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THE WEATHER NET PRESS BUN Forecast by U. B. Weather Bnreao, AVERAGE DAILY CIROULATION H artford. for the Month of November, 1929 Partiy cloudy, slightly colder to night; Wednesday increasing cloudi Con®- grir'' 5 , 4 8 8 ness. Uembers of fhe Acdit Bnrean of Clrculationa aturtealfr lEiimtttn
SOUTH MANCHJESTBR, CONN., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1929. FOURTEEN PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS VOL. XLIV ., NO. 77. (OlassiAed Advertising on Page 12) I.0WMAN LAUDS RUM RUNNERS SLAIN, THEIR CRAFT SEIZED SEVENTY-TWO DIE IN PANIC COASTGUARDS ON T B WORK IN THEATER IN SCOTLAND; Says Killing of Three Run VICTIMS MOSTLY CHILDREN ners W as “ Unfortunate <♦) But Unavoidable” ; Them Other Theater Disasters OVER 150 INJURED selves to Blame. In the Last 100 Years Washington, Dec. 31.— (AP)— i Seymour Lowman, assistant secre IN T H ^ A D RUSH New York, Dec. 31— (AP)—Among the largest theater tary of the Treasury in a statement disasters in the world during the last 100 years were: today said that the killing of three Dec. 5, 1876— Conway’s Brooklyn Theater, 295 killed. smugglers and wounding of a fourth Dec. 8, 1881— Ring Theater, Vienna, 800 killed. Blaze Starts in Projection Room— Movie House Crowd at Newport, Sunday, was "un May 25, 1887— Opera Comique, Paris, fire, 200 killed. fortunate but unavoidable" and that Sept. 5, 1887— Exeter Theater, New York, fire, 75 killed. the smugglers having defied the ed for Holiday Picture and Tiny Victims Are Tram April 9, 1894— Davidson’s Theater, Milwaukee, fire, 76 killed. government “have no one to blame Feb. 1897— Quanton Theater, Pekin, China, fire, 230 killed. but themselves.” May 3, 1897— Grand Charity Bazaar, Paris, fire, 143 killed. pled to Death or Suffocated in Dash for Exits— Pa The assistant secretary said that because of the New Year’s demand, Jan. 12, 1903— Rhoades Theater, Boyertown, Va., fire, 169 smugglers were making unusual ef killed. thetic Scenes as Mothers Crowd Streets Seeking forts to land liquor along the At I Under a deadly rain of machine gun bullets, three rum runners were killed and their capt^n wounded Dec. 30, 1903— Iroquois Theater, Chicago, fire, 602 killed. ' aboard the speedboat Black Duck, pictured above after its capture by Coast Guardsmen heai^ lantic coast. , aboard tlie speeaDoai; eiacK valued at several hundreds of thousands of dol- Dec. 25, 1913— Panic, Calumet, Mich., 72 killed. Loved Ones— Police Have Difficult Task to Get Chil Check On Supplj' w T re Wood-sp7 ttered‘ deckrwhife‘ inveTtigations into the killing of tie ^ « m e d rum run Jan. 28, 1922— Knickerbocker Theater, Washington, col The customs service, he continu S ? s ^ert launched by Rhode iL n d and federal authorities. When a stream of bu lets from the Patn)j ed, knows how much liquor is leav lapsed, 98 killed . dren Out as They Were Piled Six Deep Before Doors boat raked the Black Duck’s deck house, two members of the crew were killed exactly where you ^ Jan. 9, 1927— Laurier Theater, Montreal, fire, 77 .killed. ing the base of supply at St. Pierre, Coast Guardsmen kneeling to open the hatchway. a French possession off the Cana Other large theater disasters in the United States in recent and on Stairways. dian coast, and added that the years include: amount that has been seized is May 10, 1916— Fire, Wallacetown, Va., 22 killed. "very gratifying." Nov. 14, 1920—Catherine Street Movie House, New York, 7 Lowman complimented the Coast MASQUERADING AS MAN, i ALIEN RIGHTS Paisley, Scotland, Dec. 31— (AP)—At le*st 72 persoas; Guard upon its work and said that children killed. ^ „ most of them children between the ages of 5 and 14, died today Nov. 28, 1921— Rialto Theater, New Haven, Conn. Fire, 6 it “had done well.” in a fire which swept through a motion picture theater here While deploring the loss of life In killed. ^ ^ ^ j sending the crowded house in a wild panic for the exits. enforcing the law Lowman said WOMAN BURGLAR SLAIN ONlYPROBUl . June 25, 1925— Gillis Theater, Kansas City, fire, 6 killed. "the laws of the United States must Most of the victims were children who were suffocated or be maintained." trampled to death in a mad rush to safety and many died at the The Statement. , 77 V,on K nwAiniir i IN CHINA NOW foot of two main staircases leading from a balcony where the His statement said: Husband and Two Chddreni CASH IS AWAITING . bodies of boys and girls were piled six deep. "The preliminary official report NEW YORK PREPARING 130 Injured ““ “ does not materially alter the facts At the hospital to which the dead eyes to the operator’s quarters ^ as already published by the press. Helping Her in Theft of yilXK VETERANS I Congressman Porter Says and dying were rushed as speedily i there was an immediate cry o “On account o'*' the New Year's from all sections of the house. demand an unusual effort has been as they could be dragged from the FOR NOISY NEW YEAR structure it was stated that the A wild rush started for the exits. made by smugglers to land liquor Grocery Store When They This Will Soon Be Solved number of dead had reached 69 and The aisles were filled with strug along the Atlantic coast. the number of children treated for gling boys and girls who fought "The amount of liquor leaving i Are Surprised by Owner. Nearly Half Million Have As Foreign Courts Were minor bums or injuries 150. blindly to reach the doors. the base of supply at St. Pierre, a | All Hotels^ Ballrooms andjNEW YEARTO GET The fire started in the projection But the doorways themselves were French possession off the Canadian also quickly jammed. As those in Rochester, N. Y., Dec. 31.—Ma.s- Not Asked for Pay— Must room but caused comparatively lit coast and from Nova Scotia is Always Trouble Breeders tle damage, the horrifying death front went down imder the crushing known to the customs service. The querading as a man and leading her Restaurants to Be Faied | BIG WELCOME HERE list being due for the most part to pressure from the crowd in the rear, amount that has been seized is very husband and two of her six children the victims piled themselves into gratifying. The Coast Guard has Act Before Thursday. Washington, Dec. 31.— (AP) — carbon monoxide gas and the on an early morning burglary Mrs. Chairman Porter of the House for- by Merrymakers Tonight; i — panicky rush of the children from struggling heaps done well. the balcony to the main floor. It was this condition which con Must Obey Law. Winifred Shields, 35, was fatally j eign affairs committee said today Washington, Dec. 31.— (AP) — Horrifled parents, whose children fronted the firemen and constables “The loss of life at Newport the shot today as she fled from the store ! that extra-territorial rights in China Curfew to Ring at 3 a .m . More Entertainment Than had gone to the theater for a holi when they reached the place. The other day was unfortunate but un she had been burglarizing. There are about 400,000 men and I furnish the only problem now dis- day program which featured “The I rescuers "fought grimly to disen avoidable. The laws of the United women in the United States who j turblng the friendship of the United Crowd" stood helplessly outside! Ernest Stott store keeper on the : States and the Far Eastern repub- tangle the children and clear th3 States must be maintained. The can get from Uncle Sam—for the New York,"^ 3i-(A P .)-| Ever Beforc Planned as while firemen, constables and civil- ' way for those who were still held ir Summerville boulevard, had been ilic. smugglers defied the government sleeping in the reex of his store mere asking—cash, or a bit of paper | Predicting a noisier, more bolster-i < a a a r j t . 1 AQA ians worked heroically in an effort j the theater. The task was made Unconcerned over the announce- to snatch the children from death. officers and took their punishment. since a recent burglary, and was ous welcome for 1930 than has beenl liJ Z y rauC S lUtO iy «5 v . I the more difficult by the crowding They have no one to blame but worth from one dollar to about \ rnent by the Nationalist govem- Rescuers, many of them civilians, ' aroused by the ringing of his casn $1,600. I ment of the abolition tomorrow of enjoyed by any of its recent pre- ■ ______forward of parents who rushed to themselves.” mounted ladders, smashed windows I the scene as the alarm spread rapid register bell. But these men and women, who all courts maintained in China, by decessors, hotel and restaurant, and dropped into the body of the j Lowman said no official report Starting for the front of the store | are World War soldiers and sailors, i foreign governments for the protec- ly through the murky mill town. had been received concerning the managements today prepared to; The New Year of 1930 will come theater where the childrt.n were ly- i he saw two men and two boys flee-; marines and yoemanettes, must j tion of their nationals. Porter pre- ing in heaps. The children were i Little Fire Damage. arrest of seven Coast Guardsmen in ing from the front entrance. Stott j speak for it before Thursday mid-1 dieted that early and satisfactory entertain thousands of New Year' to Manchester at the stroke of Fortunately the fire itself did nol connection with the theft of liquor then carried out to the open air i ran to the Street and fired five shots.; night, or forever hold their peace, (adjustment would be made between Eve celebrants. | twelve tonight and wUl enjoy much where emergency arrangements had ' spread to the theater and after the ' from the Flor-Del-Mar, a rum run ------i The adjusted Compensation Act ( Washington and Nanking. ner seized Saturday night with 4,000 Police Commissioner Whalen an- j more in the way of entertainment been made to care for them. ' place had been cleared it showeo (Continned on Page 3) j of 1924 provided for payment of all i He said that governments' en- nounced that the curfew will drown! than its predecessor 1929, who in a The local ambulance service was little trace of damage. Had tha cases of liquor. Coast Guard head ______j veterans or their dependents in ac joying extraordinary rights in cer- flames taken hold of the structurs quarters also said that no report had -1 out the blare of jazz, tin horns and; hours will be forgotten in the overwhelmed and tram cars were ,cordance with the service they gave. ^ tain coimtries were gradually modi- the death list would have mountc'l been received and that the com other noisemakers in night clubs. baUyhoo of all-night parties and pressed into service to assist in re It guaranteed a monetary recom- ' fying them, and in some instances moving the victims to a nearby in into the hundreds because none ot mandant of the New London office pense to every man who served had relinquished them altogether prompUy at 3 a. m. Wednesday.' church Watch Night services. would handle the charges against firmary. An alarm was sent out for those Imprisoned behind the door PATROL BOATS KEEP more than 60 days at home or in ■ either voluntarily, as in the case of Hotels, which are immune from j medical aid and a corps of physi the guardsmen. curfew restrictions advertised Of the latter there will be only ways could have escaped asphyxia the trenches, and the only proviso it j ------three in Manchester, of the former cians rapidly responded, but in most Meanwhile preparation of a re "dancing until dawn." Cover | tion. laid down was that requests be j (Continued on Page Three.) . . . . well, one guess is as good of the cases, medical aid was un The theater seats 750 persons. As port on the transfer of the prohibi VIGIL ALONG COAST made to the branch in which the charges will run as high as $20 a Ias another, though three gigantic availing. tion enforcement from the Treasury todays performance was billed as a service was rendered—before Janu- I person. ! parties will be staged publicly here special holiday raatiness for chil to the Department of Justice was ary 3, 1930. | Many Reservations with many, many more private ones FIRST REPORTS continuing. Conferences have been dren, the house was fully occupied Many Unpaid. | The management of the Hotel: behind the doors of Manchester’s Paisley, Scotland, Dec. 31.— (AP) held in the office of Secretary Mills OUR FOREIGN TRADE by youngsters of from five to 14 Those veterans still unpaid are in | Ambassador announced that the j five thousand or so homes. —Between sixty and eighty per- i y0g_j*g q£ age. with discussions centered around Fleet of Twenty Maintaining a class with 1,551,849 others who al capacity of its three large dining-j Watch Your Step the report which will be made to the sons, most of them children, were J Poor Children ready have been gfiven a total of , rooms would be taxed with reser-1 Weather, "Fair and colder,” is officially estimated to have perish- j virtually all of these children special Congressional committee $145,850,345; and with 3,434,700 j IS ON THE UP GRADE vations for more than one thou- ; the prediction of the weather man asked for by President Hoover. Blockade; Three Foreign ed in a fire which swept through a j came from working class homes more who have received certificates ! sand. The Savoy Plaza made ready j and to those who tote their own motion picture theater here crowd-; parents and elder brothers ! that in 20 years will be worth the i to care for an equal number and | private stock of "ginger-ale” this ed with youngsters on a holiday i sisters provide a somewhat pre Ships on Rom Row. 1 sum of $3,479,953,475, and may be i other hotels and restaurants an- j forecast should prove ideal though matinee. j carious living from wages earned Increase of Four Per Cent nounced preparations for capacity; from Stanton L. Briggs of Willi- The panic of the children as they} during intermittent operation of (Continued on I’age 3) INDIA CONDEMNS rrnwds i manUc, acUng prohibition admlnls- jammed the exits in a wild effort the mills and factories of Paisley. New York, Dec. 31.— (AP)—A j ______1 trator during the absence of Robert Over Last Year; Efficien ' L Senele comes this warning: to flee the raging flames within Despite the size of the disaster fleet of more than- 20 Coast Guard ! and the wild grief which seized be- brought the death roll up until off! patrol boats and destroyers, with | AT WASHINGTON j ?:lutomobiles which transport BOMBING OUTRAGE Washington Dec. 31.— (AP.) — ! liquor, irrespective of the character cials said that the number of vie- ; reaved households, the relief work the cutter Champlain today was | 3 PERSONS HURT tims would go over sixty and would was quickly organized and carried maintaining a blockade of the shore cy of Industry the Reason Washington will see the New Year j gf the owners and whether there is in tonight with all the frivolity and j ------probably be nearer eighty. out in an orderly manner. But tho from Montauk Point, Long Island, | Great Crush best efforts of firemen and police to New Jersey to prevent rum run- j merrymaking usually associated | (Continued on page 2) National Congress by a Vote IN CAPITAL CRASH with that annual event. | So great was the crush of strug^ j could not assuage the tragedy of ning. j 1 Washington, Dec. 31.— (AP)—The crling boys and girls who only a few ■ the scenes at the theater and the ! steadily growing efficiency of In spite of a staid and dignified ; Although three foreign ships sup- j ®moments before - -had - -been watching hospital. of 942 to 792 Supports posedly loaded with liquor were re f American industry in production example set by President and Mrs. I Grief Stricken Mothers I and of American merchants in pro- Hoover, who plan a quiet evening | EVE OF NEW YEAR a program which featured “The ported off Montauk Point, Coast! Crowd,” to gain safety from the Mothers crowded around the Guard officers said there was no j Newington Residents in Auto I moting sales, is believed by William at home with a few friends, hotels j __ amusement place and cried in agony L. Cooper, director of the Bureau holocaust, that firemen had the Gandhi’s Resolution. chance of any liquor ship getting j and night clubs prepared for a, greatest diffle^^^^ the fate of their little through the blockade. They pointed | of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, maximum of patronage and the p o -, LIKELY TO BE DRY f,: . ; ones. At the infirmary where the out that several small craft have ^ Crash Into Big Truck on j to have been the dominating factors lice department made ready to su thmug nnrpnfq hor- ' dead were laid out, broken-hearted Lahore, India, Dec. 31.— (AP) — been seized within the past few ! I in sending the country’s foreign pervise throngs of New Year’s Eve , Outside stoo . i parents stumbled blindly past the The All India National Congress to days. Berlin Turnpike. ' trade during 1929 to new high revelers on the streets of the busi- | ror stricken ^ d rp- ' ^•'dl forms identif)dng the victims. day adopted by a vote of 942 to 792 Seek Mother Ship j levels. ness section. j meO’ constables 1 Occasionally sounds of grief in the resolution of Mahatma Gandhi, While Coast Guard patrols search Allowing for changes in the buy- Reception Tomorrow 1 State Administrator Says peatedly braved the flames to b & I j-jjg street were relieved by wild Nationalist leader, condemning the ed in vain the waters for 50 miles ! j ing power of money, both exports Although their New Year’s Eve ^ the young victims m s^ety. | 0j.jgg gj jgy gg g missing child ^ h o recent bomb outrage against the life I off the Long Island coast for a Hartford, Dec. 31— (AP)- Three and imports for the year made in- observance will be of a quiet nature j Autos Carrying Even Pint Use Gas Masks ., . i had escaped injury was found by of Viceroy Lord Irwin and con-1 "mother ship" reported two days ; per.sons were injured, one of them , creases during 1929, and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Hoover will make up | The dense clouds of smoke which i gg^ious relatives. But these in- -ratulating him and his party on ' ago to be transferring liquor to two 1 critically this morning, when the i Cooper, in a statement issued today, for it tomorrow with the tradition- j came from the structure were so j stances were comparatively few and « ° ^ o ______I par in which thftv w e r e ridir said the result was not brought their escape from harm small auxiliary craft, three motor ' car in which they were riding on al White House reception. ; of Booze Will Be Seized. great that it was necessary to use i expressions of thankfulness The vote followed an hour and a boats, one a rum ruimer, were seiz ' their way to business in Hartford about by any temporary causes but gas masks, some of them impro- I quickly hushed as the joyous I crashed into the rear end of a In the morning they will receive j half of discussion. ed yesterday off the New Jersey marks the continuance of a move vised. ^ j parents turned to comfort a neigh- I truck parked on the Berlin turnpike ment practically unbroken since officials of the government and j The vote was looked upon as coast. ranking officers of the Army, Navy j pec. 31— (AP) — To The fire started in the operator’s j tjgg ^jjg suffered loss or was strengthening the position of Patrol boat No. 128, in command I about five miles from the center of 1921 and 1922. box and sped with terrifying rapid- l gtiii imcertain as to the fate of a Hartford. The left rear tires of Our Expoi^ts and Marine corpp and after tne j Connecticut’s thousands Gandhi inasmuch as he had intended of Boatsswain J. T. Craven, fired lunch the general public will be welcome the New Year ity through the crowded audi loved one. several shots at a swift rum runner ' the truck were dismounted from the While December trade figures are the resolution to call forth a test ! wheel and were being repaired by torium. The death of the largest number vote on the creed of the Congress in Newark bay, near Perth Amboy, in tonight at night clubs, hotels More than 150 children were of victims was stated to be due to but the small craft sped away to an 1 the driver when the accident occur- (Continued on Page 3.) (Continaed on Page 2.) and private parties the state prohi with reference to his doctrine of I red. It is believed that the passen- bition enforcement officers have is taken to a nearby infirmary suffer carbon monoxide poisoning from the inlet where Coast Guardsmen said i fumes which filled the theater. , non-violence.^ , . . J ... i gers in the passenger car failed to sued a stem warning. ing from bums and injuries which When Delegate Ansari in second- the crew was seen jetLso^^^^^^^^ Cracked ice and ginger ale, the they had received in the mad rush It was apparent the children had inger the resolutionresolution, declared that cargo. When the Coast Guard boat | from the building. been overcome as they swayed motor boat the early morning. basic parts of a mixed drink, will freedom never was won by such out reached the spot, the Lived In Newington be regarded as potential contraband A constant stream of tram cars helplessly in the auditorium, trying rages as the bombing, students in had been beached and its crew had All of the injured were residents Saved Up $4,000 for Fare and the servers thereof will be of and wagons pressed into service to find an exit to the pure air out the enclosure waved red flags and fled. Some liquor was found aboard, of Newington and were neighbors ficially reported as violating the arrived at the infirmary bearing side. the exact amount not being disclos shouted protests. Ansari retorted on Lawton avenue in that town. law. the little victims, many dead and Some of the children showed ex that even Communists did not be ed by Coast Guardsmen. They were taken to the Hartford To Poland, Is Still Here others in a comatose condition. All tensive scratches on their knees and Other Boats Seized And this edict, affecting the aver faces, as though they had been the lieve in individual violence but only hospital by a passerby, E. J. Dan- age citizen, has been made: “autos emergency measures were taken to mass violence. Two other boats were taken into thin of 104 Center street, Meriden. victims of hysterical fear. custody because. Coast Guardsmen which transport liquor, irrespective care for the injured. Swami Govindan and Dr. Alam Matthew Tillotson was reported Camden, N. J., Dec. 31— (AP) — (plater discovered the money had been of the character of the owners and Many of the deaths occurred at said, they were rimning without ’ taken from his bedroom by a sneak SLAYER SENTENCED. Gurdit Singh, prominent Indians, to be in a critical condition from For the third time in nine years, whether there is a pint or a himdred the hospital where the victims of the opposed the resolution. lights. The Mary D, a former sub shock and a severe loss of blood suf thief. marine chaser, running vidthout Elex Slessandreck, 40, has been Starting all over again, by 1923 gallons, will be conflacated." crush and panic were carted. Most An individual poll of the vote was fered from lacerations and cuts All this Is part of a drive to make New York, Dec. 31.