l«f ■■ ■ >'"' . ' \ ' ■ f -^ \ ■n Vv ‘ - ^ S ? “ - V • -’ *_• V )=••'->.•?'*:' ■. -il-r-''> -' - . - •;• ^ •• •• •• V^v .- . „ '■ \. • ^ v j ' ' ’ • ',. •» -.- m

wen .iiM m t o il .THE WEATHER^ NET PBB8S RUN AVERAGE DAILT OUiGUIiATION FoTccaot br V. '8. Weather Barea««. Rcw'HaTca for the Month of Aal^t 1929

5 , 3 0 1 Fair tod* 7 and tomorrow. ■ ■ ■ ■ . Membera of the A adit Bnrcaa of '^■t2 Clrcnlatlona 1 ^ 1 ..■■■11.^ ■'^y/ii. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1929. P g iC E TH R E E GEIITE VOLi. XI jIII*, N0» 265» (Classifled Advertising on Page 12)

QUIET WOMAN TRAVELLER Holds The Whip Hand WAR VETERANS TURNS OUT TO BE DOLL. JEWS, MOSLEMS , Aug. 24.— The most quiet woman traveller France j has ever seen through Paris re-! IN BIG RIOTS GET DETAILS cently on her way to represent j 5 modern Danish industries at the I Barcelona exp<^3ltlon. She had come all the way from Copen- I N jm S A L E M OF HOSPITAL hagen and her fellow-travellers j in the second class railway car-j riage vowed she had not spoken ^ a single word during the entire, Twelve Dead and More Congressman F e n n De­ journey. I NAVAL ACCORD For “ she” was a life-size doll rrs POSITION g iv e n dressed in the national Danish Than 100 Wounded When scribes Newington Insti­ costume, correct in every de­ tail. One of the large newspa­ Arabs Attack Hebrews at IS ENDANGERED tution to Legionnaires; pers had hit upon this ingenious 2,600 MILES ON WAY idea of publicity and met with the collaboration of the rail­ Wailing Wall. B Y m C l T Y Election This Afternoon. roads who had offered the doll a free ticket which she wore Conunander Eckener Changes Course to Avoid Storms suspended about her fair neck. Vlwut AM IN\/Al.rt) BULLETIN! Hartford, Aug. 24.— E. Hart YYhite flouse Applies Brakes Ahead— Expects to Reach Los Angeles on Monday; Fenn, representing the First Con­ London, Aug. 24.^Brltish necticut District in Congress, told warships have been ordered to LOUISE THADEN Palestine as a result of the on Reports That Agree­ Passengers Calm Daring Yesterday’s Storm— Ship in the American Legion convention violent and fatal rioting be­ here today the details of the new tween Moslems and Jews at ment is Near on the Dis­ Touch With Radio Stations All Along Coast and WiA veterans hospital that is to be built i LEADMC DERBY Jerusalem, it was learned at down in Newington in the near fu -' the Admiralty this afternoon. At least 12 are dead and armament Question. Its Home Base in Germany. ture. Sharing the speaking honors more than 100 wounded as a v.’ith the Congressman was Sanford result of fighting at the “ Wall­ ^ * H. Wadhams, of Torrington, briga­ Pittsburgh Aviatrix Arrives ing Wall” and elsewhere In Washington, Aug. 24.— Prema­ (C opyrlgh t 1929, INS) ZEPPELIN’S LOG dier-general, U. S. A., retired, who Jerusalem. At the request of the British ture and excessive publicity has On Board Graf Zeppelin, CVia fought the war over again in some In Wichita, Kansas Forty high commissioner In Palestine jeopardized more than one interna­ Radio) Aug. 24.— Favored by a; New York, Ang. 24.— ^Follow­ ing is the log of the Graf Zep­ detail, stressing the enemy drive the British battleship Barham tional undertaking. President Hoo­ following wind of 20 miles perl of 1918 as “ the most dramatic pe­ and the cruiser Sussex were or­ pelin since beginning her round Minutes Ahead of Rivals. ver doesn’t want his proposed naval hour velocity, the Graf Zeppelin the world flight. All times are riod of the war.’’ dered to leave Malta during the day. . agreement with Great Britain im­ at 11:50 o’clock tonight, Saturday. Eastern Daylight Saving. Pointing his address, the gener­ perilled from any such cause. (7:50 a. m. Saturday, Eastern. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8 al declared “ we must never forget Wichita, Kansas, Aug. 24.— Still It is for this reason, largely, that 12:40 A. M.— Left Lakehnrst, London, ’ Aug. 24. — British the White House has applied the Daylight time) was bowling along N. J. that Belgium depended for her led by Louise MePhetridge Tha- peace and security on treaties.” He armored cars patrolled the streets brakes to the tal^ of an Anglo- over the mid-PacIfle ocean at a 1:45 A. M.— Circled Statne of den, blonde Pittsburgh aviatrix, American agreement being just Liberty in New York harbor, the was urging the Legion to work for of Jerusalem today while Royal speed of 70 miles per hour. who was forty minutes ahead of around the corner. “ Satisfactory official starting point of the more armaments even while “ main­ Air force planes roared overhead The Zeppelin’s position at that taining sympathy to world peace.’’ hex nearest rival in elapsed time, progress” has been made in the round the world flight. in order to prevent'renewed out­ Dawes-Mac Donald negotiations in time was 44.. 10 Degrees North SA-TUUDiVY, AUGUST 10 Describes Hospital contestants in the Women’s Cali­ breaks between Jews and Arabs, London, but there is a long road Latitude, 175.30 Degrees Bast 8 A. M.— Landed at Frled- Congressman Fenn read to the fornia to Cleveland $25,000 Air ahead before there can be concrete Longitude, which is approximately richshafen. convention a detailed description which already have cost twelve Derby will fly on from Kansas City accomplishment. And that road. In­ 2,600 miles east by northeast of WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14 of the Newington hospital which today. deaths and more than 100 in- cidentally. is filled with obstacles. 11:35 P. M.— Departed for . f GIJCAT TQWfAPl-N Tokio. he received from General Frank T. Negotiating the Tulsa to Wichi- juries. Officials Worried Tokio on second leg of world Hines, director of the Veterans :-GUDGETSPE^Ca Administration officials have At this hour the Zeppelin was flight. Following a two hour battle be­ iW-fUE COlAtAON? Bureau. The description was in tween hundreds of Moslems and "P h il ip ^ kjowi?e .ni. secretly been rather worried over cruising along with but four of her MONDAY, AUGUST 19 part as follows: , Jews, officers of the British pro­ A STEEL \WILL. IM A TPAlL BOOV the effect the Dawes-Mac Donald five motors in operation. Dr. 5:40 A. M.—-Landed at Kasu- “ The site contains approximate­ tectorate ordered all ^habitants in­ negotiations may be having upon Eckener, commander of the airship, migaura Air Field, near Tokio. ly 199 acres and it is planned to doors at 6:30 p. m., yesterday. All the other world naval powers, ordered the fifth motor cut out FRIDAY, AUGUST 23 provide facilities for 250 patients. shops were closed, and the popu­ Japan, France and Italy, whose co­ when he picked up the following 2:12 A. M.— Departed for JLos Buildings will be of fire-proof con­ lation was in a state of suppressed operation is vitally essential to any wind, to conserve fuel. Angeles on third leg of jonmey. struction, brick faced, slate roofs, excitement as armored cars moved worth while accomplishments in All on board were well and hap­ Midnight position given as 165 steel windows, and skeleton frame slowly through the streets. the field of further naval dis­ py. At the time of filing this dis­ East 40.05 North, appro.xlniately reinforced concrete. Serious Riot. Snowden *s Rapid Rise armament. patch the airship was only about 1,450 miles from Tokio. 300 miles from the 180th Meridian, SATURDAY, AUGUST 24 ' “ The main building wi^l contain The most serious riot, occurring ' The Dawes-Mac Donald conver­ when a crowd of Moslems invaded sations have not yet procured any­ at which point the Graf will sail 7:16 .4. M.— Graf radioed po­ accommodations for patients, clin­ thing tangible enough to present to from tomorrow into today. On sition as 43.30 North Latitude ical facilities, receiving ward, op­ a Jewish house in Damascus gate, followed a number of demonstra­ Is Political Miracle the other powers, and the exces­ passing the 180th. Meridian the 171.10 East Longitude, in' the erating suite, and the necessary sively optimistic stories .m»natlng Graf loses ten hours in clock time, North Pacific about 750 miles administrative space. tions at the famous Wailing Wall. Groups of aged Jewish worshippers from London and Washington of an her position changing from 17 southwest of the Aleutian archi- London, Aug. 24.— Philip Snow-f It altered the percentages of re­ hours ahead of Eastern Daylight i pelago. Other Details were assaulted and stoned while parations the various nations were Anglo-American agreement being den. Socialist Chancellor of the Ex­ at hand are considered likely to to 7 hours behind that time. ^ ------“ Connected to the main build­ kneeling in front of the wall, and chequer of Great Britain, finds to get from the figures adopted at ing by covered walks there will be excitement ran high through the Spa— and to Britain’s loss. make the other powers suspicious himself today in .'the totally unex­ and a bit resentful. Los Angeles, Cal., Aug. 24.— commercial flight across the Paci­ a ward building, and in addition it city when the attacks became pected role not only of hero of his known. It divided the payments Germany Tenor of Rumors The Graf Zeppelin’s position as fic, heretofore uncon'quered with­ is planned to provide a recreation own party, but one enthusiastically was to make into two classes, un­ building, nurses quarters, officers Communists throughout Pales­ The tenor of some of these ex­ radioed from the dirigible and^?ick- out -Intermediate stops by aircraft tine have exploited ’the events of backed by the opposition- parties,'conditional and conditional. The uberant reports has been that ed up by the Los Angeles Herald of any kind. ^ quarters, and a building with lauded with unanimity by the en- former were to be paid by Germany space for the 'mess and kitchen, the last few days, it is reported, Great Britain and the United States short-wave receiver today gave But even this conservative choice calling upon Jews throughout the tire British press and the entire in any event. The latter were to were on the verge of an important Latitude 43.50 North; Longtltude refrigeration, stores, boiler room, British nation. 1 be postponed or suspended In case of route is far from removing ali garage, and on the upper floors protectorate to “ break down Brit­ agreement which, at the proper 174.10 East at 12 noon (Greenwich the hazards to be met in trans­ -K>- ish Imperialism.” With the popu­ He is the miracle man of latter-! Germany had financial difficulties, time, would be shoved down the mean time), which is 4 a. m-.. Paci­ pacific flight. The ocean quarters for male atetndants.” day British politics. If six years'The payments to France, Italy and Louise Thaden lation tense because of fears of a throats of the other powers. That fic Coast Standard time. south of the Aleutian Islands, that Of the use of the-hospital the general outbreak between Moslems or even six weeks ago, anybody j Belgium were to come largely out kind of business isn’t conducive to “ All well” said the message. The Congressman read: “ The hospital desolate, sprawling broken chalh ol ta stretch ‘in 47 minutes, Mrs. and Jews, these communistic activi­ had been rash enough to predict of the unconditional reparations, international amity and coopera- position given was estimated at ap­ land extending far westward into may cover tubercular and general ties have presented the British au­ such a thing, he would have been Those of Britain were to come proximately 2,000 land miles the Pacific from the‘Alaskan penin­ medical and surgical cases but in Thaden tightened her grasp on first place for heavy planes. Phoebe thorities with a serious problem. marked as crazy. And it is all be- largely out of the conditional pay- (Continue on Page ‘J) northeast' of Tokio. sula, is one of the worst patches in the main will be built for neuro­ I cause, for the first time in six ments. The other countries were, Omlie of Memphis kept a comfort­ P*revent Bloodshed. the Pacific. psychiatric cases.” . _ a se-'years, a statesman is battling for , therefore, sure of their swag. Brit- able lead imthe light ship division. Jerusalem police prevented Friedrlchshafen, Aug. 24.— The Forty per cent of the time It ia As the convention sat patiently rioVs rioH n Yeml’n^Moshe.'a Jew-1 the hard-pressed British taxpayer , ain was not. And, furthermore, a Graf Zepelin at 9 o’clock this moru- Thea Rache of Germany was and telling Britain’s late Allies that' part of the reparations wa^ to be completely enveloped in densest listening to the speeches, there wondering today whether she ish suburb, which was Invaded by nRST OIL DIGGER nlng, Greenwich mean time, or 5 a. fog, cloaking the entire area in a was more or less conrern over the Britain is not going to be the goat made ' in' goods— ’ ’largely ‘ to Britain. m.. New York Daylight Saving could collect if she finished in the a group of 100 Arabs armed and Snowden plainly told the con­ grey, murky shroud. Several hun­ election of officers which was to be prize money. Department of Com­ ready for battle. A detachment of of their financial plans. time, was at 43.20 North Latitude dred miles square, the area 1* announced early in th afternoon. police arrived oh the scene before A Contrast in Men. ference he was not having any. He and 170 East Longtltude. merce officials telegraphed the fly­ It is the turn in the long lane. would not agree to dny alteration TELLS EXPERIENCE avoided whenever possible by \V. S. Alexander, of Meriden, pres­ ing fraulein that her license had the outbreak took place, and the The following radiogram was re­ mariners, for unlike the fogs over ident of the Putnam Bank & Trust For five years, in every conference of the Spa percentages, which expired July 15. T^is might serve Moslems were scattered in con­ meant a net loss to Britain of over ceived here from the ship: some areas of the i^tlantic, the Co., and Theodore B. Burr, of fusion. designed to liquidate the debt and “ The position at 9 o’clock Green­ to bar her since only licensed ships mollify old hatreds, Britain was $12,000,000 a year. He wanted a Aleutian shroud, can never'' be Fairfield, were the sole contestants are eligible, but it was expected a Much of the rabble of Jerusalem larger percentage of the uncondi­ wich mean time was 43.20 North counted .upon to lift after a brief for department commander. Oliver has followed Moslem leaders in the represented by Sir Austen Cham­ 1$ Still Alive and Lives With­ and 170 East. All well.” temporary license would be grant­ berlain, Foreign Secretary in the tional payments to be allotted to period of blotting out the sun. Ellsworth, of Portland, was to re­ ed in her behalf. various forays, and these tatterde­ Britain. And he was unwilling that The position given is approxi­ In addition, th^ area for sever^ tire, according to his friends. The malions furnish no real cause for Tory cabinet. He came to be con­ mately 1,650 land miles northeast Ruth Nichols Second sidered a wooden lath painted to Germany— a keen industrial com­ in Two Miles of First Oil hundred miles south of the islan'x convention seemed inclined to be­ Rath Nichols, Rye, N. Y., was the anxiety. But there apparently are petitor of Britain— should dump of Tokio. is subject to severe and sudden lieve that Alexander would win determined members among the look like Steel. He was deemed storms, and latest weather reports second arrival from Tulsa and the tail to Briand’s kite. What the reparation goods into Britain. the prize. Rumors were current to Gladys O’Donnell, Long Beach, Moslem ranks, for automobiles re­ Champion of the Taxpayer. WeU in World. n e a r s 2,000 MILES. Indicate that conditions far from the effect that the entire Middlesex turning from the Hebrew University French wished, he largely O. K.'d. Tokio, Aug. 24.—^Plunging over favorable are to be encountered in Calif., was the third. So when The Hague conference The British taxpayers rubbed delegation would support him if near Mount Scopus yesterday were the broad Pacific toward the fear­ that vicinity at present. Fourteen of the twenty who of the powers was called to take up their eyes in amazement when they Titusville, Pa., Aug. 24.— Seven­ their own candidate were out of started in the race last Sunday fired upon. the Young plan for the final settle- read all this. ‘ Here was somebody some fog belt south of the Aleutian Traveling Fast the running. ty-two years ago Tuesday, Samuel Islands, the giant round-the-world However, in spite of the obsta­ from Santa Monica, Calif., remain­ ment of reparations Germany was at last battling for them. And. of B. Smith, who celebrated his 86th ed in the running today. all things, the hero who was doing jjjj-jjjjjay three weeks ago, chang- dirigible Graf Zeppelin, • enroute cles the Graf faces in reducing to a to pay, nobody looked for much from Tokio to Los Angeles, today' mere “ mill pond” the mightiest of Mrs. May Halzlip was the last to trouble from England. it was the man they had been ed, by a chance drilling experiment, • land ip. Wichita, having been forc­ taught to fear the most. When the was nearing the 2,000 mile mark oceans, the giant dirigible Is an­ LITTLE GIRL GETS But they forgot Snowden. He is what was known as Drake’s Folly of the longest sustained trans­ nihilating space with the same type ed down twice on the hop from no wooden lath. He is all steel. Labor Socialist party was going on to the opening of the field prcduc- SAVANT CHANGES from strength to strength, the oceanic flight ever attempted by of distance-devastating progress Tulsa. Where Chamberlain, in highly Ing the finest natural oil in the aircraft. which has characterized the flight “ My engine behaved abominab­ polished diplomatic language, was Tory and Liberal leaders respected world. Discovery of oil in this town the emotional and romantic Ram­ On the basis of fairly frequent ever since the Zeppelin started out ly,” she laufghed. “ I fished every­ LEHER FROM DEAD accustomed to call a spade an agri­ was the first in the world. It was reports from the dirigible telling of on this Twentieth Century conquest thing out of my oil line but an ele­ cultural instrument with which one say MacDonald, but they dreaded then and is still known as Pennsyl­ SEX IN CHICKENS Snowden as a man who worked ac­ speedy progress across the Pacific, of the world on August 9. phant.” loosened and removed earth. Snow­ vania grade crude oil. The dis­ it was computed that at 7 p. m., to­ At times reaching 100 miles An overheated motor brought' den in plain language called a spade cording to logic and carried his coverer lives but two miles away logic to the point of ruthlessness. day (6 a. m., New York Daylight hourly, the Zeppelin thus far has down Vera Walker, Los Angeles, a spade. It shocked the French, from the scene of his epochal saving time), the Graf was fast averaged a spanking pace of -al­ 20 miles from Wichita. She ascend­ Judd Gray Wrote It When in who called him a cad, and the more Snowden’s career is one of the French Scientist Tells Col­ romances of world politics. He achievement. approaching the unmarked spot in most 70 miles an hour, and If no ed again, missed the city and sur­ they Insulted him in their press, In an Interview today Mr. Smith the ocean which would mean she unforseen complication develops to the more the British cheered their was born 65 years ago, his father prised 15,000 spectators a., the air- Shadow of Chair— Is De­ recalled vividly the details of the had left 2,000 miles " of storm- hamper progress. Dr. Eckener champion. being a poor weaver of Cowling. leagues at Congress of pert by breezing in from the north. The son had an aptitude for books. event. “ Colonel Edwin L. Dralje tossed waves behind her In the trail- should easily realize his desire to Mary von Mack of Detroit turn­ What Young Plan Provided. who promoted the drilling of the be in Los Angeles by Tuesday. The high spots of the Young blazing flight over the Pacific ex­ ed back to Tulsa suffering from an livered Today. (Continued on Page 2.) first oil well, engaged my father panses. An iiidlcaOon of the Graf’s re­ His Experiments. attack of “ air sickness,” but re­ plan were three: _____ and me to do the drilling,” he All’s Well. , markable speed was Seen in the covered and flew here. reminisced. “We were blackcmiths, Messages flashed from the wire­ position, broadcast at 10 a. m., to­ I New York, Aug. 24.— A voice but had occasionally drilled artes­ less room of the dirigible out of day (9 p. m. New York Daylight Cambridge, Mass., Aug. 24— The from the unknown spoke today to ARREST MANAGER ian wells for salt water. touch with the world save by the Saving time Friday). and picked more than 1,000 eminent scientists COOUDGE TO MARRY the one that its mortal master loved OVER 300 ENTERED Made Rigging marvel of radio, told that all 18 up by the Japanese government from all parts of the world who had most. “ Spent several months trying to passengers were well and happy, wireless station at Ochlishi on the attended the sessions of the 13th SOMETIME NEXT MONTH Judd. Gray, dead these nineteen find a way lo gel down lo ihe rock. and thankful for deliverance from Island of Hokkaido. International Physiological Con- months since he and Ruth Synder IN PLANE EVENTS IN TAXICAB THEFT Finally at my father’s request. the fury of ' the hurricane which Gives Position .gress here and in Boston, today died in Sing Sing’s electric chair Colonel Drake went to Brie— it was caught the huge ship in its swirling At this time, the Graf gave her a long trip in those days— to get position as 161,26 Bast Longitude, had officially disbanded. Is Now Seeking Apartment in for their murder of Albert Snyder, CTiP yesterday. While the physiologists from was speaking to the daughter, he five lengths of six inch Iron pipe, Striking a northeast course 39.20 North Latitude, which is ap­ this country were enroute to their New Haven; Ceremony to cherished above all— his little Jane, 300,000 Visitors Expected Louis A. Neron, Held After each section ten feet long. While slightly north of the 35th Parallel, proximately 1,190 mil4s east of the- : homes, other groups of foreign visi­ Be in Plainville. 12 years old today. i he was gone we built a blacksmith’s Dr. Hugo Eckener, the Graf’s com­ Kasumigaura Airport, where the tors were to make visits to other He was speaking not as a man j I shop along side the well, and we mander. Is piloting the huge ship GrSif took off at 3:12 p. m., yester­ centers of research. New Haven, Aug. 24. ■— John who had loved unwisely and who At Cleveland Today; Call­ Quiz in Supposed Mid- 1 made the rigging and tools for the along a route some 500 nliles south day (2:12 a. m.. New York Day­ Before officially ' disbanding at Coolldge, negotiating for an apart­ had slain, he was speaking just as’ I drilling. of the Great Circle steamer lanes, light Saving time.) Sanders theater. Harvard University ment on Fountain street. In the “ daddy.” “ We sank four lengths of the thus cutting himself o ff from visual She had thus aMompllshed ,al- yesterday, the permanent interna­ Westville district' here, roused the Gets Letter Today. ed “World Series of Air.” night Robbery. new pipe, put a wooden conductor contact with the passenger liners moat 1.200 miles in. less than 19 tional committee reported in favor curiosity of his friends who taxed The letter that Jane tvill receive on toj) of the last length and at a which ply between America and hours of flying, -In spite of crashing of holding the next Congress, three him with planning to be married today, although from a father long 45 foot depth we struck rock. We Asia. This route was decided upon into a violent electrical storm of Cleveland, 0., Aug. 24 — This Louis A. ijeron, local manager of cleaned this out and began drill such proportions that for a while years hence, in Italy. The motion soon. dead, is written in the tenor of a the City Taxi Company, was placed because of reports of adverse w’as unanimously carried. The city The young railroad clerk ad­ living parent advising a beloved normally complacent city was a Ing. weather conditions along the the huge ship was tossed as help­ veritable maelstrom of roaring undef arrest at the police station lessly as a leaf-. • • ' was not chosen. mitted the fact, adding the cere­ child. There will be ten more of this forepoon In cbnnectlon with “ On the sixth day, when we had steamer course. Sharp head winds, One of the features of the closing mony would take place at Governor them, one each birthday anni­ motors and zooming aircraft today gone down 69 feet, I happened to rainstorms and electrical disturb­ Aeronautical ‘ experts " here, who as the 1929 National Air Races and the hitherto unexplained theft of are watching the progress of the session was the report of prof. F. John H. Trumbull’s palatial home versary until Jane Is 22. $11.25 which Neron reported to look down the hole. You can ances such as that which tossed the Caridroi, of the University of Paris in Plainville some time In Septem­ Judd Gray, a pitifully unherolc aeronautical exposition formally Imagine my thrill when I saw a yel­ dirigible like a loosened kite yes­ dirigible with an “ aIrTminded” . ,lil- got under way. have been committed at the taxi terday * were reported over the terest unprecedented in Japanese concerning amazing experiments of ber. He insisted the exact date figure in his trial with Ruth Sny­ office duringr one night this week. low foam bubbling up. It was oil. sex control in chickens. hadn’t been set. der as a murderer, rose to the Prior to the start of the opening In another few days we had pumps steamer lane, and Dr. Eckener im­ history, feel that the Graf’s con­ events this morning It was estim­ Neron was arrested after he had quest of that storm proves beyond The French savant told his col­ heiglits of his span of life in the been questioned by the police and working and the first oil well in the mediately resolved to cancel hla leagues how he had changed hens RUTH ELDER TO WED ' death cell where ho awaited elec­ ated by competent authorities that world was producing.” first intenUon of flying over the the shadow of a doubt the practic­ more than 300,000 visitors were In failed to explain certain suspicious ability of airships of this type to into roosters in his laboratory. Af­ trocution at Sing Sing prison. circumstances in connection with Smith works ten hours a day on steamer ^ track, and take the safer, ter a simple surgical operation. Dr. Los Angeles, Aug. 24.— Although Hd thought not of hla paramour, the city to witness the gala classls the acre garden adjoining his if longer course. withstand successfully the worst of the air.. the supposed sneak-thief job. that elemental disturbances have Caridtrolt said the hens grew it was rumored recently that Ruth. not of his wife. He thought not After close questioning by Chief l(ome. His hobby Is his health. He 500 Miles L oi^r. combs and tall feathers, crowed, Elder, now flying in the 'Women’s of himself. Hla thoughts were all Pilots, famous and unsung, de­ eats only gteen vegetables ■ from The route the Graf Zeppelin Is to offer. .. signers, manufacturers, engineers of Police Gordon, Neron Is said to Feared the Lightning fought with one another, and had Air Derby to Cleveland, was en­ for the little child he had fathered, have admitted that the money he his own garden, does not eat des- now flying Is some 500 miles longer all the physical * attributes of gaged to marry Hoot Gibson, film and he devoted those last hours of and representatives of every other ‘ serts, candies or sweets of any kind, than the course originally decided During the storm Dr. Eckener eonceivable branch of the flying told the police he had left hidden ordered the ship’s trailing roosters. actor, a report was current in the mortality to a labor of love, _ the In a desk had no existence in reali­ and never used tea, .coffee or other upon, but In the* opinion of Com­ The Parisian physiologist stated film colony today that she would writing of eleven letters to be de­ -Industry were to be encountered In stimulants, except for a short time mander Eckener It cuts do'wn to a less antennae hauled In, fearffll all hotel lobbies and on every street ty; that he was in a jam and took that further experiments would be marry Walter Camp, Jr., in New livered once a year, starting today. this way to account fo r a shortage when he was In the army during large extent the hazards to bei Jane Gray is living with relatives encountered on this pioneering^ (Contiaae oa Page 2) necessary before he could change York about a week after the Air in his ac^unts. the Civil War. the sex of other animals. Derby Is ended. at Norwalk, Conn. (Contlnae on Page 2 )

\

■»s. -jj M a n c h e s t e r e v b n t n g h e r a l d , s o u t h Ma n c h e s t e r , c o n n .,

