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- DOROTHY MAGHAYE S FOUND GUILTY Held in Jall Tor Sentence on Satunday — | Los Angeles, June 30 P—Dorothy | Mackaye, emotional actress, was cast in & lite tragedy today as, costymed in the drab blue denim of the jail uniform, she sat in her cell awaiting sentence for compounding a felony. Bhe was convicted here yesterday of attempting to conceal facts in the death of her actor husband, Ray Raymond. Bentonce will be passed upon the actress Saturday. The court has the! cheice of glvipg her an indetermi- | nate sentence of from one to three years at S Quentin penitentiary, where her avowed lover, Paul Kelly, is to serve a one to ten year term for manslaughter as a result of his fist fight with Raymond, or of sub- stituting six months imprisonment in the county jail. o The acting ability of Miss Mack- aye was tested as she waited in the courtroom for the verdict of the jury of eight women and four men. She| had indicated hope of acquittal! when two alternate jurors who had sat in the case assured her they would have decided in her favor had they been called upon to ballot on her fate. Soon afterward jurors’ queptions regarding circumstantial | evidence forewarned her of her im- | pending conviction. ‘When the jurors filed into thtrl courtroom and the verdict was an- nounced the actress received the de- | cree of guilty with little outward | display of emotion except for the| convulsive twitching of her face. As court adjourned Miss Mackaye threw herself into the arms.of her| friend, Miss Helen Wilkinsen, who | had been weeping from the moment | the jurors appeared. Composure returned to the actress last night and she was able to greet reperters in her cell with a smile. “How do you like my little dress,” she said, as she stood up to display the soarse denim gown worn by wo- men ‘grisoners. She called her con- viction “a mistake" but declared she *“would make the best of it.” In a cell in another part of the Jall, Kelly expressed his sorrgw over the conviction of the woman for whom he has repeatedly declared his love. The charge upon which Miss Mackaye was convicted was one of two ag tniahes shrdl shrdl shrdlu | two against her at the opening of Clure of Barrington, TlL, who re-!has gone to a the trial. One count, that of acces- \ |sentative, C. v t order of the court. Dr. W. J. Sullivan, with whom Miss Me “kaye was accused of having conspired to conceal certain facts in her ‘husband’s death, although in- dicted with her, obtained a separate trial and s due 6 come before the court the latter part of next month. MOREHEAD COMMANDER - OF COLORED K. OF P. New Britain Man Elected to High- est Office At Annual State Convention. was dismissed by. The third annual convention of the Grand Lodge Jurisdiction of Connecticut, Colored Knights of Py- thias, by unanimous vote, elected the following officers for the ensuing year at its executive session held yesterday afternoon at Odd Fellows' hall, Arch street: Grand Chancellor, Charles 8. Morehead of New Britain; grand vice-chancellor, Robert U. Graham of Stamford: grand prelate, Louis ‘Wood of Stamford; grand keeper of the record and seal, W. H. DeMond of Danbury; grand master of the ex- chequer, T. J: Helms of Hartford; grand master at arms, Louis Jack- son of Danbury; grand lecturer. James Pattison of Hartford; grand inner guard, J. H. Bryant of Dan- bury: grand outer guard, I Pollard of Norwalk; grand medical trar, Dr. F. Whittington of Water- bury; grand attorney, Howard P. Drew of Hartford: supreme repre- 8. Morehead. Robert U. Graham was recommended to the supreme degree. The joint installation of officers took place yesterday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. A reception was held at Odd Fellows’ hall last evening, ending the twé day convention of the organization which had attracted members from all parts of the state. |Steel Coaches Save Lives Of Scores of Passengers Chicago, June 30.—(UP)—Steel coaches today were credited with saving the lives of scores of pas- sengers on a Nickel Plate train—| bound from New York—which struck an open switch in the south- ern extremity of Chicago and was wrecked. The last four train leapcd over an embankment and ‘overturned, trapping more than 50 persons. Only six were Injured and only one of the injured was considered | ing her own housekeeping, even to |committee investigates Mc- | marketing. The regular housekeeper | John ~W. serfous. She is Miss Dorothy ceived internal injurfes. FLASHES OF LIFE: SEVERAL AVIATORS WANT TO FLY ALL AROUND THE WORLD regis- | By the, Ausoctated Press. New York—Anthony Fokker, who has quite a reputation for building planes, knows at least half a dozen men who want to fly around the world. Some of them wish to do it without stop, by refueling in the air. anto;—fle‘enber:er, one of the Hawallan fliers, has a relative named Lindberg. New York—Commercial aviation must go some to take the place of the old freight car. Daily it is mov- ing goods at the rate of ten tons per mile per inhabitant of the United States. Sydney, Australia—The good old ship of the desert should have a laugh at these modern ships of the air. A plane has just flown around Australia, but gasoline sent to remote places by camel. New York—Which is nearer to Manhattan, San Francisco or Brooklyn? Well, the World repro- duced postmarked envelopes to show that a letter arrived in two days from Sun Francisco via air mail, then after quite & wait for | favorable winds across the East River, was delivered fn Brooklyn 18 days later. Ottawa—King George will try to jtalk to thousands of his