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News of the World By Associated Press “ydeq ESTABLISHED 1870 Qquqry MBS 190 ER NEW BRITAIN HE “wuo;) ‘proyIAVH RALD Average Daily Circulation For Week Endmg 14’444 Oct. 15th NECTICUT, MOND AY, OCTOBER 17, 1927. —EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS NEW YORK GREETS LEVINE, WHO RODE . _ AGROSS ATLANTIC : Metropolis Welcomes Home First Tians-Oceanic Flight Passenger GIRL AND CHUM MURDERED BY HER LOVER WHO TOSSES 0UT BODIES, SHOOTS SELF Chicago Neighborhood, TAX |]UT fLoop | Avoused by Sam) - (ONTRO] HAPPED Bark of Revolvers, Discovers Slaying and |National Chamber of Commerce /1L REJERSE JGOlll]iRNEEANE Suicide. Outies Legilation Plans PLANS T-ENGINE P Mother Youth | WOULD RATIFY 1923 TREATY Shot Daughter Because e A She Wouldn’t Marry Him, Treaty — Co-Operation Between | | City Farmers and Business Men— —Were Friends in High £ Menil onG: Merchant Marine Transfer, i School. | | ken From Leviathan on City Tug | Believes Macom, Where He 1 Met Dy Mayor's Reception Committee and Taunsanne | Several Relatives and Friends— Hall Program a Brilliant | New York, Oct. | Levine, the only harles A, | antic air | ‘West Baden, Tnd,, Oct. 17.—(/P)— Downward tax flood control as a measure tlonal transat ame home toda: announced on his revision, Mississippi | passe ger, Chicago, Oct. 17 (M—Two 19-year- old girls were shot to death early today and then thrown from an au- tomobile which sped on for a block before skidding to a stop against the curb, with a dead man at the wheel. | The drivery a bullet through his right tempu® was Wilfred Winters, 2, onu-time taxicab driver but re- cently unemployed, The girls who ! wire killed were Catherine Stadler | and her chum, Margaret Martin, both high school graduates of last The triple shooting took place on Rhodes avenue on the south side. 'he neighborhood was aroused by he roar of revolvers about 1 a. m. At least two householders living on the street went to thetr windows and looked out in time to see the | i:odies of the two girls pushed from the automobile. Car Strikes Curh, of na-| I he would fly the revers defense, scientific rates and * postal o - xt sum- egulation of businc from Europe ta Ame bustness ftself” were cardinal (mn".\- | mer, and t within two years he | in a tentatlve legislative program | would have in operation an for American business enunciated by Lewls E. Pierson, He addressed the meeting of the national council of jthe chamber of commuerce of the { United States, of which he is presi- dent. ocean | 5 letters to | air mail service ¥ ope for 50 cents a piece. Levine was taken from the Levia- than at quarantine on the city ti Macom, which carried the may | reception committee headed by Grover Wha and relatives and | friends of the flier. Clarence Cham- In addition to those main planks | berlin, Levine's pilot on his ocean | In his platform for business he ad- | hop, was not on the Macom. No rea vocated private ownership of mer- | son for his absence was given, chant marine, approval of voluntary Nol Interview (On Arziments ilway consolidations, opposition to Levine accorded reporters o growing bureaucracy in govern- Ljengthy interview on the Macom as ment,” workmen's compensation for [t cicamed up the bay, but friends accidents as a private and not pub- | stopped all questions dealing with lic enterprise, swift disposition arguments in which Levine got e sequestrated alien property, ratific New York today. I opening bus ness < broiled during his four and one-half | The car zigzagged ahcad and|yion of the Lausanne tr With months in Turope ! inally struck the curb, bounding |Turkey and wholehearted coopera- Tow about the fight you had back into a = passing automebile | tion hetween the business man and T G e which it struck on the rear bumper. | farmer for farm reli e Legk i) was the first question of this . Levine opened his mouth answer but Samuel Wenchler of > Rockaw nterrupted Winters' body cdge of the ound on the as hanging over the A revolver was floorboard near his Income Tax Revision Launching into the question of a permanent peace-time federal tax program, Picrson urged equitable e B Thibhes A block back, lying face down on | revision of corporation income taxes, | port o 1o o St \‘,',:m,);‘ o the pavement where they had been repeal of the fedcral estate taxes | ahout that.” thrown, were the bodies of the | with a view to returning this source Tell o young women. The Martin girl had | of revenus to the