NET PRESS AVERAGE M IL V CIRCULATION, THE W E A T H ^ for the month of June,' 1028 Foreeaat b r V. S. W eather Burcan< IVetr Haven 5,141 \- Member of the Audit Burean of Fidr tonight^ and Fri^jr^ not ClrcnlatfonM inpch change in temperatoze.

VOL. XLII., NO. 242. (Clashed Advertising on Page 10) MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, JULY 12, i928. PRICE THREE CENTS

iiNTI-SALOON MEN FIRE Pirst Photos Direct from Australia.

. . . - - . • I , . ■ *1 FIRST GUN OF CAMPAIGN ••.;.‘T.’W W v.*X sv.s'.

• ‘ . . ■ . . ' ------Name No Parly But Mention | ENTIRELY NEW A1 Smith—Wet Associa-* p A D lV IC AIM TARIFF ISSUE lion Also Starts to Make ^ Ice Breaker ' Things Hum. OF GOV. SMITH TOBESTRE^Q) Washington, July 12.— The first BY SK . HOOVER Rescues Two Italians gun In the Anti Saloon League’s ex­ His Naming of Raskob i \ ---- I pected battle against Gov. Smith r/as sounded oday by General Supt. Challenge to Work Who One of Tbem in Serious Condition With Both Legs Froz­ F. Scott McBride in a public state­ Farm Relief and Prohibition ment predicting “ a condition worse Said Democrats Would en— Kept Swedish Sdentist’s Body a Month So He than repeal” would follow election to Be Handled y Locally; of the Democratic nominee In No­ Hurt Big Business. vember. Raskob’s Election Sur­ Could Ib ?e Christian Burial— Flyer Who Located “ The election of sue • a candidate as A1 Smith,” McBride said, “ would New York, July 12.— A brand prises the Repubbeans. Walking Party, is Himself Down But Says He KiDed materially aid,the liquor criminals new Democratic Party, shorn of the of the country by wantonly handi­ last vestige of the old Bryan fringe, capping the enforcement cf the law, Polar Bear and Has Food Enough for Several Weeks; by the appointment of complaisant made its botv to the country today. Washington, July 12.— The Re-_ officials, thus bringing about a con­ In the driver’s seat is Gov. Al­ publican Party, in Its efforts to Steamer Within 14 Miles of Group Left by Nobile on dition worse than repeal. fred E. Smith, the 1928 nominee, place Herbert Hoover in the White “ Any argument of the Smith and beside him sits as national partisans that their candldatt could chairman, John J. Raskob, who has House, will make Republican pros­ Ice Floes. not injure prohibition i- as false a been not inaptly called "a second perity, the tariff and the business tile usual Tammy camouflage. Any Judge (j .ry” as a spokesman for record of Republican administra­ Here are the first pictures to reach this country of the Southern Cross flyers in Sydney, Australia after t statement to the effect that any dry so-called big business. tions the outstanding issues of the Moscow, July 12.— Survivors of t J^ESCUED MEN WITHOUT ? It is a wholly new Democratic completing their epochal transpacific flight from Oak land, Calif., in three hops. Lower picture shows the leaders or active drys h ^ been de­ flyers as they were being paraded around Mascot airdrome, Sydney, on a motor lorry so the crowds could coming campaign, it was learned to­ the Malmgren party rf the Nobile FOOD FOR THIRTEEN DAY8* ceived by this Smith propaganda is Party at the top— friendly Instead day at Hoover headquarters. „ ..h 'In I' l', of hostjli to big business, frankly see them. From left to right are James Warner, rad io operator; C. T. P. Ulm and Captain Klngsford- Polar Expedition, who haVe been Smith, pilots, and Captain Lyon, navigator. Above is a part of the huge crowd that swarmed around the The farm relief and prohibition “ Any men or group of u:,u that and avowedly wet at the top, sym­ lost, amid the northern Ice floes Moscow, July 12.— The two plane immediately after H landed. These pictures w ere rushed from Australia by fastest steamer. Issues will be handled^ locally In survivors -iof . the Malmgren I'c'y upon appeals to the base; pa pathetic with the plight of agricul­ states where each comniands wide­ since May 25, have been rescued by party were rescued by the Rus­ sions or to the appetites or to the ture— and It gives promise of con­ spread popular attention while ducting a bold, well-organized and the Russlar Ice breaker Krassln, the sian Ice. breaker Krassln at exploitatiJi o.° the weaknesses of Hoover' himself will announce his 6;40 a. m. today, (Greenwich their felloymen, canrot hope to amply-financed campaign for the “HOT DOG” MAN ship reported by radio today. presidency. personal views on both subjects In Mean Time), the captain of the v.'In victory agaFnst opponents QUICK AND EASY DIVORCE his speech of acceptance at Stan­ Prof. Finn Malmgren^. leader of A Bold Move FIGHTS MORGANS steamship reported by. radio. whose, appeal is based upon loyalty ford University, Calif., on August the group of three men, was dead Captain A. Mariano and Captain to constitutional gov,_rnment, con­ Gov. S ith’s audacious move in i selecting Raskob to conduct his 11. Neither issue, however, will be from illness and exposure. Filippo Zappi, the survivors, tinuance of our unrivaled prosperi­ In Court for Fifth Time to campaign was described by his carried to the people as a party doc­ Later wireless ad-rices to the said that Prof. Finn Malmgren ty and 'maintenance of the unequal­ 1 IN FRANCE, THING OF PAST j friends., today as his acceptance of Keep Business— Backe(l by trineunless 'developm,ents necessi­ Russian Nobile relief committee died as a result of the' terrible ed health achieved under prohibi­ «<■ Kiddies. tate a chance In the present cam­ gave details of the dramatic rescue. cold and exertion a month ago tion.” I the challenge thrown down by Dr. I Hubert Work, the Republican na­ paign policy. Men Collai»e whUe their fioating floe was oft The statement did not name any NEST OF FISH HAWK ^ Gltn jCove, N. Y., July 12— The action of Gov. Alfred E. When Prof. Malmgren’s compan­ Brock Island. Mariano and Zap­ tional chairman, to make the tariff Laws Tightened Up and IS BOTHERING GOLFERS presidential candidate but Smith. It land prosperity one of the great is J. P. Morgan may be a czar In Smith, the Democr,atic nominee, in ions, Captain A. Mariano and Cap­ pi had been without food thir­ named no party. j sues of the campaign. Wall street, but “ Grandpa” naming John j. Raskbb, ;ch^^^ tain Filippo Zappi, were ■ carried teen days ;whOn they were sav­ Answers Raskob As^head of the great General Mo Wealthy Americans Must Wildwood, N. J., July 12.— Stein, fil-year-old driver of a of the finance. cxmuhltteiS. of Cieneral aboard the Krassln they fell upon ed. Thpjt *were In extrem,ely The Board of Governors of the hot dog wagon in Glen Cove Motors, as the Jihwf'IJiapiocratic na- their’knees before Captain Samoyo- weakened .condition from ex­ j""Ra°riob. ^ which shares wUh Standard Oil and the Steei corpira Wildwood Golf Club will vote ^ today was prepared to battle 'tional chairman, only solidified sen­ lovich, master of the ship, sobbing posure and starvation. newly selected chairman of the tlon the distinction of being the big Go Elsewhere Now to Gain today on the momentous ques­ the Morgan influence to the timent In the Hoover camp for a with joy and calling upon heaven.^to Democratic national committee, gest of. big business in America; as tion of whether a fish-hawk’s highest court of the land. campaign on business issues. The sho-Wer Its blessings upon the brave had publicly endorsed Smith’s atti­ a close associate of the great Du­ nest should be removed from a “ Grandpa” solemn-faced and Hoover leaders looked upon Ras­ seamen. by the roar, of th'e motor whiqh tude on prohibition. Freedom. tree on the ninth fairway. wearing his Sunday suit, ap*^ kob’s election as a shrewd solicita­ broke the Arctic stillness with 'a pont interests; as director in a doz­ peared in Nassau County C!ourt Mariano’s legs are frozen. He^Is '■While the Anti-saloon League en great business Organizations, no­ One member of the board, tion of business support for the In serious condition as it Is feared crashing sound. Chiichnovsky was thus charted its course for the cam­ William Hunt, will vote in the and began his fight to remain thrilled to see them moving. He body could be more Interested than in business. Democratic nominee, which will're­ that gangrene may set in. paign, the organized anti prohibi­ Raskob in a protective tariff and Paris, July 12 — The days of affirmative. He smacked 11 quire heroic Republican efforts to Prof. Dead a Month dropped to lower, altitude and was tion forces were revealed as equally sparkling drive oft the ninth tee He contends that officials of able to make out two men weakly the full dinner pail. Gov. Smith’s quick and easy divorce for rich Glen Cove, influenced by Mor­ •circumvent. Zappi; said that Prof. Malmgren ready for the battle. mends pointed out today. Let Ras- yesterday but was unable to lo­ ■0 . . Party_’S:;Big,AsMt.. ha,d. died, a month ago, but that; his waving -flags to attract- his attoir American men and wqmen in cate the ball until he noticed a gan, are trying to stop him The anti-prohibition fight is be­ kob’s ELomlnatlqb stand then, they The greateVt asset to the Repub­ body had been kept In hope that tlon; It •was' Impossible to land, ing waged on all fronts by “ wet” France are numbered. commotion in the hawk's nest. from selling frankfurters and however,' and the gathering mist sSid, as the Smith acceptance of ice-cream cones to beach lican Party tn such' a campaign. It they would be rescued and It could organizations, it was disclo..ei. to­ the Republican challenge. In an exclusive statement to In­ Upon investigation. Hunt’s ball was becoming too thick for safety crowds at Glen Cove landing, was believed at Republican head­ be given a Christian burial. It was so the aviator had to sail off, alter day in .financial reports filed with Some of the southern and west­ ternational News Service today. At­ and six others were found in quarters, would be Hoover’s per­ the nest of the greedy bird. a site where he has dispensed frozen stiff when taken aboard the apprizing the Krasslq by radio of the clerk of the House as required ern Democrats of the oft school torney General Donat-Gigae, of his wares for ,the past eight sonal record as a business man, en­ Krassln. , by law. France, admitted that there had <3> his thrilling dlscoyery. Chuchnov- were still a bit groggy today from years. gineer, administrator and executive. Captain Samoyolorich told his Wet Campaign the surprise of seeing a great busi­ been “ slight irregularities” in the sky had been able to make out the Pour times “ Grandpa” The Republican fioihlnee’s handling story of the. rescue In laconic mat­ figure of one man prone upon ths Expenditure of $150,000 by four ness captain of Raskob’s type and past and that a new special cou^rt Stein, his wagon and his 13- of business affairs in the Depart­ will be created to hear divorce ca^s ter-of-fact messages but It was evi­ ice. He Immediately suspected organizations in the three months affiliation in the party saddle. Some LIGHTNING KILLS year-old nag “ Roan” have ment,of Commerce,, his tremendous dent that he had been deeply moved that rthis third member of the period ending June 1 is shown In of whom were shaking their heads, instituted by foreigners. come in contact with the law. In the future, so far as American success in promoting foreign trade by the sufferings of the rescued group was dead and so notified the the reports jijst'tabulated. too, but on the whole they appear­ Before court time Stein halt­ men. He sent word he was proceed­ Krassln of his belief. Two specific campaigns are men­ ed to be willing to give the new litigants are concerned, divorces will be granted only upn;. the same ed his wagon at a corner and (Continued Oh page 2) ing as rapidly as possible to rescue tioned—rthe North Dakota referen­ order of things a trial. COLLEGE ATHLETE hapded out some soda pop and Changes Course “ They’re bold fellows, these New grounds as apply in the American the . remaining members of the dum on prohibition! and 'the so-call­ states from which the petitioners cones to a. group of children. Nobile party marooned, on an Ice When Captain Samoyolovich rer ed "wet questionnaire mallliiF cam­ Yorkers.” one southern senator re­ “ Hey, grandpa,” they shout­ ceived the news he gave orders for marked to the International News come. Thus, an American from Ill­ floe somewhere off North Fa.ri Land paign conducted by a Delav/are inois, California or New York must ed. "Don’t le t ’em run out out ARREST MEN, GIRL, full steam ahead, but had tb ehange organization. Service correspondent. of business. We need you.” or Foyne Island. This is the group be .able to prove in the French Others Dead and Injured and of which Nobile himseU was form­ bis course owing' to the towering 'The association against the pro­ How It Was Made icebergs which were drifting in the An interesting story was told to- courts that there have been legal erly a member. hibition amendment, the chief infractions covered by written di­ IN MURDER path of the ship. The powerful Capta'n Samoyolovich described steel prowed steamer,' constructed “ wet” organization, reported re­ vorce laws of those American com­ Homes Wrecked in New the joy of Mariano and Zappi as ceipts of $11S,&64.28 during the (Continued on Page 3) to plow its way through ice fields monwealths. HE MADE FLYING SAFE, “ Comparable only to that of aead period, including loans of $ , . from six to eight feet deep, .plunged 32 500 His Statement men returned'to life.” Apparently Expenditures were shown to be Attorney General Donat-Gigue’s Hampshire Storm. through the floes smashing Its way $125,361.93. statement in full follows: IS KILLED BY AIRPLANE Girl Says She is Jig h t Club the two survivors were too exhaust­ worward on Its mission of mercy. AL s m w ed, sick and torn mentally to give The largest contributions listed “ On account of slight irregulari­ Boston, July 12.— Harold Leslie j The captain had the location of j came from William Phelps Eno ties in the past in methods of Hostess— Held as Maleri- the horrible details of their own the floe In longitude and Latitude handllnig all foreign divorces, in the Hamm, brilliant Dartmouth football sufferings. Both were half frozen which the airman had carefully I Washington. $1,000; Eldrldge R. Inventor of Lindbergh’s Com­ . Johnson, Camden, N. J., $5,000; ' MAPPING OUT PLAN future all foreign divorce actions fullback, and another man were and nearly starved to death. They worked out. ' ! Raymond Pitcairn, Bryn Athyn, Pa., will be heard by a special court, dead, four men and women were in­ pass and an Actress Are Kill­ ai Witness. were given medical aitentlon Imme­ I diately upon being taken aboard the Professor Safe $x,666.67; B. Dawson Coleman.’ whose judges will be especially in­ jured and the • debris of wrecked ed When Machine Falls. structed to scrutinize severely all Krassln. Prague, Czechoslovakia, July 12 Philadelphia, $1,000; William M. I houses, torn trees and poles were —-Prof. F. Dehounek, a member of Elkins, Philadelphia. $5,000. There j demands made by petitioners. Synders, Pa., July 12.— Morris Suffered Terribly Confers With His Board of "Not only will French courts in being removed today in the wake of New York, July 12.— Four men The members of the Malmgren the Nobile party marooned on an y*as an anonymous contribution of I M. Titterington, who made flying and a girl were under arrest today Ice floe in the Arctic, has reported $5,000. ! the future require at least six a severe electrical storm wh.ch, on safe for others, and Patricia Perry party suffered the utmost agonies months bona fide residence here the wings of a wind of almost cyc­ In connection with the, murder of body and mind. Death from star­ by raldo that he Is alive and well, Other "wet” bodies reporting in- ! Strategy Just Where, to Andrews (Patricia Perry), motion said a dispatch from King’s Bay to­ previous to filing the petition, but lonic proportions, swept across New Monday night of Golltto Marrero, vation and exposure faced them eluded: Northern California divl-i thefe will be a strict investigation. picture comedienne to whom he was continuously as they drifted in the day. A sister of Dehounek, who Sion of the association, ban Pran- Hampshire and Maine. reported to'have ’ been engaged, 22, and Florentlno San Just, 19, Place Headquarters. No divorce will be granted to for­ Hamm, 21,- son of Dr. Leslie desolate Arctic sea, the only sound went to King’s Bay, sent the follow­ cicco, showing receipt*; of $13,422 eigners except upon the same were killed in an airplane crash Porto Rican lorigshoremen who being the grinding of the ice fields ing message to her brother’s [and e.xpenditures of $11,969; Dela- Hamm,, of Arlington Heights, was liere when their plane crashed on a were shot by men In a moving auto fiancee: grounds that apply in their own alone-in a small rowboat in Lake. and the crash of colliding bergs. country. In the case of Americans mountainride during a thunder­ in Brooklyn. - , They were so weak and their "Dehounek in good health, sends (Continued on Page 3) New York. July 12— Having plac- Winnipesaukee; when nis fishing storm. Harry Sovettlerre, 28, John Tu- a thousand kisses. Be of good I these grounds must be the same as rod was struck by lightning. The movements were so hampered that : ______I kls close friend, John J. Raskob,' apply in the state from which the Titterington, a well-known mak­ tone, 27, and Miss Annette Allison, they had difficulty In getting cheer.” litigants come. bolt killed Hamm instantly.'He was er of aeronautical instruments, in­ 20, all of Brooklyn, were arrested I head of General Motors, at the counsellor at a boys camp on Red enough exercise to keep from freez­ “ Unless the divorce is based up- vented the earth inductor compass last night. The .two men were ing to death. When they left the Head Island, off Wolfeboro. Boys of charged with homicide. They de­ FARM BuiLDiN(s BURN which made possible the trans- Nobile party on May 25 to seek FLYER IS SAFE (Continued on Page 3) the camp found the body of the nied any knowledge of the double the coast (Of North East Land or Atlantic flight of Col. Charles A. shooting. ( Dartmouth athlete drifting in the Lindbergh. He lived in Brooklyn, Foytfe Island the men carried what Moscow, July 12— Learning to­ rowboat. Police said the Allison girl, is a day by radio that Alberto Mariano ! " T H LOSS OF Y $250 I cation and a brief‘ vacation. N. Y. ' . they thought was enough concen­ The other victim of the storm wag friend of Savettlerre’s, and comes trated food—-chiefly pemmican— and Filippo Zappi had been rescued ______I Op® of the first major problems SEND UP POLICEMEN Napoleon Trembley who was killed Miss Andrews lived in Williams­ from a wealthy family at Akroh, from their Icy refuge and Were safe port, Pa. She was a divorcee ^nd for 45 days. They had expected to Full Blooded Stock Valued at 11*? governor and «T a ir r i m waiting on table in a Roches- Ohio, where her father is said to reach land in q few days— a week aboard the ice breaker Krassln, the VU otucK vaiuea at his board of strategy will be the is survived by a 4-year-old son. be In the wholesale fruit business. Russian aviator Chuchnovsky, who S300.000 Saved b v Fifty establishment ' ...... of regional headquar­ TO WAKE UP JIMMY Titteringtdn had made out $10,000 at the utmost. ' I companion had his shoes torn off. She has supported* herself since On Floating Ice was forced to land on the coast of •’armhands. ters. Indications are that within in insurance policies to her. coming to the city, according to po­ North East Land after sighting the * a week Chairman Raskob will an­ Another man was knocked senseless In attempting to cross the coast when his bed was fired. Both were, killed Instantly. lice, by acting as a night club host­ Malmgren partr yesterday, sent a North Easton, Mass., July 12_ nounce the establishment of Smith For Once New York’s . Mayor Witnesses said the, plane was tossed line they began traversing , a floe wireless message to the Krassln this The high wind wrecked live ess in New York and Coney Island. that was detached by the current Fire did $250,000 damage today to headquarters at Chicago and Den­ Was on Time— Five Gops about like a feather by heavy She Is being held as a material wit­ evening stating that there was no the estate of Mrs. Frederick Loth- ver and at some strategic point winds. ness. *id carried into the open need to worry about his companions Used. ' i (Continued on page 2) watw: They foimd themselves help­ rop Ames, society woman of Bos­ south of the Mason-Dlxon line. All Neill Cerrato, 22, and Phillip and himself. ' ton. tl’ is town and Newport, R. I. campaign plans, hojvever, will be less. They had' no ■wireless equip­ Los Angeles, . July 12.— M-ayor Giuffre, alias “ Pugy,” 21, both of ment * and ^thelr only hope was In “We have just shot a big Polar ^Piili bloodied stock valued at worked out at Gov, Smith’s head­ James Tfalker of New' York City Brooklyn, are also charged with bear,” said: Chuchnpvsky’s message, $300,000 was saved by the heroic quarters in the Biltmore hotel, this being sighted by an aviator or a was aware today that the local cit­ Pro h i bi tio n -Farm-Lti bar homicide in connection with a dou­ stray* whaler.' “ and we-have sufficient provisions ■"'ork of the fifty farm hands. city, and orders will be sent to the ble shooting. , various regional bureaus as to how izenry can use force, as well as Although Malmgren was a strong and fresh meat to las.t for three The Ames family were in New­ subterfuge, to get him to functions The Murder Gar weeks.” . port and were notified over the all matters are to be handled. man physically and used to the rig­ on time. Police said Savetlerre admitted Chuchnovsky declared that the telephone that the beautiful set of Senator Joe Robinson, vice presi­ Traveling Sepa rate Roads ors of the Par North, he was the dential candidate, is said to have Several days ago he was told that ownership of a Studebaker run-, first fo weaken.. After his death the group of Italia survivors headed by farm buildings were in ruins. about answering the description of convinced the governor that there a luncheon was to be at a certain \ other'two were able to imjrease ■Viglleri are "probably starving,” Thousands of automobllists were time. Other guests were Invited to the murder car. He has been iden­ attracted to the scene and state should be 'an aggressive headquar­ Chicago, July 12.— The Prohibi-^groups, Prohibition and their''rations somewhat. The* only and that every day that their rescue ters in , the south to combat the be there an hour later. Mayor Wal­ Farmer- tified by three eye-witnesses as hav- water they had was from melted is further delayed means that their troopers were called out to handle ker and the guests arrived at the tlon party and the Farmer-Labor Labor, are “ off.” Jng been in''the murder car. * suffering is increasing. the traffic. movement already launched by It was regarded as likely that the snow and surface ice, which was* some of the Dry Democrats to swing same time. > movement were well along diver­ Police at first believed the Porto not salty. * 14 Miles Away Brockton and nearby towns sent Yesterday, however, when the Prohibition party convention would Ricans were shot by mistake in a aid to the local fire department. the south, or at least part of It, gent roads today following the ac­ Day after day they scanned the In the meantime, the Ki^assin is away from' the Democratic ticket. mayor was invited to a breakfast end with either an actual or infor­ Brooklyn gangsters’ feud which fol­ horizon for a. searching plane, only The cause of the fire was unde­ tion of the Farmer-Laborites last mal indorsement of Hoover. lowed the recent assassination of pushing forward .throught the Ice August 15 at Albany club gathering, the members took night In nominating Senator George to ■he disappointed'. Although In .flpes toward the yigllerl group, -ad- termined. Stamping: of cattle at­ no chances.' Five policemen were Senator Norris was ‘nominated by Frankie Yale,” king of Brooklyu’s^ tracted the farm hands and one Oov. Smith already has decided W. Norris of Nebraska as their can­ the last stages of weakness they risihg the Savlet relief headquar­ that hIs notification will .be held sent to his hotel and routed him the Farmer-Labor con'gention de­ underworld. '' of the big barns, filled with haj^, didate for president of the United- spite an "absolute” refusal to be a struggled to their feet with t;wo ters, in a message to4|8b^> that the at Albany and he Is expected, to. from slumber. " f States. ’ ■ Police declared’ they. know the small flags in their hands when the was found to be a roaring furnace. candidate. Only thirty /delegates identities of the assassins of .Yale' distance now: separaUng the ship insist' that the date be fixed for President Rufus von Kleinsmid, Will Vereen of Moultrie, Ga., was Rfisslan airman at last, aftei^ what from, the refugees was! estimated at The farm hands tried to stop the about Augupt 15, a fevr days after president of ^ the University of ...... : r ’ present to do the balloting; and predict that the hunted gun­ rush of the flames with private ap- nominated for vice-president on the. Senator Norris received 16 Votes on had seemed an eternity, soared intb 14'miles, and it was hofied to cover the notification In California of his Southern California and chairman men will be in custody soon. Detec­ view in the gray Arctic, sky. paratfts until the local fire depart­ Farmer-Labor ticket. • the third ballot. tives have learned that the machine this within ten hoars. Republican opponent, Herbert of the breakfast, utilized the oc­ ’ Was Flying Low . A radio ’message from the Kps- ment arrived but It was useless,' Hoover,; The ceremony at Albany casion to make a few good-natqred Shortly aftep>the ticket was an- j The Farmer-Laborites adopted a gun -which poured a rain of bullets One after another the farm build­ Ghuchndvsky had been .fiylng at Man steamer M&ligin, which is also w iir’be held on the steps of the "wisecracks” at New Y;ork’s ex­ nounced. Prohibition party leaders , platform calling for "endorsement into Yale’s body was brought her.e ings went. gave out statements to the effect ( of all laws,” the abolition of in- low altitude over the desolate, ice trying to rescue jneinhers' of the state capitol and Senator Key Pitt­ pense. The Gotham executive "cop­ from Chicago especially for the fields of the Arctic sea all day Tues­ Among the cattle saved were that they would not concur In the i junctions In labori disputes, farm crinfe, and they .say they ..have Italia arew, stated' that, the skis man oL Nevada, chairman of the pered” them with witticisms direct­ day. Suddenly in the dim twilight on one of the airplanes •which it has fifty Guernseys valued at, over notification committee will preside. ed at-‘Tjos Angeles. nominaridns. } relief, the scrappllfg of all imple- traced the auto used, in the mu^er^v |.$100,000 and four bullstvalued hi 1 he Prohibition party, In m other ments of war, withdrawal of the of'the Arctic night he saw a hud­ aboard has been damage^ hut as Friends of Gov. Smith Indicated Mayor Walker has not yet decid­ The police are preparing to ask the dled group on an ice pack that soon as these are repairw»/an ef­ 130,000'each. Imported from Hol­ words. It was indicated, will nomi-! marines from Nicaragua and public Kings County Grand Jury for fim land. ed when he will leave here to vis­ nate its own candidates, and aH * ownership of Boulder: Dam and might have beeff-either human be­ fort will be made 'by ■tha''*aVlator (Gontinned on Page *8) it San Francinco- degree murder indictments' imme­ ings or polar behra. Two’ of the ,l>lan5 for a consolldatloh of the two j Muscle Shoals^. diately. -I Babqshkln . to .'rescue Chdehnorsky figures ,eTld«i&tIy had beeh aroused. ahdvhis xompanions. ,

