New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 27, 1929, Page 1

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“Fort Worth” Sots Now Endur- aacs Recond of 178 Hows Baore Conng Down EOROPEAN BIRDMEN SET HEIGHT, SPEED MARKS | e— German Pilots Climbs 41,000 Feet and Frenchman Dashes 5,000 Kilometers—Trans-Atlantic Planes Remain Weather-Bound on Beach ot Old Orchard—Accidents Take Two Lives, Activities of the air the length and breadth of the United States as well as abroad held a foremost place in the public attention today. A refuelling endurance flight rec- ord of 172 hours 32 minutes and one second was established at Fort Worth, Texas, by Reginald L, Rob- bins and James Kelly, who brought their single motore: monoplane down yesterday after a cracked pro- peller threatened disaster. They land- ed with all the world’s records for sustained flight. Another refueling endurance flight was in progress fiom WicAita, Kansas, Owen Haug- land and Gene Shanky, varied the monotony of their flight by cruising to Minneapolis, Minn., where, after refueling their monoplane, inn Ranger,” in the air, they flew about the city. Fog and high wind frustrated the attempt of Herbert J. Fahy to set & solo endurance record at Los An- geles. He landed after 21 hours 17 minutes in the air. Ocean Flight Postponed At Old Orchard, Maine, two planes were poised.on the beach awaiting & change in the weather that would permit them to atart transatlantic flights. The French monoplane “Yellow Bird,” with a crew of three French- men, is headed for Paris. The Amer- ican plane “Green_ Flash,” manned by Rofer Q. Williams and Lewis A. Yancey, is bound for Rome, Two Fal Aviation news for the week-end ncluded two accidents which cost at least two lives and injury to sev- eral persons at Yuma, Aris. Harvey 8. Christofferson was killed and Er- | nest: Hen@urson probably- n- jured in the crash of an old “Jenny” plane. - Pilot Richard Perry was killed and two Miss Helen Do- manski and Jeseph Schweitser, were seriously injured when their plane dived to earth near Stirling, N. J. Two young Australian airmen, Lieutenant Moir and Flying Officer Owen, who had been missing since May 17, when they took off from Lima for Darwih, were found safe at the Cape Don Lighthouse, Queens- 1and, where. they have Yeen living since they wrecked their plane in & (Continued on Page 18) SOUTHERN TEXTILE STRIKE IS SETTLED ‘Agreement Is Signed and Workers Return to Old Jobs Today PROTEST REGISTRAR Elizabethton, Tenn., May 27 (»—Employment of T. Perry, Elizabethton, as a registrar for strikers returning to the Amer- fean Bemberg textile mills here, today, was™ made the basis of a protest by the work- ers who refused to register for re-employment. A mass meet- ing was immediately called to dlscuss the situstion. They al- leged Perry was one of the men who abducted Edward F. McGrady, personal represent. ative of William F. Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, several weeks ago. McGrady charged “commu- nists - are responsible for the outbreak today,” but added he had volunteered his services to & citizens’ committee to aid in quieting the strikers. Elizabethton, Tenn., May 27 UM— With peace established by the dis- senting factions in the Elizabethton textile atrike, industrial life had ap- proached normal today more than at any other time since the walkout two months age. Their old jobs open under the terms of an agreement reached by strike leaders and officlals of the American Bemberg and Glanzstoff textile mills, straggling groups of former workers came into Elisabeth- gton from their hiliside homes to register with E. T. Willson, newly engaged persemnel director of th: companies. Only “undesirables” ameong for- mer employes were to be barred from their former jobs, Dr. Arthur Mothwurf, president of the textile companies, announced in a state- ment yesterday. By *‘undesirables” he said he referred to those strikers whe had been guilty of violence and intimidation. Troops Still on Duty The continued presence of the sworn in as spe- the strike, was (Continued on Page Five) NEW BRITAIN HERAL JAMES KELLY. NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, REGINALD L. ROBBINS, Kelly and Robbins, by a sustained flight of 172 hours and 32 minutes in the airplane Fart’ Worth, smashed all -existing records for refueling flights, including that of the army plane “Question Mark” and landed with a crowd ot 20,000 people at the air field at Fort Worth, Tex., yea- terday. Already several other planes have startad or are preparing to start in an effort to break their record. H. S. Fraternity May Be Banned As Result of Dance Activities Faculty Hears Group Held Social in. Qutside Hall Advertised as Being Con- ducted by Alumni. At least one New Britain Senior High school fraternity is in danger of meeting with official disapproval unless it requires its alumni to dis- continue advertising their dances at inns and roadhouses as socials con- ducted by the alumni to this organ- ization.’ One of the administrative officers of the school said today that the dances conducted by the fraternifies in the school have been satisfactory. Members of the school faculty have been in attendance as patrons and patronemses and they have reported excellent conduct by the boys and girls. An interfraternity dance which was sponsored by the Alpha Delta Sigma, the Alpha Iota Epsilon, and ;o ‘Theta Sigma fraternities at the b recently was approved by the school authorities as a credit to the school as was & sorority dance by the Beta Mu sorority conducted at the same hall last Friday night. However, a dance held recently is said to have been sponsored by a small percentage of the fraternity's alumni but advertised as one con- ducted by the alumni. The attitude of the pupils at the school toward the administrative officers in regard to these dances has been very cooperative, Principal Louis P. Slade and Miss Millie G. McAuley, have declared on several occasions, but certain alumni mem- bers are still anxious to conduct these so-called ultra-collegiate dances which have on many occa- sions brought disgrace to the school in the past, they have been told., SAYS O'NEIL STOLE STRANGE INTERLUDE Miss Georges Lewys Asks $1,250,000 for Play Rights New York, May 27 (M—Charging that Eugene O'Neil, dramatist and playwright, stole the plot of “Strange Interlude” frcm a privately printed novel of her own entitled “The Temple of Pallas-Athenae” Miss Georges Lewys of New York itoday filed suit against him in the United States district court for $1.- 260,000. She also sought an in- Junction and an accounting. The theater guild, which produced the play, also are named in the » ‘Strange Interlude” was produced and published in 1928. Miss Lewys said her novel was privately pub- lished and circulated in 1924 when (Continued on Page 17) TUNNEY'S WIFE ON ROAD TO RECOVERY Berlin Doctor Reassures ex-Champion in Hur- ried Trip Brionl, Ttaly, May 27 (—Not only need Gene Tunney, retired cham- plon pugilist, have no fear for the life of his bride, the former Polly Lauder, but he may expect her to be fully recovered within a few weeks. Prof. Arthur Wolf Meyer, who operated on Mrs. Tunney for an ap- pendix abscess a month ago, in a statement issued from Tunney's se- cluded Villa Puntanaso yesterday, said the relapse Mrs. Tunney suffers ed last week was but a temporary condition from which she already had recovered. The statement of Prof. Meyer, who came all the way from Berlin at the urgent request of the former cham- pion, said: “The condition of the patient has not changed, except favorably, from what is was at my last examination leaving Brionl three weeks a; This relapse from which she has en- tirely recovered was caused by con- gestion due to temporary curtailment ot infiltration that has been going on since my operation four weeks ago today to remove a Douglass ab- #cess from the appendix. *“The rise in the patient’s tempera- ture is the usual thing in such cases and is nothing to be alarmed over. It is only a matter of a few weeks before she will be as well and sound as ever.” Dr. Meyer's report, which was made after a thorough examination at the villa yesterday morning, was said greatly to have relieved Tunney, who was represented as having been worried almost to distraction when his bride’s relapse appeared serious last week. Calls Berlin Doctor At that time, after various physi- cians had been called in, Tunney finally made an urgent request of Dr. Meyer in Berlin, who had per- formed the operation, to come back to Brioni, which is a secluded Adri- atic Isle, difficult of access. The professor reached the island at noon yesterday, motoring imme- diately to Villa Puntanaso, where the Tunneys have been living in seclu- sion, far from the social life of the large hotels on the Istrian coast, whiling away the days on their rather extended honeymoon. Dr. Meyer was accompanied by a woman assistant, Dr. Gertrude Lullies. STOVE-FACTORY BURNS Dighton, Mass., May 27.