states and the ' Tellesotalying been shot twice in the back. Onefinal wiping out of war-time excise 0 HK® bullet fired at Miss Stadler entered taxes that are an anomalous, ¢ il her body under the right arm and | ludicrous hang-over of a war happily lodged mear her heart. now ten vears in the background.” Winters had been casually atten- | He recalled the prononncement of tive to Miss Martin for several [the chamber at its annual meeting months, Ner father satd, but he did |last May condemning taxation that not belicve the two were in love. | produces “surpluses so large ti t was the first \\\r ers, according to the necessarily mean that there is being | heen in a plane alon r and to his own relatives, had | taken from the taxpayer more than « n in poor health for some tiine. | is necessary to mect the current €X- was very amusi S fle only recently returned from the | penses of government.” Croydon airdrome T had a laugh to where he had gone in the Discuss Merchant Marine see them run out the ambulance for | liope his ailing lungs would be bene-| Tt is not the function of orgunized ' m. i ited, business, he said, to “accept supinely | The | Asked Girl to Marry Him. the defeatist propaganda that gov- antin: | Mrs. William J. Martin offercd the | ernment ownership of only suggestion as to a possible mo- [ marine is the only way tive for the shooting of her daughter | American flag on said she believed Winters had | frails of an American marine.” He e asl Alone manner Leving was asked | d from replying to out his differenc with ch pilot he hired to fly him America. Levine did talk time he “stole’ his aris and flew 1t to the Ire back to some about the own plane at London e I 1 ever ite said with ile, “And some of the journey girl's Macon 1 to wait at g almost an hour hefore 1 4 ferred, and me Mrs. L Leviathan, so vine during this ahoard the eeting was merchant to keep the seas at the tar- heir ; ¥ repor | hille Margaret because she would | counselled “sound measures to en- Macon ceded to the | 1ot y him and that in a mo- courage private investment in ship- | battery by two police launches a ment of anger or unbalanced mind | ping enterprise Levine was cheered by a c £ #1s0 had shot the Stadler girl and hen himself. in favor of the transportation act of Winters lived next to the Martin's | 1920, Pierson advised th hile attending high school and was | ganization contin vell known and liked by the girl's|congress its views advocatin amily, police were told. “voluntary consolidations of The two girls had spent Sunday | way systems” in support of a together, going to church in the | tional policy fostering an morning and spending the afternoon ! system of ra er and and early evening at the Martins. | transportation at the lowest cost | air enferprises About 9 o'clock last night, Mr. | compatible With efficient service.” | “I've got all kinds of plans” he Martin & Margaret and Catherine Urges Treaty Ratification uid. “But other people do the | decided to go to 'a dance hall. They Ratification of the Amer- I'll do the flying.” were unaccompanied, he said, and !ican freaty of 1923 would he “en. | the crowd at the battery 1@ dld not believe they had an en- | tirely consistent with the Amcrican server waiting to give | gagement with Winters, ‘open door’ policy,” he said, and | in a suit brought| Police, piecing together the his-|Would terminate the insccurity of s president of the Col- tory of Winters, learned that his relations between the 1wo countrics ft ecorporation by the | father had disappeared when the that adversely affects “our forcign cal Digest Publishing cor- | boy was only two years old, and |trade with that nation’s” | it his mother had re-married and | Mr. Pierson said that the federal | noved to Brooks, Ind. Winters, his (Continued on Page. 9) | friends told ofticers, was industrious and quiet, though he was said to ave been morose of late because hiz health. 