. THE WEATHER Forecast by~^ U. S. Weather Bureau, NET PRESS RUN Hartford. AA ERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION for the Month of January, 1930 . 1 Cloudy ' tonight and Sunday, 5;547 lEttrmnn slightly colder tonight. ' Members of the Audit Bureau ol , ,.„vv— ^Conip* Circulations Conn. State Libuo> PRICE THREE CENTS SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. X V.OKTEEN PAGES (Classified Advertising on Page 12) VOL. XLIV., NO. 111.
SOMEONE’S MISTAKE FIRST PICTURE FROM MEXICO • GLADDENS POLICE. 20 NOW DEAD ! FRANCE PREPARING FEDERAL BOARD ! I New York, Feb. 8.—(AP)— i Returning to her studio apart- ‘ ment in East 48th street last AS BIG ROCK IS VIOLATING , I night, Miss Mary Coburn found TO GIVE OUTLINE i a note in her letter box saying a package had been left with the KILLS THREE I superintendent for her. C O N ^T U T IO N I i Opening it she found packed in -- “ I OF HER POSITION ' burlap and straw twelve bottles , labeled, “ special whiskey,” and ' all were full. She-called the po- : , Rescue Workers Added to So Says Railroad President lice and turned the package over I I to them. List of 20 Killed by Blast, CARNEGIE ESTATE ^ Premier Tardieu P 1 a i n 1 y In Address; Says Govern-1 The superintendent said a boy had delivered the package and Vexed Over British and ' the police, deduced he had : In Mine; Three More Are| SHOWS INCREASE ment Will Compete Withj ' dropped the note in the wrong ^ I box. They expressed grave • American Statements on doubt that the rightful owmer j I Still Entombed. Private Grain Operators. ' w'ould appear to claim his prop- | i ^ erty but___ would .not commit In Nine Years It Grows to Naval Armaments; French ' themselves on what would be- Salt Lake City, Utah. Feb. 8.— Council Bluffs, Iowa. Feb. 8 — ' come to the contents of the pack- (AP) -Grim death once more has Note WiD Deal With Pari ,A p )_ F r e d W. Sargent, president I age should he fail to do so. <•> j stalked through the portals of the I Ten Millions More— Now of the Chicago and Northwestern ’ h —------~ ~ ~ Z “ i Standard Coal Company's mine at railroad, charged the Federal Farm ' Standardville, Utah, where a score I Valued at 35 Million. ty, It Is Expected. Board with violation of the funde- ’ CAPITAL BUILDING were killed Thursday by an e x -; mental rights of the Constitution, in ; plosion and poisonous gas, adding i London, Feb. 8 — (AP) — Andre New York. Feb. 8.— (A P )—The an address last night. i the names of three rescue workers j Tardieu, French premier, was re He said the Farm Board %yas j to the list of dead. | 1 value ’o f the estate of Andrew Ca> PLANS TOO COSTLY The three men, searching the in-1 ported generally today in naval violating the Constitution “by using Inegie increased $10,445,193 during , ner workings for C. H. Brady, I conference circles to be considering the powers of Government and the ■ the nine-year period between I Frank James and Todie Wimber,; making a statement in which I August 1919 and August 1928, it French needs and aspirations would tion with private operators I was shown today in an accounting last night when a huge boulder, be expressed. It w'ould compare Present methods of handling the on file in Surrogate’s Court. with the statements of Secretary nation’s wheat crop. Sargent said, loosened by the terrific blast which penses Million More Than rocked the mountainside, fell on I The estate w ^ valued at $24,775,- Stimson and Premier MacDonald of were aided in the building up ot I 940 in an inventory filed August 11, formidable foreign competition and them. the past two days. that “steadily mounting taxation is ■ Bodies Recovered, 1919. The accounting, approved by Conference circles, having been Bodies of the men were recovered , Surrogate John P. O’Brien yester- threatening to undermine the na Appropriated. Three persons, including Pasqual Ortiz Rubio, newly inaugurated President of Mexico, were wounded shaken by the explosion of two and rescue workers temporarily j ■ day gives the value at $35,201,133 as mines in the shape of the American tion’s prosperity.” when an assailant fired six bullets into his car shortly after he had taken the oath of office in Mexico City. abandoned their efforts to locate the | of August 31, 1928. Mr. Carnegie and British sensational pronounce Taking Property three missing workmen, who were In this NEA Service picture, which was rushed to The Herald by airplane and telephoto, you see the crowd ment of policy, looked forward with "Bujdng grain as it is. the gov Hartford,u Feb.r eu. o— 8— (AP) ' — Back _____ „ around the presidential car as Senora Ortiz Rubio and Senorita Rosh, the president s mece, left the ^ospita . , died in 1919. ; Items making up the increase are: interest not unmixed with trepida evnment is taking property ''^th°ut g^g-te board of finance and , flooded^ the Both were slightly wounded, and the arrow in the above photo show's Senorita Rosh, wnth bandaged head, i.s tion, for another jolt about Monday due process of law and without com- |.jjg special commission t|g nfine after the blast. she was assisted into the car. President Ortiz Rubio later was taken to his home m an ambulance. I Receipt of income amounting to i $4,234,445; collections sale or tranc- or Tuesday from the French govern uses the having in charge the construction of : ^he men killed by the falling rock i fer of assets, $2,157,066, and moneys ment head. m un'efof S t feSp^STo g V ltfo She ; a new'state office building on Capi- ; were ^ohn R Loman. 24, New I received by the executor through Franco-Italian Parity the reversion of interest on the trust It was believed the probable im transportation business, taking | avenue and Washington and ; , and Waiton Hen- pending announcement might , deal CCAL MAN BADLY I funds created for the payment of '^ ^ -son , 18.’of derson, Standardville. 18, -- - u with the question of Franco-,^lian ef- plans for the proposed new building | They were members of a fresn GIGANTIC BOOZE TRIAL annuities, $4,051,572. parity which thus far has b e ^ one water* transportation, it is in The Annuities. of the biggest obstacles toward a feerdestroving private property. , for further consideration. The com- | air” crew and were endeavoring to INJURED IN DARIEN The armuities established by Mr. •Tf America is to be prosperous, .mission is expected to recheck the . ventilate one of | *,,gm^ five-power agreement. There was Carnegie included one of $10,000 for no indication whatsoever that either there are two problems that must I plans for the purpose of determin- i when the nuge rock fell on • ON IN OKLAHOMA CITY former Chief Justice William h" -olved” he said. “Agricultural j whether any change could be 1 Funeral Arrangements. France or Italy had changed their Howard Taft, and two of $5,000 p;osperity in the country must be I made which might tend to lessen Funeral arrangemen^^^^^ viewpoints—Italy remaining adam- each for Mrs. Francis Cleveland gut jn jts demand for parity and rerived. and our steadily increasing ; the cost of construction. , workmen taken ™g®trkg.. , Hamilton J. Mullen in Nor- taxation must be cut down or it will The commission is expected to re- | being made today, the bodies, take , Preston, widow of President Grover j France declining to concede it. destrov American industry, already ; port again to the board of finance , from the mine one ^y ® IOver 100 Involved in Case | WHOLESALE WAR ON 11 II 'i 1 C-llrtiiririrt I Cleveland, and Mrs. Edith Kermitj Tardieu Vexed weakened in competition with fo r - ' and control within a month, the . sent to an undertaking e^tabbs W31K nOSpilUi rOllOWing , Roosevelt, widow of President Theo- j It was made quite clear that Sec- ; dore Roosevelt. The annuities i retary Stimson’s and Mr. MacDon- ;;n production.” board having postponed action on ment at Price, Utah, and the row of the plans for that period. Unless j caskets recalled to many a similar j from Negro Laundress to AGAINST GANGSTERS AllIflTTinllllA I trust fund amounted to $6,650,338. , aid s statements of Thursday mid ' some material change can be made. , disaster in the Carbev,county mm- /lUlUlllUUilC Uiaoil. I Tbe accounting discloses paymer.t i Friday caused no joy m French ! and it does not now appear that! mg district in 1924 which cost the , Asst. State Atty.-General; j — ______to the decedant’s widow, Mrs. Louise j headquarters where Premier Tar- DOaOR PRISONER ' there can be, the board will have to | byes of nearly 200 men. Whitfield Carnegie, of specific j dieu was sa,d by some to be plainly : face the problem of acting on the | o f the 29 in the Standardville , Hamilton D. Mullen, 22 year old legacies amounting to $291^596 and ^J^iter? pIriTdiS°atch^^ i»T Y lin /1 A I f I proposed plans, which call for the ; mine at the time of the explosion ; Called ‘Rum Rebellion.’ Chicago Detectives Ordered ' son of Mr. and Mrs. David Mullen of ' $2~408,568 on account of her resi- li\l H IS I III I r lir ‘ expenditure of approximately more | fhe toll today stood at 17 known, described French comment as of ; 13 Knox street, lies seriously in- duary bequest. distrustful tone.” IIY l l i 'J I $1,000,000 in excess of the $2,- . dead, with bodies recovered, and Annuities created by Mr. Car ' 225.000 appropriation made by the j three missing, with no hope held for to Arrest Every Known : jured in the Norw'alk hospital to- Besides dealing with other mat Oklahoma City, Feb. 8.— (AP) negie’s will included $10,000 for ters, the experts committee today Legislature.. i their safety. : day. with a fractured skull and A land where black and gold and David Lloyd George, $3,000 to Wal practically finisfeed its work on the Governor’s Opinion \ Most of the men killed had fam- ! other injuries, while his mother and ter Damrosch, $5,000 to John Bums Governor Trumbuirat his talk at , uies but surrounding mining com-1 tjootleg liquor have flowed together, Crook Seen in the City. cruiser category problem. It ■will Refuses to Be Vaccinated; the McKinley diimer at Waterbury j munities responded quickly with o f - , gnd law enforcement methods of the father are hurrying to the bedside and $5,000 each to Thomas Burt hold a further session Monday and Thursday evening, let it be know'ii ; ^^^.g Qf assistance and none of the west gone hand in hand with with George Trueman, close friend and John Wilson, members of Par is expected to report to the next liament and friends of Mr. Carnegie. meeting of the first conference com that the board of finance on that j mine's dependents were in want. For ■ modern racketeering, is the colorful Chicago. Feb. 8.— (A P )—Whole o: the young man. Sends His Guards Out to With Rockville Men The estate paid inheritance taxes mittee. day had been in session for three i most part the widows, rnothers j background of the giant liquor cor- sale war on the Chicago bad men L hours, most of which was spent in | children bore their grief in | gpiracy trial now being heard in Ok- ; Mullen was riding with two in New York, Pennsylvania, apd Bring in Food, consideration of the plans for the i gbence. , lahoma City * “Federal ’ ’ Court ^ had started today. friends, Fdward Hubner, Jr., 26, of other states totaling $3,817,202. new state building. He said the j ! Among the 107 persons who at The first skirmish of the new con ‘ 21 Elizabeth street, Ellington, and Debts' of the estate amounted to building will undoubtedly cost much one or another time ha->'c been In- flict was financed from the private : Arthur Satryb. 24, of 156 West $3,076,385. MAN KILLS WOMAN more than had been appropriated ‘ II A 1 T IC nPPflQFH volvod in the case arc a ncg.:o o launlaun- , ^.gg gj Police Commissioner Wil- i Main street, Rockville, in a light San Aitonio, Tex., Feb. S.— (AP) and if after reconsideration it | | automobile that shot off the road —Occupying the usual position of a found the estimates cannot be les- :er'arpoS ?em erT n d'''‘ a r'a ssisS n t^ ^ Russell, for the city has no ; while on an S curve on Mansfield patient,paueuL, auuand rather impatient over I sened, it is likely the construction I state attorney general—a hetero- I money. The commissioner provided : street, Darien last night, and crash MEDICAL SCHOOL HEAD THEN KILLS SELF it. Dr. James Pk..R. Dram,Drain, president of ' building will have to be . de- . g-enity accurately reflecting the cos- I funds for the purchase of 25 tickets ed into a tree. Hubner, owner and the Texas Cfiii’opr^.ctic college here, ; until the next session of the TO STIMSON PLAN i mopolitan oil fields of Pottaw'atomie [ to Jack Dempsey’s boxing show last 1 driver of the car. was placed under today began the third day of his ; Lgg-jgjgture can make an addition- ! county, seat of this latest “ rum re- ' night, picking his best sleuths to at- ; arrest at the Stamford hospital, RELIEVED OF OFHCE imprisonment in the college under |ppropriation. i hellion’’’ of the west. | tend. Commissioner Russell ordered i where he w'as taken for treatment Litchfield Chauffeur Shoots guard of two policemen enforcing a Money First ^ . I Since first discovery of the sub- ; his detectives to pick up every man ! ofof his his injuries. injuries. Satryb,SatryO, w'howmo escapedescapea m u * smallpox quarantine over the col- rpj^g governor explained that the , lyioinp Senator Says, If ' terranean treasure of the Pottawa- 1 they recognized as in any way con- with little more than a scratch, is Contended That Teach erS | lege building. finance board is not inclined to auth- 1 I tomie oil fields, the county has been nected with Chicago gang and gun in the Darien lockup, Should Not Have Outside! Torrington Widow When City health authorities closed the start of a lot of construe- ! in the throes of severe growing life. ' Tel. and Tel. Employees Practice While Paid by State; school Thursday when Dr. Drain’s work and proceed until the j Adopted, It Will Start Vig-1 The symptoms have been a ! Several arrests were made, but j The three are all employed by the She Spurns His Attention. secretary was stricken with small- g^^ount appropriated is depleted i . p queer mixture of overnight■ wealth, the prisoners were released after American Tel. & Tel. Company. Ann Arbor, Mich., Feb. 8.— (AP) pox. god then ask for funds to complete being told by Chief Egan of the de- ! working on a conduit job in Nor —Dr. Hugh Cabot. Dean of the From the sidelines the plight of | ^j^g .^vork. The building when done. ^ orous Debate in Congress. |strenuousjoiftfe tective bureau to get out of town. walk. Mullen, who has been with University of Michigan Medical the doctor looked more like an en- pg v^lthin the appropriation at; “Pick Up Everybody” the company more than two years. Torrington, Feb. 8.— (A P )—The durance contest than a quarantine. ; pgod. ______, boom communities. School since 1921, w^as relieved of 8 ._ (A P) — ! Different Atmosphere. ' “Pick up everyone you know as a i.s stock manager. His parents were j p^fj^e yesterdav afternoon by bodies of Joseph Neller of Litcn- Must Be N’accinated jt does not appear likely that the Washington, Feb. ! gangster or gang hangeron” Com- totally unaware of the mishap. i pf Regents, field and Mrs. Rose Yanco of this Dr. \V. E. Hing. city health direc- commission can in any way sacrific Plain spoken opposition to the; The very courtroom atmosphere SUmson^^proposafTor naval parity i differs from the stern and formal ; missioner Russell ordered. “ Here- which may take the life of their | board, however, coutirued city, both with bullet wounds in tor. said the chiropractor would g^d of the space allotted to the vari- United j after we’ll hold them until their re- son, until appraised of it by a their temples were found early to have to submit to vaccination before , o^g departments, and it is not the with Great Britain gave rise today lair pervading the usual ! Dr. Cabot’s connection with the would en- i States District court room. Judge 4ease is forced by habeas corpus friend, who telephoned thinking facuity as professor of surgery. Dr. day in a parked automobile. Their he could leave the building. Dr. j pjgg skimp in the construction or to the'forecast that it that the injured man was the deaths were attributed by the med- Drain retaliated by ordering the ' materials which might later prove a Senate i f ! Edgar S. Vaught, presiding, is a . proceedings. W ell keep on arrest- Cabot contended that members of counter debate in the father, David Mullen. A newspaper the medical faculty should not have i ical examiner to murder and suicide, policemen off college premises, fore- : very costly experiment. Unless conference ' past international president of Lions ' ing them. Lawyers and habeas cor- thP Senate‘ clubs, and the geniality of his civic pus proceedings cost them money .account of the accident had the ‘ Evidence secured by the medical e.x- ing them to keep guard from the some way can he found out of the I outside practice while they were Chairman Hale of - i associations has remained with him. I you know.” names and ages mixed, giving rise aminer indicated that Neller who sidewalk. difficulty before the next regular employed by the state, but, should naval committtee in vigoriously a.= Revelations during the trial have , Another broom to sw'eep the city to the latter rumor. ! devote their full time to teaching. had been attentive to the woman for Dr. Drain said he slept with his session of the Legislature it will sailing the proposal yesterday Mr. and Mrs. Mullen left imme- •shoes on Thursday night before a mean that actual start on the con forced the resignation of Oscar Gor- i of its hoodlum horde was being I Dr. Cabot’s policy of having the some time, had first slain Mrs. promised that if a treaty should be don assistant attorney general, j fashioned by the Chicago Associa- diately for Norwalk by automobile,'. university hospital open to private Yanco and had then committed sui fire in his office. Asked what he did struction of the new building may negotiated “ along the lines of the driven by George Trueman. , g^entg ^ t h fees paid to the unl for food he said, ”Oh, I have some be deferred for at least eighteen charged with accepting a bribe for i tion of Commerce, cide. The woman’s refusal to en Stimson offer, or indeed should any it was learned today that Mullen ^g^sity also was- at variance wi'h city guards out here and I sent months, and the completion of the silence after his investigations had : The membership of the “Courage I courage Neller’s advances, police be- treaty be negotiated, the whole uncovered liquor operations, and j committee” to consist of six men and his friends were in Manchester | belief of some members of the j ^gg responsible for the shoot- them for food. They brought oysters building would require two years. last night and were on their way to supported by the Michigan | “ J® and crackers. I feel I am the city's Edward F. Hall, state commis matter will be fully threshed out s.n have involved the present sheriff of | was to be announced today w'lth patient and I'm expecting the city sioner of finance and control, be the floor of the Senate and its com Pottawatomie countv and chief of ‘ Col. Robert Isham Randolph, pre.si- Stamford when the accident oc-1 *j^p,jgbt Was a Widmv. mittees before final action is taken police of Shawmee. the county’s larg- ‘ dent of the assbeiation as its head. curred. They had been to Rockville, hosnital should be for | was a mow. to feed me and look after me.” lieves another legislative appropria How the commission would pro- | visiting Hubner’s father and stopped ! patients only since the pay- Mrs. Yanco was a widow with a tion will he necessary if the needs on ratification.” son about nine years old. Her hus- of the state are to be met adequate The Cruiser Section. ^^The^cast aligned on both defense ceed was not clear but the co-co-- at the center here.here, j pgt-jgptg otherwise, would have The Maine Senator touched only and prosecution sides of the legal j operation of the state attorney and ''one" to doctors in private pfactice \ band died in 1922. Neller was a OFFICIAL OF FASCISTI ly- R. R. ST.VTION BURNS. When the appropriation bill was upon the cruiser section of the ad drama that has been in progress ‘ the police department w^as expect- the state I widower with three small children. of ed. After the’ir meeting the regents j He was employed ^ a chauffeur for submitted to the General Assembly, ministration proposal as outlined in here for ten days has support Mansfield. Feb. 8.— (A P )—Fire Mr. Hall said today, it called for a veterans of other Oklahoma produc-1 asked Dr Cabot, in the interest of | Sherman Haight of New York, w.ao CONFERS WITH PONTIFF London by Secretary Stimson. believed to have resulted from a de minimum sum which was smaller tions which have drawn the national harmony, to resign', saying that he i owns a place in Litchfield. It was m “If our policy has been the cor fective chimney early today destroy- than the amount necessary. The rect one in the past.” he said, “and spotlight in years past. would be relieved if he did not. He j a car owned by Mr. Haight that the HOOVER LEAVES TONIGHT cd .the small station of the Central double tragedy occurred. A’atican Circles Believe That Legislature appropriated $2,000,000 if nothing has occurred to change On the government side, as an in -. previously had declared to Presi _____Vermont railw'ay at Mansfield. The Neller had picked up Mrs. Yanco State and Church Relations for the building and in order to in the wisdom of the policy, then the vestigator, is W. W. (Snake) Thom- ; dent Ruthven that he would not and her sister, Mrs. Mary Kost, and sure a safe margin, the board of Stimson offer which contemplates ason, one time associate of 'W. E. , FOR A WEEK’S FISHING 10®^ estimated at $4,500. resign. Arc Most Cordial at Present. Firemen from Willimantic, nine had taken them to the house in the finance and control added $250,000 the building of*at least eleven 6 inch (Pussyfoot) Johnson, who leaped to miles from the scene were summon- TREASUKAY BALANCE. car at about 9:30 p. m. Mrs. Ko.se Vatican City, Feb. S.— (AP) — more. The $2,250,000. Mr. HaU said, cruisers at an additional cost worldwide fame as a militant pro- ^ represented a cost figured at from j cruisers at cd but they found tfle station almost went inside while her sister remain Pope Pius’ lengthy reception of over the 15 cruiser program of at hihitionist from a foothold of activi 50 to 55 cents a cubic foot. It was ties in old Indian territory, now a ; To Be Accompanied by . levelled upon their arrival. Washington, Feb. 8.— (AP) — ed in the car talking with Neller. ■Viigusto Turati, secretary of the , least $58,000,000 while giving us The station, erected about fifty believed a building of this size Wife and Grou^ of Friends; Treasury receipts for February 6 The shots were heard shortly be Fascist party, at the Vatican yester- substantially parity in the types of part of Oklahoma. j y ^ rs ago, was one of three serving would be adequate. How'ever, not The Defense. ^ To Fish in Florida. were $6,330,761.67; expenditures $9,- fore 1 a. m. Mrs. Yanco’s brother Jay,_ indicates that relations betw’een ! ships allowed manifestly does not this town. Four electric trains only has the original estimate been , On the defense side is Randall : 703,988.30; balance $79,645,806.79. w’-ho rushed out to investigate, found the Holv See and the Italian jjovern^ provide for our American naval stopped at it daily. i Pitman, county attorney of Pottaw- j Washington, Feb. 8.— (AP) -| his sister’s body sprawled forward ment “ taken conjointly with other i (Continued on Page 2.) needs.” I'acts” are in a phase of the highest atomic county, who prosecuted” i President Hoover hoped to leave in the doorway of the car. She had cordiality, says a semi-official state 1 Thomason last summermurde;Tha^rgeilate in the pre tonight for ^I^ng' " Key Fla..; apparently opened the door and was ment made public at the Vatican to- I liminary trial of a fish for deep sea ^ getting out when the first shot wa.s growing out of the killing, by one of where he will fired. Neller’s body was sprawled liay. Thomason’s deputies, of two farm quarry for a week or more. Hospital For The Real Rich The communique adds that while on the seat. ers in a raid near Tecumseh. Pit The chief executive will be ac- ■ obviously no precise mductions can Lindy Leaves Glider Camp man is accused,autuseu withWILII Frank1. _ Fox,__ _ companied by Mrs. Hoo-ver and aj oc drawn as to the subjects discuss THEORY AND FINGER GONE. former sheriff,’ of organizing the group of fishing com ^m ns which To Be Opened Next Week ed by the Pontiff and the Fascist To Try Out His New Plane liquor “line” that operated allegedly will include Dr. Joel T. Boone, tae ; secretary, “it is certain that conver with their protection . and...... to theirWhite House physician. Vernon Kel- ■ Camden, Ark., Feb. 8.— (AP) — sations protracted for .such a long that brooked no com- logg. Justice Harlan F. Stone and New York, Feb. 8.— The folks who?the windows and individual baths Yesterday, H. Highto^ver had ten time must have had as their object profit, and w’hole fingers and a .theory about petition. , Mark Sullivan. j ,. pg^k avenue and travel in ' and ice boxes. Rooms will rent a profound .and pondered examina- Lindbergh Camp, Tehachapi <5’Los Angeles. He intimated he would guns. , . -r,, I make no further glider tests here Chief pf the prosecution is Roy; immediately on reaching Long; gocietv are soon to have a hos- from .$8 to $45 a day. There also :ion of important problems” and Mountains, Cal., Feb. 8— (AP) St. Lewis, energetic young district...... 1 Rgy, ... Mr. TJ Hoover— -nlono plans tn to hnard board the the I j "^.^here .. they______can1 he _:_ sick1. in *the1,0 ,T,ilIwill hobe a9.32 rnnm!rooms on one of its 14 I Today, he nr.has *>.ar.nv only nine and a half stresses the happy impressicu pro- for an indefinite period but ordered ia r»f .Tnmps J. i QQiinfprpr” from . P __ __ frx live floors operated as a hotel for the | fingers and no theory. Forestalled by unfavorable wind that the camp be maintained in attorney, who is cousin of James J-1 houseboat “The Saunterer" manner they are accused to luced in Vatican circles thereby. convenience relatives and friends Hightower, a trapper, offered to conditions in attempts to make any readiness for use in the event of Davis. Secretary of Labor. 