{ title: 'The Glens Falls times. volume (Glens Falls, N.Y.) 1922-1971, June 19, 1926, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1926-06-19/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1926-06-19/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1926-06-19/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031319/1926-06-19/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Adirondack Museum
L TWELVE PAGES - CIRCULATION BOOKS, PRESSROOM A VOL. XLVH, NO. 144 _ nner n RACK a ND MAILING DEPAR L Y 7 animc perarm GLENS FALLS, N. Y., SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 19, 1926 ENT WIDE R | 1 , b | a S OPEN TO ADVERTISERS TWELVE PAGES: RICE THREE CENTS ER A Temperance Society Raised Large Amount for Campaign In Pennsylvania Primaries QUEEN OLGA OF GREECE DIES IN ITALIAN CAPTOL Twice Saw Her Son Driven From Throne - Retired at Husband's Death WASHINGTON, June 18.-The senate \Slush fund\ committes decid- ed 'today to investigate the expendi- ' ture of a $250,000 fund raised by the W. C. T. U. of Pennsylvania, for \law enforcement\ purposes just prior to thg $2,000,000 senatorial primary cam- paign. The fund was turned over either to Governor Gifford Pinchot or his repre- sentative, the committee was told, and a detailed account of its expenditure was never rendered by members of the W. C. T. U. The committee de- | cided on an inquiry into the fund to of the senatorial candidacy of Gover- nor Pinchot. Two Hurt, Autos Wrecked, Youths aken By Police BOSTON, June 19 - A mile chase by Motorcycle Policeman Lawrence O'Donnell, of Newton, for two boys in a stolen automobile ended early today in two persons Being injured, two cars being wrecked and the capture of the boys. The youths gave these names: John J. Hill, 16, of Rorcbester, and John Faherty, 16, of South Boston. At one time during the chase they crowded the motorcycle onto the sidewalk and At Commonwealth and Dartmouth streets, the boys smashed into two other cars. glass. he had.t0. do some dexterous riding} ta save himself from telephone poles., hung up another golfing victory for: HAGEN TURNS IN GOLF WIN WHILE PLAYING BATTLE Beats English Pro Two Up in f Match - Comes From Be- | hind to Win i LONDON, June 19. - Walter Hagen ' America, when he defeated Abe Mit- chell, England's premier professional, Harry J. Brunnell, of Marlboro, was {WO up and one to play in a seventy- 4 hurled from one car and injured. The' two hole match. learn whether c If | 4 J « it was used on heha artery on his wrist was severed by; Hagen, four down at the beginning Washington- Montreal Train Leaves Tracks At Riverton In Vermont; None Are Hurt ‘ NF CARONALS - ., RIVERTON, Ve, Juve 19-Four care of, the Jf SING MASSES IN night flyer, were derailed here early today. . One hundred and ten passengers were thrown . from their berths in the Pullman sleepers and from : their seats in the day coaches, but no injuries were reported. | . The cause of the derailment is not known. ROME, June 19.-Queen Olga of Feece died here early today. Olga he fomer dowager Queen of Greece, 11s spent her declining years in It- ily, in unhappiness as she has seen The committee ordered a subpoena forMrs. Ella George, of Pittsburgh, sylvania. Mrs. Maud T. Seymour, of McConnellsburg, Pa., a vice president at large, was previously summoned. presidert of the W. C. T. TU. of Penn- and severely shaken up. A third subpoena profiably will be is- e | of the day's play over the St. George's. 2511155 Margaret Mulhern, of Dorches-! Hill course, staged an early rally ind ter, was thrown from the other car. won back his four holes in the morn- with their car disabled the youths |the afternoon round Mitchell made a were easily captured. They denied {valiant effort to come back, but the stealing the car they were driving. . American was too good for him and | Blayed steady golf, never giving his cing round and became one up. During, Princes of Catholics Church to- , Open Eucharistic Congress Faces Peculiar in Chicago Charge In court CHICAGO, June 19, - In quiet lt» f The flyer, consisting