3 N0 DRILL ON GREEN West Point Cadets Will Not Have Formations Reiterating the chamber's stand | several hundr 1 when he Beeau: of the the or- there was no parade to present to |1 stepped | carly hour | to City Hall, | ine proceeding with his wife 1ghiter 10 a hotel under police es- c The formal reception at City Hall is scheduled for noon. In h interview Lev highway | barcly sketch his plans ashore, 1= adequat wou r future | (Continued on Page Nine) UNlVERSALlSTS WARRING ON DRUGS ALSO SEE 18TH ON BOOKS TO STAY Hartford, Oct. 17 (B—The uses of | very great, tobacco, certain habit forming bev- crages, aspirin and other forms of | cd narcotics, was condemned at tods children and youth, | session of the 15th annual conven- | desiring to become as healthful :uul‘ New Haven, Conn., Oct. 17. tion of the General Sunday School | efficient as possible, may know how | There will he no drill on the New |Association of the Universalist ilaven green this year by the West church, held here at the Church of Point Cadets who come here for the i the Redecmer. Army-Yale foothall game next Sat-| Tho condemnation of N N of sclentifle temperance | ‘s to Time for in New ion is to impart the v's|the end that Haven Center This Year. and why use of against b e esttaes and ma habit of total | narcotics ( in many cases form urda That announcement was, was contained in a report read by | apstinence from parcotic potsons, made today by the Yale athletle|the Reyi Harry Adams Hersey, of [, * oo Mo parcotic i offi declared that time between | Canton, N. Y. superintendent of IRt viargicalled r good their nd work, |and howt approved | standing rcldon Shepard of | ifornia. In his re- Hersey refers to a cir- | arrival of cadet special at the New )femperance instruction Haven railroad station and the game, | and was enthu w too short to allow for the ex- by the Rev. Dr. § ercises which have always been a|Los Angele colorful part of the day's program. | port the Re temporary | his d ent will also en deavor to ascertain and impart the truth with regard to o The West Pointers are due to ar- {cular letter sent out with referen. o gReEn e ce ain ])mm; rive here about 11 a. m. urday [to World's Temperance Sunday on ;!on»”fi- »”“,.lflf T”-_] -: "‘fl:\' morning and will immediately | Oct. 30, with enclosure of an article uestic use, particularly Coea Cola which, whatever its proprictors may nd whatever an anaylsis of th g may show or not show. cems to form in thousands of s a habit identical with the co- caine habit. Even if this pop beverage contains nothing but caf- feine, should remember that the public health anthoritics and in p ticular those having the welfar march to Yale dining hall where [by Professor Irving Fisher of Yal lunch will be served. After lunch, |university on the evils of tobacco, the future army officers will again [ It is furnished the Sunday schools form in line and march to the|so that supcrintendents and minis Yale bowl where they will get in a [ters who desire to impart the f short drill before their team and the | contained therein, may have a b Yale eleven come on the field. for so doing. = “Despite the great unpopularity TUNNEY TO GIVE ADDRE of truth when it is in conflict with Walligford, Oct. 17 (P)—Gene ' Custom and habit, it is the only 1 in | children and youth in mind, ts W ‘Tunney, world's heavyweight cham- - Dasis upon which we may proc idr n re pion will give a talk on keeping fit !caching temperance in the Sunday unit in advising all persons under to students of Choate school on the Schools,” the report savs. “By the years of age to abstain from caffeine evening of October 22 according to Reneral mind the nd offects of emtirely, and all an announcement made here today tobacco are regarded preciscly 8| confine themselves fo & by Dr. George €. St. John, head- | Were the use and cffects of alcobol | small quantity, If they cannot or do r of the school. Bernard Gim. | nof £o very long ago. But truth, dis- | not ahstain entirely.” bel of New York and part owner of | agreeable and \m[mvuLu though it| Continuing the report says the famous department store bear- |may be, is that to . being a nar- | is no possibility of the United State ing his name, will accompany Tun- | cotic poison in wide use, is a Ul repealing the 1Sth ney. Mr. Gimbel has a son prepar well as an Individual poison, and |a ve ing for college at Choate, | that its total damage to the race is remote possibilit modifving the Volstead act. of ity | | condition at Ne man of So |leg. Trueman was arre | volving fl\n automobiles, ! dispute jm hour about {of 951 Stanley | about the left arm when his car nareotic militates | 2 | Farmingon avenue, lof 53 Oakiand avenue, amendment, and | ! THREE KILLED; EIGHT HURT IN AUTO CRASHES IN STATE OVER WEEK-END Haven, Oct. 17 () e killed and eight in- in_automobile crashes, two were overconie by gas and one man attempted fo end his own life by slashing his wrists in Connecticut over the week-end Motoreyela Policeman Alexander of this city is in a ¢ — Three sons were James ftica W Haven hospital as result of being run down by a ma- “hine operated by George E. True- i Manchester, Alexan- der suffered a fractured skull and ted. 