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t w e ^^r a t h b r - : y y ^ - 7. ' VoMCMt bjr • 0. •» We«Hi®f .0*M*P®» NET PRESS RUN - , TiK^w. HoTWi' rr i?iVERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION .'-r-v for U|c iiimitli of April, 1928 'A,-- -}t i- m >Fa4p and 8Ughttl7,,|igDK>Uw^t«^^ A Thursday pwBy 5 , 1 2 8 * . . ■, • 1. / •- -i •.♦.■*' ‘Member of ihe Aiidit Hurean of ^ i : '-V ;■ '■ Circnlntlona ' y " ■ ■$ '■./ ■ A V.t . ■ ■• (SIXTEEN PAGES) p r ic e t h r e e CEI MANCHESTER, CONN., WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1928. VOL. XLIL, NO. 182. (Classified Advertising on Page 14)

President at Rites lor .Congressman Madden DEMOCRATS OF BREMENECREW .... ■ V ■ ■ •• ' __ :__ --I:—- STATE UNITED GIVEN WELCOME ■ : ■ At ■■■X ■ O N m n H BY W A S M O N incomplete Reports ^ e Bnt Otherwise Party is Torn All Officials From President 28,515 M ots Oyer By Factional Fights— Ef­ Down, Present at Cere- Two Opponents, Reeff fort to Oust Spellacy Is monies— Cbl Lindbergh Wakh Combined; Hooyin Washington, May 2.— Should ai$> Both cadets were absent at the to Be Made Tonight. Meets Flyers, time. One of them returned missed young man’s dream of, a proud ca­ his suit, and complained. The Without Opposition reer as an officer of Uncle Sam’s clothes were found in Cardwell’s Hartford, Conn., May 2.— A Washington, May 2— The daring navy be forever blasted because he room. He made no effort to conceal trio of two Germans and an Irish­ borrowed a pair of pants from a them or remove identifying marks the Surprising Vote olj -strenuous last minute effort to pre­ The midshipmen whose clothes man who wrote a new and brilliant friend? serve harmony among Democrats in The lords of the navy say it were taken say they are certain the state was put under way here page in aeronautical history by should— and refuse to reinstate Cardwell only borrowed the clothes, 459,625. this afternoon. A committee of in- spanning the Atl.antic in the first Larry fcardwell, of Washington, D. The Navy Department agrees to C., in the Annapolis Naval Acad­ this. Iluential party members was being east-to-west crossing came to Wash­ emy. But Cardwell was dismissed and San Francisco, Cal., May 2;— selected by Thomas J. Spellacy, na­ ington today and received the plau­ Secretary Wilbur and ranking ad The House military affairs com­ Returns coming in from added pr®.. tional committeeman, to confer dits of the government and the mittee takes a different view. rnirals's.ustained It. cincts throughout Gallfomia todaj with the Insurgent wing of the populace for their stirring aciove- And the issue has been placed “ In any institution other than party lines intact. before Congress, to dispense justice' one in which the military system continued to emphasize the victory Mr. Spellacy and Mrs. Lillian ment. or injustice. ' must be maintained the conduct of of Gov. Alfred B. Smith oyei . The capital has no towering sky­ The facts are generally agreed this young man prpbably would not Abbott, of Norwalk, the woman Senators r James A. Reed an^ nember of the national committee, scrapers from which to shower upon, according to the report of the have ‘ evoked ' ' comment, " certainly not ;old a meeting of delegates at the down storms of ticker-tape upon its naval affairs committee today on a such condign punishment as was Thomas J. Walsh In Callforni^^/ >= \ Bond this noon that they were will­ lionized visitors, no hysterical mil­ When funeral services for Representative Martin BUJois were^cond^ in tbe Hous^ bill to reinstate Cardwell, As ex­ visited upon him,” said Secretary Democratic preferential primary. ing to ‘‘sacrifice ourselves in the lions to scream a welcome and mob plained by Rep. Burdick (R) of Wilbur.” Out of a total of 8.753 precinett ^ them, but every official from Presi­ Rhode Island, they are: Friends of Cardwell declare that interests of Harmony if mort fitted in front of the speaker’s rostrum, which was occupied of his life’s ambition was to be a nav­ tabulation of the votes in 6,(580 leaders can be found.“ dent Coolidge down to the admiring Cardwell, rushing to inspection, found he had no freshly pressed al officer. Unable to get a Congres­ gave Smith a plurality of 28,515 ; About 125 delegates gathered for flappers in the government depart­ sional appointment he enlisted in ballots over his two opponents foi he harmony meeting. Insurgents ments joined today in the unfolding suit. In dismay he rushed to the retary of State Kellogg and President C o o l l d g e . ______room of Midshipman Beyerly and the Navy, took examinations and the Democratici^presidential "‘nomi­ vere conspicuous by their absence. panaroma of official recognitio . entered Annapolis. nation. , and high praise for the heroic crew grabbed a pair of trousers. He Phis fact led to the suggestion that continued in search of a coat, and It Is well to maintain discipline, The vote in this number of pfer"^; i committee be formed to treat of the Breman. SWEDISH LUTHERAN went into Midshipman Thompson’s but too much to destroy the young cincts gave S m ith 111,265; Reei with the group that was absent. A perfect May day was provided room, where he got another pair of man’s career, said the House com­ 47.382; Walsh 35,372. > Among speakers were Charles G. for the government’s welcome to DOPE RING trousers and also a coat. mittee. The votes cast for Herbert Hod* Morris, Rollin U. Tyler and Wil­ Baron Von Huenefeld. Captain Her­ . ver, only candidate in the ■ Repulbli*-. liam Thoms. mann Koehl, and Major James Fitz- CONFEENCE OPENS 1 can presidential ticket, continued The members of the harmony maurice— in marked contrast to the AMERICAN } to grow in volume until in the 6i- committee finally appointed this gloomy and depressing rain-swept LOCAL MAN QUITS 4-DAY TO EUROPE 1 680 repo.ted precincts it had reach­ afternoon are James J. Walsh, day last week when they slipped — ed 459,625. Meriden; Alex Mooney. Bridgeport; into the capital incognito to pay Two Sessions This After­ W. E. Thoms. Waterbury; J. P. tribute to an heroic American who WORK, IS MISSING PLAN IS DITCHED SMASHING VICTORY , McDonough, Naugatuck; D. E. Fitz- died in their service, Floyd Bennett. Head of Federal Narcotic 10 DEAD, lOOfflIRT New York,' May 2.— Almost the Gerad, New Haven, and Thomas F. Ceremonies Begin n oon -F irst Public Serv­ last faint' chance that A1 Smith Noone, Rockville. A warm, friendly sun beat down Squad Makes Public Let­ “ can he stopped” at Houston next on Bolling Field where the official IN MAY DAY RIOTS month flickered■ out today in'the Hartford, Conn., May 2— Connete- ceremonies began at ten o’clock, ices Tonight Mystery Develops When Shipping Board’ s Action wake of the California primary, ticut Democrats are united on at with Secretary of State Kellogg ters Sent to Several Pub­ which saw the New York goverpol least one point this year: the nom­ formally welcoming the visitors in Willard H. Chapman Fails Threatens to Start a Bit> score a smashing victory over his' ination of Governor Alfred E. the name of the government. Socialists and Commumsts DELFiG.ATE STRICKEN chieF rivals for the Democrattfl Smith, if New York, for the presi­ “ It i.; with feeling the deepest lications. John Russell of Worcester. nommatihn. - - admiration for your magnificent dency. Otherwise the Democratic Mass., a lay delegate to the Swed­ to Return Here. ter Fight in Congress. TBe governor’s friends were organization is torn by local fac- exploit that I welcome you today Start Disturbance in War- ish Lutheran conference here, was jubilantly proclaiming today;thal; tional disputes and they are facing on behalf of the government and Washington, May 2— Evidence of “ A1 is in,” and even the ultra-dry^,-; people of this country,’’ said Kel- stricken with convulsions at two a major engagement for state con­ a widespread campaign of threat Willard H. Chapman of 240 Oak Washington, May 2.— The Unit­ and anti-Tammany bitter-endert''' trol and leadership. ' loigg. “ Your task was indeed one and intimidation 'against newspa­ saw-^King's Escape. o’clock this afternoon. He,did not were disposed to concede it. There: tp test the power of human endur­ street, married, and a partner with ed States Shipping Board’s ' sum­ When the Democratic .state con­ pers on behalf of a self-styled rally ,^nd was taken to the Meni- is scarcely a Oemoeratic-leader to" vention gets under way this even­ ance, and its successful accomp­ Alexia Tournaudjin the Silk City mary rejection of the “^proposed “ Dope Ring,” was disclosed tod^Y; .opJAl hospital here for treatment. Washington . today who now be­ ing, meeting in Foot Guard Armory, lishment has stirred the entire WiirOTW, ^ a y Ten persons Gas Station ah the corner of Center four-day. New York to Europe/ ship lieves that Gov. Smith will fail to nation. ' ‘ by -Cql, .L. G. Nutt, head “ of 'the are dead here today, others are and Adams streets has been re­ and airplane scheme today threat-, attain the necessary two-thirds of - “ You have marked another mile­ The sixteenth annual meeting of —,-XG»fttHHred-on-page 2 ) " Fedei^al Narcotic Unit. .. dying and more than 100 are suf- the New England conference of the ported missing to the police. ened to involve Congress in a bit­ the convention, although some hf stone on the path of man’s conquest them, for local reason^, are; not over the forces of nature. More­ from ^Ss f^rne? Jve? j fering from wOunds as a rpsult of Swedish Lutheran churches opened According to the information ob- ter controversy on the eve of con­ this afternoon at two o’clock with shouting it from the ho^use-topA over, I like to consider your to the federal authorities...... said:—-J. worst May Day rioting in the tained today. Chief of Police Gorr sideration of the Jones-White Mer- By- his victory in Caliromnti, achievement symbolic of the ever- two sessions on the programs. don, who was informed of the dis­ “ Warning to the publisher: If history of Poland. chant Marine bill. which was hailed as the the big REPORT OF STORMS narrowing distances which separate These were the annual pastors' con­ appearance last night. Chapman yoh publish any articles of any Nearly 0,000 Socialists and Com­ ference in the Swedish Lutheran Backers of the bill expressed the test of Smith’s appeal in .be west, the nations of the modern world, kmd about us we will blow up your has not been home Since Monday munists took part in violent street church and the Lutheran Brother­ morning. At the gasoline station it fear , that the action has “ thrown a the governor has now run his total, both in a real and a figurative .place and kill you. And we don t of favorable and committed dele­ sense. fighting. Panic reigned over a large hood or laymen’s conference in the was learned by the police that he wrench” into plans to restore the DELAYS DIRIGIBLE mean maybe. Keep, your mouth section of the city as the rival-fac­ Concordia Lutheran church. gates :to approximately 508. This is “ Your undertaking itself was an shut and watch your step. We mean left the station'* about 8’:i o’clock American Merchant Marine to its tions fired upon each othei. Eighty-five churches in the New Monday morning driving a 1920 former high position, since virtual­ out of a total of 658 delegates thus4| example of international coopera­ .business. (Signed) The Dope far selected, so that Smith is run­ tion and its happy outcome is all Theatre Square was strewn with England conference and one New Cleveland coupe and dressed in his ly no opposition had hitherto ap­ the bod'es of dead and wouqded York congregation, that at Schenec­ working clothes. He did not re­ peared to the Jones-White meas­ ning, oa a percentage basis, far ia The letters were sent to tne excess of the required two-thirds. Gen. Nobile Plans to Start (Continued on page 2) Journal of the American Pharma­ for two hours. tady, are represented at the confer­ turn Monday nor did he say where ure. ceutical Associati'^n, of Baltimore, Troops and police finally restored ence sessions wh.cL will be held he was going. Many Congressmen, who have And of the 158 delegates chosen the publication of the Sons of Am­ order. Heavy damage was done to here through Sunday. It was esti­ Business has been good at the been “ sold” on the idea of-.four- who are not definitely committed to; Tomorrow For Tour Over erica, a patriotic society of Balti- property. mated this afternoon that 150 station, it is said. Mr. Chapman day liners to Europe— cuttihg the Smith, it‘ is known that some wilt How Fight Started guests had arrived for the meetings has been taking care of the book­ running time of big ships two days vote for him after jpayiilg their rie-/ ?^ FORDS INCOGNITO’ keeping there. A notification of his the Polar Regions, (Continued on page 2) A group of Communists, who and that number will be guests at and using airplanes to speed the wav spects to favorite'sons. pretended to he workmen, edged supper in the church auditorium disappearance has been sent out by of both passengers and mails— also On First Ballot . their way into the Socialist crowd this evening. Two hundred dele­ the police together with his des­ entered their protest. Smith lieutenants in WasbingtonA cription. He came to Manchester I SAIL FOR AMERICA and began to make speecLer. Fight­ gates will be in attendance at the Secret Meeting were predicting today that he will .7tolp, Germany, May 2.— Reports j about ten years ago and worked The Shipping Board’s action, it be. nominated on the first ballot.- ing broke out at once. The Social­ sessions tomorrow. for Cheney Brothers five years. He of a raging storm of cyclonic pro-i MOLNAR DENIES ists claim that the Communists Today’s Meetings was learned, was made the subject Certainly if. the governor, can inaiA-/ is about six feet tall, has dark of a secret meeting of the House tain the dizzy pace he has set thiis: yiortions over northern Norway and opened fire upon the Socialist pro­ At this afternoon’s.pastoral con­ brown hair and when he left was Merchant Marine committee. far, ampng the 442 delegates, stilt.i Ppitzbergen caused a last moment Booked as Mr. and Mrs. cession. ference Dr. S. G. Hagglund, of wearing puttees over oil stained DIVORCE REPORT King Amanullah, of Afghanistan, Dorchester, Mass.,, president of the “ The summary action of the to be selected, their prediction#^ postponement today of the schedul­ working trousers and a dark shirt Shipping Board without a complete and the Queen of Afghanistan are conference, was in charge and there with collar attached. will be borne out. Smith need^i ed departure of the dirigible Italia John Robinson But the in Warsaw at the present time. were two speakers on the program. The police are conducting an in­ investigation was very unfortu­ roughly about 200 delegates yet,, on the second leg of its Polar The King almost got within Dr. Efraim Ceder of Portland and vestigation locally. nate,” said Rep. Gifford, (R) of and his friends say there wHi be flight. range of the fighting. He was driv­ Rev. Hans Pearson of Springfield. Mass., a member of the commit- diiflculty in obtaining them. News Leaks Out. Famous Austrian Playwright tee. While appreciatingr the niuner!-3l General' Umberto Nobile an­ ing through a nearby street when Dr. Cedar’s subject was “ Efforts to firing broke out. Immediately the “ It looks like the Shipping Board, cal value of (California’s 26 dele^^ nounced the postponement after gain- more friendly feelings be­ being in the.business of operating carefully scanning the weather re­ In Interview, Gives His police wr.rned his chauffeur to tween denominations.” Rev. Pear­ gates, it was not merely the London, May 2.— Mr.- and Mi’s. COLLEGE BOYS SEARCH ships, wants to stay in it, and is quisition of this much arithmetical] ports today. All preparations had drive quickly away from the scene son spoke, on “ Church Membership discouraging every new plan. I been made for the huge airship’s Henry Ford ended ' their English of the strife. and PersonaT Piety,” This meeting strength that most impressed t^ei don’t want them spending $250,- governor’s supporters today. What/ ilight when the postponemnt was visit today. They sailed secretly Impressions of Women. More, than 200 arrests were' was open to pastors of the con- FOR BODY OF STUDENT 000,000 reconditioning old ships announced. It was thought prob­ made, niiost of the prisoners being they dwelt most heavily upon from Southhampton on the White that will mean nothing to the Mer­ the decisive repudiation -of th^ able here that the dirigible would young men. (Continued on page 2) chant Marine nor the Navy as Star liner Majestic as “ Mr. and Vienna, May 2.— Reports‘ that theory persistently emphasised. byiT be able to leave early tomorrow. Franze Molnar, Austria’s best Dartmouth Sophomore Drown­ auxiliaries.” The Italia is bound for King’s Bay, Mrs. Robinson.” That was the the opposition that ‘■‘Smith has no; known playwright, intends to di­ The Board’s action, however, is appeal in the west” because ot.ihis!' . Spitzbergen, with a short inter­ ed When Canoe Upsets; His said to have been received with name used by the Fords when they vorce his third wife, Lilly Darvas, CANADIAN WAR CHIEF wet views and his Tammany afflUA^; mediate stop at Vadsoe, Norway, sailed from New York on the a beautiful actress, are hot true, ’BIG B ill’ HAYWOOD Companion Saves Himself. high favor by other ship-builders lor refuelling. Molnar told International News who criticized the four-day plan as tion. ’ Majestic. Senator Thomas J. Walsh (D) nf^l The Italia came from Milan, Service today. WINS HIS LIBEL SUIT Hanover, N. H., May. 2.— After unsound. Italy, after a tumultuous 30-hour At the Carlton hotel it was stat­ “ Divorce is certainly popular i IS DYING IN MOSCOW nearly 300 police, citizens and The Jones-White bill sets up a "MantaUa. an avowed dry, and back^j battle with the elements. Nobile ed that Mr. and Mrs. Ford checked nowadays and 1“ must admit having Dartmouth ’ college students had construction loan fund of $250,- ed by 'William G. McAdoo In'the/ California contest, finished s peor/:| will use Spitzbergen as a base from out late yesterday. It is under­ had some personal experience witlt Newspaper Said He Sent His searcheu both shores of the Con­ 000,000, providing government which he will carry on his explora­ stood that the Ford party went to it, but 1 am out of practice and am necticut river, the body of John loans at low interest t® shipbuild­ third to Smith and a poor second^ tions of the polar wastes. South Hampton •. last night where satisfied with my married life,” Chicago Head of I. W. W. Suf­ Troops Into Battle After the Rust, of East Cleveland, Ohio, a ers Up to 75 per cent of the cost of to Senator James A. Reed bf Miss-/ His Supply Ship. they boarded the liner, their pres­ said the playwright. fers Paralytic Stroke—j-Is 59 Armistice. , sophomore, was still unrecovered a ship, to build up a private ma­ ouri. , Incomplete returns and prl-,‘? A supply ^ ip , the City of Milan, ence on the ship being known only Molnar is planning to visit the Years Old. today. He was believed to have rine. The four-day plan would have vate advices reaching Dempe^atte/ is now believed to be battling its to the officers. United States next autumn when - Cphurg, . 6nt,, May -2.-:—General drowned when a canoe in which he taken $94,000,000 of this fund. leaders' here Indicate that Smith’ way through the ice floes surround­ It was rumored here that Mr. two of his plays will be produced in Moscow, May 2.— 'William D. Sir Arthur Currie, commander in and a companion were riding over­ I will eventually be shown-to have/ ing Spitzbergen in an effort to get Ford had opened negotiations for a New York. They are “ the , Red (“ Big Bill” ) Haywood, former Chi­ chief of the Canadian corps in turned. .jpolled more votes than his two"^ to King’s Bay before the arrival of working agreement with the Hand- Mill” and “ Olympia.” Both are cago ' leader of the Industrial France during the W« rid War,-to­ Powerful searchlights thrown on rivals conibined. Lhe Italia. ley-Page Company for the construc­ comedies. Workers -of the World, who has day'atlent’s heart was so weak s.ued for 650,00() hut'stated during about two miles above the college Middletown, Conn., May 2,— ^Dr. Italia to King’s Bay, Spitzbergen, attempted to/intervidw the Ameri­ the course of the trial that he want­ Thus far, WaTsh has not.a sS will reach that port at noon today, can manufacturer, but he secluded eous for the women. ’ . that stimulants .had to be adipinls- and we:.e^;aftemting to turn their James F. Mitchell, for years a "Of course; I do not mean to say ed, only vindication, not money. prominent physician, ywas found committed delegate^ save hlA|< a wireless message received here himself in his cabin and refused to tered. Not 'even his wife was allow­ canoe aroUhtt to return along the eight from Mon tana,. And pr^ from the ship’s captain stated. talk about any subject. that real art has anything ^to do ed at the bedside. " ‘-y. ". ; , y.iiSi'r'Arthur ; brought Ws action New Hampshire shore when the ac­ dead in bed at his home here this with sex. Genius is. as independent after the Port, Hope Guide had the annouheement of Us The City of Milan will remain at Mr. and Mrs. Ford arrived In^ ' Hasrwbdd * hah long suffered' frpih cident occurred. afternoon, -'having been shot of sex as U Is from race or colbr/ diabetes, hut the systoihs yielded puhlished' aiT article on June 13, through the head. Coroner It whs known that Montana’A^ King’s Bay awaiting the arrival of Southampton yesterday. After gates 'were ' favorable .to the- luncheon they set out by automo­ "History proves that wpmen' excel to ihsiiUh treatnaehtr His heart be-- 19 S7 'i^arging. .that. “to glorify the Lowndes' A.-'” Smltb.t Investigating, the airship which may .leave Stolp, upon the stage, l)ut db not" produce HURT IN AUTO CRASH York governor. Walsh was on| Germany, tomorrow. bile to visit the picturesque town came affected and general wenkuess Gahndlah hefaduuartefs staff,” declared Dr. Mitchell had shot him­ great work's as ^utHors, "sci^lp'tora, develt^edi’ I Haywood is, 59 years CaifSdians were.meedlessly sent to self. Members, of his temlly found ed in Wisconsin, and iost to .$1! If of i^eaulieu In the heart of New painters or composers.. That holds and Reed. He has now EGYPT’S REPLY Forest. Enrute they missed their old,-He Caine • ' td, Soviet Russia: capture the. city of Mpns. from the Bridgeport, Cdhn., May 2.-r^6ha the doctor dead. He had been in good for America as it does for Eu­ about eight; years ago to- escape ar­ Germane After the commander poor health for a number of years, and heavily, In CallfOmla.' way and traveled 40‘ miles before rope. The.astounding number of Saray, 93, a gardener, is In a criti­ Reed; ran the. other/hakd,-. rest in the'IJnited'-States. He was knew |hat the Armistice had been cal condition in Bridgeport hospital Dr.' MltchelU a nativo of Mariet^ London, May 2.— Egypt’s reply they found the main road. Eventu­ American •women authoresses who in the''picture*'.:' A t l ^ t ally they reached Beaulieu where ^ven ti small post 'by the ■ Soviet ■ffi^edT ' ’ ’ "*■ t . as a result o f an auto; accident In ta, Ohio, was graduated from the to the British ultimatum, which have failed to/prodnee one -work :governmentr in. recognition of his a total, of some 64. detei^te was received from Cairo last night, thqy.dined at the local inn and-ln- V The ‘trial, which.began on April which he received a'frapture of ,the medical school of the College of the which could be* favorably cbmpiiredi efforts Ini behalf of Bolshevism. > City 'of New York. He came hete tered'through half A,^doien was undtr scrutiny by the foreign speetd the town. with the.; output of 'Theodore IJfels-. .16, aroused great- interest through­ sknll. Alex Troll, drivef’ of the . car, out .'OaPade- Sir Arthur, is npw was -arrested charged With Arlvlng more than 20 years ago.'He spent Smith’A-.J>reeettt office today. It is understood the ,-Upon their return to this city the^ er, Sinclair Lewis or O’Neill is‘real­ delesatea are frolA/ document expresses hope that Fords spent the night at a hotel * t r e a s u r y b a l a n c e -Qi^uclipali oC-MeGill-Unlyerslty,' Mout while intoxicated and /.driving , -a two yearsjn Qendany, working un­ ly popular. ’ ■. 'i‘I ? --\v; -» ^ der direction of the United Statest to Call^i^a^ and>fi^m;''' As^lo.-^gyptian reUtiqns will im- hoarding the Majestic this morning Molnar thinks,that the film hag ;trepl.‘ /Hi8 ctxunsel produced proof car that had* defective brakes., Trolt nefore the arrival of the Imat train Wastfington, May 2.-r-Trea8nry that" ub Canadians were killed in collldednwith a machine.‘driven by government to ooihbat a cholera tr-v- - .=•’ rprhye n'h/overtures .tb not harmed the stage. He believes It r.v .iC ooU .‘wai'ds fresh negotiations. •from London. x , , has madj the theater more BOPUlar,; balance April 28: $l:98;9fi0i68T.14. j Franoa-on Armiatice .W illiaa S . Jttdd./ ..eoldaffllQ, 4 ^ .•/sbs;../ .1 V* *•»- ^ A G E TW O

DBStrates his tremqndous'^^^ LANDSLIDE FOR SMITH i ^ with the pedple.: y ; W N.Y.Stocks ®s PERMHBREHEIfSCREW i n C R A T S O F D.A.R.BUCKUST ' * “ Apparently ' Mr. Hoover s ■ s, OBITUARY will greatly exceed the total .Cakt: IS CALIFORNIA’S VOTE for the three Democratic candi- , High Low- 1 p. m. FOR N. E. BOILDINeS Ailed Chem UDSING TROUBLE dates, for whom intense campaigns .163% 162 163 OVEN WELCOME STATE UNITED were conducted throi^hou^;: ' the Am Bosch . (Continued from Page 1.) . 24% 24% 24% DEATHS state.” Am Can .. . 671/4 57 57 Am Smelt . .192% 191% 192 Will Eliminate Fire Hazard BY WASHINGTON dian border ^0 the Gulf, which Is Am St Pdy . 65% 65% 65% Mrs. George Ruddell ON GOV. SnOTHlMany Prominent New Haven another jwint that his friends dwell PURCHASE LAND TO y Am Sugar . 70% 70 70% Mrs. George (Minnie McGuire) upon to show the universal nature Am T & T .190 190 190 On Depot Square; Theater (Continued from Page 1.) Ruddell, former Manchester resi­ dent, died at her home in Paterson, (Continued from Page 1) Women Resign— Issue a of his strength. Am Wool . . . 22% 22% 22% ^ As compiled here and conceded PROTlET W A T ® SHED Anaconda ----- . 70% 70% 70% » the more gratifying to this country N. J., yesterday morning following a short'illness with pneumonia. She to be substantially accurate, the Atchison ... . . 195 194% 195 Later. to whose upbuilding the German Hartford, one group o f Smith sup­ Smith slate shows to date: Beth Steel and Irish nations has so richly con­ was 38 years old. Mr. and Mrs. Rud­ porters will be pitted against Statement. ....6 1 % ' 61 61% Arizona, 6; Arkansas 8 out of Manchester T^ater Cj^pany Can Pac ..----- 214 214 214 tributed.” dell formerly lived on Hemlock anoth^ group of Smith supporters street hut moved to Paterson near­ 18; California, 26; Idaho, 8; Illin­ Takes Ovfer L a ^ e A tabulated. of MonSay and yesterday, and the at the Mayflower hotel and then were still strong In their claims as sworn to uphold. total tax collected during that time back the theater project. The per­ tery. A Face About It is estimated that approximate­ motored alone to Bolling Field. the day wore on. Both claim they was $351,228.17. The total amount r: mit jlace'i the value on the work have enough pledged delegates to “ The United States has grown in ly 35 per cent of the 1,849,979 reg­ Chicago, May 2.— Oscar de that is now to be started as $14,- A salue of guns from Battery C istered voters cast ballots in the to be collected is $7lT,111.90. of the 16th U. S. Field Artillery carry the convention. So far the power and influence for 150 years Priest, Chicago’s first negro aider- 000, but it would be near the $20,- by carrying out the principles of election. This is ascribed by politi­ Yesterday was the last day on man, has been selected as the Re­ was fired as they entered the field FUNERALS claims are all on paper and the real cal observers to the absence of a which tbe tax could be paid without 000 mark were it not for the lum­ contest will come this evening when our fathers, for free discussions of publican candidate for Congress ber from the building being torn and a troop from the Third Caval­ contest in Republican ranks in a the usual interest rate being added. a direct appeal to the delegates can public questions. For this the pres­ In addition to the amount* deposit­ from the First Illinois District to down. ry formed their escort. Geoi^e Eagleson ent policies of the Daughters of the predominantly Republican state. succeed the late Congressman Mar­ Another troop of cavalry was The funeral of George, seven- be made. The present control As tabulation of the ballots pro­ ed Mr. Howe received 200 remit­ group is charged with having adopt­ American Revolution substitute a tances by mail which he did not tin B. Madden. drawn up at the Mayflower en­ year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert face-about toOtyrannlcal suppression ceeded, indications pointed to a De Priest is committeeman and trance as the party returned to the Eagleson of 127 Cooper Hill street ed strategy to remain In power. steady growth In Gov. Smith’s lead. have time to open. All these will DOPE RING THREATENS of all’ who differ with the present be handled within a short time and Third Ward leader in the political hotel, acorapanied by the ambas­ was held at the home Monday after­ The Insurgents admit the reigning national officers on the questions Out of the precincts already tabu­ organization headed by Mayor Wil­ sador, the minister and three gov­ powers have Hartford county solid lated, approximately four ballots receipts will be sent out as soon as noon and was largely attended. of the day. If such effort should possible. - liam Hale Thompson. His selection AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS ernment air secretaries. There were many floral tributes. in their behalf. succeed the result would be to had been cast in his favor to each as nominee for Congress was be­ Act of Recognition. Rev. Alfred Clarke, curate at St. A “ harmony meeting” was held crush the initiative and creative en- one for either Reed or Walsh. lieved dictated by Mayor Thomp­ President Goolidge’s first act of Mary’s Episcopal Church, officiated at eleven a. m., today. Mr. Spel­ energy of the American people. (Continued from Page 1.) Some Figures PU6UC RECORDS son, although five First District recognition of the Bremen's and burial was In the East ceme­ lacy called it. Insurgents are won­ "We wish God speed to those In 1,785 precincts out of the 2,- committeemen. Including De Priest, achievement today was to sign a tery. The bearers were Henry dering what its effects will be. fellow members of the D. A. R. 607 in Los Angeles county, the voted unanimously to put the ne­ more, and to the Masonic Herald, bill confering upon its crew the Such a meeting was held on the who retain their membership in an of Rome, Ga. Skoog, Clarence 'Vennart, Robert most densely populated county in Warrantee Deeds gro’s name on the ballot. American Distinguished Flying eve of the last Democratic conven­ effort to continue their protest Col. Nutt was puzzled as to Dixon and Walter Aitken. '' California, Smith was accorded a From Harry England to the-Man- If he is elected in November, De Cross. When Congress authorized tion— at New Haven. Dr., Dolan against the actions of the present plurality of more than 13,000 votes Priest will be the first negro Con­ whether the letters were actually chester Water Company 15 acres the medals, a hurried search at the was then prevailed upon, in the in­ officers but we shall see small over Walsh, who was officially sup­ gressman from Illinois, and the written by an agent for some dope of land laying between Lydall and War Department disclosed there terests of harmony, to refrain from chance of success so long as their ported by the William Gibbs Mc- Lake street. first to represent any state in 26 ring and are to be taken seriously, were only two on hand. Late yes­ WOODS HRE THREATENS principles cannot be presented with years. or whether they were prepared by a test of strength in convention. Adoo faction, and a plurality of From Harry England to U >• terday an army airplane flew to Before today’s meeting the rumor those of the officers in the meet­ more than 8,650 over Reed. Manchester Water Company, two Daniel Jackson, another Thomp­ a dope crazed fanatic, or consti­ ings of the different chapters for tuted nothing more than a hoax. Philadelphia, obtained additional M. TURNPIKE HOUSES was aboard that militant figures in Complete returns from San Pram acres, with house thereon to f > son ward leader in the First Dis­ medals and flew back this morning. discussion by the membership and cisco county gave Smith an over­ trict, proposed De Priest for the New England Paper the party had not been invited. intelligent choice between them. Manchester Water Company., The presentation ceremonies were “ None for All but All for Al” is whelming majority over his oppo­ office at the committeeman meet­ Information also was received Three Alarms Call Out Three “ The principles -we have asked E. J. Holl to Howard and Mil­ that a newspaper in New England sche'duled for the White House at the slogan the Democrats had nents. A strorighold of the Smith dred Thornton, a building lot on ing. John “ Dingbat” Oberta, police noon. In vain to have debated before the character and reputed friend of had received a similar threatening S.’M. F. t). Companies as Lo­ adapted in advance of the conven­ forces, San Francisco county, gave the Hollywood tract, restricted to A cheer went up as the flyers ar­ chapter can be stated as two points: the New York governor 30,062, gangsters, recently elected com­ letter. Nutt said that undoubtedly a cal Romes Are Endangered. tion. “ The D. A. R. should not try to the erection of a one family house large number of other threats have rived at the hotel. The crowd sur­ while Reed received 5,343 and not to cost less than $8,000. mitteeman from the Seventh Ward, rounded the entrance and packed Tlie Real Business suppress free speech when such is Walsh 1,792 votes. seconded the nomination of De been written to daily newspapers. Following two still alarms which The real business of the conven­ within the bounds set by the laws James Horwith to .. ..Charles J. Priest. He ordered a general Investigation. into the lobby like sardines. called out CoJnpanles 3 and 4 of the of our country. ^ Magnell, land and property at the Attaches opened up a narrow lane tion that starts this evening at eight LEADERS’ COMMENTS Congressman Madden, who was The lett^s were printed in pen­ South Manchester Mrs department is the election of eighteen delegates Study Social Problems corner of Oak and Clinton street. cil on ordinary white paper. They for the flyers to pass through. one of the best known men at the a regular alarm was sounded at and an equal number of alternates “ The D. A. R. should encourage San Francisco, Cal., May 2.— This deed was late in recording as nation’s capital, died suddenly of were mailed at the Arcade sub­ The flyers stood at salute as the 2:50 this afternoon calling out its membership to study the social Assurance of tbe election of the the sale was made in July, 1925 postal station at Los Angeles. Nar­ Army band played the German, Company 2 to aid in suppressing a to the national convention. The heart disease last week after hav­ delegation is to include eight dele-^ problems of the day, especially the Gov. Smith delegation* to the Dem­ ing been renominated to succeed cotic agents in charge at Los An­ Irish and American national an­ forest fire which was raging in the efforts of our government to aid in ocratic national convention .today geles and San Francisco will be thems. At the conclusion Major woods just west and south of the gates at large and two delegates himself. He had represented the from each of the ‘five Congressional arms as means of national defense. brought an unofficial declaration furnished with all details. Nutt Fitzmaurice walked across the Middle Turnpike crossing of the from H. H. MePike, chairman of ABOUTTOWN First District, with three-quarters districts with an alternate for each. To the progress made In arbitration of the population negro, for the requested all newspapers or publi­ street to shake hands with the cap­ South Manchester railroad. and the legal methods of settling the “ Gov. Smith for President” As­ past 25 years. cations which havp received threat!? tain of the cavalry guard. The fire was threatening houses Democratic women will play a; disputes.. sociation, which handled the state purporting to be om dope rings Col. Lindbergh greeted the flyers and the toolhouse owned by the large part In the convention If their “ In rejecting these principles campaign for the New York candi­ Delegates from Second Congrega­ to communicate with him at once. again at the hotel but did not enter Manchester Construction Company. wishes are fulfilled. They have the officers virtually deny to the date. tional church in attendance today “ Whether these letters are the with them. The fire was fought with chemicals perfected a subsidiary organization, members the use of their intellects. MePike looked upon the victory at the Hartford East association of POLICE CHANGE BEATS Congregational cKurches are Mr. work of a fanatic or an organized and was under control at three excelling in force anything of a They warn against listening to some of Smith in California as presaging ring, the writer or writers should o’clock. similar nature in previous years. of the most distinguished scholars and Mrs. George W. Kuhney, Mrs. “ beyond any question” his nomina­ E. E. Segar, Mrs. Anna Rlsley,‘Rev. / not be permitted to remain at This is called the Democratic Fed­ ill the United'States and are fright­ tion at Houston. The monthly change of beats of large,” Nutt said. SWEDISH LUTHERAN ened with Imaginary dangers. Sis­ Frederick C. Allen and CUnton eration of Women. The idea of the MePike also intimated that “ this Williams. ■ ■ the Manchester police, who do Narcotic conditions in Los An­ organization Is to sway the women ter organizations are denounced, al­ means the passing of William 'treet duty was made last night. geles are considered better than in delegates as a unit. A federation though officers of those organiza­ Gibbs McAdoo as a factor in the Michael Fitzgerald has been assign- most large cities. Activity of the CONFERENCE OPENS Howell Cheney will address a Cable Flashes meeting was called for two p. m., tions are many of them members of Democratic party.” - , 3d to the Center and upper Main federal agents and local police there the D. A. R. themselves. meeting of the Hartford League of street section. Joseph Prentice has today at the Hotel Bond. McAdoo was the head of the Women Voters at the Town and have succeeded in driving out (Continued from Page 1.) "The climax is reached when the Walsh ticket in California. =■* the lower Main street beat. Officer many dope peddlers. From the na­ In Equal representation among the preaching of ignorance is called Country club this evening on the Martin starts at midnight and does delegates, both district and at large, subject of “Our Attitude Toward tional standpoint there is little ference only and 54 of them were “ patriotic” and efforts to prevent relief duty until 4 o’clock when he change in the situation from a few is to be demanded by the women of Los Angeles, Cal., May 2.— C. C. Public Education.” in attendance. Discussions with a the horrors and agonies of another Teague, chairman of the Hoover- enters the police station in relief months ago. 1 the federation. The federation is view towards making recommenda­ Foreign News World War are called "unpatri­ for-President Club of Southern of Captain Schendel. Arthur Sey­ Nutt said that virtually the en­ expected to support “ the old liners” otic” it Is then time for us ,to re­ Contractor Walter Hobby has the mour will have the North End beat. tire supply of dope reaching illegiti­ tions to the business session oc­ California, issued the following contract for the new single bouse among leaders but desires Mrs. sign', to protect our patriotism, our statement today: Albert Roberts takes the motorcy- mate channels comes from foreign cupied a considerable part of the Fannie Dixon Welch, of Columbia, which George W. Kuhney is to time. love of the traditions of our fath­ “ In view of the fact that Mr. V cle work at 5 o’clock and covers the sources. With the exception of opi­ shanghai. May. 2.— The Northern for national committee woman in build this summer on his lot on At the Lutheran Brotherhood ers, and the principles on which our Hoover was unopposed in yester­ West side in this manner from 5 um, which is imported chiefly army in Shantung has been de­ place of Mrs. Lillian Abbott, of country was founded and through Henry street. Mr. Hobby has staked o’clock until 10 o’clock and Officer through Seattle and dist'ibuted by meeting in the German Lutheran cisively defeated by the Nationalists day’s election, the huge vote cast out the site and will begin on the Norwalk. Mrs. James Curry, of which it can best flourish in the for him is surprising. It again dem- Donaldson will cover the Spruce Orientals, most of the smuggled church on Winter street Herman and is falling back in the dire