of séven car,s iin charge of Conductor John Brooklyn Youth | ald, of St. Albans, was travelling over the Central Railroad of Vermont at a fast clip, trying to make up five min- h i > ».he I'fegime-etfiphshe‘d by her hquapd | sued for Mrs. Leah Cobb Marton, of 'he former King George, crumbling | @mporium, Pa., a former treasurer, inf shattered in Greece. I who was custodian of the Pinchot Born Olga, Grand Duchess Con ! fund. ztapunova, m'St. Petersburg in Au- The committee called off the ses- ust, 1851, she married King George William of Dermark in Octo rer, 1867. King George, who has been selec- ed by the Grecian people as their t'fmg while he was Prince William { Denmark, had a reign of 49 years n \Greece which was successful and appy. Queen Olga as his consort re- igned in happiness, despite the con inuial political difficulties which made Reed, (D.), of Missouri, announced the hearings will be resumed Monday. At that time, Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti-Saloon will resume the stand, Reed said. The postponement was dge, Reed said, to the fact that Wheeler could his organization until other members of the committee were HOMER RESIDENT IS CHARGED WITH CRIME: SYRACUSE, June 19 - Raiph Sea.| °°US® with a 68 this morning. 'opponent an opportunity to edge in“), utes theft had begn log. ;the lead again. i_ At Riverton, six miles below the Hagen's golfi was better than per- capitol at Montpelier, there was a fect, for he tied the record of the. grinding and the rear cars left the I M a Mitchell made a bold bid for victoryfimfls' These were three sleeping cars sion scheduled for today and Senator |ger, of Homer, N. Y., was charged | af League, Arlene Curtis Kelly, who died in a not produce the financial records Of (to the woman by a ter he squared the match at the fif-} by police here today with murder in | teenth hole, but Hagen then reeled off{ the first degree for the death of Mrs.| a Dair of perfect fours, while Mitchell! was struggling with fives, ; ° Once again Hagen demonstrated: hospital Monday from injuries suffer- that his will to win is indomitable, and | ed when a bomb exploded in her room.| while he played remarkable golf it was} Police charged the bomb was sent his constant determination which seem former suitor.|ed to throw the Englishman off his Monday and When she opened the box the bflmbistride on the last two vital holes. >| exploded, wrecking the contents ot! On the final round this afternoon} and a combination coach and baggage car. The engineer and fireman threw on the emergency brakes and prevented a possible loss of life by bringing the train to a quick stop. Two of the sleepers were at an an- gle of forty-five degreeé and the other two cars were tipping when the train ier life an unending whirl of political naneuvering. In 1913 King George was assassina ed at Salonika and his son, Constan: ine accended to the throne. Queen Mga retired and later went to Italy o reside. During her declining years she saw er son Constantine twice driven rom the throne only to dis of a brok- n heart at Palermo, and she has seen | +v grand-children scattered over the | Rever knew how the . ~of Europe. TO OFFER REWARDS : FOR MAN'S ARREST SEATTLE, June 19 - Large re ards were expected to be offered to- 'ay for the arrest and conviction of ne fiend believed responsible for the laying of pretty Sylvia Howard 'aines, whose brutally \mutilated body 'as found here on the shores of | 'reen Lake. - Mrs. Bertha K. Landes, mayor,. has | 'sked the city council to offer an ade- uate reward and Prosecutor Ewing ovin will ask the county to post a sward of $5,000. Possibility that Miss Gaines lain Wednesday nicht was being in- 'estigated today following a report by ficers, by Dwight Kallum. a bank em- loye, and Miss Odessa Gaskill, that rey had seen two men on the shores ? the lake and heard groans coming \om a clump of bushes that evening. \Whats going on there?\ Kallum sked one of the mon. \Ts just a drunk,\ the man replied. allum said. i0DY OF MAN FOUND FLOATING IN RIVER New York. June 19.