t&e radio signals from the dirigible FIVE ORGANIZATIONS Where Girl Was Found were so .strong tb,nt they could be jSKOmiEirS MFID nSE heard without ear phones. NAVAL ACC08D imsnNAiicES Slain I OBITUARY HERE IN LEGION PARADE IS POUIIUl WIACIE GRAF’S POSITION. San Francisco, Aug. 24.— Based f' DEMAND HEEtIMG upon radio reports received by *'K ISENDANGEllED (Contlnned 1mm Page 1) U P," the San Francisco Examiner’s OSATUS G. N. 6. Units, ^i^gion Post, New Electric Line to SNip^ ’ short wave station, nautical experts Legion Band and Talcott* Heavier Current for Largely by his own ellorts, he edu­ here figured the Oral Zeppelin had BYPIIBIICITY Jesse Ames cottville, Oakland. i Treasnrer Fonnd Cash cated himsell and entered the Brit­ reached a point about 1,926 miles J^se Ames, 54, native ol Man­ irille Drum Corps Going. ish governmental service through from Toklo at 3 o’clock this morn­ chester, died at Memorial hospital Because... of an increase .Ln. the its civil service ranks. ing (W cllic Standard Time). (Continued from Page 1.) Manchester will be well repre­ at 8 o’clock this morning. He had sented in the big American Le^on amount ol power uspd *t the TaL, On Hand Melted Down to But when he was 29, one day Several hours previous, the been 111 lor several years anl last cottville mills in Talcottvllle hnd while riding a bicycle, he had an Mackay Radio and Telegraph com­ tlon, and Mr. Hoover has acted to parade in Hartford this afternoon, correct it in the only method at night was the third time this year five organizations as well as scores /in Reparation lor still further pow­ accident which broke his Irall body. pany reported the dirigible was pro­ that he had been admitted to the er use when the addition to th® He hovered between lile and death. ceeding on *n east north-easterly hand— to let it be known that many of individuals planning to go to the $1.67. of the reports enthusiastically sent hospital here. canitni citv - I Talcott mill is completed, the Man- His lormer work now was impos­ course, encountering head winds Bom on Woodbridge street here. out ol London and Washington Both ol the National Guard units sible, and lor a year he lay in bed and a heavy fog. Mr. Ames went to Broad Brook at passing the long hours by reading. have been based upon fancy rather here, will join with the rest of the! According to the now treasurer than upon fact. the age of 13 and lived there until 169th ^Infantry,Infantry, while Dilworth-|Dllworth-! Streets hanging a Hew Une ol larger pf the Filth School District, Peter He had been a Liberal In politics. "ALL’S WELL.’! about two years ago when he re­ His studies made a Socialist ol him. Los Angeles, Aug. 24.— The The hope and the expectation is Cornell American Legion post band | capacity. The line will also pro­ Frye, there Is more than a technical that-the basis for an Anglo-Ameri­ turned to Manchester and made his vide for the addition power at the His PoUUcal Rise. Graf Zeppelin radioed Tokio at 4 home with his brother, Leon Ames and the Talcottvllle fife and drum] reason lor calling a special meeting When Snowden was able to leave m., today that “ All Is Well,” ac­ can agreement can be found before corps will also take part. Oakland Paper Mill if It Is required .01 that district lor next Wednesday Premier Mac Donald’s contemplat­ at 31 Oak street. Dilworth Cornell post of the when the plant gets under- opera­ evening, a real, live reason being his room, he was doomed to go cording to a short wave message Funeral arrangements are In­ through the world with the aid of picked up by a special receiver in­ ed trip to the United States next American Legion wil participate In tion next month. that the district, while not exactly October, such an agreement to complete. but the service will pro­ a pair of sticks. He made his liv­ stalled in the Los Angeles Evening bably be held Monday afternoon. the parade ljut will not go to Hart­ broke, is within $6.16 ol being in ing by lecturing and writing. He serve as the loundatiou lor a five- APPLE TREE IN BLOOM just that uncomlortable extremity Herald. Burial will be In Buckland ceme­ ford in a> body, the members going became chairman of the Inde- Night operators copied half a powered conference in Decembei or individually and meeting at the 11It ISis also expected that, at the pendent Labor Party for a long dozen messages to and from the early in 1930. tery. State Armory there for formation. On the land of Alexander Rogers meeting explanation will be period of vpars.years He contested the Zeppelin during the night. From the experience gained at The Manchester . .ational Guard on Laurel street, -at the rear of the by members ol the district voting House of Commons seat in the im­ several abortive Geneva confer-: Montgomery Ward store, there is in body ol payments made by the companies are to leave the State pregnable Tory town of Blackburn ences, it has been learned that OPENING STOCKS Armory here at 1:05 in three spe­ blossom today an old apple tree. former treasurer, Fred R. Manning, The tree stands on a high banlE' far in 1900, but was defeated. He was there is little use in trying to get a cial buses. to Fred R. Manning, amounting to elected in 1906 and held the seat ABOUT TOWN five-powered agreement when 're back In the yard. close to $300. until 1918, when he was defeated, New York, Aug. 24.— While the two largest naval powers in the majority of stocks were higher at At the annual district meeting becDTuse, like his chief, the present Because of remodeling work be­ world, Great Britain and ‘ he Unit­ held on June 29 it was voted to pay Premier Mac Donald, he was a ing done at the Italian Club on the opening today, week-end profit ed States, are wholly irreconcll-' taking caused a good deal of irreg­ a tax but the question of empower­ convinced pacifist and said so all Main street and also because the able. It was Brltlsh-American dif­ BISHOP ANSWERS RECTOR ing the treasurer to borrow money during the war. In 1922 he went date conflicts with that of the cir­ ularity throughout the list. Sev­ ferences, vital and fundamental eral new highs were recorded in STATE was not taken up. According to back to Parliament. cus, the special entertainment of differences in principle, that caus­ Treasurer Manning's report there feats of super-human strength by early dealings but at the same time His greatest triumph hitherto ed the collapse of all Geneva efforts New York, Aug. 24.— “ Dr. Em- CONTINUOUS was at that time $380 in the treas­ came on April 12, 1924, when, as Louis Sciorato will be held at the a number of stocks were selling be­ at reducing naval armament. low last night’s close. prlngham has been divorced and re­ TODAY 2:15 - 10:80 ury. Chancellor of the Exchequer in Sub-Alpine Club on Eldrldge street married. When I have said that, Three Bills to Manning. England’s first Socialist govern­ on Friday, .^ug. 30 at 8:30 o’clock. The new highs were made by In­ Frye was elected to succeed ternational Tel. & Tel. which reach­ there is really nothing left to say ment, he Introduced his great BISSELL-DAWSON regarding his standing with the Mr. Manning, at that meeting, but budget in which he took the tax off ed 140, up 1 1-2; Republic Iron and the latter held office till the end of Heavy Suit Won’t Steel 121 1-2, up 4 points; U. S. In­ church.” the people’s breakfast table. Her body bound to a chair beside Thus Bishop Willip,m T. Man­ Q the school year, July 15, when his Wins Epic Tribute. the open gas jets of a kitchen range Hamper Williams WIN IN DOUBLES dustrial Alcohol 196, up 2 points, successor Qualified and the books and Union Carbide which, after ning, head of the New York diocese It was a dramatic scene. He Mary Frances Morgan, 19, girl ath­ of the Protestant Episcopal Church, were turned over to him. Mr t rye stood there in the House of Com­ lete, was found dead in her home opening at 135, reached 135 1-2, a says that they showed a balance on today had dismissed the letter of mons. his sticks by his side. His near Philadelphia. Above you see All but two of the eight matches 2 3-8 points gain. Rev. Dr. James Empringham in hand of ;1.67. A check for $4.b«, face attracted attention with its a detective inspecting the “ death United States' Steel, which has for an account due to the district in the town championship men’s been advancing steadily this week, which the former Syracuse rector blue eyes hollowed by suffering, chair” and the straps which held tennis doubles tournament have “ renounced and resigned” his holy and received since then, accounts his strong, well-formed nose, his the girl while she was being asphyx­ sold off to 256 3-4, a decline of 3 for the present balance mounting been completed in the first round. points. Radio Corporation declin­ orders. thin, determined Ups. He spoke iated. Below is a view of the Mor­ Last night Earl Blssell and Dr. Empringham, accused of vio­ to the lofty sum ol $6.16. for hours. The Increasing pallor gans’’ home. Police sought a re­ ed 5-8 in early trading to 95 3-8. Mr. Manning, the books showed, Bob Dawson won from Rev. In spite of the declines in vari­ lating the rules of the Health De­ ol his always white face showed jected suitor in connection with the Greer and Francis Butr partment in conducting a "clinic” had paid some small routine bills the physical pain he was suffering. ous stocks, the market continued and three others, one ol $100 and crime. at Coventry Lake in straight sets. to be supported with substantial for the advice of women, addressed But from every side of the House, The score was 6-4, 6-2. Rev. Greer an open letter to Bishop Manning the other amounting to close to regardless of party, came the cries; buying. Among those featuring the $200, to Fred R. Manning and Donald Jesanls have arranged in which he attacked the bishop and "Go onS Go on!" It was a very upset were; American Can, up 4 his faith. Mr. Frye says that Mr. Manning to play their quarter-final match points to 184; General Electric up rarely paid tribute. GRAF OVER PACIFIC in the singles tourney next 'fuesdsy The letter had not yet been re­ probably forgot to Indicate what 4 3-8 to 397 7-8; America' Tel & Snowden is a master of lucid ex­ night at the High school at 6 ceived by the bishop, his office here they were lor. position. He revels in figures. He Te', up 3 3-4 to 298 1-4; Bethle­ The fact that the vote to lay a REPORTS “ ALL’S WELL” o’clock, but there is a possibility advised. The head of the diocese la is a formidable debater, with an that this match may be switched to hem Steel up 1 to 140 1-4 and summering at Desert Island, Maine, tax may have been.not in good acid style that burns. And he Montgomery Ward up 3-4 to 132 legal form is said to have probably the West Side so as to be a part of and he has confined his comments flashes out memorable phrases as the big athletic program scheduled on the letter as published to the made a new meeting necessary in he goes. He is credited with having (Continued from Page 1.) Stocks showing an easier ten­ any event, but the depleted state ol for that evening statement— “ I do not think that Dr. originated the phrase— “ the idle In the douDles, Farr and Quisb dency included Commercial Invest­ Bmpringham’s views on religious the treasury makes a loan impera­ rich.” A popular and more recent lest the copper wires attract one of the lightning bolts that at frequent meet Bob de Nlvelle and Don ment Trust which opened at 201, and moral questions need be dis­ tive, it is said, and the meeting saying of his is: “ A few years ago off 3 points; Packard off lr2 at would have had to be called in any Intervals were hurled through fis­ Jesanis in the second round tomor­ cussed." it took lour sheep to clothe one 152 1-2; Murray Body off 1 3-8 at “ The necessary ecclesiastical ac­ event, woman. Now one silk worm can sures in the sky. row afternoon. Fred Mack and Ed- It was during the dinner that the ' die Bateson are to meet the winner 84 5-8; Columbia Carbon down tion in the case will, of course, be do it.” storm broke. Messages from the Srthe ma^ch berw ren t h r Dexter 3-4 to 214 3-4 and Dupont off 2 1-4 taken,” Bishop Manning said. brothers and Markley-Gatti. Shlrer* to 219 3-4. Graf said that as usual Lady Grace but '— OVER 300 ENTERED Drummond Hay, the only woman Hawley ; o against Blssell and Daw­ . Trading was fairly brisk aboard the ship and undoubtedly son while Cervlnl and Faulkner lighter than yesterday. IN PLANE EVENTS the air’s most seasoned traveler, meet Albert de Nivelle-Paul Jesanls Leading Batters was the calmest of any of the pas­ or Hudson Lyons-Davld Samuelson. . U. 8. SENATOR DIES sengers. Philadelphia, Pa., Aug. 24.— Parsons' (Continued from Page 1) Almost two-fifths of the 5,000 WORK FOR COMPROMISE United States Senator Lawrence Tyson of Tennessee died at Straf­ Hartford Nntiopal LenKue mile distance separating Toklo corner. The races and exposition G. AB. R. H. PC. from. Los Angeles have now rolled The Hague, Aug. 24.— Despite ford Sanitarium, about 15 miles Ironstltute what might be' aptly Herman, Bkln. . .112 440 85 180 .409 away beneath the Graf, and before the avowal of France, Belgium, from here, early today. « K “Aug. 26-31 O’DourPhlla. ...117 476 lU 183 .395 He was taken to the sanitarium {termed the World Series of the air. the night has passed on this side Italy and Japan that they had m a t in e e s w e d . a n d sat. J Over 800 Entered T errv N. Y ...... 119 481 76 184 .383 of the world and day in the western reached the limit of their conces­ about two weeks ago suffering from Hornsby, Chi. ...118 461 116 166 -360 a nervous breakdown. Physicians ■ At 12 o’clock last night, the Hendrick, Bkln. 88 313 57 112 -358 hemisphere, reports are expected sions to England, it was understood SCHWAB & MANDEL’S deadline for qntrles, considerable pronounced his death this morning Leader a year ago today. Hornsby, from the Graf to tell of her suc­ today that their delegates to the BROADWAY TRIUMPH Jmore than 300 fiyers had notified Boston. .377. cessful passing of the half-way reparation conference were still due to “ complete exhaustion.” Jofflclals of the races of their Inten- American Leaffue ___ Fonseca. Clev. ..121 429 105 162 .378 mark between the Flowery King­ conferring privately with the possi­ jtlon to compete In the various llst- Simmons, Phlla. 114 471 92 17- .365 dom and th » sun-kissed Californian bility they might make another KANG LEAVES LONDON ied events. Combs, N, Y...... 113 467 99 170 .364 coast. compromise offer before night. London, Aug. 24— King George I Thirty-five closed course events Manush, St. L. ...118 483 76 175 .362 May Change Route Lieutenant Alford Williams, pilot It was reported that “ consider­ and Queen Mary left London this land nine special distance derbies Leader a year ago today, Goslln, ■Wind and weather conditions afternoon for Sandringham, on the Washington, .389. of the Flying Mercury, American able progress” had bemmittee Durham, p ...... 0 0 0 0 1 0 SUNDAY (Tomorrow) TRY FAIR BATHING BEAUTY CONTEST at Asby, B ...... 1 0 1 0 0 0 Willimantic, Labor Day Night. ELKS’ COUNTRY FAIR 28 "o ” 4 24 8 2 H artford ...... 300' 000 OOx— 2 NAME ...... T w o bate hltB« W oodm an, M artt- SPECIAL ITALIAN DAY Willimantic, Conn. beck, Bushey. ADDRESS ...... Care ^54 Main Street ^Magnificent Cast of 10& . As presented g JIMMY BEST DRESSER HARTFORD CITY BAND V Weeks at Casino Theatre^ New York, and 32 New York, Aug. 24— H.R.H. the 40—^Musicians— 40 - A fternoon and Nigrht ------Added Attraction • Weeks ai Great Northern Theatre, Chicago.^ prince of Wales, is a “sloppy” m a il ord ers n o w . e v e pr ices., Orch. $h.OO; Bale. 92.5$r aresser and Jimmy Walker, New 4 _ international bathing BEAUTIES — 4 $2.00, $1.50; Fam. Circ. $1.00; Gal. ^ ^ York’s spifly mayor, is the best- DANCING PALAIS ROYAL Miss Ireland S.1T. MAT.. Orch. $2.00; Bale. $1JS0, $1.00; Fam. Iressed man In the world, Brinkley m »B Universe (Miss Austria)' Miss England Miss France Enclose Checque vrtth Stamped Addressed BSnvelope With AU Bass, Beaumont, Texas Boy Scout DON’T MISS THIS GLITTERING SHOW OP F.4MOUS BBAuTUfiS MaU Oilers. leolared today when he met the ’ Ed Gurley’s Orchpstra mayor after returning from the Bos Scout Jamboree in England. M

I MAKCHESTER BVBNTNG HERAO), S O im i MANCHESTER. CONN., BATUKUAr, A0UUErz4.1329.

four children' of New'Britain '' are guests at Mr. and Mrs. 'Wintbrop NEW RARTHELHES? I I ^ C E BACKING Porter’s. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Links and ‘^ALKT AT STATE the house of the lord children motored to Philadelphia' RENE COUZINET’S the first of the week to visit rela­ The Evening Herald By GEORGE HENRY DOLE tives. Mrs. Link’s mother return­ SECOND CONGREGATIONAL AND Internatioiial Sunday School Lesson Text, Aug. 18. AIRPLANE IDEAS ed to her home with them after ‘‘Drag** Opens Sniidiay; Davie NORTH METHODIST CHURCHES International Sunday School Lesson Text, August 23. spending several months here. Bernie and Biuid Also Sunday School Lessons I was glad when they said unto me, Let ns go into the Floyd: pogii is spending this Paris,— France is backing a week on a motor trip with Mr. and tnre4. , ^ “ The union service of the above house of the Lord.——Psalm 122:1.. mere boy to put her in the dead of by WilBam i . Ellis. churches will be held at the North Mrs. Leon Fogil of Manchester and ; 'J . - - aviation progress. Miss Hattie Generous of Burnside, Bur Every Age* Creed and Nationality. Methodist church on Sunday morn­ He.is Rene Couzinet, aged 24, “ Drag,” the new Pir^t.. NeilpimL ing at 10:45. The pulpit will be Mrs. Henry Massy and little To Israel the “ house of tbe Lord” <^will not be burdensome: for In feel- Inventor of the Arc-en-Ciel (Rain­ daughter of Bolton are visiting bei Vitaph'one feature starring'Btohard occupied by Rev. William D. Wood­ will say with the psalmist, "1 was bow). ill-fred entry for a trans- Barthelmess, which conies tu'tlie ward. The last of the union ser­ meant* the temp^ or tabrnacle. We parents Mr. and Mrs. John Lyman. Understand that house to be a glad when they said unto me. Let Atlantic hop in which Maurice Hills and Miss Florence State theater on Sunday fbr thrjpe vices for the season will be held at us go into the house of the Lord, Drouhln, temporary pilot for days, is the second Vitaphone of­ the same church on the following church where the Lord is publicly Jones returned recently from a two worshipped. One may think that The house of the Lord is a place Charles Levine, was killed during weeks motor trip through the New fering with dialogue and sound in Sunday, at which tim e’Rev. F. C. where for a short time we “ Let all a trial last year. which Barthelmess has appeare4. OLD STONES IN JERUSALEM AllenI will officiate His presence in the church at wor- England states and Canada to the earth keep silence,” while the Couzinet has revolutionary ideas Niagara Falls. The first was “ Weary Rlyw.” The young people’s meeting will ship does not amount to much. Yet which the star made in inistanteoia he omitted on Sunday evening on the humblest person by attending Internal mind looks up and opens in airplane construction. He built The Sunday school picnic at account of the services at the Wil- regularly public worship performs to receive light and love from the them Into the Arc-en-Clel but the Columbia Lake Thursday was well hit. In “ Drag,” however, Barthel­ TELL TALE OF TEMPLE TIMES Lord. The Lord dwells in the in­ crash caused him a lot of his pres­ mess is seen and heard In a pictiith limantic Camp Ground. a fundamental and vital use: for, atended. The weather was ideal as reflection' can reveal, without most of every soul. Therefore He tige. and games, boating, bathing, lunch that is 100 per cent talking frpdi The musical program for the said, “ Know ye not that ye are a Instead of quitting Couzinet con­ the beginning until the final ,fade- «- ■ft's*America has for twenty-five years morning service follows, Collins public worship all holiness would and lemonade and the meeting of ♦The International Sunday past witnessed a perfect orgy of pass from the earth. Evet;^y states- temple of the Lord?” No matter tinued to seek a financial backer old acquaintances and neighbors out. - . ■ Drlggs officiating as organist and “ Drag” presents the eter- In a tstone-and-brick rellglf'^i- Little man knows that without schools | what a man’s state is, the Lord has j and found three— Laurent-Eynac made a day of enjoyment for all. School Lesson for August 23 Is, director; and dramatic narrative conceririug a towns and small congregations Prelude— Tender Prayer ...... democracy would perish and our i His dwelling place within him, the Minister of Air. Louis Couhe “ Rebuilding the Temple” — have taxed themselves and their Mouton civilization would pass away. It is j Lord cannot be divided or decreas- Edouard Caquot. young, ambitious newspapermap Ezra 3:l-6;22« Psalm 84:1-12. who goes to a small town to e'dit denominations, to erect dispropor­ Solo-^Miss Irene Lydall true that "The little red school- ed. The difference in men is- not It is strongly rumored that Cou­ tionately large and ornate struc­ from varying degtees of the Lord's zinet owes his recovered prestige AT PARSONS’ the local weekly paper. WhUp Offertory— Norturne . . Spinney house is the foundation of our there he falls in love with a glfl BY WILLIAM T. ELLIS tures. Some of them are an artistic Postlude— Benediotus ..Gounod country.” presence in the Inmost of the soul, to a more awesome accident than and architectural crime. Great and but from the degree of the Lord’s the one that befell his childbraiu. and after marrying her finds hliP- Without churches where there Is The biggest musical comedy suc­ self supporting a vrhole family of One of the most significant inci­ beautiful cathedrals are also going POLISH N.\TIONAL CATHOLIC. the acknowledgement of the Lord, truth and love that is called out in­ This accident was the crash of the up in many directions. It is hard to to action.by the external mind. City of Ottawa off Dungeness on cess ever produced, “ Follow Thru,” parasitic ‘in-laws.” He composM a dents in present-day Jerusalem is public worship, reading of the which has broken all attendance musical show called "The Love the presence of Jewish sight-seers disentangle the elements and mo­ Turn Hall, North Street. Word, prayer, and spiritual instruc­ Let us rejoice because God has June 17 in which seven persons tives of this church-building era— so made us that He can dwell with ■w'ere killed a*'d sir injured. records in New York for the past Prince” for the ,Jocal Women’s in the Haram. or sacred enclosure Rev. Simon Guzik, Pastor. tion, morality would decline, evil nine months, has been secured by Guild; its success encourages him of the Mosque of Omar. In pre- to separate the human vanity and 8-30 a, m.— Funeral mass foi would gain the ascendency, and the His omnipotence in His .emple The catastrophe brought up the within our souls. Let not the wprid old bugaboo about unsafe air trav­ the management of Parsons’ to go to New York, sell his play, Zionist days this was never seen. denominational rivalry from the the souls of Ignatius WrobePand human race would eventually de­ anf find that happiness whibh so sincere desire for the pure wo,-- so overflow that there is no desire el and the absolute necessity of theater as the opening attraction For the Mosque of Omar stands on Anne Pauek and sermon. stroy itself. The church holds the of the season, coming for a-week’s eluded him in the small town, r the site of the ancient temples of ship of Jehovah. 10:'30 a. m.—-High '•inglng mass ideal life before the public. If this to read the Word, fervently pray, multi-motored planes in commer­ Jews, the and find joy in going into the house cial transport, although the City of engagement prior to its Boston The story of “ Drag’’ is based on Judaism, and no devout Jew would j With the retiirning and sermon. one great use of public worship is showing. “ Follow Thru” was pro­ the novel by William Dudley Pel- venture near, lest he should inad- ' case was simple. They had but one 12:30— Meeting of the whole realized, attending public worship of the Lord for the uses of public Ottawa had three motors. worship and devotion. Couzinet bad been preaching the duced by Schwab and Mandel, who ley and was directed by Frank certently set foot up on the Holy of temple, and that had been destroy- parish. Income and expenses in ing the joy of a supreme use, one will be remembered for “ Good Lloyd, who also made “ Weary holies of his religion. Reverence for j ed by Nebuchadrezzar. July wil be reported. safety of multi-motored planes and the great future of the monoplane, News” and “The Desert Song” last River." this most sacred spot on earth kept | their religion required the rebuUd- Week. street has resigned his position season, and it is the work of the Supporting Barthelmess in this all good Jews away from the possi-; ing of this cen^r and symbol of Monday, Wednesday and Friday with City Engineer C. H. Bancroft so whether the rumors about his all-talking picture are Alice Day, recovered prestige are true, it is a same authors, composers and dir­ bility of profaning it. their worship. For that purpose the lessons in Polish language at 4 and has accepted one as topo­ ectors who made “ Good News” the Lucien Littlefield. Lila Lee, Kather­ Nowadays, however, one ma^ see, they left the land of captivity and p. m. Saturday at 2 o’clock Bible graphical engineer with the United coincidence that news of his new ine Ward and Tom Dugan. backing came out shortly after the best show of its kind. “ Follow as I have mere than once seen, went back to Jerusalem. and Catechism or religious lessons. ROCKVILLE States government. He is station­ Thru,” according to the New York Appearing on the same prograpi groups of interested young Jews Before they began the walls, they Wednesday the theatrical re­ I, ed at Vermont. City of Ottawa fell into the Chan­ are Dave Bernie and his popular press, is even better, brighter and wandering a,ll about the place, in­ set up the altar. The heart of the hearsal at 8:30 p; m. at Mr. and Letter Carrier Returns nel. funnier than the collegiate show, radio broadcasting orchestra, a side the Mosque and out even down temple, and its only reason for be­ Mrs. Grzyb’s residence on North Coroner’s Finding Frederick O. Alden, dean of The successful trans-Atlantic and it should give the Hartford snappy dance aggregation that fea­ into the crypt where is the rock ing, was the worship of God. The str66t. Coroner John H. Yeomans, has city carriers, connected with the hop made by Assolant and Lefevre theatrical season the greatest start tures a brand new sparkling Jazt u*pon'"which tradition says Abraham test of a church is its worship. Monday 8:30 a. m.— Funeral handed down his finding in the Rockville-post office, has returned in the Yellow Bird has yet to con­ rhythm. The Varsity Three, a trl« _ — . ,.e------.T7U...1— it nq a stately Gotiiic It has ever had. offered Isaac. The significance of Whether it be mass for Polish National priest death of Nolan Fanning of Hart­ to his duties following a most en­ vince the French government that of livewire entertainers, are plsc ‘ this is that the modern Zionist fane, or a plain Quaker meeting, ■Eucitius Wandowski, who died last ford, who died following an acci­ joyable vacation spent in New it is advisable to sanction an offi­ It took Miss Corry Llebbrand 35 presented In a Vitaphone offering. movement is political and social, the proof of its worth and genuine­ Tuesday in his parish, Walllngton, dent which occurred on the even­ York, New Hampshire and Ver­ cial Paris-New York attempt. hours to swim from Lausanne to A comedy and the State News rather than religious. Orthodox ness is its spirit of devotion. Only N. J. ing of August 16. He finds that a mont. He is telling his friends For this- reason Couzinet is ex­ Geneva, a distance of ^5 miles. Events will complete the program. Jews in Palestine oppose it for this the inner spiritual reality justifies spring was broken in such a place many interesting incidents about pected to help put France ahead Perhaps she didn’t realize she reason. It is a return to the land the outward forms. The altar-fires CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE in minimizing the risk of airplane could make It in a half hour, via The light-producing apparatus of worship consecrate the temple. A that a reasonable inspection of his trip. without zeal for a temple. The ex­ Rev. E. T. French, Pastor the car might not have disclosed Notes travel. plane. of the firefly and. the glow worm clusively Jewish city of Tel-Avid living faith /may express itself in is said to be the most efficient many forms of temple-building. We the defect and that said death was Mr. and Mrs. Otto Kosewitch was. far along in its development 9:30— Sunday school. not caused, by the criminal act, have purchased the newly built Foreigners spend the most It is a peculiarity of the horse the world. The glow-worm light si ould not forget that it was more before it had a synagogue. It is at 10:45— Morning worship. omission or negligence of Jack home on the Hartford road, oppo­ money in utilizing the aerial mail to arise on the forelegs first, is 80 times more efficient than a this point that modern Zionism de­ than two centuries after Christ ere 6:30— Young People’s meeting. service and parcel transport of while the cow first arises on its tungsten lamp. the first Christian church was Lassow, driver of the car, or any site the Wayside Gardens, from H. parts radically from the return of 7:30— Evangelistic service. other known person or persons. P. Floto of Manchester. Fiance. hind legs. the Jews under Zerubbabel, Ezra built. Before that, worship had 7:30— Wednesday evening, mid­ In nine days last month foreign Metals, it is said, suffer from been in homes and groves and An examination of the car showed Frederick Kuhnly of New York ind Nehemiah. These Babylonian week, prayer service. that the main leaf of . the right City, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred countries sent 112,260 letters over Ambassador Dawes says nobody fatigue. A razor, which has been txiles cared most of all for the caves and wherever else the be­ 2:00 p. m. Thursday afternoon. airlines in France, an average of needs to tell him how to get along in use for some time and become lievers assembled. front spring contained an old Kuhnly of Rau street, will be l?mple. Women’s prayer meeting with Mrs. break. This break was under a heard over the radio In five solo 12,473 letters a day. with the English. That’s right dull, can be more easily sharpen­ A Bit of History Religion Without a Church William Chadwick, 88 Hamlin The French posted by airmail Charley; not much use trying. ed If rested for a week. In our contemporary vogue of clamp which holds the spring in numbers on Sunday afternoon be­ One cannot escape the thought of street. place and was completely hidden tween 4 and 5 o'clock. Many of his only 19,355 letters, or 2,150 a vagueness tl>ere is scant provision 7:30— Friday evening. Class day. the general educational value of for the temple. In the minds of from view. Rockville friends will listen in on the study of this present Interna­ meeting. London shipped 1,506 pounds of «ia many, religion is becoming merely The rough road which the car hi? numbers. parcels to Le tourget -\/hile Le tional Uniform Lesson* series by . , ^ith the element had passed just prior to the acci­ The Ladies Auxiliary A. O. H. millions of persons. It is an intro- ST. MARY’S EPISCOPAL. dent jarred the broken spring leaf will observe its thirty-third anni­ Bourget sent only 442 pounds to duction to a knowledge of ancient of worship lacking. In thought and the English capital. in practice, church-going is regard­ out from under the clamp. This versary on Thursday evening, Sep­ history. Myriads of persons have no Church and Park Streets. Berlin’s shipments to Bourget ed as of diminishing importance. made the car veer to the right and tember 12. A banquet will be held sense of ancient times except as Rev. Janies Stuart Nelli, Rector.. it. became impossible for the driv­ at the Rockville House. For the totalled 538 pound‘d as compared Manchester Now it needs to be said that, as to only seventy pounds over the seen in connection with the Old Rev. Alfred Clark, Curate. er to hold it in the road. The acci­ first time in the history of the Testament. Cyrus and Darius and the temple was the heart and in­ ■Sunday, August 25th, 1929, 13 return route. spiration of Jewish nationalism and dent occurred near the Burke auxiliary here it expects to enter­ Xerxes, and all the greatness and after Trinty. bridge on the Hartford road. tain the national president, Mrs. glory of the Persian Empire, be­ religion, so the church, and stated, Service;, Paris will see no more goats. regular attendance thereon, are in­ County Contest Winners Mary Martin Silk of Spencer, Mass. The Prefect of Police, jovial, pink come real only through their rela­ 10:45 a. m.— Morning prayer Miss Ella Joyce of the local tions with the exiled Jews. dispensable to the effectiveness of and Sermon by the Rev. Clark. . The “ Can-Do-It-Canners” held faced Monsieur Chlappe, who is Rating Bureau Christianity. As churches become their second regular August meet­ Postal Telegraph Exchange and bent upon cleaning up the capital . We even glimpse the complete­ Topic: “ The Christian Life.” Miss Lillian , Randall of TalcoU ness and accuracy of oriental his­ empty, so, at the same time, do the (Evening prayer omitted during ing on Wednesday, August 21, due in more ways than one, has pul lives of ihe disciples. The habit of to the fact that the State 4-H club avenue have returned from a vaca' a ban upon the little herds driven Room 12, State Theater Building. South Mancheste* torical records through the inci­ August.) tion spent at Oyster River, dent of King Darius finding in the Church-attendance is, for the aver exhibit will be held next week. through the streets by picturesque age person, really essential to the CONCORDIA LU'THERAN The demonstration team, Emily Miss Margaret Burke of West Basque shepherds very early in the archives at Ecbatana— the modern street, who is training to become Hamadan— a copy of the decree of practice of his faith. Niederwerfer and Faith Lyman, morning. A deal" of buiicombe is talked by Corner, Winter and Garden Streets. won the county contest and will a nurse at St. Francis hospital, is Six of these little groups have King Cyrus, permitting the return convalescing from a tonsil opera­ of the Jews and the rebuilding of unthinking persons concerning “ the H. O. Weber, Pastor. therefore represent Tolland coun­ survived the war and are to be Credit Investigations the temple. Our present-day arch­ worship of God in the great out-of- English services 10 a. m. ty at the state exhibit. Prior to the tion. seen in different quarters of the doors” ; and the consequent substi­ German services 11 a. m. business meeting the demonstra­ Mrs. Emma Dillon and son Law­ city every morning offering their aeologists have uncovered tens of rence Dillon of Davis avenue, ac­ thousands of these cuneiform tab­ tution of the golf course or the The pastor and Mrs. Weber have tion team presented its demonstra­ milk to those who wish it. They baseball field and the motor high­ returned from their vacation and tion on canning peaches. At the companied by George P. Wend- are well disciplined and orderly, in Personal Collection Service lets: I have a number of them my­ hiser and sister. Miss Laura Wend- self, dating back far beyond the way for the house of God. . Five the pastor will occupy the pulpit business mWtlng the matter of an fact much more so than many minutes of honest thought by any­ hiser of Elm street, are enjoying Open Daily period of the exile. next Sunday morning. Achievement Night program was chauffeurs, and walk straight body will puncture this popular discussed. It was decided to hold a vacation at Cape Cod. ahead of them like little soldiers. fluch historical lessons as the Miss Minnie Tennstedt of Oak present one, with their dramatic pretense. There is little of either ZION EVANGEl.ICAL LUTHERAN this the latter part of October or But Monsieur Chiappe says they 8:30 a. m. to 6 p. m. modern corroborations, completely prayer or praise or yet of pious Rev. H. F. R. Stechholz early November, an 1 combine with street has returned from a vaca­ delay the traffic and cause confu­ meditation in the diversions of per­ as many other clubs as possible. A tion at Indian Neck. sion. No more animals are to wan­ Thursdays and Saturdays Until 9 p. m. abolish the venerable criticism of The visiting hours at the Rock­ the Bible to the effect that it is a sons who stay away from churches. Service in German at 10:30 a. check-up was made with the goals der about the boulevards unless Nobody ever hears, on a golf ville Private Home on Village series of make-up folk tales. Also m. set by each member at the begin­ they are on the way to the slaugh­ Closed Wednesdays at Noon. they make an end of the ignorant course or in a fishing boat, such a Sunday school at 11:30. ning of the canning season. State street have been changed in the ter-house. notion that the story of the Jewish paen of devotion as sprang from exhibit requirements were thor­ evening from 7 to 8 o’clock in­ nation concerned the remote twi­ the Hebrew heart after the rebuild­ SOUTH METHODIST AND oughly reviewed. A social time stead of 8 to 9 o’clock. light of human history, before writ­ ing of the temple:— CENTER CONGREG.ATIONAL fallowed. The next meeting will be Kenneth E. Sullivan, managing ing or accurate records were held on Wednesday, September 11, editor of the Rockville Leader, is GILEAD known. Stories like the one under “ How amiable are thy tabernacles, The Union Service at 10:45 will 1929, at the home of the local spending this week at Pleasant study fix the fact that Bible history O Lord of hosts! be at the Center church. The leader, Miss Margaret Niederwer­ View, R. I. is real history, established beyond j My soul longeth, yea, even fainteth preacher will be Rev. James E fer. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Austin Mrs. Alfred H. Post is passing Questionquestion of criticism. God’s------hand, ,, , ... courts « of u the Lord, Greer. The sermon subject; “ Roses Union Services ■ of Talcott avenue are at Madison this work with her mother, Mrs was then in human affairs, even as My ^eajt and^mj^flesh cry out un^o or Cross” . There will be no even­ The Congregational, Methodist for a few weeks. Elizabeth P. Hills, at the Willlman- it is now. the living God.’ ing service this Sunday. and Baptist churches will unite at Peter Couture, Age 31, a tobacco tic Camp Ground. ' Examining the Old Stones The Church School at the Meth­ union services at the Baptist worker of Ellington, was in court Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Hubbard One day, with an archaeologist SEVEN SENTENCE SERMONS odist Church will meet as usual at church on Sunday morning at yesterday on the charge of in­ and daughter, Ruth, spent the friend, I roamed about Jerusalem, 9:45 a. m. 10:30. Rev. Blake Smith, pastor of toxication. He was arrested by week-end with his mother, Mrs. climbing down into excavations, to He who knows only his own side the church will preach. Patrolman Cedor. Judge Fiske Bertha Hubard. study the stones of the old walls. I of the case knows little of that.— Pnlplt Committee to Act fined him $1 and costs, amounting Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Jones and J. S. Mill. to $11.18 which he paid. can hardly make clear the thrill I * * * The pulpit committee of the Mrs. A. W. Hutchison were vistors got from having pointed out to me, CRANE LOAN FUND First Baptist church will hold a in HartfoM Tuesday. repeatedly, the difference between 0 what a wonder seems the fear of meeting immediately after the Gelon P. Randall of Rocky Ford, the structures built by Nehemiah death. PASSES ITS MINIMUM service on Sunday morning and it Last year Americans consumed Col., is a guest at Mr. and Mrs. J. and those built by Solomon and I Seeing how gladly we all sink to was learned on good authority that B. Jones’ and is calling on old -Coleridge. 350,000,000 gallons of ice cream. Herod. Sven to the most uninform­ sleepi it will be recommended that the Less than 20 years ago the United friends. , ed observer it was clear that Nehe- resignation of Rev. Blake Smith States consumed only 80,000,000 'Mr. and Mrs. Louis Twining of The life of work is the life for a Direct Contributions of $93, miah’s stones were cut cruedly and Indirect Ones of $8, Put To­ bu accepted. Rev. Mr. Smith ten­ gallons annually. ______Hartford are passing this week at in haste; while the work of the man, and that which he achieves dered his resignation after the A. H. Post’s. others showed* careful finish and for himself is more precious than tal Over $100. service last Sunday morning. He Clarence Chittenden of' Kllllng'- Bargain seekers—here is the leisurely workmanship, Clearly, i any inheritance, except that of a worth called on the Foote families Several additional contributions has received a call to a Baptist Some Musician! and now is the time to get ^Ae there was reason why the returned good name and a loving heart.— church in Mexico, Mo. Mr. Smith here Monday. bMt buy in a good used car! The Jews who remembered the original Mrs. C. Farley Cox. to the Crane loan fund made yes­ wishes to be relieved of his duties Miss Lena M. Ellis who Is em­ temple wept because the new one i ployed by the Traveler’s Insurance most successful new car sellmg man can avoid terday afternoon and this morning here September 1. If his resigna­ was so unequal to it. It seemed as I Anything that a , ^ k tion is accepted, it will be with re­ Co. in Hartford is spending her va­ season in our history l««vea oru? if the earth had yielded up a com- under the notion that it is bad, he have brought the total, up to this cation with her parents, Mr. and stock of used cars larger then eyer noon, to $93. This is exclusive of gret. mentary in stone upon the exact I may also avoid under the n^lon No Services Sumlay Mrs. A. W. Ellis. before. To get back to a norm^ correctness of the Scripture story, j that something else is goou. two contributions, one of $5 and Mis Ruth Ellis, Miss Lnui-se the other of $3, of which the donors Due to the fact that the pulpit inventory, we have ^asU c^y cut Those walls will yet have more to | Henry Churchill King, supply committee of the First Owen and MissLena Ellis went to prices on every model. There y e say to the world of Biblical schol- * * • notified The Herald as having been Storrs Tuesday and Mrs. Robert E. 1927 PONTIAC Evangelical Lutheran church were COACH, original arshlp. And in like manner the Spirit motivated by the publicity given to Foote, Miss Lovina Foote. Mrs. cars of nearly every make, model the Crane family’s eviction by this unable to secure a pagtor for Sun­ finish, like new; All of the romance of Jerusa­ also helpeth our Infirmity: for we day’s services, no services will be C. W. Huchtlnson and Miss Mildred and price class. Choose y ow to­ know not how to pray as we ought; newspaper, but which had been for­ upholstery spot­ lem’s reconstruction is implied in held on that day. Since the former Hutchinson went on Wednesday day at a stock reduction price. this crude stone-cutting and mason­ but the Spirit Itself maketh inter­ warded through other agencies. to the Connecticut 'Sunday School less; engine O. K. The Herald feels that while the pastor Rev. J. F. Bauchmann re­ A dependable car 1926 CHEVROLET COACH. ry. The work was done in haste, cession ^or us with groanings which signed some time ago, the church Intervisitation. response to the peculiar circum­ for your family to • Its condiUon is excepUpn^y with enemies all about. Yet it was cannot be uttered.— Rom. 8:26. has had considerable difficulty in Mrs. Jules Ruberlaid and her done, heroically and effectively stances of the case can hardly be drive. Bargain good. New tires; beautiful called headlong, arrival at the min­ securing a supply. Students of the Price, done. The human body generates Theological Seminaries are busy upholstery. For a dSO ’T f t ' imum goal of $100, fixed at the out­ quick sale, only .. • ^ A Temple in the Midst i enough heat during a day to melt while pastors are taking their an­ age, j 4 4 pounds of ice and raise the set, has been accomplished. It Ours is a church-building nual vacations. NOTICE! $400. 1927 WHIPPET COACH In rather than a church-going age. ! liquid to boiling point. wishes to express its deep apprecia­ tion of the generosity of those who August Wedding wonderful condition The marriage of Miss Frances Notice Is hereby given that 1927 QLDSMO- thi-onghout. Only v have contributed to the fund, al­ there will be a special meeting of BILE. Excellent most an amazing proportion of D. Keyes of Bond street, Hartford, 1926 OAKLAND SEDAN. Good and Edmund M. Harrington of the legal voters of the condition through­ whom are persons in very modest out. Good tires; tires, clean uifiiolsterlng and circumstances. High street, this city, took place on Thursday morning at 11 o’clock Fifth School District low. mileage; fully equipped and has S?iy • $425 UNION SERVICE The symbol of medicine, a staff in the rectory of St. Augustine’s of the Town of Manchester, held at church, Hartford. Rev. P. J- trunk and rack. 1925 OVERLAND SEDAN. In with serpent entwined round it, had the schoolhouse in said district on Only its origin some centuries before O’Connell officiated at the cere­ very good condi- <1:1 ABC : South Methodist the 28th day of August, 1929, at Uon. Only . ------Christ. mony. Miss Helen M. Cronin at­ 7:30 o’clock In the afternoon . and tended the bride as maid of honor (Standard Time) for the following $485. AND and Harold F. Burns was best purposes to wit:— A Dozen Other Bargalns-r". Center Congregational man. The'couple left for a wed­ 1. To elect a moderator for said Worth Your Consideration. ding trip to New York and Atlan­ at the Swedish Lutheran meeting. ' tic City. They will be at home aft­ 2. To hear a report of the Treas­ er September 1 at 195 Adelaide CENTER CONGREGATIONAL urer. Church street, Hartford. 3. To see of the district will vote Wed Today ’ CHURCH Rev. P. J. O. Oornell, D. D. to-lay a tax. Cbarcb and Cheatnnt Sts. Miss Olive Irene Plnney, daugh­ 4. To transact any other bust 1 10:45 ter of Edward H. Pinney of Lin­ ness that may be proper to come brothers den street was uplted In marriage KEMP before said meeting. SOUTH MANCHESTER. OONN^taiS Preacher 9:30— Bible Class. this morning at the Little Church Dated at Manchester, Conn, this 130 CENTER STREET Arouhd the Corner in New York Clarence Cox, Jr., of Memphis, Tenn., is only 16 months old, but 22nd day of August, 1929. , REV. JAMES E. GREER City, .to Arthur Skarin, son of Mr EDWARD H. KEENEY, 10:45— Morning Service in and ,Mrs. Andrew Skarin of Burn- he’s an accomplished young man. Swedish. Not only can Clarence whistle, but HENRY P. JORDAN, No Evening Service. slde. 1 THOMAS N. PRENTICE, GOOD WILL USED CARS Accepts position he can play a French harp, too, and Committee. Prospect I he’s shown here doing it. No Evening Service. ,, Herbert Drehr of

