Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
News of the World By Associated Press - Zxerary T ESTABLISHED 1870 SENATE COMMITTEE HOLDING SECRET SESSIONS TO WEIGH A Y Ve nony ‘pao3HZH uufl‘_‘)“‘g“ “JAPY 1paul0) BRITAIN HERALD Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending Dec. 10th ... 14,477 N NGLISH CHURCH REFUSES TOTAKE - CATHOLG RITES HEARST MEXICAN ‘EXPOSURE SUCCESS 1S GOAL OF { Section’s Council “Yankeg” Problems Denials of Senators and Testimony of Publish- er's Men Heard—In- vestigators Convene Behind Barred Doors and Discuss Evidence.; Documents, Alleged t0 11001 contron, Have Been Taken From K ment, Mexican Files, Examined | Conditions Minutely — Every Test Made to Determine Their Authenticity. trially, civilly and politically condi- tions are very satifactory in Connec- tieut,” declared Henry Trumbull, chairman of the Connecticut Branch o the New England counsel, speak- ing at the ninth quarterly meeting held here today. Mr. Trumbull in his speech declared Washington, Dee. 16 (P—Th> maze of contradictions dumped onto the senate investigating by the Hearst Mexican committee slush fund documents were taken behind closed doors for study today by the com- mittee, after it had questioned sev- eral more witn in its effort to trace the authenticity of the paperes which purported to show that more than a million dollars was provided for four United States senator: 5 on the opening day of the in- ition, there was nobody to dis- pute the assertions of the senators— Borah, Norris, LaFollette and Hef- | lin—that no such fund had ever reached them, and the committee did not even go into this phase of | the subject. After hearing George Hinman, | John Page and Victor Watson, of the Hearst organization on details of | how the papers were gotten, and fter again questioning Miguel Avila, | who said The obtained them, the doors were barred until 10:30 ‘o'clock tomorrow morning. lspecial attention was given by ithe committee today to Avila, who was pressed for details, and he wa even asked to describe the office: of the Mexican consulate in New | York, from which he testified he got some uf the documents. His descrip- tion was of & general nature. Mirror Editor Testifies that he was more convinced now than ever that the Connecticut mind is opposed to spectacular advertising and that for the present development of business ilready within the state by encour- gement and ce in railway : of utilizing Speaking for B. Rossitor, president of the Ru ford Press, publishers of mag: declared that his council had taken an active part in the events imme- ew Hampshire, W. diately following the flood which struck New Fngland in November. Council Backed Governor. He declared that although oppo- nor's plan to 000,000 issue bonds for $3, to repair the damage to highways and to finance the project hy raising the tax on gasoline within the state from three cents to fcur, the council hacked the governor and public opinion finally lined up so solidly behind the plan that it was passed In one day's session of the ure. He also declared “that without ex- ception of the damage o highways, the state of New Hampshire had not suffered as badly, as had Vermont. | By next spring, provided there are no more floods, the roads of New Victor Watson, of the New York | grympehire will be as good, if not Daily Mirror, testified a8 to PIans | hetor than they ever were, he said. for publishing the documen ana | ¢ Lands Water Transportation said e made dfforts to authenticate | wwhere water transportation s them. Replying to questions from | o aitanic prosperity and success fol. Senator Robinson, democrat, Arkan- o (o "0 FURHET S, SO0 A PO . he sald he would not consider { > o ENPOT e grammatical errors in the papers | ouncil. would not prove they were not au- | “zprg “Nfopvill said that Maine was thentic, because wany Mexlean | - wiesions interested (h the devel. e opment of an adequate merchant | (Continued on Page 3 marine and of water transportation | S n Geneva because it bad been found | n at least one case that of 78 bills ALSHITH AUTHRIES == 7 GRAFT INVESTIGATION markets opened through shipping. | He aid that water development au- comatically answered the question of | Dishonesty in $16,000,000 Sewer Construction Is Alleged | over production. Isa