, » " - % . " ' / ' ' ' * •- + * l »• „ GEORGE ;i ! t. GOOAH "•* ' '""* " " > .' • - ; • • ' * State .I,ibr»rianU'nrlan * • ' •' '. oS^ vry- V'. '•• >"V::' C*"-". 7; •:•••>• -v.-• ••••• . ' ;' ' "• ' -.V'..;:::-*^ -. • r - x '> ' v v 1 >irX! 1 1 S > v, I : -v -' r " '* ~ *" •"!* *-T .'.-V. .-'.-*- •' Y. •* " V • -' - -; - ..-^7,. ', ;jV~ 7 .>.."...'

The Only 7' -t^m Newspaper Published

COVERS AN AREA POPULATED BY 30,000 PEOPLE

THOMPSONVILLE, CONN., THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 Subscription $2.00 Per Year—Single Copy 5c.

WILLIAM PICKENS VISITING NURSE REPORT

for Well Known Resident WM.P.GOURUE ie Activities Outlined by Miss Hel­ Take Place Tomorrow at 2:30. en G. Breen, the Nurse. Unusual Offerings of The funeral of William Pickens, 83, Miss Helen G. Breen, the visiting w-^i mwm*i mast for many years a well known resident ENDS 37 YEARS of the town, who died in Middletown nurse, reports that she attended 32 ow r airview Tuesday, will be held from the Leete IN U. S. SERVICE cases and made 202 nursing visits in Bigelow-Sanford Co. Company undertaking parlors tomor­ June. Her collections for the month row afternoon at 2:30, and burial will were $34.30 from paying patients and be in the Thompsonville Cemetery. Postmaster Who Relin­ Engineers of Sewer Survey Reached the Conclu­ Services will be held at the grave and $55.95 from the Metropolitan Life In­ Display of and Rugs at Fall Opening On will be conducted by Rev. George quished His Duties Sat­ surance Company. On Tuesday aft­ sion That Area Between Enfield Street and the Whiteside, pastor of United Presby­ ernoon she assisted Miss Antoinette Next Monday Will Be the Most Varied and terian Church. The. .deceased was a urday Evening Began Coderre of the State Bureau of Child River Will Make Greatest Development In the native of England, coming here as a Pretentious Ever Shown By the Company— young man and had resided here ever As Clerk In the Local Hygiene in conducting the well child Next Forty Years. r, . since. He was for many years em­ Office In 1897. conference, which was attended by 23 Numerous Offerings Product of Local Plant. ployed in the plant of the Bigelow- children. Mrs. George T. Finch and Sanford Company. His only •Miss Anna T. Ward helped in the surviving relative is an adopted son, When William P. Gourlie relin­ In the trade announcement issued That the area which will witness work of the conference. RITES FOR MOTOR 'the greatest development in the next Frederick White of Holden, Mass. quished his duties of postmaster here this week, the officials of the Bigelow- STILL WRESTLING 40 years lies between Enfield street last Saturday evening he had com­ Sanford Carpet Company stress the and the river south of Fairview Ave­ pleted 37 years of service in the local fact that at the fall opening which ACCIDENT VICTIM nue, is the conclusion reached by the ANNUAL DISTRICT begins in New York Monday, new WITH TRAFFIC engineers in their survey of the town P.T.MALLEY postal office of the federal govern­ ideas in carpet weaves and original for the solution of the sewage dispo­ ment. He entered the office as a clerk designs of a highly attractive charac­ HELD YESTERDAY sal problem. This statement will be in 1897 and was promoted to the po­ MEETING ADOPTS ter will feature the samples to be REGULATIONS found in the installment of the report IS SWORN IN AS sition of assistant postmaster in displayed by the company at its New which follows: 1906. He was appointed postmaster York showrooms for the fg.ll and win­ Funeral of Hazardville Regulators. in 1922 by the late President Warren ENTIRE PROGRAM ter trade. Most of this new output is Police Commission En­ POSTMASTER G. Harding, succeeding James T. the product of the local plant. A sum­ Youth Who Lost His Whereas the existing system is of Murray, and received two reappoint­ mary of the trade announcement fol­ deavoring to Meet Ob­ the combined type and even when the ments, serving 12 years in all. Recommendations For lows: Life on Broad Brook suggested relief storm sewers are Former Selectman As­ When Mr. Gourlie entered the serv­ The Bigelow Weavers' introduction jections to Code as Pro­ constructed, there _will still be some ice 37 years ago the office was located Improvement of Fire of their new Lokweave carpet is of Road Sunday, Held in sewers collecting both types of sumes Active Charge primary interest to the trade. Over mulgated— Bus Park­ wastes; and whereas it is necessary and Sewer Service Ap­ a period of years this company has ing Space Criticized. St. Bernard's Church. to collect the wastes from certain or of Local Post Office on been very carefully studying the pat- all of the existing outlets by means Monday Morning In proved by Voters Last carpet situation. Gratified Although the new traffic regulations The funeral of Anthony Noroto­ of an intercepting trunk sewer; and with the results of their research , i become whereas it is not logical to collect the Friday Evening. and parkinf ru es are due t0 vitch, 23, who was killed in a motor­ Simple Ceremony. they are presenting a line of this type official]y effective here next Saturday, maximum flow (during rainy weath­ carpets to the trade at the opening, Commission i still wrest- cycle accident Sunday evening on the er) from these respective outlets, or At a well attended meeting in the the PoIice s In the presence of a few intimate July 9th. The line will be known aS|jjng severai problems that have Broad Brook road in Hazardville, was to treat this large volume of diluted Higgins School Auditorium last Fri­ friends, former First Selectman Pat­ Bigelow Lokweave Broadloom. . Itjarisen in connection with their held from his late home in Scitico sewage; some means of by-passing day evening, which was notable forr en- yesterday morning at 8:30, with ser­ rick T. Malley was sworn in as post­ ,, , ...... I will consist of four plain qualities, I fmwmPT1t Complaints that the re- the flow at such times is essential. the jusiness-like manner in which the !one being a hard twist fabric. Fig-! strictTon" are"7oo'"drastic vices in St. Bernard's Church at 9. master la'st Monday morning. The. SU tl0I S &rG t0 dras C an< The method commonly employed oath of office was administered by questions presented to it for consid-I ured"carnetsa ets 'aTe"also°underai e develon-i ^ V ° ^ * 'The services consisted of a solemn re­ consists of a regulating chamber eration were disnosed of the entire I . iP . a'so unaei develop . such extreme measures are unneces- quiem high mass celebrated by Rev. Town Clerk Timothy J. Sullivan and n 1 1 1 s,ry f th placed on each outfall sewer, the con­ participating in the brief ceremony r 27 JSi" 'TiUr^ li™ S ™ ? •»»»- John J. Brennan, pastor, assisted by trol mechanism consisting of a float- committee and the sewer commission- the result of considerable study on!have'^ many of these objections Rev. John Dellard of Cheshire as dea­ was former Postmaster William P. ers was adopted. been registered with the Com­ operated gate, automatic in nature Gourlie, whom Mr. Malley succeeds. The annual district, the part of the Bigelow stylists in or-' imission. con and Rev. Franklin J. Corrigan of which permits an amount of liquid to report in printed form was presented) der to give to the trade the benefit St. Patrick's Church, Thompsonville, Conspicuous on the postmaster's desk to the meeting by Chairman William The storekeepers in some sections enter the interceptor, equal in volume was a massive bouquet, the gift of of new and decorative shades, with­ of the business district are particu­ subdeacon. Music for the mass was to the -sanitary sewage to be antici­ J. Hines and adopted. out taking anything away from sta­ under the direction of Mrs. John Rab- Mr. Malley's 86-year-old mother, The election of a district committee larly active in their objections to the pated from that zone. The balance Mrs. Catherine Malley of Russell ple, standard. ,colors , for -general , use. parking rules and many of them are bitt, organist. Burial took place in under flow conditions in excess of this resulted in the re-election of William St. Bernard's Cemetery where Father street. J. Hines and Atty. Francis J. Fahey 1he new shades embrace chartreuse, emphatic in their declarations that if amoun': is discharged directly to the Mr. Malley entered in his duties smoke, coral, white, oyster grey, wal- J the rules as published are enforced it Brennan conducted the committal river through existing outfall sewers. and John M. Savage, who took the services. The bearers were Joseph immediately. During the day many place of Philip J. Sullivan, who de­ nut and a very soft tonal blending of j will injure their business. The feel­ The size of the intercepting sewer prominent citizens and political lead­ wood colors. ing is expressed by^ many citizens Zawistowski, Stanley Mielnikiewicz, may under these conditions be de­ clined a re-election after a service of ne John Alesquiewz, Louis Putriment, ers visited the office and extended 32 years. Laurence T. Downey was •it" J* °-t ready-made designs j that the Commission has gone to an signed on the basis of the volume of their congratulations to the new offi­ will be available in any color combm- ] unnecessary extreme in the one-way Benny Putriment and Richard Mish- sanitary sewage only. These require­ re-elected the district secretary and insky. cial, while scores of others called him treasurer and John A. Best and Wil­ ation. These embrace all types of; traffic feature of the regulations. ments refer to future needs, a period on the telephone to wish him success. Modern, including Neo-Classic andj The arrangements in the rules for Young Norotovitch, who was 23 of 40 years hence, being assumed. WtlLLIAM P. GOURLIE liam L. Delaney were renamed audi­ years of age, was thrown from his Mr. Malley will serve as acting tors. The meeting elected Town Tax Chinese. Many of them are by the. passenger bus parking is perhaps the Sanitary Sewer Requirements of 1975 postmaster until Congress convenes well known floor covering designer,!feature of the regulations that is be- motorcycle while riding on the Broad in the Thompsonville Trust Company Collector Edward J. O'Donnell to col­ Alfons Bach. The company has made; ing the most severely criticized. In Brook Road about 6:30 Sunday eve­ A study of the probable population early next year when his appointment lect the district taxes. The officers of building on Prospect street and the various experimental installations i this connection, too, many citizens ning. The accident was witnessed by and distribution thereof has been will be formally confirmed. the fire department, all of which were made for a future period. Due weight As told in these columns last week, office force consisted of Postmaster re-elected without opposition, are as, with gratifying results. There is'have found fault with the apparent E. B. Buck and family of Hazardville Mr. Malley was informed last Wed­ nothing new about these carpets ex-1 placing of the new station in the cen- and the police patrol and ambulance has been given the past rate of the Tudor Gowdy and Miss Mamie Al­ follows: Chief, William J. Hines; dep- ;Principle of being assembled. ter at the exclusive disposal of the from Thompsonville were summoned. growth of the town at large and the nesday that he would begin his duties At uty chief, Thomas J. Furey; superin­ as acting postmaster July 1, by First corn, now Mrs. James Patterson, with the use of tape and cement, thus New England Transportation Com- Dr. Frank F. Simonton, who respond­ percentage of population tha% will re­ tendent of fire alarms, Charles Furey. elimmating all sewing, hand binding,1 pany and the excluding from that ed to the emergency call, rendered side in the area of which Thompson­ Assistant Postmaster General Howes. the present time T)esides the post­ Martin E. Brodrick, whose term as Friday he received a telegram from master and his assistant, Lewis J. process is fully covered by' area of all other vehicles both public first aid. Patrolman Charles Lock- ville is the nucleus. The distribution sewer commissioner expired, was the Chance patent No. 1842746. The and private, wood and George T. Fleming accom of people was determined by examin­ Mr. Howes instructing him to take Stinson, there are 11 other employes. unanimously re-elected. In fact, this over the affairs of the office at the They are Mrs. Mabt1 Kothe, money Bigelow company has been granted j The Police Commission is giving an panied the ambulance to the scene of ation of the various districts as to the was true of all the fire and district an exclusive license by the Collins &; attentive ear to all this discussion and the accident. available space for new structures close of business Saturday evening order clerk; Raymond Chouinard and officers, there being no opposition in and on Saturday morning he receiv­ John Dineen, clerks; Raymond Turn­ Aikman Corporation for this patent, while it will undoubtedly adhere to The principal injury consisted of a Consideration was given the proba­ any instance to the men who were BigelowKlffolATO has alreadyn1«nn/]» installedJ twoJ-- — Jl- ' 1 . . severe fracture at the base of the bility of present two and four family ed his commission from Postmaster er and Burton Henry, auxiliary nominated. its original purpose to enact a set of General James A. Farley. clerks; William F. Malley, Charles S. distinctive interiors using Lokweave traffic regulations and parking rules skull and he suffered multiple bruises structures being replaced by apart­ The district voted to abandon the carpet. One is the Lack showroom, as well. He was in a critical condi­ ment houses, particularly in the vi­ Mr. Malley is the twelfth citizen of Plank, Arthur L. Gorman and John J. Building Fund and adopted the pro­ that will be sufficiently effective to the town to occupy the position of Ferguson, Jr., carriers; Charles E. 31st street and Fifth Avenue, New meet the needs of the community, it tion when picked up and was removed cinity of the business district. The Ernest W. gram for the distribution of the mon­ York City, showing an interesting to the emergency room of the_ Enfield conclusion was reached that the ma­ postmaster at Thompsonville since Hyland, R. F. D. carrier; ey that has been collected for a new will be ready to make such modifica­ the office was established in 1834. Woodward, substitute R. F. D. car­ Chinese modern treatment on a peach tions as will insure that no real hard­ Visiting Nurse Association on High jor trend during the next 40 years ground, and their new Philadelphia will be to develop the area Jying be­ Ten of these officials were men and rier; Zephr Boule, carrier on the Star (Continued on Page Five) ship is imposed by the regulations. street, where he died about midnight. two were women. mail route to Somers, and William H. branch office which shows a smart and, At an executive session of the Com- He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dom­ tween Enfield street and the river Norman, mail messenger from the of­ simple use of the Bigelow Weavers' mission held Monday evening, the ob- inic Norotovitch and resided with his and south of Fairview Avenue. The fice to the railroad station. well known label and bouncing sheep,' jections raised and formally filed parents on the south road to Somers- probability is that new industries will combined with bands of henna rose, with that body were discussed but no occupy sites adjacent to the rail fa­ Mr. Gourlie spent the most of the LOCAL FARMS TO ville. Besides his parents he leaves HAZARDVILLE day at the office Monday showing white and oyster grey on a deeper announcement has been made of any a brothei*, Joseph, and a sister, Baf- cilities. These will require homes to Postmaster Malley "the ropes." He grey ground. action being taken. bara. house their employes, a great many left with his family Tuesday for his BE INSPECTED The complete line, with all general of which will be constructed along MAN IS MODEL cottage at Pleasure Beach, Waterford, the ridge. Consideration of such de­ Conn., where he will spend the sum­ velopment with the needs of the mer. He has no particular plans for ON POTATO TOUR things in the Bigelow fall line which |TWO lilXililMAIN BOUTSUV/UXkJ FUNERAL OF MRS. North Thompsonville and Enfield sec­ POULTRY RAISER the fall, only that he "did not propose will be shown at the opening are a j tions, must be given in the design of to remain idle." widely vari-colored and well styled; a proposed intercepting sewer. Mr. Gourlie is a native of Glasgow, group of new rugs. The! TO FEATURE V.F. M. BENNETT HELD : Levels were taken on all existing Prison Farm Field and Clifton line features a medium-scale an{ a Hartford County Poul­ Scotland, coming to this country with minri Tl/l/\rkliTTTkT/V outlets ^ profile run from the his family when he was one-year old. That of Steane & Co. hooked rug, a tan Persian, a vari-col­ I HIV IVIlIlk l\l[\|t!cemetery at Lafayette street, south- try Men Will Study the He has resided in Enfield for 59 years ored Persian panel, a rust ground W. CARD TONIGHT U ill v/l.l'Ill.l 1V* jerly to below Bridge Lane. Prevail- and as a young man was employed in Included In Places to Chintz, and two good looking Moderns ing ground levels are such that it is Method of M. J. Collins the carpet plant here, and at the time on moresque grounds, one rust and ^ « n°t feasible or economical to con Be Visited In Growers one green. A group of Clifton rugs struct a At Field Meeting Next I of the existence of the Thompsonville Paulie Ritz Will Clash feerVlCeS tor Alden Ave-, gravity sewer between these |Y. M. C. A. was its secretary. He Visit Next Week. which has been especially planned for v«ri-_ Tk* j limits and intercept present norther- Wednesday. has taken an active part in the civic the furniture store trade, are now in With Jackie Brown and nue W Oman Wf no Died ly outlets. Neither can any one or life of the community as a member work. Chinese, Moderns and Per­ T?arlv Tnoerlav two outlets north of Asnuntuck street of the Thompsonville Board of Trade Among the farms to be visited in sians in clear, strong colors will be Korloff to Tackle Ban­ J Ucolldj itiorn- jje omitted and accomplish this result. Hartford County poultrymen will for years. He is affiliated with Doric the 1934 Potato Field Tour will be featured. These rugs will be ready ning in Headliners At St. Pat- All outlets north of and including As- study the methods Marshall J. Collins Lodge of Masons and the Masonic in the late summer. ing Held at * nuntuck street can, however, be col­ the R. D. Steane & Co. farm, the ma­ of Hazardville uses to produce "qual­ Square Club, Friendship Lodge, I. O The Fervak line is also augmented Local Arena. rick's Church. lected by gravity and conducted to O. F., and is a member of the First jor part of which is located in the by a variety of designs. Besides sev­ _ site adjacent to Clear Water Brook ity eggs," on Wednesday, July 11, at Presbyterian Church. Mr. Gourlie's town of Enfield, raising 250 acres or eral Orientals is a ...very r. unusual, , nau- , i Two first class main bouts have The funeral of Mrs. Margaret Ben-'ft' ^atment before discharge into P. M., daylight time, at the second wife was the former Miss Harriet tical hooked rug with diamond shaped , , . , , ' the monthly countywide field meeting more of potatoes this year. The tour­ nett, an aged and respected resident Connec^cut River Likewise it Henry of this town and they have ists will also visit the Osborn Prison panels formed by interlacing ropes, j« arranged by Matchmaker Ernie of the town, was held this morning developed that all outlets south held under the auspices of the Hart­ seven children. each panel containing a dicerent "sea- j Bonrque for tonight's all-star ama- f hls ford County Farm Bureau poultry Farm in the east part of the town "with services at St. Patrick's Church 2 ^, including provision for the En- where 40 acres of Green Mountain going" motif. The Crafton and Ban- teur boxing show at the Belmont Ave- field sectlon could be routed by grav advisory committee, according to an ford lines will have some good look- *t 9 o'clock. The high mass of re- " announcement from the bureau today. potatoes will be inspected. The tour nue Arena. In one of the headliners •quiem was celebrated by Rev. Frank­ (Continued on Page Five) A hen egg, like other eggs is only will be conducted in cooperation with Paulie Ritz, Connecticut light heavy­ lin J. Corrigan, assisted by Rev. Paul the Connecticut Vegetable Growers' (Continued on Page Eight) as good as the company it keeps," ac­ weight champion, will meet Jackie "T. Dignam as deacon and Rev. John cording to County 'Agent Charles D. The"4th"Here Association and will be held on Mon­ Donaher of Cheshire, subdeacon. The Lewis, and the" "eggs on Mr. Collins' day, July 14, starting at 10:30 A. M., Brown, hard-punching southpaw col­ choir was under the direction of Miss MISS GARROW IS farm are in good company from the according to an announcement made UNION MTING ored lad who also resides in the Cap­ Dorilda Castonguay, organist, and time they are laid until they are de­ ITH the usual Hazardville cele­ this week by Extension Specialist A. itol city. The extra main attraction the soloist was Mrs. Daniel A. Gar- livered to the consumer. Mr. Col­ bration omitted this year, and E. Wilkinson of Connecticut State is carried over from last week and vey. Burial was in St. Patrick's Cem­ nothing planned for this sec­ College at Storrs. BRIDE MONDAY lins "traps," that is, keeps individual W TOMORROW NIGHT will have Pete Korloff meeting Eddie etery where Father Corrigan read records on 300 White Leghorns and tion of the town, the community In .addition to the local agricultural the committal service. The bearers 32 Rhode Island Reds. He hatches yesterday was devoid of anything areas which will be visited the itin­ Banning of East Hampton. were John M. Savage, Patrick T. Mal- Enfield Street Young and broods between 2500 and 3000 bordering on a public celebration of erary of the tour is as follows: The Local Branch of Textile Korloff and Banning were to clash ley, Thomas H. Smyth, James Kane, j chicks and keeps around 1800 laying Independence Day. The day in fact Theodore Hurlburt farm, Somersville ja week ago but Banning suffered a Fennel? ^cKellig°tt and Thomas I Woman Marries Edw. birds, some of them in a remodeled was the least eventful "Fourth" in on the main