«< dM Iwtn iM
w k « at T:M, aM inSM to atb
BMta aad oeou tor tha yaar IM t alaetad for IMV.
karttMOi ptopv to ; wu> ba act-
win f(ri* Bta will
Nora Saalth ot CMway ■tortaiaad a party «ft bar
_ I at earda at bar boma yaatar* ; altaraoea. aad at tbe eloaa of
■a aanrad daintj refreah'
Of Chapmaa Court, Or- e aC Aaaraath, ara rendiided of |!faatallationa at taural Ooort of
M tabi, rriday areniiiy, and Court of Hartford, Saturday
I Sawtnc Orda of ttaa Cooeor- diurdi will bold ita
I maatlna tomorrow aftarooea I o'clock.
todKO, Na 7^ Knigbto of win hold Ita rafular maat*
[tonight at • o'clock at Oraaga at which tim* kutallatkio of
win taka ptooa. Refradi* I will ba atrvad aftar the meet'
rand a largo attendance of mam- I la aspaetad.
. and Ifra. Joba Baratow ara la Tark today, attandlag tbe i * BOtor boat ahow at Grand
inuaea.
Oonkl of Rartfo*i who I 1 oa ip lc^ la the mala office ot Oaoar l^ ta la r Compijqr, Hart-
laturaed to tba Popular Rnbteow building, aa
r, a pooltlon ba bald uatU laat
Otoan CoBuaiml* i win hold Ita ttonthty boat*
. Mttag aad aoelal Ptlday aro- T‘JO la Oraan aebool
^Tba goaat i^aakar will ba ifra. ’n C KUhy of Waat Hartford, . bt o f tba Comiaetlv-ut Con* I o f Parent Taadiar aaaoeia* Bar abbjact will oe Turpoaaa
_ i Paiont Teachar Aaaodatlona I' Thalr Place la tba Commualty ** ifra. W. P. Law wU' alag aad Patty Dowd win tap dance.
~taraated, orbatha*- ihriag la tba aactlon, or elaewbera, win bo
~ 1 to attend, ifra. WlUlam O.I aad bar eommittaa of I wUI aenra refroahmenta.
Ladiaa Aid aodaty of Bmaa- Luttaeraa ehurdi win meet to*
Row afternoon at 3:80. AU mam* a,are urged to be present.
; J. C. Carter aad John Ifay ara In ■■"■fletown today attending the aa-
t poultry ahow being held in that
[,%lMBplo Chapter, OJBJB. will ob- I Vlaltiag matroaa and patroar : at Ito meeting Id the i f aaoale
tUa avaning. A auppar will the bualaeae aaaalaa.
— V— from the PoUah ctauieb rWara, ifaaa., will ooma bare on *~'*~y, January 3«. to preaent a
let comedy, entlUed, *mal- U” In Pulaakl ban on North
comblnad meeting of the execu* oonunittees .of the Beethoven O Oaf Oubf of tlie Eknanuel
-jeran church will be held tonight 8 o'clock at tbe church.
htere of Liberty No. 120., are requested to meet at
. ball tonight at 7 o'clock. _ whence they arlU proceed to I home of Mrs. Martha Hooks, d
1 street. Mrs. Hooks was a ’ of the lodge, and again to-
---- at 1:80 o’clock the Daugta-i.of Liberty wlU meet at Orange 1 to attend her funeraL
: dkneat T. Bantty and Bdward .. i n i ^ Jr„ am la New Torfc City today attandhig tba national motor boat show at tba Grand Oantral
W3!!5
HOSECO.NO.l’STC iU I WHINERS IN SETBACK
POUCE COURTBoaa Owapantaa No. 1. 8 am
af the'South Maneheater fim da* partmaat will meet for thalr flrat aittlag la aetback tonight at eight o’dock at NOb 1 Hoaa bouae on Ptaa atiaat,
Nathan Hala Lodge, No. A t>oyal Toung Americana, arlU meat In Orange hall tomorrow evening at 6 o 'd M aharp. Inatallatlea of offl* cam and oibar buainaaa will ba tranaactad. as wan as Initiation and ovary momhor la urged to attend.
SELECTMAN PERO PLANS VACATION W FLORIDA
WUk His Wife Wm Leave Soen for Foor Weeks T rip - First Vacstioii in Decade.fldactmaa Joaaph Pare and Mrs
Paro of Oakland street, arlU leave next areek for a four weaks’ vaca*tioB the greater pert of artiich arlll
In Blorlda. Mr. Pero plana to drive hia automobile to New Yorkbe spent I
and arlll aall from there for Jack' sonvine, taking tba automobile
Prom JacksonviUe ba will motor aeroaa the state of Florida. Ha baa not aa yet decided where be arin loeate, but wiU make a dedalan aftar ha raaebae Florida. Tbs trip is taken to ghra both Mr. Paro aad hla wifa a vacation aa It la the llrat vacation that Mr. Paro baa taken la 10 years.
Whila <M la absent hla pUca as saeratary of tba board of aelactnwn arUl ba flUad temporarily, tbe seieC' tion to ba made at tba next meeting. Ir ease them la any important buai- aeas ttat naada tba attention of the memters of the Maneheater Un
it Association, of wblcta be tbo board of directors
Vico President Raymond Boarera will take care of the businaas.
HOSPITAL NOTESAdmlttad yeatarday: Mias Staela
Sobleakl of 161 Middle Turnpike Wist, Victor Pyka of 81 Durant stmot, John Hutchinsoo of 78 Linden strset •
DIaenarged yesterday: Mra. Lena ZatkowaM of • Starkweather atreet, Mrs. Harry Cmne and Infant son of 77 Center street
Dtseharged today: Jamea Cough- Un of SO MkMDe Turnpike East, Mm. Mabd BaU of Covenny.
Census: Btaty-tbrea patients.A pre-natal dlnlc arlll be held in
tbe Health Center, tomorrow, at 9
TooraasiCBi CsBcInded Last Nii^t As Rosst Beef Supper Is Served; Te Start Again.
' Hoaa Conq^any No. 1 team was the arUmer of tbo setback touma- mant that has been S'idng on In tba North End Fim liaadquartem tor the past 15 araeks in the Firemen'a Setback League, which llalahed last night Ttaa No. 1 team came from behind during the last two sessions and a areek ago arent Into Srat place replacing tbe Merx tsam by eight {xAnts and but nine points ahead of the Foley Express team.
This caused considerable Interest a« It was reaUssd that the last s«s- Sion of play arould probably result In a closer flnlsh than baa been the
in past tournaments. Such proved to ba the ease aa at the session laat night tba Hose Company team scored high for the night with a total of 147 points. This made them champions by 76 points over the Mars team, which llniahed second. The Foley team was driven out of third posiUon by the Valvo- Une team who were but three points behind the second place team and the Foley team llnlabed in fourth place, four points behind the third place team.
Following the completion of play last night them was a roast beet supper served aad it was voted to start another tournament next areek. Those wlahlng to take part must be at the Are beadquartem promptly at 8 o’clock with team membem ready to start play for the second tournament.
The naal standing:Hose Co. No. 1 ......Marx Barham........Valvollao Foley ExpressDyke's Four........Hose Co. Jrs. .....Porterfields.........K. of P. ......Bluefields ........... .Community FiningHlUtops .............Ulrich’s Restaurant Reid's AueUoneem .Buckland No. 1 ...,Hose Co. No. 3 ..,,Aircraft ...............
Tbo second ot laat JUIy John J. Bjurmtt, 87; o f 68 WUls street, ,1a Police Cburt:cbBrgad with intmrica- tten, was givsn a suqieiided JaU asntsnoa of 16 days and placad on p.obatian Cor aix months.
Laat night, 10 days after tbe pro-' batlon period axp li^ ba was rested at North Main aad North siraata by Policeman David F. OaUl- gan who reported Barrett was “dead drunk.” He pleaded guilty In court tola morning to a chmge of tntoxl- cation, explaining that two drinks given him by a man or Demtng street, Imocked him out.”
Judge Johnson doubled tbe threat of a JaU term. Imposing e suspend- au sentence of 80 d a ^ and put Barrett on a probation period twice as long as ths last one, ona year.
GIRLS’ FRIENDLY GROUP IN REGULAR SESSION
BL Mary*B Cirla Friendly society opened its regular meeting Monday evening with a devotional sarvlea. This was followed by a talk by the rector. Rev. James Stuart NeilL
During the busineaa aeaslon plans for the annual turkey supper wem discussed, as well aa programs for the year. Mlaa Hannah Jensen will have charge of tbe meetings for February, Mias Teresa Britton was elected dues aeemtary.
Mrs. Dorothy Turner vriU have charge of next Monda/a mestlng. Games wiU be played aad fUwo Jensen win give a talk on her trip to Florida. Ught refreshments will ba served.
RE-ELECT DIRECrORS OF TRUST COMPANYA n n l Meetinf of Stock-
koUers Held Yerterday AftenooB.
An dlrectora of the Manchester Trust company wem re-elected srea- terday afternoon in the annual meeting at tbe bank, attended by I If a dosen stockholders in addition to the directors Su1 officials.
The directom returned to office am Harold C. Alvord, Ernest T. Baatly, Clifford R. Buir, Lawrence W. WUUam C. Cheney, W.George Qlenney, Walter 1. Gorman,
John fL Hackatt, John F. Bulitvan, aad Loland T. Wood.. Reports were nuuia toourtag that tba deposits of ths oompaay ia* creased 88 per cent during 1888 aad that tha bank samad alx and a half per cent on tto capital fund last
Directors win meet tat the near futum to elect olBcem for tLa year.
PUBLIC RECORDS
Warrantee DeedArthur L. aad Mlnnla M. Gal
lagher to Rose H. Haiprtn, property at 110 Washington street.
toXt DeedsSavinga Bank of RockvUle to
Catherine Morlaaoa. two-family dweUing on LUley street
Joseph aad BUaabeth Winkler nf East Hartford to Btaphea Martser of Olaatonbury, seven seres In Manchester and five aeiea in Bast Hartford in the HUlstowa aectloa.
C O F C R O A R D B ^ SPIESS’S PARK PLANSdeefaMi a i i PtGce Con-
itissioMr OmEm s the Old Golf Lets PreposiL
Belectman aad PeUea Cbmmls- Bloner Mathias Spteas appeared be* fora the Board of Control of the Chamber of COmmerca last night aad asked the Chamber'a support of hla propoaal for tbe ereetton of a municipal auditorium and reereatloa center at the Old Golf Lots <» Bast Center street Mr. Spiaas outUned the details of the p ro j^ he has la
T.tha beUat tbtt
such a hoUdlng would ba of gm il vahM to Manchsator. >*
Tba Board thankad Mr. Itoiooo tba prtvilage of beutog Ida pmpo» al but took no dadnlta aetlan on t8a mattir. It balag dseidad to gtvs tlw project further study bafom — ^qg a racommendatkai to tha Cbambtt memberatalp.
Tbe Board waa alao aoUflsd tbit an attampt la bataif made to revive the AutomoUve DMaian ot tba Chamber aa ChamBir msmbam siw gaged in that field foal that tbs Division Is naeded to bring about a closer oo-operative slfott of loeal automotivo agendas. Anotbar meeting on tbs matter win be bdd Monday, January 85, at 8 o'doek at tba place o f budneas ot Alfrad Bcbleeal.
The Board aoceptod an Invitation of tba Merchants Dlvislan to attend tba Division meeting on Wednesday, January 37, at which tlma Judge Edwin M. Ryan of Hartford nW ■peak on the small claims court. The rest of the mestlBg vfoa devoted to routine business.
SHOP AT HALE’S THURSDAYFor These January Sale Specials
$1.00 Boude W ool Mittens7 9
e e s * e s a
r...8,117 ..8,041 ..8,088
....8,084 ..8,000 ..3,961
....3,944 . .3,948
___3,934....3,916,...3.902....3,893....3.860___2,834..,.2.771
..3,715
“THE SEEING EYE”LECTURE-
DEMONSTRATIONBy mss Edith Btevsns, sad Her Caalae Oetde.
South Methodist Chureh FRIDAY, JANUARY 15
8 P. M.'Auspices Cosmopolitan GobTickets S8e. Children, Includlag
High sebool pupils, 16 eanta.
Solid colors tern weaves.
and fancy pat-p a ir
LOUIS S.JAFFE881 Mata Bt.
i r : t TT‘Registered
OpticianPRESCRIPTIONS nLLEDWe have a aeieeilan at tbe aew-
ast style frames.Complimentary Adjoatments.
Boy On tbs Bndget Plan AT JAFFB’S
NO BXTBA CHABOE
Complete Sae of Hamilton - Waltham - Omen
BUia and Balova Watches.
The J W H A I ^ CORKMANCHitTiii Conn*
S e lf Serve and Health Market
THURSDAY SPECIALS lb. box 2 ^ ^
5 «
Gotham Gold Stripe. FIR ST Q U A L IT Y
HOSIERYHaleh Supreme
TEAe
Waabbwa Pancake
FLOUR”Lneky Dutch"
l>OG FOOD can
PEA BEANSArmoor’a
PORK & BEAMS can'■ ' SB — BBBIB — B—
Large
ORAPEFRUIT e tor
A Shipawfit of
FAHMCBB8T COOKIESttom the evens, wm leadi Plnehamt today. Take your
ehaleei Molaaaea, Batter, Oatmeal or OM Faahhmed.
3 dozen in box 1 5 c
Ritz Crackers.................. larsre box 19c.
Callferaia
ORANGESLarge Bnach
BROCCOLI -A
ORANGES GRAPEFRUIT2 dozen 49c 5 for 25c
BALDWIN APPLES GREENING a!p PLESSyi pouDda 25c 4 lbs. 25c
H EA LTH M A R K E T
FISH SPECIALSs t e a k c o o »>■ 1 2 ie
HI TTUl EB»W fKDVZMT DKipnimT RJf
PIGS» HOCKS Tu 8cH Tlrareday At fb s, 2 5 «(We aeM eat en this Item TM iiay).
Ptoeknret wUI also kawF U i* Spam BOa and Eekhardt's FVaakfrirta to cook wttk krant.k r a u t . ,10clb.** F— want aamethlag dUforent tomorrow, try aome
TENDER NATIVE VEAL CHOPS R ib g ...........36c lb-1 Loin Chops, ,46c lb.
Piashurst Fresh Fish Shlpmcat WiU laelnde: Ojwlers Msckerel /
E*te» Lsrge Smelts: Gimvder C ^ Cod sad Halibnt
met of Haddock FoDock or Boston Blue
* stV •• car apatisi rirtniar this week lei
|No.'2 Cana Nnttlea* Tomatoes, 3 cans 29c
iStNetV Inc.
Msnehestm’, Csna.
STEAK POLLOCK lb. H ie
STEAK HALIBUT lb. 27c
Steak Sw ordfish lb. 27*
lb- 1 2 icH>. lO e
MACKEREL
Ringless Sheer Chiffon, 7 - Thread Wanted Winter Shades.
f c p r . pr.
Service Weight.
$ 2 -2 5, Another Shipment!
2 0 ” x 4 0 ” C A N N O N
TURKISH TOWELS
D R U G DEPT. SPECIALS90c and $1.00 Rem......... .........40c and 67c60c and $1.20 Scott’s Emulsion.. ,40c and 80c$L00 Squibb’s Cod liver O il................, 75c$1.00 Sunsol Cod Liver O il...... .. .69c50c Phillip’s Milk of Magnesia ..........34c25c and 75c Bayer’s Aspirin...... 17c and 50c35c Vick’s Vapo Rub........ .. 24c50c Ipana Tooth Paste............ ........... 34c35c Kleenex...................................... 31®50c Hart’s Nasal Jelly...; ............ 35c35c Danderine......... ....... ......... 25c
New Spring Shades In
TIOGA YARNSI” " 70c
Benana. Badlaace Red, Riviera Red, Coronation Blue, Cameo Roaa. For the band knit Spring garment uee Tioga Creveana—300-yard i«.n
iMtroetlona Gladly tHvea By Ow KnHUag laatrnetor.
J
This is our sixth shipment of these heavy weight checked Cannon Towels. We contracted months ago^or these —in fact for 8,600 towels— and we have not been able to get delivery on them fast enough. If we bought these today we wo'uld have to get 89c for them. Heavy, soft, absorbent Cannon Towels in bright colored -all-over check design in red, gold, green, and orchid. Regular 89c.
SPECIAL PURCH ASE
52x52” and 52x68” Pure Linen
LUNCHCLOTHS
am
Rcfular |1.19 Spedali
Special
each
with Bnena advandag In price, w« wem fortunate: la eecurlng 13 doaen lunch clothe that formerly hold for $1.19. Four amart pattMiia In two sixee, four coiore, blue, gold, green, and red. Buy n w t o youreelf or t o gifte. All-over plalde, haaket weave iriib damaek pattern and colored border, fine quality craeh with roksail borders. Large 62x68" craeh with colored border. .
VOL. LVL, NO. 8*MANCHEtfriSK ~ A CITY OP VHXAGE CTARM
MANCHESTER, CONN., THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937 (TWELVE PAGES) PRICE THREE
SLEUTHS STUDY STAIN CLUE IN M A H ^C A S E
S tile i Cur F M ■ Em ett N iy Have Bm riiv O i Kidnp-KiliBg; StiDSeck-
- h f Hk Dflitli Wetpon.
Tacoma, Waab., Jan. 14.—(A P )— Rad etataia on an abandoned anto- aiiebile, peaalbty tba one into which a. mereOem Udaaped threw tbe body of etabbed aad bludgeoned Cbariea Mattaon, 10. epurred offl- ears along an apparently wanalag trail today, aaeklng tbe kUler.
Uhcoaummleative Justice depart- mant agents utilised tbe amet modern edenee to detemdne wtaetber tbe atalne wem Hood which lldwed from tbe , little victim before hie ■layer toeeed Um, battered, naked —and stabbed la tbe back—into ■now-covered bruahlaad near Bver- att.
The automobile, etolia last Friday sight, was found la AntbprfUas tmpoundeC it tlonad armad guarda about It tai a peUea
While offleem alao sought a knife aad atudlad dues mported hourly from wldeapreafi areas; Ftd- aral nffldala took quick stapa to proeaeuta tha killer..
A -John Dost* w aim t, laaued by a USUad Btatea eommiMioner late yaetarday officially made an outlaw of tbo abductor who adsed Charlea, Dae. 27, paaeed up offers cf tbe demanded $38,000 raneom and left hie battared body wham It found by a hunter last Monday.
Baveral peraona wem de,ained for tanreetlgatlon and an order iaeued to apprdiend a California ex-oonvlct for questioning.
Paul Boeva, friend of the family, ■srpremed balief the kldn^ier was ao dangaroua a man that bo prob ably would have killed Charlea’ father. Dr. W. W. Mattemi, bad ttaa physician gone out to meet Mm and psqr tbe raneom.
Offleemconfirmed repuite tfirt tbs autopsy taidicatad tha boy Waa tuhjectod to Inhumanities, probably by a pervert.
Bceva ''thaaked the Lord Dr. Mattaon waa never able to contact the kidnaper of little Charles and give him tbe $38,000 ransom money.
“I am certain ha would never have come bock alive.'. la CkUlfonila. poUee nought tha first man definitely named aa wanted for queatloning In the eaae. Ha was FYed Orrin Hayes, former convict. Hla fingarpriats wem checked at Bacramento. Officials at Foiaom
erlaon where he served a term tor urglary, were asked to aid In locating him. Tha man's pooelble con
nection with tbe case was not revealed.
One (dtictal sold Mayea once had been questioned concerning a kidnap threat.
Deoana af ClFederal agents and state poUee
subjects the automobile to rigid oerutlny while they followed ilostsis
(UenOanod an M )
HOUSEWARES SPECIALS$3.98 Dinner SET
Floral patterno, oervloe these seta to cloae-out at ..
for six. Five of
$1.49 BEVERAiX SETwith covered pitcher and
rated china ........................alx cups, dccD-
HAODOGK
No. 1 SMELTS lb. 15e
S irlo in Stook Sh ort Stoak \ ib.Top RoundCUBE STEA K lb. 390
GlassbaLe OvenwareIn chroma frames,
ity baktng dlWna . . . .IF* platters, 11” utU-
Cookle Pr^Mes and Cake Decorators
Heavy non-rnat metal with four dealga aad one decorating aoosla-.............. ........
Radiator COVERS$ 1 - 0 0
In Heavy Steel—Wslaat or Ivory Finish
AdJuatabla open to 39”
Adjustable open to 68”.
to ,
50c Radiator Air Moistenerswith brackets for hanging bock of radiators . . . .
Window VENTILATORSAdjustable wood frame, large else; Ux87” ........
CHENILLE RUGSid rug pattena, 34x46” to m at^ 88x60”
Hi tKH>k Larger ruga
8L38.
Great Stamps Given With
Cash Sales. t Iu J W H A UMa n c h is t ir Comm*
CORK
AIRCRAFT WORKERS RUSHED WITH WORKi
O re r lO O lilio u is Ih ile d Orders Are Reported bp N itie i's M anfadirers.
New Tork, Jan. 14.—(AP)-^Alr- makara, awept by a world to acquim war and traniqiort
Wwgs. have warmed up on improved proAicUon machine to Mg accumulation of .orders._ An uUiarltatHre toads oouhee ea- Mmatad today that AmerlcaB aman- CMtmem c f atiplaass aad eatarod-tba saw year with a meord total cf saarty 81001000.000 to Ptl^ oitltra.
loAwaida ta meant ascalhe for •VdPBMnt.to Modeentae aad h sp tea UBltad Btatea olr fiorosa.
slreratt faetoitM €iowdM for dtOfTHtr op mutsiy y lW A domeaUe manufacturaia also iMkad forward to on port Hwrkst amongamrcial toaasport Hass.
Moeaowr, assay sir msn vpmpriattana I
oiasl^ of Oongmsa fiir tha Army tpA Navy to provMa amm orSir
Nnw Fnnissim
o s tu ^ m u S M T s T u tofactory and tmaq^ertotien aqnte- meat. Growth c f air toaaaoert to the Dbited Btatee has eoaiMnad
to thriveactivity la airctitft ~ slack depreosion yem
Biqninlen In dom air tosBle ftaos abont ____ , . .tkaqrLOOOJIOO yearly Is tkalMtdse-
STAGES HOLD-UP IN RISKY SPOT
N«rvy Bandit-Robs "Bniik In Tacoma With tb« City Swarming With G -h ^
Tacoma, Wash., Jaa. 14.— (A P )—A robber ehoae Tacoma —of an places to bold up a
With the dty eUve with Federal and stats offleem hunting Caiarlee Matteon’e kidnaper aad ■layer, on immasked man waved a pistol in a anburboa branch of the Puget Bound National Bank and eeeuied with IIJSOO yesterday.
Them eras not on officer around. Cliarkn W. Greening, manager aad R. • B. Coulter, cashier,, rheeed tbe robber and Coulter emptied a rifle at him.
RobUag a natlooal bank Is a Federal offense. Government agents, manieil hem on the kidnaping case, hoped they would find time to cat^ tbe man.
GOERING HEARS FRIENDLY WORDS FROMJTAUANSIt (NRddly Told Britidi
P ict Does Not Chanse Re- M o o t “ W R G en n ij; Talks WA Itafian Kag-
Bome, Jon. 14— (A P )—Official Italy told Germany's first minister empbatlcany today that the s Itolo-BrittaSi Mediterranean ogre^ meat doea not change Italian friend- ship for tbe Nasi Retch. A t the
me time official aources aald Italy waa using the occaeloa of Cbl. Gen. Hermann WUh^m Goeriag's visit for aa effort to keep Italo- Germaa volunteers from Spain pending tnternatlonal dedalona on tbe neutrality question.
Tbe foRnal aaeurancca given to Goacing otote dear tte i tba . .pdlsnMHi’q.agreement” an Madi- torraneas status quo, signed by Italy and Britain, will not change Itolo-Garmaa friendly relatlona or oeUaberathm on the major prob-
>s of Europe. U moc probleraa ta- eluda Spain, rcepoaelble Italians affirmed.
Tbe ever reeplendant Goering to'ked at length today with King Viepur Emmanuel at Qulrinal Palace. It wee reported be actually
na to Rome at tbe behest of Crown Prince Umberto, who visited Berlin last August.
-star la the day th German lulniater placed a wreath on the tomb of the unknoam aoldler. Hanking n Duce’e Venesla Palace.
Jelat Fktam Oeorae Scouting reports of coolness be
tween Germany and Italy, on au thorltatlve source reported that tha two Faadet powem wem charting thdr Jdnt futum couru In the Spaaloh eivU war In dose eoUabora- thxi.
All pretenee of Informality h m dropped from tba vtdt at
Rdcbaniinleter Goerinff and hs win confer with Premier MusaoUni, an offldal sold, on fensatlon of Italo-
Slain Kidnap Victim Carried Prom Woods.1
I'
. , ' Bt -• V 7| I
tt 2** “ w ett. Wash., beamra, under the dlreetlen*’• took to the home of his grief-
Woab. A short distance away. In a thicket, the dead lad woe found, brutally by the kidnaper who aeiaed him in hla home December 37. •«* w «. »u » i, nruieuy
FDR Turns Down Invite To His Own Inauguration
Wosliingtosi. Jan. 14— (A P ) Rockwell, dilef of the White HouseSocial Bureau:
"Please regret this Invltotion. will be too busy.”
Rockwell sew the Preddent waa having fun and sent tbe "regrets" to Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson, retire^ head of the Inaugural In this form:
"The President regrets that because of the rush of official business he is unable to accept the courteous Invttatioa to be present at tba eere- ssoolas sttending tba taausuratlon o f Hie Pwsddsiit o f tbs IfottadBtotm January 30. 1P87.”
Just before diapatcblng It, Rock- weU handed (t to Mr. Rooaevelt The latter carrying the Am a step further, wrote on the bottom:
T have rearranged my engaga- mente and work and I think (think waa underscored) I may be able to go. Will know definitely January 19. (Signed) F. D. R."
President Rooaevelt "turned doam' aa invltotion to attend hie own Inauguration on the plea he would be too busy" and then tentoUvaly ra-
considerad.It hiqipenad this way:The special committee on Inau
gural arrangements sent him yesterday a souvenir engraved .iavltotlaa saying:
honor of your pmaanea la roquostod at.tba aetemoniaB ottsM- Ing tba taaujguration of tha Prori- dent of tha United Stotoa January 30, 1987.”
Down in a comer waa thia note: “Plaaae preaent the encloaod caid
of adroistlon.”Tbe eard, however, was mlsalng.Upon recelvlag the Invitation last
night, the President smiled, and pancilad the following note to W. E.
CROSS TO ATTEND THE INAUGURATION
State’s Chief Execothre and His Party to Ride m Special Coaches to Capital
NEW LONDON WITNE TELLS OF SEEING GI FALL TO HER DEATI
First Meeting Is Held To Settle Auto Strike
By ASSOCIATED PBE8S Lansing, Mich., Jan. 14—(A P ) —
Officials of General Motom Corporation and ot the United Automobile Workera whose strlkea'bave sloataed deeply into the company's automotive production met fo)' the flrat time today across a conference table In tbe office of Governor FVank Murphy.
Governor M ur]^, who requested them to meet him “without condition or pmjudlce,” to seek "an Immediate and peaceful termination” of the ■trikes which have thrown 114.00U General Motom wage earnem out of Virork, opened the conference.
Befom tbe meeting staitad, Uuiy Davldow, union counsel, charged that Jooeph R. Joseph, Geneses county prosecutor, violated Michigan statutes by partldpatlng In a case In which an Injunction was
zsougbt agalnat strlkera In General Motors plante la Flint. Davldow, Who did not partidpato In'the cenfar- anoa. said Jooeph owned 61 oharea of tha ceiporatioa'a stock.
Mlcluipui's now govariior had labored more than a week to ar- r ago auch a conference. During this time nesurly thirty persons ware Injured in strike rlotmg at -Flint, prompting Murphy to dia- pttch iqiproxlmately 3,8()0 National Guardsman and 60 state poUcamsa to that dty.
General Motom rapraaentetlvaa attending the meeting are William S. Kudsen, axecuttva vtea-praatdant; John .Hiomaa Smith, lagaJ counsel, aad Donaldson Brown, band of tba oommUon’a Bnnnea oosnmittao.
Raprcaantlng tbe union nm HosMr
(Oanttanai an rag* Bis)'
NEGRO CONFESSES KILLING AFTER 24 HOUR GRILLING
s
FIND BABYS BODY IN QUARRY POND
Boj Wawlers Away from Home; Scores Take Part h Aa An Niflit SearcL
DEUCE OF BILLS AWAITS ASSEMBLY
Observers Predict H ere Wffl Be More Presented lla a During Last SesnoB.
<€ Two)
TBBASUBF BALANCE.
radUngton, Jan. 14.—(API i postUon of tbe Treasury
Jonoary IS:RMeipte. glS,6U,476A6; expendl-
tnrea, $1T,76SJ)19.06; balance, 81,- 906ffSlp601.3t. Cuatoms lacdpte fbr tba month. |16,4S5J16A6.
Racalpta for tbs fiscal year (atnoe July 1) 8SJ96,0a0A80A6; expandi- turaa, 8S,768ff89,67Sfi0. (Including 81,611,183,786.06 of amargaacy expenditures); excesB of expmdttures. 81.47SJI0e.068.46. v Groaa debt, 884,- 467,767J76.61, an Increase ot 8867,- 746 over tba previous day. Gold neeete, 811JM)3,466,6SS.08, iacludliig $71,8e6Ji80 J6 of teiurtive gold.
MUton, Maes, Jaa. 14.t-(.AP) The body of tiny Joseph L. M un^, 37-month-old hoy who wandered away from hla home here yeetor^y, was discovered today under too feet of water on the bottom of an ahaa- doned rock quarry almost within ■tone’s throw;nf hla play yard.
A gr^pUag Iran that booked into the brightly oolorad ptey suit worn by the yeungeter ended, near mid-day, a bunt that had kept police, American Legtonaalrao; COC men and Boy Soouta eaarrhlnr tbe surrounding woods throughout tbe mgbt
The bc^ was found, PoUoa Be. geant -WUUam Brown reported. Just before efforts wem InlUatad to drain tbe rock quarry pond. PoUee oearch- em advanced tha theory that tbe
(C on Page Twn)
Cornell Savants to Look A t Earth From Mountain
Whaea, N. T.. Jan. 14— (AP) —^ Obman aatroBomam want to look at
-Artacna daoart, so tbay'm going to taka a triaooopa to tba tap ot a 13,000 foot moontelB aad look down.
Tbra tbv wm peiat tha telane^ upamrd oaff kx4i at tbs aMoa. -
Tlisy hops to iMacovar arbtUiai tha rteoe. watsrtsae moon la Uka tba
Atlaoaa desert in any way.Ths Ooendl acisHtlita wm
tha tMaaoopa. now haing baUt. aDa Uihar than any such tawtra-MR MW CWta thalr mosareh, tha swtrsnamass
wm uas ths opaetrosoopa, ths tastni- msat which Idsnttaoa tba kind ot ■ta— praasnt la far off atam. Thay wffl oaa what tha •^ ss t” rocks te Ariacoa look Uka la tks opoetm-
VA K thsy apat ai—na tnn aUgfrosB tha— oahydtowtea B asm of tha atyatorlss of on U—
arm ba solved.
Iadiae'% diameter, ea— ftom tba a— a pet cf glees which pso- dUcad ithe 300 Ineh mirror for the agntaTs ISrgaet telescope now beteg tefound at tba CaUfOrnia laetltHte of Thchnology. r
other parte of tbe tay tela- Mope are awds ot atrploaa otuff, — atly dumhunia. That te why
I ba tel— to baratofem nnar»at«.»4 lofty Qouatola air te too
tuxbulsat, but tbo Artsoaa top te ona of tba workTs ram It te tbo blgbeot of tbo tato Boa naaeteoo paokt. eoa ISJlOO foot, tha otbar 1L600, eight adtee a ^ of Ftegataft, arbm the Lowell ,OI>-
te the
bc^gito
mrrsterw. at TffOO feat, wteura tUgbeat.
The — untalne top a wh— ^Ftegstoff site aad S o p S ^
arts fOupdetloe aeoouata for ths calm ‘— tag” air at Baa Fkaaeteoo
Hartford, Jaa. 14.—fAP) — The m ou n^ requests for IcglsIaUon of one kind or another gave promise
that the biennial deluge of bllle would be as great If not giast-U General Assemblythan two years ego.
tbe latest group to pre- — t Ita legtelatlve’ program, the
*'*8*“" outUned to Gov. Wilbur L. Cross propoeele for the nms^cUon of a soldlere' borne at Iw k y HIU and extension of state aid to widows and orphans of Worid War veterans.
The Legion’s legislative eommlt- tee, beaded by WUUam Rybeck, caU- ed w the governor yesterday to ex-
®r8«al*<tloo program. In- clucM in the propowOs also was one requiring that pemone employed by — state be citixens of tbe United Btatee.
Governor Crom in hie Inaugural meoMge listed the soldiers' home at R o ^ im i among tbe etete'a eon- ■truction needs. He eettanated the project would coot 88,000,000.
Gnwg— * Pregrans -Aaxioua to make their waate
known bsfom tbe flood of bills gets muter way te tbe General Aaeem- Wy nsort week, several groupe have te— pubHe during tbe week their tegtelatlve programs. Tbe Btate Otaage. Bteelteg m Bridgeport, waa
In Hartford, tbe Qooneetlcut Ooun^ Inc., of the International Soelaty of Master Paiatera and Dacoraton, Inc., bnd under eoiiald- sntism a meohitlon favoring na amendment to the state' Ubemploy- a— t CMnpeaaaUoa Act. Tha pto- pooed aaiendmant wlmkl have the Act apply to on empMqren of coa p— ca or awre. Ths Act bow ^
only to — ployers of five or
Tba offioe of tba attornay gsstcral meelved aotlca ot asvetal eiaiw which wm be pmesntod to tbe General Aaeemhly. Among tb— was
tr— tbe eetato af Balvatom atoco of New Havsn. who waa — t to dsatb teat a— tb by a motor vsbiete taepeetor. The shoottag occurred wbea — btepeetor amtght
On ffma Tm%
Hartford, Jaa. 14—(AP) — Two ■peotaa eoachee, a.ttachad to tba Federal Bxpreae, wm enrty. Goventor ^ — rkte stag end gueeteJp Waob- Ington for'tte Pi— d en ^ Inaugural cerembhlM WOd— day.
Fiona for the trip have been completed. Ool. George A. Wardbudd, ■aid today. They call for a buoy day for the governor with the return Journey scheduled for 10:80 a. m., Thursday.
The train will- leave New Raven at 13:66 a. m., Wednesday morning, reaching Washington at about 7 o'clock. Tbe group wlU stay at ths Mayflower hotel where the govi nor wUI be met by a military aide. Major Erneit H. Burt, aaslgned as escort by the Judge Advocate’s Department at Washington.
The governor and bis staff will occupy three autos In the InalteuraJ parade and as tha chief executive's car passes the place where President Roosevelt wlU be inaugurated, Im
leave the vehicle to sit te the president's private stand. With hbn WlU be PhUip Hewes, bis executive secretary, Major Burt, and either Adjutant General WUUam F. Ladd or Ool. Wardinskl ae his personal aide-
Host at DIaaer Gov, Croas later wiU be host to
the staff and guests at dinner te tha Mayflower hotd. The governor is not expected to attend tbe concert of the National Symphony Orchee-
(Osatlaaed on Page Six)
FOUR CHILDREN BURNED TO DEATH
Anotker Qflkland i Fireman Seriom lj Injored When SnudB Honse b Dettroyed.
TeDs Police He KiHed Mrs. Mary Case With Theft As the Mothre; Laundry Mark On Trousers Leadini Che.
New T(gk. Joax 14— (AP> — Breaking down after refUsiag for 34 houm to admit any guilt In the bathtub elaytng of Mm. Mary Rob- inaon Caee, Major Greene, stocky negro porter, st^ed a full confession of the -crinoe early today. District Attorney caiarles -P. BulUvon announced.
Tbe district attomey said Greene signed tbe confession at 6:36 o’clock, and three minutes later he was charged with the slaying.
Hs aald the porter, who was em
ployed te the Jackson Rclgbte apartment buUdlng whem the aU tractive 26-year-o)d housewife waa strangled and beaten vritb a hammer befom her Ufeleas body waa dumped into a bathtub Monday, would be arraigned today te Queens Felony Court
"Theft was the motive,” Sullivan ■aid te a terse statement T ie waa let Into the apartment hy her (Mrs.
(Ooattoaed on Page BIx)
HEAVY FOG HALTS TRAFnC IN HARBOR
Ferryboat Collides With Another Yessel h Mew York Bay Dot No One b Hart
New Tork. Jan. 14.—(A P )—With New Tork bay shipping disrupted by a heavy fog. 3,000 paoseagi crowded aboard the Btatea Island ferry TompklneviUe wem thrown Into confusion today when the ferry coUided with the U. 8. mailboat President off Oovernoi's'Island.
After a check. Deputy Commissioner A. J. Hudson, la charge of municipal ferry operationa, h none of the paasengem waa hurt The ferry discharged Ite paasengem end continued te eervlee.
Part ot the deck raU of the ferry boat waa ripped away. With women ecreaming, them was a aeramhle of the pasaengem to the rear ot tbe ferry.
The ferry eoUIded head-on with the maUboat as it was proceeding Into Its eUp at the Battery.
Uaem HeM UpNearby te ths fog-bound bay, aev-
oral ocean Unem wem held at anchor, waiting for a clearing te tbs weather befom docking.
Tbe oolUoite was the aoeond mishap of tba day because of the fog Tbe freighter Bantarian ma aground off Fort H-unllton earlier In the morning.- The ferry oontteued Into Its slip
after the mishap and apparently none at the paseengera required medical attention, although many of the men aad women were knocked down te the scramble on the 'decks.
Had Heavy LoadTbe ferry was carrying the
beavleet load of the morning rush hour. Only the fact that It was moving slowly prevented more seri- oue consequences.
The forward deck waa crowded
(Ooattoaad ea Page Ste)
CoOcfe S ta ta at T ro l Describes Elba SaHim PriH iel^ SMewaDq Testbit iy Other Witnesses As te Whether Yidki^ DnderhflieBceef]
By EDWARD J. NSn. Norwleb. Jaa. 14— (.AP)—t t I
"fURy half a aUante” for IT-; old BDea BulUvaa to crash * the aseoad story vrladoev Danoalaad Oseiao aad foB to; ridewalk balow. David Rahoffqri only outside witnees to the < testified today to tha flrat murdar trial at Robart A. i SSorear-old orebaatra laadsr.'
Rakoeky, a SO-yeaiHild I tbe UBlverrity of AlabSBM boHM la la New Londos salatamtHw la tlia ggaveaue Just aftar leavtog tbs teg a l l^ below, about 8:48 laet July 18 wbea ba beard a i looked up, aad saw aad kaord ' daws brmk.
Fteds GUri On (Than was a flfun tbara, ba i
ataadteg upright, but ba oc ' soy wbetbqr it waa a male male. SkMriy tbe figure bai uatu it wae almost double. Tha 1 and ahouldera puabad tbrougb , brokon opaateg. Tba flgura r over, fell to tbe eldewi&, am rusbod horilflad to tt. hs I BulUvaa lying tbara. too bar baod toward tha huB
'Tba Btato aosuesa Bia yaartdd isBtfihl— 13 labdw'adj Casino taaa4 with attacklag BulUvaa erimtnaUy te tka ball, ta tba pluagu fruos ths dow ohe suffered aevem bead Juries from which ehd teed ta dasuL
Rakooky, who caaM up school to teotlfy, demooutratod dar questloateg by tba Just what ha saw at tha night tragedy, taivoivtag tom lar youngstera overyoos ta Uon had seen grow up.
