'• 1 YOU NEED YOUR HOSPITAL EVERY DAYSHE NEEDS YOU JUSf ONE DAY

NET PRESS RUN AVERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION THE WEATHER OP THE EVENING HERALD Forecast br D. S. Weather Bnrem, for the month of April, 1927 Kerr Haven

and warmer tonight; 4,984 antifralfr cumittn clearing.

yOL. XLL, NO. 188. Classified advertising on page 12 MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1927. (FOURTLiiZiJN PAGES) PRICE THREE CENTS FRENCH FLIERS’ FATE UNKNOWN <•> JUDD GRAY AND MRS. SNYDER State Prosperous BEFORE THE HOP-OFF ANXm^CROW S TO BE SENTENCED ON MONDAY Bank Reports Show No Word Is Receiyed Up Un* a> • Hartford, Conn., May 10.— Con­ <^savings banks during the.period in­ til a Late Hour Woman Collapses as She necticut people deposited $18,419,- cluded: bonds of foreign countries, i 710 in state-controlled banks In the $1,841,304; railroad bonds, $785.- lirst three months of the present 538; railroad stocks, $9,750; bank This Afternoon. Hears Verdict of Guilty; year, and those banks on April 1 stocks, $1,681,242; bankers’ ac­ showed a total In deposits amount­ ceptances, $86,279; and cash on ing to .$682,803,376. 06, an amount hand $670,607- Man, With Prayer Book greater than at any previous time Decreased loans on collateral PARIS GIVES UP HOPE in the history of these banks, ac­ totaling $313,384 were reported by cording to the state banking de­ In Hand, Is Calm. savings banks as were decreases In partment. American; French and English municipal bonds, $598,410; de­ Seventy-six savings banks In the creases in federal securities, $1,- Warships Combing At­ state reported a deposit gain of 419,464. Trust companies deducted lantic In Search. Long Island City, X. Y„, May 10. $14,318,639 and total deposits of about $10,0,00,000 from reserve •—Mrs. Ruth Brown Snyder who, $560,144,465.76. Seventy-two trust funds and various cash items dur­ New York, May 10.— Anxiety with her lover, Henry Judd Gray, companies operating savings de­ ing the quarters. Of this. $4,387,- over the fate of Captain Charles partments reported a gain of $4,- is to be sentenced next Monday to 308- went Into loans and $5,379,- 101, 070-30 with a new total In Nungesser and Captain Francois death in the electric chair, was to­ 277 represented a decrease in com­ deposits of $122,659,010.30. The Coll, trans-Atlantic, fliers/ deepened day in a state of collapse. mercial deposits. increase of both classes of Institu­ today as the hours passed and no The woman who had been called Trust Companies tions is practically double the in­ authentic Information concerning the "icy blonde" because of her crease of the previous quarter Trust companies Increased their cold self-possession for days in which ended December 31, 1926. federal security holdings in the them was received. court lay semi-conscious in her Assets Increased amount of $494,046, the total for Up to eleven a. m., no trace had cell in Queens County jail, suffer­ Assets of the banks-jumped to a such holdings being $4,113,826.33. been obtained of the daring Fhrerich ing from the effects of a hysterical new figure'in the period. Trust Investments in various other aviators who took off from,Paris at epasni that was diagnosed by phy- companies report a gain of $12,- securities also increased by $1,013,- Bicians as an epilci)tlc fit. 911,844.83, reaching a total of 888, bringing the total for such 12:17 Sunday morning to fly to Breaks Down $616,566,710.33, while savings holdings to the sum of $29,100,- New York without a stop. Whether SIic broke down completely last 362. they had come down somewhere In night when a jury returned ver­ banks show a gain of $1,274,733.48 with an aggregate of $352,025,- the Atlantic In an. area of wind and dicts of guilty against her and The figures were obtained when cold, or had been picked up by Gray for the murder of her hus­ 139.77. John B. Byrne, state bank com­ Loans on real estate were popu­ some small vessel without wireless band. Albert Snyder, in her home missioner, issued a statement call. equipment, or had lu some mariner on March 20. lar with the savings, banks during As a result of tho replies Lester met with death, was a subject of “ Oh my God!— I never thought the quarter, $6,052,840 being put E. Shlppee, deputy commissioner, feverish speculation in this, country I ’d iget this," she cried. out to make the grand total for the today declared “ it would seem that "V' ,4 and abroad. Gray'; prayer book in hand, ac­ real estate loan Item $317,189,349. local business Is falHy active. The Paris In Gloom cepted the verdict stoically. Public utility bonds were in de­ demand for commercial.loans is ap- Under Drug.s This is a picture of Captain Charles Nungesser and his companion Dispatches from Paris stressed mand, the increase in these hold­ parant and the fact that individual Major Coli just before they started on their trip. Mrs. Snyder was kept under the ings on the part of savings banks the national gloom over the tragic or commercial deposits fell off disappearance of the .vlrmen. Influence of morphine and chloral being $3,614,306 and the new total while savings deposits were in­ this morning to prevent a repeti­ In this country, all along the $38,612,225. creasing would indicate that these THREE IN THE FIELD tion of the emotional putbreak Other Holdings IX POLICE POST New England and New Foundland that followed her conviction. Phy­ amounts ar* being turned to active coasts vessels were putting out to Increases In other holdings of business.” RESIGNATIONS sicians summoned to her cell found Hartford, Conn., May 10.— sea in an effort to sight the plane ber unconscious. Representative Charles E. White Bird” . A dense fog hung Pear was expressed that Mrs. ■Wheeler of Stratford, and Sena­ over the eastern coast, hampering Buyder may develop into what Is OF ASSESSORS tor Elbert L. Darbie, of Killing- the search. Out in the Atlantic, termed a mal-epilcptic, as she has TWO HUNDRED DEAD DRY COMMISSIONER United States Navy coast guard Buffered other epileptic attacks. In ly, are among those being con­ sidered for the newly created cutters and ocean-going tug:3 were that event she would escape the plying the waters in hopes Of flnd- electric chair and be sent to an MAYBE ASKED post of state police commission­ Institution for the treatment of IN WESTERN STORM WORRIES CAPITAL er. The present superintendent, ing some trace of the fliers. French mental diseases. . .. . Robert Hurley, of Hartford, also and British warships are expected ■ RP»d8'l*rayer Botrtr - • is a strong candld,g.Lg^ J h e ap­ to aid in the search. Gray, meanwhile, sat quietly in Selechnen^niifitlioul legal pointment is to be_ma-d£,by Gov­ Radio stations all along the coast liis cell reading his prayer book Several Thonsand Injured; Haynes Opposed By Both ernor Trumbull. are keeping in touch with the ships and resigned to his fate. He said -< S > at sea, hoping for word which be had "made his peace with God.” Means of Enforcing Tax would immediately dispatch com­ Justice Townsend Scudder by Mdlions in Property Loss; Factions— Seymour Low^ mercial planes, now held in readi­ law must sentence both Mrs. Sny­ ness. to the scene. > der and Gray next lUohday to die list Correction— Valua- COBB SUSPENSION Six States. Hit. \ ■ In the electric chair within six . man the Favorite. HOPE DIES Weeks from the time of conviction. tions Said to Be Wrong. Paris, May 10.— Hope for Cap­ Each of them, however, is en­ LIFTED BY JOHNSON tain Charles ,Nungesser, .Prance’s titled to an appeal. This automati- More than a thousand^ casualties, Washington, May 10.— The con-i foremost aviator, died hard and rally stays the death penalty until with 200 dead reputed and mUlions troversy raging over the candidacy slowly today. the Court of Appeals passes upon Because of two cases of unwill­ in property damage, was the toll of Major ROy A. Haynes for the National gloom over the'tragic the case. If the conviction should ingness on the part of Manchester’s exacted today by tlie latest storm post of federal prohibition commis­ President of American disappearance of Captain Nunges­ be reversed a new trial would be ser and his fellow airman. Captain nrdered. to strike the. hard-pressed middle Board of Assessors to correct what sioner may be settled through the Coli, was deepened when officials The only other alternative the west. are believed to be clerical errors in appointment of a compromise League To Make Formal of the air ministry admitted that pair have of escaping: execution From Te.vas In the southwest to "bone-dry” prohibitionist, having property assessments, the Board of Would be commutation of sentence BOSTON H.\S CABLE they had received no word upon Miclilgan in the northeast, erratic the support of the Anti-Saloon Selectmen last night was faced which hope might be based. by Gov. Alfred E. Smith. TO LONDON NOW League, it was reported today in Statement Tomorrow. TIte jury convicted Mrs. Snyder $7,139 IN HRST winds which assumed tornado pro­ with the problem of how to give France will send warcraft tn administration circles. comb the -North. Atlantic steamer on the first ballot. There was a Boston, .Maas., May 10.— The portions in various sections, mow­ Haj-nes Opposed. the property owners affected fair misunderstanding on the Gray bal­ fifth annual New En,gland for­ Chica.go. May 10.— Suspension land which is believed to have been ed down houses, burjing hundi-eds The candidacy of Haynes, long a treatment and at the same time re- lot and the vote was taken again eign' Trade conference held here of victims, razed .telephone .and stalwart of the Anti-Saloon League, of Ty Cobb and A1 Simmons, Phil­ the route taken by Nungesser when CAST OF NETS today was marked by the offi­ main within Its legal rights- Discus­ he set out to span the Atlantic in and all twelve voted "guilty.” telegraph poles and left devasta­ suffered a setback when both wet adelphia outfielders, was lifted to­ Weeps in Courtroom cial opening of the first direct tion and suffering in,- their xvake. ?nd dry spokesmen opened fire on sion of the problem touched on the a single.jump. >irs. Snyder wept as William E. cable from New England to day, effective Immediately, by Ban Missouri, Texas anjd Arkansas ,'his qualifications for the commls- best means of treating with the Cruisers Soorcliiiig '^'ollng, foreman of the jury, an­ FORHOSPITAL London with Gov. Alvin T. Ful­ reported the greatest losses of life slonershlp. From the wet camp. Johnson, president of the American The French ^ ministry of marine nounced tlie verdict. Gray looked ler sending the first message. and tremendous property damage. Senator Edward T. Edwards, Demo­ Board of Assessors, and it w'as'stat- League. has already issued orders to naval Boston now is the only city on directly at the jurors and, accepted F’lfty-four bodies so far have crat of New Jersey, charged Haynes ed that perhaps tho only means of Additional information on th e! bases to (dispatch c.misers in search the verdict with head up. shoulders the Atlantic coast otiier than solving the question would be to been recovered from the business appointment would be a “ travesty row at the Philadelphia-Boston of Nungesser. The French govern­ pquared. Mrs. Snyder burled her -Xew York, having direct cable section of Poplar Blumni, Mo., and on a government of free institu­ ask the resignation of the remain­ ment has also notified' the British face in her arms. 150,000 Campaign Gets Offj transmission to Europe. game last Thursday, received from rescue workers anticipated an even tions.” ing members of the assessors. No C. D. Owens, officiating with Um­ government that it would appre­ When Mrs. Snyder reached her greater toll when tho ruins are all The dry attack came from the action was taken by the Selectmen pire Emmett Ormsby, who banish­ ciate a naval search of English and cell she fell in a faint. She had To Good Start; Team No,| c.xidored. Christian Advocate,-which said, the last night, however, since the chair­ ed Cobb and Simmons from the Irish waters. In some^ circles there been sobbing hysterically. Upwards of 20D injured, at least naming of Haynes would be a man, Robert V. Treat, was absent, game, was the basis for Johnson’s is a belief that Nungesser may have The conviction of Mrs. Snyder FARMERS REFUSING 15 of whom are expeetd to die, are "blunder,” and. urged the appoint­ due to illness. decision. come to grief before proceeding and Gray was almost a record for 11 leads; Girls Go Sup­ being cared for in hospitals. ment of General Pershing. Two concrete cases brought to Johnson announced . he would verj' far. Bl)eed in Queeng county. The mur- The toll in St. Louis and Vicinity Compromlso Candidate. the attention of the Selectmen in prepare a formal finding for pub­ tier was committed seven weeks ago was fixed at ten dead with hun- The fuselage of the “ White Bird*’ perless For the Drive. Administration leaders were their regular meeting last night. lication today or tomorrow. is air-tight and it was Nungesser’s last Sunday morning in the Snyder TO A B A N I N HOMES (Ireds being treated for various in­ known to be looking for a com­ Alfred Kirscheifer of Stonington "Demonstrations o f this charac­ home in Queens Village. Snyder juries. belief that he could remaim afloat promise candidate. To date, the and owner of property on West ter,” said Johnson with reference was beaten unconscious by one or Tliirty-five dead were reported name of Seymour Lowman, a for­ indefintely in pormal weather. Center street opposite E. J. Holl's to the Philadelphia ruckus, “ will However, the plane may have_ been both of the accused. Chloroformed ith all the 11 teams reporting iu Garland, Nevatla, Tlgerton and mer lieutenant-governor, of, New not be tolerated in the American and finally choked to death with Ignore Evacuation Orders as Celeste, Texas. More than 100 were new tract, asked the Selectmen to damaged in striking the ocean sur­ at noon today, the total contribu­ York state, has been the most fre­ League.” picture wire. Mrs. Snyder and Gray iii,iured. ‘ quently mentioned. help him correct , the obvious error face but little hope is Jield out fot tions made to the Manchester Mem­ made in his property assessment. Umpire Owens’ report, which were brought to trial within a Water Flows Over the SubstAiitiaily the same story was if Wayne B. Wheeler, generalis­ just reached Chicago, was under­ the fliers if they are not found dur­ month. orial Hospital In Its drive for $50,- told in Arkansas where thirty-six simo of the Anti-Saloon League, Previous to the installation of the ing the day. Linder system the Kirscheifer stood to have Indicated that Cobb Fear Suicide Attempt 000 amouated to $7,139.90. Team dead were reported in Cralghea4 should endorse Lowman, It was and Simmons should be given the property was listed at $700. The So depressed has Mrs. Snyder be­ No. 11 was the leader in the col­ River Walls. county, Egj-pt, Laineve and Walnut said, the New Yorker will get the benefit of the doubt. NEW YORK’S EXD come that officials at the jail took Ridge. appointment. assessment last year was $1675, New Yoi'k, May 10;-L-A search precautions against a possible sul- lections, Us total reaching $4,620. Rlinois reported six dead. Jour but this year he received a bill for was begun today over the North At­ ’ clde attempt. Included In this amount- are sev­ New Orleans, La., May 10.— With of them ill Chicago where electric taxes laid against an assessment of BODY IN A TRUNK lantic for Captain Charles Nunges­ Dr. Charles Mulligan, who exam­ eral donations for $100 or more. the flood waters of northeastern trans|)ortatlon along the fashion­ SUB KEEL IS LAID $2675. He had received no notice ser and Captain Francois Coll, ined the condemned woman today, This is the first report made of Louisiana already washing o” er the able north shore was paralyzed for of such an increase, he told the French airmen who disappeared said her condition is "bordering on several hours. Selectmen. MYSTIFIES LONDON while trying a non-stop flight from the drive to date for there- were no Bayou Des Glaises levees, rellei One section of the storm swept hysterical tremens.” Sedatives were agencies of the state were con­ AT PORTSMOUTH YARD Talks With Assessors Paris to New York., returns made early enough yester­ through Colorado and Wyoming In adnilnlstered to her. fronted-today with the refusal of •m _ In taking the matter up with the It has been more than fifty-five She slept little last night, toss­ day that they could be made public. the form of a blizzard. Hiree Selectmen Mr. Kirschiefer said that Corpse Cut In Pieces and hours since the aviators In the It, therefore, represents the work thousands of farmers in the threat­ were reported killed near Laramie. V-5 Our Latest Undersea Boat ing restlessly upon her cot. She ened parishes south of the levee S. Emil Johnson, chairman of the Checked at Railroad Station “ White Bird” took off from Paris sobbed almost ceaselessly and was of only a day and a half. All teams line to heed evacuation warnings. Will Be Ready in About Two board of assessors, said that' he Last Friday. early Sunday morninig to try,- to unable to eat breakfast. resumed their canivassing this aft­ Chicago, May 10.— Two* hundred Years. span the Atlantic in a^ single hop. ernoon, greatly heartened by the Women and children have left v'asn’t paid for looking up such Gray, In his cell, was cheerful. the four hundred square miles in dead, several thousand Injured and This morning the men arid their He ate a good breakfast and spent ready response. property damage that will run into questions, and refused to take any London, May 10.— The grew- .\voyeles, Pointe Coupe and St. . Portsmouth, N. H., May xO.— action..« mt-The _ Board of CexiAnfmonSelectmen itl- in some discovery of the mutilated plane were still missing, although the forenoon writing letters. Following is the summary bv millions— during the past 24 hours Europe teams: Landry parishes. Immediately be­ With ceremony fitting to the occa­ vestigated■ and found that an body of a woman in a trunk here Such was the approximate toll sion, the keel of the latest subma­ and America had been thrilled a Team No. 1 ...... $ 247.75 yond the wave-washed dikes, but compiled here today of the freak obvious clerical error existed.------today furnished Scotland Yard FLOODS IN' CAN.4DA. rine for the United States Navy, half dozen times by false reports Team No. 2 ...... 162.00 througbout the entire region men wind and rain storms that did a However, Tax Commissioner Blod­ with what promises to be a baffling remain behind with their cattle and the V-5, was laid at the Navy Yard gett has ruled that the Selectmen murder mystery. that the French machine had been . Man., May 10.— Team No. 3 ...... , . . 148.00 weird dance of death over a half here today. sighted off the American coast. Team No. 4 ...... 230.90 crops apparently assured by more dozen middle and southwestern can grant tax abatements only in The trunk had been checked at Flood waters still raged rampant than 200 years of flood history in After the keel had been lowered the Charing Cross station of the United States Coast Guard cut­ through the Lacdubonnet and Mar­ Team No. 5 ...... Goioo states late yesterday and last case of "too poor to pay. Mr. west centi'al Louisiana that their night. into place and the first rivet driv­ Southern railway last Friday. The ters and ocean-going tugs are en-, quette districts today, with streams Team No. 6 ...... 364.10 en, Rear Admiral W. D. MacDoug- Klrscheifer’s case ^vill bo turned gaged in the hunt over the storm lands arc Immune from the devas­ States Hit. corpse had been cut into several being constantly swollen by addi­ Team No. 7 ...... 353.00 all, U. S. N. commandant of the over to Town Counsel W. S. Hyde tossed, fog bound reaches of th« Team No. 8 ...... 192.70 tating waters. Missouri, Arkansas and Texas pieces, each being wrapped into a tional freshets from the spring For more than 24 hours wave- Navy Yard, tested it. A brief ad­ for his opinion. parcel with coarse, brown paper. North Atlantic. thaw. ' Team No. 9 ...... 453.75 were the hardest hit, the estimated dress on the significance of the oc­ Another instance of an increase wash lias been spilling over the riv­ dead in these three states reaching Scotland Yard detectives secur­ Warships to Search The municipal docks at Lac Du Team No. 10 ...... 308.15 er walls at several points along a casion was made by Rear Admiral In assessment without notice being ed an excellent description of the It Is understood that French war­ Bonnet have been carried away by Team No. 11 . .-r...... 4,620.00 a total of 175. A score more were MScDougall to the officers and em­ given, and a refusal to make a cor­ thirty-five mile stretch and from killed In Kansas and Illinois. man who placed the trunk In the ships and possibly British warcraft the flooding Winnipeg river, and a four to six feet of water is rolling ployees of the yard who had gath­ rection was brought before the cloakroom. will join the search, thus making a log jam there threatens to carry Total $7,139.90 Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, In­ ered to witness the ceremony. down from the Inundated northeast diana and Oklahoma also felt tho Selectmen by Robert Turkington of The body is believed to be that great Interriationai quest for soma away a bridge. This total represents the work of quarter of louislana, but still these The design of the V-5 embodies Garden street. Mr. Turkington’s of a woman of about thirty years vestige of the misssng airplane. In the Marquette district the As- the teams up until noon today and storm’s wrath and sustained heavy the latest developments In all grim old planters stubbornly turn­ property damage. No loss of life assessment was increased from and it is believed that she has been MORE------MORE sinibolne river is out of its banks, includes the contributions received ed their backs upon the north, upon branches of submarine technology, $8400 to $8525 and the first notice dead about three weeks. Disappearance of the Nungesser flooding scores of homes and ma­ yesterday. has been reported from these states. the publicly displayed evacuation pertaining to the hull of the vessel he had was when he received his The body was without garments, plane makes the second recent tra&< rooning others. Supperless Workers Violent wind and rain storms were as well as to the propelling ma­ warnings of the state relief director reported as far west as Colorado bill for taxes. Curious to know the except for a pair df silk stockings edy on trans-Atlantic flightB. At 10 o ’clock last night Just be­ and upon widespread rainfall chinery and operating gear. and black shoes. Captain Saint-Roman, anoLhei Remember the Manchester Me­ fore closing time, two young girls, and Wyoming. A sister ship, the V-6, is under reason for the Increase he went to throughout the lower valley which Heavy Loss of Life. the assessors. He learned that his French aviator, who tried to fls morial Hospital. Please give at both members of No. 10, construction at the Navy Yard, TREASURY BALANCE. from the African coast to the SonV| ^ least one day’s pay and more If today added millions of cubic feet Poplar Bluff, Mo., and several land assessment was Increased, hut of water to the oncoming flood Mare Island, California. It Is ex­ Washington, May lO.-r-Treas American mainland,' dropped somfl" possible to t^e hospital« pected that the V-5 will be ready .1 Contiuaed on crest. ICoutinued on Page 21, ury balance as of May 17th: $219 for service In about two years. .(Continued on Pa^e 2), 246.883,66. (Contlutted ojlll PiVQ 2^

iiS I? * PAGE TWO MANCHESr iR (CONN.) EVENING HERALD. TUESDAY, MAY lO, 1927.