-The body of a an found floating in the Hudson iver was - indontified - at - Bellevue »spital early today as that of Alex: idey Niejen} 45. a Russian | artist, ho vanished last month from the age of the Forty-Fourth - Street 'eatre where he had been singing in The Song Of The Flame.\ 'The identification was made by his otherdn-law, Jacob Bolkoff. The lat r said that Niejen, shortly before sappearing. doclared he was \sick : living\ and*was depressed because : could 'not afford to bring his wife d two children here from Russia. Last Easter Niejen painted a set- ig of colored eggs and sent the nvas to President Coolidge, who in letter thanked the artist for the \t. ARRESTED IN BUFFALO BUFFALO, N. Y., June 19.-After Iding police at bay for three hours his soft drinkery here early today, ank Pieber was arrested on a arge of interfering with a federal icer in the performance of duty. veral shots were exchaged a¥d tear mbs wore used before Pieber was ken into custody. ELIGIBLE FOR PAROLE WASHINGTON, June 19 - Don afin, one of the principal charact- ; in the bloody west Virginia min- i war a few years.ago, who was itenced to Atlanta prison for viola u of the national prohibition act, 1 be eligible for parole June 15. department of justice announced ay. CAPTURES FINALS ONDON, June 19.-Mrs. Molla Mal- i won the finals in the ladies sin- 35 of the Roehampton tennis tourna- mg 1today, defeating Miss. C. Tyrell. . % w o at, . 1 wa‘ 2 2C toc Covdret dad on on laabawe 'a nea woe later explained that the committee IN- joy, tended to begin an inquiry today into! seager has been held since Morday. the Pinchot W. C. T. U. fund but that The charge was place against him af- friends of the organization urged it tep a court order had ordered him pro- Bbe postponed until Mrs. George, its | dueed before Supreme Court Justice president, could be present. ing to the reports received by the COM-} police were ordered to maittee, he said. Various members Of| why he should not be released on a the W. C. T. U. complained that they writ of habeas corpus. € money WAS| During the hearing District Attor spent. , ney Clarence Unckless announced the Judge Framcis X. O'Connor, PMIA: murder charge had been lodged deiphia magistrate, also will be the man and he would be ar- ental Monday's session to explain raigned later in the day. The writ newsriper stories quoting him as (was then denied. ing ke had been offered a $150,000 bribe by the Vare organization to withdraw his opposition to it. Three HEAVY GALES STOP 310 them, but the magistrate later de- “guilty of misconduct Philadelphia newspapers told the com- i WORK ON SUBMAR'NE mittee O'Connor had made the charge NEW LONDON, Conn., June 19. - A gale is sweeping the waters above nied the stories. according to submarine base officials HAVE MADE ARREST to raise the vessel is uncertain today, BUFFALO, N. Y., June 10. -- An ar- toons recently placed beneath the ves- Jacob Benderson, wealthy retired me' this afternoon. When they are all chant, who was kidnapped and slain lightened, pressure will be applied to and his body stuffed in a vacant build the tanks which is expected to force ing. The identity of the prisoner and, the stricken vessel to the surface. where he was arrested is being kept: Submarine base officials point out secret by the police, however. (that while The prisoner is said to be well- (smooth today and all signs indicate a known in the underworld of Buffalo| calm, yet a stiff gale is working out at and had often spoken ow the large; sea which will make trouble for those amounts of money carried by Bendet-, who are laboring on the sunken vessel. son. If the gales subsides the effort at rais- Police indicated this morning that|ing the boat will be the order of the in their opinion the most probable! day for tomorrow. But if the gale con- theory was that Benderson was attack- tinues the work will be postponed un- ed by thugs, who infest the nceighbor-|qil the seas are sfnooth enough for hood -- Swan ,and Centre streetSs-| safety. where his body was found. The author- ities believe the thugs killed Bender- son when he showed fight and fled ben' SAIL SOUTH lN SEARCH fore they could carry out their plan of | OF JUNGLE SPECIMENS burning the body to destroy evidence! of the crime. . 