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(S . L] v \sta News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN HERALD WORK OF BUILDING EIGHT NEW CRUISERS IS TO BE HASTENED BY NAVY DEPT. Failure of Geneva Con- ference Results In Rush Order to Com- plete Building of Au- "thorized Vessels. President Coolidge Gives Official Approval to “Moderate” Program Aft- - er Talk With Wilbur. Rapid City, S. D., Aug. 9 /P—The shipbuilding program developed by the general board of the navy de- partment which was described to- day at the summer White House as “moderate’” has been approved by President Coolidge after a confer- ence here with Secretary Wilbur. Moreover, full speed ahead has been ordered on the construction of the eight additional cruisers au- thorized by congress as a result of the failure of the Geneva naval armaments conference. It has been decided that these ships should be put on the seas within the three- year period it takes to complete them. While keels for two of the eight cruisers had been laid, only the plans have been developed for the other Congress overruled President Coolidge last winter in ap- propriating funds for three of these vessels on which work had not been ted and for which the money available for construction would have passed back into the treasury last July. Now these three along with the other five will be put into commission as soon as possible, After his conference today Secre- tary Wilbur also announced that all plans for construction of the great lighter-than-air ship authorized by congress would be held up pending approval hy congress of the propos- ed contract for this ship which would be three times as large as the Los Angeles. Mr. Wilbur is refus- ing to accept a contract on a cost basis. The only which has submitted an accept- plan for the gigantic ship is in- (Continued on Page 21) FOUR-WHEEL BRAKES ON NEW FORDS POSSIBLE Mystery Shrouds Appearance of Two New Models on the Road Today. Detroit. Mich., Aug. 9 (UP)—The mystery resulting from the secrecy with which Henry Ford has sur- rounded the plans for his new car was doubled today by the appear- ance of two different kinds of test models on the roads around his ex- perimental laboratories. One of the models was equipped with drums which obviously con- tained four-wheel brakes. The other model had drums on all the wheels, but those attached to the front wheels were so small that it was doubtful whether they con- tained hrakes. On one of the ca chinery under body the heavy ma- and on the rear led to the belief that the car| was equip_ed with a gear shift in- stead of a clutch shift. nothing about the other car. how- ever, to promote that conclusion. Both models were equipped with wire wheele. They twere painted dark green and glate gray. They ap- peared to be capable of speed than the present zzed by observers at a fast Ford is putting all of his great plants here in shape to produce the new cars with the ore from his own he timber from his own for- cloth from his own loems a beds in the brief space when he is ready. of hours Lawrence Firemen Offer Blood Transfusions Lawrence, Ma; Aug. 9 (P—After two thirds of t members of the Lawrence fire department had vol- unteered to submit to a blood trans- fusion in an effort to save the life of one of their comrades, seven of their number were selected today. They started at once for Boston where Thomas Hollows, a hoseman, is un- der treatment at the Massachusetts General hospital for Hodgkins' dis- ease, a rare ailment characterized by progressive anacmia. Hospital phy- sicians will pick the one of the seven most suitable for the trans- fusion D IN NEW YORK E | to the Herald) Otto Henry of New Brit- ain, Conn., but at present resjding in Brooklyn, and Mabel Adele Sturges, 24, of the Hotel Breslin here, were married in the Little Church Around the Corner yesterday soon after they obtained their lice! to wed at the marriage bureau. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Randolph Ra Weslaw was born in N - Britain, the son of Mitchell And ilhelmina Weslaw. The bride is the daughter of Daniel and Rose Sturges, She was born in Stepn: Conn. There was | greater | models for | the sand from his own Silica | HAVE YOU GOT YOURS? Washington, Aug. 9.