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FARN GROP VALLE OVER $22000,000 Massachusel(s Estimate Made by Reporting Service Today Boston, Jan, 19 P—The value of the principal farm crops grown in Massachusetts in 1927, based on ancrage prices to producers about December 1, was estimated by the New England crop reporting service today as $32,478,000. This com- pares with $33,279,000 in 1926 and a five-year average of $34,749,000. All cash crops showed a decline in production from the previous year | und the average, due largely to un- tavorable weather, insect damage and plant discases. Prices received Ly producers for cash crops we quite satisfactory in the case of ap- ples and cranberries but generally lower for other erops. Favorable crowing conditions resulted in in- creased production of hay and corn. The 1927 cranberry crop ranked first in valuc among cash crops and was estimated at 370,000 barrels valued at $4. 000. Apples with an estimated production of 2,520,000 bushels valued at $3,528,000 ranked second. Tobacco yields were materially less than in 192 Much tobacco was injured by hail and that which escaped hail damage was poor in quality. The onion crop was per cent smaller than in 1926 and increased production of good quality onions in other sections resulted in low prices. HARTFURD MAN' WIFE IS HELD A8 SHOOTING TAESS (Continued from First Page) and went there simply to take their daughter, Mary, to thé home of her mother, Mrs. Cavanaugh., where they had both intended spending the night. Mary had been brought to the Guilfoyle home egrly that afternoon, he said, from the Cavanaugh home to permit Mrs. Cavanaugh to secure some rest. The court case, he said, which brought Mrs. Gaudet to Hartford, had n postponed, Were Old Acquaintances Mr. and Mrs. Gaudet, according to the husband, had known Dr. and Mrs. Guilfoyle for years “We have dined at each other's home, we have enjoyed Yery close friendship for a long tim he said. Mr. Gaudet advanced the theory that Dr. Guilfoyle fired in a sudden fit of insanity. “I have known him to act queerly on various occasions.” he said, “but T mever thought it would lead to this™ “My wife,” sald Mr. Gaudet in expressing his confidence in her, “4x guilty of no wrong doing or in- tended wrong doing and 1 believe implicitly that she knows of no reason for the shooting.” Mr. and Mrs. Gaudet have been married for six yvears and according | to his statement their marital lif: has been most happy. He formerly lived on Mapleton street, liere, and it was during thelr residence in Martford that they met Dr. anl Mrs. Guilfoyle, Mr. and Mrs Gaudet moved to New Haven last May. Mr Gaudet Las been affiliated Knights of Columbus work nearly ten years Wil Be Blind Dr. Guilfoyle will probably be per. manently blind 1n one eye when he leaves the hospital. The police have ot yet learned exactly how the shooting occurred although they for with 1 $10,000. While being led out of the court- rooms Mrs. Guilfoyle almost ‘col- lapsed. Mrs. Guilfoyle's Story Mrs. Guilfoyle's story to the police follows: When the group prepared to leave the apartment on the second floor. Patricia Gaudet went first, and MMr. Way, fearing she might cross the | her. | | Dr. Guilfoyle and Mrs. Gaudet | | were the next to leave while she | and Mrs. Way remained in the| apartment to turn out the lights, | | "Mrs. Guilfoyle heard explosions which she supposed came from a | bursting tire or automobile exhaust | and thought nothing of them, but| | When she went out into the hall vay | she saw her husband and Mrs. Gau- | det standing on the first landing | facing each other. | The doctor stood with his back to | | one wall and Mrs. Gaudet facing him ! | with her back to the epposite wall. | | At the time Mrs. Way was behind | | Mrw. Guilfoyle. | Coming down the stairs Mrs. Guil- Ifoyle saw blood flowing from her | husband’s face and Mrs. Gaudet was | screaming. | | She ran to her husband to take| him upstairs, not suspecting that | | Mrs. Gaudet had been® shot. | Revolver On Floor Dr. Guilfoyle then drew her at- |tention to his revolver on the floor near him, which she picked up and | put in her coat pocket and helped | him upstairs to the bathroom, leav- ling Mrs. Gaudet in the hallw Mrs. Gaudet remained in the hall- | way after lapsing into unconscious- ness while the doctor was upstairs. The police arrived several