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PRESS THE PRESS s a An Institution Which Works A Home Town Paper For For Community , Ad- Home Town vancement&f 1 •;N: Folks. M&U9&;'-'. , ^ KJ " THE ONLY NEWSPAPER — jjj THE TOWN OF ENFIELD, CONN

FORTY-SEVENTH YEAR—NO. 81®| THOMPSONVILLE, CONNECTICUT, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1926 ^ PRICE $2.00 A YEAR—SINGLE COPY 5c. fggP|I Thompsonville Fire District Is Free oft Debt and Has Substantial Bsd- V „ ->'4 ' -•'! HELD ance in the Treasury. JAMES C0UGHLAN ®Pl > ' •• . -C- -.A ^ a_,j>r . o . ^ * Class of 128 Take Part E accounts of Secretary-Treasurer Laurence T. Dbwtiey of the!§ Veteran Custodian O f Thoinpsonville Fire and Sewer District, which were closed last In Exercises At Audi- rweek, indicate that the fire district is not only free of debt, but Local Club Handsome­ ] torium Before A Large has a substantial balance with which to carry on. its. business until ly Remembered on Eve the district tax is collected next Spring. The total amount of the Gathering Of Friends receipts, including the balance on hand last. year was $17,787.09, of His Departure For while the disbursements were $13,126.76, leaving a balance on hand and Relatives of Class. of $4,660133. The district tax list for the year 1925-26 amounted: Seattle, Wash. to $13,106.65. Of this amount there has been collected $11,550.00. One hundred and:twentyTeight pu- leaving ah uncollected balance of $1,616.65/ This amount added to On the eve of his t departure for )0f ^ils of the eighth grade, of the A. D. the cash balance on hand makes the total assets $6,276.98. The bal­ Seattle, Washington, where he is go­ Experts Begin Examination Higgins' School were graduated yes­ ance on hand will, in the opinion of the district officials, be sufficient ing to reside in tne future, Janies terday afternoon at exercises held in to meet the eurrent expenses of the fire department up to the' period Coughlan was handsomely*remember- the school auditorium. The hall was of the receipts of the revenue from taxes next Spring, when the ed by the members of the Calumet Of the Books This Morning rf most attractively decorated in pa­ larger obligations such as the annual disbursements for the pay of Club, of which he Has been custodian triotic colors. Over the stage was the members of thfe fire department become due, and will be met by for the past 25 years. The exercises the class motto in large old blue let­ the receipts from taxes. An itemized list of the receipts and ex­ were held in the club rooms and con­ Large Discrepancy. Between the Amount of the ters, "Not finished, just begun." Fol­ penditures of the secretary-treasurer of the district Which is now sisted of a luncheon which was serv­ lowing is the program of the exer­ being compiled, will form a part of the annual report of the Fire and ed under the supervision of Mr. Tax Warrant and the Sum Received From the - i cises: Sewer District which will be distributed to the taxpayers of the dis­ Coughlan, it .being his last appear­ Processional, Mr. Denslow King; trict in connection with the annual meeting, which is scheduled to ance as steward of the club. Fol­ Taxes By Town Treasurer — Will Require At liymn, "The Vision," class; invoca­ take place in Higgins' School Auditorium, Tuesday evening, June 29. lowing the luncheon Mr. Coughlan Least Week To Ascertain Condition of Books tion, Rev. Lyman C. Pettit, D. D.; was presented with a gold watch and 1 chain suitably inscribed. The pre­ * ^ address of welcome; Marion Hartley; Two expert accountants, from the Sesqui Centennial essay, Mary Con­ sentation was made by Attorney-Gen­ ray and Town Treasurer Potter ar­ auditing firm of Hadfield, Rothwell rived and proceeded to gather to-' nor; poem, "Independence Bell," by eral Frank E. Healy, who paid a and Soule, began at 10 o'clock this Katherine Simons; song, "The Con­ MISS FLEMING GRADUATION glowing tribute to the faithful and gether, with the aid of Chief of Po­ cord Hymn," chorus; "Not Finished, efficient service which Mr. Coughlan morning an examination of the books lice Harris, the tax books and other had rendered during his over a quar­ of former Tax Collector Clark L. books of accounting and receipts and Just Begun!", Robert Squires; "Med­ BECOMES BRIDE AT HIGH SCHOOL Hamilton, in order to determine the took them to the Town Building. ley on National Airs," orchestra; ter of a century as its steward. exact amount of the shortage, which minuet, Natalie Daniels, Anna Parak- Mr. Healy especially emphasized They were unable to find this year's the esteem in which Mr. Coughlan Mr. Hamilton admits exists, and warrant and receipt books however, ilas, Carmela Caramazza, Nellie Sam- OF J. F. M'CANN THIS EVENING which was the cause of bringing his but shortly after noon Mr. Hamilton borski, Leroy Lamont, Frank Bania, was held by the individual members official career to a dramatic end early Ira Goldstein, Robert Kelly; song, of the organization, all of whom, returned, found the books which without exception, considered him CLARK L. HAMILTON this week. By arrangement with At­ were placed by him in another part •"The.Home Road," chorus; grand op­ Ceremony Took Place at j Sixty-Two Students Will torney Philip J. Sullivan, Jr., who is of the store, after he had recovered era selections, orchestra; French play, their friend, and that they all joined representing the town in the investi­ them from the region of the fire, and "The Foolish Fir Tree," prologue, St. Patrick's Church on i. Close Their Course Of him in wishing him a long and happy gation, and Attorney Harold J. Brom- took them to the Town Building. Marion Hartley, Jennie Middlear, life in his new' home in the West. Monday Morning With j Studies At That Insti- SPECIAL TOWN age, counsel for Hamilton, the lat­ There he was confronted by First Mary Connor, Doris Quinn, Mary Mr. Coughlan replied feelingly to the ter is assisting in the work of ascer- Slapska, Frances Kryza, Margaret Attorney General's remarks, in which | Selectman Murray and Town Treas- ReV. Daniel J. O'Con- tution—Exercises Will tainirjjg the condition of the books. I urer Potter and made the admission Oliver, George Krause, Herbert Tayr after expressing his gratitude and Attorney Sullivan made formal re­ lor; presentation of class gift, Allan appreciation for the mark of their es­ MEETING HAS I that he was short at least $5,000. nor Officiating. Be Held in Auditorium,. quest of Mr. Hamilton, through his I Selectman Murray demanded his re­ Handy; acceptance of gift, Louis teem and friendship, he reviewed the ! Attorney, to come forward and give Lebeshevsky, 7A; class gong, music history of the club during his connec­ signation as Tax Collector which he A pretty June wedding of much The chief event of commencement BEEN POSTPONED I any assistance within his power, in immediately wrote out and presented by Denslow King; presentation of tion with it for the past 25 years. jthe audit, following his arraignment prizes and diplomas, Anson B. Han­ lockl interest took place on Monday week in local educational circles will Mr. Coughlan left Tuesday after­ to him. At a conference immediate­ be reached this evening when the |in the Town Court yesterday morn- ly following between the members of dy, Supt.; song, "America the Beau­ morning in St. Patrick's Church when noon for Seattle, Wash., where he is Officials and the School jing on the charge of embezzlement, annual graduation exercises of the going to make his home in the future the Board of Selectmen, Town Treas­ tiful," audience; recessional, Dens­ Miss Anna Josephine Fleming, daugh­ and he readily consented to help in urer Potter and Attorney Philip J. low King, supervisor of music. ter of Patrolnfan and Mrs. William class of 1926 of the Enfield High with his daughter. He has been a Authorities Decide To i every manner possible. The A. D. Higgins' memorial prize resident of the town since boyhood, Sullivan, Jr., an immediate audit of of $25 for scholarship excellence was J. Fleming of Prospect street, be­ School will take place in the school and was highly respected by every­ Defer Action Until the ! Interest today, following the dis- the books _was decided upon and a come the bride of John Francis Mc- auditorium. Sixty-two students will body in the community. j closure of the deficit, the admission representative of the accounting "firm divided into a first prize of $15 for and resignation of Mr. Hamilton as Miss Marion Hartley and a prize of Cann of Springfield. The ceremony be graduated with the usual interest­ Audit On Tax Collect­ which this morning began the audit, ing ceremony, which will be in charge itax collector, and his appearance in was requested to come here the fol­ $10 for Miss Mary Connor, daughter performed at 9 o'clock by the 31 Graduate From or's Books Is Finished. I the town court formally charged with lowing morning to make a survey of <>f. School Committeeman and Mrs. pastor, Rev. Daniel Jt O'Connor, who of Principal E. H. Parkman. There will be the customary awarding of misappropriation of the funds collect- the situation. On the advice of the M. J. Connor, and the latter also re­ also celebrated the nuptial mass St. Joseph's School town's legal representative formal ceived a prize offered by the princi- which followed in the presence of a prizes and other marks of distinction First Selectman James T. Murray i ed by him, is principally centered in pay of the school, Miss Nora Clancy large assembly of friends and rela-!in scholarship The ceremony will announced last evening that the board j the probable amount of the shortage. charges of embezzlement to the Exercises Held At Close of the 10:30 had decided to postpone the special j The former collector's own admission amount of the admitted shortage or the best civics notebook. A prize tives. The bride was attended by;as usUal attract a large gathering of Service in St. Patrick's Church last : .given by the school for the pupil her sister, Miss Marie Patricia Flem-1 relatives and friends of-the students town meeting which was scheduled j that he "was in pretty deep" is tak- were made against Hamilton, and he ; arK Su'nday—Diplomas Presented By to take place next Tuesday evening., en as an indication that it will be ajwas permitted to remain in the cus- showing the greatest improvement ing as bridesmaid and George E. * interested townspeople. Pastor, Rev. D. J. O'Connor. during the year was awarded to Chapin of. New York City, served as ' Class, Day Exercises; - The meeting was for the purpose of;sizable sum. It is generally felt by tody of his counsel, Attorney Harold the best man. The bride looked ;commencement exercises of The graduation exercises of the taking action on a proposed addition i those who have any knowledge of the J. Bromage, pending a hearing in George P. Rutherford. The highest the town court next morning. 'honor pupil was Marion Hartley, and charming in a gown of white satin; ,J-e graduating class were opened on ] 926 class of St. Joseph's Parochial to the Hazardville School, which call- I situation, t'-vit he has no definite idea crepe and net with a full length veil j Monday evening in the high school School were held Sunday morning at ed for an appropriation of $37,500, j of just wiu.t the amount is likely to Yesterday, as arranged, a confer­ the other high honor pupils were the 10:30 service in the church in the and to ask for a vote on the question |be. If the figures which are avail- Mary Connor, Allan Handy, Kather­ of tulle and duchess lace. Her at- auditorium with the; Class Day pro- ence was held with the representa­ 3 presence of a large congregation, in­ of purchasing a site for recreation |able can be used as a criterion, it is ine Simons and Mary Slapska. tendant wore yellow georgette trim- S* ™- Clyde Terwilhgei, president far in tive of the auditing company at tho; med with gold lace and a hat of yel- of ,the class' delivered the address of cluding relatives and friends of the purposes for which an appropriation | excess of the 'sum of $5,000, town building, and after a survey oi low horse hair. The wedding marches 'welcome and the others who took part graduates. The 31 graduates occu­ of $7,850 was to be asked in the! which is the amount named in the the situation had been made, and an were played by the church organist,' ?feie as follows: Class history, Miss pied seats in the center aisle. As the event of the voters approving of the ! formal charge of embezzlement made examination of the books, many of BIG-HARTS AND Miss Dorilda Castonguay and during j Dorothy Parker; prophecies. Miss Ed- graduates entered the church, the plan of the park and playground! against him in the Town Court by _ them being charred end damaged by the ceremony vocal numbers were ;.n.a P'arnondon. Miss Ruth Hurd, Mor- processional was played by the church commission. [Prosecuting Attorney Arthur R. Bos- j water, a decision was reached to be­ sung by Mrs. Frederick R. Furey and|rls Sullivan and Sumner Adams; class organist, Miss Dorilda Castonguay. The decision to defer holding the tick yesterday morning. gin the audit this morning. Mean­ OLD TIMERS MEET John L Sullivan j jmgles, Miss Rebecca Gager and Miss The exercises consisted of hymns by meeting • was reached by the select- j The total amount of the tax war- time, Hamilton was formally arraign­ Ie anor J 02l in the class, the reading the act of con­ men after consultation with Dr.; rant for this year was approximate- Following the church ceremony an i E . . T i statistics,' Miss Alic# ed in the Enfield Town Court at 11 umn d J ohn secration to the Sacred Heart and a Thornton Vail, chairman of the school jly $394,000. This is the sum which informal reception was held at the Q a? T Chillson; presenta- A. M., before Judge Bushnell, and af­ THIS EVENING home of the bride at which 100 guests tions Miss Lena Angelica and Stan- sermon by Rev. Daniel J. O'Connor, b°ard' and John A. Ryan, who is at;the tax collector was called upon to ter pleading not guilty, through his were present from New York, Hart- ley Sigos; advice to undergraduates, pastor. The diplomas were present­ the head of the playground commis- j collect and turn over to the Town counsel, Atty. Bromage, was placed ford, Springfield, Suffield, Poquonock L^rence Malley; relponse, George ed by the pastor, assisted by Fath­ sion. Both men readily assented to; Treasurer during the year 1925-26. under $10,000 bonds for a hearing on ers Keeney and Gaffney, assistants the plan of postponement until the!At the expiration of the tax collect- Final Game Before Va­ and this village. Othote of Spring-1^ombie; the class will was read by June 23rd. The bond was furnished audit of the books of Collector Clark ing period on May 1st, the collector cation Period Will Be field- -- catered.