■ 1>--' ' . ' V ■ ■*>_ - j • - • " ip- ' THE W E A W ^ ' rmnemmt h r Weather Borean,^ n e t PRESS RUN irew Barea a v e r a g e - d a il y circulation OP THE EVENING HERALD ^Conn. State Library Partly clondy toni^t and Hrars for the month of December, 1927 day. 5,079 t PRICE THREE CENTS (SIXTEEN PAGES) MANCHESTER, G0NN*» WEDNESDAY, JANUARY l8 , 1928. VOL. XLIL, NO. 92. (Classified Advertising on Page 14) TWO BLAZES, PASTOR COOPE Foreign News AT BORDERS, SEEKS CHANGE In ------— CRIMES Cable Flashes EXOTETOWN New York, Jan. 18.— Thea Ma-«start,” she said in a note left to OF P R O R A T E -«> rovska’s “ great; mbnieAt” came last Warner. Sunday night when she made her She was only thirty,, and in pri­ Confesses to Attacking Berlin, Jan. 18.— Prussia today debut as an opera singer. vate life was Miss Dorothy Mierow- Old Burke Bam to the West “MiGHIGAN’S HICKM AN” appealed .to the Court of Arbitra­ The curtain rose. She looked out sl^y • # Request Amounts Virtually tion to regain 750,000 marks over­ upon a vast sea of faces. Here and Critics CJold Neighbors Children While paid in annuities to the former there were friends. Back stage were Clippings found in Thea Maroy- and New Bara at Oakland To Resipation— Church Kaiser. flowers they had sent. She sang-— ska’s effects revealed that the “ Song Dramas of the' People,” m metropolitan newspaper critics had In East, Are Destroyed By Posing As Churchman; hi r U/vIm-'i Moscow, Jan. l8.— Official an- English, German, French, Russian paid scant attention to her debut. Names tommittee to nelp l nouncement was ,made today that and Yiddish. You see, all her life Some of them did not even mention Public Passion Flames I Dimitri Kursky, commissar for jus- she had studied and worked for this it. “ Unfortunately,” said one, Fire. big moment. She had been a pupil “ Mme. Marovska cannot sing. Her Pick New Minister. | S s r = o S s a r s S . so of Yvette Gilbet, famous French sense of pitch is so flagrantly inex­ Anew Today— Legal Bat­ • i government, has been appomterl diseuse, and of .Max Reinhardt, act that it neutralizes her otherwise ------i Soviet ambassador to Italy succeed- German master of stage craft. Her delightful performance.” Another Two barns, located at extreme Fm-rth Quarterly ! ing Leo Kamenev. Kamenev lost said; “ She roamed from Eighteenth ends of Manchester and virtually tle In Court to Keep Him At last night’s Fourtn Quarterly through his connection with voice rose and fell Century - Prance to contemporary And then the curtain went down. situated on the town.llne, were des­ M Conference in tho South Methodist the Trotzky “ opposition.” The audience applauded politely rustic Anaerica.” ■ ' troyed by fire late yesterday with a Episcopal church the pastor. Rev. She seeined to sense that night, Fnim Scene of Crimes. and departed. as she stood before the footlights, loss of about $13,000. Despite the Joseph Cooper, requested the Dis- ,[ Tokio, Jan. 18.— The Japanese ... -iri emperor today officially sanctioncn Today the morgue officials are that she had “ failed.” She sm il^ lack of a hydrant in either immedi­ trict Superintendent Rev. Myron E- ^ nuptial engagement of hm seeking Thea Marovska’s relatives (a strained smllef friends ate vicinity, firemen were able to Flint, Mich., Jan. 18— Seeking to Center, who was in charge, that a | ^jj-other Prince Chichibu to Miss thought) during the bits of mono­ to take charge of her body. She save the house in each case. The avert the return of Adolph Hotel­ change in pastorates be made at | setsu Matsudaira, ended her life by inhaling in logue she injected between her songs. One of her remarks was: cause of neither biaze is known. ling to Genesee County, where he n%« southern New En..a„d | d.u.Mer the apartment of a friend, Arthur Warner, associate editor of the Na­ “ We are. all walking cemeteries, The first fire occurred about 3 killed 5-year-old Dorothy Schneider, Conference which convenes lu | ^ school "i M in which lie buried dead hopes, tion. o’clock yesterday afternoon at the William A. Siegmiller, of Owosso, March. Rev. Cooper's action is vir- j jnetn” dead ambitions, dead sorrows and “ I am a failure in my vocation old Norman Burke place on Spencer attorney for the confessed murder, tually a resignation although pro- .-russian and it is too late to make a new dead joys. jail. 18.— street, 150 feet over the Manchester appealed in Circuit Court today confirmed a town line in East Hartford. This supreme Court has and asked a change of venue for liis ' temporary injunction forbidding QUEEN OF ENGLAND property is owned by George Heim, FROWNS ON JAZZ MUSIC ! Erwin Piscator to depict the ex-- who is employed by the Underwood client. Kaiser in a play titled “ Rasputin. HARTFORD SLEUTHS Typewriter Company in Hartford. Hotelling’s confession to having London, Jan. 18.— Queen Manchester and East Hartford fire attacked two neighbors’ children at Mary still frowns op jazz. apparatus boni ; sponded to the Rome, Jan. IS.— It pays to do The Queen danced last night Owosso has fanned anew the flames things in a big way in^This countiy. RUN DOWN REPORTS alarm. The’ house was saved by Parents who have ten or more chil- at the first servants’ ball that means of a bucket brigade and of resentment here and grave fears she and King George have given chemicals. A five acre crop of 1927 are expressed that a new lynching ; dren are exempt from municipal even to the employes at the Roy­ j taxes in Florence and some other tobacco, ten tons of hay. farming effort will be made if he is brought al Palace at Sandringham— but implements and a pig burned. A to .Genesee county for trial. ■ cities. All Sorts of Rnmors Con­ the Queen danced the quadrille. cow and horse were caved. The old Genoa, Jan. 18.— Boxing took The. King looked on for a Burke homestead was a well known TELLS iVLL another forward step in Italy to­ while at the dancing, and the road resort many years ago, being Ionia, Mich.. Jah. day when Premier Mussolini ap­ cerning Missing College Prince of Wales and the Duke widely known as a trading center Bfolelling, revealed now as the fiemt pointed General Carini as president and Duchess of York joined in for horses. The loss is estimated at I who attacked two chilnren of his of the Italian Boxing Federation. the dancing, but always the $ 10, 000. I Owosso neighbors and suspected of Girl Reach Police. musicians played waltzes, schot- New Barn Bums • being the “ Ape Man” who terror- tisches and quadrilles. The other fire started in* the new iized Owosso housewives ly® 30 by 30 foot barn owned by Henry Adolph j ago, is readir to plead guilty to “ Michigan’s Edward Hickman” is pictured above. He — —is ------, . Dorothy Hartford, Conn., Jan. 18.— Ru­ ■Welsen of 16 Montowese street, Hotelling confessed slayer of five-year-old Dorothy gdineider of FUnt, murder of h-yeer-oiu 'STATE JUST SWAPS mors of the presence in Hartfprd Hartford, and located in Oakland Mich. The child was stabbed to death and her body, thrown in a creek. Schneider. . near the Vernon town line. The 'lYoops had to be called out to disperse would-be lynchers after Hotel­ In an amplified confession today of Miss Frances St. John Smith, barn was almost totally destroyed written by himself. Hotelling said: missing college student, are keep­ but the house, which was former!v ling confessed! “ ■Wishing Jo clean up everything MONEY WITH TOWNS ing Hartford detectives busy. No occupied by Bh-ed Baxter, was saved in these matters and to make a satisfactory results have come from TO FORGET HATE by the Manchester Fire Department, clean breast of it all, I hereby con­ which was' forced to lay 1,300 feet Harvard Boys Come Back fess to the attack up.on Esther investigation of the rumors which .of hose to reach the nearest hyd­ Skinner at O^k HiU cemetery, spring up every few hours an^ gen­ rant. Owosso, on or about February 17, Rev. Joseph Cooper Figures Show That Taxes erally concerned some young wom­ For some time the Baxter home A t Girls Over ‘‘Bare Legs* 1926 and to the attack upon Ella cedure in the Methodist Episcopal an who has come to town either for '"You Must Work For Fu- has been unoccupied. It was sold May Horn near Carland, on April church does not allow for a resigna­ Paid Are Returned In the business reasons or has nqissed a recently to Mr. "Welsen by Holden 27 192;7-.** train connection out of town. & Nelson, local real estate and in­ Before* the day is over the lif^ tion. Cambridge, Mass., Jan. 18- Girls ^ “ And even if the girls in question Up To Conference The latest important report came taro” Cuban Advises Pau- surance dealers, who said that they sentence for the mutder of little Form of State Aid. from Mrs. Nathan Corliss, keeper of had insured the barn for $1,500. of Radcliffe College, Sargent School discreetly whisper a depilatory so­ Dorothy may be passed on the mi(l- No vote was taken by the church a boarding house at 21 Spring There was nothing of value in the and Miss Leslie’s School, who com­ lution, the Harvard athlete would dle-aged churchman, whose Jekyll body following Rev. Cooper’s ac­ street. Mrs. Corliss told police that Aroerican Congress, barn. plained to the Cambridge PqUee of probably be no more, willing to give and Hyde personality embraced a tion since the granting of the a young lady called at her house In one comer was a small pile of Harvard athletes*, exposing ’^‘baro up tlirir Esau birthright than to mild-mannered public *Ae cloaked minister’s request rests entirely Hartford, Conn., Jan. IS— Con­ yesterday afternoon, engaged a hay and it is believed that some and hairy.legs,i'

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7 MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HBR'AHD. WEDNESDAY, JANtfART 18,192*. ■RSBETWO D.S.PI Conn El Ser pfd tAar gnTteit-".' nT74%-^174 LDOREY.HERE, Alannlacturing Stocks Am St Fdy . 66% 65% 75 SHORT WAVE RtiAO Local Stocks Americau Hardware .. 80 82 Am Sugar . . 75 R ockville r-. ^ ^IGNORED ACCIDENT American Silver...... 25. 28 Ana T & T ,.178% 178% ] WILL AD) STIMSON Acme W ire ...... - — 15 Am Woolen ,. 23 23 IS FEBRUARY IIT H (Furnished by Putnam & Co.) Billings Spencer com. 1 3 lAhacodkia .-. 55 64% Washington, Jan. 18,— The right Bid Asked Billings Spencer pfd . 2 5 Beth Steel . .. . A6% 56 Fish & Game Club To Dine , Who Said iNothing of In- 'tho. American press to ade^ate Hank Stocks Bigelow Hart com .!. 93 96 Can Pac ----- 21)8% 207% ; The Rockville Fish & Game dirt) 'jiiry. Is Oporated On For length radio facilities Bristol B ra ss...... 10 \/15‘’ StT^aul.'IS ' 17% has extended an invitation to the City Bank & Trust . .840 — 34% V Brain Conens^on* ^ Whh» Mrs. Dore; W i Return WM impT^sed upon the Federal Capital Natl Bank . . .285 — Collins C o ...... 107 ,, vdo pfd'. .. <. 34% Fish & Game clubs of Manchester Com inH 'tAi* For H ^io Commission today by J^eph Colt Firear*"-...... 30 31 ciil & North. . 84% 84% t'tinn *Itlver ...... 300 li0% and Stafford Springs to attend their Clarehce Mlkoleit of 21. Wood­ Pierson of Chicago, chairman (« tho First Bond and Mort _ 55 Eagle L o c k ...... " 82 85 C h iR ocIsl.. 110% annual banquet which will be held To Philippines as Govern­ Amhrjean Publishers’ cable aaS ra­ ■121% Schoors% Social land .street was operated ,on at First Natl (Htfd) . . .290 Fafnir B earin g...... 1a2 ^115 Cons GaSi ... ., A?2% at the Rockville House, Thursday dio .Committee. : 4S5 Com l^dd f. 67% Memorial hospital fpday in an ef­ Hart Natl B & Tr . . .475 Hart & C ooley...... 215 evening, January 26th, at 8 o’clock. fort‘■to. relieve an apparent concus­ »‘The press is engaged In- the Inter Silver com ...1 8 1 190 Dei &'HUd .180% T80% ment OfficiaL Htfd Conn Tr C o ----- 750 19% An elaborate-turkey dinner will be Are Announced. sion of the brafn, Dr. Thomas H. communication business on a more l.and Mtg & Title . . . — 60 Inter Silver pfd ....124 — Dodge Bros .. 19% tremendous and far-reaching Male, Du Pont .... 314 314 served by Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Chap- Weldon and Dr. Caldwell were the Morris Plan Bank . . .140 — Landers, Frary & Clk 82 84 delaine. Tickets may he secured and: W a respect more vital the E r ie ...... 62% 62 surgeons In attendance on the boy. General Halstead Dorey, liason Park Si Tr ...... 550 — Mann' & Bow A .... 18% 20 132% from members or at the City Lunch The accident 'of which the Injury public, than any other group; ap­ Riverside T ru st...... 5 j — do B ...... 9 11 Gen E l e c ___ 132 The Junior Prom, one of the officer and aide to the late Govern­ Gen Motwrs . . .132 131% U5 to Sunday nigitt, at two dollars io the result occurred at the Bon pearing, or likely to appear, before PhoenLx St B Tr . . . .410* — New Brit Ma pfd A . .100 — social events of the year, will be or-General Leonard Wood of the this commission except the; Army Gi|lett .^5! .>. . l a l 101 a plate. The menuTqllows: - held in the High School assembly Ami factory, where the boy is-em­ Bonds do com . . . .' ...... 2 6 28 234 Oyster Cocktail Philippine Islands, has received a and Navy.” Pierson said. . , Bart E L 7 s ...... 897 403 Niles Be Pond ...... 28 32 Int,Harv . . . . 235 hall on Saturday night, Febru- ployed, on Monday. He is said to Celery ' ’ Queen Olives similar appointment under Henry “The' American Publishers’ .qo™" Conn L P 5VoS ------107 110 J R Mont pfd ...... — '<5 Ini Nickel . _9.3 % 9.1% it was announced today by have been struck by a falling beam L. Stimson, the new goverror^gen-.. Int Paper ..68%. 6-7*% ^ Sweet Mixed Pickles S n cip .r r u Quimiy: EmoY, tarthVurtY.olilog oY 'lhe aiald»« W mitteq,. la composed of newspapers Brid Hyd 5 s ...... ''04 — North & Ju d d ...... 30 32 81% and press associations reaching.'7 East Conn I’uwer ...1 0 0 102 Pratt, Whitney pfd . . 89 —- Kenn'Ocott .... 81% feeef Broth A L’Ahglaise,' Knight has been elected chairman at the time and kept on working. about two weeks to resume his Lehi Valley ...95% 95 Finger Rolls He had said little or nothing to 000,000;persons in the United Conn L P 4 ^ ^ s ...... 101 103 Peck, Stowe & Wil . 1 9 21 of the general committee. duties. States d^]^. It includes the. Hearst Marl o n ...... 37% 37% Roast Stuffed Vermont Turkey Decorations will be in charge of members of his family concerning Insurance Stocks Russell Mfg C o ...... 88 90 51 General Dorey, with Mrs. Dorey, newspapora, the International^ews Aetna Insurance 800 Scoville Mfg C o ...... 51 53 Mo Pac com .. 51 Cranberry Sauce Miss Minnie B. Rook and Har­ the matter and he appeared to be N Y ,Cpnt . .160% 160% is visiting here at the home-of Clif­ Serviced fbe United Press, the'Chi­ Aetna Cas & Sure . .1360 1400 Smyth Mfg Co ..,,.400 425 Mashed Potatoes Mashed Turnips riet D. Condon, high school teach­ all right. This morning, however, N§w-'iTaveii ‘ . 61 % - .60% ford D. Cheney of 40 Hartford cago TitbUne, the Christian Science Aetna E i f e ...... t>>>0 840 Stanley Wks conl.^tv.,. 62 64 Heart of Lettuce Russian Dressing ers, Florence.Schietdge being chah-- his condition grew so serious that road and will leave tomorrow to MonitotXy^Bfe Philadelphia . Public Nor Am Co .... 61 % 61% r' Frozen Pudding it was decided to have an operation Conn General...... 1800 1830 Standard .^crc / . . . .168 95% man of the student committee, visit elsewhere in the Ledgers and"the Times, Wor(d. and , Torripgton...... 93. 96 Nor Pac ..... 95 % Fancy Cake Coffee which consists (Of Frances. Schultz, performed to remove the cause of Autom obile...... 370 380 PenC R R .... 64 % 6.4% before they return to the Philip­ Herald Tftrlbnne of New York.!’ - Bart Fire ...... 800 810 i U S Envelope pfd . ...114 J, W. Titcomb, superintendent Victor Swanson and James Wilson. the concussion. pines. Mrs. Dorey is a, daughter of Pierson assailed the position of Post Cweal .. 124 % 124% It was said today at the plant of Hart St Boil . .'...... 850 875 Union Mfg Co ...... 20 82% of the State Board of Fisheries Collins Drlggs is chairman of the the late Knight D. Cheney of this the Radio Corporation of America Pull New .... 82% the Orford Soap company that no Lincoln Nat Life . . . .110 — Whit Coil P ip e ...... — 97% and Game, will'be present and will music committed, which also in­ town. and other . commonication ;com- Radio Corp . . . 99% report of the accident had been National F ir e ...... 1050 1175 Sears Roe ■..., 83 82% be one of the speakers of the eve­ cludes Myrtle Johnson and Marr The appointment is to the Same panies that se'ek’# Prevent the li­ Phoenix ...... 810 825 :i2 i% ning. The committee have left no Jorie Donahue. ■ The refreshment made. It was said, however, that position which. General Dorey held censing of private'sfidrt wave Itogth T ravelers...... 1650 1670 Sou 'Pac ?. . '.r. 121 % an investigation will be started Sou Rail . .. .142% 142% stone unturned in an effort to make committee is headed by Leslie Buck- under General Wood for several stations. , R ossia ...... 170 173 39% the event one long to he remember­ land and the other members are right away. The boy evidently dis­ years. He is an aide to the gov­ “ It seems to be hinted here'that Public Utility Su cks N.Y. Stocks S O of N J . .39% Sludebaker .. 57% 57% ed and it is hoped that they will Robert Treat, Thelina Carr and missed the incident as a trivial ernor-general in the government of raf E A ' The No Sale Policy of this store flashes through and at the same time absolved Tichacek of New York City, Frank them he wanted the papers for scale. w 11 ^| Joseph Hank, of Manchester, from Stachura, Jr., of Stamford. Anna, Hartford, and Herbert L. of this Bishop Diaz, a Roman Catholic DUKE OF r.lCHMOND DEAD the torrent of sales and price slashing of Men's all blame in the^ffair. The suit Joseph, Michael and John of Hartr town. She also leaves eleven grand­ bishop of .” , j s E A U Clothing TO YOU telling you that there is h^iven grew out of an automobile accident ford, aipd Jacob of South Manches­ children and seven great grand­ Heflin said his name was linken about a year ago. The case had ter, Thomas and Helen of Ellington children. She was a menaber of the to the documents because ‘'I was London, Jan. 18.— Charles Ed­ of good values at right prices the year round near ^ been on trial nearly a week. and eleven grandchildren. The First" Presbyterian church of Hart­ doing everything in my power to ward Gordon-Lennox, seventh Luke of Richmond, d'ed today. s E - III by. ' ' ’ ■ . Mrs. Sutton was a passenger in funeral was held at St. Joseph's ford. She came to Manchester to prevent the Roman Catholics from 1 Sulll'van’s car In Manchester in Polish church this morning at live about 17 years ago. using the United S^Res army to. The Duke was born in London 1926 when the car was involved in 9 o’clock, with a high requiem Funeral services will be held fight the battles of the Roman Cath­ on Dec. 27, 1S45. He .served as E L l a Set your course for this store and let nothing a collision with Hank’s machine. mass. Rev. Sigismund Worenecki Thursday afternoon at 1:45 from olic church in Mexico.” ' aide-de-campe to Queen Victoria, B She named Sullivan a co-defendant. Watkins Brothers . Rev. Dr. J. F. He criticised Mr. Hearst for pub­ King Edward and King George and deter you. Here is the place wheye you p^y a officiated. Burial was in St. Under *ew-lia:V^s passed at the Bernard cemetery. Johnstone of Hartford will officiate. lishing the documents _ was one of the most expensive land^ L l i nominal price for suits and overcoats ^ t 'last session of the (Connecticut leg­ The burial will he in the old North “ He (Hearst) is willing to dea( owners in. England, his properties' sale islature a claimant for damages, John Kulo cemetery in Hartford. with Roman Catholic Mexican totalling more than 286,000 acres- round. No big depreciation of value at such'as Mrs.''Sutlbn, may not sue John Kulo, age., IS years, son of | thieves in order to traduce and slan­ time. driver of tlie car In which she Mrs. Carrie Kulo of Windermere | der Senators of his own country, is a passenger^ unless the driver is avenue, died at his home on Tues­ ACID THROWER FINED said Heflin. day morning, after several weeks’ Hundreds of men have investigated—bought driving recklessly or without due care. illness. He was born in this city Waterbury, Conn.. Jan. 18.— MISSING BOY bOUND our clothing, found it absolutely first class as ad­ on Dec. 25, 1909, the son of the Michael Sheslow. 31, was finedq ^ ■b' K iddies T heater C dupoiti. late Henry Kulo. He .attended St. $200 and costs and given a sus-, Hanover, N. H., Jan. 18.--Hugo vertised and our policies “true blue.” POUlTRnUllS'SSBOW Joseph’s Parochial school. Besides pended sentence of thirty days in g^^dek, Jr., Dartmouth student and THIS rOlIPON WITH 5 CENTS, ENTITLES. ANY jail, when arraigned in Police | famous Pennsylvanw CHibD TO (OMISSION TO THE -BARGAIN his mother he is, survived by four who We offer you an extensive assortment of fine brothers, Frank and Stan'ey of this Court today On the charge of ] g ^te college football coach. MATINEE” AT THE Suits and Overcoats^fr^ which we ieel Mi'eYoh SET S'9 AND 10 city, and Peter Kulo of Chicopee, throwing'v acid with maPciouc in-1 reported missing was tent Shehlow was accused of 1 up today when word caraeTl^i Mass., Joseph Kulo of Dobsonville, . , ____n r, i ______mntVlpr I'd NetV c ^ find what jmu wantj^^ 1/ , r U and One" bister, "Mrs. Mary Macho- throwing the caustic poison on j young Bezdek’s mother ih ^ New chesE8f» Poultry club will' clothing of Mrs. Michael Shitkas, i York and his father Jn John Hop- hold its annual show on February nick of this ci.y ’’"he fuaeral will kins hospital, Baltimore, denying be held at St. Joseph's Polish and of following the woman on 8, 9 and 10 in the store formerly When arrested, acid that their son had “ disappeared Saturday AfternooUj Jan., 21 occupied by Mark Holmes at the church on Thursday morning at 9 the street, They indicated that he w-nt under marks' were found on the man’s corner of .North Main an.1 North o’clock. Rev. Sigismund Worenecki the surgecin’s knife for a tonsolilis ' BAG DOUBL|J FEATURE BILL School streets, it was decided at the. will officiate. Burial will be in St. clothing. operati-i and was recovering at the George H, Williams meeting of the club last night. Bernard’s cemetery. home of a friend near New. York. SNYDER TRIAL JUDGE The show will not be so much MARRIED IN GREENWICH Incorporated this year as it has been formerly Notes The fire department was called for there is not so much room in Greenwich, Conn., Jan. 18.— Open until 7:30 Monday, Tuesday, Friday evenings. the store as there was in the arm­ out to extinguish a chimney fire TED RONDEAU’S in the honie of William Sadlak of Justice Townsend Scudder, who pre- JOHNSON BLOCK, SOUTH MANCHESTER ory where the shows were formerly . sided over the Snyder-Gray murder •held. Entry ^blanks and catalogues West .Main street on Monday ,eve and - . -J* ning. "" and who how is investigating will be published-'soOn so that the fhe Queen, New York,, sewer scan­ Stage and Modern 8 PARK PLACE, ROCKVILLE entries may be’ made. Alfred Rosenberg of the .Star Hardware Co., is on a four days’ dal, was married here at noon u.- Joseph Tammany, who was su­ ..'ay to Miss Alice McCutcheon, of , perintendent of the show last year, business trip to Boston. Ro .nd'Hill, Greenwich, daughter of School of Dancing South Manchester The Annual Parish Supper will has heea re-appoi'nted for this f he late James H. McCutcheon, who Branch from Hartford show. be held at the St. Johns'Episcopal was known as “ The Linen King.” church on Thursday evening. The The ceremony took place in Room 3, state Theater Bids supper will be served at 6 o'clock Christ Episcopal church, with the. ‘’"THE LOTI WOODMEN POSTPONE after which there will be a business Ilov. Frederick G. Budlong, recloi South Manchester meeting of the various organiza­ his slave: An e.\oUb of the church, presiding. The wed- Open Daily 1 p. m. to 10 p. m. was a and slayiw tions of the church. cing was quiet and apparently onl*’ THEIR INSTALLATION Phone 1180 A KESEK CLINICAL , Victory Assembly, Catholic by accident was the fact revealed. Ladies of Columbus, will hold a rector— naturally— a great picture! South Manchester Camp, No. regular meeting Thursda'y evening '9280, Moderri Woodmen of Ameri­ at 7:30. STARRING BILLIE DlOVE ca, will hold its regular meeting Damon Lodge Knights of Pythias THERMOMETER FREE tomorrow night;"in Tinker Hall at are making ’ plans to present a 'eight o’clock, it was planned to pageant sometime in April or May. Final Showing Tonight TOMORROW, ONE DAY ONLY install the officers of the camp at The Sunshine Sewing Circle will hold a meeting at the home of Mrs. DOUBLE F e a t u r e s tomorrow night’s meeting but be b e t t e r TH a n t h e GORILLA cause of the Get Together club Walter Murphy of Franklin street, Marie Prevofet Lon Chaney AND A meeting in Cheney Hall which will this evening. The Rockville Girls club will hold -rin — attract several of the Woodmen It -m- has been decided to postpone in­ a public whist in their rooms on stallation until 'Thursday February Thursday evening at 8:15. Refresh­ » “Nomads of North’^ 2 . ments will be served and prizes “Almost a Lady ’s UNIVERSAL awarded. Mrs. Sarah Wilson of Brooklyn A comedy-drama of un­ fascinating story of Cana­ FIREMEN OVER NORTH street Is the guest of relatives in usual surpriaes and thrills. da. Brqad Brook.' ~ t is Fred Schwalm of Prospect street “ THE HOUSE PAD TO HAVE D M E SERIES is confined to the house,by Illness. 1^9 The members o f Hose Company Thomas Deal of New York is the OF HITS’ ‘’‘THE No. 1, Manchester Fire department, gtiest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. are completing plans for a series of Horace Deal of West Main street. WITH EDMUND LOWE TOMORROW EVENING ONLY for Costs Friday night dances to be held at Mrs. Emil Marti of Orchard less the hose house at Main and Hil­ street has entered the Hartford The . liard street-s starting this week hospital for treatment. , $ than Both modern, and old fashioned The Union Congregational Popular 8.50 1-3 cent dancilng will be on,the program and church will hold their annual busi­ 3 Acts $1.50 A1 Behrend’s, orchestra has been ness meeting Thursday evening at an secured to play. .Dancing will start which time reports' of all the or­ Hazel & Thompson Jimmy Malonejh ' down. ganizations will be read and bfficiers FRIDXY^m pTHi^ hour at-eight o’clockV Lou Beebe has Offering a variety of non­ A young chap' who $1.00 been engaged as prompter. The elected. . ' . ' to use. sense entitled t ! 2—FE ATU RE& ^^:^f ?. month •firemen assure all, whei attend th® 'The' Rockville Athletic Associa­ ciaHzes in everyiihiiig and .dahces.n good time. The floor at tion will hold their meeting this “ A COUPtE 'O F NUTS” lots of it; tha~-halL,^ ls , ,go<^ and a good evening instead of Thursday as Wore Fun 'i-A ^ O R G E «rowd ist expeeteja.] previously announced. Marie Dawne Than a M The three degrees of heat in the Universal Electric served and Rising Star Lodge, < I. O. O. F. Not the biggest and the S lH ^ E Y The girl with the golden Chowder pophlar will prevail held a regular meeting Monday best show in the country, Heating Pad are, controlled by four thermostats ■which evening after which District Deputy voice and the twinkling Party ’ FREE BED SUND’S ANNUAL but the biggest and the* best automatically distribute the heat evenly throughout th& . President Carl Goehring and staff toes. AIEBTING TO) BE JAN. 524. installed the following oflfleers for A singing apd idancing show for the money. No pad and maintain it at the exact temperature desired. the ensuing year: advance in prices. The annual meeting and election Noble Grand— Carlton L. Buck- act deluxe. of officers of the Tuberculosis Free in^LANCY’S.koSHriR WEDDING By changing he position of the switch an approximate mister. AND ON THE RIALTO SCREEN: Bed fund association of Cheney Vice Grand—Adolph Franz. THE YEAR’S COMEDY WOW! | Brothers will be held on Tuesday, heat of 125 degrees at low, 160 degrees at medium,-and Recorciing Secy.— A. T. Dickin­ An Irish-Jewish picnic of n January 24 at 5:05 p. m. in the son. Rudolph Schildl|u*aut in rest room of the machine shop, it bage mixes with gfelte flsch'^d ij^ds inVe glor 195 degrees at high is assured the user. Simple^and Finaacial Secyi— ^Howard E. Lit­ Donnybrook Fair! I annoimceiii today by Robert L tle.;: safe to use. Invaluable for children i'Fryer;. secretary, ; . ■ ^Treasurer— Arthur Schmeiske. ADDED FEATURE^ i An 4ilvitati(iii^has: been extendec, Warden— Harry Mbrganson. ito aU*ltiose who are interested in Conductor— Albert Schmeiske. ’S SOFEN o ;- the work of the association and,;ln Chaplain— Linwood Campbell. tubercfulosis work generally; His igndnuit tkoiKht he had a boy R. S. S,—-John DeCarii, hock,’* but when they sought to separate th em -^^e ^ T jOOD "DAMAGE L. S. S.— Harold Mead. Washington, Jan. 18.-—To repair see this amazing film of life and love on New Yonis SUNDAY AND damage wrought by the recent New R. S. N, G.--Harry Aborn. England floods, the Central Ver L. S. N. G.— Frank. Green. east side. ' The Manchester Electric Co. R. S. V. G.— David Gilpin. ' Richard Barthehness in “ mont railroad today asked the lu Current Issue of,Latest Pathe News Events. L. S V G— Clarence Metcalf ,773 Main Street Telephone 1700 ter state Commerce Commission for to issue $5,000,000 o? re- , Inside Guardian-r-Georp Thomp- irUficates',* ' ' Outside GuarffiSfl---Hehry Meyers., - •'^:»,‘ir