minutes |later and took Dr. Guilioyle | and Mrs. Gaudet to the Hartford | hospital. | During the night and up to a few | minutes before she was arraigned n | {police court, Mrs. Guilfoyle withhetd | |her husband’'s statement to |about the attempt on his own life. | But this she disclosed about 10 |o'clock this morning, saying that a.' [she was taking her husband up the | \stairs, he told her he had shot him- | |self. " She identified the .25 calibre | revolver as her husband's. Detective Scrgeant Charles J. | Hallisey and Detective Joseph Flynn took Mrs. Guilfoyle to the hospital to question Dr. Guilfoyl, !but when they returned to the po- lice station this afternoon, the de- tectives reported the visit unsuc- cesstul. her Doctor Makes Denial The doctor refused to tell Lis | story other than to continue to deny | |that he did any of the shooting. | When he told his wife last night @ Ithat he shot himself, she said, he |advised her not to talk. | Mrs. Guilfoyle was locked up in | {a cell at the station here upon her | {return from the hospital. | Dr. and Mrs. Guilfoyle have been married 15 years, the former com- ! ling from Philadelphia and the ilatter from Camden, N. J. For the last 12 years Dr. Guilfoyle has been | |a cattle inspector for the United | |States department of agriculture | touch with the Connecticut depart- ment of domestic animals. They | have been living here three years. | | Mrs. Gaudet was shot in the back | just under the right shoulder blade and the bullet pierced the Jung. | sing a scvere internal hemmor- cording to Dr. Joseph the attending physician, | Her chances for recovery are con- sidered very slight. She may, Dr. Heyman said, live througi the night. Dr. Guilfoyle's wound was in the right side of his head, the bulley |entering the right temple just beside | the car, and coming out between the eyebrows in front. [ The optie nerve w nd the N disic ca rhage, |Heyman, s destroyed Iged, AUTO PATALITIES GAIN IN PRINCIPAL CITIES 010 Beports Prom 56 Places Show have talked with all the people who | were guests of the Guilfoyles at din- ner last night with the exception of Mrs. Gandet whose condition is so serious the hospital authorities will not permt her to see anybody but immediate relatives, The police have learned that Dr, Guilfoyle and Mrs. Goudet hayve been more than friendly and ths she was a frequent visitor at the Guiltoyle apartment, often as a din- ner guest They have been told that Guilfoyle hag seen them i eml arraigned Judge Nathan A. Schatz In po lice court, on technical charge of breach of the On recommendation of Prosec ¥ranz Carlson her o ved until Mrs, ave be forc fn bonds of pastor of st 'and had heen a privst for 50 yi | Notone in & hundred suspects a case of System Poisoning, professionally called “‘Toremia’'! ‘fls warning sig- nals are many. Headaches, pains, nervousness, stomach disorders, lack of eppetite, or even constipation may he sigms of an spproaching attack. Don’t wait until it brings on some dangerous disease. Fight the gymp- toms NOW, with the first warning sign. Take PARTOLA, the internal antiseptic laxative. Ordinary laxative waters and pills do not dislodge the poisonous bacteria that cling to in- testinal lining. PARTOLA is safe pleasant, leaves no after distress or weakness, Millions of men, women and children now use PARTOLA. Any good druggist sells regular box 30¢, double eize 50¢. utor | was contin- | I Patalities n 192 ! Cent Increasc, | Jan. 19 (UP)— automobile aceidents lduring 1927 totaled 7.016 in 76 large cities for whicli the commerce de- partment compiled istics, it ‘asz «d today red with Washington, Deaths from Announe Comp the same LI s in cities the year preeeding, | increase of nearly rate of urban au- this represont y per cent in t cmoblle fatalitics During the four weeks which e ed December 31 ntomobile dents for 6 were responsible TG cittes ths in the corrcepond- car before . 