1 which he fished last year shortly b(^- when well. Arrayed with the defense as an | jj^g inauguration. The craft has a I of patients who wish to be ■with convince a iloubting audience that thing except very short flights, Col. favorable winds developing. The doctors’ hospital, housed in he could hold his finger over the Lindbergh today planned to put attorney for Fox, is S. Prince ! chartered from Jeremiah Mill- $4 250,000 structure overlooking the them during illness. Also there will TAFT’S CONDITION Charles A. Lindbergh today tem Freeling, former attorney general be a restaurant, presided over by a end of a gun and thereby prevent porarily deserted his experimental his next low’ winged monoplane bank of New York. East river at 87th street, will open the bullet leaving the barrel. speed ship, custom built for him of Oklahoma. 1 If present plans are carried out ■ Rg doors next week, but its clientele French chef, a barber shop, tailor, glider camp here. telegraph office, news stand and Picking up a .22 calibre rifle, \Vashington. Feb 8. (API—At After a disappointing experience and Mrs. Lindbergh at Burbank, A Little History. Mr. Hoover will stay aboard th^ be quite restricted. There will whatnot. he put his finger over the end of tendants at the home of William j just before midnight last night when Calif., through its paces in Depart It was late in 1926 that the line of craft for the week or more he plans | he no charity ward, no white en- oil derricks crossed from Seminole Stockholders include 400 social the barrel and pulled the trigger^ Howard Taft said todaylay he had bis boyish enthusiasm over an an- ment of Commerce license tests. to be gone without putting ashore i ameled beds, and prunes will be county to the eastern side of Pot- registerites. On its medical board The bullet stopped in the ceiling, spent another “very restful night.’ ...... ticipated...... extensive nighta.-o-v.* flight woe was Last night’s projected flight ap at anytime. He expects to send a ; ta^o. tawtomie county. With it moved after shattering Hightower’s finger Mr. Taft, it w'as said,saia, sleptsiept wedweu dashed at the last minute by an parently had been in the colonel’s mea,e'.ger ,o Lons key Uice a -ay Each of it; and theory. mind all day although as usual, he ' have rugs on the and was in good spirits this morn- unfavorable weather report, the (Continued on Page 2) for mail. Colonel packed up and returned to kept his own counsel. MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1980. PAGE TWO ANNUAL JUNIOR NEW ENGLAND BUSES REV. DR. REED DEAD; ^ Woman Without a Country WELL KNOWN IN CONN. CHENEYS RETIRE OBITUARY PROM TONIGHT CHANGE ROUTE IN CITY State Briefs Harrisburg, Feb. 8.— (A P )— Dr George Edward Reed, 83, former I Take Other Way to A'Void j r OLDEST WORKER and I president of Dickinson coHege, for- Congestion at Main TALKED TO SWITZERLAND. , I mer state librarian and retireo DEATHS Church Streets. New Haven, Feb. (AP) — l ,>iiiling High School Func I Methodist Episcopal clergyman, Three daughters of Mr. and Mrs. S. was stricken in a local hospital. Complying with the reqi^est of the Funeral services will be held at W alter M. Saunders in 61st Z. Poli resorted to the trans-Atlan- George J. Fallow tion to Attract Nearly the Board of Police Commissioners the home of his son. George Reed tic telephone service yesterday af George J. Fallow, formerly of L. Manchester but for the past 30 towards the end that traffic congeu- a member -of the State L«g;islature Year of Service— Born ternoon to exchange greetings for tlon might be minimized in the vi with whom he resided, at 1:30 five minutes. vears a resident of Hartford, died 300 Dancers. yesterday following a long illness. cinity of Main and Church streets in o’clock Monday afternoon, with fur Th)e parties to the conversation Hartford, the New England Tran.s- ther services at 2 o’clock in Grace were Mrs. 'Vaiter M. Sheahan and! His wife, who was Miss Mabel War- On Site of W ork. of this town, died two years portation Co. announces that effec Methodist church. Interment wili Mrs. Adelina Leonard who from this | ren, The annual Junior Promenade - be in the old grave yard at Carlisl^ ago, Mr Fallow for a number of i iuts — — - - ___« *.v,» Hitrh tive Feb. 9 modifications will be ------1 city conversed with their sister the | years v/as a foreman in the employ | principal soeW ° aj^jg g^^,. made in routes of all their bus lines High church officials are expected wait<.r AT Saunders of 20 L in -' Marchesa Lippo Gerini, the former of the Whitney Chain Company in school year—takes place t operating between Hartford and to take part in the service. d e ^ street ChenerBrotSers oldest, Lillian Poll, who with her husband Hartford. He was a member of ning in the assembly hall of Ma*i- points east thereof so that upon In addition to his son. George, a eS^lfyee both in point of years in is visiting St. M ont^ the famous Hartford lodge of Masons and the chester High school. Nearly three leaving the Hartford railroad sta sister. Miss Emma Reed, of this the^service and in age, has been re- j Swiss resort. It was 2 o clock in Odd Fellows. hundred persons are expected to a t tion the cars vdll proceed over Allyn city, also survives. tired He has just completed 60 j this city and 8:30 p. m. in Switzer- Mr. Fallow leaves his mother, tend. The gr*Ji , the Hartford hospital after a brief Ezekiel Benson, doing business as quarts of confiscated liquor, was the greater part of his working , ______I illness. He has been a resident of the Benson Furniture C om p ly , on found not guilty by a Federal jury, NEGROS ACQtriTED. Manchester for over 40 years. He Main street, has filed a petition of which returned a sealed verdict last Is American or French. night. The verdict was not opened "Mr. Saunders’ father, wm ijjr, Irene Bordoni doesn’t know whether .she leaves bis wife. Funeral will be bankruptcy, dated February 6, and Stillwater, Okla., Feb. 8.— (A P )-- The noted actress, pic- until 10 a. m. today. ma“ tS"'sSop S 'cS y^ 'lroth ers, I Harold F, Woodcock, general man- held Monday afternoon at 3:30 at offers his creditors and other per John Young and his wife. La Tosca, Watkins Brothers, 11 Oak street. sons Interested, twenty-five cents The government contended that negroes, were acquitted by a Dis thp' iae-er of the Yale Athletic Assofcia- Wh’te sold the liquor through a which F?ank Cheney. Sr., i tion has been appointed a member c e S t arnu'toVnt of her hiarrlase to E. Kay Goeta, Rev. J. Stuart Neill will officiate. on the dollar. A hearing wiU be held trict jury here today of a murder A Frenchwoman by birth, for eleven yearo, ao Goetz v\nfe, she has ne Burial will be in the East cemetery. at the office of Saul Berman, referee window of the New Smyrna jail . charge growing out of the death , r ' „ S o “ e l o r b “ ng t "" the group of millsJ timj now]Mayor Thomas A. Tully. bona fide American citizen. ______in bankruptcy, at 750 Main street, two months ago of O. P. Butler, located in A writer on musical subjects says ■“ office of j Hartford, on Thursday, February Federal prohibition enforcement of at the rear of the mam ouiut: 20, at 2 o’clock in the afternoon. the jazz music heard in the night 1 ficer, who was killed when he at Cheney Brothers. Fire destroyed, TO LEAVE MINISTRY Quits in Clash With CITY LEADS CULTURE, clubs takes the edge off the diners’ | Haddam, Feb. 8.— (A P )—Rev. H. appetite. The prices help a trifle, I tempted to serve a warrant on the TIBBETT MAY BECOME | negroes at Cushing, Okla. ‘ ue °Jus1 1 acting pastor of the Roosevelt too. I ^ ^ office and tL machine I First Congregational church _today COLLECTING SIGNATURES the mam ------^ ^ PROFESSOR DECLARES shop was erected on forest street. announced he will leave the rninis- VALENTINO SUCCESSOR try to enter business. He said he A few of the houses that faced Hartford, Feb. 8.— (A P )— Secre- will read his resignation as acting on Forest street and on the rail lowa City, la., Feb. 8.—(AP.)— | tary of State William L. Higgins road yard, were removed, the re pastor of the church at tomorrow's , Handsome Hei'O But I The city, characterized as "first in ! j^g^g written to the chief executives maining two, near Pine street le- services. Possesses Dashintf Manner! The Rev. Mr. Sweet has been culture and first in crime” by Ar- j states of the union, re SUNDAY mainin./ until the addition to the thur Schlesinger, Harvard profes questing the signatures of the gov- TODAY building was made and occupied by county secretary of the Y. M. C. A. and Marvelous Voice. | \ sor, has made more contributions to emors and the imprint of the state CIRCLE the electric department. The house since 1923 and chaplain of the coun American history than have the ru ty jail here for six years. By D.YN THOM.YS i seals, which when received, will be that Mr. Saunders was born in is ral districts. A DOUBLE-FEATURE PROGRAM THAT WILL still standing, having been moved j NE.\ Ser\ice Writer placed on file in. the office of the Speaking today before the Uni SATISFY THE DEMANDS OF EXACTING "FANS ! to Fine street and the one at the I Hollywood, Calif.—At last the versity of Iowa history conference. secretary. The reasorrfor the desire to have intersection of Forest and Pmc CAPITAL BUILDING ■ world-famed cinema gold has man- : Prof. Schlesinger traced the coun-; was moved to Cedar street, where i try’s growth to the development of the signatures of the governors on it is still in use. PLANS TOO COSTLY I Eastern cities and to their contests file, In addition to the seals, is that I That singer is Lawrence Tibbett, for transportation facilities and in on requisitions and other important who made his bow to film audiences dustry. He said the repeal of the documents presented at the state KEN MAYNARD GIGANTO BOOZE TRIAL | (Continued from Page 1.) at the w'orld premiere of his first Kansas-Nebraska bill was due to capitol, it will be possible to readily ■ —in— picture, "The Rogue Song.” here the contests of St. Louis and Chicago identify the signatures if any que.s- ON IN OKLAHOMA CITY found inadequate, he said, but the other night. opposing New Orleans nad Mem tion is raised as to their genuine cost has increased to from 60 to In the short space of two hours phis. ness. 65 cents a cubic foot and at this ; the time required for the showing Public schools, high schools, pub To date five states have beea “The Royal Rider (Continued from Page 1.) I nrice $1,000,000 more is necessary | of the film—Tibbett rose from a lic Ubraries, modern newspapers, heard from and the collection of The Greatest of all Western Stars In a Thrilling Romance of 'Tf Connecticut is to have an a d e -, star of the opera to an outsta^n i g magazines, inventions, such as the signatures has been fairly started. the Days of the Old West! the caravan of small businesses, i quate building. i figure in the world s fourth electric light and telephone, and The governors who have responded both legitimate and parasitic, ?eek-. ^ However. Mr. Hall explained, the industry. In our oP^ion, Tibbe public health measures whi(A pre- to the requests are Norman S. Case, vented plagues like those in Europe p^jQ^e Island; Franklin D. Roose-: lU to reap a golden harvest from ; board of finance and control has come cioser to takin„ Rudolpl j the generous wages paid the hardy ' tabled the plans for one month and . Valentino’s J " came in answer to urban needs, ne New York: Charles W. '"il \vork€X'~ in the meantime the i^np.cialspecial build-'build- ; fthan in an iinvany other man has Deen 1 said. , +v,o»- Tobey, New Hampshire; John E. -AN'l "Rarlsboro. a village in me the iiuubt. m idst, ins: commission will .w—review them. ; to do. Prof. Schlesioger said also that, Vermont and Albert C. ! cities led in corruption and of the new oil development over- The commission will probably meet , He is not the handsome heie that i Ritchie of Maryland. night, became a city of tents and next week, according to the com- Valentino was. But in "The Rogue A "divergence of views bstween | their government was the one bl hastily erected boarded shacks. missioner. Song” he is a dashing, laughing. . William A. Prendergast, above, | failure of American democracy. He j bandit with a truly marvelous voice. I New York Public J advocated the city manager plan, | FL’YING POACHERS Homer Kappenberger who had Toronto, Feb. 8.— (By the Cana LAURA LAPLANTE served as mayor of Earlsboro tor In reviewing "The R.ogue Song, ■ commission, and Governor ' dian Press.)—‘The Toronto Globe to — m— several years before the coming of FIVE ARMORIES BURN one is apt to overlook all .Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York, day said that the government is oil, testified that Marion Fuller, then other good qualities while ^ as the cause of Prender- planning drastic action to prevent, his chief of police, suggested an op- i about Tibbett’s voice. A n »- y ; ^^gj-.g resignation, which has sur- ABOUT TOWN if possible, a repetition this sum p'Ortunity for them to share in the j Paris, Feb. 8.— (AP) Five hig ; orised Eraoiic State politicians. mer of last year’s air raids by Scandal new affluence of the towm by exact- | armories burned to the ground and Prendergast" resigned soon after re J 4-ofvf! poachers from the United States Mrs. Alfred Gustafson of A Strong Dramatic Story of Depicting the Terrible Havoc ing protection money from the in- | hundreds of oxygen tanks roared] ceiving a letter from Governor Mr. and honored ■ r»n°° thp fiir-hpafur-bearing life of Quetico f l u x of bootleggers and dive-keep- j like big guns at the "Vincennes Roosevelt which advised him to re i Hackmatack street were i provincial park, Raised by Careless and Loose Tongues! crs. Knappenberger, who has j arsenal on the eastern edge ot ject increased rates .announced by last evening with a party given ny j L,egislation will be introduced at pleaded guilty and is awaiting sen- j Paris today. Not a single powder the New York Telephone Company. ! their relatives and old friends in session of the Legislature, the tence. said he and Fuller organized 1 exploded, although fire I recognition of the fortieth (gjobe said, which will not only a city "line,” collecting both from , was ® all around them. pose as do other situations, all of versary of their marriage. ; make penalties for poaching more Gertrude Gustafson, their daughter | ggygj.g^ empower park of c a r t o o n COMEDY—“PIRATES OF PANAMA” wholesalers and retailers of liquor. I The loss was estimated at $3,- which combine to offer opportuni who teaches at St. George, Staten Merger Formed. I 000,000, but may-be much greater as ties for Tibbett to sing. ficials to confiscate any airplane Soon afterward, it is alleged, the ! buildings collapsed on artillery "The Rogue Song” without a Ts’and was home for the occasion. caught operating w'ithin the pre city line “merged” with a monopoly stocks. doubt has opened a new and tre serve boundaries. established in other communities by Despite the bombardment which mendously vast field for motion pic- Hose Co. No. 2 setback team county .authorities, and whiskey and lasted from late last night into the tures. And in our opinion it excels gained a ’ f„^ggtvg^^^ beer concessions were sold on forenoon______the only casualty was one anything of a like nature which the their rivals m the firemen s s«t®^c basis of weekly payments of protec- ] gTeman who was slightly gassed. stace has to offer. Tibbett gets his tournament as a result of their vie sonis a?rSs via the microphone tory in last eight’s sitting he d in 3 Days Lion money. Prosperous men, at- [ Troops cleared inhabitants from 3 Days tracted by the lure of huge profits | ^ area around the arsenal as iu sf as well as he does on the stage. Hose house No. 3. May Starting and immunity from the law, financed : ^ precaution against any explosion ,.a .e in .iie wo.-,a can o .c r .a„^ o, Starting would-be bootleggers and took a powder magazines, a background of such settings as honors. The scores: No. 1 - No. Sunday Night double “cut” from bootleggers and ' the vast stretches of mountains Sunday Night STATE law enforcement officers. j and desert as this film depicts. 2, 612: No. 3. 593: No. 4, 594. The Five violent deaths and Innumer- ' RAPS RADIO BOARD 1 With the success which this pic- next sitting will be held in Hose a’ole shooting affrays have been a t I ture is certain to enjoy, other House No. 4 next Friday night. AHOY! THE JOY FLEET IS IN PORT! tributed to jealousies aroused by | ------Lawrence Tibbett ' operettas and grand operas are Mrs. Lillian Mahoney of Wash prosperity of the "line.” A princi-j __i a p I__ The ington street, past president of Gib pal witness of the prosecution died t the ’ Federal Radio really centers around this bons Assembly, Catholic Ladles of under what was described as sus- assertion that the FederM f^m o The story itself is T eak ! erk7ed by the camera’s almost un- picious circumstances on the night 1 Commission had &iv®n the ^ d o singing Columbus, is chairman of the com ^ ■ ■ ■ ------I trust and the power trust moie and far-fetched, as most operetta ^ limited scope. mittee of ladies from that organiza before the trial was to open. tion in charge of the Valentine District Attorney Lewis has been 'j than half of the exclusive broad- casting channels available in the S y\ ” ove'?!'ooS ““ ' SINGLE HEALTHINESS ^ whist to be given at St. Bridgets mentioned as a logical candidate for The entire picture Is lilmea in I Kondon-Singleworaen live long^ United States, was made today by church Tuesday evening. the Republican gubernatorial nomi natural color and there is some ^ er than married ^ g nation in the campaign starting this Senator Wheeler, Democrat, Mo.n- beautiful photography in it. And. an investigation conducted y . - tana, at a hearing by the Senate A son was born Thursday to Mr. spring. Pitman, a Democrat, has of course, there is a rom ance-the | Gabb, th a f and Mrs. Cecil Kittle of Wads charged that possible political .ad Interstate Commerce Committee on only real weakness in the produc- ^ tical expert. He numerous worth street. vantage, coupled with Pitman’s the Couzens bill. tion. Catherine Dale Owen, the ob- ; women were ^ ^ prosecution of Thomason, has stim iect of Tibbett’s wooing, is not what 1 than old men and that the majoriuy NEW LINER LAUNCHED Miss Gertrude Rogers of Prospect ulated the young district attorney In 'one T u l d coird er fmpressive in 1 of these old women had been single street and Mrs. J. P. Cheney of Cen his activities'in the conspiracy case. her role. But she serves her pur- during their me. Hamburg, Germany, Feb. 8.— ter street have left for a month s tour of the Pacific Coast. (A P )—The Hafinburg- American with line today launched its newest ves WALL STREET BRIEFS Mr.s. J. Nichols Viot of Highland sel, the Tacoma, destined for the Real “Kewpie Dolls” at This Party ANITA PAGE Park had has her gtiest for the past Pacific coast service. week. Miss Grade formerly of New K A R L DANE R. J. Reynolds & Co. does not The ship was christened by Mrs. York City whom she met In Paris contemplate increasing the whole J. E. Kehl, W'ife of the American J. C. NUGENT last summer, and who is also a close sale price of cigarettes and the re consul general. V' cent meeting of officials of manu The Vancouver, another liner for friend of Mrs. Ednah Underhill Cheney. Miss Grade makes her facturing companies was not to dis the same service, is now under con home in France and is in this coun cuss the price situation, an officer of struction. the Reynolds company said today. try for a visit with relatives and .MOVIES USE "DECOY” friends. Operations at the plants of the IN LONDON The gates at the Main street rail- Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. next ^.y.44ha(j^v. week will be increased 5 per cent ’uo London—Many of the big movie road crossing have been out of 7.5 per cent of rated capacity, the houses in London charge anywhere order for the past two days. The j | highest level in three months. from 50 cents up to $2.25 for seats north gate was thawed out, but at the regular afternoon and eve there was trouble that kept a crew It was reported in financial circles ning performances of the more at work on the south gate, which tliat officials of the Dollar Line and popular talkies. And many of them could not be lowered. They had pro tlic American-Hawaiian Steamship have hit upon a happy plan of fill gressed so far this morning that Jo. have held several meetings on ing their theaters very early in the they expected to have both gates carious phases of operations, includ- day by advertising that all seats, working this afternoon. ng the possible consolidation of the except those in the dress circle, arc { % .wo companies, it was said, how- only 37 cents if you come before A dance and entertainment will 1 1 n-er, that nothing definite had been noon. be given by the Polish Girls White decided. The box office is supposed to open Eagle Club this evening in Turn at noon and you are supposed to Hall. Gross sales of the J. C. Penney line up before that hour. So a long "cancel every date, girls! Bill Haines is in port! He’s Co., department store chain, for line forms and when the bo.x of a G ob -a n d you won’t be able to resist him in hia first fice is opened—as soon as the line Word received from Tyler, Texas, January w'ere $10,610,933, -as com brings the Information that Merrill pared with $9,015,616 for the same has grow'n large —people passing talking comedy riot! ^ see the long line waiting and decide Balch, is not only out of danger, month last year, an increase of but expects to be able to leave the ibout 17.7 per cent. that the show must be worth see ing. And the decoy—the waiting hospital in about ten days. He has Bert Wheeler been seriously ill with septic poison Horace Heldt’a f e a r s n o ROBBER line, coiltinues to draw attendance "Jed'i Vacation” FamcoB Negro Comic ing. Californians Los Angeles, —L. B. Weaks, local until the show closes at night. AU'Taling Comedy Hit! In aruggist, claims to be the most And His Merry Band It is suggested by a fashion' •‘Small Timer” 5hot-at man in the United States. Students in the University of | V of Syncopators Alabama are studying footprints, writer that husbands wear rin gs: | Metro Tone Sound Now* During the past year he has been All doHed up and some place to go—to an catertainrnenc g ,cn by he intended victim of five rob left an estimated 40,000,000 years | to Indicate they are married. We Rose O’Neil. “Xewoie Doll” artist-w ere these small nary-goers P ctured don’t know where, but suppose she j | beries. During these robberies ago on a slab of rock found in the | above at Miami Beach, Fla. Left to right are David, Benjamin and jipre than 40 shots have been fired state. The animal is thought Cynthia Smith, the children of Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Smith of New York. 1 meant through the nose. It him but he hasn’t been hit once. a forerunner of the dinosaur. > MANCHESTEE EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN.. SATURDAY,/FEBRUARY 8, 1930. PAGETHREfi