—(UP)— Beventy-five persons were out of work today following a fire which virtually destroyed the factory of the North Dighton Stove .company in North Dighton last night. Loss was estimated at upwards of $100,000. About 200 completed ranges were ruined by the flames. , First Pullman Conductor Observes 60th Wedding Date, Far From Cars Holden, Mass., May 27 ®—In a secluded part of this town, far from earshot of the strident call of ihe locomotive, Henry M. Moulton, 84, the first conductor of a Pullman car to run ‘out of Chicago, today was resting ‘up from the excitement at- teadart upon his celebration, with Mrs. Moulton, of the 60th anniver- sary of .their marriage. At 21, Moulton, who had left his native Brimfield sometime Dbefore, was a clerk at the old Adams House in Chicagp where George Pullman was then living. Pullman had met and liked young Moulton and he of- fered him a job as conductor on his first dining car running between Chi- cago and 8t. Louis. Later when the Chicago board of trade engaged a Pullman train for a trip to the Pacific coast, Moulton was given the assignment and handled the excursion, a rather novel one for those days, throughout the 13 weeks required for the trip. He served the Pullman company 13 years until ill heslth forced his retirement. One of the things the Moultons treasure most is a seven piece silver gervice presented them by the Pull- Town, County Cork, Ireland, became Mrs. Moulton. When Moulton gave up railroad- ing, he gave it up for good. MHe bought a farm here and his home is 80 far removed from the tracks of the Boston & Maine railroad that he cannot hear the famihiar whistle as the trains pass the town and he has not seen a Pullman car in years. Yesterday their 125 guests includ- ed their three sons, Dr. Allan T. Moulton of Boston, Harry 8. Moul- ton of Jacksonville, Fla., and Charles W. Moulton of Holden. Their fourth ilving child, Mrs. Maud Agnes Daley of Houston, Tex. was unable" to come, but wired her congratulations. IlEMPSEY FUGAZY [ FIRM DISSOLVED Former llumdat Champion m?mnM{gfgggpcdhun CONTRACT BNDED SATURDAY Brooklyn Sportsman’s Fallure to Provide Outdoor Arema Auto- matically Abrogates Agreement— Explains Detalls of New Project. New York, May 27 M — Jack Dempsey, former heavyweight champion, severed relations today with Humbert J. Fugazy, New York promoter, and announced he would promote boxing matches in con- junction with the Coliseum in Chi- cago starting next fall. Dempsey said his contract with Fugazy, entered into March 25, au- tomatically expired last Saturday upon the promoter’s failure to pro- vide him with an outdoor arena where outstanding matches could be staged in New York. In the two months Dempsey has been in part- nership with Fugazy, he failed to arrange a single bout. The former champion said his agreement with the Chicago Coli- seum where Jim Mullen is the box- ing promoter, calls for the staging of bouts there every two weeks during the fall and winter. At the same time, Dempsey said he would continue personal efforts to acquire both indoor and outdoor arenas. in New York. Fugazy's signing with Dempsey as a partner in the promotion of major fistic shows was built on the belief that the combine could lease the Polo Grounds, home of the New York Giants, for outdoor shows, Dempsey said. The Madison Square Garden corporation, headed by Willlam F. Carey, who joined with Dempsey in staging the heavyweight match between Jack Sharkey and Young Stribling in Miami Beach last winter, not only rented the Polo Grounds for the summer, but tied up the Yankee Stadium, as well, Dempsey stressed the fact that he had no personal differences with Fugazy and was merely following out the provisions of his contract with the Garden's chief promotion- al rival here. He said his new plans did not include any ring comeback on his part. Fugazy, surprised when informed of Dempaey's statement by the As- sociated Press, sald he “didn't now a thing about ft.” e It can’t be,” the promoter said. ‘Dempsey’s contract with me can't expire. There are provisions in the agreement, but the time limit is set at June 1. Dempsey said Fugazy would be informed of his action by his law- yers. TARIFF VOTE NEAR UNDER PRIOR RULE Congress Hopes for Early Vacation—Deadlock Threatens Plan Washington, May 27 —Congres- sional leaders today had two good reasons to hope for an early start on an all-summer vacation, and one to fear that their plan would be de- layed. ‘Their hope rested on the prospect of votes tomorrow on the census- reapportionment bill in the senate and the tariff measures in the house. Their fear was caused by the dead- lock between the senate and house farm bill cenferees over the export debenture plan. Tarift Vote Nears The house is speeding toward a vote on the tariff bill at 3 p. m. to- morrow, under the special rule which gives priority to consideration of amendments from the ays and means committee and has operated successfully thus far in blocking ali efforts to make changes not approv- ed by that group.. The tariff bill procedure is being expedited further by operating under the parliamentary method of