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GOUPLE IN AUTO HELD UP, ROBBED Highwaymen Get $50 on Lonely Shuttle Meadow Lake Road A state wide search is being made Ly the police for two armed bandits who took $50 from John Hlavatl of 45 Wilcox street and a young wom- an companion as they were seated in an automobile on the road near Lake Shuttle Meadow late Saturday uight. The bandits were riding in a ar which was stolen in Newington Saturday, and are thought to be 1bout 23 years of age. One was wearing a tan raincoat and the other had no cvat, according to Hlavati, but was wearing a blue shirt. Hlavati reported'the hold-up to lieutenant Rival early Sunday morn- ng and the latter spread the alarm 1t once. According to Hlavati, he had $25 and his companion the same 1mount. They had no chance to re- sist, he said. Hlavati reported the registration of the car, the bandits apparently having made no attempt to hide it. Several weeks ago, a pair of ban- Qits operated successfully in Lake ‘huttle Meadow section, and acted in much the same manner as those »f the most recent holdup, brandish- ng revolvers and demanding money. Three Holdups in Southington (Special to The Herald) Bristol, July 25—The Mount Ver- 1on road, which leads form Lake avenue to the state road north of Lazy Lane, Southingtop, was the scene 'of three holdups late Satur- lay night, a trlo of bandits, armed vith a rifle, revolver and flashlights securing $42 from their victims. The first holdup occurred at about 11 p. m. Joseph Johnson, while rcturning from the lake, was stopped by the men and relieved of 315. Tht second victim of the hold- » men was H. B. Elton of 25 Rich- mond road, New Britain, also route to his home. He was forced 1o turn over 314 to the sams trio, who permitted him to leave after making sure that they had all of his money. A driver of the White Star bakery of this city and stop- ped a short time later and surren- tored $13, all the money he had vith him. The stretch of the road where the | holdups occurred is lenely and savily wooded on each side. None of the men stcpped was able to fur- nish a description of the bandits, whom it is telieved were using ® .ar stolen in New Britain Saturday | The police authorities of South- sgton were notified of the holdups ind Constables Murphy, Cockayne and Foley started a search for the men. No trace of them, had been found up to a late hour this morn- No report was made to the lo- ~al police department. 0URT JAILS THO, CALLS THEM LIARS fudg Roche, Denounces Princ: pials in Fight for Wild Yaros “I'm frank o ay that I consider 1t a bareface' attempt to come into this court and lie, and for that rea con I am going to impose sentences of 10 days in jail in each case,” said Judge Henry P. Roche in police ~ourt this morning after hearing Moses aged 19, of Berlin, and Fred Cogswell, aged of 166 West street, this city, declare they 4id not know the name and address of & man with whom Cogswell was fighting on Eim street last night. Both men are cclored, and were ar- yaigned with Thomas Yopp. aged a9, also colored, of Berlin, on charges of breach of the peace and ult. Yopp was discharged. Ofticer Peter McEvoy and Su- pernumerary Officer Zaybowski tes- lified to making the arrests about 10:45 last night, on complaint. They found Cogswell and Crysty on the and Yopp, who ran when ihe officers came, was caught on Hartford avenue. He said he saw the fight but he had no part in it ad in the hope that he might \void being summoned as a witness or arrested, he ran, only to be ap- prehended with others. Prosecu g Attorney Woods recommended that he be discharged. Cogswell told the court he walking along Elm street when inan said something to him that an- cered him and a fight ensued. He did not know the man's name oOF \ddress and he did not know what the remark was that caused the nelee. He did not know what time it was because he had no watch e sald he was certain his antag- onist was not Crysty and he al ‘xonerated Yopp. Crysty told the court he saw Cogswell and the mysterious man /ighting and he separated them. In co doing, he and Cogswell fell to the sidewalk and he was trying to held Cogswell down when the officers ar- A ng sentenced, Cogs- well and Crysty gave notice of an