-L- 1 "I MANCHESTER (CONN.) KVENING HERALD. WEDNESDAY, IVLAY 2, 1928. , GETS FULL RECORD OLD VITAL RECORDS Rockville OF T O W S SOLDIERS HERE IMPEFECT WHERE YOU CAN AFFORD TO BUY Greet New Pastor GOOD f u r n i t u r e . A parish get-together and sup­ per will be held this evening at the Memorial Committee Re­ Methodist Episcopal church to Town Clerk Has to Do Much greet the new pastor. Rev. Melville E. Osborne and his family. Follow­ Hunting to Justify Birth ceives Gift of Compilation; ing the supper there will be an en­ Animal Spring Sale tertainment which wiil include re­ citations, musical selections and a Certificates. ^----- OF------To Have Cemetery Maps. play entitled “ Clothes-line Gossip.” This is for all the family and every­ In order to Insure for all times one is welcome. Frequent discoveries of lapses in accurate location and proper care Burpee W. R. C. Delegates of the graves of all men and wo­ Burpee W. R. C. will be repre­ the vital records of Manchester, MODEL HOME OUTFITS men who went from Manchester to sented at the convention to be held some of them distressing in their the various wars In which this in New Haven Thursday and Fri­ effects on natives of the towns, have country has taken part, the general day. The convention will be held prompted Town Clerk Turklngton committee arranging for the Me­ at the First Methodist church and Our Profit Sharing Plan More Popular Than Ever morial Day celebration will ask headquarters’ will be at the Garde to offer his earnest cooperation with Have You Seen the Assembled Room Outfits? citizens in correcting the records. that maps be furnished with plots hotel. The delegates are Mrs. LH We have made it so by guaranteeing every article of furniture and graves of such persons In eacli lian Buckmister and Mrs. Nellie The fact that he is a native of As an illustration of what can be done by the Keith plan of of the Manchester cemeteries mark­ ■Willis; Dept, aides, Katherine Manchester and knows many of the complete room outfits at lower costs we have assembled this Bed­ we sell. It gives you the benefit of this special outfit offer with “ A ed. Schuey and Emma Lisk; Mrs. Ma­ Arthur E. Keating presided at bel Barstom, member of the execu­ families has enabled him to discov­ room Outfit for your examination. A surprisingly small invest­ Whole Year to Pay,” just as we always give discount privileges to tive board, Mrs. Alice Knight and er some errors himself, and to as­ the meeting of the committee held ment is required to furnish any or every room in the home by this the credit customers as part of our regular selling policy. Do as at the selectmen’s room In the Mrs. Rose Smith. sist in adjustments when others Municipal Building last night. Lave discovered them. plan. Our assortment is complete and quality is guaranteed. We others are doing—furnish your home now—for we are ready to ar­ R. A. A. Meeting There have been many occasions While the meeting was of short The Rockville Athletic Associa-^ will help you in selecting any other group you may desire. range pasnnents to suit yoijr convenience. duration but well attended and re­ since the war where a certificate of tion will hold a meeting tonight in birth is required. Too often the ports showed that plans are well their rooms on East Main street. under way lor the proper celebra­ Business of importance will be birth is found not to be recorded tion of the day, which it is expect­ brought before the association and as the doctors and midwives of ed will be on a much larger scale it is hoped the members will make Manchester years ago were careless A Whole Bedroom about such matters. than In recent years. an effort to be present. $ 1 4 9 . 5 0 Si)eakers Selected. Play Postponed Two cases have developed within Completetly Furnished “A Year to Pay** Charles E. House, of the commit­ The play “ Getting Rid of Eppie” the last few days. Miss Elizabeth V. Johnson, now a resident of tee on speakers, reported that Rev. which was to be given tonight in A three piece suite consisting of full size i>oster bed, Dr. George S. Brooks, pastor of the the Tolland Town Hall has been Glastonbury, was considering a trip Union Congregational church of postponed until May 9. ' which necesitated her getting a dresser and large vanity in genuine mahogany combined Rockville, will deliver the oration copy of her birth certificate. There with other cabinet woods. We ask you to examine this Automobile Mixup was no such record to be found. at Cheney Hall. ' Rev. Watson Joseph Lokowski of Ellington suite critically and note the construction and finish. We.,, Woodruff will say the prayer at the Her father was Hugh V. Johnson was arrested Tuesday afternoon and her mother had been Rose know you will be pleased. exercises in the hall and Rev. following an accident at the foot Fagan. She was. born on North William P. Reidy of St. James’ of Union and West streets. An auto­ Main street, but there was only the church the prayer at the monument mobile driven by Mrs. Dorothy Howland of Springfield, Mass., go­ mention that a “ female” child was at the Center. born. *Her sister, who lives in In connection with the general ing toward Somers and Joseph Lo­ There Is Included Also program at Cheney Hall and the kowski, coming from Ellington Glastonbury, was able to identify exercises at the Center monument crowded the Springfield car into her as the “ female child” and she the Navy’s dead will be remember­ Mr. Dailey’s yard where it dam­ was given a copy and the record A National fabric spring. ed with a gathering from the dif­ aged a new car which was stand­ completed. ferent organizations at Gould’s ing thcwe. No one was injured. Another case was that of William A dustless white Cotton Mattress. Francis Shea, born here, who ap­ pond, so called, on South Main Captain Tobin investigated the ac­ A pair of feather Pillows, size 21x27. street, where a wreath will be plac­ cident and found Mr. Lokowski plied for a certificate of his birth. It was not found. Mr. Shea had ed in the pond eventually to follow without a license. He will appear A pair of Sheets and Pillow Cases. the outlet stream intact or in frag­ in court this morning at nine served about fifteen years in the United States Navy and had .foreign ments, to the Hockanum to the o’clock. A Bedspread, choice of three colors. Connecticut and so to the sea. West End A, C. Club war service. He is now pensioned At Bolton the services will be A meeting of the young men of by the government, but has return­ held on standard time. There will the west end of the city was ^held ed to the sea in the merchant be exercises at the Belknap ceme­ Monday evening when a club* was marine. Everything Included at the One Price tery at 1 o’clock and from there formed to be known as the West It took considerable research the delegation will move to Bolton End A. C. club. The members of to establish the fact that he was Center where the exercises will be this club will challenge any base­ born in Manchester at No. 29 held at 2 o’clock, giving ample time ball team within the age of eigh­ Woodland street on May 7, 1884. to get back for the final exercises teen years. The officers are: His mother, who is now living at at the Monument. President— Alec. Manchuck. No. 101 Woodstock road, Hartford, LfOW Costs Alone Permit Low Prices Stones to Mark Graves. Vice-President and Treasurer— has again married. She identified It has been learned that at least Edward Weber. him and he got his certificate. We buy in large quantities and pay cash. We have two soldiers are buried in the Man­ Financial Secretary— Harry Mil­ a cost system which prevents upnecessary expense and chester cemeteries on whose graves ler. still enables us to give good service. Therefore we can there are no headstones. After the Recording Secretary and Sport COPS’ NEW UNIFORMS , present Memorial Day is over the Editor— Thomas Dailey. and do guarantee Our Price Against Anybody’s. committee will see that these stones Notes are placed. Miss Agnes Burke of West Main HAVE ROLLING COLLAR Among those buried in St. James’ street underwent an operation at If There’s a Better Price Anywhere Cemetery and not on the list the Hartford hospital on Monday of the general committee hereto­ for abscess of the throat, W e’ll Meet It fore, is Louis Fanning, father of Damon Temple Pythian Sisters, StifiF Necked Blouse Is Sue- Mrs. Milton Haling of Bolton. In will observe their 14th anniversary ceeded by Civilian Roll-Col- the past this grave has been decor­ in Foresters’ hall on Monday, May e v e r y t h i n g i n c l u d e d 14. Mrs. George Scheiner is chair­ lared Coat. We May Be Underadvertised But We Won’t be ated by the members of Drake Post. man of the entertainment and Undersold. It was added to the committee’s Although quite a bit too late for plans are being made to make this Easter, members of the Manchester list as was that of Daniel Gow. Mr. year’s celebration a complete suc­ Gow is the father of Mrs. Mary Police Department are beginning cess. to blossom out in new spring uni­ $ Gibbling of Cottage street. General Kitchener Lodge, Sons 149.50 A grave in the East cemetery of St. George will hold an import­ forms. carrying the name of “ Coleman,” ant meeting tonight in Foresters’ Patrolman John McGlinn was the Civil War Veteran, has been decor­ hall. Officers for the coming year first cop to appear on Main street AT THIS LOW PRICE G. £ KHTH FURNITURE CO., INC ated in the past, but it was not will be nominated and representa­ in the latest attire. The change in until last night that the record was tives for the Grand Lodge will be style of uniform is marked, particu­ “A Year to Pay” Corner Main and School Streets, South Manchestei^ completed by the adding of the chosen. larly as to the collar. The old uni­ first name, Charles. He lived in The third division of the Ladies’ form had a military collar but the the northeast corner of Manchester, Aid society of the Union Congrega­ new is of the ordinary rolling civil­ close to Bolton and Vernon town tional church held a meeting this ian type. The coast als6 have line. afternoon in the south parlor. Mrs. pockets on the sides. Michael O’Donnell, who was F. T. Maxwell is chairman. The uniforms ,are made by Rob­ "^1 named marshal of parades at the Mrs. Leroy Hale of Davis avenue ert H. Grimason, who conducts a ■« last meeting, said he would an­ entertained the Afternoon Bridge tailor shop in the Odd Fellows KNIGHTS TEMPLARS I ™ ™ , n o t le a g u e ADDISON PICK FRANK CHENEY JR. nounce his entire staff at the meet­ club Tuesday afternoon. The prize block at the Center. FORTY-PIECE S. A. BAND ing two weeks from last night. was awarded to Mrs. Walter Rob­ Each regular member of the de­ AS P A R H TOASTMASTER During the meeting a suggestion inson. Following the whist a supper partment is allowed $50 a year for TO GIVE CONCERT HERE partisan was made by Michael O’Donnell rep­ was served. the purchase of miforms. MEET HERE MAY 17 « There is an old saying that a cat has nine lives but that record is resenting the Army and Navy Club, Mrs. Elizabeth Gerich of Union Should Work in Parties, But for a complete list of ali the mem­ street has rented a cottage at beaten by a cat owned by J. H. Cheney Mill Executive to Be Notable Brooklyn Organization Not Commit League, Says Brewer of Hilstown. The cat bers of Drake Post, G. A. R. past Myrtle Beach for the purpose of Master of Ceremonies as Old Will Play at Citadel on May breathed his last about three weeks and present to be safeguarded as a taking boarders this summer. ABOUT TOWN Employees Gather. permanent record. Miss Evelyn McCarthy of West 19. Ascension Day to Be Ob- ago at the age of 20 years. A. E. Keating of the local camp Main street is spending a week in In the May issue of the Woman L. H. Darling of Hop River is of the Spanish American ’War re­ Providence, R. I. Voters Bulletin, the organ of the ploughing and helping out on the Frank Cheney, Jr., chairman ot Arrangements have been com­ the board of directors of Chen^ ported that that body had a com­ Claude A. Mills who underwent The Girl Scouts of Troop 6 who served in Town by Wash­ Connecticut League ' of Women spring work for E. B. Treat on the pleted for the visit of the splendid Trout Brook Farm. Brothers, will act as toastmaster at plete list of gtll members of the post an operation at the St. Francis hos­ are planning to go on a hike Thurs­ band of the Brooklyn No. 1 corps Voters, just out, Mrs. Herbert Knox Smith of Farmington discusses the the dinner which will, be given in and the American Legion and the pital has returned to his home on day are asked to meet at the Center of the Salvation Army to South ington Commandery. Cheney Hall on May 17 for all "who Army and Navy Club also reported Prospect street. at 9:30 a. m. Manchester, over the week-end of dividing line between League work have been employed by. the locals the possession of such lists. Thomas Garvin of Park street May 19-20. and party work. Mrs. Smith who silk firBa 40 years or more. Mri. At this point Robert E. Carney has purchased a new Buick Master is first vice-president of the Con­ Alexa, the three year old daugh­ This band is one of long stand­ Washington Commandery, No. 1, DOGS LICENSED, DIED Cheney has been connected with suggested that the lists of these coupe. ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Tournaud ing and numbers over forty pieces. necticut League of Women Voters the firm 46 years. ‘ J' organizations was not a full of 24 Pine street, is at the Hart­ Being located in New York City, it knights Templar, will visit Man­ has just been elected a member of ’William Walsh of the •velvet de­ record of all Manchester ford hospital where she is recover­ takes part in all of the special chester on Thursday, May 17, to ob­ the executive board of the National BEFORE MAY 1; REFUND partment, a member of the Over 40 persons serving in all wars, ing from an attack of measles and events arounci the Metropolitan serve Ascension Day, one of the League as director of the first, or Years group also, is chairmah’ of and said he had, and was MR. AND MRS. HACKETT pneumonia. The little girl is re­ Division. The bandmaster, Thomas most important occasions in the New England, Region. the committee in charge of the arf willing to turn, over a list of all ported as doing nicely. Budd, has been a Salvationist of Knights Templars’ calendar. To the question of whether inter­ Town Clerk Rules That De­ rangements for the party. Sydney's’) men living within the territory Members of the Commandery will many years, and has brought the est in the League interferes /ith ceased Canines Do Not Have Elliott, another long time employee; which is now Manchester, who took BACK FROM FAR WEST A carload of gas main pipe, to be band up to a very high musical come here from Hartford by special interest in party work she answers is secretary. ' part in every war that this country standing. The organization is com­ trolley cars. They will go directly emphatically “ No!” and points out to Be Tax-Paid Fw. Plans are being made to enteiv.':;? laid from Center and West Center to the south end terminus, form in has ever had, as far back and in­ streets through the new tract being posed largely of young men and the wliole aim of the League of tain about 140 at the dinner slncfi;.;^3 cluding fne Revolution. This offer boys who have been brought up In line and parade from there to the Women Voters is to equip women The number of dogs in town have the group of employees who to v e ;; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Hackett developed by E. J. Holl, arrived Masonic Temple at the Center. At was accepted and a record of 756 North Main street, have ar­ at the South Manchester freight the Salvation Army. to serve effectively, intelligently increased and the leading pet dog, worked over 40 years numbers 69.* ’^, which it has taken twenty-five Accompanying the band will be the Center the Commandery will the Collie, which has long held the Each of these employees has .the?': rived home after spending the win­ yards last evening. Men who have ,dine and then will proceed to the and honorably in active political years to compile will be part of the Divisional Commander Major parties. lead in Manchester, is being push­ privilege of inviting iis wife; or ter months in the far west. been laying new mains in Glaston­ Center Congregational church her husband, as the case ’may be,* committee’s archives for future Upon arrival here, Mrs. Hackett bury were brought to Manchester James A. Harvey, and Mrs. Harvey, “ In a time of political activity, ed for first honors by the German guidance. Major and Mrs. Edwin Perrett, who where Rev. Watson Woodruff will or sonde other member of the Im-^ received news of the death of her and were put to work unloading the address the assemblage. such as the present, the League,” police dog, which was almost un­ hail from Manchester, the corps of­ known of in Manchester until after mediate family. brother, Daniel M. Kelleher, former car, finishing the job about 7:30. she says “ hopes that as many of The party is being- given by' deputy internal revenue inspector, ficers, Ensign and Mrs. Ralph Mil­ its members as possible sfiall en­ the war. Town Clerk Samuel Turk­ MISS HAVILAND ILL IN ler, and assistant, Lt. W. Chamber- ington reports that 1,176 doigs were members of the Over 40 Years in Hartford. Morris Jacobson, who recently gage in party work. In a broad group themselves and not by Mr. Kelle'her tiied Sunday, May purchased the Murphy restaurant, lain. The divisional officers for this FISH-GAME UCENSES interpretation the League of Wom­ registered up to last night, only territory, Brigadier and Mrs. Al­ Cheney Brothers, as ‘ previously NEW LONDON HOSPITAL 22, the day on which Mr. and Mrs. is planning to make several changes en Voters and the Political Parties twenty less than were registered state^. - , bert Bates, will be present for the are working for the same end, during all of 1927. There were Hackett started homeward from which will give more floor space. week-end. Pasadena, Cal., and it was impos­ Watkins Brothers have been given HERE MOUNT TO 471 namely, to see that honest men and twelve kennel licenses, an increase A very fine program has been ar­ women with an aptitude for their of two over last year. R^ELS WRECK iRAm Miss Helen Louise Haviland, re­ sible to communicate with them a contract to recover the floor. ranged, for which tickets are now ligious educational director of the until they reaced Manchester. particular job he given those jobs, Among the dogs licensed early in on sale. The concert will take whether administrative, judicial or South Methodist church, while vis^ Mr. and Mrs. Hackett’ have been Miss Dorothy Ridkevits 13, of place Saturday evening in the Cita­ All of Last Year’s Record the month two have died. Onevwas Mejfico City. May 2.— Rails loos-, Iti'ng her parents at Niantic on away for six months. They spent 13 Union street, was removed to del, the program beginning at Nearly Equaled in Month of legislative. The League of Women a female, a family pet for eleven ened Rebels caused a wreck on. •Monday, was seized with appendici­ two months at Phoenix, Ariz., two St. Francis’ hospital, yesterday Voters is interested primarily in the years. It was registered by a the Mexico City-Guadalajara rail­ 7:30 o’clock. The advance sale of April Alone. way in which more than 30 persona tis and removed to Lawrence hos­ at San Diego, Cal., a’nd the final where she underwent an operation tickets assures an attendance that educational end. It believes one woman, a widow with several chil­ pital in New London, where she un­ two at Pasadena. for appendicites. ' can work better for placing quali­ dren. A day or two later she re­ were injured, said a dispatch from- will make it necessary for those Town Clerk Samuel Turkington Guadalajara today. The passengeii' derwent an operation yesterday. who have not already purchased yesterday completed and mailed to fied persons in any given i^sition, turned to the office.and told Clerk The only Information as to her con­ The town board of health has if one knows something about the Turkington that the dog had died. train was derailed late yesterday^M^ their tickets, to do so at once. the State Board of Fisheries and between Ocotlan and Llmon, JallS;^'^' dition today was that she was "as APRIL RAINY MONTH been adding to the income of Man­ Commandant J. P. Spohn, the of­ Game the tabulation of the fishing jofi. to be filled and has certain He ruled that the dog’s license was well as could be expected.” chester Memorial hospital by hav­ standards for work

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PoDulation <5t, v~ ^ ^ •■ ^g^A' ^rmsn t'ZilFffOOS ^ '' . ';' ^SfT -V "‘I v?iaEErZLlZ2S:6 " ' » „ ' '' A ' f Wonder M anchester of the 23.000 Entire > ■ '! \ OVER Country %'S I M< 300.000 m ■ — ...... ^ People Bought In Main and Oak Our F ood South A Departments 'f' ' * Last Year TRADE AT MANCHESTER’S PUBLIC PANTRY

You Can Make More Than Enough To Buy The Gas For Your Car . . . . : .- \

SELECTED MAINE ^ Green Mountain Seed Potatoes $ (2 BUSHEL, 120 LB. B A G )...... SOO M ilk Fed Fowls each ,.\ In former years we have sold enormous quantities of elected potatoes for planting purposes. Our -customers, who Tender, mUk fed, fricassee fowls. S% to 4 pounds average. A teal buy at $1.25 each. make potato growing their business, tell us they had very good luck with these ]JOtatoes and they have already placed their order for this year.

Have You Tried It? FRESH^ EGGS dozen 36c SWIFT’S AND HANDY’ S strictly fresh, local farm eggs. Large whit© and brown eggs. HAM lb.v 29c Hale’S Sausage Meat lb. 18c from the best Coventry and Hebron farms. Boned and rolled. No bones—no %vaste. (Pure pork) MEADOW GOLD FRESH MADE Gra-Rock Ginger Ale and SE BUTTER White Birch, Case...... $2.25 2 lbs. $1.05 Bottled under the most sanitary conditions, A case of 24 1 lb. 53c Not storage. We think we can truthfully say that it is the large 16 ounce bottles. most popular butter in Manchester. 1400 pounds sold weekly. Pot R oast lb. 24c It goes further! Undina Ginger Ale and a n jtgk (Lean and tender) HALE’S FAMOUS White Birch, Carton ...... ^ * e Q V (Pale dry) Carton of 12. Bottled from pure spring waiter at Higganora, FRESH FROSTED 9 • MILK BREAD loaf 8c Conn. A large, 1 pound and 4 ounce loaf. This bread is made es­ pecially for us and contains nothing but the best and purest KELLOGG’ S "" 3 pkgs. ingredients. FISH T en der Shouldcp Steak lb. 27« Packed In handy 1 lb. cartons. All cleaned « and boned ready to cook: IMPORTED GRUTERE ' CORN FLAKES 19c - -...... Ch e e s e 3 boxes 9 5 c CAMPBELL’S 4 Cans ‘i 1 Extra fine, 6 portions—no crust. TOMATO SOUP 29c New Low Price! Haddock Squares, lb. .. 2 5 C Boneless Veal Roast ib» 34« lb. SOAPS and POWDERS (Tender) - ' ' ■ . • COFFEE 49c • Maxwell House, La Tom*aine and White House. P & G SOAP, 10 Bars...... 39c Haddock Fillets, lb. ... S O c GOLDEN RIPE (White Naphtha) Sole Fillets, lb...... RINSO, large pkg...... 19c 40c BANANAS 3 lbs. 19c LUX, large pkg...... 21c Mackerel Fillets, lb. ... 45c R oast B eef lb.34e Extra fancy. Tons and tons of this delicious fruit sold ^ch ( (Tender and Juicy) month. I FAIRY SOAP, (large) 6 bars ...... 25c (On sale in the “Self-Serve’* and Health Market.)

Free Parking Space HALES SELF-SERVE A large free parking space in the rear of HALES the store. Room for over two hundred C R O C E P Y cars. Entrance at either Oak or Maple IT PAVS TO WAIT Y a U I 9 S K I .F Streets. MEALTM MARKET -STS''-

Free Parking Spaee in Store Open Thursday Rear of Store. and Saturday Nights Un­ Entrances at Oak add til 9 p> in. Store Closes Maple Streets.' Wednesday at Noon. SOUTH MR NCHHST^R • CONN • LOW TEMPERATURES BRING LOW PRICES IN SPRING FASHIONS AT THE HEIGHT OF THE SEASON

WE WANT 200 WOMEN WHO WISH TO SAVE — *i $10 TO $30 ON A NEW COAT Last Yeart This Year!

$25.00 and $29.75 $50.00, $60.00, $70.00 Temperatures have been 28 degrees when they should have been 60 de­ grees, slowing up a normal demand for Spring Fashions and conse­ Spring quently accessories also. This is your opportunity! We have secured Spring Coats merchandise of the strictly Haleys quality at extraordinary savings f AND ENSEMBLES which we pass along to you this week at price economies too im­ AND SUITS portant for anyone to overlook. Confidentially, every apparel manufacturer with any merchandise on hand is stuck, and so is every retailer. Our policy—“Take ypur medicine and ^ take it quick.” Our buyers were in New York last week $21.75 $39-50 and bought up everything they felt we could use at savings of from 25 to 50%. We included otir entire Featuring the three leading style notes—the scarf coat, the cape coat, and the coat with fur cuffs. regular stock, and offer our customers the greatest dress coats of the season's fabrics—kasha, broadcloth, Every coat in this group Is beautifully tailored In kwha, broad­ tweed, silk and' imported mixtures. Heavy silk crepe lined. Many of these coats are by “Golflex,” "Townfleld; price apparel sale ever held in the history of the cloth, tweed or sheen. Unfurred coats, coats with fur collars, and and “Wee Women.” At t^is price you will also find a few coats with tucked backs. Plenty of navy sheen coats, too; for the ma­ “Townfleld”’ ensembles in exclusive Fifth Avenue models. trons. Coats suitable for every occasion. Sizes .16 to 46, We have The coat sizes range from 16 to 44. The colors: ' store. When the Hale Company announces a also reduced a number of our two piece tailored suits to this low price. , sale like this it^s a real event. Our old’ cus­ Plan to see this group of coats tomorrow. Black, Tan, Gray and Green tomers know this and we want the new Kasha, Broadcloth, Sheen, Tweed and Mixtures Trimmed With ones to prove it for themselves. Buttermole, Fitch, Monkey, Squirrel, Fox Sizes 16 to 46 Ringtail Opossum and Broadtail.

Women’s $35 and $49.50 Spring Coats $69:50 and $79.50 Coats $16.75 and $19.75 Coats High prided, hand tailored coats by some of New Every coat Is representative of one of the smartest York’s leading manufacturers. A black kasha coat with $14.75 is. Indeed, a very low price lor these well Parisian fashions. Every coat Is well made and fash- -tjie new tucked back trimmed with an American broad- made and up-to-the-minute spring coats. Coats In the loned of 1;he popular materials—kasha, tweed and broad- wanted ...... rials and shades trimmed with fur collars. tall collar . . . a ton broadcloth with a beige sauirrel col­ $59-50 cloth. This group also Includes good looking sport ^ ^ Tailored , ..Is for school, business, sport and travel wear lar . . . "Townfleld” sport coats . . . also scarf coats and $ 14.75 coats by “Bkcomoor’* and “Wee Women.” A good range fashioned of camel hair, tweed and mixtures. Misses’ plain tlalored models. Sizes 16 to 42. of sizes, 15 to 60%’. sizes 16 to 20, and women’s sizes, 36 to 46%.