consid- ering amendments as a committee of the whole.. Before the vote on pas- sage of the bill is taken, the house will abandon that status and be call- €d upon to act upon the amendments more formally, but they will be con- sidered then all together. One opportunity will be offered to Representative Garner of Texas, the democratic leader, to move for re- committal of the bill to the. ways and means committee, with instructions to substitute for the flexible provis- ions giving the president power to chance rate, a proposal to set up a tarift fact finding board responsiblc solely to congress. He does not ex- pect his proposal to command a ma- 2ority of the house, but looks to the senate to repeal the flexible pro- vision, at least. The senate still had before it to- day the most sharply contested amendment proposed during its con- sideration of the bill to provide for the taking of the 1930 census and reapportionment of the house—the change sponsored by Senator Sackett (Continued on Page 11) 150 Persons Absndon Alaskan Steamer Seattle, May 37 (M .— The steamship Aleutian struck a projecting rock in Uyak Bay on the jagged coast of Kodiak Island, Alaska, yesterday and sank after 15 passengers and 135 members of the crew had abandoned her and been picked up by the Burveyor. a coast nd geodetic survey ship. The Surveyor with the 150 survivors aboard today was plowing through heavy seas to Seward 300 miles northeast and Uyak Bay, BANKERS PREPARING TO 1SSUE NEW BILL But Notes Will Not Be Circulated for Weeks Although the New Britain banks often carry as much as a half mil- lion dollars in surplus cash and oc- casionally more, it® will .be a long time before the new bank notes which have been described in the Herald several times, will be in cir- culation to any great extent in this city, according to local bankers. The new bills will be issued July 1, and will measure 2 1-2 by € inches. They will be apportioned pro rata by the federal reserve banks. The New Britain supply will come from New York and will be released gradually until the old bills have disappeared from circulation. The old bills will not be with- drawn from ecirculation at once, neither will there be any effort to dump a large amount of new bills on the market. Bankers are of the opinion that the new bills will find their way to the market only as the old ones are withdrawn from circu- lation. Two important reasons are given among others for the chinge. One is the great amount of money the government will save in paper by the change in size; another is the de- mand for a more convenient sized bill because of changing styles in wallets, The new bills will be printed in all denominations and will be placed in (Continued on Page 17) MAN UNDER ARREST STORY BY GIRL Antonio Spina Said to Have Assauited Child, Aged 13 Antonio 8pina, 33, of 21 Pine- hurst street, was to be turned over to the Plainville authorities this afternoon for arraignment in court on the charge of indecent assault, following an investigation into a story told to Lieutenant Rival by a 13 year old girl, who was brought to police headquarters by a local physician. According to the girl, she accom- panied Spina in an automobile to Crooked street, Plainville, last night, and submitted to his ad- vances. Accompanied by Miss Ruth E. Bristoll, woman probation offi- cer, and Detective SBergeant McCue, the girl this morning pointed out the scene of the occurrence. Spina said he was married but his wife lives in Europe. He said he has no children. The girl was held by the police and her sobs could be heard throughout the cor- ridors this afternoon. Her father, who accompanied her and her brother to the police station with the physician early this morning, threatened to kill Spina when he heard her story. WHEAT GOES BELOW $1, BREAKING ISSUES Stocks Tumble $2 to $12 a Share in Re- action New York, May 27 M—The stock market again broke wide open today, scpres of issues tumbling $2 to $12 a share, many breaking through the low levels reached in last Wednes- day’s drastic collapse. Predicyions of a severe scarcity of money during the mid-year shifting of balances, d another break in the wheat market, carrying prices telow $1 a bushel for the first time in 15 years, caused the heavy sell- ng. Marry Near Midnight In Office of Lawyer As the bells of the town clocks were tolling the hour of 11 Saturday nig] he law of - fices of Nair & Nair were trans- formed as Attorney David L. Nair, acting in his capacity as justice of the peace, performed a ceremony which united a cou- ple in wedded bliss. Charles Michelson, a store manager, of Newington was the bridegroom and Miss Hazel May McGeary, a typist of 37 Hungerford street, Hartford, was the