1927 auto death of leading o ; Boston, 13 Cleveland, New York, | Pittsburgh, | Washington, ing period 1tk Folowinlg oll 1 taltimor: )5 Angeles, ; Philadelphia, " St Louis, Bishop Nilan Present At Burial of Pries! Bishop John J. Nilan of the dio Harttord and the greatest ¢ pricsts of the diocese were present St Mary's cemetery this afternoon when the body ..g[ e James . O'Brien was laid in its finad resting place. Father O'Brien John's chu He was 76 ce of had been in 8tam- { pears old ars. | The fun:ral cortege which accom- | panied the body was a large one. | ford since 1900 LECTURE ON SOUTH AME RICA | An dllustrated lecture on “Around | South America” will be given by | H 1 15 MacDonald at the next; g of the Commonwealth club, | ohowill held at ¢ o'clock Wednesday evening in the First Con- 1 ehureh chapel. The an- | meeting will take on 18 The that Wit arginator w on the the 1w now minute sermons which are ried in many newspapers. Trade unions of En, 060 members during 1% the | membership being about 5208, on January 1 4 GEDLOGISTS ASKED | Ploying lawyers, Maryland | i i land his work Lrought him in close """ lognlity | states, | street, followed her out to protect | Photo copyright, 19228, by NEA Service, Ine. Transnitted by Telephote This picture, taken just outside the National Theater in Havana, Cuba, shows the guard at attention as Presidents Coolidge and Machado emerge from _the theater after President Coo- lidge’s speech before the Pan-American conference. HEFLIN WiLL KEEP loosely used words as “bay,” which ordinarily means a body of water abutting on the ocean. At some points, where headlands | and other parts of the bank have Leen bullt out with sediment or washed back since 1877, they have Lad to determine just where the | .y low water mark was 50 years ago | by investigating the ground and | comparing old and new coast and |cret Mexican documents geodelio survey maps. Hetifn told newspapermen that in Legally, of course. no land or | s water is belng . taken from either |'S original form the resolution men- Jan. 19, (P—Instead | State, but fccrptanca of the scien |10ned him by name, but shat the il course of em- | fle Interpretation of the boundary |(onference eliminated the reference and Vird| Wil bring several changea in the |MIINE 118 thrce quarters of an hour Einta have ealled in sclentists ta | commenly cireulated miaps whien Yo discussion. On this point ,‘.'." nd their 260-year-old boundary dis. | Will be in the nature of correetions, S'NA(0TS who aftended the confers pute. i AlL however, will be of slight ex. “I°¢ Were hot tallative. The boundary is described by law tent, the geologists assert. | Héflin's Statement the southern bank of the Poto- | Haflin (alep (e d e R ihovknt £ St i going before the conference with viver from Marper's Ferry to quest that it take some action its mouth at Smith's P'oint “without - iy following indentations, bays. creeks, | garding his pas: yesterday with Aot e O WILL RE,ELEGT leTH\HDI!iIVKfln‘ but that Senators Tyson inlets or affluant rivers.” At such | e oniian (OF NorEh points it follows a straight line from b s 6 Aoie low water mark at one headland to Tyson later said he merely had ad- low water mark at the other. Making Plans to Reelect Him Should ‘ised Hefin not to continue his at- it description was acepted in 1877, when the last of a serics of compacts, the first of which drawn up in 1358, was ratified by logislatures and Congress. not in dispute. Th does it nean? 10 FIX BOUNDARY States Call Them in to Settle Problem (Continued from First Page) Washington, of following the jtacks on the party leaders. The discussion behind the closed ! Joors of the conference room begun immediatel after Robinson had called the meeting to order and had turned the chair over to Bayard of Senate See Tit to Refuse Him Seat was Chicago, Jan. 12, (UP)—Republi- n lcaders in lllinols today were _'making plans to bring about the re. . come | clection of Frank L. Smith to the | . : 1r of )r«::|;;xxi\l:l Tmnr;"a :’?1: B of confidence an as 4 m: 1‘0’-‘1‘1‘\- ‘101'( : f,:‘:iv:qu", (V?',m th: senate | oposition that the debate opened. T ovornor Lon fmall: ang Mayor |Bruce of Murgland made an extond- : <0 Btk ang ey A address in which he assailed Hef- Willlam Hale Thompson of Chicaro, 3 B0, Ly for his atiacks he Catholic leaders of two different republican ‘I““"’I' Higkuliaois. anidinf factions in the . both were said MTON- A to be ready to back Smith. Omen wlibAINg | One drawback reported as O Anslyagd N:f'"" AL i causing the leaders concorn. That is _irolina and °"‘ e should Smith run again for the YOrk. As the debato eoEvesssc, te, it he s ousted today, he Senator Glass of \ugm‘ln‘(ln\fvubdl fessor Wilbur A. Nelson of the Uni. | WOUld be admitting the senate had a 7 l’mmm‘ e j"1 1’0"“‘ wh e 088 e TR0 8 C o rig e ant Wi ‘whered hese “whereas, versity of Virginia. They are now 1”*"“: :‘l"n"“‘l'l;",‘_' 1?:’::«; oy h““";'::_"l', 1| were stricken out before the declar- [plum..,. he finishing touches on |y "0 it da that he was still the ation was adopted. yl«v\r ]\\mh‘ \\n.u'|h~.