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- News of the World By Associated Press ESTABLISHED 1870 DAY Es “dag VPV MwS NP BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1928 —TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES PRICE mnzcmu PAPAL BAN ISSUED | Coerdis Sovat AGAINST FULLY 50 CATHOLICS IN. Pope Reported Instracting Bishop Hickey to Excommuni- cate Daigoault and Assocates DOESN'T CARE 70 GIVE HEARING 70 OPPONENTS' The Rhode Islander, Providence | Paper, in Copyrighted Article, Declares Order Has Been Issuved From Vatican Upholding Bishop of Rhode Island City After Hear- ing Only His Side of Case, Providence, R. I, Feb, 3 P—The Rhode Islander, a weekly newspaper published in this city, in a copy- righted article prints today what purports to be an excerpt from the text of a papal decision ordering the Rt. Rev. William A. Hickey, D. D, man Catholic Bishop of Provi- -, t0 pronounce “major excom- tion” against Elphege J. Daignault and his associates in civil suits against the church. More Than 50 Banned. More than 50 persons including wo priests are understood to come under the papal ban. Daignauit, & | Woonsocket. attorney, recently made | a trip to Rome where he was un. | derstood to have presented his case to the papal authcrities and upon | his return early last month express- | cd confidence that his side had pre- | vafled, He announced, however, | that he was planning a second trip in order to take up certain phases | of the case. No Names Mentioned. The papal decision mentions ne names, the Rhode Islander saya, but | refers to Daignault and hia support- ors as the ‘contestants.” The author- ization for excommunication {8 un- derstood to have gone forward two weeks ago to the Apostolic delegate at Washington, soni-Biondl, to be transmitted by nim to Bishop Hickey. The newspaper says, “The docu- ment as & whole & not available, tut the following translation ef the vital section is vouched for in gen. | cral, ac y: LS oo pined: “Sald contestants have by their several acts proved themselves dis- loyal. 'The Rt. Rev. Bishop Dr. Hickey has proved to the satisfac- tion of our esteemed son and broth- er, the Most Rev, Fumasoni-Biodi, that each and every act complained of has the express approval of his iuly elected conaultors; although ac- | cording to even the civil laws, such was not necessary ® ® ® the ordi- | nary is accountable to his suffragan cnly and he to the Holy 8ee, whose decision to the delcgate or legate is tinal. (Continued on Page 26) POLICE TO SUPPRESS NEWS IF REQUESTED McCue Keeps Burglary Secret, Hart Backs Him Up sirlng that no newspaper publicity ha given to thefts, burglaries and | similar occurrences on their prem- ises need but to speak to Chief W. . directly or through a subordinate, and reports of investigations the eases will be guarded from the publie, according to a statement by Chief Hart today. That publication of the cases would not injure the chances of apprehension of the guilty parties does not enter into the situation, Chief Hart said, but 1t is his belief that requests for no publicity “in certain cases” should be respected. Expression of this attitude by the | head of the department came about | as @ result of the hiding of a re- | port relative to a burglary at the‘ Hotel Stanley on Church street. De- | tective Sergeant William P. McCue. | who 1s in charge of the detective | bureau and the police school, in- vestigated the case and filed a re- | port with Chiet Hart at the same time declining to make public any- thing concerning the incident. When questioned as to the reason for the secrecy, Sergeant McCue said he had promised the manage- ment of the hotel that he would do all in his power to keep the bur- glary away from public knowledge, and when he makes a promise, he keeps it. Asked to verify a minor detafl. of the incident after the Herald had come into possession of the facts from an outgide source, Sergeant McCue referred his inter- | viewer to Chief Hart. Asked if he [éit that the police department was obliged. to accede 10 requests such as that of the ho- tel management, Chief Hart replied negatively, but he would hold him- self in readiness to do 80 if he chose to, regardless of the feeling of the newspapers. In the case in question, publication of