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News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 ALUMNI MAY HEAL | SENSATIONAL 1926 ATHLETIC BREAK Princeton and Harvard Grado-| ates Plan for Game With Professional Management NOVEL “STUNT" MAY BRING COLLEGE PEACE New York's Polo Grounds Chosen as | | | | Site for October 30 Game—Tigers' | | Line-Up Announced — Crimson | | Team Being Formed With Lew | | Gordon and Roscoe Fitts Both Stated. Oct. 3 (A—The today that | graduates of | ‘Worcestar, ‘Worcester teams composed of Harvard and Princeton will meet in a football game at the Polo Grounds, New York, on October 30, according to information from reliable sources. The purpose of the game, its bac ers say, is to heal undergraduate breach in athletic relations, Mass,, azette says To Strengthen Relations New York, Oct. 3 (P—The pro-| posed football mecting of Harvard | 4 Princeton alumni at the Yankee Stadium on Sunday, October 30, for the announced purpose of healing | the breach in the athletic relations | of the two universities, will be promoted by Charles C. Pyle, spon- sor of Suzanne Lenglen's profes tennis tour, it wus learned Big Bill" FEdwards, former| Princeton star and profassional foot- Lall official, will be associated with Pyle in the venture while a portion of the proceeds will be turned over | tie Red Cro | Princeton Tine-Up | The Princeton line-up, already de- termined, will consist of Ted Drew: *24 and Sax Tillson '25 on the ends; Pink Baker 22 and Bob Beatty guards; Ally Aliford ‘23 and Red | Howard '25 tackle dle Me- 25 ta with Millan, former All-American at cen- ter. The backfield will be chosen from Dinny Dinsmore, quarterback in '24 apd '25; Ralph Gilroy, half- back in '22 and '28, and Joe Gilli- gar Ted Williams Charlie Caldwell '25 and Jack Cleaves ‘22 and '23. Although the Harvard team has ot been definftely chosen, Lew Gor- Gon, who represented the Crimson in 23 and '24 and Roscoe Fitts, 20 and 1, are s for end position, with Buck Evans and Vie Miller, '22 and *23, at either guard or tackle. Four tentative backs are Billy Murr cuarterback in irwingehrke, | star of the '24 backfield, Isadore Sarakov, baseball captain last spring and backfield man in '25, and Joe McGlone, of the '22 team. T | akes Statement | Princeton, . Oct. 3 (A—O0M-! cials of Princeton university know | nothing of the reported arrang: ment for a game of football be- ‘tween Harvard and Princeton gradustes at the Polo Grounds, New York, on October 30, such game would be played by the graduates on thelr own re- sponsibility, said Alexander Leitch, ircctor of public relations. Princeton TEACHER'S AUTO STOLEN BY BOYS WHO HIT POLE Lads Aged About 10 Abandon Car When Motorcycle Policeman Goes On Their Trail i Two boys, appearing not more than 10 ycars of age, abandoned an automobile owned by Miss Catherine Callahan of 138 Hart street, on Shut- tle Meadow avenue shortly after 11 o'clock this forenoon, and ran away. The police were secking them this afternoon, Motore; Officer W. was driving out the the car passed in the opposite di- | rection but before he reached it ! after having turned his motorcycle about, the boys had driven it against | a polo and left it with the engine | running. The car was not damaged. | Miss Callahan was about to notify the police that the car was missing in front of the Camp school, where she is a teacher, when she was noti fled of its recovery. The boys ap- P. Hapes | avenue when | | Madison and West | tion to the |old lower: | !tacking Alling's = Dead Sacco Agrees Through Counsel to Have Case Dropped Washington, Oct. 3 (I'P)—The dead Nicola Succo and Bartolo- meo Vanzettl agreed, through their attorneys, to have the United States eupreme court, strike their case from the docket today Chlet Justice Taft, who with Justices Stone, RBrandeis and Holmes, refused last summer to order the execution of the two anarchista stayed, merely com- mented: “It is so ordered The high court’s dismissal of Sacco and Vanzetti's appeals oc- curred in the course of its legal bookkeeping on opening of its October session today. The action, one of pure routine, contrasted strangely with the strenuous last minute efforts of the two men's lawyers to have the court inter- vene by granting writs of certi- orarl, [32 TOWNS HOLD ELECTIONS TGDAY { Mrs. Weed