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today. Met ot the iaformation in the pehedule concerns’ the June gradusting clems. All students have been aaked to make the last few 'weeks of the year count for just as much s possible as the marks for all aeniors will close on June 14, & week hefore the close of -scheel. Gradtiation practice will be held during the week of June 17-20 Graduating students will not be al. lowed to take part in practice uatll Wil their subjects are completed, On Monday, Tuesday and Thure- { Memorial Service to Ocean Flight Victims Washington, June 3 UP—Pay- ing tribute to others who tried but failed: at the foat that brought them fame, Amelis Ear- hart, Bert Acosta and Clarence Chamberlin, transatlantic fiers, are to lead an' air parade over the Statue of Liberty tomorrow in a memorial service arranged by the Nastional Broadcasting company. The . annoyncement said & group of about 20 planes will take off from Roosevelt field at $:30 p. m., fiy oyt beyond the coastline, and at a given signal shut off their motors while & minister and priest carried in one of the planes read a brief me- meorial service, Chamberiin will drep a floral piece in the shape of a mene- Sier. The service will be heand fn the radio pickup trem one of || Here's the site of the “canvas White House” ng week-ends this summer. The camp, the planes, and relayed themos over a natiepal network. day of this week rehearsals of the |\ ‘cast and chorus for Class Night will be held in the Academic butlding. On Friday evening the Senior club. will meet in the. auditerium of the ‘Walput Hill schooel. Every day next week, the Class Night events will be reheased in both buildings. On Friday, Jume 14, the last classes for presumptive sraduates will be held, although stu. dents ndt having tinished their sud- Jects will continue with their regular work. In the afterneon. the Class Night cast and chorus wiil hold Tehearmis in the auditorium of the Central Junior high school, Monday, June 17, will see all pre- sumptive graduates, marshals and the achool orchestra gathered in the auditorium of the Y. M. T. A. B. so- clety for a rehearsal of graduation exercises. Ip the auditorium of the Central Junfor high achool on Tuesday, June 18, the Class Night chorus and the cast will hold a practice at 8 o'clock A graduation pxercise practice will @130 be held in the “Tab's” hall on ‘Waednesday, June 19, with all pre. sumptive graduates, marshals and the high school orchestra taking part, School will close Thursday noon, June 20, and the high achool gradu- ating exercises will be held on Fri- day evening at 7 oclock in the Y. M. T. A. B. soclety hall, City Items Ofticer James M. McCue reported & slight collision yesterday on West Main street, near Lincoln streot, Kenneth E. Wallen of 256 Maple street was pulling away from the curb in his car and George T. Biel- man of 240 Buell street was driving west on West Main street. The fen- ders on both - ¢ars were damaged and the officer found no cause fer police action, Dr. Franklin R, Coomba of this eity was ap) oA ITINE 1 islative comgiittes at the meeting of the Conngcticut branch ef the Na- tional Nociety. of Naturepathic phy- sicians held in New Haven yestor- day. re will be & regular meeting of the junjor members of Court Colum. bas, Catholic Daughters of America at the K. of C. hall at Franklin square at 7:30 o'clock tonight. Miss Dora Heyne of 17¢ Cherry street and Otto Beck of 123 Wallace street were married last Wednesday by Rev. Martin W. Gaudian of £t erman Lutheran church. Both Mr. and Mrs. Beck were born in Germany. The Italian Book store has return. ed to city court to collect the bal- ance of a judgment allowed in court Jecently. A judgmernt of $563.75 was rendered against Martin Kam- inski but $377.52 still re mains un- paid, it is claimed. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS [téker; nurses in attendance, GIRLS WILL STAGE PLAY “T0 REPLACE STOLEN CASH l--l School Studemts to Re- “plenish Fusds With Production of “Caste” Jume 13 Christopher Moriey and his asso- ciates are not going to be the only ones ta cash in on the revival of plays made famous in the 1860s, if the students. at the New Britain State Normal school have anything to do with it. Wednesday evening, June 12, students of the school un- der the direction of Miss Louise Schmgh! will undertake to repro- duce “Caste,” the once famous play written by Thomas W. Robertson and a play which has been the tavorite starring vehicle for many dtage luminaries. Not only will It be the revival of & once famous success, but “Caste” will. also- serve to undo a robbery of the school safe which was commit- ted several months ago. Part of the money taken had belonged to the atu- dent year book fund, part had been paid in as