- The— -house was*• at-o I Alfred Woodward. at the church. The names of the by Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, mother tractively decorated with ferns and Annual Alumni Reunion. thirty-one graduates are as follows: L._ Hamilton, which was commenced' had remitted to the Town Treasurer of the collector, Arthur J. Gordon, in e this morning, was completed. It was approximately $287,000, leaving an cut flowers. The bride's gift to her: TheA annualannuali reunion anaand banquetoanquei oiof Mary Malley, Elizabeth Crombie, Mrs. W. A. Whitney, Jr., William Played On Park Ave. the felt that the extent of the possible uncollected balance of $107,000. This attendant was , a handsome brooch | Alumni Association, of the school Kathleen Carroll, Virginia Jandreau, Hilditch, Sr., and Edward Bromage. Grounds—K. of C. Still and the best man received a gold j was held Tuesday evening m the A, Genevieve Garvey, John Jakowicz, loss which the town is likely to suf- amount still stands unaccounted for The tax collector was bonded for $10,- knife. The couple were the recip- j P* Hoggins School Auditorium, and Norbert Gill, Doris White, Hilda fer financally should be determined j in no other way than that it is un- 000 in the Fidelity and Casualty Co. Lead League Race. ients of a large and varied assort-! des&\e th(? unfavorable weather was Mitchell, Ernestine White, James before any additional expenditures of; paid taxes for the current year. It of New York, and is being represent­ ment of wedding gifts, including sil-!vfjy la,reely attended, many of the Crombie, Marguerite Watton, Mat­ any size should be made. The decis- j was the fact that it was so far in ed at the audit which comm®nced to­ The final game before the league verware, checks? cut glass, furniture ^older. cJasses being represented. The thew Manning, Albert Novak, Edna ion reached by the officials _ in this j excess of the average amount of un- day by one of its_ expert accountants. schedule is interrupted by the vaca­ and linens 5 members of the 1926 graduating class Frlgon, Mary Cunningham, Alice matter is certain to meet with uni- j paid taxes in recent years, which A request for this was made yester­ tion period will be played on the Mr. and Mrs. McCann left by auto- who are to diplomas tonight Tanulas, Catherine Reilly, William versal approval throughout the town.' caused the town officials to request day by Attorney Ralph O. Wells of Park Avenue grounds this evening, mobile for a ten days' wedding trip. were among the guests. Peter Crom- Cunningham, Catherine Egan Theo­ an accounting from the collector, Hartford, who was here as the legal with the Big-Harts opposing the Old bie, Jr., president of the association, dore Zace, John Hynds, Margaret which was to include a list of the tax representative of the bonding com- The bride's traveling goWn was oi" James H. Liberty Is payers who had failed to pay their; pany. Timers. As both teams are now tied navy blue georgette with , a hat of presided at the informal program. Starr, Arthur Landry, Paul Stolpin- in the league standing there is cer­ Musical and literary numbers were ski, Earl Ryder, Andrew Browne, Trinity Graduate i taxes for the present year. So far as can be ascertained neith­ rose horse hair and coat of blue poir- I On the failure of Mr. Hamilton to tain to be a fast and snappy contest. et twill, trimmed with squirrel fur. interspersed with addresses by Prin­ Maureen O'Brien, Charles Swentnick- er the accounts of the Thompsonville The result of the games last week cipal Edgar H. Parkman, Supt. of as, Teresa Frisino, Peter Pacholski. Commencement Exercises At Hart-1 within a reasonable time, a Fire and Sewer District or the North Upon their return they will reside at m was as follows: June 10th, Old Tim­ 18 Ashmont street, Springfield. The Schools Anson B. Handy and mem­ ford Last Monday and Attended by i conference was held m the town Thompsonville district are involved ers 7, Greys 6; June 13th, Greys 4, bers of the association. Gabriel Pare FatheTancTSisters—Will"SaTVor i building' between the town official: in the shortage. The tax warrant of bride is a graduate of St. Joseph's Hazardville Young al K. of C. 3; June 14, K. of C. 9, Greys Parochial School and the Enfield High was chairman of the executive com­ Paris In September. ! }d Attorney Philip J. Sullivan, in , the Thompsonville Fire and Sewer 6. In the benefit game which was School and has been employed as a mittee. Man Married In R. I. M. J. Liberty and daughters, j which the legal aspects of the mat- j district amounted to $13,166.65. Of played last Sunday the All • Stars of tne I ter were discussed, and the proposed I this amount Collector Hamilton had stenographer in Springfield for sev­ Misses Alice and Esther Liberty of legal procedure against the collector, turned over to Secretary-Treasurer the Twilight League - defeated the eral years. The bridegroom was born Miss May E. Crosby of Woonsocket New King street, attended the one Polish Americans by a score of 11 to St. John's Day To Be was outlined in the event of he fur-! Dov/ney of the district, $11,550.00, in Philadelphia, but is a graduate of Bride of Harry F. Wallace at Cere­ hundredth commencement exercisesrC ther 10. The league schedule will be re­ the Springfield Technical High School K Observed by Masons mony in the Sacred Heart Church, of Trinity College in ZtS !!!? ' refusing to make his proper re-; leaving an uncollected balance of $1,- sumed on July 6th when the vacation last; turn to the town treasurer. . Later 1616.65. Allowing for the deduction and is a mechanical engineer employ­ Woonsocket, Last Tuesday. Monday, June 14th, at which James the town officials called Mr. Hamil- j from this of the*usual sum of~abate- period ends. The following is the ed by the Duckworth Chain Company Members of Doric Lodge Invited To . A wedding of local interest took H. Liberty graduated, leceiving tne : tnn ir> ofQim Viim or» avfoncinn nf I montc on/1 li'nno i league standing to date M - ; ton in and gave him an extension of i ments and liens, the amount of un- of that city. He is a member of the Attend Service In A Body At the place at Sacred Heart Church, Woon­ degree of bachelor of arts, D" I one week's time in which to make his |collected taxes for the district would W L P. C. American Society of Mechanical En­ First Presbyterian Church Sunday socket, R. I., Tuesday, when Harry F. erty took the four year K. of C 3 2 .600 m •- -4. n 11 • 4.1, course at; report. This period expired on June : be a little below the average for sev- gineers and also of the Western —To Receive Class of Members. Wallace, son of J. J. Wallace of Haz- 1W3S laSt Big-Harts 2 2 .500 Massachusetts Engineering Society. The subject of the sermon by the ardville, and Miss May E. Crosby of recentlv disUneruished hunself bv Thursday, and j eral years. The district officials Ire Old Timers 2 2 .500 lecently distinguished himself by Mi". Hamilton again asked for an ex-;satisfied that the audit of the district pastor, Rev. Lyman C. Pettit, D. D., Woonsocket, were married by Rev. 8 151 tensi n un tU Greys 2 3 .400 at the First Presbyterian Church on Fr. O'Donnell. The best man was to'TtudV hi FMncTfor^nr'veiT ^ ° , . the following Monday, j accounts, which will be made at the Local Water Supply ?ntr one of six from the unfvers'itils iat w,hleh tim? he Promised a full ac- jsame time that the town accounts are Sunday morning, will be "Divine Frank Crosby, a brother of the bride, ing one oi six nom tne universities : counting of the unpaid taxes of $107,- i being examined, will disclose little or Providence in History." In observ­ and the bridesmaid was Miss Anna Is Presented With A Highly Satisfactory and colleges throughout the United !000. He was given this additional j any discrepancy. The North ThomS- ance of St. John's Day, the members Wallace, a sister of the bridegroom. States to be so; honored by the P rench : time with the understanding that the-i sonville district tax amounts to ap- Leather Brief Case of Doric Lodge, A. F. & M., have During the ceremony solos were sung government. Mr . jjipei ty leaves oat- , town officials would positively carry ' proximately $700 a year and practi- Report of State Board of Health In­ urday for Cape Cod, where he will dicates That the Water Here Is been invited to attend the service in by -G. Allen Campbell of Hazardville. ' out a threat they had. made several! cally this amount has been turned D. William Brainard, Retiring Man­ a body. A class of members will be The bride has been employed as a spena tne next lew montns witn nisjtimes since the CXpiration of the of- over to them by the tax collector! Safe for Drinking Purposes and telephone operator at the exchange ager of Enfield Lumber & Coal Co. Other Domestic Use. received into the church next Sunday. aunt at her summei home in Hyan- ^ fjc;aj date of May 15th on which the Immediately following the accept- in Woonsocket and the bridegroom is Presented With Beautiful Gift by Friend Lee Mickle, A. B., M. B., Sunday School will meet at 12, and nisport, and will sail from New York return should be made, that the books I ance of the resignation of Mr Ham- Employees Last Monday Evening. has just completed a test of the qual­ the Christian Endeavor at 7 o'clock. employed as a clerk at the store of for 1'ranee the first week in Septem- >ld forcibly be take^ from him an| | iiton, First Selectman Murraya™ D. William Brainard of Pearl St., ity of the local water supply for the At the 8 o'clock service, the pastor George Webster Af Hazardville. Mr. Del • i an audit made of them. \ pointed former Deputy Sheriff Mar- who has been for a number of years State Board of Health. Mr. Mickle will preach on the topic, "What and Mrs. Wallace will reside in South Following his failure to keep his j tin E. Brodrick to fill the vacancy manager of the Enfield Lumber and is head of the Bureau of Laboratory Think Ye of Christ?" On Wednes­ Main street, Hazardville, and will be Former Local Man Is promise on Monday, events began to' until the annual election in October, Coal Company, but who has resigned ies of the state department, and has day evening at 7:45 o'clock, the ser­ at home to friends after July 1. happen of such startling and dramat-! Mr. Brodrick assumed his duties yes- to take the position of traveling rep­ made an exhaustive report of his vice preparatory to the sacrament of Quoted in U. S. Senate ic character as to keep the commun- i terday by being sworn in at the town resentative of the Rice & Lockwood finding which has just been received the Lord's Supper, which will be ob­ Father Mathew Cadets ity in a furore for the next 72 hours, j building and will actively assume his Lumber Co., with headquarters at at the local office of The Northern served the following Sunday, will be Senator Bingham Reads Portion of ' and from which it has far from re- j duties just as soon as the audit is Springfield, was presented with a Connecticut Power Company. Much held in the chapel, with preaching by Going To Pawtucket Letter Written by Manager A. L. covered yet. About 6:45 on Tuesday i completed. handsome leather brief case by the of the data in the report is techni­ Rev. John Johnstone, D. D., pastor Henry of Chase Metal Works, In | morning the fire department was j Mr. Hamilton had served twelve employees of the company last Mon­ cal, but the result of this sanitary' of the First Presbyterian Church of Will Leave Tomorrow 'Evening For Urging Passage of a Bill. i called to a fire in the Hamilton store, I years as collector, having been fre- day evening. The presentation was examination is summed in a final Hartford. Everybody welcome to all That City To Take Pa»t In State Portions of a letter written by j and a blaze was discovered in aquently elected during that time with made by Robert Bissland. Mr. Brain­ sentence or footnote, which is a part; tHeTese services. Field Day of Drum Corps 'Which Manager A. L. Henry of the Chase j waste basket underneath the desk in j an unusually large majority. He was ard left Tuesday, to assume his new of the report, which says that the1 Will Be Held On Saturday. Metal Works of Waterbury, who for-1 which the former tax collector kept| in fact considered the strongest vote duties ai? the Springfield office, with supply is adequate and as to the Former Teacher Here The Father Mathew Cadets Drum merly resided here, and is the son of j the account books of the property getter in the Republican party local- the best wishes of his former assoc­ quality of the water it says: "That Corps will leave tomorrow evening Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Henry of ! tax, and also the books of the Thomp- j ly. On his own admission the short- iates in the Enfield Lumber Co., and it was found in "a safe and very sat­ . To Wed Chicopee Man for Pawtucket, R. I., to take part in Pearl street, were read in the United! sonville Fire and Sewer District and • age has been growing steadily for the townspeople in general. isfactory condition for drinking pur­ the state field day of the drum corps States Senate the other day by Sen-jthe North Thompsonville district for j years, and is believed to have been poses and other domestic use. Miss Martha J. Doering To Become of Rhode Island, which takes place ator Bingham in urgng the passage I which he was also tax collector. The due largely to a careless and ineffic- To Discontinue Trolly Bride of G. Edward Hilbert, Yale in that city next Saturday. The loc­ of a bill to put the foreign service i fire was prevented from spreading j ient method of conducting his affairs, J. Francis Browne and Sylvester Assistant Chemist, In Holyoke, on al boys have been especially invited on a better and permanent basis. Mr. |but not before it did considerable j Despite the fact that the shortage I Service Next Week L. Mitchell left this afternoon with j Saturday, June 26th. to take part in this field day because Henry has resided in Waterbury for; damage to the receipt books and the |will, if it develops to the amount ' " •••!• mmnm a group from Hartford to attend the j Friends in this place -of Miss Mar- of the splendid record they have made twelve years, and is manager of the property tax list of the town of En which is generally assumed, impose Receiver Harrison * B. Freeman's Pe­ Eucharistic Congress which opens onjtha J. Doering, daughter of Mr. and in contests of this character through­ export department of the Chase Met­ field. an additional burden on the taxpay­ tition In Superior Court For Dis­ Sunday in Chicago. The party will '• Mrs. Paul Doering of Locust street, out the east. Their championship al Works, which is one of the large Mr. Hamilton explains the fire by ers, there is a genuine sympathy felt continuance of Road Granted By spend Friday at Niagara Falls, go-; Holyoke, former teacher in the En- standing will make them one of the manufacturing plants of that city. stating that he had been at work on for Mr. Hamilton and his family in Judge Wolfe Last Week. ing by boat to Detroit where Satur-1 field Public Schools, but for the past big attractions of the meet. the books early in the morning, and the community. One week from tomorrow 'will,be day will be spent in sightseeing trips j few years a teacher in the White The ladies' aid society of the Meth­ before leaving for his breakfast must Mr. Hamilton has conducted a groc­ the last day in which a trolley ser­ of the city, including the Ford Motor I Street School, Springfield, will be in- The last of the whist parties and odist Church will meet in the chapel have thrown a partially consumed ery store on Pearl street for several vice will be maintained by the Hart­ factory. They will be away about terested to learn of her coming mar- socials to be given by Primrose Camp, next week Thursday afternoon at cigarette into the waste basket. The years. Immediately following_ the ford & Springfield Street Railway. ten days. riage to G. Edward .Hilbiert, which Royal Neighbors of America until the 2:30 o'clock. Miss Mildred Becroft, officers have apparently accepted this! disclosure of his shortage, several at- Judge Isaac Wolfe granted the peti­ will take place in Holyoke, Saturday, fall, will be held next Wednesday ev­ teacher at the Connecticut School for explanation as no further investiga- j tachments were placed on the stock tion of Receiver Harrison B. Free­ The Young People's Missionary So­ June 26th. Mr. Hilbert is a son of ening in Odd Fellows' Hall. The the Blind in Hartford, will give a tion is being made. He was recalled j and fixtures, by wholesale houses in man in the Superior Court last week ciety of United Presbyterian Church Mr. and Mrs. Guido Hilbert of whist will follow the regular meet­ talk and musical entertainment. A from his home when the fire was dis- Springfield through Attorney Samuel that the cars be discontinued on June are holding a food sale today in the Springfield Street, Chicopee, former­ ing of the camp. Attractive prizes large, attendance is requested as it is covered, and after remaining on the Sisisky. The store is now closed and \'. w 'f'AM A It A 9 .M MIAM > 25th. The company will maintain a vacant store in Baronian Block in ly of Holyoke. He is assistant re- will be awarded. All members and the last meeting of the season until |scene for a short time he aear- i in charge Constable Martin E. \jm bus service for the present. Pearl street. search XKE THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1926.