—(UP)— If your bank account didn't amount to at least $40.53 on August 1, something is wrong. At least, the treasury nounces there was $4,744,4 637 in circulation on that date among the 117,064,00 people of the United States, or an average, it divided equally, of $40.33 per person. SEEK ANOTHER BODY IN SUBMERGED SEDAN Police Think Second Man | Vas Drowned When Car Went Into River Danbury, Conn., Aug. 9 (/P—That a second man, William Franklin, of 218 White street, was drowned Sat- jurday night when a sedan driven | by Peter Szabo of this city, plunged | into the Housatonic river following a collision with another car near Southbury, was the theory on which state police were working today. The body of the identified man taken from the car shortly after the accident was identified last night as being that of George Babyak, 23, of Danbury. The state police learned that | Szabo. Babyak, Franklin and George | Kolesar left Danbury at §:15 o'clock Saturday night for a dance in South- | bury and that they started home to- | gether shortly before midnight. A half mile from the dance hall the car collided with one driven by Mitchell Wasillieft of New York city, and plunged into the river. The] Wasillieff car also went into the river. Kolesar and Szabo swam ashore and later Szabo brought the body of Babyak ashore. What became of Franklin is unknown. The four oc- cupants of the Wasillieff car, who Wwere on their way to the summer home of Count Tilya Tolstol escaped | through the windows and swam ashore. Kolesar and Szabo informed the police and Coroner John T. Manzani of Waterbury, that they did not know the man who was drowned, | saying that they had picked him up in front of the dance hall. Tt now develops that they have known him for a long time and that they took him to the dance hall together with Franklin, the missing man, WHATNALL RETIRES FROM OFFICE AFTER 25 YEARS | New Britain Man Had Served Long | as Sons of St. George Famons Scldier and Belomlli IFLAGS AT HALF MAST; {the heroes’ burial ground at Arling- {the family. {ed Major Generals H., P. McCain, NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1927.—TWENTY-FOUR PAGES GENERAL WOOD AT “REST WITH HERO DEAD OF NATION Governor of Philippines Makes Last Journey - CAPITAL IN MOURNING Body Arrives in Washington in Ear- 1y Morning and is Borne By Mili- tary Fricnds to Grave in Rough | | Rider's Section of Heroes' Burlal Ground at Arlington—Widow and | Children in Cortege. Washington, Aug. & (P—Major General Leonard Wood today joined the long list of the nation's notable | figures who have made the journey ! down Pennsylvania, over the Foto- mac to Arlington national cemetery, !a final resting place. | | from factories are removed from the TFull military honors and part { pation of high government officials | in the funeral procession the country’s tribute to the famo old soldier who died Sunday in Bos- | ton. Arriving in the early morning, th general's body was moved from the | train to the president’s room Union station for a time before being entrusted to a regiment of troops awaiting to escort it to a grave in the rough riders’ section of ton. Mrs. Wood, her two sons and daughter were in the funeral party. v were met by government of- ranking officers of the war department and a host of friends of Tribute of the Philip- pines whose government the general | headed was expressed in the pres- ence of Pedro Guvara, Philippine | commissioner, and a group of Fili- | pino residents of the capital. City in Mourning Through a city whose mourning | was exemplified by drooping flags at | half-staff, the cortege passed in ca- dence with bhooming minute guns echoing from Fort Myer. on the bank of the Potomac at the entrance way for ng i son band led the the flag-draped caisson bea body. Major General Ha commandant of the army war lege, headed the procession. with Drigadier General Frank R. McCoy, personal friend of General Wood through more than ten years as his staff o er. Hastily summoned posts for the funeral reziment of troops incl engineers and artillery Friends About Remains Intimate friends of the general were clustered about him for the last rites. The pall bearers includ- M The army from nearby vices the d cavalry, men. w B Ireland and Frank Meclnty gadier Generals McCoy and Secretary Rockyille, Conn.. Aug. 2 (P —| Completing a quarter century of | service to the order, George What- | nall, of New Britain, resigned as grand secretary of the State Order Sons of St. George, at the annual | state convention today. Alvin Clegg, | of Waterbury, was elected in his place. | The convention was presided over by Walter Dugnore of Hartford, the | retiring grand president. Off chosen were: John Alley, Rockville, | grand president: W. M. Crandell, | New Britain, grand vice-president; John Wellis, Torrington, grand treas- | {urer; Charles A. Craig, Torrington, |grand messenger; H. W. Hewitt, | Rockville, grand _assistant |senger: J. K. Chapman, New Brit- | | ain, grand chaplain; James Mycock, { Torrington, grand inside sentinel: | Joseph Moss, Rockville, grand | trustee; Charles Price, Naugatuc | grand assistant secretary; George B. | Couch, Hartford, grand outside sen- | | tinel | | The delegates were walcomed by | \\I"\or John P. Cameron, and offi cers of the local lodge extended vart- ous courtsies and provided a dinner. In the afternoon the convention bus- | | iness was concluded | MERIDEN GUARDED Chief Protects Town Against Possible | Sacco - Vanzetti Disturbances— | Watching Public Buildings. Meriden, Aug 9.