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News of the World By Associated Press Average Daily Circulation For Week Ending 1 5’945 March 8th ... B wm‘fl “03 T \'Lh NEW BRITAIN HERA'! NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, FRIDAY, . ESTABLISHED 1870 K | BOWERY BISHOP DECLARES PRICE THREE CENTS EVERETT BATTLES Police Win Slot Machine Victory I]AY RESIGNS FROM PECTED $300,000 BLAZE; | Through Federal Court Decision; SCHOL COMMITTEE INRgNgaAlflsfihg fi:IGSHwfiY INN SCORESOVERCOE| Selzures Found to Be Within Law AFTER FOUR YEARS IS WIPED OUT BY FLAMES . NEW YORK IS ‘BETTER CITY" - UNDER PROHIBITION REGIME o o 0 e Loy J"d‘i{“dfi"éh‘é“firi‘i'c"fw?'ifiof,'lfif"&il";‘nu‘lfv“ i'fifim‘r'“e':Gompnoller tads Last Meet LOBIAEAE AN fl[mm,m suspmg Fire Chief Darhy 4l []ENY JEWE[ THFFT Constable Fuller Con- 1 of Mint Vending Devices Because ing of Education Board | [ TFumes Early Today ~l0t machines m\r]n r the statute vinced Place Was of Gambling Element. This Alternoon | (EIGHT CITIES SEND HELP |5iizemiet the Lcoping ot gumbiin T0 SPECTACULAR BLAZE £t i o™ ot CANDIDATE FOR VACANCY Nigdzyiecki and Duntz Dey Soaked With Oil Be- _ ' Connection With Robbery | fore Fire Bug Applied e avoesuns, BOTH UNDER HEAVY BONDS Torch in Night. The issue was tried in federal | from seizin to Serve—David MARCH 14, 193).—THIRTY-TWO PAGES | *“Hopes to God” Law Will Never Be Repeal- ed—Rev. Mr. White Says Connecticut Stu- dents in High Schools Doing Less Drinking. Official “Prompter”? | Yolin writte Burrows rcads as . oure GEORGE B. TAYLOR IS caus the not be enjoined ot machines os the| niotion to disnriss is | ‘('llll‘l' t issuc on al- legations ot petitioner that the comes to tl shaw ts shoud to why court on the application of the Royal | petitioner. Th Mint Co. seeking to have an injunc- | denicd. tion issued restraining Police Chicf William C. Hart and Prosecutor Jo- | seph G. Woods from further seizure | machines n question are not gan of the petitioner's mint machine. [bling devices under Section 6 Several police court actions preceded [and 6477 of the General Statutes of the move in the district court. ' the te, prohibiting the keeping Chief Hart, Prosccutor Woods and |or ‘possession of such devices when Licut. W. P. McCue were summoned | ‘used for gaming’ or ‘used for the |to court for the hearing several!|purpose of gamblir e | weeks ago. Opposition to the in- |the offense under ei |carly today destroyed the Merrimac [Junction order was voiccd by repre- [ the us is made | Chemical company plant at South |Sentatives of Corporation Counsel J. |chines by pluyers. Everett with a loss of $300,000, H. Kirkham's offi A similar ac-| “I am satistied from the iremen from eight cities fought the | tion is now pending in New Haven | that the petitioner's machines come i flames, with frequent explosions and | county. | = isonous fumes endangering their| The decision, | (Continued on Page Two) |Seven Buildings Destroyed—Much at Berlin Construc- | Engincer Nearby Property Barely Saved as a5 tion Co. Plant, Wind Blows Burning Embers and Tea Clear Across to East Boston Side | Announces Desir | | ent | | { Admit Being in Behidere But Main- | Lack — of Booze, Not Religion, Beat st “Al” Smith, Callahan: Says—Mrs. Peabody De-| cides to Let Whispered‘ Promptiné Rgmail) in Water in Farming- of River—Whercabouts of Men in e Dooms <. Mahoney Already in Race, ¢ Factory Still Uncertain, tain Their Mission Was Honest— | Structure ton, Popular Roadhouse . —Owners in Jail for Vio- lation of Prohibition Law suring Contest at Primary. | Everett, Mass, Mar. 14 (P—Tire Cotncident. wit art of Loot Belonged to Iriend today of School Committeem liam H. Day, Georg Taylor of 44 | | Mason Drive announced that he would he a candidate for the place. | This makes certain that there will a contc the office sin | David C. Mahoney has already an- nounced hims a candidate. NEW TRIAL Tl]l]AY ‘Held for Murder of Actress in New York Two Years Ago T0 DIE WEEK OF MARCH 31 Was Last Ever, With David Dudley Body Was W Ehaliit il e \ Wil of Little Family. evidence Thwarte stubborn {wiecki of this Duntz of Plainvil no connecetion w clry robbery at the ¥. Little of Wednesday night, were with neing forced to rc lough the story he has fold dovs not, they say, ring true to them. Both Held in §5,000 Bail Arraigned in police the technical the p ©y with 1 at insistence cvery hy the Niedz- William | had jew- memorandum of e for ) Record of Committee. the homi Brighton the police the probab ase Du even buildings, three and four | IN MAINE FLAMES ment. Chief Philip Ham, veteran chief of the Iverett fire department, \Loss o Court House at Least $250,000—2 Men Hurt ASSISTANCE SUMMONED| Boston department, and five other men were overcome and 100 fi Hancock County Building's $25,000 On Water| men were affected by the sulphur- Supply Leaves Half of Re: ces | $1,00 —LKeeper in Charge. 10 ¥ lity of | cven } ==——————u ¢ that Mrs. Henry W. lown above, of Beverly, prompted dry women ap- in the liquor hearings ashington in their testimony ‘Washington, March 14 (A—*"Little * 01d New York,” as they frequently refer to it on Manbattan Tsland, to- day entered tt picture of the liouse judiciary committec's prohi- Wiition hearing and one who has scen | et o milieH (o7} tlie nisler. dotwallat wito | Y5 1200 DO Answer (et E Irift along with the rest of the mil- | li¢8ed to have Leen written into lions testified it was his opinion that | the record Bz Sheabodygfreg « 25 America fly ‘han wrppn |00 10 wlbimes Dednd Ry bigger and bi it aJso has grown | SIArP cared stenographer. better. The lights pecial Herald) Farmington, March 14 — Fire is believed to have been of destroyed the Col- Inn on the Farming- road shortly before this morning. An investiga- tion has been d by Farming- ton police and fire officlals in an cffort to uncover the person or per- sons responsible for the blaze. Constable Nathan Fuller and Fire . Lee Derby, who arrived at scene within seconds of each »out 6:45 o'clock, found the ont part of the building which was T |used as a dance hall, saturated with which P Niodg | both kerosene and fuel oil while od in | Picces of furniture which were car- " | ried out before the flames enveloped Afondayil ettt e R AT R ks U\I*‘L“ ilding, give proof that oil was | R s | poured on them. The constable and afternoon, neither had nised ”““1 the fire chief both expressed a def- required amount and the prospects inite opinion that the place had been |were that they would be unable to set afi ""‘l";”"”" icirelonse Scen By New Britain Men e illed The blaze was discovered by Har- | Chiet’ De ry Olson and Joseph Seledyn of New | Ellinge Britain, truck drivers, employed by and finally admitted, the police the W. H. Hall Construction Co. of t he was with Niedzwiceki New Britain, who saw volumes of Delvidere Wednesday night smoke issuing from the place as they which he steadfastly denied {w passing about 30 o'clock. day. He is d to have told the po- | They ran to a neighborhood house lice he met the local man at the| and telephoned in an alarm to the had dicd of natural causes but an |cd the school board official of his | oSt oM pointment early in | Farmington fire department. " | ple ' orvi ¢ evening, atter which they walk-| The firemen arrived about 6:45 autopsy revealed that she had been | p in in ce of ? b | 3 ed to Concord strc off | killed by a blow over the eyc. to the : faced which incendiary origin, Highway ves,” ton-Plainville | court charge Duntz stood 1 blank look on istant Prosccut M. Greenstein not guilty and til next 1,000, Mr. today breach in the | his face 5 Attor- entered requeste Monc Greenstein told 1c Traceski that a | charge may be the out- the investigation are making. continued v until next ‘ons fumes. Spreads to Yards . The fire spread to the repair the Boston Elevated sy jing a number of cars. Beacon Oil company | and the brick shops, station tracks of the clevated system threatened at the height of the blaze. Borne on a stiff wind, the smoke and fumes were carried towards the heart of the city and 300 familtes oh o'clock of | pen until ne E of W plea of continuan [ a | | I | along the at white | plant and were to Be