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News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 VAST SEAS GIVE LITTLE HOPE OF ‘ 10]ASH “fiqa‘:q APV ; L) PREELILNA] Col. Roosevelt Speaker at 3rd Ward Club Outing FINDING FLIERS Air and Ocean Craft Search Trackless Wastes in Vain for | (lue to Seven Missing DEATH BY STARVATION OR SUN'S HEAT FEAREDi Vessels and Air Patrol Swcep Both Sides of Ocean—Fate of Six Men and Girl Remains Subject of Mys tery — Rumor They May Be Stranded on Pacific Island—Will Continue Search Longer. San Franclsco, Aug. 22 (A—The aviation world, its eyes held west- ward with a heavy heart, today watched aircraft, naval vessels and merchant ships continue tensive search in the trackless wastes of the Pacific for seven fliers who flew down the airways from Oakland toward Honolulu last week and have not been heard of since. Prayers in Churches Efforts of 68 naval vessels, aided by the merchant craft steering a course along the 2,400 mile great circle between San Francisco and Honolulu after a six day search failed to reveal any three missing planes—the Miss Do- ran, the Golden Eagle and the Dal- las Spirit. Worshippers in churches yesterday for the rescue of the six men and | one woman comprising the crews of the irshi ATaint Alckesiatihope Texarding: the plane carrying Miss Mildred Doran went up from Long Beach, Cal.; last night when a carrier pigeon landed there. At one time Miss Doran spoke of taking carrier pigeons on the flight and releasing them 150 and 300 miles out in the Check of the markings on however, revealed it was pant in a carrier pigeon ing conducted on the Paci- and he connection wi all Honolulu bir partic be c coast 1 (Continued on Page Ten) TWO WOMEN PLAN T0 FLY OVER ATLANTIC Russian Aviatrix Wing Way Alone as “Lindy” Did New York, Aug. 22 (P—Two wom- n aviators today had accepted the | hallenge of the Atlantic and that th next an- | wit few would attempt non-stop pe. Liubka Phili ce who rs ago, | ") an undrlflmmnd (‘”\Hrallon in pe, while Miss Ruth Elder of vva!\ land, Fla., hopes to pilot a spe- cially built Stinson monoplant from \"hmmg. West Virginia, to Paris. meantime, unfavorable ntinue to hold to the ground ield, Long Isla n'i the Rome-bound Fokker monop! Glo while several test fli:hv! Te- main before the Stinson-Detroiter | monoplane Sir John Carling can take | off on its projected flight fram Lon- don, Ontario, to London, England. Plans for the Mrs. he aviatrix and her manager, Oliv- Torosco, theatrical producer, who declared it will be solely “for the| adv ancrm?nt of aviation and women in aviation.” Mr. Morosco said the names of the backers would net be revealed until the flight is success- fully made. Rose 11.000 Feet Phillipps recently Mrs made an altitude flight of 11,000 feet at Cur- | (Continued on Page Ten) Sacco and Vanzetti Have Restful Night own State Prison, Boston, n guards reported ‘William Hendry this morning that Nicola Sacco and Bar- tolomeo Vanzetti slept soundly on what was expected to be their la: night before execution. Celestino Madeir condemned to die same time, also slept well, After the gu had awakened them this morning all three men had breakfast. Sacco and Madeiros ate hoiled eggs, toast and coffee. Van- zetti declined the solid foed but drank some coffee. A little later Mad admitted to the prison to see brother for a little while. It axpected that Miss Luigia Va would arrive later in the forenoon to ¢ another visit to her brother, at est she journeyed from os' sister was Fanzetti early in the informed of the | Justice Br s of the e court to con- sidor a petiticn for a stay of execu- tion, their in- | trace of the | offered prayers | May | v ian pilot | e Old | transatlantic flight | Philipps were disclosed by | at the| her | | COL. THEODORE ROOSEVELT Col. Theodore Roosevelt, former assistant secretary of the navy and son of the late President Roosevelt, will be the principal speaker at the annual outing of the Third Ward Republican club at Lake Compounce on Sept. 17. Announcement that | Col. Roosevelt had accepted an in- vitation to speak was made today by president of the Third Ward club. Col. Roosevelt is a figure of na- tional importance in the republican party. President Bartlett feels lelated at his success in obtaining a favorable response to his invitation and other officers of the club believe |that Col. Roosevelt's presence will |result in