SPRING Other Store MILLINERY Important Dress Groups Events a t

In Two Attractive HALE’S Price Groups. 'This W eek $ $ NEMO WEEK is being held this week in 12.50 19.75 our Corset Department, and we are offer­ Charmingly soft and feminine In line are ing special low prices on a few of the A special purchase enables ns to offer you Pfocks for business wear, sport wear, these frocks at 119.76. Regular $25 stock. models in this well known brand. these silk frocks at $7.95—right out of $10 afternoon bridge parties, and school wear. A two piece, print in blue and red . . . a Dainty floral georgettes, two piece flat crepes stock. Heavy quality, washable sport frocks sport dress with a plain silk skirt and a This week has been set aside in our in light pastel shades. Also good looking and prints with the new sailor collar, scarf striped blouse . . . a brown frost crepe trim­ flat crepe frocks .In the latest spring styles. effect and square necklines. Light and dark med with hand fagoting . . . a navy blue flat Baby Shop as Baby Week. Here mothers You will surely And a frock or two at-this shades. Plenty of sizes. Many of these crepe with a tucked flesh vestee . . . and many will find a splendid display of inf^fs price that you can use. Dresses that can be frocks were originally priced $16.75. other stunning models await your selection at clothing. worn right now and throughout the summer the special pil

MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENINQ HERALa WEDNESDAY, MAY 2,1928, snc .; v4’»5->4 « The Gseciioslovaklan are cast by circumstances from a Dr. Harlow shapley of Harvard has located the center of the upl'-'' HDNGARrS SUICIDES is closely following that COHEN AND HcNAMARA thriving metropAlic to a tropical gaiy’s, Tke nejtt oust, (s island. This eni^ronment of can­ verse, just about 300 quadrlUlo^ ’ miles uvay from'the earth. It that with 23v per 10 0 ,000, t t b n j nibals and hula « l s proves a uni' with 22, France .with 17.; B^h dlstanee doesn’t leem possible to SETS NEW RECORD IN ;6 DAILY RADIO AT STATE TOMORROW que backgrpund’ top the comedy is, Sweden onC Ebnmark .eg® situations and addtl to the humor­ you, lopk how far ewfty tht Sin­ 440.9-.WCX.WJR, DETROIT-^. Leading DX St^iitons. Finland ill, Gireat B rw n - Wednesday, May 2. 8:00 7:00—WJX champion sparkera. ous incidents. clair jury got! . EUROPEAN COUNTRIES , the Netherlands , IWrvray ,, 4W.5—WSB, ATLAKl^iW-630. /"'• F^on8. €(«ii.edy Teain Starred “ The Heart of a TfolUea Girl,’’ a 8 6 6 >4 •’Tho BursomaBtcr,'* • musical com- g'30 7:30—Kelvlnatore musical hour, 8:00 7:00—WliAF iroubadftbrs. _ ‘Spain with, 4 per 10 0 ,000, p o y ^ '' 8:00 8:0O-WJ5S Phllco hour, Natloual Picture, will be thq of old and naxT New Xork. Iro n 9-30 8:30—WKAF orchetlrA Qukrtet In “Wi^y Sailoys Go Wrong” ; First 10:00 9:00—Sawyer’s sasophone Dana 10:30 9:30—WEAF grand operA spooud film feature at . the State RudupMt - ’• Hungary la loading * ' ' 'i /t~ Itbe time 0l the Dutch settlers to the 10'30 9:80—Studio diversified prog. 11:15 10:15—BHiroore entertslnerA Billy Dove in Co-Featnro, TOWN ADVERnSEMENr Yearly about ' R R urap^ta 11:00 10:00-WJ2 Slumber music. tomorrow. It stars beautiful Billie among the European states in ’the 0,600 Dresenl «*y. wlU be presented during 12:45 U:45nrl^oihy program. safi aUtiaties qf eulcMe, according coipxnit suicide and niost,; ^. ‘ 11:45 10:44—Theater o«y»n -- CHiCAOO—570* ■- Based on the riotous theme of Dove and is one of| those,, rare 0 5»ho Pblleet ItOur ihroush W^JS and the 535.4—WTIC. HARTFORDt—560. to a recent pamphlet published'un­ because , of.piaterial trouble. .Slue n i M at # o^ock Wednesday T'30 6;30-iOrohe8tra.,-pollilcaJ talA the original story by William Con- pictures that combines gay, colorful 7:30 C:30—“ Ask Me Another.” Among the causes qf deagp^_r flh^" j?nleht. 'R»e projOsue la laid In the 8- 00 i:00—WKa F American 9:00 hour. Jj:00-WJZ I’hllw hour. selmah. Sammy- Cohen, and Ted Mc- atmosph'ere with a powerful dra- notice der tha aqpqrvlaioQ o f tho League of ^^town equate Ih New i” 9- 00 8:00—WEAF troubadours 10:00 orch. 9:00-rJaro8law Chmfta. arusta. matlq plot. The story takes you PpofiQiied order eatahllihing Nations. The Hungarian suicide cial distress and incurable di^eaws 11:30 10:80—ObbHc 'iVlna, music prog, .h^amara:, the incomparable comedy teed. Act one taltes ^ 9-30 8:30—WEAF male quartet. team, wlU open, at the State theatqr behind the scenes with the show building aQd v'erftBda Ugqg or oAat rate per 100,000 population is 26, .increased lately, while; un | i8ppy way and In City Hall *" lo’so 9:30—WEAF grand opera. 389.4—WBBM, CHlOAOO—77A Bide and the weal qld» of Pholps which is more than twice as much has suffered a consideraDto lose- pf , prerenl, and the. action of the BWnd 422^3-WOR, NEWARK-710. 9:00 8:00—Studio .J.* SStlaro tomorrow for - a two days engage­ girl and depicts her life and thrill­ gact In iu threa eoenw •» 7"10 6:10—l.ovilow’s ensemble; talk. 365.6-WEBH-WJJD, CHtCAGO-^. ment in the William Fox produc­ ing adventures. Road from Wbodhridge Street on ae that of the United States. Bs- its mortal influence. Wtiel^.er -tW8 the soaahore, then In the city, and 8:00 7:00—Reid’s neapolliana 7-00 6:00—Vletorlsn orchestra; talk, tion, “Why Sailors Go Wrong’’. For the final times ttmight, the the north to Grben Road on tho pacially the "gay” capital of Hun­ phenomenon is a consequence-pWpe ; alter at a lawrt fete In a Venetian gar 8-30 7:30—Columbia Negro vpcal duo s'oo 7:00—WEAF American hour. south, with time itod place of pub­ gary fleaerves today the by^uame of 5 den on the HpdSQn River, Barbara 9:00 8:00—Columbia miniature opera 9:00 8:00—WJZ Phllco hour. , Sammy and Ted form the HebreW- State is presenting Richud Dix in materialism of our age Pt ^ 0® Alanrcl, pncizO-sOprano, . etta. „ 9-:l0 8;30^Theater preeentatlona. Irish cometiy team, which has made his' new Paramount starring lic hearing on sAld proposed order. 'suiclde-cUy" as Budapest suicides increasing frequency of . Jacohaen,-Jacobsen, violinist, will be •tcrij® ju !j} Uq-qo 9:00—Columbia hour with Bar 2:011 It:00—Studio Progroni. arUsta. such a sensation; duriiig the last vehicle, “Easy Come, Es«y Go,” The Selectnieni *of Manchester, alniost dbUhlefi In the last years. could not be ascertained. iimhVa iceltbrity hpur^ bsra Maurel, soprano, 416.4_WGN^>WUB, CHlQAOO-72a . o,, cohiott. I and “Women’s Wares,’' a story of Coun., at a ipeetiiig hold April IfD, WOU snA th^ JtVz" violinist 8:00 7:00—Sani 'n* Henry; '‘®VUA years as the comedy relief of soine Half an hoor^ later U Amleo .P^hz 9:00 8:00—WEAF orchestra, quartet. of Fox Films’ biggest productions. Broadway fashions featuring Bert 1928, acting under and pursuant an ul«rl.*w»' he si.ei^tn ’ n^niVnet” ! 10:3?)^'rhe’ Witching’ hour, 10‘30 9:30—Mexican baritone. The boys got their real first break Lytell and Evelyn Brent. to Section 9 (44) Special Laws for llelencrs of WEAJ and Bed net-1 . _wBZ, NEW ENGLAND—900. 11- 15 ; —Quintet; boss race. 333 4 10 15 when they were selected to play On Sunday and Monday the Conn., 1913, approved April 9, WOl kn ■intlAino.stations Fentures for 8 Include Knf^-lA 6:55 5:55—Baseball scores. 11:35 10:35—Songs, dance tniislc. 344.5_WL8, CHICAGO—870. important roles in “What Price .management has booked Ixm> Chan­ 1913, and $ectloos 1*5 (452) Spec _i_ A rpenilar flD- 7:30 6:30—R.adlo Nature league, bovs thro gh WIP. and the regular ap 9:00 8:00—WJZ rhilco hour. 10:00 9:00—Swift male chorua. • Glory.’’ In this production the two ey in his latest and greatest screen Laws Conn., J.917, approyed Oct »r;.. oenroncVoeni.TivB of the -a-Sparkers----- orchestra , 1 lO’Ol 9‘01—WJZ Pollack’s orchestra 11:00 10:06—“Fof'gbtten operas, organ 1st. 1917 having deemed it for the throtrgh-- IVIT.W.1Z onriand the Blue networknelwoiK. y-sn—Dasob-all scores; concerL 12- 00 11 :00—Jean, .lack; flirts; trio, are now featured in a picture with triumph, “Laugh Clown Laugh.” - * . -----a----- Tooalist ondand onter-1 enter ■45,15_WEAF, NEW 'VORK—610. 447.5_WMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670. a laugh every moment from begin­ public good, that building pud V0»'» mint-?, will be featured In the latte. 6:00 5:00—Dinner music: liaaeball. 7:00 6:00—Oi'chestra, talks. ning to end. The story concerns a Fa n t s d e l a y w e d d i n g . anda lines should^ he CftahlishCl) Digram. WLW will broadcast af b.30 7:00 6 :00—Synagogue services. 9-00 8:00—WOR Columbia hours, on Phelps .Road, a highway in the a group Of compositions by Wszt pla.v- 6;45_Prank Andcr.son. baritone 12:01) 11:00—Studio orc^estiA taxicab driver, played by Sammy 7:45 374.8—w oe,' DAVENPORT—800. Cohen, and a hansom cab driver, Santa Barbara, Cal.— L. R. Stutz Town of Manchester, Conn., from ed by .Incques Jolas on BU?t s P'* 8:00 7:00—American hour. Woodbridge Street on the north rio ano At the .same time .WNvC. will 9:00 8:00—Troubadours orchestra 7:45 6-.45-W JZ political talk. portrayed by Ted McNamara, who just couldn’t bringself to wed with- niaK«make public Adolph Lewlshob’s - ^11^urse Ka I 9:3(1 8*.30—Orch.. bilvcrloun Qunr^c 8-00 7:00—WEAF programs to ll.JU, Green Road on the south, passed in music appreciation, In 10:30 9:3(>-Opera -L’Amlco 11:30 1U-.30—Soprano, pianist. dut suitable pants, so he broke in­ to the shop of the tailor who had the foUovring proposed order viz. featured this week Arthur Hartmann s i0:30—Kemp’s dance orchestra, 325.9— KOA, DENVER—920. Ordered: Subject to the provi­ quartet. 454.3-WJZ. NEW YORK-660. 10:00 9:00—'fhenter orchestra. forgotten to return them. But a - -r 12:30- Pierre’s luncheon music. 10:15 9:15—Musical sketch. sions of said Sections that the- fol­ Wave lengths In meters on left 01 g.^g 6:00—Baseball scores: orch. 11:00 10:00—Opera excerpts. cop caught him in the act and took lowing lines on the east side and him to the station. The tailor was station title. klloc.vclM on the riKht-| 7.267:25 C:2.5—Talks on politics. 11-30 10:30—Dance mmSic. artists. 'the west side of Phelps Road, a 7:00—barkers orch., comedian 535.4— WHO, DES MOINES—560. called in. Stutz showed him the Times are Eastern 8:00 s n e S ' highway ln said Town of Manches­ and Eastern Standard. Black type 8:30 7:30—Concert string ensemble. 7- 30 6:30—Music clubs concerL marriage license, whereupon the Indicates best features. 6:00 8:(H>—Phllco hour with musical 8- 30 7:30—Studio musical program. ter, be hud they are hereby estab­ play, “ The Burgomaster. 9:00 8:00—WEAF programs to 12:00. tailor refused to prosecute. The lished vizi— Leading East Stations. lOiOO 9:00—Pollack’s orchestra. 400—PWX, HAVANA—750. groom put on his pants and com­ 11:00 10:00—Slumber 9:00 8:00—Military orchestra. .BAST SIDE 272.9—WPG. ATLANTIC CITY—1100. | 348.6-WIP. PHILA’DELPHIA-m 10:00 9:00—Cuban troubadours. pleted a "delayed steal” to his iThe bu.llding line on the east 7 05 6:05—Orchestra; sport talk. 7-00 6:00—Children’s hour. pianlsL 11:00 10:00—StudlQ music hour. bri'de. side of Phelps Road ia to be thirty 8- 00 7:00—Studio program; orchestra8:00 7:00—Ben’s banjo boys. 384.4— KTHS, hot SPRINGS—780. 8:55 7:55- Aviation talk; orche.stra. 405.2—WLIT, PHILADELPHIA—740. Il;:t0 10:30—Foley's orchestra. (3^^) ft. east of and parallel to the 9- 80 8:30—Hawaiian troupe. 8:00 7:00—WEAF American hour. 370.2—WDAF, KANSAS east lino o f. Phelps Road, from lo'sO 9:3th—Three dance orchestras, fliOO 8:Q0—’Xheiiter oren., quarteL 8:00 7:00—WEAF programs (1 hr.) TOWN ADVERTISEMENT Woojfibrldge St. on the north toj 285.5-WBAL, BALTIMORE-1050. 10:30 9:30—WEAF grand opera. 10:30 9:30—The Katz-boys. Creep Road bn the south. 8:00 7:00—Dinner music. 44.oA io*20—ArcAdia dance orchestra. 11:30 10:30—Goldkette’s orchestr^ 8-30 7:30—Soprano, pianist, “ 316.^KDk CT iTTSBURQH-550. 1:45 12:45—NIghthawk dan^ fr®’’®* NOTICE The veranda line on the east side q'nn 8-00—WJZ Phllco hour, 6- 15 5:15—Band: baseball scores. 416.4— . KHJ, LOS ANGELES—720. of Pheips Road is to be twenty in-on 9:0^ W JZ Pollack’s orchestra. 7- 00 6:00—I’ittsburgh U. address,12:00 11 :00—Orchestra, vocal soloists. 7- 15 6:15—King Comfort’s arlipts.1- 00 12:00—Studio entertainments. (20) fi. east of and parallel to the 1 1 -no 10:00—Good-night program. Proposed order establishing east line of Phelps Road, from 461.3-WNAC, —650. g'oO 8:00—WJZ Phllco hour. 2- 00 1 :00—Dance orchestras. 8-00 7:00—Concert: entertainers. 10:00 9 :00—Ramblers happiness nour, 468.5— KFI, LOS ANGELES—640. building and veranda lines on east WoodbNdge St. on the north to 461.6-WCAE. PITTSBURGH-650. 12:00 ll:0O—N. B. C. Royal concerL side and the west side of Emerson Green Road on the south. 8:00 7:00—Mason-Hamlln concert. 7i00 6:00—Musical pictures. 1:00 12:00—Moore’s concert orchestra. 8-30 7:30—Columbia progs, to U.00. 7:45 6:46-Go(^ books, talk. 2:00 1:00—Dance orchestras. Street from West Center Street on ■ WEST SIDE 11:15 10:15—Three dance orchestras. 8- 00 7:00—WEAF progs. (3% hrs.) 336.9— WSM, NASHVILLE—890* . he north to Summer Street on the The blUlding line on the west 302 8—WGR, BUFFALO—990. 11:30 10:30—Stanley organ recital. 9-00 8:00—WEAK troubadours o ^ . south, with time and place of-pub­ side, of Phelps Road is to be thirty 8-00 7:00—WEAF progs. (8% hrs.) 280.2—WHAM, ROCHESTER—1070. 9:30 8:30—WEAF orchestra, quartet 11:30 10:30—Van Surdam’s orchestra. 7-00 6:00—Stocks:. talks; music. 10:30 9:30—Orchestra: organist. lic hearing on said proposed or­ (30) ft. Wtest o f and parallel to Ihe 545.1—WMAK, BUFFALO-^M. 7-45 6:45—WJZ political talk 11:30 10:30—Minstrel men’s frolic. der. west line 'pf Phelpg Road,, from 7- 30 6:30—Masle Connor, graphologist8:00 7:00—Baritone, piano; orchestra Uglis ii;i5—Stodio concerL The Selectmen of Manchester, Wopdbridg^ SL on the north fu 8’00 7:00—Dye Storehouse program. 9:00 8-00—WJZ Phllco hour. 384.4—KGO, OAKLAND—780. Conn., at a meeting held April Green Roadon the south. 8- .10 7:30—Columbia prwA (2 hrs.) 10;00 9:00—“ Wings of Song.” 1:00 12:00—Dance orchestra. 11:00 10:00—Arcadia band boys musla 10- 30 9:80—WGY mixed quartet 9-00 1:00—Orchestra: violinist, songs 10, 1928, acting under and pur­ '• The veranda line on the west 428.3—WLW, —70a 11- 00 10:00—WJZ Slumber muslc^ 336.9—KNX, OAKLAND—8^ suant to Section 9 (44) Special Side of Phelpe Road Is to be twenty 8-00 7:00—WJZ Sparkers orchestra 379.5-WQY. SCHENECTADV-7M. 12:00 n :00—Courtesy urograms (J nrs) Laws Conn., 1913, approved April (20) ft. west of and parallel to the 12-01 : —Weathert markets; tlmA 2 00 1:00—Two dance orchestraa 8- 30 7:30—LIstz’s own piano recital, 1 1 01 9, 1913. and Sections 1-5 (452) west line of Phelps Road, from I gioo 8:00—WJZ Phllco hour. 6-30 5:30—Studio musical program. 254.1—WRVA, RlCHMOND-'-IISa 10:00 9:00—Trio, tenor, concert. 6:45 5:45—Agricultural program. 9-00 8:00—Orch: travelogue; play. Spec. Laws Conn., 1917, approved Woodbridge St. on the north to 7:25 6:25—Baseball scores. 11-15 10:15—Studio concert.__^ Oct. 1st. 1917 having deemed it for Green Road on the south. 11*00 10:00—Organist; orchestra. 6:30- Remington band recital. 4^.3—KPO, SAN FRANCISCO— . io 399.8-WTAM, CLEVELAND-^ 7:30 710 the public good^hat building and Aiad it is hereby ordered:—That G R A Y C E V Y N E 8:00 7-00—WKAF American hour, 11-00 10:00—N. B. C. entertainments 8:00 7:00—Bridge kame;. . 9t00 a-oo—WEAF troubadours. 12:00 1 1 :00—Morris plan hour. veranda lines 'Should be established said proposed order of the Select­ 9- 00 8:00—"WEAF troubadoqWt 9:80 8:30—WEAF male quartet. 1:00 12:00—Studio dance orchestra. on Emerson Street, a highway in men of Manchester, Conn., be M odes fo r Summer Smartness 10:30 9:30—WEAF urvu.;awo. gran^opefA ____ : —Madrigal mixed quarteL 11:30 10:30—Dance orchestrA 10:30 9 30 Secondary DX Stations. the Town of Manchester, Conn., heard and determined at the Muni­ Secoiid^ary Eastern Stations. 275.1—WORD, BATAVIA—1090. from West Center Street on the cipal Bldg, in said Town of Man­ 5Tke versatility of Grayce de 348.6-WGPS, NEW YORK—860. 10:00 9:00—Choral singers; lecture, north to Summer Street on the chester, on Tuesday, May 8, 1928, Secondary East Stations. 9:00 8:00—Studio Proerams 288.3—WENR, CHICAGO--104a south, passed the following pro­ at seven o’clock, E. S. T. in the aft­ V y n e creatora kaa again evidenced’ 526—WNYC, NEW YORK—570. 7-00 : —Organ; artists; slocks. 508.2—WEEI, BOSTON—590. 8:30 7:30—Arthur Hartmann quartet 6 00 posed order viz. ernoon, and that the Secretary of 7:30 : —Musical program talk. 9:00 8:00—Samovar orch; artlsia. 6 30 9:45 8:45-rBrooklyn C. £• 305.9— WHT, CHICAGO-98a Ordered: Subject to the provi­ this Board cause a ^ p y of the pro­ itself in irreaistiWeinterptetationa . i.i-i 9:00 8:00—WEAF prOfrauia tO_10.80. 365,fc-WCSH, PORTLAND^O. 10-35 9:35—Coal dust Doyst OrgaJ^st. 9:40 8:40—Mathew Sisters. sions of said Sections that the fol­ posed order designating and estab­ * 245>a:-.WKRC, C IN C IN N ^ I—1220. 8:00 7:00—State of 10:00 9:00*-Ramblers entertainment, lowing lines on the east side and ;^iSporta costumes emanating^ just 293.9—WSYR. SYRACUSE— 10:30 9:30—your hour league. lishing the building *■ and veranda 0 ^ 00—Book revlewi trio, 7-30 : —Dinner music; baaebaii. the west side of Emerson Street, a 10- 'oo 9:66—Studio musical program, 6 30 516.9— WMC, MEMPHIS—80a lines upon said proposal of Select­ tkat proper casual air . . . Distin- lioo 12:00—Popular program. 8:35 7:85—DeLman quarteL g.Qo 8:00—WEAF troubadours. highway in said Town of Manches men, together with a notice of Ihe 265.3—WHK, CLEVILAND—118a 9-QO 8:00—Community chest program 9:30 8:30—WEAF orchestra, quartet. teri be and they are hereby estab­ 10:00 9:00—Alpha Gamma Delta. 10:30 ; D<«> tudlS. concerL time and place of hqaing there®.n, guisked frocks for impromptus . . . 10:00 9:00—Italian 12:30 lliSO—Loew’s theater program. 9 3 8 lished viz: — 11:00 10:00—Carol Burke. Jimmy Apie 405.2—WcS ^ M iNN.., ST. PAUL—740. to be filed in the Towp Elerk’s office 11- 00 11 "00_Woqd’s Pirates orchestra,:W8.ft-WRC, WASHINGTON-640, 10‘30 9:30—S. S. S. serenaders; tenor. EAST SIDE in said Town of Manchester, and Graciously molded models for tke DETROlT-KO. 7:00 6:00—Kltt musical hour. 11- 30 10:30—Radio home program. 7:45 6:45—WJZ political talk. The building line on the east published at least twlce^ln a news­ 8:00 7:00—■WEAF programs to 10.30. 12- 35 11:85—pance music; organ. side of Emerson Street Is to be fnorW digniQed occasions. H E ack!^ 10:30 9:30—Studio organ recltaL 8:00 7:00—WEAF progs, to 11:30. paper printed in said Town at least twenty-five (25) ft. east of and five days before the flay-df hearing model kears tke atlye-rmark tkat kas parallel to the east line of said and a copy of said proposed order m 6RE glttfiLT^THANTEVER Emerson Street, from West Center and notice to ‘ be deposited in U already come to signify autkeittkltp UCENSES SUSPENDED • GOING UP THE RIVER St. on the iforth to Summer St, on Post Office In said 'Manchester, the south. FOR SPAWNING THIS YEAR postage paid, directed to each per­ ill Je^gn an J inJiyi Juatity oF 5ea- The veranda line on the east side son or persons Interested at his or WTIC of Emerson Street is to be fifteen A list of operators whose licenses their last known address at least tion . . GRAtCK d,VTNE. (15) ft. west of and parallel to the five days before the day of said Travelers Insurance Co. to drive automobiles in Connecti­ west line of. said Emerson Street, ? T c see tkese creations is to covet; cut have been suspended for one Portland, Ofo.— One of the larg hearing and return make to this Hartford est run of smelt on record was from West Center St. on the north Board. year for driving while under the in­ to Summer St. on the south. possesion . • . nor need you ^ fluence of liquor was given out to­ recorded h-ere this year when for Dated at said Manchester, April 535.4 m . ^ 560 k . c. three weeks the silver horde of fish WEST SIDE 30, 1928. I ' deny yourself . . ; 1’- p \ day at the state motor vehicle de­ The building line On the west partment as a part of the effort to steadily pushed upward to their For and by order of the Board spawning grounds in the reaches of side Of Emerson Street is to be of Selectmen 'bf the Town o^ Man­ ‘ ’vrill ke deligkted at ' ' reduce this highway menace. The twenty-five (25) ft. west of and chester, Connecticui. V Program for Wednesday department statement advised peo­ the Sandy river headwaters. Visitors in this region during the parallel to the west tine of said THOMAS J. ROGERSa^ tkeir moderate ple to notify the department or the Emerson Street, from West Center D.25 p. m. Correct Time, Summary police in case they should see any of smelt run can see thousands of SecretarSr- St. on the north to Summer St. on A true and attested copy of orig­ c'bsiM . of Program and News Bulletins, the drivers operating niotor people day after day lined up on % ^:30 Sea Gull Dinner Group. both banks of the river steadily the south. inal order, ' vehicles. The veranda line on the west 6:55 Baseball Scores. dipping their nets Into the num­ THOMAS j . ROGERS 7:00 Station WCAC will broadcast Ansonia, David Markovilz. berless schools of tiny fish. side of Emerson Street is to be fif­ Secretary of the Board of Select­ ¥ teen (15) ft. west of and parallel „ on this same frequency until 7:30 Berlin, Thomas P. Doty. It is thought that the tremen­ men. tST. 19 0 7 to the west line of said Emerson p. m. Bloomfield, Malcolm Miller. dous Inroads made upon the smelt Manchester, Conn., l^ay 1, 19218. Bridgeport, Steve Lengyel, Ger­ when they run in the Sandy river Street, from West Center St. bn the 7:30 Jack Says, “ Ask Me Another” north to Summer St. on the south. ald S. Mundle, Arthur A. Nelson. each year must necessarily diminsh 8:00 American Magazine and Wo­ And it is hereby ordered:—That Broadbrook, Bort Giacin. their number with the passing of man’s Home Companion Hour said proposed order of the Select­ from N.B.C. Studios. Danielson, Ansellne Bernier. years, yet^hla season’s run has .been one of the largest ever held men of Manchester, Conn., be i u b i n o W j $ 9:00 Ipana Troubadours from N. Darien, Frank Stqvens. heard and determined at the Muni­ B. C. Studios. East Hartford, Haywood Van according to the records of the state game commission. cipal Bldg* In said Town of Man­ 9:30 Goodrich Silvertown Quartet Nostrant}. chester, on Tuesday, May 8, 1928, SOUTH HAHCKCSTrR* and Orchestra from N.B.C. East Windsor Hill, Albert B. at seven o’clock, E, S. T. in the aft­ Studios. ' Ahern. ernoon, and that the Secretary of SBStiBBS 10:30 National Grand Opera Hour Fairfield, Michael E. Godwin., ATter those Bxeman flyers this Board cause a copy of the pro­ — “ L’Amico Fritz”— Mascagni. Georgetown, Julius J. Caflson. through with receptions in posed order designating and estab- Glastonbury, Joseph P. Hallen- n :30 Correct Time, News and country, they’ll wish they lishfng the building / and veranda W'eather. beck, Wallace H, Wrlsley. lines upon said proposal bf Select­ Hartford, Phillip G. Chesboro, flown ri,ght back from Greenly men, together with a notice of the .Jacob Dogart, Jas. Kelly, Phil. W. Island. time and place of hearing thereon, Rowley, John'Skowronski. to be filed In the Town Clerk’s office Safe! Meriden, Leroy J. Holmes, Geo. in said Town of Manchester, and M D BEEF AND-; C; Niebour, Rudolph C. Zemke. published at least twice in a news You’ll ne'vet be ePught off your Milford, Edw. Scofield. paper printed in said Town at least economic, bPse if you’re pro­ Mystic, Walter Slko. 4«ii BAYRISHE,KNOEDEL five days before the day of hearing tected with the Ljfe InOome Hi, New Britain, Edward*K. Dawson, a&4 a copy of said proposed order HeniT E. Fairchild. notice to be deposited in a Plah. Nbw HaVeh, Wm. T. Meloy, Louis P(J8t Office in said M&nchestefi For the Plan guaranteed $100 ilhe Best Gaardian of l^ose Are the Dishes the Irish A. Wldder. .postage paid, directed to eaeb per­ ~ monthly whsheve# ytmf 1 and German Flyers Enjoy. Newton. John Reindeer. Builds Strength! son or persons interested at his of ing power is jnteiTuptea by Norwalk, Raymond W. Skidd. their last knovrn address at least , Life and Property Norwich, James Brennan. d'ye days before the dajr of said disability, and $l0O fiiiohihly X. Putnam, Stanley Ukleja. hearing and return make to this life income stafting at age 63. New York, May 2.— Corned beef Saugatuck. Thomas Vento. Board. Insurance too, $10,000 for ■ .V and cabbage or Bayrlshe knoedel: South Conventry, Thomas Welles. Dated at said Manchester, April dishes fit for heroes and heroes’ your family if you die pre­ South Manchester, Joseph 30, 1928. maturely. ' ' dishes, according to the wives of Vignone. For and by order of the Board thro heroes. ' While Major Jaines South NoriValk, Arthur Remson, of Selectman of the Town of Man­ Would you like an outline of Fitzmauric® and Captain Hermann Hary Roseland, Frank J. Slezak, chester, Connecticut. the Plan and rate at your age? insure Your Valuables Hoehl, two the Bremen trip, were James T. Wlthall. THOMAS J. ROGERS ■ V > ' ^ bjeing lavished nere with American Just call Southington, John M. Grigerek. Secretary. A BOX A GOOD SAFE DEPOSI^ YAULT vielcomes, hospitality and food, Suflleld, Steve Bielawski. A tfUe fiiild .attested copy of orig­ rned beef and cabbage in her rich. in the treatment of Wi husband’s behalf. Windsor, Anthony Krancunas. /. Corned beef and cabbage Is easily general, debility result­ WInsted, Raymond McDonald, ing from chfonlc ptiough understood in America, but Chas. G. Miner. Q^iyrlshe knoedel might cause Brooklyn, N. Y., Andrew G. Hag- coughs. dpme speculation, so Mrs. Koehl ex- strom. Exceptionally fine as a lilained it. S&ringfleld, Mass., Wm. D. Grif­ > A pound of whole wheat flour, a fin. .■ tonic in bronchial af­ ^ If loaf of dried, rye'bread, two New Bedford, Moss., Arthur fections and nervous ^ g s , salt and enough-water to Therrieu. disorders. Fire amd make a good, mixture, similar to Who Licks the Cream? teead dough,' according to Mrs, A large size bottle IStJUf^DEWEY Xoebl. is tbg first’tte'p. Then the AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COST tUer Ifl rolled Into balls, . with St’BS LOSING WIFE. The Lumheriiien’s Mutnal returned .96% of the (jlKmittm paid, LQPped, boiled hkm in the center, $1.00 In to every policyliolder last year and have alwayy (jone yp. le balls are dropped into boiling Cleveland.— It’s all right to play Did You Uet Any Money Back Oil Your Policy? tter and cooked In until they cards for money if you win once If you want to reduce the cost of yhnv AliHt Insurance yee me ime to the surface, as do fried in a while, thinks Louis Schaefer, BeffiiinltiH before ynit renew ypur present |i6]loy dr lAitttMl-fOur car, but a wife who loses all the time I will l>e glad to explain how you can iniajM your oar tn the RICHARD G. RICfl r w hen that Is %aeoompllBhed and isn’t contributing anything to tho j Tuesdasr^ M ay 8 World’s Greatest Mutual at 28% Saving. ’ " little bacon ha».bqen fried, the family budget. Schaefer, in his in South Munchester. ih Is ready to be sdrved to her petition for divorce, charged his tlttfetr Buthfins, iband, Mrs. Koehl said. The wife with losing as. high as $10 S t a r e STUART J.WASLEY XiMiiMt gnase -laboured -over the per ■week at the gambling tables, to REAL RfiTATB INitnRAKGB / ■■ por- tl» great detriment of his earalng ^ JtelUb'JllMMheste? . 827 Allltn M ,; T«L 1488dR Oiii6lV iOilUednjt iwd tiak o f saiuerkraut alongside. powera m e

V- A :-K i W \ y- • MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING iTOtAIJ?, WEDNESDAY, filAY 2,11^.