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. i» AGE TW O MANCHESTER '(CONN.)’ EVENING HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 12,1928.

‘ h - ^ ' ______have no criticism to‘ make a^t all,” corners. Someone whispered In the ROUGH-HOUSE W he said in conclusion. doctor’s ear that the patient .was a TEUS GRANGE F Q L P Realizing that every officer -and rookie and smilingly, the doetor TARIFF ISSUE ABOUT TOWN enlistedyman in the camp was an­ said, "I thlpk you had better go What' the Kiddie Cable Flashes xious to hear the latest news as to back and count yduh blankets Lincoln Robinson of Hiogham, OF SAIffiWlCH M liilG OF NIANTIC CAMP his daughter’s condition he spoke again.” "Blanket sergeant” in Mass., classmate of Charles S. briefly of her. He said the little nuendo. S tars S a y In House at Harvard, Is visiting Mr. girl, who is suffering from flu House at his home here. meningitis, was just about'^the Private Stanley Tunski is nurs­ Service Lecturer^ Describes same. "If she recovers, it will be a Foreign News H. B. House has returned from Sun^mer . Delicacies With Soldiers TUs Year Drop ing a sore foot. He deseovered that Beads of persperatlon stood on RY SEC. HOOVER miracle,” he said. Colonel Hunter a tent peg was harder than the foot. the foreheads of the kiddies. They the Boston Shoe Style Show held at Demonstration. said his daughter had great fight­ the Hbtel Statler daring the last ing spirit and that seemed to be the gallantly struggled thrOughJthe In­ three days when fall footwear Rowdy Horseplay and Atr Samuel Stevenson, 15-year-old tricacies of 4he routines in the (Continaed from Page ■ London, July 12.— Sir George Mrs. Arra Sutton Mixter of the most cheerful news. son of Mess Sergeant Stevenson is models were exhibited. household service department of Revue In rehearsal every morning Alfred Willis, oaronet, multi-mil­ No. 2 Giggle Baseball heye .|ot4.bd;|U^npi{ieut. He is sel­ at the State theater. But despite while in the Cabinet and hisilsr hihand­ lionaire and president of the Impe­ the Hartford Gas company, .Renter-, tend to Btiiiness^- Manchester’s two companies are dom seen and his dad says he taihed Manchester Grange mem­ heat and struggle to master: the ling of vast relief problems will be rial Tobacco Co., of Great Britain, , A Volupteer Life Saving Society eagerly awaiting the opening of the spends all his time swimming. steps Manager Sanson is teaching stressed throughout the campaign. is dead. bers, after their meeting last night, baseball elimination tournament.' Is to be organized In Manchestei;. with one of her Interesting lecture- them, the youngsters manage tp Special efforts likewise will be made and a meeting of all senior mem­ By Staff Correspondent Company G won the' championship Four Manchester soldiers are keep their sense of humor. One wee demonstrations. She came out on to' organize business,^ men’s clubs Rio De Janeiro, July 12.— Dr, bers who wish to enroll in the the Invitation of home economics Camp Trumbull, Niantic, July two years ago. In the soft ball down here with, the Quartermas­ girl, a clever dancer, was doing her , and to interest in behalf of Hoover, Serge Voronoff, noted European league. Company G defeated Com­ ters’ Detachment.. They are Ser­ association will meet at the East committee of the Ideal Grange and 12.— The present encampment of stuff marvelously well except that the thousands of business men who surgeon and inventor of the “ re-: Side Rec. Friday evening at 8 took for her subject sandwiches of pany H-yesterday 10 to 9 and the geant Alfred Blatter, Privates she did not keep tiffie. juvenatlon operation” with monkey the 169th infantry is one of the Howitzer beat Third Battalion seldom take an active interest in o’clock. The purpose of the associa­ different kinds, including thd Royal Ulysses Llppincbtt, Albert Cole and "Can't you keep time with the politics. glands, arrived today. He brought a quietest and moat orderly that Ni­ Headquarters Company, 13 to 9. Clifford Bissell. They are here for tion will.be explaihed and officers Sandwich loaf. She was assisted music?” Hoover leaders were nonplussed nuniber of monkeys with him with by Mrs. Anna Risley and Mrs. Alme antic has seen in many years. There The soldiers are still eating well. six weeks, which they started last which, it is understood, he will elected. ATI interested in such work Head shaken in sad negative. by the Raskob appointment. They are Invited to attend. Demars of the committee who pro­ is far less disorderly conduct among Company G’s menu for yesterday Friday. Their Job principally ’ is "Why not?” make experiments. was as follows: Breakfast, Wheat driving supply trucks. would not comment tor pubLcatlon vided the lemonade. the personnel ithan is usually the cakes, oatmeal and coffee; dinner, "Because the piano Is out of but several party spokesmen indi­ Miss Eleanor Dwyer of Williams Sandwiches made included those case. The expl^^tion for this most tune.” cated they felt the Democrats had Rome, July 12.— Led by Mon- with a filling of bananas and pea­ braised beef, mashed potatoes, Edward. Quish, brother of Lieu­ signor O’Connell, 180 members of street returned yesterday after a obvious fact is that the men seem pears, lemonade; supper, baked The piano will be tuned in time scored first blood in the coming week’s visit •with her schoolmate, nut butter, carrot, ground raw and tenant Qulsh and Ibhn Hartnett, for tomorrow’s rehearsal. campaign. The action of Raskob in the Knights of Columbus will be re­ nut meats, pineapple and cream to be in many cases of a higher beans, potato salad. Iced tea. The members of the Ar^y and Navy ceived in audience by Pope Pius XI Esther Holmqs, at Twin Lakes. grade. Howitzer ate: Breakfast, scrambled The date of the Revue will be accepting the appointment, it was Miss- McMenemy of Marble street cheese in the proportion of a small Club, were visitors in, camp yester­ announced in this column within a on Saturday. can of\crushed pineapple. drai)

> .“'Vl M^CHBSXlta (COSH.) BVBNftiC kERAU).|TimRSt)AY, m Y 12, i»AGB FOUR

Whole regtmeiitB ot boys from 12 to there are hiany flower ggrdeni. Afld 16 and women were used ae beasts a grackle that cannot And corn tb i of burden to carry munitions and feed on does bis quite tremendous Heidili and Diet Cv»nifnB Brralit j stores. When the war started the feeding on insects.'He does not eat , : I . • • s ' _ ^ * ‘.' POBUBIOBD BT population was 1,337,000. When it the flowers but he does eat the bugs Ivm x h s b a l p pium^ o oo. ended there were left alive 28,000 tha|t otherwlise would bat the flow­ 'Advice ‘ . t*' •• '• 'T‘*f • V / ^ . \ men, 106,000 women-^these in­ ers. PDmxde^gr eiwdoa.s ai«« By FRANK McCOl cluding all over, 16’years old— and Grackle hunting may be Sv«nr Bventdir Sundayi ai\d 8 6 ,(\0 0 children. Every town and flable enough bn the part of crop Boltteya. ' village had been destroyed and all growers. But In, a tow^i which Is \ Baterad i* ■hMUr M domestic animals killed. Modern half city, and haitiVlltage and not Dr. McCoy will gladly an­ 80B S C A lP T ]p{ecifio ,to HIStTORY 816 Middle Turnpike East Answer: The best method ! PINK. PINS. PENS,. PEAS, guay have shed in-f the Chaco There .may be Eoniid reason in a and the dewnse incentives of the Any one part. TEAS. \\ * governmetitr ^ ’ know of for preventing cancer is to For Radio Service over boundafy’’ disputes. farmer’s antipathy to’ that robust live on a careful diet, exercise JULY » Any possible war Involving Para­ feeder of a bird which .we call the Then the Ku Kluxers and Mayv , , . i , I or Thompson may find a hate erft- vigorously each day, and adopt the 1804- -Alexander Hamilton died of Easy Tenns un Croaiey guay must arrest general attention grackle, because he certainly is a g^de crying for their ‘hundred par right mental attitude. It Is a notice­ wounds received. in a duel “ So Bill was arrested last night Fada. Grebe, Itosch, because of the terrific, fighting hard character with \relatlon to cent’ leadership. Then all th« other able fact that-cancer rarely, if ever, with Aaron Burr. for being drunk and driving with­ qualities displayed by the people of cornfields and perhaps some other Anglo-American economic and pb^ develops with those who ctfntinue out lights." to live a vigorous physical culture I3l7r Birthday otiHenTy D. Tho- FREE Installuliun, no interest i that little country in the famous growing crops; but why on earth- litical conflicts— real" and imagined "Yes, Bill was lit up gud the car — can be brought out and magni­ life! The eonges^on of cancer • reau, poet and naturalist. wasn’t. - Lopez war, wheii the dictator fof the police of a place like ^ Mount fied. cells to any one port of the boiB^ Every mau*s woric shall be made 1864— OonfedMate- troops driven that n ^ e battled against Brazil, Vernon, N. Y., should wage a war «“ The danger cannot be removed cannot occur if the circulation of manlfesf.— 1 Cor. 8:18. ’ back from: their position HrugUK-and Argentina combined, of extermination on-grackles.it is by, denying its existence. Peace blood-'does not beopme sluggish. , t ’ near Washlngtdnv D‘ Ci ' , Horses are . hecomiug: so Scarce froi^^Y66 to i8,7.0.;iByery .male hard to giress. cannot be maintained, by repeating Sunbaths are helpful because of the ■ ' ' T*. > ‘ ' y ■ ■ that some .of 'thesa% days:-we look to- Fifteen thousand people attended the lie that 'war between Great ultra-violet effect on the blood. 19 0'4— 46;0 60 Chicago- meat paeki&ff «ee an ; auto becoine > eoared at a a New York gangster's funeral the Pari^ayan capable of bearing ^ e r e , are, we fancy, hoVmany Britain

■ixi i ■s-Vs'ii 1WGHBSTER"C<»W HERAT^^ ;>T3?XJRSDAY, JULY 12, 1928 ■J--';-??-''.*. '.-f. > 4 - Urn We’re inFavorofat4tfle;i‘;Ai^ajBR«l|^,J%htH?^ ,vlew tow;^&:;lmpTovein,ent. highways have been 'caused directly aniong other thlngsr’h'qw^^ch of 2,500 AT WEST SDE .pdp.Aroad 8,urfaees or. condiUP.ne.: a par^t J s,played.hr ros^^pphdltlons c o - o p ^ r ^ In. tad sjipjply- accdrdlng to’ the’motor; vebiisle de^ of any and all'sQtin'.|i|J9W or U'ing re . f /- iCO nistg®^‘^^rt^uhdldg 'each',' ' ad -far t^ at; 1 ^ . hand, dUgineers study eaeln' locations what part Manchester Wins Inter Town \ POLE ^ road %:s^^ehtidnsplayed in the De(IL'^Q«ei£ urash^S'My* the ac-' cldentj;^noi^.a.fe first ’^udled. The That Delightful Sports; Boys Band Earns Scanning Sites of Crashed actual''sc^ne.^ofy the,, mjishap. Is, ’ ex- ' i , ‘ • * amln!&’{ ' , View, obstructions' are check^if^: ,b'oih- as - to approach and Hour Long EncorOc to Help Preventioit , at thA'jp.lk^ of -the- accident. Tem:^ Utile bittet makes porarjj^^TS^ppfjnan'tot physical ph-' structti^q;' ii'?ahy, arp taken into' Over 2,500 persons were at the -5l11 points on the' Connecticutl considi^[^io|i:''~~A 'written- record, West side Rec grounds last night highway, systenj, outside of large with ^vesy, circumstance and factor for the annual Rockville night. cities, where two or more automo^^ enter^g .into the . accident, „ i$ then Automobiles lined, all four sides of bile accidents occurred during 1927, made,;-ito >that improyenient can be the grounds but although 208 cars are being studied by engineers of- put intp'effect effort = to see all of New : concert was given for ah hour. w ent low and; .within five Eqlnut.es, York in one night. Many Hot Dogs Eaten • leader’s first action was to “tieup” all telephone lines and to halt for the place had the appearance of a Plumbing While the games were going on sraall-town ice cream social. bined with lowest possible prices and the band concert in progress a time communication with the out­ The “tablecloth profits” of the the “hot dog’’ stand and the soda side world. ! i^stor luncheons .are, by this time,. —you'll find it one of the great­ and soft drink venders were doing An^ thus did he emphasize the ' About a year ago, a big ganibling National legends. - For hours the est features in helping make old, old struggle between the "mop- game was unddr way in. th'ef Bjroad- a big business, Thomas Weir and a theatrical kihgs -andr pawns will sit th e sale. assures you of the greatest corps of assistants being busy at ups” and the “undergrounds.” way belt.'A group of spendiej;s w^ down to chart the' amouht of mon- the stand under the big oak tree The “mopups” are visiting raid­ tossing dice for. sums that moAnteiJ fY about to he made by_this-and- to the west of the building. T^e ers—strangers imported for such into the tens bf-thousarids.'- .-.-It was that. It has been said that if the crowd was orderly in every way and occasions to cover-up the prelimin­ all very secrete and private.'' ^Yet, tablecloth profits for a year were Joseph C. W'llsoii value obtainable. the only casualty was when a foul ary work of sleuths who have dneh- within half, an hour, ;thb '.entire addedvUp they wbuld clear the na­ ball hit a little girl on the shoulder ed the evidence. So th at these inidi- “who’s who” of the g*^umblIngiwoVld tional Iql ; of France. Plumbing and Heading during' the ball game, but without viduals may not be suspected, they had the tip. It went from •‘‘cafe'ta­ serious result. play no part in the raid. They,, oc­ ble to'cafe.-table. ' - - •- GILBERT s w a n ; 28 Spruce St., Phone 641 In the volley ball contest that cupy cafe seats, even as the other - A certain .notorious “gan'gisani' was played between tho West Side custoihers and pretend vto get the, bier” -was, in the.^gaiU ej'.Ttfe/'if^ team and the East Side tearn the same shocks and thrills as the. et!’ heard that he’ wgq heay^j^inner ^^FTER all Quality Our Low overhead ex­ West Side won all four games. 15- “regulars.” The one difference, of hours'befoFe'^the’ doors of thetrpiphl 4: 15-3; 15-6; 15-11. course, is, that they have the evi­ were’opened. Don’t ask me^ho'w! I dence in their hip pockets. don’t pretend, to know. L.Jhbow is the paramount pense, due to our ioca- merely that the gang-boy never.got ’TWO BIG FEATURES The “unaerground” system in a home that night; They found him Out thing ’.. especially i n tion combined wifli-the’ city such as Manhattan is much the Close face down in the gutter when the AT THE STATE TODAY same as it is in a prison. Any man dawn |ca,me and his poqkets werelln- furniture. Price speaks who has done his time in a .peni­ side out. The: parasitic law^hfKthe savings ■’brought about tentiary will tell you that news “underground” was p^ticiiigAiits AT TREMENDOUS travels from cell to cell, without a code of “dpg-eat-dog.” • -t','- once . . . but' quality by our;own living roont “Vanishing Pioneer” and “Mag­ word being uttered and, oft times,- REDUCTIONS nificent Flirt” Here for Two without a sound being detected. • keeps on talking for­ manufacturihg. ' facili^ They say the men develop almost - Broadway-notes— Gene Days—Clara Bow’s Latest psychic powers about such matters; theatrical ‘ prbdvieer, * tries fcmi^,;i^ll Sunday. tha*t word is passed by a tapping on hisme.w'sh.owk’^inyDdtroit^;, ’ Entire Stock of ever. ties and the #ehpini^! the steel wails or tbe Iron bars. this was his 'h'o'hietoWn an'diiAjichi- Two big features are to be pre­ No radio is needed to broadcast gan gets a first view; of his; ^ffepts policy under which.'lihe sented at the State Theatre for to­ the presence of a “mopup” -gang . He never forgets ' the^^'dld night and tomorrow. They are through the highways of the rncli- home town.' . And, theys V:M Summer Cheap furniture ; is “The Vanishing Pioneer,” a Zane eteers. Let one man reach a phone me, the slim, red-haired girl who business in generah-iai’■ . **'■»* • Grey western epic starring Jack and long before patrols can pqll up appeared in the Roxy balletthis the most expensive fur- Holt, and Florence Vidor in “The the word has flashed from Harlem week I s ,none.; other than -ACTea' de operated... brings Gar­ Magnificent Flirt.” to Greenwich Village. The “look­ Mille, daughter , ’ of Wiilidnif i ^ Fifty covered wagons of the type HATS : niture. This is not a out” system goes into effect and niece of Cecil; . . . She could'hAve ber Brothers’ 'prices which blazed a trail to a new em­ the evidence is missing. pire in the days of ’49 form a pic­ had a neat movie position.^h^fln- plea to buy high priced turesque train in “The Vanishing sists on carving her own ;ca^e^;;f! . Regardless of Cost ^ I happened to be sipping my Just as the proud ; yo.ung ‘'miiilQn- down to the lowest level Pioneer.” The wagon train was 76 straw arid Fabric Hats a t ...... 50c ach filmed crossing a wind whipped - furnituro .. . but a plea stretch of desert near Hurricane, lot) Hats including felts and sijk and straws at $1 each ^ . so that you are able Utah. All the wagons in the train to insist on more exact­ were recruited from among the set­ All ether hats priced at a fraction of their cost for a to buy. furniture at Gar­ tlers in this last pioneer outpost. quick clearance, They are not relies or motion pic­ ing requirements as to ture “props” but actually are the ber Brothers of inbuilt most prized possessions of their quality. "Although price owners. quality and comfort, “The Vanishing Pioneer,” is a is an important factor drama filled to the final reel with and guarantee to give sizzling thrills and daring moments ALICE F. HEALEY ' of action and intrigue. Jack Holt Blillinery Shqp; Park Building never judge the val-; as the handsome youn,g rancher lasting satisfaction—at who leads his neighboring associ­ ,ue of furniture by its ates against a gang of swindlers no higher price than ie who are plotting to steal the water supply in the valley, has one of the price only, greatest and most Impressive char- usually charged for fur­ ^ acterizations of his screen career. Others, in the cast are Sally niture of no partncula? Blane, William Powell and Fred ^.Garber brothers’ t e - Kohler. All contribute excellent quality. _ ; performances. niture measures up to a The companion-feature, “The Magnificent Flirt,” is a peppy, ro- . mantic comedy-drama of life ■ standard Of • quality— amongst the wealthy Parisians. 36 Oak Street, South Manchester: ^ Brilliantly-lighted French cafes and Phone 1570 not down to ria certain 's' night clubs formed a sparkling background to the story, which tells price, of a beautiful society woman, who found that her numerous flirtations were held against her when she sought the man of her choice. Florence Vidor as the gorgeously- fiance- the Opening •gowned Madame Laverne, principal ■ m character of the story, portrays a at'] role that is most convincing, as far a Modem and Up^-Date ft as general tqne and appeal is con­ cerned. Miss Vidor has given many fine performances to the screen history book and this picture can certainly be jotted down among her best. ' A superlative cast'lends rare tal­ 1 ■'fl FINETURNITURE MQRGAlSi ent to the star, including Loretta - and you’ve stoi^>(^ for ^ flight ^ v d i r e c t Young, Albert Conti and Marietta Millner. the folks back hemie th e ^ u h U c On Sunday and Monday the man- aeement of the State is presenting to hear of; it: ;Tell ’ th^r Wliere X of fresh and Clara Bow, the famous “it” girl of and Aotv you are T •; Hartford A Short Block From Main Street Hartford tbe films, in “Ladies of the Mob,” her latest starring effort. In this picture the vivacious Clara has her Ji. HARTFORD first real dramatic role. (1^^ quality will be found fa = ■; . -X CT*. ; J.*v.. . ' - . •- ' Lqndon babies have been asked i. to refrain from chewing gum.’Whaf tkfadl^i^m ent as throughout store. in the world ifrlll a copper do for bis hjght stick?