bride. They ‘were attended by Miss Margaret Larson and John H. Pemerey, !Mrs. Evangeline Lindbergh, MONDAY MAY 27, 1929 TWENTYPAGES 3 "lr.a,, Sy W | ..a,; L 2] b ™ ATH Decision Covers Dispated Mascle s Bl o s s INDIANS BROUGHT ACTION Justice Sanford Decides Use of Ad- journment Means Final End of Soasion, Not Recesses — Decision Has Widespread Effects. Washington, May 27 UP—Pocket vetoes by the president were de- clared by the supreme court today to be effective in killing legislation sent to him in the closing days of a mession even though it was not the last session of a congress. The decision covers the Muscle 8hoals bill, pocket vetoed at ihe close of the first session of the last congress. Kills Bills Automatically The pocket veto results when @& president fails to sign a bill within a certain time after congress adjourns. ‘This action is effective in preventing such & measure from going on the statute books. ‘The court asserted that congress must be in session when the preai- dent returned a bill with his disap- proval, and when congress by ad- journment prevents this, the bill which he would return if the house in which it originated was in ses- sion must be considered dead. The president would not be authorized to return & bill with his disapproval to an employe of either house, the court said. ‘Adjournment” as used in that section of the constitution which provides that bills sent to the president by congress shall become law unless returned to congress with his veto within 10 days, Sundays ex- cepted, provided congress by *ad- journment” had not prevented the return, The house took the view that the word judiciary committee “ad- (Continued on Page 17) MORROWS PREPARE FOR WEDDING DATE Ambassador Back for Ceremony—Day Still Secret Englewood, N. J., May 27 ®— Ambassador Dwight W. Morrow and his family were gathered at the Morrow estate here today in prepar- ation for the wedding of his daugh- ter, Miss Anne, to Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh. The date is yet {o be announced. Newspaper guesses have set the event for mid-June. When the ambassador arrived home yesterday on vacation from Mexico City he smilingly declined to divulge any information. He would not discuss reports that Plutarco Elias Calles, who was president of Mexico when Lindbergh first met the Morrows, would attend the wed- ding. Meet Ambassador at Train Mrs. Morrow and their youngest daughter, Constance, met Mr. Mor- row at the train at Newark yester- day. The ambassador posed for photographs and the party then drove home. 8hortly after their ar- | a string of limousiness passed through the wall of mystery main- tained about the Morrow estate by the Englewood police. Presentiy Colonel Lindbergh and his mother, drove up in the colonel’s car, and soon afterward came an unidentified clergyman and four other men. Colonel Lindbergh and his moth- er left two hours later. The train on which the ambassador reached Newark was “The S8pirit of 8i. Louis,” named after the plane in which Lindbergh' flew to Paris. An escort of 280 Mexican soldiers escorted Ambassador Morrow to the border when he left Mexico City. Two bodyguards were on hand to receive him on his arrival in New- ark, but he waved them aside, 1,000 Invitations Ordered Invitations to the wedding al- ready have been ordergd and ap- proximately 1,000 will be mailed to prominent persons in the United States and Mexico. Wedding gifts and letters pour in daily. One admirer sent a silver wedding ring, another offered a suckling pig. Many of the letters are congratulatory, some offer a vice and a few warn that there still is time to cancel the wedding and 80 avert the disadvantages of wed- lock, Three Drift Through Cecil Newton Mahan, Paintsville, Ky., boy, six and one-half years old, was convicted of slaying an eight- year old playmate, and sentenced to the reformatory until he reached 21 years. A higher court judge, how- ever, held that the jury had erred in its decision and that the lower court judge had no power to issue such a sentence, EARTHQUAKE FELT IN EUROPE CITIES London and Italy Report Shock—Hawaii Feels Tremors London, May 27 UM—A violent earthquake was recorded at the Kew observatory beginning at 10:15 p. m. Greenwich meridian time, last night. The epicenter was estimated to be 4,800 miles distant, but the initial impulse was not clear enough to give any indication as to its exact direc- tion, Felt in Hawail Honolulu, May 27 M—Thomas A. Jaggar, government volcanologist, seismogaphic shock at 12:17 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The disturbance appeared to have been 4,100 miles distant, possibly in Japan, the Solo- mon Islands or Southern Mexico. Italy Faenza, Italy, May 