! fying of interest increasing Sunday School Lesson I membership. Holiness meeting at 11. j [ Public meeting at 3. CUTTING THE CORRUPT TREE j Salvation service at 7:30. Ensign j THELAWOFUSE I L. Sehl, the girl preacher from Bos- j ton, one of the ablest platform ora-1 By George Henry Dole ■ j tors in the Army will be the speaker j International Sunday-School Lesson Text, Feb. 9. The International Uniform Sun _ V, [.at all the services, and the W orces-' day School Lesson for Feb. 9. ' ' ' T I'ter Iter twins, Lwuia, uulcunoted lorfor their uieir.woxiueriui wonderful I Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, Cutting: Down the Corrupt Tree. _ ,, I singing ministry throughout Massa- and cast Into, the fire.—Matt. 7:19. SECOND CONGREGATIONAL i‘ Barnard School. Miss ^cDon^d of dmsgtts and the New England Matt. 7:12, 15-27. Frederick C. Allen, Minister the State Extension Service will lec states, will sing at all the services. Morning worship at 10.45. Ser ture on " “irst Aid. ' The public is urged to take advan- BY WM. E. GILROY, D. D. Wednesday, 2:30—The Women’s A tree and a man have' within- > grows less and less, and finally it Editor of The Congrationalist mon by the minister: “The Religion , tage of this series of special meet them something similar. Because of disappears. "Every tree that bring of Abraham Lincoln”. The music of Federation will meet with Mrs. ings. This is a temperance lesson, and George Strant, 381 Main street. this similarity, the 'Word often lik eth forth not good fruit is hewm the service: Program for the Week ' ens men to trees. The blind man down, and cast into the fire. The its kejTiote is in the Golden Rule. Prelude—Prelude E flat . .. .Muller Wednesday, 7:00—The Boy Scouts Monday, Y. P. band practice an(l If the Golden Rule had always pre will meet in the Franklin School. upon being healed, first saw men will to do good is destroyed by not Anthem—"God is a Spirit” . .Bennet i boy scouts. Corps cadets at quar as trees walking. An olive is a tree using wisely its energy.. The desire vailed in human affairs and men had Offertory—Adagio ...... Stainer ters. . ! done to others as they would that with potency to bear olives.* Man is to bear good fruit then becomes Anthem— “The Comforter Came to NORTH METHODIST EPISCOP.UL Tuesday, girl guards at 7. Senior others should do to them the world a tree capable of bringing forth the consumed in the fires of evil fire, My Soul” ...... Nevin Man in S. Stocking, pastor. band practice, 7:30. golden fruit, the priceless fruit of like the wood of useless tree that is would be free from most of the Postlude—March E flat ...... Best Wednesday, Young People's salva problems facing it in connection God’s hallowed love. Hence the cut and cast into the fire. At 9:30— Church School After the Church School which tion meeting, 7:30. Luela Larder Lord promises to make His follow In every man is both good and with the intemperate conduct of A t 6:30— Christian Endeavor i and Bessie Johnston leading, and men and women and their anti-so meets at 9:30 and closes in lime for ers “ trees of righteousness.” evil, and either good or evil has the 1 Meeting: “Incidents in the Life of the Worship Service at 10:45, Rev. j the speakers Jessie Hutchinson and cial habits. There is in every person bom into dominion. Both cannot be masters. t o Abraham Lincoln. Marjorie Krah Myron E. Center, Superintendent of Esther Gordon. the world power to bring forth the It is difficult to discuss or teach m and Roger Winton, leaders. For a good tree bringeth not forth the Norwich District, will preach. ! Thursday evening street ser-vice fruits of righteousness. Those who a temperance lesson today •without At 7:00— Union Service at St. corrupt fruit; neither doth a cor The hymns are those beginning, and public indoor service, 8 p.m delight in the law of the Lord are rupt tree: bring forth good fruit. An coming rather quickly into the Mary's Church. “Jerusalem the Golden,” “ I Want Friday, songster practice and holi sphere of present-day questions, and like a tree planted by rivers of evil man may seemingly do good to At 7:30—Special Sunday evening a Principle Within,” and “ My God, ness meeting at 7:30. w’ater, that bring forth their fruit especially the matter of prohibition, Lincojn ser-vice in our church audi others, but if his motives are sel Accept My Heart This Day^” Sunday Feb. 7, Mrs. Colonel Bovil. in season. Their leaf never withers, which many people confuse with torium. A t the opening, patriotit fish. the fruit is corrupt. The evil There will also be anthems by the and whatsoever they do, prospers. who clothe themselves wdth religion temperance, but which is not to be aifs will be played on young people choirs and organ numbers by Mr. SOUTH METHODIST dismissed as needless or unimpor Neither heritage, nor environment, I produce in their hearts a “genera- wall be followed by two short essays Driggs. Robert .A. Colpitts, Minister. nor lack of education can deprive tant because it goes beyond the by Betty Harvey and Lucile Brown. Rev ] tion of vipers.” Hypocrisy is the Dr. Center is an able preacher one of the Di-vine gift of doing good, matter of temperance and control f Stereopticon pictures will be thrown ! most deadly of sins. So Jesus said, and is sure to bring a message of Dr. Albert C. Knudson, Dean of if he so wills. Thieves know how in the personal life. If the inculca upon the upon the silver screen j “Either make the tree good, and his value to every worsliipper. the School of Theology of Boston to divide their plunder as evenly as tion of temperance had in itself illus-rating “The New South” in : fruit good; or else make the tree At 4:00 the quarterly conference one knows how to di-vide rightly the been sufficient to attain and safe which Lincoln would be so greatly University, will be the guest preach- ' corrupt, and his fruit corrupt.” 7's will be held in conjunction with the , gj. at the 10:40 worship hour. “ A honest profits of a partnership. guard the social welfare, drastic interested if he were alive today. ! Obedience to the truths of the February meeting of the Church brilliant scholar, an author of inter Surely every one can do good, be i Word prf'duce the trees of the laws dealing with the liquor prob Notes Council. This will be an open meet lem would never have l?een neses- There are 62 members now enroll national fame, and a fascinating come a tree of righteousness, if he j Lord’s planting. Plant in daily liv- ing to which not only the official ; ing the seeds of truth. They will ed in the Go-To-Church Band. speaker” is the way in w’hich a dis so wills. But if one continues in sary. members but all the members of j make us “ trees of righteousness.” Principles and Laws The Ever Ready Circle of King’s criminating thinker recently de doing e-vil, the desire to do good the church and all interested friends scribed Dr. Knudson. The choir will There will always be differences Daughters meets Tuesday evening are cordially invited. Dr. Center at 7:45 at the home of Mrs. H. A. sing two anthems. of opinion regarding the validity will preside. The Church School meets at fert, Katherine Schuey, Betty Ges- and effect of such laws, but there Cook, 22 Phelps Road. Mrs. M. D. meetings w’hich will continue every Wells, and Mrs. Cleon Chapman. Rev. Albert C. Knudson, D. D., 9:30 a. m. evening but Saturday. say, and Blanche Hartenstein. ought to be a clear distinction be Dean of Boston University School of Rev. James E. Greer will lead the tween the voluntary principles that A young people’s 'Valentine Social To Wed Today. Theology, will be the guest preacher Epworth League Hour. The^ sub should guide in perscmal and social is scheduled by the Epworth League GOSPEL H.ALL Miss Bernice M. Ciechowski, of the North Methodist Church for at the union service Sunday eve ject will be “The Most Important 415 Center Street daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank life and conduct and the laws that ning at St. Mary’s Church. D r.' Thing in the Christian Religion.” may be necessary for dealing with ! Thursday evening at 8:00, and the Lord's Day—10:45 a. m.—Break Ciechokski of North Park street, I people of our church are heartily Knudson an outstanding scholar' The Hour, 6:00. ing of bread. this city, and Stew'art Turkington of social abuses and for furthering the and preacher whom no one interest The Monthly Union Service will welfare of society. Laws enacted to I invited to attend. 12:15 a. m.—Sunday school. i Manchester and New York, son of ed in modern theological thought be held at 7:00 p. m. at Saint Mary's this end must be discussed and } Men of both churches. Come meet 7:00 p. m.—Tuesday S3 ,FcS ,E j Mrs. Sarah Turkington of Manche.*?- James Johnston, Jr., president of should miss hearing. The hour is Church. Dr. Knudson w’ill preach 7:00 p. m.—Gospel meeting. j ter, will take place this afternoon at dealt with upon their merits and 7:30. Text: Matt. 7-12, 15-27. the splendid, successful Men’s Com on “The Certainty of Faith.” 7:45 p. m.—Tuesday. Prayer meet-I 4 o’clock, at the Church of the upon the basis of their practical re The Week sults. Concerning these results at xVsk, and it shall be given you: seek, and ye shall find; knockN and it munity Class at East Hartford ever Program for the Week ing and Bible reading. Transfiguration, (Little Church Monday evening at 8:00, the regu Monday—4:00, Junior Boys' Gym: present there is still much differ shall be opened unto you: i since it was founded in 1926. On Around the Corner), New Yofk For every one that asketh receiveth; and he thafseeketh findeth; and ' Friday evening, next, at 7:30 in our lar monthly joint meetings of the i 6 :45, Epworth League Cabinet Meet- ZION LUTHERAN ence of opinion, and these contro world service and City. to him that knocketh it shall be opened. I little vestry he will be with us to finance commit ing; 7:45, Home Builders. Rev. H. F, R. Stechholz versies need not be dealt with here, tees will be held Fills Snipsic Shed. Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give j give us a valuable leaf out of his at the home of Tuesday—7:00. Boy Scouts; 7:30, except to point out that prohibition Mrs. A. P. Lydall, 22 Hudson St. A. F. Ludwig, local ice dealer has ought to be considered not only in him a stone? I experience with the class. His heart Easter Drama Rehearsal. Sunday School at 8:30 a. m . Serv Tuesday at 7:00, the Senior Boys’ Wednesday—4:00. Junior Girls' completed filling his ice sheds at relation to its immediate results Or if he ask a fish, will he give him a serpent? i is in that class and it will be worth ice in German at 9:30 a. m. Text: Club will meet in the Senior room Snipsic Lake with quality iCe 11 but in relation to its ultimate influ If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your rhil- ! while to hear him tell about it. Gym: 7:30, Mid Week Meeting. Matth. 13:24-30. Subject: The form for work. ! Thursday—5:30, Chicken Pie Sup inches thick. It is one of the best ence and effect. dren, how much' more shall your Father which is in heaven give good A gift for China Famine Relief is of the Church of (jod on earth. per and Entertainment. crops in years. He has started pil Many who do not regard the things to them that ask him? i a true answer to Jesus’ “inasmuch” . 'The Loyalty Club meeting will be 1 Two million believed dead. Two omitted this week. Friday—7:30, Mothers’ (Jlub. ing ice up outside the sheds for present situation as ideal believe Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, ^ Wednesday the Ladies Aid Socie-, Saturdav — 2:00. Intermediate early delivery. that it is only by such drastic law do ye even so to them: for this is the la-w and the prophets. i million more starving. Specially * ty will hold their F-ebruary meeting ; Boys’ Basket Ball; 2:30, Hustlers’ DIST. SUPERINTENDENT To Play Trade School that the community can be rid of marked envelopes will be in the pews Sunday morning. Feb. 16th. Group Food Sale at J. W. Hale The Rockville High school basket social abuse and that the law will Beware of false prophets, whiCh come to you in sheep’s clothing, but at 2:00. in the hose house, com er, inwardly they are ravening wolves. I for this offering of Christian com- Main and Hilliard streets. i Store. ball team will play a return game ultimately attain that end as effec AT NORTH M. E. CHURCH with the Manchester Trade school tually as laws against dueling and Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of i passion, Thursday at 7:30, the Epwor^i | -horns, or figs of thistles? League will hold a business meeting j ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL on Monday afternoon, at 3:30. In slavery have effected their ends. Rev. J. Stuart Neil the first game the Trade school five What we speak of here is tem Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree THE CENTER CHURCH in the Senior room. Following this 1 Rev. .Alfred Clark Rev. Myron E. Center to defeated the High school five by a perance—the rule and regulation of bringeth forth evil fruit. Rev. Watson Woodruff at 8:00, the League will give a Val- , A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree .All Services in the Masonic Temple. entine Social to w’hich all friends; Speak at Morning Service. close score. The High school with one's life with discretion and self- new plays and a new defense, is control and with supreme regard to bring forth good fruit. are invited. A special invitation is | 9:30 a. m.—Church School. Men’s Quarterly Conference. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down ,and cast i Morning Worship, 10:45. extended to the young people of the ■ Bible Class. confident of winning on Monday. the effect of one's action upon other The Trade school is just as confi into the fire. Sermon by the minister. Second Congregational church. 10:45 a. m.—Morning Prayer and Rev. Myron E. Genter, superin people. This social aspect of life dent. and conduct is a part of temperance Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them. The Music: Friday the Junior Choir will'meet Sermon by the Rector; Topic: “The tendent of the Norwich district, will Not every one that saith unto me. Lord, Lofd, shall enter into the i Prelude—Elegy in G ...... Semate at 7:15 with Miss Lydall, 22 Hudson Healing Christ.” be the speaker at the Sunday morn Board of Relief because man is a social being. The There will be an extra session of Golden Rule is the highest law’ of kingdom of heaven: but he that doeth the will of my Father which is In I Anthems: street. i 3:00 p. m.—Highland Park Sun ing service at the North Methodist the Board of Relief in the town a thoughtful and well regulated life. heaven. The King of Love My Shepherd Is The Young People's Winter Insti- j day School. church and remain for the session clerk’s office this afternoon from Moreover, as I have frequently Many will say to me in that day, Lord, have we not prophesied In j ...... Shelley tute will be held at Hockanum, Fri 7:00 p. m.—Union Service. of the quarterly conference and 1:30 to 4 o'clock to hear aggrieved pointed out. the existence and Thy name ? and in Thy name have cast out de-vils ? and in Thy name done j God is a S p irit...... Bennett day evening at 7:3Ci. Supper will be Preacher: Rev. A. C. Knudsen, D. meeting of the church council at 4 property owners. At a meeting held presence of law does not render this many wonderful works? Postlude—Tavanay ...... 'Vincent served at 6:30. D., Dean of Boston University o’clock in the afternoon. A la,rge Topic: “The voluntary regulation of one's life And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, I The Church School, 9:30; Classes Mr. James R.. Johnston, president i School of Theology, attendance of the church people is on Thursday night, there was a rush of taxpayers, many very much dis anv less valuable. Where a man ye that work iniquity. j for everyone. of the East Hartford Men’s Bible j Certainty of Faith. hoped for a'; both ser-vices. The i finds the' Goldbn Rule, 'fhe^highest Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine, and doeth them, I The Men’s League, 9:30; Presi Class, will speak to all men who Monday, 7:30 p. m.—Girls Friend- meeting in the afternoon will be satisfied. attitude of helpfulness toward his will liken him unto a 'wise man, which built his house upon a rock: dent, John Reinartz: Speaker, W. J. may be interested in the idea of ly Society. open to all interested. It is not for Fined For Intoxication fellow men, expressed in total absti And the rain descended .and the floods came, and the winds blew, jLupien: Topic, Human Relationships. organizing a class in the churches Tuesday, 7:30 p m.—Boy Scouts. the church officials exclusively. Charles McFarlene and Louis nence from intoxicating liquors his and beat upon that house: and it fell not; for it was founded upon a i’oek. Junio-r Story Hour, 4:00; Leader, of North Main St., Friday at f:30. Choir Rehearsal. Burns of this city were before Judge voluntary total abstinence is none And every one that heareth these sayings of .mine, and doeth them Miss McMinn. ■ at the Second Congregational Wednesday, 6:30 p. m.—Galahad John E. Fisk in the Police Court on the less Valuable because other men not, shall be likened unto a foolish man, which bujlt his house upon the CYP Club. 6:00: Leader, Robert Church. All men are invited. Club. 7:45 p. m.—Adult Bible Class. Thursday morning charged with in choose to disregard and disobey sand: ^ McComb. A. N. Potter will speak Thursday, 2:30 p. m.—The Ladies toxication. Each was fined $10 and both the Golden Rule and the laws And the rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, r.nd : on “Amerizanization.” THE S.ALVATION .ARMY Guild will meet at the Rectory. costs. of their country. The fact that beat upon that house; and it fell; and great was the fall of !t. : Union Ser-vice. 7:00: St. Mary’s .Adj’t and Mrs. Joseph Heard Every member is invited to attend. Cornelia Meeting there are laws against malfeasance j Church; Speaker, Dr. Albert C. Monday, February 17th, 8:00 p. A meeting of the Cornelia Circle Street meeting tonight corner m.—The younger members of the will be held at the home of Mrs. in office or dishonesty in business suits. Men cannot gather grapes of j Knudson of Boston. the teaching of Jesus and fail to do The Week Birch and Main streets followed by Girls 'Friendly will give a Valentine Spencer S. Fitch, 48 Union street, does not make the integrity of a thorns or figs of thistles. If we are the things that Jesus enjoined. Out I Monday. 7:30—The Troubadors a musicale in the hall by the sweet Party in the Parish House. All Masked Ball. Tuesday afternoon. An informal public official or the honesty of a going to have social w’ell being we business man any less valuable or ward condu^, it is true, cannot be I will meet with Walter Joyner, 29 est song birds of Massachusetts, members of the Parish are invited. At the masquerade ball given by musicale under the direction of Miss must sow the seeds of that welfare separated from motive and pur Sunday. Feb. 23rd, 7:00 p. m.— > the Worcester twins, assisted by the the American Legion in Princess Marietta N. Fitch wdll be a feature. worthy. in good conduct in our personal Holl street. Our lesson brings us from the pose. 'We are to be judged after all Monday, 7:30—The Kings Daugh- band and songsters of the corps. Adrpission Ser-vice for Girls Friend Hall last evening, for the benefit of The meeting will be called at 3 lives and social relationships. not merely by our actions but by high ground of the Golden. Rule ters will meet at the home of Mrs. Sunday the company meeting con ly Society. Special feature. Rev. the Bugle and Drum Corps, several o’clock. the purpose that is in oqr hearts, into the ordinary realm of cause It means little to have sound ' John L. Trask. 23 Flower street, venes at 9:30. An interesting red George T. Linsley of Church of hundred people were present from Illustrated Story and effect. Good principle and ideas unless we put these ideas into j Tuesday, 8:00—The Professional and blue contest is now operative Good Shepherd. Rockville and surrounding towns. At the Methodist church on Sun Saturday, Feb. 8th, 2:00 p. m.— good actions are known by their re- practice. One may even approve (Continued on Page 7) Women's Club will meet at the in the Sunday school for the intensi- j The hall decorations w’ere attrac day evening at 7 o’clock. Rev- M, E. Food Sale at J. W. Hale’s store by Osborne will give an Illustrated Ver- tive. The music w’as by Mac’s the Ladies Guild. si6n of the story of “Ben Hut” . Harmony Boy:. There were about More than 200 pictures will be SWEDISH LUTHER.AN fifty maskers. These judges select shown. The public is invited. Rev. P. J. Oi Cornell ed the winners, after the maskers’ In Army Now grand march: Mrs. George Schiencr, John H. Taylor of Vernon avenue, Sunday. 9:30 a. m. — Sunday Mrs. Minnie Dowding, Mrs. FraiiK who completed four years in the School, Young Men’s Fellow’ship Mann, George Thuemler and Eldrea U. S. Navy abouC three months ago, class and the Fidelity class will Doyle. The winners were: l^’or receiving an honorable discharge, meet. lady’s handsomest costume. Miss has joined the U. S. Army and left THE MANCHESTER UNION SERVICE Sunday, 10:45 a. m.—Swedish Evelyn Harrison; lady's most comi this week for Fort Ethan Allen. Service, Rev. Cornell will preach. cal, Mrs. Marion Teabo; lady’s sec Notes Sunday, 7 p. m.—English Semiice. ond comical, Mrs. Bertha Backofen; The February meeting of Sabra Rev. Helland in charge. men’s comical costume, Mrs. Marie Trumbull Chapter, D. A. R. has been I The Week Lassow; men’s second comical, postponed. Announcement later. Monday, 6:30 p. m.—Children’s Frank Grumbackf men's and w.)- Mrs. Charles Veneik and son of chorus. men’s most original costumes, Mr. Manchester w^ere recent guests of Preacher: Albert C. Knudson, D. D. LL* D. Monday, 7:30 p. m.—Beethoven and Mrs. William Marley; second, the former’s aunt, Mrs. Daniel Hal- Glee Club. Russell Williams and Miss Iris Gya- loran of Hammond street. Dean Boston University School of Theology Tuesday, 7 p. m.—G Clef Glee gell. James Rhodes • of Tolland The Ladies Auxiliary A. O. H,, Club. prompted for the old fashioned nun*- will hold a box social after its regu Tuesday, 8:30 p. m.—Church choir. lar' meeting next Tuesday evening. Wednesday, 7:15 p. m. — Boy bers. Overseers’ Banquet. Each member wil’ bring a box con Scouts Troop 5. Plans are complete for the annual taining food. Thursday, 2:30 p. m.—Ladies So Arthur T. Bissell, secretary and ciety. banquet of the Overseers Club of the Hockanum Mills Co., which will treasurer of the Savings Biuik of Friday, 7:30 p. m.—Men’s Society. Rockville, and his daughter, Mrs. “THE CERTAINTY OF FAITH” Friday evening the Luther Leq,gue be held tonight at “The Rockville. ’ Emily Bissell Swindells, are spend There will be an after dinner pro has been invited to East Hampton ing several weeks in St. Petersburg, and will leave by private cats from gram and dancing in Prescott Hall, Fla. the church. The Beethoven Glee to which the party will adjourn fol Miss Natalie Ide, a student at the Club wdU furnish the program for lowing the dinner, which will be Connecticut College for 'Women, at the evening. served promptly at 7:15. New London, is spending a few days AT ST. MARY’S CHURCH Shower for Miss Scibek. with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. SWEDISH CONGREGATIONAL Miss Stella Scibek of Vernon M. Ide of Talcott avenue. She had Rev. S. E. Green avenue was pleasantly surprised by as her guest, Mrs. Jean P^nnock o f the Children of Mary of St. Joseph’s Philadelphia. 10:45 h- m. Morning Worship. church on Thursday evening, in Mrs. Gotlieb Krause has returned 12 m. Sunday School. ^ honor of her coming marriage. to her home on Prospect street from 7:00 p. m. Young People’s M eet-; There were musicEil selections and the Rock-ville City hospital, where Sunday Evening, Feb. 9th at 7 P. M. ing (Bible Study). i games. The bride-to-be was pre she has been a patient for weeks. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, Mid-week | sented with a mahogany clock. The condition of Richard Scholl of service. About twenty were present. Hale street, who has been very ill Senior Class Dance. for several weeks, is reported to be CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE no better. . Rev. E. T. French, paator. One of the most delightful social events of the season was held at the Howard Wheelock has purchased from Henry Lisk the latter’s inter 9:30, Sunday school. Sykes Gymnasium* school Isist eve ning, when the senior class of the est in the Palace Restaurant on 10:45, ' Morning worship, Rev. West Main street. South Methodist Center Church ^Methodist St, Mary^s Second Mabel Manning wdll preach. High school held a dance that was 6:30, Young People’s Meeting. largely attended by the young peo 7:30, Evangelistic seridce with ple of Rockville and vicinity. The ODD CHECK CASHED. Church All services in the Ma Episcopal Church Church Congregational Mrs. Manning in charge. gymnasium was attractively decor sonic Temple. North Main St, All regular meetings will be omit ated and there was choice music ny Colorado Springs. — What is ted during the period of the revival Ernie Rock and his Dixieland Cot thought to be among the smallest ;9:30 a. m.— Church School ton Pickers. The Proceeds will go 9:30—Church School Morning Worship at 10.45. 9:30 a. m.— Church School. Church checks ever cashed In the United and Men’s Bible Class. to the Washington Trip Fund. States was honored by a local bank, Swedish Lutheran Coming Card Party. here recently. In addition, tbie Church School and Men’s 10:45 a. m. — Worship. Ser Sunday Morning; The Catholic Ladies of Columb’us check, valued at one cent, was 33 10:40—^Sermon League at 9:30. mon by Rev. M. E. Gen il0:45 a. m.— Morning Pray will hold a public card party on the years old. It represented a, dividend ter. er and Sermon by the << Church evening of March 14, in Knights of on one share of stock in the Port land Gold Mining company on May.. by Dr. Knudson Story Hour for Children at Pastor. Subject: ^‘The The Religion of Rev. P. J. O. Cornell, D. D., Columbus Hall. Straight whist and bridge will be played, with prizes. 15, 1896. 4 o’clock. 4:00 p. m.—Quarterly Con Church and Chestnut Streets ference and Church Healing Christ.” The committee is: Mrs. Frank Hef- Abraham fron, Katherine.. Yost, Esther Rear- 6:00—Epworth CYP Service 6 o’clock. Council. 9:30—Sunday School aad PACT RATIFIHP- 3:00 p. m.— Highland Park Bible Class. dem, May Tobin, Margaret Cratty, League Lincoln” Mary Bums, Jeannette Cosgrove, Athens, Feb. 3.—(AP) — 'lie WELCOME OPEN MEETING Sunday School. 10:45— ^Morning Service in Catherine Burke, Catherine Cody, Chamber of Deputies today ratified Swedish. Victoria Clrenovese, Mary Meyers, ah agreement of May 10 last ye^ Murphy, Louise Loehr, Margaret settling financial differences . w}th: . 7 :00«-^Eveiiing Service. Rofian* Idajry McCarthy, Heleti Sei the U^ted States. p / i' • - i 'f
MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. PAGE FOUR
