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- LABOR DELEGATE v ATTACKS LEGION (Continued From First Page) fained in this city was'a crime. Mer and women had their lives endan- gered. Some came within a hair of | being killed. 1 have been through | mmany a siege, many a rough-house | —and I'm no baby—but 1 never ex- perienced such conditions as T had | to undergo in the last few days.™ | While Tobin denounced the condi- | tions of the week, Bodenhar is- | sued a vigorous denial that had been any deaths or case poisoning as the result of the rece 1y completed Legion convention took exception to newspaper that four persons had died and eral hundred made ill by poison cohol during the convention. Only Two in Hospitals He said. “The net thorough investigation only two Legion pitals today. O pneumon the caused by an The total damage less than $250 in all hotels there of | He ts yor result showe aires w was a4 ca other an injury tomohile rccident 1 1 all “repc rou ner said that d Bodent Fay that ness was by men naires. He spoke of ceived from Police Eugene C. Hultman, that ‘this was pehaved gathering.’ During the first part of police were called to quell jn the vicinity of hotel the two conventio quartees. Later rested one Legionn liquor in his hotel room fined. irbance or posing a letter Commis: which eptionally we as 1 an exc PINCHOT DESERTED INBITTER BATTLE (Continued From First Page) inia which democratic gov- shaltering party ties state has not elected a ernor for 40 vears. Fears that Pinchot In event of victory, President Hoover for presidential nomination by dry and as an advocate of strict YC& ulation of utilities througlf a cor bination with western insurgent re- | publicans such as Senator George Norris, republican, Nebraska expressed to the United Press today | by Randolph W. Childs, chairman of the Philadelphia Citizens' liberal | party comn an organ composed chiefly of wet republicans who are supporting the democratie candidate. Say He Is So Ambitious “We believe it is Pinchot's inten- tion to seek the-presidential nomi- nation through _ cooperation with republican insurfents,” Childs said *Mrs. Pinchot contributed to Senator | Norris' campaign fund. Pinchot vent | some of his friends to Washington | 10 help Senator Nye in his renate | campaign investigation, hopi win his favor. He is the most politician in the United S Sants to line up these senatoxs m help him get in on the prohibition ! issue in 19 He plays the string that sounds sweetest at the moment | and right now it is the utilities. He is going back 20 years to the trust busting days to find an issue. But that day is gone forever. Governor Pinchot is too busy fighting for his life to think about presidential politics. At the moment Tepublican leaders of every Phila- delphia ward except one were in con- fesence approving unanimously a statement supporting Pinchot ocrritic opponent, Pinchot was here in Philadelphia making fighting at- tacks against his party enemics. Price of Quitters “Plenty” “The price of the organi quitters has not been cheap.” h declared in a radio talk immediate 1y after the city organization de serted him. “It has spent many mil- lions of dollars and payment has beeh made over a period of years. There was a day back in the history of our republic when political lea ers, secking to be bought, would fc- cept cash or check outright. That crude day soon passed after political leaders and sent to jail. “Then came the day of tractor boss. A political le ing to be bought would or confracting company and thed go to the city private corpo in return for company be grant in tracts. That system has provided the method by h certain Philadel- phia bo e been boug campaign.” Pinchot, talkin Press corrcspondent from one of his spe his utilities Vews reprezented by o ‘Any utility ihe people will hay from the drop of the “I have no desire 1o tor of utility wi the monoply given by the y fair. All T ani ; ities shall be peopls have ery public only fair is to serve does not 3.000 per cent commission company was ma ment. is prep: to chal he republican as a tol ‘n.m ‘ tes. public con- to Ward Leaders The statement i i the republican adelphia said “The wage carne chot's unreasonable business man, the employers of the his assaults adding to the ployed. The vote Pinchot in his effort business man the bread provider.” Concerni ment de tracted sense ex Mo and Br suppor cially are n of | pressed | ov L Corsets Hold Up Show, Chorines Won’t Don ’Em * Chicago, Oct. 11¢(#—The cor- set's stay—no pun intended — at the Great Northern theater ended last night. he ladi of