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NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1928.—SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS BMARINE S-3 MISSING STORM FOR 45 HOURS ‘BUDGET SLASHES NEEDED TO KEEP “TAK RATE STEADY Fimnoe Board lut Prune $183,819 From Estimates to Mintain Carrest Lovdl DEPARTMENT REQUESTS TOTAL UP_‘ $4.080,718 33.3 Mills Would Be Asecssment fif Al Appropristions Were Br—l-dl —Hoarings Start Tonight At City Hall—Deficit of $35,000 Must Be | Made Provided For in With Spe- clal Ome-Fifth Nfil. Unleas the board of finance and taxation finds ways and means of pruning $765,819.43 from the budg- | ets submitted by branches of tho,r city government, a tax rate of 32.2| mills will be required to run the city | for the flacal year 1928.1929. The present rate is 25.5. ‘When tho hoard meets tonight it | will receive requests totaling $4,- 082,718,37, minus estimated mcum! from various sources amounting to | $407,700 leaving the net §3, 515.-i 018,37, Based on the current rate, | the grand list of $114,086,233 would | produce & tax revenue ‘of $2,909,- 19894, - 1 ‘Thig wum!lon is made without constderation “of the water board's extension program calling for an appropriation of more than $2,000,- 000, this being deducted because of | the fact that the revenue for that purpose will come. out of bond sales rather than from direct taxation. In almost every fund, the amount asked for the mext flacal year is in nxcess of what was asked this year. | The increase is greatest in the budget | of ‘the athool committee where $131,133 moroe Is requested than was | granted for this year, Those | 1 | | in- | creases are bBased on estimates of cost for running the Robert J. Vance, and the Benjamin Franklin schools, and because the board was unable to carry on with the appropriation | siven this year. Department Budgets | Budgets of the departments are: Consolidated school district, $1,261,- 384; board of ‘public works, $567,- | G87; street lighting, $65,500; -mtei highways, $5,000; eewer mainte- nance, $28,000; permanent pave- | ment, $30,000; street improvements, | $54,600; catch basins, $4,000; city | plan commission, $1,000; police de.i partment, $226,455; fire department, | $231,045.92; public welfare depart- | ment, $92,992.20; health depart- | ment, $212,265; special appropria- | tions, $47,350; municipal depart- ments, reappropriated, $347,282; in- terest and discounts, $226,241.25; | payments on principal, $356,500; in- cidentals, $47,800; water depart- ment maintenance, $192,350; gen- eral government salaries, $76,98 | nett to account a | elective ofticer who was * 'his own discretion, (Centinued on Page 10.) FATALLY HURT WHEN HIT BY RACING AUTO Newington Garage Me-| chanic Victim of Al- leged Drunken Driver Hartford, Jan, 30.—M—Fred Pit- kin, 24, & mechanic at the Kinney Garage on the Berlin Turnpike in Newington, died at the Hartford hospital early today. He was crushed between the radiator of a standing automobile in front of the garage and a speeding machine operated by Willlam A. McKnight of 20 ‘Wethersfield avenue, Hartford. | Pitkin was filling the radiator of | his car which was thirty feet away | from the traveled portion of the road when McKnight's car swerved off the road, and struck the Pitkin | machine head-on. Pitkin's car was thrown 75 feet into a vacant lot by the impact. Pit- kin’s skull was fractured and two legs broken, according to a report | from the hospital. He died without | regaining consciousncss. He was a resident of Newington and leaves a | ‘wife and one child. McKnight was under the influcnce ot liquor according to state policc. He was uninjured. He was arrested on a charge of manclaughter by state pollos from the headquarters bar- racks fta Hartford. The police claim he was driving 60 miles an hour. | tin the letter writing stage today. | Lefore | morrow to explain his attitude. { because of the activity | office in | that to obey your (Stoeckel) {mons and z2dmit Famous War Chief NG [SH WARRIOR ~ EARL HAIG DIES icommander-in-chiei of British FIELD MARSHAL HAIG BENNETT PANNING STOECKEL BY MAIL \Wilton Grand Jaror Criticizes Motor Vehicle Commissioner | Marshal ! during the world w ~ ATLONDON HOME Forces in France Succumbs to Heart Attack ‘STRICKEN WHEN SITTING. -5 All England and Empire Thrown | Into Mourning as Special Editions | of Papers Announce Death of Fa- mous Soldier Who Was in 67th Year Apparently in Finest of | Health, London, tarl chief of the }1 aig, c Omm(lndflr in. | British