'n, Norman Wood, 19, of Wallingford, was thrown from the rear of a machine driven by Robert Hayden when it crashed into an- othier car and died of the injuries he In Meric {received. Albert Lunmh»r of tired of living health, sl throat with suic Bridgeport, because of his poor ‘: his own wrists an T a was unsuccessful. and Mrs. Harry ¥ leaking from a hot water he ter in ir home but were rescued by po- {licemen and taken to Stamford hos- | pital, In three crashes in Cromwel! in- four per zor but his effort at | Lockwood | amford were overcome by gas sons were injured and three others woods to avoid arrest. n Murray, | Pearce, Albert Hubbard, ran into the Those in ed were Willi; 26, of Cromwell; Malcor! 26, of Stamford; 4. and his son Lester, both of Hart ford. Burton E. Lewls, 60, of thi city was fatally Injured and h wus bruised when they were ru down by chine driven by chauffeur for Mrs. Clara ppington d, ¥ by Roher # car in which he was ridin, a culvert on the po: Police were u how the ac suffere to determ curred ane lerney, the driver of the car. In Beacon Falls Charles |74, suffered a fracture of the {thigh and numerous head inj [ when Mrs. Susie Goldup of Parks is on the Waterbury hospits and Mrs. Goldu |is free on bonds, | James I 32, of Gardne Mass., was severely injured and his | chautfeur arre cident in wh ;m molwhn wify Wade of | The chauf- | was ar- 27, of Norwalk, | dent oc- | ed William MeclIn- Parks, lott | Fliers Consider ric in down by a car driven by Naugatuck. | ed following an ac- | ch the Fuller car was | MRS, GRAYSON OFF AND BACK; PLANE PROVES T00 HEAVY > Ong-Third oi Gawllne Supply Dumped in Ocean as Plane Starts to Drop n d | E© « PLAKE POISED READY FOR SECOND TAKE-OFF Failure of Much v| Value as Test Flight—Ship Takes S| Alr In 52 Seconds and Succecds danger list at | P! In Dumping 260 Gallons of Gas in r,| Tess Than Minute — Tide Delaye Second Attempt. Old Orchard, Me Oct. 1 Py |Less than a quarter of 1 : RIDER MAY RESURRECT PAROLE RECOMENDED FRENGH TARIFF FIGHT FOR GASTON B. MEANS - ... New Note Does Not Pre- sent Basis for Immedi- ate Agreement Washington, Oct. 17 (UP)—The Irench compromise proposal in the ! tarift with this government was found today to carry a rider which may prevent omplete acceptance by the United ates, the United Press learned. The French note, decided by the state department today, said France ill postpone the discriminatory tariff rates as demanded and re temporarily to the rates in effect be- ptember 6 except where sucl rates are lower than the new mini- mum rates on German goods. France its In return assurances that the United States will lower certain American tariff rates and I sanitary restrictons which Fra protests as prohibitory. An agreement depends French willingn ccept a quate this governy to investigate the rates and restrictions and to change them only if such changes are Justified Anerican law. Although the new Fr does not therefors pres for immediate agreement, officials here are pleased and hopeful bhe- its conciliatory tone and be- : it narrows the field of the dis- ance's offer to postpone the criminatory rates, pending nego- tiations for a permanent commercial treaty, is recognized as a major con- n, and the state department will try to meet France half w diserimination dispute upon ade- to Administration officials are seek- ing a way to mieet the French de- mands without violating the Amer n tarift law, which is based on th most favored nation or principle in contrast to the recipro- y principle of France and other Furopean governments. In the background is the fear in certain administration circ that unless the ¥rench and other forcign tariff disputes are disposed of tem porarily before congress meets, the will open the way for a congressional fight on the Fordn McCumber tariff law. 