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NET PRESS RUN THE WEATHER. y^BAGB D.ULT CIBCUIiATIOX Foneoat by 0. •. Waatbaa BoteaB. " o f t h e e v e n in g h e r a l d Maw' Havaar: lor tbe month of Angnat, 19S7 5 , 0 4 4 wer» tonight; Friday fidr.

PRICE THREE CENTS VOL. XU., NO. 295. Classified adrwtlslng oa^page 12 MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, SEPTEJ^BER 1, 1927.

BIGCra USERS Berlin, Sept, 1.— ^Thirty persons The waters ol the Dniester, San' R685.13 JUMP are dead and 1,500 homeless, as a and Stryj rivers rose twelve leet in one hour, sweeping away many result of floods that have inundat­ bridges. Railroads throughout the ed a large area in the province ol district also were destroyed. Increase In Expenses Hakes Relatively Few Subscribers Galicia, Poland, according to re­ ports from Warsaw today. London, Sept. l.i—Heavy rains Here’s the Flying Countess “ Royal Windsor” Starts At Haking All Allowances, “ St Affected By Today’s An­ Fifteen towns are under water, have flooded the Carpathian oil Bigger Appropriation In the reports said, and the rich Gali­ fields, doing tremendous damage 9:17 to Cross Atlantic; Raphael” Should Have cian oil fields have been extensive­ and causing, several deaths, ac­ nouncement-New Kind ly damaged. cording to a'central News dispatch Budget Necessary— Com­ A tornado accompanied the from Warsaw today. A number of “ Sir John Carling” Starts Been Sighted By 7:30 floods, adding to the devastation. mines have been inundated. The plete Account Of Service. Fires also broke out in several of Polish government is rushing as­ the towns. ' sistance. Also But Will Stop At This Hom ing--No Word President James T. Moran of the Town Treasurer George H. Wad­ Newfoundland to Refuel; Since Flyers Left Ireland Southern New England Telephone dell today completed the report of company today announced an in­ the Charity department of the crease in telephone rates in some Union And Bar Unite Town of Manchester which he has First Named to Hake Yesterday Homing; Hay exchanges, effective with the bills prepared for the annual town re­ issued to subscribers in October. port. The Charity department over­ Non-Stop Flight Have Drifted Off Course. Mr. Moran’s statement, which ap­ To End Labor Trouble drew its appropriation this year pears elsewhere in this issue, is a and judging from the Increased ex­ comprehensive review of the fac­ penses In this branch of town gov­ Toronto, Sept. 1.—-The “ Sir Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, Sept. 1 John Carling,” London, On­ tors which make it necessary for ernment a larger budget appro­ -r-Wlth all Canada and the rest of the telephone company to increase SHARKS, SNAKES tario, to London, England the world for that matter, eagerly Both Sides Hope That priation will be asked at the town plane, passed over Alsbnrg, its revenue from operation at this* awaiting word today of the where­ time. EXCITE BEACH meeting next month. Vermont, at 11:17 this morn­ T-vJ abouts of the flying Princess Low- Not General Strikes and Lockonts Hay The appropriation for the year ing, and was over Phillips- The rate increase is not general First Swallows 40 Pound Iron which has just ended was $20,000.] bnrg, Quebec, a short time enstein-Wertheim and her two' throughout the company’s territory. The Charity department has ex­ later, according to reports pilots. Captain Leslie Hamilton and' Varying advances are made in 38 Bar^—Serpent Tries to Bite received here this afternoon. Be Stopped By Proper Baby in Bedroom. pended $22,308.86 this year. The Colonel Frederick F, Mlnchln, exchanges,.although not all classes amount expended last year was The “ Royal Windsor” which of service are affected in all the started a few hours after the every means of communication was cxchauiges in which rates are Westport, Conn., Sept. 1.— $19,628.73 making an increase in brought into play in an attempt Legislation. cost of the Charity department of London plane on a non-stop changed, while - in 33 exchanges Captain John Mulhaley, local flight to England, was report­ to Iqcate the adventurous aviators. there will be no increases in local fisherman, came Into Sauga- $2,685.13. Natnral Growth ed over St. Thomas, Out., at Experts Confer. rates, except that in all of the 71 tuck today with a ten-foot tig­ 11:80 eastein daylight time. Buffalo, N. Y., Aug; Sept. 1.— This increase can only be ex­ At 10:30 eastern daylight time, exchanges of the company there is er shark that he caught in his Both planes were flying very to be a varying advance in the so- The American Federation of Labor plained by the natural growth of this morning, government officials flat fish net six miles off Com- low. of the Marine and Aerial experts called professional rate for physi­ and the American Bar Association po Beach and killed only after the town and the proportionate cians, dentists, etc., and in the rates growth of the need of charities. computed ratios of time and dis­ have joined hands in an effort to a struggle. Captain Mulhaley Windsor, Ontario, Sept. 1.—-The tance, making allowance for head for auxiliary lines used by some fac­ called on Alfred Shaw, photo­ Town Treasurer Waddell feels that tories and large mercantile estab­ work out a national code -for the the Charity department has been “ Royal Windsor”, carrying Aviators winds, deflections from course and grapher, to drive down and other factors entering into the lishments. The general advance in peaceful settlement of labor diffi­ take a picture of the shark and fortunate in keeping expenses down Philip S. Wood and C. A. Schiller, these two classes of service will so well. The cost per capita of flight of the St.': Raphael from Up- culties. Shaw, just about to start, re­ hopped off from Walkerville Field avon, England, to Ottawa, Cana­ affect, however, relatively few sub­ Both sides have expressed the ceived an urgent call from his Manchester’s almshouse was de­ here at 9:17 this morning for a creased. Last year it cost $7.13 per da, and concluded that some news scribers. home in Weston to hurry out of the plane should have been Rates for toll service are not af­ hope that national legislation to end week for every inmate. This year flight from this city to Windsor, the era of strikes and lockouts may and kill a three-foot copper­ picked up along the North Atlantic fected at all. head snake that had Invaded the cost per Inmate per week was England. coast hours ago— by 7:30 this It is estimated by officials of the come out of the' ponferences, pre­ Sharif’s living room. reduced to $6.18. Better manage­ While the start was made several morning at any rate. company that the relatively small liminary phases of which have al­ ment at the almshouse has brought Princess Lowensteln-Wertheim and Captain Leslie Hamilton, one of the hours after the “ Sir John Carling” increase per telephone, when ap­ Shaw dashed home and But, three hours after that hbur, ready been discussed between Presi­ found that a neighbor had this about. pilots of the Fokker monoplane St.. Raphael in which she hopped off hopped off at London^ Ontario, a no news , had come. At 10:30 a plied throughout the 38 Exchanges dent William Green of the labor or­ come along In time to put the The average number of inmates from England to fly the Atlantia.to,.Canada.. The- Prtacesai who is; 82, trans-Atlantic race for the honor of roqn^-pp'ot all the wireless stations, affected will result in added reve­ ganization and former Governor at the almshouse for the year was nue amounting to $485,000 a year. snake out of the way just as was the first -woman to attempt to o ro » thn English Channel by air. being the first to span the Atlantic along the east coast was made, and Charles S. Whitman, of New York, 16. Today, there are .inmates. none' had received any word of the In this city there will be an in­ the raticijsg president of the Bar it threatened to crawl into aiv in the name of Canada seemed adjoining room where ShaW’s ^ I s number has doubled within a likely. plane. crease of 50 cents a month'"ln'"the AssoclaBon. few years. A greater demand upon individual line residence rate, but two-year-old baby was playing Wood and S chlllf were de­ Evidence of Fear. First Suggestions. the charities funds has been made Some evidence of fear for the no increase is proposed in the par­ The conferences were first sug­ on the floor. The snake ap­ ONE PLANE LISTED GERMAN SWIMMER termined to make a non-stop flight ty line residence rate. peared to have been brought by townspeople this year than in while the “ Sir John Carling” was safety of the flyers became mani­ gested by Chester I. Long, of Wichi­ any previous year. All this has fest but for the most part officials New Service ta, Kansas, who as president of the Into the house In the wood to halt for refuelling at Harbor Coincident with the rate read­ basket. driven the cost of supporting the Grace, Newfoundland. remained optimistic. Bar Association last year, advo­ IN SPOKANE RACE RECEIVES $30,000 Officials figured that, if the fly­ justment it is announced that two- cated national application of the Meanwhile Captain Mulhaley town’s needy higher, and little Its Destination party line selective ringing service related the story of the shark, hope of this expense decreasing can ers are still in the air and on their principles of compulsory arbitra­ The "Royal Windsor’s” destina­ plotted course, they would have will be offered to patrons here. This tion embodied in the Kansas indus­ a real man-eater, ripping his be seen. tion Is Windsor, England, but it class of residence service was in­ net almost to pieces In a strug­ The Report struck the denser steamer lanes trial court law. So long as the work­ will not land there. The aviators where the Gulf of St. Lawrence and troduced in several larger exchange* ing base of the proposed confer­ gle for freedom. Mulhaley A complete account of money Art Goebel, Pacific Flyer Is Ernest Vierkoetter . Wins plan to drop greetings from the some time ago and is now included paid out of the Town Treasury and Straits of Belle Isle pour into the ences remained on the Kansas prin­ droppped a forty-pound iron mayor of Windsor, Ontario, and Atlantic. In that vicinity there are, in the schedule of this exchange. ciple, “ with power of coercion” over bar, with chain attached, in an chargeable to the Charities ac­ then continue the flight to Crpyden. It is much like individual line ser­ count follows: Single Entry; Hany Pilots in Addition to wireless stations, labor organization. Green declined effort to catch the shark, but Wrigley Prize In Water Wood, a native of Duluth, Minn., several liners and freighters plying vice in character as under the selec­ to enter negotiations. the shark swallowed bar, chain ALMSHOUSE ACCOUNT served two years In France with the tive ringing system only the bell of the waters. These ships are radio- Advised that, following two deci­ and all. When the captain Labor American aviation corps during the equipped and would have communi­ the called subscriber is rung, al­ sions of the United States Supreme reached home he ripped the Supt. Matrn and Hlprs $ 1,998.95 But No Proper Hachines. Race; Frenchman Second though the line is shared by two World War, and Schiller, who was cated with land on the first sight Court overthrowing the compulsory shark open and recovered the M. F. Hutchinson, mow. 39.00 born In Iowa, -enlisted In the Royal of the plane. subscribers. features of the Kansas code, the bar and chain. The rate for individual line busi­ Bar Association abandoned the Air Force when he was 18 years old May Be Off Course. ■ $ 2,037.95 New York, Sept. 1.— Inability to Toronto, Ontario, Sept. 1.— For and served throughout the world The expert computations how­ ness service is to be increased $1 measure as a starting point. Green Medical AtteMtii->.j a month and auxiliary lines will obtain fast, long distance pianos his spectacular achievement in win­ conflict. For the past three yedrs ever, are based on the hypothesis appointed the labor committee. N. A. Burr, M. D...... 66.00 that the flyers have remained on take the same rate as the initial The Committee. JAFFEE, MARLOW threaten.^ to cut down the list of ning the Canadian National twenty- he has been In the aerial forest E. G. Dolac. D. D. S. . 14.50 patrol. their original course. Those who line. The individual line (profes­ With Green on the committee are D. C. Y. Moore, M. D .. . 10.00 entries In the National Air Derby one rnile Marathon swim, Ernst sional) will also take the individu­ The Takeoff confidently believe they are safe John P. Frey of Cincinnati; editor T. H. Weldon, M. D. ., 25.00 non-stop race, New York to Spok­ Vierkoetter, German baker, today al line business rate. The take-off of the Royal Wind­ say their speed may have been of the Moulder’s Journal and a ane, Wash., it became known today. will receive the $30,000 cash prl*e slowed down by stiff head winds or P> Party line business service will member of the executive committee BUY THE RIALTO sor was perfect despite a total load $ 115.50 that they may have been forced to of the Federation and Victor Olan- So far only one entry has been of­ offered by William Wrlglej,*Jr., of of 4,0Dc pounds which It carried, (Continued on Page 7) Drugs Chicago. “ zig zag” In their epurse. der, secretary of the Illlhols Fed­ Miner’s Pharmacy . . 54.40 ficially listed for the race which Is including 500 gallons of gasoline. Had the 6:2-year-old princess and eration of Labor. Julius Henry Co­ Packard’s Pharmacy 43.70 scheduleji to start from' Roosevelt The gruelllDig swim, the second After taxing down the runaway for her two companions veered to the hen of New York is chairman of the Former Owners Hake Only J. H. Quinn & Co. .. 41.46 Field, , on September sponsored by the Chicago million-' 2,000 feet toward th^ south the south of their plotted course, they Bar Association committee. 21. He Is Art Goebel, winner of the aire, was won by Vierkoetter last plane lifted beautifully. It turned would have struck a rather a dense A partial report from the com­ LEVINE MAY START 139.55 Dole race from the Pacific coast to night when he crossed the finish eastward and disappeared rapidly in area of wireless and shipping. But, mittee to the fiftieth annual con­ Bid at Auction to Protect Hawaii. line and clambered out of the ‘cold the mist. had thy swerved to the north, they vention of the association, declares (Continued on page 5) Goebel Is now. en route to San water without assistance after The Royal Windsor carried sev­ may have been carried over the ON EASTERN FLIGHT that “ substantial progress” has Their Interests. Francisco by steamer. His plane, swimming for eleven hours, forty- eral gallons of coffee in thermos bleak northern coast of Newfound­ been made in the preliminary dis­ “ Woolaroc,” has been crated and two minutes and twelve seconds. bottles and plenty of sandwiches. It land and the mountainous hinter­ cussions and recommends that the Taking the lead from George is equipped with a collapsible rub­ parleys continue through the com­ SACCO TRIAL JUDGE put aboard the steamship. land where facilities for communi­ If English Plane Crosses Officials of the Aviation Service ber lifeboat and Radio. The radio cation are such that it would re­ ing year. Jaffee and Marlow purchased the (Continned on Pago 2) quire a considerable period before lantic—If Not He Will “ The .committee feels very much Corporation, in charge of local ar­ consists of a sending set that Westward. encouraged and believes that the Rialto theater property this after­ HAS NERYE COLLAPSE rangements for the New York to operates on a 200-metre wave news that they had been sighted noon at the auction which was ord­ Spokane flight, said this morning length and may be heard fifty miles had penetrated to the outer world. time is now opportune for arriving The Canadian government, London, Sept. 1.— Charles A. at such an understanding,” the re­ ered by the Superior court. Jaffee that It is almost Impossible to get away, and a serviceable receiving Webster Thayer Confined to monoplanes capable of making the FIRE DESTROYS NEW set. meanwhile, stood prepared to ^80 Levine tod^y made arrangements ports said. and Marlow bought the theater for placing Captain W. R. Hinch- It Is planned to confer with em­ His Home— Taken Sick Sud­ cross country flight over high The fliers carried a wreath to be to the assistance of the aviators property for $100 plus the equity in mountain ranges and other handi­ dropped In the Atlantic ocean as a should It develop that they are cliffe formally under contract as ployers and workers throughout denly. found to be beleaguered anywhere pilot of the trans-Atlantic mono­ the country before the next meeting the property which Is about $35,- caps that will have to be met. There HOME IN COYENTRY tribute to the memory of Nunges- are plenty of first class aviators sor and Coll, daring French avia­ on this side of the ocean. Exactly plane “ Columbia.” of the two committees, to discuss 000. Worcester, Mass., Sept. 1.— what the character of this assis­ Levine, who plans to fly back to the involved questions of law and The local men made the only bid Judge Webster Thayer, trial Judge tors who wpre lost In their attempt tance would be will depend upon America, said that if no word was policy upon which an effective leg­ in the famous Sacco-Vanzetti case (Continned on 2} Former Manchester Couple to fly from Paris to New York. islative program might be reared. at the auction which attracted be­ the conditions at the time. received by tomorrow morning was confined to hls home today Loses Bungalow In Blaze The' Royal Windsor is a Stlnson- It was computed at 10:30 this from Lieutenant Colonel F. F. Min- tween 75 and 100 Interested per­ with Illness believed to be tbe aft­ Detrolter monoplane. It has a Early This Morning. morning, however, that the St. Ra­ chin. Captain Leslie Hamilton and sons. They made the purchase fo ermath of the serious strain under Wright whirlwind motor and a phael still had sufficient gas In her the Princess Lowenstein-Werthelm TH RE YOUTHS HELD protect their own Interests. The which he had been during the clos­ FIYE JAIL BREAKS standard steel propeller. The entire tanks for twelve hours flying. In their attempted trans-Atlantic ing months of the legal battle. body is painted yellow and bears first mortgage on the property held Dr. Royal P. Watjilns, attending Fire completely destroyed the flight, he would immediately start ON THEFT CHARGES by the Sheridan estate amounts to the name "Rojral Windsor,” The EARLY BULLETINS for America. If, on the other hand, physician, declared that Judge IN LAST TWO DAYS new colonial bungalow home of Mr. slogan "Wlndsor-to-Wlndsor” Is At eleven o’clock , this morning, $14,000 the second held by Jacob Thayer was suffering from nervous word comes that the British fliers Weiget of Hartford amounts to $7,- and Mrs. Peter, Mitchell on Brew­ painted black on the sides. On the thirty-twd hours after they had have reached their goal, he and shock and illness. The nature of the Found On Post Road After 000. and the Jaffee and Marlow ster street. North Coventry, near under side of the single wing are hopped oft from Upavon, England, Hinchclifte will set out In the Co­ illness other than the nervous con­ the numbers "C-NllOC.” on a transrAtlantic flight to Ottawa, Gasoline Station Had Been mortgage amounts to about $12,- Two Young Girls Admit They the Bolton line early this morning. lumbia in an easterly direction, fly­ 000. dition was not' explained. Canada, no word had been received ing as long as there gasoline holds Reported Robbed. - Judge Thayer presided at the Smuggled Guns and Saws to Mrs. Mitchell was preparing to go of the whereabouts of Captain Les­ The, public auction was made trial in the so-called cattle fraud out. necessary by failure to dispose of Prisoners. to her work In the Cheney silk SAFE AGAIN BLOWN lie Hamilton, Colonel Frederick F. T. Harold Kincade, Wright Greenwich, Conn., Sept. 1.— Two cases yesterday and left the court­ mills here, and Mr. Mitchell ■ had the theater through private sales. house late in the afternoon In ap­ Mlnchln and the slxty-twp-year-old Aeronautical Corporation expert, robberies and theft of an automo­ Troy, N. Y., Sept. 1.— Two youn,g started a fire In the kitchen stove Princess Lowensteln-Wertheim al­ bile are charged against three New It had been advertised for sale parently good health. Wllllmantlc, Conn., Sept. 1.— The made an inspectloni of the Colum­ since It closed in the spring. The girls were held by police here today to prepare breakfast. Wh6ip he went safe In the Texas Oil Company’s of­ though they had long since been bia today and pronounced i£ in York youths arrested on the Post for questioning in connection with out to his barn to do some chores Road west of here today. One of Rialto had been operating under fice on the outskirts of Wlllimah- diie over Newfoundland. -It their condition for an immediate flight. John F. Sullivan, Its former man­ the escape of five prisoners last the stove fire got started too tio is so attractive to outsiders that the three giving his name as Wil­ Northern Troops Win Sunday from the Rensselaer County monoplane, St. Raphael, . had ad­ The Imperial Airways, Ltd., Is ager, who had been appointed re­ strongly and sat fire to the chim­ It has been forced once and blown hered to its schedule, they would making all arrangements with the liam Mannix, Is charged with de­ jail. Giving their names as Marion serting from the Navy. The others ceiver by the court, but the volume ney. When discovered the kitchen apart another time without yield­ have reached the Newfoundland- air ministry for the proposed hop- of business it did was not enough Matthews and Marlon Rooney, the was In flames and in a shoi:t time ing money. 'The second attempt OC' under afrest In the affair gave their In Chinese War girls are said by police to have ad­ coast about seven o’clock this off from Cranwell Field. In the eyes of the court, to warrant the house was burned to the curred during the night. Burglars morning, New York daylight time. names as William Stellng,and Louis mitted getting a revolver to the ground. Boncelll and their homes as In A Its continued operation. carried the safo Outdoors and gave The last definite information SEARCH FOR REDFERN three prisoners and also smuggling The loss is’ placed at close to New York hotel. Some time ago, posters were Shanghai, Sept. 1.— Two thou saw blades to them In packaees of it a charge of nitroglycerine. There came yesterday morning when ths A local policeman discovered the placed in the lobby of the theater .sand Cantonese and 1,200 North­ $.10,900. * Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell was no money in it this time. plane passed over. the Irish coast Rio De Janeiro, Sept. 1.— The CiS)ftr6tt68 three In a garage on the Post Road and In adjacent store windows in­ erners were killed and wounded Officials at the United States ar­ have net lived in their Home long The safe was forced without re­ and headed out above the ocean due Brazilian steamship Nbssa Senhora and sent for help. By the time extra forming the public that the block during heavy fighting In the Lung- senal at Watervllet report another and only last night completed sults cn the eve of the Fourth of Do Soccorro sailed from Para today painting it. EVery bit of furniture west. officers arrived, the three had de­ -was for sale. Failure to dispose of tun sector on Wednesday, accord' escaped prisoner today making the July., ‘ 20 How Trip to search the Brazilian coast as far parted, leaving an automobile be­ it this way, made it necessary to go Ing to telegrams from that district fifth In'the last few days to suc­ was lost and all of It was new. north as Guiana for the missing Mr. Mitchell is well known In COOLIDGE AT FAIR. If everything went well It had hind. Presently came a report that through the regular bankruptcy today. The Northerners captured cessfully break jails in Albany, been figured the St. Raphael would American aviator Paul Redfern, a gasoline station had been robbed auction. The Rlalt^ Is mortgaged to 400 prlfloners. Ttoy, Cohoes and now Watervllet. Manchester. He la the son of Mrs said a dispatch from Para. Severe fighting continues with Mary Mitchell of Lydallville and Rapid City, S. D. Sept. 1.— Presi­ reach, Newfoundland In twenty- apparently by three men, and short­ the extent of $34,000. The John F. Albert J. D'ean, 18, held as a de­ nine hours. It was believed ppsslble,- Sheridan Estate holds the first the Northerners holding the ad was a prominent football player. dent Coolldge left here this morn­ ly afterward Mannix, Stellng and serter, broke from the arsenal however, that the plane may havt TREASURY BALANCE Boncelll were picked up while walk­ mortgage of $14,000, Jacob Wlegel vantage through superior artillery guardhouse' and got away In spite Mrs. Mitchell la employed in the ing for Newell and Nisland, S. D., of Hartford, the second, $7,000 and concentrations, the dispatches said. spinning department at the . local where he will inspect an irrigation encountered stiff head winds 'that ing along the Post Road In Sound of a fusillade of bullets. He was would have greatly slowed up Washington, Sept. 1.— Treasury Beach. the third Is held by Jaffe and Mar- The Northerners, after repulsing arrested In Schenectady three days silk mills. Mr. Mitchell has been project and attend a county fair. balance as of August 30; $74,523,- Cases of the> men come up in Cantonese counter attacks, contin­ ago, charged with desertion from working about bis place completing The trip was made on a special 821.18. town court tomorrow. (Continned on Piuco 2) ued their advance. Plattsburgh. the building and-pointing., v train. (Oontlaned on Pane 2Ii. ’ ’t i