Farmers More Interested Of agriculture, Mr. Merrill said | that the farmers of Maine are tak- ing more interest in their work now [than at any time previou nd that they are turning to new ways of do- ling things and to electrification of !'their farms. Mr. Merrill introduced as a new New York, Dec. 16 (A Smith today appointed Supreme (Member, Blliot Rogers, president of | {Court Justice Townsend Scudder to | the Roger Fibre company. dohn T | conduct an investigation into charges | Tinsley, chairman of the Massachu- lot gularities in the $16,6000,000 SCtts council, suggested that the sewer construction in the Borough councils meet more frequently to of Queens. |cope with the problems that come | The governor took mo action P and that regional meetings’ he | toward suspension from office of held before the general meetings. Borough President Maurice . Con- He urged closer contacts between nolly, which was asked in the | the genmeral council and the state charges filed yesterday I Elect George W. Harvey. In a letter notifying Justice Scud- | {der of his appointment, the governor | \requested him 1o serve a copy of the icharges upon Connolly and give him an opportunity to be heard. Alderman- councils. He mentioned as just one cxample of the peculiar problems (Continued on Page 13) POPE PIUS CREATES Discuss CONNECTICUT REPORT GOOD.i Are Major Points of | Discussion at New Haven Meeting. New Haven, Dec. 16 (A—"Indus- sition had first arisen to the gover- | Profestant Britain Adbenes o Liturgy of Relormation by Yote of Commons NEW ENGLAND | 'REVISED VERSION OF | | PRAYER BOOK REJECTED Archbishop of Canterbury, Primatc | of Fngland, Stunned by Vote Dis- regarding in Few Hours His | Railroad Develop- i ‘Work of 21 Years—100,000 Copies | Advertising, and Highway ! of Proposed Book Already Sold | Must Be Scrapped. | London, Dec. 16 (UP)—Protestant | ingland adhered to its liturgy of | the Reformation today. | Church of England 1eaders,| stricken with astonishment at a | house of commons rejection of & | revised version of the King James | prayer book, visuallzed possibility | of & split in the church betwsen | “low church” and “high church” | factions. | A convocation of bishops will | meet Monday to discuss a situation unprecedented in centuries. | Rejection of the new prayer book | means simply that the hard-headed | house of commons refused to au-| thorize a modernized and lberalized | {version of a prayer book that had ' been official and had been unaltered | /in England since 1662. EW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, Evans’ Wife in Tears as Doctors DECEMBER 16, 1927.—THIRTY-SIX PAGES ASHES OF ORPHAN Say He Has Symptoms of Insanity ASYLUM REVEAL 3 :Breaks Down in Court and Throws Kisses At'ter; Husband Being Taken Adjudged as having the appear- ance and actions of one who is mentally deranged, George aged 42 of 48 Talcott street, charged with blackmail, was committed to the state hospital at Norwich for ob- servation, by Judge Henry P. Roche in police court today. Dr. John Pur- ney and Dr. George H. Dalton testi- fied that they had examined him vesterday and believed him to be in need of observation. In order to close the case, Judge Roche found Evans not guilty Mrs. Evans, crying as though her heart would break, heard the com- mitment ordered and accompanied her husband from his cell to the po- lice service car, holding his arm un- til he entered the car and waving Away for Observation. | her husband his breakfast, but she was told that he had been fed and was not in want. er Kosswig, investiga- tor for the public welfare depart- ment, called at police headquarters rning to question Evans as to past life, he had no difficulty ving on the interview, but when physicians and police officers , he acted like a different He recognized Probation Officer Conn although he first d he thought the latter was “Mr. | Hills." phanage Fire—Gity Plans Givic Funeral Sunday {4 LITTLE CHILDREN his T his The authorities have learned that gc vost 011 Orpl - 5- - : Which Evans once raised approximately FRRANAEC 1 2100 by selling chances to fellow em- Housed 500 Tnmates Is Mass of ployes in a local factory, on a dia- mond ring which, it is said, he never Ice-Covered Ruins—TLoss to Ex T0 BLAME CASHIER Seck to Link Olson With