BANK FOR BR.ANFORD. FRENCH FU ERy FATE the park area on East Center street Mrs. Caroline M. Nelli. i RESIGNATIONS MAY BE each night between 2:30 a. m. and $7,139 IN FIRST DRIVE Hartford, May 10.— J. Edwin $5.00 4 a. m. The c.ir will be left In the Edward A. Brunner, H. O, Brad­ IS UNKNOWN TODAY Brainard, of Branford, lieutenant- uniJgved section and will be lighted. governor of Connecticut, Itpads a ASKED OF ASSESSORS ley, A Friend. David Osborne, The Selectmen were Instructed to FOR OUR HOSPITAL Prank Hood, Mrs. John Kasulkl, group of Branford residents who prepare the Jury lists. Th annual (Continued from Page 1) have today filed notice with the Mrs. W. Custer, Jr., Norman Nam- (Continued from Page 1) Job was left to the secretary and to erovsky, Fred Hare, A Friend, . a n d -•/f r, , state banking commissioner of in­ the clerk. C. Elmore 'Watkins re­ (Continued from Pago 1) -where during the flight and has tention to organize a bank and Mary L. Benton, Grace W. Beadle, got no satisfaction when he Inquir­ quested a light near the South Main Mrs. Katherine M. Finlay, C. G. Tomotrow' ^ ■ been missing since last Thursday. trust company in Branford. The street school and also suggested captained by M. J. Moriqrty, walk­ Chiefly by reason of bad weather proposed capital is fifty thousand ed the reason for the increase. Tyler, Mr.'and Mrs. J. McMenemy, that a danger sign be erected at the ed Into Hospital Headquarters and A. F. Howes. off the American coast hope has dollars and one thousand shares of Pays Only Part produced from their 'wet hand bags, causeway near Globe Hollov,r pond. $4.00 dwindled for the safety of Nungess- stock will be Issued at fifty dollars The Selectmen advised Mr. Turk- l>ee

I^AGE FOUR MANCHESTER (CONN.). EOTOTG HERALP, T0E5DAT, MAT IKanrtfeiitn l U ■7" Eitftttng llpraUi 1 , ^

i'UBLISHED BY , THE HERALD PRINTING CO. Practical Pieces for Your Home This FojnCed by EUvood Ela Oct. 1. 1881 Every EvcnInK Except Sundays ,-.nd Holidays. Entered at the Post Office at Man* Chester as Second Class Mall Matter. 5 SUBSCItlPTION RATES: By Mall tlx dollars a year, sixty cents a month tor shorter periods. By carrier, eighteen certs r, week. Single copies, three cents. SPECIAL ADVERTISING REPRE- y O 8— CIVIC I.W’ESIJIEXTS gram which will average 40 miles a Sketched from stocks SENTATIVE, Hamlltoti-De LIsser, year, an auditorium, a garbage In­ Inc., 2S5 Madison Avenue. New York This is the eighth of a series of cinerator, a 1000-acre annex to the and 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. articles teliing Jimv Amcric.nn cities city park and a new criminal courts The Manchester Evening Herald Is are meeting their problems.. . Suc­ building. on sale In New Vork C l^ at Schultz's ceeding articles in this series will Then wideawake business men News Stand. Sixth AveiTue and 42nd.. appear daily. induced the southern office of a big 2 •Street and 42nd. .Street entrance of publishing house to locate there, Grand CShtral Station. By DON E. MO WRY and got another national organiza­ "International News Servjlce has the E»9 ■ ■S.- exclusive rights to use tor republlca- Secretary, the American Conuniiiii- tion to build a $500,000 annex to 5.- r : N .tlon In any form all news dispatches ty .-Advertising .-Association its New Orleans plant. ----- credited to or not otherwise crediu City e.xpenses are always high; On top of this, the Association of ed in this paper. It Is also exclusively entitled to use for republlcatlon all but sometimes the best thing a city Commerce fathered the Interrva- the local or undated news published can do is undertake an improve­ tional Trade E.xposltlon, a non-prof­ herein." ment program that will cost a large it Institution acting as a meeting sum. place for buyers and sellers from V - TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1927. New Orleans is a case in point. all over the New 'World. New Orleans started the ball roll­ And now a list of civic improve­ Mwnllght over the lake— ing with a seven and a half million ments calling for a total expendi­ cbolftiriceaeg ■ oa the porch— THROUGH HIS HAT. dollar Improvement bond issue. ture of $250,000,000 has been com­ lot's fiance! The Ortbiyr When Senator David I, Walsh This bond issue is to pay for five piled. phonic Victrola -is ready to improvements that will make the New Orleans is moving fast. It is says that business in New England play just what you want Jhst city -a better and more attractive proving that it pays to spend mom 3 Pc. lirheii you •want it. Model is rotten he speaks from two place. They are a bigger paving pro- ey. ’ -4-3 above is only ^96 on aiigies, either of which entities his easy terms, and It’s k real declaration to a serious discount. BELIEF IN TREES. crime in that event, because no­ A big feature where suites are exposed to the 3 Pc. Fiber Suite in green finish -with vefour In the first place he is a Democratic Long before the Mississippi river body would have known anything dampness. Made of genuine reed finished in covered spripg seats. 4-6 divan, chair and politician and interested in bring­ flood reached its present appalling about his intention but himself. waterproof varnish, with spring cushions in rocker, on easy terms, $75, ing about a change in tlie adminis­ stage this newspaper ventured the And yet in, either case for a day Orthophonie tration. In order to do that it is opinion that the most effectual of he would have intended to be a glazed chintz. Exactly as sketched with choice necessary to stir up discontent. all possible means of preventing 3 Pc. Reed Suites in choice of natural var­ criminal— and in either case would of ivory with red decorations and harmonizing In the second place, though he Is such castastrophes in the futmre laj' have changed his mind before he nish finish with striped cretonne or brown -with VICTROLA not a Bostonian he is sufficiently in In systematic reforestation of the had taken a nickel of his employ­ chintz, or green and brown reed with plain red figured blue cretonne spring cushions. Sofa, accord with the Boston spirit to immediate valleys of the Mississip­ er’s money. and figured black chintz. Easy’ terms. ai’m chair and rocker, $105 on easy terms. think of eastern Massaclihsetts aed pi and its major tributaries. Here This is an extremely unstable eastern Massachusetts alone when and there some other small voice \ young man; that is sure. A most 3’ Pc. Reed Suites in brown varnish finish, 3 Pc. Reed Suites in Mongol finish-blue over he speaks of ‘‘New England,” was raised in support of the same unfits young man to have charge of ‘‘New England” means, in Bos idea. But the big fellows pooh- other people’s money. He is alto­ spring cushions in black cretonne with red and brown—with spring cushions and padded hacks ton, Boston and Its environs. It poohed the notion that the planting gether too emotional. He lacks any taupe. 4-6 sofa, arm chair and wing chair, on in a figured, striped cretonne. Sofa, arm never by any possibility means of trees would do anything Import­ moral anchorage. But if he has chair and rocker, on easy terms, $145. easy terms, $49.50. either Rhode Island or Connecticut ant tffward stopping the great river committed a crime, in anything but Only occasionally does the Boston from slopping over. Mr. Hoover was the most technical sense, we fail to 3 Pc. Reed Suites in choice of Atabian gray mind reach out to'include Pittsfield, one who couldn’t be bothered with see it. 3 Pc. Fiber Suites in Italian frosted brown 9 or even Vermont when it uses the finish with blue and mulberry decorations or any such theory. The chief of Army What he needs is not the inside finish with spring cushions and upholstered term. engineers was another. of a jail but— despite his twenty- blue and brown with blue and red decorations. So that what David I. really backs in cretonne. Divan, chair and rocker, ■Wherefore it gives us some satis­ five years and his status as a hus­ Spring, cushions to harmonize. Sofa, arm chair means when he says that New faction to note what is said on this band— a -spanking. on easy terms, $69. and rocker, $180. Easy terms, England business is rotten is that subject by E. A. Sherman, asso­ Boston business is rotten. Even ciate forester of the Forest Service, that is probably an exaggeration, who expresses the belief that ‘‘Re­ BLESSED BONES. though there is no question about forestation and forest protection there being a certain measure* of With the news that “ Connecticut will unquestionably enter into any River shad are running” there is for your old stagnation in that small neck of the plan for the future control of the >;svoods. The volume of shoe and due the lamentation of the shad Mississippi. It is idle to say that lover over the quantities of bones leather business is not what it used millions of acres of forest land that must be swallowed or hazard­ to be, largely because, thanks to within this basin have no relation the trade unions' course over a ed by those who would indulge in h to the flood problem. The plans for this gustatory creature. term of years, shoes can be manu preventing a recurrence of a flood Instead of bemoaning the shad’s factured and are manufactured of this magnitude must, as one of Turn in your old worn-out refrigerator for one of these up-to-date, more cheaply in the middle west. plethoi'a of framework every trde their essential factors, include the scientifically constructed Leonards. Two grades— Polar King and The cotton mills in the surround­ addict to the shad habit should reforestation of the headwaters of thank his lucky stars for the bones, Cleanable— offer a complete variety in enameled and porcelain lined ing towns and cities are not as the Mississippi and its tributaries. unless he be a millionaire. Because busy as they might be. The wool Although excessive precipitation ‘ n refrigerators. Easy terms, if you desire. trade is none too brisk. Boston is such is the Intriguing quality of the main basin of the klississippi is the sliad savor, the shad flavor and having a bit of a slump. a major cause of the present flood, 75 lb. Leonard 3 door model with white eh- But if David I. 'Walsh by any the Bhad consistency, ..go, fascinating 35 lb. Leonai’d top icer with galvanized lining many of its tributaries have con­ and'-compeHing the’ toothsomeness and-wire shelf, $13.75, ■' ' • ' _ameled linings and. wire chance did happen to- think of tributed their own floods. E.xtensive of its meat, that if it were not for Connecticut when he spoke for deforestation on the headwaters of 100 lb Leonard with wire shelves and white New England, and if he really the bones, which discourage mil­ 35 lb. Leonai’d top icer with white enameled ennumerable feeder streams is lions of yearning but lazy mortals, enameled lining, 3 door model, $36. meant that business is rotten in this partly responsible for rapid melting lining, $14.98. state, he is talking through his the price of shad would leap to a j of snow and for the rapid run-off point that would make fresh Kus- ! Houseclean With a 50 lb. Leonard white porcelain lined 8 door ■ hat. He would stand better in Con­ of snow water and rainfall. 50 lb. - Leonard 4op icer with Avhite enameled model, with wire shelves^ $41.50. necticut if he would not use such Sian caviar look like fried potatoe.s-1 lining and -wire shelf, $25.50. “ Extensive reforestation in the in a season of over production. | •generalizations as ‘‘New England” long run, by retarding the run-off. ROYAL Imagine the figure that could be | 75 ib. Leonard 3 door model with white por­ when he means, as a matter of will supplement the artificial engi­ celain lining, $46.50. succccpfully demanded for sliad, if i • After, too, you can keep 50 lb. Leonard apartment model with ice fact, Massachusetts specifically, and neering work. Every dollar expend­ (that r.i-istocratic cousin nf ‘ p low-1 your home as sweet and chamber at top but door in front, 2 wire shelves only part of that. ed in reforesting denuded land whjte enameled l|^ing, $24.75. ^ . 100 lb. Leonard 4 shelf model, front icer with I ly lierring had no more bones in j fresh as the day you finish­ will return with Interest througli white porcelain lining, $56.50. j him than a, squidT-or carried them, ed. cleaning— with a Royal. the sale of forest products and wa­ UNFORTUNATE JURORS. j all in two pieces, -oii tlie oui.side, $10 for your old cleaner in 75 lb. Leoiiard'apartment model, s ^ e coh- It is something of -a question, ter power and stimulation of indus­ 75 lb. Leonard Cleanable,"'3 door model, with ! like an oyster. Would iwr. dollars' exchange for a Standard structioh as above, $28.75. French gray porcelain lining, $59.75. -nowadays, whether it is worse to be try. Flood prevention will come .'is .buy a shad in 'that V W n.ld model; $13 towards a Super by-product without actual cost.” Royal. Easy terms, i| you the defendant, in a criminal case, five— or ten’.’ Not so. Then would, 50 lb. Leonard 3 door model, icing from fro^t, 100 lb. Leonard Cleanable, 3 door model, It is to be hoped that the voices wish. or a Juror. One is almost led to tho all the shad go to the oi! barons,' with white enameled lining and 3 shelves $3^.50 French gray porcelain lined, $69* of the apostles of reforestation will suspicion that there is a sort of the lottery kings and the bootleg- tacit conspiracy on foot to make not be wholly lost in the louder gers. Nary one would the artisan, the business of jury service so uu- chorus of those who see hope for the professional man or the store­ palatable as to bring about the the Mississippi only in gigantic en­ keeper get his teeth upon. gineering contracts. abandonment of the jury system al­ Blessed are the bones in a shad. together. "WATKINS BROTHERS, Inc. It Is,no longer possible for a EXCLUSIVE REPRESENTATIVES FOR CRAWFORD AND CHAMBERS RANGES citizen to serve on a jury in a capi­ INTERESTING. ' NEAVS STORY. tal case, provided the defense has Very interesting is the caafe of; One thing about the Navy that money enough to put up a stiff le­ Valentine Gebhardt, twenty-five j gets our goat is the calm placidity gal fight, with any degree of physi­ year old married bookkeeper o tjo f it in the presence of a news cal comfort, let alone peace of New York, lyho is charged with; story. Here we have the Navy’s FuheMU Dfrectort mind. In almost any such case grand larceny. I cable between Seattle and Ketchl- Juror No. 1, whoever he may be. Finding himself in sudden pos-* can, Alaska, discombobulated for a Is automatically sehtenced to prac­ session of something more than a month, with the Navy’s cable ship tical imprisonment for a number of color scheme that the company thousand dollars in cash— the hunting trouble, all followed by of a conductor, rear flagman, two days, even before the trial begins, bought last week. Perhaps this telephone and telegraph linemen, Arm’s payroll which he had jUst the revelation that the ship, the ace of locotnotives is In Chicago. waiting for the rest of the panel to a car inspector and two mechanics, drawn from bank— the young man Delwood, had finally managed to If so. It’s promptly ordered to a sergeant of railroad police and be made up, with most of his rein­ ran off with the money on Friday. bring up the cause of the wreck- Washington. So is the latest and two of hlg meh. The linemen are forcements similarly sentenced for He went to White Plains and then j age, a dead whale. The whale r a i u best of all compartment-obsqrva- ready to hop off the train and tap shorter periods. tion cars, and of dining cars. The a wire .in event of trouble, the car -And tib n to Bridgeport,, paying his way out wasn’t dead when it got tangled up same method Is'used jn selecting Then the trials themselves are inspector and his menyare ready of his own funds and keeping the with the cable, not by a lot. It was the personnel. to cope with draw-heaQl..air line, (unconsciously prolonged. At least This Is the first of a series of payroll intact in his pocket. After so lively that it bit through first On a short trip like that to New steam line or hot box aKflcultleS three daUy articles telling Just York during which President three times as many hours are con­ being away a little more than 24; the iron armor of the cable, then and the railroad cops , ’iWlI help sumed in presenting the evidence what happens when the presWent Coolidge. addressed the United keep the crowd away if a stop is hours, realization and remorse vis-j througlx the heavy gutta-percha of the United States decides to go Press dinner, some 35 or 40 per­ forced. ._ • ). -•; y G randm a as there is the slightest real reas m ited him. He telegraphed on Sat­ sheathing and then through the somewhere on the train. sons generally go along of whom .^Meanwhile every precaution has ■for. And finally, when a single urday to his boss that he had the cable core, in no less than eight about 20 are correspondents. Mr. h^n taken along the The Juror succumbs to the physical and and Mrs. Coolidge are always ac­ payroll and would bring it back. By RODNEY DUTCHER engine and .the president’s car nervous strain, as in the case now different places. companied by Dr. John P. Coupal, Then he took a train for home. He Washington, May 10.— When* have been ' thoroughly overhauled halted in Hartford, a disaster has And the Navy didn’t even know Colonel Sherwood A. Cheney and In the first place, of course. Og had all the firm’s money, untouch­ John Gooch obtains his wife’s per­ Captain Wilson Brown, respective­ occurred that threatens to undo it had a story to give out. The tale mission to go to New York he buys ordinary trips over eastern lines; ed, when he was arrested. ly the presidential physician, mili­ no pilot engine is needed to pre^ iJ 1. the whole proceeding, to say noth­ i merely oozed, after being incor- himself a ticket and boards a train. tary aide and naval aide. The question is, is this young | porated In an official report But when Calvin Coolidge takes cede aqd test the track-, as the X ing of the wretched experience to Six^ secret service sleuths ’ are man guilty of a crime. He intended ! the same trip It’s a major opera­ railroad always has; another reg­ the jurors, of having to remain tion In railroading. detailed. Two travel ahead of ular passenger train . a few min­ were quite a l e ^ e d about mother. She wouldn’t to be, beyond question. But is it| ------the party to teach local plain­ locked up for an entire week, utes ahead traveling on. schedule* eat, was terribly constipated, bilious, and seemed to really a criminal offense to incon­ The story of W*iat happens when clothes men their duties after the All along the line, relay engines awaiting the sick man’s recovery. the- president goes traveling is all be fading fast W e thought it due entirely to her 86 years venience somebody by delaying fori train pulls in. The other fouh are ready— in Trenton, Philadek Far be it from a layman to at­ the more interesting because he is stay with the president. During phia, Wilmington and Baltimore/ of age. But a nei|!hbor brought over a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s a day in the delivery of a valuable I ’a man of simple tastes and puts on tempt to Instruct the courts lij night trips one sits through until •Wrecking crews are kept manned Syrup Pepsin and it was reidly remarkable how she picked right thing? j little dog. Althou,gh no new gold- morning, his eyes constantly upon full strength and prepared for ac­ their wisdom, ^tit in a system of plated rails are laid and ' eastern up, and now she can even dance around with her g i^ d - Suppose that he had planned the [ the corridor outside the door to tion. On the New York-Washing* jurisprudence .where judges, on railroad trains do not- stand at at­ the president’s compartment. chUdren. Now we are never without Syrup Pepsin in theft of that payroll in advance— | ton. presidential run, the engtaecir- occasion, do not hesitate either to tention for hours like automobiles That comprises the official party — an old-timer with perfect record the house.” (Name and address furnished upon request) had made up his mind on Thursday when the fire wagons dash by, the take a case away from a jury alto­ When I am dead and over me unless the president takes along a -r*-and the rest of the train crew that he would run off with it on bright April president gets more real service friend or two such as Prank are changed at Philadelphia, so Regulates Bowels o f Old Folks gether or to tell that body w'nat than a drunken millionaire a"; a Friday, had figured out his course Shakes out her rain-drenched Stearns. that the personnel will always -be Dr. Caldwell’s S ^ p P^sin is So palatahle,,sets so verdict it shall bring in— as is done hair. waiter’s convention. The president’s train Is made In detail. Surely in that case the When It appears that Mr. a t , top strength and not suffei^ well in the stomach, works so ew ly, so gently, so kindly often enough in civil cases— it Though you should lean above me up like this: A special coach for from the strain of unaccustomed Intent to steal would have been at Coolidge is about to Journey out the train crew comes, after the en­ with rid folks as to accomplish its ptffpose without would seem that it might not be broken-hearted responsibility. OK CAU M least as absolute and as deliberate shall not care. amongst his people for speech- gine, then a club car, an open ysec- gripe, pain or other distress. For biliousness, sour . AT AOC I utterly impossible to proceed with making or other worthy purpose, tlon car of upper and lower berths, stomadi, coated tongue, eonat^ation, and the. lassitude, vmetha n _ z i. as in the case that transpired. But Mr. Doc Smithers, veteran chief eleven jurors provided the death or I shall have peace, as leafy trees a compartment car and finally, the of...... childten, parents or those ^ hi die eventaf tag of Me, Syrup suppose again that in this suppositi­ key-whac^r of the White House president’s own observation car Peptia la recommended everywhere. It ia ioli an druggists. disability of one oicirred after the tious case of the Thursday deci­ are peaceful symip telegraphic force, hastens to tele- with Its half dolten compartments;' For a fn o trial bottle tend name and address to taking of evidence had begun. When rain bends down the pjione the railroad office and an­ sion he had changed his mind im­ bough. and drawing rooms. 'I’he club and Pepsin Stirup Campanil,'Montios^ lU^tois. repsiN And If It Is not possible to do so mediately after drawing the money nounce a tentative SQhedule. next two cars are used by corre-’ And I shall be more silent and . Pick Beat Equi^uent iinder present law, then present law and had returned to his office with COld^hear*pd spondents and the president sel­ The railroad promptly scans Its dom lekves his own except when ft , ^ \ biost assuredly ought to be chang­ the payroll— cert^nly no one would Than you are now. equipment and Its personnel. e d . — Sara Teasdale: “ I Shall Not dining car Is inserted. ' ‘ - Pehst ddy of St. Antoninus. .have thought of charging him with Care.” Where’s that new engine with the Special Train Crew Centennial exposition opened la latest Improvementa and the trick /The special train crew consists ' Fhllsdelphit. 1876. ■-j'; .-PTN

