- c THE WEATHER Forecast by U. S. Weather Bureau. NET PRESS RUN H artford. AVERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION £or th© Month of Octobcff 1929 Generally fair and riightly colder iEumttw tonight and Wednesday. \ 5 , 5 2 2 Conn. State Library— ComiK Members of

... T ^ PAGBl’Wb'^ " - MAWUHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1929. DOHENY NOW OWNS PICK AND SHOVEL MEN SUCCEEDS FATHER j SEVEN JURORS Uncle Tom, Simon Legree SCORE ON AUTOMATICS TRES RITOS RANCH State Briefs IN REFORM OFFICE SELECTED FOR Called Real Characters They’re Digging Telephone (Cuntinaecl from I*age 1) PATIENT IN STAMFORD. Conduit Trench Where Ma­ New Orleans — A shambling, <^the countryside for affidavits tf> could not be learned here however, Stamford, Nov. 19.— (A P )—John woolly-pated negro known to mil­ I prove the theory that McAlpin and chine Ditcher Couldn’t Go. Louis Lester Hohenthal to just what conne^bn the note bore L. Cort, of Larchmont, N. Y., thea­ MIANUSTRIAL lions as Uncle, Tom and a black- I Legree were one and the same per­ to the private affairs of Fall, aor trical manager who died yesterday The pick and shovel man isn’t en­ browed, 'Villainous white iTui.n named son; and it is the affidavits he/col- was it evident why the note was at Stamford Hall sanitarium here Joseph Stratton, Jr. Simon Legree had a great deal to do tirely licked by the automatic (Continued from Page 1) lected then that Saxon quotes In Finish Out Term as Fed­ given Doheny. had been a patient for about two Joseph Stratton, Jr., 34, died at with bringing about the (Jivll War, trench digger—not yet. There are his book. Fall, in broken health. Is in El weeks. Death was ascribed to a postponement of the trial a week home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. despite the fact it was generally be­ Saxon also presents a document, times, circumstances and conditions Paso, Tex. He is under conviction general breakdown^ with a heart Joseph Stratton, 44 Garden street at lieved they never existed. that still call for hand excavating, eration Secretary. j ago, arrived at the Criminal Cou»"ts signed in 1892 by one Lamy Chapin, for bribery in connection with ni.s complication. Mr. Cort had been ill 6:15 this morning after a 'lingering They have always been sup­ whose father had bought the planta­ even of trenches. On Woodbridge i building today in charge of a detec­ acceptance of $100,000 loan from about eight weeks. illness. He was bom in County posed to have been inventions of tion before the Ci'vll War, and who street, right now, a lusty crew ef tive. He was taken to the office of Doheny. That loan was made in District Attorney Joab H. Banton. Armagh, Ireland, coming to this Harriet Beecher Stowe,) whose had lived there practically all of shovel wielders is doing a job that Lotus Lester Hohenthal of Center 1921, when Fall was secretary of the B.\SKETBAIX NEXT, country 16 years ago and obtained book fired the abolitionists and his life. an automatic digger couldn’t get at. street who has just returned from a He declined to talk to newspaper­ interior, , Middletown, Nov. 19.— (AP) — employment in Cheney Brotheis helped bring about the war be- Lamy Chapin said that everyone The Southern New England Tele­ conference with Chairman Chase men.. Mere Formality. Thirty candidates reported for weaving mill. Ke was proficient in ; tween the states. around him always supposed that phone Company is getting its wires and trustees and officials of the In­ Edwin V. Green, an elderly man Representatives of Doheny and basketball and forty have reported I was the first talesman called today. athletics and was one of Manches­ Now, however, come witnesses the plantation was Simon Legree’s, underground from Main street to ternational Reform Federation in to declare that both Uncle Tom Fall who consummated the, deal for swimming at Wesleyan. He was excused for cause, apparent­ ter’s best bowlers. and added that he himself had had Oakland street, whence the trench Washington, D. C., has been ap­ and Simon Legree were real peo­ that belief from his early child­ pointed international secretary to here yesterday pointed out the tran­ With the'exception of Captain ly 111 health. He was unmarried, being survived will be cut under the railroad and saction was a mere formality with by his parents, four brothers; ple. . When he fell heir to the continued north, another branch fol­ finish out the term of his illustrious Sanders all of last year's men are James D. C. Murray, defeise Uncle Tom, it Is asserted, was the view of keeping the affairs of available to Coach Lash for this Thomas, David William and Jack- place, he said, he remodeled things lowing along Woodbridge street for father, the late E. L. G. Hohenthal. counsel, used Number 14 of his a genuine slave, known by that the land company legally straight. year’s basketball team. r.he pros­ son and two sisters, Mary E, and extensively, cut down one of the some distance. Through the section Mr. Hohenthal’s duties will be to peremptory challenges in getting rid name, and owned on a plantation They reiterated Doheny has spe.’i- pects for a strong swimming team Margaret Stratton all of Manches­ j two rows of China trees and de- from Main to Oakland street the supervise the work in Italy, Czecho­ of the second talesmen, Edward W. in Louisiana. I stroyed all of the old slave quar­ fied Fall may have his residence on however were Somewhat dimmed ter. only practicable space under the slovakia, Hungary and Germany. Lewi, a real estate man who had Legree a New Englander ters with the exception of Uncle the ranch and a part of the property when it was learned that Bco He was a member of St. Mary 3 street for the conduit, owing to the known Arnolfl Rothstein, the Legree, it is said, was a real Tom’s cabin. as long as he cares to live on it. Griggs crack yearling swimmer last Episcopal church, Washington presence of a sewer main and tv,o Broadway gambler McManus is ac­ planter—a man whose Teal name I A number of the old affidavits are Last July mortgage foreclosure season and unofficial holder of sev- Lodge, N. 117, L. O. L., Miantano- water mains, was found to be close cused of killing a year ago Nov. 4. was Robert McAlpin, the owner of I from citizens who remembered papers were filed here by Doheny's i eral college sprint records has been mah Tribe, No. 58 Red Men and Dll- to the south curb—so close that ar Murray had challenged for cauee what is now Imown as Derry Uncle Tom, and told of having attorneys and the District Court I declared ineligible. The failure of but the judge held that an acquai.nt- worth-Cornell, Post, Americaji Le­ Plantation, on the Cane river, in I heard that McAlpin mistreated the automatic digger couldn't negotiate gave the. Tres Ritos Land Company gion having served during the war the problem. Hence the time honor­ Bob Matoon to return to college also ,anceship with the “deceased” did Natchitoches parish, now the ' old negro continually. 30 days in which to reply. On has deprived Coach McCurdy’s at Camp Devens as a member of Co property of ' Mrs. Fanny H. C. ed method. not necessarily bar him from jury McAlpin Is Defended August 15 the court ordered • the squad of a good breast stroker. duty in the case. Murray, however, D., 36 Machine Gun Battalion, 76te Cuillot. One dissenting voice is heard. land sold at public auction to satis­ would have none of Lewi. Division. The testimony of these wit­ Phanor Breazeale of Natchitoches, fy the note held by Doheny. ’I'he LNCRE.^lSE in d i p h t h e k i .v. The name of Commissioner of Cnr- Funeral will be held at the late nesses is presented by Lyle Saxon, noted throughout Louisiana as a CONE, CRASH VICTIM, sale was accomplished when Hartford, Nov. 19.— (A P )—Fifty- rections Richard C. Patterson was home, Thursday, Nov. 21 at 2 p. m. former New Orleans ne\vspaper- I lawyer, investigated the matter Doheny’s attorneys bid in :he two cases of scarlet fever were re­ brought into the case in the ques- Mary’s church at 2:30. man, in “ Old Louisiana,” a book : rather extensively several years property. No other bidders appear­ ported to the State health depart­ tioning of Robert Sterling, the third Rev. J. Stuart Neill knd Curate Al­ he has just published. ago and declared that McAlpin had IN CRITICAL CONDITION ed. ment for the week ending at noon talesman called today. Sterling said fred Clark of St. Mary’s church will Saxon dug into old records, i been badly libeled; that he had today, five cases less than were re­ he and the commissioner were be the officiating clergymen. Burial found o ld . affidavits and got to­ I been, in reality, a kind and gener- ported last week. friends and members of the same will be in the East cemetery. gether a pretty strong case for ! ous master and a sober and upright Reports today of the condition of the theory that Mrs. Stowe sim­ There was an increase in diphth­ club. citizen, and that Mrs. Stowe, far Ralph C. Cone of East Center street, ply set down the actual facts con­ eria this week, 28 cases being re­ “If it was shown that Commis­ from having vl.slted him, had never who lies critically ill at the Hart­ MURRAY RETURNS cerning real people when she ported from six counties, as com­ been in Louisiana at all. ford hospital, are that no hope is sioner Patterson had influenced cer­ wrote the book that set the nation pared with 19 last week. COTTON TARIFF RATES There Saxon leaves the matter. entertained for his recovery. Mrs. tain witnesses in this case would aflame. 1 you be inclined to let that influence He does not attempt to decide the Cone and members of his fami'.v ' 3385,000 OF LOOT j “They Are Equal Now” issue: he merely remarks, after I you against this defendant?” Mr. spent last night at the hospital a.s FAIRFIELD’S FIN.\NCES NOW BEFORE SENATORS j He does not come to any defl- viewing the graves where Uncle Bridgeport, Nov. 19—(AP)—Fair- I Murray challenged him for cause the physicians stated infection had Louis Lester Hohenthal. (Continued from Page One.) j nite conclusion himself. ' After Tom and McAlpin are buried, that set in and they feared death was field county’s bank balance at the ■and when Judge Nott overruled the ; visiting the old plantation, and “ they are equal now.” end of the fiscal year ending Sept­ challenge, took an exception and (Continiied from Page 1) imminent. The headquarters of the federa­ of the train crew opened fire as the } standing before the grave where Mr. Cone has never regained full tion are in Washington, D. C., in ember 30 was $50,084.28 or a de­ j then used another of his peremptor}' ; McAlpin lies buried, Saxon re- DID YOU KNOW THAT— robbers fled, and one of the gang crease over the year 1927-1928 by j challeneges, the fifteenth. Senator where cotton mills had consciousness since the night of the the office building opposite the Con­ was wounded. ' marks: A “master wireless clock” capa­ accident, Saturday, November c?, some $50,000, the annual report of been closed, others operated only gressional library. In addition to ad­ One Wounded I "'Was the man who slept there ble of controlling watches by wire­ when the car he was driving col­ Fairfield county commissioners part time, and still more in bank­ j a brute, like Simon Legree ? Or ministering trust funds, the federa­ The wounded bandit, Joe Newton, ruptcy. less has been patented in Russia. lided with another on the Silver tion works for the suppression of shows. ! was he innocent of the things said was found the next day at the home Walsh said he intended to vote It is a sign of a happy married Lane road. He has been employed gambling, salacious literature, ob­ The bank balance at the end of against him? There was no an­ life for a bride to sneeze on h6r of Walter McComb, and confessed. the 1927-28 year was $111,843.54. ABOUT TOWN against many proposed increases in by the C. E. Wilson Nursery Com­ scene pictures and undesirable swer. I turned away and wan­ wedding day, according to an old While police were guarding the The explanation is seen in the in­ cotton textile duties, but was con­ pany of this town and was return­ movies: it dir<^.ts its efforts against dered among the graves of the English superstition. ing from Cromwell when the acci­ house, Murray appeared and was ar­ crease of expenditures of jail, court­ Fred Johnson won a live native vinced that a “very serious depres­ negres. Perhaps among them the sale and use of morphine, heroin rested. turkey as first prize in the setback sion” existed in certain branches to Glasgow, Scotland, is the sec­ dent occurred. and opium and strives to further house and county home, and reduc­ Robert McAlpin’s body servant, Ra*mifications of the plot led to tion of $24,000 in the annual sitting at the J.Iasonic Temple Sat­ which higher tariffs would be a con­ ond largest city in Great Britain. the propagation of temperance Uncle Tom, is also lying. At any Chicago’s “Loop” district com­ Texas and Oklahoma, and from revenue. In the budget adopted urday night. Marshall Young won tributing aid in restoring prosperity. rate, they are equal nov'.” STE.-ISS BOLERO through scientific education, legisla­ statements by Newton and Mrs. Mc­ second prize and Stephen Frey took Senator Wheeler, Democrat, prises sin area of about one square tion and other forms of moral up­ for the 1929-1930 year the annual Presents the Evidence Comb, the government rounded up tax to the cities and towns of the the consolation. Twenty-one tables North Carolina, said it was true that mile. A debutante’s evening gown in lift. The International Reform His book sets forth all of the the entire gang, including Newton’s county will be slightly over $200,- were filled with players. mills were being operated day and Mrs. Carrie B. Mlgore was the pink faille has a simulated bolero Federation is affiliated witli the evidence and lets the reader brothers, Jessc, Willis and Wylie, 000 or $50,000 greater than that col­ nigfit in the south but these were make his own decision. first woman admitted to the bar in strass which also fashions the Methodist Board and many other or­ Mrs. Rose Kronick of the Wilrose a very limited number. in the United States. She was ad­ ganizations. former cowboys, and the gang lead­ lected during 1928-1929. To begin with, Mrs. Stowe’s pretty shoulder straps. er, Brent Glasscock. Later Fahy was Dress shop is in New York on a Answering Wheeler’s arguments book gave a very definite location mitted to law practice in Delaware trapped when he attempted to com­ buying trip. that some workers were paid as low to Simon Legree’s plantation, and •county. Pa., in 1884. Isn't it remarkable how the cor­ municate with Murray. as ten doBars a week for sixty described it very closely. Her The bayonet received its name oner can discover with such un- The breadfruit, with the cocoa- All confessed except Murray, Lady Roberts Lodge, Daughters hours, Simmons said wages in dol- data fit the old McAlpin planta­ from Bayonne, France, where it Brring regularity that a suicide who nut and banana, furnished the chief Fahy and McComb. The first two EARTH TREMORS SH.4KE of St. George will hold Its regnilar lars and cents were not as high in tion exactly, even to the fact that v/as developed in the 17th century. shot himself in the head died of a | food of th natives of the Pacific were convicted. McComb was ac­ meeting in Tinker hall tomorrow the south as in New England, but MsAlpin’s house originally had New-born negro infants are junshot wound 7 | Islands. quitted. NEW ENGLAND’S COAST evening. considering the cheaper living con­ two rows of China trees extend­ usually reddish chocolate or cop­ ditions in his section the wages were ing in front of it, just' as Legree’s per in color. The midv.'eek service tomorrow about the same in proportion _ to plantation house had. fCon(inu3fl fnitn I'nse 1.) evening at the South Methodist those in New England. McAlpin was a New Englander church will have for its subject, Summing up proposed changes in —and so was Legree. Several af­ the street in semblance of a near “Prayer,” in addition to a discus­ the cotton schedule, Blaine said the fidavits and stories collected by STATE panic. sion, led by the pastor, on the House bill proposed higher duties Mr. Saxon indicate that McAlpin miracle cures at the grave of the on 630 cotton articles and lower was known to his neighbor’s as a LAST TIMES TODAY Rev. Patrick Powers in Holy Cross rates on 117, while the Senate fin­ heavy drinker, a bachelor and a SEVEN IN MONTH. cemetery, Malden, Mass. ance committee increased 715 and Halifax, N. S., Nov. 19.— (A P )— ' cruel slave owner. And he had a decreased only 45. hodv servant known as Uncle Shattered chimneys, collapsed barns ] John Gambi of Eldridge street As long as labor has no bargain­ and broken dishes today remained Tom. has returned from a trip to New ing voice, he said, it could not re­ Visited There In 1840. as evidence of the most severe | Y'ork City. ceive a dollar of benefit from the Mrs. Stowe, according to neigh­ earthquake ever recorded in Nova proposed higher levies. borhood tradition, visited McAl­ Scotia. i Mrs. S. Gellen of Nelleg’s Mil­ No Southern Mergers pin in 1840. Later, it is said, she The shock continued for about^ linery Shop is in New Y'ork on a Blaine said there were a number sent a copy of “Uncle Tom’s on this new two minutes starting at 4:32 p. m. | business trip. of mergers in the industry but Sim­ Cabin” to a friend in Alexandria, yesterday and extended with about mons replied if there was a “ ten­ La., and wrote in the fly leaf, “Do equal intensity to New Brunswick The children's choir of the dency in the south towards mer­ you recognize this?” Some years L A T E S T and Newfoundland. Swedish Lutheran church will meet gers” he had not “observed it nor ago, according to an elderly In Nova Sootia, a dozen chimneys at 6 o’clock tonight. The G Clef heard of it.” Alexandria resident whose testi­ crashed at Sydney and two at Kent-1 Glee club will rehearse at 7 o’clock “There are some very wealthy mony Saxon unearthed, a citizen C A B IN E T ville. Several barns collapsed in j and the choir will meet at 8:30 families in the south that have a of the vicinity, said, “ How come the outlying sections. Stocks of | o'clock. number of mills rather closely own­ that woman up north got the MODEL goods in many stores W’ere thrown j ed in their families” he continued, man’s name wrong? His name Her plea to the floor and dishes in homes ! Troop 6, Boy Scouts, wall meet in "But I am not aware of any move­ was McAlpin, not Legree. I knew will move broken. j ment in the south in the direction of the South Methodist church at 7:15 him well. He was the worst man your heart I Panics In Offices. o’clock tonight. merging the cotton mills. It may in the whole country.” Office staffs in Halifax buildings | be that it is going on, myself.” Local tradition has it that at the RUTH CHATTERTON A i w i t e i r IKe m t were thrown into confusion arid | Blaine answered the Labor Re­ time of the Civil War everybody in several persons fainted. A scene ; NEW LONDON WOMAN search Association "had so report­ the neighborhood of McAlpin’s in her greatest portrayal shifter at a theater fell tv/enty feet ed” and he had quoted from the re­ plantation took it for granted that , with LEWIS STONE SCHfllEM-GElP KAMO but escaped injury. ' port. McAlpin was Simon Legree. No A RAYMOND In New Brunswick the shock was KILLED IN NORWALK Saying this information had not one outside of the parish ever severe enough to send occupants of come to his knowledge, Simmons as­ heard of it, however, imtil 1892, HACKETT the taller buildings at Monctc^n to serted there were "certain wealthy when Judge D. B. Corley of Abilene, ALLTALKIMC ^ the street to ascertain the cause of Norwalk, Nov. 19.— (A P )—Mrs. families” that had erected a great Texas, came to the plantation, ^PICTURE C o m e t o the disturbance. Employes on the Catherine Ross, 40, of 176 Banks many mills. He added that the found the cabin that was said to sixth floor of a building said it street. New- L-ondon, was instant'y “ Cannon family” in his state had have been occupied by McAlpin’s swayed so much they became fainr. j killed on the Boston Post road be­ “ probably a half dozen or perhaps servant. Uncle Tom. bought it, and The tremor was distinctly tea j tween Norw'alk and Darien today, six or eight mills located at different took it to Chicago for exhibition at throughout Newfoundland and .sev­ when the car in which she was rid­ points in the state.” the World’s Fair. eral telegraph cables off the i.sland ing, overturned after a collision. “But what I understand the Sen­ Judge Obtained Affidavits KEMP’S Richard Ross, husband of the dead ator to mean by ‘merger’ ” Simmons were broken. At that time Judge Corley raked woman, is being held under bonds continued, “is independently owned FELT .\T SE.\ of $2,500 by local police on charges mills coming together and operating t o d a y ! New York, Nov. 19—(AP)—The [ of manslaughter. under a general corporation, one Cunard line today received a mes- j The husband was unhurt in the corporation, a controlling company. sage from Captain Alex Collie, of I fatal accident but a third passenger I do not think that happened to any WHAT A RADIO! the liner Caledonia, telling of a in the car, Mrs. Addle Clark of considerable extent in the south, severe earth shock at sea at 8:30 Orange, Conn., received slight in­ especially in North Carolina.” REAL Tone p. m. yesterday, Greenwich meri­ juries. You hear everythingon this set—naturally! dian time (3:30 p. m., E. S. T.) Ross was driving toward New The message said: “44.26 North York when a machine operated by FUEL IS SMOKELESS SUPER Power Latitude, 57.04 West Longitude, ex­ Miss Esther Borger of New Pres­ perienced earthquake shock causing ton, Conn., who was on her way to Each Screen-Grid tube, as used here, is 100 ship violent vibrations for two min­ Norwalk emerged from the driveway BUT COST IS STEEP times more powerful! utes. No apparent damage.’’ of a filling station. The Ross auto The Caledonia’s position as given hit the Borger car a glancing blow WEDNESDAY was estimated as south of the Grand Knoxville, Tenn.— (AP)—Smoke­ NEEDLE'POINT selectivity and the steering wheel was torn less coal has been produced by a AND Banks. She sailed at noon Saturday llUlilfrom Ross’ UtlllU.hand. ivixa, Mrs. r% Ross, .USS, w w.ho nr) . . 4.__ . THURSDAY - Hear one station at a timel for Londonderry and Glasgow. • i-i.* • ^ ’ I vouner instructor in the university $ 13 3 .0 0 cr eolleg. of englnoor- Handsome Cabinet and Red Bluff, Cal., Nov. 19.— (A P )— I Crete when the door of the car flew Many earthquakes recorded on the j Fuel obtained from mine run NEW LOW PRICE! open. Ross apd Mrs. Clark were ooal by Leo Holdredge may be COMPLETE seismograph of the Mount Lessen pinned beneath the machine when It volcano observatory during the last i placed in an open brazier and car- i turned over on the opposite side of ried about from room to room few days presage volcanic activity \ the road. M of the extinct crater, R. H. Finch, ' without fumes or smoke. volcanologist in charge of the sta- j The experiments, Holdredge says, tion, said today. ! are believed to be the first of their The seat of the disturbances un- ' kind In the south, although consid­ Action! Love! Laughs! doubtedly was at Mount Lassen, as fOXV VUAHH, erable progress has been made the seismograph indicated the orgi- , A cat may have nine lives along similar lines at German uni­ gin as 12 miles from the station, | but think how often a versities and at the University of You m ustn^t assiss this opportunity! Finch asserted. Illinois. R K H 4 R D •AND ON THE SAME bullfrog croaks Forty pounds of coal yielded 28 DE LUXE.PROGRAM! Startling price reduction on CABLES BROKEN. pounds of smokeless fuel. But the compact table model! Listen to experiment was more expensive Thornton Wilder’s every model of Atwater Kent New York, Nov. 19.— (AP)— j the finest set you’ve ever Oceanic cable service was seriously | than the coal. Commercialization Sensational Novel Screen-Grid Radio. Come in heard! impaired today as the aftermath of 1 of the fuel would require produc­ yesterday’s earthquake along the | tion methods much cheaper than and see them. See -the many Get yours — here — today — the experiments conducted here. DIX “The Bridge of North Atlantic seaboard. i lovely cabinet models — the and save real m oney! The Western Union Telegraph | The smokeless fuel was obtained San Luis Rey” Company reported three of its cables | by dri'vlng gasses from the coal by were broken, the French Telegraph heat of from 500 to 1,000 degrees. With CONVENIENT TERMS Cable Company also reported three, Lily Damaita and Commercial Cables had not The LoOe Doctor Ernest Torronce completed a check-up on damage to LISTEN FOLKS A JOYMAKER IF THERE Raquel Torres its system. One Imperial Cable There is Coming to (British) was said to have been EVER WAS ONE. HEART- The romantic novel that broken. THE RANBOW TROUBLES CATCHING swept the world off its The Best Dance Attraction in feet has been brought New England. ^ AND THE DOCTOR to life on the screen. Dr. William Beebe, well-known Music by See its scenes of tem­ marine biologist, recently brought SUCCUMBS TO HIS KEMP’S, Inc. from an expedition to Bermuda a BILL WADDELL’S ORCH. pestuous passion — of THECaMTQ.U9 BEAUTIFUL NURSE. silver hatchet fish, whose battery of THE COMMANDERS tender love—the tremen­ violet lights point downward while dous climax of the Thursday Evenings HOW YOU WILL LAUGH! crashing bridge with Its Its eyes look forever upward. A Saturday Evenings jet-black whalelet with a brilliant human freight 1/ torch on its forehead also was Original Dixieland Cotton Pickers brought back. Next Week. I PAGE rilREE . MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1929. ------^

TURKEY, GOOSE, PIG EMERGENCY DOCTORS Their Golden Wedding Local Stocks Drs. Boyd and M orlarty will be on emergency call tomorrow afternoon. Observed Last Night (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) SOCIAL ON NOV. 27 Central Row, Hartford, Conn. 1 P. M. Stocks Bank Stocks. Hose Company No. 1 Names ABOUT TOWN Bid Asked The Ladies Aid society of the Bankers Trust Co . .. 325 — South Methodist church will meet City Bank and Trust . — 525 -- ; Hohenthal Its General tomorrow afternoon at 2:30. do, rts ...... 105 Cap Nat B&T ...... — 460 — Center Church Professional Girls N V ' t > ' * ' Conn River ...... 425 Committee Chairman. — 47 I club will meet this evening with First Bond and M tg . — 170 ------j Miss Helen Carrier of Cambridge Htfd Conn. Trust .... First Nat Htfd ...... 230 250 r , . , . o i nnrt dance e i v - street. Mrs. Louis St.'Clair Burr, ft “ f Land M tg and Title .. 40 — ^ s e and Ladder C om p Ly i President of the Manchester League Mutual B&T ...... 230 — en by I of Women Voters will speak on No. 1, S. M. F. D., Wrill be held on i' 'f New Brit Trust ...... — 200 Thanksgiving eve at Cheney hail _ I Parliamentary law. Riverside Trust ...... 600 — 1 'West Htfd Trust .... 375 — with dancing beginning at 8:30 ; Mary C. Keeney Tent, Daughters j Bonds. o’clock to the music of the Cora- j of Union War Veterans will conduct | Htfd & Conn West .. 95 ■ manders, widely known 12-piece a- public whist party this evening at i East Conn Pow 5s . . . 100 103 orchestra. Thanksgiving eve falls 8 o’clock at the hose house, Main I Conn L P 7s ...... 116 118 on Wednesday, Nov. 27. and Hilliard streets. Six prizes will Conn L P 5V23 ...... 105 108 The social is famous locally for be awarded the winners at cards and its drawing on turkey, goose and Conn L P 4%s ...... 98 100 refreshments and a social period will Htfd Hyd 5s ...... 102 105 pig, and a multitude of other farm follow. Tables will display for sale j and poultry produce. Departing Insurance Stocks a collection of hand-made aprons 150 from the usual custom of selling Aetna Casualty ...... 135 and other g ift articles which the | 1 Aetna Insurance .... 520 540 chances separately, the admission members have been making the past 1 Aetna Life ...... 92 94 ticket will be combined with the summer and fall. The proceeds of j 1 Automobile ...... 42 45 chances at a nominal price. the card party and sale will be spent | 1 Conn. General ...... 1700 2000 Dancing will continue until 1 for flowers, fruit and Thanksgiving . Mr. and Mrs. August L. Lashinske I do, rts ...... 58 63 o'clock with refreshments served dinners for war veterans or their . 1 do, new $10 par W.I 170 — during the evening. widows. 1 Mr. and Mrs. August L. Lashin­ 1 Hartford Fire ...... 700 710 Seven committees have been ske, of 429 Center street, observed dispose of the farm there came Mr. j do, rts ...... IOV2 12 named to take care of the arrange­ A welcome home party was given the golden anniversary of their wed­ Lashinske decided to retire 1 do, new, W. L . .. 70 75 ments to repeat the success the af­ Frank Manfreda at his home on ding last night in a party attended moved to South Manchester, ; National Fire ...... 67 73 fair has made in former years. The School street Saturday evening. He by 75 relatives. The affair was could not remain idle however 1 Htfd Steam Boiler .. 550 — Thankful indeed is the" woman who has general committee is comprised of has been absent from town for the held at the Osano cottage in Bol­ took work in the Cheney mills, 1 Phoenix Fire ...... 690 — past six months, taking a mechani­ E. L. G. Hohenthal, chairman; ton. A roast turkey dinner was finally retired in 1922. 1 do, new, W. I. . .. 70 75 cal course at the Universal Flying a new Gold Medal Glenwood. Harry Schieldge, assistant chair­ served at seven o’clock. Mr. and Their Family ! Travelers ...... 1230 1250 School in Anglum, Missouri. About Mrs. Lashinske received many gifts, man: A, F, Lashinske, secretary: Mr. and Mrs. Lashinske have Public Utility Stocks This new range cooks, all at one time, the abundant food 40 relatives and friends were pres­ among them being two purses of J. E. Moore, treasurer; Fred Wohl- three children. The are: Charles Conn. Elec Sve ...... 95 100 necessary for your family and guests on Thanksgiving day. lebe, Stewart Cordner, L. N. Heeb- ent and spent the time pleasantly in gold from their children and their Conn. Power ...... 101 103 singing and dancing. Refreshments Lashinske, of 112 West Center ner, John Learned, George Hunt, j grandchildren. street, this town, Mrs. George H. do, pfd ...... 113 117 Bake the turkey in one oven and use the other for bread, were served by Mr. Manfreda’s In Good Health W. J, McCormick and Lawrence i Kiefer, of Springfield, Mass., and do, rts ...... nVi 19 mother, Mrs. Louise M. Gado. Mr. Lashinske retired from active pastry or puddings. Cooking top will accommodate nine Williams. | Arthur F. Lashinske, of 425 Center Hartford El Lt ...... 97 102 work at Cheney Brothers plant here — L. N. Heebner is chairman of the street, this toum. There are five do, vtc ...... 100 utensils, and broiling oven is available if desired. A son, Robert Paul, was born yes­ seven years ago. He is 77 years of — 'ticket committee, Harry Maidment grandchildren. Mr. Lashinske has Greenwich W&G prfd . 96 terday to Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. age and is enjoying good health. --- - of the floor and music committee, one half-brother, John Hill, of Hart­ Htfd Gas ...... 70 A small payment at this time places Leupold of 4 Sterling Place. Mrs. Lashinske, who is 73, is in fair — Lawrence Williams of the cloak ford Road, South Manchester, and do, pfd ...... 60 health. Before her marriage she th is new Glenwood in your home room committee, C. B. Warren of Mrs. Lashinske has two brothers S N E T Co ...... 160 170 Center church business girls will was Miss Augusta Bronke. the door and office committee, John living in South Manchester, Adolph Manufacturing Sitoclis before Thanksgiving day. meet this evening with Miss Doro­ The Lashinskes were wedded in Learned of the publicity, commit­ Bronke, of Hartford Road, and Fred Acme Wire ...... 40 47 $20 thy Willis of 33 Delmont street. Germany fifty years ago yesterday. 59 62 tee, Stewart Cordner of the re­ Two years after their marriage they Bronke, of Cooper street. Am Hardware ...... At last night’s party an orchestra Amer Hosiery ...... 25 — ALLOWANCE freshment committee. Good progress is being made on came to this country and to Man­ played fdr dancing following the — 30 chester. Mr. Lashinske purchased American Silver ...... the alterations of the Purnell build­ 37 40 the farm now known as Bigelow’s turkey dinner. The rest of the eve­ Arrow H&H, com . . . for your ing, owned by G. E. Keith, which is ning was spent in enjoying the 101 104 to be occupied by one of the stores just inside the town line on W ick­ do, pfd ...... family reunion and in reminiscences. 4 — NEW ENGLAND DINNER ham hill. This farm they operated Automatic Refriger .. old range of the Economy Grocery Company. 84 for 15 years. It was then purchased On last Friday Mr. and Mrs. Bigelow Htfd, com . . 80 Glenwood It was found that in breaking aw-ay Lashinske were the guests of the — 103 towards a the door arch that the steel "I” by Clarence H. Wickham to allow do, pfd ...... Ladies Aid society of the Zion Luth­ 7 9 AT NORTH COVENTRY beam had extended to a column on for an entrance to Laurel Park. Billings and Spencer . RANGES eran church. The ladies presented 25 30 GOLD MEUiVL each side of the door and it w’as Then Mr. and Mrs. Lashinske moved Bristol Brass ...... them with a purse of gold and a — only necessary to add a short sec­ to a farm they purchased in Talcott- do, pfd ...... 95 basket of flowers. 115 GLENWOOD Make Cooking Easy An old-fashioned New England tion. So far has the work advanced ville. They lived in Talcottville IT Collins Co ...... 105 boiled dinner, such as the women of that the grocery company has al­ Case, Lockwood & B . 525 — Coventry will serve tomorrow eve­ ready ordered their fixtures and Colt’s Firearms ...... 25 28 ning in the North Coventry Chapel with the progress already made ex­ TO GIVE ILLUSTRATED Eagle Lock ...... 45 4.5 hall, is sure to attract a number, of pects to be able to ente.- the new G CLEF GLEE CLUB Fafnir Bearing ...... — 90 out-of-town people. In fact every store early in December. Fuller Brush Class A ---- 18 time they put on a meal or entertain­ CONCERT ON DEC. 3 LECTURE ON JAPAN do. Class A A ...... ____ 72 ment out there, as many Manches­ James McCullough, who has been Hart & Cooley ...... — 180 ter people will be noticed among the conducting the special gospel meet­ Hartmann Tob. com . 15 — diners as Coventry residents. Be­ ings at the Gospel hall, 415 Center do, 1st pfd ...... — 90 tween the hours of 5:30 and 7:30 a street, will deliver his final address Girls Memorizing All Their Girls Friendly Society Spon­ Inter Silver ...... — 110 committee consisting of Mrs. J. E. in the series tonight at 7:45. Mr. Numbers— To Have Fine sors Affair in St. Mary’s Landers, Frary & Clk 63 66 Kingsbury, Mrs. Olive Hill and Mrs. McCullough is a native of Belfast, Parish House Next Monday. Mann & Bow, Class A . 13 16 Archie Palmer of this town, with a Ireland. He has been here on sev­ Supporting Artists do. Class B ...... 9 12 host of assistants will serve the din­ eral previous occasions and always Members of St. M ary’s parish and New Brit Mch. com .. ____ 38 ner which will include the following: receives a warm welcome when he The G Clef Glee Club of the do, pfd ...... 9.') _ Swedish Lutheran church is busily their friends are invited to hear .an corned beef and cabbage, potatoes, returns. This will be the last op­ Niles Bern Pond .... 26 30 engaged, rehearsing for its second illustrated lecture on "Japan,” to be turnips, carrots, beets, pickles, portunity to hear him for some North & Judd ...... 19 23 Q O L r c you can n J U io [-'uy f^oed fu n inhtr* 4 browm bread, rolls, home-made pie annual concert to be ' held in the given next Monday evening in t!ic time. parish house, by Mrs. Alfred Clar:t Peck, Stow and Wil . 10 .15 and coffee. High School Auditorium, Tuesday wife of the curate. Rev. Alfred Russell M fg Co ...... 80 95 Coventry Grange is cooperating Mrs. John Dowd of Summit street December 3rd. The club is working 50 .55 very hard, holding rehearsals twice Clark. This lecture is being spon­ Scovill ...... and the program will be given in is chairman of the fancy work de­ — 75 sored by-the Girl’s Friendly Society. Smythe Mfg Co ...... the Grange hall nearby at 7:45. It partment for the Amaranth sale at a week and as usual all numbers will 40 Mrs. Clark is very well acquainted Seth Thom Co. com . 32 will be an achievement program and be memorized which means time _ the Masonic Temple, Friday, re­ do, pfd ...... 24 eleven 4-H clubs, of boys and girls and concentration. 1 with the problems and conditions in quests the members to see that their Standard Screw ...... 100 — between the ages of 9 and 17 will be The Club is very fortunate in hav­ Japan, due to the fact that her gifts are at the Temple early in the Stanley Works ...... 54 57 represented. The profits will be de­ ing for its assisting artists, Harold brother. Bishop Arthur Lea has been Radio Keith ...... 17 afternoon, or she will send for them 110 — voted to sending boys and girls who Branch of the National Broadcast­ located in the Diocese of Kyushu, Taylor & Fenn ...... Remington Rand ...... 28'1 if telephoned at 4478. Torrington ...... 60 63 TKSA YIHGS tHD d o m s of 5PECO O'DBYOr qualify, to the, short course at Con­ ing Association, of New York City Japan, for some time. There will ;c Rep I and Stl ...... 72 I Underwood ...... 97’/2 99 necticut Agricultural college at and Emil Heimberger’s radio broad­ no admittance charged, but a silver Sears Roebuck ...... 53% Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hawley of Union M fg Co ...... — 20 DEPOT s q u a r e g a r a g e . .. Storrs next summer. The enter­ casting ensemble. Director Helge collection will be taken, and mem­ Simmons ...... 71 Vi '»li A AA ^ ^ 1 A Ai AJ ^ fc fc I ' i fc ▲ a- Benton street attended the funeral 200 — tainment will be made up of a Pearson has chosen a wonderful U S Envelope, com . . . Sinclair Con Oil ...... 25'.j yesterday of Mr.- Hawley’s mother, bers of the society will have home­ 112 health play, drills, chorus singing, selection of music which will appeal do, pfd ...... Skelly Oil ...... 32 — 1? who died while visiting her sister in made candy for sale. It is hop.:d •Veeder Root ...... 36 38 violin and piano selections and Mt. Hermon, Mass. to both young and old. Sou Pac ...... 119'.j that the people of the parish will Whitlock Coil Pipe .. — 14 dialogues. The Sunshine Scissors The club has sent out associate take this opportunity to hear this Stand Brands ...... -57 Vs club of Coventry will stage a Mrs. Howell Cheney of Forest membership letters this year and lecture, which will be interesting Stand Gas and Elec ...... 88' i the way returns are coming in, fashion show. street opened her home this after­ and worthwhile. Stand Oil Calif ...... 60% Another attraction will be an ex­ means a large audience which gives noon for the annual meeting of the The regular meeting of the s >- S O N J ...... 59 hibition of work done by the boys the girls more confidence. The new Manchester League of Women ciety was held at 7:30 last evening S O N Y ...... 34%. and girls the past summer. These costumes which the Club will ap­ Tex Corp ...... 53% Voters. The business included re­ in tlie parish house. Due to the ab­ N. Y. Stocks articles will be displayed for inspec­ pear in are beautiful, the color Timken Dot Axle ...... 15% ports of the recent state convention sence of Branch President Margaret tion in the upper room of the chapel scheme being ivory and plum. These Transcont Oil ...... ^7'4 at the Hotel Bond, Hartford, and Stratton the meeting was in charge hall. election of officers. colors wdll be used in decorating the Alleg Corp 22 Vb Union Carb ...... 74 stage and also in printing the pro­ of Associate Gertrude Llddon. Tne United Aircraft ...... 41 usual short devotional period wss Am Bosch Mag ...... 31 Mrs. C. Young and daughter, grams. , J. ' United Corp ...... 25%. . ".Some guys jiust naturally get a led by Violet Madden, and the Am Can ...... 104 ITAUANS IN NORWALK Lydia, of Cleveland, Ohio, are spend­ The G Clef is the only ladies Am and For Pow ...... 63 United Gas and Imp ...... 28% lucky break,” .says Speed O’Day. scripture lesson was read by Edna ing a week in town visiting Mr. and chorus in New England which Am Internatl ...... 35 U S Freight ...... 101 Fox. The remainder of the evening That may .aecm the case as you Mrs. Fritz Johnson of Clinton street memorizes all music, so a very Am Metal ...... 44 U S Realty and I m p ...... 62 Vb the i was spent in working for articles te BATTERY consider how v.’ell your friend’s car [TOWIHG VICTIMS OF SWINDLERS and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Swartz of promising concert is assured Am Rad Stand S a n ...... 32 Vi U S Rubber ...... 25% be sold at the annual sale of the G. rur.s a"-d how free it is ftom trou­ Greenhill street. public. Am Roll Mill ...... 74% U S, Steel ...... 161% 24 HR. S., the date of which has not yet ble. rrobah’.y you n wer inquired Am Smelt ...... 72% Util Pow and Lt ...... 29 Vs SERVICE the li'.'W and where!ore of the situa­ been decided upon. A number of the Norwalk, Nov. 19.— (A P )— Mrs. The Sunday school teachers of Am T and T ...... 21734 Warner Piet ...... ‘lO tion out if .'-ou did you'd find out younger members assisted the ves­ Lillie French of 228 Newark avenue, the Swedish Lutheran church will BASS CLUB wiNNERS Am Water Wks ...... 62 Westing Air ...... 43 that he let's' us keep his car in A1 Brooklyn, was arrested tod^ in meet at the church Friday night at trymen in getting the 1930 pledge Anaconda ...... 81 VI Westihg El and M fg ...... 118 : hano. connection with the "Glass spark 8 o’clock. cards ready for mailing. Andes Cop ...... 36 Woolworth ...... 67 r e p a i r plug” stock swindle of Umberto The prize winners in the contest j Atl R ef ...... 40*/s Yellow Truck ...... 11% 1 Garofalo of the same address, who J. Fradin of Fradin’s Apparel conducted by the Manchester Fish j B and O ...... 1153^ IDEPOT SQUARE OARAGE was arrested here Saturday after Shop is in New York on a buying and Game Club during the fishing | Bendix Aviation ...... 32% I ERNEST A. ROY. PR.OP. | he is alleged to have obtained trip today. season for the purpose of finding i S. M. E. EPWORTHERS Beth Steel ...... 86 Vb $1,000 from local Italians. who of the members could catch the i Bur Add Mch ...... 43% GET TOGETHERS TO HEAR n iO N K NO. :0 51 OR 8ir)9 Garofalo who is charged with Tl;ie Majors will practice at the largest bass have been announced ; Can Pac ...... 199% COR NO. MAIN