the burglary might “hurt” the property owners and tho chief said he felt justified in help- ing them protect ‘thelr bread and butter * Archbishop Fuma- | Stewart ) THOUSANDS CROWD ? STREETS AS HAIG | | | Hidden Bagpipes Play in { Westminster Abbey PRINCE OF WALES IS Py, Blood-Red Symbol of Great Britain’s War Dead—Body of Field Marshal Goes to Scotland for Burial Tuesday Near Grave of | j Str Walter Scott. BEMAN G. DAWES | tlag-draped coffin beside ghe tomb Westmin of the Unknown Soldier in ster Abbey, the body of Ilield Mar- e in- T" M E RE IES er-in-chief of the British army in " . | procession, 1 miles long, reached sm Plt M Imhw {0 D]s. | the historic Abbey, from St. Colum- 'ba's church, ~here the body of close Ol Deal Facts |t o, ot e ene TESTIHONY CHALLENGED | for two days. today. the long route by which the funeral Passes Cenotaph. The procession passed the ceno- taph in Whitehall, the simple white monument to the million British | Boman G. Dawes and Former Sen- | Empire soldiers and sailors killed in | | the World War, ator Thomas of Oolorado mve‘ French and Belgian troops were ARRESTED FOR CONTEMPT | Abbey. | ‘Washington, Feb. 3 (P—After An impressive service was closed defied the senate oil committee | and while guns placed in St. Jame | today in refusing to answor |park, near the Abbey and across questions, Senator Walsh, of Bird Cage walk from the barracks Montana, the committee prosc- boomed ‘ot the famous Foot Guards, | a 19-gun salute, the body was taken { cutor, sald he favored asking | | to Waterloo railway station to b the senate to cite him for con- tempt and order his arrest. Htewart was ordered to re- maln here until tomorrew. Washington. Feb.. zm-&‘u,e | battering of Bemstoy tana, and the persussiveness of | Haig family vault, | Sun Shining Brightly. The sun was shining brightly when the last tweaty-minuts .gplay.ef guards had taken their pysts this morning around the bier ofi which FUNERAL PASSES 1Foch and Pefain Weep When‘ KING'S REPRESENTATIVE HICKMAN TRIAL I | Everyone in Huge Mob Wears Pop- London, Feb. 3 (UP)—Reting in | France, was accorded final holmh‘ Hundreds of thousands jammed |defense attorns Robert W, Stewart, chairman of | with the singing by the ntire con- the board of the Standard Oil |gregation of “Onward Christian | company of Indiana, had again Soldiers” and “God Save the King," | sent ‘to 8cotland for burial in the ;. Cheirman Nye snd other members of the senate ofl committes failed to- Earl Haig's body rested in 8t { Columba's chureh. YALE ARCHEOLOGISTS Owners of hotels and others de- | " Hart of the police department | into | |1t was said, will cooperate with 'h" day to shake the determination of | There was a private funeral serve Robert W. Stewart, Standard Oil |jce at St. Columba’s, but in addition magnate, to refuse to answer ques- tions concerning the disposition of 'family and their relatives and profits of the Continental Trading | friends, many zoidiers were invited. Company of Canada. | Some of them Talks Freely But— | trom hospitals scattered about t Under a gruelling examination, in | London suburbs, and policemen car- which various members around the ( ried them into the church. committes table took turns in ex- amining him, Stewart talked freely | (Continued on Page 26) | up to one peint, and that point was | lon whether he had disoussed the profits of the. Continental gad their ‘:l’:pflluomt‘h Hbl.rrrs; P ::n;:l:{r ‘EwNfill MAY A[;T "N s s, 5~ SCHOOL BOARD BERTH committes could not surmount, !ry Mayor Weld to Be Asked a8 it might. To each rephrased question tuuch- to Call Special Session ing this phase of the case, Stewart | | replied that he respectfully declined | to answer en grounds previously giv- |en—that this story muset first be told to a judge and jury, He is a witness in the Fall-Sinclair case, (Continued on Page 16) | Mayor Weld will be requested |next week to convene the members wo( the common council in a special to name a successor to the | committee. This decision has been reached by councilmen because of the fact that h ill b lled f 1 al Second Group of Explorers | :n;:’!’l:g iRt Sl o hahr et e annual budget, and a special Going to Jerash in Pal- meeting on the same night would be estine in Spring | convenient and would allow the new member to be sworn