Center of Interest i Norwalk Mayoralty iJUDGE HARSDEN CANDIDATE | Century-0ld Proenixville Split Over . ted Proposal to Chanze Name “South Quiet, New Haven, Oct. 3 more th; t Eastford " —Other (Pr—Tardl local intere day to the annual ¢l of the 1 cities which choose their of the fir. Norwalk, Weed 16 a ctions in Connecticut towns an wors 0 Monday in Octo! where Mrs. Hel andidate Hi for mayor, an na Haven were ceptions to this rule, w that cen Sout 1 1 slica can proposal Phoenixville Eastford,’ 'm stford ot Guilford an error of ti caucus, which nominated threc didates for the three opening grand jurors, creates opportunit a battie within the party ranks. On Independent Ticket Mrs. Weed pendent republican on cratic ticket in Norwalk daughter of the late Eher who for 2 tarter tury repr fourth gressional Mrs. We lican and one time, was strong vocate in 1924, She notice during the agitation t the adoption 19t amendment. Her o on th republican ticket fs Anson Keeler In West Haven, Frank D. All republican Ieader, is facing not onl the opposition of of John Loomis campaign for reclection leetman, but is confron split 1 nthe G. 0. I The independent re finar Charls ¥ ecome ade election General interest, the deme was Hi cor cor district d, a dau, it pre nent as have nominated the office, Marsden Creates Interest Madison polities center 7 th Marsden situation. Judge Arthur W Marsden, who some time 2o resigr ed as judge of probate and who been in the courts off considerable time 3 troublos, running for recleetion town clerk, an office he held whe he resigned as probate judge in tl face of charges in conncetion wit various estates. Disarmament charges against hin are now before the grievance rom mitfee of the New Haven coun bar assocfation. A hot fight over th action of the school hoard in build ing a $10,000 addition to the Har high echool, is anticipated at tods meeting, the Marsden havin, threatencd logal action Chairman F. H. Holbrook. Marsden is leading an enfire ticke into the fray. The other cities hesides Norwal clect today are Torrington Jout with a varic a s to an (Continued on Page 12) DEMANDS EQUAL RIGHTS . H., Oct. 3 (&) Concord, Eq 1 rights for all scctions of the city ar demanded by Miss H. Gwendoly Jones, 24-year-old candidate fo Towns ittached to- most ex opposi running as an “inde- mucl democratie fol- and on for a of [y to against NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 192 - o= 'WIFE DIVORCED AND 1,250 Gallons of Alcohol Seized REINSTATED BY LAW ASKS FOR SUPPOR 'Hushand Declares He Will Not | Help Her or Contribute to Rssistance of No. 2 NO. 1 SAYS SHE LOVES HIN, HE WAVES HAKD IN DISGUST Judge Roche Tells Lawyers Couple's Differences Should be Adjudicated by Civil Courts After Listening to Dombrowski's Strange Tale | | } of Marital Triangle Which He De- clares No Longer Exists, For more than an hour this morn the tion of Judge Henry P. d 150 Roche was occupied in police court of Leon Dom- street I the strange « arged on ssed un ion for him gust with his mphatically to live with in the state him by ove who! him no the support, and her with witness star love and he motio prore 1ands as he s hat he does not her, is not inter- of her heart to- 10es not want to see Judge I, B. Hungerford, ting Dombrowski, and Pros- Attor Woods, wh 1 t want wards er repr 0 within a w n e prepared to go f rinto the legal phas th War Kept No. | in Furope Dombro nt to Europ hle v Kk or more n to Ul 1 States con to return t z from the war in nun their abse had be disputes with lite, and he transterred other woman, to after he ob- om his first wife. zo, his first wife divoree n a rous n in- rricd n 8 n ng Dor 1 mary to support 1z has sinee became refused and claims & second 5 wife o t he ha ier, although hallw not suppor he nent “Hushand Not Mca Attorney Hungerf that th the - prov ' W 's first i nats 1 he is req her under the law u browsk lawful ircd to support his less she serts with him, Attorney were tried 1pply at 2540 hat a men ars ind thers hus all h h i At 1oy 1o docs not m ro absc roir to support them tanese oman, husband, all the a had in 1% “does not has boar nioney th v sh rope n W years ago to hound hi port.” Declares Dombrowski cuting Attorney Woo Jn Hungerford's without sense 1 logic.” rmit Lom into court and de- ter of his wife by fidelity. “He has