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■/' = V ^ -..J-f. > VI PAGE SIX MANCHESTER'(CONN.) EVENING HERALD;-THUKSlUAY^ nJL^ 12, 1928. - 1-

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rf UY. WHERE YOU GUET SERVICE-^EFFICIENCY ~ COURTES These Business Men, Listed Below, are Located In Your District. They Are Ready To Serve You and Save You Tinie and Money, s

Manchester Auto ■ 'x.' ' . : . . ■ / /• . Top Co. All Work Fully Guaranteed. New Price Reductions NORTH END FILLING STATION W. . MESSIER 1 Comer Main and Hilliard, Manchester Center Street, Cor. Henderson-Road ^ Phone lSlU-8 on Quality Your Chioice of the Following Well Known Brands. the great Fircstone . Goodyear All Weather (Super Twist), CJorduroy Cord, JOIN THE Factories exclusively ^ Spedal Weekend Sidewall Protection, Gum Dipped Firestone (De Luxe)' V ' » for service-giving 29x4.40 ...... '...... 1 $9.00 Tire Dealers 30x4.50 ...... $10.00 CLUB NOW Sale Of Batteries 30x5.00 ...... $11.85 I p * We have everything you want in the our Complete money-saving, long-mileage service. 30x5.25 ...... ^...... $13.75 ' Let us wasli, >ol^h No “ifs” or “ands” about it—our men do all the work way of tires at lowest prices. Firestone Ford ...... $7.00 31x5.25...... : ...... $14.25 Gum-Dipped quality — standard quality — for you. Each tire is applied on your car, ready to and grease your car ^ go.' And 'we welcome you in for additional service Dodge ...... $11.00 32x'6.00...... $17.00 each week for one • and low-priced tires for light cars. We can supply 30x3 V2 R egu lar...... 1... $7.00 youf needs regardless of price. Every tire sold gets any time you want it. Stop in today. month at the small rate Other makes ... $10.00 30x3 /2 Regular Center Sj^reet, Cor. Henderson Road $5.55 $4.20 Phone 1816-3 GIBSON’S GARAGE Silk City Filling Station 18 Main Street, Manchester HIGHWAYS IN U. S. There is nothing more vital ______i&___ 29x4.40-21 29x4.40-21 There are 3,001,825 miles of road , to automobile satisfaction than Come in 5.25 in this country. Of all this mileage, dependable gasoline service. and let us $6.70 $ only 666,000 miles have been im­ And here’s where we fit into proved to some degree. the picture. Our gasoline de­ tell you OTHER SIZES PRICED PROPORTIONATELY LOW BIG ENERGY LOSSES livers greater mileage and re- about it. ""dniJes motoring costs and trou­ At 20 miles an hour, only 8 per ble. CALL 7 0.1 - 2 cent of the chemical energy of the motor fuel is utilized in driving the mm Uy r. ra Ipq r vehicle, says T. A. Boyd, of the ... ,-equ if)mp-nt*g.iVes^; General Motors Research Labora­ yoir bette.r spr Vice tory. Most of the rest is lost in heat ower;cost:' dissipated through cooling water or the exhaust. PHONE— BATTERY SERVICE— 1710 415 Main St., POOR ROADS COSTLY South Manchester Alex Tournaud, Prop. Corner Center and Adams Sr. Motorists pay as much as 22.3 on every gallon of gasoline consumed with great velocity through the on a poor highway, according to ex­ small ope^ihg left- and' burns the periments conducted at the state valve face^or warps the stem. colleges of Washington, Iowa and North Carolina. The high costs is Big Summer Reductions on in the low milage per gallon. .“ It is impossible, when a valve RELIABLE -USED CARS guide warps and loses its original WOMEN BUY CARS alignment with the block and the Reliable Used Cars Silvertowns Let Us Demonstrate to You These Wonderful Buys. valve seat, to bring it back, yet it is It’s the wife w’ho decides on the K ridiculous to replace it. The first car you buy, 90 per cent of the 10.000 to 15,000 miles of opera­ time, says Alfred Reeves, general At Wholesale Prices 1928 Master demonstrator (see this) tion of any engine makes the set of manager of the National Automo­ 1925 Dodge Coupe cylinders wortlt a dozen new ones, bile Chamber of Commerce. So we CaU Chett 1423 - 1927 Brougham (a real buy) so far as warpage'is concerned. On may soon expect cars marked down most of'them warpage of 5 to 15 from $1,595 to $1,594.98, for the 1925 Essex Coach 1926 Standard Sedan, 4 door (perfect) thousandths of an inch occurs in woman regards these savings seri­ 15.000 miles of running., ously, he adds. 1927 Chevrolet Coach (wonderful buy) ' “ After reconditioning the cylin­ CH EH ’ S Colonial Filling Station ders and running the engine for the LESS INNERS SOLD 1925 Columli?a Touring 1926 Master Six Sedan same distance again, the warpage 88 Oakland Stneet» - . Manchester will be very little. The Uttle valve Baloon tires have made it a poor 1925 Standard Sedan, 2 door (perfect) guide,., then, is imperfect until it business for inner tubes. The De­ has warped and settled. W e must partment of Commerce reports that 1923 Dodge Sedan 1924 Chevrolet Coupe (a good buy) then cut the valve seat true to the while the sale of casings has steadi­ 1924 Chevrolet Sedan (a good buy angle, that the guide has taken.” ly increased, that of inner tubes has BID TOURISTS HELP remained practically stationary, 1923 Nasis Touring 1923 Buick Coupe, 4 pass, (perfect) during the last three years. PAAVNSHOP GARAGE^ PREVENT FOREST FIRES You Can Rely on a Buick Dealers Word. 1923 Essex Four Coach The Paris municipal authorities A small totvn newspaper is one in have proposed the erection of a which the editor casually makes the These cars are all backed with our thirty day guarantee. In former years, when a forest number of pawnshop garages in occasional remark that “ considera­ fire was discovered, .tourists in the CAPITOL BUICK CO. the capital to take care of the in­ ble humidity has been mingled in district were drafted into the ser­ creased number of automobiles the. local atmosphere the last few vice of helping to fight the blaze. JAMES M. SHEARER, Manager. that are being pawned there. days.” But It was discovered that these Tel. 1600 Tel. 1600 tourists were more a hindrance than a help, so the idea of drafting Schaller Motor Sales Inc. them has been dropped. 1600 CENTER STREET Instead, tourists are \asked to j Accessories Still Overlooked Open Evenings Phone 1226-2 help prevent forest fires by follow­ B t l l C K I Tel. BUICK ing simple rules. These are: ' , COLOR RELATED TO \ “ Be sure your match is but; SPEED OF C.\R break it In two before throwing it away. , New York, July 12.— Color come permanently set or seasoned. tain a consistent, efficient tempera­ “ Be sure pipe ashes and cigar or has come into the automotive “ Thus, every hour’s operation of “ WONDER CAR” LACKS ture, no mattor what the weather cigaret stubs are dead before, you scene as having an important re­ o; the engine 'adds to the value of the may be outside. throw them away and never throw, lation to speed. ■ material in these pavts, but makes Another “feature of this unique them into brush, leaves or needles. In looks alone, colori gives a it necessary to service or recondi­ CLUTCH, GEARS, SPRINGS automobUe is an automatic lock- “ Before building a lire* scrape car the appearance of speed, says I tion the vadve seats as soon as pos­ ipg device on the wheels, which away all inflammable material from H. Ledyard Towle, color advisor. sible after the engine shows such keeps them from sliding backward a spot five feet in diameter, dig a But, he addq, automobiles reconditioning to be needed. - London, July 12.— England is ex­ down k hill. A mysterious differen­ hole In the center and’ in that lai' should be finjshed for'high visi­ cited over a new wrinkle in automo­ By ISR.VEL KLEIN “ The guide, a small cast-iron rod tial in the rear is sg.id to do away your blaze. Keep the fire staall and bility because of the big'ner extending into the valve port where biles— a car without gears, without with skidding! never build it against trees or logs, speed we drive-cars now. "We have eliminated most engine the heat (from the burning gas has clutch, without springs, that’s cool­ and chassis noises with improve­ The wheels are suspended inde­ or near brush. “ Many a fender has been bent, greater opportunity to warp it, soon ed by'steam and that is guaranteed ment of our cars, but have still fo -THPEVE COMOtETfi. BOMPBT2.Sr pendently, springs are replaced by “ Never break camp until your if nothing worse, because th^ j find perfection in the valve mechan­ loses its perfect alignment with the ENCIRCLE THE CAT2./4ND ATJO against road shocks and skidding. rubber buffers and the steering is fire is absolutely out. driver just did not see the oth-■ seat and changes the direction of It has been called the “ wonder independent to each of the front er fellow,” he says. . isms. Yet this is one of the most travel Of the valve. ■FUN TO VocR, /\CC(0:EMT? “ Never burn slash or brush In important factors in the pfoper car.” Colonel. W. Bishop, builder wheels. The last feature. It Is .said*, windy weather or while there is the functioning of a motor. “ The spring has' the power to and owner of the unique automo­ eliminates wheel wobble. slightest danger that the fire may close the valve regardless of this The seriousness of valve imper­ bile, is shov/ing it around, while “ This car is the tesult of seven get away.' TRIP TO, OLD NEWGATE untrue condition, but does so 'large crowds gather wherever it years jf experimentation,” says fections and their causes were re­ through the valve striking a small “ When leaving camp stir . the cently taken up at a meedng of the stops. - ' ^Colonel Bishop. “ The various de­ coate of ybur fire, ^hile soaking portion of the seat first and then , “ All you do,” says > Colonel > IS A REAL EDUCATION Society of Automotive Engineers, gaining the full seat through the vices can be fitted to almost any them with water, and turn small by Jack iFrost, one of its members Bishop, “ is to start the chr, ac­ car. These will be licensed separate­ sticks so as to drepch both ' sides. and a noted automotive engineer. pendulum-like swing of the stem. celerate and the car moves off. ly to manufacturers for thetr use as This produces a metallic click that Wet the ground around the fire. If “ "Valve trouble in most . cars,” There Is no clutch to operate. they sed* fit. 1 you can’t get water, stir In earth There isn’t a nicer auto trip for defies removal through cutting the “ The speed is regulated entire­ says Frost, “ means lack of power, tappet clearance. ® “ It is not intended to market and tread it down until packed Sunday than that to old Newgate the engine will not idle, the car will ly by the pressure on the accelera­ cars like thls^ne.” tightly ove- and around the fire, be­ Prison In Granby. ^The roads are not climb a hill as it used to. ------V f- AFTER tor. Take your foot o,ff and the car ing sure that the last spark is good and carefully posted. There is “ Perfect valve action is complete, AU. CORE/NG-S’ free-wheels.”, NEW ROAD ASSOCIATION dead.” ./ an inn in connection where you can quiet closing at any speed." “ Sticking valves are produced HAV/E SEE N Free-wheeling is cbmparatively get a full course dinner or a sand­ through the same misalignment. TrtiSCHl?OME ■ PRoPerlV new in this country and the con­ At a? meeting at'Pawnee, Okla., wich just as you choose. y Fifty thousand to 100,000 times a PLATED TEtESCCPB tinent, and is practically unknown 7-6 representatives of 21 towns and day the valve is opened and closed tehated. this MORE ROOM TO RUN Then the trip through the prison'- helps VOO TO SPE ^ elsewhere. This Is a system of cities along U. S. Highway 64 and copper mines is interesting and Ninety per cent Jof the valve in the normal running of an auto­ WHAT THE THONI5B »? ^OlVWiN^ ROD* troubles, according to Frost, are transmission by which a nov.ee can formed the U. S. 64 Highway Asso­ instructive. The ru'de will tell _vou mobile. Under the best conditions, THE TAM IS A L L A T ^ i j y WILL po in t TD ciation. State amd federal highway im­ the results of misalignment of the drive without fear of clashing many tales of intrigue and blood­ this side-sl^p of the stem will pro­ VACANT P/Rlf- ■ ■■ ■■ I .. . I - . I. g i provement this year will cover the valve head with the valve stem, gears. The;.speed changes are auto­ shed that have come dowu since duce carbon to such an extent that INC- SPACES* TIME SYSTEM POi^ULAR construction of 2(1,(100 miles of sur­ valve-stem guide or valve seat. matic, in accordance v/ith the speed Colonial times. it will seal the valve stem in .its of the engine,' and when the engine faced roads and 8000 niiles o«‘ grad­ “ The valve seats and valve-stem ed and drained,, it is estimated by If you are interested: in tho his­ guide regardless of the amount of is slowed down to idling the motor Last year 60 per cent of the 553,- tory of Connecticut you .should n.of guides are subject to seasoning,” he clearance. ^ 000 cars sold in Europe were sold the American*Automobile Associa­ 1 says, “ as is the case with all parts is disengaged and the car is said to tion. miss paying Newgate a visit.. % “ With the advent of high-speed ‘‘free-wheel”.' - on time. This approacheg that of made of cast iron, and the intense engines, warped and burned valves the United States, where 64 per heat generated in the automobile (HOSHIOlteD arm ‘The only ordinary thing aboqt began to be noticed. "When a valve \A this car,” adds the colonel, “ Is that cent were sold by installments. AS GOOD AS NEW engine brings a rapid change in the does not close completely the com­ Reaches ootand picks President Coolidge used worm texture of the metal and distorts OPFPIENPS FPqvv the it stops with the aid of brakes.” bait last summer; This year he-Is pressed buuiing gas, which reaches, 5TKEBTS Oyp/Aia. Pjyca The steam cooling ;^stem is one’ The Boston. Post road, America’s these parts. The guides sometimes under ordinary operating condi­ THINKS ‘WOMEN WILL END first through highway,, is 225 years fishfng with a fly. say the corres­ WHEN VW - which automotive engineers'hkve P- require from 1000 to 2000 miles tions, a temperature of 1500 to 2,- i WAR, says a headline. When they old. In contrast to the ancient pondents at Brule River. Next thing r OHW'T P ro p — been 'considering for adoption'*for of running before they have be­ 000 degrees rahrenhelt. is forced do, then jt will be time for the men post rider’s path, -it is now a you know he’ll be ..going fishing auita soma tima. It ia a i^ to nui4n-,, to consider it. toa smooth, rigid highway! some day without that straw jailor.

V M ^ :•< <. ' ■ V . > -. f

J' MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALI)/ THURSI>4Y, JULY 12, 1928. -!• PAG ESflVEN