'The body was found lying on the: New York, June 19.-Headed by ashpit of the furnace, located in a va-: Mrs. Marshall Field, of Chicago, a cant lithographic plant. number of prominent persons sailed _ for Rio Janiero today on the Munson FORM ER JOCKEY T0 her Panr-America. They are bound ifor the trackless jungles of the Par ° ana and Paraguay river districts, and RECEIVE S\EIWFENCE'the Bolivian frontier, in search of cca R specimens to complete the South Db’fi‘NDLF‘qI‘X' _M.‘°hl;' June 58'4393” American collection of reptiles, birds orling,. former jockey, today WaS$s|angq animals in the museums founded awaiting sentence following his con- 'my, Marshall Field in Chi viction of manslaughter in connection 'by. the late M Field in Chicago. with the fatal shooting of Roy Lee, 18, at a drinking party. ! The prosecution maintained Dorling‘ser killed Lee because Lee had been» with Dorling's wife, who committed suicide at Lee's funeral. Dorling claimed a confession, later repudiated, was slugged from him by a service. state police. ___ ___. i 'The schedule will be so arranged 'as to connect with the overflight air TO APPEAL FOR GUARD ait sorvi - c fork {. GARFIELD, N. J.. June 19“Imam service from New York to Chi Mayor William A. Burke said today cago. that he would appeal at once to Sheriff Georfe P. Nimmo, Bergen County, to enter this town with a force of deputios sufficiently large to maintain peace and order during the progress of the textile workers' strike. M TO ESTABLISH SERVICE,. ZASHINGTON, June 19 - Air mail vice between New York and Bos: ton, via Hartford, Conn., will be es- tablished on July 1, the post office de- [partment announced today. A con- tract was let to the Colonial Air Transport Company to furnish the FURNITURE SHIPPED WASHINGTON, June 19- The first shipment of furniture left the presi- dential offices today. for the summer White House at White Pines in the' Adjrondacks. President - and - Mrs. Coolidge are to occupy the Estato Sgt (Z vin B. Kirkwood, Kansas City, pu NEW LIQUOR TREATY. deter, yI WASHINGTON, June 19 - Follow- ing the exchange of ratification in Ha- vana yesterday, the few liquor, extra:] HEMPSTEAD, N. Y., June 19. - To dition and anti-smuggling treaties} day was to have been the wedding day with Cuba afe expecied to become ef-} of fective within a day or two by procla-| Philip E. Dehnmert was to have been mation of President Coolidge. 'Dry of-} the Jucky man. Lagt night, while put ficials hailed the liquor ireaty as an' ting the finishing fouches to her wed- BRIDE-TOBE DiEs engaged in legislative matters. Theithe room and fatally injring Mrs. Kel-' Hagen succeeded in halving the first, Was brought to a standstill. three holes by taking only one putt on teen-foot putt. Hagen was on in three and then took three putts. Mitchell holed a fifteen: foot putt to win the sixth with a bir die, The next three holes were halved in par figures. REOPEN INVESTIGATION INTO DEATH OF YOUTH BOSTON. June 19.-Police investi- gation into the death of an unknown youth, whose body, with a bullet wound in the head, was found a year ago this month in Quarry Pond, Al 'the resting place of the submarine S. Franklin Park, was reopened today I POLICE IN BUFFALO +51 today agm? the exact time of efforts‘followmg positive identification of the body as that of Charles E. Katz, a Springfield Highschool boy, son of a here. Three of the airladened pon. Welkto.do grocer of that city. Identification came long after the ' rest. the first, was made today in con-: sel have been relieved of their air and)first polics probe was over and after was , nection with the grucsome murder Of, three more will be relieved perhaps the bodv has been buried in Mt. Hope cemetery. A few days ago,. according to Medi- Leal Examiner William J. Brickley, Mrs. Ida Woolfson, of Dorchester, call- ‘ed at his office with