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NET PRESS « THE WEATHER AVERAGE DArLX CIRCULATION Foiceaut hr O. S. Weather Barean, jtew 0aeea for the month’ of November, 192»i Partly cloudy tonl^t and ^un- | 5,237 day; colder; moderate to fresh ! Blcmber of the Andit Bureau of northwest winds. | Circniatlona C o ^ ' s ;r - _____ VOL. XLIII., NO. 64. (Classified Advertislnj; on Page 12) SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1928. (FOURTEEN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENT'S

«>- SEWER NOTICE Unique Plane and Its Inventor WANTS PROBE RECORD SHATTERED <4>- SPECULATIONS PAVESWAYTO OF OPPONENTS ON HOOVER’S IN ROAD BUILDING CONSOUDATION o f ™ NAVY” State Highway Department ABILITY TO SMILE CAPITAL TRIP Kind of Legislation Which Congressman Maas Says He laid 310 Miles of New fQMES FROM APES May Be Sought Not De­ "’i. ^ Has Startling Evidence of Congressman Wonder Why Paving During the Year ___ - „ I NAME HAWLEY, cided Upon— Some Users - - What is Behind Anti- President-Elect Plans to of 1928, We Get Our Hands and Feet Want Assessments. Cnuser Lobby. CAPTAIN OF “G” Spend Ten Days in Wash­ Also from Monkey, Says Hartford, Dec. 29.— During the year of 1928, the state of Connec­ HARlFmillAN, ington Before His Vaca­ Savant. The notice of the South Manches­ ■^’’ashington Dec. 29.— A Con­ ticut through its highway depart- ' ter Sanitary and Sewer District gressional battle over the national ment buiit the greatest number of , which was published in The Herald defense may involve both branches tion m Florida-Three miies of new highway in its history, ' New York, Dec. 29.— Humanity’s on Dec. 24 was Issued because of of Congress next week with the Regimental Intelfigence Offi­ according to figures contained in debt to the ape, the sense of hu­ the necessity of complyin,? with the $274,000,000 cruiser bill before the Reasons Given by Ob­ the annual statement of Highway laws of Connecticut in regard to an Senate and a dri/e for investigation mor of Vassar girl students, the of pacifist organizations in the cer Assumes Local Com­ Commissioner John A. Macdonald, intention to secure what is techni­ servers. issued today. During the calendar antics of twin stars millions of House, it appeared today. year, the state constructed or re­ miles away and the part science cally known as “ adverse legisla­ Rep. Melvin J. Maas (R ) of Min­ mand— Dexter and Hath­ constructed 310.72 miles of road, a can play in peace and war— these tion,” nesota, member of the foreign af­ figure which exceeds the previous were a few of the wide v.ariety ot Paves the Way fairs «.ommittee and the “ Soldiers’ Washington, Dec. 29— Specula­ high record of 1927 by 105 miles. The particular form which this Bloc” of the House, announced that away Given Promotions. tion as to the underlying reasons subjects discussed today before 5,- legislation may take has not as yet By far the larger portion of the he will go before the rules commit­ for Herbert Hoover’s decision to 310 miles of pavement laid during 000 learned men and women , at­ been decided upon, but it was tee with a demand for actior on a spend ten days in the capital before 1928 was concrete, the year’s total tending a score of inter-sectional thought best to give the legal notice resolution for a public inquiry into Captain Philip C. Hawley, Regi­ in order that the way might be open taking up his pre-inaugural resi­ for this type of pavement being ap-! meetings of the American Associa­ the activity of pacifist bodies. mental Intelligence Officer, and an proximately 160 miles. Other types either thru town consolidation of Opponents To Gather dence in Florida grows apace here tion for the Advancement of Sci­ sewer districts, or otherwise, to de­ investment broker in the employ of of paving laid were as follows: Coincidentally many leading op­ with the progress of the U. S. S. Waterbound maca uni, 96 miles; ence. velop some plan that would provide ponents of the cruiser bill, headed Bodell & Co., Hartford, was last for the permanent financing of Utah toward American shores. bituminous macadam, 43 miles; ex­ Prof. 'William K. Gregory of Co­ by Bishop Francis J. McConnell, of night appointed to the captaincy of After a dull week of it, during perimental paving, 6 miles; and future sewer extentions, the cost of lumbia University and American New York will gather here for a Company G, 169th Infantry, for the which numerous messages have bituminous concrete, 0.31 miles. In constructing sewage disposal plants conference under the auspices of Museum of Natural History said and also for the maintenance of the flown north and south, the con­ addition, the , department graded the Council of International Rela­ present. Captain Hawley assumes sensus in Washington is that the and built slightly more than five man derives his hands and feet sewers. tions. May Consolidate the command through the resigna­ President-Elect is returninig pri­ miles of gravel road. from apes, “ our nearest anthropoid Maas declared tl at he has gather­ marily for three reasons: So great was the amount of high­ This subject has been rather ex­ tion of Captain Herbert H. Bissell progenitors.” Hands and feet were ed “ startling documentary evi­ 1. To ascertain if it is not possi­ way completed during the year ‘ at tensively gone into by Cheney which is effective January 1, 1929. primarily used by the apes for dence” in a long personal investiga­ ble to avoid an extra session of only 64.73 miles of work, one of Brothers in recent articles in The Captain Hawley’s position as Regi­ climbing, he asserted. Herald. But, before any plan can tion into peace and Communist Congress after March 4 by per­ the smallest totals in the depart­ suading the present session to enact ment’s history, remains to be car­ Then, too, w’e are indebted to be perfected for a consolidation organizations. Denying that he Is a mental Intelligence Officer is to be Here are three views of Carl E. Johansson’s invention of an attach­ “ red baiter” he asserted that a full the revised McNary-Haugen farm ried over into 1929. our anthropoid progenitors for be­ with the north end, or before a assumed by Captain Allan L. Dexter ment to a cariienter’s plane for squaring and beveling acenrately. .Vt public investigation should be held relief bill. Some Comparisons. ing able to live in variable tempera­ plan can be developed which will the top is shown a plane with the cast eiluminum attachment screwed to eliminate the rental charges in the to let the people know the extent of the Howitzer Company of Man­ . 2. To discuss some Cabinet ap­ An idea of the general trend to­ tures and for our mobile face. the left hand side of the plane. In the left center is an end view of chester and Lieutenant Russell E. pointments and other patronage ward increased highway construc­ south end, provision must be made of these activities. matters. Apes, like us, can smile, it seems, the attachment as it api>ears when squaring a board. .\t the bottom Not Alarmec Hathaway becomes Captain of the tion and reconstruction is furnished by which the special powers con­ left the plane is shown as it bevels a board. To the right is a photo while other animals wear “ an in­ “ I am not alarmed about a Red Howitzer Company. These appoint­ 3. To have a voice in the in­ by other figures contained in Com­ ferred by previous legislatures on of Mr. Johansson. structions that are to be «given missioner Macdonald s statement. flexible mask.” A mouse or a gat, the South Manchester Sanitary and revolution but I think it timely that ments were officially announced for Instance, cannot smile or laugh.. Sewer District can be transferred to this morning by Col. D, Gordon America’s unofficial observers to From 1895. the year that the d^ the people should have the real the European reparations confer­ partment was instituted, to 1913, Sense of Humor the town or to a new political cor­ facts behind the anti-cruiser and Hunter, of the 169th Infantry. Scientists listened to a discus­ ence. Press reports from abroad the average highway length com­ poration. Provision must also be Carl E. Johansson, Former Selectman, Gets similar lobbies.” said Maas. “ I have Capt. Hawley’s Record have indicated that Owen D. Young pleted during a year's time was 51 sion of the sense of humor of one made for the assessment of the never abandoned my intention of Captain Philip C. Hawley who and Rufus C. Dawes probably will miles. From 1913 to 19..3, this hundred Vassar students. -Miss benefits against the properties af­ Patent on Device for Carpenter’s Tool— pressing the resolution, and will re­ be named. average rose to 109 miles per year. Polyxenie Kamboropoulous of Co­ fected in the south end of the town. new my efforts particularly in view has been detailed to the command Enables User to Accurately of the Manchester company is one Reparations Problem During the past five years, the aver- lumbia University, who made one Some Prefer .^sse.ssments of the coming conference with its ■ It is knhwn that Mr. Hoover con­ a'^e has grown to 150 miles per study, said that the Vassar girls’ Since Cheney Brothers have an­ avowed intention of bullying Sena­ of the most popuiat officers in the Square Boards. regiment. His appointment is ex­ siders this reparations problem to vear. During the first mentioned sense of humor is most highly de­ nounced the application of a rental tors into defeating the cruiser pro­ be of deep and abiding importance period, 1895-1913. the ratio of new plan for the maintenance of sewers, gram.” tremely pleasing to those *n mili­ veloped in situations which in­ tary circles here. He is one of the to his administration, as whatever volve their own superiority. They frequent suggestions '-ave come in Carl E. Johansson, of Haynes Office a “ guiding attachment for a His own investigation, Maas said, decisions are reached will have (Continaed on Page 2.) • from citizens that in lieu of a rental carpenter’s plane.” It is made of had resulted in the discovery that ranking senior captains in the Con­ get the least number of laughs out street, local contractor and builder, necticut National Guard and has their application during his tenure charge covering maintenance and cast aluminum and screwed to the hundreds of organizations are en­ of office. Some authorities here of nonsense and tneongrous ideas, interest, they would prefer a -plan and a former-member of the Man­ been with the 169th Regiment since edge of the plane. The attachment gaged in propaganda designed to feel that the approaching confer­ she revealed. which would extinguish the cost of 1922. He has served as a captain, chester Board of Selectmen, has can be reversed so that in one po­ break down efforts for preparedness ence is the most Important inter- Girls Kept Record construction by an assessment as supply officer, as regimenta. ad­ N .Y . TO CELEBRATE been granted a United States pat­ sition it guides the plane for squar­ and to spread Communistic ideas. nationar gathering since the Paris Miss Kamboropou,lous reported similar to that laid at the north jutant and lastly as regimental in­ ent on an attachment to a carpen­ ing the board, and in the other po­ Evidence in his possession, he said, peace conference, not only to Eu­ to the .American Psychological So­ end, the maintenance thereafter to sition guides the plane to bevel the telligence officer. He is a graduate ter’s plane which enables the user justifies airing the matter in pub­ rope but to the United States as ciety section of the convention that be assumed by the town and covered board. lic of the Plattsburg Training Camp well. MONDAY AS USUAL by town taxes. the Vassar girls kept a record for to accurately square and bevel Mr. Johansson was imbued with Meantime opponents of the cruis­ where he was commissioned. Later The expectation is that Europe a period of one week of the num­ boards. The attachment is simple the idea because of the fact that the er bill in the Senate, including he was with Company D of the not only is goring to try to have its ber of times they laughed at a se­ in construction but is extremely hand of Ihe carpenter cannot be de­ Senator Norris (R) of Nebraska, 307th Infantry. He is a financier in war debts to this country scaled ries of over 4,000 situations em­ INVITE REPORTERS helpful to carpenters, cabinet mak­ pended upon to plane absolutely were gathering their forces with a civil life and through expedience, down, but also to link together New Year s Eve WiB Be Ob­ bodying various types of humor. ers, or any craftsmen who have square. The turn of the hand but view of preventing passage of the knowledge and character is emi­ j Germany’s payments with the pay- Girls of the “ introvert type” need for an accurate squaring or a fraction throws the edge of the bill authorizing 15 more cruisers nently qualified td assume such an j ments that are to be made to this served as Moist as It kept the longest record of laughs; beveling tool. board off true. Mr. Johansson and one additional aircraft carrier. important detail as the captaincy of country in the debt settlements al­ those of “ extrovert type” the short­ TO COOLIDGE ISLE Hartford Man Interested. made a working model of wood and Their fir.st effort when Congress G Company. ready reached. The invention which is patented it was so satisfactory he decided to America Opposed est. The lower the degree of intelli­ reassembles Wednesday is expected Dexter’s Qualifications Ever Was. gence the greater number of times under Serial No. 251,838, Patent have a metal model made and at­ to be to delay the cruiser bill for American policy has always been No. 1,699,395 and as of January tached to a plane. the Kellogi peace pact. Advocates Captain Allan L. Dexter is pecu­ staunchly opposed to any such the girls laughed without humor­ 15, 1929, has been taken out by Mr. Gets Patent. liarly qualified to assume Captain ous cause. For First Time They Will Ac­ of the cruiser bill are confident that scheme. Presumably Mr. Hoover Johansson and the final permit Satisfied that the idea was a good it will carry if it is brought to a Hawley’s post as Regimental Intel­ has shared those views, as he has .New York, Dec. 29.— Prohibition Prof. Raymond S. Dugan of one, and that carpenters generally granted. Associateu with Mr. Jo­ vote, having as it does, the backing ligence Offiv-er. During the war Cap­ been an important figure in the two enforcement and increased police told astrono­ company President on hansson in the sale and promotion would welcome the invention Mr. tain Dexter served for a consider­ administrations that established the mers at another meeting of his ob­ of the administration. activity are not going to interfere of the device is Roberts K. Skinner, Johansson sought the assistance of able time in the intelligence depart- policy that, so far as this govern­ servation over a period of 23 years of Skinner Brothers, Hartford real local machinists who ground out a r- ,mt and proved himself unusually ment is concerned, there can be no with New York’s annual reception of Rt Persei, one of the faint stars Shooting Trip. estate agents. Profits secured working model from cast aluminum well adapted to that kind of service. connection with what Germany pays to the New Year oiT Monday night. in the Constellation of Perseus. through the sale or licensing of the and then attached it to a plane. The MSniTHTOISID Lieutenant Russell E. Hathaway to England, France and Italy, and It was apparent today. Two Stars patent rights will be divided equally attachment was sach a simple affair who now becomes captain of, the what those countries pay to the that Mr. Johansson did not consider The big town will be just as mad, “ The brightness of this star,” St. Simons Island, Ga., Dec. 29— between Mr. Johansson and Mr. UBAiIy FM EW EU Howitzer Company of Manchester United States for cash borrowed Skinner. having the idea patented. He was from the United States Treasury. just as noisy and just as wet as it said Prof. Dugan, "varies in such She stage was set at Sapelo Island, has received a well earned promo­ a way as to make it quite certain Aids Carpenters. doing some carpentry work for tion. He ranks high in the estima­ It is also expected that any has ever been. ‘■‘Christmas White House” of Presi­ Roberts K. Skinner, and during the that there are two stars, far The illustrations herewith clearly Chamber of Commerce to Give tion of the^ officers of the National scheme of reparations payments ar­ Everywhere stunts and special dent and Mrs. Coolidge, for the show the attachment and the use to time conversed with him about pat- rived at will have to include the parties are being planned. And of enough away to be seen as a single Big Dinner in Honor of Guard and is extremely popular one big show of the holiday vaca­ which it can be put. It is officially with the men. Colonel Hunter told marketing of a vast sum of Ger­ course the greater part of the in­ star, revolving about their common called in the United States Patent (Continued on Page 2.) - 'Governor Tonight. man railway bonds. Naturally, in­ habitants will follow the usual cus­ center of gravity, like the earth tion today. The executive *and his The Herald today that he was pleased that the appointments could ternational bankers abroad want to tom of totally ignoring the and the moon.” wife are spending the days from Albany, N. Y., Dec. 29.— Albany unload a great issue of these bonds “obvious” fact that the country is The suggestion that scientists In will bid Gov. A1 Smith a formal be so made that Lieutenant Hatha­ in the United States. America would Christmas to New Years as the way could be given the captaincy. flry. Water— good old H20— will various fields be organized in “ a guests of Howard E. Coffin on the KING’S CONDITION YALE SCIENTISTS farewell tonight at a dinner of then have a real Interest in seeing be conspicuous everywhere by its Quish Plea^etl to it that Germany made good her naval research reserve” as a pre­ latter’s isolated island estate off the leading business and professional Lieutenant Thomas J. Quish of absence, and more than one sar­ SoutL Georgia coast, and this Sat­ obligations. paredness measure was made in men of the city. Company G, when told of the ap­ donic toast • will be drunk to the a paper prepared by Captain C S. urday was to mark the first real The event is under the direction Knows The Question Philadelphia judge who recently opportunity the reporters and pho­ IS BEHER TODAY PLAN EXPEDITION pointment of Captain Hawley to the As a member of the American McDowell of the United States of the Chamber of Commerce, of command of G Company said that ruled that a citizen was guilty of Navy and read this morning by tographers have had to let the gen­ war debt commission, Mr. Hoover which the governor is a member. he was much pleased that Captain took a prominent part in effecting violating the law when he purchas Commander Miles G. Libbey. In it eral public know at first hand how Nearly 500 reservations have been their President is occupying his Hawley had been detailed here. He the settlements agreed upon, and ed anything containing over 1-2 of Captain McDowell said: made for the dinner. time. was happy, he said, that such a fine unless he has changed his mind 1 per cent. “ Scientists must play an ever Has a Quiet Night— Talk of Join Forces With National Hotels Crowded. A “ deer drive” is on schedule for Gifts will hi presented to the officer had been secured for the since those days European nations increasing responsible part, both in Virtually all of the hotels and this morning. From the noon hour executive by v..rious organizations. command. Because of the time his will not get very far with the Hoo­ night clubs, particularly those in peace and war, and it is proposed on, however, a busy day is in pros­ Blood Transfusion Heard M use^i to Explore Crat­ The Chamber of Commerce will work with his brother, William J. ver administration in proposing Yer Ihe white light belt, today announc­ that scientists in the various fields pect. A buffet luncheon comes first. give him a library chair, and the Quish. consumes Lieutenant Thos. duction of their obligations to this ed standing room only. And the be organized >n a naval research Then follow “ steer races” on the In London; ers in New Mexico. Albany school teachers a library J. Quish would have found It im­ country, nor for more lenient terms. money that will be spent in these reserve as a preparedness meas­ beach after which there will be table. possible to accept the captaincy of Mr. Hoover was one member of th6 palaces of joy will total enough to ure; a central information office to negro boys on the island singing Gov, Smith will be 55 years old Company G. commission who felt that the terms be maintained by the navy for co­ spirituals. It is possible the photo­ tomorrow. A birthday dinner, plan­ granted were most liberal. buy blankets for ten million suf­ The dispatches from the Utah to fering Hottentots. relating sclenMflc da+a and for is­ graphers will be able to coax a pic­ London, Dec. 29 — A slight New Haven, Conn., Dec, 29.— ned by Mrs. Smith, will take place suing naval problems to members ture of the hunting that has fea­ change lor the better in King Yale and the United States National the effect that the President-Elect The prices for a single reserva­ at the Mansion tomorrow night. will not endeavor 'to influence the tion at the hotels and clubs range of the research reserve.” tured the first two full days of the George’s condition was reported in Museum at Washington will join This ^will mark the last social af­ SLEUTHS LONG TRIP presidential vacation. The Coffin present Congress toward any king from $15.50 down to a modest $5, the following official medical bul­ forces, next spring, to explore ex­ fair for the Governor and Mrs. or legislation are taken in 'Wash­ lips and taxicab fare excluded. yacht will transport the reporters KILLED BY TRAIN and photographers from their base letin issued at Buckingham palace tinct craters in north-eastern New Smith at the mansion. On Monday ington with considerable salt. Ob­ High Prices. morning they will move to a local New York, Dec. 29^Detectives viously, Mr. Hoover could not come The peak of the prices will be here at St. Simons Island to Sapelo, at 11:30 o'clock a. m., today: Mexico. The Yale explorers will Stamford, Conn., Dec,-29— Peter “ The King has had a quiet night. hotel where they will remain until Edward Fitzgerald and Robert C. to Washington, summon Congres­ reached in the Grand Central Park a 2 1-2 hour ride. The trip may J. Murray, of Rye, N. Y., was in­ There is a "very slight change for be members of the staff of Peabody after the inauguration on Tuesday Kelly of Brooklyn headquarters left sional leaders into conference and clear up several points of mystery, Museum of Natural history who al- avenue district, with the Biltmore stantly killed near the Glenbrook such as whether Mrs. Coolidge went the better in His Majesty’s condi­ of Governor-elect Franklin D. today on one of the longest trips tell them what he wants done. That topping the list. The bottom of the leady are planning the < expedition railroad station here today when he hunting yesterday. It was reported tion.” Roosevelt. Immediately after the ever taken by police officers to bring is, he could not do it too openly, line up is reached with the quiet was struck by a New Canaan-bound Thursday that she would; Friday The bulletin was signed by Sir which was organized -when Yale inauguration the governor and his back a criminal. They are going for what would be assuming the old Brevoort hotel in Greenwich scientists received definite informa­ train of the New Haven railroad. morning that she would not, Friday Stanley Hewett, Sir Hugh Rigby family will go to New York. to Hawaii. prerogatives of the President. And, Village. Here the assessment will Murray, walking on the track, was evening that she had; and had par- and Lord Dawson of Penn. tion of fossil remains in the reaion. Jose Encarnation, alias Benjaim after all, Mr. Coolidge still Is the "be only $5, Announcement of the proposed ex­ Shortly after the first of the year Rubeles was arrested in Honolulu President. The proprieties must observed by the motorman of the While anxiety in palace circles the Governor and Mrs. Smith, ac­ The quoted prices will in­ train too late to save his life. (Continned on Page 2.) was lessened somewhat by the more pedition was made here today. on, complaint of local authorities be observed. But there isn’t any clude cover charge, supper, noise Tjie region to be explored lies companied by a few close friends, who charge him with passingv$20,- doubt in Washington that Mr. Hoo­ reassuring bulletins, it has not been will leave for the south for a producing instruments and favors removed. It was pointed out that north-west of EJ Paso, Texas, some 000 in bad checks. ver will find a way during his so­ mo'nth’ s vacation. . " , ^ -for the fair sex. Masculine cele­ anxiety must persist until the phy­ 45 miles. “ This is an extensive journ here to communicate to the brants, as is always the case, will Whalen Shows His Hand sicians be able to state definitely volcanic region where laVa flows leaders of Congress what he would receive a souvenir of their fun in that there is an increase in the are a characteristic feature,” says a like to see accompllshel before the form of a white paper with, the King’s strength. statement Issued at the university, March'^4. And neither is there any letters p-a-l-d stamped on it. Rumors of a possible blood trans- “ and near the town of Aden; Don Airplane High Up In A ir doubt but that he would like to see The Biltmore will accomodate a In Drying Up Broadway fusioQ operation led to the authori­ Ana county, lies the low cone of an farm relief enacted, fthus releasing crowd of 2,000; the Ritz-Carlton tative statement this afternoon that extinct crater rising about two him from the obligation to call a 1,500; the Roosevelt 1,500; the such a course has not been con­ hundred feet above the surrounding Is Refueled In Darkness special session at once. Waldorf-Astoria 1,000 and the New York, Dec. 29.— Police Com­ Speakeasies in the slums and In sidered by the physicians. It la country.” In this and other sim­ Savoy Plaza 700. missioner Whalen’s threat to “ dry Greenwich Village as well as in the understood that Friday’s reference ilar formations the expedition will The McAIpin will boast the big­ up New York’s White Light district White Light district felt the force to “ new 'measures” referred to a seek signs of longWanished animals San Diego, Cal,, jDec. 29,— hearsal for the epic endurance WOULD MODIFY ACT gest assemblage. Fully 4,000 by New Year’s eve” resulted in of the new police commissioner’s ne'W course in. medicines. and perhaps will find the remains Aviation experts todaj expressed flight on which the Question Mark merry-makers are expected to ex­ raids on twelve alleged speakeasies campaign. At a dingy tenement on of human beings who lived on this satisfaction oyer the test flight laat wii: set out at oawn of New Year’s New York, Dec. 29.— Out of the claim “ Happy New Year!” within last night and early today In which Mott street, only three blocks from PRINCE GOES HUNTING continent thousands of years ago. , night Qf the Army plane “ Question Day. J I 64,000 plans submitted in W. C. ,ts confines. eighteen proprietors and waiters police headquarters, liquor valued London. Dec. 29-^The Prince of ---- »------5------Mark” and her refeuling plane. For The sister ship 'of the Question The celebration at the Waldorf were arrested and liquor valued at at $75,000 wa„ confiscatec and Wales went to. Leicestershire today ‘.lie first time in history twa planes Mark and one of the refueling Durant’s $25,000 prize contest, it will be doubly significant inasmuch $200,000 seized. Most of the raids eight prisoners arrested. for a fox hunting excursion, which TREASURY BALANCE. rn mid-air establlsned contact , in planes which Is to serve as her was announced today, 6,340 of as It will be the last of its kind in were made In the “ Roaring For­ The prisoners were to be arraign­ ■was generally regarded as a sign of absolute darkness. nurse,, together with most of the them urged modification of the Vol­ the historic hostelery. It is to be ties” by police in r v operation with ed later today on chages of possess­ Washington, Dec. 29.— Treasury The feat w accon bed over personnel’ of the^ endurance flight, stead act as the best way to make tom down in the summer. federal agents. ing and selling Uauor. fContInnMl on Page 2 .) balance Dec. .27.— $276,741,294.62. Rockwell Fiela dur._., the re­ participated in tlie unique test. the 18th Amendment effectiyeC