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scheduled to follow, the Ounard ou that road as yet, the contract INO WORD RECEIVED liner Mauretania at flvo a. m., this GERMAN SWIMHER POLICE SEND TAYLOR’S ONE PLANE U SU D q however having been let and the morning radioed that It had fiot work will be started next week. VOLSTRAD U W . Vernon, because they got their OF AIR PRINCESS sighted the monoplane. The mes­ • RECEIVES $30,000 FINGERPRiNTSTONY. IN SPOKANE RACE . ■ , roads last year and a year and a sage was picked up by the Indepeii" halt ago, did so in anticipation of to GET TEETH dent jyireless Company here. The Mauretania was said to be about 0 Gallons of Gas handlcappe' in not having sufficient Commander Richard B. Byrd Is too Notes* the mysterious angles of the drown­ ming through the chill, choppy occupied with his plans for a the bill for today which will go George W. Randall and daugh­ according to anti-liquor legislature! Equipped with 800 ing. waters of Lake Ontario became too apparatus- to aid in this type of onH Hnuni- leaders of S^oline When It took off from the South Pole exploration flight. Thete over until Friday .and the perform­ ters the Misses Lillian and Lois Three are under arrest— two much for them. Miss Lottie Moore police detection. Sergeant Barron’s is a possibility that Bert Acosta, fhrEmpfre statel that he has Upavon Airdrome, the St. Raphael work in -this particular Instance ances which have been given during have returned to their home on been youths of the "drug store cowboyV Schoemmel, swim­ noted pilot, may be Induced to brought about results, hut he could the afternoon and evening during Talcott avenue after a motor trip chosen to head the lobby of the Na-Ua® a type, Irving Rpbinzahl, 22, and ming teacher, was eleven miles enter. It was said. the first two days will be retained to Camden, N. J., where they were tional Civic League during the next hours. Provided the fliers have ad- Harry Greenberg, 17, and .a heavy, from the finishing point when she have ;. been . more certain of his sesslon of Congress. hered to the great circle course they square-faced man of 42, Joseph was forced to drop out. ground had he the proper equip­ Captain O. C. Le Boutllller, for­ and the same program as was to the guests of Rev. and Mrs. J. W merly of the Royal Air Force, have been given today will be held. Woessner. The veteran foe of liquor has mapped out for themselves, and no Lefkowitz. whose recent business is • The first two hours of the race ment. prepared drafts of several bills em- unforseen accident occurs, the fliers 8. rnystcry. took a toll of sixty of the entrants whose home is in Bast Orange, N. Selectmen Meet Commissioner Everett Bell of Union street The police commissioners will no J., is a possible entrant. He has State Highway Commissioner bodying changes in the national 11- should have found themselves over Rubinzahl and Greenberg have who found the combination of cold enjoying a two weeks’ vacation. doubt, be asked to recommend the the backing and with him It Is now John MacDonald with W. E. Hulse, Mr. and Mrs. William Bartlett quor laws which he declares will land soon after the sun rose this confessed, according to the author- water and chilly air too much for purchase of more equipment and them. The race was a sure victory only a question of the right ship, special supervisor of the state high­ and Mrs. J. Stlmpson of Grove permit drawing the net more tight- morning, ties, that Lefkowitz agreed to pay apparatus ao that the department way department were in Rockville ly about scoff laws of the home and The total distance from Upavon them $1,000 each to take Goldstein for "Vierkoetter from the time he It was stated. Since the Lindbergh street and Mrs. Abbey Dailey of ia W r Y o u "n r fo r "h ls “srxt^^^^^^^^^^ will not be handicapped In any way and Byrd flights it Is difflcalt to this morning, holding a conferen.ee hip pocket brand, not to mentloji to Ottawa Is 2,920 miles, out In the bay in a rowboat and South Manchester , left today for a ^m inute speed did not diminish. 1“ it® A cabinet for buy Wright whirlwind motors. Tho with the select-nen of d;e county as motor trip to Belgrade Lake, Maine amendments relating to sale and The filers, who surprised’’ the drown him. Lefkowitz carried $70,000 insur­ and he entered the final lap of the 1 A'lng various kinds of information French government has been pur­ to the benefits of the jse of st.v*e where' they will be the guests of manufacture. world by their sudden take-off and ance on the dead youth’s-life. triangular course seemingly as and esiecially fingerprints is need­ chasing them In large numbers. aid money in the building of the Drastic Changes tbo dramatic inclusion of the Prin- ed and probably will he purchased highways under state aid. He told One of Goldstein’s brothers said fresh as when he started. Five entrants will be the most Mrs. Hugo Gross of Windermere One of the most drastic of the as the first woman passenger Gets Ovation. for the department after the next the gathering that this was the first proposed changes, he states, relates I gy^j. to atte^ipt a flight ov?r the Benjamin Goldstein had worked for to attempt the New York to Spo* avenue and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lefkowitz for four years, running 'Vierkoetter was aeporded a tre­ meeting of the commission. action that was planned under the Johnson of South Manchester left to the search and seizure. The new 1 Atlantic ocean, are reported to kane flight, in the opinion of, offi­ state highway department for a stores which would either go bank­ mendous ovation as he emerged cials here. The first prise Is $10.- this morning for Franconia, N. H provisions would permit sedreh oflbt^Ye another startling adventure In from the water. He waved In re­ general state aid proposition that the family home, and confiscation g^Qj.g jj g^gg y^gu^ g^d the St. rupt or be put out of business by 000,*^cond $5,000. The airmen where they will spend a week. fire. He charged that,Lefkowitz ex­ sponse to the cheering populace, would have a tendency to hook up Miss Eleanor Palosie of South of Instruments and materials for Raphael glides down on L’ ndbergh YHAT’S ENOUGH will take off from Roosevelt Field erted a bad Influence over the and was taken on the shoulders of with the Spokane Airport as their all of the trunk lines in the state Manchester is spending a few days manufacture. Penalty for officers ptgj^ jq Ottawa according to sched- the crowd like a football hero. and form one big family that would making a search on faulty warrants Mlnchln and Hamilton .ire un- youth and that the family tried to Lawyer:^’What grounds do you destination. Trophies are also of­ as the guest of Miss Jean Stepan get Benjamin to leave his emploj’. Cpntenders who were forced to reach to every point in the state. would be eliminated derstood to be planning a return drop out Included Arthur Compton, have for divorce? fered. “The rack has been.sanction­ Under the act of the last Legis­ Rev. and Mrs. George S. Brookes In addition Hammond would pro- to England after a rest of the fourteen-year old boy from Peggy: Well, I’m married, aint ed by the National Aeronautical lature there was appropriated |1,- and family who have been spending vide *0/ > pnd hou;ra In the Canadian city, CARD OF THANKS Long Beach, Calif., who had com­ I?— Judge. Association. 000,444 for state aid road, this the month of August in Maine are property ad udged Notable Achievement pleted sixteen miles of the gruel­ 4 amount to be spent each year. If expected home this week. a permanent Injunction against the t» fortune nermlta » -.uc ling swim, and Miss Ethel Hertle, all of the 169 towns in the state To all ov.r relati .-e , friends and Miss Corrlne Schelner of Davis person cJmJletlon of their hazard nelghboi we extend our heartfelt of New York, who was |orced to took advantage of this offer it avenue is spending the week quit because of leg cramps. would not he possible to give to machinery adventure. Hamilton. Mlnchln thanks for their kindness and sym­ South View. abatement featu^^^^^^ the princess will have scored Martha Stager, of Portland, Ore­ each an allotment of ^ 10,000, but tion law is changed to speea up ... pathy during the sickness, and at # Capt. Fred Ertel and family of the time of our double bereavement gon, Edith Hedin, of Toronto; Von there were cases where the full al­ court procedure following arrests AmeHn? Laurel street are enjoying a motor In the death of our father and PapenfUB, of South Africa; and lotment was not asked for and In Henry Sullivan, famous swimmer TO­ TO­ trip to Canada. brother. some towns none at all and this Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hewitt Other Amendments T*'® to of Lowell, Mass., also were -takqn would leave an average of 11^0,000 Other changes advocated by ‘ l^® Atlantic from east to west MARGARET SULLIVAN from the water last evening. Sul­ uo pnant. each vear by different Spring street have returned from Hammond are* ™®*- failure. That of Captains THQMAS F. SULLIVAN to be spept each year by motor trip to the White Moun livan was In eighth place when he towns, ^ Absolute prohibition of phyal- Nungesser and Coll, the French war MRS. JAMES HOLLORAN. quit. NIGHT NIGHT He explained that any town tains. cians prescrlblDig liquor or tilling of aces, met with disaster, for the to do anything In the way Miss Alice Boyle of Kensington prescriptions by druggists. fll®ra apparently dropped Into the wishing Is spending a few days with Mrs Prohibit sale or manufacture of sea somewhere between Ireland and \ STRIKE SPREADING of road building that they first Bessie Heck of Thompson street. A DRAMA WITH THE SWEEP OP A HURRICANE take up the matter with the advis­ all malt liquors, regardless of al- America. The other attempt, a Miss Edith M. Peck, librarian at cohollo content. double flight by German Junkers Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 1.— ABOUT TOWN ing engineering department of the the Rockville Library, is enjoying . highway department and they Require report of sales from re- planes Europa and Bremen, ended a Minneapolis motion picture opera­ BELLE BENNETT a two weeks’ vacation at Nantuck­ tors, members of the International would bo given the necessary In­ tall and wholesale dealers In dena- few hours after the start when the -in- et. Alliance of Theater Stage Em­ George Ruddell of Paterson, N. formation at to the kind of road Charles Colwell returned to his tured alcohol. planes were forced to turn back be- -f \ Briets of the proposed measures cause of adverse weather condl ployes, will go on strike unless J., is visiting relatives In town. to build and would also be In­ home in Stratford Wednesday after their demands for wage increases formed as to the possibilities of spending a week at the home of have been sent to the New York tlons. and better working conditions are Miss Helen L. Havlland the new aid that may be received from the Mr. and Mrs. John McKlnstry of headquarters of the National, Civic "World Walts met before midnight Thursday, rep­ state, as there was going to be state League for final approval. Ham- The entire world waited today for director of religious education at The LILY Ellington. resentatives of their union inform­ the South Methodist church arriv­ aid granted in some places that Mrs. Clara Keeney has returned mond stated. He now anticipates g^j^g Melinite word of the daring ed theater owners today. Should a woman forswear the one love .of her life?, few knew of. home from a few days spent with going to Washington IjX November I ujgj.g rpjjg venture, made doubly The strike would close fifty-eight ed In town last evening and Is —AND LET’S NOT FORGET— "In our construction work In the to prepare^for the selge in con-j the brave action of the picture theaters and throw between domiciled at Teachers’ hall. Miss Mrs. Jennie Bennett of Willlman- Havlland’s duties with the church ' future where first aid Is to bo giv­ tlc. gress. princess in accompanying the fliers six thousand and seven thousand THE en," he told the gathering, !*we on the journey, has aroused tremen persons out of work. began today. ' are looking ahead. It la not our ob­ dous Interest, and world-wide hope A wage increase ranging from Henry A. Nettleton passed a fair­ POPULAR FURNITURE NK3IT jective to Increase the number of was expressed that the undertaking ten to twenty-eight per cent , is de­ JAFFEE, MARLOW ly good night at the Memorial \ roads In the state, but to cut out would be crowned with success. manded by the operators. A Stagd full of furniture given away More presents ^ many of them, or In other words by 4 MAINE STUDENTS hospital and his physicians. Doc­ In the fog of early morning, the tors Caldwell and Burr believed him than ever cross-cuts to meet other trunk BUY THE RIALTO three fliers left the Upavon Air­ to be a trifle better if anything. In lines. This will mean that In years TO BOOST STATE drome at 7:30 o’clock (British STABS BIGGEST CATFISH to come there would be roads so this opinion Dr. Jarvis of Hartford (Continued from page 1) time) yesterday morning. Five Friday and Saturday constructed that by building these hours later the plane passed over Cresent, Ohio.— An enormous who came ont to see Nettleton connecting lines would ON'TOUR OF WORLD catfish which high waters had left today agreed. ^ lowe of this town. It is for about Incerin, on Galway l ay, Ireland, stranded in a pool near the Cimar­ A Double Feature Bill have cross roads that would lead and headed west ovei» the Atlantic, into trunk lines that would form a $12,000. ron river near here, defied fisher­ 4 ' The Rialto Theater has a Main while scores of villagers stood in men for two weeks. But a bather SOMETHING WRONG JACKIE COOGAN net work that would be of much Portalnd, Me.— Pour young stu­ silent awe. benefit to all in the state. street frontage of 52 feet and a armed with a knife plunged In and depth of 120 feet. It is located just dents of Bates College are soon The St. Raphael Is not equipped stabbed It to death. The fish weigh­ "Don’t you think she Is oldqr "It Is not always possible to give to hold the usual honor of actln,g “The Biufle Call” MilUon Bid^’ the attention to trunk lines, that south of the Salvation, Army cita­ with radio, and the only hope of ed 9 pounds, was 5 1-2 feet in than she makes out?" del and at one time was the most ns ambassadors for the State of determining its position before it is length and had a head IS Inches ’’’Well, anyhow,-she Is not as 4 go through the different towns, Maine in a tour around the world. nor Is It possible to clear the roads popular motion picture theater in actually sighted over land lies in wide. young as she makes up."— Gaiety. Manchester. That was when it was A state committee of twenty-five the possibility that its shadow may soon after a snow but the state prominent oltlBens of Portland, stood ready, if the towns would co­ known as the Park Theater and was fall across the deck of some trans- operated successfully by John F. headed by Guy P. Gannett as State operate to purchase such plows ant, Chairman, publisher of a local Atlantic liner plying the great circle have them manned and taken Sullivan. It was later taken over by route. Jacob Wiegel of Hartford and then newspaper, and treasurer of the through the county and a single New England Council, have started by the Arcadia Theater Corporation ENGLAND AWAITS WORD. road plowed out and there woulc of Hartford which owns the Grand a movement to raise $7,000 to bo also be sufficient turnouts provided extended In sending a debating London, Sept. 1.— All England Theater in Hartford and several teanrfrom‘ BatM“ co“llege o i”rtour | BO a person with a vehicle couU. other Connecticut playhouses. get through. The cost to the towns around the globe of the monoplane St. Raphael, The purpose of the trip, accord­ bearing Captain Leslie Hamilton, , in this respect would be small and Lieutenant F, F. Minchln and Prin­ ‘ the chief streets and ways through ing to plans announced by the com­ Roger W olfe Kahn 500 PETS BURIED mittee, are first principally to pro­ cess Lowenstein-Wertheim on an at­ , the towns can be taken care of in tempted non-stop flight from Eu­ this way, but the ploy, although mote international friendship and secondly to let the rest of the world rope to Canada. located in this county would not IN DOG CEMETERY No reports have been received World’s Famous Orchestra Leader bo able to provide all of the towns know more intimate details about the State of Maine and what she sifloe the plane was last sighted at once. Each would have to take over Galway, Ireland, heading out their turns and would save Cleveland.— Nestled In a se­ has to offer along agricultural. In­ dustrial and recreational lines. to sea. The populace, which is tre­ Will Personally Introduce and Conduct many cases the purchasing of cluded glen with stately beeches mendously stirred by the daring . plow and maintaining it for the towering above Is Ohio’s only Dog- The debating team has not yet been selected. The committee plans teat , is confident that the tlyerc whole year. and-Small-Pet cemetery, and one will succeed in their attempt. Any town that wished to coulci of the largest In the United States. to make a state wide canvass for take action at their annual town Although this pet memorial park funds which will make the trip possible and will endeavor to have WELCOME READY. meeting and seek state aid up to is but eight years old, more than Ottawa, Canada, Sept. 1.— All 500 dogs,‘ cats, monkeys, parrots as many Individual donations as On the Initial Appearance $10,000, but this notice would have possible, however small, thereby preparations have been made to re­ to be given to the commissioner be- and canary birds are buried there. making it a state wide affair. ceive Captain Hamilton, Lieuten­ . fore October 15 and this would be- The animal cemetery is conducted From early responses there seems ant Colonel Mlnchln and the Prin­ epm© available by November 15. by Dr. W. C. Woodruff, known as to be little doubt but that the funds cess Lowenstein. when they arrive They could also make an appropria­ Cleveland’s grand old man of pet- Will be quickly raised. here this afternoon from En,gland. tion to take care of further work, dom. Dr. Clifford D. Gray, President The Royal Canadian Mounted Po­ not to start before June 1928 by Dr. Woodruff’s animal burial of Bates College, estimated that lice has been assigned to Lindbergh making a further demand and each tract is' as beautiful as any de­ from previous trips, $7,000 would Field, where the fliers are sche­ year thereafter they will make such vised for mankind. Graveled walks cover the expenses of the world duled to land, to handle the large a resolution either at an annual wind between the graves and over crowd which is expected to be ou tour. ^ . hand. town meeting or a special town each tiny mound is a stone, engrav­ It is planned to start the long <1. JULIE meeting to have it become effective ed with the name, age and accom­ journey in April. Their itinerary Canadian air experts believe the plishments of the pet resting there. as now planned takes them first plane will arrive between two and by the first of July in the year fol­ four o’clock this afternoon. The lowing. It may be that the appro­ Blooming rose and flower arbors to San Francisco, thence to Hono­ spot the cemetery, and many of lulu. Manila, Australia, New Zea­ city is at a high pitch of excite­ priation would not be enough to ment in anticipation of the arrival. build any road, but might be suf­ the graves are cared for as are land. South Africa to the East Coast those of human friends. of Africa, England through the Mrs. Leslie Hamilton, wife of ficient to build a bridge that would the pilot of the trans-Atlantic be needed in the state road exten­ Scores of bereaved owners go to Suez Canal, returning to the United the cemetery each Sunday to put States and to Maine In October. plane, was reported to be in seclu­ sion plan. The state highway de­ sion under an assumed name at a partment wants to be sure that cut flowers over the final bed of their pets. local hotel. Acoordlng to reports, when the work is done that the Mrs. Hamilton in order to-avoid His Singiiig towns will be able to pay their publicity, arrived in this city pos­ TO FLY TO AFRICA REPORT DENIED share. ing as the maid of a friend who r Andover at present has $10,000 traveled with her from New York. London, Sept. 1.— Lieut R. R. Para, Brazil, Sept., 1.— A report that they can use; Bolton has used Bentley hopped off from the Hen- circulated In the United States that up its appropriation of $20,000 and Paul Rodfern, mlssl' American BAD WEATHER. .don Airdrome at 10:25 o’clock this St. John’s, Newfoundland, Sept. there will be no more money that morning on a sole flight to Cape a . lator, had landed at AlemqUer, \ they can spend until after June of 1.— Ilnsettled weather and a dense Town. was officially denied th's afternoon next year. Columbia has $10,000 to by Governor Dyonlslo Rentes, of the fog over the greater part of Labra­ its erde?. to be used on state aid Lieut. Bentley plans to follow the dor and Newfoundland awaits Cap­ trail blazed by Sir Alan Cobham, state of Para. The governor issue 1 roads. Hebron has already spent the following statement to Intema- tain Leslie Hamilton, Lieut. Col. F. ' $1,000 moro than their appropria- and hopes to make the flight in F. Mlnchln and Princess Lowen- H otel Bond tlon News Service: , tion fourteen days. The venture is the steln, who are flying from Eng­ first solo flight ever attempted from "Please deny the report that Rad- land to Canada, weather reports Mansfield has overdrawn its ap- fern landed at Alemquer. I made 'proprlation $500 and can take care England to South Africa. stated today. The trip- is being made in a De inquiry* and received a message The weather In the vicinity of St. of this 4n November and again in from the mayor of the town shying ‘ July by a vote, at their annual town Havlland Moth plane which Lieut. John’s is cloudy, with a dense* fog Bentley christened “ Doris,’’ his that the report is false." overhanging the coast. A west wind meeting in October. Somers has prevails. The Weather Bureau sta­ $10,000 that they have not used fiancee’s name. and Stafford has spent $83,000 tions at Cape Race and Labrador report a dense fog with winds north ‘ more than their allotment and will .ENJOYED IT ALL TOO TRUE get no mdre mdney fo^%t least two to west. "Someone told me you entertain­ Wife; Every time you see . years. Tolland has this fall and NO SIGHT OF PLANE next summer to tak© care of their ed your neighbors informally last pretty girl you forget you’l’e mar­ -.share of the $12,000 overdrawn oh night.” ried. New York, Sept. 1— Although . thelr^rpproprlatlon. The town of “ Yes, I had a quarrel with my Husband; You’re wrong, my believed to be considerably south of Unl ^ ^ « has led them into finding out for Special Offerings The themselves tho things that cannot Inter Silver com . . . .168 Calcinating Fall always be kept away by promise Int Silver p f d ...... 118 ,J^ and ignorance. Good fairies are not Landy’s Frary & Clark 87 Season’s Newest always near when evil thoughts Mann & Bow A ...... 17 and deeds are about to overcome do B ...... 9 For This Week the present-day child as were the New Brit Ma pfd A. .103 pirates! and only the tender guid­ do com ...... 19 Merchandise that you need ance of the parent can make their NIlea Be Pond new .. 18 ARMSTRONG’S FLOOR fondest wishes come true. . R Mont p f d ...... 50 ARMSTRONG’S FELT to make your home attractive. The cast: Fireflies. Florence North & J u d d ...... 26% Sport RUGS Prices that appeal to the prud­ COVERING Robbins, Honora Obremski, Helen Pratt, Whitney pfd .. 82 ent buyer— terms that make it Obremski, Sophie Mankus, Stella Smyth Mfg C o ...... 360 2 yards wide Tominski, Lillian Napoli, Doris Peck, Stowe & Wll .. 19 (9x12 size possible for you to have the Felt Base Kopitis, Evelyn Foley, Natalie Ma- Russell Mfg C o ...... 43 now $9.95 goods and pay for them out of square linoskas, Steppi Boncezkz, Scoville. Mfg Co new. 56 your income. A year to pay at ‘$1.00 a week” yard 69c Mend, Gertrude Rinholdt and Ruth Stanley Works com i 63 Special Sale Pirces. Washburn, Agnes Bober. . Stanley Works pfd .. 27 Fairies: Charlotte Bonczek, Hen­ Standard Screw ...... 98 rietta Bonczek, Fairy Queen, Adel- Torrlngton ...... 77 If you knew all about furniture— how it is made and of what materials— buying your home {ufr la Zurawckas, Dorothy Foley, Olive Underwood...... 55 nlshlngs would be an easy matter. Unfortunately most people do not know much about it, except Skarabacz, Steppi Wajner, Jose­ U S Envelope p f ----- 114 the style they want and the covering. But if you knew some of,,the materials that are put Into phine Vlncek, Albina Kasy, Lillian Union Mfg C o ...... 26 Keish, Alic Bonczek. Whitlock Coil Pipe . . — mattresses and upholstering you would actually "scringe” at the dangers to which you.are sub­ Witch, Agnes Bober. jected. The real quality of good furniture is on the r Inside— naturally It costs more. But even Pirates: Joseph Pavelaock, Cap­ tain; Charles Novak, Clarence Nell- today you can get good furniture at a moderate price. We shall be glad to offer you any ad"viee sen, William Vittner, Robert Mori- you want. - ’ arty, George Martin, Claence Gotchee, Walter Smith, Frank N.Y. Stocks Smith. 8-Piece Dining Suite 3-Piece Living RoAin Suite High Low 1p.m . HARRIMANS BREAK Am Can ...... 63% 62% $ 1 2 9 . 5 0 Ailed Chem . . 161% 158% 160% $159.50 Extremely Smart Models "a year to pay” Am Loco . . . .109 "a year to pay” • ALL RUSSIAN RECORDS Am Smelt .. . .169 fresh from the designers Table, Buffet and set of six chairs. In com­ Davenport, wing chair and arm chair. Cov­ Am St Fdy .. 57 % ered In velour, with reverse cushions. Sella and as radiant as the sea­ The correct garment for Am Sugar . . . .90 bination walnut, substantially built, beauti­ ' MINING MANGANESE Am T & T .. .169% fully finished. Sells regularly for $200. >! regularly for $165. ' son of Fall itself. immediate wear. Am Woolen .. 25’% For Cool Evenings. Anaconda .... 46% Black and Colors of Unu­ For Early Motor Trips. Moscow.— ^The mangsmese are Atchison .... 195 Coxwell Chairs and Foot StO(^' For Sports and Business mining and exporting c ncesslon of Beth S te e l___ 62% Wing Chairs and Foot Stool sual Beauty. Crepe Satin, Wear. W. A. Harriman & Company, New Bald Loco .,.2 5 7 Balt & Ohio . .120% Fashioned of New Pin York, which once more turned the X $ 3 9 . 5 0 Mirrolean, Transparent eyes of American capital toward Ches & Ohio .194 192% 194 $ 3 4 . 5 0 “ $1.00 a week” checked Woolens and Nov­ Russia after the British break with C M & St Paul 17% 16% 17% “ $1.00 a week” Velvet. 31 31% elty Tweeds. the Soviets, is functioning beyond do pfd .... 32 Upholstered In 100% mohair with reverse Cons Gas ....Ill 109% 110% Upholstered in choice Jacquard velours. An expectations. cus'hions. Only a few of these left. The Georgian Manganese com­ Del & Hud .. 207% 207% 207% outstanding value. pany, the Harriman subsidiary in Dodge Bros . . 17 % 17% 17% Russia formed under the conces Du Pont .... 306 300% 306 reports that production of E r ie ...... 61% 58% 60% Sion, 140 141% Gate Leg Table in Mahogany ...... $16.50 |^ manganese ore In July broke all Gen Elec .... 142% 245% 249 records with 60,000 tons from the Gen Motors ..249% Mo Pac com .. 53% 50% 51% mines at Chlcatourl, Georgia. July 153% 155% V ■ ' was the flrst month the company N Y Central .155% N H R R ...... 50% 49 60% operated un^er the revised Soviet 92% 93% contract which made possible the North Pac .... 93% Balance of Summer Goods at Price New Hats! Penn R R .... 65 64% 65 y% profitable exploitation of the rich­ Pull new .... 78% 77% 78% COUCH HAMMOCKS est manganese deposits in the 72 73% REFRIGERATORS Pr St Car ... 73% $27.50 Hammocks ...... a t $ 1 8 .7 5 Velvets Soleils Felts world. Radio Cor . . . .63% €2 < 63% $25.00 Top le e r s ...... at $12.50 Four thousand men are employ­ 108%- 109% $32.50 Hammocks...... at $1$JIB . Rock I s l ...... 109 % $34.50 Top leers ...... at .$17.23 $62.50 Ham mocks...... , .at $81.95?-* ed at the mines, the company’s re­ Sears' Roe ....72% 70% 72% $39.50 Side le e r s ...... »at $19.75 Be wise and^'^py for next Summer’s use. port said, and the number is to be Sou P a c ...... 119 118% 119 gradually increased. More than $5,- Sou Rail ____ 132% 131% 132 $47.60 Side leers ------at $23.73 000,000 will be invested in mine S 0 of N J .. .38% 38% 38% Moving out fast at these prices WINDOW SCREENS and transport equipment and con- Studebaker 51% 51% 51% to structl-on of laborers’ homes In the 135% 135% 55c Screens ...... at-98c United Fruit .136 75c Screens nl 80o . next 18 months. At the present Union Jah . , .187 186% 187. VERANDA ROCKERS rate of ore production the com­ $1.00 Screens...... '.a t 50o United Drug .169%. 168% 168% $4.95 Rockers ...... at $2.49 pany Is expected to yield gross U S Rubber ..47% 46% 47% proflts of $120,00,000 in the 18 $7.25 R ock ers...... : . .at $8.63 A complete assortment of the Newest U S Steel .. ..145% 143% 146 $7.50 R ockers...... at$3.73 LAWN BENCHES years of the concession, while the Wabash pfd A 94% 94% 94% $3.50 Benches...... at $ 1 .7 5 contract calls for Investments of $8.95 R ockers...... at $4.50 Milliinery Creations no fashionable woman West______E______& M 84% 83 84% All of selected Rock Maple $4.95 Benches ...... y...... at $ 2 .5 0 ;' $62,000,000. The Soviet govern­ Wlllys Over .. 17% 16% 17% should overlook. ment gets an average royalty of $1.50 a ton, or a total of $90,000 .. i. - for July alone. Only 70,000 tons of MONEY TO LOAN ore were exported for May ,and Brims and Brimless - For Miss and Matron June combined. — on— G. E. Keith Furniture Co.» Inc. First and Second Mortgages CORNER MAIN AND SCHOOL STREETS. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. Large and Small head sizes The naval air strength of the United States at present is 230 air­ P.D.COMOLLO J; I \ Sf. planes.'Great Britain 291 and Japan 198. 13 Oak St. Td.1540 t-;'

‘\ .. . Bull in that fatal battle of the Lit­ bridesmaids, ushers and assembled tle Bighorn in 1876. friends, go from this jilace, please Foolish Elk, talking through an remember that an automobile game Sfffnitts Bfrali j of tag is more likely than not to » ». ■ V interpreter, declares tTJat he, be­ >• PUBLISHBD BT ing out of the fight from' a-wound cause the occasion to end in grief I THB HBRALU PRINTING'CO. received eight days ^eW re, saw; and horror than-it is tp add to the ■V Foaatidil by Klw'bod fJta Custer cut off in the middle of that happiness of the day or the success , 1, 1881 Bverjt Bwntnjr 8*oipt annuya r.n« 111 advised charge on the Indian of the marriage.” Holldbya. . “ _ At all events, the minister could! i Entered at the^Poet Offlee.at M»p- village and tomahawked by Spotted Chester as Second Clast Mail Mattete Calf, a warrior of the Santee tribe. do worse than to say something of ‘i SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Mall the sort; for there is no more pro­ ^elx dollars a year, sixty oente a Afterward he talked about the month for shorter perlooa killing of Custer with Spotted Calf. lific source of automobile trag­ By carrier, eighteen cents n week. Every Sioux, the old man says, has edies, with the single exception of Single copies, threk oenta the hooch bottle, than the present SPECIAL AjDVBUTISING REPRE­ always known who brought the SENTATIVE. Hamllton-De Lilue^ day practice of the wedding party ■ V:- Inc., 285 Madison Avenue, New Tork picturesque, headstrong “ Yellow- and 618 North Michigan Avenue. head” to his death. engaging in a perfectly wild game Chicago. of “ chase”— the car with the bride The Manchester Evening Herald is Yet for fifty years the white on sale In New York City at 8ohalts;s man had not found out the truth. and groom striving to elude the News Stand. SlxthvAvenue and 42n story has the laughs, declares Prof. Aveling, suites and floor samples. These have been remarked for the last (drawn ends), buffet, closed china to the corporation to advance ring of truth. Because Custer University of London psycholb- two days of the sale—many at HALF PRICE. Only one of a kind cabinet decorated in Chinese red, prices of service. Too often have would never be anywhere but at gist. server, arm chair and 5 side chairs the head o f'h is men. And Jieing It takes a psychologist to work —so come early! with tapestry seats. Regular such cdrporatiohs adopted the "pub- Another five-piece Bedroom Suite $545 at the head he must have been In­ over ancient saws and make them In walnut and gumwood with Chi­ i-lic be damned” policy of withhold­ now .,. to the midst of the ambush first of appear extraordinarily learned. nese red and* gold decorations. In­ $272.50 ing all explanation or of flinging cludes full size bed, dresser, chest, to their patrons such casual and all. 'The Indians knew him w'ell, Taking himself as the subject of dressing table and bench. Regular unsatisfactory reasons as they find to their cost. He would' never have bis studies— sonrething which it is it convenient to give without the been the last to die. Inevitable- that every psychologist $149.50 taking of pains. Almost invariably must do— the cockney professor Living Room the reaction of the public is un­ TOBACCO SPLIT has evidently been analyzing the \ favorable. Perhaps It is as well that the ancient aphorism that “ He is never To the credit of the Southern affairs of the Connecticut Valley happy save when he is miserable.” W ood Bed $18 A suite designed by Jamestown, Tobacco association are to be taken consisting of davenport and two New England company it must be arm chairs of different sizes. The Into the courts for settlement, Full size, bow-end bed of walnut said that it has never, in all its his­ and gumwood. Regular $36.00. covering is a taupe frieze— one of tory, assumed anything like a high though the anticipation of what the finest covers used in furniture handed attitude toward its public. such proceedings must cost cannot making— with fronts of backs and be welcome to any of the persons seat cushions in a distinctive wool* It has been conciliatory; it has been tapestry. • Carved wood bases. well mannered; it has been diligent interested. Wood Bed $19 Was $550.00, in the giving of service; it has not The principle of co-operative now ...... $275 been extortionate; it has acted, al marketing of agricultural produce Another walnut and gumwood is, of course, fundamentally right. bed—full size — bow-end — with ways as though it realized its re- turned spindles at the bow. Regu­ It is a pity that efforts to put it in­ $245.00 Suite Sketched, now $122-50 • sponsibilities as well as its oppor­ BY Rodney Dutcher. lar $38.00. tunities— and that is a thing that to effect are so often accompanied Washington, Sept. 1.— Senator J. by disagreements among the parti­ Boomboom McWhorter, who not This suite, exactly as shown, has a carved base of wood and is upholstered Rug Specials J , -^i - can rarely be said of any public ser­ vice organization. cipants in the selling pool. In the only knows, it seems, all he reads In a light colored Jacquard velour with plain velour on sides and back. The case of the Connecticut Valley as­ in the papers, but scans between reverse side of seats are in damask. Only 1 suite at this price, We believe the declaration of the the lines as well, says the day of Enameled Chest $26 One group of 41/ 2x 6!/^ Ax- Southern New England that it Is sociation there has been, however, I war brides Is at hand. Five drawers In gray enamel with minster Rugs, discontinued making its advance in charges re­ so much of dissatisfaction and such “ The servants of Mars are about decorations in blue. Regular patterns, regularly selling for to be rewarded,” was the quaint luctantly and of necessity. We be­ an evident lack of confidence in $52.00. $15.00, now .. 7...... $7.50 ■ \ the conduct of Its affairs on the way the senator put it as he looked lieve' its statement as to its profits, up from his paper which he had $149.00 Jacquard Suite, now $74-50 which are shown to have been mod­ part of some of its members, that been shearing diligently of all poli­ Following discontinued and it would seem quite impossible|jfor tical news, particularly little items shopworn Klearflax, Rugs at erate. We believe that if the com Two pieces— davenport and club chair— In Queen Anne style, covered with, pany could have avoided making the association to function satis- about Senator McWhorter. Chaise Lounge $39.75 half price: , “ Let us look significantly at Her­ Jacquard velour in combination with plain velour. the advance and’ could have' still ‘fafctorlly’: bert Hoover and Charles G. Dawes,” Solid walnut and mahogany ■■mTr- .**», ■ continued to render service in keep­ The disputations In the associa­ the senator proceeded. “ Ain’t it the frames with cretonne covers. Reg­ (1) 30x60, reg. $4.50 . . . .$2.25 ; ing with the progress of the times, tion are too technical for accurate truth? The war made ’em and these ular $75.00. understanding by the general pub­ two men, except for Coolidge, are (2) 3x6, reg. $8.00...... $4.00 it would have jjone so. ^ow leading candidates for presi­ $205.00 Queen Anne Suite, now $102-50 And we believe that the good lic. But on the surface It would a|i- dential nomination.” (1) 41/ 2x81/ 2, reg. $16.50, $8.25 feeling that has long existed be pear hopeless that the organizatio'h Apparently neither party will tween the Southern New England can ever get onto a smooth running draw from veterans of the front Boudoir Chairs $19.75 Another two-piece suite, also in Queen Anns designs, covered in Jacquard (6) 41/ 2x 71/ 2, reg. $16.50, $8.25 line trenches next year. But 192X velour with backs arid sides trimmed In plain velour. This suite also has a and Its subscribers will not be af­ basis until It has been liquidated may see the first nomination of A few left in solid mahogany wood base with wood trim extending up the ends of the arms. \ • X3) 6x9, reg. $26.00 . . . ,$13.00 fected by the fehange in rates. legally arid a fresh start made. anyone connected with the military and walnut with cretonne covers. It Is, however, inconceivable or civil administration of the World Regular $39,50! LABORLESS “ LABOR that the tobacco growers will ever War. It is thus more or less Inter­ As nearly as can be judged from esting to consider the madam’s pro­ be content to operate again on the phecy in the light of past history. the press reports, and there is no old, wholly independent, hit-or- The first three presidents were $495.00 Jamestown Suite, now $247*50 \r6ason to doubt their substantial miss plan of marketing. One de­ George Washington, John Adams accuracy, it w-puld be A'serious con- feat or partial defeat in >their ef­ and Thomas Jefferson. Washington This is one of the most distinctive suites on our floor. It has solid ma­ fuXiciii of terms to refer to the war had been commander-in-chief of hogany carved wood base and frames, upholstered in a new checked^ Jac­ forts 'tj? bring about unified action the revolutionary- army; Jefferson bet-^«^n the Chicago .-^motion pic­ does not necessarily mean the loss wrote most of the Declaration of quard velour. The reverse sides of seats are in new figured and colored ture ei^bitors and their operators of the whole campaign. It is confi­ Independence,'Adaihs was also on Jacquard. Davenport and club chair. as a laboKwar. When four to six dently to be expected that the to­ the committee which reported the so-called opei-tttors divide up be- declaration— war service put all bacco men, if the present associa- three in line for the presidency. tweerMthemthe stijpendous task of is liquidated, i»ill straightway The first president chosen after watching a niotion picture projec­ form a new one, guiding their steps the conclusion of the War of 1812 tion machine ru n N ^ ^ und then by the experiences of the past. was Monroe, who had been secre­ changing a film— a job^wEIch a sin­ tary of state and secretary of war and had a good record as a colonel WATKINS BROTHERS, I n c . gle individual performs efficiently NO INCREMENT in the revolution. in any one of thousands of picture The Communists’ theory that But Andrew Jackson, who de­ EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVES FOR CRAWFORD AND CHAMBERS RANGES. fended New Orleans, was the real houses— the word “ labor” fades there should be no unearned incre­ fronf'the picture. And when it is popular hero of that war. He fallefi \ ment appears to have applied in to reach the White House in 1824 demanded that each of these un­ the matter of their contributions to when the presidency was thrown into the house of representatives, necessary employes shall be paid the Sacco-Vanzettl defense fund. from $75 to $100 a week for his but was swept in in 1828 and again The Communists, made an enor­ in 1832. heart-breaking toil, the, affair be­ mous amount of noise over Sacco comes not one of labor and wages and Vanzetti, using the Massachu­ The Mexican War made" General but of blackmail and extortion. setts convicts as sticks with which Zachary Taylor the Whig candidate 'Washington Square bursts Into the colored Intellectuala and e»- General These picture machine operators to beat the war drums of revolu­ in 1848 and General Winfield BcoU in Chicago no more earn $76 to the Whig candidate In 1852. Taylor Oreenwie];! Village .... that is ploring the Harlem Jai> cafei. Auto Repairing and | tion, and they also did a tremen­ when not in France. Felix Reisenberg, ex-sea captain, $100 a week than the bank bandit beat Senator Cass, but It took an­ dous amount of collecting of funds, other general of the same war, Edna Ferber Is to be found at after writing “ East Side, West earns the bundles of currency that Overhauling allegedly to he employed in the Franklin Pierce, to lick Scotv. every Important first night opening Side,” became secretary of the Ex­ he grabs at pistol point. They have plorers’ Club so that h<. would not SHELDO.yS GAUA(3B legal fight for the lives of the The' first president chosen after in the theater. She Home they brought her warrior simply organized a holdup league the Civil War was General U. S. knows her Broadway, and she lose touch with those frteuda who dead; - ' doomed men. But It appears that went out for high adventure In the Rear of 2.5 Hollister .Street. and proceeded to grab, the receipts Grant, chief of the Union armies, studies her theater types first hand. She nor swooned, nor uttered Phone 232 8-2 Residence 2328-3 however much they collected the elected In 1868 an 1872. Hayes In her last hook, “ Mother Knows faraway places- Sons of hazard were of the theatres. cry.. ^ expense of gathering together the was-elected in 1876 and'.Garfield Ntiw^York, Sept. 'l;-^ Y ou nevet^Best,” I am told that she pictured his constant companions. All her maidens, watching, said: We glory in the spunk of the op­ pennies exceeded the numbei; of in 1880'. Both had been Union gen­ can thll in New York wjiere and a certain celebrated vaudeville star And so It goes— the fellow you "She must weep or she will die.” erators who have ^had the back­ erals. Garfield defeated still an­ when you will come upon an author so faithfully that there w;aa talk of meet In a Broadway speakeasy, is the pennies themselves. It being other veteran officer. bone to shut up their houses alto­ getting “ atmosphere.” a legal suit. Both Miss Ferber and likely to turn out to be a rising Then tliey praised him, soft and the Communist theory that every President Benjamin Harrison had From every part of the nation Fannie Hurst may be found from young playwright and the young low, ^ .. . gether, and in that of the film dis­ been a general and President Mc­ man should enjoy the full products come, sooner or. later, an army o< time to time up In the "carnival de­ lady you dance with casually at the Called him worthy to be loved, tributors in backing them up. of his toil, there naturally was no Kinley a major. writing folk to haunt the various partment” of Variety getting their “ all night cafe’,’ Is, likely as not, a Truest friend and noblest foe; Yet she neither spoke'nor moved. There has been a great deal too excess of the product to go into the unusual highways and byways data from the showmen who drift short stqry writer from Kansas get­ much spineless yielding to such ex­ iTie Spanish War and San Juan this city In search of material for through. ting material for her next effort. defense fund. Why should there be, Hill had brought Roosevelt to the Stole a maiden from her place, - tortion on the part of special class­ their work. The Irwins— Will an I Inez— live Lightly to the warrior stepped. when Sacco and Vanzetti did none front and he was elected vice-presi­ O. Henry found the bums ot es of workers, and it has worked dent In 1900 and president In 1904. in the heart of Greenwich Village F. P. A., the New York columlst, Took the face-cloth from the face; of the labor of collecting It? Union Square a vast source of sup­ endless harm- The enormous cost Even Bryan, who was a candidate and get much of thelf material once had a theory that every other Yet she neither moved nor- Wfpt. Whether or not the red theory ply. Madison Square was another of from there. of housing Imposed upon the rent so often, had been an officer dur­ person one bumped iu the subway was further followed out, to the ing the Spanish War, If he had been his favorite hang-outs, Some of his The Norrises— Katherine and -was writing a play. He suggested Rose a nurse of ninety years. payers of the big cities by the ex­ end of all the reds sharing alike able— or allowed— to distinguish most colorful lingo was picked up Charles— are “ everywhere” ...... that one merely had to ask “ How’s Set his child upon her knee— actions of building trades is the himself In action as Roosevelt did, from “ pitchmen,” those nomadic theater openings, concerts, lectures Like summer tempest came her Not in the ordinary in the proceeds ql ;the collection, your second act coming along?” and sense,however. Our re­ result of this same species of thug­ he might have been elected on one vendors who' trail the carnivals, and elsewhere. the rest of the journey would be toflirs has not yet been made clears, But circuses and celebrations with "Sweet my child, I live for thee.” pair work is of an out­ gery. occdrSioi^* Eugene O’Neill once was to be spent listening to the general theme standing character and »li the kibosh seems to have been ap­ The'' two phrties, convening In everything from “ luc ;y rings” to found In a certain "Village” bar, re­ — Alfred’ Tennyson: From The Unfortunately the contractors of the stranger’s drama. can be recognizedyLet; plied to the increment, all right, 1920, refused to follow precedent. kewpie dolls. cently torn down, where he studied Princess. - and the Investors In buildings have Gerard, the war-time ainbassador Which reminds me tha^ If you A friend tried it one morning, us prove our ability to and thus far Communistic princi­ gangsters, sailors and such. Water­ you. Out prices are lacked the intelligence and inde­ to Germany, publicly bemoaned the wander about "potch” headquarters front resorts kriow him well and he but he got this reply: “ Swell. We ples are gloriously adhered to. tried it out over in Jersey the other reasonable, resulta ■ are pendence of the Chicago theatre fact that the two conventions ig­ these days you’ll find Don Marquis, got practically all his material from nored those responsible for direc­ creator of the “ Old Soak” and other night and I got a big hand. I’m go­ guaranteed. ownerg.’ : M f .r' i' first hand observations. John Dos DAILY ALMANAC ■i: tion of the war and had nominated humorous characters,. getting at­ Passes is. another young man who is ing to steal that show.” “ We Repair Right” a senator and a governor, passing INVITING DEATH mosphere for future yams. I hear likely to turn up almost anywhere. ■ ■Which means, of course, that Birthday anniversary of Edgar It may come to this; After the over Wilson, Lansing, House, that Marquis recently wrote “ Gaso­ everyone who isn’t writing a play Baker, McAdoo, Palmer, Hoover, You may find him shipping as a' Rice Burroughs (1875) and Rex minister has pronc^unced the happy line” Bill Baker, who writes “ Pipes gallor or walking a strike picket is trying to act In one. Beach (1877). CUSTER’S DEATH Pershing and others. for Pitchmen” In The Billboard, It has taken an eighty-year old couple man and wife and before he The war administrators were line. GILBERT SWAN Cornerstone of first railroad asking for permission to join the bridge, across the Mississippi River, Brule Sioux Indian named Foolish allows the party to break up in a again ignored in 1924. Pitchmen’s Association and attend Even now, one can predict that between Rock Island and Daven­ Elk, who never spoke a word of riot of rice and shoe throwing, it their national convention. ' iCarl 'Vau VechteU made himself while the 1928 candidate of one (he chief exponent of Harlem by port, laid, 1854. English In his. to upset the may become part of the ceremony or both parties may have achieved As I’ve said before, you never Minor princes and' chiefs of In­ can tell where you’ll find them. practically moving Into that vast half century old tradition of Cus­ for him to do a little admonishing, his first Important,national promin­ negro belt. Long before writing dia wear squeaky shoes to imprsss Mr. and Mrs. Blank returned ter, standing amidst his dead sol­ in some such words as these: ence during oi*‘'as a result of the “ Hlgger Heaven” he bad Interested their barefooted subjects. A Brit­ from an extended auto trip. Now war, no candidate Is going to be Edith Wharton prefers to remain look after the children’s school diers, fighting almost alone against “ Now when 'you young folks, in that aristocratic old atmosphere himself searching out talented ish firm specialises in shoes that nominated or elected on his war squeak lopdly# shoes at Gardner’s.— adv. ]^he Bwartnl^g' warrlork of Sitting bride and groom, groomsman and record alone., . of lower Fifth Avenue;'^ where colored- fplk, holding salo'ris among . '■sr MANCHESTER (GOIfl^.) EVJBNIJN S- HEKALU, THURSDAY; SEFl'EMBEK 1,