WAPPING SOiB RICH MEN SAID DAILY RADIO PROGRAM % New York, Julj? 12.’— Somewhere - y . IN LEE, ON THE WANE Hear a billion Rollers ’ In ' actual Tuarsday, July 12. 399.S—WTAM, CLEVb l a n d —750. The Y. Mi G. A. will ^hold their AnwHcan wealth, and tnly Wall 7:00 0:00—Hollcndcn orchestra. Leading DX Stations. street knows now. mlich {lotential A 'wh; iaitnas dinner at the old Max-I !i;00 7:00—WlOAfr programs (1 h r) (DST)(ST) " ' annual lawn party at the homo of ivoi; aosi.e m Nn.shville. at which! 0:00 8:00—Cavaliers program, wealth, sailed out of New “York har­ 475.9— WSB, ATLANTA-630. " Mr. and Mrs. John A. Collins on No Death Today.' aiid Only taeiitj-fourIty - courses of game were 10:00 9:00—Cone'ert; Neapoltans. 10:30 0:30—W EAF proga.. ( 1% hra.) this eve'ning. A feature of the even­ bor early this ’hiorning on* the White dr:; .«fiee blend— Ticek vesper service of the Greater 11:00 10:00—Unsebnll scores. 12:00 11:00—Ship;; harmonists, tenor. new symphony and Is using auto­ A. boys' at their lawn ’party this al other cases In other communities -A- New York Federation of Churches, 491.5— WEAF, NEW YORK—610. '.2:45 11:45—Meeker’s dance music.' mobile horns' to furnish the In- featuring M. H. H. Joachim. "Son of 6:00 5:00—Dinner music; baseball. 344.6— WLS, CHICAGO-870. evening. were known to the authorities but Iridhi.’’ will be presented through 7:00 f.:00—Mid-week hymn sing. 7:55 6:55—Organist;’ scrap book. The twelfth regular meeting of as all these have been traced-to vis­ splratloh. He ought to call this AVE.\F and WRC at 7. Mr. Joachim's 7:30 6:30—Comfort hour with a mu­ 78:10 7:10—Jack and Jean; pianisL Wapping Grange, P. of H. No. 30, its to. Lee, medical authorities were one-“ Rhapsody in Blue Language.^” subject ^111 he "Human Duty and sical story, 8:30 7:30—Angelus;.'Supertone hour. 6u might as well h c^ the best Worship," as Interpreted in primitive 8:00 7:00—River choristers. 447.5—WMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670, was held at the Center school hall certain that, the epidenjlc was local religions. The musical portion of 8:30 7:30—Hoover "Sentinels orch. 9:00 8:00—Whitney trio;- contralto. Tuesday evening. It was ladies’ in its danger. the service is furnished by Albert :00 8:00—Goldman band. 9:45 8:45—Musical program. 9:00—Halsey Stuart hour. night and the committee provided ®he isojation of the dreaded dis­ Barber, tenor, and William Ryder;' 10:00 10530 9:30—Travel talk; artists. ease wn; due, according to medical baritone. I 10:30 9:30—Johnny Johnson's orch. 11:25 10:25-Aerials: dance music. the following program: Roll call, ! 10:30—Venetian gondoliers. 319—KOIL, COUNCIL BLUFFS—940. the sisters responding by telling of men here, to Dr. George Bigelow, Wave length.^ In lueteis on left of. ‘(54.3-WJZ, NEW YORK—€80, 9:30 8:30—Old-time’ entertainers. the best automobile trip they have state health commissioner^, who per­ station title, kilocycles on the right.' 6:00 5:00—Baseball scores; orch. 11:00 10:00—Puppy Club; church. fected such an orgafiized attack in Time's are Eastern Daylight Saving j 7:00 6:00—U. S. Navy band. 1:00 12:00—Amos 'n' Andy; bears. ever taken and the brothers by tell­ and Eastern Standard. Black type | 8:00 7:00—Retold tales; orchestra, 1:15 13:15—Midnight frolic. ~ ing which was the best auto fols, the his visit of seven hours here, that indicates best features. i 9:00 8:00—Song cycle, "Flora's Holl. 499.7— WFAA, DALLAS—60C, farmer; essay, entitled “ The Wood­ the malady waned almost immedi­ I day." 7:30 6:30—WEAF Comfort hour. ately. 1 9:30 8:30—Maxwell houi:^^ featuring 10:30 9:30—WJZ Soldiers show. pecker,’’ by Miss Miriam Welles; Leading East Stations. I Christmas dinner music. 499.7— WBAP, FORT WORTH—600. piano solo by Mias Hariett Sharp; Tests of milk and the culture of. (DST)(ST) I 30:00 9:00—Michelin male singers. 8:30 7:30—Songs; piano recital. ■reading, “ June,” by Miss Charlotte patients by Dr. Bigelow showed that ^2.6?-WPG, ATLANTIC CITY—1100. I 10:30 0:30—Flit Soldiers show, 9:00 8 :0 0 -WJZ Maxwell hour. ' scarlet fever serum would combat 7:00 6:00—Two orchestras, organ. t i I tOO 10:00—Slumber music. 499.7—KTHS, HOT SPRINGS—600. Foster; a sketch by the Misses Mi­ Sacrifice 9:15 8:15—Novelty trolley ride. 45.02— WFI, PHILADELPHIA—740. 11:00 10:00—Arlington ensemble. riam and Margaret Welles, who re­ the disease. The effectiveness of the 10:09 9:09—Subway boys; orchestras. 7:15 6:15—Topics in season. % 11:15 10:15—Studio orfan recital. sponded to an encore with another remedy was proved by the immedi­ 285.5—WBAL, BALTIMORE—1050. 8:00 7:00—WEAF programs (3 hrs.) 370.2— WOAF, KANSAS CITY—810. ate results. .8:20 7:30—Mandolin orch; soprano. 348.6— WIP, PHILADELPHIA—860. 9:00 S:00—WJZ Maxwell hour. sketch, entitled “ The Dog.” . As this 9:00 8:00—Baritone, pianist. 7:00 6:00—Bedtime story, pianist 10:00 9:00—WEAF Halsey Stuart hr. was a competitive program against , New York City health authorities 9::i0 8:30—WJZ programs (IVj hrs.) 8:00 7:00—Clover instrumental quar. 10:30 9:30—Weature program. the Brothers’ Night program of two today put up the bars on milk ship­ 9:00 8:00-*-Newton radio forum. 302.8—WGR, BUFFALO—990. 1:45 12:45—Nighthawk frolic. weeks ago, the judges, wl;*> were^ ped from this region into New Your ' 1 6:30 5:30—Van Surdam's orchestra. 10:00 9:00—Two dance orchestras. 468.5— KFI, LOS ANGELES—€40, , . 7:30 6:30—Science service talk. 315.6— KDKA, PITTSBURGH—950. 1:00 12:00—N. B. C. entertainmenL Worthy Master Irving Wickham and York City until the danger of the 8:00 7:00—WEAF River choristers. 6:30 5:30—Ensemble: baseball scores 2:00 1:00—Dance orchestras. the Worthy Overseer Cowles of epidemic was passed. 8:30 7:30—Warner picture's hour. 6:55 5:55—Baseball scores; orch. 416.4—KHJ, LOS ANGELES—720. Manchester Grange, also Worthy 10:00 9:00—WE.AF programs (2 hrs.) 8:00 7:00—WJZ programs -(3 hrs.) 12:00 11:00—Orchestra; songs; artists. 545.1—WMAK, BUFFALO^SO. 461.6— WCAE, PITTSBURGH—650. 1:00 12:00—Dance music.- ■ Master Lathrop of Vernon Grange, A big public utilities company 8:30 7:30—Wolanek Conservatory. 7:00 6:00—Pianist; Gimbee; talk. 336.9—WSM, NASHVILLE—890. decided In favor of the brothers, has been fighting public o'^nership Model« T 10:00 0:00i—Tenor; movie club. 8:00 7:00—WEAF progs. (iV t hrs.) 10:00 9:00—Andrew Jackson tiio. who won by two points. ideas by issuing parodies of well- I 10:30 9:30—Buffalo Uieater program. 280.2— WHAM, ROCHESTER—1070. 10:30 9:30—WJZ Soldiers show. 11:03 10:05—Dance orchestra; organist 8:30 7:30—Sagamore dinner music. 11:00 10:00—Vendome orchestra. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Van Sick- kno-wn songs. We are expecting 461.3—WNAC, BOSTON—650. 9:00 8:00—WJZ programs (2 hrs.) 12:00 11:00—Studio program, organist, lin returned to their home here to hear something like “ Bye Bye 7:11 6:11—Amos 'n' Andy; talk. 11:00 10:00—Windsor dance music. 384.4— KGO, OAKLAND—780. from , a. visit to Mrs. Van Sicklin’s Dividends,” or “ It Ain’t Gonna Pay 7:40 6:40—Pianist; musical program. 379.5—WGY. SCHENECTADY—790. 1:30 12:30—Philco entertainmenL 9:00 8:00—Instrumental program. 12:55 11:55—Time: weather; markets. 254.1—WRVA, RICHMOND—1180. mother in Winsted last Sunday eve­ No More.” Ford 10:00 9;00—Theater entertainments. 6:00 5:00—Stocks; baseball scores. 10:00 9:00—Studio programs. ning. They went there on July 3rd 11:15 10:15—State dance music. 6:30 5:30—Orchestra; baseball scores 422.3— KPO, SAN FRANCISCO—710. and Mrs. Van Sicklin and little son 428.3—WLW, CINCINNATI—700. 7:30 6:30—Outdoor talk; music. 1:00 12:00—N. B. C. entertainmenL Protect your invest­ 9:00 8:00—^WJZ programs (2 hrs,) 8:00 7:00—WEAF progs. (2% hrs.) 2:00 1:00—Trocaderans orchestra. remained through the week. Mr. 11:00 10:00—Warner picture hour. 10:30 9:30—Buffalo entertainment 344.6—WCBD, ZION—870, . Van Sicklin, who has been working ment by running your 11:30 10:30—Tenor, soprano, organ, 11:00 10:00—WEAF dance music. 9:00 8:00—Annual Grand ensembitt as an electrician, in New York has 12:00 11:00—Three dance orchestras. 11:30 10:30—Floyd Walter, organist concert. Typewriters finished his work there and is work­ \ Model T Ford as long Secondary Eastern Stations. Secondary DX Stations. ^ ing in Hartford again. All makes, sold, rented, ex­ 508.2—WEEI, BOSTON—590. 348.6— WGBS, NEW YORK—860. 288.3—WENR, CHICAGO—KMO. changed and overhauled. as possible. Expend­ 8:30 7:30—WEAF programs (2 hrs.) 11:00 10:00—Orchestra, songs. 6:00 5:00—Organ; talks; stocks. POLITICIAN SLAIN 361.2—WSAI, CINCINNATI—830. 11:45 10:45—Studio musical program. 9:00 8:00—Orchestra, artists (2 hrs.) Special rental rates to 4tu- iture of a few dollars 9:10 8:10—Entertainers: minstrels. 370.2—WLWL, NEW YORK—810. 305.9— WHT, CHICAGO—980. Buffalo, N. Y., July 12— John J. 10:30 9:30—Dance music: artists. 7:00 6:00—Soprano; ensemble. 10:00 9:00—Studio conce.rt. Moriarity, prominent politician of denis. Rebuilt machines may enable you to get 7:30 6:30—Talk; orchestra favorites. 11:00 10:00—Your hour league. Buffalo and Erie county supervisor, 265.3—WHK, CLEVELAND—1130. 526—WNYC, NEW YORK—570. 374.8—w o e , DAVENPORT—800, $20.00 and up. 8:45 7:45—1. B. S. A. broadcasts. *7:35 6:35—Air college: baritone, 11:00 10:00—Soprano, pianist. was shot and killed here today. thousands pf miles of 11:00 10:00—Three dan^e orchestras. 8:00 7:00—Shannon's band concert. 11:30 10:30—The Pied Pipers. According to police, Moriarity was 352.7—WWJ, DETROIT—850. 434.5—CNRO, OTTAWA—690. 1:00 12:00—Two dance orchestras. shot during an argument in a additional service. 8:30 7:30—WEAF Sentinels orch. 9:30 S:30—Players; opera: organist. 405.2—WCCO. MINN., ST. P A U L -748. KEMP'S 9:00 8:00—Talk: baritone; violinist. 365.6— WeSH, PORTLAND—820. 10:30 9:30—WJZ Soldiers hour. saloon. 10:00 9:00—WEAF Halsey Stuart. 6:00 5:00—Stocks: market reports. 11:00 10:00—Pianist; theater hour. Among those being sought by 763 Main S t.. Phone 821 394.5—WHN. NEW YORK—760. 7:30 6:30—WEAF programs (3 hrs.) 12:20 11:20—Long’s dance orchestra. police for questioning, was Lloyd Bring the car to us 10:45 9:45—Contralto, poems. 468.5—WRC, WASHINGTON—640. 508.2—WOW, OMAHA-.-590. Danahy, alleged beer-runner. 11:30 10:30—Frivolity Club orchestra. 8:00 7:00—WE.AF programs (3 hrs.) 11:00 10:00—^Feature program. and let us tell you how 12:00 11:00—Midnight Bohemia. 11:00 10:00—WJZ Slumber music. 12:00 11:00—Burnham’s rhythm kings. much) it will cost to put • NEW BEDFORD STRIKE it in A -1, shape. We BOLTON use only genuine Ford parts. All labor charg­ WTIC Charles Loomis of Pawtucket New Bedford, Mass., July 12 — spent the week-end at his home Three thousand striking textile mill Travelers Insurance (3o. ed at standard flat rate. here. operatives today capped their par­ Hartford Fred Berry and daughter of Hart­ ade of 10,000 workers last night VACATION WATCHES ford are spending a week at their by appearing at the Nonquit and Take a low priced watch with you on your vacation.' 535.4 m. 560 k. c. bungalow. Sharp mills today in peaceful picket t u m b e r Miss Lavina Fries has returned lines. The workers have been on Manchester Wrist Watches...... ,$3.50 and up after spending two weeks in Boston. strike nearly four months against Pocket Watched"...... : .$1.50 and up Program lor Thursday Miss- Ruth Jones- Is spending a ten per cent wage reiiuction. The Motor Sales some time at White Sands, I^yme. •SB. Traveling or Desk Clocks___ $4.25 and up 1-. Eastern ^aylight demonstrations were against efforts 1069 Main St. Mrs. Charles Avery and daughter of the owners to re-open the mills. Saving Time Evelyn of Webster were recent P. M. Phone 740 DEWEY-RICHMAN CO. and guests of Mrs. Charles Pinney. 6:20— Summary of program Elmer Finley and family of For­ Jewelers, Stationers, Optii^ians neivs bulletins est .Hill Carden, L. L, are at their If we put too much pep into these advertisements you 6:25— "Sportgrams” farm here. 6:30— Sea Gull Dinner Group Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Phelps and can take them with a grain of salt. But it’s a solemn 6:55— Baseball Scores family of Andover were recent 7:00— Ida K. Spear, Soprano, guests at the home of George Rose. Shore fact that we take pride in the luiiiber we handle and you Laura C. Gaudet, Accompanist Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Rose of 7:15— WTIC Pet Animal League— Hartford, spent Sunday at the home won’t find a lot of green stuff in your order if we fill it. Ernest A. Legg of George Rose. ^ L o b s t e r ^ * .’3' 7: 30— Coward Comfort Hour from Russell Merrill is spending the W e like to surprise our customers with just a little bit N. B. C. Studios summer at Saybrook. 8:00— River Chtristers Mr. and Mrs. B. L. McGurk and better,lumber than they expected. That policy is what 8:30— The Victory Hour with Jack family are spending two weeks at Dinner Delany and his Victory (Laddies Watch Hill. has built Up our business. W e can’t afford to slip— ^now. 9:0^0— Goldman Band Concert— Mrs./ Harold Griswold is improv­ FROM 5 TO 8 P. M-. The Greatest Six Months’ Edwin Franko Goldman, Conduc­ ing after being confined to her EVERY DAY tor. home. (Except Sunday) 10:00— Halsey-Stuart Hour from Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bentley N. B. C. Studios have returned from a visit in New W . G. Glenney Co. 10:30— Howard Correct Time York state. Gain in 10:30— Norm Cloutier’s Dance Or­ Judge Summer has made busi­ Honiss's Coal, Lumber, Masons’ Supplies chestra direct from The Travelers ness trips to Columbia this week. 22 State St. Allen Place, Manchester. Phone 126 Recreation Grounds 11:00— News and weather. A Polish bride the other day kiss­ (Under Grant’s Store) ed 70y. wedding guests In four Hartford, Conn. hours. And this is the onion season in Poland, too! GILEAD What Everybody Says Fred B. Post died at his home Tuesday after a'-long illness. He Service^^ Quality — Low Prices was a life long resident of Gilead. He leaves two daughters, the Must Be True Misses Edna and Jessie of this plape and a son Harold Post, who You can do better aiThe Benson Furni­ resides In New Jersey, also one Finest Line grandson, the son of Mr. and Mrs. of ture Co. Merchandise up to’ the minute. Harold Post. Ralph Carpenter of Hartford and Prices are down to zero. Low overhead Byron Lord of Marlboro were vis­ itors Si' '.day at Mr. and Mrs. Ben­ Fresh Sea Food does the trick. Our Suimner Sale is in full jamin Lyman’s. swing. • Are you a shrewd buyer? Buy Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lyons and Fresh Mackerel 16c lb. Fresh Halibut Steak sons of New Britain called on the Cape Cod Butterfish Swordfish your furniture at ^ Foote families Sunday afternoon. FiUet of Cod 'The first six mondis* operation-of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur N. Hills, Boston BluefisK ' Homer Hills and Mrg. A. H. Post Fillet of Haddock D r^ed Haddo^ went to Elizabeth Park Sunday. Steak Salmon Red Salmon to bake W . C. Durant’s 1928 progr^sive pro-j Mr. and Mrs. William Bralnerd Clams for Chowder Steaming Clams of Westland street, Hartford, were guests Sunday 'at Mr. and Mrs. gnun-sho'Ws results^of over 69,000 Winthrop Porter’s. y Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Way of Hart­ HOME COOKED FOOD SPECIALS r Durant Qirs produced and sold—a ford spent the week-end at the stuffed and Baked Mackerel ...... 40c each W /lls-Way homestead. " f t ^ * Many local people witnessed the Fresh Baked'Haddock...... 25c each qu aurora borealis Saturday evening. Blueberry Pies from fresh picked blueberries . .40c each gain for all Durant plants o f mote than The colors were very bright. Apple Pies from new green apples...... 40c each John and Mary Hooker are the Blueberry Cup C a k e s...... 25c dozen guests of their aunt at her home 4936 for the same period o f1927. in Hasbrook Heights, N. J,- Finest Danish Pastry ...... 60c dozen H. K. Coffin of Windsor Locks Home\ Made . . Crullers...... % . .I9c dozen and Mr. Van Arsdala of New York City were recent visitors at Mr. and —------— ------1 . ■ . . ■ I- ... ..I n , I Mrs. E. W. Buell’s.. THE ^ £ I N B Mr' add Mrs. Charles H. Curtis FRESH VEGETABLES - of Plainville were Sunday visitors Fancy New Beets ...... 5c bunch at Mr. rnd Mrs. Owen’s. Andrew Hooker is the guest of Green String Beans, 3 qts...... 25c ■ . -I IS A BRILLIANT. SUCCESS Mr. and Mrs. Colver’s at their home -Nice Ripe W aterm elons...... /... 65c each WITH A $500.00 OUTFIT OR MORE • im Willimantic. Cherries for Pies ...... 25c qt. ' i Cash or Credit < jPickett^ M Sitles CHANGE VOUR OIL Manchester Public .Market 22-24 M aple S treet P h on e2017 Use Marland Super Motor Oil South Bfonchester A. Podrove, Prop. Phone 10, The Home of Good Bedding. Campbell’s Filling Station PAcamuBt noA veta, HllCB^-OAadiND, cct.-Toitowm casada 10 ^ Corner Main St. and Bfainard Place, South Manchester ^ Phone 155i ' 5 ■ ■

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A Gas Cabinet Range or a Quaker ^ a l R an ge ■■ “ ■ .. 'T.'"‘‘ 1

MANCHESTER ,(CONN.) EVENING HERALO/THURSDAY, JULY 12,1928. PA G E JB;[1G£1X

