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(Continued From Preceding Page) church school Easter service and presentation of mite box offerings. Thursday, 5 p. m., Woman's guild annual supper in the parish rooms. Second Advent Bunday schoo! at 10 a. m., Sun- day morning service with sermon by the pastor at 11 o'clock, subject, “Death Abolished and Life Reveal- ed”; Evening service with sermon at 5 o'clock, subject, “Principles of Interpretation.” Thursday, 7:30 p. m., and business meeting. Christian Science Bible class Sunday service at 11 a. m., sub- juet, “Are 8in, Disease, and Death 1 i Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. r Wednesday evening miceting at § o'clock. NON-DENOMINATION AL People's Sunday, 10:15 a. m., prayer in the pastor’s study; 12 noon, Bible BISHOP WIL FACE OWN CHURGH TRIAL Dane Is First to Be Tried Before Court 1 London, Apri 7 (UP)—The chief campaign for the revision of thej Church of England Prayer Book cclebrated his M0th birthday today. He is the Most Reverend and Right ITonorable Randall Thomas David-| Son. archbishop of Canterbury. The occasion is a double event int the archbishop's life, for it also s the final stages of the prayer book revision, on the success or failu of which, according to some circle depends his resignation from the Anglican church highest o1li {velopments in the Church of Eng- PRESIDENT THINKS OF FARM RELIEF Believes McNary-Hangen Bill Is achool; 6 p. meeting, There will be a baptismal service on tomorrow evening, for Dr. and h Mrs, T, T Johnson-ot 85 Garden| S0IEWRAt Improved street, e— Tuesday, 7:30 p. m., prayer for . o — tract distribution; 8 p. m., Bible | Washington, April 7 P—Congress m.,, Young People’s class, studying, *T} the Kingdom Age. Wednesday, P. m., prayer for tract distribution; § ». m., meeting of the Young Women's auxiliary at the home of Mrs. John Hoyt, Lin- den street, Plainville, : Ushering in of took a day off today, but its mem- bers had some pre-Easter home thinking to do about the pending farm relief legislation. Just about the time both houses quit work yesterday, it developed that President Coolidge felt that the Thursday, 7:45 p. m., regular |new edition of the McNary-Haugen weekly church prayer meeting. | bill, which he vetoed last year on Theme for stud: nd testimony, (the ground that its much-debated rue Righteousne: equalization fee was unconstitutional Friday, 9 p. m, choir re-|did not meect all the objections he | hearsal, found in the former measure, Int ational Bible Student’s Ass'n ‘Whether the fee provision was Sunday, 10, 12 m., volunteer | what the president had in mind was service: § p.m., Bible study at the [ not made known, although this ftem home of Charles Henry, 32 Dwight |is known to be included in several street, phases of the question now being Wedresday, € p. m. prayer, |cosidered by the executive and his D and testimony serviee, counselors. Friday, § p. m., Bible study, The 1928 bill, now undergoing de- bate in the senate and expected shortly to come before the house, attempts to meet the opposition to the fee' by making it applicable only if other means for marketing crop | surpluses fail. autumn, it is feared that it might be delayed another year, and even, according to well-informed circles in the house of commons, until 1930, Those close to the archbishop are 1s Better Bl | inclined to the opinion that his| While the president’s objections to | health will not stand the strain of |the new measure applies to both | office much longer. {senate and house drafts, he feels Archbishop Davidson holds the | that in some particulars it has been inction of having becn the|improved, but intends to withhold youngest to hold that office in his-|final judgement until congrecss has tody. He was created in 1903 at|acted and sent the measure to the the after having refused | White House. the archbishopric before he was| There have been some clajims that | Mr. Coolidge would veto the revised | Remarkable Primacy { bill and others that it would meet With one exeeption he has occu- | executive approval because of its al- pied the Chair of St. Augustine | ternate section relating