road between Somers Workers Will Hold Im­ 'bad cold in the afternoon and was tobacco barn with three floors. The years. The "night before" racket and Enfield. This farm has 70 acres forced to call off his engagement. A Mrs. Bennett died at her home, 40 j Nicholson in Ceremony eggs from the Collins' flock are taken with which the day is customarily of Green Mountain potatoes, using portant Business Ses­ substitute for him was obtained but Alden Avenue, early Tuesday morn-' from the nests to an egg room in the ushered in was almost entirely ab­ certified seed from Prince Edward Is­ failed to give Korloff, who holds the ing following a six weeks' illness.' at St. Patrick's Rectory. cellar where they are prepared for sent. It was confined to desultory land. The storehouse has a capacity sion in Wawel Hall. Wisconsin state lightweight cham­ She was born in Derrymore, County! retail sale in Springfield and Thomp­ shooting off of firecrackers and of 20,000 bushels. A thorough in­ pionship, a fight. The bout was halt- spection of his crops and storehouse Kerry, Ireland, coming to this coun-i „A wedding of interest tow 1Iiailmany» sonville under the New England farm other explosives and the usual im­ An important business meeting of j ed in the opening round, hurting the try and to reside in this town whpn i? • j j. i i n/r j • products seal. promptu bonfire on Main street. will be made in the morning. The the local branch of the United Tex-1 show greatly. Matchmaker Bourque a young girl. Her husband, Maurice J Mr. Collins is president of the Con­ The regular and special police had speaker at noon will be Dr. Roger B. tile Workers of America will be heldi'10Pes to redeem himself with the cus- Bennett, died two years ago. She is when MlSs Myra Harrow, daughter of no difficulty in keeping order, for Corbett, now with the U. S. Depart- necticut New Laid Fancy Egg Pro­ ment of Agriculture in the Agricul- in Wawel Hall, Church street, tomor-! tomers staSin^ the double windup, survived by one daughter, Miss Mary Mr. and Mrs. John D. Garrow of En- ducers' Association, a member of the from the standpoint of orderliness T ,.... , , , I putting on 11 bouts instead of the t a t e ail so s At it was all that could be expected or tural Economics Extension Division row evening. In addition to transact-: usual 10. tornPv F H «ir? A p " « T *^' field street, became the bride of Ed- Hartford County Farm poultry advi­ Vm-ir o»wi4? Bennett of New ward Nicholson, son of Mr. and Mrs. sory committee, chairman of the En­ desired. The special detail of fire­ His subject will be "Potato codes, | ing considerable routine business the Ritz is the state light heavyweight rme field .Tobacco Adjustment Committee men who stood ready for any emer­ progress made, and their possible in­ £ A^ 5 Commis-1Michael Nicholson of Enfield. The fluence on the industry." meeting will have before it several i champion of his class and has shown nf i ? o' I0?? ceremony was performed at the rec- and a leader in many other agricul­ gency that the celebration might important questions dealing with the |f« vorably heie on two other occa- bring, had little to do. The only The John Bednarowski farm, next slons of Detroit, and Michael of Suffield.; tory at 9 o'clock by Rev. Daniel J. tural and civic affairs. purposes of the organization. Thei - In Brown he will be meeting a devo tc Mr. Hurlburt's, will be the next to The June meeting was held at E. alarm the department responded to a , "t member,O'Connor, pastor of St. Patrick's be visited. Twenty-three acres of central executive committee will meet j youngster who has considerable 01 bt. .Patrick s Church and a woman Church. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Quag- W. Knight's farm in North Granby, had nothing to do with the celebra­ 1 e nce and ls e rJ blt this evening to formulate the pro- ®^ . f TJ , T p of an extremely kindly and neighbor­ and drew more than 50 poultrymen. tion of the "Fourth." Green Mountain potatoes, three acres as stu liori, brother-in-law and sister of the of Irish Cobblers, are under cultiva­ gram of questions to be presented to. ^y as Ritz. Brown fights from ly disposition. groom, were the attendants. The August meeting will be held on During the day the downtown the meeting a ?°u,thPaw stance, carrying plenty Wednesday, August 9, at the Poultry streets were practically deserted. tion and comparisons will be made f k lck in ! _ The bride was attired in a gown of between Vermont certified seed, The workers will also be called up-i? , his left mitt. He is also a Auction at Charter Oak fair grounds Citizens who remained in town, and man to ap •Farewell Dinner This Evening. pale pink triple sheer crepe, a white Maine second size seed and own sow­ on to act on the resignation of Presi- j I,, t r when m his crouch, 'William P. Gourlie, who retired last picture hat and accessories to match in West Hartford. The county advis­ hosts of them did not, seemed to dent Thomas J. Halpin, which was! T Others bouts listed are as follows: ory committee in charge of the meet­ prefer the quiet of their respective ed seed. A very fine underground •Saturday from the position of post-;and she wore a corsage bouquet of storehouse has just been built on this submitted at the last meeting. Mr. j Johnny Kmger, 160 Westfield vs. master after 12 years, and ended 37 pink roses. The bridesmaid was ings include Leo A. Grouten, Farm- neighborhoods, and in many instan­ Halpin was forced to submit his resig-' Jackie Williams, Webster, Sid Gun- ces closed the day with a fireworks farm. It is 24 feet wide, 42 feet long years of service in the local office, gowned in yellow triple sheer crepe, ington, chairman; Mr. Collins, V. A. nation because of the condition of his ™ng, 155, of Hartford, vs. Scotty Slater of Berlin, A. A. Russell, Man­ display of their own, which of and has a capacity of 6,000 bushels. Bar will be tendered a farewell dinner by. Her hat and accessories were also in The tourists will then inspect the health which made it difficult to give i nes, North Biookfield, Kid Rit- the local post office staff this evening J white and her corsage was of Talis- chester; Granville Cunningham of course was staged especially for the necessary attention to the exact- chie, 170, Springfield, vs. Ralph Pi- the edification and amusement of Raymond Howard farm, just beyond :at the Homestead Inn in Somers. ITie t man roses. Following the ceremony Southington, Charles D. Clark of ing duties of the position. It is un-|sano, Agawam; Charlie Blanchard, the children? It was a quiet "4th" the Bednarowski place. Twenty-five 1 5 affair, of which Mr. Gourlie will be,a wedding breakfast was served for Granby, A. R. Randall of Suffield and acres of Green Mountain potatoes derstood, however, that an effort will, ' - Springfield, vs. Joe Blasta, Web- the guest of honor, will be attended!the bridal party at the Homestead E. W. Hart of Burlington. for even the list of major or minor be made to arrange matters so that: ster; Tommy Mullen, 120, Hol^ke, vs. injuries is missing, as there is no are being grown, almost all produc­ by about 25 persons. Inn in Somers and immediately after ed from Maine certified seed. A few he will be relieved of some of the |Johnny Pal, Hartfoid. Gene Carestia • I the bride and groom left for a few Lawn Party Plans Underway. record of any damage of this char­ work and to prevail on him to con-j°f Springfield, Richie Gibbons, also Plans are going forward for a lawn acter being done even among the rows of own sowed seed are also used. •The monthly meeting of the Board .days' motor trip to Boston and places The Frank Clark farm in Ellington tinue in the position for the present, j of Springfield, Martin Furman or of Management of the Thompsonville i of interest on Cape Cod. Mr. Nich- carnival under the joint auspices of youngsters. This in a _ measure Mr. Halpin has made an ideal leader, Chicopee, Willie Skinner of East Troop 19, Boy Scouts, and the Bige­ compensates for any disappoint­ will then be visited. Here 175 acres Building and Loan Association will! olson, who is m the employ of the Al- of potatoes are under cultivation, in­ of the organization and members are j Hampton, Young Griffo of Hartford be held next Monday evening at the 'len Bros., Inc., and Mrs. Nicholson low-Sanford Band, to be held on the ment being felt over the fact that loath to lose his valuable service at.and Young Lockwood of Broad Brook; Higgins School grounds, North Main it was the quietest Independence cluding three varieties, Cobblers, Wl11 also headquarters of the organization in j will make their new home on Mead- Bliss and Green Mountain. this time. appear in the undercard. jthe Gannuscio bank building. jow Road in Longmeadow. . street, July 26, 27 and 28. Day here in years.

si,-dfesk;;"MM*< • W . .r;- '-^"TV?-.r-1-'-*-"V-:-v.^irif:rA:r ;;?C - v.. v?.; V%y-'£VfV;;.:^ t:-:F •^.1"'V1 - ^^ '• - p. v'^Ty '5' :--..- • ^\C'-•'•*'••• :'•'?&•&••• V/^;s*v-> - -•: ••' • ': -' • •- -' : •• :"s: -V? '•'' ' ' :• " ./• ""'I '• r ;:;•,' "•;.. >;, > v ; ' '-v;3>::;V••;-.-^ >:i"' '•{>v;-=;/'\, •v-r'.;;:;.; -: v- ' :•'" ^ -V^r .v ^•; :- :'' v--:~ i-vr ,&?^fT^y-;'r?:; -"V:-:;?;"'>e;;;-vV^;^35,;.

»&• V'.-i-" , vOf .v:'^;' THE THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 Efej ';? • 1 - : ' '•> asa :SI Celebrating First Birthday fV;' R E ROAD ENDS iv-",! . , • of NRA ;'&• 40- TFTH YEAR IN •:W: • -V-. -V' -'I::'-.':-- * • " '.••C; • ||s .-v.- ' -• •"•*'•• : ••:-• TRUCK SERVICE Has Become the Biggest Rail Operator of Di­ rectly Controlled Lines In Country Since Start VALUE on July 1,1929.

On Monday of this week, the New Haven Railroad completed its first five years in the trucking business, during which time through its sub­ sidiary, the New England Transpor­ tation Company, it has become the country's largest railway operator of its own directly controlled trucks. The transportation company's truck lines today parallel closely the entire 2,000 miles of railway lines of the parent company. Its trucks operate -AND THE PRICE IS LOWER! in close coordination with railway .-r" and steamboat service, and, in addi­ VEN at former prices the a car selling for less than $2500 i tion, carry on a general contract Ford V-8 was an outstand­ Despite its bigness, roomi­ General Johnson, with Marvin Mclntyre, secretary to the President, and others at the party the administrator gave E trucking business on their own ac­ ing value. In fact, the more ness and power—despite its count. The trucks now carry about to celebrate the first birthday of NRA. The guests of honor were the 85 members of Johnson's original staff. 40,000 tons of freight per month. high priced cars you looked at Mi When the New Haven Railroad en­ ... the more Ford V-8 features Ford V-8 is the most economi­ tered the trucking field on July 1, SOVIET MACHINES you saw. cal Ford ever built. See it. Drive 1929, the primary motive was to pro­ CITY OF PIED PIPER it. And you'll want to own it. vide better service to the public. Sub­ Now the low prices of the WELL CONSTRUCTED Ford V-8 have been reduced sequently, added to this motive was Lights of New York HOLDS CELEBRATION COOL-The Ford V-S the equally compelling one of meet­ even lower» This is particularly LOW And, in addition, there is cowl > ing what is nationally recognized as by L. L. STEVENSON Mail Service Is a Surprising important when you realize GO LOWER tion in front. Further, you have bad the most severe competition for that Ford V-8 prices have not weather comfort in Ford Clear-Vision freight traffic by unregulated compe­ Recalls Legend of Six and a The i w Ford V-8 Truck ma Ventilation from the side windows. Expose of Inefficiency. Dropped Into the Little Church been Increased this year. America's Great Truck Value tition that is faced by any carrier in Around the Corner. A wedding cere­ Half Centuries Ago. at the old price. And now the country. Moscow.—The Soviet union in these And the car has not been prices have been substantially With both these motives always in mony was being performed In the changed. It gives you a full 112" reduced. See these rugged, days gives the foreign observer much Brides' chapeL Nothing new about Washington.—Six and one-half cen­ economical Ford V-8 Trucks. mind, the New Haven officials have wheelbase. A generous 85 horse­ They're built to solve 9056 of built up an efficiently coordinated the same impression as a long battle that There are many weddings at the turies ago, legend relates, a spiteful all hauling problems. rail and truck service from which has line where a general's troops are push­ church first made famous by the late musician lured away the children of power. The only V-8 engine in grown the slogan, "Accept Today— ing the enemy forward in one salient Joseph Jefferson. Was told there were Hameln (Hamelin) by his weird pip­ AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS OF NEW ENGLAND Deliver Tomorrow." This slogan while retreating In another. 3t) or more weddings scheduled for ings, because the village fathers bick­ means that overnight service for Out of thousands of available snap­ tomorrow, Saturday, which is the most ered over his bill for having rid merchandise can be secured between shots of life and industry In this vast Hameln. of a plague of rats. practically all points on the New Ha­ popular day. But the Little Church land, two may be taken to Illustrate Aroc.nd the Corner felt the depres­ Hameln is observing the six hundred ven system and from those points to the point: BEAUTY, "^e Ford V-8 isoneof the most others as far north as Maine and as sion severely Indeed. In fact, If I am fiftieth anniversary of the tragic event beautiful cars on the road. You can far south as Baltimore. With very Recently there was held an exhibi­ correctly Informed, there was even a with a grand homecoming of all living park It beside expensive cars with pride. few exceptions a shipper can get his tion of the products of Soviet Industry Saturday or two when there were no "children and children's children" of £^^V-8 shipments to their destinations in under the "five year plan." When it weddings. But now there is a rapid the little German town, and will even New Haven territory between the Is remembered that Russia, until the approach to the old average. So the let bygones be bygones to the extent AND UP, F. O. B. DETROIT afternoon of one day and the early revolution, Imported virtually all of country must once again be facing of dedicating a Pled Piper monument, Easy terms through Universal Credit Com­ morning of the following day. This Its machines save those made here on June 26. Now *505 has been made possible by the rapid the sun since so many more young pany — the Authorized Ford Finance*Plan. under foreign supervision, the array people are convinced that two can live "Modern Hameln, with Its busy In­ building up of the truck system in of complicated machinery exhibited such a manner that it acts as a feed­ as cheaply as one, or that the seas of dustries and its salmon fisheries of Ford Radio Program with Waring's Pennnylvanians: Sunday and Thursday Evenings-Columbia Network er system for transporting freight to was Impressive. matrimony are other than troubled. River Weser, still retains many richly definite points on the rail lines, from In one room, for Instance, we»e » • » ornate houses and quaint, narrow which transportation is completed by moving picture cameras and projectors Discreet inquiries here and there streets that hark back to the days of fast freight and other trucks. made by a factory in Leningrad. To developed the fact that the increase in Its rat-catching legend, Immortalized GIVES REAL FACTS 92-Yr.-01d Woman Known Under this system there are thirty a layman, at least, they appeared to the number of weddings at the Little In Browning's ballad, 'The Pled Piper concentration _ and distribution points be well made and modernly equipped. of Hamelin,'" says a bulletin from the OF LIFE IN RUSSIA as "Mother of Mayors" between which overnight freight Church Is not the only prosperity sign. Boonevllle, hid. — Mrs. Elizabeth FRANK BARRILA Nearby were models of Soviet tractors The number of weddings with music National Geographic society. EXPERT trains are operated. These include and other farm machinery appearing Sell Chocolate Rats. Helnsle Neater, who recently celebrat­ such cities as Stamford, Bridgeport, has Increased and oftentimes the large Writer Paints Ghastly Picture ed her ninetieth birthday, Is known as Waterbury, New Haven. Hartford, quite similar to American ones. There as well as the small chapel is used, "Along one of Its gabled byways RADIO SERVICE were examples of Soviet made tex­ of Soviet Republic. the "mother of mayors." Her oldest Danbury, Putnam, New , Bos­ with couples waiting their turn to face stands the beautifully ornamented AU Hakes ton, Providence, Worcester and tiles, not so perfect as those made stone Rattenfaenger-Haus, or "Rat­ son, John F. Helnzle, was elected the altar. But that wasn't what I in­ mayor of Boonvllle in 1000. Her sec­ Springfield. The cities and towns abroad, but at least wearable. tended to say. Last year, a number catcher's House.' It dates from 1002, New York.—Eugene Lyons, Ameri­ PHONE 1057 situated along the lines of the New In still another part of the bu'Vl- and therefore could have had no con­ can correspondent in Russia for six ond son, Fred Helnsle, was named of the couples, after the ceremony mayor of Tell City In 1000, and in S7 No. Main St. Thompsonvflle Haven, within the zones of which ing one saw a model, faithfully re- was performed, had to borrow car nection with the wandering piper of years, brings back a picture of life in these concentration and distribution 1920, her third son, Floyd H. Nectef, produced, of a modern Soviet oil field. fare to get where they were going. 1284, who had no home at all. It de­ the Soviet republic that contradicts points are the centers, are served each New and radical designs In aircraft the statements of American social vu elected mayor of Boonrilla. day by motor trucks of the New Eng­ So far this year, no money requests rives its name from the frescoes along land Transportation Company, oper­ were shown, as were a modern gold have followed ceremonies. And a re­ its walls illustrating the legend. The planners who point to Russia as an ating both into and out of the eon- dredge and the newest, mo6t power­ liable report has it that the amounts caretaker makes a good living today example of successful planning, and centration stations. Each point with­ ful types of locomotives. given the officiating clergymen are far selling chocolate rats to tourists. contented regimentation. In the Cos­ in the zone is served by the trucks at Now, it is difficult to realize that larger than usual So happy days are "Another reminder-of the town's fa­ mopolitan, he says: Man's 63-Year-Old least twice daily, making deliveries a nation which can build giant loco­ here again! mous story Is the Rattenfaengerbrun- "I have seen Russia's new fac­ chiefly on the morning run and pick­ motives and complicated moving pic­ • • » nen, or Rat Catcher Fountain, on the tories and power stations, new cities Ticket Is Redeemed Flowers ing up merchandise for rail shipment ture projectors must groan and sweat and vastly Improved armies. ... On Speaking of churches, I am reminded Thlewall, a pleasant little channel in Lincoln, Calif.—Frank Elder, lo­ on the afternoon. under the simple Job of delivering mall. the northern part of the city. It was the other hand I saw the hundred and The New Haven emphasizes its of the clergyman over in New Jersey cal resident, believed railroad tick­ Yet that Is exactly what the Soviet erected in 1885. sixty-four million Soviet human be­ ets should be good until used, so Accept Today—Deliver Tomorrow" union does. The newspapers are filled who at Easter time preached to an Floral Designs Our merchandise freight service and em­ extremely large congregation. At the "Then there is the River Weser, ing in their overcrowded homes and he decided to turn In the ticket he ployees both of the railway and the with protests about and criticisms of wherein all the rats 'plunged and foul barracks, millions of them in bought 63 years ago and get a re­ the mall service. end of his sermon, he wished his exile, other millions trudging sullenly Specialty! transportation company have been parishioners a merry Christmas and a perished.' The Weser today is an fund of the fare he paid to travel carefully trained to insure that it will Recently an official was sent to in­ artery of commerce for shallow-draft In a direction they did not wish to go, from Rocklln to Lincoln. spect the post offices in Tashkent. His happy New Tear. Puzzled, some waited all of them holding on desperately to work smoothly. Special emphasis is and asked him what he meant by boats, linking Hameln with many river The ticket, sold by an agent of placed on strict observance of the de­ report on mail service there (which food cards and passports. Then the Geraniums, Petunias, Bed­ that "Well," replied the parson, "there towns south of it as far as Karl- the Central Pacific In 1870, was tails of freight car and truck loading may or may not be worse than in the shafen, and north to Mlnden. Danger­ ghosts of those whose lives had gone ding Plants, Annuals, etc. orders, which are published in special are only three times a year that I see promptly redeemed by the South­ average town) was a surprising ex­ ous rocks were avoided when a new to fatten the plump statistics crowded ern Pacific Go., which absorbed the bulletins; to the prompt movement of pose of inefficiency. so many of you, so I am anticipating In upon my mind and clamored for a cars and trucks engaged in handling our next meeting." channel was cut near Hameln in 1734, former railroad many years ago. the merchandise; to the prompt plac­ Registered letters, he found, some­ • * * and deepened in 1873. The Weser's place In the futile accounting." Elder said the ticket was unused ENFIELD times were not delivered for six or best know port, however, Is Bremen, Executions, Lyons says, are not re­ ing of less-than-carload-lot cars for Returning rapidly to the City of the because while he was waiting for a transfer from car to car, from car to eight weeks after their receipt. Col­ the oldest seaport in Germany, near ferred to as such in Russia. He was train one of his friends drove by GARDENS truck or from truck to car; to keep­ lections from the city mall boxes were Seven Million, there were those five the mouth of the river. once present in the chief prosecutor's stalwart young men who rode to the with a horse and buggy and carried ing all lot shipments intact both in Irregular. Sometimes only 19 of the "Like many other towns of western office when there was some discussion him to his destination. King Street Tel. 468 car and on trucks so that their move­ city's 50 mall boxes were cleared dur­ top of the Empire State building. It Germany, Hameln owes its origin to about three men sentenced to death ment may be made as a unit; and to ing -the day. being a chilly day, the guard on duty an abbey, but It possessed a number for speculating in bread. the segregation of all truck freight The sorting of the letters in the at that time on the one hundred and of small dwellings and a market "All three have been sentenced to in cars for preferential handling in post office was extremely slow. None second fioor stepped inside a minute d—," the prosecutor started to say the transfer from car to truck at the place in the Eleventh century. It was of the post office officials seemed to to get warm. When he returned, he in turn controlled by the French, the "death." Then he changed his words, point of distribution. found to his horror that four of the At present the fleet consists of 89 know the correct rate for mail or par­ kingdom of Westphalia, the Hanover­ "I mean, the highest measure of social cel post. five young men were taking their defense." .REFINANCE trucks, 58 tractors and 84 semi-trail- ians, and the Prussians. Today it lies ers. The most recent addition is a view of the surrounding scenery while within the Prussian province of Han­ Before returning to America, Lyons standing on top of the narrow wall group of five tractors and auto-car- Indian Mounds Opened over. crossed Europe from end to end, find­ rying trailers for the delivery of that keeps visitors from falling 1,250 Mecca for Artists. ing at every frontier barriers of bayo­ /YOUR DEBTS\ automobiles. on Shiloh Battlefield feet, while the fifth was lying down "That Hameln once was a place of nets, tariffs, censorships and spy on that same wall. The guard ordered Washington.