Man Seen | burglary | erowth the police wiccki's ca court yester Iso in $1,000 bonds. Library Lost—Drain Whose Mur- of dered Tound Later was Without Service, | Near Middletown. Llsworth, Me., firemen were seriously rch (P—1"red death 14 (UP)—| New killed and two | w. York, March 14 Idel, under sentence burned during alfor the murder two years ago of | fire which destroyed Hancock county | Mrs. Iimma Harringlon, esl courthouse ecarly today. (l.l\ was denied a new trial by Judge Preliminary estimates indicated | Chaples Cam Nott, Jr, that the loss might reach 50,000, ; sdel had applicd for w trial lon the basis of newly discovered Jevidence which he claimed would ar him of the chary of murder The body of Mrs. Harrington was found Dec. 29, 1927, in the bath- |room of her upper west side apart- \mrm‘ At first it was thought she|announcing his intention. He inform- of were i actress, was last night by ant George C. E. M. Kiely | | a L WILLIAM H. DAY ster “ireman I 8 reman I Two other firemen, and George Iortie @ hospital wheie th in Peazey, Sulisbury Fred Fortier wer taken to ¥ were reported a serious condition from burns. he firemen who lost their lives were trapped on the sccond floor when the belfry crashed down | in fact | vester- Reached Agreement Over Curtis, city comptroller, forwarded | his resignation o the common coun- | il and the nt a letter to School | Board President Patrick 1% Kin cle o a Which Iave Proven | | ¥ may sparkle just as brightly John Callahan, the chaplain at the | Tombs prison, an amazing chang has taken place. He told the com- mittee it was a change for the bet- Mot randi d i EH | wer sed by police and volunteer “ttopes to Goa+ Law says | MGELS GTANi Today in Effort 0| were rousea vy potice an hope to God the dry law will | S S I Flaming brands spread over @ wide 1 Ibulhl\ng: andl (1 olll soaked o oft in the committee record to Dehind the oil company plant took | combat the previous testimony by ‘MEET]NGS ARE SIGNIFIGANTI i-prohibition group' that since | il f Mtarted Thine accuor nactment of the eighteenth amend- building of the plant and spread | 5 i Amcricans and Japs Said to Have |rapidly. The first alarm was sound- IS RO T : led at 1:15 a. m. and aid was sum- ften referred to as the *Bishop | Items | oned from Boston, Melrose, Mal- the Bowery,” Mr. Callahan sail e e N the dry law had brought 2 A i 4 £ boat fought the flames from the said ten years ago there had river side of the plant. It was un- der control at 3:30 a. m. During the war the plant was v decade ago, but in the opinion or,S’"MS[]N BUSY IN ter and he attributed it to prohibi- workers to leave their tenements. ntly enforced,” the words fire. 4 | | ment crime has increased and con- | I | Stumbling | 2 7 i S |Somerville and Winthrop. A fire tiod” to the Bowery district, where used for ihe manufacturc of TNT. Block—Week-End Conversations. 14 (P — The Japancse naval dele- en 44 saloons. Now, hic_added, | onditions had changed went > years as director of the Hadley March and London, Ameri ¢ being the L o'clock and found the building in said in well-info to mission has given the chap- |gations were lain much opportunity for obsc tion of thosc who do mot walk or | Fifth avenue in fashionable clothes nd hie said that he knew many men 1vho ten years ago had been *'with- i d and without hope.” who ow had homes, familics, radios and utomobiles, ain, he attributed this change to prohibition. says Booze Beat Smith allahan was the second witness Before him Raymond | icago soci worke 1 cndors the 1Sth nd made the assertion 1. Smith had been de- | ated as democratic presidential | countric nominee because of his stand on!yna observers prohibition. |that they had dis When Smith signed a bill repeal-| QObservers say ing the New York state prohibition |ment has been achieved, it is enforcement act, Robbins asserted, | only one of the outstanding fea e became the “country’s chief nul-|of the conference, but is of lifier under the flag.” 1le argued | mount importance at this mome that Smith’s being a member of the| This is so because it would Catholic th had