luncheon money, and an- other part was budgeted for other student interests. Roles in the production will be taken by seven girls of the achoel, girls playing male leads. Miss Cath- erine Callahan of New Britain, will be one of the cast. Other girls who will play men are Miss Beatrice Dodson of Hartford and Miss M garet Kimberly of Goshen. Girls who will play female roles are Ruth Jones of Bolton, Pauline Clochezsky of West Hartford, Evangeline DeNicola of Hartford and Beatrice Colla of Hartford. WELL BABY CONFERENCES The schedule for the Well Baby conferences ‘oonducted by the Vis- ing Nurse sssociatigs for the week will be as follows: 5 Tuesday—47 Ellis street, North- end achoel, velunteer assistant, Mrs. J, C. Whitteker; nurses in attend- ahce, Miss Anna Ahern and Mrs. Helen Meehan, . ” Wednesday—53 Center street: vol- unteer assistant, Mrs. E. V. Pom- eroy; nurses in attendance, Miss Anna Ahern and Miss Anna Miskey. Thursday — Washington achooi; volunteer assistant, Mrs. J. C. Whit- Miss Anna Ahern and Miss Mildred Kane, Friday—East street school; vel. unteer asslitant, Mrs. H. H. Tayn. tor; nurses in attendance, Miss Anna Abern and Miss Barbara Reach. Conferences are not held on rainy days. All weighing confer. ences are held from 2:30 te 3:30 P. m. A doctor is present at all con- ferences from 3:30 to 4:00 p. m. The examining physician # Dr, L. B. Blysz. fUV QILIISSV'ID AIVHIR avau Sewer Explosions Shake Ottawa Exflodou ofuwernl Mmfl-fl htermittentl several houvs spread terror and uudgmtwin Cnlh,tniutaneuolwhflmmm At the for pis top the NEW BR!TMN DAIL flERM.D ‘MONDAY JUNE 3, 1929. built by United States Marines i capital. of fishing. Herbert L. Johnson, Who Denounced His Ves- try and Rebelled at Rules, Going Abroad. Detroit, June 3 UM—The opposi- tion of ‘& church vestry to a pastor who denounced its members and his congregation from the pulpit was believed today to have forced the resignation of the Very Rev. Herbert L. Johnson, dean of 8t Paul's Episcopal cathedral. Dean Johnson . announceq his resignation yesterday from his pul- pit and left with Mrs. Johnson in the afternoon for' New York frog where he will sail for a year of study abroad. The vestry, after a special meeting, announced accep- tance of the resignation in order that Dean Johnson might be given this “opportunity” to go abroad. Beveral weeks ago Dean Johnson, who came to Detroit in 1926 from Phoenix, "Ariz., publicly denounced his vestry as of “capitalistic charac- ter” at the church congress of the Protestant Episcopal church at Ann Arber, Mich. He charged that he had been ordered not to sermonize on sex, nor to preach prohibition “when I know six of my nine ves- trymen have cellars,” and was pre- vented from inviting a speaker of the American Federation of Labor to address the cathedral congrega- tion. In his sermons since then, he has deait with disemination of birth centrel and. while declaring himselt opposed to prohibition, sald “Any man whose hobby it was to preach prohibition from this pulpit would find the pressuré so strong that he weuld be forced to cloge his mouth or leave.” WESLEYAN PLANS ALUMNI EXERCISES Gradmls {0 Gabe Jme 1 0id Timers Are Bxpecad Middletown,. June 3 (P—Wesley- an's annual alumni day, to be cele- brated as part of the 97th com- mencement on June 15 will probably be one of the most eventful in years. according to reports received by the university today from numerous for- mer clasees. ‘The oldest class expected will be the graduates of 1872. The '79 clam known as the “baby silver grays” will hold its fiftieth reunion. The '79 graduates include Daniel A. Markham of Martford and Bishop Burt of Clifton Springs, N. Y., The 1904 class expects to carry the hon- ors of the member travelling the longest distancy as Edgar Mac- Naughten of ris, France, will journey to Middietown for the an- nual reunion. The 1928 graduates will be headed by Art Schultz of New York city and will fill the role of i its. A supper and sing will close the festivities of alumni day after which the attendance cup will be given to the class which produces the great- est number of members at the re- union. Dwelling Destroyed In New Haven Blaze New Haven, June 3 P—Fire early this morning caused a loss of ap- proximately $10,000 in a two story dwelling house at 220 Whalley ave- nue. The house is owned by Mrs. Rose Harris, who receatly bought the place. No one was in the house at the time of the fire and according to neighbors the tenants had been away for twe days. The fire caught in some unex- plained manner in the attic of the house and had burned through the reof before it was discovered. Shortly after the arrival of fire apparatus, (ke flames broke through the roof of the house lighting up the district for several blocks. PORTUGUESE LODGE MEETS New