—On the Civil war bat­ considerable wealth and culture Is evi­ systems. • Will a cash loan help refinance your debts? tlefield of Shiloh, an expedition of them down in a hurry and when they dent from the number of stately stone "War," he says, "Is again being Then consider the Household Loan Plan. CWA workers, directed by Dr. Frank alighted inquired angrily: "What are and timbered Renaissance mansions Idealized—the horrors of the last war you, acrobats?" "No," replied the Loans of $30 to $300 are available to families H. H. Roberts, Jr., of the Bureau of that line Its winding residential streets are being carefully concealed. . . . SUPERIOR spokesman of the group. "We're Nor­ American Ethnology, Smithsonian In­ and face the banks of the Weser. Psychologically, at least, Europe Is keeping house, -who have sufficient income stitution, has unearthed a group of wegian sailors and we often walk the Like Rothenburg, it is a happy hunt­ prepared for war. to make regular monthly repayments over FLORAL bowsprit In a heavy sea yoost for Indian mounds of marked historic in­ ing. ground for artists, etchers, and "The danger of conflict between 20 months. Only signatures required are terest fun!" photographers in search of medieval nation and nation is in the forefront SERVICE • * * architecture and quaint vistas. of the picture. Behind that, tinging those of husband and wife. Quick, cour­ Modern Methods in Designing Located on a high bluff above the Tennessee river, the group Is believed Robert J. Casey, Journalist, artillery "Today most of Hameln's 25,000 in­ the whole view, is the danger of a war teous, businesslike service. Reasonable QUALITY FLOWERS to have constituted an ancient refuge man In the World war, author and habitants are engaged In the manufac­ between class and class. It cuts cost. Visit, write, or 'phone the offices of athwart all boundaries." AT FAIR PRICES! and ceremonial center. Within a ra­ world traveler—he's varnished the ture of chemclals, leather, and paper. HOUSEHOLD FINANCE CORPORATION dius of two miles, It was pointed out, labels on his portable typewriter so Sugar refining and tobacco curing are sites of six once-populous aborig­ they'll stay on—has purchased chances plants are also Important, and there Cowboy Sorry He Tried of Massachusetts Spaulding Gardens inal villages. on everything from safety razors to is some shipbuilding. Life Is leisurely Suite 923,3rd National Bank Building 36 Pearl St. Thompsonville Well protected on three sides by strings of pearls. Once upon a time, among the burghers of this pictur­ to Lasso Hawk on Rail 1387 Main Street, Phone»6-0351 high bluffs and on the fourth by a he took a chance on a piano and won esque old German town. The chief Dewet, Texas.—It will be a long Springfield, Mass. palisade fence, the group is believed It. He had a piano at home and pastimes are salmon-fishing and boat­ time before Zelma O'Neill, farmer-cow­ (State License No. 139) to have been a center for worship, couldn't use two, so he placed his ing along the Weser, or walks to the boy of this community, again tackles a refuge from floods, and civic govern­ prise in storage. That was 14 years Ivy-clad ruins of many ancient castles hawk. He Is laid up at his home be­ EPSTEIN'S ment Remains of what probnbly was ago. And ever since then he has been that top the forested hills near-by. cause of an encounter he had recently an ancient temple were uncovered on paying storage charges because he "The famous legend of the children with one of these birds. AMBULANCE one building site. doesn't want to sell the only thing he's and the Pled Piper Is of great an­ While riding through his pasture, Larger mounds, Doctor Roberts said, ever won! tiquity, but no satisfactory explanation O'Neill saw a hawk on a fence poBt SERVICE disclosed no artifacts or skeletal ma­ • • • of Its origin has ever been found. and decided to rope the bird. Un­ Phones: 182 and 620 terial—a distinct peculiarity. How­ Subway eavesdropping: "He says to Some trace It to the Children's Cru­ winding bis reata he threw the loop ever, under smaller mounds, traces her that he's got to meet a man on sade of 1211, when 20,000 German and caught the hawk by one of its legs. were found of approximately 80 houses business, and she smiles to herself be­ boys, led by a youth named Nicolas, This was the signal for a desperate and, Roberts added, one small mound cause she thinks she's going to get mysteriously disappeared between battle In which O'Neill came out very contained the flexed remains of 80 her divorce sure. But all her detec­ Koeln (Cologne) and Italy, en route much the loser. The hawk flew at him, early skeletons. tives could dig up on him was that to the Holy Land. Browning wrote fastening one of Its long, sharp claws summer Plumbing -- Heating Date or Identity of the tribal in­ ihe met the guy he said he was going the poem, It Is said, to amuse Willie Into the man's knee and the other In­ pasture Taft Range Burners habitants has not been determiner!, al­ to and landed a big contract Ain't Macready during an Illness; but where to the horse's neck. The horse plunged though It Is believed they were proto- that the darnedest luck for her!" he obtained his material, or why he in terror and agony and O'Neill fell off. C. T. MERRILL feuskhogeans, from whom evolved the • * * dated the event 1876, Instead of 1284, The horse kicked him on the other 965 17 Highland Are. highly cultured Indians encountered Money that will stretch a long ways is not known." knee. by the first white explorers In tit* Is now being sold on Broadway at the The hawk still clung to him, having Gulf states. rate of 5 cents for $5. It Is rubber. in the meantime loosened the rope New Grass—a True Tonic, — .-**1 One of the salesmen chants: "Here's from Its leg. The bird clawed great your chance to pay your alimony." This Is a Perfect Case gashes upon the man's body and this pain, together with that caused by the But a False Profit of Goods Exchanging kick from the horse, made him uncon­ Edward Leete Books Bought in 1876 •F ——— Birmingham, England. — Tribesmen fresh green grass has a tonic effect on cows scious. When he revived the tes their milk flow for a while. But th« for $27 Sold for $7,700 Louisiana's Low Marriage In the Solomon Islands are now so and hawk had disappeared. He •FUNERAL Philadelphia.—A net profit of $7,673 busy making soap that they no longer won't keep up, for without a regular grain aged to drag himself home ration, too, the cow literally takes the milk off her fe A. DIRECTOR on a $27 investment was made here ^ Age Assailed in Drive have time to carve personal ornaments wife put him to bed. recently. In 1870 Joseph Parrlsh New Orleans.—The low marriage­ out of palmwood, and are buying brass back, and will make you pay the bill in lower yield bought four volumes of "The History able age In Louisiana, fourteen for ornaments from Birmingham as a sub­ next fall arid v/inter. A spring tonic can't take the 74 MAIN of the Reign of Emperor Charles boys and twelve for girls, was de­ stitute. This 1s thought to be the per­ place of feed. Keep your cows on Larro—it will pay 180 Fifth" for ?27. His daughter, Mrs. clared a reflection on the character of fect case of fair International ex­ Headln* South you back its cost many times over. Marianna Parrlsh Kelley of Radnor, the state's citizenship by Prosecuting change, as the Birmingham people get Washington.—The solar system Is sold the books at auction, after she Attorney Eugene Stanley of Orleans dirty making brass ornaments to sell moving south at the rate of. 7,800 to the Polynesians who pay for the miles a minute, Dayton C. Miller, rGEOe Se PHELPS A Co. discovered they bore the autograph parish In launching a drive for a PROSPECT STREET TELEPHONE 84 of George Washington. They brought change in the law during the next ses­ brass ornaments with soap to get the Cleveland scientist, Informed the Ha­ her $7,700. sion of the legislature. Birmingham people clean. rt TEDS THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 m^mmk

1 Dalyrmple, a brother of the groom, 10,500 AERIAL CWA Workers March on Washington in Protest served as best man. At the reception Daum, D. D., pastor of the First Prea- INSULIN ALTERS held following the ceremony the byterian Church of Thompsonville, young couple were assisted in receiv­ officiated, and burial was in Wood- PHOTOS TAKEN ing by Mr. and Mrs. Rising and Mr. lawn Cemetery here. Mrs. Wood- STATISTICS FOR Dalyrmple, worth, who was 73 years old, died from Wnrncotot suddenly at her home Sunday of a 75 were present from Worcester, heart'attack. She was born in Sims- Springfield, Hartford, Manchester • - TO MAP STATE DIABETIC CASES Mr nnH Mrs n«lu UUI-V» a ana mrs. re- m rmple left during the early evening fij?* for an unannounced wedding trip and kq "Shooting" 5,004 Square Has Deferred Greatest upon their return will reside at the n K town for the past 53 Miles of Connecticut Mortality to the Age Rising home for the summer, moving' L*™ „ jlil, u a n**? to Hartford on September 15, where j wtH? w * Terrain Completed— Groups Above 60, Says Mr. DalyrmpleDalvrmnle is employed. Both - • °^L t Hartford; three sons, young.people.areg people J graduates of the WoldwoXtf °Th5n®lonviIle Work on Laying of Mo­ State Dept. Bulletin— Suffield School. and Claude P. Wood worth of Meth- saics Started. Discovered in 1922. uen. She also leaves a brother, Lem- Mrs. Susan R. Woodworth. uel Laughlin_of Simsbury and one - The aerial photographing of Con-' Although there has been a slight Funeral services for Mrs. Susan R. sister,. Mrs. Frank I. Chapel of_ East necticut's entire 5,004 square miles of increase in the number of deaths oc- Woodworth, wife of Dexter A. Wood- j HartforcT; nine grandchildren and two area for the purpose of making a . , . worth, were held Tuesday afternoon great-grandchildren. Mrs. Wood- complete map of the state on a very! curing from diabetes m Connecticut,at 2:30 from her late home on Bur-:worth was a member of Ionic Chap* large scale was completed during the si^ce 1922, the year in which insulin'bank Avenue. Rev. W. Fletcher 1 ter, O. E. S., of Thompsonville. •iiWi'ii past month, it was announced this was discovered, the effect of this dis- ] week by Highway Commissioner J. A. Led by Norman Thomas, nationally famous Socialist leader and Presidential candidate In 1928 and 1032. some 500 covery in deferring death fronj dia­ Macdonald. For the purpose of mak­ CJWA workers from the metropolitan district of New York, came to Washington to file protests with the President and betes until the later years of life is i ing this birdseye picture of Connecti­ with Harry L. Hopkins, director of the national emergency relief organization, against discontinuance of the CWA work plainly shown in statistical tables cut, the state was divided into ap­ relief.S: compiled by the Bureau of Vital Sta­ proximately 25 quadrangles. Tne tistics of the State Department of i t planes flew these on a north and Health and published in an article by south line at an altitude of 11,400 detail of the terrain throughout the William C. Welling, director of the feet. Utmost precision in flying was •r'M state will stand out plainly. bureau, in the department's monthly required so that the proper line and bulletin issued this week. elevation might be maintained. Oft­ The map, as well as the individual prints, is expected to be of great val­ Definite decrease in diabetic deaths en it was necessary for the flyers to STATE POLITICAL GOSSIP is shown in all age groups up to the Looking Ahead drive into the wind, traveling craw­ ue to many of the state departments and municipalities. A set of double- 50-59 age group where there is no fish fashion, and to "skid" their ONGRESSMAN Herman P. Kop- great percentage of change. At the planes to maintain position. weight, glossy, seven by nine inch States District Attorney, replacing Am prints, with the index maps, will be plemann has returned from Wash­ Frank Bergin whose nomination fail­ age of 60 and over there is a marked In taking the aerial pictures of ed in confirmation through the efforts increase, however, which can probab­ WITH YOUR BANK which the map will consist, it was filed by the State Highway Depart­ ington where he has been very ac­ ment with the State Library so that of Senator Lonergan. Atty. Cohen ly be accounted for by insulin and its necessary for four airplanes, manned ...... 3 , tive during the last session of Con­ has been Assistant District Attorney effect in prolonging the lives of dia­ by pilots and professional aerial pho- municipality or individualidi may gress. Since his election, Mr. Kop- tographers, one pilot being detailed at any reason- for the past 13 years. He is a Re­ betic patients. Your bank is more than a safe depository plemann, it is believed, has grown publican, well liked and from expe­ "It may be confidently concluded from the National Guard, to remainthe stat.e. librarian, stronger with the farmers and milk in the air approximately 153 hours combination of rience qualified for the office. Many that a great and definite change has for your funds. It is more than the insti­ producers. From now until election, would like to have him retain it, but occurred in the diabetic mortality and to take about 10,500 special shot*,?? I, ™ obtained directly from Mr. Kopplemann is going to be very p it's more than likely a Democrat will with respect to age grouping," Mr. tution on which you draw checks. of Connecticut terrain and of the land the airchild Aerial Surveys, Inc., much engaged in getting all the sup­ one-half mile into the contiguous without the necessity of going soon be appointed as it's one of the Welling says. "Insulin seems to be through any state department. These port that he can throughout the dis­ offices that go with the winning party. tiding mortality over into the older Beyond these day-by-day conveniences is states of New York, Massachusetts trict solidified. He is very anxious age grouping. The increase (in to­ and Rhode Island. The work was su< will be available to all state depart to be re-elected. pervised by Commissioner Macdonald ments, municipalities and individuals. One hears so many favorable re­ tal deaths from diabetes) is not in the "look ahead" help your bank provides Work of developing and assembling ports commenting upon the recent the least alarming. Some of the in­ with the cooperation of the 118th Ob­ During the past few days, Judge address of President Roosevelt that crease seems naturally to be due to you and other customere. servation Squadron of the Connecti­ the sections of th& aerial map rwilv Re­ William J. Malone of Bristol has been quire about six months. It will be in unless something unforeseen occurs, standard methods of mortality clas­ cut National Guard and under'con- mentioned by many of the politicians his record is going to make it exceed­ sification. Diabetes, when multiple tract with the Fairchild Aerial Sur- °f Wil]iamJE- Duncanson of as being a possible candidate for W^en a merc&aM wishes to 'buy ahead veys Inc I "e department, who will ingly difficult for the Republicans causes of death are given in a death Congress from this district. Should this fall. The masses of the people certificate gets preference over such for his fall trade, where does he get ac­ Under" the contract, one set of corps °f seven department men the Judge desire to let his name come an one ma have the vote and while a large num­ principal causes of death as cerebral double-weight, glossy, seven by nine'? ?~ , 2,.detailed before the convention, there is little ber of them are easily swayed, the hemorrhage, all forms of heart dis­ commodation? From his bank, if its loan inch prints, and one index map of i ™ v Guard. The mosa- doubt but what he will be nominated general impression has been created aerial negatives, so marked as to, mounted on boards with ease, all forms of pneumonia, acute sufficient overlapping to make possi­ and would prove a good vote getter and rightfully so, that President and chronic nephritis. It may possi­ requirements are properly met. plainly indicate the area covered by in election. -He has the experience, Roosevelt is, has been and intends to bly be suggested that these causes of each negative, will be delivered to the ble the future matching of adjoining knowledge and splendid judgment boards. Each mosaic will cover an see that they have a greater share of death should be given preference ov­ When a business man has accepted notes state, together with the necessary which make him an ideal candidate. this world's goods in the future than er diabetes, as controlled diabetes is prints for laying the mosaics, and area of about 8,400 by 10,800 feet. The details of the terrain will thus be they have had in the past. Profit increasing the age grouping where payable, say, 30 or 60 days hence, how these prints will be on a scale of ap­ Judges Thomas and Hicks of the sharing by employees of large cor- I these causes of death are to be ex­ proximately one inch equals twelve sharply visible. The mosaics when United States District Court of Con­ can he secure present use of the money ? completed will be filed with the state jorations and old age insurance is pected and where they do occur un­ hundred feet and will be capable „of necticut, during the past week, ap­ iound to come. complicated by diabetes as a contrib- being greatly enlarged so that every library, and copies or photographs to pointed George Cohen as United He can, under certain circumstances, dis­ the scale desired may be obtained by —AUSTIN. utary cause." anyone from the Fairchild Aerial count the notes at his bank. Surveys, Inc. Young Plane Builders Young Women Are Best SUFFIELD The pilots were Lieutenant Chester The most important function of a modern I Want to Select Wright, William Knox, Stanley Fer­ Set New Flight Records Drivers, Say Policemen a reliable young man, now em­ guson, all of the Connecticut unit, WEDS WORCESTER MAN bank, in fact, is to look ahead with, and and S. Reiss of New York. They op­ Bakersfleld, Calif.—Known world Philadelphia.—In spite of "discon­ ployed, with Foresight, fair ed­ records for model-airplane flights were ucation and mechanical inclina­ erated under the direct charge of certing traits," women are good driv­ Miss Elaine Rising Bride of Rollin A. for, its customers. tions, who is willing to train Lieut. Paul S. Baker, commanding of­ surpassed here when planes built by ers, in the opinion of Philadelphia Dalyrmple Last Saturday. spare time or evenings in ficer of the photograph section. The two Kern county high school youths traffic policemen. A very pretty wedding in an unus­ Whatever your plans for the future" may Thompsonville to qualify as IN­ photographers were Harry Halstrom, flew 31 and 25% minutes respectively. However, they should be taught ual setting took place here Saturday STALLATION and SERVICE i Thomas Moore, Sidney Bonick arid T. The airplanes, with 3-foot wing- young. One policeman reported that when Miss Elaine Avril Rising, be, use this bank for the help it can give. expert on all types of Electric Domina. spreads and powered with rubber-band women who learn to drive when they daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. George C. Refrigerators. For interview | Cameras used in the work were Rising, became the bride of Rollin A. motors, were flown at a meeting of the are forty or fifty "are simply awful." Dalyrmple, Jr., son of Rollin A. Daly­ write, giving age and present equipped with rolls of film nine in­ high school Sky Hawks club. They become rattled, he said, and "go occupation. ches wide by 75 feet long, about four rmple of Worcester. The ceremony to five of these films being used on One, built by Arthur Thurber, soared haywire, stalling the car, flooding the was performed by Rev. Daniel Ken­ THOMPSONVILLE each flight, the flyers having remain­ to an estimated height of 4,000 feet. carburetor, and then bursting into nedy, Jr., a former pastor of the First UTILITIES ENGINEERING ed in the air seven hours a day when It disappeared into a bank of cloucU tears." Congregational Church, at "Stony TRUST CO. INSTITUTE weather permitted. The cameras four miles from Its starting point 81 A policeman In a downtown section Brook Camp," the summer home of were equipped with Alters to cut minutes later and was lost. said that his troubles would be fewer the bride's parents. The bride wore THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. 