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BERKELEY SCHOOL WARMLY WELCOMED Gordial qunion Is Given| . Episooplians New Haven, Jan. 17—President James R. Angell, of Yale university | officially welcomed the Berkeley Di- | vinity school to its new home in the | = heart of Yale at a luncheon and| 1eception today attendsd by Bishop Chauncey B. Brewster, Bishop Fd- ward € Acheson and many clergy and Episcopal jagmen of the diocese. | hop Brewster is president of the| of trustees of Berkeley which | en tacated in Middletown since “he seminary's new site purchas:d vo woens ago, ad oins several of the Scientife school's laboratories and 18 Dresident Angell's resi- chool 18 expected to 1 in September in affiliation with Yaie but nof as an int part of the university. being made in order the broadest possible train- | ing for the ministry. Buildings now on the grounds, including a dormi- ; at present nsed hy Yale gradu- idents, will be utilized tem- “Yale is delighted to have Berke- jey for her near neighbor,” =aid Uresident Angell. “I feel sure that both the students and faculty of | Berkeley will find it possible to take | advantage of the resources of Yale and T am equally certain that Berk- cley will offer opportunities of which various members of our Yale group will he glad to avail themselves. We | look forward with genuine pleasure | to the prospect of mutually helpful relations.” TRev. Elmore M. McKee, pastor of | b university, and Samuel A.| York of New Haven also joined in the welcome and characterized the move as a great forward step in the field of religious education BREEZY FLAPPER CALM AFTER NIGHT IN JAIL I'leads Guilty to Reckless Hoosick Falls and Will Driving in Pay Fine Hoosick Ialls, N. Y., Jan. 17 (UP) | — Hoosick Falls settled back to nor- maley today after a day of excite-| ment occasioned by the arraignment of Miss Jean Goddard, 19, fiery-ton- | zued brunette of Bennington, Vt Nhe aroused the town's interest and Justice of the Peace Harry H.| White's ire when she told him that | “You give me a pain” and asked him “who died and willed you New York | state?” 1 This outburst followed a lecture by the peace justice o recKless driv- | ing. | She pleaded guilty to charges of veckless and licenseless driving of a friend’s automobile, after rpending a night in jail. “Perhaps,” guggested the justice, “you would prefer 35 days in jail to paving the fines?"” | “I'll pay the money, Judge,” <he subdued and then She re- | of an said, Komewhat discovered she had none. fused her companion’s offer advance. “But I'll tell you what T'll do, Judge. Tl go right back to Ben-| nington with this handsome troop- ."* she said, pointing to Trooper | John H.Dykes. “I'll got the money | and then he can bring it hack.” The court grauted her request BRISTOL NEWS (Continued from Fage Seven) 0. R. M. will he held at § o'clock this evening 1 the wigwam on Pros- pect strest. Past sachem's badges will ba presented to seven past sachems of tha tribe. New Haven Man Convicted {found in an upper outside [the MICHIGAN GUARDS CALLED FOR DUTY TO PREVENT RIOT (Continued from First Fagc) [from her kindergarten class and |after being taken to the bank of & desotate creek, cut to pleces. Hotelling said he was at home that day. ate the statement, saving been looking for work The deputies told Mrs. Hotelling that they had reason to believe that her husband was the little girl's as- cailant. She laughed “Nonsen thought he self.” he had said. I v I'd turn him in my- she was, Build Up Case Little by little, the deputies built ip their case. The last link in the chain of evi- dence came forinitously. The depi- ties asked to see Hotelling's auto- niobila and they were led to a black sedan. The color of the automobile used by the murderer was blue. As Pailthorpe turned the handle of the door, a large ring on his finger scratched the paint on the body. Under the s was a coat of blue. idence Found The deputies established that the car had been repainted Friday, the day after the murder, They then searched Hotelling and pocket a jackknife wrapped in a piece of | paper. he knife, they found, had two keen blades both of which were