the chorl count ‘'em 5—went on strike just before the curtain was to rise on the fir act “Three Little Girls. hey announced they would not go on unles permitted to discard th hey have been obliged to w > loc B s Girls' Equity he commanded nb into the corsets. d After nearly a telephone call made to the producer, J. J. ert, in New York. iubert said that corsets or no the show g0 on did-——without corsets. the girls to Still they an hour's delay, corsets, must 1 it with his fr vocal views liquor enforc 0 AWARE LEADER, OF PARTY I3 DFAD this | ndidate farm near | n of Josiah | nn (Pepper) | ath being in this | the rliest lers 1al Marvel home- of land at by King Geord®, lived there for | de and | | a | erson | aware. As School Teacher a career as a finishing his t schools of | but later | udent in the | Gray, Wii- practiced alone for brother, Judge D. was retired from Delaware supreme gpurt bench, 1 him in 1898 and they formed 'm of Marvel & Marvhl ¢l made his power” in the ocratic party felt at the national vention in Denver in 1908, where <ed for the interests of Judge was urged as the party for congress in Delawar: but refused. established a aid of students at Delaware col- and was a member of the state | hway commission. Mr. Marvel was married April 2 1598, to Mary Jackson, a da ter of Representative W. IH. loan fund for | e a Miss (On requent. eent dressed envclope. Mr. Droof of anything depic O'vea (Wisconsin) PUNTED (10 YARDS 14 o oy { (Reg. U. FreSABBATH PERPETUAL / SUNDAY - Chrishians MONDAY- Greeks (oLb) TUESDAY - Persions with etamped. ad- ipley will furnisb ed by him). 8 Pat Of.) BY RIPLEY WEDNESDAY. Syrians THURSDAY- Eayplians (oLp) Turks FRIDAY - \ SATURDAY- Jews LEGLESS ALPINIST o} Pertland Ovegon 4 . CLMBED MTH00D (11253 E7 #ick) UNASSISTED EXPLANATION OF YESTERDAY'S CARTOON . Thea Alba Can Write Six Different Figures At the Same trained her fingers so she can write six diiferent figures or letters simultaneously, with the aid | of chalk extensions, has recently been on a vaudeville circuit in Berlin. European newspapers have commented about this unusual feat of muscle training. Time — Miss Alba, who has German and other James Wyllie, Leng (Time Checker Champion—Woyllie is one of the most famous checker ao nd This can be verified in any book on players who ever lived, and was champion of the world from 1847 to 1859, from 1864 to 1876, in from 1877 tp 1894—a total of 41 years. checkers. MONDAY—“The Gambling Corpse.” Jackson of Maryland. They had six unmy.n e fec BRA7EL1AN TROOPS tra DESERT FEDERALS : = (Continued From First Page) ting in the states of . Minas Geraes, d other localities, govegnment i$ prepared for a mpaign of months if ry and rapidly is strengthening | A with the addition of re-| o ts and volunteer battalions. | tel Additional h also is being given the navy with the conversion of commercial ves: into warcraft. | Thus far the Co lante Capella, of the Lloyd Brasileiro line, and the steamers Ttaquice and Itagiba of the Costeira Company have been taken hmini at lxh. el Rio | a- i he stren b |22 . B of 1 troops in had defeated t Rio Grande Do Sul harina many loy fighting rectionarie rd ive Justice while in Santa Ca ns we o stations st from points as 15 nos Aires w losed the government basing its ac- tion on broadcas om the 11 of revolu aw today, n- itement design: d others from the in- sterdny | cernin Th®chiet of the nee- | utio s as a 15 said bel, forees but was repulsed by deral There was no information he insurgent armies ir Parana, who Friday were said have been deploying for a m tle with Sao Paulista fede Castro. G Costa, in- ent commander, orted that cavalry had skirmished with ene Cen- al 4 ict Censorship rebel garrison at nta Ana. Do Livramento, Rio ande Do Sul border point, said had received orders from revol- ary headquarters at Porto e to impose & strict censors all outgoing teleph raph, radio. and cable' me “public safety measure. believed the censorship eld developments n ma ve w in’ the Federa that mbed J and dispatches from Sao Paulo federal airplanes had ariahyva, just nerth of junction point for A Jacarezinho. ced the belief that the had withdrawn, since only small bands of <pre planes saw the capture of Joinville the pearcd here to have struck t decisive blows of the southe Brazil, com- apture of Pernambuco Parahyba insurgents in part of the republic. commanded by At ked the only 16 casualties. d one soldicr of the being killed and 13 ] cighth battery of battalion of ) men surrend- onslaught. A small Catharina police held t to Bragza the 11 was rapidly olution. He ro, located Joinville, had