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SCHOOL BOARD HAS |~ SiReN Fois RosseRY | J-MINUTE SESSI[]N‘ Reports Heard and Bills of coen o, dareh 10 Up—Joseon $38,805 Ordered Paid in th¢ Plaza block on Main | Cheshire Man Wires \(orkb'l'\lu Men Caught in New Haven .\(Icl March 10 (A—Joseph shop street fearing that a robbery of two | weeks ag0 in the same block would | {be repeated wired & siren which | would operate on an attempted en- | trance to his stor | Late last night the siren was eard by Dr. Charles Dennison. On looking out of his window he saw 1Wo men run out er the store and 20t into a Ford coupe. He phoned Constable Leslic Hubbell, after he could not get Doolittle on the phone who chased the men into Hamden | and saw them enter a house, Constable Hubbeil then got the ! Hamden authorities and they arrest- | 1 James Apuzzo, of 37 Beach ‘lstreet, New Haven and Anthony quillo, 21, of 192 Hamilton street, | W Haven I N £ ”’f”‘m They were charged with attempt- My | IN& 10 hreak and enter and will be and arraigned toc teachers commiitee through \ SIS RAPS A departure from the custom of long meetings with drawn-out dis- cussions was made the meeting of the school board yesterday afte rog when the committeemen through the routine business l]‘.;ln.[l\fl minutes. following sub committecs Finance committes, g to $38,80. hook committer, recommending the ioption of Neuner and Bowman's “Pypewriting with Business,” for in the Senior High school; and sanitation committc ports of the nurses and dental school accomodatio tee. trade education committes, evening school commitice mads reports. n us 37 the following temporary teachers be cimployed: Alfred A. Kumerow, phy- *lm:mlon: Partis: the Nathan all in it Catherine Robin lior ngh school; <on, English; Caroline M. Doe, ph: education, and Marjorie all in Central Jumor nd Louis E. Beckert, ington school; Winifred K. tridge, Bartlett school When the report of absences in the public and parochial schools was part lirought up, Committeeman George LeWitt asked why the Nathan Hale Junior High school figures are so Ligh. Tt “was reported that § pu- pils were absent during the month. there a strike up there?” he (Co 1ed from First Page.) and it it does not do so, intlaence of these papers : thrown to the democratic candidate, the whole is to v? Palicies Not Republican. “Does this indicate that in the opinion of these editors the candi- date that they sel for the repub- lican party represents principles, generally, the same as those repre- | sented by their chosen leader for the democratic party? It cannot be said that these newspapers in any respect represent the principles or policies £ the administration of President Coolidge, No newspapers in ave more Bitterly unreasonably of Preside Coolidg pers who now propose publican . . H. Holmes explained the s depends upon the principal, some aly cascs wh are in nesd of in- ve one of these re- not a true repre- total absences? Holmes ex- ‘hen why h ports if they are ntation of the Mr. Burr asked. Supt plained they are not actual absences, s which the principal 1 should be investigated. The watter of whether or not they are to be reported depends on the prin- cipal's judgment. Truancy Cases Exactly 132 cases of truancy were roported to the attendance bures ring the past month. The list fol- ows Bartlett, nior High, 10; to di nomination for iden “It will be interesting to note how long great newspapers, independent- Iy owned throughout il be content to follo ubserviently, the leadership of this chain of papers. As the campaign rrocecds, no doubt the chain news- ' papers will fully explain their re 3; Camp, 1; Central Ju- V. B. Chamberlain, 1; ! Elihu Burritt, 10; Nathan Hale Ju-| nior High, 66; Rockwell, 1; Roose- velt, cred Heart, 14; St. Mary's, 3; Smalley, 4; Walnut Hill, 1; Washington, 15; total, 132. A letter of appreciation was re ived by the school board from Mr. George W. Traut for the hoard's ac- | ion in passing resolutions on nw (th of her husband. She assured the board fn her letter that his service was a task which Mr. Traut | always enjoyed. Mr. Traut was a former chairman of the board's fi- |y "\ uptican voters of the state of | nance committee. He was a mem- | G O B oy ber of the board for 20 years Drevi-| e Are they to make their own oftk Tt K doailt |nominations, free, unfettered and TRIAL BEFORE JURY : repulican policies and opposed eve (Continued from First Page.) 