ippeal to superior court. Refuses to Move for Policeman Edward Ridel, aged 17, of 86 Elm street, was fined $3 and costs, execu- tion of the sentence suspended, on the chargs of refusing to move hen ordered to do so by Officer Anthony Ustach. He denied the of- ficer's testimony that he refused to Main street. near th tunch room, at 10 4 he saw a t ground was a al men an oxciter only a few was placed 10 him | {0 him sev-. gating with te had alreag 1 times ab hawever, gave a a? the incident. He chorzed I 1 with not only re- faning to. move, he jaten the 'k as lov ploased ta do so. Judge Roche said he believed the officer but as the 18 he | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 2% 1927. offense was not very serious, he sus- pended execution of the penalty. Family Saves Him Fromi Jail Andrew Michelonis, aged 46, of 212 Hartford avenue, was fined $10 and costs and given a suspended jail sentence of 15 days for drunkenness and assaulting his wife. Judge| Roche told him he was escaping Jjail only because of the fact that he has a family. Sergeant Stadler and Officer San- tucei and Cabelus arrested him about 3:30 a. m., Sunday at his home. Mrs. Michelonis was bleed- ing from the mouth and accused her | President husband of having punched her. gested that correspondents writ Michelonis dented that he had com- about the government's aid to mitted the assault. [farmers i extending time limit on Officer Cabelus testified that he |their debts to the government from heard Michelonis tell his wife. he | 42 to 60 years. would assault her again, as he wa:{ The United master in his own house. Michelonis | who arrived here today denied having made the threat. {the Singing Annoys Patrolman John O'Brien, aged 32, of East street and Herbert Smith, aged WESTERN FARMER WANT SOME HELP Think Coolidge Should - Urge Extension of Time D., July 25 (UP) — olidge recently sug- Newell, Press correspondent found tha farmers are + holding a mass ting tomorrow night to protest gainst the government’s refusal to estend time limits for payments 24, of 107 Lasalle street, charged |ypon their obligations. They have with breach of the peace, were dis- | cuitivated 60,000 acres of the 100,- charged. Officer Peter Cabelus testi- | ;) oo fied that he arrested them near the the Belletourche¥siver. which Smalley school on o Talcott _street | .o 50 8 5 O I ERE Kot ent shortly before 8 elclock Eunday (=0 - TR L e B morning. Tony Canzola of 74 Tal-| 5 FERE 20 /E BE cott street said he heard some sing- | PrEirie qssert. 5 ing’ but He- afd not know who was| F: S Swith, who runs a weekly in the group. |newspaper at Bellefourche, says Judge W. F. Mangan, representing | i the men, asked for a discharge for | Their crops have been lack of evidence and it was granted. | Sradually improving the last few Willlam Jones, aged 29, of 225 |¥ears but they have not made suf- West street, who was with them, | ficient money to pay off their debt failed to appear and a cash bond of [to the government in the present 310 was forfeited. He was charged | specified time of 10 years. However, with drunkenness and breach of the 'a sugar beet factory has been lo peace. {cated out here this year and th Hurls Stone, Hits Wife's Nose |look for big crops next year. Charles Hallsted, aged 70, of Long | From an airplane, the project street, pleaded not guilty to charges looks like a gisantic gridiron with of drunkenness and assaulting Ris |little rivulets two feet wide and 100 wite. Officer Strolls arrested hi Soohn opors AL G e complaint Saturday afternoor ground to breathe fertility into the Hallsted testified that she was Struck {<oi) which furnishes annually $1, on the nose with a stone thrown bY 500,000 in sugar beets, alfalfa, cu- her husband but he did not mean |ty S S TR to sfriicerhie sy 4| F. C. Youngblood is federal offi- Prosecuting Attorney Weods said | v, = 3 SR8 OO 8 e s 2"& fa‘l‘f‘eg h:‘ "'é;dt ‘°°C$rs‘f;i" proud that ‘the sugar bect factory her husband on pasf castons. | Proud . ¢ Judge Roche revoked the suspension | 128 Peen established and promises of a 15 days’ jall sentence impased | a1 CFOpS Mext veak May he couc acres of irrigated lands may ¢t be settled. “We are making a garden of the desert,” he said. ‘The proj 1s growing