by saying he his wife was Mr. Woods de- her to the bank to , and he went to y !the r 1 1l gave her o | $10 fo Iy or some : before ed out ived obts or char- rgu- 1| He did not propose to come s hara oroof i e | £ this court n h he n H draw onut the money station : al s is | hould z to dodge to sup- She Loves Him wrowski test < to live with b K Woods d | or not sh Lo that hus ther she Wi for 1 that Mrs. Dom- reputation in the known to her hus- m at boards pay o support of t shand wski had orhood ent nei hav. | band was ¢ | whose hor | testlificd th r | thing towards ria en while rowski does not Ny- State Policemen Investigate Nature of Load and ! i I 1 With Truck On Newington Pike Operator and His Companion. A consignment of 1,250 gallons of d Icohol taken by State Police- en Kelley and Parrott on the B n turnpike in the town of New- , vesterday morning when the Yo officers stopped a truck driven | v Edger Selden of 6 Sunnyside ave 1t, Mass. was locked up in the Hart- station affer he admitted of cargo carried than to explain the shipment been picked up fn New York and was consigned to Boston, the driver would say nothi 6:30 a. m. Officers Kelley and Parrott e uck. The ur articles, sed ti ted the tior 1 were they patrolling drew i the “pik back of the of size of the cked in blankets, and they | truck for i noving th shipment AT ispicion utomobile they learned drums, each cohol. in New- nignt on ng alcohol Mass. who n, has not yet rtation. the Harol was i 1 Scott of Bosto Leen charg with tran SEVEN FATALITIES REPUBLIGAN PLANS OVERTHE WEE-END May Determine Possible Site for Automobiles Claim Three Lives' SEES COOLIDGE NOMINAT[ON?MAN CRUS held i over n id el 1 is It H H Ir by st cated they will accept or i recently. The fact that Mr. h: e ch T w has = L ti m RED GROSS HOLDING 50 Yool {008 Comvenion |~~~ in Conneotont HED UNDER TRUCK wenty Leaders Accept Invitations Aged Bristol Recluse Found Dead to Attend His Pow-Wow in Wash- | In Gas-filled Room — Woman inzton Hotel—To Confer with| Drowns In Bath Tub—Iocal Resi- Exccutive dent Injured. New Ha violent deaths and wo serious, marked the end in October. re- | traffic, accel | turn of midsun | humidity were dire John Iseaskunctz, 17, wnd Joseph Kregile, 4 hoth injured by auto- moblles in their home towns when they were struck by machines op- erated by Thomas W. Kie Haven and Frank J Norwalk . negro, was thrown | running bhoard of a truck a trolley ran into the in New wheels Clint's body, which L | Later, | Oct. 3 pow Washington, iblican party here this we friend and chair national wants to find out national countr for convention the reaction to that he (UP) -wow will be v William M of s n of th committee, the atti e aven, rven Sept uries, first week- s heavy a sudden re- er temperature and of the deaths itle close iblican Butler 1 only three the site of Branford of IFairfield, also con- Mr. Cool- does not 1iona :rni ge's statement N to be a candidat The republican chairman cated his belief that Mr ill be drafted and this expected to play an in the discussions, rrived 1 night reservations at a downto gOing to the White he sometimes stays confercnces with the comrait- 1 drifting in from varions ctions are expected to require hi ttention during the whole week 1 his secretary has indicated that robably will drop in to see Mr, the st nt and wers fatally resy n of inhardt of red Clint from the when truck The | over from later. Migs Annfe Jc rs a recluse in Liristol home, found dead in a gas-filled liv- room after neighbers had failed about the grounds. Death ental, according to Medi- cal ¥ “kett While i - bathtub, POWniigy 34, Of New seized w a 1 45 the has in- Coolidge possibility important I v art i Haven, the truck causing | o nd n passed ol instead of Hee where hours o is a fow for many | ye to oolid was ac at ea con oment. The ch oolidge v the Black ago pr k s not Mr. the president went | Hills more than t and was not consulted tent before the issued from that statement utler has let it be known ks Mr. Coolidge should nominated anyway. In surve ade over the cougtry, a majori leaders have expre 1 the Mr, Coolidg had ed himself, Among the first co arc Mrs. A. , Ky, and George Dean of Dean is in town and Mrs expected before night. Hillies of New York down about Wedaes others are to troop in from to time. About 20 