a boy's vest. She the waters inshore are Sald her nephew had been missing a year and could not be found. The vest checked up with a suit worn by Ithe drowned youth. Mrs. Woolfson itald the medical examiner, he said, 'that her nephew had some work done on his teeth by a local dentist. The dentist was called in and his chart showed that the work had been done on the teeth of young Katz. Today the body was taken from the cemetery and positive identification was madle by Mrs. Woolfson. The youth's parents in Springfield were no- tiffed. - HERRIOT GOVERNWENT IN FRANCE ASSURED PARTS. June 19 - An Terriot gov- ernment is now practically assured. A delegation of Socialists called on M. Herriot today and informed him that the Socialists are prepared to support his financial program. This support makes it | practically certain that M. Herriot will be able to form his cabinet ,although it will mmba‘bly have more of the com- plexion of the left than of a coalition. I M. Herriot plans to lay a complete { program for financial reconstruction down before those whom he invites 'to join his cabinet, and is working up this program today. | He - held numerous consultations with financial and economic | experts morning. , MARRIED FN LONDON,. LONDON, June 9 -- One of the most brilliant weddings of the Lon- don season took place loday at St. George's, Hanover Square, when Miss Sylvia Lathrop. daughter of Benjamin GHrault Lathrop, of New York, becante the bride of Eugene Lascelles Max erican family. Three thousand guests were invited for the ceremony. CcoNTRACT AWARDED WASHINGTON, June 19. -A con- tract for the construction of 100 new Mrs. Marie Carolyn Willsen, 38 airplanes, bombing type, was| awarded of Cleveland. . O} The contract price is $2,102,000. Half ! of the planes are to be delivered at important weapon against rum run-| ding gown. Mrs. Willsen succumbed to nore. heart failure. + U Hampton Roads and the other half at tho factory. each green. He then won the next hole: were tossed about but a with a birdie after be had sunk a fif- checkup showed that none were in- Hages missed a fine chance at the| Aocord-| Jerome L. Cheney this morning and fifth. where Mitchell topped his drive. other cars and the journey to show cause' during the well, son of a well known the train complete | 'The 110 passengers on | jured. Passengers transferred to Men- were | treal was continued. .- An investigation into the cause.of (the wreck was started. It was be- ; lieved that a broken brake rod drop- ' ped, causing the derailment of one car which, in turn, derailed the others. It was 4:35 a. m., when the cars {left the rails and within a few hours ithe tracks were cleared. The Montrealer is a sister train of {the Washingtonian, Montreal to Wash- ! ington, iSTATE AUTHORITIES : ASKED TO INTERVENE i NEW BEDFORD, Mass. June 19. --Portuguese and federal authorities cat Warhington today were asked by iDr. A. M. Castro, Portugese vice con- [sul here, to have state authorities in- tervenc in the case of Celestine Mad- [eiros. a New Bedford young man, con: pvicted of slaying an aged Wrentham | {bank cashier. Counsel of Nicolo Sacso and Barto: lomeo Anzetti, convicted - paymaster slayers. have been investigating re 'ports that Madeiros contessed to the {killing for which Sacco and Vanzetti were convicted The protest to Washington was on 'the grounds that under a reciprocity treaty between this country and Por- tugal a subject of the latter country's children, unless they become | citi- zens sentenced to be executed for a crime. Dr. Castro would have Ma- deirfos sentenced to life imprisonment | MYSTERIOUS MAN IS ; SOUGHT BY POLICE i- NEW YORK. June 18. - A myster ious \Emil.