’’ A _AA 'i;4tf^06 a(36^agXX383tX3e8XXK«aC^ N.''/Shapl'rQ:.. v . , i* , »• . : '.•v.. ", ' -I Baby Fails 1(N9 Feet But Escapes Death William F a llo n ...... 150.00 TOWNGHARTTY^ Clarence J. T o d d ...... 150^00 Rose Woodhouse .. • . ^ 182..00 . 1 153 ■ 1 $ 3526,il4 ip- ft SROWS Fuel K. ■ W. G- Glenney Co. . . . 236.25 William Grady ...... 88.00 Harry E. Seaman .. . . • 402.50 JUMP 4.' Sullivan, Hayes and 31.50 Once more a new school year rapidly approaches. Once: more (Coqtinaed from;page t) 409.00 G. E; Willis A Son'*’. • Mathers are checking up boys’ needs for the start of school— and Nfew Equlpiiient $ 1167.25 the'Fall to follow.. Once more House’si store is reRdy^ with fine ^ Bllsh Hdw. Co * ilOO.57 3Iedical Attention H. W. Hollister, Howard Boyd, M. D. .. . 4- 2T.B 0 -bigvstocks of fresh new Fall merchandise. Suits and finishings moving building . . . 125.00 N. A. Burr, M; D...... 60.00 Manchester Lumber Co. 119.24 [' ^•/-that combine smart style, durability and moderate prices- _ Le Verne Holmes, M. D. :.4Ti)lOO fc*. -t- i ' - ' • • » • Man. Plmb. & Sup. Co.. . 17,45 George A. F. Lundberg, ,'-.v ■. ,' . ~ S. H. Moore^ boiler , . 437,93 .60.60 100 FT. Watkins Brb...... 94.50 ' M. D...... • • ;; And once more many Mothers will come early="to: D. C.-Y. Moore, M. D. . . 71.00 Walter OUver,...... • ■23,00. make selections— shopping leisurely in cpihfp?i>— $ 894.CT .6.00 Food-r—Meats and Groceries B. L. SqJyin, M. D, ^.. . avoiding the last minute hustle and bustle that’s half W^-S.'^uW, M. p; .. ;:-R50 Morris & Co.. Meats . . 263.44 '55.00 I PineSursf Grocery .'.. . 354.70 Ti'H-'WeldO&,-M. D. .. the worry of getting children ready for school. Roberts;. Steele & Dolan -- 190.74 $ 341.50 1 il I E. H. W oodw orth----- 15.Oj) :'.'jpm gs ^ ^ He may be Mother’s angel child, but he • 823.88 htiner’s Pharmacy . . • sure gives his clothes the very dickens, . 'Fuel E. J..Murphy-...... I • ■ -: • * W, G. Glenney. Co., . 41.70 Packard's .Rhai:jpacy iM G. E. Willis & Son . 866.97 J. H. Qufhtfs & Co. We know that as well as you do. You’ll find the proof in ■^S 45. these sturdy two-knicker School Suits. They’re built to stand .r $ 908.67 ? Grain, etc. fov Barn . ., r .tBoard & Care the wear and tear they’re sure to get. ' L v O..E. Bailey ...... 62.25 Mrs. Ell Champigney.. 12.ftP, Dr Bushnell ...... , 3.00 'Mrs. Mabel D unn...... 42.0. 0 Little & McKinney . .. 337.70 City,of Hartford, . 259.5i) Man. Grain & Coal Co. 55.20 Mrs. N. Johnson . '... .■ 5 5 .# ihra. K. Kearns; ..... 263.H Priced 8 458.15 Adolph Kissman • 400.^ Telephone Service 283.6(2 Although he fell 100 feet when he toppled off the sill of his. father's hotel room ^^“ dow Nasltvil^ Mrs. F. Mansfield .... So, N. E. Telephone Co. 44.20 Sarah Matchett ...... 96.a» Tenn 2-year-old Roland Wolfe today is recovering in a hospital, sufferiing only 133.00 and right leg. Roland, shown here in his hospital bed, h^pened to land squarely on the shoulders oLRay Ellen Muirhead ...... 8 - ; 44.^ Hosanna Poleonia .... 76.80 mond Garnetts of New York (inset), who was walking along the sidewalk beneath the window. Gam tts 6.00 LOO to Scaped wUh a ?ew bmises and a cut forehead. The location of the Wolfe’s hotel room, and the line of Water Setvise Mrs. Eli Rudas...... So. Man. Water Co. . . . 183.86 Mrs. Augusta Sire .... 9o.go Roland’s fall, are shown at the left. , . Julia Warren ...... 154.0.0 8 183.86 Elizabeth W ilson ...... 94.0. 0 We have Complete Lines of Shirts, Socks, Blouses, Belts, Ties begins to get somewhere playing In Gas Service comedies, she immediately , dashes Hartford Gas Co...... ^ 63.70 $ 1965.57 and Sweaters ready for your inspection. c off into drama. I have watched doz­ ens of girls do just that very thing. Widow’s Pension Fund 8 63.70 Stale of Conn...... 8 2364.13 Personality Worth More Than “ And comedies are really more Electric Service difficult to play that dramas. In Man. Electric. Co. 212.98. 2364.Is comedy, the slightest over-emphasis ; V- ? Miscellaneous Mere Looks In Filmtown turns a situation into a burlesque 212:98 and it is ruined., ■William Barron — Ex­ Taxes pense to Maine .... 55.00 "But whether a person Is In. pic­ Second School Dist. 181.72 Best Children’s Shoes In Town tures or some other walk pf Tife he, Josephine Gordon to 7.00 By DAN THOMAS ] or she, shoiild' fight down>that urge Norwich ...... Best—b^ause they consider the needs of growing feet. 181.72 Holl6ra,n Bros. — Con­ to act at all times. If you are natur­ Repairs 4i Hollywood Calif.— It doesn’t ally of a serious temperament, be veyance & Burials . . 154.00 Best—becaus^ their styles please youngsters.. o ' matter who you are or what you Alfred Grezel Co. . . . 2.90 serious; if not, be funny.” 46.49 T. P. Hollorf.n— Con- Best— because of their splendid quality. have been lehen embarkin,s upon a Jam^s Holloran . .. . ■\^eyance & Burials .. 94.00 looks and acting ability that count. George Murray ...... 1.25 Best—because they are moderately priced. 152.37 Man. Electric Co.— From the time a girl puts on Joseph C. Wilson . . . Electric Current . .. 43.54 her first .•'.pplication of grease 18.50 Child’s Shoes, Oxfords and Pumps, $2.00 to S3.50. paint, her past is forgotten. Of 8 .203.01 7.00 course, if her great-great-grand­ Furnishings Misses’ Shoes, Pomps and Oxfords, $3.00 to $5.00. H. Waddell- -Bx- father was one of the fifty thou-^ W. H. Gardner, shoes . 27.50 f 76.65 Growing Girls’ Shoes, Pumps and Oxfords, $2.98 to $6.00. 171.48 penses ...... sand who came across on the May­ J. W. Hale Co...... 5.50 Boys’ and Youths’ Shoes and Oxfords, $3.00 to $5.50. flower, publicity m^n put on an C. E. House & Son .... 55.60 active campaign to inform the G. W. S m ith ...... 61.50 world that such was the case. But $ 460.99 that doesn’t get very far. By DAN 'THOMAS 8 316.08 " On the Lasky lot today are a Insurance Hospitals couple of new girls whose stories Hart. St. Boiler In'. Co. 6.97 onn. Chfldren’s Aid C. E. HOUSE & SON, Inc. Hollywood, Calif., Aug. 24.— Be­ illustrate this point. Both are do­ Society ...... 282.38, ing extremely ugly Is just as good 58.00 ing equally well, but they came 8 6.97 w w x w w v from widely separate^ stations. as being a slick-haired sheik when 549.00 it comes to getting In the movies. Miscellaneous Supplies * Helen Weatherford was a co-ed at F. T. Blish Hdw. Co. . 100.00 79.90 the Los Angeles branch of the In fact the gentleman with irregu­ Connecticut Co., Exp. . 1.12 1,276.11 f e Ak s ic k n e s s n o w University of California. Shirley lar features is often preferred— he 75.42 Dorman was a stenographer in a is more distinctive in cinemaland. W. H. Foster, pigs .... 21.00 39.82 of Conn— Sea- Battle Creek, Mich.— A doctor qf . studio office. But when it comes to the. social Chas. C. Hart Seed Co.. side of life, it is a different prob­ Herald Printing Co. . . . 12.00 side 121.16 a sanitarium here has announced lem. Louis Wolheim is proiid of his Charles L a k in g...... 2.00 tate of that- fear is the cause of seasick­ Miss Weatherford is convinced town 2,654.i5 ness; Fear, he believes, is the cause' I LABOR DAY I 134.20 that three rousing cheers for the “ homeliest physiognomy In. Holly­ A. L. Oliver, cash paid wood” when he is oh the set'but he Waranoke F a r m ...... 5.00 tate . £ Conn.— ^Nor- of mb?t gastric and intestinal dis- alma mater are now worth more 2,091?46 turbances, and the best way to pre­ .4han a barrel of sweet talk thrown is rather sensitive about it other­ S. R. Woodward ..... ' 10.00 wich \ wise. Home for vent seasickness Is suggestion. at a casting director. 104.30 1 Is The Last Big Holiday f “ Anyway, I got my start by “ A man can look mean and ugly 8 325.14 Children on the screen and get away with it 295.50 cheering until my throat hurt,” $6,916.05 she informed me. “ When I first great,” says the actor.' ‘ “ Movie Gross Expend.. CHAMP BREATH-HOLDER came here to enter school, I rather fans consider such a man m.erely a Less cash cred..81,313.07 $ 7,587.67 Of The Season | wanted to go into pictures, but I good actor. ’They seem to think: that Amt. due approp 220.00 Cross total hospital and ;• Middletown, Conn. — Here’s a i ^ didn’t know how to go about it, so behind it all is really a handsome Net credits . .. .------$1,533.07 outside alms ...... “ 20,190.25 new freak championship— holding If you are planning a trip in your car be sure that you I kept right on with my education. face. Such, however, isn’t the case. Credits one’s breath for 14 minutes and 2 start well equipped and that your car is in good runmng $5,382.^ “ And then the opportunity lit­ “ I always feel out of place at so­ Net cost Alms.. Cash received , from seconds. E. L. Gaylor, Jr., senior order. If you need a tire or two, come here for a good erally jumped at me. I was among cial functions because of mydboks. The average number of inmates various persons and at Wesleyan collcige, accomplished the hundred girls chosen froni I When I try to smile at a gracious was 16. The number at present is other towns for board the feat before physicians recently, buy. . school as extras in Bebe Daniels’ remark of the hostess or'some 15. The average cost per week was and c a r e ...... 8 3,050.37 fie gulped three large breaths of new film, “Swim Girl Swim.” All guest, I get a horrible expression $103.52 and a coSt per inmate of Amount due from vari­ pure oxygen and held the last one we had to do was to cheer and on my face. But I can’t help, it. I 86.18 per, week furnishing 871 ous persons ...... 214.00 for a new record. show a’ great deal of enthusiasm am ^omely on the screen and just weeks board for year. over Miss Dahiels during athletic »» as homely off it.” For complete inventory see4ist 5 3,264.37 contests. That was easy.” on file in Selectmen’s Office. , •' Net cost hospital and a Miss Weatherford did her bit of Co-ed. Helen. Weatherford It is seldom that all celluloidia OUTSIDE ATMS cheering .so well that she attracted (above) and Stenog Shirley. Dor­ 'outside alms ...... 8 16,925.88 NOTICE takes such an interest in a' single Groceries and Meats Recapitulation the attention of the director, Clar­ man crashed the HolljTVobd gates person as it has in Rubye McCoy. Anderson & Noren . . . .8 260.34 ence Badger, who gave her a on personality. 12.00 Net cost of Almshouse 8 5,382.98 REGISTRARS’ NOTICE For three years the biggest • stars, W. H. :,.rurke...... Net cost of hospital and The registrars of voters of the small “ bit” in the production. directors and producers bought cl- Campbell's G rocery... 37.58 scenes, he asked the chief stenog­ outside alms ...... 16,925.88 ■fown of Bolton will be in session at And now she has a long term con­ garets from her at the Montmartre. Harry England ; ...... 20.00 rapher to get him one. the Basement of the Church, Sept. tract. She was so popular that she at­ W. H. England ..... 260.00 Shirley was the lucky girl. She Total cost of Charities 8 22,308.8:6 6, 1927, from 9 a. m. until 5 p. m. tracted considerable patronage. Garrone Brothers .... 153.00 Shirley Dorman — which, by took dictation well, screened well ■ ■ ■ a .1 ■ to revise the list and receive appli­ — and now has a good.: contract. Many movie .offers were ma4e her Robert Kittle ...... 243.26 •the "way, sounds like a purely HIDE CARUSO’S REMAINS cations of new voters to be made. Size...... ■ . .$7.00 screen name— has a shorter story. Needless ,to say, the nd.tebobk and" for single, pictures. But: Rubye J. H. Madden ...... 69.33 wouldnt’ give up a sure thing for 66.74 Naples.— Tourists in Naples nq M. A. HALING. Deputy. After coming to Los An,geles pencil ^’'already HaVe been-forgot­ Man. Public Market .. M. L. WOODWARD, ten, having been replaced by a the uncertain films. But np'W she 15.00 longer may view the embalmed COURIER TIRES about a year ago, she held down James N. N ichols...... body of Enrico Caruso, the great Registrars. make-up. box. : ' has laid aside her cigaret trdy for Pinehurst Grocery .... 15.01 several stenographic jobs, finally tenor. His tomb had been left o ^ Dated at Bolton* Conn., ' Firestone Built securing one at the Lasky studio. And that’s how moviana hap­ good and has a contract with Met- Luigi P o la ...... 12.00 $6.60 pens to have two more budding ro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Needless to say, en to the public until photogr^ Aug. 31, 1927. When' Director Gregory LaSava Polish G rocery...... 272.10 phers tried to take pictures of thq 30x31/2 • . $7.75 wanted a steno,grapher for a _few stars. everyone in the village is pulling Reymander’s Grocery 25.00 29x4.40 for redhaired Rubye. interior, A native superstitious Chas. Skarbacy ...... 265.99 horror of pictures of the dead led COURIER TUBES Thos, D. S m ith ...... 79.41 to the closing of the tomb. Cut Down the $1.75' Here’s something new in R. L. Taylor- .... i... 98.27 30x31/2 way of cameras— one with a s $2.00 Kitchen Budget 29x4.40 • • • • • Connie Refuses To Be Seifiotis in it. The camera was devisb'd % 1905.03 Arthur Miller, prominent movie Furnishings photographer. It is equipped with a A. L. Brown & Co. . . . 96.95 tiny electric stove for warming the If Your Car Noeds Greasing or a Spring G. Fox & Co. ... 129.97 Even In Real Life film as it is used in cold weather. J. W. Hale Co...... 6.85 Bath Let Us Do the Job. Expert Service. The World War lias'been fought C. E.‘ House & Son . . . 117.17 over and over again in Hollywood A. L.-Hultman ...... 82.15 By DAN THOMAS i movie studios— and they’re still Hollywood, Calif., Aug. 8— “ Be fighting. Every month or so a: new 8 433.09 Accessories-—Genuine Ford Parts yourself!” says Connie Talmadge. ! fighting film is thrust upon the , . Milk “ So many persons seem an.xious | market. Trenches are now being R. W. Bronkle .... 109.80 to convince the world that they' dug on thi Mack Senne-tt (of Ipr Clover Leaf Dairy . , 20.69 ' ' a d ’-’ Socony Gasoline and Motor^ Oils play a pretty serious role in life,” the purpose of reopening tJiH'feud Hecket Bi'others . . , 9.30 declares the blond comedienne ’oetween our own doughboys and Stanley -Moske . . . 54.75 “ They like to give the impression ihe Germans. Vv’ho will be next? M.' C. Peckham .. . 36.32 9 that, at heart, they are really pro­ John Rosetto . .... 45.82 found and full of deep thoughts if Incidentally, this Sennett war W. K. Straughan ., 19.52 only the rest of humanity would comedy, which by the way is the I. W. Taylor ...... 18.67 Tel. 2468 "South Manchester take the trouble to understand ! first feature length picture the pro­ George Wogman .'. 78,78 E 415 Main St FILMS out-of-date stove is them.” ducer has made in some time, is 0pp. Center Springs Park. Miss Talmadge won’ t admit it — titled “ The Romance of a Bathing 393.65 x I l about the most expen­ • \ -s hut: tt)c Is probably referring to Girl.” There’s nothing suggestive Rents Developed and sive thing you can keep =1111111111111 her fellow screen players. Some­ about war in that, is there.’ ''But if Evasio Andisio ...... Printed in your kitchen! Put in a where in the neighborhood of 75 it doesn’t do anything else, the film H. O. Bowers ...... Crawford Range and save 24 Hour SeiTice Immigrants to the United States per cent of them are just such cha­ will introduce a new actress who is Adam Brozouski ..... money, enjoy your cook­ The world’s largest organ In-, racters. certainly on the road to stardom. Cheney Brothers .... will be shown films by the De­ ing, cook h eller.. . . The stalled at Liverpool Cathedral; “ Playing .serious isn’t my way, She is Sally Liiers. C, W. Cowles Est...... England, has five rows of keys, 222 partment of Agriculture which 'wQl remarks the actress. “ I believe in Mrs. Lucy Farr ..... i l E M P 'S State Crawford shown draw knobs, 168 stops, 10,93'4 acquaint them with American hls- laughter and the joy of living. I’m For the first time since she came A. Hauseman...... aboive is oije o f the finest pipes, and is driven by a 35-horse­ Wry, geography and agricultural here from Mexico Cijy to enter the methods. ' • * positive that the very best thing in E. J. Holl ...... Film Deposit Box at i u ’ii^the whole famous power motor. the world is to make ether people moyies, Dolores Del Rio is taking Jaffey & Podrove ...... CraVford line. In gmj’ or laugh. It’s not easy but is wonder- a vacation. Most actresses get theirs Store Entrance. Aaron Johnson ...... blade enamel it is priced fal when you succee.1. • '• ' ’t between pictures. But Dolores has J. W. Kelluxa...... ■‘‘I have been doing it all my life been kept too busy. She Is now In Mrs. J. Koslowskie . . ’. louier than ever before. ARTESIAN WELI5 Honolulu with her husband, Jamie Buy .it on our deferred GOdD COAL — kidding, laughing and trying’ to Z. V. Modesto ...... Drilled Any Diameter— make others laugh with me. Ever Constance Talnmtige, who isn’t a D elRlo. ^ Mrs. Jos. McCaughey . \ payment plan. See it now. STOVE ...... $15.5fl siepe the days when Norma, Nata­ lofty Intellectual, and doesn’t want Frank Obraltls...... R. W . Joyner Any Depth Any Place lie and I grew up in vhe litUe wood­ EHPORTANT HIFLINE CHESTNUT ...... $15.23 to be. ______I Urbana'Osano ...... Watkins Btps. en frame house in Brooklyn, 1 have Chas. J. Peterson .... , Charles' F. Volkert EGG ...... $1®*55 been the family poker, and I’m glad my spare time more seriously than Fashion battles will be , fought Contractor and Exeinsive Representatives for PEA $12i0d oflt” : ■ I do,” she says. “ They try to Incite out over the new hiplines, it would Crawford Ranges. §eeni. Everything Is swathed but Blast Hole Drilling : These are' cash pieces and hdtd me to study psycho-analysis or Builder Connie makes no pretense about something equally dull. I rather whether It be a drape or a yoke is Bunions Test Drilling for Foundation for payment within 10 days of de» hafjiig among the lofty intellectuals. play. Leave the seriousness in our the question. Quick relief from pain, Alteration and Repair Work t. Water Systems livery. ‘ Shejwould rather dance than read family to Norma, because she: is na­ ravant- shoe Iprotsuro. »alrook— and admits it. The turally that way. The. grapefruit probably was At oB Jnw and mot Mem Given Prompt Attention. Pumps for All Purposes. that s^'e inj^sts life into an endless not used in Europe before its Intro­ Tel. 1375-5. ARCHIE HATES string df parties proves th^t she “ The inovles offer a good exam­ duction to America by Gap.taln Residence 71 Pitkin Street. Kv..v4if Shaltuck, who is said to. have n«*en«bif'-dk» ,iiakb good cooking better h ig h l a n d p a r k P. 0 . 258 Center St. Phone 1118^ never tires Of them. ple of human, tendencies, especially poinbgMa ~ Sotith Alaachester* Phooa “ People tell m'e that I shpuld use among women. As soon ■ as a ' girl brought It from the far' Mst. ’

