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Dentist Is Victim of Office Killing

Dentist Is Victim of Office Killing

>’KT P R K ^ r AVERAGE DAILY CIRCULATION OF THE EVENING HERALD for the niontli of ■ September, 1#87

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- MANCHESTER (CONN.) BVENTNCr HBRAI3), SATDR15AT, OC^COBBR S9,19^.. . ,,V* ' ■• ■ ■' • 'P A G E tW O ^ Is the frequency with which per­ discussion would indicate that the liam Kocliler RUTH MAKES A HIT . 15,000 STATE DRIVERS sons give the wrong engine num­ man that is elected must be a lead­ Mrs. D. F/'Edgerton of, Vernon bers when making application for er, a mau who has the time and the entertained the Ladies’ Club ’Thurs­ mo'tor vehicle registrations. If a ability to give most of It for the day afternoon. _ WITH PARIS CROW S BROKE LAW THIS YEAR wrong number is given and the car Rockville Mrs. Thomae Ward o l East HarL Is stolen later, the engine number city alone and he must have the co­ ford haa been the guest of Mr. and operation of the members of the (continued from page 1) on file is useless as an aid to the Mrs. John Flaherty. (continued from page 1) police m locating the vehicle. The council and the confidence of the Miss Irene Scharf of. Union street people. transposing of the digits making is attending the Dartmouth-Yale which she’thanked everyone for the third of this number has caused up the engine number is a common LEONARD SAYS HE Prolic/iEnds game in New Haven today.) kindness shown her and added: “ I considerable Inconvenience and occurence because of attempts to Palais Royid The two nights given over to the Mrs. Elizabeth Kingston and Miss feel that I do not deserve half of trouble for the department, the memorize the number before filling production of the annual Elks’ Fro­ Aurelia Crossley of Ellington ave­ It, hut my heart goes out to you.” police, and the' owners and opera­ out the application. Numbers on IS NOT CANDEATE lic was a success as far as the nue spent Friday visiting relatives Then Minister Bokanowski, an­ tors themselves. castings and other identifications, production was concerned, those in New Haven. swering Miss Elder said: It -has been necessary to refer figures are often confused with the taking party giving a good account Mrs. Charles Bell of West Hart­ "To every Frenchman, your val- many cases to the State Police fbr TONIGHT engine number. Many persons of ttPemselves, but the attendance ford Is confined to the Hartford ourous flight exemplifies the spirit investigation, when the motor Hospital.' Mrs. Bell was formerly of- youth BO typical of America. avoid this mistake by consulting was not as large as was expected. vehicle .department might have Would Not Take Office If Miss Belinda Reardon of this city. . Like Lindbergh, Chamberlin and taken care of the cases If correct their dealer or repairman. SUNDAT—MONDAY Whjtet Party Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lewis of Byrd you came to France as an addresses had been known. The de­ Kiowa Council, D. of North Adams, Mass., are rejoicing emissary of good will. , partment has also found It neces­ Nominated By Both Par­ very successful whist on Thursday over the birth of a daughter bom “ As the father of French avia­ sary, when correct addresses are Palais Royal Rail Room evening there were thirteen tables recently. Mrs. Lewis w ti formerly tion, I believe I have the right to For Taxi Service Call 706 or not available, to send the name of 28-4. Warm closed car.— adv^ HARTFORD, 900 Wethersfield Ave., HARTFORD ties, He Insists. and the prizes were won by Mrs. Miss Majorle Boseiey of this city. kiss the world’s first daughter of the person to the suspension sec­ Carrie Kane, Mrs. Rose Markert Miss Gladys Hartensteln of Pros­ tion for "listing” for the^ purpose and Mrs. Louise Morin. ^®“ ts pect street will entertain a number His paternal kiss on Ruth’s brow of locating them. tonight Tonight Tonight prizes by Arthur O’Connell, Fran of friends at MoOre’s cottage at evoked, the audiences’ w'hole-heart- Incomplete Reports YALE-DARTMOUTH VICTORY DANCE , (Special to the fierald) Hall and Joseph Wohllebe. The Crystal Lake on Saturday evening. ed applause. Another source of Inconvenience PARSONS Rockville, Oct. 29.— There is one capitol prizes were won by Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bosely of Is the lack of specific Information Rose Markert and Arthur O Con­ Union street will move to Maine the HARTFORD Sunday Night Sunday Night candidate who has been mentioned in reports of motor vehicle acci­ S NIGHTS, ItfON., TUBS., WED. nell. » first of November. dents, particularly as to the places for mayor of Rockville, a fortner Church Notes ABOUT TOWN OCT.31, NOV. 1, 2. MAT. WED. seelctihan of the town of Vernon, where accidents occur. Frequently, Aarons & Freedly Present t| ie Four Hours of Dancing Four Hours Union Congregational Church: Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Williams the reports indicate* only the street who will not be a candidate for ma­ Rev. George S. Brookes, Pastor, Smart Musical Comedy yor, not if he knows'It. "If nomin­ of Tolland Turnpike left this mor­ and town, and It Is impossible to ated'on both, tickets, I would not Morning service at 10:30 o’clock. ning by auto for Vermont, where ascertain whether the accident oc­ Monday— Hallowe *en — Monday take' the place,” was the remark of Sermon by Rev. Dr. Douglas Mac- they will visit their son David who curred at an intersection, curve or Kenzie. Peoples Popular Service at Parley Leonard when asked con­ 7 o’clock. Steriopticon Lecture, MRS. GEORGE J. FALLOW was graduated last June from. Mid- on a hill, or anything else about Hallowe’en Costume Dance cerning his lame being mentioned Mrs. Mabel Warren Fallow, of dlebury college and is now assist­ conditions surrounding the inci­ as a candidate for mayor. “ The Kingdom Within.” A Barrel of Fun, Free Souvenirs to AIL Methodist Episcopal Church. Rev. 143 Nott street Wethersfield, died ant principal in the High school at dent. The announcetnent'made in The suddenly at her home yesterday Barton, Vermont. An example of Incomplete Infor­ Admission 50 Cents. Admission 50 Cents. Herald sometime ago that Mayor J. Garfield Sallis, Pastor. Mprning service at 10:30 o’clock. The topic about 11 o’clock. Mrs. Fallow had mation Is a recent report which W ith Cameron had no desire to be a can­ Frank V. Williams is taking his gives the location of An accident as will be “ The Largeness of Our Pro­ not been in her usual good health JtJLIA SANDERSON- didate, has been protred by his flat for^ some, time, but yesterday morn?- class of boys at the Second Congre­ the Danbury-Brldgeport road in denial that he, will no^ Ae a candi­ testant Faith.” Evening service at FRANK CRUMIT Major .Edward Gurley^s 12 Syncopators f o’clock. Evening hymn service ing ate breakfast and appeared aS gational church school to Storrs to­ Bethel. There is no other informa­ date. Stanley McCray also made the usual. When Mr. Fallow returned day to see the game between the tion and the department is left to and 100 others. Dancing. Every Night in the Week at Palais Royal. statement to'The Herald that he and address by the pastor. Prices: Eves., Orch. .$3.00; Bal. home at noon he found her dead. Agigies and Lowell Textile school. determine where on the Danbury- Ladies Admitted Free Every Tuesday and Thursday will not be a candidate even for his First Evangelical Lutheran Brldgeport road, which runs for $2.50, $2.00, $1.50; Fam. Cir., Church. Rev. John F. Bauebmann, Mr. and Mrs. Fallow had only re­ present position, not to consider PAVED FROM QUTCKS.ANDS several, miles through Bethel, the $1.00, Gal. 75c. Wed. Mat., Orch. pastor. English service at 10:00, cently moved from Hartford to a Dancing Every Night 8 to 12. Free JParking for Cars. ■ that of mayor. Mr. McCray is in a Plainville, Conn., Oct. 29— Earn­ accident occurred. Reports of this $2.50, Bal. $2.00, $1.50, $1.00; business that takes much of his sermon ‘‘Christ Restored.” German new home they had purchased iu est Phillips, an F.ast Main street kind cause inconvenience to. the Fain. Cir., 73c; Gal. 50c. Plus . time. service at 1:00, sermon “ A Sincere Wethersfield. Mrs. Fallow was a daughter of resident, was trapped in a bed of operator and to the department as tax. Party Lines Will Not Count Protestant.” quicksand on the outskirts of tne Seats at Box Office Now. As far as party lines counting in Gardner and Maria Ball Warren the operator must be requested to St. John’s Church, Rev. H. B. and was born in the Warren home­ town while bunting yesterday and supply additional information. Un­ the coming election it is the feeling Olmstead, pastor. Holy communion stead on South Main street. Besides attracted rescuers by firing his less such information la specific in­ of those talked with that they will at 8 o’clock. Sermon at 10:45, “ The shotgun until his ammunition was count less in the city election in De­ her husband she leaver two sisters, correct accident records for a par­ Print of the Nails.'’ 6:30 evening Mrs. Benjamin Wright of Hartford gone. Phillips was rescued when ho ticular locality are established. cember than they ever have before. prayer and address on “ Enthusi- had sunk above hiyyraist, his shots and Mrs. Naomi Gallup of Hart­ Wrong Engine Numbers The city is not so much in debt, bringing a dozen men to the marsh RSHIS*** ford, and a brother, Charles B. Still another source of confusion having only one bond issue against Rockville Baptist Church, Rev. where be was trapped. the city, but-the new\issue that is Blake Smith, pastor. 10:30 a. m., Warren of Cooper Hill street. TODAY to come is to be against the city sermon, .“ Death a - Principle of Fuheral services will be held to­ TODAY and now there is a feeling that the morrow afternoon at 2:30 at-the Life.” 7:00 religious forum. The CONTINUOtJS old bond issue of $54,000 -should pastor will speak on “ The Unpar­ Church of the Good Shepherd, Hart­ CONTINUOUS have been paid up and not have ford. Burial will be In the Fallow Today STATE 2:15 to 10:30 donable Sin.” 2:15 to 10:30 that and the new issue of from Christian Science Church, 10:45, family plot in the Buckland ceme­ $10C,000 to $175,000 added to it at subject, “ Everlasting Punishment.” tery. and once. St. Josephs Church: Rev. Steph­ ROUGH! TOUGH! WE’RE THE STUFF! The man that will be held re­ en Bartkowski, pastor. Masses at 8 What do we care for Dempsey or Circle sponsible for this, as far as the res­ and 10:30. Tunney? We care more for what Tomorrow WHO-O-PEE! idents of Rockville are concerned, St. Bernards Roman Catholic the people of Manchester think of will have to be a man that can be Church, Rev. George Slnnolt, pas­ our merchandise and the price we t in touch with the different depart- tor. Our Sun masses will be held at ask for it. Folks will talk if you ^ ments and each member of the com­ 8, 9 and 10:30. Devotions will be give them something to talk about. mon council as there were members at 3:30 o’clock. They will also buy H you make It of the council w ^ w e r e not aware Elks Contest Winners an object for them. Prices talk. We of the conditions M d '^e announce­ The winners of the Elks Guess­ sold more njerchandlse Thursday ment of the cost of* the work came ing Contest for Rockville are as than any one day in our thirty to them ns much of a surprise as \ WE*RE ALL follows: 1st, Leonard Dowding; years’ experience as a salesman to the residents who only had the and we were in a smaller store. infovmai.icn that was given to them 2n, Miss Helen Orr; 3rd, Mrst Rose Pressler; 4th, Mrs, Carl' E. Gerich. Smallness doesn’t count nowadays; GAMBLERS at first by The Herald. The judges for the contest were prices and quality talk. Benson’s MAWnTAMiaNEft; If the democrats present a. m t» ATAHE5 CHPZE Who the people of Rockville consln- Thomas Garvin, David L. Hondlow Furniture Company, Home of Good V mower— er will be the strong man to do th«^, afid Frank Keeney. Bedding, 649 Main Street.— ^Adv. work they will have to be ready t(r|*-‘'' ■ Employed in Manchester ondor^e that same man for another John Stevens, formerly connected IN BANKRUPTCY They Called Him “ Lucky Sam McCai ver.” with Wendheiser’s Music Store is New Haven, Conn., Oct. 29.— term Uo the work cannot be done In He Was “Lucky” ! H« Was Lucky in Love, Lucky one year, they feel. To continue now employed as salesman and tun­ The Metal Specialty Company," of And ALSO SONG REEL er of Kemp’s Music House of South 751 Central avenue, Bridgeport, to­ in__But See “We’re All Gamblers” I with the present method o$ taxa­ AND Manchester. day filed a voluntary petition In tion is a iso going lo keep the city YOU’LL LIKE TOMMY’S LATEST! / f i t - 1 \ in debt and cause increases by the • Notes bankruptcy in United States Dis­ Children’s Singing and J/. . necessity of paying higher interest Miss Lora Aborn of River Forest, trict Court here. Liabilities are set rates. The veteran member of the 111., wbo has been spending the past at $15,402 and assets/at $8,958. Dan pin Gontest council, Mr. Herzog, Is not to be a three months with Mrs. W. H. Skin­ candidate for re-election of the ner will return home today. board and from what the general Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Robinson of Talcott avenue are spending a, few days in 'Haverhill, Mass. • AND WED. A. F. Ludwig, local iceman, re­ Spies, Greenings and ceived two freight cars of ice yes- Delicious Apples.- tordnY* v The Mightiest Picture in the History John Bolger of East Main street T H E R IA L T O has purchased a new Chevrolet Cab W. H. Cowles-^ 'rfblet. Cider, Pumpkins and Squash George Simpkins is spending a of the Screen Is Here Now I ‘ Telephone 945 , few days with his sister, Mrs. WH­ Feature Bill TODAY ONLY - T J 'HALLOWE'EN Charles Hutehinson in J. MASQUERADE fc^Xhe Trunk Mystery'' I 1 With 4 C4ti of lhom*4mi$ U U td h RAMON NOVARRO MONDAY NIGHT, OCT. 31 j ! ^^The Baticlit Buster" BROTWOM m a y McAVOY CARMBL MYBIS at the RAINBOW Featuring Buddy Roosevelt FRANCIS X BUSHMAN (Willimantic-Hartford State Road) ALSO BILL TASILLO’S ORCHESTRA' THIRD AND FOURTH CHAPTERS OF “FIGHTING FOR FAME” Prizes for Prettiest and Moc!; ^ COMEDY CONTINUOUS PROGRAM NEWS Comical tostum fe. ^' t A'Riot of Fun for Everyone. Make Reservations Now for Your Hallowe’en Party at the Extra! Extra! Extra! RAINBOW INN SUNDAY and MONDAY Special Menus for Hallowe’en Night.

I ! > DORA FILM Ht.i;l Presents The GreatDramatic Star LEDA GYS in

K Indti hy iht Nobody’s Children h t4 t^ IN TEN PARTS perithhit— Your Community Center thrf w*nl 44 A gripping picture full of '•tU tndUiily 44t Your Fire Department protects prop­ Did you enjoy the .heart throbs and human “White Sister” ? Did La celebre artisto erty. emotions — marvelous in drammtica italiana You will gasp at the you like “ Over the GREAT CIRCUS Hill” ? Then you will acting and superb in direc­ Your Police Department protects life. LEDA GYS You will marvel at the be thrilled by CHARIOT RACE tion and photography. che per la sua Your Community Center. protects NOBODY’S One of the greatest pic­ 'gioventue bellezza You will cheer the Childhood, Manhood and Woman­ tures ever produced star­ e stata in tutto il SEA FIGHT hood. . CHILDREN mondo chiamata la You will tingle at the Acclaimed better ring. LEDA GYS, Europe’s bella tra le belle. LOVE ROMANCE Give your moral support to ALL' by the public and You will thrill at the critics! most beautiful and talented GALLEY SCENES THREE of these powerful local actress. organizations for the public good. You’ll Go Wild Over this Mastodonic Screen Epic!

STUPENDOUS! AWE-INSPIRING! MAGNIFICENT^ 3— SHOWS DAILY —3 ADMISSION MAT. 2j15. e v e . 6 :45 and 8 ;45 MATINEE, ALL S E A T S ...... JJ® MANCHESTER COMMUNITY CLUB * TITLES ARE WRITTEN IN ENGUSH AND ITALUN. EVENING ...... 35c and 50c ADMISSION 10c, 20c,'30c SUNDAY NIGHT, 2 Shows, 6 and 8 COMEDY AND NEWS.

mi. ♦ MANC^ffiSTER (C6n N.) OTENTNG HERALDi 3AT®J5AY. ^

essayB ahqut 'pertonal liberty’ (to oopamlt fuicido and drag all your loved oaes into the gutter behind- Rev. J. S. Stuart Neill - yopj, nor do anything to bring Sunday, October ' 30 th ^Twen­ The Evening Herald back a legalized liquor traffic, with tieth Sunday after Trinity: all its • fapilllar corruption of gov- vices as followst ernme^ and spread of poverty, dis­ 9:30 a. m.— Church school. ease. neglect, crime, insanity, con­ Men's Bible class. Sunday School Lessons fusion and failure.” 10:45 a. m.— ^Morning prayer by WilBam T, EHis." !^ter all has been said and writ­ and sermon. Sermon topic: “ Cir­ ten-'-upon the world-wide problem Bur Every Age, Creed and Natipn^ty. SOUTH METHODIST EPISCOPAL cumspection” . . „ e, o f’etrong drtnk, the first and final CENTER CONGREGATIONAL 3:00 p. m.— Highland Park Sun­ ^4lctmeht of it is that it is a des- Rev. Wataon Woodrulf ^ Rev., Joseph Cooper day school. . pdl|er of man; it mars the handi­ Morning Worship at 10:45 a. m. 5:30 a. m.— Sunday Bible School. 7:00 p. m.— ^Evening prayer and work of God; it hurts those- whom The sennon will be by the pastor, 10:30— Ministry of the Chime. sermon. Sermon topic — They Christ died to help; it runs counter ‘ Rev. Watson Woodruff. He will 10:4*)— ^Morjjing worship. Would Not Come.” to the Divine law of love: take as his subject “ Jesus, the Hu­ Organ Prelude “ Adoration” Monday, 7:30 p- m.— Girls F A R M TURNED PROPHET SETS man.” The following music will be Borowski Friendly society. „ . , s e v e n SENTBirCE' SERMONS'^ rendered: Processional Hymn Tuesdays Nov. 1st.— ^All Saints Prelude. Andante Rellgloso Hascall Apostles' Creed % Day.__10:00 a. m.— Holy Com­ No one is useless in the world Anthem, “ Turn Ye Even To Me” Harker Anti phonal Sentences ...... Tallis munion. [who lightens the burdens of it for Pastoral Prayer, Choral Response Wednesday, 7:30 p. m.— Boy any one else.— Charles Dlckeps. Hymn— S 43 Hoyt Scouts meeting. Anthem, “ Then Shall the King Say Anthem “ Were You There' ❖ deemed'a sign of lack of common Lway , Allen Thursday, 2:30 p. m.— Ladles The International Sunday '^culture not to know the great Weak men wait for opportuni­ Burleigh Guild meeting. Women who have ties; strong men make them.— Postlude. Melodies from “ The New Responsive Reading School Lesson for October SO is prophets of the Old Testament. Symphony” ...... Schubert Thank Offering Envelopes please “ Amos Denounces Sin”— Amos Later Israel heyer produced an­ Marden. A True Story-^-Part 1 Church School> 9: 30. Classes for Gloria Patri bring them to church services, on other. Since the coming of Christj (It’s mighty hard fer some folks t’ .realize that thw’s a Bible Reading or before Sunday, October 30th, 2:4— 3:15. if we would all ages. ^ ^ « uri the Jews have never had a grent For we must share, o’ nfrates operatin’ under the name o’ ftunitiire stoi«s. We, Offertory Anthem ...... Noble and place them on the Alms Basin. prophet. For that matter, Chris-1 keep, _ Men's League, 9^30— Leader Mr. Children's Story “ Outside the knoxHtTan’^ e kn