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£l'»‘ ? > .tfi. rr-- . -^•• ■'•r-r- *-■. *' m ' ' ^ CHAMBER SUITE SPECIAL DINING SUITE SPECIAL 8 P^A/«£ka ^'’* Her&’s.an?ItaiDitbaVs typical of January Sale r icC eS values. 66 inch Buffet, extension table and set of,phg,irs I J- -> »-^ ■""» I* ■*., 'f : I v O O as pictured—Im walnut and,; > Kuniwopd :0f/ vpry^-; ; vn? X.o lAi' ,? •'.?»■ - 'ir .> y; 4- , * I, ?i. : ifv. i-,;'«-^- i pleasing appearance. A weli-built suite that Has sold for $177.50. ^ .;•' '^i.’ . (-^ V’ . A Year to Bay” cMna Closet may be a'diddd at flO extra, n-. i i ;-• ■£/ ■r,' •■' . ^ v’ T^ice ayeW, P here are given ,a general overhauling.. Not juggled a dozen time§ a year. Not\marked down from / ‘*1 some exorbitant level. ^ ^ All year round the furniture values at Keith’s have to stand the test of competition— and\they do stand it most successfully A three piece eonibii^tioh of bow-end bed, dres^s- er and triple Airriar.yai^ty that sella regular at 3 Pieces ‘ in honeist values for reliable goods. '« $147.50. ,. -ihicli AhWrKftn walfmt with gumwood , posti arid rails. J., A srifte for little money. We do not handle shoddy merchandise— sale times or other > $ 1 1 9 .5 0 Bed, dresser aSfid cilPi^ ii preferred at fli4.50. l’U>' ' times. But in January we dp clean house on our regular line of “A Year to Pay” goods. Mark down prices are put in effect wherever, we .have surplus stock we desire to move—and they are genuine reduc­ tions on standard articles— and they do sell the goods and give Extrao^iriary Universal Washer US a volume of business at a time which would otherwise be very Rug Values ( “ A Y ear '' quieh ■ $135 to Pay** A suite which we have been selling regularly for' Sola and Chair $165 in the full -three pieces. Now we have a cer-' THAT’S WHYI : tain number to offer Ivery special. Jn two piecfeP" ' only-—coveredsdn comjjination of attractive Baker cut velour and plainrvelour on back and ends. "'■ ' . lO-S'gi^eSj Sellhig rPgularly at $57.50#and Looks just as shown>iand is well made throughout; ^ $62.5l>. Now for $39.50. $I a week. ‘A Year, to Pay’ Wing Chair .may. be |a^ded‘at ^40 extra. \ * I - Folks Like To Trade 27 I n c h AXM mSTER r u g s . i \ •» >?- V-•^• 1 -Mottled hit or L . - 7 • L p i i i V ‘ l i , ' ? miss patterns with plain color- at Keith^s i»: ed border., N'ow * > / 'j I I .'J ; j|i la'n ‘I.-.’ I . . ■ • t' . ;i:: . r'. . 1- - - I t t ' l t f , Regular Price • BECAUSE—they have found it a pleasant place to trade. .. j I j' ' ». 14.50 <''ST^r^i^=' , v Plenty of freedom to shop around and make selections without pressure* Plenty o f courteous and lielpfuh attention always available when they want it. -i BECAUSE— they have found it a convenient place to trade. v,;4']u r b A special purchase enables us -i J .1 • r H. it Easy to get to by foot, car or trolley—^but out of the jam and free BEDDING SPECIALS to offer a limited quantity of from parking problems. these standard high grade Uni­ Pure hayer felt cottpp mattress, all, sizes, versal machines. A cylinder <-• ^r-- BECAUSE—they have fotind it a reliable place to trade'. ih heavyweight plain .thiing w;ith rolled edge. type washer that is well known f t>i i ;No semblance of misrepresenting either goods or value is eyer and carries a five year triple ELENmjQE. SAVINGS^ON ^SIOTS yery, MATTRESS ; n‘- •'Ni rWrilnut finished panel bed, st|png Hrik spring and good wliite^cotton mat­ " When SO many dozens upon dozens of real January* Sale tress. Just as shown. I&gular price KERENS THE BEST PARLOR ,, bargains arpsput on display— and when you may just as well have $37.50. An exceptional bargain at ^ /th e m iEts anyrafei else— when you can get them on credit if you “ ■ suite' v a l u e o f a l l . haven’t the cash. ;: It’s the time to buy furniture—and Keith’s is the placer $ 2 4 .5 0 A suite that we consider a wonderful value at the regular price of $326.' The illus­ $1 a Wjiilc, tration below pictures It accurately, but hardly does it justice; Large, roomy 'pieces— ■' ;4; soft, deep spring construction on sturdy frames—upholstere^d all over, in ri9h,. high-piled *- . A- ^ mohair of the finest quality—beautifully tailored and decorated with eirnamental feet and- f arm panels. Reverse cushions are in dainty frieze. ; ; , , This is furniture of'i'eal charnaC.,, V -■ i ^ ^ > 1 J l . j .• = * W (i .fevJ A REAL A n M o h d r - $^50 JdMMBER SUITE at "A Year to Pay” “A Year to Pay” ^ Pieces, Bed; Dresser and Chest.

This is a Jamestown made suite, and is excellent furniture. in ’ Built acebtdihg to the best standards of construction, in charm- ing style;; jplmn, but very b^utiful. The finish is a lovely Hugue­ not wainiit of finely matched veneers, with a small colored inlay on each piece. ii , s • ' B ^, dresser and chest of drawers priced regularly at $165. Now$139;50i , ' Bed, Dresser and Full Length ■/ ■ i Triple-Mirror Vanity at ( • Or the bed, dresser and large vanity, may ’ be bought at $15fli50.v $159.50 ■ .**A Yrar to Pay”

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‘9 of a smallpox epidemic, and ^ j8anil|»«tMr only. It is a serious mistake to h’e/^ lieve that by observing habits of F.A Ettpnins B ftalb strict personal cleanliness and PUBIilSHBD BT avoiding physical contact with THE HERAIiD PRINTING CO. Futtiishing A Colofiittl Bcdtooin dt strangers one may keep clear of*th® Pounded by Elwood S. EIa. Oct. 1. 1881 germs of the disease. Smallpox is Every Evening Except Sundays and the most virulently contagious ail­ ‘ Holidays. __ ^ _ i Entered at the Post Office at Man- ment known. Walking cases are en­ I Chester as .Second Class ^ 1 1 ^ t u r . I SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By / Mall tirely capable of bestowing their (42) Electrical Machinery in-Connecticut. j six dollars a year, sixty cents a malignant poisOn on persons who The manufacture of electrical machinery, apparatus and sup- 1 month for. shorter periods. do not approach within several feet By carrier, eighteen cents a week. pUes is Gohnecticut’s fourth greatest indus,try, in so far as value I Single copies, three cents. of them. When smallpox is abroad, \ SPECIAL advertising REPRE- unless one shuts himself up in his of product is concerned. In comparison with other states in ; SENTATIVE, Hamilton-De Lisser, the union Connecticut’s product in this industry is seventh in I Inc.. 2S5 Madison Avenue. New York house and maintains a quarantine I and 612 North Michigan Avenue, against the world at large, there is value. j. Cliicago. The Manchester Evening Herald Is no safety in Isolation. Although Connecticut does not rank among the leaders In Furniture ? on sale in New York City at Schultz’s News Stand. Sixth Avenue and 42nd. Moreover it is the copamon^t of production value, the value of her product increased 447% Street and 42nd. Street entrance of errors to imagine that there is such from 1914 to 1926, the total value for all states was ?335,170,- Grand Central Station and at all Hoatlin^ News Stands. a thing as “ mild” smallpox. The 19,4. Connecticut’s share was $14,38.0,000, or 4.2% of the total. comparative "mildness of the mani­ During 1925, Connecticut plants turned out goods valued at Client of International News Ser- j vice. festations of the disease in so many $78,365,923 or 5.08% of the total for the United States which "International News Service has the instances is due to the relative im­ was $l”,540,002,041. exclusive rights to use for republlca- tion in any form all news dispatches munization of the patients by partly Massachusetts, ranking sixth during 1925,- produced goods credited to or not otherwise credited worn-out vaccination, just possibly in this paper. It Is also exclusively valued at $147,056,901. New York was first with a product entitled to use for republication all to inherited partial^ immunization worth $239,262,1174 Illinois was second and Pennsylvania ■ the local or undated news published from vaccinated parents. And any ■ third, having a product valued at $237,301,784 and $236,843,- herein." Full Service Client of N B A 492 respectively. Ohio was fourth and New Jersey fifth. Service. one of these “ mild” cases is capable n of passing on to any promising Sixty-five Connecticut factories employed an average of 16,- WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18, 1928 The poster-bed can be the subject a case of virulent smallpox, 458 persons during 1925, the wages and salaries totaling $22,- 122,634. Materialh cost $34,245,876. starting point for your new A -bracket-foot chest*, the than which there is nothing nlore room. Then group appropriate same as sketched above except­ HOOVER dreadful and few diseases more pieces about it. \ This model, ing with 3 ’deep drawers in­ It is rather remarkable, the Tomorrow—The Slavery Days of mahogany and gumwood, stead of four, is made of birch, fatal. finished red mahogany. d» O C speed with which the Hoover boom The only known safeguard when regular 4 ^ 0 0 7 $39.50 ...... Regular $45.00 ...... is growing. At Christmas time the smallpox is about is vaccination- Secretary of Commerce looked to general and recent. be no more than a fairly good bet it their life work to picture the 000,000 pounds of sugar valued Many persons balk at the idea at $232,330,000. You don’t, have to be furnishing or as the Presidential nominee of the evils of alcoholic enslavement and of vaccination. Many are bitterly If that sugar and tea could be refurnishing a bedroom to take advan- Republican party. Today, althou^ to persuade individuals to adopt produced at • home, the benefit opposed to it. It is a subject con­ teetotalism, were among the great­ take of the suggestions here, for there nobody knows where the delegates cerning which there is neveriohding would be the farmer’s. are that would make his nomination est and most beneficent social are pieces for practically every other and sometimes acrimonious debate. For some time. Senator How­ sure, the name of Hoover stands out forces of the age. It is one of the room in the house. That’s the beauty Possibly it is true that in isolated keenest tragedies of ^prolilbition ell has been ballyhooing artichokes of Colonial designs— ^the pieces are inter­ from all the rest. for domestic sugar, apd cassina instances vaccination has had un­ that they have well nigh disappear­ changeable. Our stock offers dozens of It is doubtful if any change what­ fortunate consequences: but at mate, a species of holly growing ed, for they did a magnificent work, from Virginia to New Mexico, for other combinations of Colonial pieces. ever has developed in the relation­ worst such instances are very rare ship between Hoover and the poli­ and one of , which there is more domestic tea. He has been sponsor­ __and the whole weight of the evi­ crying necessity now than ever be­ ing such minor legislation as is nec­ The dressing table sketched is ticians or Hoover and Big Business, dence is that it is vaccination alone essary to carry out experiments fore. ' \ made by tacking the cretonne skirt so-called. Just why the drift of which has freed the world from with these plants and to introduce and valance to a 20x30 inch table. If the Connecticut Temperance^ them to the farmer^ sentiment should set s(i strongly to­ those devastating visitations of the A gateleg table can be folded. The table is solid mahogany; turned A bit of color can be added ward him appears to have just one Union carries out its present intent “ Levulpse is 75 per cent sweeter legs; 1 drawer. Without to the room with one of these loathesome disease which, until the than sugar and is a desirable sugar against the wall or at the arm cretonne" covered chairsV^ They explanation— which is that the of advocating temperance, and if it of your cozy wing chair. Thb skirt, rjeg. $27.00 ...... $22 Jenner discovery, swept over great in every form,” says Howell. “ I be­ (Cretonne from the Drapery have pleated flounces that al­ practical politicians have just re-' is joined by organizations all over lieve that the artichoke can even­ top of this one is 30 inches areas of the world, leaving wide­ Shop.) most hide the legs. ■ inembered something; that Herbert the country in such efforts as were tually be made the mainstay of out round when opened. spread death and maiming in their Regular Regular 46: Q Q 7 ^ ^ Hoover, for all his going about his made in that direction ten or twen­ national sugar supply and relieve us $55.00 ___ _ § aJ wakes. ty years ago, perhaps eventually from the necessity of Importation.” $19.50 ...... $ 9 .9 8 Even to the clock your room own affairs and doing as little as There are at least eight weeks can' be Colonial. This 8-day part of the disasters brought about might be to'seek favor with the of winter ahead of us. It is almost So Howell has sent Department banjo model is 26 inches high, by prohibition will be compensated. has gold face and eagle and country at large, has a closer con- impossible to stamp out a smallpox of Agriculture bulletins to 110,000 I tact with th^ hearts of the American Nebraska farmers recommending painted glass panels. * epidemic during the winter in which Reg. people than any other citizen. “ EDUCATION” that they experiment in growing the it starts. The utmost care must be Dr. Ernest H. Cherrington, head tuber. $14.75 ..... $ 1 1 .7 5 I Hoover’s campaign for the Presi- taken al>-over Connecticut to pre­ of the new department of educa­ More recently Howell has adopt­ ' dency— a wholly unconscious one— ed cassina mate,* hoping to obtain vent the spread of this one. Medical tion, publicity and research of the ; began in 1914, when the World War science knows only one way to congressional support for what he Anti-Saloon League of America, believes may become an important ‘ broke out. There were thousands block the progress of the p e s t - t.upon thousands of Americans in thinks the League ought to have new industry for the south. About vaccination. two million dollars a.year for the 3,000 pounds of cassina grows to “■Europe at the time, with their funds the acre and G. F. Mitchell, the De­ next five years to spend in teaching The tip-table can be. Bhut off, stranded. Hoover, who was SL^ INQUIRY partment of Agriculture’s tea ex­ “ the next generation— the youths pert, estimates it.^now grows wild on used beside the bed. or I in London at the time, immediately Perhaps the Court of Naval. In­ who were in the grade schools and about 40,000 acres, The Argentines chair. This one with The butterfly table makes an srganized a committee for their re- quiry into the reason why the res­ high schools when prohibition be­ consumed 143,500,000 pounds of 22-inch round top' is excellent occasional piece to I lief and no less than a hundred cue of the S-4 survivors failed is as tea from yerba mate, which is simi­ made of mahogany and hold lamps and books beside I thousand of them were helped in came effective,” about the horrors Over the chest or dressing g’umwood. necessary as it was inevitable. Per­ lar to cassina mate, in 1926, and table we hang this Colonial your wing chair. 26 inch, j one way and another to get back of beverage alcohol in the old it is claimed that American cassina Regular round top. haps it is equally necessary that the jig-saw mirror with its crotch- $20.90 . . . i home. That brought the hitherto saloon days. ' mate tea could be sold for 25 cents mahogany veneered front. $ 1 7 . Regular $27.00 ----- officers in command of the rescue If Dr. Cherrlngton’s bureau a pound as compared with a dollar , not publicly known mining engineer work be subjected to questioning as 14x30% inches’ over all. weren’t organized wrong end to; if for similar imported tea. Regular I into the light, and most favorably. curt an^ apparently as little, mark­ “ This American plant is better it put r^earch first instead of last $ 20.00 ------$ 1 6 .9 5 •He was a man who^^could do things. ed by friendly coasrtderation as a than the tea plant in some ways,” in its program; it would know that Howell says. “ It contains less ^ Then straightway came the plight crook under cross-examination at jO)f the Belgian refugees, rendered if there- AVer, was a generation that^baffein and much less injurious his own trial. knew more about alcohol than any tannin— about 8 per cent as com­ destitute by the German invasion. To the layman, however, It would pared with 24 per cent for the tea other, without any special instruc­ t/ ' Hoover logically was made head of seem as if there could be only one plant.” the Commission for Belgian Relief. tion from the Anti-Saloon League certain effect of such treatment of — let alone ten million dollars He proved to be a giant in ability men who certainly did their utmost, worth— it is the generation that has i and a supreme humanitarian into at the cost of great hardship and J been passing through and. out of the bargain. His Commission ad­ personal suffering which would be the high schools for the last eight ministered no less than $950,000,- .to Insure, in case there is even an­ 000 and fed no less than ten mil­ years. other repetition of this kind of dis­ To tell these young sophisticates lion people throughout Belgium and aster, a complete case of rattles on -al^ut the horrors of old fashioned Northern . The name of the part of every officer unfortunate beer and whiskey, after they have The spinet adapts itself to the Colonial in­ Hoover rang round the world. And enough to get mixed up with the New York, Jan. 18.— Fickle New always its association was with served an apprenticeship of “ dou­ terior. This model is 35 inches wide with This Windsor ann chair Is rescue work. Y*dr^c makes and breaks its trans­ 1 drawer beaneath the writing bed. an excellent model, having great, benevolent, magical deeds for ble-cooked” and juniper, is like tell­ ient idols with unvarying regulari­ The kind of thing that men in This spjat-back Windsor Reg. heavy, turned legs, graceful mankind. ing about pillow fights to veterans ty. It glorifies certain individua's (without brace) can be used as bow and saddle shaped seat. their position are called' on to do into the status of a vogue, and. $30.00 ...... $ 2 4 .7 5 No other American, no other man of Belleau Wood. an occasional piece or for the is difficult enough, in all con­ w^hen this vogue runs its course it Regula,r dressing table. : 46Q Q 16 ^19*25 ,#•••••• $ 1 6 In the world, ever achieved such a science. They are eager enough to is through with them. MeanwhH-s Regular $4.75 . . « p O # J /0 the favored individuals gather to wide celebrity of such a chp,racter. succeed, goodness knows; without Children have since grown up who themselves great followings of sy- having to do their work in the rea­ mophants. can remember the name of Hoover sonable certainty that they will as that of a sort of fairy benefac­ afterward be called on, in case of A year or so ago a young man WATKINS BROTHERS, Ing. app^red from the ranks of the tor. It has household values. It is failure, to defend their reputations a synonym for helpfulness and the yaudeville song ana dancers. H-r; EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVES FOR CRAWFORD AND CHAMBERS RANGES and their credit as officers and men. was given .the chance- of editing power to help tremendously. It is-a pretty easy matter for a newspaper column that would re­ It is not the fact that Herbert group of naval critics, full of hind­ flect the night club chatter and the Hoover, as secretary of commerce, Broadway slang, the current gags sight, to intimate that the rescue By RODNEY DUTCHER lias rendered far-reaching and ex­ and the snappy side talk. The idea FUNERAL DIRECTORS officers acted stupidly and indiffer­ caught on and the gags were pass­ traordinary service to this nation ently— but it gets them mighity lit­ "Washington, Jan. 18.— Some ed ,about. members of this Congress are con­ which gives him his strength. It is tle glory in the popular estimation, ■There was something of the ' because, of ail Americans, his name tent to orate and vote for farm re rpugh-and-slangy of the “ big just the same. lief measures the effect of which means more to the women anji the street” in it that made "Variety, the Submarines full of men are sent can’t possibly be foretold until theatrical magazine, the classic pe­ children of the country than any vine, a young Russian makes an ex­ to sea unprovided with devices for they’re tried. A few are working riodical that it is. The “ smart” cellent caricature and frames it on $1,500,000 IN ART more quietly toward some surer other. making their* raising practicable magazines began to notice and, at the surrounding wall. It’s the sort Hoover is the greatest potential though less spectacular method of the, present writing, he is quite a and without means of escape for of place where you point out “ per­ vote getter in the United States. helping the farmer. fad. Perhaps he will rise above the sonalties” to your 'Cousin Lillian OF FORMER ROYALTY their crews; there is also a ques­ One, at least, is working in both “ fad.” class; perhaps he will not. from Brooklyn, and whisper a mag­ Th. S m a r t Shop^ The politicians are beginning to be­ ways. He is the Hon. Robert Beech­ Others, better and worse, have come tion whether the discipline in the ic name. It’s the sort of place where OF^RED FOR SALE “Always Something New” come aware of it. submarine service has not long been er Howell, the other senator from and gone. the greetings are often just a bit Nebraska. . ' ' State Theatre Building. Soitth Manchester extremely lax. But when men are too loud, as though'certain persons SMALLPOX Senator Howell has^ been pro­ Not so many winters ago, it was were trying to give notice of their drowned or smothered in supken moting programs looking forward Smallpox is as far as possible the young Michael Arlen, out of wide acquaintance. And, sprinkled Berlin— An art collection valued subs the only persons who fall un­ ,to the time when American farm­ London, wno was quoted, touted generously through the crowd, are at $1,500,000 and belonging to the from being a state of mind, but der inferential attack are the res­ ers may be able to produce the and lionized; Manhattan would have persons who real'y “ belong.” For former reigning house of Anhalt, a N i s s & community predisposition to it can great quantities of sugar and tea nothing stronger or weaker with its each of these there are a dozen pre- cue officers. German principality, is for sale to be and undoubtedly Is the result of consumed in this country, which tea. “ These charming people” be­ tehders. the highest bidder because the There would be as much sense in are now imported. came more anu more charming. Re­ a state of mind. Middletown and a For, such is the strange state of present head of that house," Duke i Matron assailing the divers— perhaps the If that could be achieved, the cently someone told me Arlen was things, that one who aculeves a de­ Joachim Ernest von Anhalt needs i considerable part of Middlesex farmers should bd much better most starkly ^ejoic figures in the critically ill, suffering from tuber­ gree of prominence in New York is the money. county are undergoing a most un­ off. And If the same principle culosis and, fighting for health likely to have this reputation splat­ world. This was revealed In a law ■ suit happy experience simply because could be worked to thei extent of somewhere in the Alps. And I’ll bet ter over and attract attention in filed against the duke by Fritz Spring making us entirely Independent of my new Christmas neckties not one they forgot that there is Auch a other quarters of America. Gurlitt, a Berlin art dealer, for ^DIVORCED foreign farm products, it might in twenty has the slightest idea Me-nwhile, the army of rounders $125,000 for lost commissions. Gur­ thing as smallpox and because the become a vitally Important fac­ what’s become o, i..m. come and go and ♦ conversation— The Connecticut Temperance tor in solving the general farm litt claims that t^e duke first Dresses ^ popular mind had ceased to concern however meaningless— goes end­ charged him with the sale and then Un|g,n. after a companionate mar­ Also, in Manhattan, it becomes Itself with the standard precaution problem. " lessly on, while waiting ears leap turned the sale over fo others. riage with the Anti-Saloon League, " , "V * “ the thing” fo be r ,en at certain upon any new quip which might be Just Purchased and Offered against the disease. eating placdS if you are to be iden­ The collection contains rare has suffered disillusionment and has The farmer’s main ailment, as serviceable for future "gag” pur­ And not only Middlesex county, has been explained times without tified as “ among the who’s who.” poses. paintings, old arms and armors, at a Noteworthy Price. but the entire state of Connecticut, declared a separation. To its dis­ number, is overprodu'etion. The For a number of years the Algon- But New York does not cling to antique manuscripts, gobelins, fur­ may the Union found that the remedy most frequently advanced is .quln practically went without com­ the latest idol. It demands new niture and glasses. is called on to face the possibility Gurlitt charges that some of the Anti-Saloon Le^ue was better at diversification of crops. The trouble petition. It had become “ THE faces, n. v names, new ideas, new of a wide spread of the epidemic place” largely because of the pres­ paintings and other art objects with diversification seems to be chatter. And the wise ones, sensing V, $ 9 - * 5 which has, business-wise and social­ allocating salaried jobs among its that, like farm production, it can’t ence of the “ round table,” where this, cash in on their moment that which the state of Anhalt wants to ly, smacked Middletown flat. adherents than it was at teaching be controlled. gathered such Manhattan "celebs” they may sit back in ease when acquire under Its legal priority Scarcely anything short of war the wisdom of temperance, which Too much uncontrolled diversi­ as Alexander Woollcott,'’ the critic; their brief hour is done. fights are being kept hidden at the latter has been more In the line of fication would spread the ailnfent Heywood Broun, the columnist; GII JERT SWAN duke’s palace, and that worthless See These. or riots can work siich economic Harold Ross, editor of a sophisti- poples are being shown to the the Union’s work. Hereafter it in­ of overproduction. injury to a community as a plague .On the other hand, if American ca'ted \.eekly; a few of the bright agents of the state. of smallpox. The presence in Mid­ tends to devote Its energies to edu­ farmers can take overproduction young men from Li"* i-nd Judge— The duke’s defense is that his ExcepUoital dletown of the j,epidemic has al­ cational labors, according to . its of commodities . now produced and many fcuch. Thereafter a second agents sold thiiigs behind his back abroad, for American -consdmp- drcle begkn to grow about the firsL ATBODGBI and that he was . confronted with ready cost that place a great deal of ori|[lnal policy. tlon, that’s all to * the good. Acre­ Movie'folk, actors, ^writers with an fsamiM^samsBssasmBBSssasssaB9 accomplished facts. Values' .money and cannot fall to cost it a It would seem, as a matter of eye for "celebrities,” hangers-on of age thus devoted can be taken Be not forgetful to entertain great deal more. Any town or city fact, that there is* more need for from acreage now contributing to all sorts and literary leeches In pro­ fusion. strangers, for thereby some have that permits the disease to get " a genuine temperance work by bona overproduction.. entertained angels.- , unawares.— THE MODERNS fide temperance organizations,' in In '1926 we imported 95,930i- "How can you whether they fQothold within its borders is ce^ This year it’s Sardi’s. It’s the Hebrews 13:2. ’ the United States, right now, thail 000 pounds of tea, valued, accord­ A stranger, if just. Is not only are' dancing or just necking?” tain to have the same expensive ex­ ing to_ the Department of Com­ sort of place where, the moment ^ "If they don’t move they’re danc- at any period in its history. Those merce, at $31,349,000. In the one is recognized as a film critic, a to be preferred before a country- ADVERTISE IN THE perience.* columnist of something M n a llv rti-l m a n . bnt a VlnsmaJi,— Pvtbavoran. insr.”:—^Jndee, people who. in times gone by, made aaniM vaar. wa imjcorted 9<640.- There is one certain preventative J

f \ •'1. Manufacturers HALE’S 12 Off

Our garment buyer was in New York last week and in visiting our New York buying office discovered that they had made arrangements A Real On dale to clean up several hundred fur coats at 1-3 to 1-2 off. This past winter, owing to lack of snow and cold weather, has been the worst fur coat season in the past ten years. The banks are calling Cold Storage loans and the manufacturers who are not financially able to carry the Thursday loans must have money at once. We have sold already four times as many fur coats as last year. Vault During this sale we will offer coats, in a great many cases, at a great deal less than we could buy them for wholesale six ^ months ^ ago. In Our Cold Storage Vault, which is Kept at a tempera­ many cases the price is less than the cost of production. This is a tem­ ture of 28 degrees all year around, is the only fur-stor- porary conditio^i; It will not affect the price of coats next winter and age vault in town.. Any fur coat bought now wiU be they, undoubtedly, will be higher than this season’s early prices.. The cleaned, inspected and stored free next summer. With Saturday whole thing is caiiSed by a weather condition over which nO One had any a fur coat, this is a very important consideration. control.