fans were re Jeeides Not to Stop o from R de In som L e T e || Valuable Monogrammed Silverware Is Stolen N Ok stole monogrammed con- | They ! ale, who e ware from Jacob H. philanthro Greenburgh, toc house effected dow. the t Schiff, and were through a kitchen 11 (P— 135 pieces of silver- home of Mr: widow of the financier, at being sought Only servants wege in the at the time, Entrance was win- of the latter states, to Grosso strong r volutionary Bahia there centers,” BRIGHT SUNSHINE WARKS FUNERAL (Continued F or C. H ed in the R-101, Not until a scott, elopment OF 48 R-101 DFAD rom First Page) * of the British air- especially Mat- are who perish- was his close friend. Doors Open to Midnight half hour past mid- ght this morning were the doors of Westminster desiring to pa of the So many to pass the the lying in midnight, I not able to cls cmds, everal fl»mmm] persons far tre o'clock, had Aft end of to the the coffins kept 1 remainder morning prece Cardingtor The licved at short Launched | Cardir was lan newly iperior to tructed of On October 1 that On there 1opes Hall G nall unaware been granted. doors were sentries again were the ding entrainment ingland, hed he proud 2 s of closed on ende from they we 1l of its grea at awaiting dispersed that an ex ten: tationed around throughout night and early sentries were st a Year Oct October, Ago 11 (P— of 192 re completed air ed by its mak, was a France, | person- Beauvais, 48 of her rojected lo burial in one labo; ed on a and th { unoccupied shop throughou the last 1, including air, who lost R- crac hill- world, French Up Grave people v homage to the bodi 48 victims. thousands were waiting coffins last night t authorities first e at the Xrlw time of | 10 o'clock to | even then r the it the en- 10 on closed the the for re- with hign the resting Lori 101, | up the grave, side so that the ied. rather th, e was not flor=1 P was hired to hoil them until they could be placed on the grave today. Many persons ar- | rived last night at Bedford, a near- | by town, to await there today's bur- |ial. | Bedford itself was in mourning. | All places of business except ths post office were closed and all nor- mal life was at a standstill. FRAUD ALLEGED IN . REAL ESTATE SUIT (Continued From First Page) title to the Sefton U!l\r' property in |trust for the plaintifts as creditors !or the defendant, Max Honeyman, |and that the Packard Realty Co. Tholds title to the Corbin averws | property in trust for the plaintiffs | Max | |as creditors of the defendant, | Honeyman, that the mortgage from | Jdward Honeyman to the Packard | Realty Co. on the Sefton Drive prop- lerty be declared fraudulent and void as against the plaintiffs, and both of said properties be sold {under the direction of the superior court, and out of the proceeds there- of there be paid to the plaintiffs the amount of their claims. Judgment is asked that Honeyman, Louis H. Henrietta Diner be required to re- transfer and re-assign the stock transferred to them to the de- fendant, Max Honeyman. Judge | Allyn Brown in superior court vesterday granted the temporary injunction as asked. 500 Note in 1927 According to the allegation in the complaint, Max D. Honeyman, Dora Honeyman and Tsracl Honeyman on July 6. 1927, gave the plaintiffs their note for $8.500 and failed to make payment of $250 which was due v 6. thereby making themselves liable for payment of the entire un- paid balance, or §7,250 with interest from Nov. 6, 1629. On Dec. 9, 1929, Max D. Honeyman transferred prop ¢ on Arch street to the Hone man Auto Sales Co., and on 1930, he transferred propert W, ard Realty Co. On Feb. Max D. Honeyman |Hyman Dworin property on Oak street, and the allegation is made that “all of said transfers and con- vevances were without considera- tion and were made with the intent ind purpose of defrauding the plain- tiffs of their debt, and with the in- tention of avoiding the payment of same.” In December, 1929,* Honeyman and Henrietta | ganized the Packard Realty Co. {and on January 3, 1930, Honeyman transferred the property at Walnut and Arch streets to the company. | Thereupon stockMin the company in | the amount of $1,000 was issued to | Max D. Honeyman and Henrietta Diner. but the capital steck of the company, nominally fixed at $1,000 actually consisted of the real of the defendant, Max D. | Honeyman.” No money or consideration was ever actually paid for stock in the corporation by any ot the stockholders, it is set forth. Rubsequently the kard Realty | Co. issued 195 shares of stock to Max D. Honeyman without consid- ration and 5 shares to Idward Honeyman