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GRADUATION AT TRIAL OF DEATH THIRTY-THREE BUSINESS MEN

ENFIELD HIGH CAR DRIVER SET members of the local In­ TO GRADUATE STILL AGITATED dustrial Development Com­ SCHOOL TONIGHT mittee, who put up such a FOR JULY 2ND splendid fight for the location AT ST. JOSEPH'S OVER NEW RATES of the container plant of the Sixty-Two Pupils To Re­ National Biscuit Company in John J. Davis this town, and only lost out by Exercises Will Be Held Mercantile Section Not ceive Diplomas At Ex­ On Bail of $1,000 After a narrow margin to the city of In St. Patrick's Church Yet Reconciled To the Meeting of Tobacco Growers Here Last Sunday Beacon, N. Y., are feeling rath­ Afternoon Goes On Record Demanding Inves­ ercises in the Auditor­ A Preliminary Hearing er gratified at a letter received Next Sunday; Program Increase in Fire Insur­ this week by Chairman Harry tigation of the Manner in Which the Affairs of ium—Other Events Of in the Local Court Yes­ Squirsky of the Committee. The and List of the Grad­ ance Rates Which Are Commencement Week. communication is from the head Valley Tobacco Association Have terday Morning. / of the industrial bureau of the uating Class. Now In Effect. New York, New Haven & Hart­ Been Conducted—Receivership Urged. Excepting the farewell" dance to­ John J. Davis, the M. I. T. student ford Railroad. This bureau had The graduating exercises of the The new fire insurance rates in the morrow evening, the annual com­ who was the driver of one of the cars taken an active interest in the class of 1927 of St. Joseph's Paroch­ mercantile section of the town, which Charges of mismanagement, inef­ know. It should be determined once mencement week will end with the that was involved in the fatal acci­ industrial aspiration of the com­ ial School, will be held next Sunday Were recently put in force, continue ficiency, and diversion of funds which and for all whether the condition was graduation exercises at the High dent on Enfield street. Monday even­ mittee, and while so doing had morning at 10:30 in St. Patrick's resulted in irregularities that are tan­ due to inefficiency or dishonesty. made a thorough survey of the Church. Thirty-three pupils will re­ to agitate the business men of the School Auditorium this evening. Six- ing, was given a preliminary hearing tamount to dishonesty on the part of Former Senator George Christoph availability of the town for in­ ceive their diplomas from the school towfi, and seem certain to be publicly of Warehouse Point who was next tv-two students will receive their dip­ in the local coujrt yesterday morning. dustrial development. The let­ from the pastor, Rev. D. J. O'Con­ aired in some manner before they be­ the officials, 300 members of the Con­ necticut Valley Tobacco Growers' As­ called upon by the chairman, stated lomas from that institution. Miss On his request for a continuance of ter confirms the fact that the nor, who will also deliver the address come reconciled to them. While in a that he came to the meeting to lis­ Doris Caskie, who is the student re­ the case pending his recovery from industrial prize had gone to the to the graduating class. Rev. Edwin ! sociation, at a meeting held in the ten. He had no previous knowledge ceiving the highest honors, will be the injuries received in the accident, New York State city, but at the Gaffney, principal of the school, will rare instance the new rates have low­ Franklin Theatre last Sunday after­ of the plans to be presented to the the valedictorian of the class, and the the hearing was postponed until July same time it congratulates the celebrate the high mass, which will ered the premium charge, they have noon, unanimously voted to take steps meeting, but while he was in sym­ second honor student, Miss Helfene 2. A cash bail of $1,000 was furnish­ committee on its splendid ef­ be a part of the exercises, and also almost entirely caused an increase to force an investigation of the af­ pathy with a movement to end the Percival will be the salutatorian. The ed for his appearance on that date. fort, and the great possibilities the benediction which will be offered which varies according to the char­ fairs of the Association and secure affairs of the association, he wonder­ various prizes and awards for excel­ Davis is being held responsible for for industrial development of up at the close. acter of the property and the condi­ the appointment of a receiver to wind ed if it would not be done by the lence in scholarship and other distinc­ a serious automobile accident which the town which the effort of the The complete program of the ex­ tions surrounding it. There are a up the business of the organization. Board 'of Directors. It might be pos­ tive achievements in connection with occurred latg Monday evening oppos­ committee had so fully demon­ ercises is as follows: Processional, few cases where the addition to the This action was taken after several sible to get back something of the the school work will be announced by ite the Weeden homestead in King strated. Incidentally it assures selected; assembly of the graduating previous cost of the insurance is on­ speakers had expressed their opinion losses that way. He raised 55 acres Supterintendent Edgar H. Parkman. street, when an automobile driven by the committee that the indus­ class; hymn, "To Christ, the Prince ly nominal but in the vast majority of the officials in no uncertain terms, of tobacco and it was not necessary Superintendent of Schools Edgar H. him collided with a car operated by trial bureau will "keep on the of Peace." 6th, 7th and 8th grade of the buildings in the business sec­ during which it was charged that un­ to say how much he lost—but the Parkman. Principal Karl D. Lee will Joseph Kennedy of Hartford, and as job" in its co-operation uptil girls; high mass, celebrant, Rev. Ed­ tion, the increase has been from 25% less immediate . action were taken past is past—and could not the man­ have charge of the exercises. a result Mr. Kennedy's ten months something just as good in the win Gaffney; address to the grad­ i to 100%.. there would be nothing left for the agement wind up the organization. The complete program is as fol­ old daughter, Dorothy, who was rid­ way of an industrial plant is uates, Rev. Daniel J. O'Connor; pres­ | The merchants and property own­ members in the way of a financial ing in the Kennedy car was killed in­ ers in this area are naturally in a return from the tobacco now in the Thomas F. Burke of the commit­ lows: Music, processional, "Gradua­ landed in Thompsonville. entation of diplomas, Rev. Daniel J. tee that arranged the meeting, reply­ tion March" (Ascher) high school or­ stantly. Mr. Kennedy was traveling O'Connor; act of Consecration to the highly disgruntled state over the sit­ hands of the association if the offic­ uation, and many of them are pro­ ials were permitted to dissolve the ing to Mr. Christoph, stated that the chestra; invocation, Rev. W. D. Ham­ south over the main highway from Sacred Heart of Jesus, graduates; best legal talent had been interview- ilton; music. "Angels' Serenade" Springfield to his home in Hartford. benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, posing various plans to overcome this organization. additional cost of insuring their prop­ The meeting last Sundav, as ex-; ?d- W'-th regard to the possibility of (Bruga), quartette; salutatory With him in the car were his wife, celebrant, Rev. Edwin Gaffney; hymn, bnn m abo with essay, "What Comes Next?" his mother, his brother, George, his SATURDAY NIGHT "Raise Your Voices, Vales and Moun­ erty. Most of them are inclined to plained bv Thomas F. Burke of East! £. e "t a dissolution of the (second honor), Helene Percival; es­ baby daughter, Dorothy, Duncan J. tains," 6th, 7th and 8th grade girls; meet the situation by a reduction in Hartford, who called it to order, was |association through some action of the amount of the insurance they are the result of several conferences andw16 dlrectors, but it was found that say, "Industrial Connecticut," David 01jver and Miss Rushleau of Laurel recessional, selected; organist, Miss ould n Brainard; music, violin duet, (a) street, Hartford. WILL SEE END OF Dorilda Castonguay. carrying, while others insist that the committee meetings by the represen-ll f f>t be done. The directors "Norwegian Dance," (Greig), (b) The heavy sedan driven by Davis, The following is the list of grad­ rate is almost prohibitive, and that tatives from the several districts that ; u perpetuated themselves in office they will be forced. to cancel their have been for some time dissatisfied1 v°ting to hold no election this "Herd Girls' Dream" (Sabitzky), which was said to have been travel­ uates: Catherine Elizabeth Cunning­ year and as the majority was favor­ Ciro Lampiasi '30, and Leo Lepore ing at the rate of 40 miles an hour, THE BIG BAZAAR ham, Edna Patria Fahey, Dorothy policies entirely. Some have gone so with the manner in which the affairs was going in the direction of Spring­ Elizabeth Kelley, Mary Elizabeth Sul­ far as to suggest the organization of the association are managed. For­ able to the position of the officials, '30; essay, "Italian Masters of the of a mutual insurance company, but mer Representative Michael J. Con­ there was nothing could be accom­ Renaissance," Rosalie Mazzini; essay, field and was swerving from one side livan, Mary Frances Campbell, Mar­ plished in that direction. He then •"Poetry of Yesterday and Today," of the road to the other. The force Two More Nights Left garet Elizabeth Ringwald, Alice Eliz­ just how far such a movement will nor of Enfield was named as chair­ of the collision was sufficient to de­ abeth Cormier, Antoinette Catherine get is problematical. man of the meeting and Harold New- presented the following petition for Ruth Hughes; essay, "Grand Opera Of the Mammoth Out- The local insurance men, while ad- berry of South Windsor, who with adoption and the signature of the as Revealed in Rigoletto," Louise Gal- molish both cars. Passing motorists Tanulas, Helen Mary McDonnell, An­ members: "We, the undersigned mem­ and nearby residents worked franti­ na Elizabeth Moran, Mary Agnes Al­ mitting that the new rates are caus Thomas F. Burke of East Hartford imberti; music, "The Heavens Re­ Door Festival of Wash­ ing them an endless amount of and Richard Devitt of Burnside act­ bers of the Connecticut Valley To­ sound" (Beethoven), Glee Club; es­ cally to remove the occupants. As len, Eileen Virginia Fleming, Anna bacco Association, Inc., a company or­ fast as they were taken from the Catherine Czepulis, Josephine Anna trouble, state that so far there have ed as the committee to arrange the say, " Intervention in ington Irving Council been no cancellations and very few meeting, was elected secretary. ganized and existing under the laws Nicaragua," Harold Rapoport; vale­ wreckage they were placed in priv­ Gannuscio, Helen Cecelia Stack, Mary the of ate machines and taken to hospitals. at Cottage Green Park. Anna Misuraca, Laura Mary La reductions in the amount of the pol­ Chairman Connor briefly outlined I - State , Connecticut, having dictory (first honor), Doris Caskie; icies. They state that much of the the purpose of the meeting and call- .t?"jC1- ,of, busmess at class song, Jeannette Woodward and In the Davis machine was Thomas Grange, Helen Marie Toolan, Irene n s Gerard of Cambridge and two girls, Mary Chaine, Arthur Raymond La trouble over the new schedule is that ed upon Secretary Newberry as the |", i' - ? State, hereby record Helene Percival, class of 1927; pre­ The big out-door bazaar of Wash­ first speaker. Mr. Newberry "declar-! , V5S m fjT°r. °* th.e immediate sentation of class gifts, George Crom- Miss Alberta Babb of Boston and Grange, Joseph Andrew Noreika, Ar­ it is new and the men whom it af­ ington Irving Council, Knights of Co­ thur Moses Gebo, Louis Joseph Gates, fects have not had time to analize it. ed himself heartily dissatisfied with i " iqU1+?tlon of said bie, president of class; music, "An­ Miss Miriam Clifford of Roxbury. lumbus, will close Saturday night at and for Miss Clifford has a broken should­ Joseph Louis Di Maria, John Henry It had been known for nearly a year the way the business of the associa- 1? ' these purposes, dante Cantabile from First Sym­ Cottage Green Park. This means that in insurance circles that the new rate tion had been conducted almost from | jn™ J?e PFP0S_e of bringing about phony" (Beethoven), high school or­ er and possible internal injuries and there are two more nights of this big Sullivan, George Francis Sheridan, an investigation of the past and pre­ Miss Babb is suffering from cuts and Harold Joseph Hines, Ernest Timothy was going to be put in force here. the beginning. He had been trying chestra; conferring of diplomas, Dr. annual event, for the festival is also It is kno\tfn among insurance men for four and one-half years to bring- sent affairs of said corporation, as Thornton E. Vail, president of the bruises. Gerard and George Ken­ scheduled for tomorrow night. The Gaudette, Harold Thomas Pryce, Ed­ may be legally permitted, authorize nedy, brother of the driver, sustained ward James Malley, Terrence Joseph as the Dean System, the principal of about a reform of the "ruinous meth­ school board; announcement of prizes, entertainment plans for the two re­ which was to make an individual bas­ ods that was be;ng employed in its the institution of proper legal or Superintendent Edgar H. Parkman; severe scalp wounds, while Mrs. Jo­ maining nights are in keeping with Furey, Peter Joseph Egan, Raymond equitable action in our name, in the seph Kennedy, Sr., suffered from sev­ Joseph Morrison. ic rate for each property and then management." He criticised the at­ music, "America, the Beautiful" the high character of the amusement penalize it for all additional fire haz­ titude of the management, and the names of any of us, or otherwise." (Ward), school and audience with or­ ere scalp wounds and a fractured features which have been provided by The honor pupils of the graduating knee. Duncan J. Oliver and the oth­ class are Catherine Cunningham, Ed­ ards that are permitted to exist in largeO salaries- ~ that theW1IV officialsV/lilC Idl O 1had iclvl #» J.V. Christoph opposedC theJL tr signingOlg m I I chestra accompaniment. the committee for the three nights and around the property. These haz­ voted themselves, while many of the I ?* the Petition on the grounds that The following are the names of the er occupants of the Kennedy car were which the^festival has already been na Fahey, May Sullivan, Margaret not seriously injured. Davis receiv­ Ringwald, Antonia Tanulas, Anna ards are determined by a survey of members received practically no re- it would obligate every man whq members of the class of 1927 grad­ held. - the condition of each piece of prop­ turns from their crops. "W^here has V' ^°, ProP°rtionate share uating this evening, the asterick (*) ed cuts about the face and injuries Tomorrow evening, the vaudeville Moran, Mary Campbell, Alice Corm­ to his legs, and was unable to give ier, Dorothy Kelly, Agnes Allen. The erty covered. While these penalties the money gone?" demanded Mr. ol the legal and court expenses of indicating the honor students: Aca­ musical team of Martin and Storen are all charged up to the property Newberry. He cited the instance of the receivership and he stated that demic—Edward Harold Abrahamson, an account of how he had sustained will be the headline attraction on the class day exercises will be held in his injuries, nor could he tell how he St. Joseph's School tomorrow after­ and accordingly serve to increase the the bank at Hartford which is hand­ ne as well as other members of the Randall George Bostick, *David Wil­ entertainment list, and this act is rate when the policy is put in force, ling the funds of the association, be­ association, had some costly exper­ liam Brainard, Francis Graham Car­ reached the Green Tree Inn in En­ said to be an exceptionally good one. noon at 2 o'clock, with the following field street. Dr. Thornton E. Vail at­ prgram: Class history, Helene Mc­ they are remitted in every instance ing paid $20,000 for its services when iences in signing papers in the past, ey, Clarke Albert Carle, *Doris Stew­ The ever amusing Charleston contest where the hazard has been removed. he, as a bank director, could state m yth tended Davis at the Inn and notified will also be held tomorrow night, and Donnell; class poem, Mary Campbell; ' i? . of Enfield agreed ard Caskie, *Margaret Kathryn Con­ class prophecy, Margaret Ringwald; The insurance men here are satis­ that any bank would be glad to handle with. Mr.,. Christoph» and— — stated nor, George David Crombie, Bernice the police, Chief of Police Clyde W. should prove no mean attraction. On celve Harris arresting him Tuesday morn­ class characteristics, Harold Hines; fied that when the situation is thor­ the account without charge, because I rships were long drawn-out and Marguerite Dockham, Raymond Jo­ Saturday evening there are to be two oughly understood, that much of the it carried a balance of from $100,000 ^„p®5_slYf af£?ir?