.I'-A t£VC,NlNU HKKALl), SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN.. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1929. PAUIS t'OUK HEBRON WAPrn Overnight Queer Twists The monthly meeting of the^ town The following committee were ap­ In D a y’s News pointed to have charge of the A . P. News school committee took place at the Christmas exercises and Christmas 'm town clerk's office Thursday eve­ tree at' the last meeting of the Sun­ day School Board: Miss Harriett OETTySBURG ADDRESS [;:■ =1' H.. ning. Supervisor Robertson and Wash,lngton—For long skirts, it >• 'iK’ New Haven—^New Haven and Con­ Sharp, Mrs, Marlon Pierce, Mrs. Miss Teresa Vincent, school nurs^, seems, the government of France is Lillian Grant, Miss Ellen J. Fostef Slxty-slx years ago today, on necticut cities feel earth tremor responsible. Senator Walsh of Nov. 19, 1863, President Lincoln de­ which shook New England, but no were present. Robert E. Foote has and Miss Faith M. Collins. These I been elected chairman and Cllffoid Massachusetts told the Senate he exercises are to be held on Monday livered his famous address dedicat­ damage reported. had been informed on highest ing Gettysburg as a national ceme­ Marlborough — John ElWTOd, evening, December 23, at the Wap- R. Perry secretary, for the coming authority that French designers had tery. Hartford Insurance man kills self in ping Parish House. year. A t the suggestion of the followed a government suggestion At the last meeting of Wapping Immediately after the famous "Oasis” hotel. supervisor it was voted to close the battle of Gettysburg, the Confed­ Hartford—Consumers Oil Com­ to use more cloth. Grange No. 30, the following named schools of the town at 3:30 p. ni., London—Six mailbags from the persons were voted Into the Grange, erates retreated with the Union pany to test legality of gasoline tax. through the months of Decembe-, forces In pursuit, leaving burial of Waterbury—Aviation necessary if United States containing pamphlets i Miss Leone Whitehouse, Catherine January and February. This will the dead and care of the wounded New England states are to main­ entitled "The Booze Fighter” have | Whltehouse, Ralph Davlau, Mrs. shorten the school day by halt an to the military and local authori­ tain their industrial record, Gover­ been delivered to members of Margaret Cotton, Francis Foster, How Thankful hour each day, but it was thought Parliament as addressed. |Mrs. Anna Sheldick, Mrs. Margaret ties of the state of Pennsylvania. nor Trumbull says in speech. A part of the battlefield was Trumbull—Driver of car carrying would conserve the pupils’ eye­ New York—Why women leave Turner, also four more names pro­ sight. Miss Katheryn Quigley wa.s posed, and Mr. and Mrs. William obtained for a cemetery and Lin­ alcohol defies constables and gunfire home, by Mrs. Louis Slade, regional coln was asked to help dedicate to escape; car later found in Bridge­ definitely engaged to continue as director of the New York League of Armour were reinstated. you will be if you put your valuables in our Safe teacher in the Jaggcr school, in the Mrs. Arthur Davlau formerly of the pemetery by a few appropriate port. * „ . Women Voters; grandma wove remarks. A distinguished orator, Norwich—$10,000 fire in Provi­ place of Miss Friedrich. Miss Vin­ cloth at home. Men started mills. It | this village, but who now lives in cent reported on the condition of Windsorvllle, has been in poor Edward Everett, was scheduled to Deposit Vault—where they are secure against dence bakery. was once a disgrace of the house­ the children's teeth, with the state­ health for some time. She has gone make the principal address. Bridgeport—Fire engine on way wife failed to can her own fruits Everett made an address worthy to fire crashes into automobile, no ment that out of 166 pupils 9U .are and vegetables. Man started the to Boston, Mass., with relatives, in risk* of loss from theft and fire. Why not rent a hopes to regain her health by the alike of his own fame and the ex­ one hurt. * badly in need of dentistry. Ihe canning factory. Mother baked the White school has the best stanclipg change and rest. traordinary occasion, but it was Bridgeport—Concetto Frazzetta, bread. Father started a bakery. forgotten in the tumult of acclaim Private Lock Box here? The cost is only $3.00, 57 fatally hurt when struck by an in regard to the condition of the Now women must go out into the The Evergreen Lodge of Masons, No. 114 A. F and A. N. held their of Lincoln’s brief speech. automobile. pupil’s teeth. It was voted that the business world to see that men car­ regular meeting Monday evening at The president’s address was so $5.00, $10.00 or $25.00 per year. Hartford — Bank Commissioner supervisor be authorized to go ahead ry on these home occupations in an pertinent, so brief, yet so compre­ Shippee pictures Arthur F. Connor, with the project of school dentistry honest manner. their Temple at East Windsor Hill. The Wednesday afternoon club, hensive, linking deeds of the pres­ president of the American Fiduciary and an effort will be made to secure Washington—Advices to the De­ ent to thoughts of the future in Co., of Bridgeport as victim of Gun- funds to pay for professional serv will meet with Mrs. Robert A. partment of Commerce from Cairo Boardman of East Windsor Hill such simple yet exquisitely mold­ der Companies which went into ices from:rom Dr. A. E. i Parents arenis of Put jegcribes mud incubators used by ed phrases that the best critics bankruptcy. nam at — the— different schools of tiiu TPo-vntinrm fi noo vears aeo. Thev this week;'' There will be reading the Egyptians 6,000 years ago. They from the book “Up the years from have awarded it an unquestioned Meriden—Two youths escape from town. This work was done by Dr. were cone-shaped affairs heated by | rank as one of the world’s mas­ Connecticut school for boys. Parent for two years in a very sat­ Bloomsbury,” autobiography of the burning of chaff and capable of George Arliss and music. terpieces in rhetorical art. Bridgeport—MayorI ^ r i u g c p v u U------XVXCfcJVAA Buckingham isfactory 1manner. H C 1 .1 A A 1 V A . The crowded------con- hatching 95 percent of the eggs. ! Rev. Francis Fate of Glastonbury to invite Mayor Walker of New . ciition of the primary room at the Hoboken, N. J.—After 54 years ' center was discussed. This room h is was the preacher at the First Con­ York to Victory dinner to celebrate at sea. Captain Piet van Den Heuvel, A LUCKY BREAK TheManchesterTrust Compahy gregational church of South Wind­ Democratic successes. 44 pupils, of the first five grades, commodore of the Holland-American New Haven—Automobile Club of with the first five grades, with one sor on Sunday morning at 10:40 is an absolutely yawn-proof line fleet, will retire when the o’clock. SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN. New Haven county to file complaints teacher. The supervisor recommend­ steamship Statendam reaches Rot­ money-back guarantee for two against inadequate lights on vehicles ed that another room be rented and terdam. Then he is going to make a and a hglf hours of solid en­ using Milford Turnpike. another teacher secured to take care Many long-haired people are not tour of ports at which his ships have joyment. New Haven—Theft of portion of of part of the pupils. called. Horn on his father’s freighter level-headed. old Yale fence from photographers The study of the book ot Corin­ he has spent the 60 years of his studio where It has been since 1879 thians was continued at the meett.ag life on the water except for nine discovered. of the Bible class held Thursday years at school. Washington - Secretary of War evening at tlie home of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Good dies. New York.—Mr. and Mrs. H. Ed­ Albert Hilding. ward Manville are leaving shortly Washington—Secretary Mellon to Mrs. Francis G. Waldo entertained for Stockholm In tlieir yacht, hoping submit $423,000,000 government Mrs. George Jjord of East Hampton, building program to Congress. to see a grandchild. Their daugh­ also Mrs. Asa W Ellis, at her home ter, Countess Rolke Bernadotte, Boston—Earthquake shakes At­ Tuesday afternoon, the occasion oe- awaits the stork. lantic coast line from New York ing Mrs. Waldo's birthday anniver­ City to Newfoundland. New Haven.— A section of the Prejudice Thrives Where Ignorance Hives! sary. Mrs. Ralph Wright, a former Washington—Western "Independ­ neighbor, spent the next alterncon original Yale fence, an antique ent” Senators reject “Young Guard ” with Mrs. Waldo, to offer congratu­ valued at $10,000, has been stolen tariff compromise offer. from a photographer's quarters. Nome, Alaska — Ice-bound ship lations. ^ Names of those pupils from th’.r, For half a century it has been used Nanuk reports Lieutenant Bielson's with every picture of a Yale cap­ town attending high school at Wind­ rescue plane wrecked on ice; fate of tain. flier unknown. ham appearing on the honor roll lor New York;—Eleven girls’ private the first marking period are Thelma ANCIENT PREJUDICE New York—One juror chosen in schools in Brooklyn have sub­ trial of George A. McManus for Cummings, Wendell Deeter, Evelyn scribed to a code of social ethics de­ slaying of Arnold Rothstein. Hutchinson and Anna and Jo'in signed to establish a sensible stand- Alamogordo, N. M.—Dohney buys Mosny. , .. ,|ard of social activity. Parties will Fall’s Tres Ritos property for $32,- The property revaluation required I be limited to p'ridavh'riday and Saturday 461. by the state is being taken, l lm nights, will end promptly at mid­ Urgana, 111—University of Illinois committee appointed by the select­ EEN REMOVED night and will be chaperoned from HAS student fined $500 for selling liquor men for tlie purpose are George beginning to end. Dresses will be A M E R IC A N intelligence beckons all to caltivatm knowledge. Tyranny, at fraternity house; charges Kibbe, Fitch N. Jones, and Robe-t simple and modest. against two others dismissed. Owen. Mr. Jones has secured Fred­ intolerance and poverty wither as schools grow in this great land of opportunity. Englewood, N. J.—Colonel Lind­ Hollywood, Calif.—Pal, star of erick A. Rathbun to serve in l is the screen, is dead. For ten years he bergh has X-ray taken of shoulder place, as he was too busy to undc’’- he dislocated in Mexico City. played with many of the leading take the work. lights of filmdom. He was a bull San Antonio, Tex. — Two flying A meeting of the committee ap­ cadets from Kelly Field killed in terrier, 14 years old. pointed for the revaluation of ta:- Turin, Italy.—The doctor who plane crash. able real estate of the town was Texarkana, Tex. — Bodies of two presided when Crown Prince Hum­ missing brothers found riddled with held at the town clerk’s office on bert arrived in the world has been bullets; authorities blame moon­ Saturday. ennobled for 30 years’ service to Twenty-eight young women and shine war. the House of Savoy. He is now Two Harbors, Minn; — John A. five children were present at th.e Count Giovanni Quirico. Barton, bank president, kills deaf- meeting of the young women’s club mute crippled daughter and com­ held at the home of Mrs. Gertrude mits suicide. Hough, Mrs. Frank Grabber, the ap­ London— MacDonald says Sing­ pointed leader, was unable to be CMBiA apore naval base work was slowed present. Hostesses were Mrs. Arthur down without formally consulting Keefe and Miss Helen Hough. Rev. and Mrs. Elliot .C. Foster and dominions. The monthly business meeting of two sons of Amherst Mass., spent Mexico C ity- Nation quietly ac­ the American Legion, G. Me’-Ie the day recently at the home of Mr. cepts election of Pascual Ortiz Jones Post, was^ held at tne town and Mrs. Henry Hutchins. Rubio to presidency. ' hall. Mrs. Elizabeth Natsch has gone to Moscow— Soviet government to The roads in the vicinity ot Hope- New York for c few days. issue $60,000,000 state loan Decem­ vale are being scraped. These roads Miss Marie is spending a few days ber 1. have been in a very bad condition in Hartford \vdth her friend, Mrs. London — Prince of Wales sees for a long time. Kenneth Tripp. Young Stribling lose on foul in bout J. T. Addison of Mansfield con­ with Primo Camera. A delegation of a dozen membe-.s ducted the Seventh Day Advent of the local Grange attended the St. Louis — Amateur Athletic service at Hopevale on Saturday Union to create two annual awards meeting of East Central Pomona in memory of James E. Sullivan, Miss Jennie Loomis of Mansfield, Grange held in Bolton Wednesd.'iy Pioneer A. A. U. executive. and her niece, Mi.ss Mildred LoomSs, all day. Portland, Me.—Northeast gale a recent graduate of the Washlna- The Columbia Improvement As.so- ton, D. C. Sanitarium, who was her abates after one to four inches of ciation held a whist party Thursday W N SO tt- snowrfaJl In interior of state and guest, also attended the service. evening at the hall. There were five heaviest rainfall in interior of state Mrs. Anna L. Kennedy c. Brook­ tables in play. Winners of the first and heaviest rainfall in three years field, Mass., spent the week-end as prizes were Mrs. Hitchcock and drenches cities and towns on coast. the guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. Henry Hutchins and the consolation Boston.—Six men and five women and M[rs. Ames W. Sisson at their prizes went to Miss Marie Durfrede recently indicted by Federal Grand home in Hopevale. and Lester Hutchins. Rrfymond (( Jury for conspiracy to violate the Mrs. Edith Strickland ot Ea.st Clarke was in charge of the ar­ Mann White Slave Act plead not Hartford, a former resident of this rangements. ’.here will be another toasting did it guilty before Federal Judge Brew­ town and a sister of Paul Coates held in about a month. ster; released in $5,000 bail. and Mrs. N. C. Johnson, was operat­ Eleven boys met at the Town Hall Gone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes^Progress Berkshire, Vt.—Former Mayor I. ed on at the Hartford hospital re­ Friday evening and organized a F. O’Neil of St. Albans drowns in cently. Her condition was very troop of Boy Scouts, with two pa­ has been made. W e removed the prejudice against cigarettes sedan which plunged into Mlssisquol critical but she is reported as im­ trols, the Flying Eagle and the Bob river. proving. Whites. Rev. John Howell is the when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri^ Concord, N. H.—Rev. .Samuel S. Mrs. Robert Goodrich, formerly scoutmaster and Frederick Hunt, Drury, rector of St. Paul’s school, Miss Catherine Waldo, was operated assistant scoutmaster. Douglas tants) from the tobaccos. elected president of state branch of on for appendicitis at the Hartford, Young is the scout leader of tlii League of Nations association. hospital a few days ago. Her con­ Flying Eagle and Clayton Hunt, Jr., Malden, Mass.—Torrential rain dition is report I as favorable. his assistant. Jaspar Woodward is e a r s ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of LUCKT thins ranks of multitude before grave of the Rev. Patrick J. Power scout leader of the Bob Whites, it in Holy Cross cemetery to 5,000; is expected that more boys vdll modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against Jack Sharkey, heavyweight boxer, .come in later. Y makes pilgrimage there. Mrs. Lillian Clarke is visiting ner all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, sister, Mrs. Brown at the lake. ^STRIKE Lowell, Mass.—John A. Stevens,, UOTATION! 61, vice-president of the American ; Mrs. Eugene Lafleur 1s spending the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, 'ir s TOASTED" Society of Mechanical Engineers' a few days at the home of her par­ from i918-20, dies at his home. ents in Meriden. properly aged and skillfully blended—“ It’s Toasted” Cranston, R. 1.—Pallo Saccoccla, A group of a dozen ladles met convict committed to state prison "Capitalism is a relic of barbar­ Thursday afternoon at the home of month ago on murder charge, dies ism we haven’t the courage to abol- Mrs. Lester Hutchins on Chestnut “TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, of tuberculosis. i.sh.”—C. J. Miller Kenyon. Hill for a food demlnstration under Boston.—Prof. Samuel E. Morlson the auspices of the Tolland County removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are pres­ of Harvard calls Fanuell hall "cof­ “Many a young man who talked Extension Service. Mrs. Hutchins fin of liberty” In condemning policy bass to his father talks tenor to and Mrs. Clair Robinson demoa- ent in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. of city authorities in suppressing his wife.”—Eddie Cantor. stfated foods containing proteins. certain speakers. The next demonstration will be in Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING”— "There seems to be no time at December by Mrs. Clayton and Mrs. all over here (America) for self­ Philip Ishan and will be on vitamln.s. culture. You do not seem to realize LUCKY STRIKE’S e x t r a secret process — removes harmful cor­ at all the value of your imagina­ FIGHTING PLANT PEST. ATHODGHT tions or your senses or what .It rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the means to be alive.” New Haven, Nov. 19.— (A P )—The —John Cowper Powys, British au­ annual report of J. E. Riley, Jr., old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and “ It's Toasted” —the phrase that describes the I have shewed you all things, thor. agent of the United States Depart­ how that so laboring ye ought to ment Agriculture shows that more coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient preju­ extra “ toasting” process applied in the manu­ than 35,000 acres of Connectiqpt support the weak, and to remem­ “Lawyers, you know, are sup­ facture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest ber the words of the Lord Jesus, posed to spend all their time set­ land was cleared this summer of dice against cigarette smoking by men and by women. how he said. It is more blessed to tling the troubles of other people. currant and gooseberry bushes on tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are scien­ ive than to receive.—The Acts I spend most of my time trying to which the white pine blister rust f0:85. settle with my lawyers.” develops. Mr. Riley is in charge of tifically subjected to penetrating heat at mini­ —John D. Rockefeller, Jr. the control work, which is done The best thing to give to your through the co-operation of the Con­ mum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. The enemy Is forgiveness; to an oppo­ "No boy ever became a leader necticut Agriculture Experiment exact, expert regulation of such high tempera­ nent, tolerance; to a friend, your without making himself a nuisance station. heart; to your child, a good ex­ to some one—at some time.” Almost 134,000' rlbes, the scien­ tures removes impurities. More than a slogan, ample; to a father, deference; to —Henry Ford. tific nhme for currants and goose­ your mother, conduct that will berries were destroyed and 10,000 “ It’s Toasted” is recognized by millions as the make her proud of you; to yourself, cultivated currants were uprooted [ It’s toasted' most modem step in cigarette manufacture. respect; to all men, charity. ' DR. APPELLMANN DIES between May' and November. Area ' —Mrs. Balfour. where the gooseberries and cur­ Osnabrueck, Germany, Nov. 19.— rants were destroyed several years No-Throat irritation- No Cou^h. ^ PIRATES IN CHINA (AP) — Dr. Anton Appellmann, ago are much freer of the disease formerly exchange professor at the 4;han those which recently were IN—The Lucky Strik* Dane* Orchestra, *vary Saturday night, ov*r a coa*t-to-co**t network of the N. B.C» Hong Kong, Nov. 19— (AP)—Two Burlington, Ifermont University and cleared. guards have been killed, 70 passen­ civilian military liaison official at the American front died here today Engineers have pretty sharp eyes.^ 0 1920, The American Tobaceo Co., Mlrt. gers kidnapped and $20,000 loot P 'w * in renewed pirate attacks at the age of 45. He was with Gen­ The other day a West ’Virginia" near that dty. The passengers are eral Allen at Coblenz and later was girl tore a piece from her skirt and being held for ransom. a resident of New "iTork. flagged a train.

I f \ X • <■ ‘ . . , I ' l . ■ / '