T /^ rr ■pATi This And That In - J The Cinderella'o^^theif^ili^y tale lia Earhart, first woman to fly really got to the balL^ But - the across the Atlantic, took her world teems with Clndeirellhs-who, epochal flight, she carried with Feminine c^^^HUTH DEffET GROVES in real life, never, get. therie, but her a copy of Commander Richard THIS HAS HAPPENED pick up their ball crumbs a? they Byrd‘s “Skyward," the story of BERTIE LOU'^ARD, on the eve may. A few nights ago the*,king Ws North Pole and Atlantic flights. She took it to Mrs. Guest, the of her wedding to ROD BRYER, and queen of England,'to say Dear Moqi: ' feels a premonition of trouble nothing- of their fair-haired b'ojr, woman who backed the flight of the Friendship. The inscription in It’s Interesting how attached > Six months pf freedom from Kids’ kits are, the latest'wfaim',pf ' when she receives a dagger-like the Prince of Wales, were at a you can get to people with whom ball. Aigrets and pearls apd tiaras the autographed • book read, in straight liair' cares and a head of fashion. The youngsters'in well to paper knife from LILA MARSH, you'have worked, ^and .hqw you do homes, in line with modern who has turned Rod down because and orchids abounded. ‘ What so part— soft waves— that is, if you get a natural that . some maidens of “ But for circumstances I well hath to leave them. Nestle. Circuline Permanent at the psychology, are developing a sense he is not wealthy. But she courage­ know that it would have been you 1 was scarcely at Madame of responsibil^y, by paCkipg and ously resolves not to be jealous of humbler ilk than princesses should Lily Beauty parlor in the House want a peek? who would have" crossed . flrst. I Elise’s establishment more than' a and Hale buildipg, phone 1671. ; looking after their own ■ luggage. Rod’s past love affair since his fu- i Two kitchen maids of’ the house admire your, determination and month, and yet I felt as much a The new bags and suit' ..casOti for ^ ture is in her keeping. courage.” part of the place as if I had been children are ever so attractive and' She also accidentally overhears where the ball was held, did. They Ellpn Eddy Shaw, curator of ele­ climbed to a skylight several It took a real woman to carry there for years. come in a great variety‘of colors one bridesmaid ask another if she mentary instruction at the Brooklyn floor-s above the ballroom tb look that message to another woman, And the last few days, whilei Botanic Gardens, says: "Ha'ving a and leathers. • . ^ thought the britte liked being sec­ through the glass ' at the : revplry even dropping her toothpaste over­ settling up the apartment and get­ ond choice. Tlie pain in her garden enriches one’s life in much below. ■ They crashed through ’ the board before she parted-with the ting ready to go out to the shore the same way as having friends heart vanishes, when Rod whis­ glass, landing, on some guests who book. — we leave tomorrow morning—^ The outstanding style features-of pers “ My wife’’ with.a world of does. There is a personal relation­ were rather badly hurt; One ..jpaaid I actually have wished I were ship between a^garden and its o-wn- new ^ shoes for women’s wear this adoration in his eyes. was dead and' the other 'will Idle. WOMEN AND AL back. I keep wondering abput summer is the diversity of mater­ They spend an ideal honeymoon er, not unlike all human relations Somehow to tne this little story The women are getting busy Helen’s latest conquests, and I that bring us pleasure. One should ials of which they are fashioned. and Bertie Lou forgets the shad­ is poignantly tragic — two girls about A1 Smith. Thousands of miss the manicurist who used to Practically any material used tot ow cast by the ex-sweetheart un­ regard a' garden as a person and who asked nothing more of life Democratic women are declaring retail all the gossip of the place deal as squarely with it as with frocks'is made up Into shoes^ Pique, til tliey return and find Lila play- ^ than a mere peek at the gaiety that they are more dry than are every morning as she buffed up blocked linens, embroidery. faille ing dictator in their apartment i one’s friends. The more time, con­ which other girls enjoy as a mat­ Democrats and that A1 will get no my nails and massaged my hands. silks and even lace fashions some because she “ knows what Rod| vote of theirs. This particular sideration and intelligent care lav­ ter of course, must die. The others I miss all the amusing things ished on it, the more beauty and of these shoes, as well- as the likes.’’ I will go on dancing.. campaign is going to be a dandy that happened— the people who reptilian skins and straw. Purse, The newlyweds settle down ih one to show up just how. much fragance it yields you in return. hat and shoes are very often rel&ted their little home, but too much came in with no intention of buy­ Like one’s friends, also, a garden’s AMTT.T.TA j power and Influence women have ing, . those who tried to get In to this summer. One of the very new­ hospitality upsets their financial Speaking of books, when Ame- in this election business, after all. worth does not depend upon its im­ est styles is made up cd 'Roman budget. This worries Bertie Lou, copy the styles, and all the celeb­ pressiveness or money value. jA rities and theatrical folk who used striped silk faille. For summer as does the persistent annoyance modest garden can bring tremen­ garden parties there are lovely san­ of Lila. So she is happy when to be a part of the day. dous enjoyment. I have often dals. with cross-stitch designs of Rod accepts a position in New And I miss the rediculous and thought that growing a garden is flowers on the vamp. York which has been offered him \ futile husband of Madame Ellse, much like bringing up children. by an old friend, TOM FRASER. IP BABY’S SLOW IN TALKING, who always tried to act impor­ Love it, watch it, care for it and But the serpent is not cast out of tant, and who was as out of place its fragrance will permeate your House'wives fortunate enough>^tpi their Eden yet for when they are there as a flapper at prayer meet­ whole life and give you joy and sat­ posses., automatic refrigerators are leaving, Lila announces her In­ DON’T FRET; HE’LL LEARN ing. isfaction. Every child should have a learning to vary their usual *menns ^ tention of seeing them soon for she Before I left, Madame Elise garden and learn young to get with many delicious new'dishes pre­ is going to visit MOLLY FRASER. made me • some marvelous prices pleasure from it, for I think there' pared with the aid of therfreesteg Bertie Lou is anxious to make a k S on some of the clothes I liked par­ is a lot of truth In our motto: ‘He trays. Frozen desserts salads and good impression so they go to an By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON. particularly ■ If he is much alone, ticularly, and I have added to my is happiest who has the power to even heavier dishes .‘in endlisa expensive hotel to live until they or has an untalkatlve mother, to wardrobe in a high, -wide and gather wisdom from a flower.’ ” variety are possible'when there > is can find an apartment. Molly Parents arre often worried if a wait until he is 22 or 24 months. handsome manner. If I were the Miss Shaw has watched hundreds of such a desirable piece of equipment urges her to buy “ smart clothes’’ baby doesn’t learn to talk as A baby understands many things daughter of . a ' millionaire, I children grow to be garden fans and In the kitchen. Two such-reclpef . and Bertie Lou is amazed at the early as his older brother or sis­ long before he will begin to talk couldn’t buy nicer clothes. has noted the softening, friendly efr are given here. cost of everything. They finally ter. Perhaps he. Is nearly two himself. At 7 or 8 months he is Jane Smith has left the shop feet a garden has on them. With take a three-room apartment at y^ars old and beyond certain inco­ usually able to distinguish the too, and is sailing for Europe on the tremendous, growing interest $5 a month. She tells Bc^ that she herent jabbeiings makes little ef­ names of his sisters and brothers, In gardens, how far-reaching this Orange Sherbet Saturday. We became the best of 1 % cups orange juice believes Molly does not like her. fort to say words. or recognize the name of a pet. friends, and I feel she was more influence ought to be. Miss Eddy’s Before long he will surDrise But He Understands. words are worth printing on a lit­ % lemon than worth all the rest of the ex-, 3 egg. whites NOW’ GO ON WITH THE STORY you by seeming to learn all at At a year, he is supposed to be perlence I gained. Incidentally, I tle folder for the use of garden clubs and others. % cup hea'vry cream “ Let’s make a budget when we get back tonight, and see," she coaxed^ once. But in the meantime his -able to understand between 75 was able to introduce Alan to her 2 teaspoons gelatine • CHAPTER XI brain has not been idle-r-nor his and 100 words— chiefly names, rich pater, and he took quite a % cup sugar “You’re cuckoo,’’ Rod told Ber­ that she’d talk '^Tom into firing Rod stooped down and kissed voice. All the unintelligible bab­ but also words such as “ stands,” fancy to my husband, so that my 'Vanilla Souffle Frozen her. “ You know how to get what Two eggs, % cup sugar, 1 cup 3 tablespoons cold water. tie Lou, but he said it with a smile. you.” blings he makes are his attempts “sit,” “look,” “drink,” He can spree at working may really do Boil sugar and water. Soak gela­ “ I’ll take that change. Call her you want, don’t you?” he said. to put vowel sounds and con­ also understand a command at whipping cream, 2 teaspoons vanil­ “ Of course Molly likes you.’’ “ The old Eve stuff.” more for Alan, in a material way, la, few grains salt. tine in cold water and dissolve in “ Of course she doesn’t,’’ Bertie up and say we can’t come.” sonant sounds togther. A baby this time such as, “ Now, close than it did for me. hot syrup. Add orange and lemon “ Don’t be foolish. Rod. “ We “ If you can’t resist me, then I’ll learns his vowel sounds very early. your eyes.” Beat yolks of eggs until very juice. Put in freezing tray nniirit Lou returned as stoutly. “ But she ask something else,” Bertie Lou I have told Alan about every­ likes you. A-nd she likes Lila.” I haven't enough money for you to Even in crying he makes the vari­ 'The more things that go | on light with sugar. Add vanilla and thickens. Whip until foamy and laughed. “ I wish you wouldn’t thing foolish or otherwise, that I cream whipped until firm. Beat Rod looked up quickly. He was be out of work. And we’ve signed ous sounfls of "a.” His little around him, the more quickly he ever did, except my most recent fold in beaten egg whites and whip­ tying the laces of his black shoes. the lease for , the apartment, you play poker with Tom. You lose noises of excitement are sounds learns. Also bright children will whites of eggs with salt until stiff ped cream. too much money.” , flirtation with Brother Shelton— and dry and fold into mixture. Turn There was a queer sound in Bertie 'know. With the flrst and last of o, u, or e. learn more quickly than dull ones. I don’t know why I avoid it. Per­ month’s rent paid in advance.” . “ I haven’t lost more than $5.” into mold and pack in four parts Lou’s voice. 'Talking Ages Differ. But often a bright child will not haps I should before we go to Tomato Aspic “ I think you’re mistaken, hon­ “ We can go back to Wayville.” But that night he had unusually make an effort to say the words ice to one part salt and let stand 1 tablespoon gelatine good luck and won back his five be- Probably the first consonant Beechhurst. ey,” he said soberly; “ but if Molly “ And have everyone laughing at and vowel he puts together . will himself although he can under­ four or five hours. cup cold water us! I shouldn’t have said any­ fone Bertie Lou came in to watch What have you decided to do This recipe will serve six persons. isn’t friendly toward you we won’t be n and a, or m and a. stand them. about the antique shop— are you 1 slice onion thing to you, but when you get to the game. Deafness or malformed voice The “ ice” can be frozen successful­ 1 stalk celery go there.” She came up behind his chair Babies differ considerably in still a candidate? Now to fill my “ We must,” Bertie Lou said flat­ playing poker with Tom you don’t the age at which they begin to chords v.'ill retard speech. If a ly in an electric refrigerator. The 1 No. 2 can tomatoes ’ seem to know when to stop.” and looked over his shoulder at the wardrobe trunk and prepare to be dinner dessert Is quite worthy of 2 tablespoons vinegar ly. “ We’d be in a terrible fl|.if you make sounds into words. Some­ child makes no effort to produce a lady of leisure. lost your position now. We’ve spent “ Well, maybe when we get set­ pile of chips before him. There a place on the company menu.* It is 1 tablespoon sugar were a number of blue and red times illness retards them or any sounds at two years of age Y'ours, so much mohey in just a few tled in the apartment they won’ t there is possibly a physical reason. particularly good to serve withi % teas^on salt. ask us to dinner,” Rod consoled ones. She knew he was winning. sometimes they are just “ slow” MARYE days. I've no idea tvhere it’s gone But if he does not actually talk, fresh fruit in parfait -glasses if a Soak gelatine in cold water. Boll her. “ And that reminds me. Here’s Still, she tried to draw him away without being mentally deficient. “ dressy” concoction is wanted for tomatoes, onion and celery together to,” she added plaintively. But it is not unusual for a baby. do not worry. ‘I have,” Rod said decisively. a letter from Daye Barstone. About from the game. Suggested they a party. for five minutes and strain. There “ It’s gone for keeping up with New the furniture, I guess. Read it ought to go. should be one and three-quarter York. But I guess Tom wouldn’t while I put on my collar.” Rod felt embarrassed and looked Announcing New Swimming Series cups of juice. Pour hot julce^over can me just because you and Mol­ sympathetically at the other men. During these torrid days when gelatine and stir until dissolved, ly failed to hit it off. What’s wrong, Bertie Lou ought to^ know he had swimming is the favorite sport with, add vinegar, sugar and Nfalt. . Pour Bertie Lou hastily ran through to give them a chamce to win 1;heir One-Minute into indiyidual molds and Chill in anyway? You were friendly enough the half-filled page. “ Oh, Rod,” I young and old, a series of articles* with Molly in Wayville.” money back. “ Pretty soon,” he on the subject by the famous Zlten- automatic refrigerator. Remove she wailed; “ something’s gone said impatiently to her. Daily H3alth Service from molds, by loosening tbe edges “ It’s a silly thing, but^ I think wrong with the fixing Dave, was field. twins may have an appealing she believes I was trying to put Before the evening was over all interest. They are the junior long with a sharp knife, dipping in-hot .. i going to do with the railroad. We HINTS UN HOW 10 KEEF WELL something over on her, Berne' things for weeks.” . but he regretted his refusal to stop Interviews distance champions of the world. water and inverting. ‘ Garnish with playing. He had won rather a large letuce leaves and serve with may­ Lou replied. “ Make her believej ..y thf. iPt- ' by World Famed Authority They were trained by their mother ‘Let me see.” Rod took the let­ sum. And, to show how he felt onnaise. Eight servings. my parents are wealthy, or some­ ter and read it over to himself. and when only 11 attracted interna­ thing like that. She’s made sev­ about it, he invited them all out FINE CHANCES FOR WOIHEN tional attention by swimming across ‘That’s a bad break. But we’ve to a supper club. MART TAYLGR eral allusions to bluffers that make got to move just the same, Bertie IN THE FIELD OF DESIGNING Schroon lake, New York. I had the me think she fnund out after that “ Let’s make it next Thursday,” I children, or an average of 2.33. American girls are the coming privilege of motoring along that Lou,” he said firmly. Molly suggested. Shp had a spe­ SUCCESSFUL FOLK SEEM first day she came here to see me “ I know it,” she agreed. “ But TO HAVE BIG FAMILIES. Seventy peers with little or no pub­ czars of fashion. In the opinion of beautiful sheet of water at least that we never had an income tax | apartment cial reason for setting the date for lic service to their country had 131 Ethel Traphagen, eminent artist and twice and I recollect that it was no that night. return sheet in the house. ^ with no furniture? There are such Bv DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN. living children, or an average of head of her own school of design­ mill-pond. That same year they 1.87. ing. swam around Long Island Sound Rod was ^ a few things we need to buy. Don’t (To Be Continued.) “ I agree with Lady Duff-Gor- Then: “ W ell/’ he said gently you we’d better go to a Editor Jouraal . of the American Harvard graduates have also and this summer they plan to swim Pure did throw a bluff by coming to t is | j^otel and wait for our fur- Medical Association and of Hygeia, don who recently declared ‘The fu­ from Boston to New York, 265 been studied in connection with ture of fashion designing lies in hotel. niture to come?” the Health Magazine. this investigation. About 25 per miles, with of course several stops Clean “ Yofl know why,” Bertie Lou ex­ America, for where ’ money and to rest. Phyllis and Bernice are “ I thought you wouldn’t let down cent, of those in “ Who’s Who” have leisure are, in the larger sense claimed. “ But I had no idea what your standard,” Rod grinned at 'CS A study of successful people now only 14 years old, and also it would cost. Anyone can make three living childj-en, whereas only there is where artists flourish,’ ” her. “ Anyway It would be throw­ that involved a consideration of 15 per cent, were'without children. have to their credit such 'endurance Best a mistake.” J=>ari^ — -/V e v ^ Miss Traphagen said. swims as from Yonkers, N. Y., to ing the rent money away tq do three different groups; namely, When the ^figu'ces are studied In “ American women understand “ But you wouldn’t move out the that.” the Battery, Albany to New York next day like I wanted 'to.” royalty throughout the world, any possible ‘manner they tend to American psychology. The growth for ‘Nobody would expect us to live American college graduates, and show definitely that success is as­ of American trade is bringing City and around the U. S. fleet when “ No, I wouldn’t. Not with Molly it was at anchor. Their mother has Fraser trying to patronize me.” here for weeks,” Bertie Lou de­ the British nobility, lends a recent sociated with the larger number of American designers to the fore. • * • fended herself. “ I thought we’d investigator to the opinion that Therefore there are increasing op­ carefully guarded their amateur Health children rather than the smaller. standing and has refused many Rod looked at her with a touch leave in a day or two. But if we those people who have more than College Grads Lag.\ portunities in the field of design­ move into the apartment now I’d average mental and moral ratings ing for the American girl. lucrative offers for exhibitions. of exasperation. “ And yet you ac-, Mr, 'Woods Is Inclined to believe cept invitations to have dinner have to get a bed davenport, and have more than the average num­ “ A keen appreciation of line I wanted one that was built to sit ber of children. that the a-vhrage* for total offspring and color is a necessary first- with them.” for all college graduates is lower “ I’m doing it for your sake. But on.” This naturally will lead, accord­ equipment . of one who would de­ “ What’s the matter with an ing to F. A. Woods «rho made the than it ought to. be to keep up the sign costumes,” she continued. RABALM S OPPED I’] lot going out of my way to type. he eeable to her. I won’t kow­ army cot for me, as we planned?” investigation, to an evolution to­ “ I believe American costumes tow ' anybody. That’s why I told “ You couldn’t endure it for ward a higher type of mentally. Among the better claMes nowa­ should use designs created from ideas garnered at American, mu­ AWFUL FOOT PAINS you 1 ' ought to conie home early. W66ks.** Record of Peerage., days those who want chilldren have “ Suffering excruciating pains in my feet for years, If I s'Lay I’m sure to say something “Well, I don’t like the, idea of The tendency is to conserved them. A few generations ago . the seums and libraries. My pupils I used Rabalm. In a few months the pain and ■ to her. I’d neVer have wanted to going to another hotel. It would selective force did not operate as also actually study the materials swelling were all gone and haven't returaed.” B. rather than to decrease the human, with which American manufactur­ J. Pendleton, Gloucester, Mass. Start RABALM come to New York lf 1 cause she likes you. Feels sorry on asking us to dinner. That means jersey or white washable sdlk crepe for you, maybe. And I_ can’t drop taking them out tb expensive res- is attractive. Navy biffe georgette Insurance and Rieial Ratfite. he^ •Iw.ayg iha ^ taurgAtB rfftiusV- crepe U chic tox atxieL