—+—Chief of Police William D. Thayer as a measure against any disturbances by sympathizers of Sacco and Vanzetti has issued orders to all patrolmen to closely guard public buildings and especially the local post office and {city hall. He has further instructed | the officers to meet all trains and scrutinize all gatherings and take in- to custody any person arousing thelr suspicion. Store Near New Haven Police Station Looted New Haven, Aug. 9 (A—Although Louis D’Ambrosio’s tailor shop < cated at 730 State street, feet of a police box that is vis every hour by two patrolmen, establishment was broken into last | night and 150 bolts of cloth and several suits of clothes valued at more than $4,000 were stolen, ac- cording to a report to police. Entrance was gaired through a small window from which the screen had bear ssamaq 20 ted his, | Major Burt | the service | Wood gave t mes- 1 - [ banked beside the grave | chants, this city, | ker nk Parker. Colonels Charles E. | Kilbourne and E. H. Humphrey and n Y. Read. The chief chaplains, Col. John T designated to conduct ] + the grave, assisted by chaplain W. H. Watts Tha burial spot selected at the | direction of Mrs. Wood was a plot close to grave of Admiral Sampson, a hero of the Spanish- American war which General | rilliant serviece, of army Axton was the A black-robed horse, bearing an empty saddle and a pair of military hoots re tirrup cups, paced immed nd the cais- exprassing the | own traditional tribute to its dead. A sword, flashing in the sun | dangled from the sa scabbard. | Thousands deser offices | to line the strees the procession moved along. With cores of auto- | mobiles carrving arm: and other friends of the gen brin inz up the rear, the procession was a half hour in passinz Numerous floral v officers caths wers when the cortege arrived at Arlinzton. One of them was from President Machado and the people of Cuba =hose g0y | ernment General Woed renrganizs after the Spanish war. Another was from Baron G. Tanaka, prime min- ister of Japan. The &0th divisien comprisinz troops trained by - eral Wood at Camp Funston, Kan- sas, for the last Great War, also sent | floral offerings, as did the military training camps ass Promin;t Wethersfield (Citizen Dies Todav Hartford, Aug. 9 (P —Frederick . Warner, leading citizen in Weth- ersfield .and president of the Warner and Bailey company, clothing died at his home at Watch Hill today. born in Wethersfield April and was a graduate of \\\lhx'x!nln lemy, Wilbraham, Mass. Mr. Warner was a charter ber of the Hubbard escort, a well known democratic organization and was active in civic affairs in Weth- ersfield. mem- KIER PLANES Aug. 9 (UP)— TMPROVE JU Dessan, Germany. The Bremen and the monoplanes in which tempt is to be made to fly United States, were locked in their hangars today for the installation of improved machinery. Officials of the company said newspapermen would not be admitted for two days. an to the { Without Doing ablt | not true | ruined and the shell fishing | amount alle Twin Sisters, Married to Brothers, Become Mothers on Same Day Pana, IIL, Aug .9 (UP)—Twin sisters, the wives of brothers, be- came mothers on the same day here. Mrs. Orie Hilton gave birth to 2 daughter yesterday morning and her twin sister, Mrs. Bernard Hilton bore a son a few hours later. BOND ISSUE WASTED QUIGLEY DECLARES No Use in Spending Money on Sewage Disposal {MusT ELIMINATE - WASTE Away With Factory Chemicals in Disposal Plants Ef- fort to Take Care of Domestic Waste is Futile. Spending two million dollars for extension of the New Britain beds would bs a waste of unless some plan is devised the chemicals and an wer nioney, w by wage first, according Mayor George A. Quigley on this subject at a meeting of Lions’ club today. Mr. Quigley opened his address by g that he was playing politics v stating frankly that he has ambitions to become mayor of the city again. “In idscusing city one who has be ernment, that the to Formet who spoke the problems by gov- spicion often arises scussing them is playing polities” he said. “This is n this case. I have no aspirations to be mayor of New Brit- in again. What I say is not to be construed as a ticism of the ment but simply from my in the city in