to the equal- longer than anyone. Four hundred | ization fea, Such predictions are not years ago, however, William War-| warranted at this time, the presi- | ham was archbishop of Canterbury [ dent fecls, because the proposal is from 1503 to 1335 not yet in its final form. Dr. Davidson's primacy is thus And before it reaches that stage, the longest since the Reformation | its sponsors are going to have some 'nd it has witnessed some of thc|amendments to contend with from most remarkable changes and de- | the democratic side. Minority mem- bers blocked cfforts yesterday to set | Tuesday for a final vote on the | measure, declaring they desired | more time to draft changes which they believe are essential. Support- land. Among these the most im- portant is, perhaps. the extension of the Anglican communion through- out the world. CLARK TRUSTEES WON'T DISCUSS BOARD MEETING University Officials Refuse to Com- ment ou Petition from Stu- dents for Investigation. Worcester, Mass., April 7 (P — After & meeting lasting five hours today, the trustees of Clark univer- sity declined to discuss what trans- pired while they were considering a petition from 182 of the 231 -under- graduate students who roqnanm"un investigation of the administra¥ion of President Wallace Atwood. George H. Mirick, secretary of the board, said that a letter would be malled to Melvin D. Kennedy of | ‘Worcester, a member of the junior, class and manager of the soccer team, giving the trustees answer to the students’ petition. Kennedy for. warded the petition, which students claimed represented a large ma- jority of the undergraduate body. to the trustees with a request that it be given their consideration. Neither Charles H. Thurber, chairman of the trustces, nor President Atwood would discussthe matter/ further, declaring that Mr. Mirick had been authorized to handle the affair. They declined to say whether the matter was consid- ered a closed incident by the trus- tees or whether the trustees would grant the students’ request for an inquiry into the administration of the university, The recent trouble between stu- dents and the president occurred after three students had been sus- pended as a result of an allegedly obscene article which had been scheduled to appear in a recent is- sue of the Clark University Month- Iy, which was withdrawn prior to the date of publication. Three honor students, including the president of the student body, later resigned as a protest over the disciplining of members of the Monthly editorial board. LOESER'S WILL 15 FILED FOR PROBATE ITALIAN KNGS u . t (hm“ R]u 'd books, boou to l|\<‘ d, the ill and | |those with tired cyes. Dr. Willis R. | e o Rite Carried trowe vith o e o s 1| 0ot in Rome ! Electric's laboratory, is working on such a device and thinks it is prac- ticable. The plan is for a long . [strip of film to be translated inta Rome, ‘April 7 0B Althougn wie| S L% 8 LRI be tnslated nto Roman Catholic church is technically three times as fast as “at war” with the Italian govern- ment, King Victor's residence at Cinei : ; incinnati—Bread fresh for cight Villa Savoia on the outskirts of the |y “nCIn S e o city had every nook blessed by the ',y <> O FNES Juice for Six month k *|The process has been developed parish priest today in observance of the University of Cincinnati. 1 an old church custom. waves kill the As always on the Saturday before Easter, parish priests were kept busy today separately blessing every room of the houses in their respective parishes. The priests were accom- |40ubt who is panied by choir-boys, who carried | Welch, mayor o South holy water vessels and into this the | Wants a factory here, s faithful, after the benediction, drop- |of Mrs. Henry Ilord, ped their offerings. In the “good old | Women must stand tog days” thesc were in gold, later in Ford rey Southampton, E comes to automobi 110s sllver, then in paper money, and But My now again in silver. I have nothing vitl After 1870, when the temporal power fell, the royal rcsidence and 5~ the parliament buildings were stern- | ly excluded from this benefit but be- | fore long the latter were *“forgiven.” | eman, dress