1 ' .‘‘t- ■ 1 IMANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, S O pH MANCXHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29,1928. ■ P A S E T W O craft, which consist aluost entirely of anti-aircrtitt guns or reinforced RECORDS BROKEN {LOCAL MAN INVENTS LINCOLN P A R rS bottoms. None is considered efflca WORBDERBTSmiOir; PHONE COMPANY Last Night Fights cibus by aeronautical experts. I PLANE AHACHMENT 'Hudlilr I FOURTEEN IN CONTEST IN ROAD BUILDING At tJe'w York— Ace Hudkins, HEAVY WARSHIP QUICfiC r e m a r r ia g e ANNOUNCES BIG MOVIE LIBRARY Nebraska middleweight, won deci­ sion over Rene De Vos, of Belgium, Chicago, Dec. 29.— MmC Iraaq; (Continued from Pag-J 1) 10; Gorilla ijones, Akron, Ohio, Big Gab Test is Drawing Pavloska, prima donna of (Continued from Page 1.) GETS BIRD FILM drew with Tony Vaccarelli, New BUILDING PLANS Crowds Now That It Nears BUILDING PLAN York, 10; Jack McVey, New York cago Civic Opera Company . the End. ents. Mr. Skinner had had some Maurice Elias Mesirow. an We «3id experiments with patents because negro middleweight, won decision construction to reconstruction was over Vincent Forgione, Philadel­ ear specialist of Chicago, a i # ^ be New York, Dec. 29.— Milt Cran­ about 15 to 1. This ratio has grad­ he once invented a type of gasoline Chicago.— The motion picture ■ London.— Drastic modifications married here today. The Boston.— The number of long engine. Mr. Skinner asked Mr. phia, 10. in the future warship carried out, dall’s big “ Gab Fest” chattered on ually changed until during the library of the natural history of At Boston— Ernie Schaaf, Bos.- plans were announced last night at distance telephone calls is showing Johansson to seek a patent, and North America being assembled by by the naval branch of the Royal today heading for nowhere and get­ past year the proportion of con­ such a rapid growth, that the ton heavyweight, won decision over a dinner party attended by the ting there fast. struction to reconstruction was 1 after about three months the U. S. the Chicago Academy of Sciences Air Force, according to the London American Telephone and Telegraph patent was granted. Johnny Rlsko, Cleveland, 10. couple. « '• The ‘Talk of the Town’ was to to 2.5. museum in Lincoln Park has been Jimmy Byrne, Louisville, Ky., “ Daily Express.” If the marriage takes place on Company announces, an additional Mr, Johansson and Mr. Skinner The newspaper'declares that the have reached an end tonight, but The 1928 construction season enriched by the addition of several won decision over Jake Warren. schedule, it will occur less than 24 Increased patronage prompted the expenditure of $11,042,000 for con­ have made no plans for manufac­ thousand feet of film showing some experiments hv'e shown that bat­ without question witnessed the struction of long distance facilities. New York heavyweight, 10; A1 hours after the signing of a divorce promoter to permit his contestants greatest amount of highway activity turing the attachment, nor have 20 species of birds, including geese tleships and cruisers costing many The new appropriation makes a they attempted to sell or license Flay, Los Angeles, won . from decree freeing Dr. Mesirow from to butcher nouns and adjectives for in the state’s history. There was and ducks from the far north, at George Hoffman, former national millions of dollars each are ex­ quite a while longer. hardly a section of the state in total appropriation for construction their rights. They do btelieve that their winter haven in Louisiana, it tremely vulnerable to njw forms of nis first wife. Judge Harry M. From present indications the during 1928 on the longer haul cir­ the guide can be manufactured amateur heavyweight champion, on Fisher, who signed the divorce, which there was not at least one was nanonnced today by Alfred M. technical knockout, 3rd. attack by aircraft, and adds that Word Derby will come to a close road being rebuilt. There was 97 cuits of the Bell System of $49,- cheaply if stamped out of material Bailey, directer of the museum. the British Board of Admiralty is will perform the marriage cere­ 038.000 as compared with $36,- rather than cast. They believe that when whispers take the place of ac­ separate jobs in progress at mid­ Bailey secured the pictures with displaying considerable anxiety as mony. cents and lucidity gives way to in- 406.000 expended during 1927. there will be a general demand for year. the device when it is*on the mar­ the co-operation of Joseph Letter PIG CROP SHORT a result. csoherency. In all of this work the policy of The telephone company stated Chicago capitalists, who is deeply The new methods of attack are The Gab Fest moved from its the department to construct Con­ that the additional expenditure will ket. , ^ JURY DISAGREES Always a Carpenter. interested in colored motion picture declared to be droppea depth original location in a Park avenue necticut roads in such a manner be applied to extensions and im­ charges and radio controlled torpe­ Mr. Johansson has always been a photography. The base of opera­ Boston, Dec. 29.— The country’s Morristown, N. J., Dec, 29.-— armory yesterday and is now quar­ that the average speed of traffic provements on long distance lines tions was the palatial Letter hunt­ pig crop is five per cent, short. does released from airplanes and in all sections of the country, in­ carpenter. He made boxes in After deliberating more than six tered at a 42nd street dance hall might be increased while at the ing lodge at the mouth of the Miss­ So stated the New England Crop it is stated that all the precautions where its attractions are illumi­ cluding the three transcontinental Sweden when he could scarcely same time decreasing the accident issippi river. Reporting Service of the United taken against such devices have up hours the jury trying G. Ross Lan­ nated by the bright lights of Broad­ hazard was continued. In the 97 routes. reach the top of the work bench. sing, Dover, N. J., confectioner, ac­ He has been in the construction Bird Tug of War States Department of Agriculture to the present proved unsatisfac­ way. The first night in the new contracts in force during the con­ Increase In Seiwice An unusual addition to the film today. Decrease in the New Eng­ tory. cused of mistreating twenty little hall resulted in added attendance During the first half of 1928, as business here for 10 years and for struction season, the speed and library sho\Vs a tug-of-war between land'states was 3.4 per cent, and in Feeling of Anxiety girls, failed to reach an agreement and the presence of Vincent Lopez safety elements were improved by three years served as a Selectman. compared v,*ith the same period in an alligator hunter and a seven- the corn belt states only 1.5 per “ The general feeling of anxiety and was discharged today by and other celebrities among the the building of 66 cut-offs, the 1927, telephone users increased He came to Manchester with the foot alligator, and the bagging of cent. Large decreases were shown on this subject was reflected by Judge A. H. Holland. The' grey- spectators. elimination of 79 curves and the their use of the long distance cir­ H. Wales Lines company when the At 10 o’clock today there were reduction of 53 grades. Improve­ Lincoln School was being built. He the' animal. The hunter, attracted in southern states. The survey was speakers at the recent mealing of haired defendant is one of eight cuits of the American Telephone made in co-operation with about the Insti.u-tion of Engineers and men recently indicted on the same still 14 embryo orators in the ment of the sight line was made and Telegraph Company an average made Ms home here while working by a flock of blackbirds which al­ running. All of them seemed to wherever new paving was laid. on the Lincoln School and though ways gather around places occu­ 100,000 farmers throughout the Shipbuilders at Glasgow,” says the charge in the Dover school scan- of twenty per cent. At the same he continued in the employ of H. pied by alligators, thrust a long cdunli'y. newspaper. “ Alfred E. Spanner, be in fair physical condition, witn In addition to the 310 miles of time there was an even larger in­ ^3.1s their retirement to the sidelines a new paving completed during the Wales Lines company for some hooked ole into a huge hole in the Southern farmers intend to de­ who has made a specnrl study of -No move was made for further crease in the percentage of foreign time, he continued to reside in Man- | bank of a pond and found the own- crease the acreage of potatoes by the question, declared that a 10 long way off. , , year., 53 towns, assisted by the calls from this country, with the prosecution of the confectioner. Betty Wilson, the Pittsburgh col­ department through state aid, pro­ ctiGstcr. er at home. The big animal hooked 29 per cent, in 1929, the report de­ pound charge exploded against a result that a portion of the newly He is highly pleased that he has clared. This decrease it was stated ship below the water line was suf­ legian, is still in first place, al­ vided for the construction of, 112 authorized expenditure will be used his tail into the roof of the hole though other women miles of town road which, when secured a patent on his invention, and resisted th^ efforts of the hun­ was likely to result in a lighter ficient, even if it did not sink her, TO CHECK UP DOCTORS to speed up the preparation of but is ■ most modest when inter­ supply of southern potatoes next to render ‘unbattlewort'iy.’ have raised the cry that she is the completed will be a valued part of short wave ti’ansoceanic systems, to ter until help arrived, after which favorite of the management. Ho^v- the state highway net, although viewed about it. His one thought it was quickly dragged to the sur­ spring and would have a favorable “ He added that the members of Stamford, Conn., Jec. 29.— Police axd Williams is just about on even | supplement the long wave transat­ seems to be the desire to give Mr. influence in the market situation in the institution known how thin the have started a check-up on persons not actually part of the trunk line lantic telephone system, which has face and dispatched. ferms with Miss Wilson, as neither system. Practically all of the Skinner as much credit as possible One reel of pictures of intense in­ Now England. bottom of a ship ac'.ually is, and practicing medicine here, and will been in service since January, 1927. has taken time out since the begin state aid construction has been for urging that the device be pat­ terest to ornitholog’scs and natural that it is beyond their skill to de­ examine the credentials of all less­ Other construction planned in­ planned with the advice of Com­ ented and then successfully securinc history lovers shows the journey’s sign and construct steel hulls which er known practioners to determine ting of the race, cludes: aerial wire lines, telephone i The other front runners are missioner Macdonald so that those the patent He hopes now to have end for a/vast migration of blue REPORT N. Y. GANGSTERS shall be impervious to the effect if they are at all qualified for the Aeanette Marlow who is * town roads selected for paving are cable lines, carrier current tele­ the attachment patented in all for­ and snow geese from their recent­ of 10 pound charges, even in war­ profession. those which connect directly with phone and telegraph circuits, tele­ eign countries. ly discovered nesting place in Baf­ ships.” Mayor A. N. Phill’ ps, Jr„ started trunkline highways or with roads of phone repeaters and loading coils, fin Land. Because of their limited PLAN TO LIBERATE PAL Describing the general methods the police activity because of com­ neighboring towns. radio program transmission circuits range these birds are among the and tactics of air attack, the news­ plaints received by the Board of and land and buildings to house Preparations for this year’s rec­ most interesting and least known. paper divides them into foar cate­ Health that jintrained persons were i BOLTONP^iSHING specialized equipment. Wisconsin Jail Heavily Guard­ ord breaking highway program were So great vas the migration that gories. Firstly, by dropping mobs. posing as physicians. begun in 1927 and the first of the The telephone company states NEW BOOK HAS bands of the birds kept coming ed on Receipt of Tip from An unsatisfactory method due to 1928 contracts were advertised for that of the construction program, down out of the north all one day New York. the highly armored nature of decks \ J. Williamson, chief game war­ bid early last December in order about $32,400,000 is being spent in den under the Connecticut fish and and night. and guns. • _ that the contract,ors might obtain additions and extensions to long EXPLANATION OF A Rare Sight Kenosha, Wis., Dec. 29.— Receipt .lerial Warfare game commission, held a hearing distance lines, and more than $12,- an early start on their grading and “ It was a rare sight,” said Bailey. of a tip that five New York gang­ Secondly, by dropping mines in Bolton last night on the question of earth removal work. The open_ 000,000 is being used^on central of­ “ Never at any time of the nine sters were enroute here to free tlie neighborhood of ships or in again closing the Boiton Pond o winter, although its continuous fice equipment in connection with hours we ivere in the blinds was a Eddia Kane, alleged member of the waters through which they are fishing through the ice Six of the cycle of frost and thaw caused in­ long distance calls. COMETS’ ORIGIN STATE hand out of sight. They came in an Boston Billy Gang of Jewel- thi*'ves, likely to pass. This is declared to ■36 persons who attended t ^ meet creased maintenance work, never­ When nearly 1,600 miles of new tng held at the hotel at the laae, endless stream, all flying in per­ caused an unusually heavy guard to be one of the probable methods of theless enabled a fine start on the telephone cable construction is be set up around the Kenosha coun­ favored the ban on ice f grading process. Commissioner fect fo mation. How many thou­ aerial warfare at sea in the future. | 30 Manchester and Rockv^e fisbe placed in service this year, all rec­ Chicago.— A new scientific Book sands if the geese there were it was ty jail today. Thirdly, the dropping of depth j TODAY Macdonald issued orders to all con­ ords for a single year will be brok­ CONTINUOUS 2 :1 5 to 10:30 men opposed it. A vote was taken of Genesis, offering explanation of impos ible to estinate. Within a The information came from Cap­ charges, said to tt an exceedingly tractors to proceed with their work en by the Long Lines Department tain Harold King of the Nassau after the fishermen had been =iven as long as the mild weather lasted. the origin and growth of comets, radius of 25 miles of Mr. Leiter’s satisfactory methoc of attack. ‘an opportunity to talk. of the American Telephone and hunting grounds are to be found county constabulary. The gang­ Fourthly, by torpeaoes. Comment­ “ FREEDOM OF THE This made it possible for the con­ Telegraph Company. meteorites, satellities, and Plane­ sters left New York Wednesday No decision ^\as ^ive , tractors to advance their work a more birds than in almost any ing on this last method, the “ Ex­ Warden Williamson said that The additions to the transconti­ toids and solving the old problems night, it was said. press” says: PRESS” full month ahead of the time It other area of similar size in the — with— would later announce it. nental routes include wires being of the retrograde motion of the Kane is -wanted for the murder of “ Experiments have been made might normally have been done. It world.” policemen bv both New York and appeared that all construction strung from Omaha via Denver and outer satellites, the “ creep” of the Other spfcias photographed in­ for some time in dropping torpe­ LEWIS STONE Salt Lake City to Sacramento, axes of planets, and the reason the Greenwich, Conn., authorities. He is does from aircraft and lately direct­ MARCELINE DAY would be finished before the heavy clude teal, mallard, pintail, gad- also wanted in New York in connec­ touring season in August. where connection is made by cable moon presents only one face to the wall, widgeon, canvassback and ing’ them by radio. Radio control­ INVITE REPORTERS to the western, terminal of which earth, is announced by the Uni­ tion with the $90,000 Livermore led torpedoes form the l..tcs' and The favorable winter and spring black ducks, many of them native jewel robbery. weather, however, turned to un­ is at Seattle, ■ and the southern versity of Chicago Press. Dr. T. C. most terrible menace to men-of- ADDED FEATURE Chamberlin, eighty-five-year-old to the Arctic, egrets and other TO COOUDGE ISLE favorable weather in the summer. route between El Paso and Los An­ herons, shore birds and,^ several war. They can be controlled from geles. Professor Emeritus of Geology and It rained more than every other species of long winged sea birds. a distance, and theii destructive ef­ Ken Maynard Paleontology at the University, is day and this interfered with actual Also, the New York to Atlanta fect is certain.” — in— (Coptinued fr^m Page 1) telephone cable is being pushed the author of the genealogy, called KING’S CONDITION paving to such an^ extent that the The “ E:.pre6s” states that pres­ “THE PHANTOM CITY” month gained during the winter southward across the state of North “ The Solar Families— The Sun’s ent-day airmen laugL at the meth­ was lost during the summer. Carolina. Children.” BOLIVIAN OCCUPATION IS B E nE R TODAY ods of defense employed by surface In all of the concrete paving done Advancing a “ chrondulitic” the­ by the state this year, a new con­ ory of the origin of the cometary all previous statements to the con crete formula developed by the family. Professor Chamberlin com­ IS NO BAR TO PEACE (Continued from Page 1) trary were erroneous. department’s laboratory at Port­ ILL MANNERS OF pletes the story of the sun’s off­ Sunday Program land was put to use. This formula spring. Formation of planets out more optimism in the royal family Sunday, according to ^ in which calcium chloride is the (im­ FRENCHMEN ARE of seed-like accretions shot out of Both Nations Agree to Sign over the condition of King George. portant element has reduced the the sun under the attraction of a Protocol Which Will Settle The Prince rode to the famous TODAY Continuous : ! „ attend hardening time of concrete by about passing star is the planetesimal Dispute. Belvoir hounds. and CIRCLE Today one full week, so that one way traf­ theory, first advanced by Chamber­ LAID TO WOMEN SUNDAY 2 :1 5 -1 0 :3 0 S ’ tiV - S t fic and detours are resorted to for lin in 1896 and now accepted as TRANSFUSION REPORT displacing the nebular hyqjothesis Washington, Dec. 29.-;—Dr. Eligio considerably shorter lengths of time Paris.— The women are to blame London, Dec. 29— Rumors were It’s Snappy, r e t e f . 's M S ’ on the than formerly. for the young Frenchman’s ill of LaPlace. Ayala, Paraguayian delegate to the current today that a blood trans­ A Romance of Truly Parisian Smart and Features of Work. manners, according to Andre de Expelled by Sun Pan American conference today de­ fusion operation may be part of the Different. Among the features of the year’s Fouquieres, chief of the protocol The chandrulites which form the clared-that the new incident at Fort “ new trea,tment” of King George Flavor. highway work was the* beginning of and arbiter of French elegance and comets and meteors are like the Van Guardia in the Paraguayan mentioned by the royal physicians 99 a new experimental road which will taste. planetesimals in size and structure Chaco, reported reoccupied by Bo­ in their bulletin on Friday. be used for the purpose of deter­ “ These post-war women,” he be­ save that they are not given the livian troops, would not be an ob­ As the result of these rumors the MARTINI mining the exact costs of main­ stacle to conciliation. {U'l^y^oSo.Trt-peS^and wails, ‘are entirely too musculine, abnormal motions imparted by a secretary of the Blood Transfusion With MARY ASTOR AND MATT MOORE tenance on all types of pavement. loo ‘garconnes,’ like the characters passing star, but are constantly A reply from the Paraguayan service of the British Red Cross was r S k ^ " l « ^ i 'l : 'S ^ t i n ^ e '’ he trill Twelve sections of different types of Victor Marguerite and cann.ot being erupted by tbe sun, which government is expected momentari­ inundated today with inquiries CO-FBA’TURE of paving are being laid on a three help but set.a bad example for the has a propulsatory power almost ly on the conciliation protocol which from all classes of people offering SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS mile stretch where uniform condi­ was sent to both beligerents by the “\h“e\°uVey'l“ “ ?er” he%rkted young men. They allow any and equal to its power of attraction. their blood to the King. Meanwhile, TOM MIX tions prevail on the Hartford- The passing star, probably dead, Maurtha committe of the confer­ Buckingham palace was being flood­ 2 SHOWS SUNDAY EVE s c h ? d ^ e ealls lor,M .^C oolidje to all conduct and thus the men be­ in Springfield road through Windsor lieve they cau do anything. They swept by the sun from the southern ence designed to prevent a war in ed with written offers. 7:00 and 9:00 Locks and Suffield. Exact costs for are like the nouveaux riches in heavens in a hyperbolic curve at the Chaco. Bolivian minister Diez The secretary of the Blood Trans- “ Lone Star Ranger” IZ T e . It'er In the la ? " " HOOHS OPE.V 6:30 the building and repair of each qulity. % tremendous momentum, within the De Medina, likewise in expecting an News Service: ehe m il dedicate nnotih tree just section will be tabulated continu­ acceptance from his government. “ They kiss women’s hands and range now occupied by the outer "“ There isn’t the slightest possibil­ The protocol drawn up by Chair­ ously. very ungracefully at that, and of planets. It drew four great double ity of anyone outside of court cir­ K r^tSiih^Ss Besides its work of carrying out shots from the opposite sides of man Maurtha of Peru, in collabora­ cles being required for this pur­ errnwn from an acorn that leu irom the largest construction and recon­ course everyone knows that this tion with Ayala and Diez De Me- should be done only indoors. They the sun, the earth being the twin pose.” struction program in ^the state’s of Uranus, and threw them, in a dna, priovides for a commission of history, the highway'department shake hands with women keeping nine judges to fix the responsibility the other hand in the hip pocket disk, in revolutional motion about also undertook a large amount of tthe sun. where they remained in for the border clashes which began ^TABBED TO DEATH NEXT 'rHUIlSD.\Y, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS other work. Chief among the lat­ and walk into a circle of ladies Dec. 6. With the ejection from K h e Coolidge oak.’’ The Presi- with cigarettes hanging from their equilibrium by centrifugal force. ter was the continuation of the It imparted great mass to the Fort Van Guardia of a small force New York, Dec. 29.— Thomas Stent then is due to go back to program of highway beautification lower lips.” of Bolivian soldiers by Paraguayan Ryan, 25, who came here recently Sapelo, according to the memora This is not done to lack of educa spirally whirling cooling gases, and PARSONS JAN. 3-4-5 by the department’s landscaping bu­ the fact that the particles were all troops. from South Boston, was stabbed dum handed the reporters. reau. During 1928, close to 1,900 tion, according to Monsieur de 3 Nights Only— Big Popular Matinee Saturday. Orchestra $2 Fouquieres. They know what moving in the same direction en­ and killed today in a Brooklyn new trees were planted to enhance abled them to grow around solid RAIL HEAD ILL. rooming house. Mrs. Rose Manning, the beauty of certain portions of should be done and how to do it, Boston, Dec. 29.— President Id a n b u^ o y b u r ie d he argues, but they have been metallic cores. 20, another boarder, also of South tiunkline road. Hundreds of other Tbe chrondulites constantly be­ George Hannauer of the Boston & spoiled by modern women whom Boston, has admitted the slaying trees and shrubs were transplanted ing ejected from the sun, having Maine railroad, was recovering to­ to more advantageous positions. they no longer respect. day at Phillips House, Massachu­ according to police. IN BIG SAND SLIDE dispersive motions, fall back to She stabbed Ryan, the police say The creation of picnic spots with the sun unless they are propelled setts General hospital, from- a sec­ adequate parking spaces was an­ How a four-line diagram, drawn she said, because he attempted to A GLORIOUS out far enough to be stopped by ond operation for hernia. The first M iw MUfiCAL c o M te y Fire Dept. Called Out to Res- other part of the work of the land­ by Marshal Foch, kept Marshal the light-push of neighboring stars. operation was a year ago. attack her. scaping bureau. In many places cue Youth Pinned Against French from a “ disastrous retreat,” In the latter event they are then new beauty spots, previously hidden is described by M. Raymond Poin­ becauseof* thick foliage, were thrown into narrow illiptical orbits {\ Big Truck. care, Premier of France, in his and form into swarms around their fRANK OTTO opened to view by pruning and fifth volume of war memoirs. OLGA 9TE:CV< pLftViA ACCARO ^^*Danbury, Conn.T^ec. 29.-F red trimming the trees which hid them. mutual center of gravity and be­ THEATER, SOUTNVVORW ERASER The Incident, contained in an ex­ come the heads of comets. BA^IL RUySDALL .Visconti 18, was buried foi an In spaces between three and four tract from the book published in ARTHOR GEkftV Jibur today, under five tons of sand road intersections and in vacant Never Dangerous BE-tVTi-lA "OOUN “ Illustration,” transpired after tlie They never form cores because HARTFORD jANAG? & ffa t slid from a Triangle street spot', left by curve eliminations, PRINCESS (/ia______RGARET WEPuE- * Germans drove through a line of n i l bank on which he was work­ gardens of varying types were of their motions and are nevet.dan­ AikT ’■ ^N0>N6AUV-’' ^ ing Rescued, he was taken to planted; and many of the formerly British cavalry in Belgium and gerous because of their slight sub­ & u r y hospital where his recov- hidden slopes lining th.e highways captured Ramscapelle and Holle- stance. Gathering in size in the w e t K beck, according to M. Poincare. fery is held doubtful, were planted with vines, honey­ feeding grounds billions of miles Now Playing! fl Witnesses turned in a fire alarm, suckle, ramblers and woodbine. In answer to a query the British out, they gain speed as they ap­ CoM PANy knd then aided firemen and police Twice during the winter, highway leader informed Marshall Foch that proach the sun and are frequently Tn" digging the youth out. The slide department snow crews were kept he lacked reserves. whereupon broken up. Meteorites, which fall bad pinned him against the rear at work throughout the night to French troops were sent up in sup­ about once a day, are accretions of lUSIC e v LigRETTO Lheels of a truck which he was clear the highway for traffic by port. chrondulites which coalesced near MAFTEft HOWARD JUNIUS JONES . loading. HirHis “=-'■ribs and stomach early morning. The customary “ The first corps of the British the sun’s heat. About seven bil­ LVfilCS By Iwere crushed work of clearing the road shoulders Army was nearly annihilated and lion chrondulites or “ shooting GWAFTeC WOWAPD 3p4 W i\ /VULuCfiN of obnoxious weeds as an aid to French wanted to draw back his stars” fall into the earth’s atmos­ PLAN LONG HOP agriculture was continued, as was artillery and even beat a retreat,” phere during a year. TWE MOST the task of clearing dead brush, said M. Poincare. The twenty-six jatellites control­ ; Roosevelt Field, N. Y., Dec. 20. dead leaves and other debris as a “ If we, accentuate our weakness led by the various planets hre ex­ sumptuously Pliver C. Le Boutilller and Captain means of preventing the outbreak now we shall be swept away like plained as eruptions from the sun of forest fires. In many places, flotsam,” Foch told the French. secondary and reactionary to. the ELABORATE Lewis A. Yancey, who plan to fly “ Hold your first corps where it is. S^on-stop to Panama, continue by the old wooden guide rail was re­ main planet bolts. The-moon Is cost what it may; and I’ll attack on the only one which could have had MUSICAL COMEP/ jeasy stages to Pernambuco, Brazil placed with cable railing since the latter offers greater resistance to the left and right with my troops. an independent orbit at any time. or- Trtc- and fly from Pernambuco back to cars which might ..ccidsntally leave “ He drew a piece of paper from As the first consistent explana­ {Roosevelt field without stopping, the road. his desk and in four lines described tion of the fact that the mooii SEASON are scheduled to start for Prance his idea. French went through faces the earth always on one side, STAGED fry 'DIVM e K 9tR(rr&D 8y field. Canal Zone, at one p. m., to­ Vvith the plan. The Germans were he believes that the ftioon, in grow­ day. Their nlane is the Bellanca finally checked and a disaster was ing by accretion, collected more At-EXANDEA LCFT4/iTcH VAOOHN GOVPRiY USE RUSSIAN PLANES pACM ESnU 1>IA&CTIE9 monoplane “ North Star,’’ owned by averted.” metals on one side than on the »y SC-PP NVOa9CV46Rr— Mrs. Anne U Stillman. other and is therefore unbalanced. Riga, Dec. 29 — Russian fighting One Frenchman dies every five It naturally present its heaviest MHIKIIPMDTOM IWEUnUE POLICE RADIO HOOKUP. planes will be used by Kin,g Amah- minutes from tuberculosis, accord­ side always to the earth. Boston, Dec. 29.— Beginning to ullah’s loyal troops to bomb re­ ing to a weM-known doctor writing Creeps of Axes n s p K A L OIF dav, radio fans can “tune lu on bellious Afghan tribesmen in the ill the “ Paris Midi.” About 150,000 Creep of planetary axe^ is ex­ FOIRmUNlB (QAILO is the yearly death toll in France state police headquarters aW tne Charkas valley, 35 miles north of plained that the vertically moving SEATS BY MAIL NOW. , State House and listen to the Kabul, according ," ' word receiv­ from this disease. lilanetesimals hit the core at one broadcasting every hour to the 22 ed today from M( \ In 1920, twenty-one out of every angle more than any other and thus 10 a. m. to 1 p. m...... 20 cents Prices: Oi*ch. S3; Bale. $2.50, $2.00, $1.50; Fam. Cir. state police barracks from the of­ These planes w.. .aken south­ lO.OOO’ lnhabitants In France died shifted the poles slowly. In Hhe 1 p. m. to 5 p. m ;...... 25 “ents $1.00; Sati Mat. Orch. $2; .Bale- $l-50, $1.00; Fam. Cir. fice of Captain Charles T. Beaupre. ward by loyal Afghan troops that from some' form of tuberculosis; in retrograde satellites the planej^fesi- DAILY 5 p. m. to closing...... , 4C nts 75c. The.radio hookup was designed for had been on duty along the Rus­ Belgium, 9.2, in England, 7.2, in mals hit the planet with such force 6 quick apprehension of criminals. sian frontier. Spaiiii 6, and in Germany, 5.2. as to rebound.

\ t- • \.

MANCHESTER EVENTNG HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN.. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29; 1928.

constantly from countless presses,' SECOND COXGKEGATIONAI. at 3 "p. m., led by Cadets In at least "five hundred languages Kuhl and Edgar Heard from the and. dialects, to hearten human New York Training College. spirits, to uplift human thinking, Frederick C. Allen, Minister. Full-^and deep— ana nwn.! ,s .V'a v - >‘ At the service tomorrow morning Great Salvation service at 7:30. The JEvening Herald to inspire human living. i —Anob.i ; * Special music and singing by the The one best chance of continu­ ■ , . • * . V. we 8ha,ll have the pleasure of hear­ ing to speak to unborn gi aerations ing the president of Piedmont Col­ Band and Songsters. Cadet Kuhl So teach us to nuDabiBr pur 44^'. will bring the message of the-even- is by writing true and profound lege, Frank p. Jenkins, who will Sunday Schpol Lessons words which serve the ^deeper that we may apply our Jie^rts mitoi speak on “ The Last Stand of the wisdom.— Psalms 9P:X2. M ; H Prbgi*am for the Week needs of men and women. With Anglo-Saxon in America.” The by Wilfiam 1'. KHis. Paul, writing-was not an art or a • •’ ? r . i music follows: Boy Scouts at 7:00 sharp. Beneath the moonlight' aid Soldiers’ meeting at 8 p. m. and For Every Age, Creed and Nationality profession, but merely a method of Anthem— “ Arise, Shine,” Maker ministry into which he poured his ‘ SHOWf . -jri- CENTER CONGREGATIONAL , f r.i on the Silent Mountains” , Jacquest. followed by meeting indoors. Prelude, Berceuse in D . .Spinney At 7:30 tomorrow evening we OFHERO-TEAdER-SAlNT a large life for the whole world. By I -T-Wblttler,; S, Friday, Songster practice and Anthem, Ring Out Wild Bells . . • • “ Gesu Bambino,” Yon. i shall again have the privilege of surrender of his,powers to a great ♦ * • - * ...... Damrosch The organ prelude: “ Largo,” hearing Rev. Edward Eells who Holiness meeting. Cause and a great Master he be­ Whatever I have done Im my Anthem, Jesu, Gentlest Saviour Handel. ■ will speak on “ The Brotherhood of ■ cordage of. the British navy, bo the came one of history’s few immor­ has simply been due to the fpet t h ^ Selected. 6:00 p. ni.— Epworth League Believers.” The service will be in ST MARY’S EPISCOPAL strain of sacrifice ran through all when I was a child my mother dallr Rev. J. S. Neill, Rector The International Sunday tals and real leaders. Postlude, Hosanna ...... Wachs service. the auditorium. School Lesson for December 30 of Paul's service. He declared read with' me a part of the Bim^,, Topic: “ Back to the Home Rev. Alfred Oark, .Curate and made me learn a part of Ibl-hy; Church school, 9:30. At the close of the service tomor­ r - is, “ Paul, The World Christian’* •^‘For to me to live is Christ.” Men’s League, 9:30. Leader, Dr. Church.” row morning the treasurer G. F. II Corinthians 11:20-30. No\ only was he a cosmopolite SEVEN SENTENCE SERMONS. ■ heart.— Wendell PMlllps, >, ‘ ^ ? Leader: Miss Margaret Lewis. Sunday, December -30th Services: and a gentleman and a scholar, but Elbert M. Shelton. Speaker, Waid Borst, will be in the vestibule to 9:30 a. m.— Church School. E. Duffy. Topic: 1928 in Retro­ 7:00— p. m.— Evening service. distribute the weekly pledge envel­ Paul was a great thinker—^the .best Teach us. N Year, to be Men’s Bible Class. spect. Christmas play, “ The Shepherds’ opes for 1929. Prayer brain that has ever fertilized human Free men among the free. MUSTA BEEN A BIG DEAL.: The Cyp Club, 6:00. Leader, Roy •Surprise.” The men will bowl at Conran s 10:45 a. m.— Morning thought. Parrots are more popular —rjames Whitcomb Riley. and Sermon by the Rector. Warren. Speaker, Mr. Woodruff. Program for the Week. Alleys as usual Monday evening at Every truth that really gets any- owls nowadays. Real thinking * * m London.— It costs big money.fpt Monday 7:30 p. ni.— Young Topic: ‘•‘Almost” where hhs to ba embodied in the jg pg^j.g jq fields, except the phy- A small ship launched upon an un­ Topic: Memories of 1928. 7:30. Boy Scouts of Troop 1 meet 12:15 a. m.— Special Parish ndulge in luxuries like transrAt? Notices Men’s basketball. at the Harding school Monday at life of a man. As we stand before.; gj^g^i sciences. In sturdy brain pro- known sea, ,antlc telephone conversations. A- the portal of the New Year, all 'have lagged below the level Monday, 7;00— Girl Reserves, 9:00 p. m.— Watch Night serv- A small seed planted from an un­ London visitor recently called an; 7:00 p. m. ^^3^:*^00^’p. m.— Highland Park Sun­ sorts of good advice will be given jjjg ancients. There is a certain primary room; 7 : 30— Troubador iC 6S, The annual meeting of the known tree, American business associate andj Tuesday 7:00 p. m.— Boy Scouts. day School. , to^ everybody— and most of it will j^g^ York schoolman, often called party, intermediate room. Ladies’ Aid Society will be held at 7:00 p. m.— Evening Prayer and Such is this strange New Year to talked 95 minutes. His bill "was, 7:15 p .m.— Camp Fire Girls. be forgotten within a week. Some the day’s greatest philosopher, who me. — Anon. Tuesday, 2:30— W. C- T, U. the Community Club House Sermon by the Curate. close to $1,425. '. meeting at 105 Chestnut street, Wednesday 2:30 p. m.— Ladies favored millions, who for six jg a materialist and almost an anti­ ♦ ♦ ♦ Wednesday afternoon at 3 o’clock. Topic: “ Wanted— A Man’ months have been following the ^ j.^ijgjgQigt. The cult of his teach- Mrs. Lois Kleinfelter, hostess. Aid meeting, Election of'officers and yearly fi-, Monday; 7:30 p. m. — Girls The gift of another year, dear Lord, 4:00— Junior Boys’ gym hour. Uniform Sunday School Lessons, jjjgg encircles the globe. Yet a dig- From Thy loving hands we take; Business, New Year’s party; 7.30 uancial report will be given. Friendly Society meeting. __Annual meeting Ecclesiastical 5:30 p. m.— Ladies’ Aid supper are fortunate in facing the year ggj. jj^to Chinese literature has made Oh, gran that we use it gratefully, Don’t forget Tall Cedars Ne%- There will be a church school Tuesday, 7:30 p. m.— Boy Scouts 1929 under the compulsion qf a a;parallel between the Tnost charac- Year’s Eve Dance at Masonic Tpratf society. This meeting will be ad­ Thursday 4:00 p. m.— Junior For Thy tender mercy’s sake. New Year’s party for all officers, meet. great c’- r. ^r, Paul of Tarsus,, tgj.tgtjg utterances of this Columbia pie.— Adv. journed to Jan. 9. Girl’s gym hour. tqach, and substitute teachers, and Wednesday, (7:00 p. m.— Gala- — Mary D. Brine. 7:30 p. m.— Young Women’s Christianity’s noblest human figure, professor and those of the Chinese Wednesday, 7:00— Boy Scouts. their wives and husbands on Fri­ had Club)— omitted. These studies are summed up in a gage,. Confucius; and the identity David McComb and Alvah Russell, basketball. day evening Jan. 4th at 7:30. The (7:30 p. m.— Bible Class) - Saturday 1:30 p. m.— Intermed­ New Year’s message, which is the gj thought and language could al- scoutmasters. short program will be followed by omitted. final lesson of the course, inspired most be called by the ugly name of Thursday, 2:00— Women’s Fed­ iate Girls, gym hour. exchange of presents. A number of I Friday, 3:30 p. m.— Girls Friend­ 2:30 p .m .— Intermediate Boys by a contemplation of the character plagiarism. So In the newly-popu- eration regula'r meeting. Program. unusually interesting games are be­ ly Candidates. of Paul as a world Christian:-—“ Be jgj. realm of “ religious education,” Mrs. Ai-ra Sutton Mixter of Hart­ basketball. ing planned. Ice cream and wafers SuBday, Jan. 6th— Speaker (an­ the biggest man possible, in highest the sayings and the ideas all seem ford will discuss “ Salads for All will be served. Each person is re­ nounced later) at the Morning Ser­ FINISHING ODR WORK SWEDISH LUTHERAN CHURCH I way^. Live the large life attain-* to come from the same matrix; no Occasions. ’ How to make, how to quested to bring a ten cent gift. vice from Washington Cathedral. able by drawing upon Eternal re- gphere has produced less originality BY GEORGE HENRY DOLE. serve. After the program, tea. Rev. P. J. O. CorneU, Pastor The annual meeting of the church Sunday. Jan. 13th. 7:00 p. m — sources.” lof thbught than this. Too many Friday, 3:00— Brownies, Mrs. will be held Thursday evening Jan.' Union Service, Preacher. Rev. To contemplate the character and i ig^tures and “ leaders” have a set of International Sunday School Lesson Te.xt, Dec. 30. Harold Preston in charge; 7:00— Sunday, 9:30 a. m. — Sunday Oscar Maurer, D. D. of Center Con­ 10th. Mrs. E. A. Lettney will be career of this great innovater-ad- phonograph cylinders instead of I have fought a good fight, I have finished niy coUrs!^ I have Mr. Williams class. School and Fellowship Bible Class. chairman of the supper, with the gregational Church. New Hajen. venturer-hero-teacher-saint is to get bra’"-' C'lls. It is no wonder that kept the faith.— 2 Tim. 4:7. 10:45 a. m.— Swedish Service. people of the parish from the fol­ Special Parish meeting after the a new sense of the size and spa­ these patterers in the realm of re^ 7:00 p. m.— Cantata “ Story of lowing streets, assisting: Hilliard. Morning Service on Sunday (Dec. ciousness possible to a human life llgion want to get rid of Paul: his CHURCH OF IHE NAZAHEXE. Bethlehem,” presented by the 30) to ratify the change of date of Everybody’s commonest temptation Cumberland, Hudson, Woodbridge. brain is too much for them. with many agents, we would diBinl$s Children’s Chorus. The cantata North Elm, Starkweather, Phelps the Annual Parish Meeting to Mon­ is to slump into his smallest self; The time will come when “ I have Rev. E. T. French, Pastor. portrays through chorus and reci­ Greatness Without Graft. those who were diabouest, ^nd un7 Road, Doane, Lydall, Mather, Cen- day, Jan. 21st. ____ to become the least that is possible, finished my course” will be true of tations the birth of the Savior. The profitable. There are'many thIffSS' terfield. Grove and Main to Wood­ instead of the most. Michael- "I’m going to make money while each of us. Happy will he be in children’s chorus numbers 35 voices CONCORDIA LU’THERAN the making is good,” recently re­ that day who can say, “ I have in the human mind like those PCT-* Special series of evangelistic land and Grove. angelo’s famous criticism of the and has rehearsed faithfully to H. O. Weber, Pastor. work of a pupil was expressed in marked a celebrated New York di­ fought a good fight i , . I have sons whom we would not w^nt-: tn services in charge of Professor Roy present this rendition. An offering vine. In this highly-commercial­ kept the faith.” a reputable business. There are the H. Contrell of the Eastern Nazarene NORTH METHODIST EPISCOPAL Sunday school, 9 a. m. one work, written on the canvas will be lifted for the benefit of the English services, 10 a. m. ized age that heresy from the Ups No one goes' through this world tendencies to overstate, overvalue; College at Wollaston, Mass. Marvin S. Stocking, Pastor “ amplius” — “ make larger.” Junior Mission Society. German services, 11 a. m. Pettiness palsies personality. Our of a Christian minister does not find finishes his work without a misrepresent, to suppress jnfor^Af 9:30— Sunday school. The Week Sylvester, services will be held sound as shocking as it would have prolonged battle. He who succeeds tion, to do thint. not strictly ho»- 10:45— Morning worship. This The Church School will meet at largest common sin is littleness. Too Sunday 6:00 p. m.— Childrens Monday evening at 7 p. m. A meet­ many potential first-raters are liv­ seemed to Paul. The apostle in business in these times must est, lo countenapee departure frptn svill be the opening service of. the 9:30. strict rectitude, and to fail in duty. chorus rehearsal. ing of the Board of Trustees will ing second-rate lives. ! shunned even the appearance of struggle»against legions of opposing evangelistic series. Professor Can- Wednesday 7:00 p. m. — Boy At 10:45 there will be a service mercinariness. He toiled as an ar­ forces well officered and organized. These ‘ rails are to .be dismiss^ of worship with music and sermon take place after the meeting. Under the ’ight of Pettiness. trail will preach. Scouts of Troop 5. Wednesday, 8 p. m.— Annual tisan that the taint of money-mak­ Naturally the successful business from character that the house'' of 0:00— Young people's meeting. . approprite for New Year’s Sunday, The air i-i full of clamor of criti­ the soul may be honest, reliable, Friday 8:00 p. m. — Sunday congregational meeting. cisms of the younger generation; ing might not rest upon his Gospel. man is admired because of his stal­ 7:30— Evangelistic service, with School teachers will meet. As this organ numbers and anthem by the Paul had a horror of seeming to wart character and mental acumen and useful. ' : - quartet and by the junior choir. Wednesday, 6:15 p. m.— Willing but the one valid, basic indictment Professor Cantrell in charge. will be the annual meeting all Workers’ society. , ^ make his preaching financially pro- by which he woU the victory of ma- This great work -cannot be donq The sermon subject will be, “ The of them is that they are not meas­ in a moment. The whole life- is 9:00— Monday evening. Watch- teachers are requested to be pres­ Thursday, 7 p. m.— Ladies Aid uring up to their own capabilities fitable to himself. terial success. night service with prayer, praise Lure of The Unattained.” To the And-Paul could write. His power Yet there is a greater accomplish­ given for its accomplishment.; 'lii ent. „ „ boys and girls the pastor will speak society. • ^ . in life; they are slaves of the -in­ and testimony and sermon by Pro­ Saturday, 10:00 a. m.— Confirm­ Thursday, 7:30 p. m.— Senior was put to the t'st ot the pen. Ora­ ment than that of b iness success, business, he who rightly yalues tliad on “ New Things.” ferior, instead of free aspiran's will not waste an hour. WHat then fessor Cantrell. ation Class will meet. Choir. • T-, ,• after what is their attainable best. tors may charm for the moment by and it can be achieved even when Tuesday, all day holiness meet­ The Annual Fellowship Rally and 1 the grace of their personality and business crashes in utter failure. shall be said of the time given to Roll Call which has been planned Friday, 7:30 p. m.—English Their thinking, their pleasures, ing, wit'n services at 10:30 a. m.; ZION EVANGELICAL IATTHERAN by the magnetism of their voice; There is a fight to be carried on in­ finish the business for which ;we for Sunday evening, will begin at choir. their idea'.', their characters are be­ 2:30 and 7:30 p. m.,'in charge of Rev. H. P. R. Stechholz Saturday, 9-11 a. m.— German but the writer murt face the ordeal side of us on spiritual planes. We are created? five o’clock. The committee on ar­ low the level of what the world has The Lord wills that we finish bur Blair Ward and Everett Phillips, school and religious instruction. a right to expect of them; and of of the recorded, unretractable word, have a business to carry, on that German service at 10 a. m. rangement and decoration of the to be judged in cool detachment by others may uot see, a business work here. One perfect Exemplar with special music. room is headed by Mrs. LeVerne The annual election of officers of what their own better judgment 7:30— Wednesday evening. Mid­ Text ot sermon: 1, Pet 2, 1-10. the willing Workers' society of the every reader. Few famous speak­ whose success may be assured from said at twelve ye-rs of age, "Wist Holmes and the committee on re­ should prescribe for themselves. ye not that I must be about my week prayer service. Topic; Will.' shdll the contempla­ Concordia Lutheran church was Everybody feels free to cifiticise ers survive as authors. Paul did. the beginning. That business is to freshments by Mrs. Cyrus G. Tyler. Scores of millions of persons ponder establish in character the principles Father’s business?” Upon the cross 7:30— 'fhursday evening. Annual tion of Christmas grace work in Fayette B. Clarke will be song lead held last Wednesday. The follow­ the preachers nowadays; which is Sunday school board meeting. Christians? Sunday school at 11:15 ing were elected: Katherine his written words every week. of righteousness and make our­ He declared, “ It ” finished.” Fight er and Miss Bernice Lydall will better for the. preachers than for a good fight. Keep the faith. 'The, 7:30— Friday evening. Class a. m.-T-Silvester service on Monday Wrozek, president; Gertrude Kluck, their critics. Fundamentally, what Schblarly criticism has subjecte.1 selves worthy of the blessings that preside at the piano. 'There ■ will his letters to every acid test. Still the Lord wills to give to the soul. Lord will give the power to do bur meeting at the home of. Fred Fish, evening at 7 o’clock in German. be an anthem by the junior choir vice president: Katherine Winzler, ails the ministry is lack of large­ the Pauline utterances pour forth If we were conducting a business allotted work. East,Middle Turnpike. Notes and solos by Miss Irene Lydall and secretary; Elsie Stavnitzky, treas­ ness; they do not meas’’ re up to A cordial invitation is extended Ladies’ Society meets on Wednes­ Mr. Clarke. Brief New Year’s mes­ urer. New Testament specifications. It i.s to*hll to attend the approachin day at 2:30 p. m. Young People’s sages will be given by Miss Evelyn appalling to contemplate the grip evangelistic meetings. Society on Friday at 8 p. m. Clarke, Leon- 0. Holmes, Edwin A. that commonplaceness has upon the Lydall and the pastor. writing and speaking of present- Announcements day clergymen as a class. The The junior choir will meet Wed­ ANDOVER Church has many more secretaries nesday evenin,g at seven o'clock than she has scholars, and many •ivith the Misses Lydall, 22 Hudson Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. "Whitcomb more clerks than she has prophets. Many Beautiful Pieces of street. and four children were guests of Locusts of - littleness------fill the air THE CENTER CHURCH The Women’s Missionary Socie­ ■Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sladen of Ham- belongs to eagles of excel AT THE CENTER ties will meet Friday at three lin street, Manchester; on Tuesday, igjjce. GIFT FURNITURE o’clock, with Mrs. LeVerne Holmes, August Lindholm and chil-' These Times, And Paul’s 267 Main street. dren attended the early service at every reader of these lines, Priced Very Low for Sunday. Jan. 6. at the first com­ the Swedish church; Manchester on ^y^g Apostle Paul was born in a Morning Worship 10:45 munion service of the new year, Tuesday morning. - period of world transition and world Immediate Clearance there will be opportunity for per­ Mr. and Mrs. Howard Stanley and formativeness. The times were sons desiring to do so to unite with daughter Jean, were guests of Mr. ready for the man. Roman roads Church School 9:30 the church. and Mrs. Lester Hutchins in Colum­ and Roman law made it possible i Combination Mahogany Spinet Desks, were The next term of the Church bia on Chriatm^s day. for a person’s grasp to approximate j $47.50, now ...... $31.75 Training Class will open Tuesday Thomas Lewis has given notice his reach; largeness of Influence! Antique Mahogany SpinetDesks, were Men’s League 9:30 evening, Jan. 8. to his milk customers that he will was open to every man with the $55.00, now ...... $36.50 deliver no more milk after Janu­ vision, the nerve and the power to Colonial Desks, red mahogany, were $57.50, THE SALVATION ARMY ary 1, as he has . agreed to sell his S0iz6 it. now ...... , • • ...... ■ • . CYP Club 6:00 Adjt. and Mrs. Joseph Heard milk to Bryant &\Chapman Co. Mr. Great as was Paul’s plastic day, Gov. Winthrops, Comb, mahogany, •were •Tonight a rousing street service Lewis has sold milk for seve*'al ours is greater. For the first time, $72.50, n o w ...... $4SJiO at. Main and Birch, 7:30. Indoors years and his herd consists of re,gis- humanity has entered upon an era Queen Anne Writing Desk, was $32,50, Individuals and families in Manchester without other at 8 o’clock. tered Jerseys. of universal communications. One now ...... $21.75 - church connections are invited to make this church their Sunday school at 9:30 with Charles Wright was home from man’s voice.may be heard, at the in­ Tea Wagons, walnut, were $29.00, now $19JS0 church home. . classes for everybody. New York for the Christmas holi­ stant of utterance, by scores of mil­ Tea Wagons,walnut or raahoghny, were Holiness meeting at 11 a. m. day. • * lions of persons. The printing press, $42.50. n o w ...... $23,60 Young People’s Legion service Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Goodale too, is at the apex of its power. Yet Woven Fiber Ferneries, were $6!25 now $4.25. motored to Springfield Friday to nev(er has more trash been printed, Natural Cedar Chest.s, Woven Fibre Ferneries, were $12.75, now bring Mrs. Goodale's'mother here and in big, beautiful books at that, were $14.50 now $9.75 ...... ^ .5 0 for a visit. than right now. Every radio lis­ Decorated Walnut Chests, Martha Washington Sewing Cabinets, • were Miss Marvin Stanley, will lead the tener will confess that the greatest were $32.50, novz $24.50. n o w ...... $16.50 Swedish Lutheran Christian Endeavo,- meeting Sunday defect of this new marvel is that so ...... : . . $21.75 Priscilla Sewing Cabinets, were $8.95, now St. Mary’s Episcopal Church evening. The topic being Learning little which is really worth while Walnut Top Rail (jhests, ...... $5.9.'S Church From Experience.” Eccl.. 1-16 18, comes over the air. were $49.50, now Barbara Fritchie Sewing Cabinets, were Church and Park Streets. Ps. 37:25. Ima"ine such an aspiring,' ambi­ • ...... $33.00 $24.50, n o w ...... $16.50 Rector: Rev. James Stuart Neill Rev. P. J. O. Oornell, D. D. Mr. and Mrs. William Thompson tious spirit as Paul’s with the tools 48 inch Walnut Console Mahogany Phone Sets Assistant: Rev. Alfred Clark Gbnrch and Chestnut Sts. and their daughter Miss Clara spent of the year 1929 in his hands! "With Chests, were $55.00, with stool; wqre $8.50. Christmas with their son, Frank printing press, radio, automobile, now ...... $30.50 now . $0.75 Sunday, December 30th. ’ ist after Christmas 9:30— Sunday School and Thompson and family in Spring- airplane— and the whole world’s ear Decorated Walnut Con­ Mahogany Phone Sets Bible. Class. field. turned expectantly for a vital voice sole Chests, were with chair, were $13.50 SERVICES: he would have wrought wonder- $59.50, now .. .$39.75 n o w ...... ,...'$9.00 10.45— ^Morning service in ously. For his spirit was greater Walnut Cedar Lined Low Burled Walnut -Phone' 9:30 a. m.— Church School. Men’s Bible Class. Swedish. than any of the appliances of man. Boy, was $89.50, now Sets, were $18.50;- now- ’ HARVARD LAW SCHOOL His all-absorbed devotion to Christ ...... $09.75 ...... $18JI0 10:45 a. m.— Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector. 7:30— Eyenirtg service. Chil­ would have thundered the great­ Doll Carriages, flat fibre, were $9.50, now Cabinet Smokers^ were ness and goodness of God, and the $6.95, now . . , . $5.25 Topic: “ALMOST" dren’s Chorus will present a ...... $7.15 BUYS PORTRAITS OF love and ■ Savio'* ood of His Son, d)oll Carriages, decorated woven fibre, were Genuine Smokadbfs, ‘Were’ r cantata. to the uttermost limits of human $11.50, DOW . ; .-.$34K>‘ 12:15 p. m.— Special Parish Meeting. $17.50, now . , ...... ,$1:L25 communications. Our generation’s ' Doll Carriages, extra large, fancy woven, were Genuine Mahogany Huiplr machinery is mightier than our mo­ dors, were $10.50, now 3:00 p. m.— Highland Park Sunday School. 8 FAMOUS JURISTS $24.50, n o w ...... $18.*'>0 CHURCH OP THE tive and our message. Velocipedes, with balloon tires, were $10.50^ ...... $14.75 7:00 p. ni.— Evening Prayer and Sermon by the Curate NAZARENE GUmpses of Greatness. DOW ...... $7.95 Lacquered Magazine'Car­ Cambridge. Mass.— Harvard Law I have trav'clled swiftly ovet the Genuine C^Dlumbia Velocip^edes, large size, riers, were $3.25.^ now Topic: “ WANT^ED— A MAN" 466 Main Street School has purchased a notable routes so slowly and toilsomely tra­ $ $ . « collection of portraits of eight fa­ were $17.75, now ...... $13.50 versed by the Apostle Paul; and to Scooters, with balloon tires and brake, were Evangelistic meetings. Prof. R. mous jurists of the 17th and 18th me the truth is vivid that he cov­ H. Contrell, .Evangelist. Mr. century, to be used, according to $4.50, now ...... '...... $3.4y ered the strategic centers of the Child’s Table and Chair Sets, lacquered, were Blair Ward and Everett PhiUips In present plans, to de^rate the new imperial Roman dominion. The charge of music. $8;.50, n o w ...... $5.75 Langdell Hall wing of the school, geographical extent of his service Child’s Porcelain Top Table Sets, were $9.50, Services Sunday 10:45 and 7:30. now under construction. was tremendous. He was a cosmo­ now ...... ; ...... $6.60 The collection paintings of Jere-, politan of the highest type— a Child’s ForcelainTop Table Sets, were $14.25, Monday 9:00, Watch Night ser­ miah Grldley of the Harvard class Greek-speakiiig, Hebrew-trained, n o w ...... $9.50 South Methodist Episcopal Church vice. of 1725, often called “ the father of Roman citizen •who had so risen Child’s Windsor Rockers, lacquered, were Rev. Robert A. Colpltts. the, Boston bar,” and Benjamjp above natural prejudices and pro­ $4.00, now ...... $2.75 Tuesday,*All Day Holiness meet­ Pratt of the class cf 1737, an em­ vincialism that he dared to be “ all Child’s Fibre Rockers, were $4.75, now $3.25 ings: 10:30, 2:30, 7 :^ - inent Bobton lawyer and later things to all men.” He was not Child’s' Chinese Grass Rockers, were $5.50, 9 :30 a. m. chief Justice of the state of Neiv afraid t6 go outside of his race and now ...... $3.75 CHURCH SCHOOL York. ' his class and his country with his The paintings portray, better imessage. than words, the legal costijmes of A gentleman born, a scholar 10:45 a. m. North MethodUt the past. In one of the portraits. trained, a traveler experienced, Paul MORNING WORSHIP Justice Abney of the Court of :put all, of bis privileges and power ttlder the dominance of a master Uptown Branch Main Store Common Pleas under George II Is Op|K>site ‘ Pastor’s Subject “HOW TO FORGET” ' Episcopal Church. shown holding in his hand' the “ pse. He round supreme satis­ 325 H i^ School Marvin S. Stocking, Pastor., black cap which judges of his time faction in life, aj well as supreme . Main Street SOUTH 6:00 p. m. North Main St. ‘ wore when they pronounced the achievement, by yielding his every MANCHESTER YOUNG PEOPLE’S SERVICE death sentence. power to the one controlling mo­ SUNDAY SERVICES The Law School Has also obtain­ tive of serving Jesus Christ. Exist­ 7 :30 p. m. ' ed a group .of more than 200 car­ ence never became a dreary grind “Where You Can Afford to Buy Good Furniture." 9:30— Church School. toons of English legal'lights. to him, because his enthusiasm for A Christmas Play Christ illuminated every experience. “THE SHEPHERDS’ SURPRISE” 10:45—Service of Worship. Don’t forget Tall* Cedars New He demonstrated the cultural value Year’s Eye. Pance at MaBonlc, Tem­ of devotion to a great cause. As AN 5:00— Apnual Roll Call. ple.— Adv. . \ the red thread runs through all the ■ f

