Fire Ins. Natfonal Fire Inaui This remarkable picture of a sensational steeplechase made at the East Devon Point-to-Point meet in England. ish take their fences seriously, and this brush-topped stopped the horse so suddenly that he plunged forward on Kcatapulting his rider through the air and over the wall the far side with a most inelegant nos¢-dive, into the med. ANOTHER FLIER KILLED Middletown, Pa, May 17 (P— Major Harold Geiger was Kkilled to- day when his plane was wrecked | and burned as he was taking off for Angola, on the west coast of Africa.{his return trip to the Aberdeen cut off a man's arm at the shoulder | proving grounds, Maryland, at the and plant it in the ground with the | United States air intermediate depot hand sticking up. here, BOLLERER’S POSY SHOP BEDDING PLANTS We Invite You to visit our Grecnhoises on Johnson St., Maple Hill. 83 W. Main §t. Tel. 886. Prof. B.I:L “The Telegraph Florist of New Britain” As a plea for raln the people of Rossia Insurance Co. .