~xyvc‘<‘(:nllnn Of Jegal senator, despite the senate's ! Glass declined to discuss this ac- providing « scitniifically exuct defl- | gugting of him, he might still carry lion of the conference, saying that ition which will leave no ground |oy the fight to obtain his seat. |all information would have. to come [ulTllnvIn.q controversy. | It was pointed out that voters from the temporary chairman, Sena- o reach their concluslons, they knew of these contributions in the |tor Bayard. have had to determine by personal {goneral election when Smith was| Informed that Hoflin had said the inspection the true course of the 'clected hecause the Reed slush found | confere Potomac and th ct location of committce had exposcd them be- the original resoiution, Senator Bay- Leadlands and to find out what tween the time when the primary in tor Heflin was not was intended by the men who which the money was spent was at the conference, that is all T have drafted the 1877 by such 'held, and the general elcetion, to say.” WHERE DEMOCRATS WILL NAME M stion is, what Inability to produce fory answer has resnlte violence and much controve the last 50 years. Jurisdiction ove rich oyster beds and fine hunting grounds is involved. Bome months ugo the problem reached a erisis. Interpretation of the legal description of the boun- dary was the problem et hefore the officlal geologists of the two Dr. Bdward B, Mathews of Johns Hopkins University and Pro- discus North in the of compact These two views of the City Auditorium in Houston, Tex., show the place where the Democratic party will choose its candidate for the presidency this year. ce climinated his name from | Detalls of what took place In the conterence room, gathered after the meeting ended, showed Senator R6- binson had presented his case in brief form. He said at the outsct that his leadership on the fioor and his membership on the special Mex- ican ‘committee had been challenged by Senator Heflin and that he Rad put the Alabama senator on notice that he would give him the oppor- tunity at this conference to carry | into effect his threatyto depose Ro- | binson from both of his positions as leader and committee member. Note To Heflin In order that there might be no mistake about it he had addressed a note to Senator Heflin that he in- tended to call the matter up and did not want him to be taken by sur- prise by it. The Akansasan then surrendered | the chair to Sznator Bayard and Senator Wheeler made his verbal motion that the conference give the leader a vote of confidence both in that capacity and as a member or the Mexican comuiittee. Then Senator Glass informed the conference that at the suggestion of several senators he had prapared a formal resolution, which he read. | Simmens, Trammell and Harris ob- | jected to the prelude in the resolu- | tion although the Virginian explain- ed that this was intended merely to | indentify the resolution itself. Sena- |tor Glass finally withdrew the | “whereases” ani left the simple “be it resoived” sectfon, which was | adopted. | Simmons agred with - Trammell that the conference should not make a position on the controversy be- tween Heflin and Robinson. i Hope To Place Blame | Just before the vote was an- nounced, Senator Simmons called ‘upon Senator Robinson to say | whether tha special committee | which investigated the Mexican doe- | uments intended to “find the forg- | ers,”” and S.nator Robinson replicd | that the commitiee hoped to be abre | to place the blame where it belonged ! for the circulation of the documents. | Senators Brace of Maryland, and | Copeland, of New York. took the lead in the discussion of the con- | troversy between Robinson and Het- {lin on the floor. The Marylander | brought in the name of Governor | Smith declaring he though it was n evil,day when any candidate | tor the presidency could be at- |tacked for his sectarian character | when his general titness for the of- | fice was recognized.” Senator Bruce also declared that yesterday's senate debate could not be regarded as a personal contro- versy; that Robinson spoke not for himself, but for his party; that |dictment against