r MANCHfeSTEB EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER,-UONN., SAIURDAY, AUGUST 24,1929,

on its own hook. Perhaps that two lessness on the part of brokers A Vacation IdyDJ tfm iriifB trr acies would make a nice little and bankers. TEST It is utterly unfair to place the park— on the map. And perhaps If Here is the answer to the Lette: Ettraing Beraiii there were no fences around it and burden of prevention of crime on Golf puzzle on the comics page: DDlRiRaDERilHiS IS — BILL SP1VIM3/ B1LL.S TrtE G U Y - — PUBLISHED BY THE t?N airplanes were - to run over It, the police when the people who EARLY. EARLS, EARNI HERALD PRiNTlNQ COMPANY, INU the airport could do very well demand the protection are con­ BARNS, BARDS, BANDS 18 Blsseir Street BENDS. BEADS, BEARS, YEARS South Mancheiter, Conn. without actual ownership until stantly and with supreme indiffer- “ There is no young man nor THOMAS FERGUSON such time as the town saw fit to ecce to consequences, placing a grown man living who cannot do General Manager dispose of its park as a bit disap­ premium on that very crime. more than he thinks he can.” — Henry Ford. Founded October 1. 1881 pointing. • * • Published Every Evening Except There Is usually some Are “ I dare say that in no country A TH O U G H T Sundays and Holidays. Entered at the around with which ^o fight fire. Post Office at South Manchester, of the western,world are men so Conn., as Second Class Mail Matter. isolated from the world of women SUBSCRIPTION RATES: as in Ameiica today.” Deliver me not over into th« One Year, by m a ll...... J8 00 “ SECOND FTODLE"* — Mrs. Sinclair Lewis., (Pictorial hands of mine en**mies: for falw Per Month, by mall ...... 8 -bu Mr. Snowden’s challenge to the Review.) \ ' witnesses are risen against me Delivered, one year ...... 89.00 • « • Single copies ...... 8 .03 Young plan has been interpreted as 7A.M. 8 AM. and such as breathe out cruelty.— due notice served that Great Brit­ “ Reality is the deepest demand Psalms 27:12. SPECIAL ADVERTISING REPRE­ ain will no longer consent to play of the age, despite. prevalent ma­ • * • SENTATIVE: Hamilton - DeLtsser. Cruelty, like every other vicex Inc., 285 Madison Ave., New York. N. second fiddle to France in the By RODNEY DUTCHER WHO KICKS — LIKE A STEER. I F W I F E Y — terialism.” Y., and 612 North Michigan Ave., shaping of Continental policy.— — Dr. E. Stanley Jones. requires no motive outside of it­ Chicago. Ills.______New York Times. Washington, Aug. 23 — The X * * * self; it only requires opportunity There is something reminiscent members of the United States Sen­ “ Thousands of educated people — George Eliot. The Herald Is on sale dally at all Schultz and Hoatllng news stands In about this. It sounds like the rum­ ate have always professed to be do very little thinking.” just a little bit better persons than Galusha M. Cole of Pasadena, New York City. blings that used to come out of — William Lyon Phelps. (Delinea­ Calif., celebrated his 103d birth­ any other persons, but there cen- tor.) Leased Wire Service client of In­ Europe in thosv neinous days be­ tainly have been times when their 0 0 * day Aug. 15. That’s three sof ternational News Service. claims were often open to question. years he’s had. Full service client of N E A Service, tween 1900 and 1914. It sounds “ By love and not by hate is the Inc. like what we used to hear as be­ Now, says Senator J. Boomboom soul of man developed to its McWhorter, there isn’t any more greatest possibilities.” Member, Aufilt Bureau of Circula­ tween France and Germany, and doubt about it. A senator has to tions. even between Germany and Brit­ — George W. Wlckersham. (Cen­ set himself up as a model of probity tury.) ain, relative to African policy. or he Is very soon out of luck. Mc­ * « • The Herald Printing Company, Inc., Whorter is rather plaintive in his assumes no financial responsibility There are ten thousand angles “ ‘Matrimony’ is not a word— for typographical errors appearing In comments. One gets the idea that lo A .M 12.M. 'ZPM. advertlsments In the Manchester tn the European situation and al­ he believes senators ought to be it’s a sentence, with hard labor in Evening Herald. most^ all of them are hard for left entirely on their honor— that most cases.” — Canon Frederick G. Scott. Americans to understand. But one is, that they ought to have the op­ EVER KEEPS HIMWAITIWG — IAORE TKAM 3 MIWUTES-- TO DRESS.' SATURDAY, AUG. 24, 1929 portunity to decide for themselves idea keeps Intruding into this whether or not they want to be­ SEA RESCUES question about “ playing second fid­ have. DECORATED HATS Twenty-six men, captain and dle” in the shaping of Continental “ Take,” says Senator McWhor­ Some medium sized hats for jiew of a 58-year-old German policy, and that is that France Is ter, “ this vicious custom of White House breakfasts. fall have slashed brims, bits of steamship that burned in mid-At­ a part of the Continent of Europe “ I can remember when an invi­ lace inserted In their crowns, flow­ lantic, have been picked up after and Great Britain is not. It is tation to breakfast at 8 o’clock In ers massed under the uplifted the two boats to which they had France that has as neighbors not the morning would have been an CLUB Insult in this town. The ordinary brims and in other ways point to taken had knocked about in a only Germany but Italy, It Is elaborate trimmings for hats for high sea for three days. Not a sin­ member of Congress would demand TERMS France, not Britain, whose towns to know why his sleep has to be formal wear. gle member of the crew was in­ and villages were devastated when broken up right In the middle of ‘t. Small down payment; But now whenever the president jured and all were reported as be­ the German war wave came. It Is LONG GLOVES easy weekly payments; ing in good condition when res­ France that has the opposed fron­ has anything important to talk 4 P.M. G PM. 3 p.m . cash prices— delivers any about he invites people around for range during the Mid-Sum-., cued. tiers. breakfast and they have to go. Whether women welcome them mer Range Club. ' If shipwrecked sailors can once Probably If we were British we IMeans Early Bedtime or not, the shoulder length glove get clear of their doomed ship in “ How is anybody going to be able is being worn in Paris right now would feel that our economic sit­ to all formal affairs. Black suede sturdy and provisioned lifeboats, to stay out all night if he has to uation— plus our navy— entitled get to the White House by 8 is worn instead of off-white, with nowadays they have a good deal us to play flfst fiddle. We are very o’clock? All would be well If you HEALTH^1HETA0¥ICE black gowns. One usually wears WATKINS. better than an even chance of be­ sure that If we were French we merely had to show up and say Going Places D r Fkw ik McCoy ^ suede instead of kid. now. ing rescued. Big as the Atlantic is. would feel the same way about It. ‘Present’, but you’re supposed to AND It is not as lonely by far as it was have a lot of bright ideas about complicated subjects. Anybody QUOTIO W IN RECARO TD HEALTH tCMCT WOl K M S M ^ GAY HANDKERCHIEP BROTHERS a century ago, and there is almost BT BAMcanr M O CM BE AOnOSXO Bf CARE » .TMS M KR IX CLEVELAND knows it’s hard enough to have Seeing Things eNctotm sm/ipeo/WDfiBssKo EMvetam nePiY always some ship to sight the cast­ bright ideas on any subject at 8 a. The white nandkerchief over­ Every once in a while it begins (QoK m-cev MtAUMseKua lasMeuB-ML. aways before their provisions and m., let alone after a late poker laid in vivid color is new and dec­ to be gleefully bruited about that orative for coat pockets this fall. water are exhausted and before party. Being prominent here sim­ Port Huron, Mich.— After 20 RINGWORBl <$ Unless the systemic condition Is the big city of Cleveland, having ply means an early bedtime. removed by diet, the disease al­ There are many capucine shades, they succumb to exposure and the years, it’s rather difficult to under­ suggesting that summer’s prefer­ had so-or-so many years experi­ “ Once we used fo have a little It has been estimated that prac­ though cured in one place, will unavoidable privations of small- secrecy in the Senate. Whenever stand how alleys and barns and ence carries weight with autumn. ence with city manager govern­ cellars and garrets and fences cast tically one half of the adult popula­ usually reappear in another. boat voyaging. a statesman or several statesmen tion of the United States has had ment, is about to return to the old decided that they could do the’ r their particular magic over boy­ In view of the constant predic­ hood. ringworm sometime during life. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS system of government by politi­ constituents more good In the long This is a popular name for several tions of the displacement of ships I’ve come, within the past few cians, having had its fill of flie re­ run by voting against their best diseases of the skin caused by small Alligator Pear by aircraft it is interesting to spec­ interests on a single occasion, we weeks, to have a tremendous re­ form. And then the Cleveland folks spect for the child imaginftlon. Ex­ vegetable fungi or molds. Question: Reader asks:— “ What ulate on what would be* the effect could go right into executive ses­ All forms of ringworm are very straightway go to the polls and by sion and there would be no need of ploring in a new and narrow is an allfgator pear?” on sea rescues if the plane and the world, it can find enchanted lands contagious and are easily transmit­ Answer;— “Alligator pear” is a si.urdy majorities vote to retain embarrassing explanations. We ted from one person to another. dirigible should. Indeed bring could put our feet up on the desks lu everything. name which has been given the the city manager system. To be sure, an alley was not an Thesei i i e s e diseases u i s e a s e s are f'-equently foundLUU..U ayo^jado. bufthis name should not about, in the course of time, a and smoke at these sessions, too. Do you know Perhaps this is not. surprising alley when I was a lad. It was a on cats, dogs, catle and birds, and describe the heavy shrinkage in the number of But now whenever we vote in sup­ are.sometimes conveyed, my uand- when, as the Waterbury Republi­ posedly secret session seme scoun­ thoroughfare filled with elegant avocado. It is not a sweet fruit as _ water-borne craft. Apparently the hiding places when you were play­ llng, to humans. the name “ pear” suggests, but a can points out, more street paving drel goes and prints the roll call The ringworm of the foot is a alteration of conditions would and they’re talking about abolish­ ing any of the hide-and-seek salad fruit of a nut-like', buttery any car oj its price has heen laid in the last five frequent occurence wherever peo­ work two ways in Increasing the ing these comfortable sessions alto­ games. Also it removed you from flesh, rich in vegetable oil, with years, under that system, than in the reality of the main streets, ple use common dressing and bath­ also some proteins and carbohy­ hazards of transoceanic naviga­ gether. ing rooms. Infected premises any previous five years ' in the “ It’s, got so bad around here with .their- grown-ups and their drates. This fruit may be used at that matches tion, even assuming that the traffic. It was far from the voiceb should be thorouglhy scrubbed with almost any meal, and combined city’s history; that it is better pav­ that whenever you want a man some powerful disinfecting agent. chance of disaster to the aircraft appointed to office now you have of searching parents. And there well with any other article of food. ing and cost less per square yard; Ringworm of the body is easily was no greater than that to ves­ to take one who has some quali­ were barns to hide in, and behind, Hands Swell that the cost of garbage collection when you wanted to roll a corn- cured by the use of a cleansing diet sels under steam or canvas. Cer­ fications. to clear up the condition of acidosis Question. J. L. writes;— “ When America’s finest medium* has been very nearly halved; that “ Goodness knows there are silk cigaret. tainly disabled aircraft would not which is always present, and paint­ I am walking my hands swell up the receipts from the city farm plenty of fine fellows in the coun­ ing the infected area night and so much that they,pain me terribly, be able to set their crews afloat in try who have worked very hard Nor was a back yard a back priced automobile? have been doubled; that the tax morning with a solution of silver especially when I touch them. At seaworthy boats, for one thing; for their party and who ought to yard, except when the grass need­ ed cutting or the carpets needed nitrate, iodine or mercurochrome. times only one'hand will swell and rate has been cut and that the cost be rewarded, not just because of the other will be perfectly all and certainly, too, the chances of beating. The carpets, however, of­ Ringworm of the body usually of operation is less than the aver­ their political work, but because right.” rescue for the occupants of a dis­ fered some compensation for one’s begins with a small patch which age per capita cost of operation of they are such fine and deserving spreads out in a circle, with a red, Answer:— Swelling of the hands abled airship, granting that it citizens. But the president of the effort. They could be converted in­ the first 24 cities of the country. scaly margin. The skin toward the Is quite common when walking could float at all, or of an aban­ United States had got an idea that to tents at nightfall and one could rapidly or for any great distance. There may be faults with the candidates for federal judgeships play “ camping out.” center of the patch may have partly | doned surface vessel, • would be recovered and appear normal. This . The swinging of the arms forces city manager system but opponents and other posts should come well Garrets were filled with old diminished in proportion as the gives the disease its characteristic the blood into the hands, but of that theory will have to look recommended and is even going clothes for “ dressing up” games ringlike form. i should not cause any discomfort un- frequency of water-borne ships, so far as to bolster up his nomi­ and old trunks and grips that were Persons with thin, light hair are less you are suffering from rheuma- elsewhere than to Cleveland for nations with lists of the 'people ecch a potential rescuer, had been tar less mysterious than they ap­ much more susceptible to ringworm tism. Sometimes an impingement conclusive proof that it is all who support the fellow. All these peared. Still, they yielded faded lessened. It takes a tremendous of the scalp than are brunettes. of the nerves which issue from the Read the chart comparing today’s Oakland All-American Six bunk. things curtail the opportunities magazines that could be pored spine and go to the arms will be the stretch of Imagination to fancy a of a senator for service. We used This form of the disease usual y with twenty other leading medium-priced cars. ^ over for hours on rainy days. And only occurs to children under the controlling factor in causing one Zeppelin or a sea-going plane capa­ to be able to get away with mur­ they were thrice desirable since hand to swell and not the other; an Thirteen of these ears are higher-priced than Oakland. Yet NEW STUFF age of fourteen, and Is frequently ble of extending any aid whatever der. parents generally demanded to osteopath or chiropractor could tell despite this fact, in 878 individual comparisons Oakland !• Longs for Scandal carried from one child to another The Snook trial, the result of know why you “ went up there and by combs, brushes and hats. you If this cause exists. to victims of wrecking, either in “ Eventually we will be voting got all dirty.” Barn lofts were sim­ definitely superior on 451 or 51.37 per cent. And the com peting the sea or on the ocean. v;hich was the conviction of a col­ on the tariff and the Maker of us Ringworm of the beard, or bar­ Raw Egg and Milk cars, all combined, are able to equal Oakland on only 382 or ply grand place? to pore over Dia­ ber’s itch, is frequently conveyed by Question: Mrs. K. 0. asks:— “ Is Fill the air with transoceanic lege professor for the murder of all only knows how many cf.us mond Dick and Nick Carter. 43.50 per cent. will be able to vote as we want means of the common lather used it healthful or not to drink a'^hole dirigibles and planes and you a co-ed with whom he had been After 20 years, I regret to say, in barber shops. Many Boards of (not beaten) raw egg in milk?” to vote. Much as it may hurt, the barn seemed singularly like & Let us show you the detailed results of these comparisona—a& would, naturally, convert the intimate, was not a particularly we’ve simply got to be noble. Health now insist on a thorough Answer:— I do not, recommend serving to substantiate the statem ent that today’s Oakland Alk> thousand barns I have seen. And the mixture of raw egg and milk. besom of Old Ocean into as empty interesting affair. It has had, how­ “ Until the last two or three sterilization of all brushes and American la America*a finest medium-priced automobile. I could more or less understand utensils used in barber shops. This If these foods are used together and hopeless a waste as It was in ever, one interesting development years nobody ever questioned-the why my mother plead with me to personal habits of a dry senator. ringworm of the beard produces they should be cooked in .the form What these features Hou> Oakland com­ Columbus’ day and put an end to — the introduction of still one “ stay out of that dirty alley.” great Irritation. ' and each hair is of custard. Now everybody jumps on him if meanlto you pares udth-the field the navigator’s present confldence more reason for a new trial, from surrounded by a small capsule of Nervous Child he has any personal habits at all. The school bouse was still there the point of view of defendant’s pus. Question: Mrs. T. O. W. asks:— in a rescue in case of disaster. It’s got so a senator can’t express little one-storied, one-roomed Large piston displace­ Oakland’s 228 cubic counsel. This new allegation, set himself on paper any more. The fingernails are sometimes at­ “ What can be done for a six-year- ment is needed to affair. It had the shape and man­ tacked by ringworm parasites and old boy who is constantly making inch piston displace­ There’s Senator Gould of Maine ner of all the little red school develop high power at ment is greater than FIRE VS. FIRE up in the motion for retrial, is become discolored, thin and brittle. faces? The doctor calls it some who wrote To a grape Juice com­ houses of the world. It’s .hue hap­ moderate engine speed, PISTON 12 of the 20 cars in its “ undue haste” on the part of the When this parasite attacks scalp, form of nervousness. Have had his hioderate engine speed DISPLACEMENT An individual, holding a couple pany to compliment them on the pened to be a dusty gray. I did not p r ic e f ie ld . O f th e 8 jury in reaching its conclusion. fine wine he had made out of their beard and nails, it is much harder tonsils removed and had him cir­ is an important factor of acres of salt meadow for specu­ need to inquire to learn that Mrs. cumcised, but certainly cannot see remaining cars, 7 are The jury was out 28 minutes. Why grape juice. Now the Anti-Saloon to eradicate than when the body is h i th e life o f a car. higher priced than lative purposes, may just possibly Coyle must be dead. But "Miss attacked, and a course of many any improvement, and his face Is it remained out that -long, unless League promises to deprive him Bessie” was still upon the earth. name in automo­ Oakland. be able to block the full develop­ of his job. months or years of treatment may gradually growing out of shape. It was to get rid of the courtroom The school house bad ceased to be be necessary. The hair should be Would be glad for any help.” bile coach building ment of the Bridgeport airport, “ Sometimes I long for the good such in the accepted term. They means so much as Only Oakland and two atmosphere and have a smoke, it old days when we had some real cut short and the affected area Answer:— The greatest cause of other cars in the field which is in the town of Stratford. taught stenography and shorthand such nervousness is from Irrltatioos Fisher. Fisher bodies isn’t easy to guess. Most folks who scandals around here. The trou­ treated carefully. are famous for style, offer bodies by Fisher. The little tract is Indlspenslble for there now— crafts that were mys­ Only those children who have of the gastro-intestlnal tract. Irri­ And one of the two is fcllowed the Snook trial will have ble with having a virtuous presi­ terious and far-awar when the lit­ luxury and roominess. the proper squaring of the airport, dent without any human weak­ been fed improper combinations tating food mixtures hare an effect In additjen, they hold nearly $100 higher in decided that the jury v#as, if any­ tle gray school house had been develop ringworm. In the rare cases upon producing Irritation all over FISHER BODY price than Oakland. owing to its situation. Were it not nesses is that the rest of us have “our school.” such advantages as thing, unduly deliberative. to be virtuous, too.’’ where close ^physical contact with the body. 1 have never seen a case sturdy comporite hard­ Of the 18 cars adii^ for the airport project the scrap of another child suffering from rlng- of these ttoubles with children that wood and steel con­ have less-known bod­ marshland would not be worth a However, the lawyers having Motion picture palaces have tak- worni produces the disease, the could not be quickly cured by put­ struction, W wind­ ies, 11 are {n e e d a bove ^eu the place of the old opera , the All-American Six. respectable fraction of the price invented this new idea, we may be LONG SIDES ringworm on the child with healthy ting them on a well balanced non- shield. side cowl venti­ nouse, where we climbed countless lation and adjustable prepared to find them, within five blood usually quickly disappears. irritating diet. Only one car as low- which has been offered for it and A sage green flat crepe frock stairs to the gallery, with dimes drivers’ seats. refused. A plain case of holdup. years, gravely applying for new for afternoon side-steps the long­ clutched in small palms— climbed priced as Oakland has trjais in murder cases in any in­ militia, the regulars and 400 sail­ Reasonably long w b^ - a wheelbase as long as Now the Airport company has er skirt ^ problem by having both them almost as soon as the nap­ Oakland’s, which is 117 of its sides made with flopping kins had been tucked in their ors. base gives greater rid­ gone into the courts and obtained stances where a jury finds a ver­ ing ease pnd road inches. 'That car re­ panels that swing from the hips rings, so that we could get seats It was the presence of these an order of condemnation. The dict in less than 48 hours, and, fighting sailors alone that , made Knl«nr«^- A1k > perm its WHEELBASE quires a turning cirds to almost ankle length. along the front rail. But before use of longer, smarter, to the left of 42 feet as speculator’s lawyers, however, within ten years, in less than a W9 went, there was a hurried hud­ the conflict worthy of the name of a battle. Undismayed by the flight roomier bodies. At the compared with Oak­ promise, to take the case to the week. Such things are progressive dle in the barn while we sneaked same time, a small land’s 36 feet. Six in their outrageousness. NEW BAGS out a few choice numbers of the of thedr friends; the sailors made higher-priced cars have Supreme Court. There is consider­ a firin' resistance until the British turning circle ia essen­ latest yellow-back. WASHINGTON BURNED tia l t o handling i riiorter wheelbases. able doubt as to the outcome, the France uses wood now for dec­ Once, trying to emulate some got in their rear and they were WHAT THEY N"EED orative inlay in leather purses compelled to give up. the, struggle. Oektmnd AO-Amertemn SJ*. $ U 4S to tlSTS. f. b . airport concern’s right to the priv­ of our older and rougher fellows! On the evening of Aug. 24, 1814, AoOvery ehmrse*. Sprint eoemrt and Lovtjoy HydrauUe S h oe* 4 b»p rb «rs in - ilege of condemnation being grave­ If some New York police com­ for autumn. Patou has a purse in the "nigger heaven” set, two of The British marched directly rliirfnri in Hat p r io w . Bumpara and raarfendar gumrda astro. Can oral JfoCora and necklace using seven kinds of British troops entered Washington from Bladensburg to Washington, T im a I’oy m a n t f l a n aaailafcia mt minimum rota. ly questioned. missioner, of more originality than us essayed to chew tobacco. And wood. cared little thereafter whether or and burned the United States capi- burned the federal buildings and Undoubtedly the greatest care Mr. Whalen, and more sand than r o w H i r Um dellverad pvieo oa well mm th e not a performance was held. tol, department buildings and left soon after, completing their wban eomparism aatatnobila vahaas . . • $1 1 >1 cr 91885.S0 FOR $2 campaign in less than a week. Pontlaa SoUsafA pcioas Inelada eolr should be exercised in permitting is common, should some day serve But, after all— boy or man— it’s White House. The vandalism was corporations to exercise the right notice on the financial district that the home town. ahaiaoa for kamlBnc aad far RnanefaiL The record sum paid the back­ made possible by the ridiculous un­ C . M. A. C. Time Psyment Plan ia oaad. AND UP of eminent domain. Still, it is nc police attention would be paid Still. I come away after 20 ers fo a race horse in America is years with the Impression that the preparedness for defense of the SPIRAL TRIM equally imperative that the law to cases where small boy messen­ $1885.50, which was given to all “ old home town” and the swim­ administration in Washington. should not support the Individual gers were relieved of thousands of who had $2 tickets on Wishing ming hole and the sand lot are A glamorous evening coat in Ring, at Latonia In 1912. Landing of 4,000 British, traops pink brocade has a spiral . &im of ;who attempts to capitalize his dollars worth of securities, it is gorgeous places to visit in reverie under General Ross at Benedict, In KEMP BROS. of a winter night when the wood banding of mink edge its * flar­ property rights’ proteotion to the probable that there would be few­ BARCELONA TOUCH Maryland, created a panic in the ing skirt * and wind around -the is crackling in the grate. For nation’s capital. 130 Center Street extent of extortion and to a point er such thefts and also that the then yoii can conjure up the boy hipline, and up the, front and ‘where he can, without rendering warning would be greeted with New necklaces are made of who was without actually looking Requisitions for militia were around the neck, hastily sent to neighboring states finy equivalent, help himself to the very general applause. many strands of fine beads in gay upon the barns, the alleys and the Spanish colors, as a gesture to the garrets. and all the troops in the vicinity ^riflta of other people’s enterprise. Hardly a week goes by without A North Carolina leghorn, hen Spanish exposition this summer. GILBERT SWAN. were mustered out. The Americans it is perhaps possible that the report of lifting of securities In selected Bladensburg as the place died after living thirteen, and a to meet the enemy, and toward half years. Just think-—if she OAliXAN D lown of Stratford, if it becomes the Wall street district that could Boston detectives pinched a Chi­ this spot there flowed an absurd laid an egg a day all her life, that liie to its own Interests, can do a never possibly have taken place nese and seized 40 cans of opium. What’s become of the old ex­ They feel pretty sure they have pression, "Hold your horses!” array of clerks, secretaries, cabinet would be 4,927 and a halt eggs, or AUi-AMEBlClAN SIX t1^ condemning in this instance, if it were not for criminal care- the dope on him. Huh, what’s become of the horses? officers, thd president himself. about 410 dozen. But she didn’t. I PRODUCT Off GRMRRAL MOTORB U^: MANGHESTER-BVEN^ HERALD, SPXJTH l^NCHESTER, CONN^ SATURDAY, AUGU^ 24;? 1929;