have indi Butler's g person, seen onths the Vem drov hoose” wpid however, he and will of Wiley in New Dixwell 1e Saturday night tood there were on the body, and Clarencs ted later on Me- Haven ess body K was found ity. Since near corner of and t Although it is unde ¥S | no rks of Will 1 e Gardner, limi- | technfeal fdleness charg Less than a month after her son cither fell or jumped to his death under the wheels of a governmont mail truck, Mrs. Mary O'Connor, 50, took her life by leaping from a third story window of her Waterbury home. Medical Examiner Crane said the act was due to dementia. | Mrs. Gillette Stevens of Bridge- port received a fractured skull when tomobiles collided fn Milford s the leader stopped suddenly. In New Britain st Cameron, . received a skull injury when, rid- ing a bicyele while intoxicated, he was thrown off. Foote stree apin- rees on Hert is D of is me ¢ al invitation for a Little Change in Site Conte has been little over the convention site Cooli 1s chosen to retire and that ta Commerce Hoover difornia has been mentioned minent candidate, have hurt the wances of San ncisco. Many iders have expressed an illingness to go to any state whic a prominent favorite son Carmi Thompson of Ohio has in- | srmed Butier he will talk to him | or taking the con- nd. Detroit, Kansas Cit cha CHILDREN FIND BODY Come TUpon Battered as a Remains as They Play in Alley Shed—Ban- danna Wandkerchief is Only Clue. ’ Sl (A —Children k in an Minneapolis, slaying hide tound the bruised and disfigu sody of Pearl Osten, year-old student, In a shed in an alley y 1 clothing was tered, and ks on her thre who came here a night ago from Pelican Rapids, Minn., was employed as a waitress carning her way through school. She was last &cen when she started home ‘rom work early Sunday morning. A scarf, made of three bandanna kandkerchiefs, and which apparent 3 )out prospects ntion to Clevel 1g0, Denver, ouis are also in the race. on will not be made until the ¢ meets here in Decembe tor ttec there re finger Miss Oste T0TH CONVENTION 00 Delegates Assemble at Capltal— | ctly due to the automobile. | Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending Oct. 1st ..... EIGHTEEN PAGES SUBPOENAS FOR 3 ISSUED IN PROBE vt (F DOCTOR HURDER Tnvestigators to Appear Before. Grand Jury With Completed Case This Week PLAN T0 UNVEIL THREATS MADE AGAINST PHYSICIAN Mrs. Lilliendahl Characterizes As “Lies” Tusinuations Made During Search For Slayer—Victim Alleged to Have Told Witness He Was Afraid of Beach and Hal Plans to Leave Wife, Ham d N. J., Oct. 3 (P Sut 1esses in the gra tion of the William Lillie on a lonely s invest slaying o Septem road north issued today he case will be considered by the Atlantic county grand jury Thursd ccording to A Pros Cameron Hinkle, on tant Hink i that he would ask only one indictment, but that more 1 person ' might be f the bill if returned 13 as a fugitive warrant charging vsician. South for sought on and ai | 1z from last T to t fearned wha s men saw an a ring the description c the highway near y dahl was killed, of the slain ph bail as a material witness killing, characterized as “lie of the insunations she sald had been made during the inve tion. Lobile his car pull > Dr. Liliien- widow the to Evldence “Solves” Crime monton, N. J., Oct. 3 (I'P)-~ of the conflicting murder of Dr Atlantic announced h Har Out clues William g the Ahl county ors will 1 npleted ppear with their ¢ sday T silver hus was released and by v and in bail s, disappe as a e confronted the body con- vene ©One, police show that Lilliendahl's property and veiled threats to him ont the w another is to the ef- fect that 1 narcotic special- ist him; felt he in danger from the poultryman who s ¢ with his middle 0 Ask For Indictments Atlantic grand b to return W0 persons William to Dr. purported or of was wife, T fury will county with the Lil ahl. Cameron H or, who 1 n id mot name the K to have accused garet Lilliendahl, slain physician, en stant o pros persons he Mrs. i Mar- th v widow . 