without consideration |and later Max D. Honeyman trans- Tdward er at 19, 1930, trahsferred to Max D. Diner or- <4 Jartman -and | Inut and Arch street to the Pack- | other | Republicans Face Hard Struggle in Elections ‘Washington, Oct. 11 (UP)— Pessimistic reports from cam- paigns in various sections of the Country have convinced republi- can leaders that they face a des- perate struggle to refain their present majorities in congress. It developed at a meeting of party chieftains at republican na- tional Headquarters here yester- day that the party's majority of more than 50 seats in the house was seriously menaced and that a few seats might be lost in the sen- ate. , Campalgn managers for the coming election various flelds reported <that the business depression was hurting their candidates, and that even republicans were generally apa- thetic about = supporting the Hoover administration working in the ferred a certain number of shares of the stock of the Packard Realty Co. g0 Louis H. Jartman and Ed- war Honeymap, and again he transferred 225 shares of the stock to them. The transfers were made without consideration, it is alleged, and “with intent to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiffs, and said ‘transfers were fraudulent and void as against the plaintiffs.” Clatm Honeyman Insolvent 1t is furthér alleged in the com- plaint that the real estate transfer- red by Max Honeyman was more than sufficient to pay the debt to the plaintiffs “and by reason of said transfers, Max D. Honeyman became and still is insolvent and unable to pay sald debt.”” The de- fendants, it is alleged, knew of the existence of the plaintifts’ claim an3 they intended by means of the transters to hinder, delay and de- fraud the plaintiffs. Referring tq the Sefton drive and Corbin avenue real estate, the plain- tifts allege that the purchase price on hoth properties was_ paid by Max D. Honeyman and title taken in the names of Edward Honeyman and the Pyckard Realty Co. as grantees to hinder, delay and de- fraud the plaintiffs and to pretent the scollettion of their claim, and thé mortgage executed by Edward Honeyman to the Packard Resalty Co. on the Sefton drive property was made without consideration and with intent to hinder, delay and de- fraud the plaintiffs. Realty Concealment Charged In the fourth count of the com- plaint, it is alleged that while the claim of the plaintiffs was pending, | | Max D. ‘Honeyman removed and concealed real estate with intent to prevent the same from being taken on legal process and when the un- paid balance on the plaintiffs’ note became due the plaintifts made dili- gent search for estate of Max D. Honeyman wherewith to satisfy their claim on the note but could find nonef In the fitth count it s set | forth that Max D. Honeyman ad- | mitted that he owed the balance due on the note but refused to pay it.| Nafr & Nair represent the plain- | tiffs. THEBAUD IN LEAD AS SECOND RACE FOR TROPHY OPENS (Continued From First Page) | vears. Unless the stately salt banker | wins today and again Monday. she | | must vield the scepter to the Glou- | cester schooner, a newcomer on the | fishing banks that got her first taste jof brine from the launching ways |of Arthur D. Story at Essex last March. i Bluenose Has Chance Although Bluenose was beaten more than 15 minutes around the | 5-S-mile_ocean course Thursday, she did not appear a badly beaten | boat before today’s contest. The ! openigg race saw her undermanned, wearing 4 poorly fitting suit of sails, |and sluggish in the light breeze that | !was blowing. g Today, she had a full crew, aug- {mented by eight members of the Gloucester fleet, her sails had been | recut, and she had left four tons of | | ballast on the dock. In short, she had become an unknown quantity overnight. Her skipper, the wirey little Captain Angus Walters, who has driven Bluenose to victory more | than once, was cheerful and opti- mistic this morning. but his crew voiced misgivings. They said Blue- ‘ TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN OF A WRIT OF EXECU- TION issued and directed to me by Emil J. Danberg, ' Clerk of the City Court for the City of New Britain, I will sell at public auction, fourteen (14) days from date. which Wil be on the 24h day of October, A. D. 1930, at 2 o'clock In the afternoon, at the public signpost in the Town of New Britain, to the highest bid- der, the following goods and chattels, to wit’ 1 Hudson Sedan. 