the largest attendance in ears, COOLIDGES EN ROUTE TOYELLOWSTONE PARK. | Pilot Engine Runs Half a | Mile Ahead to Test | the Rails ‘Aboard Presidential Special, En Route to Yellowstone, Aug. 22 |Guarded against Sacco-Vanzetti | | demonstrations, the special train | bearing President Coolidge and his | party of 40 persons wound through Wyom creek beds today up to |the continental divide in Yellow- stone National park, where the pres- |ldent is to see the scenic sights, | fish, and ride horseback for a week. A pilot engine ran half a mile | '-m»;m of the presidential train to | |test the r and secret eervice |men were ordered to be watchful |to see that no unusual incidents staged along the route. | Accompanying the president were |Mrs. Coolidge, his son, John, and i his usual retinue, including news- | paper correspondents, photogra- phers and his military aides and | physicia The special train left {Custer, S. D., 12 miles from the state ‘gama lodge, at § p. m., mountain | last night and was due to ar- | {rive at Gardiner, Mont., entrance of Yellowstone at 1:20 p. m. today. The president's plans are very in- | definite. rangements have been rade for him to stay one day at Mammoth hotel, five miles Gardiner, ch is inside the park Faithful inn for a day before pro- | ceeding to Lakeside inn, where he| xpects to spend most of his time shing. How long he will remain in the park also is indefinite, but ithe executive offices at Rapid City | made arrangements to receive him |back a week from today. Mr. Coolidge was suffering from slight indisposition yesterday, but as fully recovered this morning, according to Major James 1°. Cou- | pal, his personal phsician. Coupal said Mr. Coolidge felt a slight cold {and had a miner attack of indiges- tion. When he boarded the train at Custer last night, 2,000 Black Hills | citizens were out to bid him good | bve. He arrived at Edgemont, S. D., iat 9:30 p. m., and another crowd ‘grceled him there. " COMMITTEES CHOSEN FOR PUBLIC PROJECTS |Golf Course, Anport and Investigation of Paving Councilman Samuel Sablotsky was appointed chairman of a committee to consider establishment of a muni- cipal golf course, Alderman William H. Judd was appointed chairman of a committee to investigate the South Main street paving which was said to have been done without perm sion of the city, and Councilman C. H. Maxon was appointed chairman of the committee to consider the es- | tablishment of an airport by Mayor Weld today. Others on the golf course commit- tee are: Councilmen Donald Bart- lett and Stanley Cooper. Alderman Judd will have Alder- Donald DBartlett with )\hn on lnk committee. Those on the committee which will | with C. H. Maxon, are: Lucien Ma- cora, of the common council, and Fred A. Osgood and Nels Nelson. Donald L. Bartlett, recently elected | froml an John Maerz, Alderman David L. | lman Samuel Sablotsky | | investigate the need of an' airport| W BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1927. —SIXTEEN PAGES SEVEN DEAD, 25 HURT IN MISHAPS IN CONNECTICUT Murder and Suicide in New Haven; Double Drowning; Two Auto Fatalities —_—— (GIRL NEAR DEATH IN NEW BRITAIN HOSPITAL {Nine Injured, Thres Serlously, In Winsted When Two Machines Col- lide—Rhode Island Man Held On Charge of Drunken Driving—Eight Have Narrow Escape Touring Car Collision. New Haven, Aug. 22 (A—Drown- ings, suicides, murder and automo- biles took seven lives in Connecticut over the week-end. Automobile crashes hrought suffering to at least 25 persons. A double drowning occurred off Morgan Point, this city, when two boats containing a fishing party of six capsized. The body of one of the victims, Daniel Waterbury, was recovered immedi- ately after the accidental overturning of the second boat by Colangelo. He |had climbed into it from a smaller In Bus- |der. the smaller boat reached shore safe- ly but Rocco Larusso, 13, of Water- | bury, was drowned and his body di |appeared during the confusion re- sulting when the second boat went down. It has not vet been recovered. Murder and Suicide What the medical examiner de- cided was a murder and a suicide ended the lives of John Massaro, 30, and his wife, Rose, 28, in this city. The two bodies were found together {in a room which the wife had en- |gaged Saturday. Both throats were | horribly slashed and beneath the |body of the man lay a razor which police said had been the instrument of death