bloodstained. The paper in which it was wrapped bore the names of a number of women, including the {name of Mabel Schneider, 24-year- |old mother of Dorothy. Against her name was a sinister cross. The man continued to protest his ignorance of the crime. The deputies placed him in their machine and hurried to Ilint. The officers showed him the hand- chicfs found in the car, one of which belonged to Dorothy. He did Inot flinch. Then came Archie Bacon, pal identity witness. “That's the man,” said Bacon. Finally Confesses “Whose blood is this?" asked Sca- varda, exhibiting the two blades of the jackknife. The man faltered. weer princi- He began to 'did it, 1 don’t know | { what made The officers hustled him to a soli- tary cell. A few moments later Sheriff Green returned to question him further. He found Hotelling scraping at_ his throat with a dusty nail. Blood oozed from several red streaks, but injuries were not serious. The sherifft brought Hotelling downstairs to his office, Tt was then !decided to remove him immediately. Parts of Statement Flint, Mich, Jan. 17.—(UP)— Following are excerpts from the | statement of Adolph Hotelling, 49- old carpenter, arrested in con- nection with the death of Dorothy e | Schneider. The questions were put by Cuesar J. Scavarda, 28-year-old chief of Flint poli Question. How did you happen tq %0 1o Mt. Morris? Answer QW |'out of t. Little gir? A. Yes. What did you say to her? Asked her if she wanted to Was looking for labor. it when you where going Morris that you eaw this Q. A ride. Q. What did =he say? A. She wanted to know was going Did you coax the girl in the where 1 No, sir. Because Hands Were Soft | New Haven, Jan. 17 (—Ralph Mignone's hands were against him when he was arraigned in city court today. Ralph has soft, white hands but hardened, calloused ones wonld probably have meant treedom for him. Mignone, arrested on an tdle ness charge, told the court that he wag a truck driver's helper. His father told the court that he was an idler. The court asked tn =ee Aliz nona's hands. His father i ty dass” spoke the won indze The Burritt Art Shop 85 W. Main St. Professional Bldg. JANUARY REDUCTIONS For Temorrow Wed, Onlyt We Feature $3.98 Vg Value 1o <9 00 fee Our Window 1o Corns Lift Of—No Pain! Mard ~arns be Htt ) eam corns. zaft eorns tween the foes and right off! and doesn’t Tust drop T der aching that old with your callous You'll laugh--it 18 Tt “reazone’ Instantiy 1t st a bt an any ten fouchy corn sha bothersoms e off then vou right fingers. wark ry charm. every time eme magic’ A tiny bottle costs only a fe at anv Try it' af Freezoms e i Your Credit Is Cood when seen or vour protection w monthly— ut be fet the sign the profected Compans | Q. Where dld you intend to take | His wife refused to corrobor- ! i | | stops KenmeMR et 757 Main St X New Britoin, Ct INSURANCE !about the crime since Jan. {once in the evening. her? A. home. Q. Do you remember turning off the road and getting stuck in the mud? A. Yes, I do. Q. And then you got out of the car? A. 1 told her to get out and I would take her home. Q. Did you take her down by the river? A. 1 can't remember now, 1 must have. But 1 don’t see how 1 did. Q. What did you do? A. 1 do not know exactly. Seems to me I remember telling her that 1 was going to kill her. Q. How did you kill her? A. Killed her with a knife. Stab- bed her under the clothes in the body. I think just once is all I stab- bed her. Q. When she was laying there with her clothes all except her shoes off, do you remember cutting her? A. Yes, but that was after I thought she was dead. Q. Are you a drinking man? A. No, #ir. T never took a glass of liquor in my whole life. Q. Do you like to go out with women ? A. T never have gone with any one but my wife before or after I was married. Q. How did it affect you when you cut this little girl up? A. There was no feeling. I never did anything wrong before in my whole life and never was arrested or in trouble. Hotelling said he had been sick with the flu, the only illness in his life, but had had “lots of head- aches.” A physician gave him hypo- dermics but he was not addicted to the use of hypodermics, he added. One of his nephews, his sister's boy, was sent to lonla once for stealing but there was no one else | in his family that he knew of. His father had 14 children and all grew up and raised families, The Hickman suhject was touched. | Q. Did you read about the crime in Los Angeles? A. Yes, sir. The papers said a lit- tle girl was cut up. I thought it was somcthing terrible. 