„aild cited as an in seph Fanelli, Edith Mary Gatto, ing. high class vaudeville numbers, both class will, Agnes Allen. Patrolman Leonard Barton was the agitation will cease and the proper­ to $400,00p. He urged an immediate stance the Hartford and Springfield James Jackson Green, *Ruth Eliza­ of whom have been billed regularly ty owners will proceed to remove the investigation and demand for an ac­ otieet Railway which took several beth Hughes, Deane Horsfall Ingra- first to reach the scene of the acci­ on the "big time" circuits. They are dent and he was later joined by State Miss Bergen Honored hazards wherever they exist, and counting, for he was satisfied that if years of a receivership to settle its hani, Dorothy Anna King, Martha "Billy" Ziegler, in his champion jug­ which in a large measure is respon­ the management was left to carry affan-s. Mr. Burke stated that all Ruth Leggett, *Rosalie Virginia Maz­ Policeman Anthony Buddes and Chief gler act, and Bacon and Pardner in of Police Harris. The officers found At Prs-Nuptial Event sible for the advance in the cost of out its announced intentions of bring­ that the signing of the petition com­ zini, Hugh Richard Mc-Cann, William a unique acrobatic act. Saturday ev­ their insurance. On the other hand ing about a dissolution of the organ­ mitted the members to, was to bear Merrill, James Smith Miller, Rosella two bottles in the Davis car which ening also the finals of the Charles­ in their opinion contained liquor. Mr. Popular Local Girl is Recipient Of some of the business men who have ization, they would eat up all the their share of the voluntary contri­ Agnes Muldoon, John Gould O'Brien, ton contest will be held. familiarized themselves with the new equity that the members had in the bution for which they would sign for "Helene Claire Percival, *Evelyn Davis stated he had knowledge of The additional interesting event for Many Beautiful Gifts In Honor Of their having been a pint bottle in the Approaching Marriage At Shower rates and the conditions surrounding organization before the job was com­ to defray the expenses of the inves­ Westervelt Phelps, ""Harold Rapopoi-t, Saturday night will be the drawing them, insist that the surveys in many pleted. tigation which would be made a pre­ Carlo Louis Seavotto, Wilson Henry machine, but he felt positive there and distribution of the valuable prizes Event Last Monday Evening. was not a second bottle. He said he Mrs. Martin Bergen, Jr., of Pleas­ instances exaggerated the situation Albert Fricke of East Hartford, liminary to the court action on the Taylor, Jeannette Anita Woodward, that have been offered in connection and the insurance representatives who was the next speaker, stated that receivership. It was brought out lat­ Stanley Adolph Yesukiewicz. did not take a drink and soon after with the festival. The big prize, ant street and Mrs. Milton Young of have gone to extremes to find cause he had been dissatisfied with theIUV. man-nielli- er<» on in the. meeting"*o that theVJIC costLUOt the accident was examined by a local which will be given away on this Burns Avenue were hostesses for a Vocational—Elma Clark Akerley, very enjoyable miscellaneous shower, for penalizing the property owners. agement of the association for three |°? t^ receivership would come from physician who said there was noth­ night, will be a complete dining room e Doris Bramwell, Ida Elizabeth Brien, a surprise pre-bridal event which It is from this angle that much of years. He laid particularly severe: » funds of the association and not ing about the man to indicate that set, which will include in addition to rom *Rita Isobel Burns, Cotilda Mary they gave for the former's sister-in- the discussion will be conducted in strictures----- on the- merchandising....u.iuioiug ijui-;..pol-1 ; trie members of the organiza Cardone, Henry Raymond Cormier, he had been drinking. the regular dining room furniture, a on w law, Miss Anna Virginia Bergen, at the future as many of the poli... icy. of the association. He had urg-__0 "° would sign the petition seamless Wilton rug, set of silver and edJ 1 Anna Patricia Cowhey, *Ruth Helena holders will make individual dc-.-.v.n is i the use of an organized sales force a set of dishes. There will be danc­ the Recreation hall on Asnuntuck - ' ' ' " Charrman Connor at this point stat­ Dolan, Martha Marie Ebel, Ethel Ma­ Future Bride Given street Monday evening. Green and for a re-survey or re-adjustment of - expert tobncrn men to handle th ed that while a few had been called bel Fiedler, Edward Daniel Foley, ing both evenings, and the famous their rates. .v.jpi. The method of "dumping high midway will also be in full operation. white were the colors of the hall dec­ upon to express their opinion, the * Louise Madeline Galimberti, Clara Shower Monday Night orations and the table, where supper This sys.tetii has been 'n op:vation g;adc tobacco on the market at 25 meeting was a thoroughly democratic Shauger Hamilton, *Margaret Ann was served at 10 o'clock, was all in for some time in the h'i:iule West, ! vnts a pound and thereby causing gathering and every one present was Hannon, William Francis Kelley, Miss Albertine Chouinard Honored white with four bouquets of beauti­ and has within the past year cv t.vj ' the loss of millions to the members entitled to be heard. He said that George Kerry Knight, Eleanor Ther­ By Over 50 Friends At the Home St. Bernard's Lawn ful pink roses. A large basket been installed in Springfield, Hart­ of the association was enough to inasmuch as there were several lad­ esa Luke, Eileen Rose Malley, Agnes of Mrs. Gertrude Moran on Hart­ Party Next Week daintily decorated in orchid contain­ ford, Rockville, Winsted, and other arouse the red blood in any man's ies present and that many women Elizabeth Maloney, Ruth Eileen Noll, ford Avenue Monday Evening. ed the great variety of shower gifts municipalities in this state. Local veins," declared Mr. Fricke. He want­ were members of the organization, Doris Katherine Norian, John Fran­ Mrs. Gertrude Moran entertained of use and beauty. This was placed insurance men admit that it caused ed an accounting before another some of them should give their opin­ cis Novak, Marjorie Violet Pare, at. her home on Hartford Avenue on Annual Three Night Event Will Open considerable of a furore in every in­ pound of tobacco was sold. He told ""Teresa Mae Rochette, Alice Cecelia Next Thursday Evening on Parish upon the stage, where the packages ion. He charged that an attempt had Monday evening, in honor of Miss were opened by Miss Bergen. Danc­ stance when it was first inaugurated, of the instance of an estate of a been made by the officials of the as­ Rowan, John Ramsey Rutherford, An­ Albertine Chouinard of Russell street Lawn—Interesting Program to Be ing the Charleston and other steps but that the situation was eventually grower in Glastonbury, who was a sociation to influence members to na Catherine Savage, Peter Paul whose marriage to Joseph Plamondon Presented Each Evening. by Miss Anna O'Connor, piano music, accepted and the agitation against it member of the association and had i keep away from this meeting. The Strekas, Matthew Francis Sypek, will take place Wednesday morning, An amusement event which is look­ singing and games provided other en­ died down. One of the benefits that ,,turned , , inln ,thethe crops of 1923-24 and ! purpose he stated was to forestall Madeleine Watson, Raymond Edward ed forward to, by not only the Haz­ it brings, according to the insurance when 1 ls White, *Amelia Sophie Zawada. June 29, at 9 o'clock in St. Patrick's ardviile section of the town in which tertainment. There were about 45 « c, ? i executor went to]any action that would prevent them Church. This very pleasant pre-nup- friends present. The marriage of men, is that where formerly all build­ the ottice on State Street to inquire j from drawing their large salaries as Commencement week opened Mon­ tial event was a surprise miscellan­ it is held, but the residents also of Miss Bergen to Thomas F. Connor ings were put in at practically the aboutn,,t itlf he was +told"1'' that "thereu was Jong as possible. A lot of money had day night with the annual class night eous shower, the friends of the bride- this part of the community, is the will take place Tuesday the 28th, in same basic rate, the material of which nothing coming to the estate." A been lost by the members already exercises, which were held in the high elect who were guests numbering 50. annual three night lawn party of St. St. Patrick's Church at 9 o'clock. the building is constructed will be Hartford law firm had received $65,- and it was time that action was tak­ school auditorium. Music was fur­ The gifts, comprising numerous beau­ Bernard's Parish. This annual event, Miss Bergen is employed in the brus- given consideration in making the 000 for its services to the association en to salvage something from the nished by the high school orchestra tiful and useful articles were con­ which is scheduled this year for sels department of the Bigelow-Hart- premium rate in the future. On the in the past five years, and a few men wreck. to the marching number of which the tained in a wagon attractively decor­ Thursday, Friday and Saturday of ford -Carpet Co., and Mr. Connor at other hand the new schedule includes were receiving salaries that amount­ He told of a case that he had per­ members of the graduating class next week, has always been attended in its penalties the character of the ed to $100,000 a year for managing ated in lavender and white and drawn by a large number from this part of the Enfield Garage on North Main sonal knowledge of, a woman who marched into the auditorium and took into the living room by Mary Mor­ street. buildings which surround the proper­ the association. He favored an in­ went to the office of the association seats on the stage. The address of an, prettily dressed in white. Just the town. It is held on the parish ty which is insured. The new rate vestigation that would reveal where ft- Hartford just previous to Christ­ welcome was delivered by George before the presentation Miss Chouin­ lawn, and about every form of diver­ does not affect long term policy hold­ every dollar of the association's mon­ mas and begged for some of the Crombie, president of the class, and ard was showered with confetti from sified entertainment that it is pos­ Fish and Game Club ers until the expiration of their pres­ ey was spent. money that was coming to her so the program was then carried out in a large, white wedding bell suspended sible to devise for such occasions is ent policy. By this means many of "If something is not done now, that she might buy the children some the following order: Class history, from the chandelier. A buffet lunch­ provided. There will be a special To Open New Home the local business men who hold the there will be nothing left," declared toys and gifts for Christmas. She William Kelley; class prophecies, vaudeville entertainment each even­ eon was served at 10:30 o'clock and three-year policies will escape the Richard Devitt of Burnside. He urg­ did not receive any and the officials William Taylor, Eleanor Luke, Ruth one of the entertainment features of ing and also dancing. The plans for Formal Opening of Club House Will additional rate until the expiration ed that some action be taken immed­ only "snickered" at her as she left the Dolan and Marie Ringwald; class the evening was dancing of the Char­ tht affair are being made by a par­ Be Held Next Sunday—Public In­ of that period. iately to close the thing up. George office weeping. He forcibly pointed statistics, Jeannette Woodward and leston by Mrs. Frederick Gemme and ish committee headed by the pastor, vited To Attend Exercises in Con­ Case of South Windsor urged immed­ out that the control of the associa­ Clarke Carle; class jingle, Ethel Fied­ Miss Lena Rivard. There was also the affair are being made by a par- nection With the Event. iate action for the purpose of undo­ tion which was originally intended to ler and Elma Akerley; class presen­ music and games. Rev. Thomas J. Picker. Among the The new club house of the Enfield Board of Management ing some of the wrongs that had be in the hands of the growers, had tation, Dorothy King and Hugh Mc- gifts to be given away in connection Fish and Game Association will be been done. It had been hard work to been taken from them entirely by the Cann; advice to the undregraduates, with the festival is a complete hope formally opened next Sunday. Not of Loan Ass'n Meets start the association, but it proved board of directors and the officials of Stanley Yesukiewicz; response for the Hazardviile Plans To chest. This valuable prize is on ex­ only will the new home be opened no benefit to the growers, who for­ the organization. The full authority school, Sabath Nigro; class will, hibition in the window of the store for the first time to the full member­ $20,000 Construction Loans Granted merly could clear from $500 to $800 is now in the hands of two paid of­ Jackson Green. The class song writ­ Observe the "Fourth" of J. Francis Browne. ship of the association on that day, and Several Additional Applications an acre on his crop. Now he got ficials of the organization and the ten by Jeannette Woodward with mu­ but the general public who might be Received and Referred To Apprais­ nothing, and will get nothing if they Hartford banker who handles the sic by Helene Percival, was rendered Program Calls for Parade in Morn­ Two young ladies from Thompson­ interested in the organization is to ers—Assets Now About $400,000. let the thing go on. Officials will on­ money of the association. The mem­ by the class as the closing number ing, Two Games and Track ville, Miss Mary E. Browne and Miss be afforded an opportunity to inspect The monthly meeting of the board ly close up when their salaries cease. bers had lost confidence in the direc- of the exercises. and Field Events in the Afternoon Pearl Jandreau, and Miss Grace Cor­ the club house on that date. The of management of the Thompsonville "We should look for the crooked tors who seemed to be afraid of the The closing event of the school and Band Concert in the Evening. bin of Suffield will be graduated from committee in charge is making ex­ Building and Loan Association was work, if there is any, in the organiza­ officials, and were only tools in the year will take place tomorrow even­ The residents of the village of the New Britain Normal School next tensive arrangements for the occas­ held in the town building, Monday tion," he urged. The abrogation of hands of "Joe" Alsop and the other ing in the auditorium when the mem­ Hazardviile are arranging for the us­ week Tuesday. Miss Browne is the ion, and according to the tentative evening. The report of the delegates the second five-year contract was managers of the association. bers of the class of 1927 will be the ual Independence Day celebration. A daughter of Mrs. J. Vincent Browne program which has been prepared, of the state convention of the Con­ started in his home, Mr. Case stated. Exception was taken to the latter guests _ at the farewell dance. Music committee of which Harry Bridge is of Church street, Miss Jandreau of there will be an opportunity for a necticut League of Building and Loan Louis Grant of Buckland favored a statement by Thomas Norton of for this event will be furnished by chairman, is making plans for the Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Jandreau of real day's enjoyment presented to the Associations, which was held last complete audit of the books of the Broad Brook, a director who was pre­ Si Yaffe's orchestra of Hartford,, and event which will be on the usual large Bigelow Avenue and Miss Corbin of members of the association and their month in New London, was made to association. It should be determined sent. Mr. Norton declared that he the dancing in ^charge_of Henry Mar-scale on which the event has been Mr. and Mrs. Ira Corbin of East friends. The program provides for the meeting by President Schwabe, where the money has gone and if it was not "afraid of Mr. Alsop or Mr. tens of Springfield. The members of carried out for years. The Committee street, Suffield. Miss Browne and musical and literary exercises, athlet­ who headed the delegation. Construc­ had been honestly spent, and the Connor or anybody else." Mr. Con­ the committee in charge are Donald reports that the people of the village Miss Jandreau have been assigned to ic events and the serving of a lunch­ tion loans to the amount of $20,000 work of the association efficiently nor, in reply, cited one instance of a Hibbard, Anna Cyganus, Thelma Ad­ are just as enthusiastic as ever for grade schools in the A. D. Higgins' eon to members and friends. Follow­ were granted and several additional done. He criticised the management meeting of the directors which he at­ ams, Mary Stinson, Wilson Pryce. Al­ the celebration, and are giving it building and Miss Corbin will teach ing the formal opening of the club applications received and referred to and stated the officials were disloyal tended where things occurred which bert Bielitz, James Crombie, Anna splendid support. The tentative pro­ in the East street School, in Suffield. house, it will be used exclusively by the appraisers. The assets of the to the growers. The farmers were required some evidence of backbone, Pumiglio and Herbert Taylor. gram as far as it has been arranged, the members of the association for association are now approximately being blamed by them, but the in­ but it was not displayed by Mr. Nor­ calls for a parade in the morning, Miss Mary Simonton, who has com­ outings and recreation. Members of $400,000. vestigation would place the blame ton or anyone else. Mr. Devitt of Mrs. Charles D. Bent of Burns which will be led by Colt's Band of pleted her sophomore year at Russell the association having tickets for the where it belonged. It had been charg­ Burnside expressed the opinion that Avenue spent the week-end and Mon­ Hartford, two baseball games and Sage College in Troy, N. Y., is at prize to be given away in connection Miss Margaret Macready of Akron, ed that there was grafting among the some of the directors had been in­ day with her cousins, Mrs. Frederick track and field sports in the after­ home for the summer vacation with with the club house dedication, are O., has come to spend the summer officials and if so it should be expos­ dependent enough, but their trouble Cady of Stafford Hollow and Miss noon, and a' concert by Colt's Band her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Frank F. requested to make returns for them with her brother, John Macready of ed. If any stealing had taken place Celia Holt of Stafford Springs. in the evening. Simonton. before next Sunday. Church street. the members and the public should (Continued on Page 8.)