Even To Hold Winter

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. I Store Open Free Parking In Rear O f Store Thursday from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Unlimited parking around the store. Free parking space in rear Friday from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. of the store, enfrance at Oak and'Maple streets. - . Saturday from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. SOUTH MR N CHE STEP ■ CONN ■ MV MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERAli), WEDNESDAT, JANUARY 18,19Zg. FAUUJ SliC ’ Greyhounds can run at thp rate 1)HB iB9 you Invest in it. Nothing is more butory factors which make for suc- Yourself. You 'wftl make of your­ truthful and logical than that old of 59 t o '75 feet per secopd. 0egg_succes3 because the oppor­ self either a success or you will saying: ‘‘As you sow— so shall ye ■^0 193.19 make of yourself a failure. Parents •i.U'B ,19'l APPEARANCE AIDS tunity to advance is offered. reap.” “ Knowledge is, of course, the can guide you to a certain point. -mem n Ichoolb can give you knowledge, iKJtioid DAILY RADIO P greatest factor in advan ^ment. PLANE STILL tJP And with such evening schools as j&unday' schools can olp greatly In 8:45'^Baritone, guitar, accordion. Leading DX Stations. BUSINESS SUCCESS A o w ij« you the difference betwwn ^01 1jo9; Wednesday, January 18. 9:00—Dance music; Dalhart .trio. this, the public library, and the Municipal Airport, San Francis­ 10:00—Old time song revue. 475.9—WSB, A T L A N T A —630. n ^ T a n d wrong. But, in the end it CLD '•The Unwritten Life of Irving Ber­ many other avenues of education co, Calif., Jan. 18.— The giant tri- CSBCKXDIM: « i£ d 9ii 10:30—Concert violinl.r.t;' soprano. 8:00—Stephen Foster songs. lin " is the title of the Columbia hour 9;O0—W E A F troubadours, quartet is for you to make the decision. motored monoplane, “ Spirit of Cali­ l o iliiic 11:00—Studio personality girls. open to everyone there is no sound to be broadcast through WOR and the 10:30—W E A F grand opera. You will be in this world what y ^ fornia,” manned./)y Capt. Charles . jioiirw i Purple network at 10:00 o’clock Wed­ 11:30—Goldkette’s orchestra. argument against the; acquisition SSYever stoi^ - 535.4— WTIC, HARTFORD-^60. 11:45—Blltmore orchestra. So Willard B. Rogers T # of kttbvi'edge'upbn any subject by decide to t)e; 'I warn you that tak­ Kingsford-Smith; Australian flyer, system i« .« 0i'l9£l nesday night. Practically the entire 526—KFKX.KYW , CHICAGO—67ft. repertoire of this modern composer s 7 ;30_ vVEAF Van and Schenck. ing the path that makes for success and Lieut. George R. Pond of the toned. The 2? 1 •'il|iV7 I- 8:00—"Ask Me Another.” 7:00—Children’s program; orchestra. anyone. ^tecked.Ytw’Ul'MdM^ I wrltlnge will be played in chronologi­ 8:00—WJZ programs (2 hrs.) is not always the easiest way. Many U. S. Navel Reserve, was still afloat ter in a few tioun. •leiBuP cal order in this program to be pro­ 8:30—L. & H. air frolic. “ Application— application to any- 9- 00—W E A F troubadours orchestra.10:00—Congress carnival. Evening Students at Hart­ obstacles will confront you. Many today, after l9 % hours of continu- • be duced by two large orchestras with thiiig you undertake Is ’ another-all 9;30_\VEAF orchestra, quarteL U;82—Hamp’s Kentucky aerenaders. times, you may think the fight is ous .flying in an effort to smash the vocal interludes sung by a male Quar­ important factor. .Tho 'hoy or girl jSeSureltil tet, mixed trios and soloists. The 10:30—W E A F grand opera. 889.4— WBBM, CHICAGO—770. not worth ■sihlle and you may as^ world’s endurance record. ■t+.-UOn Great Composers hour to be put on 422.3—WOR. N E W A R K —710. 9:00—Studio, dance <3 bra.) ford High School. who goes into anything in a half-, the air by these same stations one 7 :00—Levltow’s ensemble. 365.6—W EBH.W JJD, CHICAGO-r620U yourself "wily you are not out i T i. i 8 :00—Mabelanna Corby hour. hearted way is sjire to remain at Spending yonr evenings dancing or hour earlier will consist of selections 9:00—Columbia hour, music by Saint- 7:00—Victorian orchestra; talk, the tiottom of the^Iaddeft.^ And:after The United States admitted lii.-iT ic by three French musicians Saint- 8:00—Orchestra; children’s program. in sport. But, *you get out of this GefBedficK Saens, Chaminade and tlelibes. At Saens, Chaminade and Delibes. a while, these people decide that only what 805,228 immigrants in 1921 10:00—Columbia hour. Life of Irving 9:30—Theater presentations. Willard B. Rogers, advertising world dividends upon 8:00 o’clock the New York City hire 10:80—W E A F grand opera. director of the Hotel Bond Qom- the world is against them— that iJepartment band will play at the an­ Berlin in music and song. 11:05—Villa Venice orchestra. 12:00—Studio program, artists. pany and general manager of . the someone else ivas advanced through nual entertainment of the Uniformed 333.1—WBZ, NEW ENGLAND—900. 1:00—Informal dance revue. Firemen’s - Association, the proceed­ 416.4— W G N-W LIB, CHICA.GO—720. Fuller Battery Company, speaking Influence oi' pull— that they ars ings d fi which may be tuned in 7 :00- Statler concert orchestra, 7:30—Radio Nature league. 7:40'-*KDsemble» quintet; Alnianacke before several classes of the Hart­ always playing in hard luck. This Jrom W NYC. and a • reclt^ of the 8:30—W E A F organisL troubadours. North Nastern musical clubs will be 8:00-WJZ sparkers, foresters. ford Evening school, at the Hart­ so-called hard-luck does not exist. 9 ;00—WJZ variety hour. 10:30—Mexican baritone; talk. radiated by WNAC. Other highlights 10:00—Boston University pr^ram. 11:10—Sam ’ n* Henry; music box, ford Public High school Tuesday It is but an alibi for the boy or for this same night will be the pres­ 10:35—Newcomb’s Society wgpMtra. 12:00—^The Hoodlums; orchestra. girl or man or woman who never entation of Christopher Morley s eom- evening, said in part: 491.5— W EAF, NEW YORK—610. 344.6—W LS, CHICAGO—870. “ At the outset I want to congra­ gets anywhere in life because they fedy. ’’’Thursday Night by Staten 6 :00—Waldorf dinner music;[ I ^ n d Little Theater group before the 10:00—Chicago University choir. tulate each of you upon your en­ never sail a charted course. They 7 :00—Synagogue services. ; 10:30—Organist, tenor. microphone of WGBS at 9:00; a con- 7:30—Van and Schenck, harmonists. rollment in this evening scJhool have no idea where they are going FREE! , cert by the Baltimore colored band 10:45— Hockey, Detroit vs. Blackhawks 8-00-Great history moments. ll:30-rConcerts: popular programs. which, despite its great cost to the or when they are going to get imough W B A L and Joe 8:30—String quartet, soprano. time song revue through WCX-WJR, g-OO—Troubadours orchestra. - 447.5— WMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670. taxpayers of Hartford is worth there. both at 10:00, and a descriptive story 7:30—Dinner orchestra, many times that cost if young,men “ But, the hoy or girl who takes of the hockey game between Detroit ,2:|S:5'pe?Sf'“La“K S “ K S ifiK - 10 :00—WOR Columbia'hour. • <•«». V- and the Chicago Blackhawks through 11:00—Orchestral program. and young women are sufficiently his job seriously— who works a bit W LS at 10:45 12:15—Steven’s orchestra. interested in their own future to overtime that he may do a better 1-30—Astor concert orchestra. 374.8—w oe, DAVENPORT—800. attend regularly and work hard. _ job, who is' willing to think of his Black face type Indicates best features 4';30_ven etldn gondoliers. 7:45_WEAF programs to 10:30. “ Speaking to you tonight, then, 6:00—Mediterraneans dance “Md. 10:30-Educational law talks. job outside of working hours with Ail programs Eastern Standard "Time, on ‘Personal Inventory’ I would 7-00—Savoy Plaza orchestra;' tolk. ^ 325.9^kOA.' DENVER-920. the idea of giving his employer a f ft.. 7:45—Political talk, JF. W. Wil& 10:00—Colorado theater orchestra. say that the mere fact thati'-you little more return for his invest- j Leading'East Stations 8:00—Champion sparkers. _ 10:15—Soprano, studio orchestra. have enrolled in evening s^ool 8:30—Sylvania Foresters quartet. ment in him— these are the hoys 272.6__WPG, ATLANTIC CITY 1100. 10:30—W E A F grand opera, 9:00—Variety hour. entitles you to mark your assets who get ahead. i 7 :05—Orchestra; talks; orchestras. 10- 00—Mediterranean dance band. 535.4— WHO, DES MOINES—560. many points higher than those of 10:00_Knickerbocker artists program. 7:30—Dinner dance music. “ Personal habits are, of course, r RADIO 10;30—Luther, Stokes, xylophonist. 10 :S0—'Three dance orche^ras. 8 :00—W EAF-history moments. the young men who are loitering another big factor. The hoy who'r ll'OO—Slumber music. fl<)LDER OF THE LUCKY KEY. (i 235.5—WBAL, BALTIMORE--1050. 405.2—W L IT , P H ILA D E LP H IA —740. 9:00—W E A F programs to 1^00. in pool rooms or the young^.men takes every opportunity to slide 6:30—Dinner music; WJA talk. 8 :30- WEAF quartet, soprano,,,., 384.4_KTHS,. HOT SPRINGS-780. and women who spend much of 8:00—WB.AL trio, tenor. around a corner or to the wash­ gloo—Theater program. 10:30—Foley’s orchestra. _ each day trying to 'figure out where 9 ;:i0—WJZ variety hour. - 9'30—W EAF orchestra; tenor. 422.3—WOS, JEFF.ERSON CITY—710. room to smoke a cigarette is kid­ iiifiiiiii 10:00—Baltimore colored band. : —Arcadia dance Of^hestr^ 9:30—Studio musical program. . they can have a good time at 461.3—W NAC, BOSTON—650. 10 00 ding no one but himself. I am not 348.6— WOO, PHILADELPHIA—860. 370.2— WDAF, KANSAS C IT Y -810. night. - , 6:30—Orchestra; piano duets. 7:35—Instrumental trio. 8:30—T ^ 'A F programs to 10:30. here to discuss smoking but I 8:30—Jean and Eddie. 8:30—Musical program, t a lk . ______;0:3Jli:-gffidIo cavaliers. “ I advisedly deciided to speak would like to impress upon you 8 :00—North Eastern musical clubs. 9 :15—Talk; orchestra; ^ud^io pr o ^ m l5:|s;_Nrghthawk frolic. upon ‘Personal Inventory’ : to you that most employers d » not go out .■¥» 9;00—W OR classical music. 348.6— WIP, PHILADELPHIA—860. 4&&irKFU LOS ANGELES—640. because ft Is m'y honest opinion that 10:00—WOR Irving Berlin program. 7:00—Children’ s progs^m.' 11:00—String orchestra; vagabonds. of their way to advance boys whose 1 1 -10—Thr«e dance orchest^. 1:00—Pianist; violinist. - _ Un inventory 'of the'c persiinal ele­ sole thought app ars to he ‘anoth­ 305;8-WGR, BUFFALO-990. 8;O0—Musiclijns 315.6— KDKA, PI3^»U R G W ^^ 416.4— KHJ, LOS ANGELES—720, ment of any business is worth much er smoke.’ JT,' 6:15—Two piano rfcltal. 6:15-Saudek’s Sj^pltbiiy''orchestra. n';0n—Male quartet; orchestra. more today than the inventory of 7 ;30—W EAF progf&ms to 10.3U. 7:00—Pittsburgh U. talk; concerL 12:00—Coloratura soprano. “ Associates are also extremely il'o u —Van Surdam’s orchestra. - —WJZ talk, sparkers, foresters. 1:00—Melody minstrels. the physical assets, such as mer­ important. Your environment plays ' 545.1—WMAK, BUFFALO—550. 7 45 9';00- W J Z variety hour. „ 322i5—W HAS, LO UISVILLE—930. chandise, equipment and such., 8 :30—Recipes; violinist; talk. 7;4.‘5—"WEAF programs to Jl:30. a very important part in your fu­ 9 00 280.2—W HAM , ROCH ESTER—1070. . “Elementary as it may seem to - A ll ready to install. Completely equipped. ' ^h o worfdn’t like * w h e t fK - —Columbia-programs (4 nrs.) 6:45—Odenbach’s orchestr^ ■336.9—WSM, NASHVILLE—800. ture. Associate with boys and,girls 11-nii—Dance dfchestra; entertainment. : - W E A F programs, 11:30. many- of you, I would start hii in­ 7.-.7;^ —Studio - programi WJZ talk. 9 00 to. who like to talk about getting 428.3_WLW, CINCINNATI—700. «-no—W G y Remington band. 11:30—Bob Stark’s orchestra. ventory of any of you, and IP you g-OO—WJZ champion sparkers. 8:00-r-WGy Remlngto ahead in the world— not In the 8:30—Musical vistas. 384.4—KGO, O AKLAND —780. are honest with yourself ypii- can f4t-SSSevery^«^^” ^ 8’;30_Violinist, pianist. 9:00—’Cellist, P'anist. ll;0n—Vandeville. vagabonds. easiest way— hut in a sound-hard­ 9 ;0o_Violinist. 'cellisL planisL 379.5_WGY, SCHENECTADY—790. 1 :00—Orche.stra. violinist, songs. take the inventory of yourse^, by working way. These companies are wins the radio. 9 :45—Studio features, organisL 11'55—Time; weather; markets. 336.9— KNX, O AK LAN D —890. a check-up on your personal ap­ 11:00—Thies’s dance orchestra, 11:00- Fe.iture programs (2 hrs.) 100 per cent better than the com­ 399.8— WTAM, CLEVELAND—750. 6-00- Stocks; agricultural program. pearance. It has been said that a 7:15-Studio program . 1:0(1—Two dance orchestras. panionship of those who want to, 6:00—Dance program. 7;30_W EAF Van and Schenck. 254.1—W R VA, RICHMOND—1180. great percentage of automl;(hiles become the champion pool player 7:30—Blue room program. : —Remington band concerL 8:00—Studio musical program. are being sold today upon ^appear- L>( 8-30—WE.A.F programs (3 hrs.) 8 00 of the community. i : 8:30—Musical pregram, ■ 422.3—KPO. —710. ance. And it is not far-fetched at 11 :.30—Dance orchestra. 9:00—WEAh' troubadours. 11:00—Atwater Kent artists. “ And don’t waste your time try­ 440.9— WCX-WJR, DETROIT—680. 9:30_W E A F orchestra, male quartet. 12:00—.\hn.s string quartet. all to apply this appearance feature ing to find the quickest route to Robinson Auto Supply 7 -00- Goldkette’s orchestra; artists. 10:30—Studio orchestra. 1 :00—Studio dance orchestra. of boys and , girls who are to be South ManchcMtcJ^ 8:00—WJZ sparkers; pioneers. ^ Secondary DX Stations. success. Not long ago, a man outdid Tel. 2468, Secondary Eastern Stations employed in offices, factories or another in sitting on the top oL a ’4S5-Main Street, 526—WNYC. NEW YORK—570. 275.1_W0RD, BATAVIA—1090. other places. Executives like to flagpole. He thought every vaude­ One K e y W ith Each $1.00 Purchase. 508.2—VVEEI, BOSTON—590. : —Firemen’s annual entertainment 10:0(1—Choral singers; lectiire. . 7:30—W E A F programs (3 hrs.) 8 00 deal with subordinates who are par­ 8:30—Brahm program. 288.3—W E NR . CHICAGO—1040. ville hooking agency In'thex world 10:30—Frank Stevens, organpt. 7:00—Organ; artists; stocks. ticular about their appearance. I 245.8—WKRC, C IN C IN N ATI—1220. 9:45—Mme. Wood’s musical program. would rush to outbid the other' 461.6—WCAE, PITTSBURGH—650, 9 :00- Samovar orchestra; artists, am not advising the weariHg of fellow for an act featuring him- 8:00—Book review; trio. 7:00—Orchestra, Kaybee; sermon, 1 :00—Samovar orchestra: artists. costly clothes or spending a lot of 9 :00—Martin Four. 8-30-WEAP' programs (3 hrs.) 305.9— W H T. CHICAGO—980. But, the world ignored him. The 12:00—Popular program. 11:30—Ne-w China orchestra. 9;40_Mathew Sisters. money upon appearance. For-those : —Ramblers entertainment. world will pay homage t() the man 265.3—W H K . CLE VELAND —1130. 365.6—W eSH , PORTLAND—820. 10 00 of you who must count the pennies, who, accomplishes something worth 7:35—Watkln’s dance orchestra. 7 .30—WEAF vaiv .and gchenckr \ 10;304-Xour: Hour I-eague. there is still a home-shoe;sh||ning i 8 :30—iBstrttraental ratteic. f 0:30—'V ^A 'F orchestra, quarteL ' 516.9— WMC, MEMPHIS—580. W;hi,le hat it-.has n.o u8«-for -fthe 309.1—WABC, NEW-YORK-970. 10:30—W E A F grand opera. 9:00-W E A F troubadours. outfit. Likewise, there are many 9-30_W E A F orchestra, quarteL cheap publicity seeker. 7:45—Orchestra; talk; songs. 293.9—WSYR, SYRACUSE—1020. other ways in which you can make “ And now I would like to charge 9:00—Izaak Walton League. 6:30—Orchestra; studio program. inion-Studio concerL sure that you" are presentable with­ 8:00—Rogers’ musical program. 405.2— WCCO. MINN.. ST. PAUL—740. each of you with the grave re­ 9:30—Artists; dance music. 8:30-W EAF programs to 10:30. out incurring a prohibitive ex­ 348.6—WGBS, NEW YORK—860, 9 :30—Baritone, pianist, orchestra, sponsibility of an executive. Each 10:00—Studio .program; orchestra. .10:30—Musical program. 9:00—Comedy, "Thursday Evening, 11:30—Harmony Five oi'chestra. pense. of you from now on must assume : —Baritone; violinist. 46S.5—WRC, W ASHINGTON—640. “ Do not conclude from the above H o m e 9 35 7:00—K itt musical hour. 394.5— KOB, n e w MEXICO—760, the roI§"ttf an executive and each of 10:00—Light and airy mii.sical program. 9 :30—Music; bridge; music. suggestion that ability is a secon­ 10:30—Ramblers; soloists. 7:45-.-W E A F programs to 11:30. you is entrusted with the greatest dary factor. Not at all. Appearance of all your worldly possessions— "Vs. is just one of a number of contri­ I I ported there are other cases but the report has not been verifieii. . ANDOVER The hearing about the William Plan the Cunningham children by the Child MXIC Welfare Society took place in the The secc^nd annual meeting of Town Hall Monday before Judge rTnEvelers Insurance Co. the stockholder of the Andover Sumner. No decision was reached and it jvas postponed for one Gas Lake Corpora^on was held in the H artford month. Mr. Cunninigham wants to local Town Hall Saturday at 2:30 do his bit. for hte children and is INSURANCE 535.4 m. 560 k. c. p. m. Frank P. Fenton of Willi- mantic presided in the absence of hoarding 'the. oldest girl Martha with Mrs. Ward Talbot. The other of President Mark W. Bass of New Right on York who was late in arri-^ing. The little one is with Mrs. E. M. Yeo­ ip P . M. number of directors since its cor­ mans. \f. .6:25— News bulletins. The Boys Club met and reorgan­ ,6;30— Sea-Gul^Dinner Group. poration has been seven but by The Best Guardian of ^ vote of the stockholders w'as in­ ized last Saturday. They elected \T ^ 7 ;00—fStation WCAC will broad- Burton Lewis, president; E v^ett creased to eleven and the following the casiN)!}.this same frequency till Allen, vice-president; Malcolm directors were chosen from the \ r 7:30 p. m. Thompson, secretary and Holden Life and Property various stockholders: Mark W. 7:30—-“ Soconyan” from N.' B. C. Bass of New York City, R. La Wright, treasurer. " Studios. Motte Russell, Harold C. Alvprd Blueprints 8:00— Jack says ‘‘Ask Me An­ and P. J. O’Leary of South Man­ other?” chester, Mr. Lind ahd Mr: Schaffer 8:30.— h. & H. Air Frolic. of Hartford, Frank F. Fenton of Six different types of popular Willimantic, Madison Woodland of our music will be played to-night by Columbia, Charles E, White, IJI Insure Your Valuables] Talk it over with the L and H. Air Boys during George C. Stanley and Edward J % the L., and H. Air Frolic from Yeomans of this place. There will A BOX IN A ,GbOD SAFE DEPOSIT VAULT] G^as Engineering .WTIc; of the Travelers. ■ be a meeting of the directors Sat­ The first selection, ‘‘Thinking urday and officers of the corpora­ IS T H E of You,” from “ The Five O’clock tion will be chosen for the coming IT COSTS LESS tb have adequate gas piping put m Girl” is a typical lively fox trot. year. There were abut 30 stock­ b e s t a n d c h e a p e s t i n s u r a n c e . “ My Toreador” is a song with a holders present at the meeting when you’re first building than to have floors tom swinging Spanish rhythm. Next Saturday. m f comes a waltz, “ Two Loving The men’s club will give a whist The Manchester Trust Co. j UP for it later. A nd you’re,sure to neecl it. A de­ Arms.” A vocal solo, which will party at the To><^n Hall Friday eve­ From a Dentist: quate gas piping doesn’t mean just providing for. a be announced, will follow, after ning Jan. 20. T/ which the Boys will play the Mr. and Mrs. Emmer Hewlett of “I should like to apply for S s rahge in the kitchen.You’ll want a p s water vocol selection, “ Just a Memory,” Hartford visited Mr. and Mrs. $150 a month under your Life a wistful little ballad. The final, George Plutt Sunday. heater and incinerator, an ironing machine and number, “ An Old Guitar, An Old Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Muine of Income Plan if you can ar­ Refrain and You” is a love song Scotland were week-end guests range .to bill me monthly in- clothes dryer—not all these appliances at oqce, per­ reminiscent of the songs of yes­ of Mr. and Mrs. ,.Fxed .Bishops. . ” stead of annually.” haps, but eventually. So provide for them now— terday. Mrs. Thomas ' Levine and son Thinking of You from' “ The Five Burton were callers in Hartford This was done. The dentist Fire and Liability when it costs loss. ■ , O’clock Girl.” Monday. is now sure of $150 monthly My Toreador, Spanish dance. Mrs. William Palmer and Mrs. whenever disabled and $150 i IMPORTANT!- How will you heat the new home? Two Loving arms (waltz). Kittle Mitten attended the State monthly life’income from age | W hen walls,and furnishings are fresh and clean, you theater in South Manchester Mon­ Vocal Solo. To be selected. 60 on, , when he will w an t-Jo | ’* Investigate gas fuel be- day evening. can do it Better with Gas Just a memory. take things inore easily. If he | Insurance I An Old Guitar, An Old Refrain Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wilson were . ' Ly. '4 '*■ ■ fore you buy aTutnace. and You. callers in Manchester Monday eve­ dies prematurely, his family | 9:00— Correct time. ning. will receive $15,000. | 9:01— Ipana Troubadours from N. Malcolm Thompson will be the Write for booklet describing « 4 0 B. C. 'Studio. leader of the Christian Endeavor RICHARD G. RfcH ..CALI' 9:30— Goodrich Zipper orchestra meeting Sunday evening. his contract. and Silvertown Quartette from A son of Mike Misovich who Tinker Building, Siuth Manchester. N. B. C. Studios. lives on the Hebron road is quite Connecticut General j .10:30— National Grand Opera, “ La ill with scarlet fever. Dr. Higgins Life InsuranceCompany ' M AN'irtlESTER G A S C O . Forsa del Destino” of Verdi. of South Coventry the health of­ THE ficer is attending him. It is re- 1 1 : 30— News and weather. F A Y E T T E B. C L A R K E , AGT. j ^10 Depot Square, Manchester, j Sketches^by Bessey ; Synopsis b^'J^raucher W THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE: (188) Making Rails x ’v.?’- Clerks Still To Have "Syl- h i l\ Wednesday Afternoon Off Glad of it. They should have a little time to them­ selves— gives them a brighter outlook on life when they come back to work. UUf Which reminds us— a good many of them, both men and women, wear Walk-Over shoes for foot comfort and m i . .. ixil all-round satisfaction. Iv.*:' We’ve marked down a lot of perfectly good ladies'* 'K- shoes, $5 to $8 values to $2.85 and $3.95. Good buys fo r tw- somebody. Here we see a ^ 'a t rocm full of machines, ail rolj- IfiK the original steel Ingots thtb cHffei-ent shapes,J We We have seen how ingots of steel are made. Sup Here >ye see the ingpt The ingot , ^passes see a rail here beginning to take form. The machines pose these ingots are to be made irito rails. Hei^e you emerging = fl’t>i#i‘ the'first through another set of do most of the work with only the guiiHng brain* of see a great ingot resting on the/oliers at a rolling mill,- set of, rolls. It is about roils and is further a few men. This whole milHs filed whh a blinding white- after being heated to exactly the right temperature. It ihe siie^now of a great “ stretched” by the pow­ W. H. GARDNER hot light from the metal passing between the rolls. Of) is forced beween the first set of powerful rollers which beanrsuch as are used in erful rollers that mold it THE WALK-OVER STORE .ndSvncniqf.ccpyritht.iort.’n.ACroiiifSociqty (To Be Continued) i-ty 847 Main Street, Park Buildki? "Begin to reduce the width and increase the length, i; skyscraper construction^ as if it were butter. By NEA. Through SiMcM Btfiritritn at l»i«.Pubn«li«f» TIi* Kiwwl*^. Copyrigrt. 1 » » 2 6 . MMifCHESl'CT (GOT^N;) KVBNTNO HERAT.D. \m nreSDAY. JAlTO^RT l l 19

and appropriate memorial to Wil­ betwMn'' rich g r ^ Shelton— James P. Mooney^ motor vehicles. Haaardvllle— Raymond E. Hills. PENN'SIORIAL PLACE liam Penn, his second wife and^ humble.” vehicle department as a part of the Meriden— Geo. L. DuPlessis. SO, Giastonbury— Warren N. Ab­ The Society sent a tetter effort to reduce this highway Bristol— Peter Chapor. children. UCENSES SUSPENDED Broad Brook— Peter Steppins. Milford— John Tosh. bey. . -“The memorial could be in the thanks to Rogers for bis offer, menace. There are thirty names on Modsup— Bart Constantine. Stamford'—-:Wm. B. Jacobson. TD RllAiN UNMAR^ shape of; anytbina of simple charac­ sdgiresled tbat the American nte?;^,,, . the list. Three were Connecticut Elmwood-—John Nagy. Stratfdrd— John Danowskl. Greenwich — Anlello Pennella, New Haven— Harold Hunt, El- ter, and in good taste, from a suit­ orial take the form ,of a broiiz^V' The weekly list o£ operators operators convicted in other states. phege LaRoebe, Rankin B. Mars- Taftvllle— Pierre Paquette. able bronze tablet to a small meet­ tablet erected on -the famous May- Tvvo cases were appealed. The de­ , Wm- Rodgers. Torrington— Carl Keim. MONIHRNT REJECTED whose licenses to drive automobiles ' Hartford— Ed. C. Greehbaum. ten, Thomas Pazera, Edwin Weiss, ing bouse. The cost of the mem­ flower Bam, which stands near tha, partment statement advised people Lafeyette, R. I.— Willis Hitch­ Jordans Meeting House: The bara ^ In Connecticut have been suspend­ 1 Wm. O. E. Hoffner, Chas. G. Irwin, j Daniel Wilson. orial would be entirely cared for to notify the department or tha cock. is believed to have been built of $' ed for one year for driving while Frederick J. Moran, Alexander Noroton— Gustave Jacobson. by subscriptions from public-in­ police in case they should see any North Haven— Chas. D'Agostino. Pawtucket, R. I.— Norman Ander­ T^ndon-r-Tfae burial place of the timbers of the Mayflower which under the Influence of liquor was Thompson. spired citizens here.” given out today at the state motor of the suspended drivers operating son. , , Wllllani Penn, tbe qttaker pioneer The proposal was taken under carried the pilgrims to America. and founder ot Pennsylvania, will conMderatlon by the Friends, and PtSM’s grave ip- Identical with FRENCH SEND STATUARX remain a lonely, unmarked grave. the following resolutlou adopted: that of hundreds e t other Quaker GltTC TO MRS. MACAULBV The ,yr()po3al by a Pittsburgh “ It is oiir wish to maintain the graves In the burial ground. resident. Weaver,,, H, Rogers, presi­ principle held throughout the his­ Menomonie. Mich.— A replica of dent of an American investment tory of the Society of Friends ever Ciirk was flrst used for bottle the famous statuary group “ Chari­ company, -to erect a $25,000 mau­ since the tlmh of William Penn, stoppers between 168.0 and 1715 ty” has been receivee by Mrs. soleum over Penn’s grave, has been that in death all are equal, and by a monk of the Abbey of Taut Adalln Wright Macauley, past na­ reioqted by the small committee of thht ucK. distinction shall be made Villers, Prance. ^ tional president of the American friends , whp ^ coptrol the, Quaker Legion. Auxiliary, at her home bnrial ground^ at Jordans.' here as a gift from the French Gov­ The idea was placed' before the LO OK MEN ernment in appreciation of bet part committee>;by Mr. Rogers, in Which divided stock High Grade Men’s Clothing into two prices only. in furthering the friendly rela­ he asked Whether tne Quaker auth­ We have our entire of tionship between America and, orities wouiii welcome the erection •SA rHESTCOLDS Apply over throat and chart Suits which formerly sold up to S35.00 all in one group for quick seUing at France. of' a toenioflal structure. Tini or dw novel effe^ on —cover with hot flannal doth, Mrs. Macauley led the Auxiliary -“ Some, of fellow cltizeus of Sfl% ,"® 3S.»S“5£ In the recent Legion pilgrimage to the S'tate ^ Pennsylvania.” Rogers l 5o p*cknge,»t_denlei8. France for the conyehtlbn in wrote, “ a ie . deslriouB of securing VICKS ▼ V A P P R u a and to visit the American war permission’for the erection at Jor­ ^ ofTte-D yeing OoerZZi 'an Uemd Yatatf $ 2 ^ . 9 5 cemeteries. dans Burial Cround, of a simple 5 , J , 1 ! ■ . Suits which formerly sold up to $45.00 all in one group for quick selling at

$ 2 9 .9S INC. Many of these suits have iwb trousers. H artford OVERCOATS Free Suburban Telephone Service Call 1530 I'i which formerly sold uiJ to $40.00 all in one group priced at $ 2 2 .9 5 Glearance-Won»en s Apparel J GOATS—FURS—DRESSES A 3 Days Only We Have Had a Very Successful Season in Our Women’s Ready-to-Wear Departments. Continual Increasing Demand on the Part of Our Patrons ^as Compelled Us to Buy and Sale Ends Saturday Buy. With the Result That Selection is Much Better Than is Usual at Clearance Time. Must have room for the finest line of Spring Clothing which is coming soon. IF YOU HAVE WAITED UNTIL NOW TO BUY THAT NEW COAT OR DRESS YOU WILL BENEFIT BY GREAT SAVINGS.