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MANCHESTER (CONN.) E m iN d HlSsiliJ, THtjkSDAV, JUtY 12,1928, P A O B iN IK S

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‘JOHN li.’ LEFT 968,41 National League flEENEY TO GO ODT IN BRIDGEPORT BANK Collegians Win Fast Game Results Bridgeport, July 11.— Heirs of L o c a l Club Plays John L. Sullivan,' forpaer heaiEy- IT !i- 9^.. n n O E 5IH SOOND weight champion of the world, overlooked a portion of his es­ At St. Loalsi— GIANTS 6, CARDS 4 tate according to a notice given From RockviDe Team 3-2 New York out by the Bridgeport People’s light AB. R. H. Pb. A. E. Savings BUnk. Sullivan has cred*- Cohen, 2 b ...... 5 1 1 0 2 0 That's Prediction of Billy Ited- to him in this Institution an C h a tter Welsh, cf ...... 5 2 4 3 0 0 Reese, If ...... 5 1 5 1 O O account amounting to f 68.41. Llndstrom, 8b ...... 4 0 1 2 3 0 Gibson and of Brother The first entry on this account Sipples Allows But One Hit Terry, lb ...... 4 1 2 12 0 0 Fay Ciulideiit That His T en s Jackson, ss ...... B 1 1 0 3 0 was made July 20, 1904. John L. There is nothing alarming over League Mann, rf ...... o o 0 0 0 1 Sullivan, "The Boston Strong the fact that the baseball fans of In Three Innings— Chap­ Ott. rf ...... 4 0 0 0 0 0 Tunney Himself. Boy” was In Bridgeport visiting this toWn should stay away from Standings Can Take Measure (rf V »- Hogan, c ...... 4 0 0 9 0 0 ball games as they are at present. Benton, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 friends here and in Captain W alker, p ...... — 3 0 0 0 1 0 Bonds’ training- quarters in Jerry Fay informs the writer that man's Fast Fielding Fea­ At New York I— the 6ame conditions exist all over YBSTBBDAY’S BESm,TB 'TIGERS 4, 6 ANKS 2, 6 Cummings, x ...... 10 1 0 0 0 By DAVIS J. WALSH Stratford about this time. The iters— Large Crowd Ex­ (Flrat Game) . late favorite of the prize- ring the State League circuit. Perhaps Eastem League ' Detroit 40 • 15 27 ~9. 1 was notorious for his careless the rising generation of fans are Hartford 6, Waterbury 4 (1st.) tures Visitors' Defense. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. St. Louis Speculator, N. Y., July 12—rTom pected to Attend: _ AB. R. H. PO. A. B. manner of handling money, and more than willing to share attec- ‘ Hartford 8., Whterbu'ry. 7 (2nd.) Sweeney, lb ...... 3 0 0 12 0 0 Heeney Won’t answer the bell for tioiL wiUi golf, horse riming, tennis, Hargrave, x ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 Douthit, Cf ...... 4 0 1 5 0 0 the fifth round. It Is deemed probable that he Springfield 10, Pfttsfieid 8 (1st.) Galloway, xx ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Holm, 3b ...... 11 0 2 2 1 and sundry other sports which are - Springfield"!5, Pi.ttsfieid 6 (2nd.) High, 3b ...... 3 1 1 0 0 0 • Perhaps I should have finished started an account in this city I'angllder, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 for convenience during his visit, rapidly igainlhg a .strong foothold Bridgeport 2, 'Albany 0 ( !St.) Manchester’s College Stars got Warner. 3b ...... 3 0 0 1 3 .0 Bottomley, lb ...... 4 1 1 3 0 0 that one on an interrogation, tor all over the country. / Old friends In the role of enemies sweet revenge on the Rockville Gehrlnger, 2b ...... 4 0 0 1 5 0 Hafeyr If ...... 4 1 1 3 0 0 the opinion expressed is not mine, and that he neglected to with­ Albany 3, Bridgeport".2, (second, Rice, cf ...... 4 0 0 3 0 ,0 Harper, rf ...... 4 0 1 3 0 0 draw his balance. 11 innings).' will visit the West Slie playgrounds baseball team at the West Side Rfic W ilson, c ...... 3 0 0 7 0 0 at least not yet, and is only alleged Wlngo, If ...... 2 0 0 3 0 0 to be that of our champion and New Haven-6, Providence 2. thin evening when Zeilke and Hal- playgrounds last- evening when it Heilman, r f ...... 4 1 3 2 0 0 Maranvllle, ss ...... 3 0 0 1 2 0 Three years ago - Saturday and won a hard fought game 3 tb 2. Tavener, ss ...... 4 1 1 2 1 0 Reinhart, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 boon associate of men of the better Sunday baseball would not draw American League back appear here with the Meriden The locals used their hits to good Woodall, ...... 4 1 2 3 0 0 Haid, p ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 and finer sort," Gene Tunney him­ files. It^was said at that time the Detroit 4, b^ew York 2, (1st.) team‘in the state League. The con­ Holloway, p ...... 1 0 0 0 2 0 Johnson, p ...... 1 0 0 0 1 0 — advantage and aided by some weird Blades, xx ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 self. diamondiwas too far away from the New York 6, Detroit 5 (2nd.) test will be called at 6:15 o’clock ilcManus, Ib.j...... 2 1 1 0 0 0 The prediction was sponsored by ^ Philadelphia 10, Chicago'3 (1st.) •throws and heady base runnlnig Martin, x x x ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 center of the town. For years the sharp with Bill Brennan and Rklph managed to emerge a winner. 32 4 9 27 11 0 the fount of all knowledge and in­ fans had been used to having their Chicago 5, Philadelphia 1 (2nd.) The locals scored two runs in the Ne'w York 30 4 5 27 5 1 formation, William Gibson, the games at Mt. Nebo. But the real Boston 4, St. Louis 3,. Russell handling the indicators. Combs, c f ...... 3 1 2 1 0 0 New York ...... 022 Oil 000—6 champion’s maha»?er at such times It is possible, according to ad­ first frame on a two base hit, one Koenig-, ss.,3 0 1 1 2 0 St. Louis ...... ______400 000 000— 4 reason although a bit cloudy still Cleveland 2, Washington 1., , a walk and fii’ der’s choice Two base hits, Douthit, Cohen, as he, William, is not caught at It. At W «tetb 1lt7^— vance information that Punk Lam­ Ruth, r f ...... 2 1 0 2 0 0 SHNATORB 0, 8, BRA8BCOS 4, 7 rests with these supporters and National League accounting for two markers. Then Gehrig, lb ...... 3 0 1 14 2 0 Welsh,' Reese, Llndstrom, Jackson; All the writer can venture on their willingness to help the cause precht will play with the Communi­ , Bottomley; Sacrifices, (First Gam*) New' York 6, St. Louis 4. 1 in the third innings with two down Lazzeri, 2b ...... 2 0 1 1 7 0 this subject Is two pertinent obser­ H artford along. ty Team tonight. Sipples may also Durooher, 2 b ...... 0 0 0 0 2 0 Douthit, AVilson, Mann, Llndstrom; Chicago 4, Boston 2.. play thus restorln,? the Communi­ Sipples singled, stole second and , Reese; , off vations. First, that Brother Tun­ ^ AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Meusel, If ...... 4 0 0 2 0 0 ney at this moment looks the exact Watson, If ...... 4 o 1 5 0 0 Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati S., ty’s inner works to Its full strength. scored on Thornton’s single to left Robertson, 3b ...... 4 0 0 2 0 0 Johnson 1, off Benton 1, off Walker 4; Schmehl, s s . . 5 1 1 2 0 0 Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 1- (5th, center. Thereafter the locals sub­ Bengough, c ...... 3 0 0 3 0 0 struck out. by Reinhart 1. by Haid 1, part of a fighter who might feel ' Sven oiir old friend Farmer That means Linifbll will be moved by Johnson 4. by Walker 6fii hits, off Roser, rf ...... g o i 2 0 0 rain). sided and played a purely defensive. Durst, z ...... , 1 0 0 0 0 0 that he was going to knock Some­ Slsybaok, 2b.,i,..4 2 2 4 0 0 Jones, pitcher extraordinary, failed baisk to Betmnd, his right position Rlpgras, P...1.....2 0 1 0 1 0 Reinhart 6 in 2, (none out in 3rd), off and sipples going in at short. Making a desperate attempt in Haid 4 in 2 (none out Ih 5th), off body sOmeWBere at some time nbne ComlBkey, 8b ...... 4 0 0 1 2 d to cause the. fans a thrill and the Moore, p ...... 1 0 0 1 0 0 HohmSn. c f , 3 1 2 6 0 0 The Meriden team is romping the last frame the visitors came Pascflial, zz...,,...l 0 0 0 0 0 Johnson 5 in 5, off Benton 4 in 1. off too distant. Second, that our cham­ farmer had loads of color. He was Eastem Leagtie. W alker 1 in 8-; left on bases. St. Louis pion deftly backed the writer into Malay, l b . 4 0 1 3 0 0 right along with the leaders in this r’- 1 within one of tieing the score. Pel- AB. .. P. PO. A. E. Bryant, c ...... 3 1 1 4 8 1 a good pitcher but needed gilt edged ■H M.. L. PC. 29 2 6 27 140 6. New York 10; umpires, McCormick, the clothes press or somewhere and New Haven ...... 53 24 round and appear to have an edge ton walked,' the next man fanned Jorda and Klein; winning pitcher. Van Atta, p ...... 1 1 1 0 0 0 support ..to win. Then, too, the .688 I and Monihan singled, both advanc- D etroit’ ...... 000 000 400— 4 confided in him alone the great Stybbfskl, P ...... 3 0 2 0 0 0 HARTFORD ..... over Manchester’s greatest rival the New York ...... 200 000 000— 2 Walker; losing pitcher, Haid; time, Colored Stars from the plantations 40 s r .536 irg when Nolan ■was tossed out at 2ll9; secret of his punch and it Isn’t Woodman, p,...,,.0 0 0 0 0 6 i Pittsfield . i . i... , 40 39. .506 New Departure club of Bristol. Two base hits, CombSj H argrave; haye not had a team worth men­ Jerry F&y said this morning that first. Chapman singled to left scor­ sacrifices. Laszeri, HoUbWay, Koenig, x-="Cummlngs batted for Benton in your turn to tell one yet. tioning during the past two sea­ Sprlflgfield 38 Ss ■.500 2nd. 3 6 2 IB 3 7 5 1 he would like to see a large crowd ed both runners. The hitter took Warner, Gehrlgj ^ Lazzeri Brother TUnhey, It seems, doesn’t sons. PrUvIdenCe to Gehrig to Koenig; left on bases. XX—Blades batted for Maranvllle in W aterbury 36 S7 , .403 of rooters attend the game ahd lend second on the throw in. With the 9 th. concentrate lipoh the tomato or Albany ...... 39 43 .476 New York 7, Detroit 5; base on balls, chin. He contents himself -with be­ AB R. H. PO A. E. a little moral support to his team one run needed to tie the score on off Pipgras 1, Moore 1, Holloway 3, XXX—Martin batted for Johnson in Jarrett, cf .. 1 • a a > a a S 2 1 4 0 0 Bridgeport ...... 89 43 ' '.476 9th. laboring the hat rack or temple , It will be i4membered that the now that the bdys have fought 4heir the middle path, Weber fanned end- Vangilder 1; struck out, by Holloway Dougherty, ll ...... 3 0 1 4 0 0 Waterbury 24. 49 .329 1, by Vangilder 1; hits, off Holloway until the recipient has a great Kimmick, 2b a a 1 « « a • 3 0 1 2 3 1 Colored Collegians, soHiaileh, had way up to the ffijnt ranks again. icig the contest. The summary; American League— 4 in G, off Vangilder 2 In 3, off iPlp- plenty. Hermann, 3b 0 1 2 0 0 a team of color, and that implies MANCHESTER gras 8 in 6 1-3. off Moore none in 2 At Cinciniinftli— From what I gathered, those de­ Sperber, rf ...... 4 1 1 3 0 0 every sense of the word. They were W. L. PC. AB R H PO A E 2-3; winning pitcher, Holloway; los­ , DODGHRS 4i REIDS S Chesbro, lb . a ...... 4 '0 1 7 0 1 New Y o r k ...... 58 22 .725 luded persons WhO Went about . a scrappy bunch ami their antics C. Massey, ss . . 4 1 1 1 1 0 ing pitcher, Pipgras; uhiplres, Barry, Bropklyn Huarte, ss . a i i < 9 e i 3 0 0 3 1 0 Connolly and McGowan; time, 1:55. AB. R. H. PO. A. E. fighting one Another ih olden timfes McCarthy, c alaaki) 2 1 0 2 4 0 when ahead pleased the fans and Philadelphia...... 41 33 ,538 . . S. Massey. 2b . .2 1 1 2 3 0 X—Hargrave batted for Sweeney in CaCrey, cf ...... 4 0 0 4 1 0 for the implied fiiti of the thing Jamerson, p ...... 2 0 0 0 1 0 generally a large crowd followed St. L o u is ...... it. 42 41 .506 /fO xY P H A H H Wright, 3b . . . 2 0 0 0 0' 0 7th. Hendrick, 3b ...... 4 0 1 0 6 1 didn’t know that the jaw was the Burke, pi,.. a a i 4 i . a 1 0 0 0 0 0 Cleveland ...... 37 44 .457 s .x.x—Galloway ran for Hargrave in Herman, r f . ,4 0 0 3 0 0 Farber, x ... i i a a S 1 a 1 0 0 0 0 0 their games. But now the colored The old razzberry is Cheney, lb . . . 2 0 0 5 0 0 7 th. more vulnerable that’s Brother boys have found out that playing Chicago 36 44 .450 ! Sipples, p .... 2 1 1 0 0 0 Bressler, If ------;;i.4 1 1 1 0 0 2— Durst ba'tted for Bengough in Bissonette, lb ...... 4 1 1 14 0 0 Tunney’s own— and centered their 80 4 5 37 9 2 baseball is not a paying pastime Washington 36 45 .444 incentive for a pl&yeT to I^'entis, p .... 3 0 1 0 1 0 7 th. Flowers, 2b..;...... 3 0 0 2 2 0 punches upon the t@mple. H artford : . 003 301 loo-■--6 and they, too, have quit for other B oston ...... 33 44 .429 pop one in the blefichers Bahcroff, ss ...... 3 2 3 2 3 0 Waterbuty i i a a i i a Thornton, cf ..3 0 1 0 6 0 zz—Paschal batted, for Moore in 9th. This,» i gathered, proved a bit * 103 100 0 0 0 - ■^4 fortos of pleasure. D etroit...... 32 48 .400 McCann, If . . . 3 0 0 1 0 0 (Second Game) Gooch, c ...... 3 0 2 1 0 0 Two base hits, Bryant, vaii Atta, New York ...... l20 200 lOx—6 Doak, p ------2 0 0 0 2 0 severe , on the ungloved hand and Jarrettj hoihe runs, Hbhman, Spefber; National Lengtne Zwick, r f ...... 2 d 0 i , 0 0 Detroit 000 030 002— 5 so these primitive souls used this stolen bases, Jarrett, Slayback, Carlson, c ....2 0 i 11 1 1 W. L. PC. Batteries—New York: Hoyt, Pen- 31 4 8 27 l4 1 punch only When It Was dUe to Schmehl; sacrifices, Ddugherty, Wat­ Just when the Girl’s Baseball ,St. Louis ...... 51 30 .630 nock, and Collins. Detroit; Billings, Cincinnati mean something. In brief. When son; left on bases, Hartford 6, Water.^ League games will get underway Total ...... 25 3 6 21 6 1 Smith, Gibson and Shea. a B. 11. H. PO. A. E. bury 8; base dil balls, off Van Atta 2, New York ...... 43 31 ,5Sl Home run-=^Rith. Callaghan, I f ...... 3 1 0 3 0 0 the victim was deemed ready fUr jainel-SDn 2, Stybbrskl 1; strlick out, is hard to say. Doiiger Dowd Cincinnati...... 47 claims to have a real snapp^ outfit 35 .573 ROCKVILLE Crltz. 2b i . 3 0 0 4 4 0 the coup de gface^this one is mine by Van Atta 1, Jambt-son 2, Stybbrskl Chicago ...... 46 37 .554 AB R H PO A E Kelly, lb ...... 3 0 0 ll 2 0 — they popped him upoB the bal­ 2, Woodman li hits, off Van Atta 3 ih out for practice and that his gath­ At Boston!— Dressen, 3b ...... 4 i 2 0 2 0 2 1-3. off WOOdfi^n 0 In 1, off Jaiher- ering of girls can stop, anythirlg Brooklyn ...... 42 36 ,538 E. Lahmlc, lb 3 0 1 3 0 1 Hargrave, c»...,..3 0 1 1 0 0 ustrade with everything they didn’t Soh 11 Ih 7 1^3, off StyborsRl 8 In 5 2-3 r EB s61t 4, b r o W ks have In the Wife’s name and stood within fifty miles of Manchester. Pittsburgh...... 37 40 .480 H. Lahmelc, c. .3 0 1 7 1 0 ..Boston Zitzmann, x .;i4i..O 1 0 0 0 0 (ttbrte out ln.9th(, dff BUrke 1 In 1 2-8; Benton ...... 24 51 ;320 Plcinlch, c ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 back to let Him fall. That, it seems, Wild pitch, Stybbrski; Winning pitch­ Some statement but Dodger says it Burke, 3b ____ 3 0 0 2 i 0 AB; R. H. PO. A. E-, Philadelphia ...... 21 51 .292 Pelton, cf ....1 1 0 3 0 0 Flagstead, c f ...... 3 1 2 3 0 0 Walker, rf ...... 4 0 0 4 0 0 is Brother Tunney all over. er, StybofSki; losing pitdher, jalher- Is true. Myer, 3 b ...... 4 0 3 0 3 0 Allen, cf 3 0 1 1 0 0 “ Let the muggs keep shooting at soh; uniplfes, Sullivan and Moran; .^Dogartz, rf ...3 0 0 0 0 0 Tofit, lb ...... 4 0 1 14 0 0 Ford, ss ...... 8 0 1 2 3 0 time, 2 hours. GA3IES TODAY Moynilian, ss . . 8 1 1 0 1 0 K. Williams, lf;i.n4 0 1-0 0 9 Jablonowski, p ...... 2 0 0 1 3 0 the jaw,” said he, “ fnrgetting him­ X—Farber batted for Huarte«ln 9th. Rogell, 2 b ...... 3 1 0 3 3 0 PlPP. X ,...... ;,.l 0 0 0 0 0 self in his excitement. I’m content Molly Maguire came to Manches­ Eastern League Nolan, If ...... 3 0 1 0 0 0 (Bechild Game) ter with a Providence team four Chapman, 2b .3 0 2 3 1 1 Taitt, rf ...... 3 0 1 4 0 0 Lucas, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 to take the best target offered me Hartford . . i...... 000 000 413--8 Providence at Hartford-(2) (2 Gerber,, ss ...... 3 0 1 1 5 0 Waterbury^...... OOO 004 300-'‘7 years ago and gave a fine account p. m.) Webber, p ------3 0 0 0 0 0 Hevlng, c ...... 3 1 2 2 1 0 and give it the best I have. It was 30 3 6 27 14 0 punches of this Sort,.cOustatitly and , BattefieS^Hartford: Smith, Oweh, of herSelf on the first sack. While New Haven at Springfield (2) Hothrock, z ...... 0 1 0 0 0 0 Brooklyn ...... OOl 010 200— 4 Van Atta, Woodman and Etsemanh. she was rather weak ^/■ith the wil­ Total ...... 25 2 G 18 4 2 Berry, c ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 Cincinnati ...... 200 000 100— 3 relentlessly applied, that wore Tom WaterbUryi Head, Burke, Boney and Waterbury at Bridgeport. Harriss, p ...... ; , i 0 0 0 2 0 Two base ■'hits, Bancroft, Gooch. Gibbofls down and made him col­ Moller. - - •^- low she managed to gather a hit Pittsfield at Albany. Innings ...... 123 456 7 Bressler 2, Hargrave, Picinich; three lapse from a , final fusllade to the Home run—«Roser. and was thrown out stealing second. American League^* Manchester ...... 201 000 k— 3 28 4 11 27 16 "0 base hit, Bancroft; sacrifices, Doak, And she took the ground in regular Rockville ...... 000 000 2— 2 St. Louis Flowers. Crita, Kelly; double plays, temple. It was punches like these St. Louis at Boston. Flowers (unassisted), Crltz to Ford, that kept Dempsey off balance and fashion making a neat slide into Two base hits C. Massey: hits off AT X- , , H PO. A. E. the bag. Punk Lamprecht catching Detroit at NeW York. Sipples 1 in 3 innings, off Prentis McNeeley, rf ...... 3 1 u 5 0 0 Jablonowski to Ford to Kelly; left on ultimately all but exhausted him in That’s a fuhny game they play in Cleveland at Washington. Brannon, 2b ...... 3 0 0 4 3 0 base. Brooklyn 2, Cincinnati 3; bases our fights.” for Manchester made a perfect -nm c/^jOijus 5 in 6 innings; stolen bases Wright Manush, I f ...... 0 1 1 0 0 on balls, off Doak 1; struck out, by Sorad of these towns, I suppose throw an^ caught her a few feet off Chicago at Philadelphia. Sipples, Pelton: double plays Burke Schulte, c f ...... 2 0 0 2 0 0 Jablonowski 1; hits, off Jablonowski you've seen those white lines run­ the bag. Perhaps that is what National League Nbu- to Chapman: C. Massey to S. Mas­ ^,*■^*8, 88...... 4 0 0 3 3 0 8 in 7, off Lucas 0 in 2; umpires, Rear­ Blue, lb ...... 4 1 2 4 1 0 don. Magee and Moran; time. 1:42. ning across the streets. Well, you Dodger has in mind for his team Brooklyn at Cincinnati. sey to Cheney, Prentice to S. Mas­ O Rourke, 3b ...... 4 0 1 4 4 0 X—ZltZmahn ran tor Hargrave in A girl was severely shocked whilfe have to walk between them because and it would not be surprising if Boston at Ghicagi,. sey to Cheney; left on bases Man­ Manlon, c ...... 3 0 0 1 2 0 7th. using an electric Vacuum cfeaner if an automobile hits you outside of the girls played real baseball when New York at Sk Louis. TlW4KSY>0(3eLCbaK chester 8, Rockville 5; first base On Sturdy. X ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 XX—Pipp batted for Jablonowski In in Philadelphia the o^er day. Most them it doesn’t count. they get started. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. . ^.pAUU/AlIKlId- -J balls by Erentic 8, by Webber 2; Stewart, p ...... 3 1 3 0 3 0 7th. Schang. x x ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 of ’em nowadays are severely first base on errors Manchester 1; shocked just by mention of it. bit by pitcher Carlson; struck out / _ , 31 3 7 24 16 0 At Pittsburgh)— by Sipples 7, by Prentice 4, by Web­ Boston ...... 002 100 lOx—4 ber 5; passed balls Carlson; um­ Louis ...... 002 000 001—3 PRIATES 3, PHILLIES 1 Two base hits, Myer, Hevirtg; stolen Pitsburgh Moore, xx ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 pires Russell and Brennan. bases, Manush, Blue, D’HoUrke, Stur- AB. R. H. PO. A. B. Cooney, xxx ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 dy; sacrifices; McNeeley, Brannon, Adams, 2b ...... 3 0 2 0 0 0 Schulte, Harriss 2, Plagstead; double L. aner, cf ...... 3 0 0 2 0 0 32 2 6 24 11 2 Old Gold hits a homer for ^abe l^uth plays, Kress to Brannon to Blue P. Waner, r f ...... 2 1 1 1 0 0 Chicago ...... 000 210 lOx— 4 Brannon to Kress to Blue, Gerber to Grantham, lb ...... 1 1 0 6 1 0 Boston ...... 002 000 000—2 • , ( Rogell to Todt 2; left on bases, St. Traynor, 3 b ...... 3 0 1 2 2 .0 Two base hits, Maguire, BecU; home BALL TEAM WINS ?°;ton 4; bases on balls, off Scott, I f ...... ,2 1 0 2 2 0 run. Hartnett: sacrifice, Maguire; Stewart 1, Harriss 4; struck out, by Bartell, ss ...... 2 0 0 3 4 0 double plays, English to Maguire to ^lueen, Vangraf- Hargreaves, c ...... '3 0 1 2 0 0 Grimm; left on bases. Chicago 10, lln and Nallln; time, 1:45. Brame, p ...... 2 0 2 0 2 1 Boston 4; bases on balls, off Blake 1, in blindfold cigarette test MOST ALL GAMES X—Sturdy batted for Manlon In 9th. Hill, p ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 Delaney 10 in ?, oft Cantwell 1 1 nl; n.?*—Schang batted for Stewart In losing pitcher, Delaney; umpires, Kart 22 3 ' 8 18 11 1 and Rigl'er; time. 1:42. z—Rothrock ran for Heving In 7th. Philadelphia X—BurruS' batted for Delaney In AB. R. H. PO.A.'fe. 8th. i NOT PRACTICING Sothern, cf ...... 3 0 1 3 0 0 . XX'—Moore ran for Taylor In 8th. At Phlladi^pkiai— Thompson, 2 b ...... 2 0 0 2 0 0 xxx—Cooney ran for Burrus in 8th. ATHLE'TlGS 10, 1, CHI8OX 8, 5 Hurst, lb ...... 2 1 0 2 0 0 (First Game) Leach, I f ...... ,., 3 0 1 3 0 0 Philadelphia Williams, rf ...... 1 0 0 1 0 0 TroUeymeu Leading Public ^ „ AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Whitney, 3b ...... 3 0 0 1 2 0 2 1 1 8 5 0 Sand, SB ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 2 2 0 1 0 Lerlan, c ...... 2 0 0 5 1 0 **Yea, 1 am well over 21... so 0 0 0 0 0 0 Benge, ...... 3 0 1 0 2 v 0 y Service League and Do 8 2 1 0 8 0 1 could iee no reason why I 5 3 3 2 0 0 19 1 4 al7 5 /O 4 1 0 2 1 0 Pitsburgh ...... 012 000 —^3 6houldh*t make the blindfold Not Practice. 5 1 4 11 0 0 Philadelphia ...... 000 100— 1 5 0 2 0 0 0 Two base hits, Brame, Sothern: test. As I tried the four lead- 2 0 0 3 2 1 three base hit, Traynor; stolen bases, 1 0 0 0 0 0 Thompson; sacrifices, Grantham, injA cigarettes I kept this 'box Sand, Bartell: double plays, Scott to Here la a baseball team that prac­ 1 0 0 1 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 Bartell to Traynor, Seott to Har­ adore* on the results t tices every day with Its members greaves, Bartell to (jrantham; left on in at least two counties and scat­ 35 10 13 27 20 1 bases, Philadelphia 1, Pittsburgh 7; Chicago base on.'-balls, off Benge 2, Brame 4; tered through at least seven towns struOk out,' by Benge 5; hits, off Not 1 * « « . out at first 'aid three cities yet it leads a league A'B. R. H. PO. A. E. 4 0 2 3 1 0 Brame 3 in 4, (none out In 5th), off The Tasty Teaberry; V' .and has not been beaten this year, . 4 0 1 7 0 0 Hill 1 in 2; winning pitcher, Brame; No. 2 i 4 this one 'fanned* seme record and true in every de­ , 3 0 2 3 , 0 0 umpires, Quigley, Stark and Pflrman; Flavof tail. , 4 0 0 0 0 0 time, 2:03, , a—Two out when game was called, No. 3. . . out on a pop fiy .. . In the Public Service league in . 4 0 0 4 0 0 , 4 1 2 1 0 0 rain. W hat malcei Tcabetry '.Hartford the employees of the.Con­ , 3 1 1 -3 2 0 necticut Company have a team that . 4 0 1 3 2 0 At Chicago:- Gum so No> 4 (01.0 Gotb) a home run hit! is leading the league and never 3 1 0 0 3 0 CUBS 4, BRAVES 2 The idol of the baseball world • « • pjactices except for the ' allotted . Chicago Tttt tas^ Teabeoy "The King of Swat*' 33 3 9 24 8 0 . AB. R. H, PO. A. E. *'OLO OOLD’8 mildness and time before each game. It is prac­ 012 04x—-10 English, ss ...... 5 1 3 0 2 0 of ethuse. tically impoEsible for the men to Maguire, 2b ...... 4 1 2 2 6 1 smoothness marked it 'right get together for any regular ses­ Two base hit, Hauser; home runs, Cuyler, rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 Try it . sions as there are spare and regular Simmons 2, Hauser; stolen base, Mos* Wilson, cf ...... 4 0 0 8 '0 1 ofiT the bat* as the beat,’* BABB RUTH . . . making tb* tett in the til; sacrifice, Hale; double plays. Stephenson, I f ...... 4 0‘1 4 1 0 > There s no other flavor druiiag room at tha Yankat Stadinia. Ha traa men on the roster. With a record Bishop to Hassler to Hauser, Hale to Grimm, lb ...... 3 1 2 14 0 0 of. seven straight wins in the league Bishop to Hauser; left on base. (Shica- Hartnett, c , ...... 3 1 1 4 0 0 like die Teahoty flavor in laked td aatoka eaeb o( tb« iouf leading brandt. circuit the team has stepped out go 5, Athletics 9; base On balls, off Beck, db....;.,t,,, 4 0 2 0 1 0 el earing hit tdite With block boSee betweea thYee times-this year and defeated Blankenship 7, off Grove 2; struck Blake, p ...... i 4 0.0 0 1 0 Oarkfs Teaberry Gum. imokea. Only one qnettioh waa asked: “ Whiob out, by Blankenship 2, by Grove 1; one do ron like beltP” '' ■»>•- other aggregations^ and all without umpires, Hildebrand, Ormsby and 34 4 l l 27 18 Look for the Teaberry the necessary pratftice, skull or Guthrie; time, 1:48. Boston otherwise. batted for Hassler in AB. R. H. PO. A. B; 'pink padcaga on'd&fleft^' Richbourg, rf ...... 4 1 2 3 0 0 o ^Manager Gifford, who handles . (iecond Oamc) J. Smith, cf,...... 4 0 1 4 1 0 countera* the destinies of the team, has work­ ...... 002 010 020— 3 Sisler, lb ...... 4 0 111 0 0 ed wonders with his limited time in Philadelphia ...... 000 000 010—1 Hornsby. 2b ...... 3 0 0 0 2 1 the matter of practice. He works BatterUs! Chicago: Faber and Bell, 3 b ...... 4 0 0 0 2 0 CLARKS Crouse. Philadelphia: Orwoll, Earn- Brown, I f ...... 4 0 0 1 0 0 his two twirlers, Jack Moran and shaw, and Perkins and Fox*. Farrell, ss ...... ,. 3 0 0 4 3 1 Campbell every other game and Home run— Bimmons. Taylor, c ...... 3 o 1 1 ff 0 generally uses both la every game Spohref, c ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 e a b b v on account of their prowess with Delaney, p ...... 2 1 1 0 2 'o I ^ At Wnshliisttmi<» Cantwell, p ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 the. willow. He has a good hpck- INmABB S, NATS 0 Burrus. X ...... 1 0 5 0 0 0 stop in Adler, a coal miner a few Cleveland 16UM y t ysears ago, who can throw to second - , , / AB. R, a . PO.b Vi A. E, Jamieson, I f ...... 3 0 1 3 1 0 , 3 0 1 5 3 with the best and a smooth working Lind, 2b . 4 0 1 2 3 0 . 3 0 0 0 3 infield that functions properly With­ Langford, c f ...... a d 1 1 5 0 0 , 1 0 10 0 out practice. J. Sewell, ss ...... 8 0 0 S 2 0 . 0 0 0 0 0 ; Onflight tQ the Neadunt^f Unless something unforsean hap­ Fonseca, lb . 1 0 1 1 1 0 amm aMO Burns, l b ...... 8 0 0 7 1 0 81 1 8 37 13 pens It looks as though the Trolley- Summa, rf ...... 4 1 1 2 0 0 . . - 000 000 Oil- men will win the pennant this sea­ Hodapp, 3b ...... 4 0 1 1 1 0 000,000 010- son-,, although the New Yorjt, New L. Sewell, C ...... 4 0 1 3 1 0 TWO base hits, Langford, Ruel; Haven and Hartford aggregation is Hudlin, p , . 2- 0 0 1 3 0 three base hit, Summa, sacrifice, J. W * j, do they choose OLD GOLD... • even in the dark? Sewell; double plays, Harris to Judge, right up in second place and ready _ ^ 31 J r ? 7 13 “ o Lind to Burns, Lind to J, Sswell to Wbit is thh ittporioiity that wide go miity fomona eigarettea,' And it ootnci from the k**rHeaPtk of tbu Or.LeriI)fiidGiKBa(.t] for the first faltering of the electric W aehlngton Burhs; left on bases, Cleveland 6. pMpto? lt*e liieply he»erHht meedhuu , \ . the new car men. - „ , AB. R. H. PO. A. E. Washington 9; bases on balls, oft tobaeao plant., ,tk$ finett iokteto thet freew. That’a Mede from di9 kearul Spalding, r t ..... e 6 0 o 33 0 0 >HUdlin 6, Hadley 3; struck out, by and d«l]|ht£al quality that Oto Ootjo hag added to why you oan piek O io O otoi wiUi your ayaa ektaad* Harris, 2b 3 1 1 4 13 HudUn 2, Hadley 4; winning pitcher, o i the tobacco ^ ^ If the Smiths do reach the White Barnes, cf _ 3 , 0 0 HUdlln;; losing pitcher, Hadley; um­ House, wonM the United States-be Judge, lb 38 0 i 9 U pires, Gelsel, Campbell and Owens; a,wonderful country for thedadtes R eeves,■ ss »•««■.».-i 3'3 0 1 4 ' 2 time, 2:04. who are pleasingly plump? ■West, If ...... 4 0 0 3 ‘ 0 z—Ruel batted for Hadley in 8th. Bluege, 3b ...... 8 0 0 1 8 as—Jones ran ior Ruel In 9th. SMOOTHER AND BBTTElt-»VIOT A. COUGH IN A CARLOAD” ■

jt.rjjii.'i •:rM'' •^5. Mi^CHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERAljO*, THURSDAY/JULY 12, 1928. P ^ G E TEN ■■- V- Concentrate Your Efforts-Use These Columns And Gain The ProfitaMe.Results You

