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News of the World By Associated Press “uwo)) ‘prOJIBH “pda( APV LIRIqy] 23v)§ 1R21}IAUN0) nw ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, WED) NEW YORK CROWDS ROUT PICRET ARMY INSULTING JORN . Bamners Reading: “Rockefeller Yon Are Guilty of Denver Massacre” Ripped by Mob PARADE FILES PAST STANDARD OIL OFFICE Five Women in Communist “Sym- pathy” Procession When Metro- politans Descend Upon Tt With Flying Fists, and Hands Clutch- ing for Placards—Oil Magnate Reports No Strike in His Mine, New York, dozen avowed membe 23, (P—A he work- November s of er's (communist) party engaged in vicketing in Standard Oil building e routed their number front of ti on lower Broadway this afternoon o cf d. munists carried placards cnouncing the strife attending the la r ible in Colo kers Jeer Parade A crowd of several thousa ons, composed of offi nd labe oloyed in o nearby onstru ed and booed the pickets before routing them, The who included five women, appeared in nefal ct shortly after noon and signs ich they had been holding low sere raised as they reached the 1dard Oil building. They paraded sho #long Broadway with ing crowd followins Bolsheviks” and othe nally charging and fem Three patrolmen ordered the pick- 3 to disperse, but they again arched in front com- were arr The cor 1 per- orkers ors o a tion job jeer picket f St a distance Cr-grow ling them oil | crowd, meanwhile, their arrests and v one bt acard and ripped it | ands. This in- action and the wd nded upon the pickets, | ho found themselves hemmed in by fiying fists ands clutching for the banners. ! The narrow stdewalks of the finan- | | DEFIANT, BOY DENIES | ISSUING FAKE CHECKS Renshaw, Accused of For- gery, Held for Su- | perior Court : was de- others to desce !ers, many of Ass Clifford Renshaw, aged 19, iming an attitude of defiance, of Shut- tle Meadow avenue, deni court today that he of Julius caler, 1o thre passcd on John Camp street and Ad, Arch street. He pleaded not guilty to three counts of forgery and was not represented by counsel, Atter Prosecuting Attorney Woods | warned him that he need make no itement unless he cared to, as vi he might say could be sed against him in the event of the finding of probable cause, the young | man testified that his brother, How- | ird, had given him the checks and | asked him to cash them. He gave | Howard the money, he said. On ¢ this week, Howard and a companion whose name was not mentioned, came to Clifford's room and told him they had $300 and were leaving for Maine or New Jer- Howard told him then that the throe checks were forged, he said. | “Why don't you tell the truth You know vou signed Mr. Schultz's | name to those checks, didn't vou, ! now?" Prosccuting Attorney Woods him. ‘m telling the more do you want? chee d in police had forged the hultz, local checks which were Ruck of 126 n Tietz of 464 name ice sev. d truth. What | I did not sign A replied, hot found probable | over to the December term of superior court in $1,000 bonds, remarking that the andwriting, of which therc ample idence, closely re- on the checks. | ant Lllinger testi- that he arrested Renshaw y ¢ afternoon after had been made by T wrber shop The young ma the ant he had not checks but had j brother, who left i testified that he cashed one cheek | be hultz's name and | payable to Rensl Ruck, | who conducts a shoe store at 363 Arch street, testified that he cashed two similar checks, one for $25 and the other for $30. itz denied | having signed the checks. He said Renshaw worked for him in Sep- tember and he recalled having given | him one chéck for $11.75 at that | time, The check to Tietz was cashed | Monday and the others were cashed | Thursday and Saturday, according to | Renshaw, who said he had not| known when he passed them that | the signature of Schultz was not | cenuine. He said he had received | ore than one check from Schultz vhile in his employ. | X6 bound 1 Arch strec serg forg | Britain, ‘o g i . OF PARALYZED VETERAN BRITAIN HERALD Average Daily Circulation for Week Ending 14’541 Nov. 19th ... ESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1927.—EIGHTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS Club Women “Shudder” When “Bombs Burst” in “Star Spangled Banner” Newark, N. J., V. move to aholish BECOMES HOSTILE singing_of | st | N WITNESS STAND Spangled Banner” and others by school children, proposed by 3 Newark Contemporary club at a Ex-Pipe Fitter Frustrates State’si Attempt to Prove Bootleg King e was TOO] []I C(]nsplracy 1in the flesh on the lef: side of his meeting of chairmen of the State {body, James Napoleon rs Hartford, Nov. n cell wi 28 sie wark ity Bonaparte lin Miss W s unless v ested vromotion of peace train ntally as physically to abhor war and en- mity toward people of other na- tions, America’s peace project will fail to mat x — e J of N i schools, Ag bers of trained, n inte {to saw the bars in his cell and es- jcape to the vard of the Connccticut Fe fon of Women's clubs, h gathered momentum and today club who udde when they “bombs O'Mahony is in isolation while War- {den H. K. W ott conducts an in- TELLS HOW HE CAUGHT CAB BEFIRE. SLAYING 2,2 has the approval of Miss Louise Westwood, superintendent of mu- bursting in Westwood said “c ey are ation to rtain, if possible, how it was possible for the prisoner Judge Shook Rules in Favor of State iprison yard evening by as well Iy was detected in shortly after 8:30 Brady, th last prison on Charges of Intimidation by | REMUS' CHAUFFEUR State Prison Warden Starts Probe DRAFT PETITION to Learn How Convict Sawed Bars |NVENTOR TRIFS {Prisoner, Shot in Terrific Battle With Guards, Suffering But Little—Officials May Leave Bullet in His Body guard, = a terrific battle dued by three ady's revolver in the melee and O'Mahony about the left breast, hit scted downy iodged in the fleshy the six 1 a rib 4 s0 por- side. cavity of slight not be ne bullet. T tion of It did the body an inj iry t may the os- o prot le. POLIGE HUNT DOWN DEFECTIVE LIGHTS = Prosecutor’s Office—Driver Quotes " ‘HANDSOME DAN’ MUST for George Remus” and Menacing " MEET DEATH IN GHAR Attorney as Branding Him Him With Prison Sentence. Room, Cincinnati, Nov. charge that George | & = KIlug, hie ci ur, had been tnti- Jury Finds N. Y. Police- ted by prosccutor's office, was| o Guilty of First today by George Remus before | ¢ is trying him for the | Degree Murder T4 Tnstances in This Gity Found in One Night QUICK REPAIRS‘ ORDERED Dirty mid mad the mu his wife, Imogene. te the accusation while a hostila witness, v nined by Walter K. Sib stant prosecutor, on sf cdly made by the ur shortly after the Killing. The jury was excluded from the court room while Klug testified as the “intimidation.” “Were you intimidate Charles H. Elston, counsel fense New “Handsome to ti ian he York, Nov. Dan’ 23 (UP)— Graham must go eleetrie chair for killing the had heen payr Namber Plates, and Absence ed to guard of and Taillights Windshicld against A verdict jury e of gainst th nection with the death Wipers to Result in Arrests Next rly today brought in a to first & nurder Week, Chief Hart Warns, asked for de- former patroiman fn The police departm ted lights on lowed 1t last night of Judson Au 13 a drive nst tive " H. Pratt, payr The jury the assistant | perore You have| g, ter, leliberated reaching a verdiet, said Kiug. ust 27 ‘In what way?" ohn Clippinger, prosecuto: said to me been a hoob for George Remus long | You couldn't open your | immaculately as nmouth down in federal court. Don't be a hoob for him now or you'll go on at Columbus.” » then sald he had been minutes to say he had he Pennsylvania Remus was shot. 11 Hospital wouldn't answer me to,” the wit- sent me to the iail where the dope motor v hours it today by a campaign pment of old tended to compel the cq former patrolnias automobiles with proper winds ual and with o d smile on his without cleaners and markers th trace of a good nat and unobstructed from face, heard tence tlinching. Graham day. Pratt wa 24,700 p | Graham for assig to Hart said today t the ve is in given driven station : : will be sentenced Mon- nature of a warning at this five time, but commencing next week, ar- Remus to vill be mad esumed s killed wi ying a oll to his company some months had been protect the paymaster on all such trips and they b | come great triends. On th of Pratt’s murder he had requested to e kept and 1 was made t0! o relieved of duty and another of- give $10,000 bond as a mate: wit- ficer was assigned ness to get out of there.” b bt sbald then undertook to dJs- iwas arrested when it was learncd the chargcs. ]he bad spent money lavishly on an He handed Klub notes purporting | antertainment at a night club and fo ue an account of the disputed n-| had purchased a new motor car. He LY : xplained this by saying an Aren't these the 1 left him a legacy but this could tooked e b oo JiSieia He has denied