404 N. Wells St. Chicago, 111. .through haze, and were mounted on The other plane, built by David Del' If drivers were all women. a gown of ivory satin and carried a swivels which enabled exact mainten- ameter, disappeared into a bank of "They try to abide by the law, but bouquet of white roses and sweet Deposits Insured in the Temporary ance of the north and south line. peas. Her attendant, Miss Doris Lord clouds at Edison, seven miles from its they sometimes lack confidence," he of this town, a schoolmate, was at­ Federal Deposit Insurance Fund starting place. It was In the air about said. "I wish I could take some of tired in a blue flowered chiffon dress 25% minutes. the confidence away from young male with matching accessories. John H. Both planes were flown from bluffs drivers and give it to the women." over the Kern river. Rising air cur­ A handsome six-footer found women WeWantKgrTireBusiness rents were believed to have made the "a little difficult to deal with." record flights possible. "Sometimes when I point out a flre plug to a woman who is parking she looks as If I had just put It there. SecatfieWeCan Strange Store "Birds" We have to follow orders, and I try Fascinated Bird Dog to be polite but firm. Sometimes the firmer I get the less they seem to Scottsbluff, Neb.—It was just a mis­ care. They just sit and look, and it fr'WJlilLCe INC. In understanding on the part of Spike, makes me feel kind of goofy." SPRINGFIELD, MASS. amiable, ownerless bird dog, when he gave chase to cash boxes whizzing 2 overhead in Scottsbluff stores. But Ancient Chinese Process STORE HOURS . . DURING JULY AND AUGUST . . 9.30 TO 5 EVERY DAY For ONE WEEK Off/v the misunderstanding made Spike a of Coloring Discovered nuisance. Cincinnati, Ohio.—Rediscovery of an Spike, merchants complained, de­ ancient Chinese pottery coloring proc­ lighted to hunt the strange "birds" In ess, lost to ceramists for nearly 250 their stores. He bolted down aisles, years, was announced at the thirty- JULY SALE! 9"""^ TIRES barking loudly. Clerks found It im-" sixth annual American Ceramic soci­ possible to keep him out. Merchants ety meeting here by Edmund F. Curtis, found it difficult to keep customers in Instructor in the school of Industrial when Spike appeared. art of Pennsylvania museum. MfSofe (Prices Police were asked to give their aid. 0 The process concerned the placing^ of an oxblood type coloring on pottery PEQUOT SHEETS pieces. Only a few pieces of such ARMSTRONG 30 Million Insects Work, known as Langao, are at pres­ 1st LINE ent known to connoisseurs in the The cotton market has steadied. No dropping* prices this year, Innttred 14 Months to Help Celebrate United States. but you get your low prices just the same. The extremely low Paris.—More than 30,000,000 In­ Standard prices we have announced for this sale are due entirely to our de­ Sice Price for Our Sole sects will take part In the three Price 60-Year-Old Locomotives Hii* Quality hundredth anniversary celebrations termination to make this the great economy event it always has 4.40-21 $ 7.40 85.75 next year of the famous French mu­ to End Service as Scrap 4.50-20 7.85 6.10 seum of the Jardln des Plantes. Eureka, Calif.—Two locomotives been. And here are the prices that will do it. 4.50-21 8.15 6.30 This museum was founded by which were puffing from Humboldt 4.75-19 8.65 6.70 Guy de las Brosse, physician to n 5.00-19 9.25 7.20 county's redwood forests 50 years ago, 5.00-20 9.60 7.45 Louis XHI, who succeeded to the hauling logs from which early Call- 81 x 99-inch size 5.25-17 10.00 7.75 French throne following the assas­ fornlans hewed a great western em­ $ 5.25-18 10.30 8.00 sination of his father, Henry IV. pire, are about to fall before the 72 x 99-inch size 5.25-19 10.65 8.25 The director of the museum, Paul inarch of progress. The locomotives, 63 x 99-inch size 5.25-20 10.95 8.50 Lemoine, has announced that 500 of constructed In 1880 by the Baldwin 1.17 5.25-21 11.35 8.80 the world's leading scientists will 5.50-17 11.30 8.75 Locomotive works, will end their pe­ 5.5ove and the Ark. THE THOMPSONVILLis PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 \ such improvement is possible: - They ' Mr. Gourlie | The Thompsonville found, through check-up and. survey, Dealing with the proverbially petu­ what can be found by a close and in­ 'MM He Does a What The Press hg;Pr, Press g R timate study of the complex opera­ lant public is about the most nerve- Said 25 Years Published Thursday* by tions of any large industry, that wracking assignment for anyone en­ D .....ggg? JTHH ADVANCE PRINTING AHD there is always room for improve­ gaged in any form of service. When Ago This Week , PUBLISHING COMPANY ment. Did they flare up then? Non­ 17-29 High Street, Telephone SO one has done it for 37 years and done VUMEM IT (TOMES TO CUR i- Thompionville, Conn, sense. They made known their ideas, it well it is a noteworthy accomplish­ ISllSI Thompsonville' i * V $ not in an arrogant or antagonistic at­ Mm TAILING PROPOCWOH l-r ment indeed. It requires an extraor­ The following officers of Court En- yi y^S': PHILIP J. SULLIVAN titude, but in the modern spirit of fLL LBAV& THAT TO f Editor and Business Manager field, No. 21, Foresters of America, - helpfulness and cooperation. Were dinary temperament and an unusual bl' MAN PROOGHTI were installed Thursday evening of'vfei> Entered at the Post Office, Thomp- their suggestions disdainfully cast disposition to spend that exceptional "Xf\E AlEXf TIME. last week by Grand Deputy Freder­ ftenville, Conn., at second class mat- aside? Nonsense again. That is not period in this public service, and be as ick R. Furey: Chief Banger, Jame» "v. Rowan; sub-chief ranger, James Hig- ' ' the modern way of doing this sort of amiable and unruffled at the end as thing. The suggestions were to be as •gins; recording secretary, Oscar W. at the beginning. And yet this is the Krollman; senior woodward, Hugh •s: As Viewed Here helpful to one side as the other. exact truth of the situation, for no­ Improving working conditions by Watton; junior woodward, Finley As a so-called, carpet community, body will doubt that William P. Gour- Grant; senior beadle, Julius Fiedler; -"v touches here and there was equally which title we have acquired by rea­ lie, who retired this week after that junior beadle, George Lamont; lec- ; ^ C beneficial to production and the qual turer, James Watton. At the close , ,r son of our century-old association long period of service with the Fed­ ity and character of the output of the eral "Government, is not just as pa­ of the installation a social time was , with the carpet and in­ plant. Were they adopted? Of enjoyed. Philip J. Sullivan was the dustry, there is always a keen and an tient, just as kindly and just as con­ course they were. There was no dif­ siderate today as when he entered the toastmaster and speeches were deliv- s - undeniably somewhat selfish interest ered and songs sung by the members. ferences to reconcile—there could not local post office as a clerk 37 years in the problems and progress of the be where no actual differences exist­ Bigelow-Sanford Carpet Company ago. From that humble clerkship he Station Agent D. J. Mullane will" ed. The situation was one of mutual rose steadily to the local postmaster- This has always been so, but in a par- benefit and advantage to have any have an illumination of his own this ticular sense in recent years, as we ship, and through it all he maintain­ evening, having finally succeeded in other outcome. ed a high standard of efficiency and having the electric light wires at the- almost breathlessly watched its strug­ As time goes on other situations of gle to meet the business and indus- an unfailing fidelity to his responsi­ depot connected up, and the current: this same character will undoubtedly bilities that made his entire service will be turned on for the first time trial conditions which the dishearten­ arise, for after all, the constant aim tonight. Thirty-thr^e lights will be- ing period of the general depression to the government an outstanding in a great industry such as ours is to achievement. installed and all will be burned for a imposed. improve things, and that is precisely short time this evening, although' As a pure business proposition and Mr. Gourlie retires not because he probably not more than six or eight what the administration on one side has outlived his usefulness, or has in to safeguard the enormous investment and the organized group on the other will be regularly used. in this mammoth industry, it was any way deteriorated in the character really stand for. Any other attitude of the customary high type of service highly essential that the local plant, jwould be suicidal to both_ ^ in John Long of Spring street and' which he has rendered. He retires which forms an important unit of this jfact> Ues the big advantage in the Mrs. Nellie McHale of Pleasant street because of an inevitable situation were married in St. Patrick's Church- organization, be operated as exten dual organization, for conceivably it sively as the extreme conditions which develops in regard to the posi­ Saturday afternoon at 1 o'clock, Rev. is infinitely better for any industrial tion he holds no matter what political T. J. Preston performing the cere­ would permit. But more vital still to organization ti deal with a well disci­ mony. The bride was attended by this community was the fact that its party is in control. He is simply the plined and intelligently led group of victim, as have many capable men be­ Mrs. Michael Long and Mr. Long act­ operation was of such supreme im­ its workers, than a disorganized and ed as best man. After the ceremony portance to the comfort and well be­ fore him, of a political system that a reception was enjoyed at the home frequently misled group of its em­ has become ingrained in our govern­ ing of practically every resident of ployees. of the groom's sister on Spring street the town. Nor should the economic mental scheme of things. He can re­ following which Mr. and Mrs. Long Well, that is the status of what the THOMPSONVILLE factor in the situation be lost sight of tire with the satisfaction of knowing left for a two weeks' wedding trip- old-time agitator would call the cap­ ENTRE NOUS for it also played its part in that as­ that he has rendered a long and faith­ to New York and vicinity. Upon- ital and labor situation here at the their return they will reside at the- pect of the community life. ful service that is universally appre­ From the pen of "Jack" Kenny, j ness of things, would be the last one POST OFFICE IS present time. It is not anything at bride's home on Pleasant street. Fundamentally, of course, the man- ciated by his fellow citizens in all deputy sheriff of Hartford, and poet to sanction. Being about the most all like some timid souls predicted, or forms of pursuit and in all walks of laureate of the Veterans of Foreign > active and the busiest Congressman agement of this great industry was ,vhat some few had hoped We are life here. Wars, comes the following tribute to: that we know of, we know he had sev- 100 YEARS OLD A quiet wedding took place at 1:30 concerned with the task of conserving jwitnessi a real phenomena if we the P. F. Triggs Post and some of itsjeral score of other reasons for keep- o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the rec­ the vested interests in the plant, but|only realize it Approximately 2500 members which, we gladly publish: ' ing him on the job in the unpleasant Was Established in 1834 tory of St. Patrick's Church, when iandwomen are in aclosely knit The District Meeting Washington atmosphere besides one Miss Margaret Lyons was united in lose sight of the humanitarian aspect During Second Term marriage to Robert Sargent. The organized group with a well conceived Last Friday night representative "Thompsonville" post office project. of the situation. Undoubtedly there a ceremony was performed by Rev. T. system of handling its affairs and a j group of sensible and progressive cit- If you would like to know real veter­ • * of President Andrew were numerous times during this har­ J. Preston and was witnessed by a distinctly sensible and intelligent | izens sat down at the annual district an hospitality, Now mind, we are not minimizing rowing period, which is now happily Jackson — First Ap­ gathering . of relatives and intimate leadership, and there has not been an!meeting and did several sensible and The cream of kind reception and his accomplishment in this local post! friends of the young couple. Thfr definitely on its way out, when it the cord of cordiality, untoward word uttered that could be progressive things. These forthright office business for one moment. If he i pointee Was Democrat. bride was attended by her sister, Miss would have been the part of business The joy and strength of comradeship, construed as an agitation over their acts were embodied in the program of succeeds in "grabbing off" a post of- • _ Minnie Lyons, and Thomas F. Dooley wisdom to have curtailed operations that defies depression, death fice for us in this nation-wide scram-1 It is an interesting coincidence in working conditions. Nor is there the j needed municipal legislation which performed the duties of best man.. still further. That it was not done as and pain, ble of a post office-hungry country,! connection with the change in the of- remotest possibility that there will j was laid before the meeting arid The bride was handsomely gowned in frequently and to the extent that it Come on up to Thompsonville, and .it will be a mighty big achievement J ficials which took place this week at be, for we are confident that what- which was adopted in its entirety. Of there you'll meet 'em white silk batiste, with trimmings of might have been, is an evidence that all I under the circumstances, and one the Thompsonville post office that it Irish point lace, and carried a pearl- ever problems arise in their mutual the same calibre was the action of again. the officials were concerned over which will be fully appreciated here, |occurred on the i00th anniversary of white rosary. The bridesmaid's dress relations they will be adjusted among the meeting providing for what was without any tiresome and overdrawn ,, , ^ . something more than the business as­ the was of blue satin messaline, trimmed' themselves and within the boundaries practically the beginning of the solu­ There's Maylott, Burke and Tierney, statements regarding it. He will not| establishing of the office m this pect of the situation. That this con­ sec with lace. After the ceremony a wed­ of their cooperative activities. tion of the sewer and sewage disposal all stretching out a hand to need that tactless guff to impress us tion of the town. Previous to 1834 sideration for the welfare of the com­ you, ding dinner and reception were enjoy­ We repeat what was set down when problems. with the magnitude of the achieve-! all the mail for the town of Enfield ed at the home of the bride's aunt, munity is generally understood and "Lightning" and Slamon, fixing up ment. was distributed from the Enfield post the organization of the textile group Of the same high order of achieve- Mrs. John H. Donahue, on Cottage appreciated is certain. a chair or two; office. It was in that year and dur­ here was foreseen, that we had confi-iment was the action of the meeting Green. Mr. and Mrs. Sargent left on All of which is set down apropos Whelan and Cunningham are hurry­ ing the second term of the adminie- dence in the sense, justice and fair in the selection of its district, sewer ing your glass to fill, Nor do we see the good sense or the 4:14 train for a week's trip to of the article which appears in this ood taste either in ness of the officials of our great in­ and fire department officials. The re­ Mav all the luck that helns i« life S > Senator Loner- tration of President Andrew Jackson New York and vicinity and upon their issue giving in considerable detail an gan um in on return will reside for the present dustry and the decency and good election of the same department offi­ surround those "bovs" in J P £ the publicity band- j that this section of the town was giv- account of the character and quality wagon in connection with this pro-'en its first post office and Squire Hen- with Mrs. Donahue. The groom is sense of the men and women who cers was a wise and prudent course Thompsonville. r of the designs of carpets and rugs to form their large corps of emp]oyees ject. We .know that he too has inter-j y Kingsbury was appointed post- employed as boss carder in the wor­ to take in every instance. The addi­ m ei be displayed at the fall opening which ested himself in it from the begin-' ^r 'v, * ~ „ i . , sted department of the Hartford Car­ to have any situation develop which tion of John M. Savage to the district "Post 1501" j ,, . , . . i The first post office was located on pet Company. begins in New York next Monday. +u • t i"ing and that his services were help- Main street where the Faiman store would be harmful to their mutual in­ committee makes that group a body From 22 to 96 As most of these patterns are the the roster steadily j ful, but why spoil it all by yielding to (is now> Apparently the appointee terests. As predicted—none has and of excellent balance for the carrying grows, the temptation of making political was a Democrat in view of the politi- product of the local plant of the com­ Joseph L. Bodley spent Sunday and. we firmly believe none will. Again!out of not only the routine work of In the steadiest forward looking; capital out of it, for it cannot be con- cal affiliations of the Jackson admin the Fourth in Brooklyn, N. Y. pany, this article should be read with the critics have been confused. the district, but to perform the sev­ Post, strued in any other way It is a pity, istration which were strongly Demo- more than ordinary interest. This in­ In 1842 Mr. Kingsbury was eral special duties assigned to the Where the Nutmeg River flows; then, that the excellent work that cratic. Miss Edith M. Gourlie of Garden terest, too, will be accentuated by the •Men and women holding fast— everybody has done in connection succeeded by George W. Martin, who committee by action of the meeting. street is visiting with relatives and fact that this elaborate display that Postmaster Malley courageous, unafraid. with this movement should have been served not quite two years. He was The continuation of Martin E. Brod- succeeded by George C. Owen, who friends in Burlington. is contemplated with its extensive va­ given the appearance of the ballot box Because of that inexorable rule rick on the Sewer Commission is par­ served until 1849 and after relinquish­ riety of designs and patterns is vis­ Fighting hard for veterans, being envisaged all the time. The Misses Esther and Anna Malia known as the expectancy of life, it ticularly sensible and timely in view ing the office for a term of four years ible evidence of the progressiveness What ever game is played; returned to it again and served from are visiting friends in New York and of the important part this sewer de­ Four years old, but their work stands of the management of the industry will not be possible for Postmaster Nor does the attitude of many of to 1861. In the interim between Brooklyn for a few days. partment is going to play in the civic out, ... . j .!