Plants- yille Holdup Yeggmen i | Archbishop Stunned by Vote | Cicero, 1N, Insist on | The venerable Archbishop of | hat ¥l . | t Florian Told Them Canterbury, Primate of Englang,| Stand that Floriai was stunned at the vote. He sat Olson Was in on Plan—Was to | llast night in the peers’ gallery of | the house and listened to impas- sioned debate by politicians Whose speeches hardly had been matched isince the days ot Oliver Cromwell. | The motion for approval of the | bhook, already passed by the hous of lords, was rejected by & vote| |which an official check-up today showed to be 238 to 205 instead of | 247 to 205, as had been announced | Hast night. As the motion was announced to |have been defeated, the house and zalleries went wild with excitement. There was tumult Which the speeker a8 powerless to suppress. Peers in | |their gallery, clergymen fin the | {other gallerics, and members of all | | parties on the floor cheered and | stamped. it The 79-year-old Archbishop |Canterbury remained in his seat. His face turned deathly pale. His| |hands gripped the gallery rail in © front of him. As anxious friends watched him, he rose slowly, wear- and on the arm of two of his e s ¢ el of | ™ secretaries, walked from the gal- | lery, tears streaming down his face. E 21 Years of Work Useless Tt meant for him that 21 years of work which had been devoted to the revision of the ancient prayer book was gone in a few hours of flery talk such as seldom had been heard here in recent centurles, Alternative Communions The book authorized alternative communion services. One was the old one, roughly corresponding to that of most Protestant The other was a (Continued on Page 31) BRITISH BRIDES MUST GONTINUE TO ‘OBEY Rejection of New Prayer- book Keeps Pledge in Marriage Ceremony X churches, | conce: sion to | M | th lai London, Dec. 16 (UP)—RBritish Foi brides will continue to swear obedi- ence to their hushands, and hu mainder of the loot of the Plant Vi been divided between the three Ci- touch with the part & mention ¥l thing went off as scheduled, force was used and there was no | laughed he could have been hea {they were to have an hour’s remarkable relating Plantsville National that in their flight from the bank, | jthe woods until it would no longer irun !He {nsisted that Florian h: |place In the woods known to Flor- Be Paid. Hartford, | | Dec, 16 (A—Testimony | |that Stuart R. Florian of Southing- ton was to receive $2.500, the cash- ier of the bank, Raymond T. Olson, as to receive $2,500, and the re- was to have | ille National bank ero, 1Il, uperior men, was court given in the today by William Kapello, one of the robbers of the bank. {Albert W. Meyer, as re | Florian, was to the effect that fron. obtained fro ved from Information 12,000 to $15,000 would be obtain- d at the bank. Kapello insisted he would mnot ave come to Connecticut if he had | ot been “sure it was good.” He sald he knew Meyer was “in and “a lot ¢ people in Cicero knew about it.” | Answers Alcorn’s Query | Asked by Mr. Alcorn if the rea- | son he decided to come east was | ecause it seemed easy, Kapello re lied, “You or anyone else would | ave gone in on it the easy way it as put up to me.” He said the only person he heard | the name lson’ lorian. He said at the bank every- no | He said Mr. Olson | so loud and so long that ance. o sald it had been agreed | start; | K [that the original plan was to tie up ' To0 Many Bureaus Located the cashier, . 3 . the vault was large enough to nola | in Washington, He Tells |four person o rope was taken. A pillow case rom Hotel ! used as a sack in which to place | the loot. but later it was s which was the reason | Matis in Meriden was | Drove Into Woods Thomas Di Marco, continuing his | story of the the fncidents robbery of the hank to declared | eyer drove their automobile into | because of being overheated. | 1 tola em that in the event Di Marco d not meet Florian at ads to have the three the cross g0 to the ! persons in the | The ing wh miral Thomas P. Magruder told the officers afloat were given little dis- | rangements made for the flight summer k Philadelphia navy yard, said that he |funeral service, On Monday a mass {will be celebrated for the victimi g | Search went on today for othe New Haven, Dec. 16 (P—State po- Ipodies