GLENNEY’S Every Garment Exceptional Value at the Original Price --r;* ' * And Extraordinary Value at the Clearance Price Ctrysler PRICES $39 Fur Trimmed Coats I Sensation a / At riiis Sale Eifective Jantiary 10,1928

“New C k ry sler ^‘5 2,99 ’ ^ e w t O W E B . Twodoor Sedan ^670 Coats of Suede Materials with Cuffs and Johnny Shawl Coupe ' - ' .670 , Collar of Squirrelette Fur. . jR.pa^ter. - - , ' 670 Touring - - - 695 Four-door Sedan 720 DeLuxe Coupe - 720 $79 Fur Trimmed Coats DeLuxe Sedan - 790 Quality V At This Sale Great New Unchanged C h r y s l e r “ 6 2 ” business Coupe ^1065 Roadster - - 1075 Broadcloth Coats with Shawl Collar and Cuffs of Black Touring - - 1095 Wolf—The Coats Are Silk Lined. Two-door Sedan 1095 C oupe (w ith rum ble lemt) 1145 Four-door Sedan 1175 Landau Sedan - 1235 / $98 Fur Trimmed Coats

lllttstrions New At This Sale C k rysler and up^vards Two Pass. Coupe *1545 (w id i tum ble seat) Royal Sedan - 1595 Sport Roadster - 1595 4o B o d y Luxuriously Furred Coats of Broadcloth and Venise Cloth (with tumble icat) Four-Pass. Coupe 1595 Trimmed with Marmink and Wolf Furs. ings which only Chrysler Town Sedan - 1695 Chrysler’s sensational rise from 27th to 3rd Standardized Quality can Convertible Coupe 1745 (widi rumble Mat) place in sales in 42 provide. Crown Sedan - 1795 months is the r e ^ t of a You will then instantly phenomenal public pre­ recognize, why Chrysler ference that continu­ cars — by the most as­ Fur Goat Clearance New 11Z H .P. ously demanded a record- tounding price savings breaking volume of qual­ Im perial which r^iult from a huge Here is an Opportunity to Bny a Pur Coat at Way Below the Original Price— one, two and ity motor cars. amd rapidly growing pub­ Roadster - - *2795' threepf a kind—Early Selecfloii Advisable—Some a^ Half Price. i Chrysler* s tremendous lic d^nand*—are tp^y (wftfa rumble M at) - ii «'• ’ ’ i Five-Pass. Sedan 2945 production and rapid more than ever tfao.most Original S ^ e Original Sale V • growth are the direct m arvelous tn<>tor c m Price Town Sedan - 2995 Price Price Price results of public recogni­ ues in their respectiyd SeVen-Pass. Sedan 3075 $ 5S|00 tion of values and sav­ price groups. Brown Cony Coats ...... i* •’4120.00 $ 69.00 Pieced Raccoon Coat ...... | $110.00 | Sedan Limousine 3495 Mendoza Beaver ,C<>ats , -t •. • ^ 9 . 0 0 ' 89.00 Brown Caracul, Fox Collar ..... j 169.00 , | 75l00 AU prices /. e. b. Detroit, subject to A llC h rjliler l l j h - p . Northi^rn Seal Coats, Shawl Collars current Federal excise tax. Chrysler Imperial “ 80,” viewtAromattc o ) ^ % 98'00 119.00 Northern Seal, Squirrel Collar . .deaiers are in position to extend j on display at the Auio Show in aU dealert'taleeroemnr and C.\iffs • • • * the convenience o f time paym ents. ' Missesu Golden Muskrat Gp^s, Fox and Cuffs 169.p0 Olollars, ^ 9 5 ^ 0 0 ^ Wild Cat and Fox C ollar...... 1 275.00 Extra size Electric Seal, Skankj’ ■'■f' ' GEORGE S. SMITH collars and cuffs 279.00 179.00 Fine Nutria C oat...... 425.00 Northern Seal ' with Russian Phone 660-2 So. Manchester Squirrel ...... 3di Bissell St, Fine Marmink, (Jiagonally worked \ 'I A S K F O R A D E MO N S T R A T 1 O N >.i •. .'i MANCHESTER (CQNN.) EVENING HER ALB, WK)NGS1^Y. V-- rA G SE TG H T? Review Of 1927 wd Smne Forecwta as a whole fell off 3 percent. Car- I The lollowing address of interest loadings decreased 2% pere^Mbut to everyone was delivered before they were still 1 percent about Mr the Kiwanis Club yesterday by 1925. , This decease in car loadings /fit - c l Charles J. Eyanson, an economics must be viewed in the light of the \ abnormal coal traffic pf a year ago ; .. The year just closed was one of when business was anticipating a mixed tendencies businesswise. tie-up in the union coal fields. An President Coolldge’s message to the interesting side-light on the opera­ Congress and Secretary of Labor tions of railroads for 1927 is that Davis’ report both make reference although gross business fell off 10 the prosperity of the country as $225,000,000, greater efficiency of a whole. Many Connecticut ma^i^ operation held the net decrease I'acturers have been at a loss to nnd down to $125,000,000. That alone just where that prosperity is. Pro­ would spell increased efficiency but bably the impression of prosperity we have records of a new milage- can be traced to a generally ac­ per-day for freight cars and new cepted. confusion of the term with high loading peaks. If you think “activity.” The fallacy, although you have reason to expect a reversal universally accepted, is never-the- of the hand to mouth buying move­ ENTIRE STOCK! Icos unsound. The two terms are ment I am afraid this record of effi­ not synonymous. Even in activity ciency alone will discharge you. however, Connecticut was some­ The capitalization of new corpor­ what below the previous year. Man­ ations in Connecticut shows an in­ hours worked in selected Connecti­ crease of $23,000,000, if 0“®^,*^/®- SHOES cut factories in 1927 average about counts for a large public utility 4 per cent below the year ^before. ^ merger in 1926 which accounted for Under ordinary circumstances one $50,000,000, if one discounts for a would be Inclined to view this de­ large public utility merger in 1926 crease in man-hour activity as a which accounted for $50,000,000. possible result of the recognized an­ The number of nev/ incorporations nual growth in out-put per worker was increased from 819 to 92o. which the National Industrial Con­ The tale of business failures in ference Board measures at about Connecticut, however, is a rather 7 per cent. This optimistic slant sad one. Their number increased would seem to find encouragement from 619 to 692 and the average from the fact that electric power liability bankrupt increased from UNDERWEAR consumption in Connecticut in­ $10,000 to’ $13,000. a rise of 35 creased materially as did raw cot­ per cent. One does not need to ton and silk consumption, and metal exercise his imaginative faculty a tonnage shipped from^ selected sta­ great deal to see in this the lesson of e.xcessive compeiitiott and price MEN’S AND tions of the New Haven road. Hay- ing in mind, however, the let-up m i cuting. . . I basic production—7 per cent in pig The flare for prophetic vision in iron, a still greater loss in steel business has met with so many dis-1 ingot production and 2.2 per cent couragements of late that one hesi- j MEN’S and In automobiles—I think we must tates to indulge in it. Men whose | conclude that the 4 per cent de­ judgment I respect stand aghast crease in man-hour activity in Con­ before the ventures, and I should necticut is also a measure of the be presumptuous to cast pearls of T decrease in production. wisdom about in the face of hesi­ The distribution situation tancy on the part of really big men. ' I can, however, tell you what the ] SUITS a n d throughout the country has been somewhat better than production. | authorities look for and I can also Mail oreer and chain store business tell you what history might lead us to. expect. To begin with Connecti­ w Come and see. these suits* Coitipa showed notable increase In 1927 $5.00 Duofold U n ion s...... $4.00 over 1926. Departm'ent store eales cut’s man-hour curve has shown an Boys’ $1.50 Union Suits ...... $1*1^ them and their sale prices mth anythii on the other hand which are more upward trend at the beginnig of i $4.00 Munsingwear Unions ...... $3.00 representative of the average pur­ every year, even the notoriously ] Boys’ $1.75 Union Suits ...... $1*25 you’ve seett'Or heard about. Use your eye^ bad year of 1924.. In the normal $3.00 Duofold Unions ...... $2.50 $ chasing level increased only about Boys’ $2.00 Union Suits ...... $1*50 1 per cent, which is hardly their years this upward trend persists, $2.00 Cotton Unions...... * .$1.50 until the spring. This bit of his-1 normal growth having in mind the tory coupled with Harvard’s pre­ Boys* $2.25 Union Suits ...... $1.75 $4.50 Glastonbury Unions...... $3.75 trend of population. In Connecti­ $55.00 SUITS AND COATS . $41.51 cut retail business appears to have diction of active business for 1928 Boys’ $2.75 Union S u its ...... $2.25 $4.00 Glastonbury Unions...... $3.50 been maintained at a fairly good and Brookmeyer’s expectation of level. Hartford stores, for in­ definite improvement may well lead Boys’ $1.00 Union Suits...... 85c stance, showed an increase of from us to look for an active winter and $50.00 SUITS AND COATS . . $37.51 three to five percent over the pre­ .early spring. Unfilled orders of j NIGHT SHIRTS AND vious year. Wholesale business on the Steel Corporation, after reach­ the other hand was 3 % percent ing a new 15-year low in the SHIRTS AND DRAWERS PAJAMAS $45.00 SUITS AND COATS ...... $33.7! over the previous year. Wholesale spring of 1927, started on the rise' and since production has not kept] $4.50 Pajamas ...... * .$3.75^ business on the other hand was 3 % pace, it seems reasonable to expect $3.00 D uofold...... $2.50 $30.01 percent below 1926 in the country increased activity in that quarter $4.00 Pajamas...... $3.00 $40.00 SUETS AND COATS . . .^ r-3 a ivliole. It is reasonably logi­ during the early part of this year. $2.00 Glastenbury ...... $1*65 $3.00 Pajamas ...... $2.50 cal to look on this condition as an President Grace of the Bethlehem Indication that wholesale shelves Steel Company anticipates increas­ $2.50 Glastenbury ...... $2.00 $2.50 Pajamas ...... ^.$2.00 are fairly well cleaned. 20% Off Ml Blue Sergi Money remained easy throughout ed business in 1928 from the -dei- 10% off all other Night Robfe and; mands of the railroad, construction, 10% off all other Shirts and Drawers. the entire year. Call rates stiffened automotive and agricultural indus­ Pajamas. . .’t:, slightly at the year end but even tries. Indeed, one of our best Suits then all classes of money ^ere sighs is the increased purchasing cheaper than at the corresponding power of the farmer due to the rare ' periods of 1925 or 1926. combination of large crops at good Probably the most notable econ­ prices. The index of agricultural SHIRTS REDUCED omic characteristic of the year was purchasing power, according to the reversal of international golo ■Secretary Jardine, stood at 92 in $8.00 Silk S h irts...... ^5*55 CHILDREN’S O V E R C O ^ movements. Those among you who September as compared with an | are familiar with finance know, of averSige of 85 for the year of 1926. $6.00 Silk S h irts...... 15.00 Size 3 to 10 course, that this is due to the ap­ The failure of the,railroads to. pur­ $5.00 Silk Shjffts .. > .. * • -$4.00 proach of foreign courrency, to chase their expected amounts of I $18.00 Coats N ow ...... $13.^ parity. When N. Y. Exchange of equipment in 1927 was, doubtlesi^, $3.00 C otton^ irts ...... any country records n certain point due to their operation ^ of existing $16.50 and $15.00 Coats Now ...... i...— above p^r. It becomes cheaper to $2.50 Cotton Shirts ------• • ’$2.00 plant more efficiently but many [ $13.50 Coats Now ...... —. • •«. .$10.v ship gold than to buy foreign ex­ authorities expect them to come in­ $2.00 Cotton Shirts ...... ?l*50 change. In spite of large imports to the market for greater quantities $12.00 and $11.50 Coats N ow -----... .i. . •. • • • •$8.1 of gold in the first eight months of Of equipment in 1928. Brookmeyer 10% ofif all other shirts. the year, the net out-go since Au­ looks for a business volume in the | $10.00 and $9.00 Coats Now .. w...... — — —W gust as been $130,000,000. Such a first half of 1928 somewhat greater $8.00 Coats N ow ...... • • • • • * • • * * * notable drain on the gold reserves than that of the last half of 1927, of the country would ordinarly lead but they hardly anticipate a volume 1 $6.50 Coats Now ...... • • • • • • • • • up to a rise in the interest rates as great as the first half of 1927.^ ■ ■ ■ \ but the Federal Reserve Banks have This service also anticipates a stif­ expanded their credit sufficiently to fening of prices before summer] n e c k t ie s a n d s c a r f s make up for the gold loss. which will work into the finished Purchasing power has been well goods as well as the ra-w material. maintained and the wide diffusion $2.00 Ties ...... BOYS’ O' If this Increase in the price com­ Special - of purchasing power among tuC modities which was noted last fall masses is the fundamental factor persists (and Brookmeyer’s service $1.50 T ie s...... • • Size 11 to 18 underlying prosperity. It is gov­ confidentally expects it) it will I erned largely by two factors--lilgh tend to lessen the extreme keenness $1.00 T ie s ...... MenswdYo wages and steady emplo^ent. as of competition in many lines and to the latter, while the labor market thus give manufacturers something $5.00 S ca rfs...... $14.50 Coat N o^ $11. is comparatively easy at PresenL like the margin of profit they de­ there has been nothing resemblli^ serve. $2.50 Scarfs ...... $2.00 Rain(»)ats $15.00 Coat Now $12* a serious unemployment Proolem C. W. Barron has commented on VALUED FROM $12.50 TO $22.50. NOW ONLY for the last several the unusually optimistic attitude of | the former there has been but little Industrial leaders at the year end, noticeable trend and that was in as, for instance, Mieir prediction of $16,50 Coat Now $13.( favor of 1927. Composite weekly a five million car year as against HALF PRICE earnings, according to ^ e National 3,066,000 in 1927. F. W. Dodge Industrial Conference Board were Inc., look for an active building NEWSPRINGHATS REDUCED $27 10 in the third quarter of 1827 year and F. W. Babson predicts a as against $27.01 in the corre«^ond- great deal of activity In highway ing period of the ye%r before. There construction. If these predictions have been no notable wage de­ materialize it will mean much for We have put in stock all new Spring 9 ’ECIAL BARGAUK creases in this section of the cop^ the prosperity of Connecticut be­ LEATHER WINDBREAKBiS try except in the textile cause many of the primary and sec­ 1 Lot of Overcoats, Size 35 to 42 and that even in that, Connecticut ondary materials l:i these two in­ Hats and during this sale we will give a 50c has not shared to any gr^at ciegrw. dustries are manufactured here. Value $15 to $35 Such wage changes as Money bids fair to be easy at reduction on any hat $4.00 to $6.50...... $14.40 made public, are generally in the least in the early part of the year. $18.00,Now...... nature of adjustments. Moreove^ If gold exports continue and com­ Only 24 Coats Left, If kny other evidence were needed mercial demands for money in­ ...... $12.00 as to the purchasing power of the crease, money rates are apt to stif­ $15.00, N ow ...... community there is plenty to be had fen slightly but experts, including Now in the fact that savings deposits Harvard economists, predict easier 1 $13.50, N o w ...... • • • $10.75 h a T r a ,.ta incraaaad In In money in the early part of the year. Connecticut. Savings deposits are In general business enters the GLOVESREDUCED ' a good measure of the prosperity of years auspiciously. Production has / the individual worker because the decreased to the point where ware-1 larger investor is usually attracted house and wholesale shelves are $6.00 Fur L in ed ...... $4.50 HALF lo S e aecnrity market.. Obr onalr well cleaned. Purchasing power is 20%OFFALLQTHERS there can be no savings nntiUthe plentiful and well diffused. There $4.00 Fiir Lined ...... $3.00 worker is obtaining not only is ample credit available and enough for current needs but som^ money is easy^ Much will depend $2.50 Fur L in ed ------.$2.00 25 Dozen thing to be put by against n on two rather tangible factors— | day. New financing in the United the presidential election, and thei $2.00 Fur Lined ...... $1.50 States during 1927 is ®®Umated by policy of the Federal Reserve sys­ trunks and bags SHJK STRIPE Halsey Stuart & Co. at nine billion tem. As to the first we are not 10% off all other Gldves and Mittens. SHIRTS dollars. Again these confronted with the LaFollette AU Cases ...... , $3.00 to $5.00, $1.00 off available only because ” scare of 1924 nor by the oil scan­ are enjoying a surplus. To rln. dals which rocked the country at All Cases ...... $5.00 to $12.50, $2.00 off the picture closer home I might that time. As to the latter, the mention that general bank deposits Treasurary Department seems com­ BATH ROBES AND / SWEATERS All Bags Reduced...... • $2.^ In Connecticut gained $100,000,000 mitted to the gold stablization of Values to $2.00 in 1927, and Putnam & Co. antici­ foreign currency and this can only LOUNGING ROBES $9.00 Coat S w eaters...... $7.50 All Trunks Reduced ------$2.00 pate a million dollars more in cor­ be done while money is easy, we $7.50 Coat Sweaters ...... $6.50 '.V porate dividends for stock holders are justified, I think, in expecting $16.50 Robes $12.50 in this vicinity than a year ago. a policy on the part of the Federal $6.50 Coat S w eaters...... $5.50 Building construction was off Reserve Board which will discount || $15.00 Robes . . . j ...... $11.00 $5.00 Coat Sweaters ...... $4.00 l O D o z ^ slightly throughout the entire lor reasonable exports of gold. | $10.00 Robes ...... $7.50 $3.50 Coat S w eaters...... $3.00 country in 1927, The fl8«r®® com­ There la no unemployment of any | 25 Shaker V neck Sweaters with collar, BOYS’ SiptTS piled by F. W. Dodge, Inc. indicate concern, there is no prospect of any $9.00 Robes ...... $7.00 that in the first 11 months of the appreciable wage decrease, the fed­ $8.50 Robes $6.75 Values to $12.50—$5.00.* Without Coffars year Connecticut was 1 percent be­ eral income tax corporations has| $2.50 Hickok B e lts ...... • • • $2*00 low the corresponding period of the been reduced to 11% por cent., and i previous year in the value of con­ our own states’ finances are in a $2.00 Hickok Belts ...... •*...... • • $1*50 tracts awarded while the -rest of healthy condition with a million | 50c New England was off 8 percent. and a half margin between reven-i $2.00 High School Belts .. — t — ...... $1*50 Connecticut’s relative volume was ues and expenditures. Altogether Values to $L50, aoout the same as the U. S. as a I think we can expect a fairly ac­ C. fi. HOUSE & SON, INC. 10% off oh all other Belts and Suspenders. whole. , tive year with some prefits and we Transportation and distribution need hardly anticipate any great were not quite so active in 1927 as price Inflation nor, (|n the other in 1926. Ton miles for the country hand, any notable recession.

■' -V' $

L ' . i . . - f t ' I V/. 'V- lilANCHESTBailCONl^^ WECNE5DAY, ilTATPmARlr 18,19» STATE TO,PIlESBfr DOOBdEMmitES -1 - W E lk OF SPECIALS A T RIALTO TODAY