Bofllsr WItotMM Eariler, witaaossa who Jud
with Stnqwon and IDoa Bulltouml la y ’s raatauraat, aaar tha ball, said that aU had been (
Ogdeasburg, N. T., Jaa. 14—(A P)—Four children wem burned to death aad a Amman waa aeriously tejured when flames deatitqred a ■teall fruBM house here early today.
Tba vlctlma wem Violet, 16;Rite, 11; Jean. 7 aad Martha, 8, aU ctaUdrea of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Petrinia.
A son. ^ 1 ^ , ag^ 10, waa Washington, Jaa. 14.—(A P )—Sdomestic spat is a flawle^ cam to
Marrying Joe* Great Puzzle For Goviernment Expfrts
that EUafi waa bototenaaL I only ona wlttisa. Poggla O T tw i New Loadoa would swear that youthful telepbosM imatator < der tba inttuenos at liquor.
Rakooky, h taU yoUtb, tbe eccae ta detail.
T board tha BolM of gtaaq looked up, oaw tbe break out. Tbam wem three 8t rate oraahM of brokaa glaaa M five saoonds apart ThSB, t waM fuU form te tha wtedoer. Tho d beat slowly over. The haadTH abotildem coma through tha gis Then the rest of the body. The] um thudded to the sidewalk,” he plained.
CdoM Ne4 TMh -i He ran to her. Bbs eouldaPt B "She waa sort at aaorttng.”!
said, “with blood oosdng frosn noatrila.” ,1
Under croas-examlnattoa Iqr ria Lubchansky, oounaM for " ff f t f J itiUwslqF n id Um body tbroujgb “very slowly.’’
"Did you see any othar flgurp the wlndowr" Lubchanoky di ed.
"Only that oaa,” aaaw ky.
“Did the flgum make a«ycry?”
1 heard only tha hreaktag glaa and the thud."
'Did you see any sign of fOroa hind the faUT”
“No,” aald the youngater,
tbs
reaeued with night clothes aflame u against the front door try-
from the flamingbe stood teg to eoraiM home.
Ho was pldsad up ana carried to ■sfoty by Mm. Nina WUIIams, a neighbor, who aald shf dlacovsmd tba flemse about 6 a. m., erhea abe let bar pot eat outdoom for an eariy moniiag airing.
Cbatiaa Lavaraway, 88. an Og- denaburgta fireman, was tejuied whan be fen off a ladder wtaUe fl|tot- taig tba fire.
ta CTMtoal Ckatlsa Bobby was taksa to a bospltel ta critloal eondtUon. Mm. F^lama
■old sho found tba lad pounding bia Data against tba froat door, trying to saeape. aba aald aba broke a wliidow la tbs deer to open It and
lateb him to oafs^.Tbo fattaar, epon to at a smau
raatauraat aad taal hnsliiMs had
"Marrying Joe’' Btgtabrse baa 'an outside eliance-to go doem-te history as -somettalng of a hero If ba will ■toy te JaU a while fodger.'
Joe already has . meat . Sevan months behind bam In 'hilm, Okla.,
tbo govarnmont bopw. ba wUl tgrea to aacriflee a Uttle mime of bia freedom. i . . .
He is on Otage Indiaa with plenty of money te tba United States Treasury. Hla pUgbt may settle for aU time tba legal laoue: Can any (toriSinn in a steto court aspamte a wealthy Indian from some of hla caabT
The Bureau at tadloa Adtelm aald "No,” but tba Oklahoma oourte re- pUod by puttliig BlifoMW te ^ uatu ba pays $8,000 aUasony to one of hia ex-invea.
Now tbe bureau la -buralag mid- aight oB to daclda wbattaor JoFa
r
carry to the Federal eoui^Here's a aynopeis of tha Indian’s
history taken from a two-tech volume te the Bureau of Indiaa Affalro:
Joe le 31b and early te Ufe abowed a tendency to marriage. AU want weU until he wedded Ethel, Wife No. 3, te 1988. Within a year hs had married agate, and been widowed. In another month he bad married Wifa No. 4.
But in June, 1986, Wife Na 8 on a tevoros and $8,000 agmoiiy.
Tbs gevernmant 1st Jos employ tor gal counsel to fight payment aad tbe case went to tbe Oklahoma Supreme Court.
Joe loot tbe deeiskm them but bis lawyer pleaded be bad no money for alimony purpqaa. Sevan aiontba ago Bigborm was bald fai ocatemiit.
,A rehearing ta sehadutod Batur- dsy, but meaawblto, tba word from Tula to that Joa to not iaUreatod ta
N o r w i c h , J a a . 14— ( A P ) - n i c t t a i g t e s t i m o n y a s t o 17-;. s a i c n B u U lv o n ’ e c o a t e t k m d r t e k l i i g b e e r w i t h B e a d R o b o t A . B im p e o a I n a p a r t y ) b e f o m e b e w a s f a t a U y t e j u i e d i t e t h e m o r n in g o f l a s t J u l y .18 '. o f f e r e d t o d a y l a 8ln ip e a n * B t r i a l 1 f l r a t d e g r e e a n i r d e r b e f o m a j o f t h r e e J u d g e a
J o a e p b C a e t a n g , o f N e w : s e x a p b o n e p t o y o r l a B im p e o a a t D o B e e l a a d O s r in o a t B e a c h , 11 m U e a f m m b u w a a T e a U B g g o o d , h a t c a t e d ” a n d t h a t a n d t o t o t l t o j j a t I s a y ’ s r e e t a u r a a t e to d r a n k f r o m o a s p l t o k s r i
B u t M a r g a r e t - - - - -N e w L e a d e n t h a t n i g h t f o r t h a i " B U e t t w a s u n d e r t b b i U q u o r . B h s t e d a t w a n t t o g o I d id n ’ t h a m t o g o t o i m n r a lp g . B h s a i t B t t o p a o o w o u M i ' ^ j b o a r . ”
T b e d s f U
iivn Facing Shortage In Justices o f Peace
.a ltteiig iia iwtad i t to
Stniggle Along Ai Two Do Not
Qnalifjr*M i tedty tiMt UM oShtner• to atrufto a k o f durtnc m s wuSbut J1 JuitlOM
I Um town laat I M T«
toelud* per> flMl SMRtafw mud M te(
I far M Im Court trlala if I Jeiie n d <to oty Judfc art un- I to M t
’ fiMrift Harold T. Kaatin^ ■ Inatad bgr ^ Dameerau
I ad tbair aaraa JuatioM and far anotlwr tarn itaitlnc
> Toatardajr. but the state M that the aame person
ba hath deputy aherlff and at tba paaea, ae he baa not I aa a JustiM.Hr U m ild i, also nominated
Mtad to the Oemoerats, had I foaltned today and the state
aaya that It may be aaeumed ‘ paraoas who do not qualify by
10, ara not intereeted in
BT *087 TOWN WILLBE BIOOEB THAN RATH |
Manchester’s population. ao> I e d r ^ to itets Beard of Haalth aaUinates, la iaoraaatny faster than is tha populaUoa w tba tire state.
The estimates gtrs Manohaater I of Cocuiecticut*f proMst
populatioa. while its sbara, ae- oonUni to tha 1080 rederal oso- aua, was 1J8 peroant
INIQtEST HERE KEEN IN LECTURE ON BLIND
IPRIZES AWARDED BT STATE GRANGE
lOeniU Beinl of MRford li Rewirded for Hb Hilliwijr Sifotr E m j.
Brldcsport. Jan. 1« — (AP) — | I Donald Beard of ICUferd, a member of Indlaa tUrer Oraafe No. 7S re-
' eeived
Protest Reading Test For Town *s Police Chief\
?• » ta x p a ^am a rnfuMd admiasioa iSpurrad fay a mors to oust their police chief on a eharfa ha oould not raad or arrltei an Into yroup of this quiet oommunltys . tupayers sprang' into action today. °
The IfontvUle Civle LeagTM re- taUated to aa attempt by the township committee to dismlas Chief BuaaaU Hllbart with a eountor-pro- poeal that Impeachment aetloa be brought against tha eommlttea
" T ^ r s trying to gat rid of tha mod Joseph rrsderieko.
ing shouted patted the thgif IttdlgBStlOtt Md . . . . _ MontoUle ban withsticks and stonaa.
Boms anaakad Into tha oeUar. others listened at adndowa as tba chief deaarsd that before his appointment seven years ago be mi-ntl the oommittaa's *W o<i^taot
Ha refused to taka tt again, and tha offldala withheld eorpm gg hours so ha oould consult
Tba crowd planned to storm
’USED PDBUC FUNDS TO SAVE COMPANY
IScB. W M er Charfes ?a i"T , , _ _ 1 • P^stty kltteRlah lot whsaSwem feu Abo W to
h for Stock Spoci liliosa|"yc^i»~«*««ff SS ^Watolngton, Jan. 14.—(A P)—. I
Chairman Whaalar (D. * «* I ■stTbtid In
Btttlen* Ball Brings Out Society’s Cltusy Servants
tha
New Haven Woman to Demon-
E yo” Doga.
f.NEHl ATTENDS FATHER-SON RITES
that was adjudged tba bast of aevef- al hundred submitted In a nationwide eonteat undar auspleee of the National Oranga.
______ awarded 110, a eilveratrete V a k .. a# medal, a watch and a trte to Colum-
Booing I bua.Ohla Otbare racAviag prlaa asrarda la the gtate Orange nigh' way aafaty eatay contest were
^_____ . , Ellaabeth Weeks of Chaplin. RuthCooaWarable Intereat la ahewn by CUsm of Aabford, Utuhw J. Hatch
local people to the lecture-demon- h'$*4Kmsrater, to the order named.>n to be given by lU r Edith Vernon ando » „ _ . I Raymond E. Bogue of North Ston-
^ **’ “ *• tarton racaived honorable m«Uon.Methodiat church tomorrow after- Beard’a aaaay, deaUng with traf. noon. A graduate of the aanu I ®oo*ttons to Uilford
Ip Chairman William Turaar daalad Uda. ”Wa ara only bringing the matter to a b e a d ,'^ ■eld, “bacauaa c f peralatent rumors that RUbfit cannot rsnd or write."
The oommlttee quMtloned Hilbert
towntoip governing bodHa meatlng I ooinmlttoa diatged today that thetonight, when Turner aald Hllbart I lato Van nwn^iiMii «.__ _
ebargad wltta "toaubordto-) public funda to baU out on# of theirrm d a tl^ .aid tba dvtc I-agu. S to ? * S m f,Uld ~ .k -e ---------1‘“ peachBMat of T W r , w »™ u.«e. mco;
sjdSrssus?"' “ ig—- a u 's
IlAin# o f WBJL te tlTl 111■anato railroad toveetigqbng U«Mto analyito, j2 t anot^r^aoclai
C d d e ‘ “ “ “ moonllght-mid-aectol af-
who waa
(Unner early ao that JamM and Sid- ) wa»B and Oarmea—man wboaa laatd bw aa tevnilnMy a n lost In tba tur> »«u o f domoatto aordoa—oeold gat- away aarly tor tha aoiqR and ftab '
N. Y. Stocks------ --- graduaU at tha —mf m-1 ® SfUford and parU-aUtuta to which tba famous m« i«« •»»ia number of aertousKeUer wa. trained, aald "spead ta the largest contribut-
Adama ibep .. Alaska Jun . . AUagfa^ . . .
Cham .
B oU rai Bishop Conse- '.e n to Sob in Springfield —
^ ^ td r U ia g D o u Ladd.
n 3 . Btnart NeiU. rector of g t ' 1 Iplaeopal ebureh, attended
laCBIah^ W. A. MW head of tha Wastern tto Diooaw Wadnaaday
[flpilBgfiald. Btahop W. A. Uw- acdalnad by Ms tetbar,
annd Wintam Lawnnea, IdMp af Afnaaaobnsatta, adainad Hav. Naill.
i ICrn. Wnuam P. Ladd of OMnlRy aohool. Tala
' Haven, ntorned to the gnoats of Rav.
' Hfn. J. Btnart NeUL Or. and Ladd wm apaod tba waak-and
-.tha White Bonsa, Waabtogton.> SB tha guaata of Proatdant and
10 . Hooaavslt
trained, and of "The Seeing Bye", an toatltution in Jior- dstown, N. J., which train Oer- man abepherd doga to accompany and protect blind pereon on the ■treeU, she srlU preeent her cantoe guide and not o ^ teU of tha to-
Ing factor atoee car. often do TO mOM an hour nt night where the poatad speed la 48.
"Spaed itaelf It dangerous, and besidet causing many accidents, it alwaya makM those occurring more
^ rmders to ^ [ a e i i ^ W ta eombtaod'wllS poor but actually give damonstratloaa. f Judgment, popr vialbiUty, or a £ l^
driver’sJudgment, popr vialbiUty,
One of the teechera and two alrl I ''***1 condition, uie unvsr ■ pupils toom tbs InsUtuU FOr tbs dlsrm rd tor the rules ofBlind wU] demonstrate Brails m d-1 " * rithts of otbera, ortog, and tbs whole program premia- condition due Jo alcoholisaa to be unusual appsaltos The *^??***? ’ aeeumee its aiost dsin- OoemopoUtan olub wni^ is **■-'
TABLETS
The______ the
sponsoring organisation bopas tor • farm attendance of men, women end ehUdrsn. Tba> have advertised tba modest admleelon fee, and children including those in High school wiu ba admitted tor a low pries.
Mrs. Robert Cooper Is chairman of the program commlttn and will ba aaslsted by lira. Emma L. Nst- tlston and Hra. Lula BidweU. Henrietta Devon will bo the boatess. It la expected Iftos Stevens will begin to speak at 8 o’clock.
'T tonli f au n sCOLDS ***HEADACHES
Trios, Sfle.
[INB FOODSA *
'ionomyA T
Prices
IV ost Sogar,d oth b a g .........O 'LakM Buttar,
M sifn ia ] Cheeae,
'i y is ChM 8 '
^ ^ o n i a ’ Poa’ B a ^ ,*■ j b s . .............................
C w ktail,aW l can, 2 c a n s .........
Oats,
AD-Bran,B p a e k a M .........J . PBbcdta Flonr,
Raliable Flour,e ................... .. ,
_ Je i*lb . pltg., 2
:.|Vh«at8worthB ................... ..Je Applesauce,
I Ifi-oa. c a n s ................yK nsdale Tom atoe^^ 0. 2 c a n ....................
Je Succotash.40. 2 c a n .............
’-Am erican (letti,, S cans . . . ,
Coffee.(Can . . . . . . . . . . . .
lU bbit Molasses,^Ko. m c a n ................
1 Dust W ashingJer, Ig. b o x .........
Dust, I........................ ...G rapefruit <
. 8 No. 2 ca n s .. . t Joiee, (
f o .2 ca n ,2 cans . . . . < jr.T -F in t Puddings, <
k a k g a .......................... ,* R . ] ^ e d
, 8-oa. can . . . ■ Bt Maid Syrup, tb o t t le ........... .. 4
B oep , t-----••oa-aeae* M
f» N o-Rub e ’ W ax, pint c a n .. q
OH. ie a a ................I
Admitted yeatarday: Mrs. Agnes Dickson of 131 penter street.
Ihsetaarged yeeterday; Mrs. Catherine WalchowsW of 30 Union street, Russell Tryon of 80 Pitkin street.
Birth: A daughter to Mr. and Mra. Leroy Norris of 84 (toeatnut atreet, yesterday.
Discharged today; Flormoe Titus o f Windsorvllle, Coirtoe Paircloth of 40 Purnell Place and (Sarrol Hansen of 183 Pearl atraet, Mrs Jack Banaon, 88 Hamlin atraet
Deaths: Mrs. Clara Beckwith of 140 Oakland atreet, and Charlee Long of Bolton, today.
Ceneue: Blxty-three paUents. I
"Obvioualy then, laaa speed, more law observanca, courtesy, sobriety, and careful attention on the part of driven are the main things needed to making tbe highways of my com- n unity free from accidents.”
Mrs. Ina Ooldaptok c f FarmlU River OraagA Huntington, stota supertoteadent of JuveMle Oranges, waa awarded tbe NaUonal Orange acblavemaBt pin for her work In buUdtog up Juvenile Oranges in the state.
Adoption of reaolutiona was tbe major Item of buatneas remainingou the agenda aa 400 delegatee t o ___ „ ___the three day oonvantiOB prepared I Du T out ™ to depart for home late today. Eastman Kodak
In a c t io n of Louis O. Tollss of Elec aqd iSuT Southington as a msmber of the ' ~ state executive committee for three yean wUl take place at tha closing aeaaica this aftenoon.
Allied Am Can Am Home Prod Am Rad St 8 ..Am Sm alt.......Am Tel and TelAm Tob B .......Am Wat Wks .. Anaconda . . . . . Armour, m. . . . .A tch ison '.........Auburn ...........Aviation Oorp . Balt and Ohio ..Bendlx ...........Beth S teel........Borden ...........Can Pao ...........Case (J I ) .......Oerro De Pasco Chee and Ohio .Chrysler .........Coca Cola .......Col Carbon . . . . Ool Oaa and El . ComI Inv Tr . . . ,Coml S o lv ....... .Cons Edison . . . .Cone O il.............Cont Can ...........Com Prod ...........Del Lack and West Douglas Alro
SNOW TRAIN CANCELLEDHartford, Jan. 14.—(AP)—For
tbe aeocmd tuccesalve week the New Haven railroad haa cancelled ite Sunday aaow train. It waa announced today.
Tbe season was to have started Jan. 10, but absence of snow prevented tha first train and reports this week Indicate a lUca CMulitlon throughout the New England winter sports eenten.
Bolivia has the ematlest stamp of any country to the world.
CONTIMUINO OURJanuary Clearance
S A L Eo f
Used GarsThese c a n have been reconditioned and are in good
m echanical shape.
NO D O W N PA YMENTAnd 20 Months To Pay Balance On Any
Car Sellingr For $300 Or Less.
(2) 1936 Oldsmobile 8 Tourinsr Sedans. 1936 Oldsmobile Tourinsr Sedan.1935 Dodgre Touring: Sedan.1934 Ford Sedan................................$3501933 Pljmouth Coach................. .$2951932 Chrysler Coupe .........................$2501932 Graham Sedan....... $2501931 Ford Coach........................ . .$1251931 Hudson Sedan ..................... .$2501931 Hupp Sedan....... ............ $175
Roadster.........................$1001930 Ford Coupe .. . riaa1930 Oldsmobile Coupe ............... S1251929 Ford Roadster sim
Ford CoupCT ■ ■ ■ . . .2 at 3SS ea and 1 at *75
„ „ M A w « « g s S aM r a c g i 8 A U S . t e a .
Blec Auto Lite . . .Oen Elec .............Oea Foodc .........Oen Motors . . . . .Qlllette ...............Hecker P rod .......Hershey .............Hudson Motors ..Int Harv .............Int Nlok .............Int Tsl and TsI ..Rennecott .........Lehigh Val Rd . . .Ugg and Myers BLoeWs ................Lorlllard ..............McKeesp 'Tin , . ,Mont Ward . . .Nat Blac ...............Nat Cash R e g ___Nat Dairy ...........Nat DIsUll.............N Y Central .........NY NH and H ___North Am .............Packard ...............Param P ie t...........Penn ....................Phelps D odge........Phil Pete ...............Pub Berv N J .......Radio ..................Reading ................Rem Rand ..............Rey Tob B ............Safeway Storea . . . .Sebenley Die .........Sears Roebuck .......Shell Union .............Socony V e c .............South Pao ...............South Rwy .............St Brandt ...........St Oaa and E l.........St Oil Cal ...............St Oil N J ...............Tex O orp .................Timken Roller Bear Trans America . . . .Union Carbide .......Union P a o ...............Unit A ircra ft.........Unit Oorp ...............Unit Oas Im p .........U 8 Rubber .............V S Smelt .............U 8 Steel ............... ;Wck Chem............. ..Wastern U nion.........West El and M fg ___Woolworth ..........................Blee Bond and Share «?urb)
. . . . . 17%
. . . . . 18% > .... 4% .......383. . . . . l i e.....B O------ 38%. . . . 08 ...M 88H . . . . 07% . . . . 38% . . . . 86%
7%. . . . 78% . . . . 83% . . . . 8% . . . . 33% . . . . 37% . . . . 78% . . . . 27 . . . . 16% ....184% . . . . 73 . . . . 87% . . . . 121% ....123% . . . . 120% . . . 20% . . . 78% . . . 18% . . . 47% . . . 18% . . . 66% . . . 69% . . . 18% . . . 72% ...170% ...172 . . . 8% . . . 42% . . . 88% . . . 41 . . .6 7 . . . 16% . . . 13% . . . 6 5 . . . 20% ...104% . . . 84 . . . 13% . . . 82% . . . 1 0 . . . 110% .. . 80% .. . 23%.. 91%.. S3 . . S3 .. 32 .. 24 .. 38%.. 43%.. 8%.. 83%.. 11%.. 34%.. 43 . . 87 .. 81%.. 81 .. 11%.. 43%• 34%. 08%
.. 48 « %
....... ««%
........« 8%
....... 16%
........47%
....... 27
....... 13%
....... 13%
.... . . 48%69%
....... 34%
....... 72%
....... 18%------104%....180%
------ 30--- 8%. . . . 16% . . . . 48%-----92---- 80. . . . 43% . . . . 78%
.152% 81% 27%
Flmlahad by F. B. Bhaw,'Watt Hartford
WUIlaa. B. Maittai Local Rapreaeatotlva
■' BidCap. Nat Bk. and Tr. 29 Conn. River Bk. . . . . 480 Htfd. Oonnl ‘Truet . . . 78Htfd. Nat Bk. A n . 83 Fboenix S t Bk. A Tr. 380
laeiiraaca StoekaAetna Caeualty........mA e ^ Fire ............... 49%Aetna Life ............... jqAutomobile ............... ai%Conn. Oeneral ......... S4Hartford F ire ........... 73%Hartford Steam Boiler 73Natlimal Fire ........... mPhoenix Fire ........... 9sRoeeia Ineurance . . . . 13Travelers ...................490
PnbUe OttUty Stocks Conn. Lt. and Pow. .. 71Conn. P ow er........... 5514Ht/d. Elec. L t ......... 69Hartford Gas ........... 41So. New Eng. Tsl Co. 180
Nanofaeturing StocksAcme Wire ........... . .■Am. Hardware......... 39Arrow H and H. com. 65 Billings and Spencer. 4% Bristol Brass . . . . 6114Collins Co.Colt’s Pat. Firearms .Bagla Look . . . . ___Fafnlr Bearings . . . .Gray Tel Pay StaUon Hart and Coolty .Landers, Frary A cik Mann A Bow, Claas A
do., aaaa B ___New Brit Mch., com.
do., pfd................North and Judd ..Peck. Stow A WUeoK Russell Mfg. Co. . . .SoovlU Mfg. C o ........Stanley WorksTorrtagton .............Union Mfg. Co.........]
8 Envelop, com ..do., pfd................
Veeder Root .............Whitlock Coll Pip*• B. Wiliiame Ca . . .
Van B w ariii^ arm, abld SOO.OOOj «a w a of Btoek to Clevalaad Terml- nal Bufldlng Company, anothar Van SsrartogSB aBterprIat at 8L300,000 abova tha markat prlea.
*nila and eimiiay purohasaa werai » — —- ---------^HMnoad with a 180,000,000 note le-1 “ * **“ • P»trone of tha af.aua, Wheeler aald, on which the to-
It was the "to ssrvtea'S^Sf***® y w . E vuybo^ was to asrvlea to anyl)odyi%o ■omsbody was thsrs.
^ proxy, ths Aston and tte Van- darbllu and tha Oslrieha, not to
tba Rockefellen, wera re^ rasented among the hundreda w £
tt® Hotelto tha bMM above tha daneen
Malda <|offad crisp mmnui In fa- . vor of otgandlo ovonlng gowns,^ Shopkeopr, who a S T A n S r t S a : W jr r o w tantllea wan than. too.
Tbo tlde-burnod gantlanaB who took tbo evtntog off in tba of.' charity includad Alfred, butler to' Mrs. John Schlff; Jeoeph, butler to,
•Blra. MarahaU Fltld; butlavlto ^ Vtooant A etorT ^ ^ bn tlar-: to Herman Oelrichs, aiM Gharlaa.''i butler to Conda Nast
A ahopkeeper from Nowporfcl/ standing on the fringe c t thO' danoers, cast a oontemptuoua syd"' on tbe boxes above. ‘ f
“High and mighty," ha aamlalinaA; "that’a what they ara. I aee a OMT' up there who won’t lower blntp come downstairs for a walta."
vaattogvpublle ovantuaily kwt more I than $18,000,000.
3 o ^ h R. Swan, fbrmar praatdant ^ ^ Guaranty 0>mpany « New j York which underwrote the note ie-
Aaked I *'**• ttatUled that "Van Swarlngen. ..
8884
appUcatloa at tbe on ce c f the ao- clal woihar to tba W arm Mamorlai T ^ 11^ Tha anrollntent eloeea Friday, January lA
________ . Jtt® Italian Benefit Society willoompanlae eppam tly used funds I fh-i * "*"®® tte members and obtained from the pubUo to pUr- ,®t the ItaUan baU
aaeurlUaa from otbor of their r^ f* i* * ” *i. ****® ®*4»»«l»y night nlea" but quloklv added: ®3®*T®® ®* ^®®* Btaflord,master meehuilc at tha (tyril Joho^
■on Woolen Company, who un£^I oompaniaa" but quickly added: n.1?^* **®**' ttiow anything about
116 I Used to Spoenlato81% Teatlmony atoo waa given at the 81 oommlttoe’a inquiry that proctods 88% of the note. Issue were used by tbe 88 I terminal'eOmpany to apeetdate on
ths Stock Market without the knowledge of the notes’ trustees— the Guaranty ’Trust Company of New York.
wmiam a
78%76680014
610
want an operation at the Johnson Memorial hospital Monday morning Is reported to ba Improving.
Knott who Med In Hartfon) JanTe, waa brought to West Staffo^ Wednesday moni- 1 for burial to tha family lot to tba HIU cemetery.
Cart Green of Stafford street haa gone to Wales, Maas., where he will
186 81 33%
120 19%
300 44% • % 1
8010040%17%8700%849713%80
183119
087
7887%7146
188
48%4167 0%
63%68W%
21%46%n %41
43%10%4182%680014%
Trust, board ohal^SiS!^teat?flSdtoit I wtotor nm ths Wlto h ihe never knew the Van Sweringen I ^ tte^ to-toa ^ d alater, Dr. and
Mra. Frank Shaffer_ Sweringen
firm was "carrying on market operations."
MIscellaneotisBurdlnes, Inc.............Chapman Valve . . . . ’ Conn. Invst. Mfg, .. Blec Steam StertllxtogFoundation 0 »...........Hendey Mfg. Co. ! . . | John Irving Shoe, com King Seeley Corp . . , Solar Mfg. ;Sylvania Indus ___ ’TayIor-<3oIquUt .......Utah-Idaho Sug. Com.
4440%4%36%
31%0
13%8%
44608%
1261143
4743%6%8•%33%
1113%6%46
634%
"Isn’t it the duty of a truatea to protect the property and sea It Isn't squandered?" asked Wheeler.
"I don’t think so,” Potter repUed. ‘Tte duty is to set that tbe terms of the note Indenture are fulfilled."
Wheeler contended Guaranty Trust Company had an added "moral responslbtlitjr" becauae tha Mtet were issued by its whoUy-ownad subsidiary, the Guaranty company.
Committee records showed Wheeler eald, that the $30,000,000 note taaue waa floated for the Van Sweringen corporation, which was forbidden under terms of tbe loan to ■pwmlate la atooka.
This firm Immediately turned the money over to Cleveland Terminal Building Company, a aubaidlary, Wheeler aaeerted. which used it for Stodc Market, operations.
STAFFO^SPRD^Miss Frances Mullana of Hart-
[ ford, a member of tbe teaching staff
------ of Staffordrecently received word of the death of her brother. Valentine Vaao to Lansford, Pa. «
Mrs. Ena Whitaker <rf Stafford Hollow U a paUent at the Wing Memortol hospital In Palmer, MauT where she Is receiving treatment for her eyes.
STA1E UBiURY GETS ' OLD LOCAL PAPER
“ The Hlxhlfitid News” W ss Pabllahed by Cage B rothers to B oost Their Spring W ater.Recently added to tbe files of the
ConneoUeut Stets Ubrary at Hart- * ®®^ ®* tte second i— ’« of ‘The Highland News, ’ an eight-
page, tabluld-alse, newspaper chiefly devoted to advance ths sals of Tonics water and Rock Water, bottled at Highland Park by Caaa Brothers.
The Issue at the Ubrary waa
FIND BABY’S BODYIN QUARRY POND
F«f® Oaa)y®tragater had fallen on the aUpperv rocka at tba quarry’s edge.
Ftad root PriatA tiny toot print on the buah-cov-
8®®lt. sad the aoamperlng of yWMgiter’e pet terrier
•aruer had eoaoantrated search near toe home of the grlef-etrlekea paiw to after toe searchers prevl- ouBiy had acourad toe woods tor hiwfirade of yards around.
Tha tot dleappearod yasterday s js o Ms raothar gave hlta perm it
"$<> out and see toe pretty ■urar. to Ms bright blue aaow suit^ ff*?**®***’ olL Mi pet terrier at lUi
A few miautee later, Mra Mur- P»W looked out to see what ba waa doing, but ooaldn*t find k it
Alanaad but unabla to leave tha )uaa baeauaa tba youagstor’a IS-
wSmla Ms crib, ttto OMthar oaBad poltea They eama la a buny. iuftor
tt— o a » lAglfwnalras, amca po- 8®4®4eo wba paaaad ira tba annual police ban, and long atraggUag gnnpa sf
Bank of New York Bankers Trust . . . .Chase ..................Chemical ___Guaranty Tnut !."!Continental .........Corn Exchange . . !First NaUonal . . . .Irving ..................Manhattan . . .Manufact. Trust . ’National a ty Bank !New York ...........Public ...............Title ................; ; ; ;
toauraaoe American (Nawark) . American Raecrve . . . American Surety . . . . Baltimore American .Excess ...........Fid. and OepMit Great American . . . .Halifax ............. ; ; ; ; ^Hanover .......................ga..Home toe. ................. gguHome Fire liecurlty . 8%Maes. Bonding......... 33National Liberty . . . . 10
luver r ! : . . . . : i? Prov. Wash. ............. 39P ra f^ ^ d en t ........ 30%Saaboard Suraty . . . . 338®oui1ty ton ............ 33USprtogfiald Fire A Ms. IS8
U. S F. and O ......... 37%Westchester ............ 33^
401- 72% • 48% . 64. 840 . 18■ 64 .2140 . 16■ 82% . 88. 43. 130 . 68
16
12%33%60.%
6%6%
13027%
49674%30%66
3302066
31901884%6044
1436017
14%88%63%10%8%133
20%3488%
6%6813as41 23% 86 $7%
188 1000
30% 87
atjtacon Academy, Ooleheeter, has printed In February 18M. Subaertn- b ^ appointed by toe Stafford | Oona to the p a j^ printed
ly, were 25 cents a year. - ............More than one page of toe paper
le devoted to teaUmonlali vouching tor tbe efficacy of tha minerals waters. advertised as curing _B^ht's disease of toe kidneys, diabetes, catarrh of toe bladder, conaUpaUon, indlgesUon. acrofulous affecUons, all forma of malaria and female weaknesses." t
Editorials and "nbwa" eoinmn. iq the paper were made up largely by poems and fleUon storiaa artlelts lauding the Tonies watera. Nearly a column and a nsir used in an attempt to prove that “Alcohol is a paralyser—not eUmulant."
Advertleemente Included those of Cheney Brothers for hi«i«ir and colored drees dike. Case Brothers tor preae-papera and Jacquard cards end CAse Brothera tor Tonlca Water and Rock Water,
school board ae teacher of Engii.i and French at Stafford High aChool to succeed Mias Sylvia C. Northrop of Brldgawater, who haa resigned and will ba married to Merril W. Abbey of Putnam on Saturday. Jan.
*• ® xraduate of Mlddlebury Collage, in Mlddlebury. VL, and also a graduate of Oonnec- Ucut State Teachers’ College in New Britain. She has had three years teaching expertenoe cornea to Stafford highly reoom mended.
FOREIGN EXCBANa2*’—(A F)—Foreign Exehsnge steady; Oidat Brtt-
■In In doUaiA oU en la OMto.Oraat Britain demand, 4A i l - i8;
eM a t, 4.81 l-ig ; M day MPa’ 4.00 1-16; Franoa demand, 4.87; ea- ^ iHmand. 6Ja% : oa-U 6H,
X)«mEadfl;Fraa,
W Ittgteter^ 10.001 TYaval, » .a 0 ; ItoUand, 84.T8; Norway, 84.87; Shveden, 2832; D m a ^ 21.05; Finland, 337; awitoerland, » 0 7 ; Bpaln, unquoted; Fertugnl. ^ % ; p r a ^ .00% ; miaad, 1SA8; C^ffco«®»Mtla. 8.40%; Jtwomavla.
14; Austria. J8.TINJ A a e u f. 80; R u m ^ .75; AlRmittaA
A80%N; Tokyo. 5 -n ; Bkaagbm. ttJO;
m ; IM W a ty . t7J0: Moatram Now Yotk. 08X8%; New Totk ta
Montreal. 100.08%.N—NoaolnaL _
Regina A. Tripoli, four months 39 days old. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tripoli, of Brendon Halgbte, died at her home Tuaaday evening about 11 o’clock a ^ r an lU- neas of 11 days with pneumonia. She was the only child, born at the Johnson Memorial hospital on August 14, 1036. Funeral torvleea were held this morning at toe home at 8 o’clock. Bdrial waa In S t Edward’e cemetery,
Tbe Stafford High school baaket- baU team will play toe KlUlngly High five of Danielson In the Warren Memorial Town HaU here, thU Friday nlgbt to the prellmlnaiy game which will start at 7:48 o’clock ths second team of both ■ehoole will meet
Mrs. Bmllle Riaggsra of Stafford- vlUa, mother of Second Selectman William J. RIeggers, woe pleasant' ly surprlaed at bar homt reoantly with a party in honor of bar 76th birthday. ’Tha nelghbora and frttnds caUed and oongratulated har and oztending tooir beat wlahaa tor many happy returns of the day. She received many gifts.
IntormatloB waa received at toe state police barracks yesterday that Francis S. Burke, 35, of West Philadelphia, who was arreated by Offiotr V. John Labeoky of toe local barracks on December 27 on toe charge of bslng a fuglUva from Juatica was seBtencad to 3 to 10 years in the East Pennsylvania State prison on the charge of theft of motor ve- melea when tried before Judn Mo- Devltt in toe Oty Hall oourt, Phlla- dalphia ou Jan. 8. When he was firrt arrested by Btate Trooper La- baclty, B ^ e was chaigad with reckless driving and driving without
At a MMion of Um boroo^ court T u * j^ , Thomas Shea of «6T1 Weldatoo Road, Rlvaidate, N. T ,
wlto apeadlDf. fbrtetted 1 886 baud. He waa arraated oa Oac n by Stota T rim p .T 7 T L iS .S 5 ; who trailed Mm at 88 miles an hour t b r o ^ toe town. Myreo j . x^yoos of 10 S ^ k Road, Brifhtoa. I t o ^ also fM eitad a 838 bond tor oparat- 2 * •» uanstotorad atetor v S i^ ^ waa arraated la W «t tttallinrd by Offleer Labeeky oa Jaa. A* driv- la r a ear with 1988 netttratioe platoa Judfo WnUamK. Rcold WU OQ tho bioche
BWB took ad- Of tbo roout ' oaiaff o f on-
ia the OOC oad bovo aiod
COERING HEARi FRIENDLY WORDS FROMjmiAN^
(OoaltoBad frara Page Oaa)Garman policy la the Spanish situa- uon.
Goerlng began a busy round at'- ceremonial acUvitlea tola mbttong'' which included toe audleaoo with the King. Later talka with H Dues and Count Galeaaap dano, minister of foreign affairs, it waa atatad, wtu hinge particularly on toe flew, of v^untom to Spain and tha da-^ termlned Britlah. proteato la an a^-'" fort to keep toe Peninsula eonfUet localiaed.
I t ^ was sold authorttottvaly to ' be ^tyittg to prevent any kut min- ute rush of war materials and voK'" unteera to Spain, aubjeet to Jotat International action, suggested by ' Great Britain, to be taken later. On the otopr Mmd, an official aald, France and Ruaito wera trying to -‘ brat the projected deadline by au^r’ ! Plytoff the Sodallat government with toe means of war.
Emphaelxlng toe close feeling ba>'~ tween II Duos and HiUer, an official said definitely ‘Ttaly does noc'- baUeva atcrlea of Gerioany's w anu'' tog to annra part of Morocco. BotM- gv.varnmente ara aye to aye on the* ' question of preventing Bolsheviam‘‘ from settling In the Mediterranean In tbe form of a Communist ra^„ pubUe." ha aald.
"Slogaa hare la 'Spain for the lan iards’. Italy la convinced once there Is no more Bolahevlk Interference. there wUl be neither German" nor Italian Interference.”
Tha aame official added that..;, after Gen Flanciaoo QYanco's ax-.. pected Fascist victory, Germany. aud Italy will lend all toe political^ aasiatqnce he needs in the difficult' period of reconatriicUon.
In answer to a direct questlofi on Itallen volunteers to Spain and i^relatlon to Goerin^a visit, tka offKial steted definitely: "Thera ara ao IndlcaHona of volunvavra leaving Italy to recent days. Thla may be taken to mean tha autoortUes'■re trying to prevent such departure subject to Joint declslona to b4.- taken later,
"Italy haa a great faallng c f ' sympathy with toe Ubt Brltlahmote - (asking an end to volunteen for -- Spain), specially atoca the note to :, also directed toward FYanca, showing Britain haa changed her point of view on France’s stooerity on - toe quasttan of volunteers." -i-'i:—-------------------- — ------------- - f i
DEUGE OF BILLSAWAITS ASSEMBLY
STATE(Ooattooed from Page One)
hadto halt an antomobUe which been reported stolen.
The noUca filed with toe attorney general did not aay what monetary ;>aymente would be sought Iw tha Stororatate.
8<me obrarvara have axpraaaed the belief that tha deotoiaa af tha two Houara to organise with aepa- rate committee wUl result to aa to- craaee of Mils. In other yean, ail bills have been given pubUe hearings before Jotat oommJttees. Unless some compromise la effected Senate and Houae committees will meet independently for public hear- toga.
On toe opening day of the Lsgle- eeerion. Speaker J. Mortimer
appealed to Houae members to kaep toe number of measures to aminimum. __
Tha Oaneral Asiambly win resume work a«ct U o a Siy . Both Houara ara aKpected to set a deadline then for the Introduction of bills.
quick fraaara of spring. Geologtota have declared that tbe aartoquakra of tha Caribboaa area produce sobm o f the world’s fSateat growto|; moun-
Navy Togr BringsData On Earthquakes
PhOadelplila, Jan. 14 — ( A P ) X d a r Inteaaa aummer hast or too V Sclaaca^a nowaat Information on tha 'fOtera which cause aartoquakra and build mountalna la tya Caribbean Sea area waa aKpacted to arrive bare today aboard toe Navy aub- martna 8. 8. Barracuda.