stoppipg; pn crossings, apd 110 for third Sister island. When the aud­ ^rgini^ Apple-Blossom fiiieen Being Crowned crossingsing'in In *—front of, Niagara F^&JE^ar Is iometer was recently tested in New > recklessness at croas: York it was found that Sixth Avenue ll TestedlByAvdiometer and 34th Street was New York's '"oiwlaips lof (Speed, 1*r< noisiest corner and ,that Fifth Ave. istagagt of *s»p wgqals^ DeTiff{U|edfp Meusure^Heartng of and 42nd Street ranks' next. The gs and the^pep ^iedOut On Cataract's measurements at these points were •> forty-nme 'of (grossing iff V<^pe and*IHteasiirements Made of 55 and 50 units, which is coniu.v.- trains or similar recldessness, the Roac of the Waters. ably below the measuremen t V ; Of the 114 accidents which occur- By use of the audiometer, the in- at Niagara* but at Niagara the vol- v red on grade crossings in Connecti- strument for the measurement of de- ume of noise continues twerKy-i---" ; %' CJhildreh Being Struck cut fifteen occurred in New Britain, fectivd hearing designed by the Bell hours a day, while in New Yo.t by Automobiles Show twelve in Hartford, ten each in Dan- Telephone Laboratories for the West­ volume persists only from J • bury and Meriden, three in Bridge­ ern Electric Company,' measurements A.M. to 6 P. M. ' $$$*% An Alarming Increase port, two in New Haven, one in Wat- have been made of the roar of the erbury and the rest were distributed waters of Niagara Falls. The audio­ ^ In State According To over a wide area,, mostly ..in rural meter measures noise in sound units NOTICE Motor Bulletin. sections. and one of its most valuable uses is NOTICE is hereby given to the * «'j' in testing the healing of persons Legal Voters of the Hazardville Fire A Georgian who has a hen/ that partly deaf. ;:?» * District, Hazardville, Conn., that the f A csill for action to check the in- produces 'double' eggs, each egg con­ Tests at N'iag&rk Falls showed that annual meeting will be held at the crease in Connecticut accidents to taining two yolks and measuring the two noisiest points about the Engine House, in said district, Mon- ' child-pedestrians is sounded by the seven and one-half to seven and cataracts were at the foot of the day evening, June 21pt, 1926, at 7:30 j state motor vehicle department in three-quarter inches in oval circum­ American Falls at Prospect Point Standard Time, for the election of |p" : -fhe current issue of its bulletin. In ference, is endeavoring to evolve a and directly in front of the Cave of Fire Commissioners, to take action "the past year, 1,707 children were new breed of fowl that will regular­ the Winds below Goat Island. The relative to laying of a tax, and to ' . struck by motor vehicles in this state ly produce such eggs. noise measurements at both of these transact any other business proper ; as against 1,554 so struck in 1924, Canned beef, abandoned in 1845 by points was 70 units, .which is usually to come before said meeting. IffiJpMI'*-:.# and 104 children were killed by mot- classified as a deafening noise. <»r vehicles last year, whereas the Sir John Franklin, Arctic explorer, EDWARD a ALLEN, number killed in such accidents in was opened by scientists and led to The quietest point at Niagara m H. STEPHEN BRIDGE, • 1924 was seventy-six. rats in London. It caused no ill ef­ Falls was found to be Terrapin Point, EDWARD J. LOCKE, ^£$1, fects. which is at the extreme southwest Fire Commissioners. "Pedestrian child accidents are on 1 the increase," says the bulletin. Gov. H. F. Byrd of Virginia is pictured crowning the queen of the Third Shenandoah Apple Blossom festival The Boston Museum of Fine Arts corner at Goat Island, where the reg­ Dated June 15, 1926. m •"They alone have not shown any of at the fair grounds in Winchester. A pageant in whicb 1,000 persons participated followed the ceremony. Win- recently declined to exhibit five nude istration showed 45 units. The next l! ^ the corrective tendency which educa­ Chester is one of the apple-growing centers of the United States'. paintings, part of a collection of Ital­ quietest points were at the Whirl­ Edgar Allan Poe received only $52 a "• ian art sent to America for exhibi­ pool Rapids and the Canadian Rapids for 'The (Sold Bug' and only $10 for i tion has exerted on all other types. tion. .A table is printed showing increase above the Horseshoe Falls at the 'The Raven.' -in four of seven types of accidents to is a person who has no great capac­ school to clamber aboard his automo­ •.child pedestrians listed under the ity to take care of himself, so he bile for a ride. "If the children ought W\ ••••• rgfeneral heading "carelessness," as must exercise great care." to ride the authorities whose duty it R. R. CROSSING rfollows: Crossing street, 545 in 1924, Such driving action as passing is, or their parents, .will see that iS72 in 1925; stepping from behind through a crowd of children at an they do. It is not the duty or even vsther objects without looking, 335 in uncontrolled speed, depending upon the privilege of the chance passerby. ACCIDENTS ARE 11324, 464 in 1925; playing in street, the horn signal for notice to a child If the law of damages were more 146 in 1924, 82 in 1925; coasting, 54 to get out of the way or get hit, generally understood, and it were in 1924, 66 in 1925; confusion, 20 in striking a child who has been in plain realized that to take a guest into BEING CHECKED 1924, 16 in 1925; boarding or leaving view> backing without warning and one's car usually makes the owner trolley car, 9 in 1924, 7 in 1925; without looking, and any other form responsible for injury to him, there stealing ride, 25 in 1924, 43 in 1925. of driving near children except such would be less inviting of chance ap­ Numberof Fatalities •"The situation is bad," according to as is governed by extreme caution plicants." the motor vehicle department. "The and consequent car control will more Supervision of children's play, to Prom Motor Vehicles question of what can be done about and more be held to be reckless and keep them off the streets while at Being Struck at Grade it is not concretely answered, if it intolerable, the bulletin says. It play, and the providing of play­ 3s answerable. Pessimism as to pos­ holds that the automobile operator grounds, ball fields and gymnastic Crossings Not Making sible betterment over existing con­ must look out for the child, but con­ apparatus in plenty is recommended AND HERE IS THE MOST REASONABLE OFFER YET MADE ations has in fact begun to appear. cedes that there are many instances as an effective means toward this end. Serious Gain. > But on the other hand there is, in where children run into moving ve­ FOR THE PAYMENT OF THEM. This offer will not be repeat­ Mr Connecticut at least, an army, in­ hicles or. where the operator has no The Last Man's Club, with a ros­ Sixty-four motor vehicles were ed for we expect these BARGAINS will be snapped up at once— cluding all the school forces, police previous knowledge that a child is ter of thirty-four Minnesota Civil struck by railroad trains or locomo­ -and officials, and all those others who near, which he cannot and will not War veterans four decades ago, has tives on grade crossings in Connecti- HERE ARE A FEW OF THEM. . are the closest to this problem who be expected to guard against. dwindled to three men. A bottle of'cut last year. Out of a total of 2,- .have "just begun to fight." Parents are reminded of their re­ wine which has reposed in the bank 206 railroad crossing fatalities in the in view of the common knowledge sponsibility to keep constantly edu­ vault since the first meeting will be | United States, eleven occurred in this of the nature of a child, a motor catingg theirtucii uuuuieuchildren onuii uuwhow totu taketatte i used by the last member— to toast his State and thirteen people were killed. vehicle operator is charged with a of themselves in traffic, and it departed comrades. Four of the deaths resulted from FORD TOURING CARS AND ROADSTERS, are now greater responsibility when driving is held that more care is due from ! The debt of the United States Gov-1 crossing accidents in Plainfield. In where there are children. "He is older children than younger. Jt is r. ; "rnment at the end of 1925'was four : 1924 there were six such fatal acci- selling for $25.00 Down—$5.00 Per Week obliged, in other words, to see that mistaken kindness, in the view of the i per cent less than at the end of 1924, j dents in Connecticut resulting in sev- fee so drives his car that they do not department, for an operator to stop according to Department~ of Com- rn deaths. get in his way. He knows that here and allow children on the way to merce figures. ;,".om the fact that crossing fatal- FORD SEDANS $50.00 Down—$5.00 Per Week : -s throughout the country showed increase lact year no greater than 1 6-10 J>er cent, and injuries from TOURING CARS, in fine condition, sell­ ' ch accidents an increase of only '2 of one per cent, notwithstanding ing for $100.00 Down—$5.00 Per Week "a t j considerate increase in traffic, I' e safety section of the American FORBES & WALLACE, INC. ! Railway ' Association concludes that DODGE PANEL DELIVERY $350.00 | "crossing accidents are undoubtedly j being cfiecked." STORE HOURS: Daily 9:00 A. M. to 5:00 P. M., Including Saturdays : The intensive campaign against : this type of accidents is being car- We have several other exceptional values in Reconditioned Cars. jried into Connecticut again this year, iand crossing tenders and others have YOUR OLD CAR WILL BE TAKEN IN FIRST PAYMENT. been asked to report the numbers of p;:' j all motor vehicles carelessly operat- The June Sale of Toiletries ied at crossings. During the past I year, the state motor vehicle depart- j ment received 955 complaints of im- Prices represent guaranteed savings that t proper driving at such crossings, as against 616 complaints during the count up substantially on a summer's supply. previous year. Of the 1925 com­ plaints, 792 were for speeding over 41 North Main Street Phone 606 Thompsonville, Conn. crossings, forty-three for disregard Compacts • Soaps and Shampoos Creams and Lotions of stop signals, ten for turning or Dorin Rouge, regularly 40c Physicians' and Surgeons' Edna Wallace Hopper's 60c at - 31c Soap, 10c cakes 7c Cold and Vanishing Po Go Rouge, regularly 50c 4 for 25c Creams, at 45c at - - 39c Pompeian Bloom, regularly Yardley's Lavender Soap, Dagget & Ramsdell's Cold 50c, at — 39c regular 35c cake, at 27c Cream, 33c jars 25c French Paste Rouge, regu­ 3 for 50c Small tubes 19c larly 65c, at 35c , Jergens' Glycerine Soap, Medium jars 39c 10c cakes 7c Elcaya 50e Vanishing Dental Preparations 4 for 25c Cream, at 37c Calypto 25c Tooth Paste, Laco Castile Soap, Stillman's 45c Freckle NO-NOX at 17c, 3 for 50c 17c cakes 14c 3 for 39c Cream, at 33c Pyorrhocide 79c Powder, Ponds' Vanishing and Cold at - 65c Roger and Gallet's Violette and Sandal Soap, Cream, regular 29c size, MOTOR FUBL ! Forhan's Tooth Paste, 27c at 23c tubes - 23c 40c cakes 34c 39c tubes, 34c, 3 for $1 3 for 95c Regular 49c size 39c Lyons' Paste and Powder, Pears' Unscented Soap, Frostilla, regularly 25c, at 17c, 3 for 50c 15c cakes 10c at 19c No-D-Ka 39c Tooth Paste, 4711 White Rose Glycerine Jergens' Lotion, regularly at - 29c Soap, 23c cakes 17c 39c, at 33c Ipana 39c Tooth Paste, STOPS KNOCKS Saymans' Vegetable Soap, Cream O'Clay and Cream 34c, 3 for $1.00 15c cakes 10c O'Comfort, regularly 60c Calox 23c Tooth Powder, Esteeco English Bath Soap each, at 45c 17c, 3 for 50c regular 50c cakes 39c Regular $1.00 size ... 83c PUTS CARBON TO WORK 3 for $1.00 Talcum and Dusting Forbes & Wallace Peroxide* life: Barcelona Castile Soap, Cream, regularly 25c, Powders 25c cakes 13c [UTTING the old demon, carbon, to work sounds like a paradox Amolin Talcum, regularly 2 for 25c at 19c 25c, at 19c Olive Oil Soap, 3% pound Pompeian Cream, regularly nevertheless that's just what GULF No-Nox Motor Fuel does and Johnson & Johnson's Baby bars, regularly $1.35, 50c, at 39c here's how it happens: Compression is power. The more com­ Talcum, regularly 19c, at .. 69c at 13c Olive Oil Soap, 15c cakes, Face Powders pression the more power. Greater compression is secured by reducing the Roger & Gallet's Talcums 3 for 29c Pivers' Azureau, regularly displacement or space in the combustion chamber. Carbon deposits mater­ $1.00 Fleur d'Amour, Lux Soap, 10c cakes 7c 95c, at ...... 79c at 79c Palmolive Soap, 10c cakes, Ambre Royal, regularly ially reduce this space—old time gasoline would not withstand this 50c Le Jade, at 29c at 7c $1.25, at 79c added carbon compression — clicks — knocks—pings or detonations of Mavis Talcum, regularly Mulsified Cocoanut O i 1 Mavis, regularly 50c, 19c, at - 15c Shampoo, bottle 33c at 29c distress quickly following sudden acceleration or heavy pulls. Azurea Talcum, regularly Am,ami Shampoo, 35c, at 27c 15c packages 11c Spring Flowers, regularly 4711 Dusting Powder, reg­ Golden Glint Shampoo, 75c, at 29c No-Nox withstands higher compression—stops the knocks or detonations, W: Pompeian, regularly 50c, ularly $1.50, at $1.19 25c packages 18c 1 thereby increasing engine efficiency. GULF No-Nox and Carbon Deposits , f: life- LaLete Dusting Powder, Hopper's Hair Youth, reg­ at 39c regularly 50c, at 39c ular $1.00 bottles 79c La Blache, regularly 39c, work together for more power and greater mileage. Bouton's Baby Dusting Nemo Toilet Soap, at 35c Powder, regularly 59c, 10c cakes 7c Rojane, regularly $1.00, at — — 39c 4 for 25c at 79c Turns Mountains Into Mole Hills This guarantee goes with it: GULF No-Nox Motor Fuel is Non-Noxious, Check This List and Send To * Non-Poisonous and no more harmful to man or motor than ordinary gaso­ FORBES & WALLACE, INC. line—that it contains no dope of any kind—that the color is for identifica­ MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT, €." tion only—that it positively will not heat the motor, winter or summer. SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Name GULF No-Nox Motor Fuel is priced three cents per gallon higher tHsm V ' ordinary gasoline—and is worth it. Address City Orange Gas— At tho Sign of the Orang* Disc Charge— C. O. D Am't..

•4c-.' 2 Irtr - r-T-- GULF REFINING Forbes & Wallace, Inc. Springfield, Mass. ma iiitiyiiiiiii SMjui. M'jtebjttjii^ ™ JUNE 17» 192&

'sssr :•'••".•/. T ' m .£ of tte&fe CiiH«d, ms totmm tor has increased 60 per cent in the past ester, own And operate a motion pic­ California, motor 108 miles a day ov­ 14 -years, now receives' tourists from twelve yearB. ture theater, thus earning part of er desert roads to attend school at Marseilles. Curiously, Monte Chrlsto, Odd Bits of News The British Museum has an income their expenses. Thermal. MAINTAINED where Morel went Mter his escape, of only: $3,700 a year from its per­ Caddo Parish, Louisiana, has spent Ice skates fashioned from the was also a penal colony Island for manent endowment. $8,000,000 on road improvements in : SL , bouts of cattle were used in the '"•- >v ^m many years. Monte Chrlsto Is owned Apple orchards in Maine suffered An annual hospital fee of $15, en­ the past eight years without issuing j century B. C., each bone being fbA- by Italy. It lies oft, the coast from severely during the winter from an titling them to medical treatment, a bond, the money being raised by I tened on one side along its lenctb 'Located in Loneliest Places onslaught of mice that burrowed un­ operations, and hospital room ser­ a five-mill levy. Leghorn and about 25 miles north of der the snow and stripped the bark I and perforated to admit leather in World. f^:!:p! Elba. vice, is paid by citizens of Longview, A tablecloth^ once owned by Kate j ankle thongs. from the trees. Washington. Douglas Wiggin contains autographs "Czarist Russia, for a time, sent Gasoline taxes on motor vehicles The ancient custom of firing «c ^ Washington.—Le Marlniere, said to 18,000 prisoners to Siberty annually. A half-million-dollar will penciled of one hundred fifteen notables, in­ noon gun on top of Janlcuhqe SB in this country during 1925 amount­ on a nurse's petticoat at the behest cluding Mark Twain, Henry Irving, in Rome is to be discontinued, and be the last French convict ship, sailed Mut^i of the famous Trans-Siberian Expert Pacific Coast Cocks ed to $150,000,000. Most of this sum out of La Bochelle recently with 340 of a dying man in Los Angeles haB Carl Schurz, Richard Harding Davis, correct time will be furnished thfe in­ railway was built with prison labor. Give Choice Recipes for"-'" was expended on road improvements. been upheld by a jury. and Annie Louise Carey. habitants by means of convicts destined for incarceration on The chief horror of Siberian exile was A spiritualist claims to have in­ Only two marriage licenses have Three children of Desert Center, controlled clockk Devil's island, French Guiana. the knout. By It, or by terror of It, • Unusual Desserts vented a radio box that will bring been issued in the past four years in Recently, also, Mexico dispatched* a guards kept prisoners docile. The (Editor's Note: . This is one of a icriei voices from the spirit land. Owyhee County, Idaho, which has a noted criminal to its lonely convict handle of the knout Is a heavy wood of cooking articles contributed to this It costs $6,167 to rear a girl and population of 4,694 and an area larg­ Iplljisland, Maria Madre. stick, 18 inches long. Fastened to It paper by six famous, cooks.) $6,077 to rear a boy to the age of er than Rhode Island, Delaware, and ||g| Russia has started air service be- Is a thong of rawhide. About eight There never was a woman eighteen, according to a life insur­ Connecticut. l^tween- Kem and Solovetski Island In feet from the handle the thong Is spilt who kept house who didn't ance company's statistics. Berlin police are wearing a bullet­ ||||the White sea to transport prisoners. Hay-fever victims will find no sol­ proof armor of light, flexible steel A Granite State in three parts. These streamers are want her cooking to have an ace in higher apartments of sky­ plates. 