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MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29,1928.. ’ W G B EOUBT plug. The next day a doctor should out of all ^proportion to the “ pot” ' of to Florida. That was news. be able to remove the wax with an in every Instance. Only a small Guesses and surmises, particular­ ear spoon, or it night be possible part of the money paid in by the ly when there is nothing tangible for you to syringe it out, yourself, 9 to base them on, do not constitute HEilUH««I»ET ADVICE with warm water applied through a Ctt^ttbig »raU> cash customers was ever returned soft rubber tube, using the first ap­ In the form of prizes. Most ot It news. Sf\ Dr Frank McCor „ HERALD^IN^NG^TOM^NY. INC. plication of slightly soapy, water At 13 Blssell Street. was retained for the benefit of the Mr. Hoover had every right In followed by an application of clear South Manchester. Conn. operators of the pools. It is almost the world te change his mind. water. Founded by Elwood S. *lla, too great a compliment to call this There are no strings on him. He Oct. 1. 1881 QUISTIOIIS INREMRO TO HEALTH t DIET M U Breaking a Short Fast. Every Evening Except Sundays and kind of a game gambling. It was doesn’t owe an explanation of his BT MLMCCOT WHO Cim 8E AMMIES5E0 m CAM OP n p J W m Question: K. L. writes: “ I have cheap and sordid and utterly un­ every mental process to the people j BNCLOSB ST/WP£D /tODfiESSSO Ef^ElOPB FOR RESHY fasted five days. Do I have to break Entered at the Post Office at (^at* m .cor MeAtjMsemx IPSAMoetes-CAi. Manchester, Conn., as Second Class fair to the patron. of the country— not yet at all my fast on soups?” Just the same it is something of events. ^covers. Care must be taken not to Answer: Although most fasting ^^SUBSCRMION RATES: By Mall INJURIES FROM FREEZING. author!ties.recommend taking soup a commentary on the state of so­ Even a President of the United burn the patient. dollars a year, sixty cents a for the first few days after the fast* month for shorter periods. ciety when they can and do send States is entitled to some privacy About this time every year I re­ The popular method used In By carrier, eighteen cents a week. many outlying districts, of taking my experience has shown that this Single copies three cents. men to prison for selling lottery in which his*mind may operate. ceive many letters from people who is unnecessary if the right combin­ have been Injured by having some the injured person into a cold room SPECIAL AUVERTISING REPRE­ Certainly a man who has been ations of food are used. SENTATIVE. Hamllton-l)e Llsser, tickets, with the winner to be de­ part of the ‘body froien. Most of and warming him by friction has Inc., 28D Madison Avenue. New .o . termined by certain figures in the chosen to be President, but tech­ these inquiries about a method of not as many recoveries as this .and C12 North Michigan Avenue. stock market report, and when we nically and until the electoral col­ treatment come from the northern method. There is more chance of '^'xh^^Manchestcr Evening Herald Is I'egard the gentlemen who thimble­ lege records Its vote Isn’t even a part of United States and Canada, recovery by immediately warming us date if< on sale In Nev York City at Schu. s the patient all over. Stimulants, rig that same stock market, and President-elect, should be permit­ but it may surprise some to know News Stand. Sixth Avenue and 42nd. that some of the worst freezing such as hot coffee or diluted whis­ )AME RICAN Street, and 42nd. Street entrance ot clean up millions where the poor ted to exercise the * privilege of (iratul Central .Station and at all rases occur in warmer climates, key may be given internally if the HoaUl ig News Stands. little Albany pikers were cribbing moving about without beln^ called such as Southern California, when patient is conscious. MIS TO R Y • • • thousands, are universally regard­ on for an explanation at every step. those accustomed to the warm Exposure to the cold and damp ' DECEMBER 29 Client of International News Scr- may produce chilblains, a bright ed as our very finest and rnost re­ We shall probably get, In ' due weather of the lowland go Into the 1778— British captured Savannah, mountains for vacations. Great cau­ red inflgramation of the skin, in- ' "••rntcrnatlonnl News Service has the spectable citizens. time, some detailed explanation Ga. exclusive rights to use for republtca- tion should be used by those living j tenesly itchy, and usually occur- 1835— Seminole Indians ceded, to tloa in any form all news dispatches Frankly we do not believe that why Mr. Hoover is going to Wash­ in the south who spend'lio'lidays inj rin on the ed.ges of the nose, ears ■ credited to o- not otherwise credited ington. Until then, the simple rea­ United States territory east In this paper. It Is also exclusively all the lotteries ever operated, at­ colder climates, as they are espe­ and fingers. Chapped skin of the of the Mississippi for $5,- r entitled to use for republlcatlon all tempted or contemplated in this son that he wants to ought to he cially susceptible to injuries from hands, feet orlips, although not the the .local or undated news published 000.000. country have done one-hundredth good enough for anybody. cold weather, as the people of cold­ same as chilblains, needs aln^ost the 1845— Texas admitted to the herein.” er climates are usually dt'essed and same treatment. Good food, and Full Service Client of N B A Ser­ part as much harm as the recent Union. vice. Member, Audit Bureau of Clrou- housed to withstand the freezing exercise, in fqct all methods of im­ Rugs and bull movement in Wall street. BYRD AND WILKINS 1863— Arizona organized as a liithms. temperatures. proving the circulation, are helpful.' territory. It Is probably all right and un­ Warm hose should be worn in win­ SATURDAY, DEC. 29, 1928 One standing or walking in the INCOME TA.XES questionably it is natural for mil­ snow or ice is not always aware of ter. One should carefully dry the They have had an income tax in lions of Americans to be absorbed the freezing of his extremities, and hands and face thoroughly before Draperies TWO DRY VIEWS the ears, nose, fingers or toes may going out into the cold. Wash In Massachusetts for a number of in the dally stories of the progress warm water, dry before a fire if Two interesting statements on of the Byrd Antarctic expedition, be frozen completely before his at­ in the years and it is a pestiferous thing. tention is attracted. The toes are possible; then apply some oily sub­ prohibition have been made tn stance such' as olive oil or coco- A THOUGBI The exempten incomes are those up but It is rather difficult to suppress most freequently affected because connection with the awarding of to and Including $2,000 a year for the feeling that it isn’t any too of the close contact of the feet to butter. Be careful not to wear any tight garments which might inter­ the Durant prize to the enforce- a single person, $2,500 for a mar­ amazingly sporting to be so keen­ the cold earth or ice. This may oc­ Bettor it is to be of an hmnble Pre-Inventory Tueut plan submitted by Prohibi­ cur when the feet are not sufficient­ fere with the circulation. In the spirit with the lowly, than to di­ Sale ried person. On all amoiRits in ex­ ly interested in this "million dol­ first stage of the cliilblain«may be tion Administrator of the New ly covered with thick shoes or wool-, vide the spoil with Jhe proud.— cess of these sums the citizen must lar” enterprise and to care so lit­ rubbed with alcohol, but in the sac- Proverbs 16:10. $58.50 Best Quality Axminster Rugs, 9x12 ft. size, York District Major Chester P. en hose, or when the shoes are so pay one and a half per cent to the tle about the Wilkins expedItion\ tight as to interfere with the cir­ oAd stage some good antiseptic or in rich Oriental designs and colorings,...... $39.75 Mills. One of them comes from Ma­ state. A single man earning $3,000 which beat the Byrd ships to the culation of the foot. Freezing, in dressing should be employed. It Is pride which fills the world $55.00 Best Quality Axminster Rugs, 8-4x10^ ft. size jor Mills himself and the other any case, is more likely to occur in It pays to use precaution against with so much harshness-and sever­ ...... $38.75 must pay $15 in income tax, and founding of an Antarctic base and these conditions whenever you are from former Governor Clifford Pln- individuals suffering from a poor ity.— Blair. 1 only, 12x18 Reversible Chenille Rug in two tones Of so on. which has already engaged in at exposed to cold for, as frith most blue, suitable for the large bedroom, circulation. chot. He must also devote a not unim­ least one flight over the South po- injuries affecting the human body, reg. $10.00...... $75 Major Mills says that prohibition The best treatment is to gradual­ portant part of a day to going to lai continent. / ly bring the temperature of the prevention is easier than cui’e. Cretonnes for every room in the home . . . 2,000 yard^ has been postponed twenty years Wilkins excites the admiration part up to normal blood heat. Rub­ to select from . . . formerly 39c to $1.25 the state house or a branch bu­ QUESTIONS AND .ANSWTUIS. TEST ANSWERS reduced ...... 25% by the adoption of the Eighteenth reau, getting his blanks, filling ol sportsmen because he is so very bing with dry snow or soft dry wool induces heat by friction; or warm Sofa Pillows in plain and modernistic designs; made Of amendment. little a publicity seeker. His flight Anti-Sterility Vitamin. Here Is the answer to the Letter silk rayon andvelvet reduced ...... 20% them in and swearing in his re­ wet clothe.?' may be applied. When "If our condition had remained Question: D. J. O. asks; “ Will Golf puzzle on the comics page: Flat Curtain Rods, with fixtures ...... lOe turn. Unless he is trained in busi­ across the North polar region was the parts are badly frozen they you tell me something about the CHIPS, CHINS, CHINK, CLINK, as it was before the Eighteenth ness he is Ijkely to be so confused a splendid achievement, but it re­ must be handled gently because the anti-sterility vitamin, and what CLICK, CLOCK, BLOCK. amendment was enacted," Major by the complicated and tactless ceived the scantiest of notice tissues are brittle and it is easy to vitamin, and what foods contain Mills declared yesterday, "this crack the skin. Unless some fric- questlonaire subniitted that he is either before or after its perform­ the most?” would have been a dry nation now lion is used there there is danger Answer: Although the experi­ driven to hire a lawyer or a pro­ ance. His Antarctic expedition was WATKINS BROTHERS under local option, except for a that the blood vessels of the af­ ments to determine the presence of wm The Big fessional accountant to fill out his planned, arranged and has been flicted part may become so dilated the anti-sterility fat soluble E ’‘ ita- few Isolated localities. The dis­ CRAWFORD AND CHAMBERS RANGES return. _ • so carried out with scarcely any and Inflamed that the blood be­ min In foods are still in their in­ tricts were drying themselves up comes stagnated and gangerine re­ fancy, its presence has been And when the shouting is lill beating of cymbals. Bill H urt? ®f their own accord. We have lost And much as one may admire the sults in the consequent death of the definitely proVen. It is to be found probably twenty years in effecting over, the state of Massachusetts part, making amputation necessary. in most of the green leaves, alfalfa, gallant Byrd. It would be impossi­ Rubing Is the best preventive, lettuce and most whole grain pro­ prohibition.” really nets about $6 or $7 of the $15 for its treasury— the larger ble to say with a straight face that but if this inflmmation does occur ducts, bananas, orange juice and Without comment this statement alternate hot and cold applications part having been consumed in the hfc hates publicity. peanuts. ' This vitamin is in its is submitted for the serious consid­ and raising the affected limb at In­ most concentrated form in alfalfa eration of all enemies of drunken­ costs of collection— salaries of a tervals may be helpful. and lettuce seed, but it appears to swarm of office holders, clerks, etc. When the whole body has been ness. some! extent in cocoaniit oil, olive m NEW YORK exposed to the cold for any length oil, beef muscl6 and fat, pancreatic, In complete contrast is the utter­ Now they are proposing to cut All Kinds of the exemption on- the little fellows, New York, Dec. 28.— Our big- of time the treatment must be spleenic and heart muscles, wal­ ance of Mr. Pinchot. He says the drastic or the patient may die be­ nut oil, cottonseed oil, brain, egg FILMS so that tjie untaxed income allowed town gossip, Marianna Goreckl CHAIR CANBSfG whole business is up to the Presi­ Mischalska, which happens to be cause of his loss of vitality. The yolk, milk and butter. Developed and dent. He would have the chief ex­ a single man shall be only $1,000 Gilda Gray's righ’. name, visits the best method is to bring the patient as quickly as possible into a warm Printed and Repair Work ecutive make four moves. First, and that for a married man $2,- “ home folks” in Milwaukee every Ear Wav. 000. season. . . . Eddie Cantor gives room and completely immerse him Question: ,H. O. H. asks: "Will announce his intention to see that in warm water, the temperature of you please tell me the safest wa}’ to CHAIRS CALLED That is the natural and almost the royalties from his writings to a FLAMING the law gets the respect of the na­ summer camp for East Side waifs. which should be increased until it remove hardened ear wax?” AND DBLIVBKBJ^, tion. Second, he should refuse to inevitable course of income taxes. . . . Somerset Maugham, the is as hot as can be borne without Aiiswer: For softening the ear In the event of a smash-up— will of All Rinds Anyone having work please notl* meeting the heavy cost of repairs give any office subject to his ap­ If Connecticut voters should sub­ great Euglish novelist who came burning. If the hot bath cannot be wax you can mix equal parts of fy me by calling Glastonbury .14-8 mit to an income tax because it over to write' chatter for the obtained, the patient should be glycerine and olive oil and pour* a and possible damages cramp you? and reverse charges. pointive power— of which there “ squawkies,” stutters when he talks wrapped in heated blankets, and few drops into the ear, after which Be protected. Take out one of our made liberal exemptions in the low­ Work guaranteed. are many thousands— including and is called “ Bill” by his friends. hot water bottles placed under the it should be closed with, a cotton low-cost Auto Accident Insurance Elite Studio er brackets, they would infalUbi:^ cabinet offices, to any person who . . . Which reminds me that if act­ policies and be ready for all eventu­ OSa Main. Upstairs find in the course of a few years ors in the talkies seem to lisp, it alities. Phone 1800. C. H. FISHER has not pledged himself to observe 502 Main St., Gla^nbury that the exemptions would shrink isn’t their fault. . . . It seems that in because the “ book” was written finance man, tries all of his after- the Volstead law. Third, he should the recording machine cannot be so that every man and woman who by Laurence Stallings of “ What dinner stories out on newspaper re­ JOHN H. LAPPEN announce that any government em­ taught to pronounce its s’s. . . . Price Glory,” fame. . . . Some­ porters on the theory that they’ll earns the half of a decent living ALL L'OIIMS OK INSUItANCE. ploye, including officers of the Though, they tell me, a forthcom­ thing like $150,000 was lost. . . . laugh only if the stories are funny. 19 Lilac St., South .Manchester |ADVERTISE IN THE HERALD—IT PAYS army and navy, who violates the would be called on to fork over ing film will correct this fault. Ohanning Pollock s “ Mr. Money- « « * part of his wages to the state. Carl Van Vec''ten, who wrote a penny” was another to “ lay an egg,” When Roger Wolfe Kahn, son Eighteenth amendment, will oe most comical book about the Holly­ The time to lick the income tax as they say In Broadway argot. of the millionaire banker, .dropped summarily dismissed. Fourth, ne wood actors, says that the social One of the largest department $510,000 on a musical show of his would announce that enforcement is before it gets any hold at all. , climbers out there actually eat off stores in Manhattan now has a own composition he refused to al­ v;ill, henceforth, bfe freed of poli­ gold plates and that one night smoking room for its women em­ low his daddy, Otto Kahn, to foot FREAK “ MARATHONS” when he was guest of honor at a ployes. . . . Which reminds me the bills. The elder Kahn has seen tics. dinner, the host produced 60 stun­ One royal road to wealth ..seems that all of the big New York pas­ his jazz-band-leading offspring Mr. Pinchot would also have all ning brunets because he had ex­ try emporiums have blacklisted a through several financial situations the enforcement activities of the tf be the promotion of freak con­ pressed a preference for dark gals. certain cigaret which has been ad­ that would have sent many a rich Prohibition Bureau, the Customs tests, particularly when they are . . . An,d the talkies are trying to vising stout girlies to substitute a man to the poorhouse. The first Brilliantly pulled off In New York, where a get George Jean Nathan, who thus smoke for a sweet. venture of Kahn, Jr., was a very Service, the Pureau of Internal far Has resisted. « * * certain number of bored and jaded high-toned night club, which finally Revenue, the Coast Guard and all The hardest financial blow of the ■Victor H3rbert, Jr., son of the closed after losing more than a hun other related agencies, placed un­ individuals can always be depend­ present tough theatrical season fell late eminent and popular composer, dred thousand.' der the control ot one man, direct­ ed on to pay admission fees to upon Philip Goodman, whose mu­ prefers bonds to bends. . . . He Young Kahn says he’s going to watch a lot of morans trying to sical show, “ Rainbow,” ^ lasted-but runs a brokerage business and gives take out a vaudeville revue act to ly representing the President and a few weeks. . . . Goodman ex­ eeting every do something— anything at all-— •little heed to musical affairs. . . . get some of the money back. endowed with "broad” power. pected the New Yt k crowd to pack Charles Schwab, the big steel and GILBERT SWAN. Incidentally he would amend for six days without stopping. It started long years ago with that perfect Volstead act a little— In point of style, the identity of the new enough to make the manufacture the transcendently stupid six-day Now, Boys! Watch Where You’r e Pointing Those Guns, Or— ! walking matches. These were fol­ of homebrew a felony and to.attach De Soto Six as a product of Chrysler is the same penalties to the purchase lowed by the far stupider six-day contests, which promise ' like the A of liquor as to the sale of it. apparent at first glance* Moreover, ail This also, as an alternative pro­ brook to go on forever. The Idea OWISER has been varied by long distance BU.L position, Is deserving of the seri­ v.' the elements of greater value which ous thought of all enemies of piano playing battles, flagpole sit­ tings, danejng marathons, and now drunkenness. PAas such lineage assures are evident in the We are particularly intrigued by the supremely idiotic gabfest in which a lot of men and woiAen the picture of the President of the maintenance of those high standards - 11 United States making very sure have undertaken to keep their J tongues wagging for a week. Next t that no postmaster or diplomat or that have won universal admiration and ? 2 2 consul or other appointive official — and compared to the gabfest It 1 should violate the constitution of should provo an Inspiration— will the United States by taking a probably come the stunt of making acceptance*. drink. We are Intrigued, too, by faces at a mark for fifty minutes of the picture of an army and a navy every hour for the inevitable six Multumpro pmr*m commanded exclusively by stern days. Or why not a cigarette smok­ The new De Soto Six could not be less and steadfast drys— every other ing marathon? or a looking-cross- y Faetont $84S; Road* consideration of fitness being nec­ ed-eyed contest. than it is in beauty, perfoimance, com­ ater Eapdnol, $845f essarily subordinated or scrapped. With a good publicity agent it’s Sedan Cache, $845$ fort and safety, because it bears the re­ Incidentally Mr. Pinchot was for a bet that Milton Crandall or any Cupo Bttaineaa,$8^$ other, body could pack Madison several years the governor of the ^Sedan, $885; Cupe de sovereign state of Pennsylvania. Square Garden for a solid week P i sponsibility of maintaining and carrying Lujo, $885; Sedan ^ We wonder why he never saw to with a free-for-all. tooth-picking it that every notary public, every marathon. And that tlfere would be forward the high repute of Chrysler Lujo,$95S. AUpticea state departnent clerk and every a hundred entrants all of them atfcu:tory* _ other state office holder, save the prepared to show that they were engineering and manufactiurmg genius. elective ones, was as dry in prac­ the champion tooth-pickers of their tice as he Is himself. home towns.

LOTTERIES AND LOTTERIES ONE GOOD REASON After a legal battle of almost a A tremendous amount of nosing year the promoters of the notorious has been done, accompanied by as Albany and stock market much guessing, to find out just ex­ pools, a lottery of broad scope actly why Herbert Hoover changed which operated throughout New his plan of going to Florida at the England as well as In New York end of his South American voyage state, have been brought to book, and is now scheduled to proceed several of the principals getting first to Washington and remain prison terms and many others, em-. there for several weeks before be­ ployes and agents, suspended sen­ ginning his Florida vacation. tences. — It seems to us that the newspa­ There Is not much that can be pers' province in this matter lay. said in favor of lotteries such as i.T recording the fact that Mr. those whiph- had their headquar­ Hoover had changed his mind and ters at Albany. The "rake-off” was was going to Washi-^ton Instead

I. MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29,1928. LANDING STAGE XMAS TREE “SHORF WARSAW SEES U; S. “DRY MARTINI” AT WITH THE LOCAL Interesting Interviews PROVIDES FIREWORKS TilRNINGTO RUSSIA THE CIRCLE TODAY Typewriters^ FOR LINERS IN AUTO DEALERS All makes, sold, reipted, ex> changed and overhauled. Decorative Unit “Blows Up” FOR INVESTMENTS With Local Folks Gay Drama of Paris He^ds Special rental • rates to StU- THAMES RIVER When Bulbs Get Overdose of Electric Current. Double Feature Program. George L. Betts, local Hudson- denis. itebullt machines Warsaw.— "American Interest for Bssex dealer, reports the following capital investments Is turning from $20.00 and U[i. "Officer McGlinn, one of the deliveries: Hudson sedan to George As interesting, perhaps, to their Poland towards Soviet Russia,” "Dry Martini,” a William Pox Rix of the Manchester Chamber of London.— Transatlantic liners, Christmas trees down in front of complains the "Gazeta Warszaw- old schoolmates and friends of long including the Leviathan and Majes­ special production directed by Har­ Commerce; Essex coupe to VValter ' ago as the better-acquainted series Tvachers’ Hall is burning up’’ was ska” In a very pessimistic article KEMP'S tic, the largest in the world, -will the news imparted to the officer about the future of Polish-Amerl- ry D’Arraat, featuring Mary Astor, D. Cowles of Academy streer; Es­ of Saturday articles now running in be able to land their passengers and sex sedan to Tony Paggioli of Birch 763 Main St. Phone 821 the Herald of the town’s present- ' just after 5 o’clock last night by can flnanJal relations published Matt Moore and Albert Gran in the cargo almost on London’s doorstep a woman driving an automobile after the return of the American Mountain; Essex coupe to Julius R. day residents, would be a record of , stellar roles, opens at the Circle J.m.sen ot Spruce street. after September of next j’-ear, when financial advisor Charles Dewey the successes made in the fields of | north on Main street. McGlinn was The Machell Motor Sales report the new giant landing-stage now then in front of the Cheney block from his Moscow trip. theater today for a limited two days ■nusic. art, business, and the profes- j engagement. the delivery of a Superior Whippet sicns ijf many whose early boyhood I being built at Tilbury, on the and pressed a former police patrol The Polish government hopes Thames River just below This delightful and sparkling sedan to Miss Helen Jewett of An­ or girlhood days were spent here in ; the ca-; dr’ver into service. that the Moscow visit of the Amer­ dover. • . pital, is completed. ican expert will have a favorable drama has all the ingredients that Mane tester. Such histories could i Th tree was not opposite Teach­ go towards making it one of the only te obtained through the co- ' Shipping men believe the new ers Hall, but attached to the pole reaction on the strained commer­ landing-stage represent a serious cial relations between Poland and most outstanding comedy pictures ‘ipeiai-ion of the relatives here, by at Main anJ Wells street, on which of the current season. The story re­ QUITE RIGHT challenge to Liverpool and South­ the Connecticut Company’s signal Soviet Russia ' but the “ Gazeta nail, or during'^' t.sits at such times volves around a frivolous American .as the Thanks.2 ,ving or Christmas ampton as the ports of call on this light is hung. A short circuit had Warszawska” does not share this side of the ocean, and will in time gentlemen who resides in the bril­ First Schoolmaster: Have you holidays when oost people like to overcharged the decorative bulbs optimism. Polish political circles any abnormal boys in your class? supercede them. opposing the government sav liant luxerles and gay festivities of return to the 'Oti home. and they were popping away like Paris. His friends are many, in­ Second Ditto: Yes, two. they "Mth this in mind the interviewer Save Train Trip. Payne’s fireworks. The' lights were American Investors are right In If the shipping companies are cluding feminine playmates and he both have excellent manners.— c- ! oi, • mother of two sons, speedily burned out. Officer Mc­ turning to Russia for a vaster and Answers. bo,., or waum were born in Man­ seriously impressed with its facili­ better field for financial activity "loves his licker.” so to speak. Glinn reported to the Manchester Complications arise, however, chester, attended its public schools ties for the rapid loading and un­ Electric Company. because the hopes of American in­ but since their college days the : loading of passengers and freight, vestors in Poland for big returns when he receives a telegram from This was the second of the trees his former wife stating that his townspeople have seen very little ‘ it is argued they will prefer to use to go up this way. A short circuit have been disappointed so far. If Soviet Russia gets big Amer­ daughter, now grown to woman­ of them. These men are Edward L. j Tilbury and forego the long rail­ in the tree in front of the Farr LU-COLDSCheck at first sneeze. and Harry Montgomery, sons of | road journey from Southampton ican credits, funding of the Rus­ hood, is coming to live with. him. building on Christmas night, start­ His efforts to appear dignified and Rub on—inhale vapors Mrs. Lina and the late Charles i Liverpool, a source of constant ir­ ed the lights to popping, and in the sian pre-war and war debts to the Montgomery. Both graduated from ritation to transatlantic iravelers. United States will be possible. heartily opposed to the evil influ­ interest of safety the connection ence of intpxicants, furnishes the Wesleyan university. Edward pre­ A new railroad station and up- plug was pulled. That three has yioH s pared at Greenwich academy^ and to-date facilities for the comfort amusing climax to the story. since been In darkness. CIVIL SERVICE Omr e i Mittm MONUMENTS ■ after graduatip.g with the degree of Edward L. Montgomery and conveniencerof incoming and Albert Gran is cast in*the role of the gay American in Paris and Bachelor of Science at Wesleyan, cutgoing travelers are being con­ IN GOOD ’,R.M Grave markers and orna­ still further pursued his studies of and the boys he formerly associated structed, the river is being deep­ “ Father, what is a civil mar­ Mary Astor plays the part of the mathematics, psychology and other with saw less and less of him. He ened to remove sand banks, and it riage?” daughter. Matt Moore is th'> hero. WHEN YOU NEED A mental stone work of every de­ suDjects at . He was chose to make music only a side The shades of night were fallinj “ A civil marriage, my daughter The companion feature at the scription. is claimed that large liners will be fast CARPENTER OR MASON made assistant principal o! a school line, however, and has become a able to navigate to Tilbury with­ is probably the world’s most per­ Circle for today and Sunday pre­ in Meriden, Connecticut, and re­ successful business executive. He The scene was most appalin’ fect misnomer.” sents the one and only Tom Mix, for tJiat little repair job don’t for­ out the slightest difficulty. Trans­ For Mabel couldn’t go to bed mained in that position three years. has been with the American Tele­ portation of pass''ngeis from Till- “ You must be right.” popular Fox cowboy star, in “ The get to call Gadella & Ambrosini It was there he met his future wife. graph and Telephone company for Becaufj the" shades had fallen. “ Why?” Lone Star Ranger,” a thrilling pic- bury to London will not occupy — Jud^e. 1776 Miss Mabel Lawton who has been more than 15 years. His first pro­ more t’aan half an hour by fast ‘That’s what mother says, too.” turizatiou of Zane Grey’s story. Shop at East end of BLsseQ St. his able assistant for many years. fessional position was in the Con- trains. — Judge. The Circle Short Subjects, al­ WILLIAM KANEHL His Other Schools grc.gatlonal church choir in Meri­ Mighty engineering works have Don’t forget Tall Cedars New ways carefully selected, include a Near East Cemetery. He later became principal of den. Later he went to New York already transformed the Tilbury Year’s Eve Dance at Masonic Tem­ A strawberry contains about 89 novelty reel and a Krazy Kat Kar- General Contractor schools in Bath, Maine, and Dan­ and at the present time he is bass ple.— Adv. per cent, water. toon. 519 Center St., South Manchester soloist in'Grace church. At one foreshore from a place of mud­ Telephone 2055-W vers, Mass., and in Washington, D. flats to a vast area of concrete, C. For several years he has been time he sang in four different churches in the metropolis. This built for the construction of a proprietor and principal of the Customs’ hall and baggage sheds. Fairmont School and Junior College was made possible because of ser­ The first section of the new land­ for Girls and Young Women on vices taking place at different p.v.v.v.r Massachusetts avenue, between hours. ing stage is already in place and Scott and Dupont Circles. This Mrs. Montgomery remarked that doing service for cross river traf­ school, whose students come from the only time he came back to sing fic. The whole structure is to be the first families throughout the in his native town, as far as she 1,142 feet long, almost 200 feet country,, is housed in the magnifi- could remember, was on the occa­ longer than the Leviathan and .Ma­ cant mansion which was built by sion of the reunion of all the high jestic. which should allow for the berthing of large liners not j'et HE Senator Dupont, multi-millionaire school classes at the time Manches­ and head of many large industrial ter celebrated its centennial. Harry built. • interests. The priceless tapestries, Montgomery married Miss Gertrude Floating Stage. rugs and art objects from all parts Day of Pittsfield, Mass., whom he The giant floating stage is 170 of the globe still remain in this met while she was engaged in set­ feet across from the concrete shore. part-time residence of the late sena- tlement work on New York’s East It is buoyed on hollow steel pon­ tor. His daughter who inherited J side. She is a graduate of Vassar toons eighty feet by fifteen feet. the property was so well supplied | colle,ge. They have three children, A second floor is being erected on with similar treasures she leased two girls and one boy. the elder of the stage so that disembarkation the mansion completely furnished the children is 17 and a senior at from present day liners will be an tor school purposes. It was too high school. Their winter home is easier matter. la,rge and too expensive for any on East Seventeenth street. New As an aJjupnet to the landing permanent Washington resident or York, and they spend their sum- stage, and another challenge to transient statesman to maintain. i mers at Westport, Conn. Liverpool and Southampton, there ^ VOVIISI SIEKES Founded in 1899 • is being built an enormous dry- Mr. Montgomery was able to dock 1,000 feet long, 110 feet wide, make favorable terms for a long­ and 45% feet deep. This with time lease of the mansion for school GREEN STORES MERGE a smaller dock, will be ready for V I , 1 1 1 # purposes with the heirs. Fairmont use early next year, and will be school was founded in 1S99 for the capable of accommodating any lin­ higher education of young women. WITH M’CLEllAN’S er yet built. Giant pumps will \ m Its standards of scholarship and empty or fill the larger dock with­ education have won the approval ot in two hours. w fnfsastetf educators as well as parents. It is Former Manchester Man Has Cos«h $695; Coop* 1695; Coop* (wltb a school ot intimate education and Important Position With Big M.AX VERSUS PLANE rombl* sMt) $725; Sport DoLoxe effective use is made of the educa­ Corporation. Ko««i»f r $850 (in d a d in g m m b lo somt tional advantages of the nation s London.— What is thought to be and extra.}. \ capital. Day as well as boarding An announcement that was not the first lawsuit brought against au WHIPPET students are admitted and the best airplane for the running down ot SIX SEDAN / teachers engaged as Instructors in expected to be made until after the first of the year, was given out in a pedestrian was brought in Essex the different subjects which em­ recently.’ The plane, early in July, brace mathematics and psychology, .New York last evening announcing the corsolidation V of the McClellan was forced to make a landing. In. history, civics, languages, ait, doing so, it struck a boy. music," domestic science, physical and Green Chain stores. The Mc­ “ I imrRODvcsifm TBiB x m r Instruction and other branches ot Clellan stores are controlled by the study and recreation. In the few Sherman Corporation of New York, EXHIBITION CANCELLED years that Mr. and Mrs. Mjnt- which has 212 stores, mostly in the gomery hav6 been principal ana eastern and southern states, while London.— One Mr. Fitzgerald, of assistant principal of the the Green Stores, a Boston Cor­ Barnet, was growing a giant pump­ they have found it necessary to add poration, has 51 stores, mostly in kin for exhibition at a fair. He ‘“ilMCXlR'TIP a gymnasium and several class and thv North-East. The combined capi­ provided every care that could be recitation rooms. tal of the two chains will be $30,- given a j)umpkin and it grew po.":- Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery not 000,000. It is planned to operate derous. Then one day. Fitzgerald only manage the school in Wash­ the combined stores in the larger went out to inspect the pumpkin ington, but have for years success- cities. and found that his Persian cat had COM TROir fdlly conducted a summer camp for One of the stores controlled by scooped out a cavity in it and had girls of from 10 to 17 years near the Green Store Corporation is taken possession ■with a litter of Brunswick, Maine. A number of located in the Smith building on four kittens. THE MOST NOTABUB Ajn»lVCX the students who attend Fairmont Main street here. The divisional spend their summers at Camp Eg- manager of the Green Stores, has IBT BKIVINe COnrTENIElVCE gemopgin, which is delightfully been 'Thomas Walsh, a former Man­ MISSING VET TURNS UP locate'd on an island in or.e of the chester resident. He is advanced, SINCE THE SElf-STABTEli: picturesque bays of the Maine through the reorganization and has Jackson, O.— David Johnson is coast. Several Manchester girls been spending much tim ■ in the heme with his mother and sister have been guests at the camp and west and south arranging for open­ after having wandered all over the have enjoyed the beautiful scenery, ing new stores. country, a victim of shell shock and and the many opportunities for The merger planned to open loss of memory since the World health and recreation that the War. Johnson’s kin had given him w h i p p e t nearly 200 more stores during the y-;: . fou r coach camp affords. coming ^ear. up for dead. A Mother’s Pride 3 Mrs. Lina Montgomery’s face Coape $SSS; Sedan $S9S; Readatac glowed with justifiable pride as she THANK GOODNESS $4$5 t Toaring St7S; Commwclal O iaa told the interviewer of the beautiful DAVID CHAMHKRS « b $365. A l l W U l r » 4 >n>rlaad p rie « t , o. b. Toledo, Ohio, and speciocationa Washington home of her son. his "Hullo, Bill! How’s your wife ■abject to rfiaitge wltbiMit notiee. wife and their daughter Marjory, this evening?’’ C()NTRA(.T()R and her visits to the school and to “ She’s sinking.” P ® the summer camp. During the win­ “ What, is che ill?” AND BIJILDKR . ter for several years she has made “ No. Just washing dishes.”— her home in the Park building, and Judge. as an interested onlooker she has 68 Hollister Street Greater Beauty— LongerW hed base— Larger iTJIl lies seen the march of progress in the town. and. the crossin,g of business I HE new Whipj>et introduces the Both the firont and rear springs of the to the west side of Main street, just accomplished this present winter. beauty of expensive cars to the new Superior 'Whippet have been con- She had a pleasant summer cottage T light car field. The new Superior sid6ri^y . lengthehi^. The increased at the Willimantic campgrounds, Whippet is the style triumph o f eminent wheelbase, snubbers and oversize bal­ where she spends much time during DONT FAIL TO VISIT OUR artists, men of long experience in de» loon tires further enhance the car’s the outdoor season. signing expensive custom-built cars. superb riding qualities. VoSi* The reporter tried to draw from LlCrttS her some of the details of her own Beauty that commands your instant life story, and learned that she STORE ON Still Uie came to Manchester from Ohio in admiration is expressed in the longer her girlhood, one of seven children, bodies, low, graceful lines, higher engliieeriiig leader only two of whom are living. She MONDAY, THE LAST DAY radiator and hood, more distmetive dim is a younger sister of Mrs. Eliza colors, sweeping, one-piece full crown Mechanically, the new Superior WTiip- Hastings of Highland Park, mother fenders — establishing the newest style pet furthers a long lead over com­ of Mrs. Fitch B. Barber. Mrs. m otif for Fours and light Sixes, petition.. -A new' higher coi^ression Hastings is 94 and is believed to be engine gives more than added the oldest woman no\r living in horsepower, with greatly increased A single button, conveniently located in th« Manchester. Her husband, Charles TWO BIG TABLES speed! Higher second geaj^ speed gives center o f the steering wheel, controls all functions Montgomery was associated with More room-., faster pick-up. the late Colonel Frank Cheney at of starting the motor, operating the lights the silk mills and at the time of'his greater coimfort death was Worshipful Master of And this new car is well qualified to sounding the horn. This does away with all Manchester Lodge, A. F. and A. M. OF BARGAINS The larger bodies of the new'Superior carry on W^hippet’s unsurpassed reputa- troublesome foot fumbling for the starting but* and a prominent Odd Fellow. Mrs. In the Center of the Store Whippet afford more spacious interiors, tioh' for dependable performance and Montgomery was a member of the with extra leg room and elbow room. minimum operating costs. ton. It also avoids changing from the comfortable affiliated women’s lodges and re­ ' The seats are wider and heavily U’>hol- tains her membership in them and stered,. and have form-fitting coi..ours. driving position to reach a light switch oh ihe in the' South Methodist church. ORDER NOW FOR EARLY DELIVERY. Her younger Son FREEHATBOXES dash. With the new “ Finger-Tip Control,” you Then Mrs. Montgomery was in­ can at aU times keep your hands on the wheel duced to talk about Harry, her younger son, whom many Manches­ SOLD AT $1.00 AND $IJS WILLYS;-OVERtAND.INt.Tol«l..l)hio and your eyes on the road. ter people remdmber as possessing a fine, bass voice. In his High school days-t—he graduated with the class of 1897— he gave promise of becoming a great singer. He was always in demand when singing was a part of any program and when he entered Wesleyan University at The Ladies’ Shop BIACHEIX MOTOR SALES Middletown, he was at once urged 535 Main Street, South Manchester to join the glee club. This took 91 CENTER STREET SOUTH MANCHESTER hlin' On trips during the holidays -V 4'-

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MANCHESTER EVENING HERALP, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SAiUKDAY, UEOEMHER 29, ly^a. FACiU SIX 'ITAPHONE AT STATE PRESENTS AL

The State Presents the Vitaphone | The Shop ‘‘Always Something New” RUBINOW'S I State Theater Building, South Manchester GET READ oifer = See Us You Should See Al Jolson in A Sale That Is | “The Singing Fool” I WWILLIAMS IL L IA M S ^ MANCHEST More Than A | and while you’re here Clearance Sale | I fllhO \^^TlEATlN5 to $95.00 S I The Latest in Home Comforts Georgette T o m o I M. H. STRICKLAND All the high shades = Heating Engineer and Contractor. THROUGH THl I 832 Main St. Pho»e 265 | I $5.95 “ $9.95 THE NEW iiiiiii

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I We Welcome The Vitaphone | STATE THEATER | s ' —and " ** zz FOR

I A Good Watch Will Get | BETTER SHOWS • * MB You There In Time | |- TO HEAR AND SEE | I THE PICTURES | MARLOW’S

FOR I Why not put some of that Christmas gold | Can’t You See She is Trying to; | I into a good watch? | Have Him Go to The Benson | = It will prove a lifetime friend. = Furniture Co., and Buy | Better Values 0 I Good Watches from $20 up | That New | I Dewey'Richman Co. | 1 LIVING ROOM I MARLOW’S = Jewelers, Silversmiths, Opticians, Stationers S = “The House of Value” = iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuuuumihihiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiummmmmhiiiiiiiiiiiii illllllllll niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiT SUITE I S .V siiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiunHhhiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I WE WELCOME THE VITAPHONE | f Another Electrical Achievement | We Can Afford to Sing | m a i Take One of Oar | L THE VITAPHONE 1 About Our Values ! The Si I For entertainment hear the Vitaphone. [ Boxes of Chocolates | Get a I For furniture see us. : Universal with you to the theater—after the picture s BENSON FURNITURE CO. stop here for a Hot Chocolate | I * mI Heating Pad smm • * as 3 Days Coi fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii Ice Cream Sodas, Sundaes or | You’ll wonder how you ever gol OOIME A N D F E E L JOLSON’ S M A G IC A L along without one. miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii a delicious milk shake | PLAY ON YOUR HEARTSTRINGS— HI E SPEAK CLEARLY— ^DISTINCTLY— I Scatter Sunshine With Greeting Cards I SING AS NEVER BEFORE. Only $ 8 .5 0 5 Over 300 numbers to select from. Birthday, Wed- = Complete the pleasure of the evening at | 50c down $1.00 a month E = ding. Shower, Sick-Room Cards, Sympathy and Anni- | E versary. S SUNDAY EVENING THE MANCHESTER I FRANK BRAY I The State Soda Shoppe | 40c—30c—^25c I 645 Main St. | ELECTRIC CO. E “We Welcome the Vitaphone” = State Theater Building | 773 Main St.,St.. Phone 1700 miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim WEEK DAYS Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Matinee...... 30c and 10c iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiniiiiii When You Want a iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimmimiimmmiii'i'i!! JOLSON’S PICTURE Evening ..'.. 40c--30c-15c Cemetery Memorial I After Hearing Al Jolson IS HEART RENDING -Welcoming- | CALL I “THE SINGING FOOL” If there Is anyone who can sit = To Complete the Evening’s Entertainment through the showing of “ The Sing­ C. W. Hartenstm I The Vitaphone and The New Year | ing Fool” , Al.Jolson’s greatest 149 Summit St., TeL 1621 Vitaphone production which Is to \ Pleasant memories blend with E i Stop A t and hear what he has to say : !New hopes at the Cross Roads E start at the State Theater tomor­ regarding : of the years! = row, without shedding a tear o. ■ Pleasant memories of the = else feeling a lump rise In his • Friendships with which I have E I The Princess Candy Shop throat, he surely must be a man : been favored. E without a heart or soul. It Is a soul MEMORIALS E New hopes of the strengthening s stirring drama from beginning to E of that bond, E end and' eanses a sucsesslon of made by ^ S Which makes each year = moods that moves an audience from > A stepping stone to the = I One of Your Favorite Ice Cream laughter to tears in many instances 5 Greatest of all achlevementSH— s and makes It realize that there is White Memorial . Lasting Friendships! s I Sundaes or Sodas a whimsical something aboit Jol­ son despite his cheery mood in Studio, Inc. “The Home of Sound Hits” so reflecting, may I wish you, just as a friend | I Take Home a Box of Home Made Candy everyday life. 673 Maple Ave., Hartford One of the most prominent parts A VERY HAPPY NEW YEAR | In the picture, besides the role played by the world-famous enter­ HALF AND HALF tainer himself. Is the vivll charac­ terization enacted by little Davey “ Hurry up, Junio., or v. i be [ The Princess Candy Shop | late. Have you got your shoe- on Lee. This talented young Juvenile 1 GLENNEY’ti |E Main and Pearl Sts. E star portrays the part of Sonry Boy yet?” and his acting Is destined to be­ “ Yes, mama, all except one.”— S ' . = ifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHmiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiinuniiiiiiiiiii come the talk of Mancncster. Fliegaude Blaetter, Munich. i ' j

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOLH’H MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29,1928. PAGE SI

-v-Ftr 1

ON IN “THF SINGING FOOL” M o n d a y t o e s d A

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I Ring Out The Old—Ring In The New |

s State Theater Building R A I N b I d W I N N I* After you have seen = Bolton Notch on the Hartford-Willimantic Road, S p. m. to 4 a. m. E I and heard Pre-Inventory Special Chicken Dinner $1.50 E the Sale of Also a la Carte Service Dance Music . OR THE THRILL OF I Vitaphone COVER CHARGE ...... $1.00 at E STATE SCREEN I ^ and Entertainment— Dancing— Good Food HATS SPEAK------Telephone Manchester 2486 early for reservations as we RAINBOW I Movietone can only accommodate 150 people. Dance Palace I Call and see ------and------by I our display Dance Under the Crystal Ball at i of seasonable Rainbow Dance Palace Lionel Kennedy’s First Values to $4.95 These include many ' | Accommodations for 600 People. Broadcasting Band Spring numbers. Plenty Admission $1.00. CHARl.ES M. PINNEY, Prop. of large head sizes for TCHLESS VOICE OF I HATS Matron and Miss. IMPROVED TrmiiiiiiiiniiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiniuiiiiiiiiiiiiMMiiiiMiiii iiiiimiMimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiimimiiimmiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiti

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You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet I GO TO THE STATE | Just Step Inside of j Hear A l Jolson |I HEAR I J May*s Jewelry I AL JOLSON in “THE SINGING FOOL” | yy i Store i The Singing Fool j Go To The j at 815 Main Street THEN GO TO and see I State Shoe Repair Shop I The Wonderful After The South Manchester 5 ^ for S j Christmas Bargains Candy Kitchen I High Class Shoe Repairing | I and besides you don’t have to pay cash | I Modern Methods, Prices Right , |

i H They sure are glad to have you open an account there. = I HOME MADE CANDY i I HOT SANDWICH | I:: The May Jewelry Co, |I OR LUNCHEON | LOUIS DELL I I Delicious Fruit Sundaes or Sodas | 845 Main Street S I 751 Main St,^ | . Joins in the Welcome ox the | I The South Manchester Candy Kitchen | Vitaphone to Manchester | I Next to Glenney’s = = state Theater Building E *** n* TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii < ciiiiiismiiicimiiuiiiiEmiiiimtmiiiiismimmiieiiitsiimEimiiiuuimmmiiiiiiiii TiimiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiniiii “ THE SINGING FOOL” Many Surprises In Store Talkie Films Improving IS DRAMATIC TRIUMPH As **The Barker** Shows For Vitaphone^s Patrons Al Jolson Reaches New Heights in Vitaphone’s Greatest Picture. AL JOLSON AND “SONNY BOY” Stars from Every FielfW ill Depths of tragedy are sounded by Al Jolson in “ The Singing Fool,” the new Warner Brothers Vita­ Be Heard— Premier of phone special production, which opens a limited engagement at the State theater beginning tomorrow Talking Pictures to Be night. DEC. In “ The Singing Fool” he is re­ Held at State Tomorrow. vealed as one of the most powerful emotional actors on the screen. His 30 creation is in decided contrast to his work as a comedian, though his The most thrilling innovation in rcngs have partially de^monstrated the history of motion pictures will the fervor of which he is capable. be seen and heard when the State He is first seen as a carefree, theater presents Vitaphone to the wise-cracking entertainer— a sing­ ing waiter in a New York-cabaret people of Manchester tomorrow — but eventually there comes to evening. him a weight of sorrow and mental Vitaphone has thrilled the world. stress that entirely changes the And It has captured the imagination course of his life. Everything which of artists from every field of enter­ he has attained through years of tainment. The roster of Vitaphone striving is su'^denly stripped from includes celebrities and leading him, and the way he meets and TWO SHOWS artists from motion pictures, the copes with his misfortunes makes a grand opera stage, the -legitimate storry of absorbing heart Interest. SUNDAY EVE theater, the variety circuits and the Married to a revue star who falls ^world of jazz. in love with another man, the sing­ 6:15—8:30 Dolores Costello, Conrad Nagel, ing waiter suffers torments, which Irene Rich, May McAvoy, Lois Wil­ Includes the death of the child to DOOMS OI’ EX son, Gladys Brockwell, Eugenie whom he is passionately devoted. Besserer, Helene Costello, Audrey i i i i i i i “ The Singing Fool” runs the whole 5:4o Ferris, Polly Moran, Clyde Cook, scale of human emotions. William Demarest, Cullen Landis, Adding Immeasurably to the mov­ William Collier, Jr., John Milijan, ing qualities of this great produc­ 1 - ^ Montague Love, Warn-; Oland, tion, Vitaphone Is used throughout, Herbert Rawlinson, Henry B. Wal- through Vitaphone are Roger reproducing not only dialogue of Wolfe Kahn and his Orchestra, TALKIES WILL STAY thal, Myrna Loy, Mary Carr, Hobart characters, but those songs which Bosworth and Wheeler K. Oskman Waring’s Pennsylvanias, Abe Ly­ have served to make Al Jolson the are among the celebrated film per­ man and his Band, Vincent Lopez SAYS THIS DIREaO R world’s favorite entertainer. sonalities who have appeared in and his Casa Lopez Orchestra, Earl Betty Bronsoti. and Josephine Vitaphone acts and featur* pic­ Burtn'ett and his Hotel Biltmore Dunn are seen In the leading femi­ Orchestra and Gus Arnheim and his tures.^ “ Vitaphone is a success, financial­ nine roles. Others In the cast are Cocoanut Grove Orchestra. Reed Howes, Arthur Housman, Grand opera stars like Anna ly and artistically. It is here to From the variety stage Van and David Lee and Graham'Martindale. Case, Madame Schuman-Heink, stay.” Betty Compeon she's a hula dancer in “The Barker.” Giovanni Martinelll, Guiseppe De Schenck, the most popular vaude­ Such is the honest opinion of Luca, Beniamino Gigli, John ville team in America, Willie and Hollywood, Calif., — A talking ^Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., all give Charles Thomas, Charles Hackett Eugene Howard, Jack Benny, Blos­ Harry M. Warner, president of WHAT’LL THEY DO NEXT? excellent performances. som Seeley, Benny Rubin and Jim­ Warner Brothers Pictures, distribu­ picture which really Is worth, see­ and Pasquale Amato have brought Dialogue Improves It , my Clemons have come to Vita­ tors of the world-famous Vitaphone. Cincinnati, O.— Another olt that ing. . their priceless voices to the public legion of fathers, whONcannot un­ “The Barker,” a story of a «a: through Vitaphoue. And from the phone. “ For nearly four years we have •That was my reaction to “ The been working on this invention and derstand their sons, lodged a com­ nival troupe, was made first as relative plane of the concert stage Finally there has been all man­ Barker,” which has just opened In silent picture. Then when Wamejf.:| ner of unique and elaborate presen­ have found it to be just as we plaint at police headquarters that Mischa Elman, Harold Bauer, Zim- his son, 20, had phoned from a Hollywood. I would rank “ The Brothers bought First Natlona3^‘ balist, and Cantor Rosenblatt have tations in tabloid drama, farce, ifhagined it would be— a positive portions of the. film were rem a^ sensation. All the film companies nearby town that he was trading his Barker” next to Al Jolson’s "The transferred their art to Vitaphone. comedy and burlesque in talking autb for an airplane. But the youth Singing Fool” in the way of talk­ with talking sequences. , Lionel Barrymore, Edward picture playlets. need to do now Is to secure better ing screen entertainment. And strangely enough the dialogna' material that is suited for talking beat the cops and then as proof Everett Horton, Alec B. Francis, it’s ■ way, way above other tually added to the enter! » Vitaphone has corailed the stars picture adaption." flew over his home and waved at. Leo Carrillo, Jason Robards, Fan­ of all fields of entertainment, and the glowing water. “ squawkles” which have been value of the production. ny Brice, George Jessel, Elsie their voices and personalities will dumped on the market these last Sills, as the barker of tho Janis and Al Jolson are world-re- in the future be an integral part of INDUCEMENT MUSIC IN PILLOWS 'few months. nival, was given an opportmil nownted stars of the legitimate the regular programs at the State Highest acting honors ' go to show what he really can do theatre now appearing in Vita­ theater. Proud Parent (to suitor): Has Liverpool.^The Liverpool Open- Milton Sills, who plays the title way of acting.. And ire p; phone. my daughter ever offered you auy Air Hospital for Children has In­ role — and Incidentally the out­ conclusively that. • given th» Among the world-famous sym­ Count Keyserling says an encouragement? stalled radio ph' ■ in pillows on standing part of his entire career. kind of pictures, he is fat > phonic jazz orchestras whose American thinks, if he docs so. in Suitor: Oh, yes, sir! She said If each hospital bet ..luslc may now But the other principals follow being ready for the toboggaA^ Images as well as music will be headlines. And not such a bad I married hor she'd be able to pay be heard by the patients while rest­ closely on his heels. Dorothy which BO n ^ y around V brought to motion picture audience* Job at that, It he does. .the rent.— Answer*. ing on their pillows. Mackaill, Betty Gompsoni jand ‘la^e have eim M .f