For more than a month the auh- marina, with three adentlste aboard to addltloo to the crew, has been atg- sagging back and forth beiiaato the stMace of the ocean la tba regkm of the West indlM «"«»Hi«g maasora- manU of tha foroe of gravity at more than 80 atatlona
From these measurements tha soientlato. Dr. Maurice Ewing of Lahl^ Unlvr^ty, Lieut. A. J.Hoaklneon of tha U. 8. coast and Gaedatlo Survey, and Dr. Harry Haas of Princatra University, wiu detormlae the rratl seen era of the rock cruet of mother earth at the bottom of toe ocoam Thla restless- asaa to the cause of tbe not to-
nt earthquakes, such as that racsntly struck Baa Balvadar.I same reatieaenen also cauaaa
growth o f mountains aa tbe 'I’a cruet buckles under forces ir to tocae which cause pave-
it to bulge and-form ridgee ua-
Oravlty meaauramento abow tbaeomparatlva stability and aquiU- brium of the earth’s cruet, according to Captain Lamar R. Laahy, byorographer of tbe Navy Oapart- ment, -since normal values of the puU o f gravity ara obtained
which anEM MtUdd EDd EtEblft. oltlMMigh to areas of large dlaturb- ance ’’outstanding Irregularitlra in gravity values ara encountered, which Indicate buckling and crack' Ibc.**
The Barracuda, under command of Lieutenant W. A. Oorry, waa pected to dock late to tbe day:
Many acientieta call tbe study of eartbquakee one of toe most tunda- mentsd at tbe probleme affecting mankind becauee at the devastation they cause and their emotkmai affect on man. Through such atudlra as toe one Just completed, they declared, man U losing hie fear of earthquakes and learning to construct buildings which arlll wlthotand them.
ROCKVILLEA.M.BURKECHAIR11AN
FOR BIRTHDAY BAUDance Wnn .Be Held in Princess
Ballrooni On Tnesday E ve- ‘ninff. ^ebm ai7 9.
RoekvlllA Jan. LA—A.. M. Burke c f this dty la chairman of toe Pres idenf a birthday ban celebration la Roekvilla. At a meettog of toe oommlttea held on Wednesday eve- ntog, it waa decided to hold the ball at Uw Princess Ballroom on Tuaa- S a j evening, February A
Moat of toe celebrationa In honor of the Preeldent’a' birthday ara held on January 30, but It waa decided not to hold tbe obaervance to Rock- vUla until toe ninth becauee of other affairs being held here on tbe other
CODimtY aUB RAISES ANNUAL DOES BTS4
At a apeelal meettog o f tha Man-ebaater Ommtiyolub club bald at tha
tost nlgbt tha membaraMp tor an teeraaM to annual
duaa of 84.00, JnM ona-hatt the In- deaaa tha board o f governors had leeo a m idadrTha miiTlaf was at- ■utod ' b y i l raeaben aad tha liSrd’a motion was lost ky oaty
^ votoa..Thara.waa oonaidarahia ~ flf oeuraa sad dubsouaatetyfovemauto and the peadbiUty of to v it^ a Jarger maaabaidiip hot
I ^ F o w i lSTEWART BRUCE
•PLUIf a t r i o a ______■oennr Hoomn In
•DOWN IH t STRITOr I
Mra. Ruth McKtostry Cooley ta ■ecratary of the general committee and Mra. ihnma Ltak ta tieaauier.
The following committee chairman wera appointed: Music aad aatertainment, John N. Keeney; ban, Herbert Sebeiner; ttekete, Ftaacta J. Prichard; publicity, Mrs. Dina Haraog.
OSIeera laatoOed Thb newly elected officers of Da
mon Lodge, No. 17. Knights of Pythias, were Installed laat evening in Castle hall by District Deputy Oread Chancellor Charles Hdnte and his staff. Brother Heints, the new District Deputy for toe tod Dtabrtct, has aupervtalon of toe following lodges: Memorial, No. 38, of Manchester, Unne, No. 73, of Manchester, gam, No. 83, of gtast Hartford. Asnuntuck, No. 80, of Thomp- ■oavlUe, and Damon, No. 17, of RockviUe.
The following officers wera to- stalled: Chancellor Commander, John Sohwan; 'Vice Chancellor, Bernard Ackerman; Prelate, James R. Quinn; Master a t Work, Jamra Taylor; Keeper of Records and Seals, Arthur Friedrich, one year; Master of Finance, glrnest Rwdgen, one year; Master of Exchequer, R. El dred Doyle, one year; Master at Arms, Herbert O. Oough;' Inner Guard, Charles Hetota; Outer Guard, George Scheiner; Trustee for three yean, Jamra Ts)dor: Auditor for 18 months, Herbert O. aougfa.
Naasee Team Oaptotas At toe meettog of Stanley Dobora
Unit of the American Legion Aux- Utory, held laat evening In the O. A. R. hall, the captalna or seven teams wars announcM by the president, Mrs. Mae Chapman, as fontova: Mtae Jennie Bata, Mrs. Louise Blolr aad Mra. Joaephlna Richter; Mra. Mdy D i^ p and Mrs. Bernice Boucher; Ifra 83aie Newmarfcer aad Mrs. Christine Mead; Mrs. Helen Rathe, Mra. Augusta Pltkat and Mte. Selma Prichard; Mias Emma Bats;
During the next two months there will be a ooBteat among t ^ teams to ratas money, tbe team turning In the largest amount being the guests o f tha AuxUlary at toe April meettog when a celebration will take place.
An interesting talk waa prraent- ^ at last night’s meetlBg by Mrs. Je lra MacFartand, toe district Leg-
» chairman, in regard to tbe lUve progrem of toe L ^ on
the manner in which toe AuxU-
Johanna SuOlvaii, 70, a t 10 — avenoa, died on Wednea-
kome. The body t__tte Burke Funeral holne
OB Park atraet and funeral airaage- menta win be tater.
Mias SnUtvan isavra no near teto-
o’clock and at 7X0 totra win aa addrara by Donald Adams, New Haven, hta subject being ‘"The Layinaa’a Task".
It ta expected that more than 30 churchra will ba represented at tba conference.
Reshetoall TtoAghtThe PoUab American girls’ bas
ketball team win play Ita first game of todapendei^ baaketbeil under the name of too Rockville AH Sta^ tba Toem hall tola evening. Tliey win meet the Ingraham Girls Brtsbd at tola ttota. Manager Emil Geesey atatra that toe glrta win play both Independent and league beeketball. and that t ^ have not ■evered their relaUona with toe POIlah American attaeoa’ <dub which haa ityoaaorad tha team to toe
.This game tonight wlU the first time ta aoveral yean that toe team has ptayed iaitapendeat ketoaU. —
The second gams win find the RockviUe Falcons pitted against ths C C. C. Quintet of Windsor aad win be played at 9 o’clock. Tbe glria' game ta acbeduled to start promptly at 8 o'clock.
To Elect Offleere Court Hearts of Oak wlU maet
toil evening in Foresters hall. NaUonal Bank buUdlag. Officers for toe coming year wlU be elected at tola Ume.
Food Sale Friday The Ladles’ Aid society of the
RockviUe Methodist church will hold a food sale at tbe office of toe OonnecUcut Light and Power company on Friday afternoon, January 16.
Oenoeratte Women To Meet Tbon will bo a meeting of too
Federation of DemocraUo Women at the home of Mrs. A. M. Burke of Village street this evening.
Funeral of Leopold J. Kreuae The funeral of Leopold J. Krause,
former captain of tba RockviUe Police deportment, who died at hta home at Crystal Lake on Tuesday evening, wlU be held from hta late home on Friday afternoon. January 16, at 3 o'clock. Rev. Dr. George 8. Brookee; paotm’ of tbe Union CongregaUonal church, wiU officiate. Burial will ba to Grove HUl cemetery, this city.
Mr. Krause bed been a resident of Crystal Lake for toe past seventeen years. He waa a member of too Sons of Herman, O. D. H. 8., Sick Society No. 1 and toe RockviUe Turn society.
Besidra faia wife, he ta survived by two sons, Charlee at Hartford and Walter Krauao of Milford; three daughters, Mrs. Albert Kuhniy and Mrs. Robert Tennstedt, both of RockvUlo, and Mrs. a 8. Griswold of West Hartford; ssven grandchildren and one great grandson.
Pirate Whia* Tonlglri Hope Chapter, No. 60, O. E. 8.,
WlU sponsor a Pirate whist tola evening in Masonio hall, starting at 8 o’clock. AU memben of Fajrette LoSga, Hope Chapter and their friends are invited.
Mtae Florine Slater aad Mrs. Ethel Leonand ara chairmen to charge and they win be assisted by Mrs. Ruth Lehmann, Mrs. Kate Williams and Mrs. Alice Hetota.
.U>usa
Ohanga Data tar m date o f tha DimsrtT bctM
orlgtaalty ■aaouaead fbr W eito*- day. Januaiy 80, bgr the Ro<MIle XtoihlstB dub. has baan changed to Wodasaday, January 37. The Doa- ■srt bridge win be held atarttog at 3 e ’cledc at tha ESta* home with Mra. A. O. Vtoeent In ebaige. Tbaptuoaada wm go to the charity fund o f ths lodge. _ ^
Thera wm be a Laymanta Ocofir- ■ m at tha Ulitai Oeagtagatkmal church on Friday aftamoon starltog at 4:80 o’etottor* At thta tons to m wm ba a dtaa iraten under tba gan- araf tttla o f "B om Buatoraa AJtoira of too Church".
WaRar Spenrar, prindpri o f the Oommardal High stbaoL New B»> van; and Rav. Jamas F. m .g*i^ Harttord, wm ba tha lindHU.
At 5X0 orelodc, than wm ha an ca T Im UDlqntam « ths
O h " , bgr Ra*. WknUn 8. Aidri-
OkBMr wffl be ste rsA ak 8X0
WAR VETERAN DIESNewtogton, Jan. lA —(A P)—WU-
Uam Noonai). 40, a World War veteran of New Britain, died In the United Stetee Veterana’ hospital here last night
Hospital attendants aald death was due.parUy, It Is boUoved, to Injuries Noonan aufforsd Jaa 7 when be feU from a window In hta home, dropping six feet to froasa ground.
He IravM hta widow.
DIDNT PATHS TAXES AS LAND WAS USELESS
C at A n Um Tfaabar O ff P w p w - tFt Thoa Stopped PSFinx T axes to the Tow n.
AnMng tbo pteora o f property that waa offered for qale by the tax coUeetor for back taxes waa a txaet of land located aomeerhsie to tba town of Mandieeter to too Birch Mountain district The land stood to the name of C. M. Curtta, who operated a aaw mm to Maoctaeater in 1010 and purehaaed wood land not only to Mancheater but to nearby towns. When he cut off too wood he waa able to get aome good telephone poles which be aold to the Southern New England Telephena Company and Ura that ware pur- diaaed by the New York. New Haven A Hartford railroad. Ha eras atao able to aeU soma of the four foot length wood to brick yards In New Britain, rraulttog in a fair profit for too venture. Not having any further uae for tbe land be did not bother paying any more taxeo. Later on he sold ediat wood there might be standing to be cut up into abort lengUia for atovra. The w(xxl that was out waa not only taken from the land owned by Curtta, but there being no real way a t telling Just where the lines were property of others that waa near the Curtta land was also cut off.
The land waa bid to by too town when it waa put up for aucttim and ■Ipoo that time there have been different stories about its locatioa. It ta not known when tbe survey ,wUI be made to get tbe real location, but by the time that3tthaa grown to timber again It wm be necessary to get a right of way over other land to get to tbe wood lot.
COLUMBIAMr. and Mrs. WllUam Wolff have
named their baby girl Evriyn Joyce.Mr. and Mrs. Donald Woodward
left aariy Tuesday morning for Bridgeport, to attend the three day sesalon of tha Conn. State Grange as delegates from the local Grange. Mr. Woodward ta treasurer of (Columbia Grange.
Rev. A. W. MelUnger was a guest speaker in Norwtehtown Tuesday at the meeting of the New London Association of Congragatlonal Mln- tatera.
The January meeting of the Ladies’ Aid was held Tuesday In tbe hall, with 36 ladlra present It waa an aU day work meeting and a good deal was accomplished In spite of the fact that the attendance was smaller than usual, several of the members being lU with the prevalent colds that are afflicting humanity at present A delicious dinner was served at noon by the hoeterass of tbe day. Mrs. Hay Cobb, Mra. Laura RoMnaon, Mra. Vera Lyman ■ad Mrs. Winnie Field. The Fri>- ruary meeting will atao be an all day meeting with Mrs. Junle Squler and aastatonta as hoetesees.
The meeting of (Columbia Grange Wednesday evening was a New Year's program, this being the first meeting of 1037. The first number was a New Year’s greeting and eoaga by a group of young people. The officers gave New Year’s resolutions and (Haytoa Hunt, Jr., read 'Be a Booster Rooster.” The leo-
turer gave an Interesting talk on Tbe Biggest Things of 1930” passing a ro t^ plcturra to illustrate. Delvina Etheridge gave a brief resume of people and events of last year, followed by aa original atory by Rev. A. W. MelUnger bringing in names of Columbia reatdente. The Grange was then divided into two Sidra and three eontesta held which caused much hilarity. The side winning two out of three wera served large peppermint cones, and the losing aide smaller ones. A birthday cake waa presented to tha lecturer, her birthday having been tbe day before. There were 48 members present. The next meeting will be InstaUatlon of officers w d supper. Hie supper to be at
o’clock before the meeting. Thta will be served by the losing side of the recent competitive program.
FIRE IN CONVENT
Rlmouskl, (Qua., Jan. 14.— (Ctaaa- dlan Press) — Fire drove 160 girt students sad 70 mma from tba old* Ursultoes oonvsnt on the lower S t Lawreneo river early today. None was Injured.
Father Louis Philippe Chenard, toe convent chaplain, raid there waa no panic.
Tha flames raged through too main part of tba 81-year-^ stnio- tiite, but left a new wing untouched. Volunteers Joined firemen
keeping tbe blase from nearby bulWngs.
The causa of toe flra was not
Diamond Sales Herald New Prosperity Wave
Now Toik, Jtm . 14—(AP) —Dla-^ monds, always tbs most popular of^ gems, ara harahlteg a now wave at pro^srity for Jowalora.
Now Totk Jowalora, caUtog toslr buatoaaa "dtattoctly one of luxury m too uppor biaekoto," oaid today tlisra was a maricod upswing to the demand for fine gems, with die. moBda leading the way,
T ha JowMiy businera," said a rapreaentatlve o f ono Jowolty ooa- oorn "haa fait too doprooston kocn- ly for tour or five yoora. Poopta ao a rule do not buy jewelry unless they feel financially aecura. They are buying again."
A n o ^ r Jeweler mentioned salra at 830,000 ptoOM to recant weeks, and all agresd tba holiday aeaaon waa the host atooe before too depression.
There ta a demand tor settings to suit individual taoteo, and manufacturers ara dipping into the dim past for moUto.
Ths Influeaco of Batharic, Oriental Mayan, Egyptian, aad Roman perioda may be seen to <ta- ■Igna for cUpo, broochea, pins and bracelete, hut there ta little or no demand tor too ao-oaUed antlqura of 80 to 100 yean ago.
Rubies, perhapa due to the to- fluenca of the impending British coronation, are returning toepopu- lartty. Tbe coronation influence atao ta aeon to crests Imposed on milady’s cigarette cases, perfume bottles, compacts, and Jewel boxes.
The American woman generally qnirna the ultra-modern designs to vogue in Parts, using them for costume effects, one jeweler commented.
Men ara buying more Jewelry tor tbemaelvea.
“Look at these scarf pins," Jeweler eaid. "A few years ago we couldn't give them away, now there ta aa ever-increasing demand tor them. The same applies to rings.'
AUtCRAn WORKERS RUSHED w m WORK
(Osnt Fags Ons)ode haa bean accompanied by tense fight tor buatoeas among tbe Mg airlines, resulting to heavy orders last year for larger and ssrlft ar traaaport planes, soms costing aa much as 8110,000 each. Many of these remain to be delivered this year or later.
Unfilled OrfienTtofllled ordtrs of thraa oom-
ppaloA aocordtog to lateat available figures, approximated 868,000.000. They ara the Dooglaa Aircraft Cb. Santo Monica, Odtf.; OonfoUdatod Aircraft Oorpn Saa Diago, CaUf. ■ad Curttaa-Wrlgbt Oorp, with plaato at BuffUo, 8L Louta aad Pat- enoa. N. J.
Douglaa, Muy with coatly traaaport plaara aa well ■■ miUtoiy equlpmeat. reported unflUed orders totoUng 834,636.000 at the ead of Its flacal year last November.
Foniga Marketo la the axpaadtog foreign market,
aircraft exports from tbs United States rose from 814,000,000 In 1038 to about 828,000,000 laat year, with December figures eatlm at^
Records of aircraft manufacture compiled by the Aeronautical Outm- bar a t Oammerce show the output of mlUtary planes about doubled to tha United States last year. On the basta of figures tor the first eight months, It waa estimated nroduo- tlon approximated 000 military ■hips agatoat 450 the procedtog year, while commercial craft turned out increased from 1,100 to around 1,400.
About a Uiourand Army aad Navy plaara wera expected to oonra out of domestic faetorira thta year.
U. S. aircraft appropriationa for an purposes, os recorded Ir. the year book publtahed by tba Aeronautical Chambsr of Commerce, Increased to nearly 8150,000,000 to tbo 1088-87 fiscal year from about 8130,000,000 too preceding year, 801,170,000 In 1084-88 aad 830,000,000 la 1034-38.
NORTH COVENIKY
education wUl be the speakers o f the evsning. This 1s a new 6-year hlgto school of which Mtas Cora B. Kingsbury ta on the faculty ratob- Itahlng a new department of boms economics.
The funeral of Mira Thersa Oyer was held from her late home Una afternoon at 3 p. m. Mtaa Dyer haa made her home with Mr. and Mrs. Anton MueUer for the laat thirty- three years. She had no near rala- Uves. . She has been totaUy bUnd for a number of years. Burial waa to the Onter cemetery with Rev. Leon H. Austin officiating.
The Fragment Society will attend churdi in a body at the Second Om- gragatlonal Sunday morning. Ser- vlco storta at 10:45 so the members a n asked to assemble earlier. The Society wUI furnish tbe floral tribute at thta aarvico in memory of their deceased members.
Mrs. Ruth French who was opsr- ated upon Monday morning tor ap- psadidtla ta reported as doing very welL
BOSOCERANO.Ironwood, Mich.—The dinner
tabla trick of flipping two spoons Into a glaaa tumbler had dire results for Raymond Wanke, 14. He flipped so hard a spoon spUt hta left eyebalL
Mrs. Gilbsrt WittmaaB and aon, Ronald Gilbert have returned home from the Mancheater Memorial hospital.
Mra. Joseph Skllton baa returned from a recent stay at Hotel Taft in Now York a ty .
Mr. and Mra. Harold Turaar, Mtaa Slyvla Smith and JCr. Thomas Mo- Ktoney attended the State Grange meeting in Bridgeport Turaday sve- ning.
Mrs. Hrithaus who waa vIMtiilg ai Mrs. Porter's has returned to her home in Harrison, N. T.
Tha new Guilford High achool wUI bo dedicated Friday evening at 8:15. Gov. Crou aad the commissioner of
NO AM OUNT o f advertising could poasibly havq built
the reputation and success that FATH E R JOHN’S M EDICINE has earned and m ainaained fo r e igh ty years as a treatm ent fo r colds and a body-builder, unless it had proven value and m erit. . . . Don’t w ait — be prepared — get it today.
FALSETEETH NEW EASY WAY
.Ctell tota 4na a UMe I■OBreit^-W ii— liI lH
RMOT w mcB n s
Wl Bitae tad teMe rad rata M Ota ara—
pwradlV q«»«* HNMtawtaa. Ata raS " «ee ese aet datoWM. e IS to fta V S
Federal Men Catch Up With M ail Bride Swindle
BatasvUla, Aih., Jaa.-1A—(AF)' Foatol authoritlM today ehaigad 2Cra l4Tto (Pony) Jooaa 80-yaar- eld mother, with (tafraadtog me toaa 100 M B of 118 to ISO each hy offeitag haiaelf aa a *toiaU bride."
Fori Office Inapoetor wmiam WMto aald labo oontoaaaci riia »■«<< wrtttoa araay tatten to ama pnm - iriag to ararty them aad aridag aneh tor money ao that rim might bqy aaeeaaaiy clothra and traaqiar- tatom to hK’ tosw hoaao.*”
Mra. Joaaa and bar hnahaad were ■Ralgaed betoce U. 8. Oaaurimlaa- er Daw R. Ltodaey oa chaiga at nriag too araUa to drirand. 8ho obdateod har Itborty oa 8800 bond,
was hold to daCantt o f atmUar2W to aa(d tha chargee woidd ha
taatatod to ths Federal Grand Jury sat Moaday at Ltttla Rock.
; Jonra aad hia wito baara to Arkansas to 1084 from thetoapoetor aald. Hioy aottlad with a 6oraarK>Id daughter aad aa ll-year- old son at ShUoli, Ark., about 18 milao from Heber Springs. White aald Jonra rented a post offlos boa, attending to faraarisr at n rigntog rsglstsrod Isttera tor hta wtto.
T h e said aha wonld got a Hat of marriageable men from bureaus, oonrespoad with promiM to many and ask toaproa- paritva mate tor traasaortatlea tuada," aeasriia Whito.
"FIsany rim would tsO too jMBoadaiU that rim waa and gtva aoma town whan tlisy oould write to her. Hiqy warn aavar able to loeato bsr again. Har le t t^ wsn-maOad at Rebar Springs aad ■ha lived at Shikih. m m i g vietlms uaabla to her."
■Ar 6 0 0 D IHifiiHura Sinea IB9I
• ftugt and Drapartaa• KHchaa Appaaecac
* OfRea FuniHm a
FLINT.BRUCE
188 Tie
NOW ALSO IN TABLET FORM
Y O U R i l S T F R IIN D W / a n U Y O U l
AKeff.tfW bffst way to ~ '
'roai”FUiSONAl FINANCE.Boat worry
to d a y / J
FREE SrairHvaeraeSoefc. Tta.y«JCrate bi9w a Cray.
The vats at taierrat cSerseS le airee (■> sev ecat. see eieeta, e* tSMV-eix (at) per eept* serraniara ea tSe aapalS aaieaat at the leaa.
a. W. Heeklee. Her. '■tato Theater BalMlax tSS Mala atse
P B R S O M A Iim U M C B C O
NOTICENotice ta horaby given that a Spe
cial Meeting o f The Eighth School A- UtmtlM District wm bo held at toe Hollister Street School, on Jrt- day aventog. Januaiy 23nd, 1937, at eight o'clock p. m« for tbo tol- iowtog piirpoara, to wit:
1. To SM if tbs District wiU an- thorina toe Olnetotu to purchase ■pprcaimatoly ten (10) acres of land tor aawer punoaea
X To ara If toa District will vote to maks an ^ ropriatlon to pay tor the asms.
Dated at Mahehsstar, tola day at January, A. D„ 1087.
W. W. R O B E R i^N , Pnridast
14to
MANY RRE COMPANIES HERE PLAN BANQUEIS
Tw o Have Set Datec- fo r Annual Gat T ogether and O thers PIsnning fo r Tim e.
A eommittse haa been named by Company No. 1 of tbo South Man- ehaster Are department to arrange for tha annual banquet of the 00m- pany to be held in February. No. 8 (tompany of the South Mancheater department wm hold its annual dinner In their heee house on Saturday, Januaiy 33 and Hose No. 4 of the same department wlH have their annual banquet oa Saturday night of thta week.
On Wednesday, January 30. Company No. 3 of the Mantoester flra department will have a turkey dinner served In their firehouse. The committee in charge of the dinner ta compoeed of Former (%lef J<dm F. Limerick and his _two sons, Joseph and Francta. Plana are atao bet^
ccasldered tor a Joint gatharlag at the members of the Manchester flra department at a dinner that wffl ba held in February.
JAPS EATING S nN A O iTokyo, Jan. 14.—(AP)—Doetor
Kakujl Yoehida, aetting an axampla for the IltUe b c^ of the world, announced today he had sataa 8,380
pounda a t atttm St la t yearsT-. That la moM than thna'i ttV. ^ Dr. Toshlda aald It had 1
®nbuat and youthfuL*
Tha amall ef dtaotialla on porartly atimulatea tba aena right
S A U i u r
Swtisfying, RefresiiiiiT SA
CANNEDNow is the timo to STOCK UF —■ Real Honeat^to-Goodnoss Savings
- -Ono Week Only!
White Houaa ^Evaporated
K«Slf«r P«ars 10c Statl«r ^ 4>®«-t3< M acaroni p^ 3 19cSpaghotti p51 3 19c Croam Drops ‘^lOc BiiquickP o a f^ i£ r 3 '2 :S 5 t9 cPoachof 2 33c
O ld E li A loStubby Bols. ral3 Os.ra m No Itapralt SBata. M 9C
Cteea-CMWtrlBglrae
AU
DriM oatoaeaa~N oG tlt
A S P
PAGE
Sparkle
BEANS2 1 <
W 1 9 «
ANN ^ M Oa.
raSSERTSi Era.Ceffu
Tomatoes Wax Beans Beans Asparagus Spinach PeasGiant Peas Beets Niblets Tomato Apple Iona Peas
433
Cat
DriMaia Celdea a—
19 Ota Craw 25‘
19 Ota Caaa 35‘
M Ota Cmh 25«88j0ta 23«i80 Ota Caa 15‘1
88 Ota Caaa 35‘ITOaCaa 15‘
» Ota 1 Caaa 29*^Cm m 25‘U Ota Caaa 25‘
88 Ota Caas 25*
N Oa. Craw 33*i
G r a p a f fr u H 5 w l aSweet Juley Florldas
__5 » 19*_ J
S p i n a c h 3 21c Green Peot 5=5 2 “ -19« Mew Cabbage ■“ " 3 “ ® to* York A p p l e s 19* Tongerines^ 2 ^ 3 9 * O n i o n s f s i T Z a S3*
A/eat A/arket Specials
SHOULDERS19*
SMOKED or FRESH
Chuck Roost 9 4 cBoneleaa—Prime Steer Beef 4 9 _■
Bottom r?!S!2l?' >> 31*Pork Scnifogoa s^ Spicod Ham Silvorkrook Bacon D illP icklo*J-argo Smolts Frofh Haddock
33c“u,7- 35c
37c
Coffee Specials This weekend only
B O K A R' v ^ ^ - 2 3 * '
Red CircleC O F F 8 E
Pillsbury*sC A K E A E c
FLO U R A O
A & P FO O D STORF-^' r V'.
tnulug fitrtid.ruiMJiiuicu Ht rum
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Tha HaraM Pnatiaa Ooataaar,■naaalal raaanaaibiliia
laa~BlbtMbaa aaW fipncraableal amra appaartag la JBaartlaaaiaata la tba Maarbaatai''■aaar ~aiaa NaraM
TH U M PAT, JANUARY 14
“TOO MANY*Om ot tbe batter edited and more
ligieBljpctBiia et opinloa la thli BOMBtiy Is tba Iteaa Weekly. Tat ki Mb last iwua it axbUdU Just •boot the BTerage deiree of futUltj IB deBliar iBith the problem of motor fBtaUties. In tbe course of n | ;.|rtaf Brtlelp on the subject it ggya:
^ T oo many people are killed in ttis BoaBtry to witomoMla sod- tontB. aioM spedflCBUy. too
.iMaay are killed in Teuu. It la ; BBkl that an attempt wil> be made '.'iteliw the €omtng -IgaiauiU^ ses- iBlCM to BWend tha drivers* iloenie
As the law now stands tba IBM c t aueh Ucenaaa is no I than a tonaallty. Tba
, . * hpPBM tar a lioenae, aadM i t That Is alL U tha * aoModed to roquiro an ax*
W to ^ e e M aaeh anMcant tt wID Mgla to flMia tomathliif. rtoo atm jr people are killed. It
Is a taadUar way ot putting it but to always SMins to us to Indicata a •wtous state of mind—that the per-
' who says it would be much leas I to doliiy aomettainy about
taaa safety tf the number of tbe totUms could only be somewhat re-
knave; Whether he Is a m ta a t to> different to the rtchts and Mfoty of others, Inharently teekleas; or whether he la by nature conaidar sta, careful' aad decent And those are the thlnya that really count. FlaUy, there are no more accidents, no mora kUUnye In statas that re- qulra no driver examinations rii«n in those that do.
Almost nobody really yet down to the foundation in this frothy
suppoM that tba sum "'Mild toapa Itself to .tenna o f the money of hie own country? Sup> poaa he were a Hanyerlan and Me InaUnctlva Idea of a liaa Hunyariao fortune were a bundrad fim tpsnd penyo—|2S,ooo would ba nearni to that sum than either $25,000 or $30,000. Suppose he were an ltal> ian and was tlilnkiny in tarma of an Italian eompatancy of $00,000 lire—that would be provided
ayltatloo for highway aufety. Un-1 $38,000 United Stataa money, with til a lot of people do wa are yolny l.i little left tar expanaea boma Or to kMp on Inureaelny tba "too many I If ba ware a Yuyo-JIlav aad klUlaye.** Ton don't cure cancer I thought to yet htmaelf a round mll- with mustard plasters and auryeon'a I Uon dinar be would come cIom to It **P*- I If he got $38,000 in American
money.
A JOB FOR NEGROES I ** fanciful thoughts,_ hut what thoughts In connectionn e n wUl M more than one group with such a case are not fanclful-
^ bitter m « e r « from the cons*- k , „euths have to ponder n S ! quence of the crime of rti* savage I ^fool who beat to death tbe gentle young Mrs. Case in a New Yorkapartment bouse. Not only will Just a Jttle unfortunate was the I the souls of the dead woman's bus- declaration made by Dr. George D. band and her own kin bo seared tar Strayer, "eurveyor" of tbe Hartford
long time by the shadow of that pubUc school syatau, when be aa- dreadful crime: it will add aUlI an- oerted hie conviction that "in the other burden to the difficult exist- long run tha hlgbar tha aalary the ance of tha many acores of thou- better the service." sands Of the great eity’a Negro population.
MANCHESTER EVBNIWC KERALl) lU N C H E S n i CONN. T H U R S D A ^ ^ W iW W in ^
b o u n d i n l i f O R O C C O ?
A POOR CHAMPION
How m uy is *Too many.”^ r il, wa think we ran answer
tost. Ona is too many. One hu- Miaa Ufa taken by automobile aerf.
: tfwit in tba wfaola United Btatee in / Whole yasr would be one too many.
• D m tioubfo in an buxiDaM la Mat we have come to think of
I ikstaJa aaiouat of human slaughter t r automobiles as something utter-
' ^ bqmad human control, like the ,'tosstnictioo of Ufe by earthquakM
djrtoOMM; we tadtly aaeume that the thing is elemental.
Which absolutely is not ao. Fifty Jriars ago aa on# was kUied in igie faar « r tan by an automobile. We •Mated the automobils, nature todn't; and we created the motor Math toU. And because we were "lUtog to gamble a human life fcsee and there against ths privilege af moving about faster we have tolUt up the death roll to its present Pfoportlons. We have done ao In the actual knowledge that we were swapping safety for speed, but we asade the oada aa a matter of de- Marata choice. What if the new angina did take a few lives T .Nobody could live forever anyhow
Nlna-tenths of all. the talk and toeturlag and law making la predl-
• ••tod. not on any expectation—or ■My earnest desire—to put an end to •Utomobla fatalities but to perhape Mduce them somewhat, at least fcaep the number from growing more and more ghastly. They are Just •too many." it u disturbing. u •omahow, without too much Inter- tovence wdth the situation created
the automobile, the number could ha cut to aay 30,000 men. women aad children dfestroyed In a year WBuldfft that ba nice? such an totyrovement!
No one. nowdays, unle.ss he is WUMn* to Ee generally regarded .is > taaatlc, a mild lunaUc, a nut, saw thinks of such a thing as MButtog, this criminal slaugh- tor stop!” Normal people say,*TMfa not murder quite so many—
. J5PL$f*tUug to be a-scandal!"Bo anich for to o many."Aaother esample of casual, laay
MtoWuff U tha Weaklys assump- can improve mattcie
■ A— iilMably by changing the law un iMe so aa to require
Then tbe hundred thousand dollar a ysar medical speciaust who cod-
Every such crime in which a Ne- dies the neuroaU of a select cUenUle gro is involved helps to defeat the of mlUlonaliwe wives is doing more ^ ira tjons of tba people of his race Bood in the world than the country to eatabUah themselves on some- doctor who drives day and night
like tarma of economic equal- over half a county and cleans up a Ity with their white neighbors, couple of thousand a year. One Doubtleas hundreds of Negro em- wonders If Dr. Strayer has ever ployes of apartment bouses in the heard of the girl teachers in some B ^ te r city will be quietly eaaed out of thoae toua Rldre Mountain slab
to- ■chool bousea and tbe wonders they^riduals c i ^ ; landlords will not «“ va accomplished on twanty dollam
tooanU' fear-spur- « month- generaUy never paid. Or prejudice*. I the school teachers of the French
It Is probably true that there la a Zone of the Armies who carried on parcaatage of criminals *>ctv''een 'shellings—for the sake of
•“ <»$ tha Negro population of New I the Uda.T ^ than among the white popula- There la an ImpIleaUon In this
Unfortunately the bad Ne- Strayer speech that school teachers B » U often. Incredibly, stupidly, in- « « to their profession primarily for
» « ^ n o t many white people can »»M y »chool teachers-and to moat cream am®‘“ '* * * " M aa to tell K them, .v-e are quite sure, their
too good Negro from the bad one. “ iJor intorest was In their work. . ____ » t Uroea When there not in pay day. Very few of them’nave been several Negro crimes of todeed. were giving leaa of them- P«nUlarly revolting* character, for “ >ves to their duUea than they a widespread auaplcloa of all Ne- have given had their salarieeBroes—enormously to the injury of *>o«n higher.toe colored population. Our view of It is that If Dr Stray-
tt would sce.Ti posalble that some- *>• to trying to make of himself a tM g effective could be done to meet champion of the school teachers ne this aituatlon by the Negroes them-1 to making a bit of a mesa of it.
Most of them will not thank him for toe implication that, because they are not getting the country's top salaries, they are lying down toe Job.
In New York
selves. in New York—as well _In every other large northern city — there are many highly Intelligent Negroes of as ezcclle..t character as to to be found in any racial group. Would it net ba posaibla for them to establish, among thamselvea, some sort of agency whose business would ba the MrUfleation of Negro appileanu for Jobs, as to their char- •ctort, peraonalltlae and trustwor-1 tolneas aa known to toslr own racial associates.
Of count nobody In Harlem can PMslbly know anything like everyone else In Harlem. But It Is high
probable that a well organized IfToup of Negroes could Ond out more about any given Negro, could coroe closer to evaluating his moral worth. In an hour, toan any other agency could In a year. NegroM hnow, InSnltely better than any white man can know or guess, whether this black man or that one
a good citizen or a bad one.There are In New York enough
thoroughly responsible and widely knpwn Negroes so that If they ware to promote and sponsor such an agency, and aupervlse .Its dtUgen't operaUon, lU guarantee of the character of a member of their race would certainly pass at face value anywhere.
Is
> ^ e and use It aa a dreMing tor ■tods. You will tad tha addition ot
toe pialn oil will Impart a new flavor I tc aalad dishes. Another dresaing
the peanut. ---------- toen using
toll over tbe salad.Instead of being content to use
peanuts occasionally as a between- meal snack, try using thtm with your regular meals and you will tad It possible to make them ao Important part of your ordinary diet
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Washington DaybookBy P rtjto n
' Rjr OEOEOB JMISS I . Tork, Jan. 1$.—soaw ot na
HavMt OMother Bight to rit ia on ths senu- m «U l Nonlaa of Oaom at. Cohan and Snm H. Karris oHer all tosM
Mr. Oohan was neUair la a now- . o ^ >
froducing tt ■• Mr. Barrief partnsr. i t ia ths Brrt Urn# thsy havs ooms togatiisr i oFctohanft. tolBkttoat
I thsatrleal ontflta ia town.ooMaton aad
rvaral old Uasrs cnina to giwst I the well-beloved vslsrant. Aasong tha elders ia tha audieaM w» m Wal*
P ^ to r WHOI broufbt Oohaa * Harru togsUiar almost half a etatuiy ago la hia Ut- tlo hand-Mttteg W
Mooro.iriatea tha atocy, tha Oohaa aad murris meeting was Maual. Saar. Harris had assi. Oehan In a vaudeville act aad admired hie work but had Berer rna aeroee him perMoaUy. A t that tima, Harris Was alternatias hia aeaaageilal ao- tlvltlea between prise AffttiariT real estate and Broadway shows.
One day they happened to be in Moore’s print shop at the taaM time to order their weefc'a supply o programs. The typesetter iatro- dbced them and remarked Jocularly that they should team up. Neitoer one paid aay attentloa tb tha aug- geatlon.
Tbe following Sunday, the Words and Musle aub, a frmteniMi soetety of Broadway aotobles. was baviag Ito outing on SUtea IHaad. Amonff too plenlckers ware Ouluui and Ha-- ris, and when two baaebaD teams were being chosen, the printer, Moore, a bom matchmaker, saw to it that a prise battery was pieked; Sam Harm Mtohed, Oeorfs Oohaa served as eatohar. TlMy played a hltleas, Moraleas gaoM against the opposing team.
That was how Oohaa A Harrla flrat taamad up. Whan they ferried back to Maahattaa that alght. they sealed tha b(^d with a handihake,A month later they toaugurated tha
Bpartaarabip with Joaaa.** They broui
Little Johnny They brought out flfty hiu
before tbe actors’ strike servered tbe Arm la 1$$0. But they ware bhck together again to New Haven the othn Bight aad to a aildnight
'■olt'ee with aonM of tba veterans present, went-over the aataoriM of tU Ir toltlal aaeoolatim on tha base- hall dlAmnad.
■petOgMIag lalvalleM For several biobUw, a SatvatUm
Araiy oorpa has been ooeupytog a comer on upper Broadway, offertog free purge to rianars. Tbe attead- aace was light ap to the other night, which worried the Salvatlea Army corps a great deal, especially becauaa this spot happened to be a stronghold of sin oa tbe Gay White Way. Not long ago, one of their number took the problem up with an uaemploy^ raudevtUlaa who loitered nearby. The variety panformer proffer^ some advice ead mated that a little ehowmaaeblp might help.
It waa sage counsel. Siam this battalion ot tha Faith has
MANCHESTER EVENINO HERALD. MANGHEETER, CONN„ THDRSDAT, JANUARY 14i IW T i»AC
(roadwayaer, arrayed along an alavatod t form, artfuUy Illuminated by two spoUlgifU, fed With the power, of an auto battery. And stoee toen, the Broadway dlvlalon at ths Salvation Army haa played to 8RO.
Off StageShowmen,' like harrieo tltena,
are addicted to outalde bobbies as relaxing pasUmat from the nervous tension ot the stage.-
Crosby Oalge, for eatampla, la a profleient cook, oonnotaeur of rare rlutagea, book couector aad opem- tor of a unique printing press to his spare time.
OUbert Molar pilots hia own plane across the country.
Vinton Freadlsy ia a waU-kaewn flahermaa, eelebratad for aOnM prlaa catebea.
Max OordoB can ba found at any nearby race track to seaaoa, reserving hie afternoons for the ponies.
Dwight Deere Wlnan is hii aoe tennis player.
William A. Brady Is a proUfle author of theatrical memomUll^
Health and Diet A dvice
OR FRANh MolAlk
ROASTED PEANUTS FORr e g u l a r fo o d
The pmnut le really a legume and n^ a nut. It la one of tta claaa oi
tropical America, but la alao grown In toe eoutoem pirt «
P®ltod States, and even ee tar
produced la said to be toe larxeat in
millionbushels of peanuts are sold eachyear to North America.
Boienia)QueeUon: Carlotta W. BUtea: "I
have had ecMma for toe last tan yeara and while It clean up with treatment It always comes back Could you give me auy advice T"
Answer; Even though this akin dlaorder has been preaent over aueb a long period ot Ume, toen is some hope tar you if you THU make up your mind to stay oa a restricted diet and to uaa other belpfuJ measures. The tnatmeat which 1 have found to secun the most eatlstactory results in overcoming this type _ ---------------or akin inflammation Is one which Roosevelt had ^rown up a barrier cleanses the inside of tbe body. In "•>!<* evidently meant that Joe addition to ualng a short fasting Ro*>l“ ®o" could not become a 8u- reglmen, followed by a very can- Court Justice, long as ba re-fu. diet. It la also helpful to secure I PotMIy has desired euch an assign- tnatmenta over the affected ana|®'‘ ° -given with the u ltn violet light. I 0 “ ly • ^«w houn before the Rob- suggeat that you send for my article I i?*°n press conference. President on ECZEMA, which you may aecure Rooeevelt had told another group of by writing to can ot this newspapei I Mrarten that it waa against his
PO“ <2 *o appoint men above 50 to toe FedenI bench.