In New York TALCOTTVILLE New York, May 2.— Grand street James Wood was pleasantly sur­ 'if i ' la, to all Intents and purposes, just prised at his home Saturday even­ South Manchester, TS'Z.lia^^^reet another highway on New York’s ing In honor of his birthday by a East Side. Like such highways It Is merry party of relatives and friends. Conn» h " ; .iH:; 't'’. cluttered with cheap shops the win­ Whist was enjoyed and refresh­ dows of which fairly shout their ments served. bargains. If there Is anything to Mr. and Mrs. William McNally FRADIN distinguish It from other business and daughter, Miss Sara, will leavo , streets of the ghetto district, It is on June Bth for a trip to Ireland. the whlmlsca and gaudy nature of They plan to return to this country Its pushcarts. This Is the commer­ the latter part of August. cial heaven to which all good little The May Meeting of the Mission­ pushcarts go when they live and j ary society will be held on Friday grow prosperous. In Orchard street, afternoon. May 4th, at the home of in Rivlngton street an,d the other Mrs. C. 0. Britton, at 2:45 o’clock, I , cart-cluttered thoroughfares, a instead of May 8th as previously mm pushcart is a pushcart and the stated. Kindly note change of date. wares are hawked in the simple, This will be the annual meeting of primitive fashion of the foreign the society and the last meeting of market place. the Foreign Branch for the season. But in Grand street a pushcart The annual meeting of the Hart­ becomes something half-way be­ ford branch of the Woman’s Board tween a peddler’s pack and a real !of Missions will be held Tuesday, store. The pushcarts here take on iMay 1st, at the Windsor avenue airs. They build display racks and Congregational church. The morn­ have a stock in trade. At night, ing session will start at 10:30, and Begins Tomorrow, May 3 at 9 a. m. under the flaring gasoline torches the afternoon meeting at 2 o’clock. or the strings of electric lights, Delegates may have luncheon at the For this great event we have made vast preparations. New Spring they become riotously colorful with , church for 50c. shirtwaists, stockings and whatnot. Church Notes and Summer merchandise lyas bought at ireat price concessions, the These are suspended from fence- The Communion of the Lord’s like structures, crude ..ticks and Supper will be observed at the manufacturers cooperating with us and enabling us to offer the best imitation shop windows. It is as morning service Sunday Mary 6th. easy to get a phonograph record as ' The names of Katherine Virginia and greatest bargains possible. Every deparement in the store offers a radio loud speaker. Some of the Myer, and Clifford' Calvin Myer stands are miniature department have been placed on our Sunday tremendous values. Hundreds of sale items not advertised. stores. Most of the stores of Grand School Cradle Roll. street are owned by immigrants The meeting of the Golden Rule who made their money at the crub- Club will be postponed from Friday stones. It is the last stepping stone evening, May 4th, until May 11th. to a business of your own. It has I A sterloptican lecture on the the eternal flavor of a fair or a fete subject, "Awakening India" was day. It is like nothing else in given in the church parlors Sunday America. I evening by the Rev. F. P. Bachelor DRESSES COATS at 7:30 o’clock in place of the So much for the physical ele­ Christian Endeavor meeting. At Marvelous Savings Possible ments of Grand street. But it seems A Dress Event Long to Be that this street has a certain spiri­ Remembered. tual pride as well. Prom its side­ SPECIAL FOR Once a Year Only. walks have risen some of New York’s most prominent citizens. A group of silk dresses This group of coats will And so the Grand Street Boys’ club THE WEEK-END is an organization unique even in a that you will appraise as set everybody talking. city such as Manhattan, where the Thursday, Friday, Saturday most remarkable bargains Dress and Sport models. unique paradoxically becomes al­ you have seen in many £ Every coat a super value, most commonplace. months. This lot will not last long. Formerly to 15.00. Glancing over the list of some 7000 names, one is Inclined to feel that the judge has tempered his The kind of a dress you The loveliest coats o^ the sulogy— for here is the proof of the melting pot that is Amn’ica. Here always wanted but did not season are in this assort­ is the name of Max Steuer, one of I expect to get at this low ment. Styles and sizes for :he be t known lawyers of the price we can fortunately of­ young and old. Tomorrow ealm, who began jy peddling fer during this sale a t...... matches. In the late afte-noon he is the day. Come early! would sell papers on the corners. Regular 9.95. Here is Judge Cornelius Collins and Pendants Judge Morris Koenig, v ho well Beautiful coats that sell inows Jie struggle of parents to At 9.55 only you will find !:lve their children an education. With Various Colored Stones. summer dresses that repre­ for 35.00 and are worth it. Here is .Judge Mancuso, who came Regular $4.50 and up Of Kasha, Sheen and Broad­ ;rom the Italian quarter. Here is sent the utmost in style, Governor A1 Smith, who came oft Your Choice at quality and value. Sizes cloth trimmed with quality "the sidewalks of New York." U. S. 14 to 52. Regular 14.95 furs. Senator Royal Copeland; George Olvany. the leader of Tammany Hall: Senator Robert Wagner, Ed­ $3.75 die Cantor, Al Jolson ano that famous team of Weber and Fields, Irving Berlin and a score of others. Dressy Broadcloth Barefoot boys of the city streets — all f them. And each one of them with a story of struggle io R. Donnelly fame such as only Manhattan's Jeweler FROCKS East .Side can write. 515 Main St., So. Manchester GOATS GILBERT SWAN. Advance Summer styles for Miss and l!ilatron for trimmed with mole, Fitch street and afternoon wear. and fox new selling for the Each a conspicuous price of the fums anly.

value 5TH ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS IN Regular at . . . 14.55 59.00 .. 35.00 Onions Cabbage LADIES’ 5th Anniversary Sale 5th Anniversary Sal© . GIRL’S HATS /GIRLS A boundless assortment of smart summer hats at DRESSES 1„85 2,85 Wash Dresses of broadcloths COATS A Tremendous Offering! Don’t Miss It! and prints, smaller sizes with bloomers. Regular price 2.49. Tailored coats in sizes to 16 a spe­ Sale -■ Q C cial offer for this ^ O f t WHAT A MEAL— CHILDREN’S PONGEE SILK DRESSES Smart Coats for growing girls of Sizes 8 to 14. Regular 3.98. BUT Tweeds and Kashas. Q C t Sale O Q C HATS Reg. 10.95. Sale Price ^ * 1 / v Price ...... The newest models in the most popular shades. SILK CREPE DRESSES Coats in the most popular models You can cook thes^ New Summer styles. of the season of ft Sizes 7 to 14. Q Q C 1.00“ M 55 quality fabrics and furs v Regular 6.50 ...... O ^ Foods at one time in a 5th Anniversary Special! 5th Anniversary Special I 5th Anniversary Special! 5th Anniversary Special! 5th Anniversary Special! Kid Gloves Carter’s Vests Carter’s Bloomers Silk Umbrellas Princess Slips 75c 95c 2.95 55c 185 Made of fine nainsook with New light shades in heavy Picot straps, shields under First quality rayon bloom­ Heavy silk with fancy bor­ hip hem. Hand made lace weight soft kid. Regular VENTIUTED the anns, first quality, regu­ ers. Sizes 14 to 44. Regu­ trimmed. Regular 1.00. 2.49. lar 1.00. lar 1.50. ders, 16 ribs. Regular 4.95.

5th Anniversary Sale 5th Anniversary Sale 5th Anniversary Sale 5th .; Anniversary Sale Wash GAS OVEN ^ HOSIERY CORSETS UNDERWEAR Every pair of hose DRESSES without the flavor of one affecting guaranteed to be first Corsets and Wrap LOTI— quality only. Arounds of well known Crepe de Chine Cos­ Hoover Dresses of fine makes, sizes 30 to 36. tume Slips with hem­ chambray. another, Pointex, Holeproof and Regular 3.50. O C C stitched tops, bloomers, Sale Price . 85c / Sutrite heavy service Sale Price .. step-ins and chemises. weight pure silk, light Regular 2.50 and 2.98. m shades. i Ct C Dresses of prints and The best cooking is gas cooking. Corselettes of fancy Sale I OC Sale Price 1 Price ...... loO O br,6adcloths in regular brocades of the ^ better and extra sizes. / Pointex and Holeproof kind. Sizes 34 to 44. Values to 2.95 “l Hose in medium service o:- -:o Regular Sale Price .. 1 • f 9 weight; Regular 1.50. 3 .5 0 ...... 2,55 Sale *1 Q e LOT II.— Price ...... X Silk underwear of the Foulard Dresses in Wrap Arounds of qual­ better kind, tailored or new summer styles for Holeproof Pure Silk ity brocade, medium afternoon and street Hose. Regular 1.00. lace trimmed- Re^lar The Mandiester Gas Co. weight. 1 Oft price to $3.98. ^ C C wear. O E fC t Sale . f t K / » Reg. 2.98 . . . X * « / 0 Sale Price .. Sale Price .. « « 9 9 Price ...... 0 9 C

iJ i ^ ' i, ,/.-■' V V V. • ■ • it-' MANCStfifTBS fGOl^N.) U V filfIK a tti& A lJS, J iA t % 1048. PAGE ETGHT

can Congressional ticket in his r: llanrlieB ttf Chicago district was a foregone about conclusion in view of the fact that I < y . v ~ I' only Mr. Madden’s extraordinary Evening Hlfralb popularity among whites and Ne­ V- PUMUSHCU BT . t THIS HBKA.M) PKINTINQ CO. groes alike, in his home neighbor­ F*und«d b; ISlvnod S. SU, hood, prevented bis being defeated Oct. 1. 1881 by a colored -aspirant in the pri­ (119) state Property Worth $76,500,000. Bvery Bvenlng Bxceu* Sundays snd Holidays. mary. Connecticut owns state property worth 176,500,000; proper­ Entered at the Post Odloe at Man­ We know nothing about Oscar de ty which la increasing in value approximately ?5,000,000 an- chester as Second Class Mall Matter. Priest, the candidate, except that SUBSCIIIPTIUN KATBS: By Mall nually. , , * SIX dollars a year, sixty cents a he has been a Chicago alderman, State highways,’ Improved roads, bridges, and ferries, state bnveniently Grouped for niu(ith for shorter perloda but we do know that there la no By carrier, eighteen cents a week. property In the custody of the highway commission, were val­ Single copies, three cents. earthly reason why Negro ctmstl- ued at 54I,526,‘335 at the Inventory of state property, which SPISCIAL ADVBKTlSlNa KBPUlil- tuencies should not be represrated SBNTAriVK. Hainllton-Be LIsser. was made last summer. Two years previous they were worth June Bride^ Inc.. '285 Madison Avenue. New fo___ rk 1 by Negroes In Congress or any ?36,661,470 and In 1921, ?27,723,215. and 612 North Michigan Ayanue. legislative body. Land owned by the state increased In value from Chicago. The Manchester Bvening Herald la It is a great many years since in 1921 to $5,681,876 last year. Buildings ▼"O valued at $18,- oa sale in New Yprk City at Schulis's there was even a single Negro 977.294 In 1921; $23,285,590 in 1926 and $22,236,212 last News Stand. Sixth Avenue and 42nd. year. ' Street and 42nd. Street entrance of member of Congress from any Grand Central Station and at all 'The value of furnishings, machinery and tools In custody or Hoatllrg News Stands. state, and Illinois, with its great the several departments in 1921 was $2,457,071; in 1926, $3,- colored population, has never had 219,106 and in 1927, $3,120,043. Client of International News Ser* a representative of that race in Books and periodicals, ..and special collections vice. in the state library are worth approximately $1,000,000. The Cleaning these “International News Service has the Congress. exclusive rights to use for republlca* portraits, most of which are of the men who have lion in any form all nows dispatches Whether the new colored con­ colony and state as Its governors, were valued at $250,000 at credited to or not otherwise credited gressman—for his nomination is the last inventory. Special collections at the state library are In this paper. It Is also exclusively worth $350,000 and books and periodicals In custody o' floors , entitled to use for republlcatlon all equivalent to election in that dis­ the local or undated news'published trict—will be a statesman first and several departments and at the library were valued at $345,600. herein." Full Service Client of N El A All three were Inventoried at $550,000 Iji 1921. Service. a Negro afterward, or a Negro first Automobiles were Inventoried at $823,590 last year and at is child’s play • and a statesman afterward, will $374,921 In 1921; livestock at $254,454 in 1927 and at $178,- X WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1928 depend on his mentality and on his 080 in 1921; maintenance stores at $632,601 last year ^od at hese floors are ieasily- $364,441 in 1925, materials and goods in process, at $161,670 cleaned with a dustlesa predispositions. But if the latter last year and $203,818 seven years ago. T CALIFORNIA should prove to be the case, as it mop—mere child’s play com­ B’rlday—State Expense This Year ^6,000,000 Perhaps the most significant pri­ did In the case of at least one col­ pared to scrubbing. mary election yet held In the coun­ ored Congressman, it would be no try, as affecting the candidacy of more than equal to the standing ^ by the exploiting companies to de^ Color Governor Alfred Smith of New of a considerable number of South- jjj t^ls country for some time; but ern Representatives and Senators so far as we know this is the first feat that provision. They’re beautiful too, these York for the Democratic nomina­ new floors of Armstrong’s Lin­ tion for the Presidency, was that in Congress, who openly and of­ time that the details of this of busi­ Special Assistant Attorney Gen X T OW you can step intb a room here and quiejely learn the cost of oleum. They put soft, plea&i of California, which took place yes­ fensively declare, on every possible ness have come out In an American eral Robert C. Bell reported to At­ I\1 the complete outfit fur we have arranged four room groups and ing color and design where |t terday. On California the antl- occasion, that this Is a “white court. torney General Palmer in 1921, af­ •*' ^ addition outfits on (kr floors. Each group includes enough man’s country” and that tho Con­ The tip is one of the poorest im­ ter an exhaustive investigation, pieces to start a room’s furmshings. Each group will be priced com­ enhances your pretty fabric Smith forces in the party had de­ that application of the Midwest OU pended to stem the tide of approv­ stitution’s guarantee of political portations from Europe that Amer­ Company and ten otlier subsidiaries plete. Rugs are omitted as^ooms vary so much in size that we pre­ rugs, and adds to the beauty of al of the Smith candidacy, w'hich equality for the Negro is a scrap ican ever made. It ranks with of the Midwest Refining Company fer to let you select the rug t^at will best fit your particular room. your furniture and draperies. theretofore had risen in territory of paper. communism and the pine tree for about. 15,000 acres of the field ' We have the new Armstrong should be denied because the ap- where the New Yorker had every­ blight. . / \ patterns for living and dining­ llcants wer guilty of fraud. Ha rooms, as well as for kitchen thing his own way from the start. MAKE BELIEVE scoffed at their original claim for In California there was supposed to Germany’s acceptance of the SPECULATIVE WHEAT “relief” on the ground that the and bath. be a powerful division of senti­ American proposal for a treaty The craze for speculation, which money invested had been derived 7 -pc. Living R^om Group $ 189 ment, with a belief prevalent in outlawing war does nothing, it started in the motor stocks and from the Salt Creek oil itself. Included in this seven-piece iimtfit is a upholstered suite of three since then has extended to pretty Midwest Refining, he said, had a the east that the state’s Democrats seems to us, but involve an already monopoly on Salt Creek oil. pieces—full size davenport, club ^hair and wing chair—covered in a might show a decided preference sticky situation. It would appear to much everything that can be bet Midwest Refining Is a subsidiary combination of plain taupe m ohairipd plain taupe velour with color­ for Senator Thomas J. Walsh, and signify little but an eager grab at on in the exchanges, bids fair to of the Standard Oil Company of ful moquette velour on one side of\the reversible seat cushions. In that Jim Reed of Missouri, who a chance to appear pacific and gen­ take the bread out of the mouths Indiana. The president of Midwest Refining was then Harry B. addition a solid mahogany davenport table, a mahogany finished end had centered much of his hopes on tle at the expense of France. The of a good many people. table, a silk shade table lamp and bridge lamp to match are included. With beef at a very high figure Blackmer, fugitive, witness In the Have a Floor Pacific Coast support, would be a difference between the position of Teapot Dome oil trials, Robert W strong runner-up. the German foreign oflice and that and lamb soaring to prohibitive Stewart was then, as now, chair­ \ The result, however, was a com­ of M. Briand is this; Germany prices, the news comes from Chlca man of Standard of Indiana. Stew­ Waxed FREE! plete washout as far as antl-Smlth cries, “Yes, yes!” to a pacifist pro­ go of wild speculation in wheat, art and Blackmer were in on the with the price jumping with each mysterious Continental Trading hopes are concerned. From present posal of no real value in securin.g Company deal, which provided 5-pc. Bedroom p r o u p $98 indications Smith has won every the peace of the world, while transaction. Liberty bnda for Harry F. Sinclair o sh o w y o ir War time wheat values are con­ Five quality pieces make up this low^riced bedroom outfit. Each one of the state’s fifty-eight coun­ France makes a bona fide effort to to Secretary of the Interior Fall how easily fidently predicted in the very near and Will H. Hays. Stewart Is now group includes a full size, poster%pe bed, a large dresser_and choice T ties with the exception of three, -amend that proposal so that it may you may have tnd his vote in the primaries was make matters better, if anything, future, and judging by the way in Involved in Senate cqntempt pio- of either a chest of drawers or a dressing table with mirror. To which the speculative market In in­ ceedlngs for his refusal'to tell what complete the outfit a genuine Way-Saj[less Sping ana a 100% new beautiful, pbl- 1 jonsiderably in excess of those of and certainly not worse. he knows about Continental. dustrials has been sustained, solely cotton mattress are included. The suite Ms constructed of genuine ished wax fioora Walsh and Reed combined. One of Mr. Kellogg’s draft treaty has Since the oil leasing act of 1920 the Johnson elec­ the most significant items in the two serious faults. One is that as a by the inertia of the bull move­ the government has colected $63.- walnut plywood and gumwood, finely finis^et" situation is that in the dry South- ^ whole It Is the merest expression ment. there is no telling how high OPO.OOO In oil royalties, most of It tric way, we will from Salt Creek. But hundreds of ern counties, including Los Ange­ of a shadowy idealism with no pro­ it may go before the market drops w ax and polish millions in oil have been taken oneofyourfloora les, fortress of McAdoo, the Demo­ vision for the crystalization of the out of this newest gambling frenzy. from the Salt Creek field. crats voted for Smith in about the ideal. The other Is In phraseology. without diarge. same proportion as in wet San It renounces war “as an instrument The agitation over Salt Creek be­ Number of ap­ Francisco and vicinity. This is per­ gan through a 1923 lease by which pointments lim­ of public policy.” And if anybody Harry F. Sinclair, the alleged Tea­ haps as good a straw as can be had can tell us just what that means pot Dome looter, made a contract ited. Phonej^ur'. of the probable course of the “dry” we will be obligated. w'ith Fall to buy all the Salt Creek resezyationnow.; Southern Democrats, with whom It may mean as many different royalty oil—a five-year contract the Democrats of Southern Califor­ things as there are individuals or renewable on Sinclanr’s option. Secretary Work renewed it this JOHNSONS WAX nia hold a blood and ethical kin­ governments to Interpret it. It year, saying he had no alternative. ship. may mean as many different things By RODNEY BUTCHER. President Coolidge has had the De­ &eeMeJhorTio^her With California climbing onto as there are to be days in the next Washington, May 2.—Salt Creek, partment of Justice Investigate to the Smith band wagon in this en­ century. Which is another way of which will be investigated by the see if there were any taint of fraud Senate, is a billion-dollar ocean of thusiastic manner, the chances for saying that it is meaningless, in the contract. oil. Then Senator Robinson of, In­ his nomination at Houston seem to empty and of no conceivable ef­ Teapot Dome, is almost a puddle diana, who has been trying to be, today, far more definite than fect. alongside of Salt Creek field, which smear the second Wilson adminis­ they were yesterday. Goodness knows that the cove­ is said to be the richest oil deposit, tration with the oil scandals, That California should have en­ nant of the League of Nations and acre for acre in the world. brought Bell’s report to the atten­ They lie side by side in Wyom­ dorsed Hoover unanimously was, the Locarno pacts are no absolute tion of he Senate. Bell said that ? ing, the general field laid out In the when the leasing act was before of course, to be expected. But the guarantee against war; but the shape of a bowling pin, with Tea­ Congress It was emphatically as­ outpouring of Republican voters to sanctions imposed on an aggressor pot Dome the knob. serted that Standard Oil had no In­ primaries in which there was no state under the covenant are such terests in Midwest Refining or any opposing candidate is nevertheless as, had they then been in existence, Senator George W. Norris of other claimants (who were painted Formerly $42.50 a revelation. It is highly significant must have caused much more hesi­ Nebraska whose resolution earlier as poor prospectors, but that Stand­ ard’s “absolute control” of Mid-^ that far more Republicans went to tation on the part of the Central this year lead to revelations of Sinclair’s contributions to the Re­ west subsequently had been con­ the polls to vote for Hoover, un­ Pow'ers before they started the NOW d' publican campaign fund several ceded 1928 Model O opposed, than there were Demo­ World war in 1914; while the Lo­ years ago and who now demands cratic voters in what was regarded carno treaties at least have definite investigation of Salt Creek, asks “Only a little while ago the courageously en­ as a very important contest. meanings. And if there is any hope determination whether any of the government was leases in this 30,000-acre field gaged In ‘dissolving’ the Standard Complete Outfit at all for the preservation of peace were illegal or fraudulent, whether Oil Company,” wrote Bell, “but BOODLE OUT continuing it lies in the fact they gave anyone a monopoly on now it is requested to dispense re­ A limited number of Room Size fcugs that a common police power is held Salt Creek oil and whether any of lief to. this object of charity and be­ . ^ Opposition of the international over the heads of aggressors. them should be cancelled. Senators stow upon it leases to the most bankers to the nomination of Her­ We do not see and never have Walsh and Nye of the Teapot Dome valuable known oil acmreage In the committee will handle the Investi­ world—public property to the value bert Hoover. If any, and the conse­ seen the slightest advantage of a quent possibility of their wlthhold- gation. of at least $1,000,000,000. Is this large and cheap gesture consisting In 1909, when the navy was be­ the character of claimants Congress clng their fat campaign contribu­ of fine sounding words that trans­ ginning to consider seriously its fu­ meant to relieve?” tions in the event of his being the late into zero, as either a substitute ture oil supply. President Taft That’s one thing that Norris and Republican party’s candidate, may or a pretended supplement to tho withdrew all public oil lands from the Senate’s Teapot Dome Investi­ 'HESE are the rugs recently discontinued when the Spring sl\i^- lose something of their importance entry, refusing to permit further gating: committee want to know. ments were received. All-over Persian as well as semi-cove , League covenant and the Locarno indistrimlnate exploitation^ ^n view of the Senate’s determina­ agreements. On the contrary, the Chinese designs are represented in the groups. No rugs reserve^ tion to institute a close scrutiny of But a group of oil men bought effect is merely to give persons up such claims as existed in Salt \V' campaign expenditures this year. and nations which hav4 no inten­ Creek, denied the president’s There has recently been a defi­ tion of keeping the peace forever authority to withdraw the lands nite suspicion that much of the op­ and went right in and took out the ATBOUGHT an opportunity to assume a chrubic oil. position to Mr. Hoover comes from expression and appear saintly, 4 Special Axminsters, 9x12, $38 ea. professional politicians who, from It was unt until 1915 that the while binding themselves to noth­ supreme court upheld Taft’s order. Charity shall cover the multi' long habit, are given to weighing tude of Pete 4:8. Group No. 1 Group No. 2 ing. Then the oil men. Instead of being the availability of a candidate by forced by Congress to pay for the Refrigerator ' Charity Itself consists in acting $42.50, 9x12 Axminsters ... $86 $47.50, 9x12 Axminsters .. .$40 the amount of crash that can be oil they had taken and to get out, Justly and faltUfuMy In whatever collected to “put him over.” These BAD IMPORTATION went to Congress and asked for “re­ office, business and employment a Club The extent to which the tip-giv­ lief.” They said they had exploit­ $39.50, S^xlOVg $44.00, 814x101/2 folks do not regard Hoover as per is engaged.—Sivedenborg. A xm ipsters...... $37 Memberships are still open in our ing and tip-taking practice has de­ ed Salt Creek in good faith and de­ A xm insters...... • $88 good magnet for the pulling in of manded protection for their Invest­ biggest Refrigerator Club! $3 gold. They would prefer some other veloped In this country was dis­ ment. They began a long and com­ $g5.00, 6x9 .^xmiBsters . . . .$21 $86.00, 71/ 2x 9 Axminsters ..$30 makes you a member and delivers closed when an attorney for the plicated fight for a leasing law PEOPLE IN SMALL TOWNS any new Leonard refrigerator \ to man, around whom the dollars of $14.00,41^x61/2 your home. Pay the balance In special interests would more gener­ Alice Foote McDougall Coffee which would lease all oil lands on OF C. S. WILL BE GIVEN $14.00, 4Vix6i/2 Shops, Inc., of New York, admitted a royalty basis, giving them the CHANCE TO LEARN MUSIC. A xm insters...... $12.85 Axminsters ...... $12.8o easy weekly installments yon'll ously rally. preference at Salt Creek. never miss. At the same time>oa But the prospect of a close In court a day or two ago that t^e receive the CASH PRICE on the re­ watchfulness of campaign collec­ ^wait^es3es “employed” by that con­ The late Senator Robert M. La New York.—Originating In New frigerator you select. cern pay ten dollars a week each. Follette fought and filibustered York State, a campaign to carry There ore Leonard Refrtgeratom tions and spending, by a Senate music to small towns will he pro­ to meet every homst^need and every snooping committee, may cause Instead of receiving wages, for the against the oil men’s bill for six privilege of serving the coffee years, despite a powerful and pflr« moted throughout the country, It Whittall Palmer Wiltons budget. Top leers, narrow apart­ ■J 1. this consideration to fade away in sistent lobby. Finally it was pass­ was announced by the Playground ment leers, and all sizes of the pop­ very great degree. There Is a grow­ house patrons. ed by a Republican Congress under and . Recreation Assooiatlbn of 9xlS ft. WUtons...... $95 6x9 ft Wiltons...... $61.50 ular 3-door front leers ar^ repire- ing respect for these Senate Investi­ Until the first of the year, it was a Democratic administration. It America, which plans to extend Mnted in oak, ash. white enameled nationally the movement started in 81/lx101/2 f t WJltons .... $89^50 36x93 in. Wiltons...... $16.25 Iteel and white porcelain exteriors, gations and a definite |inxlety not stated, the girls had received a dol­ was all bl-partisan and no outright lar a day in wages, but at that corruption is alleged, although at Adirondack villages by the Lake " 27x54 in. WiltonS ...... ; ...... $10.25 irces range from $13.96 up. to be hit by them. So that the bar­ least one senator and an Interior Placid club. rel bids fair to be a less salient time thON concern quit paying and Department employe were later giv­ Tho nitovement aims to open factor in this election than It has instead demanded pay. Waitresses en fat oil Jobs. greater musical opportunities to the •’ I been for some time. Such being tho in the corporation’s employ said Charges also have been made of people who live In towns of 2,500 that the tips amounted to between the payment of other hush money, populfilion or less ' and the . flr$1; case, the professionals will prob objective will be to further the nc $5 and 8 a day for each girl. for Salt Creek was so rich that the WATKINS BROTHEI^, I . ably soon decide that their only oil men could afford a policy’ of work among vlUages of New ^fork reason for bucking ■ Hoover has It has long been common knowl­ paying off and buying off of all ob­ State.! ; EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVES FOR CRAWFORD AND CHAMBERS RANGES ceased to exist and that they might edge that, In London, waiters In jectors and claimants. Mu$Io “mlssioners” already have been placed In sixty-four towns of as well get on the band wagon. fashionable hotels and restaurants The charge Of fraud enters In had toi work on the concession connection with the title claims the'State, with the cooperation of the h ew York State EduMtion De- basle—paying the management In­ that the ISssors were forced to NEGHa CONGRESSMAN show. Original entrants .were limit­ partn ent, which jpays half the stead of being paid. And there has arlesTof the teachers. The rest of The nomination of a Ne'gro tO' ed by old land laws to very small i||»ti*V*'l»i t«8Place the late Representative been more than a suspicion that the parcels, but it Is charged that in- thA < xpease has been met by the loc^l Etoards of the Bddoatlon. atartln B. Jlladdeu oa Reoubll- sano UTitoxn has been taking root cnpaerahle iidummies”- w«r« used ■7 ?

MANGWliJSrBR (CONNi) "teVENTNG H BRAU), WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1928,

'Freedom of trade without inter- FIBE IN-PAINT. PliAlWp conducted with .sUll. and efficiency; ber of automobiles^ juow owned by feW ce on the part of the State al­ Ne^“lT ^ . ^ 2 -asfA fire almost every family lu the Country, Campaign Portraits— Senator Charles Curtis ^ d that they do not .delude the ways develops competition and thjs the John A. ^Caaey paint, WL, COURT Rtsmms buyer into purchasing'goods by giv­ delivery of goods by the merchant' will protect the consumer against vanilih, viWorkE^ BWhiyA . ing him credit when he is unable to is no longer so necessary, and the the danger of monopoly. As the brought iinder wlitfor this morni. pay for them; .that they turn over buyer can save -something of the chain stores have developed in after causlQg damage estimated CHAN STORES TAX their stock more rapidly than other cost of operating his automobile by numbers, in resources, in capital $1(10,000. - Two buildiiigs in whifl^ Curtis’ Story Reads Like Fiction stores and do not keep oh tLeir saving the expense of delivery. and in-efficiency, they have perhSps hu^djeds fOf- bty-rel® -of. oil, turpbn^ Moreover, chain stores helpl to in­ <$> shelves goods long enough to de­ become -essential for the efficient tine and paint were stored, caught sure regular rentals, furnish regu­ fire and several explosions resulted-■ wise; she wanted her daughter’s teriorate and become unwholesome distribution of merchandise to the or Impaired in quality and that lar employment, stabilize the value general public.” One fireman was injured. child to grow up to be a white man, Maryland Judge Declares of real estate and spend a large not a roving Indian. So she per­ through them the tendency is to re­ This is the second time that a suaded young Curtis to return to duce the cost to the consumer. With part of the proceeds of their sales law attempting to irnpose penalties « • ' n • Topeka and try to get an educa­ T^at They Are Blessing to the rapid development of means of in the community.” on chain stores has been declared AuVS. DflllS tion. transit and the increase in the num- The Court further states that. unconstitutional. .Society. Back in Topeka young Curtis sold fruit and candy at the railway station and worked in stores while Judge Albert B. Doub of the Cir­ finishing his schooling. He lived cuit Court for Alleghany County with his paternal grandmother, Maryland has issued a permanent Parmelia Curtis, who likewise en­ injunction restraining the enforce­ couraged him to get an education. ment of an cat of the General As­ You Pay A Fair Price For Your Clothing Here As Curtis grew older he felt the sembly of Maryland taxing any need of more income. Knowing chain of stores operating more than horses, he naturally applied to a five stores within the state $500.00 livery stable owner. The latter gave for each store over five. This act him a job as a hack driver. Then was held by the Court to be un­ he began the study of law, often constitutional, as it would operate reading his textbooks by the oil in such a way as to discriminate lamps on his hack while waiting AND YOU GET YOUR between certain stores in the same for a fare. Impressed by the youth’s linp of business. determination to get ahead, a vet­ Judge Doub in his decision states, eran Topeka attorney took him '•‘Looking at the community as a into his office. I whole, the chain stores, by purchas­ At 21, Curtis was admitted to the bar. When he was 25 (In 1885) be ing direct from the manufacturer was elected prosecuting attorney. and the producer and eliminating MONEY’S WORTH Kansas already had a prohibition the profits and expenses of the law, but nobody paid any attention wholesaler, jobber and broker and to it, Curtis, however, considered It the cost of delivery and selling for In clothes, as in everything else, there is a price limit below which it is danger­ his duty to enforce it. He closed cash and thereby escaping the usual every saloon in Topeka In 30 days losses .resulting from sales on ous to go. Many men have discovered that for themselves by buying one cheap suit. and kept them closed throughout credit, are more likely to give to his four-year term. He has been a the farmer, truckman and consumer It held up until he got it home—but in a few days the man discovered he had been strong prohibitionist ever since. part of the middle man’s p^»flt and In 1892 Curtis wa!s elected to so to . become a blessing to society ‘‘held up.” Congress. He served seven 'terms and the public generally. Indeed, there and in 1907 he was elected the very elements so earnestly in­ We sell the kind of clothes we know will satisfy—in style, in fit, in service. We to the Senate. In 1912 he was -beat­ sisted upon by -the defendants as en, but he came back in 1914 and a justification for this extra license know that they will save money for you because the VALUE is built into them. has been In the Senate contlhuous- fee are the very elements that ly since that time. would seem to justify the develop­ ment of the chain store. “ The testimony shows that the TOMORROW: Senator Thomas chain stores are more cleanly and J. Walsh or Montana. •sanitary than others; that they are Senator Charles Curtis This, the 21st in a series of Pres-^ idential Campaign Portraits written on an Indian allotment farm lu Doctor Found Women by Robert Talley, tells the story of Kansas and spent part of his boy­ Senator (Charles Curtis, of Kansas. hood in the tepees of the Kaw Tomorrow’s article will discuss Sen­ tribe. and Children Sick ator Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. His great-great-great grandfather was Chief Pawhuskie of the Osages. By ROBERT TALLET Three generations ago. Princess More Often than Men Washington, May 2.— The com­ White Plume, the chief’s grand­ bined imaginations of Zane Grey daughter, married a French trader, and Horatio Alger never pictured a and trapper named Conville. Their As a family doctor at Montlcello,<^ more colorful career than that of daughter, Julie Conville, was Sen­ Illinois, the whole human body, not Senator Charles Curtis, the domin­ ator Curtis’ grandmother, being the any small part of it, was Dr. Cald­ ant but silent figure who serves as wife of Louis Pappan, another well’s practice. More than half his Republican leader in the Senate. French trader. Bllen Pappan “ calls” were on women, children In youth an Indian boy on a gov­ (daughter of Louis Pappan and and babies. They are the ones most ernment reservation, at 10 a jockey Julie Conville) was Senator Curtis’ often sick. But their illness were riding horses on Kansas race mother. She married Capt. Orrin A. usually of a minor nature— colds, tracks, at 15 a new “ butch” at rail­ Curtis, who had moved to Kansas fevers, headaches, biliousness— way depots, at 17 a hack driver in from Indiana. And so, on Grand-, and all of them required first a Topeka, at -2J- a self-educated law- mother Julie Pappan's Indian allot­ thorough evacuation. They were yer, at 25 a beardless prosecutor in ment farm near Topeka, the future constipated. Shawnee county, at 32 a congress­ senator was born on Jan. 25, 1860. In the course of Dr. Caldwell’s man, at 47 a senator— now Curtis In 1868, when Curtis was eight seeks to climax his 32 years in 47 years' practice (he was gradu­ years old, a band of roving and ated from Rush Medical College Washington by being elected presi­ war-like Cheyennes attacked and dent. He was the fli^st candidate to back in 1875), he found a good surrounded the reservation of the deal of success in such cases with announce, having entered the race friendly Kaws. Because he could I last Oct. 26. a prescription of his own contain­ speak both English and Indian, ing simple laxative herbs with pep­ Senator Curtis is 68, the oldest young Curtis was chosen to slip of all the candidates. His hair and sin. In 1892 he decided to use this from camp under cover of darkness formula in the manufacture of a mustache, until recent years coal and make his way to the military black, are just now beginning to medi,qi/ie to be known as Dr.'CJgW- post at Topeka for aid. The:Kaws’ A T AQ E 6 3 ; turn gray-,He Is of. medium height, horses had been captured, so Cur­ well’s Syrup Pepsin, and ^n''^liht round and solid of figure, wears tis made the 60-mile trip on foot in yeaj- his prescription was first plac­ wrinkled and baggy clothes, does less than two days. ’The cavalry ed on the market. not fry to pose as a statesman and The preparation immediately had While women, children and eld­ KUPPENHEDHER came and chased the Cheyennes erly people '’are especially benefit­ MEN’S AND YOUNG is willing for people to take him at away. as great a success in the drug his own worth. He is a Methodist stores as it previously had in Dr. ed by Dt. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, Caldwell’sf, private practice. Now, it is promptly effective on the most and a strong prohibitionist. But Curtis did not go back, Bojyn As the' Senate’s majority leader, the third generation is using it. robust constitution and in the most MEN8 SUITS TAILORED CLOTHES Curtis is the man behind the legis­ to the saddle, he got a job as a Mothers are giving it to their chil­ obstinate cases. It Is mild and gen­ jockey at Topeka and was riding dren who were given it by their tle in its action and does not cause lative gun. It is his role to keep in races by the time he was nine the wheels of legislation oiled, to mothers. Every second of the work­ griping and strain. Containing years old. He toured a large part of ing day someone somewhere is go­ neither opiates nor narcotics, it is K22SII to $tllO $40.00 to $55.00 put through the measures that the the west and on one occasion, it is White House desires to line up-the ing into a drug store to buy it. Mil­ safe for the tiniest baby. Children related, Jesse and Frank James like it and take it willingly. ’ necessary '"Votes ' and have them held up and robbed the box office lions of bottles of Dr. Caldwell’s ready when the time comes, to know Syrup Pepsin are being used a Every drug store sells Dr. Cald­ at the race track where he was rid­ well’s Syrup Pepsin. Keep a bottle the position of every senator on ing. In the winters he attended the year. every question, to advise the presi­ Its great success is based on in your home— where many live TOPCOATS $27.50 to $35.00 public schools, living with his fath­ someone is sure to need it quick­ dent when something is hopeless so er’s people in Topeka. merit, on repeated buying, on one it will not be attempted with re- Increasing weight finally forced satisfied user telling another. There ly. . Bultant failure. Curtis out of the jockey game, so are thousands of homes in this We would be glad to have you he returned again to the Indians. country that are never without a prove at our expense how mutfh Dr. The Kaws, traveling west, were bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep­ Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin can mean Senator Curtis, chosen to suc­ to you and yours. Just write ceed the cultured and scholarly camped six miles out of Topeka, To sin, and we have gotten many hun­ Cluldren s Dress Suits ^‘Foursome” Golf Suits SINGLE K N IC raS “ Syrup Pepsin,” Monticello, Illi­ Senator Henry Cabot Lodge as ma­ Grandmother Julie Pappan’s (epee dreds of letters from grateful peo­ ple telling us that it helped them nois, and we will send you prepaid jority leader of the Senate when he went, prepared to rejoin the One Knicker and One Long Pants. the latter died in 1924, was born tribe. But Grandmother Jul^ was when everything else failed. a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE— Adv. Sizes 6 to 18 aid FLANNEL PANTS moo to $2IS0 $27i0 to (i.00 S5.00 to S10.00

UNDERWEAR SWEATERS Two P ie c e ...... 75c to $2.00 Slip-on Styles .. $3.50 to $7.50 Union Suits Coat Styles. . . $5.00 to $9.00 Men’s I Boys’ $1.00 to $3.00 I 50c to $1.25 Spring Neckwear SUPERIORTY HOSIERY guaranteed by the name Fancy H o s e ----- 25c to $1.00 Men’s ...... $1.00 to $2.00 I Golf Hose . . . .$1.00 to $3.00 Boys’ ...... 25c to 50c Manchester Lumber Co. SHIRTS Collar Attached $1.00 to $3.00 Sign Away Your Winter Troubles Thinking of New Shoes? These are days when a man thinks seriously about his Summer shoes. You’re probably thinking about yours right now. Join Our Popular Coal Club We’re ready to show you a fine collection of good shoes. Novelties, conservative styles. You’ll appreciate the great care we give in fitting them. Saves “breaking in.” Assures SPRING PRICES ease,, comfort, peace of mind, efficiency. EXCELLENT COAL SelzSix House s Specials Golf and Sport Shoes EFFICIENT SERVICE to $6.00 to $9.00 Window protectors u^ed to prevent damage to paint and lawn. “More than a mere delivery organization” Inc PHONE 201 PHONE 201 c. E. HOUSE & SON,

... # - • / PAGE TEN MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD. WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, m S .