Canadiun | subjects tomorrow through a radio hookup on the Dominion’s 60th birthday. | ‘New York—Masterpleces of art | dealing with bird life, painted and | skketched by a famous expert are | and wqll paper on the walls of John | James Audubon’s old studio, and it is doubtful whether they can be | restored. The mansion along the Hudson river where once lived the for it was Andrade I buried beneath the common paint | carrying provisions bought person- ally by the first lady. Wimbledon—A\iss Betty Nuthall, tennis star, is perplexed by two charmers. She likes Mr. Amateur, but Mr. Professional has so much cash that she is wavering. “I wish |the offer had not been so attract- ive,” she mused. London—When Mrs. Bror G. Dahlberg of Chicago wishes to talk to her husband, she will do so, that's all. She desired to telephone him in New York from her hotel in Paris. The connection could not be made. She cabled a London hotel to put a call through for her at a specified time, then flew to London, had the {chat, and flew back. New Bedford, Mass.—Laurinda C. immigrated from the | Azores as a child all alone ten years jago. She worked six years in the cotton mills and saved up for an | education. Now having finished the | high school course with honors In six months less time than usual, she has received a $150 scholarship and |is to go to college. New Haven—State rests its case |in appeals of 14 eclectic doctors |against revocation of their licenses. 1 New Haven—Charles Carter, Hartford, is drowned when canoe overturns. | New Hayven—Grand jury is sum- moned to hear evidence against | Thomas Novak, alias Steve Rudick, {of Norwalk, charged with killing man in New Haven in 1923. | New Haven—Amicable solution of many cases out of court would atd progress of litigation, Judge Isaac | Woife tells lawyvers at dinner ten. dered Judges John R. Booth of New {ornithologist and artist, who died in | Haven and Robert L. Munger who {1851, is now a rickety frame house have been elevated to the superior joccupied by James McGrath, a rail- [ court bench and the common pleas {road worker. The studio Is his|court respectively. | kitehen, Tearing down somc old {wall paper he found something pretty.” But, he explal 1 got tired of looking at those bird pic- Itures, so T got some good lead | paint those walls. Then T got tired of the paper.” Experts are studying the possibilities of restoration. ’ Rapid City—Mrs. Coolidge is do- hospital and the | White House Imousine has been ) efore this pump 1s placed the dealer has been carefully investigated. Only men who measure up to Pan-Am standards of fair dealing can sell this better gasoline. and put a nice coat all over | New Haven—Iirst steps to pro- cure an appropriation for the es- |tablishment of a New Haven air | port are taken. | Hartford—S. W. Mott of Mill coaches of the |paint and put up some green wall | River and FF. K. English of Water. | bury advance to finals of state golf | championship tournament. | Hartford— Hartford - Hartford county bar association grievance conduct of ! Joy and Ferdinand D'Esopo, - Hartford laywers and | graduates of Yale law school. | AY, JUNE ou, 1¥ii. WHAT WENT WRONG To- NUIGHT. PFYE? WELL, You Know SURE, | THouGHT, DAT SWELL LAYoUT/ You HAD The | TELLS You JoB ALL T~ ? FRAMED - ~ LECVTRS WHAT HAPPENS' Gee! '™ Sure GETTIN' ALL DE ROTTEN BREAKS DESE DAYS AND You WELL,SCARFACE DIDN'T GET STARTS To COUGH AND WAKES UP DE + BULL ON DE CORNER. WRY WE WAS LUCKY WELL ,WE GETS IN DE DumeP ALL RIGHT, SEE- AND JusT ABouT READY T BLOW The Smoother and Better Cigarette ....not a cough in a carload AN-H-IT WAS A CINCH- | CouLDA CRACKED IT WID A CAN- BEFORE SCARFACE GoEs oW, DE NEXT JoB WIT ME, HE SURE, HE Cov, - PUNISH A SMOKES OLD Product of P. Lorillssd Ce., Bet. 160 Not expected Not thougit possible 4 T /\\./»'”\\ rQ Yet 770w an even greater MILUON oF Er | You don't have to .wonder whether you will get a square deal at any Pan-Am pump. For we are always careful to see that you are served by Pan-Am products are mar- keted by the same organiza- tion that produces them. Pan-Am gasoline will give you more mileage, easier ESSEX Super-Six Greater power—more brilliant performance Roomier—Finer and more luxurious bodies Now on dealers of known reliability. When you pay for five gal- lons, you know you have five full gallons. You know that every drop is of the same high Pan-Am quality — for starting, and more power. Yet it costs no more than the ordinary kind. Here is an unprecedented thing t do. Dlsplay Essex Super-Six is the outstanding success of the year. Its sales have topped all records. Its popularity has made it the most brilliant accomplishment the industry has known. No"wonde? thousands of motorists are turning to Pan-Am! But Essex engineers have now created an even greater and finer Essex Super- Six. So startling are its advantages that at the height of the selling season, with the market stripped of Essex cars and thousands of unfilled orders on hand, production was interrupted to give buyers a greater and finer value. " ) " \‘« ,0 Y NI For trustworthy lubrication EOOM hX) use Pan-Am Motor Oils and Greases We are now showing it. Though factory r;rednction is the largest in history, prompeness alone can insure delivery ahead of thousandswhowant this new Essex. ESSEX SUPER-SIX Coach $738; Coupe *735; Sedan *835; 2-passenger Speedabout $700; 4-passenger Speedster 3835 Al gricas 1. & b. Detrois, plus wer excise tax. 7N ‘M'I" i M‘; M eXican () ¢ ' . Petroleum Corporation ) 0'0.0 On strange roads, as well as at home, yos can de pend on the degler who sells Pan-Am HONEYMAN AUTO 200 EAST MAIN STREET