Robinson, tbe majority leader, gathered around him Just befon the opening session all toe news men who usually cover the Senate. He outlined toe bualnasa of the session to general tenna, as Is tha cuatom of majority leaden, toen swung Into a biting criticism ot toe Supnma Court poaltiOD on wages and houn and le^ la tloa
What he said was nported at the time. He doubted efficacy of wage-houn legislation without a constitutional amendment. Mon on that later. What Impressed numben of toe reporten present was that Senator Robinson's words sounded like a renewed bid for a Supnme Court berth—when a vacancy occurs.
Age A BarrierBut what some of them must
tave overlooked waa that President
[The Family Doctor
to All to the next four irean.
Great Infloeoee SeasIncidentally that 80-year pro
nouncement tareordatos a Naw D ^ flavor to tha Federal courts tor many yean to oome. During too past four yean toe President haa appointed 40 district judges. Then are 107 to the country. He also hta appointed 14 circuit Judges, of which toen a n 30.
Since be announced he had made it his policy not to name any above 60 it can be expected that a sub-atutial number ranging to yean I anemia. Such daflclency oecun par- between 40 and 60 who have been | Ucularty in babies
By DB. MfHUUS nSHBBlN Editor. Joarnal ot the Aaaertees Medical AtaoelatleB, and s f Uygaia,
the Health Magaatse
DNDULANT FEVER ROSE TO RECORD PEAK LAST YEAR
Aa I have pointed out to a previous column, a deflclancy of iron to toe body may be eeeoclated with
srd encloslDg e large, self-edJi^ ed, stamped envelope. If you wlsn some general diet suggestions, be ■!un to ask for then, and enclose an extra stamp to help cover tbe cost of mailing the second article to you.
(Face Dark)QuesUon: Bertha N. asks: "After
Senator Robinson is 64.
The question was raised in connection with appointment of a district Judge. So positively did toe President outline his 60-year-oid policy, however, that those who had the Robinson situation to mind
Incoming very emotional 1 notice thought it would apply equally to <h.t u---- ---------------- I any Supreme Court vacancies toe
It not probable that such an Irstitullon might pretty successfully combat much of the apprehension and jjrejudice, among white e m p l o y e r s . o p e r a t e at all times to the disadvantage of tbe New York Negro—and which, following such lame.itable crimes as the Case murder, la extremely liable to make the lo t.o f the whole Negro population hardei than ever?
T H A T $28,000 DE.MAND
do these examlaatlons, tbe Mt ot them, demonstratoT Mero-
Ihat tha appUeant baa s reaaoo- a ssMxmt ed akUl to the h-nnii,,,
toriniiiiildli, But what baa hslcal ahtll got to do anth aoci $sT Juat about nothing. What ' •Mtythtog to do with the kill- > *• "k a t Is InMda the drlTtra
R—ft sniiiiiiiiiiig that 00 UBlBstiaa ess poMl- Mo ■namHilng odtl-
I oat orbothor the sppti- taol or s
Some of the dopestera who have been figuring on the Mattson case have concluded that the kidnaper must have Oecn an eccentric, or at least of aa unconventional turn of mind for a criminal, because his demand for ransome fixed on the unusual sum of sas.OOO. The natural thing, according to /hese rea- soners, would have been to name $35,000 or $.'*0,000 or some other sums to tens or fives of thousands.
This seems to us to be a little un- oonvinclng, and at tbe same time It auggeats the Idea that there may ba, nevartheless, aomethlng in the *ay of a shadow of a clue in that odd-figure sum.
The Mattson children have, we bellave, described the kidnaper as a teroign-iooking man. sBuppoaa be " • f«>Mlgner. Suppose be ooocelvad the idea ot »»»«iiii»g _ _ fortune through a stogie criminal advenlun- and then retuntog to hia native land, i* r unraaaonabla to
The use of the peanut as a food started about the time ot the civii
^ northern soldiers R Browtag wild to the south
and learned that It made good food M<wt people do not consider the peanut a food, but rather a deUcacy. slmltor to a confection, to be us^ on circus days or holidays.
The raw peanut contains such a«nohearty food and
difficult to digest, but when it is roasted the starch ia converted into
dtyestod *" ***“A Wry large amount of protein Is
found to the peanut, even as high as 3C per cent and for this reason It may be considered as a good source of protein and may be used as meat substitute.
Peanuta may be purchased already roasted, or they may be roast- ed III the oven at home, as soon as you experiment to find how much roasting is necesitary to properly dextrlnlze the starch, f Moderata roasting for a long Ume ia the best method, for If the peanuts are too well roasted, the protein U destroyed and the dextrose turned Into aab.
Peanut butUr, may be made at home by simply grinding the roasted nuts, after the removal of tha akin It Is necessary to uae a good grinder which ba*) a' pulvsriainf at- tacbment If you wish the talahed product to be smooth.
A small amount of peanut butter n»ay be used with any meal without Interfering with the digestion ot other foods, but you wtu find it an agreeable change to make peanuta the principal protato part of tna meal to place ot eggs, meat, fUta or any of the other protatoa, using Mong with the peanuta a aalad made of noo-starchy raw vagatables and
that my face has a dark color for a •ihort time. It soon goes away, but 1 wonder what tbe explanation isT’
Answar: A tamporary darkening of tbe facial skid eueb aa you des crlbe la probably due tc tbe fact that any strong emotion has a strong In fluence upon the ductleas glands ana eapeeially the adrenals. As the adrenals recover from the drain upon them, tha skin elaars. This problem has not yat been fully investigated and with further research nore will be understood about the cause of the skin changing color In some people after emotional .stimulation.
put on the bench will ba sitting there, interpreting the laws of the land, for 10 to 30 yeara.
Federal Judges are appointed for life, conditioned on good behavior They may retire at 70, after 10 years' service on the Federal bench, but may servo beyond 70 if they choose. As instances Justice Van I^vanter has served stoee 1908 on the Federal bench, being a Supreme Court Justice since 1910. Justice McReynolds has been on the Supreme Court since 1914 and Justice Brandels since 1916.
Similar service by Roosevelt appointees would carry them to 1900 or 1960.
Thus Mr. Rooaevelt imprint on the government wiu not be limited to the eight yeara be la expactad to serve, i f it is conceded that oe hM changed to a degree the current of American government. It mutt also be agreed that hia court appointments may stand aa abutments against any audden return to the old channel.
and to women to fact, vlctlma of thla type of anemia ao frequently aro babies that apsclallsts In dissasaa of ehU- drsn are calling It "dietary anemia' "alimentary anemia,” "nutritional anemia,” or "milk anemia."
These terms are uaed to describe a blood condition reauittog from a lack, in ths diet, of food or mineral elements necessary tor tta propsr formation of red blood calla.
If anemia davelupt when the diet is adequate, it usually ia dus to failure of the body to utilise or absorb ths substancss nscasaaty tar blood formation. Thia may ba caus- sd by tofoctlon or by diasaso wtaioh attacks ths bone marrow or tha blood-forming,organs.
ReadingAnd Writing
•ly Jeim
hqd
some of the cooked vegetabtes. Peanut butter proviAa a delieuiua
flIUng for aandwlchals. Use only tha real whole-wheat bread, adding but-
a leaf of lettuce, if desired. Tbe oil found in the peanut is
Mry dastrabis to uaa as s food, bar- lag ta^agresshle taste and bstng •eslly Sgeeted. Thla passut oil may b purehaaed ia may t e m city, ai-
all atoraa ta sM handle it and It may ba saeaaMry tor you to can up several before finding o m which carriea it to stock. Try the nesaut oil Inatesd at oitvo oU tar a
j*. • '
The compUcations of the Irisn fight against the Bnglls: so far left thla omnivorous reader rather cold. It seema pretty evident that there has been more stupidity on both sideb than anything else, and the record of stupidity U not Inspiring Usually It la not even funny.
So that ah the fuss about Charles Stewart Parnell hasn't made
veto of Insanity; Charlea was moody. Intense, capable of dangerous emotional storroa. He also was delicate, so much so that as a child be was sent to a girls' school for a time. And he had a very bad Inferiority complex.
All thla complicated personality did not come to Parnell from his father’s line. His UHither jraa an American, daughter of Commodore Stewart of the American navy. She was mad to her own way; she gave birth to a dozen cblldran without losing her beauty or her Intenalty, and ahe spent her time scandaUztng her relatives by marriage, entangling herself with the Fenians, living wastefully to Irstand, England and France by turns. Sbs was what tha French call an "original."
Which facta, with all te* othera adduced by Miss Hasiip, seem to explain Charles Stewart Purnell rather well. In tbe body of the book there ia a masa of matorial on tha Irish home rule question which could, 1 suppose, be aklpped by a raaden intereated ia ParneU the man excluslvaly. A t any rate. I aklpped
lot of It.
The moat oommoa anci the most easily corrsctabls form is that dus u. lack of iron in tha uiat Thla condition occura la children who oon- stantly refuse to eat Iron-containing foods for long periods of tinr,e There an babtas, for sxampla, who have been fed nothing but milk for 13,18. o) mors mimtliT after birth.
Sometimes the mothers nave added cereals, potatoea and other fooos
the diet, but have 'ailjc to add______ fooda rich in iron. In aome J* •
New Haven—Donald F. Keefe ot 1 •‘">ceo, bablaa are borr with aa New London was elected treasurer deficiency, bsoauas tha mother o» ths Yale PoUtical Union undar- “ ■ foUowed a sultabto diet dur-
Overnight A News
"Pamsll,"drop impreasloa althar. When finally (Stokaa).hjh • IfMfyUtarl lsieMAA$ Sae... — I '
ky Joan HaaUp
against the BrngUsh. he ran true to type to the main, and that la that Now, however, Joan Hxsllp has written a new biography (called tersely "Parnell") aad ahe n*s brought tbe man to life. She has d w it Im by her atoiy of his oa rear than by her introductory ohaptora, when ahe goes rothw daapty Into PanaU'a family back ground, aad into tha psycholoalea] state o f the man at t h e H i^ M decided to eater polities.
The PsrnaUs as a tamlty _ _ mors bitersstlng thsa any ona of tha individuals. There were IS ^ n e l l children, and on cm aide their heritage wae that of tbe Irish ‘•“ •""■w-gentty, e a e ^ for a straak of madness. Some at <Tier^ Stewart Parnell’s doss rolativsa ware eltbsr conflnsd. or should
bMBe 8oim of hlo brotiMri ••<1 sistsfs shoHsd
iraduate speaking club.• New Milford—Four New Jersey men were convtccea on chargee of obtaining money under faiaa pretenses by Town Court Judge Myron Disbrow. AU four were mvotvsd to what Prosecutor Norman Dube eall- w». a "fertilizer racket” They had pleaded Innocent to the charge.
New Haven—Joseph Piccolo, 38, of New Haven, rec ited at police kssdquarters, IdsOkiflea h.mss]f as a man sought to conne :tlon with tue carbon monoxide deaths of m<«« Marie Nucal and Frank Kroupa, Jan. 2 and was released after questioning. He told newspapermen he knew nothmg of the circumstances Of tbe case.
Guilford- Four Guilford High school girls were Injured when a school bus collided with a parked State highway truck on the Ouil- foTd-Durham highway. Seventeen other students and the operator of the bus escaped unhurt
Ing tba period before tha birth of the child. SomeUme. there a anemia in twins, because tbe amount of iron avaiiabic V. sufficient for one baby but not for two.
The baby with a mUd degree ot aiismia du« to lack of irou to the d et may have to other symptoms than a severe paUoi of the Upa, akin, and mucous raembranss, with a alight increase in the rate of the J w t . In saver* caass, bowsvsr, thsrs is lack of appeU'o, aoiargs- irent of the heart and of tlia s{ and changes to the amount of hydrochloric acid in tbe atomach, which the doctor tadi. b a special form of examination.
A diagnOata, of eouraa. Is mr by 1 study b- the Mood to determine the amount of rad ooiortog matter tha" it contatoa. F o it^ t e - ly, theie oondiUona sro easily treat- w b> providing prop,. amounts ot iron, or Iror and eoppoTr in tot diet.
riN B S BEE BOSS
Goahea. tad.—Many employeswould Bava Ukad the duuioa Hr*. HaIsM ffhrhauth had to got ovm arlth bar boas. -
After tading hia automobile togged for overtime parklag. Joatlee oi the Peace Charleo P. Fribley ap-J pointed Mi*. FarbaoBife, hia ooero-* tary. as s apaeUl oourt to haSr hia ease.
She fls*d him $SAQ, th* oustoai- ary amount
q ^ r g . war- J S L S l “
TO THE HUNT—ON
li ncola, m.—Motorlasd HoatlM w the Jatss* wmtar aport tor tarmats la this vldalty.
H>sy bagged two wolvo* after o ovor troase stuhblo UUo t »
satMaoMlo.
dtoakl, adjutant of the 169th Infantry Connecticut NnUoaal Guard, has been promoted to major siyi transferred to tbe Stats staff it was annouaced in order i laaaad by Brigadier Osaeral Ladd, tba adjutant general.
Hartford—Ifembora at ths legls- latlve oommittss at the American lagloa In Oonnaetleat explained to Dov. Croao thoir progrom wUeh cana tor oa antroprtatfcm tor struction ot a aoldlare boms at Rocky HUI and axtsnsion ot State aid to widows and orphans u World War vstenma.
sultabls amounts In msdinlnsi form.A* Rte same timt., the doctor la
Iteely to give adequate amounts ot ths' necessary vttamlu um fruit
■heals w in D Y N A H m '
Cincinnati, JMa, U .—Laa Sraraal la, CjncinaaU Rods' first aaskar, is wertdng In a djraasHte faetoiy at nsosA csUt.
JUoas, and to aao to It that the ps- tlsnt baa aufflelaat rest so tha blood-forming organa havs oppor- t-.j|ty to taka odvsatago of th« ad- diUonal .suhsitsncss tfiat aro
Is the very aovors eoaao. the cktid to given Moon Imnedistety ^ tnatfuiftoQ. Uxuxiy tepiovx* meat Is prompt aad M ooodiuaa is aaMty ovoNom,. bacansa the ^w tng Qigaa*. ot ohUdran oaa throw off ailoMuis oaslat than can ttood at oldsr paopia.
The improvoaiaat im uur •OB* of food la foomtt yssra. aaa A ade it passible t< feed caudfoo Diuch sdaatthoajy Uua was P;;«rtbls to pravMas gsaatsuoas. vnth suttehis. oeim UM tssdiaga Om Nhp wffl assape dWary weatia.
While undulant fever is definitely a preventable diaeaaa by means of milk pasteurisation or the tostliig of catUe, it baa been stoadUy on the rlaa in Oonnectlcut since ths flrat case was recognised in 1934, and during tba year 1»3«, it roaohed an an-time high with 99 eases reported, Dr. Millard Knowiton, director of the Bureau of Pravantable Diseases of the Stats Departimsnt of Health stated in tbs department’s weekly broadcast today. Thla compares with only 79 oases of typhoid fever and 96 cases of' diphtheria.
Aithough undulant fever probably existed many hundred yeara ago, it waa not until 20 yaara ago that an American baoterlologiat, Alloa Evans, discovered that the same germ caused what was then known as Malta fever in man and infectious or oontagioua abortion in anl- mala. Wa now know. Dr. Knowiton said, that man contracts tha disease from animals, and that In Oonnectlcut most esses are due to drlnhing raw milk from Infected cows. It ia eaUmaUd that about 30 per cent of ConnecUeut’a dairy oattls are infsetod with thia gam and that these cows are distributed in about 76 per cent of ths state's dairy herds. A healthy cow may be a "carrier” and discharge germs into her milk arithout tbe aairyman knowing hia herd is Infeotsd.
Thera an two waya of provant- ing this disease in man, the dlroo- tor atated. The-first method ia' to eradicate tbe diseaae from by means of a blood test to detect Infected cattle qnd by removliig them from tbe herd. The other method la by paateuiisation of tha milk. Pasteurisation meana heating milk and holding it at a proper high temperature long enough to kill disease germs, including those of typhoid fever, scarlet fever, septic sore throat and other mllk- borne diseaaee. Phe dairyman may cbooae between the two prochdurea. and the milk user may protect himself by Insisting upon milk that is either pasteurised or from an abortion-free herd.
Dr. Knowiton tUuatraUd the .. of pasteurisation by two raeent amplea. One dairyman badrequired to pasteurise bla-milk___a case ot undulant fever bad been traced to his aupply, but the flood lost March put his pasteurisation plant out of commission. Ha aold ram milk for a faw dsiya aad ons of his euatomera contracted tmdu- lant fevar. In the other csm, a GOnnecticut child who always drank pasteurized milk at bom# visited relatlvea In another state, drank raw mOk while tbu* and dsroVopsd this dlssasa which may lart for months or evan yaais.
T.\X ON HER FATfiDfOB.
Albuquerque, N. M.— Mrs. Anna U. Seibart wrote three timas to tha BarnalUlo county tax coUsetor in quiring the amount o, bar taxes.
Receiving no answer, aba appealed to PftUOf iMfXe
‘T have paM taxaa In Beniattllo county tor a kmg tima, aad Pd Uko to know how mneh I ow* this year ” aho wrote.
WINTER MODE.
Alton, OL—Charity, a rag pick- ^ a hona, axhifaitod soasethtiig nev Id sMlns footwear wbap ba ahi> laddown ths street wearing gunSCEB."Hia negro owner, WIlUam W «u
utyls’ * d Charley was thus shod bo- caaos ha kapt “ taBing an over U bh • n r om the Hlak
DAILY RADIO PROGRAMTHURSOAV, JANUARY 14 (Oaotral aafi Bostoni Stondara Ttmei . i Netei Ah presrtm* to ker sad basis ebain* erxronM tbsrsot ualen avedl-
llsd; eoast to coast (s *• s) daalsaatloaa lariads anaTallabla ststloei.Vresrams wbjset Is thaass by slatlsns without prsvlout nctiss. 1>. si.
NBC-WEAP (R ID ) NffTWORK OASIC — Xast: wsot wlw waac wtle war wtac wesh kyw wfbr wre -way wbsii wca* wtaia wwj waU: MlSwasIt ksd VBiaq who wow wdaf wtrs wed kstp wgl woodMlbwIST-A CANADA — wtinj ksb* wlbajirsbe wdsy kfrr erot efef SOUTH—wrrs wpti i___ -wrvawfia-wsun wtod
wwiBo wavs wlax
ri.
___ __ ___ sBi wa»o wrt> wapiwJBx womb kvoo wky wfaa wbap kare wed ktba ktbs wsoe wtar vris weae wfbe kark ksao ^MOUNTAIN—koa kdyl kslr M I VACiriC—k(l ksw kemo l&qlmo kfbk kwx lonl kso Cent. Best..S.-OO— 4:00—The Fashlen Shav»-te, a tiSO— 4:S»—kellow ths Mean, Serial Si4^ 4i4S—Answer Me This Vresr^ 4:06- S:06-Whlle City Sleeae A ^ e 4:10— Oils—Tern Mix. Shtteh—baste:
riercnae peiiw, Ooerooe—west ■ 4iao— l: »^ a e k Armalrane-^Msle 4(44— l:4d — LIMI# O^an Anal*—
east; Town Tattlers Orah.—vvesttWWfl t •5MWW wv wees WWW*OdO— SdO—Ths CaWa In the Cetten 0:14- 0:10 — NsWai CrawfsrS,
Qrssn—east: Tem Mix—mldw. n> «:S6- 0:S0 Vrsss-Wadls Nsws PtrieS
Ot*
in n. Ktnnsdy—sast niy Butss’t Orshsstra ifikls Mastsra Orehast.
»m — Oidd—Thrst X SIstsrs In Sena 0:S— 0!44-Ollly A Betty—«*af njuy: Orphan Annie—mldwsst rpt-: Fly-
Ins Time, Sketeh—ether stations 0X»— rdO — Amse 'n' Andy — sast:
Oenald MeOIbnay, Csmmsnt—wast S;1b— fi1»—The Vsise of Bxysrlanee ~ Mh- 7iS0—Or^elra and Veeallsta—
west: key Camsbeil /fteyellste— - network
S:4»- 7i40—Tha Terri “
I t z l _ _________________SdO—10:00—Radio Muels Hall—c to a
10:00—11D0 — Nswai Flans Realtal— sast; Amsa 'n' Andy—rpt (or wast
14:00—1'idt—John ■..Kenned;10:10—11:10—Hsnr 10:40—11:40—Frail 11:00—1>dO—Shandsri La Marr Oreh. 11:S0—12:00—Jan Oarasr A Orchsstra
CSS-WABC NETWORKOASIC—Kasti wsbe wade woke wane wdab weal war wkbw wkro whk wjrwdre wean wjas wpre wfbl w)sv; Midwest: wbbm wfbm Inabe kmoz whss k(sb kmtBAST—wbns wpc whp whee wibs wtsa wore e(rb ekao wlbx wmas wsas wabf DIXIK—west WB(a wbre wqam weed Ura wreo wise vrwl wteo U'ld ktrb ktsa waeo koma wdbe wbt wdas wbis wdbj wwva waibs wait wnibr wola ktol ksko weoa wdne wnoz kwkh know wramroMIDWEST — winbd wlsa wlbw kfb wkbn wceo wsbt ktcj wewe wnax woe MOUNT—kror kis keh ksl kare k(bb COAST—knz kola kfro kol kfpy kvl kite
CenL East.
I>40 jidO—Wlidsrnsse Read, Ssriel
HsrbM Fssta'a Ensemblo—westd:1^ 7:10—Ms and Fe, Sketeh—be- . Jlirbert Feets EnstmMe—west 0:20— rim-Alskanear Weallestt. Talk •■40— 7:40—Eeeka Carttr’a CemmtntS7d0— fiJO—Kata Sinith Hour—e to e jOO—OiO^Mai iewea Hour—o te e ‘H ” !S?S2~£l*y*®b**n4 Adventures
JiJJ“ !??!“ The Marsh et Time—to e Wd^11:00-Jay FnamSh Orahastra— • beslo; FMtIe Meledles—west ipLr o i i tV i i i t5 K * i ;a K r
'12:20—OaH Rsvatrs DieheeSraIIAO-l;11:r
NSC-WJZ (RLUE) NETWORK BASIC — East: w)a wbs-wbia wbal wb«m kdka wtar ways w|w wwr winal wtll waby webr weky wmd wean wleo; Midwest: wear wls kwk Sell wrea wmt wood wed kso wowe wtea MIDWEST A C l^ D A — wUs) kSbx---- - — — kfyreretefef
“ WWBO vrls wjaxwfla-wsoa DiedwJdz wsmb kveo wl? wlsa wbap ksre wtar weal ktbs ktbf wsoe vravs weae wfbe kark ksaeMOUNTAIN-ride kslr ksOl Mar kved
) web wppl : wbsp T
ktbS'RSlSffiS!!*CenL Bast.
The DIstatars* Ensemble west 4:40— 1:40—Swteth4arts sf Air—oast:
HtHn Jans Sshlks, Senas—west •KIO— fdS Nevrsi J. Wllhmtan Sens• : * — S:g—Flve-hfln. Flane Ceneert
*ig - ?.r»w-RadlB News — ba- . rpLt:tO— S:20—Clark Mnnts Sens—asst 0:40— S:40—Lswsll Themes — sast; • l?4r Esoorti, Senas—west9M— 7.O0—Easy Aess Skit—else cat J:10— 7i1|—Unsuija taamplsns—boa. •'•0— 7:20—Lorn A Abnsr sast
Martha and Hal la Fattsr—wast •HO- 7i#—Jerty Ceeper, Sense—w)s
wbs: Heward Fried, Tsnai—ehala J'O^ I 'S 'ijto ’ t f " fympheny Oreh. •HO— i:0 ^ T e M Annsuneed <1 hr.) OHO—lOdM—The Chleese Jamberoe
10:00—11 HO—News: Erasoleltl'e Oreh.A OrehsstS
11:00—12:00—Henry Busse’s Oreheetra 11:10—12:30—nobby Hayes A Orchsstra
PHONE RATES CUT ON ADtUNE BASIS
Reiictioiis of from Five Coiti to One Dollar On Distiiice Calls.
New reduced telephone rates on cslla of moro thsn 43 slrllns miles te points, outajde Oonnectlcut will become effective st roldnlgtat tonight
Reductions range from 6 cents to $1, and wlU save Connecticut tel- enhona users on Amount estImAted by The Southern New Bbiglmad Compony At $800,000 AnnuAlty. Both station-to-station end person-to- peraoB CAfla are Affected, At aU hours.
TypICAl dAytlme reductiems oa •Utlon-to-stAtlon rails Are Ulustrat- ed in tills table t^ued by the tele- phone oompApy:Airline Distance Old Rate New Rate
50 miles $ .45 $ .407$ miles Jio 4K
100 miles .50150 miles .80300 miles 1.O6350, miles 1 .1s800 miles 1.28400 miles ijis-500 miles 1.90
1000 miles 3.28Sample week-day rates
tlon-to-staUon calls from change to other cities are
Manchester to:Boston, Mass..........New York City . . . . Philadelphia, ^ . . .Buffalo, N. Y. .......Detroit Mich..........Chicago, DL
W T ICTravelers Broadcasting Servieo.
Barttord, Coon.MLOOO W. 1040 H. C. tUM BL
Bastara Standard II ida
Thursday. Jaanary 14
va lue^^
P. M. 4:00—“La SaUe Style Show."4:30—"Follow the Moon.”4:48—"The Front Page”—Mrs.
Lewis Hose.5:00—"While the a ty Sleeps." 5:15—Tom Mix.6:30—“Jack Armstrong.”5:46—"Little Orphan Annie."8:00—News.6:15—Listen to Alice.5:80—WrightvUle aarion.
. 6:45—Rublnoff and Jack Arthur.' 7:00—Amos 'n' Andy.
7:15—Voice of Experience.7:30—Guess tbe Name.7:45—Red Roberts Orchestra.8:00—Rudy Valles's Variety Show.9:00—Showboat.10:00—Jimmy Dorsey's Orchestra. 11:00—News. .11:15—Tbe Connecticut Legislature
—William Sheehan.' 11:20—Henry Busse's Orchestra. .11:30—Frank Masters' Orchestra. 12:00—Weather Report - 12:02 a. m.—Shandor, violinist 13:08—Three To Orchestra.12:30—Jan Garber'a Orchestra. 1:00—Silent.
Tofoorrow'e ProgramA. M.6:00—Blue Grass Roy.6:30—"Reveille.”7:00—Morning Watch—Ben Haw
thorne. '8:00—News.8:15—Studio Program.8:30—Cheerio.9:00—Radio Bazaar.9:15—Gretchen McMullen Cooking
■ ■ School.9:30—Food News.9:46—Adele Rogers S t John.9:66—Salon Orchestra.10:00—Mrs. Wiggs ot the Cabbage
Patch.10,:15—"John’s Other Wife.”10:80—"Just Plain Bill.”10:45—Today's Children.11:00—"David Harum."11:15—Backstage Wife.11:30—"How to Be Charming."
; 11:45—Voice of Ehcperience.12:00 Noon—"Way Down Bast."P. M. ■12:15—Story-of Mary Marlin.13:30—Gene Arnold and the Cadets. 12:45—Harry Riebman; Cliff Ed
wards; Freddis Rich aad his Or- .ehsstra.
If4:00—News and Weather.H:15—High Hatters.
1:80—"Dan Harding's Wife."1:46—"Happy Jack."2:00—Music ApprodaUon Hour. 8:00—Pepper Young's Family.S:15—Ma Perklna.3:80—Vic aad Bade.3:45—rTh^O’Nsllla,
8:00—A aad P 'Bandwagon starring Kate Smith.
9:00—Major Bowes' Amateur Hour. 10:00—Your Adventures with Floyd
Gibbons.10:80—March of Tiros.11:00—News Service.11:15—Jay Freeman's Orchestra. 11:30—Abe Lyman's OrcbestrA 12:00—Vincent Lopes's Orchestra. 12:80 A m.—Oari Ravell's Orebas-
tTATomorrow's Program
A. M.7:00—Eta Alpha Programma—Col
lin DriggA organist 7:30—Shoppers Special—1st
Uon.7:45—News Service.8:00—Treasure House.8:15—Shoppers Special—2nd
Uon.9:00—Metropolitan Parade.9:26—Samud Gorsky, pianist 9:40—New* Service.9:45—Los Angeles Symphony
cbestrA10:00—Betty and Bob.10:15—Modern Cloderella.10:30—Betty Crocker.10:45—John K. Watkins — Who’s
Who ia the News.11:00—Heins Magazine of the Air. 11:30—Big Sister.11:46—Ad-Liner.P. M.12:16—News Service.12:30—Romance of Helen Trent. 12:45—Rich Man’s Darling.1:00—Five Star Revue.1:15—Ad-Uner.1:30—George Hall's Orchestra.1:48—Maks Bdlevc.2:00—News Thru a Woman's Eyes
—Kathiyn Cravea^.3:15—Americtm School of ths Air. 2:45—Myrt and Marge.3:00—Cincinnati Symphony Orches-
trA
RADIO(Bastoni Standard llm A )
Sec-
Sec-
Or-
SOUTH COVENTRY
P. M.4:00—Story of a Bong.
6:$S—AU Haiids oa Deck.5rfK) Salvstlou Army I B:lS-"Plaao aad I Beo $:$»—fihiebbdA
■8:4Sr^a«s SstvlSA T‘ffT Mmmtetnssi s d fU -H a tiy a ifitd id l — Cten
ted Gevsniment Em-
d:$0-N( d r6:45—ItafiCrow ot the MOtmtod. 7:00—Potlle Isalodls* with Jack
At the annual meeting of the Booth-Dimock Memorial Library held Monday «v*alng. aU of Its officers wsra rs-«lsctod. They are; Preddant WiUtam L. Higgins; vice- president Curtis - Dean; aseretary and treasursr, Louis A. Kingsbury; Ubrarian, Mias a Gertrude Colburn; book oommittoA chairman, Mrs Edith Champlin. Mrs. U A. Kingsbury, Mra Linda a Stanley, CurtU Dean, Miss B. Gertrude Colburn; auditors, B. W. Latimer, Charles Schroeder.
Ths Coventry Volunteer Firo Association hdd its second amuiyi meeting in ths Fire House on Monday svsnlng, and i*-«lsctsd tbs same staff of offlcsis, aa follows; President L. A. Kinimbury; vipe- prssldant E. W. Latimer; saeretaty, Nathan C. W. Jacobson; treasurer, Henry P. Frink; firs chief, Arthur L. Woodworth; aaslstantA Thomas Flaherty, F. Raymond Boynstoa, Delmar Potter, Louis GronM; sngi- neetA Henry P. Frink, Floyd Wiley. An oyster supper was nerved following the biisinaos meeting.
The choir win meat for weakly practice at tha home at Mias Penis Allen on BTiday avsninF.
Next Sunday evening in place ot ths usual C. B. meeting at the Ooo- gregatlonal ehureb, Rov. Henry B. Robinson win give an Ohiatratod lecture on *T3tlldren ot Other LondA” It wlU bs at 7 o'clock. AU ara invited. -*
TIm funeral of EUlot Chadwick ■0, was held' Tuesday afternoon at I o’clock at the funeral ekapti at Avosy aad Van Zoadt in Tnutmaa- ttq. Rov. Hansy B. RoUasea offl- eiattag. Mir. Chodwldi was n antivs o f Bolton, oad hod bosa a rsok ot South Coventry for the M st 40 jneora. Bssldss his wlta, M u y (Ls- Doyt) Ouulwlok, ho Isaras four d u f iW ^ Mra. Myrtle Oldenbaw afO oW dSO A MewEilsId, Mra. MU-552* wnUmEede. a n .Dorotky Ksnasston MdgbA OnceM S S - " ? . * ? * ' ^te Nolkoa Bote
_Recreation Center Items
nuusdayTbs man's voUey bsU period'wiU
be from 6 to 7 o’eloek.Tbo women’s swimming -itinis
WlU meet as fifilows: 7 to 7:45, advanced; 7:45 to 8:80, Ufa saving.
Ths girls’ church Isagus teams WlU bowl as follows: 7 to 8, German vs. MetJiodUt; $ to 9, S t Jamso va St Mary'A
FridayThs girlff afternoon swimming
rismss wUl start at 8:80.Tbs womsn’s plung* psried win bs
from 7 to 9 o'clock.Tbs women’s bowUiig at tbo Wsot
Bids Rac wiU be from 7 to 8.A pubhe bri4go party will hs tisM
at the West aids Roa Ploy wfll •tart at 8 o'eioek.
warTho boys’ swlianilng •tart at 9:80.
Ths girts* tap dancteff ctesaso wOl most as taUows: 8:80 to 10, buln- non; 10 to 10:80, tetermoitate: lOilO- to IL osrdor tetonasdteto; 11 to l|Ute afiYMOSd.
.S'.'svjsa'"**The Kodpsm « m nm
frooa S to t.N hold
St Ote Want jHds Roe OoOrPtey win atSEt at • orciQck.
WHUNGTONAlsxondor To4d to raestvlag trsot-
most at ths Windhsua. Community Memorial hs^fial tar blooo peisoa- ing, and is showing imprivsmsnt
Brnost B. LaFIsur ot WUUmantlc made a busteau trip to WiUington HUI Monday.
Wotter Mather vlsitsd hL. father Frank Mather at the Hartford hospltsl FtMsy, "Ito to seriously iu.
Tbs sermon tap.” Sunday waa "Tbo Tbraefrtd Cord". Prayer meeting wiU bs held this evening (Tburs- day) at tbe home of Mr. and Mi*. George P. Bugbss ot Was, WiUing- tos. There will be reading from Acte 3-1—18, Rov. Hotaoe B. Bloat suggests U ths weekly m-eting are canceUed oa account of the weather that the soripturo assigned for the Dnacting bs read at,.bomA
Clifford Woodworth and Leon O. Woodworth were la Rockville Saturday.
Tbe Boy Sooute wUI most at the old Town HaU on Will(ngton* HUI Fiiday nlgbt Tba Girl Fcouts will aasemble at ths WttUngton HUI church. Both ugaiUMtiona are. ea- thuxUifUe.
At the wbist party bel- by tbe
ToUaad Oraago Frttay nlgbt when twelve tables wet* in play, M iu Helen Pardua and Brigham Servlcs ot South WiUington won prizes. Mta Henry Laboate ot South WUl- iagton was chairman of the refreshment committee.
WiUington HiU seems tc be a populu place for doga to roam aad piay. Nearly a dosen are oeen from la r^ to a tiny white dog no larger than a medium sized cat. Someday if they are not kept at home aome- one’s pet wU) meet a aad fate.OBc- *■<! B ra ilraest Smith of tauth WiUington entertained Sunday, Hr. and Mrs. LaOuop West and Mrs. Jennie Budd ot Tolland and Mr. aad Mrs. MUo Hayes of Ellin Eton.
Next Wednesday, afternoon the mission circle wiU convene at Memorial church in South WiUington. The theme of the study wUl be "Tbs Land of Cotton’’. Mi*. Chutes Vickery of New Haven, a former mia- •ionary in India wlU conduct tae class.
Mrs. Nellie Pierson, who died Monday afternoon in Tolland, when a girl Uved with her parente near WiUington HoUow on the road to DalevlIIe, and attended- the HoUow school. At that time the teacher
Tioarded round" at ths pupils' homes, aad the length of time was accortUng to the number of chU- dren In tha family.'The teacher received about a doDu aad a half a week besides her board. Tbo farm owned by her father, David Baker Is now the property of Metro Hech- Is. MtA Pierson leave-: two grandsons in WUUngton, Ehrerett and Kenneth Robertson.
George Geron and famUy have moved from the small house at the reu ot Julius C. Meyer’s home to ths Knight bouse on the” road to Stafford Springs from West WUl- Ington.
Mi*. Frances Uubansky died peacefully January 7th in Lyrm- haven, VlrglnlA aged 70 years. She leaves her husband, Martin Dtihan- sky and daughter Monica Mosoo- polos with husband and children residing in Virginia and a am, Alexander Dulianaky and wife and chU- dren of WiUington. She also leayes a step-brother, and ether reiatlvM at present Uving in CsechoslovakiA Mra. Dutasnsky waa buried in tbe cemetery at Lynnhaven, Va
A case of lobar pneun,onia in WUUngton was reported during the pait weJe.
WiUington, Tolland, Union and
MonsSald teacher* attamtog th* mseting at Stom Tuesday afternoon under the direction of Sttysr-: visor Lsvl T. Garrison.
Stanley Soukup, who la employed in New Yoik, spent chi. we«k-«nd with bis parente Mr. aad Mta Joseph Soukup.
KENTUCKY SALES CP.
LoulavUte, Ky.—(A P )— Tbs census:, bureau reports that Kentneky's retaU sales in 1935 : ere 27 per cent greater than in 1953. _
Deaths Last AlSyLondon Sli Artbnr
JobOA 68, supervisor Britain's satenarteo bnflfihsigning during the Wortd \
SoraaotSL flA—Harty, 1 Sr., 78, vsteraa poUUcoI wrttar.
Iowa Ctty,Thatrtisr, 81, assistant tbs school o f musle at tte Ie flew A Horsesivadi _ composer ot a "Eynqteonyminor."
666UQUID • TABLETS • 8ALVB • NOSE DBOPS
USE AS A
P R E Y E N T IO llPlace 666 Salve or 666 Nose Dropa in no«tpils night
moniinsr and take 666 Liquid or 666 Tablet! every tm
1.80 1.66 3.80
for sta- thia exes fol-
sVnUIK/W////
New York, Jan. 14.— AP ) — America’s Town Meeting; which last week startsd including cities outside of New York In ib question and answer period, goes to Rochester, N. y., for that purpose in tonight’s broadcast
These outside'' pickups are made possible through a special microphone and radio connectior that feeds them Into tbe regiUar program. Origination point for the question* from Roebests: wiU be the studios of WHAM. Last weak Washington was tbe question city ia addition to tbs studio audience in New York.
Tonight’s topic deus with the CivU Service.
T iy these tonight:Talks: WJZ-NBC. 9—Dr. Hugo
Eckener on “Airship Trai sporta- tion," WJZ-NBC, 9:30- Amerita's Town Meeting, diacusr.on of Civil Service; WEAF-NBC, 11:05—Norman Thomas <m League ror Industrial Democracy.
WEAF-NBC, 7:16—Voice of Experience; 8—Rudy Vallee; 9—Show- boat; 10—Bing Oosby; 12:30—Ben Bernie Lada.
WABOCBS, 7:30 — Alexander WooUcott; 8— Kate Smith; t Major Bowes; 10—Floyu Gibbons Stories; 10:30—March of Time; 13— Ted Fiorito music.
WJZ-NBC, 7:30—Lum and Abner; 8—Boston Symphony; 10:30— NBC Jamboree; 11:80—Bob McGrow’s orchestra.
What to expect Friday: WEAF-NBC, 2 p. m.—Music Ap
preciation (also W,«z,-NBO); 4—Tea ■nme Variety: 6—New Series; Old Travelers Talea
WABC-CBS, 1:15—Ben Franklin Anniversary program; 8—Ctpcinpa- to Sirmpbony; 5:16—Dorothy Gor- don’s oornw.
WJZ-NBC, 13:80 — Farm and home Hour: 4—Radio Guild, "Or. Fautus; 5:45—Jbs Old Homeateao.