_• i c Owens two terms, the postmasters and the initiative and leadership it Patrick T. Malley to achieve the long our citizens towards this new post of- HaWey, 1849 to 1852, life for the next few years. And fi­ Esteemed from coast to coast. were Joseph F> Miss Gladys Crabtree of Blooms- has taken in the business of making record of unbroken federal service fice business inspire us with an in-|and Jabez T. Taylor, 1852 to 1853. nally the provision made, through an All veterandom knows that Thomp- bury, Pa., is visiting at the home of and distributing these important which was accomplished by his pre­ creased respect for their forthright-j The appointee in 1861 was John adequate tax rate once more, for the sonville's Mrs. Godfrey on Maple street. house commodities. decessor, William P. Gourlie. This A leading V. F. W. Post. ness. The chief basis upon which j Houston, which was notable by the raising of a sufficient revenue to meet they approach the question is that the j fact that the appointment was made The pride which every resident of would be true even though the ques­ » ¥ » Mrs. Henry Leander is spending a the necessary expenses of the fire and government is throwing away a lot of ,by President Abraham Lincoln and the community must naturally take tion of political control was not a fac­ Well, we are for that new post of­ two weeks' vacation with friends and sewer departments for the coming money on these things and we might. was the first Republican to occupy in this indication of the unmistakable tor in the future in connection with fice, of course, always have been, but as well get our share of it. Which,(the position. Mr. Houston was suc- relatives at Tupper Lake, N. Y. year. It was, on the whole, from the fact that the local industry is in the this office as it has in the past. we just wish there was a little less of course, is no logical reason at all j ^ ^f Ws Td°£' Mrs/ significant character of what was ac­ Miss Mabel Henry of Hartford forefront of the carpet making trade But while there will be no compari­ self exploitation and political pranc­ complished, an epochal meeting, and why we should have a new post office. |time being^ocate^ ?n1he small sp£ce spent the Fourth with her sister, Mrs. is undoubtedly mixed with a feeling son in the possible length of service ing about the whole business. We are he leason why we should have a new j between the carpet company's office one which serves to restore our wan­ not questioning the sincerity or good William P. Gourlie of Garden street. of security and satisfaction that the of the men, there will be a distinct - . ioffice is not because of the fact that.and the brick building known as the ing confidence in gatherings of this intentions of those connected with the the present quarters are too small, Feeley block on Main street. Mrs. status of the organization augurs similarity in the manner in which the Mrs. John B. Fleming and Miss duties of the office will be discharged. kind. endeavor here or in Washington, but [but because the location, central Houston was succeeded by Miss Ag- Helen Rousch of New Hamburg, N. Well for the future of this community. we do wish they would let up on their1 though it is, could not be more incon- j nes Stewart, who served for four The mutual and correlated interests The work of Mr. Malley as a federal tiresome press agenting and ballyhoo ea s Y., are the guests of Mrs. Stephen H. venient if we searched every foot of y T following the election of Presi Bodley for two weeks. that exist in the industrial, commer­ official here will be characterized by A Notable Service Ends in connection with it. ground in the town. dent Garfield. the same high integrity and fidelity » • * cial, social and civic life of the com­ A public service of extraordinary * * The office was returned to Demo­ to duty that was evidenced in the cratic control in 1886 when Dr. Ches­ William Braginton, accompanied munity makes any other interpreta- length and of exceptional merit end­ The thing simply bores the average And the overshadowing reason, in by his wife and daughter, Gladys, is mannel ter Johnson was appointed postmas- tion of the situation, or the reaching i m whieh his predecessor per- ed this week when Assistant Town citizen, and makes the objective, our opinion at least, is not to "grabber by President Grover Cleveland, enjoying a week of shore life with formed his task throughout the years of any other conclusion than is set Clerk Miss Elizabeth A. Bennett left which is really a serious one, smack off our part of the dough," but that Meantime in 1882 the office was mov- Mrs. Braginton's brother at Staten of his incumbency. The new official the town has long reached the size at i ed from its Main street location to forth here impossible. the town building last Saturday when more of a comic opera performance. Island. has had years of valuable experience The whole thing is so obvious that it which a building devoted exclusively the then new bank building of the her resignation tendered some time 1 in dealing with the public, both in pri­ is amazing that" the good taste and to the local federal business should Thompsonville Trust Company on Mrs. William J. Hughes of Walnut ago went into effect. With only a ros e Confusing the Critics vate and public capacities. He will intelligence of the men themselves be provided. It is on this basis it! P P ct street. Dr. Johnson was street and her daughters, Dorothy brief interruption she had been con­ should be demanded and granted, and Fcceeded ni 1898 following the pass- bring this and an unfailing tact and would allow such cheapening factors and Isobel, are enjoying a two weeks And speaking of our great carpet nected with the town clerk and treas­ intelligent understanding into the po­ to mar what will, when accomplished, while being somewhat old-fashioned, L^er bJ"T^dTcowrfr™. vacation with Mrs. Hughes' parents industry, which we do elsewhere in urer's office for 40 years. From the prove a worth-while achievement all 6 sition. These are capabilities which w! mv odious purpose of it,| dy served until 1913 when James T. in Worcester, Mass. this issue, it is now several months beginning she was capable and effi­ around. J* willing that those who feel • Murray was appointed under the make him peculiarly fitted for the po­ • • • since the local industrial workers or­ cient, painstaking and thorough in that they are entitled to it should Wilson administration. It was dur- James Melladew and wife of Wor­ sition. It is safe to assume, then, "grab off" all the glory they can from J ing Mr. Murray's administration that ganized a union and the sky is still her work. As the years went on she Now we know that the local com­ cester, Mass., and daughter, -Ruth, high over us and the community has that under Mr. Malley's administra­ the achievement—even if it does bore' the office was moved to the J. Fran- have been visiting at the home of O. became practically invaluable to this mittee that has had the special duty 1 c tion the office of postmaster here will us tremendously, and many others. is Browne block on Pearl street., E. Woodward and wife on Erifieldt not as yet been rent asunder. The important department of the town of furthering this project for the past too. \ With the election of President War- be capably and industriously con­ few months, has been intensely inter­ street, Mrs. Melladew and Mrs. Wood­ predicated disaster has not taken government because of her intimate 'ren G. HardingHarHiner the+>>P polit ducted. ested and active in its work, but we ward being sisters. place, in fact nothing out of the ordi­ and expert knowledge of the intrica­ Seen and Heard in Passing: That ion of the office changed^atail The new official, no doubt, will be cannot conceive of any single mem­ 1922 William P. Gourlie,' who has nary has happened, as everybody but cies of the office. Very wisely each perverted idea of what is "funny," as During the month of June, Miss; the timorous calamity howlers, rea­ pardoned if he feels a little more than ber of the committee neglecting his displayed by some of our embryo hu­ completed his third term, was ap­ new official retained her in the posi­ personal business or going without pointed by the late President Hard­ Karen Nielsen, the -visiting nurse, lized would the result. There has the usual satisfaction as he assumes morists in the form of rowdyism, be tion of assistant town clerk, and he his meals to advance the movement. ing. It was during the administra­ made 180 visits and attended 24 pa­ been no uprising, no insurrection, no his duties. After nine years of suc­ horse-play and other nocturnal activ­ tion of Mr. Gourlie that the office was tients. The chain teas or parties- was rewarded with a loyalty to him * * * cessful leadership of his party and ities which are foisted on unsuspect­ moved from the Browne block to its which have been given for the bene­ clash of arms—nothing. and a faithfulness of service to the three years of the most trying expe­ WIe feel that the work that this ing and defenceless victims. It is present quarters in the Estelle build­ fit of the visiting nurse fund have- What has occurred is what was ob­ community that became proverbial. time that this sort of thing was ing on North Main street. vious to any observing citizen, and we rience a public official has ever had committee has done and undoubtedly proved very delightful socially. The Her capacity for being unfailingly will do before the thing is accom­ checked up and stopped pronto, and have several thousand such. The na­ here, he was the victim of the most proceeds of these affairs and the kind accommodating and helpful through­ plished, will be fully appreciated particularly in, public places that are assistance rendered the civics com­ tionwide reorganization of industrial dispicable piece of political treachery LEGAL NOTICE out the years, and her readiness to without decorating the endeavor with set apart for an entirely different mittee of the Woman's Club of En­ that was ever perpetrated locally. purpose. And the phase of this so- workers reached here as it was pre­ place her complete knowledge of the piffle and purposeful exaggeration. AT A COURT OF PROBATE held at field in carrying on the work of the called "sport" that is the most repre­ dicted it would. It was a case of the This was carried into his candidacy mechanics of the town clerk's office at We are not sure that any one mem­ Enfield, within and for the District visiting nurse by hostesses and guests hensible of all is the practice of start­ of Enfield, Connecticut, on the 5th inevitable happening. As a result of for the position which he has just as­ the disposal of every citizen and tax­ ber of the committee is responsible are gratefully acknowledged. for this, but the common construction ing false stories, such as somebody day of July, A. D., 1934. the very clever work the reorganiza­ sumed and did not cease until the payer at all times, are some of the of it is that the incident is being used having committed suicide or some Present: . The marriage of Samuel Nolin and tion was a huge success here and the very moment of his appointment. It reasons for Miss Bennett being so other such unsavory . Those Hon. James W. Hayden, Judge. largest single group in this wide­ was not, however, shared by the re­ for some conscious or unconscious On motion of The Thompsonville Miss Marie Valliere took place at 9 highly regarded and respected by self exploitation. who perpetrate these untoward af­ o'clock this morning in St. Patrick's spread textile industry was brought mainder of the trio from which he fairs would be the first to "holler" Trust Company, Thompsonville, Ct., every resident of the town. Ordinar­ • 9 » administrator c. t. a. on the estate of Church, Rev. T. J. Dunn performing together. The skeptics and alarmists was selected, the majority of his par­ ily it would be trite to say that the and "holler" good and loud if tyiey the ceremony. Both the bride and And from the Washington angle the were the victims. There is nothing Cornelia O. Brainard, late of the breathlessly awaited the flare-up ty or the townspeople in general. town building will not be the same Town of Enfield, within said District, groom were unattended. The bride - thing has the same unhealthy aspect. decent or sporting about this "carry­ which was bound to come, but they He was regarded through it all as without her, but it is true in the case deceased, it is was attired in a gown of white silk, We are fully cognizant that Con­ ing on" and the sooner that is realis­ Ordered, That six months be and waited in vain—nothing happened. an honest upright citizen, a status of Miss Bennett—it won't be. gressman Koppleman has done a fine with white picture hat, and carried a The success of the organization which even his most fanatical detrac­ ed by those who practice it the better. the same are hereby allowed and lim­ prayer book. After the ceremony a job in the pushing of our post office The "worm will turn" some of these ited for the creditors of said deceas­ work did not go to their heads, be­ tor could not change. Being the type Playgrounds Open for Season. project without the badly overdone ed to present their claims to che ad­ reception and wedding breakfast was summer nights when they get hold of enjoyed at the home of Fred Frenette cause there was too much good sense of a man whose temperament does The public playgrounds which are publicizing of his endeavors which , the wrong man and hot towels and ministrator c, t. a. and further and sound judgment lodged there al­ not lend itself to bearing resentment, under the supervision of the Park and jarred the sensibilities of the people j arnica in abundance may be required, Ordered, That notice of said limita­ on South Main street, where the young couple will reside. ready. They are too well disciplined, he can be depended upon, in the dis­ Playgrounds Commission were open­ of this section. We know that the fic-j A few stout thumps on the "button" tion be given by publishing a copy of ed for a season of eight weeks last- tion that he would not leave Wash- j jg the best way to cure this mistak- this order in a newspaper having a these modern labor groups, to be charge of his duties as postmaster, to Monday. The instructors at the circulation in said District, and by Hazardville stampeded into going off at "half treat all citizens justly, fairly and im­ ington until he got that post office for j en idea of fun. posting a like copy on the public sign South-end grounds are Miss Eleanor this place if it took all summer is a David W. Gordon, who is a member cock." They went about their busi­ partially, regardless of what their at­ V. King and William Merrill; at the post in said Town of Enfield, near­ figment of the imagination of an of the second crew of Central High ness in an unruffled and sensible man­ titude was toward his appointment. North-end grounds, Miss Mary Car­ Masses at All Saints Church, Som- est the place where the deceased last roll and Thomas Bernier, and the over-zealous press agent, which Con­ ersville, are being held according to dwelt. School, Springfield, won two silver ner. Said business was to improve And said appointment, let it be said, Hazardville grounds are in charge of gressman Koppleman, with his extra­ the summer schedule at 7:30 and 9:30 Certified from Record, medals in the exercises in that city jtheir working: conditions where any is an excellent one in every respect. Miss Helen Blonka. ordinary sense of decency and the fit- A. M., instead of 8 and 10 A. M. JAMES W. HAYDEN, Judge. last Monday.

31 * . . _ .. ^ J. Li \ \ K, & V %» , , ^ /r* Jfk Jet w * * iiA. < Jt> 'V- ;s£- THE THOMPSONYILLE RESS.TH j*5s4A- Major Development structures at present in the vicinity Project That Is Called a Federal Laboratory of site B, as previously noted, this is LXDCAL - NEWSifeNOTES Below Fairview Ave. opposite an area which should readily develop in the future. The potential Miii 11111111 (Continued from Page One) damage to real estate could easily William J. Hughes, Jr., of Pearl Chicago following the closing of the offset the apparent saving effected by street, a member of the Holy Cross convention* last Thursday. . m < 'f J £'' - A' ipl Colleige Crusaders' Orchestra, has ; O O & t ity to this site.. An arranges, for. SS"- a&v * gone to Block Island where the or­ The fire department was called out. treating all sewage at a northerly erly site. Over an extended period chestra has been engaged to play at site has been titled Plan A and esti- the saving in trunk sewer cost by se- a hotel there during the summer sea­ yesterday morning at 11 o'clock to a WBifz y-/f„ chimney fire in the residential part of mates of cost have been prepared for intermediate site would son. • ~se, the Baronian block on Pearl street.. this nroiect ' Ior,not be as great as indicated in the- , • ° The alarm-wa$ from box 23 at the f project. (appended table as a trunk sewer will The Misses Florence Lynch, Doro­ South School. The fire was extin­ A second feasible arrangement eventually be required to serve south- thy Rostek and Barbara Worton of guished without damage. « . v. ^ » concerns collection of all outlets!erly areas. The initial cost of the Hazardville, are enjoying a week's north of and including Asnuntuck j various intercepting sewer arrange- vacation at Camp Ayspa. Miss Lynch O O • street and conducting the flow there- ments are outlined. The cost of the is president of the. 4-H Club and is a The Misses Whitney will be hos­ from to a pumping station to be lo-! treatment works is the same in" any daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. tesses for. the next meeting of the La­ cated on the westerly side of South case. Lynch., dies' Benevolent Society of the En­ River street and delivering the sew-; y/\o c field Congregational Church, which age through a force main to a propoS' will be in the form of a silver tea and ed gravity sewer originating at the IN MEMORIAM Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gilson of Pearl social, and will be held at their home outlet of Zone P in the • rear of the street are at York Beach, Me., for a on Enfield street next week Thurs­ grain company building and extend- Week's vacation. j ' day afternoon at 2 o'clock. |ing in a southerly direction. The ter- IN LOVING MEMORY OF o o i, - General, view of the Reedsville: subsistence projectpiujcvi. ucninear Ellcins,jujiiwijs, W. Va., as.it appeared when Mrs. Franklin Mrs. Jack Gati of New York City o o D. i minus of art interceptor is, of course, SAMUEL SISISKY is spending two weeks with her mo Mr. and Mrs. William S. Armitage j Who passed away July 9, 1929. • ther, Mrs. Samuel Crisinati of School °| Freehold, N., J., former residents 1 street, and her daughter, Lucy, who of Thompsonville, are holiday and cation of a treatment plant, approxi- "Loving and kind in all his ways, mately 2,500 feet southerly from Upright and just to the end of his came with her will remain for a two week-end visitors at the home of Mr. MISS BENNETT HONORED da months' visit. and Mrs. Thomas W. Hargrave of PALESTINE NOW HAS ANNUAL DISTRICT Fairview Avenue west of the railroad e. ys. O 0 i Garden street. tracks. The next suitable bincere and true in his heart and' MEETING ^ADOPTS Miss Elizabeth A. Bennett, whoXfis ^250^^ foUerly mind, Guests at the home of Mrs. Mabel . I' • o o ended her 1 MODERN METROPOLIS ENTIRE PROGRAM services as assistant town from Bridge Lane, also located west Beautiful memories to leave behind. Kothe on Church street are her aunt, Miss" Rebecca Twining of Enfield clerk last Saturday following her re- the tracks. Estimates of cost have Miss Margaret Macready of Akron, stre«t..will leave tomorrow for a two Sweet memories will linger forever, flltm m iTaimim a«i AMT* AT Tnio nlafta V N. 2 • _ _ — _ ;signation: signation tendered some time ago,ago,' en ^d ,^ese l°ca" (Continued from Page One) 0 8 bem Time cannot change them, it's true, Tel Aviv, "Boom City," Cel­ 'was the guest last Friday night at a pi " 'n * &Jdesignated as , • dinner at the Homestead Inn in Som-'. 1 " second Plan C. Years that may come cannot sever ,by friends from Hartford. They will ebrates Birthday. fire headquarters as recommended by ers given in her honor by the town Comparison of Plans A, B and C. Our loving remembrance of you." Brockport, N. Y. itour through Vermont on the return the district committee. Under this officials and those connected with the' The disadvantages of Plan A are o o route Washington.—Mention Palestine and Parents, Brothers and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Hargrave action $5,000 of it was transferred to administration of affairs at the town the proximity of the plant to the Sisters. of Garden street returned Monday! ago-old customs, tribes, and cities come the Insurance Fund and ?2500 will be ,.uildin&- T°WP C!ei'k Timothy J. Sul-! built up portion of Thompsonville, evening from a week-end motor trip' to mind. Yet Palestine, like the rest used as first ravmmf nn mnri PJ"e®lded at the exercises that limitations as to available area for to Cape Cod. Xhey were guests of.1 LINK AROUND WORLD of the world, Is changing. Tel Aviv, a used as the first payment on the mod- followed the dinner. High apprecia-. expansion in the event of more com- friends in Provincetown ,and also vis-: thriving modern metropolis of nearly ern ladder truck which was voted by tion of the remarkable services rend- plete treatment being required at a ited Hyannis and Plymouth. 1 TELEPHONE SERVICE 70,000 population, did not exist In 1909. the-meeting, the cost being $8500. ered by Miss Bennett in her 40 years distant date and the trucking prob- 00 Its site was then only a deserted area The committ(te was authorized to bor- assistant town clerk was express- lem involved in the removal of sludge The Biltmore Harry Barton of Colorado Springs,! vnw « t ewooHino- *ue is required; the elimination of of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bragin- nine foreign nations and scores of Building Code was abrogated in order Hazardville, who succeeds pumping and its attendant cost, Comfortable and Homelike ton on Enfield street last week. | Washington.—Around the world tele­ commercial concerns sent exhibits. to make way for the new building , Ss Bennett as assistant town clerk,; Plans B and C offer the common 00 j phone conversation, linking men's The exposition, known as the Third In­ regulations which are being prepared Was onen?.f ~se attending the gath-, disadvantage of requiring pumping of Miss Edith_ Simonton, who is__ a_ t voices In every Important capital and ternational Levant fair, was given a for the entire town. The change in , .1?s Bennett is now visiting all sewage originating north of As- teacher in the Sleighton Farm school' commercial city Is Imminent, accord- permanent site north of the city be­ the fiscal year recommended by the /el jS Manchester for a'nuntuck street. Site B requires a Mrs. E. F. Ryan in Darling, Pa., and John Simonton,' ing to engineers district committee was voted and au- ^ v.ys • wllI.fPend several weeks shorter trunk line in the original con- tween Yarkon river and the Mediterra­ with herr n ce Miss 14 Pleasant St. Phone 213-2 who will enter his junior year at Wes-j Already the earth Is completely In- thority was also given to have enact- • {\ ^®. . if Tv Edith Bennett,' struction than C and hence is lower Ieyan University in the fall, daughter nean. Last year the Levant fair drew ied any other legislation that may be N. H. Jin first cost. While there are no closed by chains of telephone connec­ visitors from Syria, Egypt, Transjor- and son of Dr. and Mrs. Frank F. tions. From the United States men 'necessary to improve the governing! — Simonton, are vacationing for the dan, Persia, and Iraq as well as Pales­ of the affairs of the district. The summer at the family camp on Lake talk across the Pacific with Manila tine. committee's report regarding the re­ Hebron in Monson, Me. Miss Vir- j an^ across the Atlantic through Am­ "Tel Aviv, Palestine's boom city, vision of the regulations governing: ginia Brainard of West Hartford, for-, sterdam, Berlin or Brussels to Manila owes Its origin to a small group of the fire department were adopted and was merly of this place, i§ also a member again or eastern oceanic points. Jewish residents of the distinctly Arab ! . voted to lay a district tax of of the camping party. But working connections through city of Jaffa, who moved out to the !on® ml'l- , , o o Tokyo and Shanghai to #ie United risln v e Miss Helen Ziebarth, Miss Jennie] sand dunes north of the city in 1909 o u- f °t States and Oceania are still needed andnnrf beganhnn-nn a„ garden suburb,"» saysen,.= a„ °f ^ankS t0 PhlllP,J- S"11'™1 f01' hl'S Pickens and Miss Annie Chestnut of 1 tn r>mT,i/in f»,„ - „ I services as a member of the district Church street and Mrs. John H. Frew' 1°^°^ J between the last bulletin from the National Geographic 'committee, and a silent tribute was of Frew Terrace returned last eve-! 