’-f A •W-- MANQHES^rER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY# SEFl’EMBER Ir 1927. ^AGE SIX / TEWE TO STOP FQR A RAINY DAX: . - -Tsil Benevolent Old Gentleman;- ROGER WOtFE KAHN London.— Two wedding recep­ Here’s penny for you, nty boy,. Put. it in.your money box wlien you get '' PLUHillNG DAILY tions were being held in a fashion­ A bouse may have a beautiful extertoj,: fin&' able Ifotel here at the same hour. home. . ■ 399.8— WTAM,'_C LEVE UANDi—750. Leading JD>X Stations r AI ROHD TONIGHT Since the guests kept getting Into Small Boy : Won’t you give me a' nishings on the inside— but it the.plpipbiDg Thursday, September 1. l:3u i 2:30-»»MaBqueinclenl V *- the wrong receptions, the two af­ half-penny instead, sir? ' ity or if the unseen system of water supply,^ ^ 7:00 6:00—Cleveland oithfStra. =^TLANtA'-630. { The tramp of marching feet, the 8:00 7 :U0—Studio program. fairs were merged. A late guest, ;re- B. O. G.: W hy? .1 -- and ventilation of drains is incorrectly Installid, tfien Icp^^rt, thunder ot galloping boofSi the boom 9:00 8:00—Dunes orciiesiru. 10:00 9:00-Bpomay’ s orchealrk. fusing a glass of’ champagne, said: Small Boy: I can’t get^a penny of a distant cannon and the oiare oi lu:oo a:uo—Studio, program. . , 10:30 9:30—Concert, pianist. • baejt out of the slot,— Passing convenience and health protection are talking, v , > ' f ^ * a nearby bugle, will stir the hearts of 12:00 11:00—Loiiibaj do’s orchestjra. . 12:45 11:45—Organ recital. > “ I knotv when I’ve had enough; I’ve radio listeners on Thursday night, 526—KYW. CHICAGO-570. Famous fflilliouaire Orches- seen two brides alVeady.” Show. when a program ot military melodies 440.9— Wex-WJR, DETROIT—680.' 8:00 7 :00 -Studio program. ' 7:00 6:00—Goldkeiteis ensemble. 9:00 8:00—To be announced. will be presented before the micro­ 8:00 7:00—Goidkelte's Symphony Oi phones of WIH and \VGBS by the 10:30 9;30—Stud:o program- ' - JOSEPH €0 WiiSON 8:30 7:30—song review;, musical. 11-30 10:30—Congre.'js carnival. i tra Leader to Fly From 114th Infantry liand under the direc­ I0;uti a;U0-Hi^olukei,te'8 dancs; orch. 28 SPKLCK STIiEET, 'i'KLKI’ HO.VB 041 tion of Captain James 1. ^Young. 389.4_WBBM, CHICAGO—770. "Pirates of Penzance," the light opera 635.4— WTIC, HARTFOREY—560. 8:00 7:00—Hawaiian music, arlista. bv Sullivan that tiever has fai ed to 7:00 O-.OO-T-Sea.iihll ,dl»mer 1U:00 9:00—Orchestra; artists. New York Today. bring down the house, will take up 7:30a 12:00 11:00—Hank's theater gang. part ot the liglit opera period to be 8130- 7:30—Jabrj and led. 365.6—WEBH-WJJD, CHICAGO—820. iuCrs SEIT-SERVE radiated by WCAF and the Red ^et- 9-5u 8:30—Kluniclpal orchestra. 9:00 8:00—Moo.'jeheart hour. vork The remainder of the time will 422.5—WOR; NEWARK—710 12:00 11:00-Trio, tenor, songs. Roger Wolfe Kahn, son of Otto consist of higiiiights from popular, 7:00 0:00—Jacobs' ensemble. 305.9—WGN-WLIB, CHICAGO—980. operettas and musical comedies. AX 7:30 0:30—The X'cpper I’otters. 9:00 8:00—WEAF Eskimos; niu.sic. H. Kahn, millionaire banker, and C3 p a CEBY similar program ot musical comedy s:oo 7:oo—Piano uuels; band. -fe 1 1 ^ 10:00—Sam ’n Henry; music box. ;^ne of the world’s foremost orches­ features will be rendered by the Klk e 9:15 s:15—The OoUegians.. ^ 11:30 10:30—Musical prog; songs. WABT DM XBUI 10:00 9:00—Semi-classical banjes. 12:00 11:00—Organ: orcliestra; songs. tra leaders will personally conduct A, Male Quartet through WJZ and the 344.5—WLS, CHICAGO—870. Blue Network. Another vocal and in­ 11:00 10:00—Stern’s orciiesiru. the dance music by one of his re­ 8:45 7:45—WLS plaJwiB. ' nowned^ orchestras a' the .Hotel strumental concert sure to be enjoyed 333.1_WBZ, n e w ENGLAND—coo. 9:00 8:00- Verse, mtislc. P'-'D^rs. will be "the Dove and the Swallow, 0:00 5:00—Baseball; organ. 447.5—W M AQ - WQ J,. CHIC AGO—670. Bond Rbof Garden this evening. Mr. to lie enacted before the microphone 6:30 o:30—Radio rodeo; talk. ' 9:00 8:00—Orch; trio; players. Kahn li'ill personally introduce to- SpooiSils for Friday of WrCl by contralto and tenor solo- 6:58 6:58—Baseball; talk; ensemble. il-00 10:00—Theater revue; orch. 0:30—Lowe’s orchestra. the dance devotees at the Bond -ists. Pretty little manicure misses and 7:30 12:00 11:00—w y j program. austere maidens with a crown of glory 8:00 7;U0—WJZ Shaiiuou quarleL ^ 499.7—WFAA, DALLAS—600. Roof Garden Julie Wintz and his Stock Your Pantry whicli they themselves have erected 9:00 U;U0—WJZ Elks’ quarteu 8:30 7:30—Story hour, organ. famous orchestra. Mr. Wintz plays will hold the center of the stage when 9:30 8:30—Baritone fCcUaL lOit’.n 9:30—Semi-classical music. --c; ’ from AVHK liroadcasts the musical high- 4gi.5_WEAF, NEW YORK—610. 352.9_w oe, DAVENPORT—8..0. the violin, George Zimmer, drums, light.s at the National Hairdressers’ G UO 6:00—Waldorf dinner music. 10:00 9:00—Studio program. Herman Mahr, piano, Ray Wick- convention to bo licld in Cleveland, 7:00 0:00—Mid-week hymn sing. 11-00 10:00—Male q u a rtet.__ ware, banjo and guitar, Louis Bode, Manchester’s Great Public Pantry % 7:30 0:30—La Saile Symphony orch, 535.4— WHO, DES MOINES—560. saxophone,^ soprano and clarinet, =^ and Wave lengths in meters on left of 8:00 7:00—Light opera concert. 9- 30 8:30—Orchestra, soprano. 5 station title, kilocyle.s on the right. 9:00 8:00—Eskimos, 11-30 10-30—Baritone: drama. Bill Zimmer, tenor sax. Cliff Wet You will have the best and purest that can be bought Times are Eastern Daylight Saving 10:00 you—David Lawrence, talk. •^V99 7-W BAP.i FORT WORTH-600. terau, trumpet, Hy Alexander, tuba. and Eastern Standard. Black type in 9:10—"Old Bill’s Workshop." . 10:10 9:30 »;30—Songs; pianist. All of these musicians have been % dicates best features. 10; 40 9:40—Two dance orchestras. 11-30 10i30—Musical comedy program. 455—WJZ, NEW YORK—660. I’oO 12:00—Organist. __ DEMONSTRATION Leading East Stations 1:00 12:00—Asior trio. ... 275 1--WOK, HOMEWOOD-1099. 2:00 1:00—Weather; home talks. 10-00 9-00-Orch: Hawaiians: prtists. 3:30—Manhattan trio. » v 38I 4-.KTHS, f^OT SPRINGS-780. 272.6—WPG. ATLANTIC CITY—1100. 4:30 Armour’s 5:30 4:30—Baseball; markets. 9-30—Solo hour. ‘.•‘.•‘.•Hi f 7:05 0:0.5—Dinner music: organ. 0:50 5:50—Baseball scores. 370 2--WDAF. KANSAS ClTY-810. 0:1.5 .s:l'i—Concert: novelty: orch. C:00—Bill Whipple, talk. 10- 00 9:00—Band concert: dance. 10:00^ 0:00- Emo's movie liroadcast. 7:00 7:15 0:15—I’ennsylvaiiia orchestra. 1:45 12:45-Nighthawk frolic. 10:20. .9:20—"Dove and Swallow.' »:uo 7:00—Shannon quartet. 468.5— KFI, LOS ANGELES—640. 11:00 10:00—Two dance orchestras. 8:00—Elks’ Male QUartet. 11- 00 10:00—Pastel trio; drama. 235.5—WBAL. .BALTIMORE—1050. 9:00 • 0:30 8:30—Our Musical U. S. 12:30 1B30—N. Br C. program. Ham 7;:to 0:30—Dinner orclicstra. 10:3Q_ 9:30—Abram’s ■ orchestra. 2*00 l :00~Modern classical music. S::t0 7:30—B.nritone. violin, piano. ■5W -W IP . PHILADELPHIA--590. '405.2—KHJ. LOS ANGELES—740. 0:30 S:M0 —I’iaiiist. 'cellist. 0:10 5:10—Concert orchestra; talks. 12:15 11:15—Quartet, sopiano; talk 10 00 '.i;oo—Dance orchestra. 8:C0 7:00—114th Infantry Band. 461.3— WHAS. LOUISVILLE—650. Sugar Skinned CC2.3—WGR. BUFFALO—990. 9:00 8:00—Calvert Music hour. 9:30 8:30—Studio concert. - ^ 6- 30 ;V.:m—C.ii pcntcr’s orchestra.10:00 9:00—Baritone, contralto. 340.7—WSM. NASHVILLE—880. Ciu’ed Back 8:00 7:00- \VI';a K programs. 11:05 10:05—Lanin’s orchest^ , r l(i:15 .!):15^Trio: studio■ program. 545.1 —WMAK, BUFFALO—550. 315.7i_KDKA, PITTSBURGH—950. 12:30 11:30—Pipe organ concert. i f,-:5o 'i-.MO—WOY dinner music. 6:00 5:00—Baseball: dinner concert. 384.4— KGO. OAKLAND—780. Over a ton and a half (3000 lbs.) ordered and selected ki 7- 1.5 0:1.5—Ba.seliali: race result.s.6- 55 5:55—Baseball: concert. 12:00 11:00—Light opera. S:00 7:00—Studio program: musical. 7- 20 6:20—Road talk; sketch.1- 00 1 2:00—N. B. C. program. especially for us. Sweet* tender, full “Star” flavor V.W: 10-00 ;i:00—WGY programs. 8- 00 7:00—WJZ .Shannon quarteL2- 00 1:00—Orch; artists; violin. ^ i ‘ 3:2.7-WNAC, BOSTON—850. fresh from the smokehouse. 9- 00 8-00—WJZ Elks’ quartet.254 1—WRVA, RICHMOND—1180. ’ 1 .5::!:t—Dance orchestra. 379.5- ^WGY. SCHEN ECTADY-790. 10-00 9:00—Sh-Ylames chimes. " Buy a Whole Ham—its economical IHalf Ham cut any 7:30 fi::;o-Pianist: talk; tenc . 12:30 11:30—Market.s; time: weather. 10-10 9:10—Radio.'■musical tour. 8:1'. 7:1.5—Theater program^ 2:00 1:00—One act play. 422.3— KPO, -SAN FANCISCO 710. size you wish. 9:15 8:1.5—Theater presentations. 6-00 5:00—Stocks: baseball, races. 10-20 !l:20—l-ilks’ dance band. 12:00 11:00—Program. <23.3-WLW. CNCINNATI—700. 6-30 5:30—Orch: baseball: races_. 1- 00 12:00—N. B. C. program. 7:30 6:30- America’s story; pUnist. 2- 00 1:00—James’ 9:0o 8:00—Mandolin quartet. 8:00 7:00—Programs with WEAK 344.6-WCBD. Z'ON-870. O U C o o k 9:30 8::i0—.lohnston's program. 10'00 9:00—Musical comedy numbers. 10:00 9:00—Mixed quartet, organ, 26c 10:30 9:30—Zoo music. Cossacks. 10:30 9:30—Ne.ws from Time.^ clarinet trio, artists. Puritan HamV ) . 11:00 10:00—Tommy and Irene. 11'00 10:00—Orchestra with WBAi'. 12:15 11:15—Dance orchestra. ------.7^^ Secondry DX Stations. Sugar-cured Secondary Eastern Stations. 275.1-w o r d , BATAVIA-1090. 10-00 9:00—Hour of music. ^ 8:00 7:00—kRisical: talks. Roger Wolfe Kahn 27^.6—WHAR, ATLANTIC City—1100 394.5— WHN, NEW YORK-—760. 7:55 0:55—Seaside trio. 10-00 9:00—Orchestra: Bible g;t)0 7:00—Artists, music (4 firs.) ^ '288.3—WENR. CHICAGO—1040. actors and are college graduates 447.5—WEEl, BOSTON—670. lbs. 29c Ask your dealer for 348.6- WGBS, NEW Y°RK^60. 7:00 0:00—Organ: urs ) and in all of their work, they fur­ Pur® Lard ^ 7:30 C:30—WEAF progs. (3 hrs.) 7-30 C:30—Orchestra, artists (5 hrs.) 9:00 8:00—Orche.stra: arOsts (2 hrs.) a demonstration. 333.1—WKRC, CINCINNATI—900. 416.4— W H T , CHICAGO—720. nish innovations such as vocal num­ (Snow-v/hite) 8:00 7:00—Dance orchestra. '535 4_WNYC. NEW YORK—560. 8*15 -7;15—Classical, program, ^cello. 8:00 7 :00—Talk; pianist. bers which have caused this orches­ (in sanitary 1 lb. packages) 8:30 7:30—Artists program. 8:30. j : 30—Kaltenborn’s orchestra. lo'-OO 9:00—Your Hour League. 9:01 8:01—Oriole orchestra. 12:00 11 :'00—Pianist, tenor. tra to be rated as one of New York’s For best results usS Socony Kerosene ^ 3C1.2—WSAI. CINCINNATI—830. 405'2—WFI, PHILADELPHIA—740. 405 2— W CCO. MINN., ST. PA U L 740. greatest. 9:00 8:00—Accordion so'.oist: artists. C-20 5:20—Baseball; orch;' questions. 8-nO 7-00—Orchestra: contralto. Julie Wintz and his orchestra 8:00 7:00—WEAF prpgrams (.f hrs.) o.'nn _WEAF Eskimos; arti.sis. ■/ 10:10 9:10—WEAF programs. have been playing at Jansen’s Hof- Meadow Gold Butter 11:00 10:00—Studio program. 516.9—WCAE, PITTSBURGH—580 lo'oo n’no—Violinist; 'cellist. 265.3—WHK, CLEVELAND—1130. 0:00 5:00—Orch; baseball; songs. 336'rKNX. OAKLAND-890 brau, at Broadway and 53rd-Street STANDARD OIL CO. OF NEW YORK 8:30 7:30—1. B. S. A. orchestra. 7- 30 6:30—Kaybee; book nhat. 12:00 n;00-Courtesy urg » for two successive seasons. They ]0';4.5 9:4.5—Tenor, orchestra. 8- 00 7-on—WEAF programs (2 hrs.) 2 lbs. 93c 1 lb. 47c 12:00 11:00—Hairdresser's Convention. 10:45 9:45—Flotilla Club revue. 2-W O w ! OmV h A^^^^^^^^^ ■ hold the record for continuous 26 Broadway 374.8—WWJ, DETROIT—800. ■ 361.2—WeSH, PORTLAND—830. broadcasting over one of the largest Hundreds,of pounds sold each week. It Must Be Good! 7:00 0:00—Dinner music. 9:00 8:00—WEAF Eskimos. stations, having been on the air 8:00 7:00—Concert with WE.-VF. 468.5—WRC, WASHINGTON—640. 447.5- KFOA. SEATTLE-670. 7:15 0:1.5—Hour of musuo 12:00 IJtPn—Proeiss concert ir.o. daily and twice Saturday over 325.5—WABC. NEW YORK—920. 8:00 7:00—Same as WEAF (2. hrs.) 7:30 0:30—Talk; Dr. Mu presents, 1:00 12:00—>1. B. C. program. WEAF all summer. This orchestra 9:00 8:00—Musical melange. 11:00 10:00—Ld Paradis Band. lias also done much recording. In StrieklF Fresh Eggs booking Julie Wintz and his orches­ tra, Harry S. Bond, Managing Di­ dox. rector of the Hotel Bond, who per­ Fancy selected large white eggs WAPPING COVENTRY sonally made the arrangements in WTIC New York City, stipulated that re­ Labor Gei-Vld:- ,Richter spent Tuesday gardless of price, Roger Wolfe ISIr. and Mrs. Ar,thur Frink mo­ Kahn must personally introduce his lbs. 62c tored to Springfield, Mass., last night willTIMr. and Mrs. A. J.- Vih-- Sugar u M Travelers Insnriince Cd., o-r^hestra to Hartford. .. . Sunday and visited Mrs. Frink’s ton. Mr’.'Richter was on his-’way Finest American grart^lated'in sanitary cloth bags. Hartford, Conn. to Maryland from Wells, Maine, When Mr. Kahn pleaded that he father, Frederick G. Easton. had an important engagement in 100 pound bag, $6.15. 467. The Federated Sunday school will where he had spent the summer with his parents, Rev. and Mrs. New York City on Wednesday bold Its monthly board meeting at afternoon, Mr. Bond at once en­ the parsonage Thursoay evening at Emil G. Richter. The last big week-end of the season. Undoubtedly Program for Thursday 7 o’clock, standard, time. All teach­ F. P. Hamilton has returned to countered “ Why not come by air” , FresH Fruits dk Vegetables 6:30 p. m.— Dinner Concert, Sea Chicago- after spending his vaca­ and to his very great surprise, Mr. ers and substitute teachers are re­ Better than they would be from your garden you are planning a trip in your car. Start off right by Gull Dinner Group— Ben Irving, quested to be present. tion at liis summer home in this Kahn replied ‘‘If you have a good Director Rev. "Truman H. ^Woodivard town. landing field, I will be glad to make having it put in A-1 condition here. 6; 50— News and Baseball Scores. •' preached at the Farming avenue Mrs. Sibley who had her foot am­ the trip in my own plane.” Mr. California 7:00— Dinner Concert continued— Methodist church, Hartford, last putated at the Springfield hospital Bond then explained how Colonel Sea Gull Dinner Group a few days ago passed away short­ Lindbergh has congratulated Hart­ Sunday, during the absence of Rev. ly after the operation. She was We Will Wash and Poli^ Your Car By 7 : 15— Contralto Solos— Mildred L. H. Dorchester. ford upon Brainerd Field and Mr. Valencia Oranges dox. 29e F. Swanson Mrs. William Felt, who chaper­ buried today in the North Ceme­ Kahn smilingly replied ‘‘If it was , a. Goin’ H om e...... Dvorak tery. good enough for “ Lindy” , it is good 1 Our New Warm Water Pressure System oned a party of young people for a 'The Misses Eleanor and Phyllis b. Swedish Songs— week, at Point o’Woods, has re­ enough for me.” California Fagelns-Visa...... Soderberg Huilon have returned after visit­ Mr. Kahn will use a single-fiiotor- and give it one of the best and fastest jobs it has had. turned to her home here. ing their aunt in Manchester. .Anda ...... Lagerorautz Miss Evelyn Geer is enjoying a ed Sikorskey, equipped with a His- Lettuce head Sc c. In An Old Fashioned Town two weeks’ vacation, the first week pano Suiza motor. Weather per­ Harris was spent with friends in S-uffield, mitting Mr. Kahn will leave Cur­ Large solid head Let Us Inspect Your Car and Make Any d. My Old True Love . .Ashford and this week she will spend with tis Field, Mineola, Long Island at 7 ; 30— Coward Comfort Hour friends at Crystal Luke. 12:00 noon. Standard Time. Ar- Repairs Necessary ■jg;00—Recital with Jenny Lee, So­ TEST ANSWERS If the Weather Permits We Will have Fancy Large Miss Majorie Felt is spending irangements are being made to PEACHES from PERO’S FARM. prano and Ross Reeves, character this week with her aunts, the Miss­ I broadcast the music from the Hotel actor and humorist— Laura C. Here are the answers to the ed Smith of Hartford. Bond Roof Garden Thursday eve- Gaudet, Accompanist ‘‘Now You Ask One” questions on If It Needs Greasing Here is the Place to Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Foster 1 ning from ten until midnight-and ' WTIC listeners are to be favored and family all mot_ored to Willi- the comics page. with another program by those ILLa monster with the head of a ! an effort is also being made to have Have It Done. Expert Work ! mantic and 'attended the Williman- j Roger Wolfe Kahn do his own an- two masters of entertainment, tic camp meeting last gu'nday. man and body of a horse. Jenny Lee and Ross Rooves. Pro­ 2— French Protestants of the■ nouncing. The monthly Sunday school so­ Upon returning from New York, BRING YOUR CAR TO US NOW! DON’T WAIT grams by these two artists are cial will be held on the lawn of the 16th century. always eagerly anticipated. Jen­ 3— Joseph Conrad. Harry S. Bond said he felt that the parish house on next Friday even­ dance enthuiasts of this section UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE ny Lee, who sings the old songs ing, Sept. 2. It will be in the form 4— Thomas R.» Marshall,' vice so sweetly, and Ross Reeves, the president from 1913 to 1921. would appreciate the determination of a lawn party, the committee on of the Hotel Bofid to at all times 1 famous character actor, have in­ games are Ralph Collins, Ward 5— A famous Athenian lawmak­ cluded in this program numbers Stiles and Albert Peterson, while er who framed ‘‘the laws of Solon.” lead in its service to its guests. He which will please everybody. It Mrs. Arthur Sharps’ class will fur­ 6— An invention by Robert Vonsaid 1 that out of all the big agencies , will be noticed that Mr. Reeves nish the refreshments. Bunsen for burning coal-gas with in New York City, the first sugges­ Specials fior Friday has placed James Whitcomb Ri­ Mrs. Truman H. Woodward and a hot, smokeless flame by mixing tion was Roger Wolfe Kahn and his ley’s masterpiece of humor. Miss Josephine Congdon, attended air with the gas. Julie Wintz orchestra. Mr. Kahn ‘‘How It Happened,” among the 7— Belladonna. has an international reputation as BARLOW’S GARAGE the school reunion o f the Howard BOILED HAM selections which he will render. Valley GrUmmar.school over the ' g_Augustus Caesar. one of the world’s foremost musical BAKED HAM 9— The Bank of England. Tires__^Tubes and Accessories— Vulcanizing This poem has been read and en­ week-end, at Hampton, Conn. leaders and many Hartford people ...... ; .pound 65c ...... pound 55c joyed by millions, and its inter­ 10— Count Zeppelin. will recall having seen him at the Batteries Recharged and Repaired , pretation by Ross Rooves in it­ [ famous Roger Wolfe Night Club in self would be a feature. But New York City. BONELESS LAMB ROAST ...... pound 37c 595 Main Street South. Manchester when two other offerings by him and selections by Jenny Lee are ANDOVER SMALL TENDER LEG,OF LAM B ...... pound 38c Next to Sheridan Hotel Bldg. on the same program, It makes WANTED TO CELEBRATE LEAN FRESH SHOULDER OF PORK ...... pound 22c Sunday visitors at Mrs. Ellen A TH O U fflU up a golden half hour of enter­ Jones were Mrs. Samuel Coppoli of PRIME RIB ROAST OF BEEF ...... pound 28c-34c. tainment. “ Could you, kind lady, spare a I An Old Sweetheart of Mine New Haven, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cliaritv shall cover the multitude i piece ■'^of cake to a poor man who LUNCHING H AM ...... Nicolinl of Hartford and Mr. .and James Whitcomb Riley of sins.— 1- Peter" ■ 4 - :8 - . * hasn’t had a hit for two days? FRESH GROUND HAMBURG STEAK ...... pound l|c Ros.s Reeves, Soprano Obligato Mrs. Frank Crocker of South Man­ “ Cake! Surely bread would be chester. CANADIAN BACON .. r ...... by Jenny Lee You must have a genius for char­ more suitable?” The cornerstone of the new Skin­ “ Yes— usually, lady. But today is ADVERTISE IN THE HERALD-^IT PAYS II a. The Sweetest Story Ever ner Burnett slibrary was laid Tues­ ity as well as for anything else.— T o ld ...... Stults Thoreau. my birthday.”— Tid-Bits. day afternoon with Miss Mary SYN01>SIS BY BKAUCHBH h. Lil’ B oy ...... Hazzard Hyde, Statepoliceman. Rufus Grant, \ Jenny Lee 8KIS'i'CHfc:S B¥ IJK.SSKV \ a former resident of this town and III How it Happened (Dialect others attending. THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE: (72) The Last March Poem) James Whitcomb Riley Mrs. Ellen Math«wson of War- Ross Reeves renville and Mrs. Eva Adams of At- IV a. The Lass with the Deli­ wardvllle spent Tuesday with Mrs. cate A i r ----- I ------... Arne Thomas Lewis’. > b. Jest Her Way .... .AitkeTi Miss Olga Lindholm is home with Jenny Lee a sprained ankle. She expects to go V A Story for the Ladies back to work Thursday. Jerome K. Jerome Mrs. Jacobson and family and Ross Reeves Mrs. Hilding of Hillstown spent VI a. Mary of Argyle Sunday at the home of August . (Old Scotch Song) Lindholm. b. The Songs My Mother Used Mrs. Ward Talbot spent Tuesday to Sing ...... Wakefield Smith with relatives in Manchester. Jenny Lee The Rev. Ino Wain, brother of Pe a r y g:30— Marj and Ted the Rev. Dr. Wain of Columbia, will I90f> 9:30— Colt Park Municipal Orches­ preach here next Sunday and the tra following Sunday, Sept. 11th, as a 10:00— News candidate. Sunday School will fol­ Across a terrible i^e field the last stages of the jour- ■ low service as usual. ney were made. With Matthew Henson (th^ negro). ^ Peary’s many expeditions added little by little to The party consisted of three Eskimos and 40 dogs, Peary penetrated where ” his knowledge Jind he always got a little closer to the seven white men, 17 Es­ civilized man never had. stepped. In five marches of ^ Second Mortgage Pole. In 1906 he reached a point within 200 miles of His ship w a s the PUMiS EIGHT BOATS kimos, a .negro, t9 25 miles each the men struggled toward their goal. ^ the goal. It became difficult to raise money but finally Roosevelt, and w as Money sledges and 183 dogs. It was summer and the temperature wds 33 degrees-’ Lake George, N. Y.—Harold a Peary Arctic Club was formed to pay the expenses under Captain Bartlett,^ ' Now On Hand The great march began below zero. , (To Be Con^inued) Chaken claims the towing cham­ and he set out In July, ,1908; on his final and tri­ the finest ice master of° In February, 1909.______8-30 .By'NEA, Through Sp.tl.1 Pdrmlntoff ef th» Publi«h«f. o) Th. Back »> Knewtedg., pionship of the world. With a rope umphant effort. Sk.tchei ai^d Syneptea, Copyright. 1927, The Crolier Society. fl-30 the age. Arthur A. Knofla tied to one leg, he recently pulled 97S Main St. eight boats .loaded with ,c.^pera -i.^r .M

\ ' ' \ IMAitYUHESTlSR (CONW.) !KVJJJINING~HJL'RALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1927, PAGE SEVEI

(and every other telephone, no mat- I ter how many there may be, nor ULY," FURNITURE, • how far away they may be. ■V . > RATES President Moran then pictures the first telephone exchange as a TONiGHT AT STATE v .*r ,1 .1 single unit of equipment, with a iSEHlTS single operator and then interastr Ingly traces tbs' growth of the ser­ vice from this beginning. ackie Coogan Tomorrow and “In the course of time,’’ he says, Saturday in ‘*Bugle Call;” BIGGEST USERS “a second unit and a second opera­ His First Grown-up Ficture; tor become necessary. Naturally, Strong Supporting Cast. the customers connected into the (Continued from Page 1) second unit wish to be able to talk with those connected into the first StSte Theater movie, patrons will 9 a. m. at 885 MAIN ST. be increased 50 cents a montb and unit and vice versa. Each unit must, be treated to the regular Thursday party line professional service ?1 therefore, be so equipped that evening “Furniture, N i^ t’’ pro­ O’LEARY BUILDING For The a month. either operator may connect any gram tonight which includes! Belle Individual line messatge rate ser­ two of the total numner of cus­ Bennett in “The.Llly.” The stage vice, hitherto not offered ^ere, will tomers. Similarly, when a third will be made into ^ veritable parlor be another new feature added to unit becomes necessary, each of the and the holders, of the lucky cou­ the local exchange service. three operators must have the same pons will come forward and take As more fully explained in Presi­ connecting facilities as the other their choice of the valuable ar­ dent Moran’s statement, the sub­ two—and so on as units are add'ed ticles. The weekly bargain night stance of the company’s rate revi­ to the switchboard from time to shows are proving immensely popu­ sion is a grouping of exchanges time. . . lar with the fans who feel that if jn accordance with their present Increases Through Use. they don’t win one, week, they may and probable variations in the num­ “This inter-connection of the sev­ the next. ber of subscribers served within eral units of a complete switch­ “The Lily’’ which plays tonight each exchange area. board is accomplished by duplicat­ only,, is the Fox Films’ version of Groupings. ing the switchboard terminals of David Belasco’s memorable stage For 25 years there have been all customers; lines again and again success. There Is a wide-spreading only six rate groupings of ex­ throughout the switchboard at such feeling that in this' picture. Miss changes in this company’s territory. intervals that the entire range is Bennett eclipses even her soul-stir­ Under the proposed reclassification within reach of each operator. It ring portrayal of the mother in there will be 11 rate groupings is clear, therefore, that as the orig­ Stella Dallas;’’ a characterization of exchanges, with varying rates inal one-position unit grows into a which brought her world fame. applied in each. switchboard of many hinits, the ‘The Lily,’’ boasting one of the In the past quarter century the amount of central office, equipment most pretentious casts ever assem­ number of subscribers in every ex­ per customer is unavoidably , in­ bled at the Fox West Coast Studio, change has increased greatly, but creased through the maqy and cost­ is a gripping story of • sister-love, Opening the numerical growth of subscrib­ ly duplications of the terminals with many of the. scenes laid in a ers has been notably larger in some which are required to provide f®iv romantic old chateau in .France. exchanges than in others. complete interconnection. j;ohn St. Polls, one of; the most ( “But this is not all. In the larger polished actors in. America, is cast We are going^^ to formally open our doors Friday morning, Sept 2, at 9 A. M., with an avalanche of shoe val­ , President Moran in .his an­ exchanges, the time comes when all as Count de Maigny, while Ian nouncement, which every telephone units of a complete switchboard Keith, a protege of Belasco him­ ues that will prove an excellent treat to Manchester shoe buying public. Buying up stores, buying direct from subsctlber should read for a clear will no longer suffice for the tele­ self, plays the highly Important role understanding of the problems fac­ phone growth. A second central of­ of the handsome young- artist in factories for an ever growing chain it is needless to tell you of the great savings we make possible for you to ing the company, goes deeply Ii^o- fice, and later a third, fourth, etc., love with Christiahe, the count’s the vital factors which have com­ similar to the first, must be es youngest daughter. ‘ enjoy. pelled the company to take the ac­ tablished. According to the varying The play is packed with menace These Shoes—These Prices—Our Enviable 5 Year Record in Manchester at 1013 Main Street, Tell the Story tion formally announced today, but possibilities of economical arrange­ and vital action' centers about the which has been forecast in the last ments with respect to buildings and two sisters when the father dis­ More Emphatically than Words. two annual reports of the company. outside plant, these additional of­ covers that the artist' is. married In his signed statement President fices are housed sometimes in sep- and has been unable to gain his free­ .r Moran points out that since 1914 parate buildings designed and con dom. This brings about some of the certain telephone rates have been structed for the purpose. most gripping situations ever re­ Men! Scout Shoes W o m en ! advanced, others reduced and still Cost Per Customer. corded by the camera. others have remained unchanged, In either case, additional space Jn the strong supporting cast are See our big and that the average of all changes must be provided for them; prompt, included Reata Hoyt, Follies beau­ $ 1 .6 9 through the 13 years prior to, dur­ complete inter-connection between ty, Barry Norton, a- striking young ing and since the World War, dis­ any two customers of whatever aristocrat from . Agentina, Richard $1.95 Variety closes an advance of 19 per cent, units must be made possible; In­ Tucker, Gertrude. Short, Rosa. Ru- while, according to figures of the ter-office cables must be installed dami, Lydia Teamans Titus, James ■ 'lO National Industrial Conference to connect the various switchboards Marcus, Thomas-Ricketts. . Moccasin W ork Shoes Board, the cost of living has ad­ tceether; each central office must Tomorow and Saturday, the State School Tools vanced in the same period about 65 be equipped but also with a supple­ management hfferS': the regular JJskide Soles W om en! per cent. mentary board where calls from double-feature, the main attraction For Kiddies during our oepn- By resolving each of these ad­ the other offices ar3 received, and of which will, be Jackie Coogan’s Newest and finets styles at vances into the relative worth of completed; and additional opera­ appearance in his first nearly $ 2 .6 9 P *r ing. A pencil box, pencils, the present dollar as compared with tors must, of course be employed grownrup' picture, “The Bugle pen, eraser and ruler. that of 1914, it becomes evident to handle these trunked calls. These Call.” It Is perhaps best described that the present dollar will buy 84 requirements have even, a' more as a poignant human-interest story $ 2 .9 5 cents’ worth' of telephone service marked effect upon the cost of cen­ of the days just before the Civil All style heels but only 61 cents’ worth of those tral office equipment per customer War told against a background of Mon! Dross Shoes and things which comprise the cost of than has the expansion of a; single battles between the cavalrymen and living. switchboard, yet they are absolutely the fed men. Jackie plays the part Lower In Reality es^ntial to the provision for com­ of a bugler who harbors a deep Oxfords $2.95; F o r W o m e n Stated in another way, the rates plete Interconnection which the devotion to the memory of his dead for telephone service, measured in customer fairly expects. mother. His father remarries and All leather.. .Black and brown. (. terms of wages or of prices of ma “While much of detailed expla commands |him to address his sec­ A pair of Silk Stockings terlals of the cost of living, are nation could, be added, we believe ond wife as, “other.” The ensuing with every pair of $3.95 that enough has been stated to de­ conflict which ends in the boy’s actually lower today than in 1914. monstrate that the telephone busi­ capitulation,"is unusually dramatic. Shoes or better. Opening day ' \ These facts, Mr. Moran states, ness differs from general business The other feature will be Delores only. prove that the conduct of the busi- in the ecohorhic relation 'between Costello in “A Million Bid.” Mon! Felt Honso / ness has,been economically progres­ expansion and financial results un­ sive and that no undue margin of f der constant prices; or, in other profit has been sought. words, that the-telephone business obtained at current prices. Public Slippers $9® Referring to the increased value is unique because the addition of recognition of the increasing, value of telephone service to the sub each new customer builds up the of telephone service is responsible scribers, Mr. Morfn says that even multiplicity ot- .connections that- for the, great growth of. the busi­ after the proposed rates are in ef­ must be available to all, and thus ness. To meet this demand we must fect the charges for service will dif­ tends to increase the cost of plant construct more -and more telephone fer but very little froci. those of 25 and operation per telephone. plant, for which new capital is Mon! Gonnino Calf- years ago. However, in 1902 there “This adverse tendency, however constantly required. Capital in turn were only 20,700 telephones in Con does not necessarily, imply that re must be secured from the invest­ skin Oxfords ond X necticut while today the company peated rate advances will be. re­ ing public. In return for this capi­ Men! Rubbers, Boots furnishes service to 280,000 tele quired through the indefinite tal, investor^ are entitled to lair phones in the same area, and pat­ future. In considerable measure we wages in the form bf interest and High Shoes $5.85 pr* High Cut Shoes at rons in 1^02 and now will, perhaps, have been able to offset this ten dividends. To pay fair wages for capital we must have adequate Sold the world over at $5.00 pr. Our open­ best appreciate the enhanced value dency. by developments in the art earnings. We cannol have adequate Great Savings of the service that is unreflected in and by improved methods and earnings without adequate rates for ing price ' ’ the rates. practices In the conduct of the bust service. Therefore, we must ask -Of the financial results of the ness. In fact, for many years prior the public to pay rates for service business. President Moran states to the World War we'were able to which will enable us' to earn a rea­ W om en! that for many years the accounts of do even more, and our rate history sonable return upon our property. One Big Lot of Big lot of OXFORDS and* PUMPS the company have been kept accord­ of those years is one of voluntary The reclassification of exchanges f ing to a method prescribed b / the reductions. The present exigency for rate purposes, with, an increased Interstate Commerce Commission results not alone from the tenden rate in certain of these exchanges, and show that for no year during cy inherent in the business hut in stands as the fairest and most logi­ Endicott-Johnson $ 1 . 0 0 p r - the period of the Commission’s ac­ large part from another factor cal resource for the additional re­ make. $3.50 values counting regulation have the net which is discussed under the fol venue required at this time. earnings been as high as 6.5 per lowing caption.” / Low Early Cost. Bates Mast Increase. cent upon the actual investment in “We have only to add that no W o m en ! '/ plant, and under the company’s Here Mr. Moran tells of the ef­ 1 ultimate good can come from rates $ 2 .4 5 pv* general forecast, for the next five fect of inceasing costs and says that are unfairly high or unfairly Arch Fitting Shoes for style, comfort and wear years net earnings on the actual that for 35 years up to the World low. In the changes that' we are at plant Investment will continue to War the company had installed its about to make, we seek nothing be­ \ average less than six per cent, even equipment at the relatively low yond a proper balance of rates be­ after the new rates are effective. costs prevailin,g luring that period. tween exchanges of varying size, Misses’ and• • • Children’s ! j '' At the close of 1916, he says, the and an aggregate revenue suffici­ Boys^ School Shoes 44 Years Old plant investment was $121.65 per PATENT PUMPS AND OXFORD TIES $ 3 .9 5 P*f* Since 1882 the company has con­ ent to maintain the modest margin High or low a rare combination tinuously operated the telephone telephone. Since hat time the high­ of the past few years, with such 1 er post war prices have prevailed freedom of action as will enable us service-for Connecticutof and during installed and for the , Hose Free Friday that long period of 44 years It hasfthe old plant worn to go forward with projects and $ 1 .9 5 P>p* accumulated a surplus of $2,000,- developments that will bring the Worth $3.00 , , ; out and removed. best and'the most of telephone ser­ $ 1 .9 5 P'« 155, an average of only $45,458 a As a result the plant investment year. was $167.6J per telephone at in'? vice value-”/ In terms of property investment, close of 1926 and. according tq the Children’s High Shoos Mr. Moran points out, the company company’s five year, forecast will is a $50,000,000 enterprise doing an approximate $203 per telephone in Infants’ Shoes and Women! House annual business of $14,000,000. Yet 1931. VIOLIN INSTRUCTION * V ' • Tan and patent, all sizes, $3.00 values. in no year has it earned In Undivid­ These figures disclose an Increase FOR BEGINNERS ed Profits an amount exceeding of 37.8 per cent, in plant invest­ Outfit Free ’ Slippers 49^ P^* $410,000 and its annual return to Pumps 79« pv> \ ment per telephone • between J916 WILLIAM TURKINGTON .! .t ' X $ 1 .9 5 P ^ stockholders has averaged almost and 1927 while the increase in tele­ ■ at ■ ' Of real quality. $1.00 value exactly six per cent. ' phone rates during the same period $1.50 value These facts. President Moran average only 19.3 per cent. Kemp’s Music House says, answers the possible and na­ Mr. Moran recalls, in his state­ tural question as to whether the ment, that 12 years ago a budget These Same Values Can Be Duplicated at The SELF SERVICE SHOE STORES, 1013 Main Street To Celebrate earnings reflect unfair rates. ! of $?,000,000 for gross plant ad­ President Moran deals fully with ditions was regarded as a substan­ the Opening Of Our New Branch ______. .> the fundamentals underlying the tial expansion program for one year FREE! proposed rate changes and ex­ and he adds that for the past five presses the hope that with know­ years -the, average outlay for plant ledge of the facts the public will additions "slightly exceeded $5,000,- ' We Have Added New accept the company’s action as es­ 000. During the next five years the- This We Have Added New 'I sential to the integrity and sound­ company believes it . will . be re­ ness of tke business and to the per­ quired to provide plant for an ex­ o f formance of its recognized obliga­ pected gain of 85,000 telephones Lines of Quality Shoes Lines Quality Shoes tion to the public. He said: and to carry out the program will Im p ro v e d WlttXMT.0Fr.T«p.ca “Our business is being conducted cost about $42,600,000. This figure, today at an actual though small representing an anticipated en­ margin above requirements for ex­ largement of plant, nearly equals SHOES FOR WOMEN; LEADING STYLES penses, taxes interest and divi­ the present plant investment after Fire Shovel AT MONEY SAVING PRIGES Every Pair dends. Moreover, the number of forty-four years of operation. EMERSON ipstomers grows larger each year. Must Expand. Of Our Shoes The natural question, therefore, is: After calling attention to the fact witli' every order i "7 / SHOES FOR ] Are Guaranteed If the Telephone Company is now that the provision of facilities for of one ton or more MEN earning even a slight margin of expanding and improving telephone No Matter jroflt per customer, why does not service is constantly going forward of-our this growth tend toward a larger In every direction, Mr. Moran says; KUMFORT How Little aggregate margin instead of intro- "•All this is as it should be: yet ARCH SHOES ' You Pay lucing a financial problem?” it is significant not only of the G o o d C o a l Value to User. greater public acceptance of and FOR MEN In answering this question Mr. dependence upon the telephone as Moran first points out that tele­ a vitally essential utility, but also phone service is the only utility of the responsibility which attaches Let us have your Winter coal hi \ ar commodity in the world which to us to plan and build according­ V depends for its value to the; user ly. Our desire and obligation to order now and be prepared for ipon the extent to which it Is pur- keep all rates as low as sound busi­ ihased by others. A single tele­ ness prudence will permit cannot be cold weather. phone is of no value in itself, and divorced from the primary obliga­ las a minimum value when it can tion to provide ample facilities and \' je connected with only one other adequate service.” G. E. WUlis & Son lelephone. This value increases as Summarizing his statement 885 mW " STREET ‘.onnections to other telephones are President Moran says: 1013 MAINSTREET and hade possible. The customer, seek- “There is no magical resource in In c . hg full value of his telephone, ex- the conduct of the telephone busi^ lecU a connection between his own ness. Labor and matoriol* muat h« 2 Main SU’ Phone 50