i MANCHESTER EVENING. HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29,1928. Saw Many Individual Time Turns Another Old Page For A New One Poor Trades Biggest Tilden, Cobb And Sande Mistakes In Baseball Three Of Most Notable . i m e m o r i e s 1928 BROUGHT . Loss o f Grimes Hurt Giants; Flock of Youngsters Gradually Taking Places of Season­ HARD TIME FOR Mack Missed Griy and ed Veterans Such as Dempsey, Paddock, Sande, Cobb, Senators, Crowder. rdden and Others; Many New Records Set; List of U. S. IN TENNIS % BY BILLY EVANS COLLETT, Most Conspicuous Athletes. The baseball mistakes of 1928. America Again Lost Davis They form Quite a chapter in the FARRELL final outcome of the two major BY HENRY L. FARRELL league pennant races. Never a sea­ Cup— Also Mr. Tilden; son passes but what several mana­ gers regret winter trades. Baseball As lono- as there are interesting events to chronicle and WiUs Didn’t Lose S et is a big gamble, and If you take a pleasant memories to recall, retrosp^tion loses some of the long chance you are either a hero harsh pangs attending the realization that pother j-ear has or a dumb Dora, according to re­ passed out of a span, that distinguished men m their professions By DAVIS J. WALSH sults. The biggest mistakes of 1928 are ^one or are going and that time, in its ordained way, goes on If . New York Dec. 29-Troublous times | centered around the pitching In the to prove that no man has more than his day. were had, indeed. In the realm of mi-jors. Things would have been ^ The year 1928 recorded the passing ojf Jack COCHET different in New York If John Me- Tilden, Devereux Milburn, Charley Paddock, Earl Sande and Ty ig lm lost the olv^ircup a t” t S I Graw had kept Burleigh Grimes i“ - Cobb and it introduced another crop of youngsters headed by itsplf lost Mr Tilden, the former stead of passing him on to Pitts- " ' m ' being ordained by the natural su- burgh for Vic Aldridge. Connie Percy Williams, the unknown Canadian high school boy, who S t . RUTH nerlorty of the French and the Mack would have made It far more came^from that nowhere of romance to win the two sprint races latter by edict of the United States ln.teresting if he had not sent Sam JONES Lawn Tennis Association. Gray to the St. Louis Browna. at the^OL^mpc o^d characters in its portrayal, t u n n e y Tilden’s banishment was the big Washington would have been a kick of an otherwise punchless more important factor in the race if that the tick of the clock can’t be ducked “ d in the seaons, which saw French suprem- Crowder had been kept instead of storv the year 1928 wrote another one of those . acy reach the ultimate with vie- being passed to St. Louis. Aside torles in the Davis Cup chall’enge I from the pitching, St. Louis bene- round and at the American and flted and suffered a serious •tof / English championships at Forest handicap by the deal that took r Hills respectively. The Tilden Is- “ Heinle” Manush and Lu Blue from sue came to a head on the eve of Tigers to the Browns, the challenge round in France, the The surprise of the 1928 race in I i l l amateur rule committee deciding major leagues was the unex- that William had violated the coae pected, we might say the sensa- place of honor through lour seasons that on the player-writer thing in his showing of the St. Louis '%A Wimbledon articles. Browns. One only needs to digest /■•■°^'¥htna”ures%harcoiM‘ r ; e ^ Tilden Decision thoroughly the above paragraph to He, therefore, 'was summruy .^^hy St. Louis made so day record of the ""wspapers are Bobb^ tSOSLIN dropped from the American I much trouble last season. It bene- Cup squad, thereby outraging ^jj-g^ jjy three of four trades that French sense of justice resulted in unexpected reversal of ~ “ ’ r ” WILLS that Rene Lacoste, who Hpcid- ^o^m on the part of the players In- HOUNSBYj the American title in 1921 deem IB ed to withdraw , , noint- Crowder, who was passed along* Kills event. I t ^ s y P Ly. ^^^rfrom the list it is possible to ------pick the one P'^^standing star, the _____ ed out at,the tlm ^tha^he came to St. Louis via Philadelphia, Belection would ha e to be made THE SOCCER TITLE sense of ^^'®Gce Cloud. better than 40 games for'the The New York Nationals sur­ do with them. Browns. That was some pitching on purely upon “/B^rivile ’ e \n the exercise of that ^ vived the 1927-192S soccer • 'r 1 mblssador H e rrS the part of two discards. Statistics W . without too much season as winners of the Na­ ------A if^S L T A reverse it- show that the winning of 90 games tion, would hand our vote to che tional Cup, competition for Tn'riPn for the duration of makes a club a strong pennant con which is open to both amateurs SQUASH, RACQUETS PhnllenHe round. Whereupon, tender. Crowder and Gray between ^^The magnificent perfoi nance of and professionals. The titie in BOWLING HONORS 1928 CHAMPIONS THiipn orancei’ but and defeat- them won almost half that many. thJ crippled Babe when bm team the American Soccer League Kentucky D erb y ...... Rcigh Count Mr I acLte in the first match. “ Heinie” Manush, the former De- was making a desperate fight for ■ft>nt to Boston. English D erby...... Pclstcnd The socalled "million dollar That was the end. however. Cochet troit outfielder, had the greatest the pennant and when it was as. ^ Bowling honors went to the Mid­ hMtine Hennessey and Tilden and year of his career with St. Louis Americ.'ui Thi-ee-Year-Old...... Heigh Count sports,’^ squash, racquets, court tounding a nation in the worid se- dle West exclusively during the tennis, etc., enjoyed their custom­ Prance winning the doubles match last aeacou. He batted close to .400 American Two-Year-Old...... High Sti-ung ami Hougish Eye Ties against the,St. Boujs p^ker, who had been recognized by 19 28 season, the annual A. B. C. ary activity during 1928. The fol­ land. Battles At Home with a total of 3057 and H. Will .-«> Squash racquets; singles cham­ Grimes won for Pittsburgh, the Business Slumped. j Knute Hansen, ranked by many a.s America won a men s n and H. J. Hradek, Cicero. 111., was I pion, H. N. Rawlins; team cham­ G'ants would have romped in to a u cannot be disputed that the j the second best white heavyweight No. 1 international ranking that he j said to reach the value of more Hrnial series from England National League pennant. the winning two-man combination. pion, New York. dropped another team meeting to -ames of the world series in New'in the country, was knocked out by Will’s three-game total was 68 6, had h«ld for some iftne. ] than $250,000 and Judge Emil droppea ^g "I went the limit with Gray and York were not played to the jca- K. O. Christner. an Akron clown Hradek’s 677 for a total of 1363. Helen Wills swept the court in Fuchs, owner of t.ie Braves an- France, me — the" East by 9 finally decided he would never help pacity of' the stands and that Tex who had been fighting only a year. every tournr.ment in which she uounced that he would manage annual event Iro™ Army I nie,"me,’’ is tnethe way uonnieConnie inacK.Mack e.ex- Rickard’s corporation lost $-50,000 The outstanding fighters of the his team in 1929 with the assist­ 1928 S.4W HOCKEY to 3 and the Navy beat the Army | departure of Sam Gray, feated the British team, without competed. in the promotion of a heavyweiglu year were Tommy Loughran, the^ ance of Johnny Evers. I didn’t think Crowder strong light heavyweight champion. Grif­ much contest, in the matches for Yankees Make Sensation '^^Hennessey and Lott won the na- championship fight between Gene Attendance figures and receipts Houston won the Texas League Hennessey d enough physically to be a consis­ Tunney and Tom Heeney. But onl^y fiths, Jackie Fields and Rene De the Walker international cup. CLAIM NEW PLACE tional doubles: ._gd in the major leagues fell .behina championship and B".niiiigiiai’i Hawke,, tke Aualrallan ka mteea tent winner in the American a year or two more can tell whetn^. VOS, who might be called the un­ Maurice McCarthy, Georgetown, League,” explains Griffith. "Daring crowned middleweight champion. won the intercoll“glate champion­ the records m ide in 1927 and two won the Southern Association doubles: iiiss Sarah _PaKr«, it was only a temporary slump in factors contributed to the slump. pennant and Houston beat Bir­ his entire stay with our club he business or whether the days of Jones and Glenna Star. ship. Once almost exclusively a Cana­ Ctrl’s singles: Julis Sellgson The games were poorly attended in mingham in their little world suffered from stomach trouble.” million dollar fights have passed The outstanding golfers of the dian sport, hockey in 1928 defi­ George Uhle, recently traded by Tilden Suspended the early season by terrible weather series. Bo.xing had an off year year wen Bobby Jones, Johnny nitely claimed its place at the head S k Cleveland to Detroit, comes in the ly and artistically. Rickard s lignt- The contioversy betweei Bill and the runaway race of the New Farrell, Walter Hagen, Leo Diegel York Yankees through , the first_ Football Goes Big of all winter sports, at least in the Sam Gray class. He had reached the weight championship fight between Tilden and the United States Lawn and Glenna Collett. half of the sjason hurt business in East and Middle West. In so do­ and Joe Brally and Kendall Cram, stage iu his career where for vari­ Sammy Mandell. the defending Jones, as is usual with him, had Tennis Association which resulted The football season was a tre­ ing, it took precedence over track ous rjeason he was figured to have champion and Jimmy Mcl.arn n, ^ tremenaous year again, m laui, in the suspension of the former the American League. and boys’ doubles. ^ ^ tremendous year again. In fact. The major league races develop- mendous success and was featured and field as ihe winter Indoor game* The municipal title wm i pass6 his usefulness. He has the barely paid expenses and after perfection hadn’t become usual champion was one of the few out to win 20 games for Detroit flop of the heavyweight champion eu into thj hottest contests seen by an unusual number of upsets. in the East 'tna sliuntdd baskoiball to George Jennings. GJiIcago. witii him he might have been' the of the ordinary happenings in the No major team in the country with well into the background, except the doubles to Jennings Raipn if he tends to his knitting. That ship fight. Rickard temporarily big sport figure of the year. Jones in years. The St. Louis Cardinals prn- tennis world. won the National League pennant the exception of Georgia Tech, around Philadelphia and In certain Rice. William Aydelotte and_Mjs.^ would place him in the mistakes of abandoned.1 the v * * -— field------to rival K a o n *is ® Oso U ggood U L M X Ait U Ais S3 expected of him------On the courts Helen Wills con­ In the last week of the season and was able to go through tne season sections of the Middle West. It Edith Sigourney won the indoor 1929, but one must gamble in base­ moters who would not have | it jg news when he doesn’t and tinued tg rule her class and the permitted in the field in more p .^ben he does. the , suffering without being defeated or held to proved to be one of the greatest cli'amplonshlps in men’s and wo­ ball. French players remained supreme men’s singles respectively. perous days. Jones won the American ama­ by deftating the American chal­ a physical collapse, were almost a tie. sources of revenue during the fis­ beaten by the Phiadlelphia Athle­ Tunnev Made Commoti^. teur championship for the fourth lengers for the Davis Cup and by For a change, Notre Dame did cal year at Madison Square Gar­ The retirement of Gene Tunnev U .S. WINS AT POLO time in tve years and he almosc winning all of the important na­ tics. not produce a winning ^ team. den. and his marriage to Miss Polly won the open championship. At tional tournaments. The world series between the Rockne’s men lost four games but The Stanley Cup, emblematic of Lauder, a $50,000,000 heiress, at- the finish of the tournameni he Yankees and the Cardinals will be three of them were lost to sec­ world honors, went to the New FEW SKATING THRILLS Uacted more attention in the ^pa­ Tilden precipitated hlmseif Into In spite o ' the fact that the "old was tied with Johnny Farrell and another row with the officials of remembered for years as the four tional champions and the team York Rangers, who defeated the guard” of American polo was no pers than his last gney Farrell did not win the champion­ the association by writing com­ straight victories of the Yankees pulled one of the biggest upseis Montreal Maroons in a great play more, the United States easily terrible showing fight ship until the last green of the maintained Its international supre­ before the referee stopped the tigni ment for newspapers about the was one of the biggest upsets that of the year by defeating the off. This series saw Lome Chabot, Skating supplied i lay-off round. an American standpoint durin. the proved that it was a bad match and Wimbledon tournament in which he ever has been staged in the history powerful Army team. Ranger goalie, forced out of com­ macy during 1928 in a series of fbTgeneral belief that Tunney had Farrell’s victory in the open was was engaged as a competitor. His of the series. The far western teams showed petition by Injuries and the re­ vpar the lone exception prooamy matches with the Argentines. The well deserved and was not p fiuke. nicked liim as the opponent for his act in so writing v. as against the The Cardinals were four to one up the east in intersectional appearance of Lester Patrick, team beLg Irvlng Jaffee’s v^- latter, featuring Luis Lacy and an fast fight did not reflect any favor He was the bigger winner of the amateur rule which prjhibits a favorites to win before ' the series games. Southern California beat manager, in the nets. A silver tory at 10.000 metres in th® all-star cast, was expected to win winter tournament season and was uDon the champion. It may ha e player from writing for publica­ started. Herb Pennock, star pitcher haired veteran, his day was sup­ pic games. Jaffee won t^® the event, particularly since con­ one of the favorites going into the Notre Dame. Stanford swamped been that a general public re^hza- tion abcut a tournament in which of the Yankees, was out of the the Army and the Oregon Aggies posed to have been done, long since. convincingly but the committee in sidering acrimony was evident In ______open tournament. He got a bad the American camp over the final that it was a poor maten he was playing. game with a dead arm. Tony Laz- downed a New York University But he rose to the emergency with charge declared the event n® race tion that it was a finan-j start in the early rounds because he zerl was almost hopelessly crippled because It ruled that the *ce had selection of the team. Its personnel caused the fight to ne suci | that looked to be one of the a great performance and the Ran­ Politics to Rescue with a ’ sore arm. Babe Ruth was liecome too soft for competition. was changed several times but, of cial failure. „ , strongest in the country. gers finally carried off the series One Title Passed. obviously handicapped by the Almost on the eve of the chal­ hobbling around on a Charley horse Jaffee and others, however, refus­ course. Tommy Hitchcock remained eagerness of the tremendous Jones lenge round between the United and Earl Combs was out of the Boston College claimed the and the title. ed to race again and so a well an Integral part of every combina­ Jack Dempsey did not return to Springfield, Mass., won the pen­ gallery to watch and pay heed to States and France, the American game with a broken wrist. championship. Georgia Tech won earned American victory was ruled tion named an- that fact, in itself, the ring but the former champion nant in the Canadlan-Amerlcan figured in the newc almost as much Bobby .alone, officials cabled Tilden that he was But the Yankees went out with the southern title and Texas fin­ was sufficient. as he did when he was the cham­ H ^en In Spotty Year ineligible to”” play and It created a plenty of fight, got the jump and ished first in the southwest. League and Saskatoon, came '^^Miss Beatrix Loughan, New Led------by------Hitchcock’s dare devil at- pion and he became even a more Walter Hagen had a spotty sea­ furore in Paris. The financial suc­ ran away to a victory In four Nebraska won the Big Six cham­ through In the Prairie League York, and Miss Marlbel Y. vin-j ^jjg Americans won the open popular public hero. It was pre­ son but as usual he came through cess of the challenge round mi .tches straight games, making the second pionship and Drake won the Mis­ campaign. son, Boston, finished third and ing match and all seemed well. But dicted at this time last year that in one big tournament. It was was so seriously threatened that time that they had accompllshPil souri Valley title. Colorado and There was nothing so definite, fourth respectively In the ladies tl ey xyere badly beaten m the sec­ Dempsey would return to the ring fortunate for his business that he Ambassador Herrick Intervened the record feat In two years. Utah shared the championship in however, about the final rating of figure skating contest but other­ ond match, leading everyone to be­ and the same predictions are being had his best golf in the British and exerted the Infiuence which Ruth and Gehrig were the Indi­ the Rocky Mountain area and De­ Intercollegiate League teams. Yale wise the Americans were outclass­ lieve that the Argentines would advanced now. Dempsey lived up open championship and was able to caused the American officials to per­ vidual heroes of the series. The troit was not defeated in the had an impressive record, winning ed. take the third match and the seriejs. to his word that he wouldn t fight win it. In a $5000 match against mit Tilden to play. Cardinal pitchers couldn't gat middle west. Southern California fourteen out of eighteen matches. The national indoor speed skat­ I..stead Hitchcock and his mep Tilden did succeed In winning in 1928 but the temptation of Archie Compson, preceding the them out and they ran wild. The won the Pacific Coast Conference Two of those lost, however, were ing title went to Allen Potts, swarmed all over the invaders and $500,000 may bring him back in British open, he was given the one of hia matches from Rene Babe not only hit as he never hit championship. to Harvard, prompting many to re­ Brooklyn, and the women’s cham­ won by a top heavy score. 1929. worst beating a great golfer ever Lacoste but the brilliant individual gard the Crimson as the best uf pionship to Miss Elsie Muller, New Only one world’s championship efforts of Henri Cochet could not before in a money series but he got in such an important money Not Much to Boast About the college outfits, with its record York. THEY MUST BE WORRIED title passed in 1928. An fire Hou- be overcome and France retained contributed some of the most bril­ match but It only served to get his of nine out of twelve. However, In figure skating, Roger Turner tls, the Belgian fighter, became the the cup. liant defensive plays. The United States won the track fight up and his game pointed for one of its three defeats came at the Boston won the men’s event and Fifteen members of the Gewffl®’ world's featherweight champion the big British prize. Hagen did Tilden was suspended when he Four New Managers and field sports at the Olympic hands of Dartmouth in the only Miss Vinson won in the ladles Tech football team this year will when he defeated Tony CaMonerl. little after he returned to thg Unit­ returned to the United States and Four changes In managenjpnt Games but didn’t do much boast­ class. She also took the senior-pair match played between these teams be lost by graduation to the 1929 Mickey Walker, the middleweight ed States. He defeated Farrell in a his application for reinstatement were made at the end of the sea­ ing about it. The power shown event with Thornton Coolldge, team. ehamplon, had a narrow escape series of five matches for the was not granted at the December son .Bill McKechnie, who led the by the specialists in the field and, since the green could win but Boston. Miss Rosalie Dunn and ■when he won a decision from Ace "world’s open championship’’ but meeting of the executive commit­ St. Louis club in, its desperate events overcame the miserable six out of ten, the result was a Joshphlne K. Savage, New York, POPULAR IN MID-WEST Hudklns In Cljlcago. A great num­ Farrell, beyond doubt was stale. tee. It was intimated that he would drive for the pennant, was fired weakness of the runners. 9lny laundry ticket. captured the waltzing title. ber of the experts and spectators Hagen later lost the professional not be restored .^to amateur stand­ Barbuti, who won the 400 meters, Basketball plays to bigger thought that Hudklns gave him a and Bill Southworth was recalled championship to Leo Diegel, who ing until he showed a chastened from Rochester to succeed him. was the only American^to win an j . . * K,f A LOT OF SPL.Y8HING crowds in the middle west than it fine beating. . previously had won the Canadian spirit. I In both the short runs but the does in any other section of tb-' Joe Dundee, the welterweight Bucky Harris succeeded George event on the traoli. [ championship again, HpnrI Cochet was the outstand­ country. champion, was knocked out In Chi­ Moriarty as manager of the De­ The big surprise came in the Americans didn’t run. .^he Ames swimming team was Glefina Collett pulled a distin­ ing star of the season. He won the sprint racep when Percy Williams, The California University crew i for winter dual meets cago by Young Jack Thompson but troit Tigers and Walter Johnson A Parisian authoress sent .a guished comeback when she won French and American national an unknown Canadian high school after winning the intercollegiate Lgainst Drake, Grlnnell, Nebraska Dundeef had forced Thompson to championships although he was was brought from Newark to take message to Mars the othsr day. ’ come In over leelght and the title the American woman’s champion­ boy, won both the 100 and 200 championship regatta at PougU-; Creighton and entered in the ship again by defeating Virginia beaten at Wimbledon by Lacoste in Harris’ place at Washington, Amsterdam! All-College championship and Big addressed tg "Prince Charmlngv” was not pawed. Thompson was Rogers Hornsby, manager of -meter dashes. The United States keepsie, went on to Several newspapers seemed. to., Van 'Wie 13 and 12 In the final the British national championships. and won tho Olymp ight-oared j gii championships at Kaneas ““ity beaten tater by Jackie Fields and Lacoste, however, was beaten In the the Boston Braves, was sold to the had so many star sprinters entered gard the event as nev>. ileldB became the unofficial cham­ round for the tUl . i champioilship. on March 1. - Tho American team again de- ^avls Cup matches and he lost U Chicago Cubs for cash and players j that it was looked upon as a sweep pion whezuhe-lE^ooked ont SammyJi r - r ’ ■ MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1928. PAGE NTI^B Rec Five Only Defeats Hellers Four Hudkins Beats DeVos PITT CAGE STARS READY FOR GAMES Stubborn Defense Keeps By Sheer Punch Power ■:7“ Rec Boys In Second Gear Makes Belgian Fight His THREE BUGAHOOS Fanuly Lineup Remains In ##' Way; Wildcat Away Ahead PURSUKOACHES ^ tact Until Last Five Min at Finish— His Next Op­ i i Often Handicap Mentors But ARTURE V'/ utes; CluneUses AlI Tei ponent Walker. Sometimes Prove Advan- Players; Stavnitsky Stars u \ /J By DAVIS J. WALSH tageous. V Rec Five (33) New York, Dec. 29— We had a \ REC GYM TOO NAimOMV B F T little dispute such as arose barely By BII.LY EVAN'S Bissell, rf, c ...... 3 0-0 ( once or twice of a morning during The gymnasium in the School street Recreation Center is too nar­ Tlirce big ba.gaboos' always on Holland, r f ...... 0 0-0 ( the Neolithic Age— when men were row for real basketball. The oval race track which encircles the hall male and stones were thrown— and the trail of a college football coach McCann, If, r f ___ 1 are injury, illness and ineligibility “ over-hangs” onto the playing surface to such an extent that the shoot­ at the end of ten very tough rounds HVATT Strange, I f ...... 1 at Madison Square Garden last — the three I’s, as it were. j ing area is amazingly diminished. Manchester, teams have ^ become Faulkner, If ...... 2 0-0 < They are very apt to pop up j nifght, the Neanderthal Man had somewhat accustomed to the condition, but it is a serious handicap to Norris, c ...... 1 1-1 > J made a physical declaration of his when least e.xpected, raising panic-i visiting teams. riglit to another light for the nlar havoc with a mentors’ well- Madden, r g ...... 1 0-6 i world’s middleweight champion­ laid plans, and turning what start­ The ends of the playing space are so narrow that it is next to im­ Dowd, r g ...... *0 0-il ( ship. ed out as II successful season into a possible to use a five-man offense effectively, ten players and a referee Stavnitsky, I g ...... 4 3-3 11 The Neanderthal Man of pre­ most dismal one. causing too much congestion. Lack' of sufficient space al^so increases Gustafson, Ig ...... 0 0-,0j I( historic note was a fearsome speci- I , - j ^ However, there personal contact and slows up the game cohsidferably.. men who neptled his head in the i 5 are times when munderlich The .writer cannot- help but wonder if it wouldn’t bo feasable to hollow of a rival shoulder and t h e nne.vpected 13 7-8 3? there, in tlic reek of the opposing loss of a player \ take down the running track and build bleacher scats on the side that Heller Brothers (29) body and the taste of the other’s would extend high enough to handle the crowd. The track isn’t used proves . a sort of -g " B. F.mT gore, he joyously had at it. In this blessing in dis­ to any great excess at present and it strikes me such a change would effete age, he is known as Ace Hud­ Max Heller, rf ....2 3-5:’ !'i guise to the coach improve the brand of basketball played here immensely. It would kins, the Nebraska Wildcat. m Sam Heller, I f ...... 1 2-3 ( and team, too, for also do away with the netting which, to a certain extent, blocks the It wouldn’t be enough to say that that matter. For it Abe Heller, c ...... 1 1-3 J Hudkins outpunched and outfought ■has on various oc­ view of the spectators. Nichols, c ...... 2 i f Rene De Vos, the Belgian contend­ » In case that suoh a change would not be practicable. It is at least er, last niight. He also out-strug­ casions been the A, Harry Heller, rg ..0 0-0 ( gled him, which is more important means of uncover­ food for thought for it is a foregone conclusion that it is only a matter ing a star of the Tinker, r g ...... 1 0-0- 5 because it happens to tell the story. COHEN of time when a change of some sort will have to be made. Hymie Heller, Ig .. . 2 4-5 i The Neanderthal Man of old want­ first degree. Take the case ed nothing of technique, unless it 0 happened to be a typo suited to his Billy Evaiw of Stanley Hozer, 9 11-20 25 needs. All he wanted was results Michigan fullbaclc. Hozer during Score by halves: his high school days at Muskegon Plays Entire Game; and he got them. Hudkins asked Rec F iv e ...... 16 17— 38 no more and got no less last night. was a topnotch player. He went to Not Very Foxy Michigan but for some reason or H ellers...... 14 15— 25 The Fox, they call this Belgian other couldn’t seem to get going. Doesn *t Shoot Once Referee: Clyde Waters, Bris­ who is managed and operated from Came the Thursday before the Outstanding In the collegiate is ready to start Its 1928 season. forward whp scored 292 points in tol. ’ , the depths of the social register. I game with Navy. Joe Gembis, big bafketball field last year, with noth­ Here are some stars of the Panther 21 games last year, left; Captain suppose they mean he is so cute but line plunger and the fellow whose ing but victories registered m their cage squad who, while not hopeful Charles Wunderlich, right; Lester The Rec Five kept Its home slats that is only a guess because it all placeklck beat Illinois the week games against the best teams of^the of being undefeated again this year, Cohen, a reserve of last year, below MANCHES’TER TRADE Something exceptionally unusual^ immaculate last night« by turning Is over my head like a porte previous, was taken to the hospital midwest and east. Coach Carlson’s are confident that no team will find and Bill Arture, a promising new­ occurred In the basketball game B.- cochere. He was so smart last for an appendicitis operation. Mich­ University o* Pittsburgh cage squad them an easy mark: Charles Hyatt, comer, top. between Manchester and Wllliman- Luhrsen, rf ...... 2 : back the Heller Brethers of Willi­ night that the Neanderthal Man igan, apparently, had lost its best tic‘ Trade schools yesterday after­ Viot, r f ...... 6 mantic by a score of 33 to 29 be­ spent eight of the ten rounds mak­ bet. , DID YOU KNOW THAT- noon. Kenneth Beer, Manchester’s Bqpr, If ...... 0 ' fore a large crowd at the Rec gym-. ing him fight his way, which palls The illness of Gembis, however, scoring ace, played a whole game Jamroga, c ...... 4 Although at times the R.j enjoy­ for straight Marquis of Neolithic gave Hozer his chance. And it was and did not take a single shot at Stiles, c ...... 1 ( ed a commanding lead, quite oHen rules and no hitting with cobble due to Stanley’s great work in the The big league hockey goalies Christenson, rg ..,. 3 ' th"? margin was altogether too closfi are not forced to wear those the basket, being contented to pass stones, unless previously agreed third and fourth quarters that the to his mates despite frequent McBride, r g -...... 1 for comfort. The family of basket­ upon. Maize and Blue was able to eke out yegg caps. . . . The Pittsburghs >> Hexvr^ ii. Farrell Fraser, rg ...... 0 ball players did not posses as much also want Steve Swetonic, that chances to score. De Vos was 9-5 in the betting be­ a 6 to 6 tie with the Midshipmen. The scheme was originiated by Pltkat, Ig ...... 1 offensive power as the Rec but theii fore they started. He was 0-100 Hozer’s efforts gained him a Indianapolis pitcher. . . . Gen­ Anderson, Ig ...... 0 defense was equally stubborn. eral Crowder, the St. Louis Beer himself. In fact he didn’t when they finished, which was none regular job on the team. More HE CAN HANDLE HLMSELF. the same years of experimentation Taylor, Ig ...... 0 Manager Ben Clune used all ol too soon, either. Maybe he didn’ t pitcher, owns 118 acres . of fine even tell Coach Howard Fielder. than that, he became one of tlie and, like football, it has been de­ the ten pla/ers on his squad. Hii have enough but, if he didn’t, that land outside of Winston-Salem, George Moriarty, accordin to veloped into a very satisfactory His reason was to improve his most dependable boys on the passwork. Manchester won the 18 4U first team rolled up a good lead in was his mistake. Hudkins won by N. C. . . . And he ate corn game. squad— a hard line bucker, fast baseball shop talk, will wm be in a game without exerting itself. The WILLIMANTIO TRADE the first half but when the second five rounds to three with two even. Willie in' Siberia with the A. E. The survival of football and B. He thus qualified for another title afoot and a clever chap on de­ tough spot next season when he score was 40 to 16. In respect to crew went in, Willimantic picked fense. F. . . . Shanty Hogan is one basketball under all the opera­ Hall, rf ...... 1 . shot with Mickey W’^alker and per­ of the best pool players in base­ goes back to umpiring in the Amer­ the visitors, however, it must be up steadily until halftime found Hozer, by the way, comes from tions of the legal surgeons and Tirone, If ...... 2 them two points in the rear. Clun€ haps this time they won’t be able ball. . . . But Dave Bancroft their recovery to even better stated that this is the first year the the same school that turned out ican League. Some of his friends Shae, c ...... 3 rushed the regulars back into th« to pull the decision out of a brown is said to be the best shot. . . . school has had a team, the building Bennie Oos'erban, Flop Flora thought h§ should have gone over health, admittedly caused John Robargel, rg ...... 0 fray in the second half but was un­ derby. The California players who went Heydler, president of the National having been built last season. and other gridiron greats during to the other league if he wanted to Tubs, Ig ...... 0 able to regain any lead to speak ol Ace Wins First 1 to PasaMena to play the League, to make his ten-man “ Shorty” 'Viot led the scoring more recent seasons. go back to a job that is none too with six field goals. Jamroga, De Clcco, Ig ...... 1 until the last five minutes when the Hudkins, fought De Vos much as I Georgia Techs called the bell soft when the ball players haven’t baseball suggestion. he fought Walker in Chicago last I Michigan, incidentally, has been Christenson and Luhrsen contri­ score mounted to 27-21 in favor oi quite fortunte in unearthing star i hops the first thing when tjiey i anything to call to an umpire’s at­ He had reasons to tell his mag­ 2-11 16 summer. He went into a huddle I arrived. . . '. To get their tux- buted frequently accounting for the Manchester. with the Belgian in the first minnte replacements following the loss tention. nates that football had reached wide margin. Shae and Tirone weie Score by quarters: Banishment of Norris and Stav­ of certain regulars. For instance, I edos pressed. . . • They all had Hank O’Day at one time quit unprecedented popularity because Manchester 10 7 10 13— 40 of play and. try as he might, Rene one. . . . J'like Strong is lis­ best for the visitors. Manchester’s nitsky via the personal foul route, couldn’t shake him off. For a time, there was Irwin Uterwitz, quarter­ umpiring in the National League the rule makers of the game had next game is in New Britain next Willimantic 2 3 5 6— 16 however, handicapped the Rec and tening to a baseball offer from and tried to manage the Cincin­ considered the taste of the cus­ he almost held his own but ulti­ back during the 1921-22 petiod. week. Referee: Elmo Mantelll. when Eddie Nichols replaced Abe Uteritz got his chance when the Boston Red Sox. . . . Ed­ nati Reds. He didn’t fit in a tomers and had been influenced mately he discovered, as has many ward McLean, the Washington Heller at center and Morton Tinker a good man before him, that one Banks was injured in the Mich­ managerial job and went back to by the'changes in times which de­ publisher, wants to buy Jack took Harry Heller’s place at guard, plays that way with Hudkins strict­ igan Aggie contest early in the umpiring without any serious con­ manded changing styles of the Sharkey, tlie fighter. . . .Ac­ the tide turned Willimanticward. ly at his own risk and. I might add, campaign. Uteriz not only made sequences. game. ROCKVILLE BOWLERS Nichols, former Willimantic High strictly at his own loss. Hudkins cording to Jimmy Johnston, Avho But old Hank didn’t have any good but developed into one of owns a 10 per cent, piece of | flash, scored two baskets and got carried the first round. De Vos the the greatest quarterbacks in personal troubles with the players Get Flapi>erlsli, Baseball! WIN BY 73 TIMBERS m m o four shots at the hoop from the foul second with a couple of jarring Sharkey. . . . Pid Purdy’s: of the Cincinnati club or he did He argued that baseball had not Michigan’s history. For three right name is Virgil. . . . .^nd I CHENEY GIRLS LEAGUE line in almost less time than it rights to the jaw. seasons he starred on Wolverine not become involved in' any per­ kept up with times. And takes to tell about it. Belgian Tires he'd much rather be called Pid. | sonal feuds with the players on it has not been modernized like elevens that lost only one game, ------—■» Visitors Roll 1,733 Against Weaving No. 1 Had Nichols and Tinker been in­ The third and fourth were fairly lhat being to Ohio State in 1921, the other clubs. other sports, unless the introduc­ Charter Oaks; Kaiser High jected into the lineup much sooner, even, if yon felt like giving De Vos It's a good bet, though, that tion of the rabbit ball is termed M, Strong ...... 79 Uteritz’ first as a regular. ' M. Little ...... 85 the ultimate outcome would prob­ a break. But now he found that, Uteritz was one of the best any of the ball players who start as an innovation. Man. ably have been quite different. Thil having dallied with the buz saw, something with the former De­ The hockey people have been N. Taggart...... 82 safety men of his period. He was BAHALINO FIGHTS Manchester has some good bowl­ G. Nelson ...... 72 doesn’t mean that Heller Brothers he was a bit wearied of the game. a sure and hard tackier and cer­ troit manager had better be pre­ considering changes in the rule.s Upon which. Hudkins came on to ers, but it looks as though Rock­ G. Jackmore ...... 95 would have won, but the Rec would tain of punts. An injury pared to finish it because George that would promote increased have had to pla: better than It did take the fifth with a ceaseless body is a very good finisher. scoring and it has h“en suggested ville has some still better ones. Joe gave him a chance to prove hit: 423 431 429 last might. Considering the fact that attack, won the sjxth with left woi’th. NISCHO ON FRIDAY this year that forward pas.ses be Farr’s Charter Oak aggregation hooks to the body, one of which was took it on the chin last night in Throwing No. they were all from one family, the Oddly enough, a broken ankle We Must Have Changes. allowed in the zones i:i front of Heller combination made a credit­ painful even to look at, and to carry Football had a monopoly for the goals. three straight games. A. G abbey...... 78 put an end to Uteritz’ career and A. "Walckowski . . . 69 able showing. the seventh, all but having the Bel­ enabled Tod Rockwell to break in years on the delicate trade of Boxing regulations have changed Thirty-one pins decided the first gian out. and are changing, the sport until game, four the second and thirty- M. Mukulis ...... 68 It was the work of George Stav­ regularly. “ Utz” suffered his in­ New Y oA er Who Trimmed tinkering with the rules and after nitsky and “ Cap” Bissell thqt carj Hudkins coasted through the all (those years of experimentation only the fundamentals of the old eight the third. Rockville rolled a R. O’N eill...... 73 next two and lived to regret it. jury in the game with the Marines ried the Rec over the top to victory. late in the 1'123 campaign. Rock­ the game seems to have been Queensbury code will remain. Some three-string total that would have H. Frederickson .. 68 For as soon as he stopped coming of the customers complain, how­ set a new record in tbs Herald Tommy Faulkner, one of the best well was shoved into the breach. Cohen, Flooring Him transformed into a very satisfac­ forwards in .town, went veil in his in, De Vos found himself set for tory one. ever, that boxing is being made in­ League— 1,733. Only four scores, ;56 359 346 his punches and he clipped the Ace The following week he crashed “ re-debut” following his recent into the spotlight by virtue of his "rhe coaches still grunible to to a molly game and they take two on each side, were under a many times and oft during the Once, Coming Here. have the posts set back on the heart when a young fellow like hundred. -Kaiser was high with 144 Velvel serious illness. Hymie Heller was famous 75-yard gallop in the final best for the visitprs. The Brown eigh’th and ninth. A right to the goal line' and there have been Ace Hudkins steps forward with a for his single and 380 for the three E. Lennon .. . jaw early in the ninth was Rene’s minutes against Wisconsin to star was especially clever in the art give the Maize and Bine a hard- some suggestion that a fumbled suggestion. string. H. Bodreau .. best punch of the fight. The .\ce suggests that the min­ Here are the scores which show E. Rowsell . . . ol dribbling and passing. Sam ami The Belgian had a chance to steal earned 6 to 3 victory. From then Bat Battalino of this city has ball should become a dead ball at been signed to l)ox the star bout of ute of rest between rounds be M. Sherman . Max also played well. Abe’o defense a draw by taking the tenth but one on Rockwell, virtually an un­ the spot where it is recovered. But Rockville leading by 73 pins; ten rounds at Foot 'Guard hall In there will be no violent agitation eliminated and that the gladiators Rockville J. L u ca s...... was good, but neither he nor Harry punch at the start of the round known, was the outsanding ball were anything to brag about on the carrier on the Michigan team. Hartford next Friday evening about either gjiggestion. be forced to carve each other un­ Bretz ...... 103 109 107— 319 changed his mind, pronto. It was a til one of them has dropped.. 444 432 469 offense. left hook that Hudkins dropped into Then there was the case of against Ralph Nlscho of New York. Basketball has gone through Hot ..,,...130 111 92— 333 Nischo comes here well recommend­ Kaiser ' ...... 109 136 144— 380 Velvet No. 2 Referee Clyde Waters call6d’ l 6 his sun parlor so fiercely that Rene Jack Blott, Michigan’s » great cen­ personal fouls on the Rec and seven ter of a few years ago. Blott, in ed and with a record as a seasoned Carlo ...... 117 98 117— 332 D. Miller ...... 73 dropped his hands and gasped, open performer who claims a win over against Heller Brothers. The Ret mouthed, with the pain of it. He fact, fell the week after Uteritz yreber ...... 142 110 108— 360 Gert Kanehl ...... 84 Milton Cohen of New York and per­ E. Lautenbach . . . 95 made seven of their eight atteibp^ managed to cover up and weather .went out. A broken ankle also forming the feat of having Milton from the free throw line gdb^. the ensuing storm and even came put Blott on the bench. I^eep Money In Family 601 564 668 1738 Dummy ...... 75 Cohn on the floor, a trick that Bat­ Charter Oaks Dammjr ...... 84 Willlmantic’s average was also back in the final minute to take Blott’s replacement was Bob talino could not produce In his two good. The summary reveals that the the play away from the ace. Brown, Brown made good, play­ C urtis...... 118 101 129— 348 meetings with Cohen. Wlganowskl 122 120 85— 327 411 409 438 Rec beat Heller Brothers by two But by that time, the damage ing the next two seasons and cap­ Nischo’s record shows a draw points in both the first and sCCb.hd was In. So was the decision. Ref­ Anderson ...1 1 5 111 102— 328 taining Michigan’s sensational with Teddy Baldock of Emgland half. eree Lou Magnolia, by the way, 1925 team which had but three Belletti ____ 101 107 124— 332 Main Office' who was a sensation in this country E. Geddis ...... 74 In the preliminary gr.uie, the called it a draw. Maybe he was points scored against it. Ho was last year; Nischo was one of the Sargent ....114 121 90— 325 thinking of the Harvard-Yale boat B. Williamson .... 79 Rec Girls barely squeezed out a close to an All-America selection. very few to floor Baldock. He has winner over the 'Windsor Locks, race. < 'Those instances are just a fe\v won over Billy Humphries, Milton 670 560 530 1660 M. Sullivan...... 67 ■r V( A. Bonnett ...... 69 vertizers. The score was 14 to 13. I recall wherein Michigan has un­ Cohen, Willie Suess, Pete Passa- Miriam Welles, Anne Scranton and CARDINALS WIN. covered future greats to take the fume, Johnny Huber, Gene Martini, A. Paradis...... 85 The Cardinals opened their sea­ Charlotte Foster accounted 'lor all place of regulars lost to the team Ernie Rossini, and Eddie Parches!; N. son Thursday night with a decisive for various reasons. < EAST-WEST STARS 374 352 SSI of the points made by the Rec.^rls. fbuglit draws with Joey Leone and Halftime score was 9 to 5 in Man­ victory over the Woodland A. C. The old bugaboos sometimes Teddy Baldock and lost to such Old Mill with "Speck” Kearns in rare form, work out quite advantageously. It A. Taggart ...... SO chester’s favor but Wiodsor Locks good fighterb as Tony Canonezri# TO BATTLE TODAY won the second half 8 to 5. The the Cardinals breezed along tossing seems.* Eddie Anderson. Johnny Vestrle L. Armstrong...... 84 in baskets at will. Their red-headed summary follows:/ and Vic Burrone. Rec Girls (14) flash scored more points than the Nischo has boxed better fighters Expect' 60,000 Spectators to 164 156 147 B. ‘ F. r T. entire Woodland team. Falkoski’s than Battalino and has a more en­ a brilliant floor work aided greatly In RISKO DEFEATED See Famous Grid Game in Scranton, r f ...... 2 0-0 0 viable record and has thq distinc­ California. bringing about the one-sided score. tion of never being knocked-out side of the question with a ven- Gihlln, r f ...... 0 0-0 0 Cardinals (45.) . Boston, Dec. 29.— Johnny Risko. Foster, I f ...... 1 0-0 • 2 and claims that he is ready to bet San Francisco, Cal., Dec. 29. — geance. B F T Cleveland heavyweight dropped a his purse that Battalino will not Clulow, If ...... 0 0-0' 0 Falkoski, r f ...... 4 1 9 A husky crowd of young athletes A like number of determined decision- to Ernie Schaap here last be able to hang a kayo on his young men from western colleges Welles^.'c ...... 3 2-3 S Kearns, If ...... 9 1 19 from all sections of these United Shearer, r g ...... 0 0-6 0 night. Risko captured four of the record after .he has met better States were ready today to take up were set to argue the affirmative Splllane, c ...... 5 1,11 punchers and fighters than Bat­ 'McLaughlin, Ig . . . 1. 0 0-0 0 Lyons, rg ...... 3 0 * 6 ten rounds, one was even and five that intersectional ‘ debate on the with their combined brawn and talino is reputed to be. brain. • Jackson, Ig ; ...... 0 0-0 ' () Nielsen. I g ...... 0 0 0 went to the local boy. question, resolved that “ East is The semi-final bout will bring least and west is best” — footbali- Coaches Andy Kerr of 'Washing­ Mcllduff, r g ...... 0 0 0 together two scrappy youngsters in 6 2-8 14 Pohl, Ig ...... 1 0 2 BACK IN VARSITY TOGS ically speaking. ton and Jefferson and Dick Hanley WtndSOT .Locks (18) Noble Atkins, 200-pound cen­ A1 Beauregard of Hartford and Approximately 60,000 spectators' of Northwestern for the east, and Tommy Abobo, Phlllpino of New B. P. T. Total. 45 ter. who stayed out last season to were primed to contribute their an­ “ Babe” Hollingberry and Buck play in a commercial league in York who is rated as a great club nual bit to the Shriner’s hospital Bailey for the west reported their Sweeney, r f ...... 1 1-1 3 ; lighter. C. Ssis&llftf It -1 2-5 4 B. F. T. Fort Worth, Is back on the Texas for crippled children and watch the charges in fine mettle for the fray. Christian varsity basketball team. Feur preliminaries make up the Earnings of most fighters are di­ all the money in the family. His all-star and west teams add an­ Buck Nowack, Illinois tackle, and Colii* It •••«••«« 0 0-0 0 H. Wright, rf . . . . 2 0 4 card of six bouts. OrviS) c •••••«•••• 0 0-0 0 1 Herb, Wright. If . . . 1 1 8 minished by a cut for the manager two brothers manage him and the other chapter to a national con­ Howard Harpster. Carnegie Tech AND ONLY FIVE ON A TEAM money is divided between the three troversy. quarterback, have been named to Ferara, rg ...... 1 0-0 Jamroga. o ...... 2 0 4 NOTRE DAME VERSUS PENN or managers., but that is not the XiOttuSs 0 0-0 . . . 2. 0 4 Notre Dame, which promises to of them. Ace is shown here in the Twenty-tWo young gentlemen se­ captain the '\astern all-star grid Segar. rg ...... case with what Ace Hudkins earns T. Colli, I g ...... 2 0-2 Limerick. Ig ...... 0 0 0 have the best basketball team in Penn and Notre Dame football center with Brother Ulyde at the lected for football superiority dis­ teAra which battles with the west­ Ingraham, Ig ...... 1 0 2 the middle west, started the sea­ ‘ earns, never opposed to ehch other in the fight racket. This young man. left and Brother Art at the right. played on mid-western and Atlantic ern ^rs. Nowack will handle the son with 18 . lars f"im las' < 0 the gridiron before, will meet who is trying so hard to get Mickey Last night', he bet Roue De Vos, the seaboard grid'rqn du: *; the past squad on defense and Harpster on Totftly •««•%•* • • • s 1 17 year on the squau. X bbme-aud-hoi&e Walker’! UUe. believei In keeping ;^el■ian, sMtt i^ioulder ^ae aeMatlxa ottenie. 1 BaIw —Clgdn ^ ry j'.v :T T^jT -.t f (^? ■‘\ >^

.0 -t MANOHESTER EVENING HERALD; SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURl)AY, DECEMBER 29,1928. m m i \ m HftUE REtn GOftTH This And Thai In \ \ ■