1 could not sieep that night. It has been on my mind | and I could not get rid of it. T think | about—think about it and think about {t. Q. About the fornia? A. Yes, Q. Did you think about fhis on | Jan. 12 (the day Dorothy Sc| hnumr! was killed) ? ! A. Don't know that T did. Q. Have wou thought lntendod to taky her to her little girl in Cali- A. Do not know as I hav Q. Have you slept nights since you committed this crime? A. No, sir. Q. Have you ate? A. Not very much. Q. Do you figure your mentality now is just as good as it was six weeks ago? A. Well, I can’t remember as well. Q. What do you think is the cause of that? A. I think that reading about the crime in California is to blame. Q. Do you think that crime had any bearing on your committing |h|s crime? . 1 loulu not get it off my mind. | Q. Had you at any time nmuglu‘ that you would give youself up? A. Yes, sir. 1 thought that T| would | Q. Did you go to church Sunday? | Twice in the forenoon and | Q. What did you do after you got into church and went through yonur ar routine as an elder? Just my Christian religion Did you think of the little girl? No, sir. But 1 thought of her l{lvr I left church Talked of Hickman Case Owosso. Mich. Jan. 17 (UP)— William Edward Hickman's murder | {of Marion Parker in Los Angeles | was one of the recent tavorite topics {of conversation for Adolph Hofel- 'ling, confessed slayer of TDorothy anything | v ! 1.do, it preyed on my mind and | VICTIM, PARENTS AND BROTHER | CHIGAGO DOG WAR of the accused man =aid today. “He was violent in his denuncia- tion of such a man,” said his wife, | Mrs. Ruby Hotelling, 42. She also said that when he re- turned from Klint Thursday evening. he told her of the Schneider crim almost at once and said he would like to shoot the guilty man. He discussed the Schneider o repeatedly, it was gaid. Despite his interest in the slay- ings, however, Hotelling was known in his home town as an industrious ase Since a recent church election he has been an elder in the Owosso Church of Christ. For nine years he has been onc of its most generous contributors and hardest workers. “Sunday morning he knelt at our { communion table and offered what |1 believe was his first prayer on such an occasion,” said the Rev. J. W. Frye. “He seemed not at all dis turbed, nor did he show any emo- tion as I recall Neighbors said they never saw him punish a child. In fact, they re- garded him as a model father. His chief intere thy 4 said, were church work and carpentering. SAVED BY UNDERTAKER Waterville, N. Y., n. Two students of Rensselaer !technic Institute at Troy, toe their lives to an undertaker. Poly- ¥y owed While skating on the ice of the barge canal | who fell basin here, the two students, vefused fo give their names, through the thin surface. Their cries attracted John McBain, local undertaker, who stretched out A plank across the ice, threw a rope to them and pulled them ashore, Washington, Jan. liere of a memorial statue of iGompers, former president of American Federation of labor, would be authorized under a bill in- {troduced by Representative « democrat, Pennsylvania. The statue would be the gyrt of the Federation. Schneider, relatives and neighbors Merely Margy, An Awfully Sweet Gu'l | THE MATCH, AN COME T'LIFE ' LISTEN, DEL. IF Y' [HNK ELMER'S COOLIN'OFF. PREJEND THAT YER FOLKS ARE AGAINST | HAVE A @AND JOKE ON_ARAR, HE WAS TALKING ROUT COMNONATE: . MARRIAGE. AND | L‘*«< MADE OUT LIKE ‘JJ HELL penter and a devout churchman. 