I PAGE FTVB ''l l MANCHE^ER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 192T*

iHllillillillllllllllllllllllltlillllllllllllllilllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIHHIlllllillllllt be announced later. Mr. Warren will sail for Europe after the close HEBRON of the school, to spend the rest of fc PRIVATE the summer. On account of his Sm loch. plans it was necessary to hold the T^e .Young Women’s club school earlier in the summer than Ita'last meeting at the home of Mrs. jJj F M N C E Ira C. Turshen in Amston. The The Congregational church in Ppbgram was appropriate to Moth­ the Center has fallen into line and -m- ers’ Day. is now holding -ts services on day­ '■Of pupils from Hebron- attending light saving time, a vote having thte Windham High schppl, four teen taken by its members to that, "’’f s ^ . names are listed as standing on the effect with only one dissenting, ^ ' < W W V\A- honor roll, maintaining 80 per cent^ voice. This is the first year sinde HOUSE’ S POPULARmr >* ' , * * or over in four subjects. They’ the daylight saving ordinance came are: freshmen, Anna Monsy; soph.- before the public that the church omores, Frank Garbich, Homer has taken a favorable stand on Hills; juniors, Charles Garbich. the subject. The sexton, wishing or easier CONTEST An error recently in this news to be early enough rang the first column made it appear that the: bell at 7:30 standard time, rousing hour for opening the library Tues­ some people from their Sunday l>ettcr Free Trip to Paris. ^ 1 Vote with I* . day afternoons had been changed. morning naps to wonder where the The hours are as usual, from 3 to fire was. The bell has usually 25c Purchase. 5 p. ml on Tuesday afternoon, the been rung at 9:30 and should hp.ve only chan,ge being that the library been rung an hour earlier to com­ ironing fsrmJt I ?%S*- will be closed Tuesday evenings ply with the changed time. The C. Anderson ...... , 2740 and Friday afternoons until fur­ sexton explained that so many 110] ther notice. kinds of time confused him. J. Pentland...... — 2471 ■ The naftie of Billy Hudak was omitted from the list of those rep- j tembeiatiue i F. Cervini ...... 1156 resenting the schools of the town in 'the recent spelling contest. Bil-1 aim E. B allsieper...... 856 ly was the best speller from the Center district. | ■^^OBODY pretends John Olson ...... 615 Miss Helen Gilbert spent the BAYER A S m that ironing’s fun. week-end at her Hebron home. It’s something that has David Heatley ...... 495 Mr. and Mrs. George Hardy who to be done — like calling up the grocer or wash­ have spent several months with H .H o w e...... 390 Mr. and Mrs. Hart E. Buell have PROVED SAFE ing the dinner dishes. returned to their home. The im­ _ • C. L. Hansen ------348 provement in Mr. Buell s health But ironing can be made easier ^— more pleasant continues. , ^ Take without Fear as Told — with a Westinghouse Automatic. This iron is W. M cLean...... 323 < /'■>> E. Austin Warren, an instructor in English at Boston University, more than just an electric iron; it’s an Autotna tic H .S .0 1 d s...... 249 in “Bayer” Package Electric Iron. What does that mean? It means spent the week-end with friends S : A Gold Star Mother decorating the gra,ve’ of lier son in an American here. ^ that this iron always stays at the right heat. It Peter F r e y ...... 182 inliitary cemetery where tiiousauds of warriors died while fighting in Miss Clarissa Lord spent the means that you don’t have to test the iron to see northern France and Belgium. week-endkat her Hebron home, re­ if it’s hot enough, or pull the plug out to let it cool E. S w an son ...... 176 turning to Storrs’ college Sunday to Romangne— a pilgrimage of rev­ down a little. You don’t have to lift up from your afternoon. A. E. M cC ann...... 157 erence. work because the iron’s too hot, or press down This is the 27th chapter in the American Caretaker E. Austin Warren officiated as story of a fonner doughboy who is Walter B. Shields, once of Rich­ organist at St. Peter’s church, on because it’s too cool. The automatic control takes J. B re e n ...... 150 revisiting France as a corresiK)nd- mond, Va.. is the caretaker at Ro- Sunday and led the singlDig. Mr. care of that. ent for (Your Paper) and an ad* Warren, who is dean of St. Peter’s magne. He keeps a daily record of school, made his visit here at this Tance guard of the “ Second A. E. all his visitors. The names of count­ For easier ironing hours, and better re- F.” time in order to make arrange­ less Americans are written on the ments about the school for the 8ulte — get a Westinghouse Automatic pages of the great book In the lob- present summer. It has been Iron. IWED CHAPTER XVH bv. The last name recorded was practically decided to have it open that of Capt. J. M. DeWeese of ,n O N FRl At Romangne— In the Argonne. on Sunday, the 19th of June and Louisville, Ky., “ on leave from Does not affect SUN Hues The road winds between two roll­ continue for two weeks. The THU Honolulu and reporting to Chey­ schedule of studies has not been the H eart I \lfestin^h0iise 3/^T ing hills . . . on the right Is the enne, Wyo.” definitely decided upon and will caretaker’s house . . . on the left But Shields keeps no personal Unless you see the “ Bayer Cross” I IR O N records of the French who come to on package or on tablets you ire a sweep of white crosses flashing Romagne. They do not sign the reg­ clean In the sunlight. Every state not getting the genuine Bayer ister. Their visits are recorded only In the Union Is represented by Its PANSY PLANTS Aspirin proved safe by millions crosses here, for here rest the re­ in numbers. 7,000 Mastodon Pansy Plants in and prescribed by physicians over “ February 1, 1927— (26).’’ I GETYOURl mains of those soldiers of the First bud and bloom. Call and select tv.’enty-five years for “February 2, 1927— (38).” your favorite colors direct from the Colds Headache A. E. F. who fell in the battles for “February 3, 1927— (16).” 1 IRON this almost Impenetrable region. beds. Neuritis Lumbago A Change That Will Do A Shrine 'Thla Year Toothache Rheumatism. f i l l The victors of Exermont. of Som- And so the record runs. Thou­ merance, of Buzancy, Uannevoux Anderson Greenhouse Neuralgia Pain, Pain sands of French people come every Each unbroken “ Bayer” pack­ and Dun . . . the heroes of a ti­ year, pay their unostentatious re­ 158 Eldridge St. Phone 2124 tanic conquest . . . their objective age contains proven directions. spects, and depart. Many are dress You G ood reached. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost ONLY $6.75 Three women, dressed all In ed all In black, as the widows to- :few cents. Dru.gglsts also sell dav. Romagne is a sacred objective Not all of us can have different shoes for every day in black, are walking slowly, in single- .Jjottles^of 24 and 100.— Adv. if you trade in your old iron. still. . ^ the week— but all of us should have at least two pairs of file, up a lane among the crosses. $1.00 A MONTH = They are French widows. Two of I Romagne is in the Argonjfe,' not FOR THE LADIES 75c d :) w n . business or work shoes, and sport shoes for “ After far from Exermont, and Som'mer- the women lost their husbands In n • I New lifts of hours.” battles along the Somme. One lost ance. and Buzancy, Dannevous and two sons in the Champagne sector. Dun. To its 14,000 graves will come \ n p p 1 Q l leather or rubber WilHam KaneU A change of shoes is good for both the feet and the thousands of the American Legion­ U p w v lu l £qj. your wooden They have no graves to visit be­ shoes—you’ll get better service from both, that way. cause the casualties that have af­ naires when they arrive in France heel shoes, neatly put on for General Building, I The Manchester Electric Co. | fected their lives are listed as “ Un­ this September. I 861 Main Street. Phone 1700 | Black or Tan Oxfords. known.” But, on two occasions Tiiuinuiimiiiiiiiiiiiiinimiimimniiiiniiiimimimiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiii every year, tlieymake a pilgrimage-' TOMORROW’ ; Songs of 1927. 25c Contractor and Mason Ladies Soles, sewed 90c. Co-Operatives $7.50 to $9.00 519 Center Street. Tel. 1776 received sufficient credit for some Men's Soles, .sewed $1.23. reason or other. . . .Perhaps it was Selz because Stallings wrote another SELWITZ . I Will Finance Your Building Advertise in The Evening Herald-lt Pays war scenario for /lolb ’wood. Selwitz Block, 10 Pearl St. During Construction. $6.00 to $8.00 Saw John Ringling about town. . . . But, strange to behold, he House’s was not behaving a bit accordir,g to ancient tradition of circus folk. $5.00 to $8.00 . . He was up in the 57th street , I art belt. . . . And; later on. I Sport Oxfords for Sport. New York, Mav 10.— See-sawing i found that this inember of the ^ ^ T, ' T . TJo,. I Ringling Brothers (count them, up and down Broadway I sa^ Hai-; prowling about the Well Trimmed Lawn with a “Keds” for Whole Family. ry Lauder in a supper club.. . And j collection and had some wag related the tale that Sir, a Lippi for ?1600 and a Buster Brown’s for Boys and Girls. Harry had arrived and, picking up | century portrait of Petrarch the bill of and noting the |g5(3_ _ _ . W hich, doubtless, cover charge, commented in ,gig p. x. Barnum best Scotch: "If yer na mindin . I H ! in pig casket, hae my dinner wi'out any cover.” I GILBERT SW’AN. . . . But then there are so man;.- j Coldwell Lawn Mower C E. House Son, Inc. such tales about Sir Harry. Saw Ed Howe in from Kansas to | Our 28th Year Handling the Same Make of Mower. he banqueted by prominent Man­ ARTESIAN WELLS X363a06X3C9C9£5CS63£363«C5£^^ hattanites. . . . And, somehow, in the formality of exclusive hotel at­ Drilled Any Diameter— Ideal Model 22 Power Mower mosphere it seemed anything but a Any Depth Any Place Ideal Model 30 Power Mower Similar in construction to Mod. 30, birthday party, though all made but designed for the ordinary home every effort to push informality through the gilded doorways. . . . Charles- F Volhert Width of cut 30 inches. owners lawn. Width of cut 22 inches. Saw Charles Journal stepping | Blast Hole Drilling PLUMBING S1XTUBES from a fine looking car and saun- j Speed 2% miles per hour. Capacity; 3 to 4 acres per day. Test Drilling for Foundation Price alone should never govern either the selection of th* teriug into a certain cafe. . . And. Cutting capacity 5 to 7 acres per day. Ambassador, if you have never heard Charley’s Water Systems fixtures or the plumber to do the work. Assurance of good ^a,* name before, know then that he is 16 inch, $14.00; 18 inch, $15.00. terial and workmanship is certain only when, there is no falsa. “ some punkins” about Broadway, Pumps for All Purposes. Power— Single cyl., 4 cycle engine Ollfplipcc economy in buying plumbing and when good Judgm«int selepts being the highest priced and best Tel, 1375-5. with autom. governor, air cooled. En­ 16 inch, $11.75; 18 inch, $12.23. the men to Install it. known head waiter in this man’s i town. . . . Which means. of | HIGHLAND PARK P. 0. closed oil tight housing. Newpofftj course, that his income is doubtless j 16 inch, $10.00; 18 inch, $10.50. considerably more than that of i JOSEPH C. WH.SON many of the guests. . . . And they ; Price S375 Delivered Knickerbocker, 28 SPRUCE STREET. TELEPHONE «4l' tell me this maestro of the dining j 16 inch, $14.75; 18 inch $15.75. halls started a place of his own last i Typewriters winter and defied all traditions, in j V'VVNXVVNA.N.i that he had no music, no dance | All makes. Sold, rented, ex< floor and served no liquor, return- 1 changed and overhauled. Interstate ing to that fine tradition of dining j Special Discounts to Students. for the purpose of eating, and that i High Wheel, B. B. he did a mighty business with this i icDovation. . . . 1 Telephone 821 16 inch, $13.00 ...... 18 inch $14.00 Saw Senator Capper, whose sev- j eral publications are mighty in the ! mid-west, stepping about the annu­ Kemp's Music Planting Time al newspaper convention and, they i Colonial do say that nine out of ten New Yorkers when questioned on the House i First class low wheel B. B. Light for ter­ subject have never heard of the , race work. Hardy Capper publicatioiv;. . . Yet had the senator or any of his state folk 16 inch, $10.50 18 inch, $11.00 confessed to knowing nothing of Manchester New England Grown The New Yorker, let us say, Man­ hattanites would scornfully refer to LAKEWOOD A. them as “ hicks” and such. . . Saw Maxwell Anderson, whose Best all ai’ound ball bearing mower to be ~ Nursery Stock play, “ Saturday’s Children,” they GreenStore had at the price. Guarantee ' tell me, will get the Pulitzer prize, Just to remind that we carry and I hope so for here is a young 18 inch, $12.25 We warrant every mower against me­ ROSES man who has long devoted himself in stock to worthy creatioru . . . And I re­ Fertilizers chanical defects and to work perfectly and FRUITS member the time out In San Fran­ cisco when he was writing editor­ Feeds JEWELL give satisfaction. HEDGING ials for an afternoon newspaper and Best low gi'ade mower on the market. a most conservative paper it was. Seed Potatoes EVERGREENS . . . And Anderson one day put 16 inch, $8.75 This Is the Way We Sell Them some liberal thought into the col­ Shingles (Red Gedar) ORNAMENTAL TREES umns and met with dignified re­ Clapboards Take one, try it, and if not satisfactory buke, whereupon he kissed the Lawn Edger and Trimmer ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS plac^ farewell ana came to Manhat­ Roofing Paper return it. tan with his family. Landscape Advice FREE. And for a long while It was "not Builders’ Hardware 8 inch cut, $10.50 so good," simee his esthetic Im- l)ulses took him to editing a*poetry Paints, White Lead, magazine. JusUtry to raise aTaml- Linseed Oil MANCHESTER NURSERIES ly on a poetry magazine. .. . So Our low prices on same will he took to writing editorials bn The C. E. Wilson & Co. World and there he met Laurence surprise you. 302 Woodbridge Street, Maiichestri:, CoiRi. Stalliugs, who was running a book review column, and together tfiey PHONE 74 file F. T. BUSH Phone 1100 wrote, "What Price Glory?” a play - • for whlclr^ it se'embfi^o Dt’eli thb An­ derson half of the combine never W . Harry Englisuid m A h iJIj m riiti M llii irllti ------* r ------

\ ...... PAGE SIX MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, ITJESDAY, MAY 10, 192T.

<8— dog, and becomes the father of a THE GREAT WAR TEX “WINGS OF THE STORM” litter of fine puppies. YEARS AGO TODAY ■ . : ( '...-V -r,.; I With the advent of the puppies. Thunder seems to realize his re­ (By United Press) IS FULL OF THRILLS sponsibilities and becomes a leader Sour Stomach May 10. 1917 among his own kind, fearless and Senate defeats the press cen­ alert. sorship item In the Espionage William Russell and Dog Star Bill. "Phillips Milk of Magnesia” Senate and House conferees In Circle Theater Picture. eliminates from selective draft ‘TRISCO SALLY LEVY” Better than Soda bill the Harding amendment Probably the most picturesque which would have authorized the kennels ever seen In » motion pic­ IS A ROARING FARCE Instead of soda hereafter take a sending of four regiments of vol­ ture provide, the locale of one of little “ Phillips Milk of Magnesia” in unteers to France under thc the most Interesting and amusing water any time for indigestion or command of Col. Koosevel;. sequences in “ Wings of the Storm,” Bour, acid, gassy stomach, and re­ which is the feature at the Circle Humor and Drama Combine to theater tonight and tomorrow'. Make State Picture One of MAY-TIME SALE lief will come instantly. For fifty years genuine “ Phllllpa Featured in this picture are, Wil­ liam Russell, Virginia Browne Best— Sally O’Neill Stars. Milk of Magnesia” has been pre- Faire and Reed Howes. Russell is ■crlbed by physicians because it R. W . Joyner Winsome Sally O’Neill, as overcomes three times as much acid well known to followers of he-man pictures, for he has been one of the Irish as the lakes of Killarney, has In the stomach as a saturated solu­ screen favorites for many years. His one of the most unusual roles ever Smart Sport N e w tion of bicarbonate of soda, leaving Contractor and supporting cast is e.xcellent, it hav­ given an actress in “ Frisco Sally the stomach sweet and free from ing Virginia Browne Faire, who en­ Levy,” in •which she is sho-wlng at all gases. It neutralizes acid fer­ deared herself to millions as the the State theater tonight and to­ mentations In the bowels and gent­ Builder fairy, Tinker Bell, in “ Peter Pan.” morrow. Sheis cast as the daughter ly urges the souring waste from The photoplay centers about of Irish-Jewish parents, . and has the system without pursing. Be- Thunder, who is the runt of a lit­ two lovers, oae of them of the tribe Bides. It Is more pleasant to take Alteration and Repair Work ter of puppies born to a blue-rib­ of Abraham and the other a boy than soda. . Insist upon “ Phillips.’’ Given Prompt Attention. bon winner in the kennels of Anita whose forefathers fought with COATS SUITS Twenty-five cent and fifty cent bot­ Baker, a noted sportswoman. The Brian Born. tles, any drugstore. "Milk of Mag­ Sally O’Neil as the piquant little Residence 71 Pitkin Street. action of the story unfolds the nesia” has been the U. S. Regis­ daughter of a Jewish . father and for the outdoor days, of tweed.- Also Velvetine Jacket and white flannel Sciiilli Manchester. Phone character development, as w’ell as tered Trade Mark of The Charles the physical development of the Irish mother, has one of the great­ Dress Coats of twill, fur collared. skirt. Jacket is silk crepe lined. H. Phillips Chemical Co. and Its weakling, after he goes Into the for­ est roles she has played since her predecessor Charles H. Phillips ests. He lives in the open, finds his hii; in “ Mike.” She’s hoydenish, ilnce 1875.— Aclv, Herald Advs. Bring Results mate in a beautiful white police tomboyish, captivating— and still May-time Sale Price May-time Sale Price with the capability of intense emo­ tion, as the remarkable scenes showing her homecoming to her sick mother demonstrate. Sally O’Neil is a real find as an actress. Another member of the cast who more than distinguishes himself is $ W h y Tenen Holtz, the character actor, 17.95 playing her father. As the humble proprietor of a tailor shop, he •mingles screaming comedy with some very remarkable bits of emo­ tional e.xpression' in fact, his role is one of the mo'.t difficult ever at­ tempted. and his long career with Bertha Kalish and Nazimova stood him in good stead. Roy D’Arcy plays a ^ple new to him as Mr. Gold, the rather sheik- ish stock broker, and Charles De­ Delightfully Modish laney is the young Irish traffic po­ GUM-DIPPED TIRES liceman. Smartest WSsar Longer CUT TOWN AUDITS Summer E recently were given the tremendous advantage of having the mammoth INTO TWO PERIODS W Firestone factories brought to us. In Tire Educational Meetings we were shown, by means of motion pictures, charts, tire samples and complete engineer­ According to Francis G. Lee, one ing data, the details of Firestone tire design and construction— and how Fire­ of the two town auditors, the town Some arc combined with lace, in Frocks the foremost shades of the season. stone and Oldfield tires and tubes are made in the world’^s most efficient and books will be audited in a different manner this year. Instead of audit­ of heavy silk crepe, long or short economical rubber factories. ing the entire year at one time, the sleeves. Newest pleated effects. auditors will make two jobs of it, May-time Sale Price Firestone pioneered the original low-pressure tire and made it practical by taking six months at a time. The Gum-Dipping. The motion pictures showed us how the cords of the carcass purpose is to insure a very com­ May-time Sale Price plete check. are dipped in a rubber solution, thoroughly saturating and insulating every Mr. Lee and John Limerick, the fiber of every cord with rubber. Simple demonstrations and tests illustrated the other auditor, will start on the ac­ count of the first six months of the great advantage of this process, which supplies the extra strength to withstand fiscal year Thursday. The other the extra flexing strains of low-pressure construction— on^ of. ^he reasons why auditing period will be in August. Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires are establishing such unheard-of mdeage records. Low W e learned why the Firestone Balloon Tread I gives extra safety, comfort and long wear. W ej Cash Prices were shown why Firestone,' ifronh: the vefV begin-! Announcenrent has just been made-- casual Jiere only last falU will got ning, designed and continue to use the round COOLIDGEAND that the German government hasT htftA^Yor th* summer, leaving the Generali H OLDFIELD Balloon Tread, minimizing “shoulder breaks”, so leased a spacious house at .Man­ embassy staff here. destructive to tires. Excess rubber at the edges of chester, an hour’s ride from Boston, Minister Bostrom of Sweden vUl Auto Repairing and as a summer embassy and that Am­ TIRES a Balloon Tread is wasted— actually detrimental to Lift O ff-N o Pain! sail in June for the homeland, >av- EMBASSIES PICK bassador Maltzan will move his ing his legation staff in Washing­ Overhauling 3 0 x 3 Fabric $ 5 .8 5 tire mileage. In the Firestofie Tread the small staff there immediately after his re­ ton. 8HELPO.VS GARAGE 3 0 x 3 NElGms! higher than ever before— prices are will transfer the British embassy to The New York Consul general will OldSield Tubes are lowest in history. Buy nowl Pick New England For Manchester shortly after his return look after consulate matter.? from also priced very low from the West. The British have the New York Office. The Lithuanian legation also Made In the great economical Vacation Sites. made their summer home at Man­ Flrostone Factories at Akron nwH chester for several seasons. may be closed for n season, as Min­ WeCanServeYouBetter ister Bizauskas will be' leaving carry the Standard Tire Warranty Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a lit­ Minister van Reijen, the new Dutch envoy, likewise has chosen Washington permanently in a .short and Save You Money tle “ Freezone” on an aching corn, ■Washington.— 'iVith summer just time and seveial weeks probably instantly that corn stops hurting, Manchester for his summer domi­ around the corner, members of the cile. Thus there will be quite a lit­ will elapse before his successor ar­ then shortly you lift it right off rives. with fingers. diplomatic colony here are busily tle diplomatic colony there. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle engaged just now making their Minister Cretziane has leased a Summer plans for the Hungarian legation are uncertain. of "Freezone” for a few cents, suf­ plans for the heated term. villa at Newport, Rhode Island, for Conkey Auto Co. ficient to remove every hard corn, A goodly number of the embas­ the Rumanian legation’s summer Depot Sq. Filling Station soft corn, or corn between the toes, abode. and the foot calluses, without sore­ sies and legations will be closed The Best Coal 20 E. Center, South Manchester 241 North Main, Manchester and temporary summer domiciles The Danish legation will summer ness or irritation.— adv. at Bar Harbor, Maine, where Min­ will be establislipd at Eastern re­ Lov/er Spring Prices. sort colonies. The intensely torrid ister Brun has been going for sev­ Today*s Best Schaller’s Garage weather that marks Washington eral seasons. Fill your bin now for nex Robinson Auto Supply from mid-June to mid-September is Minister Smiddy of the Irish Winter. Monuments too much for most of the diploma­ Free States plans to spend the sum­ Radio Bet Center and Olcott Streets. 415 Main, South Manchester Closing out entire stock. Re­ tic set and all those who can con­ mer “ seeing America” on a trans­ continental tour. You’ll make no mistake. I tiring from this line. Good veniently get away for the most of that season do so. j chance to get monument for French Are Waiting SWEDISH MALE CHORUS— G. E. Willis & Son, Inc your plot at wholesale. Call Fiirtliermore with President Summer plans oi the French em­ WCCO. Madden Brothers Landa’ s Filling Station Coolidge spending his summer at a bassy are awaiting the return from niasjn Supplies. Saturday and Sunday, May camp, probably in the Lake region France of Ambassador Claudel I A Swedish male chorus and solo­ 2 Main Street Phone (V Main Street and Brainard Place. 563 Main, South Manchester 14th and 15th. near Chicago, but certainly at some early in June. ists feature a program from 'WCCO We do lettering on head­ poirit in the mid-West. and with The Belgian embassy will remain at 8:30 p. m. central time on'Tues­ stones in any cemetery. Secretary of State Kellogg probably in Washington ;but it is probable day, May 10. going to his old home in Minnesota that Ambassador de Cartier will go Other picks are: P. J. MoriartY Smith’s Garage for his vacation .tliere will not be to Belgium for the summer. "WIBO, 5 p. m. central time— Re­ Manchester the urgent necessity for the diplo­ Minister Peter of Switzerland al­ cital:— "American Composers.” For Your Car 174 YN est Center, South Manchester mats to stick close to Washington ready has returned to his home WIP, 8 p. m. eastern time— Cape 30 Bissell, South Manchester to keep in touch with the activities country for the summer. The lega­ May (N. J.) chorus. Monumental of this government. They can do It tion staff vlll remain here. WHK, 8:30 p. m. eastern time— just as well in New England as Count (I’Alte, the Portuguese Music “ comldette” — Mac and Len- ■lie re. minister, will go abroad, but the nie. j Clarence Barlow Works Massachusetts Popular legation st-iff will remain in'Wash­ w o e , 8:30 p. m. central time— | Massachusetts seems to be the ington. Anniversary program. 595 Main, South Manchester Oakland Street drawing magnet for the diplomats.. Ambassador Padilla of Spain who A new top, new curtains, slij covers, carpets, glassmobile en THE ROMANCE OF AM ER ICA: John Jacob Astor (8) SKETCHES UY BESSEY closures. Sport Model tops am SYNOPSIS BY URAUCHER A THOUGHT dust covers made to ordiei*, ...... - ■ . The heart knoweth his own bit­ terness.— Proverbs xiv:10. * « « Manchester A guilty conscience is like a Auto Top whirlpool, drawing in all to itself which would otherwise pass by.— W. .K MBSSIIJR Fuller. 115 Oak ST. Phone 1810-