'l of the two partic Are Candidates Same “Is it because both of these can- |didates are internationally minded? Is it to be assumed that their views are the sume with reference to the League of Natio Do these news papers contend that their candidates enterf milar views with refer- ence 1o the tariff? Do they claim at th epositions of their |lvov n anointed are similar with reference o the cighteenth amendment and | its enforcement? The question that is presented to | r\ publican administration, including hat of President Coolidge, to make lh(‘ nomination for them under the | flvvrnt that if such authority is not these newspapers will swing nmr influence, whatever it may be, |to Governor Smith of New Yor had set the bond tentatively at (I - should not be lowered. | Before being taken to his m:]l l‘ Gardiner conversed with his wifc ind one of his daughters, and Ira| | l.conard, at whose home he was lc also spoke to Edgar Pond of Newington, reporter L Bridgeport Sunday pPaper ipag his companions were which printed Gardiner’s quotations | eq, they seized a man in £ charges against Chief and Mrs. |who was around in the vicinity and . C. Hart, Sergeants Feeney, Mc- who was carrying a hoe on his | Cue and McAvay, and Officer Do- shoulder and who admitted that he lan, alleged to have heen made by |was Rohloff. Peter J. Pajewski, deposed chair-| He said he picked up the n of the board of police com-|from the field. missioners, in which he connected | Rohloff revealed that Hunt wa them with illicit liquor traffis. ~:lirlim:] in a h?ylon' of ? P;!m m*,ur; | J S80S Wi by where police found im, hu All the state's witnesses were | of, FACTE B0 o 0 e good Tis cnt when court opened. Policc Commissioner Harry E. Morton was|“HRC e ulso present as a spectator, as were | o o VRS HEEE i Alderman J. Gustave Johnson and | Councilman William G. Gibney Judge W. F. Mangan, counsel for the chief and his wife and the po- lice officers in civil actions agai Pajewski and Gardiner; Attorney . ¥. McDonough, counsel for John O'Brien and Matthew R. Mali- nowsky, proprietors of the City Drug store; Attorney B. J. Monkie- wicz, who had service of papers on Pajewski in Chief Hart's $25,000 action delayed for two days for rea- |vear and the fund was $100 short of sons that remain unexplained, ana |the necded amount. The local team | a number of others including men | Proved o be a ig attraction and one | who scldom attend sessions of po- |Of the largest crowds that ever at- | lice court {tended a game in Winsted was pres- [ent Britain did its share to- {wards the fund by waiving all |claims to the usual guarantee. The S arranged through Coach ge Cassidy with the sanction of 'Prlndpal Louis P. Slade. Dancing | | was held after the game, it being the first time in four years that the Gil- |bert authorities allowed dancing |after a game. The @ilbert principal {announced after the game that the | necessary amount had been realized. Hendershot Still in A Critical Condition hington, March 10 (UP)— (Continued From First Page) | hoe | Fund Raised at Game | w Britain High school's co-op- | tion in arranging a basketball | game with the school authorities of | the Gilbert High of Winsted for I <tl ning proved to be a succe move for the Winsted authorit The Gilbert school provides a schol- | arship to one of its students every | SPEEDS UP OVER CURB AVOIDS TREET CRASH (Continued from First Page) | wether too much reckless driving,"” | remarked as he imposed the fine. Wa#l Yarosh, aged 33, of High strect, failed to rencw his m»- crator's license during the time sp 4 cified by law, and while driving | Lestcr J. Hendershot, inventor of the through Stanley strect about noon | “fyelless motor,” was still in a seri- vesterday his car figured in a col- | 1 ous condition at emergency hospftal lision with a car driven by Albert J. | hers today from an electric shock | nmons of 507 Commonwealth av- | he received last Tuesday. | ‘nue near the Vibberts gasoline sta- | His physician said Hendershot had | ion north of the junction of Hart- | gigiculty King, since nerves of | ford avenuc. Last evening, Simmons | his palate were partly paraly and Yarosh went to the police st: 1d the inventor denied himse tion and the former charged the Jat- | newspapermen. | ter with not having