u". A . * ' s • • t * "*•? «V 4 *•« i : V.*"••f • '-' i y:-.y 't-\K :.f " TWO THE THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1927 street to Amos D. Bridge's Sons, Inc., Injury By Motor To grown-ups a day were down or ed, and conservation agents reported 7 School Street, Hazardville, Gonn., TOWN CRIERS' DUEL otherwise injured by automobiles in that as many as 150 muskrats were HIGHWAY DEP'T bid $66,331.65; Towns of Guilford and Children On Increase that period of this year, while ten a seen on a single raft. I Madison, 9,489 feet of highway to day fell victims of motor vehicles in i Conn. National Pavements, Inc., 69 ROCKS BRITISH TOWN Mangrove trees flourish in sea the first quarter of 1926. water, which is deadly to most flow­ AWARDS TWELVE 'Middletown Avenue, New Haven, A Much Higher Average For This |Conn., bid $66,924.78. The greater percentage of accidents ering plants. Form oit Motor Vehicle Accident is Shepherd's pipes, long used for call­ S8 Towns of Waterbury and Middle- One of Contestants Has Noted For the First Three Months to children, at a- time when some ing flocks together, are seldom heard More than half a million tractors , ....^IpNEW CONTRACTS bury, 20,739 feet on Waterbury- of Present Year by State Dept. safety authorities were beginning to in Queensland; Australia. Sheep now are helping in the work on American Middlebury Road to M. A. Gammino take hope .that the campaign to re­ being fed from autos, the sound of farms. w.'wws' v* * ' " ' " ' ; Range of Seven Miles. Motor vehicle accidents involving Our ten largest cities hold a sev­ Construction Co., 728 Valley street, injuries to children increased 60 per duce accidents among minors was the motor is the welcome signal for teis. mIffI Ten Pieces of Paving of Providence, R. I., bid $280,739.50; the hungry animals. enth of the entire population of the London.—Stentor, the famous her­ cent in the first quarter of this year, taking hold, is attributed partly to United States. Town of Voluntown. reinforced con­ ald of the ancient Greeks, renowned it is shown by statistics made pub­ The Canadian Parliament believes State Roads and Two crete_ slab bridge and approaches ov- the unusually good coasting condi­ A Bay State hunter shot a noble W§3W:;KSgS; •'• for his loud voice, would surely have lic by the state motor vehicle depart­ it has the oldest and youngest mem- stag in the deer-shooting season on­ Bridge Building Jobs er the Pachaug Brook on the Volun- hung his head for shame had he ment. Nearly five children a day tions that prevailed in January and ibers of any legislative body. George A t i a >t> n> town-Greenwich Center Road to F. D. ly Vo find later that it was an aban­ in were hurt by automobiles in the first February. A large percentage of the Casimir Dessaules, senator, is ninety- doned piece of ornamental lawn stat­ I^'.^IS-l^Are Let to Nine Differ­ Miller, R. F. D., No. 6, Norwich, Ct., visited the little village of Pewsey, , nine years of age, while Louis M. C'$£%$ Wiltshire, the other day, for twenty- three months of this year, as against children injured were struck while uary. 7 bid $9,938.00; Town of Farmington, an average of less than three a day Auger, member of the House of Com­ ent Contractors. 10,498 feet of reinforced concrete four of the loudest "loud speakers" in coasting. Fourteen children and for­ Jade is one of the oldest commod­ aWi hurt in the corresponding period of ty-seven adults met their deaths in mons, is but twenty-three. ities of trade in the world. In old­ pavement to M. A. Gammino Con­ Britain were arrayed against one an­ last year. The number of adults in­ struction Co., 728 Valley street, Prov­ accidents in which automobiles figur­ Part of the land flooded in the St. en times it was valued more than Contracts for ten pieces of Con­ other seeing who could shout the loud jured in motor vehicle accidents in ed in the first quarter of this year, Bernard and Plaquemine parishes, gold. necticut highway reconstruction and idence, R. I., bid $69,811.00; Town of est. the first quarter of this year was 33 Bethel, 10,030 feet on Grassy Plain compared with ten children and thir­ Louisiana, was trapping land. In or­ The United States per capita ac­ for two new bridges have been award­ Pewsey is so small it only appears per cent greater than their total for ty-nine adults killed in the first quar­ der that the muskrats might be sav- count in savings banks is $211; that pst ed to nine companies, according to Road to John DeMichiel & Bro., Tor- the initial quarter of 1926. Thirteen sfcfe?.'- rington, Conn., bid $46,956.06; Town on large scale maps, but It certainly ter of 1926. i ed, rafts fully provisioned were float­ of the State of Michigan, $324. an announcement made this week by was the noisiest place in all Britain Highway Commissioner John A. Mac- of Newtown, 20 foot span reinforced Donald. Announcement of the award concrete slab bridge and approaches when the human "loud speakers" of eight more contracts for paving. over , Pond, , ,Brook ~ on the Hawleyvillem started "broadcasting" for the town and bridge work for which bids were ; Road, to John DeMichiel & Bro., Tor- criers championship of England and received on May 31 is expected short-1 n,n{»'on>Conn., bid $9,439.22; Town Wales, with its silver challenge cup ly. Contracts were let by the high- Stratford, 21,371 feet on the Strat- and a goodly handful of golden sover "Nash Le*:ds The World In Motor Car Value" way department as follows: jford-Shelton Road to the Lane Con- elgns. Towns of Durham and North Bran- struction Co., Meriden, Conn., bid As the "big noise" the town criers ford, 31,680 feet on Middletown-Dur- $143,239.00; Towns of Westport and ham Road to F. Arrigoni & Son, Fairfield, 14,763 feet on the Post were immense, but they also provided Middletown, Conn., bid $221,614.10; Road, to Osborn-Barnes Co., Danbury, an Impressive spectacle, for most of Towns of Darier. and Norwalk, wid- . Conn., bid. $178,738. the towns that boast a crier provide •ening section of Boston Post Road to j ——. him with a handsome uniform, a bell Silliman & Godfrey, 686 Lindley St., | Vatel, a Frenchman and a temper- and a wand of office. Some of the NASH has the power you Bridgeport, Conn., bid $89,003.69; i amental artist in cookery, killed him- uniforms were picturesque In the ex­ "Town of Berlin, 12,882 feet on Beach self in "1671, during a banquet given treme, and of great antiquity, and Swamp Road to M. A. Gammino Con- by the Prince de Conde to the King some looked like courtiers out of the .-struction Co., 728 Valley street, Prov- at Chantilly, because the lobsters for middle ages, others like highwaymen, idence, R. I., bid $73,077.05; Town of the turbot sauce did not arrive in East Hartford, 14,710 feet on Silver time. gallants of the bath which Beau Nash controlled, or glorified trolley car con­ need on the HILLS ductors and bandsmen. Mufti Wins. Every Nash owner notices that he has very little gear ces of other cars, and extend their engines to che point Why the Burglar Didn't Win Some carried more gold lace than shifting to do on hills, no matter how steep the grades of strain. any admiral In full uniform. One or may be. The burglar picked the wrong one two tlivre were in "mufti," or with Another reason for the powerful performance of Nash when he tackled Mrs. Anna Heller merely a peaked cap to denote their Nash is a very powerful motor car. There is nothing is 7 bearings. 7 bearings in every Nash model, instead of Brooklyn. She knocked him down calling. Sad to relate, it was from half-hearted or sluggish about its response—the motor of 3 or 4, means that power is not thrown away by and called the police. these one or two soberly clad com­ never "talks back" at you—even though you are climb­ crankshaft "whip." Proper bearing support conserves petitors that the eventual winner came ing mountains. energy that older motor types waste. —Ernest Austin of High worth. Wilt­ shire, who wore ordinary street One reason is the more than adequate power designed Quick acceleration—powerful responsiveness—such as clothes. into every Nash motor car. Nash engineering has pro­ Nash provides, is a safety factor you cannot overlook. Rut the gaylv chid ones howled no vided reserve energy for situations that tax the resour­ It is invaluable on the hills, very handy in traffic. bl.v, and tli&re was not much in it be­ tween Austin and Walter Abbott of Lyme Regis, who wore a carefully copied imitation of the dresa of the The Nash price range on 26 different models extends from $865 to $2090 f. o. b. factory. town crier of that ancient borough to the Thirteenth century. Gomer Thom­ as, from an unpronounceable Welsh town, and winner of the cup last year, was placed third. He had a gaudy uni­ form and was first favorite for this HALL NASH COMPANY^ year's contest. The oldest competitor was seventy- five and the stoutest voice was un­ 9 NORTH MAIN STREET THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. doubtedly that of James Cox of Barn- ham, who has a seven-mile range. Oox, George F. Halbwachs, Proprietor Fred P. Simmons, Salesman however, could not even get fifth prise as others beat him for enunciation and oratorical powers. Tuning Up. Pewsey enjoyed itself when the Jfor Economical TrantporfathH loud-voiced men gathered, for never Forbes & Wallace, Inc. was there so much noise in Wiltshire, as the competitors exchanged greet­ Store Hours: Daily, 9:00 A. M. to 5:00 1'. M.. Including Saturdays ings and tried a few practice shouts against each other. All having been allowed to test their vocal chords, the Mail and Phone Orders 1 criers lined up and marched to a com­ bined carillon on their bells to the Filled All This Week On arena, a great field, in which the judges' tent was placed 200 yards from the platform. The judges could not see the criers, and judged merely The JUNE SALE on purity and loudness of tone. The "test piece" was a bright little Hour after Hour over any Road composition proclaiming the virtues of Pewsey, nnd ran as follows. Of TOILETRIES "Oyez, oyez, oyez! Found at Pew- ; sey district carnival the biggest and ! brightest spectacle in the south and -and always in Comfort / Low Prices Guarantee Savings Which Count west of England, where a week of i revelry and pageantry reigns supreme. Up Substantially on a Summer's Supply. Scientifically balanced—swung low to the Fleets of Chevrolets are constantly under I and a procession of stupendous pro road— and with the body resting on Pond's Vanishing and Cold ! Black Diamond Perfume, i portions passes through scenes of test at the General Motors Proving Ground Cream, reg. 29c, at j regularly $4.50 an ounce, fairyland midst a blaze of brilliant il chrome vanadium steel springs that are —driven day and night over every con­ lumination; a revival of the time- 88% as long as the wheelbase—the Most ceivable type of road, from concrete regularly 49c, at 39<* i at $3.25 Guimet Perfume, regularly honored town crier, the means of an- Beautiful Chevrolet provides the most straightaways to deep-rutted clay lanes. Frostilla Cream, regularly ! nouncing royal proclamations, the astonishing riding and driving comfort Performance results are measured and 25c, at 19^ $1.98 a bottle, at 79<> Ambre Royal Face Powder, earliest advertising medium, and the ever offered in a low-priced car. recorded with scientific accuracy by deli­ Odorono, regularly 29c, at I original form of broadr-nsting. God At every speed up to wide open throttle, cately-exact electrical and mechanical regularly $1.00, at 73<> save the king." the June sale .... 20£ Pompeian Face Powder, it holds the road with a surety that is a devices—invented and built by General This proved somewhat ot a tongue revelation—while rough stretches are Motors engineers. Every unit of the car Woodbury's Soap, regular­ regularly 50c, at „ 39<- twister to many of the competitors, negotiated in perfect comfort. You can has been tested and improved until it con* ly 21c, at 17£ Dorin Rouge, regularly 40c who are accustomed to proclaiming in tributes its full share of comfort. 3 for 50 c at 31<^ simple language and in the local ac­ drive for hour after hour, mile after mile, cents of their native districts. Loud over any road, without the slightest sense Cuticura Soap, is regularly Ashes of Roses Rouge, reg­ ness of voice was not the sole aim, foi of forcing or fatigue. We have a demonstrating car waiting for 19c, at 17<^ with due regard to the niceties of elo cars as a result of the most gruelling road that will delight and amaze you—rid­ ularly 15c, at 10£ Lydes Jasmin Talcum, reg­ cution. A pause in the wrong place tests ever conducted in connection with ing comfort that you never thought pos­ Lux Soap, regularly 10c, at ularly $1.00, at 69<^ ruled out several of the loudest the development of an automobile. sible in a low-priced automobile. the June sale .... 7c 4711 Dusting Powder, reg­ mouthed criers. 4 for 25<£ ularly $1.50, at $1.19 Palmolive Soap, regularly Forhan's Tooth Paste, reg­ Cross-Bred Trees to 7 10c, at 7$ ularly 39c, at 34^ Solve Wood Shortage V, 4 for 25<> 3 for $1.00 New i'ork.—Wood pulp is being con Mulsified Cocoanut Oil Absorbine, Jr., regularly sumed four times as fast as it 1? Shampoo, bottle 33^' $1.98, at $1.75 grown, says a report issued at the Qhe COACH Bayer's Aspirin Tablets, Regularly $1.05, .at 89^ New York botanical garden, where ex regularly 15c, at 11^ Mellin's Food, at 59^' periments are being carried on in co Castoria, at 25^ operation with Columbia universitj 595 regularly 25c, at 22 Qhe Touring $ ff ^ ff regularly 95c, at 79^ Pluto Water, regularly 35c or Roadster at 27^ effort to increase the supply. Phenolax Wafers, regular­ Selective breeding and hybridization Qhe ly 25c, at 20^ Redwood Toilet Paper, 1,- Coupe---- - are making trees grow much more Qfie4'Door Kotex, 12 in a box, regu­ 000 sheet i olls, at 15 rolls quickly, the report states, and the re Sedan - - - - larly 49c, at 39«> for $1.00 suits of such breeding have been con Qhe Sport ff Household Rubber Gloves, Epsom Salts, 1 lb. size, reg­ spicuous in the various fruit trees Cabriolet-- / J.C5 ularly 15c, at 10£ In certain of the nut trees, as well as- Qhe $ **2 e regularly 59c pair, at the Landau--- M^!U June sale 45>^ Lesco Cleaner, regularly In ornamentals. Qhe Imperial ' 25c, at 19? Similar improvement in trees growi> Landau • • • £ Bath Sprays, regularly 89c for wood pulp should present no es 3 for 50^ VzTon Truck 5 335 at 69^* regularly 55c, at 39£ sential differences either in procedure Qwuit OmJf 4711 Bath Salts, regularly Kleenex, regularly 29c, at or results, the report adds. 1 Ton TruckCJmuH Cnhf^495 50c, at — 39<^ this sale 19£ All Price* Fob flint Michigto Come in Today! New Simple Alphabet regularly 90c, at 79^ 3 for 50^ Check Chevrolet See for yourself the remarkable beauty of the new Chevrolet. Drive it and get the Favored by French Blind Delivered Prices thrill of its smooth, powerful performance. Paris.—A new system of touch They include the lowest Then you'll know why each day thousand* Check This List and Send To reading for the blind, more simple than handling nml tinmcing Beautiful Chevrolet are buying the Most Beautiful Chevrolet In Braille, is given prominence by the charges avaiUbie. Chevrolet History. Forbes & Wallace. Inc. efforts of Its friends to have It gen erally adopted. The blind are said to SPRINGFIELD, MASS. master it In a few minutes. Louis Mayrou devised the system be Name cause he found many war-blind could Street not easily learn the Braille system. His alphabet is made by various posi­ City tions of three characters, a right angle, a U and a square. Amt - Charge C. O. D Beethoven's famous "Ninth Sym­ ENFIELD GARAGE Orders Will Not Be Accepted at These phony," dedicated to King Frederick Louis R. Halbwachs, Proprietor—Dugan Blaney and Thos. Connors, Salesmen William III of Prussia, brought the Prices After Saturday, June 18, 1927. composer a letter of praise and a diamond ring as evidence of the king's pleasure. Later, on the point 41 North Main St.—Phone 606—Thompsonville, Conn. FORBES & WALLACE, Inc. of starvation, Beethoven was forced SPRINGFIELB, MASSACHUSETTS to offer his cherished ring for sale. [He was stunned to learn that it con- 'tained only glass stones. UAL I TY A T LOW COST