1 ¥ord Coupe, 1 Cadil- lac wrecker, 1 lot of accessories, 1 Nash sedan, 1 Essex sedan, 1 lot of tubes, 1| lot of polish, 1 lot of paint remover, 1 lot of mew Oldsmobile aummobile parts. Dated at New Britain, Conn., this 10th day of October, 1930, Atgest: MARTIN H. HORWITZ, Deputy Sheriff, 55 “West Main New Britain, BY VIRTUE st Conn, GUY CAMBRIA vs. J. KUNDRA Hartford County, MICHAEL Superior Court, tober 8, 1930 NOTICE OF SALES By order of 'he Superior Court of the County of Hartford, 1 have been ordered to sell the property described below at Public Auction on the premises on Octo- | ber 25th, 1930, at two (2) o'clock in the afternoon. The property Brighton St, and lows: Lots Nos. 27 of Lot No. 26, Block of land known as Quarter, New Britain, the Bodwell Land Chmpany, drawn by Hall and Bacon, Englneers, dated April, | 1011, and recorded in Book of Maps Vol 1 page 181, in the office of the town clerk in sald New Britain. Said land s | | bounded on the North by land now or | formerly of Bodwell Land Company, on hundred and twenty-five (125) feet: o lthe East by other land now or formerly | of sald Bodwell Land Company, fifty | | (50) “feet: on the South by othwr land of the Bodwell Land Company, one hun- | dred_and twenty-five (125) fest; and on e West by Brighton Street, fifty (50) feet. Said, property is fifty feet in the | front and' rear and one hundred and | twenty-five feet deep. PETER DEN Commitiee. Ow Is known as Np. 119 | is described a8 fol- and 28, and one-half | bt (3) on & Map | Belvidere” Stanluy | Connj property of | would entrain | trouble, nose needed a good strong wind if she was to show the speed she was capable of, and the weather fore- cast -did not encourage them. Although light air seemed The- baud’s best chance, Captain Ben and her crew also hoped for a strong wind. They were willing and an- xious to have it out with the Blue- nose - in her own element. They agreed with the men from the mari- time provintes that a race in light air was no test for deep water fish- ermen. Both Crews at Ball Both crews attended a ball last night tendered as a public recep- tion, but there were no lagging steps this morning, and all were eager for the fray. Aboard the Thebaud today was a millionaire fisherman, Tuller, a Worcester manufacturer. Fuller has served several weeks aboard Thebaud in order to qualify as a bona fide fisherman and to ac- quaint himself with the Gloucester schooner’s rigging. He is not unac- quainted with sail, for he has a 40 foot sloop of his own which he moors off his summer home here. Now past 60, gray of hair and moustache, the deck of a fisherman is not unfamiliar to Fuller. He saw service aboard the schoners Colum- bia and Elizabeth Howard, two of the many racing fishermen that have gone to @e bottom of the sea dur- ing the past ten years. COLUMBIA TAKES OFF FOR LONDON (Continued From First Page) George I, would probably pass directly over the town of Penzance. Croydon is but a few miles to the south of the city of London and the flight direc- tion from Tresco would be east by north through Exeter, Salisbury and Aldershot. Croydon Waiting Croydon, England, Oct. 11 (P— Captain J. Erot Boyd and Lieuten- ant Harry P. Connor started out to complete today- the transatlantic crossing from Harbor Grace, New- foundland, {to Croydon, which they fell just short of making yesterday when_ their plane, the veteran Cul- umbia, made a forced landing on Tresco, Scilly Islands, 290 miles from its goal. The two airmen, who left Harbor Grace, at 11.20 a. m., E. S. T. Thurs- day, were brought down, it was un- derstood here, by a choked gasoline main. Landing was at about 5 p. m., or noon castern standard time, a little more than 24 hours after their start. The plane, in landing at Tresco, was more than 150 miles off of its course, far to the south of Bantry Bay and that section of the Irish coast which Lieutenant Connor, who was navigator on the exact flight of Roger Q. Williams to Bermuda, had planned to pass over en route to Croydon. Plane Not Damaged Although the planc's landing was forced, and Tresco is a very sm island, almost at the extremity of the British Isles, the Columbia, if which Clarence Chamberlin and Charles A. Levine crossed the At-! lantic to Germrany, was not dam aged. The craft was ready to con- tinue the flight to the airdrome here today. Levine, who is ip Engalnd, when first hearing of the safety of the two aviators, wired them that he last night for Corn- wall and fly to Tresco, but when he learned of their intentlon to pro- ceed her today he changed his mind and de“.ded to await them here, Tirst word of the success of th Columbia’s second transatlantic ad- venture came from the Coast Guard on St. Mary's Island, hear Tresco, who telegraphed