8 centers of population. society. paid to the memory of the late Henry ning frim a few days' motor trip to Tokyo Link Being Speeded. Second City of Palestine. Davis, for years an auditor of the the Gloucester beaches. The principal missing link—be­ "Since the World war Tel AvIt district. The meeting was presided o c tween the United States and Tokyo— over by F. Howard Stetson and the- The Enfield Naval Cadets left last. whose name means 'Hill of Spring,' records of the proceedings kept by Tuesday for a five days' cruise on| Is rapidly being forged and probably has witnessed spectacular growth. To­ Secretary Laurence T. Downey. * , Long Island Sound. They are in i will fit Into the chain before the end day this all-Jewish community Is sec­ charge of Commander Arthur H. Lee of the year, according to engineers ond In population only to Jerusalem and Mate Herbert Blowen. here. Some authorities expect It with­ among the cities of Palestine, and is Neighbors Bewitch Them, i o o in two or three months. the most modern town of the eastern Is Charge of Mexicans 1 Mr. and Mrs. William E. Savage re­ "Tests have been conducted be­ Mediterranean region. Continued Jew­ Chihuahua City, Mexico.—Authorities turned home Tuesday after a ten tween the United States and Japan ish Immigration to Palestine, much of days' trip to Detroit and Chicago. Mr are Investigating the charges of 15 for about a year, Indicating the pros- it from Germany, adds monthly to Tel residents of the village of El Almagre Savageis president oj: the local' ^c,Tf r4»T»r 67vS to he near Aviv's growing population. that Mrs. Maria del Refugio Bermu- Shoup, communica­ "With Its modern homes, paved dez "bewitched" them. ternational at Detroit, and visited the tions expert In the Department of streets, shops, clubs, steamship offices, The 15 couples appeared before the Century of Progress Exposition in Commerce, said. and bathing beach, Tel Aviv resem­ mayor and penal Judge here and asked During the last twelve months bles a European city rather than one protection against the forty-five-year- ' the United States opened telephone BUILDING PERMITS GRANTED In Palestine. Many of Its trim houses old woman. The case was referred to communications either for regular or are surrounded by small gardens, pre­ the state's attorney general. j Charles Blondek, Hazard Avenue, special occasions with Russia, Vene­ served from drought by sprinkling sys­ Victims of the "spells" became rigid, i barn. zuela, Manila, Guatemala, Panama, tems—an unheard of extravagance so Spoke at the rate of "a thousand words ! Arthur Keller, Enfield Street, resi­ Costa Rica and Nicaragua. Earlier It close of Jerusalem, which Is often short per minute and frothed at the mouth," dence and tea room. opened communications with virtual­ of water even for drinking. Attrac­ It was testified. Per order of ly every nation In Europe and South tive shops display wares from many The witnesses also said that they Enfield Zoning Commission. America and even with South Africa. lands, while steamship offices adver­ saw "burros with human faces, cows Dated at Enfield, Conn., this In all, 52 nations are In telephone 5th day of July, 1934. tise excursion rates to Europe and with feet In the air as well as on the contact with each other, and every na­ America on garish signboards In He­ ground, airplanes carrying nude men Herbert A. Varno, Clerk. tion having more than 100,000 tele­ (july 5-12) brew and Latin characters. and women, and hordes of frogs and phones, except Japan and China, Is in cockroaches." part of some worldwide chain. "At the bathing beach there is a modern casino with Jazz bands, and They charged Mrs. Del Refugio Ber- Work on Java Connection. the sands are used for sun-bathing by mudez gave those afflicted mystic po­ In addition to perfecting the con­ men, women, and children—a custom tions and cast them IntQ hypnotic Announcing nection between the United States and almost unknown In Palestine before cpells. Japan, Japanese and Dutch engineers the Zionists developed their own city. the Opening of the are perfecting the link between Tokyo "The population of Tel Aviv is ultra Evolution of Golf Ball Is and Bandoong in Java, which Is the modern, thinking In terms of social sci­ terminus of two chains to Europe and ence and business as well as advanced Revealed by CWA Workers Rainbow a junction between Europe, Australia agriculture. The city contains over a Indianapolis.—Evolution of the golf and New Zealand. Manila and Ban­ hundred schools and kindergartens un­ ball was revealed when CWA workers doeng are connected already. The One Best Time to der Zionist direction, and a school of dredged a water hole on the South | Spaghetti All this development has come since the Universal Israelite alliance. There Grove golf course here. March 10, 1876, when Alexander Gra­ are also two libraries: the Municipal The workers found several layers of ham Bell conversed In Boston with library, with a large collection of so­ balls In the silt. The bottom, layer Install Automatic HOT House a companion seated in another room ciological works bequeathed by the was the gutta percha type. The top a few feet away. Most of the Ameri­ late Asher Gulnsberg, and the Central layer consisted of the present day "bal­ In Its New Location can International telephone develop­ Library of the Cultural Committee of loon" type. ment has occurred since 1922, when the Jewish Labor Federation, with Harry Scliopp, club professional, es­ Water is RIGHT NOW! only Cuba and Canada were linked 740 Enfield St. nearly 100,000 volumes In Hebrew, timated there were »10,000 golf balls with the United States. or $5,000 worth at 50 cents each in Near Alden Ave. Yiddish, and European languages, deal­ ing with sociology and economics, sci­ the collected by the workers. during the popular ence and agriculture. The hole was built 22 years ago. It AN ADDITION TO OUR NOTICE furnishes a fair paying concession for Wealth in Oranges. rakers during the summer nMu»*hs. USUAL SERVICE IS "Tel Aviv's most spectacular holiday Notice is hereby given that from comes during the feast of Purim, dur­ this day forward (July 5, 1934), I ing which horse and motor-drawn CARD OF THANKS Wine and Beer will not be responsible for any floats may combine the seven-branched debts incurred by my wife, Mrs. candlestick and modern display adver­ On behalf of one who can no William Tarasavitch. A Rental or Purchase Plan Charles Barrila, Prop. tising. carnival spirit prevails longer speak for herself, I wish to (Signed) among the noisy crowd, and young thank the many friends for their William Tarasavitch. girls masquerading In heavy beards kindness to my sister, that cheered poke good-natured fun at Orthodox her and brightened many of the rabbis. long hours that she was confined "A more cosmopolitan crowd than to her room, and assure them that You Can Rent an You Can Purchase an she appreciated it. that seen during the Purlm procession For myself, I am unable to ex­ would be hard to find even In ancient press in words my gratitude to SLAYBARD'S communttles, for here are Immigrants those who comforted and assisted from the Ghettos of Europe side by me in my bereavement. side with residents who have made Charles H. Brainard. their fortunes In America and other Gold Medal Tivoli Beer lands, and have followed the Zionist's Automatic Gas Water Heater Holds It's Popularity as the Favorite—$1.75 Case! dream to this sand-dune city from whose house tops one may look across We also have Draught Beer in quarter and half barrels suit­ the Philistine plain to the rocky back­ CLASSIFIED ADS able for picnics, home gatherings, reunions, clambakes, etc., $C.OOT and we supply you with the cooling apparatus FREE! bone of old Judea. for as little as a day for as little as down "The real wealth of this region 1> 5c In oranges, and whole shiploads of the TO RENT SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! famous Jaffa oranges are loaded for Payable monthly Balance in small monthly payments European ports when the weather per­ TO RENT — Five room flat at 114 Pearl Street, second floor, just re- Old Kentucky Straight Whiskey mits. Most of the new plantations finished. See M. E. Broderick, have been set out by Jews, who mar­ Phone 66 Windsor Locks. tf ket many of the oranges co-operatlve- Fifts $1.00 — Quarts $1.25 ly, and are helped by the Palestine TO RENT—5-room tenement on En­ Consult Us or Your Plumber-Dealer for Full Details of TRY A QUART AND BE CONVINCED THAT YOU CAN GET government In keeping down fruit dis­ field St. First floor, bath, hot wa­ this Special Offer and Learn How Little it Really A GOOD WHISKEY AT A POPULAR PRICE. eases and maintaining high standards ter heat, automatic gas hot water heater, inlaid linoleum in kitchen, Costs to Enjoy the Convenience of Auto­ of inspection. Before the war the Jaf­ all varnished floors. With garage. Another straight whiskey which we stand behind and recommend fa orange groves shipped less than a Vegetable garden given free, also matic Hot Water Service Now! million cases of fruit. The number is fruit trees. $30 per month. 450 now close to three million, with a val­ laying chickens if desired. Inquire Berkshire Straight Whiskey ue running perhaps as high as four to C. Bilodeau, Phone 302-5. dl2 five million dollars a year. Telephone 300 Fifts $1.50 — Quarts $1.75 TO RENT—Five room tenement, first "Tel Aviv also possesses Palestine's floor, all improvements. Corner of pioneer industrial plant—a brick fac­ GINS 84c to $1.50 WINES 79c to $3.00 South Street and Keller Ave. In­ tory which makes hundreds of thou­ quire No. 1 South Street. dl2 The Northern Connecticut sands of silicate brick for the con­ ELECTRICITY You can find almost every liquor you desire in our stock. struction of homes of cublstlc de­ sign and of other buildings for Immi­ FOR SALE SLAYBARD'S grants each year. It also has smaller FOR SALE—China cabinet in fine Power Company condition. Five shelves, full curv­ 14 PEARL ST. Phone Orders Promptly Delivered TEL. 99 plants turning out furniture, textiles, shoes, candles, orange cases, etc." ed glass front. Will sell reason­ able. Phone 674-2. tf SIX THE THOMPSONVILliE PRESS. THURSDAY, JULY 5,

Konormai connmons -Tiave so rar passed as to offer favorable prospects NEW DRUG ASSISTS for a settlement" -^ , "Door of Unity" Unveiled at Plynrriii News Review of Current ""i -w" r-.vv;-. WAR ON MALARIA CHURCH NEWS "^AZI storm troops in Germany %|yipjE'vents the . World Over have demanded that the Stahl- helm, or Steel Helmets, composed of Totaquina Is Developed Jby Union service next Sunday morn- . • fag at 10:30. Rev. G. Stanley Helps l war veterans, be banned by the Hitler m World League Experts. !k " '• government. But the leaders of the < £ will preach on "Parables of Nature— 1 president Cleans Desk for Hawaii Cruise—Drouth Relief organization reply that it shall not Geneva.—Totaquina, the new drug , the Sea and Its Mystery." At 7 P. be suppressed or absorbed ln the to combat malaria, is proving its M., open air service under the auspi- Funds Allocated for Middle West—Federal # storm twtops. The existence of the worth. ces of the Christian Endeavor Union ,1 Stahlhelm, they assert, Is guaranteed ( Discovered by league experts wish­ at the Town Farm, Hazardville.azardville. / . ' Reward for Dillinger's Arrest. *'* by President Von Hindenburg, Chan­ ing to lower prices of powerful qui­ IP^ cellor Hitler, and other Nazi chiefs. nine rings, limiting quinine supplies — ...... far below world requirements, tota­ ' "" ""'"United Presbyterian. ^-ssvs. - By EDWARD W. PICKARD r\N THE twentieth anniversary of quina Is becoming popular. Services next Sunday as usual.'' . © by Western Newspaper Cnlon. the assassination of Archduke Hospitals and dispensaries ln Al­ morning service at 10:30, evening at PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, back united States "or 'if I? IS a plaything Franz Ferdinand at Sarajevo, the geria, Morocco, Malaya, China, Italy, j7. Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. The ? * from his brief trip to New Haven, to be held over the heads of honor­ event that precipitated the World war, France, Rumania, and Spain are using j Wednesday evening service at 7:30. . jtotaqulna instead of quinine, accord­ New London and his home in Hyde able and decent employers as a cudgel there were bombing outrages through­ I The Sunday School lesson is the topic; ^ *1 out Austria directed against the Doll- ing to the league health section's new Park, put in a busy week clearing up to browbeat and bulldoze them Into ifor study. Choir rehearsal follows surrendering their constitutional rights fuss government and possibly Insti­ survey. his desk for his de­ Is s&sa 'this meeting. On July 10, the Bos- _ parture on the long for the benefit of outside agitators gated by the Nazis. Certainly the The chronic shortage of quinine, the planned cruise through whose only purpose Is to exploit labor disorders were political in nature. world production of which is 572 tons 'ton Presbytery will meet at Brock- ; the Panama canal to for their own personal gain." Power plants, railway lines, and one less than required annually, is con­ ton, Mass. Commissioners to the Gen­ the West coast and General Johnson's reply was In ef­ newspaper office were blown up. sidered in the survey as one of the. eral Assembly at Oxford, Ohio, will Hawaii. All those fect that the company could stay main difficulties of ridding mankind give their report.: who have had occa­ closed forever if It wished to, but It ITH congress adjourned and the of widespread malaria. sion during the last must comply with the NRA regula­ WPresident preparing for his While the world does not. produce Hawaii cruise, Miss Margaret Le more than 600 tons of quinine^ An­ First Presbyterian. generation to call at tions to get back its Blue Eagle. The union meeting this Sunday at the White House are The dispute started last October, Hand, confidential secretary to Mr. nually, at least 1,172 tons are required >10:30 A. M.. will be held in the Meth- glad to learn that Ru­ when about 300 employees went on Roosevelt, decided to each year by the 68 malarious coun­ jodist Church. Rev. G. Stanley Helps, dolph Forster was strike with the claim that the com­ take a vacation, so tries covered by the league's Investi­ will preach. Young People's union selected by the Presi­ pany would not reinstate twenty-three she sailed for Europe. gations. Rudolph outdoor service at 7 in the evening. dent to make the voy­ workers who had joined the United Now comes from Paris To find a cheap substitute for qui­ Dr. and Mrs. W. Fletcher Daum are* Forator Bishop Daukes of Plymouth, England, unveiling and dedicating "the Door age with him. Since Workers' Textile union. the positive statement nine, league experts experimented un­ in Atlantic City for the week. Dr. of Unity," a memorial to American naval officers who lost their lives in action the days of McKinley this able and Fred Held, vice president of the that Miss Le Hand is til they discovered totaquina, which Daum will preach in the Olivet Pres­ against the British during the Revolutionary war. The ceremony took place at courteous gentleman, now executive American Federation of Hosiery to be married to Wil­ is a total alcalold mixture from dif­ byterian Church in that city next St Andrew's church in Plymouth clerk In charge of the White House Workers, went to Harrlman after the liam C. Bullitt, Amer­ ferent alcaloids of cinchona. It has Sunday. executive offices, has been on duty and mills closed, but was taken from the ican ambassador to been approved by the league's malaria never before has he accompanied any train by a band of armed men, taken Russia, and that she I commission representing all the vari­ Enfield Congregational. President on trip. Now Mr. Forster some distance In an automobile and was making the final Minister Buys Dresser; ous schools of malariology. Morning worship next Sunday will a be held at 10:45. The minister, Rev. Is going to have a real vacation, and released on promise not to return. arrangements in the Finds It's Really Bar The world's governments should Raymond A. Waser, will preach the . French capital. The Lights of New Vork Secretaries Howe, Mclntyre and Earle Margaret Oklahoma City.—An Oklahoma City pool their knowledge of malaria even sermon. On Friday, July 6, registra­ young lady would say will remain behind to take care of the DOSTMASTER GENERAL FARLEY Le Hand byL. L. STEVENSON minister recently objected strenuously more than previously, the survey tion for the Daily Vacation School White House. There will be no other ^ and Secretary of the Treasury Mor- nothing in confirma­ when he bought a second-hand dresser states. Some strains of malaria are will be held on the church lawn from tion or denial except to declare that civil officials aboard the cruiser Hous­ genthau came forward with an an­ a virulent ln one country and mild ln 2 to 3:30 in the afternoon. The reg­ A rather small man with keen blue and discovered he had purchased ton. nouncement of their plans for the she was not going to Russia, but the genuine antl-Volstead bar. another, thus making it essential to istration fee for the two weeks is 2& eyes, high forehead, aquiline nose, On the way down to the canal Mr. spending of $110,000,000 in the con­ correspondents were sure the plans study malaria on international lines, cents. On Saturday, July 7, the Sun­ close clipped gray mustache and sparse The furniture dealer removed the day School picnic will be held at For­ Roosevelt will visit Puerto Rico and struction of new post offices and fed­ were well advanced for what it had bar from the piece. It is added. gray hair is John Francis Curry, the est Park, Springfield. Cars will leave the Virgin Islands. From Panama eral buildings. been hoped would be a secret wed­ A copper container, set in behind The league, which has studied ln only leader Tammany has ever de­ the church at 10:30 A. M. On Mon­ City he will go to the Hawaiian Islands, In all, 626 communities in every ding. It was understood that Corne­ the mirror, with the spout at the bot­ relation to malaria, specifies require­ posed In its more than 130 years of day, July 9, the.Daily Vacation school first making a brief stop In Colombia. state and four territories have been lius Vanderbllt, Jr., a close friend of tom, could be filled and the liquor ment and conditions whereby a house the President, would act as best man history. Uncommunicative and a will begin at 9:30. All the children Returning to the Pacific coast early in selected for new federal buildings, drawn at the spigot may be a defense from an infection of the community are invited to at­ for Mr. Bullitt. Mr. Vanderbllt Is In fighter, he rose from the ranks ln the August Mr. Roosevelt will travel over­ according to the announcement Half and not an exposure to malaria. tend. organization. He plays golf and bets land by rail, and there is a possi­ of the program—302 buildings—will be the Riviera, and Miss Le Hand also was booked to go there before return­ on horses as a diversion, his liking bility he will make some speeches, undertaken with $65,000,000 authorized ing to America late ln July. probably in Minneapolis and Green for that purpose in the recently en­ being to pick long shots. John P. Woman Cashier, 74, Ambassador Bullitt is a widower Bay, Wis., where the tercentenary of acted deficiency-emergency appropria­ O'Brien, whose defeat for re-election and has a young daughter who is now Calls Thugs' Bluff the Badger state will be celebrated. tion bill. It was explained that 324 as mayor contributed much to Curry's COAL - WOOD - COKE — OIL with him In Moscow. Chicago.—Miss Catherine March buildings will be constructed with downfall, is a golfing companion. BUY NOW WHILE PRICES ARE STILL LOW! We MMEDIATE relief for the drouth Curry started life as a cowboy in Man­ Is seventy-four years old. Her "funds already available from other fighting weight is somewhere have anthracite in all sizes, also bituminous, Koppers I stricken areas in the Middle West sources." NFORMATION was given the house hattan. That sounds rather strange. was decreed by the President in an I committee Investigating War de­ Nevertheless, a half century ago, the around 92 pounds. Coke and Range and Fuel Oils. partment expenditures that prices Sitting in the cubby-hole where executive order which allocated $56,- T TNCLE SAM Is determined to get west side of Manhattan was pasture quoted the government on automobiles she works as cashier for the ele­ 250,000 for direct aid. The remain­ ^ John Dilliuger, the country's most land. Curry looked after his father's have jumped since the Issuance of the vated lines, she was approached by der of the first distribution of federal notorious desperado. A few days ago cattle there and drove them to the FRANK P. SMYTH executive order excluding Henry two young gunmen. relief for the drouth area Included Attorney General Cummings offered a stock yards. Later he became a tele­ 98 PROSPECT STREET TELEPHONE 496 $43,750,000 for purchase of seed, food Ford from bidding until he certifies graph operator and It was an assign­ "Open that door," said one, reward of $10,000 for compliance with the NRA. Represent­ and live stock; §25,000,000 for seed the capture of the ment to the convention that nominated thrusting a revolver through the and feed loans, $12,500,000 for pur­ ative Kvale of Minnesota said he had Grover Cleveland for the Presidency change aperture, "or we'll fill you murderer and bank evidence to back up this charge, and chase of lands in the drouth regions, robber, and half as for a second time that turned his at­ full of lead." Miss March leaned and $12,500,000 for establishment of that the situation has cost the gov­ tention to politics. back ln her chair, folded her arms much for Information ernment thousands of dollars already. HARRY W. JARRETT civilian conservation camps in the » » • and shook her head. leading to his arrest. "For Henry Ford to submit a cer­ stricken region. At sixty, Curry is rated as a wealthy "Go head," she Invited. "I guess GENERAL INSURANCE At the same time the tificate of compliance," Mr. Kvale man. In addition to holding several I've lived long enough anyway." 