2^®The famous monastery on the island three feet long. The ends are tied individual touch. And the scraper structures, scientists declare. The French Parliament has for­ j^has been converted into a prison. Into hard knots, although lead or iron As much pollen exists in the air at bidden the manufacture of sucettes, 'm& "These three incidents show that hooks sometimes were used.. 3 making of desserts offers the top of a thirty-two story build­ baby pacifiers, as causing adenoids. Lawn Mower RSlthe practice of maintaining convict "Preparatory to administering the BE^fk Plenty of cp- ing as on the ground. A British expert says that women MMIMIIM in the world's loneliest knout the victim was tied face down­ lPEGRAP portunity for John Philip Sousa paid $25 to have will never become perfect air pilots When Price and Quality are consid­ Iw places has not entirely been given up,"' ward o,n a rough table. Close to the. expressing this his first song published. because they are too fearless. A |Ssays a bulletin of the National - The first bathtub installed in ,the certain sense of fear of danger makes ered there is no better Lawn Mower knout wielder stood a clerk with a individuality. United States was made of mahog­ for carelessness, while fearlessness §|j|graphlc society from its headquarters book In which he checked the number Recipes for any. often makes for carelessness. on the market. Prices range from j^lfat Washington. of strokes as that worthy swung them e v e r a 1 deli- A new rush to the Transvaal dia­ Worry about overweight sent 225 |||| Famous Penal Colonies. and called them. For the first 25 ious desserts mond fields has started, following re­ I women suffering from mental disor­ Ww&. "Devil's island, Maria Madre and strokes the skin was marked white by cent sensational diamond discoveries. ders to Bellevue Hospital, New York, |||1Solovetski Island are in very mixed the lash as if a chalk mark were are given in A man has only one chance in last year. $10.50 to $16.75 company historically. Virginia, St. drawn on the flesh. After that the MRSi- this article by twenty-five of coming out alive in a The baronial estates of Sweden are KATE bare-handed battle with an ostrich. being divided and sold to farm work­ - Helena, Funchal, Monte Chrlsto, Sl- thongs began to cut through. When BREW Mrs. Belle De- Grass Scythes and Sickles, Lawn Rakes -/t , Iberia, the Seychelles, Australia, New a knout Sentence called for 100 VAUGHN Graf, San Fran- Of 2,600 judges on the bench of ers in an attempt to stem the tide V Caledonia, Andaman islands, Tasma- Soviet Russia, 1,416 are peasants and of emigration to America. and Steel Garden Rakes, Hoes and Gar­ '•r>. strokes the last one was usually omit­ Cisco* home economics coun- 882 are workmen. A Farmington, New Mexico, hotel , /nla and Sakhalin have all been penal ted as a 'token of imperial magna­ sellor, and Mrs. Kate Brew Levulose, the sweetest sugar drilled a water well, connected it den Weeders. „l -• colonies for more or less distinguished nimity.' " Vaughn, domestic science di­ known, is derived from dahlia roots with a house pumping system and t- prisoners. rector, Los Angeles. and artichoke tubers. then oil came in and surprised the '*-j "St. Helena, Funchal and the Sey- No amendments have been made guests. Large packages of high-grade „ schelles are royal prison islands. The ' - ^ Bachelor Tax » to the French Constitution since Ocean cables controlled by Great „'f others in their time served for com- Managua, Nicaragua.—A proposal Santa Clara Dumplings 1884. . Britain and America handle 90 per Lawn Grass Seed priced at 40c. ' mon criminals or unlucky politicians. for a "bachelors' tax" has been pre­ "For a quickly made dessert. I Liquor drinking among the Hindus cent of the world's cable traffic. recommend Santa Clara Apricot decreased 7 per cent last year. Opium from India has a morphine When Elba failed to hold Napoleon he sented to the Nicaraguan congress. Dumplings, says Mrs. DeGrarT "It This proposal would tax all unmar­ takes less than half an hour to pre­ Thfe per capita consumption of content of seven per cent, Chinese -was placed on St. Helena, well toward pare them." " meat in America last year was 154.3 opium 10 per cent, Turkish and Per­ the middle of the South Atlantic, out ried men between fifteen and sixty $5 pounds, the greatest ever recorded. sian _ 13 per cent. Heroin, codeine, a month. Here is Mrs. DeGraf's recipe: The Thompsonville of harm and out of the shipping lanes. 1 cup sifted flour A million gallons of sea water will dionin, and morphine are extracted '' i That was in 1815. He died in 1821. 2 teaspoons baking powder ' be transported from the Atlantic from the latter. "Funchal in the Azores and the Sey­ % teaspoon salt coast to the new Shedd Aquarium in English miners may be compelled Floating Nursery S tablespoons shortening chelles on the east coast of Africa % cup milk Chicago, to provide a home for the j to carry miniature radio sets—re­ Hardware Company noith of Madagascar are more recent New York.—A floating nursery is 1 cup strained, stewed salt-water fish which will be on ex­ ceiving and transmitting—as a means bound for Hamburg. The Cleveland apricots hibition there. jof communication in case of disast­ prison stations. In Africa the British Sift dry ingredients together. Hub The number of persons on city, ers. 112-114 MAIN STREET occasionally find it expedient to ab­ has 31 babies aboard. In shortening, then gradually add milk, mixing with a flat knife. Turn county, state and national payrolls j Students of the University of Roch­ sent certain native rulers from their on to a slightly floured board. Roll subjects. So, when Prempeh, king of put in rectangular shape about 4 | Georgia Refuses Pay inches Avide and 8 inches long. "'the Ashanti on the Gold coast, spilled Cover top of dough with apricot too much blood, they sent him to so­ ^ on War-Looted Bond puree, then roll up like a jelly roll. Cut off slices an inch thick, and journ In the soothing climate of the a Atlanta, Ga.—A man in Call- place cut side down in greased bak­ Seychelles. Prempeh, after twenty fornla, who holds a state bond ing dish. Bake in a hot oven about years, returned to his people, so ap­ 15 minutes. Serve with lemon sauce. X of "1854, will find he holds a Make the lemon sauce by mixing parently he did not like the asylum. i> joker, State Treasurer William % cup brown sugar, % cup white LeFT to right: Mrs. Sarah Tyson Rarer. But the English did, so they sent J. Spencer has announced. sugar, l tablespoon flour. Juice and grated rind of one lemon, and 1 Miss Rosa Michaelis, Mrs. Belle DeGraf. Mwanga, deposed ruler of Uganda, to The seventy-two-year old bond tablespoon butter. Bring to boll, Join him and then Kabarega of Un- and cook for five minutes. Mrs. Kate B. Vaughn, Miss Lucy G. was presented at the capltol Dumplings and sauce should b* yoro, Sayyld Khalid of Zanzibar and with claim for payment. served hot. Allen, and Miss Margaret Allen Halt Saad Zaghul of Egypt. The Sey­ The treasurer will not pay, chelles detention was not nearly so ef­ a/.ntJ will demand the return of fective in the case of Zaghul, who is '.tee document as stolen property now the leader of a popular party In which, he asserted, was taken Egypt- To Funchal was sent the de­ by the troops of General Sher­ posed emperor of Austria-Hungary im­ man in the famous march I ' mediately t following the end of the through Georgia. World war. He died in exile. His Also, it is not a real bond, In- With Oranges wife and children are, now in Spain. asmuch as it was not Issued, Another interesting fruity dessert Tourists Visit Chateau d'lf. for which Mrs. DeGraf provides the the treasurer said. recipe is Orange Custard Pudding. "Chateau d'lf, the castle in which 1 cup sifted bread crumbs tha baxa a£ Dumas' novel. 'The Count SirCrMirCrtitrCrCziiiiiitrUirCt-Criiv % cup milk 1 cup orange rind 3 eggs separated , % cup sugar Add the grated rind of 1 orange to I the juice. Use soft bread crumbs. Sift through a coarse strainer. Add milk and orange juice. Beat eggs separately. Add sugar to yolks and then add to the custard. Mix well, then fold in stiffly beaten egg < W whites. Pour in pudding dish. Set dish in a pan of hot water and bake until firm in center, about 30 min­ ' V ^)w utes, in a moderate oven, 860 degrees —Service Fahrenheit. It has been said that: "Profit is the revenue contributed1by a community for "If men did the cooking services rendered." Pineapple, Too they would insist on a good stove^|^ Our motto has been and will be: "To Hawaiian Pineapple Pudding Is a simple dessert which is very pretty. Mrs. DeGraf makes it with one cup make prompt and careful delivery of a rice, 1 cup grated pineapple^ 2 cups Where is the woman who does not whipped cream, and % cup powdered quality that will satisfy." sugar. Wash rice well. Add 2 cups of agree with Mrs. Rorer's statement? cold water, Cover closely and set over a low flame, cookincr for about t 20 minutes, or until all the water is Yet why will so many women put up TwPrivate Phones—21 and 22, absorbed. ) When cooked. ) remove from fire, sprinkle with salt, replace with an inefficient stove day after day? cover and 1ft stand Ave minutes. Turn into a bowl and set aside to cool. Just before luncheon Is served RS. RORER, famous Philadelphia of heat, regardless of how many burners add remaining ingredients. Pile In cooking expert, and five other are lighted. Each is an independent unit." sherbet cups and serve. famous^M cooks who recently conducted Send for free booklet, Enfield Lumber and With Any Fruit a practical test of the Perfection Stove, Dependable flames. "That's true," "Favorite Menus and Re­ Strawberry Meringues I Doesn't agree that good cooking results depend remarked Miss Lucy G. Allen, of the cipes of 6 Famous Cooks." It sound like a most palatable des­ sert? Mrs. Vaughn nas a simple to a great extent on a good stove. They Boston School of Cookery. "And the Coal Company recipe for it. •agree, too, after critical, exhaustive flames stay just as you set them. They I'iVELLOW 3 egg whites TIPS 1 cup sugar' cooking tests that the Perfection is a do not creep." Prospect Street Thompsonville, Conn. % teaspoon vinegar mighty good stove. Their comments on 1 teaspoon vanilla And clean. "There's no soot or odor, CLUE Beat egg whites stiff. Add the the Perfection's performance will give FLAME vinegar to the egg whites and beat. either, when you cook on the Perfection," -*-=rop-:?vyicn Add sugar gradually, beating it with you some idea of what men would de­ wlre„whip. Drop the mixture in mand, and what experts do demand of added Mrs. Rorer. "The efficient long Six famous cooks recom­ spoonfuls on oiled paper placed on chimneys burn the oil completely be­ mend this flame for frying baking sheet and bake in a slow a stove. oven. When finished, cut the me­ fore the heat reaches the utensils." andforpre-heatingtheoven. ringues through the center and fill It has ye! low tips 1 Yi inches with crushed strawberries. Serve E(lSy operation, "I like equipment topped with whipped cream. which is easy to work with," said Mrs. Safe and economical. "All these high above the blue area. Don't Read This Ad Other fruits may be used in sea­ points'recommend the Perfection," said son instead of the strawberries. Belle DeGraf, San Francisco, home This makes a dainty dish to serve economics counsellor. "And the Perfec­ Miss Margaret A. Hall, Battle Creek Unless You Are Looking For A Good at parties, too. tion certainly is. It lights at the touch of CoHege of Home Economics. "And, in Home At A Reasonable Price. a match. And the heat is regulated by addition, it is safe and economical in a simple turn of the wick." operation. What more could anyone ask of a stove?" ENFIELD ST. PROPERTY • e • Price Cash, Adaptable, too. "The Perfection An Unusual Pie proved its adaptability to me," com­ In other words, the Perfection meets Brand new 5 room Bungalow, four acres of Mrs. Vaughn's tig pie Is an unusual mented Mrs. Kate B. Vaughn, Los ihe high standards of the six critical The oil supply is always l j 6500 $4500 change from the ordinary pie. Here an( are tne Ingredients: Angeles, home economics director, "by cooks. It will meet yours, too. See the visible. Perfection's patent­ 8 room House, 1 acre of good land 4500 1% cups boiling water performing many cooking operations at 1926 Perfections at any dealer's. All 2000 2 tablespoons cornstarch ed reversible glass reservoir 8 rooms and 2 acres of land 6000 2 tablespoons flour the same time—frying, baking, boiling, sizes from a one-burner model at *6.75 can be refilled without soil­ 7 rooms, IV2 acres of land—a good buy 5500 3500 % cup sugar to a five-burner range at $120.00. Every Juice two lemons and broiling." ing the hands with kerosene. Eight rooms, all modern. Coops for 2000 Grated rind one lemon woman who cooks deserves a good stove. 12500 % cup finely chopped fig* "And," said chickens - 2 eggs Ample heat supply. Manufactured by Sift dry ingredients into top of Miss Rosa Michaelis, famous New PERFECTION STOVE COMPANY THOMPSONVILLE PROPERTY double boiler. Pour boiling water on them, stirring constantly. Cook Orleans specialist, "there is no lessening Cleveland, Ohio Park Ave., 5 rooms, steam heat, just built 5000 2000 for 15 minutes. Beat eggs slightly, and with figs add to cooked mixture. Park Ave., 2 family and 2 car garage 8000 3000 Let cook 3 minutes. Remove from 1500 fire and add lemon juice and rind. STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK Near Franklin St., 8 rooms, steam heat ...... 5000 Turn into plate lined with pastry, 5200 2200 wet edge. Make lattice of pastry' Elm Street, 2 family, good repair strips across top. Bake 40 mlnuteB Distributors • 26 Broadway Woodlawn Avenue, 4 room Bungalow, large at 350 degrees. Serves 6. 3300 800 Everyone likes a change of cook­ lot — ing. These "different" dessertB will Dartmouth St., 5 room, one floor bungalow 4000 1600 pleasre the most particular. 5700 1500 (You'll be interested in thetpeetaleooh- 4700 2000 ing article on thie page next week.) Highland Park, 2 family. Make an offer. Saves "Guesswork" Baking PERFECTION A device that registers the degree of heat in the oven is now on the I I market. It takes the "guesswork" Have Some Very Choice out of baking and roasting. It is Oil Cook Stoves and Ovens easily fitted to almost any glass t Building Lots—Easy Terms. oven door. ' WARNING: Use only genuine Perfection A million dollars in.pennies is fed wicks on Perfection Stoves. They are marked Wrii. Hyland, Jr. into vending machines each day by with red triangle. Others will cause trouble. the American public. Each machine Farms and Residential Properties registers profits of $3 to $6 a month. A bankable check for $1,000 was For best results use transmitted across the ocean by cable Sutotuctty 0

M-:ssv mm- *OUR AY, JUNE 17, 1926» I i , i , , k. bitj ml i. k ' TIME TO INQUIRE tion is to'be considfereci and present TheThompsonville the sam& for approval. In order to do this consistently,' the rottnbers of- DOrkXOl7I>C JEWEL ERS Press Has anybody officially t?ken the the board must'not only satisfy them­ *£jh*ingfield, Mass. trouble to inquire who will restore selves that the appropriation is nec­ •atioi* Published Thursdays by * the streets and highways of the town THE ADVANCE PRINTING .AND essary, but also that it is no more following the' removal of the rails and than is actually required. In this Sugaur ^lid Cream Sets ^ PUBLISHING COMPANY ties when the trolley roa,d has been without ice 27-27 High St., Thompsonville, Ct. , , , . . . i they are not only protecting them- abandoned as a means of transporta-> sely but safegu;Jing the taxpay- Special at . Telephone No. 50. ; ; ; : tion? According to the statement of ers- interests, which is primarily the Frigidaire is the Modern, ecoi&micat the receiver of the road to the Super-i ' ^ / , : PHILIP J. SULLIVAN for which the oard xists IIAMB£eRED design of delightful simplicity,' gold lined, method of keeping foods at an even, <5old tor Court last week, the equipment There ig nofc ^ siighte8t indication II and made of fine quality silver plate. Take advantage •Editor and Business Manager temperature. Change your present ice^;;,.A. ini Telephone No. 95-2. ^1 be auctioned off to the highest that the Board is doing other than of this low price made possible by a quantity purchase. bidder. If it is m the condition which the ri ht thin in this matter> and box into an electric refrigerator with thet^ Entered at the Post Office, Thomp­ the receiver pictured to the court, it it is inconCeivable that it would at- y \ f MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED Frigidaire unit, or select one of the new win be purchased for unk-and junk rwise at any sonville, Conn, as second class «mat- 3 t t to function othe 1386-1390 Main St. Established 1898 4-6 Pynchon St. metal cabinet Frigidaires'. Buy ther^?- ' • . j: wy' w6v, rr W1^ "atur.allf ®o1" time. The school addition will be > ' ^ All communications should be ad- lect what he has paid for, including voted aRd it is believed that the Frigidaire. you want on the G - .f , jessed to The Thompsonville Press. the rails which are now laid on ties amount rec0nimended by the Finance . & •' A C monthly payment plan. : ^ Office: 27-29 High Street. imbedded in concrete on some of our Board wm be ad t(f so that the • i-- . r>v..- principal streets In this Particular few d extra taken for its consid. section it is hardly expected that the eratiQn ^ not fee wagted even The finance committee of the Town purchaser will go after the ties but th h it is rec ized that th; acute 'A School Board has prepared a tenta­ it seems certain that he ^11 want the . situation in Hazardville calls for tive budget of the proposed school rails, and m proceeding to get them haste * « < t/" 'expenditure for next year. It is un- will make a sorry spectacle of the j "' ELECTRIC REFRIGERATION ; : Boys! Have You derstood that it is about the same hardened streets. It is this part,! m. ' . , amount as last year which was $205,- e ann a 1 e in too, that the street railway company! .,T e j. \ ?® *' .ft Seen the Official The Northern Connecticut Power^^t™®®^ 000. is oblieed to keen in renair •RntiXlUe ^ .district will be held Mon . " • »7 .? ^ I , i day evening, June 21st, in the. en 'Mm when things have reached a stage 'gine house in that village. The large attendance this week at where we have no longer a street < > ! \ ££ the various school exercises indicates railway to deal with, it is more than the great interest which this part of likely that we will be doing business the community life has for the people with some irresponsible junk dealer j here. This is an especially good sign who will not concern himself with' ''&• ."' A' , for there is no more vital thing in anything only what he bought and; Classified SHOE our town than our schools, and there paid for. t j is no better way for the people to Over most of the territory covered j •fated* Well If Not Come In demonstrate their interest in them the removal of the rails would, be; Advertising V*r,tT than by attending the activities in inexpensive and do very little dam- Classified Advertising must here­ and We Will Show connection with them not only at this age to the highway because of tfieir after be paid for in advance, in MCA^sasb time but throughout the entire year. continual location being only adjacent accordance with newspaper rules Them To You. ' /• '.'