wielded by Massaro. The couple had only recently effected a reconciliation after several | estrangementt. No motive for Mas- |saro’s actions was evident. Police, — | however, said that there had been premeditation on the part of Mas- saro. Local Man Is Suicide Steve Kowalezyk, 48 of New Brit- | took his own life by drinking | zin, | poison yesterday. [for three yea | Although only one fatal automo- He had been ill I bile crash was reported in this state | | Saturday and Sunday, the victim of |a motorcycle accident in Winsted August 9, died in that city vester- | day. |son, 19. | The fatal crash Saturday in Derby caused the death of Emma Jackson, 138, of New Haven. She was a pas- | senger in an automobile operated by |Harry Anderson of New Haven who | escaped with lacerations. Their car | Lit a telephone pole. The body of Harold Haventeldtz 20, of Bridgeport, who with & com- | panion was drowned off Fairfleld | t Monday, was recovered being washed ashore at - persons were injured, seriously, in Winsted ¥ | two automobiles collided. Winslow, John Brequet and Edward | Brequet of Torrington, and Burton iffany of Winsted, were taken to | Litchfield county hospital. of the skull and lacerations about |the body. They were passengers in car operated by James Gouthier of | (Continued on Page Ten) DEATH OF KOWALCLYK IS CALLED SUICIDE But Daughter Denies Father Intended Self Destruction Despondent, it is believed, cause of continued poor health, | Steven Kowalczyk, 48 years old, drank a preparation containing poi- son at the home of his daughter, | Mrs. Bertha Kuczmarczik of 54 |ln'on strect and despite first aid | treatments at New Britain General hospital, died yesterday morning. When the announcement that her | father had committed suicide had been made, his daughter, Mrs. Kacz- marczik was emphatic in her denial. She claimed that there was nothing in her house which contained the poison. According to her the liquid he drank was a poisonous alcoholi | beverage which was not taken with | intent to end his life, The attempt was made at 1 lock Sunday morning, four hours | fore Mr. Kawalezyk passed away, He had been in poor health for th | past three years. Dr. John Purney deputy medical examiner, viewed the remains and proclaimed death due| to acute poisoning taken with sui- cidal intent. He gave Stanley Boraw- | ski, undertaker, permission to pre- pare the body for burial. Kowalezyk was born in Poland and emigrated to this city when he was 15 years old. He leaves be- sides his daughter, a son, Stanley | Kowalezyk, with the United States navy stationed at China. The funeral will take place morrow morning at 7:30 o'clock at Sacred Heart church Interment will be in Sacred Heart cemetery. o be to- Colangelo of | boat which had previously gone un- | Colangelo’s two companions in | years' | The victim was James Bron-| three | erday when | Charles | Al ex- | | cept Tiffany had possible fractures | be- | e Governor to Whom All Friends of Sacco Turn GOVERNOR A. T. FULLER Boston, Aug. 22 (A—The fact that up to 1 p. m., today Governior Fuller had not summoned the executivé council to meet with him indicated to newspaper men at the state house that he had not considered up to that time the question of granting a respite to Sacco and Vanzetti. Under the law any respite granted | by the governor must have the ap- | proval of the council, which com- | | prises eight members elected from | lieutenant governor. When the men wers ite 12 days ago the decision was delayed until only a short time be fore the hour set for execution ow- ing to the deliberations of the coun- cil which had the governor's recom- mendation before it. 'MONROE DOCTRINE IS MISUSED--KNOWLES: Former Ambassador At tacks U. S. Invasion in Latin America Aug, 22 (P— A wholesale indictment of American ‘Williamstown, Mass., policy in Latin America was made before the Institute of Politics to- | day by Horace O. Knowles, former | American delegate to Rumania, Ser- | bia, Bulgari aragua, the Domin- ican Republic and Belivia. A ruthless and indefe of invasion and interv se of the Monroe Doctrine the success of its d to Washington by the former ambassador, who declared that nothing was hurting America in | more | the eves of foreign nations than this attitude towards the small nations south of | “We have imposed our force upon | weak, helpless and defenseless coun. es and slaughtered thous of | their