won him mit of a three-power agreemen many vote it lost. The third Wit-|tween {he United States, ness was John It Melntyre, super- | Britain and Japan if the confe intendent of the Whosoever Gospel | failed to settle the French que mission of Germantown, Penn. lc = also spoke in support of the dry (Continued on Page law. He said the work of the mis sion showed a change for the bet |Muvo (leveland Men ter under prohibition, and that it (Continucd on Page quarters this afternoon achieved an agreement lonly dependen confirm from the The ported to have all but accompl included ttlement of the it claim for a 70 per cent crui I'This h been the outstan stumbling block since the gotiation Scnator Tteed | Matsuas two have cated diftfficulties between the , met again this mo were on home authoritics. big task which they ar begir 1 d Robins, likewise T tmendment that Alfred and old friends, that if this Two) Ohio, March 14 Ii. Braggins salesman, Killed in Cleve Cleveland Pilot Richard | David Bunnin, Cleveland, were 10) a plane crash near an nd ai whic! anesc r ratio, Ambassador been threshing out the compli- led to believe ussed final details. para- G Killed in Plane Cr: rmed have h ation is ished wding aning who two roing cc- not tures nt. per- t be- at rence stion | Chemical company but was through the burning structurc to the 1t was formerly the Cochrane | ojpy. Yougnt company in 1917 Across River Aid Is Summoned the Me e Ember ried The wind carried thousands of burning embers across the oil silt | marshes that flank the Beacon Oil company and ont across the Mystic river and Boston harbor to lLiast Boston, where a constant wateh was | kept over the small wooden tenec- ments that Jine the waterfront, Dwelling houses and tenements near the scene were constantly bat'e- cd in ms of water from a score | of hose companies and the grassy banks of the Mystic were patrolled | by the Boston firchoats, which tack- | led the job of putting out burning | by rimac C several when the of the fler Aid summoned adjoinin, communitics blaze menaced the cenfer town. Iiremen succceded, long battle during which they wer severely handicapped by frigid weather, in confining flames to the courthouse. The wa the Iancock county law valued 0, was destroyed. County re kept in a fireproof | vault, were believed undamaged. The courthouse was built 1885 drain on, the city’s water sup- ply was so great that schools were suspended for the day and half the residents were without water. Al- though estimates of the loss differed some county officials placed it at $30,000 and said it would probably | cost §500,000 to replace the build- NEW HAVEN' PROFITS INCREASE §6,000,000 (Continued on Page Two) KANSAS BANK CLOSED; PRESIDENT IS ACCUSED 0ld Official $ Examiner Says 70 Year Played Stock Market—Loss Not Yet Determined. ash P— and both of | air- rport | —The Commercial N | Independence, Kas., March 14 (®) ational Bank of onc of the largest was closed today. bank the 1 Independence, Improvement Program During Coming Year banks in L. examiner closing T Kansas, K. Roberts, chief natio: for the district, ulted from losses caus said library, | Railroad Will Carry Out| | Much of her clothing and [were missing from the apartment, | Suspicion turncd to Iidel who was known to have been friendly with | the Woman and when certain of the missing clothing was found in jroom in New Haven, Conn., which | 12del had occupicd a warrant w {issued for his arrest. Ho founl three months later in Paut, | Minn., and returned to New Yor trial Convicted of Murder ral postponements was tried and convicted st degree murder, March 7 of year, and sentenced to death. Ldel originally was sentenced Lo ng Sing during the weck of last year but appeals d (Continued on Pa - wi i for | hic of | dic \\ml | Two) MACDONALD VICTOR | |Real Battle Is Expected | When Naval Con- ference Ends London, Marc ernment of J. 14.