d The first year Senator Farini, Who |from the marts of f was the chairman of the senate, or- | hutes 1o a revolr c dered a munificent donation to be youth the fact ¢ given on the blessing of the senate chamber but the parish priest, after faithfully performing his duty in all other rooms, drew back and said: “I can bless no room where laws against the church are made."” The secretary of the chairman gray replicd that in that case the senate could make no offering. At the quirmal palace the resi- dence of ‘the sovereign, from whis |later the ban was removed, all the rooms were blessed with exception of the royal bed chamber, the offer- ing—this time in gold—being given all the same, inches below the kner lelderly wives of hankoers Paris modistes have luid down 1 are -~ FORLONG SEARCH Wil Try to Get Kidnapers Prey- The present king, a few years | mg 0‘1 Chlcagoans after his accession to the throne, left the quirinal palace, reserving it —_— only for official receptions and went to live in Villa Savoia, on the out- | skirts of tite city, where the parish |l Chicago. April 7 » Commisioner (P —Dep O'Connor Po- and six Ilaw ter, DETEGTIVES LEAVE - Only a week ago the houses of Canterbur d York decided to] submit the prayer book in its latest | The work of prayer book revision | ers of the bill, however, do not anti- Estate Goes to Harvad if He automobile, and “getting away with | priest always blesses every corner, detective squads tore north from including the bedroom. tective headquarters in automobiles e {eacly today, confident that they were A o . ion a hot trail of kid 0 ¥ ir Gets Harder Each Year o0 ¢ bot trai of Kianape < who in To Steal Automobiles |cazo ana Detroit victims, Aoy 1ot Chicago, April 7 () —Stealing an no word as to their destination. The immediate kidnaping under revised form to the assembly of the, has heen the most momentous e | cipate these will be radieal l‘nmxg)ll Church of En, probably - this” terprise of the archbishop's primacy. | to delay a vote which some hope monih. It then will be presented 10 | He has been intimately concerned | to reach by Wednesday. parliameni. for passage. Stands on Prayer Book IR It is said that *“a what happened in commons last year, when the vised prayer hook bill met totally unexpected defeat, would uratively, if not litcr Lo the death of the archbishop. I’or many years now he has been | far from well, a fact which has giv-| el rise to rumors from time to time ! that Tie was about to resign. It is| said that when he left the house of | yommons er the fierce debate which climaxed in the defeat of the | repetition of | the Thouse of with | revised praver book measure hel looked a broken man. With tears streaming down his| face and bent shoulders, he tot- tered forth on the arms of his friends, a man to all appearances ! 10 years okder than when he enter- | ed. Some say another defeat would be too much for him o the English people | kota, republicans, supported the There s a possibility, liowever.| He showed no interest when asked | measure, Both proponents said the that the archbishop never will about sites for factories. [farmer had been diseriminated know the ultimate results of the Various delegations endcavored to | against by the government and cited | prayer hook gain an audience of TFord. Each |the raflroad and other industries as | Delay a Likelihood At present every cffort is being posscssed the ideal site for an auto- ) Opposing it on constitutional tiade both Ty supporters and op-|mobile factory, |srounds, Walsh declared public ! ponents to bring the book befor e funds could not be taken out of l]l",‘; parliament this spring. Should it| Bombay, India, is having many |treasury and turned over to an indi- be allowed to hang over until the| strikes South Congregational Church Celebrating Easter Day with it from the beginning, for he a member of the Royal Eccles astical Discipline which resulted 1906 in Royal Letters of Busines ng issued to Convocation by King Edward VIL Ford Just on Visit To English People | London, April 7P —Much of Eng- land was convinced today that Henry Ford had come here on an important business venture