citizens,” said Dr. Knowles. “\\fl have attacked them when they expected we would defend them. We ave used the Monrce Dqc to mpathetic European na- | tions going to their rescue when we abused them. In our dealings with | them we never allow them their day | in court, and we ignore and disre- gard that principle of due process of law which our constitution saf | their personal liberties or property | rights are involved.” | Mr. Knowls asserted that while calling them backward, unedcated and uncivilized America has made no Christian move to remedy this condition, and that our national nothing, despite the promises which | the Monroe Doctrine held out | various districts in the state and the | granted a | guards to all our citizens whenever policy has been to take all angl give |c 42 ARRESTED IN BOSTON PROTEST | AGAINST DEATHS Letter Signed “Sons of Italy” Threatens Destruction of Rail- road Bridges and Banks |UDGE WEBSTER THAYER IS GIVEN EXTRA GUARDS Demonastrations Against the Execu- tion of Two Radicals and Ma- deiros Staged in Many Parts of World—Police Ready To Meet | Riots and Outbursts in All Large | Cities, ‘; The hour | prot ma demonstrati| execution nearing, tings and “red” s begin to be staged both in this country and in Europe | for Sacco and Vanzetti. Three hun- | dred workers in Boston effected a sympathy strike, despite the refusal | of official union sanction. A line of pickets rapidly grew around the state house and ended only when | 42 arrests were made. Reports of | new strikes and demonstrations con- we to pour in from all parts, Strike In Boston Boston, Aug. 22 (P—Efforts of the acco-Vanzetti defense committee to | have members of labor unions in | Boston g0 on a sympathy strike to |day had brought about 300 worker lout up to noon today. They report- ed at headquarters in the S au- | ditorium in the South End district. | The full ult of the committee's appeal could not bs told until a |canvass of the needle trades workers had been in the afternoon. | Labor union officials had refused to |sanction a strike. 12 Are Arrested The line of pickets in the second demonstration of the day gr ap- idly and again the police intervened. | Forty-two arrests were made. A con- siderable crowd of spectators had cathered and some of them applaud- | d when the police stepped in As the officers were starting for the Joy street police station three more pickets began walking up and i t of the state house ¢ were promptly arrested | hreaten Destruction | made > | stay | was outside banks and vere made. The letter which the to , Warning town you Sons of s 22 of August. Rail- road bridges blo nd town hall. T ! Chief of Frederick E. Lar- | "oh turned the letter over to Ber- |gen County Prosecutor A. C. Hart. | | Washington, Aug. 22 (A —A de- cision by the department of justice | to allow inepection of its files by\ high Massachusetts authorities 1if | sire it and the com- | n for a review by | supreme court.in connection | with the Sacco-Vanzetti case were contemplated today by representa- tives of the condemned men as ave- nues to stave off their execution. Following announcement by Act- Attorney General Farnum that the department of justice would permit mination of its records ling with alleged radical activi- ies of the two Italians if the Massa- | setts authorities requested such | {ed that Mr. to go hefore one of the three su- | (Continued on Page 13) ;Geologist, Trapped “Cave of Darkn 21 | Shelimound, Tenn., Aus | Trapped six days in Ni |cave, Lawrence S. Ashley, geologis who entered the cave last Monday en an exploring trip, dug his way -Jack ¥ said that he had trapped by falling earth crawled through & narrow vay while attempting to huge cavern | Although weak and | condition, Ashlev said {not sufrered from hunger. A small | shovel he carried was used in di | sing his way to the sur |~ Ashley, who had given more { two yvears to the ex |famed Nick-a-Jac! ; last Monday, leaving a message that | if he did not return by Tuesday the government be notified After three days of (llh'n(( ef- forts appeal wa Austin Peay, of Tennessee, w |dered Chief Mine Inspector I Pino and a crew of [rescuers fo take charge of rch. This crew concluded [Ashley had met his death in “River of Darkness” which e e were made to thoroughly dr tream today The cave has a larg {sub-caverns, some of |mever ‘been explored. and a half from the | “River of Dark runs through | [the