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Manchester (conn.) evening h e r a l d , sato rd ay, October 29^ I9gy. rA T A G E T O X m

every decency of life to the sole ever to become a really general' end of accumulating money. thing. We continue of the opinion that It is all very well to lay out WASHINGTON LETTER the kind of rebuke to youthful tienlng Utralfc landing fields, as many as possi­ miserliness and averlce which For Today and ble; but there are great areas of Magistrate Farrell administered the earth entirely suitable for the ^.throat as a “ lesson.” He has since thb oa was an infinitely better thing in By RODNEY BUTCHER Fo4nfi*d by Blwpod ii Bl». occupancy of mtmkind, where-there 1 been known as “ Castor Oil Col- Oct. 1« loSl its effect on society than the inter­ can be no landing fields— it may Washington".— Here In the effete Mns.” , Every Bvenln* Bzeept Sunteya ^n« ference of those who sympathize “ They raise hell with bankers even prove a mighty job to find east, where almost anyone from who try to foreclose on farmers, ° Enter?-’. »*- the Poet Offlce et Mao- place for one, that will amount to with such qualities in a boy. j west of Chicago is regarded as a e'lieaier. as Second Glass Uall Matter. radical, many persons regard Sen­ says a man who knows Sheridan SUBSGKIPTION RATES: By UaU anything, in Manchester; and there county and admires its people. six dollare a; year, etxty eente a are any number of places less fa­ ator Burton K. Wheeler ol Monta­ month for ahorter parioda. na as a radical who will 'bear y vorably situated for aviation trans­ By carrier, eighteen cer.te a wee*. .t2/N ew '% ito watching. The county sheriff has a splend­ Single ooplea. three centa. port than this town. Aviation will Especially here in the smug na­ id reputation for catching border SPECIAL AXIVEIITISINQ REPRE­ fully come into its own only when tional capital, it is felt that if rum-runners, but he is hard on SENTATIVE. Hamliton-De W w n Ino.. ?86 Madison Avenue, New xor* it is possible- for a plane to take % 4 P a j r i s < ^ Wheeler isn’t a radical there isn t would-be farm-hands who don’t and 61» North Michigan Avenue. to the air not only in any town but one in the Senate. ■ carry the red card of the I. W. W, Chicago. Paris, Oct. 29.— After the con­ But out in Montana, one learns Incidentally, some of the big farm­ The Manchester »»•“ *«* in almost any part of any town. fusion of learning street names has with astonishment, Wheeler is be- ers in Montana prefer I. W. W. on sale In New Tork City at Scbulta s It is for that reason that the News Stand. BIxth Avenue and «n d worn off. After the eyes have grown ing panned as a reactionary. Some j .^orj^ers, insisting that although Street and tXnd. Street entrance ol perpendicular jilane is certain, soon­ accustomed to the romance of build­ of- the voters out there are much | demand reasonable hours and prand Central Station. er or later, to be so developed that ings and the color ol sidewalk cafe more radical than Wheeler and if .^aggg they aren’t as shiftless as j A r. “International News ienrlce b u the crowds. After the first attack of 2000 YDS. after it goes up it can also go there were enough of them, as the ordinary non-union hand exclusive rights to use for republloa- heartburn from over indulgence in there aren’t, Wheeler might be In pientywood they have tion In ahy form all news dlapatohM along. Whatever we acutely need in credited to or not otherwise oreolu rich foods has been conquered and defeated in his campaign for re- erected a Farmer-Labor temple, ed in this paper. It Is also nxoluelvely the way of mechanical Invention, you’ve managed somehow to un­ election next year. which is a community affair where entitled to use for repulnloatlon all scramble the various Louies, the local or undated news publlahed we shall get. The day of “ can’t” The anti-Wheeler feeling centers are held all county events .from herein.** belongs in the past. Henry’s, Maries, Joans, Napoleons in Sheridan* county, in the ex­ dances and ladies’ aid meetings and such. After you’ve managed treme northeast section of Mon­ to prize fights. The Krazy Kats SATURDAY. OCT. 29, 1927. to make a taxicab driver understand BEAL PREPAREDNESS tana, along the Canadian border (an orchestra) plays for dancing. the directions you give him and IPs and North Dakota. Are the Bolsheviks of Moscow New curtains in various weaves In sharp contrast to the gran­ about time to go home— several Experts say that you can’t find a elated when Chinese peasant ^ Regular 65c to $1*75 values in and styles have just arrived and many THE KNAPP CASE tonne, many dropped patterns and diose but unmeaning outcry for a things begin to hit you square in more radical section in the country Communists win military victory are marked special for two days. A No small *boy with his blouse the eye. Or, at least, they did me. than Sheridan county. The folks Not a bit morq than the good folk short lengths included, special Priced huge navy, from people who have few items are listed here. stuffed with apples thrust upon him scarcely the vaguest idea of how. First was the failure to gnd chil­ out there boast of It, too. And it s of Sheridan county. The Produc­ while they last, yard ...... 39c dren at play. Only the very young by a strange bogey man with horse­ why or when such a means of de­ peculiar in more ways than that. ers News JOt Pientywood. wWch have a chance to play- Qnce they By electing farmer-labor county “ goes into every home in the The latest in ruffled curtains hav­ hair whiskers and sm ^e coming defense could ever be employed, have reached the r.ge of 10 or 12 White dotted curtains, 2 1-4 yards tickets each year, these radicals county,” banners the report In ing 10 inch colored skirts at bottom out of his eyes ever p re^ ted a less is the proposition of Governor Rob­ youngsters go'to work. Aboard ship control the county. From all re­ an eight-column headline and you long, made of good quality marqui­ the shining of brass' railings and "Of each. Priced spwially for Satur­ convincing picture of Injured inno­ inson of Delaware, Who urges the ports they do a good job of run­ can’t find in that weekly, more sette. Specially priced Saturday and cence than the lady who, as secre­ ijitensive fortification of the pres-j the packing of steamer rugs was ning it. They drove a small-time than two or threqother items of day ond Monday, p a ir ...... $3.49- entrusted to youths not ready lor Monday, p a ir ...... 95c tary ol state, bossed the taking of ent quarantine station at Lewes, crooked regime out of office when outside news. The Producers long pants. In the Paris highways News receives the services of the llie million dollar census of the they stepped In. Delaware Breakwater, and the es­ the delivery kids and the followers Sheridan is altogether a farm Federated Press, which serves Empire state. , tablishment there of a great avia­ of odd trades were lads you’d like county and is run in the interests radical labor news to Socialist WATKl NS BROTHERS. Inc, But even if Mrs. Knapp did put tion outpost for the protection of to have met on a sand lot kicking of the farmer. The state law pre­ or Communist or Labor papers. It around footballs. But the lads of CRAWFORD AND CHAMBERS RANGES all the relatives she could scrape the mid-Atlantic coast and of a vents any change in the y delivers horrendous blasts at Paris know nothing of fdbtball or county government, but the Sheri- Montanas two “ reactionary sen­ up on the census payroll, and if she vitally important strategic area ol .. And somehow I grew dandites don’t mind that. They ators, Wheeler and Tom Walsh, ,did endorse their checks and’ turn lying Inland and behind it. lonesome for the sound of childish have just the kind of a govern­ accusing Wheeler of being the them over to a Syracuse store In Sue# an outpost, the' Delaware voices and the scurry ol young feet ment they want. hireling of the Anaconda Copper payment for many and luxurious governor points out, would not only about the pavements. Children grow Go', and Walsh the servant of personal purchases, and if she did protect the Important cities of old fast in Paris. The dominant force in Sheridan Standard Oil. run the business of census taking Philadelphia, Washington, Balti­ county is the United Farmers, It prints an old photo of Walsh And then, one day, to your sur­ a secret agrarian organization more and 'Wilmington, with their with the caption, “ The famous as if it were a charity pieuic gotten prise, you are confidentially in­ which has also made headway In walrus moustache, worn by the lup lor'her bwh',particular benefit populations, but also the navy formed that America must be a very ■Washington state, Minnesota and senior senator before he met Mrs. More than one-fifth of the mefii-[ we insist that there is in the rather yards at League Island and Wash­ naughty place. A very wicked place, North Dakota. This group is or­ Borden Harrlman. Senator Walsh, bers of trade unions in Austria are squalid circumstances no slightest ington, the munitions production in fact. You gasp and ask how come ganized both for economic and po­ like Samson of old, has lost much women. Well, you are told, your young reflection on “ the woman in poll plants at Baldwin^,' Midvale, Beth­ litical action. Its numbers and of his political virility since Its American women, your girls and membership lists are kept secret edges were shorn.” tics” any more than there is refleo- lehem and Sparrows Point, but the your grown- women are so very Ostrinsky and when it endorses a candidate itloh on any decent Manchester great powder and high explosives very bold and unconventional and for office the fact is kept secret so \ Sheridan divides its vote in the *male voter in the circupstances ol plants of the Duponts, the chemical openly naughty. You reply there that if perchance it takes a politi­ Insurance must be some mistake. You insist primaries between the Republican Ihe Teapot Dome lease. warfare plants at Baltimore and cal licking the. fact remains un­ that it’s the Paris girls who are known. Meanwhile, It arranges conservative ticket and the Farm­ In fact, there is in this case, 11 other factories'producing war ma er-Labor radical ticket. It knows Sdcvifilcc Sdte bold and unconventional and with local merchants to give all Of AU Kinds you care to twist it about a bit, a terials. naughty. card-carrying members a discount its political pnions, and wastes no time when Democratic candidates V- rather special support of the theory This is constructive defense Your French friend shrinks Into when they come to town for pur­ ithat women have as much Inherent planning that is worthy of respect­ his shell. No, he comes back’.. . . . up for state-wide vote appear on the ticket. Wheeler, for instance, rig'ht in politics as men. The con­ ful consideration. If the real desire do not the American girls come Every store in Plerttywood, the boldly and brazenly to Europe all got 17 votes in the last senatorial Carney Agency High Grade trary belief has been bplstered by of the preparedness advocates is county seat of Sheridan, is said to by themselves and - go boldly and grant such a discount. In this way, primary and then carried the contentions that -fromen shouldn’t to make the United States impreg­ county by a majority of more than brazenly about the streets? Uo not members are guaranteed savings JOHN P. CARNEY be in politics because they are es­ nable to attack on the Atlantic the American girls sit at the aide- amounting to more than the mem-- 800 votes! sentially different from men in coast, then there is mighty little walk cafes and brazenly drink bership dues. Often the council Next November it probably will Room 4, Orford Block their temperamental equipments. doubt that, for a tiny fraction of straight whisky and gin? Do they steps in and persuades a banker to vote against Wheeler, the “ feac- tionary.” Radicals in Butte, Great This Knapp case goes a consider­ not take out their cigarets and hold off on a mortgage foreclosure the cost of a great cruiser fleet, brazenly smoke them in public? No Falls and elsewhere may join In able distance toward knocking that there could be gathered and main- against a farmer. FOR A THOROUGH decent, self-respecting French girl When a court ruled that a Sheri­ the anti-Wheeler movement, but notion galley-west. -Mrs. Knapp .talned 'at'-Cape Henlopen an air would dare do that. dan county mortgage-holder was many of Wheeler’s friends believe Oak Street didn’t do a single thing that was navy of such capacity for destroy­ And so, you find, that morals and that this will be much more than SClENTffie EXAMINATION entitled to a portion of the debt­ f pot stuffed and mounted long long ing siifface warships that no fleet manners are all matters of where or’s crop, a crowd of boys went offset by the attraction of reas­ 0 Regardless o f you happen to be and what the cus­ sured conservatives to his banner. of your eyes and properly fitted Everything Must ago in the museum of political his- in the world could- approach with­ right out to the debtor s ^^.rm, toms of the other fellow happen to Mere progressives will all vote, for glasses ■tory— years and years before any in striking distance of those shores. ^threshed his crop and hauled it th e ’Price. ; ; ^ be- You’ve always known this, but away and sold it before the court Wheeler. ' ■ ■' " See woman had even a vote, let alone And it is highly probable that*.,by now you come face to face with it. could enforce the decree. An ex- There is a chance that radical Come In and Convinced. i public o'fflce. She registered abso­ the establishment of not more than sheriff, sent by a court with pap^ rule” in Sheridan county may be WALTER OLIVER lutely true to type as a cheap, eight or ten such fortified aviation There really is not use arguing. ers containing bad tidings to^ a upset, Sheridan has many Danish farmers, most of them religious, grafting political sap-head— if she centers throughout our entire coast I tried it and my French friend straitened farmer, was seized Optometrist / walked to a news stand and bought and they are said to believe the did all these things with which she line we should be rendered as sale and threatened with a noose. After 915 Main Street So. Manchester | a Berlin and a French magazine a promise not to return, a pint or farmer-laborites are atheists or charged;—exactly like a thou­ from invasion by any sea as if this Tel. 89-S. devoted to the publication of pic­ castor oil was poured down bis something. a d v e r t i s e IN THE HERALD—IT PAYS sand cheap grafting political sap- nation were alone in the world tures of undressed girlies. Ninety Honrs 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. heads of the male persuasion be­ per cent of the photos were of Mack cannot understand American girls it is generally by family arrange­ Sennett bathing girls and other ment and not by choice. Sho thinks fore her. CONSIDERATE movie beauties in various stages of having become accustomed to perhaps, it is by choice. And so It always made us smile to be “ Elmer Gantry” stirred up a fine nudity. strong liquor through prohibition told that women in politics would cocktail parties. No defense would French family life Is strict and row but we doubt if it ever provid­ “ See,” he cried, waving the evi­ decorous, while our American life make the country pure and the po­ dence. “ Do you deny these are seem convincing. ed as legitimately excellent ground is something to he shuddered at. litical game noble. But it also made American girls Do you deny that ivhcit you^ve for intellectual discussion as will There is, as a matter of fact, no And there you are. us mad to be told that she didn’t they go about like this?” GILBERT SWAN the action of its dramatist, Bayard But what was the use? He would more sheltered girl in the world have exactly'the sam^’ rights as- Veiller,-in completing a stage ver never have understood. I could have than the French girl of respectable well ,as exactly tli^^ame qualifica­ slon of Sinclair Lewis’ bile stirring^ told him that in America there are family— unless it’s the Spanish girl. tions for self-government as men. novel and then tearing up the man­ scores of magazines displaying por­ She is kept in a family group and V V > may meet only those men the DAILY ALMANAC It seems to us that the case of Mrs uscript and returning the ad­ traits of undressed French girlies. Knapp supports both positions The interesting thing is that Eu­ family brings in and endorses. She Philadelphia chartered, 1701. vance payment, simply because he rope cannot get accustomed to our cannot go abroad alone and to go Women are entitled to every civil United States troops under Col. feared the play would cause bitter traveling American girls. They can­ with several other girls is just as C h rysler "6 2 ” Features right, including the ballot vote and J. Q. Davis occupy Sitka, Alaska, feelings. •* not understand girls being allowed bad. Her escort must have the of Perfoihnance,^ Quality the right to hold office, - for the to leave home unescorted to roam family O. K- and when she marries 1*867. Great New Chrysler "62” at n095 gives Mr. 'Veiller is no repentant sin­ and Long Life-- very sufficient reason that, politi­ ner. It is no'pang of conscience the far places of the world. They cally, they are precisely like men— you more in performance, beauty, com ­ that causes him to scrap six 1. Slx.CyUnder Enidne, 54 Horsepower not a whit better,. , nor a. whit months’ work and chuck over a Did Someone Say “There Ain’t No Such Animal?” 2. 7-l>fearing Cra^slmft, inter- fort, safety and long life than cars of worse, in any way. changeable sh im ^ *??f?P** „ good many thousand dollars. He 3. 62 andmoreexcepdonMMUeeanHour other makes costing many hundreds of declares “ Elmer Gantry” is a fine 4. ’Typical Chrysler Acealarallo^ dollars more. book and quite modestly states 5. Impulse Neutralizer . that he had made a good play of 6. Weibed Crankcase Constmetion Through Standardized Quality Chrysler STRAIGHT-UP PLANES 7i, Ventilated Crankcase Announcement of the tact that it. But he believes that there are • 8: Invar Steel Strut , offers you in the "62” a so many people who are either too o. Special Eiigine Manifpl^ng _j F. Trubee Davison, assistant sec­ 10. t^ S ^ ve’^^e of Cylinder Head and ciGmhinadon of' fineniar features, whith retary of war in charge of aviation, narrow-minded or too timorous to Combusdon Chainber previously cost several hundred dollars is watching with keen interest the face facts without yrrithing that it, 11. ^Ichroine Valves development by the Curtiss com­ would be a mere Infliction of ex­ 12. OU Filter more even in a Chrysler and which ^ e treme mental anguish on a large pany of the perpendicular airplane 1^ ^ eram i^ c Heat Control still not available in any other make un^ proportion of the populace to put Is accompanied by the statement \ 15. NUnifbld Heat COTtrol. , Iffy you pay very much more than ^1095. that it is not believed that the per­ “ Gantry” on the stage. 16. Cellular Type Radla^ This is a brand new kind of 17. Full Pressure Oiling System pendicular will ever replace the See the Great New Chrysler "62,” Ride present type of plane, though It is charity-—expensive to indulge In considered as having “ great possi­ apd altogether novel. If 'Veiller had ^ * Wk Balanced Front Wheels in it. Test it in any way you choose. bilities for observatioiX/ purposes.* gone ahead with his stage “ Gan­ 21. Pivotal S tce^ You will then readily understand the try” we wonder how many of the 22. 4-wheel Hydraulic g r ^ es It Is a peculiarity of the succeed­ 23. High Carbon Sted . reason for its most sensationri public ing generations of mechanlca indignant would l\ave refrained 24. Specially-designed Rear A de for from calling him names because preference. geniuses that, like the powerful in­ 25 LeveUz^ c^ftont and Rear brings dividual of whom every country they might hurt his feelings. 27. FedcoTheft-pro^Numbering System village boasts, they “ don’t know New "6 2 " Prices—Touring Car, 8109ft t h .At c a r e f u l b o y 28. Electric Gasoline Oaun a,. , their own strength.” From! a wholly ^ HeadUmp Control «Steertog Wheel «, $1125; 2-door Seda^ different cause from that of unin­ As might have been anticipated, Im gmat) S117S; Coupe («wm rum ble scat), $1245; the case of the nineteen-year-old 30. Narrow Corner Pilurs aTc S J i m s , swoiw 8i29sg^ o.^ formed skepticism they are given 31. Adjustable Steering Wheel Detroit^ SuNscS to currenS F edy^ egeiee tax. to believing that limitations in cer­ boy James Moore, whom a New It &det Visoc ' ^ , York magistrate sentenced to a tain lines of invention ihave been payments. reached, only to have that belief term In the workhouse for sleeping dissipated by those who follow dl In subway trains when he held one rectly in their footsteps. The ig­ Job that paid him ?35 a week and another which provided him with norant skeptic declares that this • ChryslerSmiwmcwofJ^ gMM cost on all other models. or that thing can’t be done, because his meals, has raised a deal of bobr 40. Attractive Color Cootbiwations In „101S Great Variety // he knows nothing at all. The me bery. A number of persons to //. chanical expert decides tha^ the whom young Moore’s Idea of thrift same thing can’t be done because appear to appeal powerfully have he has plumbed the resources of protested at his sentence and a his science and found them lack group of "Wall street men’’ have ing for the achievement. But new supplied him with a lawyer who resources develop; and the thing has appealed the case to the Court that couldn’t be done is done. of Special Sessions. To the layman who suffers no James, the boy plncbpenny. Is handicap of expert knowledge being to no small degree lionized His brag In court that he saved GEORGE S. SMITH m echpics nothing seems more cer tain tlran that, eventually, the per substantially all bis earnings and pendicplar pliiBB Fill supercede the was going to be a riqb. man seims 3)0 B issell S ti, P hone S60-S Se. Manchester “ running start” tjsjpe. Simply be­ to tickle a good many Individuals ' aC9hi cause it is absolutely necessary that who find it an admirable thing to It shall, if the use of the air is go dirty and ragged and dodge M AN CH £STEK ISVISNING AERAI-P, SATURDAY, OCTrOBBR 5 9 , . CONCORDIA >tJYHBRAN monitor Qlub campaign. They will PICK fl.OOO FOR JURY DUTY subaojihe. generous sums. The Japanese government is choosing 6.000 persons to be eligi­ Winter DRIVE COM IHEE “ Now the public at large is asked: . -H. to contribute.-to the Community ble as jurors for the jury trial sys­ Qlub cainp^gn. lA committee tem scheduled to go into operation in October next year. About 3,000 Sunday school— 9 a. m. worker will visit you during the English Sealing Off The HOLDS SESSION next few days. Give him or her a will be selected for Tokyo and the German sertiftesL^l l '^ welcome and contribute as feener- rest from the five largest cities in ously tp the campaign fund as you the nation. Selection ih by lottery. Monday, can. Hallowe’en part^. , Community Club Executive “ Remember: The Manchester, Tuesday, ,7 :-30 . p; m—rTpsfh^, Community club is devoted whole­ PEDESTRIANS DEMAND ROADS mSdtihg.^ ‘K No White Collar heartedly to the welfare of the Pedestrians in England are up 'Wednesday, 6:3 0—iWllKng^W??^'" ers; 8 p.'m,‘*Chtirch BbiW Committee Meets and boys and girls of the town. The in arras because the authorities per­ club is helping to build character sist in widening and Improving the Thursday, <$>time. Nothing of the kind had ever' wallop to put some of those seals as well as .to provide;recreation. roads solely for the- benefit of mo- Aid society; .S^ior'/chgdri'f-^ ■ been dreamed of. out’ Mr. Batten said' "But I Forms Plans. When does the boy or girl,■‘man, toris'ts. They insist tl^t, some of Friday, 7.i;i0r^3Sfegliife” 8 Tom Batton, For 50 Years a “ We didn’t use rifles. We used had a good wallop in those days or woman, hatch mischief? . It is the good, old-fashioned roads be p. m.. Young People’s: socieityi.ir ' clubs. And we started and flnish- and I think Fe all could have during their ^leisure time, not when left f

J- A

1.5 : r '■

•. ,1 . -n • .