'SPEEDER HITS TROUGH AT 60 MILES AN HOUR Car Turns Over, Occupants Escape Serious Injuries g south on Farmington av jenue at a rate of speed said to | have been between 50 and 60 miles 10:50 o'clock last Albert: LakFlamme, aged street, was injured night, struck the watering trough at the intersection of Beaver and Washing- ton streets. Boleslaw Kragiel of 64 rmington avenue told Officer O'Brien that the car, after strik the trough, turned completely about so that it was facing north on and John Walsh who took LaFlamme to New Britain General hospital, told the officer he was prised that there was not a A companion of LaFlamme from the car and ran awa cording to witnesses. Officer O'Brien found that the windshield of the car was smashed and the left front wheel demol- ished. There were also other parts of the car damaged and the trough was broken so that the water ran out of it. A charge of reckless Iriving was preferred against La- Flamme and in police court tod continuance until next Monday was tality. Jumy, New Britain and vicinity: settled this afternoon and tonight, probably light rain Tueday siightly clouds, not much change in temperature. | urn | under the | equality | T | THE WEATHER ‘ | | Former Dept. Agent May Be Freed | From Atlanta ngton, Oct. 17 is serving a sent iln the charges of violating the nationa of Justice . (P —Gastor a penitentiary on ithe Dawn took off today, ck on the of improper bal she was in t e plane was 1o ane p her up. His Goldshorough, dumped 0 !lon nd ed from Harry M gallons will shift or a better of gasoline | two hours 1 ck the at- prohibition act, has been recom- mended for parole by the parole 1t of the t a gasoline was not availabla Lt " and that much time was n Means o was formerly a de rtment of ju prominently in the senate inves. | tigatlon of Harry M. Daugherty administration of the de rounding out a prison term to which he was tenced in New York. He h | eligible for parole for some ti In the first case Means was con victed of conspiracy to viol th | natfonal prohibition law in connec tion with whiskey withdrawals. Later a fury found him guilty o | conspiring to bribe government offi charged that he, funds from It was others sought of two business concerns | preventing prosccution of the com panies on charges of having use the mails to defraud. On completing his first prison Legan serving his second. was fined $10,000 on eack two counts on v convicted. Under the law he would ' be required to pay the $20,000 he { fore the expiration of kis term in June 1928 or resort under the poor law. If his parole is approved does not pay the fine and be re auper's oath” he would jays on each count after approva ot his I‘urfll-" PAMILY HAVE NARROW " ESCAPE AS HOME BURNS ‘Jo«*ph Kogan, Wife and Six Chil dren Rush From New New Haven, Conn., Oct. 17 (P Smoke from a fire in their hom drove out Joseph Kogan, his wif | and six children shortly after las midnight and all had a narrow e cape from 1 overcome befor beong aroused. The family Jive i Porteast and ncighbors saw flame isulng from front windows of th house and did not see \e inmates. Kogan nd he got his wife and fiv n into the street in their clothe: Then Mrs, Kogan missed the hah arouse: nigh and ran back and took it from ths cradle in which it was sleeping. Nelghbors gave shelter to the Ko gans = after flume and water had done damage. The momentary loss not great. Roller Polo League Starts Here 14 New Britain's first home gams in the roller polo league will be played at the Stanley arena on Churceh street on November 14. This will mark the formal ap- pearance of a New Britain team in the new circuit although the name of the opposing team not been announced. This city lhag played an important part in the roller polo history of the country and at one time was rep- resented by the champion club of the world. At a meeting of the club own- ers in Hartford yvesterday cc mittees were appointed to whip arrangements for the opening of the leagne into shape. Final plans will be discussed at a meeting next Sunday when a schedule and the list of players in all teams will be announced. The league will be composed of Holyoke, Meriden, Waterbury, New Haven, Bridgeport and New Britain. Frank McDonough Is the holder of the local franchise. agent and figur- | artment is econd two year with | officials for use in | ® term at Atlanta, Means immediately | In addition to the prison sentences ch he was to exemptions nd he ort to the exemption privilege by taking a ed to remain in prison for thirty | Haven su Residence to Homes of Neighbors, ny signs of | FRENCH BAKER'S CHANNEL RECORD chil- as their home was not hablt- . it was decided that the flight n ommrmm ne wa #h on th "he - leasily from the o of less than its position had risen n pointed towar al, however, when it ¢ she was rapic - ling the altitude zained | 20 Feet Above Water The plan barely bove the the vas dumped. Tt took les _ minute to ease the plane of 1 | tents of the two tanks whi {line the motors, just below 1 | per wing. - the nose hee The ship then