PAGE FIVB'> MAMCHESTER e v e n in g h e r a l d , sound MANUHESTER, CONN., lU ESU AY, NOVEMRER 19, 1929. CHAMBER COMMERCE CASE BROTHERS Paper Manufacturers F. T. BLISH HARDWARE COMPANY Hardware and Garden Supplies CARLYLE JOHNSON MACHINE COMPANY lAL MEETING ISSUE Friction Clutches and Gears c. R. BURR & COMPANY Nursery Stock CHENEY BROTHERS •r Silk Manufacturers w. G. GLENNEY COMPANY FOLDKR TELLS Coal and Lumber Dealers NAME HOHENTHAL THE GAMMONS-HOLMAN COMPANY CHAMBER MEMBERS HEAR OF OUR TOWN Tool Manufacturers J. W. HALE COMPANY Department Store HEAD OF CHAMBER THE E. E. HILLIARD COMPANY INSPIRATIONAL ADDRESSES Attractive Chamber of Com­ Woolen Goods HOME BANK & TRUST COMPANY merce Booklet Stresses Its Banking Advantages. ORFORD SOAP COMPANY ------/ New Slate of Officers Elect- Soap and Soap Powder Manufacturers C. E. HOUSE & SON, INC. Henry T r u m b u 11, State | WILLIS PRESENTS Men’s Fiu-nlshlngs and Shoes An attractive folder that tells of THE ROGERS PAPER MANUFACTURING CO. the advantages of living in Man­ ed Last Night by I W - Press Board, Insulating Paper and Specialties MANCHESTER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Chamber Head, and E. L. I CHAMBER BANNER chester has been prepared as part Architects, Contractors and Builders of the Chamber of Commerce pro- gpram to boost the town. The fron­ mous Vote. MANCHESTER ELECTRIC COMPANY Taylor, Railroad Execu­ tispiece bears the words “Come to REV. WILLIAM P. REIDY Electric Service and Appliances Manchester” over a drawing in Pastor St. James Roman Catholic Church tive, the Speakers. Retiring President Gives As­ green and black, depicting people Charles W. Holman, chairman of MR. JOHN L. REINARTZ MANCHESTER PLUMBING & SUPPLY COMPANY walking along a street lined with Cheney Brothers Hardware and Garden Supplies beautiful homes, spacious lawns the nominating committee for the sociation Emblem as and shade trees. Chamber of Commerce gave his MR. RICHARD G. RICH MANCHESTER TRUST COMPANY The Manchester Chamber of Com­ Quoting .from the first page of report and presented the list of new Insurance Banking merce at its annual meeting last Parting Gift. the booklet; officers nominated for the year at MR. FRANK J. RIPPIN night at the Country Club heard in- ' THE LATCHSTRING IS OUT— the annual meeting last night. They C. R. Burr & Co., Nursery Stock MONTGOMERY WARD COMPANY you are Invited to come to Man­ splrational addresses by Henry ! were elected unanimously. The new MR. LEONARD J. RICHMAN Department Store Trumbull of Plainville, president of chester to-live! officers follow: A Chamber of Commerce banner, Dewey-Richman Company, Stationers and Jewelers the Connecticut Chamber of Com-1 For president to serve one year, THE STATE THEATRE white letters on a blue field, was Towns are very much like people E. L. G. Hohenthal, Jr. MR. W. W. ROBERTSON Motion Pictures merce and E. L. Taylor, industrial commissioner of the New York, New presented by Harlowe W. Willis the —some are friendly and make you For vice president, R. K. Ander­ Orford Soap Co., Soap Manufacturers Haven and Hartford R. R. The ad­ feel at home right away; some are son. , . ^ „ G. E. WILLIS & SON retiring president. Secretary E. L. conservative to such a degree as For treasurer, Earl G. Seaman. MR. THOMAS J. ROGERS Coal Dealers dress followed a roast beef dinner. Banker Following the speakers of the eve­ McCabe accepted the banner with would make you feel always a For directors to serve two years: 1, Fayette B. Oark; 2. William B. WATKINS BROTHERS ning reports from the nominating assurance to the donor that it would stranger. But Manchester is one of MR. JAMES J. ROHAN committee were read and the new be properly displayed from the the friendly towns; our people are Halstead: 3, Edward J. Holl; 4 Real Estate and Insurance Furniture, Musical Instruments and Undertakers Charles J. McCann; 5, Harlowe W. officers for the year were elected. Chamber office. Mr. Willis introduc­ cordial and will bid you welcome. MR. F. A. ROLSTON William B. Halsted, ex^an^ge Willis. . ^ , Real Estate manager of the Southern N. E. Tel. ed the new Secretary E. L. McCabe The sense of “home" is deeply The new president and vice-presi­ MR. HAROLD C. ALVORD Co., entertained the gathering wito after which the report of the treas- rooted in everyone and its broader dent in well-chosen words told their MR. WILLIAM RUBINOW Treas. Manchester Trust Co. Kubinow’s, Women’s Apparel tricks and magic, aptly showing the (Continued on Page Seven.) MR. ALBERT ANDERSON (Continued on Page Seven.) (Continued on Page Seven.) MR. R. LA MOTT RUSSELL (Continued on Page Seven.) Anderson & Noren, Meats and Groceries MR. SAMUEL J. KEMP President, Manchester Trust Co. MR. FRANK H. ANDERSON H. W. DERWAY Kemp’s, Inc., Furniture and Music MR. PETER C. SALMONSON J. \V. Hale Co. Department Store Bryant & Chapman Co., Milk Dealers MR. BURT L. KNIGHT Bryant «fc Chapman Co., Milk Dealers MR. ROBERT K. ANDERSON MR. ALBERT T. DEWEY C|ieney Brothers MR. G. H. SANKEY Watkins Brothers, Undertakers Banker MR. ALBERT F. KNOFLA Milk Dealer MR. LESLIE E. BADMINGTON MR. ROBERT J. DEWEY Manchester Construction Co., Contractors and Builders MR. WM. H. SCHIELDGE E. E. Hilliard Co., Woolen Goods Devvey-Richman Co., Stationers and Jewelers MR. ARTHUR A. KNOFLA / Printer MR. WALTER BALCH Real Estate and Insurance MR. GUSTAVE SCHREIBER Orford Soap Co., Soap Manufacturers MR. JOHN J. DWYER General Contractor and Builder N. Y., N. H. & Hartford R. R-, Freight Agent MR. WILLIAM A. KNOFLA MR. ERNEST T. BANTLEY Manchester Construction Co., Contractors and Builders IMR. EARL G. SEAMAN Center .\uto Supply Co., Auto Accessories MR. FREDERICK P. FITCHNER F. T. Blish Hardware Co., Hardware Manager Local Manchester Gas Company MR. ADOLPH KRAUSE MR. FITCH B. BARBER Cheney Brothers MR. HARRY E. SEAMAN Carpenter MR. LUCIUS M. FOSTER Coal Dealer Case Brothers, Paper Manufacturers MR. J. P. LAMB MR. GEORGE M. BARBER Cheney Brothers MR. JAMES M. SHEARER MR. WILLIAM FOULDS, JR. Capitol Buick Co., Automobile Dealers DR. J. F. BARRY William Foulds & Co., Leather Board Manufacturers MR. JOHN LEARNED Dentist Cheney Brothers MR. JOHN F. SHEEHAN MR. JOHN F. BARSTOW MR. JULIUS FRADIN MR. EDWIN A. LETTNEY Retired Kadios Fradin’s, Women’s Apparel E. A. Lettney, Plumbing CHESTER C. SHIELDS MR. F. J. BENDALL MR. WILLIAM B. GAMMONS DR. GEO. A. F. LUNDBERG Manchester Rating Bureau, Collections and Credits Cheney Brothers Gammons-Holman Co., Tool Manufacturers physician MR. SCOTT H. SIMON MR. CARL BENGS MR. WILLIAM H. GARDNER MR. U. J. LUPIEN Carlyle-Johnson Machine Co., Clutches and Gear Manufacturers Cheney Brothers William H. Gardner, Shoes Cheney Brothers MR. LEWIS H. SIPE MR. GEO. L. BETTS MR. ARTHUR F. GIBSON MR. EDWIN A. LYDALL Treus., Hume Bunk & Trust Co. Automobile Dealer Meats LydaU & Foulds, Needle Manufacturers DR. THOS. G. SLOANE MR. JOHN H. BISSELL MR. CHRISTOPHER GLENNEY MR. CHARLES MAGNELL Physician Cheney Brothers Glenney’s, Men’s Furnishings Druggist MR, A^ LEROYSUOCUMB,...... MR. FRED T. BLISH MR. CHRISTOPHER GLENNEY MR. NATHAN MARLOW The Textile Store, Dry..Goada ...... Manchester Plumbing & Supply Co., Hardware Dealers. Pe'rrett * Glenney, Tracking" Marlow’s Variety Store MR. ERNEST SMITH MR. FRED T. BLISH, JR. W. G. GLENNEY MR. MATTHEW MERZ Aceto-Smith Co., Concrete Contractors Manchester Plumbing & Supply Co., Hardware Dealers. W. G. Glenney, Lumber and Coal Auto Supplies MR. ROBERT J. SMITH DR. HOWARD BOYD ' MR. WALTER P. GORMAN METTERS SMOKE SHOP Real Estate and Insurance Physician Plnchurst Grocery, Meats and Groceries cigars. News Dealers MR. MELVILLE L. STACY MR. J. FRANK BOWEN MR. ALFRED A. GREZEL MR. CHARLES M. MILIKOWSKI Cheney Brothers Town Engineer A. A. Grezel, Heating and Plumbing Florist MR. CHARLES STAYE MR. ALVIN L. BROWN MR. ROY C. GULLEY MR. J. M. MILLER Cheney Brothers A. L. Brown & Co., Men’s Furnishings Fruit Grower Carlyle-Johnson Machine Co., Clutch and Gear Manufacturers MR. EDWARD STEARN MR. J. S. BROWN MR. JOHN H. HACKETT MR. FRANCIS E. MINER Montgomery Ward Co., Department Store Butter and Egg Dealer Hackett Brothers, Tobacco Growers Druggist MR. HARDING A. STEPHENS MR. C. R. BURR MR. WILLIAM HALSTED MR. GEORGE B. MINER Automobile Dealer C. R. Burr & Co., Nursery Stock So, New England Tel. Co. Barber MR. DELPHIS ST. JOHN, JR. MR. HAROLD R. BURR MR. FRANK HARE MR. D. C. Y. MOORE Campbell’s Filling Station, Auto Accessories Bryant & Chapman, Milk Dealers Frank Hare & Son, Laundry Physician MR. GEORGE W. STRANT MR. N. A. BURR, M.D. MR. GEORGE S. HARRIS MR. M. J. MORIARTY President, Home Bank & Trust Co. Physician C. R. Burr & Co., Nursery Stock Retired MR. WAYLAND K. STRAUGHAN DR. FRED F. BUSHNELL MR. ANDREW J. HEALY MR. HENRY MUTRIE Milk Dealer Veterinarian and Sanitary Inspector Hartman Tobacco Co., Tobacco Growing Contractor MR. W. A. STRICKLAND MR. PETER F. CALHOUN MR. L. N. HEEBNER MR. CHARLES J. McCANN Lynn Leather Co., Leather W'ashcrs Pitkin & Calhoun, Milk Dealers Manchester Electric Co. J. W. Hale Co.. Department Store MR. M. D. SULLIVAN MR. EARL J. CAMPBELL MR. ALBERT HELLER MR. ALBERT McLACHLAN Retired CampbeU’s FllUng Station, Auto Accessories Manchester Grain & Coal Co.,., Grain and Coal F. T. Blish Hardware Co., Hardware MR. DANIEL J. SULLIVAN MR. HUGH J. CAMPBELL MR. EDWARD HESS MR. THOMAS McMURRAY Sign Painter Manager of the State Theater Electrical Supplies, Heating F. W. Woolworth Co., 5 and 10 Cent Store MR. HAROLD R. SYMINGTON MR, JOSEPH C. CARTER MR. J. H. HEWITT REV. J. S. NEILL Symington’s Men’s Shop, Men’s Furnishings Retired Former Milk Dealer Rector, St. Mary’s Episcopal Church MR. JOSEPH TEDFORD MR. LOUIS S. CARTER MR. WILLIAM E. HILL MR. JOEL M. NICHOLS Millt Dealer Treasurer, Cheney Brothers Carpenter Cigars and Newspapers MR. W. R. TINKER, JR. MR. JULIEN C. CARY MR. ELISHA E. HltLIARD MR. EDWARD J. NOREN Retired Insurance E. E. Hillard Co., Woolen Goods Anderson (b Noren, Meats and Groceries MR. OLIVER F. TOOP MR. LAWRENCE W. CASE MR. HARRY E. HILLS MR. WALTER OLCOTT Postmaster, South Manchester Post Office Case Brothers, Inc., Paper Makers G. E. Willis & Son, Coal Dealers Inventor MR. ROBERT V. TREAT MR. DAVIS CHAMBERS MR. EMIL L. G. HOHENTHAL, ^R. MR. WALTER OLIVER Manning & Kahn, Tobacco Growers General Contractor and Builder General Contractor and Builder Optometrist and Optician MR. CLINTON H. TRYON MR. AUSTIN CHENEY MR. EDWARD J. HOLL MR. JOHN I. OLSON Meats and Groceries Cheney Brothers Real Estate and Insurance Fainter and Decorator MR. JOHN TYNAN MR. CHARLES CHENEY MR. T. P. HOLLORAN JOHN J. PENTLAND Painter President, Cheney Brothers Undertaker Park Hill Flower Shop, Florist C. W. VIBBERTS MR. CLIFFORD D. CHENEY MR. CHARLES W. HOLMAN MR. M. PASTERNACK Manager W. T. Grant Co. Cheney Brothers Gammons-Holmau Co., Tool Manufacturers Photographer MR. G. H. WADDELL MR. FRANK CHENEY, JR. MR. LeVERNE HOLMES MR. MYRON C. PECKHAM Towti Treasurer Cheney Brothers Physician Milk Dealer MR. CHARLES F. WARD MR. FRANK D. CHENEY MR. CHARLES E. HOUSE MR. W. A. PERRETT Manager, Personal Finance Co. Cheney Brothers C. E. House & Son, Men’s Furnishings Perrett & Glenney Trucking MR. STUART J. WASLEY MR. HARRY R. CHENEY MR. HERBERT B. HOUSE MR. JOHN F. PICKLES Real Estate and Insurance Retired C. E. House & Son, Men’s Furnishings Mechanical Engineer MR. C. ELMORE WATKINS MR. HORACE B. CHENEY MR. ARTHUR L. HULTMAN MR. W. F. PICKLES Watkins Brothers, Furniture and Musical Instrument* Cheney Brothers A. Hultman, Men’s Furnishings Retired MR. F. E. WATKINS MR. HOWELL CHENEY MR. RAY HUNT MR. GEORGE H. PINNEY Watkins Brothers, Furniture and Musical Instruments Cheney Brothers Waranoke Press, Printers williams Brothers Mfg. Co., Glastonbury MR. MILO D. WELLS MR. JOHN P. CHENEY MR. HERBERT INGHAM MR. LUCIUS PINNEY Mechanic Retired Cheney Brothers Retired MR. HAROLD T. WEST MR. PHILIP CHENEY MR. JAMES S. IRVINE MR. FRED PITKIN H. H. West & Son, IVUU and Cabinet Work Cheney Brothers Cheney Brothers Pitkin & Calhoun, Milk Dealers MR. HECTOR W. WEST MR. RICHARD 0. CHENEY, JR. MR. JOHN JENSEN MR. LUIGI POLA H. H. W’est & Son, Mill and Cabinet Work Cheney Brothers Investments Coal Dealer MR. G. H. WILCOX MR. WARD CHENEY MR. AARON JOHNSON MR. ARTHUR N. POTTER Connecticut Business College, Educator Cheney Brothers Retired Educator MR. G. E. WILLIS MR. WILLIAM C. CHENEY MR. RAYMOND A. JOHNSON MR. RICHARD J. PRITCHARD G. E. Willis & Son, Coal Cheney Brothers Attorney Manchester Net Co., Seamless Nets MR. HARLOW WILLIS MR. FAYETTE B. CLARKE MR. S. E. JOHNSON MR. ROBERT E. PURINTON G. E. WilUs & Son, Coal Insurance Assessor Case Brothers, Inc., Paper Makers MR. CLARENCE E. WILSON MR. ALLEN R. COE THOMAS H. JOHNSTON MR. JAS. H. QUINN Manchester Nurseries, Nursery Stock €3arlyle-Jo,)mBon Machine Co., Clutch and Gear Manufacturers Rogers Paper Mfg. Co., Inc., Paper Makers Druggist MR. LELAND T. WOOD MR. LAWRENCE A. CONVERSE MR. WILLIAM KANEHL MR. J. E. RAND L. T. Wood, Ice and Trucking Orford Snap Co., Soap Manufacturers Contractor General Contractor and Builder REV. WATSON WOODRUFF MR. D. W. KELSEY MR« CHARLES RAY MR. A. L. CROWELL Rogers Paper Manufacturing Co., Paper Makers. Pastor Center Congregational Church Case Brothers, Inc., Paper Makers Milk Dealer

• • A GOOD TOWN IN WHICH TO LIVE - WORK - INVEST AND PLAY » ' 'y i MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN, iu i!,ou A i. NUV*.MJJEK 19, 1929. PAGiSSIX , * ' I J mier MacDonald would be very filled with a auddloo'love and ads careful to see to it that at that miration for all master photo fln-- ishers— one type of citizen, after fu. conference there would be a mark­ Evniing Xrralb ed paucity of navy jingoes among all, that does not seek to make the the conferees. The indications at President waste his time and I PUBLISHED BT THE { < HERAXiD PRINTING COMPANY, INC. this moment are that the forecast strength shaking its paw. 12 Blasell Street If only in every school house emd i ’f. South Manchester. Conn. will be completely fulfilled. So BY EODNEY DTTTOHER THOMAS FERGUSON strong are these indications that in every fraternal headquarters NBA Service Writer Good Used Pianos 01, General Manager the habitual strident big-navyites and in every conventional secreta- j Washington, Nov. 19.—Seldom Is ^ Founded October 1. 1881 are uttering despairing pleas for riat in the land it could be blar \ Published Every the presence in the American con­ .„„e d that of all human t.el»Sa | Sundays and Holidays. Entered at the Hoover loves master photo finish-1 gygp much hope Post Office at South Manchester. ference body of Admiral Hilary P. & Conn., as Second Class Mail Matter. Jones, to whom they look for sal- ers best, and the reason therefor, | for a measure such a measure such SUBSCRIPTION RATES: of 1 what a fine thing it would be. I as the Norris tariff bill amendment ■ One Year, by mall ...... ;••• vation from the “ blundering” j designed to limit profits on imports ^5 Per Month, by mall ...... » Delivered, one y e a r ...... mere statesmen. | I to 25 per cent. - Single copies ...... * That’s all right with us if it is I With equal infrequency does the % with Mr. Hoover, but it doesn't j : consumer have set before him in MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED i black and white an analysis of the i PRESS make a straw’s difference whether ! IN NEW YORK The Associated Press Is prices he pays, showing the per- | entitled to the use for Admiral Jones goes to London or i centage of cost and the percentage I of ail new.s dispatches credited to U not. Neither he nor any other m.a- Newyork, Nov. 19.—Nearly every- of profit. But it happened the other ; 1 ,0 ^ or not otherwise credited In this paper and also ths local news pu hoganyhoB-anv sailor will havenave anythinganyt „ one sees New York Jhrough dlf- day when the Senate was shown llslied herein. All rights of republlcatlon or conclusive to say about the deter- j a^dand some its voice; some ! Norris proposes seemed to be the special dispatches herein are also re­ minations of the conference, so far never leave the" ——Fifth ■ Avenue shop- j raUier than the exception on served. 1 as America or Britain is concern- ping belt, and some try to cover , imported goods sold in American SPECIAL advertising REPRE­ its high spots from Battery to j stores. 1 ed. The professional navy men SENTATIVE: Hamilton - Del.lsser. Ghetto between trains; seme rush j Norris Showed ’Em i Tnc.. l!8.'i Madison Ave.. New York. N. have already been consulted. All Y.. and 612 North Michigan Ave.. to Broadway ^ d leap from theater j rpj^g evidence was toted into the Chicago. Ills^______their technical data are, or will bs to theater in to effort to catch the | gg^ate in the form of 103 exhibits ' ^ in the hands of the delegations. better shows In a few evenings, ' articles purchased at retail in \ 5 The Herald is on sale dally at all some enter the wholesale belts and | j^g^ York, including everything Their presence is unnecessary from Schultz and Hoatllng news stands In are lost for days in bargaining, a^t- i a clarinet to a dog muzzle, .New York Clty^______any point of view and undesirable tending a couple of snappy ^ght, exhibit which caused Full service client of N E A Service, from the angle of a sincere desire clubs and making the next train ggjjator Barkley of Kentucky to HALLETT & DAVIS for results. The London parley, be­ home. , 1, 1 arise and demand of Vice Presi- V Member. Audit Bureau of Circula­ Some come as professional oh- : a parliamentary in­ tions. ing intended to get somewhere, servers and some as critics. W ord-[ . stands in no need of the presence The Herald Printing Company. Inc., i “By what authority have Kresge $35 assumes no financial resnon.sihlllty of either an Admiral Jones or a I and Woolworth moved into the Sen- ; for typographical errors appearing In YOUR CHOICE advertisments In the Manchester William B. Shearer. At the moment, I have before me ! ate chamber?” i Evening Herald. ______TUESDAY, NOV. 19, 1929 “ JIM” GOOD When a man has been christen­ hava La^ Ga“ a ^ ?rL lonS I^cord“ who a,lght have For For GERMANY’S ARMY ed James William and in spite of haya G , _ thought Barkley was calling him a One of the most interesting his having become a notable figure sifh," which" m fy^r'Say not t «v.-fhd-ten-ce„t senator J»tated Thanksgiving Christmas o“r > o r t Of answer .o '•Mother out things written about German mili­ in his country everybody who tary aspirations and achievements knows him calls him “Jim” there “TOe apell of New York Is t o -! PdbMcah members _of__the^ since the World war is an article in is something significant in the fact. stantaneous,” it begins. “Tall sky­ ' Committee had arranged it to show the percentage of difference be­ the New York World under the by­ scrapers, the buzz of endless traffic, He is a man beloved. tween the landed valuation of irn- line of Arno Dosch-Fleurot. This shouts of the newsboys, speed of James W. Good, secretary of war the overhead and underground rail­ ported merchandise and its retail unusually w'ell informed corre­ and first member of President roads. . . . In the dazzling splen­ sale price. I spondent, wTiting from Paris, says dor of windows, in the glorious lux­ In one case appeared a difference Hoover’s cabinet to pass away, was of 3325 per cent between the landed HERE’S no reason now why your too, is the opportunity for clubs and socie­ that Germany’s army of 100,000, to all men “Jim.” His keen, alert ury of Fifth Avenue, the blaze of Broadway, the giddy jazz of Har­ selling price— that is, the value In consisting of professional soldiers country of origin plus duty, trans­ home should not have a piano .... ties to secure instruments for their club intelligence partnered with a warm lem, the newcomer forgets his per­ T who enlist for nine years, is far and generous heart. There was plexities and his prospective. . . . portation and other costs of impor­ with these three instruments reduced to rooms. These three pianos go on sale and away the best trained and “There are autos whizzing past tation—and the price in a shop off something to Jim Good besides Fifth avenue. This was Exhibit No. at our Furniture Exchange, Oak Street most zealous in Europe; that the mind and character—he was hu­ like meteors in a dream, the cap­ this extraordinary price! Now is the itals of Europe are within .tele­ 21, a pair of , alleged antique metal old relationship between officers (in our own building) tomorrow morn­ man, companionable, deeply alive phone call, frocks that make the vases which cost 98 cents in France time to make your selection and begin and men has been completely to the existence of his fellow man. Rue de la Palx green with envy and 48 cents for duty and trans­ the children’s musical educations. Here, ing. changed so that between rank and are as easily procured as an army portation, but which were being re­ He was not only respected bftt sin­ tailed for $50. file there has been established an of waiters or porters. . . . Hot cerely loved. water runs all night in the pipes A human hair-net showed a pro­ understanding and co-operation ex­ There were stout bonds between of Manhattan and whisky runs all fit of 995 per cent. These imported isting nowhere else; that each in­ Secretary Good and his chief, the night in every locality. It Is no nets from China only retail for 10 cents each, but they cost less than dividual in the new army has been President of the United States. longer necessary to talk softly at „ o L- « Q c qfipptssheets area r e a cent to buy and bring to New trained in every department of Both were lowans by birth and the ?han|ed every day '. . . reception | York. A wig whose landed cost was WATKINS BROTHERS, warfare and is capable of being a home towm of the secretary was, rooms of Wall Street, ornate with j $7.74 FURNITURE EXCHANGE-OAK STREET leader. Mr. Dosch-Fleurot does not we believe, in the same county as alloil thetVip treasurestrpasiirGS «of the ea6fl-rtli— l ' ypflrrtin6nt ^ storo for $oo. put it in just so many words, but the birthplace o f Mrs. Hoover. Both chd-iirs of Tutankhamen, nais Czechoslavkia in effect tells us that what Ger­ Napoleon, framents from the Pyra' knew their America from the far mids, the Sphinx’s missing nose, sold for 79 cents at another de­ ^BW>DOLLAB> partment store. A French briar- many has done is to develop an inside. Both found in public office the Cenotaph from London . . . wood pipe selling in American jrroB O S , army of a hundred thousand poten­ opportunity for service rather than Buddhist figures on walls and Per­ chain stores for 50 cents cost but tial officers. for aggrandizement. Both held the sian carpets, Dresden china, silver boxes and portraits in ivory; din­ 71/2 cents in France. Here are He contrasts this organization some other examples, the figures same humanitarian views. In a ing rooms with mirror tables . . . In order being the landed cost, with France’s army, which under very real sense they were the same pretty faces and diamond studs— the one-year service plan would the retail price in New York and kind of men. ______JML is the percentage of difference: ‘ have 35,000 officers and 120,000 Genuine grief in Washington and side of it. . ‘"'Gefffian' b ifd 'c i^ e $4.89, $16.50, “Men see the Tight and rush like HEAL1H«*l»Er ADVICE ■^raw recruits outside of its colonial 237 per cent. Danish pewter bowl in the. state of Iowa marks the sad moths to a lamp. The blazing Dr FronKMcCoy^ ,, troops. death of Secretary Good. He was a chandeliers shed glory upon fair $8, $29, 262 per cent. German thumb thacks 7Y2 mills, 5 cents, It is suggested that perhaps, forms, all around gleam the sparkl­ splendid example of the frank and 571 per cent. Swedish vacuum ing gems among stately, tall fig­ (KKSnOW IN MGASO 10 HCMTH tM ET M U K JMSraeO after all,, the small, highly trained candid and service-giving type of cleaner $20.51. $77, 275 per cent. 9 ures, jeweled shirt fronts, white BT iijicc0nfflR on K MDRfsxD M CM or TW wes army might prove, in any country, Alencon lace $2.50, $9.50, 280 per MfrciOSK ST/tMPKO MtM€SSMO BitVetOPe POP fig P iy public-life American. His loss from bosoms and fairy feet. . . . Mani­ (Qaai PC. tor mMPt jwnur laSAimtta- cal. to be a more effective military ma­ among the President’s official fam­ cure and massage salons and a cent. French incense burner 29 hundred and one manifestations of cents, $1, 247 per cent. English PREPARING FOR WINTER QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS chine than the big conscript army ily will be difficult to replace. military buttons 29 cents, $2.50, 771 national prosperity, luxury, ease, (Continued) under the short-service plan. Those per cent. French cut-glass bottle extravagance and Mammon.” Protruding Ears who have reason to remember the $4 29, $15. 250 per cent. Austrian Question: D. A. S. asks:—“Will NO BRAG Quite an alluring picture, if you While the heavy red flannels of imcaimy capacity of the regular painting $8.99, $70, CTO per cent. you please tell me how to correct The little folder “Come to Man­ asked me. German box of stationery 65 cents, years ago have almost entirely dis­ army non-coms who took so great protruding ears in a 7-year-old boy ? chester,” just issued by the Cham­ $2, 208 per cent. German violin appeared, it is true that many peo­ When he was born his ears lay close a part in creating the American Yet Mr. Gauha seems to have In ber of Commerce, is an excellent resin 5.7 cents, 25 cents, 339 per ple who work indoors all day where to his head, but as a baby he con­ fighting machine in the World war haled only Manhattan 3 luxury and; French clarinet $16.90, $55, piece of condensed presentation of the temperature is always warm are stantly rolled his head on his pillow i glitter. 225 per cent. Czecho-Slovakian dress when awake, to which we attribute may be' inclined to agree with this He forgot, somehow, the millions j the merits of a . community. It clasp $1.02, $5, 388 per cent. Jap­ always overdressed. the condition. His younger brothers impression. of tired clerks and shop girls and j avoids the error extremely com­ anese tooth brush 8Vz cents, 35 City office workers do not really workers who fight for standing and his piother and father do not | V- Somehow, in spite of all this, we cents, 300 per cent. Vienna cara­ need heavy clothing. It is well to use mon to such literature, of verbosi­ room on subways and go sweltering have this kind of ears.” | can’t scare ourselves by any con­ mels 23 cents, 70 cents 202 per cent. ty. It contains no over statemefit. homeward 3to,\ the Bronx, Brooklyn warm wraps in going out of doors, Answer: — Projecting ears are | templation of German military S'wi^s selfwinding watch $8.75, $55, but they should be removable on ' usually caused by the child lying on Being manifestly free from windy and fhe sUbtlrijs. cent GGerman spark plug coming to work and, for example, a ^ ears which are pushed forward power. About the hardest thing to bragging, it is con-vincing. It pre­ He ioysottj^ie t e ^ | ^ents, $1, .455 per cent. German light woolen sweater is much more while sleeping. With children, the imagine is the German people con­ Uie lanes of poverty. He overlooked | g 45 ^ents, r sents the town of Manchester in an the dark and gloom-haunted rooms ^ German razor $1.30, healthful than coddling the body condition can be corrected by band­ senting to take the 1914 chance with heavy thick underwear which aging the ears or using adhesive attractive light by arraying at­ that jlarallel the I $5, 285 per cent. Dutch spinach over again. he forgot the millions of babies and interferes with the circulation of , tape to hold the ears back, while tractive facts and pointing the non­ seed 11.32 cents, 75 cents, 543 per blood to the skin, elimination from I with adults plastic surgery may be children who see a tree only when cent. French, curling iron 33.44, existence of unattractive facts. They go to a park; he forgot the the skin, and the circulation of air. necessary to correct the condition. FULLER’S NERVE $1.75, 423 per cent. Spastic Paraplegia It is the part of wisdom struggle of the masses and the High tariff senators pointed to The home should not be heated Former Governor Alvan T. Fuller those who seek to interest the out­ even greater strain of the individu­ too warmly. 68 degrees or 70 de­ Question: F. M. writes:— “The these exhibits as showing that im­ doctor here says my mother has | may not always have manifested a al. grees is plenty. A fresh supply of side world in the merits and vir­ porters were making enormous spastic paraplegia and that is in- j high degree of courage but he at Diamonds, baubles, luxury— sure, profits despite duties on the arti­ oxygen in the air is.*just as import­ tues of a meritorious and prosper­ ant ’ . winter as any other time. curable. He injects a medicine into j leest has his nerve with him right we have them! And scentfed pal­ cles. Norris, introducing his amend­ ous community to leave the bang- aces, dream-like dance gardens and Open up the windows once or twice her arm which he says won’t cure now. Himself accredited with be­ ment, said such profits were being but will help her. Could you suggest bang and thum-thump sort of pro­ palm-fringed lounging rooms; in­ made apparently by means of a a day and get a fresh '^Supply of MUMS ing a candidate for the United cense-haunted tea rooms and flash­ oxygen. ^ anything that might help her?” motion to towns that have nothing “gentlemen’s agreement” between Answer:—The only thing that I States Senate seat of Frederick H. ing diamonds. importers and makers of similar The children should not be requir­ to merely talk about. The Cham­ Only the tiniest fraction of New ed to wear extra-heavy undergar­ have found to benefit a spastic FOR THANKSCiVINC GlUett, he took the occasion of his goods -in this country. ber talks about Manchester with York’s millions ever see these ments. A medium light suit is suf­ paraplegia is a prolonged fast and arrival home from Europe yester­ the quiet assuredness of the sub­ places. I’ll wager that ihore visl^ ficient, and if tfey are going out to diet regime, using the orange juice day, to deliver a dig at other ors have looked upon .^e cltys play they may be bundled up, but it for about ten days, followed by a stantial town or the substantial in­ WARWICK GREENE DIES milk diet for several months. How­ Massachusetts aspirants for that glamor spots than those who live is never wise to over-dress a child. dividual. Those who read the fold­ within its gates. ever, I hesitate to recommend such job by classifying them with Sena­ Both children and babies have a er will be likely to believe it and GILBERT SWAN*'- 1B6‘stdiir NbV. T9.— (AP) — War- bodilv heat that is higher than that a long fasting regime to anyone who tor Bingham and others who, he REMEMBER be impressed. wick Greene, 49, of New York City, of adults and they do not have as ' is not nnder my personal super- hinted, were concerned with "in­ director of the- Bureau of Public sre&t a difficulty in keeping warm. | vision. Possibly some good results terests seeking concessions.” Works at Manilla from 1910 to 19 i5 Another great means of prevent- | from shorter fasts at frequent in- [ PRODIGY ROBBER ARRESTED a n d 'e i^ f M the United States mis inff colds is to get enough sleep. It | tervals with a well balanced diet be- | YOUR HOSTESS “I am sure the people of Massa­ would prove A boy of eight years, son of a sion to Finland, Esthonia, Lativia, is hard for anybody to take cold un- tween fasting periods chusetts will realize what a blow helpful. Physiotherapy treatments woman who has “long wished to and Lithuania in 1919, died at the less he is first enervated or over Bingham’s exposure was to New Plainville, Nov. ; 19.—(AP) — Peter Befit Brigham hospital here tired. When one is over-fatigued, the are usually lielpful. rear a child for the ministry,” is Dermoid Cyst That gay cheery bloom, the Chrysanthemum, lends color England and the wisdom and ne­ Charles Dunbar, 48, of New Britain, late yesterday. He failed to recover resistance is lowered and the cold to be permitted to preach a sermon was under arrest here today on a from a serious operation. gets a chance. Rest at night is very Question:—Mrs. R. asks:— “What to the festive holiday spirit. They’re fresh and lovely in cessity of nominating for the of­ is a dermiod cyst?” of his own preparation in a church charge of highway robbery. He is A graduate of Harvard college In beneficial in winter. fice of senator one who is inde­ alleged to have .robbed George li901 and the Harvard law school in Walking, skating, coasting and Answer:—A dermoid cyst is a our greenhouses. Gifts of floivers make friends, bring at Danville, Va. Out of the depths congenital cyst contanining bone, pendent of the interests • ♦ • and King, 50, of Wallingford, of $300. 1905, he became director of the far all of the -winter sports are fine body cheer to the sickroom, and will carry your Thanksgiving of his experience and the mellow­ The-robbery took place in a taxi­ relief commission of the Rockefeller builders. If plenty of vigorous exer­ hair, teeth, etc. They do not often fair and unprejudiced and imcon- increase in size. It is usually best to ness of his wisdom he should be cab near the White Oak stone Foundation in 1916 and served as cises is taken in the winter, an ex­ Greeting better than a thousand words. We will have trolled.” Which of course means quarry, on the Plain'ville-New Brit­ have them removed. able to contribute greatly to im­ major in the air service of the cess of starch in the diet may be Alvan T. Fuller. ain highway. Dunbar, according to ready thousands of Mums and Pom Poms in Pink, Bronze, ^ American Army in, France in 1917- burfaed up. I If it were to be granted that the provement of his hearers. We police, chartered a cab driven by Chapped hands and lips can be 1918, becoiping lieutenant colonel FOOTBALL NICKNAMES. Yellow, Red and White. Bingham-Eyanson incident has should, however, advise such little Fletcher Davis in New Britain and the ne^t,.year. He was a member avoided if you are careful to dry then took King, who was intoxi­ companions as play marbles with Qt the, Investmeiit banking firm of the skin carefully, better near a fire. Bulldogs, Tigers and Wildcats are cost New England a single cent of cated, for a ride. him to keep their eyes peeled. Carpenter and Greene of Boston, After the skin is dry, rub in a little popular names for football ■ teams. Mixed Bouquets, Beautiful baskets, Potted Plants, Carna­ tariff protection—which is a mil­ Davis saw Dunbar steal the money glycerine or some good vegetable from his companion’s clothes and New York and Washington. He was Yale, Butler, Drake and Georgia use tions, Roses, Boston Ferns and others. Place your orders lion miles from being proved—the bom iji Washington, p . C., ani oil such as olive oil or cocoa butter. the name Bulldog: Princeton, Miss­ damage done to this section by HAND SHAKING turned the cab around, heading ^ack Those who are troubP.d with cold for New Britain. When he jap_ jfiever- married.i ouri, Clemson and Hampden-Sidney early before you forget and regret. such a loss would still be micro­ The Master Photo Finishers As­ ^ 'Hlaf clubs "Were-the Tennis and hands and feet ■will find that all that use Tiger; Northwestern and David­ proached the Black Rock bridge is necessary to stir up the circula­ scopic compared ■with the evil rep sociation met in Washington. Ten f)unbar jumped out of the mo'ving Racquet- here and the Racquet son use Wildcat. and: Jefinls and India House tion is to exercisq vigorously and to utation given to it by the wretch thousand national organizations, cab. Davis stopped his cab and live correctly. A daily bath is as a short distanefe in New York. He was a Re­ ed Sacco-Vanzetti case. And Mr. meet in Washington. Almost al-, caught Dunbar publican in politics. His mother, valuable in winter as any other time. RETURN BASKETBALL VISIT „ . ^ ^ a w ^ and then turned him over to I have had some complaints that Fuller would have a fine job shimt- ways part of the program is to get - Britain police. Davis said who lives here, survives. daily bath in -winter makes the skin Michigan, Indiana and Ohio Anderson Greenhouse: ^ing off the discredit of that miser into line and call on the President. ; the offered to divide the State of the Western conference BULGARIA MUST PAY of the body itch all over._ Try rub­ able tragedy onto anybody in the ’The Master Photo Finishers -show-; money with him. bing down after the bath with olive and Notre Dame will play the Uni­ in Dunbar will be arraigned oid or cocoa butter, and this will be versity of Pennsylvania basketball world other than Alvan T. F'uller, ed some originality. They paid To-wn Court in Plainville. Sofia, Bulgaria, Nov. 19— (APT— and Flower Shop their respects to the nation’s chief The British, French and Italian min­ avoided. ‘ quintet in Philadelphia this winter, j These instructions are not hard to returning the visits made by the j NOT NEEDED executive by sending him a letter MENJOU UNDER KNIFE isters jointly approached the gov­ Phe-n* ernment today and suggested Bul­ follow and will well repay the effort. Quakers las year. j i.53 Eldridgf Street. S At the moment of the calling of by registered mail. garia must pay off its reparations Let us join the “No Cold Club” this Paris, Nov. ,,19- t-(AP)—A dolphe It is believed that San Bernar- ^the forthcoming naval conference We are not the keeper of Mr. Menjou, American film star under­ account in 36 annual installments winter and see how- many of us can keep our resolutions, and when the | dino county, Calif., with an area of ^ ^ya.t London this newspaper permit- Hoover’s soul, nor have we any key went an operation,for appendldtis of 12^500,000 francs (about $600,- 000). The foreign office wijl give cold blasts of the winter months 20,175 square miles, is the largest *• ’ ted itself to indulge in the luxury to its inner recesses. But we know today at the American hospital. Dr. county in the United States. It is Charles Houve who operated said it its reply "after consultation with have passed, we can welcome spring about 16 times the size of Rhode > of prediction, and its prophecy was as well as if we did have when the was entirely successful and that the legates, now in Paris and with the With joy, full of pep and aboimdlng ADVERTISE IN THE HERALD—IT PAYS President Hoover and Pre- President sot that letter h« was patient’s- eoudirion'wto'-Kood. binet Council. health. Island.