Ottt of Flood De the Red Cross maintains contact One of the striking features about the flood with the men still in the armed was the world-wiflt forces, whether at home or on for­ Red Cross Backed by Nation’s Will to Help, sympathy engendMtM eign posih. . by the flood suffeters. First Aid Taught Restoring Mississippi Valley— Flood as attested by messages Through its First Aid and Life of condoleuce and of­ Saving Service, the Red Cross is Sufferers on Home Acres. fers of material aid developlOg a potent force against which poured into Na­ the annual accident toll in Amer­ tional Headquartei;? of ica, whether in industrial life, or the Red Cross from is a s t e r relief on a gigantic scale never before wit­ the recreations at the beach. In nearly every part of the past year, 19.000 completed the D nessed in this country was the outstanding accom­ the world. A partial Red Cross course in First AM, plishment of the American Red Cross in the past ye^^. list of these sympnthl*- while 81,000 were quallfled in water Surpassing in its destructiveness was the Mississippi flood. ers would show that safety and life saving, both groups they ranged from Can- passing rigid qualiflcatlon tests un­ Sweeping a thousand miles through the great valley, inun­ der Red Cross supervision. Many dating 20,000 square miles of the richest farming land, others were taught in both sciences jvnd are on the road to qualiflcatlon. submerging vast areas in eight states, tendering nearly Bequests for Flrat Aid instruc­ three-quarters of a million people dependent, it challeng- tion are received by the Red C r^s ed the resourcefulness of the,great relief agency. Yet the from factories, gas and electric companies. State police and munlcl- challenge was met. i fv,« pal fire and poUce departments, and Confident of the support , of the whole people, the various other Industrial groups, American Red Cross mustered its trained forces, drew to where its value is decidedly prac- itself the proffered resources of the Federal Government UcaL Many of these establlshmente now maintain trained crews and and the services of hundreds of its members in the supervisors in First Aid, this per­ RED CROSS CAMP IN GREENWOOD/ sonnel being distributed at ^ ^ te- stricken States, and threw ^ MISS. WHERE HUNDREDS OF ...... the health experts of the Red Cross gic points in the shops and offices; this practical army of mercy and co-operating agencies super­ REFUGEES certain ones being detailed with against the common enemy. vised a "clean-up” of the areas new­ LIVED each shift, so that ho matter when The whole nation w ^ alive ly. emerged from the flood. In the an accident might occur, an expert to the danger and of the latter work, houses were scrubbed will be ready at the scene. Each with soap and water to rid them of year sees new thousands of tralnM needs of the people in the disease-bearing refuse left by the men and women added to this valu­ danger zone. With a prompt­ flood; water supplies were dis|n- able group whose members are to ness that was unprecedent­ i:eTcted, animal carcasses destroyed, be found everywhere in the coun­ and wreckage cleared. Inoculations try. ed every part of the country were completed, and incipient epi­ Railroads are enthusiastic dev­ responded to the appeal for demics watched for. otees of First Aid training, and relief funds—placing in the With the passing of the emergen- a feature of the training program each year is the railroad First Aid hands of the Red CroM near­ Car, with its Red Cross instruction ly seventeeh million dollars. force aboard, which covers thou­ Indicating the Immensity of'the sands of miles, visiting shops and task was the fact that nearly 1,000 plants along the way; each stop large river boats, and -an uiltDld being instrumental in new groups becoming interested in the beneflta number of small auxiliary craft RED CROSS were required to Insure the safety NURSES IN A ■ of this instruction- Annnally among • of the populations In the flood xone. FLOOD FIRST the men and women receiving Collaborating In this rescue wonk: a id t e n t awards for unusual achievement in were airplanes from the Army and saving life, are those who have Navy, radio crews and apparatus. learned Red Cross First Aid, and Navy and Coast Guard craft of vari­ applied their knowledge at some ous sorts, all working under the crucial momenL Red Cross. Aircraft searched over Many similar tokens go to those the unnatural lakes and submerged who have qualified in .tiie Red Crose miles of trees and housetops, lo­ PS course in Life Saving and water cating marooned refugees, guiding safety. The annual toll of drown- ings is a standing challenge to the f l country, which the Red Cross en­ VSfAITING FOR. THE deavors to meet by training new n e x t f e e d in a thousands each year In scientific REFUGEE CAMP water rescue methods. The foct that “ graduates” of this system of training perform volunteer aerrlce at beaches, swimming pools, and YOUTHFUL REFUGEES AT A CAMP TABLE

V

ALL BUT TREE TOPS AND ROOF UNDER WATER /i IN THIS MISSISSIPPI SCENE

'^THE' r e d ' CROSS ada to Cuba, in­ resorts all through the year, tM* , NURSE service aggregating thousanda of CHANGES cluding Great TRANSPORT Britain, Japan. hours, adds to the value of tite DISABLED EX-SERVICE MEN FIND A FRIEND IN THE RED CROSS W ORKER China, Chile. training where the country la coa* Peru. Panafia. cerned. During’ the height of the Guatemala, Haiti. outdoor season, rescues by life* loinbus, Ky., which was moved bod­ gusrds, many of them trained by rescue boats, watching the crum­ cy stage of the disaster, the Red Santo Domingo, Cross launched Us rehabilitation ily to a new site halt a mile from Colombia, Ge^ the Red Cross, are frequent. bling levees for new breaks; the where it has stood for more than a latter being the signal for radio work, an invariable part of the dis­ many, France and Closely allied to health work la aster relief service of the organlxa- century; Arjtansas City, Ark., wh'.ch many others. the Red Cross nutrition Instruction, crews to summon contingents' of was simply strewn about by the rescue crews to the threatened Uon. The great mlgratlou.of thoq-. sissippi flood, is the service of Red Service of the American Red or the science of choosing foods sands started once more, this time swlHing flood; And Melville, La., currences marked the year. In Cross abroad is always done in the for health. This was taught to IS,* point, ready to take off new popu­ which had to be excavated from un­ Cross nurses. For the whole disas­ homeward. As each family left a fact reports to date indicate that name o^ the American people, as 000 adults and to 115,000 school lations for the concentration camps. der heavy deposits of mud left by more people have required assist­ ter operation, a total of 329 nurses Concentration camps were ordered camp, the Red Cross supplied ra­ served in the flood zone, working in when it extended the arm of mercy children in the past fiscal year. the current. * ance the past year from the Red set op, food was requisitioned, and tions for the readjustment period camp hospitals, traversing the dev­ llrom the scene of the Florida storm During that period, 14 Staten Throughout the past summer, Cross than in any similar period appeals for help were sent ra­ which would follow until the family astated area by boat, on foot, on across to Cuba, struck by a similar werd given from one, to 10 pro­ veteren Red Cross administrators of the country’s history- dio; airplanes rushed food, sand­ could become self-supporting again. horseback, or over flooded country calamity; and more recently when grams of nutrition Instruction in remained in the flood zone, direct­ bags, medical supplies, doctors, and They ^were given simple household Destructive as the Mississippi where they shared the hazards of National Headquarters cabled Its each State, through Red Cross nu­ ing the work of the State and coun­ relief workers when other t^an8po^ effects to replace similaV necessi­ flood proved, the record snows that the men relief workers. No major offer of assistance to the German tritionists while reports show that ty Red cross committees which Red Cross when a flobd in Germany tatlon failed. It was relief work in ties destroyed in the flood; feed for tornadoes headed the list of disas­ disaster of recent years has struck in 38 SUtea nutrition Instruction were extending rehabilitation aid a peace-time catastrophe, but it re­ the livestock was .donated. Where ters numerically, 26 being listed, the country that they have not been played havoc, even .while the Mle- was given either through the Red to the stricken States. In some sec­ sembled war in the mingling of the taffiily was de^ndent on such with 24 floods coming second, and ready, and have rendered service, sissippl was raging for nearly a Cross nutritionist or through v<^ tions this assistance must be car­ thousand miles through our own science and rough-and-ready meas­ animals, farm stock lost In the flood fires in 23 communities. 9 hurri­ it was the same in Florida, the sec­ unteer-enrolled Red Cross dietitian- ried ipto the winter, so completely country. Services such as these ures with which itjivas carried on. was replaced by the Red CroM. All canes; and a miscellaneous series ond great disaster the past fiscal instructors. Tfie degree of Inte^ families, farm animals, household devastated are they. of mine explosions, hail storms, were frequently recalled by various Approximately 149 camps and year. eqt In this subject .has been demon* goods and supplies, were transport­ Tremendous as this one task ha.s foreign sympathizers with our own concentration points sheltered the train wrecks, and disease epidem­ strated over a wide field, hut as the ed by the Red Cross to the home proven, it was only one ol 91 disas­ ics making up the total. Enrolled under the Red. Cross flood victims. bulk of those reached are In ths refugees brought out of overflowed Foreign contact through the Red acres. In many cases the migratton ters in the United States during the - The* Mls^ssippi flood and the more than 44,000 qualified nurses school rooms It Is espedally Inter* farms, swamped towns, out of tree Cross is not confined to occasions was by boAt, just as the people had past fiscal year In which the Red Florida hurricane of September, are constantly at the country’s call, estlog to note the manner Ih which tops and off of levee remnants. In of distress, since more than 5,000,- travhled to camp, because in many Cross extended relief. These dis­ 1926^ are the outstanding disaster though they may be quietly fol­ It spreads from the school to the these camps the Red Cross cared 000 school children in the United areas the water drained off very asters were scattered through 25 relief operations which the Red lowing their regular duties. On ac­ community. Teachers, and asaoda* for 330,000 refugees, and for other States enrolled In the Junior Red slowly, leaving roads impassible or States; Hard as it is to grasp, while Cross conducted 'the past fiscal tive duty throughout the. past year. thousands in the upper stories of Cross, are closely identified with tlons of parents and teachets,' b^ non-existent for miles. the Red Cross was matching every year. In Florida the organization 806 Red Cross Public Health sides community organtfattoas* houses, and similar refuge points, similar foreign groups of Juniors Many refugees had no homes left resource at its command against expended nearly $4,500,000 for the aufses were on duty In every part bringing the total assisted by the In most of the countries of the have co-operated in this respect* to return to, others had only the the Mississippi flood. 12 other ca­ relief of approximately 40,000 vic­ of the country, assisting to main organization to 607.236 people. Be world, maintaining bonds of friend­ with the result |hat the subject has remnants of homes and farm build­ lamities occurred at the same time tims during a relief and rehabilita­ tain community health, working un­ asides this vast army of sufferers, ship through mutual helpfulness to been taught to maqy sucltgroups. the Red Cross found itself' with ings. The Red Cross supplied ap in other parts of the country, and tion period covering five months. der local'Red Cross chapters. Re In the past yea» nverage of the organization was still able to lated to this work Is Red Cross in each other. 200.000 bead of stock to shelter and proximately 5,009 homes of moder­ To date the Red Cross has given 15.00U individuals a mouth, Includ* furnish relief to these also, in the structlon in Home *Hygiene and feed until their owners could re ate dimensions, to meet this need rehabilitation assistance to more ing parents, teachers, other adults, the houses being delivered in the same year 21 foreign disasters Care of the Sick, received by 67,000 ' Aids Wa^Disabl•d claim them. than 90,000 families in the Missis and children, were aided byrthe Red flood zone in sections, so that they claimed assistance from the -Red- wbmen t^nd girls the past year. sippl disaster. Sharing with disaster relief as an Cross in -during a knowledge o f could be.erected by the new owner Cross. Altogether -it makes a rec­ outstanding obligation of the Red Disease Prevention Catupoign More than $12,000,000 had been Headed by American^ Legion nutrition and U- application to if necessary. Regularly organized ord of disaster relieved by a single Cross, is Ur responsibility to .the expended or committed at the close posts and auxiliaries, and the or­ their daily lives. Simultaneously with this vast ef­ Red Cross caravans, consisting of organization unparalleled in Red disabled ex-service man and his of the organization’s fiscal year ganized groups of total industries, An acquaintance with these many fort. the Red Cross. la*conJunctlon crews, motor trucks, derricks and Cross history. family. This Is a continuing serv­ from the relief fund. An extensive an untold number of volunteers other servlcea of the Red Cross will with State and Federal health/ of- repair apparatus, traversed the ice despite the ten years ^nce the rehabilitation program is still in labored with the regular Red Cress indicate why Us disaster relleL Hcers. undertook the greatest dis­ devastated regions, assisting to set All told, nearly a million persons World War, because Red Cross forces In the Mississippi fl’^od. while spectacular, is only a part Hi ease prevention campaign of peace­ up houses, repairing or hauling victims ‘Of 112-dlsa8ters, have re­ progress in that disaster area. service to these men is supplenien Some manned rescue boats, otners the Red Cross respohsthiUty under - time, designed to protect not alone others across fields bp.ck to their ceived assistance from the Amert One of the other floods, in which tary to provisions for their welfare helped in the camps and flooded Us charter. It will also shew con* flood refugees but the whole coun­ original foundations from which can Red; Cross during the organlza- Iho Red Cross served was in the by he Government, acting as a me­ towns. In their impromptu way clnslvely the importance of a large try, from the menace of epidemic they were swept, and assisting the ■tlon^B past fiscal year. Jackson Hole country of Wyoming, dium between the pe^ le and the these people carried out the tradi­ membership, through which dues diseases which might quickly re­ returned flood victims to clear their where,tho flood occurred at 6,500 Government, And the disabled ben This service extended throughout tion of volunteer service developed most Red Croea activity .Is nwds sult from flood conditions. This surroundings for normal work once feet altitude, and^he workers had eflclary. That the field for such as­ the civilized world, though the se- by Red Cross volunteers in many possible. Every man and wonwn Is campaign accomplished the com­ to reach the scene by sleigh sistance is stil! wide is Indicated by more. rles of disasters in the United of lines of year-around activity: invited to enroU for ^thb. comMiC plete inoculation against typhoid -of through mountain passes deep with a reford of service to an average States claimed a major share of from voluntary duty at the water year during the Eleventh Annual 29U.842 people and vaccination of Whole Towns .Reconstructed^ snow. of 73.000 disabled veterans anil Red Cross assistance. Floods resorts as life-savers to. transi-rib- Roll Call, which will be held from 121.705, besides those partially in Red Cross Nurses Share Hazards their families each month during spread oyer thousands of miles iug reading material into Drallle ocuiated: it undertook malarial - Three towns - in their entirety Running through the record of the oast flacal vaar. In addition. November 11 to S4. inclusive. were reconstructed by the Red while tires, tornadoes, explosions, tvne for blind readers. prevention throughout the flood hurricanes .and filmilajf violent oc­ relief work. osueniallV in the Mi.><- states, and as a post-flood effort. Cross: the famous old town of Co MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD. ;s a T U 1^A Y , CM3TGBER 29,1927,