\ believed to have been the frausn of the suicide of Anna Austin, 32. musical comedy actress, was being; j sought by police today in an offm‘l‘ to , untangle the motive for Miss Austin's self-destruction. |_ The actress ended her life by swal- lowing poison, dying after walking the floor of her apartment for two hours land frantically resisting efforts of po- Mice and physicians to administer an antidote. One physician said she told him she swallowed twenty-five poison tablets. A note asking that a BrookIyn tele- phone number be called and Emil noti- fied \that I am dead\ was found on Miss Austin's desk. §U. S. TENNIS PLEAYERS DEFEAT ENGLISH TEAM EASTBOURNE, June 19. --- Ameri ca's two-man tennis tram made it a 'clean sweep over the British team , here today. The Americans. | Vincent Richards {and Howard Kinsey. won all five mat i ches in the twn days' play. Richards and Kinsey wound up their triumphs with a victory in doubles aver Crole-Reegand Kingsley, 6 4, 3-6. 6-8. T-5. M The American were never extended, Kingsley had to bear the burden for the Englishmen, as Crole-Rees was highly erratic. TO GIVE RECITAL Senior music pupils of St. Miry's Academy will entertain at a recital to- morrow afternoon, beginning at 2:45 o'clock in the K. of C. auditorium., The NEW YORK, June 19.-Because, it tle chapels scattered throughout the is alleged, he didn't try to prevent archdiocese of Chicago, nine Roman his seventeen-year-old bride from ai Catholic cardinals, envoys to the tempting suicide, Rogers McDermott, twenty-eighth Eucharistle Congress, to- 19, said to be a member of a wealthy Gay read the Mass, not with the cere- Connecticut family, must answer in | mony attending their high station as a Brooklyn court next Friday. ' princles of the ghurch, but win} the i im ar,, simple service of a monastery priest 1 _The case is unmiefzedented in New ! Following the impressive civic wel- York state, authorities say, and fOr come tendered them last night in th« that matter any other state. coliseum, the aged prelates today Rogers and his wife, Katherine, sought retirement, a temporary su- daughter of Herman Meister, well-to cease from the strain of being con- do Brooklyn contractor, were both stantly \on parade,\ in order that thev students at Erasmus High school in might recoup their strength for the ar- Brooklyn. They were married Oct.| duous work of the congress which 17 but the girl's father was not en opens tomorrow morning. 'thuaistic over the marriage because Chicago's civic welcome, attended br McDermott was only 19 and not work- more than 15,000 persons, all thé spa- ing. McDermott, however, got a Job cious coliseum could hold, while 160. as an oiler but at small wages. 000 more milled about the entrancq Tho young couple's romance pros | struggling for admittance, started off ently neared the breaking point and las a purely formal affair, but before it ,she became \disgusted with life.\ She had ended. all of the 15,000 present, threatened to end her life. representing every denomination, Pro- \Don't do it in front of me,\ Mc- testant, Jew and Catholic, were on Dermott is alleged to have said. \I'll their feet in a wild demonstration for go into this store and buy some can- religious freedom and tolerance. dy while you do it.\ .- Thi@ demonstration centered around While he was in the store she took the speech of James J. Davis, sécre- two tablets of bichlovride of meroury.) tary of labor, who brought a message She will live, however, from President Coolidge to Cardinal But McDermott is accused of a ; Mundelein and the visiting prelates. crime on the ground he failed to pre- ‘The President's letter was a greeting vent her from trying to take her life. | to the delegates and an expression of {regret that he could not attend the AMERICAN TENNIS | congress. After reading the letter, Mr. STAR IS IN LONDONlhiS c ' Davis followed with a brief address of After mentioning Rhode Island and -i,} Maryland as --- the first American LONDON, June 19. -- Helen Wills Colonies to sponsor the principles of arrived in London this evening, 100k, religious tolerance, Davis began this ing a trifle pale and wan from her re- sentence: ; cent illness, and conclusively spiked. _ \If there is any prejudice against all reports that sho bad any intention, Catholics in America, it comes from whatever of playing in the Wimbledon: persons who make a specialty of pre- tournaments, which start Monday. judice against Catholics in America.