ISI AUTO ELECTRICAL SERVICE .i Astor died March 29, 1848, leaving a fortune esti­ Astor, in his later years liked to have celebrities at Toward the last Astor REPAIR WORK GUARANTEED^' Astor pensioned a man suffered infirmity. His mated at $20,000,000: Of this $18,000,000 went to his table. He befriended Washington Irving, Fitzgreen his son, William, and he bequeathed gifts to his native Halleck, the poet, and other literary meiv ip when to live with him in his old exercise is said to have NORTON age and speak German town of Waldorf, Germany, the city of New York and writing in America was one of the poorest paid pur­ consisted of being rolled ELECTRICAL INSTRUMENT CO., to him. easily in a blanket. various charitable institutions. suits. He enjoyed his beer, a little music and the - OIS27BYNEASERVICE.INC. (Nexti P. T. Bsmum) theater. ______^______— HILLIARD ST,' j PHONE. 1 \v\> NEAR MANCHESTER F reig h t s t a t io n MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY> MAY 10,^1927, PENTLAND GAINS IN TRIP CONTEST

'IVhitey” Anderson Still Holds Lead of Over 200 BOOK OP THE WEEK ] The Herald recommends as I Votes at House’s. the best book of the week, and ' one of the most important books of the year, Thomas Mann's “The Magic Mountain” C. E. House and Son’s “On To (Knopf), a two-volume study by Paris” popularity contest is now Germany’s greatest writer— one third over. “ Whitey” Anderson profound and thought-provok­ holds first place with a total vote ing and, hence, advised to the of 2740 and Jack Pentland is still discriminating reader. pushing him for the lead with a vote of 2471. Frank Cervinl stays in third place but has piled up a Crowning an American poet nice lead over the next man, Earl laureate and wrangling over the [Ballsieper. Cervlnl’s total now x=i Pulitzer prize awards are suffi­ stands at 1186 whereas that of ciently exciting events fpr any lit­ Ballsieper is 856. John Olson, who erary week. got off to a good start in the first Doubtless many a snicker will go ifp at the idea that affairs in the three weeks of the contest, is stand­ world of writing can be exciting; ing still. Harold Hbwe and Walter m it depends entirely on the point of McClean who both started off with view. We have seen thousands a small vote are climbing but they A New cheer the stupidest and most one­ have got to show more speed to get sided • of prize lights. , in the final running. Peter Frey, E. m Swanson and J. Breen, all of whom Xever, it seems to us, was there started off with a good vote the a more irritating-Pulitzer literary first week have been practically at award. Louise Bromfeld took it a standstill since the start. with “Early Autumn” (Stokes). Following is the standing of the But where, oh where, was this first fourteen contestants: prize committee when this same young man wrote “The Green Bay Clarence Anderson ...... 2740 Tree”? They wdit until the young Jack Pentland...... 2471 author has admittedly plunged in­ Frank Cervini ...... 1186 to an American saga and is some Earl Ballsieper ...... 856 two volumes deep in it before they John Olson ...... g js make their presentation for a nov­ David H eatley...... 495 el that shrieks of the Galsworthy Harold Howe ...... 390 influence to such an - extent that C. L. Hansen ...... 343 to a 73 Year Old Landmark the author is in Paris intent upon W. McClean ...... 323 new styles. H. Olds 249 This in a season that produced Peter Frey ...... 132 “The Time of Man” or “The Ro­ E. S w anson...... 176, mantic Comedians” or “The Or­ A. E. M cC ann...... 157 phan Angel”! J. Breen ...... 150 The surprise of the award list was the selection of Paul Green’s It has been decided by the judges tragic and moving play of negro that all names not registering 100 again, and for no less than the fourth life, “In Abraham’s Bosom” (Mc­ votes or more at the counting next Bride), for dramatic honors. This Monday will be eliminated from, was brou,ght out in book r- form the voting from that time on to the time in four years, Garber Brothers’ furniture establishment has outgrown its physi­ about a year ago, following this finish to the contest. The contest author's short plays also written is now more than one third over for negro casts. Green is a young and there are dozens of entrants and thoughtful dramatist and, we who have a few votes registered, in cal limitations. And this magnificent new entrance is a fitting outward example of are told is writing a novel wTth the their name and have gained none Abraham of the play as the lead­ since. It is apparent now the names ing character. He hails from South of the ones who are in the running one of the greatest expansion programs in the history of Hartford, now practically Carolina. and it is believed that with the The poetry prize went to Leona elimination of many entrants who Speyer's “Fiddler's Farewell” have few votes the voting will cen-: completed . Garber Brothers is now more than twenty times as large as it was in (Knopf). Mrs. Speyer was a for-, mer violinist of note, giving - up ter upon the leading candidates., music to write and then trans­ planting her music in her verse. July, 1923 . . . when this institution was started. ^ She is a woman of wealth and her salon on Washington Square i3 a Arthur A. Knofla t gathering place- for artists and writers. Her talent runs largely to musical verse, though in some 875 Main St. of her ballads there is fine fan­ tasy and humor. She long since Insurance and Real Estate. has been accepted as one of our To have made this great stride in so short a leading poets. 1 As this is written there are in­ time has been no mere accident of circumstances. To have grown from so inconspic-' numerable critics prepared to award Edw-iri^ Arlihgtibn Robinson’s “Tristram” a place beside the AlC.H.Tryoii’8 uous a beginning into-such a large institution has been no mere freak of chance. It greatest poems in the English lan- gUEige. 'There are others Avho will Sanitary Market say that “Tristram” is the great­ est poem to be written by an Amer­ has been due in large measure to certain ideas and ideals and to the high spirit of ican. And there is some justifica­ tion for all claims. Robinson, Phones 441-442 whose place for some years has our co-workers, and m a far greater measure has it been due to the splendid re­ been secure, is engaging the pres­ ent public clamor largely thanks to pne of those enterprising new QUALITY AND LOW PRICES sponse and loyalty of the public. book distributing concerns. It happens that "Tristram”, is the third selection of the Literary Guild of America and that— heav­ Special For a Few Days, Our en be praised—a book of noble Best Coffee 43c lb. blank verse, of great lyric beauty, Liquid Veneer, 1 60c Bottle, 1 will be forced into the hands of fif­ 15c Bottle, Value 75c, Sale 60c. ty thousand or more readers. Strictly Fresh Eggs from Atkin Through such happenings may Farm, 35c doz. come that long-augured rennais- White Loaf Flour, 1-8 bbl. Sack, ance of general taste. And some 91.19. readers, their appetites whetted by Peerless Pastry, 1-8 bbl. Sack, this meeting with Robinson, may 95c. turn to his New England elegies— Heinz New Salad Dressing, 25c which we happen to prefer since Small, Large Size, 85c. they are more essentially American an seem to us of greater depth and ^^Fremier Salad Dressing, Large, Growth Importance than the recasting of Heinz Sweet Midget Pickles, 55c that romantic Tristram-Islot, re­ Bottle. told through the a,ges. Good Old Cheese, 48c lb. Were it not that we hail with 3 Packages Kellogg Corn Flake, joy any burst of beauty in a taw­ 25c. is an expression of drily careless age, we would be Inclined to protest this or any oth­ Clover Bloom Butter, 57c. er presentation of the sugary-ro­ . .Pure Cider Vinegar, 39c gal. mantic viewpoint of the “nice 1-3 lb. Tunaflsh, 39c can. nineties”.... but why quibble? Virden Peaches, 29c can. Royal Scarlet Com, 18c can. 1 Robinson creates moods and pic­ Carnation JDlk, 11c can. public confidence tures that are and puts Large Bottle Extract, 39c. great imagination into his charac­ Large Cans Tomatoes, 18c. ters. • ••wv.v.yk « He is one of the great poets, doubtlesp, though we would prefer to have him live in his day and his This plain structure, which houses the entire Garber Bros, country. And, again we bow to his Meats We then added 4,000 square feet more; in 1924, 8,000 square New England poems. organization, was built in 1854, just 73 years ago, or seven Native Fowls, 45c lb. feet more; in 1925,15,000 square feet more, making a total of Legs of Lamb, 45c lb. years before the Civil war, by the now great Cheney Silk Mills. Itlb Roast Beef, ’35c lb. 30,000 square feet.... and now we occupy the entire twin build­ 68 Miles Per Gallon Shoulder Roast, 28c lb. It has, since the Cheneys outgrew it, been occupied by several ings of which 60,000 square feet alone is devoted entirely to In Public Test Pork to Roast, 32c lb. Beef Liver, 18c lb. manufacturing organizations.... and therefore-has played no display. Stertfaag Inveation Get. Mintculoui Sausage Meat, 36c lb. Mileage and Starts Native Veal Today small part in the progress of Hartford. Little does one dream, when looking at the unassuming ap- Fords Instantly Veal Cutlet, 65c lb. Loin Veal, 88c lb. . pearance of the exterior.... that the interior is one of the larg­ GET ONE FREE! We chose this building four years ago in which to begin Chie^a, m. — The motor public v u um ed est and most attractive furniture show rooms in America. Man^ H M U r ,J!^ea • Ford Muippcd with the ntw BUack. IV raem tic Crotral m^« 43.8 mila o nnn economical reasons. Occupying then only 00 ^ ctUon ^ (If in in Olticial I^blic T ttt: people who remember this building in years gone by have mar-' “ “ ‘ k " *«»*• A v e n g , in Fruit S,000 square feet. In the fall of the same year it became evi- Sljwilf ■ pcrjcallong breakias world's veled at the change. The change has been amazing! It has been I T h e Bhmcke Cwtrei (s e a d n lr into- Fancy Strawberries, 29c and 85c aent that this space was insufficient for the growing business. «*<» m n a lu m il cow every iew v m k . basket. thrilling to see this old landmark modernized from day to day* 12 }««y»»atcod.to wirt«»ldmtaK>torteiwntly I* *^*?**^ wwove md prcvent eer- Bananas, 10c lb. 1 ben, n ^ h a li oil uid incrcMt tpeed, pep and .Theraowntie Ceotrol tned on CwiilUc Cal. Oranges, 49-59-70c doz, Lifht under Blmcke Licenm—in- 3 Grapefruits, 25c. elMT mre prwf 01 om it. The Inventon want 3 Grapefruits, S.jc. M O eyerywhen ud wUl .end one Control Apples, 75c basket. ** to your eoBununicy; Sile* Fancy .Apples, 45c doz.

m a «»t wfll he n o t at once to anyone who Vegetables Spinach, Native, 80c peck. DAVID CHAMBERS Head Lettuce, 18c. Tomatoes, 3Sc lb. CONTRACTOR Native Apsaragns, 42c lb. 8 lbs. Rhubarb, 25c. FINE EgRSlTURE and Green String Beans, 18c q^adrt. Beets, 8 Bunches for 25c. BUILDER 3 Bunches Carrots, 26c. Native Potatoes, 56c peck. 66 Hollister Street, 2 lbs. Onions, 25c. 0 to th e Manchester, Conn. HARTFORD MAR&TS& First and Second Mortgages HARTPOHfi- aiTanged on all new work. Read Herald Advsi ONE BLOCK FROM MAIN STREET PAGE ETGHt MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, TCESDAYi Ma V io ,’ ! M

MOTHERS TO MEET TALK TO KEPAIR MEN lOWN BUU ORDERED BllDING DiSPEGOR’S REPORT TO HEAR ABOUT TIRES '■:,“ I f you really want to know place one of our magnifi[cent mj^ WITH HRS. WATIHNS tiies, talk to the men who repair ble or.granite PAID BY SELEmra The following report of Building Inspector Edward C. Elliott Jr t-Sfim,” That Is the advice of Diave was accepted by the Selectmen last night: - ’ , ’ Hpusen of Housen’s Service Station sincere and Mnqst€a|itlouB-^& Hon, Board of Selectmen, , - Mrs, C. Elmore Watkins ot South w Oarage. “ We can qulcltly tell Manchester, Conn. In iJ e Let pa Anderson & Noren, G roceries...... Main street will open her hoqie to S»u what kinds of tires are i6i the ? 21.14 Dear Sirs— I herewith submit for yotir approval my report as Build­ sI|op most often for repairs, as well (iiteig£^aw dr

miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|||,|,|„„„„„„|||, See Our Window for One of Our Best Jacquard Vel- Ff /\ Store Fixtures our Suites. Best construction. Good value at $250. I I I of Oiir SrIp PHpp ^ "

We l^thekf ti^ '’'1^ you. 3 piece stripe velour all round 5 4.V. one-ton truck is universally recognized as 5 s a E F ^ ll webbi^ bottom, mohair spring s the world's outstanding haulage unit because it stands i George W . 5 alone in furnishing low cost transportation. S m . formation, reve!^l^e ■ euiiiiMi in = Ford ton trucks, equipped with standard Ford bodies S will be sold at public auction in trade lots to suit, on the premises; beautiful ^pestry. Don’t miss this. , S almost every haulage requirement and in every line S 5 of business where they are used delivery costs are at the - 969-973 Main Street, South Manchester, Conn. H d s H e e n , sold flsewhiire?;^ for s mimmum. = $190. Our lAnali '^rice g Low first cost, dependable performance, and small S S upkeep expense have made Ford trucks the outstanding = s choice of truck users everywhere. = s When haulage units are considered, common sense = Thursday, ^ May 12 I dictates that you standardize on Ford One-Ton Trucks- i For $250 one otiier i stake Body, closed c a b ...... $570.00 deUvered = Don’-t buy until you see this genuine Angora mohair big size suite. Kidney shape - Open Express Body, closed c a b ...... $557.00 delivered 5 A t 1:30 p. m. front. Double stuffed suite, same grade mohair outside. Reversible-cusbkms in an Fixt^es consist of Floor Cases, large quantity sectional shelving, 12 counters, exquisite tapestry pattern. Beauty and style at a moderate price. Characteristics stock tebles, Welch’s revolving clothing cabinet, glass front, 3 sections, mirrors, hat about it that make it a good value at $350.A better buy from us at $250. I Manchester MotorSales Co. I c^e, National Mahogany Cwh Register, Ic to $99.99. Large assortment window dis­ play fixtures. Clothing display forms. Shoe department settees, umbrella c€ise, awn­ i a u t h o r i z e d Ford Dealer. I ings and other equipment of up-to-date men’s clothing and'furnishing store. ‘ I 1069 Main Steeet, South Maneheater I I Opposite Army and Navy Club. 5 i Open Evenings and Sundays. ' ^ By order of the Owner, I Frank J. O’Connor, Manager. Phone 740 5 Sheridan Hotel Building, Majn Street, ' a Manchester MORRIS YOUNG, Auctioneer. fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimiiiiiiniiiiiiiiuiuiijiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiyg \ MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, TDESDAT, MAY 10,19S57.

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Gift Of One DaVs To Help

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I . • Remember tbe Success of this Plan Depends Upon Every Individual Doing His or Her Part in Order to Raise $50,000

What They Eat What Is Behind Each

There were 97,080 meals served which means that 88% of the town could be furnished three meals a day on what is given to the patients at the hospital. Case There were 8,759 loaves of bread used, and allowing only 10 Inches for the The Manchester Memorial Hospital has cared for 1,884 patients during length of each loaf, if placed end to end would reach from the Center to Forest the year: 568 male and 816 female. street, or sufficient to five one-third of a loaf to 30 per cent of the town's whole population. Has any of your relatives been among them? There has been an average of 47 patients a day. There were served 541 dozen of rolls. Their average daily stay has been twelve days. This would give an additional roll to forty per cent, of the town’s popula­ Their total daily care has been 17,105. ^ tion.. .. —;■ . ■ —r-— ~ t : . f , Do you-know what this means? There were 2,620 dozen eggs used or sufficient to provide every man, wo­ It means that at home you would have a person ill for four years and man or child in Manchester an egg for three meals each day. three months. 1,174 oranges were used. This would be sufficient to furnish an ^ orange a The hospital has done this all intone year* day to sixty per cent, o f the whole town’s population. There has been 710 operations performed. ^ This is at the rate of two a day. There was 297^ dozen of lemons used. This would be enough to furnish a glass of lemonade twice a day to all the people in Manche^er during the There has been 4,464 laboratory examinations. four summer months of the year. ■ This means,that there has been twelve of these^exabiinations a day. Butter to the amount of 1,885 pounds were used. This would give each • They may take fifteen minutes, an hour or two hours. Gould your doctor person in town 14-5 ounces of butter a day. , give his time to this? If he did it would take eighteen hours of his time each day. There was 15,969 quarts of milk used. This would give each person in When could he call? Manchester over a pint of milk e^ch day. The hospital takes care of these tests and the doctor takes care of you*’ There was 4,028 pounds of sugar used. Or enough to give every person in These are the days of specialists. Manchester a fifth o f a pound a day. A specialist does the work. There were 278 bushels of potatoes used. This is better than 4 ounces to There has, been 449 X-Ray examinations. . each person in Manchester a day. Each picture must be read. '

There was 12,472 pounds of meat and fish served. This vwuld allow 4 U , Men who make this.their life work does this. ^ ounces of meat or fish a day to all in Manchester. . • All is furnished in addition to bed, clothing and nursing, " /'

WelVorkForYoa364 How It Can be Pone , . • * .1 We Work For You 364 This looks big| but just consider: '•■■a A Cigar costs ...... 15o a day Days. Yoa Work For A deck of Cigarettes cost...... 15c a day Days. You Work For A College Ice costs ...... 15c a day Us One Day. More If A Milk Shake costs ...... 15c a day This means 15 cents for 365 days, giving you Us One Day. More If only one of these items, a total of ^8.75 a year.' Your Conscience Directs All that is asked is '’one day’s pay for the Your Conscience Directs hospital."