a license. Yarosh | id he was on the way to Hartford | 2 10 obtain the license when the col- . Fla., March 10 (UP)— lision occurred. Detective Sergeant |The wrecking tug Warbler left here Ellinger arrested Yarosh for driving | today to assist the freighter Com- without a license, on Simmons' com- | mercial Pioncer, reported aground plaint, and 2 fine of $5 and costs ' off South Pass, at the mouth of the was imposed by Judge Saxe. | Mississippi river. CHAIN NEWSPAPERS of saving the lin the | flurries as the day | flashing out the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1928, STANLEY WORKERS RUN A. L. MEETING Factory nght Is Success—‘ New Members Initiated anley Night” was obscrved at the Eddy-Glover post, American L gion home on Washington street, last evening, and those attending compared the time favorably wit “American Hardware night” which was held two wee ago. Commander Avery rust business through and tur meeting over to Stanley men at once introduced Pat Dagenais, Reah Beloin and Peggy known as the Stanley Trio. Their act was very well received. After the entertainment, the ladies’ auxil- jary served a lunch, New members received are: Clar- ence Primros apoleon Lavigne, Owen J. Sullivan, Alfred Ca; | Steve Stakowich, Michele Nardel! \\ll]ldm R. Linn, Malery Sobol, s R. Brennan, Joseph Yuchu- tlw t-:mt’tno Di \Lxuro Matthew | Mooradian, Nicola Constantino, John Grobstein, mund Slomski, Arthur Sefiancois George Wuchert Jr. pointed manager of the Bes: appeared before the Legion and pre- sented the post with a large picture of “Old Ironsidc will be hung in the post rooms. Working with Harry Jackson, Wu- chert offered the use of his big win- dow on Main street to sell these pic- tures to the general public. The pro- ceeds from the picture sale to go to ‘Old Ironsides™ committee in Bos- ton to be used in reconditioning the famous old war frigate. After he had finished Wuchert was applauded for his offer and his willingness to cooperate with the Legion. RESCUE OF ALL SEEMS LIKELY (Continued from First Page) Providence, R. I, while bus trans- portation will be furnished who desire to return to Boston. d ned the the which No Loss of Life Manomet Point, Mass., March 10. —(UP)—A motley fleet of coast guard vessels fought its way to the ide of the Boston-New York steam- hip Robert E. Lee today in the hope 263 passengers and crew whose lives were imperilled when the ship was driven hard and t upon the jagged rocks of Mary Ann reef. The 70-mile an gale which had blown the 5,000 ton steamer off her course at 8 p. m. Friday was abating somewhat at | dawn. Coast guard officials said they believed the crew and passengers could be taken off without loss of life, Direct communication with the grounded ship ceased at midnight. At that hour the Robert E. Lee's rapidly fading radio signals indi- cated she was in no immediate danger, although her engines were waterlogged. Her main radio set had been paralyzed by the force of im- pact when she etruck the rocks. First attempts at rescue were made by coast guardsmen from the Manomet station at 7:35 a. m. At/ that hour, attempt was made to launch a surfboat to take off some of the wrecked steamer's passengers. The first effort to launch a boat after the drenched boat crew has! rested and the seas abated, another attempt was to be made. The snow had settled down to faint though the wind was still blowing at zale force, the sca was gradually {lowering. The Lee could be plainly seen from ‘shore where scores of people | had gathered to see the ill-fated vessel. Most of them were sea-far. ing people or their wives and sweet hearts. They were interested but not ited. These people have 6een many a ship pile up on the ragged coas line and break up with loss of life. who | Burke | recently ap- | store, | framed | those | hour snow-laden ! pounding surf failed. Later, | 'TROLLEY CAR JUMPS RAILS ' AND KNOCKS DOWN POLE \\k‘lul Passengers Aboard When Vehicle Leaves Tracks At North and Clark Sts. A north bound troliey car tn harge of Motorman Bernard Carl- on jumped the tracks on Nortl street, near the intersection of Clark !about 10:40 last night, and a telephone pole, knocking it down. There were several —passengers on the car, but nobody was injurcd tar as is known Superintendent W. J. Bryun of local division of the Connecticut Company said today the front truc