—^(APl—Jo demanded and will be taken this lights off Atlantic Highlands, N. J., about the body. robbed of money which he had sav he had saved $1,200. He withdrew of those who succumbed at the in seph Barbetto„ convicted murderer, this, intending to sail for Poland, the state “bone dry” on New Year’s firmary met deaths from Injuries, evening. fled to a dock, where the crew dis Tom Brown, 26, sustained minor ed to return to his native Poland. eve as outlined by Stanton L. today was sentenced oy -ludga appeared. No liquor was found injuries about the body. Yesterday he drew $1,000 from and again several hours later some chiefly internal, rather than from James M. Barrett to die in the elec one stole the money. Briggs, of Wlllimantlc, acting pro bums. aboard. The motor craft K-10606 In Annie Mosdale, 35, was badly the bank and prepared to go to hibition administrator. tric chair at Sing Sing prison dur TREASURY B.ALANCE. Shark river, near Asbury Park, N. shaken up by the crash and received Poland. Last night the money was Police last night arrested four Theater Jammed. ing the week of February 8. Bar- J., also was seized, because she was minor cuts and bruises. The truck stolen. roomers In Slessandreck’s boarding P lan BaHls The theater was filled to capacity betto was convicted by a house as suspects. He announced Agents will be stationed in all Washington, Dec. 31.— (AP) — running without lights, and the was the property of E. P. Wind In 1921, he said, he had saved parts of the state and raids made and the film had unwound about county jury last Friday for thf Treasury receipts for Dec. 28 were crew was taken Into custody. All ward & Son, of Windsor, Long dis $2,200 for the return trip home. He he would start the new year by half of the projection box. The .sud slaying of Julia Quintieri cn Seik again beginning to save for passage tember 15. ' $4,532,472.20; expenditures $9,147,- three boats were taken to the Coast tance movers. State police con decided to withdraw the money (Continaed on Page Three.) den ending of the show tiumed all 537.35; balance $175,060,080.54. Guard base at Staten Island. ducted an Investigation. from the bank and several hours to Poland. I - i . '
i- : MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1929. FAGB TW O Kreuger, and Toll ...... 23% Peter A. Hatting in Bronx Suprenar;.| Court to Joseph Catania, Daniel J, LeWgh Valley ...... 71% VITALE’ S GUESTS lamascia and John Savino, the, KIWANIS TO BANQUET ] HOLDS AUTO LAW Mo Kan and T e x ...... 46% three guests at the dinner who were Local Stocks Montg Ward ...... 49 alleged to have arranged for the re AMERICAN SPEECH Nat Cash Reg A ...... 75 OBITUARY (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) turn of the jewelry and money Nat D a iry ...... 48% OUT UNDER BAIL taken by the robbers in the alleged H. S. FOOTBALL TEAMj ^ fO O SEVERE Central Row, Hartford, Conn. Nat Pow and L t ...... 32% TO BE PRESERVED 1 P. IH. Stocks. Nevada Cop ...... 29% fake holdup. Banl{ Stocks. N Y Cent ...... 168 Woman Released January 20 Chosen Tentative-1 Bid Asked Mrs. Grace Savino, wife of John, ly as Date for the Party;! N Y N H and H tfd ...... I l l DEATHS Bankers Trust Co . . . . 325 Nor Amer ...... 97 Obtain Writs of Habeas Cor who had been arrested on a charge Get Movie Reels. Hartford PoKce Court Judge City Bank and Trust . 400 Packard Motors ...... 16% of vagrancy and questioned by po Language Ass'n to Make Cap Nat B&T ...... — 400 lice, also won her release today. She Frank F. Holmes Pan Am Pet B ...... 60 p u s-G ra n d Jury Probe January 20 has been chosen ten Conn. River ...... 425 Par Fam Lasky ...... 50% pleaded guilty to the charge and tatively as the date for the Man Orders Release of Man; Frank F. Holmes, a resident of Htfd Conn. Trust . — 170 was given a suspended sentence by Phonograph Records of Manchester the past six years, died Perm ...... 74 chester High school football ban First Nat Htfd ...... 215 Phil and Rdg C and I r ...... 11% Goes Ahead. Magistrate Jean Norris in Tombs quet to be given the team by the this morning at his home, 118 Mc Land Mtg and ’TiUe . — 60 Court. Means Test Case. Kee street, after an illness of seven — 240 Pub Serv N J ...... 31% Our Various Dialects. Kiwanis club in honor of the past Mutual B&T ...... Rad Corp ...... 42% Mrs. Savino, who appeared today season success on the gridiron. years. He leaves his wife, Mrs. Mary do, vtc ...... — 240 in the criminal lineup with her A. Holmes. The funeral will be held Rad K e ith ...... 19 New York, Dec. 31— (AP)— Po The feature of the evening’s en New Brit T ru st...... — 200 Rem Rand ...... 26 husband and his two comp^ions, tertainment will be the showing of Hartford, Dec. 31.— (AP)—Ex- on Thursday morning at his late Riverside Trust . . . . — 650 lice efforts to pull the mask from was questioned closely by police but aeveland, Dec. 31.— (AP) Rep Ir and S tl ...... 76% motion pictures of the important the opinion that two .ec- home ‘‘o ' cT o^ bS West Htfd Trust .. 350 — Sears Roe ...... 36% New York’s vmderworld met a tem if they learned anything of value Americaai conversaUon with the plays of the season. The entire film Bonds. tions of the law in Chapter 285 of James’s cemetery. Simmons ...... 91 porary reverse today wnen three they did not divulge it. dropping of “r’s” in Georgia i - of the Harvard Yale game will also Htfd & Conn West . 95 District Attorney John E. Mc- the Public Acts of 1929 were ap------103 Sinclair Oil ...... 24 men they had held on charges of “boids” for “birds” in the east and be shown which has been secured East Conn Pow 5s . 100 South P a c ...... 120% complicit in the holdup of a dinner Geehan of the Bronx in the mean other characteristics that differ wich through the cooperation of local parently at variance on the matter) Conn L P 7 s ...... 116 118 Sou R'wy ...... 136 Vz time was proceeding with his Grand 108 to City Magistrate Albert Vitale ob geographic location wiU be a matter Harvard graduates. pertaining to the sentencing of per-11 r P 1 0 O F I r p T E H Conn L P 5V2S...... 105 Stand Brands ...... 27 tained writs of habeas corpus. Jury investigation only one witness, , of permanent record if a plan of the The speaker of the evening has sons convicted of operating cars j vJLiuJu\j 1 IJ l/ Conn L P 4>(^s . . . . 08 100 Antonio lamascia, a brother of 105 St Gas and E l ...... H7 The writs, returnable Thursday Modem Language Association of not as yet been announced by the while they are under the influence Htfd Hyd 5s ...... 102 S O Cal ...... 61 morning, were granted by Justice Daniel. America is carried through. committee in charge but they hope of liquor, second offense, Judge John j Insurance Stocks. 160 SONJ...... 66 According to Hans Kurath of Ohio to secure a noted authority on this L. Bonee, in Police Court this mom- j xAetna Casualty...... 150' SONY ...... 33% State University, attending the 46th popular branch of athletics. Man ing, ordered the release of a man , FOR 1. C. BOARD Aetna Insurance ■ 520 530 92 Stew War ...... 39 Qnnna.l convention of the Association chester High was fortunate last convicted of that offense and who xAetna Life ...... 00 Studebaker ...... 43 year in securing Tad Jones, Yale has served only ten weeks of a six xAutomobile ...... 3714 39 here today, the chief language char 130 Tex C o r p ...... 56 FOLLOW THE CROWD TO THE acteristics of all district in the football coach for the occasion. months’ sentence. The court ordered Conn. General ...... 125 Tex Gulf S ulph...... 54% the accused to go on probation for Chief Justice of Idaho Su xxHtfd Fire $i0 par .. 63 65 United States and Canada will be % Transcon Oil ...... 3% SPECIAL MID-NITE PERFORMANCE placed on phonographs and charted one year immediately upon his re do, rts ...... 1014 10 Union C a rb ...... 79 lease. The judges of the state courts Htfd Steam Boiler . . . — 580 on between 2,000 and 3,000 maps. MEN OF S. M. E. CHURCH preme Court Picked to 69 Unit A ircra ft...... 46% More than 10,000 phonograph rec have been imposing the six months National F ir e ...... 6T Unit Corp ...... 31% term, interpreting the law in refer Phoenix Fire ...... T5 78 ords of the different language char 1400 Unit Gas and Imp ...... 32% STATE THEATRE UNANIMOUS FOR BEER ence to second offenders as “ mada- xTravelers ...... 1350 U S Freight ...... 99% acteristics will be made. dory.” Succeed J. B. Camphell. PubUc Utility Stocks. TONIGHT It is estimated that the cost will 90 U S Realty and I m p ...... 60% Law Too Severe Conn. Elec Sve ...... 80 U S Rubber ...... 23% be made. , “The law in this respect is too xxConn. Power ...... 80 83 It is estimated that the cost will Friendship Body Elects High U S Steel ...... 169 THREE SOLID HOURS OF FAST AND severe in many cases,” said Judge Washington, Dec. ;0.MAP) - do, pfd ...... 114 Util Pow and Lt A ...... 31% be between $750,000 and $1,000,000. land Park Man President; 17% Bonee. “I do not believe that the William E. Lee, Idaho, has been do, rts ...... 17 War P l c t ...... 40% FURIOUS ENTERTAINMENT! The survey will be carried on by Sen. Smith Tells of County. sheriff at the county jail will honor Hrtford Elec Lgt .... 83 86 selected by President Hoover as a Westing A i r ...... 44 the American Council of Learned this order, but I will sign it and do, vtc ...... 76 86 Westing El and Mfg ...... 143 ^ HEADED BY SocieUes, if the plan is carried send it along.” Turning to Attorney member of the Interstate Commerce Greenwich W&G, pfd. — 95 George Beer of Highland Park 72 Woolworth ...... 70% through, and the council would rai.se Abraham A. Katz, who represented Commission to succeed Johnston B. Hartford Gas ...... 67 Yellow Truck ...... 14 was unanimously elected president 60 the money by endowment. The Thomas P. Kelly, 24, 234 New Bri Campbell, whose resignation is effec do, pfd ...... — plans for the survey have been of the South Methodist Men’s tain avenue, who was sentenced ten S N E T Co ...... 172 178 tive Jan. 6. •Manufacturing Stocks, worked out with great care by the Friendship club at its annual busi weeks ago, the court said: “I sup- Lee is chief justice of the Idaho Acme Wire . .. ~ . 42 — language association, Kurath Haid. Arnhipipose you want to make a test case Supreme Court. He was endorsed TALCOTTVILLE To Take Two Years. ness session held last night. of this and take it to the Supreme xAm Hardware ... 61 63 Court.” Mr. Katz replied Uat it was to the president today by the Idaho Amer Hosiery ----- 29 — The project, Kurath estimated, Haugh will serve as vice president, Congressional delegation. He is ex The Golden Rule Club will hold would take 25 to 50 field workers Frank Mullen, secretary and WU- his intention to do so. American Silver .. 21 25 a. member supper on Friday eve liam Black treasurer. Reports were Sheriff Dewey said this afternoon pected to win support from members xArrow H&H, com 41 44 ning, Jan. 3rd at 7:00 o'clock m the "two years for its completion. They of Congress from other states of the 104 Will go into different sections of the made of the work of the club during that he had not yet received the X do, pfd ...... 100 church parlors. Election of officers iTALKING court order and added that he was west including Oregon and Washing Automatic Refriger 4 — for 1930 will take place at this tbntinent and seek out the persons the past year. 75 — 2 5 STARS i ^ / I N G I N O who speak the most characteristical County Com- unable to state what action he ton. Bigelow, Htfd, com time. , , ^ . Tbe business over, The old controversy among rail 97 — ANDAOIORUS ______missioner Robert J. Smith in a con- would take when the papers in do, pfd ...... 97 Mrs. Felix McCue and infant son DANCING ly of that section. ways over the long and short haul 5 7 picture The field workers will make notes yj^jing as well as interesting way Kelly’s case came to his attention. Billings and .Spencer Edmund, have returned to their 200./ . ______o —.r? _ . . 4___ — ^ i-\T1 t h e enters into the appointment of a — 27 'o f the various pronunciations and told of the county commission, the He admitted that the situation was Bristol Brass ...... home in Worcester, Mass., after successor to Carqpbell. Campbell 90 — phrases. They will have a story principal of which ori^nated across unusual and so far as he knew with do, pfd ...... • • spending a week with Mrs. McCue s out precedent. came from Spokane, Washington, Collins Co...... 105 — parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Edmund A Brilliant Melange of Song Hits, Amazing read into the phonograph records the ocean and was first put into 525 — Dancing, Laughs and Sketches. practice in this country in 1647 in “As a rule,” he said, “we honor and was regarded by the intermoun- Case, Lockwood & B Bradley. , and then have the people in these Colt’s Firearms ...... 26 27% M. H. Talcott, who has been ui It Is Hard to Believe Its Marvels Until You Essex, Mass., for the purpose of ad the papers without question and it tain states as their friend on the sections tell stories of their own. is not for me to judge when to sus Eagle Lock ...... 46 50 for several days with a cold is able Have Seen It Yourself! The atlas and records will be at ministering justice and collecting commission in the dispute over long pend sentences and in which cases and short hauls by railroads. Fafnir Bearings ----- 65 75 ta bfr about again. the disposal of students desiring to - - t&X6Se to suspend them.” Members of Congress from the in Fuller Brush Class A 18 The Misses Ruth Custer and trace migrations and the mingling of The Hartford county commission — 82 termountain states have been con do, Class A A ...... Dorothy Wood who are, attending different racial stocks, Kurath said. was established in 1666, about 30 135 155 ferring for several days on this va the New Britain, and Willimantic years after Hartford, Windsor and 17 — Normal Schools have jjeen at their NEW YEAR TO (ST cancy on the commission. Hartmann Tob, com . Wethersfield were incorporated. do, 1st pfd ...... ____ 90 homes here during the Christmas Selected Hartford county at that time com 100 108 Song Reels Inter Silver ...... vacation. Come and Join AU-Talking prised nearly half the state and in xLanders, Frary & Qk 63 65 Captain and Mrs. Hugh Ulrich FORMER TALCOnVlLLE BIG WELCOME HERE in the Merry Party. Comedy Bfit. cluded Tolland, Windham, Middle HOLD SPECIAL ASSEMBLY Mann & Bow. Class A 14 16 Nisbet of New York City have been sex and part of New London. County do. Class B ...... 8 10 visiting at the horn* of Mrs. Nis- WOMAN IS HONORED courts were organized in 1774 a jail (Continued from Page One.) New Brit. Mch., com . 25 35 bet’s parenta, Rev. and Mrs. F. P, was located on what is now Trum AT M . H. S. T O M ''"'' North & Judd ...... 20 22 Bacheler. TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT TEIE BOX OFFICE! bull street, Hartford. a pint or a hundred gallons, will be 26 29 Fred Cannell of Maynard, Mass -Mrs. Christine Bachelor Nisbet Senator Smith explained to the confiscated.” ' I Peck, Stow and Wil 10 13 has been a recent guest at the home 85 Wins National Art Club Methodist clubmen that the first As far as watching of speak Tomorrow will be Alumni Day at Russell Mfg C o ...... 75 of his sister, Mrs. Fred Thorp. known Methodist sermon was easies by the prohibition forces, 53 57 Prize of $100. —. preached in Hartford on June 21, Manchester is safe for Manchester the High school. It will be New |^J[hg M fg'co’. ' !.’ ! 100 has no speakeasies. Year’s Day also and a special as- j gg^jj Thom Co., com 30 — 1789 by the Rev. Jesse Lee. Free — Big Frolic. sembly will be held in the after- do, pfd ...... 24 - Rev. and Mrs. F. P. Bachelor of born Garretson, presiding elder 115 135 Talcottville received news today preached in 1790. Probably the greatest amount of noon, to be addressed by several of ' standard Screw .. interest locally will center about the those who have graduated within Stanley 43 46 Wednesday '•that their daughter, Mrs. Christine Hartford county is the second 115 —> Special • Bacheler Nisbet of New York, had largest county in Connecticut and i second annual New Year’s Eve frolic the past twenty^five years, Taylor & ! of the Tall Cedars of Lebanon at Classes will be held as usual in the 61 63 and been awarded the National Art includes 29 towms as W'ell as the 96 98 Holiday ' club’s prize of- $100 for the best cities of Hartford, New Britain and the Masonic Temple starting at 8:30 morning and alumni, parents and o'clock and closing at 2 o’clock in Union Mfg Co...... — 19 Thursday piece of art in the thirty-ninth an- Bristol, representing the first con friends of the students may visit the — Attraction nual exhibition of the National As- the morning as three hundred tick classes. In the afternoon only one U S Envelope, com 180 gressional district, bounded on the 111 — • sociation of Women Painters auuand ° Hartland, northeast, ets have already been sold for the recitation period will be held from do, pfd ...... affair. Ernie Rocke’s Cotton Pick 37 40 'Sculptors. Mrs. Nisbets picture is Enfield; southwest, Southingtonsrmthinfrtnn and one o'clock to 1:45 o'clock at which — entitled “Respite.” The exhibi ers will play for dancing. The party time the assembly will begin. Whitlock Coil Pipe 11 tion, which is being held at the southeast, Marlboro. will be informal. The hall will be It is hoped that this affair will be XX— Ex rights. Fine Arts building. New York City, The population in 1910 was 250,- decorated and favors will abound. the forerunner of many more to ac X—Ex-dividend. will be open to the public until 182 and in 1920 it was 336,029, while Refreshments will consist of rolls, custom the alumni to return to their January 19. that of Tolland, Windham, New Lou butter, chicken patties, coffee, alma mater for a visit. As practi don, and Middlesex was 232,192 cookies, and ice cream. cally every graduate is free on New Hartford county is entitled to a tohil At Tinker hall a turkey supper Year’s it was thought that this N.Y. S to c k s of 46 representatives and seven sen will be served by the Waranoke Ho- would be the best time at which to NEW YORK PREPARING ators while New Haven has 40 rep-' |-gj Night Hawks orchestra hold Alumni Day. resentatives and 10 senators will play for dancing until the wee Among the speakers at the as The county officers include the hours of the morning. At the Hotel sembly will be Frank H. Anderson, Alleg Corp ...... 24 FOR NOISY NEW YEAR following: county commissioners, Sheridan dinner will be served from Am Bosch M ag ...... 40% of the class of 1905, and now presi Am C a n ...... 120% treasurer, state’s attorney, assistant 9 o’clock until midnight. dent of the American Department state’s attorney, clerks of courts, a.s- Midnight Show. Am and For P ow ...... 95 (Continued From Page One) Store Association: Stuart Segar, Am Inter ...... 38 I sistant clerks of courts, stenogra- A special midnight show, fea class of 1904, now manager of the turing “The Hollywood Revue” will Am Pow and Lt ...... 80 admitted. Preparations are being j pher, sealer weights and measures, New Britain office of Thomson, Am Rad Stand San ...... 31% made for handling the crowd. I public defender, sheriff, deputy usher in the New Year at the State Fenn and Company, brokers; ------I sheriff, coroner, deputy coroner, theater with a galaxy of song reels, Am Roll Mill ...... 32 Charles S. House, class of 1925, Am Smelt ...... 72% IN CHICAGO ; medical examiners, county health of comedies, and Vitaphone acts to make for enjoyable entertainment. now associate editor of the Har Am S u g a r...... 60 Chicago, Dec. 31.— (A P .)-T w e n -] fleer. The commissioners have to vard Lampoon: Miss Margery H. Am T and T ...... w.220% ty thousand tables in the better do with prudential affairs such as At the Country club a private party will be held, the largest of its Smith, class of 1926, now managing Am Water Wks ...... 93% known cabarets and■ hotels■ ■ ' have I the court houses, jails. county editor of the 'Wellesley News; Lud Anaconda ...... 73 % ■w'el- home, bridges, roads, widows’ aid kind in the vicinity. been reserved for Chicago’s Over the Line. wig Hansen, class of 1928, now Atl Ref ...... 37% coming of the new year. and formerly liquor licenses. This is all of interest scheduled Yale ’32, and William Johnson, B and O ...... 11^% Although most places have ban Mr. Smith urged all his hearers in Manchester but stepping over the president of the class of 1929, now Bendix Aviat ...... 36% ned setups for the evening, the who had not inspected the fins new towm line into Bolton plenty of di with the American Tel. and Tel. Beth S teel...... 94 V4 25 STARS - CHORUS OF 200 government has made its usual Hartford County building on Wasn- version will be found at the Rain The well-known High school so Burr Add Mch ...... 