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YXXSrS iTBilf , HANCHEStA. '(CONN.) -EVBNfeG ; HCTW,' f ' 'X J LATEST FASHION FEATURB^ -^ T lg M | > I HINTS BY FOREMOST ABOUTLBODT INTERBStora^INtEREi? 'f ^ - S AUTHORITIES WOMEN ?* lj' •?■ ’ » T

P o i ^ e t e d ETHEL Then futid Noy JiliYDUDOYOURCAR

.TreatvTI^SThem and They « j# i ; M in You Better Says yOmG Gust in QJ9^7 bf SewQ^. THIS HA8 HAPPEjnSD special preference, not one ot t]iem I«. . B y’JOSEIPinNB PETTS BIXiLT WBLIiS, NYDA LOMAX and WINNIB 8HBLTOX, emplores had bepn able to break down T. Q.’s invPbyslcal Education, ot tke bis T. «. COBiraS depart­ rigid Impartiality. ’ CoUej^ New York ment atoret are taken into their cmployer’a homh aa hia warda for The name of Dal Romalne was one 7ear> becanae he 'wahta to help never mentioned between them, nor- ■' .“ Meroy! How my feet hurt! And them further ambltlona tnrhich by T. 'Q.. Curtis, but Mrs. Meadows Fth lined to death.” each haa expreaaed. Billy, trho ■Quite naturally. One is very sure tvanta to become a concert vlolin- spoke of him frequently to Billy, lat, la the only one of the three and the girl had the unreasoning to follow the other. And unless we spre blessed ■with the patience of Job that la aerlona, the othera harlas con'victlon that she ^ not alloV i lied to enjoy T. ^ 'a seneroalty. cmr tempers'are probably in as bad Billy la Infatnated with DAL I the other twO girls to forget him ROMAINE, nephew ot HRS. either. Billy had agreed ■wlA Dal, a"'state„as,.our fpet. Abd why? i MEADOWS, the hired hoateaa ot on parting from him in Gqlf^ ‘ ..^Perhaps! because we have never the Cnrtia home, but ahe la deeply takeh time.tO'bo properly introduc­ t . troubled when ahe anapecta that that it would be better if they did 4 he la “plnylns” both her and Win­ not try to ■write frequently. ed; to-those perfectly good members nie Shelton. of our boily.- Jf-Henry knew as ■s Billy tenderly remembera CLAT “More heartaches and misunder­ little .about his car as he knows CURTIS, aon of her benefactor, standings come oqt of a long-dis­ The qualpt, charm of ' this new who haa diainherlted himaelf and about; his: feet'his family would CSj la Ilvlns In the Welle home In n tance correspondende than could chemise of flibwered!,white glove silk thing'twice before, they entrusted poor part of town, workins in the ever be explained away," he had if in'.ltp.'two U^tife pqckets. It is themselves to his ‘ care. Perhaps Trnman factory by day and writ- ins mnalc at nlsht. told her practically, while his eyes trimmed vrith"b|ini}8 of apricot silk. >om» of the rest of US' are like i The sirla. unknown to T. R., and voice caressed her. “Bat—I Henry;. If s6,i^let us get out of his learn that he Intenda to adopt one will not let you forget me." class far. eno,ugh to treat our feet ot them when the year la up and to sain hia altectlona. a aerlea of And he had kept his word.^ There ■with fMrly intelligent respect. r. intrlsnea. inatitnted by Nyda and were roses and a cablegram from For example, let us know that Winnie and cnrlonaly InrolTlns each of our two feet possesses two Mra. Mendown. Dal Romalne. and him awaitihg her in London; in EDDIE BANNING. Nyda’a chnnf- Paris she received a long, whimsi­ •arches: .1 one. the anterior arch, fenr-aweethenrt ot department cal letter, sparingly but thrllllngly running across the front of the atore daya. turn the houae Into a foot, from the base of the big toe hotbed of plottins and achemlnp. studded with terms of endearment. Billy la dlaspated with the whole But her joy in it ■was almost de­ to the base of the fourth and fifth thins and loaea Intereat In her stroyed when she saw an equally toes: the other, the. longit-dinal Tiolln. Becanae ahe haa a nerrona arcb,. goes, lengthwise of the foot, breakdown, ahe lenvea town for a bulky envelope, with Winnie's name from the ./heel , to the base of the month and belleTca In thia time inscribed on it, in those tiny, ahe haa routed Romalne from her AlUKE SUMNER. big toe. The larches are' Nature’s heart. Upon her return, however, printed characters. sbock absorbers. Use thpm prop­ ahe flnda ahe la na much under hia In Rome, a Hindu, fearfully and apcil na ever. Thinkins he would Npbody asks-; very /much any erly and we may walk through plenae Nydii. who haa lied about wonderfully garbed in his natlire more that old questions of “what’s life lightly, buoyantly, without a her ambition to become n klnder- dress, stopped her outside the snrteq teacher. T. R. eqnipa a In'a name?” \ As we read cigarette jar to-the hody;-also without the model achool In hia home where Vatican one day and introduced and cold'cream endorsements, we nagging grinding pain that we in­ two dnya n week Nyda tenchea himself as an intimate friend of flict on. our perfectly loyal and the children ot the cook and realize very ‘ well the commercial; honaekeeper and twina ot a Dal Romalne, with the added ex­ value of a namb. Oanna Walska or willistg feet.. wealthy neishbor couple. Reporta planation that Romalne had in­ Mrs. Harold McCormick will no Why'not give those feet a fair ot her unkindneaa and cnreleaa- chance.' Why not show proper re- neaa reach T. R., and he aplea on structed him to see her and give doubt find what’s in a name as she her one day to learn it this la her a note from him. The two had does business in her new beauty «pect to them by wearing what be­ true. The charpea are confirmed. tea together, Billy self-consciously shop. .YOU -may have 'heard- that longs to them? By wearing shoes When T. Q.. leta Nyda know ot hia with an Inner line conforming to presence In the room, ahe quickly aware of the intense interest of a Mrs. .McCormick . will''manage a becomes the Interested, sweet number of American tourists, but beauty shop with Dr. Serge-Voro- the shape -of the. foot, with room teacher she has posed ns belnp. enthralled with the tales which the noff, the famous gland rejuvenator for the toes,"with a broad low heel NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY high-caste East Indian told her of who makes flappers out o f great-: and flexible arch? Why not learn CHAPTER XLIV Romaine’s life in India. The note grandmothers. , With such names to walk correctly, toeing straight ahead, bearing our weight on the fT^HB first Sunday In June the was a short poem, ■written- in Dal’s and such motives what shekels copperplate characters, in a lan^ they will reap!: A woman - will outer borderp of the feet, toes grlp- newspapers of Colfax carried plpg the ground? And why not give guage which was utterly f^eign to spend her money for proihlsed front page stories which were des­ tbein a few simple exercises all tined to set the great Curtis depart­ the puzzled girl. The Hlncm trans­ beauty -when she won’t spend It for half-soles on her., shoes! their oivn? ment store into a ferment of ex­ lated it for her, smiling inscrut^ ! Mother Saiclde ' iWe can ■wiggle our toes when citement, jealousy and suspicion. bly into her eyes aa he spoke the “ Cinderella glrle off for Europe,” was the way one paper hlazonei Before she jumped out of a we take off opr shoes andr stock­ “ Cinderella Girls oft for Europe tender words of love which Dal had the news. twelfth-story hotel ■iflndow, . Mrs, ings, and' walk about the room with T. Q. Curtis” was the way one dedicated to her. Martha Auerbach, 36, mother of, barefooted. And, in addition, 'we Billy was reading a long, affec­ paper blazoned the news. Another it. The three girls were dra-wn Into short strands of small hut well- two little children, wrote a pota in- can insist, that ,our lo'ng-suffering headline which caused T. Q. Curtis a sort of armed-truce intimacy dur­ matched pearls. In Berlin he al­ tionate letter from Constance Brad­ which she begged her relatives to feet havei, their shard of attention to wince stated boldly: “Modern ing the trip, for T. Q. and Mrs. lowed them to choose tiny, beauti­ ley one morning while the party “please, please, please, never let in bur health examination and that -Midas and foster daughters off for Meadows discouraged their becom­ ful wrist watches, studded with pin sat at breakfast together on a hotel the children, know that it was any­ we get '■ exercises especially pre­ European jaunt.” ing too friendly with other tourists. point diamonds and chips of emer­ veranda in Florence: scribed for themi 3 thing but an accident.’’ J The T. Q. Curtis party in­ There were half a dozen adven­ alds and sapphires. His pleasure “ You really must hurry home, It’s too bad that a mother who, .Then let us follow those di­ cluded the millionaire, Mrs. Mead­ tures during the summer which in giving the things almost ex­ Billy dear. Old Colfax la positively rections religiously. Not only will just before she took her life,- could k ows and the three girls—Nyda Lo­ threatened melodramatic conse­ ceeded the rapture with which the seething with exdtement. There is think of . the sensitiveness'of' little jout'fedt gratefully repay us by max, Winnie Shelton and Billy quences. On the boat going over, girls received them. a most marvelous soothsayer or children' and attempt to protect carrying us more happily, but, In Wells. After two weeks of pleas­ for instance, Billy saw Winnie-in fortune teller or seer or clairvoyant them from brutal , impressions,’ Action, our whole , body will An^f *iil during those enchanted s'^Ug more easily into the erect, antly frantic shopping in Neiw York the arms of a man who was later four months the struggle between —whatever you want to call him— could not stay to supervise the Job.' they were on board a luxurious sea­ exposed as a card sharp, Nyda con­ who actually seems to 'see all, “Flapper Votes” yiigorous posture we all want— the Nyda and .Winnie, each to make posture of good leadership. And going-hotel, bound for Liverpool. ducted a hectic affair with a charm­ herself more Indispensable than know air, as the vaudeville fortune It is hard to “get” all the to-do In that conference in the library, with that posture our whole being, ing;, dissolute, young-old French­ the other to T. Q.’s happiness, did tellers always claim. He is a thrll- in Britain because; wqme'n may I wish, Matilda, yon would agree which T. Q. in his desolation of man, who trailed the party hope­ lingly handsome and mysterious' soon vote; at 2X instead of ■waiting physical and mental, will swing not abate. The odds from the first paore readily into a right balance. not to talk when I am driving in spirit had called for the puftose of fully from ;?arjs to Vienna, and had been^.la Winnie’s ^avor, for East Indian—by the way, had you until they are 30, according .ta TEST ANSWERS trafflc- outlining his suddenly conceived from Vlenna^tox-Naples,- but there it was nafiMl for her to ciiadle and noticetl that"’'Dal"' Romalne looks the old p}an. The shrieks Of “ flap­ We can discuss that Hi we go plan, he had explained his motive he suddenly switched his amorous like a Hindu himself?—and he per government” and,' “tie. baby purr and cajole, and T. Q. was Here are the answers to “Now along, Adolpus. *■ > voice'’ sound 'so silly, when alb wo­ In giving them a summer in Eu­ attentions to a fat, middle-aged human enough to be flattered and reads crystals with the most amaz­ Tinklers You Ask One” for today. The’ ques­ rope: American widow who was reputed ing accuracy. I’m quite frightened, men know. If they know, anything tions are on the comics page. touched by her unceasing atten­ at all, that a girl of 21 ip as old as “I feel that all of us need a to be worth many millions. tions. of him, but I keep going back—as 1— A perennial. a boy of 25. Which is the'reaspn change, that perhaps there has been Billy herself did not escape the Billy, watching the tall, splendid, everyone in our crowd does. The 2— The spider crab of Japan too much work”—he glanced threat of romantic complications, man must bo making a fortune, for women are warned, to m vry gi.on whpse body often measures over Nu-Bone Corsets graceful Nyda trying the same tac­ older than themsel-yes In ^yhars,"'Be­ rather ironically at Nyda, Winnie for an apple-cheeked young English­ he is distinctly the vogue. Every­ four feet across. ‘ tics, was Ironically amused and a cause the woman of the'same year# te I and Billy, who flushed uncom­ man pursued her, in a moat gentle­ little ead, for the role set so poorly one goes to him—even the most 3 — Termites, or white ants, fortably—“and too much Colfax In is so much older mentally. Still Lead manly ‘ but determined fashion, on her shoulders. But it was not conservative old- mossbacks in which have destroyed much valua­ most of our lives. Here -you are to'wn. Hurry on home and have A FOq I -’T o^ ! , ble panel- money. 3 over half of Europe, finally aban­ without a secret feeling of triumph If a girl wishes, :to teach school A good fitting corset or corselet never allowed to forget that you are doning romance for a more con­ that Billy realized that it was she your fortune told.” 4— ^Because all of them exceptis the best foundation fof youi 'Cinderella girls.’ I want* you to In an Ipwa town/sHermust attend -3 crete excitement in Mcmte Carlo. who had become his real friend. It Billy stared at tlje letter incredu­ some tropical kinds live on Insects. gown. Dressmakers and tailori have travel to broaden your minds church at least bhee'on • Sunday. 5— Peanuts are produced under- During the course of the Euro­ was Billy whom he chose as his lously. This from Constance! Con­ Here’s ■wagering.’ thq^tthls, town ^11 will tell you that. _ and your viewpoints. I know,” he stance who was ao wise and cool gror.nd by an herbaceous plant. pean tour, which extended over a companion for walks and tours of get a’ funny, grist of schbpl teach; >'■ ■ ' r ■ grinned wryly, “that that Is an old- period of four months, .the million­ and rembte! Her heart was beat­ 6— i^ix years. Mrs. Gbrdon will call by appoint­ cathedrals and art galleries, for ers— the sort that, no'real thvrn 7— President of the Federal /C fashioned reason for going to Eu­ aire department store owner took she was the only one of the three ing so heavily with a strange, terri­ would'have. ■ Now, I am’ not s^y- ment, take your measurements and rope, but I have a feeling that if Council of Churches. a naive pleasure in presenting his not too Indolent or ignorant to take fying excitement that it was almost ing that only morons- an'd hear-imT get you the perfect garment for you girls can get away from Colfax, S— Yes; Andrew Jackson was im­ Y three lovely wards with bits of a genuine interest In sight-seeing. a minute after he had spoken before beclle. schoolJLeachers. will gO/ -to your figure. Surgical corsets if see the world that lies outside, peached but the Impeachment was not too expensive but exquisite There were bitter quarrels be­ she realized what T. Q. Curtis had church on Stmday; but I ata saying needed. - learn other valuations than those jewelry. In Paris he surprised and been saying: not susialned. T' tween the three girls, of course, vul­ that a girl with'? spunk enough to 9— The Southern Pacific. (Ac­ ■which were given you, first by delighted them with platinum din­ “Well, pack your duds, girls. teach apywhere'-else vronld. n6tS.be gar quarrels during which they cording to the World Almanac, poverty and then by sudden luxury, ner rings, set with their favorite I’ve got a cablegram from home, f hurled recriminations and accusa­ teaching in a hide-bound communi­ 1927 edition). Mrs. A. M. Gordem• t you will be better able to cope with stones: a ruby for Nyda, an emer­ tions, for they could never quite The store needs mp. When can we* ty that attempted to buy’her mind life after this year is up.” 10— Entomology. 680 Main St., South MaiichesteJ ald for Winnie and a sapphire for forget that they were contestants be ready to sail, do ypu think, Mrs. and seul for..her.'$100-'a-month sal­ And so they went to Europe. It Billy. The stones were neither for a tremendous prize. But In the Meadows?” ary, Thl6,fiaSa day of liberty. „of was a dazzling experience for all of large nor flawless, but the com­ main they were too busy and too (To Be Contlnned) belief— even for school tea'chers. V • ■; ■,;pi *• , them, but of the three Billy was the bined cost rah into thousands ;of- excited by th,eir new experiences to ■ QigoIbS'S •• only one who had had a previous Billy leavaa that Clay (^rtla la the dollars which T. Q. had spend a great deal of time in quar­ Now comes the .high' cost ‘of gigo­ background of reading and educa­ prosrreaalnK 'wonderfally wl(k-< kla amassed with so much shrewdness reling, agd no matter how*” hard mnalc, Trklle ake la atandlng ' atlfl. los. A gigolo,, in case you' are so old tion which fitted her to appreciate and hard work. In Rome he added In tke next ckapter ake ealla on tke fashioned as not 'to knov* is some­ A^loyely new earrjng with a fas­ they worked to gain marks of his atrance (ortnne teller. thing like a lounge, lizard, only he. cinating, tlpkle'Is fashioned of gold «llllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIII|||||||fflllll|[||||||iHlinil|IHIIIIIIIIlllll|||IHIIIIII|||||||lll||ll||l|||Ml||||||yui||nillM||HliiyyilMl||||UUiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiniiiinn||||y|y|||||||||i||||[||^^ is a lizard with ? commercial; In­ shplls strung on a gold chain in a stincts. Bec!hu‘se some handsome; large cluster. well '-'groom ed, 'wall',-, mannered youths learned,' th at‘ fa d e d .., giglng and am not at this minute thinkr' women who cknnot' ^et .an escort Jng of murdering anybody, but L can hire one;.'' these- youtllS" .have Home Page Editorials should hesitate" in this* day and age^ gone into'the*escorting business— G oxi Mature to contemplate any sort of crime.'^ so much an hopr'to eat with., ao ,A' Criminologists,, pathologists, psyP. m uchUo talk with, ; SO:. mnch :, to chologlsts, all know how our'minds, dance ."withy No’W 'the;'rate’ has work better than we know them gone up. In London it’s from five Detectives ourselves. They know the subtle to fifteen doHars foir* a tea dance cunning of the criminal and what and from ten to- twenty-five dollars Good he would do when he finds himself’ for a dinner dauoe-^fobd . Includ­ tES, TEA AND COFFEE in a corner; before he knows it- ed. Which is the'modern version of coffee or a cup of tea is usually himself. CONT.AIN A DRUG— By Olive Roberts Burton of how the woman pays and/pays sufficient to produce the drug ef­ Every murder case or robbery: and pays! — -■ ..t— - • BUT IT DOSENT HURT fects. It is not habit-forming in the case brought to light makes us that^ BY DR MORRIS FISHBEIN same sense as are opium and The detective with the big cigar much safer. It is the red. slgnsh Human beings all over the cocaln. The best scientific evidence has the means of putting jam of warning to those who would in-; \ World have, since time immemorial, indicates that taken in moderation, on the jok'ester’s bread for years. I terfere with the life and freedom l^o'Goode has ;bppg1itr new bom e^even paspep-ger .with ballbon A fter' School— fegularly used drugs of one type or tea and coffee are not harmful. suppose that like the mother-in- of their fellow men. ■ Defectives N e w H i i t s knother for various purposes. Many persons are known who law, the stingy* Scotchman, the hen­ who J^ave to be a bit of all three/, tires. ' ,..'t. The natives of South America* have taken tea op coffee'dally for pecked husband and the flivver, he comprise our great standing army, I (Oopniht uarx and at School*Milk Means hewed coca leaves because they periods of 50 or 60 years without will continue to do so. of protection. elleved that this relieved fatigue. apparent ill effects. And perhaps it is as well that he [Lctually it gives a dose of cocaln On the other hand, children, rates as he does In the mind of the What Is a Pretty pastel shades are the or­ Happy, Healthy nffleient to abolish hunger and persons ■with unstable nervous lay public. It suits his purpose ad­ der for Spring!'Do your own tint­ ing of lingerie and dainty dresses 0 give a sense of euphoria or well systems, persons who react un­ mirably to be thought a boob. He IHuretic? CHOOL AND HEALTH OFFICIALS agree that m ilk is . 1' ' ' ■■ / ■_ ■ — but he sure to use rear dyes. Get ••jV* lelng, although In the long run favorably to stimulation of any rather invites it, one Is led to sup­ he habit is injurious to health, pose, or long ere this he would P e o p le A r e Leum/iig- dui Vohis flf theyacfukl dye powder at a drug­ S Natiire’s greatest tonic* and health food. Our kind, should avoid tea or coffee. In store for fifteen cents, and dilute latives of the Orient chew the such people sleep is Interfered with, have come out into the open and Lifers Niceties Oecasfonal U se.'• it yourself. pure, rich milk is good for little minds and bodies. r?;.- etel nut for the same purpose. It and the system is constantly whip­ declared himself for what he Is, an expert In the most complicated’pro­ < ‘’jCold water tinting is easy, and It builds rich, red blood. For convenience and greattf as been estimated that one-tenth ped up to a point where the ner­ HINTS ON ETIQUET results are perfect when you start f all human beings In the world vous system is unable to withstand fession in the world, the science of human nature. with dyep. Dye tints are true; they protection we cap our bottl^ milk with Sealright adulge in this habit. the strain. do'n’t streak. They give the same The use of ppium and its derlva- We call him a detective. He is Pouring-Pull M ilk Bottle Caps, wUch provide an easjr, It is also Inadvisable, when really a criminologist, and more the stralii of pur soodeRx tints fabrics have ■when bought. ve, morphine, and the use of greatly fatigued, to attempt to re­ 1. Does a hostess rise wheil* And if you want , the tint to stay, 9cain are addictions apparently than that. He is a student of psy­ our orgau are apt to become- sanitary way to serve milk at school and at home. lieve this feeling by drinking tea chology— particularly in crime psy­ a late guest enters the dining sluggish apd requite aasistanee. just^'use boiling water Instead of Ifflcult to overcome once they are cold. or coffeo. This is like whipping a chology. People often resent the room? ' More aod niore nepp'le ate Just lift the patented 'tab—insert straw throu|^ e d p ' ■ f itablished and apparently deptn- tired horse. The caffein does not Diamond dyes do regular of all presentation of crime In Its various leamiiwiieuseEpatfej^/oc. opening and drink from the original steriltBed>,bottle/ snt to a large extent on weakness relieve the fatigue, but merely phases. In the newspapers, and 2. Should the late guest apol-^ ... matariais just as successfully as t the will as well as on eome gives stimulus sufficient to over­ shudder when the evening paper ogize for his tardiness ■whem ination > wbipb' is so ifniritlsl they'tint, too. Silks or woolens; . Write or telephone to have bur delivery sendee start langes brought about in the body come the fatigue, placing, how­ comes with the news of another entering the dining room? to gpo< bi^tb.'Mote t i ^ M .. * lluen;cotton /goods. Your drug- y:the habitual use of the sub- ever, an added burden upon the murder trial. lOp^tefid users'ba^^ glbt'has..color cards and simple dl- today. 3. Is it proper to serve corn JO o e ti'e rpotiohs. Or, let us send Color Graft bance. worn-out tissues. The^pqblic forgets that for the sl||aed reepmmenda- on the cob. at a formal dinner tipps, .Sesmely a •^ffee. A book,with a wealth of Tea and coffee contain caffein A person engaged in m’ental ac­ enOrmbus percentage who are not I their chief drug. It has been interested Ii^ trials of crime there party? but has im m m eati^em 'A tt v,( Idusiih full colors. Write for It tivity sometimes finds' a cup df tpdky. Address, DIAMOND DYES, lid of coffee that it is the drink coffee a temporary bracer of great is also a very small but very im­ The Answers." ' \ portant percentage who are read­ Dp|^t: N85, Burlington, Vermont. J. K HEWITT hick cheers but not Inebriates. It value. Used In this way, it may 1. Yes, if the guest is a woipan;^ a stimulant to the higher brain ing every word. These are the nof if it is a man. • be highly desirable, hut not when criminals themselves. They miss 49 HoU St. inters; it quickens the pulse and repeatedly used without rest Is 2. Yes, by all means. He or she!; 6 0 e ilteves the sense of fatigue. nothing, you may te sure,, of what should go immediately to the hosti; that the effects of fatigue accumu­ goes on at a trial. ^The amount of caffein in a enp late. ess. ' . ' t o B Y B I have never murdered anybody. a- No. . ■ . r y j R T i v i c