that the plane had landed on a small beach on the neighboring island and that both the fliers and the plane were safe. Motor their message said, forced the Columbia down short of its gonl. Both Afrmen Well A message two airmen, said they weére well, that the monoplane was not dam- ged and that they would procee:d today to Croydon. Although th solitary telegraph line to Tresco w hut down early in the evening it | was re-opened later to permit a few | messages to be sent the fliers. Some concern had been felt for the Columbia up to the time of its landing although a plane, apparent- ly it, 200 miles off Land's End and somewhat off the shipping lane. Irish civic had ]{(‘Rl a close watch for the craft, to Levine from the | had been sighted by the steam- | |er Virgilia, about guards | but had failed to sight her. A small crowd, ipcluding Levine and the boxer, Da Shade, / had gathered at Croydon to witness ar- rival of the Columbia. They receiv- ed with relief word from Tresco of the safety of the fliers. GORN BORER VIGL IN STATE CLOSES (Continued From First Page) ties where they were being carried, according to a statement by Dr. W. E. Britton, entomolgist of the ex- periment station and state adminis- trator of the quarantine. Preven- tion of this long distance spread is the obJeCL of the restrictions he said. The Middletown-New Haven pike, with 124 borers included in the in- complete report, had the next larg- est number of interceptions. The Hartford-New Haven, Waterbury- Meriden and Manchester-East Hart- ford lines also yielded considerable numbers of the pest. Taking off the patrols stations re- leases®145 men, the largest staff of its kind ever employed in the his- tory of the state. Ten men were re- quired on the day and night force to keep traffic moving at Branford. Few Found in Berlin The greatest number of corn borers found during the inspections of the summer were at the stations around Branford. There were also a large number found at the station on the road from Berlin to North Branford. Only a few were dis- covered on the roads in the vicinity around Hartford. There were com- paratively few fourd on the high- ways between New Britain and Ber- lin and between Berlin and New- ington. Exact statistics could not be obtained concerning these various stations today. SEEK MODERN BLUEBEARD FOR MURDER OF VICTIM George W. E. Perry Believed in Hiding Somewhere in Arkansas Or Missouri Chicago, Oct. 11 (UP) — George W. E. Perry, the modern bluebeard who, it was charged, lured at least four women into marriage by prom- ses of wealth and murdered one of them on her honeymoon, was be- lieved in hiding today somewhere in Arkansas or Missouri. While the search for Perry was p\lshf'd in five other states, it cen- tered at Blytheville, Ark., where he had left an automobile once owned by Cora Belle Hackett, who was slain 6n a Wisconsin Indian reserv: tion a few weeks after she was mar- ried to Perry in Chicago. Leaving the automobile as se- curity for a §150 loan, Perry prom- lised to return to Blytheville yester- day, but did not do Police ob- tained information which led them ito believe, however, that he either {was in that vicinity or in St. Louis, land many officers joined in the search for him in both cities. I City Items | Mae Makoski, the home of J. st. Hairdresser, Is at Keaveny, 45 Lincoln For appointment call 2874J. —advt. Howard Smith, Jr., vice command- er of the Walter J. Smith post, Vet- lerans of the Foreign War. has left | for New York where he will under- |80 an operation. Louis Kirshnit, president of the Latimer Laundry Co., is attending the state convention of laundry own. ers at the Hotel Davenport, Stam- ford, today. Child of Royal Union Baptized in Brussels Brusscls, Oct. 11 (A—Wrapped in a shawl of rare lace the infant Prince Baudouin, second child of “rown Prince Leopold, and Princess Astrid was baptized today at the Church of St. Jacques of Couden hnrg Hundreds of school children | were among the crowds that lined {lhc streets and watched the proces- | sion of royal carriages to and from the church. The king and queen of the Bel- gians, Prince Leopold and the prin- | ces Princess Ingebord and Prince | Charles of Sweden were in the pro- cession. King Albert is the infant prince’s godfather. FLYING At Swanson’s Field SUNDAY By Curtiss-Wright Flying Service Also PARACHUTE JUMP by ROY F‘OREST If Weather Permits Boost ew Britain’s Only Airport Mayor Quigley at 7:30 TONIGHT at the Little -Meadow Golf Course 147 MAIN STREET EXT STRAND During Month of October one half receipts will be donated to Christmas Relief Fund.