«A s fast ns the bears dumped stocks THIS HAS HAPPENED V . • . A k. A.______.a 4a 4K a i * ASHTORETH ASHE, R beRuUtul Ashtoreth turned back to the Femininr itonosTRi^w from Boston, Is hnv* shining sea and faced him square- Ins «tt e ^ ttn g tima on shlpbontd. ly* JACK 8MYTHE, an Englishman “ You know perfectly well that I The death of Theodore Roberts, "Grand Old Man 6f the Movies,” whom sho moots aboard» mskos lm» didn’t know anything about Mona or her jade!’’ revealing his unhappiness because 'i.-' ..V mediate love, and kisses her during of loneliness In estrangement from the first five minutes of their ac­ •And you didn’t care!” he taunt­ You’ll look better— 5'ou’ll fe e lf doesn’t wear-too many kinds artUo, ed. “ It wasn’t policy to ask ques­ his family, Is surprising not so better— If you will put yourselves same time, they Bkoald not quaintance. tions.” much because of his ruvealment of in the.hands of the skilled beauti­ ed. Jewelry ensembles for.ipeil are She snubs him after that— but family trouble as that a man should ho warns her. Just the same, “ Well, you didn’t think I was go­ cians at the Lily Beauty Parlor in on the up and up. ing to ask her if she’d come by her bo so emotionally dependent on the House & Hale -building during against her roommate— MONA DE family ties and Incapabls of carv­ MUSSET, a glorious and mysteri­ things honestly!” this strenuous holiday season | Instead of the usual chlcken.r'iry Ashtoreth laughed. “ Maybe you ing out happiness with or without which makes such demands on the a duck for Sunday’s dinner,. Thjejr’ sto; ous lady. Mona has been very good family harmony. to Ashtoreth, presenting her with gave them to her?” she hazarded. looks as well as the nerves. plentiful and a .llttlg cheaper than; "Oh, no!” he protested. “ I've One of our social traditions is ------I chicken at this time o f year, TheY any number of beadtlfu* gifts. that man can live alone both out­ Sinythe tells Ashtoreth that the never given Mona a.iythlng.’ An easy to prepare fruit salad are very ,fat and should be, placed “ You wouldn’t,” Ashtoreth told wardly and Inwardly if he has Ills is a large half of canned peach on on a rack In the roastJng pan aa'd respectable women on board will own fairly satisfacory job, but have nothing to do with her If she him rudely. “ And I don’t care what 'Ibe Qv angrily from his chairs were empty, and Mona’s thing or Other will have her em­ ships, efforts and sacrifices entail­ Crea. -who is a research- tnycoloilis^, fingers on her arm. book, with a box of chocolates, lay erald is rather out of order. Jew­ ed to obtain and offer them furs for raises these flower's o'n i'a, laf^e “ Oh, yes, i do,” she flared. “ I un­ on her stea.ner rug. Ashtoreth els mean much more^ today than their adornment, they might appre­ scale and is experimenting ; with derstand perfectly.” threw herself down. mere baubles for personal adorn­ ciate better these garments’ which them with the- idea- of’ exfraHifife “ I mean about Mademoiselle de She was furiously angry with ment. Sales of emeralds like this have become indispensable to their the rare heart'tdnic^ which, Musset,” he persisted. “ Jt isn’t Jack Smythe. He was the most pre­ mean about the same impersonal complete winter wardrobe. Wh>m contain, which- som^imes'istirs. * colorless thing of high finance as quite the thing for me to tell- you, posterous person, she assured her­ they happen to see the inside of listless babe to life or helps eW ^- the sale of stocks ,or bonds or real their coats they think ’ they are ly people over periods of sluggl^ pe r hap s— b u t— ’ ’ self, that she had ever known. How “ No,” agreed Ashtoreth testily. could he think such utterly un­ estate. made up of small pieces, but these heart action. The Rurplish^blossoins or “ finger-stalls’' as^sotoe' eSH-theW, “ I don’t think it is. Mona has been speakable things of ter! hundreds of yards of seams repre-. She fondled Mona’s jade tender­ HIS CLAIM They 'Did'o'L sent the art of the furrier and give are believed to be.''thB:'ii:^s|^' perfectly sweet to me."She has a A certain artist recently sued ly. I was cold, as ice in her hands. the wraps that look of continuity so McCrea carafuljy sgalq eaci heart of gold. And I don’t know his wife for- divorce ■ on the Cncoarac!^ Hack She knew that real jade is always f'lce sought for. of the plants she-is experfgientlng that I’m particularly concerned grounds that; slm^v “ destrqyed I his Cxerci'tTe — 1 on with waxed pa^er;:'Alside jff^in ~ about her morals. They’ra not any .cold, and she thought, fantistical- power of creative' art.” Whether To ly, that if she had millions and mil­ Watch Night Psirties ! their showyness In th e, perepalnl of my business, 1 mean. . . . ” he gets the divorce or, not is not lO» ftck'ov . UaVTTv New Year’s eve is always an j border, isn’t -interestlnfe; to ^kBOW “ But you don’t want the holier- lions of dollars sho would live in so interesting as his' reason. It the tropics, where it was always event for celebration. In many; that under prdpet scientific, than-thou sisterhood arrayed makes one , wonder. . what ;would homes watch parties-are held and ! ment .these,.-lov-ely.^-spik'es;.of, .\>'elj- against you,” he interrupted. “ Wo­ warm. And she would have 'lade to- happen if all the wives in -the New Year's resolutions are the shaped■ flowers" 'have an- itifinltjely men have to run together. The pack, keep her cool. A couch, like Cleo­ world who believe that they might popular topic of conversation. more useful imfssloji,’.. makes it too tough for those who patra’s, to sleep on. And j.ade things be'great, successes of one sort or Q i 928 by NEA s e r v ic e . iNC all about, to put her w^arm hands There are a lot of “ never again ’ don't. You can’t afford, for in­ auother.if they w'eren’t married Shoes for men have caught'-some on. Medallions to wear on ■ her decisions which will probably be stance,, to antagonize every respec­ would begin suing right and left. made about food, but just the same of the style chaiiEes that haye^talv- table woman on this boat in order breasf. And bracelets to reach from Funny how both men and wom­ refreshments play an important en place in btliec articles of theii* to take up the fcudgels for a girl her wrists to her shoulders...... en will forget all about these Fashion Plaque apparel. Toes a re b lu n te r, tips Oh, wouldn’t it be wonderful to be ^ii part at these gatherings and per­ like Mona de Musset. It simply aspirations till after- • they re in haps buffet suppers are easiest fo m ore distinctive " 'afid ^. intricately rich! And have just everything you marriage----then begin groa.ning isn’t done, that’s all.” serve and most appropriate. , Tlie perforated 6r stitc'hed.’ -Por" fipriug wanted! for the thing that mi&ht have “ But Mona has been my friend!” bulk of tha work should be done sport wean two «olprS,/ptqterabiy cried Ashtoreth. “ And what do I The thought of Sadie. Trivial, in­ been! Or isn’t it so funny? tan and white di-bladki, a i^ 1w|ii consequential little Sadie. Sadie had Daily Health Service beforehand so that the hostess al­ care about these other women— so may have a good time. Plenty of will be the thing.-,Fpr v ^ t e t -sp^s wretched old cats!” everything she wanted— or*almost “1 DIDN’T KNOW!” are on therTffcreabfi, everything. Sadie was awfuUy gen­ 17-yearrold girl was recently HliNTS OiN HOW I'O KKI’l* WKLL sandwiches of different kinds may “ Mona leavdo the boat at Guade­ be made, a hot dish planned for matching up with- . Ah^e. Or erous, too. She had for instance, caught by the Denver Juvenile by World Famed Authority loupe” , he reminded her, “ and the such as chicken creamed or a la brown hat or the/.generfei-dolor w. etched old cats are making the given Ashtoreth a perfeilly marve- , Court for some irregular social scheme. 'r:/- lous negligee, and a nightgown, and 1 procedure involvin.g two husbands King in patty shells, a chicken or Tip: round trip. You won’t have even a fruit salad, with rolls, relishes those darling littie mules. And then ‘ without benefit of divorce from me to fall back on. I go, as you such as olives, stuffed celery . or IMqufiqt \Vi»t.er she had loaned her. that stunning the first one. She naively explain- r-i ixfATir PI,YY ^fnecessities of life after their travel. know, to Antigua. It wil’ be more CLIMATE^DOES^ invalid cart almost pickles, home made cake or wafers Four or . flvei: -smtioth Tu'fidiq'ta- than a week before I rejoin the camel’s hair coat, and the suede i ed that she had never heard of bigamy and didn’t know she had OF 'I'UBERCULOSIS. anywhere is from $25 to $5W per and coffee or cocoa. sizsd beets,; 2 tablespoons melted ship. You’ll be dreadfully alone. hat to match. butter, 2*tea£pooira sngarr-l-'S^tea­ done anythin,? wrong. This is the first of an important-; week. Therefore, at least ?12h0 to Ashtoreth tilted her chin defi­ Ashtore.h’s face grew suddenly spoon salt,. l._;te''Ifispp / ■ k 'grey mocha Is correct. Allow plenty of • timer'for They had stopper, to lean against But Ashtoreth' seldom found i t ’ theless play a considerabl: part >u CHEESE IN SOUP i --^ 1^ x e W upper arm bracelet ing winter’ beets. •.T‘'w6 hours^ at the rail. Flying fish raced aiong the pleasant. Disinissiug the hateful ' \ r o u R the speed of the recovery. i - „ ,, ^ i composed of rhinestone links with According to the jewelers, “ gan­ least will be tieeded. side of the boat, like wuite flame notion, s.he picked up Moiia’s book. In considering climate one is Keep small pieces o* flower and leaves .of red and green der gems” — yes, that is what they MARY, TAYLOR. dancing in the sunshine. Vi^hen they There was something on the fly concerned -not only with tempera- cheese. Grated it is excellent - for [ shows the trend toward call them in Paris— were a big item had disappeared, a school of por- leaf in Mota’s writing. She wrote a CHILDREN ture and humidity, but also with giving taste to vegetables and-cream j elaborate costume jewelry, this Chrutmas for gifts. Cuff links prises nime, turning somersaults broad, untidy hand, and Ashtoreth wind dust, and storms, with rain, soups and makes a tasty addi ion to and rings were modernistic like Florida lots’ should be a good like awkward aquaiic clowns recognized it immediately. A bit of O lii'C I^b e rts B arlon the character of the,'soil, the sun- a salad that might otherwise be TUCKED B.^NDS everything else, in fact a man may buy, now they’re sellingrat^Ei^The “ Oh, look!” Ashtoreth leaned doggerel. A whimsical little thing. shine and many other factors. flat. ■■ Tucked bands form the finish wear any precious or semi-precious alligators on them are worth that over the side. “ Did you ever see It sounded exactly like Mona. <0tCi28 by ME.A Sgr-vice.Inc Heat or cold in great excess are| • ------of the cardigan of a catawba wool stone he likes now, provided he. much^ ' • , ' anything so funny in your life !” This was It: crepe suit. Tucked bands form An old saying goes, “ A sense of dangerous to health and may b e: The jade ornament that ohe wore “ Talk to me tendeily, tell me lies; MATTRE.SS HANDLES the cuffs and the front closing of humor is a saving grace.” fatal to life. Tlie effects of tern-j about her neck swung out into the I am a woman, ani time flies. perature on the body are dependent | a purple pink blouse that goes It is as good today as it ever sunshine. She beat her hands ex­ I am a woman, and out of the door .Some day .when .there, is not with it. was, better in fact, for existence to a great degree on humidity. o u citedly on the rail. And the brace­ Beautj go s to come no more. Warm moist climates are gen­ much work to ■ do, an hour spent lets on her wrists clinked merrily. has not only come to be a rather putting handles on all the mat­ SILVER BALLS downright dig-in-to-the-elbows a.- erally believed to have a depressing Sn.ythe took the or lament between Talk to me tenderly, take my band; effect. Cold, dry a ir's stimulating, tresses will bring satisfaction. Cut A Paris sports ensemble of grey fair, but a pretty grim tight for his fingers. I am a woman, and understand. but as pointed out by Dr. James A. one-inch strips of heavy material, jersey cardigan suit, with blouse Business Men’ s many of us if we wish to keep a “ Mona’s jade, isn’t it?” he re­ I am a woman, and must be told Miller, demands a capacity for re­ make loops big enough to slip the in many shades of gray, is com­ Lies to warm me when I am old.” place in the sun. hand through, and sew four to each pleted by an unusual necklace of marked. I should begin early to culti­ sponse from the individual. Ashtoreth flushed. Ashtoreth smiled. She wondered If the boc’ is not able to re­ mattress, one on each corner. . silver balls, the size of cherries. how old Mona was. And if she real­ vate a sense of humor-in children. “ Yes,” she said defiantly. “ And I Now there is humor .and humor: spond properly to cold, dry air, as For 1929 ly felt that w’ay. Tv/euty-eight, per­ is the c^se with persons who have have one of her hats on. And this there is the kind of irresponsible haps. Or 30. It must be awful to been greatly weakened by,long con­ ' sweater is hers. And, in case you’ve silliness that takes life as a huge Loos6 L6r£ LsdgGr Outfits $3»50, ,$7.50, $.10..0,0. know that you were growing old. tinued illness or by old age. the ef­ been thinking I smell nice, I might joke and shifts responsibility ^on Loose Leaf Memos in leather and black texbide^85c add that the perfume is Mona's. EverycLdy was, of course. But 30— other people, and there is the kind fects of cold dry air may be harm­ and up. V" ' And I use her powder and her bath why, that was sort of getting mid­ ful. that helps us to bear trouble. That Excessive moisture has a relax­ Double and Single Entry Ledgers, Journals and Col- crystals, and everything. I believe dle-aged. Mazib always said k a girl is the kind I am talking about. , - ; l ing effect which may predispose to I ’m even carrying one of her hand­ wasn’t married by the time she was Children should be taught to William lumnar Books, bound in texhide with black covers, 150*; infection. The. movement of the kerchiefs. Yes— all are linen. 30 she neverWould be. Well, prob­ see the bright side of things, the 300, and 500 page at $1.00 to $4.00. • .' . -I air materially influences the tem­ Smell!” ably Mona didn’t want to get mar­ good fat part of the doughnut, the Ledgers, Journals and Record Books, canvass boupd in She flicked it under his nose. ried, any'iow. Why should she? She perature and the liur’ idity. silver edge to the cloud. If the air is hot and moist,, move­ 150, 300 and 500 pages 55c up. v • “ That perfume,” she said, “ cost had everything, in the world.... One mother I know .is an expert ment of the air will aid in elimina-j P. Quish $54 an ounce. It’s Mona’s, of And love,, besides...... If Jack at diverting little minds from Card Index Files in steel and 'wood-65c and jip.. r course.” Smythe— and all thq wretched old tlon of heat. If the air is very cold, Index Cards, Journals, Ledger and Fmnt Ruling 3x5, •- trouble. there will be an increased demand Smythe dropped the medallion. cats— knew what they w'ere talking Buddy Has Accident 4x6,' 5x8. Indexes for files in colors. \. • F • ; . “ I wonder,” he said, “ if Mona about. Tor heat produced from 'the body. One day Buddy came roaring in If tbs air ,is both -moist and cold, Funeral Large Box Files 50c up. .. . ! ' . . had never given you a thing, if Ashtoreth turmed the pages of with the knees out of both of his conditions are extremely uncom­ you’d be so fond of her. If, for in­ Mona’s book. Swinburne. She tried stockings. He had tripped and Shannon and Clip Board Files. ‘ t to remember what sort of a loet he fortable, and may be harmful. stance, she was just a common fallen on the walk. • . In selecting a climate for the was supposed to be. Was it Swiu- “ Buddy Anderson!” His mother every-day little tramp, without any invalid. Doctor Miller suggests, that jade, or French perfumes, or im­ brrne and Keats that everybody gave him one look and then fast­ ened her gaze hard on his stock­ there is do one best climate for ported chapeaux— I wonder if you’d thought about together? Or was it tuberculosis. In other words, prop­ be so beautifully loyal then.” Shelley and Keats.' ing's. “ I hope you had the decen­ er treatment under scientific condi­ cy to fall in ‘Job’s turkeys’.” “ Of course I would!” “ Some day,” vowed As'ntoreth, tions is more important than cli­ “ I ’m going to read a lot of poetry, Now in -that family every pair 'Ashtoreth defended herself in­ mate alone. Ambulance Service— Lady Attendant dignantly. and the biogn phies of all the great of stockings was named, and one particularly ugly pair, yellow with Some types of patients never “ I enjqy wearing her pretty pcets. One really should.” should be moved in search of cli­ Telephone 387 jwritefs things, of course. That wrap I had She had heard something about black marks, that Grandma had 225 Main Street bought at a bargain were immedi­ mate. This Includes patients who T-. on‘ last night— the red one— was Swinburne. But she simply couldn’t are severely ill in the early stages hers. She gave it to me. She’s given place him. That was too bad. She’d ately christened “ Job’s turkeys” as the black marks -resembled of the disease. In such cases, com­ me any number of things. I rather have liked to say something casu plete rest in'bed either at home or turkey tracks. hated accepting them— at first. ally about him, to sort of impress in an Institution In the home city is $38.50 Mona. You wouldn’t think now Those stockings just wouldn’t Maybe I h.;'.ven’t very much pride. wear .out. The ugly ones never the first step in treatment, and But I ’m telling you the truth, any­ that Mona was the sort of girl should be continued until the pa­ Every sanitary precaution Type'writer-Papers, 500 sheets to box $1.00. who’d read poetry. Well, you do, you know. how. I ’m not fourflushlng. And I’m Buddy’s mother looked relieved tient is able to travel without risk. surrounds the handling of Typewriter Ribbons and Carbon Papers.. being just as truthful when I swear couldn’t ever tell. — even pleased. She disregarded Not long ago the United States Ashtoreth turned the pages. There that Mona’s gifts haven’t a thing his roaring entirely. - •• government through the Public milk at this dairy. to do with the way I feel about was something penciled. Something “ Why, . .you blessed child, you Health Service protested agaln.st her!” ' probably that Mona, liked. She read did! Look, Job’s' turkeys are the shipping of patients to certain Smythe smiled cynically. it slowly; completely ruined. Now we can states when such patients did not “Well, it’a hard telling,” he said. throw them out for good and all have the m,eans to provide for the Pasteurized Milk ' • • • "t, ■ “I suppose you think you’re being “Fi’om too much love of living, without hurting ' Grandma’s feel­ From hope and fear set fret, , Blue, Blue Black, Black Drawing, Stuping honest, anyhow. But, you know, I ings. I ’m so thankful it wasn’t -IS- Cards in all colors and sizes. wondbr sometimes if women are We thank with brief thanksgiving the Totem Poles.” ' MRS. ADA M. ever altogether honest— ^wlth them­ ■^hatover gods may be. Forgotten were the stinging CJlips, Pens, Pencils, Rulers, Inkwells...... •. . selves, or anybody else. Upon my That no man lives forever, knees.* Buddy, too, was laughing MERRIFIELD Sponge Cups, Letter Tr^ys, Scales, Stamp Racksfetc*'■ - word, I don’t think so. That dead men rise up ;iever; now. That even the weariest river I think that’s a lot-better thani. Teacher of “I think women sell everything Tenor Banjo Safe Milk they’ve got. Friendship. love. Loyal Winds somewhere safe to sea.” the other kind off sympathy, don’t Mandolin \ f Banju-Mandolln ty. Everything. Courotsans sell you? Ashtoreth closed the book, a^d Tenor Guitar Plectrum Raujo their bodies— and drive a hard bar l^kutele Mandu-Ueilo Bryant & Chapman gain with them. They’re honest, at shivered. . . . “ From too much love DECORATIVE BUG j Successor to A white . satin evening gown, M'aiidola' Cello-Builjo least. Btit nU ybu respectable wo­ of livln:..... ” Rnsemble Playing for Advanced " The Dewey- men. wlth'yonr little lies, and eva­ Saint Thomas, the first, of -the with a fitted bodied, has a stun­ ning big spider-like bug worked Pupils. . ,v. sions. And yonr sickening delica- ■Virgin Islands, lay ahead. Its-feet Agent for Utbsqn instruibents. I Jewelers, SUversmiths^ Pptiddiis. and S ta t^ In the sea. And mists hanging over out across the back of Its decol­ J. H. H EW ITT Ci6S • • • • • ’ . . Odd FetlloWs’ IHork ' • The Home of “Gifts thit LaaL” '‘You know liow'Mona de Mus- its mountains. lete bodice In ■ opalelscent beads 49 Holl Str^t...... PhPne 2056 The p.’ Bsengers 'vere flockiar to The beads continue up over the Ihe renltir.— Rihhii , M. Mon- set- got t ^ t Jade? It’s a price you I’noMltty, Wofliieaday and wonltiiit-14y. • • • - th«'rail. Where w. , Mona? E shoulders and around’’ "tbe ff'dni :avfmhoIe'b{ tha j*own. I'bujradiiv. **ls ■ol"' (To be Continued).

I I'. •/a- MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1928.