and in- Those objecting to a votc Tuesday included Senator Simmons, North | Carolina; Dill, Washington, and Mc- | Kellar, Tennessee, all democrats. | | The latter expects to propose a change to limit the powcr of the | proposcd federal farm board in util- | izing the equalization fee. i A seccond prospective revision s | for the president naming the com- modity councils set up under the | measure, instead of the farm board. | | Senate confirmation would be re- | | auired, another change would make dustrial districts were trying to per- | it mandatory that the board obtain suade him to view their “wares” in | the consent of the commodity coun- | the form of factory sites. | ¢il before it could declare an oper- - I'ord. however, kept his plans | ating period for the equalization fee self and ed all questions | on a certain product, rning his own plans, although | Walsh Opposes Tt. he answercd other querigs readily | Debate yesterday developed oppo- nough. sition from Senator Walsh, demo- “Plans® fic said as it puzzled to | crat, Montana, while Senators Good- one questiongr, “Oh, 1 just called to |ing, Idaho, and Frazier, North Da- wanted to' convinee him that the v | having been given federal aid. ! | vidual or group of individuals for { the promotion of private business. | WINGATE'S ASSAULTERS |lector and Has No Grandchildren New York, April 7 P—Unless his 15-year-old daughter marries and has children, much of the $600,000 cstate of Charles A. Loeser, art col- Brooklyn department store owner, will go to Harvard uni- versity, providing it is not used for the erection of new buildings or de- struction ef the older buildings on the Harvard grounds. 'Within the last few years,” reads his will, “I have revisited Harvard after an absence of more than 30 |vears and I have found the beloved |old college yard made unsightly by the destruction of certain old build- ings and their replacement by such a monstrosity as the new Widner Memorial Library.” Mr. Loeser, an alumnus of the class of 1886, died March on the eve of his departure for Florence, Italy, where he lived for 32 years. He said the university’s art treas- ures had better be housed in such “ancient brick buildings” as Harvard Hall as it has been his experience that “new buildings erected to serve for art musgums are well nigh in- variably failures.” The will suggested that of the amount contingently bequeathed to Harvard $200,000 be used for th establishment of traveling fellow- ships for students, graduates, teach- \PO”CE SAY THEY HAVE {ers and officials of the university. Mr. Loeser left $100,000 outright to hig widow and a life estate in will Appear in Court Tomorrow— | $1,000 Reward Was Offered $300.090 which at her death is willed |to his daughter Mathilda, now a student at a convent in South Ascot, t England, The girl is willed $6,000 a year from the residuary estate until | she 18 21 w! the balance of the 9:30 A. M. ! |she 15 21 when Service for Reception of New Members 10:30 A, M. % Regular Morning Worship With Sermon L “What Really Does 7:30 P. M. An Easter Pageant By Young “THE People’s Church lorning Service 10:45— “They have taken away My Lord” Evening “Death—the only source of Power.” “That I may know power of fellowship made conformable unto His death.” Wishes You A MOST JOYFUL and cordially invites you to its iZaster music, Easter Message by the “THE TRIUMPHANT C LIVING CHRIST” All Are Most Cordially Welcome To All Services Stanley Memorial Church EASTER aster Service of Worship. Special for Their Arrest. Cambridge, Mass., April 7 (#— Four yonng men who are alleged to | have assaulted Osborne R. Wingate, & government witness in the carbarn | | murder case, as a result of which {three men were executed, have been | 1dentified, according to an announce- ;ment by the police last night. The {men have agreed to appear tomorrow lin the office of District Attorney | Robert T. Bushnell, who has author- ized a reward of a thousand dollars | for their arrest. Wingate, who 1% a Boston elevated § | bus driver, was assaulted by four {men after he had completed his final trip last night. He has been an im- portant witness during the