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PAGE SEVEN MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER. COJ^Nh TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1929. FOLDER TEI.LS WILLIS PRESENTS MURPHEY HEADS JAIL BREAK FOILED CHAMBER MEMBERS HEAR OF OUR TOWN Women’s and Misses’ $719.56 to $98.50 3 Eastland, Tex., Nov. 19— (AP)— (Continued From Page Five.) CHAMBE BANNER GARDEN CLUB A deputy shepLff was near death to­ INSPIRATIONAL ADDRESSES day and Marshal Ratliff, sentenced meaning applies to the community to death for a sanguinary bank rob­ (Continued from Page Five.) { stressed the importance of a^icul- j itself as well as to the individual ^ (Continued From Page Five.) bery which he lead in the full I tural pursuits, naming that divison i citizens within the community. „ ^ regalia of a Santa Claus, was in a relationship of the telephone ex­ i first in importance as relating to 1 urer E. G. Seaman was read and ac- Election of Officers is Held jail hospital ward as the result of change to the subscriber by the use I living conditions and the general Manchester is the kind of tow n, cepted. an attempt of the condemned man to shoot his way out of the county Coats of the mystical Chinese rings. I good of all people. Following agri-| -u proud to call “home." I t : w ur ^ j In Recreation Center President Trumbull ■culture in order is manufacturing j g j j simple charm and n a - , WiUis follows. jail. Taking for his subject,” The with other business pursuits listed , ^grai beauty characteristic of New I wish to thank you, t_____ ^ Deputy Sheriff Tom Jones was Chamber of Commerce and its value Here Last Night critically wounded by Ratliff’s shots ! as service divisions. • England towns, enriched by its and the prisoner was severely beat­ i Agriculture I heritage from the past, for Man- Dress coats in the new silhouette “The agricultural units of today ; g^ester dates back to the early en in ^ hand to hand struggle on a must needs be possessed of mana­ that is a subtle combination of so­ Colonial days. At the same time it ^ Charles M. Murphey was elected “ S f f e S r ^ t ^ h a g liS ? S t phistication and youthfulness. gerial ability, capital and with many has all the comforts of the modern ; president of the Manchester Gar-1 jj^ gg jones fought for his life. A i 1 of the qualifications needed in other ! today, Broadcloths and soft suede like lines. Production must be intensified, j den club at its annual meeting held large crowd congregated outside the last evening at the School street jail, but dispersed vrithout demon fabrics with collars and cuffs of Your neighboring Buckland has re- , Manchester has much to offer stration. I cenUy produced 400 bushels of pota- i justice to your family Recreation Center, succeeding C. flattering furs. Sports and semi­ W. Blankenburg of Talcottville. sports coats of tweeds in attractive toes to the acre at an estimated cost yourself, and in consideration L.ATEST TELEVISION i of 11 cents per bushel. The average ; your future comfort and happi- | Mrs. W. J. Taylor was re-elected new weaves, oxford cloth, fine llama ; yield of hay in Connecticut is one ■ j^^gg should visit Manchester vice-president. Mrs. Mabel Rogers succeeds Mrs. Harold Belcher as Rochester, Nov. 19.—(AP)—Tele­ cloth and imported mixtures. All I and one half tons per acre. On my | ^ beautiful vision that may be viewed by a ! own farm I succeeded in Producing . 1 secretary and Mrs. Gertrude Pur­ richly fur trimmed. ’ nell will be the new treasurer in room full of persons or flashed on an average of five and one half tons j the theater screen are possibilities J per acre. A greater production per j place of Mrs. Fred Norton. Miss i Mary Chapman, Mrs. E. A. Lett- science hopes to make actualities acre is necessary to reduce the cost with a new type of tube it has de- i of living which in turn will make ney and W. E. Buckley are the These other members of the execuCive veloped for the reproduction of ! industry stronger and more secure. NAME HOHENTHAL movies by radio. ! In conclusion Mr. Trumbull asked board. The retiring officers gave Dr. Vladimir Sworkin, television Smart i for a continued . cooperative com- interesting reports of the year’s pioneer and research engineer of I munity spirit which in itself is es- HEAD OF CHAMBER work. Westinghouse Electric Company Colors: ' sential to the proper community Mr. Murphejt, the new president, said that the tube which replaces all [ growth. was really the promoter of the mechanism in the reception of tele­ * “Your tov/n wall be known ‘by (Continued From Page Five.) Manchester Garden club, whose vision will enable more than one or Black, Brown their fruits’ collectively and indivi­ membership has grown in the few two persons to watch reception at Gray, Claret dually, and group effort must be car­ audience of the possibilities and ' years of its existence to almost a the same time. ried through the proper leadership. hopes for the coming year, The hundred. Mr. Murphey about four ’ The town of Maipchester or any Beige Blue president’s address follows: Harlowe VV'. Willis years ago while holding an exhibi­ There’s nothing very funny about i ’ other town depends on leadership tion of gladiolus in a Main street Hunter’s and cooperation of a non-critical it,' but have you noticed how the j store raised on his farm at Coven­ stock market seems to get all the ' Henry Trumbull membership.” j bers of the Manchester Chamber of Green ______j I Commerce for your kindness and in- try, issued cards to be signed ^Y j breaks ? in Community Development,” Mr. j _ Halsted’s Tricks i I terest in the Chamber during the persons interested in forming a. Trumbull said in part: Following the principal speaker of , ; period I have been honored to serve garden club. Later he invited pro­ “This is my first opportunity to j the evening Mr. William H3.^ted, j ’ as your president. fessors from Connecticut Agpricul-1 greet a representative Manchester | manager of the local Southern N. E. tural college to give lectures here; ALWAYS DEAD TIRED? lathering. I have a deep seated in- Telephone exchange entertained his “We are purposely omitting the and personally urged those who Secretai'y’s report at this meeting These terest in Manchester because of the i audience with some very good tricks signed the cards to attend as w ell; Howsad! Sallow complexion, coated fact that 54 vears ago I was born 1 with giant cards, rings, paper cut- , as we have a very full and interest­ ing program and with our new as giving a public invitation ■ tongue, poor appetite, bad breath, in a neighboring vUlage, Burnside. | outs and humor that brought touch through the press. The formal or- ; pim ply 8Kin and alway^ tired. W ’s SPECLVL Fash­ My first recollection of those days i applause, secretary having taken office only two weeks ago it was thought by the ■ganization took place later at the , wrong? Chances are you’re poisoned was in crawling under the fence at I Taj lor s Talk Manchester Communiiy/ club just i ^ clogg^ bowels and inactive liver. NOTE: ionable the old ball park. Manchester—if I An address by E. L. Taylor, in­ Board of Directors to be the most advisable and best thing to do. after a fall flower show. i Take this famous prescription used remember always had a good ball dustrial commissioner of the New ^ constantly in place o f calom el b y men There are some York, New Haven and Hartford R. Mr. Murphey was chairman of Furs: team. “There are many items I could the club’s autumn show in 1928, he and women for 20 years—Dr. Ed­ coats, with long “Consequently, my sympathies are R. over a period of 17 years show­ talk about tonight, but I wish to be wards Olive Tablet;3. They are harm­ slende r i z i n g ing the inception and growth of has entertained the members at Fox Wolf with Manchester because of early very brief and I will not touch on his farm and provided speakers less yet v ^ effective. A compound of lines, designed memories. Your town has made a “The Chamber of Commerce Idea” ; many. However, I would like to call vegetable ingredients. They act easily especially for the was very enlightening. from Storrs not far distant. He has Civet, Muskrat distinct progress equal to the towns your attention to the new Chamber on several occasions donated prizes upon the bowels, help free the system larger woman, in on the other side of tlie river of “The Chamber of Commerce idea I of Commerce design which has been : - . ___ atnnir of of poison caused by faulty elimina­ this group. Kit Fox which I am better acquainted. is 330 years old,” said Mr. Taylor. approved by the Dhectors and whleh ft™ a,od tion and tone up liver. “The first Chamber was organized glad bulbs and ip many ways .has Rosy cheeks, clear eyes and youth­ “A town is to be known by its will be standard on all letters, en rendered aUle assistance in the industries and organizations; how in the year 1599 in the city of velopes and printed matter sent out ful energy make a success o f life. Take Marseilles, France. At one time from our Chamber from this time. club’s activities. Dr. Edw^tis Oliva Tablets, nightly. they are cherished and supported. Mr. Murphey w a s th e principal Coat Shop—Second Floe*- - New Store 'These are indeed desirable qualities. there was reported a balance of It has been our thought In deslgn- Know them by their olive color. 15c, $180,000 in the treasury of this first speaker a t th e meeting la s t even­ 30c and 60c. All druggists. They are the highlights of a thrifty ing, and answered many questions and industrial community. community organization. In the time —Photo By Elite. Should Lead E. L. G. Hohenthal, Jr. put to him by the gardeners. He “A Chamber of Commerce should passed around a number' of gladi­ lead the list of all civic enterprises. “It is with pleasure that I accept olus bulbs, showing the character­ It should have the interest of the the presidency of the Manchester istics of some and the method of IF YOUR INCOME IS community at hearty also the indi­ Chamber of Commerce. « I want to dividing or propagating high priced TOO SMALL vidual welfare of the town. In this thank you for the honor conferred varieties. When the bulbs had been Sage-Allen & Co. day and age when the feeling is go- j on me in this appointment. the rounds Mr. Murphey said they for your needs. Investigate our Life ing the rounds that the community “Your new president wishes to were welcome to them and each Annuities. ’They enable you to in­ INC. is over-organized it is up to the | thank the retiring president and all member went home with a small crease your income without sacrific-. Ihg security of Income or principal. citizens to choose that organization i previous presidents for the efforts collection. HARTFORD 2-7171 that does the greater good and stick they have put into the Manchester Miss Mary and Miss Helen Chap­ They are backed by a $125,000,000 to it. I Chamber of Commerce. The past ' man exhibited a few white, yellow guarantee. “Speaking of his own experiences has been experience and experience and orchid chrysanthemums of the in Plainville as President of the ^ is education; therefore I enter office Chadwick hothouse variety, large FRANKLIN G. WELLES, JR. Chamber of Commerce, and what • with the benefit of .the education of handsome blossoms raised by their 307 Woodbridge St., Manchester that body accomplished, Mr. Trum- ^ the past and with a full realization head gardener, John Clarke. Phone 4098 bull continued: I of the responsibility that rests on Phoenix Mlttaal Life Insurance Co. “In our town I don’t know how me as President to make this the PALE ROSE BLOUSE ADVERTISE IN THE HERALD—IT PAYS we eould have existed without our | r- vhest year the ■Manchester JShern^^-^ •'A lark broWh skirt and cardi­ Chamber of Commerce. Over a two- : of Commerce has ever had. gan suit of jersey has a charming year period of intensive activity we , “We are starting a new chapter in pale rose jersey blouse with crys­ put into effect the following com- I the history of^ the Manchester tal buttons and is lined with pink. munity betterments: a new building | Chamber of Commerce, having with code; created the town board of I us now as Executive Secretary, Mr. ORANGE TIE finance; put into effect new zoning I E. J. McCabe and already the mem­ A burnt orange tweed suit, with regulations, public parking and j bers of the Board of Directors have its jacket a basque, completes its many other changes. Our Chamber | recognized in him the personality chic with a tuck-in white satin has been in existence 24 years. Earl G. Seaman blouse and bow tie of orange crepe. Don’t Let It Decay E. L. Taylor “If this work has been of value to | ing this that the Chamber could- of Louis IV there was a Chamber of YOU SAVE Plainville it is also essential to Man- j teli a story to our local people and the Chamber in these promising Chester’s growth and development. i Commerce in every city in France those with whom we are able to avenues. We have found it an agency to ad­ but they were arranged to be in­ communicate outside of our com­ “I wish to congratulate the new just the industrial, commercial and ferior in value to that first unit in j munity. The Manchester Chamber of president and his officers and wish social programs of ouf smaller Marseilles. ! Commerce intends more than ever them the greatest degree of success town, handing problems as they ar­ “The first Chamber of Commerce | to do the things that will make for the coming year. I feel sure that rive. Stick to the Chamber of Corn- in the United States was organized I Manchester a Bigger and Better this is going to be one of the ban­ merce. Business should not let it in 1770 in New York City and was ! Manchester and by working on pro­ ner years for the Manchester Cham­ ‘decay or run down at the heels.’ given a royal charter. j grams to do this we will prove that ber of Commerce and I take pleasure “In these days of budgeting this “Mr. Taylor spoke of the yearly | Manchester is A Good Town in in presenting the Manchester Cham­ and that it is essential and in­ increase in industry as recorded in ; ber of Commerce with this banner the yearly addition of trackage which to Live, Work, Invest and dispensable to throw your support Play. which I hope will mark the location to the body that takes the lead in on the N.Y.N.H. & H. railroad which “To tell others how good a town on Main street of one of the best all civic enterprises in your com­ department he supervises. Pleading Manchester is in which to live, work, Chambers of Commerce in Connecti­ munity. In our little town we have for a closer scrutiny of new indus­ invest, and play—the Chamber of cut or the country. 64 so-called organizations with a tries, Mr. Taylor voiced the opinion that no incoming unit of industry Commerce has authorized the print­ NOVEMBER SPECIAL title. It is for our own good to select should be given tax abatements or ing of a boklet which is now in the that one which reaches out farthest any inducements not in conformity works entitled “Come to Manches­ in its influence in all branches of with good business principles. | ter.” 'This will be completed very community betterment. “All new industries should be ask- ; soon and a copy will be sent to each P er tttS sill “Citing the changes that have ed to show a proper backing in all member of the Chamber. 85c ■BALANCE taken place in commercial and in­ branches that would tend to show “Your retiring officers have had dustrial lines and the resulting re­ them a proper addition to the com­ difficulties during the past year but Couglw DOWN quirements he said: munity. we have had the pleasure of starting For A MONTH Industries a program which we now turn over “Industries have passed through R. K. Anderson. various stages of development from the ‘one man business’ to the highly BRIDGEPORT YOUTH and ability colored with a back­ C o n st a n t coughing uses $ 1.00 '"departmentalized and specialized in­ ground of valuable and varied ex­ up energy more quickly than dustries of the current day. The day ARRESTEO IN NEWARK perience that makes us feel he is PRICE of the ‘one man industries’ is past. going to be very valuable to our Etrequous , exercise. Check 7 CUP Specialization is much better than Chamber. coughs at the start -witl\ the old ‘hit and miss’ management. Newark, N. J., Nov. 19.—(AP) — “It has been considered wise that CAPACITY Research is now essential to all lines James Langden, 16, of Bridgeport, we in starting this new chapter with Pertussin. and cannot survive without such ser­ Conn., was returned tp the State a new Executive Secretary in the $4.85 vice. The boot and shoe industry is Home for Boys at Jameshurg today office, put some real study into leader in this respect according to by Newark police after having been ‘What the Chamber of Commerce revelations made to the New Eng­ at liberty since his escape July 27 Should do in Manchester.’ ' We are land Council of Activities of which I during which time he said he was not going to specify our work pro­ am a member. Textile units else­ incarcerated and escaped twice, was gram for the coming year at this HUNTERS As a November Special This Handsome Paneled Corona where were found to he below nor­ prevented from committing suicide time, but we simply promise you mal in this changing condition. by hanging, robbed 13 stores in three our whole program can be centered Electric Percolator Valued at $7.00 for $4.85. “Your own Cheney plant was far states and stole three automobiles. around one plank— TAKE NOTICE! “Readiness to meet Manchester’s above the average grade of textile He was caught here impersonating Hunters are forbidden to industries. It was my pleasure to a naval officer. needs of the moment as they may listen to an address by a member of The youth, police said, also ad­ arise, or in other words, our aim ! trespass on our property at the Cheney Brothers staff on the mitted being an amateur safe crack- i will be first, second. and alway; Highland Park for the purpose 85c Down— Balance $ 1.00 a Month subject of textiles as pertaining to er. Langden walked into police throughout the year—’Service.' “To make our Chamber of Com­ of shooting game. the silk industry. This address is headquarters yesterday just as de­ Any persons violating the order highly treasured by the New^ Eng­ tectives were discussing a request merce the valuable organization we Just the durable 2 to 7 cup percolator for everyday use that you have been wait­ hope to make it to our entire com­ will be prosecuted to the full extent land council and a copy of this va u- from Bridgeport authorities asking ing for. Heavy guage aluminum that will stand kitchen wear—with the famous Uni­ able discourse is on file in my office his arrest. 'The youth told a plausi­ munity during the coming year we of the iaw. ble story and was about to be per­ need the support and backing of LAWRENCE W. CASE, for reference. every member. When you are versal cold water pump which quickly makes clear, delicious coffee. Unemployment mitted to leave when another pris­ Case Brothers. “Speaking of the Nati'. nal confer­ oner present, a former sailor, re­ called upon to serve on a committee E. J. McCabe Tonica Springs Co. Though low in price the Corona Percolator is high in quality and can be used in any, ence called by President Hoover to marked that Langden was wearing a or do some kind of work please try coxswain’s insignia and that “it and co-operate and I am sure if this to the new officers and we shall ameliorate unemployment conditions is done by all we are going to have ^dining room. > general over a greater part of the would be impossible for a kid like watch with interest the progress of that to earn that rating in four a very successful year;-a year that country, Mr. Trumbull said: will stand out as a bright one for “The Chambers of Commerce in months.” Let Us Invest Most of his robberies, Langden the Manchester Chamber of Com­ DAVID CHAMBERS coming years is to face its biggest merce.” problem in imemployment. Produc­ said, were committed in Bridgeport, FREE! tion today is far ahead of consump­ and that his attempt at suicide was CONTRACTOR Your Money tion. That is the thought in our also committed In that city’s jail. BOSTON BROKERS FAIL Through the courtesy of William Boardmah & Sons we are able president’s mind in calling the meet­ He said he escaped when he was AND BUILDER ing next Wednesday. He will show transferred to an asylum. In Mortgages to give a free POUND of PUTNAM COFFEE with each Corona Per­ the man he really is when we meet Boston, Nov. 19—(AP)—The firm 68 Hollister Street in business coxmcil. BOW YOKE of Downer & Company, a srnall bn good reliable local proper­ colator. The choice of experts. “In reference to possible unem­ Green, brown and white fleck commission brokerage house, today ties. We handle all the de­ ployment conditions various lines of a tan tweed suit with peplum flare was suspended from the Boston industry have been so specialized to its coat. The back yoke is cut Stock Exchange for failure to meet tails. that less manpower is needed. This so it looks like a big flat bow. its contract. The firm’s liabilities | ARTISTIC PICTURE same condition applies to Plainville were reported to be between $50,000 , FRAMING over a period of seven years time. HAT PINS and $100,000. It was the first Bos- j F. J. BUZZELL Manchester Ebctric We are faced with the question of It is chic to have either a spray ton Exchange member and the sec­ 553 Woodbridge St. ARTHUR A. KNOFLA 773 MAIN STREET PHPNE 5181 how to absorb this resulting unem­ of flowers of one’s initials worked ond Bostop brokerage firm to be Telephone 6142. “Service That Satisfies” ployment. out smartly in brilliants for hat seriously affected by recent market | iW’ork Called for and Delivered. Mr. Trumbull in his address ornaments this season. conditions. '875 Main St. Phone 5440 ■ fAGB ElUiff ' ^ Yale Looms Favorite 0JBS WITHOUT QUARTERBACK ^ V** •'■v? ^ j.jC FOR NEXT TOWN TITLE GAME i s : To Win Over Harvard

ptZI^/eD DID YOU KNOW THAT— V E A tiS TKCfA Will Be 48th Meeting Be­ One of Georgia’s veteran line­ D a ^ s l Out With B r o k e J L a s t M g A f ’s F i g A t s ' UllTlA A men says that Bell of Oglethorpe DENY DAVE HAYES and Reeves of Florida gave him ...... /siE’O'C'** • tween Colleges; Lehigh more grief than any other line­ K b and Stratton Will Be' men he has met this year . . . . HAS BEEN SIGNED and you know Georgia played , , i\ iL £ won on foul over Young Stribling, ^ and Lafayette to Meet for Yale and New York University Absent Owing to Death o f ; Macon, g. , p ^ y E R . . . . Dan Howley says Sidney Sixty-Third Time. Weil, Cincinnati owner, strikes England outpointed him as the sort of a man he’s Brothen Croman and New York, 10. j going to enjoy working for . . . Philadelphia—Lew Massey, Phila­ BY HERBERT W. BARKER The St. Louis players gave Dan delphia, stopped Harry Blitman, a wrist watch as he was going Donnelly Also on Injured Philadelphia, 2. Johnny Jadick, Report Was to Effect For­ New York, Nov. 19.— (AP)—Two away .... After Rockne’s team Philadelphia, outpointed Luis 'Via- of football’s oldest rivalries will be beat Stanford several years ago, List; Meikle May Play centini, Chile, 10. mer Notre Dame Star renewed on Saturday when Yale a reporter asked him if it were New Castle, Pa.—Phila Tobia, meets Harvard at Cambridge and true, as Glen Warner said, that New York, outpointed Erne Peters, HB Lafayette clashes with Lehigh at the Stanford players had out- Quarter. Cleveland, 10. i Would Work on Majors' VDORB Bethlehem, Pa. kicked, outrushed, outsmarted Pittsburgh—Yoimg Jack Thonip- AMlRCNi For the Blue and the Crimson it and out first downed Notre Dame son, Los Angeles, stopped Billy .... "That’s true,” said the BY TOM STOMTl will be the 48th meeting since 1875. White, Jersey City, 8. Line During Week, Lafayette and Lehigh have played Rock, “and I understand that the ■mAT MADe HIM American League next season Santa Fe—Bade Colima, Los An­ 62 games since 1884. The Cubs' chances of winning tie geles won on foul from Kid LOOVi LU uniform next Sunday. of the town football series next Sun­ c m i -RUtKS 8IRD1E this season. . Of the 47 previous ward pass drill and defensive work Dahlouist is confined to his bed at HOCKEY SEASON day at Hickey’s Grove was said to clashes Yale has won 27, Harvard against Crimsoi. plays. All regulan be without foundation today by 14, with six ties. with the exception of Booth wen Dwyer himself. The balance of the eastern sched­ on hand yesterday for the black­ "It’s the first thing I’ve heard ule for Saturday is made up of in­ board talk given by the coach. IN FULL BLOOM about the matter. I don’t even p tersectional frays or else tuneup Harvard Gets Rest know Hayes,” Dwyer answered. ’The m contests for the big colleges for Majors assembled at the Community Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 19.— (AP) preparation for major battles on —Coach Arnold Horween today gave Club last night where a serious dis­ Thanksgiving Day. One exception is All Ten Teams In National cussion was held regarding the sec­ the Harvard football team a com­ ond game of the series. Coach the Bucknell-Fordham battle at the plete rest in observance of the an­ Polo Grounds which will bring to­ Dwyer outlined the faults of the A BLACVl CKOO) , nual “holiday" during the week be­ League Swing Into Action various players in the opening gether two of the strongest teams fore the Yale game. The Crimson game. PiCKEP CHAS. B. RYAhiS BALL- in the east. players were the guests of the m is DRiOe m a d 6lUENi M(M Dwyer said this morning that it Yale Works Inside coaches at the Myopia Hunt Club for Tonight; Springfield Wins would be a much different story next A p6TeNiT/AL"Bn^iE" i \ e .... rw e New Haven, Nov. 19.— (A P )— an afternoon and evening of quiet. Sunday afternoon He figures that CC20UL) (oAlNiEO RVANi'S U^^DVl)06 Driven indoors yesterday by a With today’s leisure only tomor­ his offense will click next time and steady rain the Yale Varsity today BVDROPPlNi6ir/N:>THE Ml K E U JA C H / row and Thursday will remain for New York, Nov. 19.— (A P )—The that his team will at last get a, TOU6MEST ON^TBE COOKE-- was to take the field for a long preparation for the game and drill couple of favorable breaks. Present practice in preparation for its final biggest scoring spree of the youthful VPS'OH--CLEUeLAKiDyO.--1920 in defense of Eli plays. National Hockey League schedule is plans call for starting Bronkie at game of the season Saturday center, Tumiensky and Lippincott against Harvard at Cambridge. on tap. Tonight brings the first VETERANS PLEN'nFUX. complete schedule with all of the at guards, Coseo and Coughlin at GIFT OF FAN. as a reward to the team for defeat­ Little Albie Booth, whose flashy ten teams playing and if the splurge tackles with Crockett and Mc­ ing Michigan two years in a. row. play was missed in the Princeton A LUCKY BREAK of goal getting w’hich started the Carthy or Angello on end. Colgate had seven backs, six encounter when he sat on the side­ Jimmy Spillane, star fullback, is A combined water wagon, tem­ lines nursing a “Charley horse” was season off can be taken as an indi- YOUNG GRID MENTOR. ends, five tackles, two guards and The latest thing out. You'll understood to have remarked that to be out for a workout this after­ I cation of what is to come, the vari­ porary ambulance and first-aid Joe McKenney, 24-year-old foot­ be a back number at bridge he will be able to play. However, five centers who had seen previous noon after a rest of two days in the ous nets will be sagging from re- station to be used at football games ball coach at Boston College, is said team officials maintain that his varsity football experience at the infirmary. table conversations if you don’t I peated impacts of hard driven pucks was presented to Ohio State Uni­ to be the youngest head football aukte injury is of such a nature that start of the 1929 season. Although head poach Mai Stevens see it at Cheney Hall, Nov. 22, before tfie evening is over. he will be unable to get into action. versity by Guy Bowman, loyal fan. coach in major gridiron circles. In nine games so far, 63 goals “Yump” Dahlquist BUly Skoneski, Cub end who suffer­ have slid off the sticks of various ed a dislocated left elbow, was dis­ players, an average of seven to the charged from the Memorial hospital home with a broken rib and has game. This bids fair to esclipse all been ordered by the doctor to remain scoring records of previous seasons today. ' there at least the rest of the week, The Cubs are going forward with when two or three goals was about their plans to end the series Sunday. his mother said this morning. Strat­ the limit for one game. Individual ton also announced this morning There is no danger of any frame-up scoring marks also are about to go to lengthen the series and thus make that he would not be in uniform due under, with the veterans of former to the death today of his brother, more money. The Cubs have al­ years showing the way. Aurel Joliat, ready booked the Hartford Giants to Joseph Stratton. tiny wingman of the Montreal Cana­ This leaves the Cubs without the play at Mt. Nebo a week from Sun­ dians, already has rung up a total • services of a regular or even reserve day and that game will undoubtedly of six points on five goals and as signal barker. “Cody” Donnelly has attract at least two or three thous­ assist. Cooney Weiland and Dutch had some experience at the position and persons. Gainor of Boston have five points •hut he is out of the picture due to The south end eleven’s chances of why smokers each while Bill Cook of the New blood poison in his left arm. Johnny going through the season undefeat­ York Rangers and Hec Kilrea of Groman, another possible choice for ed or untied is not particularly good. Ottawa have four points apiece. ' the position, hasn’t recovered from If the Majors or Giants don’t bump Charley Conacher, former Toronto 14a bad kidney injury two weeks ago them, off,..then.,ther,e.is d,qnger of ‘•land the doctor has strongly advis­ amateur, leads the recruits wfth the NgW'LOndon Ockfords doing that trick Thanksgiving Day after­ ed against his playing again this three goals. All of these leaders will have noon. The Whaling a t y outfit tied season. graduate plenty of chances to increase their the locals twice last season. A game This leaves only Tommy Meikle, is also in the works to be played *:ex-Windham High star, as likely scoring marks tonight. Joliat and his Canadians go against their near­ with the Meriden Insilcos in Meri­ ’selection for the important post. If den some evening in the near future. Meikle is used 'at quarter. Coach est rivals, the Montreal Maroons, in Tom Kelley will have only four other one of the night’s headline battles. taackfield men. Ding Farr. Lefty St. The other leading attraction sends John, Chuckie Minicucci and “Pop” rne Boston Bruiu.s, featuring their tlFagleson. St. John has only partly high scoring pair, against the Rang­ BAT TO WATCH 'recovered from a very bad ankle in- ers. I't is the first meeting between tnese two teams since the last game '.jury. Never before has a south end of the Stanley Cup series last spring, MARTIN FIGHT team been so short'of backfield when the husky Bruins captured the ' talent for a town title game be- world’s title from a battered bunch of Rangers. Ottawa, now leader of the Cana­ dian section of the league plays its Boston Featherweight Meets first game away from home, going Camels to Detroit. Toronto, after two ties on the area ice, likewise goes on the Phil Verde of Rochester road, meeting the Pittsburgh Pirates who lost their first encounter to the Maroons. In the other game. New In Hartford Thursday. York’s Americans make their sea­ son’s debut in Madison Square Gar- oen, tackling the young and speedy Andy Martin of Boston and Phil Chicago Blackhawks. Verde.of Rochester will clash in the ten-round star bout at Foot Guard The Springfieid Indians of the hall in Hartford Thursday night. Canadian-American League opened Martin is the Boston feather­ T h e phrase “ I’ve their season with a 5 to 4 overtime weight who has been clamoring for victory over the Boston Tigers, last a bout with Battalino. At the time Graduated to Camels’ ’ originated year’s champions, at the Springfield of the Brown-Battalino bout at th with a Camel smoker. It expresses Arena Saturday night before a crowd of o,000 frenzied fans. The the experience of millions who next home game will be Saturday through Camels have learned wnth New Haven. urkish T to know real smoking pleasure.

- V LEAGUE TO UPHOLD

Jack Stratton GEORGE TORPORCER « cause of injuries. Only one extra back is available for the game next Sunday which means that undoubt­ New York, Nov. 19— (A P )— The As taste in smoking develops, it naturally leads toward better quaUty. International Baseball League will edly Kelley will workout on a couple have to get along without a presi­ of his linemen for backfield positions dent for another three weeks at during the week. It wouldn’t be a least, perhaps longer. New smokers may not be critical but when they once experience the big surprise to see Pete Conroy Meeting here yesterday, league pressed into backfield service. He is directors, seeking to find a successor a good all around man. St. John to the late John Conway Toole, may even be used at quarter in pref­ found themselves deadlocked over true mildness and surpassing fragrance of the Camel blend, they reaUze that erence to Meikle owing to the fact whether Jack Hendricks, former that he has played the position, and manager of the Cincinnati Reds, or is at more practice sessions, there­ William L. Dill, New Jersey .com­ here is a real superiority. It is for smokers of such discernment that Camels fore knowing the plays better. missioner of motor vehicles, should succeed to the office. Each was given fo'ur of the eight votes, five Andy Martin being necessary to elect. are made . . . for them the choicest tobaccos are selected . . . and this MAJORS STILL LEAD Eventually the league decided to Hartford baseball park last sum­ adjourn and try once more during mer, Dave Lumiansky, manager of the Minor League meeting at Chat­ both Brown and Martin, said Match­ tanooga, Tenn., December 5, 6 and maker Hurley had promised him the quaUty is maintained for the millions who know genuine smoking pleasure. THE HERALD LEAGUE 7. Ta the mean time, the league’s next Battalino bout for Martin. So affairs will be looked after by Char­ when Andre Routis was aimounced les H. Knapp, chairman of the as Bat’s next opponent, Lumiansky Due to an error, all of the scores board. brought suit a n d . filed an attach­ of the bowling matches in the The 1930 season will open Wed­ ment on the receipts the night Bat­ Herald League last night did not nesday, April 16, and close Sunday, talino beat Routis for the title. reach the office for publication to­ Sept. 21, with each club playing 168 Now Martin makes his Hartford night but they will appear tomor­ games as usual. The opening day debut and Hartford fans will have when they learn the difference a chance to judge the soundness of row. The Night Hawks crawled up schedule will finfl Buffalo at New­ ark; Toronto at Reading; Rochester his claim that he can beat the new a point on the Majors by winhiug at Baltimore, and Montreal at Jer­ champion. Bat will be present. four points from the West Sides sey City. Martin defeated Fay Kosky of Los while the Majors could get no more The league voted to uphold Billy Angeles in the star bout before a than three from the Charter Oaks. Souyiworth, manager, and George big gallery up at Boston last Friday The British Americans won four Toporcer, second baseman, of the night. they flock to from the Construction and the Cen­ Rochester Redwings in their fight Verde has fought Bushey Graham ters took the Shell Gas into camp by against the severe penalties meted three times and has met many of Ihe same margin. out to them for their part in a dis­ the other good boys of his weight. . turbance at the last game of the The aggressive Nick Christy of "Visitors to the English Parlia- "Little World’s Series.” Toporcer Bristol meets Joe Pasquale of New jnent average 5000 on- ordinary was suspended for one year and fin­ York in the eight-round semi-final days and more than 20,000 every ed $200. Southworth was fined and three preliminaries wiU, round O 1929, R. J. R*ra«Ut TebasM Camels Saturday. $500. out the ^ d . CMBytsfi Wiutmi.Btlaa, N. C MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN^ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1929. PAGE NINE