March from “ Scenes Pittor- 6:30— Acoustlcon hour from N. B. esques” , Massenet. C. Studios. 'AVIATOR STUNTS AT Trees, Rasbach. 7:00— Old Company’s program State Free O f Many Rockville WTIC 7:30— Genla Fonariova, soprano. from N. B. C. Studios. Mr. and Mrs. Plske of ' ‘Wsst 8:00— National orchestra, Walter 7:30— Musical program by Major j BURNING OF BARN Haven who have been spending the Damrosch, director. Bowes’ .Capitol Theater Family, i XnT«l«ni InMirance Co. Legal Clutterings Chrlstmu Party Thursday. (^rlstmas holidays, with their 9:00— Lew White, organ recital. New York City. ' daughter, and family, Mr^ Walter . Hartford 9:30— Mildred Hunt, soprano with 9:00— “ Our Government,” David The annual Dbrlstmas tree party ot the Methodist church was held S. Billings have returned to their Marimba orchestra. Lawrence. making the act *as broad and far- home. 535.4 m. 560 k. c. 10:00— Lucky Strike dance orches­ Big Blaze in Seuth Windsor Thursday evening and was a most Handicaps and Stumbling reaching as any like existing act in enjoyable affair. There was a The Evergreen Lodge.of Masons, tra hour from N. B. C. Studios. WOMAN LEADS AGAIN any of our states. large attendance. Santa Claus was A. F. and A. M., No. 114, held their 11:00— Howard correct time. 14. The giving to an accused of present and distributed gifts. Rev. regular meeting at their temple at Program for Saturday. Paris.— Local airway companies Visited by FGer Who 11:00— Hotel Bond dance orches­ Blocks Existing in Many the right to elect, when called upon M. 0. Osborne, pastor of the church, East Windsor Hill last Monday M. tra. are disposed to believe that the to plead, to be tried by the court evening. r:00— Lotetor Eastauraut Quia- was remembered with two gifts of 11:30— News and -weather bulle­ “ weaker” sex has more nerve than instead of by the jury, but provid­ Scares Crowd. money from different societies in The Wapplng Grange dramatic tatte. her brother. Witness their travel tins. States Absent from Con­ ing that in cases where the penalty the church. club will give their three-act play, The Lobster Quintette will be figures wh^h indicate that five of is death or life imprisonment and "A Poor Married Man,” at Newing­ every, nine passengers are women. Men’s Guild Elect Officers. at this time in a program of pop­ Program for Sunday. the accused shall elect to be tried A large horse barn and tool stor­ The Men’s Guild of St. John’s ton, next Wednesday evening, Jan­ Many women, they say, fly between necticut’s Courts. by the court it shall be composed of ular dassleal numbers. The 1:30— Peerless Reproducers from age building located at the head of church has elected the following of­ uary 2. Paris and London merely to attend three judges. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Chandler Quintette is a recent addition to ‘ N. B. C. Studios. Avery street In the town of South ficers: President, Chester Bronson; to WTIC’b dinner groups. To­ dinner parties, and when they hop 15. The right to take judicial and daughter Helen, spent Christ- 2:00— Biblical drama. from the plane they are dressed Windsor, was destroyed by fire, vice-president, Ernest Walthers; night the cellist will be featured In concluding this report, says , notice of the statutes and decisions early last evening, the work, it is secretary, William .'A. Kuhnly; mas with Mr. and Mrs. Calvin ready to step Into the drawing of other states; a right which has in “ The Last Rose of Summer.” 2:30— Frances Paperte, mezzo the Connecticut Judicitki Council, j suspected, of an incendiary. The treasurer. Joseph Grist; auditors, Bolles of Pleasant Valley. soprano. room. 1 existed by statute since 1840. Miss Emma Sheldick of Hartford Sweet Melodie, Friml. we are led to express the thought j barn was one of a groiip of build­ Chester Bronson, William Kuhnly. La Caretas (tango) Itzel. 3:00— Dr. Stephen S. Wise. ings belonging to the American Judge Fahey Ends Term. spent Christmas with her brother 4:00— Dr. S. Parkes Cadman. Prosperity for 1929 is practi­ which has been' uppermost in its and family, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shel­ Serenade, Cbamihade. preparation. Amid all the many Sumatra company, and stood on Having reached the age 'limit. The Last Rose of Summer from 6:00— ’Stetson Parade with the cally assured. There are four what was formerly known as the Judge John E. Fahey will end his dick of Pleasant Valley. Weymouth Post American Legion mouths in the year which have opportunities for the betterment of U. S. BUSINESS IN Harry Walker was confined to “ Martha” , von Flotow. our practice and procedure which Huntington farm. There were no term on Monday, Dee. 31 and will ((3ello solo, Sol Rubin.) Band. five pay days each. horses in the barn, but It contained be succeeded by Edgar B. Daw­ his home with tonsilitls last week. have been and still ire before us He Is Improving now and able to considerable hay and very shortly kins. ^ it remains true that very many of 1929 TO MARCH be around some. ■ the most pressing problems In many after their discovery the flames had Polish Society Hold Dance. spread through the building. The The Kazfmer Polish society will Mrs. Henry Baker has been ill at other jurisdictions are not existent her home at Pleasant Valley recent­ In Connecticut. We are not afflict­ fire was visible for miles around hold a social dance tonight In ed -with a condition of congestion In ON AND UPWARD and was plainly seen in Manches­ Lincke ball on Village street. Music ly* DAILY RADIO PROGRAM ter. will be furnished by Kahrick’s or­ Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sheldick re­ our courts which cannot reasonably ceived the sad news of the death of * be taken care of. The judges of Washington.— Long range busi­ There was nothing available In chestra. , . J 9:00—Arcadia dance music. Leading DX Stations. ness forecasts are about as safe as the way of fire protection and the Poem Engraved and Displayed. thetr cousin, Mrs. Nettie C. Mac ' Saturday, December 29. 10:00—WE.AF dance orchestra. our higher courts. Supreme, Super­ Lachlan, wife of Wilmot G. Mac- 11:10—Omicron Alpha Tau convention. 402.5— WSB, ATLANTA—740, weather predictions— yet if there building was rapidly consumed, to­ John N. Keeney, an expert en­ Walter L&rr.roscb will open his 7:30—Cable trio music bo.-c; concerL ior and Common Pleas, and the Lachlan, last week. They attended 428.3— WLW, CINCINNATI—700. different classes of officials named closed a year that held out glowing gether with the hay and farm tools, graver and engrosser, has engraved weekly nation-wide concert at 8 o clock 7:40—Two dance orcliestras. 9:00—WJZ musical play. promises for prosperity for the including a tractor. The loss was the funeral at her late home, 115,<-. Saturday nicht over the WEAK net­ 8:40—Mansfield and Lee. 10:00—WEAF dance orchestra. by them are functioning in accord­ the poem written by Rev. George S. 11:45—Conservatory entert.-iilior.'. next, it is 1928. about 15,000. * Brookes In memory of Frank B. Wolcott Hill Road, Wethersfield, work with tho New Ym i-’ s son* writ^ 9:00—WJZ musical play. ance with a standard of duty which and at the First Presbyterian ]0:C0—Hawaiians; entertainers. 293.9—KYW, CHICAGO—1020. If all the barometers, thermome­ Aviator Shows Off. ten by his famous father. Dr. Leopola 9:00—AVJZ musical play. was handed down to us and still Condon. The poem is now in dis­ Damrosch. who orsanized the New lO:30—Singers: dance orchestra. ters and altimeters of commerce Automobiles were soon blocking play In the window of thd First church, Thursday afternoon. 280.2—WTAM, CLEVELAND— 1070. ]0:iiO—Hcrlmveaiix ci’cii'*slra. persists, and the administration of York Symphony and yielded the baton —WJZ Slumber music. that are kept In the currents of the roads on their way to the fire, National bank and is attracting con­ Mrs. Walter S. Billin,ss left to which his son later succeeded. 6:00—Cleveland dance orcliestra the.Te courts commands and de­ Thursday afternoon for a stay ot 7:00—Studio concert (3 hrs.) 12:00—l-'iorito’s dance orchestra. trade and manufacturing in Wash­ and when the flames were shooting “ Rin* Out. Wild Bells“ is tho tiUe of 1:00—Insomnia Club program. serves the confidence and respect siderable attention. a few days with her parents at their tho timely piece contributed on this 422.3—WOR, NEWARK—710. ington reflect rightly the situation, the highest an airpla'ne came out Pinochle Tournament. 7:30—Fraternity row; recital. 389.4—WBBM, CHICAGO—770. of our people. home in West Haven. occasion by two generations of Dam- 9:00—.lubllee singers. 1929 for the great mass of the of the west, made two circles The Rockville Athletic associa­ roBch musicians together with the 9:00—“ Aunt Dinah’s Quilting Party.' State’s Advantages 9:30—Gordon’s orchestra: organisL 10:30—Lombardo's dance orchestra.. American people should be one of around the fire, coming closer to tion. and the Army and Navy club Sixteen Singers, consisting of^elght I;(j0—Old Gray Mare chib. Connecticut possesses many ad­ THEY SHALL NOT PASS male and eight female voices Ri^olf 10:30—Three dance orchestras. steady and certain march forward the ground each time and then, of South Manchester will open 302.8—WBZ, NEW ENGLAND—990. 254.1—WJJD, CHICAGO—1180. vantages which help to bring about Frlml't musical play. “ The Vaga^nd 8:0u—Orcliestra; lessons; songs. and upward, along a plateau of with the sparks shooting up around their pinochle tournament Tuesday, King,” will be radiated by the WJZ 6:00—Organist; novelty pianist. this result. Among these we name Washington, D. C.— Police here 7:30—Orchestra: music lovers. 9J)0—Palmer studio program. living that in 1913 seemed Incon­ it swooped over the flames, climbed chain at 9. The work, which was 12:00—Orchestra, songs (3 hrs.) S r f 6W \ Januarv 8. , ^ must figuratively “ stay in their first produced In New York In 19-6, 9:00—WJZ musical play. ceivable. and shot off towards Hartford. Flanini Named Director. 10:00—Disabled Veterans Christmas 416.4— WQN-WLIB, CHICAGO—720, 1. A Practice Act concededly one own back yard.” U. S. Comdilssion- concerns toe days when the Duke of 9:00—WGN Players. America is prosperous, and ac­ So close did the airplane come to H W. Flaram has been named a Burgundy was besieging Louis XI Remembrance program. of the best among the Code states. er Turnage recently handed down-’ 11:05—Lowe's orchestra. 11:15—Hungry Five; orchestra. cording to the signs will remain the fire that many in, the crowd director of the Consolidated Mer­ in Paris. One hour later WJ^Z 13:00—Dream slilp, orchestra, Coon 2. The appointment of the judges a decision that District of Colum­ will feature an adaptation of the 454.3— WEAF. NEW YORK—650. prosperous, largely because of the thought that it was falling and chants Syndicate Wholesale Cor­ 6:0(1—Dinner dance music. Sander’s nighthawks, of the higher courts by the bia police cannot chase liquor ped­ drama “Hazel Klrke*" The scene of 1 :00 -Knights of tho Bath. ttemendous production and sale of there were several panicky rushes poration of New York City. This the iMay Is laid In I^ancashlre, Eng­ 7:00—Phil Spitalny’s music; soprano. Assefflbly upon nomination by the dlers across the line Into neighbor­ 8:00—National Concert orchestra with 344.6—WLS, CHICAGO—870, luxuries and semi-luxuries. among the spectators to get out of chain consists of 1.024 storos of land, and Its heroine Is the winsome 8:30—Barn dance, banjo, harmonica, Governor. ing states. This opens the way foia Hazel, daughter of the country miller. Walter Damrosch. The unvarying practice tnai Since the war the agricultural, its way. which Th** Roval of this city is one. 9:00—White organ recital. orchestra, artists, Haw-alians. 3 action against four local policemen An ejperlenced Broadway cast will bo 447.5— WMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670. the’ judges of the highest cijurts bituminous coal and textile indus­ C. of C. Meeting. heard^ in the production. Other blgh- 9:30—Marimba orchestra, soprano. who arrested a rum runner In Mary­ 10;U0—Feature dance orchestra. 9:0(1—Studio concert orchestra. shall be retained in office, within tries admittedly have been out of The annual meeting of the Rock­ lighte for Satui-day night are concerts 11:00—Amos 'n* Andy: orchestra, land after a chase. by Walter Damrosch’s orchestra and 11:00—Ponce Sisters program. the prescribed constitutional line with developments in other ville Chamber of Commerce will be 11:15—Ben Pollack’s orchestra. 11:15—Two dance orchestras. toe Sixteen Singers, through toe 319—KOIL, COUNCIL BLUFFS—940. so long as they maintain the Con­ phases of commerce. OrwoU Likely held on Tuesday, January 15. 'The WE.AF system at 8; Sam Herman, 393.5—WJZ, NEW YORK—760. 6:00—Yoeng’s dinner orchestra. 10:40—Tenor; Amos ’n’ Andy. necticut standard of Judicial and To Aid Fanning annual reports will he read and the xylophonist, and Frank Banta, pianist, 12:15—" ’rrip to the Movies.’’ through WJZ at 10:30, and the Disabled 7 :0 0 -Orchestra: educational talk. private conduct and fulfill the There are real signs of improve­ officers for the ensuing year 8:00—Concert violinist; xylophonisL 1:15—The nelglibor’s kids. Get Ready Veterans Christmas Remembrance pro­ 288.3— WFAA, DALLAS—1040. duties ot their office with compet­ ment in these laggard industries. elected. gram through WBZ at 10. At the 9:00—Musical play, “ Vagabond King. • To Play First 10:00—“ Among Ourselves” with Curt 10:00—Musical programs. ency and a just regard for the President-elect Hoover has pledged Church Notes. same time a dance orchestra will of­ 12:30—Theater presentations. fer a pt^New Year festival program of Patterson, tenor. rights ot those with whom they himself to arrange a surgical op­ Union Congregational Church. 10:15—Drama, “ Hazel KIrke.” 299.8—w o e , DAVENPORT—1000. dance tunes that made “Broadway 8:20—Bass, piano recital. come Into official contact. eration on agriculture which will 10:30 a. m.— Rev. Dr. Sherrod Broadway.” The musicians will fea­ 11:00—Slumber music. 535.4— WFI. PHILADELPHIA—560. 10:00—Musicians’ Federation program. 4 The appointment of State s bring to the millions on the farm For Athletics Soule will preach. ^ ^ ture three current favorites “Thou 361.2— KOA, DENVER—830. 7:00 p. m.— Motion picture, The Wmter Drivmg Swell.” “ Forever and Ever” and 6:30—WFJVF programs hrs.) Attorneys by the judges of the some measure of the benefits of 9:30—Elwood Ivin’s solo male quartet. 10:00—WEAF dance orchestra. “mack Bottom.” li:00—Sunday school lesson. superior court and the fixed practice prosperity which has been enjoyed Man Nobody Knows.” 10:00—W ?:a F programs (1%. hrs.) New York,. Dec. 29.— Some of St. Bernard’s Catholic Church. ■lack face type .Jndicatea best features 491.5— WIP, PHILADELPHIA—610. 11:30—Graban’s dance orchestra. of the judges to appoint the best by the average urban dweller. The WINTER TOPS, 6:30—Dinner music: markets. 374.8— WBAP, FORT WORTH—800. obtainable lawyers for, the position the experts figure that the man to Rev. George T. Slnnott, Pastor. 11:00—Musical program; readings. other industries through scientific GLASS WORK FOR AUvprogramz Eastern Btandsrd Time. 7:00—Birthday list; pianist. without regard to qualifications be given a chance to hold down Masses will be held at 8, 9:15 305.9—KDKA. PITTSBURGH—980. 491.5— WDAF, KANSAS CITY—610. and waste eliminating methods that first base Job for Connie CLOSED CARS 11:00—Amos ’ n' Andy. team. apart from fitness and character probably will recover. and 10:30 a.m . 6:30—Dinner dance music. Mack’s club next summer will be SIDE CDRTAINS L ea^g East Stations. 7:15—Home radio club: readings. 12:4.5—Nl.ghthawk frolic. and to keep them in office so long as At the present time the specula­ St. Joseph’s Polish Catholic 7;45_\VJZ programs (2Vi hrs.) 468.5—KFI, LOS ANGELES—640. Ossie Orwoll. Church. 272.6—Wf»Q, ATUANTIC CITY—1100. 12:00—Concert orchc.stra; s.vmphonette. they fill their office with honor to tive activities of the stock market CARPETS 8:15—Marchetti'-9 concert orchestra. 10:00—Gile’s dance orchestra. The reason this belief exists is ReV. Sigismund Worenecki, Pastor. 10-30—Bestor’s dance orchestra. 2:00—Studio midnight Ti-olic. the law. and just service to seciety. are causing the government grave REPAIRING CURTAINS 9:00—Recital; concert orchestra. 370.2—WCCO, MINN., ST. PAUL—810. because Orwoll looked pretty good Masses at 8 and 10:30 o clock. 10:00—Dance orchestra (2 hrs.) 246.8—WCAE, PITTSBURGH—1220. 5 The vesting in state’s attorneys concern. 6:00—WEAF dinner music. 9:00—Musical progniiii (2 hrs.) while on first ba^ : in a few games Baptist Church. 283—WBAL, BALTIMORE-1060. 11:05—Dance orchestra, tenor. the power of beginning criminal ac­ Secretary Mellon recently ad­ 7:45—Talk; tenor; xylophonist 7:00—Play; studio recital. last year. Looked better there. Some Rev. Blake Smith, Pastor. 8:00-WEAF programs (4 hrs.) 379.5— KGO, OAKLAND—790. tions upon an information filed by mitted to Congress that the reme­ Manchester Ante Top Co. 8:S0—Studio ensemble. 12:00—Golden legends; big show (3 say, than he did pitching for the 10:30 a. m.— Sermon, “ Christ 9:00—WJZ musical play. 260.7—WHAM, ROCHESTER—1150. them in all classes of criminal ac­ dial attempts of the reserve system 10:00—Tho Patterson’s program. 6:31)—Dinner music, tlieater. b rs.) tions except those where the pen­ A’s. and World Friendship.” W. J. Messier 8:30—Eastman School program. 503.2— WOW, OMAHA—950. owing to activities of powerful I 24S.8—WNAC, BOSTON—1230. 10:00—WEAF dance orchestra. alty is death or life imprisonment, Orwoll hit only .306 in 64 games 7:00 p. m.— Sermon, “ All Things 8:00—Dinner dance music. 9:00—WJZ musical play. groups of speculators and the be­ 10:10—Orgihrist: dance music (2 hrs.) 11:00—Brown’s Oklahomans. with the resulting practice that the last year, the majority of which New.” ^ Center St. and Henderson Rd. 7:11—.\snos 'n* Andy; talk. 270.1—WRVA, RICHMOND—1110. lief of the public that stock prices 7:30—Orchestra; studio players. 373.5— VVGY, SCHENECTADY—7S0. grand jury Is only used in he appeared in as pitcher or pinch First Evangelical Lutheran Church. 11:55—Time: weather; markets. 7:30—Orchestral program. were on a perpetually rising plane, Rev. John F. Bauchmann, Pastor. 9:00—WOR Columbia programs. 9:00—Corn Cob Pipe club; show. where the penalty is death or life hatter, but the big hurler delivered Phone 1816-3 13:30—Two dance orcliestras. 7 :0 0 -WE.\F dinner music. had been futile. 10:00 a. m.— English service, ser­ 7:30—Rochester concert. 10:10—Orchestra: organ (2 hrs.) imprisonment or involves scjme in- many of his blows when they count­ 545.1— WGR, BUFFALO—550. 440.'9—KPO. SAN FRANCISCO—680. Nevertheless best informed gov­ mon. “ The Gracious Errand.” 7:10—Van Surdam's orchestra. 8:30—Gertrude Makes, contralto. vestigation of deep public import- ernment experts do not believe that ed. 7:30—University of Buffalo talk. 9:00—WE.VF programs (1 hr.) 1:0(1—.V. B. C. studio program. The fact that the first base job 11:00 a. m.— German service, 8:00—WEAF National orchestra...... 11:00—Albany—— dance music. 11:00—Henderson’ s dimco band. the speculative activities will have sermon, “ The Mission of Christ. Secondary DX Stations. Annual Meeting any important effect on productive on the Philadelphia club seems Secondary Eastern Stations 6. The annual meeting and spec­ St. John’s Church. 344.6— WENR, CHICAGO—870, business in 1929. A general crash pretty much of an open proposition RAL 508.2— WEEI, BOSTON—590. 399.8— WCX-WJR, DETROIT—750. Rev. H. B. Olmstead. Rector. g;Cn—Soprano, tenor, piano. S:15—Farmer Rusk’s talk. ial meetings on the call ^® c^'®^ in the market that would wipe out adds strength to the thought that 7:30—Pianist; baritone. 1:00—International test program with justice, of the judges of the Super- 10:45 a. m.— Sermon, "Going to 8:00—WEAF orchestra. 10:15—Melodrama with WJZ. the savings of the thousands of Orwoll may be given his chance. 9.-0U—Sandy MacFarlane; pianist li:00—Merry old gang. 50.000 watts. io; Court, composed of the justices Bethlehem.” 1 202.6— WHT, CHICAGO—1480. scattered and amateur speculators 6:30 p. m.— Evening prayer and 10:00—WEAF orchestra. 325.9—WWJ, DETROIT—920. 9:00—F.nsemble, organisL of the Supreme Court of Errors and the country over, might be serious. 11:15—Auction bridge talk. 8:30—Orchestra, organ. of- the trial judges cf the Superl(Dr sermon on the New Year. 646.1—WKRC, CINCINNATI—550, 11:00—Y’oiir hour league. But no crash of far-reaching con­ RELEASE NOT RECORDED 'J:30—Orchestra, soloist. 299.8— WHO, DES MOINES—1000. Court, at which all appointments First African Baptist Church. 9:00—WEAF organ recital, 10:00—Orchestra: Ponce Sisters. 7:30_nocking chair progiam. sequences is anticipated. 10:00—Orchestra, pianist. of State’s Attorneys, clerks, steno­ Rev. A. E. Hendricks. Pastor. 11:15—Pollack’s orchestra. 9:00—Little Symphony orcliestra, The country has credit resources S74.»—WSAI, CINCINNATI—800. 526—WNYC, NEW YORK—570. 11 ;05—Saturday night frolic. graphers, public defenders, jury An attachment for a bill of $7n0. 10:45 a. m.— Sermon. “ Broken 7:00—Seketary Hawkins: artists. 7:30—-\ir college lectures, pianist. 374.3—KTHS. HOT SPRINGS—800. commissioners, coroners, county that run into the hundreds of bil- brought by the Hartford Sash and Vows. 8:00—WEAF programs (1% hrs.) 8:10—Viola Blanchey, songs. 10:00—Dance frolic: soprano. health officers, members of the Bar lions. Between four and five bil­ Door Company against F. O. Goben 7:45 p. m.— Serra'on, “ Real Lib- 9-.S0—Studio artists frolic. 3-,9—WCSH. PORTLAND—940. 11 ;:;o—'riiwiler oigun. lion dollars normally are in circu­ 10:00—Two dance orchestras. 9:00—WE.\F programs (3 hrs.) ’ 2:1.1—Studio dance music. Examining Committee and of Hartford, In which land and erty.” 215.7—W HK, CLEVELAND—1390. ( 461.3— WSM, NASHVILLE—650. messengers are appointed, rules ot lation. There, is an outlet abroad Christaln Science Service. 9:30—Morgan sisters. 315.9— WRC, WASHINGTON—950. houses to the value of $75,000 were 7:45—Washington college program. 9:00—Possum hunter.-^: fiddler. for about five Uilllon dollars worth 10:46 a. m.— Subject of the les­ 10:00—Hawallans: Strollers Four. I(i:00—Barn dance orcliestra. practice adopted or modified, and levied on on Nov. 19 still stands on 11:00—Amos 'n* Andy; music. 10:00—WEAF dance orchestra. of excess production annually. son, “ Chrls.aln Science.” 10:15—WJZ drama; Slumber music. 11:00—Possum"hunters; clod hoppeis. all matters affecting the business of fhe town records though a settle­ 12:00—Organ; dance (3 hrs.) the courts or of the various of­ There is no productive business in­ ment was made on November 22. Notes. 280.2-WTAM. CLEVELAND-1070, Leading DX Stations. ficers appointed by them disposed flation. As 1928 closed stocks of Thirty-nine lots in one section and The Rockville Baptist church has Sunday, December 30. 7;3U—WEAF prograins Ci'A Ins.) commodities were not excessive. added thirty-five members during 405.2— WSB. ATLANTA—740. several houses were attached. A Kathryn Meisle. American operatic IU:4,5—Two dance orchcsiins. The banking situation is secure the year 1928. This is considered 399.8— WCX-WJR. DETROlT-750. 7:3u—Bilinioie dinnci music. 7 The rule of the Supreme Court release was given on Nov. 22 by contralto, and Albert SpaJdlng. con­ S;U0—WJZ mixed qiuiiK-t. with failures this year sixty per a remarkable growth. cert vloUnlsL accompanied by an or­ 8:1.5—W.IZ Radio hour. of Errors that no appeal or n-W Edward A. Mag, attorney for the 9:15—’I’heater .organ recital. 9:ii'j—WK,(\K piogrnms (114 hrs.) cent less than last. Less than 3,- Mr. and Mrs. Karl Schuhle of chestra under the direction of Josel 11:1.5—Itiuitist TalieiiKicle piugium. trial will be granted for harmful plaintiff, but it was not sent to the Fastentauk, will broadcast a recital 11:00—Baptist hymn sing. 000,000 iadividuals out of the Brooklyn, N. Y., are soending a 499.7_VJTIC, MARTFORD—600. 293.9—KYW. CHICAGO—1020. office for recording until this morn­ through W EAF and aUied. stations at 8:011—WEAF programs HU hrs.) ®rr®r- , J - country’s 120,000,000 are required few days with Mr. and Mrs. Ed­ a:l« Sunday nlghL At the same time 8:00—WEAF' program.'! (3'.i hrs.) Latitude for Judges ing over a month since the release 422.3—WOR. NEWARK—710. 9:15—Book t.-ilk: studio program. to pay direct federal tax. There was ward Huebner of Elizabeth street. a reading entitled ’ T h e Deserted Ui:(Mi—Uuliy Ring’ s advcnuiica. 8. The power vested in the trial was given, and even then it was not Plantation” will be presented as one 3:00—United Symphonic oichestra, judge to discuss the evidence at his $28,000,000,000 In savings ac­ Mrs. Emil Kroyman of Union We make a specialty of floral 4:00—Cathedral ensemble, choir. lu: 15—studio week-end pail>, accompanied by the legal fee for street is confined to the house by of the features of 5:30—I'resbyterlaii Church service. 416.4— WGN-WLIB. CHICAGO—720. discretion so long as he does this counts and mere than $7,000,000,- design pieces for funerals, an­ UUca Jubilee Singers through toe WJZ 7:00—Chicago Symphony orchestra. recording. chain. Appropriate Negro music will 8:30—Olive Kline, soprano. reaso&ably. and to express an opin­ 000 new Investments in foreign and illn®ss. 9:0O-fcMoran and Mack, two black 9:15—W’K.M-' vocal redial. Clemens Smith of Jersey City, N. niversaries or any particular be interspersed during toe reading, bi- 1(j:15—Dixie piograni: i’orteis. ion upon the evidence and the facts domestic enterprise during the NEW PLANE ORDERED cluding “ Massa’s In de Cold, Cold crows. J., is spending a few days with his occasion you have in mind; we 10:00—Ivan Ivantzoff, baritone. U ;15—Airline: orchestra, tenor. so long as this is done with reason­ year. There is also the Item of FOR VIENNA-VEMCE LINE Ground,” reflectins the grief ot the 12:1b—Two dunce orchestras. brother Rev.' Blake Smith of Or­ plantation slaves for their dead mas- 10:30—Science ndvaneement talk. able fairness, except that in crim­ $18,500,000 in new life Insurance. AS TRAVEL INCREASES can supply you on the shortest 7,- v«n Winkle." a romantic- 302.8— WBZ, NEW ENGLAND—990. 447.5— WMAQ-WQJ. CHICAGO—670. chard street. 6:30—WJZ programs (244 hrs.) 8:00—Sunday evening dub. inal cases he may not direct a ver­ Money for commercial purposes is notice with the most appropri­ light opera by the French composer. 10:15—.Mild snndy. feature hour. plentiful at fairly reasonable Mrs. George Herzog is ill at her Robert Pianquette. may be tuned in 9:15—-Michael Ahern, artists. dict. ' ^ , Rome.— Aerial transportation in home on Orchard streeL ate de.si«jn for the occasion, at from WEAF or an associated station 9:45—WJZ El Tango Uomimtico. 10:30—IVOR Columbia progiam. 9. The making of the test for rates. Italy is growing daily. The Italian 10:1.5—SUid io spoi t-o- g I a ai.s. 11:00—Aiiio.s ’ n’ Andy, comic team. Rev. Blake Smith, pastor of the just the price you wish to pay. at 10:15'. The legend of P,ip Van Win­ 11:10—Women’s musicians’ club. the admission of evidence: “ Unless Both Secretavy Mellon and Sec­ kle centers around Tarryiown, and de­ 454.3— WEAF. NEW YORK—660. air line that runs between Venice Rockville Baptist church, will give 2:00—Biblical drama; mezzo-soprano ]l:4u_Siiidio eone-ert orchestra. excluded by some rule or principle retary of Commerce Whitting have picts Rip aa the village good-for-noth­ 344.6—WLS, CHICAGO—870. and Vienna Is about to install a new the graduation address at the Ea«t ing who, lulled to rest by the tnundei 3:00—Kabbi Steplien S. Wise. of law, any fact may be proved predicted a continuance of “ good 4:00—'i’alk. Dr. S. I’arkes Cadman. 7:00—Sermon-story. Brown Church plane on this very busy line. Hartford High school Friday. Jan­ ANDERSON in toe KaaUkllls, Sleeps for twenty quartet, players (2 hrs.) which logically tends to aid the times” next year. years. Fifteen minutes before WIP 5:35—Twilight volce.s. The plane has a 450 h. p. engine, uary 2o. 6:00—American Legion band. 319_K0IL. COUNCIL BLUFFS—940. trior in the determination of the So far as 1928 Is concerned there will radiate its “ Sleepy Hollow” hour, 10:(i0—('elebrtty pmgiam; travelogue it will be able to carry 1.500 kilo­ in which will bo featured the studio 6:30—Joe Howard, vaudeville star. issue.” were four outstanding develop­ grams of baggage, 4 passengers GREENHOUSES instrumental quintet. A variety ol 7:00—Relnald Werrenrath, baritone. 12-30—Amos ’ n’ Andy: frolic. 10 The admission in evidence in 7:30—Theater program. 2^8.3—WFAA, DALLAS—1040. ments. Of first importance was and 2 pilots. It will do the trip in composlUons from the pens of master 8:00—liible class, songs. actions by and against the repre­ the net export of nearly $500,000,- SUSPENDED ANIMATION mutlei will be played by the Chi­ 9:0(1—(.lovernment talk. about 2 hours and 15 minutes, thus 153 Eldridge St. Phone 2124 cago Symphony orchestra, under the 9:15—Kathryn Melsic, contralto; Al- 1:00—Dunce orchestra. sentatives of deceased persons of 000 In gold. There was the stock bert Spalding, violinist. 299.8— w o e . DAVENPORT—1000. the entries, memoranda and de­ beating all velocity “ records” in Leeds, England.— The musical fe-?- (lireetlon of Dr. Frederick Stock, In a 7:30—Twilight voices. market situation which resulted in sne<^ program to be broadca^ by 10:15—Opera, “ Rip Van Winkle.” clarations of the deceased, relevant commercial flying traffic. 393.5—WJZ, NEW YORK—760. 361.2—KOA, DENVER—830. a boost of brokers loans to more tlval here recently was marked bv WON and "WDAF at 7 o’clock. Open­ 9;ir._\vEAF programs (2 hrs.) to the matter in issue and the ad­ decision of Sir Thomas Beecham to ing with Weber's overture to Dei 2:00—Roxy Symphony concert. than $6,500,000,000. Financing of 3:00—Young Dcople’a conference. 11:1S—Flower time program. mission of these in favor ot any NAPLES FARMER FINDS suspend extremely modern music ]MescbUlS.“ the famous muslcions will 259.8— WHO, DES MOINES—1000. new construction and enterprise be iS through Beethoven’s “ Larghet- 4:00—Opera ensemlile, singers. person claiming title under or from MINERAL WHICH MAY BE for the preservation of his suspen­ 5:00—South Sea Islanders. 7 Chicago Syr.iphony orchestra. went into record figures. Business to." and then turn to toe noted works 8:0li—WE.AF programs (3 hrs.) the decedent whenever these would GOLD; EXPERTS TEST IT ders. Tho elastic stood the strain sf composers for tills "Imperial Rus­ 5:30—Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick. generally overcame a sudden slump 6:30—Anglo-Persians orchestra. 11-0(1—Little Symphony ordicstra. be admissible in favor of the rep­ for five days of snappy conducting sian Ballet” who h.-tve given tho world 374.8—WBAP. FORT WORTH—800. which marked last November and ft vast amount of bsautlful music. 7:00—Fragments in Fancy. resentatives of a deceased person. Napes — In Atavilla Irplna, a __while his collars wilted— but on 8:00—Mixed quartet. 9-00—Orchestra, artists (314 hrs.) December and the first of the year 374.8— KTHS, HOT SPRINGS—800. Right of Attachment small town near Naples, an old the sixth it parted. Be it said for Blsck fscs typs Indicstes best features 8:15—Milton Royle, playwright. started a forward movement which Soond Financing 9:15—Utica Jubilee SIngeri. 7:00—Thomas Avey, organisL ,11. The giving to the plaintiff th^ in many respects has established farmer while digging on a track ot Sir Beecham that he nonchalantly 9:45—El Tango Romantico. 7:30—Foley’s dance orcliestra. earth on his possessions came AU progrstns Eastern Standard Time. right to begin his action by an at­ records exceeding those even of unbuttoned the broken band, put FortheWorlUngnBan 10:15—American Singers male quartet. 9-.30—Grand ensemble, soloists. across some mineral that looks 10:4.5—White’s organ recital. 238-WJAX. JACKSONVILLE—1260. tachment of defendant’s property 1926, generally held to have been ir in his pocket and proceeded with Leading East Stations, 305.8—KDKA, PITTSBURGH—980. 7:30—Orchestra: dinner music. in order that he may secure the very much like gold. He show'-d It the next number. 8:30—Evening church service. the most remarkable Industrial and *7*.»-WPO, ATLANTIC ClTY-1100. 2:00—Roxy with W.IZ. , judgment he expects to obtain and commercial year In the peacetime to the authorities of the village Oar Family Loan Service 7 hlO—Sunday concerL 4:00—Carnegie Institute organisL 468.5— KFI, LOS ANGELES—640. the giving to the court the right to who immediately had it sent to the 9:35—Concert orchestra. 6:00_Bestor’s dance orchestra. —Moore’s concert orchestra.. history of the United States. w m Solve An Tour 6:30—WJZ Anglo-Persians orchestra. 12:00—Concert; soprano, pianist. annul or reduce' the attachment If Ministry of National Economics in 10:UO—Oaten Ball trio. 1:00—Dane* orchestra, soloists. It now appears that the volume THE 19TH HOLE 11:00—Arthur S. Brook, organisL 7:00—Episcopal Church service. illegal or excessive. No doubt this of foreign securities publicly float­ Rome. Money Problems ■ qee—WBAL. BALTIMORE—1060. 8:00—WJZ programs (3U hrs.) 365.6— WHAS. LOUISVILLE—820. system occasionally works an in­ It is at p’-esent being carefully 7:00—Three composer’s program. 246.g—WCAE. PITTSBURGH—1220. 9- 00—Studio feature concerL ed in the United States this year ' "Waiter, this spinach Is ter­ 10:45—Methodist morning service. 9:15—Seelbach Instrumental quartet, justice upon a defendLUt hut since will be about' $1,500,000,000 In­ examined by experts who will as­ gSOO LOAN payable $5 7:0(^Ff.uvr-Klrk concert ■ orchestra.------It Is governed by a reasonable pro­ rible!” 8:00—WJZ programs (1% hrs.) 1:30—'WEAF programs hrs.) 370.2—WCCO, MINN., ST, PAUL—810. cluding new and refunding opera- certain what quality of minerals “ Sorry, sir— you’ll have to take monthly, plu* lawful ■u 7:00—Feature music hour. 8:1.5—VioIinisL fessional spirit of fairness and c(jn- interest. •^‘S^vWA?:irotTON-ia30.. 7:30—WEAF programs (2% hrs.) itlons. New loans probably will run this piece contains and if necessary It up with the greens committee.” 10:00—Minneapolis Symphony o,rch. trolled by the court so that no In­ send one of their experts to investi­ *;40—'Amos *n' Andy, coinio team. 635.4— WFI, PHILADELPHIA—660. 461.3— WSM. NASHVILLE—650. $1,250,000,000, slightly less than — Judge. 7 :66*»C«iurreg*tlonal services. 4:30—Presbyterian Church service. justice, within their power to pre­ gate the matter further. o a o o LOAN payable $10 9:15—WE.AF vocal recital. vent. Is done there Is comparatively last year, while the gross loans monthly, plus lawful *;10—WOBnrOBCo Columbia progs, (2% hrs.) 6:00—WEAF programs (H i hrs.) 10:15—.Nashville Conservatory program may be somewhat largqr. ^W.1-WGR. BUFFALO-^. 7:30__preslityerlan Church service. 10:45—Rhythm Symphony orchestra. little injustice done by this system. interest. *;06—WEAF programs (1% hrs.) 9:15—WEAF programs (2 hrs.) Dividend and Interest payments 379.5—KGO. OAKLAND—790. Its benefit to creditors is apparent. tu5—Presbyterian service. 491.6— WIP, PHILADELPHIA—610. for li928 probably exceeded 1927 9:00—WEAF programs (114 hrs.) 10:30—Anglo-Peralaiia orchestra. The stimulation which it exercises $ 3 0 0 LOAN payable $15 10:4,5—Trinity morning service. 11 ;0u—Congregational Church seivice, by five per cent with an estimated monthlyt plus lawful 10:80—tuslan septet, soloist. 10:00—Sleepy Hollow hour with Instru­ over defendants tends to make * 333.1—WMAK, BUFFALO—«00. mental quintet. 440.9— KPO, SAN FRANCISCO—680. debtors more careful In meeting total of over $5,000,000,000. interest. 10 :60—Wnlty morning wnrlce. 260.7— WHAM, ROCHESTER—1150. 11-.".O—Theater concert; organisL their obligations, and by enforcing There was another tax reduc^o'n Other A netaii In ProportloD rghJO—Granger organ redtsL 7:00—WJZ programs (314 hrs.) 12:01)—Seiger’s orchestra, These Used Cars Can’t Be Beat! 9:0(k—WOR Columbia progs.^(2 hrs.) 1:00—Vocal recital. a higher standard of honest deal­ in .1928, with substantially $200,- 4tt.»»W LW . CINCINNATI—700. S79.6—WGY, SCHENECTADY-790. 000,000 knocked off by what the Cost fixed by law* Every reray- l l : 00- ‘-Eplscopal Church services, 309.1—KJ(J, SEATTLE—970. ing has Improved the social Integri­ 1925 HUDSON COACH. 7 :00—Dinner dance orchestra. 10- 00—Violinist; novelty program, country must pay the federal gov­ meat truces the cost. All ^ T:t5—Presbyterian Church service, 1:30—Peerless program. ty. 192(1 FORD ROADSTBR-t-THIS IS A REAL BUY. ' loans io strict privacy^ > 4:00—Dr. 0. Parkes Cadman. 11:00- Saion orchestra; soloists. The open-mindedness of our peo­ ernment annually. The reduction ■gas—WJZ Radio hour. 5:30—WEAF programs (614 hrs.) 277.6—WCBD, ZION—1080. In the corporation tax, the bene­ 1929 (EARLY) HUDSON SEDAN. 3:16—Omeert orchestra, soloists. 8:00—Semi-chorus, organist,^ artists. ple to modern attempts to Improve CkU. Write or Nume dano*.- music. ------11:15—Television transmission. fits of which will not be reflected 1929 REO DEMONSTRATOR. Secondary DX Stations. the machinery ©r justice is. seen in Secondary Eastern Stations. three of the recent forward look­ until 1929, was the greatesLcODse- 1925 ESSEX COACH— NEW PAINT JOB. PERSONAL FINANCE BOSTON—690. 325.8—WWJ. DETROIT—920 389.4—WBBM-WJBT, CHICAGO—770. quence, and no doubt^will prove a COMPANY 9:00—Gnomes feature program. ing attempts, viz: 1925 ESSEX COACH. 8:30—WOR Columbia program*. stimulant to business. Rooms 9 and' 8, State Theater :80—WEAF- programs (1 hr.) 9:15—WEAF vocal recital. in:30—Gospel Tabernacle hour. 12. The appointment by the 1925 FORD COACH. ffiid—Ckrden:3 ~ • talk;*------concerL 286.9—WHN, NEW YORK—1010. 1:00—Nutty CHub dance music (3 hrs) Judges of public defenders in each Government finances'are secure. ISolldlng, 758 Main Street 9:lK)—Sunday night taJkj^ pianisL 10:3(1-Home, Sweet Home hour. While there has been much talk of SO. aiANCHBSTBK, CONN. •:18—WEAF vocal reettal. 202.6—WHT. CHlCAGO-*-1480. county charged with the duty of de­ 11 ;0i)—Organ recital: orchestra. 7:00—I’age organ recital. a deficit for the year ending June 374>«>WBAI» CINClNNATI-i-800. 12:0(1—Studio presentations. fending accused who are without BETTS’ GARAGE Call) Write or Phone 1-0-4 9-30—Concert ensemble; artlsta 30, 1929, owing to the $106,000,- Open 8:80 to 5. Sat. 8:80 to 1 T:S0—Hymn** aemonette. bymna 272.6— WLWL. NEW Y O R K -1100. 10-00—Biblical dramatic events. counsel. V h t m i 711 f:^ ^ A F program* (8% hrs.) 3:15—Knights of Columbus forum. 000 refund of taxes illegally col­ 129 Sprnce St. Licensed by State, 491.5-WDAF. KANSAS CITY-610. Optional Trials and Essex Sales aad Serrloe. tiaF-WHK, CL1VELAND-I39a 8:00—Sermon, J’nul'.^t choristers. lected, there is little probability of Hndsor bonded to public. 315.6— WRC. V / A S I INGTON—950. 7:00—Chicago S.vmphony orchestra. 13. The rules of tlje judges of the grtIWWOR' wogram* <8% hrs.) 10:15- Salon orchestra, baritone. 31:00—Amos _*n* Andy., comic team. 4:30—Washington Or-diedral. Superior Court under the Connec- an excess of expenditures over re­ uixs—Two due* orcbesUaa, 1:00—WEa F programs (4% brs.) 10:45-Amos ’n’ Andy, comic team. tiaut D»oUt>«*»iry Judgment act, ceipts.

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MANCHESTER EVENESIG HERALD, SUUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1928. SETWBEVB ncentrate Your Efforts-Use These Columns And Gain The Profitable Results You Want