in for the school committee’s Iebruary meet- ing, which takes place one week New Haven, Feb. 3 (UP)—Plans |from today. for & second expedition to the Near | Reveral prominicnt republicans East were announced today by Yale (are being mentioned for the posi- authorities, who expect to throw ton. It will be necessary to hold a |new light on primitive Christianity party caucus prkzr to ',h'v mecting | by excavations in the anclent cities after which the G. O. P. side of the house will announce its selection of Dura in Syria and Jerash in Pal- estine, The announcement was made fol- lowing receipt of concessions for t: excavations from the British govern- tand the council will proceed to elect. It is expected that the choice will be made from among the followin, Aaron A. Danielson, a real estate deal-’r; F. Rzymond Gilpatric, for- " | building commissioner and sn en- sineer in the Russel & Erwin divi- sion of the American Hardware d:t':; ::':::f:m‘."".‘:;‘:l'"‘:ia‘:‘:: |corporation: and Sherwood H. Ray- e {mond, who is connected with Lan- Iy with the Dura project, announced | 4, “ypary & Clark and who s last month. the Masonic Te: e According t6 Professor Benjamin S R W. Bacon, Yale archaeologist, the city of Jerash is considered one of the most promising sites in' exis- tence to reveal facts about nrly Christianity. lof the common council. The ruins, Bacon said, are largely —_— intact and furnish a fruitful field of erideavor because of the large num-‘Y.lc Grad Heard Harvard ber of inscriptions dating trom.2z | Game in Far Off S. Africa British 8chool of Archaeology. | chairman corporation. None of these whose names are mentioned are conducting active campaigns for the position but each { has supporters among the \m(mhl'rs ! to members of the field marshal's |"' were disabled men | Hate Georgr W. Traut on the school |his friend. Former Enemy Nations Pay Tribute to Haig During Funeral Today London, Feb. 3 (UP)—The Hungarian military attache, who fought in the war against the British army, attended the funeral of Marshal Haig today. A wreath was sent from the Hungarian legation. Neither the German embassy nor the Austrian legation was represented, or seat wreaths It was explained to the United Press that neither had a military attache at London. Flags on both the German em- bassy and the Austrian legation were at half mast. NEARING ITS END, Pl B i i e Defense Expected fo Complete All Evidence Today ALIENIST Additional Brain Specialist Called | and Will Be Asked & Long Hypo- | thetical Question About Insanity— | Accused Offers Self for Tests, Courtroom, Los Angeles, Feb. 3 (A | ‘The defense expected when court | convened this morning to complete its case for William Edward Hick- man before noon. Dr. R. O. Shelton, psychiatrist, was the first witness, and Jerome Walsh, ditional alienist would be called. It was then planned a ask a long Ihypothetical question embodying the entire insanity defense. |among the 6,500 soldiers in the | Hypothetical Question ‘ Different Version of Famous Deal | ¢ 1001 procession. Repregentatives | The lypothetical question embrac- from | of the United States and of other |©1 the following points: 1 Standard Ofl Magnate, | and of other | 'allied countrics were among the| 1. Testimony that the Hickman | WALSH WANTS STEWART | distinguished congregation “at the [family had ‘shown traces of insanity {for three generations. The sudden change “of the s slayer from a popular and brilliant student to & morose and unap- proachable individual 2. Brutality of the crime he com- mitted . 4. Tack of definite motive and | the small sum demanded as ran- som. 5. Testimeny of the father and | mother that Hickman was ‘*born ad.” 6. Evidence that his mother, Mrs. Eva Hickman, had been committed | 1o an insane asyly ly befare Hi in her worst, Hickn Hickman was deluded by the be- f that a “special providence” or- him to murder Marion Parl Shelton, former sanity com- r of San Diego, testified. alienist testified tha this ques- | tioning of the young murdercr had | brought out that Hickman believed himself “greater than Christ.” and that he was sent to earth “with a message for all men.” According to Dr. Shelton, Hic man told him that he was to be a man without emotion and that the murder was directed by *“providence” as a test. The