—(P—The gov- Ramsay MacDonald ON CENSURE VOTE Niedzwiecki uring irs of probably Nicdz- and I then Belvidere no particular {o strall, The polic when Nie: r's Tiome flashlig I: (Continued on Page Two) 2 n sistc was Lugene Kiefler Suspended After hably Being Taken to Headquarters By Serg seant. | i ! Found intoxicate Arch t about Ofticer 1 brou A« ol a and E: hort z he was (Continucd on P 1 10) 1 York, men a to hospita treated b March 14 (@ A 1 women were taken and several others were ambulance su it be fur worke 1 enth avenue. clash occ d in front 1 in poor cons fol- left twed he board for its cooperative spirit | YD 1 outs | wiccki ~ went {they walked to the | cording to his stor | e after his pistols to meet Duntz. | tivities in Belvidere, Dun ] walk streets until eparated on off duty by Licutcnant W. P. McCue, | Where he boarded center of Susp: (1 Officer Kieffer pending a [leaving Niedzwiccki alor ol Chateman M. W. Bannan of the | “ue, accordi h\lur latter’s report, | t ehiefly be and he was di Bim driven to his hom and preferred to Tl mber. | 11VeS With Tis sister into o came |tion of the city for howey suspeet that nd masks, which he p Says Visit Was Harmless d on his beat on |sistent in his that ) polic L ‘ they ley street, xbury On receivir he reports on {he mat- | changed cars in the hearing by the bhoard of police com- [distance from the place ircumstances wl n Arch ect s and he | health red but he | the licuten- chool committee and thanked | ton He will (e re. | Duntz waited out wearing rubbers, purpos other than INTOXIGATED ON BEAT, \oriver it o not carried with him when he Questioned closely as to their 4 o'clock this Claiy |no more than through Sergeant J. C. St jored | Sta near a trolley car ter, ting Chief George J. Kelly |city, going directly to his hom i ) ing chief noti- | Ofticer Kiefter told Lieutenant ““‘l ur Flies as Furrier r n]'nm‘: the n his wifc Lientenant McCue ofl on 1 ear, whic Sos «low him to do on of a see- | road, | and | the | Settle Labor Dispute | flames on the west side where the | kitchen was located. They used the contents of the chemical on their apparatus and several hand chemi- cals in an cffort to check the blaze but the fire continued to gain head- way, T inn was not within the t is ved by fire hy- nd the firemen hooked the | pumper into a well nearby. In less than two minutes, this went dry and the water supply was exhausted. Garage in Rear Saved Unable to do anything but watch | the building burn, the firemen turn- cd their attention to keeping the flames from spreading. A stiff north wind was Dblowing. Several grass fires we rted in the vicinity and only through the hardest kind of { work were the firemen able to save ag ¢ in the rear of the inn. The dry cross the road started sev- eral times but these blazes were ex- | tinguished before they could do any [ damage. Only twisted | district | drants | A8 steel girders and | charred beams were lett of what was once a popular wayside stopping place for pleasure-bent parties when the flames had done their work. No | t of the building was left stand- ing, so complete was the destruction. As the flames ate their way through supports, the structure caved in- to the cellar and the doomed build- ing was soon reduced to ashes. Dog Burned to Death examination of the debris in llar uncovered several pieces fancy chinaware still unbroken. piano was consumed in the the An o | emerged: today | With its oposition, victo fight but an the b in on his condition, so he 'S pre Sr., and HEEPS HIS BUSINESS °-5+= ENGAGEMENTS BY AIR " =25 Curtis-Wright only the twisted wires of the (Continued on Page Two) by defaleations by the dent, George T. Guernsey, from bad assefs. A national bank examiner was | placed in charge of the institution. a|The bank's statement December n of the Ohio Bell Telephone | 1929, showed resources totalling $6,- company, who reported’ it to the |250,337.00 and deposits airport. After a long search the |986.7 wrecked ship was found on a hmr} side. 1t was demolished. The two | statc "m»»n had been Murled clear of the [the T0-year-old president, Faced with the necessity of being | Wreckage. Cause of the accident [the loss had been made 2 | was not known immediately. | speculations. Man Who First Saw New Planet Describes Sensations of