45 preparations to have agents in and ^ ington street, Hartford, to do so at bow Inn, both in the entertaining cial hour will follow the assembly Canadian Pac ...... 190 ^ out of the various celebrations t±ie earliest opportunity. Frank and refreshment line. Farther still and the alumni will be invited to Cerro De Pasco ...... 63% throughout the evening. j Cheney, Jr., was a member of m e from Manchester is the A1 Pierre stay and dance and renew ac Chic MU StP and P p f ...... 43 Th« *irst song-and-dance revue to come One Loop hotel, the Palmer ; building committee. It is the finest Tabarin in Willimantic featuring a quaintances with students. The Chic and North' est ...... 84% house, has ordered all dining rooms building of the kind in the state and New Year dance. Thursday assembly will be omitted Chrysler ...... 36% | cost together with the site $364,000. Col Gas and El ...... 73% to the screen! ..closed for the evening while an Turning westward from town this week. other will have three New Year’s Manchester's furniture stores had a pleasure seekers wall find variety Col Graph ....* ...... 27'% parties in full sway imtil morning. part in the equipment, furnishing galore, in theater or on dance Coml Inv Tr ...... 38% Many more thousands, minus rugs and draperies. Two Mancheste.- floor. Practically all of the many TO WATCH ROADHOUSES. Comwlth and Sou ...... 13 The greatest galaxy of talent ever table reservations, wall gather at men found steady employment Hartford theaters will have mid Consol Gas ...... 98 ^ dance halls and theaters. there, George May is caretaker by night shows of one kind or another Boston, Dec. 31.— (A P)—Alfred Con tin Can ...... 50% gathered into one picture! day and Chester Shields at night. and a host of clubs will find favor F. Foote, commissioner of public Corn Prod ...... 38% The speaker touched on the bridge among those wishing to dance until safety, today ordered extra details Curtiss Wright ...... 7% question and said he believed all dawai. Among the best of these wall of state police on duty at road Dupont De Nem ...... 118 More laughs, more sang hits, more SEVEN PERSONS HURT bridges, Hartford included, should be found the Prison Nite Club at houses and on the highways Elec Pow and L t ...... 51% be state-owned. He also gave an ac 126 Wells street, the Club Worthy throughout the state during the Erie ...... 56 % Ku^ctacular scenes t.ian any Gen Elec ...... 242 count of the work of the County_____ Hills in the Allyn House, the Hotel New Year’s Eve celebration. A AS AUTO BUS SKIDS children Bond on Asylum street, and the Col close watch will be kept for drunken Gen Foods ...... 47% ' $6.60 musical show! temporary home for Gen Motors ...... 40 of which the state pays lege Inn at 26 High street. drivers, he said. Trolley cars will leave Hartford Commissioner Foote also called at Gold Dust ...... 39 li ,$3.50 and the county me balanuo Grigsby Grunow ...... 21 % | Metr o-G oldv/y n-May er’s ; Meriden. Dec. 31.— (AP)—Seven | necessary to feed and clothe and ed- for Manchester up until early morn-, tention of motorists to the fact that ing, the last leaving Hartford at their automobile insurance for 1929 Hershey Choc ...... 67% ; passengers in a Boston-New York ! ucate the small charges. Int Combust ...... 5% SINGING ‘ bus w'ere injured this morning when ! The commissioner spoke of the 2:15 o’clock and Manchester at 3 expires at midnight tonight, al o’clock. though the law permits automobiles Int Harv ...... 79 '• the'*heavy vehicle skidded on the Seyms street jail and work provided Int Nick Can ...... 32 slippery wood block pavement on Churches. to be operated imtil noon tomorrow t a l k i n g for those detained there. Consider More quiet and more conservative with 1929 plates. Cars found in op Int T and T ...... 73% • North Colony street. able criticism had been made of this Johns Manvllle ...... 124% The condition of three uf those will be the New Year’s observance eration after noon tomorrow wltli- jail but he believed it would bear at the churches. The Salvation out 1930 plates will be taken off the Kan a t y Sou ...... 81% d a n c i n g injured is declared serious. They comparison with many jails of a Kennecott ...... 57% are Mrs. Lillian Smith, 60, of Win Army will hold its watch night highways, he said. supposedly superior type. Instead of service, commencing at 10:30 p ic ru E E chester, Mass., fracture of the jaw; coddling them, the ihmates are -.John Brown, 38, of West 126th o’clock. The Church of the Naza- ^ street, New York, spinal injuries made to understand that they are rene will observe a like service at 9 MARION DAVIES . and Lamburtus Van Raayan, 32, of prisoners in a jail not boarders in a o’clock while the Swedish Congrega JOHN GILBERT ■'Paterson, N. J., possible fracture of hotel. Many of the facts he related tional church will begin its watch norma SHEARER .^the skull. W'ere new to his hearers at the clo.se night service at 9:30 o’clock last Ring out the old— Ring in the new at WILLIAM HAINES Frederick H. Ling of 66 Waldo of his talk he was given a round of ing until midnight. The program JOAN emVi/FORD ^•street, Arlington, Mass., driver of hearty applause. will be presented by the Young b u s te d KEATON <,the bus; John Riedy, State street, Sandwiches and coffee followed People and refreshments wdll be BESSIE lOVE '■South 'Weymouth, Mass., and R. C. and a session of games in the gym served during intermission. THE RAINBOW INN CHARLES KINO .^McAllister and Edward Stevenson, nasium. As all-night revelers wend their CONRAD NAGEL w'ay homeward low masses will be MARIE DRESSIER ^both of whom gave no addresses, JACK BENNY were treated at the Meriden hospi celebrated in both the Roman and DANCE PALACE Catholic churches In Manchester. OUS EDWARDS tal for minor injuries. ROBBER ARRESTED DANE aARTHUR The bus was one of a fleet of At St. James’s, at 5:30, 7 and 7:40 Bolton Notch Tonight l a u r e l £■ HARDY ‘ four vehicles of the Gray Line fleet. o’clock, at St. Bridget’s at 6:30 and UKELELK me New York, Dec. 31.— (AP)—Po 7 o’clock. 8:30 p. m. to 3 p. m. Continuous Celebration. ANITA PAOE ^Two other buses skidded at the lice today arrested John Cassone, POLLY MORAN 'sam e spot but no injuries or dam- 23, as the second of the two robbers Special Turkey Dinner $6 Per Couple. Music. OWEN LEE .'■age was reported. BROX SISTERS who held up a brokerage house mes Vaudeville Acts 11 p. m. to 3 a. m. Dancing 8:30 to 3. ALBEOnNA RA9CH S ------senger in a Wall street subway sta ENGA(XMENT b a l l e t Under the Crystal Ball. NATACHA N A T IO N ' MANUFACTURER DIES. tion November 15 and obtained loot & ca N, ______in cash and securities totalling Music by THE COMMANDERS, 10 Pieces. THE ROUNDERS V Philadelphia, Dec. 31.— (AP) — $13,000. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Leduc of 418 Biggest Vaudeville and Dance Program in Eastern Conn. “ Stuart Wyeth, president of John Cassone, police said, admitted Center street announce the engage V Wyeth and Son, Inc., one of the old- that he participated in the holdup ment of their daughter Beatrice A. Admission $1.00. Oh, Boy I "What a time. «est and largest manufacturing along with Dominick Madeo, 19, Ijeduc to Frederick A. McCarthy, chemical firms In the east, died last who was arrested on the robbery 3on of John McCarthy of 16 Pine knight in his apartment here. charge last Friday night. Hill. L • 'f t - - "
PACE THREE MANCHES'fER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN.. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1929. IMAJOR LADD TO TAKE NEW FOSD B oons M AYIN STAU SENATORIAL PROBE Ia n o t h e r w o m a n h e a d s AUEN RIGHTS State Briefs OFFICE ON THURSDAY ONSHOWTODAIfi Wall Street CLOCKS Di THIS TOWN ONLY PROBLEM Briefs Chamber of Commerce to At FOR GUARD DEATHS|^^“ Succeeds Brigadier General LABOR’S RESOLUTION i Dealers Throughout the Coun tempt to Get Series Placed I George M. Cole as Adjutant Mrs. Sven Carlson Becomes Bridgeport, Dec. 31. (AP) To try Exhibiting New Line of In Several Places. President Succeeding Mrs. friends of organized labor I Greneral of Connecticut. IN CHINA NOW Model A Cars. New York Dec. 31.—Directors of of its members the Connecticut Fed Baldwin Locomotive Works, it was Western Union clocks, controlled Sen. Metcalf, of Rhode Is ! Otto Johnson. eration of Labor has sent a greet Hartford, Dec. 31.— (AP)—Briga- (Coiitlnaeil from Page 1) Detroit, Dec. 31.—New Ford reported today, will ask authority at by United States Naval Observa- ing for the New Year with a resolu , dier General George M. Cole’s final ^ bodies will make their appearance land Demands an Investi For the first time in the history tion for 1930 which reads; ; day as adjutant generalgen ial of ConnectConnec !-1 i- i gj compulsion as in Tur- | for the first time today in dealers i holders to increase the company’s j ‘ .. . ^ ’ a w of Scandia Lodge, No. 23, Order of “Resolved, that we shall be con I cut was a busy one. This morning he | compulsion as ^i showrooms throughout theme United umteu {fu^^ed; funded debt. The Baldwin Company i to be ne theme mostmust accurateaetumm andouu reliable j Vasa, a woman succeeds a woman siderate of the old folks and try to I was kept continually busy at nis : j * ^ «1 owStates.-ow-ao AddedahhoH hMufvbeauty nfof lines concon- -•t i_____ i. j done______any ______outside financing!____ 1 aIaa electrical,IvIaqi timing device unftHAmade, mAvmay make their last days upon this earth 1 office in the State Armory attend- | Knows the Subject. gation at Once. I to the presidency of the organiza- stitutes the outstanding feature- of i; since..jnee the present corporation was! be installed in Manchester as a re-re ! tion boasting a membership of 500, as congenial and happy as possiible. ing to cleaning up final business The Pennsylvanian, who has these------new bodies.------Mechaifically, - t !| formed in 1911, obobtaining its mone; sult of a conference between E. J. when Mrs. Sven Carlson is installed “Therefore the least we can do for I and routine affairs. He will be sue- j taken particular interest in the re- ▼rw.. —J 4-V«a eomo nriaQQIQ ADfi i . ’ . ® ^ Providence, Dec. 31.— (AP) A in Orange Hall on Thursday eve them in the year 1930 is to help ceeded by Major William F. Ladd, | latioM between the United States : S fn e "’^th ft ^ earnings or; j^^^abe, secretary of the Chamber Senatorial probe of the killing' ot ning at 8 o’clock with Algot John enact an old age pension law m j for four years commander of the and China since long before the ;S o rm a ?ce r^^ords of the Model A j accom- , commerce and A. J. CoU^r. ^ three unarmed rum-runners aboard son, district deputy, and staff of Connecticut.” I 43d Division Aviation, who will take j Boxer rebellion, said that although ^ t h such changes as have been j naoaaUons. j^ct superintendent of the Western the Black Duck, by a Coast Guard Portland, conducting the cere ! up his new duties Thursday. j the extra-territorial rights had been built in since its introduction. ; j Union. , ,, , , patrol in Narragansett Bay early monies. Mrs. Otto Johnson becomes RUM BOAT SEIZED ! ------——— ------j imposed upon that country through The new lines of the Ford are I The Weirton Steel Co., Chicago, j To justify the heavy expense of Sunday morning will be demanded past president. New London, Dec. 31.— (AP)—- j necessity following the first opium most readily apparent in a deeper | has purchased a site at Gary, Ind., | installing a master clock, which The fishing boat Leona M. Sproul [ war in 1843, that “ this sort of priv by Jesse H. Metcalf senior Senator Also for the first time in the and narrower radiator, a higher and j on which it will erect a branch mill.] hourly regiilates the other clocta on lodge annals a woman will be made I with 600 cases of liquor aboard was ilege is going out of fashion among from Rhode Island, unless investiga 1 longer hood and streamline mould- j Construction of the plant, however.; the line, the Western Union Com- a trustee for three years when Mrs. seized and her crew of four taken iiH? governments.” ines that sweep gracefully rearward | will not start for another year or] pany will expect at least ten com- tions now in progress “go to the roct Gerda O. Thoren. takes that of prisoners by the Coast Guard PS;trol Explaining that extra-territori- i _>*.1__ 4. «^ break. The'T'ltA instantinctoTii" 1 ira- TYi- I1 so.or\ I p&iiiGS to subscribe to tlic service, of the matter.” the Senator declared fice. boat CG-148 shortly after midnight ality permits a person to reside in | ggi^j, ^ car that sits and rides | _ _ i costing $1.50 a month and $18 a today. Others who take office Thursday this morning of Montauk Point. year. courts'^of ^is o ^ ^ nation ^ ^ o ^ r i results from a lowered top, j stockholders of the Scoville Man- Charges of Charles Travers, only evening are: Alfred Johnson, vice- The patrol boat, in command of The Chamber of Commerce is in president; Edvrin Swanson, secre said they "obviously seriously im smaller wheels, larger tires and new |ufacturing Co., of Waterbury, Conn., survivor of the rum crew of four, Boatswain W. J. Pinch, brought the fenders, while increased riding space , approved issuance of $1^5,00,000 terested in the proposal to the ecs- that the Coast Guardsmen opened tary; Algot Johnson, assistant sec rum boat to the state pier here to pair the sovereignty of the nation in tent that by installing a Western ----has------beenJ. ------provided through „ greater jin 5^2 debentures — ------andr:mn,wwv 500,000 add;- fire \vithout warning at a close retary; Emil Brandt, financial sec day where it was tied up along side interior dimensions. Fenders of new Union clock in the Chamber office, range must “be investigated wrtn retary; Arvid Gustafson, assistant the three others seized by the Coast 1 weaken Yhe conSeime ^ a S ^ res^ t g^^^adiTa^greardS? t ^ L f flo ^ j a free service of correct time may the utmost thoroughness,” Senator financial secretary; Amandus John Guard over the week-end. The four I of the citizens of that naUon for while the run- I acquisition of A. Schraeder Sons, be extended to the townspeople '>y son. treasurer; Mrs. Carl J. B. men were held under guard pending I t^eir own government.” | - - ? d Sde’ T s f shilld^^m j Brooklyn. telephone. There is now no place Metcalf said. Anderson, chaplain; Gustave Florin, The text of Senator Metcalfs their transfer to New York where Source of Trouble. ; vninnpp fit snne-lv to the bodv. Also, I . .. „ in iviancnesierManchester wnerewhere «?>- CAN YOU IDENTIFY THESE PICTURES OF IMPORTANT NEWS EVENTS OCCURRING IN 1929? ROCKVILLE Fire Department Fair Dates Set The Rockville Fire Department fair committee held a meeting at the Fitch Company house on Park Place la^t evening and the dates for the annual Firemen’s Fair were set. The fair will be held in the Town Hall as in former years on the evenings of February 27, 28 and March 1. The Firemen’s Fair is one of the biggest events of the season and each night draws record breaking crowds. No definite plans have been made, but' the committee plans to make it a big event. The committee follows: Chair man, Captain Fred Ertel; secre tary, Frank Mehr; Charles Feistel, George Newmann, George Thuem- ler, Fred Miller, Edward Frederick, William Weigold, Chief George B. Milne and Assistant Chief William Conrady. FEBRUARV MARCH JULY SEPTEMBER Dobosz Post Important Meeting What was this his A camerainan for The Herald and NE.A Seiwicc travel Of course you recall this picture of a great ^ ed to the top of a lonely mountain to get this picture. Stanley Dobosz Post, American What famous airplane accident was this? Newspa tory-making event? Legion, will hold its next regular per readers everywhere read the story when it took national event. What nas It. this? What was the story ? meeting in G. A. R. hall on Tuesday The identification of these outstanding news pictures of 1929 and interesting facts concerning them will be found on Page 7 in today’s pager. evening, January 7. Plans wiU be EDITOR’S NOTE: discussed at this time for incor porating the organization. The KILLS PARTNER, SELF. banquet committee will have a re pastor of the Trinity Lutheran HOLLYWOOD REVDE ANDOVER port and it was annoimced by the church officiating. | Prospevity? Inevitable N C L chairman today that tickets are Watch Night Service j Vienna, Doc. 31.— (AP)—Leopold going well and there is sure to be At the First Evangelical church | AT STATE TWO DAYS A family reunion was held on i Fanto, partner in the widely kno'wn Christmas day at the home of Mrs.! UPON Vienna textile firm of Rokenbauer a good crowd present. this evening, the Lutheran Brother Dennis Keefe. Those present were ! and Graf, was shot dead in his office The membership committee has hood will hold a Christmas party. Professor-Engineer, After Survey of World been busy the past week checking Stars of Stage, Vaudeville, Arthur Keefe, and children of i A TIM E today by his fellow partner Fraoa There will be a Christmas tree, Gilead; Morris Keefe of Hebron, 1 up on its present members and se- ' recitations, special music, also a Industry, Says U. S. Must Get Richer While Opera, Radio and Screen Karezag. Karezag committed sui curing new ones. The Post is plan Shown in Dances, Songs and Willian Keefe of Andover; Edward | cide. Santa Claus. Each person attend It Continues to Do More Work Than Many Keefe and family of Andover; Al- j ning a successful year under the ing is requested to bring a gift, this Skits. bert Keefe of Willimantic and her | leadership of the present command being the price of admission. Other Nations. son-in-law and family of Burnside, | er, Lillian Plunder. , The entire congregation, includ Stars of the stage; stars of vaude Mr. and Mrs. Streeter. | A Fife and Drum Corps has been ing the children, is cordially inthted ville; stars of opera and radio; stars Miss Mary Merritt who boards j organized by the members and the to attend. By HORTENSE SAUNDERS of all our wonderful twentieth cen with her aunt and attends school in j instruments are to arrive soon. To tury amusement media in one of the New London, spent the past week | MANCHESTER help defray the expense of the in After the Christmas party, the members wdll go to the sanctuary, greatest casts ever assembled for with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. { struments, a moving picture show New York, Dec. 31 — Doubt where a watch night ser'vice will be ful economic and business con one motion picture—one by one W. Merritt. ( will be held at the Palace theater they pass before you with dance, PEOPLE held. This ser'vice will commence at ditions to the contrary, the United Ellsworth Mitten recently joined j on January 21 and tickets are sell song or comic skit in “The Holly the Y. M. C. A. in Willimantic and! 11 o’clock and continue until the States is entering another of its 1 have been trading with us ing fast. most prosperous years — all be wood Re'vue” which will be the fea plays on the basketball team. ‘ Every member of the Post should New Year is ushered in. There will ture attraction at the State Frank Schatz and family attended j for years and years and we be a ser'vice of song and praise. cause it will do nearly as much make a special effort to attend the work in 1930 as all the rest of the Wednesday and Thursday. the funeral of Mr. Hammond in | sure do appreciate it. AVhen 'Twenty new song hits and novelty meeting next week Tuesday night. Annual Roll Call world put together. j West Hartford Friday the 27th. i in Hartford dine with us and The annual meeting and roll call Prof. Thomas T. Read, of Co- ( dances, abundant gags and laughs, A committee consisting of Eugene A. O. H. New Year’s Ball tuneful melodies and dialogue that Mrs. H e rU) e r t be sure to bring home some Plans are complete for the 54 th of the Congregational church at lumbia University, has completed r Thompson. Miss Persir Allen and Hoover moved Vernon Center will be held on a survey of the world’s power pro- | sparkles, to say nothing of the Mrs. Ward Talbot met at the home oysters and crackers for the annual New Year’s ball and whist, largest dancing chorus of beautiful out of her so to be held under the auspices of Thursday night, January 2. The duction, anu he says that the mills of Mrs. Talbot Sunday afternoon to rority house at other members of the fam annual reports of the various offi of American prosperity are not girls that ever dazzled the bald- make up the topic cards for the ^ Division No. 1, Ancient Order of headed row are a few of the gay Leland S t a n- ily- cers will be given. It is a request grinding slowly. Machines in this Christian Endeavor society for the i ford when the Hibernians, and the Ladies Auxil features of this screen opus. It is a ensuing year. They are expected to i iary on Friday evening, January 3. that all members be present. country, he has found, are doing other girls ob twice as much work as those of Ziegfeld, Earl Carroll and George be out in about two weeks. j HONISS’S The ball will be held in the Girls’ Neighborhood Club Meeting White show rolled into one with jected to her The Neighborhood Club of Ver- Great Britain, four times that of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Phelps mo- 1 laundry - collec club rooms and Knights of Colum many deft motion picture touches, tored to Hebron Sunday to attend f OYSTER HOUSE bus hall, Prescott block. non will meet with Mrs. William i France and nearly thirty times and because it is a motion picture, tor sweetheart, White of the Ogden Corner section that of China. ser'vices at St. Peter’s church. | “ Bert.” He is 22 State Street The whist will start promptly at “These figures show,” he de many cities off the beaten track of Mrs. Thomas I«wis, her son Bur 8:15 o’clock. Tables ■will be ar on Thursday afternoon. After road productions, ■will witness a now the presi Hartford, Conn. clared, “how false is the belief ton and Mrs. Lewis’s two sister.s dent. ranged in the Girls’ club rooms and needlework there wall be a social great revue of r:vues for the first spent the day recently in Hartford. hour, followed by refreshments. held abroad that the United States it is expected many players will has grown rich at the expense of time. Wallace Woodin delivered a very ; In the first place, “The Hollywood participate. Beautiful prizes ■will be Wonder Cookers Meet Europe. interesting sermon to quite a large i a'warded the ■winners. The Wonder Cookers 4-H club | The wealth of the United States Revue” is the screen’s first revue. It congregation Sunday morning. | The dance program will be an met at the home of Mrs. Thomas : jg (_jre product of the work done differs from such musicaF sound Harold Hansen and his staff from , especially attractive one, including ' Neill in Vernon on Saturday after- ; here. This is proven by the fact successes as “The Broadway Mansfield will he at the Grange ; both old-fashioned and modem 1 noon. Creamed corn was made, i that the per capita wealth of this Melody,” “On With the Show,” “The meeting next Monday evening to in numbers. In addition to the whist very successfully under the capable | country and Great Britain is ex Fox Follies,” “The Gold Diggers of stall the officers for the ensuing and dancing, delicious refreshments leadership of Mrs. Neill. A social'| actly in proportion to the per cap- Brr-dway” and “The Desert Song” year. ; ■will be served during the evening. hour followed, at which time songs ita work done m both ^untnes. in that it contains none of the in gredients of musical comedy nor NEW It promises to be a most enjoyable featured and games were played. ! Kwh^MenJVork Prof. Thomas T. Read, above, says , operetta but is strictly of the revue affair. worlvlng nations must get richer, OPENING STOCKS i America who have made possible \ i type of entertainment. Interspersed The committee in charge of the idling nations must become poorer with the song and dance numbers 54th annual New Year’s ball and Ernest Thomas of Hudson, N. Y., I ^he rich workingmen, according son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Thomas! professor Read, who is an en- are satirical skits “Blackouts” and New York, Dec. 31.