cave. The river is said to be |15 feet deep in places and at others runs under whore a boat cannot go The cavern in early history, was lthe rendezvous of marauding bands | of Cherokee India The entrance of the Nick-a-Jack cave is on the Tennessee line where he pas reach a in a dazed that h hml mine the that the ations g the zo number of which have For a entrance the alls of the P— been | flows | [ mile | cavern | Six Days In ess,” Digs Way Out that state joins Alabama and Geor- gia and the ageways of the cavern run far back into the latter | two states. | Ashley entered the cave last Mon- | day to examine an unexplored sub- cavern, a cavern which he believes “is much larger than the famous Mammoth cave in Kentucky.” and there he was trapped by a ¢ which cut off his retreat | and forced him to dig his way to | frecdom with a pocket knifg and a small shovel, which he had carried | with him into the cave. A supply of food which he had cached in the | cavern, and from which he was not cut off by the slide served to sustain during his six davs fight to free | After a brief rest at the home of | 2 friend, near the cave, Ashley ap- [ peared much refreshed as he re- s experiences of the past He was indigiant at tions that the whole air a was (Continued On Page Five) [ e i HIGH TIDE 1 | (Angust 2 || New Londo | New Haven 9:1 | Daylight Time) | | | % * | TEE WEATHER | New Britain and vicinity: Unsettled tonight and Tues- day, not much change in tem- perature, | | | | | I | I | | | | Justice | said later that Chief | the s | hope of his rescue {ebb. |it struck the river. {iumped into the Average Daily Circulation For Week Endmg Aug. 20th . 14,033 PRICE THREE CENTS SHADOW OF DEATH CREEPS ON TRIO; CHAIR DUE TO TAKE LIVES TONIGHT; DOUBT FULLER WILL GRANT REPRIEVE jStay of Execution Re- fused By Supreme Court Justices Taft and Stone—Sole Hope Remains In Res- pite From Governor. | Petitions for National Re- view of Proceedings in|.. Massachusetts Court Docketed Today Washington— Journalist and Minister Ask Com- mutation of Sentence to Life. in Stonington, Maine, Aug. 22 (Pi—, of execution in the Sncc_o»\'an- zetti case was refused today Harlan F. Stone of United States supreme court at summer home at Isle Au Haut Justice stay the his the sea tone was visited at little island, eight miles out to from here by Arthur D. Hill, chief counsel for Sacco and Vanzetti. Attorney Hill made the trip to the |island by b(\'x' after coming here on | the steamer J. T. M from Rock- l:\nd where h“ completed early this morning a 200 mile motor drive from Boston. He brought his auto- mobile across the western entrance to Penobscot Bay from Rockland on the steamer so as to have it avail- able here to return to Boston. Justice Taft Refuses Boston, Aug (®r—DMichael A. -Vanzetti de- ced today that Justice Taft had sent him a am in which he announced his refusal to receive a petition for a of execution because the matter jurisdiction. Elias Ficld of defense counsel, Justice Hall | had placed the petition for a stay in the hands of Judge Sisk of the supe- rior court, who was with Chief Jus- tice Hall at a conference with de fense attorneys last week. Field s2id that he would go to the Suffolk county court house some time dur- ing the day to see Judge Sisk Keep Text Secret Musmanno withheld the the chief justice’s telegram bu Taft had advised text of add- him preme court justices now in this dis- trict, if he ed actior on such a petition ¢ has appealed to Justices Holmes and nd today Attorney Arthur Hill was on his way to place a a stay before Justice Stone at lsle au Haut, in Drande! D. petition fc Harlan F. Maine Musmanno szid that he expected to rec time during the day a decision from Chief Justice Wal- ter P. Hall of the superior court on a petition for a stay laid before him last week He had said earlier in the day that as le understood it Chief Jus- (Continued on Page Ten) TOURS N. Y. SEWER 7-Year-Old Boy Falls into Manhole and Speeds Onward for 20 min- utes to the East River. New York, Aug. 22.