which I was He continued to explain that no citizen wishes to hold up expendi- tures of funds for improvements if the expenditure is to be a benefit and not a waste. “It is utterly thing to our sewer separate our trade domestic sewage” he coutinued. Explaining the theory of fltera- and the removal of typhoid and r poisonous elements from sew- 3 erial activities he said. When vou place in domestic ‘sew- de of potassium, muriatic beds until ste from our micals you Kill | the sewage. acturing plant in the anml'\ must have a reclamation plant or disposal plant of its own. Must Remove Chemicals “I don't know whether they ake all the chemicals out of the aga or not, but if they can't then don’'t appropriate vour money. Unless vou take out these chemicals jon is possible. the present system Mr Quigley stated that the city is not recovering the entire amount of its sewage. He said the removal of the chemicals would permit the saving | ich conld be turned into | er which would . now going to Britain, Hartford Bridgeport, Stamford and other cit s by not taking the chemicals out of the sewage are destroying their reams and ruining shore property. Long Island Sound is becoming a cesspool, the fishing industry (Continued on Page Three) WARRANT ISSUED FOR BROKER IN NEW HAVEN William B. Goodrich to be Arrested on Charge of $100,000 Em- hezzlement New Haven, At 2—A warrant rich, president and treasurer of Wil- liam B. Goodrich and company, stock brokers. was issued this noon by As sistant Prosecuting Attorney Pouzzner. it is expected, when Goodrich re- from Vermont. as he has nt word that he will return at ence The allegation in the warrant is that of embezzlement and the amount is said to he about §100,000. stated that police visited ch's house last night and took rious papers relating to his stack brokerage business. It is understood that the charges made by persons who have done business with the concern. Assistant utor Pouzzner said that a check up indicated that the fully taken was at least §100,000. h has been on a vacation in Vermont When informed that action was to he taken he sent word that he might be expected to arrive | home about 6 p. m THE WEATHER New Britain and vicinity: Mostly cloudy and cooler to- night; Wednesday generally % |lightning for the second time within | HIGH TIDE (August 10—Daylight Time) | New London 7:58 am., 8:17 p.m. :28 am., 9:31 p.m. * | | | | *. * | acids | foolish to do any- we | can | v i the arrest of William B. Good- | Daniel ! 1t will be served tonight. to have been wrong- | FINAL PLEA FILED INDESPERATE TRY | TOAID CONDEMNED Lawyers for Mass, Radicals Formally Protest Judge San- derson's Decision Today NEW YORK AND BOSTON ARE HEAVILY GUARDED Police of Both Citles Posted At Strategic Places To Prevent Any Demonstrations or Bombing A(-j tempts Which Have Been Trheat- ened—Alleged Explosives Cache Near Hub City Being Sought. Boston, Aug. 9 (P—Counsel for Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola | Sacco today filed with the clerk of | the state supreme court an appeal | from the decision of Supreme Court Judge George A. Sanderson denying Ithe condemned men a writ of er-| ror. Judge Sanderson’s decision was | rendered yesterday. | _ The petition, which was filed by [ Richard C. Evarts of the defense le- | 8al staff, alleges that the denial of the writ by Judge Sanderson con- stituted a violation of the defend- |ants’ rights under both the Massa- | chusetts and federal constitutions. Before the appeal can go before the full bench of the supreme court it must be passed on by the judge whose rulings are the basis of the exceptions taken by the lawyers, in { this case Judge Sanderson. The move was taken in the efforts of the defense to utilize every pos- sibility of the state courts hefore seeking action in the federal courts, to which as vet no appeal has been made. Police Guard New York New York, Aug. 9 (P — One| |thcusand patrolmen were posted at | ITnion Square today and smaller | detachments were placed at some 20 halls throughout the city to| rcserve order during what ils {leaders said would be the biggest {strike in the history of New York, e for one day in againg, the fmpénding execution of | Sacco and Vanzetti | The strike, which Sacco-Vanzetti vmpathizers said would bring out | het 0,000 and 750,000 per-| an in orderly manner. The left their places of em- q and procecded | bance to various yployment without meeting places Strike leaders estimated that tne walkout involved 75 to 80 per cent jof the workers in the garment dis- trict who number about 100,000. In |the fur district no walkout was evi- | dent up to shortly before noon and | shop heads were positive thatthere | would be mnone. Police expressed there would be no connection with strike but every measure was taken. Besides the as- signment of extra police at the | meeting places armored motoreycles cere held in readiness and special antomobiles carrying tear bombs were prepared for immediate use | |in case of emergency. | iward Levinson, secretary of | strike committee, asserted hortly befors noon that 143,000 rkers had walked out this morn- ing. He based his assertion on re- ports he had received from officials of local units. Levinson said he was informed [that 8,000 members of the Pockew book Makers' union had joined the ‘rike, 55.000 clothing workers, 12.