believed in the ruins a lice last night seized a yawl rigged |tho 36 bodies, most of them chil- sloop with & cargo of 100 barrels |dren, were recovered. ot Scotch malt, 40 cases of so-called Toss About $250,000 The 95-year-old orphanage, which gin, 2 five ton coal trucks used for iy 4 noused 500 children and o transporting liquor and arrested 11 number of nuns, was a mass of biggest pre-holiday |ice.covered ruins. A modern wing, raid of the season. The value of the ‘however, stood undamaged. The seized material is estimated at $40,- 'loss was estimated by the Rev. 900, Mother St. Hicefonse at $250,000, ‘fl'rnose agrested were Fred D'An- |ot which $00,000 is coversd by in. Sear nio. Antorio Jarmean, gPasqnale, |gurance, Walter Rogers, Jerome Brock in the history of all of this ci Out of the ai t, John Pearson, Fred Smith, |rious of its kind v, Edward Decker of lthe city, came storics of deeds of Brooklyn, Y., and Johan Olsen, 'heroism, not the least of which was of 130 Fourth street, New York city. [the courage with which Miss Rosa last named is alleged to belanna Goudreault, 17, met her skipper of the sleep. Willlam Tal- |qeath rescuing her young charges madge and Nellie Green Talmadge |in the infant ward. After repeated of Talmadge Inn also were arrested. |trips into the burning bullding, on Hearing Tuesday Night cach of which she brought out a All were charged with violation of | few slcepy youngsters, she made & the liquor law and will be arraigned |final visit from which she faiied to in East Haven court Tuesday night. |return. Hours later her charred D'Antonio was held in $3,000 bonds hody was found near a room in while Pearson, Smith, Decker and |which several babies had been suf- About $40,000, ister, the most.se- focated in their sleep. (Continued on Page 33) Most of the recovered bodies e were uncharred, Indicating that death was merciful in its form | where only a few have been identi- The blaze started in the basement and worked its way to the second floor, AUTOS PINWHEEL OVER House Body Washington, Dec. 16 () —Attack- t he described as too many orders from Washington, Rear Ad- ‘Glazed Streets and Side- walks Make Travel Hazardous 4 iouse naval committee today that | cretion in planning their work. | He cited in this connection ar- last v Clarence Chamberlin in 1 to the Leviathan while The kind of weather all motorists e inet Aread was introduced to New Britain that ship was several hundred miles thiS morning. A drizeling rain, just at sca bound for Europe. wet enough to make ice and not covered the Magruder, the commandant of the | “NOUKh to wash it aw streets and sidewalks. Pedestrians ived orders giving in minute de- | el sl ik MORE TINY BODIES '3 Koown Dead in Quebes Or- STILL MISSING TODAY *IGE GOATED HIGHWAYS PRICE THREE CENTS LINDBERGH PLANS TO SPEND CHRISTMAS IN MEXICO CITY: _ WILL FLY TO PANAMA LATER With Lindbergh Hero Invites His Mother in Mexico City to Come to Southern Country to Observe | Holiday With Him— Likes Hot Climate, He Tells Reporters. Mexico City, Dee, 16 (#—The avi- ators and m nics at Valbuena Iying ficld where Colonel Charles A. ergh's plane is sheltered, have itest admiration for the plane as well as the flyer. \ They have studied the Spirit of St. s as much as possible since its iing in an attempt to understand ts details. They took the oppor- 7 good-bye and throwing kisses to him | raffled, and it has also come to the i " e e il apin Friends in America Vigor- until he was out of sight. Officers jattention of the authorities that he | ceed $250,000—Only Few of frery featu e e e Iv P H. C. Lyon and E. B. Kiely had him | was found seated cofortably at home, | . : e spect Mexlaan fing ooy Protest Flier's Ate 1 | custody, 'She’ had i requsatedsmeking i oleas wills Bl et || Corpses: Tdentifiod! by Welativos— ‘("r‘)ii?\;‘:l\t{mr- Sl o) ) lier's At Captain Kelly to be allowed to make g a choice turkey, when & man | spanc Badly Charred. o itore 8 BlyAcE . . ~ B it Narm 1 G Lo can et catiedi e aicsl- e oo tonton t 7 .?;fyof".].n.,’"x':‘;,l.”