['A. : *to. the hardened surface. Through and regulations. Th&te A re .It is learned that the Enfield Town the village of Thompsonville, how-. . . Come in anyway whether you buy a Hall Community Association will*not ever, the situation is entirely differ-' r v- require the remaining $2y600 which - pair or not and,let us explain prize • • v-: ent. Here it is impossible to remove | WANTED r would have been included in the bud­ the rails without tearing up the; offer in connection with this shoe. : get for next year as the last pay­ EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVE— streets. It may be that" if the buyer wanted to look after our business ment on the $7,500 voted to this or­ is forced to restore the hardened sur­ in this territory, and county. A Some lucky Scout is going to get a ten day free trip to ganization two years ago and pay­ face here, he will elect to let the rails splendid opportunity for a real Washington and there are 100 other prizes. This is the able in three annual installments. remain intact for the present on the producer. Spare or full time bas­ official headquarters for the Herman Boy Scout Shoe which ¥ a \m-' 1* The work for which this appropria­ grounds that the removal would be! is. Outfit free, no experience nec­ essary. The Oakland Nurseries, is the best shoe for boys that can be .produced. Come in tion was specifically voted did not re­ more costly than they are worth. / quire the total sum anticipated, and When in the years to come the road Manchester, Conn. d9 and let us explain the contest to yoUi) - f for that reason the officers are un­ will necessarily have to be rebuilt, MALE HELP WANTED—Reliable I derstood to intend passing up the re­ the rails could be removed without man wanted by nationally known quest for further funds. doing any harm to the streets and at Company to act as local distributor of their products. Highly profit­ practically no expense. It might ev­ able and permanent business. Ev­ Chief of Police Clyde W. Harris en pay the town to buy the rails that Just the kind that would make a has served notice on some of the ery co-operation given. Experience iam are so located that their removal* now. unnecessary. Write The J. R. Wat- nice gift for Dad on Father's Day. chief offenders against the speeding would do an almost irreparable harm i kins Company, 231-45 Johnson Ave. 55 PEARL STREET THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. law that unless the practice is dis­ to the streets. While there remain-j Newark, N. J. *dl0 continued they will be brought into ed a bare possibility that the trolley! They are new in every sense of the word. court and prosecuted under the new cars might be retained, it perhaps motor law statute covering this of­ would have been premature to make FOR SALE New in color, new in cut, new in pattern fense. Several complaints have been this inquiry and establish our status and tailored a little better than usual, and lodged with the police department in the matter. Now however, with1 BABY CHICKS—Bred-To-Lay Popu­ --v.. recently regarding the recklessness ! lar breeds; special selected stock; they are reasonable in price. a definite date of one week hence set prepaid guaranteed live delivery. * ' with which cars are being driven for the dissolution of the trolley, and Free catalogue of Chicks, Brood­ through the more congested streets the definite statement of the receiver ers, and Supplies. Visitors wel­ ... % • of the town. The police intend to as to what disposition is to be made come. Clark's Hatchery, Dept. 10, m have it stopped or prosecution will of the equipment, it would seem as East Hartford, Conn. tf Special For This Week follow. though the time has come when the FOR SALE—Tailoring Shop on Main rights of the town in the matter St., formerly conducted by the late The Youthful rowdyism, mostly perpe­ should be protected. Harry Mangerian. Price reason­ Here are two very special values which' trated by young men under the in­ able. Inquire of A. -Tatoian, Tele­ should prove attractive to the ladies of fluence of liquor has become a source phone 726. tf Northern Connecticut I of considerable annoyance to the pat­ DOING THE RIGHT THING FOR SALE—Horse Hay. Inquire of the town in Ladies' Dresses. ^ rons and proprietors of stores in the C. E. Hoskins, King St., Enfield, r business section of the town. The Those who profess to be impatient Conn. *d8 « Power Company Rayon Silk $2.98 offenses are mostly committed on with the action of the Finance Board FOR SALE4-Easy Washer CHoov- Saturday night, which is usually the in checking up on the proposed ex-1 er),_ Bed Room Suite, Sitting room .jr Printed Ppngee $1.98 busiest night of the week. Several penditure for the addition to the Haz-1 table, Library Table, White Enam­ of the stores on Pearl Street have ardville School, should bear in * mind el Bed, Book Case, Rugs. Call af­ especially been the scene of many of that this is precisely the purpose for ter 5:00 P. -M. at 32 Russell St., $6.5 0 CUMULATIVE these brawls recently, and as a re- j which the Finance Board exists. It Town. *d8 suit the police are being asked to i is not to block or obstruct any im-1 PREFERRED STOCK take a hand in the prevention of fur­ provement, and there is no just rea-' A. F. JAVORSKI ther outbreaks of this character. son for intimating that it is acting1 FOR RENT in this manner in connecton with the TO RENT—A five-room flat. All Dividends earned over 2.43 times. 41 Pleasant Street Telephone 160-2 THE TRAGEDY OF IT. request of the School Board. But in modern improvements. Inquire 98 order to function properly it is right Pleasant Street. tf Regardless of how keen the com­ that it should scrutinize carefully all TO RENT—i room cottage at Cry­ 'EXEMPT FROM NORMAL FEDERAL expenditures which it is called upon stal Lake. High location. Ready ; INCOME TAX AND THE CONNEC­ munity as a whole must feel against for occupancy June 15th. Inquire condoning the offense with which the to approve. That is precisely what TICUT PROPERTY TAX. the Finance Board appears to have of Zace's Tire Shop, North Main former tax collector stands criminal­ St., Telephone 514-3. tf ly charged, and of which on his own done in this instance, and it found admission he is guilty, the grim trag­ when it made its inquiries and com-' TO RENT—A Store at No. 93 As- nuntuck St., next door to the A. & edy of it all cannot fail to excite our parison that the figures submitted by Price 98% and divi­ the special committee of the School P. Store has done a successful sympathy. He has committed that business forVyears. A good chance most traitorous of all crimes against Board were not very far out of the to get a start. Rent reasonable. dends, to yield 6.60% the body politic—a breach of the way, in fact there is found to be Apply to Louis Burns. tf WARNING! public trust. He has earned, and will scarcely any difference at all when the dimensional difference in the TO RENT—A 6-room furnished cot­ undoubtedly receive the public con­ tage at Bay View Beach, Milford demnation and social ostracism, which [ rooms as figured on by the School > Conn., by the week or month. All society imposes on any of her mem­ (Committee and those decided as ade-' modern improvements. Inquire of Annual District Meeting bers who errs in this manner. There | quate by the Finance Board, are con-! D. A. Gourlay, 20 Pease Street, TIFFT BROTHERS will be no disposition to soften the I sidered. The outcome is as was pre- j Thompsonville, Conn. tf The Legal Voters of the Thompsonville Fire ft, blow, or mitigate the punishment j dieted, as it was felt that the com- j to RF^T—Caracp on Park Avenue Members New York Stock Exchange which public opinion will deal out toj™lttee of the School Board had gone I inquire at 144 Spring St., or Tele- and Sewer District are hereby warned to ln e Third National Bank Building, Springfield, Mass. '•k him. It will be far more drastic than j ^° th matter thoroughly ^before j phone 451. tf meet-in the North Main Street School Aud­ any sentence which he might receive j submitting its figures to the Finance j TO RFNT_Two tenements on Vir- Agricultural National Bank Building, Pittsfield, Mass. at the bar of justice. And yet it is ; Board, and knew what it was talking! ^j^aAvg NorttiThompsonville- itorium, Thompsonville, Conn., on 1 well to remember, that tiiis unspar- i about when appearing before that one of- 6 - rooms and the other, four' ing lashing which he is sure to re- j body. There is every reason to be- rooms. Modern improvements. In­ ceive at the hands of public opinion,! ^'eve, from the figures submitted, that quire of Thomas Broderick, 30 will not fall on him alone. The j the committee did just that. South St., Phone 851-2. dlO ?-/• stupendous tragedy of such occur- j! It should be remembered too, that! T0 RENT—Country house of eight Tuesday, June 29, 1926 the rences is that the innocent are all too i * mance Board has an additional j r0oms, with garage, electricity and frequently compelled to bear the con- ' responsibility in the matter, which j town water. Just a step from the At 8:15 O'Clock P. M., Daylight Saving Time sequences to a greater degree than ' imposes caution before action is tak- j bridge. Inquire of L. Tavino, Riv- those who are actually guilty. It is ien- Once an appropriation is ap-1 er Boulevard, Suffield, Ct. *d9 INTRODUCING THE (7:15 P. M. Standard Time) an unfailing condition which marks ; proved it is the duty of the Finance i TO RENT Two stalls in garage. these affairs with unerring regular- ^ Board to go into the regular or spec- j Inquire of Edwin Oates, Prospect CAR OF THE YEAR THE PURPOSES FOR WHICH SAID MEET­ ity. This tragedy, like thousands of j *al town meeting at which the ques- ' St., Telephone 163. tf ING IS TO BE HELD ARE AS FOLLOWS: its predecessors, stalks into a home,: — _____ touches innocent lives, and leaves its j _^^^^mmt imperishable impression on them for ! 1. To hear the report of the District Com­ all time. It will be argued, and with mittee, Officers of the Fire Department, much truth, that the erring one' New Light and Sewer Commissioners.' should have thought of this as being one of the tragic, and the most path­ etic consequences of his misdoing, 2: To elect a District Committee, Secretary- and that it would have proved a de- j terrant. But thoughtlessness is one i Treasurer of the District, Auditors and of the basic causes for such crimes, j Six NASH Collector oi District Taxes. &- and is the particular reason for most of them. They have their foundation i FOUR DOOR SEDAN in a mental disease which gives no 3. To elect Officers of the Fire Department. heed to creating of unhappiness or | DISK WHEELS, FRONT AND REAR BUMPERS, the wrecking of lives. 1 SPARE, TIRE AND MOTOMETER. 4. To elect a Sewer Commissioner. In this distressing affair there are j You Will Be signs that the heart of the commun- j 5. To make an appropriation for the main-, ity goes out in fullest sympathy to j Delivered in Thompsonville those who are most afflicted by it, i tenance of the Fire Department. but who are least fitted to bear the Sitting on * consequences. It is a splendid dem­ 6. To make an appropriation for the main­ onstration of the great humanity of the people of our town. With a fine $1183 tenance of Sewers. distinction which does them credit, Top of the World the people are condemning on the 7 To lay a District Tax. • one hand an act of gross dishonesty, If you will take the time to come here now, and . First Payment, $393.00 in anticipation of the warm weather which will •which has been perpetrated by one PER ORDER, they had for years reposed an soon be here, lay in a liberal supply of this full YOUR OLD CAR WILL BE TAKEN degree of confidence, and cut, carefully. tailored, comfort weight Underwear., ; | TOWARDS THE FIRST PAYMENT. , and on the other hand they are, Several materials and styles from which to choose. ' William J. Hines, it -: infinite tenderness regretting Phone 606-2 For A Demonstration ~ heart breaking effect of it on his domestic circle. And if there is a Peter J. Smith, . note of genuine sympathy too, in the community for the unfortunate life Philip J. Sullivan. that has been blighted, and there is, Fred J. District Committee. '« it is because, with all our faults here, we frequently exercise to a re­ 108 Main Street Thompsonville, Conn! 41 North Main St. "Thompsonville, Conn. Dated at Thompsonville, , this 17th day of June, 1926. markable degree, that greatest of all 's. stirtraes—chirity.r^v

'v V,. v, ••jr -r.- .1 ''X - -V: vv-:-: mm '1>5-'V'-:". -Jt:. i"; mmmmSmdW SS,THURSD AY 17, 1926. > 'gfWKS v ; : : £ 3* >:'-v> yv*w*«a**.v,•;• •- Is---- * -.-.• J*., w rival' is~a; granddaughter of » m~ ' 'n , .v;^ •, Mrs: D. C., is at the home of his parents. ( Mrs. Harry 'Lane of James Rush of Prospect street* Mr. and . Mrs. J. Francis Browne of evening was pleasantly qpent yj, Sewer Commissioners of The Thomp­ Many friends and relatives at­ Pearl street for the sumtiier recess. . thj£$ tablet) being occupii&d] tended- tha month's mind , mass cele­ The ceremony of the Forty Hours After the game / refreshments w<* \'h brated in St. Patrick's Church the • • ."v? '• sonville District HaveHadAn devotion opened in St. Adelbert's served. Two prizes were awarded first of the week, in memory of Fran-; Church at the 10:30 service Sunday those scoring the highest number < cis Henneberry. morning and was brought to a close points, Mrs. Henry Datfts receir'J Mr. and Mrs. John A. Best were '! ' Unusually Busy Yesr^f Rfe Blag, Day was observed with Tuesday evening with procession of first prize and Mrs. Lajie .second. Miss Editti Simonton, home from generous display of the national col­ ; present at the commencement, events Westbrook Seminary in ~ that city, . 'T*. , ,, ' :3Si the. Blessed Sacrament and sermon The class of 1926 t of' the JunUJf^j at Mt. Holyoke College, Saturday, ors throughout the town Monday and by the pastor, Rev. Stahislaus Fed­ High School are enjoying a picnQs' **' * •**•(' Where she is a sttideht. Miss Simon- A WORDING to the data on file at the office of the Secretary-Treas- exercises were held in the schools. Sunday and Monday. '.Their, daugh­ tptt was awarded the silver cup, giv- J\ • urer of The Thompsonville Fire and Sewer. District,, the Sewer erkiewicz. The exercises were very today at Btoshriell Park, Hartford. " 1 The annual memorial exercises of largely attended ter, Miss Harriet Best, was . one ot m for one year by the alumnae of ,• Commissioners have had an unusually active y6ar.' In addition Court Cavour, the Italian Court of those who graduated with Honor. She the seminary for excellence in men­ to the upkeep and repair wdrk of which there is -Considerable each Foresters, was held Sunday m Hanson for the Greys and Fortier mother, Mrs. Georjge R. Steele of Thornton E. Vail was the examining $450.. In the written report which will accompany the complete fi- The annual "farewell promenade" Frederick C. Jandreau of Bigelow | for the Knights. The second game Prospect street, , physician. oancial data prepared by the Commission it is urged that in future of the senior class of the Enfield High Avenue has been attending a three- between the Polish .Americans and an *•: Mrs. Noble Ricketts, who is spend­ , Miss Florenee Brainard is at home when an.appropriation is made from the district funds for use of the School will be held Friday evening day convention of the New England all-star team selected' from the sev- ing several months, with her .mother, with her parents, Mr. and. Mrs. D. sewer department, the funds be kept available for that purpose in the |chool auditorium. Yaffe's or­ Associations of Insurance Agents, at eral teams in the Industrial Twilight Mrs. John K. Bissland of Enfield William Brain&rd 'of Pease street, The separation of storm water from the sanitary sewage is also dis­ chestra of Hartford will furnish the "The Griswold," Eastern Point, New league, proved a slugging exhibiton street, was in South Hadley, Mass., from the New Haven Normal School! cussed at length in the report. < ( music. Tickets may be secured from London, Conn. and was won by the All-Stars, 11 to over the week-end attending the of Gymnastic^ ^Pr, the summer vaca-1 any high school student. Mrs. Edwin T. Gowdy entertained 10. pitched for the AU-'^fe •' Alumnae Day and other commence­ twn. J. Francis Browne, Jr., a student at her home on Franklin street Mon­ Stars and Rypysc for the Polish- J ment exercises of M£. Holyoke Col­ In the m6rnirfg service next Sab­ The proceeds will be added to the Largely attended, funeral services at Catholic University, Washington, day evening in honor of her mother, 1 Americans. w?