- [700 cap workers, 25.010 Jewish | workers on the East Fide, and 45,- f0h cloak makers. Tdentical resolutions addressed to Governor Fuller of Massachusetts were adopted at all the | (Continued on Page Two) the belief that disturbances in the sympathy precautionary | i | | meeting | |radical elements to avert {asserted by 1189 of the Central Labor union were ready to | | fied himself, he | scious 3 He hfi"l a scalp wound, a cut from | '~ BODY IDENTIFIED ! Rrother Identifies Drowning Vietim | As George Babrak—Sank In Zoar | Lake After Collision Bridgeport, Aug. » (M—The body | of the man drowned in Zoar lake in Southbury early Sunday when automobile in which he was riding plunged dovn an em- | {bankment. following a collision with | ancther machine and sank beneath | the surfaca of the water. was identi- | fied last night as that of George Bab- | vak. 23, of the Ernst hotel, White strest, Danbury Identification was made by his Metrick Babyak of 33 Patch | street, Danbury. The body is at the funeral home of J. D. Kimball in Woodbury, awaiting completion of funeral arrangements HOME STRUCK TWICE Residence |brother | Hackett In Greenwich Damaged Two Times By Lightning In Three Weeks. Greenwich, Aug. 8 (P—Struck by three weeks, the residence of John |t J. Hackett, of Havemeyer place, was {badly damaged by fire early tod Fire which followed the first holt did damage estimated at £10,000. The house had since been undergo- ing repairs. This morning the roof | sciousness, morning, g | was struck a second time. Firemen fought the resulting blaze for more jthan an hour. JUDGE THAYER P~ \v,V'\_ ‘Q\ ot Q \\\a\\ “o) 9’“ J" Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending Aug. 6th ... 14,012 PRICE THREE CENTS vt PLEA FOR NEW TRl GOOLIDGE NOT 70 INTERFERE; ELECTRIC CHAIR READY 750,000 READY TO STRIKE IN NEW Thirty Mee ngs Scheduled In Metropolis; Officers Ready With Armored Cars and Machine Guns—Executioner Heavily Guarded. By the Associated Press The situation arising the world-wide campaign of labor and execution of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti headed for a double crisis today. As the decision was awaited of Judge Webster Thayer, at Dedham, Mass., upon the last of three court appeals, orders for extensive strikes here and abroad went into effect. In point of numbers New York city led with up to 750,000 workers labor to be ready to become voluntarily idle for the day. Thirty meetings were scheduled in the metropolis, the largest at Union Square where 1.000 equipped police were ordered held in readiness. May Use Machine Guns Fourteen thousand armored cars, and emergency wagons equipped with machine guns and tear gas bombs were held in readiness for instant service. Tom Connors, secretary Sacco-Vanzetti committee in Los Angeles, was arested on suspiclon of criminal syndicalism tion with his possession of ture urging people to attend a mass meeting arranged for today. Arrests in Philadelphia Philadelphia police arrested eight men alleged to have attempt- ed to incite transport and electrical workers to a 24-hour strike against the execution. It was reported that 200 units of the local from quit work for 12 hours, An I. W, W. spokesman who or- ganized a strike in the southera Colorado coal field said 4,000 men of a three-dav protest strike. Surround Consulate Reaction to the sentence was in- dicated in at least one disturbance. numerous mass meetings and strikes in Europe. A numher of people were hurt as police battled a hostils crowd marching against the American consulate at Cher- bourg, France. O thousand taxicah drivers were idle in Paris and part of the working population in the Rrench capital and in many provincial cities went on strike. George Branting, Swedish attor- ney and one of the attornevs when Sacco and Vanzetti were tried, MAN HURT ON MILFORD TURNPIKE DIES TODAY Erick Peterson’s Death Is Twenty-first Fatality This Year Miltord, Conn.. Peterson, 31, of 232 Ward | Hartford, who was found Iving| alongside the Milford