“,,,',!;f,,\',’]‘,'“:‘, o dexleo tending Bullfight on Sun- advised her to wait a few days be- the strength of Evans' representa- | Quebec, Dec. 16 (P With the | Clty was e d t and danger- : s et fore visting the intitution. She al- |tion that he and his famlily were In | ricovery today of the bodies of Goylh the New York to Paris day—Young Girls Smile so asked to be permitted to bring |financial straits, | 7 ZEL 3 three more children, the death list — at Him and Populace J oS ‘u{ the Hospice S§t. Charles fire Major Augustin Castrejon, ' avia- o g ere were 1OT attached to the presidential staff, | § ST |escned S35 KON TRen IO ST AR lid vitant I naker ol iy e Stages Enthusiastic Re- |still missing 36 hours after the Aexico City with him during his ception Today. {blaze. visit. Lindbergh said he would be | | - i 1 to do so. | Danger of falling walls haited Kl | 2 ) ber, J a 3 | said: Mexico City, Dec. 16 (B Colonel | — T temporary re-enforcement of the, “He's a bhorn aviator, whose s ! i Charles A. Lindbergh will spend . masonry permitted the work to achicvements command the respeet | (%" » Tflke SlOOp L]qfl(]r Tm(}ks flfld continue. Bodies were go charred and admiration of his colleagues CNFIStmas in Mexico City and then ) ) |that fdentification was virtually throughout the world. His Mexican|plans to make a flight from the ‘ Eleven Persons {impossible. flight was a wonderful achievement. | Mexican capital to the Central | A civic funeral will take place "I consider if a more dangerous! smerican countries of Guate —_ | |Sunday atternoon for the little vie- and difficult picce of skillful naviga- |y Salv: R ey tion than the Parls flight because op | 1onduras, Salvador and ranama. !slon was made by Mayor Simard the dark than when going to Parls.| Evangeline L. Lindbergh, Detroit following & meeting of the finance ~Of course landing in the ocean chemistry teacher, to comv to Mex- o - 2 % fun, but neither is bumping in- ico City as the guest of Anibas: 3 Round Up is Biggest Pre-Holiday ' committee. All expenses will be !STO fun i & nbassador P iz Lieom by the municipal and pro- | (0 @ mountain in the dark. | Dwight W. Morrow to spend Christ- | Seizure This Season and Value of ' (o | — | mas with him. giuslaauiiontiles | Will Rogers, who lost his guest! (Despatch terday from D i 4 2 e s, 9 o espatches yesterday from De- Material Taken Is Estimated A¢| Burial will follow the group room at the American embassy to |troit said Mrs. Lindbergh was not Lindbergh, sald: “I've closed my | going to Mexico City to spend Mexico City engagement. Christmas with her son). “I closed automatically when Lin-| Col. Lindbergh, telling of his plans dy landed. Nobody can compete with |in an interview with new papermen, that boy.” |said that the order in which he will Rogers moved to a downtown visit the four Central American hotel after telling Ambassador Mor- | countries had not been decided row that a comedian and world's| He will fly from Central America foremost fiyer are too much for the |to Havana and then from Havana ambassador to have in his house at | directly to St. Louis, Missouri. the same time. Col. Lindbergh indicated that he might go to a bullfight on Sunday. ‘When asked about protests f; thy 1United States against his, 8t a_ bullfight,. Hio replibd: o0 e s “L think Mexico is perfeot! pable of choosing its owr nati | sport.” | Telegram From Jerscy { Moorestown, N J., Dee. 1f The quarterly nyeet] it} tiety of Friends ' Jiere, representing abou ers in southern New Jersey, have sent a telegram to President Calles of Mexico declaring that it “was deep- | Iy stirred by the successful com- ! pletion of the good will flight of | Charles A. Lindbergh Mexico | { City.” We are grateful,” the message | added, “for the magnificent recep- | i tion that you and your people have | “ oy’ pingperch who visited accorded him and we hope that the | , ot WFC 0 nY spirit of friendship between our two |y " CCER FOOK countrics may continually be | strengthened and grow deeper.” Interview Quickly Ends Col. Lindbergh sat on top of a Protests From U. . Protests from organizations in all parts of the United States aguinst ks possible attendance at a buil- fight continue to reach the embassy. About sixty have been received in- cluding one from Minnie Maddern to the ere today where | th vociferous ap- | plause, told the reporters that he | belleved a regular airline service would be established between the United States and Mexico and Cen- deskc In the office of the first secre- | (1)) American countries before very