Tommy Grezel, Walter Buckley, Plane in Fatal Plunge to Housetop MR. AND MRS. JOHN ROBB LEGION ADJUTANT SEEKS COVENTRY Jackie Puter, Everett Carlson, Ed SILVER LANE MEN’S REC CLASSES win Jilsen, Louis Dimock, Jr., Rich and PILGRIMAGE EUGIBLES ard Dimock, Tony Uliano, Thomas 35 YEARS MARRIED Freney, Holdsworth Sharpe, James HOCKANUM Mrs. Emma Case has been stay Neill, Theodore Browm, Gordon Weir, ing with her sister in Hartford who PROVING POPULAR Raymond French, James and Wil News Netes was- ill. The sister passed away Observe Coral Anniversary Wants Names of Gold Star Thursday. Mrs. Case will remain liam Murray, Howard Wiley, Wil- Mothers and Widows Who ! liam Tedford, Teddv Bantley, Ran- Last Night at Their Home in Hartford until after the funeral ' dall Pillsbury, Willard McIntosh, At 23 Summit Street. The Parent-Teacher Association j Can Make Trip to France. which will be held Sim ^ y in Meri Gymnastic and Boxing ! Steven Cava^aro, Robert Drlggs, held its monthly meeting on j den. American Legion posts and aux- The North Coventry 4-H Dairy ' Francis Brimley, Vincent Lennon, Nearly twenty-five friends and Wednesday evening^^t ^^lie | iliary units have been requested by ! Thomas Conron, Elton Haddick and relatives of Mr. and Mrs. John Robb Club will meet this afternoon at the grammar school National Adjutant James F. Barton home of Russell Neigold at 1 Groups Under Frankie I Woodrow Trotter, of 23 Summit street surprised the was Junior Achievement in the j to report to the War Department o’clock. i The Junior Life Saving Class held couple on the occasion of their 35th School. Miss Frances Baker, prin-j I from 11 to 11:45 a. m. Saturday or coral wedding anniversary last the names and addresses of Gold Rev. J. N. Atwood has invited the Busch Growing Rapidly. clpal of the school, is the director > Star mothers and wddows in their boys between the ages of 11 to 13 I morning has a total enrollment of night. Mr. and Mrs. Robb were of this movement. Sixty children ' 19. Diving is also taught in this presented wdth a set of dishes, the communities who are eligible to years to meet at his home Saturday ' class as well as the correct strokes presentation being made by Miss are enrolled. make the pilgrimage to France. The afternoon. The South End Bridge Club met | The committee in charge of the The senior boxing class has had with racing turns and starts. The Ethel Robb on behalf of the self full name of the son or husband, Thursday afternoon at the home of ij the branch in which he served, and turkey supper to be held Tuesday a total enrollment of 41 members. following boys have been in this Invited guests. ■ class: Leo Johnson, George Leary, Refreshments were served and the Mrs. William C. Roberts on Naubuc the cemetery in which he lies buried evening, Feb. 11 at 6 p. m. is plan The Recreation Center has to offer i' Francis Gardner, Edward Stecholz, evening was spent in singing and avenue. M[rs. NVilliam Yauch of 1 should be given. Only those who ning on serving one hundred people. The turkeys have been purchgsed the most up to date equipment and Robert Carney, Lawrence Mallon, enjoyable games and stunts. South Main street had high score, have relatives buried on the other from Otis Hill and will be roasted facilities for boys who are inter William Weir, Frank Uliano, James 1680. Iside are eligible. Mrs. Anna Loomis of ^outh Main |j The American Legion gave its by Chas. Heckler, chef. ested in boxing therefore the class O’Reilly, Thomas McCann, Raymond Hilderbrand, Gerald Demeusy, True street has broken^ ground for a I support to the measure passed by nas grown large through these qual man Read, Wilbur Ciechowski, ABOUT TOWN dwelling on her ^property, opposite Congress which provided for the ities of inducement. This class is James Neill, Clarence Foley, Earl Station 25. This is the fourth house Gold Star Pilgrimage. Congress held on Monday and Tuesday eve and Clarence Lewie. under construction in this locality. has provided that the pilgrimage The annual meeting of the Ele shall be made by four groups, dur There’s Nothing nings from 7 to S p. m.. is open to mentary School Principals associa The Ladies Aid Society of the Hockanum Ctongregational church ing the period from May 1, 1930 to Finer than a all members of the Recreation Cen tion of Connecticut will be held October 31, 1933. Each group will ] IS SERIOUSLY HURT held a very delightful bridge and ters at a very little added expense. next week Saturday, February 15, be in Europe two weeks and they STROMBERG- The following have taken advantage , at the Hotel Garde, New Haven. whist on Thursday evening in the are assured of first class accommo of this class: A1 Dowd, Anthony [ PLAYING BASKETBALL The program will open with a lunch vestry. There were 17 tables. Frank dations and every comfort during CARLSON Ambukewitz, V. Nelson, Joe Gra- ; eon followed by addresses by sev Stangle of Woodbridge avenue East the trip. Stepmothers, or mothers; vino, James Craig, Arthur Kelly,' Investigators cited this fatal crash, in which a pilane plunged through eral principals. A business session Hartford, won first prize for men through adoption, or any woman j John McVeigh, Woodrow Clifford, with a score of 2140; Mrs. Louise New Haven, Feb. 8.— (A P )—Con the roof of a house near Roosevelt Field, Long Island, from m altitude of will follow at which the election of who held the place of a mother to a | Raymond Clifford, H. Ellis, John 1000 feet as further evidence of “ the need for laws to prohibit low flying. R. Finn of Naubuc avenue won first KEMPS stance Gilson. 16. daughter of Judge officers for next year wiU take deceased member of the military o r } Ole'skv. Wm. Sargent, Samuel Felt- Store fronts on the bottom floor of the three-story house were demolished John L. Gilson of the Probate Court place. prize of 2317. Mr. and Mrs. George naval forces for one year prior to , INCORPORATED ham. Herman Fink. Clarence Brown, and several occupants narrowly escaped injury. The aviator, Elliott de w^as in a critical condition today at Towne of Hartford carried away the the date he entered the World War, j Elmer Prentice, Leo Poulin, Lucien Lisser, 29, had abandoned the plane on its downward plunge but was killed The D. U. V. Sewing club will 763 Dlain St., St. Raphael hospital with a frac prizes for whist. Lunch was served. will be entitled to the journey to | Poulin, Hector MacDonald, Donald meet Monday evening at 7:30 with tured skull received in a basketball when his parachute failed to open. ______The Parent-Teachers Association his grdve in Europe, provided she | South Manchester Rember, Oscar Schack, Jack Grady, ' Mrs. Etta Loveland of Elro street. game. of Hockanum will hold a bridge and has never made the pilgrimage. | Wm. Rowe, Ernest Ritchie, Allen whist on Feb. 17 at 8'p. m. in the Only a widow who has not remar- j Dexter, H. Winchell, E. Anderson, Miss Gilson, a student at Miss ______Day’s school, playing in an informal i Elmer T. Thienes, well known Y. litUe brick school at Station 25. The ried will be eligible to visit the j Ted Lupien. Art Davis, Robert Stur- ANNOUNCE CHEVROLET M C. A. and member of the Man Arthur Man-game between pick up teams in the proceeds to go toward the welfare grave of her husband. | Lincoln Murphy, chester Kiwanis club will be the Gold Star mothers and widows in i ^^°'^S^''FehcrA^uVbkne^^^^^ I TrinYty Parish ‘ gymnasium yester- funds of both schools. lev SALESROOM OPENING Wall Street speaker at the Monday noon meet On Tuesday evening, Feb. 25 from this vicinity interested in this trip ! TOWN ADVERTISEMENT ey ’ Ward, Roy Bucklcr, and Joe : day, was pushed against a side wall. ing of the club at the Hotel Sheri Last night she was operated on by 5:30 to 7 p. m. in the vestry of the may obtain full information by get Hanlon. dan. He will talk on the high spots ting in touch with Mrs. Minnie A newly organized class on Mon Dr. William F. Verdi. Her condition Briefs of vocational guidance and training Hockanum Congregational churen today was declared as poor. the men of the community will Sault, 30 Foster street, phone 4.509, day evenings from 7 to 8 p. m., for Mackley Company in New, of young men and women. This is Mrs. James H. McVeigh. 71 Oxford BOARD OF REIEF Miss Gilson collapsed on the serve another of their famous roast high school boys has proved popu Quarters in 0
■-•■Lx ' r ‘
* 'y '
MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN^ '.^A’TtlRDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. PAGE FIVE
fair which was given in aid of the dajiced at Woolaey h ^ until jnorn- The nuptials of Miss Elizabeth i 6 Medley from “ Sons O’ Guns” leeted either for the reception or ing hours. Ogden Browfer and Donald Preater j BROADWAY MUSICAL What Love Can Do . ., dinner for diplomats who in the past Memorial hall and clubhouse of vet Katrinka van Courtland Suy44ro, Warrln which were celebrated in S t.! 7 Collegiate Love ...Rhythm Bdr)^ ILLNESS OF TAFT ! not infrequently have crossed the DANCES FEATURE erans of the Sevent-Seventh Divi-1 Margaret Ritchie, ;^^ry du l^s, Luke’s Episcopal church at Mont-1 What Would I Care ' i ocean to be present at such an Sion. HITS BY WHITEMAN 8 South Sea R o s e ...... Trio They danced for hours and then Eleanor Barps and ^ r b a r * ^aretow Clair were among the most interest- [ event. So important is the attention i ing. Little. Kiss Each Morning.Crosby paid the diplomatic corps that for SOCIETY DOINGS gathered at supper time around were among those who attended the SHOCK TO SOCIETY i The bride wore a princess gown Liza ...... Trio frolic. \ many years it has been a custom small tables surrounding the ball of ivory satin and a close fitting Brodaway’s two biggest current for a President’s wife to hold a re- j room floor to watch the cabinet pro cap of rose point lace. She carried ception in the White House as soon gram—a program that was worthy Among the more serious business musical smashes, “ Strike Up the of attention. The day when Park of musicales and lectures the a bouquet of lilies of the valley and Band” and “ Sons O’ Guns,” furnish as possible after the inauguration, gardenias. Chief Justice and Wife Mostj and an afternoon tea or reception Many of Them Entertain avenue had to call upon Broadway Bennington college meeU^ arrang tke high lights of the Old Gold — each succeeding season, in addition for its supper entertainment seems ed by Mrs. George S. Franklin and Her maid of honor and brides Paul 'Whiteman program over the A HOUGBT Popular at Capital— Pa-' to the dinner and reception includ New York's Smart Set to have passed, and now society has held at the new Junior League Cluo maids were gowned in frocks of Columbia Broadcasting System next ed in the series of state functions. become so versatile that it puts on on Thursday night. John W. Davis chiffon velvet shading from pale Tuesda.v evening, February 11 from presided, and President Robert D. peach to coral and carried bouquets 9 to 10 p. m. Eastern Standard its own show. of bronze snapdragons, lavender, I For he shall not much remember trons of the Arts. During the Past Week. Miss Gwendolyn Lewis snapped Leigh of Bennington college gave 'Time.. The song hit, “Soon” from j the days of his life; because God An international engagement an the principal address. Ernest and sweet peas. The tiny flower “Strike Up the Band,” written by nouncement of particular interest in through a tap dance. Miss June < answereth him in the joy of his Hutcheson of the Juilliard Graduate girl, who wore a frock of pale blue ejeorge Gershwin, the Prince of the northwest is that by Colonel Blossom and Ward Fox gave an ex taffeta and a poke bonnet, bore a I heart.—Ecclesiastes 5:20. of Music also spoke. composers, and arranged for the oc I « » « Washington, Feb. 8. — (A D — Re and Mrs. George C. Thorpe of their New York, Feb. 8.— (AP) — hibition of ballroom dancing, and basket of petals which she sprinkled Before the meeting there were a casion by the King of Jazz. Paul There is a sweet joy that comes daughter, Amy Elizabeth, to Mr. Dances and more dances, varying Eleanor Waters sang a group of j ! along the aisles of the church. Whiteman, will be sung by Mildred tirement of William Howard Taft number of small dinners, at which to us through sorrow.—Spurj;eon. Arthur Pack, commercial secretary all the way from formal balls to popular songs. j Bailey, and the dashing “Ride On, as Chief Justice of the United small private parties, have been the Among those who watched fromj the conversational ball revolved ■— to the British Embassy. The time While many members of society Vaquero,” from the same peppery States, this week removed from of the wedding has not been given. fashionables’ piece de resistance this the side-lines were Mr. and Mrs. not around fashions and parties— show will be chanted by Bing Cros TO CUT PRODUCTION but around politics and art. froliced in town others journeyed to Washington's official society two of Colonel Thorpe was born at North- week. Kenneth O'Brien, Mrs. Snowden by. Lake Placid for the winter sports. Manchester, Eng., Feb. 7—(AP) ! its most prominent members. field, Minnesota, ajid Miss Thorpe’s And between the frolics of their Fahnestock, and Rear Admiral A melody of six knock-out songs heels they foimd activities for their Louis R. de Steigeur and Mrs. de Another evidence of society’s in Bob-sleighing through icy caverns i — Spinners in the American cotton Life tenure gives to the Supreme ! mother was formerly Miss Cora at forty miles an hour has become from Jack Donohue’s “ Sons O’ heads in musicales, lectures, benefits Steiguer. terest in more sober business Is the Guns,” and the most popular num ' section are planning to take a bal Court a dignity and permanency not I Wells of Morris, Minnesota. 1 one of the fashionables’ favorite little picture house, I'recently opened ber now to be heafd on Broadway, lot on a proposal to curtail produc-: enjoyed even by the President him I Miss Thorpe made her debut at —and the rest of the more serious I sports and many of them have de- ; the end of November, in a quiet social business that marks the late on East Fiftieth street, and num “What Love Can Do,” will be direct tion by thirteen hours weekly for self, and Mr. and Mrs. Taft had The Yale junior proni—a festiv j parted early, well supplied with fur I manner but among celebrities at a winter season. It’s smart, these bering among its founders Miss ed by Mr. Whiteman, these being eight weeks. come to be looked upon as fixtures ity wliich makes the debutante’s ' coats and leather leggings to join not only in official circles but in the j tea at the home of her parents, and days, to concentrate on matters a Anne Morgan, Mrs. James Roose played by special permission oOthe season complete—took many of the in the fun. capital’s life as a whole, in which later a brilliant ball given for her bit weightier than party frocks and velt and 'William H, Vanderbilt. copyright owners. In addition I butterflies to New Haven this week Others have departed for quail INTERNATIONAL they henceforth will participate as I at the Mayflower. supper menus, and between them The theatre was opened with the Whiteman will offer a dozen other for the gaieties that lasted several hunting in the Carolinas. Mrs. Rob private citizens. ' Mr. Pack, who is the second son gaities the fashionables are devoting notice that its object is to promote lively selections introducing Jack days. Informal teas, the Glee Cluo ert Chandler, a devotee of the sport, SERVICE STATION It was Mrs. Taft and Mrs. Chai'les ‘ of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Pack of some hours to the study of Chopin, the best pictures “wherever they Fulton and the Rhythm Boys. The concert and the Dramatic Associa may be screened.” An interesting wears for hunting a brown and full program follows: Evans Hughes who are credited to \ FIngland, entered the British govern- French, painting or other matters i.n tion’s presentation of the play “The feature of the place is an oak- biege tweed suit, a novel feature of 1 Hello Baby ...... Rhythm Boys LOUIS CHERRONE a great extent with relieving the j ment service in 1911, and has held w’hich they have an interest. Truth about Blayds” were part of beamed tavern room, where a num which is the hip length jacket, cut Never Say Die .... Rhythm Boys awed reserve which for many years j various appointments under the Corner Vernon St. and characterized the social routine of I Crown. He has occupied his present the program that kept them whirl ber of the fashionables may be with a yoke effect. She prefers a 2 Strike Up the B a n d ...... Quartet The Liberty ball, with its large circular skirt of medium length to the Supreme Court ladies, who are post since March 1925. He served ing until the climax of the “ prom ’ found at tea-time, lingering over a Soon ...... Bailey Middle Turnpike attendance of smart w'omen in cup of Oolong and discussing the knickers and chooses for accessories Ride on V aquero...... Crosby required to make few first calls and ! with the rank, of captain during the frocks that heralded the spring itself. Manchester Green return but few visits. Their dinner j World War, and was a member of picture. a small brown felt hat, light wool 3 Waltz—Must Be Somebody Wait mode, and its supper p^rogram of en hose and brown kid oxfords. The ing ...... Fulton parties, confined to the entertain : the British military mission to the tertainment novelties, was an out Many a glittering pair of part}' majority of women who indulge in 4 Congratulations ...... Trio ment of the judiciary, formerly ! United States from 1917 to 1918, as Weddings and bridal plans, which — SHELL G A S - standing event of the week. Fri slippers was worn to shreds that shooting, however, favor knickers As Long As I’m With You.Bailey were of interest only to that branch I machine gun adviser to the 30th are becoming as numerous in Feb American division under the com day night found hundreds of the night, for there wa.s no “ early ruary as once they were In June, and suede wind-breakers. Mrs. Looking at Y'ou ...... Crosby Onc Finely Woven Roman Tapestry of society. hours’’ slogan to send the merry Geraldyn Redmond usually hunts in 5 Figaro ...... Trio given FREE with total purchase of Mrs. Taft hnd Mr.s. Hughes, how mand of the late Senator Tyson of fashionable gathered in the ball held a generous share of society’s a tweed suit of this type. I have To Have Y o u ___ Crosby Gasoline for the amount of §20. ever, with their distinguished hu.s- Tennessee. rooms of the Park Lane for the al- makers scurrying home and they interest. bands, accepted invitations to din ner parties and luncheons and en tertained in their own homes with a freedom and hospitality probably never equalled in the Supreme Court circle. Mrs. Taft had previously been affiliated in so many different phases of official life in the capital that when she came to be a Supreme Court hostess, she broke off none of her old connections, and she and the Chief Justice were favorites alike in official and smart .society. Mr. and Mrs. Taft are patrons for Washington's music and art, and Mrs. Taft has never failed to lend her aid as a patroness even to the strictly local charities. For a musician to receive her sanction, Buy Your USED Car however, is a conscientious matter with her, and being a musician her self—a pianist of ability—she does not countenance the mediocre artist. When her name appears on a li.st of patronesses, critics are re assured. From a NEW CAR Dealer Sunday luncheon parties have for some years taken the place of d.stc dinner parties with both Mr. and Mrs. Taft, and they have enter tained in this manner quite fre quently this season. They had issued notice of their regular New Year’s 'i're only young girls in tlie jiid i- care and discretion you would use (: ■ ' cirele. Mir.s IMarcarct and Mis.; .'.nne Eatler. daughters of Associate .'.m’li-.e and Mr.<. Pierce Butler, will in purchasing a NEW Car! b.-; .Tgrccablc companions for Mis.s Eiizabctli Hughc.s, daughter of the new Ciiicf Justice and Mrs. Hughes. DURANT Experience has shown that the Manchester dealers herein listed make every possible effort to render their used Ohioans were prcjmincnt on list of those attending .the Cabinet din car department worthy of your patronage and so justify their being in business. In other words they feel that HUPMOBILE ner given by Postmaster Generad their reputation as reliable merchants is involved, hence the merchandise offered is what it should be. and Mrs. Walter F. Brown in the presidential suite at the Willard Obviously these dealers a.ssume that at some future time the used car buyer will be a new car buyer. He seeks H. A. Stephens hotel. transportation in a used car and he gets it. These firms warrant the confidence of the public. Governor and Mr.s. T.Iycr.s Y. Center and Knox Sts. Tel. 584S Cooper attended, as did Mr. and Visit any of the salesrooms of the dealers listed herein. In i^ ct the used cars which are befittingly displayed. r.Ir.s, Joseph R. Nutt of Cleveland: Every one of them contains thousands of miles of unused transportation and is real value for the price asked. Miss Grace Burton, niece of the Late Senator Theodore Burton; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Garford, and .'i.d.ge and Mrs. George P. Hahn of Ti.;lcdo, .Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. .’.dams came f-rom Rye, New York; ■Mr. and M:.-;. Lewis H. Strauss f;om New York City, and Mr. and These Automotive Merchants are in business year Mr.'V Lamont Rowlands from Mis- sis;-iippi. DODGE Mr.s. Hoover was busy this week after year—they serve you with the idea of preparing for licr ti'ip to Florida with the President, but she attend ed the Wednesday morning musicalc at the Mayflower hotel and received Schaller Motor Sales earning your patronage the NEXT various gue.sts during the week. If present plans are carried out, the 631 Center St. state dinner to the diplomatic corps, Tel. 6282 time you buy a car! scheduled for February 13, will be postponed, as was the reception to the corps set for December 5 and postponed . because of official mourning for the late Secretary of War James W. Good. The dinner to the Speaker and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth was an “vent of quite unusual interest, ihough, like that to the Vice Presi- ient, rather small for a state din- ler. WILLYS-KNIGHT CHRYSLER OLDSMOBILE STUDEBAKER Of more concern is the postpone ment of the Congregsional Club’s ERSKINE jjnnual breakfast in honor of the WHIPPET VIKING-MARMON President’s wife, which has been set up from February 14, to, Feb Cole Motor Sales George S. Smith ruary 25, when it will be given in Crawford Auto The Conkey Auto Co. “ When Better Used Cars Are Sold, :he Pan American Union building, We'll SeU Them.” Supply Co. ■’amous musician.s had to be asked 30 Bissel! St. Tel. 5054 20-22 E. Center St. Tel. 5648 ;o change their arrangements; wo 91 Center St. Tel. 8275 Center and Trotter Sts. Tel. 6495 men in the Congressional circle had ilamned a departure for the middle of the month, and other arrange ments were upset. No date seems to have been se- • ■J’? ' ’ MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN.. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. AGE SIX _And He Got the Job! ing to attend his own wife’s funer form of political expression in Mex-1 H a n r l |M t » r al in a borrowed suit of clothes. He ico. One man, acting wholly on his * had invented a great contribution ovvTi initiative, cannot express the Evrning Iftfralb to the comfort and convenience of political views or demonstrate the women, yet a whole generation of political status of a nation; and it PUBLISHED BY THE was only one man who expressed HERALD PRINTING COMPANY. INC. women lived and died without the 13 Blssell Street service of that invention because his political view of President - South Manchester. Conn. Ortiz Rubio through the medium of THOMAS EERGUSON there was no advertising to present General Manager its service and to make women pistol shots. Help We of America consider our Founded October 1. 1881 w'ant it.” selves to be, of all people, most Published Every Evening Except Now it goes without saying that Sundays and Holidays. Entered at the if the sewing machine had had the capable of democratic government. Post Office at South Manchester, Yet political assassination is not a for the homemaker Conn., as Second Class Mall Matter. benefit of modern advertising its SUBSCRIPTION RATES. adoption would have been a great whit less common in the United OPEMINGt W2. One Year, by mall ...... jo.uu States than it was in the past in i OF /; Here is a simple, practical, easy-to-understand book P er Month, by m a l l ...... » deal more rapid than it was. How Delivered, one year ...... ever, in the interest of historic Mexico. To be sure, our sort of as- j REAl A9lLrrV . on home furnishing. Beautifully illustrated with Single copies ...... * truth, it might be remembered that sassination is a bit more subtle, in many helpful suggestions for furnishing each room MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED that we do not find it necessary to PRESS Elias Howe, Jr., first to patent a in the modern home. Written for our patrons by kill the bodies of our enemies in or The Associated Press Is exclusively sewing machine but not the first to Helen Townsend Barton, Department Director, Na entitled to the use for re''ubllcatlon der to destroy them politically. But of all news dispatches credited Jf invent such a device by a good tional Home Furnishings Industry. Just drop in any or not otherwise credited In this many years, produced his invention we are quite as adept in removing paper and also the local news pub human obstacles from our political time and ask for your free _____ ^ lished herein. in 1846 and within a half dozen All rights of republlcatlon or paths, and quite as ruthless, as aiiy copy of ■ ‘Capturing Charm K ' epeclal dispatches herein are also re- years half a dozen manufacturers ST- eerved. were turning out machines which Spiggoty revolutionary anywhere. •with Home furnishings. FURNISH SPECIAL ADVERTISING REPRE- later were declared to be infringe- It should not be necessary to YOURHOME SE.N'T.* "^IVE: Hamilton - DeLlsser, I ments. He did have one period of name names or cite specific in IT TCU.» Inc.. 2S5 Madison Ave.. New York, N. %nUTYOUAKI Y.. and 612 North Michigan Ave., severe penury, but it was brief. stances. Any American whose mem Chicago. Ills. Perhaps during that time his wdfe ory is a yard long can, if he cares to, Full service client N E A Service, did die and' he borrowed a suit of recall any number of instances Inc. . ,, , Member. Audit Bureau of Ll.cula- clothes for the funeral; we don’t where the skids have been put un tloiis. ______know. But by 1854, when he was der political careers that gave The Herald Printing Company. Inc., only 35 years old, Howe won his promise of interfering with the am assumes no financial responsibility bitions of the politically powerful for typographical errors appearing In patent litigation and thereafter sat WATKINS BROTHERS advertisements In the Manchester on the top shelf, so to speak. So and where useful and patriotic citi Evening Herald. 55 YEARS AT SOUTH MANCHESTER far was he from living out his life zens have been as suddenly and SATURDAY, FEB. 8, 1930 in poverty that when he was serv completely eliminated as Senor ing as a private in the Union army, Rubio would have been had his as LEGION AND REDS being then well into his 40’s, and sailant been a little better shot. The American Legion, as by far when for some red tape reason the There have been some brilliant the largest organization of Ameri- soldier’s pay did not arrive from | demonstrations of the art of assas- cap veterans of the World War, Washington, he paid off the entire sination quite recently in the Unit- Visit the commands and doubtless always regiment out of his own funds, we ed States Senate, even though the will command the deep respect of Typewriters believe over a period of several victims may not have rated quite every citizen w'orth his salt. That m NEW YORK HEALTH«*DIEr^CE All makes, sold, rented, ex months. He was the owner of a Class A—the most recent of them McGovern does not mean, however, that the 3,4 D r FTonK McCoy , changed and overhauled. great factory in Bridgeport and I bearing the napie of Vare. Legion has always been fortunate New York, Feb. 7.