— (AP) Thei whist under the auspices of these gies, Schwabs, Duponts and Mor novelty tableaux. BEAUTY two live organizations consists of of Prospect street, underwent an gineer and lecturer of interna gans keep on expanding and devel Stock Market began its final session j operation recently at the Hudson, tional trade. He believes in the Secondly, the new musical pro of the year ■with a sharp upturn to -! the following: Mrs. William Ash, oping new industries as their mil duction presents more stars “under N. Y., hospital. machine age, and believes in using Mrs. John Bolger, Mrs. William lions pile up, and they give em one roof” than ever before. Among day. i Miss Bertha Gerich of 12 Winde- machines to do the world's drudg ployment, and high class employ Missouri-Kansas-Texas, Kroger j Burke, Mrs. Rose Cullen, Mrs. Wil ery. He believes in an industrial those appearing in the picture are S e e the n e w liam Yost, Mrs. Charles Willeke, mere avenue is at the Manchester ment, to millions of people. John Gilbert, Marion Davies, Wil Grocery and Columbian Carbon ^ civilization, and consequently is “Our rich men surround them- jumped about 3 points each, whi'e, Michael O'Connell, Stephen Ryan, Memorial hospital suffering with a sure of American prosperity, for liam Haines, Joan Crawford, Bus Thomas and Arthur Keman, Char fractured arm, which she received j selves with highly skilled techni- ter Keaton, Norma Shearer. Laurel U. S. Steel, Radio, A. M. Byers,: -he new decade as well as the new I cians and mechanical experts, who American Can, Consolidated Gas and | les Willis, Edward Ronan. in an auto accident in Manchester. year. and Hardy, Polly Moran, Conrad FORD Ca r s at Mr. and Mrs. Albert He'witt of Amer- i carry out their ideas, instead Nagle, Karl Dans, George K. Ar National Dairy Products opened 1 to ^ Legion Banquet Jan. 16. “The industrial uystem in of self-seekers.” Stanley Dobosz Post, American Hartford were the guests of Mr. ica today, ■ the wealth it has pro I thur, Cliff Edwards, Bessie Love, 2 points higher. 1 Studebaker, Pullman, Chrysler, Legion, will hold its annual ban and Mrs. John Hewitt of Woodland duced, and its potential prosperity, Sees No Decrease in Skill Marie Dressier, Anita Page, Oliver 1 Professor Read scoffs at the quet at “The Rock'sdlle,’’ January street on Sunday. is unparalled in history,” he j Hardy, Gus Edwards and a host of Columbia Graphophone and Stand-, oiir show room s Mr. and Mrs. Francis Pinney said. “And it is because our rich ' idea that machines have driven other screen and stage celebrities. ard of New Jersey mounted >2 to 16, and elaborate plans are being j skill from this country. He ad- made by the committee in charge. have returned to their home in New are literally captains of in- Selected Vltaphone acts and the Active bidding for leading shares York after several days ■visit ■with ' dustry. When they become mil- ' mits we no longer have the man- latest sound news complete the continued during the first half hour A turkey dinner with all the fix of-all-work who could do anything ings will be served. Following the Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pinney o f . ponaires, instead of merely collect- program. and the market was carried forward Maiden Lane. I ing art treasures and enjoying from fixing the clock to rei>airing along a broad front, more than a j dinner. Commander William C. the mantle, but says this man is score of important stocks mounting Pfunder will welcome the members The Friendly Class of the Union j themselves, they keep expanding church will hold its regular month- j their businesses and remain busi- absent only because he has become from 2 to 4 points. | and guests, after which he will in absorbed in industry and is being CARDINAL ILL Adjustment of accounts incident , troduce the toastmaster of the ly business meeting and social in j ness men. paid a good salary for doing some the church social rooms on Wed- j Europe’s Idle Rich to the turn of the year evidently | evening. First Selectman Francis of one thing well. The tinkers of accounted for the bulk of the activi- 1 Prichard, one of the Post’s live- nesday evening. There will be a | “In Europe, the average man yesterday are the skilled techni Vatican City, Dec. 31.— (AP) — good program including a talk by i wealth ceases to be a prodtmer Cardinal Gasparri, retiring papal ty. Shorts have been waiting until 1 wire members. State Commander The cians, of today. today to cover their commitments, ! Mrs. Charles Mead, who recently; after he has his compe^^^^ secretary of state who is ill with in William S. Alexander of Meriden California, court life, v/hich represented the Employment, too, he believes, so that their profits will not be ; and Clarence Quimby’ principal of returned from a trip to ■ighest achievement, socially and has been organized and enlarged fluenza, felt better today althougn Henry Murphy and Jack Keeney taxable until 1931, as legular trans- ; Manchester Motor Sales the South Manchester High school politically, was lavish and rich for until the matter of finding a job he ran a temperature during the actions today wall not be cleared un of this city, former members of w ll be the speakers of the evening the few, but not productive for the is much simpler today, even for night. til Jan. 2. 1069 Main St. Tel. 5462 and both ■will have a message worth The Commanders, have signed to whole. the least skilled laborer. “New His temperature rose to 100 Fahr Tax selling in order to be effective hearing. play with the Club Worthy orches A kins: surrounded him.self by industries,” he said, “are con enheit last night but had receded to today must be for cash, and a large Music will be furnished by a lo tra at Hartford and with The Para- j courtiers, “diplomats, artists, and stantly being developed, and the 99 this morning. He was reported to number of cash sales appeared on cal orchestra and there \^1 be gon orchestra at New Britain. Both . entertainers, who added to the recruits for these must come from have spent a fairly restful morning. the tape, indicating that many singing, with George Taylor, the boys left several days ago and will | gayety of the court, and produced I our own laboring class instead of His doctor, however, ordered him trades were establishing last min Market street barber shining as reside in Hartford. Murphy is at i something individually, but noth- i Europe, since the immigration to remadn abed. ute losses. This selling was readily - - — ■• ' ” ------° - I .laws------1have------restricted- J that Jyp g Q f song leader. the Club Worthy and Keeney IS ing economically. Pope Pius inquired aiter the absorbed, however, although it was Pi Tickets are out for the banquet, playing at The Paragon. Four mem “On the contrary, the Came- I lalyr.” cardinal’s health several times. notable that many cash deals were and by the advance sale, it looks as bers of the original Commanders somewhat under prices for regular if every member will be in attend have recently signed ■with well- night that will linger long in your transactions, reversing the normal ance. known orchestras; Herman Wise MIDNIGHT SHOW memory. trend. Policemen’s Ball Jan. 7 and Henry Murphy are with Lionel Tickets are now on sale at the COLLEGE GIRL KILLED General Electric sold up 4 points, The second annual Policemen's Kennedy, Jack Keeney ■with Tom box-office. and among shares showing early Ball will be held in Town Hall on Casey at the Paragon Night Club AT STATE TONIGHT Philadelphia, Dec. 31.— (AP)—A gains of 2 to 3 points were West- ■ Thursday evening, January 7 and and Zeb Shonty is traveling with seventeen-year-old Edgewool; Pa., inghouse Electric, U. S. Steel, there is sure to be a record-break Earl Hansen’s vaudeville orchestra. BIG CROWD ASSURED college student was killed, two American Can, Standard Gas, Unit- : A large number from this city nurses seriously injured and a naan ed Aircraft, American Telephone, | ing crowd as tickets are selling ‘Hollywood Revue” to Be j Johns Manville, Nash Motors, fast. It will be an informal affair will celebrate the old year out and | and a woman hurt early today In an 1 the new year in at The Rainbow I Screened for Revelers—Is | AT RAINBOW TONIGHT automobile collision at Sixth and American and Foreig^n Power, U. S. I and will be one of the biggest Industrial Alcohol, and Great I events orthe season. There will be this evening where there is to be a j One of Best of Musical! Spring Garden streets. special entertainment and dancing | The dead girl was Miss Virginia Northern preferred. j a concert from 8:15 until 9 o’clock, Shows. Foreign exchanges opened easier, by McEnelly’s orchestra of Spring- from 9 to 3 at the dance palace | Reservations and requests that Barkley, who was ■visiting her n with an additional program and | aunt, Mrs. Mary Jane Travers, 31. with sterling cables quoted at $4.88 | field, who will also furnish music All roads lead to the State to- have poured into the Rainbow the 1-16, off 3.16. for the dancing which will follow menu at the inn. The Commanders! . v. ■ .u ■ , 'latf fpw davs assure a capacity Miss Barkley died shortly after be And May 1930 Be Prosperous, Too. will provide the dance program | night, the occasion being the special , ing admitted to Hahnemann hospi the concert program. I crowd at this popular dance palace There is a Fashion-of-the-Month with vaudeville talent assisting. midnight performance welcoming in tal. I The concert will be an outstand and night club this evening Besides Mrs. Travers the others club in New York. Apparently ing feature which will draw crowds the New Year. The mammoth festi from several cities in the state and Henry Schaller I, injured were Miss Elizabeth Con there are some people who actually Schaller’s Garage from all the surroimding towns and val of fun will get under w'ay guests from Massachusetts and nell, 24, nurse; Mrs. James A. Ryan, believe a fashion can really be con Schaller Motor Sales, Inc. cities. ■ promptly at twelve o’clock, mid- i Rhode fclaHd to appropriately celd- 36, and Edward J. MuMhill, 47, all fined to such an interminable The dance program ■will consist EX-PREMIER PREDICTS ; night, and will finish—well we will I brate the passing' of the old year and of this city. length of time. of eighteen numbers, with encores i list say the finish will fall where j the boreterous ushering in of the and the hall •will be elaborately dec I new. A delightful program that orated. Refreshments will be serv NEW BRITISH ELECTION ,,3 j will last from 9 o’clock to- ed throughout the evening. ______I ranged for such a night as this. night until 3 o’clock tomorrow Vernon Grang3 Meeting i None but films possessing a large morning has been prepared and the Vernon Grange will hold its reg London, Dec. 31— (AP)—Sugges-j element of fun will be found on the I Commanders will put on a big sh iw ular meeting in Grange hall on Fri tion of a new British general elec-1 bill. “The Hollywood Revue,” Metro- ! assisted by special vaudeville talent., day night and installation of offi tion at a not distant date was made! Goldwyn’s contribution to the film iThe gay feeling always .prevailing cers ■will take place. Important today by Stanley Baldwin, former! world of musical shows willt head the the Rainbow will be very much iu business wiU be transacted and re Conservative prime minister, in a! bill, and it brings to you, 'evidence this evening. both freshments win be served by the New Year’s message to the Prim of the fastest, funniest entertain ment, filled with tuneful melodies the dance hall and the inn where a January committee. rose Leagpie of his party. second program will be featured for Mrs. Bertha Miller He appealed for a year of hard that it has been your good fortune to see and hear in many a long the benefit of the numerous dinCrs. Mrs. Bertha W. P. Miller, 86. work, “for we do not know how soon Diners and dancers will be privileg wife of the late Carl Miller, died at month. we may be again in the turmoil of a Dozens of stars will cavort in ed to enjoy an unusual program at GREETINGS her home on Ellington avenue Mon- I general election.” He said the labor song and dance; a chorus of 200 The Rainbow and many sensing tins day morning. She was bom in government was encountering in- And Best Wishes for a Happy and beauties will be heard in song and pleasurable privilege have made Prosperous Forst, Germany, and resided in creasing difficulties as a result of seen going through many novel and plans to spend at least a part of this Ellington more than fifty-seven rash election promises. intricate dance steps. Sketch after evening there. New Year’s Eve ■will years. The ultimate solution of the un sketch follow'one another in rapid be fittingly and - appropriately cele NEW YEAR She is survived by one son, employment problem, he said would •ii. succession, throwing the audience brated at Connecticut’s nidst popu George C. Miller of Burnside and depend on expansion of trade and into coifvulsions of laughter. Aside lar ballroom and night club. A HAPPY NEW YEAR two daughters, Miss Clara Miller development of new markets, the from the feature attraction, the pro- —------and Mrs. Bertha Rau of Ellingfton field from that expansion lying in gram will include a selected all- Well, well, income taxes are get- GEORGE L. BETTS avenue, also seven grandchildren. the rapidly developing empire talking comedy riot, and several ting Iqwer and lower. It’? .going, The fimeral will be held from her nmrkets. He declared unemployment song reels will be sho'wn. The a'udi- to be' a^Eotigh blow, however, for The Manchester Gas Co. — 127 Spruce Street - - late home on Wednesday afternoon was increasing under the present ence.will be invited to join in the-j some ■ o f' those 'Ctrarities usually at 2 o’clock, with Rev. E. O. Pieper, govermnent;...... singing, so all in all, it will be a j listed on the regular March returns. ::-vv* ■>rr- MANCHESTER EVpnNG HERALB. SOXJTH M^ CONKh TUISI?AY^^>EC^MB^^ i •. ^ i’.'/ \ A d d in g ' • ' i •-■. ' !*■ ^ I ^ TO \ M^vnt h€nttes, in beautifui new eelonSf this Tuesday by Ford dealers *« TT h e Model A Ford was a good car when it variety of beautiftil colors, with bright Rustless was first introduced. It has constantly been Steel head l^pp$, radiator shell? hub caps, tail made a better car. As soon as improvements are lamp and cowl finish strip. All have roomy in found and tested they are passed on to the public. teriors. All bring you the safety, comfort, power, That work goes steadily on. speed, acceleration, ease of coiitrol, economy Now comes the time when another forward and long-lived reliability that have given the step can be taken and this policy of constant Model A Ford such a high place in the regard improvement given still further expression. On of millions of motorists. Tuesday of this week, a new line, of Ford bodies will be displayed by Ford dealers; ET apart a little while this coming Tuesday The introduction of these new Ford bodies is to see these new Ford be^ You will be of interest to every motorist. In flowing grace particularly interested in the manner in which of line and contour— in the carefully planned new beauty haa been added to outstanding per- harmony of every detail of design—- they set a formance^" In appearance, as in mechanical con new high standard for a low-priced car. struction,' craftsmanship has been put into mass produQtion. Further details and illustra •>a ; A new, fresh beauty has thus been placed >T within the means of every one. tions of the new Ford bodies will soon appear All of these new Ford bodies fire finished in a in this ne^w^pap^ ; r , ■ > FORD M O TO R -7 ' i .'1 V*: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1829. MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOTJTH MANCHESTER. CONN. [from Western Massachusetts and So New London is going to quit collecting its taxes effectually and HEAUH<*nEr ADVICE UOTATION! ibniti|»Bter I the fur trading adventurers and i Anglican liberals who founded the going back to the old easy way of Dr FrorUtM e^ , population of New Hampshire and letting things slide. And Mr. Alex EvettbiQ Bfralb ander is going to make his living as who from the beginning had little “Sex should be put in its proper sympathy with the sombre puritan- an accoimtant. Sufficient unto his place. It should be extoUed and 13 Bt«»ell Street ism which is so erroneously suppos ambition was his New London ex- deified.” South MancheatM. Conn. —'Bemarr MacFadden Arne for help about dropsy you should THOMAS FERGUSON ed to underlie the “New England perience f i n d o u t t h e c a u s e o f Tget a diagnosis from your doctor. General Manager character.” d r o p s y . •The United States lost in forest W'HAT A CHANCE! Send me this report with your letter Founded October 1. 1881 New Elngland is far too often and then I can mail you some sug fires in 1928 five times more than Dr. Nickey Butler, may his Many people write to me asking the cost of maintaining the whole misrepresented as a region settled gestions for diet, exercise and help T>ubllibed Every, shadow never grow less, believes for a cure of dropsy, as if dropsy German forest.” Suhdaya^and HoUdaya Entered and peopled by a single type. It ful home treatment. __Dr. William H. Moore. that full professors of Columbia were a disease. Dropsy is not a di f was, to be sure, in its early days, CoSn. SU??1S BSCKJ.PTIONs£ ? L W * Vr a%ES^^ t ES; University should receive from sease. It is an accumulation of QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. “I do believe in the Flood. 1 had $ 6.00 almost entirely English spealting. One Tear, by lilBll . $ ,60 $12,000 to $18,000 a year. That’s all fluids in the tissues or in the body I a Noah’s ark as a sn ^ l ^ y . but Per Month, by o\aR ...... S9 00 But there were almost as many and (Cancer Not Contagious.) Delivered, one yeaws...... • , - i . with us: only—if Dr. Butler cavities and is a symptom which • I never believed in Mr. Noah. $ .03 may accompany many different di- Question:—Mrs. A. writes: ‘"Three .-T h e Dean of Petorborougli. Single coblea as widely “ - “ ^ t T e R e ^ “ uT that Idad of a pay ached- in a family have died of cancer in .population, even before the Revolu without Tammany some- S0&S6S* MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED Before any case of dropsy can be throat or stomach in two' years. “Women are getting dumber as PRtCSS , tlon, aa could then ^ i „ „tuar hl-Jaeklng control ot treated, it is necessary to have a Soiled clothes of the sick were wash they grow smarter.” ' Th* ARSOclat^d Frcaa is excms»veJy British Islands—to say nothing or ■ ed by a relative who has three smail ^ —Mary Garden. -entitled to the “ «* to u the university and filling the pro ygfy careful diagnosis to determine of all news dispatches credited to t the inherent differences between . just what is causing the dropsical children, and has been living in the or not otherwise credited In ta s fessorships with gentlemen who Same house since the deates, and is p ^ e r and also the local news pub- individuals. condition. Disease of the heart and "Self-consciousness Is the great chew their cigars ragged and talk using the same clothes, dishes, bed est handicap of women in business. There were widely differing atti-. comers of their mouths kidneys are the two most common "' a U Hgh."s of republlcatlon of causes, and when one notices an ab ding, etc., which has not been wash- —Mabel Walker WUlebrandt. special dispatches herein are also re tudes between these colonies even j j g one normal swelling of the limbs or ab d or aired. Is there danger? She served. ______■ in such matters as separation from domen, an investigation should im says cancer is not catching, only in “You can’t mix a career and do Wishing you a smart guy. herited. Is it advisable to have the SPECIAL advertising R E P R E the mother country, a fact ap mediately be started to find out the mesticity.” SENTATIVE: Hamilton - DeUsser. r©£ll CELVISG* house" fumigated ? ” —Mrs. Frederick. McLaughlin. Inc. 285 Madison Ave.. New York. N- preciated by the British gov WE SHALL SHARE Answer; There is no evidence that Y. and 612 North Michigan AVe.. There is a slight difference be — (Irene 0 » t le ). ernment when, during the Rev Electric railroads in the United there is the slightest chance to con Happy, Prosperous Chicago. Ills.