\ V MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, 'iAGE EIGHT

THESCOREBOfltD Nearly 1,000 Persons Attend YESTERDAY’S RESULTS Eastern League HE FOUGHT BEFORE TUNNEY Albany 3, Hartford 2 (15). IN 2iiiIR0UND,m ; $ | New Haven 2, Bridgeport’! (1st) Track And Field Meet Program New Haven 6, Bridgeport f (2) Springfield 1, Pittsfield 0 (1). Springfield 6, Pittsfield 5 (2), 4 CLUBS ENGAGED Several Hatches Booked fof Farrell Says ^rkey May TODAY IN FISTIANA Providence 4, Waterbury 2. By DOO REID .‘'uaerican League Toni^t and Tomorroif; Athletic Competition Very Results Of Junior And Senior Hit Downgrade From Now New York 1, Boston 3. dof. Washington 5, Philadelphia 3. IN NIP AND TUCK Close; Doable Wins In Events On Track Meet Program SBra. St. Louis J, Detroit l'(l). Threatens Postpone His Andysis. d'BALDWIN vs. WORMALD St. Louis 4, Detroit 3 (2). Fifty-nine years ago today ,Ned Other teams not scheduled. O’Baldwin, a native of Ireland, and National League meat. ^ Volley Ball and Tennis SENIOR EVENTS Lupien and Bill 'Schieldge— won Joe Wormald, a claimant of the En- All RosluDg For the Wire iO-15, 15-8, 16-14 from the West By HENRY I/. FARREIi lish heavyweight title, met in the Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2 (13 The results of the senior events Side— Fritz Wilkinson, Dickie Kerr,, (tTnitcd I'resB Sports Kditor)' ring at Lynnfield, Mass., in a sche­ innings, first game). Help Easterners; Track Pittsburgh 7, Philadelphia 2 (sec­ Almost Abreast In the Big follow: Bobby Metcalf, Bete Hanson, Hel- New York, Sept... 1' (United' duled’fight'to the finish under Lon­ With several title tennis matches 100-yard dash (first heat): Red mer Gustafson and Clarence Gus­ Press).— ^Wlth the’,notable excep­ don prize.'ring rules for $2,000 a ond game) on deck for tonight, rain was Events Go to West Side Sheridan W, Ernie Dowd, W, (sec­ tafson, The East Side Girls— Kath­ tion of Gene Tunney, the records side and winner take all of a sma^l Cincinnati 1, Boston 0. League Race. ) threatening again early today to. ond heat) Jack McCavanaugh, E, erine Giblin, Leo Gryk, Elizabeth will show, not one fighter amounted purse. St. Louis 3, Brooklyn 1. postpone them. / So far only one Bob Dougan, W. Washkiewich, Leo Giglio, Grace to much after he had» met Jack The men fought desperately fox Other teams not scheduled. match had been reported played in 34-16; Affair Complete Broad jump: Won by Red Sheri­ Giglio, Esther Carini and Stella Dempsey. one round lasting 15 minutes with the second rounds of either the Qryk— won from the West Side— dan, W., 18 feet, 8 1-2 inches, sec­ Tunney Is the notable exception O’Baldwin getting the worst of it, I THE STANDINGS By DAVIS J. WALSH men’s or the girl’s tourniaments. ond, Harry Bellamy, W, 18 feet, Eleanor Runde, M. Modin, A. Mo- because he whipped the killer and when the police broke into the ring W. L. PC. I. if. S. Sports Editor In that match, “ Car*” Bissell elirnl- Success. dine, E. Lithiusky, H. Dahlman, E. the killer didn’t land any of ,the nated "Hank” McCann, 6-1, 3-6, 6 inches ‘third, “ Tubbie” Johnson, with the intention of arresting the Albany ...... 74 59 .584 ,New York. Sept. 1.:—One of those 18 feet and one half an inch. Johnson and M. Donnelly. The punches that had brought to a close principals. "Wormald escaped, but Springfield ...... 71 60 .641 6- 2. scores were 15-12, 9-15, 15-4. the career of so many others. unsung geniuses who persist In This is the second time Bissell Half-Mile: Ted Chambers, E, O’Baldwin was captured and sen­ Pittsfield ...... 69 60 .534 ruining a perfectly good dime by first, Jim Crow, W, second, Jim Junior Events. Jess Willard nevp amounted to tenced to 18 months in jail for dis­ has been forced to-e^ert himself to POINT STANDING Bridgeport ...... 67 63 515 vritlng Lincoln’s Gettysburg Ad­ Quish, third. Following are the results of the much after he w as' butchered by turbing the peace. Hartford ...... 63 63 .500 - win. His young brother, Earle, gave West East 100 yard dash (finals) Red Junio revents: Dempsey and it may be tha,l 1^ Wormald then went to Canada dress across Its face should be call­ him a rugged tussle in- the first Event New Haven .... .64 65 .496 ed In to tell the story of the Na­ Junior ...... ___ 63 ' 57 Sheridan, W, first, Ernie Dowd, W, 1-5 Mile Relay (10-13) won by wasn’t much before that: where in 1871 he died of dissipa­ round only to Ipse 8-6 and 6-4. The the West Side. 1-5 Mile Relay (13- Waterbury .60 69 .466 tional League race today. Pitts­ Bissell-McCann match went 1.8 Volley ball . . . ___ 0 30 second and Bon Dougan, W, third. Fred Fulton was positively ruin­ tion, while O’Baldwin, who sur­ Providence ...... 51 80 .390 ___ 10 0 Mile run: Joe McCluskey, E, 16) won by the We^; Side. ed by Dempsey and it may^ be, in vived him by four years, was shot burgh only one game behind Chica­ games, the majority tp^deuce. It re­ \ Quoits ...... 1-5 Mile Race (10-13) H. Ben­ American League go; St. Louis only ono same behind \ Mile relay . .. • 0 first, John McCluskey, E, second the same way that he was terrible and killed by his pal, Micky Fin- quired two hours and a half'to play o son, W, first, M. Brozowski, E, W. L. PC. Pittsburgh and New York only a the match. Bissell’s. next opponent High jump . .. ___ 7 and Runde, W, third. before Dempsey knocked him silly nell. . New York ...... 89 37 High Jump; Harry Bellamy, W, second, E. Solomson, W, third. (13- .706 half game behind St. Louis. wdll be the winner of the Ty Hol- Mile run ...... 1 8 with one punch. Philadelphia .. .72 54 .571 0 first, 5 feet, four inches. Jack Mc- 16) H. Goodstein E> first, D. Mc- Billy Miske was started to his In other words, you pay your land-Walter Dunn match which will 100-yard dash ___ 0 Conkey, W, second, J. O’Leary, E, Detroit ...... 68 57 .544 money and take your choice and ___ 3 6 Cavapaugh, E, and James McCaw, grave by the beating he took from be played tonight, weather permit­ Half mile . .. . third. Washington .... .67 57 .540 mine, like that of the old-time po­ ting. , ' . Broad jump . . ___ 9 0 W, tied for second place at 5 foot, Dempsey but it is one of the trage­ three inches. 50 Yard Dash (10-13) E. Solom­ Chicago ...... 59 64 .480 litical writer on the non-partisan Several other matches are sche­ son, W. first, McCormick, E, sec­ dies of the game that Miske was .55 70 .440 Mile Relay: Won by West Side dying when he fought the killer and Cleveland ...... paper, is that there is much to be duled for tonight and , tomorrow Totals ...... ___ 107 93 ond, Delaferro, E, third. St. L o u is ...... 50 75 .400- said on both sides, and, in fact, all night. The tournaments will be ooh- with Bennie Schubert, Bobbie Dou­ made the sacrifice of his life to get gan, Ernie Dowd, Red Sheridan 75 Yard Dash (13-16) D. Mc- Boston ...... 39 85 .315 sides. cluded next week-Saturday whlph Conkey, W, first, J. O’Leary, E, the purse money for his fight. Four clubs rushing for the wire means some of the survlvoxs of the and -Jack Stratton running in that George Carpentier was so soften­ National Leapne To the victor goes the spoils. order ajgainst an East Side team second, Aitken, W, third. W. L. PC. almost abreast and September, that second round will have to play tw# Running Broad Jump (10-16) H. ed up byithe hammering he deceiv­ old do or die month of all baseball or three times next week. And so it was last night when composed of Harry Bellamy, Jack ed from the champion at the time Chicago ...... 73 50 .594 McCavanaugh, Ted Chambers, Stan­ Goodstein E, first, McConkey, W, Pittsburgh ...... 71 50 .587 races, beginning today. There is the West Side outscdred the East second. Marrow, E, third. ' that he turned into one of the easy JOM WIUJAM* really no choice but the right one, & ley Bray and Bill Shields. marks of the ring, falling before St. Louis .69 50 .580 Side by fourteen points in the all­ Horseshoe-pitching: Won by Running High Jump (13-16) which can be selected with great day track and field meet which the clown Siki. Gibbons and Tun­ New Y o r k ...... 70 52 .574 WAS BIG SURPRISE West Side. Bill Leggett and Jim Coles, W, first, McConkey, W, sec­ That Illinois woman who thre-w 66 .455 accuracy after It is all over. came to a close just before dark­ ond, Phelps, E, third (10-13) S. ney. Cincinnati ...... 55 Thompson of the West Side de­ six consecutive double ringers at Brooklyn ...... 53 70 .431 Favors Pittsburgh ness last night. The official score Vennart, W, first, E. Murphy, E, Tom Gibbons went the limit with At the same time, it places an un­ Failure of Watts Gunn to qualify feated Oakes and Francis’ of the Boston ...... 51 69 .425 in the national amatenr meet was a was 107 to 93. An idea of how East Side by the following scores: second, Johnson, E, third. Dempsey in Shelby but he took a usual burden on the already over­ terrible trimming. One punch on Philadelphia . . . . .45 80 .360 big surprise to the golfing ■world. close the competition really was is 21-12, 21-20 and 21-15. am Nel­ Baseball Throw (10-13) B. Eag- 4 burdened Chicago Cubs and fn a gleaned from the fact that had the leson W, first, T. Cole, W, second, the terhple made his head so sore son and Bill Furphy of the West GAAIES TODAY slightly lesser sense upon the St. East Side been able to win any one ide beat Mike Suhie and Lawrence G Fraser, W, third. (13-16) ,W. that he couldn’t wear a hat for Louis Cardinals. The Giants, tour­ TO ENTER CX>LLEGB Eastern League of the events chalked up on the Tomm of the East Side, 21-13, 21- Aitken. W, first, J. O’Leary,' E, days. ing the hostile west, between Sep­ West Side’s half of the ledger, the 3 and 21-17. In the playoff for the second, J. Marrow, E, third. (10- Up to the time that he met Gene Albany at Hartford. tember 9 and 24 inclusive, are not Eugene Homans, who was among outcome would have been just the playground championship Leggett 16) J. O’Leary, E, first, A. Krause, Tunney, Gibbons never had been Springfield at New Tlaven. facing any easy cinch, as the fellow the leaders in qualifying this year opposite. and Thompson beat Nelson and W, second, R. Hadden, W, third. knocked down but he was knocked Waterbury at Pro'vidence. said. ‘ at Minikahda, will be a college Close to a thousand persons Furphy 21-8 and 21-iO. ■. Tennis: Singles Csirls) K. Giblin, out by Tunney. It wasn’t the punch­ Bridgeport at Pittsfield. But the Cubs must take the real freshman next fall. watched the athletic contests and Volley ball: The East Side'won E “ ^ - es of Tunney that caused his defeat American League slap within the next fifteen days. Tennis doubles (girls) K. Giblin, that sweltering night, it was the horseshoes has a slim chance of enjoyed the splendid two-hour con­ in both the boy’s and the girl’s getting married now— with an aim Boston at New York. That Is, they must take it or leave E, E. Washk^iewich, E. failure of his own structure to hold Washington at Philadelphia. cert which the popular Bristol New matches. The East Side boys like THAT. it and, if it is the latter, the stuff Departure Band offered. Judging Freddie Phaenuf, George Gibbons, Grand total: West Side 107 up. Cleveland at Chicago. will be off like a hat in churcl^ IS VETERAN OF G.UUE from the repeated bursts of ap­ Joe Mahoney, Tom Morgan, U. J. points. East Side 93 points. Tunney has always held it Detroit at St. Louis. Having played .333 baseball “ GIRL HELD FOR RUNNING Harry Legg, who eliminated plause, the efforts of the musicians against the writer that after the be National League through the east and having just Gibbons and Dempsey fights we STILL.” What'a relief it will George Yon Elm In the ’ national were greatly appreciated. The New when she finishes. Brooklyn at Boston. dropped three straight ball games Departure Band is one of the fore­ went to greater lengths to explain Chicago at Pittsburgh. to the Giants the Cubs now will be amateur race, won the trans-MlssIs- most in New England and would why they had lost than to tell why Others not scheduled. asked to do the following; ' sippi championship as far back as he had won. But that is neither Oh, well; there’s one thing. The 1909. ‘ be difficult to prove otherwise by Jack Dwyer To Coach U. S. polo team certainly extends What TTiey Must Do their performance here. here nor there. Play the Pirates In Pittsburgh The competition between the All of this leads up to a question We know a good poker player today; play three games this week E ^ t Side and West Side was both of what effect the terrible body who figures he’d make a great golf­ with the Cardinals in Chicago; play the Cards will draw funny-pictures close and interesting. At the con­ beating he took from Dempsey will er because, he figures, he ought to three more with the Cardinals in on the wall if It doesn’t all stop Cubs Football Eleven have upon the future of young Jack be a knockout at chip shots. soon. . ■ . clusion of the Junior events which St. Louis and then take on the were held in the afternoon, the Sharkey, one of the best prospects j Giants for a big series in Chicago. Having virtually broken even on West Side had a six; point lead, in the .heavyweight class, despite j Announcement that there are 3,- The Cubs and Cards, in brief, are their season series to date, it may 63-57. In the evening the West LOCAL BOYS WNNERS the fact that he was knocked out by I 000 languages will chirk up those hooked up, in at least six games in be that neither.'the'^.eubs nor the Siders added eight more points to Red Yendrillo Named Man­ Dempsey. O j sports writers who have run out of the next eight days and must meet Cards wlll.lose by these games. Un­ this lead and the only thing which If Sharkey hasn’t been- crushed I vegetables they use Instead of at least eight more times before the fortunately, this is not the time inside and softened-by the terrific j “ baseball.” •when a team can, afford to stand saved the East Side from a much IN YELODROME BOUTS no Guests privileges. end of the season. There, naturally, worse beating was the double vic­ ager; Predict Strongest lacing he took in the stomach— is not a burst of wild acclaim still. For w'hile they are locked In even before that questioned punch DOGS ARE HIS HOBBY tory which it scored in senior vol­ The new Welch town of “ Llan- emanating from St. Louis over this their o'wh embrace, the Pirates wjll ley ball and junior tennis, netting (By Staff Correspondent) that finished hini— he ought to go fact, either, but then the Cards be playing;- Cincinnati and the Team Ever, Both Men fairpwyllcylantsillohogh” must be Jack Dunn, Baltimore manager, 40 points. The score for the senior Now that Rockville is a member on- will draw something of a breather Giants will be dallying with the Manchester’s . sporting family Sharkey is not of the sensitive where, the Giants get all their un­ is one of the nation’s greatest Phillies and BravPb. track and field events alone stood of pronounceable rookies. before their New York series while 34-16 in favor of the West Side. WeU Qualified. there is reason for a double rejoic­ type who would be ruined mentally breeders of setters. The outstanding athletes in the ing among the local tight.fans be­ by the humiliation of a: knockout. senior were Red Sheridan, Joe Mc- cause two of our boxers came out He has enough ego to believe that Cluskey and Harry,Bellamy. Others victorious last evening at the Velo­ he could come back and beat Demp­ who did well were Ted Chambers, It surely looks as if the boys drome. A1 Satrab, sho'A ing remark sey and, he also had'the consolation Bobby Dougan, Jack McCava- mean business this year. Last sea­ able improvement over the form he of a personal opinion that he was" Horn to Start Labor Day Wrong By BRIGGS naugh, Jimmy Grow, Tubby John­ son Manchester fans were cheated displayed at Cheney "nail this win fouled. ^ -ut son, Bill Shields, Lefty -Bray, Jack out of the annual town champion­ ter, gave a splendid exhibition Sharkey was a darn good fighter Stratton. The volley ball and horse­ ship football classic through the against Charlie Ev'ans, of.;Colches- before he met Dempsey and he should be a better lighter now if -A nd You HAVE’ A 3LOW/OUT shoe pitching matches were hotly failure of the two competing teams ter. Evans had the longer reach but 'iO O yP AT 4* A.M. 3ATORLAT •A nd Th e r e ’S n o c r e a n \ fo r the Rockville boy by boring, in, beat he hasn’t been broken up by the contested. The East Side won the to come to U.ims. However, if pres­ mornj>''1G vwiTH Three g l o r io u s VooR Co f f e e B e c a u s e t h s BeFoRE-You've.G o n e a .miub down his defense and at the end punishment. Unless he has an un­ . girls’ anfT men’s^volley ball match­ ent plans are carried out, 1927 will v a c a t «om days a m e ao o p you MlLKMAhi JJOESisl’T .. c o m e ' es, but the West Side, was better at be vice versa. had his opponent on the verge of a conquerable ego the lessons he. knockout. It was Satrab’s from bell learned in the Dempsey fight »SO E A R L Y CHa n G in) TIhiS quoits. Incidentally the West Side All of which is to say that the Tl C TSLU T h e WO'RU'p challenges the East Side to another to bell. should have learned was that he iS T ir e w i l l g i u s Cubs football eleven of the South r/A 51TTIMG OM To p M e vJu,ST T H e , men’s volley ball- match to be held End has organized fo- the season A1 Dowd, of this town gave Pete not the only young man in the bus­ SLACK coPPEE »s This Roberts a boxing lesson, to- use the iness who knows how to fight. He O t= IT Fin e s t Th im c /n T h s e x E R C i s e Saturday afternoon on either with a new and comiio.tent set of 1 MEETD team’s court. “ bosses” that should carry them bromide. Pete made funny faces should have been taught at a great W o r L'D ftoR SREAKPAST Taken as a whole, the affair forward to their greatest season. and jumped around and tried to cost that skilled trainers and a went off splendidly. This was due Already they’re talking about scalp­ slug and changed paces and did all smart manager deservo attention in' no small way to indefatigable ing the Cloverleaves. Announce­ sorts of weird things in the ring. and that two or more heads are efforts of Miss Ruth C. Calhoun, ment was made yesterday that Jack. Dowd, cool an^d methodical, chang­ sometimes better than one and are assistant director of the Recreation Dwyer, former 'hports editor on The ed paces with him. When he boxed always better than one when that Centers and the four playground Herald, had been Secured to coach the local boy outboxed the Hartford . one is..,dazed and dizzy ,from a instructors. Miss Dorothy Hardy, the team and that energetic Peter lad and when Pete assayed to slug punch. Miss Mary Drew, James ,;Dqwd and Yendrillo has been named manager. he found that Dowd could slug with Sharkey has natural tools, which the roughest of them. The Man­ if used in accordance with instruc­ Thomas Pickett. They spent many ' The mere fact that Dwyer is go­ f-ff. .T long hours Of ..bard work getting ing to coach the team,; alone asstfres chester lad got a good hand when tions, might have won his fight everything in readiness. That their South" Endefs that they will he was announced the winner. with Dempsey or at least might efforts, not only of this affair, but resented by a first-class , grid A summary of tlie other bouts have given him a more graceful all season have not been in vain, is chine. What Dwyer d ^ k 't know,;: follow : exit from the ring. He is a beauti­ shown by the marked increase in about footbal^ Isnlj^ori^ learitln^.T The Summary ful boxer and Instead of trying to attendance at botk/ playgrounds He knows' tite . g a ^ fr’em have it. ter; 120 pound class, Adolf D’Ono- The young Boston heavyweight when mothers had! to,...urge theii* North many years ago, Since,.,I^t ’ a n d 3 0 T M C . . frio, Hartford, won a three round should have learned also ■ that he - ANO Th s n Y o u D i AC ov/ e r TfauVE children to go to the playgrounds, time, however, difficulties have -AMD A SPEED COP >SLlPA YoU U T T 6 R L V • R O fN «:t> but now it’s a case of “ keep supper decision ovfer “ Sport” Moylan, Hart­ hasn’t enough of a punch to bring LEFT hbOR OLD GOUOS AT arisen, and Dwyer has come over A TIC K ET VJHEs* YoU vJOST- HOME AMD THERE’S . NOT A waiting.’’ to the South End. In that section of ford; 122 pound class, Johnny Mas- down a rugged fighter like Demp­ G e t Goinxg acsainj. r-'CAN'T Yoo Ketap Hundreds of persons passed the town, he has also demonstrated tro, Hartford, won a three round sey or Paulino or a clever boxer CIGAR ^TORg o p e n ! (t h o s e K id s through the interior of the West his ability as a grid mentor by pi­ decision over Steve Polanski, Col­ like Tunney or*. Delaney. He punch­ Pix This OP .With UosCE' I Th s p e <5y i s - r f Side Rec last night after the ath­ chester; 126 pound class, Al Dowd, ed himself out on Dempsey In the RUSSELL WHSW I Ge t b a c k - loting the Pirates to the town 'LL Be a CIHCH- He l Un/a letic engagements to view the championship two or three years in South Manchester, won a three first round and all he saw was splendid exhibition of sloyd work succession." round decision over' Pete Roberts, Dempsey’s , knees shaking and made by children in Henry H. Mil­ Officials of the Cubs organization Hartford; 148 poun(j class, Harry Dempsey tearing back at him on ler’s classes. Many of the visitors feel that Dwyer will build/up the Seeche, Hartford, won a three his wobbly pins. were amazed at the exceptional most powerful machine the club round decision over Paul Terzo, Another lesson to be learned was skill of the youths. There were has ever known; one that will not Hartford; 138 pound class, Charlie that he needs footwork. He acted chairs, tables; chests, lamp stands even stop short of taking the meas­ Romano, Hartford, knocked out Ylc like he had glue on his shoes in the and many other handsome articles, ure of the Cloverleaves, He will Cotnor, Holyoke, in the first round Dempsey fight. He didn’t know how too numerous to mention. Among have a lusty and husky squad of 135 pound class, Gerald Emard, to back-step or side-step away from the work that stood out was a candidates to make his selections Holyoke, won a three round deci­ the Dempsey rushes and had to cedar chest made by George Bant- from. Anyone in town is eligible to sion over Barney Youseman, Hart­ stand there and take them. ly, a writing desk, chair, floor lamp, tryout. Positively no favoritism ford: 145 pound class, Ylc Morley, William Muldoon, senior member hall tree and hall table made by will be shown. Everyone will get a Hartford, won a three round deci­ of the boxing commission, told him the Dotchin brothers, Leslie and square shake. A practice session sion over Fritz Adamson, Ne'W he was making a mistake by not Raymond. will be held tonight at the Charter Haven; 118 pound class, Mickey paying attention to footwork when Just before the band concert Oak street field at 7 o’clock. The Roberts, Hartford, won on a techni­ he was training for Dempsey. Mul- program. Miss Dorothy Hardy’s team will open Its season early in cal knockout ovqr Buster NadelEUiv "ioon told him to get some fast lit­ dancing classes favored with “ The September with a game in New )^ ^ ok e; 167 pound class, Hddie tle fellows to 'work with, but Shar­ Sailor’s Hornpipe,” “ Highland Britain or against the Hartford Prevost, Holyoke, won' a three key ignored the advice— and suf- Schpttishe” and “ French Minu- Rambler^Tigers here. round decision over Joe Howard, ‘ fered for it. ette.” These numbers went off In naming Red Yendrillo mana­ Hartford. If he has not been badly injured fine and the crowd gave the little ger,- the Cubs also made another Sharkey ought to go on and he is girls a hearty applause. Among wise move. Yendrillo Is well versed matter, so fe Manager Bill Griffin •in a good spoti,to get to his goal. those who took part were Olive in the managerial work and he has of thp'Cloverleaves, ' so it surely Regardless ol the winner of the Catana, Gertrude Bensche, Ter- had a world of experience. Al­ looks as if the boys mean business Dempsey-Tunney fight someone will ese McConville, Mildred Smith, though hitherto, his efforts have ■this time. ' ' have to be found to meet'the cham­ Josie Smith, Elena Keeney, Ruth been confined to baseball, Yendril­ Manager Yendrillo in making the pion next yealr'and "Sharkey has’ a Wickham, Ruth Runde, Eleanor lo is expected to prove just as ef­ announcement that he had been chance to" fight himself back into Breen, Nadine Sullivan, , Tessie ficient In the rough and tumble named manager and Dwyer coach, 'first place among the challengers— ld If Dempsey hasn’t ruined hi?n. i O Sapienza, Virginia Landry and sport. And what’s more. Manager informed the writer that he stood The Smoother and better Cigarette Mary Culotta, It might also be Yendrillo is entirely, in accord with willing to meet Manager Griffin Im- mentioned that “ Dodger” Dowd’s the suggestion in The Herald r;e- -m ediately to make tentatl've pi an's tumbling class did well. They were cently that the managers of both" for the title classic. He said the HHLD TITLE FOUR TIMES Clarence Dowd, James Eagan, the (3ubs and the Cloverleaves get Cubs stood willing, to accept the Francis Della Ferra and Shorty together, before the season starts suggestion that the game be played Harry Lesg won the trans-Missis­ . not a cough in a carload e 1927, r. LodUwd Co., Bin nw Delluco. Also George Olds an- and make arrangements for the at Hickey’s Grove on a 60-35 per- sippi championship four times in flouncjng...... , , . town ohamnionahiD battle. For that _centaEe split ^Ith neutral officials. succession, bexinninj; In 1909«