r-V. >7 - , k '-v ; ,;-:M THE THOMPSONYILLE PRESS, THURSDAY/JtJNE 16, 192t THKEtt HOPE FOR TITANIC the score: Sophomores 3, Juniors 2. STATE JOINS IN TREE RINGS CLEWS TO Cappozzi, on the mound for the soph­ SHAFT IN 2 YEARS omores had the juniors eating out of HISTORY AND WEATHER ENFIELD HIGH his hand. He dazzled htem with his mm MMRETINGPLAN ______terrific speed and they were not con­ Sponsors 111 Washington Seek fident that he could control the ball. We Are Advertising • He allowed one hif and retired nine OF NEW ENGLAND More, Funds in Congress. Life Story Is Revealed in by the strike-out route. "Tom" Ber- Own Cross-Section. -V* ner pitching for the juniors was al­ to You Madame! Washington.—Obstacles which for Juniors Win Interclass Honors. so in superb form and relied mostly! Will Have, Through An fifteen years have blocked the erec­ The interclass track championship on his pitching craft to get him by,1 Washington.—Announcement by Dr. of last Thursday afternoon went to as he is not of the speedball type.. tion In Washington of a statue coin A. E. Douglass of the University of Van Dyk's Teas have the -M ?5 Act of the Legislature, memorating the 1,500 victims of the the juniors who won with 67 points. Bernier allowed two hits and one of Arizona that the study of the sequence The sophomores got second with 36 these was lost by H. Baronian who lovely fragrance and deli­ - i Uniform Standards of Titanic disaster are slowly being of tree rings is likely to be of value points, while the freshmen and sen­ should have had Cappozzi's fly to cleared away Members of the Wom­ cate flavor that make them Grades and Containers in long-time weather forecasting re­ iors trailed with 7 and 2 points, re-1 right field. Bernier struck out ten EANS Tj&'..£ an's Titanic Memorial association calls that tree rings already have fur­ spectively. Cappozzi '29, was high; sophomores. Scavatto umpired the ideal for Iced Teas. hope that t.heir objective will be nished valuable clews to dating pre- scorer with 20 points. Tina and Aug- j game and did a very nice job of it. .With Other StatesfJS? ust '28, were second and third with j reached In gnothei two years. Columbian history of America. - • - '- : •r Organized shortly after the disaster 15 and 14 points each. In the 100-1 'm The uniform farm marketing bills This method was used in conjunc­ yard dash, Tina '28, got an easy first passed in New England this year have In 1012. the association promptly tion with pottery types In fixing the with a time of 11 1-5 seconds. Cap­ «•?« »> joined the New England states to­ raised more than $40,000 for the me- time when Pueblo Bonito, New Mex­ pozzi '29 and Johnston '28 finished in X Puts Geese to Work mortal, hut it was not until 1017 that VAN DYK'S DUCHESS gether in a common cause, and will ico, flourished as the metropolis of that order. Tina walked away with •{• "Hoeing" His Cotton $ be a practical means of enabling New a bill authorizing use of public America in the years before 1492. the 220-yard dash also in 25 3-5 sec­ England agriculture to meet outside Albemarle, N. C.—Rural labor •*. grounds for the purpose got through Trees Our Oldest Inhabitants. onds, one of the best times yet made COFFEE, 45c LB. competition, Philo T. Piatt, Connecti­ the legislative jam In congress. Then on the track. Cappozzi and Daly '28 shortage holds no horror for *»* cut Commissioner of Agriculture, de­ Dr. Neil M. Judd, leader of the Na­ followed in order. Cappozzi won the | Farmer W. S. Kinrey. He puts the site which had been selected was tional Geographic society expeditions .j. clared this week. Commissioner Piatt denied. 440-yard event hands down in 67 3-5. •»* his geese to work. *»* i had a large part in planning and to Pueblo Bonito, with whom Doctor second. Johnston nand Collins '29 j Last fall he harvested nine QUALI-TEA, 55c LB. putting through the New England A new site was chosen, on the Po­ followed him in. The 880-yard run, Douglass collaborated In applying his X 500-pound bales of cotton from X m farm marketing program in co-oper­ tomac near the ground dedicated to was a victory for Collins who follow- j method to the Pueblo Bonito ruins, ten acres, "hoed" by three geese ation with the Commissioners of the the Lincoln memorial, and Mrs. Harry writes: ed Phelps '28, around the track and Try Gobel's Canadian Bacon other New England states and the X and nineteen goslings. Up until X Payne Whitney of New York went "The oldest living things In Amer­ passed him easily on the last half' Agricultural Committee of the New Rhead with completion of the statue lap. Kelly '27 got third place for y then his neighbors laughed at V and Scotch Ham •M England Council. Commissioner Piatt ica are its big trees, the sequoias' of the seniors. Time was 2 minutes 42 X him, but now they are seeking X from a design approved by the Fine the Sierra Nevada. The pines and said: Arts commission several years ear­ 2-5 seconds. The 220-yard relay was *i* his "system." "The uniform marketing bill, pass­ junipers of Arizona and New Mexico a junior victory as Tina, the anchor Authorized Van Dyk Distributor ed by the Connecticut legislature this lier. Farmer Kinrey waits until are much younger than the sequoias; man, sprinted away from Collins, his X the cotton plants are big enough X year, in common with other New The new site was under water, but but, like the latter, they are older nearest rival. The junior team cov­ England states, will, I believe, pro­ plans had been made for construction ered the four laps in 1 minute 59 1-2 to be too tough to tempt the ap- Malley's Delicatessen than any other living thing In their X petites of geese, then he turns X vide a real service, not only to agri­ of a sea wall as part of the program own neighborhood. Some of these up­ seconds, leading in the sophomore and cultural producers, but to consumers for linking Potomac and Rock parks. freshman teams. {• his "hoers" Into the field to 58 PEARL STREET PHONE 196-4 of our Connecticut grown food pro­ land trees are - between four hundred The honors in the pole vault went feast on grass nnd weeds. Appropriations for the wall were and five hundred years of age, and it ducts as well. The plan of having hard to get. however, and work on it to August '28 with Tenero '30 and uniform standards of grades and con­ is not at all Improbable that still old­ Gwozdz '30 tying for second place. tainers from Connecticut to Maine is had to be suspended In 1922, after er ones may be found. The height 7 feet 3 inches is a mis­ essential and practical as a means only part of the riprap foundation had "The life history of almost every erable one in comparison with vaults of meeting outside competition. been put In. The last congress grant­ tree Is revealed by Its own-cross sec­ made by the varsity. August again "It does not mean that Connecticut ed $25,000 for resumption of the work, tion, this year's growth being record­ crashed through in the high jump shall share her wealth equally with but that was enough to provide for when he cleared the bar at 4 feet 8 the other five New England states ed by a new ring. If any given year inches. Jordt '29 and Zace '30 divid­ little more than repairs on the old has been one of scanty rainfall, the when it comes to markets or market­ foundation. Knglnoers estimated that ed the remaining points with a tie ing, for while they plan to co-oper­ particular ring for that year will be for second place. In the broad jump, ate closely, each state will retain its another $175.0110 would be needed. relatively thin; and, conversely, if the Tina's leap of 18 feet could not be own individuality and its products Mrs. William Howard Taft Is Inter­ rainfall has been abundant, there will beaten. Cappozzi and August took anklin Theater Program will be identified as state products ested In the plan, which Is under the second and third. Ash '29 won the Fr be a corresponding increase in the and so stamped when marketed. This guidance of Mrs. John Hays Ham­ shof put with a distance of 32 feet legislation provides a method under thickness of the annual ring. mond, first secretary of the associa­ "Periods of drought or excessive 6 1-2 inches. Daly took second and which the farmer may offer his pro­ tion, and Mrs Robert S. Chew. Cappozzi third. First place in the moisture, It has been learned, tend to THURSDAY, JUNE 16—Fox SUNDAY, JUNE 19—First National ducts to the consumer under a state These women are confident that the discus event went to Cappozzi with guarantee that the contents of the repeat themselves at fu rly regular in­ a heave of 79 feet 10 inches. Aug­ package are as represented and are, necessary appropriation will be grant­ tervals, resulting thus in a more or ust and Fanelli '27 secured second therefore, a service to both the pro­ ed by the next congress and that soon less orderly sequence of thick and thin and third. The meet was a nip-and- Madame Wants No Children "THE MASKED WOMAN" ducer and consumer, and a means of afterward they will be able to com­ annual rings which do not vary, to tuck affair between the sophomores plete their task. their gaining renewed confidence in any marked degree, in all the trees and juniors with the latter present- Featuring Maria Corda Featuring Anna Q. Nillson each other. of any one district. ling a better rounded team. The sec­ "The bills as passed in Connecti­ ond and third places helped the jun- Comedy, Charlie Chase in "Bromo & Juliet" Comedy, Billy Dooley in "Dum Belles" cut and the other states are also im­ Amazing results in plant produc­ "Certain of these ring series pos­ liors to score as they counted some portant in that they join the New tion by means of electroculture are sesses Individual features thai quick­ j points in every event. For the var­ Serial, "Melting Millions" Fox News Also Pathe News Reel England states together in the com­ being obtained by Henry Surber, a ly Identify them, uo matter in what sity team of next year, Tina, Aug- Swiss. The apparatus used pulls mon cause of their own welfare and • ust, Cappozzi, Ash and Collins ought A elements from the air and feeds them locality they may be found, and these that of New England as a whole." are naturally utilized by the investi­ j to make good records on the track to the plant roots, making fertilizer for the high school. SATURDAY, JUNE 18—F. B. O. TUESDAY, JUNE 21—Warner Bros. unnecessary. Maximum strength, gator as "keys' to the problem he is • • * * • The largest ballroom in the world \ reached at the end of the fifth year, seeking to solve. And what is true of is to be built in Chicago. Its con- ] ! Sophomores Win Baseball Series remains at that point indefinitely. living trees Is likewise true of dead On last Friday afternoon the in­ "CACTUS TRAILS" "TRACKED BY POLICE" struction will cost more than one | Conservative scientists estimate trees, and beams or roofing timbers terclass baseball championship was million dollars and it will provide j that there are probably 3,500,000 from prehistoric ruins, like Pueblo Featuring "Bob" Custer 7,500 dancers. j awarded to the sophomore class as a Featuring RIN-TIN-TIN kinds of insects in the world. Bonito. result of their victory over the Jun­ "From the foregoing it will be ob­ iors who had previously defeated the Helen & Warren Comedy, "The Last Word" O'Henry Comedy, "Man About Town" vious that if any overlapping series seniors. The game was a 's Wisecrackers Series Aesops Fable Also Pathe News Reel of annual rings can be discovered— battle with errors figuring largely in the scoring. The game ended with that Is, If a given sequence of rings can be found both in a beam from Pueblo Bonito and in a tree still liv­ ing—it will be possible to date the former with reasonable exactness. You can't Tree Calendar's "Missing Link." "Such a direct connection, however, with no intervening links in our time, chain from the beams of prehistoric Pueblo Bonito to the living trees of look at a tire northern New Mexico, is rather be­ yond the range of possibilities; the explorer's task is rarely quite so easy as that. "It seems necessary, therefore, in and tell how the present case, to find a 'connecting link' In this time chain, and that was the especial object of a subsidiary ex­ pedition authorized by the research far it will run committee of the National Geographic society in connection with the explora­ tion of Pueblo Bonito. OU CAN'T SEE a tire carcass because it "Cross-sections from 49 timbers un­ is covered by the tread. Yet the way earthed during the explorations of two Y seasons were examined by Doctor this carcass is built tells how far the tire Douglass with very instructive re­ will run. sults. These beams, taken from the eastern portion of Pueblo Bonito, all Dunlop has had 39 years to learn all the seem to have been cut within a period A hidden points where tires wear. Dunlop of 12 years. carcasses are built from the best long fibre "Some timbers exposed in the north­ .;v - *'-> western quarter of the ruin, however, cotton, spun in Dunlop's own mills into the were cut several years earlier, thus famous Dunlop cable-twist cord. corroborating the archeological evi­ dence previously presented." These cords are elastic, so they give and take as your tire runs; strong, so they resist Cemetery Centuries Old constant load and pounding. They build the best possible foundation for the Dun­ Found, History Unknown lop tread—the toughest rubber develop­ Chester, Pa.—Curiosity-seekers have discovered an abandoned burying ment known. ground near here, said to be the oldest in the section, as dates of 1698, 1704 Thus Dunlop's extra years of experience and 1735 are decipherable on the few build added value into every vital tire- remaining stones, which also show the part. That is why, not one Dunlop—but family names of Ford and Smith. Mr. Business Man!—Let Us Drive Home This One Thought every Dunlop—gives you more service The two-century-old cemetery is lo cated in two states. Pennsylvania and than you can reasonably expect. Delaware, as the Mason and Dixon We recommend that you put Dunlops line runs directly through the prop­ erty, located in the most southern on your car part of Lawncroft cemetery, on the Wilmington pike. A cluster of trees Are You Looking Into stand guard at the rapidly vanishing McKINNEY'S FILLING plot, which is on a hill, overlooking the valley between the two states. STATION Inquiry fails to find anyone to relate 138-140 Enfield St. Thompsonville, Conn. its history. the Future? Origin of Shoemaking Traced Back to Egypt When you spend a dollar for advertising, do you look into the future to New York.—It may boot little to see what far reaching results, what wonderful possibilities are opened up you that the origin of shoes has been 1 traced to Egypt, through the foot in the future. We want our advertisers to get immediate results, of course, wear taken from mummies In public but immediate results from advertising are never so satisfying as are the museums, but in the days' when "worn an bangled her arms, blngled her hair results obtained through the use of CONSISTENT ADVERTISING over and bungled her face," as Homer or a long period. every Herodotus put It, she always was care­ ful to "tittivate her toes," asserts Dr Frank H. VIzetelly. 2% seconds The Israelites wore sandals. The It is the constant growth of good will that makes advertising a good in­ early Chaldeans wore neither sandals vestment in your business. No matter how small your advertising may nor shoes, but shoes were not un­ someone buys known to the Assyrians even In the be you are welcome to the service of our advertising department in plan­ earliest period, for they were indi­ ning the campaign or preparing the copy. a cated on the feet of foreign tribute bearers as early as the Black Obelisk king, Shnlmaneser.