______• ______tween the dropsy due to e ffe ct^ olution and while the Vermont States are to spend one htmdred and kidneys and the dropsy due to heart tract cancer through infection. 4 _ _ The Herald is on sale dally at all There is however some reason to be . IT A ljA N S HEAVY SMOKERS Schultz and -Hoatllng news stands in ers were squabbling with their forty-seven million dollars for new trouble, but this alone is not enough ■ New York City. ______in upon which to base a diagnosis. As lieve that tumors of various kinds, neighbors, New York and New construction and equipment I some ten- R o m e — (AP)—Figures just given a rule,rule theme dropsy uiuuoy _from_____ heart- ______trouble, including cancers, have New Year Full servlc# client of N E A Service, Hampshire, over boundary lines, it | American gener^ly comes on toward evening dency who resemble each other in out show that Italy consumed ^"Member. Audit Bureau of Circula very nearly succeeded in getting i j.jgj.j.j,{g Railway Association. Bet ® I fQjjjji temperament. 1 911,452,400 cigarets last fiscal and is Tost during the night, while year.. Some 400,000 poimds of cigar tions. ______Vermont to set herself up as an in-1 Connecticut Company Is the dropsy from kidney trouble (Clove Chewing.) tobacco were consumed. dependent province associated gQjng to buy a new car! comes on during the night and dis The Herald Printing Company Inc., j Question:—r-E. S. T. writes: “I am assumes no financial respons btllty Canada. One has only to imagine appears during the day. Thus, a for typographical errors appearing in a man 63 years of age. 1 do not use W ATKINS BROTHERS how such a proposition would have puffiness under the eyes that ap adverUsments In the Manchester pears early in the morning and is tobacco in any way, nor drink intoit- F.vening Herald. ______been received in Massachusetts or gone is usually caused by the kid icating liquor, nor drugs nor dope ot 55 YEARS AT SOUTH MANCHESTER TUESDAY, DEC. 31, 1929 'Connecticut to realize that New IN NEW YORK neys, and if the ankles swell from any kind. I have gotten into the Englanders never were a unit In heart trouble the swelling usually habit of chewing whole cloves. I use For Taxi Service THE NEW YEAR appears toward night and disappears a pound in a period of six w^eks. I characteristics any more than they would like to know if they are in Tomorrow will usher in a new New York, Dec. 31 — "Little in the morning. This is only true of are today. Lord Fauntleroy” has a thousand jurious, as I do not feel any bad ef year. Unless all signs fail it will, the early stages, however. It is quite impossible to draw a or so very modern little brotherers fect from using them.” v New Years Eve too, mark the beginning of a new A condition which causes a very Answer: I do not know or any picture of Calvin Coolidge qr any in Manhattan. toxic blood stream may cause drop epoch in American life. There are poisonous property in cloves. The other person of marked hereditary To be sure, in this day and age sy. Other types of dropsy are, “wa many indications that, a decade or oil which they contain is slightly ir personality and say: “There is the they do not wear curls and velvet ter on the brain” or hydrocephalus, ritating if used in large quantities two hence, people will look back an engorgement of the liver with Dial 3151 embodiment of New England.” It eens. But for juvenile foppery,’ New and might lead to some inflamma' to the opening of 1930 as a period toxic wastes may produce a water CHARLES A. SWEET may be possible to say that such a York is hard to beat. tion of the stomach. in which the country began to set dropsy or ascites in the abdomen, person typifies many generations of There is,^for instance, one swanky abnormal fluids in the chest is call tle down to the serious business of (LupusO I We Wish At This Time , | a particular group in New. England. and very expensive shop in the fifth ed hydrothorax, small fluid swellings steady progress after more than a Question:—Mrs. M. M. C. writes; But that is as far as you can truth avenue district where lads of 14 or under the skin are termed edema decade of more or less hysterical thereabouts run charge accoun..s The o^y'^form'of treatment which j “I have suffered for the fully go. I gesticulation and noise making. and are catered to above all others. wiU^remedy the dropsical condition years with a case I To Thank Our Old We are rather weary of hearing They are the sons of the Park permanently is a treatment which tons. Will you please • tell me of After aU, an egg is an egg. And New Englanders described as Avenueites, who “absolutely must removes the real causes. Thus, if some kind of* a treatment for it, and E.A.Lettaey when with great ado and gyra wear the right clothes.” And be what kind of food I should eat?’ though they were cast in a mold, the dropsy is caused by the heart, Customers and New I tion of elbows we beat the egg of cause they “just must,” since teey the heart must first become normal Answer: Lupus can usually be like tallow candles all made in the cured through a fasting and dieting Main St. Manchester 5 3 attend the smartest boar^ng before you are free of the dropsy. prosperity into a froth we can make treatment combined with local treat same kitchen. schools, they walk into the shops If the source of the trouble is the it fill a much bigger dish but there with that “man-of-the-world air ment with the ultra-violet light. kidneys, then you will have to adopt Customers | isn’t a particle more egg than there about them and order from four to a treatment for kidney trouble to Such cases must be handled care PLUMBING and A CH.YNNEL TUBE fully as the trouble is too serious _was to start with. Something like hdlf-a-dozen suits. overcome this cause of dropsy. 1 for their patronage in tlie past and we wiU || Another winter like this, and if “One for each occasion, Travers, to be treated by the general advice "Jthat is what we have been doing, I will he pleased to help you by HEATING the occasionally suggested Channel they remark to the valet, who has which I can give in ttus column. I do our best to merit your patronage in the || ^^ost of the time, since the war. accompanied them from the waiting giving advice, but before writing to It Is to be anticipated that be tunnel between England and France limousine outside. . SPECIAUZING IN I future. ginning with 1930 a lot of the froth doesn’t become the principal sub is going to subside. But the egg ject of discussion in the former Just the other day, when prowl I , YOURS FOR BE'TTER ing timidly through a shop will be aU there, just the same. coimtry it will be strange indeed. .WASHINGTON Sheet Metal I RADIO IN 1930 Once again the Channel stealners which I never dare to enter unless Beginning with 1930 it is highly they have a “holiday sale” of tweed probable that the American people have been forced to suspend by suits, such a youngster came in, ^ L E T T E R will quite rapidly recover from the storms, and air flights between and with all the assurance m the Work world ordered himself — One for delusion that only chumps and London and Paris rendered impossi winter sports, you know—and a tux, By RODNEY DDTCHER tte’moS? sa!S to't'JT Now the time to have h a t ! BARSXOW’S RADIO SHOP horses work and that people of any ble. * and three school suits.” He didn NEA Service Writer taxpayers will be available to busi- ers cleaned and repaired. Give I 20 B isseU Street, South Manchester ^ sort of cleverness all devote their How many years it has been even take the trouble to give his Washington.—Billions of dollars jjggg g^jjd individuals for other pur- size or try them on. Everyone us a call. Prompt service. time to getting rich. Beginning since England had experienced such will be spent in * America during pQggg_ frequent isolation as she has this within speaking range 1930 on construction and expansion -while it is impossible to say just Phone 3036. with 1930 it is highly probable that and scraping. It seemed that the winter we haven’t any idea; but work which might have been held j^^gh money wiU be devoted this nation will renew its apprecia suits are sent to his home on trial UD had not President Hoover forci- nation-wide intensification tion of the fact that industry the losses occasioned by the sus and can be just as easily sent back, blv warned industrial leaders and effort toward prosperity, wWch if found undesirable. is not only essential to existence pension of transportation to the Dublic officials against the danger have been spent had hut after all is the most satisfying Continent must have been im of a serious slump. Hoover not acted in concert with And it sent me thinking back to The perilous tendency to curtail business and other government^ mensely greater than ever before, the days in Michigan when 1 quality with which man is endow onerations and production in a cau- agencies, it is pomted out that the ed. Beginning with 1930 the Ameri because there has certainly been was a kid. In my “gang,” one suit t ^ s attempt to guard against the $490,000,000 which railroads plan no such series of interruptions to of clothes was sufficient to start a can people, in a word, seem to be fight. A youngster of that day and inevitable recession after the stock to spend in the first six “ onths i transit, and commerce since these market crash appears to have been $i4o!oOO,000 more than t°r the first 1930 headed for a restoration of the age literally battled against hav actmties grew to anywhere near ing a new suit of clothes put on S k e d to a substantial degree by gbc months of 1929. The public norm and for complete abandon vteorous White House intervention, utilities, with their $865^00,000 in their present importance. SSSSS33S332S 2 ment of the excited get-rich-quick But mothers being mothers, then No one can make an accurate new construction, say tliis “ SS33S3SSSSS3: fallacy. Connecting France and England, . as now, my mother would expiate tabulation of the money involved increase of $65,000,000. And to by tube is one of the most obvious- -her little man’ looked in in toe prosperity campaign to 1930 highway construction is esti- In all of which there is promise rVvinu Wnnver eave the impetus, mated by contractors to be m ex of sane and healthful happiness; ly desirable achievements imagin the clothes. And rather than hurt her feelings you’d put on the suit. but it is a fact of great importance cess of the 1929 outlay by at least and when the Herald wishes its able. Also it would appear to be a You knew what it meant even it various important industrial 10 per cent friends a Happy New Year it does simple enough job from an engi the breaking in process fell upon a groups have joined with federal, so, this year, with an unusual de neering------standpoint^------. and not prohibi Sunday. You knew what it meant itate and municipal governments in stimulating outlays not only gree of faith that they will have it. lively costly. What has really stood , Phrtlcutoly It a new ^ jr o^^ in the way of such an enterprise for | happened g B gtdSably in excess of expenditures NO ONE TYPE many years is the everlasting sus-; shoes hurt. They always ginailarUllcli- purposes last------year Gamaliel Bradford, biographer picion and the war bogey. French- 1 hurt. And, great heaves, they Big Sums Are Involved A total expenditure of $12,000,- and psychologist, declares that Cal men see in a Channel tunnel a mill- j Did^you dare venture 000,000 proposed by five vin Coolidge—whom he does . not tary road for British troops invad-| patent leather? After all, groups was recently estimated by JEFFERSON RESIGNS otherwise compliment very highly— ing France. English people see in i t , mothers can go too far. What the Magazine of Wall Street to represent a gain of 15 per cent over is “an absolute incarnation of New a military road for French troops j would the other kids do On Dec. 31, 1793, Thomas Jeffer .. V, 1 sDotted those patent leatners. S 29, showing that the mcrease son resigned as secretaij of state England.” We have all heard this mvading England. S d have to fight your way up may be reckoned in billions. 1 opposed neutrality as idea expressed so many times since This is nonsense. Either coun- ! streets and down two more. The railroads plan to spend France and England, then $1,050,000,000 on consideration and | between France ana i:. b Mr. Coolidge came largely into the try’s army engineers could blow “Now doesn’t he look grand. your mother and sister would iJSpmenTtn 193o','niarly halt of | at war the tunnel into complete ruin in a jLiac followers of Jefferson held public eye that there is nothing es it in the last six months. | The pecially impressive about it now. few minutes if necessity ever arose. You almost determined to spend *utilities*” fi^ re on spend-1 that toe United Stat.es was . But perhaps this is as good a time Besides, the occasion isn’t going to the day in the house rather toan ing^ at iers^ ^ '^ otoTthef^ bbillion V on Sdollars u a rsib 1 by^ ^ gratitude&’^?«titee ^ and d treatytrek^ ^^,fonno- face the inevitabilities—and how ^ construction and maintenance, i French Republic; and his oppo as another to inquire what these arise. per cent of which; nents argued that motiv^es of self^ grand the seedy and patched old more toan 80 toan folks mean'by New England when ' pants looked. they speak of an extremely typical HE COLLECTED I But finally you went out—to your - 1 aii^^ Vermonter as being its incarnation. If there are any bright young ■ inevitable destruction. And sure As a ipatter of fact there is men in Connecticut who carry the I enough, the gang was out in - r/ir? A- I idea that there is opportimity in of the combination news-stand and about as much similarity between tobacco store. the people of Vermont and those the business of collecting taxes One glance was sufficient. of the major portion of New Eng when it is conducted with verve “Aw sissy -— look’t the duue and snap and intelligent applica and then the fun began. land, in 1929, as there was between It all came back as though it were tire inhabitants of that region and tion to the job, let them take note yesterday. It all came back — the colonial populations say of of the career of Hibbard A. Alex how you hated to go to a store to Boston, New London or Providence ander, who has been tax-gathering trv clothes on —how you hated to in New London. break in new shoes—how you results of ------_ i Start the Ncu) Year Vlantations, before the revolution most ran away from home, rather public officials planmng to push —^which was far from being great. New London had $425,000 in un than go to the shoe store at all. state and municipal programs, but The taciturn, self-isolating type paid taxes due to it. Alexander of And here stood a lad, in Man Dr John M. Gries, head of the new I FIND NEW LAND u)ith the safeguard of a uiell-rigged fered to collect the whole sum for hattan’s swanky Fifth Avenue Division of Public .Construction in i of Vermonter which repeats itself knd without the batting of an eye four and a half per cent. They the Department of Commerce, says] ------with such surprising frequency he was saying—“Yes, four suits and he is confident that the .volume of j t-. ot t Fund. It mill give your family among the people of the Green made him tax collector. He did col a' tux, Travers.” this work WiU be in excess of last, Montevideo, Uruguary, "• Mountain state, and of which -Mr. lect the back taxes, almost to the At that moment, I would Mve dear’s 1 f AP)—The first fruits of Sir Cteorge Smooth financial sailing in last dollar. He forced toe sale of given two years of life to bring 'TwB of the most active governors; Hubert Wilkins exploration tognm Coolidge is a complete representa 1 bacK the gang that used to l ^ g following dispatch of telegrams j g^er Antarctica were revealed here tive, never from • the beginning of a half dozen vacant lots, he put around the tobacco store m fort urging speed-ups from toe White i today with advices he had discover- the years to come. things was a faithful example of two or three people in jail for a Huron. ^ -nt House are those of Ohio and Cali-lgd previously unknovm land in his GILBERT SWAN. the New Englander of any other day or so; he had one defiant, tax fomia. The governor of Ohio [ j^gt venture over the Polar ice cap. payer thrown out of his office. He called in the county commissioners j The government radio service an- state in the group. It has always of 88 counties and recently it was jounced receipt of a been a distinct element, and numer had done what nobody else ever EXPECJT LARGE ATTENDANCE. aimounced that business men and 1 effect from toe steamer Melvuie, ically and proportionately a small did, what nobody else dared under officials in and .around Cleveland { ^hich carried toe explorer to ue- San Francisco, Dec. 31.— one, in the population of the sec take to do. had decided to proceed with' ception Island, which he usese as a An attendance of more than 50,000 $100,000,000 in improvements dur- j base. DetaUs were not given, tion. It would be hard, for example, But did New London keep him persons is expected at the fifth an MANCHESTER TRUST teg the ne«t few months. to think of any two groups less on the job? No, no. Because ne nual east-west classic here Federal aid and encouragement Since Deception Isle, one of the SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. made one person just like another, row. Last year toe east defeated the south Shetland group is in the so- alike in every way, save in the fac west by a score of 20 to 0. The game may result in the buUding of up to compelled them all £b behave alike $200,000,000 in ships. called Weddell Quadrant of ^ t a r c - tor of a common racial origin, than is -held annually and the proceeds tic, it is believed probable the new as the laws of taxation contem go to the Shriner’s hospital fund for The Mississippi flood control pro the pioneer farmers of the Vermont gram, involving hundreds of _ mil- territory is somewhere in toe ^cmi- hiiiH and the hard-fisted, hard- plate, he became hated, loathed, crippled children. lions' of dollars, will be speeded and | gr south of Tierra Del Fuego swearing, hard-fighting New Eng execrated, detested and abhorred. the government, which added $100,-1 the Argentine land fishermen and sailors who The impudent taxpayer whom he It has been predicted that the 000,000 to its public building pro gram, ■v^ also make a similar manned America’s privateers in the had thrown out sued him and a joy airplane of the future will be a Some of the Christmas drills gantic wing, speeding through toe amount available in its program of ous jury soaked toe tax collector a make it seem almost impossib*. ' Revolvition and the War of 1812; air like a bodyless bird, with en co-operative highway building with hea-vy wallop in damages. The col that anybody ever could be arreted or the descendants of liie scattered, gines, landing wheels, passengers, toe states. for selling liquor on toe strength Advnlise hi The Ev^ung Herald*!! Pays lector found himself with no more freight and fuel all housed . be Tax Cut Alao Important. solitude-seeking settlers who push In thin summary should also be of such evidence. ed up into the Vermont territory I friends toan a skunk at a picnic. tween its lower and top curves. > • 'v ^ - - . shrimp fishing, and told them she [ t — I POOR GIRLS PRESENT thought it a very nice picture in deed. New Artificial Light Today the picture was brought PICTURE TO PRINCESS to the princess with the- word that Cairo, E g ^ t, P ij: 31.-4 the fisher girls with whom she took ’The Egyptian ministry, Aids Machine Workers the sacrament so many years ago day. Eing Faud will Brussels, Dec.. 31.— (AP.) In had remembered her compliments tapha Nahas Pasha, lsiid|r majority party to- form ^ a the early days of the war^ when to their painting and had sent it to Dea Moines, la., Dec. 31.