1 W under poultryman, are \aterial w ch, how: 1 has not yet he if T n't the nd jur has disappeared Hinkle the $ ve n found. show up forfeited i< Charge ) bond would be “Suspeet Wite? learned and his was to lah along so q together wa gotten eral months vi Hu that months 4go in- told Willian his wif 1 around Anthony him he nged oint one his with ne expendi- told recount bank his wife to on: s0 Heat N conli T leave n * Anthony said Dr. Lilliendahl en he | sur- | ad made | would | | || Fight Film Carrier | Gets Big Surprise Plus Jail Sentence Louis, Oct. 3 (P—William s got the surprise of his oday when he was sen- by Federal Judge Faris to three months in jail and fined £1,000 upon his plea of guil interst: transportation of ney-Der fight films =deral statute. admitted st he ers must go to g shown at three ters here law portation films had been aimed at L HEAT WAVE BREAKS OGTOBER RECORDS City Crowds Beat Hasty Refreat 1 10 Seashore MERCURY RISES 170 100 Sunday New York's Hottest Fall Day in 46 Years—Waterloo Hot- test City—Weather Man Promises | Reliet Tonight. York, Oct a b 3 retreat (P —The to its beaches east over the week-end to escape an un- casonable heat wave that broke all provious high October into | temperature records and aths and many The or | caused three prostrations, degrees fn New three degrees higher than precious record for October was higher than any temperature corded in August and was exceed- »d only once in September. crowd estimated at 400,060 sons, half of them bathers, ended upon Coney Island. Other Lundreds of thousands went to the Rockaway Beache Football Star Dics | Donala Morey died in & New | Brunswick hospital where he K from &r & aturday betw: and Manhattan college cat took the |old man in New York city and a baby girl at Grantwood, N, J. Among those prostrated w: zi Scheff, actre: 1ge N ance in ater at mark of 87 en s Trit- r the end of her perform. Bye Bye Bonnic” in a the- New Haven, Conn. Hottest in 46 Years | Sunday, the hottest October day |in 46 vears in New York, saw tem- | peratures of ST degrees at 1 p. m., [and again 4 m., breaking the | previous record for the month, | degrees, which had only been | lished Saturd: In upstate | York the mercury was in the nine- ties, 92 heing recorded at Buffalo {and 1 1t Waterloo. The ther- mometer at Atlantic City, s | registered 74, several degrees high- | er than the average for July, | i York, Oct | s today broke | heat wave as the stood 65 degrees. After a Sunday of blistering July n the mercury stood at §7 logrees, New Yorkers awoke this norning to find the skies cloudy and the weather pleasantly cool. » local weather bur prom- a lower temperature by night- (UP)—Cool New York's thermometer all WAGNER DENIES GUILT suilty to Deaths of Two ® When | Pleads Not State Troopers on Sept. Arraigned In Sourt Today. Relmont, N. Y., Wilmot L. Wagner, first degree murder with the deaths of ors at Caneadea, Sept. ned in supreme court here ay before Judge Charles H. Brown, A plea of guilty was entered by his counsel and date for trial was Octoher 17, It was expected er's coun would ask of venue but this plea was Oct. 3 (UP)— charged with in nection two state troop- ot hang delaye Wagner court room rought the heavy . He was, into un a s iron during the on lives of an 80 vear . who fainted on the | was ar- | to- for 14,357 PRICE THREE CENTS! 00D WIL SEEN IN FRENCH REPLY T0 TARIFF NOTE Expect America to Accept With Reservation September 30 Compromise Proposals U, S. DEWANDING MININUM RATES DURING INQUIRY Belleve French Guns Trained On American Tarift Rates Since Sign- Ing of Franco-German Commer- cial Treaty—Washington Rebuked For Reference To Penalty Section of Tts Imports Law. Washington, Oct, 3 (# most recent While the tariff note is viewed by administration officials as ;conciliatory and perhaps opening *he way to settlement of the present dispute, Frenc; text of the first two notes exchanged shows that the French | BuUns have been trained directly on American tariff rates from the time the rman treaty was signed Th notes were simultancously today ton and Paris, to be by the current chap terchange, the French turday. The Am reply s now being formulated and is exp. ed to go forward late this we The new French note cites the | equalization provisions of the Amer- ican tariff act, Section thority under which treaty nego- tiations might proceed. That section authorizes adjustment of rates up or down to allow for any difference in American and foreign production costs of the articles involved in or- der to remove the difference when | the articles are placed in competi- tion here with