eighteen million !American citizens, and that the |party Itself would have been sub- jected to misconception unless a de- tense was undertaken by the recog- nized leader in the senate. | “It was proper that Senator Rob- |inson should do it as party leader.” Bruce continued. “Nobody could |have done it as well as he did, but |it he had not done it, others, my- {self included, would have been {obliged to take the floor.” | Senator Bruce said the Catholics had been driven into {cratic ranks by bigotry and added that the kind of bigotry advanced {by Scnator Heflin would drive them {into the republican party. “If the democratic parly ia to |become a Catholic baiting party I {for one will get out of it.” | Senator Copeland asserted that {there were four million Catholic voters in New York state and in-| |velghed against assaults upon them |and the other millions of Catholics | by a democratic senator. | |ference that Benator Reed, of Mis. !sourl, sent his proxy in favor of tho‘ | resolution of confidence. | Of those who did net attend. Senators Ashurst and Hayden, of (Arizona, were detailed at the hear- Ing of Boulder Canyon dam bill in {which they explained they were “vitally interested.” Senator Dill, of Washington, sald he did not get no- tice of the meeting until a late —|hour and he was obliged to take| |care of some departmental matters. | Both Senator Dill and Scnator Hay- den said they had no purpose in remaining from the conference. Besides Senator Ransdell, Senator 1l’:flwud- of New Jersey is out of |the city. '500 AT INSTALLATION OF 0DD FELLOWS LODGES Joint Induction of Officers of Three Branches Attracts Out of Town Delegations. Andre lodge, 1. 0. O. F.. waa host to approximately 500 people in & oint public installation held in Odd IFellpws’ hall last evening. Officers of John Erickson lodge of Hartford, Scandia lodge of Meriden and An- dre lodge were installed by Albert M. Peterson, district deputy grand master and, his staff. Herbert J. Phillipy of Waterbury, superintendent of the Odd Fellows' home in Groton, was the principal speaker. Others who spoke were Deputy Odburn of Phoenix and Lex- ington lodges and Louis Heisler of Gerstaccker lodge. Entertainment | and dancing followed the cere- ! monfes. ‘The following Andre | cers were installed: Noble grand, ! John Nyborg; vice grand, Claus Carlson; financial secretary, Algot | Peterson; recording secretary, John | | Holmberg; treasurer, Frank Wallen. A group of appointive officers also | went into office, . | City Items | —Johnston’s clean coal is good coal. City Coal & Wood Co. Tel. 217—Advt. | Louis DiCesare complained to the police that a dog killed two of his geese. He lives at the corner of | Kelsey and Chapman streets. | New lunch specials at Crowell's. | ——advt. | Worthy Temple, No. 18, Pythian | Sisters will hold a regular meeting | {at 8 o'cleck tomorrow evening in Judd hall. ~ Nash Suit or Overcoat—$22.90. |McCabe, ¢9 Walnut 8t. Tel. 454.— advt. lodge offi- the demo- | It was announced after the con-/ EASTHAN AT 65 15 AGAIN N AFRICA Yeteran Camers Man Answers | Call of the Wild | Entsbbe Uganda, East Africa. | Jan. 19. UM—At the age of T3, | George Eactman, millionaire camera | maker. philanthropist, and big | game hunter of Rochester, N. Y., | again has answered the call of the | wild jungles of Africa. | e¢ Eastman hunt here eran sportsman, by inches during a last year, but the vet- lured from his | comfortable Rochester fireside, is | | coming back for more adventure. Eastman, his doctor, and a few | friends are making their way slow- | !ly up the 1,100 mile stretch of the | | Nile from Cairo to Rejaf, the head of navigation. Then they cut across to Arua by automobile | They will enter the jungle hunting fields with camecras and guns about February 1. | In Uganda the big game chaser's life is like a movie filn of thrills and hairbreadth escape a con- stant battle of human wits anJ high-powered rifles against nature jand the jungle heasts, The hunter isn't al vs as lucky Eastman was in his narrow ee. vear, Frer since the Rochescer man left tne States on the piesent expedition, famous big game hunter in st Africa has other, mauled by a as cape i leopard, never will hunt again. Willlam Judd, who | killed African for 30 vears, met death |tusks of a had wounded. Charles Cottar, hunter of 20 years’ was the leopard's victim. The Least's claws lacerated