forces in France | r, died hudd(‘lll) during the night at his London hiome in Prince's Gate, Death resulted from a heart at»i tack suifered while the famous sol- | dier was preparing for bed. In the ! house with the stricken ficld marshal | wcere his brother-in-law, George Jamieson, and Mrs, \Vllll'\m Jamie- Retived About 12 ' WRITES HlM SONTHINGLY | .oy o b sons. the say Will Appear Before Commissioner at | Hearing Tomorrow to F. \plnln Refusal to Sign State Police War- rents for Violators, Wilton, Jan. 30 (®—The contro- versy between Grand Juror Frank | Bennett of this town and AMotor Ve- hicle Commissioner B. Btoeckel, over: the the latter that the former ed to sign warrants involving charges of violation of motor vehicle laws, when presented by state police, was Mr. summons to appear Stoeckel to- The commissioner claims o derive au- thority for bringing the grand juror before him under the 1921 law. Bennett ) said that his refusal to sign warrants was that the 8 as presented 0 him by state ofi ‘not important enough.” Lawyers Engaged, He engaged counscl, Light, Dun- bar and Quinlan of Norwalk who also appear in the case as counsel for the town of Wilton, The confroversy has created inter- est nmot only in the town but throughout lower Fairfield ronmv of the s police engaged in control .m.i regu- Robbins charges ol has re Bennett is under Commissioner | lation of motor traffi Denying Authority, Counsel for Benrett toda; letter to Commissioner Stocckel de- nying his author sent a a quasi-judicial | xercising | ed by his oxth of of his gu own conscicnee, under the the performance duty.” The letter says that Bennett fe. oi! duty bound to iake this position in the interest of the sound and orderly administration of justice and of the rights of every prosecuting and judi- cial officer of the state, belicving sum- authority claimed by you (Stoeckel) would create harmful and dangerous precedent.” Quote Law. Counsel in the letter had quoted from the law of 1921 which gives the commissioner the right after notice and hearing, to make a p entation to the state’s attorney who shall apply for a bench warrant against the offending officcr and prosecute for misfeasance. (ounsel further said “We note your st ment to the effect that this provi- sion was intended to give you cer- tain control over the action of ‘gran jurors and justices of the peace’ even if there were nothing elge in the act to show a contrary intention, certainly no one re ing | the foregoing action would think for a moment that the words ‘any offi- cer' were intended to give you con- trol of the judicial and quasi-judicial officers of the state. * * ¢ to con- tend otherwise and to hold that the words meant, in fact, any ofticer of the statz: and in the state, woula lead to the inescs hle conclusion that you were given Jike contro over cvery presidine orney in the state, over the judges of the courts in the state, inctuding the supreme court of errors, nd by the same | (Continued on Page 12.) & gross total went over the !said good night to Mr, Jamieson and retired to his room. He was sitting on {he side of his| il(‘d when he collapsed. He was con- l cious for only a v minutes, was unable to speak. Doctors were summoned hurried- Iy, but he was dead when they ar- | rived, | and Mre. Died For Country i Physicians attributed his death to overst work after the arm died for country, |years after the conclusion of the | t of the wars he had gone (innw_n | U'p to the day of his death he had | devotod his life to the welfare of the but particularly he had work- o the men who served with him in i'rance and Belgium. :dy Haig, to whom the field | marshal was devoted, was not with him when he died. She was spending the weck-end with friends and was prostrate with grief over news of his death, | stice; Thus he though nine | 66 Years Ol = was 66 years old. He 1-:; arl by his son, | Eugene Douglas George Alexander (Continued on Page 'I'hroe) " GRAND LIST BOOSTED BY PLAINVILLE BOARD ail Mr. Ben- 24 Per Cent Increase Ef- fected by Complete Revaluation (Special to the Merald) Plainville, Jan. 30—A complete re- valuation of every building within | the township wrought an increase | of more than 24 per cent in the ! Plainville grand list, which was an- | nounced today, and increased the | net total to $7. 