Some Friday short wavs*;3RO Roms • p. hl- A msrlea's
Hour: OSD 08C OSB London, «:46 BBC Empire orchestra and 9-
Emplre MaUbog; RAN Moocow, 7- Summer In the Arctic; DJD Beriln, /.39— Popular orchestral concert •J ■ 9:15—Variety program; YV3RC CaraeoA 8:45—<3oncort—orchestra; CJRO CJRX Winnipeg, 31:80—Orchestra and Soloiate; W8XK Pltto- burgh—13DX OubA
7J
HIDDEN DDNUS"I ■ ■ ,
comes back to you
/ // '/ /m n wU n d e r ths Hartford >Gbs Company's stfip>dotm gas ratsB. wieh mmjer ffte* applianc* you add sams you • lowsr avorago rata tor all gaa uaad in your homo. It's aa simpla aa A, B, C — “Tha mora gas you uaa tha Ifaa it
' eosta par unit."•
For axampla. Rata A appliaa whan ona major gas applianoa ia uaad — aithar rang* — rafrigarator — or automatie watar haatar. .r '
a lowar Rata B applliss whan two mafoo V*a appliMcas ara uafOd, aithar ranga and rafrigarator, ranga auid automatie watar haatar, or rafrigarator and automatie watar haatar.
a still lowar ^ t a C applias whan aQ thraa major gas appUaneas ara uaad.
IT PAYS TO KEEP YOUR KITCHEN ON THE AXjL 0A6 STANDARD; ;
GAS C00KW6— GAS WATER HEATING— GAS REFRIGERATION
Cjas piesenis ike ieaiest a Oance in /937 bolfiSlanchester D iv ision
^ Bartt*r« Gas C*.
IS STARTED ON PLANE CRASH
•f f id n t StiD 1 SeriNt C iid itioi--T o Qm iIn i Ae Tiro Pflott.
AagulM. O ilif-. J«a i* ' ||ykr)—VMeiml tmrMtl(«iton con-
todajr on «UmiMtior HM*” dram WMtern Air
while medteal idenee atru;- I te M et the U Injured lunrlrori
' Itoeefleye treneport eraah.Mu Hb JcAbioo. noted Ug game
nr, and Jaaiaa A..Braden, Cleve- Ink Company president, were
wd fataOy when the Wettem Brpreae plane, enroute from
I lik it City, craahed on a New- paM rldfe In a snowstorm IS
M from the landing field here. Mra. Martte Johnson, her bus-
rs partner on Us African es- oMom was not Informed o f his ath yesterday because of shock d weakness. She suffered a frac- red knee and concussion. Hospital
K;nHlBdants reported her condition ^■^^rtherwlsefood.
Jamas nnney. Federal air line ipaotor, said the plane crew would I foeetloned.
Most of POets Killed *Vlot often are the pilots of an Iplsne left to tell their story aft*■ an aeetdsnt o f this sort” , Kinney Id. *Vesalts o f a hearittf should
|iKe mnst btfpful In eUmlnatlnf the Tiianper nones In the west . .
ro o t Wnilara l«w ls told rescuers ,'ka was baeet with motor and radio efjMOble while truped In the fog.
Safety ■egwiatlons A t Washhiftnn, the oommOrce de*
eat announced more serere air ' le fwlaHnws were betaif. pre-
Frank Nance said he I to can a jury o f aeiation
I to make flndlnn.■0 iafuast win be coodueted for I eletliao until the others have re-
1 MOricieatiy to. testify.‘ ware reported In a serious
L lioomla, Omaha, O l^root CUfford P. Owens,
Calif.; a T.- Anderson, Oallf,; and Bari E. Spen-
Nddent o f the Stromnerf Company. Chlcafo. Loomis
d BncoBSdous.: least two public hearinfs are nspeet a was the fifth trans-
crash In the west In four , with a total loss o f 39 lives.
>F00RCHIlDltEMBURKED TO DEATH
ram Pace One)
to work when the lire broke
an said they discovered Mrs. staadlnf, delirious, on the outside her home.CaaUe te Bxplala
• was in no condition to esplaln dM escaped from the home but ibors tliMrtaed she discovered ■mss, ran from the house and tt too late to return for her
o f the four children ) found lyin f crossways on a bed "lir bedroom, only a abort dis*
from a window leading to a abed down which they m lfbt
> crawled to safety.Btremsn said they did not know at caused the blase.
Mrs. PetrilUm was taken to the o f ICtsa Florence Sovie, a
Mrsi Clara M. (Healey) Beckwith, wife o f WlDlam M. Beckwith of 14B Oakland street, died at the Memorial hospital this noon follow inf a lln ferln f illness.
Mrs. Beckwith has been a resident o f Manchester for the past 14 years, eom lnf here with her fainlly from Hampton, Coim. Besides her husband she leaves two sons and one daufbter. They are Ra3rmond A., o f Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Louts M., o f Wethersfield, and Mrs. .lames M. Oliver of Hampton. *She also leaves one sister, Mrs. Lucretla A. Barnes of ColUnsyiHe, and several Crahdchildren.
Mrs. Beckwith was a member of the Second Ooncreyational church o fthls town, and of the Bkutem Star chapter in Simsbury. She was a woman o f aterllny qualities, kind neighbor, and with her lovable dispositloa had surrounded herself with a large circle o f friends who mourn her passing.
Funeral services will be held Sun' day at 3:S0 p. m., from Watkias Brothers Funeral Home, 143 East Center street. Dr. Ferris E. Reynolds o f the Second Congregational church will officiate and interment will be in the Wapping cemetery. Watkins Brothers Funeral Home will be open Friday and Saturday ^enlngs for the friends o f Mjrt.
CHANGES IN BIBLE AROUSING GERMANS
J em Christ b Described As Beiof Ae First Grett Opponent of Ae Jews.
Berlin, Jan. 14. — (A P ) — The new antl-Jewish version o f St. John’s Gospel, recently pubUshed by Bishop Weidemana. Off the Evangelical church, o f' Bremen, who describes Christ as “ the first great opponent o f the Jews” , aroused new bitterness In church circles today.
The Gospel, miMlshed In pamphlet form s s f ^ o f iSo ambitious pro-
Discover That Scotland's Drifting Toward Ireland
Beckwith.
Charles H. LongCharles H. Long oi Bolton died
this morning at the Manchester Me. morlal hospital following a brief Illness. Bom in Hartford, be had lived in Bolton for about 60 years and was a farmer.
Besides bis wife, Grace (Carpenter) Long, he leaves one daughter, M ra Robert H. Lewie o f Fairfield street .this town; two half brothers. Ell Carver o f Rockville and George Lcug of Manchester, and one sister, M ra Eleanor Rose of Hebron. He also leaves uue grandchild, Robert
. Lewie, Jr., o f Fairfield strMt. The funeral will be held Saturday
a ^ m oon at 3 o’clock at the Thomas Dougan Funeral Home, 5S Holl
street Rev. John W. Carter of East Hartford, pastor of the (Juariyvllle Metbodlst church, will cffictate and burial will be In Bolton cemetery.
f u n e r a l s
<oM|»bor./ Ooorge I_ Stovie, a neighbor, suffer- ( Of burns on the hands and face in a »CDtne attempt to rescue the children.
Neighbors said screams o f the (■feUdren could be beard from the
iM reet when the fire reached its
METHODIST WOMEN TO MEET MONDAY NIGHTThe monthly meeting of the Wes-
•■•yaa Oufid wfll be held at the ' ******** Methodist church. Monday tavanlng. January 18, at 8 o'clock.
; la ta Oari Furay. president of the ' at® preside and the members
M nlM groups are urged to at-
Mra Martha A. Hooks largely attended funeral, services
were held this afternoon for Mrs. Martha Agnes Hooks, widow of ’Thomas Hooks. 1110 service at 3 o'clock was at the home of her daughter with whom she lived, Mra. George Poots of 8 Orchard street, and at the Salvation Army clUulel at 3:30. Adjutant Valentine conducted the service, which was attended by a detection of the Daughters o f LIbitfty, No. 125, Ladies Loyal Orange Institution, relatives and friends.
’The bearers were George McKinney, George Uttle, Edward Swain, David Foots, William Atkinson and Edward ElUott, 8r. Burial was In the East cemetery.
MACCAMES M STAU WOMAN COMMANDER
Mrs. Etta G. Perkins Is First o f Her Sex to Become Head o f Manchester Tent,
!• profrmxD will b€ la cb a rn of MVid H. Caldwell. Misa Mar*
Its Bengs who U with the SU te. . ... w .•jw ^ I^Ud Welfare wUl speak' fleers of a new
* 5 ^ Placing.” Mrs. Arthur ssanske, contralto, will sing sev-
; etal songs, accompanied on the by Miss Ann Strickland. Mrs
Legg will lead the devo>
social will follow the meeting fina program and the Philip Embury
wm serve refreshments.
Manchester Tent No. 3 Knights of the Maccabees, which has been a fraternal beneflt association here for oO years, seated its flrst woman commander last night. Mra. Etta O. Perkins, widow of Frederick M. Perkins. Mrs. Perkins succeeds George M. Bidwell who was held the position since 1929, Her associate officers will be as follows: lieutenant commander, Paul Priest; record keeper, A. L. Brown, who Is enter-. Ing upon hJs 49th consecutive year in that office; Chaplain, Edward Perkins: sergeant. Clayton Perkins; master at arms. Francis J. Dtmcan; first master of guards, WilUam Haugb; sentinel. Howard Spencer: ;>leket, Julius Bratsnyder; trustee for three years, George M. BldwelL
A social time during which coffee and doughnuts were served follow , ed the meeting, with Howard Spencer and his committee in charge.
Saturday evening the degree team V 111 go to Putnam to Install the of- fleers of a new tent-hive In that city. Those making the trip are requested to be at the Balch and Brown hall at 8:30 Saturday nlgh- and transportetlon wUl be fum laM .
ject started by Nasi translators two years ago to retranslate the Bible, added new fuel to Germany’s long oontraversy over the nature of the vision of Christ _ _
Bishop Weldemann belongs to the group o f tbeologlans which holds Jesue was not a Jew, basing their theory on the fact Ms homeland was Galilee,' which was regarded contemptuously by reaLJews.
His efforts to harmonize the Christian gospel with Nazi Ideology seem futile to the' Germanic faith people who want a complete break with aU rellglaa originating in Palestine.
Bishop Weldemann’s version was considered to be an Interpretation rather than a translation of St. John’s tex t It wss considerably abridged except where St. John’s anger against the Jews for their treatment of Christ could be emphasised to give an anti-Semitic turn.
The Oppoelte o f Jew The new version characterizes
C3>rlst as ’ ’the very opposite of Jews” , and gives that aa the principal reason why he was crucified.
The Bishop translates Judea as 'Jew land” saying, for tnstancs, not
Jesus "left Judea and departed again into Galilee” , but be "left Jew land and went again Into his homeland o f Galilee.”
To the Protestant confessional the Weldemann version proves Its own falsity by robbing the famed 16th and I7th verses of the Third Chapter of the Gospel o f all Christian mean- tag.
M esolng ChangedThe old familiar "for God so loved
the world, be gave his only begotten son . . . " I s telescoped Into this panphrase:
Such Is God's love that he gave bis salvation, bringing bis message to the world in this chosen one, not to judge the world but to save It through him.”
Versea 81 and 33 of (^apter Sta **'®'*can8lated to eliminate the name of Mosea:
"The Bible alao reports bread fell from heaven for our ancestors In the desert.. 1 you thetruth. These old stories to which you Mways refer do not help you. My fatber alone fffves you true. Di-vino hpMrf pH ' ^ *
Cnaagow. Jan. }4.—(A P )—B eot-f land waa rapertad today -by aa oSl- eial o f the Olaagem Observatory, to be drifting toward Ireland—and Anasrica-nat tbs rate o f mors than eight feet a year.
H w inw R. TannahlH, a member at the staff, said tbslr e«ift, nrk>ns showed the mainland h'M. westward 600 fast in the last 70 years.
Bkigland. he explained, has net joined in the movement and, consequently, Great Britain is apparently "bending In two."
Describing the observations which led to the discovery, Tsnnablll said "in 1865 Glasgow's Longitude west of Greenwich was 17 minutes 10.56 seconds. ,
‘This value waa accepted as correct until radio made possible the regular tranamiaslon o f Greenwich time signals.
"Our obssrvatleas our Longitude Is in
nslgtaborheod o f 17 mlnutss U :35 •seonds west of Orstnwicb—Um diffsranoe represents a real change la Longitude.
"W ere Scotland acoompanlsd by Orasnwich In Its msandartngs the prospect would not bo quite so alarming, but unfortunately Greenwich la being left behind. ■
"This must be taken to Indicate Britain Is attached to Ikirops only In the neighborhood o f the and la turning alowl> somewhere in Kent 'jO that the northern part o f the Island Is moving 'westward while the south romalns' stationary."
Asserting repeateu recbecks showed no error. In the calculations, TannablU said whatever the explanation for the situation. It was "far t c . startling to accept without further Investigation.”
FRANCE SPEEDS DP HANDS OFF POUCT
To Ask Leigvo Powers to Stop.YoInteers from Entering Spudsli Territory.
she. was la bed wbsa she heard tbs Eraat door ^ s a . It aras B U « r»- tumlag.
"Is tbs danes over,” Mr*. Bum- van asked.
"No, mama,’’ answered the 17- yooi^Jd telspbons operator, came back to change my They're killing me.*;
Mra. BuUlvan aald she did not sea Ellen again until the girl waa dying In a boapiteL
M en waa a aeoond year High btUiEwt la 1938 When the
left achool to go to work aa a tele- Pjene operator in Ne. London. Mrs. r — . -
nho bread.’ " •Chancellor Adolf Hitler has kept
aloof both from Bishop Weldemsnn’s group and the Germanic faith movement, committing himself only to Usalt”^ * * behind "positive Chris-
ABOUT TOWNHEAVY FOG HALTS
TRAFnC IN HARBOR
FIRST MEETING IS HELD TO SETTLE AUTO SIR K E
(OsnAlaaed htan Pag» One)
f ; Mertln. president; Wyndham Mortimer, flrst vice-president, and John Bropby, director of the Committee for Industrial Organization which has aupported the UJL.WJA. In its strike.
Two days ago Gov. Murphy requested each side to send three representatives to confer with him end James F. Dewey. Federal labor conciliator, on a prompt conclusion of the bloody labor dispi te.
Gov. Hurphy Invited the repre- ■entativee to meet "without condition or prejudice.” eaying objec- tlons raised by aacb tide last week had prevented a joint conmiltatlon.
**we are clad 4> accept and to re- state our p<uition, given you In my letter of^Jafi. 8,’’ Knudsen wrote in accepting the governor's invitation. "W e are keenly alive to the h lrt concept you hold in rega.-d to your duties in behalf o f the citizens'of Michigan, and anxious to extend whatever aaslatance we can toward the accomplishment o f your objectives without sacrifice o f principles which we bold to be of vital consequence to our industry and the
Mbs. ^ t h 8. Latbrop, wife of I^ b rop of Summit stru t
pwehaaed from Edwartf and ■tisuaB a building lot 57H by
test oa Hanry atreet. Mrs. ■ sp w d her husband plan to be- eooetructloo Immediately of a
g e n in g . The lot waa through the agency of
1* Graaladlo, and is part of Psrk tract
■ Mrs. Thomas R. Williams ™ jy.P****-**” * fbOCTt gueste
Mrs. John G. Pentlaod of i»)srtmente. Mr.
** ”*** **
togiaa cxecutivo com- — w Dare corrected the
arrpaaoutly implied ta a “ • Mo*y His t the commlt-
tto Belsctmsu to con- r tobrse at the Omter street.
■M m y asked the "■Mjjw M»e PeasthOlty goir eonras la Maa-
(Oeattanafi from Fags One)
with passengers when the mailbost Iwmed 300 feet ahead ia the fog The paasengera surfed aft.
The mallboat waa oa itq way down the bay to pick up maU from some o f the Users held at anchor bv the fog. •
Half a dozen Uners and ftelghtere were aacborad down the bar around Quaraatlne, waiting f o r a m lathe fog. O n e o f t ^ ^ t h S Italiai^llner Rex, with the largest Pjssenger list o f the day's sblpplag, 831 persons. _
Somewhere outside Ambrose gP***b«*. mtranoe Into the bai^
North Oermma Lloyd liner Bremen, carrying 836 paasea- g «s . It was beUeved the Uner bad dropped anchor In the outer waters.
The French liner Paris was «u g h t ta tbs fog after dasrtag Q uraatias aarly in ths. m o rn S and naehored off tha Status at Ub-
Atoeng its paassagm ia Bart " * * * • **>• svlstor who recently
the Bpaalab LoyalM
Most Get OatIn the letter'Knudsen mentiohed
General Motors specifled that "alt down" atrikers la five plants must evacuate before the company would negotiate wUh the union. The union declined to accede unloas the corporation gave written aaaursace
B® sttem pt would be made to resume operationa or removs equipment during the. aegoUationa.
Tn New Tork a apokeamaa fbr General Motors said that Kaudsen’s acceptance o f the governor’s Invlte- tio,. should not be interpreted as meaning that the corporation was receding from Its position nonoera- Ing the "sit down” strikers. He emd the company eonaldered todaya meeting m e r^ a aaealot to aseer- teta what might be worked out and not a conference for coUective bargaining with workers' representatives.
• W llhoM PrejwdioeMsstln ’o acceptance informed the
governor that union representatives would attend the <onference “without any condition or prejudice."
"The United Auto Workers have * * -? naOy at aU Umae. through oonfarenee and ooUeetivc baxwSt- •**••’* “ to nrrtvo st a aatua-
nt which would be fair to all psrtlaa eoncernad. ineiiMM.ir the public."
It eras tmderatood Oov. Mur- Phjr had nady threa baalc ipinte to^
4
submit for discussloa, but he declined beforehand to reveal them.
Three legislative 'roposals which were an outgrowth of the strike were in committee, the Michigan Legislature having failed yesterday to obtain sufficient support to suspend rules for immediate consideration. The Aeaembiy, is in sea- Sion here.
Tha bills would provide for the appointment o f a legislative com mlttee to make a thorough investigation of the labor dispute and recommend remedial legislation; for another committee to investigate impeachment charges against Circuit Judge Edward D. Black, General Motors stockholders who issued an Injunction againat the "sit down” strikers at Flint, and for the State Board o f Canvassers to conduct a refers -dum of workers in closed Oeneril Motors plants to determine their views on the •trike and also how many are union members.
An order Issued overnight started approximately 900 more troops to Flint, where 1,400 already were billeted.
No reason was given for the movement of additional troops into the Flint strike aone. All waa quiet and military officials had indicated the 1,400 Guardsmen ori duty yesterday would be the only units call- ed unless new diaorderL developed.
These units were the entire 126th Infantry from Coldwater Adrian Kalamazoo, BatUe O eek, Grand Rapids, Ionia, Grand Haven and Big Rapids; an ambulance company from Bay City; and one company of the 128th Infantry from Flint.
Loat night’s order called for Im- lucdlate movement o f all other companies of the 12th to Flint. These companies previously had been noblllzed and were being held in readiness at Detroit, Owosso, Saginaw, Monroe and Port Huron.
The 119th field artillery, from the Lansing area, and tha 106 Cavalry, ftom southern Michigan, have been mobilised, but have not been order' ed to atrike duty.
Ehccept for the arrival o f new troop units by bus and train, there was very little svldurcs o f the large military force in the city. The Guardsmen were requirou to stay in the buildings where they were billeted or in a roped off area around the buildings.
The 126tb waa in an old school buUdlng across the street from the police station. Cook tents and field kitchens were set up outside the building and the men came outside to be served. Sentries with bayonets fixed kept civilians out of the enclosure.
The troops arriving today were to be quartered at the armory, and at Haskell and Berstoti field bouses.
A t the request of Governor Murphy, Sheriff Thos. W. W oicott held up service o f "John Doe" warrants for the arrest of several hundred "ait down” strikers in tha Fisher Body Plant No. 2 where Monday night’s riot occurred. He aiso delayed service of warrants on seven atrike leaders who were outside the plant duiing the disorder.
Seven other automobile workers, who were wounded in the clash, were In the Genesee count} Jail, where they were taken yesterday after receiving hospital treatment. Officlala Indicated they might be arraigned today. Seven ethers still were in the hospital.
Manchester Date Book
TonightJan. 14— Public installation at
DeMolay officers at Masonic Tern pie.
ToomutowJan. 15—At H. 8.-Meriden ,b a ^
KetbaU game at State Armory.This Week
Jan. 16—Legion dence at Rain' bow Inn, B<dton.
Also Democratic Victory Dinner at Masonic Temple.
Next WeekJM ' 11—Legion Forum meeting
at the Nathan Hale school.Jan. 18—Lecture o f Mrs. Lewis
Rose, "The World Today", at Y. M.C. A. at 8 p. m.
•Tan. 22—Mother and daughter bonquet at South MethodUt church.
Also special meeting o f Eighth District at HoUiater Street school.
Jan. 34 — Annual meeting of Emanuel Lutheran church.
Jan. 36—Conn. River Bridge Association dinner to Legislators, Hole. Bond, Hartford.
Jan. 27—Manchester High Day exercises at school auditorium.
Also dinner meeting at Merchants Division o f Chamber o f Commerce.
Jan. 29 — Manchester High midyear graduation at school ahdlto- rium.
Jan. 30 — British-Amerlcan club family party at Masonic Temple.
Also President's Birthday Ball at State Armory.
Next MonthFeb. 1-2 — “ Petticoat Fever", 8 ______
act play by the Community Players change, at whlton Memorial auditorium. I 7a r
Peris. Jsn. 14.— (A P )—France decided todsy to ask for itgal pow- ar to stop voluntew Spanish enlistments and agreed to meet Germany half way on the issue of economic- political frtondablp.
Tha government, after a minia- teriV council, let It be known wlU submit a bin to ParUament to obtain the power it needs to halt the trickle o f Spanish government enlistments from France.
11118 power, however, would be used only In coUaboraUop vrtth other interested oountrlea, and would be dependant upon similar action by Berlin, Rome, London and Moscow,Foreign Minister Tvon Delbos told the ministers.
An official announcement aald the "M oroccan incident," Involving K ' ports o f a Gerinan incursion in Spanish North Africa, Dad been closed by a Franco-German change o f assurances.
Informed persons said the Soclal- lat government had agreed to open economic negotiations with the Nazi I'other girla:Third Reich without demanding, | ”Tm going to meet Bob.' first, a aeriqa o f German
BulUvaa tlftw).Happy That Night
Tlie night .aha crashed to her “ Sath from. Um aeoond story win- wow ibe went to Um danco wearing • white ja ck ft with big orange buUona down the front, a brown skirt, and wbiter-ekoes. Her mother aate^ahe was “very happy” that
On the way to the dance, they d r o p ^ off Ellen’s sister Jane at tht Lawrence Memorial hotpitel, where the slater wss in training aa a nurse. EUen was taken then after the fall, and died there two days later.
Frances Duchette, a pretty young brunette and wiU Mrs. Corlnne Castanza companions o f EUen at the dance, filled in the hours before the young telephone girl kept her rtsndesvoue with Simpson after midnight. EUlen had one glass of beer at Izzy’s, a beach restaurant, went home just before intermission at 10:30 to change her shoe, and get her bathing suit, went swimming for half an hour and then told the
"D o you mean Simpson, the ao> cused?” asked State Prosecutor Arthur M .'Brown.
"Yes,” said Miss Duchette,
TOWN APPRAISAL SUIT TO BE TRIED THIS WEEKScheduled for trial in Hartford
County Superior Court this week Is the protest o f the Savings Bank of Rockville ooacerning the appraisal o f the Cowles Hotel property at Depot Square, owned by the bank.
Laaf year the protest of the bank ooneernlng the aaeeeement In the 1934 grand Hat waa settled out at court by the selectmen: This year the ealactmen instructed Town (kxmael Hyde to try in court the valuation o f the Board o f Assessors in the 1935 grand Hat, which the bank claims ta too high.
START TOWN G A ^G E ADDITTON MARCH 9
Construction o f a brick addition to the'tow n garage on Harrteon •treet, aa a WPA project, will pro- bablv start March 9, according to TNTA officiale.
Planned to. provide additional working and storage space for the municipal highway and water de- partmenta, the garage addition wUl coot approximately 813,000, vrith the town paying about half the <ioet.
Part o f the building vrin be need I a meter inepeetion and atorege
■pace by the water department. remainder wtu be used mostly to house trucks and other town equlp-
Feb. 3— Annual banquet of LU' tber League o f Emanuel Lutheranchurch.
Feb. 5—Annual Masonic Ball at CTieney hall.
Peb. 7—Annua] Police Benefit at State theater.
EXTENSIVE COMMITTEES
An Parts o f S t Bridget’s Parish Represented— To Be Heid February 3-6.
In order that all parte of S t Bridget's parish be represented In the disUibution o ( tickets for the four night entertainment that la to be held in the church hall on February 3, 4, 5 and 6 a large number has been appointed to the ticket committee. Thomas Moriarty is the chalrmai^of the committee and Mrs. Margaret Wilson will be his assistant. Other members of the committee are; Mias Stephanie Tun- sky, Miss NeUle Smith, James O ow e, Alfred Lachanoe, Thomas Opalach, Miss Stella Krieskl, Felix Oldlenckl. Custer Obright,Agnes Wopciechowski, John Goll- mltaer. Miss Nellie BurdzUI, Mra. Margaret Btyan^- Arthur Scranton, Mrs. Edward Broanan, Mrs. Frank Handley, George KeUey, Miss Bessie Newman, Mias Mary Olander, W illiam Strimicke, Mrs. Lena Bober, Mrs. Ella ()ul8h. Mrs. Edward Moriarty, William Miner, Mrs. Frieda Duffy. Joseph Patelesk, Mrs. Margaret Brannlck, Frank Yankewakl, W alter Moake, Mias Stella Yankow- ski, Michael Murphy, Mias Alice Brasauakas, Miss Stephanie Ihu> ciak. Richard Hyland, Peter Jania- zewski, Mias Helen Jamroga, M ra Frank Ck>nti, M ra J ( ^ O. Mahoney, Harold Jarvla Rohsrt Coleman. Mlsa Mary Hahn, Carol McGuire, M ra Georgia Dfaynard, Mlsa Minnie Zatkowricl, Ralph Butna, Mrs. Ernest Roy, Mrs. Jamas Duffy, M ra Frances Shea, Patrick Griffin, Mra James HoUoran, M ra John O'Leary, Mrs. Cain Mahoney, M ra ~ Galllgan. Leo Burke, M ra Tbomaa Sullivan, Mr. and M ia George Patten, Mra Helen McCarthy, John Boyle, Mlaa Rose M. PaUler, Mra Margaret LaMott, Maurlea McKee- ver, John Zapatks, John Benevento, Mrs. James Benevento, Mias Helen McOonviffe, Tony O btM t,Maty Nakowakt M ra Oeoige H. W illiama M ra John Dtlworth, Joseph Skoncsky, Mias Mabel Breen. M ra Bertha Hlaon, M ra Doris O'Keefe, M ra James ’neraey, M ra Mary McVeigh. M ra LiUlsn Hart. Mrs. Alice Hunter, Mias Mary McGuire, Mlee Anna McGuire, Mlai Ceitherine McGuire, M ra Julia Raw- eon. M ra Tholhae M oriarty. Mlee Irene Sunhraa. M ra Bdward Moriarty, M ra Paul Oeivtai. Francis LtBMrlclc, Mlaa Adale Karpuaka. Dflaa Laonora Renaud, Tbomaa SpU- lane, Michael S a d ie r^ Anthony Kaminski, Raymond Coleman, Miss Margaret McLaughlin, Henry Val- Ihmt. M ra Margaret Shew. Mlaa M argant Zorskte. Matthasr Mara M ra Joaeph Moriarty, MIh Ada Pa^ ganl. Dante Paganl. Jtaba Brsaa. lUaa Irane Jacoha Miss Adals Cher- m aika Mias Loretta Bkea, M ra M aty Lamprecht. M ra lam Bataoo.
caiartes Oiapnals and Frank Plochankt,
politicalpledgee.
A Stambilag Block That decision hurdled the main
stumbling block to tha proposed trade accord by which France hopes to return Germany to western European collaboration.
The O rrnaiu have insisted that economic negotiations come flrst political settlement later.
Premier Leon -Blum has determined to meet Germany half-way and will announce a modified plan Jan. 24 before a Peoples Front meeting at Lyon.
Press OonunentThe French press, in part, consid
ered the changed position so outstanding as to make it "unnecessary to emphasise the Importance of this event in world poUtlcs."
Other portions o f the press gloomily observed that, when a con- dltional advantage was granted Germany, the condition usually was lost In the end.
A Franco-German economic treaty pro'vlding a new and almpll- , _ . _fled clearing system was reported to I Rosa. Calif. There was no In- be the flrst objective o f the negotia- “ ‘ caUon any at these reports had tions to atlmulate commercial ex- beyopd the claaalflcatioh‘ o f wild rumors.
British Columbia police turned two men, convicted o f carrying arms across the border into rsinads. over to U. S, Immigration authorities. Police aald they were con- vtneed the men, Leonard Dahl. 81, and William Bailey, 44, had nothing to do with the kidnaping.
Another SnspectSanidentifying himself as Harold Sproule, 38, arrested In a hotel at Santa Rosa, <5alif. Sheriff Harry U Patteson said erotic literature and road maps, letterheads and soap from Seattle. Portland and Vancouver hotels were in his room.
But the kidnap hunt still centered in Everett. There officers sought a long-bladed knife with which they believe Charles was stabbed in the back before he was killed.
The stab wound was revealed yes-
SLEUIUS S11IDY STAIN a U E IN M T m CASE(Oratinned 'from Page Ooe)
of reports from widely aeparated points. One o f these, they believed, would lead them to the kidnaper, already thought to be in a state of actue terror and likely to reveal hla whereabouts by some desperate move to obtain hla freedom.
Clues took officers on long trails at Cleburne, Tex.; Hoqulam, Wash.; San Bernardino, Calif.,; Vancouver, B. C.; Kelso, Seattle, ‘Tacoma and Santa Rosa. (3allf.
ORUINUNIFOItM TO SERVE AT BAH
AriBory Basemoit Dininf Room to Bo Decorated With ETorgreeos.
Uniformed young women will serve the refreshments during In- termlaaloa at the Preeident’s BaU
turday night, Jenuaiy SO. Chairman Thomas Conran o f the refreshment committee said today.' The basement o f the State Armory will be decorated with evergreens supplied by the C. B. WUron nursery.
Cake and ice cream will be sold on the dance floor uurlng the evening by attepjlanta. Persima wishing to donate cakes are saked Mr. Conran to notify M n. B. Brosnan, telephone 5543. The H. P, Hood company will gl-ve the cream. Linen for the refreshmi tables will be provided by the cheater Coat and Aprod Supply.
NEGRO CONFESSES KILLING AFTER 24 HOUR GRILLING
(Oeattenaa from Page One)
(A . Berlin communique yesterday atated officially experts already were negotiating for aa economic accord.)
France was considered generally to be seeking every means of holding a friendly Germany from Isolation by aaslng the Reich’s economic stress. Eventual return o f lost (3er- maa colonies was believed to loom large in the discussions.
Anower onspect epptm ent o f Justice agents left
Francisco to question a man, Ufylng himself as Harold
HANDLE CHURCH FAIR|nEW LONDON WITNESSTELLS OF SEEING GIRL
CRASH THROUGH WINDOW(Oratinned ‘rom Page One)
that Miss Sullivan was intoxicated the July night the state contends Simpson took her back to the darkened Casino after the dance, criminally attacked her. and forced her though a second story window. She fell 35 feet to a concrete sidewalk below, received severe bead injuries from which she died two days later.
The defense contends that Simpson took Miss Sullivan to the dance hall to "sober her up” , that she became hysterical thereafter telling Simpson she was pregnant, and threw herself from the window while be went to find someone who would help him quiet her.
' What sort at spirits waa Miss Sullivan In during the party at Tesy’s after the dance” , state prosecutor Arthur M. Brown asked Miss O’Neill, a pert red-beaded young lady who answered swiftly.
‘‘She was gay at times—too gay. She was cross when she couldn’t have more beer. She was boisterous.”
Caatansa, who followed Miss O’Neill to the stand, modified her story considerably.
How much was there to drink” . Brown asked him.
“One pitcher of Beer", ha aald.He esld the pitcher held do more
than "Five or six glasses’’ and waa shared by aU, he having two, and Simpson two. He said he didn’t
___ know whether more l^ r wss or-Davki I <T*>od while be waa dancing.
' "Waa Miss Sullivan Intoxicated' Brown demanded.
She was feeling good” , Caatansa replied.
"Waa she feeling happy?”“ Very happyT^"W ould you can her drunk T” "N o."
Wanted to Stay Late Caatansa aald that Mlaa SuOlvan
remarked during the conversation, chiefly about the chances o f Simp- son’s orchestra playing at coUege dances during the winter, that she didn't care whether she ever went home that night, for she did not have to work the next day.
M O n m i tS n a t ix n A gray^telTMl, soft ^ oIu b wo
man, Mra. Maude SaUlvaa,. told today bow ske and bar husband took bar 17-y«ar-«ld dnugbtor EUen and tw o‘other girls to the Dan cel and O ulno at Oeaan Baacb the night ti-e atete accuses SUnpeon o f causing young EUan’s death.
With B ilsbbon and frieoda crowded Into the court roonl. Mra. BuUlvan said tba gay youngaten want to Um doacs from her borne m New London abortty befiora nine p.
She left them at tlu Oastno and with bar husband drove bad. borne.
About 10:5*, Mra. Buntvan aald,|
terday by an aubmsy performed under orders of the Federal agents.
John Doe Warrant The "John Doe” warrant sworn to
^ U. S. District Attorney J. (Charles Dennis, charged the unnamed man with Iddiraping under the "Lindbergh” law, using the malls for extortion and conspiracy to kidnap and extort. Any person harboring the kidn^iier or anyone withholding information concerning the kidnaper’s aCttviUea would be prosecuted for conspiracy and sentenced to two years In prison under the warrant. Federal officials explained.
Reliable sources said the impounded automobile was used to transport the body o f the boy.
Bloody Haadkereliief On one fender was a handkerchief
covered with what appeared to be blood. In the rear seat were other rags or clothing, also apparently blood-stained.
Verne Williams o f Everett, owner of the automobile, said Federal agents went to bis drug store to compare the blood of Uttle Charl^ with the blood found in and on the automobUe. Williams could not say V'hetber the blood was found to be Identical.
Outwardly composed. Dr. and Mra Mattson an)l their two other chU- dren, WtUlam, 16, and Muriel, 14, attended a 3S-mlnute funeral sei^ce for Charles yetterday at a Tacoma funeral parlor. Twol hundred frlenJa and relatives attended.
In paying tribute to tbe boy said the Rev Harold Long, “wa are rew in number but beyond us there art ti:ousaads. perhaps miUlona, whose thoughts are with us.”
A floral piece bore tbe card o f J. Edgar Hoover, chief o f the Federal Bureau o f Inveatigatlop. Hie agenU have been urged President Roosevelt to bring the killer to justice spiediiy.
The minister saw in the sad occasion "a time to resolve that because o f him (Charles) the world Shan be made safe for children.”
'the body was Interred in I mausoleum.
Case) on the pretext lie waa going Lo wash thq windows. That was before 2 p. m., just how long I can’t say.”
Blood-atained fingerprints on the apartment woodwork and a blodd- atalned pair o f trouaers found in an Incinerator chute were the clues that led to the arrest o f Greene at his Harlem home 86 hours after the kUIlng.
A blood-stained hammer, also taken from the Incinerator, was ea- teblished by poUce aa tbe Instrument with Vi’hlch Mre. Case's skull waa crushed.
The murder charge on which the negro was booked by UeuL Edward J. O’Neill at the Newtown police station said Greene "during the commission at a burglary struck and killed one Mary Case with a hammer, causing her death.”
The negro told police his mother lived In Bartow, Fla., and hla father in iGdton Park, Fla.
Frank <3ase, 30-year-old Cornall University graduate now empIo}red by. a hotel supply company, found his wife’s lifeless body In the tub, which was covered by a sheet, when he returned from hts office Monday night.
Sign of Struggiei Overturned furniture In the
apartment gave evidence of Mra. Case’s struggle for life.
Funeral services for Mrs. Ckse were arranged for this afternoon at her heme in Loncaater, Pa., where she and Case were married November 33. 1985.
Deputy O def Inspector John J. Rysn o f the Homicide Squad suggested early In the investigation that robbery waa tbe motive. The attractive housewife’s platinum wedding ring was missing and two . o f her pocketbooks, empty, bad been thrown Into the incinerator. One o f (jaae’a auits alao was mitt tag.
The stained trousers discarded by the killer bore a tell-tale dry cleaner’s mark and were traced to a tailor shop three doors from Greene’s home st 68 Weet 118 street, Manhattan.
One o f four suits stolen last July from the Ctase apartment waa found In posseiaion o f Henry Oreene, Major's brother. He was arraigned yeaterddy in Long Island a ty Court aa a material witness against Major Greene and was held ta 135,000 bond.
Also held ta 335,000 bail waa Francesco Ctataneo, a furnaoa tender in the apartment bousa, whoa# connection irith tbe case was not explained.
Cataneo told police during a routine questioning o f building employes that be entered the country illegally in 1030 by deserting a ship on which he |vaa a aeamam
CROSS TO ATTEND THE INAUaiRATION
(Orattnued from Page Ons)
tra which takes the place o f tbe customary inaugural hall omitted this
1 n esidyeir by the President In tbe governor’s party will be
Mr. and Mrs. WUbur L. Cross, J r , Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Avery Cross, Col. and Mrs. Michael A . Oonnor, Dr. Charles W. Ctamfort o f N( Haven, surgeon-general oa staff; Major and M ra John J. Me- Garry, Major and Mrs. Harold B. Pinny, Commander and M ra Herbert L. Seward, Col. and Mra. Anthony Sunderland, Gol. and M ra Edwy L. Taylor, Mr. and M ra PhUlp Hewea and, tentatively, Judga and Mrs. Kanneth Wynna and Col. Thomas Hewes, and Cong, and Mrs. Shanley. Major James J. Timaey may mlae the ceremonlea He expects to be ta Texas at tbe tim a
KICKED BY IBO CT
Lanceota. N. H„ Jan. 14<—(API —Take the word ,of Tiiomae J. O’Hara a grocer, a aeven-pound trout baa aa "awful Uck.”
A trout attempting to jump the Mata atreet bridge, he reported, •truck, felled and atuanad him.
Hoyt Wlaebeetar. lakea regfc guide and trapper, gave credence to OTIara's rapett with tbe explanation that during high water the trout probsUy mistook tbe bridge for a water falle and attempted to jump i t
KILLED BY AUTO New Haven. Jan. 14.— (A P )—
Mrs. cnara Harris, 88, at New Haven, was injured fatally today In an automobile accideat which tbe driver blamed on tbe fog.
She died ,ta a boepital three houra after being struck ^ a oar.
Policemen Edward Goldriek and Joaeph McDonald aald Thomas Manning at New Haven waa tbe driver. They, quoted him ai eaying bla vtakm was obacured by tbedog.
JOHN J. CONE DEAD.Deal. N. J„ Jan. 14.—(A P ) —
John J. Cone, 70, . Supreme Knight o f the Knights o f Oolumbue ta the United States ftom U M to 1900. is dead at his. home here after a long lltaisa
He waa the founder sad former president o f Robert W. Bunt and company, New TMk ongtaeolinx firm, and traveled all over tbs worio for I t
a A M ia u a r r E R « 7 k m in o H i t A i A iiA N O H ia n rin it. o o k h ^ ■ n r o n s D A T , jrA N U A irr i 4, i w r
New Paul Bunyan Story Narrated hy Old Timers
Raspberry Island. Wis., Jan. M -sforgot the laeldeat promptly upon-(A jP)—Bearded old timbrs o f the
north 'woods, hearing o f tba strike of lumberjacks la Mlnneaota, harked back today to tbe time Paul Bunyan almost had labor trouble on bis huge lands.