every year. Rainfall has been large this year and helped im- mensely. We will have the largest ince' the plot was started in s92 by mands. He gave Hallsted another ch; and put him on probation. It was Hallsted’s 27th arrest, according to the police records. Smoke Shop Raided John Miezanka, aged 30, of 174 Pleasant street, and Joseph Chanda, aged 43, of 182 Allen street, plead- ed not guilty to two counts of vio- lation of the liquor law. They were| Farmers, however, are complain- arrested about 11 a. m. vesterday|ing about the government require- by Sergeants Ellinger, McAvay and iment that they pay off their debt McCue. The alleged violation took | for land within ten vears and they Place in a smoke shop at 28 Broad |hope Mr. Coolidge will see fit to Scech lend his assistance to their move- On request of Judge W. F. Man-|yeny gan, the cases were continued until | Thursday morning. Miezanka s arged with being a second offen- Y. W. C. A. NOTES Schedules for the swimming pool er. for the coming week have been an- A continuance until Thursday|poynceq by Miss Gertrude Fossett, morning was granted in the case of | pyygical director of the Y. W. C. A, Thomas Mierzejewski, aged 21, of | o gonows: 148 Farmington avenue, Who was| aonday: |arrested this morning on the charge | g oolock. of violation of the liquor law by $er- | * Tyecday: Junior plunges, 4:15 to 5 | geants McCue and Ellinger. He is|iclock. Senior plunges, to 9 the alleged proprietor of a smoke | g0k chop at 79 Broad street. Judge W. | Thursday appeared for him. Seloeie The charge of breach —of the| --jgg Fossett has announced that peace was nolled In the case of Peter Scudo, aged 42, of 282 High street. !|Judge W. F. Mangan represented | him, . Swimming classes, 6 to Sentor plt to 9 swimming classe~ | are stiil open for enrolment. The { classes will complete their course on | October 1 Other dapartments of the local titution have ceased activities Manchester, Mass., July { Miss Helen Wills, making her | the Week-End County club women’s invitation | singles tournament. The scores were Hartford, July 25 (UP)—Two per- sons were killed and nine injured in in- for P— | 6-1, 6-1. Miss , Sarah Palfrey of Brookline, 14 year old national in- door girls' champion, defeated Miss Eleonora Se sets, 6-2, 6-3. accidents in this state over the week end, Joseph O. Gagnan, 52, went be- vond his depth at Savin Rock and was drowned despits attempts to save him Michael Milano, 6, dieq at the |Grace hospital in New Haven from injuries received when he was struck Iby an automobile. Robert A. Weis, jof New Haven, driver of the car, was |arrested on a reckless driving jclm-ge. He was released on $300 { bail. Tive persons were injured, three {seriously, in a collision between two |automobiles in South Willington yes- terday afternoon. They were taken to the Johnson Memorial hospital in Stanford Springs. The injured are: | Clayton’ Skelly, 23, Edith Skelly, 18, | Robert Rinner, 22, Mary Rinner, 19, {all of Tolland and Miss Rose Pro-| dice, 22, of Willington. Rinner is | not expected to 1 | Canoeists Baffled by Mighty Mississippi Memphis, Tenn,, July 25 (® — The Mis ppi river is too great a hazard for a canoe, four New York youths who quit their 3,000 mile [trip from New York to New Or- {leans within 750 river miles of their goal, declared here last night | “We can't go any fruther,” they |said as they beached their craft. | The voung men in the yarty, "Howard Adams, “Rudy” Steinhofer, i Arthur Dellack and Herbert Meyer, left the Micmac Canoe club on Sheepshead Bay, } on May {for the first leg of their long and arduous journey. Albany was the |first itinerary,_stop. thence through the Erie canal and up the Mohawk 'and Seneca rivers to Bu |Lake Erfe to Toledo, th | venturers went to Fort W {Down the Wabash from ton, Ind., the quartet {Ohio and went to Cairo. | Falls Out of \\'indo'w. Lands in Flower Box | | Newark, N. J. July 25 (P—Wil- | |liam Davis, 11, probably owes his {life to the geraniums which hloom 110 a flower box one floor below his bedroom swindow. Early today the lad gAile asleep, | teil from a *hird story window and | landod safely In the flower box. A ccping on the second floor enod by his screams and | | puiled him to safoty. He was taken | to ‘he Clty hospital, treated for ' | bruises and gent home, That's what Tagalong Whiz! arrived at his home. . Ever since Tag asked bo his pony, mail has been ar Hunting struck the it is: Dear Boys and Girls: my pony. dreds—and lots more of lette: dandy names. But, of course, I can't, so I ho picked out, everybody will be pony—and me, too—whateve t | i project which is watered | here is justice in the farmers' de- | | Aviator Dies From | Automobile Injuries | 1 Watertown, N. Y. July 25 (A— W. Knox Martin, Detroit aviator | who came here to act as bearer at | the funeral today of Jack Garlock, killed in a plane crash at Lomax, | I1l., died late last night of injurlcsy fl’(‘ll\(dl Saturday in an automobile | | accident. | Miss, Marie LaFave, 25, was zlso | fatally hurt when the car overturn- | ed. Three others were less seriously injured. EVANGELIST HAS " SETTLEMENT IDEA \Proposes Three Peace Terms to . Mrs. Kennedy Los Angeles, July 25 (P—Ditfer- | | ences between Aimee Semple Mc- | | Pherson and her mother and busi- ! | ness manager, Mrs. Minnie Kenpedy | over control of Angelus Temple, | still awaited definite settlement to- day. Three alterpate settlement were drafted by Mrs. Me- | Pherson at a series of conferences | yesterday with her mother. | The Evangelist, who suddenly ended a revival campaign at Alton, ., to fight over finances broke out be- tween Mrs. Kennedy and a faction headed by Rev. C. A. Jaynes, whom Mrs. McPherson named as the new manager of the Temple ¢ after removing Mrs. Ken- mads the | ong as she desires, | ating with the Evangelist tn- sofar as advice on policy lines and | c work is concerned, but | managerial capacity. That Mrs. Kennedy take rge of the temple and jated bodies and Mrs. McPherson step down and out and | found an entirely new and individ- ual religious body. | (@) iThat rom all ac temple work and in recogni | her previous services, she cd a substantial income from An- s ple for the remainer of McPherson w | leaders to be favored by Mrs. Ken- | proposals for a! | | trapper, begins HOPE T0 CONVICT THREE OF MURDER Louisiana ~ Authorities Open Trial Today Franklin, La, July 25.—(#— While defense - attorneys remained silent as to their plans, the state an- nounced tcday ready to start its ef- fort to send three persons to the gal- lows for the murder of James J. Lebouef, superintendent of the Mor- gan City branch of the Louisiana Public Utitlities Company. Trial of the three defendants, Mrs. Ada Bonner Lebouef, widow of the vietim; Dr. Thomas E. Dreher, prominent Morgan and James Beadle, today 1n Mary Parish courthouse. Dr. Dreher, according to the an- nouncement of Sherif? Charles the St ed in the crime but he accused ! Beadle of firing the fatal shots, Mrs. | Lebouet, the sheriff said, confe ed 0 witnessing the crime but asserted she did not recognize the assailants. Pecot, confessed that he participat- | for the summer | ars of Boston in straight | Isn't it wonderful”—when another heap of letters nedy. Mrs. Kennedy declined to com; on the proposals. |State Movie Men Hold | Meeting This Noon | New Haven, July 25 (#—DMotion Beadle has remained silent through- out except to insist that he knows nothing of the slaying, and to de- | clare that any one¢ who says he kill- | ed Lebouef is a “liar.” | The slaying is alleged to have taken place July 1, while Lebouef and his wife were riding in two boats. The state contends that Dr. Dreher and Beadle approached in another boat and the Lebouet was | fatally shot at time. His body was | | then split open to keep it trom | floating, it is alleged, and cast into | the waters of Lake Palourde weight- | {ed down with two heavy angle irons. | The body was found five day: |later in the lake by frog hunters. | Investigation by Sheriff Pecot re- jsulted in the arrest of the three | persons. HELD ON SUSPICION | Noted Anarchist in Buenos Afres | Is Suspected of Having Bombed Washington Statue. | Buenos Aires, Argentina, July 25 |uP—>liguel Arcangel Roscigna, de- |scribed by the police as a noted an- archist, has been detained on sus- | picion thdt he was connected with |the bombing of the George Wash- ington statue and the Ford agency |in Buenos. Aires Friday night. Roscigna said to be a member lot the local Sacco-Vanzetti