turnpike on August 2, died at the Milford hos- pital today. Except for a few mo- ments during which he had identi- had been uncon- entering the hospital. Aug. 9 (P—Eric street, back of one o forehead, a crushed ch several broken ribs. No blood was found by police in the vicinity of the place the body was found, leading them to believe that he might have been hit by a car at another point and carried to the where he was found by two men who took him to the hospital During his brief spot spell of con- Peterson said that he 4 besn hit by an automobile while ng along the turnpike. i the 21st since the LEGlONNAIRES FAVOR AIRPORT FOR GITY | Resolution to be Read at Eddy- Glover Post Before Pre- sentation to Council A resolution endorsing the move- ment to establish an airport in New Britain will be read at a meeting of Eddy-Glover Post, American Le- gion, Friday night preparatory to its | submission to the common council at the August meeting, Commander Harry Ginsburg announced today. Legion posts elsewhere have been instrumental in bringing about the establishment of airports and it is| he wish of Commander Ginsburg | that the local unit be similarly ac- tive. Iriday's meeting will be the last before the etate comvention which | opens at Danbury, August 18, New | Britain will make an attempt to again capture the prize for having the greatest number of legionnaires in line. specially | policemen, | ot the| in connec- | litera- | ad- | |dressed a mass meeting of 15,000 in kholm, Sweden. Resolutions {were adopted protesting against the |sentence and asking a new trial for |the two men. From | Protests All Over World and appeals on behalf of the condemned men came from all parts of the world. American delegates at the conference of edu- tional fellowship at Loca Switzerland, in a cable to Presid Coolidge begged the president intervene. Members of the Mosco: sects of the Tolstoyans, Bap Dukhobors and Molokans cabled the president in betl the two men. Among the protests were lowing | S an 9 (A — Some unknown pe ing Monday night fixe [American wreath on the cen here a paper on which was W lin red: “From the nation that will mruder innocent men—Sacco and Vanzetti” The police are investi- gating. South ¥ ontevidio Intercedes Montevidio, Uruguay, Aug. 9 (#) |—The chamber of deputies sent u |telegram to President Coolidge last night asking that Sacco and Van- zetti should not be executed. The chamber previously had rejected m | communist motion not to hold a |session today, as a protest against the sentence passed on the two men. Policemen and soldiers are being |held in readiness to cope with | emergency which may arise in con- Iscquence of the general 24-hour | strike which was to be effective to- protest | had left their work on the first day | day as a protest against the exe- | cutions. Truck With Electric Chair | Omanha, Neb, Aug. 9 (P — A {truck in which an electrical chair | was placed as a protest against the |execution of Sacco and YVanzetti was ordered off the streets by po- lice last night. Roy I. Stephens. secretary of the Omaha chapter of the International Labor {league, was sitting in the “electr: | chair” with a hood over his head {When police stopped the truck, | Stephens eaid he had a permit from Acting Mayor Hopkins to use (Continued on Page Four) LEVINE AND DROUHIN READY T0 SPAN OCEAN Gas Tanks Filled to Limit for First Flight to America i | 1 | Parls, Aug. 9 (P—The gasoline tanks of the monoplane Columbia, which already has received the di | tinction of fiying from New York to Germany, weré filled to the limit to- day and the plane was all 10 start on a return fight to New York whenever the weather man set Eversthing is ready a few bl and a bottle of brandy emergency.” said Maurice Drouhin, | French aviator, who will pilot the ship with Charles A. Levine as a passenger. The Columbia’s reservoirs filled to capacity this afternoon and the ship was taken {rom the hangar where it had been overhauled and Placed in another hangar there is insurance protection Drouhin was so convinced of the ship’s readiness for the ship's flight that he permitted t} propeller and spara parts to he tak- were en away from the Le Bourget fiving | felesram to the president fleld | Levine sent for the pl rubber | boat to test it on Bois De Boulogne la weather this afternoon unpropitious for a flight was New York. Aug. 9 (P—The New York Evening Post says Giuseppe M | Bellanca. designer of the plane in chich Clarence D. Chamberlin and rles A, Levine flew to Germany, |is building a single motored mono- | plane which he expects will establish a record for sustained non stop flight | easily surpassing any made hitherto, doing 6.000 