School supplies from this conntry b. Macushla ..... MacMurrough m ORCHESTRA ENGAGED are l^ing adopted in tke Dutch IX— A Major W a ltz...... Brahms d U A D West Indies. MISS GAGUARDONE WINS X— Humoreske ...... Dvorak POPULAR MEIGHAN IS •• ■ ■■* WTIC 5:30— Crosley Moscow Art Orches­ C. Daniel .Iliod^e acQompanied by. FOR FEATURE, "BEN HUR” tra from N. B. C. Studios. his daughter Mrs. Sherwood Ray-' STAR AT THE CIRCLE REC MASQUERADE PRIZE 6:3 0— Capitol Theater Organ—- Travelers Insurance Co. mond and fainlly- of-New Britain GEO. A . JOHNSON “ Melodies for the Folks at spent last week-end 'with bis sister Manager Sanson Announces “We’re All Gamblers” to Show Hallowe’en Affair Attended by Hartford " Home”— ^Walter Dawley. Mrs. Nellie Carpenter in Matunick. Low Prices For Dig Picture Civil Engheer and Surveyor On Saturday and Sunday. More 'ThanThan 150 Dancers In 535.4 m. 560 k, c. R. I. ^ V At State Tomorrow—Film-to • Mr. and. Mrs.. Arthur Parks of Run Fmir Days. Residence 577 East Center StreH Costume. East Hampton were recent visitors Tom Meighan, the popular Irish­ at Mf. and Mrsi C. J. Pogll’s. Manager Jack Sanson announces Telephone 300. man, Is the/ star of “ We’re all Miss Tina Gagliardone, who has TEST ANSWERS Mrs. J,. Banks Jones passed sev­ Gamblers,”^he feature at thfe Circle often won prizes for pretty cos­ PTOgrain For Sunday an augmented orchestra and popu­ 3:00 p. m.— American Legion Band eral days this week with Mrs. Nel­ lar prices during the showing' of theater on Saturday and Sunday. In tumes at masquerades, won further lie Skinner at'her home In North this film Meighan has something laurels last night when shq took the from N. B. C. Studios. Here is one solution to the LET­ “ Ben Hur,”- the greatest picture of The program which will be fea­ Westchester. > them all, which comes to the State quite a bit different from his usual first prize at the Hallowe’en Frolic TER GOLF puzzle on the comic Mr. and .Mrs. Royal P. Deacy and Assessors Notice roles, but he makes the part a good and Dance at the School Street Rec. tured by the Howard Radio Hour page,: Theater for four days beginning to- this week comprises ten selections child from Meriden spent last The inhabitants of the TOWN OF one. ^ ^ Miss Gagliardone was garbbd in an morroiir. MANCHESTER liable to pay taxes from the classics that make up a week-end with Mr; and Mrs. C. Long runs have been celebrated Three weeks of being poked in attractive Turkish costume that Daniel Way. are hereby notified and requ,lred to the ribs, hit on the chin, and bang­ concert program of unusual merit. by this great epic In New York. was in a class by itself. Sepond The Howafd Hour is a regular Sun­ Chester B. Lyman of Columbia return to the assessors on or^before ed on the side ot the head with prize was awarded to Miss Anna spent a night recently with Mr. and Boston, Chicago and Philadelphia. the first day of November ne: animated by the. Jewish ideal time if possible and not crowd the- Paramount. The star plays a heavy­ "Melodies for the Folks at Home” costume and a mask. Do the stunts weight championship contender in which are asked at 8 p. m. of a temporal Messiah he raises a and evening sf^lons. Owners of Au- programs. THE g r e a t AVAR legion to take up arms for Jeusu of, tcmobilos and Motoicyclea-are rc- the early sequences of the picture. 4:30—-^ward Radio Hour— TEN YEARS AGO TODAY Mrs. A. W, Ellis and daughter Director James Cfuze wanted real­ I— Selection from “ Lohengrin” passed Friday In Hartford. Nazareth, But the Prince of Peace BUILDER qiie.siad to give make and date ol comes, not into a worldly kingdom. their machines. Persons owning ism. FIVE COONS IN SIX NIGHTS ...... Wagner 6y United Press Miss Lovlna Foote, a student at After a week, Meighan displayed! _ _ 'MnsTirniiiT O II— Baritone Solos— the South Manchester High school Ben-Hur is bidden to, put up his First and Second iVi»i-t$;age.s pianos are urged to hand in their considerable skill but when it came j JO J ip fA D D QF SENKBEILS Oct. 29., 1917 returned to her home Thursday 'p. sword and becomes a humble fol­ list of same in order to save ten a. Poor Man’s Gaitlen . . . Russell The entire Isonzo front In time to make the scenes before the Iw IVLvVflll/ v ^ b. Turkey’s Song from “ Rob m., as the school was closed ^ Fri­ lower of the Master. His long-lost arranRed on all new work. per cent addition. All lists of real camera the electricians became fight Roy” ...... DeKoven Italy collapses; the rapid suc­ day. mother and sister are restored to estate must give the boundaries ol fans and let loose a few cheers This III— Sousla Trellle (Vlnyard Idyl) cesses of German and Austrian Mrs. J. Kellogg White, Mrs. him by Esther and are cured of 68 Hollister Street, the land, as by law required, or encouraged Smith to greater effort. Five coons in six nights is the ...... Didler armies causes all roads in this Ruby Gibson - and Mrs, Daniel sickness by Divine healing. they v.'ill not bo accepted. Thls-Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer work Mr. Meighan' defended himself record of a hunting party in which IV— Victor Herbert Favorites district to be filled with dis­ Hodge were visitors' In South Man­ Manchester, Conn. PLEASE NOTE! Nov. 1st is the cleverly, but admitted afterwards Carl Senkbeil and his father, Aug­ ...... Arr. Sanford orderly, retreating columns of chester, Thursday. is described as. a faithful plcturlza- last dii)! •that his dentist would probably ust Senkbeil, of 33 Norman street V— The Herd Girl’s Dream Italians. Mrs. Hays, of Boston, is a gueSjt tion of book and play, but with the Petsons neglecting to atlcpd t-j charge him plenty for repairing have established as leaders of hunt­ . . , , ...... Labitzky The U. S. Fuel Administra­ at Mr. and Mrs. Hart B.. Buell.. immensely grander resources \ of their Hals o:i or before the first day loose fillings. ing parties within the last week. VI— Selection‘ of Schubert Songs tion and the Broadway Associa­ Mrs'. R. ,B. Foote and Mrs. E. E. motion picture ,art. Ramon Novarro JOHNSON’S of November ’.vill liave ten per cent, Their latest bag was on display In ...... Arr. Helmberger tion of New York consider a Foote were Hartford visitors Thurs­ heads the cast o f.150,000 players. added to came. All persons llabl*? the Barrett & Robbins window yes­ VII— In a Monastery Garden proposition planned to dim the day. The feature at the State today Is ELECTRIC CO. to give in lists of taxable property Mrs. A. H, Post, Mrs. C, R. Per­ “ The Rough Riders,” , telling the are urged to appear before the FOOTBALL DANCE terday. , ...... Kettelby white, lights from 5 until 8 p. Solicits Your Electrical Busi­ The Senkbeils seem to be about VIII— Tenor Solos— m., until the war ends. ry and Mrs. Charles Fish were vis­ story of Colonel Roosevelt’s famous .\gsesjo:s. Persons making out high hook among the raccoon hunt* a. Ish tar...... ----- Spross itors in Hartford, Monday. regiment In’ the Spanish' American ness— ^ t h Wiring and Fix­ their lists will ba obliged to make AT PALAIS ROYAL ers in this part of the state for rare­ War. tures. oath and sign same. Blanks can ly a season goes by when they do be o’otalned of the Assessofs, Town not bag ten or more. They are stlh General First C^lliss Work. ClorU and at the several post offices . Palais Royal, 900 Wethersfield in town. Ave., Hartford, the biggest and keeping the live animal they caught Estimates Cheerfnity Furnished. a year ago and it is thriving under ' Auto Repairing .and S. EMIL .lOHXSON, best dance ballroom in the New S.AillUEL NELSON, JR., England stages offers one of the their care. DAILY RADIO PROGRAM Overhauling' As a sideline the elder Senkbeil A Fine Line of Fixtures. GlSORGE A. JOHNSON, best attractions of the season to fol­ SHELDON'S UAHAOE * ' Assessors. lowers of high class dancing. Start­ breeds pheasants, which are sold to lO'OO-studio entertainmetit. organ, Leading DX Stations. Hear of 2K Hollister Street. fish and game clubs for stocking Saturday, October 29. 11:00—Miller's dance orchestra. 29 Clinton St. Phone 057*4 Mancbeker, Conn,, Oct, 4,' 1927. ing tonight a big Yale-Dartmouth, 3§9.8—WTAM, CLEVELAND—750, 476-W8B, ATLANTA-630. Phone 2328*2 Residence 2828*3 Wesleyan-Trinlty football victors' their preserves. The second act of "My Princess, 12:30—Gill's orchestra, 9:00—Philco hour with WJZ. one of the most popular of New 11:45- Troutt’s melody artists. dance will be featured with Major 0:00—Dance orchestra. 526—KFKX-KYW, CHICAGO—570. Ed Gurley’s Augmented Syncopat- y*ork’s current musical plays, has 7:00—Studio recital. 7:00—Children’* program; concert AGAINST GAS TAX been cho.icn by W EAF and the Red 8 :30 -Pocahontas Indians. 8:00—Congress studio program. ors playing only the latest hits from Albany, N. Y., Oct. 29.— Imposi­ 0:00—Willard Cavaliers. Broadway musical shows. Dancing network to be featured in the Old 10:00—Wandering minstrels. 9:00—WJZ Philco hour. tion of a gasoline tax by the 1928 Gold on E''o®dway’* hour which wm 10:00—Congress carnival. will be from 8 to 12 o’clock, 11 ;00—Dance orchestra. 11:30—Hamp’a Kentucky aerenaders. Legislature will be vigorously go on the air at 10:00 o clock Satur­ 422.5—WOR, NEWARK—710. Sunday night the regular Sunday day night. The artists who will ap­ 6:15—Jacobs' ensemble; talk. 389.4—WBBM, CHICAGO—770. 7:15—Ford and Glenn. Leading DX S'fiticlis. attraction will be offered by Major fought by automobile dealers asso­ pear before the microphones a p Hope ' 7:30—Orchestra: talk; violinist. 8:00—Orchestra; artists. Sunday, October 30. 7:30—Methodist ser.ice; hymns. ciations of the state unless the Le,s- Hampton, Robert Woolsey and Leon­ 8;30—“ Paul Jones.” light opera, 11:00—Orchestra: popular program. 8:15—WJZ Collier’s Radio Hour. 476—WSB, ATLANTA—630. Gurley and his musicians with four ard Ceeley, with music by Sigmun^d 305.9—WGN-WLIB, CHICAGO-980. Albert Spniclihg. the Great American 7:20—WEAF iheater program. islative leaders agree - to pass an 9:30- Soprano, pianist, baritone. violinist, will plve the: Aiwa ter Kent 9:15—Organist: hymns. hours of dancing starting at 7:30 Romberg. Tha Philco hour at 9.00 10:30—Russian trio. ' 3:00—Football, Michigan vt.' Illinois. 422.5—WOR, NEWARK—710. 9TI5—WE.VF violinist, pianist. amendment to the constitution through W Ja and the Dluo network 7 :.35—Ensemble; Almanack. radl* concert on • Sunday night at ... 526—KFKX-KYW, CHICAGO^70. p. m. 11:00- Parody Clul* orche.stra. 9:15, through WUAl'” and the Red 3:00—Columbia symphony concert. will present an operetta, starring Jes­ 333.1—WBZ, NEW ENGLAND—900. 9:00—Musical ensemble; baritone. 4:00—Vorhees* concert band. wN4;15—W.IZ Radio hour, wizard. Monday night, Hallowe’en, a big which will' provide that all money sica Dragonette. lyric soprano. An­ 10:00—Womens’ Atwater Kent audl- Network. He will be assisted by ^ssO;l3—Chicago U. book talk. 2:30—Football, Harvard vs. Indiana. Andre Bcnolst, pianist, and the At­ 7:45—Ixivlteir’e- Sunday musical. Hallowe’en dance will be offered from such -taxes be used on high other light opera has been scheduled 0:30- Morley's singing orchestra. tion. ; 9:00—Columbia Effervescent hoon 10:15—Violin wizard with WJZ. _ for WOR at 8;!?0. This will be Paul 11:10—Sam 'n* Henry; music bo.T. water Kent orchestra under the direc­ 389.4—WBBM, CHICAGO—770. with many valuable prizes for the ways. 7:30—Concorde Male Quartet.. 11:40—Melody time: artists; organ. tion of Nathan Franko. At the same vocalists, orchestra. , Jones.” .and wHI he played by the Ur­ 7:13—Springfield musical. 10:00—Columbia intimate hour, with 9:00—Thrao dance orchestras. best costumes. Free souvenirs will This announcement was. made ban Quartet and orchestra. Mayor 365.6—WEBH-WJJD. CHICAGO—82C. time Merle Thorpe, noted authority on 1:00—Nutty Club, 8:10—Boston Symphony orchestra g:00—Orchestra; lesson: songs. economy and politics. w'iU be the. songs and music. 365.6—WEBH-WJJD, CHICAGO—820* be given to everyone and a barrel here today by Lewis G. Stapley, James .1. Walker will give a short 10:20—Lowe's orche.str.a. 333.1—WBZ, NEW ENGLAND—90a manager of the Empire State Auto­ talk, ent'tlocl "Municipal Affairs 9:00—Palmer studio program. guest speaker of thO' Collier's 8:30—Theater presentations. of fun is in store for all who attend. 491.&—WEAF. NEW YORK—610. 12:00—Orchestra, songs to 3:00. dio hour to ,bo bioadcast through WJZ 10:45—Unity Church ser\-lcea through WNYC at 9:30. Other high­ 1:45—Football. Penn vs. Navy. ■ 2:00—Ro.xy with WJZ. 9:15—i’almer HouSS program. The ball room has been tastefully mobile Merchants Association. lights for tliis .same night will be con- 344.6— WLS, CHICAGO—870. and the BUie network. Half an hour 10:00—Ralmer studio program. 0:00—Waldorf dinner music. 8:30—Barn dance, banjo, harmonica. later the Utica Jubilee Singers wlll;A>e 7:00—Blue- and Gold bOuK 305.9—WGN.WLIB, CHICAGO—980. decorated with corn stalks, pump­ “ The automobile industry in this c « t s by the Wickliffe High School 7:00—Janssen's orchestra. 7:50—Statier ensemble. glee club through 'WHK at V-OO, the orchestra, artists. ^ heard In « program of Negro spirit­ 8:30—Songs: "Au'.d Sandy." kins and lanterns. In fact every­ state,” Stapley said,, “ is thoroughly 7:30—High Jlnkers, . _ , . „ 447.5—WMAQ-WQJ, CHICAGO—670. uals rodfsted l.y WJZ and . WHAM, '8:15—W JZ Radio hour. 9:15—W ^ F pianist, violinist. Police Department Band through -8:30—Musical play, “ th e -1kl6—Bosteti musical -program,’ thing that makes up a real old time aroused and organized to. oppose WNYC. one hour later; the Boston 8:30—Studio program. • and at 10:00 CiSock the 104th. Infan- 10:15-Music: talk; arts. In''"Old Gold on Broadway. ery hand will rfiider a program of 10:00—104th infantry band. 11:20—Slaric: organ; Hoodlunw. Hallowe’en dance will be there. any tax to be levied on the motor SjTnphony orchestra through 'y E " 10:00—KoUe'rt Paints D'or orchcRira .9:00—Talk, Gov. W. J, Bulow, 491.5— WEAF. NEW VORK-j^ at 8:00 and a program of Negro splrtt- 9;:i0—Violinist, song cycle, orchestra. mililary airs for the benefit of WBZ’s 447.5—WMAQ-WQJ. CHICAGO-^7J. Gurley and his augmented syh- . vehicle or the motorist which is not 11.no_Hatrnn’a orohestra, 2:00—WQJ popular program (3 hrs.), listener.s. A musical Interpretation of 8:00—Sunday evening music cjub. iials by the I’leasantviHe colored oc­ • 455-W J Z . NEW Y O R K -6 6 0 . * 3:00—Sfoung*^”p^ple’s c o k ^ ^ c e , ' copators will bring Broadway to | to be entirely spent on the main­ tet through WTG at 10:4§ 499.7— WFAA. DALLAS—600. Rosettl-Debussy’s "The Blessed Dam-^ 19:15—IVOR Columbia broadcast. 1?;45—yopiig's dance ozel’* will tempt the dial twister to 4:00—Jtedford Y. M. C. A. program. 11:00—Reverie hour, Whitney trio. Hartford playing only the latest, in tenance and construction of high­ 1:45—Football, Yale vs. Dartmouth. ]2;00—Baker dance music. 6:30—Concert orchestra. Black face type indicates best features 12:30—Theater musical features. either WJZ or WBAL at 7:30 and th6 344.&-WLS, CHICAGO—870. dance numbers. Dancing every 4:30—Banhattan trio. Chicago Philharmonic trio will be 6:3iu-£iiblical drama. ways.” 374.8—WOO, DAVENPORT—«0a 7:05—Instrumental trio. 7:i#0—Little Brown Church service*. night in the week at. Palais Royal AB programs Eastern Standard Time. 7:00—Rich's orchestra. g:00—Dramatic players program. heard through WHT at 8:30. A mat­ 8;5S—Little Brown Church QuarteL 8:00—U. S. Army hand. . 9:00—WJZ Philco hour. ^ inee feature of much popularity win 7:20—Capitol Theater program. 499,7—WFAA. DALLAS—600. with special features’ on Saturday, 8'.30—Ed Smalle. xylophonist. 9:15—Albert Spalding, violinist; An- Dra. 499.7—WBAP. FORT WORTH—600. be the Sunday afternoon atroll of r :00—Bible class; gospel songs. Sundays and holidays. Ladies are ARTESIAN WEU.S Leading East Stations. gloo—Llght opera with Jessica 9:00—WEAB' programs. Roxy end His Gang through WJZ and dre B ^oitt, pianist, in Atwatei :15—WEAF violinisL pianist. gonette. In Philco hour. Kent hour. , admitted free every Tuesday and 272.6—WPG, ATLANTIC CITY-1100. 10:00—Musical: readings. the Blue network at 3:00. s:nn‘—Popular dance music. 10‘Oo—Keystone duo, ballndeers. 384.4— KTH8, HOT SPRINGS—780 10:15—English uuthoPs talk. 374.8—w o e , DAVENPORT—800. Thursday evenings with dancing Drilled Any Diameter—^ 7-OS—Dinner music, soprano. 10 ;30—Cathedral echoes, organ. 9:00—Studio prog: concert music., 10;:!0—Manger , » cBn 10:30—Great Western chefs. Black fees type Indicates best features i » 0—Congregational Church service. from 8 to 12 o’clock. Any Depth Any Place 508—WIP. PHILADELPHIA—59a 370.2— WDAF, KANSAS CITY—810. 348.6— WGBS. NEW YORK—860. 9:15—WEAF violinisL pianist 10:00—Daugherty’s orchestra. 6:10—Dinner music: markets. 8:30—Hallowe'en program. ■ 10:45—Pleasantville colored octet. 9:00—WJZ Philco hour. All program* Eastern ^Standard Time. 10:15—Meyer comfort hour. 7:00- Bedtime story. , 10:20—Popular program. 8;4S.wS0ngs. music to 10:Qft 325.9—KOA. DENVER—920. SPEEDING AUTO HURDLES CAR ll:15-Silver 8:00—Contralto, pianist;- musical 465—WJZ, NEW YORK—660, Charles F. Volkert 352.7—WN AC, BOSTON-^0. 10:30—Great Western chefs. 9:30—130'voice choir; organist To prove the strength of his •1:110—Tenor, pianist. _ Leading East Stations. 9:00—Children'? hour, 449.7—WBAP. FORT WORTH—600. 6:33—Dinner music;. talks; piano. IQ.or,—Kenton's orchestra, organ, 12:4.5—.Nighthawk frolic. 1:00—The Mediterraneans. automobile a Frenchman recently Blast Hole Drilling 8:00—New England stories. 468.5— KFI, LOS ANGELES—640 272.6—WPG, ATLANTIC CITY-1 lOO. 16:30—Organist; musi^ progJ^ 31^7-KDKA. P'TTSBU^ROH-950, 11:00—Saturday night revue. 6:16—TwHight concert hour. 2:00—Roxy and.Hfa Gang. '2S2.1-WOK, HOIJEyVQOD-im speeded it to 60 miles an hour, 8:30—Barkley ensemble. 1.45_Football. Yale vs. Dartmouth 4:00—St. Georgm- Tespers. Test Drilling for Foundation 9;15^Square and Compass club, 1:00—Classical program. 9:10—Loventhal’s concert orchestra. 9:00—Orchestra, artism drove up an incline and vaulted 6-55—Football scores; address. 5:30—National Radio vespers, 384.4—KTHS, HOT SPRINGS—780. loioo—Two dance orchestras. 2:00—Pianist, artists, uke. 10:00—Sunday evening musical. 6:30-The Grandas orchestra. over another car. In the jump the Water Systems 7:15—Radio club; concert. 3:00—Midnight frolic. __ 285.5—WBAL, BALTIMORE—1060. 9:30—Music Lover's hour. 302.8—WGR. BUFFALO—990. Q.nn W.IZ Philco hour. • 7 :00—Organ recital. car rose to a height of 10 feet. The 1.45—Football, Penn vs. Navy. 405.2— KHJ, LOS ANGELES-740, 6:30-^oncert orchestra. 7:30—“Tha Blessed Oamozel,'* musi* 10:30—Organ recital. landing was made without mishap Pumps for 'All Purposes. 7:30-WEAF High J Inkers. 112:00—Hallowe'en frolic. 7:80—WJZ musical expositions. 336.9—WJAX. JACKSONVILLE—890. 1:45—Football, Yale vt. Dartmouth. 403.2—WCCO, MINN.. ST. RAUL—740. ^ . 7 —WNAC. BOSTON—860. ci(L ^ 6:30—Orchestra dinner music. to motor, springs or other parts of 8:30—WE.\F “ Old Gold. 0:45—Orchestra: piano duets. 8:16—Collier Radio :hour with Mori# Tel. 1375-5. 545.1_WMAK, b u f f a l o —550. 8:45—Fireside philosophies. 1:00—WOR symphony; band (2 hrs.) Thorpe. / . i 8:00—Church service. the auto. 6‘IS—Armbruster's string ensemble. prom m . 9:00—WJZ Philco hour, 7:30—ChurclL service. g-lS—Vibrant melodies, soprano, harp HIGHLAND PARK P. 0. 7:30—Theater program. 10:00—Popular opera hits. 9:00—WOR Columbia prog. (2 hrs.) 9M6—Utica .Jubilee Slngars. iS itlS S If jrF'reRSON C.TV-ML 8;30_Democratic committee program 11:00—Barrett’S orchestra. j* 11:00—I.ong’a dance orchestra. 302.8—WGR. BUFFALO—990. 379.5-WGY, SCHENECTADY 790, 7:45—Presbyterian service. 10:15—Don AmalZo, violin wizard. , tSl'TNpEl.J»-«l. gloo—Musical; organ: players. 384.4— KGO, OAKLAND—780.' eOS^WlP, PH lLADELW IA-^90; 10:00- Popular program. 11:55—Time: weather: 12:00—Quintet., horn, soprano: 9;15_WBAF violinist, pianist. 11:00—ClaMlcal hour, plMisL 1.,4g_Football, Penn vs. Navy. 54S.1—WMAK, BUFFALO—650i 10:45—Trinltjr Chufah '.aervlces. 12-00—“ Orest History Moments. R. W. Joyner 11;00—Silver Slipper orchestra. 1:00—Girvln-Bealc's orchestrai 9-SO—WGBS' concert. ' FOR SALE c-so-__ Syracuse dinner music. 2:30—Nutting’s -orchestra. 10 :*J5—Presbyterian service. 1-00—BlueS singer, dance music. 428.3—WLW, CINCINNATI—700. gloo—WEAF High Jlnkers. 315J —KDKA, PITTSBURGH—950. ^'46L3—WHAS, LOUISVILLE—650. l;45_Footlmll. Tale Vs, Dartmouth. 422.3— KPO, SAN FRANCISCO—710.' 2:20—Rlchelson’s forum. , g.30—WEAF Old Gold program, 2:00—w o n symphony; band (2 hrs.) 10:45—Chur

^hii^eoft** magnet was more powerful than the ordi* KOLSTER $89.50 Faraday ^ a # quick to apply hi* discovery. Fixing nary one and OMtld be made a magnet or not a m ^ e t a coil of wire between the two pole* of a magnet and William S^rgebh, In Coating thq Iron with as ourront was turned on or off. Joseph Henry, Prince­ 6-Tube making it revolve, he led away the current thus gen­ . 1825, made an efei^fo- ton professor, found saHII better way by^ insulating tHe erated along a wire, harnessing a new force in nature. varhieh to imulats It, hs magnet of the- higheat wiHiq>f>od o o p p t r v w ir e wire, with aWt, then wrapping the horseshoe. The-power Faraday generatea is used for telegraph, value by Ineulatlng a With the current from a smalt battery his magnet MU«d telephone, motor car, airplane, wireless and countless around it so tno turna did hbrsMhoo shaped piecf not touch one another. lift 3000 peunds. (To Be Continued) iSIBSOirS GARAGE other tasks. of soft iron. __ 8y NIA, TirouiS ipMitl Nfml««l»w *4 d*« FiiMI,k«r».>t 8««lt «4 16-18 Main St., Tel. 701-2, Manchester MANCHESTER (CONN;) Blh& N G l^KALO, SATURDAY, OCrOREK 29, 1927. PAGE EIGHT FEATURE A ABOUT INTEItBI LATEST FASHION W O B IE N ^ h i n t s b y f o r e m o s t •f .V--/j»_ ,.. % AUTHORITIES THE HERALjys HOME PAGE LITTLE THINGS COUNT TO 'im \ OYSTERS! THEY X AGAIN IN SEASON