—The scene is just a short time before his death i& M a m Special rental rates to stu •In its spokesmen or that the utter one of the many ballrooms of the Granite Co/$ —he died at 48—collected more dents. Rebuilt machines ances of individual officers of the Ritz. than two million dollars in belated m cioim S7MMO MOOflKS$MO 0€Pi $30.00 and up. organization must be forever free And even for a town where the AM* MC-tof ------Memorial royalties from infringing manufac from criticism. fantastic reigns, there is an atmos DIET THEORIES AND f “My doctor w ants to put me under NNtnW PRACTICJAL FEEDING ' ether for a rupture operation, and Exhibition turers. We are inclined to doubt, very phere of the incredible. This sense KEMP'S As for a whole generation of Literature dealing with proper under gas for tooth extraction, seriously, whether a majority of travels rapidly from person to per feeding has constantly emphasized Would he suggest either if he 763 Main St. Phone 5680 of women living without sewing ma Legionnaires, for instance, would son in as strangely mixed a crowd certain theories, many of which thought that I had ^ y sort of heart chines after their perfection, that as ever rubbed elbows. Gentlemen lend unqualified approval to the de have been of no practical value to trouble? He examined me but did depends on what you-call a genera who have had their daily irony whis the layman, and certainly of lit- not say anything about it. My heart Monuments and mand of Legion Adjutant Barton, BY RODNEY DUTCHER. per behind the backs of their hands. Automobile Owners! tion. Certainly within twenty years tie value to the physician.■ No doubt never bothersooiners me and^ at the Hartford gathering of the Ladies of the upper intellectual many doctors have given up the use flights up. I would like to get rid Markers of the machine going on a produc W'ashington.—If beans continue veterans on Thursday, that com circles whisper—“Isn’t this just too of diet treatment principally be- of the rupture and the tooth, but Recently quite a few people tion basis it w'as a common enough„ to be spilled in Washington as often unbelievable?” Original in Conception munists, anarchists and I. W. W.’s cause these old theories have not I am afraid of the ether and the have called us up to ask if we commodity in American For Peggy Joyce is holding a been found to be helpful when ap- gas.” be thrown out of the country. commoaity n. | Mrspa%S®'rr°ng°WOT still serviced the makes of cars Moderate in Price Likely enough, if modern advertis ^ interesting as ever, literary tea.' Peggy—she of the n S to the patient. I Answer: Why don’t you ask your If there are three groups of per ought to be as interesting transient heart—is------suddenly------. -holding ^ Thousands ^of books have been doctor about it? Many physicians we have sold in the past. ing facilities had been in existence, 147 AMyn St., ^Hartford sons in America for whom we have Several pots full have been the spotlight as a writer. And all j written about diet and food, but so prefer ether for certain it would have been quite as com dumped on distinguished heads, in- Our answer to this is—“\Ve no earthly use it is communists, an- the who’s who of the writing world | ^een only copies of other and sometimes gas or a local anes- mon in two or three years. still have the same mechanics Local Representative crehists and wobblies. But when Just the same we w’ouldn’t great- about. I little additional material gleaned Experience ^ and are glad to service any car the talk is about “throwing them .. XT lis o i runningLt LX JLX X X.X^ for election this year in Leave it to Peggy to draw out the original research. kind of anesthetic sho^d °ot be ly object to taking Elias Howe s | popular votes out that needs servicing.” Mr. J. Fuller Mitchell out of the country” it is time to en crowd! High hat snobs and garret earnest searcher after used in all fases^^ejen^with^patiejRs average poverty and riches as our; j^is own home town of Bristol, Phone 2-4129, Hartford quire, Where are you going to poets; young revolters against writ- truth theorizes about subject are of who have no heart trouble of any own. I Pa. <5onntr.r ing Standards; critics and special course interesting- but these theo- kind. Ask your doctor about it and H. A. STEPHENS throw them? What’s...-----—rxr— happened , in that , Senator, J ' article ® writers; uiorarirliterary mpn-about- men-about so often mSft give way to the he will no doubt be able to explain There are not such a tremendous Grundy has been TD- placed - a t on Hnnvpr record ■ town and literary sycophants; rebels ■ • j.gg^jt of practical experience! Even this to you so that you can under- Center at Knox Sts. Tel. 5848 AT HALF-COCK I as saying- - that President~ ■ lent Hoover Hoover , wouldn’t “go in for hounds , ^^vsicians are apt to fall into the stand his reasons for using the an- lot of these strange folks anyhow, office of dog There is one thing which we never ran for ^ ^ iJnnvthine- t h iS I ^ndH,nu celebratedeeicuiatcu authors-these.---. - - and uaDlt ■ or leacmug, teaching^ r parrot-like, > o . what i ------esthetics- which-- he expects to use m but such as they are, probably a Know , ---- , times. millir~ ■“ should like to know from such peo- doesn. L a score of other types, milling in jf fj^g books are only put your two operations, very considerable majority of them at all from experience what le^sla^ j sraokv. congested rooms, g^ /b y established medical publish- —------were born in the United States. pie as Senator Wagner of New ‘ ^hese words were , rhythmic ^ go-'n^^anies" Arabic is written without vow This is especially true of the I. W. York, who has just done a rather ; p^rt of a speech ® 1 synco|ationings' of a darky band the^original thinker and observ- \dvertise in els. W. group, which is very largely showry job in the way of spanking before the Senate 1 from Harlem. i gj. attempts to publish a book with made up of vagabonds not only of the Wickersham Commission, and , and were Hoover had been I i new ideas, such a book is iminedi- American birth but of Western t.a t is, WKat reason have Sel-"coSi^pla'JLd | ptherinrj Se^ci^m^fr American descent; while most of being so cock-sure that that body : fbat Hoover’s mind . He is too expensive too keep. nVE DEAD, 15 HURT Fort Erie, Ont.— Benjamin Call of ! CONCERTS ENLIVEN OPEN FORUM Buffalo was clever, but Customs in Queer Twists spectors have something on him. IN BRAZlUAN RIOT His car, bound from Canada^ was Newfoundland's Part DR. MORAN BIDS ADIEU In Day's News crossing the bridge on the magneto. SOCIEH IN SOUTH Inspectors looked into the battei'y Editor, The Herald, case. They found five quarts oi Having arrived at the time when Vice President Not Seriously i whiskey. Now the car is no longer . . . 1* C L A ! I can cause to be executed the plans ' Injured — Police Arrest New York— Fashionable weddings Benjamin’s. ivlinneapolis jympnony Ur- j I ^ave made, and can avail myself Scores— Believe Plot is On. are criticized by the Rev. Dr. Caleb Washington—Anglo-American al In The Great Conflict R. Stetson, Episcopal, rector ot 1 of the opportunities I have awaited liance: Miss Betty Thorpe, debu Rio Janerio, Feb. 8— (A P )— Gov- Trinity church. Writing in a churc.b tante daughter of Colonel and Mrs. chestra Starts Series of which , plans and j ernm^^ police were engaged today publicaUon he Says they are often George C. Thorpe, is engaged t-o I enablee^auic me to<-e promote^------— ,® to lin ' in aa rounduproundup herenere of or suspicious suspicious vulgar displays of wealth; the | j pack, commercial secre- FnlprlainmPnlQ in FlnriHa endeavors I chosen to believing a shooting af- church is so decorated with palrns. tary of the British Embassy, Alfred Butler, of Oak Street,! Describes Last Cavalry Charge L n ie r ia in in e n iS Ul pursue, I find myself rnost jfj.ay in the State of Minas Geraes in and trees and flowers that it resem-j g(._ Louis— The city desires the jably reluctant to bid adieu to my , president Mello bles a flower show and it is made I courts to determine where the west of British in the World War i friends and patients with whom i viaima was wounded, might be the Tells How Sturdy Natives! I difficult to realize that a religious i begins and has a preference for Palm Beach Fla Feb 8 — (AP) 'have enjoyed such pleasant associa-, ^ widesprehd plot. shot in ' ‘3 taking place. j starting it near the Atlantic sea- e c i t i n g his experiences on Flanders Fields, during -SSa?dfng^n a"w^ek f i n e d f / n S a s m con^“ rn Sg th i Ibut his ' Haven, Conn.— Professor' board. In the days of the California Of Northern Island Rush social activity a concert by the 1 u ' f S b ” “ now^ I the early days of the World War, Alfred Butler of three wounds were not considered Billy Phelps's Irish setter Rufus has j gold rush Bryan MuUanphy left R 272 Oak street, a four year British veteran, and Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra j Possib I t ^^h^ ^ a charge account. He goes to a i money to aid travelers on their way serious, A special train carrying has inaugurated the season s senes , gj t^ank all with whom I butcheii’s when he likes, eats and his him and 14 other wounded from to settle in the west. The fund now ed to Aid of Mother Coun one of the first to go from his native Newfoundland, of entertainments sponsored by the heen^associated, and all who ------Montes Claros, where the shooting master pay.s later. amounts to 51,000,000. Heirs seek lauds the splendid courage of the British cavalry in their famous Society of Arts, of which have proven themselves of such un- Qgg^rred, arrived at Bello Horizonte, Omaha— Dazzler, mammoth hog, the money on the ground that no Edward T. Stotesbury, Philadelphia, try-Spent Four Years last attack on the western front. measurable assistance in enabling; ^.^^g pj-gsident, much im- who has taken airplane flights and more poor are westward bound. The is president. “ The old line cavalry made their last attack at Cam- me to realize the degree of success ; j.Qygd_ was taken to his home. Five ; received much attention because of 1 city suggests an interpretation tiiat After the concert on Monday . » . I n i i r * I ______9 • _ 4.1.^ _ -r T I Vi 1 G Cl'TO 1C f n Km r» Tvi A /->Ki-\T-kC I which has rewarded my efforts dur- j "gj-gons were killed in the affray, his size, is to become pork chops - would permit extensive aid to On Various Fronts. brai,” said the British veteran. “I don’t know the num night Mr. and Mrs. Stotesury en ing the years of practice I have ^ ------all 7 feet 2 and 1,365 pounds of him. ber of troops engaged, but there seemed no end to them tertained at their ’Villa El Marasol travelers. going in on the right of the line that day. in honor of Henry Verbruggen, con- ^ P became en- ,RITATN called her sons from ductor of the orchestra, Mme. Nina - Medicine and SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON many distant corners of the The shock of the retrospect seemed to affect the Morgana, soloist and other artists. 11 ° j j^^ve eagerly looked for- B globe during the World War. narrator, visibly, as he gathered himself for the re’vela- E1 Mirasol was decorated with I ^ (Continued from Page Three.) Australia, India. Africa and the tion of the result of the last glorious charge of British jewelled lights gleaning in the palm ; myself able to continue islands of the seas furnished stal cavalr\', comparable to the famous “ Charge of the Light trees of its spacious grounds. ' further into its study. A few ------years jqj. ^o man ever quite attains to , Exceptionally LOW wart sons for the seemingly endless Among those entertaining at din ago I found myself quite ready and the good that he desires. But to , holocaust. Canada’s aid will never Brigade” at Balaklava. ner preceding the concert were Mr. well able to return to school that I profess faith in goodness, and the be forgotten, nor will the service of “At midnight a leftenant and 12 men cpie in bring and Mrs. Henry Seligman, New might pursue the study of the speci- (jggjre to be good, and to act with , H I G H E l ^ T one of her noble sons, Albert Butler ing’ eight prisoners. The officer was shot in the throat. York: Mrs. Henry R. Rae. Pitts- alty of my choice. But the tremend- | selfishness and evil intentions to- P R IC E S on of 272 Oak street. South Manches burgh: Mr. and Mrs. John Shepard, That was a glorious attack against overwhelming odds ous obligations and the tremendous | ^.a,rd our fellow men is to belie ter be soon erased from memory, be Jr., Lenox, Mass., Mr. and Mrs. moral debt I had Incurred on the i profession. i cause of his great service on many and the last, perhaps, of the age,^ The returning ofiicer John F. Harris, New York, Mr. and day I entered Medical School in a ^ Right Foundation | QUALITY Lavatories fronts during the entire war. received the V. C. from his King.” Mrs. Earge Perry Charlton, Fall large way prevented me from so i conduct cannot be judged merely ^ Alfred Butler is not the ideal Twelve rnen... .out of perhaps a thousand. \et River, Mass. doing. As everyone ■will know and I fj-om its results in physical welfare. story teller. It is difficult to draw as everyone will appreciate every Pursuing the conscientious course ^ from him the intricate and free flow in the face of defeat they brought back nearly a prisoner Miss Mary Brown Warburton and opportunity to succeed in life I owe often may mean sacrifice and loss; | of war experiences. He deals wholly apiece! Charles A. Munn, entertained on to the wonderful Dad and the most hut all the upbuilding, permanent, with cold hard facts with no em Tuesday night at the Munn Villa. wonderful Mother God was so good forces of life are in the realm of bellishment whatsoever. When he Casa Amado, with a farewell party to give me. Monetary compensation righteousness and truth. You can tells in that quiet mannered way- for Mr. and Mrs. Gurnee Munn and for the favors granted me by them no more build a sound society upon j even toned, without the slightest I <4^ Rodman tVannamaker, 11, who left I they would never even begin to con- principles and actions that arc | semblance of self creeping into the his pain. A greenish-yellow pallor that night for New York. Each | gj(jer. The time I found myself able wrong than you can build a g rea t' statement that his regiment, New overspread his face as the hours War Vetetran guest impersonated a contemporary j spend near and with them was building: without regard to rule and foundland’s own was on the way to dragged on and no help arrived. -w at the party. I j-be only other thing I had to offer plumb-line. ! France a scaint month after war Finally Found Among those in attendance were j jbls I vowed I would give, even There is such a thing as being up- ; was declared, a vision of a Canada Finally at 3 o’clock stretcher the Countess of Carlisle, Naw'orth took me the remainder of^my right and foursquare not only in i superlatively enthused with a wave bearers found him in the midst of Castle, Carlisle Scotland, who flew' stay_ here____ to__ repay ^ , them” as they the W'orld of physical things but in, of patriotism seldom seen in the big beet-field. The Germans had over from Nassau on Monday; Vic- would be repaid. My debt to iny world of inner life and outward jective possessions comes to rnind. occupied the territory so long that j countess Cranbourne, William Mother was too soon repaid for she conduct. And the true rule for the The enlistment turmoil of the cities, ♦BARNES* i they had planted gardens, so sure Rhinelander Stewart, New York; was taken from me a short three building of society is the Golden Q U A L IT Y i the besieging of countless news- were they that they would be there , Mr. and Mrs. Florenz Zlegfeld, months subsequent to my gradua Rule. Anything built upon any pap*r offices for the latest w'ar bul Enamelware!! at harvest time. Though it took | (Billie Burke), Mr. and Mrs. John tion The pleasure and the honor or other basis carries its own weak letins and a populace clamoring for sacrificial blood aplenty, that Emerson, (Anita Loos), Mr. and ness and its danger of toppling— a a chance to do battle for the home one crop that was never harvested repaytor my Dad I Mrs. Edward F. Hutton, Harold S. j what seems only a little part that is not a matter of theory, country is pictured. Such w'as the by the enemy. Vanderbilt and many others. i longer for he too was called away but a sure demonstration of history. conditions in the summer of 1914 Those were days of sudden death. | 'in September of 1928 -So------now- in in all of Canada. But Alfred But Three British tanks advanced to the i theiTloss i find another obligaUon * ler’s patriotism had no such en A notable list of patronesses was attack across a canal bridge. Two | to meet, that which now compels couragement or grounding respect named for the recital at the Em ORTIZ RUBIO B E nE R got across safely but the third | me to exercise every effort to erect dropped like a plummet through the ^ bassy Club on Thursday afternoon ing its quality. of and within myself a monument Our direct factory connection, as an authorized Barnes frail bridge and a film of oil float- i sponsored by the Palm Beach Par In Cold Newfoundland somewhat worthy of them. In con Mexico City, Feb. 8 — (AP) — ] ing down the canal was the only I ent Teachers Association, Mrs. Dealer, permits us to quote these exceptionally low Far up in the northeast corner of sequence I leave with the &nm e- Emilo Portes Gil, minister of m -1 Newfoundland, in the little village visible evidence of the tragedy. j Oscar O. Davis, Kansas City, presi prices on highest quality lavatories: dent. Antoinette Halstead, soloist at termination to make of nyself the terior and temporary head of the , of Griguet, a scant dozen miles ! type of surgeon they hoped I wou d government, in a brief announce- | from Cape Ball and within sight of Bethesda-by-the-Sea, was the artist. a f t e r f o u r y e a r s 1 ■.'AA-'; " ' be and only the type I myself would ment today, is said Daniel Flores | Beautifully designed, purc-whilc smooth finish, 20x24, the snow capped hills of Labrador, Patrons in attendance included HE GETS FURLOUGH ! Madame Louise Homer, Mrs. E. T. care to be. who Wednesday shot and wounded I Pedestal Lavatory, ^ 1 Q ft Alfred Butler lived with his broth So now as I leave I make my President Ortiz Rubio, had been ers and sisters in peace and con NVALIDED to England for five | Stotesbury, Mrs. W. L. Kingsley, without fittin g s...... V A Rome, N. Y., Mrs. John F, Harris, honest effort to sincerely thank all placed at the disposal of the Mexi- j tentment with the world. He loved months, Butler was back j who have been instrumental m aid can Attorney General, Aguilar Y. i Remarkavle value, high back apron wall the land that Dr. Grenfell knows so I again in the front lines in j N’ew York, Mrs. Earle P. Charlton, Fall River, Mass., Mrs. Paris Sing ing me in the establishment of the Maya. Lavatory, 18x21, without littings .. well and has benefitted so faith March 1918, at Passachendale ; He and Police Chief Miares Pala- j $10.88 er, New York, a’nd Paris, Mrs. practice I have here enjoyed. I do fully during the last decade. The Ridge. Three weeks of fighting en- ; cios will continue the investigation i George A. McKinlock, Chicago, and want to assure you that I have and inference is taken that Alfred s sued on this famous battleground ; that I do sincerely appreciate every | qj t^e attempt against the presi- Mrs. Leonard Replogle, New York. father had also taken his homeland w'hen the enemy tried breaking i Alfred Butler bit of assistance I have received, dent's life. Senor Portes Gil said Other Lavatories $7.28 up Otto Kahn, New "York, Mr. and 1 to his own heart for Dr. Grenfell, in through again at Armintieres. The and I am now just as sincerely hop- genor Aguilar wolild make a public I Mrs. John Shephard, Jr., Lenox, one of his stories, “The Preacher’’ entire four brigades were taken out ing that some day within’ the fu-fu statement next week giving the re-1 These lavatorie.s will prove a source of pride and Mass. from his book, "O ff the Rocks’’ and sent in on the channel front. ture not so far distant I will find suits of his inquiry. Previously it satisfaction to you and a definite asset to vour home. characterizes the elder Butler for Vicious thrusts in this area w'ere myself equipped to return, perhaps had been said conduct of the inves * his wonderful work as a lay preach effectually checked by the time Mr.s. George J. Dobyne, Beverly ----- w ‘ V *__tr. n tigation was to remain in the hands er or catecist in the Episcopal Farms. Mass., entertained the South ^'^et to We guarantee delivery in perfect condition ready for tried divisions. closely approximated where and of the military. church. True to the family urge Shore Bridge (Jlub at the Ever But 85 Left when I will be able to make every The condition of President Ortiz installation, or will gladly quote installed prices. Come for interpretation of the finer things glades club, while among those en A t this point, after nearly four | sincere effort to return as b ^ t I Rubio was said to be “constantly im in and see them. of life, another brother is now en tertaining at the Seminole Golf years in the trenches, the W ar Of- | can the volumes of favors that have proving. gaged in missioin work in the vicin fice decided that the remainder of | club were Mr. and Mrs. Emil J. SHERMAN’S BIRTH here been tendered me. ity of St. Johns. I the original Newfoundland regiment , ___ Stelhi, New A"ork City, Mr. and Towards those who have in any TOUCHING CAEL W . AMHERSON, INC. But it fell to the lot of •Alfred suffered and sacrificed to its ut- ! February 8, 1820, William Mrs. Thomas M. Content of New way contrived to injure me profes and Thomas Butler to write the termost. A careful check showed | -pg^umseh Sherman, one of the York enterta.ined with a small sionally or otherwise I harbor no Ma: what’s the matter, dear— Plumbing— Heating family name boldly across New that but 85 men remained m the , generals of the Civil War, wa.s dance in the Castillian ball room of malice. To the contrary I now real foundland’s contributory page of sick? Office and Showroom, 57 Bissell St. original 500 m^n sent to France ; gj- Lancaster, O. the ambassador hotel Tuesday eve ize that I owe them a huge debt for Pa (waving telegram): Just a historic World W ar service and j ggj.'jy 1914. They were deserving Upon the death of his father, who ning for their daughter, Anne. strange as it may seem it has been slight touch of/the son.— Answers. sacrifice, one to serve his supreme | ^ furlough home to Newfound- i me Lo I was a judge of the supreme court to no small degree the very honesty moment on Flanders fields under land,------so the W ar Office r decided, -.n-io +v,„.oiOf and , Ohio,nviin ShermanRhprmpm was adoptedarlnnted byhv Glenna Collett, famous golf play of their intentions which has cre Canada’s colors and the local vet in the early summer 'Thomas Ewing, who became a U. S. er who has arrived for a short visit ated within me the added determina eran to have given more of service 85 veterans went aboard the Whi e i gg^jgtor and member of the national was seen at the bath and tennis than is required in generations. tion to throw off the mantel of rust Star liner, Olympic at Southhamp- ; ^g^^j^gt Later, Sherman married club with Morris Wood, Philadelphia which has enveloped me and dig ton, enroute home for a 30 days daughter, and Mrs. Mary Labaw, of the Ever myself from the rut of general prac NO DEMONSTR.ATION'S furlough. j Sherman began his military ca- glades club. tice into which most of us sooner DLTIING THE W.\R DAYS j .Arriring at New /^ojk the ’'’f^ter- | ^y-gst point at the age of 16. or later seem destined to fall. In ans boarded the train for home -well Qj-aduating near the head of his consequence I now find myself all ■O ■war propaganda was in evi I satisfied with the respite f^orn e , ^jgg^^ gj,g(. gg^^ service in Florida I the more anxious and all the more dence in the little shore town seeminglyly never-to-end combatcombat. on ^ g^gj^^g^ Seminoles. determined to realize myself gradu- of northern Newfoundland- COLUMBIA I N' his arrival in his home ^ resigned from the army in ated from the ranks of the General Griguct—during the early days of I Griguet, the veteran learaed j jke banking business, Practitioner, and all the more eager 1014. No stirring parades or con enlistment of his older but when volunteers were called at The Young Married VYomen’s club and anxious and all the more dater- siderable amount of enthusiasm of his death by shellfire on the west- 1 outbreak of the Civil -War, he met Tuesday afternoon at the home mined to take advantage of the big- came as a result of the deplorable ern front. homed the Union forces. of Mrs. Fred Tatro. <^er and better opportunities which situation across the seas. Still the Then came days of rest a d - Appointed a colonel, Sherman Twenty-eight members of Colum the practice ■ of Medicine and Sur quiet, unassuming sons of the north- cuperation sorely , X . ! soon lost his command by making bia Grange motored to Gilead Tues land saw their country’s need and gery can and does afford. war-aged veteran. T e g t | ^.j^g^. .