^Every Film a First Run Lon Chaney and Marie Prevo^l NV-?’ ture 4n Tliis Week’s Share Honmns—Vaudevilk jp^m;; Country ^ r e Tomorrow. lM ?f- morr(w ^i|ght. That Lon Chaney is one of Man Chester’s most popular film favor ' Ml This week^eems to he a special jjit M\far as ^ograms at the State ites was proven last evening at th« theater are concerned. The pictures Rialto theater, judging from the i ti I clkpacity audience that witnessec (/.'JO- Scheipiletf. for the week from today ‘fintiPnext Sunday are all big feat­ his splendid performance In “ No­ ures and on Friday and Saturday mads of the North.'* .This pictun two of them will be presented to­ rates among Chaney’s best and pre­ gether. Country store night comes sents probably for the first time hif • Initial role as a heroc'"Nomads o: again as usual on Thursday night. the North,” is a screen adaption ol The feature at the State tonight the novel of the same name by is “ The Love Mart,” starring Billie James Oliver Curwood. Supporting Dove, Gilbert Rowland and Noah i Chaney in the cast are Lewis Stone FURNISHINGS Beery. The former is shown as the Betty Blythe and Francis McDon- ' beautiful girl who is held in slavery aid, a trio of well-known film JAN. in Louisiana by the brutal Captain celebrities. This thrilling drama Remy, played by Beery. She is con- will be shown again at the Rialto . ceded to have negro blood in her for the final times tonight. DOW N^-NOTHING RESERVED but,.thi3 is all a plot on the part of Paired with Chaney features is the brutal captain and in the end “ Almost A Lady,” a Pathe-Demille she is proved white and the lovers comedy-drama deluxe -starring BARGAINS IN SHOES FOR WOMEN, are brought together. beautiful Marie Prevost. Tomorrow’s feature with < the Again on Thursday night Man­ ‘5N.1 Country store is “ The^ Wizard,” ager Campbell is presenting three starring Edmund Lowe, Leila acts of high class vaudeville. These MISSES AND CHILDREN Hyams and ■ Barry Norton. Lowe programs have became quite popu­ add Norton were players in “ What lar with logical theatergoers und In styles, in quality, in price, these shoes are, we be­ Price Glory,” the former the hard Mr. Campbell is.interiding to make INC boiled sergeant and the latter the j them a regular policy at his thea- lieve, the best value in Manchester. Without exaggeration, mother’s boy. The story is that of 1 ter. we term this opportunity most unusual. The best proof of a super-criminal who trains an ape The acts for this week incliulc Hazel and Thompson, a pair i>i this is the shoes themselves. Come early while the selec­ to do his bidding and who has sev­ eral murders committeed by the comedians extraordinary, Marie tion is most varied, most complete. beast. Dawn, blues singer, and Jinime CLOTHING On Friday and Saturday the feat­ Maloney, a young chap who special­ The reason for this exceptional pricing is briefly told— ures will be “ Clancy’s Kosher Wed­ izes in everything and plenty of it. The film feature will be “ A Han “ broken sizes.” " Yet, the assortment includes all sizes ding” and “ The Open Range.” The former feature stars George Sidney, In Hock,” starring that veteran from A to D among the styles included which are Red Cross, who jylayed with Charlie Murray in character actor, Rudolph Schild- kraut. U lM G M E N ’ S Coon, Dorothy Dodd, Sally Sweets and Enna Jettick. “ Lost at the ’Front” and “ The Life of Riley.” Sidney was also the star of the great dramatic success of the 75 PAIR RED CROSS year, “ The Auctioneer’’ im the part STYLES ...-T...... $6.95 created by the great David';W’ar- PETER HAPENNY GIVES field. RCOATS “ The Open Range” is a Zane BLOOD FOR FIFTH TIME $8.50 PUMPS $7.48 Grey story produced by Paramount. The stars are Betty Bronson, Lane Chandler and Fred Kohler. Betty DXto* own j'udgment. Make your own Submits to Transfusion For $8.00 PUMP& $7.10 Bronson first 'gained fame by her MifHKon. We know how good these role in “ Peter Pan” and has since Benefit of Woman at St. been making success after success Francis Hospital. really are. $7.50 PUMPS $6.29 in fe a tu r^ Kohler is one of the For the fifth time, Peter Happeny most accomplished villains of the i.il screen today, portraying the brutal of 22 Knighton street, today sub­ $7.00 PUMPS AND TIES $5.95 type of “ heavy,” as compared with mitted to a blood transfusion to the suave drawing room type. help save another person’s life; In­ ilOeS^JITS AND COATS ...... $ 2 6 . 2 5 On Sunday and Monday the State cidentally, it was the fifth time that $6.00 PUMPS ...... $5.10 presents Richard Bartholmess in the patient to whom he gave the \ “ The Noose” .” This is Barthel- blood, has been the recipient ol $5.50 AND $5.00"p u m p s )M SOTS AND COATS ...... $ ^ ^ ^ U mess’ first picture to be shown in transfusion. AND T I E S ...... -... $3.98 Happeny’s latest blood-gift was Manchester in several .months and made this morning at St. Francis’s it is considered his best. t.00: SHUTS COATS ...... $ 1 8 . 7 5 hospital in Hartford. The bltmd BROKEN LINES $2.98 was given to Mrs. Anna Galinap, 34, of 76 Stanley street. East Hartford, ;>i ti who is very seriously ill witk per/ Ini 1;S8 SUtTS AND COATS ...... - $ 1 7 . 5 0 nicious anemia." : j..', WAPPING - Dr. James Lynch, attending phy­ sician ;-said that a pint of blood was jii) Jl 20% off Daniel Green Comfys, Mules Mrs. Karl Reichenback of Dem- transferred to Mrs. Galinap’s veins. Off All Oxford ing street is recovering from a se­ A week ago she was given a trans­ and Boudoirs vere attack of the grip. fusion but the doctor said her con­ Mrs. Winnefred Foster Smith is dition was such that another was ill at her home in Brooklyn, N. Y. necessary to make her .able to take • 4a* ^ercoats She was burned severely just before better diets. The .doctor'said her Christmas and the shock of that blood showed only thirty per cent caused her illness. Her aunt. Miss normal. 15% O ff A ll Infant’s, Children’s and Misses’ Footw ear Ellen M. Foster, is caring for her. Three of the previous blood Mrs. Percy West and- infant transfusions Happeny has given slaughter:returned to her homekere .h^ye .been for Manchester rpersou?.-- I.J O Y S ’ KNI£KEE SUITS iaBt Suiiday Viflernooh"* fP6'M *'£116 in these cases ha refused.. ta aci«> >-^ ^/Manchester Memorlar.h;ospi(al-,- | >s any Teimbnrserhent. According tn OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF MEN’S AND • Sunday visitdrh at the home of doctors, Happeny’s blood is of unlis- iRierwith One Long and One Short Pant. Mr. and Mrs. George A. Frink were ual quality. her two sisters and their husbands, kSO.Suit Now...... $17.50 Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kornigebiel and FOOTWEAR SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED Mr. and Mrs. William Hoffman, all .ftii.Suit N o w ...... $15.00 of Hartford and her mother and COVENTRY FOR THE BIG JANUARY SHOE SALE father, Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Schucg 0® Suit N o w ...... $13.50 of Burnside. Thursday evening Coventry !s0IAnd $15.00 Suits N o w ...... $11.50 Briefly, this means a sale that enables everyone— man, woman or child -to supply There was a very pleasant party Grange No. 75, P. of H., will hold every shoe need with footwear of good quality at prices greatly lowered. Prices, how­ held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. its regular meeting and install its Karl Reichent xch last Saturday officers. .50 Suit N o w ...... $9.50 ever, whose true measure is found in the splendid quality of the shoes. evening, when about twenty of their oh Friday evening, the Rockville U')3 iflffiSuitNow ...... $7.50 Manchester friends called , upon Christian Endeavor Union will meet them. Games were played and re­ In Rockville Friday evening. There freshments were served. will be a baked bean supper and ■'ll The icy traveling caused an acci- play given at the Grange hall. Sup­ rlcnt on Tuesday morning at Wap- per will be served from 7 to 8. The ':N ping Center when two men who play “ Who Kissed Barbara” will be OATS Special Bargain vydre driving to their work In Hart­ presented by Ellington talent at ford. Their car slid and went over 8:30 p. m., following the supper. the bank and onto its side in the Miss Laura K. Kingsbury has pjfe Coat Now $1^.00 ditch, just in front of the parson­ been elected captain of the soph- 1 Lot of Men s and Young Men’s Suits age. No one was hurt but the car mores basketball team at Storrs. \ lost a left front wheel and had to They play the University of Maine IJ.iO^Uoat Now $16.00 ’ bestowed, to the garage by a this Saturday at tn-5 Connecticut Size 33 to 42. Only 35 Suits in this lot. These Suits have 15 inch wrecker. Agricultural College. Bottom Pant, Now Only The poles jot the electric lights LM -Coat Now $18.00 The exceedingly low prices prevailing now emphasize the advantage of supplying are very nearly all set. The poles were set as far as William Chris­ footwear needs for months to come. NEW BEAUTY PARLORS tiansen’s home last night. LWHCoat Now $20.00 $10.00 MEN’S OXFORDS MEN’S SHOES OUST HAIR ^ S S E R S WOMAN DISAPPEARED Men’s $9.00 Oxfords, n o w ...... $7.89 Men’s $9.00 Shoes $7.49 Men’s $8 and $8.50 Oxfords, now . . .$6.98 FOR JAPANESE GIES Men’s $7.50 .Oxfords, now ...... $6.10 IN TITANIC DISASTER, Special Bargains in Men’s ...... $5.85 Men’s $8.50 Shoes $6.98 Men’s $7.00 Oxfords, now . . . ^ .— The kami-yui, or: ^old *1 LOT OF BOYS’ SHITS Men’s $6.00 Oxfords, n o w ...... $5.19 fashioned hairdresser of is HOME AFTER 16 YEARS Men’s $5.00 and $5.50 Oxfords, now $4.65 being crowded out of business by ••••••< Odd Pants Men’s $8.00 Shoes $6.49 modern beauty parlors. Coalville, Eng.— Unheard of foi Size 13 to 18 Y ears. Modern girls, of Japan do. not A 15 Inch Bottoms sixteen ypars, Mrs. Jane Robertson, t Men’s $7.50 Shoes $6.29 BOYS’ SHOES want their, hair dtessed in the cum­ believed by her parents to have bersome fashion of the grand­ perished in the Titanic disaster has Were $10 to $15 mothers. They do not like the Men’s $6.50 Shoes $5o49 Boys’ $5.50 Shoes and Oxfords, now .$4.65 made a draniatlc appearance at hei high-piled crests, the heavy oils, mother’s home here. Now Only Boys’ $5 Shoes and Oxfords, now . . $3.98 and the multitude of hair-pins, nets Boys’ $4 Shoes and,Oxfords, now .. .$3.29 Remaining only a few hours, she • Now Men’s $6.00 Shoes .... $5.19 and gee-gaws that in olden- imes told her mother she was married Boys’ $3.50 Shoes and Oxfords, now .$2.98 were considered indispensible to Broken Lots of Men’s " to an American doctor, had travel­ Boys’ $3 Shoes and Oxfords, now . . $2.49 the Japanese woman’s coiffeur. The $7.50 to $8.50 Shoes $2.98 modern girls want a boyish bob, a led all over the world, and then left ‘permanent” and a "facial.” for an unknown destination, "tefus- $2.00 So in Tokyo and all the large Jng to further lift the veil of mys- ■ cities of Japan beauty parlors are tery from her sixteen years bl $5^00 Were $4.50 to $7.00 multiplying rapidly and the kami- silence. ARCTICS yui is retreating into the back­ As Miss Wilkinson she had left ground of a fading past. “ The Coalville to go to the United States. Women’s 7 inch Fancy A r c tic s...... I oka Paris Hair Dressing Shop,” “ The She booked a passage on the Titan­ Women’s 4 Buckle U . S. Arctics, N o w ...... Marie Louise Shop” and -Bimllar ic, which sank in April 1912. but Mackinaws and signs are adorning an .increasing It is now revealed that she changed Women’s $4.50 Patent Fastner Arctics ...... number -of attractively appointed her sailing date at the last mom'eirt 50c OFF parlors in Japanese cities. without telling her friends. IChildrmi’s Sheep Lined Coats Wwnen’s 7 Inch $4.00 Patent Fastner Arctics, N ow ...... Some of ^ the kaml-yul have seen Daring the sixteen years she has* Any Boys’ Knee ther handwriting on the - wall and been absent her father,'sister and^ Children’s Patent Fastner Zippers...... • • - - have climbed aboard the band-wag­ two brothers had died, and Coal­ Now ■ Pants Children’s 4 Buckle Arctics — ...... - ...... I t " ” on of progress. Jn these places ville has.so altered ais tb be almost a sign will be seen announcing that unrecognizable. WASH Misses’ 4 Buckle Arctics...... - - -,- I " " ” hair dressing is 4one in “ both West­ “ It was , like someone coming H ALF PRICE ern and Japanese style.” Mani­ back from the dead,” said Mrs. Misses’ Zippers ...... • • ...... - ‘ • |,'iX curing, face massaging and hair- Wilkinson. “ It nearly killed nu Men’s $5.00 4 Buckle Arctics ...... - ...... curling usually Is done, at these when 1 saw her again. We tried tc places and they are quite popular find out something about her siXv> SUITS Men’s i Buckle Arctics ...... i ••••• ...... - - ...... j with cafe waitresses, oflSce girls teen years of silence, but all shs and> otkere of the upper working would say was that she w$« ,nura. CHILDREN’S PANTS Men’s Felt Boots .,. — • • •,...... ClffSS6S I (1.000FF ing in France daring the war and Thsre la still a field for the kaml- was captured by the Germans. I un­ Left Size 3 to 10. Boys’ and Youths’ Felt B oots...... • - - -- ^taa yul, however, • among, the geisha, Size 4 and 5 Only ANY whose profession.^equlrea that' thhy derstood her to say she had mar­ must tcllhg to' the "old fashioned ried in the United States and hei ^ .W ere $2.00 to $3.50 M AN ’S OR YOUNG M AN’S ■headress. Hundrhds of these little only child had died there, I helievi entertainers still must appegr spick she and her husband both work oi Now ships.” ODD PANTS AND land apah at the tea hottaes ntj^tly C. E. HOUSE & SON' INC. and the task of Iteepipg them heau- The border between the United KNICKERS . tifltdlD accustomed feshlon pro ^ N«w$1.25 H ALF PRICE vl^ea conel*M!tM* work and profit States and Canada is the longest tor the kami-yui. unguarded frontier In the world. ■ TE A Ttjw ^XB iei^^l^w ^' ■0 • k AilOUT — LATEiiT Jb AssHiOiN h in t s BY FOREMOST authorities €iRICHMOND 99 WARMTH Life Niceties i , \\OVlANS \ HINTS ON ETIQUET THE BENSON AUTHOR © 'Q iarle^ Scribnep'? Song y fw«.VANDINI MURDER CASE ^ AOENE SUMNER 1. Is it obligatory for a host­ doubt as they had been at the mo­ CHARACTERS ment of her capitulation to death, ess to entertain for her house Why Is it that the Prince of PHIIiO VANCE when she had relinquished her grip guests? Wales can determine the male fash­ 90HN F - X . MARKHAM, Dlatrlel upon the murderer’s wrls^. 2. W h y? ions of all Britain, but the hats of AttoRiey of New York-Conatr The spell of horror cast over us 3- W hat is the established Mrs. Coolidge have no effect on the w AROARET ODEIjI* (THE headgear of American wonaan- by the sight of the tortured, body way of entertaining fot a “CANARY”) was broken by the matter-of-fact hood? For instance, when Mrs. OHARIiES CLEAVER, « rn tin - tones of Health. guest? Coolidge went to church on New aboat-towB The Answers KENNETH 8POTSWOODB, a maaa> "You see, Mr. Markham,.she was Year’s Day she wore a large droopy evidently sitting in the comer of 1. Yes. hat. Since this hat is a radical de­ factarer 2. So that her gueht may meet LOrCIS MANNIX, aa Importe* this settee when she was grabbed parture from the close little felts local friends and. in turn be invited DRs- AMBROISB IiINDaCIST, a suddenly from behind.” which are all the rage, the little faeklonaUe nearoloBtet about. felts would be -'ul’.e out .of it and Markham nodd^. *Tl must hare 3. A formal dinner. TONY SKEEL. a profeaaloaal bar- taken a pretty strong man to big hats a la Grace Coolidge would Blar 'EtAvetaioBr be all the rage if our fashions were WILLIAM ELMER JESSUP, tele- strangle her so easily.” • 99 phoae operator "I’ll say!" agreed Heath. He 1 made that way. But they’re not— h a r r y SPrVELY. telepbpae op­ B e d -I ^ o m bent over and pointed to the girl’s “Ideal Fashions perhaps It’s too bad, for few First erator fingers, on which showed several Ladies have dressed so well. ERNEST HEATH, Sergeaat of tae abrasions. “They stripped her by Homicide Bureaa • • • rings off, too; and they didn’t go Jean Belle Hamilton “ SO’S YOUR— 1” Lamp who’s THE STORT THUS PAR about It gentle, either.” Then ho Well, well, well, look Vance bae ble own tbeorliw indicated a segment o f fine platl- h .re! None less than Judge Allen aboat erlailaal procednw aad a* nnm chain, set with tiny pearls, C. Southern of Circuit Court, Kan­ tell* them to hie frlead Markham, sas City, Mo„ who refused a divorce icMH U who le coaeldernbly '^i*"**® which hung over one of her shoul­ ders. “And they grabbed what­ to Mrs. Ethyl Cummings, former the crime ollnatlon la New York. U“ Then the aewepapere ever It was hanging round her secretary of the Kansas Public Ser­ the mnrder of A neck, and broke the chain doing vice Commission, on the grounds known a* the “ Canaw,” that no woman with a Job outside Folllee Bin and il ^V/kEBE Macisa&e t O dell It. They weren’t overlooking any­ wny bennty. Markham <’}'!’ ■ thing. or losing any time. . . . A the home could be a good wife, Vance for help nnd they rlelt th and that her public life constituted “ Cannry’e” n^nrtmenj. Was ^'ramlsd swell, gentlemanly Job. Nice and refined.” an “ Indignity” to her husband- CHAPTER ITT “Where’s the Medical Examln “Whenever a wife participates actively in politics,” said the S Markham entered the Odell er?” asked Markham. -«■- A 'IB oulb Cabihet Judge, “ she has instituted a regime apartment t>hat morning Ser “ He’s coming,” Heath told him. incompatible with domestic rela­ geant Ernest Heath came forward “You can’t get Doo Doremus to go tions” . at once and extended his haim. A anywheres without his breakfast.” Symbolic of the southern hospi­ that gives such a good view of the Vi Wish there wei . some, modern look of relief passed over his broad, “He may find something else— expression as much needed right tality one expects in a house called grounds. Everything in the kitchen is ar­ pugnacious features; and It was ot^ something that doesn’t show.” now as "So’s Your Old Man!” “ The Richmond” are the many ranged to Increase the efllciehcy of vlous that the animosity and rivalry “There’s plenty showing for spoken with asperity and vigor. * which always exist between the dfr Clothed POYEB- me,” declared Heath. “Look at features of this spacious home. the housewife. And a breakfast nook appreciably lessens the work tectlve division and the district at­ this apartment. It wouldn’t be' TUB OR SHOWER? A wid^-open hall runs from torney’s office during the Investiga­ Clo,set much worse If a Kansas cyclone I hear that all our really up-to- porch to porch through the center of serving the first meal of the day. For the lucky gUest who visits tion of any criminal case had no had struck It.” snuff young people think it’s hor­ of the house: French doors onto place in his attitude on this occa We turned from the depressing "The Richmond” sin exceptional ribly old-fas’aioned and common the verandA- permit freedom of slon. , „ . „ spectacle of the dead girl and and vulgar to use bath tubs. Hor­ room is provided, 12x^8 feet. Its two big windows looking on the “ I’m glad you’ve come, sir. ne OriLY Doo«. TO moved toward the center of the rors, yes! The showe’'’s the only light and air; big bedrooms with said: and meant it. / room. mechanism for ablutions which more closet space than most homes side yard with its cute white en­ Odell APAirrMExiT trance gate, and a cozy corner up He then turned to Vance with a the smart young things condescend can afford and , a roomy upstairs “Be careful not to touch any under the eaves. The cost .of “The cordial smile, and held out his'- to use. W ^ , let ’em, but as for hall Increase the sense of comfort­ tul they didn’t blow the Joint up thing, Mr. Markham,” warned Richmond" is from 27000 to hand.* ^ . ... yond. There was no other entrance me, life wouldn’t be half worth able ease. to the apartment, and the bedroom with dynamite." returned Heath Heath. “ I’ve sent for the finger­ Alighting at “The Richmond,” a 28000. “ So the amachoor sleuth Is wun print experts—they’ll be here any living If the^e weren’t nice long us-agaln!” His tone held a friendly could be reached only through the acridly. guest’s heart is wanned by the But it was not the general dis­ minute now.” deep white hath tubs in which a For further information aboat banter. archway from the living-room. 1 person could loll and soak and re.id pleasant, homey appearance of Its There was a large davenport, cov­ order that most attracted us. Our Vance looked up In mock aston­ "The Richmond” write the Stand­ “Oh. quite," murmured Vance. and rest. What can a shower offer window boxes, its wide windows, ered with brocaded silk. In front gaze was almost Immediately ishment. with cheery small panes and smart ard Homes Company, (Colorado “ How’s your Induction coil work - 4 compared to a good old-fashioned of the fireplace In the left-hand drawn and held by the body of the “Finger-prints? You don’t say— board shutters, and its open porch Building, Washington, D. C. Ing this beautiful September morn­ tub? wall of the living-room, with a long dead girl, which rested In an un­ really! How delightful!-Imagine ing. Sergeant?” natural, seml-recumbent attitude narrow library-table of Inlaid rose­ a Johnnie In this enlightened day 3 0 2 5 When some one tells us that we “ I’d hate to tell you! Ihen In the corner of the davenport near­ JACK’S SISTER resses trained to always Jog your wood extending along Its back. On leaving his finger-prints for you to memory by asking “coffee” ? or by show such characteristics in our Heath’s face grew suddenly grave, est to where we stood. Jack Dempsey’s sister, I hear, and he turned to Markham. “ Its the opposite wall, between the find.” has got a job in a stock company, bringing it to you without asking. hands we are immensely flattered. Her head was turned backward, “ All crooks aren’t clever, Mr. a raw deal. sir. Why In hell foyer and the archway Into the bed but she doesn’t go by her real We like to think that we show our room, hung a triplicate Marie An.- Vance,” declared Heath comba­ couldn’t they Have picked some as If by force, over tne silken tuft Circular Fulness Plays name of Elsie Dempey, but by W’OMEN’S CLUM blue blood or our artistic leanings. one besides the Canary for their tolnettep- mlrroir, -bsneath which ed upholstery; and her hair had tively. An Important Part ,. Elsie Dawn. She says that she It’s quite the cute and smart But the rather broadj squajn fing­ stood a mahogany gate-legged ta­ “Oh, dear no! They’d never be dirty work? There’s plenty of come unfastened and lay beneath \ doesn’t want to cash in on her fam­ and “ intelligentsia” thing to laugh ered hand of the capable- man or apprehended If they were. But, Janes on Broadway who coulda ble. her head and over her bare shoul The skirt of this crepe satin ous brother’s name. Wonder if at women’s clubs as something women, or the fine sensitive hand On the tar side ot the archway, after all. Sergeant, even an authen­ faded from the picture without der like a frozen cataract of liquid frock swirls into graceful fulness Elsie would have felt tue same way futile and inane. But a resume of of the surgeon, or the clever mixed near the large oriel window, was tic finger-print merely means that causing a second alarm; but they gold. Her'face. In violent death, below a draped girdle which is about it a year ago? Wonder if women’s clubs for the past year characteristics of the business wo­ the person who made It was dally­ gotta go and bump off the Queen a baby grand Steinway piano with was distorted and unlovely. Her crushed into a buckle at the left there’s much cash value in being brings forth such constructive ac­ man’s hand are all good in their ing around at some time or other. a beautifully designed and deco skin was discolored; her eyes were hip.' Then, there Is a shoulder a Miss Dempsey right now? complishments as building scores own different ways- But if the of Sheba!" rated case ot Louls-Selze ornamen­ It doesn’t Indicate guilt." As he spoke, William M. Moran, staring; her mouth was open, and bow of the same fabric with long of sanitariums and babies’ homes, hand is poorly cared for and un­ "Maybe so." conceded Heath dog­ the commanding officer of the de­ tation. In the corner to the right her lips were drawn back. Her ends indicating a lengthened line LIPSTICK CLUBS medical attention given hundreds groomed it reveals ■ a slip-shod ot the fireplace was a spindle-legged gedly. “ But I’m here to tell you at the back. The oval neck and These various high school clubs of crippled children, school lunch­ character, no matter how beautiful­ tective bureau, came Into the little neck, on either side of the thyroid 3S- tlght-fltllng sleeves correctly com­ escritoire and a square hand that If 1 get any good honest-to joined by girls who pledge them­ es for undernourished children, ly shaped it may be. g foyer and performed the usual cartilage, showed ugly dark hruls Uod finger-prints quta this deyas plete a frock of distinction for the painted ..waste-paper ..basket >of es, Sbe- was dressed in a. illmsy selves not to use lipstick, rouge registration of baby campaigns, 'CleanlineBS*"’l:sVthe "fir^^ step i hand-shaking ceremony. Though tated area. It’s not going so easy fashion-wise miss and small wo­ vellum. evening -gown of black Chantilly or powder, leave me quite cold. dental and goiter clinics establish­ toward beauty. For this purpose 1 he had met Vance and me hut once with the bird that made ’em." man. Designed in sizes 14, 16, 18 ''■;Tqr?he -leTt’ .iof the fireplace stood lace over cream-colored chiffon, and^ Seems to me it would be much ed, a'hd other stupendous pieces of Use a good toilet soap, plenty of ! before, and then casually, he re- Vance appeared to be shocked and 20 years. Price of pattern one iof the loveliest Boule cabinets across the arm of the davenport more to the point if such clubs work that organized men would hot water, and creams and lotions i • membered us both and addressed us bjloj) positively terrify me, Ser 15 cents. I have ever seen. Several excellent had been thrown an evening cape The secret of distinctive dress were formed to teach girls how to never think of tackling. to dissolve the grime and dirt not s courteously by name. reproductlolns of Boucher, Frago­ geant. Henceforth I shall adopt 1 “Your arrival," he said to Mark of clotli-of-gold trimmed with er lies in good taste rather than a use intelligently and artistically removable by the usual soap and nard and Watteau hung about the mittens as a permanent addition i ham. In a well-bred, modulated mine. lavish expenditure of money. these real friends of beauty and CLEANLINESS, FIRST water method. walls. The bedroom contained a to my attire. I’m always handling W. voice, “ is very welcome. Sergeant There were evidences of her In There is a charming assortipcnt youth. Many a plain girl has had IN BEAUTY OF HAND All stains should be erased from chest of drawers, a dressing-table the furniture and the teacups and g Heath will give you what prelim effectual struggle with the person of fashions from which to choose life glorified for herself and asso­ skin and 'nails. Even the creams and several gold-leaf chairs. The the various knlckknacks In the your reauirements in our s inary Information you want. I m who had strangled her. Besides ciates by learning how to make To be admired it is not necessary will not always do this satisfac­ whole apartment seemed eminently houses where I call, don’t y’ Fashion Book. 15 cents the copy<^ 1 ^still pretty much In the dark my- the dishevelled condition ot her herself prettier. that your hands should conform/to torily, so we must call, on the sci­ In keeping with the Canary’s fra- know.” any one type In particular. Beauti­ ence of chemistry to aid us here. 1 self—only just arrived.” Markham Interposed himself at DIME COFFEE ful is the artistocratic hand which Sometimes nechanlcal means will 1 “A lot of information I've got to her gown this point, and suggested they As we stepped the little They say that coffee will have to we see exemplified in the paintings be of great assistance. These aids = give." grumbled Heath, as he led there was a long rent In the fine lace make a tour of .napectlon while Manchester Herald foyer Into the- living-room and stood of the old masters (in that day only we will discuss in detail later. § the way into the living-room. across her ^breast. A small corsage waiting for the Medical Examiner. cost a dime a cup because the poor for a moment looking about’, a-scene Pattern Service. those of wealthy aristocratic class = Margaret Odell’s apartment was of artificial orchids bad been tor “They didn’t add anything much restaurant men lose money when bordering on wreckage met our, could afford to have their portraits 5 a suite of two fairly large rooms from her bodice, and lay crumpled to the usual methods,” Heath Pattern No...... they sell it for a nickel. Stuff and eyes. The rooms had apparently painted). And so is the well recog­ Approximately 72 per cent of the = connected by a wide archway In her lap. One satin slipper had pointed out. “Killed the girl, and nonsense! Any woman who knows been ransacked by some one In-a Price 15 Cents. nized artistic type.' earth’s surface is water. = draped with heavy damask por- fallen off, and her right knee was their-rlpped things wide open." what a pound of good coffee and B tieres. The entrance door from the frenzy of haste, and the disorder of twisted Inward on the seat of the cream and sugar cost, and who s main hall of the building led Into the place was appalling. davenport, as If she had sought to *Heiitb had become acqnnintrd^ ^amS knows, too, how many cups can be TTltb Vance diirlns Ihe InveetiKalion’ M a small rectangular foyer about “They didn’t exactly do the job lift herself out of the suffocating squeezed from a pound, knows in dainty fashion,’’ remarked In­ ot (be Benson mnrder rase two Size ...... iiiiiiiiiiiiliiili W eight feet long and four feet deep, clutches ot her antagonist. niontbs previous] that even with cost of fuel and g with double Venetian-glass doors spector Moran. labor and service, coffee at five Her fingers were still flexed, no (TO BE CONTINUED) Address ...... - v/.. M opening into the main room be- “I suppose we oughta bo grate- cents a cup means a nice fat profit. If it isn’t profitable, why are wait- Send your order to the “ Pat­ tern Dept., Manchester Evening 1 They would • rather be just thtpi" Herald. Manchester. Conn.” selves. j Home Page Editorial It seems almost a paradox that KEEP YOUR 1 those who act for the public, write for the public, and work for the DaQy Health Service i LIVER AN D j public should he^personally shy of COFFEE SPOTS APPEIITE YOUNG public favor. As a glove flung ;to To remove coffee spots from HINTS ON HOW TO KEEP WELL ' ONIONS AND ! their work they appreciate the silk, sponge immediately with by World Famed Authority FAM E ! homage enormously, but they clear, warm water and rub dry •.N-i.? 1 themselves as a rule would rather with a circling motion. 1 By,Olive Roberts Barton | retire into some quiet corner and ^e Just plain John Smith Or Sally W ET F u r PROGRESS OP DISEASES IS the killing of all insects, particular­ Jones, with John Smith’s or Sally Fur coats that have been in the ••s'* HALTED BY DISINFECTION ly body lice that may be on the pa­ Jones’' right to live as he choosqs, rain should be shaken vigorously tient or his clothing, or on the bed Mrs. Thomas Wliiffen, the Grand A woman whose name.^ is a and dried away from artificial By DB. MORRIS FISHBEIN linen; the application of a similar bid Lady of the Theater, says that household word said to her quite- heat. Brush when perfectly dry. Editor Journal of the American procedure to persons associated in her sixty years on the American as-famous artist husband; “Jimmy, •.N f < with the patient and to his immedi­ Medical Association and of Hygeia, stage she knew, nothing of the flesh we’re honor g.uests tonight at V^n COLORED GLASS ate surroundings. If you have a crystal lamp base the Health. Magazine pot of Broadway. “I have never Vee’s. Now, go and dress.” Some thousands of years ago it seen one of your gay places!” she “Fooled you that time,” sqjd that doesn’t quite match your •was believed that pestilence or told her interviewer, “ excep^j; an oc­ Jimmey. “I got out of it slick aa a room’s decoration, fill with colored plague was due to a general putrid casional trip to Delmonico’s or Rec­ whistle when I met old Van Vpe •water any shade you desire. condition of the air and that such tor’s. My husband and I led very yesterday. And the cook has or­ Care of Babies putrefaction was brought about by Bridge M e quiet lives.” ders to have liver and onions tor On the current 25 bill appears a influences wrought by the gods or So'mehow or other we ,get the our dinner. She also has the liver large portrait of Andrew Jackson. by the stars. idea that celebrities are made of and onions, for I Just brought Why do so many, many babies of j Castoria.* 'The kind called

; ^ PAGB^^.EV^« MANCHBSnffi (CONN.) EVENING HBEAED, WBDNiSSDAT, JAN0ABT 18^ 1928.