witness testified Hickman said that at one til during the dismem- hering of ion Parker's body, he stopped his work and played a phonograph record to determine whether he was experfencing any {emotion. Dr. Shelton said Hickman believes that if he were hanged, he would be like Christ. At other times he believes that |he never will be hanged but that his “providence” will cause some acci- dent that will halt the law, Dr.'Shel- ton said. “He is under the delusion, for cxample, that he could make you Dr. Shelton said, ad- dressing District Attorney Asa. That is the first real del vou have shown us,” Keyes declared. The remark was ordered stricken from the records by Judge J. J. | Trabucco. Details Are Told Los Angeles, Feb. 3 (®—The hor- yifving details of the mutilation of little Marion Parker. lie fifful thouzhts and schemes of the killer and the innermost secrets of the Hickman tamily have found iheir way into the record of the William Iidward Hickman sanity trial. Before the close of yesterday's court session two of the three ex- pert witnesses for the defense had “tarted to draw from the evidence the conclusions with which his at- torneys will attempt to convinee the | ury that Hickman was unable to distinguish between right and wrong Lt the time of the murder. To the evidence was added a mother's story of grief. a father's tearful account of his married life and a Lrother's matter-of-fact idea of the prisoner's mental status as well as the grim testimony of a po- liee officer. Tt was the latter and a newspa- per photographer who brought fnto the eonrt records the morgue pho- tographs of the girl's dismembered 4 the big jackknife which 7 declared was the weapon COOLIDGE SELECTS ~T0 TESTIFY |, mission to Revice statutes — v, sald only one ad-! BUSINESS SECTION OF FALL RIVER SMOLDERS IN RUINS AFTER FLAMES SWEEP DISTRICT WITH LOSSES ESTIMATED AS HIGH AS $25,000,000 STABILIZATION OF .sm.., Abmdonul WARREN BURROWS FRANC INPOSSIBLE e Mill Curtain of Flame Six Banks, Two Theaters, a Charch ‘ aml Newspaper Plant—Aid Received From Groton Judge Nomimied Tor, Poincare Tels Depaties Frexch Brockton, Providence, Taunton and Boston Wt Have Gold Staodard | .—No Loss of Life Reported. FOR“ER ST”E SENATOR DEFENDS ms POLICIES dxsuh" River, Mass., Feb. 3 (AP)—The Fall River business rict lay in ruins today. Only a few gaunt walls stood in an |area of five blocks which was swept by fire last night and early Was Admitted to Bar in 1905 and | Emum Says France is “Liberated | this mommg, At Present Serves On State Com- From Bondage of Banks” and Is| Hasn't Borrowed * Since 19: Veteran Prosecutor. Washington, Feb. 3 P—Warren| parls, Feb. 3 (UP)—It is impos- | B. Burrows was nominated by President Coolidge today fo be an | SPIe at present to stabilize the ac- | additional judge for the district of | tual value of the franc in relation | Connecticut. {to foreign currencies, Premier Ray- | mond Poincare told the chamber a( | { deputies today. It was the zecond day of the pre- mier's speech defending his finance policiea. Prominent in State Senator Burrows, nominated to be a federal judge, today, was a mem- | ber of the 1925 and 1927 general assemblies as & member from the F J. WACHTER RESIGNS 18th district. He was born in Gro- | “Stabllization of the actual me’ mlTl"N ATL F &[; ton within a short distance of his|or the franc, Poincare explained, present home. For 20 vears he had | ... cousarily would be followed by | | een prosecutor of the Groton town | s pEAL revalorization o the salaries of state | Vice President and Cutlery court and for 10 years assistant cmploes. The budget equilibrium | - g0 Pivector to Leave | state's attorney for New London county when the late Hadlal A. Hull | would be upsct unless new taxes were Imposed. 