i PARLIAMENT W ILL TRY Article for Sate 45 UNLICENSED DRIVER TO REDUCE RiGJiTS OF Want Ad Information. Loot and Found ABOUT TOWN CROWN IN LITIG.AXLL' LOST— WHITE GOLD brooch, be­ FOR SALE—AUTOMATIC waslilng I ------• 4 machine. used as demonstrator. London.— TUe Grow«*— iLaI .ta to tween Main and Griswold streets. COLLECTS FOR CRASH Mrs. Clifton L. P''tter of Lilley Manchester Valued as a gift. Call 992-3 or The Guaranteed same as new one, price say the government—-in Britain Textile Store, S40 Main street. Re­ reasonable. Time payments. Phone street entertained at bridge last 1700. still possesses certain mediaeval Evening Herald ward. ______Phone Your Want Ads evening in honor of her sister, Miss rights against litigants and a de­ Insurance Company Waives Marion Packard, and Miss Olive Classified Advertisements FOUND—ON PINE STREET pocket- Electrical Appllancea— Kadio 40 termined effort is being made in book containing sum of money. Own­ Illegal Operation Defense Little, both of whom teach in the Parliament this Session to sweep Count six n^e^ er may have same by proving prop­ To The High school at Turner’s Falls, Initials, numbers and When Car Is Not*RUnning. away these anomalies. and compond erty and paying for this adv. Call at FADA, PHILCO AND Stelnite radios. Mass., and are at their homes here Cheney Bros. Employment Bureau. Service on all makes. Clayton Mc­ The G own, in law, comprises no ^v^o‘^r"d/°artVrworXMlnlmum cost is A sudden freezing and a slippery for the holidays. The decorations less than 21 government depart­ Carter. 16 Olmstead street. East included a prettily trimmed tree, price of three Imes. ^ Announcemenis Hartford. Laurel 642-4. roadway on the night of December ments. Each of these. In its rela­ red candles and greenery. A buffet Line rates per day for transient 8, resulted in several automobile tions with the public, has extraor- « Herald lunch was served. Miss Marion STEAMSHIP TICKETS—all parts of Fuel and Feed 4U-A accidents on the Bolton road. One dinary legal privileges. E«eetlve March IJ-^f-^^^harge the world. Ask tor sailing lists ahd of them involved cars controlled by Packard won first prize and Mrs. If one of them commits a breach rates. Phone 750-3. Robert J. Smith. FOR SALE—BEST OP hard wood. George Holmes the consolation. fi Consecutive Days .. 7 ctsj 9 cts 1009 Main street. Slabs $7.00 load, hardwood $8.00 Thomas McGraw of Meriden and of contract the ordinai-y man has :> Consecutive Days .. ^9 ctsj U cts James H. Neill, Jr., of this place. . Others present included Mrs. Flora no legal remedy as of right against load; also fire place wood. Chas. R. Knowles, Mrs. Harold Foriest, Miss ^ orders 'for ‘ i^Vegular insertions Automonlles for Sale 4 Palmer. Telephone 895-3. Because sleet had collected on his them and has to rely on arbitration. windshield McGraw was out of his Marion Jacobson and Miss Gertrude If one of them loses in a lawsuit will be charged at the one-time late. FOR SALE— SI.AB wood. Stove Gerard. special rates for long term every | 1027 WHIPPET COACH. length, fireplace wood 6 to 9 dollars car, w'hich pulled off on the north it is not bound to pay the costs of d-,t^ldvertising given upon request. , 1 926 FORD TUDOR. a truck load. V. Flrpo, 116 Wells side of Middle Turnpike, wiping off vds ordered for three or six days , 1025 FORD TUDOR. And Ask for “Bee the successful litigant. street. Phone 3166-W and 3634-3. the ice. The car driven by Neill Christ church cathedral branch If one of them refuses to pro­ nnd stopped before the third or fifth ; 1926 ST.YR 2 DOOR SEDAN. of the Girls’ Friendly society will d iv ^vill he charged only for the ac MACHELL MOTOR SALES approached from the rear and a col­ duce docum.ents there is no power WOOD FOR SALE— Hard, chestnut, Tell Her W hat You Want hold a candle light service at the tuul number of times the ^<3 aPPear- 01 Center Street. Tel 2017 mixed, white birch and slab. Season­ lision threw McGraw several feet at law to compel it. No proceedings rd charging at the rate eained. but Open Evenings cathedral, corner Main and Church ed and sawed lo order. L- T. Wood and injured him. can ha taken against them except no allowances or 9^"f?„V"the ! ' Co.. 55 BIssell street. Phone 496. She will take your ad, help you word it for best results, streets, Hartford, tomorrow evening on six time ads stopped after the It was learned that McGraw, who in- the Supreme Courts. FOR SALE—GOOD USED CARS and see that li is properly inserted. Hill will be mailed is in business with his brother in at 7:30. They will meet in the Garden-Fami-nairy Products 60 parish house at 7:15 and have in­ 'The Bill is hacked hy a strong ‘'^No^^uni forbids": display lines not; CRAWFORD AUTO SUPPLY CO. same day allowing you until seventh day after Insertion Meriden, had been working in New committee of judges and lawyers Jersey and had a license to drive a vited St. Mary’s branch here to join ' “ Tlie Herald will not be responsible | Center & Trotter Streets to take advantage of the CASH RATti. and it’ is hoped to pass it within a .Tel. 1174 or 2021-2 FOR S.ALE— F.ANCY GREEN Moun­ car in that state, but did not have a them. fo. more than one tain potatoes. Frank V. Williams, few months. ..f any advertisement ordeied foi ■ FOR SALE— REO 7 pass, touring. 989-12. Connecticut license. In court on i-.mr-"' than one time. Monday, December 10, he admitted The last serious Indian disturb­ Chandler sedan, 3 Reo trucks, o e FOR SALE— APPLES. Greenings, Brazil nuts ripen in March and The inadvertent omission of j dump truck. Brown’s Garage—Tel. not having a state license. He was ances were among the Chippewas vret publication of advertising will e i S69. corner Cooper and West Center Baldwins, Jonathan and Delicious, rectified onlv by caiicellalion of the , by the basket, bushel or barrel, at allowed to go on the payment of at Leech Lake in October, 1898. April. charge made for tlie service rendered. : streets. the farm or delivered. Edgewood 65 costs. Fruit Farm. Tel., 945. W. H. Cowles. Houses for Rent Neill made it kiioAvn thqt he .\U advertisements must conform Aolo Accessories—^flre# O I FRAGRANT FILMS would look for damages to his car in vivle copv and tyi)ograph> 'V, ' i Houseliold Goods 61 FOR RENT—TEN ROOM house, oil i cg-uiatioiis enforced bv Pbe ! B.VI’TERIES FOR YOUR automobile | burning furnace, two bathrooms, as he claimed that the McjGraw car ris and they reserve tlie light to ^ ranging from $7 up. Recharging and 1 two car garage, corner Woodbndge Avas not showing a tail light. -Y edit, revise or reject any copj con- . repairing. Uistni)utors of Prest,-0-i and North Elm strets. Call 2oS. suit was in the making. light job. Let us estimate. .AH kinds AA'afted across . the audience. These cannot be guaranteed. [ WILL BUY Anything you’ll sell In street. its usual place of abode. The in­ * » » of jobing. Alliert T. Crawford. 320 scents Or perfumes will he changed East Center street. Telephone con­ the line of junk or old furniture. surance company took the stand Call me on the phone. Wni. Ostrin- and regulated to emphasize actions Index of Classifications nection. that there is no excuse for a rear sky. Tel.. 849. in the play. Evening ITer.ald tVant '’‘f"'-' GETS AN ACQUinAL end accident when the other car has rroiiped according to classificati m.s ] Florists— N urseries 15 “The smell of new-mown hay. 10 Hilliard St. Manchester handy reference will i WILL PAY THE H.IGHEST cash already been stopped, and made a below and for prices for rags, paper, magazines, the fragrance of pine forests, the appear in the numerical order indi- j old metal. Will also buy all kinds of settlement for the damages done to f o b s a l e — c u t f l o w e r s , Calen-I OF R0.4D RECKLESSNESS s'ductive perfumes used by vam­ the McGraw car, the injuries that caicd: ...... \ i dulas. Carnations. Snap Dragons and chickens. Morris H. Lessner. Tel. pires. the scent of honeysuckes Two stories high, of brick, mill construction, 35x100 r.irtbs ...... some potted flowers. 621 Hartford ; 1545. McGraAv suffered and also for dam­ Engagements over the wall will fill the picture Road. Telephone ages done to the young women who Marriages .. . I PAY THE besl prices for rags, J. J. Moriarty Found Not houses of the future,” explains feet, with basement suitable for storage purposes. En­ Deaths paper, books, metals etc. D. Oren- Santell. \srve in tliP I^IcCiriiw car, .Moving— I’rticklng— storage town. Guilty of Auto Violation in Cards of Thanks ...... stein, oldest junk dealer In the e.xpectetl defense that .Motii’aAV tire building equipped with Grinnell sprinkler system. In Memoriam Tel. 473-M. Causing Crash. was opei’atih.g illegally, and tacitly I.ost and F-ound ...... GENERAL TltFCKlNG—Local and .\ n nonneemen t s ...... - Conlinuing. the director pointed admitting that he was not opeiatiug lung distance. I’rompt service— rates Apiil'tnienis. Flats, reiifiiients 654 out tliat talking pictures only a Light and airy and suitable for manufacturing purposes. I’crsonals ...... ’’ reasonalde. Frank A . A\ illiams, Jerimiah J. Moriarty of Wood­ at all. short time ago Avere considered im­ 1 Automobiles for S.ale ...... ^ OSO-12. FOR KENT— 4 ROOM tenenient up­ land street'was found not guilty of Automobiles for Lxebange ...... >’ reckless driving in Police Court to­ possible and that Avhen color was J STORAGE ROOJIS for furniti re or stairs, good condition, rent $20.Ut). used it caused a furor in the in-i PREPARATIONS Will sell or lease for term of years. Auto Acce.ssories—Tires ...... " merchandise available at Braith- Apply at 11 Ridgewood street.______day by Ji dge Raymond A. Johnson. Auto Repairing—Painting ...... ' waite’s. 52 Pearl street.______Moriarty Avas arrested and charg­ dustry. Auto Schools ...... TO RENT — GREENACRES Wads- “The sense of smell is just as I Mrs. Jo es: Mother Avrites that .\utos— Sliip by Truck ...... ; I’EKRE'l’T lA: GLE.NNEY moving sea­ wortli street, 5 room flat, all niodein ed with responsibility of an auto­ she Avill be here tomorrow for a .\utos— For Hire ...... • important in creating an effect as | For particulars inquire at The Herald, 13 Bissell son is here. Several trucks at your i luiirovements. Inquire. 98 Church mobile accident Avhich occured on sound and color and ultimately will Icng visit. t .arages— Service—Storage ...... service, up to date equipment, ex- street or telephone 1348. ______Mcl.ean Hill a week ago tonight Motorcycles— Bicycle ...... 1' I-erienced men. Phone 7-2. find its place in important produc­ Mr. Jones( to young son): Tom- street. South Manchester, Thomas Ferguson, Manager. AVanted Autos—.Motorcycles ----- 1- FOR RENT—TENEMENT of four While proceeding toward Hartford, tions,” explains Santell. “ When the mv. didn t you ask me the other BuNtne.ss and P^ofensioiial Services LtAC.AL .AND LON'l distance moving rooms, ail improvements _ at 21 up hill, Moriart: turned out ind his lovers step into an old-fashioned day to buy you an air gun, a trum- Business Services Offered...... by experienced men. Piihiic storo- Ridgewood street. Call 1810-2. car collided Avith one driven by Household Services Offered ...... lo-.A house. L. T Wood. 55 Bissell street. i garden, a, delicate odor will be pliet and a mum. Building—Contracting ...... William B. Faraquhar. Both cars Tel. 490. FOR RENT—FIVE ROOM tenement i Avafted through the house, creating Tommy: Yes. dad. l-'lorists—Nurseries ...... ’ with all improvements on Holl were badly damaged but no one was the illusion of roses.” Mr. Jones: Well, I shall bring Funeral Directors ...... H’ street. Telephone. 1214-4. injured. Street and trolley traiHc Healing—Plumbing—Roofing ... m Ri'ltalrliiu Santell is not alone in his pre­ them tonight.—Tit-Bits. THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE: Insurance ...... 1° FUR RE.N'T— 6 ROOM tenement on were tied up for some rime. diction. Robert Armstrong, work­ Millinery—Dressmaking ...... CHI.AI.NEYS CLE.ANED and repaired, Brainard street, near Main. Apply to Moriarty said in court that he ing for Fox movietone, special, is j ^ jp port Chester, N. Y., Moving—Trucking—Storage ------(J key fitting, safes oiiened, saw filing Aaron Johnson, telephone 524 or had to turn out to avoid hitting a convinced that fra.grance Avill play I g raging toothache to a den- “Tale of a Stocking” Painting— Papering ...... -> and grinding. AVork called for janitor 2040. ______car which had stopped suddenly in Professional Services ...... -- Harold Clemson. 108 North Elm an important part in the films of | tisfs office. 'The dentist being out, Sketches by Hessey; Synopsis by Oraucher Itepairing ...... ,...... street. Tel, 4 62. FOR RENT—SIX ROOM tenement at front of him. Lieutarant William the future. ' I the patient hanged himself. Tailoring— Dyeing— Clc.Tmug ... -4 561 Main street, all improvements. Barron, who made the pclice in­ “ Remember the smell of clover | -There’s alAvays some Avay to end Toilet Goods and Service ...... MATTRESSES. BON SlMilNGS. cusli- Inquire 4 1 Russell street.______Wanted—Business Service ...... ions and pillows sterilized and reno­ vestigation, arrested Moriarty on a and fresh ploughed fields in the i g toothache. Edueatioual vated with suUiliur and formal­ FUR RE.’^T-^6 ROOM tenement on reckless driving charge. The court spring ?” he asks, “ and the per- j Courses and Classes ...... dehyde best method. Reasonalile Hilliard street, all improvements .n- decided, however, that there Avas fume of locust trees in the yard? Private Instruction...... prices. Holmes Bros. Furnl'ure Co.. cluding heat. Garage. Telephone insufficient evidence ^o warrant a Neither the eye nor the ear can ! Dancing ...... 331 Center street. Tel. 1268. 1307-2. Musical—Dramatic ...... -■ conviction. cai’ry on so far back in memory as , Wanted—Instruction ...... SEWING .MACHI.NE repairing of all ro RENT — CENTENNIAL aoart- Moriarty Avas defended by Attor­ the sense of smell.” he added. j Only 82 Days Financial makes, oils, needles and supplies. R meiiis. tour room aparimeril. jani­ This looks as if an entire new in­ Bonds— Stocks— .Mortgages .. . 31 AV: Garrard. 37 Edward street. Tel tor service, heat gas range, ice box ney William P. Harney. Bu.siness Opiiortunities ...... 7 1 5. furrnslied. Call Manches'er Con­ dustry will be added to the making Aloney to Loan ...... struction Company. ’2100 or 782-2. METHODIST MISSIONARIES of pictures. Money Wanted ...... PHO.NOGK.APHS. vacuum cleaner, WILL DISCUSS PRORLE.MS Then Comes Help and Siluatinns clock repairing, key fitting gun and FOR KENT— PLEASANT apartment, Help Wanted— Female ...... lock smitliing. Braithwaito. 52 Pearl i20 \V. Center street. Walter Oicoit. (MET IN FOREIGN FIELDS With the advent of the ‘talkies’ j Help Wanted— Male ...... 3(1 street. Teletihone 357. the responsibility of the director | Help Wanted—Male or Female ■ ■ : NeAv York.— Racial political and becomes greater and .greater. i S p r in g ..\gents Wanted ...... ^ Fv)R KENT—SEVERAL first class Hollywood directors who have ' Situations Wanted—Female .... 3S | Help Wanted— Female 35 rents, with all improvetnents. Apply religious problems of Christian mis­ Situations Wanted—Male ...... -'9 j Edward J. Holl. 865 'aln streeC Tei. sionaries in the Orient and Latin- been satisfied with the appearance Employment Agencies .'...... 40 O(i0. America will be the chief topic of and acting of a performer have Start Now to Plan For I.lve Stock— Pets—Poultry— Vehicles | WANTED—GIRL for gneral house­ much to think about. The new di­ work. Telephone 1785. FOR RUNT—5 ROOM tenement, mod- discussion at the annual meeting of Carefully Marsie folded her clothes when she went to Dogs— Birds— Pets ...... 41 7 Allen rector must be a master of dic­ That New Home. Live Stock—Vehicles ...... 4 2 ern conveniences. Apply the Board of Foreign Missions of bed that night. From a drawer she took a stocking Poultrv and Supplies ...... 43 WANTED—AA'OMEN and girls to Place, the Methodist Episcopal church tion. Wanted — Pets—Poultry—Stock 44 work in shade grown tobacco ware­ Except in the case where brok­ Winter Bargains and hung it upon the bedpost. She was soon fast house. K. F. Falk, Manchester Pub­ FOR RlON’r—6 ROOM tenement. here Nov. 19-21. For Sale— MiNcellnneous Robert J en English is used by alien charac­ .Articles for Sale ...... • 4"; lic AA’arehoase. Manchester, Conn. Mather street, rent $16. At least a score of bishops and NICE AND NEW. up-to-date asleep. The stocking grumbled at its fate to be "taken Boats and .Accessories ...... 41- Smith. reUohone I50-‘2. ters the performers will be obliged handsome colonial of six rooms and out of a nice comfortable drawer on a winter’s night layme.n and clerical delegates from to speak perfect.English witn flaw­ Building Materials ...... 4- Help Wanted— Male 36 32 sections of the country and a sun parlor, oak floors, beautiful in- and strung up to a bedpost tike a common thing." Just Di.amonds —Watches—Jewelry .. 48 less enunciatio'h. For this reason terior decorations, well appointed Electrical .Appliances— Radio ... 40 MEN TO SELL our Uigh grade gar­ number of missionaries Avill be in English actors who have been then there was a noise in the chimney. Fuel and Feed ...... 49-.A TEN MAN TEAM rooms, garage, $6,500, small cash. den and field seed direct to planters. attendance. International problems trained on the stage will have first (Jarden — Farm—Dairy Products 50 A good position with big Income. DANDY CORNER LOT on Pitkin By NEA, Through Special Permission of the Publishers of The Book j f Knowledge. Copyright. 192 3 -2 ^ Household Goods ...... of the work of missionaries in Chi­ call at the office of the casting di-, --- - base- Experience unnecessary Cobb Co.. na, Japan, India. Africa and Latin- Machinery and Tools ...... ['2 Franklin, Mass. rector. One of the defects of the street just ri^ht for eU g ba^se^ Musical Instruments ...... -to New York, Dec. 29.— The idea American countries will be consid­ first talking pictures was that the- ment, walk, curb and „uttgutter . Office and Store Equipment ... 54 WA.N'TED— BOY AVITH High school of a ten-man baseball • team advo­ ered. Bishop Fra icis J. McConnell lots to choose from. Sportin.g Goods— Guns ...... (>5 training, for clerical work. Apply to performers were so engaged in try­ Specials at the Stores ...... 56 Cheney Bros. Employment Bureau. cated by President John Heydler of New York will preside at the ing to remember their lines they HAYNES STREET, a complete Wearing .Apparel—Furs ...... 5i of the National League is sched­ meeting. forgot to act. This can’t happen home of 8 nice rooms, oversize liv­ r AYanted— to Buy ...... \V..\.NTED—TAVO experienced broad- The appropriation of nearly $ 3,- ing room with 'beautiful fireplace. Rooms— Hoard— Hotels— Resorts leaf tobacco sorters. Apply R. J. uled to get its first tryout on in the case of trained stage actors. Restaurants Zimmer. 247 Forest street. near March 20 next in an exhibition COO,000 to carry on the religious OAvner called out of town and offers Rooms Witliout Board ...... 59 Hillstown Road. educational and medical work of By the same reasoning directors to sell at very reasonable price. Boarders Wanted ...... 59-A game betAveen the Phillies and the 60 Brooklyn Robins at Clearwater, the board through its 972 mission­ who have had stage experience will HENRY STREET— Well built, Country Board—Resorts ...... S7-A Hotels—Restaurants ...... 61 Agents Wanted Fla. aries in 34 foreign countries during figure prominently in the new art. well arranged, six room single, Wanted—Rooms—Board ...... 62 the coming year will be a chief William DeMille and his more glassed porch, hardwood floors, Real Estate For Rent MEN AND WOMEN to sell New Manager Robinson of Brooklyn, topic on the business program of famous brother, Cecil DeMille, both garage, good sized lot. Price only .Apartments, Flats. Tenements . t'l, Specialty every housewife buys on in a telegram received here, prom­ Business Locations for Rent .. sight. No investment requireii. Good the meeting. had long experience on the stage $7,500. You should see it soon. Houses for Rent ...... G3 earningrs assured. Apply: Wonder- ised that he would have an extra and in Avriting plays, William, 66 BRAND NEW SINGLE— Just .'Suburban for Rent ...... Fit. Jersey City. N. J. player in the line-up hitting for YOU TELL IM noAv directing for Metro-Goldwyn- Suhuner Homes for Rent ...... GT finished, six rooms, steam heat, etc. . GS the pitcher. He said he would a’so Mayer, wrote scenarios for years. Only $6,000. Hard to beat at the AVanted to Rent ...... Sitnntions Wanted— Male 39 He has three famous stage plays Real Estate For Sale use a ten-man lineup in Brooklyn’s He: I want to see a pair of silk price. Apartment Buildings for Sale . to his credit. 70 exhibition games with the Boston stockings for my wife. Business F’.roperty for Sale . . . . 1 W ANTED—W'ORK as private chaffeur Braves. She: Sheer? James Gleason, in charge of dia; Farms and Land for Sale ...... , 71 1 or truck driver. References. Tele­ logue for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Houses for Sale ...... 72 phone 954-3. He: No, she’s home.— Judge. f •> won his position with two plays A white-bearded old Loudly the stocking l.ots for Sale ...... I The new cruisers asked if Con­ Itesort Projierty lor Sale •■•••• • 43 that ran on BroadAvay, Noav York. complained as old Father .'

MU \ PAGE THIB'rBESN' MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. SOUTH MANCHESTER. CONN.. S.VrURDAY, DECEMBER 29.1928. By Percy L. SKIPl'Y FLAPPEjt FANOT SAYS? SENSE »< NONSENSE

Authority w e S C T T C R m “ I am the-captaln ot my soul,” f i C T V t t o t t We heard him rise to proudly state. H tfe 8 ( M e But she who knocked him for goal of acTtiH-wetf Was just his humble little mate. THIS M K N UMS Youngstown, Ohio, Telegram He has to say in undertone Hi', soul’s his own tor oh, my dears, A captain doesn’t always own The craft, you know, he engineers. ap j. In 1890 The world's greatest automobile maker was working in a bicycle shop. A millionaire hotel man was a “ bell-hop.” America’s steel king was stoking a blast furnace. . /i An international banker was firing a locomotive. A railroad president was pounding , a telegraph key. n: In 1950— you? I ' / 0 REG. U. S. PAT. OTP. For the rules of success are the V Copy^tit, 10S9, Percy L. Ciy»by. Ctntwl Prct5 rtscy / y O I92S. BY NEA SERVICE, INC. same now as they were hundreds .i- of years a,go— hard, conscientious \Vheii wifie Rets a fur, hubby OUR ROARDINC; HOUSE ^ work. tets it in llie neck. The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang By Fontaine Fox By Gene Ahern Cause and Effect “ I heard the most perfectly darl­ ing radio program last ui,ght,” Miss Sparker gushed. n/e:r,Y f e W FEopi_,r Ha V e e >/e k a . dAR, "THE ALL r ig HG *^SAV I'm TM' bio j “ Yes. wasn't it wonderful, W a y t h e P i P leoAP "IWIMK I WILL agreed her very dearest girl fiieiid. UP A ViEAt-fH SCHOOL AMP FlMAAiClER,I'P TAKE AM’ “ I didn't have a date either.” t h e c?THEf=^ PAY- ' A EAST AM' UEST OF VOUR SAMIYAPIUM IM a FBUl MbMrTHS? c o isf THE OLD BLOCK, TOO The Radio Bug CIRCUMFEREM E,--^ H TH “ Do vou carry B-eliminators?” -vl wamY a cubmYele: o f -the BLACK RIBBoM s p e c s u p To You've heard a lot about CHIPS “ No, sir; but we have roach pow­ HliSYLI/UO, BMERSeYlO OF VOUR-t h r e e -LAVER off the old BLOCK and here’s a der and some fly swatters. AFFAIRS, WHd APE SO EM R SSEP chance to see just how much alike 6 0 THEM PRESS BUTToM MUMBEP V iK H B U 5 IMESS,-YH e Y M E G L E C T they are. Par is six and one solu­ A Chinese named Ting Ling 7-B -HVs i c a u co^Svr^^o^M^ Bing! Bing! m V sivTH s e c r e t a r y ,- \ M 'V A m V EKPER iEM c E a s A The Con turned his head— "'(5iv/e THis o l p k it e To the passemgers he said. W sicA L IMSTRUCfoR^ WILL ASSURE c H 1 P s TH' " “ The car's lost awasher,” THE SUCCESS OF m Y SAMlTARlUM' Ding, Ding! — ^ Ha/FM, I w o U L P s a V T o a Traveling Salesman: “ This reme­ FIMAMCIER, ''SIR^ - 5UPP0SIMG dy is good for whooping cough, measles, mumps, scarlet fever, St. \ V oU R m o Me V w e r e IMV/ESTEP i M Vitus dance and palsy.” 'PRoPOSlTtoMS AS s)pHAK'/ A iV i / / I, ± Dealer: “ Sorry. My customers AMP UMSOUMP AS would never swallow that.” V T o u r "Bo p Y First Partner: “ What, another ar,gument with your wife! Second Partner: “ The same old tiling — she’s right and I d'on’t B L 0 C K agree with her.’” “ What have you a knot in your THE RULES. handkerchief for?” _ “ My wife put it there to remind 1— The Idea or Letter Golf is to me to post a letter.” change one word to another and do “ .\nd have you done so?” it in par, a given numlier ol “ She forgot to give it to me.” C 9 strokes. Thus change COW to HE.N’. in three strokes, COW, HOW HEW, “ Honey,” inquired a man with an HEN, expanding waist line,” have you 2— You change only one letter G seen mv belt anywhere around the l l o o P L E ^ at a time. house?’’’ “ No dear,” was the an­ 3— You must have a complete swer. “ I didn’ t know y6a wore it M E A IT H ^ word, of common usage, for each around the house.” jump. Slang words and abbrevia­ CO. tions don't count. If quinine proves efficacious in 4 __The order of letters cannot be j # i f preventing fading of paintings, let s REG. O. S. FAT. OFF. / changed. try it on the radio.

Tolerance is that restraining in­ It is easy to standstillstill fluence which prevents one from easier to go backward. Let him try 6 doing the things one feels like do­ it in a busy cafeteria. (OFontaine Fox. 1928, The Bell Syndicte. Inc ing while trying to talk to an in­ I bought this hat tolerant person. “ Yes sir-ee. By Crane two years______ago Had it cleaned WASHINGTON TUBBS H Seeing Kandelabra A young schoolboy was asked to twice, exchanged it in a restaurant s p e ll Pittsburgh: Immediately came once, and it still looks as good as new.” T CUARGED M\T TRNlUG COO-COO, the answer “ K-D-K-A.” To .JML M\T 'EM. NEH. ViOT’S TriE WELL, P^MWAS, \0E^ UEPE: To STEAL A PiOE ON CAP'N'. IT'IAIAS. MNRCHl HEPl PEPl WINE, USSENl HEY! siience! BOPON? vMl\ER^ PER RC^^^L CARRIAGE, ONUV A HACK WITH \ -TuiWV PAV5 ON _ IT uooitep c^Tcv\ POT srepl HEinei NOO C M T PlMCH TT pyKim e us TJ^ERR CAPTAIN JAPA, AU OLP fRIENPJ ANP - Op OURS, iNSlPE T v _ VATER. OP IT ANP— ~ r STOmr ^ UAL COCHRAN — PICfURES ^ KNICK Mo.u.i.rAT.orr.

\ ~ Rm. U. 5. PAT. OFF.; «V HtA StWICi; INC JjA ---- - By Blosser FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS A Surprise in Store?

VNUOSASD1‘W006)4T JUSTTJllbJRV^U DO* BECAUSE WE FELU ) f r e c k l e s 5AVS 055lE's 1 TJiOUStfTSO*! IATH e TIVE EARTHA \NAS ) ASK VOL) A OCNMM AM’ MUPT AB ) MHAArPME, 6CNNA 'FLV, HOH? AUP ■moOtSMT poor VesTERDAV VOO BEUEVJE \T/-- (\A^AA^^A....\MUy COHIUE- IH E KIDS RolAoWo~--L BETCUA VOUR POP TD VMALK AiOT? VOO W earta J AR6 DOAi'TKAiCKW ______ROUMD-m' IS FLAT“ D0M'7CUA II EABml A^AVCING A^OVW?? f o M o f o s e iE 's PROMISED flight; u)6 \ have A HUMCH \ HEi-L. EuRPRiSE THEM.

REG.U. S.PAT.Orr. J i'll nec. u. Si. PAT. OPT • sU*- J ^ SY NEA SC.TV1CF. INC.__ By Smaif (READ THE STORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) SALESMAN SAM Good-bye Bundle Buggy, The Tinies watched old Jack gine go. Here is a little button. ______------"V On the top of it is ‘Start.’ Hop in, Frost go. Then Clowny said,-“ I’d tAT 5 ll-,V-00? wuy DlDM'TCHA 'T h e r e 's o m l t ONE t h im o - 'T a cam d o and 1 will push the thing, and we riCUtG Ujc:c TuST T

SOaRTEEM H9anrh«0trr Simtino Irralh

Nineteen tables were filled with New Year’s Eve Dance players at the whist given last night NO PHONE BILLS YET TONIGHT Modern and Old Fashion at the Green school hall by the Another Big Time Dancing Until One O’clock Modern-Old Fashioned women’s committee of the^Manches- Surprises For Everyone ter Green Coinm .nity club. Many Through a misunderstanding It , MrE.'James McNamara and infant , A broad range of prices makes our At the RAINBOW JENCES liONE OAK HALU came from surrounding towns. was stated yesterday that notices daughter of 27'Walker street were Monday Evening, Dec. 31th DANCE Dancing followed the cards. First relative to the early installation of discharged from Memorial hospital service available to those in the most Kennedy’s Orchestra BILL WADDEL’S ORCHESTRA prizes at cards were won > by Mrs. dial telephones In Manchester had yesterday anS Mrs. Frank Morey of Modern Dancing Fred Taylor, Prompter Green School Hall E. Jacobs and Adolph Carlson; sec­ been sent to subscribers along with StaHdrd Springs was admitted. moderate circumstance. ° ond prizes. Miss Marcella Groman their monthly bills. Numerous sub­ scribers, receiving the notice but no idodern-Old Fashioned Epworth Leaguers of the South Auspices Manchester Green and Henry Smith; consolation, Mrs. Jemima Smith and F. J. Schon- bill, quite naturally concluded that Methodist church enjoyed a roast Community Club the bill had been omitted from the Lady Assistant "always in attendance. DANCING beef supper served by the mission­ %aar. Sandwiches, cup cakes and COMPLETE WEHR’S ORCHESTRA coffee' were served. Another whist- envelope through and more ary societies of the church last eve­ than a few of them have been calL City View Dance Hall ning under the chairmanship of Dan Miller, Prompter dance will be held Friday evening, RADIO SERVICE peeney Street January 11. ing up the offices of the telephone Mrs. L. S. Burr. Mrs. C. L. Taylor, Admission 50 Cents. condpany and inquiring about the EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT who was to have assumed charge, ■ ' Free fube Testing. '.dm.; Ladi j 25c. Gents 50c. bills. As a matter of fact no bills -t - General Repairing was unable to do so because of ill­ have been sent out, the notices con­ i^nlttusi Jitmtred f ^ I o r a ness. - Mrs. Howard Keith super- Center church Women’s Fed­ WARD DUFFY SPEAKER cerning the dial phones being a Aatborlzed eration will hold its first program 1 Sales and Service for iitein i&treet %ised the decorations, which were separate mailing-job.' pfiontS Bap 406-2 ABOUT TOWN of red paper, green candles, red meeting of the year Thursday, Jan­ BEFORE MEN’S LEAGUE 4 Majestic Atwater-Kent berries and juniper. With one ex­ uary 3 from 2 to 5 p. m. The prin­ Don’t forget Tall Cedars New ' Kolster ' Rad iota ception all the young people of the cipal speaker of the afternoon will Year’s Eve Dance at Masonic Tem­ Eveready Joel M. Nichols, Depot Square church at home from various be Mrs. Arra Sutton Mlxter, direc­ "Ward E. Duffy,. managing editor ple.— Adv. news dealer and Mrs. Nichols are schools were present. Christmas tor of the Hartford Gas Company’s of The Hartford Times, will be the both confined to their home with carols were sung and games were home service department. Her sub­ speaker at the session of the Center KEMP'S grip. Joel M. Nichols, Jr., who played. ject will be one of Interest to the CoUigregational Church Men’s came from New York to spend housewives— Salads. Mrs. Mixter League at 9:30 tomorrow morning Christmas with them, is also at the is no stranger to local audiences. in the church. He will discuss the SUNDAY DINNER Nichols home recovering from an Mrs. C. D. Pease of So-mers will She has given lecture-demonstra­ spend the winter with her cousin, outstanding events of 1928 includ­ attack of the same malady-which he tions before Loyal Circle of Kings ing local, state, national and inter­ suffered the night of his arrival. Mrs. J. J. Strickland of Main street, at the who has just returned from a visit Daughters and Manchester Grange national happenings. , with her mother and sister in She is also well known to many Mr. Duffy is well known in Man­ Second Congreafitional Sunday through her radio cooking lessons chester and at one time was con­ school teachers and their friends Waterbury. broadcast from WTIC every nected with The Manchester Even­ will hold a Christmas party on Fri­ ing Herald in an editorial capacity. Miss Marion Dorward, supervisor Wednesday forenoon at 11:00. A day at 7:30 at the church. Each number of her recipes have appear­ He has spoken before the Men’s HOTEL SHERIDAN teacher is requested to bring _ a of music in the Ninth District Club several, times'and last year dis­ schools, will preside at the organ at ed, from time to time on The ten cent present. A short meeting Herald’s home page. cussed the same topic he will talk Turkey, Duck or Chicken will be held. Refreshments will the morning service tomorrow at on tomorrow. The meeting is open be served. the Second Congregational church. to all men of the community. with all the hxings, $1 Organist Clarence Wood has been The young men of the Manches­ The Children’s Chorus will meet called out of town. ter Green Community club will hold at the Swedish Lutheran church to­ the usual Saturday evening dance morrow night at 6 o'clock sharp Manchester Kiwanians will hold tonight in the assembly hall of the and at 7 o’clock they will present their weekly meeting Monday at Green school. They have engaged the story-cantata “ The Story of 12:15 sharp at the Hotel Sheridan. Wehr’s orchestra to furnish music Bethlehem.” The musical numbers No formal program is planned. The and Dan Miller to call off old-time WATKINS BROTHERS. Inc, will be sung by the entire chorus new president, Frank H. Anderson dances. During the Christmas vaca­ and the speaking parts taken by 12 will outline the work of the Ki- tion the school building has been of the children. The children’s wanis club for the year 1929 and partially re-decorated. The walls of iuDetal iXteefor^ chorus has been rehearsing faith­ it behooves dvery committee chair­ the assembly hall and other por­ fully this past month on this can­ man and committee member to be tions of the building have been ESTABLISHED 54 YEARS tata under the direction of Helge B. present, Scott Simon will furnish painted. The floor of the hall will W H Y ^ Pearson. the attendance prize. not receive attention until after to­ CHAPEL AT It OAR SE night’s dance. The coming of the New Year I will be celebrated Monday evening Robert ICAndersorii at Jenck’s Lone Oak dance hall. 'I Funeral Director Pleasant Valley, with a itoodern they don’t fit and old-fashioned dance lasting un­ til one o’clock. Bill Waddell’s or­ Second Congregational Church chestra will keep things lively with their usual snappy music and Fred North Main Street 'JDIVIDUAL executors are often institutions report a 374% increase in Taylor will call off the squares. A MORNING, 10:45 'i surprise will be given each person square pegs in round holes. When four years in the number of executor and a good time is assured all who suddenly faced with the settling and trustee appointments. attend. Worship With The Address by Frank E. Jenkins o f an estate they are like strangers in a If you have already.made your will, The Jitney Players,, of which rstrange land—they know neither the naming an' individual executor and Bushnell Cheney is the directing “THE LAST STAND OF THE Extra-Powerful head, are to apepar in Manchester language nor the customs. trustee, you can readily substitute this High School Hall on Tuesday eve­ ANGLO-SAXON IN AMERICA” The logical, well-equipped peoj)le company by means o f a brief codicil ning Januay 8. They will present “ The Dragon.” EVENING, 7:30 A x m T E R K e n t who should actas executors and trustees which your lawyer can quickly draw up. under wills are those who have spe­ The schools in the Ninth District Address by Rev. Edward Eellsr More specific information about this cialized knowledge which best fits will resume their winter work Mon­ ‘Brotherhood of Believers.” will be given gladly by our officers day after the Christmas vacation. R 4 D 1 0 them for this technical work. upon request. If you prefer, we will Mrs. Mary Carter McDowell, of WELCOME AtwaterKentapeates ^ The modern trend is all in the dftec- have one o f our trained trust men call Hartford, formerly of this place, —3 aUe«,aaniequaUty M n T i F .i , -€ach$20. tion of naming companies like ours at your place o f business or at your sister of Sidney and Paul Carter, is a daughter-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. to act in all trust capacities. 750 active home your convenience* Samuel M. McDowell of Stonington, who were instantly killed Thursday i evening when their car was struck by a Boston-New York express § train. Their son, John McDowell, and his wife had just returned r u o N ^ to Hartford after spending Christ- » mas with them.

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Wilson Built by the largest radio manufacturing concern in th*. of Woodbridge street left today for world. 222 tests and inspections of every radio, set before it New Orleans, La., by steamer from GOOD THINGS TO EAT leaves the factory. 9,000 skilled workers in a 15 acre factory, New York. The trip by sea, will every one expert in their part of the work. All working to bring The Manchester Trust Co. take six days. From there they will HOLIDAY HOURS. the public the greatest dollar for dollar value in radio today— go to Texas and later work north to ATWATER-KENT. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. 'St. Louis and Chicago, reaching the Pinehurst asks its patrons to take note of the latter city in time for the Illinois fact that this store will NOT be open after G o'clock As proof of the superior sensitivity of Atwater Kent Radio, State Nurserymen’s convention the Monday evening. Nor will it be closed all day on there is a list below of stations brought in by one of our Atwater latter part of the month of January. New Years, Tuesday. The store will be open Kent receivers, located at 63 Hamlin Street. UNTIL NOON on the holiday. So that Monday’s business hours here will be Hartford, WTIC 74 Omaho, Neb., WOW 76% those of any other Monday. And the telephone New York, WEAF 60 St. Louis, Mo., KMOX “ 16 ORCHESTRA and delivery system will be operated at full speed, Newark, N. J., WOR 50 Hammond, Ind., WWAE 14% from 6:30 o’clock in the morning, for the phone Cincinnati, O., WLW ' 5'2 Fort Wayne, Ind., WOWO 13% service, and from 8 o’clock in the morning, for the New York, WJZ 43 Salt Lake City, KSL 14% delivery service, to take care of the natural increase Springfield, Mass., WBZ 22 Los Angeles, Cal., KFI 64 WANTED of holiday business. ^ Pontiac, Mich., WJR 45 Philadelphia, Pa., WFAN 72% A-l Drummer wants perma­ There is still an excellent assortment of poultry New Haven, WDRC 9 Washington, D.C., WMAL 66 nent or temporary connection. for the New Year’s dinners. You can order just Toronto, Can., CFRB 24 Denver, Col., KLZ 86 10 years’ experience and owns as well over the wire as in person— and be very Des Moines, la.. WHO 22 New York, WMCA 83 WINTER STORAGE sure of getting absolutely full weight as well as ab­ Toronto, Can., CKGW 23% Kenosha, Ind., WCLO 11% car. solutely high quality. Buffalo, N. Y., WKBW 5 Wheeling, W. Va., WWVA 13% Write Phone 2000. Nashville, Tenn., WSM 62 Buffalo, N. Y „ WMAK 28% “STRANGER” Providence, R. I., WEAIji 99 New York, WLWL 15% c-o Herald Office. Louisville, Ken., WHAS 35 Youngstown, O., WKBN 19% for YOUR BATTERY Tifton, Ga., WRBI 16 Worcester, Mass., WTAG 79 Nashville, Term., WLAC 5 Mount Vernon Hill, Va., -I .Shenandoah, la., KMA 29% WJSV 5 Oil City, Pa., WLBW 10 Detroit, Mich., WGHP 10% Chicago, 111., WENR 30 Kansas City, Mo., WHB 24% Atlanta, Ga., WSB 45 Nashville, Tenn., WBAW 4% 50c per month Chicago, 111., KYW 19% St. Paul, Minn., KCTP 5 New York, WABC 31 Chicago, 111., KFKX 20 We Are Here,To Give You Schenectary, N. Y., WGY 39 Kennonwood, La., KWKH 32 Your battery called for, cleaned, charged every 30 days and installed in your car Pittsburg, Penn., KDKA 22% Fort Wdrth, Tex., WBAP 82. when you notify us.' , \ , New York, WMSG 8 Bridgeport, Ct., "WICC 12%’ Chicago, 111., WBBM 41 Imtianapolis, Ind., WCCO 36% Chelsea, Mass., WLOE 4 Denver, Col., KDA 34 REAL SERVICE Atlantic City, WPG 16 Shenodoah, la., KPNF 29 I Rossville, N. Y., WBBR 6% Richmond, Va., WRVA 16 y. S. L. and Willard Batteries Philadelphia, WCAU 13 Cleveland, Ohio, WTAM 17 Plan on having your car greased and oil changed before taking Webster, Mass., WKBE 12 Hot Springs, Ark.,,KTHS 38 Special prices with very liberal allowance on your old battery. that long drive. New York, WOV 14% Chicago, 111., WMAQ 57 Buffalo, N. Y., WGR 89 St. Louis, Mo., K. S. D. 89 Three service pits> seven service men/^ Baltimore, WFBR 10 Chicago, HI., WMBI 16%’ New York, WPCH 16 Baltimore, Ind., WGBF 66 ' Troy, N. Y., WHAZ 9 PhHadelphia, Pa., WFI 87 Authorized Nashville, Tenn., WLAC 4 Kansas City, Mo., 'WDAF 75% Narland Super Motor Oil Distributors Clearwater, Fla., WFLA 28% Oklahoma City, Okla, Chicago, 111., WGN 49 WKY 28 WILLYS KNIGHT, OVERLAND, WHIPPET Syracuse, N. Y., WFBL 28 Hopplnsvllle, Ken., WFIW 25 Goodyear Tiros—Hood Tires Chicago, 111., WLS 30% Raleigh, N. C„ WTPE 55% Best. Equipment Detroit, Mich., WCX 44% Columbus, O., WAIV 63% Genuine Exido Batteries Davenport, Iowa, WDC 21 Boston, Mass., WNAC 91 P arts SERVICE B est Labor Milwaukee, Wis., WTMJ 68 Columbus, 0., WAIU 63%' Knoxville, Tenn., WNOX 85 Raleigh, N. C., WTPF 55% Charlotte, N. C., WBT 16% Muscatine,, Iowa, KTNT 12% Ti^UsforErtce New York, WRNY 20 Montreal, One., GFCF 47 Washington, D. 0., WRC 24% New York, WBBR 9%' Portland, Maine, WCSH 25 Chicago,’ 111., WSBC Flat Tire B a fi^ Trouble Out of Gas 7 Rochester, N. Y., WHAM 15 Chicago. 111., WJBT EXTRA Detroit, Mich., WWJ 27 Cincinnati, 0., WKRC SERVICE (iUUSSJiWeWill Ta^eQaj;e of You Palisade, N. J„ WPAP 20 Iowa City, Iowa, WSVI 79%’ FEDERAL TIRES Signed, JAMES B. HUTCHINSON. on CAMPBELL’S Let us put an Atwater Kent in your home N o E xtra Small Payment ATTCSTiON today. Phdne 821 for free demonstration C harge CREDIT Down FILLINGV * , ^ STMIOS - * • Corner Main and Kem p’s M iisic House featuring Idjddle Tatnpjkei •> J. ATWATER KENT TeL 1284 ALEXANDER COLE