of the car left the tracks whils rear truck remained in pla Officer Kazlauskas remained on the seen until the poles and wires cleared away. MILLIONS LINKED INLEGAL TANGLE Russiau' Gold Involved in New York Lawsuit v York, e were March 10 (P —Tiwe containings n gold today wer: a complicated legal mesh with their ownership at issue. Suit was filed by the Bank France in the federal court here to recover the gold bars which are now |held by the Equitable Trust Co. and the Chase National bank. It was based on the assertion that the metal was stolen from the vaults of the State bank of the Russian em- Jx‘lro‘ after the holshevist revolution. The legal aspect was complicated |by the fact that American courts thave ruled that the soviet can neither sue nor be sued since it is not recognized by the United States as being legally an entity. Accord- ingly it cannot become a party to lany legal action conneccted with the present suit. Thus trial of the suit was expect- to raise many intricate questions of international law, and involve the attitude of the American govern- ment toward the soviet government. The gold was sent here from Rus- sia last month to facilitate handling of trading between America and Russia. When it was presented for jassay, the treasury department re- fused to receive it unless the two New York banks would guarantee title to it. The refusal of assay was based on !a seven year old embargo on Rus- slan gold established because it wa held that title to it was not clearly established. As long as the embargo exists the gold cannot be specie. Its pr status is simply that it is 20 casks of material being held in banks vaults for the soviet. Legally the gold is not gold at all. {Under the existing situation, it would be impossible for the Bank of France, which is a private corp- oration, to contend that the soviet had confiscated a given sum of |money from it and seek the return | of a like sum of money from the 20 | casks in New York. Therefore the action filed here sets forth that the identical material or “chattels” as the suit terms it, {now held in the New York bank | vaults is the property of the Bank 1of France. It is averred that it was placed in safe deposit in the Russia State bank before the collapse of imperial |Russia and appropriated by the |soviet without any reason whatso- ever, The action, thus, is precisely a move to recover property alleged to have been stolen and to recover that lidentical property as distinguished |from reimbursement for its loss, nt wore on. AI-‘ TOSSED INTO A Plymouth, Mass,, March 10 (#)-— | Eight coast guardsmen attached | the Manomet station were tossed in- to the furious sea when their 26- foot surt boat was swamped while attempting to return to the station from the Robert E. Lee shortly af 11 o'clock. From the shore four men were seen struggling in the wa- ter and the other four were clinging to the overturned boat. From shore, the steamship ecem- | ed about 10 fect out of the water at low tide. The Mary Ann reef is con- cealed by the waves even at low tide, R i W The wind whipped waves could be | ey, 9 1e |scen tossing against the sides of the | mede Gilbert H. S. Scholarship | Lee. High tossed foam has formed through Stanley J. Trac the rail and | a coating of ice on superstructure. Perhaps a quarter mile away 1 the three naval vessels from | Provincetown. The coast guard ships appeared to have gone on. After several unsuccessful at- | | tempts coast guardsmen succeeded in | torney launching a surfboat at 8:45 a. m. |1t could be seen several hundred | feet off shore, its crew of six bent at the oars. Officers at the station felt confi- | dent it would reach the stranded vessel, although it was questionable whether the tiny lifeboat could get close to the Lee to effect a rescue of any passengers. Inside Cape Cod Bay ‘The rocks on which the Robert E. Lee went aground are about a mile oft Manomet Point, six miles below Plymouth on the inside of Cape Cod Bay. At this point, however, the bay is approximately 25 miles wide. Capt. H. W. Robinson of the Eastern Steamship lines, who was in charge of the ship, is believed to have been attempting to steer a course as close as possible to the fury of the storm. The coast guard station here recognized the ships peril and at- tempted to warn her by signal lights as she nosed down the coast. The warning