Dorothy Caruso, tells, how her Red Broom Sweei* Clean BY SIS'TBR MARY famous husband went honte. to his Green dustpans, green-handled M B CAS brooms, scarlet mop bandies, can­ villa near Florehce'^when s6e was ary yellow bread boxes, jade spice In an old “ Book on Foods” we "V A N D IN E ® CHA2LES SC2IBN1S8 SONS just a bride, and tbok it for grant­ are told that “ R is for oysters” — identify Itself asthe tox of Jewels Miss Hoffman prevented him from ed that his 23 relatives should boxes to match any kitchen equip­ ment in all the lovely shades of the meaning- that any mouth spelled- Characters of the Story hv the inn^sltive housekeeper, admitting that he was aware of the swarm in upon them and live with with an “ R ” Is seasonable for m v S f- *3 i' other’s knowledge concerning it him. She tells how Caruso, man­ rainbow to match any kitchen, are PHILO VANCE ihe very latest. I wandered Into one them. JOHN F.-X. MARKHAM.District ^ t nTfiHnea hM ^ n t him The Major listened with consid- like, loved the role of head of the ofI. theseLiAC'c newJACTT kitchens the other day , Nowadays we think less of the Attorney of New York County t t“ m th. erable a«obl,hm ».t. hto e y » grad- house, -provider, and Heap Big her gewgaws lo sa growing angry. carried out in symphony of Jade i seasonabillty of many ALVIN H. BENSON...... Well- Chief of his tribe. And one catches yawning dungeon.' a certain:whimsical amusement in green and creamy yellow. Crisp 1 did our grandmothers. Fruits a ^ a known Wall Street broker and "Nor did I overlook the fact that “I’m afraid Alvin deceived me,” her mood when she writes how Ca­ ruffled gieen gingham curtains 1 vegetables are shipped from the man-about-town, who was mys­ he had been shielding someone in he said. He looked straight ahead south to northern markets and for a moment, his face softening. ruso himself in ' time tired of the against creamy walls, a jade green teriously murdered in his >home his explanation about the check. sink, a cream cabinet with jade from north to southern markets MAJOR ANTHONY BENSON... Therefore, as soon as the lady s “And I don’t like to think it. now role and found hisrVnly' the whole year through, making It joy in a stuffy little room which shelves, and ail the kitchen equip­ ...Brother of the murdered man name and address were learned by that he’s gone. But the truth is, was hidden from everybody else In ment in green or creamy yellow. So possible to eat strawberries from MRS. ANNA PLATZ...... Tracy, I made the appointment for when Miss Hoffman told me this morning about the envelope, she the villa. This liteiof the great ten­ entrancing a spot was it that I January to October. ..Housekeeper for Alvin Benson Season Grows Shorter! you. . . . also mentioned a small parcel that or called “Wings, of Song’’ Is one could not be dragged into the liv­ MURIEL ST. CLAIR...... We were Classing the Gothic- of the most human biographies over ing room. But some sea-foods are like ...... A young singer Renaissance Schwab residence had been in Alvin’s private safe- written. ' ; After all, rose colored coffee cans game and have a very definite sea­ CAPTAIN PHILIP LEACOCK... which extends from West End ave­ drawer; and 1 asked her to omit cost no more than white or black son; oysters are one of them...... Miss St. Clair's fiance nue to Riverside drive at Seventy- any reference to it from her story ones. When one thinks of the hun­ Oysters are “ in” from September LEANDER PFYFE...... third street; and Vance stopped for to you. That Baby Crop to April and “ out” from May to tThe “ better class people” who dreds of years women have delved ...... Intimate of Alvin Benson’s a moment to contemplate it. “I knew the parcel contained Mrs. August. However, this season has could afford to have babies,, but In homely kitchens, one wonders MRS. PAULA BANNING...... Markham waited patiently. At Banning’s jewels, but 1 thought the grown shorter during the last few don’t, have beeil spanked pretty se­ why this obvious change in kitchen ...... A friend of Pfyfe's length Vance walked on. fact would only confuse matters if years due to the fact that the verely of late. But with all the styles wasn’t made before. ELSIE HOFFMAN. .Secretary of “ . . . Y’ know, the moment I brought to your attention. You see, oyster beds are being contaminated the firm of Benson and Benson saw Mrs. Banning I knew my con­ Alvin told me that a judgment had causes and explanations, given for their childlessness or, at best, but in many places. COLONEL BIG8BY Q^.TRANDER clusions were correct. She was a been taken against Mrs. Banning, , A Woman Did It! Oysters are higher and' scarcer ...... A retired army offlcer sentimental soul, and just the sort and that, just before the supple­ one or two children, none seem to hit the nail so squarely on the head What a hue and cry goes up because the supply must come WILLIAM H. MORI ARTY...... of professional good sport who mentary proceedings, Pfyfe had when any public woman official Is from manufacturing zones. The ...... An alderman would have banded over her jewels brought her jewels here and asked. as a theory set forth in “The Build­ ers of America” by Huntington & caught in the Slightest taint of remote areas are naturally small GEORGE G. STITT...... \ to her amoroso. hlm to sequester them temporarily scandal! I refer to the reams of and the cost of production and Of the firm of Stitt Whitney...... "Also, she ■ was bereft of gems in his safe.” space spent upon -Mrs. Florence marketing Is greater than from the and McCoy, Public Accountants bn our way back to the Criminal Two Pictures when we called,—and a woman of The book includes a graphic pic­ Knapp, former secretary of state of large beds lying in the more ac­ MAURICE DINWIDDIE...... her stamp always wears her jewels Courts building Markham took New York, whose secretary charged cessible bays and rivers. Assistant District Attorney ture. At the left is a squalid, dirty ..... when she desires to make an Im Vance’s arm and smiled. in an investigation of the 1925 High, But Worth It! ERNEST HEATH Ser­ tenement. The bill for the cost of a ...... pression on strangers. Moreover, “Your guessing luck Is holding state census, that her name was The food value of oysters is geant of the Homicide Bureau baby which comes here Is Itemized she’s the kind that would have out. I see.” written by Mrs. Knapp on no less high. They are nutritious and easi­ iSi.eLCuea oy Anna Wllle on the Rue de la'Palx: (F )'a intern.din-* b u r k e , SNITKIN, EMERY below—Doctor, Nurse, Hospital. --- jewelry even if the larder was “Rather!” agreed Vance. “It than 33 expense accounts which ly digested, and although they are ner ring consisting of one large rectangular topaz flanked at-the'side by Detectives of Homicide Bureau Tbe total is zero, with a “ Paid by emj»ty. It was therefore merely a would appear that the late Alvin, she, the secretary, had never used! high, in price there is little waste, smaller graduating stones; ( 2) Pierrot’s head ot silver.apd hlqck enamql BEN HANLON Command­ Charities” written over the zero...... question of getting her to talk." like Warren Hastings, resolved to Oh, well, maybe and maybe and so for the money invested the on a black silk cord makes a charming pendant; (3) Premet 'knots ing Officer of Detectives as­ At the left is the doorway of a “On the whole, you did very die in the last dyke of prevarica­ maybe some more, but one wonders amount of nourishment is great. tightly at the throat strands of small blue and wbite:pearls; ('4).a, ‘„'inod- signed to District Attorney's office middle-class heme and below the well,’’ observed Markham. tion.” where enough white paper would Care should be taken not to ern” ring of silver with square cut amethyst, and (5) a large sHy^er PHELPS, TRACY, SPRINGER, bill for the baoy that tomes there. brooch set with jade— also In the modern manner; Vance gave him a cqndescendlng “In any event," replied Markham, Doctor, $200: hospital $192; nurse come from if such “irregularities” overcook oysters. Nor should they I—.- I , . I m mn "n HIGGINBOTHAM ...... “the Major has unconsciously added were dragged forth from each and Detectives as­ bow. $192; operating room, $20; inci­ be cooked at too high a tempera­ ...... “Sir Hubert is too generous.— another link In the chain against every office piloted by a male pub­ signed to District Attorney’s office dentals $50; total-.$654. Is it any ture. Oysters are a protein food ed In two ways. The first is to TASSEL NECKLINE But tell me, didn’t my* little chat Pfyfe.” wonder that the vicious and ignor­ lic official. Not that black makes and their digestibility depends serve the oysters on the shell with CAPTAIN CARL HAGEDORN.. “You seem to be making a col­ ...... Fire-arms expert with the lady cast a gleam into ant have babie.s w.aen their coming white, but why hold up a woman muc' on the care used in prepar­ a small straight-sided glass of your darkened mind?” lection of chains,” commented entails no sacrifice, while those to shame for a practice which is ing them for the table. Intense cocktail sauce placed in the center A brocaded evening .gown,-with DR. DOREMUS...... “Naturally,” said Markham. “ I’m Vance drily. “What have you done ...... Medical examiner who should have'them can’t be­ only "good business” when a male heat and over-cooking makes them of the crushed ice. Each oyster is a circular flared sklrlj^'achieves dis­ not utterly obtuse. She played un­ with the ones you forged about Miss cause they aref* paying the bills of power can get away with it at the tough, leathery and hard to digest lifted from the shell with the fork* tinction from its skillfully poiilt^ FRANK SW ACKER...... Sec­ consciously Into our hands. She St. Clair and Leacock?” expense of the voter and taxpayer? the other babies? Raw oysters may be served to and dipped into the sauce before decolletage ..of gold ^ with, a tass^ retary to the District Attorney believed Pfyfe did not arrive in “I haven’t entirely discarded CURRIE...... Vance's valet invalids; so may steamed or baked eating. . suspended from'thb'center.; • New York until the morning after them—if that’s what you think,” oysters and plain oyster stew. The second way is to remove the S. S. VAN DINE.....The Narrtttor the murder, and therefore told us asserted Markham gravely. • * • I Made dishes of oysters are more oysters from shell and serve mixed quite frankly that she had ’phoned When we reached the oflBce Ser­ “Ideal Fashions Home Page Editorial difficult to digest because of the with the sauce in a cocktail glass, THIS HAS HAPPENED him that Benson had the jewels at geant Heath was awaiting us with Vance eliminate. M l.. St. Clair i “makings,” the oysters themselves green pepper or lemon shdl. The a. a .uspcct and prevent. Mark­ home. a beatific grin. Jean Belle Hamilton being practically steamed or baked oysters and sauce must be thor­ ham from arresting Leacock when “The situation now ^is; Pfyfe “It’s all over, Mr. Markham,” he Ptyfe’s ntatcmdnt. ..trengthen the Snub Came in the other ingredients. oughly chilled before serving. knew they were in Benson’s house, announced. “This noon, after you’d Baked Oyters ca.e ngaln.t the captain. It I. gone, Leacock came here looking bronght out that Pfyfc had forged and was there himself at about the Home to If possible choose oysters in the for you. When he found you were Alvin Ben.on’. name to a check. time the shot was fired. Further­ shell. Wash shells and place in a Panla Banning admit, to ’ Vance more, the jewels arei gone; and out, he ’phoned headquarters, and Roost! that she had loaned her Jewel, dripping pan. Bake in a hot oven they connected him with me. He to Pfyfe to put up with Benson Pfyfe tried to cover up his tracks until the shells part. Force open, wanted to see me—very Important, as security. that night.” By Olive, Roberts Barton sprinkle with pepper and salt and NOW BEGIN THE STORT he said; so I hurried over. Vance sighed hopelessly. serve on shell. “Markham, there are altogether “He was sitting in the waiting- CHAPTER XL room when I came in, and he called If oysters in the shell are not Lifers Niceties too many trees for you in this case. One day_on the 90’s a little girl procurable the following is a good (Wednesday, Jane 19: t You simply can’t see the forest, y’ me over and said: ‘I came to give in school said to another little girl, myself up. I killed Benson.’ 1 got way to prepare them: HINTS ON ETIQUET p. m.) know, because of ’em." “The church is having a bazaar at One pint oysters, small ovals of ‘There Is the remote possibility him to dictate a confession to our house tonight. Can you come?” HEN we were again outside Swacker, and then he signed it. toast a little larger than the oys­ W that you are so busily engaged In The second little girl hesitated. ters, 4 tablespoons butter, 2 table­ Markham asked: looking at one particular tree that Here it is." He handed Mark­ ‘ 'es. I’ll come, thank you,” she “ How in heaven’s name did you spoons lemon juice, 1-8 teaspoon you are unaware of the others.” ham a typewritten sheet of paper. answered. ^ Her birthday dollar i nutmeg, 1-2 teaspoon salt, paprika. 1. In what order does a wed­ know she had put up her jewels to Markham sank wearily Into a MONUMETO A shadow passed over Vance’s wouldn’t go far, but if it helppd Clean and drain oysters. Toast ding procession enter the help Pfyfe?’’ chair. The strain of the past few the heathen any she might as well Grave markers arid “My charmin’ metaphysical de­ face. bread on one side only and arrange church ? “ I wish you were right,” he said. days had begun to tell on him. He spend it there as any place. The mental stone work of every de­ ductions, don’t y’ know,” answered sighed heavily. in dripping pan toasted side up. 2. If there is a ring bearer, It was nearly half past one. and rich Bronsons might not • think it Place one oyster on each piece of scription. Vance. “As I told you, Benson was we dropped into the Fountain Room “Thank God! Now our troubles much but it would help some any­ where does he walk? not the open-handed, big-hearted toast. Sprinkle with salt and pep­ of the Ansonla Hotel for lunch. are ended.” way . 3. Who leads the procession altruist who would have lent money per and bake in moderately hot Markham was preoccupied Vance ‘ooked at him lugubri­ 'Phat evening right after supper, back up the aisle, after the Gadella & Amtirbsini without security; and certainly the ously, and shook his head. oven until oysters are plump, throughout the meal, and when we a sturdy little figure in a brown • Qi-gam butter, slowly beat in salt, ceremony ? Shop at Eaist end of B ^ e ll St. Impecunious Pfyfe had no collateral entered the subway later, be looked “I rather fancy, y^ know, that worth 510,000. or he wouldn’t have your troubles are only beginning,’’ serge dress, blacu stockings and nutmgg lemon juice. Spread Near East CeiqfietiMy. ’ uneasily at his watch. shoes, and a fine gold chain around over oysters, sprinkle with paprika The Auswers forged the check. Ergo: someone “I think I’ll go on down to Wall he drawled. I lent him the security. When Markham had glanced her neck could be seen hurrying; serve at once, 1. First, the ushers, two by Street and call on the Major a mo­ across the park toward the b ig ; Oyster salad made of raw oys- “Now, who would, be so trustin' ment before returning to the oflSce. through the confession he handed two; then the bridesmaids, two by as to lend Pfyfe that amount of house. In her hand dangled a tiny I ters is delicious and makes a nice two; next, maid or matron of hon­ 1 can’t understand his asking Miss it to Vance, who read it carefully shell pocket book with the dollar security except a sentimental Hoffman not to mention the pack­ with an expression of growing Sunday evening supper dish. or; alone, and last, bride, with woman who was blind to his inside. Oyster Salad her father. age to me. . . . It might not have amusement. Sue stood for a long while in a amazin’ defects? y*‘ know, 1 was ”Y’ know,” he said, “this docu One pint oysters, 2 grapefruit, contained the jewels, after all." corner, trying to understand things, j ^ ^ gup 2. Just In front of bride. just evil-minded enough to suspect “ Do you imagine for one mo­ ment isn't at all legal. Any judge finely chopped celery, 1 there was a Calypso in the life of The house seemed to be full of l i i j 3 tablespoons lemon ment," rejoined Vance, “that Alvin worthy the name would throw it tie girls all dressed m white, white i ? . « icmou 3. Bride and'bridegroom. this Ulysses he told o® told the Major the truth about the precip’tately out of court. lUs far juice, 6 tablespoons oil, 1-2 tea- YELLCW stopping over*ln^ew York to mur­ and pink, white and blue, ribbons, , „„„„„ , o . ^ ^ package? It was not a very cred- too simple and precise. It doesn’t ruffles and puffs. She felt very much i teaspoon powdered PENCIL mur au revoir to someone. table transaction, y’ know; and the begin with -greetings'; it doesn’t out of place. Her friend was there f ^ gratings nutmeg, 1-8 W nH TH E “When a man like Pfyfe falls to Major most likely would have given contain a single -wherefore-be-lt’ or ^ ^ , ' 1 teasDOonteaspoon pepper,nftnner. paprika,nanriVa hiaarfahearts nfof MRS. ADA M. m > specify the sex of a person, it 1s but she was very busy. him what-for.” ‘be-it-known’ or ‘do-hereby’ : It says I lettuce. BAND safe to assume the feminine gender. And ladies and gentlemen passed | MERRIFIELD Major Benson’s explanation bore nothing about ‘free will’ or ‘sound from counter to counter buying Another Salad So I suggested that you send a PauJ mind’ or ‘disposin mem'ry’ ; and Another oyster ^alad Is made Teacher of out Vance’s surmise. Markham. In tilings and saying incidentally, Mandolin Tenor Banjo Pry to Port Washington to peer the Captain doesn’t once refer to with cooked oysters molded in telling him of the Interview with “And whose little girl is this? And MandoJa Cello-Banjo into his trans-matrimonial activi­ himself as thi party of the first lemon jelly. This is served with ties: I felt certain a bonne amie Paula Banning, ^ emphasized the whose little girl is this?” Only one , Ukulele Mando-Cello part’ . . . Utterly worthless. Ser­ old man stopped before the little' f'e^y cur s and mayonnaise on a Louise Kice,i would be found. Then, when the jewel episode in "the hope that the Tenor Guitar Plectrum Banjo Major would voluntarily mention geant. If I were you. I’d chuck it." brown figure and said, Whose lit- 1 lettuce. Banjo-Mandolin ran poativdir rCfed y our talcxite, virtues mysterious package, which ob­ Oysters make a delightful first and faults Yiordtand viously was the security, seemed to the N^ackage; for his promise to (To Be Continued) tie girl is this?” Ensemble Playing for Advanced “ I don’t know,” said her friend’s course for a formal dinner, served what nots t b k you'icnMjle'iri»«{^J:lp*k Pupils. in thought”.'’ ■ .v- mother. “Just some little person raw on the half shell with wedges Agent for Gibson Instruments. of lemon they are sure to be popu­ Send ybuf “ jK3ibbUngB” ’c4;rignatartf who happened in.” CMii Fellows* Block $ o t analyn*. Bneiow the^cture oftwitotadek 1490 The brown little girl’s cheeks lar. Be sure that each oyster is At the Center.-—Room 8. Mon­ head. cuCfnana b « cf-Mikadg peoiila, flushed. She had a name— a nice completely loosened from its shell day, Tuesday, Wednesday and ten cents. Address LouisnRiM, c i^ « Bridge M e name, and her friend’s mother before serving to prevent discom- EAGUB FENCa CO.. NEW TORK G t t t Smart Edition of a 1 Thursday. knew it. Only it wouldn’t mean I fort for the guests. Very often a Daily Health Service One-Piece Frock anything to the old man. Being a ! sauce of grated horseradish Is Another With the front of the skirt pleated smart little soul she sensed in­ passed and tiny “oyster” crackers HINTS ON HOW TO KEEP WELL are usually served. Five or six BY W. VV. WENTWORTH and the neckline exhibiting the fash­ stantly the fact that if her name by World Famed Authority ionable "V-shape, no wonder this frock had sounded important it would oysters are planned for each per­ (Abbreviations: A— ace; K—' Raisin Cooides! Nut Bread!! is acclaimed one of the season’s su^ have been repeated. son to be served. king— Q—-queen; J—jack; X— j <*8ses-for these are the points Parw She hurriedly spent her dollar Delectable Cocktail Date W affles!!! jany card lower than 10.) considers essential to chic. Adiagonal- It’s a snap to make up Aese delicious' complet^y digested and absorbed. got the big door open somehow, On oyster cocktail may be serv- BULKY POOD HELPS KEEP The lack of sufficient bulk in (doeing vestee of pique and man­ and tore home across the park to recipes with Rumford. *rhey 11 be perfect nishly tailored cuffs finish the dress. DIGESTION AT NORMAL the diet and the abuse of the use sob herself to sleep. in texture, taste and appearance t<^ 1— How do you determineNo. 1490 is in sixes 36, 88, 40, 42 and In thirty years the little girl’s Rumford makes off baked foods especially of cathartics are believed to be 44 inches bust. Size 38 requires 4 H By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN responsible for many of our dif­ twenty-one points in a no- name was known around the good and wholesome. Always use . Editor Journal of the American yards 39-inch dark material and ^ world. When she traveled kings en­ ficulties of digestion. A normal trump bid, when estimating w d contrasting (cut crosswise). Medical Association and of Hygeia, tertained her. amount of bulk will help the pro­ the value of your hand? Price 15 cents. • ^ , the Health Magazine. cess- and will not give rise to the Make your dresses it hom e your­ A national organization asked K N fv e r The sophistication of food sub- 2— ^What is a baby no- her to be its head for a year. In RUMFORD Irritative disorders that result self! Of course you can with the help "stances seems to be pointing t(> choosing committees and chairman from the abuse o!! cathartics. trump ? •of our patterns, perfect in line and The Wholesome aBakteg ward that time so much exploited A person who eats the proper 3— Partner bids no-trump. correct In every detail. There is a she came face to face with her by the wagsmlths, when a whole food in proper amounts and who You hold: K X X X X in minor charming assortment of fashions from friend’s mother from the old town. Needless to say there was no for­ BAKING POWDER meal will be taken in a tablet. has regulated his Intestinal action suit and bust. What should which to choose your requirements in More and more we are inclining will have one normal bowel action our Fashion B o

/I i; N , ■' > MANCHESTER (CONN.) EVENING HERALD. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1927,