-'V" expense account fund of the associa­ were held Friday morning in St. Ber­ lege. bath at United Presbyterian Church -Sis' Miss Elizabeth Woodworth has the subject for study will be "The tion. nard's Church for Wiljiam Cybulski, gone to Yorktown, N. Y., where she Tenth Commandment." This will Bills totaling $4,500 were approved son of Mr. and Mrs.' Stephen Cybul­ and Mrs. Richard Elliott have leased complete the series of studies on the for payment at the regular bi-month- ski of South Shaker Farm. A solemn the Pinebrook Tea Gardens, which Decalogue.' In ' the evening service ly meeting of the Board of Select­ requiem high mass was celebrated by * ' they will conduct through the sum­ Rev. J. G. Thompson of Chicopee will men held Tuesday in the town build­ the pastor, Rev. Thomas J. Picker. mer months. They will be joined in preach on the theme, "Quit You Like ing. .' Rev. Stanislaus Federkiewicz of St! the enterprise later in the month by Men." Rev. Thompson is a strong Miss Lois C. Gordon of Hazard- Adelbert's Church, was deacon, and Miss Woodworth's sisters, Miss Ed­ preacher and is well worth hearing. ville was a member of the 1926 grad­ Rev. Dennis A. O'Brien of All Saints' na Woodworth and Miss Hazel Wood- Sabbath School arid Christian En­ uating class at the Connecticut Col­ Church, Somersville, was subdeacon. worth. deavor at the usual hours. All are lege for Women, New London. The Mrs. Mary Sheehan sang. A com­ : exercises were held on Tuesday. mittal service in St. Bernard's ceme­ Miss Isabel Gourlie, Mrs. Charles welcome. • • s* Graduation exercises of the gram­ Whalen, Miss Mae Mitchell and Miss Dr. J. Francis Burns of New York tery was conducted by Fr. Federkiew­ mar school of Hazardville were held icz. The bearers were F. Niemiec Belle Landry, motored to Brookside City spent a week's vacation with last evening in Institute Hall. Lodge, the Y. W. C. A. camp, in his mother, Mrs. John A. Burns of A. Cichoski, J. Wronecki, T. Wron- Enfield Grange visited the West ecki, Anthony Yanisikiewicz and M. ~ SPECIAL " Chester, Mass., in Mrs. Whalen's car Pearl street. Springfield Grange last evening and [ Stec last Saturday for a week-end (>outing. Dr. and Mrs. H. Wilson Fancher of assisted in the evening's program. Mrs.' Belle Aldrich of Madison, N. Enfield street entertained Dr. and St. Joseph's Parochial School clos­ Cards have been received from Mr. ed Tuesday morning for the summer J., and her daughter, Miss Ruth Aid- Mrs. Herbert of Baltimore, Md., over and Mrs. William J. Mulligan from SALE of • the week-end. Dr. Herbert was 'a J vacation. Sessions will be resumed rich, a teacher in the high school of Budapest, Hungary. They have vis­ in September. that place, motored Friday to this classmate of Dr. Fancher's at the ited Paris, Munich and Vitenna, and village to visit the former's sister, University of Maryland at Baltimore. on the return will stop at Prague, Mrs. Mary Bernier of Asnuntuck Mrs. Lyman C. Pettit of Pearl street. Mr. and Mrs. George H. King, with Dresden, Berlin, Brussels and The street has returned from a several Mrs. Aldrich will remain through the their daughter, Miss Lois King, of Hague. Their daughter, Kathleen, is weeks' vacation spent with her par­ 0 summer, while Miss Aldrich is motor­ ents in Ireland. VULCAN Elm street_ attended the commence­ accompanying them. ing with a teacher friend to Califor­ ment exercises of the New Haven Myron A. Burgess of 74 Enfield Mr. and Mrs. John A. Rush of nia, leaving the latter part of this Normal School of Gymnastics, from Street, received the degree of Bache­ Hartford Avenue are receiving con­ week. the ' normal department of which lor: Of Law from the Boston Univer­ gratulations upon the birth of a WATER HEATERS Miss Emma L. Parsons, formerly their daughter, Miss Eleanor V. King sity Law School, at the graduation daughter,, born Monday at the Mercy of this village, now of New York, is graduated last Saturday. Miss King exercises of that institution last Mon­ Hospital in Springfield. The new ar- p-;iv the guest of her cousins, the Misses has accepted a position as councilor iristmll day. Parsons of Enfield street. Miss Par­ at Red Cottage Camp, for under-' While they sons attended the reunion of her weight children, at Grove Beach, for Miss Nellie Kelly and John Kelly class, that of 1887, and the com­ the summer. of Walnut street, have gone to Provi­ mthfypayments mencement events at Mt. Holyoke The annual outing of the freshmen dence, R. I., to attend the graduation College over the week-end. class of the Enfield High School was exercis.es of their nephew, Harold S. l%st Dr. and Mrs. Frank F. Simonton held Tuesday at Riverside Park. Goodwin, at Brown Unversity, being are entertaining her cousin, Miss The dance held last evening in the held this week. Mr. Goodwin will Lillian Stockman of Portland, Me., Enfield Town Hall by the Commun­ return to teach at, the college next who accompanied their daughter, fall. He is a sop of the late Joseph ity Association was well attended. S. Goodwin, former superintendent Each year we set aside a definite number of VULCAN of the Hartford and Springfield St. Railway, and later superintendent of GAS WATER HEATERS to be disposed of at our spec­ the railway system in Detroit, Mich. ial sale price of 75c down, $2.00 per month. This year's Wilbur Bromage, son of Deputy Sheriff and Mrs. Edward Bromage of sale is closing. Only a few Vulcan Gas Water Heaters Pearl Street, a student at Brown left for this sale—act at once. If you want to have Hot University, Providence, R. I., has re­ 1. turned home for the summer vacation. Water comfort—BUY NOW at our Special Term Sale. Miss Anna Stafford of Cottage Green was given honorable mention Who Knows in the Elks' Flag Day essay contest, j "My Country's Flag and What It I When? Means To Me," was the subject of! :J the contest. Over 150 manuscripts! F you keep much money COME IN AND ORDER ONE. DROP were submitted. Many pupils from j I in the house, hidden the various schools in town sent in j US A LINE. TELEPHONE 300. essays also. - i away or on your person, Capt. P. J. Rogers of John M. | sooner or later "thieves Handley Camp, Spanish American i may break through and ONLY-DO IT AT ONCE! War Veterans and his assistant of- i steal." ficers, Edward J. Lynch, Henry Men-! ard, Clarence A. Goodhue, Joseph! Your loss is( almost as Chevalier, Luke Wing and Patrick H. j certain, often more so, if Connelly attended the state conven- \ you gamble hard-earned Sbj> intoV,. tion sessions held in H&rtford last j Friday and Saturday. ! money on wild schemes * lr proclaiming profits that are Telephone 300 Telephone 300 both quick and large. ELECTRICITY Legal Notice But a "building and AT A COURT OF PROBATE held loan" account is notably at Enfield within ancl for the Pro­ safe. ' • bate District of Enfield, in the out-of-doors County of Hartford, and State of Safety and 5'/2%. Connecticut on the 14th day of Junej 1926. The Northern Connecticut Present, Charles J. Fowler, Judge. The Thompsonville Estate of Mary Quinn, late of En­ field in said District, deceased. Building & Loan Girl's Bathing Suits. Upon application of John A. Quinn Association praying that letters of administra- j Power Company We have exactly the thing for >a girl who tion may be granted on the estate of | The Institution of Thrift said Mary Quinn, deceased, as per j is seeking something new and different application on file more fully ap-! pears, it is in a Bathing Suit, in new range of colors Ordered, That said application be heard and determined at the Probate and weaves which we are now showing. Office in Enfield, in said District, on the 21st day of June, A. D., 1926, at 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon; and that notice be given of the pendency of said application and the time and A Midsummer's Dream Came True' place of hearing thereon, by publish- iing a copy of this order once in a newspaper having a circulation in William Landry I said District, and by posting a copy Beauty and Comfort in j thereof on the public sign-post in the | Town of Enfield in said District, at The Only Shade Made With A Ventilator 120 Main Street Thompsonville, Conn. i least three days before said time as- I signed, and return make to this Court. Each Vudor Shade 1 CHARLES J. FOWLER, Judge. VUDOR PORCH SHADES not only make Ventilator Coolinig Porch the porch delightfully livable all summer long and the sun parlor more 'attractive, but are an added beauty to any home. They are made of thin wood strips stained in beautiful, permanent colors which har­ monize with their surroundings. Vudor In Our Vaults Shades last for years. During the long, hot summer days one Lies Safety longs for a cool, shady place in which to rest, read or sew. A porch hung with Vu­ dor Shades provides just such a place, airy and cool and protected from the blazing Laying around the house is no place for your valuables, that is if SELF-HANGING sun and the gaze of passersby. Every you treasure them in the least. The loss- in one robbery will cost Vudor Shade has a woven-in Ventilator at ; you more than to rent a Safe Deposit Box in our vault for many the top which allows free circulation of air. ; years. Make it a point to stop here and find out about this im- Vudor Have a cool porch at very moderate cost. r portant safety measure at once; VENTILATING Measure the size of the porch openings you PORCH SHADES wish to shade. There are Vudor Shades OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS, 6:30 TO 8:30 P. M. for every opening on your porch. • r, r— • '

Trust Co. V : 1 ;• THOMPSONVILLE, CONNECTICUT J. FRANCIS BROWNE

.i: ;4' |«||gp«3v a " - ^jpp&r ;~of lack of sufficient water, a call was pastor of the First Congregational spinal meningitis after two days' ill­ •'I i-lserit to the Thompsonville depart- ness. Besides his parents he leaves ipg Mashes. ' \ ?.\'-ment. Firemen and volunteer help- Church officiating. Burial was in Woodlawn cemetery. Mrs. Guy was four brothers and a sister. The fu­ life »*•.*•* era carried furniture from the Clum neral was held Monday morning at " fe" house, while others were saving the 75 years of age and was born in Buf­ falo, N. Y. She married Mr. Guy 53 9 o'clock in St. Joseph's Polish church • ifP' U/}.\ .> yjp-.*> • house from destruction. The Thomp- and burial was in St. Mary's ceme­ - sonville firemen, unable to use water, years ago. She was a member of a? the First Congregational Church and tery, Windsor Locks. * m r feg®! : threw chemicals on the Cook proper- Mrs. Harriet A. Chaplin, widow of w§. ty. Swept by a 30-mile wind, flames active in church work. She leaves a daughter, Mrs. L. H. Creelman, with Frank A. Chaplin, died Sunday at 63 |§|;Sfc quickly razed the Hendee shed which whom he lived. years of age, in the Chapin Memor­ ' v was filled wth farming tools. The ial Hospital, after an operation. Her Prospect Street e ' , wind carried the embers over a mile Howard W. Alcorn, eldest son of Thompsonville, Corn# State's Attorney and Mrs. Hugh M. husband died May 21. Mrs. Chaplin f:.' J! of territory. Part of the loss is cov­ was a daughter of Seth and Mary fill ered by insurance. Water for the Alcorn of this town, was graduated (Lyons) Jackson and lived all her Mapleton Avenue .district passed from Yale Law School and is spend­ life here. She leaves a daughter, through a four-inch main. The Suf­ ing the summer at home. On June Mrs. Homer Young of Springfield; a field pumper, using two lines of hose, 24 and 25 he will take the state bar examinations. son, Charles F. Chaplin of this town; utilized every drop passing through four sisters, Mrs. Arthur Wood and the main. Hugh Greer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Joseph Wraight of this place Miss Bessie Leahey of West Suf- Prince and Princess Li, two of the most popular members of the imperial Robert Greer of Boston Neck, and and Mrs. Otto Getts and Miss Ger- family of Japan, leaving the Ivasumigasoki palace, Tokyo, after bidding V'V'' farewell to other members of the imperial household, previous to starting The Value Of A Dollar| their journey to the United States. should be measured by what it will de- 4 prive you of if you don't have it at the ' trude Jackson of Springfield; and two right time rather than by what it •will buy , of Charles F. Cleveland of Plants- now. brothers, Charles of Suffield and Ar­ ville. thur of Wilbraham. The funeral St. Mary's grammar school base­ By saving a certain sum each week, rain Sweeping was held Tuesday afternoon in the ball team again won the play-off in or shine, you will be prepared to meet fi­ home in Halliday Avenue. Rev. E. the league which is made up of the nancial emergencies or to take advantage Scott Farley, pastor of the Second grammar schools in the north and of the many profitable opportunities pre- , Baptist Church, conducted the ser­ south sections of this locality, the sented to those having available cash on C Price Reductions vice. Burial was in Woodlawn cem­ local lads trimming Suffield Center hand. etery. . School in the second game of the The Suffield School's 93d anniver­ play-off at that place Friday after­ sary and commencement exercises noon 8 to 4 in ten innings. By their SAVE WITH US BY MAIL: opened at the Second Baptist Church victory the Locks team retains pos­ Sunday at 8 o'clock when the annual session of the large silver cup for baccalaureate service was held. The another year. sermon was preached by Rev. James Tobacco transplanting is underway HUDSON-ESSEX Gordon Gilkey of the South Congre­ in earnest this week, the warm days St! .The Travelers ISIS • ^ • SpSStl gational Church at Springfield. The giving the growers a chance to start program opened with an organ vol­ the season's work which has been Bank andTrust Compif^ untary with a call to worship follow­ held back by continued cool weather. Effective June Nine ing by Rev. Arthur H. Hope. A hymn IravolorsBuilding Hartford,CtJ£ followed the scripture reading by Rev. R. Maplesdom of the school. A HAZARDVILLE hymn was then sung by the school New Low Prices glee club, followed by prayer by Rev. Arthur Gaskell, Jr., 8, son of Mr. E. Scott Farley. During the entire and Mrs. Arthur Gaskell, was sev­ program Dr. Brownell Gage presided. erely bitten by a dog Thursday night Dr. Gilkey's baccalaureate sermon in front of his home on Cedar street. then followed, the topic being "Mak­ He was bitten five times on the arms 6 COACH ing the Most of An Ordinary Per­ and side, the dog being stoned by sonality." The graduating class of neighbors before he would release the the school held its class day exer­ boy. His injuries were attended by cises Monday afternoon in the Sec­ Dr. W. G. Shepherd. The dog was MECHANICS SAVINGS BANK HUDSON COACH 1095 ond Baptist Church, which was filled owned by Thomas Grace of Cedar with relatives and friends. Hugh M. street and was turned over to the dog (Incorporated 1861) * Alcorn, Jr., son of State's Attorney warden. Hudson Brougham and Mrs. Alcorn, opened the exer­ The funeral of Mrs. Mary Q«inn, cises with an address and the re­ 72, was held Saturday morning at 9 80 Pearl St., Hartford, Conn. mainder of the program was as fol­ o'clock at St. Bernard's Church, and lows: Class history, Helen M. Walk­ was largely attended. Rev. Thomas Hudson 7-Pass. Sedan 1550 er; presentations, Misses Mildred S. J. Picker, pastor, conducted the re­ Orr, A. Cornelia Staples; prophecy, quiem mass. Burial was in the fam­ This Bank is a strictly MUTUAL SAV­ Dorothy E. Root and George Vales; ily plot in St. Bernard's cemetery. All prices F.O.B. Detroit Plus Government Tax address to undergraduates, President Mrs. Quinn died last Wednesday ev­ INGS BANK, with ASSETS OVER $20,- Fred C. Hawley; ivy oration, Pros­ ening at her home in Scitico. She per D. Lacava. The ivy was planted was born in Ireland 72 years ago. 000,000. The above prices include following equipment: in front of the middle school build­ She came to this country when a ing. young girl and lived nearly all of her Bumpers Front and Rear; Automatic Windshield Cleaner; Rear View Mirror; At the commencement exercises of life in this town. She is survived by We Have No Stockholders the College of New Rochelle, the two sons, Patrick dnd John, both at Transmission Lock, built-in; Radiator Shutters; Moto-Meter; bachelor of arts degree was conferred home and three grandchildren, James Combination Stop and Tail Light. on Miss Annie Wiedkor, daughter of and Mary at home and Winifred of DEPOSITS made during the first five Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wiedkor. Miss Springfield. Wiedkor while at New Rochelle has calendar days of any month, will draw played basketball and baseball, mak­ India absorbed half of the world's JAMES KNIGHT, Enfield, Conn. ing her letter in the former. She is output of gold last year. interest from the first day of that month! a member of the Alpha Nu Omicron, and Alpha, Alpha and is on the lit­ erary staff of the "Annales," the col­ lege annual. "A Strong /Bank and Getting Stronger" Miss Dorothy Hope, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. Arthur H. Hope, re­ turned to her home last Thursday jnanm from the woman's college at Oberlin, Wet Wash Ohio. s WINDSOR LOCKS

Mrs. Esther Schennelli, 49 years i iJvmfTJIwmsoi} 8?@>. old, wife of Rinaldo Schennelli of "Service Whiton street, died at Springfield Hospital Saturday evening, death re­ that excels" ^JlartfbrdM Shopping (Senior: sulting from peritonitis following an operation last week. The funeral was held from St. Mary's Church on Monday morning at 9 o'clock with a requiem high mass celebrated by Rev. G. M. Grady and burial was in St. Mary's Cemetery. R. & R. S Preparing for Shore, Camp or Lake The funeral of Margaret Rooney, 29 years old, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Rooney of this town, who died at the home of her sister isrr- • You Will Want Pleaty of Bedding in Hartford Saturday, was held from Laundry Co. St. Mary's Church Monday morning, WITH A LARGE SHOWING OF BLANKETS, COMFORTABLES AND a requiem high mass to be celebrat­ Longmeadow ? ed later, and burial was in St. Mary's as goodas QUILTS, VARIED AS TO KINDS, QUALITIES AND COLORINGS, WE cemetery. The deceased had been ARE PREPARED TO FILL YOUR SUMMER BEDDING WANTS TO living with her sister for the past Tel. Wal. 4223-W YOUR ENTIRE SATISFACTION. few years and her death was due to myocarditis. Before you are persuaded, by EXTRA SPECIAL are the CRINKLE BEDSPREADS, cream color with In the town police court Monday an extra allowance on your old I stripes of Rose, Blue, Gold and Green with scalloped finish. Sized 72x108 evening the case of William Driscoll, charged with reckless driving of an car, to buy some car you might inches for $2.50 each. Sized 81x108 inches for $2.75 each. automobile, resulting from the col­ lision of a car owned by Jerry Cal­ not otherwise choose, compare Oregon City Woolen Blankets, in dark grey. An lahan with that of Arthur Russell of I#' Hazardville, was heard before Judge the new car offered you to Buick. . # ideal blanket for out of doors. Priced $3.00 ea. Noonan. After hearing the testi­ t mony the accused was found not guilty and the case nolled. Arthur Esmond Blankets. "Two in One" Plaids in all Christiensen of Wilson Station was Does it have a "sealed chassis"? colors. Priced at $3.29 ea. arrested by Officer Caffrey for speed­ ing through Main street last Friday Has it a torque-tube-drive? evening, was found guilty and fined Army Blankets, all wool and just what the camp­ $10 and costs which he paid. Has it mechanical 4-wheel er wants. Priced at $5.00 ea. The State Public Utilities Commis­ brakes? Has it a ten-plate, sion has approved the plans to elim­ inate the grade crossing known as multiple-disc clutch? Has it a Extra Heavy Blankets, Khaki color, Oregon City "dead man's crossing" in the south William Dean part of the town. Selectman W. J. ? Has it adequate make. Priced at $8.50 ea. 9 McGinn has received notice of the Howells i division of costs for the undertaking. and efficient nation-wide service Cotton Blankets, lightweight with choice of tan, The town will be assessed $4,000, the "Many a man may dis­ railroad company $52,000 and the agree with you verbally facilities? Has it more than a white and grey. Priced at $2.39 pr. balance of $86,000 will be borne by while mentally he has the state. The bridge crossing the enrolled under your ban­ million enthusiastic owners? Cretonne Spreads. Sized 81x108 inches. Rose, tracks will be of three-span steel girders, 167 feet long, the roadway ner." I blue and gold. Priced at $2.19 ea. will be 28 feet wide and the concrete floor will have a bituminous covering. E give to the com­ Camel's Hair Blankets, very light and warm and Children's Day exercises took place W munity we serve the Sunday in the Congregational church. best of our professional special value. Priced at $5.95 ea. One exercise was "Making the Flag" knowledge and the bene­ with appropriate songs and recita­ fits of our experience. LIGHT WEIGHT COMFORTABLES, with figured Challi coverings and tions, and girls formed'the flag. A pageant, "Like Unto These" was al­ sateen borders. Choice of rose and blue with pure white cotton filling, so presented. 100% pure. Very special value for $3.95 each. Riverside Council, K. of C., has ap­ THE LEETE pointed a special committee to ar­ ^CRINKLE BED SPREADS, 81x108 inch for full size beds, color choice range for the annual summer carni­ COMPANY , Buick Sales and Service includes rose, blue and gold. Just the thing for Summer homes. The val. Tentative dates are Aug. 19, 20 ; EDWARD LEETE • 152 ENFIELD STREET V. greatest value yet for only $1.95 each. / and 21. The homestead of the late George Embalmer and Director Glover in Spring street has been pur­ 74 MAIN ST. TELEPHONE 164 THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. chased by Mrs. Mary Cleveland, wife