^bidG W^ith M s ...... Lid,dl31 Helen Berggren > ' i CaEF.Bi^HOVEN Onward Christian Soldiers McDougall Beethoven and G Clef Glee Clubs CLUBS SING FINEY with Albert Pearson ' SHOP V- 90 HOUSES BUILT Widely Varied Program, at ' First; Joint Concert De- H EE DURING 1927 i ^ ts Big Crowd. Last Year Outdid Year Previ­ AND BARGAIN BASEMENT The G Clef Glee club and . its big ous In Dwellings— Total, 1013 Main Street South Manchester i-brother organization, the Beethov­ \\ , en Glee club, appeared in an excel­ lent concert at the Swedish L^^ther- However, Little Less. an church last night under the di­ rection of Helge E. Pearson. It was A Gigantic Public Disposal Sale Starts Tomor­ the first joint concert of the two Although the year 1927 was con­ sidered a slow year in construction clubs. , The program incwded. Mj, . a wide va­ wotk in Manchester the records of riety of selections.rranging, from Building Inspector Edward C. El­ row Morning, Thursday, Jan, 19 at 9:30 A. M. t: folk songs to arrangements of clas- liott, Jr., shows that during tlsat - Bical aJrs to well known poems. One time 90 new dwellings were built of the best numbers of the G. Clef, at an expense of $620,300. In 1926, club was **A /Minuet at' Marly*,.,an ;-w^).jch. was considered a big year 84 Two floors jammed fuU of wonder shoe valires offered for quick public ffisposaL A arrangement of Beethoven’s Minuet "dwellings were erected at a cost of JW in G. Another .number in which the $584,500. series of both bankrupt and bought out shoe stocks, some p u rch a^ from U. S. Bankrupt- women sang well was “ Greetings to The number of building permits cy Court together with our own regular shoe stocks at nnusnll prue concession. Spring,’’ words set to Strauss s issued in 1927 was 389, against 402 . “ Beautiful Blue Danube’’ waltz. in 1926. The grand total of all con­ The best chorus number of the struction -work both old and new in Shoes Rubber footwear for the entire family at prices slashed to the four v^d s. A evening, perhaps, was “ Beautiful 1927 was $792,575. In 1926 this miffh^ towent of super shoe bargains that will appeal to the ever increasing throng of Saviour’’ by Christiansen, sung by total was $975,125. The total for the combined clubs. This included new work in 1927 was $743,280 value-wise shoe shoppers who know Self Service shoe store offeniigs. an incidental solo by Miss Helen In 1926 itwas $853,760. Berggren, contralto. In comparing'*1927 .with 192,6 it Prince’s Song High Mark is well to remember that Manches­ The Beethoven club .reached it^ ter erected its new Municipal build­ hi^h mark in “ Glad Sasom Fage- ing in 1926 at an expense of $167,' lin ”■ a Swedish number by Prince 000. r T Special I Gustaf, and “ Goa s Heaven,” a Ne­ Special! Special I gro spiritual. Its first lumber was GAM Sullivan’s “ Lost Chord,” with an in­ JAMES TIERNEY HEADS i WOMEN’S QUEEN QUALITY FOOTWfiAR, cidental solo by Sherwood Ander­ ’ 1 EMERSON SHOES FOR MEN $5.95 Soloists for the concert were A l­ HOLY NAME SOCIETY iO lr $7.50 to $10.00 Grade, Now, Pair ♦.. bert Pearson, bass, and Miss Berg­ KS* $4„95 $5.95’ gren. Mr. Pearson’s two solos were the recitative “ Thus Saith the St. Bridget’s Holy Name society Lord” and the aria, “ But Who May Abide?” from Handel’s “ Messiah.” at its annual meeting last night These two numbers called on Mr. elected James Tierney president for ; Pearson to exhibit everything he is the coming year. The other officers arc James J. Callahan, vice presi­ One Lot of Women’s 1 possessed of and he met the exact­ An exceptional oppor­ ing demands of the compositions dent and Clifford Chartier, secre­ admirably. tary. tunity, $5.00 and $6.00 Remarks were made by the new The numbers require very deli­ ■calfskin shoes and ox­ ® Novelty Footwear cate shading, a range from the ex­ officers and plans for the coming lai treme lower to the high upper reg­ year decided upon. The meeting fords. Solid leather. ister, and a change from piano to nights were set for the first and Rubbers Every pair guaranteed. loudest fortissimo. Mr. Pearson.. third Tuesdays of each month. A committee for a whist party to Women’s Felt Slippers nevertheles& was at complete ease We have assorted 1 ,2 and 3 pair lots of different atyles in every part of the solos. He is be held on Tuesday of next week We are going to set new rec­ one of Manchester’s most promising was appointed. The personnel of P a ir...... $3.95 on our regular $4.00 and $5.00 styles, comprising one big Several colors, moccasin style singers and is still on his way up. this committee is Joseph Moriarty,, ords for low prices for rubber lot. Several hundred pairs, going out d»1 Q pf ribbon trimmed ^ Miss Helen Breggren, in her solo John Boyle, Walter Leclerk, George at. P a i r ...... ^ 1 .J/U All sizes, pair ...... O J / -JOf with the Glee Clubs and individual­ H. Williams and George Kelley. footw ear; tis ■ ly in “ Abide With Me” showed that The executive committee will pro­ she is improving every time she vide the entertainrnent at the meet­ MEN! L... sings. She possesses a beautiful ing on February 7. One Lot of Women’s contralto voice clear and even in Following is the executive com­ all its^hases. It was largely her No such values were mittee elected at last night’s meet­ ever heard of before. Felt and Leather solo work in “ Beautiful Saviour” ing: George H. Williams, Edward LADIES! which made that number the best J. Murphy, John H. Gill, Joseph Solid leather, Goodyear Slippers of the evening. Moriarty and George Hibbert. welted black and tan, The church was filled by a high­ Here Is a Rare All new styles, several pretty ly pleased i audience and considera­ high and low shoes, every c:r John Aason is the tallest actor go i ble money was added to the fund pair guaranteed. shades. Value $V.25 pair which will be used wh«.n the con­ in the movies. Opportunity. Going for • RQ r Children’s Rubbers ference of the Augustana Synod is a p a i r ...... held here this year. Pair ...... „ $2.95 Following-is the program: Shoes that were sparkling values formerly, at $3.95 Lost C h ord ...... Sullivan Ladies’ Rubbers Incidental Solo, Sherwood Ander- and $4.95. Short lots, practically all sizes in lot, good |»li; Pair ...... Sheepskin Slippers ^ son. Men’ s pickings aU up-to-date, . Scissor G rinder...... Jungst Misses’ Rubbers Going out at, pair .. , ...... - - Our policy is never to carry Beethoven Glee ulub A Minuet at Marly .Beethoven Pair ...... W ork Shoes them over. Regular $1.25 kind, pair ..... Such a Ll’l’ F e llo w ...... Dichmont Boys’ Rubbers i • (i Clef Glee Club P a i r ...... The surprise of the Ladies’ and ^ r ' 5lecitative and Aria from “ Mes­ WOMEN 1 iJ4/ siah” ...... Handel day. One lot high grade Men’s, pair ...... V o v F v ? li Men’s Dress Overshoes. They must be cleaned out (a) Recitative— Thus Saith the elkskin, composition soles Lord The new style low 4 Buckle QQ Guaranteed for real ser­ quickly. (b) Aria— But Who May Abide? P a i r ...... cuff gaiters in grays, Albert Pearson vice. Regular $4.00' Swedish Folksongs next time you're blessed value for d* O |20 tans and blacks, sev eiv..B af . ’ . .inJdead-g4i ETAON Here Is an Exceptional Glad Sasom Fageln with e stiff ueck, apply P a i r ...... J p ^ o D * / eral hundred pair, 1/ Prince Gustaf V alu e: Halsning Till Hemlandet Baume Bengue—then going out J I g g Kromer say; bye-bye painS Men’s, Women’s and Misses* to ^ Boys’ Solid at pair Beethoven Glee Club Men’ s Indian moccasin slippers, not Beautiful S avior...... Christiansen Beethoven and G Clef Glee Clubs Leather all sizes, but several hundred Greetings to Spring...... Strauss A A lA A Ai pairs in the lot. Value $1.50 Spin, S p in ...... Jungst LADIES! to $2.00 Cleaning O Q G Clef Glee Club o School Shoes Rubbers out at pair ...... Negro Spirituals One lot, about 78 pairs of women’s tM low cuff gaiters illUMEi ^ of quality, style and service. I’m Troubled in Mind . . .Russell (ANALGESIQUE) going out to the early birds at, p air ...... God’s H eaven...... Gaul All leather. Blacks and Pc-tUtVES A . m u Dixie Brand. Were $6.00 value, all wool Jersey. QJ Ai • W Beethoven Glee Club tans. , - Values $4.00 and One Big Lot of Men’s made by the Hood Rubber Pro­ $5.00 pair Misses’ and Felt Slippers ducts Company. Every pair going at .. $2.95 guaranteed perfect. Up to Regular $1.00 value C Q ^ Children’s Welt going out at ...... v v ■ anl date s ^ e s 89c Sole Shoes Scout Shoes Made by Lined, extra good wear Children’s Felt Slippers in every pair, sizes-^8, and Booties — 8‘/2-11* Regular $2.45. Endicott-Johnson Oijtf regular 89c- qualities Overshoes Men’s d» 1 n o Pair. Boys’ gQ Pair P a i r ...... $1 *69 going at ^ K K n Pair ...... UUC Women’s and Children’s 4- $1.98 2 Pair for $1.00. buckle overshoes, good m ^es, all are up to date One Big Lot of Men’s, Boys’ and Pair ...... $1.89 Men’s Storm King One Big Lot of Children’s SHOES Children’s Shiny Boots Rubber Boots Knee-length and Storm King CHILDREN’S SHOES, sizes 2 to 8. length. Sizes somewhat brok­ MEN’S 4-BUCKLE Red soles, every pair guaranteed Value $1.50. Going for, pair ...... 89c en, mostly sizes 6-8 going P a i r ...... $3.95 All kinds and sizes, no two pair alike. Going out at, p a ir...... • 89c $1.00 Overshoes Boys’ Storm King Heavy Red Soles and Light About 300 Pairs of Weight for Dress BOYS’ SHOES .1 Women’s Rubbers wear, pair^------J. v ^ ^ ^ Rubber Boots Toes on the shoes are narrow, fiht they fit property. Included in this lot are several Styles not the latest 150 pairs going storm style. Going ^ Sizes 11-2 0 5 Sizes 3-6, Pair pairs of Ball Brand, first qual­ out at, pair ...... U iJy o u t p a i r ...... ity, worth $4.50 pair. * -rSH! STO RES^ 'K/'i Perhaps yow didn’t realize that Bayer Aspirin tablets are made SELF ^9 relieye th ^^p -4oi|m rheumatic aches as well as dispel the occa- f lh ^ c l^ e . Tiiey db! In cases of neuralgia, neuritis, Ium- those pains that penetrate one’s very bones, Bayer ^ -K ^ r in itu b le ts offer, rey relief. Just be sure you are getting the AND BARGAffI A each tablet and on the box-— SOUTH MANCHESTER ' r f 1013 MAIN “f a it does KOT affect the heart ta iha mark Of Barer Maimfaetare of Monoaceticaoldester of SallcrUcacld ^SDQTOHBSTBR (CONN.) e v e n i n g HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1 8 ,1928,^ PXGBTWBCVTS NO 1V 0 FIGRTS FOR DEMPSEy PHiUPPINE’S CHIEF THIS YEAR, DAVB WAISH SAYS Contractors C t o Up ; • ; ; : ; il ll Now is the time of the year when 1 . 1 .. li . -«*•'vtThoniibtfThonitbtf V .. . . . ti 00 jKckard Would Not Stand SCORES OF 6 8 ,5 3 all good athletic directors worry I Richardson .89 88 their heads over the scholastic at­ poned Match: Bat 1 Alvord “i-.'v 91 99 tainments of their athletics. In For It For Fear Something i ~ I other words, examinations are on. Totaiss 445 455 440 IN JUNIOR LOOP The first wail coines from Ohio Against Plranbcjfk vWatliias -Bi-ou, (4) State. Seven young men there Hennoouin 'll 98 84 Should Happen to Spoil who are prized rather highly School Wins. - ' P Ldvetl.. 8l 8? W li around athletic headquarters have Gieasdn ... •96 11^ I'oo 'our Games Played In Com­ been banned from athletic piartici- Sargent- . .. . .v.^ . .1 ^ 96 91 Tenney Bout pation during the middle semester League Standing'- WIganowski . . 1Q4 100 because of failure in the class- munity League; Cardinals W rooms. t Watkins Bros. . .20 U -2 8 Totals • 475 4H8 472 BY DAVIS J. WALSH The most prominent athletic de­ Construction .• . ao V.rf. ■' ^ ;^8- • Tj*us1^ ooni|onin^y (^) High School . .17 24 Gorman ...... 88 « 73 7.') clared ineligible, until he passes :.l . 90 91 (I. N. S. Sports Editor) Win 16 to 15. off certain work is Howard Kriss, Man. Plumbing .15 .12 • 19 Clarke ‘. ; ?/ .... 83 .11 16 v_14- Thornton . ,.. .. 88 93 a three-sport star. Kriss, holder Trust Co. .... 96 New York, Jan. 18.— Jack Demp­ Trade School . . .5 16 Richardson .....84 % of the conference title in ___91 87 7>j sey may talk two great figlits this The Community club junior bas­ the 60-yar.d dash, is ineligible now A. & P. . , ----- . .6 is .y-)-’ 8 Alvord .1 . . .,.4 L7 ; 5 year but. he will fight only one of ketball league swung Into action but may get »*. clean slate later in Keith’s "434 439 406 them, if Tex Rickard has anything last night in both divisions, four Totals the year. Although it grabbed^; pU : four Consir-fivo;* to, (4) to do with it, which may be games being played. At the Harding 100 George Pouch and Ted Hierony­ points in its postponed .match with F. Knofla ...... 89 9'6 characterized as a dsitinct possi- school, the Warriors beat the Bull mus, both football lettermen and ...... V6 — Dogs 28 to 8 and the Cardinals the Manchester Trust i Company, E.‘ Knofla . — basketball candidates, are out. So Manchester Construction Coin- M. Osello . -- 76 8.1 TMs was one of the impressions nosed out the Woodland A. C. 16 to ...... 97 85 xo 15 in Division One. The score tells are Fred Shuler, George Dyer, pany’s bowling team slipped a T h is r ...... the writer gained in an interview Robert Irwin and Bryon Coffee, couple of p.egB against Mahsbeater A. Khd'lr.- i 88 DO the tale in the first game but in the 102 95 with Tex Rickard today. Another other basketball candidates. Plumbing & Supply Coifipany/lYhidh , Anderson , - 97 was that our John had been re^ sepond, it was anybody’s game right up until the final whistle. Hap- This matter of keeping their resulted in a deadlock; And as a re­ 4511 citing a piece that was “ Ot in the athletes interested in their school sult the fast stepping hpys . -fiVW Totals ■447 453 peny and Mcllduff were instrumen­ i - High School (4) original script when tal In the Cardinal’s victory. work is one of the problems that Watkins Brothers are now Jied with the International News Service in them for first place in the Commer­ Kelley ...... 82 98 103 At the Kacey hall on Bissell always tend to worry the coaches ___ _ _ . 97 78 9.N Los Angeles yesterday that street in Division Two, the Olympics along about this time of the year. cial League which began its round Miller ----- wanted a warm-up bout en route Robinson . •••••■• S2 93 80 easily turned back the Polish A. C. Three of the four major foot­ last night at Murphy’s alleys. io;i to the third episode of the Tunney It was a bad night for the bank­ Wigren ...... 89. 91 68 to'^sTrEls. is the highest score ball teams in Virginia will be ...... 92 66 8 y serial, now intended for a June made in either division. Schiebel ...... captained next year by graduates ers, for they lost eight p<>ints, four Da^s .... to the contractors and the same to and Turkington e^ch made eight ^1 the same Roanoke, Va., high Totals 442 426 479 Rickard simulated astonishment baskets. The other game resulted school. Albert Barnes, Albert Watkins. However, they never when told that Dempsey had de- m m once gave up the ship until it went Keiths (0) in a 53 to 32 win for the Liberty Bailey and Earl Fitzpatrick, who Murphy'. . . ___ . . . 79 96 73 dared in favor of warming A. C.. over Highland Park. Welles played together in high school, below the surface. Joe.Sargent hit 76 77 i; VA 125 against the banker's. I t was the liratt .... • ••••• 7*/ something that never Ha® been was- high scorer but not by much. will face each other as rivals next ' 7 65 T” high score of the night'.', » ' E. He(tb .% actually cold since the The senior league will play to­ year as the leaders respectively pf Hemhogotn ' ■ O'.*‘ • t ■*. -* 8-3 round at Chicago. This aPP^-®f^J^ night at the Harding school gym. the Virginia Military Institute, In the upset of the evening the Plumbing & Supply lost .the firpt : 68 is not being done, at least aot since Last night’s summaries follow: Virginia Poly and Washington Modean ..>....116 96 51 the other evening when Sharkey Warriors (28) and Lee grid outfits. and Heeney warmed up the situa- I' ■ b ; r . What a sensational debut Total' '421 414 391 ticn to such effect that both went Reed, r f ...... 3 1 Branch McCracken, Indiana sopho­ into cold storage until further no- Stergeun, rf , , ...... 1 1 tively. A rally in the last stage of more forward, made in Big Ten the match saved the pintail tally ticc. Radding, If .••••••.••I 6 haskethall circles. This lad play­ for the contractors. Smith was b ^ t Two prospective eliminators were Bycholsky, I f ...... 1 1 ing his first conference game for the plumbers and Anderson for thoroughly eliminated on that oc­ Coe, ...... ,,..3 0 S- against Chicago, shot 11 field the contractors. A large cro\?i casion and. while Rickard careless­ CervinI, rg ...... 1 1 -m e CUlSr eV-PoR-TS OF TUB goals and caged two free shots for watched this match‘and the cheqr-; ly neglected to say as much, there Welles, I g ...... 2 0 a total of 24 points. He also ing was vociferous at times. is no doubt that he has very littlo starred on the football team as an 28 The High school faculty which .Is, intention of permitting the same end this past season. far from, out of the running for the Bull Dogs thing to happen in Dempsey’s case. Ever wonder what became of title, picked up four more points at Coach Jerry I’ay annotmced last Our John quite apparently, was By WERNER LALFER Bobby Thompson, who, as a the expense of Keiths Furniture Nachowski, rf night that the Community club talking in gum Arabic yesterday member of that famous PassaiC, Company. Modean’s I"'' was high. girls will open their basketball sea­ Prete, If . . . The boys who compile the big red and my guess is that Rickard will N J., high school team, scored The Trade school faculty and the son- tonight at Broad Broo^against tell him so as soon as he gets him Godz, c ...... more than 1000 points as a ba^.ket- Atlantic & Pacific had a stirring Palmer, rg . geography text books have evident­ the Crescent girls ho .last night on the telephone. The Dempsey- ly overlooked something. .ball player? Well, he is now man­ match, each winning two points. Kelly, Ig, . . . The school got the first game by; pu'mu^llcd the- Windsor .Locks Ad­ Tunney fight is the only big shot In treating the exports of the ager of the Syracuse basketfiau vertisers .,16 '.-fo‘ ,, L.-at ?bot Guard Rickard has now and it must be Philippines, much space has beeu team, watching men he could easi­ nine pins and the last by ten, but' protected, like a gambling conces­ ly eclipse on the floor represent the thernp tea T..H. clerks won the _other____ by suf- <^1110 Rartford? ’ • - Referee. Ernie Dowd. given over to the amount of sugar, ficient margin to win the pintail ■r’:'Obach-Fay will, take a; squad of sion or brook trout in the closed Cardinal A. C. (16) oriffee, coprr, and so forth, that is Orange. A physician’s order pre­ point. The results follow: eleven player,, ' to BropG^ Brook. season. B. F. WHO WON THE FUSS? veaily sent out from those tiny vents his playing. They will leave lu li'iitomobiles from Must Have Two Fights luemi’js that there will speckt in the Pacific, but not one Loyola in New Orleans thinks; Trade School (2) Anderson, rf ___ '.____ 1 0 Admission by the heads of the two service ac 78 82 67 the White House at‘6;45 sharp. • It constitutes one fight for Mr...... 0 0 u ----- A-r^v-Mnw football game this year terminates the first round, at ^ little brown men it has a future Olympic cham- Kitching Klatzer, If . . McBride 95 "86 101 The 'teaiir went ‘ through another Tunney. Rickard must have two, if Niesen, c . . . 0 pion in . VZeke” Bonura,: a- fresh­ Mr. Tunney’s word of mouth is to Orchard 79 81 . I snappy practice session last night Happeny, c ...... 2 1 that if'the Army didn’t actually S trim iTcU%Tht lov^ man. who at San Francisco, in 82 95^ be relied upon. It may be assumed, 1:925-heaved the javelin. 205 feet. Warren , * 39 j,at the K- of Cr hall. . » Lyons, Ig ...... 0 1 crs. How come? 78/ 81-. - 9^. . tThose who will make the trip to- therefore, that everybody would be ...... 0 0 Just how many of these two-fist­ BonUra’s throw that year iwas Roscoe . Comber, Ig . —>— 7 night’are: '• very wroth, Mr. Tunney in particu­ Mcllduff, rg ...... 3 2 ed brown atoms have entered this seven feet, five inches short of the land during the past decade is hard Totals *12 425 483 Forwards: Ethel Richmond, lar, if Rickard bobbed up with ex­ American amateur record. He will A. & P. (2) — - . Jackson, actly no fights when the time 6 4 16 to guess, but right now two-of their try for the Olympic squad this r~_.iAnne Scranton, Estellp t-hoTn hnw thev were to regulate athletics was maintained so consistently Swartz ...... 9fir »2 Peggy Boyle. ' ' comes. This can happen very well Woodland A. C. rank are among the elite in their spring. ^<76. respective divisions and seem dos- Fischer ...... 73V-..,84 ■ Centers^. • Mabel- Sheridan and If our John goes around calling Brown and height have little Mitchell______...... 80y’ ' • 9-1 ' ; 85- signals that arS not In the code. V. Ingraham, rf . . . . tinecl to share ring laurels with the to do with proficiency in run- j '86 Charlotte Foster. wait until next y e a r . ______^ I late Pancuo Villa, first of the Poly- Jennings...... 83 Guards: Mariam Welles, Peggy • For one thing, he could be great Segar, If ...... ning, one learns by the case of Petke ...... • •. 32; -,108 102. In this warm-up thing and still ruin Jamroga, c ...... ' nesians to win world championsnip Loren Brown, Michigan State McLaughlin; Evelyn Gillman, Viola Before the football season opens the commandant^s hoiiM-s in the roped enclosure. Shearer and Katheryn Giblin. the continuity with a broken hand, R. Ingraham, rg .... and Annapolis will have been succeeded, but the schedule will have cross-country star. Brown weighs Totals • ,, Vv 4Q^i;,.45,8:i ti??, ; 3Tlj -vA-Jc--- • provided It was his own. For anoth­ Gill, rg , ...... We refer to Ignacio Fernande.': llO.pounds. He iSdauly S f®"' been completed before the incumbents are relieved, and it is not featherweight, and Lope Tenerio, . ' Construction Oo^ (2).... j How "many times did Babe Rutii er, he mijgW be terrible and-the- Wilglrt;' !g military cLtom txi ride over the inherited policies established by inches more than five feet tall. F. Knofla ...... 93 78 90 lightweight, both of whom are in But he recently broke the western and Lou Gehrig hit home runs with same effect would he achieved. For our midst gunning for a crown. E. Knofla ...... 87 , 98 8o the bases filled during the past sea­ a third, either himself or his op­ 15 predecessors. conference record for the five-mile J* Thier ...... 76 89 91 Referee: Ernie Dowd. Fernandez, the featherweight, son?—^Ti H. J. _ ponent of necessity must be ellmi The making of the 1928 schedule— that is, the filling made his American debut early last run made by Phelps of Iowa m A. Knofla 86 86. ^99 Each performed the feat twice. nated and where would the second Oljunpics (68) 1924. He also featured the wins A. Anderson . . . ..IT^^.- 89 -TeJ B. November Saturday left vacant by the cancellation of the big inter-ser­ summer by stoppin&'vAbe^ Attell ’ Is Vic Hanson, connected with the Tunney fight be then? Quite so, vice classic— places the two academies in another sparring match for a Goldstein in less thhh' d round at Of his team against teams of Mar­ Syracuse Aihletic Association in any I Hemingway; right in the garlic Nicola, rf ...... 6 quette, Notre Dame and Michi- Totals 458 ,440 467 Schiebel, If ...... ,,.. 8 Chicago. Since then he has van­ way?— D. K. L. Suppose the opponent won. He ™ NaturaUyTthe West Point and Annapolis schedule-makers would like quished Joe Lucas, Johnny Farr, ean. •______iMumbing & Supply (2) Yes, as assistant football coach. then would go in with Tunney and Turkington, c ...... 8 i Barrett J...... '"-65 .7 6 , 74- Moriarty, r g ...... 3 to close the season with an outstanding national team so Harry Forbes and his stirring en­ probably would lose. They couldn’t THIS IS .Vs o u t f ie l d Dike ...... 81 92 l i t WAS LEAQTJR'l e a d e r Seamond, Ig ...... 6 look in each other’s direction, make faces and gloat You wouldn t counters with Archie Bell, Tony produce Dempsey for a September .,y .Connie M^ck recently announced Blish ...... 99y 82 99 Nohi Richardson, rookie third play us, eh? Well, look who we got in your place.” Canzoneri and Donunic Petropij! Sm ith...... IJL'2' 105 9T fight against a man who had beaten 68 The Army already is in a better position to show a schedule with more will live long in the memory of (hp that hia.'outfield this year will find baseman with the Detroit Tigers, 31 Alvord ...... i ...• 90 r the man who had beaten him. The Polish A. C. (23) floss on it than the Navy possibly can arrange on short notide.-;^ bugs who appirepiate action. A1 Simmons, Bing Miller and led the Texas League In chances same logic applies three ways that Tenerio is a late importation who Bevo Lebourveau or Walter B. TVip Padets liav6 book©d games witll'Notre Dame, Yale ana 'Harvard, Totals 444 443 471 accepted last year with 500. is, to any situation that might Parclak, I f ...... 2 and It tier, aran’t fancy trimmings In those tbres, wherS could yon find ^turtadJU^Amw^^^ French as regulars. arise in connection with the three Falkoski, r f ...... 2 men In question. It seems that, if Ruhacka, c ...... 2 ’ *’ lt’ is understood that the Cadets would like to book one of the big | so good a performer as Jimmy Me- we are to have two championship Bingham, Ig ...... 4 teams of the Western Conference for a final game, or would be willing iLarnin. Rnsa fights this summer, we must have Tuma, r g ...... 0 ?o\ “ gn up one Of the Pacific Coast powers and go to Chicago to meet tsmee then ^ Ruso two contenders and the only way to them. make certain that we won’t Is to 10 3 23 Adams and just receatly he turne.1 match the pair of them. Referee: Jim McLaughlin. back the highly feared Stan Loayz’d, The Army will be a great card for any team interested in gate re­ Chilean lightweight, with a seven This could be done. But it Liberty A. C. (58) ceipts, and they all are more or less concerned with the financial B. ; round technical knockout. mightn’t be a bad idea to bet all phases of the game. Now his manager, Ike Lorgan, the jugs in Jugo-Slovakia that it Seelert, If ...... 5 Hansen, rf 5 has offered $50,000 to Sammy won’t. There is more color to the Cadets and the Army teams than there is ■Mandell, lightweight champion, Welles, c ...... 6 to the midshipmen. Most any neutral young lady would be attracted Spencer, rg ...... 5 give the brown “ fury” a shot at the more by the fancy rigging of the cadet costume than by the formal som­ coveted diadem. TOUGH U F E ! Winzler, Ig ...... 2 bre blue attire of the midshipmen, and there certainly is morq interest Philippine fighters have come to 7 53 in a balky, kicking mule than a goat. play an important part in our figb’. Highland Park West Point managers are particularly eager to get an opponent with history. With the success of Pan a great big name to take the Navy’s place— some team with real strict cho Villa, who garnered both th>- regulations so evidence would be available that the Army eligibility i national and world flyweight title'- B. Dugan, rf rules were accepted by Soandso U and therefore there could be nothing in our rings, the punch throwei' C. Dugan, If .. from the islands have been coming ^tohan. If . . .r< so wrong with them. Navy has • attracted some large crowds away from the Annapolis in droves. Their coming has stim-i- Schieldge, c . lated interest in the smaller dii/i Gorman, rg » parade grounds, but it is doubtful if the Navy teams could mainta4n the average for annual attendance that the Army does in the Yale fixture. signs as the Filipinos, without e' Beer, Ig .... ception, are the most furious box Campbell, Ig The Army has long established relations with Notre Dame and Yale and It Is quite likely, that, under the existing circumstances. Harvard ers in the ring today. 16 0 3: will become a fixture on the schedule. ; They fight with all the vicious ness of their bolo-throwing ances­ _I Referee: Jim McLaughlin. tors and have readily adapted them With three such teams on the schedule and the chance to hook selves to the American code of glove HERE’S A CHALLENGE up with one big southern, middlewestern or team the tossing. Sports Editor, The Herald: Army would he several steps ahead of the Navy and would have a Boxing was Introduced In the I Would you please insert the fol­ schedule that automatically would make It a candidate for national Philippines by American soldiers on lowing In your sport column word honors consideration. duty there, the natives taking to the for word? game with such eagerness that it is The New Britain Lions basket­ now the leading sport of the is­ ball team of New Britain averaging lands. Much credit for the develop­ 18 to 20 years would like to chal­ Records O f Yale and Illinois ment of the game must go to Frank lenge any team in Manchester or Churchill, now. a leading boxing im­ vicinity at the above average. To presario. the present writing the Lions have Stand Out Among Colleges He discovered and prepped Pan- W ith compiled a truly remarkable record cbo Villft for the world flyweight and hope to keep it up. The Lions title. have won 9 consecutive games with­ New York, Jan. 17— ^Yale and the Under Churchill’s direction, the out a loss to mar their record. If University of Illinois were two of brown “ buzz-saw” won the Ameri­ can flyweight honors from Johnny there is any team in Manchester or the most successful schools Centers Playing Buff and shortly after annexed the vicinity their manager can arrange on the college athletic field world title by putting the snore oe a game by writing to Jerome Kar- last year. Yale tied with Pitts­ the great Jimmjr v.tilde. Villa, honik, 155 North street. New Brit­ burgh for the eastern football whom death cut down in the midst ain, Conn., or phone 2624 between championship, each team losing one Bnddies Tonight of his triumphs, was regarded by ^ Gals. 6 and 6:45 o’clock. game to a team from another sec­ some critics as the greatest fly­ Dear Editpr please let me take this tion. Yale was beaten by Georgia weight that ever lived. opportunity of thanking you for and Pittsburgh lost to Stanford. The Center A. C. will meet the Churchill next presented Pete your most welcome co-operation in Yale also won five intercollegiate "Buddies” in the preliminary game Sarmiento, one of the most pleasin.g this matter. championships and swamped Har­ at Plainfield tonight. In the main fighters ever to trade a punch. A1 . .Sincerely yours, vard and Princeton in dual compe­ encounter, Jim Thorpe’s Indians though never a champion Sarmien^ Jerome Karbonik^ tition. Yale won the swimi^ng, will meet the Plainfield Pros. to piled up a record that will go water polo. Indoor polo, outdoor The Centers will be composed of down in boxing history, Sarmiento LAST NIGHT’S FIGHTS polo championships and tied with Earle Clifford, Elmer Johnson, Clar­ lacked boxing skill, hut was ever At Cleveland— Lope TenerlO; Lehigh for the wrestling champion­ ence Larson, Jimmy Neil, Sherwood ready to mix and won renown by Philadelphia ‘ lightweight, won de ship. Anderson and Ray Nelson. ' The his punching accomplishments. LAVERNE FATOR cision oVer Joe Gllck, Brooklyn, 12 In addition, a Yale athletic, Sabin trip will be made in Johnson’s au­ Churchill still makes a specialty Gaston Charles, former French Carr, made a new world’s record of tomobile. of Philippino ringmen,. having such It’s a tough life one of America’s bantam champion, scored technical 14 feet for the pole vault. capable performers as Feruand®^- leading jockeys ha- to lead under f . knockout -. in first ' y Miss l4 lld i^ Hutchinson on the among ftd women, voters. roads. The car carrying the prison­ WOMEN VOTERS HEAR use roouns in the school which they MlCi6AIFS“AP|MAN” planer and Collins ©riggs and Bd“ The OxecutiVe board wrad H , RUM(HIS OF LOVE MATCH er -sras delayed at the roadside once ward Jarvis, piano and violin. charge of th«T social period whlcld very kindly granted. by a flat tire but the prisoner was "The Primary is Ji model depart­ MISS SALLY GLEATON President Burr . then introduced followed. . Mrs. C. W. Holman acted TELLS OF OTHER CRIMES not recognized throughout the trip the guest speaker o f the afternoon. aj chairman. The tea table waa ment which I am proud to show to M O ifr FAMOUS A im iO R from Ionia to Gefiesee county and imyone but it is crowded and cramp­ Miss Sally Fanny Gleaton, field sec­ attractive with its centerpieces at back. Field ^ecretgicy .. Addresses retary for the Jjtate organization. roses, carnations and freeaia and ed in a manner which interferes - (continued from page 1) wiih^the best work and results. Meeting at ^ t h Methodist Miss Gleaton is a native Of Georgia dainty eatables. Mrs. Lois Kline* The Junior Department is splen-^ Says Mithael Arlen Has Been Churcli--G^rgia Native. and an ,exoell«ttt Speaker with that felter and Mrs. Lola Hutchlnsod prepares to plead in his behalf, his interesting tinge of southMn ac­ poured. ^ didly conducted and taught and Disappointed A g a iit^ e De­ shame-stricken wife. Myrtle, is pre­ NEW DIREaORS this room is large enough but the nies It in Paris. The Manchester League of Wom­ cent and charm. She gave the local paring to bring the children for GANGS'ISIRS’ WAR. Reports Of Otfijcers Show 'department grows-almost tbo .large what will probably he their last en Voters held its January meeting branch------a- » idea of what they were for one superintendent. The aver­ Paris Jan. 18.— Friends of meeting with their father. The son, AT SAVINGS BANK yesterday afternoon at the South . doing in other leagues of the state age attendance in this department M l S ’ Arlen.' noted English Devere, 16, an assistant scoutmas­ Hethodlst church. It was unusual There was no question In her mind Chicago, Jan. 1 8 . Gangland waV Good Year— ^Pastors in the winter time is over 125. novelist. are '^°°dering to­ ter at Owosso and one of the up' ly well-attended and proved to he but that the league had been in-- flared again In Chicago today and The Intermediate is the most day if he has been disappointed standing young men of his commu as enjoyable socially as it was strumental in' increasing the vote. the ’bodies of three victims, riddled port In Full. difficult department and it has a in love again. Reports were cur­ nity, has already visited his father Harold C. Ahrord and Jtidge educationally helpful. She said in 1896 the greatest num­ with machine gnu bullets, were very efficient superintendent who rent for several weeks that he was in prison. * Mrs. Louis St. Clair Burr presid­ ber of persons eligible to vote did found in two different places In the all this year has been struggling engaged to marry Atalanta, daugh­ Would Speed Trial W.S. Hyde Named to ed and outlined plans for the year’s so, after that there was a consid­ far south side. along with an inadequate teaching ter of Count Mercatl by a former The state and Hotelling’s own work. Mrs, Lois Klinefelter of erable falling off until women were Bodies of two of the victims, Encouraging reports for ti.e past force. This condition is partly ac­ counsel are bending every effort to the nominating committee reported granted the right to vote. The fashionably dressed, were found year, bright prospects Jor the fu­ cidental due to sickness. But it is ^\talanta and her younger sister have the Hotelling case ended and Board of Local Institution. securing Mrs.. Lola Hutchinson as Carnegie Institute had set its stamp slumped in a ditch. The third vic­ ture, good speeches and music and not pleasant to contemplate that in Daria are now with thelf mother. secretary of the league. Announce­ of approval on the notable work the tim was found a mile away In the the prisoner on his way to what marshy weeds adjoining an unfre­ a church of the size and poww of Baroness Von Phlugl, .''’'^b®*® will' certainly he life imprisonment, ment was also made of the coming league was doing in adult education a delicious supper were sonae of the The annual meeting and election quented road. ours there should be three Kfrls band is an Austrian diplomat asr probably at , Marquette, before visit to Hartford in February of on political subjects from Maine to things that contributed to the suc­ of officers and directors of the California, through Its^ citizenship Squads of police were rushed to classes in this department wi^out signed to Geneva. night. Whether they succeed de­ Savings Bank of Manchester was Judge Jean Norris of the juveniie cess of the Center church annual Up until a week ago the gins schools and other forms of town, the scenes. meeting last evening. Fully 275 teachers. I wish thpt this cwditlqn pends upon thei time • required to held yesterday afternoon. The fol­ court. New York City. persons gathered In the auditorium would get on the consciences ^of were at St. Moritz, Switzerland, en­ prepare the necessary papers and lowing officers were re-elected; some women here present and after joying .the winter sporW'. The girls obtain a change-Of venue. President, Frank Cheney, Jr., treas­ at 6:30. Red was the color note w Se seen much in Arlen’s com- used by the committee^—red cani this meeting they would seek out Hotelling’s confession of out­ urer, R. LaMotte Russell; secretary, . dies, red rose napkin holders, red Miss Langdon and offer to teach. pany, but his preference was plain­ rages against little girls'In 1926 Thomas K. Clarke. cherries as a garnish for the grape­ The situation ought not to continue, ly for Atalanta. and 1927'was; obtained by G. P. Five new corporators were nam­ fruit and salads. Group 1 of the It offers a fine opportunity for ^ Now the girls have returned to Lawcock,.. sheriff and J. A, ^ink ed making the total 26, The new Geneva with their mother, who de­ women workers assumed charge of Christian service. undersherifl \of Shiwassee cponty. corporators are Harold C. Alvord, nies that either daughter was ever the event. . , , m,. The work among young Pf®' Hotelling sat with his head in his Thomas Ferguspn, William S. Hyde, While the diners assembled The Die was never jn as good condition Mgaged to the novelist. On the Robert J. Smith and’ M. Clark Ter- contrary, Atalanta is said to be en­ hands, sobbing and moaning as he Troubadours played a number of L it is today. We are very for­ verified the suspicion“‘of the officers. rill. , selections. Ray Pillsbury led in tunate in having Miss trotter for gaged to Count Palsi, a Hungarian. Two new directors were named Arlen, who- has been evading the His calm demeanor had broken. Enjoy Its Exquisite Flavor chorus singing before and directly this work. The Cyp club, the Girl No longer was he the churchman to succeed those recently deceased. [ after the supper, which consisted of question until recently, now denies Harold C. Alvord was named to ’ Reserves, the Business Gi’^l® vehemently thattHat heliA was engaged to whose poise had permitted him to grapefruit, baked hain, buttered the Troubadors are directly ^ue to accept election as an elder in the succeed the l*>te Joseph N. Viot. string beans, creamed, potatoes, her initiative and guidance. lue either girl. and Judge William S. Hyde was Owosso Church of Christ and to. named tn succeed tlite late Judge pineapple and cabbage salad, rolls, B oy-Scouts'suffered a series loss officiate at a communion service on coffee and pie a la mode. The H. O. Bowers. The hoard of direc­ in the departure of Mr. the third day after be had commit­ church quartet under the direction to the New York office of the ’Ira- tors is now composed of: Harold C. of the organist. Miss C. i^ouise HARTFORD SLEUTHS ted perhaps the most revolting Alvord, James M. Burke, George W. velers Ins. Co. Mr. Strickland has crime in Michigan history., - Dickerman of Hartford, sang sev­ been too busy to give the troop the Ferris, William Foulds, Jr,, eral times and Miss Emma Trebbe, ' Breaks Down .; Charles W. Holman, William S. supervision it needs. o RUN DOWN REPORTS contralto and Jarle Johnson, bass of The King’s Daughters h a p had a He had broken down completely Hyde, Aaron Johnson, Earl G. Sea­ the quartet, were heard in solo after the visit of his son at the man, Fred A. Verplanck" and C. El- lalbordine finp vear: A glance at their an- numbers. I (Continued from Page 1.) prison. State police and sheriff’s more ’Watkins. nuaUreport discloses the . , , I reports of the officers were volume of their social and chanta- deputies had to grip -him firmly to least, the theories of kidnaping, prevent him from fallings _as he read and showed chat the bank had ^%he^Ladies’ Benevolent society elopement, or amnesia, state au­ collapsed in despair on the secret enjoyed a very successful year. and the Foreign Missionary society thorities, working independently of trip through Owosso, his home private detectives and College offi­ town, on tfie way to the Genesee REPORT DENIED. have carried on. as usual. New York, Jan. 18.— A report The Men’s League has had regu­ cials who have thus far been con­ “ hidden” arraignment. ducting investigations, today sought The officers did not dare stop that Miss Anne Mdrgan, sister of lar weekly and “ onthly^^meeti^s. J. P. Morgan, is engaged to marry Its good year was due directly to a crazed degenerate , said to have even in a small town to go through done his work with clever cunning. this necessary legal formality. Prince Louis, of Monaco, who Is the faithful and detailed work of traveling in, this country, was de­ The state police search centered They turned off Trunk Line 21 itj president, Mr. Bohlin. ^ on a large wooded territory sur­ nied here today. might as well have the best 1 always feel that I am well s p - just east of the Genesse county Miss Morgan’s secretary said rounding the State Hospital for the line and entered the village of ported musically , Both director Insane here. Officers questioned at­ that she believed Miss Morgan was Lennon. The fact that there were V i and quartet enter into the spirit of tendants in an effort to learn if any not even acquainted with the worship and cooperate in every pos­ of the 1,290 inmates had been ab­ a number of people on the street prince. sible way. Miss Dickerman uses sent. Meanwhile, other state police, prevented them from holding the the organ skillfully which pu8lst» concentrate on the theory of foul arraignment there. John Crockett remains in a seri partly in covering up its defects. play, went over central and western Finally their cars drew up^on a ous condition at the Memorial hospi And that same remark Massachus'ettai for clues. lawn by the side of'the road, at tal and sees no one hut the mem­ 4* Iv to Mr. Bray’s manipulation of Many “ Tips” Senator Peter B. Lennon’s farm, bers of his family. our heating plant. Mr. Foster p Federal authorities, at the same and the formal arraignment was chairman of the Ecclesiastical pcie^ time, were asked to co-operatei ac­ carried out while the prisoner sat Second Mortgage ty’s committee in 1927 has rendwed cording to a.- message sent Mr. St. in the curtained automobile that an amount of service which perhaps John Smith by Senator Hale, had carried him there. He said Money Park & Pollard^s Lay or Bust Feed few Center Church people realize. Already Investigators have rvfti nothing when the charge against Waranoke The past year has seen progress down hundreds of “ tips” hut have him was read. Now On Hand: FULlrO-PEP FEEDS . made iq Church Union and a pries found absolutely nothing that A technical not guilty plea was HAY, STRAW, REMEDIES of the solidarity of the Christian entered and he was remanded to would lead to the solution of the Arthur A . Knofla Lowest Possible Prices. Protestant forces. For the second mysterious ? disappearance of the the Genesee court for trial. But this, Hotel 876 Main St. time we have held Union SepicM wealthy college freshman. too, is a technicality, devised in or­ Rev. Watson Woodruff with the South Methodtet church Possibility of an elopement loom­ der that there might be a case to Phone 783-2. transfer to some other circuit. Phone 583 Rev. Watson Woodruff called for for two months in the summp tl^e ed early in the investigation but Last sprang we united in^a Christian as far as could be learned the only The party made its way from I the report of the clerkj Charles. JJ. Ionia to .Lennon by back roads, the Manchester Green Store, yHouse, who with an appropriate Mission Jasting a month, with six young man with whom Miss Smith Protestant' churches. This season was friendly was Frederick Ward two cars keeping a considerable Rooms By Day ^stbry referred to his report in the distance apart and Hotelling being Phone 74. , W. printed booklets to be found at each we are joining with the same Gates, sou of a Rochester, N, Y., . -plate. The pastor also urged the churches'in monthly Union Sunday publisher. Ypung Gates yras found careful reading of:these reports, of evening services with prominent in his class room at Amherst col­ Or W eek the financial standing of the vari speakers from the different p n om lege. He met Miss. Smith at Roches­ ous organizations of the church, Inations. I am sure that this t p e ter, N. Y., last summer, had cor­ Open Day and Night and then called for the report of of service makes for good feeling responded with her and ^ad been AtC.H*Tryon’s the nominating committee, Mrs. J. and sympathy between Christians of a house ■ guest of her parents at ■ • ■ I, A. Hood, chairman. The reportwas the various churches and • a CQJl" their country!, home ^in South. A.m- 801 Main St., accepted as_subniiU_^_and the slate scibiisneSs of our common tp k in herst. Gates said he was completely Sanitary Market -Watch Repairing , of officer’s and committees declared forwarding the Kingdom of God mystified, that he had received no South Manchester O n G u a r d i elected as per vote of the meeting. And now what of the future, hint from her that she planned to They are as follows: am very hopeful that the p a r <[o away. Your watch, like your automobile, may have Clerk and treasurer, Charles E. 1928 will see us launch our loUS Young Gates has aided in the Phones 441-442 House. , , . • anticipated drive for funds lor search for the missing Miss Smith. A Coat of Good Paint bent parts, through “bumping.” Deacons to succeed those whose terms have expired, Elbert Shelton, new parish'house. Gradually the obstacles which is always on duty 24 hours, Let us straighten them out and put your watch Samuel Bohlin. ' Church committee: Mrs. E. E. have stood in oUr way are being NEW HAVEN FEARS SPECIALS FOR every day of the year to protect in good order. Blish, Mrs. Rollin. Hitt .Mrs. James cleared and I hope that I am your projierty from destruction unduly optimistic in thinking that THURSDAY AND Johnston, Miss Gertrude Carrier,. SMALLPOX TODAY ro ■:o: ' Flower committee: Mrs. Charles within the year our land dUficulties FRIDAY by rain, snow and sleet. Holman, Mrs. J. A. Irvine, Mrs. Ah- wUl be settled. ■' The Building committee will h p e Let us do your next painting nesley Trotter, Miss Mary Chap­ (Continued from Page 1.) gtrictly Fresh Eggs from Pome man. . . . plans to submit and then everything roy Parm 83c dozen. job for satisfaction and econ­ Ushers: Charles F. Marshall, will depend upon the loyalty, the sack Dewey-Richqian Co. girl’s sickness, but he believed Occident Flour, 1-8 barrel omy. We have competent Walter Hobby, James Barr, W. H. gifenerosity and the sacrificial spirit $1.39. Gardner, Herbert House,’ Jaines Ir- of Center Church— as to what ep chances were remote for the .spread Stationers, Silversmiths of the disease. a lbs. Fancy Prunes 23c. workmen whom we know can Jewelers, vinej James McCaw, Jn. vRoy-^ and’ tent add' hbw soon we shall be able Apricots, fancy, 85c lb. ' 767 Main Street Ray Warren, Rodney Wilcox, Rob­ Clinics Crowded. do first class work. to build. We will undertake a big The city established ten, clinics 3 cans Campbejl Bahod Beans 2oc ert Carter, Elliott Knight, Stuart task. It will require sacrificial Fancy Grab Meat 38c can. Robinson, Robert McComb. for vaccination and all were crowd­ Eiviag-on the part of each one, ed today. Factories^ numbering 3 bars Palmolive .Soap 25c. MONUMENTS Sunday School ofEldh^: BUt I am confident that we' can ac­ 3 bars Lux Soap 25c. Superintendent: George H. Wil­ six hundred, were securing their complish a big task and Sft plea­ own doctors and receiving vaccine 3 lbs. ’White Beans 25c. Grave markers and orna­ cox. sure out of the adventure, a know John 1. Okon free of charge from the pity so that 2 lbs. Yellow- Eyed Beans 25c. mental stone work of every de­ PalnHng and Decorating Secretary: Miss Mildred Porter. that ^ we must do’ “it if to a lbs. Lima-Beans aSc. Treasurer, Giles Vickerman. all employes might be vaccinated. scription. Contractor. move on to bigger things and betpr In the plant of the New -Haven 1 lb Codfish, in wooden box 20c. Supt. Cradle R o ll:M r s . Elbert service in this community for iNot-a-Seed sAlsins lOo pkg. Clock Co., where New Haven’s Gadella & Ambrosini 099 Main St., Johnson Block GOOD COAL Shelton. Christ' and the Church. Fancy Peas 18c can. I orlglnnl smallpox patient was Beginners’ Dept.r Miss Hazel I am fully conscious of my in­ Royal Scarlet Peaches, large, 33c Shop at East end of Bissell St. Sontb Manchester Trotter, Miss Ella Washburn. working, 1,899 out 1,950 workers % Delivered in your bin at the following low prices for Prima^, Dept.: Miss Gertrude debtedness in the ministry of Center had been vaccinated at sunset yes­ c&n* Near East Cemeftery. Royal Scarlet Pineapple, large, cash. Carrier. ' Curch to very many men and terday and the rest were to be Junior Dept.: Mrs. Watson Wood­ women whose loyalty I prize and treated today. 33o can. ' Apricots, Peaches and Pears, I Chestnut...... $15:25 a ton ruff, of whose friendship I-try to be Doctors Busy. Intermediate Dept.: Miss Doris worthy. , , - j Every city employe was vaccin­ small; 1 2 ^ c can. P Stove ...... • • • Langdon. Mr. Woodruff then introduced ated either yesterday or today and 0 bags Charcoal $1.00. Rev. Watscn Woodruff’s report, the guest speaker, Norman Whitte- lines of citizens waited at the I pga ___ f...... $12.00 a ton touching as it all -branches of more, a worker for many years in clinics for their turn, while physi­ IDEAL LOANS the church wo^i:;|ivas as,itollows::;i«< Korea, who gave an interesting ac­ cians, were swamped with patients. I FEED AND GRAIN I submit her^ith^m ji seventh count of his experiences in that Every theater employe, a group MEATS To Have the Things You Want annual report-as minister of . the country, contrasting the Korea of numbering hundreds, has been vac­ " Center Church: ‘ , tne present day with the country cinated according to the health de­ Native Chickens' for roasting 52c lb. w'uen he. first went -there in, the . Native Fowls 4 ^ lb. These reports; follow, one apother partment. When You Want Them very rapidly. Life isX strenuous. nineties. He gave the Japanese gov­ ■V^hen the single smallpox case Legs of Lamb 39c lb. SMITH BROTHERS GRAIN CO. ernment full credit for the iro Rib Lamb Chops 89c lb. Rhone 130-2 Time flies. TfaV^-ichurch year does had been discovered, the patient’s the small 256 Center provements and changes that" have; contacts were traced and as a result Lamb Patties, 3 for 25c. We finance the working men. the St. I, not synchronize.i-with |Khe; calendar been v/iought in Korea. They are merchant and the smaU^property holder by granting them ai^ Phonel396-2. ‘ ' year;. The chij^h ye^i*r‘really|'hi%- twelve homes have been quarantin­ Native Veal Cutlets 55c lb. -V Bolton Notch, .striving moio and more to give the Loin Veal Chops 88c lb. ginsf^in ,Sept,eifeber. and\concludes ed, including one in Hamden where ■^reans a just and benevolent ad­ Veal Fatties, 8 for 25c. with Children’-s Sunday, the third ministration. lives a yo.ung man who has .been IDEAL LOAN $25 to $300 ’ Sunday in June. We are in the mid­ the girl’s escort several times late- Daisy Hams 48c lb. Mr, Wliittemore gave many ac­ Foi^ to Roast 26c lb. dle of a church year now. But let counts of the customs of the people, Sansage Meat 28c lb. ^ us look in retrospect over the last their superstitioj^s and relii^ous |ie- ^ To care for possible /applicants Let us Income your butriier, hos/ltal' bills, for vaccination, the city today sent Pot Roast 28c lb. ^ twelve-month. liefs. many of vnlch are changing Rib Roast of Beef 35c lb. The church, I am sure, gains In femter, Including their i,g- to New York for additional vaccine volume and momentum with the norAnt ideas about diseases,, "lo add to the 26,000 points then on years. I have no figures’on church hand wh^ch were being called for .n »»r«.a 'many o, oar ciuiractevized them an a most Let Your Heater attendance this year so I do not dustriouis people, working durirg steadily. patrons to become ’■ know whether- attendance at morn­ FRUIT Prove White Oak’s ihe farming reason from d*wn t h r i f t y ing service has increased. I know sometimes to 9:30 and 10 In the Superiority FIRE AT YALE. Cranberries 88o qt. that it has not changed greatly. evening. Very ofien their religious Bananas 12c lb. Order this efficient coal The membership increases steadily- meetings had to be conducted after mined in the famous New Haven, Jan. 18.— Every Greening Apples .$1.35 peck. monthly repayment plan has proven that tma , though not so-rapidly as anight be that hour. They: are*very Indepen- Florida Oranges 6Bc dozen. smokeless coal fields of expect^'frqm 'the numb^ of new dtfflt, d^og everything possible ro Yale student who possibly could 79c IS THE SAFE WAY TO BORROW MONEY West Virginia. You’ll find get there lined up along Eliu street Oyifom la Oranges 69c and accessions. ,pPeople^ove away.andj^,; jheip themselvesr and some of th-im dozen. Many of your neighbors borrow from it gives greater comfort— - people,^ebinetimes 'flHgapjpear 8i,. a givis 'most generously of their to-day to watch the firemen, .work ■ requires less attention— Grape Fruit, 2 for 25e. g;S;r^y?y«Vu^’m .V.'‘S ?£ ir.p.,ty ..4 .a.om.WU,. : manner quite mysterious to Miss ^•orldly po8.sesBion8 so that t’ae on a fire in Durfee hall, a_ dormi­ and sho'ws a substantial Trotter and to me. However at the money may be used in the advance­ tory where a student lost a Morris saving per ton. chair hy a fire of undetenplned “ our end of the year there is always a ment of religious work. courtesy extended. Consider these, easy terms. Ord*r tku km*. Urn ; net gain. The meeting came to an end with origin. Y O V R C O A L eek. Urn emC‘ eoet U4atifr«m the etttiUng of “ Bleet Be the 'I'ie Dense smoke led to the impres­ VEGETABLES Tour Interest charge ? The Sunday School is in good con- Iceberg Lettuce 15c. Tou can make repay­ TOU B ILL S W IL L MANCHESTER LUMBER That Binds” find the clasping of sion that the whole structure, was PAT NO can he ai low as: . 't dition and It grows. I do not see in danger of being destroyed. .The Celery l« c . ments as low as: $L75 on $50 loan COMPANY ' as much of It as I wish I did but hands in a circle around the tables. 53 a mo.' on $60 loan FBE3 $3.50 hn $100 loan b e L O W E R E P firemen received an old-fashioned Parsnips, 4 'lbs. 25c. $5 a mo. on $100 loan OR OTHER $7.00 on $200 loan f I am quite sure tjiat it is the most reception from the,students. Carrots, 4 lbs. 25c. $10 mo on $200 loan CHARGES G. B. WILLIS & SON, Inc. , Important and effective Christian Sweet Potatoes, 5 lbs. 25c. agency we hive, Morp lintortant TWO DIE IH DUEL Tnrnlps 25c. pk. Any Information without obligation 'than p^’eachlng. TW->3a?Wst in*- , - “A', Onions, 5 lbs. 25c. crease-to thS Sund^ .school wag ’Ohicfgo, Jan. 18.—-Two men inet Cfiftibage'10c and 16c head. IDEAL FINANCING ASSOCIATION, Inc. : madeJn'tliyS fleginn^Defiartmei^^ at a ‘street comer In Berwyn today, «EO.AJOflNSOH Peppm 18c qt. ? It has almost doubled in a yearls-f’ whipped out revolvers and fired at Pamey 10c. »SB Main St„ i Booin408. i time. Miss Trotter and Miss ’W^sh- each other until both were dead. A Soup Boheh 10c. F. W . Hawklnson, Mgr. Phone 2-S652 ■ burn and their assistants wer^ girl paeserby was reported to h ^ o LlecBBed by Bank Cominleeloiier and Bonded to the State - crowded put ;“