1t would mean be- Company. was in office. | ginning all over again to rehabilitate | R Frank J. Wachter, vice-president “The government will act only| Frank J. Wachter, vice-pre {and sales manager of the cutlery when it can offer not perhaps the | %7 3 : best solution but anyway the least |division of Landers, Frary & Clark, [has resigned, it became known to- bad one. “Prance must refurn to the gold | |day. No date has been set for the | esignation to become effective. standard. “Let tha government accept the | Mr. Wachter has been with the responsibilities of the situation; and |company for about 15 years and| | take the initiative when the moment | has had direct charge of the sales \cnmes" of cutlery during that time. It is In his epeech yesterday Poincarc |said that he intends to take a long rest. n!d that France meant to pay her Mr. Waohter resides at 45 Park | war debts, but could not see l(t'\ she could pay them within the €% |place. He is a member of the New Britain club and the Shuttle Méadow Will Ask Kirkham to Rule | vears suggested. “The government Ias been hb,ut- o romWeld'e Twe ~ = | ¢ entirely from ‘the ‘bondagé #f Votes |out employment today. Mr. Burrows attended Mount Her- | man school and the law department |of University of Michigan and was! | admitted to the Connecticut bar in | 1905, He is married and has three | . Burrows is commission to re serving on the se the statutes, | umse. | banks,” Poincare said proudly, ‘We { have not borrowed a centime since sured | spread into the residential section end result in a still worse confle- gration. club and enjoyw & wiie uwi T Loss Seven to Twenty-Five Millions The loss was estimated by the mayor and police chiefs as Centime” jetween $7,000,000 and $12,000,000. Some insurance men ; ‘thought it might run as high as $25,000,000. No Loss of Life There was no loss of life, Several firemen and others were slightly injured by falling walls and the effects of smoke. Two thousand workers in offices, banks, hotels and stores were with- Terrific Tell. Starting at the corner of Pocamet and Main streeta, the flames swept northward to Bank street and east- | ward to Rock street. They destrey- ¢d three hotels, six banks, two thes- ters, a church, a newapaper glant |2nd several office and stors M\l- ings. Firemen from all cities and m | In this vicinity and from eities.as far away as Providence and helped in tha all night fight. was 2:30 a. m. before.they were 8s- that the tlames , would mot The fire started in what waa for- merly the No. 1 mill of the Pocsssst Manufacturing Company.. The féur units of this abandoned textile plant were in proceas of demolition. ' It was the oil-soaked fleors of old mill that gave the flames tremendous force at the start. * A strong wind carried burning embery long distances.. Almost | the Fall River fire department peale ized that it eould net cope with the fire and hurried calls for l.lp were it Waraing was giyen and they filed out i the end of 1923.” NEW BRITAIN MACHINE Gumnmahum " (ordinance legalizing roller Poincare sald that the unemploy- | . COMMON STOCK YOTES Owners Regain Status | With Dividends on | Preferred Paid sporting events are not satisfied | that there was a favorable trade | with the manner in which anbalance of 2,500,000,000 francs. raised a question of legality on Mayor Weld's vote as a member ofw It is their plan to resolution at the next meeting of t an opinion as to whether the ordi- | Price of 325,000 Declines | Common stock holders of the New nance was legally adopted in view | | Britain Machine Co. will exercln‘ hockey | BITY WILL PAY $8,000 the council and second vote as! ommon council calling on t,arpor» of the mayor having voted twice. | at Threat of Con- |their voting right for tho firat time | Opponents of Sunday afternoon | ment crisis had been “settled, and | |on that day was adopted and hu'l: mayor to break a tle. introduce l,\ tion Counsel John H .Kirkham for | A roll call vote was taken in the | = |common council at the last meting | demnation inmeyErRYyRAtd At hE/NHIMYmSeh after Chairman D. L. Nair of the| iing February 17, at 2:30 o'clock, ordinance committee had moved for ! oo The voting rights of the corpora- | adoption of the law. As is custo- Condemnation proceedings nstl- tion were vested in preferred stock | mary, City Clerk A. L. Thompson |tuted by the city to procure for the | o oo o5 B flumes were notified in Hm before the: fire reached them. Flames Advemce, Relentlessly the wall of flame me te lete | pushed forward into the heart of | the busineas district. ‘At the height of the firc:all communication with outside points was cut off. The Western Union and Postal Telograph companies lost their quarters, The telephone exchangs an Bak atreet |was saved but the operators were ordered out when it appeared that |the