H^d8tead, general manager of the ; Rockville and Manchester district of OVER MILUON BELONG QUAKE, BABY HERE,! the Southern New England Tele­ Outweighed 95 Pounds F ootb a ll ROCKVILLE phone Company, will be the speaker. TO COMMUNITY PARTY 1\\/ViV T iljJjJLi Mother’s Club Meetijg. '^Briefs BIGGER UP NORTH! The Mother’s Club of Union church Stribling Loses On Foul , will meet tomorrow evening. Mrs. s Moscow, Nov. 19— (AP)—Official ■j I1 i Fined for Setting Traps. George Herzog, president of the figures issued today gave the pres­ 'London, Nov. 1 9 .— (A P )—William; Camera a bad beating about '..he New Haven—Albie Booth has tak­ club, will preside. The speaker of ent membership of the Communist ' Frank Kupchunos of Vernon was | the evening, which has been an­ i B U m Y body. en one more day of rest to recover ; before Judge John E. Fisk the police j party which rules Russia as 1,655,- L. (Young) Stribling of Macon, Ga., In the third round Stribling cracke I Quite a Shake-up in Nova nounced previously . will be Miss from Charley'"lorse that kept him i court on Monday morning at 9 \ 000 members. making his first ring appearance in Alice Watts, who v/ill have as her Factory workers comprise 64 per the Italian on the jaw and Camera out of the Princeton game but it o’clock, charged with setting traps i England met with defeat. Ihe went down for a count of six. He didn’t make much difference in the subject, “Amy Lowell and Excerpts cent, peasants 21 per cent and em­ Scotia, Slight Tremors in without permission and setting i From Her Work.” The committee ployees and others of various cate­ Macon, Ga., heavyweight lost on a got up however and in a wild fury, Eli practice. Mai Stevens spent yes­ traps without having them marked.' floored Stribling for a count of nine. terday afternoon telling the players has also planned a short musical gories, 15 per cent. Joans He w'as arrested on Friday by Game i foul to Primo Camera, huge Vene­ program.. In 1917 shortly before the October The American was dazed but game­ about their mistakes against fche All of New England. Warden Wraight. Judge Fisk fined ■ tian'carpenter, in the fourth round ly got up and succeeded in holding Tigers. Notes. revolution, the Bolshevik section of him $10 and costs of $10.26 amount­ Earl Semple has resigned his do- the Russian Social Democratic of what was to have been a fifteen his rival at bay for the rest of the ing to $20.26, which he paid. Cambrtdge— Harvard’s squad has! sition at the Springville Mill of the Party, the forerunner of the Com­ round encounter. The bout was held j round. Scores of Manchester persons plain Adolph Marker of Vernon was ar­ munist Party, numbered only 115,- UP to $300 in Royal Albert Hall last night. | Early’ in the fourth round Stno its “annual holiday” today. Tho HockSinum Mills Co. plainly felt effects of a slight earth­ rested on a similar charge on Friday Bert Willis of the local fire de­ 000 of whom 65,000 were workers Eight thousand fans including the ling landed a right and a left to Crimson players follow a plan of quake which rocked the east coast of by Game Warden Meyers. Judge part, sprained his akle, while at the and 17,000 peasants. Prince of Wales attended and were Camera’s body. The referee ruled Coach Horween by Taking one day for all New England late yesterday after­ Fisk fined him $9 and costs of $11.- Talcott avenue fire on Saturday. Total membership of the present rewarded with some spectacular the blows were foul and Stribling off from football just before the| Communist Party was reduced 31, which he paid. Mrs. Paul Preuss has returned to honsohold eiaer^eaeiefi w’as disqualified. Yale game. Golf and teimis balls; noon. No one was reported' injured greatly' by a recent “purging” pro­ milling. . Jail Report. her home on Davis avenue, after Stribling amazed the crow’d wn .a ; Camera weighed 283, had an ad­ are in order to replace the pigskins.; and many were unaware of the One hundred fifty-six prisoners j cess which eliminated more than The only charge is three and one- vantage of 95 pounds and towered tremors. The vibrations were felt several days visit in East Douglas, his skillful work in the first two 200,000 Communists who were found half per cent per month on nnpaid eight inches above his American West Point—Army’s game with! here mainly by persons in the upper | committed t3 Tolland Coimty Mass., where she accompanied hei rounds w'hen ’'.e evaded all of the stories of W d in g s . ! at Tolland during the fiscal wanting in some respects. rival. Ohio Wesleyan Saturday is the lasti husband to the annual banquet of amount of loan. giant Italian's wild swings and gave Three separate tremors were felt I 1929, according to Coumy the Blackstone Valley Association. home game for the cadets. They | flyg and I Commissioner’s report presented lne| DUCE PR.AISES ENVOY play Notre Dame in New York H| here for periods of thxee, Mr. Preuss is employed as an over­ Rome, Nov. 19— (AP) —Premier P e r s o n a l F i n a n c e C o . four second durations, xhe"he first oc- week. Of the 156 committed, a. 1. week later and Stanford at Pa’o I seer in one of the factories. Mussolini-today received in audience Rooms 2 and 3 curing at 18 minutes of four. The 1 but 11 were over 21 years of age. j Nathan Edwards of Thompsen Alto late in December. ' | The records show that the prisoners j Count Elia, Italy’s represent^ive at LOCAL FOOTBALL ' shock was most noticeable in the street, has returned to his home the Williamstown Institute « Poli­ State Theatre Bldg., Second Floor were committed for various of­ AMO top stories of buildings along Main from the Rockville City hospital, tics last suihmer. I 753 Main Street Hanover—Dartmouth has two street at the south end. Tables, fenses, the largest number, 85, being weeks to prepare for the Navy where he underwent an operation The premier congratulated Count So. M a n c h e s t e r , C o n n . HIGHLY PRAISED pictures and dishes were reported as for drunkeness. Following are the recently. Elia on his efforts to create a better game and has chosen a two- days having been moved by the vibra­ number committed on other Telephone Dial 3-4-3-fl rest as the best way to start. Prac­ Mrs. John Lovett and children of understanding of Fascism and ; Open 8:30 to J—Saturday 8:30 to 1 tions. charges: assault, 9; common drunk­ South Manchester were the week­ Italy’s financial situation in the tice will not begin until tomorrow. The earthquake, according to As­ ---- LICENSED BY THE STATE---- ■T ards, 10; common prostitutes, 1; em­ end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eugeue United States. That Bert Keane, sports editor of sociated Press dispatches, shook the bezzlement, 2; forgery, 1; frequent­ the Hartford Courant, w'ho umpired THE SOPHOMORE CROP. Philadelphia—Pennsylvania will eastern coastline from Rhode Island Edwards of High street. ing' house of ill fame, 1; house The Delpha Alpha class of tho the Cubs-Majors game here Sunday The time is almost here when have no easy time defeating Cornell to Newfoundland and as far west as breaking, 2; keeping house of ill was impressed with semi-profes­ I on Thanksgiving Day In the. opinion Albany, N. Y. The center of dis­ Baptist church will meet with Mrs. I sports writers the country over go fame, 1; larceny, 1; lewd conduct, 1; Ernest Butcher of Flower street on sional football in Manchester can be of Lou Young the Penn coach nas turbance was believed to be at Nova neglect of family, 5; obtaining goods ■ into training for the rigorous ges- Wednesday night. readily seen from the following so much respect for the Red team as ^ Scotia where several houses were by false pretenses, 2; robbery, 3, comment in his daily column in to­ j ture of selecting the All-ARierica an opponent that he gave the tom from their foundations and Louis Demley, organist of the Bap­ seduction, 1; stealing from the per­ tist church was able to be out again day’s issue; team. In some ways we must ad­ Quakers only one day of rest, start­ a bridge thrown out of line. The dis­ son, 3; taking auto without leave, 1; “The football followers who be­ ing practice today. turbance was attributed to a slight on Sunday after his recent illness. Graybar Electric Washer lieve that sand lot elevens are a mit that the Carnegie Foundation displacement of tho earth’s crust vagrancy, 9; violation of liquor law, rough tough combination, with little bulletin on athletics had the right along the “Fundian Fault,” which 8; all other offenses, 9. Military Whist. skill or speed and only a desire to dope on this annual exercise— from extends southwestward from the committ mayhem or murder would Bay of Fundy to Cape Ann. A Military Whist will be held by — Safety Device the angle of ballyhoo and the in­ Hope Chapter, O. E. S., on Tuesday OPENING STOCKS have had their eyes opened wide it justices that are bound to result BOWLING Dr. James W. Farr, local dentist, afternoon, November 26 at 2:30 they had seen the game at Manches­ from an All-America selection, reported that he was treating a — ^Lovell Wringer o’clock. All members and friends, ter Sunday between the Cubs and sometimes it seems hardly worth BRITISH-AMERICAN CLUB. patient at the time and that the who have attended previous whists the Majors, the first .in a series for the candle. The ballyhoo is often tremors caused the chair to sway New York, Nov. 19.— (APj —Fur­ — No Oiling during the year, are especially re­ the Silk Town championship. harmful, arousing jealousies within I League Standing. slightly. Other persons in the Farr ther selling developed at the open­ The teams are a little rough but the ranks of teams and leading to I W. L. Pts. block also felt the vibrations quite quested to be present at the final ing of today’s market, but trading — Porcelain that’s football. They are not tough the charge of bias on the part of I England ...... 4 2 -1 plainly. Morris Pasternack and party of the year. The officers rf was relatively light in volume. r.t all and good sportsmanship pre­ Interior the picker, who cannot possibly j Wales ...... 3 3 3 other business men upstairs in the the club will act as hostesses. Re­ Westinghouse Electric dropped dominated in that game from the weigh the merits of every player in : Ireland ...... 3 3 3 Cheney Block felt the tremors even freshments will be served. 51/2 points and Union Pacific, Union coaches right through the squad. more distinctly. John Zaldera said Beethoven Concert. Carbide, National Cash Register, — Duco Exterior Tom Kelly, Manchester High coach, the pack. I Scotland ...... 2 4 2 There may be a guard or tackle he looked out the window and saw There were more than four hun­ Air Reduction, Columbia Gas and h.as tutored the 'Cubs and Jack the telephone and electric light — Two Speeds in the line there somewhere whose High for the night: dred people present at Union Con­ Consolidated Gas, yielded 1 to 21-2 Dw'vcr the Majors. They have wires swaying. Mrs. A. Theodore points. heroic' charge let Fullback Bull Ba­ , J. Fleming ...... 306 gregational church on Sunday night, taught their teams that clean foot­ Anderson who lives on the high sec­ U. S. Steel Common opened frac­ — Concealed Motor loney go through for a 75-yard run. j H. Donnelly ...... 3^9 to hear the concert presented by the ball wins. tion of Ridge street also reported Beethoven Glee Club of South Man­ tionally higher, and Dupont and “ If any of my men play dirty or The fullback goes on the All-Amer­ ! F. Warnock ...... 302 —Self Emptying feeling the shocks. chester. The concert was one of the Brooklyn Union Gas showed initial rive the officials any trouble HI ica and the fellow who made his |f . Haugh ...... 300 The shock was distinctly percepti­ great work possible is given a letter best ever presented in the-city, and gains of IV2 points each. take them out of the game and ble at the South Manchester Post- Failure of a small New Yorn keep them out,” Kelley told the of­ and a banquet. ! IRELAND. although it is not customary to ap­ APPROVED BY office. plaud entertainers at a Sunday eve­ Stock Exchange house, announced GOOD ficials before the game smarted and I Donovan ...... 97 86 80 Inquiry failed to disclose any ef­ just before the close of the market Dwyer chimed in with 1 11 do the The Sophomores. I Cordner ...... 107 90 81 fect of the quake at the north end. ning evening service, the audience HOUSEKEEPING could not refrain from doing so, on yesterday, apparently caused no un­ same.” They shook hands on the For instance, it is not a custom I Donnelly ...... 103 111 95 easiness, and brought forth no un­ INSTITUTE of those who name the All-America Simday night. Every number on .’■.he I McDowell ...... 90 93 83 usual volume of liquidation. Brok­ ^^“The'^S)S won the first game 19 to choose sophomores. Yet this program was enjoyed and many Jones ...... 90 84 82 erage house comment was muca The Washer featured to 0. They are favorites in the bet­ year some of the finest football Haugh ...... 89 129 82 present expressed a desire to hear ting preceeding the second players in the country are sophs. FEDERAL RESERVE these artists again in the near fu­ more cheerful in character, and buy­ at The Herald Model ing recommendations were numer­ which wall be played at Manchester Glancing at the various backfields, ' 576 593 5’J6 ture. Home. next Sunday and if they the names of Albie Booth, Yale; Engagement Announced. ous. I ENGLAND. A block of 8,000 shares of Rey­ contest they will go gunnmg for the Shipwreck Kelly, Kentucky; Alex 82 76 BANKS PROSPEROUS Announcement was made at a Gillis ...... 69 nolds Tobacco -B at 41, off 1^, whs Terms Can Be scalp of the Hartford Giants and Yunevich, Purdue; Walter Masters, ■ Robinson ...... 84 88 '/I' party on Saturday, of the engage­ many who have seen them in actiop the largest transaction in the first Pennsylvania, and Marshall Duf- I Warnock ...... 98 100 1011 ment of Miss Miller, daughter of believe that they have the material field. Southern California, pop right Mrs. Louise Miller of Union street, half hour of trading. General Mo­ Arranged and the ability to add one more de­ i Hughes ...... 84 Washington, Nov. 19.— (AP) — tors opened with a block of 5,000 up at you. These players have been i Morrison ...... — to Julius Hoff, son of Mr. and Mrs. feat to the record of this city s lead­ in large part responsible for the Loans and investments of Federal shares at 41%, off %, but nearly all i Karr ...... 89 Reserve member banks were $35,- ; Frederick Hoff of East Hartford. ing professional team.” success of their teams. ' About thirty friends and relatives the other industrial and railroad 69 914,000,000 on Oct. 4 the date of the leaders opened with transactions of Vandervilt has a soph quarter­ last bank call. gathered at the Miller home '.'n back, Mouse Leonard. At Illinois is Saturday evening, when Mrs. Millei only a few hundred shares. M. H. STRICKLAND HONOR H. N. ANDERSON 493 547 .'>09 Made public by the Federal Re­ CleneraJ.Atqericsin, Ta.nk fell bA;k Pete Yanuskus. Up ^at Harvard is serve Board today, this was an in­ announced the engagement of her Next to Montgomery Ward’s Barry Wood and at California, daughter. 7%, United Fruit 3%, U. S. Freight WALES. crease of $203,000,000 for the three 3 and United Aircraft 2. Early FOR WORK IN SPORTS Moose Garity. There are Hewitt of W. Flemming ___ 86 88 83 months since last June and of Mrs. Elizabeth Barber. Phone’3768 832 Main Columbia, Miller of Alabama, and Mrs. Eli25abeth (Hooper) Barber, losses of a point ^ so were register­ W. Shields ...... ___ 103 90 81 $985,000,000 during the year. ed by Southern Pacific, Pennsyl­ Carlsten of Pennsylvania. There Total loans increased $506,000,000 91, died at her home on Talcott J. McCoIlough .. ___ 99 89 99 vania, Rock Island, International Battalino Besieged for Base­ I are others whose names elude u.s during the quarter and $1,840,000,- avenue on Sunday evening, follow- P. Doust ...... ___ 81 101 73 Telephone, American Telephone and ball Autographs; Signs I now, but who, as sophomores, are S. Wilson ...... ___ 84 67 94 000 during the year. Reaching a to ing a short illness. She was born I playing the kind of football that tal of $26,165,000,000, investments ; in Lancashire, England, March IS, Woolworth. Name Many Times But Not brings All-America honors. But— Western Union rallied 4 points, S. j 453 435 433 in United States government and 11838. She came to this country at Without Much Effort. i well, you can’t pick everybody. other securities declined $304,000,000 • the age of four years, locating in H. Kress and Public Service New SCOTLAND. Jersey 3 each and Baltimore & Ohio, S. Richardson ...... 63 — — during the quarter and $855,000,000 New York. She was married to Several Manchester persons were i A. M. Byers, and Borden advanced Fighters on the Coast. G. Baker ...... ___ 90 79 V6 during the year. ^ Ralph I. Barber, who died some among many present at the Hotel a point or so. U. S. States Steel ex­ BK Fight promoters in many Pacific T. Kane ...... ___ 99 91 92 Net demand deposits of all mem­ years ago. May 31, 1859. Mrs. Bar­ Garde in Hartford last night to pay tended its initial gain to a point and Coast cities have just about given H. WUson ...... ___ 115 83 93 ber banks on October 4 were $18,- ber was a woman of many loveahle tribute to Harry N. Anderson in it up for a bad job— unless they’re then fell back to yesterday’s closing J. Fleming ...... 92 125 89 952,000,000 a decline of $26,000,00(T qualities and has endeared herseff honor of his silver jubilee as an ama­ fortunate enough to live in the Los quotation of 160. D. Robinson . . . . 100 since June 29 and of $43,000,000 for to a host of friends, who will he teur sports promoter in the city of Angeles district, where the fans 81 Foreign exchanges opened firm, AGAIN the year. Member banks in New sorry to hear of her death. Hartford. flock to see any kind of a mitt-, York City reported a reduction of with Sterling Cables quoted 3-16 of 459 478 431 She was one of the oldest mem Members of the various team win­ slinging contest, or San Francisco, $248,000,600 in net demand deposits ^ ^gj.g of Union Congregational church, a cent higher at $4.87%. ners of the amateur baseball leagues where a few shows are staged. But for the quarter, member banks in Hope Chapter, O. E. S. and Burpee in Hartford were present. The prin­ as far as Seattle, Portland, Tacoma Chicago an increase of $60,000,000, Woman’s Relief Corps. and Oakland are concerned, the lid cipal speaker for the occasion was RUSSIANS FIRE ON other reserve city banks a decline of Mrs. Barber leaves a niece, Mrs. MONGOLIAN HOUSEHOLDS Ed Thorp, nationally knovm football is on. $12,000,000 and country basks an James Merry of Victorial, Australia CONFISCATED BY SOVIETS official who handles the Yale-Har- In the Northwest legal tangles increase of $175,000,000. three grand nieces and two graa-i have dropped the boxing racket for vard and Notre Dame-Army games EASTERN RAILWAY For the year ending October 4 nephews. during the next two weeks. He told a count. Last spring a negro pre­ member banks in New York City Ulan Bator, Mongolia, Nov. 19 — ' The funeral wais largely attended (A P )—More than a thousand house­ of several interesting situations liminary fighter died following a Harbin, Manchuria, Nov 19 — reported an increase of $331,000,000 GIVE from her late home this .afternoon which crop up in the life of a grid match and public officials promptly in net demand deposits, member holds valued at 8,000,000 rubles (AP)—Airplane and artillery bom­ at 3 o’clock. Rev. George S. Brooke.i, (about $4,000,000) belonging to banned the sport. Fight clubs were banks in Chicago a decline of $5,- official. bardment by Soviet troops at both pastor of Union Congregational former Mongolian princes and noble­ Mayor Walter E. Batterson per­ darkened throughout the summer. ends of the Chinese Eastern Rail­ 000,000 other reserve city banks a The People of Hartford and Vicinity the Greatest Money Sav­ Only recently have a few clubs at­ church officiated. Burial was in men were confiscated today by the ing Offer They Have Ever Recorded From Any Dentist In This formed the duties of toastmaster in way were reported today. It was decline of $243,000,000 and country government, and apportioned among his usual highly capable manner. tempted to put on minor shows. believed Soviet forces were trying banks a decline of $126,000,000. Grove Hill cemetery. State. Motion Pictm-e. the collective farms operated by Your Health Comes First, Luxury Last Among those called upon for. re­ With Seattle clubs attracting lit­ j to cripple the railway by striking at Capital and surplus of all member peasants. marks were Judge Francis A. Pal- tle talent, those in Portland and the road’s fuel supply, banks on October 4 was $254,000,000 “The Cricket on the Hearth” writ­ Take Care of Your Teeth ten by Dickens, will be presented in Each prince who yielded his lotti. Rev. John F. Johnstone, A. W. Tacoma automatically suffer. There j Advices reaching Harbin today above the total reported for June 29 house, cattle and other property .•VII physicians recognize the value of good teeth. They know Keane and A. B. McGinley. Bat Bat- has been only one show of any con­ ; said heavy damage had been inflict- and $715,000,000 above the total re­ motion pictures at the Union Con­ gregational church next Sunday without a struggle, was permitted All physicians recognize tho value of good teeth. They know taJino, world’s featherweight cham­ sequence in Tacoma in months. ' ed on the Dalainor mines near Man- ported for June 29 and $715,000,000 teeth are abscessed, faulty or decayed have them taken care of at evening at the popular evening serv­ to retain 3,000 rubles worth of prop­ pion, was present. Portland operates under a state law chuli which are reported by the above the total reported October 3. once. Now. read my splen^d offer below. This Offer Is Good for ice. The public is cordially invited erty, while those who were accused Every person present was given a that permit 10-round bouts, but a Chinese Eastern Railway. All work Total capital and surplus report­ of trying to conceal their assets to attend. This Week Only. new baseball and a busy session municipal commission has handi­ ceased at the mines and the miners ed was $5,551,000,000. from the government were left only of autographing followed. The prin­ capped various promoters. fled with their families. Astronomer To Speak. 300 rubles. Simultaneously with Delainor’s cipals at the main table and Bat­ San Francisco also has known its On Sunday evening, December 1, (Outer Mongolia is generally §25 SET OF TEETH §15.00 talino were in big demand. Both of troubles. And Oakland hasn’t done bombardment Soviet airplanes were L. W. Ripley of Glastonburj*, th'3 recognized as an integral part of reported to have raided the mining A great saving on a fine set of Natural Byte Gold Pin Teeth. Bat’s hands w'ere still bandaged and anything big in a fighting way since ONE DEAD, TWO INJURED astronomer, will give an illustrated the Republic of China but is auto­ Our work guaranteed. Take advantage of this offer. it was very evident from the manner the inception of the 10-round law in area In the vicinity of Progranich- address on “The Latest Messages nomous and organized to a great ex­ in which he wrote his name that it California in 1925. Several big naya and Sulfenho on the eastern from the Sky.” He will show lantern tent on Soviet lines.) was considerable effort. Yet the arenas in Frisco have lost money end of the railway where the IN NORTH HAVEN CRASH slides, which he has gathered from SET OF TEETH— RUBBER Chinese Eastern has been buying popular Hartford champion, didn’t trying to stage weekly shows. An- Lick, Yerkes, Mount Hamilton, Yale LOW A S ...... have the heart to refuse his friends cil Hoffman and Harry Morrison coal since the Russian supply was and Harvard. It will be an interest­ $10 severed. North Haven, Nov. 19— (AP) — We Also Make Gold, Aluminum or Hecollte Sets of Teeth—» despite the decided inconvenience. alone made money by staging a few An unidentified person was killed ing subject and many of the towns­ big scraps in the Seals’ ball park. Passengers Automatic Unbreakable, Durable and Perfect Fitting. Among those present from Man­ According to messages from and two others were Injured, one people will be out to the service. chester were Arthur St. John, Frank Los Angeles and Hollywood con­ critically today when their car Meeting Night Changed. Complete tinue to enjoy prosperity in a box­ Khailar several passengers were TEETH EXTRACTED Wallett and Charles Varrick from killed and others captured by Soviet plunged down a ten foot embank­ The monthly official board me st­ Heat Badly decayed broken dowTi -teeth or roots the Economy Grocery'team, winners ing way. The Hollywood American ment after crashing through a ing of the Methodist Episcopal Legion makes money every week troops after the bombardment of a carefully removed. of the Independent League, Wallace crowded passenger train between bridge guard. Two others in the church has been changed from tlis Contra and the profits at the end of each machine escaped injury. Nelson, an umpire, Bernard Sheridan Manchuli and Khailar. One shell third Tuesday night to the third Porcelain or and Thomas W. Stowe of The year resemble a tidy fortune. Tom James Spiro, 40, of New Haven Wednesday night of each month, Gallery does the job for Hollywood. was said to have made a direct hit FILLING TEETH Silver, low as Herald. on a dining car while machine guns is on the danger list at Grace hospi­ which will be more convenient for tal with a possible fractured spine. were fired at the passenger coaches. the members. A meeting will be held TEETH CROWNED Most of the passengers killed The second person injured has not tomorrow evening in the Men’s Cor­ been identified and Is also at the Dr. King’s Dentists crown decayed or broken HOLD LOTTERY MEN were traveling third class, the re­ ner room at 7:30 o’clock. All mem­ teeth with porcelain or gold, so that they feel like hospital. bers are requested to be present. ;f o x \ 9u m ^ ports stated. James Andius, 24 Walter Place, your own teeth, last for years and add to your An artillery bombardment of Lions To Meet. New Haven, Nov. 19 — (AP) — Some fellows go around the driver of the machine Is being appearance. Low as ...... Manchuli on the western end of the The Rockville Lion’s Club will Four men, arrested in connection with cloves on their breath. held In $1600 bonds in connection railway, also was reported. The meet at the Rockville House on Fri­ BRIDGEWORK Low as ...... with yesterday’s seizure of several — others are single railway station was badly damaged. with the accident. Olerands Rallls million lottery tickets, were held in of Spring^eld, owner of the car was day evening of this week. William Lost teeth replaced without plates. Bridge $1,000 bonds each today for the Su­ the fifth person in the car. Andius teeth made by Dr. King’s Dentists over tiventy perior Court by Judge Stanley Dunn and Rallls escaped injury. Regulator years ago are now being worn by many people in in City Court. CHINESE PROGRAM FOR Police said that the car went Hartford. If you have any missing teeth, let They are: Irwin Wener, 34, of through a rope railing at the bridge Ur. King's Dentists replace them for you. West Haven; George S. Smith, of WOMEN’S FEDERATION after failing to negotiate a turn in p tr uourhome.. Highwood; James J. Kane of Strat­ the highway. The car landed on Its side after falling down the em­ Hecolite All Pink Sets ford; and Walter E. Collier of Ham­ Is your home cold in the morning bankment. , ' den. Three of the men were arrest­ The Center Church Women’s Fed­ when you come down stairs to The most beautiful unbreakable material ever Invented to take ed yesterday, while the fourth. Col­ / eration will hold it.'< meeting tomor­ breakfast ? the place of rubber. Ask the doctor to show you one of these lier was arrested this morning. Po­ row evening at 8 o’clock with Mrs. NO FOOTBALL. Our heating expert can tell you beautiful sets of teeth. lice believe that the men are con­ Herbert B. House, 201 East Center how th eliminate this condition and nected with a state-wide lottery street. A program of unusual Inter­ at the same time control your coal ring with branch offices in Bridge­ est has been prepared under the dir­ Wilmington, Del., high school Is EXAMINA'nON FREE Plates Repaired In S Hours fired boiler this winter so as to port, Hartford, Stratford and ection of Mrs. J. A. Hood, Mrs. Wat­ without a football team this fall be­ make your home comfortable all Waterbury and one in Montreal. son Woodruff and Mrs. Sidney cause the parents of some students The tickets stored in three rooms Wheaton of the World Service com­ refused to sign faculty cards which day. Investigate if. were seized in a raid on a warehouse mittee of the Federation. Miss Lydia relieved the school of responsibility Sta-Amatic In­ after Police Chief Philip T. Smith Houston of the Foochow Mission in in case of injury to their sons. strument & Appli­ DR. C. W. KING aad received Information that the China will be the guest speaker and ance Company, 1703 rooms were being used as a central I M c Ca n 't aU B the silver collection will be received LEADER STILL STUDIES. A LUCKY BREAK HARTFORD distributing point for the ring. for that mission. The young women Park St., Hartford, 306 Main St. Cor. Charter Oak Ave. VWG./o^^r.J or representative. second machine. bers of the V/omen’s Federation. degree. Nov. 22 at Cheney Hall.) J 7 c . X • ■

PAGE TEN MAJNUHESTlii’K EVENING HEKALD, SOGTH IVLANUWESTEK, GUNN., XUEaGAi:, NOVEMBER 19, 1929.

9 k , A l g ^ Daily Health l a r i a t ^ a r / « Service S y Arm© A ustin, author of THIS AND THAT IN ,rD. 1929 by by World Pained Authority .Sjejlvi c e ,. I n, c • ^*The Black PigeorC''Rival Wives: etc. Hints Un Hmv 'I'u Keep Well