climbed as though |an anchor had n cast nearly lost to view o cean as it sped east past Neck. Then the ery went 1 the hundreds - |beach: ‘She is coming T 1| Mrs. Stultz and Mr were slanding on the word did they cal moments was dumped was again over the | Goldshorough exclair “Didn't they drop that gas q h Only wh I heach did v After clrc aliont to the south- ward, Pilot Stultz brought the Dawn down to a pe 1 came to a stop in fror re the pl nee for exactly v Takes Air Quickly vigator Gioldst plane took the The dumping of the 1 the s in load 10 scconds, Al- : cre of thot e t n : OFFICIALS REFUSE TO RECOGNIZE t| ¥ h Channel, n by th on be- it was dis- s me r fove swir hentic, but it to be impossible fo rec because mo official observer present, The dis was Inferesting here becuuse surpris 1, arrivi Dover, on Sp ed with had swum the utes sioned when | Margaret Bay, ber 10, 19 announ {companions that | ehannel in 11 hou Only ten days Vierkotter, erman jelaimed 12 hours 43 minute Vierkotter's record generally was credited. Since then he has won the $25,000 Toronto marathon He had been German champion for a [tong time. | Was Slowe: | Michel had hes e of [the slowest echannel swimmers, | though Wy one. with ninc [previous efforts to his credit. Tt |vas thought possible that strong currents had carricd him to Dover lin sueh surprising time, nest t Swimmer known m- | aker, had | FALL AND SINCLAIR STUDY JURY WHICH CAN IMPRISON THEM FOR TWO-YEAR TERM BHHTLEGEER AT 19 Vemremen Q uickly SENTENCED TO JAIL Chosen, Several Ad- o b mitting Little Knowl- Youth Convicted for Secondl edge of Nationally- Time Gets 30 Day Term | Discussed Case. WEEK-END RAIDS FRUITFUL:Former Secretary of the poidence 1 Interior, Suffering From Bored— However, Detectives Mop Up Street Cold, Appears His Partner, hows Great Interest. Washington Pool Room | | With Handkerchief—Lay in Wait | For Woman Restaurateur, Washington, Oet. 17 (P—Albert Fall and Harry inclair took 1. Saxe in police . places today before the bar ’ er he ha at dental of the the testimony of two po- who cluimed to have seen | p bag rflnminmgj' < of alcohol Lafayette str ne into the tene- n automobile from man named am” intending to | » engagement with a young jferior, suff woman named “Helen,” who lives |¢d plainly his dist on Spring st He did not know |routine of t the last name of either, and he dozed in his chair, but Sinclair fol- positive in his denial that the po- ‘,lu“ul t procecding lice had not only seen him carrying | Within two hours, two-thirds of th the bag (hrough a driveway but had |Prospective jurors were accepted found his“clothing covered with lint 1'm-~ atively, amon, em iwo wom- from the bag. |en. Scoffs At Lack of Warrant i There was some surprise among Prosecuting Attorney T. 6. Woofs [“Po00AI0m: a6 the epeed with whidh the jury box was being temporar ©d Battaglia of attempting to || practice deception, in addition to |flled. Whether later challenges by nse will empty being a “hootlegger and a rum rup. |SOvernment or de ner.” Replying to Judge W. k Man- 1 W & Guistiod Gt SEbasine tering the tenement without naving | Notwithstanding G 4 warrant, Mr. Woods said thag | Prominence given the case and the J0int was (he weakest In the argy. | d€ciSion of the superior court re- The police at | €Aty Which denouced the lease S ot [of the reserve fo Sinclair, the jury specdy information of the | Paiel called to he ShoD on- 1 0f A crime, Te said ang |120ed Many persons who declarel it does not matter whether it fs - |theY Knew little about it. These il or an apartment” Years | PrOfessions facilitated the work of policeman was found to have | 0SIng _the 12 who will [ whether Fall and Sincla af the Distric Columbia supreme lute olute court and wa otonous task of selec vhic will try ti arry a n on charges of riminal e 1 1pot Do conspiracy in connection ne b nelair of He said he had g ment to horrow Hexaliollireserve; The former sccretary of the i ring from a cold, show- the duil court, and once closely world-wide ustified in smashing with njs [ Wheer Fal and 81 d plany Tt i D :-n . h .:{:‘, and #oy- v man who was et S e en tending bar Mr. Woods said. cers failed to challenges with which to from the box jurors with they may be dissatisfie Mrs. Bailey First Juror As tentatlvely accepted, the first lify were Mrs. Annella T.. formerly of Colorado; Miss Heaton, a telephone in- remove whom 1. of Had follow Bat- into the tenement they would : proven themselves unfit to wear the uniform, he said. Judge