A passport issued to Elkanah Wat­ son, one of five printed by Benjamin Franklin on his own press in Passy when he was envoy to France, "THE PRESS" brought $1,775 at a recent auction in New York. Evidences of tuberculosis of the 27-29 HIGH STREET—TELEPHONE 50 spine were found in an Egyptian FOUNDERS OF THE PNEUMATIC TIRE INDUSTRY mummy dating back to about 2500 B. C.

.A ^4 ffOUR THE THQMPgONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1927

horror and destructiveness of disas­ which is the backbone of our indus­ sonville to leave passengers from The ThompsonviJI? trous fires. This appears to be about trial life, but safe and sound though , -New York. Train 74 leaving New the position our town is in at the it is, and secure as its future may . York at 4:25 p. m. Sundays will leave Press present time. Our business men and be, there is a natural and perfectly at 6 p. m., making principal stops, ' Published Thursdays by ^ property owners are being called up­ sensible desire for the further stab­ PUT BACK ON THE due at New Haven 8:04, leave 8:10, CHANGE IN PROGRAM! m THE ADVANCE PRINTING AND on to pay for the presumption that ilizing of our industrial life by the due Springfield 10 p. m. Train 57 PUBLISHING COMPANY we •will have large fire losses some process of diversification. eriirniTI 17 leaving Springfield at 6 a. m., will day, and are the same time con­ ill ill Til 11 emit stops at Warehouse Point, Hay- 27-29 High Street, Telephone 50 * -sd Milford, Westport and Sauga- Thompsonville, Conn. fronted with the alternative of pay­ 1 , i: • iij.'Huck, Greenwich and Port Chester, ing the price or engaging in a guess­ Hazardville Grammar KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ing contest with the insurance agents. PHILIP J. SULLIVAN School Graduation Officials Found That the spri»g«eid 9:so Few men will be willing, no doubt, S!®§ , Editor and Business Manager New Time Was Incon- .%-x- to gamble their property against the Twenty-Nine Pupils Receive Diplom­ H *; Telet)hone 95-2. future probabilities of escaping a as At Exercises Held Last Evening Venient For Early Com- Wallingford, Milford, South Norwalk, m iti visitation by fire any more than the In Institute Hall—Largely Attend Darien and Stamford, due New York Entered at the Post Office, Thomp­ insurance companies want to lay a ed by Relatives and Friends. muters—Summer Ser- 1 p. m.; Train 51 leaving Springfield sonville, Conn., as second class mat­ lower stake than the present prem­ Twenty-nine pupils were graduat­ * vice Greatly Curtailed. 10:54 a. m. daily will omit stops at ter. ium charges, that such unwelcome oc­ ed last night from the Hazardville Windsor Locks Sundays and will stop - at Wallingford daily; Train 89 leav­ currences as fire will not take place grammar school at exercises in In­ stitute Hall. The hall was filled with The officials of the "New Haven" ing Springfield 3:05 p. m. daily will LET THE TRUTH BE KNOWN here. The probabilities are that the parents and friends of the graduates. Road have sent out an additional no­ leave at 3 p; m., omitting stops at COTTAGE GREEN PARK §t-: remedies proposed by these revolu­ The invocation was given by Rev. M. tice regarding the new train schedule Thompsonville, Windsor Locks, Wind­ ^ When both sides admit that the co­ tionary rates will be applied in every J. Creeger, pastor of the Methodist which went into effect last Sunday, sor and Wallingford, due New Hav­ operative marketing scheme, under instance possible, and in most cases Episcopal Church. The salutatory that advises local patrons to ignore en 4:55 and New York 6:40 p. m.; : I)'? will in the end make a substantial was by Harold Firtion, president of the new schedule on train No. 63, Train 83 leaving Springfield 4:30 p. . which most of the tobacco has been m. daily will leave at 4 p. m., due at raised and sold in this valley for the reduction in the present figures. The the class and the valedictory by Miss which was put forward 15 minutes in insurance companies are being critl Agnes Pianka. Those who received the morning and was to leave here New Haven 5:50 and New York at past five years, is dead, it must, be­ diplomas were: Mary Abbe, Teofil Al­ at 5:00 (6:00 daylight time) instead 7:25 p. m. yond further controversy, be so. By cised, among other things, for put­ Train 396 leaving New York at 6 ting this radical change in force bert, Michael Aleskwiz, John Beroz- of 4:55 (or 5:55 daylight time.) This both sides, of course, is meant the sky, Hazel Bertrand, Wilfred Brien, train will run on its old schedule. The p. m. will omif stop at Mt. Vernon ; without the slightest intimation. This te ' officials of the Connecticut Valley To­ Beatrice Cormier, Joseph Corbett, changt was found to be inconvenient and leave stations 1 to 7 minutes bacco Growers' Association, and the stricture • seems justified, for undoubt­ Gertrude Davis, Arnold Farnham, for the early commuters to Hartford earlier, due New Haven 8:04 p. m., large number of growers who are edly if these defects had been point­ Harold Firtion, Evelyn Gaskell, Mary from the towns between Springfield continuing through to Springfield; ed out beforehand they would have Golden, Wallace Gowdy, Anna Hiet- and Hartford. The new train sched­ Train 820 leaving Hartford 3:48 p. members of the association, and have m. will have schedule 13 minutes voiced their opposition to the meth­ been remedied as far as possible, and ala, Mildred McGuire, Robert Miller, ule has made large curtailments in much of the present turmoil would Stanley Miller, Agnes Pianka, Vic­ the service between here and New earlier,' due Springfield 4:27 p. m.; ods employed in the conduct of the toria Pianka, Edith Russell, Mary York, and several minor changes in Train 819 leaving Hartford 4:35 p. affairs of the organization. Ordinar­ be prevented. The companies appear m. will leave at 4:05 p. m., due at FRIDAY, JUNE 17TH to have adopted the questionable pol­ Savage, David Shepherd, Julia Smith, the arriving and leaving time of ily this would end matters, and there Louise Smith, Ferdinand Stroiney, trains from the north and south. The New Haven 5:13 p. m. All stops at would but remain the doleful duty of icy of shooting first and explaining Louise Tuomala, Margaret Uzell and principal changes as set forth in the Wilson's are discontinued. winding up the affairs of the organ­ afterwards. Helen Wysocki. The class had for schedule are as follows: ization as expeditiously as possible. its colors the rainbow and for its Train 96 leaving New York 6 a. An appointment existing in Lon­ But unless the officials of the assoc­ THE PARKING LAWS motto, "Look to the End." Harold m. daily will omit stop at Windsor; don since 1570 is that of "remem­ iation wish to spend the remainder Firtion was the class president, with Train 82 leaving New York 7 daily brancer." The holder of this ^ office, Mary Abbe, vice-president; Edith will leave at 7:35 a. m., omitting who must be a lawyer, is paid be­ of their lives charged with some­ Much as there might be an inclin­ thing more serious than inefficiency Russell, secretary, and Ferdinand stops at New Rochelle, Port Chester, tween $7,500 and $10,000 a year, his ation to sympathize with one who Stroiney, treasurer. Richard Kennon South Norwalk, Wallingford, Wind­ duties being to sit beneath the gal­ and mismanagement they cannot end feels that any law imposes an injus­ the principal for several years, has sor and Windsor Locks, due Spring­ lery of the House of Commons and Martin and Storen the affairs of the organization by a tice, it can hardly be agreed that a resigned and will continue his college field 11:16 a. m., continuing through "remember" legislation affecting the mere adjustment of its liabilities and defiance: of it is the manner in which studies in preparation for his degree. to White River Junction and begin­ city of London. He must also act as assets, ning June 20 through to Bretton medium for communication with the BANJO ACCORDION to seek relief. It is conceivable that Woods, N. H The meeting here last Sunday af­ such an innovation as the enactment Meeting of Ellsworth Will stop at Thomp- royal family or cabinet. ternoon indicated that there is some­ and enforcement of parking laws, thing else in the back of the minds such as lias taken place in the' town, Memorial Association of the members of this fast disinte­ would impose some temporary hard­ grating organization, as the cause for ship and inconveniences. The possi­ Attended by Officers and Members of its failure, other than that which is bility of this development was point­ Penelope Terry Abbey Chapter, D. • "We Can't Make All the stated here. Nor were these reasons A. R., Held at Ellsworth Homestead ; SATURDAY, JUNE 18TH kept in the rear of the mental cham­ ed out when these by-laws were first In Windsor Last Friday. j ber of many of them either at this proposed. Undoubtedly the town of­ Penelope Terry Abbey Chapter, D._ ! Hot Dogs, mass meeting. They were "spoken ficials stood ready to grant relief A. R., was represented by the reg- right out in meeting "in no veiled from any unfair condition that theient, Mrs. Mark W. Bushnell, and 111 But We Make the Best" terms," but with startling frankness, operation of these laws migh^ inflict of the members, at the annual meet­ BILLIE ZIEGLER on any business man or property ing of the Ellsworth Memorial As­ that left no doubt but that the men sociation, held last Friday at the Ells­ were ready to stand back of what owners in the town. There is no indication that there worth Homestead in Windsor. Mrs. CHAMPION JUGGLER they said. These charges, too, were Frederick E. Hunter, and through made by men who are not ordinarily was any intention to be autocratic her the chapter, were honored by her COLLINS' KOZY KORNER addicted to intemperate speech, but in the matter, but that they would election as a director in the associa­ who seemed fully cognizant of the be willing to compromise in any in­ tion. She will also be a member of THOS. J. COLLINS, Prop. 9 CENTRAL ST. impor^ of their utterances. In every stance where a real hardship or in- the ways and means committee. Mrs. BACON and w im sed b y the instance they gave the impression of f P°u , operation j Hunter has been one of the chapter's being a hieher tvoe of Citizenship of lof the law" The only way that the I™!084 Pro"inently active and interest- a lineage and ancestr, who St SSftSS er four ears service a given to inflammatory statements or ,aw a fah. t and ^ it is entitled ' TT y ' * treasurer. PARDNER ! er otherwise acting in™ an irresponsible and ,t _s the ^ eiti- ? . outstanding accomplishments manner. th HEADLINE ACROBATS It does not seem that the charges r„ to co-operate .0 that end The j Slf0„ UTo„dT™t?„e°°£ made at this meeting can be evaded formulating and enforcement of just; $ii650, more than doubling the chap- by any group who expect to retain such laws constitutes the greatest I ter's quota, raising the fund of $400 Finals of the Charleston Contest traffic problem that confronts every j for purchasing bronze markers for You Can't Re-Build their self-respect and the confidence community little and great at the 54 of the graves of over 60 Revolu­ of the commonwealth in the future. present tSme. Practically every mu­ tionary soldiers buried in the town Those against whom they were made nicipality in the country is cemeteries, and the fund of $245 for owe it to themselves, to the great with the same' question. furnishing a students' room in the Drawing Saturday Night of the wonder­ organization that gave such promise, dormitory built by the Massachusetts With Ashes Modern traffic conditions have sim­ and to this industry which means so D. A. R., at the American Interna­ ful Dining Room Set, including a Seam­ ply forced the situation to the point tional College in Springfield. That i, much to this section of the common­ where in the interest of safeguard­ wealth, to permit a full investigation her efficiency has deservedly won for less Wilton Rug, Set of Silver and Set of ing human life, the conservation of her this recognition in state D. A. R". „ Nothing- but a Fire Insurance of the affairs of this organization. property and the keeping passable official circles is very gratifying to Dinner Dishes. The, r. .,blame , for, ,its failure , ., should, i be I iCthe avenues Jof communicationJ and', Mrs. Hunter's many friends in town. Policy will compensate you for definitely placed where it belongs. traffic, the problem must be met and Mrs. Leon R. Abbe, honorary regent On the one side the officials are charg­ solved in its own way by every com­ of the chapter, whose ability in gen­ Two Big Nights Left, Friday, June 17 and ed with inefficiency, mismanagement ealogical research is widely known, a loss. Call— munity. State laws provide for this, has also had the distinction of serv­ Saturday, June 18. Dancing, Midway and and worse. On the other the blame but the actual solution must be made is being placed on the membership ing as a director in the Ellsworth in every instance in the manner that Memorial Association. "big time" vaudeville each evening. "Let's of the organization who it *.s claim­ | will serve the interest of the people ed were not the type of business men of the various communities and prove See You There!" that would lend themselves to the most effective in carrying out the Legal Notice Brainard-Ahrens, Inc. operations of an organization of this purpose at hand. The problem could character. not have been evaded here a moment HEARING There may be a measure of truth longer, and to have neglected to de­ In accordance with Public Acts of Telephone 45-2 in both contentions but how large a vise and enforce such rules for any 1927, a hearing on Petition for the measure, in justice to all, should be establishment of a Gasoline Station 106 MAIN STREET THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. further length of time would have on the property of Gregory M. Sap- fully determined and disclosed. This been much more to the disadvantage can only be accomplished in one way. suzian situated on Enfield street, in of the community than any tempor­ Fire District No. 1, Enfield, Connec­ The exact status of this regrettable ary inconvenience which their opera­ ticut, will be held Friday, June 17, affair is not only the concern of the tion might cause anyone here. 1927, at 3 o'clock P. M., Daylight officers and members of the associa­ Saving Time, in the Town Building, tion, but it is the business and of Thompsonville, Conn. vital interest to the people of every A NEIGHBOR'S TROUBLE JAMES T. MURRAY, GEORGE H. PAYNE, section of the state in which this in­ The newspapers of Rockville arc dustry exists. Only one thing is cer­ ALBERT J. EPSTEIN, very forcibly and ably reminding that Selectmen of Enfield, Conn. Tax Collector's tain now, and that is that the assoc­ community of a change in the indus­ Dated at Enfield, Conn., iation has been wrecked in some man­ trial condition of that city which calls June 2nd, 1927. d6-7-8 ner, and that a movement which it for serious thought on the part of was hoped would solve the problem the people of the city among the Notice of the tobacco growing industry has hills. Until recently that community come to naught. Whether this came has enjoyed a diversity of industries about from the fact that it was in­ sufficient, i^ was thought, to safely Classified augurated at a time when the indus­ balance its industrial activities and I will be in my office in the Town Build­ try was at its lowest