890 Enfield Street PHONE 22 Thompsonville attorney general of­ said, "would mean he would have to city Jobs, he built up an insurance The robbers went away. INAL settlement of the questions fered $5,000 for the secure 5,000 certificates of compliance "INSURANCE THAT INSURES" business, which didn't suffer at all F in dispute between the steel mas­ .... -jrm capture of Lester M. from those who furnish parts and ters and their workers is expected and 1 G i 111s, alias "Baby products for his cars. That is obvi­ through his political connections. Even the threatened strike probably will be SL * Face" Nelson, Dlll- ously impossible." without^ the insurance business, de­ ln averted. The President, Invoking his inhT"nininn... S^r'3 right-hand spite the loss of the Tammany job, he John Dillinger man. x n f 0 r m a110 n The committee called on War de­ new emergency powers, named a partment officials to reply to this ac­ wouldn't starve. He was commis­ three-man board to arbitrate the in­ leading to Gillis' capture will be re­ cusation. sioner of records of the Surrogate's . dustry's troubles, and both sides in­ warded with $2,500. court from 1911 until 1923, when he j dicated they would aecept its deci­ This action was followed up by con­ ERE is more woe for President was chosen to boss Tammany, and sions. The members of the board are sideration of plans for co-ordinating H Mendieta of Cuba. The A. B. C. for that he receives a pension of $3,- Admiral Henry A. Wiley, James Mul- federal, state, and local efforts to society, strongest of the secret political 600 a year. lenbach of Chicago and Judge Walter catch Dillinger. It was understood associations in the island, has an­ • • • IStacy of the North Carolina Supreme that plans using the array and Nation­ nounced that it would no longer sup­ A gentleman rather the worse for | court. The two latter have had long al Guard in the offensive were under port the Mendieta government. The his liquor, wandered into one of those experience as labor mediators. Under discussion. reason given was "the lack of firm­ classy cocktail rooms and leaned the emergency law this group can or­ The federal charge against Dillinger ness displayed by the government In against the service bar. The head der and police elections in all steel is transporting a stolen automobile dealing with terrorists, especially waiter Informed him that It was plants to determine which union shall across the state line. Nelson is want­ with men responsible for the assault against the law to drink at the bar represent the men in collective bargain­ ed in connection with the murder of on the A. B. C. parade June 17." and led him to a table. When he had ing. The board can also hand down W. Carter Baum, Department of Jus­ The A. B. C. manifesto said the so­ been served, the drunk staggered to decisions on all complaints brought by tice agent, near Rhlnelander, Wis., ciety would continue to work for the his feet, glass ln hand. The head either workers or employers. April 23. good of Cuba against terrorism and waiter then informed him that it was President Roosevelt ordered the In addition to the federal prize, other forms of "gangsterism" which illegal to drink hard liquor standing' If you have not tested the quality of the food distributed by this modern and up-to-date board to report to him from time to the person who can catch Dillinger "are directly traceable to the influence up. "But I gotta stand up," declared market, its friendly and courteous policy, and its excellent and prompt service, you are will receive $1,000 reward from each time through Secretary of Labor of Moscow gold." the unsteady one. "I'm drinkln' to the of five states—Indiana, Illinois, Mich­ missing the finest opportunity for home buying in this section. Added to the high qual­ Frances Perkins. A crisis ln the cabinet resulted and President of the United States." igan, Ohio and Minnesota. ity of our foods, the unfailingly perfect cleanliness with which it is handled is the most several members, who belong to the • • • vital factor of all—the very reasonable price policy of the market. T MAT be necessary to resort to the A. B. C., offered their resignations, as For no good reason at all, that re­ I emergency labor legislation to put ITTING in his White House study, did 600 employees of the treasury de­ minds me that the king of Sweden's an end to the street car strike in Mil­ S President Roosevelt talked over partment pants are ln Rowayton, Conn., ln the waukee. A minority of the company's the radio directly to millibns of his A committee of conciliation was at possession of Arthur Billard. It seems work on the government's troubles and employees went out and by violence fellow countrymen, seeking to reas­ that John Tunis engaged ln a game of Specials for Friday and Saturday, July 6-7 it was reported that it might suggest forced the suspension of service. The sure those who have been alarmed by tennis with the king and there was a parliamentary form of government mobs fought the police and attacked ( the frequent allegations that the New some kind of locker mix-up. At any headed by a prtaae minister. The A. Land o' Lakes Butter CERTO the company's electric plant and tt| [ Deal Is becoming radical. He rebuked rate, Mr. Tunis came away with the Per bottle cars. his critics as "doubting Thomases," B. C. leaders w'uld agree to this If 2 lbs. for 29c king's pants, which he presented to The American Federation of £4$ the premier were chosen from their "prophets of calamity" and "theoret- Mr. Billard, who is his next door unions are trying to compel thy ranks. ROYAL DESSERTS t leal diehards," and by implication de- neighbor, and Mr. Billard Is retaining Country Roll Butter pany to recognize their represent® 3 pkgs. for ( fended the brain trust. He highly the royal raiment as a show piece. (Wilson's) 2 lbs. for 17c in dealing with employees insiea ILATERAL conversations on naval , praised the departing congress for its * • • Native Wax Beans the company union with which It hai work in the lines of relief for the dis­ strength, being conducted ln Lon­ B That reminds me of the gentleman Genuine Spring Lamb Per lb. had a labor contract for 16 years. tressed, recovery and "reform and re­ don by the United States, Great Brit­ Per lb. 5c Rev. Francis J. Haas, formerly of construction." ain and Japan preparatory to the com­ who attended a very formal affair. Giving himself a final look ln the Native Green Beans Milwaukee and now chief conciliator Mr. Roosevelt told his listeners the ing conference, did not appear to be glass, he was quite pleased with his Per lb. for the national labor board, was sent simplest way they could Judge recov­ getting anywhere. The British sub­ Best Rib Roast Beef 5c to the Wisconsin city with full author­ ery was to consider their own situa­ mitted a plan whereby the United appearance, every detail being cor­ Per lb States should sink Its battleship fleet rect. So he put on his topper and Jersey Cucumbers ity to act. Mayor Hoan, a Socialist, tions. Each held the company responsible for the "Are you better off than you were and Britain should be permitted to called a taxi. And not until well Tender Corned Beef 5c Strike and ensuing riots. last year?" he asked. "Are your debts build a large number of small cruis­ along ln the evening, when it was en­ (Solid meat—no bones) lb. tirely too late to do anything about It, NATIVE BEETS less burdensome? Is your bank ac­ ers, airplane carriers and airplanes, 5c bunch—6 for EDERAL JUDGE J. P. BARNES count more secure? Are your work­ and they, the proposers, were fright­ did he discover that his feet were 25c ened by their own temerity. Mean­ neatly encased ln blue bedroom slip­ Sugar Cured Bacon F of Chicago gave one phase of the ing conditions better? Is your faith In (Rinless) per lb. California Plums !New Deal a rap by granting an In­ your own Individual future more firm­ while the Japanese delegate told the pers. Hereafter, he won't start out 15e doz.—2 dozen for American representative that his gov­ until he receives an o. k. from his 29c junction restraining the government ly grounded?" |rom enforcing the provisions of the ernment was increasingly suspicious wife. Fresh Killed Fowl NATIVE SQUASH of an understanding between Britain • • • AAA milk licensing agreement against OMETHING like a hundred thou­ (3 Yt to 3'/i lb. average) lb. Each and America that would work to the 5c the Independent milk dealers in the sand Americans and Canadians One of the minor mysteries of the S detriment of Japan. .. Chicago area. In effect, the judge gathered ln Detroit for the good will great city is the tombstone of a baby Fresh Hamburg Kellogg's Corn Flakes ruled that the government, through the celebration which was held on the that died 118 years ago. It was found 10c lb.—3 lbs. for Per pkg. 7c AAA, has usurped powers which un- Ambassador bridge under the aus­ by workmen razing a tenement house

"J":'. THE THOMPSONVILLfi PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 SBVBN

Angora Cat Thrives on the Jericoes, 3-0, and the Crusaders I Casintehino of the Park A. C., 6-8, BULLETIN URGES Capt. Larson Gets ike Mackay Cup triumphed over the B. B. Club, 3-0. 6-3; Santanella of the Crusader Jun- ||| Diet of Woolen Goods I Amateur Tennis ln the singles, Mcintosh of the First iors beat Lamont of the Owls, 6-8, ' rj.k " Istanbul.—A white Angora cat with League Results Church defeated Lyons of the Jeri- 6-3; Organ of the Crusader Juniors r\ CAUTION IN USE • mothlike appetite has become a coes, 6-2, 12-10; Gourlie of the First trimmed Campbell of the Owls, 6-1, scourge to the residents of the Istan­ Church trimmed Larkin of the Jeri- 6-3, and Stevens .of the jSTetmen beat W L P. C. , coes, 6-1, 6-2; Olschafskie of the Cru- S. White of the Park A. C., 6-1, 6-0. bul suburb of Psamatia. Group A: OF INSECTICIDES if The feline, which has one green and saders trimmed Baronian of the B. In the doubles, the team of E. White Hazardville RCA 10 4 .714 B. Club, 6-1, 6-3, and Gaudet of the and Comrie of the Netmen defeated one blue eye, has developed a passion Bigelow-Sanford 8 5 .615 Crusaders defeated Patterson of the Furey and L. White of the Park A. vasas Health May Be Affected for wool. It eats large holes in jer­ Greys A. A. 7 8 .462 B. B. Club, 6-4, 6-1. In the doubles, C., 6-2, 6-1, while Santanella and seys and berets, gently gnawing and Enfield Street 3 11 .214 Crombie and Higgins of the Crusad­ Wing of the Crusader Juniors beat By Chemicals Used for swallowing the wool. Group B: ers beat Moody and Patterson of the Lamont and Scavatto of the Owls by Driven out by Its owner, the cat has Crusaders 9 3 .750 B. B. _ Club, 6-3, 6-3; McLaren and the scores of 6-3, 6-1. Spraying Fruits and Young Men's Club 8 4 .666 Gourlie of the First Church defeated The schedule for tomorrow night is been visiting all the neighboring houses B. B. Club 4 8 .333 Vegetables, Warns the In search of woolens. Keller and Larkin of the Jericoes, as follows: Crusaders vs. Young •iisi Jericoes 3 9 .250 6-2, 6-3. Men's Club; B. B. Club vs. Jericoes. Juniors: The second group of matches in the Saturday morning at 9, the Crusader State Health Dept. Crusader Jrs. 6 0 1.000 Owls Junior League were played Saturday Juniors will play the Park A. C. and Boundary Dog Makes 3 3 .500 morning. The Crusader Juniors de­ the Owls will stack up against the Caution concerning the use of i Netmen ft 3 .500 feated the Owls, 3-0, while the Net- Netmen. Next Monday night the Knotty Tax Problem Park A. C. 0 6 .000 secticides, the safe use of which is as­ men came through in their contest Greys will oppose the Bigelow-San- ' ^ suming increasine imnortance with Sidney Greek, Ont.—A dog lives with the Park A. C., 3-0. In tL« ford combine and the Hazardville B. in Stoney Creek—and thereby Monday night's matches in Group singles, Fuge of the Netmen defeated C. A. will oppose Enfield Street. the constantly greater consumption A of the local tennis league resulted •of fruits and vegetables and with the hangs a tale. jin the Greys defeating Enfield street, wider interest in home gardening, The home of the dog's master is • 2-1, and Hazardville defeating Bige- on the township line, half in and was urged this week by the State De­ low-Sanford, 2-0. In the singles, Ol­ half out of the village. So when schafskie of the Greys beat Keller of partment of Health in its weekly bul­ the dog is In the front of the house Enfield street, 6-2, 6-0; Chestnut of INSURE letin, which declared that precaution he Is a township dog, and when the Greys w&s the victor over Sum- should be taken both to avoid poison­ he Is in the back he is a village merfield of Enfield street, 6-4, 4-6, IN CONNECTICUT'S OWN INSURANCE ing during application and to prevent pup. 6-4, and Rich of Hazardville defeated ingestion of more than that amount COMPANIES The owner refuses to pay two Goddard of the Bigelows, 6-3, 6-4. In -of insecticide which can be tolerated the doubles, Firtion and Dureski of THERE IS NONE BETTER AND FEW AS GOOD. when the products are eaten. taxes on one dog, and the dog re­ Hazardville downed Gaudet and Tay­ Lead arsenate, one of the more poi­ fuses to stay In one end of the lor of the Bigelows, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4; THEY ARE OLD. TIME-TESTED AND RBUABUL sonous insecticides used in this part The army's most valued flying trophy, the Mackay cup, which is awarded house. So the township assessor Mitchell and Fanelli of Enfield street of the country, can be used without annually for the year's greatest aerial achievement, has been awarded for and the village assessor are trying beat Fuge and Taylor of the Greys, -apparent injury to health if the com­ 1933 to Gapt Westslde Larson of Bockwell field, California, for a series of to decide who should collect the 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. BRAINARD - AHRENS, Inc. mon sense precautions of staying to tax. Last Friday night's matches in the windward of the spray to avoid experimental flights. Group B resulted in the Young Men's 106 MAIN STREET Phone 45-2 THOMPSONYILLH inhalation and of wearing protective . * \ Club of the First Church defeating clothing are observed. Use of this -chemical should be avoided where pos­ sible, however. Even with less toxic materials, such RAILROADS GIRD TO as those containing free nicotine, care in handling is necessary, however. If MEET COMPETITION nicotine chemicals get on the clothes, the garments should not be worn again until the insecticide has been completely removed. Absorption of Seek Traffic Lost to Buses, nicotine through the skin may cause Planes and Autos. severe illness as it did in a case which the _ bulletin cites. A man sat on a Washington.—Railroads, out to re­ chair on which some' insecticide con- tainng 40 per cent free nicotine had capture passenger traffic lost to buses, been spilled.. Fifteen minutes later airplanes and private motor cars, are he was suddenly seized with nausea emphasizing speed, beauty and com­ and faintness. He spent four days in fort in developing radically different the hospital before recovering. Aft­ types of train equipment, geared to er discharge, he again donned the present-day needs. same clothing without cleaning. The Two Western lines have produced symptoms immediately returned and stream line trains, one of which re­ the victim spent four more days in the hospital. cently attained 104 miles per hour on It should not be necessary to warn a test run. Hundreds of thousands of against storing insecticides on shelves persons, including the President of with food stuffs or in the medicine the United States, displayed "boyish cabinet, the bulletin said, but cases of enthusiasm" in these llghtly-bullt, mo­ poisoning through mistaken identity tor-driver trains wherever they have of these substances are still reported. been on exhibition. Furthermore, containers which have "Other enterprising railroads are been used for storing or mixing in­ secticides should not Jater be used for trying to entice riders through elec­ drinking purposes. trification, automatic train-control, air- Care should be taken in the con­ conditioning, and the use of motor suming of fruits and vegetables coaches and 'rail-mobiles,'" says a bul­ which have been sprayed, lest too letin from the National Geographic great an amount of insecticide be society. "This summer American rail­ taken internally. Proper methods for roads are adding 700 air-cooled pas­ applying insecticides have been given senger and dining cars, doubling the to all producers in the state and the Dairy and Food Commission collects number now In operation. samples frpm the producers for ana­ "Night Club" Cars. lysis for lead and arsenic, not more "A New England railroad is build­ than one-thousandth of a grain per ing 'turtle-back* day coaches with pound being permitted. ovallzed bottoms and all moldings UP TO BRING _ Rainfall assists in washing exces­ eliminated to cut air resistance. 'Night sive amounts of insecticides from club' cars, with hostesses and music, some products,-but to be on the safe side all fruits and vegetables should made their appearance on Florida be washed thoroughly before eating. trains last winter, and pullmans com­ The stem end of the apple requires posed entirely of individual bedrooms more thorough washing since from are now in general use. One Western one-half to three-fourths of the total road is using green window glass in amount of lead arsenate is located at club cars making desert runs, to cut that end. Lead arsenate should not down light glare and give a 'cooling* be used for leafy vegetables, such as effect. Indirect lighting, reclining •cauliflower, spinach, lettuce and cab­ bage. _ To assure protection against seats in day coaches, and radios are insecticides on cabbages, the outer also making their appearance. leaves should never be used. Circu­ "The history of railroad transpor­ lar 100 of the Connecticut Agricul­ tation In the United States is a story • tural Experiment {Station contains of amazing development. At the out­ We • 4 much information concerning the use break of the Civil war the country had M • of the various insecticides. Wmmm5 less than 81,000 mlle3 of line, of which ' 'V'A. only about 2,000 were west of the Mississippi. It was not until February Yankee Colony in Paris 22, 1863, that sod was turned for the Drops Off to Only 7,000 first transcontinental line, on the Pa« Paris.—Hard times have caused the ciflc end at Sacramento. Not until "American City of Paris" to repatriate December 2 of the same year did work its "citizens" to the United States In begin in the Mississippi valley. to the record low price of such vast numbers that its size has de­ "Six years later, after many delays creased In the last four years from and after 225 miles of overlapping line 20,000 to 7,000. had been built, an agreement was MALER ADVERTISEMENT The remaining Americans are di­ reached whereby the two companies vided Into three groups: Hardened Joined forces, and the gold spike which long-timers and wealthy expatriates tied together the East and West was who have practically become French driven at Promontory, Utah (west of Corlnne), on May 10, 1869. NEW REDUCED PRICES except for their passports; the "big New Amount chiefs" of American business houses "The railroads, indeed, constitute still maintaining Paris offices (banks, the key that unlocked the treasure- STANDARD MODELS List Price Reduction Importing firms, news agencies, pur­ house of American resources. The Sj^prt Roadster $465 $25 chasing branches, etc.), and Americans story of the nation's rise to greatness Coach 495 25 and power Is an account of a succes­ who, In A. E. F. veteran parlance, have Coupe 485 25 a "life sentence"—or a French wife. sion of frontiers. This class Is probably the greatest of Push Back Frontiers. all, numbering 8,000 (including hus­ "At the beginning the frontier MASTER MODELS band, wife and children). stopped at the Blue Ridge mountains. Sport Roadster 540 35 The American colony In Paris Is The turnpike and the canal finally Coach 580 35 down to its pre-war size and shrinking pierced these heights and let It move Town Sedan 615 30 further. on to the Alleghenles. These became an Isolating Influence that held the Sedan 640 35 pioneers In the eastern half of the Coupe 560 35 Mississippi valley almost a separate Sport Coupe 600 35 AND UP, F. O. B. FLINT, MICHIGAN people from those on the Atlantic sea­ \ J. F. HYDACK board until the railroad builders' faith Sedan Delivery 600 45 Successor to S. L. Mitchell removed these mountains, as far as When Chevrolet announced price reductions several weeks ago, some­ Plumbing : Heating the flow of commerce and communica­ COMMERCIAL CARS tion was concerned. Commercial Chassis 355 30 thing important happened . . . something of vital concern to every 40 HIGH STREET "In turn the Mississippi river be­ Phone 196-5 Thorn psonville came the frontier. What was the good Utility Long Chassis 515 50 buyer of a low-priced car: Chevrolet stepped into the most favorable price position it has of the land west of the Father of Dual Long Chassis 535 50 enjoyed in a long time! Waters If that stream remained un- Utility Chassis and Cab 575 50 bridged? Dual Chassis and Cab 595 50 Reductions amounting to as much as $50—the most substantial price cuts announced in "Even as late as the early eighties J Francis Browne our people thought that lt was useless Utility Long Chassis and the low-price field this year—dropped Chevrolet's base price to a new low figure of $465. to build railroads through western Cab 605 50 UNDERTAKER Minnesota and the Dakotas, arguing Just compare this price—compare any Chevrolet price—with those of other cars. Then Residence, 158 Pearl Street Dual Long Chassis and Cab. 625 50 that the region was a desert in sum­ Commercial Panel 575 35 compare what you get for what you pay! There'll be no question in your mind which PHONES: mer and a wilderness of snow In win­ HOUSE 36-2 OFFICE 36-i ter. It took Custer's campaign against Special Commercial Panel. 