* ^ I ' ' ' m MANCHESTER TCCNN.y^ EV EJm G 'lBBR A EIJ. 18,1928.^

Tell And You Will Sell. A Classified Ad Is The Cheapest }tices Apartments—Plats— Farms and Land for Sale 71 Help Wanted— Female ^ Taneiiients for Etent 63 AT. A COURT O^^ROBATE HELD liost ^ d Fonnd: ,at Manchester. ■ wUnin and for the Want Ad Information FOR SALE—Real e .ate and Insur­ district of Maifchester, on the 17th. FOR RENT—5 ROOM airs _flat. ance. Stuart J. Wasley, 827 Ma4n BAi;^ w ith spot day of Januarj% A. D., 1928.' LOST—BliACK FOR general house- a ll m odern' im p ro v e m en ts. 82 Sum street. Telephone 1428-12. ______P resen t "WILiLia M S. HYDE, Esq. underunaer theme n^t: ^ ‘ 'is w e f s lie of Chestnut St. mer,street. Phone 1986.^ ______Manchester Nlggie. Finder jfleise returJij59,.p> worn. aei. ------Ju d g e ' ‘ a ll im - f o r s a l e — 4 ACRES of. land with E s ta te of . Fjrank Amraltla late of Charter Oak street. Help Wanted—Male 80 FOR'^RENT—^5 ROOM flat, all building near state road, low price Estate of Frank Abraitis: late of Evening Herald Phone Your W ant Ads provements,' 34 Walnut street. for quick buyer. Phone 368, LOST—$5 BILL ON Main street, or Upan epplicat^n M. Anstranckas Cottage street down Oak street. Re­ praying that adrt^Istration be grant­ Classified Advertisements I A p a y i n g POSITION OPEN to 72 ed on said estath, 'as per application turn South Herald Office. of . T a k e f o r Houses for Sale Count six average words rGDresentatlve character. To The REN T^i' ROOM tenement, new on file, it is •' ! Initials, numbers and abbreviation^ o?de?Soes-hosiery direct to wear- ready? for , - er Good; incbme.-:.P.remarienL/Write ..I’j ■ f t ' ■i^ jQRPERED:—That , the foregoing oorVi oount as a word and compound LOST—BLACK -SHEPHERD r u a l-y 1st./Inquire -^ 0 Eldridge St. COLONIAL HOME—ISO Porter Streefc^. iSSwcation Tie heard grftoi^eternuned words as two words. Minimum cost about four old, name Jaci^ i now .for'iree ' book- ‘‘G®ttfns . Suitable tor two family dwelling.? 'at'the Probate offldeTa Manchester is price of three lines. collar and tag No. 16840. Tanners Shoe Mfg. Go. 1610-1 C St.. -TMi'NT— 5 ROOlkil FLA.T w ltli Half of house now rented, leaving in sa id D{ t, on-athfi- on jA)ifi- 28 28th.th. day of last seen Saturday at 4 p. m. Spencer Boston. Mass. -hath and garage for one car nearly very desirable six rooms and bath • • • street. Finder notify Mrs. icia J a n u a ry , A. D;; i.92Srat“'9^..o'clock in Lilne rates per day for transient : ■•'new,-34 St. John street.______with all conveniences, for buyer or the forenoon; 'aijj^-jhat notice be Forbes. Forbes street, Burnside. Sitoatlons Wanted— Pemale., ^ can bo rented separately. Reasop- ads $5.00 re.Ward'i, • li •FOR R E N T —^AT 20 Chestnut street, given to all PVJ^? interested m Effective »Inrch 17. 1» 2" able terma Phone Manchester 221. sai^" estate of■ 'WjMdency of . said Cash Charge WANTED—NURSING by a 'yoanS vV » v.^Sasi floor flat, a ll application and. and' place of 7 c ts 9 c ts Annpdnceiuenis 2 woman. Confinement C’ptyWt 43 Church street or telephone ON STATE ROAD— 6 room single publishing a copy (i Consecutive Days house with garage, large lot. Price hearing thereon, a C onsecutive D ays 9 cts 11 c ts p ra c tic a l n u rsin g . T elep h o n e 13b2y^. -424- of this order in ...e':ffewispaper hav- 11 cts 13 cts only $5000. Call Arthur A. Knofla. ing a circulatio •In'iiaid district, on 1 D ay ...... STEAMSHIP TICKETS—all Pa/t" Call 664 apartments—Two.i ier- Tel. 782-2. ' All orders for Irregular insertions the world. Ask for sailing llsW aim Situations Wanted—Male 89. ^ room apartments, hfan isniWr ler or before Jan'u, 1 ^ , 1928, and by will be charged at the one-time rate. rates. Phone T60- 2; Robert J. Smith. vice. S&8 range* refrigerator* ln*a* posting a cop bf tlfia order on the Special rates for long-term every 1009 M ain stre e t. door bed furnished. Call MMOhester public aign-p'ost in town of Man­ WANTED—TREE WORK to dcM ^y And Ask for a Want Ad Taker ^ chester, at least six days before the day advertising given upon request licensed expert orchardist WiU ! Construction Company. 2100 o r tele- Ads ordered for three or six days , day of-said hearing, to appear If they Automobiles tor Skle take jobs by contract or hour. Box phone 782-2. ______* TOLLAND see cause at.saiA ti and place and and stopped before the third or fifth ^ T, Manche'ster Heram ...... _ ^__ Tell Her What You Want day will be charged only for the ac­ f o r RBNI?—SE-STERAL.. firs t class be heard relative thereto, and make tual number of times the ad appear­ GOOD USED CARS An experienced operator will take your ad. help you rents with all Improvements, AwlV rejinrn to .thison. Saturdays and bric-a-brac. Frederick E. Both aviators were feted today. Oakland and Pontiac SPECIAL ON HIGH grade white Oak Hughes. Phone 386-2. ______FOR RENT—^4 ROOM tenement with Cut Oh Models 52 and 62 Range was a week-end guest at the home Last might they were entertained by 10:30 a. m. i 3 Bissell St. Tel. 2169-2 kegs, of all filzes: also charred keg& 10 heat; also garage on Spruce street. Frdm $50 to $100—In Effect of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Telephone Your Want Ads ^ Manchester Grain and Coal Co.. JUNK—1 will pay highest prices for Telephone 409-? or 1320-12. government; officials. W E H.y VE SEVERAL good buys In A pel P lace. P h o n e 1760 all kinds of junk; also buy all kinds Immediately. ^ Charches. Ads are accepted over ciie telephone used cars. Fords, Chevrolets. Essex of chickens, Morris H. Lessner, tele­ 2 FOUR ROOM FLATS one up and Mrs. Frank Luhrsen, who has at the CHARGE R-ATL S'ven above and a few others. Electrical Appliances— Radio 49 phone 982-4. one downstairs, all modern Improve­ be^n at the home of her daughter,; A ■wttd dfck"cfh njiles per as a convenience to advertisers, but H. -A STEPHENS ments. at 437 Center street. Call Substantial savings in the prices \ i X t the CASH RATES will be accepted as Mrs.. Arthur Morganson and famili' hdur. ^ Chevrolet Dealer Center St. MAGAZINES, rags, bundled P ap er. 1986. ______of the new Chrysler “52” and Great FULL PAYMENT if paid at the busi­ e l e c t r i c a l CONTRACTING appli­ junk bought for cash. Phone 849-3. New “62” effective at once, are an­ for two weeks, has returned to her ness office on or before the s®v®ntb 10 GOOD USED CARS including Mar- ances. motors, generators. soW and . Will call. 4. Elsenberg, FOR RENT—FOUR ROOM tenement home on Stafford road. ] . dav following the first mon and Olds demonstrators. Craw­ repairedr.work called for. Pequot a t I 80 Maple street, with all im­ nounced by Chrysler Ofidcials. Eight candidates will be iniated each ad., otherwise the CHAUEE ford -4.UIO Supply Company, Center E le ctric fci)“'407 C en ter stre e t. P hone Rooms Without Board 69 provements. Inquire at 187 Maple The hew prices make various It.YTE will be collected. No responsi- and T ro tte r stre e ts. T elephone 1174 1592. in the third and fourth degrees at This Is.A jbliee hilitv for errors in telephoned ads s tre e t. ^ ■ body styles of these two cars from the Tolland Grange Tuesday even­ o r 2021-2: FOR RENT—STEAM HEATED fur- $50 to $100 lower than heretofore. will be assumed and their accuracy I’uel and Feed 49-A FOR RENT—5 ROOM- t«nemenL all ing, after which the Harvest sup­ cannot be guaranteed. • 'nished fboins with kitchen, all Im- Auto Reiialriiig— Painting 7 pfovements; also single_rboms for improvements. With" heht furnished. ” :New"“52” factory list prices, to­ per will be served. Several others Phone 664 lig h t h o u se k ee p in g , 109 F o s te r St. Call; at 441 Center.-siredt:- ''.. v ; gether with the savings, are: have handed in their applications. VULC.ANiZING—'WE have our own wfeet k ; .tSrown on $8. Slabs- “Sis Roa4ster (with Mr. and Mrs. William Senk are Six rooms and sleeping porch, VSK F o n \V.\NT AI> S E R V IC E H en ry • • • plant and ‘expert to do the work, .lokdsv______sold. C P alm e r, 44 Boarders Wanted 59-A Rumble Seat) $670 Savings $55 entertaining their daughter, Mrs. steam heat, gas, 2 ear garafeej nic® Reasonable'- prices; .all types Tel. S95- $670 Saving $55 corner - loceldon -in Index of Glassifications w ork. C e n te r A uto S upply Compsats^V.th' ------Cpnpe Porter from Hartford. 155 Center .street. - SSOR'i-i^ALE — HARDWOOD ^stove WANTED—GIRL OR woman board­ Two-Door Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nutland, Mrs. tions. Price only ij |7.50(|, Cash ------cover, nnver. Call after 5 er andr roamer, steajA.heat, bath, all $670 Saving $65- $500 or more. A rare chahee. Evening Herald Want Ad® are now Wells street. ' privilege's, reasonbl^i.' Call at South Sedan Robert Doyle, Rev. William- C. Dar­ grouped according to classifications .ALL MAKES OF CARS repairedt ;4,uto^ ■ 116 Rev. J. W. Deeter’s'theme^.for his $695 Saving $55 by, Mrs Nettie Darby and Mr. and Pitkin-^reet-. G«jen^BEfti-Terras, electrical, systems repaired. ’ used Phone 1807-2. Herald office. ■ tk m rin g below and for bandy reference will sermon Sunday morning was “Re­ Four-Door Mrs. I Tilden Jewett called on Mrs. new single < of se'^en roQtna. tile appear in the numerical ojrder Indi- ! parts for-sale. Abel's Servee Station; conciliation toward Gor and Man.” O ak stre e t; T elep h o n e 789. FOR'-SALE — SE.-ASONED WOOD Apartments—^Flats— ^ Sedan $720 Saving $75 Myron Sparrow Saturday at the bath, fireplace, all i up to date in ca te d ; ' Chestnut and birch $6.00 load; hard 63- th e Christian Endea-vor service $720 Saving $75 Day-Kimball hospital in Putnam, every detaili.: Gao^be-iaspected at Lost and E^und ...... •• wood $7; hickory . $8. Phone 1051-o or Tenements for Bent De Luxe Coupe Announcements ... .^ ...... Garages— Service—Storage ’ 19 Avas held at tl?.evchurch at 7 p. m. De Luxe Sedan $790 Saving $85 Conn. any time. ] ; P e rso n a ls ...... FOR RENT—ON" M’^NUTE from Homer Trills ’wak the' leaderthe,. Mr. and! Mrs. I. Tilden Jewett I Tiave ten building lots ^all to- Automobiles Main street, six room mo. ern tene­ 4 1 FOR RENT— g a r a g e rgar of .701 topic, beinjg “"What diff^enck^doe's were guestsjSunaay afternoon o f jtether-on-Qiift-rStreet-tfeat”l"ican sell Automobiles for Sale ... Gai-deii—Fariii:^f Dairy Products 50 ment, all improvements. Telephone New “62” factory prices and sav­ 5 Main street. Apply to Aaron Jolih- 1804 o'r call A rthur K'.ofla. 783-2. reaaingithp Bible, make. Mr. and >*TS. Ingram at fJew Brif' for $100 ^ach,;rV G$s, /jSSfy watef Automobiles for Exchange 6 } son, 62 Linden street. Just 176 persons were, vaccinat­ ings are: . Auto .Accessories—Tires . 7 1------^ ^ ------FOR SALE—STRICTLY fresh eggs, business Coupe $1065 Saving $60 ain. Conn. and; electricil^*'^;n'^aifeblfe. > Easy Auto Repairing—Painting Delivered 'Wednesdays an d S a tu r- FOR RENT—FIVE ROOM tenement, ed at the clinic held by p. C. Y,. Regardless of the rainy night the-;' I&ma. IT desired.-- -(A place 7-A all improvements. Apply 111 Holl .Auto Schools ...... 8 i TO RENT— TAVO GARAGES a t 392 -days. Call 1465-^ Moore of' Sbut^. Jxsnchester -and J,i Rb.adster (with . Ladies’ Aid Sofciety supper at thte for garden and poultry. Autos—Ship by Truck — 9 i Maln.iStreet. Phone 1497. : street. Telephone 1214-4. Banks ..J ones, rbckl healthjiPfficer- at ■^Tinmhle.Seat) $107.5 Saving $100 Autos—For Hire 'FOR SALE—STRICKLY FRESH eirgs Federated church last Friday night Buildiiig lot- ...... ■ 36 New York, regjilftSSSv^lce. Call 7-2 Com pany. ______1______Charlesaife Charles ... ------W. Holman..awn ,, compa^^% idel# known principle Help Wanted—Male or-Female .. 37 o r 1282. ' Agents Wanted ....A .,, ...... ONE M A H O G A N Y _____AND _genuine . iG. . - Hohenthal,. both prominent tem- I'he annual meeting of the La­ of Standardized Quality, are given Situations Wanted—Female .... 38 leather bed davenport with sagless penance and prohibition workers. ■; dies’ Aid sociecy^'wiil be held with by the company officials as factors Situations Wanted—Male ...... 39 j .itenalflriff , 33 spring .$g5; ;Mahogany living_roora dissolution of partnership d^rs. Emily .Ellis 'Wednesday after- co|&ib»ting to make possihlq these Employment Agencies 40 ______' ______table to >matcl\ $25. W atkins Furni-, l.Ire Stock—Pets—Poultry—Vehicle.^ | ture Exchang^i 1 7 . Oak street. between the Union and the Antjp cnoon. grbi^f vaiues;,^^to the public, D o g s—B ird s—P e ts ...... ' .41 j MATTRESSES, B0,J^"PR1NGS cush- Saloon League was announc^'j-at Mrs. Joseph Barrgpso is suffering DUjHng til® year 1927 the Corn- Live Stock—Vehicles ...... 42 I| ions an d .pliloAVSi.;’ ste riliz e d and thb’- meeting, the reason being al-., ,with rheumatfsniVaid is under the pan jf^^dvanced, to third place among P o u ltry and S upplies ...... 43 i renovated vvith’' 8u 6 ?S^r and forrnal- AVanted — Pets—Poultry—Stock 4414 4 ! delyde; best njotliod. • Manchester] leged discrim'inatipn shown against care of Dr," Mns6h ''d£ 'Willlmantic. all manufacturers in the sales re­ For Sale—Miscellaneon.s i. Upholstering Co., 119 Spruce street. 1 tAvo of the union’s prominent -work­ E. W. Buell;ds .having his house cords- of the National Automobile A rticles fo r S ale ...... •• • 45;45 ! Phone 1268. - ' v j ers after the merger had .taken wired by thte Acme Electric Co. of Chamber of Commerce. Its growth B o ats and A ccessories ...... 4G ' —— ------~W------' Willlmantic. - ' . • . Building Materials ...... 47 I PHONOGRAPHS. Vacuum cleaner and AS R. C. LIFE SAVERS place. has been the most rapid of any sin­ Diamonds—Watches—Jewelry .. 48,48 clock repairing. Loc'k and gunsmith- Gustave T. Bochman, secretary gle cpmpahy in the history of the l i - i i Electrical Appliances—Radio .. 49 i; Ing, saw filing; - jBraithwaite. 52 of the union and Miss Dorothy autoihotive industry. . Fuel and Peed ...... 49-Ai.A P e a rl s tre e t. . - '-i ■' Jenirry Sinnott’e fighting blood w(aa «P . ,, Ten sAvimmers graduated from the Wheale, it was said, had been dis­ Company officials point out that one felibw'ih .the. school vuho had’rtoodby him Garden—Farm—Dairy Products 50 CHIMNEYS CLEANBO, and repaired, senior and junior American Red criminated against by the Anti-Sa­ HOUSE’S ANNOUNCES 1927 sales of both these cars were Household Goods ...... 51] locks and safes opened; expert key Jerry was ready to fight for Jack—and with him—againrt Machinery and Tools ...... 52 i Cross Life Saving classes which loon League. Mr. Bochman said the'hlghest yet attained. 'They point ■ whniawhole world. With a tigerish pounce, he got one of the trio by Musical Instruments ...... 53 ' fitting, saw filing and grinding. have j'ust.- ,; concluded their first that he had been placed In a situaT Office and Store Equipm ent...... 54 j Work called for. Harold Clemson. BIG CLEARANCEYALE out that by passing on to the public neck and flung him, spinninspinning, into,a corner. LockWill’e foot cras^ Sporting Goods—Guns ...... 55 1 108 No. E lm s tre e t. P hone 462. terms at the School street Recrea­ tion in which he felt he could no the even greater value these new against the...... chin'of)T a another. Specials at the Stores ...... 56 tion. Center,, it is announced T by In­ longer continue, and Miss Wheale, prices make possible, that a still AA’earing Apparel—Furs ...... 57 I Private Instractlon 38 structor*,;; Frank C. Busch; who was educational secretary, had Tomorrow marks the opening of greater number of motor car AA'anted—To Buy ...... 58 , Those who passed the life saving been dismissed. C. E. House and Son Inc. annual can now take advantage Qlf the Koo ms— Boa rd—Ho t els—Resorts BACKWARD CHILDREN and those tests in the senior class were Ber­ Kestanrants behind In work because of sickness nine day clearance sale. 'This is abilities offered in these two cars. Rooms Without Board ...... 59 tutored in all grammar school sub­ nard Sheridan, Leslie Buckland,. one of the biggest events of the year Boarders Wanted ...... 59-A Robert Treat, August Mildner, J.- jects. Former grammar school at the store and Is looked forward T.TOF. ALASTER, a n Country Board—Resorts ...... 60 principal. Reasonable rates. Call Ricker Small and Everett Fish. In to with great interest'% h'rmdreds IN TfflS SKAMNG F .^ H o te ls—R e s ta u ra n ts , ...... 61 215-5. . I. O .O .F . ANNIVERSARY AVanted—Rooms—Board ...... 62 the j'nnior division, the graduates of Manchester men. Real Estate For Rent were Leonard Hicking, Messino The store is filled;;; to «, capacity John May of Bigelow street is Apartments. Flats, Tenements .. 63 Bonds-r-Stocks—Alortgages ^1., ■Viullermet; Thomas McPartland Business Locations for Rent .... 64 ON SATURDAY, JAN. 28 with fine merchandise lor tlifis big considered one of the H ouses for R e n t ...... 65 MONEY TO LOAN on first and second and Roy Frazer. sale. .It Is regular .high .;/Srade in Manchester. He can be seen any S u b u rb a n fo r R e n t ...... 66 mortgages. Mortgages bougl^aiid, Instrurto'r : Bu.sch expected ta House merchandise greatly-.'tfi^ked day when the ice is good at the S um m er H om es fo r R e n t ...... 67 sold. P. D. Comollo, 13 Oak street. have/’an increased attendance for down. That is the reason for the Center Springs pond when tj®v® j® AVanted to Rent ...... 68 Tel. 1540. •The 38th anniversary celebration Real Estate For Sale the.,second;term"of each cla,ss,which popularity/of this sale. Buyers a hockey game going on and he l- Apariment Buildings for Sale ... 60 hegins'H'fiis week. The senior class of King DairidiLodgi of Odd ■Flplf, know that tkey are getting some usually in the thick of the game. Business Property for Sale ...... 70 h u n tin g seaso n has its' session from 7 until 8 lows WilliSaturdw. He raises Rhode Island red chick­ l-’a n n s and Land fo r S ale ...... 71 ______r o’clock- tonight and the juniors evening, January 28, one week from real values,;/.'- , H o u ses fo r S ale ...... 72 All departments are cooperating ens and the story is told by people “I’m going down town to buy a from Id: 80. until 11:15 Saturday this week' Saturday. This was not whoi live around the pond that the J.ots for Sale ...... 73 made clear,in last night’s report of in this sale and it is expected that Resort Propejr,^ for Sale ...... 74 i sport dress.” noon. All dbthoji^trationB are given all previous records will be broken. chickens have taken up skating on Suburban for *Sale ...... 75 ] “But, my dear, you won’t need imjllie Rec.ppbl/j^nyone who wish- the banquet in which the date was theirto^ account. At least, they Real Estate for Exchange ...... 7f es7;|p division should omitted. Tho'se.-'desiring tickets for AVanted—R e al E s ta te ...... 77 ! one at this time of year.” have been seen a numbr of times geti’in felich with Mr. Busch per­ the affair; should get them before Roman Navarro’s name was or- now, running around on the ice. ___ correct, Auction—Legal N'otlecs ' “Oh, yes, I will. I’m going to I iglnally Ramon Gil Samenyegos. Then Loc1twill.SlipP®fl . A u ctio n S ales ...... 1 sonally of leave his name at the January 20. th ^ . Legal Notices ...... 71 shoot my husband.”—Judge. eel from the hands of ti» Rec office. By Frank Beck voice. A upfforroedi^icer was fellow lurched, crumpled and GAS BUGGIES—Out of the Trap in the doorway. ' became quiet. HOW DID TMBY OUT X AMD W