was too late. The Rob- rt E. Lee was already fast upon the rocks, and in a few minutes her emergency radio set above decks was first of the S O & calls, JAP STE. ER SINKING Toklo, March 10 (UP)—The 5.226 ton steamer Koryu Maru, bound from Vancouver, was aground and sinking off Tokio today. High seas 50 far have prevented rescue of per- sons aboard. ¢| John Joseph shore to avoid | | CIVIL SUITS RECORDED | The following civil actions we | krought today: Jack Calderone vs. lata, Salvatore Salata, and Pasquale Sa- Santo Nico- Giuseppe 1 etto, ski, 3750 damages. Service by Deputy Sherifl { Matthew Papciak. vs. Paul Simon $100 damages, through Nair & 1 D. L. Nair, receiver of Burritt | Motor Sales Co., Inc., vs. William A. Drew, $300 damages, through At- Harry Ginsberg. Service of by Consfable Thomas papers Murphy. ‘Walter Reindel vs. Clarence Bald- win of Berlih, $300 damages, Attorney William F. Mangan, Serv- ice by Deputy Sheriff Papciak. Frank Stakara vs. Adolph Kali- nowski, $500 damages, through At- torney 8. J. Traceski. Service by Deputy Sheriff Papciak. Jan Lukowski vs. Alexander Kor- ankiewicz, $300 damages, through Attorney Lawrence J. Golon. Serv- ice by Deputy Sheriff Papciak. Klemens Kalkow: Mary and Pawell Messner, §. damages, | through Attorney Monroe 8. Gordon. | Constable James W. Manning per- formed service of papers. A. Morris Koppel vs. John Tim- ko, $300 damages, through M. A. Sexton. Service by Constable Frank | Clynes. Peter Suzio and Staff of Hartford vs. Katarzyna Kaczfarek, | damages, through Roche & Cabelus. Constabh‘ Frank Ciynes served tha papers. COMMITTEE TO MEET | Boston, March 10 (UP)—The | 1egislative committee, which will de- | cide if the acts of Attorney General Arthur K. Reading warrant im- | peachment, will meet for the first |time at the state house Monday. Chairman George F. James an- nounced late yesterday that Major Thot ton had been selected prosecutor for the investigators. 'cause they pas 3. Hammond of Northamp- | G. 0. P COMMITTEE | BODKS DESTROVED Witness Says Former Chairman, Upham Did This March 10 (UP)—The ! ‘ham, treasurer of wional committee, | s just'before the) nal convention in Irl Hipsley, told ot Dome \’umlnl(lx‘u‘ ington, took the stand, | of Montana, an- t A, V. Leonard, of Chi- s a witness, had noti- | committce that he would Process servers een unable to find | £ Of No More Value the committee that | lie books were m!‘ Hipsley Cpham “d no further v “Inasmu be treasurer of h 1¢ Was not going to the committee any | more, he ordered all his books de stroyed, cxcept a card index sy tem,” Hipsleys 7 He added that he may have| iled Continental Trading coms ny bonds for Upham but could not | recall. He handled all Upham's se- | curitics but could not be certain Will ad turned over $60,000 of 1s in November or Decem- d knowing anything n of bonds among pron ‘ago campaign con- | tributoi. (. onvert into cash) and could not remember that Upham had given James A. Patten, Chicago cat King 00 of the bonds. “I gave Patten a lot of securities | cause Upham had a private loan with Patten,” Hipsley added. The witness said he was now con- od with . J. Budd and Com- . Chicago, and was exccutor of » Upham estate. He could fur-| ih no record of any liberty bond | he said. ! up of midwestern | terested in the Teapot Dome case, | clieve their offices have recently | been subjected to night searches no‘ have removed all their important | papers to safer places, it here today. | The development came after dis- s office employecs of | of the senate Teapot Dome committee had discovered evi- dence that his office was ransacked twice during January. Nye and the others do not intend to lodge any formal complaint be- | do not believe it would do any good, and Nye has declined to discuss the matter. “We all felt that we are being subjected to more or less close scru-, tiny by some power, but they never leave any evidence upon which we | could go after them.” one of the aroup told the United Press. The capitol police force is m\ 1rd in the building but over week- | ends there are no janitors on duty nights, making remote the chance of discovering marauders. Police how. ever have heen cautioncd to be cn‘ lookout since the Nye inc!d»nr.! No papers were taken from his of- fice, but on two Monday mornings | during January his clerks found | vapers in disarray and other