V

TODAY’S GRID GAMES Want To Trim Dartmouth

ARE IMPORTANT ONES Pans Get Chance to Look Over Either Town Title Contender Tomorrow} First Home ferson last week, experts picked the Football Season Passes Half eastern squad as championship con­ SCORING POWER COUNTS Game (or Cubs. tenders. Penn State is at the top The scoring punch is the vital of its form. It should continue its thing' In all forms of sport. Tomorrow’s aportVjaeuu for Manchester football fans-includes home Way Hark and Big Elev­ winnlpg streak. The Army will be In baseball, the timely single contests for the Cloverleaves and the Ciibs. aspirants (or the 1927 toim forced to their best to beat Buck- with the bases loaded is always championship. The 1925-26 champions.; the Cloverleaves, -will again nell. The Penn squad is a finely- two or three runs more important try conclusions with the speedy iVallihRford Eagles at Hickey’s Grove ens Enter Final Stages of coached eleven. Carnegie Tech than a triple with the bases while the Cubs will tackle the.strong AH-Plainville aggregation at-the should push West 'Virginia a step empty. ‘ West Side Playgrounds,-.. It will be the first home game of the seasoj* or two more further into the' cel­ The greatest elevens are those for the south end club. Development. lar. Georgetown is picked to ,heat that have a scoring kick when Waynesburg. Amherst should van­ Gi'eene they are in possession of the ball quish Massachusetts Aggies. 'Villa- inside the opposition’s 20-yard line. It is reported. that thh'Cdbs will The Wallingford-Eagles are com­ BY TOM THORPE nova will take John Carroll Into That Is the spot where it be­ hold plenty In reserve in their Special. Correspondent camp. Nebraska may not do so well comes a serious question as to game with Plainville because they ing to Manchester confident they against Syracuse. A Salt Lake vic­ what is the best play to use. It is fear scouts from the north end 'will will topple the Cloverleavea, These New York, Oct. 29.— The grid­ tory would not surprise us. Coach be among the large throng'df spec­ two teams met a couple of weeks tators which they hope will witness iron season passes the half-way Lew Andrews has devefbped a fine ago and WaJlingford came within a squad at Syracuse. This is likely their contest. Although no such mark today. All of the big elevens announcement has been' made offi­ hair’s breadth of winning. The re­ enter the ^final stages of their de­ to be proved today. cially, members of the Cubs team sult was a 6-6 tie. velopment Those who have fallen say it has been decided to work a position or zone that taxes tlie The CloveAdaves'did not gain as by the wayside must wai.t until an­ resources of the field general and straight plays as much as possible.-' other year for a try at champion­ calls for the best that is In the of­ No announcement has been much ground as Wallingford and ship honors. The few teams remain­ ampus fensive team. as to'the starting lineup foisMan-^ their lone score was the result of a ing in the select class are going to Chester but it inay be Mozzhr' and blocked punt by Ted McCarthy, confront sterner opposition each iONSPORlil Football games are decided Mantelli, ends; Greenberg and "Ven- week. Today’s toll of casualties is pishwidc drillo, tackles: Finnegan and Hap- who also recovered the pigskin. A not on the ground gained but few line plunges and Captain Brn- likely to cut deep into the hopes -oil the points scored. peny, guards; Pentore or S. "Ven- of ambitions of more than one big drillo, center; Donnelly, quarter­ nig Moske was over the goal lino, but the try for point went wide. eastern squad. eOB MATHERNS Punch Was Lacking back; Dietz, Farr, Dahlquist, St, John, Groman, halfbacks; Gervinl Then came Wallingford’s hair- The Yale-Dartmouth. contest In In the defeat of 'Vanderbilt by raising finish. A , long forward the New Haven Bowl is the most Breaker of winning streaks— Texas and Alabama by Georgia or Schubert, fullback. Manager that’s the title they ought to give Tech, the value of a scoring punch "Vendrillo has announced that If the pass nestled in the arms of one of important on any eastern gridiron. tlieir ends and he dodged hla way Tad Jones and his Blue sqUad are in Dixie to Mike Donahue, Louis­ was never better Illustrated. 'Van­ fans support his team good tomor­ row, more home games will be past two Cloverleaves’ backs for a fighting to keep their heads above iana State coach. derbilt and Alabama gained the score. Things looked mightv the football horizon. The cleancut That Is what this veteran coach more ground but didn't win. played before the title game ou In going down to defeat, before November 20. . gloomy for the Cloverleaves for a victory over the West Point squad has been doing to great football minute but “ Whltty” Mullins broke last week has placed the Ells on the teams ever since ^ the formidable Texas eleven, Dan Not much is known about the McGugin’s ’Vanderbilt team com­ caliber of the All-Plalnvilles. They through and smeared the kick. road to championship honors. If he became con­ Tomorrow is another day, how­ they can continue that march today, nected with Ala­ pleted 13 forward passes, gained are said to have a heavy line and 316 yards against 151 and made 18 a light and speedy backfield com­ ever, and both teams promise to it is very likely they will enter the bama as coach make a much better showing. It big Princeton classic at New Haven more than 20 downs to seven, yet were defeated posed of ex-high school and former college stars. If they are any­ slmuld be a game well worth on November 12 with every right to years ago. He was 13-6. watching. The only change in the be classed on even terms with their a star player at The two defeated teams in these thing like, the W*Ulngford Eagles, very important southern games local lineup Is expected to be at Jungletown rivals. Yale prior to ac­ ^ Chhrleswovth the Cubs should be in for a warm made more than 600 yards through session. Play will start at 2:45 quarter because “ Hook” Brennan Gamp Important. cepting the coach­ will,be out for at least two weeks * f * Hobcn with competent officials in charge. Today’s game means much to the ing job at Auburn.

n- TPAQBTBKt"^ ■ ______’ - - , . ______:------■ '' ■■■" ' . . ------. ' :------“” ~T « >f^L' aw i You’ll Find That Used Car You Want Listed In These Columns. Look Through Them "" ^ ■ •, ■*' ______...... ApMtaaenti->FUtg— Dnsinfm Locations for Rent 64 28 Tcnsmonti tor Rent 63 UURE sn p r FIRE Repairing ODD FELLOW’S HALL for entertain­ Want Ad Infonnatfoii Lost and Found ^ ment, dances, lodge purposes on EXPERT KEY FITTING. Lawn mow ON LILLBY ST. near Center, four vacant nighta Apply Henry Loud, CHEATS t h e De p a r t m e n t LOST—ROLL OF Valley tin betwep ers sharpened and repalre^ ai® TOOMT^all Improvementa. Vacant janitor on premisea Manchester Center, Garden, Main or Pine streets. scissors, knives and saws sharpened. No “ 10th., also garage on Lilac. Call So. Herald Office. ___ Work called for and deliver e^ Phone 1701-5. ______.Bonsfls for Rent 66 Harold Clemson, 108 Small Blaze Home C. ll. Evening Herald LOST—A KBYTAINER, 3 keys, be­ street, Manchester, Conn. Telephone ONE. THREE oM four room Hathaway Put Out .Befmre tween Center and Main, or Bissell flat, on second floor, at les uaa FIVE ROOM, half of house, modern, 462. _____ Prices street. all Improvements, with Classified Advertisements and Wells streets. Finder call Summit street Firemeii; Arrive. 1068-2. l o c k a n d GUNSMITHING, vacuum garage. Inquire 164 Oak street or Home Bank and Trust Company. cleaners, c l o c k s . Phonographs, etc, on Used Cars probably*never will be low­ call 616-5. ______FOR RENT-SIX ROOM HOUSE at 47 Fire, thought by fire department aunonncements repaired by Braithwalte, new loca p l e a s a n t s ix ROOM flat. Imprwe- tion. No. 52 Pearl street.______er than they are today. Dealers t^ough- Branford street, with all Improve­ officials to have started from a cig­ ments and good loc^Uon. Vacant Oct. arette, did . some damage to the Is price of three line*. out the city have cut their stocks to bedrock. 1st. Inquire 9 Strickland street.____ ments. Phone 473. 5 PIECES reupholstered , like SEWING MACHINES, repairing of roof of the porch atthe rear of new ?22. Let us renovate your mat­ all makes, oils, needles und supplier The brisk sales of new 1928 models have ST. PETERSBURG, Line rate. p e T to T tot tranelent tress and reupholster your furniture 6 BOOM TENEMENT 17 Hui^lng- ter home In best residential section Charles R. Hathaway’s home on R. W. Garrard, 37 Edward street. brought a great influx of late model trade- ton street, modem ads. _ ___ Manchester Upholstering Co., liy JPhOn^ for the season at reasonable prlc^ Laurel street this forenoon. An Blte«tl-re Mnreh IT, tVSt Spruce St. ______ins.” Rather than put them into "storage ' newly decorated. Ap^y Mrs. Mar Living room, dining room, kitchen, CMh Cbarxe garet Arnott, 125 E. Center street. porches, three bedrooms, two bath^ alarm was tuimed In from Box 36 dealers have priced them for immediate but the. fire had been extinguished 6 Consecutive Day« . . j I S S lll eS NOTICE—^I HAVE purchased a halt Conrses and Classes 27 double garage. Completely furnish­ 3 Consecutive Days . . » OM w Interest in the Silk City SIX ROOM TENEMENT ed. For further particulars ■ com­ before the apparatus arrived. mirn corner Main and Eldridge clearance. Select the car suited to your drldge street, ?24 a month. Apply on , municate with F. J. Limbacher In 1 I>av •• e * e e • *.e e ••••-■• I ** BARBERS, ALWAYS ^^MAND^ J Carpenters were shlngUqg the All for Irregular Insertions f t r e V 3 barbers, no waiting. purse and plan from the many offered under premises. ______care of Watkins Brothers, Inc. From 8 in morning until late at We prepare you to hold job in shor upper roof of the Hathaway house night. Charles Culotta. time Vaughns Barber School. U Classification 4. 6‘ ROOM TENEMENT, steam heat, all arid ft Is thought that one of them Market street, Hartford, Conn. modern improvements, Honaes for Sale 72 PERSONAL CHRISTMAS CARDS. We Vacant Oct. 20th. Inquire 16 Doane may have thrown a cigarette stub will nrlnt your name on 15 assorted Private Instruction 28; street. TeL 904-4.______FOR SALE—^19 Oakland Terrace, 6 from this roof to the roof of the ana stopped before the third « T a rL wUh envelopes for $L50. Stop Read room house, all improvements, ex­ day will be charged only lor J® porch below. and*^ see our assortment. Waranoke • TO RENT—4 ROOM TENEMENT, cept gas and sewer, new barn and Chief Foy of the Hre department tual number of tlmea the ad Press, 625 Main street. p r iv a t e INSTRUCTION given In all j garage. 464 Hartford Road and two shed space for three cars, large Irt eharalng at the,rate earned, but ^Jlammar school subjects by former , Herald Classified Ads small buildings for sale, one 12x17 chicken . coop. L(^ 100x140. Easy said that the fire hid started be­ no allowances or refunds Jj* “ the «?t e a MSHIP TICKETS—all parts of Irammar school principal, for rates and one 11x22, good for garages. In­ terms, see owner. Tel. 2168. cause of the dry condition of the on six time ads stopped after tne the world. Ask for sailing lists and call 215-5...... __ quire 591 Center street. TeL 990-2. Jater Phonf 750-2. Robert J. Smith. For the CAR you want to buy. WASHINGTON ST—New 6 room shingles on the roof* due to the ® No’^^tlil forbids” ; display »nes not 1009 Main street Help Wanted— Female 35 TO RENT—3 ROOM tenement, all Im­ home, Immediate occupancy. Large October drought. provements, 22 Norman street. In­ lot, one ear garage, mortgages ar Hose Companies 1 and 2 re* “°i^ e Herald will not be roaponalhl* 4 quire on premises. ranged. Cash $1000, price right. Call for more than one “ o? Automobiles tor Sale Arthur A. Knofla. TeL 782-2—875 sporided to the alarm* of any advertisement ordered tor THREE ROOM heated apartment, In Main street. more than one tlma , _ mcor- f o r SALE—1923 CHEVROI^T tour­ w a n t e d a t once Johnson Block, all modern Improv^ ing in good running condition, sell ments. Apply to Aaron Johnson, 62 COLONIAL HOME—180 Porter Street. 1,500 TAX LISTS lINFiLED; cheap—no use for it. Tel. 1133. Linden street or to the janitor. Suitable for two family dwelling. Electrical Appliances— Radio 49 Rooms Wlttiont Board 59 Half of house now rented, leaving FOR SALE—1924 FORD COOTE— women and girls mi THREE ROOMS—Heated apartments very desirable six rooms and bath S a t e ,11 A p p ly ed. Good condition, new tires. Phone shade grown tobacco. Wet with bath. Apply shoemaker. Trot­ with all conveniences, for buyer or ONLY THREE DAYS MORE 1322-3 between 5 and 6. stone and Berment, Apel Place, e l e c t r i c a l CONTRACTING appli­ FOR RENT—COMFORTABLY fur­ ter Block. can bo rented separately. Reason­ All advertlsementa^'must confom Manchester. ances. motors, generators, so ld and nished steam heated room. Inquire able terms. Phone Manchester 221. l ig h t c a n o p y to p 44 Pearl street. Phone 1781. TO RENT—4 ROOM tenement, steam * 1-2 ton delivery repaired: work called for. Many Auto Owners, Neglect to regulations"°^„?:fo^^y?y“ enforced^J)y ?hfpublleh^^ body for Ford, good condition, cheap E le ctric Co.. 407 Center street. Phone heat, all improvements. Inquire 104 WHO HAS A BUILDING LOT which ,no ttey reserve the right to for quick sale. Call after 6 p. m. 1592. f u r n is h e d BOOM, steam heqt, n^ar Walnut street. they would like to trade for a new Put in ListSi Courting 10 ers, andrevise " or “ reject any copy con- Center, suitable for two gentlemen. edit, rev.—- "wi— Telephone 776-13. Help Wanted— Male Inquire 16 Wadsworth street. house? We will take the building lot Per Cent Penalty: Fuel and Peed 4 9 -4 TO BENT—3 ROOM tenement with as part payment. See Stuart J. Was- ®'clLOSINQ*°HOURS--^laMlfled ads 1__1927 Ford Sedan, like new. all improvements, 28 Church street. BIG OHIO CORPORATION seeks NICELY FURNISHED BOOM to one jey, 827 TeL 1428-2. ^ 1—1925 Overland Truck. Inquire 30 Church street upstairs, With three more days left, al^ut 1—1927 Ford Truck. ^manager for unoccupied territory FOR SALE—BEST HARDWOOD, |8, or two refined young ladles, with or noon or evenings. ?50 weekly commission. Earnings $10, $12 a load. Hardw^d slabs, $7. without board. Centrally located. Ad­ Wanted— Real Estate 77 1,500 lists have yet to be filed in 10:80 a. m. a a j 1—Durant Touring. C. r -■Nash : Touring. start immediately. Good foi SIO Cash on delivery. TeL 895-3 dress Box R, in care of South Herald. TO RENT—4 ROOM tenement in new the office of the hoard of assessors, Telephoiie Your Want Ads yearly. We furnish everything, de­ R, Palmer 44 Henry streets house, $21 per month, 91 Charter WANTED—FARM OF about 25 acres it was said today. Many of these Ads are accepted over the telephone JAMES STEVENSON liver and collect. Capital or experi­ FOR RENT—Single and'double steam Oak street. in vicinity of Manchester. Give par­ ot^the CHARGE RATE given ibove 53 Bissell St. Tel. 2169 ence unnecessary. ohi^’ FOR SALE—GOOD hard wood for heated furnished rooms; also 3 large ticulars. Address Box M, Herald. lists, the assessors say, are those la a convenience to advertisers, but 1556 Fyr-Fyter Bldg.. Dayton, Ohio. fire place, furnace chunks, also rooms, heated tenement, all improve­ FOR RENT—^Flve room flat with containing only automobiles. It Is the CASH RATES will be accept^ m stove lengths. Call 637-5. ______ments at J09 Foster street. bath, electric lights and gas. Inquire likely that many of these will have EtILL PAYMENT If palQ *t tne busi­ 1925 Hudson Coach ...... 475 MAN to book orders for roses, 28 Mt. Nebo Place. 1923 Durant Sport Touring...... 150 ^shrubs, vined, ornamental and fruit FoT sa LE—HARDWOOD slabs, stove ROOM TO RENT; also a store at a ten per cent, of their value afided ness office on or before the seventh lengths $10 cord. Hard wood $12.50. rent that will pay. Call at 459 Main TO RENT—3 ROOM steam heated “NOBODY’S CHILDREN” day following the 1923 Overland Sedan ...... trees. Also appoint asents. as penalty for, failure to list. each ad. otherwise *.he lm.a k « iu 1923 Overland Touring ...... 1*“ nient free. Pay weekly. C. W. StuaTt Telfephone 1205-12. O. H. Whipple, street. apartment, all modem improve- One of the assessors said & Co. Newark, New York.______mente, Orford Building. Inquire S. teday RATE will be collected. No responsl- 1922 Bulck T ouring...... I5U A ndover.______that automobile owners who ^ r a hiiitv for errors in telephoned aos Boarders Wanted 69-A L. Barrabee, 52 Maple street. AT RIALTO TOMORROW w ill\ e assumed and their accuracy Small down payments. Easy terms. SALESMEN to sell our grade SALE—HARDWOOD $9 R®o “ton-per-cented” ' last year have garden and field seed direct to truck load; $9.75 split. V. Flrpo. 116 TO RENT—4 ROOM TENEMENT, up­ come up and have filed their lists cannot be guaranteed. We will Insure payments If you are planters. A good position with big Wells street. Phone 1307-2. ROOM AND BOARD for young wo­ stairs, near Main street, $17 month. income. Experience unnecessary. man with companionable lady who Inquire 58 School street. promptly. Other owners; either Phone 664 sick or Injured. will share comfortable home. Inquire Mammoth Screen Production Cobb Co., Franklin, Mass. ^ e l and Feed 49-A Ignorance of the law, or for other ASK *'OR WANT AD 8BRV1CB CRAWFORD AUTO SUPPLY CO. 13 Moore street. reasons, have made no effort to file. ONE MAN FROM 25 to 35 years of TO RENT—Four room tenement $19 Plays Rialto Tomorrow and Cei.:3r & Trotter Sts. . The hoard will alt this afternoon. TeL 1174 or 2021-2 age with Insurance, magapne, SAVE COAL—Burn wood this Fall. Wanted— Rooms— Board 62 month. Inquire 35 1-2 Walker street. Monday; Leda Gys is Star; Index of Classifications We sell hard and soft firewood, also Until 5 o’c lo ck ,-a n d ^ - Monday and vacuum cleaner or other specialty Double Feature BiH Today. 1925 Ford Tudor selling experience. Apply 4 to 6 P. fireplace wood. L. T. Wood, 56 Bla TO BENT—SIX ROOMS all Improve­ 'Tuesday until 7 o’clock. Tuesday m. Mr. Pierson, 517 Main street. sell. Pho 3 496. WANTED—ROOM AND BOARD by ments, furnace, electric lights, gas, 1924 Ford Tudor Protestant girl, age 20. Near mills. is the last day. 1923 Ford Coupe South Manchester. hot water, bath, set tubs. Apply 475 That great dramatic star, Leda 1923 Liberty Roadster. Garden— Farm— Dairy Prodnets 50 Call 1960. Center street. a K rY u ^ h V n u m erlciil order mdl- MANAGER wanted for Manchester Gys, plays the leading role in “No­ SWEDISH LUTHERAN cated: . . i MANCHESTER MOTOR SALES CO. Branch Store. No experience neces­ Apartments— Flats TO RENT—5 ROOM flat, new house, body’s Children” which plays the f o r s a l e —CABBAGE and turnips, Rev. P. 3 . O. Cornell Lost and Found ...... ^ 1069 Main St. Tel. 2303 sary. $500 cash deposit required^ on 63 all Improvements, garage. Inquire Vitinouncementa | goods. $300 up monthly Manufao- soft heads at half price, g o ^ r o ^ Tenements for Rent 164 Eldridge street. cozy Rialto tomorro.w and Monday. Personals ...... Dennis P. Coleman—^Mgr. turer, 338 Pearl street. Hartford, by way of Oakland to farm. Wm. H. This mammoth production is one Sunday, 9:30 A. M. Sunday Automobllea a p a r t m e n t s —Two. three and four These cars may be seen in our show­ Conn. Felt. Telephone 776-4. TO RENT—6 ROOM TENEMENT on of the most famous ever filmed. It School and Fellowship Bible Class. Automobiles for Sale ...... g room. room apaitmonta, heat. Janitor oer- Newman street; also 5 room fiat, all Automobiles for « FOR~SALE—CABBAGE, large solid vice, gas range, refrigerator, in-a- Improvements, 147 E. Center street. is in ten parts. The titles are writ­ 1 0:4 5 A. M. Swedish Service. A uto Accessories—Tires ...... ^SPECIALS THIS WEEK- Help Wanted— Male or Peinal6 37 heads $1.00 per doz. Yellow turnips, door bed tumlshed. Call Manchester Phone 1830. ten both in English and Italian, orfe Rev. Cornell will conduct the ser­ Auto Repairing—Painting ....• Down 75c per bu. Miller Bros., 188 Spencer Construction Company, 8100 or tele­ on top of the other. Matinee ad­ vice. Payment WANTED AT ONCE a live man or street. Phone 342-12. phone .782-8. ____ TWO ROOM HEATED apartment In mission Monday will he ten and Autos—Ship by Truck ...... “1925 Bulck Sedan M aster...... ?280 woman to solicit Gasoline Club mem- Johnson Block, facing Main street. Music as follows: Autos — For iXir® , * e e e • e FOR SALE— Red and yellow onions. CENTER ST., 439—Four largo rooms Apply to Aaron Johnson. 62 Linden twenty cents and Sunday and Mon­ [Viragea-Servlce—Storage .. JO 1925 Bulck Touring M aster...... 220 bers and on The Silent Glow oil Invocation, Guilmant. 1925 Bulck Sedan M aster...... 280 burner. Apply at Community Fillmg $1.50 bushel, pickling onions 60o and bath—recently redewrated— street or to the janitor. day nights will he ten and thirty. Anthems, Blessed Is the Man, M..tiire,vcies—S'®?®'?® *;,'*_***** it 1922 Essex Coach ...... • • 1”0 Station. W. S. Grant Mgr., 139 No. basket, Green Mountain potatoes, electricity, gas, good heat. Rent $zo. ! - . — ------feels that Want ed Auto8--Motoroyole8 1924 Bulck Touring ...... 160 Main street, Manchester. $1.75, parsnips $1.50 bushel, cabbage No objection to children. UPPER SIX ROOM PLAT with bath, Wennerberg. ' 75c dozen turnips 75c bushel, carrots on Strickland street. Improvements this slight Increase in prices for Choir assisted by Miss Elsie Ber- Kusiue.sr Services OffereJ ...... J. M. SHEARER $1.25 bushel delivered. Phillip Hoff­ FOR RENT—6 ROOMS with all im­ including gas. Rent $24.00. Apply “Nobody’s Children” will be entire­ ....18-A Agents Wanted 37-A gren, soprano. Mnusehold Services Offerjd 14 Capitol Bulck Co. TeL 1600 man, 460 Hillstown Road. TeL 2440-2. provements. C. J. Tuttle, 51 Flower Chas. J. Strickland, 168 Main. Phone ly satisfactory to the patrons, be­ r.uilding—' ontractlng . . . . street. Telephone 767-5. _____ 1727-3. • W hat a Friend, Converse. Florists—Nurseries ...... FOR SALE — GREEN MOUNTAIN cause of the high-priced' photo­ Postlude, Jubilate, Whittier. Auto Accessories— Tires 6 SELL PERSONAL XMAS C A R ^ .— Funeral Directors ••• • •i” **’ ** tS Names embossed in gold. Everybody potatoes $1.75 per bushel. Thomas FIVE ROOM FLAT, second floor, all play they will see In return. There 4 P M . Wonieh’s Missionary So­ Healing—Pluinhlng—Roofing .. J* buys at $1. dozen up.. 50 percent Burgess. Wapping. TeL 29-2. Improvements with garage. Inquire will also be a comedy. Sunday and Insurance ...... LARGE . ASSORTMENT OP used tires. 38 Woodland street. Phono 1521.__ ciety will meet. Dr. Kagler will be profit. Samples free. Dunbar Corp., WORK ON 3RD DISTRICT Monday nights, there will be two MlUlnory—Dressmaking . ..••• Prloee ranging from $2 to $5. Come New Brunswick, N. J. FOR SALE— TURNIPS and cabbages. the speager. There will be special In and pick yours today. Center F. A. Krah, 669 Tolland Turnpike. FIVE ROOM PLAT all moderfl Im­ shows, one at 7 o’clock and the Painting—Papering ...... “ Auto Supply Co., 155 Center street. TeL 364-2. provements. Vacant after Oct. 15th, music. No evening serrlc^ Protesslunal Services ...... " j Situations Wanted— Female 38 Inquire 24 Orchard street. Phone SCHOOL STARTS TODAY other at 9 o’clock. Notes. Garages— Service— Storage 10 GREEN MOUNTAIN POTATOES, de­ 846-2. ,______Today is bargain day and there Monday, 7:30 P. M. Meeting ot TnnorVn”^D ye{ng-^isan*® * NURSE. WITH many years experi­ livered in five bushel lots to families, will be seventeen reels on the con-1 Toilet Goods and Services ence and best of references would mangle beets $10 ton delivered, 100 FOR RENT—SEVERAL first class Church Council. Wanted—Business Service . . . . . like a patient or elderly person to Plymouth Rock Pullets, some laying. rents with all Improvements. A w y t,. , tlnuous program which starts at Monday 8 P. M. Beethoven Glee Bducntlonal _ GARAGES. CAR STORAGE space for care for in her home, refined sur­ C. W. Johnson, Wapping. TeL 92-12. Edward J. Holl, 885 Main street. TeL Construction Company S ta k e s 2 -.is and lasts until 10:30. Includ- Club will meet. Courses and Classes ...... Jirent etc. 62 Pearl street. roundings. Address Box N, in care of 5 6 0 . ______R ead y; ed on the bill are “The Bandit Bus- Tuesday 7 P. M. Q Clef Glee Club Private Instruction “ GREEN MOUNTAIN potatoes $1.75 Out Cellar; To be South Herald. i ter”, featuring Buddy Roosevelt, ’Tuesday 8 :30 p. m . Choir re­ Dancing ...... * m Wanted Autos— Motorcycles 12 per bushel. Yellow Globe turnips. 75o 4 ROOMS on Ridgewood street, white Next September, Musical—Diamatlo ...... bu. Delivered. H, W. Case. TeL 36-3. sink and set-tub, bath, electricity, “The Trunk Mystery” portraying Live Stock— Vehicles 42 hearsal. _ ^ ^ . Wanted—Instruction furnace, garage and store room, $23. Charles Hutchinson, the third and Wednesday 8 P. M. Concert by Flnanetal ONIONS $1.10 BUSHEL. Red onions, Inquire 591 Hilliard street. The Manchester Construction AUTOS—Will buy care for Junk. fourth chapters of “Fighting for Miss Elsa Nordstrom of Worceeter, Bonds—Stocks— Mortgages . k«.« Used parts for sale. General auto re­ a t STUD—Wonderful little Boston $1.50 bushel, cabbage 60o dozen. Ap­ Company today began the building Fame”, a comedy and Pathe Re­ Business Opportunltlos ...... »• pairing. Abel’s Service Station, Oak Terrier. Fine speciman. Toy. Regis­ ples 75o basket. John McConvllle. HERE IS A CHANCE—a very eco­ of the 670,000 schoolhouse In the Mass., assisted by Miss Helen Ber- Money to Loan ...... ••••••••••• Sj street. TeL 789. tered, by the Stroller, 32 Mountain Telephone 1364-13. Green Mountain nomical flat of 3 rooms, for small view— all for the same popular greitk contralto and Mr. Albert Pew- Money Wanted street, Rockville, potatoes, $1.00 bu. family; 3 minutes to trolley; newly Third District on Porter street. The Help and SItuatloms papered and painted, near school. cellar was staked out and excava­ prices. on Bass. This concert is under the Help Wanted—Female ...... « Business Services Offered 13 Robert E. Homans, the two hun­ auspices of Luther League Team f o r sa le — WONDERFUL well . Household Goods S i For information see Seastrand Bros. tion work will start as soon as pos­ Help Wanted—Male ...... broken riding horse with full equip­ Agents, South End 91 Main street. dred-pound comedian who appeark number Five and it Is hoped th « Help Wanted—Male or Female.. 87 SAND, GRAVEL, STONE, cinder fill­ sible. ment, bridle Mnrting.'ilo. officers with Buddy Roosevelt In “ The there will ber a good response by Agents W nted ing. Loam and grading, ashes remov­ saddle and blanket. May be bought MODERN 6 ROOM RENT, hardwood The new schoolhouse Is 141 feet Situations Vnnted-Female . . . «» ed. Moving and trucking. Now is the very reasonable. 106 Benton street. FOR SALE—Empire Crawford coal finish, 29 Main street. Inquire 6 Hud­ Bandit Buster,” has been on the publiC in backing up this co»» Situations Wanted—Male ...... »» time to have your cemetery lot South Manchester. Phone 2344 or range, good condition, TeL 65S-3. son street. Phone 1233. frontage with a width of 62 feet. stage for twenty-four years, during Employment AgsjMiiRs .y cert. _ ^ , Mve Stock—PStsetPoaltry—VeWelee graded by Alexander Jarvis, Jr„ 416 2412. _____ It will be two stories high and which time he has protrayed more Friday 8 P. M. Sunday School Center. Phone 341.______FOR SALE—ONE GLENWOOD coal IN SELWlTZ BUILDING three room will have a concrete foundation. Dogs— eee«eeeeeee*d than seven hundred different roles. FOR SjVLE—GOOD HEALTHY Fer­ range and one Glenwood *4 burner apartm. t, all modern Improvements. teachers will meet at the hoffie o f [filve Stock—V^htcloi ...... • • • j* CHAIR CANING neatly d ne. Price rets. Walter H. Wells, 9 Village gas stove: both in excellent condi­ Inquire Selwits Shoe Shop. TeL 885-2. The exterior walls will be of hol­ He states that there is no training Dr. and Mrs. P. J. O. Cornell Poultry Anu SuooUoi, 5; right, satisfaction guaranteed. Carl street, Rockville, Conn. tion. Call at 387 Hartford Rd., after low tile with bricK veneer. A twen­ for screen work that • equals the Wanted — Pets—Poultry—Stock 44 Anderson, 53 Norman street. Phone 5 p. m. or Phone 2437-4. ty-year tar and gravel roofing will For Sale—MIseellaBeoas 1S92-2. experience gained with stock com­ TO GIVE HOPE CHEST 48 be used. The school will be ready Artlolee for Sale Jo Poultry and Supplies Office and Store Equipment 64 panies. Mr. Homans has also di­ Manchester Camp; R < ^ N«gh- Boat! and Accessories ...... J* 18 TABLES OF WHIST for occupancy next September. rected many successful stage plays. Building Materials ...... JJ PIANO TUNING—All work guaran­ bors is dlstrlbuUng Uck*te for the Diamonds—Watches—Jewelry .. 48 teed. Estimates cheerfully given. FOR SALE—SEVERAL second hand FOR SALE—WE AtlE MAKING a On the first floor, there will be Hope Chest which is to j^ Electrical Appllanoee—Radio .. 49 Kemp’s Music House. TeL 821. coal burning brooder stoves: some change in our store fixtures, and will AT 5TH DIST. P A R H rooms for the manual training just before Christmas. The chest* Fuel and Feed ••:**;****/t very slightly used; also Perfection dispose of show cases and counters Garden—Farm—Dairy Produote 60 chick hoppers at reduced prices if at very low prices. Manchester class, domestic science class and will be on display in a Main sU-eet Household Goods ...... gl Florists— Nurseries 15 ordered before Jan 1st. 136 Summer Plumbing and Supply Co. kindergarten besides toilets, boiler CIRCLE TO K OPEN store window and wUl be a vwlUWe Machinery and Toole eeeeeeeoe* street. FOR SALE—CARNATION and Chry­ Eighteen tables ..were filled at room and coal pockets. On the sec­ treasnre chest, to some lucky per­ Musical Instruments ...... Wanted—To Boy 58 Office and Store Equipment . . . . santhemums, at 621 off Hartford 1000 MARCH HATCHED White the Fifth district Good Will club’s ond floor, there will be six class son. It will contain among other Road, Green House. TeL 37-3. rooms, 32 by 22 feet, a teachers’ Sporting Goods-Guns ...... Leghorn Pullets. High producing whist party last night which was ON TWO DAYS ONLY things a pair of blanke^^a qnllL Specials at the Stores ...... strain. Grown uder Conn. “Grow JUNK—1 will pay highest prices for room and the principal's office. The silk .bed spread, towels, table linen Wearing Apparel—Purs ...... CUT FLOWERS, Carnations, chrysan­ Healthy Chick" Plan. Oliver Bros.. all kinds of junk; also buy all kinds held in the City "View Dance Hall. Wanted—To Buy ...... themums, pompons, roses, everything No Windham. Conn. of chickens. Morris H. Lessner, tele­ Following the card playing the building is to have provision for a and everything to make it a vaiu- in funeral and wedding flowers. Also four room addition should this be­ Rooms—dlonrd—Hotels—Resorts phone 982-4. gathering enjoyed dancing. Manager Jack Sanson announc­ ^ l e prise. * Restnuraate •palms and ferns. Delivered^ any­ come necessary. Mrs. John Anderson, presOTt ^ Rooms Without Board ...... 68 where. Burke The Florist, Wayside Articles for Sale 45 ■MAGAZINES, rags, bundled paper, The whist prise winners were as ed that from now on the Circle Boarders Wanted ...... Garden. TeL 714-2, Rockville. junk bought for cash. Phone 849-8. follows: Ladles first, Miss Hansene The new school will he erected theater will be open only on Sat­ ade o f Mimchester camp be«io» Country Board-Resorts ...... JO Will call. J. Elsenberg. on a site immediately In the rear Committee of ladies Moving—Trucking-Storage 20 FOR SALE—BABY CARRIAGE, cot Nelson, Ridge street; ladles sec­ urday and Sunday evenings. He Hotels-Restaurants ...... 31 nnd single bed. Cheap. Apply at 86 of the present school and the lat­ associates will be ^rs. BmiM Wanted—Rooms—Board ...... 68 West street. ond, Mrs. Herbert Mitchell, Bell expects to continue to bring cur­ Real Uatnte For Beat street, Glastonbury: ladies third, ter will be torn down upon ^ e com­ rent productions to Manchester on Bengs, Mrs. RacbeL llunsle, Margaret Shea^ Mrs.: Margaret Apartment!, Fiats, Tenements., FOR FURNITURE storage space. SPECIAL ON HIGH grade white oak Catherine Moore, out of town; gents pletion of the new school. The new those two days. Business Locations for Ren. ... See Braithwalte. 52 Pearl street. kegs, of all sizes; also charred kegs. ABOUT TOWN building will accommodate about fin, Mrs. Mary P rederl<*8^, Mrfc Houses for Rent ...... 66 Manchester Grain and Coal Co., 10 first, Louis Laine; gents second, The Circle has been operating 800 children. . ^ _ Charlotte Johnson, Mrs. Louise Gil­ Suburban frr Rent . . . . . y . . . . . 68 L, M. HEVENOR local and long dis­ Apel Place. Phone 1760. Mrs. Sidney McAlpine and child­ William Mitchell; gents third, Wal­ for four days a week since Its Summer Homes tor Rent 67 • The Porter street school Is the man, Mrs. Marie HdUand. tance hauling and furniture moving. ren of Portland have 1 een spending lace Palirier. opening last month^for the season. to Bent •!%!!••« eeeeee** «• Pneumatic tire trucks. Prompt ser­ 47 third job of its kind for which the On one or two occasions, as during Real Estate For S^alo vice, Reasonable ratea TeL Manches­ Building Materials the last few days with her parents, Apartment Butldtnge tor Sale..* 69 • HOSPITAL NOTES contract has been awarded to tne the showing of the Tunney-Demp- The bridge'party at toe- Man- ter 67-4. Mr. and . Mrs. W illiam Evans of Manchester Construction Company. . Chester Community Club ’ wlH ba Business Property for S a le ...... 70 CONCRETE BLOCKS of all kinds for Three patients were admitted to sey fight films, the theater was Farms and Lind for Sale ...... 71 sale. Inquire Prank Damato, 24 High street. held on Mdndajr afternoon as‘ usual. PKRRETT AND GLENNBY—Local Memorial hospital yesterday. They The other two are In Simsbury and open on five d ^ s Houses for Sale ...... •• and long distance moving and truck­ Homestead Street, Manchester, ■Wlnsted. The former school was Lots for Sale ...... ^ ...... 78 ing. Dally expretss tu Hartford. Liv­ Phone 1507. An 8 1-2 pound daughter was are Edward Rich of New street, completed September 15 and the Resort Property for S s le ...... 74 ery oar for hire. Telephone 7-8. born yesterday to Mr. and Mrs. Ray­ Mrs. Harriet Foley of Burnside Suburban for Sale ...... 75 roof will be on the Wlnsted school Real Estate for Exchange ,....« 78 mond Carrier of 26 Walker street. and Mrs. Russell Skinner of Bissell MANCHESTER & N. Y. MOTOR DIS­ Women of England are becoming before winter comes. Wanted—Real Estate ...... 77 PATCH—Part loads to and from successful In conducting rabbit The little girl has been named Bar­ street. Anctloa^Legal Wotloea New York, regular service. Call 7-8 Auction .Sales ...... 78 or 1282. farms. bara Mae. Legal f otlces ...... 7* By Frank Beck |