nMDOCTW r M0l«f MOW GAN I QME TMB4 TNfi SUP f ■ 9E N B W WHEN wohrr,ji THE DUKE %lj \ / -- •' ■ 5-*

•» He was the nightwatch of the town. Instan|iy, ,SinnQ$t.se|*j!|f 9, :u chair whirled it over his head and flung tt at There was a crash, followed by darkness., ‘-‘Coma on, Jackl ,b»sed;, Jerry in Lockwill’s ear. In that darkness, they swept theT)ffic«r.^r.- aside and plunged down the stairs. A figure sprang before ttenuas they fled past a street lany. . _ , 7 (“fo^pe Contmued><,'/.v/ PAGE FIFTEEN m isf^ESTEai tcoNN.) EVEisrrNrG wEPJHiflsiJAY; jAJNuAKr is, 1 9 2 8 . By Percy L Crosby SKIPPY FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: SENSE »"i NONiNS£ • \ UHA-f Does Thit j: The only thing some of us can do that everybody will like will be to (Jie- She is so dumb that she thinks a combination-shot is a pair of undies gone to the ragman. ,

The naked truth is less attrac- tive if bow-legged.- Why expect Congress to solve the flood-conjtrol problem? It can’t even stop the flood of laws. Home is a place where a man can do as he chooses, provided what he chooses is agreeable with T what his wife wants done.

It’s pretty hard to prove that the fellow who’s intelligent enough to be happy isn’t intelligent enough. i '' Fat Lady (to bellhop)— “ Boy, Copyrli^ 192S, Pezey L. CTotby, Cwtnl FitM Amo., .Uc. / - /’7^ “a. REG U. S. PAT. OFF. call me a taxi!’’ ^1928. BY NEA SERVICE. INC Bellhop— “ All right, but you look like a truek.” eUR BOARDING HOUSE These days, when a fellow gets ^ Mickey (Himself) McGuire By Fontaine Fox hopping ni^d, he is liable to be in' ‘‘ Would you like to take a nice By Gene Ahern long walk?’’ she asked. Paris or Berlin tu? next day. “Why, I’d love to,” replied the young man joyously. •‘Well, don't let me detain you.” c a m e : ACR.OSS "THr 1^. Tf^ACK^ A nFD vvcBV-^ov/e LADS, X'ZJCST He MOS-T BE PONStT l e t -TH’ The he-martyrs of old suffered a | BECSI'JBP VioRP-THAT I »e a ^ e e M\SSL\S MEARTW a T ^ DRAFTED ALMOST f:VrR.Y KiD IN THE: poLlT^ lot. but they never have had to go PASSED lASCRAkiCE MEDICAL^ d o c t o r ! ujelcome speech shopping with a woman. f^pSlDp:A/T/Al- .DISTRICT poR ShloW S NGe ^ TyAMiMA'flOki Vy(ilTpi FLVIiAQ OR M A V F E HE To VOURSELF A woman can explain anything COLORS! doc-To r SAIP^ aK.'p VoOTo ABOUT' VoUR but a gray hair. NOT LONG NOW Little Mabel was poking at some­ I VdAS A PERFECT EYAMPLE SHoLi H\S M AR\/ELO aS thing in the grass. Sudenly she oiF MAkiMooP, E O A P '‘ G R A T lT iiP e c o m s t K o-t i o /A, thing in the grass. Suddenly she The teams will be startiAg AS SAFg AlA iMSliRAkiCE- FOR*LEARK\iA 6 -^SME^LL APP Aki south for training soon, then green snake!” U n i Her mother, one of those cau­ RISK AS PA'VBREAK*.' SOME WEVJ AMEKiDMEMT'T'o PLA Y BALL will be the next tious women, replied: “ Keep away sw m p oms thing you’ll hear. Par solution T A from it, darling. It might be just HTAirTHV EtIERV is on another page. You maj’^ be Cm . Mot RMouiM’To I as dangerous as a ripe one.” O b B / - able to beat the puzzle editor’s RESPECT^-^SI'ROfiO AS Af\^ seven strokes o-'. th’ •. When there’s enough flesh to OAK AKiP 50UK\P AS 'keep the knee from being bony, A Kiirffcr there’s too much somewhere else. ------s/ L V Xow We See Through It. I? p A We wondered how the Swiss cheese got that bored look, until we heard that it had been at a mock wedding. Probably the funniest definition in the dictionary, when you consid­ er everything, is this: Cantaloup, a melon Of delicate flavor.

Sign During Christinas in Toiikawa v r • (Okla.) Postofifice. “No Packages Accepted Wrapped <2> in Holy Paper.”

The Good Samaritan nowadays t: draws up beside the road and lends a fellow a quart of gas to get to the next filling station. a girl he often marries her for his B A L L a girl he often'■maries her for his THE RULES money. Two friends were having an in­ 1— The idea of letter golf is todignation meeting of their own. change one word to another and do Both had suffered domestic strife I lb and - noAv they were comparing ( Fontaine^ox, 1928, The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) / OARUMG’S BASK. ev^RMTMiRG IP O WIROMG , AM' chaEiged. ‘‘Why she married me.” ^Twe PM.Pl'tlkt'AtLHCj U 6 W OP Ne R\D OP TkbiGO? evitM VF \ P\P \t RVGVVt— \t’D -) P(\\R Rov.\e. S flL L S 6 \aSROMCj . S'tio CiOZM. APPteSAOCG.

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By Blosser FRECKLES AxND HIS FRIENDS He Doesn’t Know Just How to Take That O A ’. IS FRECKLES VOO'LLAAMETO W6DSE OSSIE VOOSAOOUDCOMS a d o m r e v ? a e< cosE 6oims TALWM'TD B1LUE=1'LL CWBRTt) My MOUSE cmAL Livje A FRIEMD OF TP SEE OSCARS DCMKEY-y I AA’ SEECLAftA’ j - l I X MIME.’ MAU-6 a im IHTRODOce r e a l l v ? AMD 1. OOST a d o r e f/ ' n s w T TAJiSVtoUCWER ME 70 ASP.' DOM KEVSH ' SAOM) ( SISTER^ R7D V w o o !

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no. u. a PAT. OFF. \ «■ Bv NSA somcs; me.'

i By. SmaU READ THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE SALESMAN SAM iThe Time Draws Qose Wee Clowny slid down from the something dropped. “ Why, there’s // hay, and as he landed, yelled. “ Hur­ our big surprise box,” shouted ray! At last we’re back on earth Scouty i^.^deiight. “ And as upon again. That surely was some flight. the ground it lit, he added, “ Come, I must admit that I was scared, bat we’ll opfen^t. W e’ve tried before, think bow luckily we fared. We- but now, perhaps, we’ll find the surely should be tji^ k fu i that we way that’s right.” all are quite all ri)^ . So, that’s just what' the Tinies “ You bet we sh^ld,” someone did, and after while they pried the replied, "And, as for me, that sort lid until it flew wide open. Then of ride is not so good. I’d rather there came r big surprise. “ Oh, hive iay feet on solid ground.” look,” yelled Scouty, “ This is ’The rest then left the pile of hay great!” The Tinies didn’t hesitate, and Coppy said, “ Come on, let’s but peeked inside, and Clowny ^ LoveRtSPffS YiC % ^ play. A larger, greener fleld than said, “ I can’t believe my eyes.” this, I ’m sure can ne’er be found.” When everyone had had a look, Just think! The bunch had left they reached inside and promptly I B v/LTkrfi the land

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■ Lucius Pinney of Prospect street E. L. G. Hohenthal, S r .left___ to'- ^ 60 LOCAL FAMILIES Who is ill with pneumonia, is rest­ day. for a few days in Wasbihgton First ' LUNCHEON FOOD SALE ing more comfortable today and Philadelphia At the ‘ AIDED AT CHRISTMAS DEMOLAY DANCE Manchester Community Club . HALE’S SELF-SERVE (Auspices Manchester Members, Charter Oak Chapter, Order of Friday, Jan. 20, 3 :3 0 to 5 :3 0 p. m. George H. Waddell Makes Re­ DeMolay) port For Community Service Salads, Fish, Meats, Vegetables, Committee-^Xiist of Gifts. JANUARY CLEAKANCE SALE MASONIC TEMPLE Cakes— Everything For a Complete n a c e: r y Luncheon. Manchester’s c.,oiLmunity Service SATURDAY, JANUARY 21 Committed aided 60 families at NOW GOING ON . IT PAYS TO WAIT PM IfOWHgMMbff" Si Yaffe's Orchestra Advance Telephone Orders For Christmas time this past year ac­ Tickets------S2.50 a Couple Food Received. cording to a report just rendered by SAVE MONEY BY BUYING HERE. (Includes Dancing, Checking Call 1655 or 1594 George H. Waddell, treasurer of the Refreshments.) committee. A total of 162 chlldreu and 17 adults were cheered through Modern-Old Fashion Dance the committe-’s gifts made possible GIRLS COATS Given by Hose Co. Xo. 1, M. F. D. MODERN DANCING by contributions of money from Hose House, Corner Main and CITY VIEW DANCE HALL several different sources. Fur collars and fur trimmed. All high grade Hilliard Streets In answer to a request for sup­ Keeney St. * Friday Evening, Jan. 20 plies for Christmas dinners for poor materials. rifY Tomorrow Xight Music by Behrend’s Orchestra and needy families 25 local people Regularly selling for $ 1 5 .0 0 ...... V v .Auspices H. C. T. Club Lew Beebe, Prompter volunteered to furnish such sup-, Prizes------IVehr’s Orchestra Admission 50c. plies. The committee out of its funds purchased 26 Christmas din­ ners for other poor families so that The H. C. T. club will give an­ 51 families were given fine dinners MEN’ S OVERCOATS other of its popular dances at the through the committee’s works. ABOUTTOWN City View dance hall on Keeney Some idea of the work the com­ One lot to close out ...... - • • • street tomorrow night. All modern mittee accomplished can be gained Regularly selling for $25.00 ...... v... $13.50 Miss Ruth Nubum will speak at numbers will he played by Wehrs from the following lict of articles the North Methodist church .Sun­ orchestra. A big crowd is assured that w'ere given to the needy in day morning at 9:30 on the sub-| by the fact that three straw ridel Manchester by the committee. Meh!s 'Crew Neck Sweaters .;.. . *.... • -. it Q ‘/Q t t Cooi^ ject of foreign missions. Miss Nu­ are coming from Hartford to attend Shoes, 79 pairs; rubbers, 65 Regular $6.0() ^..;.... o w v bum is home on a furlough after the dance. The parties are coming pairs; stockings, 166 pairs; union .^pending five years in China. All here from the Royal, Underwood suits, 134 pairs; slippers, 4 pairs; Many Other Items Greatly Reduced for This Sale. departments of the school will as­ and Arrow Electric factories. blouses, 6; underdrawers, 2 pairs, semble in the large vestry to hear undershirts, 2; ■'y’s suits, 11; her address and all others inter­ Group 3 of the Center church trousers, i6 pairs; overcoats, 14, ested will be made welcome. women w'orkers will hold a special white shirt, 1; lumber jackets, 2; meeting tomorrow evening at 7:30 sweaters, 3; dresses, 7; vesTts, 2^0; CARDfl’S DEPT. STORE A New Way Charles A. Sweet has received a at the home of Mrs. J. A. Hood on sleeping suits, 2; gloves, 2 pairs; / ’ letter from Cody Allan, grandson Chestnut street. Plans will be toques, 6; gingham, 3 yards; flan­ 35 Oak Street, South Manchester of “ Buffalo Bill," William A. Cody, made for the supper of thej- Men’s nel, 12 yards; shed'-s, 9; pillow lo whom Mr. Sweet sent a souvenir League on February 1, for, which cases, 12; bloomere, 2 pairs; leg­ m -- ■ s button showing a picture of the Group 3 will cater. gings, 1 pair;’Teddy Bear suit ,1. famous showman in tlie heyday of ills career, and which had been in FIREMEN’S SETB.^CK in his possession for forty years. Mr. Mary C. Keeney Tent, Daughters Allan who lives in New York warm­ of Union War Veterans will install Hose-Company No. 3 was high / their officers for 192 8 at a regular scorer at last night’s weekly ses­ ly thanked the donor and states \ that he has remailed the package meeting tomorrow evening at the sion of the S. M. F. D. setback tournament held at its own house. 10 his mother who is out in. Cody, state armory. Department president Wyoming, and will be glad to add Augusta Ranney of Hartford will The other scores ere: No. 1, 655; HALE'S SELF-SERVE it to the collection in the Buffalo be the installing officer. Supper No. 4, 591; No. 2, 535. The high ?n- k.ib. will be served at 6:30 by the fol­ dividual" score, of 190 was made by Bill Museum which she has built Whollebe and Wistoski of No. 1. there. lowing committee: Mrs. Ora Ames, G R Q CERY chairman: ^Irs. Muriel Davis, Mrs. The team' totals follow: No. 2, John Trask, Mrs. Ethel Carter. Mrs. 4316; No. 4, 422o; No. 1, 4186; Stockholders of the Odd Fellows No. 3, 413 5. The ne.\t sitting will Building association will have their Luna Hutchinson, Mrs. J. A. Go in to your dealer today and ask for a package, be at No. 4's house. annual meeting tomorrow evening Loomis. of Seafresh. You’ll get a 1 lb. carton, of the most at S o'clock, when reports will be submitted by the officers and direc­ delicious Atlantic fish you ever tasted. It comes to tors and three directors chosen to hold office for a term of three you all ready to cook. No bones, no waste, no clean­ yoar.s. The meeting, will be held Good Judgment and at the Odd Fellows building. ing. A new patented frosting process keeps all the fu o n S full rich flavor and nourishment. And remember .Mrs. Herbert A. Alley heads the committee in charge of the public # Economy In that 1 lb. of Seafresh is equal to 3 lbs. of ordinary whist wliich the members of l^ie- ivorial Teiu))le B.vthiau Sisteis will whole fish. Cook Seafresh as you would any fresh hold in the Balch and Brotvn club- GOOD THINGS TO EAT loonis tomorrow evening. Six Shoeing At The fish. . , . .. inizes will be given and light le- CALL 2000 FOR freshments served. Strictly Fresh large White E ggs ...... 57c dozen SellfSerye pan. Add the tomato pulp and IjA •;„> Baked Seafresh seasoning and cook two minutes. Hose Company No. 2, of the . Two dozen $1.10. s.k , -i .v-> -A,.w A Manchester Fire department will Dip the filers in milk, then in hold Us regular meeting tomorrow Brown's Butter r^ . ... .’1,.... 6 0 c ^ . finely ground and sifted cracker or night, in the headquarters at Main Pure Lard, 2 lbs...... *• •: ’ • • • ■ ’ • • JACK FROST bread crumbs. Place in a well Hashed Brown = and Hilliard streets. Cannon’s Native Potatoes...... $1.69 a bushel greased baking pan. dot each filet CONFECTIONERY with butter or bacon fat or place a Seafresh St. Margaret's Circle Daughters (Delivered to your home.) strip of bacon on each. Bake in a of Isabella will liold its regular Pinehurst Hamburg...... , ;. / ' lu* hot oven (450 degrees Fahr.) about and Potatoes meeting in K. of C. hall tomorrow Ribs of Corned B eef...... -. . -.; • I- /z SUGAR 4 pkgs. 29c ten minutes, until the fish is brown. li, cup salt pork fat evening at 7:3o sharp. The busi­ Serve with creole sauce or with egg 1 pound Filets We will have some veiy nice large heads of Cauliflower ^ Pound package. ness will be followed by a whist of sauce. 2 cups chopped boiled potatoes . which Tvirs. Alice Burke is the chair­ Pepper . man. Her assistants will be Mrs. Parsley Theresa Buckley, Mrs. Bessie Bir- li ; -lyjMSi SnOUUIER HAM lb . IS f Flake the fish and add with the nie. Miss May Barrett and Mrs. No- . Creole Sauce seasoning to the potatoes. Heat Fresh from the smoke house, esi>ecially selected. rene Cotter. Prizes will be'given 4 tablespoons green pepper the fat in a’ heavy frying pan and and refreshments served by the stir in the fish and potatoes. Stir 2 tablespoons onion committee. n a t i v e . SELECTED LARGE constantly over the fire for three 6 mushrooms or olives minutes^ let brown underneath, l i cup salad oil The regular Wednesday evening STRICTLY FRESH EGGS shaking the pah occasionally to whist will be held at the Manche.s V2 teaspoon salt avoid sticking. Fold like an ome­ ter Community clubhouse this even- Yz cup tomato pulp FRADIN’J and juice let, turn out on a platter and gar­ dozen 59c Cut the pepper, onion and mush' nish with parsley. Tf uncooked fish is used, it wfll tak^ aibbut forty Mrs. James J. Breen of Alton rooms or olives into small pieces and cook three minutes in the oil, minutes to brown. Cooked fish will street was pleasantly surprised last POST’S brown in about twenty minutes. evening when about 12 of lier January which has been heated in the frying women friends called to felicitate FLAKES with her on her birthday. The time was spent in playin.g bridge and i ot-her games, Mrs. Charles Holton i MEADOW GOLD SPECIAL TOMORROW winning the first prize. Mrs. . . Clearance Eben Hill of West Hartford and 1 BUTTER t 53c Mr. Breen sang popular songs and ] The most popular butter in town 2 lbs. $1.05 Haddock Squares, everybody enjoyed the dainty lunch | Frosted Filets, wliich the guests provided. Mrs. Breen received a number of indivi­ lb...... 34c lb. 28c dual gifts. Sale PURE LARD 2 lbs. 25c .. • ,ri. '■'v ■■"Pound i)ackage&‘ ''- ^ -A —^ / v Sole Filets, lb...... 49c Mackerel Filets, lb. 55c Mrs. Elliott ]Now In Progress Hemstitching On Sale in the R4 Park Building OfiSers IVORY SOAP 48e »*SELF«SERVE'' and HEALTH MARKET Giu’est size.' 12 bars in carton. -V A* Remarkable FRESH'SHHPMENT; F iG ^A R S 2 Ills* 22c Bargains In Pm’e flg filling. imrs GiNGiRSkAPt Department Store Underwear 2 lbs. 22c DEPOT SQUARE, MANCHESTER LADIES’ VESTS, medium weight, tailored top. WE AlMWtTH FINfp ti ^ ^ i GOAL TO SEBVE.- Regular 59c. 39c Fresh Fruits And Vegetablies Open Every Night Sale Price jhat we your bus­ The freshest and most complete display in towm« iness tw deserve Until 9 O’clock BEAUTY LADIES’ VESTS, medium weight with short The best way to find out just sleeves. Regular 69c. 44c MALE'S how good our coal or ofl is and IN BOBS! ■ Sale Price PU6UC RECORDS how prompt our* service is to Skillful bobbing and trim­ give us a trial order. We feel MEALTM MARKET ming can enhance your- bea^y CARTER’S VESTS, first quality, short sleeves. LUNCH CART SALE. sure you’ll be a regular custom­ more, perhaps, than you realize. , Papers were filed today in the er after the first trial. Flat Tire Regular $1.00. f t A sale of a half-interest in the Silk The subtle artistry conferred Battery Trouble Sale Price ...... City Diner lunch cart and the lot upon us by years o f training* . f'7- , S\' - S, P- « . /.V ; A /xm i \' ... • . ■ . ..

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