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■-t- -‘ ..'-s.'l’ , / _ __ MANCIffESTER (CONNO KTOOTG HERALD^ THtmSDA*?, h m ^ . * . . ___ * .« T" -

V. Additional Si^rts wtishowmuchyualky yoii^g^ tiial pfice you p^y that counts^ . . andiiot the discount you hope to get. i . .. . •■■ - ■ V. ^ -J} ; Natiraal League American League ^ ^/VVby di(i peoplecome to Garber Brothers iivgreater ni^bers At Philiidelphlai— At St. LouU*-— „ „ PIR A T E S 3, 7s PH ILLIES 3, S BROWNS 8, 4, TIGERS 1, 3 durixig August, the iponth of “sales” eve^where exccpt,at Gar­ (First Game) (First Game) PITTSBURGH ST. LOUIS ber brothers? { , ; . ^ AB. R. H. PO. A. E. A3". R. H. PO. A. E There is uo hidden reasoiivWHir^ It simply dsCaseiof com­ L. W aner, c f ...... 6 0 1 1 0 0 O’Rourke, 3b ...... 3 0 0 1 1 C Barnhart, Tf ...... 6 1 1 AO 0 0 R ice, rf ...... 1 1 i .f S 5 paring and finding out the truth. Thcjreasons are quite obvious. P. W aner, r f ...... 5 0 0 2 0 0 Slsler, lb ...... 4 1 2 11 0 1 Wright, 8S ...... 6 1 2 2 7 0 Williams, If ... ------2 1 1 0 0 ( They are of utmost importance to ev^y person who wants to Traynor, 3b ...... 5 1 3 1 2 0 E. Miller, cf ...... 4 0 0 3' 0 (irantham, 2b ...... 4 0 0 3 4 0 Schang, c ...... 4 0 1 5 1 buy furniture. ' > 5\ / ■ Harris, lb ...... 5 0 0 14 2 0 Mellllo, 2b ...... 3 0 2 2 5 Manufacturers of living room suites . . . . selling theni. di­ Gooch, 0 .J...... 6 0 0 5 0 0 Gerber, ss 2 0 0 1 3 0 Aldridge, p ...... 4 0 1 1 0 0 Jones, p ...... 2 0 0 1 ^ ^ rect to the public from the sariie factory building .... on one CvengroB, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 H ill, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 28 8 7 27 13 1 DETROIT profit plan. > , 47 3 8 39. 15 0 AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Selling dining and bedrqpm, suites and air other furniture PHILADELPHIA Warner. 3b ...... 4 0 1 1 5 0 AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Manusli. cf ...... 4 0 0 0 0 0 from the same factory building .... a big saving on overhead Spalding, If ...... 6 0 1 6 0 Fotherglll, I f ...... 5 0 1 2 0 0 Sand, 8S, 3 b ...... 5 0 2 6 4 Hellmann, rf ...... 4 1 3 0 0 0 expense. Williams, rf ...... 4 0 0 4 0 McManus, ss ...... 4 0 l 1 1 o Building is unasaiming .... the, cost of uimec- Wrlghtstone, lb, 2b 4 1 2 12 1 Gehrlnger, 2b ...... 4 0 2 3 5 1 plain and Leach, c f ...... 4 1 0 5 0 Blue, lb ...... 3 0 0 13 0 0 essary frills is eliminated. W ilson, c ...... 4 0 1 0 0 W oodall, 0 ...... 3 0 0 4 3 0 Thompson, 2b ...... 5 0 1 3 3 Stoner, p ^ ...... 2 0 0 0 1 0 Lrocated just one block from Main Street .. . . . yet far, Attreau, lb ...... 1 0 0 0 0 Smith, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Frlberg, 3b ...... 3 0 0 2 1 Whltehlll, P ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 enough from the beaten path to make a drastic cut in overhead ^ Scott, z ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Nixon, zzz ...... 0 0 0 0 0 Bas8?er, xx ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 expense. . ' Cooney, as ...... 2 0 0 0 ^ 84 1 8 24 15 1 U lrich, p ...... 5 0 0 1 8 All these reasons combined form the one big reason why M okan, zz ...... 1 0 0 0 0 St L ouis ...... 300 000 OOx— 3 D e t filt ...... ilOl 000 0 0 0 -1 Garber Brothers CAN and DO sell fot less. 44 1 2 ~7 7 8939 12li 1 Two base hits, Warner, Rice, Mc- Also Garber Brothers, instead of selling at high prices dur­ Pittsburgh ___ 020 0001 000000.1 000900 01—01- 3 Manus, H ellm ann; home ^ n . w ii- P hlladelphla . . . 000 000>0 002 ooa 0001 0- 0— 2 llarns; sacrifices, ing eight months of the year and at so-called discoimt reductions _ Two base hits, Wrlghtstone, Thomp- double plays. Stoner toW arn er ,,to e ' son; three base hits, Barnhart; sacri­ Blue, Mellllo to Slsler; left on bases, during the other months .... sell at the lowest possible prices fices, Trayaor, Wilson, Wrlghtstone; Detroit 12, St. Louis 6; bases on balls, left on bases. Pittsburgh 8, Philadel­ off Stoner 2, off Jones 6; struck ouL Every day of the year. Prices based on Economies which you phia 13; base on balls, off Aldridge 4, by Stoner 2, by Jones 4; hHs, oft rilll 2. Ulrich 2; struck out, by Al­ Stoner 6 In 5. Smith none in 2, W h lte­ cannot afford to overlotok. No discounts to confuse and disap­ ai drldge 4, Hill 1; hits, off Aldridge 6 hlll 1 In 1; hit by pitcher, by Smith, In 9 1-3, C vengros 0 in 1-3, H ill 1 In (O’Rourke); by Jones, (W arne^; los­ point you. . T-: J 3 1-3; hit by pitcher, by Aldridge, ing pitcher, Stoner; umpires, Owens, (Williams, Sand); passed ball, Gooch; Van Grafian and* Connally; time, l:o2. And the value-wise people after comparing our Everyday winning pitcher, Hill; umpires, Moran, X__Wingo batte’d for Stoner In 6th. prices with “sale” , prices ..... our standard of quality wrth » O’Day and Reardon; time, 2:84. XX—Bassler batted for Smith in 8th. ** S'—Scott batted for Frlberg li) 9th. (Second Game) “sale” quality, found that they can get better values at Garber zz—Mokan batted for Ulrich in 13th. St Louis ...... 004 000 OOx— 4 zzz— N ixon ran fo r Scott In 9th. Detroit...... 000 000 0 3 0 -3 (Second Game) Brothers. Pittsburgh ...... 100 200 004— 7 At New York>— _ _ « Philadelphia ...... 000 000 020— 2 YANKS 10, RED SGX 3 NEW YORK .. •••..■•. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. At Boston I— Combs, c f ...... 5 1 2 3 0 0 REDS 1, BRAVES 0 Koenig, as ...... 6 2 2 4 2 0 CINCINNATI Ruth, rf ...... 4 3 I 2 0 0 AB. R. H. PO. Gehrig, lb ...... 3 1 1 9 2 0 Dresser, 3b ...... 4 0 1 0 Meusel, If ...... 3 1 1 1 0 0 •;'X- Walker, rf ...... 4 0 2 1 Lazzeri, 2b ...... 5 2 3 1 2 0 Kelly, lb ...... 4 0 0 15 Dugan, 3b ...... 2 0 0 0 1 0 Bressler, If ...... 4 0 0 1 W era, 3b ...... 10 1 1 0 0 Allen, c f ...... 3 0 2 3 Bengough. c ...... 4 0 2 4 1 1 JFord, SB ..,...... 4 0 2 2 Pipgras, p ...... 3 0 0 £ £ e C rlti. 2b ...... 4 0 0 3 Hargrave, c ...... 8 1 1 1 0 ' 35 10 13 27 10 1 Luque, p ,., ...... 2 0 • 0 1 0 ■ -BOSTON — AB. R. H. PO. A. E. 32 1 8 27 0 i Rothrocl;, ss ...... 5 1 2 2 1 1 BOSTON Myer, 3b ...... 4 AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Flagstead, cf ...... 3 0 0 Richbourg, rf ...... 3 Tarbert, -cf ...... 2 0 0 Gautreau, 2b ...... 4 0 Regan, 2b 4 0 0 M oore, 3b ...... 4 0 Tobin, r f .... j.....'. 4 1 2 W elsh, c f ...... 3 0 Shaner, If ...... 3 0 1 Fournier, lb ...... 4 0 Todt, lb ...... 3 0 0 Farrell, ss ...... 4 0 Rollings, l b ...... 1 0 0 All Exceptional Valuel Clark, If ...... 3 0 Hofmann, c ...... 1 0 0 B row n, I f ...... 0 0 M oore, c ...... 2 1 2 Early American— 4 Pieces in Urban, c ...... 2 0 Ruffing, p ...... 1 0 0 i u u 3 Lovely Pieces in Fine Jacquard J. Smith, z ...... 1 0 R ogell, X ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Genuine Imported Mahogany Gibson, c ...... 0 0 W elzer, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Robertson, p ...... 2 0 For appearance, for comfort, for dura­ H igh, zz ...... 35 3 9 24 8 2 bility—this suite at this price represents Cooney, zzZ 000000 New Y o r k ...... 005 400 Olx— 10 Morrlsoii, p 0 0 0 0 1 0 B o s t o n ...... 010 000 002— 3 the unusual. You cannot find its equal ' '■ '-V- Two base hit, Tobin; three base hit, anywhere at the price. Comprises, as 81 0 6 27 17 0 Gehrig; home runs, Rothrock, Ruth, Cincinnati ...... 000 000 010— 1 Lazzeri 2; stolen bases, Koenig, Ruth; sho-wn, a davenport, club chair and Stolen bases, Richbourg; sacrifices, sacrifices. Hofmann, Gehrig, Meusel; wing chair. . , ^ Importeci -Luque, "^elsh; double play, Farrell to left on bases, Boston 9, Netr York 8; the productiem* of tha ikoicfest .patfeliiis of Co Gautreau to Fournier; left on bases, bases on balls, off Pipgras 3, off Ruff­ Other Jacquard Suites As Low As ?95. Cincinnati 7, Boston 6; base on balls, ing 3, off Welzer 1; struck out, by lonial furniture early in the eighteenth cen­ off Luque 1, Robertson 2; struck out, Pipgras 4, by Ruffing 5,‘by Welzer 4; by Luque 1, Robertson 2; hltS, off hits, off Ruffing 8 in 4 innings, off tury. And so the Hooker with its quaint Co- Robertson 6 in 8 innings, Morrison 2 ^ Welzer 5 in 4 innings; hit by pitcher. - lonial -charm, is ' made ^broygk()ut u f genumo in 1; winning pitcher, Luque; losing I by—Ruffing (Dugan"); losing pitcher pitcher, Robertson; umpires, RiSler, | umpires, Dineen and -Nallin; mahogany. Sturdin ess and . simplicity , dia- Jorda-,and-Hart; time,:.l-.28. time, 2:03. , , tinguish this suite, which with its excellent z—J.'Smlth batted for Urban in 8th. X—Rogell batted for Ruffing in 5th. zz—High batted for Robertson In proportions and restrained detail creates-a d?- .... •8th. . At Washington:— cided impression of'dignity and richness. The zzz—Cooney ran for High in 8th. NATS 5. ATH LETICS 3 W a s h i n g t o n color is a medium colonial red which pleasingly AB. R. H. PO. A. E. At Brooklyn:— Rice, rf ...... 4 0 1 1 1 0 emphasizes the beautiful gram of CARDS 3, DODGERS 1 Reeves, ss ...... 2 1 1 6 2 1 The four-poster bed, the ball feet, tlie deta^ecl , ■ ST. LOUIS Speaker, ss ...... 4 1 1 1 0 0 mirror for the dresser, the quaint ^ vanity • - . AB. R. H PO. A. E. /Goslin, If- ...... 4 2 2 4) 0 0 Holm, cf, rf ...... 4 0 2 2 0 0 Judge, lb ...... 4 0 1 9 0 0 dresser, all sound a pleasing note of the eight­ T oporcer, 3b ...... 4 0 1 0 3 0 Bluege, 3b ...... 4 1 2 0 4 1 Frisch, 2b ...... 3 0 0 1 6 0 Harris, 2b ...... 0 0 0 1 0 0 eenth century. A suite of this type will endure Bottomley, lb ...... 4 1 2 IS 0 0 1 Stewart, 2b ...... 2 0 1 3 3 0 in its good taste as long as furniture is used Hafev, rf, if ...... 4 2 2 1 0 0 Ruel, c ...... 3 0 1 7 3 0 Blades, if ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 j Hadl_ey, p ...... 3 0 0 0 0 0 and there is no suggestion of the very low price D. Clarlc, rf ...... 2 0 0 1 0 0 at which this suite is Pffered. ^ Douthit, cf ...... 1 0 0 1 0 0 j 30 5 10 27 13' 2 O’Farrell, c ...... 4 0 2 1 2 0 PHILADELPHIA Schuble, S3 ...... 4 0 1 2 6 0 ! , AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Rhem, p ...... 4 0 0 0 0 0 Bishop, 2b ...... 2 0 0 0 2 0 Hale. 3b ...... 5 1 2 0 1 0 34 3 10 27 17 0 French, rf ...... 4 0 2 0 0 0 Looks Like $300—Will Wear Like $300 BROOKLYN Cobb, c f ...... 1 0 1 2 0 ■ 0 AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Cochrane, c ...... 5 0 1 4 0 0 But Garber Bros’ Direct Factory Statz, c f ...... 4 0 1 7 0 0 Dykes, lb ...... 4 0 0 12 O' 0 i Carey, rf ...... 3 0 0 0 0 0 W heat, If ...... 2 0 0 3 0 0 ’ • vd r Hendnick, l b ...... 4 0 1 8 0 0 B oley, 8 ...... 3 1 1 2 . 3 0 Price Is Only Tremper, If ...... 3 1 0 0 1 0 Ehm ke, p ...... 2 0 0 0 2 0 •■.Or Barrett, 3b ...... 4 0 0 2 5 0 Rom m el, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Partridge, 2b ...... 4 0 0 2 4 1 Johnson, p ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 There are suites and suites . . . but nowhere wiU Butler, ss ...... 3 0 1 3 1 0 F oxx, X ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 you find a suite of such dependable construction Henllne, c ...... 3 0 1 4 1 1 Collins, XX ...... 1 11 0 0 q and covered in this grade of mohair at $165. A Doak, p ...... 2 0 0 1 0 0 suite of this character commands a much higher Herman, x ...... 1 0 0 0- 0 0 ft fifti Q n price. Hand tied springs on reinforced webbing. ■rw W. Clark, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Washington ...... 000 200 12x— 5 Selected filling, hand padding. Cushions are re­ Send for Catalog Philadelphia ...... 000 000 003— 3 31 1 4 27 12 2 Two i se hits. Speaker, Bluege, versible in lovely, brocatelle. Comprises a daven­ St. Louis ...... ;... 100 002 000— 3 Stewart; three base hits, Goslln; home port, club chair and wing chair. B rooklyn ...... 000 000 100— 1 run, Goslin; stolen bases. Reeves; —MaiV This Coupon Two base hits, O'Farrell, Hafey, double plays. Bishop to Boley to Hendrick; stolen base, Carey; left on Dykes; Stewart to Reeves to Judge; bases, St. Louis 6, Brooklyn 6; bases Rice , to Judge, Johnson to Boley to on balls, off Rliem 2; struck out, by Dykes; left on bases, Philadelphia 12, Rhem 1, by Doak 1, by W. Clark 1; Washington 4; base on balls; off John, hit by pitcher, by Doak (Blades, son 1, Hadley 10; struck out, by Frisch), by Rhem (Tremper); hits, Ehmke 2; Hadley 6; hits, off Ehrnke off Doak 9 In 7 innings, off W. Clark 5 in 6 innings, off Rommel 3 m 1-3'in­ Garber Brothers 1 in 2.; umpires. Quigley, Pfirman and nings, off Johnson 2 In 1 2-3 innings; W ilson ; time, 2:00. • hit by pitcher, by Hadley (French); I 120 Morgan Street. • X—Herman batted for Doak In 7th. losing pitcher, Ehmke; umpires, Evans, Hildbbrand and McGowan; time, 1:40. I Hartford, Conn. | X— F o x x batted fo r E rm ke In 7th. XX—Collins batted for Jolinson In 9 th. I Gentlemen: ^ Hartford Game According to the estimate of one 4 Pc. Bedroom Suite, Charming Design specialist there are 14,000,000 At Albany:— bobed heads in America from which I l^lease send me without ob- » and of Sturdy Construction LAWMAKERS 3, SENATORS 3 35,000 tons of hair have been ALBANY AB. R. H. PO. A. E. sh ea red . I ligations, your attractive fur- | Worthy of gracing the bedroom floor Hesse, cf ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 • ttiture catalog. ’ of any home. Simple in design, yet has McCorry, cf ...... 5 0 1 4 0 0 Gleason, 2b ... ___ 5 1 1 9 1 1 a charming air of refinement. Consists Farrell, lb ...... 6 0 1 21 0 0 Early American Dining Room Suite of k dresser, ihesf of drawers, new Vordy. If ... • « • • • « • 4 0 1 1 0 0 Typewriters Burkett, ss ...... 6 1 0 2 9 0 1 Name ...... , French vanity, and full size bow end Helgeth, 3b ...... 6 0 1 1 9 1 Choice of Mahogany or Walnut bed. This suite is of an open stock pat­ Solomon, rf , ...... 2 0 0 1 0 0 All makes. Sold, rented, ex­ Smith, rf ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 • • • • # * tern. New pieces may be added from Anderson, rf ______2 1 1 0 0 0 changed and overhanled. The finely grained woods, the lovely time to time as the need arises. M unr, c .... 0 2 6 0 0 . . ' I . finish, the excellent c()nstruction, imme­ lJ:-:cf, P . • • •...... 5 0 0 0 4 0 Special Discounts to Students. diately stamp this suite as exceptional. Address ■ • • • • • 46 3 7 45 29 3 HARTFORD Consists of a buffet, oblong: extension We NEVER have “Sa/es” AB. R. H. PO. A. E. table, five side chairs and one arm chair. i.i. ScKmehl, 2b ...... 7 0 2 3 3 0 Telephone 821 Davis, c f ...... 5 1 2 3 0 0 Server and China closet may be had at We ALWAYS Sell for Less Schinkel, If ...... 7 0 3 5 0 0 slightly additional cost. •rut *e Keesey, lb ...... 6 1 J } 9 Comlskey, ss ...... 7 0 1 3 1 0 Kemp's Music Hermann, 3b ...... : 5 0 2 4 5 0 Neltzke, rf ...... 6 0 0 I 0 0 Hamby, c- . — ...... 5 0 0 8 2_ 0 House O ut Krahe, x x ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 A Short M angum , 0 ...... 0 0 0 1 0 0 Thom as, p ...... 0 0 1 1 2 1 Budget 57 2 14 x42 14 " 1 DAVID CHAMBERS B l o i k A lbany .'...... 000 000 200 000 001— 3 H a rtford ___ 100 100 000 000 000— 2 Two base;hits, Keesey; three base Plan Erom hit, Davis; home run, Anderson; CONTRACTOR sacrifices, Keesey, Burkett; ^stolen bases, Keesey, Hermann; left on base, ' and Is At Hartford 14, Albany 7; bases on balls, MORGAN Main off Thomas 4; Brice 3; struck out, by EINE FURNITURE — — - '% c , '■'homas 8. Brice 6; double plays, Hel- BUILDER geth to Gleason to Farrell 2, Brice to Your d i r e c t Street Gleason to Farrell; hit by pitcher, by Thomas (Hesse); umpires, Conroy and 68 Hollister Street. F a sce; tim e, 2r5S. Service to th s X__None out when winning run was Manchester. Conn. H a r lfo M s^orcQ ^ H a rtfo^ ' XX—^krihe batted Xor H am by In First and Second Mortgages 13th. . XXX—Smith batted for Solomon In 7th. arranged on all new work.

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^ffifCHESTER. HERALD, THURSDAY, ’“^ A G B T E f f — ------^ ^ — r ^ . ------FEATURE ARTICLES TP ABOUT INTERESTma LATEST FASHION WOMEN HINTS BY FOREMOST AUTHOBITEEIS THE Maine’s ‘*511:81 Lady” This And That In