/ . I MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 10,1927. PAGE ELBVOJf

To Admit Girls tree When THREE GAMES THIS QUOn PITCHING TO PROVE Local BOSTONIAN WINS PREAKNESS; Ou tdoor Boxing Starts Here WEEKFORS.M.H.S. POPULAR DURING THE SUMMER Sport SHIPPED TO RUN IN DERBY

V The first outdoor amateur box­ Several'young women attended the Army and Navy Tournament Chatter ing tournament to be conducted at bouts at Cheney hall but many Rodnie Toawrnw, New ‘T|)qf A e Wtamj Entry” American League others nfralned from doing so be­ the baseball stadium on McKee cause they feared they would be too Lofidoo Thirtdz; sod Gets Under Way With 13 Horseshoe-pitching bids fair to street l^y bheney Brothers’ will not conspicuous. At the spacious sta­ Slogu hiii WeR Yoter- Resuitr be one of the most popular of the ke staged until Wednesday evening. dium, however, this would not be minor sports in Manchester during May 25, ,it was decided last night the case. , . WiffiM stie Satwrii]^ Kel­ Teams and Tommy Weir the summer

1' w '

PAGE TWELVE MANCHESTER (COJNN.) EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 1927.

Many **Good Buys** In Used Cars Are Offered Here B y Reputable

Want Ad Information Garages—Service— Storage 10 Lost and Found Apartments— Flats— Apartments— ^Flats— for Sale 79 Tenements for Rent Tenements for Rent 63 iOST—PACKAGE of silver on Silver MUNROE ST;, ‘ beautiful six room Manchester GARAGE for rent on School street. bungalow. Ideal corner. Iboation, two Lane last Friday night. Finder ALU IMPROVEMENTS—Five room TENEMENT of 6 rooms, near Center. will be rewarded If returned to bus Call 456. A ll Improvements. Vacant May 1st. ■■car garage. Price right. Arthur A. Evening Herald driver. flat, Greenacres. Inquire 181 Wads­ , Knofla. Tel. 782-8,, 876 Main. A Read’y Market worth street, or telephone 1198-5. Inquire 53 Spruce street. Tel. 1622. OAKLAND AND PONTIAC SALES N^IW 5-ROOM HOUSE—with all Im­ Classified Advertisements WICKER FISHING BASKET lost. TENEMENT of five rooms, newly Tuesday night, May 3rd. at Case' SILK CITY—OAKIiAND CO. APARTMENTS—Three, and four provements, 2-car garage, poultry Count six aTerags woraa to a line. room apartments, heat, janitor ser- renovated.'ready May 1st. Inquire at ■house 2 extra bulldl-ng lots, 59,000. Pond, West Side. Finder please call 195 CENTER ST.— SO. MANCHESTER 111 H oll street. Telephone 1214-4. I .'v Initials, numbers and abbreviations, 1114. i ‘Vice, gas range, refrigerator, In-a- '■ -Small amount cash, 7 ifiinutes walk each count as a word and compound for Used Cars :■ door bed furnished. Call Manchester ■from Cheney’s Bilk Mills, South ■words as t'wo ■words. Minimum cost Wanted Autos— Motorcycles 12 Construction Company, ,2100 or tele­ 3 LARGE ROOMS, steam heated, Manchester. Walton W; Grant, 75 is price of three lines. Announcements phone 782-2. modern conveniences, rent reason­ Pearl street, Hartford. TeL 2-7584. ■WILL YOU own an automobile In 1927? If consid­ able. Inquire at 76 Main street cr. AUTOS—^WIll buy cars for junk. Used telephone 156-3. ' : >’ Line rates per day for transient ering the purchase of a good used car look over those :F1VE r o o m f l a t s (two) new. all RIDGE STREET—6 room house, all STEAMSHIP TICKETS to and from parts for sale. General auto repair­ conveniences, $35. With garage $5 Improvements, hard wood trim, extra ads. all parts of the world—Cunard ing. Abel’s Service Station. Oak St. listed under classification 4 on this page every day. Here , .extra. Apply 34 Hemlock street. THREE ROOM FLAT, all Improve­ corner lot. Two car garage, price E ffective March 17. 1927 Anchor, White Star, French, Ameri­ Tel. 789. may be found many cars of practically every standard ments, on North Main street, next $5500— 5500 cash for quick sale. Ap­ Cash Charge can, Swedish, North German Llo^d j P!\'E ROOM FLAT, second floor, to Paganl’s. Inquire Paganl’s store. ply 117 Ridge street. ' ■ and several others. Assistance given make and type— ready for instant service— and frequent­ 6 Consecutive Days .. 7 cts 9 cts Business Services Offered 13 ly at remarkably low prices. I modern. Rent 526. Inquire 137 West 3 Consecutive Days 9 cts 11 cts in securing passports. Robert J. j ..uiddle ■Turnpike. THREE ROOMS—Heated apartments SIX ROOM SINGLE, brarfid new. no-w Day ...... 11 cts 13 cts Smith, 1009 Main street. Phone. with bath. Apply shoemaker, Trot­ ready. Good large size Jiving room, 1 750-2. ASHES REMO'VED and moving done. ter Block. AM orders for irregular Insertions These cars are offered by reputable dealers and indi­ ! :'iVE ROOM TENEMENT with all price only 55500— $500 cash. Robert Robert Creighton, 16 Knighton St. viduals. The quality of cars offered is unusually good. j i:iiprovements, centrally located, ------i ' li l t j. Smith, 1009 Main street. will be charged at the one-time rate. Telephone 105-5. nehr mills and trolley. Inquire TWO UPSTAIRS FLATS with Im­ Special rates for long term every Antomobiles for Sale 4 Often a car is included that is practically new; others provements. rent reasonable. Apply day .advertising given upon request. I ..-iclmcl Foley, 46 1-2 Summer 3t. . BENTON STREET—New’- five room Florists— Nurseries 15 have been reconditioned aud are attractive In appear­ 224 North Main street. Tel. 28-2 or bungalow, all Improvements, oak •Kds ordered for three or six days Buick 1927 M aster ‘‘6” Dem on­ ance and good for long service. The prices and terms 409-3. trim and - two car garAge. Easy and stopped before the third or fifth strator. 5 ROOMS Including garage, 75 Sum­ terms. Tel. 1483-12. i day will be charged only ior the ac­ Bulck, 1926 Brougham. FLOWERS— 50,000 giant Italian pan­ will interest you. mer street. WALNUT ST., 83—5 rooms, first floor; tual number of times the ad appear­ Buick, 1924 Touring. sies, geraniums, agaratums, Martha all improvements Including steam EAST CENTER ST.. 463—A real home, ed. charging at the rate earned, but Buick, 1923 Touring. Washington geraniums, all In bud 1 I ROOM FLAT—All latest Improve- heat and will redecorate for desir­ seven rooms with sun parlor, two no allowances or refunds can be made Essex Coach, 1926. and bloom. Hollyhocks, hardy chry­ READ CAREFULLY j ments. Inquire of Frank Damato, 24 able couple. Short walk to Cheney fire places. Will exchange for five on six time ads stopped after the Hupmobile, 1925 ‘‘8” Sedan. santhemums, peonies, asparagus ! Homestead street, Manchester. Tel. mills and trolley. Inquire 85 Walnut room house or lot in good location fifth day. Hupmobile, 1924 "4” Touring. roots, everbloomlng rose bushes, 1507. street after 5 p. m.. Phone 482-12. or a two family tenement house. For No "tin forbids” ; display lines not Studebaker, 1921 Touring. catalpa trees, California privet, CLASSIFICATION 4 particulars call 1321-2. sold. evergreens and grape vines. Cab­ 4 LARGE LIGHT ROOMS with extra Houses for Rent 65 The Herald will not be responsible J. M. SH EARER bage, cauliflower and lettuce plants room In attic, 2 weeks free, 523 rent. EAST MIDDLE TURNPIKE—New for more than one incorrect Insertion now ready. All at low prices. Michael EVERY DAY six'room single, near Main street, of any advertisement ordered for CAPITOL BUICK CO. TEL. 1600 Call at 439 Center street, after 5 AT CENTER ST., 185 corner K nox Pinatello, 379 Burnside Ave. Green­ o'clock. oak:trim, silver fixtures, gas, fire­ more than one time. houses, East Hartford. Laurel 1610. and Center streets, six room mod­ place, sink room, garage in cellar. The inadvertent omission or incor­ ern house. Telephone 244-4. FORD BARGAINS FOUR LARGE light rooms with ex­ Terms to suit. Walter Friche, 54 E. rect publicatior. of advertising will bo NURSERY HEDGING, shrubs and Middle Turnpike. Tel. 348-4, or your rectified only by cancellation of the . tra room In attic, 2 weeks free. 523 ON WINDEMERE ST.—Five room New Ford Cars Greatly Reduced evergreens trimmed and landscape, rent. Call 117 Ridge street. broker. , charge made for the service render­ 1 ton truck, 6 post. work guaranteed satisfactory. Rea­ house, all Improvements except gas. ed. sonable rates. McConvllle and Mc­ Poultry and Supplies 43 Articles for Sale 45 With or without garage. Garden. 5 Fordor sedans, wire wheels. POSTER ST., 109— Corner Blssell St. Rent reasonable. Call 1364-3. MANCHESTER GREEN—6 rooms, 3 Tudor sedans. Laughlin, Manchester. Tel. 1364-13 Three room tenement; also four bath, electric lights, 2 1-2 acres All advertisements must conform or 1397-2. WE ARE MCVING to our new store, 1 Coupelet. BABY CHICKS—Ducklings, Cert-O- 119 Spruce street and have reduced room tenement on Ridgewood street. W ARREN ST., 21— 6 room house, land, eaSy tertn's, consider renting. in style, copy and typography with The above cars are all the latest Culd stock; popular breeds; guaran­ Phone 1545-2. Tel. 886-2. regulatitms enforced by the publ.sh- our prices. Come In now, on or be­ with apple trees and garden, models. NURSERY STOCK at reasonable teed live dellverj-; free catalogue. garage If desired. Inquire 136 South erj, and tbev reserve the right to prices: also cabbage plants, 15c doz, fore May 12th and save a large per­ SINGLE HOUSE and garage, all mod­ Clark's Hatchery, East Hartford. centage on your new furniture. Man­ HUDSON STREET—Six room tene­ Main street. edit, revise or reject any copy con­ GOOD USED CARS WITH A 30-DAT tom ato plants, 25c, geraneums, 35c. Conn. ment, near depot, 535, garage 55. ern, good location. Must be sold. A sidered objection.abie. John McConville, Homestead Park. chester Upholstering Co. Hotel bargain for you. Address P. O. Box GUARANTEE Sheridan Bldg. Call at 55 Hudson street. Tel. 981-2. CLOSING HOURS—Classified ads 1923 Touring. Telephone 1364-13. BABY CHICKS. Smith Standard Cert- Wanted to Rent 68 87. F. Herman, Manchester, Conn. to bo published same day must be re­ 1923 Coupe. o-culd thoroughbred from free range JOHNSON BLOCK. Main street. 3 ceived by 12 o’clock noon. Saturdays 1923 Studebaker Coupe. Millinery— Dressmaking 19 stock. Chicks on hand at all times. Fuel and Feed .49-A room apartment, all modern Im­ LARGE GARDEN—Wanted to rent s ix ROOM BUNGALOW on Oxford 10:30 a. m. 1920 Overland Touring. M anchester Grain and Coal Co. Apel provements. Apply to Albert Harri­ or share, rich soil. Anna M. RIsley, street, steam heat, gas, etc. Garage.« Telephone Your Want Ads 1926 Tudor Sedan. Place. Tel. 1760. son, 33 Myrtle street. Phone 1770. 481 Parker street. Tel. 832-5. Price only 56000— 5500 cash. Robert 1923 Tudor Sedan. DRESSMAKING—Ladles and chil­ J. Smith, 1009 Main street. dren’s sewing. M. Creighton, 16 AVOOD for sale, also light trucking Ads are accepted over the telephone We also carry a complete line of L.AKE WAMGAMBAUG—Up-to-date Apartment Buildings for Sale 69 at the CH.-VRGE RATE given above genuine Ford parts. Knighton treet. Phone 105-5. BABY CHICKS 15000 FOR APRIL clay or evening. Telephone 33-2. five room apartment. Will rent by SIX ROOM house, all Improvements, as a convenience to advertisers, but Open evenings and Sundays until week, month or season. Located on garage in cellar, large garden, ex­ the CASH RATES will be accepted as noon. DRESSMAKING—Latest styles at BABY CHICKS 15000 FOR MAY Garden— Farm— Dairy Products 50 lake shore. Furnished if desired. W. TEN' ROOM PLAT for sale, excellent tra garage outside, widow wants to FULL l^ATMENT if paid at the busi­ ELJIER AUTOMOBILE CO. reasonable prices. Bertha M. Gar­ E. Orcutt, Coventry. Tel. Manches­ condition, conyenient terms, 1-2 selL Call 68 Oxford street, after 6 ness oflice on or before the seventh 91 Center Street. Tel. 941 diner, Johnson Block, 689 Main St. OLI'VER BRO’S. S. C. W. LEGHORNS ter 1064-3. minute from Center street. Inquire o’clock or Saturday afternoons. day follow in g the first Ins'fertlou t BARBERRY BUSHES, 55.00 per hun­ of owner. Call 812. each ad. othfirwise the CHARGE dred, 3 years old. Inquire at 36 Gris­ TWO FAMILY of 13 rooms, large HEMSTITCHING SHOP—We special­ On account o f extrem ely large wold street or telephone 861-4. MIDDLE TURNPIKE, EAST—Nice 6 RATE will be collected. No responsi­ ize on pillow cases, sheets and dress hatches we will have more chicks room tenement, all modern Improve­ rooms and in good shape. Price only bility for errors in telephoned ads FORD COUPE 1925, thoroughly over­ Henses for Sale 72 57000.00. Call Arthur A. Knofla. Tel. hauled, new Fandango slip covers, ornament. Our work Is done by the than W3 booked orders for—Tliere- ments; two minutes from Main will be assumed and their accuracy 1 latest factory methods. F. X. Dion. fore we can take a few more orders. Household Goods 51 street. Call Arthur A. Knofla, 782-2 782-2, 87j Main street. lock ■wheel, spare tire, driven less 235 Spruce street. Tel. 1307-12. These are the well known OLIVER AUTUMN ST., So. Manchester, nice cannot be guaranteed. than 10,000 miles. A. real buy. F. H. or 1804, or a^ply at (5 East Middle BRO’S CHICKS—carrying the /ery Turnpike. colonial house, on 2 large lots; six Lots for Sal« 78 Phone 664 Anderson, in care o f J. W. Hale Co. best blood lines—Every chick is FLUFF RUGS made to order from rooms, bath, heat, oak floors, built- Moving—Trucking—Storage 20 from our own eggs, hatched in our your old carpets. Write for particu­ in Ironing board combination sink ASK '^OR WANT AR SERVICE FORD light delivery, 1-2 ton closed NICE 5 ROOM tenement, modern, has own Incubators. Every bird official­ lars C. Schulze, 5 Chamberlain St., hot air heat, rent low. Call 2100, and set tub; near school and trolley. PORTER STREET—-Nice building lot cab, good tires, excellent running PERRETT AND GLENNEY—Local ly blood tested by the state. All R ockville or call R ockville 439-2. You can own this home on monthly 14i‘i feet frontage. An Ideal site for condition. WIM sell for 5100 cash. Maneftester Construction Company Index of Classifications and long distance moving and orders for 1000 or more delivered ‘.■r telephone 782-2. payments. W. Harry England. Phone that new home. Price of Arthur A. Call 1063-3 after 8 o’clock. trucking. Daily express to Hartford. direct to your brooder .house by auto FOUR ROOMS of furniture, Including 74. Knofla. Phone 782-2. (Over Quinn’s). Evening Herald Want Ads are now Livery car for hire. Telephone 7-2. within five miles of Manchester. a Singer sewing machine, refrigera­ NEW 5 ROOM FLAT—All improve­ grouped according to classifications FORD SED.AN. good condition, and Price 21 cents each. 300 or more 19 tor, screen doors, tenement must be COTTAGE—6 room single, furnace WASHINGTON ST.—Dandy building fully equipped. 5 new semi-balloon ments. Inquire 270 Oak street, after below and for handy reference will Painting— Papering 21 cents each. vacated soon. Phone 859-4. five or Sunday. heat. 2 car garage, with two extra lot; small amount of cash down; appear In the numerical order indi­ tires. Quick sale, 135 High street building lots, chicken coop. Price terms arranged: sewer, gas, side­ after 5 P. M. walk and curb In front of lot. cated: OLIVER BROTHERS G.AS STOVE, Vulcan, smooth top, NEARLY READY cozy rent, for small 54500 for quick sale. See Stuart J. Lost and Found ...... i PAINTING—And paperhanging. I three burner, in excellent condition. Wasley, 827 Main street. Tel. 1428. Arthur A. Knofla, 876 Main street. FORD TRUCK, 1923, one-ton capaci­ also carry Graves high-grade wall­ family, with electric lights, bath, Phone 782-2. Announcements ...... * CLARKS CORNER. CONN Reasonably priced. Call 1877. cement cellar, grained floors, white ty. perfect mechanical condition. papers. Work done neatly and rea­ DELMONT ST.—Ne-w six room single, Personals ...... t - ...... ^ Consider trade. Can be seen at 117 sonably. Ted LeClalr. Tel. 2377. enameled rooms, 518. Seastrand just being finished, buy now and Automobiles NEW GAS RANGE for sale. Three Brothers, 91 South Main street. Real Estate for Exchange 76 Autom obiles for Sale ...... 4 Birch street or telephone 1890. burner. Inquire Mrs. Virginia, 422 choose your own interior decora­ There is a reason why Oakland street, Manchester. tions and light fixtures. Oak floors Automobiles for Exchange .... 5 Repairing 2.3 OAKLAND ST. 35.— Five room flat, 12 ROOM DOUBLE PLAT, for a six Auto Accessories—Tires ...... 6 folks prefer throughout, French doors, fireplace. 1924 HARLEY-DAVIDSON Miller’s Superior Baby Chicks all improvements. Inquire Sam Yul- One car garage. A home you’d be room single, in good location. See Auto R epairing— Painting ...... 7 Musical Instruments 53 yes, 701 Main street. Stuart J. Wasley, 827 Main street. Auto Schools ...... 7-A MOTORCYCLE EXPERT KEY FITTING. Lawn mow­ proud to own. Arthur A. Knoffa. Tel. A bargain—540 DOWN. ers sharpened and repaired; also, S. C. White Leghorns and R. I. Reds 782-2. (Over Quinn’s Drug Store). Telephone 1428. Autos—Ship by Truck ...... » scissors, knives and saws sharpen­ PURNELL BLOCK—3 room heated Autos—For Hire ...... 9 1924 TUDOR SEDAN UPRIGHT PI.ANO for sale, excellent Just overhauled, 575 DOAVN, guaran­ ed. Work called for and delivered. Our stock has been bred many tone, in A-1 condition. Price reason­ apartment. With kitchenette and EAST CENTER ST.—2 of Manches- Garages—Service—Storage ...... 10 Harold Clemson, 108 North Elm bath. Modern Improvements. Rea­ ter's nicest homes. Owners say sell. Motorcycles—Bicycles ...... H teed 30 days. years for size, vigor and produc­ able for quick sale. Inquire of Miss 1924 OVERLAND SEDAN street, Manchester. Conn. Tel. 462. Healey’s Millinery Shop, Park ] sonable price. Apply G. E. Keith It’s up to you. Further particulars of ’Wanted Autos—Motorcycles ... 