17 [UP)—1 the | ‘m AD HEI IK\ID CLASSIFIED \lls‘wnlml This picture shows Dorothy Schneider's mother and father | (inset) with Dorothy (left) and her three year old brother, | Kenneth, lDunbury Boy Crushed by Elevator Fails to Survive Danbury, Jan. Machado, the 14 year old boy who a8 crushed by a freight elevator lat the store of the Mohican com- ipany on Main street yesterday aft- ernoon, died in the hospital early 17 U — Joseph | NOW IN DEADLOCK Mrs. NcLanghtin llfl Dr.X Unable to.Gain a Point L Chicago, Jan. 17 UP—A word war over dogs between Mrs. Irene Castle McLaughlin and Dr. Arnold H. Kegel, health commissioner of Chi- cago, has ended in a temporary dravw. It started whea Dr. Kegel launch- ed & campaign against dogs after several persons had been bitten. Fearing an epidemic of hydrophobia, the commissioner sought to have policé destroy all unleashed, un- muzsied dags found at large, Dr. Kogel's eonqul brought m )(n McLaughlin the comment Kekel “must have a very llnibd kulrl.dn of doga” Tc this the heaith commissioner torted: “Evidently Mrs. McLaugh- lh knows more about dancing and dresses than she does about diseases. of dogs.” Mre. McLaughlin,a director of the qnti-cruelty to animal society, wrote. toa newspaper protesting Dr. Kegel's plan to destroy loose dogs. During a recent horse show she argued against the use of tail sets on horses, A short time later she wrote another letter urging residents of the city to take in homeless dogs. In her latest letter, she wrote: “Personally, I do not believe in ra- bies and my father who was a phyai- ciah and a graduate of Cornell uni- versity, did not oelieve in it either.” Calling attention to eight deaths in Chicago from hydrophobia last y Dr. Kegel said: “Whosoever there is no such thing as a ra- sy there 4 uullmw’!y- Health muldnn- of five sub- urban ecities adepted resolutions supporting the stand of Dr. Kegel. Dr. John B. Jaftray, of the Chicage veterinary soclety, suggested jail ssntences for “publicity hunters and heartless persons who cast their cogs in the street to suffer untold agonies and endanger the lives of children.” Shots Fired Into Home While Family Prays Tralee, Ireland, Jan. 17 UP—A fusillade of revolver shots fired through the kitchen floor of the home of John Crean near here pass- ed over the heads of the family a they knelt at daily prayer. The shots were imbedded in the wall opposite the window but the Crean fam'ly remained kneeling an calmly continued their devotiona. 'The attack was attributed to & land dispute. bles might just as u-clmu phoid fever. GROWING {this morning. The boy and two companions were playing about the elevator, unknown to employes of | the store, and started the electrical ! operating mcchanism. The Machado | {boy attcmpted to scramble aboard the lift as it ascended and his body, half in and half out of the eleva- for, was caught between the floos and the top of the door. His com- | panions, who lowered the elevator !to the ground floor after the accl- !dent, ran away but the police found them in school, where they told the | story of the occurrence, {French Aviators Hop Off ' For Trip to Venezuela | Colon, Panama, Jan. i7 (P~ | Dicunnone Costes and Joseph Lebrix, French hoped off at 6:25 to- day from France Field, Canal Zone, tor Caracas, Venozuela. As they vi', follow the coast virtually the whole ' flight of approximately 1,000 miles was ahead of the n. The tiiers expect to arrive at Cara- cas at dusk as they will lose one | hour of the sua en route. i T'rom Caracgs they will go to Bar- raquilla, Colombia, and then to Ro- gota, Colombia, returning from ther: to Panama ¥rom Panama they will start northward to New York stopping at Guatemala City and Mexico City be- iqre reaching the United States. | AT BRIDGE ob Goldberg of 74 Mon- i ente:tained last evening at ;hm' hiome in ionor of Mrs. Jacob Gordes of the same address, who { will leave soon for a visit ‘o C‘anada. | Bridge w od and refreshments 1”“ rved. Mrs. Gordes was pre- with a ftraveling bag. ENTERTAINS Mrs. roe streef WHAT 2 A NOTE FOR THE HECK WITH fibue WHO? ME? FOLks, SWEETHEART! 220 MAIN STREET LISTEN, DEAR. ITS TEN TWENTY? CAN You GET READY BY MIDNIGHT* WITH REASON SAVE 2,10 ON THIS ITEM ALONE ONE GALLON REGULAR $5.00 '2.90 AND A BRUSH FREE! DURING PITTSBURGH PAINT WEEK HARDWARE I:I.'.IMF'ANY @ 1908 by Newnpaper Foature Service, Ine . Great Britam rights reserved. 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