evi-| dences that the place had been sy tematically searched. | WONDERING WHEN RISE WILL DESIST Wall §t. Observers Speculatin About General Motors Stock New York, March 10 (® — Wall street observers today were wonde! ing where the upward parade of stocks led by General Motors com- | mon was going to end as they fu-‘ viewed the trade of the last seven | days which had carried the stock | of the motor company up 22 1-2 points, increase in value $391,500,000. Fortunes were made and lost| with every hour of trading during the past week and the street today was estimating the winnings of the big traders in millions of dollars. Among these big winners ob- servers listed William C. Durant, former head of the company, who. it is estimated, has cleaned up $10,000,000 in his trading in the stock during the past. two years; Arthur W. Cutten of Chicago, the Fisher brothers of Detroit, the Du- Ponts of Wllmington, Del., the Timkens of roller bearing fame, the Graham brothers and Clarence R. Bitting of Detroit. The losers names are mentioned only in whispers. Bears Whipped Bears, or the shorts in General Motors, took probably the worst whipping in metors ever adminis- tered by an organized clique or! pool. Many of them sold the etock at 130 and 135, believing that a slowing down of business would bring a recession in the motor in- dustry. Many “stopped” their stock at 138 to 140, A op™ order automatically be- comes a buying order when the price of the stop is reached and this accounted for the great activity of the stock between 139 7-8 and 145, as the stops were caught and the bears covered. Having stopped out two or three times, the bears have usually resold the stock mov- ing up the stop loss a few points only to have that point reached again and again. | senators, was learned | LEAGUE CLOSE: Geneva, March 10 (P—The session of the council of the Nations closed this e last subject before it was the St. Gothard machine gun incident which a complaint ainst Hungary the little entente. A comimnittes three appointed to consider this case told the council| it would be unable to report before | the June meeting. 49th League afternoon caused by They are the talksof the town— ,Merald Classified Ads. ! operation this summer. One of these | visit to North Carolina. 8he is said | —ETHEL — 1PE GAME OLD QOUGS‘ GRORS 1RSS5 AnD SHORTER DREGDES HAuE. RGPOIDED 10 O Many ENCORES® Tt LADT oW veARS — Y S COMING-~ ~ It conne~ WE ARE WONDERING~ (* LONGER LOCKS ~— ~—AND LONG-ER FROCKE ™~ 4 WLk REMLLY GYAG-E, / A comifi?acv( f4 City Items Patrick Mangan of 480 Myrtle street is h\dnpoam‘\i at his home. MUSSOLINI RAPS . LI AMERICAN POLICY s ot o s | OAFS G0l _ls Prime Object of This Gountry GOOLIDGE FAVORS NORTH CAROLINA' May Spend His Summer's Yaca: | i President Coolidge finds one from the south, as Asheville, N. C., the most attractive. | Although a finat decision has not yet been reached, a residence offer- ed no later than Thursday by Philip 8. Henry of Asheville, appears to the president to unite the essentfal features for his 1928 vacation home. Z«alndu, as the Henry mansion § nown, occupies 100 or 120 acres o Bmucatcher mountain at an alti- | tude of about 8,000 feet, or about 500 feet higher than the city proper. Close to Washington, The place also is close to h- | ington, relatively close to New Eng- Jand and at a sufficient heighth to assure relief from the summer heat, three factors which will figure in| the ultimate selection. Asheville is only fourteen hours | from Washington by railroad, and | as such is looked upon by the chief executive as within a convenient dis- tance from his likely centers of Mussolini, brother of the premier, charged America with attempting to exert pressure upon Europe through its enormous wealth, in a peech discussing the world domi- ant forces. | “Gold constitutes a | weapon and one must expect any surprise when the weapon it at the disposal of a young race,” Mussolini said. “Yet the world is lucky the wealth is at the disposal of & race rather than a universal idea.” He said America w attempting to carry out a big policy and their problem of armaments hardly be- | trays the concern at the necessity for Americans adding military glory to |their wealth and their technical skill, America’s {intervention World war, he said, had a huge weight because of the military means of defense offered by