THIS HAS HAPPENED. UNDULANT FEVER FEMININE LORE MRS. EMMA HOGARTH, miser, SLOWLY GAINS A said to keep money in her room ! The children of this and future FOOTHOLD IN AMERICA on the second floor of MRS. generations, if they do not have a J RHODES’ boarding house, is happier outlook on life, ought to i BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Mrs. A. B. Homewood announces |bne or two halves of peaches and strangled to death. BONNIE J Editor Journal of the American DUNDEE, “cub” detective, assist­ have a healthier one because of the a pre-showing of her natural-look­ cover with dough. Put cupq in , a ing LIEUT. STRAUN, attaches Medical Association a n d of ing roses and other flowers, so steamer over boiling water and intelligent work that is being done Hygeia, the Health Magazine prized for some decoration, every steam 45 minutes. signiflcance to the utterances “Bad * * * Penny” made by CAP’N, Mrs. Ho­ ; in sight saving. Years ago considerable attention day this week until Friday, at her garth’s parrot, when he flnds in In talking with Mrs. Winifred was paid to a disease called malta home 122 Oakland street. After The cut of gowns for coming-out the victim’s diary reference to a Hathaway, who assisted in the first fever which had occurred in epi­ that they will be at her Hartford parties is of real importance. When mysterious “D.” of whom she iived course for sight saving given at demic form among British soldiers shop, 75 Pratt street. Mrs. Home­ a young girl has a small waist it is in dread. Suspicion falis on EMIL Columbia University in 1921, and quartered in Malta. The same dis­ wood’s gift articles are the daintiest wise to cut her gowns to emphasize SEVTER, former boarder whom who has. giveh. similar courses in ease occurring in other parts of the imaginable. Do take advantage of it. Often a bouffant type made Mrs. Hogarth accused of trying various other parts of the country, world carries the name of Mediter­ this opportunity to buy when the longer than formerly will bring out rob her and who has ieft town I was amazed aL the fine results ranean fever and undulant fever, stock is fresh and full and prices her slenderness admirably, while that are beihg achieved in this the latter because of the intermit­ moderate. j other figures will be smart in hurriedly on the one o’clock train. * • • Boarders quizzed are: HENRY field. tent character. I high-waisted gowns. Flowered taf­ DOWD, CORA BARKER, theater There are, she told me, now Of recent years this disease has Changes in the silhouette have fetas are lovely for these bouffdnt pianist once named as an heiress more - than 4000 partially sighted tended to occur in increasing num­ brought into existence a new,shop ago'wns, then there is a hydrangea to the victim’s hoard; NORMA ' students enrolled in sight saving bers in other parts of the world, so where instead of fitting new dresses blue moire that is exquisite. 'The PAIGE, latest heiress who in­ classes in the various states. that within the past year 15 cases to one’s figure, the figure is act­ rich brocades should be left until the curred the old woman’s w'rath by * * * have been reported as developing in ually tailored to fit the dress. 'The debutante • grows older. As for becoming engaged to WALTER Helping Defectives Great Britain; in Denmark, there principle of reducing is not by diet. I colors the pastel shades and white STYLES, once an heir, and en­ “In these classes,” she explained, are said to be 500 cases a year, The main line of attack is in pur­ are preferred to deep tones of any raged because of Mrs. Hogarth’s “special large type books, movable and several hundreds of cases have suit of the waistline which eight one color. accusations against him to his seats, and desks that raise to an developed in the United States. women out'of ten have lost the last ’It ♦ * fiancee: BERT >LYGNUS, amateur angle are used. The best lighting At the same time that this dis­ few years. The process as far as I The girl who is subject to eye- scenario writer,. and. DAISY’ arrangements are made and special ease has appeared in man, the can make out is by massage and strain because of working imder. SHEPHERD. methods used to adapt the regular disease known as contagious abor­ some people prefer that to return­ poor lighting conditions, should rest Dundee learns from Mrs. Rhodes grade curriculum to the needs of tion has been more frequent in ing to the old-time corsets. They her eyes at all times when traveling of the mysterious manner in which the children. cattle. Investigators for the United boast of a grand' opera singer who to and from work in trains and the victim received and sent mail, “Educators have found that States Public* Health Service have lost nine inches around her busses instead of reading as so making the postman her only con­ many children who had been ac­ shown a definite relationship be­ waist, two “around her upper many do. Just closing the lids and fidant. When pellets of paper, the counted .stupid, sullen, morose, tween the germ causing contagious arm, four around her hips and relaxing works wonders. This may missing page from Mrs. Hogarth’s mentally sub-normal and even abortion in cattle and the one caus­ three around her knees. It is inches be done at odd moments during the diary, are found in the drainpipe criminal, displayed excellent in­ ing malta fever or undulant fever and not pounds, or both perhaps day. Occasionally focusing . the of Cora’s room, she breaks down telligence and pleasing disposi­ in man. that disappear under these vigorous eyes on a far distant object is good and confesses being in the mur­ tions as soon as their defective vi­ The germ is found in the milk manipulations of superfluous fat. for them. der room but swears the woman sion was recognized and they were of infected cows, but this is not One might do the alterations them­ ♦ * * was already dead. She says she j placed in sight saving classes, apparently the chief mode of in­ selves, I suppose, if they would per­ Housekeepers should realize the tore out the page because it re­ j “The necessity for some chil- fection, since the disease affects sist, but it is much more modem to advant9,ges of combining vegetables. ferred to an alleged affair between I dren to take the same work over young men more frequently than it have it done. Now then when we Cheap ones may be used as ; a her and Sevier. Strawn arrests “What do you use for taking out spots?” Dundee asked. again, a serious educational waste, affects women and children. see a dream of a frock which once stretcher for more expensive ones her as a material witness against ' is frequently traced to eye diffi­ , In Denmark, investigators found would have been too small for con­ or popular ones with those not so culties. In sight saving classes, most of the cases among agricul­ sideration, we may be trimmed down Sevier, who is missing. boarders a dance for three or four girl in the house—about breaking well liked. Carrots and cauli­ NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY apparent dullness often disappears tural workers, especially those com­ to fit it. flower is a combination that is un­ years—” the rule which says ‘Positively no and children are able to receive SIMPLE SMARTNESS ing into close contact with cattle, ♦ * * CHAPTER X X n “But for once it was the piper washing in rooms or bathrooms,' ” usual. The vegetables are cooked It was 2 o’clock—just after the j an education of regular school and in this country many cases have Peach Cup Puddings. separately and the cauliflower may who paid,” Dundee reminded him Styles laughed, as he soused a pair A simple printed rayon crepe in been found ■ in workers in packing bigDig sunaay Sunday dinneruimier forxui which gravely. “She has certainly paid of gray silk socks in his stationary i standards without injury to eyes.” One cup flour, I tablespoon but­ be surrounded with creamed cat- few of the Rhodes House boarders nnw becoming tones of bro-wn and yel­ houses dealing with swine, sheep ter, 2 teaspoons baking powder, >4, tots, or a tomato sauce perhaps. . And noiy w'hat basin. “But I have the same excuse Giving Courage low-beige. and cattle generally. had any- appetite^^when Lieutenant chief?” as the girls. I actually haven’t the teaspoon salt, milk, canned peaches. Carrots and peas and carrots and She mentioned two specified in- It emphasizes higher waistline, * It seems likely that infection Mix and sift flour, salt and bak­ creamed celery‘are good combina­ Strawn sought out- Bonnie Du ee “I’jjj going tochuck everything ' money to spare to get my laun- probably occurs from direct con­ in his litue third-noor roo • belonging to the old lady into her ' dry done outside. Believe me, Dun- I stances of happy results from and curved hipline so important in ing powder. Work in butter and cut tions. Beets offer many possibli- ' training, that seemed to me very the mode. A circular godet is in­ tact with diseased material rather in milk to make a soft “drop” ties if boiled whole and scooped out _ locked trppk, lock it, and take it down to I dee, I’ve become an expert on than from the drinking of infected associa^ cheerfully. headquarters for safe keeping, cleaning, pressing, and light laun- ; much worth while. One was the serted at center-front of skirt dough. Put a little dough in each to form cups to be filled with peas, t case of the son of a famous sur- milk or eating infected butter or up. She 11 thev’H Down there, I can take niy time ! dry. About the only things I can’t which gives interesting swing to of four biVered custard cups. Add beans or any of the vegetables men­ ' geon, who had set his heart on fol- hem. The collarless neckline is cheese, although it is quite possible tioned above, creamed or buttered. morning, ^.nd i suppo ' ^ looking over her papers and things j manage myself are my shirts and that the latter may be a source. grant her bail, ’ for any clues to her past-relatives pajamas.” : lowing in his father’s footsteps, rolled into revers. Sleeves boast A savory combination is beans, cel­ j but naturally could not do the of wide turn-back flaring cuffs. Workers for the various state ery and onions, another is dried lima her behalf myselt, 1 i ® vintVi' ''’^o ought to be notified, and so | “What do you use for'taking out health departments and for the Pretty—Smart ' but I’ve already ha a on. Her will must be among them : spots?” Dundee asked, with idle in- amount of close study and applica- Style No. 718 is designed in sizes beans and carrots. I tion for a medical degree, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38. 40 and 42 United States Public Health Ser­ « * « Sherwood, the clistnc y. somewhere, and your little Miss terest, his eyes roving about the vice are attempting to find out and I think it 11 be al rig , ^ Paige will inherit—a bunch of old ' pleasant little bedroom. On a chair- i His teacher did not discourage inches bust. It is an excellent Kellogg’s All-Bran Waiflesv I him, but she interested him in for- dress for school or office wear. how frequently the disease con­ One and one-half cups flour, % can get anyone to go on clothes about 10 times too big for back, protected by a towel, hung tagious absortion occurs in cattle. “It seems ghastly , her.” I three pairs of socks. On a lini i estry, little by little, so that he is It makes up beautifully in feath­ teaspoon salt, % tablespoon sugar, j now happily engaged in being a Examinations o f specimens o f 3 teaspoons baking powder, % n viSma? who h^as done every-’ ! Dundee flushed at that “your lit- strung between the dresser and the erweight woolen which is so smart, j tree surgeon—a pursuit quite pos- and included in every new ward­ milk are studied as to the occur­ All-Bran, 1 egg, % cup milJt, K fn hernower Ue Miss Paige,” but said nothing. | bed post hung other garm ents- I sible with his handicap, and yet rence of the germ of tuberculosis tablepsoons melted shortening. S d be d a S inL j£l as a ma- “You can stick around here, if j washable ties handkerchiefs, even robe for general daytime occasions. and also as to the possible pres­ ^ at the same time not so remote Midnight blue wool crepe with re­ Sift the flour, salt, sug;ar " am) should De ciappea j Bonnie,” Strawn went on, a pair of white duck trousers, and, from his ideal as to be too obvious ence of the germ of malta fever. baking powder together, add tbs “O l i d ' S aet out on bail. When addressing the boy affectionately by j at the very end, a pair of gray vers of white crepe de chine is chic. a substitution. Canton crepe in hunter’s green is Patients who have the symp­ bran, the well-beaten egg, milk and I left the ja ifsh e was having the his nickname, for the first time, suede gloves There was a girl, too, who was toms of this disease, which in­ melted shortening. Beat well. Baka Stvles held up a bottle especially attractive and practical. clude intermittent fever, great warden telephone to Hartman, man- “Keep your eye peeled an_d your i This! artistic and had the feelings*- and Crepe satin in black with the dull in hot waffle iron. JlTJf'thT'LRtle"^^^^ager of the Little Queen, Strav-n errlV en rh u rp erson ally I think of cleaning fluid triumphantly. “It the impulses of an artist, but not weakness and symptoms similar MARY TAYLOR. Assured h^m easilv. “So you think the case is about closed.” really works! . . . Well, if you II surface used for center-front godet to those of typhoid, malaria, and assured him easily. “So you think the case is the eyesight. Landscape gardening in skirt, partial belt, cuffs and ■ W v a s telling the truth, the whole “W ell-I don’t,” Dundee retorted, excuse me I’ll dress, now that my became her salvation, and she now even chronic heart disease, are Ice cream was introduced into _ womanish work is over for the day. rever facing provides interesting istudied by modern diagnostic truth and nothing but the truth, but the words were spoken to him- has k large staff of helpers and is trimming effect. France about 1550. self alone, after the door had closed ^ I’m going to take Norma for a prosperous and happy in her work. methods which involve removal of bov ? an- behind his complacent chief. j walk, and to a mo\ne. too, if she’ll Silk crepe in rich plum shade, I -certainly— dnill ■DundSfi., This age may not seem so glam­ sheer velvet in black or gay print specimens of blood and testing of 'consent to go'.: -Pdor: girl! -Tbis ter­ orous. or so romantic, to us in th^se specimens as to their reac- swered vehemently, “.Any woman rible business has hit her harder and crepe Marocain in cocoa shade Suiinyside wonv-ho vmuldv.muiu telllen heruci right age, when — Suddenly he remembered some reallv many ways, but when we consider are ideal suggestions. I tion with the germs of the dis­ it hiiT-t as badly as it hurt Cora thing, and sprang to the door, in ; really what is being done for sick and Pattern price 15 cents, in stamps ease. /o t stick at telling time to hail Strawn before he j ^^zy about tha queer old woman. defective children, we have to ad­ or coin (coin is preferred). 'Wrap I The menace of undulant fever is S r;v i„,o truth about annhtug „a=hed_the ataina-.y, VVhen tb. dej I mit that it has its advantages. I not the menace of a great plague Private SchoGl sun____ By the tective lieutenant was back in the | a lot of things,” he added evasively, | coin carefully. else under the We suggest that when you send ! like the great epidemics of influ- chie<’. have you heard any- room Dundee said: ■ not having^ the ^ slighte.st x suspicion ! : enza, but rather the danger of a ’ ’ .c / e" ,.r. ruH imii that Dundee had overheard both h)s I for pattern, you enclose 10 cents 217 North Elm St. thin?- on those food analyses: , “Sorry, chief, but aia you cn.,LK. . , ' additional for a copy of our new I new condition which insidiously poison on ?a,sy Sheph.rd-s n.i.„,ght. anb No^™ P. creeps into the population and • PhMie 3300 YOUR Fall and Winter Fashion Magazine. gradually affects increasing num­ Bonnie's bed.' think there .'°°^n s„re! Matter of routine. The behind him, he became aware of bers of people. ETHEL M. FISH w S be And carraway says none : call came from a drug store coin I he slow tapping of Bert Magnus’ CHILDREN Manchester Herald Beautiful but decidedly not dumb of the fingerprints he found in the ; ]^ox in Chicago, so we don’t know 1 ^ypevv n Pattern Service CRYSTAL WINGS is Lucy Thompson, above, of Em­ Director roommatchup with Dowd’s or ' “r^o was calling our Daisy. 'Why ?” j “Well,’ he grinned as he knocked. ‘he can’t do m.ore than kick me | by Olii’e/^berts Barton 718 poria, Va. Classmates at the State As this is a day school for in* H.Iagnus’s. So you see the trail ^ 'Well, Daisy insisted on leaving j As our pniiorns ore mailed Two crystM Things adorn a little Teac.hers College in Farmville, 'V'a., reenrieadinrrighTba7k to¥evier.” ' to d i-!“’sa^r^^^ if shi | out . . Gloves . . . Gloves! In this ! Lv NEA ServiceJnc black, velvet with long voted her the most intellectual stu­ dividual instruction in elemen­ “Of w’honi we have no finger- sta.ved on here. I thought that was j ^^ind of w eathei. he added to him- from ,\«-vv Vorli 'Jity (ilease al­ Should children of the family play low five days. sides. dent in the school the other day. tary grades, pupils may enter prnt‘5 ” Dundee remmded him soft- ^ little queer, in view of the fact : self very thoughtfu wn but the together to the exclusion of outside Prlie 15 Cents at any time during the school fv“ oh. mavbe vou’re rirht. chief, that she daimed she’d fallen a.deep I words o*d not refer to Bert Ma.gnus, companions? year. and 'Pew'er is our men. but- ” ,,^hile waiting to be questioned this ^''^o ja .s openmg the door to him I hadn’t given this matter much Name ...... ■noming” Dundee answered. ct’uugingiy. thought until I heard a mother ‘■rf vou croak ‘Bad penny’ at me “Where did ehe go? I’ll have a ^ 1- say the other day that she abso­ Size . .. >•••••< a"-a>.n. I’ll brain vou,” • Strawm >^.^11 her'for-a couple of.dav.s, , U® t>3 Lcn..niie;i) lutely discouraged her children Old Fashion New England Boiled Dinner TUTORING tviT.-,-*ened with a grn. “Bv the until.tlm igquest is-, over—not that from playing with the neighbors. Address ADULTS AND CHILDREN rTpiTjer fiovm to head- tiiere’s any .yeql need.” Strawn a,,- flM\RT IDE-\ “There are three of them and North Coventry Chapel Hall Cora t-’d >>ow she not -,vered ■gbod-.hu'moreflly- . ' ‘ ‘ ____ that’s enough. 1 know they can’t Send .yoor order .to the “Pat­ Class for pre-kindergarten ri'’t o ' the room., d’dn’t 'e?.ve “She said sh e, was going to .ths • If you have a smart winter suit | learn any harm from each other Wednesday, Nov. 20,5:30 to 7:30 p. m. th« door craw'ed out oFTSIrs. curtis Hbte''* fintii she Cf)uld ftnd tern Dept., Manelu‘.8ter Evening age for training in socM rela<« with longish coat, match the color j and 1 never know what other chil­ Herald. So. Manch««ter. Conn.” tions. Hogarth’s window, then tlirough another good boardin.g house . . • in a crepe de chine frock, with dren are going to do,” she ex­ Entertainment by 4 H Clothing Clubs her own window. But before she -gy w'ay, when will the inquest suitable accessories, and you hav’e plained. MENU: Corned beef and cabbage, potatoes, turnips, carrots, Miss Fish is available aa left she took her handkerchief and held?” two complete outfits by inter­ If this mother feels as she docs, wined off any fingerprints she «i talked* with Sherwood about Ue ones, big ones, tall ones, short beets, pickles, brown bread, rolls, home made pie and coffee. parents advisor in rfiild prob­ might have made on the window , that today. He’s in favor of hold- changing accessories and wearing no doubt there are many others the coat with both. who have reached the same con­ ones, young ones, older ones, ricn CO»IE OLT: TO COVENTRY WEDNESDAY EVENING lems. Appointments on Tues­ sill Quick thinker, that dame! Of i jng jt off till Wednesday, unless we ones, poor ones, pretty ones, plain day, Wednesday, Friday and course she destroyed Sevier’s finger- j catch Sevier before then. Other- clusion. I can understand it th.or- AN~D ENJOY IT ALL. oughly, they wish to segregate ones, and so on down the list. Saturday afternoons and oo prints at the same time, if he left -^^hse—that is, if we drag him in Yes, I thing it best to open the any. Carraway is sure, though, , today or tomorrow, the inquest will Down to Earth one’s own, and on the face of it, each evening of the week. it often seems the best thing to doors, and if a bull occasionally that he used gloves. She told me i t,eid Tuesday. I’m depending on | rushes into the china shop, why somethin.g else, too. Said that,; you to keep this bunch in the corral I do. For instance, a mother spends much time and trouble teaching it might be just as well to let the while she was on the porch going; until after the inquest, any- | children know that ther4 are bulls to her room, she heard a slight ‘ -^vavi” . i her children courtesy and consid eration for each other. She may —and even learn to handle them, noise at the west end of the porch,: w ith a grin.Dundee told'him of if need be. by the ro^e trellis.” the successful speech he had made even have gone a step further and “ '!''m not surprised,” Dundee ad- at the breakfast table that morning asked Tommy to help her over­ m'"‘:"d. vith queer reluctance. “I _successful in holding all boarders come Dick’s quick temper, and so­ EXTRA DECORATION h" -’ a lo'^k at the rose trellis .w'hile excent Daisy Shepherd. . licited Dick’s air in making Harry vou ”-°re gone, and someone has “Which makes you the fair-haired less sensitive. When there are children in the hoo’i '’V’'bVi'ng it, all right. One of 1 ^gy -^vith Mrs. Rhodes. I guess,” Mother Not to Blame. family it is worth while to have a You Will Be Surprised to ♦ hq '---e green 'Slats V;-as- freshly gtrawn chuckled. • “She’ll be offer- The young trio enters into the few jars of such decorative extras hrohen and a branch of the climb-1 jug- you boarc^-^f^ee■. if you don’t friendly conspiracy and in that as fancy chocolate shavings, pink ng ro'=-es was torn off the tdellis.” -^'atch out. WeU, so Iqng again! I family reigns harmony and peace; sugar and colored caraway seeds Find How Much “G.'*od work!” Strawn commend-i you’re a good boy, Bonnie, even if Who can biamie their mother if she to sprinkle over the tops of cook­ ed him heartily. “I guess all we you have got fancy ideas.” wishes to rear a wall around the ies, white cake and puddings for need now to convict little Emil is— , 'When he felt sure that Strawn happy structure she has built up an extra appetizing touch. Emil himself! Wonder where the j had finished his work in Mrs. so successfully and keep it intact devil he’s hiding? Looks like he , jjogarth’s room and had departed “ j against the raids of outsiders ’’ simply melted away in last night's 1 ^vith her trunk, Dundee wandered Not I! confounded heat.” I dowm to the second floor, rather But this is what my better judg­ Manchester Dairy Ice Cream “Have y o u checked Dusty’s j aimlessly. What he really wanted ment says: THE TOUGHEST OLD alibi? Dundee remembered to ask. , to do was to take a long, cooling All training of children in their means to you in solving the dessert problem if you “Oh, yes. Of course that whole j drive with Norma Paige, but he early years is not only a matter of CAN NOW BE STOPPED lousy outfit could be lying,, but' had no car, and no claims at all character moulding, but a prep­ are not in the habit of serving it. they’ve given him an ironclad alibi j upon another m.an’s sweetheart’s aration for life—for the years Lingering coughs—the kind that all right. He was playing pool time. ” '• i'. .. later on when they must go out hang on and hang on and rob a there, behind the speakeasy bar, “Hello, Dundee! Feel like paying !'^<* and meet people on their owq man of his sleep—the kind that There is a fine list of flavors to choose from until 11:30. Then he started in to ■ a call?” a cheerful voice hailed him ground. makes him peeidsh, and all worn drink in a serious way, and never as he turned toward the stairs, It takes all sorts of people to out. and then it provides a perfect basis for many fancy left the joint till my men foimd him : It was Walter Styles, standing in Those are the breed of coughs and brought him in—dead to the j the door of his own room near the make a world, and people are not desserts that are easily prepared and make a most world . . . And what did you find ; end of the hall. always kind. They aren’t going that prove that common cough and about Tilda Brown, the cham- i “Thanks. I am feeling rather at to make allowances for touciiy syrups are about as useful as a bot­ attractive and appetizing appearance. bermaid?” ! loose ends,” Dundee replied grate- tempers or fears that pop out it tle of ginger pop. “She came in at 2 o’clock this j fully, as he joined Styles. And he shadows, or sensitiveness. They The quickest and surest way to morning, in a fli-wer, with three | wondered what Styles could want won’t handle them with gloves. get rid, of a persistent cough is to other whoopee-makers,” Dundee vvith him. And so I can’t think it quite take a teaspoonful of Bronchuline answered. “Wilkens, who’s on duty fair to children to let them stand Emulsion four times a day. again, told me he talked with the Nothing apparently, for the the shock of enlightment later It’s made to stop the old-timers The Manchester Dairy whole bunch, then let Tilda go to young haberdashery proprietor without some kind of hardening —the tough ones—and it does it i her room. They’d been together all seemed to have no deeper designs before hand. The shielded child without any loss of time. evening at a dance at some cheap upon the new boarder than to en­ usually gets the worst of it. And remember, there is no little roadhouse 20 miles out In the gage him in conversation. They Variety Is Important. chloroform—no sugar—no dope m Ice Cream Company country.” talked about the murder,, of course, Because she was Miami’s first avi- Not only do I think they need this grand cough medicine. It’s a DAIP “■Well, I guess that clears us up,” and of Cora Barker’s arrest as a atrix, and is called its prettiest. these outside children to play prescription for stubborn coughs DIAL *)2.'i0 Strawn ya'wned. “Sorry, for your material v^fness^ Dundee guarding Miss Glades Barwick was chosen with, but they need a variety of and that’s the kind it speedily con­ sakd, boy, that there’s not a ‘D’ his own speech carefully so as not to turn the first; earth in an exten­ them. I should stop short of iic- quers. Always Obtainable at Your Neighborhood among the whole lot. Maybe he’ll to betray his official connection sive development of the municipal tual cemtamination, of course, but For ordinary, coughs one or two turn' up yet, and make a claim for with the case. And as they talked airport, which is being prepared for otherwise I should let them come doses is usually enough. The North Store or Favorite Soda Fountain the old lady’s estate. Fat lot of Styles went on with the w’ork on the second All-Amencan Air-meet up against strenuous children, End Pharmacy, Manchester, or goo(^ it will do him, eh?” he which he had been engaged before to be held there in T.aniiary. Here meek children, kind children, self­ Magnell Drug Co., So. Manchester, chuckled. “She sure put it over | he hailed Dundee. you see Glades making a perfect ish children, smart children and and dealers everywhere can supply & this bunch didn’t she? Leading the “I’m afraid I’m worse than any landing at the “stick” of a spade. children who require patience lit- you.—Adv. MAMCHESTBR EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1929.. PAGE ELEVEN