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1926. SEVEN' "f* Belgian as early as 1604. The pro­ ject included the construction of a S^DfcE3S GLASS EARTH FAULTS IN • BROAD BROOK PUBLIC UTILITY BOND Odd Bits of News huge aerostat, but was turned down ' GREAf OIL FIELD SISSUES ARB by scientific societies of Europe. ; ' - ; ^ Suburban News Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Martin attend­ Ireland is minting her own coins ed the graduation of their son, Ron­ Public utility financing, so far this The Grand Lama of Tibet has is­ for the first time in . one hundred Little Danger , of EaritTtqi * : ald, at the Massachusetts Institute year, has furnished the major part sued a ukase forbidding further atr years. The first Irish coins were Evolved From:i Rare • Element : , SOMERS ISAIS of Technology at Cambridge last of American activity in bond financ­ tempts to reach the summit of Mount Struck by Danish kings in the 10th Says Expert. week. ing. The Southern California Edison* Everest, because of the death of na­ Century. ' by Scientist. Miss Isabel P. Bugbee, who has George Sargent of Florida is spend- Co. adds materially to it with an is- tive porters On former expeditions. Cheyenne, Wyo.—"Faults" In the ing a fewtew weeks at the home of his j sue of $40,000,000 of 5 per cent re- A decrease of 1.2 per cent in the Ithaca, N. Y.—Sandless glass is be­ been teaching French in St. Johns- When Congress refused to build a number of farms in the United States earth's crust ctiss-cross one of the bury Academy, St. Johnsbury, Vt., is parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. 'Sargent i funding bonds due in 1951. This is- new post office at St. Mary's, Ohio, between 1920 and 1925, is .reported by ing made In the chemistry laboratory largest oil fields in the United States— of Depot street. j sue has been exceeded only once this spending several weeks with her par­ ear n ublic the citizens raised $45,000 by popu­ the -Census Bureau. at Cornell university. the Salt Creek field—and the Teapot ents, Mr., and Mrs. Raymond S. Bug- James Loftus, Jr., who underwent y * P financing though there lar subscription to construct . the Butcher knives fastened to the The substitute for sand In the proc­ Dome, the naval 'oil reserve. But there bee. an operation at the Hartford Hos-,have been several issues of about the building. ^ > pital last week, is rapidly convales-> mcludmg one of Se­ table with a thirty-inch chain are the ess of manufacture Is the dioxide of Is little danger of earthquake occur­ Ralph G. Chaffee of Andover, N. The grades of society in China are only eating utensils in a restaurant germanium, a rare, mysterious and cmg.eing. 000,000 by the New England Tele­ il ring in these oil regions, in the opin- • H., is a guest in the home of his phone & Telegraph Co.; $37,000,000 classified by custom in the following at Lockhart, Te~s»- costly element which Prof. L. M. Den­ Ion of A. B. Bartlett, Wyoming state parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chaf­ This evening the Ladies' Aid So- ip® order of importance: Scholars, farm­ by the Duke-Price properties, and #1''-W: Forty-five passengers who landed nis, head of the department of chemis­ geologist fee. h 17 -V'A ers, artisans, tradesmen. Soldiers, try, is now able to produce in quantity tiuuf io ihe\sror,t™£:i»«r " * no matter what their rank, have no at New York on a French liner had The faults are described by him as Franklin P. Combs, Jr.j a student gregational Church. . enterprise. • no passports. A steward throwing after years of experimentation. "dead." There arte nine small faults at the University of Pennsylvania, social position. away waste paper had picked up the has come to spend the summer with Whether the new glass has proper­ on the east side of the Salt Creek Children's Day services in the Con- The Tsen-Tse-Kwan-Pao, official A carrier pigeon bearing a mes­ envelope containing the passports and ties that will make it of great value his father, Franklyn P. Combs. gregational Church will be held next. gazette of Pekin, is believed to be sage to ^the naval station at San by mistake dumped them overboard. field and another three miles long be­ The Woman's Club was pleasantly bunaay. | the oldest newspaper in the world. Diego arrived there perched on the Alaska, for which the United States for optical purposes is still undeter­ tween the Teapot and Salt Creek entertained by Mrs. Henry W. Gil­ mined, but the results thus far ob­ : It was founded more than 1,000 running board of an automobile, paid $7,200,000 in 1867, exported $62,- fields. Three faults have been lo­ lette at her summer home "Spring- Two rounds of flapjacks and maple j years ago, and many of its editors where it had ridden for forty miles, 223,735 worth of products in 1925 tained indicate that it has unusual cated on the Teapot Dome structure. stead" Thursday afternoon. Dr. Gil­ syrup so enthused Latin-American j have been decapitated because of according to the driver. \ alone. refractive qualities. "Wyoming Is not in a region of lette gave an interesting illustrated journalists in New York that they! statements they printed. ssfeSli Farmsuarms in methe Unitedunnea Statesovates repre- AranciaiArtificial fogsxogs are beingDemg useaused in Chemists still are puzzled by ger­ present earthquake activity, although lecture on their trip to New Mexico hastened from the table to cable their j Ebony railroad ties so hard that it sent one-fifth of the total national i Norway to prevent' the freezing of manium. They frankly admit that un last year. respective papers of their find. is necessary to bore holes' through wealth and contribute one-sixth of |crops. slight tremors do occur," Mr. Bartlett The graduation exercises of the til it WAS put to work making glass said. "The 1925 tremors Increased the Electric fans are installed in al­ them before spikes can be driven are the national income. j To prevent its destruction by moths grammar schools of Somers was held most every office in Greek towns such used on certain divisions of the Kan­ A Moravian village attempted to i Paganini's famous violin has been they had not known what to do with flow of oil wells and in some cases the at Piedmont hall last evening and it. Even now they are confident it as Athens, Piraeus, Salonica, Patras, sas City, Mexico and Orient Railway kill off its cats with poison gas to i removed from the glass case in which temblors caused water to flow In with were largely attended. The list of and Delos. in Mexico. stamp out rabies. The cats were it has been kept since his death in has other and more important uses the oil." the graduates follows: From the Cen­ merely joyfully intoxicated by the 1840, and is to be used more fre­ to which science some day will apply The largest "dead fault" in the state ter school, Frances Elizabeth Bassett, vapors. , quently. it. At present Professor Dennis Is Is that along Casper mountain, six Albert Kenneth Cormier, George 'The greatest earthquake disaster Italian organ grinders are being studying its compounds with a view to miles south of Casper. It has a dis­ Whitlock Davis, Elmer Norman Des- in all history occurred in China in refused passports by the Fascist gov­ determining whether the element has placement of 10,000 to 11,000 feet, and so, Florence Ernestine Galbraith, LLIAMS 1556. More than one million persons ernment on the grounds that they de­ medicinal properties that will make it Hillary Allen Munk, Sarah Hurlburt were killed. Chinese tradition refers tract from Italy's prestige. is 21 miles long, and was once re­ Naylor, Amos Floyd Pease, Edward (•smo to it as "the time when the' moun­ Anaconda skins from Brazil, igu­ of inestimable value to mankind. sponsible for the elevation above Cas­ Monroe Stebbins, Frank Wargo; from ROOT BEER tains walked." ana skins and shark skins are being Germanium is extracted from crude per of the 3,000-foot pile of solid rock the Somersville school, Mary Julia The biggest piece of mica ever used in the manufacture of fancy zinc oxide. In crystalline form it is now known as the mountain, according Boryczka, Albert William Cormier, EXTRACT •' found was taken not long ago from shoes for women. a glossy, flaky substance resembling to geologists. A geological survey of Doris Olive Cormier, Ernestine Mabel a North Carolina mine. It weighed War between Sweden and Denmark zinc, hard and extremely brittle. the mountain showed pre-cambrian Cormier, Bernice Anna Dzirkall, ,3,332 pounds and was worth approx­ is definitely outlawed by an unlimit­ It is worth many dollars a gram, granite on the mountain top, while the James Edward Halpin, Frank Peter MAKES MOST DELICIOUS SUMMER imately $5,000. ed arbitration treaty signed by the and Cornell exhibits the largest mass Kabeski, Normand Allen Keeney, ORINK FOR YOUNG AND OLD ^ A world flight was planned by a two nations. survey of the rock strata under Cas­ Mary Katherine Labanoski, William of the element ever assembled—a per placed this rock formation 3,000 Ellwood Keeney, Pauline LaRose, KEEP.A SUPPLY HANDY FOR (VERY OCCASION round piece, beautifully crystalline, feet below the city. Peter Louis Monstello, Edward Ben­ about the size of a silver dollar and The other large fault is in the west­ jamin Petkis, Stanley Joseph Petkis, weighing 104 grams. ern part of the state, running north George Arthur Sharon, Helen Matil­ TbeVmiaiiwtCadctonCa It has been learned that crude zinc from Kemmerer, halfway across Wyo­ da Strekas, Bernard Patrick Under­ EAST HAftmnp Conh oxide can be heated with strong acid ming. It Is believed that the dis­ wood, Julia Survilla Wescott. under such conditions that a volatile placements of this fault are small and compound of germanium of high have been made over a long period of purity distills over. This Is decom­ years. posed by water so as to produce pure Prediction that another landslide germanium oxide, a white powder. Pro­ may occur In the Teton mountains In fessor Dennis further discovered that the Gros Ventre region, where a moun­ Ingots of the' pure metal could be ob­ tain .peak toppled over into the Gros tained by fusion of the powder under Ventre river last spring, was made by ordinary salt. Mr. Bartlett. The landslide last year Laboratory tests disclosed that a poured 50,000,000 cubic yards of rock BUSINESS DIRECTOBT gram of germanium could be extracted and dirt into the river. It was caused, from a pound of zinc, and the produc­ Mr. Bartlett said, by a slight earth Be Just To tion has proceeded on this basis. tremor, the alluvium on the limestone formation having been saturated by Your Buildings Actor Has Silent Role spring thaws so that all it needed was L. N. Wiley, D. D. S. a "gentle shake" to be sent tumbling A FIRM WITH A REPUTATION Use good roofing products on your building— in Play 15 Years Into the river valley. Dental Office roofingproductsthat are weather-proof, leak-proof Los Angeles, Cal.—There is a man Extracting A Specialty of doing good work for the past 35 and fire-resisting, that will look well, wear well, at San Gabriel who for 15 long years NEW DAVIS BABY TELEPHONE 870 has sat silently amidst #one of the 91 Enfield St. Thompsonville years can be of much value to you are easy to lay and easy to keep in repair. Cover greatest dramas of 3ie past, his long in building your monument. your building with white hair gleaming In the sunlight— who has watched the tides of passion ebb and flow; has seen the land in the Thompsonville Monumental Works heyday of its glory, has watched it The Advance RU-BER'OID crumble and fade—and yet, despite M. J. LIBERTY, Proprietor the fact that he is a very vital part Printing and OFFICE, 97 Pearl Street TELEPHONE 403-4 of it all—he has said no word, made ROOFING - SHINGLES no complaint for 15 years. Publishing Co. Ruberoid Roofing Pro­ position. These will He is not dumb, yet he never talks. ducts are made from neither become hard He is Prank Cuellar, one of the HIGH GRADE PRINTING the highest grade felt and brittle in cold i ^Mission Play performers, who has no Of EVERY DESCRIPTION j lines to say, and who has no ambition Thompsonville Electric Co. protected by the purest weather nor soften and to be other than he is—a silent patri­ Telephone 50 bituminous materials. run in warm climate. arch. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS The saturantis carefully He is said to be the only actor 27-29 HIGH STREET All kinds of Electrical Appliances & National Mazda Lamps Be just to your build­ known who has been content to re­ THOMPSONVILLE TELEPHONE 524-3 77 HIGH STREET compounded and can­ ings. main a silent performer. not evaporate and the He has been with John Steven Mc- surface coating is a Phone us today for Groarty since the Mission play's be­ ginning and he Is happy to remain •»> special asphaltic com­ samples and prices. right there, for he is a native of old •SPR; GREGORY M. I California and he loves the play. THOMPSONVILLE The first photograph made of lit­ SAPSUZIAN, JR. tle Jewel Davis, tli6 youngest baby SULLIVAN BLOCK B rainard-Ahrens, Inc. LUMBER CORP. The average monthly pay of a farm of Secretary of Labor James J. Davis hand is now $34.38, with .room and and Mrs. Davis. All of the Davis chil­ LARGEST INSURANCE AGENCY IN NORTHERN CONN. PHONES 131 AND 132 board, as compared with $32.01 six dren have names beginning with the INSURANCE and 95 Prospect St., Thompsonville, Conn. months ago. letter "J." The average weekly movie attend­ REAL ESTATE ance in the United States is estimat­ LAUNDERING STREET CARS NOTARY PUBLIC ed at one hundred and thirty million. "Nothing but Insurance" Washing street cars is a more dif- Telephones: SrfWd Offic* Thompsoavill* OAm icult job for a subway company than for one that operates surface equip­ Office 294 Res. 313-14 Phone W. Locks Div. 222-3 Office Tel. 45-2 Rwljnm U-| ment. The iron dust that subway Thompsonville, Conn. cars accumulate during their trips oxydizes in wet weather and causes stains on the- exterior paint of the car. Many surface lines maintain William J. Mulligan A motor car that offers cleaning stations through which each ALPHONSE TRUDEAU car passes daily. There the outside of the car is sprayed with water Attorney At Law from perforated pipes and employes GROCERIES, CONFECTIONERY, with mops and cloths do the drying. CIGARS AND TOBACCO next year's advantages todayI Thompsonville Office Collectors are offering $700 apiece 27 HIGH STREET ^ 115 High St., Thompsonville, Conn. Telephone 246 for early air-mail stamps in which Telephone 50 Think of the genuine satisfac­ in permanent Duco. It intro­ the airplane is pictured flying up­ tion that comes with ownership duces thrillingly new standards side down. The issue was -canceled of a truly advanced automo­ of liveliness, acceleration, power by postal authorities as soon as the Hartford Office error was discovered. 983 MAIN STREET and smoothness. And it incor­ St. Luke's Episcopal "Church, EDWARD LEETE bile— Telephone 2-1412 porates advanced engineering known as 'The Old Brick Church,' at j —one that actually brings you j FUNERAL DIRECTOR features not combined in any Chuckatuck, Virginia, built in 1632, next year's advantages today! is the oldest building of English con- j 107 ENFIELD STREET TELEPHONE 1§7 other car, including air cleaner, struction still standing in America, j OFFICE 74 MAIN STREET TELEPHONE 18* This is exactly what you obtain oil filter, full pressure oiling, C. ROGERS ^ CO. .. in the . interchangeable bronze-backed OPTICIANS CAMERAS It-offers ultra-modern, ultra- bearings, Four-Wheel brakes beautiful Fisher Bodies, finished and the Harmonic Balancer. Thousands of WILLIAM E. SAVAGE THERE'S NO Oakland Six $1025 to $1295. Six, companion to Oakland Six, $825, Coach or Coupe. New Words MIDDLE COURSE General Contractor and Builder All prices at factory. Easy to pay on the liberal Time Payment Plan. spelled, pronounced, in eyeglass or spectacle fit­ Successor to Thomas Savage & Sons and defined in ting. They are Right or THERE IS NOTHING TOO LARGE OR SMALL FOB US Wrong—one or the other. TO HANDLE IN THE BUILDING LINE. WEBSTER'S We fit glasses and fit them NEW INTERNATIONAL EIG124T5 MAIN STREET SPRINGFIELD DICTIONARY Opp. Chicopee Nat'l Bank The "Supremo Authority" FRANK P. SMYTH Here are a few samples : COAL AND WOOD hot pursuit Red Star Air Council capital ship Our coal is the kind that sparkles with pent uv h«at. It mud gun mystery ship Automobile is well screened and in every way satisfactory. S. P. boat irredenta aerial cascade Esthonia Repairing OFFICE. MAIN ST. TELEPHONE CONNECTION American Legion Blue Cross girl scout airport All Makes of Cars Enfield Street. Thompsonville. Conn. cyper crystal detector Wrecking Crane—Day or Night sippio superheterodyne shoneen DODGE BROS. CARS /a thit itorehoutm Graham Bros. Trucks of information A ttrving youT EPSTEIN'S EXPRESS • Landau Sedan 2700Paget Geo. S. Bridge Local aad Long Distance Furniture and Piano Meying $1295 Oakland and Pontiac Sales and Service 6000 Ului- 244 Enfield St., Thompsonvill« 90 High Street, Thompsonville, Conn. trationt Telphones 461 and 34S-S 407,000' Daily Express—Springfield, Worcester Word* and Phrase* and Boston WINNING AND HOLDING GOOD WILL GaietteerandBiographlcalDlotionary LONG DISTANCE HAULING Get the Beitl — Write for a sample page of the New Words, specimen of S. L. Mitchell STORAGE WAREHOUSE Regular and India Papers, FREE. PLUMBING AND HEATING Ofilec Phone 82-5 llS Main Stew* G.&C.MERRIAM CO. 40 HIGH STR®ET House Phone 182 39 Central Street D SIX Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS PHON® 196-3 SpM. Office, 36 Lyman St. Boston Offies, » Otis St. ]

vi mm s;,;'. ^•;/ % *v« <•''!, fa It® 0*!KS$$8U^P^ Sm £ w|j^|?C^P-. ^Jj?^ (, *, -, ,i >S i> wW'^'T' ""vS**?** < E^P?^,-'- " W#!i THE THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, lt>26.