I here In Manchester a few . we^s Wheat Growers ago. Copyright 1909 Chrytlor Corporatlofi “ Cyclones are queer things. Sev­ eral times they i^kipped right over How They Do our farm and destroyed everjrthing six miles furthfer oh. An Incident. “ I remember one .incident. ,A man was alone in a house. The W ORLD’S FINEST cyclone came and destroyed every In The Wheat Lands room in that house but the oenter room In which that man was. He was found unconscious under a table, but caine'out all right. - “ Our great danger^ in Kansas Is PERFORMANCE Carl Anderson, Just Back not cyclones but fire. Let fire Many Crops in the Far West start in a wheat field and it Is the most terrifying thing in the world. from Kansas, Tells Inter­ Depend On Wandering Workers Thousands of acres destroyed In as 3 CHRYSLERS WITH MULTI-RANCE GEAR SHIFT many minutes. There’s no stopping esting Story of the Big F it were not for the ‘bindie stiffs’ there never would it and no escape for crews caught be any wheat harvested in Kansas,” says Carl An­ in it. We fear fires most.” GIVE NEW DRIVING THRILL I derson, whose interesting story on wheat growing “ Mrs. Anderson do you think it Farms in the West, of is so difficult to get along in Kan in that state, is told on this page today. sas?” h r o u g h the development of a nevy Multi-Ronge Gear Shift “ What is a ‘bindie stiff’ ? Why they used to be call­ “ It was hard at first but It will Tand other sweeping advancements, Chrysler has left the in­ Cyclones and Roads and ed ‘gay cats’ in the old days; later ‘wobblies’ and now for be better now. Of course* I have dustry far behind. want of a better name they are termed ‘tincan tourists.’ great faith In my native state and the Federal Farm Board promises Other Things. “They are the floating army of men who roam this to help us. In the past it was First created for the magnificent Chrysler Imperial — and now country working at seasonable tasks. They used to rather hard but money is still to be carrying out the Chrysler ideals of Standardized Quality, also OW, take, for Instance, this tramp the highways or-ride the rods or the box cars made in cattle and hogs. That off­ incorporated in the new "77" and "70"— the Multi-Range Gear here state of Kansas you of freight trains. Now four or five of them club to­ set our losses in wheat. There was Mr. and Mrs. Carl Anderson. a little trouble with the heirs in Shift completely revolutionizes range and quality of motor car N hear so much about. It is gether, get a second handed Ford and travel in style. It is square allowing us to build barns for our performance. The results are entirely without counterpart in somewhere out west. the side I would have been forced —no, rectangular in shape. It’s ITiey camp along the road until they find jobs. They cattle but that will be settled, have fixed stations for their ‘jungles’ or dining places. to quit, but this • sideline tided believe, and we plan to go into that automobile experience. n o miles long and 210 miles wide. me over. I was not discour­ Some state in size. In it you will end when things are settled.” NEW Empty cans which once contained ‘canned heat’ litter aged but kept on.’’ There is nothing neW to learn in driving. You shift gears os before find Kansas City but not the Kan­ these ‘jungles.’ Canned heat is that stuff the campers While the wife was speaking a sas City you always read about. Federal Farm Board word picture of Mr. Ai ierson was — but with what a difFerence in results and what o difference in use to cook food. The men drain it through a cloth and “ How about this Federal Farm procured. He is about five feet That is in Missouri. It is also the the joys of driving! home state of William Allen White, mix it with water or spread it on bread and eat it. It Beard? Will that help the farm­ ten inches in height and strongly the newspaper editor who raps gives one a wonderful jag. ers?’’ built. He weighs in the neighbor­ and IMPERIAL “ It may in the future but it did Not until you actually drive o Chrysler Imperial, **77" or " 70 " will things in general in his newspaper. “They are not tramps in the true sense of the word hood of 170 pounds, has blue eyes, And talking about size, they do not help nie. The middle man is heavily tanned and is smooth ‘ 2 8 9 5 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL PRICES — you realize finally_and fully how for ahead the new Multi-Range for they are willing to work but not for long stretches. made all the money. The farmers shaven. He was in working tell some tall things about Kansas Nine Body Styles, from $2895 to $3855. Gear Shift has carried the standards of motoring. if you listen to them tell it. For As soon as they make a few dollars they are off on the did the work. You see I was a New clothes, brown trousers and a light Englander and maybe I did not blue shirt. He is one of a family F. O. 8. Factory (Special Equipment Extra) % . Instance they say that the corn road again. ’ They are natural wanderers and many edu­ \ grows so tall there that it takes a cated men are found among them. Clever mechanics know as much about the game as of four brothers and a sister. His man and a boy to see the top of the I thought I did.” family consists of his wife and a Nor do you wont to miss seeing and driving the remarkable new *1595 NEW CHRYSLER " 7 7 " PRICES— stalks. The boy looks up until and even artists are found in these ‘jungles.’ It developed during the inter­ boy, a y«ar and three months old. Chrysler "66“—lower in price than any six that ever before bore “In years past they would start picking hops in view that the Kansas farmers have Kansas. Roads. Nine Body Styles, from $1595 to $1795. he gets tired. Then the man takes the name of Chrysler—a new creation already proclaimed for and up the job to look the rest of the New York state. Then they’d unload grain on the Great much to contend with. There is a “ Nobody walks in Kansas,” said F. O. 8. Foctory [Special Equipment Extra.) way to the top. They tell lots of Lakes. Next pick apples in Northern Ohio and rest over dearth of water at times and they Mr. Anderson. “ Distances on the wide os the foremost six-cylinder value of the times. It is every inch other stories of the same kind, but must use tank wagons to follow farms are ao great that we all o Chrysler in the best Chrysler tradition, from radiator to rear the cold days in Chicago. From that city they would ride, even to woKk. on our places. 0. this little sketch will deal more the harvesting crews. It is also hot '1245 NEW CHRYSLER " 70" PRICES— with facts. move westward as the crops ripened and end up picking ar times, 110 in the shad-> is noth­ [ might as well tell you that I was. axle, from rims to roof—and what a value! ^ oranges or olives in California. ing unusual in the summer time. elected constable while out there Six Body Styles, from $1245 to $1395. F. O . 8. Factory (Special Equipment Extra) TRIES GROWING WHEAT “Were it not for these roving bands of workers the “ How do you plant wheat?” but had to resign as I was too busy to keep the job.” OUT KANSAS W AY. crops could never be gathered in many of the western “ You do no ploughing. It is here is a young man in Man­ called listing, a sort oi ridging job “ How are the roads out there?” chester who has just com­ states. because sometimes the wind storms “ Roads? You ought to be there *985 NEW CHRYSLER "64" PRICES- when it rains. The mud -gets so T pleted four years residence in “1 remember once that a railroad had engaged sev­ would blow away your seed as the S'lX Body Styles, from $985 to $1065. CHRYSLER the Sunflower State and he was eral hundred men to work on construction work. They soil is light but it is very rich. You sticky you can’t go through. It is called gumbo and is of the con­ F. O. 8. Factory (Special Equipment Extra) CHRYSLER MOTORS PRODUCTS induced to tell a little about it for had been signed uid at one of the big mid-west cities and can list 40 acres a day and remem­ this week’s feature article. ber in the planting season we often sistency of molasses. Why these Carl Anderson, is 27 years of age. were en route to the job somewhere in the far west. work night and day, using lamps roads------” He lives at 1016 Middle Turnpike “ The train came to a water tank and had to stop. on our tractors. In harvesting you But the reporter who had just (East) and if you don’t think that traveled over that bit of highway At the tank were a crowd of farmers who needed help. just cut oj the heads. The stubble from the Green to the town line, is far away from Main street, walk is ploughed back into the ground. out there some hot day. They walked through the coaches offering more money remained to hear no more. No roads In Kansas, no matter how Carl was born here and went to than the railroad paid and the whole bunch of them quit LIT'TLE AMUSEMENTS the grammar schools in his boyhood the train and went away with the farmers. That train bad, could equal that Manchester IN THE WHEAT FIELDS. street. days. When he was 13 years of had to go back empty.” ow about amusements?” age, the family moved to Massachu “ Amusements? You're so setts but did not remain long there. tired at the end of the WM. E. KRAH GEORGE SMITH They returned and Carl worked at day’s work that you are glad to get South Manchester various places around th.a town, at car. And that old Ford had to 270 acres of wmeat and mortgaged to bed. Expert 30 Bissell' Street, Cheney Brothers, the needle shop break its crank shaft and bust Its the crop to get the seed. Then the “ How about those cyclones?” Radio Service over north and on farms here­ tires so 1 had little of my fortune old tractor went on the bum but Mrs. Anderson took the floor. abouts. The World War found him left. My vrife had inherited a “ Carl didn’t see any serious ones Philco Jars and Batteries too young to join but after the the agent had faith in me and had quarter of section of land and a it repaired. but 1 did. They are terrible. They R C A Tubes and New Sets war he decided to join the army come in the spring or fall. The little house so we decided to go in “ Remember I knew very little Phone 4949 Advertise in The Evening Herald-It Pays which he did. He spent his enlist­ for farming. A quarter section is temperature drops quickly and that ment time in various camps, among about growing wheat but 1 had a gives you time to dive to your cy­ not a little place by- any means as great help in my wife who was them Camp Lewis, which is situated it contains 320 acres and here I clone cellar. Dark clouds appear, near Tacoma, in the state of Wash­ born and brought up in that coun­ stringy, like the rain clouds here. I was planning to farm that by my­ try. She did the planning and in­ ington, on the Pacific coast. The self. went through several of them but government decided to reduce the structing and I furnished the mus­ they are not nearly as terrifying as “ I went to the bank which was in cle. size of the army and young Ander­ a town some 18 miles away and told the hail storm I went through right son was allowed to come home. On my story. They believed me and I “ If it had not been for the THE CAMERA DOES NOT DO JUSTICE TO his trip east he saw the wonderful got $65 on my word alone. neighbors I do not know how 1 farms of the west so he decided "The'house had little furniture would have gotten past that first after a brief spell at home, to go but that meant little. There was year. They helped mo a lot but the W T 1 C west to seek employment. a stove, a bed and a few chairs end of the year found me in debt. PP.OCRAIVIS Starts as Harvest Hand. but what means that to a young I paid b(ick the $65 to the bank Starting as a harvest hand he couple? We decided to make the and decided to hold my crop for Travelers, Hartford worked ever westward until best of it. higher prices. I held it for four he reached Kansas and then fate months and then was forced to sell 500 m. 600 K. C. played its hand. He met a girl in WIFE PLANNED WQRK ic at 90 cents when it cost about a PINE LAKE Preston, that state, so decided to FOR NEW ENGLANDER dollar to raise it. That was sure Program for Saturday make his home there. some profit. I had 2,400 bushels As the young man tells the ITH the money loaned from E.D.S.T. the bank I bought a sec­ but had to give a third of the crop 6:00p. *m. Black and (Sold Room Nature’s story: for rent. Next year I got 80 cents 14 Miles ‘‘I certainly had my nerve with w ond hand tractor. I helped Orchestra — Ludwig Laurler, Beauty; me. I had just $90 and an old Ford the neighbors and in return they for my wheat and were it not for Director. From loaned me their machines. I put in corn, hogs and cattle I raised on Marche Carnavalesque . . .Friml Tout Paris . .'...... Waldteufel Manchester Spot Suit T rian on...... Lacome SHORES Menuet DAILY RADIO PROGRAM Passepied Eagleville, South Coventry, Conn. Aria 422.3—WOR, N EW A R K —710. Leading DX Stations. ‘ Saturday, August 24 7:45 6:45—Nineteenth Hole feature. Gpvatte , Glctl' .s soprano, will feature 8:15 7:15—Security League address. (DST) (ST) Selection from “ Firefly” .. Friml 8:30 7:30^Pianist and violinisL 405.2— WSB, A TLA N TA —740, 6:25 United States Daily News Bul­ WITH THE 22,000 PINE TREES roquos'.'.'il specialties du.-ing the hour 9:00 8:00—Salons of other days. 8:30 7:30—Sunday school lesson. to be radiated by WEAF and associ­ 9:30 8:3?—Midshipmen’s program. 9:00 8:00—WEAF programs (2 hrs.) letins from Washington, D. C., ated st-ations at 9 o'clock Saturday 10:00 9:00—Organist, string trio. 11:00 10:00—Studio eniertainmenL JIartford Cojirant News Bulle- | 11:05 10:05—Two dance orchestras. 12:45 11:45—Studio organ recital. night. Under the direction of Nathan­ 302.8—WBZ, NEW ENGLAND—SOO. 293.9— KYW , CHICAGO— 1020. tins. iel Shilkret. the concert orchestra of­ 7:07 6:07—Studio music hour. 9:00 8:00—WJZ musical prog.-ai-n. 6:30 Hotel Bond Trio— Emil Heim- fers Wagner's overture •‘Tannhauser.’’ 6:30 5:30—Falvey’s dance orchestra. 10:05 9:05—Dance music to 3;(i0. •berger. Director 8:00 7:00—Sailortoryn; Dixie Dusk. 389.4^WBBM, CHICAGO—770. * Another instrumental highlight wilt be 8:00 7:00—Dixie Dusk music. Miscellaneous Concert Classics— a violin solo l>y Yacob Za.vde, Saint- 9:00 8:00—WJZ programs (1 hr.) J 10:00 '9 :0 0 -Reisman’s dance music. 8:30 7:30—WABC programs (1 hr.) Melodie .'...... Dawes Saens’ ‘‘Introduction and RoneJo Cap- 9:30 8:30—Chicago’s dance music. Serenade Espagnole...... Bizet riccioso.” parade of popular songs 348.6— WABC, NEW YORK—860. 10:00 9:00—Studio entertainment. •will be played by Jesse Crawford, 6:30 5:30—Classical musical vespers. 10:30 9:30—Lewis dance orchestra. Orientale ...... Cu1 “ Poet of the Organ,“ during his broad­ 7:30 6:30—I.Kipez dance orchestra. 254.1— W JJD, CHICAGO—1180. Sous la Treille ...... Dldier cast over the Columbia chain at 10:30. 8:00 7:00—ZIto's Sorrento serenaders. 8:00 7:00—Orchestra; lessons, songs. Humoreske ...... Dvorak In this number Mr. Crawford has in­ 8:30 7:30—Music, finance talk. 9:00 8:00—Palmer studio program. cluded many of the favorites, both old 9:00 8:00— Nit W it nonsense hour. 12:00 11:00—Orchestra, songs (3.hrs.) Serenade ...... Ern and new, combining them as a “ Pa­ 9:30 8:30—Studio temple hour. ■ 416.4—W GN-W LIB, CHICAGO—720. Berceuse from “ Jocelyn” ...... trol” with unusual results, due to his 10:u0 9:00—National forum talks. 9:00 8:00—Old-time llrst r.ight.s. Godard ability to simulate on the organ every 10:30 9:30—Crawford’s organ recital. 10:00 9:00—WEAF dance orcliestra. instrument used in band and orches­ 11:00 1'0:0U—Popular dance music. 11:20 10:20—Quintet: dance orchestra, 6:55 Baseball Scores tral work. The “ Andante Cantabile" 454.3—WEAF, NEW YORK—660. 6:00 5:00—Dinner dance music. 12:00 11:00—Dream ship; orchc.stra, 7:00 Vocal Recital— Earl E. Styers of Tschaikowsky. I'oldini's "Dolly 344.6—W LS, CHICAGO—870. — Laura C. Gaudet, Accompanist Waltz" and “ Love Sends a Little Gift 7:00 C:00—Piano twins: baritone. 8:10 7:10—The Angelus hour. of Roses.” will also be played during 7:15 6:15—Phil Spitalny’s music. . 3:30 7:30—WEAF progs. (K i hrs.) 7:15 “ Connecticut Influences in tlio hour. 8:00 7:00—The musical cavalcade. Northeastern Pennsylvania” — 9:00 8:00—Shilkre'.’s orchestra with 10:00 9:00—Barn dance program. Wave lengths in.meters on left of soprano, violin, orchestra. 447.5— WMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670. J. P. Boyd. Editor. The Susque­ station title, kilooclcs on the riglit. 10:00 9:00—Kolfe's dance orchestra. 9:30 S:36—WABC progs. (1 hr.) hanna Company Papers. Times are Eastern Da.vlight Saving 11:00 10;0U—L«w White, organist. 10:30 9:30—Orch; Amos ’n’ Andy. 7:30 Landay Revelers— Joseph Piz- and I'l.astern Standard. Blacl: face 11:30 10:30—Two dance orchestras. 11:12 10:12—Concert orchestra: pianist. type indicates best feature.''. 393.5—WJZ, NEW YORK—760. 12:20 11:20—Two dance orchestras. zitola. Director. 6:00 5:00—Gossipers comic skit. 238—KO|L, COUNCIL BLUFFS—1260. 8:00 Silent. 6:30 5:30—Orchestra, male quartet. 11:00 10:00—WABC dance orchestra, Leading East Stations. 7:00 6:00—Newspaper man’s story, 12:00 11:00—Studio entertainments. Ambassador Charles G. Dawes, (DST)(ST) by “Tex” O’Reilly. 1:45 12:45—Studio frolic: orchestra, former vice-president who now 272.6—WPG, ATLANTIC CITY—1100. 7:20 6:20—Orchestra: business talk. 288.3—W FAA , DALLAS— 1040. represents the United States in S:-;5 7:15—Baritone and pianist. S;00 7:00—Celebrities of Chicago. 10:00 9:00—Musical program. 12:30 11:30—Theater presentations. Great Britain’s royal court, is the 9:30 S:30—Harmony learn. pianisL 8:30 7:30—Pickard musical family. s ss ^ V “■ 9:13 8:45—'renor; novelty band. 9:00 8:00—Skit, "Cub Reporter." 361.2— KOA, D EN V ER —830. composer of the lovely melody 10:30 9:31)—Three dance orchestras. 9:15 8:15—Tenor; Spanish music. 10:00 9:00—WEL\F dance orchestra. which has been chosen by Emil 283—WEAL, BALTIMORE-1060. 10:00 9:00—Male octet, music. 11:20 10:20—Sunday school lesson. Heimberger and his Hotel Bond 8:30 7:30—Cameo "feature concert. 10:30 9:30—Comic sketch, orchestra. 11:45 10:45—Studio string trio. 9:00 8:00- Ensemble and xylophonlsL 11:00 10:00—Amos ’n' Andy, comedians 299.8— W HO, DES MOINES—1000, Trio to preface their dinner concert 9:30 8:30—WJZ Spanish music. 11:15 10:15-Slumber music. * 8:30 7:30—Rocking Chair orchestra. slated for 6:30 o’clock this evening 10:00 9:00—Patterson’s music, tenor. 535.4— WFI, PHILADELPHIA—560. 9:0() 8:00—WEAF programs (3 hrs.) from Station WTIC. The concert 1 1 :00 10:00—WJZ Slumbex music. 7:00 6:00—Studio musical hours. 12:00 11:00—Comic opera hour. 12:00 11:00—Marylanders, baritone. 8:30 7:30—Ivin’s solo male quiret. 374.8— KTHS, HOT SPRINGS—800. will consist of a miccellanec us 203.8—WNAC, BOSTON—1230. 9:00 8:00—WEAF progs. (2)4 hrs.) 8:00 7:00—Bible cias.s program. group of short works by a variety 7:11 C:ll—Amos ‘ n‘ Andy, comedians 491.5— WIP, PHILADELPHIA—610. 9:00 8:00—Dance; string quintet. of composers. Ambassador Dawes’ 7:30 0:30—WABC dance orchestra. 6:30 5:30—Adelphia dinner music. 11:00 10;()0—WEAF dance orchestra. 8:30 7:30—Player's presentations. 7:00 6:00—Children’s birthday list. 491.5— WDAF, KANSAS CITY—610. “ Melodie” will find itself in the ex­ 9:30 8:30—WABC progs. (21^ hrs.) 305.9—KDKA, PITTSBURGH—980. 11:30 10:30—WEAF dance orchestras. cellent company of a Spanish ser­ 545.1-^WGR, BUFFALO—550. 6:00 5:00—Pipes o’ Pan. 12:'45 11:45—Singing Mountaineer. enade hy Bizet, an oriental hit by 7:30 0:30—Van Surdam’s orchestra. 6:30 5:30—WJZ programs. 1:15 12:15—Orch: nlghthawk frolic. ‘7:45 6:45—Medical Association talk. 7:05 6:05—Studio programs; club. 468.5—KFI, LOS ANGELES—640. Cui, Dvorak’s popular “ Humor­ 8:00 7:011—Tommy Tucker’s orch. 7:45 6:45—WJB programs (2(4 hrs.) 1:00 12:00—Orchestra; studio artists. eske” and several other concert 9:00 8:00—WEAF programs (2 hrs.) 245.8—W CAE, PITTSB UR G H —1220. 2:00 1:00—Studio symphonette, classics of equal beauty. 428.3—WLW, CINCINNATI—700. 6:00 5:00—Dinner music; recital. 3:15 2:15—Midnight frolic. 6:00 5:00—Seckatary Hawkin’s hour. 7:30 6:30—Tracy-Brown’i orchestra. 370.2—WCCO, MINN., ST. PAUL—810. Program for Sunday 7:00 C;00—Orchestra: memory tunes 8:00 7:00—WEAF progs. (4(4 hrs.) 8:00 7:00—Barlow’s dance music. 9:45 p. m. Biblical drama, “ Herod 8:00 7:00—Old-time Singing School. 260.7— WHAM, ROCH ESTER—1150. 8:30 7:30—WABC progs. (2(i hrs.) and Salome” , National players 10:00 9:00—Historical highlights. 8:00 7:00—Studio male quartet 11:00 10:()0—Lake Harriet band. under the direction of Gerald 10:30 9:30—Comedy team: dance. 8:30 7:30—Two piano recital. 12:00 11:00—Two dance orchestras. Pine Lake Shores is reached from Manchester by motoring to Bolton. A t Bolton Notch take the left hand 12:00 11:00—Hawalians; orchestra. 9:00 8:00—WJZ programs (1(4 hrs.) 379.5— KGO, O A KLAND—790. Stopp. 280.2—W TAM , C LE V ELA N D —1070. 10:30 9:30—Organ; dance music. 12:30 11:30—Holiy.wood Bowl program. 10:15 Studebaker Champions from road. Directly after crossing the railroad tracks at Mansfield Depot, turn sharp right along Route 32 to 8:00 7:00—Dinner dance music. 379.5— WGY, SCHENECTADY—790. 2:00 1:00—Troubadours: musketeers. 9:00 8:00—WEAF concert orchestra. 12:55 11:55—Time; weather; markets. 4:00 3:08—Gunzendorfer’s orchestra, N.B.C. Studios — Jean Gold- 10:00 9:00—Music hour; variety. 6:00 5:00—Albany dinner music.. 270.1— W R VA , RICHM OND—1110.. kette. Director. Eagleville, then follow Road S^gns direct to property. 12:00 11:00—Three dance orchestras. 7:15 6:15—Studio entertainment. 7:00 6:00—Dinner dance music. Baby’s Awake Now, from “ Spring 283—WTIC, HARTFORD—1060. 7:30 6:30—WEAF programs (1 hr.) 8:00 7:00—Studio piano recital. Is Here” ...... Rodgers 6:311 5:30—Lobster dinner quintet. 8:30 7:30—(VHAM music hour. 8:30 7:30—NBC programs (1(4 hrs.) SALESMEN ON PROPERTY EVERY AFTERNOON UNTIL DARK— MOTOR OUT TODAY. 7:15 6:15—WEAF progs. (3% hrs.) 9:00 8:00—WEAF programs (2 hrs.)’ 11:00 10:00—Richmond dance music. Can't You Understand? ...... 11:00 10:00—Heimberger’s orchestra. 11:00 10:00—Albany dance music. 12:00 11:00—Feature variety hopr. Young and Osterman Secondary Eastern Stations Secondary DX Stations. Lookin’ for a Boy, from “ Tip­ 508.2—WEEI, BOSTON—590. 399.6— WCX-WJR, DETROIT—750. 344.6— WENR, CHICAGO-870. toes" ...... Gershwin 7:15 6:15—WEAF programs (4 hrs). 9:30 8:30—Vocalists, instrumentalists 8:15 7:15—Farmer Rusk's lalk. Roses of P icard y...... Wood 11:15 10:15—Auction bridge lesson. 10:00 9:00—Bind with WJZ. 1:00 12:00—Comedy gossip sketch. 202.6—W H T , CHICAGO— 1480. .Old Man River, from “ Show 545.1—WKRC, CINCINNATI—550. 12:00 11:00—Merry old gang. Boat" . Pine Lake Shores, 10:00 9:00—WEAF dance orchestra. 272.6— WLWL, NEW YORK—1100. 9:00 8:00—Ensemble, organist. 6:00 5:00—Soprano and orchestra. 11:00 10:00—Your hour league. Piano duet. Retting and Platt Phone Hartford 5-0796, 410 Asylum Street 374.8—WSAl, CINCINNATI—800. 6:40 5:40—Orchestra, baritone. 461.3— W SM, N A S H V IL L E —650. Capitol Building, Room 225, Hartford 8:00 7:00—Aviation talk; organ. 11:00 10:00—Barn dance orchestra, Only a Rose, from “ The Vaga­ STEPHEN CUBLES 8:30 7:30—Mountaineers musicale. 7:15 6:15—Talk; tenor orchestra. bond King” ...... Friml ^GLADYS M. ANDREWS 526—WNYC, NEW YORK—670. 11:30 10:30—Gully jumpers music. Sales Manager 9:00 8:00—WABC programs (2 hrs.) 6:40 5:40—Plays; Irish music. 12:00 11:00—Fiddle, banjo, piano, Out of the M is t...... Callahan Pres, and Treaa. 11:00 10:00—Old-time Singing School. 7:40 6:40—Air college lectures. 1:15 12:15—Harmonica; barn dance. Welcome Home, from “ On With 11:30 10:30—Morgan Sister’s music. 8:00 7:00—Ruoss-Stockwell duo. 6()8.2—W OW , OM AHA—590. 12:00 11:00—Variety music: organ. 315.6— WRC, WASHINGTON—950. 12:00 11:00—Studio musical hour. the Show” 325.9—WWJ, DETROIT-920. 8:45 7:45—Washington College prog. 440.9— KPO, SAN FRANCISCO—680. 10:45 Baseball Scores. 8:00 7:00—NBC programs (4 hrs.) 9:00 8:00—NBC programs (3 hrs.) 12:00 11:00—Henderson’s danea band.

'4 V, KViaraiG MANCHESTER, CqNN.. SAlTODAVi AUGUST 24; 1929. : - r'^ Cirj,- s PAGBSIX /■

Park ✓ Occupies Very Sightly Location OIL BURNERS’ EXHIBITION HOUSE Rear View of Exhibition Home MOTOR HIGHWAY A Simole Dignity Marks This House MODERNIZE HOMES TO LINK CANADA NOW BEING LATHEDi ^ ''' ^ Oil burners are another big aid in moderniziiHK the American hom^. TO WEST COAST Simple in operation and yet so effi­ cient in heating the home, accord­ ing to M. H. Strickland, local dis­ Exterior Shingle Work Fin­ tributor, the clean, odorless, silent Los Angeles.— An automobile oil burner is.the ideal one foi the highway that would link Canada modern home. Torridheet, manu: ished; Tile Work Let to and the Pacific Coast with Capo factored by the Cleveland Steel Horn or Buenos .Aires, in South Products Co., of Cleveland, Ohio, is East Hartford Man. America was projected here today. all of this and more. Toridheet Steps to crystallze the* idea in­ can be installed in practically all to a practical working plan have i types of furnaces such as vapor, been undertaken by engineers of] steam, or hot water. The, .advan­ The end of this week finds the j the automobile club of southern tages of a clean, dry basement can Herald-Blizaheth Park Exhibition j California. be enjoyed as a playground by the The project, hailed as the might­ children or any other pleasant pur­ Home being lathed and the win-1 iest tor commercial and peace de dows being set. The exterior shin-1 pose. Where there are invalids ex­ velopment along the west coast tra care should be taken that the gle finish has been completed. It j contemplates the use of four pres­ yfi proper temperature is maintained is stained a medium gray. Rough ] ent unconnected routes. All tour smmm at all times and no shoveling and it was said have a common appeal plastering will follow as soon nv This view shows the rear of The Herald-Elizabeth Park drugery and dirt are necessary at due to historic or scenic interest. MODEL HOMES. all. The Toridheet is Automatic. the lath work is done. Exhibition Home being built by Kornsa Bros, for the owners, Starting at Vancouver, B. C., ac­ It is simple as flashing on an elec­ The contract for the tile work j Mr. and Mrs. James Duffy. cording to the engineers, a broad BY CORA W. WILSON. tric light. The’ ideal oil burner has been let to E. Cippola of East | 1 highway would follow the scenic A simple dignity leads distinc­ must keep itself clean and carbon Built-in cypress gutters have been used on this house* I Columbia and Redwood highway Hartford and the painting con­ They make a fine appearance when finished and should last a tion to this Dutch Colonial home. free. The ingenious and scientific routes, the Camino Real over which There are eight rooms and through­ air supply of Toridheet prevents tract has been let to Joseph. Ben­ lifetime. ______the Padres trod to opdn California out the house Is of wood construc­ ,"il the formation of soot, carbon or son. Mr. Cippola has just com­ to the world,, and the ancient stone tion. Brick chimneys, a panelled other dirt. The idC&l oil burner pleted the tile work in a large in the end costly because of up- paved causeways to Aztec and In­ doorway, small-paned windows, a JiXi must be low hi initial cost a®d easy ca. apartment house ih Hartford. Keep. ■ quaint formal entrance and a slop­ to install. Toridheet sells at a CHARM OF OLD Again for economy and in order Two continents and a dozen na­ ing, shingle roof make it a design price which places it within the There are details on the Herald- to obtain permanency, accentuate tions would bq^ tied together by the of exceptional beauty. reach of the man of moderate Elizabeth Park Exhibition Home some one feature, such as the main road. The interior is unique. There is means. Installation of this burner that are distinctiv' and give it a entrance, keeping the rest very sim­ Already informal international a small vestibule provided with a r ( A. *. 4 e » in the furnace is simplicity Itself, finished appearance perhaps not HOUSES IS LAID ple in contrast? This certainly will discussions have been held regard­ convenient -coat closet and lava­ requiring a few hours, Oace in­ found on many other houses ex­ be more interesting than an all- ing the proposal. Most of the gov­ tory. The visitor enters a hall stalled the,home owner can forget cept those costing a gooc. deal over treatment of meaningless dec­ ernments approve it, the automo­ with a true Colonial stairway and it and enjoy winter with the aisuT- more. One of these details involve^ TO SIMPLICin oration. Fodr brick walls, possibly bile club reported. passes to the left into a good-slaed ance that the home will be. warm, the finish of the corners. In most painted white, with well propor­ From the United States govern­ living room that Is distinguished b cheerful and completely comfort­ cases the corners consist of two tioned windows propirly distributed ment and state engineers a com­ a large open fireplace. This room able— a June day indoom, even pieces of 1” x 6” or 1” x 8” joined plete working plans was expected 7 : ------are in fact a small portion of the is lighted on two sides by large TTTT •I!: though January without. together. In £hls case a fancy Builders Accepted Sound total cost of a mcmern house, when to be developed. This will be sub­ windows at one end of the room — Toridheet is listed as standard by moulding was used so that each one considers the kind of heating, mitted to Latin-American leaders one leading to an open porch and the Underwriters’ Laboratories. It corner has a panelled effect. lighting and plumbing required. The tentative route connects Brit­ the other to a study that has an Is listed as approved by New York] Another feature will be a spe­ PrincipleSj Says Writer; Placing of House Important ish Columbia, Washington, Oregon attractive fireplace in one corner. ■O W H lt-'S - Board of Standards and Appeals, by cial cabinet in the wall in the hall Another most important consider* California and Arizona; Mexico On the wall opposite the study, CttMBtK Connecticut Board of Fire Marshals near the bathroom where shut-off ation is the proper placing of the Nicaragua, Panama, Columbia, Ec­ glass French doors lead from the and by Massachusetts Board of valves will be located controlling Site Influences D esip. house on the site, especially when uador, Bolivia, Peru, Chile and Ar living room to the dining room, •Hi l L‘ Public Safety. the fiow of hot apa cold water to the site is small. It is almost al­ gentina. which looks out on the garden. j the bathroom. This is especially ways a mistake to place if in the As a single highway it would From the dining room a door leads convenient in case of trouble. center of the lot leaving a mere cover more degrees r ’ latitude than to the pantry and the kitchen. The There are certain first principles t * ie m ------Strange to eay, not an « g l was To prevent the lawns from wash­ fringe of ground around the house any other route in the world tra so evident when one builds a house servants’ entry separates these Ot Dcf’o ~— >^>-0 broken when 24 dozen Were ing when the downspouts end for treatment. Either one side or versing the tropics, two temperate rooms from the maid's room and Cvticu. Ca^ttMtr- —— I would hesitate enumerating them • *0 rza. eu n. dropped from an airplane, via the front or even the back of the and one of the frigid zones. f l . O O K .1 P t large dry wells ha /e been excavat­ the bath. . t C O K PJL were it not that I see them so fre­ To be expected “ some day” ac­ .5 parachute, down on a Los Ange­ ed and filled with large cobbles. lot offers a far better solution of The maid’ s room is about five les airport. Stranger, there wasn’t This is a mighty good, arran.^e- quently neglected in the small the problem. If in the back of the cording to the automobile club. Is country and suburban houses. a highway sign arrow pointing to steps above the kitchen level, and, bedroom is a fine open fire-place. York City, and be sure to enclose a peep out of one of them. nient that doesn’t cost much to lot, an interesting garden approach the house being built on a sloping the clipping from this newspaper.) Why is it that the old Colonial might be obtained or if in the front, the south and “ to Cape Horn, 10,- The house contains 40,725 cubic install when the building is under house and almost all old houses are lot, the garage is below it. construction add before the lawn the service might be placed on the 000 miles. ’ feet and at a cost of about 40 cents so attractive, and why is it so difli- On the second floor is a cen­ a cubic foot, the price of such a has been graded. street and great seclusion obtained trally located bathroom with a cult for either owner or architect to back of the house. house would not be beyond the match the charm and atmosphere of small hall between the two bed­ average main margin, if this size Any house so placed, built In per­ rooms. In this hall Is a large some of the simplest examples? Un­ manent materials, lends itself to the seCDoM Docm house is needed. The house is 78 questionably, the best have sur­ cedar linen closet. There are clos­ feet in width and this would need planting of vines and trees and a ■ o m Vo o r . ets in each bedroom, also. The vived because they have been cared general treatment of the grounds at least a hundred foot lot. for through several generations. LQCVi IF master’s bedroom Is a double room without too much architecture. An V O O 'R F O P with two closets and a dressing (For additional Information and They are good also because they attractive plan of the grounds with cost estimate, write Mrs. Cora W. were built at a time when there on\V o o ^2. room leading into a modern bath­ good planting helps largely to make room. On one wall of the master s Wilson, 420 Madison avenue. New was a real respect for tradition, the architecture a success. when people were more resigned to The planting may be small to be­ accept certain simple principles of gin with, without immediate effect, good taste which they had inherited but whenever I see a new country and which were dealt out to them house the first thing I ask myself Painting and Interior Decorating by architects or builders guided by certain very simple and primitive is, will it grow into something, hand books on “ how to build” will it improve with age? It is ) Lasting Factors in which were in general circulation. like a friend who studies and im­ Architect’s Aid First Need proves himself mentally, he be­ The Enduring Beauty and Qiarm comes more interesting as he grows A man building a house should . of The Home first select his architect and ' this older. should be done when possible be­ fore he selects his building site, ’ A Mays Landing, N. J., hen bat­ JOSEPH BENSON because certain sites are suggestive tled with a horned owl, to have Separat^y or while others are forbidding to the her young, and won. Now the Painter and Decorator architect. If you are to have con­ rooster likely thinks he has some­ Decorator of The Herald Home Phone 8731 fidence in an architect, select him thing else to crow about. ©AlfrA withmaivelom with as much caution as you would a surgeon to perform a major oper­ Suitability newimpn ation. Your cousin or brother-in- 1 law may be worthy, but building in. the furnishings your house is a major undertaking, for the so the selection of a skilled archi­ ANDREW ANSALD1&CO. m 1 Electrolct tect by the same token as the selec­ tion of a skilled surgeon is of first Mason Contractors Importance. After the site has been chosen, 145 West Center St., Tel.. 7073, South Manchester TT Exhibition Home there are almost sure to be certain P rices physical conditions, such as grades, o r r e c t color schemes, and periods are not views, or neighboring houses which Mason work of lasting durability and enduring beauty enough in furnishing a home. The use to within reach of everybody. will suggest design and then in turn exemplified by us at the Herald-Elizabeth Park Exhibi­ Cwhich a room is to be put . . the suitability when the house is built it should of the furnishings . . must also be considered. Is Most convenient terms in town. suggest a certain treatment of the tion Home. grounds which will make a happy the room a guest room? a child’s room ? a study? marriage between the house and its Here is another angle which our decorators must environment. consider when furnishing the Herald-Elizabeth A man building a small house Park Exhibition Home. generally requires two stories and an attic, in which event it is most THE TRIM Important to make one of the two dimensions in plan dominate. For the Otherwise, three equal dimensions WATKI NS BROTHERS would be obtained, forming a cube Herald-Elizabeth Park Exhibition Home '\otir Children— which is hopeless from an architec­ 54 YEARS AT SOUTH MANCHESTER tural viewpoint. In almost any Furnished by - - - IS their tood sate / composition of three parts, one of VICTOR-RADIO CONSOLE R-32 these should dominate; incidental­ (Don’t Be Misled—Ask Your Friend Who Has a G. E. ly by so doing, the direction of the The Hotchkiss Brothers Co. roof is not left indefinite as one Interior Finish Doors Windows Refrigerator. The G. E. Was the First To Have a Cold would naturally make the roof run Cabinet Work Control). ______lengthwise with the house. Small, Savings Recommended 156 Woodland S t.,. Hartford, Tel. 2-2992 PLUMBING AND HEATING Generally, a gable end is best be­ exquisite,m odem cause it best accentuates this differ­ Let Us Solve Your Heating P rob lem s— NOW ! ence in the three dimensions. As a matter of detail, avoid too much Estimates Cheerfully Given. PAUL DONZE projection to the eaves, an ugly Equipment is easily unreasonable expense. Too Installed. Listed as “ Tis ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR piazza room and covered areas shut standard by the Un- out the light and are useless and denvriters’ Labora­ June 153 West Center St., Tel. 3512, South Manchester expensive. Thousands of houses Komse Brothers tories. Approved by Within— LESS have been built with endless and New York Board of Modem and Up-to-Date Wiring $155 TUBES useless piazzas and more cellar 44 Fairriew St., Tel. 7129, South Manchester Standards and Ap­ Even space than needed— these two sav­ peals, by Connecti­ Tho’ and Fixtures. ings alone with a simple exterior cut Board of Fire treatment would have made It pos­ Marshals and by January Featured by us at The Herald-Elizabeth Park Ex­ sible to build with permanent mate­ Massachusetts Without” rials, such as brick or stone, a real General Contractors Board of Public hibition Home. house instead of a wooden house, Safety. KEMP'S, Inc. which always seems temporary and for the “AS QUIET AS A CAT’S TREAD”