6.003, while !ho‘ $8,000,000 is an increase of : pear ago per of mopmy‘ past three ye > in town revalud nley M. Smith of the id today. Last ¥ lists were completely disre- gorded and new figures were which are about 75 to 80 pe the actual value of the ho y figures for land ha . Mr. Smith s map:s . ! With of almost $150,- | 000, the Trumbull Electric Mfg. Co. in the largest taxpayer. Its property is valued ard Steel & D figure of 9 ight in- W again Neri Bros. are umong resident taxpayers, | $100,000 mark for 'h" Frary and a larger | eri Bros, and figure a umn.i.i.q » cent in the valuation here within the Chairman £ irL)JTi] of is Stan the crease, third passing the humbull once more leads the individual taxpayvers with a pro- perty evaluation of $68,830. a $5,000 incre An $5.000 jump has been | (Continued on Page 10.) | Tautenhahn, 59, of 34 Pitkin street, - | Coast guard cutter No. 107, “Bossy” of Newbaryport Likes His New York New York, Jan. 30 (UP)—It took ' two days (and nights) for Bossy | Gillis, mayor of Newburyport, Mass., |to diagnose the principal fault n(‘ New York city. “It's the best big burg fin the world,” Gillis informed a group of reporters in a bedside interview at | the McAlpin today, “but the lrou-i Night Club Life lived in Newburyport. Lucy and Gillis yeara ago were fellow-gobs on the U. B. 8, Columbia. The visiting mayor decided it was | useless to seek further sleep and he | nnd Lucy, together with the fnrmer | tellow-townsman, Jack Delameter, talked things over. Then reporters nnvl camera men | HICKMAN'S TRIAL ‘Deiense Asks Slayer Be Exam- | ined by Psyehiatrists SAYS HE (HAS MO FURDS. ‘A"EMH TI] HALT jWas En Route to GuTu:mo, Cuba, With U. S. ' Fleet for Winter Operations—Disappeared i vy Blow Saturday Night 100 Miles South of Cape Hatteras With 39 Men and 4 Officers i Aboard—Navy Not Seriously Alarmed. Washington, Jan, 30 (AP)—The submarine S-3, sister ship of the & has been separated from the submarine control ble with it Is you can't get enough were permitted to troop in and Bos- | Walsh fn Legal Move o Stop Trial force en route from Hampton Roads, Va., to Guantanamo, Cuba, and has not been heard from since late Saturday. Lost From Fleet The navy department was informed today that the S-3 was lost from the rest of the force at sunset Saturday about 100 miles south of Cape Hatteras and had not communicated with any one up to 2 o’clock this morning. The aircraft carrier Saratoga, the tender Camden, and the | seven other submarines making up the force en route to Cuba sleep, olhr:r I'm going to complain to the mayor — Jimmy Walker — | Bm) had Jjust been awakened by | Walker, whom he will visit at cltyi he returned |hall later in the day, was “on the | |from a night club at 7. a. m. he left | wagon” and had not had a drink | ON SIDE OF H[s BED ]uurd that he did not wish to be dis- ’llnce last 8eptember. i “Must of run into wome tough a cruel ruse. When rbed until 11 But at 10: 0 he was told that| Lucy wanted to see him. The Hon. Andrew J. Gillis stirred. | “Send her in,” he commanded of | a camp follower. “Her" turned out to be Frank J. Lucy, one of the best known jitney | drivers on 96th street, who once sy was interviewed and photograph- ' jed. He informed was that Mayor l!ufl." Gillls commented. He thought about it a little more | and continued: “Well, I don't blame him. T don't drink because I don't get any kick out of it. There's plenty of life (Continued on Page 10.) ' DEATH MYSTIFYING G A, Tentenhahn Heart Attack Victim l"lgillmg Assailant POLIGE HUNTING . CLUES Neighbor, Looking Out of ww-.‘ Sces Man Dragwing Prostrate | Form—No Signs of Struggle and | ‘ No Weapon Found Near Scene, | Hartford, Jan. 30 (#—The circum. stances of the death of Gustave A. ast Hartford who was found dead carly Sunday’ morning propped up a highway man who had assaulted him, remained a mystery today. Heart Failure Causes Death While Medical Examiners Henry | N. Costello of Hartford and H, J. Onderdonk of East Hartford say the man had been given a blow be hind the left ear with a blunt in- | strument which might have been a | blackjack, death was actually caused | ! by heart failure due to Tautenhahn's | exertions in a struggle. Robbery Probable Motive The case presents certain ele- nonts of mystery which the police | ad not succeeded in clearing up | today. Tautenhahn, sccretary of the | Hartford Maennerchor and a promi- | nent member of the Liederkeanz, was not known to have an enemy in the world, and that the assault was | | committed for purposes of robbery, | i quite evident to the investigators. He had been in Hartford and was presumably returning to his home | when he was assaulted and robbed | of something less than ten dollars. He had $10 with him when he |c(t| home, he is known to have made | small purchases in Harttbrd, but the | indications were that his pockets had | been ransacked before his assailant had completed his work. Girl Discovers Crime Miss Antonia Grunschneder, | who lives on the first floor of N Pitkin street, was the first to dis- | cover the crime. 