tazy ol the Amerlcan embasay, Alnn|y i SmiigRc MnRGe98 S HE Rl | F. Winslow, swinging his legs while : | he chatted with th ereporters. jipetoze i rosuInc SR tE R TG U e He talked freely whenever ques. |S¢TVice could be established. tions were asked concerning avia- | Idndbergh sald ihat he did not be- tion, but appeared not interested, | lleve transatlantic alr service was when personalities or other subjects | feasible as yet and added that he S e intoddeeat considered his flight to Paris more The interview concluded when one | difficult than that to Mexico City. reporter asked it he was having | Ate All Sandwiches more difficulty resisting the Mexican | Iindbergh said that he ate all | senoritas than the French made- | three of the meat sandwlches which | moiselles. he carried on his trip from Wash- Lindbergh grinned and shook his ington and that he drank all the {head with a gesture of surrender. |Water he wanted, but had plenty left “Well, I guess that's about all,” |when he reached Mexico City. He he laughed and jumped off the desk. | did not touch his emergency ratfons. Then he went into the ambassador's Iindbergh estimated that he flew office to meet a committee from the | from 2,300 to 2.400 miles on his Mexican congress which had just Washington-Mexico City flight, but |arrived in return for his visit to the |that he had not calculated the dis- chamber yesterday. LONDON TYPIST FAILS IN GIBRALTAR ATTEPY jogyre=cs ot e > v Miss Mercedes Gleitz Gets Half Way | (ween land and water flights. Com- mander Byrd tance exactly. Asked about a theory advanced in the Mexican aviation department that his flight constituted a record ! solo non-stop overland trip, he re- plied: ¢ h ord.” Across But Is Forced To R g 2 = ey would be di- |tail arrangements elivery of the | Pirouctted and skidded on their way | L [bands il continue to endow thetr 'an Whers the money would be di- (ail arrangements for delivery of the | PIOWSUC] and BRidded on thelr way | Pt L Mexlco Clty, Dec. 16 (P—Paid the The governor said that Judge brides with all their worldly goods, | V!ded: Blans, the setount of Emmeline 10 pUE | £ 0 ls fiile n v unable to highest honor in the power of the Scudder would sit, under the statute, FOUR NEW BISHOPS in consequence of the rejection of | He did mot know he was being in it, and other arrangements. make it. Jitney schedules went Tangier, Morocco, Dec. 16 (M — | Mexican government, Charles A as a representative of the governor | the revised version of the Church followed until he was arrested. | The admiral cr:pcrcd :\I‘l-\‘pzml con- glimmering. No one arrived any- Miss Mercedes Gleitz, London typist, | Lindbergh today was ready 10 a s remo justice. RTE AT 5 bk i o ation of power in Washington, st i R i o : s TR and not as a supreme court justice. |of England prayer hook. | ; where on time left the beach at the mouth of the | gratify the desire of the people of ,_In his letter to Judgs Scudder the | American Pricsts Ralsed To Apos-| An alternative church marriage "Chinese-Soviet Break = "‘”.“**“‘\':"” ‘:‘;”; ‘°3 e ‘.”“' Motorists starting out far Hartford s river at 2:30 o'clock this| Mexico City to ses him before } governor declared the Greater New YAk BT Priate: in et {service was provided In the i s 2N naval activitis T AAMINStErINg |4 roported o have gone as far as morning on her attempt to swim | flew away to other parts of Latin York charter provides that the gov- olic Rank By ate In Serles | o0k—though the old still would Unannounced Officially | ‘A“l i l‘ “fl uder argued that the | the State Normal school and then the Strait of Gibraltar. America. erngr may remove a horough presi- e have becn permissible for unmod-| Moscow, Dtc. 16 (P—Official an- |, uc'gres AAEEIICr ATEUSA that the Lyrpeq back. People who drive all | At 10:40 a. m., Miss Gleitz was| During the course of his stay sev- dent in the same manner that sher- s ernized brides—by which the word | nouncement of the action of the ”-1 ':‘ .‘., A "‘1‘ °§("‘ ‘tion | Winter ook to trains and trolle due north of Tangier and half way: eral public ceremonials will be Leld e are T e Pointed out| Rome, Dec. 16 (P—Monsignor obey was omitted and the bride |Nanking nationalists in breaking | e dbtlaiee it emEneHEn | AN rondn Teading out, of e cltyll ncrossi the \Stralt e appented. follln the bix athlatolsta seating that under the state constitution the | Thomas' O'Reilly, recior of the would have pledged herselt merely | yith Sovtet Ru a5 not yet been | e a oSy that recent repal | yero conted with fce that be Foing Strong. 