A Tile Bath For The Modem Home Herald-Elizabeth Park PAUL BRANDT Sanitary As Well As Beautiful Concrete Construction Contractor A Feature of The Home You Can Be Proud Of. Exhibition Home _ OIL BURNER. 26 Ashw orth St, Tel. 8291, South M anchester All Tile Work at Hearld Exhibition Home Being Done « , FOR^ BETTER. HOME HEATINO By Us. Estimates CheerfuUy Given. “A house is only as sound as its foundation.” Builders of Homes, Modern, Convenient M. H. STRICKLAND Estimates cheerfully furnished on aU types of worh* E. CYSOLLA & SON FonnUatlon for Herald-Ellza|>eth Park Exhibition Home Poured By Us. 224 Spencer Street Burnside, Conn. and Comfortable Dial 3768 832 Main Street Phone Hartford 8-0736

♦ f I-.,___ I

■I - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD^ SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN.’, SATURDAY, AUGUST 24. W i9»

Better Homes Makes Manchester A Beautiful Communii

•4 - •* cal languages university. Apart from his extraordinary Lawn Experts Urge Planting. SUMMER HOME reading ability, the boy has made A Bungalow Suggesting the English Cottage remarkableN showings in naentaJ testing, according to the standard O f New Plofs During August Terman mental tests. At ^ three PLANS MARKED years Howard’s grade was 160 1. q Los Angeles.— At the age of August is the ideal month to® be kept moist, thought the seed by Professor Terman’s rating. start a new lawn nr to freshen uy must uot be washed out by tod six Howard Clinton Woodworth Regardles he is just an active, the old one, according to gardening, heavy watering. BY SIM PLICnY son of a woman professor at the playful, healthy youngster playing experts of the New York Botanical! Grass seed will sprout and grow . University of California at Los out of doors with the rest of the Garden, B.’onx Park. ■in as little as a week’s time during Angeles, has astonished educators kids. Modern chemical fertilizers have very warm weather, and wHl nave His mother has taught hi-i to taken the place of the former a foothold before the frost. WUB Fitness for Purpose and In­ here by his remarkable ability to read both English and Latl^n. stable manure dressing for lawns. the heat of a second summer the read English and Latin with ease. has, never considered the accom­ But the new chemicals must be lawn should be thoroughly estabr Howard reads such familiar chil­ plishment of reading the classical used sparingly and be thoroughly lished. formal Arrangement of dren's claslcs as “ Aesops’ Fables,” language as anything out of the mixed with the soil. A pound of New grass seeding can be prefect- “ Robinson. Crusoe” and “ Alice In ordinary, but changes from one powdered chemicals evenly dls-i ed from the dangers of drought and Wonderland.” language to another with entire trlbuted should cover thirty square ' washlngT)Ut by scattering over it a Rooms Stressed as Aims. naturalness. feet. fine pulverized peat moss, which Ho also translates with the same At the nursery school maintain­ interest and ease, the Latin text A new lawn requires a good dar’K will not only help hold the mois­ ed in connectiop with the universi­ topsoil, well furtilized and worked ture between waterings, but will books of th6 first year of high ty, Howard is rn the second grade. By FRANK C. FARLEY school. to a six-inch depth. The surface- keep the soil lr>ose and absorbent.* « ' At eighteen months he knew iiic soil should be pulverized, rolled j The old lawn, that has stood Midsummer Is the time when the letters and at nineteen months A Brockton, Mass., man went and leveled, and sown with about a , hard wear during the summer, likewise may be nourished by a line . inland dweller longs tor a seashore could read words from the head­ to Italy and married a girl he had pound of seed to a hundred square j lines of tbe newspapers. never seen before. We know a feet. i sprinkling of the powdered chemi­ or tidal riverside house. And with There is nothing of the “ infant fellow who married a girl he had When the seed has been evenly; cal fertilizers, washed down into ihe house to be occupied only dur­ prodigy” about the child, who is seen numerous times, but hasn’t scattered on the surface It should the soil by a good rain, or, falling ing the summer goes an easier, less the oldest of four children. been able to see her since. be lightly raked, so that it is this, by a deluge from the garden hose. formal, freer life than goes with His father, Lewis A. Woodworth scarcely buried. The earth should The report that Tunney is com­ ------J------the permanent abode of the colder la an instructor in Romance House No. 642 languages at a private school here. ing bom,e from Italy to fight civil seasons. So more direct and sim­ sa'-e' suits has been denied. He isn’t of light A fire­ His mother. Mrs, Clinton Wood- ple planning is the order. h e old thatched cottages of Eng­ jL zr O! even coming home to fight. place is provided worth, is a member of the classi­ Entire halls and passages may be Tland seem to be recalled by /the ' BtDBCDM ) curtailed. Living and dining design and treatment of this bunga­ in the front bed­ rooms, and at times even kitchens low. The fitting eyebrow dormer in room, which can be ly-Juire' William A. Knofla ’ Albert F. Knofla may be rolled into one. Several front and a larger one in the back used as a library, bedrooms may resolve themselves give light and ventilation to the at­ or den in the event y President and Treasurer. Secretary into bunk rooms or dormitories. tic where an additional room can be it is not needed DmuM eoDH Outdoor sitting rooms, in the form for sleeping pur­ COOBT provided if needed. LtVINa ftODM Mutual Insurance Policies of covered piazzas, or open ter­ poses. The living i^cttz-cr races where one may also dine, are Face brick has been chosen as the W O 'X 2 0 -6 ' material best adapted to carry out room has three SICTHT found wherever the breeze from the casement windows Represent water draws through best. the beauty in the design. The wide V Basic Consfmrtion simple range of colors available give to the across the front With the informal life and the builder his selection of ’ colors that and a single, good- DEPENDABLE PROTECTION open inviting character of the harmonize with the landscaping and sized window on strictly summer or week-end house at the same time the brick lend their the side vrall, next ------at------goes a simplification of the basic "permanence and strength to the home. to the fireplace SKII-L.. 5 INTEGRITY. construction and so. instead of Given a Flemish bond—^which means which has been - 20-0*- A LOWER RATE plastered wags we often find that that every other brick is headed out, placed in the cor­ in the case of ■frame houses by the __with mortar colored to contrast ner. rear porch is as wide as the kitchen Let ITs Explain. shore the wall framing, joists A large arched opening between and bracing have been left open with the color of the brick, this and opens directly into the attached and apparent on the interior. home takes on an indiinduality of the living and dining rooms gives the garage. The garage can also be en­ RESPONSIBILITY. Another simplification is the appearance that is charming. effect of one long room when viewed tered from the front through a door omission of the cellar, and we Through a vestibule one enters from either end. In the dining room, leading from the breakfast roqpi. STUART J. WASLEY cither a hall on the left wluch leads the window is o f ample size to per­ The ceiling height of this home is CONTRACTORS. usually find frame structures set on Phone 6648 a series of Isolaled piers. to the bedrooms or the living room mit good daylight and opens onto a 8 feet 6 inches and the content is 815 Main Street SO.MANCHESTER.CONN. The exterior treatment will be on the right. The bedrooiM all are court which has been designed for 33,000 cubic feet A 55-foot lot is of good size and conveniently lo­ like the average frame structure. the rear of the house. The break- ample to accommodate it and if the cated near the bath, ^ c h room ^ Siding, clapboards, shingles, or fast room and, kitchen adjoin and garage is placed in the rear, a |ot of even vertical boarding with battens windows on three sides, insuring ______both are equipped ■with cabinets. The 45 feet in width will suffice. to cover the joints. good ventilation and an abundance The small house will tend toward D N. «» «««. .1 a.1. - I - simplicity of roof outline. Many of these shore houses, particularly along the coast from New Haven The Manchester Sand east through Cape Cod, are but a story and a half high and seem Steel Coal Windows anchored to the rocky ground and Protect Building ready to withstand any north­ Paint Makes Home Look New, Says & Gravel Co* easter. Architect Should See Site Carefully planned homes today W. J. THORNTON, Prop. The vacation house, as well as Master Painter Use It When Modernizing are being constructed wit steel or the permanent abode, requires cast iron coal inlets. The old fash­ Screened Sand and Gravel thought. The wise man will look ioned window with a wooden frame on the Brick, Loam, Cinders and Trucking over with his architect the sites of­ One of the points brought qut infvise with home owners always served badly as a coal best colors to use to make their fered and weigh with him the ad­ the Herald’s series of feature arti­ chute. Flying chunks of coal mar vantages of each. houses look attractive. We want cles on Home Modernizing is the and dirty the woodwork and often Everything Some sites will be of easy access, every reader of the Herald to keep break the glass in the basement will have piped water, electricity, influence the appearance oT the step with this movement, and are sash. The wooden coil inlet was QUAUTY and SERVICE and even gas at hand. Other sites homes plays in expressing the spir­ willing to do our bit toward mak­ always an 'Tinsightly entrance. will be far from all public services, ing a cleaner, tdore progressive- Today steel coal chutes are being Plant—Charter Oak St. I House 608 Wood bridge S t and each new house will be a unit it of the community. locking city.” A town that is alive and pro­ used because of their many advan­ Tel. 7387 I Tel. 6893 in itself, and will require a well or tages. The steel frame resists That You Need cistern for the water supply and a gressive is one that has clean, well separate independent power plant cared for homes, state moderniza­ damage from moving coal. The H a d i o F o b sides of the building are always if electric lighting is wanted. tion authorities. They point out Select Others again will have electricity that a town filled with dingy, Beauty and Tone protected. When closed the steel A1 quality and in any from the public services, but water weather-beaten houses is invariab­ plate that forms the cover or win­ dow acts as a barrier against in­ supply must be sought. The small ly behind the times. Its citizens are Remember that yo: r radio is quantity. electric lighting unit operated by a not energetic and prosperous. truders. piece of furniture as well as a Equip Your House With gasoline engine which starts at the “ I am thoroughly in accord Place your order with turn of a switch, and for cooking with the ideas of these moderniza­ source of pleasure. Choose the A member of the United States and hot water supply the kerosene tion experts,” states Joseph Ben­ cabinet to harmonize with the fur­ Coast and Geodetic Survey predicts us for satisfactory service. stove and hot water heater give son, painter and decorator. “ I have niture of the room in which it is a heavy earthquake in the Missis­ YALE perfect service. become very much^ interested in placed. sippi Valley within the next cen­ Lumber for the Herald- Wnen beyond the public mains a the Home Modernizing movement Often the radio is purchased en­ tury. It’s nice to have adequate well may be sunk not too far from as sponsored by thi Herald and tirely with Its technical features warning so we can be prepared for Elizabet^ Park Exhibition the house, with a small electric feel that the series of weekly pages in mind. True, tone is important such things. Locks and Hardware pump and pressure tank. Or, if no will, do much to keep our city to and the ability of the set to get Home being furnished by good well water can be found, a the front as one.that is progressive distant stations a convenience and There is nothing better or finer than the cisteirn may be built to receive the .and on its toes. source of pleasure. Yet do not San Juan County, in the south­ us. water from the roofs, and the water “ The value of good paint in the overlook the importance of the eastern corner of Utah, is larger Yale line. We invite you to see our win­ pumped from it. modernizing of homes should be than the entire state of New Jer­ With the simplification of needs cabinet as a, piece of furniture. The dow display of Yale Products. When emphasized. I have seen many old thoughtful home-owner will see sey. But its population is only and requiremepts beauty must be time houses that were carefully aiound 4,000, according to the last sought by pure proportion and by that the radio fits into the decor­ planning the hardware for your new home The painted to subdue the ginger bread ative scheme also. census. fitness to need. trimming so-that when the job consider the Yale line. Simplicity here means just •what was done the house looked ten or is needed to make living easy. Fit­ ness may mean both fitness to the fifteen years newer. W. G. Glenney site as given by nature and as “ A modernized house deserves a modified by the works of man. good coat of paint for paint is the WITH COLD WEATHER Nothing is more unsatisfactory preserver of both wood and metal. than a house which is completely Practically every part of the house ONLY A FEW MONTHS AW AY- out of tune with its older neigh­ should receive the touch Of the Company bors. painter before it is completed. Both outside and in this is true. COAL, LUMBER, “ The family who cannot go MASON’S SUPPLIES ahead with their modernization Now Is The Time Kornse Bros., contractors for plans can afford to paint the ex­ The Herald Elizabeth Park Exhibi­ Allen Place, Phone 4149 terior anyway, for it is sound in­ To Consider Manchester tion Home have taken contracts to surance to reduce deterioration of build a sand-loader for the East the material. I will be glad to ad- Hartford Sand Co., and to remodel The Advantages of Oil Heat ______1 . the porch of J. Martzer’s home on The Yale Cottage street. , Andrew Stavinsky LET US INSTALL A Deadlatch The population of the United Carpenter and Builder States is expected to reach 120,- Remodeling Jobbing DOOR CLOSERS-NIGHT LOCKS A Complete Line .Of 000,000 in the 1930 census. Why, we thought there were that many Estimates kids on our street alone. 61 Lyness St. Phone 6181 UNITED STATES OIL ...... BURNER BUILDING

I Constructed IN YOUR HEATING PLANT % MATERIALS

No More Soot — Dust — Ashes Also B r ic k / Wor^ or Worry* PERFECT h e a t i n g AND COM^DRT COAL ALL DAY—AND EVERY DAY I We specialize in Yale Padlocks. Com­ plete line in stock. The ^ . “y < -!:?>• a OQC w i t h t a n k / BuildersV Hardware i ‘V' »p 0 * 7 0 i n s t a l l e d ^ Garage Door Sets and Locks Manchester Lumber JOHNSON * LITTLE Manchester Plumbing & Supply Co. Com pany y Mason Contractor Plumbing and Heating Contractor Phone 4425 U s It for Service ' Phone 5145 13 Chestnut Street South Manchester 54 Walker St. Phone So. Manchester

ji-V -"j ♦ . A ' , 'i*^' ^“1-' EVENING H ER^tE; ^XTtH MANCHESTER;, C O IW ;/ S A T u f e c ^ itJGUST^^^^^ . ^ . PXCTTBIGffinr

SPANISH STUCCO HOME IMPROVE EACH PART This Handsome . . Spanish Home W as R e ^ Of Reinodeliiig ONCE FRAME BUNGALOW OF THE DWELLING When the small frame California abroad opening at the left contain* The home modernizing move-< washers. Electrical thermostats type bungalow Illustrated below be-I a number windows. now regulate automatically the came too small for the family, the the gable Is a narrow s ^ b that ment is a broad and f owner decided that a wing should lights the.attic and aids the archl* program to make modern and up to heating plant, varying the temper­ ature of the interior of the home be added to the dwelling to give tectural design of the facade, 5atf each part of the house^ him the needed space. j The quaint entrance with its high Very often the remodeling of the as needed. Vacuum sweepers aid in cleaning the rooms. At the same time he seized the openlnf- and odd hanging lantern house is the outward evidence of opportunity to chatige the-exterior ’ h eigh t^s the Spanish effect, the modernizing but it The Home Becomes Beautiful. derstood that remodeling is only Pleasant as the home may be, a design of the building giving it the! The extension of the wall from constant flow of new aids to hone Spanish motif, as shf-wn in the the corner of the building tends to one phase of the movement. illustration at the left. give it a low. clinging effect. • The outward lines of the beauty permeate the market. New may be modern— in keeping with rugs and draperies, furniture, wall So great has been the change in Plenty of Light, the architectural practices of to­ coverings and the like give a new the exterior lines that it hardly features of this Span- \ day. From the standpoint of the touch to the home and mark it as seems possible that this beautiful ygj.gp number ol passerby this home is modern and being up to date. stucco home was once the frame single units are rare, ?oSplete. It does not need mod- Improving the home may be bungalow below. / Usually each bay contains two oi matter of landscaping, for no home New W ing Contains Living j ^o re sash. The use of transom is really modernized if lawns and The porch at the front of fne,|jgj^yg distinguishes these windows, Yet°fn examination of the inter­ away ior of the dwelling may s h ^ that shrubbery are not planted and de­ frame bungalow was> torn away, selection of a Spanish archi- the heating plant is inepcien., veloped. The lines of the home and an addition ran out to the ygp^ural design called for stucco :ausing unusually high fuel bills. may be modern, the interior up to right forming -a wing containing a which has many merits. Stucco Dr it may disclose that there are a date, but the whole is not complete living room with a broad fireplace. homes are warm in winter and cool lack of electrical outlets in rooms unless It is property set off by French doors with . many small in summer. This material is fire­ spacious, - v'ell-trimmed lawns and panel lights open out onto a con­ wnere they are badly proof. Properly applied under \ot Remodeling But Modernization artistically placed flowers and crete terrace. The original chim­ modern methods, it will last for Needed. shrubbery. ney still remains, serving the heat­ years without attention. Usually In such a home remodeling may ing plant in the basement. a stucco structure i.. white but the not be necessary but modernization A bay of six small narrow win- material may be tinted in various dows projects at the front of the is needed for no home is modern This modern stucco home was once .the frame bungalow-below. Illustrations ime rnose reproauceu ncj colors if the environment requires. Proper Food Important older section of the house. Another The exterior views on this page that is in need of improvements. able results that can be achieved by modernization. Even the garage carries out the architectural scheme. Modernization embraces many show what has been done with the factors. The outward lines of tne Advises Child Specialist outside of the home. They do not house, the interior arrangement of indicate the radical changes that oc­ the rooms, the conveniences and Use Wide Doors When Remodeling curred within. accessories of the home, the -en­ Proper food and cleanliness are A new addition to a building vironment of the dwelling, all may a child’s outstanding needs, accord­ usually calls for new furniture, The wide 3oor is appropriate forced ■view of the trees and lawn and rugs and draperies. The interiot need improvement. And if such be ing to Carolyn Conant Van Blar- the bungalow or cottage, the! allow an abundance of sunshine to the case, modernization is more or com, formerly instructor in the decorations of the addition also light the front hallway have been made up to date. Igss nGcossary. John Hopkins Hospital School for Colonial Spanish or other type of j Often the door is flanked on each Throughout the home new acces­ Times change and the average Nurses, and author of “ Building house. I side by • side lights which add to house grows old. Every home that sories have been added to aid the the Baby” and other books for Then, too, it is a decided con-'the attractiveness of the design. was built five years ago is lacking mothers. mistress of the house in her daily venience to the owner, especially] Such side lights must remain in duties. In every respect the new in some improvements that aid in “ Most of the illness and death when bulky objects such as large keeping with the motif of the door giving comfort or in satisfying the j modernized home is complete. among infants is due to errors in pieces of furniture, are to be car-'itself. desire for beauty. . * feeding, to infection or to both,” Fan Lights are Attractive. Fixtures Grow Out of Date. ried within the house. They can she says. “ A properly fed baby be moved through the door without The simple, white painted, pan­ Electrical fixtures such as the will resist infection much better eled Colonial door is often sur­ Dhandeliers of the living or dining danger of marring either the furni­ Second Mortgage than a baby who is not properly ture, the woodwork or the walls. mounted by a semi-circular tran­ room may be giving good servme fed. Suitable food is the most im- Today, without increasing love of som, known as a • “ fan light" or Money yet be slightly out of date from the Dortant factor in the care of “ sun-burst” with panes sometimes standpoint of looks and style. the outdoors and its sunlight and babies.” fresh air many home owners pre- i leaded in intricate design. Colonial Now on Hand Like styles in garments vari­ “ There are three factors la be fer to inkall doors with a clear doors using the fan light are often ous appliances of the home change observed asserts Miss Van Blar sheet of plate glass in the upper paneled with glass, from.year to year. Newer models com. “ The milk must be made up nart while the lower half is wood | Some modern homes have doors Arthur A. Knofla vary in appearance from those of according to a carefully drawn paneled in attractive designs. |with a fan light over the head of Bay.* Bnild and Live in Manchester yester-year. formula. It must be fresh and Doors of this type enable the the door which is of paneled wood 875 Main St. I’hone 5440 More efficient methods _of per- clean. It must be kept cold. The owner to secure a clear, unobstruct- giving a Colonial atmosphere. lorraing the household duties come necessity of keeping milk at a tem nto being. The older types must perature that is constantly and be discarded in favor of the new rapidly, but between 50 degrees | cause they have stood long enough evenly cold cannot be over empha to be worn out from the battering The occupants of this little frame bungalow were cramped for room so they added a wing DAVID CHAMBERS Electric washing machines take the sized. and 100 degrees Fahrenheit the in­ and modernized the building so that'it became the striking Spanish stucco home at the top. place of the older hand operated crease is very fast; hence the nec­ elements and the wear and tear of No matter ho*v good the milk is, occupancy, but because they no CONTRAIfTOR when it Is delivered to you, if it essity for thorough cooling and the These before and after pictures prove the value of modernization. maintenance of low temperatures longer correspond to the most up- warms up to a temperature above to-date ideas of arrangement and for a heating plant manufacturer is Vacation flirtations seldom lead AND BUILDER 50 degrees Fahrenheit for even a until used.” . “ The Public Health Leaflet No. equipment. The steel frame struc­ Want Color In advertising a heater that is ^vivid to anything— unless the wife hears short time, the spoiling process be­ ture may not resist opinions and ^ with color. Red seems to be the 68 Hollister Street gins. 1, published by the New York City about it. Department of Health, quotes, ‘To preferences as long as the less in-1 popular shade with theni. ■‘The baby’s milk must be kept destructible country home. | The Basement? cold all the time and the most sat­ prevent decomposition of milk, isfactory way of -doing this is to even though sterilized, it must be The invasion of color in the keep it in a modern electric refrig­ kept cool at or below 50 degrees The greatest height above sea kitchen and bath resUlted from the SERVICE FOR THE BUILDER erator. Fahrenheit.’ level is not so great as the great­ housewife’s desire to brighten up \ “ Baby’s feeding is too imporant “ ‘Mothers are learning the nec­ est depth that has been probed the home. Now the man of the DESIRING A BETTER HOME to be guesswork,” states Miss Van essity of keeping baby’s milk and below it. house can gratify his need of colors Blarcom. “ It should be adjusted to the family’s food as well, at a con­ the needs of each baby according stant low temperature to keep it CELLAR EXCAVATING to its weight, age and general fresh and wholesome.' The Govern­ vigor. The doctor should be con- ment and City Dispensaries have —«.PLUS------I suited to to the formula to be used. done much to make known the “ Certified milk should be used vital importance of correct food. so as to be sure that the mijk is well kept to maintain good health.” E. L. G. Hohenthal) it. MODERN MACHINERY 1 fresh, whole and not skimmed. It should be free from disease germs, contain no preservatives and should / We use a gas shovel in all our excavating work thus be about the same composition Dwellings Last Longer General Contractor giving you expert work in the shortest possible time. ! every day. As soon as the mi’k is PAINT UP Time saving plus a price yo.u can afford to pay. received, it should be placed in an Tel. 3269 I electric refrigerator.” Than Piibhc Buildings 24 Roosevelt Street A building may he perfect as A WORD TO THE WISE The government has issued a to architecture and beautiful as number of booklets on the proper South Manchester t() lines, Lut if it needs a coat of Insist on your contractor using our sand and gravel in his I preservation of milk. Mr. Demp­ The life expectancy of building.? paint and if this important work work. You will then be assured of the best materials in all constructed to serve as dwellings is sey, Manager of M. H. Strickland has been long neglected, the phy foundation or plaster work. / greater than that of any kind of sical beauty of_the architecture e l e c t r i f y y o u r h o m e Co., distributors of General Electric Refrigerafors, declared that in structure, according to the report Estimates Furnished on Short Notice. Prompt Atten­ lisappears. Paint brings out booklets on the preservation of of an investigation conducted by the charm of any house, aside " Years ago, wiring a home was the National Association of Real lust an ordinary job. Today it milk and other foods issued by tion Given to Jobbing. 'from the factor of preserving either the U. S. Department of Estate Boards, at the request of the wood. is planned to put at your great Bureau of Internal Revenue of the ALEXANDER JARVIS Agriculture or the Health Bureaus If you are planning to build a new home or modernize est convenience, the power of United States Treasury Depart­ electricity. Arrangement ot of large cities, the correct tempera­ JOSEPH BENSON Sand, Gravel and Excavating. ture at which they should be kept ment. an old one let us dp it. lights and the situating of wall The investigation brought to I'.U-XTEIl AND DKCOItATOlt 416 Center Street, South Manchester and floor plugs calls for an ex­ is an important item. Phone 8731 . ,, PHONE 4234 perienced electrical contractor. “ Bulletin No. 9S, issued by the light the fact that office buildings, theaters and structures of all sorts We are equipped to make all U. S. Department of Agriculture.” electrical installations, and the reports Mr. Dempsey, “ states that which form a part of the commer­ moderateness of our charges and at a temperature below 50 degrees cial or public life of the people be­ come obsolete and useless, not be- the thoroughness of our work Fahrenheit, bacteria multiply less lUiiiirui has earned for us. Estimates COAL furnished free of charge.

JOHNSON ELECTRIC CO. 29 Clinton St. Phone 4814 •Jf nn o u n c e m e n t COAL

TwitiM Tnnirc 'E have been appointed distributors 1 Clarence ? U ln d e r 50il_ of the SUPER Automatic Oil Heator. lunn turira This oil burner fits completely in­ side the average home furnace. It is low GOAL A Power In The ADEQUATE in first cost, and it bums low price fuel ' ■ ■ ■‘f.. oil efficiently. Any Size, Any Quantity INSURANCE Progress of Manchester It is made in the factory of the Potter Delivered Any Time & Johnston Machine Co., of Pawtucket, Representative of Manchester’s spirit of industry, - The Guards Rhode Island, famous for the manufacture Savings Bank of Manchester is a power in the process of this of precision machines. The manufacturer community. It is a reflection of the d^amic ent^nse that Against Place your order with us for satisfaction. moves this town onward with speed and surety. It is t^ ica l is a member of the Oil Heating Institute. of the simplicity of character which has developed Manchester • Quick Service on Building Materials into such a desirable community of home-owning, home-loving Disaster The SUPER is the lowest-priced high- Lime, Cement, Plaster, Flue and citizens. ' ■ ^ -a quality^ motor-driven oil burner on the The ability of this bank to aid in community development At All Times. market. Please call or telephone for a Drain Tile, etc* is yours to borrow, yours to command. - demonstration. We shall be pleased to render assistance and advice to indi­ PLAY SAFE viduals and business men in matters pertinent to finance. INSURE WITH Paul Hillery, Inc. 749 Main Street, State Theater Building

MAIN G.E. SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. OMFNn-HAmEDsm .AtITOM ATierOlLiHEATOJft 2 Main St.,' Tel. 3319, Manchester established 1^06 lllilllll ^TELEPHONE! 8 3 4 8 Whether You Are An Old