Paul Bunyan is the legandary giant of ths north ttmberlanda, a man 70 feet tall ta his wet socks, who lagged off moat o f aorthsrn Wisconsin, Maine, DUehlgaa and Oregon, among otlier territory.
One winter, the old tiroan say, Paul waa working one end of a tog saw and ten o f his crew wera on tha other end to balanoa hla strength. Paul became Impatimt at the alow progress o f the.work and gave ao hard a tug that he jerked tha ten men right through tbe slot ta tbe tree trunk.
The men were n little peeved at this, but after due constderatioa they decided not to strike. They
reaching the oook ehanty, where •core or mora o f boys with hi tied on their feet wero skating up and down the mile-long flap-jack griddle, greasing U for ons o f thooe fine Bunyan camp moala.
Raspberry Island, ooa o f the Apoetls group In Leko fliiporior just off the Bayfield county peninsula, regarda Paul aa Ite founder. Paul blamed a big bUl on the Bayfield •bore for the aevere wlator o f the blue snow, the year tbe mercury dropped 30 feet—not just degrees— below aero.
He wound a thousand-mile togging chain around the base o f the hUl the next summer and hitched Babe, bla big blue ox, to the ether end. Babe jerked the bill Into a thousand pieces, which spUahed Into the lake and became the Apostle Islands—Madeline, Baas, Sand Tork, Bear and Raspberry.
SDliPLE CEREMONY FOR INAUGURATION
Next Wedneiday't Pande WQl Not Compare WHk Some That Went Before I
(Editor's Note: This is another of a series of stories by tbe Washington Bureau of the Associated Press djacusstag some o f the tradition behind next Wednesday's Inauguration at President Roosevelt.)
P0NHFF WHEELED INTO m s CHAPE
Enoog] to Loafe
Hit Bed Chamber.Vatican City, Jan. 14 — (A P)
Pope Plux X I felt sufficiently recovered today to be traneferred again from hie atekbed to a epeeiaUy built vriieelehalr.
He wss moved into a aalon ad- joiniita tbe Puial iMdrocm, and received his sister, Donna OamlUa Rattl. and Eugenio Cardinal PaoeiH, PapM secretary o f stata, in audience.
’The Holy Father also wee wheeled Into hla chapel where’ he heard
Vatican attendants reported the Pbntlff suffered additional pal; throughout the night because o f bis seal ta being moved to the wheelchair yesterday. <
He awoke In a weakened eondl- tk » , well informed drclee, eeid, after a night marked hy a vecur- rence o f the extreme pain ta hla legs and labored brsatlting.
OendKIea UnchangedOfficial reports said he passed a
“ reasonably good” night and that his oonditl<m remained unchanged. He heard mass' this morning as usual.
Dr. A mints Mllanl called early ce find the Pontiff worn but determli to carry on with hts work as long as possible. ,
'The chief phyaletan gravely begged the Pope not to attempt to repeat yesterday’s experiment o f sitting up ta bis wheelchair—the cause of much of his suffering di^rteg tbe night
Doctors were on duty throughout tbe night to administer relief through Injections o f aedsUvea.
They and other attendants ta the Papati anteroom slept but little.
'Ihe Pope Idmself 'was reported most cheerful o f all those ta the sickroom.
Although' dra'wn and haggard from wave after wave o f pain, tha Holy Father waa sustained, a prelate aald, by hts mind and spirit and no longer by bis erstwhile rugged phsrsique and Iron constitution.
FORMER KING TO LEAYE AUSTRIA FOR A TH E
Duke o f Windsor to Be Guest o f Hungarian Friends in Caatle Near Budapest.Enaeafeld. Austria, Jan. 14.—
(A P )— The Duke of Windsor, it was disclosed today, may leave Castle Bnseafeld, bla retreat since he abdicated the Britlah throne, to bt. tbe guest o f Hungarian friends near Budapest.
Friends at the former King said It was__ understood he would be a guest st a castle near Budapest, st least for a short time, and then would return here.
Baron Eugene ds Rothachild, his host, already has left for Paris and the Baroness ta planning to follow ta a few 'days.
Vienna newspapers reported the Duke Is devoting bis evening hours to practicing Austrian waltses on an acconUoa be received for Christmas present
Despite a Imre hand, he spends many houra skiing ta tbe Tyi^ean fame surroundtag tbe Rothechikl estate.
Hollywood
BEICHYl m S T DBSYEOYEB
Kiel, Germany, Jan. 14,— (A P ) — The Third Reich put into service without fanfare today tbe firat de- Btrayer o f ite augmentodi B eet
Tha 1AS5 ton warsUp, first at 16 "o f aa entirety new type” to be laid down tbe 1955 Aagto-Qerman naval trea^ . was taunebed secretly amae time ago. It waa learned.
Tbe entire OotlUn Is t'*H ulvd to be iee4te tor rommlaeloo April 4.
— Tbe flegeMp.gt tbe new deetio je i fleet is tbe Leberecbt naoMdta honor o f the admiral who went down when U s flageUp, tha Koala, iraa sunk fay tbe Britkb 1914. - Lug. SO,
KJfXM YO U V O W ILD C A T
0>Ulnsvfila Jan. • 14. — (AP)* — Stanley Weaver, 36, employe o f a dairy farm here, threw a stone at ai s a i . ’f f i s J S 'L s a
Waaver caam upon tba eat wUla p anting tbreugb tea paatera e i tea term yeeterdajr.
Ha said W o a ^ trarim evidenea on the prendaee days aguk
Honywood, Jan. 14,— (A P) — Crooner Bing Crosby waa $500 rlcbnr today because he faUed to take bla own advloe and placed 510 bet "on the nose” o f Ms horse, Fight On.
Because they took Bing’s advice and failed to back the bone, his film friends a n aore.
Fight On came through at Santa AnlU yesterdav to win tbe U ttle Bo} Blue race for two-year-olds and pay tbs sssson’B record price of 1160 for a 33 winning ticket.
T didn’t know be could run,' Bing explained afterward. "Tbe other boreee looked a lot belter. Honaetly, I didn’t know be waa that good.”
Only 397-was wagered on hla horse, tbe first to carry the Croeby colon at Santa AUta tela aeaaon.
Blng'a brother Everett held a 36 combination ticket, purely for aen- tlmental reasons. He cashed ta for 3347. Comedian Oliver Hardy collected 3529 on a 315 bet.
Croeby bought the col’ at Saratoga last summer for 31500, just twice what It won for him nn hla 310 wagsr.
He advised bis friends to back Khayyam ta the third race yesterday. Khasryam dU not place.
Ralph Ratager, aoe Hollywood •ong-writor, listened to nuraeiy music today.
Mrs. Rainer presented him with a daughter yesterday.
A new kind o f movie star enjoyed Us work today.
Studio tachnlclans rigged up a mlcroacope and camera and filmed
ee o f a grasabopper eating the beads off wheat atelka. t'be mlcro- photographlc acenee wUl be used ta "The Good Earth,” they said.
Janice Dawson, actress, and Bruce B. Pierce, film editor, were honeymooning today as the result o f a studio romance.
The wedding took place Sunday ta Tijuana, lower California, It waa diecloeed. Pierce, grandson o f Mrs. Henry Clay Pierce of Santa Barbara, Calif., bpd hla bride first met four years ago when she waa appearing on the New Tork stage.
Leo Mantta and BUeanor Ninon, composers, were loser today in a 31,000,000 suit against Paramoimt studios for alleged infringement of
song copyrightTbe court ruled "One Hour With
You” , n number heard In a Paramount muslca] picture, was copyrighted ta unpubllahed form before the plaintiff’s song, "e i. Si SenorlU of Spain.”
Film Production Notes:Young Douglas ficott who play
ed Lord Nelson as n child In “Lloyds of London” , will -q>pear as M ott the drummer boy in Shirley Temple’s new picture, "W e W illie Wta- U e."
Margot Grabame baa replaced Ketti Oallian, iU with tbe llu, ta tbe Fred Astatre-Gtager Rogers feature, "Stepping 1 ^ . ”
One m Hollywood’s many vlc- tima of the flu, Buaey Berkeley continued today to direet "Tbe Go- Getter," whUe a doctor and nurse attended him on the set.
Eleanor WUtney and Johnny Downs will bold the romantic Inter eet In the Paramount production of lu r n Off the Moon."
Washington, Jan. 14. — (AP) There’s a tradition about taaugura' tion parades—like the U. S. Mall football games and shows they "must go on."
So the thousands who gather Washington Wednesday for PresI dent Roosevelt’s second inauguration may reasonably - expect to see the full spectacle despite possible rein, snow ai sub-sero weather.
"W e say the parade must go on.' said an official o f the' Inaugural committee. "O f course, e 30-foot snow or something like that could ■top it, but we don’t have 30-foot ■lO'we here.”
There will be about 10,000 persons ta the big display end it wlU take them approximately two hours to pass ta review before Presldwit Roosevelt.
Hoetijr MlUtary' Cblirtly mUlUiiy. with Anaapolta mld-ehipmen end Weet Point cadets as. Well as Army, Navy and Marine unite, the pande nevertheless win have a fair seattertag o f civilian participants. Each governor will be allowed three automobUee for hlm- ■elf and his sides end friends, in addition there will be 400 COC b m and 300 bey and girl beneflclarlM of tbe National Youth Admialatra- tlon.
Along the route gnndstenda, covered and wmUed egalnet tbe midwinter chin, will accommodate 40,- 000 epectaton at 3SA0 to |10 each. Hie revenue goes to defray expenses o f tbe Inaugural celebration, which Washingtonians are underwriting to the extent of riOO.OOO.
Simple Oeremenlee This year’s parade wiU be, ta con
trast to s(m e, a simple and well- ordered affair. It ia storied past, Pennsylvania avenue on inauguration day has resounded to the tramp o f sllk-hatted Tammany braves, Indians, cowboys and a ifl Scouts among others. Movie actresses and Civil War veterans ta turn have heard tbe plaudits o f the sidewalk crowds and Intermittently heavy cannon and whirring ftre-en- gtaee have rumbled past the White House.
There was a parade at tbe very first taeuguratlon, held ta New York City In 1789 wlien George Washington topk office.
Wanted Ne Parade Historians disagree, but some
say the tan, freckled end Democratic Thomas Jefferson would have DO Inaugural parade: just walked acroea the field from hts boarding bouse to tbe then domeless oapitol.
William Henry Harrison ta 1S41 Inspired tbe flrst typleal "Great American Spectacle.” The crack National Greys" came all the way
from Philadelphia to march for him, and Tippecanoe partisans by the thousands displayed bennere, coonekins and cider barrels, end dragged a log cabin on wbeela.
From then on parades grew In length and Imagination. For Polk, members o f a New York poltticel club paraded with a roartag brass cannon. A dozen briUlsnUy clad fire companies, with n formidable red engine from Manhattan, marched for Franklin Pierce.
Buehenen’e parade ta 1857 boasted a frigate on wheels, with sailors
g h t a C »Id ?To help cad it sooner.
thfM t and chest witeVffiJSff
_ tea Goddess at Libwty, and George Waehtngton Perite CusUs, Waataingten’e atepeon, who saw all tea taauffurala from tee first thtough Buoiianan’A
Grover caeveland’s flrst parade ta 1885, drew 50,000 marchers end lasted elx boute.
INFANTILE PARALYSIS NOT MODERN DISEASE
Surrey Recently Made Discloses Malady Existed at One Time in Ancient- E^ypt.
New Tork. Jen. 14.—Infantile paralysis against which modern science wages a courageoua but so far not completely vlctorloua battle, ie not. aa many have supposed, a disease o f modern times. It did Its fatal work in andent Egypt and ta medieval Itarope, according to a survey recently made by Dr. LeRoy W. Hubbard, director o f the extension work o f tbe Warm Springs Foundation of New York.
Only In recent yean , however, and since tbe disorder has from time to- time reached epidemic proportions to parts o f tbe United States has tbe mcdlcM fight against it been ■dentlfleany dlroeted. Medicine In tbe United Btatee baa been aseiated by the oontributions o f tbe people of tee country through tbe annual birthday balls In honor o f Mr, Roosevelt, end ttala-'year It ta expected further staewa o f war will re- ^ t from the parties to be held on January M .
to bis review o f Infantile par- e ^ ta In ancient end modern times Dr. Hubberd points out that Dr. Oarenee Victor Vaughan, tbe medi- cri btatorlan, foiind definite traces
the rem its o f tbe dlseeae ta Egyptian mummies.
’^ e first Ug modern to tee Ublted Stetes” , Dr. Hubbard wrltee, ^xxairred In 1915. It rracbed y w y state ia tbe union and etruck
man than 35,OM pereenn tbe otajorlte at them children.”
The difference between the ritua- ****,*m tlans and that or
Americans ta tJm aufferen la 1987 are tirated with ell the eklU at modern science which oonttaues a printed-up research la aa effort to
*“ W 4 to the extent o f the tatereet end funds supplied bv tee public, largely throw h the Preeldent’a Birthday Balls.
giidsmleu1
YIND WOMAN’S BODY
Catatan, Mask., Jan. 14.— (A F )__^ fully clothed body o f Mtw Ruth Poole. 51, waa found ta the Nateus rlror under the New Havwt rmiroad Jj**!t* horo Wednesday moratag.
o f Police Mtehari K r il^ T ^ -Jwmpwi or feu froin Ut6 rftllroAd span.
.. Ntae Poole bad been employed ta *•*• y^ tM Stetoe genwrel account-
f ‘ ' *“ **‘*>Yton but had |m & lU at hsr homa h m elnca 3Tianksgivlng. She bad previously ?^*> ® a rest home at the capital roiiowlag a nervous breakdown.
She ta survived by a brother, Herbert Poole, end a etator. Mra. Atkta- •on o f CSievy Chase, Md.
HELP15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES
T sflu te u u lA ri^ e n ii
BTAIS EDIKMUl TO MEET
New Haven, Jen. 14.— (AP) — The annuel meeting at tbe Oonnec- ticut Editorial Aeeoclatloo will be held here, Jen. 3S. V. Donald Har- ssm, eecnrtary-treaaurer, aaaounoed today.
“nM eeaeioa win ba held at tbe Hotel Oarde where tee members and their famines wiU be tbe gueste of Q>L Walter S. Gsrds st s dinner dance.
Among tbe queetlone for dtaeue- ■Ion wtu be tbe effect ef tbe Social Security lews on pmarrn.
Tbomss Perklaa, executive eeere- taiy of tbe OooaeeUcut pubHoity eommtaeion. Is co tee sfteraocn program end OoL Mtabsri Oonaor, etete motor vehicle eenuntarioner. ta among tea epeeken In tee eewUng.
EESMawOuiaaa. Jen. XL— (AP)—G eom
B. Fuller, preelJwit of tee r-— Nattanal bank, kawrerignad and hta plaee Oiled by JoeqihL, T farmer State Senator
Fanonf, n «m tbe
’m r M n t D iatrict Fuller wne tee b oa rs first end
^ preridm t np to tbe ttiae be ro- *A>i**n, it woe eanoansed last nlgbt. Ha took riflea In IMT w bsatka taetitntksi wan^ S K s t a s d e r in rivte and bnetoem affairs here, ta wldeiy known terougbeut tee atete.
Dine and DanceTONIGHT
"HAPPY. LU "‘ AND HIS RHYTHMMAKERS
Good Music and Entertainment THE BEST OF FOODS
At Moderate Prices BEER — WINES — UQUORS
Dinners Served Every Day.We enter To Banquets.
The O A K GRILLSO Onk SL. Formerly Oak S t TkYem
—TONIGHT—BINGO-BINGOOdd Faltom Han
M 0 . M D O O R n U Z ES W E E P S T A K E S T O N IG H T
B rA y*! J e w e lry S to re .25 Prizes! Playing: Starts At 8:30 Sharp!
Oer verltflet ef canned pest have been esrtfufly Mlected by ew awn expert buyen. ta this ««y you are aitured ef excellent quelity no matte what price yes pay.
QUALITY RICHMOND FINAST
GOOD QUALITY sac 2UNS
FANCYQUALITY
EXTRA TINY FULL FUVOREO
2 % ’ 2 9 c2 SIZE 2
CANS
Tomatoeschoke ef fiiree dMinettve Miidi ef tenwleeadepeiidin0 epee the price
•net to pay. There are two ekes an each tried Iktori below. Stock penlry ihehwa .
FOR COOKlNfiQUALITY QUALITY RICHMOND
4 % ’ 2 5 cFiM COOKINC
FUVOR
RICHMOND S&fOo.FINASTFINAST
• EXTRA FANCY WHOLE SOLID PACK
EXTRA FANCY WHOU SOUO PACK
3 > ^ ' ‘ 3 1 e 3 % * 2 9 c 2 “ ^ ' » 2 9 c 3 3 5 c2 ’ ^ » 3 1 c
FINAST FINAST DELMAIZ ^
Here are sM ie bsim Siat am astod Ikr SMk tanfiwibat tfM totoflaver captared to Be Ms. Main year Oem tMs M of wbNi.
QUALITY RICHMOND FINAST FANCY
CUTCRCEN
STRINOESS CUTCREEN
sr WAXWHOU
REFUCa
WHOUWAX
NeScs Hie tree tarries Sever hi bate Rlcbnueri yes try Hwm. yeeni be back to bey mera.
RICHMOND W I FINAST
FINAST 2 ,L £ .2 3 cJULIENNE BEETS JUUENNE CARROTS '">« 2,4,123c CUT BEANS r*huSe 2 j^ 2 9 c CORN oh tho COB 70 *? 2 can* 33c CORN on tho COB ^ 12 •« 39c
T / e < j c t a b ^ £ S p e c l a J i t i e ADICED CARROTS FINAn
PEAS and CARROTS SPINACH FINAST
UM A M ANS '« « SUCCOTASH -COLOUnSflTAM
A CUPFUL OF SATISFACTIONKYBO COFFEE
EVANGELINE MILKHORMEL SOUPS TOMATO? M b S m O O ^
UNSWEETENEDEVAPORATED
17c
9as4A OmuUand tte fdaUei
GRAPEFRUITA GROWER-CONSUMER
COOPERATIVE CAMPAIGN
FANa FLORIDA
3 ■ s r^ lor
3 medium rndm8? 13cORANGES
FLORIDA
2 45cextralarge doi •ize
TOMATOES2 “»19c
SPINACH3»19c
ONIONSVOIjOW 1 0 -15c
TURNIPS5 - l O e
yit Oma Meat 9)jepaAtmeni
3 ^ 2 0 c
ilUC-FEOS A vera^
29cFANa . RIFE
FRESH
YELLOW
FRCSN - LEAK fNOirr SHANK
SHOULDERSFANCY MONC
LAMB LEGSBONED and ROLLED IF DCSIREO
LAMB FORESFRESH - RIBi er LOIN END - ANY WEIGHT • ONE PRICE
PORK LOINSS tp e e la tA
SWORDFISH ISS MACKEREL
FIRST NATIONAL S T O R E S
■ ssK
Im SS 5 i 5 w ! y a i l i ^ *"*■»! i'
inc a tA p n R i
' taOt Mack-ballad maa r baataaaa auit atood on a tar- I baaUa tha rojral l o ^ and
amtebad the avaninf^ I MhUaf oaar dipped hadgaa ■*— lawn.
s - r y nwnjr. to the e a ^ joaepn io(«ed into hlatba capital city of « lon^ time. Then he Jerked» Wrfki»#KttaeaHa»a _a ___ ti_ _graat caqiire o( ^Northumbra
ca tbe darkeninr aky. JO niatic affair of log*,
aama, but a great man- eg cut atcoa — roaa behind ita yaat bulk aaamlni: to
tha aoUdity and maaalve ag tha em ^re afboae mou
lt houaad. The man turned . j looking from tbe aaatem
In the a lv to the pile of _ —try behind him.Ughta glaainod from Franch
1owa in tha wall a t hla back, wiadonra aarung open, aa be
a t them, and a trim young in tbe uniform of a naval
It came out and atepped________tha flagged pava-Baiting a faw yarda from
tan man In g i ^ , thla officer hla heela and aaid, "Your
. it la ready.”_tan man atraigbtened withair eg relief, and flipped hia
into the dirubbery.' ‘ for the laat act, eh?
■ d d i ^ t l y . ”A1I right, B artIk e o ffli^ wheeled formally, aa . he atood on a quarterdeck In
of ah admiral, and badi Indda. Tbe taU maa na more look arotmd him aaquidtely artifldal land- , the formal flower beda,
_ 4 Paa in a ^ c h not one leaf cut of place,‘had drew a long Ih. nien, thruatlng hla haada
pi'into Ma pocketa and throw- Ma head back with a half-dell-
~hre, he followed the officer the French windowa and
room.i. dotMn men atood about
flpactoua room; aome of them attire. All eg them auto-
drew themaelvea erect — maa came In. Their
were flxed on hla face— on Mack muatache, tbe tiled
and the bojriab mouth that recogalaable in every coun-
the gtoba—and t h ^ mur- *T3ood evening, aire,” aa
«aaad briakly to an inlaid — before the wide fireplace,
acknowledged their greeting a careleaa filp of hla band
beat over tbe table to look W a riw le aheet of paper that lay
I t The royal creat decorated “ la top of the aheet; there fol
ded a down typewritten llnea h itated that "1, King Paul I lra t of Northumbra, hereby
,mder, renounce and abdicate llgbta to tba throne of the em-
Tba tall maa read It |h quickly.de tbe table atood an elderly
ening clothea. He had an R o i ^ now that Jutted
above a luxuriant white I, and hla mrea had the
pierdiig look of a man who ' imed to command.
-----majeaty," be aaid, ”1 re-it^rofoundly that I am obliged
we’ve gone into that enough. L«t‘a luat aay that Tve laid down a Job i ought never to have taken up. Let'a aay that after giving thirty- five yeara to the empire—tw en^- five aa prince, and ten aa king—1 am trying to gH a few brief yeara for myaelf. And let’a alao aay, Jo- aeph, that the throne and the crown are In better handa now than before—for they are held by a maa who really bellevea in them.”
Joaeph lo^ed into hla eyea for hlmaelt
U A N G H E S T B S E V E N IN G U IH A L D . I IA N G H E S IE S . CONN
C llE A .3 cn la Inclf«E
OiSTAUDENOLAY OFFHXRS TONIGHT
Dorothy Gray, aacretary and anur. f a c ia l committaea are:
W o r a ^ inaa Aeeynath J o i ^ Him Kato Kitynyeh, Henry Jonea, David
_Tbera waa a breakfaat table on the balcony. Two people, Yt man and a woman, aat there looking out over the blue bay, aaylng Ut- ^ thinking and feeilng much.
away, almoat aavwely, and with a vlaible effort atraJghtened hlmaelf and regained control i f hla emo- tlona. When be spoke bis voice was flat and expressionless.
•T suppose they're waiting for me—down there?”
“They are. Go on down. King Joaroh.”
‘You’re leaving—at once?”’Right away. 1 expect the car
la a t the door now.”“And n i never see you again. “Never again. You don't belong
to yourself any more, my boy. You belong to the people—to mlUlons UpOO millions of them, carry lliy the hopes and the aspirations and the dreams of all of them around on your shoulders. Youll want to get away from It; you’U feel aU of that aa an actual, tangible ^ g h t , pressing down on you without a let-up, day and night, as long as you Uve. .I t’ll be bard, especially v^en srou see poor, downtrodden people look up at you out of their misery and aay. ’God save the king!’ with a break In their voices, so that you’ll know that unless 3rou help them no one will . . . and then you’ll discover tbAt Um throB# Bod th t Bc#pt6r are only make-believe, after all, and that there’s pltlfuUy little you can do flor them
He stopiMd-abruptly and stroked ilder.
paper for your sig
him andatking looked suddenly.
„ believe that srou really do,” aaid. He glanced around tbe
aeemed -mildly surprised, took a second look around.
I’t roy brother here?” hele has gone to bis rooms,” said
hawk-nosed man.” ' He asked to tell your majesty that he
too affected to remain. He to see your majesty imme- afterward.”
king smiled again — rather “ la time.
Joeepb. He takes It/hard,” Then he turiied to the
From a stand of ornately gold be picked up a pen.
a_ moment be stood looking at ““^ t . as If be had never had
to examine a pen point . then, as if he had come
mat to aome decision, be put to paper and in a steady band te “Paul, R” at the foot of the
aheet. He laid tbe pen carefully, atood erect, and
adiout tbe room, gentlemen. It la all over,"
to one moved. He looked at their it tiylng to read the ex-
IS on them; but all were . ily Impaaslve^aa If each man
Joened a mask.king, gentlemen,” said
“U upstairs. I am going to w. He will be down dl-
Btrode across the room, through a wide hall, and
a great flight of stairs _ upper floor. He moved Jaunt- •a if some profound weight
fUlen from hla shoulders. , todead, he reflected, that psadaely tbe case. He had
the weight of a great em-S i tapped a t a door at the iua Dk kali, opened It and went In.
boom was dusky, the tallI standing out as gray ob-
the daik walla. A slimone of them.
Uy against tba bt. He did not
came In. Paul Uy aereas tha room
hand on tba youth’s
W Wt stood by
todistiaetl} twUlAt.
^ aa Paul (Midly
I Ms I
Jossph,'* ha a > T t’a all over, lioag Uve tha
protact and
Ud affao- llie king
Wng and
maa tnmsd. A p a ^ j looked up through
I a t tba maa wbo b ~ tba throaa,
a a ld ^ y m ia g a M
as ba atrove to Is.ffitapad Paul’s
hla brother’s ahoul ’Xk> on down, your majeaty,”
he said llghUy. "And— good&. Tiy not to think too badly of me.”
The young king gripped hla band, .^bard. “Think ba^y of you! You’ve always been — my king! And you always will!"
Joseph turned and went out hurriedly without look i^ back.
The open doors threw a fan jf Trtlow light into the porte cochere. Paul came down the steps and got into tbe waiting automobile. A guard saluted rigidly, tbe car door closed with matter-of-fact finality, and tbe car sped noiselessly off down the drive Into ,the .darkness.
Half an hour later the car swung In through the medieval ji;ate of ancient Fort St. Gregory. :[t rolled quietly past the great battlements, turned, and came at laat to an open meadow which had been graxlng ground for the garrison's cattle, since time Immemorial, until a new kind of warfare had come along and turned It Into an airport. The car stopped Just behind a row of floodlights which turned the field Into a daa- ailng expanse of unearthly vivid green. Attendants sprang to open the door and transfer the luggage. A general In full regimentals saluted aa Paul got out.
It took but a few moments for Paul to get Into the gray monoplane that waited. lU propeller glinting in a silver circle as It Idled In the glare of the floodlights. A private fastened the hatch on the luggage compartment and sprang nimbly down. The general came forward to lean In at the door for a final handshake. The door was closed, a voice cried ’’All clear!” and the drone of the motor rose to a roar. The plane trundled awkwardly across the sod. left the ground, seemed to balance Itself uncertainly, and then became a thing of grace and austere beauty, rising above the floodlights and cleaving a straight course through the dark.
They flew high, and tbe lights of the capital spangled the blackness beneath. There It layt tbe aorld’s proudest dty, girt with the memories of a thousand years of empire; and the map wbo had given It all up with a stroke of the pen looked down as Its starry diadem slid by beneath him and drifted off to tbe west. They cams to the sea, and Paul look^ down and saw the riding lights of hla majesty’s great ships of war aa they lay at anchor.
And then they were out over the ocean, and the land fell behind them, and the llgbta of the capital itmmed the invisible borlson far In the rear. And Paul did not look back, for he waa through with the past and all Its memories. He peered over the pilot’s shoulder at the unfathomable blackness ahead.Si, If he were trying to nuUte out the fair shape of a future that was to be hla own.
The sun sparkled on the unbelievably blue of the Bay of St.' Francis. The green land lay In a wide curve, a rim of golden sand meeting the white surf; te tbe north, the sullen blackircss of Cape Roman lay In a Jumbled, rocky l(ne on the hoiisen. a harrier to cut off the storms of the open sea and Insure for the bay an everlasting peace.
The vUIas lay scattered along the shore, gay with their white walls alnd their red roofa Neat green lawns ran down to the sand, broken by old stone walls and flights of whitewashed atone steps. Each villa had Its clump of trees to give it shade and privacy, Ita flowerirrg shrubs and Ita gay. Informal gardens to make It bright and cheery.
In all the world there waa not a spot where things were more per- fectly arranged to permit life to flowsmootUy and easily.
The y n ii San Margarets waa «ie of t ta largest An Ivy-grown stoiw wan shut It off from the
«» U>e landward sld«^towa« tba sea, a wide town “ ^ e d gently down to the c u r v ^
A , second-story balcony J tth ita wrought iron raiUag and ito colmM canopy of rad and WMto s t r i ^ canvas ovarioekad 2 |f * ^ * > W ^ a » b in g roaas grew ftew tha g ro a ^ a ^ twined &air tw b lto in and out o( tha railing.pwnMing nolaUy from ’-irsinw to
Onis of them waa the former wing Paul the First of Northumbra, now private dtisen Paul Ferrone; tha other waa tba Canadian-bom former Ardath Rich mood, once aa actress familiar to New York and Hollywood and now—by grace of a ceremony performed twelve hours ago In the prefect’s office at tbe little village of San Loren Mrs. Paul Ferrone.
She waa a tan woman, with tbe palest of blond hair and the fairest of fair skins. Her features were regular, delioate, more patrician- looking than those of the maa beside her—which waa rather odd. for she was the daughter of a Scandinavian baggage man in an Alberta Junction town, while be waa the jieseendant of Innumerable kings.
“Do you mind,” said Paul, tak Ing a dgaret from aa ebony box on tbe table. ”tf we Just sit here for a while? You have no idea bow marvelous It la to feel that I can Just sit here aU day, if I want to—to feel that there are 'no demands on my time, no people who have a right to come and present me with an elaborate schedule of the dajr’s activities.”
She smiled a t him fondly."Your majeaty,” she said, " “you
are to receive a deputation of the War Mothers a t 10, and your cabinet awaits you a t 11. At noon there Is the unveiling of the monument to Admiral de Yonge, and a t 1—”
“And a t 1,” said Paul, toying his band on hers, ’T think I shall plunge Into that surf and see If It can possibly be as warm and creamy as It Iboks.”^
He smoked contentedly for a moment.
’’Life la all my own—all our own,” be said slowly. “Just think of It. dear. No more Interference, no more fuss-and-feathers, no more flunkeys In gold braid hovering a t every door—”
“No more reviews, no more cornerstones—”
“No more slipping away to somebodjr’s country house In the hope that I can have a few hours with jrou without setting every high-born gossip cackling—” ^
He paused, to gaze contentedly at the sea. A shadow fell across her face, and she slid closer to him.
“Paul,” she said softly, ’’are you very, very sure that It’s all . . . worth It? Are you—”
“Worth It? Worth It? My own. my own—worth It? Never ask me that again.” He held her close, and her fair head lay on his shoulder by his dark one. ‘Tve given up nothing and I’ve gained every
thing. I’ve gained freedom, life, hap^ness . . . ” He stopp^, and pressed hla lips on her hair.
“I get frightened, sometimes,” she said after a moment. “Sometimes It seems to me that the past
still here, somehow—that what
that one was going to ‘tie an architect and tbe next one was going to be a professor of literature— and they were forever planning for toose careers and looking ahsM to *Ne future. But what plansthere for me? I knew what my career waa going to be. and I knewthat I t ' didn’t really matter whether I did wen or Ul a t tbe university—I’d make Just aa good a king one wiw as the other.”
He broke off, and turned on hla side to look a t her.
'But now,” ’ he said contentedly. “Now—”
He left It unsaid, and stretched luxuriously. “Race you up to tbe bLuae,” he said, getting to his feet. She extended her bands, he belp^ her up. and they ran gaily acipfs tbe sand and up tbe sloping lawn, toughing as If every care In tlM world had been left behind for- ■ever.
Tbe roAd wound a lazy way down to the village of San Lorenao. Paul walked along with a free, easy stride, his long body clad In flannel slacks and an old sweater. Ehrery step be took seemed to emphasise anew bis fredom. He was actually walking to town, alone and unattended, to buy aome necessities a t a shop!
Jules, the grizzled bouse man a t the villa, could, of course, have almost an adventure: to discover had wanted to go himself. It waa almost an adventure: t o discover that be lacked eomething, without having an Impeccable servant or a uniformed aide discover It for him, to go and get It himself Instead of having an obsequious Siiopkeeper send it out, to go afoot like any suburban clerk In-
Sfaite Officers Led I7. State M aster Coniciilor to Condoct dra WoHl
Pbrter;' recreatlaii, John Fbalps, Miaa Dorothy Gray, Mlaa BopUe Pomprowieg, Henry Fomprowles; study, Mlaa Barbara Tennant, Miaa Jane Pomprowtes, Kenneth Jobn- aoa; work, Leonard and Bari Porter, Miss Merle Jones, Miaa Eflena Hoany. MaetUigs win be held wisek- ly a t 7 o’clock, Sundays. The next meetiag win ba a t the home of the roctor. the Rev. H. R. Keen, and Miss Barbara Tennant wiU act aa leader. There win be a discussion
iBOUGBispsiairis GLARINGUGHTS FOR tw o HEW HOMES ANAUTOMENACE
Win™ Single p . «?s j i iDweDingg On W e stm in ste r i l i l lS r l C t CnC d M orO T oS ll S t r e e t—To C ost $8,000. '
A lo m wui M ft diBCUMlonThe 8U te Dt llotfty om een led ^ **Wbftt la Invohred in beln^ •
by Stote Maater Councillor Robert ^WMtSaM >,111 .»i^. . noueiT i fug Tuesday evening a t tbePwfield will visit John Mather hom e'of John n S p s to A n d o ^ Chapter tonight to install tbe newly | T«» were present a t tost Sunday eieetod ----- - officers . t I *’'**‘*^* “ ee**®*- •«<« after thedeeted and appointed the Masonic Temple.—uuiuc lempie. i
Bengston will be tostaUed *taater Councillor succeeding'
» Converse. RutledgeS ^ th win be installed as S e ^ r ttunelUor and William Brennan as J unior^Councillor.
_]!5^_tostahatlOT ceremonies will
evening’s meeting, and after worsUp period ice cream
Plans for two single dwelUnga to be built by Edward J. HoU ooW est- inlaater street have been alterM to tocreeae the estimated cost of each from «S,000 to M.000. Additional permits for the homes, to be built m lots M and 97, have been issued W BuUdlng Inspector Edward C. Elliott, Jr.
Both will be air conditioned and will have attached garages to tba r ^ and an additional bedreoi
Any Other Q nestioiiiaire.
m
Intetest shown in the queatlon-i nalre recentw offered by thVGoveir-
imlasion —
Wi7:W fbltowad by d an d sf ia ’i n i rerulftr BMetliif of theLOe iTIITIflllfr fiall #saoi ^ll aa.>._I mMaa----------- 1 TUC
WAPIWG'u p to g Grange No. 80, r first I ■
nor’s Commission on "S tM t Highway Safety to the people of Connecticut for their attention la
, the matter of motor vehicle traSlo >m on I problems waa far beyond a mere
■ “yes” or "no” answer to the ques- Ilsted.
Not only eras comment on the
the secepd floor. A bay-window for “yea’ tba dlnlM room at one and a dormer I tlonswindow fbr a bedroom to the other I Not oniy waa comment on tbe are provided la the new specifica-1 twenty listed questlona the rule tlons. I rather than the exception, but ItftTB bdl ** Waeeltfi I meaea eiei #WtfasM fiWem e*eat»«e«wA SeaMsSA
held
■ aaawsma msau uam UUV lb^ ..elng built tre Mr. Holl I appears from tbe volume at “writ-
on land owned by the ItoU Invent- 11« to” opinion already received that
those at- “?w,year. las? Tuesday i^ iu n g . at tending the tostallation. I the w arning Community C ^ rc b
---------------------------- I House irith i* - - - -----
aa lano ownea oy me HOU Invent- I tea m" opmion aireauy received that meat company and to accordance I a t least two aspects of tbe problem with Olaaa oreoared hv A. Raviiiniul I not Included in the oueetionnaire mm
HEBRON— about thirty* members
present. After the usual businessI meeting, the following program I p resraM : A song by i^ , whichI waa followed by an eiriginal paper ^ aa original paper by Mrs. WMtw
IN. Foster, a talk by the maater-
— aaa ™“i * " *f “JSmIVTtwith plana prepared hy A. Rajnhand EUla of West Hartford.
Other appUcatlona have been made by Mr. HoU for pernUts to construct a two-aad-a-half-story, one-famUy, six-rooms, frame dwell
not Included to the questionnaire are of great concern to the responsible operators of tbe state. i
“Something must be done about' glaring headlights” la the thought most frequently expressed on the
The annual meeting of SL Peter’sthe election I ’V oy we maater-
Hflrt, also a talk byMra I Stone, the subject of their talk beingAnne C. Gilbert.
Salley, son of Mr. Md Mrs. Clarkson F. BaUey. of A m ^ a t ^ h e r in North Ston-
transferred fromthe Northwest Corner district.
Center and Benton streets of a two- aad-a-half-story, one-famUy, six- rooms, frame dweUing a t aa estimated cost of <8,000, Both WiU be air conditioned.
’The new applications Increase to six tha number of new dwellings for
stead of being carried in an ornate limousine— this, ha told himself.
has been la sort of banging In tbe air oVer us, ready to drop down between us If we ever relax our guard.” *
She hesitated, and added. There’s been so much against us.”
"The past Is paat.” aaid Paul. "It can’t reach us now. Nothing can. We’re free, a t laat. Free, darling, free! Can you realize It?”
"Will the world let ua be free?” 'The world baa nothing to say
about It. We’ve renounced the world- along u ith other things. ”
She looked up and kissed him quickly, and smiled.
’’You renounced a throne, and I - a reputation,” she said lightly. ’You know, Paul, I am a con
scienceless gold digger. I am. really. Almoat any woman on earth would teU you that.”
“Gold digger. Sweet gold digger. Goddess. Angel.”
’They would. I’m a schemer. A selfish, designing—
"Shall I t« l you what you are? You are the moonlight on the sea and the wind on tbe mountain at dawn. You are what I fsel when 1 bear Byoat musie and what I sea when I look Into the coals to the fire and dream long dreams. You are what I have Uved for and what I would happily die for. You are you, perfect and adorable. You are very, very lovely.”
Three hours later they lay on the sand to bathing suits, tba warm southern sun lying like a grateful blanket on bodies which spray and surf bad set tingling with eager life.
'You can’t possibly Imagine. Paul waa saying, "what It U like to look ahead a t aa endless vista of days and ‘know, for the first Ume to your life, that they are all your own, to do what you want to with. Tve never Uved untU now, Ardath.
“You know, when I was utue,- was tbe second son. I never expected to inherit the crown. That waa for my older brother, Leon. Sc they put me in the na'val cadet’s school when | waa thirteen and told me I could have a career to the navy. I liked it, somehow. Tbe bojrs to the school were the first people Td ever met wbo accepted me on aa equal fa tin g . Just like anyone else. Young aa 1 was, I could ass that the life I waa leading there was real, a t least. It meant something.
”WeU, that lasted a Uttle over a year. And then Leon died, and they pulled me out of the school and brought me back to the paU ace and surrounded mo with a whole regiment of tutora. And my
was the very seal and emblem hla new life.
He walked -into the village and made his way to a shop. The tourist season had begun, and Madame Elll, the mustachioed virago behind the counter, was hovering watchfully while a group of Americans examined her stock.
One of tbe tourists aeemed to Paul to be the perfect example of tbe cartoonist’s caricature of the touring American. He was big and stout, he wore plus fours and a tweed cap and horn-rimmed spectacles, and hla voice waa nasal and penetraUng. Aa Paul entered the man was talking with a whlte- sklrted and red-capped girl.