Discovery of the ai t hardware department | the Stanley Works, yesterday “took to the air,” and completed his (Note: Tollowing was written for | |the Associated Press by Clyde Tom- | baugh of the Lowell Observatory, | schedule on time. An carly morning appointment in IMlagstaff, who was the first {man to see the new Trans-Neptunian shop operated by flanies, controlled by I'he f \m' group of ted to stablishment Knives, | Benjamin | { bLrolk ‘ e 573 ELIGIBLE TO BE fists were used S ADDED TO VOTING LIST ain cont and | | | cw York, ch 14 (P—Th of mecessity lo New York, New lHaven & Hartford | looked forward to Railroad company today reported | MoOre dangerous tilt net income of § 68 for 192y, | NOW When the coal cquivalent, after the payment of [ trover: resumed preferred dividends and guarante The conservative on Iy operated companizs, | CeNSure blaming ti 5 ¢ on the commen | fOF the general depr This contrasts with net in- | Pass the house come of $16,887,900 equivalent to|NENE after a lc of 508 o $8 a share on the common in 1 | the government ) There are indi ble Lo pri: ervative attack years, consisting of $2,401,000 ba A mail pay received frolh el ing the debuts government and $1,869,000 frc e revenue covering disputed divisions, [ ¢y "poce O CEER FIOCE principally on Canadian loop traffic. | 111 whont o This additional revenue, which after | apcontad themselvos from (he taxes amounted to $3,686,000, Wi | juct hofore the used in a special improvement pro- | ™ pogiite the victory of (he zov- | gram, over and above the regula | omnmont the feeling wa at | | | ity il regular is 29 ye cord in the depart ption of one susper charge of neglect ot duty, having grown out of an in 1t on last street extension wi A himsely n who n atening th ofti Kieff merary June romoted fo the 1 ood 1 yor- E May impending Cause of the accident ' had {been determined. Both men { employes of the flying service. plane was seen to fall by no e and forc a week from mines W con- force motion o Domijan Flies to Appoint- ments at Widely Sepa- rated Points clubs and vernment X0 d to lust memi o they entrance The chiet examiner declined to the amount allegedly taken b, fou of commons thy dely majority to the police hurcau reserves radical ifth Ward Is First With 183—Sixth Ward Is Second L low to be outw buil o tad in s Operuting vevenues in cluded §4,270,000 appli fions 1AL LE officer with a dispersed 1 was mor Want Course In Italian Language Added to Curriculum at N.B.H.S aid e a time a test of the cured, ) conservative rvati 200 more than Registrars discarding applications, J. Smith and W. J. Ziegler nnounced there are 1,8 to take the electors’ oath at sessions of the board of sc lectmen, March 22 and 24. The time limit for filing applications expired last night. The fifth ward has the largest number, a total of 483 men and show. | wom! This is the district having the Jargest number of non-voters in the city. The umallest ward, the fourth, has only 107 applicants. Others are: First ward, 217; second ward, third ward, 181; sixth ward, 2 Hyman Rubin, one of those named by the independent party as a candi- date for councilman, is not a voter, accordin ; to the registrars of voters, who today examined their lists and noted the absence of his name. The chased for §1S0. is also an|application of the party for a place his services¢expenditure of commended | on the voting machines was signed any finan- | by one non-voter and one resident of I l wnother town, aQ um. te Thoma today persons cligible house division was take 1920 budget, to provide betler Pas- | (hat the ministry's defeat Tuc senger and freight scrvice. on a minor amendment to the coal Ireight traftic, the report 1 mines bill—which the coal mine showed a substantial increase in th: | owners yesterday ting con- last two months of 192 demned in its enti t b and the t cline in freight traffic still continues, | regarded as the handwriting on the | although wall ‘ indications point to in- provement. Notwthstanding the| M Donald was not present z the det wid 1o be present decline in revenue, the com- | wise