595 35 car to buy, once you do. the Indians to persuade the public that Utility Panel 750 50 the Northern Pacific extension beyond Dual Cab and Stake Body.. 680 50 Chevrolet offers patented Knee-Action—and others do not! Chevrolet alone has a the Mississippi, at St Paul, could be kept open more than five months a Dual Long Cab and Stake Fisher body! And the same thing applies to cable-controlled brakes, Y-K frame, shock- EXCURSION year. Body 740 50 proof steering, and 80-horsepower, valve-in-head six-cylinder engine. Chevrolet gives "During the Civil war the South had Abort are Hat prices of passenger cars at Flint, Mich. With bumpers, spare tire and tire lock, the list price TO HEW YORK much less than a third of the nation's oi Standard Models is tl8 additional; Master Models, you far more features—far finer quality—a far better name for dependability. Yet the railways. These linked up distant $30 additional. List prices oi commercial oars quoted Sundays, July 8-15-22-29 are t.o.b. Flint, Mich. Special equipment extra. Prioe* price of the Chevrolet Standard is lower than that of any other six or, of course*' communities rather than industrial subject to change without notice. Compare Chevrolet's ROUND TRIP (tO OH centers. Comparatively few of them torn delivered prsoee and easy O.M.A.C. terms. A General any eight in the world. , RAILROAD FARE were strategic, whereas the North had Motors Value. LT. Springfield 7:00A.M. Lt. laompsonvlll* 7:15 A.M. rail connections admirably fitted for CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT# MICHIGAN1 DIM 125th St 10:15 A.M. the movement of men and munitions. Do* New York* 10:25 A.M. "In Europe the history of railway York* 6:30 P.M. construction has been that of roads Lt. 128th St 6:30 P.M. * Grand Central Terminal. laid down to meet the demands of 41 NORTH MAIN ST. EASTERN STANDARD TIME traffic already there. In this country PHONE 216 A day for sightseeing, visiting friends or tens of thousands of miles of line have relatives—baseball—theatre. Purch&s* tlcksts in advance. Number been built through virgin territory, THOMPSONVILLE limited to accommodation* on special which lt was hoped would grow up to LOUIS CHEVROLET CORP. coach train. their faculties." THE NEW HAVEN R. R. THE THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934 S FUNERAL OF MISS Fatal Crash of an Airliner at Lima, Peru !| a BRAIN/RD /"• pi HELD SATURDAY mm 6S DEtites for Enfield Street Woman Held From Her Late Home With Bur­ Lawn o wings ial in Family Plot in Adult and Children's Four Passenger Lawn Haddam Neck. 4." Swings made of hardwood, fully bolted, nat­ The funeral of Miss Cornelia 0. Sill ural varnish finish with red trimmings. "Brainard, 83, who died last Thursday J Frictionless, noiseless, non-squeaking, long after an illness of several weeks, was ADULTS held from her late home on Enfield wearing, metal hanger brackets and hooks. street Saturday afternoon and was largely attended by relatives and $9.95 An amazing low price for these popular, well friends, among whom were represen­ made and roomy lawn swings! — tatives from the organizations of CHILDREN'S which the deceased was a member Two aviators and a passenger were killed and three passengers, including the Chilean ambassador to the United States, were seriously Injured at Lima recently when an American Grace airliner crashed while taking off for San­ and there were many floral tributes tiago, Chile. This photograph shows the remains of the plane after the disaster. of esteem. Rev. Raymond A. Waser $5.95 Open Friday and Saturday Evenings of the Enfield Congregational Church, Miss Brainard's pastor, officiated, and "'Lead, Kindly Light" was sung by Unusual Offerings Of Mrs. Lerone P. Bower. LOCAL YOUNG VACATION HOLDS The burial took place in the Had­ Bigelow-Sanford Co. dam Neck Cemetery, where lie sever­ (Continued from Page One) J. FRANCIS BROWNE al generations of the Brainard kin­ MAN MARRIED MANY DANGEROUS dred, the first of whom, Daniel Brain­ STORE CLOSES AT 12:15 P. M., WEDNESDAYS DURING JUNE, JULY & AUGUST ard, was one of the founders and or­ ing and richly colored new Persians. iginal proprietors of Haddam, as IN WARE, MASS. Among the Beauvais' are a sand- HEALTH HAZARDS -were also the Shermans, Cones, Spen­ ——— ! taupe Persian, a rust Keshan, a rose cers, Brooks and Darts, ancestors of Miss Brainard in both paternal and Raoul Pruneau Weds^ ground delicately drawn Sarouk, a State Sanitary Engineer warm tan Kirman and maternal lines. Daniel Brainard was Miss Grace M. Rivard > >. a simple m0d-_ also the ancestor of David Brainard, . ^ . em design m beiges and browns, Warns Vacationists on BEGGARS LIVE HIGH the renowned missionary to the In­ in Ceremony at M-OUnt There will also be a smart classic dians. Water, Milk, Bathing AS MONEY ROLLS IN Miss Brainard's parents were Hen­ Carmel Church — Will Modern pattern. The Sanforstan line ry Sherman and Ursula (Brooks) tj • j u | features several Persians on taupe Spots and Eating Es­ Announcement Brainard, who removed from Haddam ttesiae xiere. jjaspe grounds, an intricate panel de- tablishments. England Finds Barnum's to this town when she was four years • |sign, and an adaptation of a lovely The Enfield Automobile Dealers' Association •P -D „„ » , 'Chinese brocade on a rich brown old and where the rest of her life was Estimate Too Modest. WISHES TO ANNOUNCE spent. For her Revolutionary ances­ Raoul Piuneau of this town was grouncji The Oriental reproductions Impure water, infected milk, dirty try she traced to her great-grandfa­ married to Miss Grace M. Rivard of are being augmented by a rose eating places, polluted bathing wa­ London.—How true the saying Is, ther, Benjamin Sherman. Ware, Mass., in a ceremony which'ground Kirman and a blue ground ters, while not very pleasant for one THE SUNDAY CLOSING OF ALL contemplating a vacation to think "there Is one born every minute," Is Miss Brainard was the oldest ac­ took place at Our Lady of Mt. Car- Sarouk in the Talamar line, and two emphasized by an interview In London tive member of the Woman's Club of rich rose Persians in the baromar about, are nevertheless health haz­ AUTOMOBILE SHOWROOMS mel Church there yesterday. The. ouajity with B. E. Astbury, Inquiry secretary Enfield and was also its oldest char­ ards for which every vacationist We hope the buying public will find it convenient to ter member at the time of her death. marriage ceremony was performed Among the new Axminster carpets should be on the look-out and which of the Charity Organization society. In 1903, she was chairman of the by Rev. C. Ernest Lapierre, who also are many splendid Hooked designs, he should carefully avoid if he ex­ Mr. Astbury is Inclined to think that, arrange all demonstrations the balance of the week. household economics committee of celebrated the nuptial mass that fol- especially in the Ashton and Beau- pects to return home in good health, In England at least, there Is more than (SIGNED) the club which conducted a very suc­ lowed. Mrs. Bertha Brodeur, organ- v?'s qualities. There are also sever- Warren J. Scott, director of the Bu- one born every minute, and tells of a usable reau of Sanitary Engineering of the cessful venture, a summer vacation ist, played the entrance march, and , fl small scale Moderns and some of the extraordinary methods em­ ENFIELD MOTOR CO. ANTHONY MOLINSKI sewing school that was attended by the Mt. Carmel Church choir, of flower-and-leaf patterns. In State Department of Health, warned in the department's weekly broadcast ployed by tricksters who specialize In JAMES T. KNIGHT FRANCIS H. CROMBIE 100 children, and was a continuation which the bride is a member, sang ^e Bigelow Imperial Axminster line begging letters, writes John Steele in of a project begun the year before by Leonard's mass. L. E. Leclair and ,e.r? !.s a beautiful Knman design today. MERRILL BROS. MOTOR CAR COMPANY w the Chicago Tribune. the civics committee, of which her Ulric Bouchard sang "Ave Maria." ^ich is noteworthy. Though it has The most serious and most common LOUIS CHEVROLET CORPORATION sister, the late Miss Ursula M. Brain­ The ushers at the church were two 'a_veVy.' ar&e scale, motif, the general disease hazard of the vacation is ty­ "In London today," he says, "there ard, was chairman. Miss Brainard cousins of the bride, Adelard Fleur- effect extremely level because of phoid or para-typhoid fever, and the lives a man who has for more than a TANGUAY MOTOR SALES had served the club in various other ent and Henry Deslauriers. i ®. ,s0^ c°l°r- Another Imperial best precaution against it, he said, is quarter of a century done nothing to •capacities, had been a director in the The bride's attendants were Miss which should be popular is a well cov- to receive an anti-typhoid innocula- earn a living except by writing beg­ e ed TUnfield Visiting Nurse Association Claire Fontaine. a cousin, as brides- ?' > beautifully drawn Kirman de- tion from the famly physician. The ging letters. He lives in a well ap­ and was an interested and valued maid, and the Misses Anita Fontaine s!^n, °,n a rich bla,ck ai}d b,lue lustra- innoculation which is usually admin­ sha istered in three doses at intervals of pointed flat in Kensington, has an of­ .member of Penelope Terry Abbey and Clara Berth iaume, representing ded ground. There is also a strik- fice and maintains a staff of clerks, Chapter, D. A. R., and the Enfield the Children of Mary parish organi- inJ? black g™und Empire design suit- about one week insures immunity branch of the Red Cross. She will be zation of which the bride was an ac- smart hotels, restaurants, from typhoid for from two to three and has an International organization greatly missed in these societies and tive member. Edward Rivard, a bro-! apartments, etc. years. which operates In America and on the A by many to whom she was endeared ther of the bride, served as the bestl , gi'eat many additions have been With the sanitary supervision of continent He poses alternately as an by friendly, kindly and generous man. The bride wore a gown of white' I"ad® t0 the Velvet carpet lines. In public water supplies by responsible ex-army officer, an ex-naval officer, and deeds. satin, princess model, trimmed with: ., Durant there are many things local officials and the State Depart­ a doctor of literature. Keep Spaces Filled Sherman Brainard of Waterbury, pearls, with a full length veil of tulle i suitable for contract installations— ment of Health, one may generally assume that a public water supply is "We first made the acquaintance of Raymond Brainard of Springfield and bordered with lace and cap trimmed j Moderns, Persians, all-over foliage this individual 25 years ago. Then he d sl ns s a a dependable source. The sparkling Dr. Harry Wrisley of New York, ne­ with pearls. She carried a bouquet of, f, ? > P i»sh and hooked types, was preying upon elderly women who phews of the deceased, and Leon R. white roses and lilies of the valley. al in strone> ?lear colors. Among stream on the hillside or the tempt­ In the Garden ! Abbe of Enfield acted as bearers at The bridesmaid's gown was of pinkloth®? Patterns m the Commonwealth ing well or spring may often be sub­ were interested in the suppression of the services. One brother, Charles taffeta and mousseline de soie, with | <1™^, "> .a handsome]Italian Renais- jected to pollution by some careless 'blood sports.' He formed, so he san ce desi n a bo ld Em ir person or by toilets and cesspools, H. Brainard, also another nephew, ' blue hat and shoes and bouquet of T S ' , P e pattern, claimed, i society for the purpose of Early Celery Plants Ready For Setting. Malcolm, and two nieces, Mrs. Leon pink tea roses. The Children of Mary!a Louis 16th, and an outstanding however. Avoid use of water from organizing a campaign to stop 'blood 1 11 ern- streams, wells and springs not ade­ R. Abbe, and Mrs. Louis N. Tyler of representatives wore gowns of white j ™, , T , . sports,' and subscriptions simply rolled Keep After the Bugs—Insecticides The quately curbed, covered and located, Haverhill, N. H., are the nearest sur­ satin with abbreviated veils. . popular Jackson Wilton qual- In. 1 has bee n was Mr. Scott's advice; if you have to viving relatives. Following the ceremony a recep-l ^ , augmented by 18 pat- "The man Is certainly one of the For All Purposes. tion was held at Artisan hall, out-of- tern.®to make an. usually wide and use water from a suspicious source, var boil it for five minutes. cleverest of begging letter writers, and TRY THE NEW MAGNESIUM ARSENATE town guests attending from Spring-i suitable for all pur- is always up to date in his ideas. Now $600,000 Chewing Gum field, Athol, North Attleboro, Indian P?ses a£d a11 sections of the country. If possible, only pasteurized milk DUST FOR MEXICAN BEAN BEETLE Orchard, Somersville, Hanover, N. H.,l Jhe self"tones and small repeating should be consumed, he declared. he has turned poet and a doctor of Exported to China in '33 North Stukely, P. Q., and this town!! fi»ui'es ai'e especially planned for ho- With reference to eating places, he literature, but of what university he • Puiping.—Last year China imported The couple left in the afternoon for ^ bedroom work as well as for m- urged that the public help to enforce does not say. s a a ;ions in ri a e the laws regarding sanitation and $000,000 worth of chewing gum. This a month's stay at Montreal, Sher-1 J 1 P 7 t homes. There amount is estimated to total about 70,- brooke and Granby, P. Q., Canada,iare also P1®11^ °f the bread-and-but- proper protection of food by refusing The Same Old Story. 000,000 strips. and upon their return will reside at' ^er tyPe black and taupe with to patronize places which observation "Then there is the dear old soul who Brainard Nursery & Seed Co. 19 Bartley Avenue, this town. The touches of color, and several good shows are insanitary. for years has been making a comfort­ The traditional Chinese equivalent looking lai'ge scale designs of the Polluted bathing waters are a po­ of gum is the watermelon seed, of bride wore a traveling ensemble of able living by telling of her hardships. | ENFIELD STREET PHONE 218-2 free-flowing scroll-and-flower type. tential disease hazard, although not Using accommodation addresses in dif­ which tons and tons are consumed yellow and brown with brown acces­ as dangerous as impure drinking wa­ each year throughout the width and sories. The bride is a daughter of ter since only a very small amount is ferent parts of London, she writes to Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Rivard of 47 titled people. Always it is the same breadth of this vast land. Park Avenue, Ware. She is a grad­ New Marking Makes Sun taken internally while bathing. It is While western movies and airplanes wise, Mr. Scott said, to inquire about story; her husband has Just died, she uate of Mt. Carmel School and St. Dial Accurate as Clock Is In terrible distress; owes $5 as rent. •and bombs have made deep inroads Ann's Academy in Marlboro. The the safety of bathing places to deter­ into Chinese social eustoms, the chew­ groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Alex­ State College, Pa.—A simple system mine that no sewer outlets or other And she encloses her 'rent' book of for making the readings of an ordi­ sources of pollution are dangerously course. ing gum idea apparently has not made ander Pruneau of St. Remi, P. Q., and near. much progress, except possibly in the was educated in Canada. nary sun dial as accurate as those of "In the last twenty years we have WE INYITE YOU TO metropolis of Shanghai, which is re­ a synchronized clock has been per­ known that woman, and I have at least ported to absorb about half the total fected by Prof. Leland S. Rhodes, de­ Burro Stages Comeback; a dozen of her 'rent books,' each very £um Imports. Tomb Erected by Villa partment of engineering, Pennsylvania carefully written up and showing the Few Chinese pass a day without for Himself Still Empty state college. Montana Orders Carload amount said to be owing. She uses Take Full Advantage To eliminate the sun dial error, Albuquerque, N. M.—The horse may a score of different names, and is most tracking a few dried seeds between Chihuahua, Chihuahua, Mexico.— their teetli, and It Is estimated that which may be as much as fifty min­ not be coming back, but the burro Is, sympathetic in her appeals. She never OF THE •very Chinese disposes of at least ten The ornate tomb which the late Fran­ utes, Professor Khodes inscribed sev­ at least in Montana. makes the mistake of writing to the cisco (Pancho) Villa ordered for him­ a day. If an arbitrary popula­ eral half circles on the dial instead of Sawyer Stores, Billings, Mont., firm, same person twice with the same story. •eeds self In the old cemetery, Panteon de tion of 400,000,000 is accepted it will the customary one, spacing them for recently sent an order here for a car­ That she makes a really splendid liv­ seen that gum has a long way to go. la Regla, remains empty. the different seasons of the year. load of burros, in sound health, broken ing at this sort of thing Is shown by At the height of his career as Mex­ Except for Shanghai, the only other Across the ends of the half circles he for riding, and suitable for children. the fact that only a few weeks ago we ico's "strong man," Villa ordered the marked the months and dates to which went to one accommodation address Service We Offer places in which chewing gum has been A search of Albuquerque and sub­ chapel built and expressed the wish able to get a tooth-hold are Peiplng, several semi-circles apply in comput­ urbs resulted in a shipment of less near London which she was using and .. A regular call and delivery service. Tientsin and a few other cities of to be burled there. ing the shadow reading in terms of than half a doz&n of the beasts of found more than 30 letters waiting for •similar size. Out in the provinces the Instead, his body lies In Parral, Chi­ standard time on a given day. burden. her there, and on the envelope of .. Quality cleaning and custom tailoring. watermelon seed remains first in the huahua, far from the spot he chose. nearly every one was a crest or a cor­ Besides hlg "tomb," Villa built ten affections of all Chinamen as a tasty Redhead Club Sees "Red" onet. .. Expert garment fitting and alterations. more for his most trusted aids, who Large Amber Mines Share "The begging writer specializes very pastime. were Faustino Borunda, one of his Over Accusations of in Recovery of Industry definitely. There Is one woman who .. A personnel trained to do each job well. most trusted men; Jose E. Rodriguez, Des Moines. — Thirteen flaming follows the birth announcements and shot by a firing squad In 1916; Donato haired members of the Des Moines Kotnigsberg.—The famous amber Immediately writes her appeal: 'How .. Fine fur storage accommodations. Guerra, Abraham Gonzales, Martlnano State House "Redhead Club" saw "red" mines on the East Prussian Baltic happy the new mother must be. Yet Serin, who was shot to death In 1915 recently when It was challenged that coast, long half dormant, are being I, who became a mother on the same because he refused to tell federals they were "dyed In the hair" rather worked on a 44-hour weekly schedule. day, am destitute and my child dead. where his chief was hiding; Andre# than "dyed in the wool" redheads. The "blue earth" deposits of Palm- Now I have nowhere to go, for my FLEMING'S nicken, close to the coast 30 miles Vargas, killed at Celaya; Anacleto The accusation came on a post card husband was killed in an accident only QUALITY CLEANERS AND TAILORS Glron, fatally wounded at the battle signed "Katherine Hepburn." But the from here, furnish 90 per cent or more a week before the child was born.' An­ of the world's amber supply. of Zacatecas In 1924; and RIcardo card was mailed In Des Moines. The other woman specializes on the engage­ Estelle Bldg. THOMPSONVILLE Phone 210 Zea, killed In the same battle. author said she had been employed in ment column and has a sad story to re­ the state house for several months. F. O. R.'» Portrait In Bead* late, ending with an appeal for help. Bostonians Eat Meat The redheads are searching for the Harrisville, N. H.—A portrait of Profession Overcrowded. unjust assailant, who declared that President Roosevelt, made entirely of Boston. — Boston, famous for Its "Then, of course, there Is always the out of the 13 heads of flaming red beads, has been completed by George baked beans, also has a taste for meat. old soldier or old sailor who writes locks "only one genuine." E. Duncklee. It took 27,000 beads to A survey revealed that Bostonians ate Is to widows of naval or military officers, make the 10 by 12-inch portrait. no less than 111,631,765 pounds of claiming to have served under their meat In 1933. husbands. Another clever and persist­ This Is Just a "Nautical" Illusion ent begging writer is a man who Don't Forget Next claims to have been employed at one Revolving Sign Used time by a firm of court jewelers in an exclusive part of London. The. man cer­ New Strength by Church in Texas tainly posssesses a list of old clients of Week's Payment Fort Worth, Texas.—A unique the firm, and writes his appeals to in Rimless Glasses revolving sign, propelled by two them, pretending to have done them a electric fans, now announces the service years ago. Regularity of deposits is the principle FUL-VUE NO-SCRU location of the church of Dr. J. "The profession of begging letter Frank Norrls, Fort Worth's Bap­ writing is rapidly becoming overcrowd­ of successful saving. Keep your Build­ First, there are no screws tist minister. ed. In the last twelve months we have through the lenses. Electri­ The sign Is the only moving had between. 8,000 and 4,000 more In­ ing and Loan Account growing. cally soldered pins hold the church sign In Fort Worth, a de­ : C quiries regarding the genuineness of lenses tightly and perma­ parture from the staid cornerstone letters than ever before." nently in place. Second, there name plates, and Is believed the In a recent police case In London It are tiny springs cushioning only one In the state. was revealed that a man had lived for the lenses against breakage. It Is rectangular and Is located wmm 20 years on begging letters, keeping THE THOMPSONVILLE atop of Doctor Norrls' church. It a man and woman servant, an automo­ revolves on a shaft. On each end x-,< ,> bile and four dogs. It was also stated BUILDING & LOAN A. B. MITCHELL of the sign, facing opposite direc­ that the man had a small cottage In tions, is an electric fan, providing the country, and went abroad every Jeweler and Optometrist ASSOCIATION locomotive power. •' illm —i year for a couple of months to avoid 12 PEARL ST. One side of the sign reads: London fogs and bad weather. Member «( Federal Home Loan Bank System Opposite lire Station "First Baptist Church." The oth­ This photograph from Aberdeen, Scotland, shows not a wreck but u trawler 86 Main Street ... Phone 46 Thompsonville, Ct. THOMPSONVILLE, CT. er side reads: "J. Frank Norris." In the trough of a huge wavfr as another trawler passea by. The boat* wew I American airplanen continue to leaving the harbor fo^ tiM fl&iife'jpouttdfc. ..U i'>.; /?.* i •• . • 1 ^ dominate the Chinese market. is <•.. » % , .. . -J**.., I -J. ' JlV '±.e.Z^ .«,» Si J A 1* . •S- .