re Gl At ny part in aster. and all motorists p to have given adequate notice that the equip- nent on th proper been RS the way he wanted es related, “lhey ospital in the machines mus tion to p limits of tk be in rection y of New within the ins @ Patrolmen Ia havin st 11ght stopped cars headlights or taillights not tunctioning properly and gave the drivers tags requiring them to have the nece repairs made and re- | port at police headquarters not later than today to prove that they had obeyed the warning. The intent of the drive is not to persecute, Chicf Hart said, but the 1 wting fo | otor vehicle equipment will be strictly enforced and it will be ti ult of the drivers themseive ey are caught in the net warnin oday, cars having no windshleld cleaners were stopped and the sa procedure gone through. Attention was paid to the condition of mark- hich were found to be s to be practically invisible others were battered and tw 1 to such an « nt that they | were uscless for the purpose for which they are intended, according to the pol In 74 cascs the po night that th wer lights. The great ma tending drivers hast broken bu! killed Graham prov a otes T took?" m over. edly that in-| Killing the p over to| Eore tell?” Tiston < went class of water. Ftesiar it ) asked Klug whether on B o rring of the murder Remus 4 with him before leaving SR NEARING §6,000 MARK onee | didn't vou tell to the in an interview we had in | utor's office 2" s that Remus objected. Told the Truth” During the hearing on the intimi- dation charges, Klug said: “I told the truth as far T know--talked of my own free will.” | That was enough for Judge Shoo Contributions to the Amcrican and ruled in favor of the state | Red Cross drive are nearing with the comment: “There has been $3,000 mark, with a total of §7,560 no coerclon or intimidation shown. .93 in the hands of Treasurer L. A So far as I can sce. The state was; Sprague at noon today. Subscrip- witliln its rights in holding the wit- | tions today were $1,551.40 with 1 ness under $10,000 bonds.” 264 donatlons fncluded fn this The jury then was called back. | amount. The judge’s ruling was read to the | The report fssued today Jury and Sibbald went on with his| Yesterday's total Today had the ol Pric me so dirty while Uik i ubscriptions Received To- y day Bring Total to $7,860 found a ty of d to reg s and repair the wiring where nece y but some had not reported toc In the cases of the latter, they will be awaited until a ble today, Chief Hart nd if they persist in ignoring rning they will be arrested. One woman driver, stopped at 1:15 | this morning, pleaded that she was | so slecpy she could not go to the police station and the ofticor lowed her last re 1u, follows: (Continued on Page 12) 'PREPARING TREATHENT Grand total so far . Analysis of Today's al- ufficient time to have the (Coy BRID nued on BOFOKHINTES | o e v ot | 0 il BRINGS DIVORCE SUITi o i“«"l"h“"l Dept. Intolcrable Cruclty Charged in Bl | Mwelve) 1. em- Naval Hospital Friday. I !"Orvlsl | Lions club o Paralyzed from the neck down, [ South Cong. church ...... the after effects of an attack of in- Tash Motors employecs | fantile paraly Arthur E. Ander- | John Boyle Co. employees {son of 551 Stanley street will be|P. & F. Corbin employces |talken by the U. 8. Veterans' bureau, | Barry & Bamforth em- of five months' | NTOUBR the cooperation of local | _Ployees MU physicians, to the Brooklyn Navai|lst. Church Christ . (Borek) Roman, ihogpital in Brooklyn Friday. B. Gas Light Co & LeWitt, has| Mr. Anderson was stricken with | Plovees or divorce against John [infantile paralysis during the recent | ?\“}I’m‘“"‘vncf(; ”’f‘j"’“’l”“'s : crable cruclty, |Period when there were several ‘(“CM“[’;": l‘{’M":"mM ried to the |C15°8 In the city. He was taken to | o (ShAFeR o Tovac J : larrlec ¢ ithe Hartford isolation hospital, | SKinner Chuck cmployees defendant on M , 1927, in Ken- F | Rackliffe Bros. employees o ms that on divers | ¥here he was cured of the discasc. | A0 EE BEoS. €] i e b the | The after effects left him paralyzed | o o0 1 FIAOSIERT - present, the defendant has been (1N the arms and legs and an al-| ™) o suilty of intolerable cruelty, She | MOSt complete internal paralysls |y, b O%ees oeee scels u decrce of divorce and per- from the meck down. R PR e i misslon to resume her maiden name. | He was taken to the New Britain |y 00 Frary & Clark as Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Horwitz | €°neral hospital