BABE’ S No. 5 AGCBUEB' INTBpi^i?^; Major League Washington, D* C., May 2—'The i “So you met Allcef-’^ . American League Two mighty Babe 'Ruth stands supreme she kept her girlish Hgurer Wild Rumors Concern Results Standings today among the home run hitters “Kept It? She’s doi^ded It" Di&cussed By Mackenzie of both major leagues. The Bam­ ■m-BUs. I bino clouted bis fifth homer of the 'j ' ' • ’■.V- At WnshlnBton»— YESTERDAY'S RESULTS season against the Senators yester­ HIS BIO TROinBLB X ..'V- Sharkey-Delaney Bout YANKS 8, NATIONALS 5 EDITOR’S NOTE: This is day and is noF two games ahead of New York E astern League his last year’s record. YOUNG LADY: A big strong m in • AB. R. H PO. A. E. the fifth of six articles in which Combs, cf ...... 5 0 1 3 0 ) Roland Mackenzie, one of H artford 2, Springfield 1. Buster Gehrig has only two cir­ like you beggingr^you ought to; Koenig, ss ...... 4 2 2 2 1 1 America’s leading golfers and Pittsfield 8, Albany 7 (10). cuit clQuts to his credit. He is look around for work.. . .. Ruth, rf ...... 5 3 4 2 0 0 Providence 6, Waterbary C. hitting the ball hard, however, get­ THE BIG STRONG^ MAN: 1 C4U L, So Many of Them That New |G1ANTS LEADING Gehrig, lb ...... 4 2 2 11 0 0 a member of the Walker Cup IV Meusel, If ...... 5 0 3 1 0 0 team in 1926, talks about golf New Haven 15, Bridgeport 2. ting a double and a triple yester­ look aroundi ■ lady< I’ve d Lazzerl, 2b ...... 3 0 0 1 2 0 and wbat hef thinks of it in an American Leiuiue day. neck.—Judg^ ,■ f Dugan, 3b ...... 4 1 2 3 1 1 interview with Henry L. Farrell New York 8, Washington 5. York Boxing Boari Or- NATIONAL LEAGUE Collins, c ...... 3 0 1 4 0 0 For every dollar > un^r^ Shealey, p ...... 4 0 1 0 4 0 The Herald and NEA Service Philadelphia 5, Boston 3. Sheffield, which no'w has a pop­ Moore, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 sports writer. This is the first Cleveland 4. St. Louis 3. ulation. of 600,000, was once a lit­ the boiler, 80 c e n ^ to e s up rte ders an Inrestiption To­ Plpgras, p ...... V 0 0 0 0 0 0 Detroit 10, Chicago 5. tle Norman settlement and later a smokestack while ■, 20 cents Is de­ time that Mackenzie has ever LEADING LEAGUE: HITTERS livered to the switchboard. 37 8 16 27 8 2 been interviewed to this extent National League pleasant country place. Trim Brooklyn 4-2; Yankees W ashington on his favorite game. Grantham, Pitts., .451. New York 4, Brooklyn 2. day. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Douthit, St. Louis, .44)5. Boston 6, Pbiladelphia 3. West, cf ...... 2 0 1 0 2 0 Ganzel, If ...... 4 1 0 2 1 0 By HENRY L. FARRELL Terry, New York, .381. Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 1. By DAVIS J. WALSH Also Going Strong—Ruth Rice, rf ...... 4 1 4 1 1 0 Bell, Boston, .380. Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 3. Judge, lb ...... 8 1 0 8 0 0 Washington, May 2— Golf strokes P. Waner, Pitts., .375. New York, May 2.—The pro- Barnes, If, of ...... 5 0 1 3 0 0 Leader a year ago today, Horns­ Bluege, 3b ...... 2 0 0 2 2 0 are the vitally important weapons THE s t a n d in g s posed Investigation by the New Gets Another. Tate, c ...... 5 0 8 5 1 1 of the game, but strokes alone do by, New York, .441. York Boxing Commission into the Ruel, c ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 not make champions. This is a American League E astern League CARTER'S Gillis, ss ...... 3 0 1 0 3 0 Kress, St. Louis, .511. circumstances surrounding the generally accepted fact among the ■w. L. PC. Sharkey-Delaney knockout was By LES CONKLIN Harris, 2b ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 Goslin, Washington, .404. New York, May 2.—Having Hayes. 2b, ss ...... 5 1 2 5 3 0 theorists and the lack of another New Haven ...... 6 2 .750 proceeding today through a laby­ Marberry, 0 0 1 1 0 Meusel, New York, .390. knocked the Brooklyn Robbins out P ...... 2 essential quality Is frequently heard K. Williams, Boston, .373. H artford ...... 5 2 .714 rinth of innuendoes suggestive cir­ Van Alstyne. p .... 1 1 0 0 1 0 in the expression—“he hasn’t the cumstances and allegations. These of first place, the New York Giants Sisler. z ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cissell, Chicago, .366. Pittsfield...... 7 3 .700 were determined to make it three Jones, zz ...... 0 0 0 0 ‘0 0 competitive temperament.” Bridgeport ...... ? 3 .500 Union Sidts were of the type similar to those Leader a year ago today, Pother- straight at the expense of the Rob­ McMullen, z z # ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Others say “he would be a great gill, Detroit, .540. Piovidence ...... 4 4 .500 in circulation before, after and dur­ player if he didn't have nerves,” or ing the course of many fights, only ins today and go west tonight 38 5 12 27 16 1 W aterbury ...... 3 6 .333 strongly entrenched in first place. New York 100 230 110—-8 “he would be a champion if he had Springfield ...... 3 6 .333 this time they were deemed of suf­ ■With Fitzsimmons and Faulkner Washington ...... 000 000 140—5 ficient plausibility to prompt Chair­ any guts.” Albany ...... 1 6 .143 For Men and Boys on the mound, the New Yorkers Two base hits, West, Collins, Rice, Those things called nerves, which man James A. Farley to order an Gehrlf, Koenig, Hayes, Meusel; three HARTFORD GAME' American J/eague trimmed BrooWyn by a 4 to 2 score base hits, Gehrig, Ruth; home run, throw around the game of golf so W. L. fo r inquiry. yesterday. Harper’s home run took PC. Comprises every style that men care to wear Farley, however, did not take Ruth; sacrifices. Rice, Koenig; double many ethics of conduct on the part New Yora ...... 11 3 .736 the steam out of Dazzy Vance. plays, Lazzerl to Gehrig, Rice to of competitors and spectators, are Spring and Summer. You know the fit, wear and make this action uptil the stories were Judge, Dugan (unassisted); left on At Hartford:— Cleveland ...... 13 6 .684 "While the Giants face tough op­ an essential part ol the game. SENATORS Z. POM ES 1 < of Carter’s Underwear—none better. Priced from consolidated into a chain of cir­ position in the coming intersectlon- bases. New York 11. Washington 14; Philadelphia . . . . . 7 'X .636 cumstantial evidence and presentsd bases on balls, off Shealey 6. Moore “I have found,” Roland Macken­ H artford St. Louis ...... 11 9 .550 al contests, the Yankees are again -, Marberry 1, Van Alstyne 2; struck zie says, “that there are two kinds AB. R. H PO. A. by a local newspaper for his con­ blasting their way through all Am­ out, by Shealey 2, Plpgras 1, Mar- Peloquin, cf ...... 4 0 0 1 0 Chicago ...... 7 11 .389 sideration in the form of a hypo­ berry 3, Van Alstyne 1; hits, off Shea­ of nerve maladies. One is the lack Slayback, '2b ...... 4 0 1 0 2 Detroit ...... , 8 13 .381 $1, $1.50“'$2 erican League opposition. Led by G. Roser, rf ...... 1 0 1 0 thetical case. The presentation ap­ Herman Ruth, who raised his ley 11 In 7 1-3. Moore 1 In 0, Plpgras of the control of nerves, which rat­ .. 3 Washington ...... 5 9 0 in 1 2-3, M arberry 10 In 5, Van tles a player, and the other is. the Martlneck, lb ... . . 4 0 1 12 0 .357 parently found the official in a re­ emaciated batting average to the Alstyne 6 in 4; winning pitcher, Schinkel, If ...... 3 1 1 2 0 Boston ...... 4 11 .287 ceptive mood, for it came as the respectable mark of .313 by clout­ Shealey; losing pitcher, Marberry; lack of nerves which renders a play­ Schmehl, ss ...... 4 0 2 5 3 National League climax of a week of rumors, suffi­ ing two singles, a triple and his umpires, Geisel, Owens and Campbell; er immune to inspiration and pre­ Comiskev 3h ...... 4 0 0 0 3 W. L. PC. ciently plausible, in his estimation, time, 2:17. vents him from rising to the Eisemann. c ...... , . . 4 0 1 t) 1 fifth home run, the world’s cham­ z—Sisler batted for Glllis in 8th. Levy, p ...... 0 1 0 3 New York ...... b .667 to cause him to order a sharply pions trounced Washington again zz—Jones ran for Tate in 8th. heights of efficiency under the stim­ Brooklyn ...... 9 6 .600 Carter^s Blue Stripe worded warning to the fighters by yesterday, 8 to 5. The Senators zzz—McMullen batted for Van ulation of situations.’’ 33 2 T 27 12 Cincinnati ...... 10 7 .588 the referee before the bout. Alstyne In 9th. The lack of control of the nerves Springfield have lost 8 straight. AP. R. H PO. A. E. St. Louis ...... ^ 8 .500 Rickard Impressed In National League can be corrected, he believes, but Albert, rf ...... 4 2 Pittsburgh ...... 7 8 .467 $1 Athletic Union Suits These stories likewise were al­ At Boston I— 2 Pittsburgh, moving up fast in the ATHLETICS 5. RED SOX 3 the man who is not susceptible to Demoe, 2b ...... 4 Boston ...... 6 7 .462 leged to have impressed Tex Rick­ National League standing, again Bedford, cf •> Philadelphia the stimulation of those situations Chicago ...... 9 11 .450 ard to the extent that his match­ defeated the Cubs, 4 to 1. Carmen AB. R. H PO. A. E. W ight, 3b ... 0 forM^len is without doubt the greatest value ever giveli will shoot just a certain score arid Belanger, lb 15 Philadelphia i...... 4 10 .286 maker, Jess McMahon, was sup­ Hill allowed only five hits and Bishop. 2b . . . . . 4 1 1 4 2 0 no more. There is nothing to fire our customers. Warranted to wear, reinforced where Cobb, rf ...... 5 0 1 1 0 0 Fitzgerald, If 1 posed to have visited Delaney’s George Grantham, the league's Speaker, cf .. 0 0 2 1 0 him. Benes, ss ... 1 the wear comes. You’ll find no tearing at the back in camp in order to Judge the young leading batter, had a perfect day . . 4 Nlebergall. c 3 Miller, If .... 4 0 3 2 0 0 “I have had the experience Fortune, p .. U GAMES TODAY these garments. man’s condition. It seemed, how­ at bat with three bingles. ' Hale. 3b ...... 4 0 0 1 3 0 feeling that I was going to fiy apart, ever, th at it was an off day in the Red Lucas outpitched Alexander Fox. c ...... 3 0 1 4 0 0 t Boley. ss ...... 4 1 1 1 6 0 and a number of times I did blow 31 1 5x26 17 2 Eastern League Delaney camp, so McMahon is said the Great as the scintillating Cln- Hauser, lb .. . . 4 2 3 11 1 0 with my game, but I found a way H artford ...... 000 100 001—2 to have returned without specific cinnatis outslugged the St. Louis Grove, p ...... 1 0 0 0 1 0 Springfield ...... 000 001 000—1 Hartford at Springfield (3:30 D. of correcting it. Whenever 1 start Two base hits. Demoe, Eismann; S. T.) information. Cardinals, 6 to 3. Dykes, x .... • • • . . 1 1 1 0 0 0 to get all excited I stop and say to Oswoll, p . . . . . 1 0 0 1 2 0 home run. Bedford; double plays. Albany at Pittsfield. The stories further were said to The Boston Braves made their myself—‘Keep your head down. Demoe to Benjs to Belanger, Levy to hits count and handed the Phillies Proviiieuce at Waterbury. have caused a hurried conference 35 5 11 27 16 0 Keep your head down.’ Concentra­ SchmehPto Martlneck; left on bases. B.V.D. Special between Rickard, Jimmy Johnston a 5 to 3 beating. The Back Bay- Boston Hartford 7. Springfield 5; base on New Haven,at Bridgeport. boys passed the slipping Cubs and tion on anything but the source of balls, off Levy 2, Fortune 2; struck and Johnny Buckley, managers of AB. R. H PO. A. E. your distraction will quiet your out, by Levy 6, Fortune 2; umpires, American League Sharkey, an hour before the fight jumped to 6th place. Flagstead, cf . . 4 1 1 1 1 0 New York at Washington. FOR THURSDAY ONLY Todt, lb . . . . O 0 1 13 1 0 nerves, and I have'found that I can Moran and Kuhn; time, 2:00. The conference, it was said, threw Johnny Hodapp, whose four er­ o 2 X—Two out when winning run was Philadelphia at Boston. Myer, 3b ...... 3 1 2 0 best calm myself by keeping my scored. no light on the situation. rors cost the Indians a ball game William.s. If .. 3 0 1 2 0 0 Detroit at Chicago. o head down and thinking over and Genuine B. V. D. Union Suits, $1.50 Value If Farley’s proposed investiga­ on Monday, squared himself with Regan. 2b . .. • • • .. 4 0 2 3 0 St. Louis at Cleveland. tion takes the usual form, those the Cleveland fans by driving In Taitt, rf ___ .. 1 0 0 0 0 0 over— ‘It’s not the ball’s fault. All four runs against the St. Louis Berry, z ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 you have to do is hit it.’ National League Identified with the bout will be Tarbert, rf . .. . 1 0 1 0 0 0 BUNION DERBY Boston at Philadelphia. Browns. These tallies were just 0 “Some players get highly worked haled before the commission at its Gerber, ss . . .. 4 0 1 3 0 Brooklyn at New York. next meeting on Friday. The chair­ enough to give the Indians a 4 to Heving. c . . . . . 4 0 0 6 0 0 up over the conduct of the specta­ Lincoln, 111., May 2.— C. C. Pyle’s 3 margin. Zettlemire, p . .. 2 0 0 0 2 0 tors, but I seldom find any distraj- Cincinnati at St. Louis. 89c man, however, had nothing to add 71 pavement pounders forged ahead Grandpa Ty Cobb is still going Morris, p ... - . ... 1 0 0 0 1 0 tion from the gallery. I have been Others not scheduled. today to his original statements, Hofmann, zz . . . 1 0 0 0 0 0 today for their 60th control at 3 to a customer. contenting himself with saying that strong with the rejuvenated Athle­ annoyed at times by the click of Normal, 111., 33 miles away. many rumors about the fight had tics, who have copped seven straight 32 9 27 13 0 cameras. Several times when M Peter Gavuzzi, youthful English­ games. A timely single by Tyrus Pliiladelphia 001 000 400-—5 knew a camera was facused on me man, headed the big parade with an MAGUiM RELEASED reached his ears during the past yesterday staked the Mackmen to a Boston ...... 002 001 000-—3 week or more and that he consid­ Two base hits. Hauser, Flagstead, I kept thinking just as soon as I elapsed time of 366:15:11 for the five to three win over the Red Sox. Myer, Tarhert; three base hits. Miller. hit the ball that shutter will click 2,230.7 miles traversed since leav­ ered that these were w'orth looking Detroit collected 16 hits, includ­ New York, May 2—Leo Magum, into. Fox. Hauser; sacrifices. Grove. Wil­ and I have had the temptation to ing Los Angeles on March 4. Five right-hand pitcher bought by the ing 7 doubles, in taking a ten to liams: double plays, Bishop to Boley fool the photographer. To see if hour.s, 26 minutes, 45 seconds be­ Reporters’ Opinion five slugfest from the W hite Sox. to Hauser. Boley to Bishop to Hauser. New York Giants from Buffalo last GLENNEY'S I could come close enough to the hind him was Andrew Payne, Of the newspapermen congregat­ Harry Rice knocked in no less than Gerber to Regan to 'rodt, Flagstead fall, has been released outright to ed at the ringside, the vast major­ to Heving: left on bases, Pbiladelphia ball to make him click the camera. youthful Oklahoman, holder of sec­ TINKER BUILDING 7 runs. 7. Boston H; base on balls, olT Grove the Bisons. He flivvered when sent ity saw’ only a remarkable come­ “I remember one particular oc­ ond place. against the Boston Braves here Sun­ 2, Orwoll 1. Zettlemlre 1. Morris 1; Gavuzzi and Gonzales, Denver back on the part of sAarkey in the HIS CLASSIFICATION struck out, by Grove 2. Zettlemire 3. casion when I was playing George day. 73-second knockout of Delaney. Morris 1; hits. Off Grove 2 In 6 in­ Von Elm on a thirty-eight hole, I pastry baker, ran a dead heat DRIVER (arrested for speeding) nings, otr Orwoll 1 in 3, off Zettle­ through 31,6 miles yesterday from Most of them said that Sharkey But, officer. I’m a prohibition believe it was. A movie photo­ ■‘looked great." The w’riter failed to mire 9 In C 1-3. off Morris 2 in 2 2-3; grapher started his machine hack Springfield in 3:52:24, five min­ agent. hit by pitclier. by Zettlemire, utes four seconds ahead of Harry see Sharkey in that light, it being OFFICER; Ignorance is no ex­ (Bishop): balk Zettlemire: winning of me just as I was about to putt. his idea that the Boston entry pitcher. Grove: losing pitcher. Zettle­ I got all tightened up and, like Rea, Long Beach, Calif. cuse.—Judge. mire; umpires, Dineen. Barry and ■ looked good only because Delaney Nallln; tirpe, 2:03. baseball batters do sometimes at obviously was bad. X —Dykes batted for Grove in 7th. the plate when they are held too The latter, indeed, seemed to be z—Berry batted for T aitt in Cth. long, I decided to step back and re­ the losers on a basketball or foot­ in a daze, for they had to ring the zz—Hofmann batted for Morris in ball team. There may not be the 9th. lax. I did so just as I was about bell twice to get. him out of his The horse race business is to hit the ball. When I went back glam or in, golf th at there is for the varsity football player, but the golf­ j corner. Sharkey’s punching was the onl’y one where it At Clovelnnd!— for the shot I'didn’t hear the ma­ ■ slovenly and poorly timed. He IXUI.AXS 4, BROWNS 3 chine. In the club house I was'told er in a championship match has threw long right handers at ran­ pays to play favorites Cleveland just as much of a kick out of a Service that the photographer actually had When AB. R. H PO. A. E. dom and that* was the way they Jamieson. If ...... 3 fainted when I stepped back. fine shot as a football player do ,, landed. Delaney didn’t seem to be Lind, 2b ...... 4 “I don’t know where all the in catchin,? a forward pass ov in able to untrack himself and stood Langford, cf ...... 3 ethics of golf galleries were drawn, kicking a hard field goal. there, “fascinated” as the punches J. Sewell, ss ...... 2 Fonseca, lb ...... 3 and sometimes I think they are a “I would offer a argument came over to beat him down. He Summa, rf ...... i little stringent. Perhaps U would against the theory you hear often came up the first time without a Hodapp. 3b ...... 3 be better to have a little more noise that the benefits of gufing are only count, took the full nine on the Autry, c ...... 4 around. Then the slight click of a from the walking in the open air. next trip and then reeled forward Grant, p ...... 2 Shaute, p ...... i camera shutter would not sound, You hear that said chiefly by those directly into the uppercut that fin­ like a cannon shot. I hardly think \yho don’t shoot such a good game. ished him. 26 4 10 27 17 2 that more freedom would result In I have heard some of that type play­ Sharkey put everything he had St. Louis aly possibility where a player would ing for 20 cents a hole who were V behind that last punch. It had all AB. R. H PO. A. E. McNeely, rf ...... 4 0 0 2 0 be razzed deliberately by anyone in thinking of- everything but the fine CIO the follow through of' a long tee O'Rourke. 3b ...... B 1 1 4 4 the gallery to throw him off his air and the feeling of the legs. I shot, with the shoulder snap im­ Manush, If ...... 5 o 1 0 0 shot. parted at just the correct instant Schulte, cf ...... 4 0 2 2 0 have been just as physically tired to make the impact carry full au­ Kress, ss ...... 2 1 1 2 5 “I have had nerves In other ways, and sore after a hard golf match as Blue, lb ...... 3 1 1 8 1 too. I actually cried last year when I have been after playing a game thority. Brannon, 2b ...... 4 0 3 2 0 This is what some 15,000 spec­ Schang. c ...... 2 0 0 4 1 I was beaten by Chick Evans. That of football.” tators saw. If Farley saw anything Beck, p ...... 4 0 3 0 4 brings up a point that I would dis­ else, he was keeping it to himself pute that there is no great kick in TOMORROW: Mackenzie tells 33 3 12 24 15 2 competitive golf. I have felt just Farrell of his feelings in bis match today. thEQLNVciDg Cleveland ...... 020 001 Olx— 4 V St. Louis ...... 020 000 100—3 as badly over being defeated In a with Watts Gunn for the intercol­ NO TELLING Two base hits, SchuRe, Autry; golf match as I have in being with legiate championship last year. . . sacrifices, Summa 3; Jamieson, Fonse­ i f “Am I the first girl you’ve ever u)i7H A SHouuDeP ca, Hodapp, Kress; double plays Beck kissed?” ‘"©MBA • I'l BLA D E'*’* to Kress to Blue, Kress to Schang to Everybody in the tire busi­ Drive-in service — lots of “As a matter of tact, yes.”— O’Rourke to Blue, Beck to Kress to Tlt-Blts. foCrtBSlfeg, H.y. Blue, Langford to Autry, J. Sewell to ness talks service these days room—no fender scraping, Lind to Fonseca; left on bases, Cleve­ land 7, St. Louis 10; bases on balls, off but not everybody is clear no waiting. Grant 4, Shaute 2, Beck 3; struck out, by Beck 1; hits, off G rant 8 In 5 1-3, on the meaning. Shaute 4 In 3 2-3; winning pitcher Curstone service went out Shaute; umpires. Van Grafian, Con­ nolly and McGowan; time, 1:54. Service means two things— of date long ago. At ChleaBoi— a complete stock of new TIGERS 10, 'WHITE SOX 5 A machine to check wheel Detroit fresh dependable tires on AB. R. H PO. A. E. alignment. Budweiser Tavener, s s ...... 5 2 2 3 6 0 hand all the time—we offer Real Quality Sweeney, lb .,. . . . 5 2 3 14 0 0 Rice, cf ...... 1 3 2 0 0 you Goodyears. And sec­ Up-to-date grease rack&too Heilmann, rf ...... 5 1 1 3 0 0 M a l t S y r u p Gehrlnger, 2 b .. . . . 4 0 1 2 5 0 —done while you wait. McManus, 3 b ...... 5 0 1 0 4 0 ondly, making it easy and E asterling, If ...... 5 1 1 1 0 0 Woodall, c ...... 3 1 1 2 0 0 economical for you to get Anything you want—^when Billings, p ...... 4 2 3 0 2 0 Stoner, p ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 every last mile out of your you want it. .41 10 16 87 18 tires. Chicago Pond Fishing Opened And, oh yes—a service car AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Clancy, l b ...... 5 0 0 6 0 0 Therefore, we have a mod­ in case of road trouble. A Moore, rf ...... 5 1 1 2 1 1 Metzler, cf ...... 4 1 2 3 0 2 This Week B arrett, 2b ...... 4 0 1 3 1 l ern clean store located con­ phone call brings you in­ Falk, If ...... 4 0 1 2 0 0 Malt »yrup adds Kamm, 3b ...... 4 0 1 3 1 o Have you all the tackle you need? Are you sure that venient for veryone. stant assistance. Cissell, 8s ...... 4 1 3 3 2 0 some of those lines haven’t become too old for safety? flavor ana nutri­ Crouse, c ...... -2 1 1 5 1 1 m ent to foods Blankenship, p .... l 0 0 0 0 0 Better drop in and get fixed up on these things before The next best thing to Goodyear Tires is Adkins, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 yoH start the season. Barnabee, p ...... 2 1 1 0 8 86 6 11 87 8 6 Tackle Boxes Bait Boxes GOODYEAR SERVICE Detroit ...... 204 300 100—10 Chicago ...... 000 000 600— 6 We have both—try us! Two base hits, Sweeney^ Rice, Hell- Minnow Buckets T h e COST OP THE RAW MATERIALS mann, Gehrlnger, Billings, Woodall, Easterling; home runs, Rice, Barna­ Bamboo and Steel Bait Rods used in Budweiser Malt Syrup w ill not permit the bee: stolen base, Kamm; sacrifice, Flat Tire Out of Gas Battery Trouble giving of premiums. The quality of our product Woodall; double play, Gehrlnger to Tavener to Sweeney; left on bases. All Kinds of Lures and Artificial Baits is the premium we give / f and it is included Detroit 7, Chicago 8; bases on balls, Phone 1551 off Adkins 1, Billings 4; struck out, includinsr A1 Foss Pork Rind Baits in every can of Budweiser Malt Syrup you buy. by Blankenship 2, Adkins 1, Barana- bee 1, Billings 1; hits, off B lanken­ ship 7 in 2 1-3, Adkln? . 8 In 4 2-3, » SKIFFS SPINNERS ANHEUSER-BUSCH, St. Louis Baranabee 1 In 2. Billings 8 In 6 2-3, Stoner 3 in 2 1-3; hit by pitcher, by Sold by Groctrs mnd D saltrs Everyvohor* Adkins (Gehrlnger); winning pitcher, Billings; losing pitcher, Blankenship umpires, Ormsby, Guthrie and Hilde­ BARRETT & ROBBINS STANDARD PAPER CO. brand; time, 2-12. ' CORNER MAIN STREET AND MIDDLE TURNPIKE. iHsMiutors Hartford* Conn. Sporting Goods Headquarters BM-79 The last of the Brltlsh-owned 913 Main Street, South Manchester four-masted sailing ships, the Gjurthaoioli was built In 1891*

A ■•'.■ '•. . '. ' v'V"r ■/; •-V-'

vAgM (T MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, WiCDNESDA'Y, MAY 2,1928, MAY 1923—OPENING

Anniversary

y Starts Thursday, May 3rd, 9 a. m Tomorrow Morning When W ill

Over 10,000 pairs of shoes that are known throughout this vicinity to be unbeatable values are going to be slashed still further in price in celebration of our 5th anmversary. Three years for Self Service Bargain Basement and five years of faithful service in Manchester, are celebrated in this 5th Anniversary Sale which will break all records. So extraordinary are the price concessions that this sale will prove a revelation in value giving. AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT A XT I m w Sr t a NT ANNOTTNCEMENT- In celebrating the rounding out of our 5th milestonein Manchester, w'e find it indeed a pleasure letting loose this avalanche of ^ o e bargatas f s S e n of S Manchfs “ and patrons, for the wonderful response that we have had during these five successful years of business operations. YtMVWors of Shoe Offerings That Only Unrestrained Buying Power Can P r o ^ e M A iR FLO O R BARGAIN BASEMENT OFFERINGS Tennis Goods One Big Lot of SPECIALS One Big Let of One big lot of boys’ and youths’ Women's Sneaks, lace to the toe, trimmed, Misses' and ChUdren'i LADIES! first quality, made Novelty 7 by Hood, p air ...... 79c Play OxSords and Sandals We have a rare* offering for you in a selection of sport shoes, Footwear All sizes, going out at 95c a pair# patent leather pumps, arch fit­ ting shoes, all style toes and We have assembled several styles, all One big lot of boys’ better^grade Sneaks heels, a pair ... ^ O O Q sizes, comprising several hundred paits, f Come early. worth $2.00, going out at $1.19 a pair. lADIESl which we are offering at $1.89 a pair. These shoes were formerly priced at $2.95 and Don’t overlook this lot: One big table, LADIES! $4.95. broken sizes, going out at $1.00 a pair, of Grasp the hand o i opportun­ Pumps and Oxfords. ity^ Here is a lot Jpf d|ur regu­ Men's Felt Slippers lar $5.00 and $6.# offerings, composing of genuine Goody'.ar Regular $1.00 value, going out at 55c welt sport shoes, arch-fltt‘ hg Misses' and Children's shoes and snappy novelties, pair. MEN: One Big Lot of all sizes 7 ^ 1 Shoes a pair ...... o f v On lot of patent one stfa]^s and Oxfords# High and Low Shoes Shoes that were made foY real service* narrow toes, going out at $1.89 a pair. / $1.89 a pair. Ladies! - Here is a Here is real vdue. One lot of $5.00 c;alf 8kin Rate Chance Oxfords and High Shoes, going out at $3.75 a One Lot of Children’s and Women’s pair. One lot of Children's and Misses’ One One lot of high shoes, medium toes with Strap Pumps and Oxfords, vulues up to low and Cuban heels, going out at 25c pair. White Cai^vas Shoes $2.50, going out at $1.49 a'pair. MEN! all styles and description, going out at 19c One big lot, Goodyear welt LADIES—Here is anothef super value a pair. Oxfords, blacks and tans, all ^ One lot Children’s Eelt SlibpefS and — Women’s Felt Slippeics. One big lot, Booties. Our regular price, 69c pair> spe* sizes, going out at going out at 29c a paif. a p a ir ...... cial clean out at 49c pair. One Lot of Misses- and Childireii's, Cross­ ' i. strap Sneidts, gbiiili' but at fi9c, a Men's Work SihoeS'- Boys' One Lot of Infants* I's Snoafcs One Lot 1 One lot of high grade elk skin composition Shoes and .V' ‘ soles, guaranteed for real service, $2.69 a pair. OxSords Patent Leather, Go&g Ottt af $1 a Pair Blacks and tans. One Strap Men's Seout Shoes Goodyear stitched, sol­ id wear in Sizes 4-8, also high shoes, going out at Another Lot of Growing Girls high and $1.89 a pair. WONDER WEAR IN EVERY ^ every Sneaks, gifing out at 95c a pair* . pair . $1.89 790 a pair* PAIR. i •; .'1 SHOE SOUTH M A N €B E Sm i 1013 MAIN STREET AND BARGAIN BA SP^N T