’’Sure it Is,” be waa a a ^ g . ”1 read it this morning in the paper on the train. Thla la the town, San Lorenzo, where that runaway king and bis girl friend have hid out.”
Paul turned quickly and looked away, in a sudden terror lest hla face be recognized.
”Oh,” said the girl, “let’s And out where they’re staying and drive by there. Maybe we could even get a look at them. Do you suppose we could?”
"Okay If you want to.” said the man. ”I t ’d be Just as much worth looking at aa those cathedrals you’ve been dragging me through.”
The man bit off the end of a cigar and Jabbed It to his mouth.
’T hat spick we hired the car from’ll probably know where they’re staying,” he went on. ”I wouldn’t mind having a look at that dame, myself. She must have something to make the poor sap do what he did.”
Blindly, Paul groped his way to the street. Without another thought for the things he bad come to buy he h u rri^ back up the road. He could think of nothing except his overwhelming need to get behind the sheltering walls of the villa again.
(To Be Continoed)
of Is
«-orner district, a i unogeport.. Thew. teaching In place of meeting of Wapplng Grange
Ruth Starkweather, who* re- the InstallaU on^ officers, on■Jraod her poslUon a t the Cairist- Tuesday, January 36 a t eight p. m. Mas tmcatlon to be married. This I P an e ls Lyman and his inHaiiing
a larger school than the former Ue present from Vernon
“What should Wapplng Grange accomplish to the year of 1987”. The worthy master, Robert Watson and
Ixils M. Dumuer ai new oweiiings lor i ^neiuoreo aahave been requested dent hazards.were attending the meeting of the >ki. .,.1 . ^ I
Stato Grange a t Bridgepoi^. The
Drivers whose “meandering” operation results In long lines of excessively slow-moving traffic on Coq- necticut’s mgny narrow, wiadlng and hilly roads, aa well as pedestrians in general are also widely considered as contributors to accl-
^ o o l where Mr. BaUey Uught, Md is nearer his home here Md jUso nearer Norwich, all of vdilch ^t^uta afc to his advantage.
• T h e crowded contUUon of .the Am *»y Miss ^
SiSKit R « > u ^ u , Is causing com- on the part of the i^rento
Jn J "umbers 37, withThe school
rmm should accommodate oniv ^ u t 30 pupils It S S ^ e re ro w d -
” PupUs. but when a new famUy moved to the place f r ^to cWIdren to^Sw
recenUy. both parraU It U m e ^ ^ a
Grange and Instiui Wapplng Grange oincers. ^
Mrs. Bertha Hevenor and her friend Mrs. Stetson of (TromweU and Mrs. Hevenor’s cousin. Jay Ripley left thla Thursday morning by auto- mobUe for Florida, where they expect to spend tbe rest of the winter.
Mrs. Dorothy (Dewey) Harrison wbo baa been quite lU with septic
o n iv l“ ” throat, is improving a t her \ heme here.
The next meeting of the Wapplng mothers’ Club will be held a t the home of the president, Mrs. Judaon G. Flies, thla evening instead of at the home of Mrs. Bmsworth Fair banka, aa David Fairbanks ia re
TWO YOUTHS IN COUNTY ENLIST IN THE NAVY
Two Hartford County young men were among a group of eight enlisted In the United States Navy at New Haven yesterday. They were Kashmir A. Gut, son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Gut. of Addison, and Anthony J. Blascsyk, non of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Blasoiyk, 77 Germania street, Southington. Young Blascsyk graduated from Lewis High school laat year.
This group waa drawn from all sections of the state and was tha second to be selected for the naval service thla jrear under the January quota for Connecticut They were transferred today to the naval training station at Newport, R. I., where they will remain imder Instruction for the next three months after which they wlU be assigned to ships of the fleet for active duty a t sea.
protest A banks, as David Fairbanks is ri-puplls are tam sp w to d fro m ” thS “ ''•ring from aa attack of pneu- ”GuH” D istrict toe " “•"•••having been closed In ^ e n t vMm R’aasant VaUey club turnedAn Impromptu par^t-tesehtl^> P rlndp^ Carl A. MagnusonmeeUng was held and H wsTSS^h “ Proceeds of aed to lay a peUUon benefit of thevlaor Martin B. R o b e ^ n W U i^ r High school library,that acUon be taken ^ rlnclpal Magnuson said tbe entireschool board meeting in proceeds would be used for purchas-openlng again the *omi *"* books for the school,school ^ District Frederick WUllam G rant son of
Carlton H. Jonea Arthur r» mi ^*>.**^ Roswell and Annie Grant I t . ..H Arthur R. GU- of East Windsor Hill died Sunday at
The Poet’s ColumnTHE STRICKEN DOVES.
father sad mother h ^ to go awajr Jnat then, cb a four months’
A stricken dove has fallen low From puritjr’s estates;'
Her gentle nature did not know That guile her heart could break.
Her Innocence was obvloua.No thought of wrong had she;
To her things seemed itmocuous And gloriously free.
Alas! Confidently she fell—As mother Eve of old—
For honeyed words were used so well No gulto did she beheld.
The stricken dove wept bitter tears.O'er the ashes of dead love.
Only during tbs latter years.Did peace come from above.
le tt. — ’ ■ ‘"u r K. QU-W te and others are struggling with
About the town. These Caere have been severe but not nar- tlcularly criUcal.
Joe ^ r n e t and bis "Troubadours” are ^vlng Friday evening dances at
round ands q ^ re ^ c e a are featured.Select-men and firemen and friends are to-
r i t ^ to attend a demonstration to R*“ "lville. Friday eve?
r tn fir F’alt. en-representative of the ^ ^ o r d Fire Apparatus. Springfield,
Maps showing the layout of the p r i s e d continuation of the Noi?S
«»t*ndlng totofs receivedUils WMk and are on file ,a t the town clerk's offiat.
8<^ooIs of the town had a one resslon day ’Hiursday. on acco iit
tor*ln’‘3,'e‘’* ^ te S ‘'*Mre. Albert W. Hlldlng entertaln-
Afternoon Bridge club at_her home Tuesday afternoon. Two tables were in play aa “•ual, Mrs. Mark Rllis plarinr as
m S B in. ^ • “ ««<»•W P'*"*' **ra Rob-R- second. Refresh-
Paach pis, ice
^ rnfist next time with H n . Joho Palmer“ cetlng of SL Peter’s
O em rtey Improvement AseociaUon n i l ^ ??*** A* *b* borne of W. Clifford Robinson, Monday, January 18.
®,P »• FlrsL to bear tbe reports of the offieera; second, to elect offlrers for the coming year; third, to transaact any business that maycome before said meeting.
A m e e ^ of tbe effirere of tbe
of thetourlefte empire, and I __
Nobody win ever k n o w ___knely I waa then. Oh how miaer- ah!#*
“I Mved through iL of oourae. I grew up and by and by I want to the natvanrity. But tha t waaa’t real. Ilka Um naval adwaL They rantad a Mg apartment fbr me. and I had a valet aad a aMtetanr, and tkera was ahaaya that tnvla- ihla wan between are aad tha other atudasts. Thag w en SU pre- pariBf far thatr cateeea—this ooa
to ba a lawyer end
Tima win hsa| the deepret searing. Though a scar doth yet remain;
Chastened love is sver dreaming That love’s stag msy sing sssin
r . J . BUZZEOX,160 Henry SL.Manefasster, Conn.
•S'MBKIN’ FISH CAUGHT
r,
F h t- (A P ) - A 33S-p0UBd Mastums Laaeaelatiis was V A seaman flMdng in tha Gulf atrsaaa nsar bare. I t w as'tbe fifth M its eariaty to ba caught la Fieri
Hebron Cbriatlan Endeavor aodaty was held Tuesday evaalng M t t a ' bOM of tha preeldeuL Mra. WUUam Oewn. Plans wars taUtod ever for the coming year, but no deflnlta acUon was taksn, several queetloas, including election of offieera for the coming year batog held over for further censidefetiOH.
Mjmen S trickland, young pupil a t Hebron Green primary room, waa struck to the head by a stone thrown by a plajrmate a t recess Wedneaday aftemoon, recaiviBg a laah whhfii raqulrsd treatment by aphysiclaB. Mra. Chariaa P. Miner, a trained nurse, wbo waa taking care of a case near the school
ave first aid. Small boys--------lere are altogather too free
with stone throwing. They have brtaen windows aad alaetrlc tight Aulba or tojuied guida boarda la ■everal taataaees. They usually run aaray when anjrone approaches to reroonatrato. aad It ia diffleidt to tell Just who tha offender o r offend- •re are. These boys ptniiabty do i» t mean aay bana, they are simply thoughUeas and untralnad, A H tSe pMics aupervisian would do them good. Their parents also ought to taka them to hand, but they probably do not know what their yomrew sters are doing.
Mias Marla Jenea. <|a<«hUr ef Mr. aad Mrs. Ctoadebaaw alaetod cM taki of the Friah5 S . *AWA WtodhareBOgh aebaoi. whara aha to a ata-Blgh acbooi, dawL
Tka Tsung Faantofla of a t Patac's g p ire^ a l
Ml boras to West Hartford. He'was born in this tosm and lived a t the Grant homestead in South Windsor until be went to New Rochelle, N. Y., several years ago. He leaves his vife, Christine Belden GranL three daughters. Dorothy, Betty, and Virginia Grant, of West Hartford and a alater, Mrs. Maud G .Hovarth of Provideace, R. I., and a brother Rodger Grant of West Hartford. Tlie funeral vraa held a t the Pratt Funeral Home. Hartford, Tuesday with burial in Eaat Windaor Hill.
The following are the new officers of tbe South Wlndeor First Congre- gaUonal church: Harold M. Newberry, president; clerk, Mrs. Frank Bidwell; treaaurer, HoUla CJhurch Peter E. Bosen waa appointed act tng treaaurer during the Ulneas of the treasurer, Hollis Church. Mrs. Elmer Stoughton, assistant treasurer; Sunday school superintendent. Rev. Harry B. Martin; deacon for four yefu's, George O. Case; church committee, Mrs. Marshall Bidwell Mra. Ralph M. GranL Mra. A. C. Johnson, and LInwood Elmore; in vtatment committee, Robert A Boardman; finance committee, -Un wood Elmore.
“Contact" ^ glassts were to vented to 1837 by a man named Herachsl, who cast them from gelattos negatlva.
TOWN ADVERYISEMENT TAX c o u m o i n
NOTHX OF SALEIn pursuance to the provlalona of
the ( S ^ r a l Statutes of the State of nectliConnecticut and tax warrants
properly tamed to me as Tax Collector by the Town ef Manchester, you are hereby notifled that L Samuel Nelson. Jr„ ’Tax CoUector for the Town of Manchester. Conn., will sell a t public auction enough or all of the fouewtog proper ty bekmgtng to R. Irene Hippe, fOrmerlv of Manchester, Conn., to pay taxea due to the Town of Manebeater;
A esrtato tract or parcsl of land situated to the Town of Manebes- tc Cotmty cf Hartford aad State of Connecticut known aad rtesrrihetl aa Lot No. 1S3 of t te Tract known aa “PtoehuraL” a m ^ or plan of which tract Is now on file in tbs office of the Town Clerk of said Town of Manchester, reference to arhidi is hereby saade for further description.
Tha above aals is to bs mads ter the purpose of paying taxea, interest thereon and uther legal charges. Said taxes were levied by tba Town of Msnefaester agiatoat tha abova BMhtieoed ta^w yar aa teUewa:List of Octobar 1. 1980..........g 9J9List of October 1, 1981............. 10.89H at of Octobar L 1983...........lOAOList of Octobar 1, 1988........... 104(8List ef October 1, 1984 .,.,;., 11.97H at of Octobar L 1988........... 9.48
this year.A permit has been Issued for in
terior and exterior alterations to the four-family tenement a t Wells aad 'Vine streets, owned by Lukaas Ptes- ciuk, a t an estimated coat of $1,800. Tbe work will be done by Ignats
Appreciation of the social aspects of the general problem and Its complexity waa clearly Indicated. The belief that regulatory maasurea, tending to abut tba door on certain traffic basards “before the horse gets out of tbe stall” would yieldm e worn win oe oone oy Ignats i geu out oi me stau would yield
Berzenski and will include inatalla- I greater safety on the road, waa fre- tlon of new supports, addition of • o '»rH v nnt*A aian front and side porches and general renovating. •
quently noted and alao the opinion that the public does not as yet appreciate the need for mch messurea.
One small town official would prosecute pedestrians who pisca themselves in dangerous situations,
I and gt tha same time looks upon tooIN STARS, TUNES, DANCES veMcles u ’’sigiiemore tommyrot”.
' Even among a group of operators whose experience averaged thirty-
"BORN TO D A N C r TOPS
e , n All A , 1. a , A experience averaged tnirty-S te lla r A ttra c tio n a t th e S ta te I two years of driving was the variety
T h e a te r Today, T om orrow opinion noticed. This group of. . d & l . r d . y , 3 t . n S T S J L S J S SPowell. . of driving were In agreement only
-------- I to their belief that periodical re-”Bom To Dance”, current attrac- examination of operators aad a
tlon at the State theater, Is tbe sea-1 raise to the legal age limit of Ucena- son’a most lavish pot-pourri of music I Ing of drivers to elj^teen years and dancing. The new musical ex- might make for aafer motor traffic, travaganza presents the djmamic Amon^ driving ------------ , --------------- _________I --------- ------- > habits recom-Eleanor Powell as a star aad Just mended by these experienced opera- about runs the entire gamut of I tors were: “never drive more than rhythm. forty miles an hour a t night”, ”ad-
In all, there are more than 390 Just speed a t all times to eondl- dancers aad more than 200 Inatru-1 tlona”, “teat brakes a t least four mantalista and singers in tMs new times a year.’ e ir iiec t the ’worst’ production with music and Ijrrlcs by Lhe part of(^ thycars on tbe road Cole Porter, for several eeaaons I Lry to ooiHiMiMte for IL” Broadway’s No. 1 tunester and ly-| Das driver oommeata ’’some driv- ricisL I era are perennial hogs, others are
Mias Powell, whose versatlUty aad conslatent fools, aad all of ua are a ipealing personality wop bar star-1IRH* bit of one or tbe other once toappealing personality wop bar star-1IRH* bit of one or tbe other once to
dom In a single picture, “Broadway I * wlfUe”. Another driver thinks one Melody of 1936", Introduces fourteen ‘>Pe«’»to»' every eight should be DAH.fiA. dance steps In one I allowed to use only cars fitted with
... ■ speed governors, and one man vroulds*m m-B-mmisinnumber she d ^ a m ^ley of six dlf-1 •!••••* ffovernors, and one man would ferent types of dsndng in as -nAwy re-examine about the same numberminutes. She even leads a 78-plecs I ,, , ,- I While many replies lea'vs the aolu-bar
thesad
minutes.band with taps and makes twinkling toes compete with drummer's most expert rolls beats.
In addition one dance group of 110 men does a fast tempo routine wMch embracee the shuffle, truck- to’, anakehipe, waltz, waltz clog.
eraaasv av suPM 40«bT« ***“” auiu*tlon of traffic and safety probipma to the policy of “there ougbt to be a law against it”, aoany more replies going Into detail atreased ’‘engineering” and ‘planning” as ssssntlal. Especially waa the belief to thla latter method noticed in matters of traffic congestion, headlight glare.the strut, fast and Mow bG^k AidM ^
wing. mlUtary Up, tbe dreg, fox ^ provision for pedestrianA towyer writes that no continued
A decTWue of meddoaU ihfty b« «3C-
S tfv - Sforcement can to eonsiatenUy bIh r “ •'*'•*• rigid and Impersonal. A number
L "ffIo n t Ray-1 were of the opinion that young per- "x"* ••■lly acquire the at- Buddy Ebsen. Roy Del Ruth scores I tltuds of mind necessary to develop-. 4-K ^ I .— ----- . .with a tin t-ra te Job of dlreeUon.
The accompan^ng feature today,!nd ^ u ■ - - I
ing haMU of good d r iv ^ .tomorrow and Saturday featurra I PatrieU ElUa aad Mickey Rooney to “Down tbe Stretch.” '
TOWN ADVERTISEIIENT TAX COLLECTOR’S
NOnCEOFSALE
TOWN ADVEXnSEIIENr TAX COLLECTOR’S
NOTICE OF SALEIn pursuance to the provtsiens of
the General SUtutes of the SUte of Connectleut and tax warranto prop-
• _ , [“vly Issued to me as Tr Collectorto pureuMwi to the provlalona of by tbe Town of Manchester, you are
®**to hereby notified that I. SamuM Nel- A *** warranto son, Jr., Tax Collector tor tbe Towo
l^ p e rly as ‘Tax Col-1 of Manchester, Conn., will sell atManchester. I public aucUon enough or all of theyou are hereby notifled that L Sam
uel Nelson, Jr.. Tax CoUector for the Town of Manchester, Conn., wUI seU a t pubUc auction enough or aU of the foUowIng property belonsing Lp Marie Hlppe, formerly of Man
foUowtng property belonging te EiRnk Goetii Batote, formerly oi Manchester, Conn., to pay taxes due to the Town of Manchester:
A certain tract or parcel of •Ituated In the Town of Manchester1 -------: in me i-owD OF Msncbes
Connecticut located and describee
Auction--------- sale win tak* toaeeU o n te . Mamb A M tT .'jL D t a tTan-Tblrty a. u . a t tlia Town BaU
Mwidweter. Oofui.>- Oatad I t M snrhsatss. O nto. 0««»«utk Anj of Dseawikw, 1998,A. D.
•AMXm. NELBON, JR>
A Mvtftln trftct or pftreel of Iftsdlfta follows: Northerly bv HIIUak ®* .**"•*»•««. StreeL 70 feet: Easterly 1^ landM
<rf T h e Herald Printing toSoanv O o n n ec^L known and described 161J) feet; Southerly oy land o f ^ ‘ » kiHmm Carlyle Johnson c S n ^ T i o f ^ ;id ““<1 Westeriy by land of The Car-
In the I lyle Johnson Company. 160A fssL ^ the T ^ a e r k of saM Being the same ik S c o n v ^ to T o ^ ^ c b e s t e n reference to Frank Goeto by Norman Loomta,
****^^-. F i l l e r by deed dated June lUh, 1904, Re-^ same iMd corded to the Manchester Land Rec-
m v e y ta to Marie L Hippe and Er- orda, VoL 86. Page 186Hippe by Edward J. HoU. oy •P topcleef Sale,
n o o r t a d ^ ^ t e m b j w 9 ^ 198A j The above sale la to he made for Die Msnehestar Land I the purpoee of paying taxea, ir’ -rest
****"”**’ ***** ***• I thereon and other legal ehaigea.The ehn^!TSr* i**»*^I^ a- . I ***•• l«vled by the TownHie above sale Is to ba made for of Manebeater against the above•puipoae of puyinc ?• »*•. tatarest I mentiooed taxpayer as foUows:
-®**y»**-lH** ®* October 1. 1938..........$83.78^® *u |H st of October 1, 1939........ . 81 JOof Manchester agatoat the abova
mentioned taxpayer as foUowa:W of October 1, 1990...........9U J4U st of October L 1 9 tt.............1809U st of (October l , 1994.......... 1*J7List of Octobar 1, 1998.......... 11A8
Aucttan Mia wfll 'ta k e ptoea on U c o ^ . M arta '9, 1897. A. O , a t TM-Tblrty 'a m. a t tbe Town Weii to Maachaater, Osm,
Dated a t Manctiaator. rv— , *hte Uilrtleth day of Daeember. 1999,A. Dr
SAMUEL NELSON. JR„Tax CbOactar.
List of Oetotaer 1, 1930.......... 86,47U st of October 1. 1981......... 86.47List of October 1. 1933......... 88.61U st of October 1. 1988......... 88 60U st of October 1 . 1984 ......... 42.48U st of October 1. 1938........... 80A3
Ttmm aad n o n af Sale.AoeOcn sola wiU take place on
M ^ . Marta A 1987. t T T . at Ten-Thirty O’dock a - m at the T O ^ ^ to MaadMOter. OonA
"L **M»cheater. O nn.. this ttlrtte th day ef December, 1988,
SAMUEL NELtlOM. J& ,Tax
L O C A L T R A D E U P S E T S H A R T F O R D R IV A L S . 3 3 -2 4 -------- ---- ----______ _______ ____ ___ _
Suffer Second Reverital In Seven Games To Date
Coach, Captain and Forivards Of M, H. S, Cage Quintet
Take Lead a t Outset Falter b Second and Tkird Perknlt to A lborb Defeat; Seconds Lose Overtm ir, P b y Rodm D e Tomorrow.
Hartford Trade’s three-year quest te r a baaketbaU victory over Manebeater Trade came to a sue- oesiful cenolusita yesterday afternoon when the O pitol (31ty quintet upeet the loeal Mechanics a t Hartford by a score of 33 to 34, tlu aeo end reversal to oeven starts tor the Seboberite* and the first from Hartford since 1984.
Trail a t Halftime.Mantaeoter eutsoored Ita rival by
sllgfat margtoa to tbe first and last period but faltered badly to second and third quarters to provide Hartford with tbe opportumty to pile up a goodly m a r ^ that rekuitad to ultimate triumph. 'The local Tted are Jumped Into a 7-8 lead to the getaway period but Hartford put on a furious spurt to forge to the front by 16 to 18 a t halftime. rhta advantage -vas toereaaed to 38-19 in tba third period and then Hartfurd dav6ted itaelf to defense oiay to atom the desperate attempts of the Behoberttes to close the gap.
, SaivA Knipa and Gayron paced Hartford'a attack, wbUe Kurlowicz and WyUe featured for Manebeater. Chiater got a bad poke to tbe eye to tbe opening period and the injury bothered him oonslderebty during tbe rest of the game.
Maet BockvUIe NexLA three-minute overtime was nec-
aosaiy to sattia tbe Issue to the pre- Hmtoary contest, ihe Hartford Re serves ocmtog through with a 31- 19 dectoton after the score had been deadlocked a t 18-aiU during the regulation playing time. Kacsorow- •kl featured for the winners and HU- toskl, ZeppA Be ker and 'Parchlak divided honors te r Manchester.
Tbe local Macbanica travel to Rockville tomorrow night to take on RockviUa HIgb to a ‘ pair of gamcA Moncheater achieved a 83 to 36 victory a t the Bast Side Rec recently and la determlnsd to dupU cate the feat toay>rrow nigh t In spite of the fact that tbe locals have nsvar been able to beat Rock vir on Its home floor. Mancheeter has always been able to repel the Windy Cltyltes here but It's an en tlrely different Story on the latter’s court
Hartford Trade (88).
SIX QUINTS ENTER HIGH SCHOOL LOOP
FreshniaihSoplioiiiore C^^ ^ Opens Tonight a t the East Side Rec Gym.
p B F T1 Oayson, If ........ . . 3 0-0 t0 Qumlnlak, If . . . . . 0 0-0 08 SalVA rf .......... . . 4 8-4 113 Kostek. rf ........ . . 0 0-0 0IJadUA c ............ . . 3 2-5 60 Peluso, Ig ........ . . 0 1-1 10 Jatochill, Ig . . . . . . 0 0-0 00 Krupa, rg ........ . . 4 1-1 90 (Jwllka, rg . . . . •• Ofc 0-0 07 1 8 ^ 7-11 88
Maaehester Trade (34).1 (Juster, rf ........ . . 0 0-0 01 Boyko, r f .......... . . 8 0-0 63 KurlowicA If, c . . 4 1-1 91 Anderson, c , . . . . . 0 0-3 01 Panaluk, rg . . . . . 0 0-0 03 WyHe. Ig .......... . . 8 8-5 96 10 4-8 34
188
Hartford ................8Manchester . . . . . . 7
Score a t halftinM, 16-18, ford, iteferee, BlaacU.
Time, 8 minute quaiferA
8— 389— 24 Hart-
Hartford Seeands (31).P B F T1 Klimaa, rf ............ 0 1-1 10 Dyolnchuk, If . . . . 0 0-0 01 Hauser, If ............ 0 0-1 01 Banes, 0 .............. 1 0-1 3'1 Kaczorowskl, c . . . 6 0-1 101 Oriseviteb, . rg . . . 1 0-1 30 Jatochill, rg ........ 0 0-0 00 Dsiadyk, I g .......... 3 2-3 61 CwUkA I g ............ 0 0-1 06 9 8-8 31
Maarkseter Snda (19).3 HUtooU, rf .......... 3 0-1 ' 43 Zeppo, U .............. 3 0-1 40 Porterfield, i f ___ 1 0-0 23 Becker, c .............. 3 0-0 40 Regette. rg .......... 0 0-0 00 Badatuebner, rg . . 0 0-0 03 Pavchtak, I g ........ 3 1-5 50 PasytulA Ig ........ 0 8-0 08 9 1-7 19
A freahmen-oophouore leagua to develop pUyera te r Manchester High basketball gets imdsrway a t the East Side Rec tonight with six teams scheduled for action to throe ffamsA The leagw to coached by WUfrad J, Oarke, fUd one White mentor. Hia first game will sta rt a t 7 o’etoek between Alabama aad Notre Dame, the saoond brings to- cether N. Y. U. and ta la and the nightcap features Duke aad Pitt, these being tbe namea taken by tha teams. No admisii«n will ba oharg. ed and local fans are tovttad to a ttend.
The personnel t f tbe teame to aa foUows:
Alabama—N. Kilpatrick, D. H iat- ly. J. Blanchard. E. CtoriiU, Katth, r IdToa.
t* i*—L. Harrto, D. Schwartd, A. Dupont, C. BaulL Odermaa, Flts- gerald.
Notre Dame—R. DoggaiL J. Benson, W. (Jotter, J. H'llttoe, H. (3nan, A. Hutchinson.
Duke—W. Murray, R. Robarts, J. Lautenbach, M. Annieblo, Jordan, J. Alvord.
N. Y. O.—R. Davldaoa, W. Ted- ford, W. Dungan, J. Sapiensa, JUl son, Agard.
P itt—M. Oorrentl, G. Ageste- nelll, T. lulliano, W. Forde, A. Roberts, D. Dougan.
The rest of the first round sebed- ule follows:
Jaanary 81Notre Dame vs. Pitt.Yale VA DukAAlabama va N. T. U.
Jaanary 38N. Y. U. VA PIU.Alabama va Yale.Notre Dame va Duke.
February 4Alabama va. PltLN. Y. U. vs. Duke.Notre Dame va. .ale.
February 11Notre Dame vs. N. Y. U.Yale vs. PltLAlabama va OukA
METHODIST MEN GAIN Y iaO R Y ON ALLEYS
T urn Back RockTiDfi R ivals by D ecisive M arg in to Even Up Bowling ie rie ti.
n a tch to Rockville
la a special bowling match a t the Y. M. C. A. alleya last ntgbL the Men’s Qub of the South Methodist church defeated the Rockville Methodist church men b / a dactrive margin. Thla was the second match of a thraa-gama sartoA Mahehsster lost tha t e t sevaral wsaks ago.
For Mancheeter, Win ton bit high stogie of 180 and Netoon bit 837 for high 8-etrtog. Nstoon Tyler hit high single tor the evening and alao high 8-etrtog. Tbe third mateb will i<e bowled on noutral alleya
Bentk MethodtotC u rra n ...............- 118 103 99—314Haugh ................. 101 107 100—308Mercer ................. lOO 98 110—309Nelson ................. 96 M9 113—337B a n k s .................. 93 M 94—376Wlnton ................ 130 *90 101—831
TRADE WINDS STIR UP BASEBALL OFF-SEASON
Rmnors of Three Potiible Player Deals Arouse Hot Stove League; Van Mungo and Newsom Involved; Giants Seek a R e ^ e r .
New York, Jon. 14.—(AP)—imports of three '^ MStblC base ball player deals went the rounds today, thereby aavtog thU eepeciaUy dull hot stove season from taking a dive Into ite own cracker barrel tor want of something to talk abouL
The trade talk, such as it Is. revived the talk that:
1—Van Ungle Mungo will from the Brooklyn Dodgsn to (Jbicago Cuba’ nftehlnsr etaff. *
METHODISTS EDGED IN 0VER1TME TUT
MIDDLETOWN HOOPS’ GAIN A 32 TO 26 VICTOR GIRLS NOSE OUTI BOX S C O ^
Win Vittner’s Basket (dves Talcottville 24-22 Win; Results of Other Games.
ts:!blcago Cuba’ pitching staff.3—Buck Newsom to headed away
Bher Mcorhoose Dtak Oobb
Hare’s Coach Wilfred J. Clarke and three of tha Red and White cage stalwarts whom he counts on to halt Meriden High's victory march a t the local State Armory tomorrow nlghL (toptato Jimmy Horvath, a fine guard, ia tha one mem
ber tf the team who graduatea thismonth and has but three more games to play. Moorhouse and CJobb pair up In ths forward bertha and both are expected to be leading factors In tomorrow night's sU-lm' portant encounter.
EXPECT BANNER CROWD AT HIGH-MERIDEN TILT
Qose to 2,000 Fans* Likely to Jam Armory Here to Capacity for Scholastic Cage dash Tomorrow; Clarkemen Are ConfidenL
632 608 616 1891 ’ BoekvIUe HeUMdtot
A p e l.................... 101 89 86—372N. T y le r ................ 96 101 188—839B. Beebe.............. 133 93 89—804B darards............. 100 108 98—398Bow ers................ 108 90 79—389T y le r ...................... 88 99 J09—299
8—311—19
Hartford ............4ICftadiMtei; ••••3
BocM a t bamime, io-i, »**--^n* ter. Referee, irissrll
Time, sto mtouto quarters Me three-minute overtliiie
HOCKEY
^ . 9k ^rtogflald 9.ProvliteBos 8k OaVsiand 9.
Minneapolto 8, - iimmi a t y L T O N l o a n BUnBOCLB
NatteMl League Chicago a t llaatiaa l tU neoADetroit a t M. T. ~
Mo
Kaaaas O ty a t Mtoaeapolto. BCItoU t *-----
609 663 983 1793South
Gin .................... 91 108 94—398Olbson ................ 109 71 99—376McLean .............. 118 91 97—801R obb ................... 102 97 101—300M cKinney.......... 93 96 100—388Hewitt .................. 98 80 . . —173L arrab ee ............................ 80— 80
897 889 871 1706 Beekvilla MetheBtot
U sh e r .................. 97 93 67—936L am bert.............. 99 89 77—983Waber ................. 99 99 81—361M etcalf............... 78 80Edwards .............. 79 80K roym sa............ 99 99 1()|8t497
490 BIB 809 U U
Laet NighFg FighteNew Tctk—Tedito TariMK 189.
irfb, ontpetated M ty Krla-Plttahurgk, ontpelBi |c r . 198t BraoMya. (10).
New Hava ~ n o H , abm ed 199. New TortL (8).
Oarkatotoi. W. Va— lrita Tutaer. 189. RtefeaMad. Va , aad tbe Atahaato Sldk 199k Dovw. Okto, draw UO).
Arrangementa are bplag made to handle a capacity crowd a t the State Armory tomorrow night sriien Manchester High tangles with Meriden High In on oll-tmportant C C. L L. cage encounter. I t to expected that cloaa to 9,000 fana will Jam their way-Into the spacious Main street drill shed and an attem pt to being made to provide aeate for aa many as posribie.
b v a B stia Btaaehwa In addltton to tha regular blaaeh-
e n OB the north and south aldee of the Armory, extra blaacbera will be Installed a t both enda Even aa, It will probably be impocalble to
a great record and gained tbe finals of the state tournamenL
Huge crowds of local fans have followed tbe team In every game played this season and they’ll be on band In full force tomorrow In the bopaa that Manebeater will up- aet the unbeaten Meriden invmdera, holders of the atate and New Ehig- land championships and preaent laadera of the C. C. L U with eight straight victories. There's also much interest In tha appearand of Al “Horae” Klasoskus, stellar Meriden forward, wbo to rated by many as the best indlvidusl performer In the state.
impocal^ v id e sta te for a v s r y b ^ aad it’ll
eaat of first coma first atevad. Tbara arill bs ao rsasrvsd aaate aadno advance In prices for the game. Interest In sebotostie basketball seems to be on Ite way bock to tbe beigbte enjoyed during the 1990-81 ■aason. wbaa Manchester oompitod
Players Confident Manchester has been working
out d a ^ a t the Armory and Coach W. J. Clarke reports tha t bis play- era are primed for this tUt with Meriden. Tbe team to datermlncd to give Its beat efforts In tba a ttempt to halt tbe vlslton and are quietly confident of their ability to emerge on the long end of the eoore. The preltmGiary to set for 7:30 o’clock with the main game a t 8:80 or thereabouts, followed by dancing.
LOUD OOLOB8 IN A. A.
Chicago, Jan. 18.—American Aa- soctatlon baseball uniforms will speak ter tbemselvee nest year, (jolors of various team suite will be maroon, black, green, orangA red, aky blue, and aoarleL
Moriarty Girls Clean Up In League Bowling Match
Turning In one of their beat team s performances of the oeasoo, theMoriarty Girts swamped tba Catholic Daughters In a Orsater H art-terd Laagus match a t tba Morgan alleys ia Hartford loot.night, rawitig all three prints as every member of the team roUad better 800. 71m shutout victory gave Uw i«e«i. ^ record ef 99 wins and 19 losses to IjWt thsm very doss to Iks lissfus
I t was ths fourth straight triumph tar ths Morlaitv ptaasra la tbs ssoond round of oompriltloa aad their n th wta la 19 “*~*rhea to
Tha loeal girls are p*«—«>» to sBtar tba "■***■** to am u isa t a t Nottelk, Vfli, thto year aad thsir fiBcm last Bight ssaasa to that thsyTl ba a Isadtag eoatsodar to the avaat if thsgr thsir
Jsnala Schubert bit high aiagle of 118 aad Mae Sherman rolled high triple of 818. The locals won every game of tbe match by a dectotve marfln. th d r rivals falUng to hit 600 la aay ganw. The scores:
Moriarty Girls (g)Bksnnan ............... 118 ii4 01—818Strong .................. 103 100 101—804N dera .................. 99 107 118—819Pattoa ............ .. .1 1 8 100 94—809Schubert ............... 99 108 118—811
w nuff . . . Rowiaad Rourka . O’Brlea . (Jtoele . .
819 524 515 1568 a Ok sf A (9)
............... 109 09 108—919
................ 94 95 93—284• •-•.kik*' 89 98 88—375 . . . . . 1 . . . 88 87 99—374 ............... 99 98 118—811
/479 490 499 2487
from Waahlngtoa, toward DetroiL3—The Giants will land a catcher
from ClndnnaU.For a while ft looked oa If tha
Boston Red Sox might lure Mooes Soltere from BL Louie or JOe Vos- mlk from Clevdand. However, Tom Yawkey put ths damper oa such goings-on yesterday by aa- plalQlng ha baa learned the “for sole” sign was definitely In moth- balla ao far as these two are eoa- cerned.
Onto Want Voa MaagoThe Mungo-to-Chleago rumors
have been turned on and off like a faucet almost since last season wound up. Recently there waa talk tha (Juba would get him, Brooklyn’s classy third baseman Joe fltripp. and Pitcher Paul Oerringtr of the Rads in some aort of three-ooniered trading.
Thto, however, turned out to be too big a prtmoeitlM for Chicago to swing. But Manager (Jharlle Grimm fMls the addition of the temperamental Are bailer may mean a pennant next fall, and says be’e atlU trying to land Mungo.
Ehrer since Newsom let off steam against tbe Senators In the public prints some weeks ago, he to a^d to be persona non grata with Washington Mg-wlgA That waa the starting point te r reporte be would do his pitching somewbera else this year.
Mickey (Jochrane put In a bid for him at the big league meetings last month, and even tbougb ba was turned down then, tba Tiger pilot Is still anxious to have a 17-game winner like Newsom around.
And “Old Fox” (Jtark Griffith of tbe Nate isn’t one to say no sale to an attractive offer.
Olaato Need OsteherThe giants are In dire need of
another catetaer. They can't expect Gus Mancuso to do again tha workhorse act of last season. Tbe Rede have a corner on the catching market a t the moment, with Ihnle Lombardi, Spud Davto and GUly (Jampben on hand. BUI Tarry baa been bussing around Cincinnati Ilka a bee around honey, but tba Reds want more than be wiU put up. They have their eyes particularly on Outfielder Hank Lsiber, but Terry needs Haak te r *87.
Bill, however, to stUl trying to swing a deal, for ha rsaliaes that another capable receiver will Just shout leave thia CHsate aet for tha coming rikTA
Up and ooming Talcottvine turned la aaother tmpreasiva vietory In Hie Y. M. C. A. Senior Leagua last night by nosing out ths South Msth- odtoU la a '34 to 33 court aiaaler that proved ths best game of tbe nlghL The aoore was tied a t 3S-aU a t the and of tbe regular playtna time and WIU Vlttnar’s hoop to the extra period provided Talcottville with Its wtoning margin. Fish, S Goads and Tuttle featured to the nlri aad tuck oontasL
Tba pace-aetttog Ramblan obalk- 4d up an easy triumph over tha Oxfords to ths ascoad gams of the avs- nlng, 30-33. Laalre, Anderson aad Quartus starred, ‘rbe nightcap oaw ths Arrows trim Highland Park to a rough and tumble affair that elossly rassmblsd footboU, 80 to 19 Rubaoba took ocortog honora ter the winners and Baatly aad Nlehoto atood out for the loaars.
Box BoOrea:Tsloottvine (34)
P- B.0 T. Lotas, If ...... .......... 30 TutUs, I f ......................s1 8. Gosdz, c ....... , . . . . 80 WeUsA c ......................08 Z. (3osds, r g ............. \1 Vlttnsr, I g .................2
F.1-80-00-01-10-30-0
11 3-8Boutli Methodist (S3)
a F.
34
1 O. Smith, r t . 0 N. BnUth, If .. 0 F U h ,c 0 Richmond, rg 8 F nslar, Ig .
. . .3
. . .3
. ..4
. . .3
. . .0
1-21-40-00-00-0
10 3-8 33Score a t half, 18-18. Referee Ken
nedy.
iOtlEGER DEFEATED BY TEDDY YAROSZ
Pittabiirgh Puncher It De- dshre Victor in lO-Round Middleweight BouL
New York. Jan. 14__(AP)—Outof a marry-go-rotmd muddle came the mtddlewright division’s battle
isa today, srith a pair of ax- ehamplons, Babe Rhuo and Teddy Taroes, as the ranking challengers for Freddy Steele’s crown.
Risko, wbo lost .the title to the Tacoma slugger laat yaax, already
■ been given the number one ohoL Taroos, eomebacklng after an
ration which straightened out trick knee, took rank Just behind the SjrracuM - puncher last
night by decisively whipping New Tork’s Solly Krieger ‘n s ten-round- «r a t tbe HIppodromA
Aa plana were laid today, Risko wlU meet the ebampkm to t return title engagement over the 18-rounu route to Madison Square Garden on F eb rua^ 19, now tbe Pacific coast ohampkm baa agreed to termA
The winner wUl, to all probability, tangle with Ystocs either be- teru the Indoor season winds up or early in the outdoor campaign.
I t e Pitteburgh punebar, sbowtog Bc signs ef tba ailing lag that slow- ad him up whan ba dropped hla ehampionslilp to .Uolu,, used a text left band and a big odga to ring itaeralohip to trounce Krlag«’.
Krieger put up a good Mugging battle, but oouldn’t bold a candle to the boxing ahlBty Taraee ditpiayed. Tbs Aeew ifited ftoee aoore card ■bowed ToretB on tq> to aevan of tha tax lenxdB. with tka fifth rated aa Kriagar’a bea t In that b ea t Isroax canM elooa to gotog down
a oouat wkaa ha walked fluxh tetx X aeM righ t 19 Uw JMW.
p.0 Anderson, If . 2 Sheldon, rf . . 0 Lanky, c . . . . 0 Daigle, Ig . . . . 8 T. Donahue, o0 Burke, rg1 F. Donahue, ig ,0 Ctuartus, rg . ,, 0 Reid, I g ..........
i:-1 VIttoer, rt . . . 1 Yankowskl, If 1 Rowiell, e . . . . 1 YamaltU, c ., 8 RubochA rg . 1 LUs, I g ..........