— (AP)— her as a, wedding gift. cabinet. - A three-day week for machine work ANDREW JACKSON Princess Marie Jose was a little The princess’s wedding gown will Adly Pasha» who. reiigttrt, ers through use of at present un girl with braids she watched other be made of white silk and velvet formed only a temporal:^, available energy in artificial light girls, not bom to such high station with a matching court coat and an for the interim b e t w e e n - ^ ia suggested to the American Asso as herself, fish in the waters about 18-foot train of white velvet at of the Mahoud Pasha cabin# ciation for the Advancement of Sci- ^ AND HIS FAILINGS tached to the shoulder. A veil of the general electicms a . ence as an industrial development Oostduinkerke. She made friends with them and Belgian lace, gift of the Belgian ago. These resulted In a victory of the future. I took the sacrament with a number people, will complete the costume, the Wafd. It is a by-product of a new field i She will be married January 8 of scientific exploration which was at the poor fisherfolks’ church at Brown Professor Says His the small town. While in the church ' to the Prince of Piedmont, Italian Fiye ia the explained to a general session of the the Moors. association last night by Dr. W. T. she, saw and admired a painting of heir in Rome. Bovie, formerly of Harvard Medi Limitations Outweighed cal School. It is based on observa tions which Dr. Bovie said promise the possibility of producing an arti His Achievements. ficial light, a wide range of health ful and stimulating rays that are j neutralized at present‘because not chapel Hill, N. C., Dec. 31—CAP) disentangled from useless or harm- ^-ndrew Jackson was pictured to- fulc,,i rays /sfof the dotriAsame HcThf-light. day J __ by TuriiUomWilliam AilopT^rmald.MacDonald, DFO-pro Shorter Working Hours. fessor of history at Brown Univer The idea of shorter working hours sity, as a man whose personal was suggested to him by a manufac limitations seem today far greater Dancing chorus in minstrel scene from "The Hollywood Kevue” which is to be on State Theater screen turer and by his own observations than his achievejnents. Wednesday and T h u r s d a y . ______^______that some workers would prefer | "Andrew Jackson, a Century night work if they might have a Estimate,” was the subject of the of the church which wdll be held at | healthful condition as in the day. paper presented by Dr. MacDonmd the Town Hall,' Friday evening. A ! With the equivalent of sunshine before one of the groups of the supper will be served by the Ladies I available artificially it might be American Historical Association, Aid Society at 6:30 and election of , possible, he explained, to operate which yesterday opened its forty- officers, reports and other business j machinery 24 hours a day, saving fourth annual meeting. The associa- will follow. I theiiic interest —on capital —I'— ---- now lost with tion is meeting jointly wath the There was no meeting of the ; idle time, and developing resources : university of North Carolina, Christian Endeavor on Sunday eve- | ^^ach^year treat COLDS to give workers the shorter week. , chapel Hill, and Duke University, ning, it being the last Sunday eve- | Dr. Bovie illustrated what he has ; Durham, N. C. ning of the morfth, at which time i learned about light with graphs i in his paper on Jackson, Mr. Mac- the Tri-County meetings are held, j showing sunburn produced by differ- | Donald described the The meeting this month was at Col- 1 without DOSING" ent kinds of light, some .beneficial vv'ho always asserted that ms Chester, where a pageant and can- | / for health, the others apparently not | actions were “for the '/ tata were given. Several local peo- ! so good. 1 though the words were' Probably When Vicks VapoRub was originated, n»thcrs pie planned to go, but the snow j especially were quick to appreciate it because Earthquake possibilities for the more a political commonplace than storm which developed during the j eastern part of the United States , as a body to be heeded and served, afternoon changed their plans. there is nothing to swallow, and, of course, noth' were discussed by James B. Mac- ! Political Power ing to upset children’s delicate stomachs, as Elw'ane, S. J., of St. Louis Univer- Jackson was said by Dr. Mac i “dosing” is so apt to do. sity. Donald to have been the most in AUSTRIA IMPORTS HAIR, I fluential personality in American TEEITI AND DRIED BUGS; Just rubbed on throat and chest, Vicks acts politics from the time of Jefferson through the skin like a plaster; and, at the same — ^ to the time of Lincoln. Despite -«>- Vienna—(AP)—'Two tons of hu- ; time, its medicated vapors, released by the body heat, are inhaled limited intellectual powers Dr. Mac man hair formed one of the items j Here Are Answers to| Donald asserted Jackson enunciated :h.. 3T'.' '.'.♦i'. ¥ among the imports into Austria in; direct to the inflamed air-passages. certain political principles and com j the last fiscal year. Much unsatis-1 Today, the whole trend of medical practice is away from need' Newspicture Puzzle mitted himself to certain political 1 tied curiosity has been roused as to | less “dosing,” and Vicks is the standby for colds—adults’ as well principles, which together set the I what it could be used for in these., on Page Four political tone for his administrations i days of close crops, as children’s—in over 6o countries. and served as a doctrine for his fol i Another item was artificial teeth, To keep step with this everuncreasing demand, the famous lowers. He was more forcible and { of which almost exactly the same Vick slogan has again been changed.There are now “Over l6 direct in his views than Jefferson I weight came from abroad. Dentis Here is the identification of the and no influence comparable to his Million Jars Used Yearly” in the United States alone. big newspictures of 1929 appearing try has reached a high state of de in the popularization of political The U. S. .Allegheny, a sea-going tug. velopment here, so no, surprise is on Page One today. Each of these theory emanated from the presi- pictures w'8is printed in The Herald ___ <$)------caused by this quantity. denital office after him until Wood- Nearly 500 pounds of dried in at the time, being supplied by NEA row JVilson was elected, the speaker EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the Isham and family and Miss Harriet Service, the world’s greatest news sects came in for museums. Wom X/ICKS added. seventeenth of a series of articles Fuller of Columbia. en’s fashions were responsible for W V a p o R ub paper feature service, which serves His Limitations on the strength of the U. S. navy, this newspaper exclusively in this At the Sunday morning service of the arrival of twenty tons of croco "From whatever the point of view especially in comparison with that dile, seal, elephant, hippopotamus, city. the Jackson period may be studied the local church notice was given of JA R S USED YEARIV of Great Britain. The articles are the regulai' annual business meeting lizard and shark skins for shoes. OVER I L L I O N FEBRUARY—The wrecked plane Jackson’s personal limitations seem of especial interest in view of the in which Colonel Lindbergh and today appreciably greater than his approaching arms limitation con Anr Morrow escaped death at Mex achievements. Not only was his ico City. The pictures of this acci practice of personal government op ference in Lqndon. dent were flown by airplane every posed to any rational theory of the foot of the way from Mexico City to nature of the American constitu By RODNEY DUTCHER St. Louis, Mo., including an epochal tional system, but it also made his In writing about the Navy, one 1000-mile night flight in a special own course vagarious, quite as ought not to forget the ocean-going NEA Service plane from the Mexi- much at times a matter of caprice tugs of the fleet, which are vessels can border to St. Louis. There the as reasoned conception of the pro- much superior to the ordinary harb pictures were telephotoed to cities j piem.”* or tugs with which we are most from coast to coast. I "X X X. The cultural advance- familiar. MARCH—President Hoover tak- j ment of the United States, whether 'Twenty-three of these fleet tugs E F / > ‘mg the oath of office, administered ; jn the quickening of intellectual are kept in commission. They are $600,000,000 by Chief Justice Taft. An NEA air- ' -life, - the mitigation of social in used for towing, minesweeping and ^ Christinas plane equipped with a darkroom was equalities and injustices, or the re various other sea-going drudgery. saved by more than 9.000.000 used to fly the inauguraUon pictures finement of manners, owned noth Fitted with accommodations for Club Members receive from from Washington to New York, the ing to him in example or encourage their complement of from 35 to 40 S i3.5o to $1,000. The average dis members, through more than 8,000 plates being developed en route. ment: he Incarnated rather the men, they carry radio, excellent From New York City they were spirit of a crude frontier, uncouth, towing equipment, deck winches, tribution per member is S09.10. 63% banks, proves the popularity of telephotoed to widely scattered quick temper, driven to makeshifts windlasses and similar equipment of the annual accumulation of S600,- Christmas Clubs this year. This is and force.” and each one is a self-sustaining cities* 000.000 is diverted to constructive m a y —Rescue \/orkers braying unit. $00,000,000 more tKan last yea/* deadly fumes at the Cleveland Clinic These tugs are made of steel, uses—investment and permanent disaster, in which more than 100 LAREDO CITIZENS ASK have a displacement of 1000 tons /imcj as much as bank ?iccounts, taxes, mort persons lost their lives. NEA pic and are 30 feet broad with a 13 or in ig-jo! ' tures of this disaster were the first 14-foot draft. Their speed runs j gages, etc. to reach the telephoto wires for THE REMOVAL OF VALIS from 13 to 16 knots. transmission to various bureaus. They cost about $400,0Q0 apiece,] July—Pope Pius XI upon the oc although the more expensive ones ✓ ^ casion of his emergence from the Laredo, Tex., Dec. 31.— (AP) — were built for $640,000. Last year EXTRAl'I' Vatican, the first time a Pope had A resolution seeking removal from the operating costs for such craft left the Vatican since 1870. This pic office of District Attorney John A. ran from $35,000 to $130,000. 'MONEY FOl ture W8LSwas flo'vnnown fromnu.i* Rome------to London- Vails will be sent to Governor Dan bv soeciallv chartered NEA airplane | Moody today with the signature of TOMORROW: Colliers. and sent by radiophoto across the | 400 persons who adopted the meas- ’’V Atiantic to New York and thence ure at a mass meeting last night, A ■ across th“ United States by tele- Vails’ recent threat of arrest S S o I against Gen. Plutarco Elias Calles, ^ SEI^EMBER—Wreckage of the } former president ofi Mexico, was re 'h a p p ie r ^ air liner City of San Francisco, in j sponsible for closing of the Mexi- COLUMBIA which eight persons were killed can consulate here and the Mexican Christm as: when it crashed in a wilderness on federal government has informed top of Mount Taylor in New Mexico. Laredo business men that the con Miss Time Fredericks is spending NEA cameramen were forced to sulate will not be restored until a few days at-her home on West ride horseback- and make their way Vails resigns or is removed from street. WILL YOU BE ONE of the more thrm office. Vails sought to arrest Calles on foot for miles up narrow moun Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Hunt and ’ %■/ tain trails to get the pictures after on a 7-year-old charge of conspiracy family motored to Johnston, R. I.. 9,000,000 foresighted people who will which they were flown by NEA air in the slaying of two Mexican Army Thursday to visit at the home of plane direct to the St. Louis tele officers here, but was prevented by Mrs. Hunt’s sister, Mrs. Chester assure themselves of extra money for next Christ- photo station for quick national dis diplomatic immunity granted the Winsor, returning to Columbia Fri tribution. formed president. day night. The resolution, addressed to Gov Miss Anne Dix has returned to mas? Will you receive part of the $6OO,0OO,OOO ernor Moody, requests the executive her home after spending the past to ask Vails to resign. In event the month with friends in New York or more which will be distributed to them in cash about Dec district attorney refuses the resolu and Montclair, N. J. She was ac \* WAPPING tion would have the governor re companied by Miss Katherine Ink ember 1st? In other words, do you belong to the Christmas Club. move him from office. of New York who spent the week end in Columbia, returning to New Christmas Club members are thriftyjieople who know that a dollar The Christian Endeavor Society York Sunday afternoon. held its last service of th3 year Sun Mr. and Mrs. Tsham and Mrs. day evening. It was short paper COVENTRY Ruth Jacobs spent Christmas Day Is worth its weight in happiness at the Yuletide Season. The public night. The leader of the meeting in Spring Hill at the home of Mrs. was Rev. Harry B. Miner. The Herbert Gillette. spirited cooperation of more than 8,000 banks and financial institutions meeting was followed by the regu A daughter, Loretta May, was born on Dec. 26 to Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. James Grimm of lar church service. _ William McKinney at their home. Bridgeport spent Christmas at the operating Christmas Clubs has enabled the public to set aside small sums This evening, at 7:30 there is to home of Mrs. Grimm’s parents, Mr. be a skating and coasting party The children attending high school resumed their studies today. The and Mrs. Hubert Collins. each week to meet'their Christmas needs. Simply tell us how much held at the Walter N. Foster farm Miss Margaret Sherwood of to which all young people of the schools in tovni open Thursday. Miss Kate Mann passed away at Salem, Mass., is a guest of Mrs. money you want for next Christmas, and we will enter you in the proper place are invited. * If the skating Howell at the parsonage. fails there will be a social party at the home of her niece, Mrs. Charles The^Misses Ahlene and Margaret the home. ^ ^ Schell on Sunday morning. Private Badge have been visiting their , class. It is very simple and practical. Why not join now The annual meeting the Feder funeral services will be at 1:30 to I morrow at an undertaker’s parlor in friend. Berth Buell at her home bn ated Workers will be held next Fri Utley Hill. for 1930? Then you will be sure of a full purse and day afternoon, at the home of Mrs. Manchester." Burial at the Center There was a Christmas party and # Erwin F. Stoughton at 157 Prospect yard. family re-union Wednesday at the a good time next Christmas street. East Hartford. Henry Newell died at his home home of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Lyman, The Congregational church will Sunday morning following a week’s those present being Mr. and Mrs. hold its annual meeting Thursday illness. The funeral services will be Wilbur Smith and son of Talcott- evening at 7:45 o’clock. held at his home on Tuesday at 2:30 ville, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stolten- The Federated Sunday School p. m. Burial will be in Nathan Hale feldt and daughter of Manchester., Board will hold its monthly meeting cemetery. South Coventry. Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Little and at the church on Thursday evening Rev. J. N. Atwood officiates at daughter of Willimantic, Mr. and at 7. both these funerals. Mrs. E. P. Lyman, Jr., and family The Federated Workers will serve Coventry Christian Endeavor of Willimantic, Mr. and Mrs. Philip a twenty-five cent supper Saturday society voted to attend the Rock WEEKLY PAYMENTS evening at the Parish House, from ville Union Watch Night service on 5:30 to 7. Tuesday evening at 8 p. m. at the 25c Per Week for 50 Weeks . .$12.50 Miss Clara Chandler ij spending Rockville Baptist church. Let Us Invest 50c Per Week for 50 Weeks .. .$26.00 The Manchester a two week’s vacation at the home Coventry Grange No. 75, P. of H., $1.00 Per Week for 60 Weeks $50.00 of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry will meet Thursday evening at ? I Chandler of Ellington street. which time the new officers will be Your Money $2.00 Per Week for 60 Weeks $100.00 I* * Thomas Herritage has resumed installed. $5.00 Per Weelt for 50 Weeks $250.00 Trust Co, his work at Cheney Brothers silk Mrs. Walter S. Haven has been $10.00 Per W ^k for 60 Weeks $500.00 mills. chosen by the Board of Trustees to act as chairman for the supper com In Mortgages PROF. JUNKERS DECORATED. mittee for the supper to be served at the annual church meeting to be On good reliable local proper Dessau, Germany, Dec. 31.— (AP) held Jan 10. ties. We handle all the de —The Siemens ring, a decoration The committee in charge of the established by Werner von Siemens play "CJyclone Sally” which will be tails. for achievements in science, has given in Grange Hall January 31 by been awarded to Prof. Junkers in the Masons from Suffleld are work recognition of his services in ther ing very extensively on their plans. ARTHUR A. KNOFLA mal research in aviation. The tickets vrill be for sale imme The ring has hitherto been con diately. Mrs. Walter S. Haven is in “Service That Satisfies” ferred on only four scienitsts. charge. 875 Main St. Phone 54401 \ liASCHESrER'EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN,, TUESDAY, DECEMBER SI, 1928. \ PAGE EiGHU \ Memoiies Hot Weather Tomorrow SPORTING LEADERS ^ ^ • • • . ^ ^ ••■We OUTLINE Would Be Pitt Handicap .-A! if Jv; FOR THE NEW Panthers Have Been Prac- NIGHT HAWKS TOP •7 •* t I S • vv.-vv:-. -e ^ licing in Colder Climate; MAJORS ONE POINT Here Are Champs Unusually Keen C<^petidon How the Two Teams In Every Sport Looked for, Bobby Jones, l IN HERALD LEAGUE I ____ Compare. I BASEBALL Connie Mack, R ockne, I World Champions — Philadelphia Athletics (American League). Pasadena, Calif. Dec 31 -They | former Tafces 3, Utter Wins National League—Chicago Cubs. Dempsey, Tunney, and :all it the annual grid classic, and | Leading Batter (American)—Lew Fonseca, Cleveland. :his year at least, it will be worthy | All; Wilkie Rules Team Leading Batter (National)—Lefty Others Give Views Along of the name. j O’Doul, Philadelphia. The two teams that meet tomor- | Most Valuable Player (Ameri With Art (The Great) row have been ranked among the Winning on Forfeit Must can)—Fonseca, Cleveland. first four in the country. Notre Most Valuable Player (National) Dame has usually topped the list, -Rogers Hornsby, Chicago. Shires. then Pittsburgh, Southern Cali Roll Game. fornia and Purdue. If Pittsburgh BASKETBALL . wins by a good margin, they will By Associated Press. have equal claim with the Fighting National A. A. U.—Cook Paint Nothing startling happened in Company, Kansas City. Champions and leaders in the Irish to the mythical national the Herald Bowling League last Professional — Cleveland Rosen- world of sports at the special re crown. Picking the winner can hardly night although the Majors crept blums. quest of the Associated Press today be more than a guess. There is within one point of the pace-setting set forth their -views as to whht thd plenty of money to back the Tro Night Hawks and the Centers dis BOXING new year holds in prospect. Without jans. And many fans believe that placed the West Sides in fifth place. Hea-vyweight—V acadt. exception they look forward to un Pitt will win. The betting is even. No records were broken, high single Light Heavirweight—Vacant. Middleweight—Mickey Wajker. usually keen competition, especia4ly Questions In Doubt for the night being rolled by Can- in intemationed rivalry, during 18u9« In selecting the probable winner, Welterweight—Jackie Fields. ade with 150 and team three string Lightweight—Sammy Mandell. Their statements follow: there are a few questions that stand Bobby Jones, National Open golf out in the mind of the public. by the Centers with 1701. JuniM- Lightweight—^Tod Morgan. Featherweight—Bat Battalino. champion: “The only thing'worthy of 1— Can Pittsburgh’s defense . of Because of the many forfeited comment In 1929 was the fact that passes break up the Trojan aerial games President Wilkie of the Her Bantamweight—Vacant. Flyweight—Vacant. there were no new arrivals in cham attack? The same attack that ran ald League has ruled that the team pionship golf. All championships wild and rolled up 45 points against accepting the forfeit must roll the match so that averages may be kept FOOTBALL were won by men and -women who Carnegie Tech. had held them before, except the 2— Can the All-American Don-intact. As the HvTald forfeited its ' * .•■'.•/S';--.;-'. X Intercollegiate (undefeated) — chess and his running mate smear game last week the Britlsh-Ameri- American Amateur which was won- Notre Daine, Pittsburgh, Fordham, by Harrison Johnston, a contender those powerful off-tackle thrusts cans rolled their half last night. V-’ i Western Maryland, Purdue, Tulane, for years. Looking forward I thlnlc with three-man interference. The The most exciting game of the Tennessee, Texas Christian, South same powerful plays that have third night was the Herald-Night 1930 will see much action; in inter ern Methodist, St. Mary’s, Utah. national competition particularly in gained five to fifty yards per shot Hawks match. The Herald won the Professional—Green Bay Packers. against the best of opposition this first game 544-522 and the Night * ••V***;.’*r*x the amateur field. The U. S. should be able to send a, fine team over * 363rS0n. Hawks took the second 540-503. GOLF 3_W ill the elusive Saunders run With the Herald leading in the last for the Walker Cup matches and in ragged against the Panthers as he game by seven pins Sasila needed a British Open—Walter Hagen (U. asmuch as the competition will ho did against Carnegie Tech and Stan- jjja.rk to bring his team to victory, S.) played on British soil, it is safe Ip ford? The same Saunders that wig- j ^ spare that brought a British Women’s—Joyce Weth- •say that the British side will ho gled out 95 yards and a touchdown 2 1 pin margin, ered (Great Britain.) stronger than it was two years ago. National Women’s—Glenna Col acainst the powerful Rockne team. Herald (1) A good many American players will "4—Will the Panther passes spread ...... 113 83 130 326 lett. very likely compete in both the Susie ■ ... P. G. A.—Leo Diegel. out the Trojan line and allow Park Ellington ___ 128 96 106 330 BLUE LARKSPUR British Amateur and Open tourna inson and Uansa to plunge through ...... 120 115 103 338 Ryder Cup—Great Britain. ments. My plans are to take part in Fortin U. S. Amateur—Harrison John center for long gains. Or will the de Cervini ...... 