— MV^^J^i^Arrf^>^nrl-r^ru^Jv^r^^J^AAi^nru■¥^rrw■M-iV^M^‘r^r^ *^ r*^ ^ ^^ ^*^ rir■* rv v N ■ v v v v v v v v v v y rv v v v ^ *^ ...... Want Ad Infomialloii In Memorlam F Beal Batata for Bgcluuica 70 town, endorslng-4iie book and cortl- Live Stock— Vehldes 42 ^ing its,purpose. •— IN HBMOIUAM FOR Sa l e o r BXCHANOB property “ Kindly let us hear from you at Manchester In town, in good locality. What have once., . ‘ r- FOX—^In sad and gloving memory of FOR SALE—GOOD farm horso. Call yon to offer? Wm. KanebL Telephone “ Very truly yours, - The, ■ Catherine' M d: I^ary Evening Herald our dear Mother, who departed this Manchester 1069-4; 1776. life, on the 11th. of July, 1926, and u^"Wm. 0. fla ^ , Shea-df Stiaht fitreet ate 8p.«tndlng (Classified ^Advertisements was Interred In the East cemetery: the week at White Sands Behiilii. Poultry : and. Sopplles 48 Phone Your Want Ads Legal Notices 70 “ Chief of PoUce.” Count nix %v M f Sleep on dear Mother Thy labor Is 014ef Gordon Vexed . Initials, numbtffs -AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD Mrrf, P. J. O. Cornell^ chairman each count as a o’er, FOR SALE—BAHREDv- ROCK. Pul­ Q^uite naturally assuming that \ Thy willing hand will toll no more. T o T h e at Manchester, within and for the of the sale '6f home made . food 'vrords as two worda Mmlmum cost lets. Karl Marks, ISd^ummer street. District of Manchester, on the 12th. the p^enslon fund was Interested in Is pries of three llnea A faithful Mother true and kind. Telephone 1,8.77. which the Ladies. Sewing socl^jr- of No friend on earth .like thee we’ll day of July, A. D., 1928. the success of- the advertisement so­ the Swedish Lutheran' church''will Line rates per day for transient find. Present WILLIAM S. HYDE, .Bsa„ licitation, Chief Gordon did-give to Forget you no, we never will, OLIVER BROTHtlRS day old ohieks Judge. hold at the store of the J. W-^ Hale ' fda the solicitors here a letter accord­ BffeetlTa March 1 711, 19W _ As years roll on.we love you still. from two yaar bid hens. HoUvvood Estate of William A. Arnott late of company Saturday afternoon 'at 2 ■ Cash Charge Worthy of everlasting remembrance. Strain-Blood -tested and free from Manchester, In said District, deceased. ing to Hart’s request and according Evening 7' The Administrator having exhibited o’clock. The other memlters o f the 6'Consecutive Days ,:.| I at' » ots Ever remembered by her Son and white diarrhea. Oliver Bros., Clarks to his own understanding of the committee are Mrs. Alfred ilohnson, 3 Consecutive Days ..I 9 oti 11 ots Daughter. Corner. Conn. his administration account with said matter. f IS ots RICHARD FOX and MRS. J. COT­ estate to this Court for allowance. It Mrs. Fred Swartz and Mrs; 'Carl 1 Day ...... I is Now that it turns out that ’the Hultin. .. _ All orders for Irregular Insertions TON. Articles for Sale 45 will bo charged at the one-ttiM ORDERED:—That the 18th. day of only party/interested in the success Special rates for long tenn every July, A. D., 1928, at 8 o’clock, fore­ of the : canvass is the speculative Lost and Found FOR SALE—HARDWOOD |10 cord, noon, at the Probate Office, in said Police Officer Heifron this morn­ day ad/rtlslnjf Iglvn upon Call 664 Manchester, be and the same is as­ concessionaire concern. Chief Gor­ ing was sent to Oak Grove street slabs $8.50 cord, native lumber $30 Ads ordere4%for thre^ J’.L.**.?* «^7h signed for a hearing on the allowance don naturally feels that he was-“ let and stopped ,1®}^ ?he® S LOST—MONDAY NIGHT pair of black per M. Tel. 1779 Lathrop Bros. and brought In Edward Garland, day will be charged.only for the ao shell rimmed glasses on 6 o’clock And Ask for “Bee’* of said administration account with in” ’ and agrees with the Chamber who was found sleeping near the Cross Town car, or on West Middle said estate, and this.Court directs the of Commerce that it was poor judg­ tual number of times the Administrator to give public notice to side of the road. A complaint had ed. charging at the Turnpike. Finder please return to 16 FOR SALE—USED Maytag electric ment on the part of Chief Hart to no allowances or refunds can be msdj Essex street. washer. Phone 1107. Tell Her What You Want all persons Interested therein to ap­ been made to the i>oIice about him. on six time ads stopped after the pear and, be heard thereon by pub­ withhold the facts in the case. He was locked up on the charge of LOST—ELK’S TOOTH charm. Please FOR SALE—LOAM. Inquire Frank lishing a copy of this order In some Never before has the advertising intoxication. fifth day. , ulsplay lines not call Mlllkowskl The Florist, or phone Oamato, 24 Homstead street. Man­ newspaper having a circulation In No "till forbids' She will, take your ad, help you word it for best results, said District, on or before July 12. privilege of the annual'police meet 1088-2. chester. Phone 1607. program been sold out In this way. ®°The Herald will not :>e responsible and see that It is properly Inserted, Bill will be mailed 1928, and by posting a copy of this State Policeman Lowe had a order on the public signpost in the for more than ope IncoiTeot Insertion Annonncenients * Electrical Appliances— Radio 49 same day allowing you until serentb day after Insertion It isn’t likely that it will be again— card of less than twenty auto li­ of any advertisement ordered for Town where the deceased last dwelt, not, at least, without a public state­ to take advantage of the CASH RATE. six days before said day of hearing cense aplicants to meet him today. more than one tlma STEAMSHIP TICKE’ra—all parts of ment of the fact. The Inadvertent omlssloi or incor­ ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING appll- and return make to this Court. This morning’s* class was „ne;st to the world. Ask for sailing lists and anoea motors, generatora sold and WILLIAM S. HYDE rect publication of advertising wm be ratea Phone 760-2. Robert J Smith. the smallest that he has had-since rectified only by cancellation of the repaired; work called for. Pequot Judge. he started coming to ManTchester charge made for the service rendered, 1009 Main street. Electric Co., 407 Center street. Phont H-7-12-28. t • • • 1592. Thursdays to issue ’ licenses. All advertisements must conform Antomoblles for Sale iSammer Homes for Rent 67 TROLLEY-AUTO CRASH In style, copy and typography with Household Goods 51 Apartments, Flats, Tenements 68 LA FOLLETTE PLATFORM regulations enforced by the publish­ 1924 M.AXWELL COUPE $150. ers, and they reserve the right to 1927 PORDOR SEDAN $250. FOR SALE—3 DIPPER self dryer FOR RENT—4 ROOM cottage at CHIEF BLAMELESS edit, revise or reject any copy con­ 1925 FORD TOURING $60, FOR RENT—TWO ROOM apartment, Columbia Lake for August with CAUSES LOSS OF TRIP ..Waterloo, Wis., July 12.— “ I am washing machine. Call 136 Blssell also furnished room. Inquire at Sel- sidered objectionable, 1923 FORD ROADSTER '$40. street. garage. Fireplace, electricity etc. a candidate for re-election to the CLOSING HOURS-rClasslfled ..ds 1924 CHEVROLET TOURING $100. wltz Shoe Shop. Call 1090, Manchester. Senate on the Progressive platform to be published same day must be re­ ALSO 3 GOOD USED TRACTORS. ____ 4______IN TRICKY DODGE ceived by 12 o'clock noon. Saturdays FOR RENT—6 ROOMS, all modern TO RENT—FURNISHED cottage, gas Travel on the South Manchester which embodies the principles pre- APPLY AT SALESROOM 9 PIECE OAK dining rooln set. Can Improvements, with garage. 29 Main 10:30 a. m. MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES be seen at 562 Middle Turnpike East. and electric lights furnished free, trolley line was_delayed and pas­ sented at Kansas City.” 1069 Main St. Tel. 740 street. Telephone 1233. $35 week. Myrtle Beach. Davi** Mc­ sengers had to transfer as a result Senator Robert M. La POllette, Collum. Phone 1193-3. Telephone Your Want Ads Dennis P. Coleman, Mgr. FOR SALE—DANDY baby carriage, FOR RENT—4 ROOM tenement, all of an accident just east of th^ Jr., in the opening speech here to­ or will rent it: bassinet, crib, cot Improvements, 29C Spruce street. E. FOR RENT—6 ROOM cottage, west Jockeyed Into Backing Po> Hartford bridge last night. A car day, made this statement in which Ads are accepted over th>i .telephone FOR SALE—BUICK 1927 Master Six, bed, strollers. Porch rockers only $1 E. Scranton, telephone 407-2. at the CHARGE RATE given above Jseven passenger sedan, low mileage, each. Call before they are gone. 29 side of Columbia Lake; also garage on which Leonard Lieberg of this he said he was a candidate'not on like new, private owner. Bargain for strant street, phone 859-4. , on Lilac street. Inquire at 21 Elro place was motorman became involv­ as a convenience to advertisers, but TO RENT—FOUR AND five rooms. 3 street or telephone 2637r5. the platform adopted at Kansas the CASH RATES will be accepted as quick sale. Phone Manchester 583. Walnut street, near Cheney mills, Kce Pi^ogram by New ed in a collision with aq automo­ City hut on the one'presented by FULL PAYMENT If paid at the busi­ $89 BUYS A 4 piece, ber...tlful w .Inut white sinks. Prices reduced $20. In­ ness office on or before the seventh 1927 Oldsmoblle Landau, $700. finished bed room suite. This is a FOR RENT—LAKESHORE cottage bile. Pending the clearing of the the Progressives as a minority. 1925 Oldsmoblle Sedan, $376. quire premises. Tailor. at Bolton. Inquire at 13 Winter wreckage passengers on lines east La Follette declared hothing ■ day following the first insertion of good buy, 4 piece beautlf I velour street or telephone 1081. each ad., otherwise the CHARGE 1926 Oldsmoblle 2-Door Sedan, $450. living room suite, up-to-date $98. TO RENT—6 ROOMS all Improve­ Britain Force’s Methods. of the river were transferred and could he accomplished by a Third Ten other good used cars at reduc­ Must be seen to be appreciated. Good RATE will be collected. No responsi­ ed prices. ments. and garage, window shades, FOR r e n t —COTTAGE at Coventry one entire trip was lost. Party movement at this time. bility for errors In telephoned ads values In every department. Benson’s screens. combination storm and Lake from middle of July on. To re- will be assumed and their accuracy Furniture Company. Home of good screen doors. 358 Main street, near cannot be cuaranteed. CR.4.WFORD AUTO SUPPLY CO. bedding. . |______« spohsible parties only. E. T. Morgan, Center and Trotter Sts. Haynes. Telephone 555. telephone 2524. Failure on the part of the New • • • .4' TeL 1174 or 2021-2. $110 Walnut bedroom set $88 TO RENT—6 ROOM tenement with FOR RENT-r-COTTAGE at Coventry Britain police department to make Index of C!lassificatidns $89 3-piece Reed set $59. garage, inquire 140 Mapl"* Street. clear the conditions under which it Evening Herald Want Adi are now 1927 Studebaker Standard Sedan. $159 Mohair suite $110. Lake, running water, electric lights, 1924 Studebaker Special 6 Sedan. boat. Theodore Bldwell, 68 Chestnut was taking a profit for the Police grouped according to ' classifications $98 Odd Daveni'ort $88. FOR RENT—4 KOOM tenement at 177 street. Telephone 483-2. below and for handy reference will 1924 Studebaker Big 6 Sedan. $30 8’3’’xl0’6" Axmlnster rugs $24. Oak street, inquire 179 Oak street, Pension Fund has gotten a dumber Single Houses You May Buy appear In the numerical order Indi­ -1933 Studebaker Big 6 Touring. Odd Walnut beds $15. or call 1619 after B p. m. , 1921 Studebaker Big 6 Touring. of police chiefs throughout the state cated: All gas stoves 20 per cent off. Houses for Sale 72 into a position that they do not Henry,street— good one of seven rooms and conveniences in­ Births ...... • is^s. a .•IW. ess', e A few cars of all makea Good buys WATKINS FURNITURE EXCHANGE FOR RENT—FOU^ ROOM flat, first Engagements for little money. floor, hot Water heat, at 170 Oak like and for which they are not in cluding flrepla'ce, extra size lot. one car garage. Price only FOR SALE—MY MAIN STREET dou­ $8,000. , Marriages >esssssssss sgc«*r*rr s s s THE CONKBY AUTO CO. DO YOU REALIZE that we save you street or Callan 616-5 the least to blame. 20-23' East Center St. TeL 840 ble house, 14 rooms, not including Ijeaths . a . . . , ,. . money cn a parlor suite? 3 piece bath, and hall, fine location. Price Another on Henry Street of five rooms with attached garagO, ^ Cards of Thanks .#:•' s s s s;s:s: sa :«( s # « Jacqua»Ti velour suite, allover de­ a p a r t m e n t s —'I'wo three and four The Manchester Chamber of steam neat, gas, etc. Lot 66x155. Price $6,600. Watch In Me;iK^iam ... CHEVROLET SALES & SERVICE sign, reversible cushions $86, Holmes room apartments, beat, lanttor ser­ most attractive for quick sale. Chas. Lost and Found Those'- wishing to purchase open Bros. Furniture Co . 649 M.oin street. vice. gas range, refrigerator, in-a- E. Hale, 99 Main street. . Commerce, through its secretary, Henry, Street. Announcements . » s s-« e s:s • « s s:t:si cars will do well to inspect our stock. TeL 1628. door bed turnlshed. Call Manchester George E. Rix, has just issued a Six room new, steam heat and up to date in every way, good Personals ...... s Prices right—cars right. Construction Company. 8100 or tele­ FOR SALE—4 ROOM bouse, good con­ warning to Its members against giv­ lot with some fruit trees, close to Center Street. Price $7,500. • Automobiles H. A. STEPHENS • phone 782-2. ' dition, modern Improvements, also 10 Automobiles for S a le ...... t Center at Knox Tel. 939—3 Wanted— To Boy 58 lots. Inquire 1 Lockwood street, tele­ ing advertisements to solicitors for $5,800 takes a nice 5 room single. There is a furnace, gas, Automobiles for Exchange ...*V ^ FOR RENT—SEVERAL first class phone 1364-2. the program of the field day of the etc. Also'a garage. Very easj terms. Auto Aocessoiles-^Tlres ...... 8 Aatb Accessories—Tires O WANTED—TALL, old-fashioned chest rents with all Improvements. Apply State Police Association to be held $6,350 is the entire cost of a 6 room single, oak fioors and Auto Repairing—Painting ...... 7 of drawers. . Write giving descrip­ Edward I. HolL 865 Main street. TeL FOR SALE—GREENACRES 6 rooms, trim. A fine home for the price. Small amount of cash. Auto Schools ...... 7-A V - •; ______tion, condltion,;^nd price. Chest, care 560. all modern. Owner leaving town. at New Britain August 11, under Autos—Ship by Truck ...... 8 $16 BUYS c o m p l e t e set of four Herald. Manchester. Telephone 1422-4, any misapprehension concerning A u tos^—* For Hlr ...... 9 Indian: Shook Absorbers. Free trial FOR RENT—TWO AND three room the destination of the solicitors’ in­ Garages—Service—Storage ...,v 10 The Indian ' is the finest shock ab­ I WILL BUY ANYTHING you’ll sell suites In Johnson Block, with mod­ FOR SALE—SMALL HOUSE with 10 Motorcycles—Bicycle., , ..w..i.T.’i 11 sorber yet made. Ask us about It. In the line of Junk and old furniture. ern Improvements. Apply to ,iobn- building lots. .1400 growing trape take. Such solicitors have been can­ Wanted aatp^Motorcyles ...... 12 Center Auto Supply Co., 165 Center. Call Wm.: Ostrlnsky. Tel. 849. son. Phone 524 or lanitor 3040. vines. 50 fruit trees, you can get this vassing for advertisements for the ROBERT ]. SMITH Dnslnesa and Professtoonl Services TeL 673. year’s crop. A nice little place. Price program, representing that by pay­ very low. Terms. Call Arthur A. Business Services Offered ...... 13 WILL PAY HIGHEST prices for all Business, Locations for Rent 64 ing the extremely high prices asked Real Estate and Insurance. Household Services Offered...... IS-A Business Services Offered kinds of poultry. We will also buy Knofla, Telephone 782-2. Steamship Tickets. Building—Contracting ...... 14 rags, papers and ail kinds of lunk for advertising space, advertisers 1009 Main Street. FOR RENT—SMALL store, suitable WASHINGTON ST.—new six room Florists—Nurseries ...... 15 WANTED—TEAM work, scrapping Call ] 506-2, would be contributing to the pen­ Funeral Directors ...... 16 for tailor or shoe shop, or confec­ single, sun porch, lot sixty foot sion fund. This is not a fair repre­ Heating—Plumbing—Roof ng .. cellars, plowing, carting ashes, etc. tions, located on Church street, rent front. Price right terms. Arthur A. Insurance ...... 18 55 Blssell street. L. T. Wood TeL Rooms Without Board 5» reasonable. Inquire at 13 Winter St Knofla. Tel. 782-2—875 Main street sentation of the case. Millinery—Dressmaking ...... 19 496. Moving—Trucking—Storage . . . . 20 TO RENT—A LARGE comfortable TO RENT—STORES. Walnut street, _ Sold , Out Rights THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE: Fainting—Papering ...... 2l Florists— Nurseries 15 room for gentleman roomer. 31 near Cheney mills, suitable for any l•sslllnal Services...... Laurel street. kind of business, very reasonable. SEIZE CANADIAN BEER As a matter of fact the Nqw Brit­ (337) ADoU’sHouse rtepulrlng ...... FOR SALE—150,000 winter cabbage Inquire premises. Tailor Shop. ain police department, which ac­ 'I’ailoring—Dyeing—Cleanirg ... and celery plants. Geraniums and EAST CENTER S’TRRET. iTT firTt Sketches by Hessey; Synopsis by Braucher Toilet Goods and Services ...... class room, on bath-rocni floor. Near cording to association custom is to other flowering plants. 379 Burnside the Center. Houses for Kent 65 WITH A HALF MILUON Wanted—Business Service ...... Ave. Greenhouse, East Hartford. Call be host to the visiting officers, sold Eiliicntlonal Laurel 1610. FOR RENT—2 FAMILY modern the program rights to a profession­ n.,i and Claeses ...... Boarders Wanted .50-A Private Instruction house, five rooms each half of house. al advertising concern for a lump j Moving— Trucking— Storage 20 All In excellent condition. Summit sum of $1,500. This $1,500 dollars, D.uiclng ...... WANTED— BOARD your child street. Apply Home Bank and Trust Detroit, Mich., July 12.— Stocks Musical—Dramatic To of be.er and liquor valued at $500,- it is true, is to go to the Police Pen­ 30 Give best of care while you work. Company. Wanted—Instruction ...... LOCAL AND LONG distance moving Address Mother, South Herald offlce.l 000 and stored in two of the largest sion Fund. But it will be made Plnonclnl by experienced* m L. T. Wood. 65 neither larger nor smaller by the Bonds—Stocks—M'rtgagea ...... Blssell streeL. Tel. 496. FOR RENT—6 HOOM house, all im­ export warehouses on the Canadian Business Opportunities ...... Country Board— Resorts 60 provements. Inquire 128 MapK St. border were In custody of provin­ results of the contracting concern’s uney to Loan ...et.''...... a..... PERRETT & GLENNEY moving sea- canvass. So that, in truth, it is the Money Wanted son Is here. Several trucks at your cial police at Windsor, Ontario, to­ Help- and'fiftniitlona service, up to date ^ lulpment, ex­ ROOM AND BOARD at Tammany FOK RENT—TWO FAMILY modern., day. advertising concern, and not the Help Wanted—Female 85 perienced men. Phone 7-2. Hall, Sound View. Make reservations house, five rooms each half ot The warehouses are those of the police lund, which reaps the bene­ Help Wanted—ijiale ...... -.i... 36 now for July and August. Write Mrs. nouse. All In excellent condiilon. fit of indirect donations made by Help Wanted—Male or Female.. 87 MANCUES'l'EH & N. Y. MOTOR Dis­ Phillips Coffee. Box 194, Sound View. Summit street. Apply Homo Bank Carling Brewing & Export Co., of Agents Wanted ...... d...... 37-A patch—Part loads to and from New Conn. and Trust Company. London, Ont., and Windsor, and of advertisers in the form of high Situattons Wanted—Female . . . . 88 York, regular service. Call 7-2 or space rates. The police have nothing 1282. the Nathanaon Co., a Montreal or­ Situations Wanted—Male ...... 39 W anted— Room s— BOa rd 6 2 ganization with warehouses all over to do with the success or failure of Employment Agencies...... 40 THREE BODIES FOUND the program. Live Stock—Pete—Ponltiw—Veblelee Repairing 23 Canada. Dogs—Birds—Pots ...... 41 WANTED — PROTESTANT boarding Although the police would not Nevertheless, the buyers of the Live Stock—Vehicles ...... 42 home for Jim, 9 years. Needs a real Babylon, N. Y., July 12.— The advertising rights prevailed on Poultry and Supplies 43 LAWN MOWEltS SHARPENED and father and mother. Apply giving bodies of three of the four men comment- on the seizure, it is un­ repatted, chimneys cleaned, key flt- derstood a general seizure of all Chief Hart of< the New Britain de­ Most boys have sisters or girl cousins who would be Wanted — Pets—Poultry—Stock 44 references to Connecticut Children’s who were drowned when their mo­ partment, to lend his aid to them For Sale—|l.lscMla«cons idg. safes opened, saw filing and Aid Society, 50 Trumbull street, tor launch capsized n. the Fire Is­ stocks along the border with a val­ glad to have a doll’s house. The one shown above can Articles for.8are^V-.'-'.T,-i-....i. 45 grinding. Work called foi, Harold Hartford. ue of approximately $50,000,000 in theii* olicitatlons by inviting the Boats and A c c e iw a M e » ; ...... 46 Clemson, 108 North Elm streeL TeL land channel two weeks ago have local aid of the various chiefs be made, from boxes, with one side left open to swing 462. would follow. Building Materials k i,.V IV ...... 47 Apartments, Flats, Tenements 63 been found. The third body washed around the; state. He did this witn on a wire hinge. One box can serve as the frame, an­ Jiiainonds—Watches—Jewelry .. 48 ashore at Fire Island beach, was These docks supply the fleets of Electrical Appliances—Radio .. 49 SEWING MACHINE, repairing ^ %uch enthusiasm that he neglected other the partitions. We can cut out windows and all makes, oils, needles and supplies. FOR RENT—4 ROOM TENEMENT, identified as that of Edwiq Maine rum runners with the liquor they Fuel and Feed ...... 49-A smuggle into the United States over to mention the fact that the amount doors and pape/ the interior with some old rolls that Garden—Farm—Dairy Products 50 R. W. Garrard. 37 Edward str -t. modern Improvements. Inquire 151 Post, of Washington, D. C., said to of money to go to the police fund Household Goods ...... 51 Phone 716. Maple street or telephone 2184-3. have been the former husband of the Detroit river, it is charged. are usually left around the house. Machinery and Tools ...... 62 could not be affected, since it -was LAWN MOWER s h '’^>enlng, repair­ Emily Price Post, writer on eti­ Much of the liquor goes to the De­ By NEA. Through Special Pemmaio^ Publishers of TK* Book of Knowledge. Copyrir;ht. 192J*2^^ ; J Musical Instruments ...... 63 FOR Re n t —5 room tenement, with troit rum trade but a large quanti­ already assured of all It, could pos­ I'fflce and Store Equipment . . . . . 54 ing. Phonographs, clocks, electric all Improvements, vacant August quette. sibly get out of the concession. Sporting Goods—Guns 65 clpanfars. looks repaired. Key mak­ 1st. Inquire 237. Spruce street. Tele­ The body of Guy Egliton was ty is shipped from. Detroit to cities Specials at the Stores ...... 56 ing. Bralthwalte. 52 Pearl street. phone 1349-. throughout the country. Chief Gordon of Manchester got one found yesterday on the Fire Island jot Hart’s letters, which reads as Wearing Apparel—Furs ...... 5Ti beach, and that of Leon Pierce According to Canadian officials Wanted—to Buy ...... 58 Money to Loan much of the liquor brought to the follows: R lomii—nonrd—Hotejs—Reaorte , V ______WIFE KILLS SELF. Clark, Jr., was washed ashore at warehouses. Instead of being "ex­ "Samuel G. Gordon, Esq., RestanVaala MONEY TO LOAN on mortgages. that beach Tuesday. Post, Egliton, “ Chief , of Police, Rooms Without Board ...... 69 Clark and Max Heinrich, of Nash­ ported” to tbg United States found Boarders Wanted ...... :.:..59-A Mo'^ftgagos bought and sold. P. D. New York, July 12.^The divorce “ Manchester, Conn. Country Board—Resorts...... 60 Cofnoll'o, 13 Oak street, telephonu ville, Tenn., had started out June its way back into Ontario where it 1640. suit of Robert 'V'ollbracht, wealthy competed illegally with the govern­ “ Dear Chief: Hotels—Restaurants ...... 61 30 from Babylon in a motorboat for “ As you, know, the State Conven­ Wan*'ed—Rooms—Board ...... 62 automobile dealer, against his New London, Conn. It Is believed ment liquor stores. Real Estate For Rent Help Wanted— Female 85 wife, Florence, will never be heard. tion and Field Day of the police of Apartments, Flats, T^nemcuts.. 63 that the party encountered strong the state is to be held in this city Believed to be despondent because currents and that the craft cap­ Business Locationp for Rent . . . . 64 WANTED—TWO GIRLS for clerical of the impending court ordeal, Mrs. this year, and we are anxious that Houses for Rent ...... 63 work. Must be. High school gradu­ sized. The body of Heinrich has FIND STOWAWAYS. it he a most successful affair in Suburban for Rent ...... 66 ates, good typist and write a good 'V'ollbracht ended her life by drink­ not yet been found. Summer Homes "for 'lent ..'...... 67 hand. Apply to Cheney Brothers Em­ ing a bottle of deadly poison last every way. Wanted to Rent ...... 68 ployment office. night, according to police. Aboard S. S. President Roosevelt, “ In connection with this even! we Real Estate For fulf WORLD GIRDLERS SAIL. via, Radio, July 12.— Three stow­ are publishing a handsome souve­ Apartment Buildings for Sale .. 69 WANTED—-TYPIIST, local girl steady Before taking the poison, she Business "’roperty for S a le ...... 70 work, gojodv^'B.ribe for advancement. Yokohama, Japan, July 12.— aways, bent upon. accompanying the nir program, the proceeds from telephoned good-bye to a a friend, The American world travelers, United States Athletic team to the Farms and Land for Sole 71 Box Z, South Heifajd office. who raced to the woman’s room this program to be donated tc the Houses for Sale ...... 72 John Heufy Mears and Captain Olympic games in Amsterdam, were Police Pension Fund. Lots for Sale ...... 73 Help Wanted— Male 36 only to find her writhing on the Charles Collyer, who are trying to found on board today! Twp claim­ Resort Property for Sale .....n » 74 floor in agony. “ We are desirousiof having rep­ The roof is pictured Suburban for S a le...... 75 girdle the globe from New York ed to he from Los Angeles; the resentation from each city and town Real Estate for Exchange . . . WANTED—MEN, women, girls and In his suit V'ollbracht stated that here, two triangular boys to work on shade’ grown, tobac- by plane and boat In record time, third from San Francisco. , in the state, both In reading matter Wanted—Real Estate ...... in a raid on his wife’s hotel room, sailed for the United States on the The athletes rested today. They pieces and Awo rectang­ A action—Legal Notices CO. Truck leaves South Manchester and adyertlsing. To ^thls end we The design aboye Auction Sales ...... 78 Center,'6:20 a. m„ (D. S. T.) and pro­ he had found her and a prominent liner Empress of Russia this after will begin training toniorrow. All would appreciate a letter which shows how to cut out the ular boards. Mark off the Legal Noticea ...... 79 ceeds through North Manchester;^ L. clubman together, lightly clad. noon. are in good health and fine spirits. Wetstone & Son. our representative' could rise in your sides of the stairs. Nail boards with pen and ink tiny strips across each to imitate slate. y GAS BUGKJIES—Love’s Labor Lost By Frank Beck stair. SkttehM tnd Synoput, ’Sm * 6 ANI <3 W A V , WHO PLEASE C/YUH O P E N U P ! THINK ■>t>u