8he had had lunch in her home, and preparing to retire, had raised the curtain of ker window and looked out. The storm was ing and she saw a man | dragging the figure of Mr. Tauten- ! hahn. He was about 20 feet fromi | | | the house at that time and he then | used month in Chicago, today netted its hastily pulled the body over to "‘ei fence and left it there, Miss Grun- had :n and her father, golng inloi the yard, found the bhody ef Mr. Tauntenhahn, recognized him as hls; (Continued on Page 10.) | \l “SEL IS SAFE . N. J., Jan. 30 (UP)— ! missing | was reported | Cape M since Saturday night, by coast guard headquarters today‘ as safe in Delaware Bay. A broken radio set, it was said, |7 prevented the craft from reporting -end. Twenty-four qther vessels, dis- | tched to search for the 107, were | that he would be out for the e\'flninlf P being recalled. | 1| i1 THE WEATHER 'w Britain and vicinity: Tucsday in- |a distance of about 50 |automobile, v« co-sco E. HARTFORD HAN'S LINDY AND PLANE THRILL VENEZUELA Natives Even Forsake Bull Ring ind Tomdom lor Lone Bagle lil)lloiis BOUVAR'S MEMORY American Flier Places Wmch on Tomb st Caracas, to Which City | He Came Today by Automobile From Maracay, Caracas, Venezucla, Jan. 30 (A— The people of the Venezuelan capital were astir early this morning, and the crowds in the streets multiplied when it became public that Col. ain during the war and his|against a fence near his home where |Charles A. Lindbergh whose daring | | he had heen placed, it is believed by flight yesterday from Bogota had stirred all pulses, was on his way to Caracas from Maracay, ‘landed. It was about dusk Sunday that the 8pirit of 8t. Louis ecircled over the city and the people of Caracas 4 ‘uere anxious to see the man whose | plane had thrilled them as his long arduous flight was nearing an end. Bull | Fight' Forgotten Marcial' La:Laads, ace of Spanish | |toreadors, was tetally eclipsed when | |the cry went forth just before svn- set yesterday that the Spirit of 8t. Louis was in sight. The Caracas bull ring was crowded at the time. {Suddenly Lindbergh appeared over- head—the toreador and were forgotten. After an enthusiastic greeting at Maracay last evening, Colonel Lind- | bergh showed signs of fatigue and | retired early today. He comes here, miles, and one of his first acts (Continued on Pnge 10.) 'KIDNAPING BANDITS' ROB BANK OF §35,000 |Cashier Held Prisoner | Until Time Lock on Vault Was Off Chicago, Jan. 30 (#—The “kid- naping” system of bank robbery, for the third time within a practitioners $35,000, James Dillon, | schneder told her parents what she | t"lbhlcr of the Industrial State Bank of Chicago, toid police that he was ' held a prisoner in the bank all night while his four captors waited | | for the time lock in the bank vault to open at 7 a. m. The four ban- dits escaped after looting the vault, ! leaving the caahier bound and gag- ged in the bank. Dillon, 22 years old, said he was | from by two kidnaped walle returning church at noon yesterday men who forced him into an auto- | mobile, threatening to shoot him 1f | he made an outcry. He said he was {its position -during the storms over | taken to & small garage and kept the week | for six hours, then was forced to rall his landlady and inform her playing cards taken to an apal after which he was ment and finally open at 6:30 o'clock last night. He was tak:a inside and a Negro porter was seized. the robbers standing watch ever the couple un- til the time lock was relcased. The robbers bound thelr victims before Icaving but Dillon crawled to a tele- | phone and knocked the receiver from the hook which resulted in the police being notified, where he the bull | by | | is Sworn In and Takes Witness Stand—Motion is Over-ruled By Presiding Justice, Court Room, Los Angeles, Calif., iJln 30 (UP)—The defense made | another unexpected move today to ihait the trial of William Edward | Hickman. The move was a motion to have |the American Psychiatrists Associa- |tion apppoint alicnists to examine Hickman, whose only hope of escap- ing the gallows for the murder of | Marion Parker, lies in proving him self insane. The motion was ove ruled by Judge J. J. Trabucco. Jerome Walsh, young Kansas Ci(y | attorney, who is directing the de- |fense for Hickman, then stepped to {the witness stand, in a sensational | move to have the action made matter of court record. Walsh was permitted to take 'hr- oath, He testified that Hickman | | was without tunds and could not | ehoye to cope with the alienists em- | { ployed by the state. | “This is an unequal Dattie,” Walsh said. “On one side we have the wealth of the state of California {and on the other a penniless youth fighting for his life. “The defense can hope to obtamn {the service of alienists that will give [1! an equal chance with the statc only if members of the American | Psychiatrists association are ap- | painted to serve without pay.” | Walsh testified that he had spent $600 of his own money in arranging for Hickman's defense and indicated that he did not expect to get one {penny as a fee. He said & fund for Hickman's de- fense had been raised in Kansas City but did not reveal the amount. Walsh was nervous and red- | taced. In denying the motion without prejudice, Judge Trabucco said such {a move would halt the trial. He said it would be possible for the alienists to make an examination of Hickman that would be a fair test {of his sanity or insanity only when \he was not subject to thc daily strain of a court room appearance. | Hickman sat nervously working his hands. He was slumped far down in his seat and a dejected look came over his face when Walsh lost the move to delay the trial for fur- { ther examination of alicnists, | Mrs. Amich was excused by the | defense by peremptory challenge. It | was the seventeenth peremptory | challencge used by the de 8 |leaving but three. Mrs. Fiorence | Mack took Mrs. Amich’s place. Mrs. Mack was passed by the de- {fense and the state then excused Maurice J. Machl by the exercise of ia. peremptory challenge. Maehl, it was reported, held the | opinion that Hickman should be | hanged unless it was shown the youth was sane beyond the shadow iar a doubt, Machl was replaced by | Hockensmith. The time spent in selecting the jury apparently has hothercd Hick- man, who once called himself the “Fox” and was sneeringly blase. He hn- become nervous and fee |tain that he will hang for the girl murder rather than be sent to the state insane asylum. “I will swing for this,” he told one of his guards | 8ince then he has not changed his view. Over the week-end he paced | his cell nervous prison officials said, and seem>d anxious for court | to resume 80 that the case could be completed. In event testimony starts to | the state can cstablish its case by reading the indictment-—wh'ch charges Kidnaping and murder of | the pretty little school girl—hecauss of Hickman’s unique plea | Since the burden of proof rests with the defense, attorneys then are expected to start presenti money intended to show that Hickman was insane. Thirty-cight depositions collected Jerome | Walsh, chief of the def from | school boy friends of Mickman in Kansas City, will be included in the testimony. The first of these is the | statement of Donald Johnson. These depositions total more than | 600 typewritten pages and will r quire at least a day to be transposed | | i 10t nse, | to the bank which he was forced to | into court records. Middletown, Conn.. Jan. 3 (P— A single additional case of smallpox reported here today brou dlesex county’s roll of suff the disease to 120. Many of have been released and Albert R. | families who had been quarantined | conditions | |are described as “about normal.” |are searching the vicinity. GOLD WAVE STRIKES EASTERN SEABOARD Low Temperatures Prevail! Thmughout Conn. and New York | 30 BELOW AT SARANAC, Five Below Zero in Danbury While New London and Waterbury Re- | port Low Marks—First Real Snow | Falls, ©y the Assaclated Press. Gradually rising were bringing rellef throughout Connecticut today as the state, | snow-mantled for the first time this winter, experienced the coldest snap of the season. Temperatures rang- ing from 10 above to 15 degrees be- low zero were reported in various sections, In the early morning hours. Danbury Low In Danbury, the lowest tempera- tures were recorded with the mer- cury going down as low as 8 to 15 degrecs below zero. In Torrington, | the thermometer stood at 6 below. Cities along Long Island Sound had higher temperatures, New Haven reporting its lowest mark at 7:30 a. m. as 10 above zero. At the thermometer was at 18 and rising. The weather bureau predicted additional rise, with a drop to lower temperatures tonight. temperatures Two Inch Snow