• . • A - . . , _ ' - • j/\

^ ' \ <

f r \ V- MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATUKDAr, AUGUST 24, 1929. PAGE NINI^ ! j A Home In Manchester, The Ideal I no matter which it is, a more Especially when there is a vista bia— all may be arranged to silft charming manner of treating a cor­ AN ENGUSH COTTAGE OP INFORMAL CHARM from the living room into the din­ the owner’s taste with no consid­ ner than furnishing it with a colo­ ing room is the china cupboard ef­ eration given the practical problem There Are All Kinds nial comer cupboard cannot be dp- fective if so placed- that it can be of placing the pieces most frequent­ vised. seen fro mthe distant room. The ly used on the most easily reached The hanging wall cupboard for large, movable cupboard is often shelf. the display of china usually con­ , just the right decoration for a Of Cupboards Made sists of three or four narrow monotonous wall- space. If, how­ shelves with side pieces of irregu­ ever, the wall space Is very large, BATH FIXTURES BY MARIE EISENBRANDT. -$111 design anad sometimes fitted lar carved outline. That is. It Ms a pair of cupboards, one for china So great is the decorative effect with glass doors. The most charm­ simply a set . of open shelves. and one for glass, may be more ef­ REQUIRE CARE IN )f rare china and old glass when ing featured the well-known shell Hanging cupboards, small and rect­ fective than a single large cup-1 displayed to advantage, that the design—a great white cockle-shell, angular in shape with glass doors, board. Frequently the tall china ] exquisitely carved out of one solid are also used. Either type of these closet fits perfectly into the space return to favor of the china closet between two windows, while odd ARRANGEMENT was almost inevitable. Our new piece of wood, the carving often be­ hanging cupboards is the Ideal solution for the problem of dis­ wall spaces and small corners lend evaluation of and growing regard ing done by a such a master crafts­ themselves readily to the hanging for the colonial tradition has has­ man as Samuel McIntyre. playing one's rarer pieces of china Convenience of I ^ m Depends and stemware in the small city cupboard of, a few shelves. It may tened this return with the result The cockle-shell curved grace­ be necessary to try the hanging or On Proper Placing of Tub, that, the china cupboard is taking fully above the shelves and was in­ apartment or in the tiny suburban Basin and Lights. its place in the modi'’ed colonial variably surmounted by a gener­ house. While limited as to space, the movable cupboard in several the hanging cupboard has this places In the room before a perman­ homes of today pust as it did years ous keyed arch. The lower part of The three important items in a ago in the large square houses of these cupboards was paneled to great advantage — it combines ent location-is decided upon. I The arrangement of the treasur­ bathroom are the hasin, the tub the past. serve as a closet, while the upper readily with other pieces of furni­ ture or with wall ornaments, form­ ed contents of the' china or glass and the toilet. Whether the room After the chest, the cupboard is portion consisted of Irregularly be large or small, its convenience the oldest piece of furniture which shaped shelves for the accommoda­ ing attractive units of decoration. cupboard must depend to. some ex­ Thus such a cupboard might be tent upon the use to which those depends upon the arrangement of . has come down to us. It was tion of different types of glass and these three immovable fixtures. As, .known as a cupboard, cubberd, china. Later, cupboards with upper combined with wrought-iron candle contents are to be put. If there is brackets, or if it Could be hung a kitchen dresser for the dishes like the butler’s pantry, the bath­ hutch or, if sacred vessels were doors became popular. Sometimes room is dependent generally on an­ stored therein, an almeric. Origin­ the.,4oors were glazed, the panes above a gate-legged table with a which are used for every meal, and lacquered tray placed directly be­ none other than one’s best and other room, it often turns out a ally, used as a storage place for being''cut square or charmingly M-'-, most unexpected shape in relation food, separate cupboards for the leaded. low it upon the table. rarest pieces of china are kept in the china cupboard, only the pure­ to the outline and form of your storage of the utensils from which Anyone interested in acquiring a' The huilt-In cupboards of today and the moveable and hanging ones ly decorative effect need be consid­ house. Therefore, one cannot give the food was eaten soon developed. genuine colonial cupboard for her i c' you any hard-and-fast rules for the In fact, there are English inven­ as well, are very different in ' ap­ ered. If. however, the china cup­ chinaware should remember that board must serve a utilitarian as designing of bathrooms. tories of china cupboards.as early the base of the cupboard often in­ pearance froth those that were seen Just about forty years ago. There is well as an esthetic purpose and However, here are a *ew hintes. as 1344. With the china craze of dicates the age of the piece. Cup­ Place the basin near or under the * the eighteenth century, the crea­ no standardized appearance to must hold chinaware that is used boards of the earliest colonial 'daily, the contents of the cupboard window so that you have plenty of tion of china cupboards received a period rested flat on the floor; these modern china closets. Each has a distinct Individuality of Its must be arranged for convenience light. Have a big tub. Have plenty great impetus. Later, many beauti­ later, feet of the bracket type were of electric light—two separate fix­ ful ones were designed by the own. Often the built-in cupboards as well as for the artistic effdet. added. The tops of the genuine In the purely decorative cup- tures preferably. Besides a medi­ great English craftsman Sheraton, colonial cupboards are also inter­ are so well built in that this is not Heppelwhite and Chippendale. apparent until one realizes that hoard only the esthetic problems of cine cabinet, a closet in which to esting in detail. The earliest ones balance and color need be consid­ keep bath wrappers, sponges, etc,, In this country the china cup­ were flat, often being finished with they are flush with the wall. In board appeared as early as the many instances they look like a fine ered. Old blue-gray ginger Jars is desireable. a carefully wrought cornice or •DlfOlMGBDOMzr in their wicker webbing, treasured Many bathrooms have showers seventeenth century. It was then frieze above which pewter or piece of furniture that has been /I*. 14' found scattered throughout New placed in a recess In the wall. pieces of Sandwich or Waterford either over the tub or as a separate earthenware was displayed. The glass, old Chelsea, Royal Worces­ fixture. When the shower is sep­ England, varied in type and in broken arch or bonnet top de­ Nor are the corner cupboards wood but usually simply constructed used today always painted white as ter, old Lowestoft, and blue Canton arate be sure that it has a caralullv veloped in the eighteenth century , china. Willow ware and Bristol regulated mixture of water so that with wooded doors and a painted in the time of Chippendale. The they were in the eighteenth cen­ interior. From 1725 until about tury. Now they are painted any glass, Irish Beleek, English Mlntoii, there is no danger of being scalded center of the arch was usually em­ Wedgwood, Lenox and Della Rob­ by hot water. 1730 many of these china cup­ phasized by a vase or urn motif. color which harmonizes with the G Af general decorative scheme of the L iOIAX3 T2 0 0 M- boards were designed to match the Later on, carved wooden flames ap­ I5V20' paneling of the room or the wood­ peared as finials. room. Or they are given a natural work on doors and windows. Many During the Empire period the finish if the rest of the woodwork were of mahogany or walnut. Some china cupboard became, alas, heav­ In the room has been left in its INCREASED PRIDE natural state. Where a beautiful were built into corners, others were ier and less graceful in design with in detached and movable. These most the result that the colonial cup­ wood such as curly maple, walnut Mist enchanting came into use during boards reproduced today are gen­ or mahogany has been used in con­ YOUR HOME the time of Sheraton and Heppel­ erally those of the preceding cen­ structing the cupboard the natural white. They were sometimes o^en tury. Characteristic of the Empire finish is always used to bring out J FIRST FLOOR PU O ) Through cupboards is the gilt eagle mark­ the grain of the wood. If, how­ JECOATO FLOOR ing the center of the arched top. ever, the cupboard has been made HOME OWNERS The modern home owner, of Inexpensive white pine it might whether deciding upon an antique be painted a delicate jade green, a By R. C. HUNTER, Architect, and framed in with half timber add a single car garage, the entrance colonial china cupboard or a mod­ soft silvery gray, a bright Chinese New York. a note of charm to the exterior. doors of which are sheltered by a INTRODUCING ern cupboard for the proper dis­ red or a dainty lavender banded This small home is complete in The exterior walls are white stuc­ roof as well as the entrance to the play of rare pieces of Royal Doul- with black, the choice of colors all its appointments and possesses co, and gable ends are siding stain­ kitchen. obtaina'bie at a nominal charge Dy oOx THE ton or old Lowestoft in her dining depending, of course, upon the character that will stand out among ed weathered gray. The roof is On the second floor are three interior decorators. The super color room, has a choice of three types other colors used in the room and its larger neighbors. In planning gray arid purple slate laid in irregu­ nice bedrooms and a bath. scheme and a bit of varnish will m'ake of china cupboard from which to upon the harmonious effect of the this house the architect has, by the lar courses. The cellar extends under the en­ those dull, dingy rooms like new, Tex- OILHEAT make her selection. whole. handling of the roof lines, succeed­ The first floor plan shows an en­ tire house except the garage and tonlng a specialty. For service or ad­ There are the built-in china cup­ Incidentally, the corner cup­ ed in developing a low, spread-out trance vestibule with coat closet contains the heating plant, laundry vice board of shell design is more popu­ SYSTEM boards, the movable cupboards and appearance often lacking to a no­ and toilet room adjoining. The and storage space. the small hanging cupboards. lar today than any other. The ticeable degree in small houses. living room extends across the front Cost about $12,500. CAIX Where space is limited the built-in shelves themselves are frequently The broad low stone entrance ga­ with two groups of windows* open Complete working plans and spe­ cupboard is always preferable decorated with a colorful textile ble with its heavy oak door deeply firep.lace and stair leading to second cifications of this house may be ob­ The Manchester Decorating ('o. since it occupies less room than such as a black, a green or a rich, recessed creates a feeling of sta­ floor. The dining room opens from tained for a nominal sum from the Phone 7471 Will. T. Smyth,' Prop. 74 East Center St. the movable or the hanging type. It red velvet which serve to set off the bility. The small diamond paned the living room. There is a kitch­ Building Editor. Refer to House can often be made to utilize un­ china displayed. If the cupboard windows snuggling under the eaves en with ample cupboard space and A-184. BOTHER used space to advantage without is a painted one, the shelves are iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin ^ affecting the structure and beauty usually painted a color which will MOTORS enhance the beauty of the china ex­ or oak with H-hinges are of course of china and glassware. town house where dust and dirt are of a room. Indeed, it usually adds Whether to select a closed cup­ perpetual bug-bears that must be to the charm and friendliness of a hibited. Occasionally, the back most appropriate for the very early BLOWERS walla as weH as the shelves a"e American colonial interior. An board or one with glass doors must dealt with da^ly, much can be said dining room or living room. Often, remain a matter of individual pre­ in favor of the cupboard with glass­ the built-in cupboard can be put painted: a two-color scheme being eighteenth century colonial dining HEAT LOSS frequently used, such as apple- room demands either a built-in or ference. Both types have been ed doors. ■3 ■ into the wasted space above the Once the type of dhina cupboard green and apricot. a movable corner cupboard of shell marfe in practically every period fireplace or two companion cup­ in the development of-., the china desired has been decided upon, the ELECTRICITY boards can be constructed one on Practically every type of movable' design. A Spanish interior needs cupboard is used for china and an elaborately carved china cup­ cupboard.^ There is a greater sense question of where it is to be placed COZY each side of the chimney. Another MOVING PARTS glassware today. In general, how­ board of walnut or pine wood. The of friendliness and hospitality in the dining room, living room or excellent device for saving space in about the open cupboard. double-service room arises. It may a small room where a china cup­ ever, the larger and more capacious niche idea with small shelves fitted RADIO TROUBLE ones are preferred. Some of the into the niche, is being revived in Glass doors, on the other hand, be made the center of attention in board is desired is to combine the protect and at the same time re­ fhe room, although it should yield cupboard with an enclosed radiator, secretary type, where desk and many Italian Renaissance dining china closet are combined, reach rooms. veal the delicate beauty of the the position of first importance to the lower part of the cupboard con- china within. Certainly in the the fireplace, if there is one. tatining the radiator with the even to the ceiling, while in others The hanging cupboard with open shelves and china above. This de the well-stocked shelves are hlihd shelves should always be consider­ HOME DUAL CONTROL vice also solves the problem of with the baseboard. For a room ed in a room that seems a bit what to do with thq unsightly, done in Tudor or early English severe and in need of warmth. MANUAL or THERMOSTAT space-occupying radiator. style the heavy English cupboard Such shelf cupboards hung on a The separate china cupboard of the huffet type with shelves level with the eye invariably sug­ which is not built in has' the advan­ above for the display ot china is gest friendliness and hospitality, tage of all movable pieces of furni­ admirable. The simple, sturdy for our minds inevitably associate IF Costs Less Than Other Makes ture. It can be tried out in one movable cupboards of maple, pine the ideas of dining with the sight WARMTH part of the room or in another to buy, install or operate. part, or, for that matter, in two planning to build or modernize you will want de­ or three different rooms, and pendable work. Let us make an.estimate for you. should you' ever pick up your Talk over your plans with us. We will be pleased Is Easily Secured household and move away, it can be carried with you to your new to advise. WALTER B. KOHLS abode. For The Coming Winter 107 Spruce St. Incidentally, • the corner cup­ Phone 8232 board may be of either the built-in Plumbing, Heating, Tinning or the movable type and certainly. Against Gustave Schreiber & Sons FIRE Building Contractors We can insure you against all forms of West Center St. Phone 4090 ESTATE loss. Play Safe, Protect Your Home. Fire, Automobile, Tornado, Liability Holden-Nelson Co., Inc. GAS 858 Main St. Phone 8657 W HAT IS Insurance of All Kinds. COOD WILL Good Buildings Deserve 1 HEATROLA 1 MH rfrrf— •_- --that - — tuma - - nmtm hmt Good Hardware In to twmrmtfu Ftrnnm Uhom m ^ ^portmtanta,atarammndojfiea^ And, what is it worth? The old German philoso­ m r-* — - mnm. pher, Kant of Koenigsburg, wrote: “There is no = Uimry h—tar fo r Urgar hamaa, CORBIN good, in the world but the good will.” If this is true, then good will is worth whatever it may cost in time, I A most delightful modern heater, with Spanish — Colonial or Georgian? trouble and money. No matter which you choose, your hardware To obtain good will, a light and power company should be good,—and will be if it’s CORBIN must have character, just as an individual must have I thermostat control, and^'ust a little in ad- What is your new home going smallest latch, if it’s Good character if he is to have the respect of his neigh­ to be? Georgian? Then you’ll Hardware—^^Corbln. And so want Good Hardware in. the too with Spanish or Colonial. bors. I vance of the latest Georgian period. Or will it be No matter what period you It must have spirijt. Something in addition to the Distinctive Wallpaper Spanish? Then the hardware choose you can have Good material properties and bodily labor must be put into should be authentic—must be Hardware— Corbin in authen­ I Phone 5075 We have a fine assortment of^ papers in good. But. perhaps you prefer tic styles and complete variety the enterprise to maJke it live. ^ the Eolonial period? Yes—it, of items. The history of the light and power industry is one all the newest patterns. Our large turn­ too, can be had in Good Hard­ To be sure of good hardware, of character and spirit. The price of good will has ware— Corbin. In perfect taste, you have only :o over of stock assures you of the latest in If yours is going to be a Geor­ to remember one word—“Cor­ been great, but the resulting public confidence has the new wallpapers. < gian home you’ll want Geor­ bin.” Corbin on every pie^e— made it worth while. gian hardware throughout— big and little^—assures you of every last-piece of it—Geor­ correct design and permanent gian. W^ich is exactly what carefree operation for years T h e JOHN I. OLSON you’ll get, right down to the and years to come. I Ike Manchester Gas Co. PAINTING AND DECORATING CONTRACTOR Manchester Electric Co. 699 Main Street South Manchester 773 Main St. Phone 5181 The F. T. Blish Hdw. Co. liiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiHinviiiHHiiiMiiHiiiiiiiiHnhiunHuiiiinaiiiiii These Contractors Do The Work And These Firms Supply The

y •V

MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOOTH ^^NCHESTEK, WNNy PAGE TE^ Daily Health l i o f t o p Service L This And That In by World Famed' Authority 1929 "By ^tA J ^ lce IKjc; V n ELEANOTi-'EATO-Y UL Hof mhi?, Hints On How To Keep Well ______« — ------itcPu^ic vjiiii Feminine Lore interrupted. “ Lowbrows. Morons “ But I was,” she Insisted. you m 'TfiKT He looked at her sharply. 4: TOO MUCH OR NOT t h is h a s h a p p e n e d . . . .It doesn’t make any difference. c?rtot^r'Cvci(?T" But ‘Ashes of Desire’ isn’t for them. “ By the way. Jack Wells is com­ ENOUGH CARBON DIOXIDE MOLLY BURNHAM, who has It is for the very few— the few who ing in to New York on the Isle de WILL CA USE ASPHYXl A'nON France tomorrow. Our correspondr written two sensation^ c r l ^ will understand.” plays, is writing a book called i ‘‘But you must accede to popu­ ent In Paris sent us a tip.” (This is the fourth of a series of Mary Carr, the most famous and j cob and oook 10 minutes.'Add milkr-; best loved mother of the screen is : butter and salt and bring to th’e Ashes of Desire. Molly has ewry- lar demand!” he argued. Molly bent to tighten her shoe articles by Dr. Morris Fishbeln thlng on earth that should make a “ Oh, no,” she said. '‘Not any 1^C6 about poisonous gases and^ their a mother in real life, in fact she is ] boiling point but do not let it boil, woman happy— success, wealth and more. I never intended ‘Ashes of “ is that so?” she replied po-j effect on humans.) the mother of six children all of the love of a dear Uttle girl. The litely. . I whom are grown to young man­ A frozen fruit salad Is popular Desire’ to be a popular novel.” served In ' place of dessert. Thin child Is the daughter of Molly s “ You might jazz it up a^ little, But Red, being an observing | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN. hood and womanhood. She no't college roommate, and MoUy ^ he offered hopefully. “ Give it a young- man, was not deceived by Editor Journal of the American only mothered her brood of chil- j brown bread and butter whd taken care of her since KlXA s her casual manner. Any girl, he Medical Association and of dren but supported them during a | wiches or crackers and a delicate happy ending.” cheese with a small cup of coffee untimely death. Still, with «11 the “ I’m sorry.” she told hinj pa­ decided, could regain her compo­ Hygeia, the Health protracted illness of her husband things that should make life itui, sure, after spending 30 full seconds Magazine. and often rushed from a long day’s should be served with the fyult tiently, “ that I cannot make you salad. ■ This is particularly^pd Molly is strangely unhappy. understand. I’ni being absolutely on a shoe string. There wasn’t any­ A person can be asphyxiated in work as a screen mother to take up There are three men who com­ thing the matter with the shoe one of two ways. her duties as a mother in fact. to serve for the refreshments n't a sincere, Mr. Hall. I don’t want to dessert bridge. plicate things— JACK WELLS, her do popular stuff. I’m tired of manu­ string anyhow. It was tied, in the First, he may stop breathing first sweetheart, who is in Italy now beginning. through shutting off windpipe It is well within the memory, of Sometimes the dressing alone is facturing for the trade. I’ve had frozen. This is worth keeping in with a middle-aged millionairess. enough of catering to the market. That evening. Molly could not or by some action on the breathing a good many women how drab and MRS. BULWER-EATON is the old banish thoughts of Jack. She won­ center in the brain which inter­ unattractive were the house dresses mind when a large number of per­ I’ve put my heart and soul into sons must be served. A pear or lady’s name, and Jack, who is M something real. And I don’t care dered if he had read “ Ashes of De­ feres with the motion of the dia­ or wrappers, as many called ‘■hem architect, is in her employ. Molly whether anyone likes it or not. I sire.” And what he thought of it. phragm, the muscles of the chest sold in the stores' years ago. In ; peach stuffed with a frozen cheeSe And of that silly old Mrs. Bulwer- i6 S 9 and the lungs. fact it was not until the World j dressing is delicious and quite resents the situation furiously, but had to write it.” ^ there is nothing she can do about “ Well, I’ll see what I can do, he Eaton was returning also on the When this happens, the person War that women began to wear | partifled. Isle de France. And where they’d does not get oxygen from the air Hoover aprons and trim, edsily promised. , , , Then there is RED FLYNN, a been. And what they’d done. And and the carbon dioxide is not pro­ donned working frocks. A Kansas- Frozen Pineapple Salad cine cup shredded canned pine- reporter and a regular fellow, who She wanted to tell him not to if Jack had missed her. And if m OLD a o sfoPa duced. It must be remembered City woman, Mrs. Nell Donnelly, that the production and elimination appiei 1 cup shredded cabbage. T-2 makes love casually. Red has M bother. That she did not care if he there’d ever been another girl. And made a fortune while she was still Invalid mother, and has promised if Mrs. Bulwer-Eaton really tried of the carbon dioxide is necessary a young woman, making neat cup minced celery, 4 tablespoons never found her a publisher. That blanched and ■ shredded alnjonda-, 2 aer that he will never marry dur­ the only thing that mattered was to vamp him. . . . to keep the breathing going at the pretty house dresses of chambray, Then Bob came, to interrupt her .regular rate and rhythm. prints and ginghams. When the teaspoons granulated gelatine. 1 ing her lifetime. that the book was written, and the ' In the second kind of asphyxia, cup mayonnaise, 1-2 cup whipping The third is BOB NEWTON, lit- truth told. But she knew he would wonderings. For sopie time Molly war came she added Red Cross and tie RITA’S father, who has asked she'was telling lie's, if she had succeeded in being evasive with breathing goes on but due to com­ Hoover aprons to her own lines cream, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 2 tablespoons cold water,' 1-2 cup Molly to marry him. Molly has no j^lk to him like that. Be- Bob. He had been sober and con­ binations of various substances and built up a big business. Then ■r«- with the blood the oxygen is not boiling water. regai-d for Bob, but she lives in cause it is doubtful if anybody] siderate, and had not tried to talk her frocks began to come out of mortal terror of losing Rita, whom again of love or marriage. taken up. Under these circum­ the kitchen on to the porch and Let cabbage and celery stand in ever wrote anything with the idea i stances, the giving up of the carbon ice water for an hour. Drain. she loves above all reason. that nobody would read it. But tonight there was determi­ out to the country clubs and out nation in his eyes. And a purposeful dioxide is not interfered with. As door sports. She still keeps her Soften gelatine in cold water, for She is working on her Ixrok. She hung UP the receiver slowly, which is rather autobiographical. look about the set of his mouth. • a result, the person is likely to business in Kansas City though ten minutes and dissolve in boiling wondering why she had written the Molly knew that her night of reck­ . breathe too much and he dies. often urged to establish a New water. Combine pineapple. caV book, if it were true that she did NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY oning had come. I Another type of asphyxia results York address. bage, celery and nuts and add dis­ not care whether it was published. ! from being locked up in an air- solved gelatine and lemon juice. CHAPTER XL. The half-remembered lines of a (To Be Continued) There is a story about the young­ tight enclosure for a long period of Succotash made with lima beans Let stand 15 minutes and add furtive poem ran tantalizingly ■ time. This happens when a human is delicious and provides a way to mayonnaise and cream whipped er Dumas, and how he shut him­ through her mind. She thought In this changing world a citizen ■ being becomes accidentally incar- until firm. Pack. in ice and .salt self up in a garret, and wrote a make the dish .serve extra persons. that if she could recollect them, no longer takes his life in his hands 5’Cerated in a bank vault or i.i a The following rule will serve five and let stand three hours.' Allow book in no time at all. Vidtor Hugo, they would explain why she had but takes it as far as it will go in imine or in a cellar following the five hours for freezing' in an elec­ Is said to have done something of or six: One pint each lima beans felt the necessity of writing some­ an automobile on traffic infested ! caving in of its walls. Mos* rooms and corn cut from cob, 1 teaspoon tric refrigerator. Serve, in a fresh 'he same sort. And there is a less­ thing which no one might read. Sunday. are not airtight; indeed, concrete or novelist who took a vow neither salt, two tablespoons butter and | tomato which has been peeled nnd walls are not airtight. The experts one cup of milk. Cook the beans chilled, cut in quarters and o'pened io shave nor to bathe until he com- Hours later the lines came to her. They were from Kipling’s L’Envoi “ Waiter, about half an hour ago point out that a man can stay in an in boiling unsalted water for 20 out yrithout separatiijK. bleted his book. I ordered a drink. Now, did you airtight enclosure for a consider­ minutes.. Add corn cut from the 1 MARY TAYLOR The chances are, however, that bring it, did I drink it or did; ’t I able period of time without dvin.g. In point of time— Molly beat them order it?” provided no poison gas is present. all. She scarcely slept until “ Ashes “ And no one shall work for money, and no one shall work for fame. The badness of the air is due in 3 f Desire” was completed. But each for the joy of working, such cases to increased temperature Once, when she was a reporter, and humidity and lack of move- she interviewed Miss Amy Lowell, and each, in his separate star, j the poetess. Miss Lowell did all her Shall draw the Thing as he sees It. ] V ,ment. for the God of Things as They 1929 ‘ If a person is quiet, seven hours work at night, writing in bed, prop­ are required to reduce the ogyxen ^ O M A N B S V A W B t t Are!” ped up by 16 feather pillows. She in a cubic meter of air tr one-half drew the curtains against the sun­ Yes. That was it. “ And only the its normal oxygen content. About light, and tacked black cloths oyer this time discomfort and danger,danger the mirrors. Because the creative Master shall praise us, and only Ue. \f fO'W f begin to develop. When the brain son of late before the city commis | gj aesthqUc sing, the Master shall blame.” . . . .It was fire, she said, burned more brightly 01929. BY HEA SERVICE, INC. tissue is deprived of exygen, it re- gjon of Wichita, Kansas, with a law . said unaesthetic limb at night-time, or under artificial not with covetousness for the praise of critics that Molly had acts more quickly than any other which would make any young jg annointed with some liquid •ight. , . j tissue is deprived of oxygen, it re- damozel so benighted as to ap-| preparation which converts it into “ Try it, my dear,” she advised. written. Nor in fear of the censure of little minds. She had written the without oxygen for 10 minutes, ir­ pear in public with unstockinged a duplicate, of a limb stockinged ‘And never forget that genius is reparable damage may develop. nine-tenths work. You’ve got to Thing as she saw It, for the God legs just naturally wish she hadn’t ,in one of the modish shades which, Thus, if a person is under water when Myra’s law got after her! | for the past several years, have sweat for success.” of Things as they Are. for 10 minutes, he may sometimes Molly had remembered. Like It was with less difficulty than V O U l t Myra isn’t the first stem lady done everything in the world ta be resuscitated, but the dajnage lo to wage war against the nude legs, imitate the exact hue of the un­ Mi*s^ Lowell, she turned night into he anticipated that Mr. Hall found the nervous system may be so g.e.i^ a publisher. And the publisher, it begins to appear from the • clad_limb itself, it’s hard to.see day, working w'hile’ others slept. as to be permanent. She plugged her telephone bell, and with enthusiasm for romanticism, mumblings and grumblings that [how any sane persons can object the girl without stockings is the j to whether the limb is covered or told Mary she was at home to no conceived the notion of bringing out “ Ashes of Desire” after the new-fangled substitution for the not. one...... She grew pale and thin. And her style of a sentimental 13th century MANCHESTER COW old-fashioned girl who rolled her socks and rouged her cheeks and S'TOCKING COST! syes took on a peculiar green light, novel. bj/ Olive I^berts Barbn Here's wagering that hundreds and looked huge, and a trifie wild. When Molly’s book made its ap­ caused the Myras such pain and pearance it was demurely bound WINS DISTINCTION WOP in a bygone day. and thousands of fathers and She drank quarts of black coffqe. ©1928 bn NBA Service.Inc lue lituj ______- .mothers hope and pray that some- • and cared nothing for substantial in white kid and orchid vellum. The lady crusaders are frothing Before the title page, and at the at \ h e‘^outh “ against “the cigarel ; body makes the critics of unclad food. I never miss the chance to, wan-^that arouse emotion and senti­ limbs “ pipe down.” For who beginning of each chapter, was a ment, and those that teach. Prospect Betsy Ross Makes girl on the billboards, the babv She withheld herself from even der through a toy store. knows better than parents what Rita, vowing that nothing should gold vignette. And the name was We’re getting away from the “ Register of Merit” Record who wears a suntan suit and written in letters of gold, as if by The other day. however, I had shows his ribs quite unabashed, it means to try to keep a daughter interfere with the completion of sentimental toys into the ■ hard- for Milk, Butterfat. or two or three of them in silken hand, across the vellum cover. another thrill waiting for me that headed class, because it’s a hard- and'the,man who has been heard her greatest work. Once, when Red ho.«e? Flynn came— and refused to leave Critics and artists acclaimed the never had been waiting before a headed age. Prospect Betsy Ross of W. F. to make home brew. jacket as the most charming in You just can’t make a girl wear ^ until he had seen her— she begged small but real honest-to-goodness 666825, a purebred Jersey cow cotton: in fact, you can’t buy ’em, him not to be disappointed in her many seasons. Its fetching dainti­ owned by Pitkin and Calhoun, of IN DEFENSE lawn-mower with sharp blades Now their opinion may be just and it’s no joke to find ,five of when her book proved unpopular. ness, they said, suitably heralded Waranoke Farm, Manchester, has Dad’s $40 weekly wage going for “ Oh, it will be popular all right,” the return of romantic fiction. that would cut real- grass, stood in completed an official production as good as mine; on the other WITH THE LQCAL hand, mine is just as good as the women folks’ silk hose. he assured her. “ Everything you The novel itself was received a swanky coat of gilt and red, test in which she yielded 456.8S Parhaps we should,say ‘fipng with almost hysterical fervor. Im­ theirs, and I arise in all my do is a wow.” before my astonished eyes. lbs. of butterfat and 8,005 lbs. of live the Myras!” For It’s a cinch^ “ But this is different,” she ^ - mediately it jumped to the head of milk in 305 days, it is announced dignified majesty to remark that Now I’ve seen the day not so the stockingless leg is as chaste th'at, if they stir up sufficient plained. “ ‘Ashes of Desire’ will best-seller lists, and was the unani­ from the New York headquarters agitation the stockingless fad will never be popular. I don’t want it mous choice of The-Book-of the- long ago when mothers would , of the American Jersey Cattle club. as the lily of the field. have held up their hands in right­ To be sure, there are times grow just because it’s being pick­ to be. I want just to speak simply, Moment Club. Betsy Ross was started on this ed on. and maybe poppa aud It was written, the critics said, eous horror at the idea of putting when a close survey of unstock­ truly, to the few who will under­ The Crawford Auto Supply Com­ test when she was 4 years and 5 momma won’t be a little bit. gl^d ^ stand. I never want again what the with exquisite sensitiveness and such a weapon into the hands of months of age and with this record inged legs parading up and down children. Very likely they would pany reports the delivery of an the village streets, makes one a if Imogene doesu’t have to 'have world means when it says suc­ poignant beauty. There was a great qualified for the_ register of merit her new pair of silk hpse every deal of conjecturing. Was it, they have cried: “ Why not give him a Oldsmobile sedan to John Gardner of the American Jersey Cattle cluh. bit old-fashioned and admit that cess.” gun and be done with it? perhaps, stockings are just as week! Red stared at her, uncompre­ demanded, in the nature of an of Spruce street. Her sire is Prospect Ladd of War­ autobiography? But it isn’ t so now. anoke Farm and her dam is Betsy hending. The Conkey Auto company re­ Helen had regained her breath she “ What?” he asked inelegantly. At the insista.nce of her publish­ Mothers know just as well as Stude-I^oss of Green Meadows ers, Molly received reporters. And ports the delivery of a attempted to pump the water from “ What in blazes is eating you?” CHIC ONE-SIDEDNESS they ever did that little toes or her aunt’s lungs, using the method “ I mean it,” she insisted. “ I am I then, being thoroughly human and A black crepe satin that carries fingers may get nipped, but they baker Dictator Six sedan to Jack] A horse would have to roll in the trying now to be true to the real' a woman, she played up to them, of resuscitation she had seen de­ out black and white theme through are learning in a larger way that Jenney of Summit street. mud for three hours to get as soi - monstrated at the 'life saving things.” it is part of a child’s education for Madden Brothers report the de­ ed as a motor car can get in travel­ The orchid bedroom had become one-side flaring collar of white classes in camp. It was not very ‘You look like the devil.” he in­ sUk crepe, boasts of new slender­ him to lea»n to take care of him­ livery of a Nash sedan to Fred Dart ing ten miles on a soft country dirt long after tl^t her aunt was reviv­ terrupted, scowling at her paleness. her sitting-room, formally beauti­ self and the toy method is as good ful. Relieved of all austereness, ness. of Flower street. road. ed and help came' to take them back “My work is done.” she told him It is rather suggestive of Princess as any other. George S. Smith, the local to the other shore. gently, “ in grief and pain. Yet I v;ith flowers and books, and gay, lines with its molded bodice, and Many a man calls his wife the blossomed china. The floor was Forewarning the CTiild Chrysler dealer, unloaded two car­ Helen plans, to take life saving must write, or die.” snug hips with new flared treat­ If Robert’s mother buys him loads of Chryslers this week and better half, when she is about 90 instruction this summer while she He shrugged contemptuously. waxed green, and seemed to shim­ per cent of the famjly. mer. At the windows were green ment achieved through shirred such a toy now, she’ll say, most now has on display a complete line ______Because shq saved the life of ^er is in canip tor as she, said when You’re getting arty,” he accus­ panel. of the new models. questioned about the accident, “ I ed. “ Success has gone to your head, silk glass curtains, and the walls likely, ‘‘Look here son! The.se The slim back assures slender blades are knives— real knives. Cole Motor Sales delivered the The broadening effect of ^travel aunt at G°7keV o f just had to do what there was to you’re going temperamental. Snap were hung with yellow brocade. is more than offset by the flatten teen year old Helen LorKey u* Molly wore a Nile-green tea gown silhouette. You must never put yopr fingers following cars: 'Willys-Knight road­ Troop No. 2, Allston. Mass., has do as no one else was aboqt. I am 3ut of it, old thing.” Style No. 677 comes in sizes 16, ing effect on the pocketbook. glad I got my .aunt in although I “ Please leave me,” she besought. with flowing sleeves and a train, nar them for any reason, and ster to Joseph Hills of St. Law­ been awarded the bronze life sav­ 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40, 42, an^ 44 your feet away from them. rence street; 'Whippet special road­ am not as expert as I will be later.” * « * when she talked for her public. She inches bust. You’ll find the mak­ keep Somo flower beds look like a ing cross only given when the sat in candle light, and poured too. If you don’t you’ll be badly ster to John Sinnamon of. Highland claimant has shown special herc^ It is only the second bronze cross He went awq,y angrily, becauge ing so simple that you’ll immedi­ Park; Willys-Knight de luxe sedan garden of weedin’ . to be issued by the national Girl he thought she was posing. But orange-blossom tea from an old cut.” ism or has faced extraordinary risk ately want to make another using If Robert comes in one fine day to Ignazfo Ottone of School.street. Scouts this year. worried, also, because she was thin French service. 'When reporters same pattern in printed sheer vel­ ' Painted face ne’er won fair hus­ of life by the national (Hrl Scout ipd white. And, since he could do came, the' butler drew a tea-table with a nipped finger, she isn’t Whippet • 6 sedan to Harry How- standards committee. ™ s an­ vet for early Fall wear. The rever going to take his new present away royd of Russell street. band. nouncement was made today by nothing about it, that made him before the firplace, and laid it with collar may be of chiffon or plain angrier still. Molly watched him a lace cloth. Then Molly, trailing from him either. For she knows Mrs. Julius H. Barnes, acting clmi^ velvet in blending tone. that the best lesson he caji _ have from her window, drawing the clouds of chiffon glory, received Claret red cautop crepe is popu­ man of the committee, in New AR'THUR H. STEIN shade aside cautiously. He did not like a lady in a novel. is this very thing. She’ll disinfect York City. Wishes to Announce That lar choice that is very wearable, and tie up his hand and warn him ‘‘Miss Wills, Would Y ou Please look back, but stepped into his old One day Red came, and found and is smartest self-trimmed. Eate last summer, H^en. her the Fall Term in car, slamming the door furiously, her pouring her orange-blossom aeain, and the chnees are that aunt, a cousin, another girl and a Seal brown in supple silk crepe is there will be no more casualties. and driving away in a clatter of tea, and passing caviar sandwiches. flattering with rever collar in maize small dog were in a ° ° Violin Instruction rollicking fenders and loose bump­ She wore' water lilies at her belt, There were other toys in the Lake Winnipesauke. While at a Will .start shade. place that were quite as fascinat- ^ ers. trailing their long stems down the Purple Is captivating in crepe I very lonely spot of the lakeside t le FRP>AY, SEFTBMBER i A week later the manuscript was softness of her yellow skirt. And satin using the dull surface with ing and in their small way. ^as j little dog jumped overboard and in she looked, he thought, like the risky as the lawn mower. It ^ eflorf to stop him. the boat cap­ Finest of MeAoids Used, finished. Molly wrapped it senti­ collar in eggshell shade. ffrivate lostmction Only. mentally in lavender tissue, and Lily Maid, in Idylls of the King. Chepe Marocain in burgundy shows the trend of the times, I sized Both Helen’s cous n and When the others had gone (there remarked to the owner, of the the other girl were able swimmers Also a Complete Line o t Violins, tied it with lavender ribbons. Then shade, and tweed patterned silk Bows and Accessories. she carried it herself to her agent. were two literary dowagers and a Cx-ppe in brown tones are lovely shop. but they lost their heads and set “I’lMook at it tonight,” the man society reporter), Molly changed selections. A Lesson in Toys off for the far shore. When Helen Call Manchester 4476— or promised, “ and call you first thing her chiffon gown for a skirt of Pattern price 15 cents In stamps And the shop keeper, evidently realized that she was ajone with, Rockville 148-12 In the morning. There’ll be no plaid stuff and a scarlet blouse. And or coin (coin is preferred), wrap up to date in more things than her aunt who could not swim at trouble finding a publisher. Df her feathered slippers for a pair coin carefully. toys, answered. “ Doesn’t it, all, the aunt had gone down for :ourse, you know that.” of stubby oxfords. We suggest that when you send though? Toys are more than mere the second time. Helen was hy no But he did not wait until morn­ “We’ll go for a. walk,” she said, for pattern, you enclose 10 cents playthings in this age of mechan­ means an expert swimmer only ing. At 10 o’clock he telephoned. and buy some hot dogs some­ additional for a copy of our new ism, and there are all sorts of having had the elementary instruc­ “ I’ve read ‘Ashes of Desire,’ Migs where. If you knew how sick to Fall and Winter Fashion Magazine. things manufactured to teach tion at camp that summer but with Burnham” (hesitantly and a bit death I am of being rare and deli­ children safety— how to take care great effort she managed to tow apologetically). cate!” • of themselves. Of course, hardly her aunt by the hair to the shore “ Yes?” she prompted. “ You But Red laughed at her protesta­ Manchester Herald one of these toys could do . any nearby where they both fell ea^h® don’t care for it, Mr. Hall?” tions. Pattern Service great amount of damage, but you I beach from exhaustion. When “You love it,” he told her. can see for yourself that one could “ It’s so unlike anything you’ve Pattern No. 677 done!” he protested. “ You’re eating it up.” get quite a nice, little shock from “ It’s the best thing I’ve done.” “ It‘s amusing,” she admitted. As onr patterns are mailed this electric set. Just enough “ But your public doesn’t expect “ I know.” from New York City please al­ sting to make a boy re.vllze he’d this sort of novel from you. They “ It’8 a relief, being respectable,’’ low five da.ys. rather not fool with the wrong want you to give them crime,. Miss she declared. “ Mother’s coming to end of it. Of course, these sris Typewriters visit me, I’ve been so good. I don’t Price 15 Cents are not for babies, but for chil­ Burnham.” dren old enough to ,be taught how All makes, sold, rented, ex­ Molly sighed wearily, know what mother will say when “ I know. 'Well, I’m through with she sees my butler. I hope he to use them.” changed and overhauled. Nam^ Then I examined the hundred what my public wants. I’ve given doesn’t frighten her. He is rather 8|iectal rental rales to stn- Imposing you know. I used to be and one types of airships to be them a book out of my heart. If Size lents. Kehnllt machines they don’t like it, I don’t care. scared of him myself.” put together, and all the ocean write another any- “ You and your butler!” jeered steamers, and the makings of 1120.00 and op. Bball never Address every sort of sailing ship that ever how.” Red. “ And I remember when you used to borrow your lunch money.” breasted the mighty main. A boy Kids are different nowadkys. They used to Mr. Hall cleared his throat. would be a regular sb’iB builder “ It’s beautifully .don^,” he as rtiie oiits at the big league parks to get autographed baseballs from the. when he got through. - after Autographed tennis balls. Here you see KEMP^S Bured her. “ But you know your Molly sighed. Send yonr order to the “ Pat­ “ I was happier then,” she mur­ A liberal education Indeed for HClIri Wills, America’s queen of the courts, writing her name for a 763 Main St. Phone 821 self what your market is^ Miss tern Dept., Manrheatet Evening the boy fortungte enough to own Burnham. “ Yop’ve always catered mured. youthful admirer'gt the opening of the women’s national tennis cham- “ Yes, you were!” he contradict- Herald, So. Manchester, Conn.” any one of them. to— er— shall we say— ” Toys are of two tyjjes — those plohBhlps atiForeat Hills, L. I. don’t care what Tou^y.” ^ yPOfl’t yull that OA np* .MoUyy‘ MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOFTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, AUGUST 24,1929.