10 people, other enclosures governor may remove & Sherift by | Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist, {0 love, honor and cherish her hus. | pubiierar. oo This mornin a -privately owned vessel in the | pcaipola, Cars were seen Miss Gleitz was in good spirits |50 that all e flyer. He serving him with @ copy of 1he | g 2 v e e R S Tn Ry New York navy yard cost $400,000, |, in all direction g ek S Bl o i fly A i nin ) Cleveland, has been appointed d: 4 | newspapers printing merely hile thr Sl ere | i€ all direction and confident of success when she |has expressed his willinzness to fly ch zainst him and giving him : E L . while three other similar ships we . Sl B L ges ag & | bishop of Scranton hy Pope Pius. The bridegroom would — have | pai gispatches foreshadowing 50,000 i were uscless. Between New Britain |jert the port of agier for the | Over the city, to gratify the public's an opportunity to be heard in his| “mye Rey, Bdward Kelly of Baker, | Promised “with all my worldly goods | rrn}x’g‘: & sli;»lg:x tio relations, | opnired for, §250,000 each In Prl-|4nq Plainville a truck skidded and Bt nortlyiatine nxlnrpr "When | interest R 3 | ) aker, k b d atic rela s, S beach shortly after midnight. en | inte . defense. § SER s o I thee share,” instead of the old-| n s e Yaje yarcs crashed through a fence . % 5 Fly to Pans Al simen-Bleor | Harvoy s smice |20 Do heCD sEnciAlSREoRlotl /oy BF el (RETRE D RS 0rc M i Bamsestiny BTG RETeknnval Sy yniiliialo ks S G riteiie (Tl it s Gt D D BT S 1:21\1 e B : s elected at the JRtG e eR08 i ticipated the receipt of a note de- |iouched upon, the admiral saving | o oorcin > 2004 S i tions were good. The sea was dead | TAndbe fly to Panama publican and was elected at the I The Pope also appointed the Rey. 500ds I thee endow. [rtanaing the ®recall ol thia Soviatl s il cun s |was possible only under difficultics |- nd there w: light | was announced there, at a date to eleet a strong democratic di; 3 i nding the recall o . that bachelors reccived less than o alm and there was a slight mist. | cetion in a strong cratic PR Toh s or of the! In the modernized fon the | e aae e 5 ; AN Lon cars cquipped with chains. With- 210 Vertalned Tatie. s Has niNis trief. Connolly is a democrat. : AONBENGE, bride: . e satar | representatives as scon as various ‘married men and officers in the in- e altios ST he launch accompanying her 6 a has ¥ Church of the Immaculate Concep- |Pridegroom would have said, “with | 8 out chains it was aimost impossible. ment invitations from several Harvey made four specific allega- | 2 Sl r 7 AT (i members of the Nanking govern-|termediate grades received more v ot VRS . carried a wireless set and a phono- | BRE s S & i 8- | yion, St. Joseph, Mo, as fitular|MY body I thee honor,” instead of : ; Jitney owners reported climbing o thar . Canteal AR A thn . ST HIET tions in his chatges to ihe governor, | tion, St. Joseph, Mo, as ular | Cth with my body I thee wor- |Ment reach Shanghai money than their services were hills with difficulty when equippeq STaph: Spanish member ot the | Other Central Amer 0 s, He charged gross waste of public | PIShOp of Taso and coadjutor bishop | Hith,, ¥ 8 | Pravada, official organ of the cen- (worth. S it ol Sl Be s e | including Nicaragua. funds; unlawful preparation and ac- ‘0‘1;‘1.&‘2\\'N1\\or(|| plin e T sU Ot Sy et reviaed) varsion Ltho minindl | trollexearitive committee, publishing | discussed the question of 100 them. The Mastco company report- | The woman swimmer had covered | i “:'f ‘Ff It il h‘f“l"f 1::::;3;{ ceptance of specifications; fraud on [SWIEHSOR. o tor|teT Would Tave blessgd the couple |20 editorial on Chinesc develop- | Pevy, yaros and refexted invlod that the Kelsey strect hill and {more then Balf Of ihie a7 mites) (N8 OKLATIAONSICE Al & S9N taxpayers by utter disregard of en- | e oy, John MeNamira, weblok | /iy, this worda ‘that: Heing faithtully | Ments and touching upon reports ot 1y to “log rolling” days in con- | park street between John and Stan- Which