27 (UP)— Earth tremors beginning at mid- night (6 p. m. Sunday E. 8. T.) and lasting two hours were recorded on the seismological instruments of Rafael Bendandi's observatory te- day. Ofticials at the observatory said that after careful examination of the instruments, it was evident a catas- trophic earthquake had occurred at a distance of approximately 5,590 miles from Faenza. YALE YOUTH FALLS OUT HOTEL WINDOW Leigh Mnrlow, Banker’s Son, in Drinking Party With Friend Baltimore, Md., May 27 (UP) —Two Yale students, exonerat- ed in the death yesterday of Leigh Miltz Marlow, 21, Yale student who fell from the eighth floor of the Belvedere hotel, were held today in $500 bail on a Volstead law charge. They were accused in connec- tion with a pint of alleged gin seized in the room where Mar- low and the others had held a party. Nine empty bottles were found in the room and turned over to federal dry agents, Coroner Reinhardt gave a verdict of accidental death and ordered Marlow’s body held at the morgue until his father, C. Thomas A. Marlow, banker of Helena, Mont., reaches the city. Raltimcre, May 27 (P — Leigh Miltz Marlow, 21, son of C. Thomas A. Marlow, Helena, Mont., banker (Continued on Page 17) Night In Boat, Land Safely on Quincy Harbor Isle Quincy, Mass., May 27 P—A long battle against wind and tide in a leaky milboat in Quincy harbor was rewarded early today when the three occupants of the craft, a gi and two youths, made safe landing on Nut Island. The three, Miss Edith Duncan, Paul Hunter and David Clff, all 18 and residents of Houghs Neck, were numbed and fatigued from their ex- ertions. Miss Duncan was clad only in a swimming suit and a light wrap when she joined the youths at Wol- laston Beach Sunday afternoen for what was te have been a short sail. All went well until they lest con- trol of the boat @ Stony Beach, Hull, and the craft started to driit about the harbor. Hunter and CHiff attempted to hold a course with the aid of a breken oar while Miss Duncan helped to bail out the beat which constantly shipped water. A man who saw their plight off Pemberton Peint early in the evening called coast guardsmen who, in the growing dusk, were unable to locate the beat, despite a search of several ‘heurs. When the three finally made Nut Island the news of their had been spread so widely that the shore was dotted with moterists who sought to take & hand in the ssarch while a number of yachtsmen had reported the registering of a strong [ ba Bridgeport, May 27 UP—Atter deliberation of little more than sde hour ‘a jury ‘today-found'. (Bpirits) Feltovio guilty of - gree murder. He was nnm Judge Isaac Welfe to dis by ing during the week of July.3§. . " Feltovic trembled as - ke “No” to Judge Wolte's query &8 whether he had anything te before sentence should be He stood up calmly hear the sentence, but did at the judge and sat down again before the judge had barely finished speaking. Bhortly before. ‘Assistant Blate’s Attorney Lorin Willls clemsed: killing of Jacobs as a * i i t s 5 g%illi! ever removed frommoclety." Family Hears The killer, who has but shown any great emotion the trial, listened 'with interest 1o the arguménts of the state and.| counsel, . His aged mother and. father and several of his | and sisters were preseat court ‘room. 80 crowded was the..co leave the room. Afer court was apened, u‘m vic was taken from the privewgms |pen. arguments _were immedistely started by Mr. Willis. In ‘opening’ for the state the ag- sistant state's attorney declaved that thn task about to be is “one of & serious and @ and one which It qlwsys: ‘breught face. te. fhos m‘s 1 Telling the jury tm it was trouhled with . amy. of the defense, the m . attorney launched into Nl ll”' ment, Responding to a telephons oalf shortly before ¢ o'clock afternoon, Officer John M. went to a house at 15 Noble to which he was directed by Mi Gomes, 35, who lives there, found a pool of blood on the and a trail of blood on-the After he completed his hmnuui- the officer arrested Gomes Roderick, 45, and Manuel m alias Fernando, 37, both of the-saie. address, on the same mm Roderick, in polic accused Rodriguez of mm. lh with & pocket knife in the right arm" just above the wrist, o' the blood, but Rodrigues denied charge. The officer was unable find the knife, despite a search ‘f The cause of the fight a mystery, despite the efferts. Prosecuting Attorney Woods Judge Baxe to determine it. Liebler testified that the cousins and the fight started ever:, woman who lives in the trio, however, denied was involved. three stitches taken in the and was positive that wielded the knife, but clalmed that he was punched ia the.

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