commit- {tee and the police believe that lonly was he connected with Fri |night's outrages, but the bombing [some time ago of the United States legations at Buenos Montevideo, although proot of this. Among papers selzed at ths Lead- |quarters of the local “committee for |Sacco-Vanzetti,” the police an- |nounce, was 2 message from Bos- |ton signed Jose Morro of the com- mittee for the defense of Sacco and Vanzetti, making it known that the lexecution of the condemned men would take place August 10 and that the ‘situation is desperate.” |Argentine workmen were asked to Icooperate in an international mahi- ation of protests on July 31. CAROL AT SERYICES ; |Attends Mass Held in Paris Sunday | as Memorial to His Father—Ap- pears Grieved and Tear-Worn. Paris, July 25 () — Former Crown Prince Carol of Rumania unobtrusively made his first public appearancs since the death of his father, King Ferdinand, at a service iin the little Rumanian church here vesterd picture theater men met here this ndon to hear a d sion on the| |nlock booking decision, and arbitra- | in the industry with several| |other topics to be offered if there was time. ! The state organization has Arthur | H. Lockwood as president and Ed- | G. Levy, secretary. The speak- ers at the luncheon which followed | were Prof. Wesley Sturges of Yale | ty, P. S. Harrison, publisher | tion picture review, in New . and Secretary L on |Goddard Leaves L. F. & C., | Ends 10 Years Service | F. A. Goddard of 60 Griswold street has resigned from his posi- tion as assitant foreman at Landers, Frary & Clark, ‘ending a period of service which covers 10 years in the repair department of the factory. He has made no further plan garding connections with an; firm and will spend two the shore before returning is cit } | other = GEE WHIZ/ | AINT IT WONDERFUL ? He looked grieved and tear-worn. He received the condolences of of- ficlal amd diplomatic personages at the conclusion of the service, and then left the edifice as quietly as he came. He returned immediately to his villa at Neuilly. A few Rumanians among the crowd outside the church raised a cheer and what were reported to be cries of “Long live the king” in Rumanian, but the prince paid no heed to them. It was reported today that he re- ceived a political Bucharest, but what passed st the meeting has been kept secret. In any case, his friends aver, he has no intention of considering any po- litical plans while mourning his father. The service which Carol attended was an official requiem high mass for the members of the Rumanian legation, the diplomatic corps and representatives of the French gov- ernment. The secretary of the American embassy represented Am- bassador Herrick, who is in the delegation from |United States. What Is Your Opinion of Yourself? Folks who do not know you judge you by the clothes you wear; by the care you take of your clothes. Are you doing yourself justice? Do you 1se DESDE Dy Cleaning? Before you go away for the Call 904 DESCO can and will help you and its costs no more than ordinary dry cleaning. week-end West Main Arch St St. Tel. 904 Tel. 904 Delivery Service Everywhere To whom will they tum? It is well for a family to have something to fall back upon. When illness or lack of employment brings decreased income, or when misfortune brings excep- tional expense, how fine it would be if your family could tumn to a Trustee for help! At its discretion, the fund provided by your life msurance could meet the sudden demand upon it. You could trust the discretion of this Bank as Trustee. McGoosey said today—‘‘Gec vs and girls to help him name ving by the bushel-basketful —and you can't exactly blame him for being tickled pink over the way his little friends have taken an interest. Tagalong brought a letter in for us to print—so here It surely is going to be a lot of fun picking a name for I have had hundreds and hundreds and hun- s so far, and they all suggest I wish I could call my pony all of them. pe that when a name is finally satisfied and will still like my r the name is. I want to thank you all for helping me, and in return, Freckles and I will try our best to amuse you every day. Your friend, - TAGALONG M'GOOSEY New Britain National Bank . Trustee for Insurance Funds . \