• i Three Games Baseball Here Over Weel^ End HUDSONS DEFEAT AMERICAN Like Day And Night Town Tide Track-Field RAMBLERS3T01 Meets Red Sox At Chicago «— CHISOX 3, ATHLETICS 1 Chicago AR K. H. PO. a . E. West Side Sunday Meet Is Set For Tuesday Metzler. If ...... ■* 1 2 0 0 0 Cissell. s s . ..•••••• 3 0 1 o 2 1 Cop First of Play-off Series; «■ Reynolds, rf .... 4 0 0 4 o 1 Shires, ,1b ...... J O 1 4 0 0 Watwood. c f ...... 3 0 1 3 0 0 Only Five Hits Made m Bon Ami Entertains East Hoffman, cf ...... l 0 0 0 0 0 NATIONAL Junior Competidon in the j FALLON WINS WAY Redfern. 3 b ...... 3 0 1 2 1 0 Kerr. 2b ...... J » 2 5 1 0 Game. At Phlladelplila*—» Berlin and Cubs Go to McKkin, p ...... i ' i ^ CUBS 6. PHILLIES 1 Afternoon With Events at ! INTO THE FINALS Chicago 32 3 10 27 8 1 AB R. a. PO, A. B. Highland Park This Aft* Philadelphia The Hudsons lived up to expec­ English, 88 ...... : 5 0 1 1 1 0 Night; Band Concert at AB. K. H. PO. A. E. tations in winning the first game Heathcote, rt -...... 4 2 1 7 0 0 Bishop. 2b ...... 3 0 1 3 5 0 Hornsby, 2b ...... 4 2 1 0 0 0 French, r * ...... - « 1 J ^ ® of their series of baseball games Wilson, cf ...... 4 1 3 4 1 0 emoon. Defeats Mose Taggart 50 to with the Ramblers to decide the Cuyler. If ...... 4 0 0 4 0 0 Night. Miller, if ...... 4 0 0 2 u 0 senior playground league champion­ Blair, lb ...... 4 0 2 7 0 0 Foxx, lb ...... 4 0 0 .7 1 0 ship at the West Side field last McMillan, 3 b ...... 4 0 1 0 2 0 There will be three games of Boley. ss ...... 2 J I ; o 5 Taylor, c ...... 4 1 1 4 u 0 The date for the animal town 1 34 and 51 to 37 Last Perkins, c ...... ^ 0 u - - i , night. The score was 3 to 1. Maloire, p ...... 4 0 I 0 2^ baseball In town over the week-end. Cronin, z ...... u 0 0 0 0 0 A good "sized crowd was on hand championship track and field meet Two will come this afternoon and Yerkes, p ...... ® ® ® ® J; and ed next Tuesday night. Hurst, lb ...... 4 0 1 9 0 0 Highland Park in effort to show the held at the West Side playground? championship horseshoe-pitching Chicago ...... 003 000 OOx— 3 Pitchers held sway over batters, Williams, cf ...... 3 0 0 2 0 0 natives that their former victovy There will be competition for three elimination tournament last night Philadelphia ...... OOO-OOO 001— 1 a total of five hits being made by Theveno\y. ss ...... 2 0 1 2 4 0 was not so much apple-sauce. when he defeated Mose Taggart at Runs batted in: Cissell 2, Metzler, | both teams. Hugh Moriarty and Lerian, c ...... 3 0 1 5 1 0 classes, junior boys, intermediate gumma: three base hits, Bishop. | Benge, p ...... 2 0 0 0 - 0 Tomorrow afternoon Manchester the West Side playgrounds in Boley; two base hits, Kerr. |Helen Wills Swamps Walter Kearns were the mounds- Collins, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Green will entertain the Red Sox boys and seniors, ^^e fup age limit will be from 10 to 1*^- ^be straight games.. The scores were men who performed so splendidly. Sweetland, x ...... 1 0.-0 0 0 0 of Hartford at the West Side play­ 50 to 34 and 51 to 37. At St. I.ouls:— « The Hudsons won on but two hits, second from 13 to 16 an^ the thir^d 30 1 5 27 11 0 grounds. Play will start at ■ ;15. all 17 and over. For the ]uni r. Fallon will meet either “ Punk” BROWtVS YANKS 0 the Ramblers losing with three. For a time yesterday there was a St. Louis Kearns struck out ten and Mor­ 000 003 210— 6 there will be four events, 50 yard Lamprecht, Pat Furphy or Quido AB. R. H. PO. A. E. NuthalFs Conqueror Philadelphia ...... 000 000 100— 1 question what team vould play iarty six. Not a single assist was dash, one la.p of the race track, Giorgetti in the finals next Tuesday Blue, lb ...... 4 0 2 14 0 0 1 Runs batted In: Wilson 3, Hornsby here tomorrow. The Economy and running evening. Furphy and Lamprecht McNeely, If ...... 4 0 1 2 0 0 i made by the entire Rambler team, 2, Thevenow, Taylor; tw base hits, running broad jump 0 : Lerian. Friberg. Thompson; home Grocery club of Hartford obtained The intermediate will meet this afternoon in the .quar­ Badgro. rf ...... 4 1 1 0 0 something extremely unusual In a permit to use the field and in­ high jump. McGowan, c f ...... 4 1 0 1 0 runs, Wilson, Hornsby, Taylor. ter-finals at the West Side at 5 3 1 n i baseball. The Ramblehs made four tended to bring the New Depar­ have 7f> yard dash, two lap run, 4 0 1 Kress, ss ...... S 1MoUa Mallory Never Within jTlLDEN AND HUNTER times as many errors and this help­ running high and broad i^mps. o’clock and the winner will swap O'Rourke, 3b ...... 4 1 1 0 At Boston i—' tures of Bristol here but it de­ For the seniors there wil be lOU shots with Giorgetti Monday night Melillo, 2b ...... 3 1 1- 1 7 ed bring about their defeat. BRAVES 5, CARDS X veloped that the Green had spoken at the same place at 6 o’clock. Manion. c ...... 2 1 0 6 1 0 ! The box score; Boston previously for the West Side field vard dash. 230 yard dash. 44 yard Blaeholder, p ...... 3 0 0 0 4 0 j Even a Point of Winning DEFEATED AT TOURNEY Hudsons (3) AB It. H. PO. A. E. ' half-mile run. mile.run, run^ Giorgetti is a heavy favorite to Welsh, cf ...... 4 0 2 6 0 0 but through an error it had not run AB R H PO A high jump, running broa meet Fallon in the finals. 32 5 7 27 15 0 1 Maranvllle, ss 1113 0 ning 0 0 0 been properly assigned to them. and fwelve-pound shot p j - Last night Fallon threw a total New York Falkoski, If .2 1 Richbourg, rf . The Red*Sox are said to be one jump AB. H H. PO. A. E a Game; Jacobs Loses. Big Bill Meets Lott Today in O’Leary. 2b . 3 0 1 0 0 Sisler. lb ...... and intermediate coui- of 32 ringers 14 in the first and 18 2 1 0 of the best semi-pro teams in Han­ The junior Byrd, rf ...... 0 0 0 Hewitt, 3b . .3 1 0 0 0 Bell, 3b ...... in the afternoon in the second against 30 for Tag­ XX .. 1 0 0 0 0 0 Finals of the Cushman Cup Harper, If . . . ford county, not to mention the petition '.’ill be Durst, . . . .'i .. Holland, ss . 2 1 0 0 2 events in the eve- gart who made 12 in the first game Robertson, 3b . . . . . 4 0 1 D 0 Singles. Maguire. 2b . Capitol City. Alexander, Salad and with the senior 4 Forest Hills, N. Y., Aug. 24.— 0 6 0 and 18 in the second. The winner Dickey, c ...... 4 0 1 0 0 Wilkinson, lb .2 • 0 Legett, c .... Greenbaum are three of their main­ .. 4 0 0 U 0 0 0 Gowdy._ c .... ning. „ j „ 28 piece of the tournament goes to the East­ Ruth. If ...... Rather than a thrilling final round Kerr, cf. . . . 3 0 0 1 stays. Metcalf will pitch. Dodge The Windsor Band, a CombB, cf ...... 4 0 2 4 0 0 Gultafson, rf o 0 0 0 0 R. Smit'h. p .. organization, will furnish a two ern States Exposition to compete Gehrig, lb ...... • • D 0 0 12 0 0 coming as a stirring climax to a Newport. R. I.. Aug. 24.— Wil­ will catch with Jacobson on first, Maloney, c . 2 1 0 10 1 31 5 8 27 6 1 hour band concert. Efforts ar® a for the New England title. Lazzeri. 2b ...... 3 0 0 0 1 1 week of spectacular play, the final liam T. Tilden, of Philadelphia, Putnam, 2b, Cameron, ss. Green­ koenis, ss ...... 0 1 1 3 0 of the women’s national lawn ten­ dean of American tennis aces, today Seams, p . . . . 1 0 0 1 1 St. Louis so being uiade.to stage one of the 9 0 0 0 1 0 ' / 4B. K. H. PO. A. E. baum, 3b, Clarkin, If, Salad, cf. the Pennock. p ...... nis singles here today between meets George M. Lott, Jr., of Chica­ Brewer, rf. quarter-final tennis matches Lary, x ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 T ota ls...... 20 3 2 18 4 Douthit, cf . . . t.o p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 Helen Wills, of California, inter­ go, in the finals of the Cushman Orsatti, rf . . . The Green will present Its regular town championship tournament Moore, Ramblers (1) be played on the’west Side courts WASHKIEWICH GETS national champion and Mrs. Frisch, ’3b ...... 3 0 1 1 8 o lineup with the adition of “ Pop ’ 31 0 6 24 10 1 Phoebe Watson, of England, M. Moriarty,2 b 3 0 0 Botturoley. l b ...... 3 0 0 12 0 0 Edgar who is slated to do mound starting at six o’clock. St. Louis ...... 000 500 UOx— 5 Jolly. 88, . Hafey, If ...... 4 0 0 2 0 0 INTOm-FINALS Runs batted in: O’Rourke, MelUlo, comes as close to being an anti­ High. 3 b ...... 4 0 2 0 0 0 for the Economy team this season Blue 8: two base hits, Blue 2; three climax as anything in the world of Dowd, rf . Butler, ss ...... 4 0 0 3 3 0 Burkhardt and Prentice will also be base hits. Combs. Wylie, 3b Wilson, c ...... 3 0 2 2 0 1 sports can be. Goldsmith, p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 available. Helen fairly slaughtered Molla Vince, c . The Greeq’s lineup will be as fol­ At Detroit I— rf Holm, X ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bjurstedt Mallory, winner of the McConkey, Haines, p ...... 2 1 1 0 0 0 lows: Holland, cf, Dowd, rf, Burk­ How They Stand Defeats Marjorie Smith 7>5, NATIONALS 1. TIGERS 0 Hand, cf .. Washington championship eight times, in their E. Smith, c ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 hardt, If, Robb, lb, Poudrier or Hadden, lb semi-final match yesterday. Molla 32 2 7 24 11 1 Hewitt, 2h. Boggini, ss, Stevenson, YESTERDAY’S RESULTS 6-1; Last of Women’s Judge, lb ...... 4 0 11 0 0 H. Moriarty, 3b. Forgett. c, Edgar, p. This after­ Rice, rf ...... 4 0 3 0 0 took the court determined to win Boston ...... 200 003 OOx— 5 St. Louis ...... 000 010 010— 2 noon, the Green journeys to Goslin, If ...... 4 1 3 0 0 at least one set but she was lucky Totals ...... 22 1 3 18 0 4 ' Eastern League Myer, 2b .’ ...... 4 1 3 3 0 to get the few points she did Runs batted in; Frisch. Haines, Middletown to meet the state hos­ Quarter-Finals Today. Cronin, ss ...... 3 1 3 6 0 Hudsons ...... 200 100— 3 Bell 2. Maguire, Gowdy, R. Smith; Hartford 2. Pittsfield 0. against the champion. She was de­ two base hits, Bell; home run, Haines. pital team. New Haven 17, Allentown 2. West, c f ...... 3 0 2 0 0 Ramblers ...... 000 001— 1 Spencer, c ...... 3 0 1 0 0 feated 6-0', 6-0. Struck out by Kearns 10; by Providence 10, Bridgeport 6 . o Dispatches from Paris announce The quarter-finals of the town Khayes. 3b ...... 3 1 1 0 The end of the trail in the wom­ Moriarty 6; base on balls, off Bartholdi’s State of Liberty Springfield 4. Albany 0. championship women’s tennis sin­ Jones, p ...... 3 0 0 i 0 en’s national tennis championship was presented to th6 United States several new feminine styles. That American League Kearns 3: off Moriarty 2; Umpires will be quite a change. gles elimination tournament will 31 1 4 27 12 0 came for Miss Jacobs when the | Markham and Kerr. at Paris, July 4. 1884. Chicago 3, Philadelphia 1. be completed with the playing of Detroit ninner-up of 1928 ' suffered her | Washington 1, Detroit 0. the Ruth Behrend-Marjorle Smith AB. R. H. PO. A. E. second defeat within two weeks Boston 8. Cleveland 5. Johnson, r f ’ ...... 4 0 0 3 0 0 match starting at 1 o'clock at the Gehringer, 2b ...... 4 t) 1 2 3 . 0 at' the hands of Mrs. Phoebe Wat- St. Louis 5, New York 0. high school this afternoon. The Fothergill. if ...... 4 0 1 3 0 1 sen of England at 6-1, 3-6, 6-4. National League winner will go against Mildred •Alexander, lb ...... 4 0 0 9 1 0 Played to a standstill in the Boston 5, St. Louis 2. Holland in the semi-finals some­ Rice, cf ...... 4 0 o 1 0 0 opening set, the California girl Chicago 6, Philadelphia. 1, McManus, 3b ...... 3 0 0 0 1 0 time next week. Hargrave, c ...... 2 0 2 6 1 0 lifted her game in the second to •> WILLYS • KNIGHT (Other games rain., Miss Elizabeth Washkiewich bat­ Westllng. ss ...... 2 0 0 0 0 win storms of applause from the tled her way into the semi-final Schuble. ss , 0 0 1 1 1 7,000 spectators witn her irresisti­ THE STANDINGS Whitehill. p 0 2 3 0 round last night when sAe elimi­ Heilinann, s 1 b 0 0 0 ble service and appeared to have » nated the other Marjorie Smith victory within her grasp when she 4 \ Eastern I.«eague from Elwood street in straight sets 30 0 6 27 13 2 stood within a point of 4-2 in the . W. L. Washington ...... 010 OOO 000— 1 (feciding chapter. But here Mrs. at 7-5, 6-1. Miss Smith fought Runs batted in: Cronin; two base Albany ...... courageously but was unable hits, Myer. Goslin. Watson, who had given the impres­ Bridgeport ...... 559 I cepe with the powerful forearm sion of being at the end of her Providence ...... J igg drives which her opponent aimed ,\t Cleveland physical resources, stemmed the Distinctive Performance Pittsfield ...... 61 64 455 I at the baseline with almost unfall- RED SOX S. INDTA.NS 5 tide that was sweeping her to de­ Johnny Doeg Boston Springfield ...... 6. 109 I ing accuracy, especially in the sec- feat, and with her punishing fore­ AB. K. H. PO. A. B. Cup singles at the thirteenth an- New H aven...... b,. 498 i ond set. Miss Washklewlch’s serv- Reeves, 3b ...... 5 0 M9 0 1 0 hand functioning in its best fash­ Allentown ...... 402 particularly deadly. It Scarrltt. If ...... 5 9 1 3 0 0 ion again, she ran Miss Jacobs rag­ nual Casino tournament here. Hartford ...... 51 <6 was easily one of the best yet seen Rothrock. cf ...... 5 9 4 1 0 0 ged to win four out of the last five .Ali:eady holding two legs on the .\merlcan League \v. Barrett, r f ...... 4 9 1 S 0 0 of! trophy, a victory today would give I PQ, in the tournament and the match ...... 4 2 3 2 0 games and repeat her triumph W. L. Regan. 3b .. 1 I n i “ Big Bill” permanent possession of I 092 between her and Aileen McHale Todt. l b ___ 9 1 I 9 1 0 the Wightman Cup matches, -Individual Style Philadelphia------S3 37 595 j next Tuesday night ought to be a A. Gaston, c ...... 4 0 1 2 0 1 their first meeting Mrs. Watson the cup. I New York ...... 69 4^ Rhyne, ss ,...... 4 0 1 1 2 0 Lott and John Doeg. of Santa 525 humdinger. McFayden. p ...... 4 0 0 0 1 0 won in two sets. St. L ou is...... 63 0 1 504 I No other matche-, were played Thus, with the elimination of Monica. Cal., defending champions and top seeded doubles team in the Cleveland ...... 61 bb 8 13 27 7 1 Miss Jacobs, who was runner-up to 467 i last night in the singles tourna- tournament, swept into the final Detroit ...... 56 b4 44s ments. With the completion of this Cleveland Miss Helen Wills also at Wimble­ Washington ------52 64 AB ft. H PO. A. B. round by a victory over Tilden and 499 ! afternpon's solitary match, only Morgan, rf .. .•...... 4 1 1 0 0 0 don this year, faded the prospect Frank T. Hunter in straight sets, Chicago...... 48 j - 350 i tour players will remain in the J. Sewell, 3b ...... 4 1 1 1 4 0 of an all-Berkeley final between Boston ...... 41 lb i women’s division against but eight •Averin, cf ...... 5 1 9 2 0 1 the first two ranking players of 6-4, 6-2, 6>.4. National League Fonseca, lb ...... ,S 1 3 12 0 0 The Lott-Doeg team meets Fritz p j. i:i the meu’s. Play in the mixed Jamieson. If ...... 5 1 1 5 0 0 the country, just as Mrs. Molla W. ^L. Mallory’s victory over Miss Betty Mercury, of Harrisburg, Pa., and J. ... IN TWO SERIES 684 doubles and the men’s doubles is Hodapp, 2b ...... 4 0 3 2 5 0 Gilbert Hall, of Orange, N. J.. the Chicago ...... 78 36 59(5 e.\|.ifieU to continue over the Gardner, ss . 0 1 2 3 0 Nuthall on Thursday upset expec­ national clay court champions in Pittsburgh ...... 68 4 6 534 wt-ek-end. Monday ulght of next Tavener, ss ...... 1 0 1 1 1 0 tations of a semi-final meeting be­ New York ...... 63 5 a L. Sewell, c .••••*.. 3 0 1 2 1 0 the finals this afternoon. FROM ,496 week Mac Macdonald and “ Cap ” Hudlin. p .. > » • e e * • 3 0 0 0 4 0 tween the defending champion and St. Louis ...... 58 o? 457 ; Bissell will stage their all-import- Mauser, z ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 the English girl, who carried her Brooklyn ...... 53 63 ,427 1 ant match at the high school at 6 Porter, zz ...... 1 0 0 0 0 0 to 8-6, 8-6 two weeks ago today. an whose competitive spirit, to­ /1045 to X1895 Cincinnati ...... 50 67 Mtljus. p ...... 0 0 0 0 0 0 gether with a forehand that was '407 o’clock. Other playeiv in the quar- Myatt, c .... 9 0 0 0 0 0 Glory Is Short Lived Boston ...... 48 70 405 ter-ftnals are asked to try and Mr^ Mallory’s hour of glory was thought in its day to be filled with Philadelphia ....47 69 ^ I avoid playing on the same night. 42 5 14 27 18 1 short-lived. Opposed to the player as much dynamite as any before U The matches are beginning to get Boston ...... 400 001 300— 8 whose fearful drives ended her and made her invincible in Ameri­ G.\.MES TODAY Cleveland .. 100 000 '202— 5 T h e smart W illys-Knight . extremely important uow Runs batted in; Regan 3, Gaston 2, dynasty in 1923, the former na­ ca for so many year;.., was as much many desire to watch them, Rothrock. Tudt. Rhyne, Hodapp 3. tional champion suffered the most of an ordeal for the gallery to look " 70-B ” is the largest, most Eastern League Fonseca. Tavener: two base hits, Pittsfield at Hartford (3 o'clock) one pair of eyes is their limit. crushing defeat she has sustained upon as it must have been for Mrs. Todt, Regan. Rothrock; three base Mallory to go through with. The beautiful Knight-engined car Albany at Springfield. hits,. Regan, Scarrltt. Hodapp. during her career of fljteen years. Just twenty-one minutes after Um­ former champion had no illusions, Allentown at New Haven. ever offered at such a low Providence at Bridgeport. GREEN FLASHES WIN pire Benjamin Dwight called in spite of her herqjc effort on “ play” Miss Wills had added the Thursday, and knew full well the .American League price. Philadelphia at Chicago. New York woman to her list of fate that was in store for her. GAME WITH TIGERS NORELIUS WINS victims without giving her the sat­ Mrs. Mallory understood her New York at St. Louis. limitations, knew that nothing Boston at Cleveland. isfaction of winning even a game. The new W illys-Knight Washington at Detroit. Eight minutes were all that, were could avail against the murderous The Green Flashes easily defeat­ required for the first set, in which shafts that came from Miss Wills’s National League ed the South End Tigers last night TEN MILE SWIM Great Six is the most dis­ Pittsburgh at New 'York (2). Mrs. Mallory got only five points, racquet and that any such expen­ at the Green school playgrounds by and except for the second and fifth diture of energy as she made as Cincinnati at Brooklyn (2). a score of 12 to 1. A. Borello’s tinctively beautiful motor Chicago at Philadelphia. games of the final chapter, Mrs. the price of her victory over Miss hitting featured for the winners Toronto, Out., Aug. 24.— Martha Nuthall would serve no purpose. St. Louis at Boston. Mallory was never within a point car that W illys-Ovcrland has while Smith played best for the Norelius had further clinched her of interrupting the steam-roller She might as well hav etrled to losers. Monday night the Flashes title of “ The American Mermaid” chain lightning as to turn back the ever created. Its individuali^ will play the West Sides at the procession. ' today. Taking the lead soon stter This match .between the most jolting forehanders that were AMERICAN FAVORITE Four Acres. The players must re­ reveals a new and higher the start in her first major profes- j devastating hitter that women s stabbing the lines of her court port at 6 o’clock. tennis has produced and the wom- with the inevitability of fate. Tigers (1) sionaj appearance the New Y ork' standard o f beauty, luxurious Jasper National Park, Alberta, AB R H PO A E girl swam to the finish line in the Aug. 24.— For the first time in Redd, ss-p . .. .3 ■0 0 0 0 0 $10,000 Wrlgley marathon here ap^intments, and perform­ history, an American was certain to Smith, 2b .... 3 1 1 1 0 1 yesterday in 5:24:22, a new mark win the Canadian amateur golf S. May, c-3b . .3 0 1 1 1 1 for the event. ance. championship today. J. May Ib-p . . 2‘ 0 0 5 1 1 Second place went to Ruth Tow­ CADDIS’ GOLF TOURNAMENT Eddie Held and Gardiner White, Lloyd, p lb . .3 0 0 2 1 1 er, titan-haired local favorite, who both of New York entered the final Ecabert, 3b-c .3 0 0 3 1 4 fought every stroke of the way to GREAT SIX SEDAN I1895 round today with Held picked by 0 0 0 1 wrest the lead from the former Peterson, If . 3 0 WILL BE HEID NEXT TDBDAY Cmft^ J-fm . CmH, st m m fHm. the experU as the probable winner. Swanson, cf . .3 0 0 0 0 0 Olympic champion. Miss Tower 6wir$wimb,Pw^kmtkiKUtd, JUW Hijf Held eliminated the only Canadian Dickerson, rf .3 0 0 0 0 0 trailed the winner by some 300 KMlgit fricuf- •* *> f t W s left in the tournament yesterday yards at the finish but lor a time The annual caddies’ golf tourna-3^ Herb Fraser has led the way limmfytt m timgt witimt mtU*. by defeating F. J. Wood, two and Totals ...... 22 1 2 12 4 9 she threatened the flashing New ment at the Manchester Country in the practice rounds, with a one while White beat D. Clarke (Green Flashes (1 2) Yorker’s lead. * . Club will be held next Tuesday, it creditable 81 but Muraski Is close Corkran of Nobla. Pa., by the same AB R H PO A E Forty-five swimmers started in COACH 4 z«45 was officially announced today. at his heels with an 82. In the score. Boyle, lb . .. 2 1 1 4 0 0 the race but boats were busy all Nearly 50 entries have already been Otfe Df pf4Si S i t e Wood put himself out of the run­ Cowles, 2b . .3 1 1 1 0 along the course picking up the junior ranks, Davie Simpson seems n 2 received and expectations are that Mmdatf Vo4Si «* * * ning with what appeared a perfect Vaifro, p . . . . O 2 1 1 0 fatigued athletes. Miss ’Vivian the competition will he the most to be the most likely winner, but htkdU. tt»*r Mmdsrdt««««. WILLYS-OVERLAND, INC, TOLEDO, OfflO; 2 2 2 0 shot on the 16th when his second A. Borella, c .3 1 Welsh of Girard. Ohio, was the vic­ spirited in years. George Peterson and George Binok ball dropped five feet from the pin Hastings, ss . .3 1 1 1 0 0 tim of a large lamphrey eel which Twenty-eight boys have entered may spring a surprise. Elmer Hul- but was stymied by its divot, over Silverstein, 3b 2 2 1 2 2 0 attached Itself to the flesh of her the senior division which is for ah teen, junior champion of two years which he had to pitch. Held’s third N. Borello, If .2 1 0 1 0 0 side about a mile from the start. boys twelve years or older and ago, is improving rapidly and may came from the rough to within A. Cowles, rf .1 1 0 1 0 0 The Ohio girl was exhausted by her there are an even dozen in the finish well up In front in the senior inches of the cup. On the 17th, Guesega, cf . .1 1 0 1 0 0» fight to free herself and was taken junior group. In the senior ranks, division. The seniors will tee off Held shot his second from behind a Clarke, cf . . . .0 0 0 0 0 0 from the water at the mile and a Einer Anderson who won the ti.ie at 9 o’clock in the morning with water pipe to within three feet of half mark suffering from cold and last year, will not compete this the juniors playing their nine holes the cup and the match was over. Totals ...... 20 12 7 15 6 0 cramps. later In the day. - 1 year, having gone to work. In nis i White also won his match on the Tigers ...... 100 0 0 - absence a .close race is expected be­ . Members of the club have con­ 17 th with a second shot dead to the Flashes . . . . 222 6x—-12 tween the Fraser brothers, Herbert tributed $85 for prize money not to hits, Silverstein. A. Four wagon loads of Cleveland mention a lot of golf supplies. The SALES pin. Two base cops ■ leveled shotguns at an and Roy, Joe Muraski, Tom Ted- C<>LE MOTOR ' Borello, Vaifro h;ase on balls off ford, Andy Binok and Albert An­ Caddies’ Tournament this year elec-j Vaifro 2, Lloyd 2: double plays, escaped Auburn prison convict and should prove the most successful in South Manchester Roman politicians before he promptly surrendered. Rare derson are considered the pick of 91 Center Street tion -time used to bathe with the Silverstein to T. Cowles to Boyle. the field. history. people In public bathing-houses. Umpire, Stevenson. judgment. - '^ '. MANCHESTER EVTO^G HIiRAtJJ^ SOUTH MANCHESTER^ CQT^.,; SATURDyT,.AUGtJ^2^ ; ';;^;:;,_.._._:2li^ TH E CL^SSI FI ED SECTIOW '.. t*' B liV /VW D SELL H Drowned On Their Honeymoon Want Ad InformatioD announcements 2 1 c o u r s e s a n d CUASSEB 27 ABOUT TOWN STOMACH ULCERS, gastritis suf­ Manchester SPECIAL DAY and evening sum­ Henry Ahern, who has had the ferers, get rid of your pain: per­ mer classes now open In barber- contract for laying walks, curbs manent and quick relief guaran­ Evening Herald Ing. l^ow rate of tuition, inquire and gutters this year, has finished teed. No diet. Udga Laboratories. Vaughn’s Barber School, 14 Mar­ CLASSIFIED ADVERTISE­ such work as the original contract 4232 Dakota Bldg., St. Paul, ket street, Hartford. calls for. The appropriation for MENTS Minn. ^ walks this year was cut from $3,- Count'tU averme word! to » |'"•• Want a cook, HEl.L WANTED— l! 000 to $15,000. Initials, numbsrt and •^^j^nmSnnnrt Want a clerk, each count as a word and corapounn AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 4 FEMALE 35 words as two worda Minimum cost Is Want a partner, L. J. Mack, who has been day pries ot three , 1926*NASH 4 Pass. Advance Coupe. I WANTED— Middle aged woman to Want ft situation, than at The Colonial Lunch, is 1926 Studebaker Commander Se­ about to return to his former work Lins rates per day for transient j do housework for two weeks. Want to sell a frrm, dan. ] Telephone 5901. in grocery chain stores. EffectUe March 17, i* -’ 1924 Chevrolet Truck, cheap. Want to borrow money. Cash Charge Arthur Waddell of the Waran- 6 ConsecuUvs Days . .i J ctsi 11 ots CONKEY AUTO CO. ! LADlES-r-Flne positions on ocean Want to sell sheep, caittle,' S Consecutive Days ..I S ots] 11 ots 20 E. Center Studebaker Dealer j liners to foreign shores: good Want to sell town .properly. oke hotel leaves Monday for ll otal IS ots pay. Send self-addressed envelope Bristol where he will engage in toe \ Day 1 Want to sell groceries, drugs. All orders tor Irregular Insertions 1925 NASH COACH. j for list. E. W. Arculus, Mount plumbing and heating business. He w'll be charged at the one-time rate. 1927 OAKLAND SEDAN. Want to sell boots and shoes, Special rates for long term every i Vernon, N. Y. has been employed by the Southern dav advertising given upon request. 1927 ESSEX COACH. Want to sell dry goods, carpets. New England Telephone Co. in con­ Ads ordered tor three or six d^a.ys 1925 ESSEX COACH. Want to sell clothing, hats,- caps, struction work. and stooped before the third or fifth 1924 NASH SEDAN. HELF WANTED—MALE 36 day will he charged only for the ac­ 1925 FORD COUPE. Want to find buyers tor anything, . tual number ot times the ad appear­ Miss Ann McCann of School ed. charging at the rat# earned, hut 1926 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN. I POSITION on board ocean liners: ADVERTISE »N THE HERALD, street, employed by Jaffee’s Jewelry no allowances or refunds can he made MADDEN BROS. ’ good pay: visit France, Italy, Advertising gains new customers. store, leaves tomorrow on an ex­ on six time ads stopped sfter the 6S1 Main St. Tel. 5500 ; Japan. Experience unnecessary. Advertising keeps old customers.. tended motor trip to Canada. fif'h day ^ Send self-addressed envelope for .Vo "tli: forbids": display lines not 1926 Studebaker Stand. 6 Sedan. Advertising makes success easy. sold. I list. A. Arculus, Mount Vernon', Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dorsch and The Herald will not he responsihie 1923 Dodge Coupe. Advertising begets contldence. son, Chester, of Lyndhurst, N. J., for more than one Incorrect insertion i N. Y. 1926 Pontiac Coach. I ______, ■ - ■ - Advertising means business, have returned home after spending of ony advertisement ordered for 1925 Willys-Knight Sedan. I DISTRIBUTOR for 100 store route more than one time. Advertising shows energy, the week with Mrs. Rachel Shaw of The Inadvertent omission ol incor­ 1926 Overland Coach. this county. Experience unneces­ Ridge street. rect uuhlipaiton ol adverrlslne will he When better Used Cars are Sold i sary. No selling, distribute and Advertise and succeed. Discovery of the body of James Parillo, 22, In' the waters of Devil’s rectified onlv hv cancellation of me We’ll Sell Them. collect. Should net $70 weekly. Advertise judiciously, Lake at Baraboo, Wls., ended a manhunt which Baraboo police had Mr. and Mrs. Hans Engel and charge made for the service rendered COLE MOTOR SALES ■■ begun on the theory that Parillo li*d murdered his bride of a few days • • • Write Peris Mfg. Co.. Florin, Pa. -Advertise or b u s t. their son, Earl, ot West Middle 91 Center St. Tel. S275 ! and fled. Parillo and his bride, Pliiloinen^ Parillo, 20, shown here with All advertisements must conform Advertise weekly. Turnpike, have returned from an in style, copy and typoernphy witn " i POSITIONS on board ocean liners, him, went to Devil’s Lake on their honeymoon, and both were drowned automobile tour through New York regulations enforced by me tJUhlish- 1925 Dodge Sedan. i Good pay., Visit France, Italy, Advertise now. when their boat overturned. ers and they reserve the right to 1928 Studebaker Coach. state to Montreal. Canada., . On i Japan. Experience unnecessary. Advertise their return they stopped at several edit, revise or reject any copy con­ 1927 Dodge Coupe. I For particulars send 2c stamp,- sidered objectionable. 1929 Graham Paige Sedan. HERE minutes but the running time is Maine shore resorts and took a trip OUlSI.Vt; H UKS— Classified ads I Box A, in care of Herald. something over an hour for ordi­ through .the White Mountains. to be published same day must be re­ 1924 Dodge Coupe. ! ______JITNEY PLAYERS ceived by 12 o'clock nron. Satijrdavs WANTED— Young man for mill nary occasions. T,he complete wir­ 1927 Chrysler Coupe. The Aceto-Smlth Company Is l'l:Sn a m kin A number of other good use’. operations. Apply to Cheney Bros. ing of the stage has to be done, to­ TELEPHONE YOUR WANl gether with many other special cleaning up the laying of sidewalks cars. Employmeut office. ADS , HERE ON THURSDAY tasks: in the Silver Lane section of East Crawford Auto Supply Co. Hartford. The walkTln East Hart­ Ads are acceptad over the telephone Center and Trotter Sts. Half an hour before the per­ at the CHAKCJE RATK given above formance, the business manager ford have been done by this com­ Tel. 6495 or 8063 AGENTS WANTED 3 7 ^ as a convience to advertisers. nut ______o ------takes his place at the section of the pany year after year. A large the CASH KA I'hiS will he accepted as BIG OHIO CORPORATION seeks canvas fence known as the box amount of work has been done this fU lX Pa YMKN’i If paid at the busi­ 1928 ESSEX COACH. Celebrated Gipsying Thea­ ness oftice on or before the seventh 1926 FORD TUDOR. manager for unoccupied territory. office, the performers in .the first year for Clarence Wickham, whose dav following the first insertion of 1925 OAKLAND SEDAN. Liberal commission. Earnings play go to their tents to start estate is close to the East Hartford- each ad otherwise the CHAKlih 1923 STUDEBAKER. start immediately. Good for $5,- preparations, and the stage crew Manchester line and wlio has ex­ RATbJ will he collected No responsi ter Group Sponsored by pended 4Jonsiderable money for hlllty for errors in telephoned ad? 1928 OLDSMOBILE STDAN. 000 yearly. We furnish stock, de­ ROOMS WITHDU'l BOARD 59 HOUSES FOR RENT 65 attend to the final details of pro­ wjll he assumed and their accuracy liver and collect. Previous experi­ duction, which differ with" the par­ walks and curbs along his property 1925 JEWETT t o u r in g . from the town line westward. cannot he guaranteed...... 2— 1926 ESSEX COACHES. ence unnecessary. Fyr-Fyter Com­ FOR RENT— Pleasant furnished FOR RENT— 5 room house and the Kiwanians. ticular play on the bill. . INDEX OF CLASSIHCA- MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES pany, 1912 Fyr-Fyter Bldg., Day- room in private family. Reason­ garage, 150 McKee street. All im­ TIONS ton, Ohio. Manager Plucker of the Economy 1069 Main St. Tel. 5462 able. Telephone 5992. Inquire 272 provements. Inquire on premises. Grocery baseball team, has with­ Births ...... Thomas Donahue, Mgr. Porter street. Sponsored by ^he Manchester ATTEMPTS TO REVIVE engagements ...... 8 ROOM FLAT, modern, very rea­ drawn from the game scheduled by Marriages ...... 1925 HUDSON COACH ~ SITUATIONS WANTED— sonable rent. Center and Main Kiwanis club, the Jitney Players his players tomorrow at the Man­ Deaths ...... will appear again in-this town next chester Green diamond as it will be Card of Thanks ...... ^ 1927 OAKLAND SEDAN MALE 39 I FURNISHED ROOM to rent. In- street 352. Telephone Hartford ALL-YEAR HALF HOUDAY BETTS GARAGE 2-3887 before p. m. Thursday evening, when they will in use fay the Green team. ___j quire 86 Church street. 6 present the delightful comedy, Lost and Found ...... * Hudson-Essex Dealer— 129 Spruce BOOKKEEPER — ACCOUNTANT, Announcements ...... ^ FOJl RENT— 6-room flat, heat fur­ “ The Man Who Craved Culture’’ by A petition is being circulated Arkansas, Florida, Mississippi, twelve years experience, good Moliere. more commonly known as along Main street by Herbert B. and South Carolina are the only Aofe?«ional Services ...... '22 s t o r a (; e 20 for canning $1.25-$1.50, basket.] Maple street. ration with his wife, Alice B. Keat­ floors and other modern equipment Itei-atring ...... “ Edgewood Fruit Farm. Telephone i seen to be appreciated. See TO HEAR QUTMBY FELL OF at $7,500. It is a real bargain, on I'ailoi irig—Uvelng—Cleaning ... FOR RENT— 4 room tenement with i Stuart J. Wasley, 815 Main street. ing. flood? ar.d Service ...... 2a WANTED— Load to and part load SgO’O. W. H. Cowles. New Cars This Year ' ROWING ’ROUND MAINE. easy terms, too. from Philadelphia. Fa.. Camden. all modern improvements. Inquire Telephone 6648. Clarence P. Qulmby, who has re­ Wanted-Busine?? Service ...... 2« FOR SALE— Gladiolas 50c a doz. 105 Spruce street or telephone Formerly two Ford trucks and Kdaciitloniil N. J.. or enrouie any day this i two Ford touring cars made up the cently returned from a vacation $6,200— $500 Cash, buys a six- Courses and Classes ...... '21 month. Perretl & Glenney. Phone. Over 80 varieties of better kind. ] 4980. spent in Maine, will be the speaker Private Instruction caravan which carried the actors. room Single. Steain hegt. etc.l 2- .28- 3063. Clark’s Glad Garden, 425 Middle | at the regular meeting of the 1 la ricirig 1 Turnpike. Manchester Green. Tel. FOR RENT— 3 room suite in John­ This season they are the proud car garage. Central location. M nsloa 1 — Pra t Ic ...... HARTFORD DISTRICT possessors of a Studebaker, a Reo Manchester Kiwanis clyb Monday PERRETT & GLENNEY— Express 5339. son Block with all morteni im­ Wanteti — InsfriioMon ...... 30 and a stage truck given them by the noon at the Country Club. His topic | Here is a good bargain! $5,500 FInanrInI and freight service: local and provements. Apply Janitor 7635. Bonds—Stocks—Mnriliaaes ...... 31 Auto-Car Company of Philadelphia. “ Traveling All Over . Maine ,in a ] Duys a six-room single; steam beat, long distance. Expert furniture AMATEUR ON SEPT. 3 Business Outioi t unities ...... 3i FOR RENT— 5 room furnished In this main truck, which is the Rowboat,’’ will be sure to interest, 1 moving. Seivice any time by call- j gas, 2 poultry houses, 2-car garage; Money lo L'>an ...... 33 HOUSEHOLD GOODS 51 rent, all improvements, near Bus. stage when it is unfolded and set enlivened by . C. Pi Q.’s ■witty | Help nnd Sllnallitna j What will be of special interest 15 fruit trees. Close in and very ing 3063. | Piano, garage. Box W, in care of up. are all the curtains for the stories. William A. Knofla will Help \V a n I ert — KemaJe ...... 3!) GAS STOVES $10 up. Several good interest to many Manchester golf- .furnish the attendance prize. convenient to trolley, bus and Help Wariiert — Male ...... 36 MERCHANDISE ordered by you to- | Herald. stage, the tents which serve for Help Wanie.d —Male or Kemale .. 3? coal ranges. I ers is the forthcoming annual aina- The delegates and alternates to day in New York, or to be sent to | FOR RENT— 5 room tenement, all j teur tournament ‘ for Hartford , dressing rooms and for sleeping schools. Agents tVanted ...... 37-A WATKINS improvements, garage. Telephone 500 feet of canvas fence. the Poland Springs district conven­ Situations Wanted — Kemale...... New York, picked, up by us lo- | FURNITURE EXCHANGE county. A number of local golf- ! Quarters, . tion in September are. as. follows: Henry Street, new Single of six Situations Wan'ed — Male ...... 33 night and delivered the next j 3364 or call at 15 Ashworth St. • ers are expected to compete in the 1 electrical equipment. and Employ mem .Agencies ...... 8') or 3l<86. Hornsby, Cubs ...... 28 ; the back drop. While this wor'x: ^ ICHTHVOPHIS ( Lots ror Sale ...... 73 stairs. Ii2 Oak street. Inqinre 114 goes on, the rest of the company ] CHIMNEYS CLEANED and repair-i More people were killed in New j Simmons. Athletics...... 27 : ' O F A S IA ANO.,1 Besort Broperty tor Sale...... 74 Oak street. Gehrig, Yankees ...... ■27 pitch their tents at either side of 1 SiiPurban for Sale ...... 75 ed, key fitting, safes opened, sawjYork streets in 1928 than in the! CEVLON ARE Beal Estate for Exchange...... 76 5 room flat at 21 Bottomlev. Cardinals ...... • 25 i the stage, and get all into readi-' S T R U N G • filing and grinding. Work called 1 famous battle of Bull Run. Indlcat-lFOR RENT O’Doul, Phillies ...... 25' ness for the show. On occasion all' Wanted —Beal Ks'a'e ...... 77 for. Harold Clemson, 108 North j ing that the battle of Pedestrian] Cambridge street. Available Sep­ T O G E T H E R . Auelioii— Legal Nollers Hurst,' Phillies ...... 25 this w’ork has been done in 35 Auction Sales ...... 78 Elm street. Tel. 3 648. ‘ Run was much w^orse. ‘ tember '1st. Inquire on premises. IN A BUNCH, Legal Notices ...... 79 A N D ROUND By Frank Beck TH IS T H E * GAS BUGGIES—Experience Speaking MOTHER OOILS HER BODY UNDL VIOLA TELLS YOU CAN LIVE NVDMEN W H O D O N 'T POOR VIOLA ALEC IS NO T H E / h a t c h . ME ALEC INSISTS Y / ^ ON LOVE WHEN BU T V IO L A t h i n k m u c h A B O U T HAS BEEN STARVED d u m b - b e l l , a THE VOONS THEN ON POSTPONING YOU'RE SINGLE AND DOESN'T CARE M O N E Y BEFORE TH E FOR ALEC'S LOVE. MAN CAN'T DO m LEAVE THE AAOTHEfi AND, THEIR MARRIAGE UGHT-HEADED, BUT ABOUT MONEY. j f y j . CEREMONY USUALLY AFTER THEIR LONG SUMS AT HOME ^ LIVE IK WATER ONTlL TTIE UNTIL. HE STARTS NOT AFTER YOU'RE S H E H A S TH IN K T O O SEPARATION IT SEEMS EVENINGS AND HOLD FIN , WHICH HAS ADORNED THEIR THE DAM AND f y / / ) MARRIED AND ^^^PLENTY^^ MUCH ABOUT IT ^ SILLY TO PROLONG HIS W IF E IN HIS BACK. DISAPPEARS.' -THES' THEN CTOME THINGS FURTHER. LAP .AT THE MAKES A LITTLE START GETTING AFTERWARDS. RACK 'C- I'VE THE RE3TOF.THEIR LIVES ON LANO. MONEV. LIGHT -'yVAISTED. SAM E T IM E . r O he MAN''\f? AC'SU.ASS AN ATTITUDE OF d r a w e r , a s i t WAITS FOR. SM LL ■i-; id. INSECTS TC> COMB - WITHIN STRIKING % Di5TA.NCE. IT. IS . RECAPpEP WITH MU^::-6 G u P E R S T lTtO N IN A\.«NS' C O U N T R IE S V tliS L - ' - n AND IS ACTUAl-LV 1^. f » ' i w oR s h ip e o b y t h e HOTTENTOTS.