\ Miss Wills explained that her deci- Here a storm of applause=broke and sion not to play at the present time drowned out his voice. was made because of a cable received He touched - another from her father, in which he flatly for- chord when he refuarked, bid her to go on the courts. She said} referring to Mexico: she immediately cabled back to him, \I can promises you, you will al- promising that she would not Play. _! ways find in - America-no - matter She said she was \feeling fine.\ 24} what condifion may prevail in other was anxious to got in trim to PIAY Mi gprtions of this hemsphere-the-free- the maiches st Forest Hills BSXti gom wpobp you require to teach your month. faith to young and old and to be BLOODY FIGHT OCCURS | missionaries to ns all.\ When the demonsiration was at lits height. the famous old cdliseum, IN CAPITOL OF NATIOlehFrPin three - presidents | of - ths irnitrd States were nominated and BERLIN, June 19.-The secnndirhr. fourth, Mr. Coolidge, - received bloody clash in the battle over the the nomination for vice | president, plebiscite tomorrow on the confisc@' was hot unlike the scenes during a tion of the property of former German national convention. . royalty occured today when seven N4, - There was ore | outstanding\ ex- 'tionalists and communists were feri<' eeption. That was the colorfil array l ousty injured in a street brawl. of honor guesis that sat grouped Both sides. riding in wagous, hurl | around the speakers' stand in the led rocks at each othor. | eenire of the huge amphitheafre. 'The Propaganda of the pros and anfisp‘nnm'ab‘ln princes of the church, in Iwas reaching a climax throughout RN'A‘fhoir medieval robes, sifting in the Hin. - Communists - were | paradin@| midst of men in conventional even» through the street with gallows from ing dress, represented a strange link= which an effigy of the fOYmPl‘ K3i5f‘l‘. ing of ages past with the prospnf. dangled. Communist orators, made to; t the conclusion of the recepton, resemble - Wilbeim, _ were - making, police had difficulty in clearing a | speeches in favor of confiscation. passageway in front of the building co- ~~ <that would permit the dignitaries to ireach their automobiles. One of them, ANOTHER ARREST IN . itomobi ESCAPE FROM JAIL hasr or was caugti in the : crush of spectators and roughly shov- ed around. When police sought fo responsive obviously AUBURN, N. Y., June 19--One more 1 , arrest was made today making a total ”25.9157“ him PB said: of three as a result of the escape of Nevor mind, thpx mean well, and 'Ransom D. Stone, an Inmate of Au.'I am ins no danger.\ Then he raised burn prison. from the prison bighway his hand and blessed the throng. camp at Niles. Miss Ethel Young, 22,| Presently they made way before him of Syracuse, arrested this morning iszand he walked, unhindered, to his charged with aiding anhd assistjsntg theic‘fm risoner to escape. She is one's j t* - Is’wenthpm‘t of more than year. ._READY TO RESIGN. __ Stone is pow behind prisons bars: | WARSAW, June 10 President having been arrested in Picton, Can.: Moscicki is reported to he ready in ada, several days ago. {Th-“fall if parliament. meting | next - week, fails to approve of the Bartel AIRMAN is Lost. | Pilsudski reform plans, eiv'ne wider PARA, Brazil, June 10 - All ef.| Powers to the president - Fearful af forts to 18 ite Bernardo Duggan, who lan outright military die'atorship. \the has disappbéared while attempting a | OPDosition to the reform plans appears seaplane fight from New York to |to be weakening. Beunos Ayres. have thus (ar failed. l GETS JAIL TERM f TO DEATH 1 SANDUSKY, Mich., June | 1%- NEW $5er June 19. -Isaac Har- | Pearl Dorling, convicted last night af owtitz. 86, leapéd to death today from .man§1aughtm‘ in connection with the the window of his room in the home | slaying of Roy Leo, 18-year-old High of the Daughters of Jacob, while his | school hoy was sentenced to 1§ years public is invited to attend, r on cade n ace =--~ nurse was Absenrt. =» lin Jackson prison today. + + «on