GAS BUGGIES—Complications New six room single, oak floors and trliri, • 1 stairway three chambers and bath on second floor, good uttic, - h u m p h W/J VOUR YOU etc., lot 63*150 4 .PPle ttcoo «id | HEAVENS, HEM I S P ITE F U L AFTER THIS'] THAT CAT, ^ LITTLE - I GUESS , garden; Price only 65,500, cash 6500. g MISS TABBY, '/J DARLING ^>/RETCH, CAME OVER YOU AW £W v o u w o n ' t West Center St. on State. Road, six room S ^\HA5 BROUGHT STICK UP 2 car garage, poultry houses and fruit trees. Price only W.00O. s JUNIOR T O > .T O M Y OIDNY .\ W A N T YOUR Middle Turnpike East,^ brand new single of 6 S V / / iCOURT------SO^ ■ HOUSE, !P// V / H IM SILENCE NOSE A T , tionally largp Uvlng room, oak floors, real good electric ana = h e 'd k n o w HUNTING FOR HIS ' • HERE - Y O U R plumbing fixtures. Price 65.500. cash 6500. s YO U W ^ R E IN SUPERIORS. O N T R IA L UNCLE COURT Two family flat on West Side, steam heat, etc., ^ k and = FOR B A N K HEM,. curbing, all conveniences. Price only 67,500, reasonable terms, g ROBBERY. We have a real proposition to offer In a brand new sev^ s room single in the Green secUon, absolutely modem and | stantlally built, Ule bath and shower, extra^lavatory, S ecus hot water system, all piping brass throughout. flrePj®*** = Plenty of closet room, two car garage, gas, sewers, walk, euro and gutter all in. extra large lot. restricted to protect P«r«iaa- = er. Price Is surprisingly low and may be had on application. "Spring is only flve months away.”

I Robert J. Smith 1009 Main St | S “If you intend to live dn earth own 44 rilee o f I t.” S TiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiuuiiimiiiiiiiiniiniBniiiBiiiiBiiiiiniiiiipwuiiHiii. r«.rirt. wigi»>nUrf' —* T»,fcii«fcR».u.s rv .q£l

i j -'cvV-.:.'*- -M t -T- A By L. Cro^y .1 SKIPPY PT.ifcT>PttR P A N ^ Y S A YS? SENSE a»i NONSENSE

All tbfl happily married women aeem to be a little overweight. / 7 The evil that men do lives after INDIAN them, the good is oft squelched by the neighbors. ' Flirtation is attention without Intention. fjj.mr. • Freedom from debts is one kind of freedom some folks never know.