-iv. ©1927i Femiiune Lore quickly as possible in my apart­ BEGIir HERE TODAY ment, No. — :East 181st s,treet, the TERA CAMERONt plain bnal- Bronx. Apartment No. 4-B. . Ring n eu Klrl. allows kerselt to be the bell three short rings. Do you transformed Into a beantT by , JERRY MACKLYX, her bosj a d ^ understand?” yerttslns manager for Peach “Perfectly,” Jerry assured her, Distinctive gifts that will win the salt. Fold in whites of eggs beaten Bloom Cosmetics Co. Jerry falls and^ click of the receiver at the In loTO with Vera, also called gratitude of your hort» if y ou ' are until stiff and dry and turn mixture Vee-Vee, and his love persists other end'of the line was his an­ Into a mold. Chill and serve with even after ho learns Vera con­ going to visit friiaids this Labor sents to the transformation only swer. day week-end* you will fluij in in­ boiled cus^^rd made with yolks of because the man "he frfls 1® “Whew!” Jerry sank back\ln his finite variety at The Old Wood eggs. with, SCHCYI-EB dMYTHE, Ig­ V* chair. “Jerry, my hoyi you’ve got nores her. . St Shop, Pitkin street. Vera spends her vacaOon at the biggest job of your life ahead Watch for the new series on auc­ liake Minnetonka because Smythe of you! And I don’t even know Unless taken with cream and tion bridge to begin on the home Is there. He and other guests mis­ whether it’s etiquet to kiss a prin- 3 page within a day or two. Those take her lor VIVIAX CRANDALL, sugar, the social cup of tea has ex-prlncess, who after a Paris « - cess’ hand or to smack her on both g absolutely no caloric value. The who are adept at the game won’t vorce Is In hiding. Vera tries to cheeks, like that Frog general did g chief concern of the housewife is need to study these articles, others convince everyone pi her true when he pinned a medal-on mu In | who are not so sure of themselves Identity but when she renllses to assure herself that what she Smythe Is In love with the glrV France.” . g purchases for ■ tea is free from will profit by them. he thinks she Is, she finds further Jerry knew his Bronx. He had g trash and dust and that it has been, confession difficult. . Hotel guests returning to the been born on Rivington street, on s carefully kept from the air. The Being hostess for the last time In city notify the CrnndaUs of their the lower East Side, had fought his g Pure Food law has done much to the summer seasop or first time in supposed daughter’s ^h^eabouts. way up-town with fists and brain, | the fall demands something more Schuyler, who still thinks she Is prevent adulteration of tea in im­ Princess Vivian, steals a car and bringing his mother with him and g port. About 40 per cent comes from than the Informal afternoon bridge they flee. He confesses his love establishing her in a decent homo g Japan, 50 per cent from China and party which has been the feature lor her and proposes they be mar­ in the Bronx, which had seemed = the balance from India and Cey­ of vacation entertaining. Perhaps ried at once. Believing he 1®^«* like Paradise to him after the pusl^ ^ g It is a homecoming party for a her for herself n*®”®’ 7*” lon. him the truth, substantiating hM cart district in which he had passed | friend returning from abroad or a Mrs. Ralph O. Brewster, wife of the Governor, has scored tremendous identity with Jerry’s > «««• send-off for the young people go­ popularity with both sexes in her state because her character and her. Smythe Is furious, revealing him­ the first 13 years of his very active | The coming week-end holiday is self ns a fortune-hunter. A «c r / life. His mother was dead now, and | as dependable as the seasons and ing away to school, tt is often much manner are as charmingly simple as her interesting face suggests. More-» his anger subsides, he *■ Jerry’s §25,000 a year as one of | marks the end of vacation or play­ easier to give these affairs at a over, she has youth and poise, twin aids to popularity. by the thought that perhaps she country club or tavern than to en­ Is the princess after all and is New York’s cleverest advertising | time and the hegtenlng of a new trying to outsmart him. He at­ men, could not buy her any of the | school year. It is a favorite time tertain at home. tempts to retrieve but Vera has luxuries he had promised her when | lor entertaining or being entertain­ seen his true character. For the early fall social festivi­ Two masked men stop them ana he was a boastful, fighting, ambi- ^ ed, and with so many household Vera Is whisked away by them In § tion-ridden little red-headed “Irish- | helps to take the “ labor” out of ties a new gown is often uppermost an airplane. She Is taken a in tlie mind of femininity and this shack In the mountains where er.** 1 Labor day, the modern housewife PRINCE IVAN, Vivian’s ex-hus- The address which Vivian Cran- | does not consider it a burden as in season there seems to be a radical band, awaits them. Vera and the dall—he had not the slightest doubt | former years, and plans everything departure from the straight and ^I^ALLEm SUMMSm prince are horrified when the nien narrow silhouette. Even sport suits announce they will hold them for that it was she-^had given him was | well ahead so tjiat she can devote a ransom from the Crandalls. VPra only two blocks from the flat build- | as much time as possible to her have been wedging in a lot of full­ She’s the luckiest girl I ever<»just a contact had made. And the convinces the prince that they ing in which his mother had died | guests. ness under the guise of novelty knew,” someone said the other day, contact thus encouraged might must play the part, otherwise the pleats, and some of them have been come back in the way of an Invita­ men, angered at finding her poor six years ago. It was like coming : speakin,g of our mutual friend Prue. and unable to draw a ransom, home to get out of the familiar ; Dr. Durant, writing in the Amer­ nipped in slightly at the waist “ I never in the world knew any girl tion to a “genuine, home-cooked will murder them. Meantime subway station, to pass the same ; ican magazine says the present pe­ though the reason is supposedly to to get into things and in with Italian dinner in a real Italian, Jerry Macklyn In New York reads show off a swanky belt of unusual people like she does. How does she home,” or a gift of a strange carved an account of what has happened. old cigar store and “sea food” res­ riod of imitation of men by women When he reaches his office, he Is taurant. But why was Vivian will pass. In every field they have skin or buckle. The new evening manage it? Isn’t she the cleverest box, or a confidence that mieant'a story to thrill one to tbe marrow. greeted by ROSEMARY PITCH, Crandall living in a neighborhood | acquired enough of the intellectual gowns are frankly full and are you ever heard of?” who stuns him with the announce­ Anybody who wanted to give her­ and moral quality of the male to gathered in to form a waistline ment she has seen Vera that very like this? Decent enough, but peo­ self as Prue does, would get her morning. pled by the big families of low- make every moralist in Christen­ that, while it may not be as small For we had just heard that Prue as grandmother’s was, is, after all, had tied up as secretary-compa­ returns of a life more than abun­ NOW GO ON W ITH THE STORY salaried men. The sidewalks were dom deplore the masculinatlon of dant. Most of us “ won’t bother.” CHAPTER XXXVI crowded with perambulators pushed the once gentler and weaker sqx- a waistline. The straight silhouette nion to a “ literary lady” who was 'St verily seems to be fading out of 3RRY MACKLYN knew then by stout, placid-looking women of about to tour South Ainerica. “I 'S? Russia’s marriage and divorce the picture. I guess I won’t have a thing, to do Once upon a time Prue skipped ; Phow a condemned man feels all ages, ambling from shop to shop, buying provisions for dinner. laws of late have permitted men but write her letters” wrote Prue, about seventeen states from her '•'Mr. Maciclynf” a low, pleasant voice came over the phone. when he is reprieved. He literally In spite of the heat and the noise and women to marry, divorce and Peach Moonshine “ for she won’t work. She just pre­ home state arid got a job. By the collapsed into his chair. tainty that it was the real Vivian and the overcrowdedness of it, remarry in less time than it takes Beat up the whites of six eggs tends she’s Titerary’— all expenses end of the first week she was the, I’d been comparing Vee-Vee’s pic­ paid, a chance to see the world, town mascot. “How’d I get ac­ Crandall who had been staying at Jerry loved it all, for it had been to order and eat a dinner. Last “ Say that over again and say it ture with that Vivian Crandall s, to a stiff froth. Add gradually and write my own stuff. Pretty soft, quainted?” Prue answered us. "Oh* the Minnetonka, using Vee-Vee’s home to him for ten years—the yearxthere were 100,000 deserted slowly. Remembcj I’m ^ weak in the paper.” twelve tablespoonfuls of powdered heard about all the interesting name and getting herself kidnaped. happiest ten years of his life. He wives in broad-minded Russia, 18,- sugar, and beat again for fifteen eh wot?” man, Rosemary,” he begged, grin­ “You gave Vee-Vee one of those people, the kind of people I knew Jerry Macklyn held himself sniffed the mingled odors of over­ 000 of them asking support for de­ minutes. Then add three large booklets?” Jerry demanded. Now I don’t in the least mind I’d like, and'When I was through ning wanly at her. rigidly to his desk all that day, not ripe fruit, wilting vegetables, fresh- pendent children. peaches, peeled and cut into dice, ‘Tes, I did.” Rosemary burst Prue’s intimations that she had work at night, I went around to “I said,” Rosemary laughed, “that even leaving his ofiBce for lunch baked bread, and fish—tons of fish, and one-half teaspoonful of almond see them. Funp(y? "Why? They’d into tears. “I don’t see what you’re In reply to the north end reader breezed her way by canny cunning I saw Vee-Vee Cameron this morn­ lest a telephone call whiclr he was offered for Friday’s dinner—and extract. Fill dainty glasses three- never have known I was In town, so sore about! I was just saying who asks for a remedy to remove into a “ soft snap,” for I know Prue ing. I was in the Bronx subway. more than half expecting'^and ar­ found them sweet in his nostrils. fourths full with the mixture; chill, and life’s too short to miss the to her, ‘Vee-Vee,’ I said, ‘I’ve just ink stains from an embroidered and Prue knows me. But I did mind We were just pulling into the dently praying for would come and The building which he sought and just before serving, fill them folks you want to know.” lunch cloth— one authority says Alicia’s assumptions that,Prue was Seventy-Second street station when been reading in the papers about find him gone. It came at four was a four-story “walk-up” flat high with whipped and sweetened I realize that I am not telling Vivian Crandall and I was scared that ink is best removed by using born plain lucky and was a schem­ the train stalled in the tunnel for a o’clock, when he had almost given house; that is to say there was no cream and top with q little piece a convincing story of a Prue paying to death it was you. I never was so a weak acid such as lemon juice, ing, self-seeking adventuress who, minute. You know how it is—to up hope. Rosemary was out of the elevator and no doorman. Certain­ of peach. aqy price for her many contacts. sour milk or cream of tartar. Ap­ by dint of knock-’em-down-and-get- glad to see anyone in my life,’ I office, as she had been most of the ly a most amazing place for a Cran­ let another train pass,” she ex­ ply to the stained material, let it MARY TAYLOR. what-you-want, got there! said.” day, gossiping with other employes dall to live, if she did live here! plained breathlessly. stand a few minutes then rinse in 1 “And what did she say?” Jerry about the sensational kidnaping of He scanned the four-row battery of “Yes, yes. go on,” Jerry urged warm water. Another suggests that I happen to know that Prue PRESERVED GINGER urged her, weakly collapsing again Vivian Crandall, who had so bells and mail boxes, found the her impatiently. His brain was and closing his eyes. the stain be saturated with perox works for everything she ever got whirling. So Vee-Vee had escaped strangely used Vera Cameron s “4-B” easily enough, and read the HANDS NEED SAME in a way that ^ew of us would ever “ She didn’t answer me. She was ide of hydrogen. Apply • several Use preserved ginger, cut in somehow, God bless her! She was name, so Jerry answered the phone card in the little slot below the ATTENTION 'AS FACE work. To be sure, the Gods did just looking at the booklet I held number, as he pressed the bell three times if necessary and place in the small chunks, when making ginger in the city, would be here any min­ in my hand, open to her picture. himself. sun. I recall using peroxide on give her a start when they gave her “Mr. Macklyn?” a low, pleasant times. “Craig” was the one word By MME. ANNE GERARDE a certain gift of self-assurance and bread or ginger waffles as it gives ' ute—But that, on the face of it, She said, ‘Let me see that, please,’ white embroidered linen cepter a richness powdered ginger cannot.i was ridiculous, unless the kid­ voice—the voice of a cultured wo­ on the card, neatly lettered in ink. little surplus shrinking-violet qual­ as if she was startled. I remem­ piece and while it removed the to napers had returned her to New man—came clearly over the wire. So she was Miss Craig here! Odd Hands are too age-revealing ities. bered what you’d said about Vee- how those assuming an alias in­ stain it was no doubt left on too York. All of his hideous worry for “Yes, this is Mr. Macklyn,” Jerry long for the threads wer^ burned neglect. Vee’s not wanting the booklets to stinctively retain their initials. ’Cold cream your hands as regu­ nothing! But oh, the relief! be sent out, because she didn’t answered, his heart knocking or weakened and a hole soon, re­ Once upon a time Prue and Crandall—Craig! larly as you cream your face. Apply were wandering through Greenwich Colonial iFurniture “ I saw a girl pushing her way to want everyone to be calling her against his ribs. “Now, if she’d just called her­ sulted. Removing stains must al a bleaching lotion— preferably one the doors to get out at Seventy- ‘The Peach Bloom Girl’ and I said, “I am calling in reference to an ways be done carefully. If acid is Village. We passed a certain tea advertising booklet, published by self Callahan, I know I’d like that that has some slight oily consisten­ room. There were pottery jars full II t second. She had on glasses, Mr. ‘Oh, we’re not sending them oi^t, woman, princess or no princess,” used it is better tp let it stay on cy— every night. If your hands are your firm. I was given your name only a short time, rinse it out of buttercups and marigold in the Macklyn, like she used to wear, but Ve^Vee, until you come back from Jerry grinned to himself, as the very dry, keep this lotion on ail by your switchboard operator as and repeat the operation than to window and we caught a glimpse N E W LOCATION I saw right .away it was Vee-Vee. I your vacation. I just took this one automatic “clicker” in the inside night and cover your hands with a the advertising manager of the have the fabric ruined. of red brasses and hickory chairs 333 C E N TE R ST^ “ had just been reading in the paper home to show mother. Here, you door of the vestibule told him that pair of old gloves to work the lo­ where this Vivian Crandall had can have it,’ I said, and she took it, Peach Bloom Company,” the low within. voice went on firmly, without a his ring was being answered. tion into the skin. Y ou are invited to inspect | been kidnaped and that she’d been and just then the train jerked into This recalls an item in one of Once a week rub half a lemon He bounded up the first flight of the Hartford papers recommending “ Gee I bet somebody interesting stock of Antiques. || using Vera’s name and I didn’t the" Seventy-Second street station quiver. over your hands to keep them “Good girl! A thoroughbred!’ stairs. By the time he had reached green tomatoes for removal of iron keeps this shop!” said Prue, suf­ Repairing and Restoring of if know what in the world to make of and Vee-Vee pushed her way on out the fourth floor he was not bound­ white. Cream afterwards, as lemon i t You know, for a minute I had Jerry applauded her silently. Then rust. I tried it a few days ago on ficiently mid-west to be thrilled by of the car.” ing, but walking rather slowly, is drying. Antique and Modem Furniture. ;| the wild idea that it was our Vee- aloud he said, “That is correct. I a new white garment and as yet a village shop. “ Let’s go in anff talk When they had talked a few min­ dragging a little at the handrail. Housewives can avoid “ dishwater Vee that had been kidnaped, and I am the advertising manager of the the stains of the rust as well as to them!” utes longer, Rosemary suddenly de- hands” if they exert care. "Wear “But we don’t know them, and tell you I was scared—” .yeloped an urgent necessity to com­ Peach Bloom Company. Is there “Too many elevators in your life, the green tomato remain. It looks Victor Hedeen Jerry, my boy!” he told himself rue­ rubber gloves for all the worst who cares!” said I. “That was a wild Idea!” Jerry' municate her news to a new audi­ anything I can do for you. Miss—?” as if the remedy was as bad as the fully. “Maybe the princess came work about the house. Keep a bot­ agreed weakly, mopping his fore­ ence. Jerry watched her trip out “I am going to make a rather blemishes from rust. tle of good lotion in your kitchen here to reduce.” But Prue decided she wanted to head with his handkerchief. “What of the oflBce on a pretext, knew ex­ extraordinary request of you, Mr. Wash • your hands with toilet soap Macklyn,” ’ the cool, musical voice He pressed the bell on the door The enterprislrig manager of a know them. She went in, and I went did you say to her?" actly what she would do, and after dirty work and apply lotion on Prue met me that night, bub­ wished that he could help her do went on. “If you are the author of of apartment 4-B. big furniture store has arranged a Ladies’ every time you wash them. bling over. The girl who kept the “ I didn’t have time to say much.” the booklet, ‘The Modern Story of (To Be Contlnned) row of rooms for children on the Rosemary rushed on. “It was fi It Within half an hour every em­ If yoiir nails are dry and Inclined shop was “ perfectly fascinating! Repaired with great caroj ploye of the Peach Bloom Com­ an Ugly Duckling,’ I fee! sure you sunny side - of the. building, with to break, rub yellow vaseline or Prue had helped her wash dishes funny thing, Mr, Macklyn, but I will understand without any fur­ Jerry was right, He Is faee to the cheeriest of little pieces, be­ Thin soles* n^w lifts on smaOt bad one of those booklets In my pany would be told that Rosemary face with Vlvlasi Crandall. And some nail cream around cuticle each and make the luncheon salads! The ther explanation on my part. My Read the next lieving that it is distinctly well t a n d - 'x j know. The Modem Pitch had seen Vera Cameron, had Vivian has a plan, night. Get or give yourself a good girl had the duckiest apartment high heels, etc. request i s , that you meet me as chapter. worth while to give a room to the Duckling,’ and talked with her and knew te a cer­ manicure at least once a week. all hung with batik curtains she child for its very own and furnish­ had made herself. Maybe she 'would Bring them to me. ed. People are much interested Ih go into partnership with her! The the exhibit and the store has had cases mentioned are cases of a lays' particular stress upon the many orders for the room furnish­ Low Heel Prue merely doing what she likes. words “love and honor till death ings in whole or in part. But I have known a Pue, dead-tired Home Page Editorial doth us part!” from a hard working day, trotting LQUIS DELL The girl c,annot change her na­ Dr. J. Laumonler, writing in a out to a hospital with a book or ture. She is a loveable, splendid girl French journal says science proves posy for— oh, not even a friend. State Theater Bnildihg I f in spite of her roving eye. The boy constantly that women are more re­ cannot change his ideas, and why sistant to death and disease than Hymen Passed should he? Aren’t they right?. I see men. He points to the fact that na­ Judgment! breakers ahead when the glamour ture pro.duces more men than has worn off. Will the girl come to women because more men die. He The most serious reactions take By Olive Roberts Barton me again some day, and say. “ I was points to the greater number of Vleaners that 'Clean'" USE OF ULTRA-VIOLET RAY positive he was the right one— but widows than widowers of the same CALLS FOR CAUTION place in babies whose skin is thin and who may be unusually sensi­ now, there’s somebody else!” If age. If this becomes generally tive. A case is ' cited of a boy, only Hymen could hold court and known we will be expected to yield By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN The picture of a certain bride-to- aged 8 years, who had a severe judge whether “ this .man is suited our seat^ in street cars to the frail Editor Journal of the American be in the photogravure supplement LABOR D A Y eruption of the skin every time he to this woman or this woman suit­ males, run the furnace, mow the Medical Association and of Hygeia, of a newspaper makes me thought­ was exposed to ultra-voilet rays. ed to this man,” before they ap­ lawn and beat the rugs. LABOR DAY— the last sumnjer holiday Don’t the Health Magazine. ful— and dubious. proach his marriage altar! This had occurred every summer have an apologetic time because your light summer As she grazes contemplatively When I think of dispositioqp and Peach Blanc Mange The human being tends to in­ for four years. Spruce up from the page I know, that. her people I wonder that marriage is as Two cups peach pulp, 3-4 cup clothes show the effects of the season^ dulge in extremes, perhaps on the There are other cases in which lot of the reaction involves, changes in thoughts are not of the man named successful as it is. granulated sugar, 4 tablespoons for the holiday— and remember there’s a hypothesis that if a little of some­ beneath as her fiance. Indeed it cornstarch, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 2 thing is valuable a great deal may the blood which may be even warm week-ends coming yet. more serious than those that ap­ would e hard to name positive eggs (whites). be much more valuable. the object of her revery. For she Pare and core peaches and put One of the possible dangers of pear on the skin. Cleaning and dyeing promptly and Test Is Recommended used to confide in me and I know through vegetable rlcer. There the advice to indulge in sunlight of the many affairs she has ■ had, should be two cups pulp and juice Iv done. Your orders called for and deliv­ may be an over-exposure to sun­ Infants should be tested first with small doses of sunlight or and each time she was positive she Add sugar and heat to the boiling ered. They are taken care of as yiiur indi­ light or to the artificial ultra­ had found the man she loved. point. Stir cornstarch to a smooth This shoe illustrates the new inner violet rays resulting in more harm the artificial ultra-voilet ray to L ife's Niceties curved heel and the effect of the vidual things— not huddled together in a su­ It was during that time that the paste, using enough cold water to than good. determine whether or not they high arch with low-heeled shoes. burban bundle.” are especially sensitive before photograph was taken. I have one HINTS ON ETIOfJET make mixture pour easily. Stir In­ It has been known for years to hot fruit and cook twenty min^ Beige kid is bordered and saddled that prolonged exposure to th^ .they are treated with large doses. like it. After it was taken she met with black. the young man she is to marry, utes. Remove from fire and add Telephone 1510 violet and ultra-voilet rays of th,e If they respond with serious re­ sun, to natural or artificial ttiyh', actions, they can be treated ac­ Is it only another case of being may cause not only disturbances cordingly. “ positive”- that at last she has met the right one— only to find before 1. Of all courtesy letters, of the whole body, but also in­ Whenever a new method is another, summer that she was mis­ which is the most important? flammations and serious changes brought into the , practice of medi­ Cake aiid Hot Broad JIOVGAN DYE WORKS cine, the quacks seize upon it and taken? Or, is he really the mate 2. In addition to your host­ INC. In the skin. It is another aphor' she can love and respect all her Ism in medicine that every potent exploit it without consideration of ess, to whom should you send HARRISON ST. its dangers. They were among life? remedy Is a two-edged sword with A disturbing factor compels my courtesy letters upon return­ iOUTH MANCHESTER. possibilities of harm as well as the first; to advertise themselves CONN. as especially competent in the notice. He has money. More money ing hom e? good. ithau any other-suitor she has ever treatment of disease with light. 3. Is. it ■necessary to write Sensitive Skin hatd. Has It affected her affections? appetizing and bertof all, wholespme, nutnlwe , It is well known that some Their Ignoriance of dangerous re'- at length in courtesy letters? actlons- in the human body is I do not know the young man ex­ food*—every time. ^ ' I lll ML. people are unduly sensitive to sun­ cept by “ hearsay.” I have informa­ IIH light; the skin hums easier and likely to result in harm from The Answers Hill overdosage of what properly used tion that he is serious-minded and f ^ freckles easier than in the case of a worker, with an ideal. other persons. Some people • re­ may be a valuable remedy. 1. “Bread and butter” letters. RUMFORD His ideal has been to find the spond promptly to sunlight with old-fashioned type of girl who will 2. Any friends who have helped H i* ____ ^ blistering of the skin. Blonds her entertain you. Our largest national forest is put husband, home arid children be- usnedly buirn far more easily than ^lore-.anytbinfi els^oju .earth,. ,, JEIe brunettes. Lthe ToqiLaBB,ii. .Eo.rjBsL Alkska-t - BAKIKClBOMDER ■.... nuT'"

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• O f •• • ■ »— , . -5^ m at^ the same mnnher of tel^honea, L simuar to tne urst, must ne established. Its annual ftturn to dtodthdldmrs has aver­ k S indicated in secent newspaper aa- aged almost exactly 6%. So m u^ in answer ^ whra to-day one ocnmects twice or three v / \ vertisements, this Company is about According^ to the varying possibilities of I IMPORTANT FACTS to the possible and natural question as to times as mihy eUltomers as the other. To economical arrangements with , respect to . J \ to make various changes, effective correct this CWiditidii, we are^re-dassifying, buildings and outside plant, these addi­ lncre In return for year. The natural question, therefore, is: tomer fairly expects. for five years ahead, the aggregate re­ phone service, measured in tenns of wages Ais capital, investors are tmtitled to fair If the Telephone Company is now earning While much of detailed! explanation quired = during that period to provide for or of prices of materials or of the cost of wages in the form of interest and divi­ even a slight margin of profit per customer, could be added, we believe that enough has an expected growth of 85,000 telephones living, are actually lower to-day than in dends. To pay fair wages for capital wo why does not this growth tend toward a been stated to demonstrate that the tele­ will be $42,600,000, or nearly as much as 1 9 1 4 . must have adequate earnings^ We cannot larger aggregate margin instead of intro­ phone business differs from general busi­ the total plant investment of the Company Surely this comparison evidences that have adequate earnipgs wiAput adequate ducing a financial problem? ness in the economic relation between ex­ at the close of 1926 after forty-four years we have sou^t no undue margin of profit rates for service. Therefore, we mui^t ask^^, The starting point of the answer to this pansion and financial results under constant of operation. In the larger exchanges, old and that the conduct of the business has Ae public to pay rate* for service wKidi^ vital question is found in the fact that tele­ prices; or, in other words, that the telephone buddings are enlarged and new buildings been economically progressive. ~ will enahle us to earn a reasonable return phone service is the only utility or commo­ business is unique because the addition of are constructed to house the vajdous cen­ i f e '; upon our property. The re.clo88ification of , dity in the world which depends for its each new customer builds up the multiplic­ tral offices of the area; many of the smaller 'exchanges for rate purposes, wiA an in-; value to the user upon the extent to which ity of connections that must be available to exchanges, for which a single room and the TSe Increased Value of Tele­ creased rate in eertain of Aese exchanges, it is purchased by others. Every other item all, and thus tends to increase the cost of simplest of equipment once sufficed, come stands as Ae fairest and most logical re- ^ of home or business equipment is selected plant and operation per telephone. phone Service ' to require separate fireproof buildings and source for Ae'^xdditiehal revenue required" for the value that it holds in itself. But' a all the equipment attributes of city ex­ This adverse tendency, however, does not h e foregoing has dealt mainly with at Ais time. single telephone is of no value in itself; it necessarily imply that repeated rate advanc­ changes ; experience demonstrates the merit the problems and performance of the In our last annual report to stockholders, acquires the minimum yalue when it can es will be required through the indefinite' of dial service for certain types of exchang­ TCompany under service expansion. It, now yfO stated: / be connected with one and only one other future. In considerable measure we. have es; cable replaces open wire not only in the may not be amiss to comment briefly upon telephone; and this value becomes gradu­ been able to offset this tendency by devel­ local plant but in much of the toll plant; the dwelopment of service value to the “In Ai* mattor of rates Ae ce,Changc^ we are about to make,: we seek noAing be- - versa. Each unit must, therefore, be so of ,1916 the plant invastment was $121.65 yond a proper balance ^ rates between ~ o r many years, under act of Congress, ALTHOUGH each sUbsoriber is being equipped that either operator may connect per telephone. Since that time the higher exchangOa, o f varying size, and ani aggrfr the accounts of the Company have been advised directly as to such rate any two of the total number of customers. post-war prices have necessarily been paid gatek revenue sul^ient mamtain f F•kept according to the system prescribed by changes as are being made in the exchange Similarly, when a third unit becomes neces­ not only for all new plant required for modert m ar^ of Aepait Tew years, wiA the Interstate Commerce Commission; imd with which he is connected, it may be ap­ sary, each of the three operators must have growth but for the replacements of the old such freedq^- of action as will enable , us for no year during that period have the net propriate to, state here the general charac­ the same connecting facilities as the other lowjpriced plant worn out and removed , .to go-'forward wiA projects and develop­ earnings been as high as 6.5% upon the ter of the proposed revision. Except for two — and so on as units are added to the from time to time. As a residt, the plant ments tltet wULhring Ae best arid Ae most, actual investment in telephone plant. Fnr the correction of two rates which are clear­ W switchboard from time to time. investment per telephone,jwas $167.61 at of teleiAotte valtt«k * 1925 the return was at Ae rate of 6.S7%; ly discriminatory. and which apply to a This inter-connection of the several units the close of 1926, and according to our five- for 1926 it was at the rate'of 6.21%; for relatively small number of customers, the of a complete switchboard, is accomplished year forecast will approximate $203.00 in ■■ V ' ■ the first six months of 1927 it was a t th e substance of the revision is a re-grouping by duplicating the switchboard terminals of 1931. rate of 5.97%; and under the generel fore­ of exchanges by rates in accordance with To Our Cusflomers all customers’ lines again and again It is pertinent that while the increase m cast for the next five years it continues to present and p^able variations in sl£e. throughout the switchboard at such inter­ plant investment per station for ther ten- r To ns you stand as our only resource for average less than 6% even after giving e ff^ Basically, the present classification, con- vals that the entire range is within reach of '' year period between 1916 and 1 9 2 7 was patronage and good will* Of all our busi­ to the impending rate changes. \ ^ sit ing of six rate groups, has remained each operator. It is clear, therefore, that 37.8%, the increase in telephone rates for ness problems, Ae most distasteful and , The Southern New England Tekphone ' practioaliy unchanged for more than twen­ as the original one-position unit grows into the same period was on the average only diAeartening are Aose which involve con­ ty-five years, D u^g Aat period the num­ a switchboard of many units, the amount Company has operated the telepbono S(^ troversy wiA our patrons. We have wnt- 19.3%. i . ber of subscribers in each exchange has, of of central office equipment per customer is vice for Connecticut continuously rinoa ten Ae foregoing as evidence of good course,^ increased greatly ; but the rates of unavoidably increased through the many 1882. During that entire period of foity^ faiA in'the step which we are about to Growth in Plant: Past, Present, growth have differ^ widely. As a conse­ and costly duplications of line terminals four years it has accumulated a surplus of take. If you find it obscure or unconvino- ^ and Predicted quence, certain eitchanges which now bear which are required to provide for complete $ $2,000,155, on an average of $45,4^ p4r ing, we earnestly urge, that you give us A e little rdationship to oneimother in the num­ inter-connection. A* DOZEN or more years ago we consid- ’ year. In terms of property investment, thb opportunity for furthet explanation, to Ao ber of telephones or in the cost of render­ But this is not all. In the larger ex­ /A . ered that a budget of $2,000,000 for Company stands to-day as a $50,GOO,OPO end that Ae business relaUona^ betwerii ua ing service are still grouped together. It changes, the time comes when all units gross plant additions constituted a sub-^ institutionV doing an annual business in « - may he maintained wiA mufiial friendU- is obviously unfair to continue to apply the of a complete switchboard will no longer stahtial program for a single year. For • cess of $14,000,000. Yet in no year of nete and coUfidence. - i < same service ratas to two exchanges, for suffice for the telephone growth. A second the last fiye years the average expenditure its existence has it earned in Undivided - example, at one tittle had appioxi- JaIos T. Uo»Mi Presidents r central office, and later a third, fourth, etc., for such additions slightly ^ceeded Profits an umount exceeding |$410^0^, and