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■ , - MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HBRAiaJ, WEDNESTFAY, MAY 2,1928. p a g e TWECVtt

FB^CTJgnRA irrw^ ^ . LATEST FASHION HINTS BY FOREMOST 1 AUTHORITIES THE HERALD’S HOME '.I; —ETHEL—

i m m opeAKfoG-, ESvary family of any size what-'tinue to sacrifice the other pon soever has one child singled and his splendid wife to the cause out as the artist or genius or swan of "the artist in the family” and of the family. This child really his rag-tag family, and relieve •Not write to David?" Sally | daughter. All our friends and ac­ may be possessed of gifts, or the themselves with outbursts of re­ THIS HAS HAFPHIVKD would disgrace my mother, why echoed blankly. love David, | quaintances know that it has been “I parental necessity of believing proaches and refusals which make SAIiliT FORD. wax« •! the etate don’t you let me go? I can marry Mr. 'Barr, and I always wilL It’s j orphanace einee ah* ^as fonr. Is David and no one will ever know a great grief to us that we have no that they have created something life miserable for everyone. not fair to ask me to promise not | **(armeS not* to CLRM CARSON that I have a mother—" children, and I believe our action unusual may endow him or her The author takes no stand and the Bvmmer she Is 16. and meets to write to him.” j +ACAIOC1 DATID NASH, student, who Is “That la very sensible, Sally,’’ , in this matter would occasion no with those attributes. issues no propaganda.' Sh eneither “I already have his promise not working on the Carson farm, Courtney Barr nodded, a gleam of great surprise. The adoption It­ But whether a real or psuedo- says that art must be served at DaTid hits Camon when he makes to write to you,” Barr told her im­ self will take place before your 18th any cost to those who are not COrtlftG- remarks about David’s friendship kindliness in his cold eyes, “and I placably. “He understands the | genius, the family has a real prob­ for Sally. They run away and birthday, while you are still In horn with the artistic tempera­ have tried to make your mother situation, agrees with your mother: | lem In its hands. In fact, talented Join a carnival, David as cook’s believe that your happiness would school. If there Is any newspaper ment, nor that it must not be. She helper and Sally as “Princess and me that your past must be for­ children often make such tumult publicity, It will be of an Innocuous merely tells the story of its selfish Lalla,” crystal g a z e r . be best assured by your sticking gotten as quickly as possible. You that one is inclined to believe In Capital City, location of the kind, I hope. demands. But she makes Theo to your own class—” are entering upon a new life to­ families devoid of them truly orphanaee, Sally Is recognised “It isn’ t her class, ^f you mean “Naturally I shall take care that almost likeable, too, a being more by one of a crowd of little or­ morrow when you leave for Vir­ blessed, and makes one wonder, that shoe’s suited only to poverty any newspaper investigation will to be pitied than censured, for he phans, chaperoned by a beautiful ginia with me, a life that will be too, w h y any family should Insist “Lady Bountiful.” Rulck action and bard work!’’ Enid Barr Inter­ not be able to go back of the story is helpless in a workaday world. totally different from David Nash’s . ' on having one. on the part of the barker diverts rupted passionately. “Look at her. I shall prepare very carefully, and Life iB full of such' stories. All attention from Sally. Sally learns If there Is any hint of scandal at You will—though you don’t seep from an easterner, who annoys Court! She’s a born lady! She's to realize it—be an heiress to great o& ns know familler in which her with his attentions—ARTHUR fine and delicate clear through—” all, it will inevitably reflect on me A BOOK ABOUT IT every member but one works and VAN HORNE — that the Lady “And so Is David!’’ Sally cried and not on your mother, as I have wealth some day—” Bountiful is ENID BARR, wife “You told him that!” Sally ac­ Sarah Millin’s new novel, “An sacrifices and denies himself in of a wealthy New Yorker. indignantly. “He may be middle- already pointed out. After your cused him hotly. “You told him Artist In the Family,” treats this order that the “genius” often In another state Sally and Da­ class, but he’s the finest, most hon­ adoption and your graduation _ subject ably. Thee Bissaker, the takes his chance for granted, and vid believe danger of detection is from the finishing school, you will he’d be a fortune-hunter if he tried over, und they go freely about. orable man in the world!” to marry me when I’m of age! Oh, p son of middle class South African in his success forgets all about MRS. STONE, matron of the or­ “We shall not quarrel about of course take your place In our you’re not fair! You have no right “ farmers, is the artist In the Bis­ those who made It possible. phanage. follows Sally and con­ class," Courtney Barr cut In with home as our daughter, will make fronts her in the sideshow. Again to turn David against me, when I saker family. Exploiting Tom, heavy dignity. “The Important your debut In society that fall, UNWORTHY TALENT GUS. the barker, comes to her love him as I do—” the other son, who is not a genius, rescue and she manages to get thing Is that your mother is de­ and, I hope, be very happy with us the Bissakers by dint of their own My mother tells of a family away. She and David dee and and In your new life.” “ You’re only 16, Sally!” Barr plan to get married. The preach­ termined to have you, to fit you and their garden-variety sons who, in days when professional for the station to which she be­ Sally sat very still, her eyes wide cut in sternly “You don’t know ortia er is saying the drst words of the the meaning of the word love— ” thrift and sweat and sacrifice, education was much less usual service when Mrs. Stone and Enid longs. I believe she Is making a and blank, while her bewildered, send Theeo back to England to than now, managed to send a Barr rush In and stop them. Enid unhappy mind tried to picture the “Please, Court,” Enid begged, confesses there that she is Sally’s mistake, both from your standpoint Cambridge. bright son to a law college. On and from hers, but I am willing to future which Courtney Barr was her own face white and drawn mother. Sally clings to David, with pity for Sally. "Please let They live for his letters and Sundays when the bright son but Enid insists she must not agree to a sensible arrangement. outlining for her. At last she think no economy or toil too came home the rest of the family marry him. Finally Sally agrees shook her head, as If to clear,away me handle this myself. Sally is to go with Enid, but only after Our plan now, Sally, Is to put you great so Idng Os the artist In the would meet any callers with hush­ the mists of doubt and bewilder­ overwrought now, nervously ex­ David promises he will dnish his into a conservative, rather obscure family Is being educated as his ed voice and a finger to their lips, college work and come for her ment. Her mother had taken Sally’s hausted. Come along to bed now, girls’ finishing school in the South. talents deserve. But about the forbidding much noise and 'confu­ Inter. In Kansas City, where little lax, cold hands and was cud­ darling,” she coaxed, her little Enid takes her new-found daugh­ I have several relatives—‘poor rela­ time Theo is supposed to be grad­ sion, as they said, “The lawyer’s dling them against her cheeks, hands upon Sally’s shoulders. ter. Sallv meets Enid’s husband, tions,’ I suppose you would call uating from Cambridge he returns home.!’ COURTNEY BARR, to r the first them—in the South, and It is my bringing a finger-tip to her lips Let Mother tuck you up and time. The girl's dislike for him home, confessing that he hasn’t The “ lawyer” was left undis­ occasionally. sing you a lullaby. I’m not going crystallizes when he tells her suggestion that you enter school been to school at all but has been turbed in the one warm room of that to protect Enid they cannot as my ward — mine, you under­ “Poor baby! And—poor mother!” to be cheated of that experience painting and living on the money the hoi^e, frowning if anyone ap­ take Sally In their home Just yet. stand, not' your mother’s, so- that Enid whispered brokenly, and the even if my baby Is bigger than I sent him by his father and brother proached him, and insisting by his NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY any suspicion as to your real par­ spell was broken. The hard lump am.” AN ADDED BURDEN very silence that he was of a CHAPTER XLII entage will rest upon me, rather of unhappiness and resentment Fresh tears gushed Into Sally’s And that isn’t the half of it. world apart from the common T was the loving distress on than upon her.” He arched his that had been aching In Sally’s eyes, and she allowed herself to be led away. At the door she He brings with him a wife and herd of his tribe. I Enid Barr’s quivering face that eyebrows at Sally, looking rather throat since Courtney Barr had be­ How about it? Do families make gun to speak melted in tears. They paused: her child. Theo naively explains quickly brought Sally to bewil- consciously noble, and she nodded a mistake in pampering the ge­ wept in each other’s arms, while ‘Good night, Mr. Barr. I— I that he married her because he d e r e d, humiliated submission, miserably. “ During the two years nius, if any, and making him con­ Enid’s husband walked impatiently don’t want you to think I don’t felt sorry for her with the. baby’n rather than the cold anger and Ill- that you will be in school—” scious of his superiority, if any? up and down the room. appreciate what you’ve done for everything. Pinned down, he ad­ concealed hatred in Courtney Barr’s “Two years!” Sally echoed Do they make It too easy for ge­ When the storm had spent Itself, me— and David— and what you’re mits that of course he expects his pale gray eyes. Enid had left the blankly. Two years more of lone­ niuses to thrive? Would the ne­ liness, o f not belonging, of being Sally remembered David again, and going to do for me. I do think family to support the three of U b? _ _ arm of her husband’s chair and you’re good and that you want to them, and the poor old parents cessity of taking the bumps of life an orphan! pain and fear contracted her heart had drawn Sally to a little rose- be kind to me, but I know you’re knowing it’s 'that or starvation along with the rest of the family upholstered settee, and it was with Two years will pass very sharply. making a mistake about David for the three of them, bend their stifle all unworthy talent and only ;.T. her mother’s hand cuddling hers quickly,” Courtney Barr assured “Did you see David, Mr. Barr?” and me. I am young, but I know back to the load some more, take stimulate the real kind? I think compassionately that Sally listened her. “ Enid please control yourself! She sat up and dabbed at her wet love David and that I’ll never on Theo’s quixotic gesture, con- so! as the man’s heavy, judicial voice I am infinitely sorry to distress you cheeks with one of the exquisite in this manner, but it is the only sheer linen handkerchiefs which want to marry anyone else.” went on and on: Courtney Barr flushed and looked “ I am sure, Sally, that when you sensible thing to do.” Enid had given her. r “Yes, Court,” Enid choked and “Oh, yes, yes!” Barr answered embarrassed. “Thank you, Sally. have had time for reflection you I’m sure we’ll be friends. I want will see my viewpoint. 'Naturally, buried her exquisite face In her quickly. .-“I managed his affairs small, useless-looking white hands. very neatly. Rand, the district at­ to be. I expect to take niy duty as your mother’s happiness means your father very seriously, to try more to me than does yoiirs,. and Sally put her arms about her torney, personally attended to the mother, and leaned her glossy black quashi g of the charges against to make you happy. As for David, I believe I know my wife well time has a way of settling things enough to state positively that a head against the golden one. “ I’ll him, and It cost only a thousand try to be contented and happy, Mr. dollars to get Carson to issue a if we only give It a chance. By. Letters newspaper scandal or even igosslp the way, my dear,” he added among our own circle would cause Barr. Of course I want to pro­ statement to the press that he had ioiaaa?BV stAaBwet iwa.' hastily as Sally was about to pass BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES her the most acute distress. It tect Mother—” . really seen nothing compromising on into her bedroom with her shall be our task, Sally, to see that “That is another thing, Sally,” betweeiji young Nash and yours.elf. Marye, dear: Courtney Barr interrupted in an He also admitted that the boy’s mother, “I think It will be wiser she Is spared ‘such distress. I’ve a little time to spare while^ almost gentle voice. “ You must anger had beett In a measure justi if your mother does not accompany “I’m sorry to appear brutal,” the clothes are soaking so I’ll fin­ NOISELESS TOWN. JOY RIDING CHIGKEN. try to remember not to refer to fled, that the assault had been pro­ us to Virginia, I will arrange for Barr said stiffly. “ But it Is bet­ ish what I wanted to tell you last Mrs. Barr as your mother in the voked by his own mistaken charges you to board with my relatives in ter for us to face the facts, for If Virginia until school opens this time. It’s so nice to have a wash­ Minneapolis.— Chickens will go , our friends ever know them they heacing of anyone—anyone! If we -against you and Nash. The boy’s Joyriding even if- they have' tpTsit^piL^ fall. They will be glad, for a con­ ing machine. Frank helped father One-Minute Santiga, Chile.— If things keep will not mince words. If you are going.to protect her, we must reputation is cleared now and he axle. J. L. Caffrey had been on, si begin now.” can go back to college this fall, sideration, to do and say anything buy it for me. up the way they’re going here, this should come into our home now, I wish them to in regard to you, Well, Marye, Mr. Northrop said hunting trip expedition, 31 milM as you are, gossip would Imme­ “Yes, sir,” Sally bowed her head also saw his grandfa^er and per­ Chilean town will be one of the and we must begin immediately to that a man from South America from home, and when he returned diately set themselves to dig up lower so he might not see her suaded him that the boy bad been Interviews quietest spots on earth. Unneces­ take every precaution to pfbtect must think American girls were sary noises, such as -sirens on fac­ his dogs went after a hen roOH^ ' the facts. Too many people already tears. a hero rather than a blackguard ing on the front axle. The puHet your mother.” just waiting to be made love to tories, music by merry-go-rounds know that Sally Ford has been “Both Mrs. Barr and I will drop Young Nash is at home on his fiad apparently “ hitched on” Awhile “ Yes, sir,” Sally a n s>w e r e d _ because they give the men they go and the shouts of pushcart vendors- sought by the police as a—delin­ casual remarks about my pretty grandfather’s farm again, so , that Caffrey was hunting and held its faintly, her eyes appealing to Enid M I out with so many chances for it. are banned by a city ordinance. quent. My wife and I could not young ward In school down South, incident ir successfully closed. IMAGINATION, SELF-RELIANCE precarious perch throughout the for consolation. Phonographs must cease after 11 possibly hope to explain our ex­ until our friends have become ac­ Gratitude brought Sally to her __ Down there, girls are always chap- HER FORMULA FOR SUCCESS. When Sally was in bed, having o ’clock. But nothing is said about long drive. traordinary Interest in a runaway customed to the idea. You will be feet. “Thank you, Mr. Barr = I eroned, even after they’re engaged. registered as Sally Barr, a distant You’ve been wonderful! It won’ been flutteringly and lovingly as­ ~ And he said that they didn’t re- Five secrets of success for wom­ saxaphones. orphan. Do you agree with me, sisted in her preparation by her I GLEAN BLANKETS Sally?’’ He tried to make his voice relative of my own, and my ward. be so hard for me to be away at = I spect a husband who failed to pro- en in business have been defined mother, Enid bent over her to I All blankets should be washed kind, but his eyes were as cold and It Is even probable that it would scho'ol if I know that David is in ~ tect his wife because, with them, a by Mrs. Alice Foote MacDougall, before packed away for the sum-' not be unwise to have you with us school, too. I wrote him tonight whisper: ^ husband always did that. If he the “big coffee and tea room mag­ CRUMB OMELET. hard as steel. “ parling, darling, don’t look so mer. Use tepid water and soap “ Yes, sir," Sally agreed In her for a short time next summer. We but I’ll tear it up and write a new didn’t it meant he didn’t care nate,” who often is called Ameri forlorn! 'Two years will pass so Bread crumb omelet Is delicious. flakes and dry over a line. Brush meek, institutional voice. But she have an estate on Long Island, you letter, telling him ail about every­ what outside Interests she might ca’s most successful business wom­ swiftly and if you’re very good, Soak a half cup crumbs in equal the nap up when dry and fold over felt so sick with shame and anger know. thing and how hatipy I am that he’i have. And no decent man could an. we’ll let you ask David to your amount os milk. Add four well- cardboard to keep from wrinklinf. that her only desire then was to “As my ward and as my distant free of those awful charges— be like that. “ Imagination, flexibility, reliance beaten eggs, season, and bake in run and run and run until she relative, you would not be particu­ “No, Sally,” Barr interrupted, coming-out party.” So it must look to your friend on one’s self, originality, and a (To Be Continued) buttered dish. found a haven In David’s arms. At larly conspicuous, but our friends frowning. “Your mother and I are Pedro as if Alan is either a fool cold, critical analysis of one’s abil-. If we lived in Washington nowy the thought, some of the spirited would meet you casually and be the agreed that you must not write to or a skunk. For you can’t com­ itles and limitations are the five we’d be on the lookout these days Sally begins to fear that David is ness which her few weeks of Inde­ less surprised when it became young Nash, that there must be no pletely Americanize anyone who requisites of success,” said Mrs. fdr cars “a block long”. lost to her and that promises do pendence bad fostered in her an known that Mrs. Barr and I had thought of an engagement between _ has grown up in another country. MacDougall. serted ItselL “ But, Mr. Barr. If I decided to adopt you as our , you—” not mean anything. 1 1 All this jazz, cocktail drinking and “You must have imagination to 1^ 1 cigaret smoking that most of you perceive the public’s needs, flexi­ Don't Make alb y ' iillll young people indulge in must bility to meet them, reliance on make a foreigner think the Ameri yourself instead of weak depend­ (5ut of Baby’ More than likely she is taking up! can boys and f rls have cut loose ence upon some man to ‘put it over for you,’ your own way of doing -Babies Have'Nerves' a profession which means years j p n things, which is called originality, By RUTH BRITTAIN 1 Home Page Editorial more at a university and some, - , ..-u years thereafter to get started. you take steps now and then to and complete honesty with your­ Needless to say that almost the correct the impression. No doubt self about what you can and can ^ Daily Health Service There Is No entire sacrifice comes on her you, Marye, have given your not do. mother. friend a better opinion of you than “If you have these, business Is as ■ easy as two-and-two-makes HINTS ON HOW TO KEEP WELL Substitute Women are working on Into old he’d have of most girls who would-' four. If you haven’t, you muddle by World Fam^ Authority > age to give their daughters a accept an invitation from a man for Mother chance. They do not complain, they did not know. But you can along and make a hard task out j of an easy one.” They want their girls to do what just be sure that what’s in his ^ By Olive Roberts Barton ’ Mrs. MacDougall, started in the rest of the world is doing. mind isn’t flattering to you or- business at the age of 40, when wTTi^ TTci? But please be under no illusion your husband either. And maybe she was left with the support of g a l e ; EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the protect the human brain, whose about the real work of the worldjsome little remark you may make three little children, though she You can’t get a machine to make going on quite as well without the will put an end to his hesitating 1419 fourth article of a series of six capacity for punishment by the had no business training and only dealing with the demands modern overstimulation and overfatigue sandwiches and salad and coffee girls as with them. To keep hu- to make love to you. For I hon- and cake for a party. You can’t get $38. Now at 60, she is the head life makes upon our health. To­ brought about through modern civ­ man beings well fed, happy and estly can’t see how anyone but one a machine to make beds, or clean of a four million dollar coffee­ morrow: Fear and Anxiety. ilization is limited. healthy is the “realest” work of you youngsters yourselves, can house business and coffee corpora A Cleaning Prof. Carlson is convinced that up the morning clutter. You can’t there is. If it were not for mid- really believe that you aren’t.so get a machine to cook meals and tion. the evidence is not yet sufficient dle-aged mothers, the entire sys- bad as you seem.^^ I know I’ve Much of the nervousness in old­ BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN put away the wash and mend the to say that tea, coffee and tobacco tem would collapse. | heard girls say things right here er children can be traced to the Service for Editor Journal of the American clothes and keep silk undies in or­ Mediical Association and of Hygeia, improve or harm the human race in this house that no girl could Wonder how it happened that overstimulation during infancy, when taken in moderation. der. You can’t get a machine to— A masseuse is suing Mae Mur­ have said twenty years ago with Pilot Levine didn’t get up to the Health Magazine Well, of course you have guess­ caused by regarding baby as a sort Although human beings have in­ ray, Hollywood film player, for out giving a false impression. But Greenly Island some way? .. of animated toy for the amuse­ Women Thai ed it. There is no machine to dulged in these substances for hun­ $2140. That seems a little like their boy friends don’t seem to ment of . parents, relatives and take the place of mother. Per­ “As a consequence of the growth dreds of years, during which tlpie rubbing it in. pay any attention to what they friends. Baby may be "played with, Can’t ^Be of knowledge, particularly of haps there is a maid, but only say, no matter how shocking it is. , « y they have made great progress, at perhaps, and even then I know but not for more than a quarter of chemistry and medicine,” said You can’t expect a foreigner to an hour daily. Beyond that, being least In technical fields, the fact few mothers whose days are not Prof. A. J. CaVlson as his fourth be like that, though. And when a handled, tickled, caused to laugh cannot be cited as argument. absolutely full. Home Hints Equsdled thesis on the physiological life, It might just as well be claimed woman is toying with the thought or even scream, will sometimes re­ “ man of today is being subjected that progress has been made In Not so many years ago a woman of love I guess the man with her sult in vomiting, and invariably of 40 had a right to expect a light­ Fine, careful work that re­ to a greater variety and quantity spite of indulgence in these things isn’t going to he too dumb to know causes Irrftablllty, crying or sleep­ of stimulants and drugs.” ening of her household burdens. news the life oLyoiir. dresses, rather than because of It. it. Not If he’s got the same thing lessness. coats and suits. The stimulants and drugs which . . . , ^ ^ ! Her daughters took much of it off on Ills own mind. Unspoken Fretfnlhess, crying and sleep­ interest human beings particularly Among drugs and stimulants and j i^er shoulders and she was more narcotics taken by man today are | qj. j^gg jreg enjoy a second thoughts aren’t so rarely read as lessness. from this cause can easily We are prepared to . 'Tender today are alcohol and tobacco, tea many chemical substances used in [ youth, you might suppose. But even if- be avoided by treating baby with quick service and hope that and coffee, and various modifica­ the preservation of fooft, or in you don’t mind risking a scene more consideration, but when you you . will give ns a ehnnee. 4o Three types of girls represent tions and derivatives of these sub­ adding to Its flavor or other quali­ with this man you might remem­ just can’t see what ft making baby prove our statement—A “ modern” youth. One of the girls restless or upset, better give him a stances. ties. These things represent an at­ ber that Alan is deserving of more CLEANING SERVICE THAT is a business girl. She makes $2.5 few drops of pure, harmless Cas- It is now generally admitted that tainment of modern civilization. respect. CAN’T BE EQUALLED. excessive indulgence in alcohol a week and pays $8 board. That toria. It’s amazing to see how No artificial product should be Sincerest love, 1 produces deterioration of the indi­ does not quite pay for her meals, MOM. quickly it calms baby’s nerves and Remember we clean and pyess used without proof of its harm­ the rent of the extra room in the soothes him to sleep; yet it con­ a number a rtiM ^ to r 'tealy . vidual. At the same time, how­ lessness. Obviously the burden of apartment, and her laundry. She tains no .drugs or opiates. It is y ever, it produces death early in such proof must rest upon those 5 : life of defective offspring and in comes home at night too tired to purely vegetable— the recipe is on who are promoting the sale and the help. Until she marries, her MONUMENTS the wrapper. Leading physicians that way tends perhaps toward im­ use of the products. provement of the race. mother will go on working for Most Nurses Use prescribe it for colic, cholera, diar­ Other Narcotics her. Perhaps it will be for many Grave markers and orna­ rhea, constipation, gas on stomach It is Prof. Carlson’s view that PROPHECY FULFILLED. years. mental stone work of every de­ and bowels, feverishness, loss of New Face Powder / 1 inost physiologists today would iNew York.-—^Dr. Charles A. Another is the society girl. If scription. sleep and all other “upsets” of vote against alcohol on the basis Phillips, a New York physician the family is not rich it requires MELLO-GLO, the new wonderful babyhood. Over 25 million bottles 1 of probably more injury to man­ demonstrated his powers as a diag­ the night-and-day working, plan­ French Process Pace Powder, Is used a year shows its overwhelm­ ing popularity. kind than good. The influence of nostician to the end. Having inhal­ ning and scheming of her mother preferred, by nurses because of Its other narcotics such as opium, ed chlorine gas in the course of his to get the things her daughter purity, and they say it does not Gadella Ambrosini With each bottle of Castoriiu yon ■ ■ get a book on Motherhood, worth morphine and similar sabstances Is hospital work several years ago he needs. This mother usually does make the skin dry and drawn. its weight in gold. Look for Chaa. Injurious, except when taken in studied the symptoms and compli­ the work of two maids and seldom Stays on longer, keeps shine away, Shop at East end of Bissell St. H. Fletcher’s,-'signature! on the P yeb andttSeanera proper dosages to prevent pain and cations w

f' t i - MANCHESTER (CX)1W .) EVENING HERALD; WEDNESDAY, M At 2, 1928.