about a month ago. | 113578 served the paper |where he was undergoing a course | yg oo e of treatment in electric therapy by | goivice ... Dr. Johanson. While there he re-|oyiio1q piv. covered to the extent that he can|vacuum Bottle Div make slight movements of the toes | 4piit OUE {of one foot and the fingers of onc | yojloware Div. |hand. ¥is heart shows enough | Gnopner Div, |signs of improvement now so that|yaw Diy. (k. | Physicians are optimistic for his fu- of Complaint Against John Roman of Kensington, After a marriage duration, Sophie en through Greenberg »rought su Roman, charging intol petitione Clergymen Protest New Book of Common Prayer London, Nov. 23 (A—About 1,000 cler men from various of the itish ds, to- nst the common | ture. 150.0¢ 143.70 258.50 o 57.00 Mai | Elec. Range Div. | Blec. Washer Div. | Cutlery Div. Isles, with bowed h stered a protcet ntly revised book of ayer of the Church of Lngland, | Anderson is marrled and the while the Rt. Rev. Dr. mund | father of two children. He is a vet- Arbuthnott Knox, former bishop of |eran of the World war and is un- RATNER'S SCHEDULE 1S FILED IN GOURT Assets of $1,978,400; Lia- hilities of $2,055,022 Disclosed of Woest an Main the Rialto ston ith court payalk 94 50 in and $2,- 0 cured $47.10 the and eecured estate whicl d in real estate 28,400, and ,000. There piece valued at $1,- Insurance policies of are 12 mortgages on s of property in New Ha- al buildings, 4 and Merid tal of mortgages being $846,- More than 50 firms hold secur- d claims. AL 100 7 be r cent composition offer made to creditors and e acceptable to about one- v Haven property 253 ( os of $37,¢ mortgag el street 1,000, mortg el strect, $44,500; $132,000, mortg i Whalle mortgages $46,00( $276.400, tree gages i 284 $185,000, mortga The largest individual creditor s a New Haven man whom Ratner owes §70,755. COOLIDGE NAMES NEW AMBASSADOR TO CUBA Noble Brandon Judah, Chicago Lawyer, Is Selection mort street, on Nov. 23 (B a Chicago by Waushington, Nobel Brandon Judah, lawyer, was appointed President ¢ idge today to be ambassador to a. Mr. was recommended to fluen- Judah ige by a group of ir tial Chicago republicans. He inguished war record and h prominent in law and ban s in cago for some time L hus no diplomatic exper- had c The appointment fills a vacancy at Havana created by the resigna- tion spring of M General Enoch H. Crowder. Mr. Judah's se- lection automatically gives place on the American delega which will represent this country at the Pan American congress to be held in Havana next January and which Mr. Coolidga is expected to attend. In additlon to practicing law, Judah 18 a director of the Chicago Title and Trust Co. a trustee of Brown university, and of the United Charities of Chicago, and is on the board of various other charitable institutions. He served for one ges- sion in the Illinois house of repre- sentatives. ntering the army as a first lleu- tenant he won in France the can distinguished service medal, the Irench Legion of Honor and the croix de guerre with palms. He was mustered out of service as a colonel and now holds that rank in the re- serve corps. or Mr. Manchester, pronounced a benedic- | der the care of the U. §. Veterans' | [ tion. |bureau. The government will ar- Dr. Knox, who is §0 years old, irange for his transportation to Ber- | | was too infirm to make a .s[wvch.Jlln by ambulance Friday morning. | | but he prayed that the Almighty |He will have a special compartment | | would *not send our beloved church !and a professional attendant on the back into the iniquitics from which |train to New York, and will be| | it was delivered by the reforma- faken by ambulance from the Grand | tion. |Central ‘station to the hospital, | * NO HERALD TOMORROW In accordance with the us- ual custom, the Herald will not be published tomorrow, Thanksgiving Day. THE WEATHER T —_— | New Britain and vichnity: | Cloudy and colder tonight, and Thursday; possibly lHght rain this afternoon or to- night. | | | | * i6 £es eri- | | 1$34 from the cash register, counted RUTH SNYDER AND JUDD GRAY MUST GO TO DEATH TOGETHER DURING WEEK OF JANUARY 9 Boston Man Explains How He " Came 0 Stfrt “Friend to GONGRESS HGHT jCourt Ail;vs—Doomed Friend” Canvass | I_"flMS []N_ TAXES Lovers Another - Christmas and New NIES P RIS SR 4 ‘DE sTSEAlfirESSSBigll(JgD ES’LAN Demacrat Leader Demands Slash Year's—No Legal Re- of $350,000,000 Sa¥eDs course Open in State Judicial Department. COOLIDGE SAYS $225,000,000 Commitiee Completes New Schedule, 10 SNAP ‘CHAIN Philip Tucker Also Avows William Butler Did Not Sponcor His Idea —Says He Investigated President’s o (;O‘A. },las Power to Stop Execution —Pair in Death Cells as Judges Sign Warrants Which Will Send Them to Grave. mith, Alone, Health and Then Put Letters Into Circulation—Requests Immediate Involving Total Cut of $235,820,- Halt, 000 — Aids Small Corporations— New York, Nc Tucker of Exempts $1 Show Tickets. Boston Washington 23 dent Coclidge i interest at ered on the tr sund requesting stop at or Tucker denied printed reports i Fran committee's prograr for the Nov. 23 (#) e the receive 1tio called up floors of 1ls today fo M. L the committee itselt with tie consider tric chair a Mrs con- see him ; but nia My Sing Ruti Viilage and tion of it to hi to make cer health er term ends of the | 1TOW! 2 e proposed her or not would be made es to revise the ain would and paramour Henry Juid murder of Albert Under » place not lr nor more than weeks a of sente Ordinarily court fixed a time midway be the xecution m Disasur han four weeks declared that a t of § ,000,000 would cr the government's fiscal re- and that President Coolidge 4 expressed belief that the treas represented the maxi- n reduction advisable. Among those ecasting stiff op- position to the commit program vas Representative Garner of Texas, anking minority member of the and ans committee and one democratic spokesmen on tax reduction in congress, Committee Approves Bill Tmmediately after a majority of the way and means committee late ¥ 1 the proposed the ween ximum and minimum times Cle William J. Armstrong of the court prepared the death war- setting the execution for the of January These were signed by all the judges of the court and were forwarded to Sing Sing prison where Mrs. Snyder and Gray are confined in the death house. ixing the date of execution fol- swiftly after the court's un- action in sustaining ihe convictions of the blonde haired Mrs. Snyder and her corset salesman companion. The only possible chance for life now left to the convicted palr is executive clemency at the ha Governor Smith. It s considered & certalnty that appeals for commu tion of s e to life imprison- ment will be presented to the gov- ernor. The last legal recourse the couple had—with the exception of possible intervention by Governor Alfred E. Smith—failed yesterday. The court held the couple had a fair and fm- partial hearing in Long Island City last summer. If Mrs. Snyder dies in the electric chair, she will have been the first woman executed in New York in 18 years, » Salient points n the t opinion of the court of « clude: “On March Snyder was kill s home at (1 New Yo ant. Ruth voung. daug at the time. The chil broken till R yder her some tim letters w sole purpose w for the larg: it possible 1 to go it al osen T ihar on other m ods properly 1d receiv before e s health 0 arfipie physical fitness, “Mr. Coolidge 1 wish that d that a slice | 00,000 was pos- th. the total duction would come nearer $325,.- before bill reached the House, than the amount ap- cd by the committee - action of the committee late day in disposing of all major issues entering into the question of X reduction paved the way today for a discussion of minor matters. It is the hope of Chairman Green that the tentative program for re- of the revenue rate will be 1 into bill form by the week- 1 that the committce can pro- | 4 within a few days to consider- tion of the measures with a p few to its improvement. No Attempt At Change chairman, however, has in- he regards the deci- rrived at on the major ques al, o0 far as the commit > 1s concerned and that no material tempt will be made between now | the reporting of the new rev- : bill to the house to change the im in its present form. e committee program for tax the Texan decla . of ions favoring the candidac should be discont e th from president in tc rewith, it seems b 1ccord- trying to upon him to cons 1 Iy tr on my 1se t to run. st that all immediate- pressure Therc work plan ¢ Nov. 23.