Mangan, representing Bat- 1 said the action of the police | was an “ou ous procedure.” The | ¢tryotor; Charles T. Hennessey, a constitutional government under | ratireq postal employe; N. . Dent vhich the-people of the United | " pynye teller: - Conrad J. Herzog, States lve is based on the sacred- ness of the privacy of the home, he and in this fnstance, the po- rushed into an apartment and 4 three gallons of alcohol | brought into court and red as evidence. “This is going | a little too far,” he said | \ Enitering Building Walter Malona and FEd- T Kiely testified that they | » on th west side of a barn on cstate property In the | car of Main and Lafayette streets | thout 5 o'clock Saturday evening ! two young men come driveway leading from | stre One, wearing & lue suit, ran away at sight of an automobile salesman; Fonderville, a native of France; George Grazier, a clerk, and Brad {ner Holmes, a department stors floor mana; Although today’s procesdings in a District of Columhia court con- {stituted only the criminal phase of ithe long drawn out fight of the government to cancel t oil leases |negotiated by Fall as secretary of the interior, the supreme court a week ago in cancelling the Teapot Dome transaction expressed the opinion that the two defendants had conspired together. That opin- ion, however, was rendered in the {ctvil suit and d4id not relate directly thelio the indictments under which ers, but the other, who Was|pay anq Sinclair are being iried fified as Battaelia, went upstairs |~ 4 iy or g opene creen door and en- | ypiop e S tenement on the second looT | ida g to shether {he old Mechan building. The of- | han g0 free or rs followed and found the three | (o suo v Armani tooth ction of will de- two men prisoned up 5 e . | Defendants in Court Early (Continued on Page Tour) [ Fa 1l and) Siric)a ovars 1o e N Gy : court room ea They presented {sharp contrast i\omm oneer days |of the southw ntier, bore tha |stamp of expericnce as a prospec- tall grizzled | tor. Sinclair, short, stocky and dap- | No one has questioned Gertrude [per, was onc small town stora 'S fime writer was | clerk who found his start in the men and | | Virginia oil ficlds of Oklahoma and ompanied her |quickly rose to a place imong photog rany as one of | throug fact that sheiihe Jeading oll operators of the fwar the auspices of an toountry ana later as owner of A de most {famous race horses Wearing a dark blue suit of per- Sinclair was first to enter the court. He eIf be- tween his chie jeorge P, |Hoover of W and Martin |W. Littleton of York., While | eritically today over 1 she ve made the im to exp the ease with which s conld be mad § sorry, ne spapers nd the notary Waiting for Justice Siddons he tall 1 af- [ed with his 1 rs and shook it of her sw s so annoyed (hands with friends, that it imed up the telephone | Fall had on a gray suit and wors w Logan might be |his miliar blae sombrero to { pr |which he stuck through his long Sleitze, Mrs, Ivy ! mmne, three Britons | public service in Washington, As he removed his hat, his rapidly w iccessful channellers, fening hair was slightly awry. He he authenticity of their i pushed his way through the throng Miss Gleitze offered to swim |to nis place beside Willlam Leahy, it again under official supervision. |of Washington, and Mark Thomp. $1 Dr. Logan seemed concerned prin- feon “or New Mexico. | eipally ov & fact thet, Gesttds | “wiy g osien Sure bmnbhe the Bt i 1e had se h a ca atu- . g E 5 i ]" o Hadissntinsmmartyconsratus |G N et T jury box. eI didnt nlend e ImEtian 1!One of them. Mrs. Annella 1. Bail- had broken her record,” Dr. Logan | ¥ Was the first examined by coun- sel. She said she had read only the | unch | sel. S 1 she had read only th |headlines in the said. “But as I lay in our LR g dawn broke g was afraid I newspapers about | might be seen it T didn’t start tn, |the oil cases and had formed no | " Originally T intended to keep my |conclusions regarding the cases, hoax sceret for a month, but thel Mrs. Bailey, who is a. native of fact that it was overwheimed with | Colorado, qualified temporarily with- congratulations and was given a|out counsel asking her directly $5,000 prize made the situation too | whether she had read the opinion or serious, any newspaper accounts of the opin- “T belleve T have made further [court holding that the Tea Pot faking impossible.” Dome lease was a result of “collu- \ British oplnion agreed generally - with {he last statement. (Continued on Page 16) R