^.gg considered a rash sug- day evening to visit Hebron Grange I want to especially thank the immediately offered their services. ing air of the northland was stimu- ; ^gr the Kentucky campaign, and furnish two numbers of the pro Major Football Team for the very A t the time of Alfred Butler’s en lating to the weakened soldier and j regained his prestige and gram. Two short sketches were wonderful farewell dinner tendered listment on September 8, 1914 he e I j.ggjg courageous and successful given by a group of the younger lo was number 460 in his regiment. me on February 6, and I want to month s furloug . encounters with the Confederates. cal members. The other visiting His outfit was called the “Blue Put assure them that I will upon my re : Assembling his three armies near Granges were Andover and Colches tees’’ because of the peculiar shade turn bend every effort to return the AFTER END OF WAR Chattanooga, Sherman began his ter, who also furnished part of the of the regimental leggins. After countless number of compliments HE COMES TO U. S. famous invasion of Georgia. After program. Refreshments were served several months of training at vari I and favors with which I have by capturing Atlanta he made his cele by Hebron Grange. them been honored. take with me ous camps in Scotland and a two LFRED Butler was discharged i I brated “March to the Sea’’ from This has been a busy week for lo every pleasant recollection of the It's week's intensive training period at from active service Sept. 14, that city to Savannah, thus sever-- cal Grangers, as Wednesday, Colum times we have spent together and I Aldershot, he joined the ill-fated w'hen it was apparent that ing the Confederate govemmept bia Grange w'as host to East Central leave them my sincerest wish for Gallipoli campaign at the Dar- the end of the four year conflict dcnelles. The Newfoundland segi- from its western states. Pomona Grange. The business ses health and happiness and every suc was at hand. It was the end of the j ■When Grant became president, ment relieved the Scottish Rifles— sion opened in the 5th degree at 6 cess in the years to come. Seden. $1795 (Sc>ecUl E o is n t E a t r O former good health enjoyed by the Sherman was promoted to a full CHRYSLER- New Chrysler ’77" Crown \vhat was left of them— 40 men out o’clock, with a recess for supper, | DR. A. B. MORAN. Newfoundland veteran. The brae- I generalship. of 1000 that had gone into action served by the Columbia Grange to ing air of the homeland brought j about 200. Following supper a class six w'eeks previously. Butler was back in a measure some of the | of 32 were initiated in the 5th de mercifully, spared one horror for vitality sapped by four years of bit- | always Chrysler-fox PERFORMANCE! gree, 16 of them being members of BLAST KILLS THREE another— the ravages of a semi- ter fighting, as he roamed the fields j the local Grange, as follows: Donald tropical disease— enteric or typhoid of his uncle’s farm, during the short 1 Woodward, Frederick Hunt, Carle- fever and as effective in its destruc- northern summer. { Never before have you known ton Hutchins, Miss Margaret Hutch There are all kinds of cars at all ■ tion of the hardy Newfoundlander’s Comes To .JVIanchester | Pottsville, Pa., Feb. 8.— (AP) ins, Miss Harie Field, Miss Gladys kinds of prices — but no other such performance — such brisk tissues as any number of battles. Alfred Butler arrived in Manches- ; Three miners are dead today, vic Rice, Miss Gladys Lowman, Mrs. aliveness of pick-up — such The British hospital at Alexan ter in 1925 and obtained employ tims of an explosion, said to have car can give you performance Elsie Dubois, Miss Laura Greene, dria, Egypt received and cared for ment in Hartford in the Underwood i been caused by the ignition of a comparable to the brilliant speed with silky smoothness— Miss Lucie Greene, Mrs. Ruth Segar, him until Christmas, 1915. and after Typewriter factory, later trans pocket of gas, at the mines of the such ease, quickness and non- "The world has become astonish Mrs. Ida Newberry, Miss Bessie speed and pick-up of a new threspeedy termination of White. cents.”— Tit-Bits. ‘ vengeance for his rebellion. on the New York Stock Exchange, PAGE EIGHT MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER.' CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. Plans Shown Here Drawn By Well Known Architects netmaker’s art—a type of furniture I ing note of color into the room. more suited to the country house. I Additional color is found in the Six Billions Spent In Building ! ORIGINAL DESIGN The bourgeoisie, the trades people old fabrics used for upholstering. A STUDIO COTTAGE of small French towns who gradu I The Herin II armchair, covered in Construction Industry In 1929 OF OLD HOUSES ally became prosperous and who j Aubusson tapestry, is a fine example upon occasion had access to these j of provincial cabinetmaking. The fine houses, endeavored to copy the • other armchair in the foreground of taste and fashion of their social su j The American architect of today SHOUJ^BEKEPT j the picture is of the more rustic By J. MOXROE HEWLETT periors. That is why we find that i type. Derived from the Louis Quinze has fallen heir to a great heritage. ^ r . •country furniture, although simpler When we speak of modern archi To the student of our history the j style this chair originally was rush- and made from native woods, au i seated, with curved slat back. Now, tecture we visualize a great com names of Richardson, Hunt, McKim, thentically follows the line and style pany through \yhose agency rnodern Best Effect Achieved When I more comfortable and certainly Burnham, Bacon, Goodhue, Medary, of the more sophisticated Parisian architecture has coir.n into being — I more decorative, it is upholstered in i and many others who are no longer pieces. The same thing holds true Architects^ engineers, builders, ' with us, will stand as symbols of j old quilted material of brilliant yel- Interior Blends With Ar of the rustic furniture of the peas ; low. The Louis XIII, armchair of manufacturers of all the materials an enduring influence in our civili ants. and appliances which enter into zation. j walnut is covered in green bourrette, James H. Bailey's nouse in New modern construction and, in addi Today, more than ever before in j an old material made from short —- r' chitecture, Says Decora Canaan, Conn., is derived from the ends of silk and linen. tion to this, a great army of crafts our history, the influence of the men and artisians through whose architectural profession is helping rural architecture of France. The ( The cabinet near the entrance to united efforts the expendiutre of to mold policies and undertakings tor. fundamental idea in developing the 1 the room, almost Italian in feeling, $6,000,000,000 has been made possi of government itself as well as all interior of this house has been to is a French behut of both charm ble in the building industries of this the widespread activities and enter maintain a simple background. The ; and dignity. The little porcelain country throughout the last year. prises which make our country windows of the li^ving room pictured I figure on this piece is one of the By HELEN P.VSC.AL Each of the elements of this great great. have been curtained with old white I saints such as we see on a shelf or homespun, mellowed by age, so that I a niche over almost every bed in industry has its appropriate and Our leading architects must be In recent years many Americans essential function, but the respon they melt into the walls rather than ; France. not merely great practitioners of sibility that rests on the shoulders have bought houses in France. When become an important note of color. their craft, but leaders of men cap I An interesting feature in the of the architect is the most com remodeling them, making them liv The rods and fixtures are squared able of co-ordinating and control : master’s bedroom is a four-post prehensive responsibility of all He able, certainly the unforgivable sin wrought iron, in keeping with the ling all of the agencies and organi : Brittany bed. It is made of walnut, is essentially the guardian of a tra I =is to interfere in any way with the old oak timbers in the room. The zations which have a part in the I following the line of Louis XV peri- dition which has existed in unbroken ©R..C.WOMTEIQ.; >JXhifec+. /vuw^ork. original architecture of the house. furniture has been cho.sen from the building industries. [ i od, and has its original valance of sequence for 5,000 years. \ h < . The art of decoration is the harmo earlier periods because these are . green serge with an applicated de- Our estimate of the civilizations The American Institute of Archi- i nious blending of the architecture— more masculine in feeling than the I sign of yellow taffeta, tects is collaborating with such which have preceded us is based I of the structural proportions of a later styles. The texture of the j These pieces mentioned are sup- largely on the quality of the archi organizations-as the American Con- , building—with the interior ensem walls is so beautiful that one hesi struction Council, the American En- | ; plemented by other minor pieces of tecture which they produced, and, ble, from the most important piece tates to “decorate” them. A few j furniture, all in keeping with the MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. PAGE NINE You May These Plans Very Reasonably Milne Granite Company, George BIG GRANITE MERGER Straiton, Inc., Grearson and Lane ADD PUDY VALLEE j WAPPING Company, Canton Brothers of Overnight Barre, the Eureka Granite Com A French Cottage Ideal For Corner Lot 1 The an n ual meeting of the Fed- pany, the Lawrence Granite Com TO WTIC PROGRAM i erated Sunday School Board was | Barre, Vt., Feb. 8.— (AP.)—Gran pany of Montpelier and Phillips and 1 held Thursday evening at the church ! ite realty valued a t more than $6,- Slack, Inc., which includes the W. A. P. News with sixteen members present. The 000,000 has been involved in the A. Chase Granite Company of -I! report of the secretary, Albert E. merger of the Rock of Ages Cor Northfield and the Perry Granite The “It” Boy from Brooklyn to; Stiles .showed th at the Sunday Corporation of Waterbury. Richard Present His Croonings on Torrington — Joseph Nellar, poration, largest owner of granite W. Smith of Edwards and Smith of school has had a very prosperous quarries in the world, with 10 other Station’s 5th Birthday. Litchfield widow'er kills self and year. These officers were elected: New York was the leading figure in Mrs. Rose Yanco, local widow. concerns. the merger. the superintendent (chosen by the ; With the completion of the deal j Rudy Valee and his Connecticut j Stamford—Edward Hubn'er, Ell church) is Mrs. Josephine G. Fos ' yesterday, it was announced that The Rock of Ages Company quar Yankees have been added to the ! ington, held after car he drives ter; assistant superintendent, Ward ries one-third of all the granite j directors and officers of the new produced in Barre, one of the cen bevy of headliners who will be heard ■ crashes into tree, send him and E. Stiles; secretary and treasurer, corporation would be named within' in the all-night fifth anniversary ; David Mullins, South Manchester, Albert E. Stiles; assistant secretary, a few days. The new organization ; ters of the industry in the world. celebration of Station WTIC of , to hospital. Homer Lane, Jr.; home department I will operate under the Rock of Ages ' Hartford, Conn., Monday night. New' Haven—Bronze bust of late superintendent, Mrs. Anne V. Col j Corporation with administrative 1 The cat is one of the few do Rudy’s part in the festivities is Col. Isaac Ullman given New Haven lins; cradle roll superintendent, Mrs. I and operating headquarters in this j mestic animals that cannot be scheduled to star at 12:30 o’clock hospital on exhibit at Fitkin Pavi Hattie D. La»e; pianist, Walden V. I city. ; trained to come w'hen called. We Tuesday morning. February 11, and lion. r : ^ Cellins; primary superintendent, i The other companies involved arc i have noticed the same thing about will be transmitted c-xclusively to W esterly, R. I. - - Enreo Riccio Mrs. Lois S. Colhns; beginners’ cu- j Barclay Brothers, the William 1father when there are dishes in the Hartford station direct from the ; bound over to Grand Jury in slaying perintendent, Mrs. Lillian E. Grant; : the sink. Villa Vallee in New York City. The - of Atwood gardner, negro here Jan. missionary committee, Mrs. Harry i ------program by Vallee and his Connecti 14. Miner, Miss Kate M. Withrel and cut Yankees will continue for a naif Brirlgeport- Jamc.=: J. O’Connell S G i Mrs. Lois S. Collins. hour. r ailroad policeman and I* rcderick The next monthly Sunday School It has also been announced by the Palmer, train caller, will sock re social will be held Friday evening, Hartford station that the National ward offered for finding Max Price. Feb. 28. The committee for the Broadcasting Company will tran.smit ' Hartford •— Final pica to save games is Miss Lillian E. Burger, to WTIC exclusively a half-hotu-s _ Frank DiBattista from gallow's for ; Walden V. Collins and Miss Harriet program by Clarence White .and his murder of grocer, to be mada before j L. Sharp, committee for refresh well-known Negro jazz band. doe Board of Pardons next Friday. ments, Mrs. Johnson and her Sun- Green, colore 1 star of the Broadway Wallingford —John WoUschlagcr j day school class. success, ‘‘Hot Chocolates.” and tlva killed by train at crossing. i Louis L. Grant, son of Mr. and Taylor, famous radio crooner, will Waterbury — President Goss de I Mrs. Chester Grant of this place is also be in the special program from I picts prosperous year as head for i quite ill with grip at his home in New York City. | Scqville Mfg- Co. ' Buckland. Hartford—Irene Muller, Hartford, I Harry P. Files of Boston spent a heads state graduate nurses. few days with his family here this h u n t e r v s . l e l ig s o n Hartford—Drain on funds makes week. curtailment of some types of^state Miss Faith Galinat, daughter of New York, Feb. 8.—(AP)—Two | veterans relief necessary, C. C. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Galinat, who players of different tennis genera- j Scarborough reveals. formerly lived on^Felt Road, Wap- tions but remarkably similar styles ; W’ashington—Chairman Hale of Liv in g -' ping, is critically ill with pneumonia on the court prepared today to fight i Senate naval committee attacks KIT at Manchester Memorial hospital. it out for the national indoor singles Stimson proposal regarding cruisers The Christian Ehideavor society The Manchester Sand & Gravel Co. championship. Frank Hunter, 35 : in plans for parity with Great Brit will hold its meeting Sunday eve year old New. Rocl^elle newspaper ; ain. ning at 6;30 at th' church. At 7;30 W. J. THORNTON, Prop. publisher and Julius Seligson, Le- , there will be a lecture by Rev. Elmer high University senior, were to ■ Washington—Taft makes further CELLAR EXCAVATING imnrovement. T. Thienes of Marlborough, county SCREENED SAND AND GRAVEL meet in what promised to be a bat Sfe-o" secretary of the Y. M. C. A., which tle of baseline drives. i Washington—W. Cameron Forbes, BRICK, LOAM, CINDERS and TRUCKING . former governor general of Philip j will be illustrated by moving pic- Hunter was the favorite having ; ' tures. beaten Seligso i in all four of their ! pines, napied head of commission to A corner lot is the most desirable give easy access to all rooms on tcrior. Gray or red shingle tile Is QUALITY and SERVICE ! study U. S. withdraw'al from Haiti. recommended for the roof. Box Plant: Charter Oak Street. I House: 608 Woodbridge Street, previous meetings but the Lehigh | location for this picturesque French both the first and second floor. The More than a million dollars a player demonstrated in his semi- : San Diego-Slight earthquake cottage type home. kitchen amd dining alcove combina- bushes on both sides of the en- Tcl. 7387. Tel. 6983. tion also are ventilated from three ’ trance are additional spots of color, week is said to be spent in the final round victory over Gilbert j sways city. If built on an inside lot, sufficient are ventilated from three United States for chewing gum. Hall yesterday 6-4, 7-5, 6-2, th at he j Washington — Committee ap space should be allowed for a small sides. I A wall of the same color as the is in the best form of his career. | pointed to study whether Heflin rose garden outside the living room Built-in conveniences are provided: house walls around the garden Hunter won from Perrine Rocka- | violated rules. window, and a suitable setting is in kitchen and alcove, and ample I would add to the attractiveness, fellow. ex-Colgate University star i / Las Vegas, Nev.—Leonard Kip essential to the full beauty and closets included on both floors. The Estimates of construction cost in 6-2, 6-1, 7-5. The finalists for the i Rhinelander threatens to stop wdfe's charm of the design. ' rear entry is another excellent fea- communities of medium size aver- doubles title won last year by Til- i allowance unless she drops suit All bedrooms have cross ventilla- I ture. I age about $8,000, and lower in the II|IUH:W JI1JHI« den and Hunter were Dick Murphy, i against hirn in New York. tion and the living room and mas Buff or white stucco with smaller cities, depending upon; The Modern Utica, N. Y., and H arris Cogge- ' Washington—Hoovers entertain ter bedroom are exposed on three door and blinds in green is choice and grades of materials and j shall, Des Moines, Iowa, vs Rocka- . Sir Esme Howard and Lady Isabe.Ua sides. Halls of spacious proportions pleasing color scheme for the ex- prevailing wage scales. i fellow and Merritt Cutler, New , Howard at last state dinner before Housewife York. i retirement. has sustained a deficit of $313,495 wards of N. Y. U. and Eddie Roll, Paris—Tardieu ministry wins 315 since reorganization a year ago, ap BIG TRACK MEET former Colgate runner now compet ^ou need., YALE VS. DARTMOUTH to 257 on vote of confidence. points committee of seven to confer ing for the Newark A. C. Ver-Sur-Mer, France—Fisherman with directors. Ray Conger, Illinois A. C. middle Demands New' York, Feb. 8.— (A P)—Two j says he found instruments lost from New York, Feb. 8.— (AP)—Cana distance flash will run against Joe battles in the eastern intercollegiate j Byrd’s airplane. da, Poland and Switzerland will Sivak of Butler University, Orval send athletes into action against U. Martin of Purdue and J. L. Mont basketball league tonight will find ' Rostov, U. S. S. R.—Ten Kulaks TOO MUCH WAR 9 Penn trying to regain undisputed; sentenced to death for banditry and S. rivals at the annual Millrose A. gomery of Penn in the Rodman More Outlets possession of first place and Yale plotting two train wrecks. A. games in Madison Square Gar Wanamaker mile. The high jump Magistrate: You ought to be i den tonight. In the sprints Canada has drawn a crack field and in the doing its best to vacate the cellar : New York—Robert E. Walsh, son ashamed of your self, deserting! position. of “Big Ed” signed by Yankees. sends Johnny Fitzpatrick and Leigh pole vault, Fred Sturdy former Yale your wife like this. | Miller to compete with Jack Elder vaulter now with the Los Angeles you need it/ Of the two Penn’s task appears Houston, Tex.—Craig Wood and Defendant: If you knew my wife, for Electrical slightly the easier. The Quakers : ! of Notre Dame and Cy Leland, A. C., will attempt to set a new Joe Greenwood tie with W. H. Cox your worship, you wouldn’t call me Texas Christian football stars, and world’s record. He already has done travel to Ithaca for a battle with and A. K. Newby for first place in a deserter. I’m a refugee.—Somer A service h e re ' for Cornell which already has lost tw'o Chet Bowman, Newark, A. C.; Jim 14 feet. Convenience pro-amateur golf. set County, England, Gazette. my Daley, Holy Cross and Howard About fifty college teams are en the builder or re of its three league games. Penn on ^ Ottawa—Lloyd Guenther of De its home floor nosed out Yale and ' Kriss, Cleveland A. C. tered in the mile relay races. builder that strikes troit wins Canadian Senior 220-yard Stanislaus Petkiwicz of Poland overwhelmed Dartmouth and will 1 skating title. a new note of pop be a heavy favorite to beat Cornell. SIX MONTHS FRESHER will be seen in the two mile miss Malden, Alass.—Mrs. Eileen Tre- and out race and Dr. Paul Martin BRUTAL ular acclaim. For Yale goes to Hanover for a game ‘ fry, 29, and four year old daughter with Dartmouth with the odds all i W aiter: Y sir—those are the of Switzerland, in a half mile run. it’s speedy, prompt brutally attacked and critically very best eg we have had for a Four great runners will match Pretty Sister (anxiously): What ness you’ve never in favor of the defending Indians. : wounded by man armed with flat /J Yale has dropped three' games out year. strides in the Millrose six hundred, did he say about my voice? before enjoyed — iron; police seek her husband. Diner: Oh! Well, bring me Pete Bowen of Pittsburgh, national Young Brother: He muttered of four while Dartmouth lost to Springfield, Mass.—Congressman efficiency that re Penn, beat out Princeton and lost that you’ve had only about quarter mile champion; Bernie Mc- something that sounded like “a a one point match to Columbia Allen T. Treadway of Stockbridge months.—Hummel, Hamburg. Cafferty, Holy Cross star; Phil Ed night in a gale.’’.—Tit-Bits. moves every con says he believes personnel of Na struction difficulty. which shares the league lead with tional House of Representatives far Penn: s.uperior to that of Senate. •/ Bangor, Me.—Former Mayor John THE JONESES WON. Wilson formally announces candi dacy in June primaries for Republi End the inconvenience of insuffi- Better lumber and building materials London.—The Joneses had every-' can nomination for governor. I cient plug-ins. You can have a thing their own way in a recent Boston — Federal officers seek j separate outlet wherever you need throughout, too—sturdy and tough to football match here between Bangor , former police officer Oliver Garrett j it—for the vacuum cleaner, electric Reserves and Colwyn Bay Reserves. to subpoena him to appear before , iron, toaster, or any of your house- make your home liandsome and comfort Nine players on the two teams were Federal Grand Jury. I hold aids. A wonderful ease and named Jones. And if that wasn't Hanover, N. H.—Dartmouth's I comfort in our wiring service that able .... permanently. enough to decide in favor of the 20th annual winter carnival con I modern women in modern home.s de- wellknown Joneses, the referee was tinues with intercollegiate competi i mand. Let us tell you more about also named Jones. tion in winter sports and swimming, ' it. presentation of student musical re ILI-EGALLY WED. vue and fancy dress ball. Boston—James J. O’Neil given 12 London.—Due to a recent decision to 16 year sentence and Thomas J. of justice Hill in Divorce Court, Gallant of Brookline and Edward The W. G. Glenney Co. hundreds of Russian couples in Lon Livesey of Providence, R. I., sen Johnson Electric Co. don are now regarded, for all legal , tenced to nine to 12 years each in !9 Clinton St. Tel. 4314 Coal, Lumber and Masons’ Supplies, purposes, as not being husband and s'eate prison on being found guilty wife. Hill rules that the union of i of attacks and holdups. Allen Place, Phone 4149, Manchester man and woman called “marriage" j Saco, Me.—Stockholders of York under the Russian Soviet code is not. Manufacturing ^Company, which marriage according to English law. * - ~ 'i -Jt = % Lincoln Had The Gift Of Vision AT THE SOURCE OF A It is said that those who knew Araham Lin coln, realized that he had the gift of vision. He NATION’S STRENGTH could look far into the future, see the reason of The skyscraper metropolis, as well as the merest village, J. HUBLARD is nourished by its gas reservoirs. The giant industrial things—and apply a practical solution. plant and the tiny cottage are equally dependent on gas. 'Vi General Concrete Contractor This ideal fuel, Tvhether natural or manufactured, sup 5% Interest Paid, 318 Middle Turnpike, Manchester, Green, Phone 6987 plies the heat and power that keep the wheels turning. The Gas Company, therefore, has an immense responsi Compounded Quarterly DRILLING, BLASTING, WRECKING bility to the public. We trust that our record of service reveals the extent to which we feel our resposibility. AND ALL KINDS OF WORK REQUIRING PNEUMATIC TOOLS The Savings BankofManchester We have a Sullivan Compressor mounted on a speedy truck that can be moved quickly from job to job. SOUTH MANCHESTER,CONN. No job too large or too small. THE MANCHESTER GAS CO. yiniiijyy established 1906 tiiiiiiiiii ■c' PAGE TEiN MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANC6 ESTBR. CONN^ SATURDAY, FEBRUAEY 8, 1930. YO U TH FEE a p r o n W IT H [ KILTED PLAITS TIES AT BACK | ^ I NY L W Panel Frpnt Slenderizes the Figure Ratyh. Uorc^^ativce OtPEOPft^Sd OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON © 1 9 3 0 J9f © 1950 ev NEA Sievia; iwc. NEA Service Inc. LOU BROOKMAN Don’t let children know that theyAings and scoldings don’t rdake for are being trained, that they are ob conceit. Not in the wray we tlUnk, jects of experiment. I sisted on going to work in spite of but her face showed clearly the perhaps, but it is a well-known b e g i n h e r e t o d a y strain of the afternoon. One of the greatest mistakes fact that a child starved' for attta- I it and came home exhausted. that we parents can make is to let Judith Cameron, typist in a New I “H— m mm !” said Dr. Shephard Her hands were clasped together In the uneven contest between tion will persistently. do things the children in on the fact that that have only such revyards' as York pubUshing house, marries again. nervously. Part of the time she youth and maturity, the weight Arthur Knight, her employer. stared straight ahead, yet seemed of opinion has been so prejudiced we’re trying to do certain things these for his trouble— just to at Stethoscope in hand, he drew a to them. Knight is a widower with a daugh to see nothing. She listened but in favor of the charm of the twen tract attention to himself. chair forward and sat down. It doesn’t matter much whether ter, Tony, 18, and a son. Junior, 16. there was no sound that broke the ties that it has, it anything, over The children are the most im “Well now, let’s just see about we’re using the old-fashioned meth The girl ignores her stepinother. ; cheerfully and reach- stillness. played the bleakness of the 40’s. portant things in the house. The od of ciiring by smacking, shaking hiter she tells Judith she must lea'C Arthur Knight’s WTist. Five o’clock. This was the hour And many an intelligent woman universe does swing about them. and scolding, or the new-fashioned to which Judith looked forward has said: “After all, nothing real They are the whole world of the the house. Knight overhears ana “W hat’ve you been up to way of prevention— it is wrong to each day because its arrival meant ly counts but youth— there’s noth future. What they will be, it wiH compels Tony to apologize. Ivnight?’’ let them get the impression that The girl spends much of her time Arthur would be home soon. Five ing ahead for you, once you have be. But to let them think so, to had opened his they are material for our workman- with Mickev Mortimer, blase amuse- ^ doctor entered the ^o’clock but no Arthur would arrive sprouted a wrinkle.” make them over-conscious of their ship. In a way they are, but they i own importance, and to turn their inent seeker, whom she met in Fans. respond to the i this evening. How feverish and un- need not know it. eyes constantly on their own ego, AN ARITST SPEAKS He is separated from his .greeting but his smile was feeble. | natural he had looked lying there Of course, we don't want to rub ■ is weakening the raw material we An artist, and a very good one, deep in a flirtation with Tons^ N out that feeling of human rela- have to work on even before we Abel C. Warshawsky, formerly da vs pass a ‘state...... of bit her lip.-It ' would bot tionship— of belonging. That gives begin, tv exists benveer. Tony and J u jt^ - the pulse be . i emotion at this from Cleveland, Ohio, who has “H— m m m :’’he said again w’hen | them a feeling of pride and securi- . ■ \ndv Craig, a young man spent a large portion of the last ty in the home. We want them to Leave Influence Lnseen he had finished and tucked the hand i vvas so much harder to pass had helped through ^allege, calls ^ decade painting in France regards feel that we are acutely interested [ And so we should try to keep back under the covers. “Now we 11 j.j^g jong hours down here alone Tonv. He has been in love with her women pictorially as well as intel in them and that what thej" do mat- I them as unconscious of our influ- rather hopelessly—for a long while, just have a look at that throat— " than if she could have remained up lectually, and here is what he has ~ MO ters more to us than almost a n y -! ence as possible. We should try Craig comes to the house frequentlj ^ q;.j^g examination continued 20 stairs in Arthur’s room. But that, to say: ul thing else in the world. As a m at-i to give them the idea that every- and Tonv. in a mood of spite, tries ^ j^^Qutes longer. Judith was at the she knew, w’ould displease Miss Aow CPUDEj “The real height of feminine ter of fact, that feeling is the very j thing they do comes from within to convince her father the young ; doctor's elbow% watching each move- _ Mallory. Judith must manage some- h W0l?i<- beauty comes only with maturity. foundation of training. But that is i themselves, and as a matter of fact man is carrying on an affair " ‘‘tn ment, noting her husband’s expres- how to live through these weary A beautiful woman is never more different from bossism, whether | it should. There is too much talk Judith. M'he'n Knight denies this gion, dispatching Mrs. Wheeler on ' hours of waiting, A lovely than when she reaches 35 that bossism is kindly or otherwise. I nowadays before children of influ- angrily Tony tricks Judith and .\ndy ; errands and waiting anxiously for Mrs. Wheeler came to inquire or 40. Sometimes the full glamor Conceit Easily Fed j ence and training and all that. Let Crai”’"into a luncheon engagement ^j^g verdict. about dinner plans and Judith told of her charms comes ' even later. Children get a wrong impression ; the influence be there always, but They have the poise to set off their and brings her father upon the rpjjgj,g none forthcoming. ; her to have the meal served for of their status in the home, in the | as an unseen guest. It is a very native loveliness. They. aj:e sure scene. ______“Now, Mrs. Knight,’’ said Dr. i Tony and the nurse. She did not feel world, in society in general, when ^ good idea when talking to chil- of themselves so they can regard Knight tries to over^me^his^su^^^^ , j^g “,gg’g ^egan i hungry herself she said, and doy after day this matter of train-! dren, even little ones, not to say, life and the changing world with ,j'cions. ( raig calls t „rri\ al ' packing away his instruments, stay wittith Mr. Knight while ing is made paramount to all ' “I think it best,” or “Father thinks serenity." M hen Knight announces “ we’re Agoing to keep your husband i the others ate.;. Later, perhaps, she other affairs in the ho'use. Who ^ it best,” but “Don't you think it One thing is certain: a woman Tony refuses to see the joung rnan last and ^ggtea. can blame them if they absorb the ' best?” or “What do j"cu think is much more responsible to her At six o'clock Harriet called the idea that they are the most import- i would be the right thing to do?” hut makes her jj-ip ; \\“eTe going to watch that throat, *'^t six o clock Harriet .... self for what she is at 40 than father. Knight pronuses 'Tonj a trip ^ ^ ^ ^ prescription to : ^urse and Tony to the dmmgning room.1 ant things in it and tha tthe uni-1 i know it sounds like skimmed stay she is at 20. to Miami, tr^P ^ hhed. Now in order that he can , Judith went upstairs to stay with A t 20, a girl is pretty much a verse circles around them? Our i niilk, but if the habit of obedience ^one there. Prejarations the tr f ^ ivp «-ant her husband, conceit is easily fed even at one ^ is established in the first year, as product* of her environment. If 3 7 7 begin immediately. Judith and He was restles.s, tossed about the she has been intelligently reared, 3'ear of age. And it converts a ll, it should be. it is amazing how this ' rthur quarrel over a dinner en bed and twice mumbled phrases manner of things into nourish- j idea of freedom under certain re- nurse. wisely taught, has learned easy gageraent and Tony makes the most, which Judith could not understand. manners from good social advan ment for its own growth. . strictions, works out. Children When the nurse returned she too I suppose it will be remarked | know the limit, just as we know, of the ®it“ ution. Next n^^^ , paused. Judith's eyes sought tages, and been taught how to noted the patient's unrest. that training consisting of sm ack-1 and accept, the walls of our houses. Arthur is ill but goes . doctor’s appealingly but she , dress and to make the most of her An hour later Dr. Robert Shep looks, she is bound to be attrac By .ANNETTE NOW GO ON \MTH THE STORY did not interrupt. hard, reading comfortably by his tive. A most attractive apron that kilts ^0^^ • v :x x “The nurse should be here by five study fireside, laid down the volume But at 20, many girls have been its skirt at either side'to flqre the dency to constriction of the arteries Her crs’ ^taokc as r i lorrvard: : o'clock. Shell b a « her ^in his hand to answer the tele- and small blood vessels within the . :n f. land know just what I want her to ; „^^QQg_ badly brought up, badly spoiled, hem, which makes it appear rather under educated and not polished, like a morning frock, is illustrated bodi', with dilatation of the capillary Knie-ht^had closed the door be-j do. I think if you keep Mr. Knight ‘'Doctor:” a woman's voice came Daily Health blood vessels near the surface. Ap and are as a result quite ill adapt in Style No. 377. nind Mm and stood leaning against i qujet until she arrives every i ^ ^ver the wire "Come quick— Mr. ed to life. The next 10 or 20 It is snugly .fitted through the parently lying in the hot bath tends Tt heavU- His figure slumped and will be all right.’ ; ,,.g ,3g,.. Service ' years, in which they develop ac waist b y tie strings at back that to diminish the output of the heart be -azed“ at Judith with dull eyes He continued with minor instruc- . per beat. When the person ccx>ls 2 (To Be Continued) cording to their own intelligence hold it firmly to the figure, tied in I Hints On Hnw 'I'o Keep Well down after having had a hot bath, vhich told the storv. : tions which Judith and Mrs. Wheel- \ and their own standards, may bow at center-back. ' “ All in " he mumbled. The man's , er both listened to carefully. Then, i ill ()>' World E'ained .Anltinrity there is usually a prompt return to Y wa9 o .k^ change them completely. Some will The neckline is unusual in square voice was wheezy and unnatural, taking bis hat and the leather all of the normal conditions. be women of charm at 40 because outline at front with rounded collar -If' BL^UT" More and more scientific physi •'Feelin°-— rotten;" medicine case, he bade them good they will have learned from their effect at back. He began pulling at his overcoat, j day, promising to make another HlC Wih'Rt triumphs and their defeats, tested W.ARM B.\TH PRODUCES cians are beginning to pay atten It uses a blocked gingham in trying to rid himself of it. The task . visit in the morning, SISTER 'M 1-f f their capabilities, and will really be . DEFINITE CHANGES LN tion to the physical factors asso lovely orchid coloring with purple seemed to tax his strength. Judith ^ Judith walked down stairs with themselves. BODY FUNCTIONS ciated with the treatment of dis binding. reached for the coat, held it as ne - Shephard. When they had ' ease. Light, heat, water, the out It is designed in small, medium By DR. .MORRIS FISHBEIN door air, and all of the surround withdrew his arms. ; reached the lower floor she said en- i WHEN BRAINS COUNT NARY'S and large sizes. Editor Journal of the .American ings of man can be used to ad Mrs. W heeler!" she spoke sharp- ; ^reatingly; j m ' I Since maturity and age are in •Get a doc- It is an excellent type to slip on Medical .Association and of Hygeia, vantage to control his functions. Iv to the housekeeper "Doctor, you’re NOT keeping ' evitable, and all the skill and sci Cnea I over your “best” frock after return The Health Magazine tor—hurry!" an 'thing from me?” ence of the ages cannot stay the had 3 ing from an afternoon bridge game, Since the time when man first “Yes, m.a’am !” The woman The man denied this hastilJ^ KITCHEN calendar, there is no particular use I as it is loose and will not crush any discovered fire and began to use it SHOE C.ARE. been watching anxiously frorn the “Oh, no, no, no, my dear ladvC _ ! in1 struggling so violently against | part of the frock. to modify his existence, it has been doorway. “I'll telephone Dr. Step- ; gf the sort. Throat cases the years. Bv SISTER MARY. I Printed pique in red and white recognized that the hot bath has No leather shoes should be worn hard,” she said, and disappeared in- ■as \'ou probably know" always need In these days, there is no rea- j with red binding is smart. certain definite effects on the human without being dressed proper'y to the living room watching. They need watching WTIC PROGRAMS son why anyone should be out of | Yellow and white dotted Cotton “Don't you think you're better go Persons who like sauerkraut body. Throughout the world, hot with cream beforehand. This pro closelj'! Now when we get a nurse I i Travelers Broadcasting Service the running so long as she keeps : broadcloth with plain yellow trim is right upstairs?” Judith said to Ar must be- delighted to Know of springs are used for medical treat tects that pristine beauty and saves here who understands what to do her human sympathies and mental | equally smart. thur. “You look so tired. ’ the excellent reputation researcu Hartford, Conn. ment and with a clear understand them from discoloration and scuf for you husband I think we’re go alertness, and takes reasonable j Chintz, flowered dimity, striped workers have given it during t,ho 50.00U \V., 1030 R. C., ‘282.8 M. ing of Che fact that they do modify fing. He nodded. ing to find that we’ve checked this care of her appearance. The worn- ! radium silk, cotton pongee in pastel “Want to get to bed," he agreed. thing just in time. Mustn't worry * past few j’ears. Mineral salts aud an who doesn’t get the most of her | the pnysiologic functions. shade and Rayon cotton crepe suit With a view to finding how hot ■'Y'ant to get— wa'-'m.” ' now! Remember j'ou mustn’t get ' are supplied in abuni 40's, 50’s and 60’s, even, has only -1 able for this youthful model. One of these days Senator She took his arm to help him ' Saturday, February 8 baths affect the normal human excited! And j'ou'll hear from me | a-nce and this places this cabbage | herself to blame. Brookhart or Senator Borah is go mount the flig showed . I Eastern Standard Time being. Dr. Geoffrey Holmes of Eng again in the morning. Good after- ' product in an enviable position ing; to discover a saloon. piainlv he considered this an indig- j I 1:00 p.m.—Hartford Courant and Manchester Herald land made some observations on noon!” I among foods. SOUVENIR SPOONS. three normal people who were given , nitv. Judith stepped back and Ar- He opened the door, stepped out ' Sauerkrut cocktails arc rapidly I United States Dailj" News Bulle- Pattern Service thur painfully and slowly proceed- j baths of temperatures of approxi-1 briskly and went down the walk. ; gaining popularitj". The cannea i tins: Weather Report. If you belong to the age when j 377 ed up the staircase. | 1:15 p.m.— The High Steppers — mately 103 degrees F. Judith returned to the sick room. | kraut is s;mply drained trom ;ts souvenir spoons came home from .As ou* patterns are mailed Just as soon as the persons gets They had reached the second hall- ^ There were certain arrangements ' juice and the juice is thoroughly i NBC. wav when the door of Tony s bed- j every trip you took, get them O'jt from New York City pleaae allow in the bath, there is a significant which she knew should be made. [ chilled and used just as it is witn 00 p.m.— Silent until 4:15 p.m. SPECIAL! of the attic and shine them up. rise of the pulse rate long before 15 p.m.—Newscasting. five days. room was flimg open. The girl ap | vvheeler’s assistance she ' whatever seasoning is wanted. If Thej’ are in vogue again. The older ! Price 15 Cents » there is a rise in the body tempera 14:30 p.m.—Boy Scout Program peared. ..he saw he , ^ | began giving Arthur Kuight’s bed- j home-made or bulk kraut is used ture. Associated with this there I sponsored by the Hartford Coun- and quainter, the better. nark ejesey fi-lea =, • ,y , j-j^g aspect of a hospital ward. i put a pound of kraut in a coarse Name ...... are rapid breathing and an exces FOR 30 DAYS did not move. 1 cil. ! For a while Tony lingered, watch- sieve. Pour three-fourths cup cold sive amount of elimination of car ■'Oh!" she cried. I 5:00 p.m.—The Stringwood Ensem . FLASHING CHEER. , ,, , ■ , T eoiri : in§! ^nd looking as though she water through it and press out the Size ...... bon dioxide gas from the lungs, so ■Your father’s sick. ^ » Presently she ble. juice. Chil and season with lem i that the body tends to become more quietly. “Will you go Jo^^^staus J' I 5:45 p.m.— “Movie .Highlights.” One's window curtains are more j .Address ...... on juice, salt and a dash of pap alkaline. and tell Mrs. " JudRh lowered shades at the win- I 6:15 p.m.— Yellow Cab Flashes. than a mere decoration for the RUBBER I There is a prompt fall of approxi rika. 6:20 p.m.—Benrus Correct Time; room. Kitchen windows with mer- a hot pad and o v e t’’ i and urged Arthur to sleep. He i I mately ten millimeters of mercury ' Hartford Courant News Bulletins; ly red, green, pink or yellow cur Send your order to the “ Pat in the blood pressure, after which ^ Ir th u r 'dfd'^ not even look up. | besid^'Se’ b?J'fnd I Sauerkraut and Dumpling.s. Weather Report, Alcohol An tains are cheering to all those who tern Dept., Manchester Evening there is perhaps a slight rise. Tony watched an' instant, then | ® '' j An excellent and inexpensive nouncement. pass by the rear of the house. Herald, So. Manchester, Conn.’* \ Due to the heat, there is a ten obeyed instructions. She was pale as and a half later she be prouhded if sauer- 30 p.m.— Mary Oliver Concert, HEELS FREE she ran dowrn the stairs ; downstairs and knew i kraut is served with sparenbs and p.m.— Silent. Fifteen mmutes later Arthur , Thm is hearty fare WITH Knight lay i Judith went doi.-nstairs to meet the j V s evening. it Sunday, February 9 Judith patted at the coverings, in ^ newcomer I ^^e dinner begins with cream soup 8:30 p.m.— Chase a n d Sanborn DAILY RADIO PROGRAM effectively trying to make kim more | She saw ^ a small, attractive youngvm m - ' and ends with a rice custard pud- Choral Orchestra— NBC. Sat lvday, February S. 302.8—WBZ. NEW ENGLAND—S90. Leading DX Stations. EVERY PAIR OP comfortable. The housekeeper had | 9:00 p.m.— “Our Government" — 6:30—Singing the blues: talk. - . ^ Cl, on his i''-Oman, clad in hat and coat, talk-i "Jth kraut and dumplings V>alltr UamroEch weaves contrast- 7:00—WJZ Amos ’ n‘ Andy. 4C3.2—WSB. A TLA N TA —740. reported Dr. Shephard was on i Wheeler. Both of them * main course, a well-bal- David Lawrence—NBC. infr compositions of his own and of 7:15—Studio musical program. 7:00—ytudio musical program. SOLES SEWED OR 'vay.T J-.,. 1 1. A_ Qf, , vior ,hns-1 _ I p-ianced imup as .TiidithJuditb RonparpHappeared. ThPThe ,^ anced,^uced, nourishing meal is served. 9:15 p.m.— “The Enchanted Hour” other outstanding writers into a sym- 7:30—WJZ songs, orchestra. 8:00—WE.XF programs (3 hrs.) — Emil Heimberger, Director. V'honic pattern during the program to 8:00—Nature league program. 11:45—Studio skylark program. Judith loo'e ! housekeeper introduced the stran-| Here is the recipe: be liroadcast by WE.XF and associated 8:30—Boston feature program. 10 p.m.— Studebaker Champions 293.3— KYW . CHICAGO—1020. band anxiously | ggr as Miss Mallory, the nurse who i One pound kraut, 2 pounds stations at 'J o’clock Saturday night. 0:00—WJZ programs (1 hr.) 8:00—WJZ musical program. NAILED. NBC. 'I'he moderately slow "Andante” move 10:00—Lowe’s dance orchestra. . thp faop w as in nro I ^^^en sent out by Dr. Shephard. ! spareribs. 1 cup flour, u teaspoon 10:0.5—Dance music to 3:00. 10:45 p.m.— .Alfred Cohn, violinist; ment from Beethoven’s “ First Sym- tUOO— Hockey, Bruins vs. Pittsburgh. turned so t haokorcumd ' Judith welcomed her and took i salt, 2 teaspoons bakibaking powder. plionx” and the weird "Perpetual Mo 359.4— W BBM. CHICAGO—770. Douglas Bailev’, accompanist. 348.6—WABC, NEW YORK—86a 9:00—Carnival: popular orchestra. J ThP oh?pks w e ? e u^^ I ^^P^tairs to the room which had i milk, tion" by Moszkowski frame the con 6:00—Dinner dance orchestras. 10:00—W.XBC feature program. ot tne pillow ^ue ® n e ^ „ i been prepared for the nurse’s use. , Put spareribs in a kettle with wa- 11:00 p.m.—“The Merry Madcaps" cert which wilt also include “ Moment 7:00—Bernard Levitow’s ensemble 1:00—A trip about town. — Popular Melodies directed by .Musicale.” “ Bolero” and "Xphigenia’s with "Ben Alley, tenor. PrfLS? stm There she left her and in 10 min- ter to cover and cook one hour. Add I'areweH” from “ Iphigetiia in Aulis” 254.1—WJJD. CHICAGO—1180. r ^ I Norman Cloutier. 7:30—Orchestra: tenor. contraUo. 8:00—Orchestra; lessons, songs. ^ For an instant the girl's h eart' Miss Mallory appeared in crisp | canned kraut and cook 30 minutes by Damrosch. The influence of the 8:00—Talk: finance period. 11:30 p.m.— Benrus Correct Time; Bible on the Negro spiritual is illus 8:30—Negro spirituals recital. 9:00—Falmer studio program. seemed to cease beating. Then she | , ■ ,, , ! *^^® Weather Report; and Alcohol trated in “ Little David. Play on Your 9:00— Nit W it nonsense hour. 416.4— WGN-WLIB. CHICAGO—720. llarp.” a song of homage to the musi saw the heavy H==e and fall...... of ...Ar-i , Here, ’ said Judith, drawing back I “dear.” Mix and sift flour, sa.t 9:30—Biljo’s balalaika orchestra. 9:Oo—Studio players’ presentation. I .u - A— , Jver 1,600 Watch Bristol Outsmart Locals 31-16 S3 GALA ICE CARNIVAL HERE TOMORROW I BIG FLOOR MORE INJURIOUS GAUXY OF ICE STARS MANCHESTER’S ICE WIZARD S lllU R y i THAN BENEFICIAL TO LOCALS Bristol High (31) <$> ; p. B...... AT CENTER SPRING POND 13 White, rf ...... 8 0 Wasley, rf ...... 0 WHY BRISTOL WINS Home Team Sadly Outclassed Before Largest Crowd 13 Lincoln, If ...... 3 11 .Mbertelll, rg .... 0 13 Hall, c ...... 1 Ever to See Basketball in Manchester; Armory Pack New England Speed Skating Champions and Many Other 10 Gurske, c ...... 0 10 AUajre, rg ...... 0 ed and Ticket Sale Stopped; Locals Unable to Pene Noted Skaters to Appear Here; '‘Dodger” Dowd’s 0 Palau, rg ...... 0 10 Greene, Ig ...... 1 Hockey Team on Program— Ice in Good Condition. 13 La Pante, Ig .... 3 trate Zone Defense or Check Bristol’s Pivot Play. 9 • 11 9-13 311 I Manchester High (16) P. B. I The largest crowd ever to watch a basketball game in Man Manchester’s third annual ice carnival will take place to-! 0 Tierney,-rf ...... 3 chester taxed the State Armory to capacity last night and saw morrow afternoon at Center Springs Pond unless the weather i 4 Smith, If ...... 0 ^ Bristol High school once more demonstrate its superiority over man becomes unrub’ and desides to temporarily postpone festivi- ^ 0 O’Leary, If ...... 0 3 Turkington, c .... 3 I Manchester High in a convincing manner which left not the ties. However, such an unwelcome turn of affairs is not antic:-1 1 Nicola, rg ...... 0 i least thread of doubt as to the better team. The score was pated. Latest reports are to the effect that the ice is in excel-; 0 Courtney, rg ...... 0 I 31 to 16. lent condition. Several thousand persons are expected to jam ' f 3 Dowd, Ig ...... 1 Manchester wa.s hopelessly out-^- the banks of the lake. ______; I classed almost from start to finish 19 6 4-10' 16 j.and was fortunate not to have lost LEAGUB STANDING Expectations are that the gala I Score by periods: I by a bigger score. The strategic mid-winter, outdoor sports event will ANOTHER ED. WAESH Bristol ...... 1—la—9—3—31 j ; move of taking the game to the w . L. Pts. even surpass the one last I’ebruary SOX IN THE MAJORS Manchester ...... 3-— 3—9—1—16 j I Armory in hopes that the much I 6 1 18 when NorvaJ Bap tie and Miss Halftime score: 30-6, Bristol. i larger playing surface would han-1 5* 1 15 New York, Feb. 8— (AP) — Middletown .... Gladys Lamb of national fame, were Referee: “Chick” Hayes. : '■ V<* J •» ! dicap Bristol’s airtight five-man | 4 2 12 the outstanding attraction which Another son of Big Ed Walsh is ; zone defense proved more injurious j Manchester .... 4 3 ‘ 12 proved a mecca for five thousand in the majors in the hope emulat- i THOMAS M. MON.AHAN to the home team than beneficial. West Hartford . 2 6 6 spectators. This famous pair will ing the pitching ■ feats of his Bristol’s Great Coach Captain Eddie White spread his East Hartford . 0 8 0 not be back this year but the pro father. 1 Bristol defense across the wide ar- Last Night’s Results gram includes a larger number of Robert E. Walsh. 22, s;x feet SECOND ROUND Bristol 31, Manchester 16. four inches in height and tipping I mory court in such an effective noted skaters. manner that only half a dozen Meriden 29. West Hartford 15. the beam at 205 pounds had been | -X'. Basket by Basket Middletown 27, E. Hartford 25. Ice Comedian. signed by the N. Y. Yankees. His ] Manchester field goals were regis Among the headline attractions brother Ed Walsh, Jr., already is i CLOSES MONDAY tered during the entire 32 minutes Following is a basket by basket of play. Then, to make matters all w ll be the appearance here of Miss pitching for the Chicago White ; 03647395 account of last night’s Manchester- many long shots, especially by Helen Cosker and Alfred Basilic re Sox. Both boys landed in the i the more embarrassing, Manches Bristol game here: ter could make little progress either Captain Ernie Dowd, and pops taken of Hartford, holders of the speed big leagues jlirect from the uni First Quarter. Pictured above i.s Francis "Woody” Wallett, Manchester’s leading con offensively or defensively. f/om too far out on the wings of skating championship of New Eng versity of Notre Dame. Ed. B. the court by Bruno Nicola handi land. This pair have appeared in Walsh, Sr., now is a scout lor tribution to the fancy skating world, w'ho is at the head of the committee j Eight In a Row ! on arrangemens for the second annual ice carnival to be held at Center ; i Greene, Bris., field ...... 2 capped the locals. numerous ice carnivals and always the White Sox. Allaire, Bris., fo u l...... 3 The game marked the eighth j In the second quarter, Bris'-ol are received with much applause. MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, l ^ r PAGE TWELVE THEC 9 O 1 lii^EliliH iEIIE:______HVHI Warn Ad Inforrnatlop IN MEMORIAM HKLR WANTED—MAI.E 36 | FOUR CARS INVOLVED WATKINS TO PRESENT IN MEMORIAM POSITIONS ON BOARD ocean | Manchester’s Manchester liners; good pay; visit France, j IN CRASH YESTERDAY MISS HUn IN RECITAL In sad and loving memory o^ our Italy, Japan; experience unneces- ; Evening Herald dear wife and mother, Wilhelmine sary; self-addressed envelope j D a te B o o k CLASSIFIED C. Freiheit, who died Feb. 9, 1929. brings list. Box 110, Mount Vernon, j Skidding Causes Accident Near Piano Pupil of Archibald Ses N. y. i advertisements St. Bridget’s R. C. Church sions in Seventh of Present A precious one from us is gone, ------— I Tonight SALESM AN— $120.00 vi'eekly repre- ; Over North. Series on Tuesday. A voice we loved, is still, Junior Prom, High School Hall. Count six average words lo a line. senting million dollar factory. Sell j IriiLials, numbers and abbreviations A place is vacant in our home, . Coming Events I paints, varnishes, roofing on credit j An automobil.e accident in which i eacli count as a word and compound i Which never can he filled. Feb. 9— (Afternoon) Ice Carnival, I A targe attendance of music words as two words. Mintmilm cost Is j to homes, factories, etc. No ex- four cars were involved occurred \ lovers'is expected at the piano and HUSBAND AND CHILDREN. Center Springs. | price of three lines. I perience needed. Factory prices yesterday afternoon at 4 o’clock on song recitaj, the seventh in W at Main ' - . - Feb. 14.».