THE SOUTHERN NEW

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"N IPAXSE T W B L V B jV ivy.; Si > Y o u 'li F in d Some Used Car Bargains You Can’t Afford To Miss In , - ...... r ’ "— Apartments— Plat*— Houses tor Rent Honses tor 8a|e Lost and Found Repairing 98 Tenements ifor Rent 68 Want Ad Intomation BIX ROOM SINGLE, , wltk large ban ______»______t 4- FOR RENT—SB’WEN ROOM slf^e LOST—RED COCKEJt Ijpalilel female and>ab(^.l-h acre ot land, on trol­ EXPERT KEY FITTINGK Lawn «ow - SIX ROOM TENEMENT on Nswman house. George A. Brown, dpraer ley line In Manchester. i House and dog near Porter and Oak Qroye - W i - Bharpeued and repat re A also street, modern Improvements, steam Cooper and West Center atrset So. streets. Answers to name of JHoiur^ barn nearly new. PricA right. See Manchester ' solssora Knives and saws sharpened heat. Inquire 147 East Center street Manchester. ______Stuart L Wa^ley, 887 M^ln street. Finder please call 1829. ^ Work oalled for and delivered. Phone 1880. Evening Herald Harold Glemson, 108 North Elm Apartment Bnlldlngt for Sale 89 I.OST—PAIR OP CELIiUDOID 'rim­ street, Manohester, Conn. Telephi.ne JOHNSON BLOCK, Main strsst 1 Classified Advertisements med glassns, In ci I ** South Manohester street, Hartford. Conn. elegance. Select the car, suited to your improvements. Inquire 68 School St All orders for Irregular COLONIAL HOME-180 Porter Street. Season Has Been JSpg Disap­ ...n bo Charged roV^^o^l^^Vr.very STEAMSHIP TICKETS—all parts of li(Straotlon 88 purse and plan from the many offered under TO RENT—6 ROOM tenement, at 46 Suitable for two family dwelling. i'poclal the world. Ask for sailing lists and Private Blssell street, newly papered and Half of house now rented, leaving say .ad ^-tl_slng^ glve^n upon reouee-^^ rates. Phone 750-2. Robert J. Smith. Classification 4. painted, rent $26. Inquire 50 Blssell very desirable tlx rooms and bath "‘ Ads'^ordered'fo-'r three oi si* aay. 1009 Main street. PRIVATE instruction g lv sn ^ all street. with all oonvenlenoes, for buyer or pointment— New! Meth­ nnd stopped before the third grammar school subjects by fOrmsr can be rented separately. Reason­ day grammar sobool principal, for rates TO RENtV-4 room TENEMENT, all able terma. Phone Manohester 881. Aatomobiles lor Salo call 215-6. Read Improvenients, garage, $24. Apply IS Moore street. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE, six ods Are Adopted. b .'ir«5l."‘» ‘or Vin»-»V qS; • .?> «! down. p r iv a t e INSTRUCTION. Shorthand, family house, steam heated and all on six time ads stopped after the Essex 1924 Coach $225, $90 Typwrltlng and English. Josephine Herald Classifie(^ Ads TO R E N T -6 ROOM TENEMENT with Improvements, also 4 family, for Oakland 1926 Sedan 4-door. or without garage, all Improvements. farm or smaller property. Address tU'th day. ' 1921 Cleveland touring, $65, 126 a : Smith, Hartford. Tel. 2-6842, No ••till forbids' ; display lines not For the CAR you want to buy. Inquire 281 Spruce street. Post Office Box 276, So. Manchester. By MINOTT SAXJNDERS down. , , , , ^ 89 1921 Ford touring, $86. $14 down. Musical—^Dramatic TO RENT—6 ROOM PLAT, all mod­ ®"Tbe Herald will not be re8P»“ "‘}i^® 1923 Durant touring $65, $26 down, for more. than one Incorrect Insertion ern Improvements, garage. Frits ot any advertlsenrient ordered for Balance monthly or weekly. CHARLOTTE TREAT KEENEY, Johnson, 29 Clinton street. Phone FOR SALE I SILK CITY, OAKLAND CO. ^^acher of Pianoforte, 88 Church 657-4. Paris.— ^Th0 tourist season this more than one time. 195 Center St. Telephone 2169 The inadvertent 0™'"®’°” ” iVll^be street’. Phone 222.______Modern Eight-Room House. All year has been such a dismal disap­ roct puMIcnttoi. of advertising J?U1 be TO RENT—5 ROOM FLAT, first floor, convenienoee. Oak trim. Large Rooms, rocUed only by cancellation of the FOR SALE—1919 DODGE 3 passenger all modern improvements, garage, Large two-story Garage (22x24). Lo­ pointment that.8tep)i are already charge niido for the service render coupe, A-1 condition, five new tires, BnUdlng Materials 47 Apartment*—Flat*— 321 East Center street. Inquire 41 cated at 46 Strickland St., good resi­ being taken Itt government circles will sell cheap for cash. Must be sold ed. Tenements tor Rent 68 Bigelow street. dential section. Easy Terms. Phone to put France bahk'lhto Its prefer^ at once as party Is leaving town. A STRONG, CAPABLE woman for 418—1100. Telephone 18C5 after 6 p. m. laundry and other heavy w o^ , two c o n c r e t e b lo c k s of all kinds for TO RENT—6 ROOM TENEMENT, all ential position. All advertisements days a week. Apply to Mrs. Geo. E. sale. Inquire Prank Damato, 24 FOR RENT—1 MINUTE from Main 'Improvements, upstairs, rent $20 7-. Homestead Street. Manohester, street, nice six-room tehemCnt, with Even th* Amwlcatt Ceglon con­ FOR SALE—1924 REO SEDAN—A Keith, 19 Lewis street. ____ month. Inquire 223 Spruce street. vention will not bring the business regulations en the right to No-1 condition, bumpers stabulators. Phone 1507. garage, low rent. Call 1804 or 1 ACRE PLACE, 9 room house* steam Hrq and tl-GV reserve George A. Brown, corner Cooper arfd g ir l for general housework. No 7S2-2 or apply at 75 East Middle TO RENT—6 . ROOM TENElfENT, all heat, lights and water. Garage, that was an'tlclpated. Hotel, restau­ edU. revise or reject any copy con- W. Center streets. laundry. 79 North Main street, Teh Household Goods 51 Turnpike. modern- Impro-vements, very desir­ chicken coop, fruit trees. Price $4800. rant and storekeepers are greatly " ' S s I NO ® HOU RS-Classlfied, ads 1594. able location, steam heat. Inquire 14 Easy terms. Jas. J. Rohan, 517 Hart­ dismayed.. Many oC them now rea­ Overland Tudor Sedan. FOR RENT—5-ROOM FLAT, located Wadsworth street. ford Road. Tel. 1668. to^b^^Pubnshfd same day mus^^ Ford Coupe-^1923. HOUSEKEEPER by widower _ with A FEW CHESTS OF drawers. $6.50, on Benton street. Inquire Edward J. lize that their expectations, based celved by 12 o'clock noon. Saturday three children school age. Good homo three burner gas stove $10.00, Cedar Holl. SG5 Main street. Tel. 560. on fpriper .seasons with a more ad­ Maxwell Sport Touring—1924. chests are now in. Join our Christ­ TO RENT—1081 MAIN street, 3 rooms, 10:3C 1. m. , . a j for right party. W, W* Keeney. Buck- all improvements, steam heat, near vantageous exchange, were too high «» rrelephone Your Want Ads CRAWFORD AUTO SUPPLY CO. land. mas Club, $2.00, $1.00 a week. Ben­ FOR RENT—6 ROOM TENEMENT, all High school. Inquire Silk City Bar­ Oldsmoblle and Marmon Sales and son Furniture Company, 649 Main modern improvements, 85 Garden ber Shop. Tel. 2480. , • ■ and that they went ^ far. A.Is sre accepted over the telephone .• ■ Service WANTED—EXPERIENCED waitress street. The home of good bedding. street. Inquire 82 Garden street, call BRILLIANT MEN . I B e ^ jOampaign • r^tiA h pr RATE given above Center & Trotter Sts. Tel. 1174 beginning September 6 for Hillside 1356 after 5 o'clock. , Inn, Bolton. Telephone 2421-4. Business Locations for Rent 64 It Is too late now- to recoup this Dependable Used Cars HOUSEHOLD FtfENITURE for sale. FOUR ROOM PLAT on second floor, year, hut a determined movement Manchester Motor Sales Co. WANTED AT ONCE an experienced In good condition. Telephone 1090. with all Improvements and garage, DESIRABLE STORES In the State CRACKING UNDER has been started, headed by M. Tar- 1069 Main St. So. Manohester also three room flat on second floor, Theater Building Hartford. Suitable girl for general housework. Apply 6X9 GRASS RUG, slightly, shopworn, dleu, minister of public works, to day following the a ROE Open Eves & Sundays. TeL" 740 at Murrays, State Theater Bldg, all improvements with garage, at for candv and Ice cream parlor and regular $8.25, now $5.98. Watkins 168 Oak StreeL Inquire 164 Oak or all other lines. Appjy on premises. bring the tourist business here next S-S e 'win V.‘'ron'ec% A Vf.p.n..- Used Furniture Store, 17 Oak street, call 616-5. THREE BUICK SEDANS In excellent Help Wanted— Male 86 year. An extensive propaganda cam-* hUlty for errors in \®'®?_^°"tfuracy condition. South Manchester. . MODERN STRAIN will be assumed and their accuracy J. M. SHEARER FOUR ROOM TENEMENT on Spruce paign in foreign countries, partiou< cannot be guaranteed. Capitol Bulck Co. Tel. 16f)0 MANAGER WANTED for South Man­ Wanted— To Buy 58 street, with all. improvements. Tele­ larly the United -States and Gerx chester branch store, no experience phone 1320-12 or 409-3. many. Is being planned* Local lh< necessary, $300 to $500 cash deposit TOBACCO BELT Phone 664 Auto Repairing— Painting "T JUNK—1 will pay highest prices for FOUR ROOMS and basement, toilet, terests will work with Steamship ASK •■OR WANT Ali SERVICE required on goods. $300 up monthly. all kinds of Junk; also buy all kinds Insanity Is Hitting a Grow­ Manufacturer 338 Pearl street, Hart­ of chickens. Morris H. Lessner. tele­ bath and electric lights, at 37 Apel and railway services, and already, Place, $20. Inquire 102 Woodbrldge' established tourist agencies, to at­ VALVES AND CARBON job, labor ford. J phone 982-4. Index of Classifications street. OPENS MARKETS tract the travelers. charge on Chevrolet $4.50, Pontiac YOUNG MAN between 20 and 30 years ing Number of Our Busi­ $6.50. Oakland $8.50. All work MAGAZINES, rags, bundled paper, FOUR ROOM tenement at 158 El- M. Tardieu has taken the prob­ guaranteed at Catlin’s Service Sta­ old willing to work. Good wages. junk bought fo# cash. Phone 849-3. Steady employment. Address all com­ Will call. J. Elsenberg. drldge street.' Inquire at 30 Griswold lem to Premier Poincare, who has tion. 255 Center street. South Man­ munications to 52 Mt. Nebo Place. street. ^ ‘ given a sympathetic ear to the vari­ appearSfoTina In theio °'Sn«, numerical order ,„'if ndl chester. ON SEPTEMBER 6 ness Leaders. Tenements for . Bent 63 FOUR ROOM TENEMENT at 21 ous possibilities’ of exploiting cated: _ a 1 YOUNG MAIf with high school educa­ Apartments— Flats— Lost and Found ...... , Garages— Service— Storage 10 tion for office work. Apply In person Ridgewood street, with Improve­ France in ojther lands. It is now re­ Announcements ...... 3 to Valvollne Oil Co. ments. Rent $18. Inquire on premises. |> alized here' that the useful propa­ APARTMENTS—Two. three and four Philadelphia.— Modern business­ Personals ...... ••• ...... room apartments, heat, Janitor ser­ IN SELWITZ BUILDING three room ganda of such countries as Bel­ Antomobllcs ^ FOR RENT—GARAGE for one car. Sitaatlons Wanted— Female 88 New "Bright Bell” Is Set men in alarming Increasing num­ gium, Sweden and Italy, while Automobiles for Sale ...... 5 vice, gas range, refrigerator, In-a- apartm- it, all modern Improvements. Automobiles for Exchange . . . . | Inquire at 90 Walnut street. door bed furnished. Call Manchester Inquire Selwltz ^hoe Shop. Tel. 835-2.' bers today are falling victims- to France was doing nothing to bring Auto .Accessories-—Tires ...... ^ WANTED—HOUSEWORK for several Construction Company. 2100 or tele­ phone 782-2. For Record Showing Ini one of the gravest diseases that has business, has diverted travel from Auto Repairing—Palfitlng . . . . . Wanted Autos— Motorcycles 12 hours mornings. Call 64 School this country. street. an oilcloth or rubber coat, to pre­ ever faced medical science— Insanir Autos—Ship by Truck ...... | DESIRABLE 5 ROOM lower flat, 150 vent water spraying over it and Advertising AUTOS—Will buy cars for Junk. Summit street, heat, all improve­ ty, in the opinion of Dr. Huhley AutoS'^For i.fclr0 •••••••**'* * *^* ** ia Used parts for sale. General auto re­ Live Stock— Vehicles 42 rendering it Ineffective. 1927-28 Season. ’The result Is that France will Garages—ServJ^ce—Storage .. • ments. screens, storm windows, yard, H. Owen noted Philadelphia police Motorcycles—Bicycles ...... pairing. Abel's Service Station, Oa.' garage. Phone 454-12. adopt competitit^methods. French Wanted Autos—Motorcycles • • ^ street, Tel. 789. FOR SALE—CARLOAD of accredited and fire surgeon. This disease is in­ tourist agenCies''wlR be encouraged Business and Professional Services cows from Vermont, new milch and TO RENT—PURNELL BLOCK—three If the car has gone over long creasing steadily among business springers, under federal supervision. •room heated apartment, all modern RALEIGH, N. C.— Eyes of the in American oities.^lso such capi­ Business Services Offier|l ...... • Building— Contracting 14 conveniences. Apply G. E. Keith mountain roads, the brakes need and professional men until at the Household Services Offered ....1 3 a Franklin Oroutt, Coventry. Tel. careful adjustment, and perhaps re- world’s tobacconists are centered on tals as London, yienna, Copenha­ Building-contracting ...... " Man. 1064-3. Furniture Co. present rate it will become soon as gen, Berlin and Madrid and other ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING appli­ lining. Eastern North Carolina, where the grave ,a problem as cancer and other Florists—Nurseries ...... 5 ROOM FLAT all Improvements on important centers, to advertise the Funeral—. _ __ 1 Directors*»rvrtf/VWQ -.....• . • • • e se ances, motors, generators, sold and Poultry and Supplie.s 43 Another mountain climbing af­ country’s next big tobacco belt insidlijus diseases unless drastic Heating— Plumbing— Roofing 17 repaired; work called for. Pequijt trolley line Station 52. Harrison's advantages 'Of Freiujh beach and 18 Electric Co., 407 Center streeL Phone store 598 Center street. Phone 569. ter-effect is the softening of the opens the 1927-28 season on Sep­ steps are taken immediately to com­ mountain resorts "and watering Insurance tember 6. Millinery—Dressmaking . . 19 1592. MARCH PULLETS—All breeds from hose couplings in the water cooling bat its inroads, Dr. Owen asserts. places and attract'^,’ tourist patron­ 20 excellent stock. Also milk fed broil­ FIVE ROOM MODERN flat, first lioor, This, the New Bright Belt^ as It It is our. best citizens, the ones Moving—Trucking—Storage £1 35 Cooper street, rent $30.00. Inquire system, from overheating of the en­ Painting—Papering ...... Florists— Nurseries 15 ers. Wm. B. Bradley. Phone 1163-3, gine. These should be checked up is called, takes in the tobacco pro­ who have taken the lead in civic age. Professional Services ...... 22 321 Oakland streeL Manchester. at The Home Bank and Trust Co. This is rather,- a remarkable 23 and, if they are cracked or show ducing centers of the coastal plain, and national affairs, that are tbq manehl?er foP/.tiiBlK'f’iench to take. Tailoring—Dyeing—Cleaning 24 BARBERRY HEDGES, California TABLE FOWL for sale, also spring considerable wear, should be re­ and is the largest of the tobacco most susceptible to this mental, cal­ 35 Privet hedges, bulbs a,nd flowering chickens. Karl Marks. 136 Summer has been run a few thousand miles In years past, especially since the Toilet Goods and Services .. 26 placed with new couplings. . belts in the southeast. amity. The present day modes of Wanted—Business Service . shrubs etc., for fall planting. Way- street. Telephone 1877. New laid without a change. Sky high optimism, touched off living is the cause, Dr. Owen claims. •war, France -has .had the lion s Bdacntlonal side Gardens. Rockville. Tel. 714-2. eggs. To be sure of a thorough cleans­ Overheating also takes large share of tourist tiusiness. The slump S7 chunks of rubber from these coup­ by the auspicious openings recent­ The pace is so fast, that day after Courses and Classes ...... 28 WINTER CABBAGE AND CELERY' ing, the engine also- should be of- this season, however, has been Private Instruction ...... lings and mixes them into the cool­ ly of the South Carolina, Georgia day, some of the most brilliant of Dancing plants, cabbage 10c per dozen, c40 1000 MARCH HATCHED White washed with gasoline or under and Florida belts, • prevailed our business men are "cracking” a lesson. Musical—Dramatic ...... “ ppl 100; celery 10c per dozen, 50c Leghorn Pullets. High producing steam pressure. ing system. These chunks might per Too. Michael Pinatello. Station throughout the Eastern North under the strain. During the last three years the Wanted—Instruction ...... strain. Grown uder Conn. "Grow clog up the radiator. The whole Tired Basiness Men. city of Paris has been busy with , Financial 22, Burnside avenue greenhouse. Healthy. Chick” Plan. Oliver Bros.. system therefore should be drain­ Carolina area, as preparations Bonds—Stocks—Mortgages 31 East Hartford. Our institutions for the insane some notable improvements, and 32 No. Windham. Conn. ed and flushed several times, be­ went forward for the opening of a Business Opportunities .. Sometimes mud, thrown back dozen or more of the world’s big­ are coming more and. more to con­ now another great beautification Money to Loan ...... ““ Heating—PIurabing—Kooiing 17 from bumping through wet roads, fore fresh water is put in. tain on their rosters'the names of enterprise is": beih^ hastened. It em­ Money Wanted ...... clogs up the air vents of the radia­ After the cleaning, the chassis gest markets. Help and Sltnatlon* Opening* Sales Big patients who have been the out­ braces the extensionvof the Champa . 75 DUBUQUE ROOFING CO. Roofing of ] tor, reducing its cooling efficiency. joints should be greased thorough­ standing men in their respective Help Wanted—Female ...... • all kinds, 24 Falrview street. South ly,-and the springs should not be On the'basis of/reports from thd Blyaees, the famoh*. boulevard that Help Wanted—Male . . . . — •• . .76 The radiator, therefore, should earlier markets, tobacconists ex-1-communities, Dr. Owen points out extends fr^m the Place de la Con­ Help Wanted—Male or Female •a 37 Manchester. Telephone 990-5. be washed thoroughly after a long o'vrerlooked. .S7-A pected to fare well when the New "Note the patients in our sanita- corde to the Arc de Trlomphe, to Agents W'.nted . 38 drive. In doing so, it is advisable to •The body, too, needs tightening riulns. They are chiefly "tired busi­ Situations Wanted—Female Moving—Trucking—Storage^ 201 to keep the car in good running Bright Bglf opens. Opening sales on make the highway one of the most Situations Wanted—Male . . . . . 39 cover the front of the engine, es­ the South Carolina marts broke all ness men taking a ‘mental’ rest, attractive and longest In th* world. Employment Agencies . 40 I pecially the electrical system, with condition 'for the rest of the year. L iv e Stock— Pets— Ponltry— Vehicles PERRETT AND GLENNEYrr^Local records, and prices appeared to be he^said. and long distance moving and truck­ ''‘We are constantly working with To' jDiO?® tfep Traffic Dogs—Birds—Pets ...... standing up to.,last year’s average. This plaU^was' considered before I.lve Stock—Vehicles ...... ing. Daily express to Hartford.' Liv­ By ISB.4EL KLEIN our' nerves keyed "to the highest ery car for hire. Telephone 7-2: On the return from a long trip The leading market in New ,the war, but had to be postponed. Poultry and Supplies Bright Belt is Wilson, self-styled pitch and unless there Is relaxation Wanted — Pets—Poultry—Stock 44 the car, like the rest of us, needs for at least a part of the day,” the It is proposed no'W to extend the For Sale—MUcellaneoas "biggest tobacco market In the 45 ' OLD M.4.STERS a general cleaning' and overhauling. doctor says, ‘‘a heavy toll is exacted great highway to Saint Germain, Articles for Sale ...... The road is none too kind to any world,” which last year marketed of our nervous and mental stamina. linking up the Avenue de la Gran- ‘ Boats and Accessories ...... 46T 61,825,130 pounds at an average of Building Materials ...... 47 i automobile, especially after several This toll takes the form of insani­ dee Armee, the Avenue de Neullyl Diamonds — Watches—J ewelry 48 I went back an old-time lane days of constant touring without $26.86. ' ty In time and it is becoming so and the Avenue de la Defense to. Electrical Appliances—Radio 49 In the fall o’ year, Phone Your ^ant Ads Other markets iu the New Bright Nanterre, and Joining the main Fuel and Feed ...... k. minute's attention. The body widespread that even the laymen Garden—Farm—Dairy Products 50 There was wind and bitter rain squeaks, the chassis frame is loose, Belt, all of, which will open on Sep­ are astounded at the amazing in­ road. Household Goods 51 And the leaves were sere. the engine is noisy and the car It­ To The tember 6, are: Washington, Wind­ roads made in the past few years. The highway, when completed Machinery and Tools ...... 52 self is full of dust and grime. sor, New Bern, Wallace, "Warsaw, “ This disease is one of the great­ will provide passages for pedes­ Musical Instruments ...... -S Once the birds wer« lilting high Tarbofo Enfield, ■ 'Ahoskle Smith- Offlqe and Store Equipment . . . . 54 It is therefore good practice not est problems facing medical men trians, cyclists, equestrians, vehicu­ SpoYtlng Goods—Guns ...... 55 In a far-off May— only to have the body cleaned, but field, Kinston, Robersonville Wil- today," declared Dr. Owen. lar traffic andean electric railway: Specials at the Stores ...... 56 I remember, you and I to check over all running parts, to Evening Herald 1 liamston Rocky Mount, Farmvllle, “ Modern business men should service from tlm -Btoile into the- Wearing Apparel—Furs ...... 57 "Were as glad as they^ __ •Tighten u^ all body and chassis Greenville and Goldsboro. slow down, take more exercise and suburbs. Theylhorease in traffic, Wanted—To Buy ...... 58 Fourteen d ^ s later wlH see the Rooms—Board—Hotels—Resorts bolts, and' see that all joints are -relax more often,” the physician particularly motor trkffic, has madei Restanrants •But the branches now are bare well greased. ast of the North Carolina Belts— advises as a preventive. this great artery necessarj;:, ' Rooms Without Board ...... 59 And/the lad you knew the Old Bright Belt, taking In the City life is blamed not only for Boarders Wanted ...... 59-A Long ago was buried there— central portion of the State— under the increasing number of insanity Country Board—Resorts ...... 6) Long ago, With you. ^, Dust gets into the cracks and Hotels—Restaurants ...... 71 openings of the automobile, and ac­ Call 664 way. September 20 was the opening cases among business meh*but also — Thomas 9. Jones* .Jr.: In the FORCED OUT B Z BEES Wanted—Rooms—Board ...... 62 cumulates to a startling degree on date set for this belt by the United of that among Immigrants, by Dr. Real Estate For Rent Fall o’ Year. State Tobacco Association, at its re­ S. H. Lanybn of the Philadelphia Apartments, Flats. Tenements.. 63 any sort of journey. The dry dirt And Ask for a Want Ad Taker Kansas City.—-A swarm of heeSi Business Locations for Ren. — 64 roads we meet on almost any trip cent' annual meeting at Morehead^ general hospital. Houses for Rent ...... 65 City. Do Not Need Pity. looking for a home early this year’ throw up great quantities of thin Tell Her What You Want selected a window; ledge of an, Suburban for.. Rent ...... 66 i WIFE WAITED 38 YEARS dust that creeps into the crankcase, Prospects Bright "Professional and business men, Summer Homes for Rent ...... 67 Prospects on this belt also ap­ when insane, usually have reached apartment house. Attempts to dis­ Wanted to Rent ...... 61 into the transmission housing and An experienced operator will take your ad. help you that point through worry over loss lodge them failed. The . tenants Real Estate For Sale into the carburetor. pear to be bright. This belt sold Arkansas, City, “ Kau.— Thirty- word it for best results, and see that it is properly in­ of money or through grief, ac­ moved out and. t^ fh ees remained.- Apartment Buildings for Sale,,* 69 This dust must bo cleaned out. 133,799,006 pounds of the golden Business Property for Sale • .... 70 eight years Is long enough to wait serted. Bill will be mailed same day allowing you until leaf in 1926-27 at an average price cording to Dr. Lanyon. “ The im­ — for five months. ’ The other day Farms and Land for Sale ...... 71 for one’s husband to come home. The oil in the crankcase should be migrant, on the other hand, their hive was chopped away, but changed and before new oil is put seventh day after Insertion to take advantage of the of $24.21, compared with 107,333,- Houses for Sale ...... 72 So said Mrs. Etta Warner when she 270 pounds at $18.70 during the times is unable to adopt himself to they still are swarming about the Lots for Sale ...... in a quart of thin fresh oil should CASH RATE. Resort Property for Sale ...... appeared In court to ask for a di­ preceding year. Its largest market the stress of life under new condi­ building. Suburban for Sale ...... vorce. She said John A. Warner left be used to ^ush it out. tions, especially in our large cities, New heavy oil or grease should .is Winston-Salem, which marketed •V’ Real Estate for Exchange her and their ten children in 1889 in excess of 43,000,000 founds- at says Dr. Lanyon. "These persons if Wanted—Real Estate ...... and now she has decided he never be put into the transmission and Auction-Legal Notices an average of $23.30. place\i on farms,’-' he said, "would Auction Sales intends to return. rear housing, especially, if the Car have avoided bjeakdAwns. uegal f otices "But with It all,” adds Dr, Lan­ yon, "one shouldn’t pity.the Insane. New House GAS BUGGIES—What a Scarel The majority of them are far nap-^ pier than their normal brethren. The sanfe person is' always • con­ fronted by a struggle. The insane person escapes all this for he If^s Yes, we have one brand new with, in a world of his own delusions. On oak doors, full bathroom, located on the .whole they are mostljr pleasant. lot 50x150 on street with sewer, Insanity means escape— from the gas, etc., walking distance to trolley rworld of reality and its struggles. and business section.. "The common sajrlDiS among Wadsworth St. Beihiidetached physicians In charge of the psycho­ ot 6 rooms, each apartment, -all pathic wards in our various hospl- modern and offered at a reasqnable (tals is that the happy people of 'pric6«' this world are in our institutions, Brand new single of 6 rdoms oak the unhappy ones on the outside,” floors, steam heat, extra large living Dr. Lanyon said. "Don’t pity them. room, 5 minutes from trolley. Price They are happy.” only $5,800. Small cash neces­ sary. , ^ Ten room two family with 3 ex­ tra building lots. Only a lew min­ BACK TO SCHOOL. utes off Main street.- ’ $7,500. Easy terms. Pasadena, Cal.— At a "sunset Near Main street, 4: room house luncheon” giten recently in Pasa­ with bath and electrieity# Price dena high school, the youngest only $2,900. .r guest was 85 years old. .Among the 40 others was one centenarian. An R O B E R T J. s m i t h ; old-fashioned.-spell-down was a fea­ ture ot the day and students, dress­ 1009 Main- ed in the fashion of 75 year* ago, Real Estate, .fcsuraiice, ■ii.na> nlri.tfna aangs. Steamihin Tickets. STHimSDAY. SEPTEMBI® 1,1! ,t ■/ .J. - . ■ . ' IPAGE FOtTRTEElf-•» y ' ______

Local Teachers At - OLD FASmONED-MODERN Modern and Old Fashioned ANDERSON TO LEAVE ' A.' DANCING./ Dancing Convention At City View Dance' Hall ^ Dance FOR PARIS NEXT WEEK r t -iv Keeney Street Ends Work at Post Office Sat- Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Wlrtalla,' t \ TO-NIGHT ■ MAPLEGROVE V urday^McCluskey His Sub- local dancing Instructors are in at­ 'I.' SHERWOOD’S ORCHESTRA tendance this week at the normal ^ Admission SOc. ROCKVILLE stituter Achool for dancing being held at the Hotel Bond, under the auspices Clarence O. Anderson, of Jackson of the Connecticut Dancing Teach­ TONIGHT Friday Evening; Sept. 2 street, popular local mail carrier ers’ Club. More than 125 Instruc­ h.- and ex-^Aervlce man, will wmd up At the Rainbow tors from all over the state are Ramblers 5 Piece Orchestra ils duties at the South Manchester taking the course under such pro- Old Fashion and Modern post office Saturday prior to his. ^ Admission 40c. trip to Prance where he will go next fpssionals as Madame Sonia Serova week with the American Legion. of New York who specializes In hair EXTENDED UNTIL SATURDAY NIGHT Dancing Mr. and Mrs. John Croskey of let and aesthetic dancing and chil­ V ‘‘Whifey” as he is more commoh- At Belirend’s Orchestra Eldridge street have had visiting dren’s work; Jack Blue and Oscar them relatives from Pattersonj^. N. IJr knoi^rn, sets sail Duryea, also Myra D. Ryder of 10% SAVING * JOIN OUR FUR COAT CLUB morrow from New York. He is the J., nieces and nephews in the Sea­ Boston. man, Stahlin and Broskiez families. wlnnervof tjie recent ‘ On-to-Paris You will be interested'to know thiit our August Fur Sale which has been running for the past ten days will be Tree trip of^red by the C. E. House . Mr. and Mrs. Wlrtalla report many new ideas In fox trot, tango \ extended until Saturday.' We have sold 50% more coats in this, sale than we sold.during the entire winter of last ABOUT TOWN / St. Margaret’s Circle No. 280, and son clothing store in which Jack Pentland was the runner-up. and other hall room dances. They year. We want you to undWtand this simply as an explanation of the confidence which the public has placed m National Daughters of Isabella will Heartily approve of the new Kinka- 'hold its regular business meeting During the several weeks, Ander­ \ son will he away, his work at the jou, which Is full of pep and bound our fur coat department. , , " , . ' ' ' ... Mr. and Mrs. Henry Viens of 18 in K. of C. hall this evening at 8 to enjoy great popularity. \ o’clock. Further plans for the get- post office will be cared for by John Buying furs ks we do. In connection with some of the largest stores In the country, we are In a position to g ve you e ene Williams street gave a dinner par­ McCluskey. His route is on the fol­ ty last evening in honor of Mrs. together to be held later in Hie of every possible price saving. I t month will be made. Members de­ lowing streets. Maple Oak, Birch, Elizabeth Blow of Burlington, Vt. Cottage, Florence and ^ part of . About 100 words were added to The advantage Joining our Pur Coat Club now, allows you to buy the coat at 10% better than our regular cash price and gives who is visiting here. Mrs. Blow ex­ siring to make returns for the re­ the English language during'1926. pects to return homA next week. cent whlsts'ma/ do so at this meet­ Spruce. you amplO time in which to pay for it. This is a most unusual feature and is worth considering. You are under n6 “ ing. to Mrs, Lillian Carney, treas­ to purchase, even if you come In and look. "We are absg^utely responsible for every garment we sell an we ave a Mr. and Mrs. Emil Helm of urer. up to date Cold* Storage vault'in which we store your furs without charge next summer. Be sure and see us omorrow. Spruce street are '’spending their ,yyg36XX3(36XXXX%'X%XX3£X3C$!S%ISXX56XXXX?6XX5636XS6^^ vacation visiting with friends in Miss Bernice Juul of the "Weldon NATURAL Provincetown, Mass. Beauty parlors in the Park build­ FRENCH SEAL ing has returned after a stay of Russian Fitch Collar MUSKRAT Mr. and Mrs. George Ruddell of several days in Cos Cob, Conn. Schopl Days Are Less Patterson, N. J., are visiting until $225.00 $225.00 Labor Day with Mi. and Mrs. Wil­ Tne first quarterly conference of liam Waddell of Wadsworth street. the North Methodist church will be A very youthful mod­ Finest selected skins. held in the vestry this evening at el with the Johnny col- Shawl collar. Heavy Mrs. Leonard Leeburg and 7-45 Rev. Myron Center, district Than A Week Away lar^and cuffs of Rus­ ‘silk lining. daughter. Ruth, of Roosevelt street superintendent, will preside. sian Fitch. Made of have returned after spending the YOUR BOY starts back to school—will he be properly finest quality skins. past few weeks with relatives on The lining Is of bro­ fi but not expensively dressed?- caded silk. BROWN Staten Island. P. 0 . sc h e d u le \ • ^ We are prepared to supply his needs from the better CARACUL Mrs. Hampton and Miss Lillian ON LABOR DAY Keeney of Summer street returned grades of merchandise at prices no higher than some NATURAL OR Fox Collar yesterday after spending a few days BROWN PONY $175.00 in New York City. , inferior grades. Fox Collar Postmaster Oliver F. Toop todny Finest quality skins. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cheney announced the South Manchester $225.00 Plain silk lining. and daughter, Ruth, of Porter Post Office schedule for Labor Day, street and Mr. and Mrs. .Walter Special Close-outs on Of the finest select­ Monday, Sept. 5. T^lp^very ed skins, beautifully Lewis and son, James of Highland city, rural, or parcel post Park left this morning on a tour of marked. Mushroom RACCONEY t h e ^ w England states. The money order BOYS’ SUITS collar. Heavy silk lin­ closed all day but > .» ing. dow will be open in the morning $85.50 Raymond Barrett of Barrett & ^ $24.50 VALUES ...... $18.75 Robbins and Edward Taylor, well from 7:15 to-lOilB. Tomboy style, with Mails will arrive NATURAL Mendoza beaver shawl known Manchester singer returned at 6:35. 6:55. 9:15 will be des­ $21.50 VALUES ...... $16.75 yesterday from a ten days' stay on* MUSKRAT collar and cuffs, and. Block Island. Stormy weather was patched at,8:50 and 11.00. AH $17.00 VALUES ...... $13.85 sport lining. An excep­ \ the rule during their visit to the departments will close at 11 Fox Collar tional value. Fully Island and there was no tuna Dsn- o’clock for the rest of the day and $16.00 VALUES ...... $12.75 guaranteed. open Tuesday at the usual hour $247.50 ing for them or anybody else. Dur­ $15.00 VALUES ...;...... $11.65 ing two days the wind blew so hard Beautifully matched that the front doors of the hotel ' With two pairs of Knickers. Sizes, ages 9 to 17. finest selected skins BROWN where they stayed could not be Give Party For •with mushroom collar. IV’V' opened. Boys’ Master Shirts and Blouses, $1.00 and $1.50. Heavy silk lining. MUSKETINE Fox Collar Bill Streeter, mechanician at Glastonbury Bride Boys’ Belts, Caps, Hosiery, Undei-wear, Oxfords, Keds, BLACK PONY Housen’s service station on Depot Slickers and Gym Suits. > $71.55 Square, who recently returned from I Pointed Fox Collar a motor trip through Canada says Twenty-five members of Helen .$175.00 A remarkable ^oat that one meets on the Canadian Davidson Lodge, daughters of Sco­ Special Value is Offered in wi for this price.* Fully roads more automobiles with United Soft luxurious fur tia. motored down to Glastonbury irivA-.-WC'i guaranteed. States markers than with Canadian last evening and tendered a sur — all selected skins. plates. Also he says that the prise party to Mrs. Harold,Duse at BOYS’ SLIP-ONS Skinner’s satin lining. weather north of the line has been her home in that place. Before her far more summer like than in Con­ STewest Fall shades, all wool, w. 7 7 W ? W r NATURAL CONEY marriage this summer she was $ TAN CALF necticut. Miss Agnes Russell of Che^nut g it...... 3.50 k,'--. ' ' $53.55 and has long been a member Fox Collar Town Clerk Samuel J. Turkinton lodgeof the Daughters of Scotia. The Better Values at Moderate Prices Shawl collar. Bro­ and Joseph Albiston went out to ladies provided a plentiful supply $85.50 caded lining. Fully Amston today to fish. Sam is out to of good things to eat, as well as a in All Boys’ Wear Mushroom collar. guaranteed. heat Andrew Ferguson’s big catch, set of stainless steel and silver cut- Nicely lined. even if he has to stay all night to lery and a serving tray aa ?-lasting | FRENCH SEAL do it. reminder of their good wishes. The FRENCH SEAL usual pleasant evening was spent Cocoiette trimmed Miss Kathryn Dimlow, daaighter enlivened by stories, music and Squirrel Collar of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dimlow GLENNEY'S of North School street gave a birth­ games. $175.50 $112.50 Tinker Building. day party at her home yesterday engagement A lovely French seal coat with cocoa squirrel shawl collar Cocoiette shawl collar and cuffs. afternoon and invited 18 of her rpj-rt A TIG ilt hHS bGG D • HTl- ] q , ’ and cuffs. Beautifully lined. little playmates, all of whom thor­ uounced of Miss Helen D. Johnson, oughly enjoyed themselves. The William- Johnson, 224 ------FRENCH SEAL home was decorated with pink and daugnrer _ , ^ -William Flavel, I ’ ------— ------BLACK CARACUL white crepe paper and a profusion Fox Collar $99.00 of cut flowers. A bountiful supper ,Flavehof 93 Spruce street Self trimmed. Mushroom collar. Nicely lined, was served. Kathryn received mdny $175.50 useful gifts. 4 . Beautifully marked. Mushroom collar. SILVERINE Mr. and Mrs. James H. Mc’Velgh FO R SA L E Fox Collar of Oxford street have as ’ their Clapp’s Favorite Pears MENDOZA BEAVER V guests, Mrs. Edward Lin,gham of $71.55 Brooklyn, N. Y., who leaves for her For Canning $121.50 home this evening, also Mrs. R. E. Beautiful fox crush collar. Anderson and daughter, Roberta, Edgewood Fruit Farm Self trimmed. Mushroom collar. Nicely lined. 0.461 oWoodbridge Street of New Britain who will remain un­ ON SALE MAIN FLOOR til Labor Day.' Telephone 945

School Days Are Here .SOUTH -Mf\hCHS:STER • Typewriters for Students ‘ standard and Portables ^

New and Rebuilt Machines Principal Q. H. Wilcox, of the For Sale and Rent THE GREAT WAR Connecticut Business College, will Salesladies Wanted /^fthtlT A. Kliofld; TEN YEARS AGO TODAY be:In the office this evening to en­ for Coat and Dress Department. roll students’.— Adv. Only experienced need apply. By United Press ' I.. 875 Main S t Dewey^Richnian Co. A Personal Service Abroad September 1, 1917 Just returned from Point'O’ Four German mine sweepers Woods, how about the. children’s FRADIN’S Insurance and Real Estate. Jewelers, Stationers, Opticians C P ^ H E joy o f a trip abroad is very often offset by are destroyed off Jutland coast achobl shoes? Gardner has the 757 Main St, New Location, 767 Main Street O t h e fear o f traveling in a strange land, -with by the British forces. good kind.— adv. The German press denounces strange customs and a strange language. President Wilson’s rejection of V \ N W X XXX X X X VX.VSA That fear has been overcome and the travel path the Pope’s peace plea and 'the EVERGREEN o f the tourist made easy by the world--wide service of newspaper Lokal Anzeiger says the American Express Ck>mpany. This b a ii is equip- his object Is to prolong the war at any price. ' to introduce you to this service in the f o ^ o£ Planting Time' arranging your trip to any place you may -wish to ' V HULTMAN'S travel and for- any length o f time you may wish to RUTH ELIZABETH It is now the best time of'the •wy- ,. T E A BOOM entire year to make evergreen Shoes for School Wear You may travel abroad with a carefree spirit, 70 N. Main St., Manchester. Conn. plantings. . - SMARTNESS, combined with FIT, and REAL WEAR­ knowing that this service will smooth all of the de­ Tol. 1594 tails of yoiir journey. Uniformed interpreters are ING QUALITIES Afternoon Teais, If you need assistance -we ,witi ^ . BOYS ^ maintained at important seaports, frontier joints help you to lay out your grounds.; and railroad centers, ready to lend a helping hand. I’ldll himish the Ma^ruJs? OXFORDS and SHOES ...... $3.50 up L uncheons, The offices o f this world-wide organization are Card Parties Catered For. Our Nurseries are one of *tthe Black or Tan That will determine, often, whether or not your also available for cashing travelers cheques, exchang- Dinners by Appointment most complete in New England i m i s s e s new home wffi be athing of worth and cooaf^ ot ihg money, sending cables and performing countless Open Every Day Prom 12 A. M. Visitors always welcome. PATENT LEATHER PUMPS ...... $3.00 up other services that only the traveler can appreciate. » to 11 P. M. otherwise. All down the Hne, you’ll find high- OXFORDS and TIES ...... ^3.50 up qusUty materials here,at right pricea.For instance— For travel either at home or abroad, the safe and (Open Evening^) . Sizes 111/4 to 2 ’dependable and convenient way to carry your funds S H E E T R 6 C K CHILDRENS is in the form o f American Express Travelers Cheques. AUTO TOPS OXFORDS and PATENT P U M P S ...... $2.50 up. sale o f Travelers Cheques is only another of the le finproof wallfaoard. Beat Sizes 2V z to 8— 8V^ to 11 ' many services this bank offers to travelers. Their cost A utQ C urtains nun r ( ^ in broad, hiah sheets KEDS > is only 75^ ptf $100. ' Sbrepaper. Penmnent. Decoratedi Cellidoid Lights. cxadtSi waatps or buckles. Vermihri C. E. Wilson & Co- CHILDREN’S, $1.00 and up. BOYS’ $1.50 to $2.75 Made and Repaired. White or Tan Nurseries, The Manchester Trust Co. Carpets made to order. 302 WOODBRIDGE ST. ' ' South Manchester, Conn. W.* G. Gleimey Co. ' Allen jPIace, Manchester. Arthur L. Hultman Members o£ Hie American Bankers’ Association. Charles taking IHeraU Advs. Brins