point, that the make its economic status reasonably members took the wrong attitude safe. But the unexpected closing of Advertising ing, Thompsonville, to collect all Prop­ towards it and expected too much, two of its mills during the past year i Classified Advertising must here- erty Taxes due the Town of Enfield on that it has been mismanaged or that has made a decided change in condi­ ! after be paid for in advance, in there are still graver reasons for its tions there. The diversity of indus- I accordance with newspaper rules list of 1926 due March 1, 1927, each Sat­ downfall,, . should„ , „ be ,determined „ , once, , try no longer exists, and Rockville and regulations. and for all before the final dissolu- finds itself confined almost entirely urday from 1:00 to 5:00 P. M., and at any tion takes place. to woolen manufacturing business, a other time by appointment, until further business by the way, that has not MISCELLANEOUS THE RAISE IN RATES been going any too well for the past notice. few years. With the prospect of all LOST—A small tan leather purse, Coming on top of a business con­ its industrial eggs in one basket, and containing a sum of money. Find­ er will be rewarded by returning dition that has been anything but the attending dangers of such a con­ to Press Office, 27 High St. d8 prosperous for the past two or three dition, the people of that usually Frank A. Simmons years, and in the midst of a season thriving community are becoming WANTED that has been, for obvious reasons, worried, and they have good reason COLLECTOR more or less precarious, it is not sur­ for it. This is particularly so, not WANTED—Boarders for room and Just Three Words prising that the raise in the fire in­ exactly because of the single indus­ Board. Best of food and reason­ surance rate has been somewhat of trial basket, but because of the char­ able rate. Mrs. Lacieau, 58 Cot­ a jolt to the business men and own­ acter of its contents. tage Green. dll ers of commercial realty in the town. If the industry which Rockville is FEMALE HELP WANTED—Ladies, About Tire Values It is presumed that the insurance to be mainly dependent on for some who can do plain home sewing and companies will find no difficulty in time at least, were more stable, there want profitable spare time work. Highest Quality—Goodyears! explaining the advance in the prem­ would be no real occasion for worry, Send stamped addressed envelope ium charge on the grounds of nec- but it is far from that. It is, in fact, for particulars. Glendale Co., Put- nam Station, N. Y. *d For Just A Week! : essity due to the mounting fire losses. in such a highly competitive state at Low Price—Goodyears! I The irony of that explanation here the present time that a policy of re­ WANTED—Girl for general house­ '• will be that it is made to a commun- adjustment and retrenchment is be­ work in Enfield street home. Tele­ For just another week we will continue some Real Service—Goodyears! • mjesv- •. j ity which has been very proud of its ing carried out which has already phone 871. tf of our great values that were offered in our : exceptionally low fire losses for al- closed many of the smaller mills en­ BUY GOODYEARS NOW! Here are a few examples ¥ 1 most a generation. It is apparent, gaged in this industry in New Eng­ FOR RENT recent big sale. .Here are just two samples of the bargains we are offering in Genuine GOODYEAR however, tha^ past performances have land. It is, therefore, the status of TO RENT—Three or five room tene­ of what these values are: TIRES for this week only: • no bearing on the business of fire the industry that it is left with, rath­ ment at 10 Bartley Avenue. In­ b insurance rate making, but that it is er than the character of its indus­ quire at above address. dll : on the ever-present possibilities of a trial activities which is the real cause Ladies' Shoes, that were $6.00 30x3Y2 AWT Clincher $ 9.95 •te: for concern to the Rockville people. TO RENT—1 garage on Grant Ave.; fe • ; conflagration in this or any other 1 garage on Mountainview Avenue. to $8.00, now $1.97 I community that the insurance com- Here for years, we have existed with Price low to reliable party. Inquire 32x4 Straight Side Cord AWT $15.95 j pany stakes, its money. an average prosperity that is com­ of Olin E. Woodward, Grant Ave., Gentlemen's Shoes, that were 29x4.40 All-Weather Balloon $ 9.95 i They operate on an assumption and parable with any community of our or Miss Ruth C. Melladew, Moun­ a law of averages for which the care­ size, under the single industrial bask­ tainview Ave. tf $6.00 to $7.50, now $1.97 ful as well as the careless commun- et plan. We have long sought for a TO RENT—Flat, in the Dunne Apart­ ' ities are compelled to pay. The fact diversification of our industrial ac­ ment on Garden St. Modern con- We Have A Few Other Such Val­ that real or imaginary fire risks ex­ tivities here, and we are still earn­ veniences. Telephone 467. tf ENFIELD GARAGE ist is an assumption that there are estly engaged in that task. This is TO RENT—One 3-room tenement at ues Left Over From the Big Sale. LOUIS R. HALBWACHS, PROP. : going to be fires, and it very likely being done, however, not through any 103 High street; one 5-room tene­ on the average works out that way. fear of an industrial let down that ment at 32 Central street. Also THOMAS CONNORS : Salesmen : DUGAN BLANEY But there are the usual exceptions, would be fatal to the community, but garage to rent. Inquire at 6 Bart- of course, but the more fortunate for the purposes of natural expansion ley Avenue, Town. *dl0 j JOSEPH MAKOVECKAS TELEPHONE 606 :§§ community gains nothing by its good that should be the ambition of any TO RENT—Store on Pearl Street. 98 PLEASANT ST. fortune, except that through its own live community. We have the ut­ Inquire of Baronian Bros., 106 THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. 41 North JVIain Street Thompsonville •m, fib initiative or alertness it is saved the most confidence in the great plant Ij'earl street. ^ tf HiNiMmmrnmmmmmmmmJSiiillli * / 1 rt £ ^ f J- V J v"'W .>•. •' '-'<•V••)'' THE_ THOMPSdNyiliLE , Thursday: juimlm 1927 :

Caskie was elected chairman of the the Horth RoadH)to HazlrSiville, a Cfiurch, and Rev. Roscoe W. Vining'next Sunday: At the morning ser- Pearl street, was destroyed by fire,, work committee and Mrs. Sidney week ago Sunday, resulting in the of Hartford will speak on this theme vice there will be baptism of child- *the,causelw> of which sis- unknown.—1 »»-Mr. Blowen of the Sunshine committee. dsflfh of Evangelist J. Chaine of Wal- in the morning service in the church. ren. The Sunday School will meet at and Mrs. Joseph Roberts who came Meetings will be resumed in Septem­ nu%.str'eet, ohfe of the occupants..Miss "Watch Your Step" will be the sub­ 9:30 and Christian Endeavor at 6." here from Rouse's Point, N. Y., about ber a* the home of Mrs. Nelson Steele Eg^lrik was represented by Attorney ject of the children's sermon. The Miss Eleanor King, who is a teach­ three weeks ago were occupying the- on Enfield street. James E, Cannon of Windsor Locks. subject of the pastor's address at the er at the Brookwood School, Lands- dwelling, but they were not at noma1 Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Bushnell Next Sunday is Father's Day. Re­ 7 o'clock evening service will be, downe, Pa., is at the home of her Saturday night. Furniture owned by motored to Boston last Saturday to members him with a gift or card. "School Days and Commencement or mother, Mrs. George H. King of Elm three different families was stored The J. W. Club of which Miss Grace returned for this reunion, which was spend the week-end with their daugh­ J. Francis Browne, Jr., a student After Graduation What?" Sabbath street, for the summer vacation. in the house and the loss is divided Smith is leadfer, met at the home of held in the banquet hall of the Stud­ ter, Miss Persis Bushnell, who is as­ at Catholic University, Washington, School at 12 o'clock, Christian En­ Thomas Newsome has sold his one- among Mrs. Frank Roberts, Mr. and Miss Margaret Harris on Enfiekl ent Alumnae building. The table dec­ sistant secretary of the Girls' Re­ D. C., is at" his home here for the deavor at 6:15 P. M. Everybody is family house located on Connecticut Mrs. Joseph Roberts and Clarence street last Friday evening. After the orations, carried out in lavender and serve department of the Y. W. C. A. summer vacation. welcome to these services. Avenue, near State Line, to Peter .Roberts, the latter having occupied business session, Miss Margaret purple, the class colors, were in of that city, and from there went to A month's mind mass in memory A dinner party was held at the Mercier who buys for a home. The ! the house until the death of his wife Bridge gave a reading and games charge of Mrs. Bissland. She re­ Providence to attend the commence­ of the late J. Vincent Browne, a for­ home of Mrs. John J. Connor of Main sale was made through the William j last winter. were also enjoyed by all. The hos­ mained at the college for other com­ ment exercises of Brown University, mer well-known citizen and business Hyland real estate agency, j ed by tess served refreshments. street, on Wednesday last, in honor when the fire was discover mencement services and exercises un­ of the graduating class of which their man of the town, was celebrated on of her sister, Miss Marie Allen of Mrs. James T. Burgess of Enfield ] John Pecor, whose home in Connecti- James A. Tatoian, son of Mr. and til Monday evening. son, Worth Bushnell is a member. Tuesday morning in St. Patrick's Springfield, who is to become the street, and her guests, Miss Jessie cut Avenue was threatened, the in- Mrs. Avidis Tatoian of Pearl street, Edward Bromage, Jr., graduated Albert L. Bissland of the office Church by the pastor, Rev. Daniel J. bride of William Conoden of Boston Gourlie of Lincoln street and Mr. and j terior was a mass of flames. The will graduate froni the Harvard Med­ from Brown University in Provi­ force of the American Telegraph and O'Connor. The soloist was Miss Alice After dinner Miss Allen gave sever-1 Mrs. Thomas Hargraves of Washing- North Thompsonville fire department ical School, next week Thursday, with dence, R. I., yesterday. He is the Telephone Company at White Plains, J. Liberty. al vocal selections andj 4.1the remaining ton Avenue, motored to Pleasure under the direction of Louis C. Grant, the degree of D. M. D. He has been son of Deputy Sheriff and Mrs. Ed­ John J. Weimers, son of Mr. and hours of the evening were fully en­ N. Y., spent a week of his vacation Mrs. William Weimers of Spring Beach Saturday. Mrs. Burgess plans did excellent work and devoted their awarded a scholarship in research ward Bromage of Pearl street, who with his mother, Mrs. John K. Biss­ joyed. Miss Allen, who is to be mar­ to spend the summer at her cottage efforts to saving adjoining property, work presented by Dean E. C. Low­ with their daughter, Miss Grace land of Enfield street and had with street, was graduated last week from ried the early part of July, has chos­ there, with Miss Gourlie as her guest Considerable excitement was caused ell of the college. In his senior year Bromage, and son Wilbur Bromage, him as a guest George Atwell of Mt. the engineering department at North­ en for her attendants, Mr. and Mrs. for a week. She entertained Mr. and by the report that persons were he was elected historian of the Delta attended the commencement exercises. eastern University, Springfield. John J. Connor. After her marriage Vernon, N. Y. They, together with Mrs. F. K. Brewster has returned Mrs. Hargrave over the week-end. asleep in the house and after an in- Sigma Delta fraternity, of which he The Past Chiefs' Club of the Pyth­ Robert L. Bissland, attended com­ she will reside in her new home in • . vestigation by the firemen it was had been junior page. He is a grad­ mencement at Dean Academy in to her summer home in Suffield after Boston which the groom-elect has had ian Sisters held their June meeting spending the winter at the Hotel riac+iwtT-c AJrwi«fV» found that the house was unoccupied, uate of the Enfield High School and at the home of Miss Mae McLean of Franklin, Mass., of which they are just recently erected. flic i/CBllUjs XNUnn The house was built four years ajjro took a two years' course at Tufts alumni, last week. Belmont, New York City. an( Maple Avenue. After the business At the 10:30 A. M. service of wor­ ThnmnsnnviAiiuiujjsuiivuie'llp TTnmonorac * was valued at $3,50C. There will_ College before entering Harvard. session,: the hostess invited the guests Friends in town will be interested The pupils of Mrs. E. B. Greene ship at Methodist Episcopal Church be an additional $1)000 loss on furni Dr. and Mrs. John F. McHugh of to the dining room where luncheon in the word that has been received will give a closing recital on Wed­ next Sunday, the pastor will preach ~~""1~~ ture. A garage and hencoop in the Central street are planning an ex­ was served, following which a social by Mrs. Catherine Conboy of Lincoln nesday, June 22, at 8 P. M., in the on the topic, "The Christian Touch." Two-Story Frame Dwelling Owned yard also were burned and a heavy tended trip abroad. They will leave hour was enjoyed by all. street of the birth of a grandson, Methodist Church parlors in Windsor. The story talk for children will be, by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roberts on truck, owned by Clarence Roberts, Monday the 27th, sailing from New She will be assisted by violin pupils "Some Arithmetic." Church School Sword Avenue, Is Completely Gut- which was in the driveway near the Miss Virginia ferainard, daughter John Francis Conboy, in Port Jarvis, of her daughter, Camilla Estelle Ed­ York on the steamer Ryndam of the of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie C. Brainard N. Y., on Sunday, May 12. The child at 12 o'clock, Junior League at 5:45, ted by Blaze Sunday Morning. .house, was slightly damaged. Holland American line, with Rotter­ is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Con­ dy. Those taking part will be Jeanne Epworth League at 6:15. At the ev­ ox Pearl street is at home from St. Middelaer, Donald Gourlie, Wanda Damage in the amount of $4,500 ~~— dam as their destination. Nine dif­ Margaret's School in Waterbury for boy. Mr. Conboy has the responsible ening service, "A Pleasant Hour," at was caused early Sunday morning, Ski were used as an aid to walking ferent countries will be visited, in­ Lehman, Helen Zibberlas, Muriel 7 P. M., a short sermon will be giv­ the summer vacation. position of paymaster and timekeep­ Fiedler, Ethel Fiedler, Frances Sisis- when the two-story frame dwelling in deep snow by the Scandinavians, cluding crossing the Mediterranean The annual meeting of the North er for the Fred T. Ley Construction en by the pastor on the subject, "A on Sword Avenue, near State Line, long before the Christian Era. The into Africa. In September they will Company of Springfield. ky, Arthur Everett, Mary Geogiloe, Giant Cannibal." Mid-week devo­ Neighborhood Club of the Fir^t Pres­ Anna Stinson, Margaret Kruger, Jos- owned by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rob-. ancient Armenians had their horses tour the British Isles and will return byterian Church was held at the home Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Lynch cel­ tions at 7:45 P. M. every Wednesday. erts, who conduct the Maple Inn on • trained to walk on ski in the snow. about the 1st of October. ebrated their 16th wedding anniver­ ie Ankvas, Anna Parakilas, Ellsworth Next week's topic: "Cause for Hap­ of Mrs. William Oakley on Bigelow Clarkin, Charles Alaimo, Ernest Lan­ Mrs. John K. Bissland of Enfield Avenue last Wednesday afternoon. sary with a very pleasant dinner piness." party at their home on Lincoln street dry and Robert Blunden of Thomp- street attended the reunion and ban­ Officers were elected as follows: Pres­ sonville, and Teresa Oileo, Clayton Dr. Warren F. Hilditch of Erie, quet of her class, that of 1890, of ident, Mrs. George S. Bridge; vice- Sunday, at which the guests- were Althen, Betty Althen, Nancy Warn­ Pa., is visiting relatives in this place which she was vice-president, at Mt. president, Mrs. Minnie A. Hardaker; relatives, including those from Hart­ and Warehouse Point. ford and Willimantic, to the number er, Naomi Pomeroy, Angelo Ceilio, Holyoke College last Saturday even­ ! secretary, Mrs. Harry Blowen; treas­ Douglas Brooks, Doris Gunning and A daughter, Dorothy, was born re­ ing. Ten of the members of the class urer, Mrs. William Naylor. Mrs. John of 14. Cut flowers and potted plants Alvin Tyson of Windsor. Friends of cently to Mr. and Mrs. Alfred C. were attractive decorations for the Blakesley of Mapleton Avenue, Suf­ occasion about the rooms and the din­ Mrs. Green and her pupils are cord­ ially invited to attend. field, and granddaughter to Mr. and ing room table had as a centerpiece, Mrs. Michael Shea of South River peonies and carnations. Mr. and Mrs. Thirsty people like the flavor and street. Lynch were the recipients of many sparkle of honfb made root beer when Doric Lodge,oa e A. F. and AA. M.. will handsome gifts, including silverware, you use William's Rdbt Beer Extract. . "°™ ^ S > *• - To Build or Not to Build Ask your grocer.