12 tion: is State tested and free Furniture Company. MASONS TO OBSERVE Business and Professional Services 540 DOWN, small weekly payments. from Diarrhoea and disease. We Building. Arthur A. Knofla. Tel. 782-2. (Over 1921 CLEVELAND TOURING CAR LAWNMOWERS put in proper order, have been sold out five weeks in Manchester Plumbing & Supply Business Services Offered ...... 13 RENTALS—Several desirable rents Store). Household Services Offered ,,,,13-A Good mechanical condition, good tires phonographs, clocks, electric clean­ advance all Spring, but can Sup­ — 530 DOWN. ers, Irons etc. repaired. Key making. ply local orders beginning May Wanted— To Buy 58 with modern Improvements. Inquire 169TH INFANTRY NIGHT Building—Contracting ...... 14 Edward J. Holl. TeL. 660. EAST CENTER STREET — corner Florists—Nurseries ...... 15 1923 FORD COUPE Braithwaite, 150 Center street. 10th in any quantity up to 3000 A bargain—535 DOWN chicks per week at special re­ lUNK—1 will pay highest prices for Hamlin street, eight room single, Funeral Directors ...... iO SEWING MACHINES, repairing of SIX ROOM TENEMENT—262 Oak large lot, garage. Robert J. Smith, Heating—Plumbing—Roofing .. 17 duced prices. Come and see us or all kinds of junk; also buy all kinds street, 535. Six room ■ tenem3nt, Two officers from the Manches­ . MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES CO. all makes, oils, needles and supplies. telephone. Brooders and supplies. of chickens. Morris H. Lessner, tele­ 1009 Main street. Insurance ...... 18 R. W. Garrard, 37 Edward street. Trumbull street, 535. Six room single ter C. N. G. companies will attend M illinery— Dressm aking ...... 19 1069 Main Street So. Manchester phone 982-4. liouse on Glenwood street, $45. Apply Phone 715. FRED MILLER'S FARM AND CITY property for sale the special program of St. John’s Moving—Trucking—Storage .... 20 Opposite Army and Navy Club • t ; Manchester Lumber Co. or exchange. William Kanehl, 519 Lodge, No. 4, A. F. & A. M. at the Painting—Papering ...... 31 Open Eves & Sundays Tel. 740 RAGS, MAGAZINES—Bundled paper Center street. Professional Services ...... 22 Tailoring-Dyeing—Cleaning 24 COVENTRY POULTRY FARM and Junk bought at highest cash 6 ROOM TENEMENT after May 16, lodge’s clubrpom in Hartford to­ prices. Ph.re 849-3 and I will calk I. R ^ a ir in g ...... 23 all improvements. Apply 281 Spruce GOOD SEVEN ROOM single on East morrow night. The occasion will Tailoring—Dyeing—Cle-anlng .. 24 NASH SED.AN. 1 924— Cheap, perfect DYED WORK and relining at special Coventry, Conn. Phone Man. 1063-3 Eisenberg. street. be the annual observation of 169th I condition. Call between 6 and 8 p. Center street. Pine place, steam Toilet Goods and Services ...... 25 prices. Mrs. I. B. Nelson, 129 Center heat, etc., very reasonable price and Infantry Night, an evening con­ AVanted—Business Service ...... 26 m. Telephone 1229. street. South Manchester. Tel. 2403. Rooms Without Board 59 i terms. Robert J. Smith, 1009 Main St. Educational c h i c k s for sale. White Rock, day 2 4 ROOM, one six room tenement. ducted by the Masons who are offi­ NEW WHIPPET COUPE fully equip­ old chicks. Bred from prize winners Courses and Classes ...... ?7 Courses and Classes 27 Telephone 651-12— 54 Birch street. cers of that unit. Private Instruction ...... 28 ped. at a large reduction from origi­ Ready h rlday. 1 White Rock Cock FOSTER STREET—One and 2 cheer­ The officers for the evening are Dancing ...... 28-A nal cost. W. R. Tinker Jr. Tel. 1000. n 1st at Manchester show. ful sunny rooms, furnished for Musical—Dramatic ...... 29 AMBITIOUS MEN. BOYS. A splendid Ed. Newton, 25 Hamlin. Tel. 1029. M ONTEY MEETING to be: Capt. Starr L. Beckwlth- opportunity to learn barberlng, housekeeping, modern conveniences. ’Wanted—Instruction ...... 30 OAKLAND COACH. 1926, in excellent Call 1545-2. Legal Notices Ewell, worshipful master, St. Financial condition. Soutli Manchester Garage. ladies' bobbing, shingling. Latest S. C. R. I. REDS—Pines quality from John’s Lodge, No. 4, Hartford; Bonds—Stocks—Mortgages ...... 31 Phone 680. methods taught. Complete course trap nested stock, State tested, and 535.00. Day, evening class. Vaughns free from diarrhoea or disease Tele­ AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD OF GARDEN CLUB Colonel D. Gordon Hunter, senior Business Opportunities ...... 32 FURNISHED ROOMS, 141 Center at Manchester, within and for the Money to Loan ...... 33 Overland, 1926 Two-door. Sanitary Barber School, 14 Market phone us your wants. W. S. Haven street. warden, Caleb Butler Lodge, Ayer, street, Hartford. Conn. Coventry, 1064-4. district of Manchester;' on the 7th. Miss.; (iapt. Edwin H. May, junior Money Wanted ...... 34 Studebaker 1924 Big 6 Touring. day o f May. A. D., 1927. Help and Situntiona Studebaker 1924 Light 6 Coupe. Present WILLIAM S. HYDE, Esq., Held at Chapman Home on warden, Hospitality. Lodge, No. Help Wanted—Female ...... 35 Studebaker 1924 Special 6 Coupe. Private Instruction 28 Articles for Sale 43 FURNISHED ROOM for rent. Pearl Judge. 128, ’Wethersfield; Lieut. Russell Help Wanted—Male ...... 36 Hudson Coach, 1924 street, near Main. Telephone 1147. Estate of John Clement late of Forest Street Yesterday Af­ Help Wanted—Male or Female.. 37 . ■ Stutz Roadster, 1924. B. Hathaway, treasurer, Manches­ PRIVATE INSTRUCTION given in Manchester in said district, deceased. ternoon- ter Lodge, No. 73, Manchester; A gents Wanted ...... 37-A Studebaker 1922 Special 6 Touring all grammar school subjects by ■ ANTIQUES Upon application of Sarah M. Kelso Situations Wanted—Female ... 38 Hupmobile 1923 Touring former grammar school principal, Antiques bought, sold, repaired, re- Legal Notices praying that Tlie Manchester Trust Capt. Philip C. Hawley, secretary, Situations W anted—Male ...... 39 Buick 1924 Master Six' Coupe for rates call 215-5. stored. Refinlshing and upholstering The, regular monthly meeting of Seneca Lodge, No. 55, Torrington; Employment Agencies ...... 40 Co. be appointed trustee of Elizabeth Nash 1923 Sedan of old and modern furniture. V. AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD Clement under will of said John the Manchester Garden Club was Lieut. Edgar M. Thompson, chap­ Live Stock—Pet»—Poultry—Vehicles -ledeen. 37 Hollister street. at Manchester, within and for the Dogs—Birds—Pets ...... 41 Help Wanted— Female 35 Clement as per application on file. It held at the home of the president, lain, Manchester Lodge, No. 73, CONKEY AUTO COMPANY district of Manchester, on the 7th is Live Stock—Vehicles ...... ‘ ‘I STROLLER and baby carriage for Miss Mary Chapman of 75 imprest .JVIanchester; Capt. Irving E. Par- 20 East Center St. Tel. 840 day o f May, A. D„ 1927. ORDERED:—That the foregoing Poultry and Supplies ...... 43 KEY PUNCH OPERATOR, experienc­ la*?) condition. Inquire Present WILLIAM S. HYDE, Esq., street, last evening, with 38 of the tridige, Jr., senior deacon, St. Wanted — Pets—Poultry—Stock 44 93 H ollister street. Tel. 1396-23. application be heard and determined ed, for our tabulating department. Judge. at the Probate office in Manchester niembers present. Everyone had an John’s' Lodge, No. 4, Hartford; For Sale—Miscellaneous USED CARS— Apply to Clieney Brothers Employ Estate of Fannie Chappell late of Articles for Sale ...... 45 in said District, on the J4th. day of interesting time previous to the Lieut. George A. Wardlnskl, Junior ment Bureau. * Manchester in said district, deceased. May, A. D., 1927. at 9 o’clock In tlie Boats and Accessories ...... 46 Oldsmobile Touring, 1926. Legal Notices Upon application of Administrator business session inspecting the deacon, SL John’s Lodge, No. 4, Building Materials ...... 47 Oldsmobile Touring ”4”, 1923. forenoon, and that notice be given to Help Wanted— Male of said estate, praying that an en- all persons interested in said estate beautiful Chapman garden., The Hartford; Lidut.'Donald R. Witter, Diamonds—Watches—Jewelry .. 48 Buick Touring. 1922. SO tention of time for settlement of said Electrical Appliances—Radio .. 49 A’elle Roadster, 1922. AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD of tlie pendency of said application tulips and all the other early spring senior steward, St. John’s Lodge, estate be granted on said estate, as and the time and place of hearing No. 4, Hartford; Lieut. Arthur M. Fuel and Feed ...... 49-A Maxwell Touring, 1922. at Manchester, within and for the per application on file, it is flowers were in full bloom and the Garden—Farm—Dairy Products 50 Durant Touring, 1922. WANTED— district o f Manchester, on the 9th thereon, by publishing a copy of this rock garden was aisv very pretty. Grayson, junior steyard, St. John’s Overland Sedan. 1926. day of May, A. D„ 1927. ORDERED:—That the foregoing order in some newspaper having a Houseliold Goods ...... 51 , application be heard and determined The business meeting was held in Lodge, No. 4, Hartford; Capt. Har­ Machinery and Tools ...... 52 Hudson Coacli. 1925. EXPERIENCED MAN AS SALES­ Present WILLIAM S. HYDE, Esq., circulation in said district, on or be­ Musical Instruments ...... 53 Ford Coupe, 1926. Judge. ' at tile Probate office in Manchester in fore May lOtb, 1927, and by posting'.a the Chapman homa. The club Is ry Schwolsky, marshal, Lafayette Ford Touring (Five). said District, on the 14tb. day of May, ccHiy of this order on the public sign­ Lodge, No. 100, Hartford. Office and Store Equipment .... 54 MAN IN RUG DEPARTMENT OF Estate of Ann Gibbons, late of A. D., 1927, at 9 o’clock in the fore­ plamning for a spring flower show Sporting Goods—Guns ...... 55 Reo Truck. Manchester in said district, deceased. post in said town of Manchester, at and Miss Mary Chapman, the presi­ Specials at the Stores ...... 56 Easy Terms—One Year to Pay. noon. and that notice be given to all least 4 days before the day of said HARTFORD STORE. APPLY "RUGS” Upon application of Administrator persons interested in said estate of dent, was appointed chairman of MINT FLAVOR Wearing Apparel—Furs ...... 57 We make payments if you are sick of said estate praying that an exten- hearing, to appear if they see cause or injured. tlie pende.icy of said application and the committee to arrange Cor the With the first really hot days, a Wanted—To Buy ...... 58 BOX S, MANCHESTER HERALD. tion of time to settle said estate be at said time and place and be heard Rooms—Board—Hotels—Resorts til time and place of hearing there­ relative thereto, and make return fo cool drink is made twice as refresh­ granted on said estate, as per appli­ on, by publishing a copy of this order show with power to choosi her own Restaurants CRAWFORD AUTO SUPPLY CO. cation on file, it is this court. assistants. ing by the addition of a few leave.'? Rooms Without Board ...... 59 Center & Trotter St. Tel. 1174 in some newspaper having a circula­ WILLIAM S. HYDE Boarders W.anted ...... 69-A Oldsmobile and Marmon Sales and ORDERED:—That the foregoing tion In said district, on or before Judge. Mis.s Chapman pressate 1 co the of mint. Country Bo.ard—Resorts ...... 60 Service Help Wanted— Male or Female 37 application be heard and determined May 10, 1927, and by posting a copy H-5-10-27. garden club from her sister. Miss j Motels—Restaurants ...... 61 at the Probate office In M anchester in of this order on the public sign-post Helen Chapmauj two bo^iK's to be j Wanted—Rooms—Board ...... 62 Auto Repairing— Painting 7 said District, on the 14th. day of May. in said town of Manchester, at least HELP WANTED—Men and women to A. D., 1927, at 9 o’clock In the fo re ­ 4 days before the day of said hear­ added to the club’s lio.’.’ary. They Roiil Rotate For Rent aid in the Introduction of a new BIG OPIUM RAID. IN T E R N A T IO N A L P A P E R Apartments, Pl.ats, T enem ents.. 63 noon, and that notice be given to all ing. to appear if they see cause at were “ Garden Making aud Keep­ AUTHORIZED SERVICE—PONTIAC. item Into the homes in their’ own persons Interested In said estate of CXJMPANY, Business Uaications for R en. . . . 64 neighborhoods. Pleasant, easy work, said time and place and be heard ing,” by Findlay, and “ The Seasons Houces rcr Runt ...... 65 CHEVROLET. OAKLAND. Flat rate I the pendency of said application and relative thereto, and make return to New York Mercli 30,1927. or straiglit time. Prompt service, 57 a day. Frederick Luce. 44 Pearl the time and place of hearing there­ this court. Boston, Mass., May 10.— Opium in a Flower Garden,” by Shelton. Suburban frr .‘tent ...... 66 street. P. O. Box 175, Town. The Board of'Directors ha're declared a Summer Home.s for Rent ...... O'! tliroe servlc»;inen. All work guaran­ on, by publishing a copy of this order WILLIAM S. HYDE valued at $100,000 on the drug There were a number.of interesting} teed. Gatlin’s Service Station, 255 in some newspaper having a circula­ discussions in regard to plants and quarterly dividend of Fifty Cents (50c) a Wanted to Rent ...... 61 Center street. Phone 669. Judge. market was seized and three Chi­ Real R.state For Sale Dogs— Birds— Pets 41 tion In said district, on or before H-5-10-27. nese were arrested early today flowers. ^are on the Common Stock of this Com­ Aparlm ont .UuUilings for S a le ..* 69 May 10, 1927, and by posting a copy pany, payable May 16th, 1^27, to Com­ PERSONAL ATTENTION given to all of this order on the public sign-post when an attempt was made to un­ Bu.slne.s.s Property for S:ile ...... 70 repair work. Superior brake re-lin­ 3 BLACK PUPS, Pomeranian, for V mon stockholders of record at the dost of Farms and R.and for Sale ...... 71 In said town of Manchester, at least NEARING 10 mLLIONS. load the “ dope” from the Far East business May 2nd, 1927. Checks ■will be ing and greasing service. All work sale. Price, males 525, females, 520. 4 days' before the day of said hear­ ■: Remember the Manchester Me­ Houses for Sale ...... 72 fully guaranteed. Schaller’s Garage, Call 163 Maple street. steamship Malayan Prince at Pier morial Hospital. Please give at mailed. Transfer books will not close. Lots for Sale ...... 73 634 Center street. Tel. 1226-2. ing, to appear If they see cause at 4, Soutli Boston. Resort Property for Sale ...... 74 said time and place and be heard The Chinese, it was learned, at­ least one day’s pay and more if On-EN S hepherd, Vice-Prcj. cS Tretu. Suburban for Sale ...... j 75 Ll'ye Stock— Vehicles 42 relative thereto, and make return to ■Washington, May 10.— The Red possible to the hospital. Real Estate for E;10-37. today. Legal J-otices ...... 79 kind ever made at this port. GAS BUGGIES—It Pays to Advertise By Frank Beck

N O W D O N T g e t . HE CLAIMS THE BAG OH! i t ’s OH WELL, CHIEF, T H E NOT SO FAST. V. Phone Your .Want Ads t o n g u e - t i e d HAS A SELF-STARTER TH E GUY IF VOU KNEW HERMAN SATCHEL THEN IF YOU'LL MY FRIEND. I’VE ) THE MINUTE THE INSIDE THAT WE'LL ■ WHO GOT SHNOPS AND ALL ABOUT CONTAINS JUST PUT THAT GOT A SUMMONS ' To the CHIEF- STEPS IN, RUIN IF W E OPEN IT ^HERMAN HIS COMPRESSED AlR A SEC R ET ,GOOF IN THE CLAIM A G A IN S T YOU FOR AND-'a C T AS IF LEAVE TO CHECK UP ON SHNOP S’ CAR, THEN YOU KNOW S T A R T E R , DEPARTMENT WISE TEARING ALL THE YOU DIDNT KNOW IT T O HIM. IT SOUNDS AS T R IC K W H O r A M . i 'm T H E ■FOR TH E TO HIMSELF, CHIEF. TRAFFIC LAWS AFTER WHAT IT WAS M E . I ’LL FISHY TO ME AS ^AIR CAR! MAN HE LEFT IT TO CAR. W E WE'LL TAKE OUR TO PIECES, WHEN F.A IU N G T O DEMAND ALL ABOUT. t h e COMPRESSED. bring IN HIS WILL. THAT LO ST I T , SATCHEL AND YOU TRIED OUT Evening Herald RECOVER HIS SPEAK UPJ SAY, M Y GRIP AIR *tAR HE HIM IN. EXPLAINS EVERYTHING., W H E N RUN ALONG-- YOUR TRICK CAR. S A T C H E L -, f r o m POINT BLANK WITH A SNAP SAYS i t ’s . W E WERE THE FINE IS is o . I T H E K E E P E R OF YOUR FINGERS, I’l l 5A Y,"w e l l ,’ FOR. ri T R Y IN G I ’LL CONSIDER TH E I'HE CLAIM ^ '^££ HERE, MY CHIEF. WHICH O U T T H E , DEPARTMENT^ M A N £ W ANT IS IT TO BE! THING BECAUSE HE' s a t c h e l Call 664 SERVICE”., y M Y ' c o u l d n ’t •;'.■■•’ O R Y O U R DESCRIBE ■ A* "SHIELD.?” And Ask for a Want Ad Taker SELF-STARTER Ui he’d never seen , Tell L: :r What You Want HEM APPEALS (i T O T H E An experienced operator will take your ad, help you CHIEF^OF POLICE, word It tor best results, and see that It is proserly in­ W HO, AS EVENTS serted. Bill will be mailed same day allowing you PROVE, IS MOftE until seventh day after Insertion to take advantage of r AMENABLE TO the CASH RATE. ^ ^ ^ ; r e a 5 0 m : T v

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A . \ MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 10, 192T. PAGE t h i r t e e n "

FLAPPER FANMY SAY^ SKIPPY by Percy Crosby T55------S E N S E a n d n o n s e n s e nnir WUCRC MAV€ YA Been / w h a t i s c ir r e e a n ' iNA^OTTHAri Self-made men sometimes need 0C 6H A C c c k M a c h w a c k i n ' a lot of alterations. AROON* THC C IV R A R V HAS fOUR A N 'i UP C in e Aterms 66rrm* M€ r A c e n r s , H oof5 T H A T , r - Willie: “ Please, teacher, what JOXCR S6r r I sTRAi^Hreueo o u t a n did I learn today?” ------r ------NPtUXNA Teacher: “ What a peculiar ques­ RtOOC€SriR. tion!” Willie: “ Well, they’ll ask me 1 when I get home.”

Ctae: Aw, come on, hare another banana sundae^. Two: Doh’t tempt me. I feel my­ self slipping now.