If you cannot boost Manchester or cannot help in any other way just kindly keep still and don’t knock and you will be doing some< thing. gK IP Py'w A f (JIV6W A OIMC W Stealing a kiss is really only r l petting larceny. D£LIV£g A F its TO A TW6ATR6 The outs want to get in,and the ins want to stay in, so we have politics. "Theatrical folks as a class," P. L. Crosby. iW? ^ AisosUUon. eiMT BY *** ****"^ ”*^ says a writer, "do not take enough WASHINGTON TUBBS H Hilut tn

“ What’s all the excitement c 0 L D: ger in a I X IrXXCVU O X X M A A - • Funeral, mister,’’ replied a na-

1 “Who’S dead?” “ Dunno, mister. Th’ lynchin’

Old Lady (stopping 'double­ ■^ONVO. t eft.- iwv-N’see, eck” bus in the pourii rain) : V\e Abi' Any sitting room?” VaSCLL, THe Cheerful Conductor: “ No, ma’am ^\-0N6. see. pK^vrr 'Tvxw ctoffA Kee? pRieMULi' While 65_per cent of the divorc­ ^ tA\vie- ' — ^ es are obtained by the wife, they w A R M also get 100 per cent of the ali­ mony. 'V. THE RULES 1__The idea of letter golf is to There came a premptory knock change one word to another and do at the^ door, and Into the editor’s it in par, a given number of strokes. private sanctum walked a very Thus to change COW TO HEN, in angry man, lA three strokes, COW, HOW, HEW, “ You are the editor of the r HEN. Welch Warbler?’’ he snapped. 2— You can change only one let­ “ Yes." ter at a time. “ My name is Morgan T. David, 3— You must have a completeYesterday your paper printed an word, of common usage, for each article about .me. You called me jump. Slang words and abbrevia­ a thief, a robber, a blackleg and a tions don’t count. lot jft other things.” 4— The order of letters cannot be r *fWe did,” said the editor. changed. ‘V e il, sir, I’m here to tell you my middle Initial is T. and not ' Hbw many of us feel like arbi­ H. If you can’t spell my name - r ~ ~ i ♦ - By Blosser trating’ when we feel sure we can correctly, have the goodness to lick the- other fellow r - - ” Answer That One leave It alone.’’ FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS —N It’s getting so the magazine ads SAV, P0P=VM1LL VCU THE SKIR'TLET , IIXAI'S RlSAXTAe-VNASAi are prettier than the covers. Po p vjJptAn'5 lAi A ) TIXSES’S A RSED ( you WANT YD ABOor TELL VHA&RS When the grass with dew is wet; Little skirt, you need not fret; lioPN TO AAAViS ) J/^ - m i s i e s JUST a s ’K p o p - - M)S\C GOES APTER I It seems the more money a .man yAAOvj^A^W b l o w AB’LU'TELL vou Up above it you’re so high ITS BESAi PLAYED, £i has the more reluctant he is about /^Ai/osr IT \ r c H > s ^ s AMVTAIAIC/ going to jail. That you can’t help keeping dry. /V.OSIG? OP M U S IC , TO B S ...... m t s @ PLAV6D/

SiOBY ^ UAL COCHRAN— PICfURES ^ KMCK iiia.u.ftMT.eBr. -L

By SmaD An Unwise Salesman SALESMAN SAM ^ 1 5 IS % FIRST TUAfi YOOV/6. BeSM ^ ^ OARH IT‘ IFORSOT THAT AUTO ^ MOW, iM T h is c a R jMR.g u z t l g m , THAT SAL&tAAH «S 60NMA CALL OM ME. VOU'RG 60JM6 TO FG6L PeRFECTLY KILLS HOfAE IM TH E eVeNIMS 5INCS TM<\T CRAZY T ’ MISHTl HCRS'S W.HGRE HG- ALLI6AT0R rOMTeST 5TAR.TeD-VM SOIMS PtT HOr^S I s a l e ! « ir T'MifiHTl WASH TH’ DISHES AMD , MAILS MB* jIt y o u ^IR ounr.QFTtVHoys^

■A / II 0

■ m . REaU.S.mT.OFF. r by Gilbert Patteii Jack Lockwill’s Forest Rangers (READ THE SfORY, THEN COLOR THE PICTURE) The captured goat looked sad, in­ fill. And then wee Coppy said, deed, and all the bunch heard “ Let’s make him do some work for Scouty plead, “ We ought to get him us. Perhapi he knows some clever from that hole. ’Tls cruel to keep tricks. I wonder could he carry him there. Let’s dig the ground out, sticks. He’ll either do it gladly, or all about, so he can easily walk out. he’ll raise an awful fuss.” 'As long as he Is tame, to keep him "But, Why the sticks?” somebody captive Isn’t fair." cried. And Coppy answered, as he Bo, everyone got busy quick. sighed, “ So we can build a dandy Each Tlnymlte grabbed up a stick, fire, and maybe cook some fish." and nfter hours and hours of work, "Well, say, that’s great,” another a long pathway was made. "Come said. "And now that Mister Goat’s on UP, goat," we Clowny cried. been fed, let’s lead him to his labor And then he walked up to his side. ere we plan a dainty dish.” The goat began to amble forth and So, oft they went among the trees and found a lot of- sticks with soon the grade was made. ^ I ^ S u n ^ o r e s ^ a n g e r s T w h o had lost their outfit In the fire, They began to pat his head. ease. “ There’s one thing sure,” said Scouty, “ wood Is one thing we don’t were Invited to remain at long as they chose, as Paul’s guests.. “ Oh, gee, he’s friendly,” Carpy “ Here’s to the brave lads to Later In the evening. Sue Varden and Tom McNally stepped out^iide lack.” They gathered lots and lots They crouched, huddling together, in that small, dank cave be­ Jack and his two comrades said. “ I wonder If he’d like to eat. whom I owe myjlfe,”.sald Var­ to look at the rising moon.- What they saw thrilled them.v.On a ' of wood; then found the goat be­ neath the oaecade, protected from the raging lire by the screen of •were entertained that night at Let’s lead him to some weeds. I den. *i shot the dog that was high, bare ridge, clearly beheld against rite hpge’disk of the*gol^ri: think he’ll make a dandy friend, if haved real good. He stood real still .water. ,Then the rising storm broke, vmh flaring li^tning and I supper in the huge log camp chasing the white deer away, ! moon, stood the albino buck. _ he knows that he can depend on us and let them pile it all uj>on his crashing , over the flaming forest.-' When they ventured (where the Vardens and their but now I give you my word NEXT STQR Y -^C X LO ^M LL BACK AT • juat being nice to him and seeing back. ; I forth, an hour later, the .deluge had conquered the conflagration. friends were staying. Paul -/ j- j I - But they beheld a blackened, devastated scene.. Varden toasted .theiiu never to ehoot tha dear.’*- to his needs." “ f f j^' k > i i ^ The weed patch gave, the goat a (mie Tlnymitea have a fiah t x j IhrUL He acamperad up and aU hit In ^ anirt

\

*s \ ■ SATURDAY^ PAitSETWELTB Lullaby, Brahms, SAM ONG, FREE, WILL GCLEFaUBOYB Step by Step, O’H ar^ BOY RANGERS HOLD Darling Nellie Gray, H ^by. F 1 U M 8 PUBUCWHBT Sue Coleman Weds Good Night, Beloved, Pinsua , I Miss AYOffi OLD LAUNDRY FIRST CONCQIT TONKHT Develop^ and ODD FBDLO^ HAliL HALLOWE’ EN PARTY SWEENEY SOTH WEDDING Tu6sd&y» Nov. 1» 8t00 p% ift« James D. Burke Today Printed Auvplces of Ong, only eye-witness of the Women’s Choral Organiiation SUNSET BBBEKAH AND KING Chinese tong war murder here HAS 2 DAYS CELEBRATION 24 Hour Service consisted of yellow chrysan^^ To Make Its Public Premier DAVID LODGE, I. O. O. F . St. Bridget’s Roman Catholic March 24 last, has not returned to Film Deposit Box at mums and bronse pom-poms. Tbe his laundry shop on Oak street al­ At WiDimantic. church was the scene of a very Meet at Community Chib For Retreshments. Admission 85c bridegroom was attended by Ed­ though he has been released from Store Entrance. pretty wedding this morning at nine Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sweeney ward C. Taylor of this town. The the custody of state authorities, af­ The G Clef club of the Swedish of South Main street will celebrate o'clock when Miss Sue F. Coleman, ushers were Robert Coleman, bro­ ter being held for months as a ma­ Lutheran church, the only women s daughter of Thomas D. Coleman Evening’s Sport-Many thelh golden wedding annlversai^ ther of the bride and Attorney Wil­ terial witness. It has been reported, choral organiiation in Manchester toniorrow. A high mass was held KEMP'S MODERN DANCING of Lydall street, became the bride liam J. Shea. During the cwemony, however, that he was in town a day now, will sing In public for the first of James' D. Burke, son of Mr. ana today In St. James’s church for TONIGHT AT THE Edward F. Taylor sang O! Snlu- Games and Tests. or two ago. time tonight at the Swedish Luth- members and friends of the family Mrs. Harry M. Burke of Park street. taris,” and "Ave Maria." Just what Sam’s plans for the fu­ eraxi church of Wllllittwitic ^ The church was decoraited with and at 1 o’clock tomorrow a din­ RAINBOW A largely attended recePtloa fol­ ture are is unknown. One thing is concert under the auspices of the ner will he served, followed by a palms, ferns and chrysanthemums. lowed at the home of the bride s A Hallowe’en party was held at highly probable. He will not start Luther League of that church. Bill Tasillo’s Ordiestm The ceremony was performed with­ reception. father. Mr. and Mrs. Burke left the Manchester Community club by up the laundry business at the same Helge Pearson, director and organ­ in the altar rail by Rev. C. T. Mc­ Mr. and Mrs. Sweeney were mar­ later in the day for a wedding trip, the Boy Rangers last evening. The place again. The Oak street shop is izer of the club, will direct. ried in Arlington, Mass., in 1877 Cann, pastor of the church. "Then a Mrs. Burke being attired in a dress committee In charge of the games where his cousin, Ong Jim Hem . The club will sing two groups of DINNER nuptial high mass was celebrated and in 1899 came to Manchester of beige crepe trimmed with vel­ consisting of Walter Wright, was slain by Ching Lung and Soo three numbers as its part of the where Mr. Sweeney took charge of by Father McCann. vet with a hat and coat to match. George Wilson and Director Wash­ Hoo Wing, two Hartford Chinese, program. Miss Beatrice Johnson the Cheney farm.- They have lived at the a b o u t TOWN As the wedding party entered the They will be at home after Decem­ burn with William Parks as judge who will die on the gallows next will give readings and the soloists ,church, Mrs. Margaret Shea, ongan- in this town ever since. They have ber 1 at Benton street. in several of the events. Tuesday morning unless a reprieve will he provided by the Wlllimantic 33 relatives in Manchester af Monday being the fifth ist, played "The Wedding March The bride is a graduate of the A candy hunt was the firgt event is granted. While nearly all hope church. The members of the club tliG inonth of October, all the dii by Lohengrin. present. South Manchester High School and on schedule and was won bjr Robert for the lives of the two Chinese has will leave the local church here this The best man and the brides­ SHERIDAN ferent groups of women who sew The bridfe wore a gown of ivory attended New Britain Norinal Campbell. An indoor shot put with faded, it is barely possible that a evening at 6:30 and will make the and make surgical dressings for the transparent velvet trimmed with maid who attended Mr. and Mrs. school. Mr. Burke was graduated a toy balloon was won by Arnold reprieve will be granted. It was the trip to Wlllimantic In automobiles. Sweeney at their wedding are ex­ Memorial hospital will come to­ pearl. Her veil of tulle, caught with ■A considerable number of Manches­ Turkey, Duck or Chicken from South Manchester High Clark after a tie with Richard La Supreme court’s denial of a new pected to - be at the’ reception to­ gether at the Recreation Center on orange blossoms, fell from a cap of trial that caused Sam Ong to be re­ ter music lovers are planning to at­ School, Morse Business College and Chappell. The doughnut eating morrow. with all the Hxings, $1 School street. Mrs. R. O. Cheney s imported lace. She carried a shower attended Holy Cross College. He is contest was won by Raymond Har­ leased. tend. group will act as hostesses. bouquet of Killarney roses, garde­ at present Grand Knight of Camp­ rington who although small in Following is the program: all 706 or nias. and lily-of-the-valley. Medley from the South, Pike. 12 M.*to 2:30 P. M. King David Lodge of Odd Fel­ bell Council, Knichts of Columbus stature had a marvelous capacity Miss Lulu Coleman attended her and is connected with the Schedul­ which he combined with speed. The Spin, Spin, Jungst. lows and Sunset Rebekah lodge are sister as maid of honor. She wore about to start their winter activi­ ing department at Cheney Broth­ cracker race was a test of brain peach transparent velvet and a against speed, in that systematic ties with a series of five brown picture hat. Her bouquet ers. ___ to be held on Tuesday of each week eating and whistling Yankee Doo­ for five consecutive weeks, begin­ dle at the finish was means of ning November 1. Prizes are to be OAKLAND CHILDREN’S placing William Vittner first in awarded at each whist and at the this event. The shoe race was the end of the series a prize will be climax of the evenings events in given to the lady and gentleman ' SAYINGS TAKE BOOM which all the shoes of the contes­ having the highest scores. tants were placed in the middle of MANY PAY TRIBUTE the floor and upon a given signal TIRES Mr. and Mfs. Paul Shea of 37 School Gets Into 100 Per Cent a mass of arms and legs shoes and Foster street were pleasantly sur­ Class in Quick Jump From shoe strings in knots found op­ prised by a party of their J^iends TO HENRY A NETTLETON ponents sitting on the floor in Tires are grateful little creatures Treat ’em nice and they’ll go a 50 Per Cent. they’U throw you down eighteen miles from the nearest who came to help them groups in feverish haste to unravel yo l their fifth or wooden wedding an­ tie tangles. Frank Vittner and According to the latest school Bid Farewell to Dead Friend farm house and thirty-seven miles from a garage. niversary. A jolly evening was savings system report, the percent­ Raymond Allen proved to be the spent and a buffet lunch served. age of the number of pupils making At Funeral Rooms— ^Rites at first two boys to complete the job That’s why we chucked out the damaging tire iron and sledge hammer. Chuck Their guests left with Mr. and Mrs. weekly deposits at the Oakland Center Church Today- and probably they never will this Children will grow up— their Shea a welcome reminder of the ’em long ago. i school has jumped to one hundred year put on their shoes so fast photographs stay young for­ celebration in the shape of a bridge percent for the first time in the The funeral of Henry A. Nettle- again unless it be to do the things ever. In later years you’ll Our tire changer and tire spreader never harm the J’*®. ^ lamp. school’s history. A short time ago, ton will be held this afternoon at so dear to the hoys heart when he p e S t us to ch^ge and inspect tires just as they do it at the big tire factories. only a little better than fifty per­ 2:30 in the Center Congregational treasure pictures of them The Missionary Society of the goes to play. cent of the pupils were making de­ church. Ofticiating ministers will be After the games the committee made today. Swedish Lutheran church have ex­ Come over here for a change! You’ll never go anywhere else. posits but remarkable progress has Rev. Watson Woodruff, pastor of assisted by Raymond Allen, Ray­ tended a cordial invitation to all «AL” THE TIREMAN. been made for the week ending, Oc­ the Center Congregational church mond Merz and Director Wash- Now— before' the rush of the local missionary societies to at­ and Rev. George W. Reynolds, of tend the farewell service under its tober 11, the school has showed hum served the boys ice cream and Christmas shopping, bring them eighty per cent hut the following West Hartford, a former pastor of auspices at 4 o’clock tomorrow a wafers after which everybody vot­ to the studio. You’ll have the the church. . ernoon. Dr. Anna Kugler will tell week jumped to g. hundred. ed it was a grand time. pictures for early Christmas ON CREDIT Following is the report: Many of Mr. Nettleton’s friends of her lifetime of labor ^on g th visited the rooms of Watkins Broth­ mailing. people of India, to which cou^^y Enroll Dep. P. C. ers’ last night where the casket was she is soon to return after a per^d School pi-ent 17 100 opened. Numerous floral tributes MRS. RORINSON, MISS AITKEN of rest and recuperation here. She Open Air . Tel. 909-4 20 100 were seen, noticeably one from the STAR MASKERS OF “FRIENDLY’ is head of the hospital at Guntur, Oakland . . 983 Main St. Man. Green 253 100 Kiwanis club* and one from the offi­ India. South .... 86 100 cials of the company Mrs. David Robinson and Miss 99 Alice Aitken won masquerade The local W .~ T . U. will hold Hollister St. 303 Hartford office. 98 The bearers will be Fayette B. prizes at the Hallowe’en party of , its regular meeting Tuesday, No- No. School St 580 95 Clark, James J.' Duffy, Wendell the Girls’ Friendly Society of St. j n e vemre? 1, at 2:30 p. ni. with Mts, Porter st. . 88 . U. S. L. 110 89 Mowrj^, Dr. D. C. Y. Moore, Nathan­ Mary’s church last night. Hal­ G E. Keith, 19 Lewis street, re­ Buckland . . B a tte rie s \ ports of the recent state conven­ Keeney St. . 67 77 iel J. Scott and Robert V. Treat. lowe’en games and stunts were en-1 76 joyed and refreshments were serv- j ELITE STUDIO tion at Meriden will be given. Bunce .... 69 Washington 224 62 CREIGH, LOVETT FUNER.VLS ed. 'The party was in charge of Miss Miss Viola Shea entertained Barnard . . . 258 54 Lillian Reardon, Miss Dorothy Nor­ Photographs Live Forever A P o w e r about twenty friends at a Ha oi\- Lincoln . . . 237 52 There were two funerals in St ris, Miss Helen Crawford and Miss e V - uartv given last night at her Nathan Hale 230 48 James’ church this morning. The Evaline Pentland. i,„„e a,.'Foster street The h o u j_ first was the funeral of Mrs. Mary Totals 3422 2542 72 Creigh, who died in North Attle­ U n it wr.3 tastefully decorated ^ ins, games were played and boro, Mass. This was held from the lunch was served. rooms of William P. Quish on Main “ HALLOWE’EN PARADE” street at 9 :3 0 and at the church at \u attachment in the sum of 10 o’clock. 1 y e a r $150 was placed on Clinton stieet Tie funeral o‘ Mrs. Julia Lovett veal estate owned by Ida Haskel FOR COMMUNITY CLUB was held from the home on Wells oTtrinsUy by the Havtford-Conrtec- street at 1 0:3 0 and In the church at licut Trust company today. in® 11 o’clock. G u aran tee \ Will Start at 7 p. m. Monday V I ♦ « « 4 » 4 4 * ♦ ♦ * Hartford bank is f® The bearers were Thomas Huin- EXTRA SERVICE under the will of the l^e Dr. Ern Frcp “White House” ; Prizes phries, Joseph Steppe, John Carlin, AUTOMATIC OIL HEATOR cst A. Wells of Hartford. The Fdr Costumes. Jeremiah Lovett, Michael Fitzger­ FOR HOME HEATING amount comprises damages claimed ald and Edward Flynn. TIRES and costs of the action. The success of last year’s Hal­ Both burials w;-.rc In St. James lowe’en parade given by the Com­ cemetery. Made to He^t Homes Anthony Jordt has sold to John munity Club for the youngsters of $1.00 A WEEK AND UP Jensen North Main street property the North End seems to have left a consisting of a house and lot and. favorable impression, in that most Qi/'er/ioulin^ * having-a frontage of 55 feet. of them have been clamoring for WTT T V S KNIGHT, OVERLAND AND WHIPPET OWNERS another. Director Washburn states about your c a r uot just right. Let me check it up for you The Board of Selectmen will that on Monday evening there will hold a special meeting In the be another parade forming at the and tell you just what it will cost you to put it in ship shape. Municipal building Monday eve­ "White House’’ at 7 p. m., from ning at eight o’clock. Several hear­ there the line of march will be de­ ings are scheduled for the meeting. cided on by the marshall of the pa­ rade. Who Wants a 1924 Ford Touring Car for 25 Bucks. Just Ask for The chime at St. James's church There will be prizes awarded for lyas tolled this morning for 'Miss the lucky participants. A prize will Charlie. Margaret Creigh whose funeral be awarded for the boy’s best cos­ took place there today. tume and one for the boy’s funni­ est or grotesque costume. Also a AFTER a car has been Miss Evelyn C.-.rke, a sopho­ prize will be given for the girl's on the go for a year it more at , New prettiest costume and one for the should be subjected to London, is at her home on Main girl’s most original get-up. An ad­ an entire overhauling, Oaklyn Filling Station street for the week-end, ditional prize will be awarded for Our expert attention ______„ 9A the best lantern of any kind. will save you money ALEXANDER COLE, 24 H OUR U SE D TIR E S Edward J. LoClair Is today mov­ Last year’s parade was partici­ in future repair bills, Road Service pated In by 142 boys, masked as VULCANIZING 93 Center St., 367 Oakland St. ing his household effects to New “ WE repair right" T O W CAR York where the family will locate endmen, pirates, gladiators, clowns, Work Guaranteed in the future.* and whatever the youthful Imagina­ tion suggested, and the wash-bollei The Girl Reserves of Center band provided music, church have postponed until next Saturday t^e hike planned for this James M. Shearer, manager of afternoon. the Capitol Bulck Co„ reports the following deliveries: Bulck sedans Miss Erna Kanehl of Center street to William Vennart of Lilac street, who is home from Connecticut col­ Carl Bengs of Park street, William lege for the week-end will take in Steel of Delmont street, and a the Yale-Dartmouth game at New Bulck Coupe to George Waddell of Haven this afternoon. Center street. H O O D TIRES Mrs. Chris Peterson of Lllley street has returned from a visit’ GIVE MILEAGE AND REAL SERVICE. with her mother in Boston. THE NEXT TIME YOU CHANGE, CHANGE TO HOODS Mrs. John Blssell of High street entertained at bridgft; yesterday af­ ECONOMICALLY ternoon. Mrs. Richard Ruddell won first prize and Mrs. Emma Dowd A Decision and second. EFFICIENTLY EXIDE BATTERIES Mrs. John Anderson, eon and You Must Make daughter of Pleasant*street have DON’T FAIL TO SEE THEM. returned from a visit with friends Now in Boston. JOHNSON & LITTLE r a d i o b a t t e r i e s Plumbing and Heating Contractors. ,Mrs. B. B. Treat of Addison had 13 Chestnut Street. Tel. 1088-2 one leg amputated at the Hartford ' Hospital yesterday. Gangrene had set in after a serious Illness mak­ You win never know how your STANDARD — HIGH TEST— VALVOLWE ing the operation necessary. executor will handle the woik of Everybody neighbors. Manches­ settling your estate. ter Community Club.— Adv. • • • # I i • • r # » I » Your discretion must be exercised AUTOMATIC OIL HEATOR OIL and GASOLINE in advance by selecting an executor FOR HOME HEATING SPECIAL in whom yon have entire confidence. ______— ...... ___ EXPERT GREASING SERVICE Here is a chance for you to LET'US GO OVER YOUR CAR AND GIVE IT AN A1 JCB, get your shoes repaired for Let us co-operate widi you now in JOHNSON & LITTLE 13 Chestnut St., South Manchester half price for a limited time a safe plan for the fixture. f o r SERVICE PHONE 1551 only. Men’s Soles sewed on .... $1.00 I am willing to know more about Super Automatic modern heating. Ladies’ Soles sewed on .... 75c The Manchester Trust Co. Signed...... I...... Goodyear or O’Sullivan heels Campbell’s Filling Station attached. Member American Bankers Association Street., •i.City. ..State., All work guaranteed at the SOUTH MANCHESTER, CONN. C o r . Main and Mid. Turnpike Boston Shoe Repair 4 • • • Shop 105 Spruce St. Co^ Bissell

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