84 108 99 291 these events.” pendable Barrager and Dye hold Groman ...... 99 101 113 313 stone. Connie Mack, manager Of the them in check as they did Smalling GRAHAM SUSPENDED U. S. Open—Bobby Jones. world champion Athletics: *T be and Rothert of Stanford, two of the 544 503 551 1598 Western Open—Tommy Armour. lieve 1930 wUl be a fine year In greatest plungers in the west. Night Hawks (3) Western Women's—Mrs. O. S. sports. Sports of all kinds are con 5—Is the reserve strength of Murphy ...... 86 109 102 297 Local Sport Major Sport Happenings Cincinnati, Dec. 31.— (AP) — Hill. stantly being placed on a higher Pittsburgh equal to that of South ...... 90 118 110 318 "Bushy” Graham, Utica, N. Y., ! Burke former featherweight boxing cham plane and for this reason I thiatc ern California? Or will those ten 1 Gado ...... 112 96 108 316 HOCKEY they will be bigger and greater than or twelve Trojan backs go into the pion, was suspended indefinitely to j Saidella ...... 98 107 127 332 Chatter Stanley Cup—Boston Bruins. ever in the year at hand. The Ath -game fresh and tear the Panther to ...... 136 110 110 356 day by the Hamilton County Box Sasila Are Briefly Sununarized ing Association for failure to meet letics had a wonderful season in pieces ? The Young Men’s Community ROWING 1929 but I have a strong hope they ' Passes and Power ! 522 540 557 1619 Freddie Miller, Cincinnati, feather Pitt's defense of forward passes Club basketball team defeated, the weight champion of Ohio, in a ten Intercollegiate—Columbia. will even surpass this record in .193(>. Howitzer Company at the State Diamond Sculls—^K. Myers. I send my greetings to sport fans is heralded as one of the best in Shell Gas (0) round bout here New Year's after the country. It’s a cinch that Troy Armory Friday night by a score of noon. everywhere and feel they are,in.Xor Mazzoli ...... 108 115 79 302 21 to 16. On.Thursday night the Boxing Has Suffered Through Loss of Tunney and Rick SWIMMING will not run wild against Pitt as 173 Graham claimed an inurjy to his a great year.” Moriarty ...... 80 — 93 same team was beaten by a fast Men—Walter Spence, Walter Lau-1 Tommy Hitchcock, Jr., captain , of they did against Carnegie. But it is 88 122 311 left eye, which had been cut, pre Frieheit ...... 101 Central Motors Five, 41 to 16. Bois- fer, George Kojac. 1______American^ polo “Big Four:” “1930 quite likely that the outcome of the — ard; Interest Increases in Schmeling; Death of Miller vented him from entering the ring. Fields ...... 85 92 177 seau, former Dartmouth player and Women—Eleanor Holm, Josephine ^jg ^ year In polo and the game will depend on thij more than ...... 92 141 97 330 He and his manager returned to Angeli Carey, a former Holy Cross star, McKim, Joan MeSheehy. United States enters it with as fine anv other point. Jackmore . .. --- 87 83 170 Utica without reporting to a physi I < And the Trojan power piays. Jock were outstanding for the winners. Huggins Sad Blow to Baseball; Jones’ Defeat in Golf cian here as he had been ordered. I. Wrigley Marathon—E. F. Keat- supply of material as the country ing, Martha Norelius. j g^gj. tq j^gg^ yjg chaUenge Sutherland is said to have one of 466 523 474 1463 W. Driskell, secretary of the Na the best pair of ends in the country. Bristol High plays Windham High tional Boxing Association, said the jof a strong British team for the Majors (4) in the former’s home town tonight, Recalled; How the Other Sports Shaped Up. Certainly no one can dispute Don- Werloski ...... 97 109 86 292 suspension automatically barred TRACK AND FffiLD international cup we wUl have avail* chess. And it is at the ends that 81 and takes on Manchester on Friday Graham in any state where the 100-Yard Dash — Eddie Tolan, members of last year’s in* O’Bright ...... 81 — — night, als6 on their home floor. This many of Troy’s plays are aimed. Chartier ...... I l l 110 96 317 sport is regulated by the national University of Michigan, George ^gj^^a^ional squad as well as'Som6^ Thornton and Norton of California 95 310 will be the locals first major contest organization. Sinapson, 9^^°., State University players who have develbp- Magnuson ___ 106 109 and Bristol is expecting one of its BY WILLIAM BRAUCHER . effectively stopped them. It is likely Kebart ...... 100 131 109 340 (with startmg blocks.) g^ rapidly since then. The.,coUege» that Pittsburgh will. hardest contests in its campaign for N E A Service Sports Editor 440-Y y d I^sh—R. F. Bowen, producing more and Conran ...... — 121 132 253 As to Saunders. H,e may get away its fourth state title. The old year in sport is dying. Battles of the diamond, University of Pittsb^gh character.- 1 for one or two long runs.* Even 1 495 580 518 1593 the ring and the gridiron have been f,ought and the records writ The Nut Cracker Mile Run—Leo Lermond, Boston Tunney, heavyweight cham- Notre Dame couldn’t keep him If Manchester High can weather i ten. Before turning the page to start on the sports chronicle bottled up entirely. the storm at Bristol there’s no tell West Side (0) Mickey Cochrane wants to take Southern California is not espe^ 101 307 ing but that the title will come home of 1930, let us see what the outstanding events have been. Schubert ___ 105 101 °*pT ?fS ?-F red erlck Sturdy, I ^ v e -o thought thM I tove l g . ^ cially strong on defense of passes 121 111 313 to the Red and White. So far this Boxing has suffered. Gene Tun-f " a crack at Art Shires, too. Mickey Pontillo ...... 81 is a catcher, of course, but we have T,nq Ancrpipq A C the future of boxing into retirement Both California and Notre Dam« ...... 88 106 98 292 season the locals have proved in nev retired as heavyweight cham- | of which is becoming more general. Sad vincible, downing East Hartford a hunch that in this fight maybe IhVf S t-H er'm a u Brlx, Lo, me The game artU , were able to work their aerial at ...... 123 88 108 319 f t h e enrt nf 1928 mak-I The A. A. U. accepted Simpsons Pitke twice, Rockville once and the pion toward the end of 1928, ma , record made with start Angeles A C the chaos of the moment, tack with success. Canade ...... 93 150 115 358 Art would pick up a few points Reserve^ Strength Alumni once. ing this sports review the seco . blocks.” But the- fact remains about receiving. Discus-^Eric Krenz, oimypic order wUl emerge. Certa^y during Sutherland is'said to have the 490 566 533 1589 Club, San Francisco. the new year a t^eavjweight c h ^ - best reserves in the country. He’ll Centers (4) On Friday night the Rec Five ?efvj^\'prcLm|orto | ''^^be^'ram of There’s a chance for a, great Decathlon—W. Doherty, Cadillac pion will be estabUshed and thls.j^l need them. Troy has a powerful lot T. Anderson ..100 119 108 327 tangles with the fast stepping m^itch that may never be made. We A. C., Detroit. balance to the situation which of substitute backs that- are nearly 149 385 Springfield Mohawks who on Wed ? r u « r s S x m ck“ d' who diod ih| j S i r / s u " ' ’ mean Whispering Shires versus Mile Relay—New York A. C. I was somewhat unwieldly during Humphries ...116 120 when the year was.young during the | ^ ^ equal in ability. Saunders, Duffield, 95 319 nesday night toppled the Bristol Silent Sharkey. The only thing—an Team Championship — Olympic 1929. No I have no idea that the A. Wilkie ...... 115 109 promotion of his battle between The battles fought by the un Hill, Moses, Musick, Edelson, Pinc- Thompson . . . 96 115 97 308 Endees, state champs, by a score of beaten football teams, precipitating affair like that never should be Club, San Francisco. j future of boxing is behind it.” kert, Shaver, Apsit and Wilcox 124 362 26-25. Jack Sharkey and Young Stribling TRAPSHOOTING I Knute Rockne, Notre Dame foot- S. N elson...... 120 118 in Florida. The heavyweight di-vision a nation-wide football argument held in a boxing ring. would all be stars on a team of less over the national championship.' Of Grand American Handicap—M. baUl coach: “We lose nine first class or consequence than Southern Cali- | 547 581 573 1701 Woody Wallett and Dorothy has felt the passing of Tex keenly; Newman. i football players by graduation and without him it has been leaderless, the undefeated, Notre Dame, by And maybe it would be just a fomia. I Bro-wn, well known fancy skaters of virtue of her difficult schedule, well to have the event out c i face a stiff ten game schedule in Manchester, will exhibit at the New for Tex was the friend of the ,big Pittsburgh has been practicing in } Charter Oj^ks (3) seems to have accomplished more doors. - TENNIS ' 1930. But don’t feel too sorry, for us, cold weather. If tomorrow turns out wilkie .101 119 98 318 Year’s Eve Carnival at the Spring- fellows. Da-vis Cup—France. 'We’U have a fair team and be scor- field rink. Among those on the pro Besides the Tiumey retirement than any other eleven— to be a hot day, the easterners will John Pontillo . 97 98 86 281 The defeat of the world’s great Football players in the colleges National Men’s Doubled—George ing a few touchdowns. I’m almost L19 345 gram for the evenings entertain apd the death of Rickard, boxing be at a distinct disadvantage. Car- Anderson . .114 112 est golfer, Bobby Jones, by young are playing hockey now. A season Lott, Jr. and Johnny Doeg. well again and should be able to be negie Tech ran into a warm day and Georgetti . . . . . 98 95 L02 295 ment are Tracner of Toronto, a one- also has been stricken with an epi National Men’s Singles—William gf gome help to my very able coach- legged skater, Paul Carr and part demic of foul fighting, culminating Johnny Goodma-i of Omaha in the of football is just the thing to pre wilted. . A. Anderson . ..102 114 109 325 first roimd of the national amateur Tilden IH. - jing staff.” ner of New York City and Miriam in the recent 'Von Porat-Scott af pare a man to die really for dear National Professional Singles— ) Arthur (The Great) Shires; White Davenport of Springfield. Several fair in New York City. This fight led tournament at Pebble Beach, and old Whoozis. 512 538 514 1564 Jones’ smashing -victory over A1 Karel Kozeluh. , gox first baseman: ”What I’m going RADIO BROADCASTS Construction (1) comedy numbers and mirth provok the New York Boxing Commission National Women’s Doubles—Mrs. -jjg ^ American league pitchers ing acts will close the exhibition. to adopt a measure cutting down on Espinosa in the open— Another war will not find us Stevenson ...109 123 94 326 Clear demonstration of the su Watson and Mrs. WUson (England.) ^ggQ jg nobody’s busineiffl and Rogers ...... 101 — 111 212 the pay of a fighter who delivers a ■without one army, anyhow. West National Women s Singles Helen j'm going to do' to some of OF FOOTBALL (iAME Another Innovation in High school foul blow. premacy of Glenna Collett in the Point took 110 players to Stan Brennan ...... 115 107 85 307 field of women’s golf In the United Wills these basebaU players who think 85 291 basketball is to be credited to Coach Title Won On Foul E. Knofla ...... 102 104 States, and the great game of Joyce ford. Wightman Cup—United States. 94 112 299 Wilfred Qarke. For the first half An important championship they can fight is plenty. -My goal la Isovv York. Dec. 31.— (AP)—The Borowski . . . . 93 Wethered of Great Britain, return to get $250,000 and then settle down Chase 84 84 his team appears on the fiber in changed hands during the year in TURF Pacific coast's annual football greet red jerseys. In the second these this way, when Joe Dundee fouled ing from retirement— and Jack Elder on the football field. in some little town. I expect to ings to the New Year will be broad The -winning of the British open Gene McEver’s 130 points to lead Two-Year-Old—'Whichone. 520 512 487 1519 are exchanged for white ones, not Jackie Fields in Detroit. The only Three-Year-Old—Blue Larkspur. get a hunk of that to 1930 even if cast tomorrow afternoon. necessarily for the color but because other title that changed hands dur tournament by Walter Hagen, who the nation in scoring— they do call me a fpol.” Two games are to go on the air. later failed signally in the American The disclosures of Ray Barbuti, Leading Jockey—Melvin Knight. Pirates (1) they are dry and refresh the team ing the year was the feathrweight. Jack Dempsey, former world The Tournament of Rose contest be golfing events— Olympic hero, in regard to ama Phillips ...... 104 104 95 303 tremendously. Bat Battalino of Hartford -winninig WRESTLING heavyweight champion: “Boxing vKll tween the University of Southern 102 88 280 fron* the fading Andre Routis. Leo Diegel’s second victory in the teurism and its “price”— Shikat, Gus crown a liew heavyweight cluunp to California and the University of Harrison ...... 90 Roy Reigels’ long run the wrong Heavyweight—Dick ...... 10 97 106 313 There have been thrilling and Professional Golfers’ tournament in 1930 and with him will come new In Pittsburgh will be broadcast by the Sherman Los Angeles when he beat Sarazen, way in the Pasadena Rose Bowl, Sonnenberg. Riemer ...... 97 90 91 278 eventful moments in the world of terest in all diyisions. The heavy National Broadcasting Company 133 110 332 REJECT ANY CHANGE sport during the year that is pass Farrell and Hagen on successive and his subsequent fighting back to weight champion is the king of the Diqkson ...... 39 gain a place on several All-Ameri from Pasadena. The East-West All- ing, however. Here are a few the days— sport. Without him boxing doesn’t Star game at Kezar Stadium, San 526 490 1506 writer remembers, taken at random Horton Smith’s great 289 at La ca elevens— Francisco, will be described over the 490 OF FOOTBALL RULES Helen Wills’ splendid game, prov 1932 OLYMPIC go very far. Along with my best British-American <3) from all branches of sport: Gorce to win the richest open cham wishes to all sport followers for a Columbia chain. 296 The sensational victories of the pionship of the year— ing her superiority over the field in McAdams ___ 105 99 92 Tnq Anp-eles Dec 31— (AP)—The prosperous New Yew let The revised list of stations for the 109 97 307 Philadelphia Athletics over the Clyde Van Dusen’s powerful race every event in which she was enter two broadcasts, aimounced today Morrison ___ 101 New York, Dec. 31.— (AP)—Tho ...... 106 108 105 319 Chicago Cubs, four games to one. through the mud and rain at ed— City C ^ S h ] ? approved a con- eJoZ follows; Metcalf football rules will stand as they are The great running of Whichone, tract for enlargemrat of the ixjs lieayweight UUe holder will be ch03- Wilson ...... 97 92 113 302 The Athletics did what never had Churchhill Downs to wdn the Ken N. B. C. Chain if the Natlontfl Football Cdaches As tucky Derby— the two-year-old champion of the Angeles Coliseum to more than middlewest. Cole ...... 100 100 89 280 been done in a world series, over Sammy Mandell, world light '4:30 p. m.— (Eastern Time)— sociation has its way. coming an eight-run lead in a single Reigh Count’s gallant races in year; the fine comeback of Blue 100,000 seats, in preparation-for Tournament of Roses — WEAF, By an Informal vote of about four weight champion: “I’m gotog to risk 509 508 496 1513 Inning to turn back the Chicago Great Britain and the great horse’s Larkspur after being beaten in the the 1932 Olympic g;ames. ■WKY, ■WTIC, WJAR, 'WTAG, or five to one the coaches, meeting team. The final game was dramatic, failure to win the Ascot Cup— Kentucky Derby, and the splendid The council tentatively alloted my title often in 1930 and while I X WeSH, 'WLIT, WRC, WGY, WGR, here in annual session yesterday, re too, the Athletics batting their way Columbia’s Victory riding of Melvin Knight in bringing $225,000 for replacement of the up expect some tough battles, I believe WTAM, WFJC, -WWJ, WSAI, “POLLY’ HUMBER, jected three changes in the code to victory after they had gone into Columbia’s crew triumphing over in more than 140 winners during per tiers of wooden seats and for I’ll still be the Ughtweight chatopioo. WIBO, WHO, WOW, WDAF, ARMY CAPTAIN. recommended by the association’s the ninth inning with a two-run the field of college oarsmen imder the year— construction of new foundations for It’s going to be a big year for box- WTMJ, KSTP, "WEBC, WRVA, rules committee, headed by Glenn adverse weather conditions at Fonseca’s Fight the proposed additional seats. The ing from the heavyweights down, 1 WPTF, WBT, WJAZ, WIOD, handicap— Barston, Cal., Dec. 31.— (AP) — Thistlethwaite, University of Wi.=!-- The rise of the star of Max Poughkeepsie where the California Lew Fonseca’s fight to win the contract for the construction niust ■ think.’’ WHAS, WSM, WMC, WSB, WAPI, Cadet Charles J. (“Polly” ) Humber, consin coach. shell was sunk— American League ■ batting cham be approved by the Tenth Olympiad | Gienn (Pop) Warner, Stanford WSMB, KVOO, KTHS, KPRC, Schmeling, the first fighter from for three years right guard of the Officers elected were President Germany ever to reach the boxing Babe Ruth’s marriage to Claire pionship in spite of the handicap of Association, the Sixth District football coach: “It was a great foot- WOAI, KOA, KSL, KGO, KFI, Army football team, is captain of WUliam A. Alexander, Georgia Tech; Hodgson and his home run the first an injured knee— Agricultural Association and the season but I think next -year KGW, KHQ, KOMO, WJDX, 'WKY, heights. It was Schmeling’s techni next year’s team. He was elected vice president, J. F. Meehan, New cal knockout of Johnny Risko that time at bat on the day of his wed Lefty O’Doul’s blazing away to Community Development A s ^ a - better. There win be WFAA, "WDAF. at a meeting of lettermen on the Y « k University; second vice presi ding— National League batting supremacy tion, before construction .may begin.. more 'itersectional games O. B. S. Chain earned him a chance to fight for the train that is taking the squad to dent Clarence W. Spears, Minnesota; world heavyweight title. Interest In Jack Sharkey’s i^ght hand crash with a mark of .398, after McGraw Under the Football Is helping the east to get 4:46 p. m.— (Eastern Time)— yVest Point from Palo Alto, where ing against the chin of Tommy had traded him down the river to and the county must expend with the wesL One Bast-West game—WABC, WNAC, Army lost to Stanford. secretary-treasurer, W. H. Cowell, the campaign of Schmeling will betternequainted with the west pne New Hampshire. Robert C. Zuppke, Loughran, knocking out the Phila Philadelphia— 000 before January 1, 1933, in the WMAQ, WBBM, WHK, KMBC, mark the beginning of the New construction work. of the outstanding things of tie Illinois; Glenn S. Warner, Stanford Year in sports. delphia battler in his first engage These have been outitanding past season was ths advance of KOIL, WEAN, KMOX, WMAL, among the thrills of the year. Sum The Coliseum is the scene of the WMT, Bill Carrigan has decided he and J. R. Sutherland, Pittsburgh ' The Fastest Human ment as a heavyweight— tern Catholic schools, notably S t WHP, WFBM, WFIW, Amazing individual efforts my A1 ming it all up, it has been a -fruitful Jniversity of Southern —— California ------WISN, WCCO. WWNC, WDBJ, won’t manage the Boston Red Sox vere named to ait as an advisory George Simpson’s wonderful 100- year in sports. May 1930 bring football games and of other out- s and Santa Clara, to a.foo&>. KLRA, next season. A man’s patience has lommittee with the football rules yard dash record of 9 2-5. The mark Marsters, Albie Booth, Russ Saun WBRC, WDOD, WRBC, ders, Willis Glassgow', Gene McEver sports followers twice as many! standing athletic events. ball ■way. A^BW, KDYL,'KFRC, KVI, KFPY. its limits, after all. committee. was mads with starting blocks, use MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 81, 1929. PAGE “ 1 New'Vfea rs G reeti ng gtfUtt rom Manchester Real Estate Dealers^ Contractors & Builder^s Supply Dealers T O Y O U The Season^s Our Sincere Greetingrr Wishes for The 19^19 HAPPY IT IS 01 R SINCERE WISH THAT THE COM- Manchester INC YEAR WILL SEE THE FLAME OF HAP- PINESS HLRN BRIGHTER THAN EVER FOR NEW YEAR YOL—THAT SUCCESS, HEALTH AND CO' Construction TENTMENT WILL PF YOURS. Company The W. G. Glenney Co. . 