London, June 3 ‘M—The an- nual convention of the supreme lodge of the Portuguese fraternity of the U. 8. A, convened here this morning for a two day convention with 100 delegates present from various parts of New England. At the annual banquet Supreme Presi- dent Joseph Carreira of New Bed- ford, Prof. Francisco Pinol ef Con- necticut college and Mrs. Mary in the Fork variety of fish, Forced Resignation of Pastor Seen As Detrolt Dean Leaves Suddenly PHILADELPHIA GANG WARS CLAIM TWO Borrowed Auto Target—Gang- ster Found Dead in Road Philadelphia, June 3 (UP)—Two men are dead today as a result of outbreaks of gang warfare in vari- ous parts of the city yesterday. Returning”in a borrowed automo- bile from a day's outing in New Jersey, Harry J. Howett, 54, was fatally shot and Harry Rodenbaugh, his son-in-law, scriously wounded when a gangster's car opened fire on them on Ridge avenue, in the northwest section of the city. Three other members of Howett's famfly, one of them an infant, .n the rear seat and escaped inji " Police learned that the Howett family borrowed the aulomobile from an alleged bootlegger, Albert Silver. According to police, Silver admitted' that gunmen had shot at him before and that the assailants probably thought he was in the car when they fired. William J. Sheer, 30, said to be a gangster with a long police record was found shot to death in the road an exclusive Germantown resi- dential section. He had evidently been “taken for a ride,” police said. A third gang shooting flared up in the old tenderloin and two bystand- ers were wounded. Two machines stopped on opposite sides of Race street ncar Eighth, the occupants opening fire on each other with pump guns and automatics. One man was said to have slumped for- ward in one ot the cars, but police could not tell whether any had really peen shct. But two pedes- trians, Nellle Smith and Fred Schwizer, fell to the street. Both were shot in the leg. PROVIDENCE MAN FINED Torrington, June 3 (# — Charles Hoffman of 112 Chadbrown street, Providence, R. 1., was fined $200 with costs of $397.61 in city court to- day on a charge of traneporting in- toxicating liquor. SV QILAISSVI) ATVHIH avay Here's relief and comfort for cry- ing, fretful, feverish babies or chil- dren that you don’t need to urge or command them to take. They love the delicious taste of Fletcher's Castoria. Your doctor will tell you it's absolutely safe, so you can give It as freely and as often as nceded to kecp your children happy and well. A few drops is all it takes to quiet fretful, feverish, colicky ba- bies; relieve their biliousness, gas on stomach, constipation, et soothe them to sledp in a jiffy. For like disorders in older children, you simply use a little larger dose of the same reliable Fletcher's Cas- toria. Don't use grown-folks’ medi- cine; with babies or children, spe- cialists say. Ninety per cent of them recommend Fletcher's Castoria #nd thirty years of steadily increas- ing popularity proves they're right. To protect you from imitations, the Fletcher signature is on every bot- Itle of genuine Fletcher's Castoria. P s VAR N U ASTORIA NEA thmzton Bureau where l-‘uhermnn Herbert Hoover will go during ictured above as construction started, is being ountains of Virginia, not far from the national Here the president will go during the torrid months to indulge his favorite pastime The streams in the barren, isolated region have been freshly stocked with a {BILL T0 OPERATE MUSCLE SHOALS 1S GIVEN 70 SENATE (Continued From First Page) governmental functions, we can as an incident thereto, develop both cheap watef power and cheap elvo- tricity and give them to the people at prices that will demonstrate the possibilities of the proper uses of our flowing streams, Sees Occasion to Rejoice “If, in carrying on these proper governmental functions, we incident- ally Jighten the burdens of the home and cheapen the necessary and es- sentia] clements in manufacturing, we should rejoice rather than despair.” The report recalled that investi. gations of the Shoals project were responsible for the inquiry now belug made by the federal trade commis- sion into power companies and charging that these corporations have “undertaken, through the in. tricate and secret control of the most human activities, to build up & public sentiment in favor: of their viewpoint and in opposition to the retention by the government of Muscle Shoals and other similar properties. Millions Spent For Newspapers “Millions of dollars have been spent, as is showa by that investiga- tion,” it asserted. “for the ptirchase of newspapera for the employment of collcge professors and school teachers, and in the election of pub- lic officials. “In the face of the terrible iis- closures made by the federal trade commiasion, the fermer