trial of by the Pastor Easter Tell Us?” People of the Church School acrued interest on the residuary es- tate is to be paid to her and from that time she gets the annual in- come from the estate. Should his widow died before his | daughter {8 21, Mr. Loeser asks that the president of Harvard act as her guardian, He is asked to obtain the advice of 1sidor Draggiotti, Boston patron of arts, in plans for the girl's education. Edward J. Heinlein, John J. Dever- eaux and John J. McLaughlin, all of i whom he identified as participants in |the slaying of James Ferneau, aged Captain Patrick J. Hurley of the | the homs of one of his detectives and confessed to the assault. He #aid that the young men claimed | they were unaware that Wingate had | had any connection with the murder trial and that the assault was the result of an altercation with the bus driver while they were passengers on the bus he was operating. | Noted Harpist to Play At St. Mark’s Service Salvator Di Stefano of New York city, a noted concert harpist and | composer, will assist the choir of 8t. Mark’s Episcopal church at the service at 10:45 o'clock tomorrow morning. Miss Esther A. Bradley, who, with J. George Waterman, was to have assisted the choir, will be | prevented from so doing because of the serious illness of a member of {her family. Through her courtesy Mr. Di Stefano has been secured. There will be an organ, harp, and violin recital at 10:45 o'clock, and | Mr. De Stefano will be heard In a harp solo during the service. ’ Service 7:00— Him, and the His resurrection, and the of His sufferings, being Easter Services. Pastor HRIST” INDIAN FIGHTERS VANISHING. St. Paul, April 7—Only 44 sol- T 60 P. M.—Service in charge of the Junor de- diers remaln or.x state pension rolls partment. An Easter dramatization, |from Minnesota’s Indian uprising of | “In Old Jerusalem." 1862. Pension payments have fallen (from $56,000 a year to $17,000. watchman of the Waltham carbarn. | | Cambridge police said that the four men who assaulted Wingate called at | THE BELVIDERE DRUG STORE WILL OPEN TODAY, SATURDAY, APRIL 7, | with a full line of Drugs and sundries. The been thoroughly renovated ‘ throughout. Mr. Whalen of Waterbury, registered pharmacist, with 20 years’ ex- perience, will be in attendance at all times to compound prescriptions. store has Patronize Your Neighborhood Drug Store. Announcing investigation was that of Thon Gaynor, wealthy automobile deals it,” is becoming harder every year, according to C. A. Vane, of the Na- tlonal Automobile Dealers’ associa- |ind part owner of the new Me- tion, in announcing the result of a |Cormick hotel. Gaynor has heen survey of automobile thefts in 2s |held since last Sunday under a de- Americaniciiic mand for &100,( ansom A total of 95,083 cars were stolen| Agents of the kidnapers yestorday in the 28 cities last year, but of this APProached Jamcs McCormick, number 87,786, or $1.7 per cent, | 4 r and McCormick Mo- et A |tor Sales Co., and demanded $100, ewport, R. L, had the only per- |90 Tansom. After dickering the fect record of all the citics, Thirty- |M¢n sald they would accept $1¢,000 six cars were stolen and 36 recov. | McCormick after getting the money, ered during the year, York, Pa, |Met the men at his place of busi- was next best with 78 stolen apd 75 [Ne8S. but detectives were concealed recovered. Nile, Omaha, had @ bet. |A00Ut the place and the money was ter than perfect record with 1,076 [MYEREC offered the gavs_ptolen and 1,108 §rendverad. |y o e e ey e ait NG which included cars stolen in other ‘”‘ou; S ouldl moE Sl trer Siliew 2 sbrodBic o Omaks ‘";d They drove away, followed by detec- ?;‘,’,‘6’“"“’"“ reported missing B |jveg who after trailing them sov. {eral miles arrested them, fearing Detroit led the list of cities in | {that further pursuit might result in both the number of cars stolen and | e on's oscaper the number recovered. The figures were 12,336 stolen and 11,000 recov- ered. Chicago had 11,965 stolen and r 10,464 rccovered. l.os Angeles, 11.