L V E E O T . ARE.?, B U SIN ESS INlSIpE ! ♦ 5 0 0 ,€A N 6 m - r FW 2ES, WERE' MilD A WAY* AS AS YOU ARE* P M i s o

OONTRetnORS, BACH OF VyMQM FELT POSnyE If we piit In glass windows, the simplest way to fix T H E Y * HAD r) them in position is with tacks at the boUoin and top.crf' S^MT IN THE the .frahies. The doors can be provided Wjth hfngM by ':^ ^ u«hg cloth or thin leather strips, glued lni;d;pfa^. If; / ^ yoii Wish, you can paint red and black/jmes:on thev^^^^^ outer wails to represent, bricks. ^ , ; v / (Next; Measuring ,the W nd) \ V - MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVfeNTNG HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 12," 192ar

FLAPPER FANNY SAYSiv SKIPPY SENSE «Hi NONSENSE —^ By,f.aey,ti,Cg9l ^ ' ...... ‘ ' «■ ■pBBliBaBWMltil I Safety Alphabet. ■ ,t A is Authbflty you should re­ M e spect. lL64.0 thing is busted. VT BEC.V. 8.FAT.«ff. L is the Lights, see they’re al- Cl MB. BY way adjusted. . 1 M is for Motor Cops, they are L CMikK CwM Youth is sloAving down. Nowa- your friends. flays it takes a girl 80 years to N is for Narrow Road, sound OUR BOARDING HOUSE horn on bends. The Toonerville Trolley That M eets A ll the Trains By Fontaine Fojf reach 20. O is for Oil, a supply you should By Gene Ahem carry. P is for Puncture, you hate like THir piSf'i.AYS A 0 i T C f Old Harry. R is for Reason, which saves All, w*. SO POVS VviEMrf broken bones. S is for Signals, you always MAz^oR VaIE I b o K o a R UP VOUR UMCLES f a r m . should give. v E»4 ^ U.4. \MBLL,-rMAY WAS T is for Traffic Rules, obey them ft? VACAtlOl^, VtlMlLE Voti RIGHT Ul* TO THE CUP. and live. SPLeMJ>iP„ M "LAl>;,^Ves!r U is for Uniform Courtesy and A W A V ! I S , There are cups in letter golf and S*' |> 5 I care. there are cups at PINK TEAS. "lb SAV^ Can you hole out today In four? V is for Vigilance everywhere. That’s par and one solution is on W is for Wlnshield which should OF US be kept clean. B GAP, -^COMPliSCloUS another page. euw s ® up y X is for the unknown that most "^l-fRULV SPAKB^ '''Mb Whio I of us fear. "lb m V UAlCLF^ FARAA* w Y Is for Youngsters, away from UBS^ MUS-r HAV/B A QooP I them draw. ^ A v e AMV MBMORV AMP -rriis- Z is for Zeal in obeying the law. Fuvi, ^ vis MAPg US k i £ i . • LAP WAS OMlV The number of automibiles is in­ creasing b*y leaps and bounds and MB VesifeRDAV How Me pedestrians are surviving the same COViSS,x*^MILk(M^ H iyffE R ,- Took c a pb o f -tMb way. €> A M " ALU eAPPBMyWMlLB 1 WAS A jaywalker should be seen and t i ^ A - r / c not hurried.

“ An undertaker was run over by an auto and died.” “ He didn’t make much on that THE RULES funeral, did he?” 1— T^e idea of letter golf is to“ Where do the old autos go?’ change one word to another and do “ They don’t.” it in par, a given number of strokes. Thus to change COW to When a woman driver holds out HEN, in three strokes, COW, HOW, her hand, you may know she’s go­ HEW, HEN. . ing to stop— or keep on. 2— You can change only one let­ ter at a time. I envy thee, little lightning bug. 3— You must have a complete You worry not a bit. word, of common usage, for each For when ypu see a traffic cop. Jump. Slang words and abbrevia­ You know your tail light’s lit. » |0- tions don’t count, I 4— The order of letters cannot The final test of personality is to be changed. ask a girl to ride’ In your flivver when she has a chance to ride In a 7 -/2 . He— I’m going to buy myself a nickel-plated coupe. harem. ns&u.s.MT.orr, WILL It— What do you mean? You If price reductions continue can’t buy a harem, can you? Mr. Ford will eventually receive no (CFontaine Fox, 1928, The Bell Synd >IB2a BY NCA lOlMGa I FlMP 6um= He— Sure, I saw a sign at a gas more for a joke than we do. station that said “ Eight Gals for a Dollar.” The Wrong Jack. W ASipNGTON TUBBS U He needed four new tires, but B y C r a n e The difference between petting His chance was not so sweet. now and fifty years ago is forty Because the only jack he had r miles per hour. Was underneath the seat. 1 CNN'T D'UEVe \r, MO,\t'siRuel IT*S TROEi / - / OBQN! 60WNA Ct02Vl WHM--WHV VitfY, aoSH -0€W N'H SOMDAM SCtA- ee MiLUOHi^iRes vrs iMpossiBtel IvXAfS A FROf\t Of ^6 h0 0 0 vteK£ 60NNKde - f f i Dtn f: IMPOSSIBLEl ^\WCf Y6STeRPkY. NiiaioMNREil ff) 3! — 7 ------"CTOmr ^ UAL COCHRAN— PICniRCS ^ k n ic iT taoi m nte.U.i.»AT.orr. m - ‘S m S O A P

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:<.>■ p XG b t w e l v i b ^ , , -■'•t*--- -S’" ______" iitanriifBlgr im ltli|lip a^)^^ -j». ■ X,--... . II il 1 I iPHj'J' — license has been ' filed with Town HEAT WAVE A BOON 9TH DISTRICT MEETING Clerk Samuel Turkjlngtbn by Miss ABOUT TOWN Norma-* H. Peterson'or 81 Spruce' street and James Dickson of 98 •• .V :.t,3 • :r ;. ..; • X TO COnAGE OWNERS TO BE LARGEY ROUTINE Hamlin street. They are to be • ■ * -S ■ i; ■ •, ' -•■■■ •' - - Stewart Hyde, son of Mr. and married on July'21. Mrs. William S. Hyde of Main An application for a marriage atreet, has left for Gamp Wachu- license has also been filed by Ray­ From No Rentals at. All, Sum­ Re-election of Two Retiring mond L; Smith- and Miss Ruth 'E. sett, Holderness, N. H., where he mer Resort Demand Has will spend the remainder of the Committed Members Is Tak­ Proctor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. summer, Sent Prices Soaring. , en for Granted. Isaac Proctor. They are to married Saturday. A daughter was born Tuesday The heat wave that has held The annual meeting of the Ninth afternoon to Mr. and Mrs. Ward E. Manchester in its grip for several School District will be held in High Duffy of West Hartford, formerly days has been a boon to cottage school hall tonight. In addition to Mrs. Fred B. Littlefield of of this town. The child was born at owners who have been in the habit the routine of hearing the reports Moosup Is visiting her daughters, \ahment the Niles street hospital, Hartford. of renting put their places except of the ofllcers,' - borrowing money Mrs;' Cora Johnson of North Main Mr. Duffy, who was at one time a during the week or two they used and laying a tax, there are two street and Mrs. Harold L. Rich­ member of the Herald staff, Is now them themselves. Until this heat places on the committee to be fllled mond of 477 Center street. managing editor of the Hartford wave arrived practically every own­ for a term of three years. The Times. er had one or more empty cottages terms of Miss Mary Cheney and on his hands and little prospect of John' H. Hyde expire this year. It Mrs. Frank D. Cheney of Forest being able to rent for even a fair Is a foregone conclusion that they street Is at Keene Valley In the share of the season. will be re-elected. \ Adlrondacks and will remain there Not only were the cottages at The action taken by the Ninth until the middle of September. neighboring lakes affected but even district a y e ^ ago in removing the big shore resorts were laboring from among the elective offices the Troop 3, Girl Scouts, is con­ along with the prospect of one of position of collector and treasur­ tinuing its meetings this summer, the poorest seasons on record. er, which were made appointive, re­ Mluminum^Uasher thus giving the Scouts opportunity Then came the .• heat wave and moves the possibility of a contest . to pass tests. More than 20 of the cottage after cottage was taken up that was one of the reasons why Scouts attended a recent meeting for the remaining months of the many persons attended meetings of at the Barnard school kindergarten. season as townspeople flocked to the district in the past. Ruth Cheney, Dorothy Wilson and the lakes and shore resorts seeking There is nothing out of the ordi­ Second Lieutenant Naomi Foster relief. Cottage owners who had low­ nary in the call for tonight’s meet­ •were in charge of the exercises In ered the rental prices of their ing and no contests are expected. the absence of Captain Marlon places, figuring half a loaf to be \ Tinker. The test work was follow­ better than no bread, jacked prices ed by games. back up and in some cases even PUBUC RECORDS raised the ante, yet found they could The annual summer outing of rent their cottage twice over, so Rockville Lodge, B. P. 0. E., will great has been the demand. W.1RRANTEE DEEDS 31st Anniversary Specials In be held at one of the groves In Ver­ Two weeks ago the neighboring Edward J. Holl to W. Harry Eng­ non on Sunday, July 29. A commit­ land, Lots Nos. 169, 170 and 171 of lakes were deadly quiet at night, thj Greenacre tract. tee, of which Charles P. Ryan is with scarce a whisper disturbing the Manchester member, is arrang­ E. J. Holl to W. Harry England, $1.49 the natural solitude of the sur­ Lot No. 81 located on Wellington ing for a dinner and a card of roundings. Today the strum of road in the Hollywood tract. Novelty Ruffled sports. Manchester Elks will attend j yukes, the tin pan music ground Summer Yard Goods \ in large numbers. I forth from cheap phonographs, with MARRIAGE INTENTIONS the shouts and laughter of late An application for a marriage 'The Connecticut Nurserymen’s bathers leave such an impression SALES and SERVICE Printed Dimities 1,000 Yards Association Is holding its annual of life and vitality that one cannot and Curtain Sets Swedish Bakins: Sale Fasheen and Soisett^ summer outing at Lake Compounce help being struck by the tremendous Imported Novelty today. Arrangements for the outing, change a few hot days, have Prints ■which is being attended by seventy- wrought. HALE’S STORE HILLERY BROS. Voiles 91c®^‘ five members of the association, All the beach resorts are in their Saturday at 2 p. m. Yard Dainty curtain sets in a fine quality of were made by Arthur St. John, sec­ glory. . Tel. 1107 cream voile with attractive shell-stitched retary of the association. A number Auspices of Ladles’ Sewing Society Yard of Swedish Lutheran Church. 384 Htfd. Road, So. Manchester 31c edges in blue, gold, rose, nile and lavender. of nurserymen from Manchester are 29 c The set consists of a pair of curtains, tie in attendance. Every woman is familiar with the STATE’S NEW AUTO BOOK Sheer. . dainty. . flowered and mod­ wearing and washing qualities of backs and a valance. Curtains suitable for ernistic patterns for cool vacation these fine cotton prints. New de­ the bedrooms, the dining room or the sum­ Walter F. Balch and Mary H. frocks. Your choice of printed dim­ mer cottages. In this group at 91c you will Balch of Hilliard street have signs and colorings, absolutely color IS THE BEST ONE YET ities or imported novelty voiles in a fast, that are suitable for women’s also find dotted marquisette ruffled curtains; bought a six-room house recently wide assortment of colors and pat­ and one lot of lace and colored dotted mar­ erected on Washington street by and children’s warm weather frocks. terns— guaranteed color fast. 36 32 inches wide. quisette curtains that have been priced as John Clough. The sale was made inches wide. high as $3.00 a pair. through the Arthur A. Knofla ‘Little Manual for Motorists” agency. Mr. and Mrs. Balch have Is Title of Latest Bulletin on Curtains— .Main Floor / sold to John Clough a building lot Motor Laws. on\Washington street, also through Light o’ day the Arthur; A. Knofla agency. Under the title “ A Little Manual GOOD THINGS TO CAT Dainty Summer Wash Rayon Prints for Motorists” which is a revision .'LIXXE LoW .E PYTHIAXS of the motor vehicle laws up to FISH? OF COURSE. Goods Yard \' IXSTALL XEW OFFICERS July 1, the department of motor ve­ This time, OF COURSE you’re going to want Yard hicles has now rea^y and is distri­ fish. The fish yearning is inevitable after a long 79c .'.The followin.g officers ,of Uinne buting this book which give more stretch of hot weather— and we’ve been getting 50c Two of our best sellers in summer Lodge, No. 72. Knights of Pythias, real information to automobile that, all rig:ht, all right and some more all-rights. j^ard goods— Light o’ day and rayon were installed last night by D. D. A splendid assortment of patterns \ owners than anything that the state It just happens, too, that the Thursday-Friday prints that are just the right weight David Anderson and staff' of Hart­ has ever provided for the public. and styles in summer wash goods supply 6f fish, right from the Fish Pier at Boston that will make up into attractive for warm weather frocks and they ford. C. C., Carl Hultin; V, C., There are twenty-two pages in the I ^ and as good as alive, is exceptionally fine this week. come in a wide assortment of smart Robert Modean Prel., Carl Ander­ sport and afternoon frocks— printed booklet. On the first page is an in­ ^ Swordfish, which hasn’t been quite at its ma.ximum prints in blue, tan, green, rose, etc. son: M. of W.^, Hilding Bolinr. -'M. I piques^ dimities, broadcloths, rayons dex of necessary information in of perfection just lately, has come in wonderfully 36 inches wide. Guaranteed color A.. Edward B eferen I. G., Carl eleven different important sections. and linens, as well as plain colored fast. '* ' Gu^afson; O. G., Eric Nelson; Rep­ X good, and a little lower in price into the bargain. linens in pastel shades. 36 and 38 The book was compiled by Mal­ • It’s only 53 qents a pound. resentative to Grand Lodge. Axel colm D. Rudd, deputy commission inch materials. Juhnson; alternate, John Frisell. The butterfish are excellent, too, at 35 cents. So er. Among the sub-headings an are the mackerel which are selling at the low price C. C. Carl Hultin appointed the fol­ Operators’ Licenses, Discipline. lowing committees: Sick committee, ^ of 19 cents. 40 Inch Jo'hn Benson, Carl Anderson, Her­ Vehicle Registration, equipment The filets of sole are from hard, big fish in the bert Johnson;auditors Edwin Swan­ and Accessories, Accident Reports, pink of condition. Forty-nine cents. 40-Inch Printed Celanese son, Carl Gustafson, Carl Birath; Financial Resi sibility Require­ Steak cod, white and firm and toothsome— per­ Rayon Satin amusement committee, Carl Thoren, ments, Miscellaneous Information, fect fish— is a quarter a pound. Yard H.'Bolin, Robert Modean, Herbert Reciprocal Privileges, Hand Sig­ I Then, of course we have the staple filets of had­ committee. Alex Berggren, Carl nals, Number Plate Symbols and dock and dressed haddock, also sweetly fresh and $1 39 Johnson, Carl Johnson; delinquent Approved Headlight Devices. firm. \ A beautiful summer fabric that Bolin, John Carlson. This booklet, know as Bulletin And besides all these Fish Pier products, this looks like georgette but Is much No. 56, can be had by applying to week there are some prime fresh salmon, at the Your choice of a light or a heavy more durable and less expensive. the state department. reasonable price of 49 cents. weight rayon satin that is most pop­ Floral patterns in three and four Special Values iii LOC.AL X0MIN‘ATI0N BLANKS ular for slips. Chadow-proof and beautiful colorings. Guaranteed ARE RUSHING THE SEASON Fresh salmon and green peas! That’s the hot weather equivalent of turkey and cranberry sauce cling-proof. 40 inches wide. Colors: washable. A fabric that will make and three hot vegetables. white, flesh, maize, blue, beige, nile, up into fluffy dance and afternoon There is still ample time for SELWITZ etc. frocks for home or resort wear. those who wish to become candi­ Fish lovers won’t need any special urging to take dates for town or state offices, such is back on the job. This is to let a whack at this list. Those who aren’t fish lovers Yard Goods—^Main Floor as representative and justice of the you folks know that I'have reopen­ yet, but just a little fagged over the old routine of Pouche and Under-Arm Bags peace, to make their applications. ed my shoe repair shop after being meats in hot weather, could have no better time to To make it possible for those who closed two months on account of join the ranks of the seafood eaters. Limited Number ONE LOT have such,ambitions Town Clerk illness. I will appreciate every TELEPHONE TWO THOUSAND job big or small. $1.98 I Samuel Turkington has placed out (Regular price $2.98) on his table a supply of proposal RUBBER HEELS .ATTACHED Apex&Premier CHILDREN’S blanks. We have reduced our regular stock of It is rather early for the blanks 25c Reconditioned $2.98 leather goods for our anniversary sale to appear, but to prgvide those who COATS ■ at $1.98. Good-looking pouche and under­ want them a sufficient supply they SELWITZ -Electric arm bags In plain or novelty leather In gray, are now at the office and can be had 10 Pearl St. TO CLOSE-OUT black, tan, brown, etc. One and two-tone at any time. VACUUM combinations. For best selection come., early. CLEANERS $5.00 Leather Goods— Main Floor (Values to $14) WATKINS BKOTHEK.S ORIOLE Many mothers are buying th^^e FILMS $9.95 coats with next summer’s needs in < Childrens* vie'W. Coats of navy sheen; rose Jju neral DEVELOPED AND (Regular Price $19.50) and blue kasha and na'vy and tan PRINTED A limited number of re­ woo)en materials in dress and sport SUMMER GLENWOOD styles. Sizes 7 to 1'4 years. Goats 24 HOUR SERVICE conditioned electric vacuum ^trectnrs Film Deposit Box at cleaners'' in two popular that were originally priced as high DRESSES Store Entrance makes— Apex and Premier as $14.00. — special during our anni­ > Main Floor Robert K, Anderson versary sale at $9.95. These Prints, Chambray, NEW PROCESS vacuum, cleaners have been Phone: 500 or 748-'.- KEMP'S reconditioned in their own Voile factories and are in perfect working order — complete with new, cords, new brush­ es, new bags and new parts 99c HIGH C U S S — and may be purchased with Hale’s guarantee of satisfaction. Darling little cotton Vacuum Cfieaners-~Ba«men$ prints and plain broad­ cloths for play or general \ wear at the beach, .fluffy GAS RANGES voiles for diess-up occa­ sions. A good assort­ u $3.75 Table S e ts ...... $1.95 Hale’s Number Twelve ment of colors. Sizes 2 to 6 years. Some of these , Depoj Beautiful and efficient. Ven­ '. .Children’s three plecejtable sets consisting of SANITARY NAPKINS dresseswere, (prnterly a foldlnig''table and two chaiis finish^ in red. ^ 4pkg)S. $1.00 priced at' OBie dialrs have gi«en'and white canvas seats... Regular price 36c package. V C . tilated, heat controlled ovens ( J Table Set ■■"Baoement Notions— Main Floor Children’s Dresses— Main Floor assure you perfect cooking at all PKbne O ilers FU l^ times. Store Open Phone 400; and Ask Tonight Until W 0 - ’. for the Personal During your vacariotit ■' '*■ • y Prices are so low, terms so rea- 9 oVlock silverware and other ,, Shopper SOUTH Mf\h CHESTER - CONN valuables may. be de-^ sonable that every home should posited in our vault at have a perfected range. a small charge* DAVm JiMAMBEm vBUY YOUR TIRES AT WiUys-^night Olj^YGEN-ACKTLYNB ' : c o n t r a c t o r ; Overland-Whippet'^ WELDING Blacksmith ^rgttig and 'Jobbing MANCHESTER ' AN D /B lilL p E R Camj^lTs Fillip Station SERVICE The Manchester Trust Co. Charles 6 . Vi^* Nelson; OAKLYN PILLING STATION South Manchester^ Conn. 68 Hollister > street . Phone 1551, , 277 Bim£ Mid^e Turnpike GAS Company '^Telephone, 1284-2 ' ’ Tel. 8W 4I i V- ANCIENT GENERATORS Henry Ford today acquired four \ -----‘ generators^ from the Orinnell mill generators,;.reputed to be .the oldest collection of antiques kt Dearkol^b'^ New Bedford, MasB.,* July. 12 w here, through . his personal repre- in any cotton mill in the United Mich. They were installed here in trading new machines for old ones, eontatfve,- ^ Ralph ~ Synaott.>* ;;The States, will be added to the Ford 1878^ ■ .'\a. -i ■ ■ 5,.- y ., — . •"V. -