old Europe. However he said that military heroism was restricted to a few actions on the western front. “We paid a high price for a cor- | responding interest for such inter- | vention and since then the American | world is discussing with an attitude of haughtiness, any problem con- cerning old Europe,” he said. Sarcastically the premier’s brother | remarked that those having means | always find a way of imposing them- selves in times of serious economic difficulties, “This explains why Parker Gil- bert, though not knowing a word in German, knows how to weigh pre. in the probably will be Northampton, Mass. whence Mr. Coolidge does not wish to depart too far on account of the condition of Mrs. Lemira Goodhue, Mrs. Coolidge’s mother, who has been dangerously ill since last De- cember. Washington, on account of the peculiar situation this year, is the other center to which Mr, Cool- | idge intends to remain relatively close., Leave June 11 The likely dates on which Mr. Coolidge would begin his vacation can not as yet be settled. The Presi- dent feels that, although it will de- | pend largely upon the closing of congress, for which he naturally will | remain in Washington, his departure is not likely to be before June 11, for which day the budget meeting has been tentatively scheduled. Mr. Coolidge, in this respect, is of the opinion that congress easily could dispose of all business before it by the middle of May. This would leave him free to star his annual vacation as soon after June 11 as practicable, probably coincidentally with the opening of the republican national conventfon in Kansas Ci on June 12. { The President is believed to be influenced in regarding Zelandia with favor by recollections of his tion, to extend a rousing alarm about fault international Mussolini_said. | He pointed out the American | market was not big enough to ab- sorb overproduction and hence there was a necessity for Americans to at- tempt a conquest of the world. “Woe, if enormously wealthy peo- | ple were pervaded by the idea of world domination. The strength of bayonets would find a way to de- fend such an idea and force it upon the whole world. America, how- sit to Asheville with Mrs. Coolidge | €VeT: 80 far is solely the framework while he was vice-president. It was | Of CONCrete whereln the inccntive his first trip to the south, and re- } springing from history is missing, mained the farthest he had gone be. | he concluded. yond Virginia until his visit to Ha.| Mussolini's lecture has aroused Yaoa, IiY JUBHGEY, extensive and favorable comment. Mrs. Coolidge s known to have | Invitations already have come from especlally warm reccllections of her | Venice and Mantua for Mussolini to deliver similar lectures there. obligations,” even to have championed an invita- | tion from that state r before | the Black Hills of South Dakota finally were decided upon. TO MAKE Rome, March | Prince of Thun grand master of the Knights of Malta, informed Premier Mussolini % u that the Knights would make Alien Pmpertv Bill a pitgrimac in April to Rhodes and Washington, March 10 UP—Presi- | Jerusalem, visiting shrines of the dent Coolidge today signed the Alien | Mediavel Crusaders. Cardinal Pa- property bill, providing for settle-|trick J. Hayes of New York, Card- ment of American claims against |inal G. W. Mundelein 10 and Hohenstein, PresidgnTCwlidge Signs ‘LAME DUCK’ WILL formidable cisely the German economic situa- | the strength of the German budget and a warning that Germany not de- | of Chicago | CONTINUE TO LIMP House Kills Measure That Would Abolish Bi-Annual Session Washington, March 10 —The “lame duck” will continue to limp on Capitel Hill after the next elec- tions. Coming before the house for the first time, the four-times senate- approved constitutional amendment to abolish those biannual three- months' sessions of congress popu- larly known as the “lame duck” terms was turned down yesterday, of the two-thirds necessary proval. for &p- Party Lines Fall Of the 365 members present— there are 435 in the house—two, Staiker, republican, New York, and Williams, democrat, Texas, voted present. Party lines were obliterat- ed on the final vote, 8% republicans joining 118 democrats and two farmer-labor members in support of the amendment, and 102 republi- cans combining with 35 democrats m opposition The action, coming