IRISH IJXQUIST DIES . Why Leave the [l a s t s h o w t o n i g h t Dublin— (A P )—With the death of 'SEES SAFETY WITH Farm, Boys? Rev. Fredcaick William O’Connell, DAILY RADIO PROGRAM Ti/Famite a»istant director of the Dublin 283—WTIC, HARTFOftD—1060. OF MADAME' X Tuesday, November 19. Leading DX Stations. Broadcasting station, Ireland lost 5:30—Ensemble supper musicale. one of her most accomplished Un­ Ischaikowsky. who onc3 immersed 6:30—Heimbeiger’s instrumental trio. 405.2—WSB, ATLANTA-740. ANY STATE PILOT 422.3— WOR, N E W A R K —710. 8:00—AVJZ band concert. quiets. O’ConneU broadcast in 14 himself to tho neck In a river on a 7:00—Piccadilly orchestra. 8:30—AVEAF programs (3 hrs.) [Double Feature Program Next languages and had an understand­ cold autumn morning, in the hope of 7:30—AA’andering gypsies: chimes. 11:45—Rliythm Kings orchestra. ing of 22 others. catching a fatal cold and ridding him­ 8:00— Main Street rural sketch. 293.9— K YW , CHICAGO—1020. Capt. Smith Tells Lions i Two Days— “Bridge of San self of an embarrassing love affair, is 9:00— Radio feature presentations. 8:00—N BC programs (2Ai hrs.) the composer of ‘'None But the 'tVeary 10:30—Two dance orchestras. 11:15—Dance music to 2:30. Luis Rey” on Bill. Heart” which will be featured in the 11:00—Dance orchestra. 389.4— V/BBM, CHICAGO—770. 11:30—Moonbeams music hour. program of ‘'Songs of the Season’ to 9:00— AA’ABC programs (2i,j hrs.) Conn. Licensees Are 100 I “Madame X,” a screen adaption be broadcast by W B A K and associated 348.6— WABC, NEW YORK—860. 11:3*—Symphonic orchestra, tenor. WHEN A CHILD 6:00—Drama, "Chautauqua Players.” atatlons at 8 o’clock Tuesday night. 12:00—AVhoopee feature program. j of the famous play of the same Today’s Choice 6:30— Orchestra: dinner symphony. 1:00— Dance music; Coffee Dan’.s. The artist^in the recital will be Rob­ 7:00— Niagara Falls band concert. ' name, Avith Ruth Cfliatterton in the ert Simmons, tenor, and a women s 254.1—WJJD, CHICAGO— 1180. Per' Cent Perfect. by 8:00— Plantation music houi'. title role, will be shown at the IS FEVERISH, octet. Light classical selections char­ 9:00—Theater presentations. acteristic of Herbert, Offenbach. Doni­ 8:30— Drama, "Young Girl’s Way.” 9:30—Mooselieart children’s hour. State the last times today. Richard BOOTH zetti and Vollstedt comprise tlie pro­ 9:00—il’aul AVhiteman’s orcliestra. 12:00— Artists entertainment. Dix in “ The Love Doctor,” and Lily 10:00— David Mendoza's orchestra with i Tbe commercial side of aviation . TABKINGTON gram which Edwin Eranho Goldman 416.4— W G N , CHICAGO—720. Damita, Ernest Torrence and Ra- CROSS,UPSET and his "symphony in brass will Victor Hall, tenor. was the subject of a lengthy but | 10:30— Night club romance. 10:30—Jim Brown’s orchestra. quel Tores in “The Bridge of San j broadcast over the tVJZ chmn also at 11:20— Louie’s Hungi-y Five. highly interesting and enlightening ; Novelist S. Among the numbers will be bec- 11:00— Russian musical program. Luis Rey” make up an attractive j 11:30— T*vo dance orchestras. 11:30— Original songsters; dance. talk by Captain William B. Smith, i Colic, gas, sour ond to None,” excerpts from Eileen__ 12:00—The dream ship. double feature program ■which will | 12:30— Midnight organ melodies. flight surgeon of the 43rd Division belching, frequent and "The Daughter of the Regiment 12:15—Jean Goldkette’s orchestra. be shown at the State Wednesday j "America," "Jolly Fellows and On 454.3—W E A F , N E W YORK—660. 1:00— Two dance urdhestras. Air, Service, before 25 Lions and ■ vomiting, f e v e.r- the Bier." Two solos by Victor Hall, 6:00— Ludwig Laurier'.s oirhestra. and Thursday. j 344,6— W LS, CHICAGO— 870. guests at the weekly meeting at the ] ishness, in babies tenor wiU be heard when David Men­ 7:00— “ Roads of the Sky” with talk 8:10—Tlie Angelus hour. “The Love Doctor” concerns a I Booth by Major Clarence M. Young. and children, gen­ doza and his orchestra entertain lis­ 8:30— W E A F orchestra music. Rainbow Inn last night. j young doctor who thinks he can! Tarlcinrfor teners of the Columbia network at lU. 7:15— Universal safely series. 0:00- Feature music hour. Captain Smith congratulated the | i Blessed are the poor in spirit: for erally show food The hour will open with "A Day in 7:311—Sketch with music. j inoculate himself against love and I 344.6— W E N R , CHICAGO—870. Lions Club on the relative youth of | is souring in the Hawaii” and will close with Close of 8:00— Songs of the season with women 8:15—Farmer Rusk’s talk. j hand out sagely adAdce on the ques- 1 theirs is ■ the kingdom of heaven. oc’.ct; Robert Simmons, tenor. S'' H M little digestive Day.” ______I 10:00—Home circle concert. the men who made up the organiza- . I tion of matrimony without any fear i Blessed are they that mourn; for S:30—Alaie trio, orchestra. 11:00—The musical parade. tion, saying that it had struck him ■ they shall be comforted. tract. Wave lengths in meters on left of [ 9:00— Inga Hill, vocalist, with N a ­ 12:00— Smiles: comedy skits. for his future. Richard Dix plays i When these station title, kiiocycies on the right, j thaniel Shiikret's orchestra. 1:00-D.K air vaudeville. forcefully since nearly all the ser- , the role of the young doctor. It is a | Blessed are the meek: for they 10:00—Kskimos dance music. symptoms appear, give Baby a Times are all Eastern Standard. Black 447.5— VVMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670. vice clubs he had visited were com- i snappy farce, and eventually the ^ shall inherit the earth. j face t\pe indicates best featuies. 10:30— Feature vaudeville hour. j teaspoonful of Phillips Milk of 11:30—Dramatic sea tale. >):30—Concert; Slumber music. prised of somewhat older men. Young doctor finds himself ini n love---- I Blessed , are .u they .. which do hun- [ 12:00— Hal Kemp’s orchestra. 11 ;00—Orchestra; Dan'and Sylvia. Aviation, he said, was a young | with his nurse— but pursued by a and thirst ^after te r Magnesia. Add it to, the first bottle Leading East Stations. 393.5—WJZ, N E W YORK—760. 11:30—D.X vaudeville club. 11:4.5-Three dance orchestra.*. man’s game from one standpoint, ; young deb. How he gets rid of the i for they shall be filled, of food in the morning. Older chil­ 272.6—WPG, ATLANTIC CITY—1100. 6:00—Old Man Sunshine, songs. 6:30—Ocean Liner’s orchestra. 202.6— W H T . CHICAGO— 1430. and everybody’s game from another, j youni deb and finally admits that j . Blessed are the merciful: for they ' dren should be gpven a teaspoon- g;00—Marchetti’s concert- orchestra. 9:30—Artists: ramblers. 8:30—Avoda Club Jewish program. 7:00—Amo.s 'n' Andy, copicdlans. Piloting is for the young, the use of ' there is no serum that can prevent shall obtain mercy. ful in a glass of water. This will 7:15— Highlanders’ musicale. 1U:00— Concert ensemble. •j:U0—THo; sopiano. pianist. 10:30—A’our hour league. the air is for everybody. ; love, provides the background for Blessed are the pure in heart: comfort the child— make his stom­ 3y;2ij— Nightingale: music ensemble. 7:30—Lew AA’hile organ recital. There have been three fundamen- : for they shall see (iod. 11:00—Silver Slipper orchestra. 7:1.5— Adventures of Polly I ’rcston. 361.2— KOA, D E N V E R —830. some extraordinary farce. Clever ach and bowels easy. In five min­ 11:45—Organist, assisting soloists. 8:00— Goldman’s band concert. 0:0n—AA'EAF programs (2Vt lu'S.) tal developments in travel, the boat | situation, fast dialogue and really Blessed are the peacemakers: for utes he is comfortable, happy. It 11:35—Orchestra, male quartet. Why boys leave the farm is a 283_WBAU, BALTIMORE—1060. 8:30—Musical world tour. to float on water, the wheel to run ; pjj^zling question when one consid- commendable acting made “The they shall be caUed the children of Avill sweep the bowels free of all g;00—W.IZ programs (3 hrs.) 9:00—Jlusieal melodrama, orchestra. 12:35—Luclle Fowler, contralto. God. 11:00— lula’s Symphonic ensemble. ;i:3il— Old-time rriirstiel hits. 299.8— W HO, DES M OINES—1000. on land, the wing to fly in the air. ( Lucille Newell, above, 17-year- Love Doctor” as go(^ a farce com- sour, indigestible food. It opens 508.2—WEEI, BOSTON.-590. 10:00—I'red AAatdner. tenor, orchestra, 8:30—W E A F programs (3 hrs.) Connecticut Air Service | farmerette of Wakefield, Kan., Blessed are they which are per- the boAvels in constipation, colds, 11:30—Recorded brevities. 7:00—Big Brother club. 10:30— Orchestradians orchestra with Captain Smith told briefly how winner of a state-wide contest for ta lk iS sSeem*" Dix" is^Tbl?" s lip - 1 f ecu ted for _rig^^^^ children’s ailments. Children take 7:30—W H V F programs (4’,2 hr.'.) Paul Sisters, Eddie Gale, vocal­ 12:00—Aerial playhouse. 243.8—W N AC , BOSTON— 1230. ists. 374.8— W 8AP, FORT WORTH—800. Connecticut came to have its present j brains among 4-H clubs i ported by June Collyer, Morgan ; thmrs is the kingdom of heaven, it readily because it is palatable, 6:13—Artists: dinner music. 11:00—Sliimlier music. 11:00—Musical program. air ser\rice. Six years ago it had one j Kansas. She can cook and sew | Farley and Gale Henry. i Blessed are ye, when men shall pleasant-tasting. 305.9— KDKA, PITTSBURGH—980. 12:00—Theater features. 13:00— Hector's dance orchestra. hanger. At the time National Guard | expert judge of grain “The Bridge of San Luis Rey” is j you, and persecute you, and Learn its many uses for mother 545.1—W GR, B U FFA LO —550. 7;on_Raflioette feature hour. 374.8— KTHS, HOT SPRINGS—800. were being stationed cauI 6;S0— Van Surdam’s orchestra. 7:15—Sacred song recital. 9;00—Barn dance players.' Squadrons were being stationed j — g^d is she pretty? Well, an adaption of the sensational novel j shall say all manner of against and child. Write for the interest­ 7:00—Feature music hour. ii;fiO_WJZ programs (3 hrs.) 11:00—Dance orchestra: organist. about the country, now numbering“ I! we leave that to you! of the same name by Thornton ’ You falsely, for My sake. ing book, “Useful Information.” 7;S0—AVEAF programs (H i hrs.) n;nu— Bestor's d.'ince music. 12:00— Studio entertainment. 16. By rights, the one for NeAV Eng­ Wilder. The picture boasts of what 1 Rejoice, and be excee^ng glad: 11 ;G0—AV.IZ .Slumber music. 468.5— KFI, LOS ANGELES—640. Address The Phillips Co., 117 Hud­ 333.1—W M A K . BUFFALO —900. land belonged to Providence but the ; i is probably the largest cast, in j for great is your re^vard m heaven: 7:30— Featui-e music hour. 245.8—W CAE, PITTSBUR G H —1220. 11:00— Schonberger trio, songs. son St., N. Y. It will be sent FREE. \ f ocoo2,wo5i ir« » rxio. Ifor SO persecuted they the j;00—WEAF programs (4 hrs.) C;00—Dirfjjer dance music. 12:00—Parker family recital. city did not raise the money “RAINBOW” UNDER BORIS jpoinroTnamX assembled in a pic“ [fo r fo persecuj;_ed t i i e ^ In buying, be sure to get gen­ 428.3—W LW , CINCINNATI—700. 7:00—Orchestra: safety series. 1:00—Radio artists’ review. at once. While Providence Avas which were before you.—Matthew 7:30— Uncle Giinhec: song-story. ture in many months, and the story uine Phillips Milk of Magnesia. 8:30—WJii programs (I’i hrs.) 370.2—WCCO, MINN., ST. PAUL—810. attempting to reach a decision 5:3-13. 10:00—Arzan’s orchestra: concert. X:uO_WL.\F programs (4 hrs.) 8:00—AV.ABC programs (3 hrs.) is astoundingly different from any- j Doctors have prescribed it for over 10:45—Trio: chime reveries. 12:(Ml—Trricv-Brown’s orchestra. 11:00— Politicians music hour. Connecticut heard of it and sent thing the screen has seen hereto-i (Compiled by the Bible Guild) 535,,1—WFI, PHILADELPHIA—560. PROVES ITS POPULARITY 50 years. 12:00— Studio dance orchestra. 11:15—AVABC programs ( “4, hr.) two men to Washington to lay fore. Aside from the three prin- j 12:30—Feature variety hour. 6-30—AVK.AF programs (S 'i hrs.) 12:00—The old settlers. Wednesday: Henry G. Leslie, j “ Milk of Magnesia” has been the 260.7— W HAM . ROCHESTER— 1150. 379.5— KGO, O A K L A N D —790. before the officials there a proposi­ cipals, the cast also includes Don ! 280.2—W TAM , C L E V E L A N D — 1070. ffOAernor of Indiana. I U. S. Registered Trade Mark of 6:00— Studio concert. 6:;{(i— Dinner dance music: talk. ]2;30—Los Angeles entertainment. tion for the assigning of the squa­ Alvarado. Henry B. Walthal. Emily j 7:00—AV.IZ Highlander’s program. I The Chas. H. Phillips Chemical 7:30—AV^AF programs (o’i hrs.) 1:00—.Artists: Sauntering Sailors. dron to Connecticut. “ And,” said the If there Avas a doubt in anyone’s Fitzroy, Mitchel LcAVis, Tully Mar-1 11:00— Studio dance music. 7:30—Concert orclicslra. baritone. 2:00—Musical musketeers. RILLS DAUGHTER, SELF. I Co., and its predecessor, Chsis. H. y:o0—WJZ programs (3 hrs.) speaker, “it is typical of Connecti­ mind as to the popularity of The shall and Paul EUis. It is a picture | 302.8—WB2, NEW ENGLAND—C90. 270.1—W R V A . RICHM OND— 1110. I Phillips, since 1875.— Adv. 6:30— Dinner dance music. 11:011—Owl Clul' dance innsie. 8:rifi—AVJZ band concert. cut that Avhen it wants a thing it Rainbow Inn and dance palace, any that breaks all rules of production, I f;00—Studio musical concerts. 379.5_WGY, SCHENECTADY—790. 8:.3n—.studio music hour. gets it.” The airport at Bvainard Two Harbors, Minn., Nov. 19.— 11:55— Time: weather: market.';. 9:30— Acca Temple Shrine Chan'.erf. such doubt Avould have immediately ^ remember, g;fin— Binir family party Field has grown to be cne of the ( A P )—Money, science and loving S:3n_AA'JZ programs (2 hrs.) 6:.30—Dinner dance mu.sic. 10:00—A\'E.AF programs (2 hrs ) been dispelled by a glimpse into . — care failed to cure the invalidism 10:30—Two dance orchestras. 7:00—Studio concert orcliestr.a. 309.1— KJR. S E A T T LE —970. finest military organizations in the li:30—Feature variety hour. 7:.70—AVEAF programs (4 hrs.) 13:0n_DancP orchesirn, entertainer*. these two places Saturday evening TAD PRFSS RFPORTS of 17 year Beatrice Barton, daugh­ United States. Avhen a record crowd attended the IXlirUIUiJ Secondary Eastern Stations. Secondary DX Stations. The speaker compared the speed ter of Two Harbors wealthiest citi­ dance and completely filled the din- m n ilP P IF P r v r X T im zen, John A. Barton, with hope 545.1—WKRC, CINCINNATI—550. 475,9._CNRA. MONCTON—630. 238—KOIL, COUNCIL BLUFFS—126a of air travel with other modes and E. A. Lettney 8:45— Instrumental quartet. ing rooms at The Inn, it being the J 10:60— Studio entertainment. n :"0— Shep barn dance. said he believed that business would ARM lU I UtNltU gone. Barton killed her and then 11:00—Dance orchestra. 9:00—Vocalists, instnimcnlaiists. 1:00—Studio musicale: tenor. grand opening night under the man­ 10:00—Little concert oichc.-;tra. soon be dependent on the air. In the himself. 38 Main St., Manchester 374.8—WSAI, CINCINNATI—SOO. 288.3— W F A A . D A LLA S— 1040. agement of George Bokis. Unpre- 1 ______Coroner Thomas Brown said 7:10—Feature music hours. 272.6—W L W L , N E W YORK— 1100. Middle West there is much more fly­ 12;15--School days. gang. pared for such an unexpected crowd there Avas no other possible theory 9:00— Minstrel men’s frolic. 6:00— Tenor, piatiist, soprano. 11:00—Bridge lesson, music. ing then in New England, as it is i London, N oa’. 19. — (A P )—Pessi- 9:30—AVEAF program.-! (2 hrs.) 0:15—Catholic address: baritone. Mr. Bokis succeeded in handling the and he decided to hold no inquest. much safer. New England is claimed ' mistic Japanese press reports of a 215.7— W H K , C L E V E L A N D —1390. 7:20—Alorality talk; orcliestra. 491.5— WDAF. KANSAS CITY—610. rush AA'ith skill and despatch and The bodies of Barton, president of j PLUMBING and 7:00— Dixie steppers; address. 526—WNYC, NEW YORK-570. 10:30—Cooh’.s feature artists. by all experts to be the most dan­ discouraging trend in the prelimin­ 11 tfifi—W iiA F vaudeville hour. favorable comments on the food and ! the First National Bank and his ; 7;30—Male quartet: cab frolics. 7:35—Air eollegi? Icclnrcs. gerous section of the country in ary negotiations for the five-power j S:30—W A B C programs (2',i hrs.) 12:1.7—A’ariety music hour. service Avere heard on all sides. The daughter, were found in the Barton j S;15—The Lo Gitna trio. 12:45—Niglithawk frolic. which to fly. In the West a plane can naval conference, Avere stated at HEATING 71:00—Two dance orchestras. 8:3.5—Business falk.s: songs. growth of business, since the Inn car, parked on a country road, 399.8— WeX-WJR. DETROIT—750. 461.3— WSM, NASHVILLE—650. stop anywhere—not so in N bav Eng­ the Japanese embassy today to be 0;0U— .Studio oiiterLainment. has been under Mr. Bokis’ man- early yesterday. ' 7:30— Business talk; trio. AVB.AF programs (2’,2 lira.) land. Flying has come to be a com­ without foundation. SPECIALIZING IN 9:00— Manuel girls: orchestra. 357—CKCL, TORONTO—840. 11:30—Golden Echo male quartet. I agement is very gratifying Asath 10:00-Red Apple Club program. 7 :00-Popular music: trio. monplace in the West but here it is Yesterday, Ambassadors Matyu- 440.9— KPO, SAN FRANCISCO—680. every indication of its being one of CLEVTER B.YNDITS 325.9—W W J, DETROIT—920. 8:30—ftadio Hawaiians. still regarded as something new. dira of Japan and Charles G. >):(i0—Simpson opera hour. 12:00—Great composer’s hour. the most popular night clubs in the New' York, Nov. 19.— (AP)—Four 6:30— Barium dance orchestra. DaAves of the United States, held a S:00— Gypsy baron’s concert. 11:00—Goldkette's orchestra. 1:00—Bears: trocaderar.s. Changing Designs state. gunmen who carried musical instru­ conference prior to the departure of Sheet Metal Designs of planes are changing Bill W’addell and his orchestra ments cases to lend atmosphere to General Dawes for a visit to Paris. all the time, said Captain Smith, continue to attract a large number their masquarade as musicians were 111:02 p. m. Temperature. Later Ambassador Matyudira and who predicteci that the future engine to The Rainbow every Thursday being sought today for holding up ! 11:03 p. m. Bert Lowe’s Statler Or­ would approach the Diesal type. In evening for a very enjoyable evening Prime Minister MacDonald held a WAPPING an orchestra leader. Work chestra. of modern and old-fashion dances, conference at the House of Com­ VV T 1 C speaking of the different phases of A fter being admitted to the eighth I 11:30 p. m. Telechron time. Avhile The Commanders have thor­ mons and it Avas understood these aviation— the heaAuer-than-air craft, floor apartment of Carmen Lombar­ Now ia the time tp have heat­ PROGRAMS oughly established themselves with informal , conversations Avere pro­ lighter-than-alr craft—he said he do the four produced guns and com­ ers cleaned and repaired. Give j Charles J. Dewey and daughter, believed the time was coming when the dance fans after providing the gressing smoothly. fraveiers, Hartford 1 Mrs. Henry S. Nevers and her Saturday night programs for the The Japanese delegation Avill ar­ pelled Lombardo to hand over $2,000 us a call. Prompt service. GILEAD the latter Avould be used for world in payroll money and took jewelry I daughters, motored to Florence, past 10 weeks. This band is in great rive in London before Chrlstma.s Phone 3036, 500 m. 600 R. C. travel. valued at $20,000 from Mrs. Lom­ j Mass., last Saturday, where they He described the three types of demand and was offered four en­ and will be ready for the formal spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. bardo and Miss Frances Peshkin of craft, the rigid Avith ribs through­ gagements Thanksgiving eve at conference opening Jan. 21. Am­ Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Hills enter­ I Charles M. Dewey and family. Chicago, a visitor. Program for Tuesday tained ar party of friends at a out so thaj; it-AVlll not collapse when Bridgeport, Holyoke, and Athol, bassador Dawes will return to Lon­ I Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Bentley and Mass., but Avill be heard at Cheney don for the Pilgrims dinner «n Nov. Eastern Standard Time “ Coon Supper” an evening last daughter. Miss Elizabeth Bentley, gas is let out; the semi-rigid which has only a backbone and collapses Hall at the annual firemen’s ball of 22 and his address on that date is 4:30 p. m. Auction Bridge Game— week. motored to Willimantic Sunday, and MANCHESTER N.B.C. Feature. immediately A\-hen the air escapes; the Manchester firemen. awaited A vith keen interest as it Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Foote and Mrs. j gpg^t the day with relatives and The RainboAv at Bolton is now 5:00 p. m. “ Musique Intime.” ElizabethM l___T T i n ... Hills were visitors 4 - ini-r-, Col- ^ fiends. and the free baUoons, which explain seems likely he will speak of the Don't the most popular night club and latest phases of the negotiations. 5:30 p. m. “ Sunset Hour”— Studio Chester a day recently. Gertrude Simpson of Pleas- themseh’es. PEOPLE It is the gas that holds up the dance palace in the state and is be­ Ensemhle Supper ^lusicale, direc-1 Several local folks attended the ' orit \7a.llpv was taken to St Francis ing patronized by an increasing buy lighter- than-air, while the heavier- ted by Christian Kriens. ! meeting of East Central Pomora , hospital fast w?ek for treati?Snt number each week. FOILS KIDNAPER have been trading with us 6:20 p. m. United States Daily | Grange held at Bolton last Wednes- | gj^g jg improving and expects to re- than-air depends on power and TUBES for years and years and we NCAA'S Bulletins from Washington, | day. I turn home in the near future, speed. The United States is the sole D. C.; Hartford Courant News | Charles D. W ay is ill and possessor of helium gas, the non- sure do appreciate it. When under , Mrs. Elizabeth W. Smith’s cousin, Chicago, Nov. 19.— (A P )— Miss Bulletins. the care of Dr. Louis Mason inflammable gas used in dirigibles. in Hartford dine with us and of ! Albert W right of New London, call- Margaret Carlin, a stenographer, 6:30 Benrus Correct Time. | Willimantic. All other gases are inflammable. ' ed at her home on Sunday. NEW GRANGE OFFICERS was kidnaped last night by a man in be sui*e to bring home some 6:31 p. m. Music of Finland and C. Daniel W ay is on a northern Wasp Motor Mr. and Mrs. Gillette and children a chauffeured motorcar, but she oysters and crackers for the Bohemia—Hotel Bond Trio, direc­ Captain Smith had nothing but trip, cattle buying. have moved from Clarence W. John­ fought so fiercely, her abductor ted by Emil Heimberger. Mr. and Mrs. J. Banks Jones and praise for the Wasp motor manu­ other members of the fam­ son’s tenement house to Pittsburg, Seattle, N oa'. 19.— (A P )— Dele­ j thrcAV her from the machine. FINLAND Mrs. Lovina Hutchinson accom­ factured by the . Pratt & Whitney Mass., last Aveek Saturday,. gates to the annual convention of Her kidnaper, she said, Avas a LISTEN ily- Prelude ...... Jaernefel t panied by the Misses Doris and Mr. and Mrs. George A. Collins Company. He said that a Wasp was the National Grange turned from Valse Trieste ...... Sibelius middle-aged man wearing goggles. Lydia Hutchinson of Manchester attended a class reunion at Wilbra- the only motor that would take a business to pleasure today after He demanded to know the address to the HONISS’S Berceuse ...... Jaernefelt ham Academy last week Friday. visited NeAvgate Prison and the old plane 10,000 feet over the Rocky having elected officers and chosen of John Buit, her fiance. He said BOHEMIA There was a meeting of the CLEAR, HUMLESS TONE tavern in Granby, Saturday. Mountains, and the mail planes are NeAV York state for the 1930 meet­ he Avanted to kill Buit. OYSTER HOUSE Songs My Mother teachers of South Windsor, held at I There was no Christian Endeavor j all equipped with th?hi. ing by a vote of 32 to 26 over W is­ The young woman Avas picked up | o f > 22 state Street Taught Me ...... Dvorak j service at the church Sunday eve- | the Wapping school hall, last Tues­ Regarding the safety factors in consin. i hysterical from the street and ! Hartford, Conn. Three Dances from “ The ning as the members accepted an in- j day afternoon at the close of school. flying, the speaker named the en­ Louis J. Taber of Columbus, O., Bartered Bride” ... Smetana Ralph Lasbury has purchased the I taken to a ho.spital. She said she | vitation from the Andover society ■ gine, stability of plane, parachute, was re-elected national master of : did not knoAv the m a n Avho kidnaped | ARCTURUS Slavonic Dances...... Dvorak to meet A vith them. i house which was recently OAAmed by weather and most important of all, the Grange by an overAvhelming DLUE A-C LONG LIFE 6:59 p. m. Industrial Alcohol Insti-1 the late Miss Martha Jones of South her, but that he protested his love Mr. and Mrs. Benjaman Lyman ] the pilot. “ The weather,” said Cap­ vote. Others re-elected included for her and SAvore death to her tute Announcement. celebrated the 60th anniversary of 1 Windsor. tain Smith, “ has aviation licked to a I Herman Hide, secretary; 'W. W. RADIO TUBES Mr. and Mrs. Frank LeGeyt and fiance. 7:00 p. m. Silent. their wedding Sunday afternoon. | frazzle. If it could be controlled the Deal. Treasurer, and David H. family of Sheffield, Mass., were Their relatives and invited guests last obstacle would be removed.” I Agans, steward. WBZ—WBZA ^ gathered at the local hall which was j ^undaj? guests at the home of Mr. Great strides ^ e being made in Other officers elected Avere W. W. DON'T Tuesday, November 19 ; tastefully decorated AvIth laurel and 1 Mrs. Everett A. Buckland. fighting this hairier to absolutely Deal, Idaho, Chaplain; Herman Miss Louise Ludlum, of South :00 p. m. Metropolitan Melody j bouquets of chysanthemums for the ' safe flying and instruments have Hide, Wisconsin, steward; H. J. Cur­ mcooD?. Windsor, spent the week-end in Bos­ Treat Your Boys. _ _ i occasion at 2 p. m. Later in the i Most ailm en ti ita r t from poor elim­ VISIT ton, Mass. been perfected for blind flying. tiss Hopkins, Rhode Island, assist­ 4:15 p. m. “ Crime” by Dean Glea­ afternoon local folks called on them Radio, in touch with the plane at all ant steward; Fred Freestone, New ination (constipation or temi-consti- son L. Archer, Suffolk Law A daughter was bom to Mr. and pation). Intestinal poisons sap vifal- Car Rough auuand presented themLUC.X. A VVX.XX vith c.a pursepxxx.. ^of Bratsneider last Sunday times during flight, guides the pilot York, executive committeeman; W. itr. undermine your health and make OUR TUR K EY School. money. Mr. Lyman Avho is 84 and hi. - g^g^ing, at the home of Miss Nellie and tells him of the weather condi­ B. Hanley, Oklahoma, gate keeper; life miserable. Tonight try N? — 4:35 p. m Statler Organ—Rorls NATUBE’S REMUT-all-veKeUbla YARDS wife 76 are m excellent health for | Hollister of Marble street, Manches­ tions ahead. Mrs. Fannie B. Phillips. Missouri, This Winter Tirrell. corrective—not an ordinary laxative. people of their years. ter, Mrs. Bratsneider was, before Pilot Key Factor “Ceres;” Mrs. Emma Palmiter, Ore­ 5:00 p. m. Final closing stock mar-1 Floyd Fogil while hunting recent- See how will aid in restorinir your This Sunday her marriage. Miss Netta RockAvell, In naming the pilot as the great­ gon, “ Pomona;” Mrs. Harry Abbott, appetite and rid you of that heavy, Rent a kets. ly accidentally shot his dog. and formerly lived in Wapping. est safety factor, the speaker said Maine, "Flora;” Mrs. Florence En, loggT pepleii feelinsr, Drive to Vernon Center 5:25 p. m. Gkivernraent Bulletins. j and Mrs. Leon Fogil of South Miss Elvira Clapp of South Wind­ that a^ survey haci been made show­ sor, Maryland, lady assistant stew­ MM, mI«. sartly vaftlaUe — at drat*Uts, ealy Z5c turn West Convenient, lx)w- 5:29 p. m. Sessions chimes. i Manchester spent the week-end at sor, has gone to Wethersfield to live. ing that 53 percent of all accidents ard. . FEEL LIES A UILUON. TAKE at the County Home. 5:30 p. m. Lost and found; positions ■ and Mrs. C. J. Fogil’s. There was a good crowd at the were due to the pilot alone. He Avas See Hundreds of Cost Stall in Avanted. Local members of the Young Wo- baked bean supper last Friday eve either physically or mentally unfit, TO-NICHT 5:45 p. m. “ Tuberculosis” by Dr. men’s club attended the meeting ; ning and to the whist which follow- he used poor judgment, or it Avas bad TOMORROW ALRIGHT N.\T1VE Manchester’s John B. Hawes 2nd. last week at Mrs. Gertrude Hough’s, i g^j, xhe baked beans and broAvn piloting. 5:59 p. m. Temperature. in Hebron. | bread were all given by Walter S. As flight surgeon it is Captain 6:00 p. m. Telechron time. Mr. and Mrs. George B. Miller of j Billings, as was also the Cox’s Smith's work to select and supervise Largest Heated 6:01 p. m. Champion Weatherman. Colchester spent Thursday and Fri- | pound cake. The supper was given pilots. Each man undergoes a rigid 6:02 p. m. Agriculture Market re­ day Av1th Mr. anci Mrs. E. E. Foote, j under the auspices of the Federated test and in no case is there a devia­ Garage ports. Mrs. A. H. Roote and Elmer Workers. tion from the rules. Each man must 6:15 p. m. The World Bookman. Foote of Colchester accompanied by be practically 100 per cent perfect. and 6:20 p. m. Dinner Music. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wales of Am- Connecticut is the only state that 6:30 p. m. Savannah Liners’ Orches­ I herst, Mass., spent an evening re­ HOLD CULT LEADER t:.kes its aAdation seriously and to t u r k e y s t u r k e y s tra—^The Liberty Bell, Sousa; I TREAT Save Money You cently at the home of R. E. and A. heart. Much is being done by the De­ will make your Thanksgiving an Love to Hear You Singing: To Be i q Foote Would Otherwise partment of Commerce to safeguard COLDS old fashioned New England in Love: Merry W^ow AValte, i several local women attended the Spend on Repairs Los Angeles, Nov. 9— (A P )—Mrs. the public in aviation, but Connecti­ fc^st. Lehar; Indmn Love Feast; Satis-1 ^j^g League of Women cut is the only state that has a full fled; M y Dream Girl, Herbert; i voters held in Hartford last week. Mae Otis Blackburn, leader of a re­ DIRECT 60c LB. LIVE WEIGHT ligious cult in the Santa Susana hills time commissioner of aviation, to Cocoanut Dance, Herman, le a rn -, Mrs. E. E. Foote and Mr. have a patrol ship, to inspect every Dressed 50c e.vtra per bird. ing; Your Mother and Mine. northlSof here, Avill appear in Super- E a c h year more and more and Mrs. A. C. Foote and children lI ior ^ u rt Wednesday to answer fif- plane in the state every GO days. M i h e r e Drawing and Delivery Conkey's 7:00 p. m. Amos ’n’ Andy. motored to Granby Sunday people give up the old, indirect 7:15 p. m. Dickinson-Streeter Or- teen^ounts of grand theft. She was Two men being employed on this 25c e.vtra per bird. visited Newgate Prison. They also arraigned yesterday. work. There is a technical inspector way of treating colds by “dosing” gan. stopped "at Sponzo’s brick yard in and turn to Vicks VapoRub. SOME QUALITY K.ARL MARKS 7:30 p> m. New England Gas Hour. The complaints, filed by Clifford on parachutes and a staff of men Garage Windsor. R. Dabney, an oil operator, alleged who know every phase of the game. Just rubbed on, Vicke med­ Poultry Yards, 136 Summer St. 8:00 p. m. Waldorf’s “ Bing Family.” Tbe postponed case of Stewart Tcl. 7280 AT THE CENTER ‘ 8:30 p. m. "Around the World with he had given Mrs. Blackburn ap­ Captain Smith concluded by as­ icated vapors are inhaled direct originates and Jones was heard before Justice proximately $50,000 to complete a suring every man present that he Tel. 5648 Libby.” H . P. Collins of Columbia at the to the air-passages, and, at the 9:00 p. m. Johnson and Johnson book to be known as the “ Great tould rest assured of safety in all local hall Thursday evening. Attor- i sixth Seal.” Dabney said the woman planes operated by licensed pilots of : same time, it acts direct Program. ney for Stewart was Brown of Col- j represented to him that information through the skin like a plaster. 9:30 p. m. Dutch Masters Ministrels (Connecticut. 1 Chester and King of Willimantic for in the book came to her through a ’ __stay in Your OAvn Back Yard; This better w ay of treating Jones. Justice Collins found Jones | deity and contained the whereabouts RADIO Eleven Cent Cotton; Is Every­ colds originated with Vicks a guilty and imposed a fine of $10 and i of sources of mineral wealth body Happy?; Jemima’s Wedding 42 AS\XUM STREET costs. He appealed to the higher Recently the cult was under In: FOR RADIO " generation ago. i Day; By the Watermelon Vine HARTFORD I vestigation by tbe district \attor- Today,thewhole If that’s the Landlord, I ------Ain’t, i SERVICE GARDELLA Hoover Bldg. One FUght Up i ney’s office on suspicion that some trend of medical Home; Peaceful Henry; Henry 1 missing persons bad been mistreat- PHONE 8160 Jones, Yo Honeymoon is Over. PUFF SLEEVES practice ia away DIAMONDS I ed. Failure of evidence to shoAV Have you beard the new Majestic RADIO 10:00 p. m. Williams' Gllomatics— from needless SALES AND SERVICE Party frocks for those under anything of such nature caused the Electric UadioV ■Why Do We Dance?; At the inquiry to be dropped. “dosing,’’^ and DIAMOND Peep of DaAvn; Shanghai Dream 25 use the puff sleeve occasionally lillion Frompt Attention to Pbono Calls with great success. A purple net, there are “Over Jars Men; I Never Guessed; There Barstow Radio D IA L 4949 very long goAvn has Avide, square 26 Million Jars yeirly PLATINUM Was Nothing Else to Do; Four A LUCKY BREAK Service standard Accessories. Walls; Golden Gate; Make Be­ decolletage and full short puff Used Yearly.’ Atwater Kent, Stromberg-Carlsoa lieve You’re Happy from “Lovely sleeves. Authorized Dealer It only lasts two hours Majestic, 1‘hilco Majestic, Bosch, Phllco. MOUNTINGS la d y .” 10:30 p. m. Stars o f Melody. Canada, Venezuela, is the oldest j 'JO Blssell St. but you’ll remember it Next door to Kittle’s Market WM. E. KRAH 11:00 p. m. Lohgines time. English town on tbe South Ameri-! luin Tniiutri Itirnnika. 11:01 J). m. Champion Weatherman. * can mainland the rest of your life. l»AGE m BLVE MANCHESTER EVENING HEKALU SUUTH MANCHESTER. CONN., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1^29. THECILx^SSIFIED SECTION

gg)()g)()gXX5g3gX)O(XXS65tX36X3CXX506XXXXX36XX%>9eX%%XXXX%%1OCXXX%XXXXX36X%'%’%____ !*.iv-».-%.VVVV^CSS3W3k3k3»>'J^3i3»S»3{3t5S5SX3»3S3S3»a8SI306S6SSSS3£SSX3CSS3«SS3WJ5SSIXS5KVi3CSJ5g3j35X3g3^^ JijillAND SELL HERE- ______. - . ._____.1 I T /\CI n A XI T V C'/VIIXTIX I I n [P tl A f U ■ XTr' •»•> I I __ I I _____ I Want Ad Infonnatlon LOST AND FOUND REPAIRING HOUSES FOR RENT 65 M ATTRESSES, box springs, pil­ SMITH CHARGES FRAUD LOST — P A IR TORTOISE shell FOR RENT—SINGLE HOUSE, 7 ENGLISH TENNIS STAR Manchester lows and cushions made over, glasses, between Pine and ■ Short rooms, bath, steamheat, garage. 31 Evening Herald streets. Reward if returned. David equal to new. I day service. Phone Mather street, Manchester. E. A. AT DETROIT ELECTION 6448 Manchester Upholstering Co., WEDS PORTRAIT'PAINTER Robinson, 9 Short street. Standish, Andover, Conn. Telephone CLASSIFIED 331 Center street. Established 1353-5, VVilllmantic. advertisements W IL L THE PERSON who took the since 1922. Detroit, Nov. 19.—(AP) Count siT average iords to a line. white iron rabbits from in front of ■The. Eileen Bennett Becomes Wife luiUale, numbers and abbreviations my house please return them and CHIMNEYS CLEANED and repair­ city election commission was called each count as a vrord and compound When You Need FARMS AND LANU FOR receive reward? No questions ask­ ed, key fitting, safes opened, saw together for a special meeting to­ of E. F. Whittingstall, at ■words as two worda Minimum cost is SALE 71 price of three llne.s. ed. Mrs. George Cheney, 21 Hart­ filing and grinding. Work called day to consider charges of "fraud in London Ceremony. • • • ford Road. for. Harold Clemscn, 108 North connection with the municipal elec­ I.lne rates per day for transient Elm street. Tel. 3648. To Have FOR SALE BUILDING SITES In tion Nov. 5, which are expected to nds. every section of the town. Low be filed by Charles P. O’Neil, attor­ London. Nov. 19— (A P ) — Eileen EtTcclive March 1<. lO-* C.nsh Charge ANNOUNCEMENTS 2 SEWING MACHINE repairing of prices and easy terms. Now de­ ney for John W. Smith, w h o m I Bennett, noted English tennis star, all makes, oils, needles, and sup­ veloping "Clearview.” Arthur A. c. Consecutive Days . .1 7 clsl 'J cts Charles Bowles defeated for mayor, and Edmund Fearnley Whittines7ril Whittingstall’, :; Conseculivo Days .. !* cts It cts PHOTOGRAPHS FOR Christmas— plies. R. W. Garrard, 37 Edw’ard Somediing Done Knofla, 875 Main street. Tel. 5440. Richard W. Reading, city clerk - ■ 'vnuungstall 1 i.ay ...... I 11 ctsi 13 cts Make appointments now for early street. Tel. 4301. whouu summoned»uuimuiieu the commissioner.s. ) of^Chalfont^St riie^ ^hitUngstall All orders for irregular insertions sittings. Avoid last minute rush will lie cliarged at the one Ime rale. j HOUSES FOR SALE T 2 is understood to navehave beenoeen iniormeainformed .: shire were ’ Buckmgham- * c-.. Special rates lor long term every and disappointment. The New by Smith supporters that cases of ! garet’s Westminster dav advertising civen upon request. Studio. Dial 8383, 9 Johnson Ter­ MONEY TO LOAN 33 PHONE 5121 I FOR SALE—HOUSE of eight fraud have been checkedcheeked in eig^tei^rht i ® today. Ads ordcrcil lor three or s : days race. precincts and that in every Miss Bennett wore a picturq gown and stopped hetore the third or Ijllli I rooms, electric lights,, running of cream ring velvet embroidercil cinct fraud is alleged to have been iliv will he charged only for the ac- ANNOUNCEMENT.—Large slock ! water, barn, 1-2 acre land, more pearls and diamante. The gown hail inal Mu'iihcr of times the ad appear- NO TIME IS WASTED committed. of antique furniture, also lirst class ; land can be bought if wanted. a train six yards long, heavily em­ d. rhaignig .at tiie rate earned, but Reading said the commission ids c.an he made Property located on State Highway broidered'with pearls and diamante n 1 alhiwanres or rcriiin.. repairing and rclinishing. V. Our service is quick, courtesy and Ask for a Want-Ad would be glad to check any precinct ,.ii six time ads stopped after the in Ellington, Conn. Apply owmer, The bridesmaids wore scarlet ring Hcdeen, Dial 4498. The Old Wood private on all where fraud was rumored. He 1111 h da >• , , Shop, 15 Pitkin street. Box S, Herald Office. velvet picture frocks, scarlet velvet \.i -lill fL.rl.ids'; display lines not Taker and Tell Her pointed out, however, that O’Neil and scarlet shoes. S'hi. LOANS UP TO $300 : PROSPECT Street at top of hill. had submitted no evidence that Tim Herald will not ha rcsponslhle Mr. Whittingstall, who is twenty- r.'r infire than one Incoiiect Insertion Beautiful new English type home. 6 would justify a widespread check. eight, is a portrait painter and had AUTOIMOMII.ES FOR SALE 4 Come in— Phone or- Write! What You Want. Ilf any a d vc i 11 sc me n I ordered for well arranged rooms, sun room, O’Neil has promised to produce this a picture in the Royal Academy thn 111"I e than one lime. 1927 Old.smubile Sedan. breakfast nook, hot water heat, evidence today. year. • ■| lie inadxeiieiit om.sslon of liieor- “ The only charge three and one- Shedl take care of 1927 Dodge Coupe. fireplace, tile bath with shower, Smith supporters have charged A t the time of their engageinenL iici pti Mica I ion of advertising will he half per cent por month on unpaid ii-ciihid only by calice 1 la 1 Ion of the 1927 Chevrolet Cabriolet. brass plumbing throughout, at­ that “dummy” voters participated Miss Bennett denied she planned tu charge made for the service .ndered. 1925 Cadillac Sedan. ' amount of loan.” you and it's ten to tached heated garage. Price attrac­ in the election by using the cards give up tennis after her marriage. 1925 Big Six Studebaker Sedan. tive. Terms can be arranged. Call designating new locations of polling It was said Mr. WhittingstaJl play­ Ml .TlverilsemerilE tnust conform PERSONAL FINANCE CO. places which Reading mailed *to In si.vlc. copy and lypograpliy with 10 other good used cars. one that you'll get 4522. ed squash racquets and other games, icgul.itio’ ; enli»ced hy the piihlish- Crawford Auto Supply Co. Room 2, Second Floor, qualified voters. but no tennis. To thi.s Miss Bennett ers and they reserve the right to Center & Trotter Sts. State Theater Building, the result you want. FOR S A L E —$800 DOWN buys new said; “ You can take it from me, he edit, levlse or reject any '"ly con­ Telephone 6495 or 8063 753 Main St. South Manchester colonial home. Six rooms, tile bath, is a jolly good player.” sidered oil iecnoiia Me. CI.OSl.NC IIOU US— Classified nds to Licensed by the State Phone 3430 oak floors, fireplace. Mortgages ar­ liii. pnlilis.hed s;ime dii.v must he re- 1927 ESSE.X COACH ranged. Arthur A. Knofla. 875 Main BIG FRUIT MERGER , l ived liy 13 o'clock noon: Saturdays 1925 HUDSON COACH street. Tel. 5440. SECRET CONSISTORY Terms—Trades Considered SITUATIONS WANTED— ’ ^ TELEPHONE YOUR BETTS GARAGE FEMALE 38 CLASSIFIED DOES A LL TASKS FOR SALE—NEW BEAUTIFUL St. Joseph, Mich., Nov. 19.— (A P ) Vatican City, Nov. 19— (AP) — WANT ADS. Hudson-Essex Dealer 129 Spruce English type home. 6 rooms, fire­ —Fred L. Granger, president of the Pope Pius has decided to hold a place. steam heat. Small amount \ds are aecepied over the telephone M IDDLEAGED W O M AN desires Michigan Fruit Growers, Inc., today secret consistory on Dec. 16 and a down. Terms. Price only $7500. at’ the ClIAUCC KATM given above GOOD USED CARS general housework, with small announced plans for a combine for public consistory on Dec. 19. as a convenience m advertisers, hul Arthur A. Knofla, 875 Main street. Cash or Terms family or elderly couple. Call be­ the consolidation of 20 co-operative It is generally supposed he ■will tlie CASH UATKS will he accepted as Tel. 5440. appoint new cardinals at this time. I'UUL PAY.MK.NT If haul at the hnsl- Madden Bros. tween 5 and 7 p. m. 4982. fruit packing and cold storage 681 Main St. Tel. 5500 ness office on or before Hie seventh plants and 10 of the largest fruit dav following the first ’ "serHon of Ciicli ad otherwise the CHAK(il-i LOTS FOR SALE 73 canning plants in western Michlga-i. F U R C APE i:\TE will he collected. No responsl- GARAGES—SERVICE- SITUATIONS WANTED— The organization will be known as hi'lity for errors In telephoned ads STORAGE 10 MALE 39 GARDEN—LAWN- APARIMENTS— FLATS— HOME BUILDERS.—A few choice the Great Lakes Fruit Industries, Grandmother’s short fur cape will he assumed and their accurac.v building lots on Prospect street, Inc., and will be capitalized at S3,- cannot be giiaranlecd.____ DAIRY PRODUCTS 50 I'ENKMENTS 65 has its 1930 successor. Paris sends INDEX OF W A N T E D —USED cars, old cars WANTED—WINDOWS to wash or close to bus ser\ice, convenient to 000,000 controlling approximately finger tip capes of black caracul CLASSIFICATIONS moved from yards etc. General housework of any kind; also cellars FOR SALE — YELLOW GLOBE FOR R E N T — 6 ROOM tenement, mills, high elevation. Price low. 90 per cent of the fruit canned in that are very chic. Auto Repairing. Abel’s, 26 Cooper Gleamed, etc. John Quinn, 95 Cen­ turnips, 7oc a bushel delivered. B. garden street, all improvements; Call 6185. Michigan. Included in the grouu Births ...... ^ ter street. Engagements ...... street. Dial 5520. R. Keeney. 596 Keeney street. Tele­ also 4 room single house, newly will be most of the fresh fruit can­ ZIPPER CLOSINO Marriages ...... j', phone 3321, days or 4691 after 6:30. done over, at 122 Birch street. Call LEGAL NOTICES 79 ning plants from St. Joseph to Heaths ...... at either place or phone 5092 or Traverse City. liard of Thanks ...... ' BUSINESS SERVICES DOGS— BIRDS— PETS 41 FOR SALE — GREEN Mountain An evening girdle of pink satin in .Menmnam ...... 7‘240. .■\T .\ COHBT OF PROB.\TF HELL) Bos', and Konnd ...... OFKEREI) 13 potatoes. $2.00 bushel, delivered. ."It M.'iiu’hr.stcr. xvitliin .mil for the with square of lace inserted in Aniinunceinenis ...... “ FOR SALE — TH RE E Male poodle Thomas Burgess, Wapping, Conn. FOR R E N T —4 ROOM tenement, all J>l.':trk-t of .MMnc'hestp|-, on the 19th. TUNNEYS TO RETURN modernistic fashion fastens down i’ersoii'jls ...... WELDING, Placing, carbon burn­ puppies, two months old, ideal pets, Tel. Rosedale 60-2. improvements, and garage, 23 Trot­ ilav of Xovenihor. I').. 1999. the left side with a little gold zip­ .|\ iilomolillcs ing and blacksmithing. (!has. O. W. T’rrsent Wir.Lt.V.YI S. HYDE, Esq., Brioni. Italy, Nov. 19— (AP) — .\ntomoMles tor Sale ...... J reasonably priced. Inquire L. S. ter street. Apply 116 Center. Tele­ .riii]L;c. per closing. ,\ 11111 n III III Ics t Cl r 1‘jNchange .. Nelson, 277 East Middle Turnpike. Robinson, Miner Farm, Gilead. phone 4508. i:.srale of (Irai'o TIaii.sen late of Gene Tunney, former heavyweight !\ciii .vcciss-ries—Tires ----- Write L. S. Robinson, Andover, HOUSEHOLD GOODS 51 Ma m-lu'.xt er. in .-^aiil Distrii't, ileceaseil. champion, and Mrs. Tunney. the A ' 11 • * 1 i r i»;H ri ii 12 — I *11 i ti li n g • i Conn, R. F. D. No. 2. FOR R E N T —3 & 4 room flat, all im­ Till' .\ilmini.-;t rat rix li.-iviii;^ I'.xi lii t- former Polly Lauder, are planning A 1111 • 1 s ...... BUILDING- FOR SALE—HOUSEHOLD furni­ provements, including hot water eil 11 r ail Ml i II i.';| ra I ion ani-oiiiU with to sail for the United States from \ 11 I I I s-“ ^‘ 11 ' 5» I» 1 1 12 C U ...... said i-.slati,' t" this I’nurt for allow- 'a i,,i..-1--..i ...... CONTRACTING 14 ture. Contents of six rooms, in good heat. 170 Oak street. Inquire 164 aiirr. it is Naples on the steamship Vulcania » I;i r j - t — Se r V —Sf t* r:i g ^ LIVE STOCK—VEHICLES 42 condition, to be sold at once. Mrs. Oak street or call 8241. I'lBOEBEP:—'I'h.-it llic L’:;rt] ihi.v of on Thursday. MORTGAGES lUfvcle ...... C A R PE N TE R WORK, porch and Wm. Eneman, 77 Garden streev. N'liMMiiher. I).. 1999. at 9 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Tunney recently re­ W ,n:. it Ai i"v--.M"tiircvcles toii'Monn. at the I'rohate office, in I'riif f'.'«hiniil Sprvicp" storm enclosures, altef^ions, re­ FOR SALE—3 SHEEP, 3 pigs, 15 FOR R E N T —FOUR room tenement, turned here after a trip to Germany lti »ln -sv aril BRAID ED RUGS for sale at 149 .said Manclicstcr. he and tiie same is Invest your money i; j (.IffI’ rill ...... pairs, rooting, and garages. T. Niel­ geese, 50 pullets. Telephone Rose- with all improvements and garage assiLiiied for a Itcarini^ on the allnw- where Mrs. Tunney underwent an ||..,i-. 'i.iM Sr I V •5 ( MI V I ? (1 ...... 1 3 • son, telephone 4823. dale 25-5. ■ Oakland street, Manchester. Please at 5 Ridgewood street. Rent $23 ...... said ad m i n ist rat Ion accmint operation for the removal of her ap­ ilm.^ - • 1 I : u-'; IIi; call and see them. Mrs. E. P. Darl- month. Inquire 178 Parker street. with said estate, and tliis Court di­ pendix. in first and I FOR S A LE — P A IR W ORK horses, Dial 5623. rects tlie administratrix to )rive pub­ ELOKISIS—NURSERIES 15 weight 2900, would sell separately. lic notice to all per.soiis interested 1 ’1 , j-n UI n ‘ -nr.ofine: tlu'i'ciii to appear and be lic.-ird there- second mortgages M. F. Hutchinson, 24 Bigelow FOR SALE — PORCELAIN jined FOR R E N T—5 ROOM tenement, I'li hy ]Mi 1)1 isiiinLT a copy ,-,f tliis order I <1 • - ’ uu FDR SALE—CUT FLOWERS, car­ street. Dial 3467. Polar King ice box. family size, in lower floor, all modem improve­ in some iicwsp.ipor haviiiK' a circiila- ■ T • ijftv' " t; nations. chrysanthemums, pom­ ------— t . very . good condition. Telephone ments, available Debbnjbdr; 1st. C. lioii iu said ni^trii-t. on or before HUPMOBILE “8” on Manchester - I I p : : r: L . . . . poms all colors, also potted plants. FOR SALE — 3 GOo’b ' work horses. 4874. E, Lewis. 44 Cambridge street. .Vo\-Pniher 1 !>. 1 :i99. and h.\- po.stimr a { l-i •n i! S* rvice? ... 621 Hartford Road. Tel. 8962. Cheap if taken at once. Call cop_\- of this order on tiie t'lihlic ,si;;n Telephone 7269. I'osl in llic Town where tlie deeeasrd delivered new to real estate. * 11 • I ' 11 -I u 'Ivii n 1 ii'V Thomas Hickey, telephone Rosedale SEE BENSON’S window for mat­ last dMeli. four dax's l.efon- said day original owner one I Illi Si- I ' IVP ... 57-5. tresses, $5.00 allow'ance on your ukl F’OR R E N T —4 ROOM flat, on Divi­ "i he.i.'ne and return make to this year ago this month We have a few places \\ .j n ' cd —' liu ' I . S. ( V li-e ... IMOVlNIi— IRUCKINIi— mattress this week. Headquarters sion street, all improvement.s. In­ I 'on I I. (I iM*:i 1 loiinl SrORAGE 20 for good Bedding. quire 46 IValnut street. Telephone WILId.Y.M -s. lIYr'K for $2045. :i I • .11 i| .•ill-H'iv ...... J lid; where you can 111 , \ I ii > r I 111' I ii III ...... POULTRY AND SUPPLIES 43 6472. Il-I l-l9-9'.i. H I iii-i n ~ ...... MERCH.\NDISE ordered by you to­ 9 PIECE OAK dining room set $60. SALE PRICE loan your money .VIII > ii-ii I — 1 M'.i mri I ...... day in New York, or to be sent to TURKEYS FOR Thanksgiving. New three piece living room suite F'OR R E N T —5 ROOM flat, gas, W ,1111 ed — 1 MS' 1 m'l i.in ...... New York, picked up by us to­ Order early. Gilbert H. Storrs, $130. P^ranz-Premier vacuum clean­ lights, to adults only. Apply to 28 ii;i,ooo 1'.mil;- —Sli.’vl'S —.\l"1■l.^Mgl-S . . night and delivered th^ ne.xt Coventry, Conn. Telephone Rose- er $15. Mt. Nebo Place. few low-priced used cars at now. BiiMiiv.-iii Hii|iiii ' iinii its ...... morning via Manchester and New dale 34-5 Manchester. Watkins Furniture Exchange •Mivn t y III 1 .• I III ...... York Motor Despatch. Daily ser­ TO RENT—FIVE ROOM flat at 35 attractive figures. llt'll) lllKl SlIlinlioilK vice and reasonable rates. Call Cooper street, all improvements. Wall Street 11 l ip \\ run vil - l■■^■ imi le ...... WANTED— ID BU^ 5t< Apply to Christopher Glenney, 789 Robert J. Smith Help Wmiit || —.M:ile ...... 3063. 8860 or 886-1. ARTICLES FOR SALE 45 H. A. STEPHENS Main street. Help W.III'I il —M.He or Keniiile Center St. at Kno.v. .37- PERRETT & GLENNEY—Express 1 W ILL PAY HIGHES'l cash prices Phones 3450 and 5756 ,\ ;jein V W;i 111 f il ...... SWEET CIDER $10 per barrel at Silmitiiinp W'liiiicil—l-'itmile . and freight service; local and i toi rags, paper, magazines and F'OR R E N T —4 ROOM upstairs flat Briefs the mill. New oak barrels, eight I uii Ho 11 s Wiiiitiii — M;ile ... long distance. Expert furniture metals. Also buy all ainds ot on Ridge street, steam heat. In­ 1009 Main IlmplovniPlii ,-\ e v iieips-...... hooped parifined $3.50 each. E. A. moving. Service any time by call­ chickens. Morris H Lessner. Dial quire 79 Ridge street, upstairs. I. iv c SliM-k —1*1-1»—1‘oult rv — V Standish, Andover. Conn. liims— llirris— I’eis ...... ing 3063. , 6389 or 3886. New York, Nov. 19—The Chrysler Live Stock —Vtliu-lP.x ...... -13 I FOR RENT—5 ROOM lower flat FOR S A L E —FEW LOADS of soil, Corporation has retired an addition­ rmilirv anil Suii|ilivs ...... <3 j W AN TE D —R ETU RN ' load from JUNK steam heat and garage. Eldridge W'aiucil — Bets—I’liuli I V—Slock also two or three loads of wood. W. al ,$6,000,000 of Dodge Brothers 6 Batavia, N. Y., Rochester, Syra­ Highest prices for anytlilng saleable, street. See James J. Rohan. Tele­ per cent debentures. ||'or Stile—.VHm-elliii'eiMix G. Glenney Company, Allen Place, cuse, Utica. Albany or enroute, be­ particularly copper, brass, rags, phone 7433. .\ nicies tor Sn ic ...... ' , Manchester. r.ijais and .^cccsso^les ...... ’ p i tween Nov. ISth and 21st. Perrett magazines. Call 5879. VVm. Ostrin- The Cities Service Company, F'OR R E N T— F'lVE room flat, steam Ihilhling Malenals ...... -ty & Glennev. Phone 3063. sky, 91 Clinton. Prompt attention. through its subsidiary, the Crc\v- IMamomls— Wau'hes—Jewcliv .. -ISj FOR S A L E —W h i t n e y "I mby car- heat, second floor, large rooms. In­ Lovick Co., has taken over the hold­ Klocincal Appliances— Katlio .. -Hi! riage, in good condition. Price $10. quire 219 Summit street or tele­ 11 ings of the Consolidated Service r eI a Mii [''I'cil ...... -13 - I Dial 3274. Al'AK I MEN lb— FLA i: phone 5495. H. iriJeii — l-'a rm —1 lau y Proiiucts faJ REI’AIKING 23 Stations Co. and the Towoco Filling I I o u VC liohl Hiuuls ...... Ill I E N E M E N I b 63 •M Mcln iiery a ml fools ...... f'3 VACUUM CLEANER, phunugraphs, F'OR RFINT—4 ROOMS, all modern Stations Co., operating in Crawford WHAT OO TA K E TH IS and Erie counties, Pennsylvania. ■M nsica 1 Hisi i u im n i v ...... clock, gun repairing, key fitting. FUEL AND FEED 49-A FOR R E N T— 2 ROOM furnished improvements, including steam iiifice ami Sioie l.iiuipmcnl .... l'• YOU want; BUNDLE o r Braithwaile, 52 Pearl street. heal, at 14 Arch street. Specials at Hie Stoics ...... fol apartment, steam heat, also single World production of copper in U'r.-ifiiiv; .-Viip.iicl — l-'i.is ...... f'7 FOR SALE—HARD WOOD and room. Inquire 109 Foster street. BOSS? LATHES OYER W.iiiicii—To Boy ...... &S hard slabs, stove length $6 and $9 F'OR R E N T — VERY DESIRABLE~4 October totaled 178,269 short tons, TO THAT ItixMiis—Itiiiinl—llolels—Hesnrl* COURSES AND CLASSES ’27 per load. A. Firpo, 116 Wells street. FOR RENT—6 ROOM flat on and 5 rooms, near Cheney mills, compared with 174,553 in Septem­ m y/ I (CM IIIII r:i III a Dial 6148. white enamel plumbing, very rea­ ber and 176,623 in Oct. 1928, accord­ JOB ON II. ioiiis WiHioul Boaril ... 1)'-' Spruce street, near East Center. BARBER TRAD E taught in day Inquire at 25 Spruce street. sonable. Inquire Tailor Shop, 5 W al­ ing to the American Bureau of I. 1 la I il'■ I'S Waiiu il ...... i'.i-.\ Metal Statistics. FOURTEENTH I'oiiiiliy Board — Ifcsorls ...... 'ai and evening classes. Low tuition FOR SALE—THE FOLLOWING nut street. Telephone 5030. STREET. II 111 Ms— Ifesi .a II ra n I 5 ...... fi 1 rate. Vaughn Barber School, 14 kinds ot wood, sawed to order; FOR R E N T —5 ROOM tenement at W.iiUcil — Booms—Boa 1 11 ...... ti? Market street, Hartford. hickory, hard, white birch, slab and 82 Bigelow street $25. Call 7855 or F’OR RENT—6 ROOM tenement at Steel rail buying by western Heal llsl.atc I'or Kent 162 Center street. Phone 8737 be­ railroads fol- 1930 delivery now .\ I i.i rl men I s. l-'lals. 'feiiemcnts .. Ii3 chestnut. L. T. Wood Co. 55 Bis- 8790. l‘..isiitoss l.ocaiioiis lor Benf .... fi 1 sell street. Dial 4496. tween 5:30 and 7 p. m. totals close to 1,500,000 ton.x;, while Houses lor Ben' ...... f.i COURSES AND CLASSES 27 TO R E N T —5 ROOM tenement, on mill officials expect that total .s II: .iir ha n tor Bent ...... tai FOR SALE — SEASONED hard Wells street $20 month. VV’illiam F’OR R E N T —6 ROOM tenement at orders will be between 2.250,000 So 111 no f Homes for BciU ...... IIT DORIS HAPGOOD wood, sawed to order, chunks $6.50 Kanehl, 519 Center street. 79 Wells street, all modern im­ and 2,500,000 tons. U'aiilcd to Bent ...... tiS Teacher of Piano—Beginners only. load, split $7.25. Fred Giesecke. provements, furnace. Call at 81 Iteiil Mslnlc l-'or Sole 598 Center St.—Tel. 8304 xp.irlmcMt IJiiihling for .--^ale ... fc* Phone Rosedale 36-12. FOR REINT—6 ROOM tenement on Wells street. Tel. 7617. Because of the unsettled stock I'.u-iiies.s I’riipcrty for S a le .. 7iJ Newman street, all modern im­ market conditions, stockholders of l■■.ll■il.s .•■iiol l.aiM for Sale ...... 71 FOR S A LE — 1000 CORD hard wood provements: also five room flat on FOR KENT—4, 5. AND 6 ROOM the U. S. Playing Card Co., of Cin­ H11 us V tor Sale ...... 73 I'RUFESSIONAL and slabs. Price $10 cord for slabs, Newman. Inquire 147 East Center rents. Apply Edward J. HoU, 865 cinnati, have voted not to accept I I .s I-1' r Sa h: ...... 7 3 SERVICES 22 $11 for wood. Slabs extra fine Main street. 'I'elephone 4642. I . I'l 1 1 I' 111 III, 11 y for Sale ...... M street. Tel. 7864. the proposed recapitalization plan. u I m r I I.I II lor S:i h- ...... quality. Call 6991. The plan provided for the issuance PIANO TUNING io-.al H-lale tor llxchai.ge ... TW O ROOM SUITE in Johnson of two shares of new common and ffaiUcd — Bc.al Bslate ...... HARD WOOD $6 per load. Hard BIock, facing Main street, suitable The Smithsonian Institute was 1 1-4 shares of no par convertible Yiicliiin—I.rKiiI Niitlccs John Cockerham slab wood $5.00 load. Wm. J. Mc­ for light housekeeping. Phone .1 1 established in 1846 under the will class “ A ” stock for each share of 1 e. 1 \i ii ice s ...... 6 Orchard St. $ I -I ..u I .\ot lees ...... Tel. 4219 Kinney. Phone Rosedale 28-2. Aaron Johnson 3726 or 9635. of James Smithson. $10 par value now held. (;AS BUGGIES-Aii Honest Opinion By FRANK BECK MR . CHERRY , IS W A ’AL. , SON , ALL THE ^ GEE , THAT'S IF s h e ’s t h e ^ t h e r e a n y PU T U R E SUGAR IN THIS BUSINESS rG . R E A T . W IL L IT RIGHT KIND SHE I HERE INJ THE a i n 't i n s a c k s . i V e BE VERY SOON — w o n ' t D O M U C H GROCERY BUSINESS TAKEN QUITE A FANCY Y O U S E E I HAVE WAITIN' WHEN SHE POR ME ? DO YOU TO YE ; KEEP UP YER A SWEETHEART, L E A R N S VOI THINK I CAN MAKE GAIT, AND SOME DAY AND 1 CAN’T PROSPECTS GOOD - - THAT IS-- \ J YE*LL BE MANAQIKI* EXPECT HER TO A H E M I W H O ENOUGH SO 1 CAN O N E O F M V W A I T T O O T H E L U C K Y I<5 oET. M A R R IE D S T O R E S L O N G . DICK T 3 0 M E D A Y . ■c> P 0 N l T l R Families are often Separated b y this.