—{P—Swept more than half 2 mile by the swirl- ing underground waters of New York's sewers and finally washed into the East river, 7-year-old An- thony Agostino today ence. a sewer man- with several excavation avenue and 53rd street. Cries of his compunions attracted van who notified the police departments cor 53rd street avenue were opened and ered with ropes and But each time the res- late, Tony had al- Police then learned that the sew- | er into whick into a trun] the boy fell emptied sewer at Second avenue which turned emptied into the river at 4Sth street Firemen, police and members of the United States Volunteer Life Saving Corps, which has a station nearby, gathered about the sewer outlet to await the arrival of the boy. Minutes passed. Tony had been in ‘wer waters twenty minutes and alive began to Suddenly from the outlet from which three to four feet of water rushed, came a mud covered bedy which began to kick and squirm as everal firemen water and- hauled the boy into a boat “It was terribly cold in there," re- marked Tony as he was rushed to Bellevue hospital. There it was found he was suffering slightly from submersion and several bruises. by | | was little the | | er than Italy { Pead in Massachusetts'.” 'RADICALS DECLINE T0 Seven Years Alter Not Doomed Sacco’s Fate Boston, 22 (P —Nicola Sacco | and Bartolomeo Vanzetti are under sentence of death by electrocution shortly after midnight tonight. Both were born in Italy. Sacco became a prosperous shoe worker in Stough- 1 with a family of a wife and two ildren. Vanzetti was a fish peddler Plymouth with no relatives near- Aug. A paymaster and his guard were ed in a holdup in South Brain- n April 15, 1920. Vanzetti was convicted after this crime of a roh- bery while armed a short time be- fore. He was known to department of justice operatives because of radi- cal a ities. A jury in 1921 took a few hours deliberation to reach a verdict of guilty of t tree murders. Repeated mo- tions for new trials were made and denied, the case three times going to the state supreme court The state's case rested on identi- fication by eye/witnesses; the fact that both men were heavily armed when arrested, Sacco with a revolv- er claimed to be that carried by the slain guard; a cap identified as Sac- co's found on murder scene; and various other circumstantial evid- ence. The defense contended the men were armed because they feared de- portation as radicals; produced wit- nesses to contradict identificatio charged collusion Dbetween federal and state officials; persecution for political ideas; prejudice on the part of trial justice and jury forema and general denial of state case. e anzetti's Sister Asks Brief Boston, Aug. 22 (P—An appeal by Miss Luigia Vanzetti, sister of Bar- tolomeo Vanze for “people throughout the world to stop what- ever they are doing for a few min- utes at noon today” in protest against the impending execution of her brother was issued early today by the Sacco-Vanzetti defense com- mittee The committee announced plans for an all day conference of : 0~ Vanzetti sympathizers at the Scenic | auditorium and promised an abund- ance of speakers including Ed Vincent Millay “who has writter will read a poem entitled ‘Justice is The com- | mittee also announced arrangements for continuous picketing of the state house by delegations drawn from the | auditorium conference. Strike RECEIVE CHURCH HELP Refuse Spiritual Consola- | tion and Will Die as They Have Lived Bosten, g. 22 (P—Sacco and Vanzetti today refused the last rites of the church, saying t} preferred to die as they had lived outside its pale. Father Murphy completed his visit ahead of the physician and issued the following statement “I visited the men as T promised them I would last night, when T left them. I once again urged them to prepare themselves for eternity, to receive the sacrament and to meet death fortified by the rites of the church. “Each one refused, sa preferred to die as he had | side its pale. However, I shall hold myself in readiness to offer one or all the consolation of religion, until the end.” Miss Luigia Vanzetti sister of Bartolomeo, and Mrs. Rose Sacco, wife of Nicola, arrived at the prison at 10 o'clock and were taken to the | arden’s office. After waiting ther T an hour they were taken to the death house to visit the two men Both Sa ti during | the forenoon spent part of their time reading prison literature. Ma- gazines from the prison library were brought to them and Sacco read por- tions of the life and letters of Lin- coln, | FUND FOR CONDEMNED MEN Italians At Picnle in Kensington Contribute to Further Legal De- | fense of Sacco and Vanzetti. A gathering of 200 Italians who attended a picnic yesterday at Hart's Pond in Kensington, passed resolu- tions in favor of the two