she estimated would be the |Session” for a private citizen, s ginecrs' estimates and statements, | Of St. Gabriel's, Washington, Was|i, oipor they may surely perform | the intention of the nationalists piti- ' gre ley were presenting difficultios, but 1°ngth of her swim, when she gave Lindbergh was received in the #nd cmployment of incompetent en- | 4ppointed as titular m‘tnulp_ of BU- [414 keep the yow and covenant bo- | 1¢S5V to exterminate all surviving — Chairman Butler interruptod 1o | 1 resen gt g difficulties, but = chamber of deputics. T'is was th gineers and men to handle contracts | Menia and auxillary archbishop of |y \ive thom ma. W & communist. not even sparing 'say that he had opposed some navy them. The Arch etreet buses: While Miss Gleitz was battling highest honor congress could pay Stk |twixt th ad hereas the old ing them. The Arch etreet bus I g involving public funds. Baltimore. |blessing was “that as Isaac and Re- |YOuths, declares: ‘The unmasked yards only to find himself “Sitting moved with difficulty and the line With the waters of the strait, her | him as such a session is called rare He asked that the investigation| e the |Decca lived falthully together o | Aslatic exccutioners expose fully under a tree in a snowdrift.” He |\ar tiod up while dilvers went in. rival Miss Millie Hudson, who at|ly and only for st important delve Into administration of the bor- | \fzwhmmon, Dec. 16 (A—The | thoge persons may surely perform their ‘cultured’ Europcan bosses— |said he could sympathize with Ma- |ty the station to look for chains, One time was threatening to jump in | overnment ofticials. 3 ough's affairs for the last 15 years | Rev. John McNama appointed | 4ng keep the vow and covenant be- | caring the masks of civil- | gruder. | Busses on Hart street moved slowly and make a race of it, remained | Lindbergh is not a private eitizen, and declared that in his opinion | titular bishop of Eumenia and AUX- pywixt them made. Magrnder concluded with — the lang at one time one bus and ten apparently indifferent toward Miss |but an “ambassador of good will to wholesale fraud has been nv'nr'imlJ""'{' bishop of Baltimore, Organiz- | n the old version the minister's ————— statement that his remarks referved | other o were stalled on the jce Gleitz's effort. Miss Hudson's only | the Mexican people” the deputies vpon the people of the borough. ‘ul S abriel’s church here DINe | opening statement said bluntly that : * e oy | ONlY to administrative and not leg- |petween Linwood street and Park acti as to go for her wusual decided by rmal vote He was Tn his first-letter to the governor |¥ears ago to provide religious facili- | matrimony was not to be entered | THE WEATHER islative uirs, and that he con- Terrace morning swim. | therefore entitled to reccive highest some weeks ago, proposing fhe in- tics for a growing community W |“to satisfty men's carnal lusts and | | strued it to be the duty of naval| On Locust street a big truck skid- | Great interest had been aroused | honors, Vpitigatom, Harviy charged thatjnorthwest = Washington, —Prior 1o appetites like brute beasts that have | | New Britain and vicinity: | |officers to spend money as econom- | ded around the corner onto Green- by attempt of the English girl| During the session, cheers for & jthe queens erowd” makes “the old |that he was pastor of St. Patrick's ino understanding.” The revised ver- | | Rain tonight and probably | ically as possible with the best needs |wood street, marrowly missing & |to perform n feat nmever before wc- president of the United States were {yweed ving look like amateurs and ) church. He had been prominently sion omitted the words quoted, and| | Satarday morning; lower | |of the fleet constantly in mind. Ad- |crash with the curb. Cars attempt. complished and regarded as about as | heard, probably for the first tim: 4 £ | : . a ! Y P ¥ Captain it was a gentleman :nn'llmmmonl-(l as a likely successor to|other similar statements r»;arq)ngr | temperature Saturday. ! Imiral Magruder will reappear before | ing to climb Linwood, Griswold | difficult as ever attempted by l‘ —— a scholar compared to them.! the late bishop of Savannah, | matrimony. | S A ——% |the committee Monday. |and Grand streets without chalns swimmer, (Continued on Page 31)