building would go. They ve- turned this morning to find every- thing intact but a church wall lean- ed against one side of the. bullding. The principal buildings destroyed were: Mohican Hotel, largest in the eity, ! with 400 rooms. Wilbur Hotel. Bay State House. murder and ' first. called the name of Mayor Weld | water board land owned by the \ and the mayor voted “yes.” When |Sandberg estate were dropped today | articles of association, this being | the poll was completed it was found when an agreement was miade to done for the benefit of preferred | that 14 had voted fn favor and 14 [sell the property to the city for §8,- | stockholders to whom back divi- | against, chairman of the meeting and broke the tie, passing the ordinance. NEW STOVE EXPLODES Happiness of Hartford Family Turn: to Sorrow When Three Are Ser- ' fously Injurcd. Hartford, Feb. 3 (R —Just recent- ly able to ecrape together money nough to buy an old-fashioned, ramshackle stove, Louis Trevison, & laborer, set it up this morning in the kitchen of his four-room flat at 34 Walnut street. There was great joy in the little family over this new The mayor then voted as ! 000. The price fixed originally was £25.000. The land is in the Shuttle Meadow | district and it was wanted by the city as a sit for a fiitration plant and for other features of the pro- posed water works extension.- Negotiations have been going on for several months but no agree- | ment was in sight until Judge John H. Kirkham, corporation counsel, brought the matter to superior court on a condemnation writ. FIVE OF SEVEN-MEMBERS OF FAMILY DIE IN FIRE 1 Two Surviving Members of Decp- tuxury, and when Trevison had man- | fore noon he, his wife and their two small children sat happily around ' the stove, enjoying its warmth. The fire had been going only a very short time when the stove exploded. wrecking the room. Trevison and the two children were rushed to the hospital badly injured. Mrs, Trevison escaped in- jury . Hartford Loses More Than Half Million in Big Fire Hartford, Conn., Feb. 3 P—Hart- ford insurance companies sustained a loss of nearly $600,000 from the conflagration in Fall River, Mase. None of the companies has re- ceived definite information as to its exact losses. Some companies have sent Tepresentatives to the scene to check up on the damage and others | are still awaiting more accurate re- aged to start a fire in it, shortly be- | Haven, Minn.,, Houschold Are Severely Burned. Minneapolis, Minn., Feb. 8 —Five members of a family of zeven were burned to death when their small frame cottage at Deephaven, Lake Minnetoaka, was destroyed by fire early today. The two survlving members were | severely burncd but are expected to rocover. The dead: Leon L. Wiley, 45, and his chil- i dren, Joseph, 13; Ciark, 9; Tone, 7; | Ollie Mae, 6 The mother and the youngest p) | dends were owed. These dividends | ‘have now been paid and under the | came rules, the voting Tights revert | to the common stock holders, Under the articles of association, | the passing of a dividend gave the preferred stockholders the power to clect directors and officers, which they did. Some time ago, a seven per cent preferred stock was offered in | exchange for the eight per cent pre- | ferred and nearly all was exchanged. | That which was not exchanged was called on January 1. Now that back dividends have been paid and the cight per cent stock s out of the way, conditions revert to the posi- tions held prior to the passing of the first dividend. ATTY. UPSON NOT GUILTY OF BREAKING KING WALK LAW Property on Harding Street Found 10 e Owned by Bankrupt Contractors. Attorrey Arthur W. Upson, who was notified by Captain Kelly yester- day to be in police court today for |violation of the city ordinance rela- | tive to removal of snow and ice from sidewalks, proved that the | sidewalk in question on Harding | | child, less than a year old, escaped street is in charge of the bankrupt | ! by breaking a window and crawling estate of Johnson & Casperson. of out of the burning cottage. All members of the family were | asleep when the firc started. Cause of the blaze was unknown. Mrs. Wiley's back and Ahouldqu were burned and the baby was | which Deputy Sheriff M. H. Horwitz | is trustee. Attorney Upson was not in | jcourt today and a warrant was is- !sued for Mr. Horwitz, with the cus- | |tomary understanding that payment | Massasoit-Pocasset National Bask, on eight-story building. Metacomet National Bank. Citizens Saving Bank. | Fall River Co-Operative Bank. | Troy Co-Operative Bank. Peoples Co-Operative Bank. Granite Buildiug, largest tuilding in the city. Buffington buildirg. 