American products. The Washington government is prepared to assure France that it | will make full use of this section in caling with tariff rates against | which that country may complain, | but it will not bind itself to reduce | those rates. Any change in rats will | be based on study of production costs and it will go up or down as | that study dictates. Officials are in some doubt as to whether the French authorlties calize that in many previous casecs J‘suv‘h studies have brought tariff in- cre commercial made public in Washing- foilowed later er in the in- ote received ce Radical Changes Tn any event, examination of the first French note shows the new suggestion is a wide departure from the original proposal for a treaty based on reciprocity and to includ. it necessary ‘“such reduction adaptations of the (American) tir- Iff" as would permit certain unnam- ed French goods to enter the Ameri- can market. In reply the state de. partment implied surprise that the French government did not know that the American tariff law “does not envisage the inclusion of a treaty ot reciprocaly in regard to rates of duty While the French tariff system carried a three column system, the maximum of which is now applied to American goods involved in the dis- pute, for the specific purpose of treaty bargaining on rates, the American note sail, American laws “embody no such margin for bar- gaining” and the proposal for gen- eral most-favored-national relations was reiterale the best way of solving the problem. In attacking the schedules, the Fre terized them as s bitive regime"” certain French goods to which the Washing- ton government answered that tariff rates were “a matter solely of inter- involved in the ute with France which was con- fined strictly to French tariff d | eriminations no force against American proc | Trench ¢ In admitting lof these rates [they had come {toms reto American farift h note charace ting up a “proh nst Lack of Harmony an rmentation the French note said about un . which in consequence of the reaty.” It adds that exceptional treatment” American goods entering and which was withdrawn by the August decree “was not {in harmony with the cons crease in American rates and th |enforcement of custom practiced by America” the “detriment of the p; gra | Fran; i ed re- barriers 1 to sp 5 e certain Pres. Coolidge and Sec. Hoover 1 parently started the car by use of a |mayor, in her platform issued today. | ond wif« far knife or simlar instrument, as the The first woman to seck the office | Dombrowski ignition key was in Miss Callahan’s | in this city will be opposed at a run- | testified that possession, HEAYY NEWINGTON YOTE oo . |BELGIUW'S KING GREETS COOLIDGE BY RADIO TELEGRAPH THIS MORNING ; < Washington, Oct. 3 (P—King Al-| republic the v p— . 2 i3 ., O, Ot S ot o O tex | bert of Belglum and President Cool- | timents lalool Bthisfoon ol O | jage exchanged grectings by dircet!to his co DD o a Bt o BN e O O e le AT com Tt tion i los vy town election. This is considered | of service | peopl? !l day in the tnauguration remarkable since, in the case of|yoywoon Belgium and the United| Reply were fol- “Your majesty’s gracious message only & town election such as this| gy BRI S0 I, many times the total number of | jo\eq by a similar interchange be-|on the. inauguration of the new ra- Votes cast all day has not greatly|iween Socretary Kellogg and the|dio telegraph direct service between Exceeded: 300. About 100 votes were | Bojgjan minister of telegraphs, An-|the United St and Belginm s tast between 6 and 7 o'clock this | geole. but another proof of the constantly morning “The opening of the Ruysselede | increasing ties of understanding and The 1id, | of communication which link thi ¢ way [ country with Belgium. In expresss ause for this large number wircless station,” King Albert bt votes ation | ing good wishes to!Judge Edwin B. Parker, chairman | | is the fact that there a affords Belgium another ez deveral independent candidates try- of long-distance communi. Ing for positions. The positions over which cannot fail to enhance our I desire to add the|of the board of directors of the| tvhich the warmest battles are be- | relations with the United States. I affectionate grectings of the peo- | United States Chamber of ing waged are the school commit- am glad