—(Adv.) i °1- ^ anl?T ! ?J)serv?n. WITH IORAIM WHEEL it is NOT a LORAIN Out of Doors the town court Saturday morning on pairing. Agent for Amer­ the charge of reckless driving. She Legal Notice ican Cleaners and Dyers. ERE AT BROWNE'S, you'll find dozens of welcome pleaded guilty and was fined $50 and costs. Miss Egelvik was driver of HEARING The Northern Connecticut H suggestions to help you derive maximum enjoyment the touring car that overturned in In accordance with Pubjic Acts of from Summer days out of doors. Comfortable summer 1927, a hearing on Petition for the WM. E. GORDON Power Company furniture of superior quality, built to withstand all kinds establishment of a Gasoline Station CUSTOM TAILOR NOTICE on the property of Munsell H. Gage* TELEPHONE 300 of weather and at unusually low prices now! situated on lower King Street in En­ 84 High St., Thompsonville The annual meeting of the Enfield field, Connecticut, by Melvin H. Jen­ Telephone 89-5 Cemetery Association will be held at kins, (station known as Maple Tree the home of Miss Martha Alden, En­ Filling Station) will be held Monday, field street, Thompsonville, Monday June 27, 1927, at 3 o'clock P. M., evening, Jurte 20th, at 8:00 o'clock, Daylight Saving Time, in the Town Daylight Saving Time. Building, Thompsonville, Conn. LAURENCE KLEIN, JAMES T. MURRAY, Secretary. GEORGE H. PAYNE, Thompsonville, Conn., June 16. ALBERT J. EPSTEIN, Selectmen of Enfield, Conn. Dated at Enfield, Conn., NOTICE June 13th, 1927. d8-9 SUMMER UNDERWEAR PUBLIC HEARING BY BOARD OF SEWER COMMISSIONERS. -FOR THE FAMILY All persons owning land on either side of Park Avenue Extension, or Porch Shade Lawn Settee on either side of Colony Street north Here are a few timely suggestions for warm weather Underwear of its intersection with Park Avenue, for every member of the family, and at prices which indicate that Keep your porch shady and Sturdily built and finished and all others interested in the build­ comfortable. Easily rolled in natural and red. 40 in­ ing of a sanitary sewer in either of they are real values. up when not in use. 5 by ches long. A super-bar­ the above mentioned streets, are re­ 6 feet $5.40 gain $3.50 quested to meet with the Board of Sewer Commissioners at the Town Ladies' "Forest Mills" Vests, in bodice, band tops and short sleeve Building, Thursday, June 23rd, at 8 P. M., Daylight Saving Time, for the styles, priced at * 29c to $1.00 purpose of considering the building of sewers in said sti-eets, to hear es­ Misses' "Forest Mills" Vests 25c and 29c timates on same, and to take what ever action necessary for the build­ ing of such sewers and to arrange Boys' "Forest Mills" Union Suits, 4 to 16 years 59c for the payment of same. M. W. BUSHNELL, Boys' B. V. D. Union Suits 85c J. H. CALLAHAN, A circlet—a long M. E. BRODRICK, Sewer Commissioners. rope—a graduated Men's Lawrence Balbriggan Union Suits $1.25 strand—our collec Men's Nainsook Union Suits, none better for the price $1.00 NOTICE don of BLUEBIRD PEARLS includes Men's B. V. D. Union Suits $1.35 NOTICE is hereby given to the Legal Voters of the Hazardville Fire every voguish style Lawn Swings Couch Hammocks District. Hazardville, Conn., that the All hues—all lengths— Men's Fine Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers, each 79c Annual Meeting will be held at the beautiful claspi.. friedPri $10.00 $13.75 Engine House m said District, Mon­ from $10.00 upward*. day evening, June 20, 1927, at 7:30 FOR FATHER'S DAY GIVE DAD A TIE Roomy seats in the full Complete with substantial Standard Time. For the election of four-foot width. Sturdily metal standard and sturdy Fire Commissioners, to take action A. B. Mitchell braced. They'll sell fast at chain, and upholstered seat relative to laying a tax, and to tran­ 4 12 Pearl Street sact any other business proper to this substantial saving! at this low price. come before said meeting. Thompsonville H. STEPHEN BRIDGE, ARTHUR G. GORDON, A. F. JAVORSKI EDWARD J. LOCKE, Fire Commissioners. 41 Pleasant Street Telephone 160-2 Thompsonville, Ct. J. FRANCIS BROWNE Dated at Hazardville, Conn,;-••*»*»*•»»«*• June 13th, 1927. d8

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THE THOMPSONVILLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1927 •- :-r •" -•- •; :-y; :. - • /• •:-•/•- ,li!?:.•<• v>•.; j> i r-;,v. • j'-v-i.-' ^ r- »•>^ ^ %• Cutter Meets a Terror of the Sea mM Your Spare Dollars O they go into your Savings Ac­ ys,; v'iSf '7' most every branch of Masonry in this :i:^j;aSUFPIELlJ, D count or is someone else getting p|;;p;$V: town and Hartford. interest on your moneyf - "; •' Ms5e5.1*-^ 5 The Stone Trust Corporation schol- Gov. John H. Trumbull has ap- arship prize in mathematics, award- ^pointed Senator Samuel R. Spencer i ed to a sophomore in the Sheffield ' Start your account with this bank ft«ia v PI of this town to the new State Board | ®ci®nt^c. School for excellence in today, and deposit every spare dol- . ^ nr c ithat subject is divided between Phil- h-)ot Control and Finance. Mr. Spencer ;ip c Michael 0f West Suffield and lar you K';N has for many years been considered ; Albert L. Ruiz of Upper Montclair, a financial expert. Besides repre- | N. J. mti ep . senting the 7th senatorial district in i A fire of unknown origin on the Save With Us By Mail -j e# the last Senate, he had previous leg- j farm of Louis Qualitroli of West Elm . islative experience as a representa- {street, caused $4,500 loss when a Y->\£ tive from this town in 1915 and 1917.' three-acre tobacco shed filled with -•** ;-v •]

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BIGHT &L. THE THOMPSOrmLLE PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1927

ceremony and also celebrated the nup­ evening in the high school auditorium Principal Karl D. Lee and also by the mwm .. • tial mass which followed in the pres­ Y. M. H. A. To Again i and was attended by over 200, in­ four guests of honor. Selections were ence of a large gathering of friends PUPILS PERFECT Be Attraction Sunday cluding the members of this year's rendered by the high school orches­ and relatives. The bride was at-j graduation class. Representatives of tended by Miss Gertrude Neville and tra and vocal select .ons given, after Crack Home City Nine Which Played classes as faV back as 1887 were pre­ which dancing was enjoyed until 12 the best man was Adolph Tanguay IN ATTENDANCE sent. The event was in honor of the o'clock. The auditorium was attrac­ of Hartford, brother of the bride­ Scoreless Game Here Recently Will four oldest teachers in point ser­ groom. urn Again Oppose Polish Americans at tively decorated for the event. Aus­ f , m MILLER—BARRY Thomas J. Picker, pastor, performed Park Ave. Grounds Next Sunday. vice in the school, Superintendent E. tin Reilly was chairman of the com­ the ceremony and also celebrated the Following the ceremony a wedding FOR PAST YEAR H. Parkman, Supervisor of Music, mittee of arrangements. Among those |j§p| Tifiss Laura V. Miller, daughter of nuptial mass which followed in the breakfast was served at the home of Denslow King, Miss Inez L. Gay and present at the banquet was Dr. War­ jpfejMi*. and Mrs. Julius Miller of Adiron- presence of a large gathering of rel­ the bride, 50 guests attending, after Last Sunday afternoon on the Park Miss Marion Storrs. The banquet which the couple left on a honeymoon Avenue grounds, the Polish Ameri­ ren Hilditch of Erie, Pa., who was ' ^kjack, N. Y., and Thomas H. Barry, atives and friends. The wedding School Office AriiiOUntie was served by Othote of Springfield, graduated in the class of 1902 and march was played by the church or­ trip to Buffalo. The bride wore for cans of this place were defeated by after which the address of welcome was one of the organizers of the ^I^Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. ganist, Mrs. John Rabbitt, and the her traveling costume a poudre blue Names of Local Pupils the strong Diamond Match team of was given by Rockwell Holcomb, Alumni Association. Dr. Hilditch was >(' ;Barry of South Windsor, were united soloist was Miss Emma Gallant who georgette frock with hat to match. Neither Absent, Tardy Springfield by the score of 10 to 6. president of the alumni association, an unexpected guest at the banquet 7-Y'in marriage in St. Patrick's Church sang "0 Promise Me," and the "Ave Mrs. Tanguay is a graduate of Ware After leading the visitors to the first who in closing introduced Mrs. Ar­ and gave a very pleasing and enter­ ;' yesterday morning at 9 o'clock. The High School and Bay Path Institute of the ninth frame by the score of Maria" was sung by Edward Taylor. Or Dismissed For the thur C. Eddy as toastmaster of the taining address when called upon by ! ceremony was performed by the pas- The bride was attended by her sis­ and has been employed at the United 6 to 5, the locals were headed off ; tor, Rev. Daniel J. O'Connor, who ter, Miss Therese F. D'Arcy of New States Rubber Company. Mr. Tang­ Entire School Year. when they started to play faulty ball evening. Remarks were made by the toastmaster. :v. also celebrated the nuptial mass in uay is a graduate of Hartford High behind the unsteady pitching of their York City and the best man was John School and has been employed by the star twirler, Rypysc. On next Sun­ ; the presence of a large assembly of J. Shea of South Manchester. The The following pupils in the public relatives and friends. The wedding Underwood Typewriter Company. day afternoon the management has ushers were Ellery Donahue of South schools of the town were perfect in booked one of the best attractions of inarches were played by the church Manchester and Blaine E. D'Arcy, a attendance, that is, neither absent, organist, Miss Dorilda Castonguay, the season, a return engagement with brother of the bride. The bride wore LUCKAS—SHERIDAN tardy, nor dismissed during the year: the Y. M. H. A. club of Springfield, and the soloist was Mrs. Frederick a gown of white satin crepe and a High School—Seniors, Rosalie Maz- : R. Furey. A pretty June wedding of local in­ who recently played a scoreless tie full length veil caught up with or­ zini; juniors, George Baronian, Char­ with the local team, rain breaking The bride was attended by Miss ange blossoms and carried a shower terest took place in St. Bernard's les Dutton, Harold Thatcher, Charles Mildred Barry, a sister of the groom up the contest before the nine innings bouquet of bride roses and gardenias. Church, Rockville, on Tuesday morn­ Van Kleeck; sophomores, Philip were played. Hy Goldberg will be and the best man was Richard J. The bridesmaid wore a dress of sal­ Dowd, Stuart Jordt, Marguerite Tur- Quinn of East Hartford. The bride ing, when Miss Anna Luckas, daugh­ on the mound again for the Hebrew mon pink taffeta with hat to match rin; freshmen, Frank Bania, Cornelia aggregation with either Zerwitz or •wore a gown of white georgette with and carried a bouquet of pink roses ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Luckas of Baumes, Willard Bromage, Kathleen •full length veil caught up with lilies that city, was united in marriage to Pollack doing the receiving. The loc­ and larkspur. Following the cere­ Carroll, Douglas Chapin, Kenneth al team will present the same line­ Of the valley. She carried a bridal mony, a reception was held at the Joseph E. Sheridan, son of Mr. and Cordner, Elizabeth Crombie, Frank jjouquet of roses. The bridesmaid Mrs. Joseph Sheridan of Pearl street. up as usual, with Rypysc twirling home of the bride on Main street, at D'Lorenzo, Charles Gannuscio, Vir­ and Copeland behind the plate. After -tvas gowned in orchid georgette with which Othote catered. The ceremony was performed by Rev. ginia Jandreau, John Norian, Albert Whole Pork Loins 23c lb. ."hat in harmony and carried a bou­ George T. Sinnott, who also celebrat­ last Sunday's defeat, the second of The young couple left on a honey­ Novak, Howard Pease, Katherine Si­ the season, the locals are looking for Whole Slices of Rouncs Steak 25c lb. quet of pinK roses. At the conclus- moon trip to Washington, Atlantic ed the nuptial in the presence of a mons, Mary Slapska, Josephine Tor- . ion of the church service the bridal large gathering of friends and rela­ a victory, and these teams being riv­ City and the Delaware Water Gap, torich, Eileen Tromley, Bernard Un­ als on account of the previous score­ Large Fresh Shoulders 18c lb. party went to a Hartford hotel where and will be at home to their friends tives. The bride was attended by her derwood, Theodore Zace. , the wedding breakfast was served. sister, Miss Rose Luckas, and the less contest, a fast and interesting after September 1st at 157 Wads- A. D. Higgins' School—Grade 8, battle may be looked for. Short ami Sirloin Steak 39c lb. The bride gave her attendant a worth street, South Manchester. The best man was Philip F. Sheridan, Aline Bilodeau, Frances Piorek, Mar­ pair of white gold rosary beads and bride has been teller for the past brother of the bridegroom. The bride garet Higginbotham, Conrad Kuhn, Salt Pork 15c lb. . the: best man was presented with eight years at the Connecticut Motor was gowned in white satin trimmed Chester Nowak, Frank Romano, Mar­ High School Alumni Large Smoked Shoulders 18c lb. :gold cuff links. Mr. and Mrs. Barry Vehicle Department office in Hart­ with pearls and wore a full length garet Miller, Frank Tokarczyk, An­ Ijave gone on a motor trip to Maine ford. She was a pupil a* the New tulle veil caught up with lilies of the gelina Pascucci; grade 7, Helen Blas- Hold Annual Reunion Bacon (by the square) 22c lb. , and upon their return will reside in England Conservatory of Music and valley. She carried a large bouquet zko, Anna Stinson, William Rarus, v South