-Charity ball. Elks, Em- Cine rates per da.v for transient save 40 per cent.' We deliver, and street near St. Bridget’s l kins Brothers series of lectures and church. Carroll McGuire, mail ccar a r- 1 C ub at Masonic Temple t;H'cc f 1 \v/AS -rSULINCj 1 c o u l d n ’t VOU AREN’T-..- HELP>LE5S . 1 D A D D V A B O U T VXXJR I ’ D L IK E T H E N L E T ’ S BE SO UNFAIR AS DADDY AND 1 TALKED THAT OVER BBINS COOPED UP NOTHING BETTER, G E T M ARRIE TO MARRV VOU, AND HE SAID YOU COULD KEEP HEPE Al_OME AUl_ DAV NELLIE , BUT w e ’ r e E N G A C DARLING, WHEN I T H E B O O K S -----h e ’ l l RIG THINGS UP a n d m e a g r e e d I c o u l d n ’ t AND IT’S MV c a n ’t s u p p o r t VOU 50 VOU CAN WORK IN BED. IT’LL WITH ME THAT VOU IM P O S E O N P L A C E T O I’ m a h e l p l e s s BE A BIG HELP TO DADDV ---- HIS OUGHT TO COME V O O T H A T L O O K A F T E R CRIPPLE AND EYESIGHT IS FAILING— CAN*' I A N D S T A V WAV. ------DOC CALL SAID VOU SEE , DICK ----- y o u ’ l l W IT H U S . ALWAV5 WILL ------^BE DOING VOUR BE ----- AlMlMlllS S U T E N Coni?a^jbtig/ bui; not: da/n^erousf. There are at least four mistakes in the above picture. They maj pertain to grammar, history, etiquette, drawing or lyhatnot. See if yot can find them. Then look at the scrambled word below— and unscram ble it, by switching the letters around. . Grade yourself 20 for each ofl the mistakes you find, and 20 for the word if you unscramble it. * M* OORBE CTIONS (1) The large aad email chain wheels on the bicycle should b e : versed. (2) The stairway and entrance to the bus should lead up f~ the opposite side. (3) The lan}F« on the street light do not match. A place established in 1918 is not old enough to be holing a l « h noal sale in 1980. (5). The sc r^ b le d word is IINTHUSIASM* >41 1 V ' ■ ' . \ PAGE THIRTEEN MAiNUtmib'iEK EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1930. By Percy L Crosby RAWER f a n n y SAYS: SKIPPY SENSE NONSENSE WtO.U.».P*T.O>T.______C|4„10UNN0- nr \ < e e ? s Uc Massa Ob Do Shccpfol’ ) d e e p ! i V Fcie3 AWAY . De massa ob de sheepfol’ J Dat guard de sheepfol’ bin, Look out in de gloomerin’ meadows Wlmr de long night rain begin— So he calls to de hirelin’ shepa’d: i •'Is my sheep, is dey all come in ?” j And den says de hirelin’ shcpa'd: j “De’y’s some, dey's black and thin, ] And some dey's po' ol' wedda's, ; But de res', dey's all brung in. But de res', dey's all brung in, I I Den dc massa of de sheepfol; j Dat guard de sheepfol' bin, Goes down in dc gloomerin' meadow , Whar dc long night rain becin— So he lo' down dc ba's of ilc shcep- fol' Callin' so f; "Come in, come ini” Callin' so f: “Come in, come in!” Den up tro' de gloomerin' meadows, 11 w a, ,»■ , „, n ( Percy'L. Cro.sb.v, Great Bii'.iiv righl.^ rcsorvo! Tro' dc col' night rain and win', i f King Features Syndicate, b ■ ______(it' And up tro' de gioot^ierin' rain paf j What do sleet fa' piercin' thin, j OUR BOARDING HOUSE Do po' lost sheep ob de shecpiol' By Fontaine Fox Dey po' lost sheep ob do sheepfol' Noboilv knows why some people Neighborhood News By Gene Ahern Dey all conies gadderin' in, insist on reading creepy ghost De po' los' sheep ob de sheepfol' stories. It's a frig h t! ______Dey all comes gadderin' in I” rnmes at dc conclusion, 'when he X n j t e r e s t i n t h a t Sy n t h e t i c ’ v o l c : a n o h a s b e e n 1/tiPSEjp *Tbl£\i EPS'S lakes up a collection.'’ SAV CA^i WOLi Sambo—Say, I\iandy. g;;;;;i:c a REVIVEP OWING TO THE PISCOVERY OF A NEW METHOI^ '-/ou‘'Re iikiP&BTep A^ioTHep .WiP little kiss, will ya, huh? A IPEA ABOli-T A negro mammy had a family of O F o p e r a t i o n . •To M'S- 'FO'R WMEld ilandj’— (No answer. i W riA -r -T i m s y o u ’ LL c o m b , v e u T o Sambo—Aw come on, sweet thing well-behaved boys. One day her TvJo OF Sod APS be a spo't—jes' one little kiss. mistress asked. "Sally, how do you f LIMPlAi(3 iMrfO PO'RTT AiU3nT2 ^ s HORT PERIOP FldALL^ UdPER T d’ Mandy— (No answer yet. i raise your boys so well? f EThtEP, v/oa UlAKE “ An rait?es 'em vvid a. barrel sta\c X CAld ARRAAiSE Q-p- Sambo—Yo won't miss one little UP T K '' p e e t o f and ah raises 'em frequent.” SLE -EPlM a S c HEPOLE- ^ kiss, will yo' sweet gal? 4 E(5AP FROM US vdi-tH VodP Mandy— (Still no answer). 50 lY u BE ABLE "Tb PAV OFF "is this train ever on tim e?” WriAT I OBSEPVE, SOdJdP SLEEP Sambo— Say, am yo' deaf? , F euI Mo l ir s ' S l e e p b e f o r e Mandy—An' how 'bout yo'self, growled the grouchy passenger. VoU ARE ME^TALLV OF MUMBU1k1E» black boy, am yo'ail paralized? “ Oh." replied the conductor, "we v o d ST lSMRlE AAd’ A d ’ M A dL T never w'orry about it ever being on i ASLEEP A^P VaJAi^E m s u p F o p T M ’ bring me Iwo ! time. We're satislied if its always, PriV^fOALLV PELAVEP Customer—"George, PES-r OF -TH ’ poached eggs.” i on the track.” I r THE MAtToPlTV Waiter— “Jedge, 'sense me.'suh, ° ^ • e m t * OF A-IW EM T/ Many girls play golf in their bare 5 ah kain’t rekemmend dem aigs." FOUR Ho u r Customer—“Aren't they fresh. legs these days. One of the first ? rules of golf is to keep your eye George-” . PAVf Waiter— "Dey mought be. but de on the ball. truth am, we ain't got no aigs to Good morning, are you Safety- day.” j I wise or otherwise today? Mrs. William McKinley used to tell of a colored widow whose chil I Cash and carry will hardly ever dren she helped to educate, ihe i be so popular as charge and de- widow married rather late in life. i liver. — "How are you getting on ?” Mrs. I ------McKinley asked her a few months i Claude; “ Do you know any par- after her marriage. . lor tricks?” “Fine, thank yo' ma'aml'' the Frank: "I'm not that kind of a i bride answered. ! girl.” And is your husband a good pro <3 vider?” I TALKiL NEWSPAPERS “ 'Deed, he am a good provider, FOR NEW YORK t ma’aml” was the enthusiastic re ply. 'Why, jest last week he got me New Y'ork—The news-reel is fast five new places to wash atl" becoming a specialized branch of the talkie-movie industry. p "A Speechmaker. " said Uncle New' Y'ork now’ has a novel cine Eben, “ain't satisfied wif applause. ma with a show starting at 10 a. m. De real test of his eloquaciousness and running continuously until mid night. News events of the previous day arc flashed on the screen and as AT i m E n C-V n M , ^ things hanpen d u rin g^ e day, films are taken’ of them aneWushed to the theater for a showing. In this way the program is changed hour by '■fttd. u.«. Mir. Oft’ , TS FOOLISH 'Co liotir. 01930 BV NEA SERVICE, INC J p e s t e r p u p s . ,'.M (Opontaine Fox, 1930, 3 0 A W E R . IF \\ORLD OF ROBOTS D o s H IS _ ^ By Crane Birmingham, Eng. — The world WASHINGTON TUBBS II. Dead or Alive! Da e .! w’ill be a place of mechanical men in 1950, according to the institute of Industrial Welfare. Skill will have IVIOIAHS REPORT PIANE IS MEXICO 80UN0! vanished from industry then, it was Pi\o cnBP*; tniNS aocw ^atrol^ (^orofp. predicted, and men will be slaves of machines, working ceaselessly in Sl\0CfTS the cause of mass production. The / mM I,” Institute is trying to develop o u t / / BOW "leisure skill” in place of me-, [ DCk\lOSON. chanical skill. \N00NDS UEVAOA PEPOTV '4 1 BUSES DISPL.YCE CARS iiii flving gun Street cars no longer run on the BATTU. • Pennsylvania avenue line of the Wilkes-Barre. Pa., car line. It was escapes in stolen i one of the company’s oldest lines plane after u\s and rather than install new equip OWN \1>' FORCED B£G. U. 3 . FA .. OFr. ment, motor buses were adopted. DOWN WITH MOTOR T r o u b l e POUCE WATCrt AIR o r WASW OFFERS REWARD OF * 5 ,0 0 0 PORTS TWRUOUT WEST. pop CAPTUR.E OF BOLL OA>mSON DEAD OR i XUVEI’AMP RETURN OF STOLEN MONEY. | [ MEANNUILE, ME AND EASY SPEED rieSTvMAR^.J By Blosser FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS H e’ll Show Them Now X 60T OTUE£ TU\N65 BOT VoO •Y£AU,1 MISSED NlUAT ^ I SIAOOLO TVilliV? BOT US VMUO fDCED PlMldV V)40L)L0 HELP all ON ME; MlNO BESIDES NJASN'T in . la st SONOAV AN' v*jAS rr -VOL) LOOL FOB TMAT ) cz; US DOES IS UOOLClN’ For “TUAT 7US CWOlK. ! SOMEBoD'V MAO^ *mE ORGAM DOS, AS LOhiS AS JUST STAND SCROOT= 1 S\N0 IN LAST SONOAV-. A CBACK, UE \WAS VOOR TUERE AN’ 7U' CUORCU CHOIR. MAMASCP. VODEL— ,'V'kNO'^ — COWvE AN' o So LO SE^'.' ^ 1 - OMW y- e. a ./ R.tv,, V' y : /' . INC REO, U. S. PAT. OFP. By Small ^ C 1930 BY NEA SERVICE, IN C v V tiW ' The Only Drawback SALESMAN SAM (RE.Vl) THE STOliY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) DO T ft C ^ L \ I c p (NT'.T vienTY- o « c . S U R E .'. ^ replied the friendly Oilcan. “But I HOWDT SAM\’. CIGAPS ON 'N ^OUR. , iT t SCNN fto e , PilH’T ITC* The Oilcan man laugh.cd at the' TtKAT sroFf=?'/P* care not for a trip. I thought, CO^^G. IN fvN' I'LU BUT A PeUY-P - TvJGMT't'-OKe.-XvJGMT'T-OKe X OFX'l'. Fil ftN bunch and said, "I have a happy i though, I could oil your wheel. \ v o t e , m o w ' CPM'T '. bunch that I can be of help Lo you. T fx ON S-! ueWT Think how much greater it would Cl O A R . Now don't all start to grin, and feel. 'Twill make the wheels run uohTqjs m think that I can't do a thing. Why, easier, though 'twill cause no f/' gee, some comfort I can bring d e -, parts to slip.” spite the fact that I am merely "Oh, gee, that sure sounds fair — made of bits of tin." enough,” said Clowny. “And, if it’s no bluff, go right ahead and oil our “Hurray for you,” one Tiny SeG -(M R .S ^ said: "If you can aid u.s, go ahead. bike. We'll help you if we can. The vi883E2Zar* * wheels will soon go ’round and sw okE But; tell us, what have you in a mind? We’d surely like lo know. 'round. We’ll ride till some new E(.«€»-iPo ©ViT “tU ^Re'S MO CtWeCnoMl* We'll gladly stay a while and play place is found. If I remember right, CIOA(2S if you can do the things you say, both wheels were squeaky as they but if you’re only foolinj, it is bel ran.” Rope. ter that we go. So. while the bunch looked on, “ You see, we have a little bike amused, a lot of real good oil was and it is natural that we like to used to fix the bike up properly. ride upon it, so we do not want to The oiling job seemed fun. At last IM loiter long. Perhaps you’d like a ttie Oilcan man said. “ You can try nice trip, too, and here is what it out now, ’cause I’m through. I we’U gladly do; we’ll gladly let you think you’ll be surprised to find how join us, and just trust that naught easy -it will run.” (g r S S ^ goes wrong.” ~\eie3o«YMBmavici.iwc.^ Vt “Now wait a minute, little lad. (The Tinymites meet another The plan you have is not so bad,” i friend In the next story.) ± -r r 7 m ____ 9 PAGE FOURTEEN iianrl}pat?r iuFtting i$araUk 5ATUKUAY, FEUKUARY 8, newsboy hesitated. Taking a deep ald will you take it from me?" Dinks are in the lead and look like^ Dancing Tonight I OF MODERN THEOLOGY SCHOOL DEAN POLICE COURT HOUSEWIVES VISITED breath of heroic resolve he went It was only after much question-1 this week’s winner. Warner Broth back and u^ the walk and onto the ing that she finally secured the in-j ers through Hugh J. Campbell, City Club Orchestra UNION SERVICE SPEAKER Carl W. Lipgens of 139 Oak BY YOUNG SALESMEN porch.. For-a mpn^ent he paused formation that the boy was a mem-1 manager of the State' theattf . are RUSSIAN MUSIC street, was before Judge Raymond and then he knocked loudly on the her of a Herald newsboys’ team thus offering to a few of the boys of Hartford at the A. Johnson in the Manchester po door. A few moments later the door competing for theater tickets given j each week opportunity to see free Dr. Albert C. Knudson, of Bos lice court this morning for driving Herald Newsies Try for Thea opened. The lady of the house was free to the team having the great-1 of charge some of the outstanding Sunday Evening an automobile while under the in greeted as follows: est number of new subscribers each features being presented, at the RAINBOW ton University, to Preach on fluence of liquor. He was found ter Tickets by Seeking New “Hello, I beg your pardon. I’m an week. IState under the slogan “Blaidng the “Certainty of Faith.” Subscribers to Paper. guilty and a fine of $125 and costs , , ^ I “Ape.” If you don’t take The Her At the present time the Rinkey I Way to Better Entertainment.” Added Attraction Feb. 16, al 7;30 was imposed. Lipgens had an ac FRANKIE FINN Dr. Albert C. KnucLson, Dean of cident on Oak street late last night The other evening a youngster 1' Boston University School of Theol when his car struck one owned by with a big bundle of papers under.' ‘TheAVorld’s Greatest Boy CHORUS OF 40 VOICES ogy. who will preach at the union .Arnold Pagani that was parked his arm struggled manfully through | Entertainer” service of the Protestant churches alongside of the street. Sergeant the gathering darkness, stopping a t, South Methodist Church to be held at St. Mary’s church to- John Crocked was called to inves- every other hous^ or'so to l^ve a.: SHE HAS Mgate the accident and found that pap>er on the doorstep of one of his' l Lipgens was intoxicated. He told customers. Finally he reached a l DANCE the judge that all he had to drink house set apart from the others. The! DANCING was three bottles of beer. Given by Every Saturday Night The Eagle Club Manchester Green School A W IL L TURN HALL BILL W.\DDELL’S OUCH. LUPIEN TO ADDRESS February 8 Dan Miller, Prompter \\cim an’s Orchestra Admission 50 cents. CENTER MEN’S LEAGUE OF HER OWN Charles W. Hartenstein, local vou can get representative of the White Me ! Chenev Brothers Department ABOUT TOWN |morial Studios, has been confined I Head to Talk on “Human ------I to his home on Summit street for Relationships.” St. Margaret's Circle, Daughters | some time, is now able to leave his of Isabella, will hold its regular | home for short periods. U. J. Lupien, head of the service ALL meeting at the K. of C. clubrooms i dcpartnient at Cheney Brothers will of the - Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. The I Betty Harvey and Lucilc Brown be the principal speaker at the meeting is called thus early so that will read essays on the life of weekly meeting of the Men’s League Automobile members who wish to do so may I Lincoln written by them this week at the Center Congregational church attend the Valentine social at St. i with other Eighth District children tomorrow morning at 9:30. Mr. Insurance Bridget's "hurch under auspices of ' in observation of Lincoln Day. as a Lupien will take for his topic, “Hu the Catholic Ladies of Columbu.s. part of the special Lincoln Me man Relationships.” This is a sub should wish to plan for morial service at Second Congrega ject on which he is most qualified its distribution. "Out of Doors in England," the tional church tomorrow evening. to talk inasmuch as it is closely .•subject of Miss Lucy O. Hunt's il The program will begin at 7:30 in connected with the nature of his In the disposal of their prop lustrated talk before the Manches the auditorium. There will be stcrc- work at Cheney Brothers. It is ex YOU erty, women of means follow ter Garden club Monday evening at opticon pictures shown of ‘‘The New pected that a good-sized attendance the Manchester Community club, is South," descriptive of the work be Dr. .Mbert C. Knuci.son. will be on hand to listen to what he the same plan that men have .-^urc to be interesting and inspiring, ing carried on among the mountain has to say. morrow evening, is an author and found desirable. to the members, and especially to j whites. The music will be favorite educator of note. After graduation Why ShouldnH She? those who claim Great Britain as Southern melodics. The business-like methods their native land. Miss Hunt lays , from college .he studied at several SECURE MRS. YERRINGTON NEED no claims to being a lecturer, but German universities, receiving his in one contract employed by trust organiza will give an informal account of her , Dean A. C. Knudson who is a Doctor's degree from Heidelberg. T be modern woman controls tions as executor and trustee own observations and delight in featured speaker at the morning Deeply interested in Old Testa AS LEGION’S SPEAKER with one institution. England, and if time permits show ; service at the South Methodist ment origins and backgrounds par 41% of the nation’s individual appeal,to their good judgment. views of Switzerland and other por-1 church and the union services at St. ticularity in the prophetic field he wealth. She is the beneficiary of We think it should be a satis tions of Europe. Thomas Maxwell | Mary's Episcopal church tomorrow lias made several distinctive contri Will Address Joint Meetinff THE TRAVELERS of the Manchester Electric Com-1 evening, will be the guest of Mr. butions to the literature of that I Of Post and Auxiliary Mon-| 80% of the $100,000,000,000 faction to you to know that your pany will be in charge of the balop- and Mrs. Lawrence W. Case of ■ subject among which may be named | HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT ticon. The meeting i.s called for 7:30 ^ Highland Park during his stay in “Beacon Lights of Prophecy” and day Evening'. i The largest multiple-line insur of life insurance in force in the carefully drawn will, fully ex and Miss Hunt will not begin to town. “The Prophetic Mov(?ment in Israel.” ance organization In the world. United States. She constitutes pressing your wishes and nam speak until S p. m. Ordained to the Christian minis- Past State President Mrs. Lillian t - -i- trv in 1898 he at ohee attracted at Yerrington of the American Legion from 30% to 40% of the cus ing us as your executor, is prop Evangelist Mabel R. Manning and pay for it on Mrs. Sedrick J. Straughan of tention bj’ his unusual abilities in Auxiliary will be the speaker at the who is at present conducting a tomers of investment houses erly filed away in our safe East Center street who has been ill helping young people to adopt the joint meeting of Dilv.orth-Cornell series of revival meetings at the Post No. 102 and its Auxiliary on EASY TERMS at the Memorial Hospital and her new knowledge, brought to them and she makes up a majority of keeping. Church of the Nazarene, has chosen home for several weeks past, is con from the scholastic world, to the Monday, February 10, 1930 at 8 p. m. in the Veterans room at the stockholders in many large cor If you have not yet taken care valescing at the home of her aunt for her subject for the morning ser substantial and basic things of vice tomorrow. “Strength in Unity” State Armory. In addition to the and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Christian belief. He has been called JOHN H. LAPPEN porations. There are as many of this duty to yourself and those talk by Mrs. Yerrington, the ladies Kellogg of Glastonbury. Miss Lottie and for the evening meeting at b,v one “the happiest harmonizer of INSUR.ANCE SERVICE have arranged a program of enter women millionaires as men.* who come after you, we invite Stoutnair, graduate nurse who has 7:30, “God’s Invitation.” There will knowledge and faith since the days 19 Lilac St. Phone 7031 be special music by the choir and of Drummond.” tainment, and will also serve re With all this wealth in her been caring for Mrs. Straughan for freshments. you to discuss it with our Trust the past three weeks has returned solos by Mrs. Manning. The public With this special gift to appoint it name, it is natural that she to her home in Oakland. will be welcome at any of these was inevitable that Dr. Knudson OfiScer. meetings, which will continue should be taken from the pastorate # Ejttmaicj jurm^lud by a leading •xomen s mega::ytu The choir loft of Swedish Lutheran throughout the week every evening and placed where his entire time church has undergone extensive al except Saturday at 7:30. cculd be given to the work with terations. The steady growth of the 3’outh. After a brief Professorship Choi.' has made it necessary to ac I The Town Pla3’crs will meet at in Denver University he was called commodate 30 members. The new I the School Street Rcc at 8:30 o'clock to Boston University and in 1927 WATKINS BROTHERS, Inc. choir loft will be ready Sunday. I Tuesday evening. AH former mcm- was elected Dean of the School of j hers and those interested in joining Theologj’. Dr. Knudson has an The first rehearsal of “Miss Fear are invited to attend. Plans will be nounced “The Certainty of Faith” Funeral Directors as his theme for tomorrow evening. less it Company", the three-act play I made for a production in the near ESTABLISHED 55 YEARS which Center Church Women's I'ed- future and election of officers will The service is at seven o’clock. THE MANCHESTER TRUST CO. cration will sponsor in March, was be held. held last evening under the direction Dependable service on furnace I CHAPEL AT 11 OAK ST. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. of l^Tr.s. Emma L. Nettleton. The The Lions Club meeting on Mon- | and fuel oil may be secured by dial cast includes well known, talented daj' evening, 6:15 o'clock at the i ing 5145, The Manchester Lumber 1 amateurs. Hotel Sheridan will be devoted cn- 1 Co.—Advt. Robert K. Anderson Phones: Office 5171 tircly to business. j Funeral Director Residence 7494 The motion picture committee of Second Congregational church DELICIOUS which is composed of Ralph C. All members of the Luther League Brown, chairman, Mrs. George F. of the Swedish Lutheran Churcli 1 Borst, Meredith Stevenson, Rev. F. who are planning to go to East ] PASTRIES C. Allen. Ralph Rockwell and John Hampton next Friday night are ask Don’t wait until you liave a S. Wolcott, has set the date of 'Ved- ed to notify Herman Johnson, Fil- ’ nesday evening, Februarj' 26 for a more Gustafson, or Paul Erickson | party to treat yourself to our chicken supper in the vestrj' of the b>' Thursday at the latest. The trip | delicious PIES, PASTRIES church, t,T be followed by a first will be made b}' bus and the Bee- , and CAKES. m O N I class motion picture in the auditor thoven Glee Club will accompany : Try a loaf of our home made ium. the league and present the program, i bread. 20% On Your Money •• Winslow T. Runde, son of Mr. and Nearly 200 Boj' Scouts were and Mrs. William Runde of 118 Wal- guests of the State Theater man IManchester GOOD THINGS TO CAT A saving on rubber covered tires not at inflated prices like nvit street, who is employed in one agement last night filling the thea Public Market of the Hartford Insurance com- ter from the front row to as far OLD DOC COOK panie.s, entered the Hartford hospi back as the balcony. The Scout.s We Deliver. your recent Stock Market. tal Thursday evening, and was to be enjoyed the show tremcndouslj'. Dial 5139 Well, we see that they arc going to let Old Doc operated upon today for appendici Cook out of the pen—Old Doc Cook who “discovered tis. the North Pole” and how to sell large gobs of phon Reg. Price Less 2 0 // Reg. Price Less 20% ey stock by mail. Somehow we’ve always felt n- Mrs. Bcrteline W. Lashinskc, well little sorry for Doc—he so completely missed the 30x31/2 Hood . .... $7.50 $6.00 29x4.75 Hood ..$10.65 $8.52 known contralto of this town who is ; greatest of all chances for his peculiar talents. .He .-^oloist at the Asjium Hill Congre- j ought to have been chief publicity man for the cash- 34x41/2 Hood . ...$18.60 $14.90 30x5.00 Hood ...$11.35 $9.08 , gational church, Hartford. will i and-carrJ^ price-before-quality food store idea. make her radio debut at WTIC, th" j Doc could probably have made people actually be 33x5 H. D. Truck $27.50 $22.00 31x5.00 Hood ... $11.85 $9.48 Travelers broadcasting station this | lieve that service and high quality and personal in afternoon at 3:30. H€L/HE/ terest have no value to them and that their owm 32x6 H. D. Truck $36.00 $28.80 28x5.50 ...... $13.70 $10.96 LNIjCKTAI^INC, time and gas and tires and digestions are also not C. E. Wilson of the Wilson Nurs eries who is at present on a South fLNECAL CIEECTING worth thinking about. But they put him in jail 30x5.50 ...... instead of in that business and nobody else has been 29x4.40 Hood .... $8.25 $6.60 ■ .. $14.35 $11.48 ern trip will visit Texas, Havana, quite equal to the job. W'hat a miss! Cuba, and other points before re 30x4.50 Hood .... $9.20 $7.40 32x6.00 ...... $15.95 $12.76 turning home. IT IS A GREAT Lady Assist.’.nr 29x4.50 Hood .... $8.85 $7.05 33x6.00 ...... $16.45 $13.15 Arthur N. Potter of the High SATISFACTION .■=chool faculty and principal of the These tires are all firsts fully guaranteed. We need the room in our storage as evening schoots will speak on 'lo linow that we have brought we have just received a' shipment of tires for our Spring trade. ''Americanization'' at the meeting the last tribute to the dear de of Center church Cj"p club tomor parted in a befitting style. row evening at 6 o'clock. Elxperience has taught us how best 'lO attend to the last ritc.^ Buy tVhitc Oak Coal $12.00 per and to bring a measure of con Announcing ton. G. E. Willis & Son.—Advt. solation 'lO the bereaved. BARGAINS rdepRonc. Super Values MANCHESTER, CONN. Oo^ and Night The Opening of Our I 30x3V2 G & J Oversize-----$4.95 30x5.25 Hood F. S...... $9.00 In New Headquarters 31x4 Firestone...... $9.00 33x6.00 Fish First ...... $13.95 in the 29x4.40,30x4.50 Kenway .. $4.00 33x6.00 Usco Cord ...... $10.00 29x5.00 Fish F. S ...... $8.00 34x5 Truck Tigerfoot ... $20.00 VALENTINES Odd Fellows’ Building 31x5.00 Hood F. S...... $8.50 32x6 Michelin Truck...... $30.00 10 East Center Street for the entire family daintily assembled Have Your Car Greased Today. Battery Specials and with suitable sentiment. A splendid South Manchester on Ford, Chevrolet and other lifeht cars, 1 1929 Whippet 4 Sedan year guarantee. 1928 Willys-Knig-ht assortment to choose from. We cordially invite your inspection. $7.75- ■ • ■ 6 Sedan Starters and Generators 1927 Whippet 6 Sedan Chains Repaired, New 1927 Whippet 4 Coach to Repaired Cross Links 1925 Ford Tudor $38 $1.00 Six closed cars ranging from $50-$100 The Mackley Chevrolet The Dewey-Richman Co. COLE MOTOR Jewelers, Stationers, Opticians CAMPBELL’S FILLING STATION 'The House of Value” Company, Inc. MAIN AND MIDDLE TURNPIKE SALES 767 Main St. Phone 6874 91 Center St. Tcl. 8275