* («0) B. F. T.
___5 0-0 10rie a s • * 0-0 4. . . .1 0-2 3. . . . 0 1-1 1. . . . 0 0-1 0. . . , 0 0-0 0. . . . 0 0-0 0. . . .4 1-1 9---- 3 0-0 4...
14 3-5 80( « )
B. F. T.___4 0-0 8___0 1-1 1. . . .4 1-3 9. . . .1 0-0 3. . . .1 0-8’ 3. . . . 0 0-0 0
• II 1 1 ^10 3-7 33
Middletown (98)a F.
Brink, rg ................ . 4 3-3Spinney, Ig .............. . 1 8 8Colwlck, c ................ . 1 0-0Peekhom. c .............. . 0 0-0MCler, c ............ . 1 0-0-.nier, rf ............... . 4 0-0Foran, If ................. . 5 0-0
IS 3.3Maaehaetar (36)
B. F.DellaFerra, If ........ . 0 0-0Pchueu, rf .............. . 1 8 8Antonio, tf .............. . 0 0-0Sheldon, 0 ............. e U 0-0Fraser, Ig ................ . 0 0-0Biaaell, Ig ................ . 3 0-0SlamondA rg .......... . 8 3-8
IS 3-5
T.1033008
10
32
T.020
12048
Sharp Shootinf of* Brink and Miller too Much for Fire m Cape Thriller;Down Riralt hy 17 t r
36score a t half UmA 16-13, Speed-
boys Referee, "Cep’’
Lupten,LeemonMooUa
If If
rf
Duke IgY Keugb, rg
Merlariy Oirte (17)a F.
......... 0I • , , , , • 0> , , , , , , 1 >•••••, 1
1I, * • •, • 4
T.118339
Aelxx^nre
fleogtiagan, JeneA If • Holland, Ig AdamA e . . Prokop, rf IiwlA If GUbert If
rg
7( 11)
B.4010000
17
F.1000000
T.9030000
11Boors a t half Uiba T-6, Moriarty
Bn a Glrla. Referee, "Cap“ BieeelL
RAMBLERS TROUNCE THE INDIANS 6-3
p y iy Team T i^ e n t Held On Eastern Dmsion Lead m Ice Hockey Leafie.
Score a t half, lS-9, Ramblera. RefarsA Kennedy.
Arrows (90)a0 RnbacbA rg ........83 Tool I g ......................30 Bycbolekl, e ............. 33 VaUlant If ................ 01 (Jomber, r f .................. i0 Brookx. I f .................... 00 Y a a k o w ^ r f .............10 Snow, 1 i ......................0
F.0-98-60-0om0-00-00-00-0
s 13 6-9mgklaad Park (19)
0 Nlcboto, r f ............................. 8 X 8-13 Baatly, i f ............................... 4 i . j4 a Dougan. If 3 Ouatber, e . . .1 Adams, rg . . .3 C. Dougan, Ig 0 Lewto, Ig
80
.. .1
. . .1
. . .0
. . .0
. . .0
0-00-10-10-00-0
u 9 1-4 19Boors a t half, 13-7, Attowa Ref-
Kannedy.
SEEDED ENTRIES WIN DIXIE NET MATCHES
TempA m , Jan. 14.—(AP)—A match between Florida’e only first- tea pleyen topped a Dixie teante tournament card today with tbe sln- glee field reduced to the eight seeded eotries.
The match today between Arthur Hendrix of Lakeiand. ths nation's tenth raaktag player and (Jharlea HsitIa West Pabn Bsoch, rated eighth, waa put down as a tosa-up.
Bryan Grant, Atlanto’s “bull ter- nar ef tha haaeUnes." deployad agetost Baa- Frxaetoeo’a Wayne Sabin to today’s pckar riagtes teaL
Top-seeded Don Budge from Oek- Uad, rested after erutatog Randall Rcos of SL Petersburg, 6—2, 6—0.GranL who hopee to repe^ his re- eent Miami Btltasera triumph over
BobBudgA was preosed a bit Oetaar. of Miami but 4' 6 0 WWtflOte
Fraakte Parkor tecdi Varaoa Mat^ cum of Lakaiand to straight seto but had a Mt of a acuffls for a 8—3, 7—8 daolrien. Tha xuarter-flaalsm u k9 oatefteteU ------
New York, Jan. 14.—(AP)—The Philadelphia Rambisrs apparently meant buelnese when they turned over a new leaf for 1987 and daeld- ed to go plaoae to tha Internatloaal- Amertcan Hockey LeagUA
80 far, they've held their raeoiu- tlon so well that they have been nn- defaated to savan starts stooe 1987 supplanted ’86, and ara now r id l^ high, wlds and handsome a t tha bead a t tha league’s eastern dlvt- aioA
They p o s ^ their fourth atralght t n lghL ..............................win laat nlghL trampling thsir clos
est rivalA the Bprtogflald IndlanA 8—8 before a crowd of «5,000 on home Ice. U m vietory gave them a three-potot lead over the Indiana to tbe divialonsl racA
Starting off to high gear, tha Ramblers piled up a 6—0 lead to the first tiro pertodA At the etart of tba third, tha Indians' goaflA Benny GranL had his nose broken when be got to the way of s shot off Charlie Mason's stick.
This seemed to provide a spark to get the Sprtogflelds under ivay, for from that point on they took complete oommond on4 banged to three goals to tbe closlag seaatOA
In the nlgbfa only other game, the Providence Reds returned home after taro defaate on tbe road and whipped the lowly Cleveland Falcons 8-3. The win enabled the Reds to pick up a Uttle ground oa second- place Springfield In the eastern division, while boosting them away from tha idle New Haven Etegles, who were praastog for third placA
WRESTLINGBy ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mancheeter, N. H.—Deano O’Ma- ho n ^ , 380, Iralend, defaated Walter Diiaek, 318, Oiiiaha, (straight falta). ■“
Hartford, > Oonn.—George (JIark. 337, Scotland, defaated Irish Jack Donovan, 330, Boston, (straight falls).
Holyoke, Meee —KXyo .Ooverly, (Jalifornia, defaated Angelo Cls- toldi, Italy, (straight teUs).
Miami—Everett Marahall. 321, La JuntA Colo., dafeatad Johnny Plummer, 228, TampA FkL, (fuU Nelson, 11:19).
Moriarty BrotharF mnntox streak canM to end last night at tha State here when the. Middletomi boys hammered tha eubmlaalta to goto a 83 td uraph before a crowd ef ( who cheered themaelvae bo to DO avail as the sfa Foran, Brink and Miliar ed the local players aax teno'c.
Hard Lota Ox flhete. J K WM a "dog aa t dd|nSg$A |
the opening whIaUe with ‘ quarter ending t-9 In favor. But when tbe oec tame up* spectacular Buddy iv>raa and W arrau' swiftly sent the Speedkeys' tore end gave them x 29 to 1 gto a t balfttoM. Tba L. hard hick throngheut as only “Red” gbeldax find tbe beakeL TIomagain, ebots by the outfit boundad out of tk 9bring gteana from the lomij while Foran and Btlidi of to n dropped them from aU <
Tha tojaetiox of Earl the Merlariy Itoetv la period put aaw Ute tote the i he dropped two lairir mota 1 tba net to b ci^ tha ax Just batefo tba qoartar about two adautaaof tbai Um oouat waa 90 to 94. Al I ■put tba rim with tens axMsd a rally tftniMo A# AimJ(bn“ Oohriek put tba 1__ter Um Spaadboya with a : and tha final whlsUe after.
Foran lad lha aearini vadon m tb Svo t wihpd Brink and ICIDar td a d tuefi
avangodA-ispaadboya triumph 1 ■etbaek oultend from tha . quintet laat Thanksgfviflff the f ln : dateat ouffOred bgf' Hugh Orear'a ebatgoa hi four ( this season and tbe first riaa i
1988, rinee which t b ^ tbg ietooea tan tm a 1IUXI4; 0tTftftlClaat night’a eatertatoiag
Girts Wla PmThe iforlariy Glila
preaalve debut to Uu enooimter as they outclassed a much aiora'i Aatna Fire Olria 27 to L Meet of tba loeal 1 p a r t ia tb a i playing an Moriarty q u in t: a t halftlma but apurtod ia < lag perioda to more daolatva.
team toI aooclag with MIti I eutiiuadiaff lol lulat hrid u Am '
Racing NotiDufol Naadlay.
brought his unelFa to the laoaa giant sea ef went ftB OMTfttloiftnisbtog Udid to Staad Ooriato to tbe Stare ai hamUeap a t Arltogtea
Dtspite bis long
winning the Inaugural Hialeah Park for Hal lay. Tbe Ug five-year old, of the avimt lost year, poundA however, as the 93 pecked by Coequal' llshlng the old mark thrao ago.
MartbaU Field’s turned to a brlUiaat ftolataing a baa Tbe 1935 Balmont futorlto < bad not raced stooe the Tri handicap last May a t Belmeat!^ Under 116 pounds ba todti will ba mighty hard to baat sprint dlstanee this year.
Wbtle Whopper aod TtotaEiMB turning in sensaUcoal rarae^' Ml Pblppe* White (Jockade pr* ‘ appoinimeat a t Hialeah terday. Tbe 1986 Wlthoco 1 ner and eooqueror ef BrsvityJ race waa seratebad firomaugural and figured to have I allowenoa effslr a t hiidropped out of otatentlea first quarter of a mOe baC: back to ttolah third btated aad Chancing, wbteb laa hea t
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lanJES FOR SALE 4PANTS AND Uraa. Wa alao
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Manchester ^^ening Herald
C L A S S in E O '^ V E K T IS E M E N T S
ala avaraae waraa le a Ih aaaMia aad aaaravlatloa* _ « * , M a -m t aad aoBBoaae \ aa twa warda Mlalaiaai aeat la
larai iTatf«tas ear da» ear traaaiaat
aaaOTO ^ | ^ i!II dial 18 jeaem ear maralai laaaruaar I abaryad at tba aaa uaa rata lal raiaa ler laad larm aaarr jaartMiaa gira aeaa raeaaat i irdwad lac thraa at aia ttw I aafan tba tbira at dfta abareae -aiy car tba aa- T a( 1m tba a aaaaar- ties ai tba rata aaraaa aai laaa si rataada aaa ba mada Ids ateaaad attar tbs
iraM wui eat aa raawiaaiaia tbaa sea laearraat asartlos avcartlaaataat ardarad ear I aaa timeCaartaat oBiaaioa al laasr.I at adrartisiBS will aa
salt at saaealla'ies si tba aaa ear tba aaraiaa raadaraa ■ta masi saafara rat aad ttao«raabt wiia aatacase to tba saallab tbst taasrva tba rlcbl ta ar lajae* sat ssat aaa. cartHIMO Sutiwe Oaaainao ads laa d ------dto aiBst aa re*It Waloaa aoaa: datardats
TELEPHONE YOUR WANT ADS-
■a ascastso saai tna taiaaboaa CliiuUlS RATb airsa above roalaa . ta advartiaara sat ItATBS wUI D< aseapiaa aa AT1IBM1 U paid at taa aaai- ar batars tba aasaate . rtba deal laaaruoa al bd atbarwiaa tba jaAKUa arlU ba sallaetad Ha raapoaai far arrara la laMaboaad ada I aaaaoad aaa tbali aoearaer ba dwaraataad.INOBl OF
CLASSIFICATIONSd a a d d a b a a a a a a a a waS_• d d e b d b « d « a M * S K a w • • M• • • • A O S A O d S to d S B b bd ta C
a a a • • a d Sto • • • • • • • • • dWa D
Tteaka d d d d d W d d H d t ______d d d d e d d d S S d d to d d d d M B L
d d Ad d d d M d A W d d d d S d d d « M » dANO • d * d d • •
e e a d d e d d d d d d • • ddM
ilea toi data ..........laa toi dacaaoea rtaa—Tlrea riac—Paia'Jac •
ila at TnaobA U F A a • a e e a a e a • e d # drvlea dtoraea . . . . .laa Bierslaa .............aotoa—llotoretolas . . .■Taaalsaal aarvidsrvMsa USared . . . . .DM dar ioaa iNtarad . . . . . aatrastlBi*ei araa^,, . . . . . . « . « .OIraetora ............... .
-Plaablna—BaoBaes a a s s s v s s s s s a s d a a a a d d
rOrsssBiablBS . . . . . . .. . eaisa—d.urac*Paasaaasf dsmas . . . . . .f—PaaartBe . . . . . . . . . . . .pal darrlaaaf —Dm Iss—O eaalae i« . u o dsrvtea . . . . . .-duaiBss, a* visa . . . . . .
HELP WANTED— FEMALE
WANTED— GOOD lauudreea for family work. Inquire 16 Ridge Btreet.
WANTED — OIRL for general houaework. Telephone 7M1.
HELP WANTED—MALEMAN—TO BECOME cortact man and Inveatlgator for natkmal or- ganiaaUon. Bhtperlence unnecea- aary. Good appearance eaaentlal. No aelltng. Write 750-770 Madiaon Bldg., MUwankaa, Wla.
MEN, (2) WITH CARS tor local poaltlowA Baperlenee unneceasary; refereneea required. Phooe for appointment, Hartford 6-OSOO.
SITUATIONS WANTED— FEMALE S8
EXPSaUENCSID woman, would like to take care of email children, dfternoona, or evenlnga. 480 Eaat Middle TumplkeL
DOGS—BIROS—PETS 41FOR SAUB—FX7PPIE8, croc- bred
malea and femalea. Robert Rlch- ardaon, 203 Highland street. Phone SOSO.
SCOTTISH TERRIERS, wire haired terriera, Boaton terrtera. Pup-, plea and growu dogi. Reaaonabla prleea. Route 44, North Coventry. Mra. A. O. Benaon, ManaBeld Depot. Phone Manchester 8634.
P O ri.T K Y AND SUPPLIES «:tFINEST NATIVE quality roasting chlckena, brollera, 32e lb., dreeaed aad delivered. Cartoon A Son Poultry Farm. Telepboaa 4217.
FUEL AND FEED 49-AAGENT POR KOPPER’S CUKE. Oaah price $13.00 per ton. OoKe aold for caah only. L. T. Wood Company. 51 Btoaell atreet. Phone 44M.
EMERGENCY CALLS
POU('E
434SFIRESooth
4321N orth
S432
GARDEN—FARM - DAIRY PRODUCTS SO
BTRICnUT FRESH In Mancbaatar on Phone 4525, atoo dreeaed poultry.
Eddlvereddaya, S5c. toea aad
School Children Conduct Their Own Traffic Court
WANTED—TO BUY 58 Jan. 14.—(AP)— llie* liio school court meets everyHIGHEST PRICES paid for )unk and Uve poultry. Wm. Oatrlnaky. 50 Glenwood atreet. TeL 5879.
ROOMS WITHOUT BOARD
LARGE WARM aunny room, oU beat, bualneaa perauo preferred. Telephone Htfd. 6-Z220 ur Ma cheater 8584 after 7 p. m. -
BOARDERS WANTED 59-A
WOULD LIKE AN elderly person to board aad cara fOr. CaU 3196.
APARTMENTS—FLATS— TENEMENTS 63
TO RENT—0 ROOM FLAT $30; 6 room alngto $40; Mala'atreet atora with S room living quartera auit- abls for tailor, barber, plumber, ate., $45. Apply E<twara J. Holl, Tei. 4842.
Canter Safety She has the traSio situation well in hand at the Center achooL
Under a court plan worked out by Robert L. C are^ the principal, and the Connecticut Motor club, pupito vtoleting the rulee feel the heavy hand of the law.
For Instance, m k len bicycle riders are aentehced to bump around the rocky part of the playground at the acbooL
“Runners,”—children caught darting across the road—must trot around the school grounds untU weary, and the mlddleroad walkers have to trud^ back and forth between home and acboo. half dosan times a day.
The Center Safety Six under the captaincy of Robert Christie, makes the arrests and enforces all sentences.
Friday.Mary Fauatinl to magistrate,
D y ld Guion, whose father by the only to town prosecutor. Ir prosecutor; Evelyn Feller handles tba cleA ’a job and Audrie Parka to baiUff.
The "constable'* In aervlng the summons states the offense to the court. If the accused pleads Innocent, the officer states the dreum' stances and the prosecutor eX' amines tba defendant ana witness es.
Cross-examination by the defense Is allowed.
Althougk the court began only recently, aaveral enterprlring- lawyers already have hung up their shingles.
The rules extend llkewtoe to behavior in the ihuses which transport children to and from school from great distances.
Sports Roundup181 AND 188 AUTUMN atreet. Bach 6 rooms, steam heat, $35. The Lomas A Nettleton Co., 18 Asylum atreet, Hartford 7-3212 or -Manchester 8275.
FUR RENT—FIVE ROOM apartment steam naat 28 Blroh atrast Apply Supt A pt No. A
FOR RENT—JAN. 15th, aa Cam- hridga street t room tenement garage. $35. Td. 5409.
HOUSES FOR RENT 6Y
By EDDIE BRIETZ
New York, Jan. 14.—(A P)—If anybody In New York has more friends than Ekldie Brannlck, oecro- tary of the Giants, It'll take Sherlock Holmes himself to find ou t.. . . at ths dinner the baseball writers tossed for Brannlck the other night Jimmy Durante turned proceedings into something of a riot by reading this wire, supposedly from F. D. R.'Oingratulatlona.. .glad you didn't
run on the Republican ticket last faU” ___
the baoeball writers* dinner,' the boys along Broadway are totting out their vesta.
Cauliflower Row: Friends are trying to persuade Tony Canxaoeri to forget that comeback stuff, but no dice yet....F red A] istUl, the bell- ahop from San Francisco, may have conaiderabto to say before the middleweight situation to settled .... the big gun behind the Joe Louto retirement talk to Mra. J. L ... . .Freddie Steele to the first coast born lighter to bold a ring title ainee Jim Corbett'a day.. . .Tod Morgan, Jackie Fields, Muc Baer, Young Corbett and the others all were bom In other sectlona.
FOR RENT—6 ROOM single and sun porch at '159 H>pie AU modem improvements. Available Jan. 23. Inquire at 123 Wea Center
Btreet or Phone 7078.
KASPERS SWAMP CRESCENTS *rhe Kaapere swamped the
Crescents at East Bide Rec, 39-20.The Kaspers were pushed to the
limit In the first half but coasted to easy victory in the last half, throwing shots In the hoop from all angles. Coniibrs and Smith starred for the Kaspers while Pieno outstanding for the Crescents. The Kaspers victorious In two of three starts wUI play ^ e Wapplng
Jlnt fans would rather read about Bill Terry buying catchers than cow s... .Red Grange to telling the boys on the coast Los Angeles may get a fraachtoe In the National Football League next season.. Cecil Hart, manager of the Montreal Ctonadlens, never played a game of hockey la hto life .. .but that's nothing, points out Bob Ray in the LosAngeles Times___Arnold Eddycoaches the U. of Southern California hockey team and can't even sk ate ....
CLOWNS ARB BEATEN
Uneas In Wapplng Wednesday and ire leanl
Kaspers.the odds are leaning toward tbs
The Kaspers would like a game with the Eagles from the Y league at the Y. The box score:
KaspersB F P
Robinson, If ................... 3 0 6Olovan, rf .................... 0 8 SD. Smith, e ...................... 6 1 ISConnors, l b .................... 4 1 9Jones, rb ............... 4 0 8Totals
Creaoento17 6 89
Hapontk, rb .......Musebko, lb ........Pierro, c .............Dallocbia, rf . . . . Oplzri. U .............
Totals 2 20
Attentlou sports writers: Deadline for your Cooperstown baseball ball of fama nominations to January 15... the PhlUles seem to have grabbed off one of those jacks-of-all-tradee in William Andrus, rookls from Little R ock... .be can pitch, catch andplay the infleld and outfleld___soManager Jimmy Wilson will Just park him on the bench and wait for something to happen___since giving old King Levtnsky a good going over on the coaat the other night, Maxie Rooenbloom wants to be known as “Jewish heavyweight champion of the world.”
The Detroit Tigers have ordered Hank Greenberg to lay off baihdball . . . . Frank G. Menke has decided not to Issue hto entertaining allsports record book this }rear... with the Joe Humphreys memorial dinner next Monday, to be followed almost Immediately by Joe McCar- th /a annual beefsteak party and
The Broad Brook Reserves defeated the C30WUS, 22. to 20, as Harrington featured for the winners and Walker for the losers. The reserves led at halftime by 18-11.
Broad Biook Reoerveu (22)B. F.
Harrington, If ................. 5Mahoney, rf .....................1SabonlA c ........................ 0Felber, I g . . . , ................... 2Glsaler, rg .......................0Mlareckl, rg .....................0
SPEEDY LADYSMAN PROVES A FAEDRE
IN BIGGEST TESTSGaOant Coe Campaigiier
Bows to Lonf Shots in Fntority, Darby, Preak- oess and b Santa Anibu
This to the flrst of five articles on famous racing failures.
By MAX RnmUB NBA Servlea Turf Writer
New York, Jan. 14.—Ladysman was one of the greatest two-yeor- oldt of the past 20 years. He earned $111,000 as a juveoilA
Aa a four-yesT'Old on May SO, 1984, Ladysman WUpped the mighty Equipotoe In a thrilling stretch duel In the time-honored Suburben Handicap at Belmont Park. Tba W. R. Ooe stake campaigner possaasad speed and could carry weight. The white-faced thoroughbred proved hto gallantry and the stoutneae of hto heart la nu- maroua othar races. He won eight In aU and $184,000. He retired to the stud with a splendid reputation, aad to SKpeeted to enjoy hto share of succeas there.
Yet Ladysman was a failure—a tragic one—in the four great efforts of hto UfA With all hto class, pickup, and courage, he flopped when the chips were down.
Lodjvman first was a disappointment In the Belmont Futurity of 1932. By virtue of a sparkll^ victory in the Arlington Futurity and a Saratoga grand atom of the United States Hotel Grand Union Hotel, and Hopeful S t^ ea he was an even money choice.
Clowni (20)8 6 22
Walker, rg Davidson, Ig Wolfram, c . . , Johnson, If . . , Crockett, rf ..
Referee: Getosler.
B.40022
F. T. 1 9
4 20
OntLS OYM CLASS LEAGUE (Bee Alleys)
Ooeanibers (1)Eva La Frances.........- ... 73Mra. Runde ........................ 62Mra. G rezel........... ............79B. Grezel .......................... 69
eoa U'MSMlaetrsetlea-Utmatatv
>•■«•••••••• Si81»••••••■—•••88-A>■•••«•■■••■• IS • ••••••■••iv 8e
-Mortceevs ••• 81UMertuitiM .• • ..• .. 81lo Leaa 88_ aeal* .....• .• 8*WeateO—Male I«
^fseteo ■•••• a •••.•.•• *8e—a lied—Male or reaato.. lifaatae ......... ti-aWsacad—PeauUa . . . 88Weatwl—............... - 8tat aaaaelaa .......... 4tfam rae8ti fi Ya —Paia •••••••■•■.•,• 81
aad teeeilad 88• Pete —Poelttr- ■ dtaak
eeawiaii 81•WeieSid iewaiiy . . <
ledsdld 88• •Ma.«a....«B 61to . . . . . . . . . 68S . . . . . . M i 88lelSMWt 88
•••••••«
t s SSo ^'MTaSf* fi
vl
AMBIFLANCE(Uongmn)
5630(H oU oraa)
3040(Q ntah)
4340HOSPITAL
5131WATER DEPT.
3077(Aftgg i P. M.)
7840MANCHESTER
WATER CO.
5974GAS CO.
5075ELECTRIC CO.
5181EVENING HERALD
5121
H E A T I N GComplete Steam
Hot Wstoe.Ceadmooed Alt
•aatallattoiia.Oeleo Beat Oil
'ttaraerw FBraaee Ba|tolrs
Bsttmatee Cheerfully, Olvea.STANDARD PLUMBING
COMPANY961 8lala 88. PhOM n ot
Potatoes (1)H. Gustafson...................... 84I. Sullivan ........................105B. Anderson.................... 80M. Brown............................87
278 331
NOTICED esirable 5-R oobb A partm ent fa d u g the street. All im provem ents. H eat fam ish ed. R ent $25. H eat charge $10 per m onth during winter m onths on ly. A pply, Janitor, 26 B irch Street.
Rocking Chair Solves Problem o f Cutting Steel
FOR SALEBEVEB.AL GOOD BINGUB HOMES AND BUILDINO LOTS la Sue resMtoatial aertinaa. Theaa eoa ba iwaght at very low aacriSoe prteea aa uwaera ars maktag athw plana
List year property with thto agoaey 9sr quick reaulte. Have ■Mmy preepecta tmr leeal property a a i thnan
GEORGE Lo G R A ZIA D IOI — BcMla — .
9M No. Mala Strert TeL 8278
Pittsburgh, Jan. 14 — (AP) — A g combination of the actlmi of the rocking chair and the machaatom A the guUloUne provided today a aoh^ tloo ot a trig problem of steel maau- facturlng—the bending ot steel beneath cutting obeturs.
A. W. Sodarburg, chief engineer at tha Homestead min of tba Car- negle-IlttBoto Staal Oorporatloii, thought of tha troubieooma *tiow“ and the resultaat need of dtralghten- ing the plates while be sat fai hto home Idly tipping a rocUBg chair with hto toe.
The noticed that only a ralatively small part of the rocker touched the floor at say time.
Came hto idea:“Maybe there*! eomethhig we caa
develop la that.”He bunt a Uttta wooden model eC
a cutting devlca with a blade, which, like tha chair rocker touched only a small part at a tlma.
State Taverns a Cause - O f Cruelty to Animals
Hartford, Jan. 14.>—(AP) y Aadaliorae was treated by a vstarlnar- >w the tavern to a causa ot cfueltv isBi and the hameas was properbr -------------------- ■ lU aagw 1 ------------------------------—
nowto animals. General ___Seth Jones of the Connecticut Ha mane Society reports.
A few months ego eomplalhta that parents neglected their chUdiun to spend their time In tavema ra- vealed abuses ot chUdren to agento of the society. At the latest meeting of the directors Mr. Jones reported that the loclety had received complaints of drivers of horses leaving their animals standing, unblanketed. for five hours while they warmed themselves, inwardly .w j outwardly, in taverns.
One su ^ case of Uttreatment ofhorse waa the cause of complalnta
on two successive daya oo-dety agent found that not only was the man’s horse suffering from cold, but that it was sore frotfi an improperly adjusted hameoa The
fitted by a home A total of 275 complaints of
.cruelty to atilmato was received In December. Warnings were toeued to 69 persona Tha society destroyed 1,200 animals, most ot
For the children's department, Mr. Jo%es reported that ‘06 new famlliea involving the weUkre ot 190 children, were reported to the eoctoty In December. Fifty fam- Ulea that previouaiy had been ru- pprted were again brought to tha aoctety*s attentkm, making a total of 106 tamiUea with $86 chlldran added to the group of 514 famlUea with 1,977 ehildr^ carried over fVom November.
Eleven peraons ware prosecuted tor offenses against 14 children, and eight court bearings were held on behalf of 16 children.
$100,000 added Santa Anita Handicap in February, 1935. That wai the one In which aU the celehratad cripples were entered. Twenty Orand. Equipoise, Mate, Faireno, Oavalcada and some more. Several of them failed to get to the post, but nevertheless the field was a remarkable one. No lees than 20 started.
Ladyamon ran a mriMhiny But one other r.nbetter one. He waa Fred M. Alger’s imiwrted Asucar, ths oonvertad jumpar. We know now that, like Kerry Patch, Asucar was not St to match bridlea with Ladysman. Tat that afternoon, when it meant $109,- 500, Asucar, which paid $26.80 for a $2 mutuel ticket, waa Lodymnan’e superior. Second money amounted to $ 10,000.
Hto best simply wasn't good enough In the big moments, ao Ladysman, one of the best hoiass In yearq, finished hie racing career unable to win any one of the four major objecUyes of hto life.
with some pretty lucky etrlkea and m>area. There jiut ain’t no juotlee.
StnadtagPoints
Team No. 2 ........ 4Tanm No. S ............................ 2Team No. 4 .............................. $Team No. I .............................. 0
Ttoun No. 1MeCtowan........... .7 $ 99 98—27$NeKea ................. 102 UO 87—299Sm ith................... 108 108 106—822D leto....... ............ 128 106 188 864
F o x ........Wamar ., Anderson Berry . . .
4U 422 422 1286 No. t
. . . 86 104 90—279
...101 88 126—812
...118 100 104—222 ...117 188 108—887
Kerry Patch, a 30-to-l shot, beat Ladysman In the Belmont Futurity. Kerry Patch had the luck to get out in front and sufficient stlck-to-it to remain there. Ladysman began In a tangle. Just when it seemed that he might get through to score, he was blocked. E va then Kerry Patch, which bad eight pounds the best of It in the weights, preveUed by less than a length.
The Kentucky Derby of 1933 long will be remembered for the battle between Broken Up and Head Play, and the fisticuffs between the jockeys, Meade and Ftoher. But many atoo remember that Ladys- mon, the winter book favorite which carried their money, failed to get up. Broken Up went to the post a maiden and never won another race.
Ladysman raced wide for almost tha entln mile and a quarter. The extra long journey took too much out of him, with the result that when It was time to move on the leaden he oquld not rally.
The chips again were down in the Preakneds. It was another of Ladys- man'a game bids, hut Head Play, with CSiarley Kurtalnger up, ran the most remarkable Pnakness since Man o’ War's. He could not be denied In his finest effort, and once mon Ladysman ran second.
481 427422x1876X— Team No. 2 won on roIlKiff.
Team No. 8Tedford ............... 108 116 88—807Torrance .............. 125 118 109—882Holland..................108 118 88—804Dummy ............... 92 86 88—366
NEXT: Top FOght.
CRAVAT BOWLDfO LEAGUE (Morphy’s Alleya)
Team No. 2 took 4 points from Team No. 1 while teams Na 8 No. 4 split with 3 points sach. “Laa” Berry captured hiih alngto with 188 and “Honey Boy” DIsts took high tbne-string with 864. For a while it looked as If a certain obacura and uiUuiown bowler who usually gropes arouiul in the 80’a was going to get a chance for a special write-up but the two old maaten decided to shove the upstart down where ha belonged, so they came through
Blanchard Larder . . . Murphy . . Oreaal . . .
4 » 488 868 1829 Na. 4
. . . . 97 112 96—807 ....100 104 88—393 ....112 86 118-216 . . . 93 108 134—824
401 410 428 1389DANDEUONS 9LOOMINO
Eaat Hartford, Jan. 14.—(AF)— Hra. Ctoorga RIpolma reportad today that dandeUcos have bqgnn to Moom In a meadow bora.
Recant warm waathar was ra- aponalbto.
A woman apyhig tba flowara, gathered some of um gregg tor salad, M n. Rlpoloms m M.
FLAPPER FANNY-•arimtammen. XH.anLnagsr.gnt-
By Sylvia
Ladygman was in position tor _ 856 308 killing In the first running of the
He took the model to hto office. Hto aasociatoa weren’t particularly Impressed.
*TU show you," aaid Soderberg, "Ws'll get some chewing gum.”
Ohe by <me they ted doaena of stlcka of gum into the device which looked like a- chair rocker built Into a guillotine frame. Each out cleanly snipped, smooth and uncurl- ad.
The engineers went to work. From the model grew en 80-ton rocking shear to cut steel without a cuiL
Tomorrow, with Myron C Taylor, chairman of the U. 8. Steel and directors Jt the nation’a largeat steel corporation present the new unit at the Homestead mill will be opened formally.
Ona of the first etopa they will visit to the alto of tbs rocking obear —the sad of curled steal problems.
m m nru^ Tz•C lYv ,
PIEL
. *Civeherabtohoidogthiifisis,les Tbelasfontssusthavebesnlbg
__ _______________________________________________________________________ ■ f - / t
MYRA NORTH, SPECIAL NURSE Cause For Wonder By THOMPSON AND COLL *
NEAJeilstOr RXXESIOIlS . N0W ..005M , m O O IM (»
AND HOW COVOU THINK riL FEEL? BUT, AT LEAST 'JOOLL KNOW TM SAFE
w hile HDU'RE60M E *
THANK. HEAVENS POR THAT.I THERE CERTAINLV SKAJUDATT
ANY DAKl&ER IN NURSHsi(5 A »C K OLD LADY. W THE W K/ PERHAPS WE SHOULD INQUIRE
FOR AINSLEV HOUSE.
^ HALF HOUR LATER. ANOTHER o S ^ BNJSES.TO ASM. DlRECTfONS..__________
OLIMEV/ SOMETHiNCi MU51 *we 'APPEN ED10 OL LADY AlNSLEV'
i .
The Stanly Ooonty Katerprtos. . pubitobad weakly at Albamarls.
North Carolina, qarrtod tba tollow- ing poUUoal sdvarttoameat jnst before the 1936 elootloa:
Attantton VetastI Promtoa, If. Blsetso. Tb Sup-
pert the Nebtost Ideals of Oanw^ racy. To Unhold the Hlgbaat Priael- plea of Right aad Justice. To Stand
JUbarty, Freedom aad Equality, To Oppoas iBjuaUoo aad intolerance, to Lay Down My Life, If NsM
to. Defense of My Country aad Its PMple.Vote For
Steve Furr For tx ^ Catehe
It to not plsaaant to stiek dav •«ar d ^ n £ to to n o u a ly ^ P ^ tolly at a bnstnsas or a job. But any awn ean afford to do It rather than take the consequsnoee of foU- ing or refuring to do It
“Oed", -wrote the sweet glrL have beoome Infatuated with ealto " mUea."
"WelL daughter,” rapUad the fond father, *Tf your be:rt la set on him. I haven’t a word to aay, but I ai- v'ays did hope you’d marry aa American.”
Every man who suepeada to keep an eye constantly on hto busl- nesa or his job. Thera are times whan he's relaxing or noting but hs’h nsvar forgetful or nsglsciful of hto meal Uokst
Kulper—1 am convinced that our baby looka just Uko ma
Rattigan—I wanted to say tbs same thing but 1 wag afiald you would be offended If I did.Read It Or NotH
Of 60 elttoa In the United Stotao, Denver)Oriorado, to tha highest a b w sea level, 5650 feet New OrtoanA LoutoUna, to tha toweat, five fasL
Daughter—Daddy, tbs man that you owe 860 to on the pbona
^ d y —Hey? Tell him that we had the phone taken out
DeSnlUon c i a Monologue: A eon- veraatlon between a meti uid hto wife.
Henry Peck—Just my luca. Friend—What to the matte: now?
_ proml ed my wiferd be home by 10 o’clock last mght
Friend—Couldn’t you make ItT H ^ Peok—Yet; I did even bet-
Ur. I got in just at 9:45, but she was sound aoleep, and I faitod to p t any ers^t I might just aa wsU hava otaysd out irith the boys.
From Genesis $e RevetoMenTwas autumn when they chanced
to meet sha was a prstty girl; And after ona good haalthy glance
hto head was to a whlrt.The winter eftas. He «ktd her
more. Her nmeitig was divine;And snuggled In Me arma on . night,
she heard: "Will you be mine7” And ao, as birds and flowera told
the world that it was spring.This love-atriiok man spent all hto
cash for ona big dtomhnd ring.B’ i summer’s come; and, aad to
tell, things aren’t the a.me aome- how.
He saw her in a bathing suit. There’ll be no wedding now.
—L. Myws.
• t i e m n y probloaM dbd thaman doea not attentot to aa*
Lite wise swer tham on.
Antique Dealer—I have beio very rare revolver. It dat«, from the time o f tha Romane. .
(hutpmar— Why, the Rossaas didn’t use revolvers.
D saler-That’s what maksa It so rare.
Patlsnt—I underatend flab la good tor the brain. Can you rAeadnend—lining special 7 _
Doctor—Wen. you might begin with a whala
When we aak advice, we are seeking oonflrmatlon of our
own judgment
•ooaomtota* belief that a now erop o. footo eomss along every 80 yeera
■Dr. T. J. Grayson. Uahrsrslty of PHmsytvanla.
Thto country to not going to tbs bow-wows. Polities to sntorliig bust- nsss, yes, but Urns mnllPg all thoae things. Aad even U it eon- tlnues, the people will get used to It and go right on living.—Ambroee Swaoey, 90, Ctovetaad.
0 „ Induatrlaltota.
No poUtlelan ever created a more abundant life.
—aeywooA Moley.The right-minded people to WaU
street don’t want to aaa tba public rushing into securiUas without lin t finding out what they're buyhig.
•Charles Gay, preaMtant. 1 ew York Stock Exchange.
The most marveloiu Aprettion of dsfnoeratlc life In America today is a utUverrity aupportsd by the people.—Or. Walter A. Jesanp, piesMent,
Oamegie Foandatton for ths Ad- vaneenient of *-*mtng
I would elevate the admtototra- Uon of the preeldeaey by eUmtoat- lug Its competitive political oharae- ter after 'ilecUou.—U. 8. Rep. George Holden Ttok-
hwB. Meeeaehneelte. srbo tovoio a ■tagto, aix-year term tor tha pna- ident mt tha United StelSA
A ThoughtBut behold, the hand of at— #t.—»
betrayeth me to with me m the teblA—St. LtoM atiSl.
There to no traitor like him whom domestic treason plants tba poiriard within the breast that truatad to hto truth.—Byron.
b r r b ih t a r y vs. e n v ir o n m e n t
MoragA OaUf.—James BuUer. from the tropical island of Guam, and Pete Barrows of Juneau, Alas- kA both St Mary's eollags studsnto, trudgsd 18 mllss through the snow when they missed tba tost bus from Oakland.
Arriving at school, the youth from the tropics attended etouss In ahlrt slesvea. The boy from the frozen north was sent to bed with a cold.
FRECKLES AN D HIS FRIEN DS By Blosser
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BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ^foswrie---------------
SC URC HY SMITH^ W ^ / 7W -M 4 5 d/V WANTS
th at p l a n kp p y o v n 8 •^ytCTOH eO ULDN 'r K K T trriC H IN \ ANO MAtON't • ‘
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IF YW t h i n k I'H T - now, CAN THK e^IN K TO PIK UP MV \ HKPO ie*, Kt/PO V- PLANK m g MASON't) K K T P H ig r POP VSKVOU^PB— ONCKfOR—
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By P an e OUT OUR W AY0N i.ie6K r H6RE.1T \▲ 4EC/*»ev kAkJZktmOFERATIS A SECRET MASNiTlC
■— UNDER THE WTIREElNto.
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.y S li? th ree ^ 0 5 o fOONCtAUiD IN 5& E .VAjlW X TURN ON ThEMAONBT, THE m e ta l ETICIC6 TO THE f l o o r . IF THEU*6 n o MIBTAL IN VOUR V iO S '
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C A W T N LICKED. r iL FURNISH HIS OPPONENTS WITH M E T A L W06S l y throw 'EM OFF EALANCEf 6UJE 'EM TO DIE f l o o r s MM4E ’EM
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■OYS TDECTHER WAKTAdfrrMi
W AINT aOTROOM ONNew Worlds To Conquer
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By HAMLIN
CAPTURED WMOOVII
WNG, THIS / § t C F T W OOP
• * an* m OMOfMJRMOW UP r
rMEANWI UB- d j :UNAWARE OF the CAlAMITv THAT HAS befallen TH0R klNB AND MIS PARTV. THOSE IN CHARGE OF THE M00\/1AN GARRISON' PSQIIK WINS AND means id MKT ANVStTUA-TION that MlBlir ARM .
'0 0 NODTHINK THAT NASTV O f
wur VAnaffTACK.
MOOT
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OF_H 6R E ./( e ^ HERS.
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