—(UP) 1 today ouncement Washingtor ns wer by the W Ho that President Coolid over the circulation asking him to r Senators, repr er prominent rep presidential aspiration were more ever w whether Mr. Coolidge drafted or declared ou cel h vision 1927, Albert ile lying in bed ns Vi near His wife, the , and their hou! ) W M is quite T " in of some republican n leads ork ain m fter Snyder was ki ed. Mrs, ier had been tied h and foot, she claimed, by rob- [ bers, and had becom (Continued on Page 12) from fright 1 ed condition of t emed to RUTH'S MOTHER WEEPS %t oo the police suspected ti committee Coolidge “jolting k fron or his friends— w o they in a ey don’t know how to play talic for publication but s0 ock. tur New York by a re and clreulated am politicians f i house g story “After au ¢ down and confessed thut Henry Judd Gray had killed husband, that after the murder, he had, w | her acquiescence, r ok and feet in order to dive from thems ough in the confession she attempted to place the larger art of the bl e upon Henry Judd ¢ yot she admitted acts on her part upon which the conclusion of her own g cipation might be drawn with eonfi- lence, Henry Judd Gray was ther after apprehended in Syracuse. He claimed at first that he had been in his room in a cuse hotel at the - Snyder stepped forward to meet | time of murder. After questioning te covered her mouth |y, = 1qo, confessed. According to dkerchief and gazed |40t confeasion he had gome 0 her mother's eyes.| nyaeng Village, from Syracuse the ng before the der and re- turned to Syracuse the next morn- ing. He had, in advance, arranged with Mrs. Snyder that they should Kill her husband that night. “Preparation was complete, he believed that he had suc manufactured evidence which would show, if he were accused of the murder, that he was at the time in Syrac According to his confcs- slon Mrs. Snyder played a greater part in the murder than she admit- ted, but each confession if accepted as true would be sufficient to estab-’ here her daughter was waiting. | lish the guilt of the person making both houses. She wore the same black, fur- It for the crime of murder of Albert —_— trimmed dress and black hat which | F}xl\l.\'dcn A\ldl!l|oml1 proof, lwlhirhhln [ T . she had worn in court during her | this case was incontrovertible, that Con delate_ Robber Y |daushter's trial; . the crime charged had been commit- Takes What He Needs | During the last few days, it was ted, was of course available as re- | New York, Nov. 23 (- New York learned, she had been packing up|quired by sectfon 395 of the code | has one robber who is this sort of [the furniture in the Snyder house in|of criminal procedure, before the a chap—when he needs §11.60 that's |Queen's Village where Mrs. Snyder | confessions would warrant convic- all he takes. No matter what's in the and Judd Gray murdered Albert|tion. ® o ¢ & till. Snyder “Extended analysis of the testis A young man walked Into a clgar| "It was a sad task,” she was quot- | mony produced at the trial would store, held up the clerk and took |cd as having told friends, “The din- | serve no serious purpose. Both des fng room was just as {t was last|fendants testified in their own bee Thanksgiving day.” | halt. Each attempted personal ex- | Mrs. Snyder, prison attendants| culpation by throwing as much of, he told the sald, was exceedingly nervous toda: land took practically no food. bro to tr Mrs. Brown Pays Sad Visit to Daughter on Eve of Thanksgiving wsure was stion at rence. Tt wsed at spondents. to Mr. made, bi-weekly r to a qu » perplexity ¢ ome w Coolidge sin ment ck Hill & Prison, Ossining, N. Y., (UP) — Mrs. Josephine today visited her daughter, Brown Snyder, a few hours Irs. Snyder learned that the ¢ of January § she must dle in @ electric chalr. s. Brown approached Mrs. Snyder's cell in the death house, Nov Brown iandary of t metho nis Is. Tt to encourage 1h rather than dispel ft Democrats pointed cement as their contention to be renomina “T understa anothe that Mr. Coolidge is 1 Senator wrist 4 5 for ile other prisoners were recely- ug presents of cigarettes, Than iving dainties and various luxuries to che 1 over tomorrow’s holi- Mrs. Brown brought nothing to r daughter. Mrs. Brown arrived in & closed automobile at the prison and avoid- | ed photographers as she hurried in- prison offic an’t say anything.” she told reporters. When an attempt was to question her, she wept and prison officers led her quickly down | the corridor to the death house ippl, petitioners t & Senator Capper, republican, Kans. ted that in his 1 s would “But of ttor Curtis 1he wil hav sam 1, course we 2 (republic the del il Unless there is some {1 development before congr a week from Monday, consf liscussion is expected on the floor of iminating reots | |out $11.60 and put mainder. “That's all T need,” | clerk as he left. back the re- (Continued on Page 13)