his arms. Ugana swarms with | Elephants roam the country by the | thousands. Since the days of an- cient Egypt ' giant tusker for ivory, but the wila clephant still defics civilization. . Man-eating lions terrorize the na- ti VVicious leopards are abiq- uitous. There i every type of the lion and leopard family from the giamy | Felis Leo to the diminutive Kaffir | cat, ancestor of the domestic tabby, and every primate from the great !gorilla to the wee bush-baby, no | Ligger than a half-grown Kitten. elephants impaled on big ame | A’ charging oull rhinoceros miss- United | been killed, An-| the | charging clephant he | experi- | game. | man has hunted the | Mysterious beasts Uik white rhinocerous and the la, oV in danger of extinction, may ealy be hunted with the camera. Countiess antelope, buffalo, zebra. giraffe, birds of prey and dJeath- dealing reptiles await the hunter in the untamed land, which 18 British protectorate, The Eastman party may encoun- ter adventure even before it reaches Ugands. A few weeks ag> a British officlal was murdercd by a tribesman in the Sudan, an! until the incident is settied the lit- tle steamers of the upper Nile. on» | of which is carrying the Tastman | party, slip warily past the rude | native villages where naked braves in war paint and carrying .poisoned | apears line the river banks. ARBUTUS GROWING Great Barrington, Ma Jan. 19 (M—While Thomas Renfrew mowed his lawn, Mra. Ernest Babb and her daughter Lois picked a bunch of srbutus buds, full grown and ready to blossom, near Mill River. Little Green Capsules Stop' Rheumatic Agony | The tawe of the little green cap- <ie, Decause of its canuy power to specdily stop the termible rheumatic | bains that make life almost unbear- ‘;nMv. is rapidly spreading all over | America. You go about conquering your nierciless rheumatic enemy in & | different way—a knock-out way. Every hour the first day you take | one little green capsule for just ten hours—then relief comes. The second day, take one every two hours for 14 hours—Then take 4 littl2 green capsules every day | until every little twinge and every 1h|t of tenderness is gone and your rheumatic troubles have ceased. | The ‘little green capsule now so much in demand from coast to coast | must have a name s0 it is known in | every worthwhile drug store in !Amerlcs as Allearhu Number 2, | For your own protection insist on Allenrhy Number 2. And please re- Imember this—the little green Cap- | sule must give you prompt reljer— i must give you abundant satisfaction —must free you from rheumatic dis- tress or the price you pay for the first full bottle will be promptly re- funded by Fair Drug Dept., or any Irepuubla druggist in America. Powerful, Penetrating Antiseptic Oil ' Heals Eczema and Other Skin Diseases | Must Give Results in 7 Days or Money Back, | Says Fair | Make up your mind today that you are going to give your skin a real chance to get well, You'vp probably been like & ot {of other people convinced that the |only thing to use was an ointment jor salve (some of them are very good) but in the big majority of cases these sticky salves simply clog |the pores and the conditlon prim- arily remains the same. | Go to Fair Drug Dept. or any oth. er good druggist today and get an original bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil. The very first appliction will give | Mag's | N.E. Drug you relief and a few short treat- ments will thoroughly convince you that by sticking faithtully te it tor a short while your skin troubles will be a thing of the past. Don’t expect a single bottle to do {it all at once but one bottle we know will show you beyend all ques- tion that you have at last discovered the way to restere your skin to per- tect health, | Remember that Moene's Emerald Oil is a clean, powerful, penetrating Antiseptie Ofl that doss not stain or ileave a greasy residue and that 1t n.ust give complete satisfactien er your money eheerfully refunded. Need ANOTHER TAILOR Experience Required Applications Close Saturdey MAG & Soms phone B Moving Day Is February First— Avoid vacancy by securing a tenant now through a Herald Classified Ad. At the Classified Ad Counter, courteous a result getting ad. clerks help you word e office is open from 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. Save money by coming to Classified Ad Headquarters and paying cash. The Herald