“ Somewhere a Voice is Calling” is a song, and should not be taken literally by some singers-

Bachelor— Why don’t you drown your sorrow, my friend? Married Man— I can’t. She knows hoTy to swim. V ______On earth the women are aU u . RE6. U. S. PAT. orr. Copyriglit, P. L. Crosb.v, 1927. Johnson Features, Inc. ei927 BY WEA SERVICE. INC. angels, in heaven the angels are all men. ! The clUTei’ence between two “Stinky” Davis Outwits Mickey (Himself) McGuire . By Fontaine Fox WASHINGTON TUBBS H I boy friends is a g ir l./ “ Listen, Abe, you don’t want to marry that girl. Why everybody in B y Crane town kisses her.” “ Veil, th^ town ain’t so beeg!” A O « / V K 3 ^ M/CKEY MC(3ui/?e is J-AYiM’ For Lots of men and things seem easy ME a k d ir You’jll He l p h e g et until you try to do them. Ho m e s i v e ^ A l U O r © The Prince of Wales has been Y o u A DIME* r .\ LITTLE NATURE licensed to practice medici.ie through the award of an honorary The first five questions In today’s diploma. The next time he comes to W l k quiz dealiivg with natural history, America'he can write his own pre­ II I were prepared by the American Na­ scriptions. ture Association. 'The rest deal with a little of everytliing. The answers After years of research it has are on another page. been decided that the two most 1— Is golden rod an annual orfamous sentences in the English perrennial? language are: 2— What is known as the “ kinc “ Ten dollars and costs.” of all crustaceans?” a/ 3— Against what insects arc the “ I pronounce you man and wife.” U. S. Treasury and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing at Wash­ Many a girl now realizes that ington compelled to wage constant bobbing the hair was the unkindest warfare? cut of all. 4— Why are bats useful? 5— Do peanuts grow on trees? Spring Song 6— What is the length of theBetween the buds and the blos­ term of a U. S. senator? soms, 7— Who is S. Parkes Cadmaiv? WTien poets spring-idyls indite. P 8— Has any president of theComes a time, in the seasonal r United States ever been impeached? sequence. 9— What American railway sys­ That is known as the Doctor’s tem has the greatest total mileage? Delight. 10— What is the study of insects called? The web-footed mud larks are mat­ ing. The time seems to be coming And building their nests in the drain; when a good steak will have to be And hark to the gutter snipe, sing­ bought on the dollar down, balance ing I" weekly basis. He k e s Th e d im e :! His bronchial song, in the rain! Bill: Haven’t we met before? Gladys: Kiss me and I’ll see. The red-fianneled slicker is with us. The sore-throated fiu-jay is here. Our automobile figures run into The crocus is waiting to croak us— millions, and so, apparently, do our No wonder the medicos cheer! automobiles. A timekeeper for a railroad gang Even the air is no longer free. It asked a new work'm’an his name. bslongs to the radio trust. “ George W’ashington, suh,” re­ plied the dusky son of toil. “ You’re not the man who cut REG._U.“ s. pa¥. o^. ’.Music hath charms,” not the |C FcnniiK Fox. 1927 Tl;f Bell S-.-ndirnte, Inc) \ least tuneful of which is the bank­ down the cherry tree, are you?” ^ SsPid^Bv NEA SERVICE. INC. note. asked the timekeeper. Jokingly. “ No, suh! “ Twasn’t me, suh. This A dame is as strong as her weak­ is the first wu’k Ah’s done for ovah est wink. a year.” FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS On His Way! B y Blossei Time and tide must wait for the Mail robbers who want what’s ten-ton truck. coming to us sometimes get what’s coming to them. /OOBODVdSr VMILUES TZIAr U7TLS Boy WAT yAE In this prosperous country you AOOSE SAVU/N& SAJEAk. 7 1 RADIO A/OAiOUNC5D WAS LOSrMOS?" A\ may still find a few people so poor Every boost is a knock for some o u r - Twey '^ o s r r / m ss BES-OMEPtACE.' SEE.AE COULEVsi'r they Qjvn two automobiles. folks. / kS BEFOBE M)6a,r A /i’ JOSTA DROPPED OFF 7W’ I'M 70 KEEP A | i^ A .r BV 7AEM rUL. BB VjJORLD.V QW <5OJM0 TILL 1 FAR from AERE.' F/AiD A/M.' FALLS AAIP TA<3 Sr— MAS A . CT7J STOmr'-^ UAL COCHRAN — PICnjRCS KNKK JiM REG. u.s. PAT. orr. •*' */✓ t * * * • " RUBBISA' 6ARREU FOR. AIS b e d /

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m MiiiminlllKm _^ R E g U. S. PAT. O F^CISIT »Y WEA SCTVICe, IWfc L JACK LOCKWILL’S HIDDEN ENEMY by Gilbert Patter (Head the Story, Then Color the Pictore) "And now,” said Daffydoo, “ I’ll and spread them out upon the fix a table, just one of my tricks. plate. And then they all sat down You Tlnies trim the berries of their to dine, all almost starved to little stems and such. It really death. Scouty, as he swallowed f isn’t hard to do, so hurry now, and fast, said, “ My share of berries will please get through. I seem to get not last so very long. I hardly stop more hungry, every berry that I to take a real good ^eath." touch.” Just then thq ^ n ch heard So all the Tlnies sat right down, Clowny yell, and everything just and spread the berries on the went pell-mell. The dishes on the ground. Then Daffydoo brought out table soon were flying here and a plate and said, “ We’ll put them there. A funny cat, with monkey here. Get water from the nearby face, went o’er the table on a race. well, and wash them till they look It caught the Tlnies with surprise real swell, and then when we arc- and gave them quite a scare. eating them, of dirt we’ll have no “ Hey, cut that out,” said Daffy­ fear.” doo. The Tlnies knew he meant it, A great big stone stood right too. He reached and grabbed the nearby, and Daffydoo exclaimed, monkey by Its long and dangling The sheriff showed his warrant. "But if Abe’s rib^ is busted," “ No)y I will fix a lot of places on tail. The ca4:-faced monkey seemed At soon as h« had taken his shower and dressed again, Lockwill Armed with the warrant, the said he, “ we won’t drag him outer bed. We got to search the place, this .stone, where we can eat.” He real proud till Daffy lectured him took Willie Darlihg with,him and. went to see Gideon Butler, the sheriff took them in his flivver 3 They were admitted by Mrs.1 though.” In a small, dark chamber of an upper floor, they found found small rocks around the place aloud, and then he knew that being Rocklakc sheriff., when .lack had told Butler what had happened to to Cowl's home. The village doc­ 3 Cowl, a slatternly, tired-look-’ Imp. The monkey appeared half starved. Willie picked the poor and, as a smile spread on his face, bad was qujte to no avail. him at the old Elwell farm, the sheriff said: “ Well, I guess we bet­ tor’s roadster was standin^be- ing woman. "My husband fell creature up in his arms, and it uttered chattering squeaks, as he said, “ Each one of these, of ter git a warrant from Jedge Quilland, and a permit to search Aba fore the house when Butler and busted his ribs.” she said. though trying to tell them'how glad he was to see them. course, will answer as a seat.” (The Tinles meet a hlppogator in Cowl's house. 1 got a notion we’ ll find t’other feller there.” s-o knocked. “ The doctor's with him now.” ,0is27evNCAscRvicc.mc. (To Be Continued) .TlzdiU fiz^d HaiUa .. — - ^ 1 : .1^ 'I*AGE f o u h t e e i ^ TUESDAY, MAY 10,192T. .

I . -n.rr ■' ■ John Conaway of Philadelphia is Ethel Fish, Mrs. Gertrude Foster continuing meetings all this week and Mrs. Buell Grant, ^ ‘ WOMEN GYM PUPILS N otice at 7:45 p. in. at Gospel hall, Cen-, ter street. T p ^ George B. Johnson of Boston The Manchester Water Com­ spent the week-end with his par­ WILL HOLD BANQUET ents, Mr. and,Mrs. John E. John­ pany will commence flushing The Holden Nelson company, in^ son of Clinton street. Mrs.^ Johnson surance and real estate agents, and children have been spending Women’s gym classes, . which the water mains Tuesday, May have moved from Room 6 in the the past three weeks in town and Park building to Rooms 1 and 2 in will,spend a few weeks with Mrs. worked under the direction of Miss 10, and will continue for two the same place. These rooms were Johnson’s parents in East Hart­ Ruth Calhoun at the School street formerly occupied by Miss Alice ford before' returning to Boston. Recreation Center during the win­ Healey, milliner, who has moved to hr three days until work is Room 3 . ter months, will give an exhibition ____ I The M X club %will be enter­ .in - the gym on Thursday evening, kompleted. tained tomorrow evening at the Angelo Bosco, former Manches­ The exhibition will be followed by ■v—sr - .-f home of Mrs. Arthur Starkweather a banquet to which all who have ter resident, who has been on a of Starkweather street. visit to this country for several been members during the past two months, left yesterday morning for years are invited. Osano will serve The Beethoven Glee club will I a chicken dinner to about 50 wom­ ABOUTTOWN New York and will sail tonight for meet for rehearsal at the Swedish Italy by way of Cherbourg. Mr. Lutheran church tonight at 7:30 en. Bosco, who had lived here for many o’clock. Because of this rehearsal Committees in charge of ar­ years, went back to Italy three the Boy Scouts, Troop 5, will meet rangements are: Banquet, Mrs. Miss Edith B. Rogers, teacher years ago to make his home there. tomorrow night at 7 o’clock in­ Oliver Mallon, Mrs. William Robin­ it Senior English at the local High He was given a banquet at th'e stead of tonight, their regular son, Mrs. Alfred Grezel, Mrs. Otto Uchool last year, and now of W^ash- home of Cosimo Aloislo of Oak' meeting night. Scheutz; entertainment, Mrs. SPECIAL L " Ington, Is spending a few daj's vis­ street on Sunday afternoon and af­ Joseph LaShay, Miss Rose Wood- iting at Teachers’ hall. ter the banquet about 18 of hisj house, Miss Alleen McHale; decora­ friends went to the home of Angelo} SOC AND BUSKIN TO DO tion, Mrs. B. C. Kraetchmar, Mrs. Gatti of Birch street, where Mr.l Walter Vennart, Mrs. Paul Donze. $12.50 Women’s swimming and life sav­ Bosco has been staying. Women who wish to attend the ing classes at the School street Rec “ PRIVATE SECRETARY” banquet must sign up at the Rec LAWN MOWERS frill be canceled on Thursday even­ Temple Chapter, O. E. S., will before Wednesday at noon. ing because of the gym class ex­ meet in Odd Fellows hall Wed^ hibit and banquet which will be nesday evening at 8 o ’clock. A $10 held then. On Friday evening. May 20 the class of candidates will be initiat­ Soc and Buskin Dramatic club of ed. '> the South Manchester High school Roller beg,rlng. 16 Inch A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. will present a three-act comedy, ' cutting blade. Frank Damato, of Homestead Twenty-five young people from “The Private Secretary’’ which street yesterday morning. the Luther League of the Swedish will be enacted in the school as­ MAY 9th TO 14th Others from $7.95 to Lutheran church will go to Mid­ sembly hall. , Elizabeth Carrington, 6, of 16 dletown Thursday evening when Eleven high school students have $24.95 L Trumbull street, is recovering from the Beethoven Glee club will ren­ parts In the play and ate being fliptherla. She Is a pupil in St. der a concert In the Swedish Luttf- coached by Miss Rebecca J. Estey, Special Display and Demonstration James’ Parochial school. eran church there. Sherwood An­ junior English teacher, dramatic derson of Center street has charge coach at the school. Joseph Morlarty. of Main street, of the transportation. The auto­ The' Cast Is out of work for a few days with mobiles will leave the church at FolLowing ,1* the cast for the an injured hand. 6:30. c play iyUleh’ -vras originally sched­ Red Seal . Zephyrs Grass Catchers uled to"'be staged this week Fri­ The teachers of the Eighth Dis- The Ever Ready Circle of King’s day: $1.25 Irlct will entertain the Education­ Daughters will meet tonight at the Mr. Marsland, M. F. H. al club tomorrow afternoon at home of Mrs. L. A. B. Gilmore of ...... John Cervini 2 9 c yard Adjustable to any size t:15 at the Harding school on 141 Middle Turnpike at 7:45. The Harry Marsland (his nephew) mower. Galvanized sheet Hollister street. Permanent hostess will be assisted by Miss ...... Albert Tuttle 1 A living model will display new summer frocks Iron bottom. Mr. Cattermole . .Terence Shannon Douglas Cattermole (his nephew) fashioned of Red Seal Zephyrs in our Fabric De­ ...... Charles Treat W aving partment .all this week. This material is a bright, Rev. Robert Spauding all-purpose fabric, especially adapted for warm ...... William Gahrman Those who want a perma­ weather wear, for rompers, frocks, or home deco­ Mr. Sydney Gibson .Frank McCann John, K n o x ...... Rodney Wilcox nent wave before Memorial rative purposes. 32 inches wide Edith Marsland .Katherine Carney Eva W eb ster...... Edith Balch Day are requested to make Mrs. Stead ..Madeline Woodhouse Taffoshan, yard ...... 99c Miss A sh ford ...... Mae Clune appointments now. 50c Rayon Alpaca^ yard . .39c A smart, new fabric that is very similar The fabric of many uses: slips, children’s to broadcloth at one-third the price. Guar­ dresses, underwear, draperies and linings. All anteed fast color. Soft plaids and checks the cool summer shades' of maize, orchid, Our Annual May Garment Sale BOY SCOUT NEWS iu the wanted shades. white, peach, etc. GARDEN TOOLS WELDON Bamboo Rakes ..... 59c A Court of Honor will be held In ‘‘Year Round" Charmeusette, g When we offer at the makers cost the School street Rec on Thursday 79c Ray-de-Rayon, yard .. 59c Steel Rakes...... 69c up evening. May 26. All Scouts who Beauty Parlors Spading'Forks . . . .$1.49 wish to go before the court should y a r d ...... 59c Twenty-five new and alluring patterns In. This fabric with its permanent, satiny lus­ all new Spring and Summer have their applications for merit Bernice M. Juul, Prop. this smart rayon fabric from which to choose. S p a d e s____...... $1.98 8.53 Main. Phone 107-2 ter and wonderfully soft finish will prove The ideal fabric for sport frocks as It laun­ Hoes ...... i 98c up badges or first class badges in the Ideal for captivating frocks. 36 inches wide. ders so beautifully. Cultivators 98c to $1.49 Wearables hands of the secretary of the court Guaranteed fast colors. of honor, David Hutchinson of 63 Hose Reels ..!.. .^ $2.50 Hamlin street, on or before Mon­ The growing girl, the miss, the woman should make Rayola, yard ...... 75c Garden Hose, 50 feet iii day. May 16. Herald Advs. Bring Results Honan Pongee, yard ... $1.39 length ______. . . $5.95V the most of the coming six days and choose her suit, her 33 inches wide. This washable fabric A heavy rayon material that is being used coat, her dress, or other wear at our big garment section with its rough and heavy finish makes it extensively for slips. It comes in the light and make the savings at makers’ cost. jDiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiimtiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiR adaptable for sport dresses, children’s frocks, shades, as well as navy. draperies, blouses, etc. All the light sum­ ALL NEW SUITS, YOURS AT MAKERS’ mer shades. Radio Chiffon, yard ..... 79c RICE’S SEEDS COST PRICE. I PUON By the way this material has been selling Tasteful models of snappy tweeds, twills, and ensem­ Excellum, yard ...... 79c in the past few weeks we know that it is go­ 10c and pkg. bles in both silk and cloths. ' Come see the suits we are A sport satin material that is very, popular ing to be very popular for warm weather now offering this week at for slips to wear under the light weight sum­ frocks. Yegeteble and Floww seeds* mer frocks; its heavy quality makes it shad- $21.10, $25.30, $28.95 and $33.40 each ofr-proof. All shades. GOOD THINGS TO EAT Silk and Cotton Prints, Garden ALL NEW COATS, YOUR CHOICE AT MAKERS, Rose Marie Crepe, yard .. 99c yard ...... 99c COST PRICE. I MEAT SUGGESTIONS | A frock of this light weight silk and cot­ Dozens of the popular prints can be found Trellises Our entire stock of mixtiu'es, plaids, twills, satin and ton material can hardly be .told, from an all In this material— the colors^ are guaranteed faille coats, plain and fur trimmed at maker’s’ cost. 5 Tender, lean Pork Chops or Pork to Roast. = silk dress. It comes In soft, subdued pat­ fast. Suitable for street, sport and general terns with tan or gray backgrounds. wear frocks. 36 inches wide. 5 Foot Fan Wonderful values now at E Native Veal for fricassee. = Trellises .. 89c 816.95, $18.15, $21.10, $28.75, $37. 95, $43.10 | E Pinehurst Hamburg 25c lb. . | SPECIAL! SPECIAL! Trellises, NEW SPRING FROCKS ALL AT MAKERS’ ^ = Breaded Veal is very nice. Try some Native Veal = ,1 COST PRICE.. = Chops or Cutlets this way. = . $l;39i $1.79 $2.19 45c W ashable 17 inches wide; 8 Think of the selection you have. Our full showing of I Honeycomb Tripe. 5 feet high. cloth, jersey and sport materials, new georgettes, crepes S Fresh or Salted Pigs’ Hocks. E “Year Round" and satins. All the new high shades in all sizes, priced Flat Crepe Trellises, I FRESH VEGETABLES | $2.49 to $3.49 $6.75, $8.90, $10.60, $12.55, $13.94, $15.59 Prints 26 inches wide.'8 feet-hlgh. $15.90, $21.10, $25.30, $28.95 up. = Fresh Strawberries, Native Asparagus, Spinach, E E Dandelions and Rhubarb are at their best just now. E $1,79 yard ALL NEW BLOUSES AND SWEATERS AT E First delivery 8 a. m. , E 39c yard This Is one of the best selling fabrics In MAKERS’ COST PRICE. the country today—suitable for frocks, Garden Tools Silk or cotton blouses in the newest styles. Smocks, uiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimT These beautiful, old fashioned prints are slips and underwear. It comes In over Sweaters and all like garments at the biggest livings the last word in spring colorings and de­ twenty shades Including: monkeyskln, 25cr yet if you make selection this week at signs. Suitable for both women’s and cherry blossom, mother goose, Athenih children’s warm weather frocks. Guar­ blue, poudre blue, conch shelL gooseberry, $1.74, $2.49, $3.29, $4.24, $5.25, $5.60 anteed fast colors, by us and by the man­ and navy. Our regular price is $1.98 a Small hand trowels, culti­ ufacturer. Regular price 45c a yard. yard. vators and weeders. and $6.29 each. HOUSE GARMENTS, YOUR CHOICE AT MAKERS’ COST. Hale’s Wash Goods Dept.— ^Main Floor. You will better realize the savings if you select a Hu-, Children’s brite, Granby, Sacson or Queen make dress. Also Ki- monas, Robes and all house garments and Nurses’ uni­ Garden Sets at forms at makers’ cost. close-out prices. FOR THE GIRLS YOU GET NOW AT MAKERS’ COST. Coast, dresses of wash fabrics, clpth dreses, party dress­ Basement es, school dresses, skirts, middies, knickers and all the SO U TH ’MR N CHJSS T£R • C ONN ' garments the girls wear in the very newest Spring styles and the savings are well W’orth while if you select now at — 1..—» - —. — makers’ cost. ' r - ' FLORSHEIMS ■ ■ ■...... - ^

[m iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|||||||||i||,,|,||,|,|||||,||,|||,|~|,|||,|,||,||||,ii|,|,||| fo r smart style— niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifniiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil . They’re just the shoes a young I SALE OF REAL ESTATE f W hat Time Is It? SLICKERS man’s fancy turns to when he thinks o f style. New, fine look- 1 Fridayj May 13th, at 6:0Q P.M- | Time passes so much faster in Summer that it is of I even more impcjrtaiice than iii Winter, to check it up. ing lasts— new shades of tan— 2 DayUght Saving Time. 5 ' You need a clock that will be right. Of what v^ufr Boys’ And Men’s is a clock if you have to ask some one a dozen times a nothing equal to them anywhere E we will sell at public sal^ on the premises, the property S S located at No. 386 Parker Street, belonging to the 1 day whether the clock is right or not? In Green and Yellow: ,:; If there is really no good clock in your home, why not buy one right now and get one good enough so it may be o * '^lO I ESTATE OF MARY J, BARNEY. I handed dovm to future generations and valu^ by them ^3^ to ^5^ i „■ 7 § M people today value the timepieces of theiFapeestors ? £ The property consists of about four acres of land # ‘ See our clocks made to keep time for iiosterity 'as well i together with all thq buildings thereon. 1 as for todayd We will surprise you with mocks of £ The property may be inspected by inquiry of us, at | .wonderful beauty and worth and genuine significance. Girls’ Slickers Fancy Colors GLENNEY'S S any time before sale. ' > ^ Fine timepieces in solid mahogany cases $15*00 up. m.. -^.7 ^ , ■ ^ 'ft Reds, Greens, Blues, $5.95 Tinker Building. • ti- The Manehestqr Trust Arthur L. Hultman S Jewelers, Stationms, Opticians. S Visit Our Boys’ Department. ^ Company, Administrator. New Store, 767 Main St. luMMIIIWIIlilHWHMIiilMWIlim hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHitiiiiliu

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