vhrw. The funeral was held Satur­ their supper on the groun&i will be ' blue trousers 'with white pencil stripe, ist; vocal selections, Walter Farr, eath el3Sr&E€. day afternoon at 2 o'cloek at St. An­ provided for. Other attractions will , gray socks with black dots and t$n Miss Ci$n)$ie at the jpiano., A short Sedan Damaged lit ' Who S&si^^End A drew's Episcopal Church in this vil­ len, with flowers, bal-;high shoes. No marks of identity talk was given by Rev. Lyman C. Armstrong in Soiners lage Rev. William A. Beardsley of loons and grabs, and music will be could be found on his clothing. In Pettit, the pastor. The chapel was Collision With Truck > Phone Conversation St. Thomas' Church, New Haven, of­ a special feature. The committee of his pockets were found three hand- tastefully decorated with palms and idow of Gabriel Armstrong, For­ ficiated, assisted by Rev. Glenn B. arrangements consists of Mrs. Henry kerchiefs, a-small change purse and Iris, through the courtesy of Chester Machine Owned and Drivert by Helen As General Rule, the Calling Party mer Local Hotel Owner, and Resi­ M. Demmi of Springfield Crashes Coykendall, rector. The body was Eugley, chairman, Mrs. William A. j ldose change aggregating $1.47. 'Dr. Brainard. During the evening there Should Be One To Bring T.v k T,> dent of Net Haven For Past 25 bxoof&t to the new cemetery in Haz­ Bridge, Mrs. George J. Gordon, Mrs.'Joseph A.Googan of Windsor Locks, was candy for sale by the young Into Rear of Huge Kneeland Van Year*, Dies in Brother's Hone. ardville for burial. Robert P. Bridge, Miss Marion Wil-J after viewing the body as medical ex- people in charge of Mrs. Lyman C. .When Traffic Makes Sudden Halt. Conclusion. . "Mra. Harriet C. Armstrong, widow son, Mrs. Clarence Martin, .Mrs. Ern- jaminer, stated that the body probably Pettit, Miss Virginia Brainard and Last Friday afternoon a Nash iiafGabriel Armstrong, who was * for est Buck, Mrs. Seymour Pierce and i had been in the yjater two months. Miss Janette Parkman. sedan owned and driven by Helen M. By whom should a t,?j}/i>n~ v- j^aany. years proprietor of the Thomp- Hasardville Church!!!! Mrs. Walter Albee. The proceeds j The man probably was between 85 Demmi of 656 Armory street, Spring­ versation be ended? As a i? i--.- i 1 aotmlle Hotel, died Thursday after- will be devoted to purchasing new j and 40 years of age and had dark field, was badly damaged in a rear- rule, the one who calls tip is th? j^/fioon at 4:30 o'clock in the home of Plans Lawn Party furniture for the parsonage. The! brown hair, with a smooth shaven end collision with a truck owned by who should terminate the talk, as V i _____ s HISTORY IN CAKE Bill Kneeland, expressman, of, that ... f iller brother, Edwin T. Hurlburt, in patronage of the public is cordially face. _ The. body was taken to Coop- AiTTf QMrfS Vm Tfc 1 T— ' Tn _ • person who calls qp is in the posi^ t. JSomers, where she had been visiting Will Be Held on Grounds At Home invited. er's funeral parlors, Suffield. city, and driven by Ralph' O. 'Fair tion of a caller and if he or she were of Mrs. Allyn G. Bridge, Under the ,fie 'Id. •Several « cars"***" werej"ViVI travelingViATdlUK ; t for ten days. Mrs. Armstrong was W; , calling in person the host or hostesi 67 years old and was born in Som-j Auspices of Ladies' Aid Society of toward Springfield, and the driver of (obviously would not be the ones to .•;';ers. She has been a resident of New. Methodist Church Next Thursday. Local Youths Find Many Attend Funeral the leading car stopped suddenly. bring the call to an end. Howeyer, - 'Haven for the past 25 years, where! The Ladieg' Aid Society of the The driVers of the six or eight cars as regards telephone conversations, she and Mr. Armstrong conducted a Methodist Church in Hazardville are Man's Body In River Of Jeremiah Lynch trailing applied the brakes but Miss this is a rule which l^as its excepSf j. v .hotel in the vicinity of Yale Univer- planning for a very attractive outdoor • _ Demmi, before she could stop, col­ tions. ' M , sity, which was patronized largely by event, a lawn party, which will be Discovered OnSuffield Side of ; Well Known Resident and Civil War lided with-the rear of the ponderous When a woman is conversing over Yale students. Mr. Armstrong died held on the grounds of Fairlawn, the River, Near the Hilltop Farm, By j Veteran Buried in St. Patrick's truck. The radiator was pushed in, the telephone with a man, it matters ' ; about a year ago and is buried in the home of Mrs. Allyn G. Bridge, next Walking AIong__ Bank—Has j Cemetery Following Church Ser­ the headlights broken, and the car not whether the woman or the man new cemetery in Hazardville. jweek Thursday, June 24, from 4 to Been Umdentind As Yet. j vices Last Saturday Morning, was otherwise crippled. Patrolman did the calling up, it is the woman Mrs. Armstrong is survived by two ' 8 o'clock. There will be a variety of An unidentified man's body was1 Largely attended funeral services 3K M . Leonard Barton investigated the ac­ who should bring the conversation to ;: ^^sons, Hurlburt A. and Edward G. j tempting home cooked food for sale, found Wednesday afternoon in the |were held Saturday morning at 9:00 cident and found that Mr. Fairchild an ^end. That is her privilege, and Armstrong, both of New Haven; one; an ice cream and cake booth, alsq Connecticut River, east of Hilltop o'clock in St. Patrick's Church for was in no way responsible for the the man should never place himself Ppgforother. Edwin T. Hurlburt of Som-1 punch and other refreshing drinks Farm in Suffield, by two Thompson- Jeremiah Lynch, Civil War veteran accident. in the position of -ending the conver­ »!§}l|lpers, and a sister, Mrs. Gertrude J. i and candy. The plans include a hot ville boys, who were walking along and well-known cigar manufacturer. sation. On the other hand, especial­ ^Pendleton of New Haven. A niece,j dog roast and other food specialties, the river bank. The body was dress­ The service consisted of a requiem Prolonged litigation between Con­ ly if the woman is calling up a man ff:3 ; Cecelia A. Wardwell also sur- so that those who wish to secure ed in a blue shirt, a union suit, dark mass celebrated by Rev. John F. ''h.i 1 necticut and Massachusetts, in which during business hours, she should be Kenney. The, casket draped with an ^ T" * 't " Enfield, as no other community in the careful not to continue the conversa­ American flag, was carried into the tion too long lest the man might find church by bearers from the H. A. §pK?ltS state will be Vitally , interested, is promised over the Boston water it necessary to excuse himself. This p! Grant Camp, Sons of Veterans, and is a difficult thing to do, no matter friends of the. deceased. They were measure which would take the sup­ how tactfully he may be able to* ac­ Thomas Smyth, Maurice H. Foley, ply of the Swift and Ware Rivers, complish it. - James H. Bailes, Harry Bridge, Al­ tributaries of the Connecticut River. If a woman calls up another wo­ bert Epstein, H. F. Fletcher. Mrs. Navigation; and the proposed power man it should always be the woman Frederick R. Furey was the soloist development at the lower part of our who calls up who brings the conver­ during the mass. A body guard of town would be affected by the im­ sation to a close. Long telephone World War Veterans, in uniform, led conversations are bad form. While the procession to St. Patrick's ceme­ pairing of the flow of the waters of the Connecticut River, which this the person who. does the calling may tery, where the ritualistic service of have plenty of time to engage in Samuel Brown Post, G. A. R., was Metropolitan water plan of Massa­ such a conversation, the party at the given, with Albert Elcock a si com­ chusetts would bring about. It is other end of the line may be engag­ mander, assisted by Henry J. Bridge hoped that the effort to adjust the ed in some very important occupa­ THAT WHAT WAS FORMERLY KNOWN AS THE of the Sons of Veterans as chaplain. matter by arbitration will be success­ tion, but would be too polite to make A firing squad from the American ful. this known. EJv. ALDEN AYE. GARAGE WILL IN THE FUTURE Legion participated in the ceremony kf at the close of which a bugler sound­ BE CONDUCTED UNDER THE NAME OF THE ed taps. Five comrades in the G. A. Iter- • R. Post were present at the services. They were Albert • Epstein of Wind­ sor Locks, Albert Elcock, Suffieled, This replica of historic Independ­ Andrew Gordon, Hazardville, John ence Halt-in Philadelphia is a fine ex­ C. ALAIMO CO. McCready of this village and Joseph ample of the baker's art. It was made R. Sperry of Warehouse Point. by the chef of one of Philadelphia's leading hotels to advertise the Sesqui- MODERN MARKETS First Church Society Centennial International Exposition, 'PHONE YOUR ORDER—QUICK SERVICE vtf. which will open in that city June 1 Close Supper Season and run to December 1 to celebrate TEL. 456—FREE DELIVERY the 150th anniversary of American In­ Final Event Held Last Thursday Ev­ The reason that our prices are the lowest is - ening and Was One of the Most dependence. The "State House" Successful of Season—Fine Enter­ stands on a table at the entrance to « ( because we sell for cash and buy for cash. tainment Program Rendered. the main dining room of the hotel. T t supper and entertainment of ' -Specials In Fish Ladies' Aid Society of the First The third anniversary of Colfax Fresh Caught Mackerel, 2 lbs. for i - 25c ' byterian Church, which (was held Rebekah Lodge, I. O. O. F., will be Small Fresh Haddock, 3 lbs. for 25c -c Thursday evening, was one of the observed tomorrow night with a Fresh Cod, per lb - 18c •••t successful of the season. Mrs. birthday party in the rooms in Odd w es Bailes was the chairman, with Flounders, 2 lbs. for - 25c • Matthew Henry, Mrs. Claus Ab- Fellows' Hall. A feature will be a Clams and Oysters r .imson, _Mrs. William Klein, Mrs. birthday cake. Refreshments will be Ag.nes Reid, Mrs. William Gourlie served. • n and Mrs. William Oakley as able as­ - Week End Savings Only sistants. Mrs. Bailes also had charge Campbejl's Pork and Beans, 3 cans for 25c of the entertainment program, which Campbell's Tomato Soup, 3 cans for .: 25c consisted of the following numbers: Fancy Tomatoes, large can, 2 for «... 25c pf:, Piano and violin selections, Mss Stel­ Fancy Tomatoes, small size, 3 cans for 25c GARAGE la Phelps and Frederick Phelps; read­ ings, Miss Bernice Squires; vocal /Fancy Bengal Peas, 2 cans for 27c The aim of the new proprietor of this establishment is solos, Mrs. Harold McKinney, with Selected Pea Beans, 4 lbs. for — 25c to provide absolutely the best general garage service Miss Florence Gourlie as accompan- Fresh Spinach, per peck 15c that it is possible to give. For this purpose there has Fancy Lettuce, 4 heads for 25c already been installed an equipment that is positively Card of Thanks Milk Fed Veal—A Special Fancy Legs of Veal, 5-6 lbs., per lb .... 15c the best to be found between Hartford and Springfield. To the many friends and neighbors "Unless someone tells who were so kind and helpful to us Fancy Pot Roast of Veal, per lb - — 12c fvii. Every possible garage service will be rendered here ex­ in our recent bereavement, in the her about her eyes— Boneless Roast Veal, per lb 29c loss of a dear Husband and devoted she 11 need an extension on Choice Loins of Veal, per lb 25c cept body work and upholstering. Father, we wish to return our sin­ cere thanks. We would especially her arm" Veal for Stewing, 2 lbs. for 25c • thank the members of the Samuel Choice Veal Chops, per . lb 25c It will include complete Electrical and Mechanical re- Brown Post, G. A. R., H. A. Grant The woman is far-sight­ : Camp, Sons of Veterans, World War Choice Beef—the Very Best ffe ' Dair work and also welding and wrecking service. The Veterans, and all those who contrib­ ed, but doesn't know it. uted the lovely floral tributes and How ridiculous she makes Fancy Pot Roasts, per lb 15c maintenance of this service here is wholly dependent on spiritual bouquets. herself lopk, in her attempt Fancy Roast Beef, per lb 18c up the support it'receives from the public. Mrs. Jeremiah Lynch, to read the menu! Too Choice Tender Steak, per lb 25c and family. many women, and men too, Fresh Liver, 2 lbs. for 25c iSfe •. go through this same futile Honeycomb Tripe, per lb 12^c WEfcCARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF Legal Notice performance. Be sure that Sugar Cured Bacon, by the square 25c your own sight is normal. *• ' AUTO SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES AT A COURT OF PROBATE held ' 'i'ljk-' i at Enfield, within and for the Pro­ Have your eyes examined! ' bate District of Enfield, in the County of Hartford, and State of Connecticut on the 15th day of June, 1926. Present: Charles J. Fowler, Judge. t': Estate of Ezra M. Bowen, late of Enfield in said District, deceased. Jl'ellszvorth Tillyet Upon application praying that let­ Lenses are the best BEACON known to optical ters of administration may be grant­ science. ed on the estate of said Ezra M. Bowen, deceased, as per application on file more fully appears, it is A. B. Mitchell Ordered, That said application be Fresh CaugTit Mackerel 13c lb. heard and determined at the Probate Jeweler and Optometrist Office in Enfield, in said District, on 12 PEARL STREET Steamer Haddock 10c lb. •ft • GARAGE the 24th day of June, A. D. 1926, at 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon; and that Tel. 542 For Appointments. Fresh Caught Buck Shad 25c lb. notice be given of the pendency of THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. said application and the time and Fresh Caught Roe Shad 35c lb. K. E. MYER, Proprietor place of hearing thereon, by publish­ ing a copy of this order once in a Silver Eels, Herrings, Steak Cod, newspaper having a circulation in v S; •vfri-'l • CORNER ALDEN AVE. AND ENFIELD STREET said District, and by posting a copy Steak Blue, Halibut and Salmon. thereof on the public sign-post in the A STEAMING HOT % THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. Town of Enfield in said District, at CUP OF least five days before said time as­ Shanks of Veal, 5 to 6 lbs. each 15c lb. |-r*. . signed, and return make to this Court. CHARLES J. FOWLER, Judge. Van Dyk's Legs of Veal 25c lb. Duchess Coffee Stewing Veal 15c lb. and up For Breakfast Tender Veal Chops .'. 28c lb. will do more to inspire en­ Round Steak (by the slice) 25c lb ergy than any Spring ton­ ic. Serve it at your home. Short and Sirloin Steak 38c lb Fresh Lamb Flanks, for stewing 13c lb. t. Here's How! VAN DYK'S Duchess Coffee \ Choice Rib Roasts of Beef . 22c lb up (The Coffee Supreme) Fresh Killed Scalded Chickens ...... 45c lb SB*# Bacon Squares 23c lbV §fe Drink a toast to your friends with a 53c Lb. brimming glass of Enfield Dairy de- VAN DYK'S Fancy Burmuda Onions, 3 lbs. for 25c •ft"-. •0 liciously tasteful Ice Cream Soda—a Mara Coffee Choice Canned Pears 15c can wonderfully thirst quenching, taste A different blend Ideal Raisins, 2 pkgs. for 25c * j, fe?1 •' f satisfying drink for warm weather. 47c Lb. Miner's or Baker's Cocoa, % lb. can l*9c Confectionery Sugar, 2 pkgs. for 15c No need to ritn short of v Van Dyk Teas, Cocqa or Matches, 6 pkgs. for 25c Every Ingredient Guar- other specialties. Our ex-< -v Mm # : - Fancy Table Corn, 2 cans for 25c •••• elusive Van Dyk Dept. is equipped to take care of Golden Bantam Corn, 2 cans for 25c • anteed Absolutely Pure. your wants at most reas­ onable prices, always with Libby's Pork and Beans, 3 cans for 25c highest quality. 5 Kellogg's Corn Flakes or Post Toasties, per ' ft m .i, : package 10c «3 MALLEY'S Monarch Catsup, large size, 2 bottles 45c Delicatessen Ritter's Catsup, 2 bottles for 25c Telephone 675-5 Somersville, Conn. 1* ptarf" Street WM Thompsonville, Conn. Native Asparagus 10c bunch