- 460 stolen and 10.171 recovered. and New York, 10,600 stolen and 8,900 recovered, \Prince of Wales Acts as i Doctor After Cup Race | London, April 7 (®—The Daily xpress today said the Prince of Wales acted as a doctor after the | royal mnavy cup point-to-point steeplechase at Oxton on Thursday. | The prince had dismounted and | was entering the weighing room when he learned that one of the competitors, Captain Alexander, had been thrown and had broken his| collarbone, There was no doctor pres- | ent and the prince hastened to the captain and administered first aid. “I learned how to fix it when 1| broke my own collarbone two years | ago,” he said referring to his fall in | {January, 1926 when his horse | stumbled while taking a hedge. The prince also aided another | naval officer whose ribs had heen | injured in the race. | Mexico City will have a civil air- port. 295 Arch Street milk. to chance. 1AL TR R §\\ | ALBRO MOTOR The Meaning of ‘‘Pure’ We could let up quite a little on some of our methods and still give our customers good pure But it's worth the extra precautions to know that our idea of “pure” means the utmost that can be done, rather than leaving anything FLASHES OF LIFE: TOM JENKINS IS STRONG AND LIVELY “CORPSE” because they find the present revealing modes a great handicap | for matrons, Rome—Heinrich Koehler, finance minister of Germany, has been in a convent this week er retreat, while agent general for Count Volpi , have bec and Jtalian finance minis- n conferring. West Point, N. Y.—Tom Jenkins, | tler, on whom Youssoff, the ible Turk. inflicted “severe in-| uries that indirectly caused death,” | has to laugh. Now teaching our fu. ture general how to grapple, Tom would like to show an active corpse to William A. Brady, who in a cur- nt magazine article describes his while managing the wr i ches has just had She had to go home from the theater by taxicab. \ deputy sheriff seized a big lim-| that was waiting outside dur- act. It belonged to Edgar 10 is no longer her man.| i there is some litigation ents on it, Towa—Ed. Dickson, air| has his ups and downs. ning an aviator during the £ made 19 parachute| In his Jatest he descended t from a burning plane, pilot Since b It was aft lours of ques. | of these two that Deputy | ( ssioner O'Connor and the de- tectives, accompanied by the twe | Tiad whom they arres made | {heir sudden departure from head- | O'Connor believed that Gaynor | was being held by the ¢ band | that Kidnapped several Chicago and | Detroit men during the past year | anl exacted the payment of ransom, the total of which is cstimated in excess of 82 MYN Somerville, 0 T P John Savage, 23, of Northeast Har- her, Me, died in the Somerville hos- pital with a buliet in his brain this morning after attempting, police be- lieve, to Kill Miss Mildred W. Sack- endo ar-old girl at whose pa Savage was a roomer, The girl was taken to the same institution suffering from a slight wound. vage was found in a bed where he was believed to have shot himself, Miss Sackendorf was lying in a hall- way | he shooting occurred at 4:30 a. m.. and Savage died three hours A FOURTH “ Paris, April 7—To the three R's tiught in French primary schools is to be added a fourth—roadlore. Children will be schooled in traffic rules, | DOG SAYS “MAMMA."” Port Moo B. C, April 7—The Trench bulldog that said “hello” at the Boston dog show is said to have a rival here. It is a dog that is 22 | years old and still says “mamma.” LES (0. Tel. 260 A R R RN S s N Joseph Landwele Berest Momgw Efficiency Economy Experience A.M.Paonessa For Mayor Pull the Second Next Tuesday | Mayor— Town Clerk— Tax Collector— Treasurer— | Comptroller— | | Councilmen William F. Huber Alderman Walter R. Falk Councilmen Thomas Heslin Councilmen Frank Riley Alderman C. E. Torello Councilmen Robert Johnsen Councilmen Lucian Macora Alderman John F. Maerz Councilmen W. D, Beyle DEMOCRATIC TICKET EXPERIENCED, and EFFICIENT GOVERNMENT Es Vote for Democratic Nominee Lever and Elect Angelo M. Paonessa A. L. Thompson Bernadotte Loomis Curtis L. Sheldon Hanford L. Curtis FIRST WARD Roger Whitman SECOND WARD Matthew McGrath [} THIRD WARD Peter Dorsey FOURTH WARD J. E. Peterson FIFTH WARD James Murphy SIXTH WARD W. W. Greene A YOTE FOR THE IS A VOTE FOR ECONOMICAL