last * Saturday: whenr v Balcben June. At thiR time be was found .BAIiCHEN HOPS OPP cerns; favorite trading days, name forced to ahahdjbii a proposed Two base hits, Critz. Purdy, Ford. guilty and fined |100 and costs by High; stolen bases, Dressen, Frl^sch; of Hartford newspapers read daily; Judge Johnson, who remitted 47JS Miller Field, Staten Island, N. to-~Washl|igtoh from Cortfs POUCE COURT Long Island, to bring back the double plays. Ford to Critz to Pipp; TELL THEM, “HONE electrical equipment ,in 1 ouse and of/the fine. This morning he gave T., May a.—>Bemt Balcben bopped left on bases, Cincinnati 6, St. Louis oF for the Ford aviation field near man flyets» .following, th e ir, trip NaSSSL'I League where bought and other questions notice of an appeal to the June 8; bases on balls, off Lucas 2, K auf- Albert Gado of 179 Spruce street Detroit in the Ford monoplane the grave of Floyd Bennett. mann 1; struck out, by Lucas 3, by winding up with this especlr.lly im­ term of the Superior Goutt and Ba­ Results Alexander 2, Kaufmanu 1; hits, off was given a ten-day Jail sentence which #as used, to rescue the OF TODR BUSINESS” pertinent one: tista Ansaldl of 140 Maple street Dlseas^ and: insects take an an- ' Alexander 12 in 7. Kaufmann 1 in 2; "W hat price do you pay for your and a fine o f^150 and costEi for furnished a real . estate bond of Bremen flyers from. ,Gre«ily Is­ wild pitch, Alexander; losing pitcher, driving an automobile while under p.ual toll of one-fifth of the possl- ' \ dresses?” $500 for hiS appearance, at that land, at 10:40 a. m., today. Alexander; umpires. Hart, Jorda and the influence of liquor by Deputy The plane had'been here since ble CHOP'j^eld in .America. ' ' Rigler; time. 1:46. Secretary Rix advises Manches­ tiijae. X—Martin batted for Alexander in ter hoasewives* that they do not Judge Thomas Ferguson In the po­ At New Torkt— lice court today, Gadovvras arreetr 7th. _ Pretended Censns Takers have to answer these questions un­ G IAN TS 4, DODGBRS 2 XX—Toporcer batted for Thevenow ed at about 3:15 this n to ^ n g at . New York in 9lh. • , less the/ wish. He also requests his home by Patrolman Edwin J. GETTINO FEI^NAIi AB. R. H PO. A. E. XXX —Reinhart batted for Kauf­ that housewives make an attempt I Roush, cf ...... 3 mann in 9th. Ask Impertinent Qnes Donaldson. He was taken to the ; Ott, H ...... 4 to learn their ^identity. Chief of police station where he was exam­ STEW; (entering flower shop): ' Lindstrom, 3b ...... 4 Police Samuel Gordon informed Mr. At Pittsburgh t— ined by Dr. Le Verne Holmes and want some flowers. r e m e m b e r Y O U ! Tsrry, lb ...... 4 PIRATES 4. CUBS 1 tions in Business Snoop. Rix that he had had no complaint PROPRIETOR: Potted, eir? *1 Jftekson, ss ...... 3 Captain Schendel. Donaldson testi­ Pittsburgh of anyone canvassing the town in fied that Gado drove past him with STEW; None of yer business.— Harper, rf ...... 3 H PO. A. E ...... 3 AB. R this manner. his lights out. He attempted to Judge. ' Ciohen. 2b ... Ij. Waner, cf ...... 4 0 13 0 0 it Hogan, c .... Secretary George E. Rix of the stop Urn but was unsuccessful and SAVE : Fitzsimmons, p .... 3 Adams. 2b ...... 2 1 j Faulkner, p ...... 1 P. Waner. rf ...... 4 1 Manchester Chamber of Commerce MORE MARINES SENT followed him to his own yard and Wright, ss ...... 4 1 today asked The Herald to warn AFTER GEN. SANDING there placed him under errest. Dr. 32 4 9 27 18 0 Traynor, 3b ...... 4 0 Puerto, Cabezas, Nicaragua, May' Grantham, lb ...... 3 1 Manchester housewives against Le Verne Holmes, Captain' Schen­ Brooklyn 2.— Two additional detachments of Manchester R. H PO. A. E. Comorosky, If ...... 4 0 answering a volley of personal del and the arresting officer all tes­ marines were enroute today to join 1 Tyson, cf ...... 5 0 2 1 0 9 Smith, c ...... 3 0 questions by two strangers who are tified that the man was Intoxicated Brlckell. z ...... 0 0 the three columns now converging 1 Bancroft, ss ...... 4 0 0 4 4 0 canvassing the town from house to and in an unfit condition to drive > Hendrick, 3b ...... 4 Gooch, c ...... 1 0 on the Pis Pis mining district in a a car. Auto Top Coa ON EVERY DOLLAR’S WORTH YOU PURCHASE Herman,, rf ...... 4 Hill, p ...... 3 ( house. net spread to capture the Sandinista 1 Bressler. If ...... 3 Although their Identity has not Gado admitted he had driven the DURING OUR SALE WHICH STARTS 32 4 13 27 17 0 band which looted the American car and that he had been drinking We Feature 1 Bissonette. lb ...... 3 Chicago yet been established, Secretary Rix TOMORROW MORNING. 1 Blconda, 2 b ...... 4 mines there on April 12 and 13. but maintained be was not drunk . . 4 AB. R. H PO. A. E. is of the opinion that the men Two amphibian planes were ex­ 1 ZieBerry, c .. English, ss ...... 3 0 0 0 4 1 at the time. He was in the local po­ |] /ance, p ...... 2 represent some out of town busi­ pected here today to in the ...... 1 Webb. XXX ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 lice court on a similar charge last Sport Model Auto Tops If Uenline, x .. Beck, ss ...... 0 0 0 1 0 0 ness concern trying to get trade in drive against the guerillas. The ma­ || 34 2 11 24 10 1 Maguire, 2b ...... 3"0 0 4 4 0 Manchester. The only excuse they rines intend to cut off the rebels Slip Covers 000 121 OOx— 4 Wilson, xxxx ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 offer for asking the questions is GEO. E WILLIAMS, 1) New York ...... from every side and fdrce them into Brooklyn ...... 000 001 010— 2 McMiUen. 2b ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cuyler, rf ...... 4 0 1 2 2 0 that ‘‘we are taking a census”. One a decisive battle before the rainy 713 MAIN STREET Two base hits, Bressler, Ott; home SEND YOUR CAR TO Carpets for All Cars run. Harper; stolen bases, Terry, Heathcote. cf ...... 4 1 1 1 0 fl woman said the men give the im­ season begins next month. Lindstrom, sacrifice, Bissonette; Stephenson, If ...... 4 0 1 1 0 0 pression they are government In­ There was still no word today double plays, Cohen to Jackson to Grimm, lb ...... 4 0 1 10 0 0 from George Marshall, of New No Job too big or small. Gonzales, c ...... 3 0 0 3 2 -0 spectors of some kind. Campbell’s Filling Station Terry, Terry to Hogan, Jackson to Some Qaestlonairei York, assistant manager of the Terry: left on bases. New York 8, Butler, 3b ...... 2 0 1 2 - 0 We can do any Job from the Brooklyn 8; bases on balls, off Vance Bush, p ...... 1 0 0 0 2 0 After opening the conversation Laluz mine, and acting-superinten­ chassis up. 4, Fitzsimmons 2; struck out, by. , Kdlly, XX ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 dent head of the Neptune mine, I - I Blake, x ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 by mentioning tho census, the men For a Grease Job Fltssiminonal, Vance 3. Faulkner ’ ‘ W elch, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 ask for tho following information: both of whom are believed to be in AU work fnUy guaranteed. hits, off Fitzsimmons 11 in 7, (none name; address; number of chil­ the hands of the rebels. out in 8th), Faulkner, none in 2; ^ 1 5 24 16 1 dren; amount of rent paid; salary wil4 pitch, Fitzsimmons: winning Pittsburgh ...... 000 003 Olx 4 W. J. MESSIER pitcher, Fitzsimmons; umpires, Klem. Chicago ...... 000 100 000 1 husband gets; savings, if j,ny,’*and Demonstration McCormick and Magee; time 2:05. Two base hits. Grimm, Butler. how much; checking account: kind X— Uenline batted for Vance in 9th. FILMS Grantham, Smith; stolen base. L.- of piano, if any, and amount paid 115 Oak St. Phone 1816-3 ------OF- Waner: sacrifices, Adams, Bush, Hill; THE double plays, English to Maguire to for it; radio or automobile; amount Developed and Grimm; le ft on bases, Chicago 5, of trading done In Hartford, with At PliUad«li>hiai~ Printed Pittsburgh S; bases on balls, off names of stores; charge account at BRAVES 0. PHILLIES 3 Bush 2 H ill 2; struck out, by H ill 3. OLD WOOD SHOP Boston Bush 1, Welch 1; hits, off Bush 9 in Hartford stores, with names of con- AB. R. H PO. A. E. 7. Welch 4 in 1; passed ball, Smith; On Pitkin Street, which has Ricbbottgr, r f ...... 4 i l 4 1 0 losing pitcher. Bush; umpires, Rear­ FRAMING Mpoire, If ...... 3 0 0 1 0 0 don, Moran and W ilson; time, 1:43. been closed since the death Hotlisby, 2b ...... 3 1 1 3 3 0 X— Blake ran fo r K e lly in 8th. of Mr. Hughes, will be open of AU Kinds Brp.wn, ,cf ...... 4 0 0 4 1 0 XX—Kelly batted for Bush in 8th. Belk 8b ...... 4 0 1 0 2 1 XXX—Webb batted for English in afternoons, starting May 1. Farrell, s s ...... 4 0 l 2 1 0 8th. AlC.H.TryoRs The Home Bank & Trust Co. Burrus, lb ...... 4 2 2 10 0 0 xxxx—Wilson batted for Maguire Elite Studio Taylor, C ...... 4 1 3 3 0 0 in 8th. Smith, p ...... 3 0 1 0 2 0 2—Brlckell ran for Smith In 7th. Salutary Market Executor. 983 Main, Upstairs tOAL&GAS 35 5 10 27 Philadelphia StJRE ’NOtJGH \ AB. R. H PO Leach, c f ...... ___ 4 0 2 4 The wife was going through her V K VX X XX NN \ S \ \ VN> EXPERIENCED. Thompson, 2b . ----- 6 0 2 3 husband’s pockets. Tel 441 Tel 442 WilUams. rf ... ___ 4 0 0 1 ORCHARDISTS WHson, c ...... ___ 4 1 1 0 ‘‘Hey, there,” he cried, ‘‘that Wrightstone, If, lb 4 0 1 2 money belongs to me.” ALWAYS GIVE And GAS RANGES Whitney. 8b ...... 4 0 1 0 "It won’t be lonfe now!” she an­ Does Your Roof Need Sand, ss ...... 3 1 2 6 swered.— Judge. Kelley, lb ...... 2 0 0 11 For Thursday and Friday O U R STOCK Green, s z ...... e • • I 0 0 0 Southern, If ...... 0 0 0 1 PREFERENCE Walsh, p ...... ____2 1 1 0 Re-Shingling ? Schulte, z ...... 0 ti 0 0 Native Veal Today. Why is it Orchard Plant­ Thursday, Miller, p ...... 0 0 0 0 GEO. A. JOHNSON Veal to Roast, 88c lb. We have the shingles. The best red cedar. Also Nixon, ZBZ ...... 1 0 0 0 Veal Cntlet, 55c lb, ers within a radius of fifty Veal Patties, 3 for 25c. Roofing Paper. miles of our nursery visit us 24 3 10 27 10 1 Civil Engineer and Surveyor We carry the famous Lowe Bros. Paints and Varnish­ and Saturday Boston ...... 001 021 010— 5 Pork to Roast, 35c lb. before placing their orders'? Phtuaelphla ...... 000 001 110— 3 Residence 577 East Center Street Leg of Lamb, 45c lb. es. Also Linseed Oil and Turpentine. Tw o base hits, Whitney, Taylor, Hornsby, Bell, W alsh; home run, Bur­ Native Fowls, 42c lb. The name “WILSON” rus; sacrifices, Leach, Moore, Horns­ Telephone 209. Pot Roast, 30c lb. POULTRY WIRE means something more to Factory by; double plays. Sand to Kelly; left Rib Roast Beef, 35c lb. Heavy Galvanized on base, Boston 3, Philadelphia 8; Smoked Shoulders, 18c lb. most planters than the name bas^s on balls, off Smith 2; struck 4 Feet, 150 feet per r o l l ...... $4.75 Demonstrator out, by Smith 2; hits, off Walsh 8 in Daisy Hams, 89c lb. of an ordinary nursery. 7; Idlller 2 In 2; hit by pitcher, by OLDS Haked Ham, 75c lb. 5 Feet, 150 feet per ro ll ...... $5.To Smith, (Sand); losing pitcher, W alsh: of head or chest are more easily Sausage Meat, '30c lb. 6 Feet, 150 feet per r o l l ...... $6.75 It means that for every Present umpires, Pflrman, Stark and Quigley, treated externally with— z— Schulte batted for Walsh In 7th. Small Sausage, 39c lb. DOLLAR you invest in a?— Green batted for Kelley in 8th. MANCHESTER GREEN STORE “WILSON” Trees you re­ Every Day am— ^Nixon batted for Miller in 9th. W. Harry England. Phone 74 ceive ONE DOLLAR in GROCERIES value. X X VX.X.VVN.>>^>Ai A t St. Lonlai— REDS 6, CARDS 8 Fancy Peas, 18c can. Follow the lead of those Cincinnati Large Can Peaches, 29c can, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHuiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiU who know good , stock at Remember AB. R. H PO. A. E. Fancy fedrii,' 18c can. CritjZ, 2b-....« ______5 2 3 3 3 1 right prices when they see Purdy, If ...... 6 1 3 1 0 2 Steak Salmon, 25c can. Pipp. l b ------...... 5 0 1 H 0 0 Carnation Evaporated Milk, li e it. That Barstow Walker, rf ... • e • • e 4 1 0 5 0 0 can. Callaghan, of . e e • • • 4 0 3 1 0 0 Chlpso, Large, 19c package. We have some orchard Dressen, 3b ... • • • e • 4 0 1 0 0 0 [ Yankee Filling Stations | H as Been Hargrave, c ...... 4 0 0 5 0 0 New Maid Bread, 8c. size Elberta Peach in sur- Ford, ss ...... 4 1 1 1 8 0 Strictly Fresh Eggs from Pom­ plus. The stock is right Lucas, p ...... 3 1 1 0 1 0 eroy Farm, 42c doz. I Incorporated and so is the price. Making Stoves S3 6 13 27 12 3 Fancy Mixed Cookies, 18c lb. St. Louis 6 Packages Soda Crackers, 25c. I DISTRIBUTORS OF THE FAMOUS Bear this in mind-— prices Since 1836 AB. R, H PO. A. E. Prunes in Cans, Large Size, 33c Hlhdeif « • • e • • 6 0 0 2 0 1 will never be any lower than can. / ./L High, 8b ...... 5 1 3 0 2 0 Rice, 3 lbs. for 25c. they are today—fruit stock Frtsoh, 2b ...... 2 1 1 3 2 0 I H-C (High Compression Gasoline) | F-25 RARCTOW Special Bottomley, lb ...... 4 0 2 10 0 0 Mrs. Clock’s Canned Goods,, in is very likely to be higher Douthlt, of ...... 4 0 0 3 0 1 Glass, 88c. next year. Every nursery Roettger, rf ...... 4 0 1 2 0 0 Star Soap, 6 for 25c. E To accommodate the small investor, we will accept There Is Nothing Better So Why Msnouso, 0 ...... 4 1 1 4 3 0 Waldorf Toilet Paper, 8 pack­ S subscriptions for units of: man will tell you this. Thereno'Wi ss •••••$ 8 0 1 3 4 0 N ot Buy a Barstow? AUxander. p . • e » • e • 2 0 0 0 0 0 ages for 23c. Kanfmanh, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Royal Scarlet Coffee, 1 lb. can, Plant this spring and save Mdrtin, X ___ ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 a year. Toporcer, xx ...... 1 0 0 0 0 fi 4Sc. 3 Shares Preferred Everybody Welcome at This Reinhart, xxx ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 CampbeU Baked Beans, 3 cans — for 25c. Demonstration. 28 8 9 27 11 2 (7% Non-Voting) Cincinnati 300 010 200— 6 C E W ilson and St. Lonls . 010 020 000— 3 All Cooking Given Free to Visitors, FRUIT 2 Shares Common (^m pany, Inc Strawberries, Pint 25c. ($10.00 a Share-Voting) MANCHESTER Die HcGevern & aiAe Co. Bananas, 9c lb. Offices and Packing Cellars EDWARD HESS CENTER STREET ApplM, 2 lbs. for 25c. Chi terms which may be arranged. HEMOtUALS Oranges, California, 79c doz. ALLEN PLACE Phone 1100 South Manchester 855 Main Street, South Manchester C. W. HAKTENSTBIN Telephone 941 Florida Oranges, 59c doz. Stockholders receive a five cent discount from posted Seedless Grapefruit, 2 for 25c. 302 WOODBRIDGE ST, Tel. 1621 retail price at any Yankee or Municipal Filling Station. 146 Suitttoltt St. Yankee and Municipal Filling Stations, operate in VEGETABLES Hartford, New Haven, New Britain, Springfield, Plain- ville, Glastonbury and Bridgepc rt. Dandelions, 85c. Spinach, 85c peck. Five cents per gallon means a saving of $50.00 per E| New Beats, 15c. thousand gallons. Cucumbers, 18c. , Overheard at New Carrots, 2 Bunches Yor 25c. FOR INFORMATION ONLY Announcement! Green Peppers, 6c each. New Cabbage, Do lb. Expansion Dept., Tomatoes, 20c lb. YANKEE FILLING STATIONS, INC. The Dance In response to the urgent demands of an Peas, 18c Quart. Iceberg Lettuce, 12 l-2c head. Donaghue Bldg., 525-Main Street, already increasing number of satisfied Celery, 20c. Hartford, Conn. Parsley, 10c. Last Night customers of Soup Bunch, lOc. Milk and Cream Every Day. TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiluuiiuiiiliiiiii “Where did you get that snappy dress? It must have Treat’s Tasty Ice Cream cost you a mint!” “Oh, no! I buy all my in Manchester we take pleasure in an­ stock Reduding Sale dresses at the Smart Shop nouncing the establishment of a branch, fo r Qidy located at 9 Oak Place, South Manchester where a wholesale and packed order busi­ ofi USED CARS ness wiU be done. $7.95 Bidwell’s Soda and Gandy Shop, 533 Main street is d - ready serving this k e cream and other agencies in dif­ ferent localities in town will be established from time to ” “M y favorite tinie. -A share of your patronage is respectfully solicit­ ed. W. R. TINKER, Jr.’s dress shop” “ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW’’ f PLENTY OF Treat’s Ice Cream C6. 13'0 Center St. So. Manchester State Theater Building, South Manchester In Phone 2116 iPAGE FOUBTEEN MANCHESTER. (CONN.) ESVUINING HKKA^U. WEDMESUAY, MAY 2,1928. ► •%r- - •••:• ------r -fr^ . Moving Or Shipping? Consult Classification 20 For A Reliable Truckmatu

Houses for Rent 6 5 Want Ad Information CARD OF THAIVKS I Bepairlng S E L F ^ E SHOE SIORE COtTAOK ARE BOOST TO We wish to thank the friends and LAWN. MOWER ■h'vnsnlng. repair­ FOR RENT—6 ROOM single house Manchester neighbors for their kindness during ing. Phonographs, elooks, electrlo and garage on Anderson street, off the illness, and at the time of the cleaners, locks repaired. Rey mak- .V Bigelow street, practically new, all HOLDS 5TH BOLTON < 3 ^ death of our darling son George. We Ing. Bralthwalte, 63 Pearl street.^ modern. James J. Rohan, 517 Hart­ Evening Herald would especially thank all his play­ ford Road. Tel. 1668. Classified Advertisements mates, and the bearers, and the fold­ LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED and Phone Your Want Ads Count six average words to a line. ing room of Cheney Bros., and all repaired, chimneys cleaned, key fil­ Suborbaii for Rent 00 Aadrew ■ Maneggla, coliector of others who contributed fiowers. ing, safes opened, saw filing a.nd Big Sale Annpunced in . Con­ Initials, numbers and abbreviations, grinding. Work called for,. Harold taxes for thp town of Bolton', has each count as -a word and compond MR, AND MRS. ALBERT EAGLE- To The TO LET—PASTURE of 76 acres for junction With Observance of SON AND FAMILY. Clemson. 108 North Elm stre e t T eL received his rate'booh :on which words as two words. Minimum cost 462. the season. Apply to C. H. Schell, the taxes for 1928 are, to be, col­ Is price of three lines. telephone 143-12. '' Store’s Birthday^ • « • Lost and Found lected. The rate of taxation fs 24 Line rates per day for transient Business Opportunities 82 Houses for Sale' 73 With a. smashing' sale and, at­ mills and the grand list Is |6(J8.- ads, LOST—NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tractive price coheessiop- Belt Serv­ 700, an Increase over last year duf* EflectlTe March 17, 1027 that Pass Book No. 3631 of The BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY — Dining Cash Charge H e r a ld BARGAIN—^IF YOU are looking for a ice Shoe Stores, .19.13 Alain street largely to -the number of summer Home Bank and Trust Company has car—like new. Best location In town. good house at a bargain, don’t miss 6 Consecutive Days ■•. 7 cts 9 cts been lost, and the owner thereof has 10 room house, can be used by own­ here in AIanchester, a branch of the cottages that have'been buflt near 3 Consecutive Days .. 9 cts 11 cts this one. Ten rooms, 2 family house, Bolton Lake. Oh this list the' col­ made application for new book. All er or turned into rooming house. 10 must be sold this week to settle Diamond Shoe Store sjrhdlcate with 1 Day ...... 13 cts person.s are warned against pur­ year lease with option to purchase lector is directed to. collect $10,- All orders for irregular insertions estate and pay taxes. Price $4100. stores in Hartford, Norwich, New chasing or negotiating sal - book, property. An opportunity of a life­ Call 438-12. Britain and Putnam,. are celebrat­ 624.75. will be charged at the one-time rate. and if found same should be return­ time. Box N., Herald. Special rates for long term every ed to said bank. ing the rounding out of their 5th The outstanding Indebtedness day advrtlsing givn upon request. FOR SALE— 8 ROOM single house ESTABLISHED ICE CREAM, candy recently done over, oivner leaving milestone in Manchester. against the property owners for a Ads ordered for three or six LOST—TUESDAY MORNING wool and tobacco business for sale, A-1 M. L. Diamond, head of the con­ period of five year.s, amounts.to $ 1,- and stopped before the third or fifth town. For quick sale will sell for embroidered purse. Finder please location, reasonable rent, priced $6800. Inquire on premises, 43 Clin­ cern, says that this eifent is being 560, all of which is protected bv day will be charged only for the ac­ call 252-3. right. Phone 347-4. And Ask fo r ‘"Bee'" tual number of times the ad appear­ ton street. staged as a token of appreciation liens on the property. Although th*- ed. charging at the rate earned, but Help Wanted—Female 85 Tell Her What You Want FOR SALE—MAIN STREET, nice for the five yearg of successful op­ period of, collection of these taxp« no allowances or refunds can be made FOUND—GREAT DANE female. Tel. bungalow, just the place tor busi­ erations of this storei which has start oh May 15 And end.s oh June on six time ads stopped after the 477-14. ness. Car washing and greasing been patronized generously by the 15, when an additional interest fifth day. , . WANTED — WOMAN for general No ‘'till forbids” : display lines not housework, to stay nights. Mrs. She will take your ad, help you word It for beat results, equipment. Garage (tor ten o^irs) or public. charge will be made. Mr. Maheggi.t Announcements Howard Boyd. Phone 1145-3. workshop 50x30. Lot 66x270, Investi­ and see that it Is properly inserted. Bill will be mailed gate. (lall Arthur A. Knofia for Three years ago the first'shoe as personal, tax collector made a ^°The Herald will not oe responsible same day allowing you until seventh day after Insertion bargain basement in Manchester perfect showing this year by collect­ for more than one Incorrect Insertion STEAMSHIP TICKETS—all parts of WANTED—GIRL about sixteen for terms and price. Teh 782-2, 876 Main. of any advertisement ordered for the world. Ask for sailing lists and mothers helper. Write Herald, Box to take advantage of the CASH RATE. was inaugurated by. this concern ing every personal tax bill for the D. for Interview. FOR SALE—NEW 6 R(X>M bunga­ and today with the building they year and also clearing up several more than one time. rates. Phone 750-2. Robert J. Smith, low, all Improvementa Telephone The inadvertent omlssloT. or Incor­ 1009 Main street. 2633-2 or call 108 Benten street occupy now under their control of the former years’ outstanding rect publication of advertising will be Help Wanted—Male 8 6 further expansion may; be under­ personal tax collections, > rectified only by cancellation of the Automobiles for Sale FOR SALE—DELMONT STREET— charge made for the service rendered. J taken to care for the ever-increasihg * • • MEN WANTED, between 21 and 35, seven room single, fire placev oak patronage which the store enjoys. FOR SALE—;1925 FORD Tudor sedan, for chain store work. Experience not floors and trim, shade trees, price See Donnelly's special for this All advertisements must conform right Call Arthur A. Fnofla. Tele­ in style, copy and typography W'tb in perfect condition. Can be seen at essential. Call between 6 and 7:30, Household Goods 511 Apartments, Flats, Tenements 63 week-end. A fine value. 515 Main regulations enforced by the publish­ Sheldon’s Garage, Hollister street. 517 Main street. phone 782>3, 876 Main street street.—Adv. ers. and they reserve the right to Phone 2328-2. LEAD DEMONSTRATION WANTED—SALESMEN to sell Oak­ FULL SIZE BROWN metal bed, all TO RENT—3 ROOM tenement, all Im­ edit, levise or reject any copy con­ provements, heat furnished. Call Tel. Resort Property for Sale 74 sidered objectionable. FOR SALE—FORD roadster, bargain land and Pontiac motor cars. No joy­ cotton mattress, with spring $22.50. CLOSING HOURS—Classified ..ds ?100. Apply after 5 p. m. 31 Strant riders wanted. Apply James Steven­ You will find our prices below zero, 1598 or 398-2. street. son. 53 Blssell street. Telephone all the time. We don’t have to holler WATER FRONT COTTAGE, deep- FOR PAINTERS TONIGHT to be published same day must be re­ FOR RENT—$17 for 4 rooms up­ wide lot, wooded, driven well, shed Houses For Sale ceived by 12 o'clock noon. Saturdays 2169-2. our heads off to let you know how 1927 Studebaker Standard Sedan. low our prices are. Those that holler stairs and $19 or downstairs, all garage, west side Columbia Lake, 10:20 a m. 1924 Studebaker Special 6 Sedan. the loudest, give the least. Our low • improvements. Inquire 122 Birch or Columbia, Conn. Walter F Critten­ 1924 Studebaker Big 6 Sedan. WANTED—MEAT CUTTER for Sat­ overhead. Is what does the trick. 77 Garden street. den, 396 Livingston street, New Ha­ Meeting at School Street Rec­ $2,600 fs the.^ilcfi Tfir fi fiffiatl Telephone Your Want*Ads 1924 Studebaker Big 6 Touring. urday spare work. Apply by letter to You can always do better at Ben- | ven, Conn. cottage with fair sized lot. eleo 1923 Studebaker Big 6 Touring. Herald, Box M. son’s. TO RENT—TENEMENT of 4 rooms reation Center to All Mem­ trlcity, bathroom, garden and pouL Ads are accepted over the telephone 1921 Studebaker Big 6 Touring. and bath room. Inquire 143 So. Main ReHl Estate for Exchange 76 bers of Trade. at tile CHARGE RATE given above 1922 Studebaker Light 6 Sedan. WANTED—HIGH SCHOOL Senior or WE ARE OFFERING $5.00 for your street. So. Manchester. Phone 1720. try place. Why pay rent.? Cen­ as a convenience to advertisers, but A few cars of all makes. Good buys Junior for Saturday. Prefer boy with old mattress this week. This surely tral location. some grocery store experience. NORTH END—5 ROOM tenement to FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE property th- CASH RATES will be accepted as for little money. is the home of good bedding. 7 inch in town. In good locality. What have The National Lead company at Seven room single,-fnmace, FULl. l'AY.MENT if paid at the busi­ THE CONKEY AUTO CO. Write Herald, Box M. for interview. rolled edge hand-made floss mat­ rent, all improvements. Call 159 Oakland street, r-- North End Tailor. you to offer? Wm. KanehL Telephone the invitation of the Master Paint­ etc., walk and curbing, 2 car garage, ness oilice oh or before the seventh Distributors. Studebaker & Ersklne tress $29.50, layer felt from $15.50 1776. ers’ Association of -Manchester will day following the first Insertion of 20-22 East Center St. Tel. 840 Help Wanted—Male or Female 87 up. Cotton mattresses from $8.50 up. poultry bouse, land for anothei each ad., otherwise the CHARGE It costs less to advertise this way. FOUR ROOM TENEMENT at 27 give a demonstration at' the School house or' garden. A few fruit RA'1'1'. will be collected. No responsl- FOR SALE—BRAND NEW 1928 Paige that’s why you can do better at Ridgewood street; also two garages. street Bee at 7:30 this ' evening. Tel 93-3. trees and grapes. Price 16,600, bil:ty lor errors in telephoned ads Sedan. Will sell at a sacrifice price. WANTED—^MAN OR WOMAN. Must Benson’s. This demonstration will be on lead terms. will I.!' assumed and tlieir accuracy Phone 1321-4. be a go-getter, have a business col FOR RENT—6 ROOM TENEMENT at NO MORE OCEAN HOPS and its many new uses and 'will be cann.ii I'c guaranteed. lege training, aile to furnish securi­ 3TPlece Parlor Set $35. Porter street, nice single wltll f 8» ♦ * 1927 Oldsmobile Landau. ty bond; to act as secretary and Breakfast table.s $5 up. 150 Center street. For Information accompanied by motion pictures. 1925 Oldsmobile Two-Door Sedan. treasurer of company now in process New enameled gas ranges $24.75. telephone 171 All painting contractors and paint­ car garage. House Is all' mode'ra Index of Classifications FOR COL. UNDBERGH and the rooms are well arranged. It 1924 Oldsmobile Sport Touring. of organizing. Call at once. W. S. New porcelain tables $5. FOR RENT—FOUR ROOM FLAT, all | ers not affiliated, with the associa­ Evening Herald Want Ads are now 1926 Essex Coach. Grant, Mgr.. 139 North Main street, Iron beds full size $4.95. grouijed according to classifications improvements. Apply Mrs. L. tion are cordially invited .to at­ Is offered'at $7,500, $1,000 easB-. 1925 .Chrysler Sedan. Manchester, Conn. New Atwater-Kent raolu and Mathiason, 66 East Middle Turn­ Six room American colonlal» Qa% below anil for hkndy reference will 1923 Overland Champion. speaker $50. tend. appear in the numerical order Indi­ 1923 Dodge Sedan. WATKINS FURNITURE EXCHANGE pike. Telephone 688- . “It Would Add Nothing to Ad­ trim and floors down, steftlb, cated: 1923 Nash Roadster. Situations Wanted—Female 88 white plumbing, 3 cait ga^i©, nigh Birtlis ...... A FOR RE.N'T—3 AND 4 room tene­ vancement of Aviation” He There seems to be some doubt 1922 Buick Touring. Office and Store Equipment 54 ments. on Charter Oak street, near elevation,. norUt end. 3relw only Engageiuents ...... B 1922 Chandler 7-Pass. Touring. whether or not Fall will be tried, Marri;iges ...... *- WANTED—ALL KINDS of plain sew ­ Main. Inquire Philip Lewis, 83 Char­ Tells Reporters. S6.60(>. $1,000 cash. 1924 Chevrolet Touring. ing. work called for and delivered. ter Oak street. Sinclair having ' been ' acquitted. Deatlis ...... D 192(’) Ford Touring. Telephone 475-2. Mrs. Caroline Mc­ FOR SALE—TWO show cases $35. Five roonl' single, GrOStiaerBS. A Cards or Thanks ...... E Apply Campbell's Filling Station. E. Washington, May 2.— Colonel Before this thing is ended Fall 1923 Ford Coupe. Connell. 20 Ashworth street. FOR RENT—f> ROOM tenement, all nice little cottage,. all llKJdem In .Meinoriam ...... F 1922 Reo Truck. Middle Turnpike. improvements. newly renovated, Charles A. Lindbergh isn’t plan­ probably will be named winner of Lost .and Found ...... J CRAWFORD AUTO SUPPLY CO. the Nobel peace prize or given a $6.50U. . $500 cash. Announcements ...... - Poultry and Supplies 48 windows sliaded. 39 Russell street. ning any more trans-Atlantic flights Center and Trotter Streets Wanted—To Buy 58 Call 28 Russell street. Distinguished' Service -Medal; Building lots. Buy IKW wBen Perso na Is ...... 3 Tel. 1174 or 2021-2 to Europe. Antoinoblles lirices are at lowest of year. Prices SPECIAL MAY PRICES Miller’s TWO ROOM SUITE Johnson Block. The pioneer ocean flyer made Automobiles'for Sale ...... 4 FOR SALE—1920 SEVEN PASSEN­ Baby Chix, Reds and Leghorns, from I WILL BAY 'PHE HIGHES'P price that plain today in denying the lat­ as low as $150 with, fiity iriier and .Aulomobilcs for Exchange ...... 5 for all kinds of junk and old furni­ Apply to Aaron .lohnson. 62 Linden GER Chandler Sedan, run 33,000 pur own 16UU disease free, and trap- street or to janitor. est story emanating from the Wash­ electricity. $350 with sewer, Auto Accessoiits—Tires ...... 6 miles, good repair, good rubber, nested breeders, blood tested by ture. Prompt attention. Call 849. INTERN ATIONAL PAPER water, gas and electricity. These Auto llepairing-^Painting ...... 7 good upholstering, $150, H. Morgan, Stale, and UK) per cent free from ington rumor factory that he had COMPANY are absolute bargains and a lot for Atiio Iscliools ...... 7-A 'phone 698, 42 Bigelow street. white diarrhea. Heavy layers of WILL BAY IIIGHES'I' ortcos for ull completed plans for such a flight New York, March 28 th, 1928 .(vuios - Siiiii iiy Truck ...... 8 kinds of poultry We will also buy FOR RENT—5 ROOM flat, all Im­ a little. large eggs. Weekly hatches. Local rags, paiiers and ill kinds of lunk provements. 118 North Elm street. this summer with stops at Green­ The Board of Directors have declared a Auios — For Hira ...... 9. DEPENDABLE USED CARS delivery. Phone Fred Miller, Man­ Telephone 2257. land and Iceland. quarterly dividend of Sixt;}.’ Cents (60c) Garuges—.Service—Storage ...... 10 MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES CO. chester 1063-3, Coventry, Conti. Call 982-4. Muton.-\cles— Bfcycles ...... 11 1069 Main St. So. Manchester (Brooders and Supplies;. FUR RENT—FIVE ROOM tenement, Major Thomas G-. Lanphler, of a share on the Common Stock of this \V:inied A..tos—Motorcyles ...... 12 Open Eve. and Sun. Tel. 746 Rooms Without Board at 59 School street, near Educational the Army Air Service, who Vas Company, payable May loth, 1928, to Robert j. Smith Iliisilifss and Professional Services OLIVER BKOl'HEKts day old clucks Siiuare. Inquire of Luigi Pola, 55 mentioned aS his co-pilot in such Ciommon Stockholders of record at the Eusiue.ss Services Offered ...... 13 CHEVROLET SALES & SERVICE from two year old hens. Hollvwood School street. Telephone 546-2. Huu.-ieliold Services Offered ...... 13-A an undertaking, issued a similar close of business. May 1st, 1528. If you are In the market for a good Sti'airi-Blood tested and tree trom TO RENT— FURNISHED room, 27 Y ------* - - --- 1009 Maln'Street Luildiug—Contracting ...... 14 re-conditioned used car we have them denial. Checks to be mailed. 'Transfer hooks- white dlarrliea. Oliver Bros.. Clarks Brainard Place. TO RENT—5 ROOM FLAT, 90 Holl will not close. REAL ESTATE, ' INSURANCE Floiisl.s—Nurseries ...... 15 at all prices. Corner. Conn. street, all improvements, including “Such a flight would add nothing STEAMSHIP TICKETS Funeral Directors ...... 16 H. A. STEPHENS shades, curtain rods, screen and to the advancement of aviation,” ____ : O w R N S tfE P H C R D , Vice-Pre/,e^ Treax, Heating—Plumbing—Roofing .. I Center at Knox Tel. 939-2 BABY CHICK-'*— Best local stuck; Apartments. Flats, Tenements (I’d screen doors. Also garage. Must be said Lindbergh. Insurance ...... 18 seen to be appreciated. Apply Man­ .Millinery — i iressma U ing ...... 19 popular breeds. guaraiiteeP live de­ He said he still hoped to return Auto Accessories—Tires 0 livery. wo do cusiom halcliing; tree P’OR RENT—4 ROOM tenement, all chester Wallpaper Co., 527 Main Moving—Trucking—Storage ...'. 2U catalogue. Clark's Hatchery. East modern improvements, at 158 El- street. Phone 2326 or House Phone. to Europe “some day” and.see the THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE: Painting—Paiieriiig ...... 21 2108. things he missed last summer when ■ ■.isional Services ...... '22 I.NDIAN Srt'iCK ABSORBERS. Let Ll.'ir'f'ird. Conn. dridge street. Inquire 30 Griswold (278) Parrots—Their Kin. Reit.airing ...... 2;! us put them on your car for a ten street. Phone 1027. the government ordered his imme­ Tailoring —Dyeing—Cleanirg ... 2t (iuy free trial period. .No obligation, BABY CHICKS W. B. A. WHIST diate return to the United States, Sketclics b> Besgey; Syndpffis by Braachev Toilet Goods and Services ...... 2.5 .9 yetir guarantee. Center Auto Sup- Baby ctiicUs. blood tested, Ohio FOR RENT—MAY 1ST., five room but he has madie no definite plans. Wanted — Lu.siiu'.s.s Service ...... 20 |)ly Co., 1.5.5 Center. Tel. (i73. State Universitv accredited. Order In llat. all Improvements, garage if de­ lOdnca t ioiial advance. Maiicliestei Grain and Coal sired. Call at 38 Pearl street or tele­ Party in Odd Fellows Hall Last phone n si. .s and Classes ...... 27 Motorcycles— Bicycles 11 Company Phone 1 760. Night Well Attended—Asso­ Private Instruction ...... 2S FOR RENT—PRACTICALLY brand ciation Meets May 15 Daiicin:g ...... 2S-A Articles for Sale 45 new 5 room Hat. all Improvements TEST ANSWERS Alusical—Dramatic ...... '29 FOR SALE—1925 Henderson motor­ cycle. Apply 185 Maple street after and conveniences. Centrallv located. Warned — Instruction ...... 30 Tel. 1519 or call 2.'i Strant street. The Woman’s Benefit Association Financial 6 p. m. or Phone 829-4. FOR SALli—ONE ROLL top desk, whist at Odd Fellows hall last eve­ Bonds—Stocks—MertgageJ ...... 31 one protectograph clieck machine, Here is one solution to the LET­ some baby carriages good as new, ■APART.MENTS—Two. three and four ning was well attended and all en­ Business Opiiort unities ...... 32 Business Services O.ft'eretl 13 room alia ft merits, heat, janitor ser­ TER GOLF puzzle on the comic Moiiev to l.oan ...... 33 few gas stoves, all guaranteed, ice joyed themselves. The winners of boxes exchanged. If you think of vice. gas range, refrigerator, in-a- page. Money Wanted ...... 31 door bed turnislied. Call Manctiester the first prizes were Mrs. Rose St. llclit and Situations LAWN MOWERS sharpened by ex­ furniture for your cottage, see uss. pert; also knives, scissors, shears, Spruce street Second Hand Store. Construction Company. ‘2100 or tele­ John and Marshal Jant; second. Help Wanted — Female ...... 35 phone 782-2. Help Wanted—Male ...... 36 axes, saws and all kinds of tools Tel 2627-4. Miss Nellie Doyle and Harry Trot­ Help Wanted—Male or Female.. ^37 sharpened. Spruce street, corner of ------— ter and consolation, Mrs. F. O'Brien ■ Blssell street. HUDSON STREET. 8 RuOM tenement U R N Agents Wanted ...... 37-A l-'OIi SALE—LOAM, inquire Prank and garage, near liopot. In gqud and Thomas Tedford. Sandwiches, Situations W.anfed — Female .... 3S CHAIR CANING NEATLY done. Price Uainato, 2 4 Homstead street, Man­ condition Modern Imuroveinenis cake and coffee were served at th.e Situations W anted—Male ...... 39 Teleplione 981-2 ' Emilio vment Agencies ...... 40 fight, satisfaction guaranteed Carl chester. Phone 1507. close of the playing. The commit­ T R N Live S f ocU— Pe (s— Poultry-^V ehicles Anderson, 53 Norman street. Plione tee in charge included Mrs. Lillian 0 1892-2. l-'OR SALE—PEKTILIZEK tor lawns. FOR RENT—SEVERAL first class Dogs—Birds—Pets 41 Karl Marks, 136 Summer street. Tel. rents with all improvements. Apply Kamm, Mrs. Marie Houston, Mrs. Live Stock — \'ehicles ...... 42 WANTED—TEAM work, scrapping Edward J. Holl, 865 Main street. 'Tel. Anna Wade, Mrs. Aldea Gutzmer, Poultrv and SuplJUes ...... 43 1877. C o cellars, plowing, carting ashes, etc. 560. Mrs. Margaret Kellner. R N In the Austraffisian and Polynesian regioit of Aus­ AVanted — Pets—Poultry—Stcck 44 55 Blssell street. L. T. Wood. Tel. For Sale— Miscellaneous 496. 3 ROOMS FOR RENT at 170 Oak The next regular meeting of the tralia are found the charming Lories and Loriquets* a Articles tor Sale ...... 45 Building Materials 47 street, all Improvementsi hot water association will be held on Tues­ Boais and .Accessories ...... 46 C o 1 family of gentle, handsome and amusing parrots, Moving—Trucking—Storage 20 heat. Call 616-5. day, May 15, when there will be a N Building Materials ...... 47 FOR SALE—CONCRETE building class of candidates initiated. favorites in many homes. Swamsoiii’s Loriquet, pic­ Diamonds—-Watches—Jewelry .. 48 blocks and chimney blocks. Inquire FOR RENT—ONE 6 room and 1 five Electrical 'Apitliances—Radio .. 49 tured above, measures a foot, including his five-inch LOCAL AND LONG distance moving Frank Oamato, 24 Homestead street, * room flat, best locations, rent $35. Find iirid Feed ...... 49-A Manchester. Telephone 1507. Call Stuart J. Wasley. 827 Main C H 1 N Garden —Farm —Dairy Products 50 by experienced me L. T. Wood, 55 tail. The Swainspn beauty is the handsomest of all Blssell street. Tel. 496. street. Telephone 1428-2. Household Goods ...... 51 Electrical Appliances—Kadiu 40 d a te its. Australia's .great parrot group. Macliinery and Tools ...... 52 PERRETT & GLENNEY moving sea­ FOR RENT—FIVE ROOM FLAT With By n'ea. Through.Special Ptrminiian of 4h» Publisher, o f Th« Book ef Knawltdgi^Cogyrt^it;^^ Musical Instruments ...... 53 S H son is here. Several trucks at your bath and garage for 1 car. 32 St. A m e r i c a n 1 N Office and Store Equipment...... 54 service, up to date equipment, ex­ ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING appli­ Johns street. South Manchester. E. Sporting Goods—Guns ...... 55 perienced men. Phone 7-2. ances. motors, generators, sold and A. Standiah, • Andover. Conn. Tele­ Specials at tlie Stores ...... 56 repaired; work called for. Pequot phone 1351-3, Willlmantic. HISTORY S K 1 N Wearing Apiiarel — Furs ...... 57 MANCHESTER & N. Y. MOTOR Dis­ Electric Co., 407 Center street. Phone Wanted—to Eu.v ...... 58 patch—Part loads to and from New 1592. K «>n« s— Board— Hot els—Resorte York, regular service. Call 7-2 or TAKES 51 TROUT IN FOUR MAY 2. Itesta iirants 1282. Rooms Witliout Board ...... 59 Fuel and Feed 49-A TRIPS TO NEARBY WATERS 1785—Thomas Jefferson made 5 K 1 D Boarders Wanted ...... 59-A American minister to Country Board—Resorts ...... 60 Painting—^Papering 21 PO RSALE—HARDWOOD large load France. Hotels—Restaurants ...... 61 $8. Ashes moved. Charles Palmer, 44 Andrew Ferguson, crack angler, Wanted — Rooms—Board ...... 62 GEORGE E. STURTEY ANT and Sons, Henry street. Telephone 896-3. has visited the streams on only 1851— San Francisco burned; 2,500 Real Estate For Rent painting and interior decorating, four occasions, the last one being buildings destroyed; loss, CONFISCATE ESTATE Apartments. Flats. Tanemeuts.. 63 prices reasonable, work guaranteed. Garden-Farm-Dalry Products 60 a “side- line” with some other $3,500,000. Business l.ocaDonp for Rent .... 64 198 Eldridge street. Tel. 1922-5. London, May 2_.—The Soviet au­ Houses for Rent ...... 65 “prospecting.” But in the four 1863—^'Stonewall Jackson acciden­ r i thorities have place dthe magnifi­ -Suburban for Rent ...... 66 FOR SALE—"HOWARD 17’’ straw­ /times out he has brought in fifty- tally wounded by his own Bummer Homes for Rent ...... 67 Repairing 23 berry plants. $1 a hundred, $7.50 a one trout. The first day he took men at Chancellorsville, 'Va. cent estate of Fedor Chaliapin at Wanted to Rent ...... 68 thousand. “Double-Ender” white eighteen, followed this up on his 1865—President Lincoln proclaim­ Vladimirsk at the disposal of the Real Estate For Sab SEWING MACHINE, repairing of flint seed corn, small stalks, medium ed a reward of $100,000 for Russian Red Cross, according to a ' Apartment Buildings for Sale .. 69 all makes, oils, needles and supplies. ears, easy husking; $2 a bushel. S. second day with sixteen and on his dispatch fit»m Riga received by the Business '’roperty for S ale ...... 70 R. W. Garrard, 37 Edward str-et. G. Bowers. 75 Demlng street, Man­ next trip fourteen. He got only the arrest of Jefferson Davis, Farms and Land for Sale ...... 71 Phone 715. chester. Tel. 258-2. three In the “part time” trip which president of the Confeder­ Exchange Telegraph Company to­ Houses for Sale ...... 72 day. m Lots for Sale ...... 73 he last took. acy. This action by the Soviet officials Resort Property for S ale ...... - 74 3 OR 5 PIECE MAHOGANY suite, re­ Household Goods 61 1890— Oklahoma organized as a upholstered. new springs Inserted Is believed to have resulted from Suburban for Sale ...... 75 territory. the famous Russian singer’s persis­ Real Estate for Exchange ...... 76 and finished. Make your own selec­ 1912—Post (jfflce Appropriation Wanted—Real Estate ...... 77 tion of covering. Call for free sam­ SMALL SIZE ROLL TOP desk, Hoff­ Serve raw cabbage frequently, as tent refusals to return to his native t Here fs the Bare-eyed Auction— Legal Notices ples. Tel. 1268. man gas heater. Good valu es. In bill provided $750,000 for Cockatoos 4 6 HOLMES BROS. FURNITURE CO.. household furniture. Ostrlnsky’s some of its most valuable proper­ land. Chaliapin Is now in the Unit­ •Cockatoo, showing un­ Auction Sales ...... 78 ties are destroyed in the cooking. experimental work with par­ ed States. tlc birds; distinctive Legal Notices ...... 7S 649 Main Street. ) Furniture Store, 28 Oak, cel post system. crests. H^re the artist usual resemblance to the has pi(>tured a L.eadbeat- owls of which parrots GAS BUGGIES—^The Post-Mortem ' By Frank Beck er’s Cockatoo, . , are.kin. :