trust is mifl active. It demands that the na- tional resources of the country shall be turned ever to private corpora- tions for private profit. It insists on capitalizing for its own profit. the property of the people.” Washington, June 3 P—Congres- siona! leaders expect to bring their plans for a summer recess closer to vealization this week by fulfilling at least two of the administration wre-vacation requirements. Spurred by th prices below the del expect enough export debenture ad- vocates in the senate to join with administration supporters ia voting for pllm!nllu that plan from the chamber's farm relisf bill to permit final enactment of the legislation in time to offaet this year's ci House Takes Up Census On the house'side cr the capitol one hour was alletted today for the discussion of a special rule intended 1o expedite cousideration of the bill to provide for the 1930 census and reapportionment of its membership. to enable a conference committee te begin—and possibly finish—! tiations for adjustment of difference which may develop betw the two chambers over this legislation, in- cluding probably a rejection by the house of the eengte provision to place the 100,000 cenus enumera- tors under civil service. That will leave the leaders with only one major problem to dispose of—the fixing of & date for senate action én the tariff bili—before they will be able to decide whether they can move successtully and with ad- ministration approval for a short re- cesg.or a long one. That question has been put sside pending clarifi- cation of the legisiative situation, in view of the opposition to an all- summer vacation expressed by se: eral influential senators. Expect Debeature Agrecment Return of the export debentu. issue to the senate this week was re- garded as practically certain in view of the progress of the joint confer- ence committee working to bring the the house into conformity. It has been taken for granted since the ne- gotiations were resumed after the deadlock over the debenture issue that the senate group would yield on that point and recommend elim-. ination over the oppositien of Presi- dent Hoover by a majority of three after a lengthy controversy. Whilo the house was called upon to begin discussion of the census. reapportionment bill today, the sen- ate stili had before it the proposal of Senator Borah, republican, Jdaho looking to governmental regulation of commission merchants dealing in perishable farm products, with the resolGtion of Senator Nye, republi- r- “Cfiu_ L funl tf / Are you living in a house that is owned by some- one else . not yourself? . just collecting worthless rent re- ceipts month after month . . . aiding others, If you are . . . stop & minute . . . think. Does each month see you no farther on the road to independence . . . that day when you can say to yourself and the- whole wide world “That Home Belongs to Me!” When every cent that See Classification 83 in Today's . 'HERALD CLASSIFIED SECTIO A vote on the bill is expected in time | farm bills passed by the senate and | can, North Dakota, for repral of the nations! origins provision of the im- migration law ready for considera. tion mext, The Nye, resalution is intended to carry out the last of the five recol wendations placed before the special session by President Hoover, whe announced his opposition to the new national origins immigration quots basis at the time he issued his pro- clamation to put it into effect mext month. Advocates of the plan, head- ed by Senator Reed, republican, Pennsylvania. us tion supporter. BROWN PIA Providence, R. 1.. June 3 M—Iu auguration of Dr. Clarence A. Bar- bour of Rochester, N. Y., as the tenth president of Browa University will take place Friday, October 18. according to announcement made to- day by Theodore Francis Green of the inauguration committee. Dr. Barbour succeeds President W. H. P. Faunce, who will retire June 17 after 30 years as head of Brown. MAN DEAD OF WOUND Springfield, Mass., June 3 (P — | Kanenetz, 18, died in a hos- pital today from the effects of a wound inflicted accidentally yester- day when a companion, Ignatius Burke, was showing him a pistol in the attic of the Burke home in West Springfield. I! AT Vfl. VOll Associated Press Photo {No word has heen received of the fate of Maric Monsen Midthun, mis- | sionary, captured by Chines& pirates, " April 23, when they attacked the steamer Peking off Lungkow. t into it comes out. and with interest. s the joy of owning your own home. [t’s tlme foryoutoact . . . you owe it to your- our famil, at your oor . . . ity is knocking {urly knocking itin, Wake up . . . buy now . . . it’s up to'you. Turn now to the Classified section of the Herald. There you will find hundreds of the “Best Buys” in New Britain homes. Get started toda Y.