miles, or hours in the air. The new plane, which is to be ready for testing within two month [is being built for a man who is said to be internationally known but | whose name Bellanca declined to di- | vulge. This man is “out to break all | records.” | be similar in many respects to Cham- berlin's transatlantic monoplane | “Columbia™ will have a wing spread of more than 80 feet. It will be powered with a theoreticval speed of 150 miles an hour. The new plane wi . carry 1,000 galons of gasoline, |as compared with 435 gallons carried |by the Columbia. the fol- | any | Defense | except cold | where } ra motor, | more than 60 | | |to receive Judge Bellanca said the plane, which will | [and accounts | tion it |President Says He Has YORK—POLICE ARMED EVERYWHERE 14,000 Received No Appeal From Defense Coun- sel, But Is Asked By Congressman To Fol- low Wilson’s Exam- ple. Prison Walls Inspected and Guards Stationed—Prep- arations Made for Exe- cution Wednesday Night if All Moves Fail—Gov+ ernor Makes No Reply. Mass., Aug. 9 (P—Judge €r ot the superior court d motions by defense counsel for a revocation of the death and for a stay of execution for Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzerti. Their respite expires at midnight Wednesday. copy reached the Judge Thayer was at his home in Worcester and word received from there was that he |would add nothing to the brief rul- ing. Lawyers explained, by ti however, that second sentence of his deci- {sion the judge left the way open to the defense counsel for an appeal to the Massachusetts supreme court, this centence preserving for the con- demned men any right to take ex- ceptions that their counsel might have had, had the decision been an- nonnced in open court. Counsal for the condemned men were expected to proceed immediate- Iv in an effort to bring an appeal from Judge Thayer's decisions deny- ing a new trial, a stay of execution and revocation of sentence, befors state supreme court. Text of Decision The complete text of Judge Thay- er’s decision follows: “The motion for revocation of sen= ce and stay of execution is heres denied. To the denial of this mo-~ tion, the defendants duly saved all rights to which they are entitled as a matter of law, whether by excep- tions, appeal or otherwise.” Whether the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti is to take place as scheduled, sometime after midnight Wednesday night, or is to be defer- red while their counsel continue the irgal moves to save them may, in the end, rest with Governor Fuller, uld the state supreme court con- sent to consider the appeal from Judge Thayer's rulings, attorneys said the execution could be halted only by another respite from the governor. None of the counsel for the cone demned men was in court here today Thayer's decision was any representative of the state, Coolidge Sent No Appeal Rapid City, § D, Aug. 9 (®—It was reiterated at the summer White House today that President Coolidge considers the Sacco-Vanzetti case entirely a matter for disposal by Massachusetts courts. The president says that he knows of no appeal to him by the Sacco- Vanzetti defense counsel. Recommendations for clemency e reached Mr. Coolidge from time to time, sent to him on what is con. sidered to be the erroneous impres- |sion that the United States govern. ment has an interest in the case. These recommendations have been referred to the department of jus- Congressman Appeals Milwau Aug. 9 (A—Victor L. Berger, socialist congressman from Milwaukee, today appealed to Presi- Coolidge to intervene in the Sacco-Vanzetti case. Mr. Berger made his appeal in & at the s immer White House at Rapid City. “President Wilson intervened in the case of Tommy Mooney and Jae Gill, Califernia and Utah. Depart. ment of justice under Mitchell P mer was very rotten and its actions ought to be investi- Also its activity in connec- Sacco and Vanzetti. In view of the international excite- ment which this case created we most respectfully suggest again that you intervene until it is made clear that these men were not framed. It the men are guilty the courts will still have them to punish, but if they are innocent, a fearful crime may thus be prevented.” gated. Boston, Aug. 8 (P—If all moves to obtain a stay of execution fall it is expected that Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti will go to thelr death in the electric chair at the state prison in the Charlestown dis- trict early Thursday morning. Governor Fuller, when he grant- ed a respite from the original execu. tion date of the week of July 10, announced that this respite was “to and includigg Wednesday, August 10 (Continued on Page Thres)