perturbed in exy defeat, since there it truce until the century I was just lucky. That was all there was to it, “And what did the others sa when. I called them in to see it— well, you know how these astron- tomers arc. They are used to think- t the oldest many would when the Then, Ttalian lanzuage he 1. Finance Committee Among items in the report of finance sub committee is one ance of $6,140.87 after bills | The committee also re ports that there was a cut ot ) in the 1929-30 appropriation and v cut of $37.450 in the 1 31 ap-| propriation of the school depart- | ment. Another item has list of rental pric - High school auditorium. » for rehearsal; It will be mended that the 36 tables be pu do this work dur plan would be g 8t could be pro- Advancing claim Italian language is one of land most beautiful and colleg gnize it for credits, ons in including busines me hanker clerks, and labor hay igned petition to ool board askin n |Y<‘;Hm' @ col Italian be incly “tation of afcd in thc 1 hool curri- to he | culum. naval conference | The 1 have been luded, when | afternoon bor prime minister almost cer- | hoard along tainly will have hit to maintain | leader in 1 | his government [ ten. James Bordiere, loeal barber The Daily Chrov d adult student at the Senior High 1, today editorially 1, started the agitation. Hg | commons debatc 2 f had an opportunity 1o observe the | a demonstration need in the Senior High school, adding {hat “we all knew hefore- | claims in h ter. | hand what the conservatives would ! Mr. Rordicre offered say and what the -trader teacher tis ¥ in reply.” the that entrance this city s if sucee a mee at s rec da- seve suggest 1 ) and wa l N Senior 1 ms e Two) (Continued on read 29 of the letter w ment h writ- will be ti chool 1 the fu mee vith a movc of THE WEATHER to fi been added to | s for the Sen- 1t com- this city had been made, another wa to follow in Hartford, a third at Providence, R. I, and the fourth in Boston, M It was necessary that all be kept before noon. The local call being made, Domi- 1 took a train for Hartford, o'clock, where he had a hurried con ference. At §:30 o'clock, he left | planet.) Brainard field by plane and 28 min BY CLYDE TOMBAUGH ing in terms of millions of years and utes later stepped out at the Provi-| Tlagstaff, Ariz, March 14 (®— millions of miles. They weren't ex- dence airport. At 1 o'clock he ([ “How would you feel if you saw a |cited. They said it might possibly ain boarded a pluw and reached [new world giving you the high sign |be the lurking Lowell planet, but ston at 1 o'clock. | from beyond the rim of the sol:lri(lw.\' would have to watch it further On a recent business trip in {he [system? That is what happened {o |to check it with data they had been middle . Domijan left Waynoka |me in the dark room when I was | ihering so lor airport 0 a. m., and was in the frunning another bunch of photo happened February 18, and Stanley Works office at 1:30 o'clock |plates through the ‘machine. 1 heen working on it ever the following afternoon, completing st flicker of star- Only last night did they feel 2 2,000 mile trip in little more than |light in « day's work. cnough about it to make an liberal or- | 24 hours. I 1xeite 1 should say so announcement—and even yet, ther seribed {he Delivering a special order of §00ds, |is no word for it. T just didn't know |mizht be a mistake—but we don't | recently left the office on Lake [what to do or think, or how to act. |think so | trect al 1:30 o'clock in the afte Sought Lor 25 Ye “You know T noon, went to Long Island. and re- ure, I was the first to sec tronomer—guess turncd in time to sign his afternoon [ the whole Lowell staft has mail. Iworking on it for a quarter sham New Britain and vicin Pair and slightly colder to- night; Saturday increasing cloudiness with slowly rising temperature, probably fol- lowed by rain Saturday night. That | « cl is a ) I and nothing more, he here 19 not a real 1 couldn’t am you as- Dbut been | of af call | 50 that be overcome. frec would | (Continued on I* s arat £ > Two) ial obstacles may (Continued on 'age Two) '