of ®his opportunity to give | ple of the United States to those of me and James L. Feis iee and the town plan commission. | the president of the great American | Belgium.” I chairman of the Red Cross, gua s she has observed behalf un- to Lurope, o {1y was dropped by the girl's slayer was the meagre clue on which po- were at work. told him. “I'm going to sell every- g0 her way and I'll unable to com- |Products of the Fre trad 1 as going on. His| The latest and as vet unpublish- sister, Mrs. Thomas Hughes of Tio. |¢d French note rebukes the Wash- N who ified Wagner | ingto overnment for a th his eapture last week, was prese reference to the penalty section of tat the arraignme the Am an tariff law That mark was prompted, presumably by the statement in the American note alling attention to section 317 as auth g counter discrimination, but g that Washington “is to make such duty in- s despite serious discrimina- ) erained from doing 0 in the hope that negotiation of & most-favored-nation treaty and ad- interim suspension of the Trench | discriminatory rates would settle the controversy without that recourse. Insist on Reciprocity The French insistence upon the principle of reciprocity does not de mand any special reduction in the American tariff for France alone, but simply a reduction in the Amer- \ican dutics on French products. The French memorandum cites the high tarifis on French exports to America and asks reductions “which simple equity suggests and (Continued oa Page 15)) ? pre} wh in his 0w wif loff primary on October 11 by Mayor | faithful before she went | Fred N. ‘Marden, former Mayor | Willys H. Flint and 1. B. Haskell. | Pt r Scheduled to Speak. v A 82,000 T 3 (P—Looking f NEGRESS FOUND WANDERING amford, Oct. 3 (A~—The made Anne Eliza Jackson, 78, negress, wander far from he daughter's home today. The polier found her in State street, and she ave her address as 51 Jay street, | glewood, N. J. She sald that she left her daughter's home this morn- d|ing to go to the stor | She rei bered riding in a trol- |ley car and nothing clse. Mrs. - | Jackson was carrying a box of matches and a bag of vegetables. on| The police endeavored to get into was the attendance for the first time | touch with the daughter. of delegates from the Junior Red Cross, representing the high school | 4 membership of more than 600,000, | The program for the day called for addresses by Proctor Dougherty, president of the board of commis- | ioners of the District of Columbia, | | Washington, Oct. forward to addres: President Coolidge and Hoover, more than 500 delegates ass: in the capital today to T0th annual convention of th ican Red Cross As head of the great relief or: ganization, President Coolidge was | K en the program to speak at tonight's session with his address annot to begin promptly at 8 o'clock retary Hoover was scheduled sp! tomorrow evening cial flood relief session An innovation of the ward finding ed = way BURGLARS ROB SPRINGFIELD RECTORY AS SEVEN PRIESTS OF PARISH SLEEP More Than Is Frequently Cast During Entire Dar. assurances of fric hip and patrio cordinl from th my to sen-. of send and Igian Mass. prics ked their roon Mic and wa Oct. slopt the rectory hedral early with $500 and Py burglars — | Thinking that a shadowy figure near ! the door was a priest, he called: “What is it father? The burglar fled, and, although Rev. Murphy pursued him, escaped. Investigation showed that de and clothing had been searched. Of | the $500 taken, $400 was the per- sonal property of priests and $100 | belonged to the Cathedral High school athletic association. The watch was that of the Rev. George A. Shea. The $5.000 was In a safe which vas not touched by the thieve The rector of St. Michael's cathe- dral is the Rev. §. L. Connor, famed chaplin of the 26th division. ak at a ransac of St day gold Approximatel been collee om + cathedral yeste ael's ¢ aped sident Coolidge said: conve — $5.000 which had arishioners at ay in a special THE WEATHER 4 the second time in three rs that burglars had entered the On this occasicn entrance was gained by forcing a side win- | dow. The Rev. George P. Murphy, a curte, was awakencd carly this morning by a noise in his room. New Britain and vicinity: Unsettled tonight and Tues- day, probably showers to- night; not much change in temperature.