The snow which whipped over the | state Saturday night averaged about 2 inches. Many sports were wind- (Continued on Page 12) (. LORENZEN ESTATE APPRAISED AT §19,921 Inventory Filed Today by New Britain Trust Co., Executor A valuation of $19,921.26 has been placed on the estate of the late Carl Lorenzen, Church street florist, by the Commercial Trust Co., executor, according to an inventory filed in probate eourt today. Ti te is itemized as follows: Certificate of deposit, Com- mercial Tru: $5 Mortg: note o RS One $100 bond, Second Lib- erty Loan, at $100.03 and interest of $12.52 ...... Three $£100 honds, Third Liberty Loan, at $100.75 d interest of $11.10... o bond, Fourth Lib- erty Loan, at $103.81 and inter of $12.87, Two $100 honds, New Brit- ain Turner Society, at $112 Deposit, Sivings v Britain Deposit, Burritt 000.00 116.68 224.00 Bank of Savings Commorcial Trust savings account..... Commercial Trust checking account. .. and note ory note Mutual Finance 1,200.00 20 share 5 shar pra. 200 shares . 1 Porter Co... . Pratt & Whitney, 410.00 Prentice Mfe. 6,000.00 ! 2 shares, Scandia Land & Imp. Co., capital stock .. 50.00 (Continued on Page 13) 756.93 | 360.00 | The ship, commanded by Lieu- tenant P. W. Warren of Springfield, |11, disappeared from view of the (other vessels during a rain squall |and a heavy gale. Although some |apprehension was felt, it was said lat the department that disappear- ances of this kind are not unusual ,:md generally the vessels later turn lup all right. On board are three officers, four chief petty officers and 33 men. The officers are Lieutenants W. F. iWeddntr, Charles B. Garvin e M. Cabannillas. i Built in 1918 ‘The 8-3 was built in 1918 at the { Portsmouth, N. H., navy yard and is "’31 feet long with a beam of 22 |feet. Her weight is 876 tons on the |surface and 1,092 tons submerged. ‘The exact location of the vesscls | when the 8-3 was lost from view was given as latitude 32,25 north |and longitude 75.25 west. | Other submarines in the force, jall ot which are aiding 1in the erH. are the 8-7, 8-§, 8-9, B8-10, 8-11, 8-12 and B-13, | Brumby im Charge | Rear Admiral Brumby who was in |charge of the rescue operations at |the mcene of the S-¢ disaster off | Provincetown, Mass., is in command | of the control force and the message informing the department that the |8-3 was missing came from him |aboard the Camden, flagship of the |force. | In announcing the fact that the ship was missing, the department |said the search was being made “on account of the failure of communiea- tion between the missing submarine and the other vessels of the group.” “This is not unusual for small ves- 'sels during bad weather conditions, |which are existing,” the department 'added. The water where the S-3 is miss- ilm'( is reported to be almost twe !miles deep. Be Found Shortly Ofl’l('iall expressed the belief that she would be found shortly. The control force left its Hampton Roads base ¥riday for Guantanamo to participate in winter maneuvers, Lieutenant Weidner's home is list- .ed as Hoboken, N. J.; Garvin's is . Harrison, Arkansas and Cabannil- las’ is Mayaguez, Porto Rico. Navy Statement Washington, Jan. 30 (UP)—In releasing information regarding the $-3 the navy department announces | that the scarch is being made on ac- count of the failure of communica- tion between the missing submarine (Continued on Page 13.) BERLENBACH IS AGAIN IN LOYE WITH WIFE Paul and His Bride of Few Months Effect Reconciliation in Court Today New York, Jan, 30 (UP)—The threatened divorce suit between Paul Berlenbach and his wife ended in & clinch today in the office of Richard J. Barry, the pugilist's attorney. 1t was a long clinch culminating in a smacking Kiss, an impressive sign that the Berlenbachs had made {up. “Annie,” said Paul, what I said.’ “Paul,” said Annie what I said too.” With that the breach was healed. A weck ago the Berlenbachs an- ,nounccd through their respective at- !torneys that a divorce sult was in prospect. Paul was all for bringing suit for separation and Mrs. Ber- |lenbach was prepared to contest the action. Over the week end they met and ade up. In Barry's office .today they met again in the presence of Paul's at- torney and that seemed to make the reconciliation official, although mei- ther one would say what the re- {marks were that made them sorry. After leaving Barry's office they went over to Mra Berlenbach’s at- torney, Aaron Steuer, and announced {they ‘were starting tonight “en am- |other honeymoon.” “I'm sorry for I'm sorry for