condemned 1adicals in Massachusetts, Sacco and Vanzetti The resolution asks clemency for the two men and urges an additional reprieve and a new trial. A collec- tion was taken and forwarded to the defense committee. STEAMER OUT OF DANGER Bordeaux, France, Aug. 22 (P—A wireless message from the Danish | ridor. steamer Cyril, reported in distress in the Bay of Biscay yesterday, says it is out of danger and {is being towed to Brest, Preparations for Exe- cution Completed At State Prison—Every- thing Ready for Exe- cutioner To Throw Oll Switch. Several Protests Being Staged in This Country and in Europe—Govers nor, Judges, and Publi¢ Officials Protected — Madeiros May Be Firs§ and Vanzetti Last ta Die. Charlestown State Prison, Bostony Aug. 22 (A—All details of the plans for the execution of Nis cola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzettly due to die in the electric chair here some time after midnight tonight, were completed at the prison todagm Unless the last-minute moves of their counsel serve to bring thems Mass | another stay the respite which saved them from death barely a half-hour before they were to start the march to the death chamber on the night of August 10 will expire at exactly 13 o'clock tonight. Despite the international interest the case the steps in carrying out the law will differ in no particular from those surrounding the least known murderer from whom the law exacts the highest penalty. There will be the customary number of witnesses, the same executioner, the usual prison guards. Only in the arrangements outside the execution chamber Will there be any difference, Outside guards, state and city police will keep crowds a block or more from the prison gates. Within the gates the largest crowd of newspaper men who ever gather« jed for an execution in Charlestown will be stationed to flash the neww to every corner of the world where the case has attracted attention. But 40 Feet From Chair Sacco and Vanzetti and Celesting Madeiros, due to die at the same time, though for another crime, reste ed today in their cells approximately forty feet from the chair in which they are to die, though shut off by brick walls that hid the knowl« edge of its presence. There they will remain until the guards summon them, one after the other, to stawt the march to the chair. Custome arily this eccurs within a minute of the stroke of midnight. The official witnesses, invited By Warden William E. Hendry, will gather in the warden’s office shortly after 11 p. m. The group will ine clude, besides the warden and depe uty warden James L. Hogsett, the medical examiner of Suffolk county, Dr. George Burgess Magrath; the prison physician, Dr. Joseph 1. Mes Taughlin; the surgeon general of the Massachusetts National Guard, Dw Frank P. Williams; Sheriff Williarg H. Capen of Norfolk county and Wy E. Playfair of the Associated Presgs The law permits two other witnesses at the discretion of the warden, and two physicians may attend. Five prison guards will be in attendanee The witnesses will start for the death chamber soon after 11:30, They will walk within the prison t& the death house, a small one-story brick building which houses the death cells and the death chamber with the chair, Switches Are Hidden Sacco, Vanzetti and Madeiros oes cupy adjoining cells, facing a cors On the opposite side of the corridor a door leads into the death chamber. The chair stands at one cide of the room; a few feet away is a small niche in the wall, in which (Continued on Page Ten) EIGHT HURT IN CRASH Many Have Narrow Escape From Death When Bus and Touring Car Collide on Boston Post Road. Darien, Conn.,, Aug persons were injured Wwhen a large touring car and & New York-to-Bridgeport bus collided on the Boston Post road. All were treated at the Stamford hospital, but the injuries of only two were serious enough to warrant their being detained at the hospital. They were Mrs, L. Van Allen of Ypsilanti, Mich., a passenger in the bus, and Thomas E. Bartram of Bridgeport, operator of the touring car. The other injured were: L. Vag Allen, Clarence Davis and Miss Das vis, all of Ypsilanti, Mich., and’ Mre, Sarah Hoten, S. B. Hastings and Arthur Wren of Bridgeport. The bus was driven by Hermam Lucier of Bridgeport. The touring car, according to police, was zigzage ging down the highway and rsm into the bus which carried & number of passengers. 22 (A—Eight early today