014 Fall River Herald building. Plant of Fall River Independent, French language newspaper. New York, New Haven and Hart- ford Railrcad bus terminal. Temple Beth-EL The plant of the Fall River Her- ald-News suffered extensive damage, mostly from water, and the paper was printed today at the plant of the: New Bedford Standard. The ruilding of the Fall River Globe “as fl'm halting place of the fire nd. Its press was made ute- hu b; water but its other equip- oftice ; (Continued on Page 1§) DRAW ON FIE FUNDS | FOR SCHOOL DEPKRTMEAT i Deficit of $31,000 to be Made up by Action of Common Counctt | Five funds have been drawn on to make up a deficit of $31.000 .in school committee accounts, and the | money will be formally transterred aftep the next meeting of the eem- |mon council. The accounts affected are: Pay- ments on principal, $10,000: taxes, iurn- 'of $2 outside court would be accept- 189.100; interest and discounts, §6.- | virtaally untouched. | Circassians planted there by Sultan ' Hamid TT. of the river Jordan in new estament came in on Sunday morning. times. Like most cities along the Of the descriptive story of the outskirts of the Roman empire, it |wind-up when mention was made of was abandoned about 600 A. D.[the snake dance, when everybos Rince that time it has cdepredations of a small Burns sat listening in whites ® ‘mosquito boots. and | | * -~A plea for the freedom of Porto | heaith board by Mavor Weld toda: lico in the form of a “message |He fills a vacancy which has ex- |of Rhode Island are to ! learn of the terrible shocked conflagration | A. D. to the sixth century. Most of | New Haven, Feb. 3 (P) — The As the afternoon session came to I i et | ed about the hands and feet | able. 1900: police department, $6.060; | the writings are in either Greek or | radio account of the Yale-Harvard o close a defense alienist, Dr. k. 0. POT'S from agents in Fa e e R health department, $1,000. Tetal, | Latin, facilitating the work of the |football game last fall was listened Shelton of Los Angeles, declared = | Dr. Mendillo Appomled SYMPATHY FOR FALL RIVER. |531.000. | translator. {to by William Burns, Yale '07, man- — Plea for Freedom Given | To Health C Providence, R. I. Feh. 3 P—Gov- | The incidental account huln far- Jerash, or Gerasa as it wae |ager of mines in Northern Rhodesia, (Continued on Page Lindbergh to Deli ! ‘0 Health Commission crnor Abram 1. Pothier today sent ing a deficit, and a transfer of $5.- known to the Greeks, was chief.city ‘South Africa, he writes to the | P e i . rgl ClIVET | Dr. Vincent F. Mendillo of 28 |the following telegram to Mayor o0y from the health department of a chain of Grecian outposts east | Alumni Weckly. The last quarter L. Sy San Juan, Porto Rico, Feb. 3 UM | Andrews street was appointed 10 the | Monks of Fall River: “The citizens funds has been agreed upom. To meet in a measuré the need for {atreet improvements, §17,008 will be from the people of Porto Rico 1o iisted since the death of Dr. Ernst |that has befallen your cits. We offer aken from the permanent . the people of the United States” was | T. Fromen, and hix term runs to conferrcd a the American aviator. | several years. He is a republic: you our profound sympathy. wist.” If we fund and $7.200 from the. remained ' was described as “nearly frozen entrusted to Col. Charles A. Lind- | May 1, 1930. |can be of any assistance, nlease ad- | taxes. 3 save for the and the fur-clad participants look- ay increating lergh today at a special session of Dr. Mendillo served his interne- |vise.” Mayor James E. Dunnc of | A transfer of un from fi s colony of‘lngllkcn“nuarm of muskra Mr. stowly rising temperature. the Porto Rican I gislature which lxhlp at the New Britain General |Providence, zent a telegram stating: |account to the state alé for medal of honor upon | hospital and has practiced here for |“Let us knou how best we may as- |fund will be required to csbry O8 |the work for the rest of