Windsor. Mrs. Barry is a sis- was organist at St. Bernard's Church, of bride_ roses and lily of the valley. Stella Nabonzy, Regina Trachimow- Fresh Pigs Liver, 3 lbs. for 19c •"! ter,of Mrs. George O'Keefe of Cot- Hazardville. Dr. Barry is a graduate The maid of honor wore a gown of icz, Harold Smith, Mary Guowa, An­ Over 200 Attend Banquet of Alumni tagfe Green. The couple were the re- of Manchester High School and Tufts peach colored georgette over pink na Novak, Mary Doyker, Wanda Ba- Association Held Tuesday Evening ; cipients of a largs assortment of wed­ Dental College, and enjoys a large satin and a picture hat to match and yek, Jennie Luczia, Leroy LeMore: In High School Auditorium—Four ding gifts from their many friends. practice in South Manchester. carried Ophelia roses. |ismuc grade 6,u, meuieNellie Fay,ray, iviaryMary Milkowmiikow- Oldest Teachers Guests of Honor. FISH DEPARTMENT Immediately after the church cere- ,ski> Josephine Gannuscio, Frands The annual reunion and banquet the Alumni Association of the Enfield D'ARCY—BARRY mony a reception was held at. the Salva, Joseph Salva, Nellie Arnone, Steamer Haddock 9c lb. ; BARRY—TANGUAY bride's home which was attended by Helen Bania, Caroline Jedziniak, Ce- High School, was held last Tuesday The marriage of Miss May Elean­ j Miss Agnes Mary Barry, daughter nearly 200 guests from Rockville, El­ liz Pierz, John Struziniak, Stanley Live Shore Haddock 12c lb. or D'Arcy, daughter of Mrs. Nellie lington, Hartford, Springfield, Suf- i of Mrs. Margaret Barry of Terrence Tomasky, Fred Chumura, Tony Pas­ and the late Representative Thomas field and this town. The young couple cucci; grade 5, Clair Tomosek, Albert Live Cape Mackerel 15c lb. F. D'Arcy of Hazardville, and Dr. I street, Springfield, became the bride left early in the afternoon for a wed­ Nabonzy, Emil Greenblatt, Saverio John Francis Barry, son of Mr. and of Armand T. Tanguay, son of ding trip to Bfeston and vicinity and LaTerra, Edward Gwozdz, Frank Connecticut River Roe Shad, Whole Market Mrs. Michael J. Barry of 41 Florence Eugene Tanguay of this town, in St. upon their return will reside on Main Ruggiero, Stella Doyka, Veronica street, South Manchester, took place Michael's Cathedral, Springfield, last street in this town. They were the Garstka, Karolyn Struziak; grade 4, Cod, Steak Cod, Salmon, Halibut, Flounders yesterday morning at 9 o'clock at St. week Wednesday morning. Rev. G. recipients of a large assortment of Frank Anzalotti, Walter Borys, Nich­ Bernard's Church, Hazardville. Rev. L. S. O'Connor, pastor, performed the wedding gifts, including silverware, olas DellAquilla, Edward Jarosz, Leon and Herrings. cut glass, bric-a-brac and furniture. Jedziniak, Rose Kolodricz, Helen Mi- The bride's gift to her attendant was ka, Adam Pierz, Annie Setera, Alex­ a gold piece and to the best man the ander Gracewski; grade 3, Edward California Oranges, sweet and juicy, two groom presented a gold piece. Mr. Taylor, Alec Zaczyuski, Leona Town- Sheridan, is a World War veteran son, Sophie _ Nabonzy, Stanley Doy­ dozen for 49c serving in France with the YD divi­ ka, Alvin Pierog, Edward Pietruiza; sion, and as a member of the Bige- grade 2, Jane Pierz, Jennie Santin- Annual Three Nights i low-Hartford Athletic Club has been ella, Teddy Bednarski, Stanley Borys, ' a crack and baseball play- 1 Stanley Kwicienski, Edwin Salva. •Fancy Old Potatoes 59c peck er on the teams representing that or- North School—Grade 4, Joseph Fi- i g'anization. He is employed by the ori, Josephine Jedziniak, Joseph Ku- Kellogg's Corn Flakes and Post Toasties, 3 LAWN PARTY j Bigelow-Hartford Carpet Company, kulka, Helen Kida, Jane Kososki, Ed­ packages for 25c i The bride is popular in the younger ward Pepek, Aurelia Wascowicz, Gen­ BENEFIT OF ST. BERNARD'S PARISH [set of Rockville. evieve Ziemian; grade 3, Edwin Gon- Pillsbury's Pancake Flour, 2 pkgs 25c cher, Peter Kaminsky, Frank Sypek, Grave Charges Made Matthew Alaimo, Joseph Pepek, Ev­ Silverware For Sliced California Peaches, special 19c can On Parish Lawn, Hazardville elyn Rachwalski, Grace Lamana and Fancy Pears, large can, special 29c By Members of the Alexander Pilch; grade 2, Billy Mar- Weddings migos, Benny Mielkowski, Ouida San- Compound Lard 2 lbs. for 25c THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SAT­ Tobacco Association tandreau, Bertha Ziemian; grade 1, SHOWERS OR ANNI­ Sigmont Ligenza, Rose Bendirenza, VERSARIES Confectionery Sugar 2 pkgs. for 15c URDAY, JUNE 23rd, 24th and 25th (Continued from Page 1) Josie Kukulka, Helen Pilch, Joe Qau- iria, Michael Melfa, Helen Pepek, There is no more delight­ 5 pkgs. of Sunshine Crackers, special 24c Viola Typronsay. ful or practical gift for any was^ that they were in the minority. Fresh Fig Bars 15c lb. Dancing-, Entertainment and many other South School—Grade 6, Adella Na- of these events than a care­ It developed during this discussion suta, William Gray, William Hil- Sunshine Special Assorted Cookies, special attractions each evening. Admission 15c. that in the opinion of Mr. Connor, ditch, Joseph DeMayo, Peter Shaw- fully selected chest of high the director from the 11 District. renski. William Walsh; grade 5, Ed­ quality silver. You can for 35c pkg. Miles M. Smith of Hazardville, had na Jordt, Victoria Shawrenski, Paul get that here, and reason­ acted independent of the officials and Baillieul, Sophie Hias, Allen Bail- able too. Fancy Fresh Cocoanuts 5c each in the intere£f of the growers from lieul, Donald Gourlie, John Mish; his district at all times. grade 4, Stella Zaleska, Francis Mil­ Fancy Heavy Grapefruit 4 for 25c On a motion of Mr. Case of South ler, John Santanello; grade 3, Stella Windsor, the meeting, by a unani­ Mientus, Louis Casinghino, Joseph Arthur H. Lee i&tsi mous rising vote, went on record as Korona, William Zirblis, Francis Mu- Jeweler and Optician favoring that immediate steps be tak­ ich, Hem-y Mangerian, Charles Pace; <5ampatu| en for an investigation of the affairs grade 2, Everett Baillieul, John Haz- 30 Pearl St., Thompsonville y'J. .i.wissswaasaasp of the association, with the ultimate nar, George Mangerian, Stanley Sfuneral lirertot purpose of securing the appointment Shawrenski; grade 1, Evelyn Tatoian, nil of a receiver to wind up its affairs. Josie Vetro, Stanley Korona, Richard Former Senator . Christoph, M. C. Stevens. Griffin of Granby and Richard Jones Center School—Grade G, Frank Big- C. ALAIMO CO. I^OOD taste, unobstrusive but of Windsor were among those who addressed the meeting during the dis­ C-.:, Alexander Piorek, Sophie Ligen- \J thorough service, and the cussion of this motion. The meeting :.a; grade 5. Kenneth Cowles, Bennie perfect blending of all details— Tackubiec, Wc!t:; y Ligenza, Frances MODERN MARKET voted, on a motion of Mr. Devitt, that Novak, Honorsta Piorek, Edward Po- these are assured in every fu­ a committee ol' five be appointed to RUSCO p.oryio, Andrew Prayzner, Paul Sar- neral placed in the care of this name a general committee consisting no, Josephine Szarek, Statia Jedzin­ Phone 456—Quick Service—Free Delivery establishment. of one representative from each of the 22 districts into which the assoc­ iak, Mary K:.v,":ik, Edmond Kukulka, BRAKE LINING The Store where we can positively px-ove that by trad­ iation is divided. This committee Joseph Zawada; grade 4, Vinci which consisted of Thomas F. Burke Alaimo, Stella Nowak, Mary Santan- ing here you can make a substantial reduction in the elli; grade 3, Josephine Hias, Pr;s- cost of living and at the same time be certain of getting 74 Main Street Telephone 180 of East Hartford, Harold Newberry cilla Police, Josephine Santanelli, of South Windsor, Louis Grant of the highest quality of Foodstuff. Thompsonville Night 197 Buckland, Patrick Chamberla:n of Stanley Novak; grade 2, Francis Du- Broad Brook, and M. C. Griffin of John Silansky, Margaret Sarno. Si Maf, Granby, retired and prepared the fol­ Hazardv'lle School—Grade 8, Rob- lowing list of members of the com­ ert Davis, Louise Toumala, Victoria Fancy New Star Potatoes, 15 lb. pk. 79c mittee: District 1, Geo. Smith, Glas­ Pianka (po"fe"t attendance for three tonbury; 2, Franklin J. Handle, Glas­ years), Agn?s Pianka (perfect at­ New Cabbage, 2 lbs. for 13c tonbury; 3, Fred Schaefer, East Hart­ tendance for two years), Mary Gold­ ford; -1, Richard Devitt, Burnside; 5, en, Edith Russell; grade 6, Andrew Fowler's Yellow Cling Peaches, sliced, Burton Lewis, Buckland; 6, E. A. irvromey; grade 5, Joyce Warner and Buckland, Wapping; 7, Frank E. Bid- Charles Luce; grade 4. Joseph Dubiel; large size, 6 cans for $1.00 well, South Windsor; 8, John F. Dris- grade 3, Vern ah man and Helen Thompson; grade £, Paul Pelkey and Fresh Eggs, 2 doz* for 55c coll, East Windsor; 9 and 10, Samuel Fred Wence. Chamberlain, East Windsor; 11, M. J..Connor, Enfield; 12, Stanley Brown Brainard School—Gi'ads 5, Evelvn Crispo Fig Bars, 2 lbs. for 25c Comfort and Health of Windsor; 13, E. A. Root, East Scott, Mary Klebosky; grade 4. Frank Granby; 14, Edward Phelps, Suffield; ivazmierski; grade 3, John Klebosky, Uneei'a Biscuits, per pkg 4c Walter Stryh&rz; grade 2, Stanley j 15, Harvey Fuller of Suffield. The Kazmierski." •>. Featured in Fashionable Massachusetts representation on the Buckeye, Milwaukee, American Flier committee, and the members from Enfield "Stifcet School—Grade (5. Stops Qmcker Peter Esiufcevfe, Lewis Stinson, Adel­ and Canadian Malt and Hops, spec­ Footwear for Women some of the districts in the lower part AN you stop your car in 27 of the Connecticut Valley were left la Gudaitis, Rita Grandchamp, John ial, 2 cans for $1.25 to be selected later. Glista; grade 5, Edwin Cybulski. Her­ C fset going 20 miles an hour R. Dickerman Hurd Health Shoes are a boon to The committee held a brief session man Grandchamp, Fremont Oliver, with two-wheel brakes? That is the woman interested in shoe style but who tires following the close of the meeting Mary Talnak, Margaret Viniconis; 8f eet quicker than police requ ire. D grade 3, Michael Talnak; grade 2, El­ Rusco brake lining gives you easily in the ordinary makes. Hurd Health Shoes are and plans were made for taking im­ sie Pobat. GROCERY DEPARTMENT mediate action on the proposed inves­ extra safety. It's the last few feet constructed along sensible lines and have built in them Scitico School—Grade 4, Jack Ker- the Dew improved Pedic Arch which offers perfect tigation. The committee is hopeful that make the difference be­ Star Soap, 5 bars for 23c of getting the application for a re­ tenis, Frank Kertenis; grade 3, Adel­ support for the muscles of the foot and ankle. Yet la Sarna, Helen Sordoski; grade 2, tween safety and sorrow. Also, Fairy Soap, 5 bars for 24c ceiver before the courts previous to Victor Kertonis. Rusco brakes equally well, rr.in Chipso, large package 19c style is easily apparent in every pair — they appeal adjournment for the summer which cr shine. Don't drive with infer­ takes plSce about June 30. The as­ East Wallop School—Grade 4, Vir­ Fancy Bengal Peas, 2 cans for 25c to every woman who wishes fashionable footwear. ginia Gowdy; grade 3, Dominick Gi'o- ior, worn out or poorly adjusted sociation is said to have, in addition brake lining. Let us inspect your Indian Root Beer Extract, 2 for 24c ; to about $1,000,000 worth of tobacco jeski; grade 1, Harriette Gowdy. Matches, 6 boxes for 23c Hn- - brakes today. We are the au­ on hand, a bank balance of $200,000, Very Best Cocoa, 2 lbs. for 29c and in addition the sum of $250,000 A man in South Africa has just thorized Rusco Service Stat ion. which has been set aside for hail in­ papered his room with 500,000 used Best Lard for shortening, 2 lbs. for 25c surance. None of the officials of the postage stamps. We have two plans: Drive (tobacco association were present at your car in and we'll do the the meeting, but the men who pro­ job complete, or if you do MEAT DEPT. SPECIALS moted the gathering were certain Legal Notice that they had reprtsentatives there to your own work, bring us Choice Tender Round Steak, by the slice, lb 35c i HeeP in tou^h with the proceed- , AT A COURT OF PROBATE held your brake bands and we'll Boneless Roast Beef, per lb 25c ings. The meeting convened shortly at Enfield within and for the Pro­ reline them free of labor Fancy Rib Roast, per lb 20c ViolcL, ; before 3 o'clock, and lasted two hours bate District of Enfield, on the 15th charge, your cost will be Boiling Beef, 2 lbs. for 25c and a half. It was orderly and well day of June, 1927. the price of the lining only. Fresh Pork Liver, 3 lbs. for 25c ! conducted throughout. At the open- Present: Charles J. Fowler, Judge. Pickled Pigs Feet, 2 lbs. for 25c i ing of the session the legal status Estate of Rocco Spinelli, late of We have installed special of it was established by the reading Enfield, in said District, deceased. machinery for the lining of Fancy Roast Pork, 3 to 4 lbs., per lb 23c A distinct novelty. Being two widths nar­ of a notice of the meeting that was Upon the application of Teresio brakes by means of which Fresh Shoulders, 2 lbs. for 35c rower at the heel and arch, women with slim published in The Press last week. An Marinaccio, Administrator of the es­ all rivets are countersunk Smoked Shoulders, 2 lbs. for 35c feet are assured the utmost comfort in a shoe that action of the meeting in the begin­ tate of Rocco Spinelli, late of Enfield, Boneless Roast Veal, per lb. 29c fits perfectly at every point. A serviceable shoe ning also, was extending a rising in said District, deceased, for an or­ into the lining. No rivets in Black or Brown Kid or Patent Leather that vote of thanks to Manager Burbank der of sale of such interest as'said are exposed to cause an­ Fancy Legs of Veal, 4 to 6 lbs., per lb 15c retains its shape under the most severe conditions. of the Franklin, who donated the use deceased had in and to certain real noying squeaks or to score Fancy Roast of Veal, per lb 15c of the theatre for the meeting. estate particularly described in said the drums. Pure Pork Sausage Meat, per lb 29c Attempts for the past few days to application, it is Liverwurst, per lb 29c elicit a statement regarding the meet­ Ordered, TTiat said application be Every brake lining job ing from the officials of the associa­ heard and determined at said Pro­ Bacon, sugar cured, squares, per lb 22c tion were without avail. A meeting bate Court in said Enfield on the done in our shop is guar­ of the committee of 22 will be held 21st day of June, 1927, at 9:30 o'clock anteed to give satisfaction. tomorrow evening in the town hall in the forenoon, and that public no­ FISH DEPT. SPECIALS at South Windsor, according to an tice be given to all persons interest­ Fresh Mackerel, per lb i0c announcement made by Secretary ed in said estate to appear, if they MERRILL BROS H. W. Newberry yesterday. Plans see cause, and be heard thereon, by Fresh Haddock, per lb i0c will be made at this meeting for im­ publishing a copy of this order in a Cod, per lb 18c mediate action on the application for newspaper -having circulation in GARAGE Flounders, 2 lbs. for 25c George H. Cunningham the appointment of a receiver. I-' &)y said Probate District, at-least five -Central St., Opp. Northern Clam Chowder, large can 27c THOMPSONVILLE, CONN. dayg tmfOre said time assigned, and 1 55 PEARL STREET More than 150,000 people? 1A' Wales return make to-this Court. Conn. Power Co. Office. Sardines, 4 cans for 25c % i- do not speak English. CHARLES J. FOWLER, Judge.

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