1 kie Coal, Lumber and Masons’ Supplies. ^ ..anchester Electric Co. Allen Place, Phone 4149 77:: .,iAIN ST, PHONE 5181 Our Best Wishes New Year's for Greetings E 9 I fiom A Happy New Year STUART J. WASLEY The Holden-Nelson Co., Inc. Insurance of All Kinds Real Estate Insurance Phone 6648 853 Main St. Phone 8657 HAPPY YEAR Manchester has prospered during NEW 1929 and in the year now ending it has seen a splendid increase in real estate Year 1929 - 1930 and building activities. No matter to what part of the town one turns Emil L. G. Hohenthal, Jr. The Manchester Decorating Co. Contractor Builder one finds new homes built within the Phone 3269 74 East Center St. Phone 7471 past year. This new construction work has kept Manchester real estate dealers, contractors and builders sup 1929 1930 Sincere Appreciation ply firms busy. Prospects for the Happy New Year for New Year are bright and with this in mind these firms extend their best O P P w it h a O A Your Patronage In the Peist wishes for a Prosperous and Happy and New Year to all. Our Best Wishes For 1930 NEW YEAR GREETINGS We e.xtend to our members and to the general public of Manchester THE NEW YEAR New Year’s Greetings. We hope the year 1930 will be a very pleasant, joyful and prosperous year, and on each page in your book of experience, will be recorded SUCCESS. iasichester Plumbing k Supply Co. TO THIS END WE OFFFER THE CO-OPERATION AND SERVICES OF The Manchester Lumber Co. Phone 4425 Phone 5145 Phone 5145 877 Main St. THE MANCHESTER CHAMBER OP COMMERCE N E W ♦ Our Best Wishes All Together Now for 1929 1930 Hip! Hip! A Bright and Prosperous HAPPY BEST WISHES , NEW YEAR for ’ NEW A HAPPY NEW YEAR YEAR ROBERT J. SMITH Fayette B. Clarke G. E. WILLIS & SON, INC. Real Estate and Insurance INSURANCE . ALFRED A..GREZEL Plumbing and Heating Contractor 2 Main St. Phone 3319 Post Office Building Depot Square I VT'- MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN^ TUESbAY, DECEMBER 31, 1923. PAGE ;t e n J New Nightie of Frenck Inspiration; f it’s Quite Formal with Its Reven and Deep Yoke Bodice Daily Health Cliristmds Carol Service Charles; Dickens Hints On How To Keep Well By by World Famed Authority So many parents seem to have the fold-fashioned and, impossible? Why idea that the new independnee o f | ^ to keep Children _8entlment^y inclined to the religion of thCir DAY NEW DISCOVERIES OB’ children makes aU efforts at train- i they are reading au- b e g in HEBE TODAY ‘FLU’ GERMS MUST BE mg them In the way they should go thoritles on philosophy and divinity A cold, heart-hearted, grasping ! Now that bachelors and unat- TAKEN WITH CAUTION unavailing and futile. ' for themselves and making their miser was EBENEZER SCROOGE ! tached men demand kitchenettes Cs . I don’t turn away from this very own deductions and decisions? His partner In business, JACOB 1 with their apartments and are EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the natural trepidation. What are we Recently I heard a man of great jvlARLEY, had been like him. But second of two articles on the _____hearing ____ all______around____ us ? Why,__ this___ * prominence______talk on this very sub Marley h ^ been dead seven years. i going in for Epicureanism in a big | causes, effects prwentton of in- j very thing—that children are learn- ' Ject. And he expressed in clear, On Christmas Eve Scrooge had a way, they are producing good ideas “fiuenza by Dr. '*Morris '■ Fishbein. ing to think and act for themselves terse language the thing that I had visitor. It was the Ghost of Marr as well as good feeds. * >n « at a very early age and in many always held to be paramount, ley. Wrapped in clanking chains, They have as much fun getting [ By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN cases they are so much more ad- j When children are trained in the aiid raising dreadful cries, the into a kitchen as a woman has get I Editor Journal of the American vanced in thought and education way they should go, unquestionably Ghost repented its wasted life and ting out of it, and as the ladies I Medical Association and of Hygela, than the parents themselves that it has its effect on the formation of told Scrooge he was wrong to shut emancipate themselves further from the Health Magazine every effort at guiding and suggest- ' their later lives. mankind out of his heart. j ■V»'. ■* the skillet and griddle of a woman’s During influenza the resistance of ' lug on the part of their elders is Lessons Remembcfed “ You shall be haunted by three 4 y-./. 4 MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 31^ 1929. By Perry L. Ooshy SKIPPY ^ SENSE NONSENSE FLAPPER SAYS; ------* r- r Happy New Year, Mother! | tAS OhiCLS COT A “Happy New Year!” shouted Harrjr. When on New Year's morn hej P A ^ r e IN TH € ^ T 'H A T ’S m o t h j w woke, eOT A e>UST IW TH6 HAU And his voice was very merry T O tJN h a l l t w o OJ66KS As the joyous words he spoke. I OF FAM6 FIFTY VeARS I a g o . ^ “ Same to you, dear,” answered A ( i O . Mother, Who had waited for his yoice, linowing well if only Brother Could speak first he would rejoice. “That’s a splendid greeting, chap-j py.” _ . t Spoke up Daddy to the boy, | / ‘Wishing Mother might be happy, i Wishing her a year of joy. | “ She will have a happy New Year If you help her as you should, She’ll be glad the whole year thru, dear If you’re always kind and good.” ^ Y p e r T T u Crosby. Great Britain rights reserveC lliitL ® 1930 J King Features Syndicate, Inc. “I will try, dad,” answered sonny, j ©NE* L _____ OUR BOARDING HUUSR “An’ I’ll try my hardest, too; j By Fontaine Foi Won’t it be just awful funny Quite often the loud speaker is i Pathetic Figures B ; Gene Ahem If I can make my wish come. right in front of the microphone. true?” i things to be done without the help MATOR A Ne\Y Year’s Resolution. of manager and three assistants. iNipeep SIR, VoQ ARe v e -r v -‘•AKiP VoUYL OkiLV A man who gets to work on time use: GLA$ses p e m e m b b r t h a t The year 1929 is dead. ! r in the morning and does not imperii c a A LCT OF PRY SClE^rriTIC LE-CrniR^ Worn out with age. the life of others in an attempt to \-r HAPPeMs- To Be., kieul vears And youthful 1930 •RgAPIfJS VeU A T fE # iP eP , be first out of the office at night. ev/e-, Ajsip r am oliTt l a s t Kiew WEARS Appears upon the stage. | A man who is neat in appearance YES, VoLi i Tlimp ATTi4e cokiCLUSioki EV/e 9 AKi’ Vou and does not sulk for an hour’s over m oTt^SR ViORPS, May we strive to improve time in emergencies. th a t I AM BOUMP For, > CAME HqMS WTH Doing naught to offend ] UTeRATdRB: WILL A man who listens carefully when OF ROlSTElRoas A LCT OF c HEUJW<3 Being grateful if spared 1 he is spoken to, and asks only l5(jeMch( VoUR To see part, or the end. j ■RE'JEL'RV I WILL g u m . W WotiR 1 enough questions to insure accurate TAKg PART IM ABACCHAMAL! t h i r s t t o r ' carrying out of instructions. y Ha ir f r o m b e w g 1 9 3 0 . I j A man who moves quickly and iiiiTMsrk —r'ATii ♦ The year 1929 is history. To have !| makes as little noise as possible | worked, all of us have made son.e I about it. mistakes. Those who made the few ! A man who looks you straight in est are better off than those vv no i the eye and tells the truth every have made many. Some of us whl I time. 'fit by our mistakes while others I A man who does not pity himself , not—that’s the difference be ' for having to dig in and hustle. tween success and failure. ! A naan who is cheerful, courteous | Nineteen hundred thirty holds for ; to everyone, and determined to make us many unseen things. Just uhat 1 good. the year delivers to us will depend to 1 If interested, apply, any hour, any a great extent upon what we put in : place, any where to anyone. to our work and lives. Like begets i ------like; so haphazard, half-hearted ef Good Friends: forts bring forth poor and unprofit For the moment let’s lay aside Ihe able results. formalities of business and, figura Make 1930 the best year you have tively, give each other a not-tco- ever lived. It can be done. Right gentle wham on the back and a living, clear thinking, hard work and hearty hand-clasp. thrift will put you over the goal. The loyalty of friends such as you, in your opinion, is the most Want Ads. j cherished possession one could have, (Not gathered from Exchanges i and we want you to know that yoiii good co-operations and support, your that pass our desk.) Wanted—A man for hard work friendship and your confidence hav'e and rapid promotion, who can find helped us greatly. May we wish for you and yours a very successful New Year—a year which we hope will bring to you all the good things that make living f OXY VMANH and working a worth-while joy. Sometimes it takes a little Constant striving for the unob knocking to drive home / 2 - 3 / - 1 a point tainable frequently results in neglect of important matters close at BUS hand . . . 1 I Truth In A Nutshell—When a I man knows he is a fool he knows By Crane i more than some people give him Mr. Dawson Is Resuspected v v a s h in (;t o n t u b b s n i credit for knowing. I ______/ just wot I WAmS, SHIPMATE. $5,000 :H‘. v.'maT jsou-'roo BIAMKe iA 1 b l a z e s '. HERE'S ! COLLEGE MEN TO MEET. rOHVY Twjo WEEKS UNTiU WASH'S AMP 1 HAS the cash RIGHT A LOT O’ MONEY, s u y giAHVCI BY Thunper] Trial, viovi* got t o 7 ' - m i , WE WC»VD£R> iS BOLL PAWSON BUYvNCj an AIRPLANB? K O . 0. S. I i 01189, BY NEA' StRVlCE. IWC. y ~r STOBrvA- H /5 By Blossec FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Well, What Luck? n eed s a Companion oN ■ W o W l [ o S C A R - O S C A R ! - ah’ *mEN OSCAR CAA^e • ■niEN Voo ^ - ’‘NELL , 1 COOLON'T COAAE OOT AN’ SAY SO b e c a u s e umm-m •'! ~nus t r ip o f u\s and if it s D<»1N VJJI7U *m' iWOlAPS..... ARE REALLY IAS SSMT lAlS e s s a y OVER IT YIAS OSCARS IO£A=— ALL RISHT Nll'm VoO I'M GOING 71AE NNININER- TO M E --I FIKEO IT UP U£ YION FAIR AN’ SQ.UARE TO SEE tpat Yo u g o vnitu OSCAR.' TU’ BEST 1 COOLO AM’ 1 DON'T ENNY UlM A TWNS^ UlM ON U\S TRIP TO TUE ^ c a r .' s e n t i t in AN’ 'IT I UOPE lAE lAAS A S o o o CAPITAL, freckles 7^ WINS FIRST PRIZE..... TIME Ihi VNASIMNSTo m H 7 ^ S£S - 1P //' ^ ^ ^ 7 7 '!'| ^0 T- ' y-’' r/TATCl INC____ ^ r y ^ REaU.S.PAT.OFT. J .c: C1929. BY NCA SERVICE. INC. . By Small Grub, Too, Sam? (READ THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTUR.E) SALESMAN SAM “ Oh, please don’t blow us off this cried Carpy. “We are having \*je. ©(^OOOHT 0 \ i ^ , OWMT?\BL€. i fun and if w'e leave our bicycle OH, t h a t (v 5 t ^ bike. This is the sort of trip we I SO T h w a h TF) W'CLCotAeTH' MSW Ye a il / p e h e 's VJO(LRYlM' OS AT { - C L O T H ' ’twill upset everything. Please ! IN a t ,‘UCrttT CLU&.MOH? O K e. ‘ -’TLrTW NAt^E 0«=OF X Arthur Anderson has returned to The Jolly Dozen Sewing club William McLoughlin well-known which was scheduled to meet to ’TOOL BOX NOT STOLEN, north end nurseryman, left yester his home in Newton Center, Mass., after spending a few days with Mrs. night has postponed the meeting TONIGHT day for West Grove, Pa., where he for one week. is to manage the budding a ^ rose Anderson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. JUST TAKEN CARE OF Aaron Johnson of Linden street. C. R. Burr is on a trip that will growing for the Dingee and Conard take him to Richmond, Va., and Nursery. Mr. McLoughlin was lui- for- I Mrs. Anderson and two children re- ______DANCING merlv employed at the C. R. Burr I main for a few days’ longer visit ] later to Norfolk ! Harold Clemson Thought Sew-1 A1 Pierre Tabarin S d C o, ^ d has many friends who i with her parents, wish him success in his new John Copeland and William Shea j er Gang’s Layout Had Fall of the north end spent Sunday fish-, position. The Center Church Women’s Fed en Off a Truck. WILUMANTIC, CONN. eration members are urged to start ing through the ice. They reported The y. D. Club held a meeting the New Year right by attending no catch. f r e e — last night at the Army and Navy the first meeting of 1930 to be held Nobody stole the tool box of Souvenirs, Novelties, Noisemakers clubhouse. Among other matters tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock at There will be a senior band prac Cheney Brothers’ outdoor gang which was thrown onto a truck and Dancing' 8t80 to 1:00 A. M. of business theLne annualauiiuc, ban- the home of Miss Mary and Miss tice tonight at the Salvation Army ouet to be held next month was j Christine Hutchison of 221 Pine citadel, contrary to the annoimce- carried off while the gang was en Peerless 10-P. Orchestra Planned for. The committee ap- ' street. A brief business session will ment made maae on on eunuay Sunday uigut night thatmai. gaged in sewer repair work on Mid Dancing Every Saturday Evening. oointed to have charge of arrange- i be followed by a period of games ^ould be none.The bandmas- dle Turnpike East on Saturday. It ments is Edgar Morgan, Joseph and a social - get-together ^ ter desires thetvio presence•nrpspnr'.a of everyeverv was Harold M. Clemson, North Elm Moriarty and Clarence Wetherell. freshments. Mrs. George Smith gn gggd time for this re- street locksmith, who carried away Another regular meeting of the and Mrs. This will precede the spe- the toolbox. And Clemson wasn’t ABOUT TOWN club will be held before the banquet, the hostesses. All women of Cen . watch Night service which even playing a practical joke. He due notice of which will be sent to j ter church will be welcome. at ' was just altruistic. He saw the tool Second Congregational Ladies’ ___ ; commences at 10.ou. box lying in the road, jumped at the Aid society members 'will note that the members. ; ____ The Salvation Army Watch-night The South Manchester Free conclusion that it had fallen off a the meeting will be held Thursday Ladv Roberts Lodge, Daughters service this evening will commence i truck, stopped his own vehicle and afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Man — — — , , .11 ' Librarv and the AVest Side Library of St. George, will be host to the at 10:30 at the cit^el. This wilF ^ be closed all day tomorrow, loaded the toolbox aboard, knowing chester Community clubhouse in also usher in the Golden Jubilee Year’s Dav that it might well fall into the stead of tomorrow, New Year’s day. members’ fainilies and those of crusade, a special service period ex- New Year s uay^__ hands of junk-selling kids other Earl Roberts Lodge, at a supper wise. When he saw the ad in last and New Year’s party to be held in tending over ten weeks, celebrating ^ Lions club will meet at the Ward Cheney Camp, Spanish fifty years of Army activities in , Sheridan regularly every evening’s Herald in reference to the 'Tinker hall tomorrow evening. The tool box, he telephoned information ■War Veterans and Auxiliary will this country. ____ [Monday evening at 6:15 o’clock. hold a joint installation of officers meal will be served at 6:15 under of the lost property’s whereabouts. the chairmanship of Mrs. Harold I This was decided at a meeting held at State Armory tomorrow night The class of 1926, Manchester shpririan last eveniner which “Anyhow,” said Clemson, “what at 8 o’ciock. The state officers of Belcher and will consist of meat at the Sheridan last evening which would a locksmith be doing with a High school, will have a reunion took the form of a Christmas par both organizations wiil be present loaves, salads and many other good Thursday night at the Manchester lot of sewer tools? Anyhow, again, and the Miine Camp and Auxiliary things furnished by the ladies. Mrs. Country club. They have engaged ty. didn’t I learn when a kid that of Rockville as guests of local George------Potterton is in charge of Osano to cater and the dinner -will honesty pays? Didn’t I find sixty camp and auxiliary. A roast beef I the entertainment to follow. be followed by dancing. Already The choir of the Swedish Luther dollars over North, and didn’t my supper will be served at 7 p. m. be- j ---- more than 50 have signified their an church will rehearse at 7 o’clock mother make me put a forty cent fore the installation ceremonies. All j cheney Brothers’ Girls Athletic intention of being present. tonight. The G Clef Glee club re ad in the Herald and didn’t a farm Oa OiircMam uHcfuL, members of Ward Cheney Camp i association will begin a series of hearsal has been postponed until er from Vernon prove it was his and Auxiliary are urged to be pres- , parties on Monday eve- The Salvation Army girls who Friday evening. money and didn’t he give me half ent to greet the visitors. ! Cheney hall. The members each week sing at the Memorial a dollar and so wasn’t I a whole I desire it made plain that these so- hospital, conducted a service at the The Luther League of the Swed dime to the good? Youbetcha.” Sunset Rebekah lodge will ish Lutheran church will hold its 1 cials are not for them alone but almshouse on Sunday afternoon to its new officers at a meeting to be the pleasure of the inmates and the annual meeting on Friday evening bath O ld ana i/Hur. for women from any part of the held Monday evening of next week town. It is proposed to play from managers, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver, who at 8 o’clock. in Odd Fellow's’ hall. The program 8 to 10 o’clock each evening, then accorded the visitors a courteous George will begin with a supper at 6:30 in welcome. Miss Hanna Humphries of the the banquet hall, for which Noble follow the games with a period of Grand Mrs. Minnie Smith has chosen sociability and refreshments. had charge of the service, and un Princess Candy Shop the following committee: Mrs. Bridge, straight whist and setback der her direction some very special I.0.0.F.EECTI0N '}be~Sxtmd Oar will be played, with a first, second and appropriate hymns were sung. Emma Dowd, chairman; Mrs. Lil Wishes You lian Christiansen, Mrs. Lillian'Helm, and consolation prize in bridge and Mrs. Heard brought a short mes- j Mrs. Anna Knofskie, Mrs. Alice whist and six prizes in setback. sage. 1 At the regular meeting of King Martin,j y L d l L l L l j Mrs.X V A l o » Agnes »._»V Seidel. ,* V. * Mrs ^First A and second iprizes ^ will i X -be Vk giv- X The Community Club setback Da'vid Lodge No. 31, I. O. O. F. the Sarah Davis, Mrs. Annie Trotter, en to the players making the best follo'wing officers were elected: Mrs. Elizabeth Wright, Mrs. Eliza j scores for the series. tournament, scheduled to play to Noble grand, Franklyn H. C. Park Chapman. The w'ork will be in | night will not meet, because of the er; vice grand, Clarence L. Taylor; charge of District Deputy Gertrude I young people of the North I holiday, but the regular sitting will BestWishes rora recording secretary, Charles S. Zerver of Glastonbury and her | church in the pastor's | be held next Tuesday as usual. Roberts, Jr.; financial secretary,, staff. class,« ____ will*11 1have______a^ New 'VYear’s o T»’ CJ party !| I Samuel J. Prentice; treasurer. Wai j at the church tonight at 7 o’clock, i Dr. Fred Gorman, who has been ter H. Walsh; trustee (3 years) J. For the fourth year in succession, located in Webster, Mass., for sev D. Henderson, Jr.; board of gover or since the new South Methodist Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cahoon and eral years and who recently passed nors, H. Lowd, W. J. Horton, C. church has been in use, tnethe oioold belloeu j ^ .j ^ center street have the state board examniation for L. Chapman, H. F. Stevenson. dentists, has leased an office in The entertainment committee are Happy Ne\i^ar Rockville and expects to open there making preparations for a supper, J early in January. The change is January 17, when the officers for period to welcome in the New Year. |Cod. made to be nearer his home in the ensuing term wiil be installed Manchester. by D. D. G. M. Robert P. Watrous and his associate officers. 'Sib® CD John Hackett, who has spent the past seven years each winter in Florida, left for his winter home Sunday morning. In other years he has made the trip by rail, but this y, The ______year for the first time, is going by j ^ D E P A R T M E N T STORE ^ SO. MAtiCHESTER^,COMN; automobile. - ' ^ ^ ^ 5 Buy White Oak Coal $12.00 per > Store Closes Tonight at 6. Closed all day tomorrow. ton. G. E. Willis & Son.—Adv. NEW 1930 Brown Thomson Announces | Dresses and Rompers Embroidered Beginning Thursday | 1 to 3 Years $1.00 Mrs. ElliotPs Shop $47,189,00 Worth Of | 853 Main St. autiful New I W e Extend To You Our Best Wishes I Fur Coats Extends For THE SEASON’S GREETINGS -to- 28,801.00 ALL CAR OWNERS ☆ IK For Safety Frankly they represent the greatest sav ings we have ever offered in Furs. Elegant HAPPV JAMES M. SHEARER fur coats made by one of New York’s lead Buick Marquette Agency. A And Your Convenience ing furriers...... who is widely known for Main and Middle Turnpike, Phone 7220 ^ furs of quality.. .wormanship and smart NEW] The place of safety for your valuables and ness. If vou have a thought of a New Fur Coat you YEAR, for your convenience is our Safe Deposit Vault, will have to decide within these three days------Thursday, Friday, Saturday, January 2nd, 3rd, where you can rent a Private I»ck Box for $3, 4th. mONEi $5, $10 or $25 per year. LAPIN COATS PO N Y COATS Johnson&Little 89.50, 122.50, 135.00, 89.50, 110.00, 122.50 Plumbing and Heating 142.50,165.00 Contractors. GOOD THINGS TO CAT (If sold in the usual way (If sold in the usual way U. S. and Oil-O-Matic Oil would be 110 to 155.) would be 110 to 215.) Burners. PINEHURST WILL CLOSE AT NOON The ManchesterTrust Company N E W Y E A R ’S D AY. Pony Coats in black, tan 13 Chestnut St. Tel. 5876 Lapin coats in light and and natural shades, trim South Manchester Please Telephone Your Order as Early as Convenient. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. dark shades, each a smart med with Nutria.. Leopard Fresh Green Peas, Beets, Celery, Ripe Tomatoes, Green Beans. imiiMl'jii iMiiiiiji; new model and at decided . .Fox . .Natural Lynx and Roast Beef Welsh Rarebit ... .33c jar ESTABLISHED 1905 ntiiiiiii iiiiiiiTiT: German Fitch. ------— — — savings. Sunnyside Pot Roasts Meadowbrook Fresh Chickens E g g s ...... 55c dozen Turkeys SEALINE COATS LEOPARD CAT Strictly Fresh Canadian Bacon (Dyed (^ng.) COATS Private School Small Sausage Local Eggs 65c dozen 89.50, 110.00, 122.50, 142.50, 165.00, 185.00 217 North Elm St. CURLEY KALE, SPE C IA L...... 15c Peck 135.00,185.00 SMALL LEGS OF LAMB (If sold in the usual way Phone 3300 (If sold in the usual way would be 105 to 245) would be 189.50 to 245.) Sealine Coats trimmed Leopard Cat Coats, trim ETHEL M. FISH Among Our Assets with Skunk, Natural Beige med with Red Fox, Raccoon Squirrel, Australian Opos Director sum, Jap Weasel and Mink. and Beaver. A s this is a day school for in We like to count the only one that money dividual instruction in elemen cannot buy— your good will. And so [Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tary grades, pupils may enter at any time during the school at the holiday season we extend to you year. — ^not as a merchant alone, but as a friend— the Best of Wishes for the com ATKINS BROTHERS, Inc, TUTORING n ADULTS AND CHILDREN K E M P 'S. Itie. I ing year. Funeral Directors Class for pre-kinderg:irten ESTABLISHED 55 YEARS age for training in social rela tions. DAVID CHAMBERS CHAPEL AT. 11 OAK ST. Miss Fish is available as The Mackley Chevrolet Company, Inc. parents advisor in child prob CONTRACTOR wish you HULTMAN’S Phones: Office 5171 lems. Appointments on Tues Robert K. Anderson AND Bim.DER Funeral Director Residence 7494 day, Wednesday, Friday and A Happy New Year ______Saturdav afternoons and on 68 Hollister Street each evening of the week. \.i