1 0 Q 7 '8 - 2 4 fTegaSM I MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD, SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN., SATURDAY, AUGUST 24,1929.

FtAFPER FAbJNY SAYSi SKIPPY By Percy L Crosby LO.S.MT.Qfr. SENSE ^ NONSENSE U»e ©ov* p\>(3 WHEN A WOMAN ASKS FOR A I N6U6je I Don r You HEADACHE TABLET T l i e 9 c o k She la trying to avoid a visit to her Hau6 w husband’s relatives. , Lt0RA«Y. She wants to escape kitchen slavery by dining out. T She is seeking encouragement to r purchase a new hat on the mor­ row. She is looking for an excuse to pre­ vent a visit from the neighbor­ hood bridge fiends. She is laying the groundwork for a little vacation trip to the beach or mountains.

IF THE TRUTH WERE KNOWN “The dice is cast,” brace Caesar said, “ I hope that it’s a seven.” But it was not, and yet he smiled. For it came up eleven.

PERFECTLY SAFE iftiooa J Percy L. Cro.sby, Great Britain rights reserved. “ Haven’t I told you. Bobby, that 1 U ^ Fcatn-es Ijyndicate, Inc. L. you w ill smash your fingers if you drive nails?” If your foot doesn’t slip, moun “ Yes, I know. Dad, but Jane’s OUR BOARDINC HOUSE holding the nail.” ( West Toonerville News Item By Fontaine Fox tain climbing is strictly on the4'Iia upTtr By Gene Ahem and up. MODERN Divorcee’s child: “ Oh, mom, look A be: v /of^t LiE in v it e p a f e WFR i b n p S o v e k t o e e at that funny man over there!” ^ BiM 'riiAUa i-r.Av/eftV -- m V ^ His Mother: ‘Sssh, dear, that’s PRESENT WHENi HE PA^5e P Up T<^TH E dlTY FELLEK your father.” eaV 1)^ SYATE, VllFE'S ABSENCE Ma s ST^OW/aJ - t h e F°FKF0U o f h a y V/iTH t h e BEE^ ME3T i n IT- If you can be pleasant until ten iAi-XA Y o u r . uii'Fe AWAY oU o l l T O F . PROPORT io k I o f a o’clock in the morning you’ll have A VACATiOfd I UIlsM REASONABLE Y A c A T o N the balance of the day and away into the night to be grouchy. // MY TROUJfl VJOLlLP 6 0 - ^ e s a p - w- s Me .M a s t u p n e p A TIME PUZZLE SOMEPLACE TbRTitlo “Heh what’s the idea of wiping ‘i f " ' « H IT iMTo PESERTlOia, BY T o Y e / WEEKS A YlSlT^ Today’s letter golf puzzle re­ your spoon on the tablecloth? What PRAT ir MAYE a do you think the napkin’s for?’" turns to the E A R L Y YEARS for YeM..— oMLY Its inspiration. Perhaps you can f - t J i m s ' MI aJp T o P l Y o R c E Me r o N beat the par solution— nine strokes "Lindbergh was 26 the other • R E S T A^\" C o ^ e / ^ T - TM e c o m m o n * G R O U N p s * —on another page. day.” “How old is Anne?” mek\T I Map was OF PESERToN ! A former shoe salesman now sell­ Mi^lE Yeat^s Aeo ing coal was giving his scales talk r — ^ SOLlAiPS “ElA R Y\ to a prospect. “ There is no ash in IM-tW' FioSPiTALr this coal. Not a bit of sulphur or PRASTcT 1dirt. It’s a wonderful coal.” B u r ~ “ How many B T U’s are there in • \A It?” asked the prospect. / “Not a damn one!” A L There would probably be more ! justice in this world if there were less law. M

# U • • • i. And just think how ten years ‘ •v. • ago we would have enjoyed hating '/> a man named Lindbergh.

A monologue Is sometimes de­ fined as being a conversation be­ tween a real estate salesman and • V» his prospect. • kit ' “ V/I • Look yourself over and see If you can find any good reason why your children should amount to very I r V E A R 5 much. THE RULES “ Mary, can you see In the dark?” I O t* “No, mother, why?” S^lV/G'RCe 1— The idea of Letter Golf is to “ Last night I heard you tell Tom he hadn’t shaved.” ■ MER' FO-R change one word to another- and v ^ i do it in par, a given number of n. PESERTio/N strokes. Thus to change COW to Young Husband:^ “ Why, here’s the announcement'of the Jones’ /xti ''‘i- . . A N P h e n . in three strokes, COW, new baby already! It was only Mo N-SUPPORT HOW, HEW. HEN. born this morning.” RtO. U. S. PAT. OFP. G1929. by NCA SCftVICC. INC. MATqR r 2— You change only one letter Ditto Wife: “I’ll bet they knew (fFontaine Fox. 1929 JC. at a time. about it all the time.” 3— You njust have a complete word, of c ^ m o n usage, for each “ Loan me five dollars, will you?” jump. Slang words and abbrevia­ "Sorry, but I have but four dol­ WASHINGTON TUBBS H Tricked By Crane tions don’t count. lars and seventy-five cents.” “ W ell, give me that. I ’ll trust you 4— The order of letters cannot r ■To I tell 'iOO r W BUT, LAPY> he changed. for the other quarter.” ooTA DEAR BUT, couMTess, I TOUR. UAMt HO iAOKEY. I VOE'RE I Vi& \ OU6HTA MEETiM' I if '(OO vliLU \CL0S1MG UP A R £ o u t o f 1 a o Y iE T^liS MERY S is t e r . / lekam£ kiMOv-'-/ \NMT t l u \ foaTna. .oY.\6 \S JiA'S, WASV\.X MiMUTE. ■paT h e r NW CjENTlEMAN V H\6HT. lb /'

»'! (7 PAT.i 01929, I HlA SCBVICe. INC."

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Heads It Is ! By Blosser ------n OACiJ£ UABBVU- 8E. SOBPRlsto ■ZAKS: VOOR ITS LETS S&S VMUETHap. YSP - u s A o s i r VHIXE/^ WE SREAlA TUE. AlE'fJS . To UIM*= US DOESbiT EkPECT ' ITS U^ADS •••TWAT m ^ a i® OS^Tt) SA/ \H£U. .'SP TAILS - VME 6 0 R o m e !

ear HOMESlCR- AiOTME

jm tL WgA «£BviC8. Wa By SmaD • ( ^ A D THE BTORX, THE N COLOR THE PICTURE) SALESMAN SAM So Absent-Minded “ Oh, goodness, what a fall we small necks hurt. “I can’t stand took,” cried Clowny. Then this,” said Coppy. “ Guess I ’ll lie W l L,IF \ KEEP OM Y!?.Pi\ieUM’ UKE. UVE. ©EEM DOIN', J'LL. S o “TH6><.eAT CAMDLCS UP W OOSH, \ 9dWMSD tU e he added, “Look! The aviator’s, fiat on the ground. Then I can VJHOUE “TMlMGr- KiNOft still in the air. I wish he’d come B e UP VUTH “m e e s k in v o s soon - < iu e s s i 'l l c m p o u r MOKTH,HOH? WeCL., \'LU look straight up with ease. What “m ^ L e s s , BUTT (AeeiftE. down here. He saved our lives. funny things a fellow sees.” The HS.R.e fep. TF M itHlT- 3UST pRAcnce up/e b v t - Say, he Is grand. I'd rather like others joined him as he flopped *t«eM \'LL RepiO ft VJHttJE., i 'L L Cr^ USRO To ^efA- to shake his hand. If he comes and started gazing ’ round. ' ftM 'T U R M IM - m « ,- close enough again let’s all give In ’bout an hour the plane him a cheer.” swooped low and Scouty jumped The bunch then jumped up to and shouted, “Oh! I think he’s their feet and watched the plane going to come right down. At do queer stunts'neat. It seemed least it looks that way.*’ And, sure the aviator was a -fiyer o f much enough, the motor stopped and, to worth. He’ d spin along to left the earth the plane then dropped. and right, and rise up most'out of It made a perfect landing and the sight. In just about a moment he Tlnles yelled, “ Hurray!” was back down near the earth. Of course they all began to run. “ Oh, 'look ,” cried Scouty, with Said Carpy, “ ’T w ill - be heaps of a whoop. “ I guess he’s going to fun to meet this dandy flyer._ , loop-the-loop. His plane is almost Look, he’s out and there he up-side-down. He has a heap of stands.” The flyer walked across nerve. I think I’d like to ride the ground and all the Tinies with him. Just watch him live gathered ’round. He said, “ Hello and watch hi m skim. It seems there, little folks,” and started • that he w ill fall each time he does shaking hands. a sudden swerve.” ’Twas thrilling as a cloud he’d (The Tinymites take a plane "■ V.'.li.-'*- . , skirt. They, watched - until their ride in th«, next stoi^.X "R03B FOTJBTBHR U tm rilif0{^r lEupning l| m lb

Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Denton Members of the Manchester Kl- Troop 6, Boy Scouts, will go on Chester. It was rented recently by wanis club used their cars in an overnight hike to Coventry this the Hartford men. of West Middle Turnpike and three nND A BIG STILL The still contained 600 gallons DANCING children are spending two weeks at bringing back today the second afternoon leaving the Center at 1:30 o’clock. and near it were 600 gallons of de-: Buy Your Automobile Insurance e v e r y WEDNESDAY AND their former home in Maine. delegation of local kiddies who have been enjoying a two weeks’ vaca­ natured alcohol in drums. Lt. Rus­ SATURDAY NIGHT Miss Marion Robertson of Henry tion at the Hebron camp. The Benevolent Society Segar will RUNNING BOLTONsell Harmon, Henry Heinoldt and As You Bought Your Car! street left today for a week’s visit camp ends, today, one of the most meet in Orange Hall at 8 o’clock Charles Daly of the Stafford State with relatives and friends in Syra­ successful seasons since this work tonight. Police barracks made the raid and Perhaps you bought your automobile on the installment LAKESIDE CASINO was sponsored by the Kiwanians. arrests. • ' plan— paying for it on a monthly basis. You can buy Travelers cuse, N. Y., where she lived for a State Po&ce Seize 500 Gal­ Justice of the Peace James A. number of years. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Larrabee of Automobile Casualty Insurance In the same way. Strant street are spending two Connors presided at the court hear- This unique prbmium payment plan was ori^nated by- In the case of dementis Sena- ingj. Miss Margaret Foley, daughter tro, arrested for speeding by Traf­ weeks in Canada. lon Plant, Much Alcohol, The Travelers Insurance Company—the largest and oldest ABOUT TOWN of Mr. aqd Mrs. Cornelius Foley of fic Policeman Roberts yesterday. writer of Automobile Casualty Insurance In the world. New street, and John O’Connor of Judge Johnson suspended judg­ FALL OFF VERANDA Buy the highest grade of Automobile Insurance and Buy It Hartford, will be married in Bt. ment in the police court this morn­ KITCHEN “ SHOWER” Arrest Five. NOW through Mr. and Mrs. David Armstrong James’s church Tuesday morning, ing on the payment of costs. and cWldren of Buckland will August 29, P in s TOT IN HOSPITAL spend the next week at the shore at Express Agent NiQkerson, who Miss Rose Valenti of 130 School Five men are in jail today as the Buttonwood, R. I. Indications are that a large street was “ showered” for the third result of a raid on Ihe biggest still crowd will be present at the outing has been on a leave of absence for JOHN H. LAPPEN two weeks, returns fo his duties at time last evening at the home of ever seized in Tolland County Three-year-old William Kearns, Mr. and Mrs. Wells Pitkin of of Campbell Council, K. of C., to be the Manchester office, on Monday. her sister, Mrs. Mary Bellinghirl, of made by State Police late- yester­ son of Mr. And Mrs. Thomas A. All Kinds of Good Insurance Norwalk are visiting with Mr®. Pit­ held tomorrow. The committee Spruce street. Guests were present day afternoon In Bolton. A speedy Kearns, of- 320 Main street, was 19 Lilac Street So. Manchester kin’s mother, Mrs. Jennie Cook of met last night to receive names and from Hartford, Bristol, New Brit­ trial followed the arrests and a taken to Memorial hospital last reservations and were Informed by The special meeting of the Fifth Telephone 7021 Manchester Green. and Ninth School District and a ain, Rockville and this’ town. There few hours after the raid the opera­ night suffering from injuries caused the keeper of the inn that he could were vocal and instrumental music, tors were In ’Tollahd County jail by a fall from the veranda railing take care of twenty-five more than circus are all booked for August Washington L. 0. L. Social club 28'. dancing, and a buffet luncheon. waiting for someoile to pay fines at his borne. His injuries are not originally Intended to go, so tickets Miss Valenti received a large num- and costs totaling nearly $1500. Tvill have its annual serious, but an X-ray picture is to will be sold right up to starting Maurice Diamond of the Dia-lber of gifts. Four of the men arrested are be taken today as a precautionary row at the Courtney Farm in time. The start will be made from Somers, with > chicken dinner mond Shoe stores is passing out Wednesday evening a miscellane­ from Hartford— Tony Spagnr' Jos­ measure. ADVERTISE IN T H F HERALD—!^ PAYS the K, of C. rooms and ample motor eph Slovola, Seaborto Measiizna, served hy Osano at 5 o clock, and rolls of smoke in celebration of the ous shower was given in her honor transportation has been assured. at the home of Mrs. Mary Aparo of Alphonse Olen— and the other is a program of outdoor sports. birth of a son at the Hartford hos­ pital. New Britain, sister-in-law of the John Magglonl of Middletown. The * The annual outing of the Sons bridegroom-to-be, Anthcny Aparb, farm where the still was foufld is Mr. and Mrs. Alexander McBride and Daughters of Italy is to be held to whom Miss Valenti will be mar­ on the South Bolton road near the and two sons of Summer street will on September 8 Instead of Septem­ Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Keeney of 43 Brainard Place have returned ried on September 4. old shoddy mills. It was formerly leave tomorrow for a stay of two ber 18, as first planned. Aldo owned by Carl Reuben of Manches­ Paganl is chairman of the men’s after spending two weeks at their •(veeks at Sound View. cottage at Black Point. ter and Is said to be novr c^vned by B e Prepared committee and Mrs. Nettle Aceto of SHOWER FOR MISS BERRY a man named Newman, of Man- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tedford and the women’s committee. Do not endanger other people’s lives by having poor brakes. We have expert family of East Center street and Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Austin of Main street is spending a vacation mechanics here that can Adjust and Reline Brakes properly— Also An Up-to-date Mrs. Sarah Murphy and daughter Mr. and Mrs. Fred Swartz of Miss Harriet Berry, daughter ol Edith of Foster street are leaytog Green Hill street left today for a with her sister, Mrs. C. H. Clarke, BRAKE TESTING MACHINE. at Columbia lake. Mrs. Margaret J. Berry of Knox for a week-end trip to Watch Hill. vacation at Pleasant View. street, who Is to be married on Sep­ SUNDAY DINNER tember 7 to George Kelly of Oak­ Mr. and Mrs. David Titus Mrs. Thora Stoehr and Miss Thomas Gorman of Main street, John Gorman of the same street land street, was the guest of honor of East Middle Turnpike, and Edith Stoehr leave tomorrow on a at a shower given, by her associates at the ten days’ trip to New York state. and Paul Fitzgerald of Brainard Starters and Generators Radiators Cleaned Arthur Anderson of Main street place left this morning to spend the In the office of the Connecticut Mu­ will leave today for a visit with re­ week-end at Point o’Woods. Wil­ tual Life Insurance Company. The Repaired Radiator and Hub Caps latives in Nanticoke and Harris- Mrs.- Frank Diana and son, An­ party took place at the close of thony, of Center street, will spend liam Gorman is at Point o’Woods burgh, Pa. for a two week’s vacation. office hours yesterday afternoon the next week In Boston. and 16 of the girls were present. HOTEL SHERDAN Wilfiam T. Smith and family of The Young Women’s Society and Ice cream, cake and confections Charter Oak place left today for The regular monthly meeting of the Young Men’s Lithuanian Soci­ were served. Miss Berry received Turkey, Duck or Chicken Complete Line of Radio Rentals and Did Orchard. Maine. They were Dilworth-Cornell Post, No. 102, ety will hold a dance at Chestnut la choice collection of gifts in linen. accompanied by Miss Rachel Lyons American Legion, will be held in Grove, Buckland, this evening. silver, glassware. with all the fixings $1 Distributor Parts and Brushes Car Batteries of Hemlock street who will return the veterans’ room at the Stata Sunday night. Armory on Monday at 8:15 p. m. Important business will come be­ Mr. and Mrs. Oscar G. Anderson fore this meeting, and a large at­ HOOD TIRES GOODYEAR TIRES of 34S Center street and child will tendance is desired. spend the next ten days at White OILING and GREASING CARS WASHED Sands Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred McKinney IT’S A CRIME to throw and daughter Janet of Florence, N. Miss Ethel M. Fish, director of J., have been spending the past SEE US REGARDING THE NEW TRUCK REFLE’CTORS. New Law, Effective Sunnyside Private school, an­ week with Mr. McKinney’s parents, September 1st, 1929. nounces that the school will be Mr. and Mrs. George McKinney of away old tires when they will open to the public on Wednesdav Foster street. GOODYEAR PATHFINDER GOODYEAR ALL WEATHER and Thursday, August 28 and 29, frcm 10 a. m. to 9 p. m. This is in Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Keeney cu t the cost of 4 # compliance with a wish expressed of Brainard Place returned last 30x3V2...... $6.70 30x31/2 - ...... — $8.80 by interested parents. During the night from Black Point. 31x4...... $9.90 31x4.. ..$12.35 summer vacation a study room has been fitted up. On the days for Mrs. Margaret Aitkin of Summit VW.V.W.'. 32x4...... $10.55 32x4 .. .. .$13.10 inspection next week there will be street is visiting her daughter Mrs. .V. .. $8.45 an exhibit of modern textbooks for William Bunnel of Reading, Pa. 29x4.40 ...... $6.60 29x4.40 the elementary grades and chil­ 30x4.50 ...... $7.35 30x4.50 .. $9.40 dren’s story books. Demonstrations will also be given by the director 30x5.25 ...... $10.90 30x5.25 . .$13.20 each day at 3 o’clock of reading Special On lessons for beginners’ classes. 31x5.25...... $11.20 31x5.25 . .$13.60 Ladies’ Flexible Soles 33x6.00 ...... $13.55 33x6.00 . .$16.45 Mr. and Mrs. William E. Keyes and Heels of Washington street left today for a vacation of ten days to L spent h o s e old tires are at Norwood. Mass., and Hampton JIM’S SHOE REPARING Trade In Your Old Tires On These Prices. Beach, N. H. AND SHOE SHINE PARLOR worth money 887 Main Street T Out of Gas Flat Tire Battery Trouble Miss Teresa Mader of the tabu­ Trade them in for lating department at Cheney Broth­ ers, who has been spending a week new, Fisks. That’s a at Rye Beach. N. Y., and places in DIAL 7114 New Jersey, is expected home to- Visit the sure way of getting morrow. first-class tires at a r Mr. and Mrs. Robert McCaughey McGovern of 371 Hartford Road and William. Flavell of 9 3 Spruce street, have saving! CAMPBELL’S FILLING STATION left for Canada, where they will Granite Co.’s CbRNER MAIN AND MIDDLE TURNPIKE spend ten days. nSK RUGGED ALUCORD— The finest tire ever m«de, giving .4n anniversary mass will be held the utmost in safe traction, good Memorial loolcs and lon{( life. A remarkablQ .\tonday morning at 8 o’clock at St. value. James's church for the late D(^mi- Exhibition nique Thibodeau. of COLE MOTOR SALES I OAKLYN FILLING STATION THE Monuments and 91 Center Street Tel. 82751 Oakland Street Tel. 6463 OPEN AIR STAND Markers

in Front of the Library OriRiinal in Conception Moderate in Price The Best Quality of 147 Allyn St., Hartford FRUIT Local Representative Fisk = F ederEil Mr. J. Fuller Mitchell JIM MANNISE Phone 2-4129 All Tires listed below* are Guaranteed for Entire Life of Tire Sale Every Saturday against defects. Also a Written Guarantee of 10,000 MILES. \ 30x31/2 30x31/2 31x4 32x4 WATKINS BROTHERS, Inc. Extra Size e-Ply 6-Ply $3.95 $4.55 $9.55 $9.90 Comfortably Funeral Directors t ESTABLISHED 54 YEARS 33x4 32x41/2 * 33x41/2 30x5 CHAPEL AT 11 OAK ST. 6-Ply 8-Ply 8-PIy 8-Ply $10.60 $13.65 $13.95 $16.90 Settled Robert K. Anderson Phones: Office 5171 Funeral Director Residence 7494 . 29x4.40 30x4.50 . 28x4.75 29x4.75 It’s a grand and Various feeUng, financially spesiing, can happen to . $5.60 $6.95 $7.40, isn’t it, dutt first-day of younxtca- your family. $4.75 You ran insure this relief from worry turn? Yousetdebadcinyourchair SAVE MONEY by malcing youT will, appointing a bus!-- and realize duu for the next few ness-like executor, and setting up a trust _ On Your Children’s 29x5.00 30x5.00 ' 31x5.00 30x5,25 weeks you don’t haoe to ^ up in fond as part o f the wilL School Shoes Now! $7.65 $7.95 $8.25 $9.25 die morning tottil you jed like it, In a trust fund, you,know, you can* direct us, as your trustee, to invest the . keep a single business appoint' mcmey you leave so as to provide for the meat, or have- so much as one education of yoiir sons and daughters, 31x5.25 29x5.50 32x6.00 33x6.00 I»yments to dependents and-an income e-piy 6-Ply 6-Ply t serious business question come $9;55 $12.90 up for settlement. . . Solid com- for your wife as long as she lives. ^ $10.'90 $12:75 Until you do tiiis, you won’t know' fortt diotl what real comfort and peace of m ind FREE — QUICK — EFFICIENT SERVICE. . really are. So we have been fold many QOUD comfort, this, too: When times—^by fellow townsmen of youn Manchester O you plan your affairs so thoi^t* who have matured their plans and folly that, no matter what happen* named us, as their executor and trustee Don’t wait until the last day. Monumenjtal Go. COLE MOTOR SALES to you, nothing vety serious, to carry them out* Have your children’s school TELEPHONE 8275 Moniinients of Every shoes rebuilt and save the price 91 CENTER STREET Description* of a new pair. Lettering and Qeaning in The Selwitz AO Oimeteries. Oaklyn Filling Station Shoe Shop OAKLAND STREET TELEPHONE 6463 THE MANCHESTER TRUST CO. N. AMBROSINL Prop., Comer Main' and Pearl Streets IS7 BlMeiD Btn FhoM .7578 South Manchester SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN.

'I--,