after three days of heated debate, killed the of the proposal's adoption ion. Had it been adopt- atures of three-fourths of the states would have had to ap- prove it before it joined the other 19 amendments of the constitution he amendment, attacked vigor- ously by republican leaders, would have the meeting d: of congress from the first Monday in December to January 4, thus convening it two months after an election instead cf 13 months as at present and wiping out the short session at which the “lame ducks” or members defeated in November are permitted to sit until adjournment March 4. The proposals also would have re- quired presidents to take offic January 24, instead of March 4. and ful constitutional provisions dealing constitutional provisions dealing with succession to the presidency iu event of death of the president and vice-president. Two provisos, spon- sored by democrats, went down with the amendment’s defeat. One, Ly Jeffers, Alabama, would have el inated specific adjournment dates for congress, and was designated, Jeffers said, to curtail the oppor- | tunities for scnate filibusters at the ' fag end of a session. Binding The other, by Garrett, Tennessee, the democratic leader, provided that | the amendment would not be binding | unless ratified by three-fourths of the states within seven years, and !unless one new house in each state had been elected suhsequent to fts submission for state ratification. The house also had rejected on Thursday & rider to the amendment by Representative Bankhead, demo- crat, Alabama, proposing to increase from two to four years the terms of re| prcqentnm s, son, of Connecticut, the repub- Hcan floor leader; Madden, of INi- nois, chairman of the appropriations | committee, and Snell of New York, ! chairman of the rules committee, fired the biggest guns against the amendment, although they met stiff counter attacks from members of | their own party—White of Kansas, co-author of the proposal, and Clif- ford of Massachusetts. Minority leader Garrett also had worthy foes Milan, March 10 (UP)—Arnaldo on his side of the aisle, the chief attackers being three Virginians, Tucker, Moore and Montague. Not Binding Arguing that members had not been given sufficient time to con- sider the proposed revisions of the amendment, Tilson, on one of his three oral charges against it, de- clared it would be better “to leave a thousand good things out of the constitution than to put one bad thing in.” In offering his state legislaturc amendment, Garrett contended that at present fewer than 4,000 people could amend the federal constitu- tion. He was supported by Ram- seyer, republican, Towa. Madden on Floor Besides firing on the amendment itself, Madden directed a special at- tack on the Jeffers’ proposal, con- tending that automatic adjourn- ment dates provided a ‘“safety valve” against indefinite sessions and the spending of the people's money. Garrett interrupted and wanted to know if the appropriations com- mittee head could not think of something else besides the treasury “in writing the constitution.” “The protection of the treasury is in the largest measure to the people’s interest,” Madden replied CASCIO STILL HELD FOR NEW YORK OFFICIALS Extradition Papers Faulty—Wanted for Alleged Murder of Brook- Im Woman. New Haven, March 10 (®#—Frank Cascio of Wallingford, known as Murphy Cash, a fugitive from jus- tice, was held for another week by the city court today that extradition papers may be served on him by the New York police, who want him for the slaying of Mrs. Rose Licata in the kitchen of her home in Brooklyn on January 12. Officers from New York were here yesterday and had with them a copy of an indictment found against Cascio, but as their extradition pa- pers were incomplete the man could not be claimed by those officers. The latter returned and expected to be back early next week, when the court will probably order Cas- release 0 the New York offfe ascio remains under $50,000 bonds which he cannot raise and is lodged in jail for safe keeping. It is understood that Cascio’s fam- ily have engaged counsel in New | York to def-nd him. STORMS ENGLAND | London. March 10 (UP) — — Sonew- Germany for the return of scized | and many other leading American storms raged today in the Beitish property. ,i ‘atholics are members of the order. |Isles, France and the Rbineland.