There are at least four mistakes in the above picture. They may r - 4 pertain to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing or whatnot. See it you can find them. Then look at the sc rambled word below— and unscram* ble it, by switching the letters around. Grade yourself 20 for each of the mistakes you find, and 20 for the word if you unscramble It.

CORRECTIONS (1) Laths, in the carpenter’s conversation, is spelled tijcorrectly. (21 The bundle on the floor is shingles, not laths. (3) There is no ho’t m . : in the handle of the saw on the work bench. (4) The hammer on th* work bench has the head on wrong. (5) The scrambled word is PAR* T ln O N . MANUHESTlfiK E VEIN INU HEKALU, SUUXH MANUHESTEK, UUJNW., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1929. . PAGE FHIRTKEN

By Percy L. ( nishy F l a p p e r f a n n y S a y s : SKIPFY SENSr««l NONSENSE H M . U . 8. PAT, o rr.

FOR SPEEDERS TO READ j Motorists who are inclined to ^ take chances probably" will be sur-; ! prised to learn just how much; ground they are covering each sec­ ond. Here are the sobering facts; I 10 miles an hour covers 14.66} feet a second. | 15 miles an hour covers 22 feet a sepond. ; 20 miles an hour covers 29.33 feet a second. I 25 miles an hour covers 36.66 ^ feet a second. i 30 miles an hour covers 44 feet I a second. ' 35 miles an hour covers 51.33 feet a second. j 40 miles an hour covers 58.661 \\ feet a second. 45 miles an hour covers 66 feet a second. 50 miles an hour covers 73.33 feet a second. 55 miles an hour covers 80.66! Ml feet a second. ' 60 miles an hour covers 88 feet ^ 1(»0 Crosby, Great Britain rights reserved //- /f? O iazs Features Syndicate,.Inc. ______a second. OUR ROAfU)lN(; HOUSF ! Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains By Fontaine Fox MORE STATISTICS Most girls learn popularity by By (Jene Ahem Being a pedestrian is now listed male. by insurance companies among the hazardous occupations. piled and patted the sand into a passable semblance of a racing ONE CAUSE OF PELAV AT THIS TIME OF YEAR IS WHEIIS © ! — BLESS- v^EP He r e I a m ; Hm F f r o m WHO’LL DENY IT? car, the second had made a touring t h e S k i p p e r ^ s h o o t in g f r o m t h e f r o n t p l a t f o r m , car, but the third boy’s construction Bl a c k - tTa c k : 'TAKErTH^ LAP 'MHo TAE a p p e a r AMCS “ The automobile has cut down was without shape or form. b r i n g s d o w n a b i r d a n p c a n 't f i n d i t . distances’’— Yey— W e’re all closer to “"What sort of a car is that?’’ "Bl i m p s o A i Mo u r (5 ETS 'UIHAT He g o e s OF t h o s e p u c k s the poor house. asked the first boy. “ It looks like oL'’ He a p - a f t e r — ALi’ MORE? AUP "THE MARKS two or three cars all together.’’ OM t h e m , L If there is one too many for the “That’s just what it is,” replied % — I UJAS AFRAIP - He H ^ s e m p m e seating capacity of the car, the one the boy, loftily, “ It’s a collision.” HAV/E REASo MT o who doesn’t care to go this time is MoLi AIMEP OOT T(iR PEAM lATS ' Aki’ BELlEV/E "THAT THEY mother. The American home is slipping UiROfJG OF T ll BRl/^iG B AC K declares an editor. Then it ought ARE, POMESTc A'TEP Signal: A motion made by the MoUR QLi^ Aki’ e l e p Ha m t s ! F p to stay off the roads until they dry driver in front just before you cuss SHCiT MoURSELF PUCKS AUP w e r e him. off. A GoT Mo-RE PUCKS, IKiSTEAP OF A SHo T IM SOMEOfAE^iS Helen: “ Does your fiancee know b u t t He ^ a l l l e f t “I f caught by traffic in the mid­ GOlPE ♦ — Akl" PRlv/ATE POUP much about automobiles?” dle of the street, the best thing to TH^ s t a t e UlMEfi Carl; “ Heavens, no! She asked OR "FbUUTAlLi ; do is stand till,” says an expert. LOOK AT T H ’ p o c k s ; me if I cooled my car by slipping WORP W E U T AROUMP And if time permits, scribble a WELL- EG AP I farewell message on the back of a the gears.” ■'EM t h a t I WAS WELL- visiting card. Customer: “ I want to pay cash Joe: He dabbles in oils S little.! for this car.” Salesman: “ Yes, sir. But it’s so Jim: An artist? unusual that I’m afraid you’ll have v ’ Joe; No, an auto mechanic.” to give us a reference or two.” Student on a steamship for the ; ------/ first time pointed to the lifebuoys i Bobbed hair is like the automo­ and asked, “ I say. Captain, what’s bile. It isn’t the original cost that the idea of all the extra tires?” counts so much as the upkeep. Three small boys with spades and ; Salesman: me sell you a buckets were building model motor- ; radiator cap. _ uin. :ars in the sand. The first boy had Dumb One. Naw I ^on t like ______that s why I got this derby.

IC j o UAcre ' The automobile has become the // % l e a r M, 'F M o o I people’s heaviest liability. Moo vcMouo \T ' Mud beats dust. The passing car AU_* ' splashes it on you, but can’t make you eat it. 'FT -RETUR^iS I There will always be cheap cars '/ T r i u m p h - for those who are rich enough not AMT to care what people think. li/M C / The daily race between automo- I bile drivers to beat each other to / REQ. U. S. PAT. orr I street crossings brings prosperity 1 to hospitals and garages. / 01929, BY NCA SERVICE. INC. T?-’?• r* TTFox._-inoo 1929 • -- Twenty-five miles of spired thread would weigh only eight ounces. WASHINGTON TUBBS II Telling Her Story By (.Vane

The Roman catacombs are 580 "SUOOENLM I HEM50 PiSTOU SHOTS. viovj, 1 CMLS ThM I VlAS \U THE DEPOT square miles in area, and it is esti­ / vjell/COOMtess'; oust Tea us lu 1 KMEvI SOhAETmvUa DREADFUL HM) mated that they contain about OH,WO» N0T»«M6, eh? R£M^RK^eU£. 1 BONiUo Tickets fo r our ■1O0.R 0\MM CRUDE IMHW 'fOO KVJOW ^\^PPE^iED. I FW4 OUT ^ND SKW 15,000,000 dead. 1 S'POSE VOO vJfVSN'T £V£M <3POSE VOU 6^6T^^^J^V, Tv\NT'S WHERE. ^6O0t TA\S '(00 BENOlKG OVER TrtE DUl^E-AMO TvAEPe VJv\£N IT HAPPENieP, S£TT0d’ UP with The d u k e w n s h iDinc-t ^ 1 KMOVO COPS RUbiVHMGt UP. I SUPPOSED NOTvWMfa NOVJ VJAS VOO? \ -SICK FRlLtlD- OUTSIDE \aJiTH TuEB’S ^A0l4£V. HE'D DEEbi SHCrr \^1H\L£ RESlSTlVlG ^B0UT VT., MO, I ARREST. i ------' s vlASN’T.

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fniii \ ^ 4 ^ RCO. U. 8. P»T. orr by siRvicc inc. rT By Biosser FHFt'KLES AND HIS FRIENDS Oscar Has Them Guessing

saV-' VMAATS AU. -TU\S S/Y' P'P Yoo '^E a ll ABOi^ | gOT UE VjJAS iq jo WONDREO AN' A^A-AU^TUATS UlAA 60IM’ IM ALL THE /AAVBE ALL THAT X UEAR A90UT OSCAR FELLAS UEAR ...... """ IM MR. SCWMITZEL'S' TMENTV FINE DOLLARS! JUST WlS VUAV LACO'MARE AN' FEED STUFF UAS SOME7U1N6 GotKiS IMIP UARD'JJAR^ REAL ESTATE (5 E E / 7WAT SEEAAS l ik e .if OF TR/IM’ Tt» ABOUT OSCAR STDCES AN' LOAABER T b CO VNITB lAlS STbE&S, ItEEO SToc^:S, A LOT OF m o n e y — ake os YARDS OCESMT OFFICE ASKIN’ UoW lu /aber vacos and M TVhKK e s s a y a f t e r a l l -- M40CRV US AKOCU AN' ACRE oWy v n e l l ASRIM' QUESTiO(^S?? HE'S SoT SOAKE I t OF LAMD VNOOLO 1 \)40NOER..... BIS idea Fo r AMY-' CERTAIMLV TUAT WAS/^iT COST UIAA U /5E AK>YmiMS ID D o Vjonw r ESSAV 0 0 ODD 0 0 0 U\S ESSAY/.' = ms.'.’ 0 n IT f 1 /^

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$:^:^iwau.*.MT.orr. , — ©1929. BY NCA SCRVICC INC. HEQ. U. a PAT, orr. h . v._ ©I»2«, lY WO< W, By SmaU SALESMAN SAM Kitty, Kitty, Kitty, Etc. (RE.YD THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE)

“ W^e’re through the cloud,” one so, slick,” .said Scouty. “ Just sup­ \ <»oT c « a I AN' WHILE iTHlMKOP CHAMC^tHAT l a s t iTfeC^ — 'c^ee..vie'Re oeTriw' a l o n g - '\FiMe,soFp^R’. e>uT © e . su r ^ "TUAT REfOiMOS M e l PUT Tiny cried, “'that surely wa.s a posin’ that you grabbed a big QONNM " T H R e e C A T S (T, YA SeTteR RUN BACK AM' tAAKe. IT TW lRTeEM c a t s SViELL ONTH'S— (N'JeNTbRS',------' VA INCLUDE eVeaTTRlNO-^ wondrous ride. For just about a bird's feet, 'twould lift you ■quick­ 1NST€A0 OFTHReel minute it was dark as it could be. ly from the sled. You’d better CrU7.-2.\ 'The cloud was real damp, goodness stay right here instead. I ’m sure © IG - knows. 'There stul is moisture on a trip to some bird’s nest would LAnP ^LG. my clothes, but I don't mind. It not be such a treat.” w w rw icK really was a dandy treat to me.” Then, for a time, the bunch sat “Me, too,” cried Clowny. “But still. Then Carpy, in a voice quite at first I sort of felt it was the shrill cried. “ Oh! Look back! I worst trip we had ever taken. fear a cyclone’s coming right this Then we came out in the light. way.” The whole bunch saw a dark "77/?tfs cloud near. Of course it filled them As soon as I felt nice fresh air, it V or LCis took away the sudden scare. Now all with fear. “ Oh, my,” sighed oUE. I don’t care what happens, just as Scouty. “This is going to spoil a To rt- long as we’re all right.” dandy day.” And so they sailed on through The wind then hit the sled ker- the breeze. The sled just skimmed smack and almost threw it on its ►To R ,€ . along with ease. A bird would back. The Tinles all spilled off but pass them now and then and chirp didn’t fall down to earth. Each Rooi^ [ 3 ^ ' to beat the band. Once Clowny little fellow used his head and grab­ l l tried to grab a bird and Scouty bed real quickly to the sled. “ Don’t said, “ Say, that’s absurd. You drop, cried Scouty. "Hang right on S w o kim K; cannot catch a thing like that for all that you are worth.” with such a tiny hand.” Wtt.U.S.MkT.Orr.1 "Well, anyway, don’t try that (The old Goofy-goo bird helps th« W © im wt N«a y v ig . mt- trick ’cause it might not turn out Tlnymites in the next •tnr«A TU ESU A Y r NoinEMBER 1 9 /l§ i9 . PAGE FOURTEEN manrlFffltrr )£tirafttQ ^entUii

Loyal Circle of Kings Daughters have made arrangements to collect DANCE articles for their rummage sale to­ ABOUT TOWN morrow, Wednesday forenoon In­ Wedn^isday ISve’g. Nov. 20 stead of today. The sale will be held Hollister St. School Hall Duo-Dollar certificates are given Unlimited parking space in rear Thursday In the Richards block on By 3 Original Cardinals The Women’! Forelgm Missionary out with cash sales and pay­ society of the Nazarene church will the west side of Main street. It will BILL WADDELL’S BAND of store. Entrances at Oak open at 9 a. m., and continue Admission 50 Cents. meet this evening at 7:30 at the throughout the day and evening. ments on accounts. and Maple streets. chulrch. DEPARTM ENT STORE SO. MAMCHESTER,,CONN, The second in the series of lec­ tures on Interior decorating to be presented by Watkins Brothers dur­ eas mm ing the winter season, will be held in their auditorium, 11 Oak street, at 8:16 tonight. Horace B. Cheney, vice president of Cheney Brothers, : and one of the foremost authorities 1 dn fabric designs in the country, I wili talk on "The History of De­ sign." The lecture Is open to the public, without charge. ; C T l \ a n ^ s 5^vint^ S^ale The Lithuanian Dramatic Club will hold its semi-monthly meetlqg tonight at 31 Union street. Every one is urged to attend this meeting. , I EVENING Iespecially new members who have , joined, but not attended meetings as j

m m yet. Also those who have small bills j to pay, are urged to make returns for same. The meeting will open 7:30 sharp, therefore all must come , Dinnerware, Glassware, Roasters, Baking Dishes and early. | The Young People's Union of Man­ chester which represents young peo- ; Cooking Utensils at Special Sale Prices I FASHIONS Ipie from the various Protestant | churches will have a meeting at the North Methodist church on Friday of this week at 7:30 p. m. The ‘Wear-Ever” New Oval Roaster: weaker will be the Rev. Vernon L. I^lllps, pastor of the Congrega­ tional church in Kensington. Mr. Phillips is also president of the Con­ I that taper into smart j necticut Christian Endeavor Union. Musical numbers will be furnished by Miss Helen and Miss Elsie Berg- gren and the Maxwell Madolin club. Miss Hilda Magnuson of the North 4.95 I lengths in all their I Methodist church is chairman of the social period to follow the meeting. With new lifting rack. 16-inch size—a gDod size Just a few scalp treatments will stop your hair from falling and pro­ 50 Piece for roasting chicken, tur­ 1 feminine grace \ mote new growth—Call the Weldon Beauty Parlor for appointment. Tel. key, duck, whole bam, etc. 5009—Adv. American Porcelain Dinner Sets i Showing Clever Versions of = RUMMAGE SALE ■ Thursday, 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. mm H22 “Wear-Ever” “^Vear-Ever I the New Modes | . RICHARDS BLOCK 12.50 i Next to A. & P. Market Roasters Roasters Loyal Circlo Kings Daughters Inexpensive but smart sets that will add to the attractiveness of your Thanksgiving table. Good-looking border and spray patterns. Fine quality S Presenting s very elegnnt collection of new and. dc- s 3 .0 0 5.95 American porcelain. Seiwice for six persons. With new lifting rack. 12- The square shaped "Wear- s cidedly smart Evening Fashion. Youthfully becom- s HANDKERCHIEFS inch size. Ever" roaster. 14 pound size. 100 Piece 50 Piece I ing Gowns of Panne Satin. .Moire, Taffeta with Tulle | 100 Piece Enamel Double Roasters = and the very charming creations of 1- ishnet, that Lake on £ FOR CHRISTMAS Dinner Sets Dinner Sets Dinner Sets I an air of dignity with their moulded bodices---- drapery ^ L?.i"e assortment. L 9 8 Savory dark blue enamel dou­ i in the back or front and the long, full skirts Many :: 29-50 24.95 14.95 ble roasters in the oval shape only. 14-inch size. s smart copies of French imports. z New fall dinnerware In at­ Choice of good-looking New Autumn dinner seta ' Xa I spray and border patterns on In the very latest designs. S53 Main Street tractive, narrow floral bor­ white or Ivory grounds. These sets have gnid han­ Pmarnel Roasters White House ders outlined in gold Ser­ American porcelain Service dles. Service for six per­ vice for twelve persons. for twelve persons. sons. 2.98 Roasters 3.98 Savory blue enamel or White New ivory enamel roasters .louse ivory enamel roasters with soft green bead trim­ I $16.50 to$75.00 i SHOE REPAIRINd in the 14-inch size only. Dou­ mings. Double roasters in ble roasters. the 17 1-2-inch size.

§ la ening Fa.shions Second FI ^ Double Rpasters Special 1*00

fill* ^ • ruoHU i l S s GOOD TUINOS TO EAT Reed Roasters Carving Sets Savory Roasters 1.00 1.00 GRADE B BALDWINS With inside tray. Flat top Savory Junior double 4 .9 8 double enamel roaster. 13- roaster; oval shape; 13-lnch Three-piece, stainless steel Inch size. size. carving sets with stag horn 16 qt. basket 99c handles. ^ Sauer K ra u t...... 10c lb. 2 Spareribs and end of pork to cook with kraut. p GRAPE FRUIT, 3 for ...... 25c You See Style 21 Piece Glasbake Ware '4 Small California Oranges, 2 d ozen ...... 35c ....Fit You Feel! ^ Cucumbers, Spinach, Mushrooms, Tomatoes for baking and cooking gTYLEiseasy. One takes ^ Old Dutch Berry C offee...... 49c lb. that for granted in good shoes. But few shoes fit Glass Luncheon Sets ^ Tender Pork Chops. as Wilbfir Coon Shoes fit, 1 .0 0 ea. • ^ Lean cuts of Pinehurst Corned Beef. 5 points of the foot. That’s 2 Early delivery 7 :15 and 8 a. m. wny style remains so long 2 .9 8 in Wilnur Coon Shoes. Glasbake Ware is made for Your feet don’t hurt. In For holiday bridge parties-and luncheons, one of these sets would oven use only. It is guaran­ sizes 1 to 12, AAAA to EEE. come in very handy. Dainty glass sets in the popular optic pattern in teed not to break while In the green only. The set consists of six cups and saucers, six plates, a oven. On Glasbake Ware is creamer and a sugar bowl. featured the “Heat-Quick" 'oot- NAVEN’E tom. At 1.00 you may choose: Colored Table Impoited WATKINS BROTHERS, Inc. ■MW BlTW W fTW aiisiaj 1 1-2 quart Round Casse­ 1 "■ Mixing Bow! roles 7: Glassware Glassware Funeral Directors Sets 1 qt. Oval Casseroles 12-inch Utility Baking ESTABUSHED 65 YEARS 39c ea. 1.49 ea. 1.00 Dishes 0?:i CHAPEL AT 11 OAK ST. Delicate table glassware con­ We are showing an unusually For mixing Thanksgiving 10-incli Utility Baking sisting of sherbets, goblets, fine assortment of glassware at dainties, use one of these yel­ Dishes this price—vases, fruit bowls, low banded sets. Five piece Hi Robert K. Anderson Phones: Office 5171 and cocktail glasses. Soft, candy jars and bon bon dishes sets consisting of 5 to 9 inch 9-inch Square Cake Pans SA| Funeral Director Residence 7494 rose-pink and dainty orchid in a choice of shades and deco­ bowls. colorings. rations. 10 5-8 inch Beefsteak seroles 2 for 1.00 OOgKXXXXXXX%XXXXXXXXKXX36XX3CKXKX30CXX^^ Imported Japanese 9-inch Pie Plates I WEDNESDAY SPEQALS 9-inch Layer Cake D'slies ^ Salt Spare Rlbi ...... 18o lb. Oblong Bread Pans 5 Salt Pigs’ Hooks ...... ,...... 18o Ib. ; Luster Tea Sets ^ blew Sauer Itraut ...... '.m.«...... 3 Iba 26o Fat Salt Pork ...... 18o Ib. Colonial Best Top Round S tealc...... 49o Ib. 2 .9 8 set Tender Shoulder l^ f Steak ...... 35o Ib. FURNITURE Framed Casseroles Chicken Pies ...... 20o each A special selling of high grade, Imported Japanese luster tea ^Valnut Oakes .... •...... 80c each sets In the plain luster colors of blue, tan and green. We have Cocoanut Custard Pies ...... lSo-860 each Maple also Included a few decorated luster sets that regularly retail at 2 .9 8 Ginger Squares ...... 1...... 19o dozen 5.08. Stunning seta that will add to the joy of Thanksgiving One and one-half quart cas­ Sweet P otatoes...... 4 lbs. 13c and Maho/^any entertaining. seroles with engraved covers. Fancy I'ellow Onions...... 1-2 peck for 21c Nickel frames. Finest Yellow Globe Turnips...... 19o peck Finishes MANCHESTER PUBLIC MARKET Hale’s Housefuimishing Department—Basement DIAL 6180 KEMP’S, INC.

. i.-.