THATS WHAT I FURTHERMORE-- I'M • BEGINNING TO HERE YOU ARE. SAID. ALEC SMART AND THEY NOT ONLY AND SO THINK YOU MUSTV e NOW, HOW DO YOU AND C0LD6RIP ARE MV ■you L E T * PROVED THEIR INNOCENCE YOU A LL SPENT TTX) MUCH TIME BEFORE EXPLAIN THIS. IF YOUR FRIENDS. THEY EXPLAINED' ] THOSE TWO BY COMING SACK, BUT A RIDING BACKWARDS ON I ANSW ER FRIENDS ARE SO H O N EST,^ EVERYTHING. IT WAS FRAUDS TELL THEV r E GOING TD PBVOnTE PARTY TD A MERRY- 60- ROUND,7 A N Y MORE HOW DOES IT HAPPEN RUSTY WHO SKIPPED YOU THAT THE • REST OF THEIR LIVES^, CELEBRATE WHEN YOU WERE A I QUESTIONS, THAT THE 6AS PELLET IF NECESSARY, TO THEY WERE PROMOTING, WITH THE PETRIFIED FAIRY t a l e ! TH E FA CT GABY; BEFORE YOU I W A N T '< GAS c o m p a n y ’s d o u g h , W ELL, 1 , FOR REIMBURSE US FOR Alt TH AT YOU GO ANY FURTHER, SOM E FOOD PROVED TO BE SUCH THE IMY THEY LEFT - © O N *T THE JACK ■ WE LOST;. A RE GOING a n s w e r M E M Y HEAD A P A k E f ___ ^ L L — FDR SOUTH' AMERICA. BELIEVE THSV v B GOT SOMETHING T O 8 6 A THIS ___ FEELS ...W HY DONT..- IT. BIG UP THEIR SLEEVE, SUCKER DIZZY. THAT TD G ET AGAIN. f :2 ON. r In \^uth^Afner^^ the Macaws, shoWiest of all tiie parrots,' Ittr general they are large, but their m i taife (gtye,'^em;a:(:^s^^^ prodigious size. The m m Blue-ai^d-Yetfdw Mapayy, shbwh"here, is the comfhon- P 'v. est. AU |\^aw s are^s^eatit^ Tikigh palm nuts wMch man cannot ppnetrate without toots I l i this '-bird sbdh'.reduces'to a pulfK - - ^ SluKhu It 192H» H«rk. Trailr

i MAKUHBSTISK IW N N .) BVENING HERALD, WEDNEBDAIT, M A I Z, 1928. SKIPPY gAPPER FANiaV. Sj^S; SENSE »«i NONSENSE By iPercy L* Oosby

How To Succeed "Poppa,” said little Abie, “ What lAV OWCLE r is ethics?” OF 'EM HE WA3 OomPEO OiJCsrioHs: Quetr/oNS “ Ethics, my son, iss ven a cus* W A X A WA5 ME tomer comes in to pay a forty dol­ ^ ASHOIlP Oh/ H OcjEfJf •'0 H t NOTHIN* e o r • lar bill und pays fifty dollars by ev/E(^ mistake. De ethics iss, should you o w c e r . XHIPW (DECKED? FULL OF CfitJtsliBALS. keep de ten dollars— or divide it T H E V C H A S e a HCM D o w n / T o v,^^uejrfONsV \yith your partner?” A o c e a n Full op m a n It’s a frank age; Open covenants, KA'TIN' SHfiRHS ------open plumbing, short skirts, court­ ship without turning the lights ------down.

Save the Snrface-SaVe All Ida— Is it true that statistics prove women live longer than men? Ada— Well, you know paint is a great preservative. [,

“ Haycraft was almost drowned last night.” I lf II, “ No, how come?” l\ W RE6.l/.S.PAT.OPr. “ The pillow slipped, the bed J 1 0 1 9 2 8 . BY WEA SERVICe, IMC. spread and he fell in the spring.” Copyrifht, 1928. Percy U Cceeby, CeotnU Pren Aan., Inc.,

Following fashion is no crime, A local girl boasts that she is even though it lands you behind wearing a bracelet once owned by The Amateur Truck Gardener ihe bars. a millionaire, Mr. Woolworth. By Fontaine Fox OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Gene Ahem Tommy— Pa, what is a theorist? Tommy’s Pa— A theorist, my son, is a man who thinks he is learning to swim by sitting on the bank and HoT/hia -THl^ f^AOT -TMA-T ir4VAPHsl^ HiS Alo •TVkeE MfM Voi5 BUrf c MABLBYj,>-*.5UCK< MISTr U^t S watching a frog. (SiAf\Pi^r4 A u W A i S o t i - r o f o p LAUMPLV Mo w • wuo WCA L0M6 CAUSBS VOOR CEUBSTlAL ^ (JoHPS H A t Laughter creates appetite,” said 'AWcesibRs m u c M umMa p p im e s s ! the Scotchman, starting to cry at TiMiS VOO Mo COMB PAV the dinner table. IMPBBP^wv \-f WAS VoLlt^ THIS SOUNDS DANGEROUS. TLO POLLA -ru-TfV FLV CBMT! OWM COMFliSCIOLlS wrio so Many an une.xpected SKID de­ Never give a friend your correct Vou-tH lM kC V Mie B I6 address. He may be planning to WISEL-V SAiP,^ER-"jFTt4V velops from a sudden TURN, but CLAZV 2 ‘-*^1 in letter golf it can be done on send you a wedding invitation. MEle^BOR BE LOUJ IM purpose in just seven months. One CATc MUM M o MBV BLUM VoQ is solution you may be able to beat .Ian Blames Fate for other acci­ MoMEVy PAisE MifiM H is on another page. dents but feels personally responsi­ T oPAV, MBBBH^OMOLU a SBIPlT IM CPEPiT 7 -vE0 AP ble when he makes a hole in one. MA-- SEM I VlASHVfr- ^ OF A TR^JT^V cMARLEV, The correspondent of a large S6 Hi m m b u i I WILL PAV Vou T U R N business concern had been invited out to dinner by ^ friend. At the B iiL -e 5- V^AMPSOMELV table the host asked him to say ( 2 ? MEYT WEEh grace. It was a new experience, but he was not to be found wanting. “Dear Lord,” he began,, “we thank Thee for all the favors of re­ cent date. Permit us to express our heartfelt gratitude. We trust that we may continue to merit Your confidence, and that we shall re­ ceive ma.iy more blessings from You in future. Amen.”

“ Did you take your honeymoon trip on an airplane, as you intend­ ed?” “ No; but I came down from the IP clouds shortly after the ceremony."

Joe— I’ve got an invention that’ll S K 1 D make me millions! Boe— What is it? THE ItULES. Joe— A liquid which, when ap­ plied to a girl’s lips, makes her 1— The idea of letter golf is tokisses taste like oranges! change one word to another and do Boe— ’At’s not so good; why not it in par, a given number of strokes. a liquid that’ll make an orange Thus to change Cow to Hen in three taste like a woman’.i kiss?” rtrokes, COW, HOW, HEW, HEN. f^^SVUfS SO t h a t i N a p a y so 2— Y'ou can change only one let­ Extravagance is often caused by Wii-u PUT ANorn^K ohj ofHrK ter at a time. \P- one mistaking his wants for his 'fo MIS SMITH, WHO OHIO^gNS.______^ REa O S. PAT OFT. 3— You must have a completeneeds. 6 192a BY NEA SERVICE, INC word, of common usuage, for each jump. Slang words and abbrevia­ tions don’t count; - 1. -i- ...... ,. . . Always Present 4— The order of letters cannot Felt hats may come and straw WASHINGTON TUBBS II By Crane be changed. hats may go, but the high hat goes on forever. Heredity is something every Ov\, WHM vJOR^M ABOUT THE father believes in until his son be­ It pays to be upright. Look at gins acting the fool. the poularlty of the pronoun “ I.” OU!) TREASURE. tOOK'. «/\Vl£ \oo Noficep HOW The smoke eoes G E f m ^ o s H liMTO OUR. GAVE iMSteAD Of OUf. '(OU PON’T SPOSe -thm JUSTUKE ‘a flREPLACE. T V M $ IS CftlMWeS ROEK? — m

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. V ® 1 9 2 8 . BY NEA SEBVICt W&j REG. I). S.PAT. OFF, y FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS All Alone! By Blosser

0 M/-1 C f SOMF7W)/)6SURgtVMUSr^ M AYBE A l io n ! S/OEAKED [ . [ MEBBE 7A0SS ASAD BOBO a n d X’LL s t a r t AJCLSAARRV :j AA'OFAAPPE/OEDTDUAICLE* UP )M 7AE MIcSAT AMD Took. V V aumters lAATo-ycLEMCpy OUT AMO LOOK FOR7AEM, T] V [ 7DLDME a b o u t KID/OAPPED AAlD MR. A166)AS ; | AARRY AMP MR. Al(5(5lJOS ! BOTM OF 7AEM AMJAY-STILE. 7 A A T S VWMAT MJE’LL ' A;M-\WELL,2CAMr STAY disappeared ! j OR 7 K & V D BE&A1 Ba a R ^ X DOM'T TAIMK it did ’CAUSE OOU FR O M C A M P T/ME. U/OCLE MARRY MJOULDA AER& BY M ySELFI'LU ' AA 'JS DO SOME'TAIMS V B S T E R D A V I 9 AMD DOITQOlcRJi M O R M IA iG AND AlOTWjMS AAS B&EM SEEM 0 F 7 A E M SI/OCE • « • ..5^- MEAM\UA1L-E f r e c k l e s ,\NAO IS LEFrALQ^JE \N17A Bogo.TRlES .S' - TO FI SURE TAI/OSS OUT.’.' REG. 0. S. PAT. OFT. 0 )9 2 8 , BY NEA SEHVICC, INC.

yAV. READ THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE When both the dwarfs were a bite today.'’ They found the big SALESMAN SAM Atta Bay! By Small out of sight, the strange man wheelbarrow full of radishes and eyed each Tlnymite. "‘Well, who such. “ Just help yourselves,” ex­ are you?” he finally said. "I’ve eoess VJ^ve Losoeo o u t ITS HO OSS’. I've. 6eeH cHeeRUP.suzT.’. a t s claimed thb man. “ Now, don’t be ^MD It TWE will be a dandy treat.” ^esc(J6.is. “ Oh. fine!” yelled Clowny. (The Tlnymltes wprk In the JM . . N . “Lead the way. We haven’t l^ d e n ia the aton.l,

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■ J T fr ^ MOD]gRN.aLD FASHIQN MODERN-OLD FASHIONED Orford Pariah Chapter, Daugh­ The May meeting of the Trinity' He was called out to make rer will be read and th j'e he -fhej ters 'Of the American Revolution, Past Noble Grands assQciation will O’CONNELL,‘COMES BACK’ pairs on a bus of thp Connecticut TRUST CO. .nsual. election of dftecto)^ Dancing DANCE will hold its May meeting Saturday be. held at Stafford Springs on the Company which had , gone-wrong at It 4a expected that thd |»reaent afternoon at 3 o’ clock with Mrs. 15 th. the top of Asylum street. He found FROM TAtAL’ DODRY is not the custom to int|ke TOMORROW NIGHT Benefit Aces Baseball Clnb Donald Grant of Wapping. The the trouble to be in one of the ANNUAL N E H MONDAY Keeney Street Dance Hall session will be given over to re­ • Mrs. Garl Oman, Mrs. Edgar wheels. Crawling under the car he ^ changes , unless -necea^^. -WEDNESDAY NIGHT, MAY 2 ports of the delegates who repre­ Morgan and Mrs. G. H. Waddell asked the driver to "back up'd lit­ ' iBoard consists of Harold G. Alvpro,; motored to Northampton, Mass.; Local Man Badly Hurt in Hart­ AT THE RAINBOW McKay’s Serenaders sented! the chapter at the recent tle.” .The driver blundered' and .'.The annual meeting of the stock- Lawrence W. Case, Horace iB , Continental Congress In Washing­ yesterday where they attended a ford Bus Accident Is Out of Cheney, W'illiam C. Cheney, Charlesl WADDELL’S ORCHESTRA Admission—'25c, 5Uc. moved f Or ward, the car roiling over hiMders of the Manchester Trpst ton, D. C. Mrs. Grant will be assist­ luncheon at the new Hotel North­ Hospital. E. House, William H. Hyde, PatrlcM Prof. Taylor, Prompters ampton, given by Mrs, Oman’s sis­ O’Connell’s body. When he was Corilpahy will be held at the direc­ ed by Mrs. Clinton Williams and picked up he was found to be bad­ tors' room .in the bank at 4 o’clock J. O’Leary. William W. Robertson.] Mrs. G. E. Willis. Automobiles will ter, Mrs. C. T. Richardson. R. LaMotte Rusaell, Scott H. Simon j MAYFAIR CARNIVAL William J. O’Connell of Prospect ly crushed and there were fears of nelct Monday afternoon. meet the 3i4t> car at the north end internal injuries and at the time it ■ President R. LuMotte Russell of and Robert V. 'treat ; ' Modem Dancing Given by the Children of Mary • terminus, for those who desire The Ladies’ Benevolent Society street, this town, who has been Ip the employ of the Connecticut Com­ was expected that he would die. the company said this morning:that Messrs House and' W. C. Cbeney-1 ST. JAMES’S SCHOOL HALL transportation. of Center church will hold its fin­ have been on the board Mnce tbe| SATURDAYS al meeting of the season on Wed­ pany as an automobile mechanic, While he has not fully recovered ■Only routine-matters, will come up Wednesday, Thursday, Friday at the session. The annual reports bank was founded In 1805. Lionel Kennedy’s Orchestra. Mh and Mrs. Raymond Carrier nesday afternoon. May 9. It will be has returned to his home after sev­ he is able to get around the house May 2, 3 and 4.— Adm. 25c. and children of Webster, Mass, in the form of a social get-together, en weeks spent in St. Francis hos­ and yard a little-each day and Modem, Old Fashioned Dancing have been visiting Mr. Carrier's followed by.,a supper in charge of pital," where he was taken. It was hopes to return to work after a Mrs. E. E. Fish, Mrs. .Edna'Case thought. In dying condition. few weeks. m o d e r n -o l d FASHION mother, Mrs. Byron Carrier of Cam­ DANCE bridge street. Parker, Mrs; Gertrude Purnell, Mrs, DANCING Henry Lowd and Miss Ellen Lang- Every Thursday Night Miss Harriet Upton, formerly a don will arrange for the entertain­ ment. TURN HALL Each Saturday Night resident of Main street is now mak­ Starting This Week ing her home at Whitinsvllle, Mass. Weinian’s Orchestra. BUCKINGHAM FOUR CORNERS .\ Good Time For All DANCE HALL Mary Bushnell Cheney Auxiliary 8-YEAR-OLD BREAKS ARM PUON .McKay’s Serenaders, will give a whist at the state arm­ ory this evening for its members, their friends and those of Ward FOR THE SECOND TIME ABOUT TOWN The preparatory, membership Cheney camp,, U. S. W. V. Mrs. class at tile South Methodist church Charles B. Warren heads the com­ called for Friday afternoon will be Little Robert Sherwood, Fol mittee in charge. GOOD TUiNCS■*v TO CAT omitted. lows Up Cycle Accident There will be modem and old W. E. Schreiber of 167 West With Fall From Swing. LEVITATION OF PRICES lashioii dancing at the Keeney Mary C. Keeney Tent, Daughters Center street is moving his family Let it he a Reminder street dance pavilion tonight under of Veterans will hold its regular, this week to his father’s new sev­ There’s a pretty trick-of the conjurers whereby Robert, eight-year-old son of Mr. a human body or othefe solid object is raised from tl'.o aWHpices of I he Aces baseball j meeting at the state armory to- en room Colonial house on Scar, and Mrs. Ora C. Sherwood of Cook team. ! morrow evening. borough road, Hollywood. the ground and suspended ih air apparently with­ street, Manchester Green, is once out support. The oniookeir,' may ' suspect that more laid up with a broken arm. Rev, and .Mrs. .'Vlfred Clark will j The social service committee or sornewhere-and.somehd\4there Is a sustaining fac­ o f your Figure Needs The Junior choir of the North A year ago at this time, Robert 111 be given an oribial welcome in the the hospital and town, appointed Methodist church will rehearse this was riding on the handlebars of a tor, but he can’t see it. v4n some cases it Is pretty parisli ball of St. .Mary's ebureb I during the winter, will conduct a evening at the home of Mrs. Cecil bicycle and was thrown to t’ae side­ well impossible for anybody except those taking Friday evening. i food sale at the J. W. Hale com Taylor, 15 Main street. walk when his foot caught In the part iii the show to know just how it is done. I pany's store, Saturday afternoon ai- spokes of the front wheel. His Every now and then there Is a boost In the price livv. Alfred Clark, assistant ruc- ■2;:in. Center church girls who will at­ left arm was broken at the elbow. of some sort of food, at th*e sources of supply, which lor of St. Mary’s Episcopal church, tend the annual Hartford County Yesterday afternoon while play­ can’t be explained by any known conditions of de­ will liave charge' of the adult con- .Gustave Luther of 14 West Mid ■ Older girls’ conference at Thomp- ing in a swing at the Manchester mand and supply, of crop results or the state of lirniation class which meets to­ ' die Turnpike has returned home sonville this week are Eleanor Green school playgrounds, RoBerf the public’s pocketbook. i night in the church. The class v.Tll from a four-day visit to New York Runde, Mary Harvey, Margaret Wa­ fell and broke the same arm. Tb.- Beef has been pretty high for quite a while, and be conlinned oii June 1.5 at Trllh afld New Jersey, The purpose of terman, Elizabeth Kean; and from attending physician said it was a a flue lot of contradictory.statements in explanation in the evening by Bishop Acheson. his visit was to be present at the the Girl Reserves, Genevieve Eddy, very bad fracture, both bones be­ and refutation have been printed. . But nobody I welcome of N'ew York City to the Marion Hills, Esther Peterson, Ruth ing broken. minded much because pork .was cheap and lamb was Rev. C. P. Plireaner of Wood- G.erman-Irish flyers. Wogman, Marion Rippin and Ger­ Robert was standing In the not too high. Now. all of a sadden, lamb has bridge street will conduct the mid­ trude Gerard. swing, "pumping” back and forth, taken a terrifle jump in price and pork is much week prayer service this evening at when he lost his footing and fell higher than It was. The fresh meat situation Is .the South Methodist church, in th.a I The Bon Ami Club will hold a Manchester was well represented public i^nist party Wednesday eve­ face down. He Instinctively threw troublesome to the budgeted housekeeper. And absence of the |)astor. Rev. II. A I at the conclave of Washington out hts hands to check the fall but Colpitis at Kansas City. ning, May 9 at the hose hous.e, cor­ the worst of it Is that the wheat market Is soar­ Commandery No. 1, Knights Temp­ the left arm crumpled. ing, too; you can always bet that average food ner Main and Hilliard streets. There lar in Hartford, when five Man­ will be si.x prizes, refreshments and He was taken to Memorial hos­ prices will follow the price of the cheapest staple ■Mrs. Fayette Clarke of Main chester men received the Temple pital, the hurt was X-rayed, and street left today to spend a week a general good time. Miss Ruth degree. — and that’s wheat. Cddell is chairman of the general then removed to bis home. He is It’s all something like the conjurer’s levitation with Mrs. Elmer Stoughton at in the third grade at the Manches­ South Windsor. committee. act. You can’t put your finger on the cause— The regular Thursday meeting of ter Green school and it is possible not with certainty. .^nd^ when you can’t find the the local branch of the Ancient that the Injury may keep him out cause you can’t find a cure. Order of Hibernians ;will not be for most of the remainder of the Pinehurst regrets the increase in fresh meat held tomorow night because of the school year. costs. But all It can do is to keep its own prices bazaar at St. James’s Parish Hall, down to the last notch of workable margin. That' but will be May 19 instead. This PARTY FOR BRIDE-ELECT It Is doing— and hoping that the price levitation ASK ABOUT OUR 10 is the date for the semi-annual will be over soon. meeting of the organization. Miscellaneous Shower Given Wood- Meantime, fish, fresh and canned, fresh vege­ bridge Street Girl— Is Soon to tables, spaghetti, cheese, the good old New England Employees of the Western Union Wed Bristol Man bean, smoked meats, poultry and a hopeful disposi­ PAYMENT PLAN Telegraph Company throughout the tion are recommended." state attended the annual get-to­ Miss Helen Yourkshot of Wood- FOR MEN ONLY gether of that organization held bridge street was the guest of hon­ last night at the Hartford Yacht or at a miscellaneous shower given Try Ivanhoe Mayonnaise.. 25c and 45c jar Club. Manager Betty W. Clarke of Monday evening at the home of ______\______the local braiichr office attended. Miss Henrietta Pinney of Hart­ CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, Walter Williams of this town Javor- ford. The young women who num­ Pinehurst Bulk Molasses ...... 35c qt. ed the gathering with three vocal bered about 30 were her associates numbers arid also sang with in the office of the Aetna Fire In­ Fresh Shad Calves’ Liver Worthy Hills orchestra, which play­ The Nemo Week Special surance company. A mock mar­ B u c k s ...... 25c lb. Beef Liver HATS, CAPS, SHOES ed for dancing. Mr. Williams was riage, games and music helped the his own accompanist during the time pass merril}^ The dining Roe S h a d ...... 35c lb. Honeycomb T ri^ Is a stout woman's Combination made solo numbers. Pickled Pigs’ Feet, 2 lbs. 25c room was decorated with blue and Shad Roe. white streamers and a dainty lunch Vegetables for health. with the concealed Wonderlift Belt for I. H. WILLIAMS, INC. Mrs. Herbert Angeli of 79 Flor­ was served. Filet of Haddock Fresh Dandelions Miss Yourkshot is to be married complete control. ence street was admitted and Mrs. Filet of Sole 713 MAIN STREET Michael Mooney and infant daugh­ in the near future to Adolph Sel- Spinach ter of 67 Glenwood street, dis­ nau of Bristol, Conn. Dressed Haddock Beets and Carrots Of very handsome rayon- charged, from Memorial Hospital Smoked Filet of Haddock New Green Peas yesterday. Haddock Celery, Lettuce, Tomatoes striped batiste used only in 1 See Donnelly’s special for this WANTED Halibut Johnson’s Liquid and Paste the Nemo Week Special ... $6.50 week-end. A fine value. 515 Main Time to Have Your Ashes Re­ Pinehurst Round Ground W ax. street.— Adv...... 45c lb. Strawberries^ This year Nemo Week is being observed in moved; By Load or Job, Also Pinehurst Hamburg 25c lb. Ripe Pineapples. our Corset Department from April 30th to May 5th. Murray^ s Light Trucking. Tel. 1465-2. “CORRECT FOOD SALE We are observing it by putting into our BUT INEXPENSIVE” Given by the Social Service stocks a most complete array of Nemo-flex Committe of the Hospital and Foundations, each designed for a specific fig­ Town at Hale’s, Saturday aft­ ure type and made of handsome materi£& ernoon, May 5 at 2:30. and splendid workmanship— ^in keeping with the high standard of Nemo-flex design and workmanship. You can observe it by look­ ing to your figure needs. Come into our Charles Laking Corset Department and have competent cor- setiere fit you to the Nemo-flex model which Auto tops repaired, recovered will do most toward the betterment of your and rebuilt. Automobile trim­ figure lines. ming in all its branches. Best materials used. All kinds of % Corset Department— Main Floor A. leather goods repaired. Interest Special for Also Harness Repairing. Thurs, Fri., Sat. 314 Main St., Tel. 128-4 THURSDAY ONLY! South Manchester 5 dozen 50c and $1.00 Compoiinded NEW WATKINS BROTHERS Quarterly Gillette Blades HATS ( f u n e r a l 31 f and 6 2 ^ pkg. * o f the very latest crea­ vlpr»^iwmad» d ir e c to r s Five ten blades in a package. ' tions made to sell for >I/ASH ^UlTf $3.95 and $4.95. Robert K. Andersob Drug Dept.— Main Floor

Specially Priced at Phone: 100 or 748-2

$2.95 and Read Our Ads on Pages 4 and 5 $3.95

NEW BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS Money Makes For SOUTH MRNCHESrCR ■ CONN

PLENTY In khaki, Broadcloths, Linens, “Wedded Bibs” OF YOUR COAL FOR WINTER and Jersey Silk. All with de­ THERE is at least a grain of truth in the old tachable Blouse. LARGE 3WILL HSLP you SAVG . adage, “When poverty conies in at the window, UKE- EVERYTHING-! HEAD Love flies out through the door.” A steady It certainly is so. Now is SIZES growing Savings Account at this Bank will cer­ $1.00 $1.65 the time to buy your tainly further marital happiness. Start saving You cherish— it 8 0 ^ ^ andjj enljance its-beauty by tsseuing $1.95 $2.45 COAL now. I a TtauhC^uin& Oraiige 5 ic>ssomi^ $2.95 mounting. Many ■ styles andr^ At Reduced Prices shap» are a'va^al^ for your sdec-| Guaranteed fast color. [$ Bank of Manchester Good clean coal of the best in our'di^lby." Boys’ Dept. South Manchester, Conn. Murray’ s grades. “Correct But Inexpensive” ARTHUR L HULTMAN State Theater Building &. E. Willis & Son, Inc. Mason Supplies, A' dlZ SlaiB S tm t A a Atola street Fbone SO